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Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 14, 1987

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Major
Hoople's

.

Daily Number
• 170
Pick 4
0055

pic~s

Page 4

tO HELP CELEBRATE OUR
.

THURSDAY I OCTOBER 15th

ONLY
9 P.M. UNTIL MIDNIGHT

Old Fashion·p,ice1 In A

8- J 2-14-27 -;28-39

.1

Vol.37, No. 111
Copyrighted 1987

•

•

at y

e

.

TH ANNI~ERSAR~

Super Loto

I

Pomeroy-MiddiP.port. Ohio,

- MosUy sunny. Partly cloud.y
tonight. Low between 40 and
15. · Highs Friday 65 and 70 .
Chance of rain near zero ..

enttne

T~ursday,

October 15, 1987

2

Section~.

14 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Ust proposals for development block grants
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Stall Writer
The Meigs County Commissioners announced
Wednesday the eight proposed Community
f?evelopment Block Grant projects they Will be
submitting to the state.
Included in the group of eight are Sutton
Township, $10,719 for road paving on Welshtown
Hill Road; Middleport Village, $9,200 for sidewalk
handicap access ramps; Racine Village, $4,863
for park equipment; Syracuse VH!age, $6,400 for
improvements to London Pool; Rutland EMS, .
$9,624 to improve the E;MS building; 'Chester Fire
Department, $7,680 for !irefighting equipment;
Pomeroy Village, $9,800 for sidewa lk improvements in the business section; a nd $24,873 for a
revolving loan fund for ·a possible new county
business.
According to state regulations, only eight
projects could be included in the 'CDBG proposal.

Those projects denied were Rutland Village's
request for $9,630 lor road· paving and Scipio
Township Fire Departments'·s request lor $6,260
for breathing apparatus and air tanks.lthoug\1 the
commissioners regretted having to deny these
projects, they pointed out that both entities have
received CDBG funding fm· other projects the past
two years.
The commissioners also denied Pomeroy
Village's request [or $6,239 to pave Pomeroy's
portion of Welshtown Hili Road. This project was '
submitted initially as a combined project with
Sulton Township, however, the commissioners
explained, the state specified that the two
requests had to be classified as separate projects.
The commissioners gave Pomeroy Village
officia ls the choice of which project they would
rather have funded at this time.
Final proposal for the CDBG funding must be
submitted to the state by-the end of October.

•
Bids for dump trucks and a six -passenger
automobile lor the highway department were
opened yesterday. Pat Hili Ford submitted two
bids, $29,300 and $21,839, for single axle trucks .
Gibson Truck Parts, Athens, submitted a bid of
$48,527.52 ·for an International tandem. Jim Cobb
'Chevrolet entered a bid of $13,639 lor a 1988
Caprice, and Pat Hili entered a bid of $13,500 lor a
1988 Crown Victoria.
Vehicle payments will be due after J~n. 1.
Bids were tabled and turned over to county
engineer Philip Roberts for review.
Roberts reported that the state has recognized
Olive Township Road 273 as a township road and
has reopened the road to public travel. The road,
which leads to Forked Run Lake, was closed and
barricaded earlier this year by state forestry
personnel, causing protest from area residents.
Roberts said he gave OiiveTownship'Trustees a
copy of state procedures forregulating speeds on

township roads. Recently changed state law
allows trustees to set limit s of not less than
25-miles per hour on unimproved roads a nd within
platted subdivisions, if a subdivision is located
outside an incorporated municipality.
Roberts also reported that one of the. la st
wooden deck bridges on the county 's road system,
on County Road 76, Childrens ' Home Road , is
being replaced with steel decking.
The board announced 1hat the I]love of the
county's Bureau of Support frottrthe jurisdiction
of Common Pleas Court to the Department of
Human Services shall be made no later than Dec.
1. Decision to move the support bureau to human
services was made following a change in the
state's support enforcement law.
Finally, as requested by Prosecuting Attorney
Rick Crow, a law enforcement trust fund was
established by the board.

Iraq strikes British tank~r;
United Nations told of attack

/I
I

MANAMA. Bahrain iUPII -A
suspected Iranian-fired missile
slammed into a U.S.-managed
supertanker in Kuwaiti waters at
dawn today, hours after lraq
a I tacked a Brilisll tanker at
Iran's Kharg island oil terminal ,
shipping sources and Kuwaiti
officials said.
There were no casualties in
today's sttack on the U.S .operated, 124.085-ton Sungari,
which was moored at Kuwait's
Shuaiba anchorage, shipping of·
ficials ' said.
The Lloyd's of London shipping
intelligence unit said thP missile
hit the tanker at 5:04 a.m.
Firefighting tugboats brought
the blaze under control within
two hours. the Kuwaiti News
Agency said.
"The fire · is under control
completely," Kuwait Oil Tanker
Co. Cha irm an Abdul Fallah
al-Badr said in a telep hone
interview.
Also in the northern g ulf.
shipping sources said a n Iraqi
warplane struck a Liberian·
!lagged supertanker, the 231,990ton Pegasus 1, with a French·
made Exocet missile.
The Pegasus 1, operated by a
London-based company, was hit
late Wednesday in the waiting
zone at Iran's Khari Island oil .
terminal, the sources said:
Al-Badr said four re-flagged

Kuwaiti tankers that arrived in
Kuwaiti waters under U.S. navy
escort Tuesday were moored 12
to 15 miles away from the
Sungari's a nchorage and were
not affected by the' attack.
Kuwaiti For_eign Minister
Sheikh Sa bah Alahmad ai-Sabah
sent urgent messages to U.N.
Secretary-General Javier Perez
de Cuellar , Arab League
Secretary-General Chadli Kieibi,
Gulf Cooperation Council
Secretary-General Abdullah Ya·
qoob Bishara and the Islamic
'Conference Organization inform·
ing them of "the new Iranian
aggression against Kuwait and
shipping in the gulf." a ministry
spokesman said.
"Sheikh Sa bah Alahmad urged
the world comm unity as rep res. e nted by its ~ario u s organizations to shou lder its responsibility in deterring surh
aggression." .the spokesman
said.
A Kuwaiti De(ense Ministry
spokesman said his country is
holding Iran responsible lor the
Sungari attack and "calls on theworld community. particularly
the United Nations Security
,Coupcil, for a speedy implemen-.
tation of its Resolution No. 598
calling for an end tothelran-Jraq
war.''
Diplomatic sources said the
Sungari was hit by a suspected

Silkworm missile. If true, it
would mark the first lime Iran
has used the weapon to attack an
oil tanker. The sources said the
missile caused little damage for
a SiikwQrm, but it could have
been fired without a warhead.
"It seems a bit of a waste of a
missile," one Wes tern military
expert said .
Kuwaiti official s h~s previously s aid Iran fired Silkworms
at Kuwait, and that at least one of
them hit the tiny gul f nation this
year. Earlier t his year, a Silkworm missile fired by Iranian
Revolutionary Guards from the
Iranian-occupied Faw Peninsula
hit the southern Kuwaiti coast,
prompting a protest by Kuwait to
the United Na lions.
Lloyd's also blamed Iran for
the attack on the Sungari. Which
the agency said is managed by
the Omi Corp. of New York and
owned by Omi Sungari Transport
Inc·. of Monrovia, Liberia.
A U.S. diplomat in Kuwait said
no American warships were in
the immediate vicinity at the
time of the attack.
"No U.S. Navy ships enter
Kuwaiti waters, " he said.
The Kuwait Oil Tanker Co .
chairman also said he doubted
the Iranian missile was aimed at
any of the U.S."escorted re. flagged tankers that arrived
Tuesd ay .

-S eek regulation of takeovers
. ,I "' "

.. ..,.

·''

BUILDING RAZED - Another well-known
Pomeroy building Is coming down. Actual
chipping away of the structure, initially known as
the Owen building, began Wednesday morning.
Later the building became best-known as the

.

residence, located upstairs, of the late Judge and
Mrs. Frederick Crow I. Over the years the
downstairs housed several different businesses.
By Wednesday afternoon more than half of the
building was ori the ground.

.CBO revises deficit .estimates
The Ways and Means Commit WASHINGTON tUPI) - The
Congressiona l Budget Office · tee expected to vote t od~n its
proposal to raise more thaii"$'12
raised its estimate of the federal
billion in new taxes in fiscal1988,
deficit today to $179.3 billion,
which began Oct. I.
about $1 billion more than
Democrats on the Senate Fi previous forecasts, and attribnance
Committee, meanwhile.
uted the increase to h~avier
were
nearly
finished with their
spending in the last fiscal year.
own
lax
package,
but said they
The new estimate cou ld be a
still
needed
to
find
ways to raise
key element in .ca lculating mandatory a utomatic budget cuts in another $1 billion to meet their
nearly ali spen\ling accounts in goal of $9.5 billion.
The CBO presented its revised
case Congress and President
Reagan fail to agree on alterna- figures this morning to the
Senate Budget Committee,
tive deficit reduction plans .
whose chairman, Sen. Lawton
A new law requires the harsh
Chiles, 0-Fla., said the numbers
automatic cuts unless Reagan
shou ld provide a new incentive to
joins lawmakers ih approving a
$23 billion cut in the deficit. The encourage agreement on a pack· $23 billion figure was specified in age to avoid harsh automatic
earlier legis tat ion; but according spendi ng cuts.
"Can it be so hard to find a
to CBO calculations, an extra $1
billion in cuts is needed to rational way to find $23 billion in
compensate fo~ spending in· savings out of a $1 trillion
creases since the first of the year . budget?" Chiles demanded. "It's
The House Ways and Means not an Impossible.task. We're not
Committee and Senate Finance talking about Lindbergh on half a
Committee are nearly ready with wing or anything like that. We're
separate plans aimed at raising talking about something that's
at least $23 billion by prescribing doable."
The $12 billion Democratic
varying amounts of new taxes,
plan
sent ·to the full Ways and
spending cuts and other economy
Means
Committee included sevmeasures.
eral
controversial
provisions.
Reagan. despite his perennial
call for a balanced budget, has Including limits on mortgage
vowed to fight efforts to meet the interest deductjons for people
deficit goal with the unpopular whose homes are worth more
than $1 million and on home
step of raisfng taxes.

equity loans used for other
purposes.
Other provisions would continue the telephone excise lax
scheduled to expire and would
subject corporale raiders to a 50
percent non -deductible excise
lax on their gains .
T)lc Finance Committee "Democrats tentatively agreed during private meetings Wednesday
to plans to begin collecting diesel
fuel taxes at the wholesa le level
instead of at the retail collection
points now used. The provision
would raise about $200 million in
1988 and similar sumsdn the next
two years.
A second provision would end
the "completed contract method" Of collecting taxes from
defense and building contractors
at work on multi-year jobs.
Under current law, they are
permitted to delay some of their
lax payments until their projects
are completed. Committee ana lysts calculated the provision
would raise $800 million in the •
current fiscal year.
Earlier this week, the Senate
Democrats had approved tenta·
lively another $7.5 biliion ln new
taxes. With Wednesday's sum
added in, the $8.5 billion total was
about $1 billion short of the final
goal.
·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Gov. Richard F. Celeste and
state Attorney Genera l Anthony
··J. Celebrezze Jr. have joined the
battle against a federal attempt
to pre-empt state laws against
hostile corporate takeovers .
Celeste and Celebrezze told a
press conference Wednesday
they worked too hard on Ohio's
anti-takeover law to stand by and
watch the federal government
~vein .

"We gave Ohio companies the
tools to fight takeovers, " the
governor told a press conference
attended by former New Orleans
Mayor Moon Landrieu. "We
launched a friendly takeover- a
takeover of our economic
destiny."
"Federal pr!' -emplion ol
states' authority in regulating
hostile corporate takeovers
would be a tragedy," said Lan drieu , a former U.S. secretary of
housing and urban development

and currently c hairman ol the
Coalition to Stop the Raiq on
America!
Celeste, Landrieu and Cele- ·
brezze said the House Enet·gy
and Commerce Committee is
about to vote on legislation
allowing the Securit ies and Exchange Commission to replace
t he states in regulating takeover
defenses .
" That would be like the fox
guarding the chicken house, "
said Landrieu .. "They (the SEC)
have no intention of stopping this
game."
.
Landrieu said the "game' ' Is
for a handful of cagey executives . brokers and attorneys to
make money without producing
anything of value and without
consid~ring the impact of hostile
takeovers on workers , their
families and communities.
Celeste pointed out that Ohio
was in the forefront of enacting
legislation giving companies the
tools to fight hOstile takeovers

when the Goodyear Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. was in danger ol
being taken over by James
Goldsmith of Britain .
Celeste said that law could be
cn(Iangered by the federal legis"
la tion under consideration. He
said he prefers a bill, s ponsored
by Sen . William Proxmire of
Wisconsin and recently passed
by a Senate committee, maintaining state authority in the
area , protecting share holder s
and requiring earlier disclosure
of a raider' s takeover tac tics·.
"Our business lea de r s and
employees need to be a ble to
devote the ir e nergies to fi ghtin g
competitive challenges th ey face
rather than lighting the takeove r
sharks who feed on othe rwise
healthy companies," said Ce iebrezze, "The Wall Stree t ba nkers
Who only wa nt to spin the m a rket
to increase their alread v hu ge
profits mu s t not be allowed 10
ruin Ohio's sta ble, we ll -run
companies ."

More sewage going into Ohio River
CINCINNATI (UPIJ - A malfunctioning pumping station is
sending aboul3 million gallons of
raw sewage it day into the Ohio
River near downtown, and officials said it could take five days
before the problem is corrected.
Metropolitan Sewer District
Director Tom Saygers said the
equipment broke down Monday
night.
"II was a station mechanical
failure and regrettably the entire
station Is flooded with sewage.
We have to bypass the flow (Into
the river ) until we can pump out
the station," he sa[d.
Saygers said there is no danger ·"
from the spill because of the

strong river flow and the lack of
recreational activity on the river
at this time ol year.
In a similar incident les s than
two months ago , up to 15 million
gallons of untreated sewage
entered the Ohio River daily for
about three weeks . City health
officials were not told for several
weeks that the se~ge was
spilling into the river . The sewe r
district spent more than $500,000
to clean the debt-is :
Alan Vicory , executive director of the Ohio River Valley
Water Sanitation Commission,
said his agency has not tested the
water for bacteria since the
latest spill began bu t planned to

do so later this wrek.
" We will look at th a t th is w'ee k
and see w ha t the m ea surp of

impact might be,'' Vicory sai d.
" I don't a ntici pale dea lin g with
an y potenti a l probi,e ms with th e
water supply ...
He said 'th e lwos pills show " the
cit y does need to 1urn a higher
level of att e ntion to th e opera tio n
of it s colle ction S.\'S tcm ...
Vicory,sa id no a rea communities have drinking wat e r intak e
systems downstrea m of t he spill
on ' the Ohio s lue of til e river. Hr.
said sewa ge collec·ts o n the bank
of the rive r a nd doP~ not fl ow
across to t he othe r si d&lt;•.
·

.,

'

�••

•

Thursday, October 15, 1987

Commentary_

Education~ gap _____B.....:.y_J_a_ck_A_n_d_e_rs_on_an_d_·J_o_se..::__p_h_S.:.....p_ea_r

The .Daily Sentinel
,Ill Court StrP&lt;'t

Pomproy, Ohio
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Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
Thursday, October 15, 1987

WASHINGTON - ThP "gaps"
that Americans are asked to •'
worry about usually lnvo'ive
weapons or high technology
vis-a-vis the Soviets, or credibll·
lty irl the case of certain politi·
cans. Now some Labor Depart·
ment economists have identified
an education gap, yawning be·
tween the demands of high-tech
. employers and the supply of
qualified job applicants. There
won't be enough trained workers
to Ill! -all the jobs opening up in
the next dozen years, they wa rn.
What makes thi s of more than
academic interest is the dire
effects this educ allonal shortfall
is bound to have on the U.S.
economy. If uncorrected. It could

' ' ll'.t • ""lllL.: ""\I' .. t'l ·'· tH t"•·n; l ll!ll'"

Governors support
welfare programs·

than -average rate' and will probeventually chip away at the estlmate, almost one-third of
ably
continue to do so, all bul one
standard of living Americans • these jobs will be filled -out of
require
education above the
have taken for granted In the·la st necessity- by workers who lack
,
median
level.
The exception Is
40 years. American companies adequate education.
have suffered for years from
At first gla nce, t'he statistics on the service Industry . J:\ut it's
obvious that American prospercompetitio n from foreign firms
education don't look too bad :
ity In a competitive world can't
whose workers are paid less:
Today's job market demands a
be substalned by serving more
they will soon be vulnerable to
median of 12.8 years of educ a·
.•fast
food and fixing more flats ..
foreign rivals whose workers
tion: the new job market will
The
uncomfortable truth Is
know more.
need a 13.5-year median. But
' The arithmetic of future em- when this Is translated lnto that Americans who'll bE' jolnln!\
ployment ls Inexorable: Only 22 English, it means there wlll be t he work force In the next dozen
years will have educallonal and
percent of today's jobs rtiqulre a
roll! ions of Americans who won't
college educatlon But more than ·have what lt takes to answer the skill levels far below the IncreasIngly tough requirements of the
50 percent of the new jobs cr.eated help wanted ads of the late 1990s.
before the year 2000 will require But despera te employers will
new hlgh - tect~ economy.
In addition, Census Bureau
education beyond high school hire them anyhow .
projections
show both the pop11la·
and there won't· be anywhere
An even gloomier perspective:
near enough applicants who are Out of more than 30 occupations llon and the work force growing
qualified. As a result. the experts that are growing at a greater· at a significantly slower rate the slowest since the Great
'
Oppression of the 1930s. This
means that as the pool of younger
workers shrinks, the average age
of the population and lhe work
force will Increase.
Among ttre projections that
worry the Labor Departrrien1
expe rts: The slower -growing
population and work force will
create less deman d fqr housing,
food, cars and other consumer
· OK~~
goods, stunting the growth of the
nation 's economy. Also, com pan·
les that cou ld be expected to
experience rapid growth will be
seriously handicapped by the
lack of yo un ger, qualified
workers better able to respond to
rapidly changing job requlr£&gt;·
ments. And companies that de·
P~l[:eNTIAL
-pend on younger customers will .
face a diminishing market .
In general, the experts foresee •
small businesses as _ ~reatlng
mo sl of the new jobs; shorter and
more flexible working hours:
significant changes ln fringe
benefits: a nd an awakening of
union activity In the low-paid
service indu stry.

WASHINGTON CUPIJ - The National Governors Assoc iation
declared 'i ts support W~dnesday for legis la tion that would require
states to offer welfare to two-parent families. ending the general
national policy limiting aid to sing !~ parents.
CONTRA
Arkansas Gov. Bill C!inlon , spokesman for the governors, told a ·
Senate panel the notion of extendi ng aid to two-parent families Is not
the controversial question it has been in the past.
"Consensus is growi ng around the idea tha t you can not C'ncourag e
the formation of stable. healthy families while pursuing a national
policy that provides ass ista nce only to families with an absent
parent," said Clinton, a Democrat. in testimony before the Senat e
Finance rommi1tl'r.
The committee is considering wei faro reform legislation proposed
by Sen. Daniel Moynihan. D·N. Y., that would. among other
wide-ranging provisions. requirE' all states to offer assistance to
two-parent families.
Twenty-six states now participaiP in a special federa l effort. the
Aid to Families with Dependent Ch ild ren-Unemployed Parent
program, that allows paym~nts to two-parent families as long as one
parent agrees to enter' job training or plac~ment programs.
Other stat~s. however. have refused to participate becau se
opponents feel it removes incentives to work and E'ncourages
dependence on welfare.
,
But Sen. Daniel Evaris. R-Wash ., told the committee tha t during h is
tenurp as governor of Washington , state studies showed res tr ictin g
a id to single parents on l~ enco uraged poor families to brea k up . .
Evans sa id Washington in 1981 discontinued its participalion in the
--------------~------------AFDC-Unemployed Parent program. onl&gt;- to see many of those
is fatal.
WASHINGTON (NEA) ~ellable statistics are availaby I991 . CDC, however, believes
two-parent families separate so the~· could continue gelling aid und er
For
those
presumably
not
as
ble
on the number of people who
Here's
a
brief
quiz
about
ac
·
the fi gure wll!_ reach 270,000 by
the regular· AFDC program.
.
quired immun£&gt; dt&gt;ficiency syn- susceptible to the virus, there is
have contracted AIDS and whal
1991.
He said that. 17 months aUcr th&lt;' two-parent program was
another uncertainty - how soproportion . of them have di ed
What is certain, ln the words of
discontinued, "38.2 percent of 1the affected filmilieSI bccamPcligibl&lt;' 'dromt&gt; that illustrates how little
c iety will handle the epidemic,
is known about AIDS six y£&gt;ars
while relying upon currently
one especially valuable new
for regu lar AFDC benefits. in most instances because there were no
especially It-s mounting financial
after it fi rst appeared in this
available medical responses to
handbook on the subject, ls that
longer two parents in the home ...
cou ntry:
costs.
the disease .
" the AIDS crisis Is just begin·
Securing the necessary funds
l) The average medical costs
The number of cases r~ported
nlng... yet already both our
will present an awesome cha l- to CDC now exceeds 42,000.
incurred by a si ngle AIDS victim
heallh care l,•stllutlons and our
lenge, bul simply ascertaining One-half of those who have
from the onset of lhP disea se until
social fabrk are strained by the
dpathare: aJlessthan$30,000; bl
how mu ch money will be re· contracted AIDS have died
AIDS epidemic."
WASHINGTON tUPil White House - spokesman Marlin
almost
$150,000.
qulred
is proving to be difficult, if within one year of the initial
That timely observation comes
Fitzwater s harply critic ized ABC, CBS and NBC for dcdiling to forgo
not Impossible.
diagnosi s . Aimost three-fourths
21 The average incubation
from "AIDS Public Bollcy Di live coverage of PresidPnt Reagan's speech WPdncsda.v , ca lling thrm
period for AIDS Is: a )·five years:
There is no consensus on the have perished within two years.
mensions," publishe d by the
"sadly inadequa te" in meeting their public responsibility.
bl
10
years:
c) 20 years.
cos
t of providing medical treat - Seven-eighths havp died within
United Hospita l Fund of New
"I'm very disturbed that three of the tour networks would tleny the
ment to a typical AIDS patient, four years.
:l) By 1991, thecumulaliv e tot al
York and the University of
Americ~n people the opportunit y to see lht• president's address."
while
eslimales
of
how
many
oi
known
AIDS
cases
in
thi
s
Th
E'rc
is
no
agreement,
how
California's
Institute for Health
Filzwaler sa id. "It's a newsworthy event. The American people
people
w
ill
be
afflicted
by
the
coun
try
will
be:
a)
13.'&gt;,000;
ever.
on
what
the
future
holds.
Policy
Studies.
deserve to hear their national leaders discuss an iss ue of such
b)270,000.
d'isease vary even more widely.
"For every case of reported
"The AIDS epidemic," the
importance."
.
Centers
·for
Dis·
The
federal
.
RPgardless
of
wiTich
answers
AIDS
in
the
United
States,
there
book aptly notes , "Is suffused
The three networks ran their regu larly schedulctl aftprnoon soa p
ease Control, ThE' organization ar£&gt; aboui 100 or more carriers,"
you picked, you've ac hieved a
with and exacerbated by myriad
oppras during the 3:15p.m . EDT_speech. which focused on Supreme
that ha s most closely monitored a respected Harvard University
perfPcl score on the test. That's
ethical. financial , legal. medical ,
Court nominee Robert Bark .
the epidemic, examined the costs researcher told a Senate commit·
because
all
of
the
alternatives
political and psychosocial issues
"Havi ng dcvoted hours of broadcast lim e to the Senate
listed above havP been offered to
of prov-iding hospital care to the lee la s t year .
that de mand balanced discussion
;confirmat ion ) hearing , they have sudd e n! ~· gone blind to the
first 10,000 AIDS patients in thl~
the public by reputable medical
" Once infected, (they · are)
and careful analysis ."
pres id ent 's address." FitzwatE'r sa id. " That view of thdr public
countr
y.
then
reported
In
1985
researchE-rs
as
reliable
infected
for llfe," he added. "We
President Reagan has been
responsibility is sadly inadeq uate ...
es timates.
that the ex11enses averaged see a wave a deva sta ting disease
notabJy un enthusiast ic about
Th e networks sa id they decided to skip live covprag&lt;' of the• spcerh
$147,000 per person.
For members of · high-risk
coming."
-participating ill that dialogue.
because White House staffers told them the president did not plan to
But
a
subsequent
scientific
groups
,
notably
homosexual
and
Oth er dismiss those views as
but the nation urge ntl y needs the
offer any new Information .
stud y of the costs of treating
bi sex ual mC'n and intravenous
unnecessarily hyst erical. if not · unified, coherent pollcy guidance
• '' II was an editoria l decision ." said NBC News spokesman Bi ll
drug users. the uncert ainl y of AIDS victims in San Francisco outrageously apocalyptic. One
that only the federal government
McAndrew . "I t will be covered on NBC NightJ~· News. We were
AlDS
is
whether
they
will
con
hospitals
produced
an
estimate
scientific
projection
places
the
can
provide to deal with the
advised !here was no hard news irl it ...·
under
$27,600
per
person.
of
just
tract
the
disease
thai
invariably
cumulative
total
at
135,000
cases
crisis.
Before the speech, ABC spokeswoman \arol OJ wert sa id , " We feel
we can cover it adequately in our regu lar newscasts."
\BS stressed the decision dld not represent a confrontat ion with thf'
W~it e House, which "did not request live coverage. as it does in
national securit y ev~nts, but made this ava il able for li ve coveragea big distinction ," a network spokeswoman sa id .
All threp nptworks said th e~· were ready to go live immediate ly if
The past few weeks confirm
ward Bark, common se nse such aid.
sion of· Granada, for example,
neces sary.
· the peculiar,· corrosive grip thai
shou ld warn us against lakin g
Never mind th e wisdom of
althoug h they most certainly
" We are like the Boy Scouts. we are&gt; always prepared ... said CBS
pollsters hold on modern politics .
their pronouncements at face running foreign policy by refer would have opposed it had they
executive producer Tom Be!!ag.
Judge Robert Bork, the contro - value.
·endum. By Rudman's logic, a
been asked befor ehand.
Cable News Net ,work, the 24 -hour all-new s network . ca rried thP versial nominee to the Supreme
politician could just as easil y
All of which sugges ts that
speech live in its entirety. followed by th,e Democratic response.
Court, hasn't merely submitt ed
In the. first place, pE&gt;ople lie to favor an actual invasion of
polling results make an unpredic. " We never cons idered not carrying it-.." said Bill HPadline. CNN"s · to the advice-a nd-consent propollsters. When polled about Nicaragua, si ne£&gt; Americans
table compass for charting a
Was hington bureau chief. He said the speec h itself may not be news,·.
cess of the Senate. He's also
whether they favor a state E qual tend to support a military foray
political career. Transfixed by
"bu t the fact that he's gi\·ing the speech is ."
undergone the advice-and - . Rights Amendment, for exam· once it has begun, even thoug h
polls, senators neglect their ow n
During Reaga n's speec h. CBS aired "The Guiding Light, .. NBC.
co nsent ritu al of pollsters.
,
pte, a majority will almost they oppose such action In the
beliefs. II makes you wonder why
"Santa Barbara," a nd ABC. "General Hosplla l."
Pollsters obvio usly cla im to
always say yes. Then they will go abstract.
I hey think th ey w0re e iPc led.
measur~ popular attitudes, and
ou t and vote against it. This has
Americans cheered the invato varying degrees they succeed.
happened in New . York, New
YPt most pollsters routinely
Jersey, Florida. Iowa, Maine and
attach a precision and rigor to
(as recently as last Nove mbert
thclr results that is simp ly
Vermonl .
implausible - a nd yet are oft e~
Sometimes people lie because
By United Press Inte rnational
taken
seriously
by
people
who
they're
nol at ease with the
Today is Thursday. Oct. 15. the 288th day of 1987 with 77 to follow .
shou
ld
kno\v
better
.
questioner.
One example: The
The moon is wanlng, moving toward its 'new phase.
the
polling
results
Consider
Joint
Cen
ter
for Political Studies
The morning s ta rs are Mars and Jupit er.
concerning
Bork
.'
They
suggest,
and
the
Gallup
Organization
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus a nd Saturn.
variously,
that
57
percent
of
fou
nd
that
blacks
are
more likely
Those born on this date are under th e sign of Libra . They include
Americ
ans
oppose
Boi-k
while
to report racial polarization to
Roman poet Virgil in 70 B.C".: German philosopher Friedrich
black interviewers than t o
Nietzche in 1844 ; boxing champion John~- Sullivan in l 8o8: English on ly 29 percent back him (a Louis
white.s.
writer-humo ris t P .G. Wod.;house In 18Sl: fllmm akerMervynLeRoy, Harris Survey) or that 39percenl
Finally, people don ' t like to
producer of " Thc Wizard of Oz," in 1900; picture archivist Otto of America ns favor his elevation
appear Ignorant or indifferent.
Bettmann in 1903 (age 84 1, writer-historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. in to the hi gh court while 35 percent
When confronted by a pollste",
1917 (age 701. Chrysler Corp. chai r man Lee lacocca in 1924tage 631. oppose it !Times Mirror Poll ).
While
the
majority
of
polls
they sometimes take stands on
actrPss Penny Marshall in 1943 (age 44) , and pop singer Richard
seem
to
have
gone
against
Bark,
issues they neither care about
Carpenter in 1946 (agc-lll /
even these disagree on the
nor have thought through .
number or Americans who re·
·This Is not to say polls are
On thi s da tf' in hi Story:
main
undeCided.
Ignori
ng
this
useless.
Especially when the
In 1917. the most famou s spy of World War I, Gertrude Zelle, known
•
gap,
however,
pollsters
soTPm
nl
y
same,
un
complicated
question Is
as Ma la Hari, was executed by a firing squad outside Paris .
asked over a long period of time
In 1928. lhC' German dirigibl e Graf Zeppelin arrived in the United proclaim virtual infalliblllty. For
example,
a
Roper
poll
of
resi
"Do you favor the death
Stares on it s first co mmercial flight after crossing the Atlantic in four .
dents of 12 Southern states
penalty
for murderers?'" - polls,
and a hall days.
(high
ly
unfavorable
to
Bork)
ca n ~very revealing.
rri 1946, Nazi Re ichma rs hal Herman Goering, sentenced to death as
admitted a margin of error of
Unfortunately, polls are casua war cr iminal, commlfted suicide in his prison cell.
a lly exploit ed by opportunistic
In J964, Soviet Premier Nlkita Khrushchev was ousted by Kremlin onl y 2 percentage points.
U
ls
obvious
Jhat
Harris
a
nd
offtcla
ls. Thls abuse has been bad
leaders and replaced by Alexei Kosygin and Leonid Brezhnev .
Times
Mirror
cannot
s
imultane-enough
in the Bork deb'ate, but it
In 1984, asrronomers in Pasadena. Calif.• displayed the first
•
&lt;D
ously
be
correct..
It
should
be
probably
reached Its peak earli er
pholographlc evidencP of another solar system , 293 trillion miles
- ~;p
equally obvious that the margin
thls year when Sen. Warren
from Earth.
of error acknowledged by polls Rudman, R·N .H .. explained to
"Let's just assume you're a liar, a cheat .and
ters
is
suspiciously
small.
Yet
Oliver
Nort h that politicians
A thought for the day: Lee lacocca sa id , "The trick is to mak e sure
an
adulterer - and focus on THE ISSUES. ''
even lf pollsters agreed perfectly
don't Support the contras be•
you don't die waiting for pros perity to come."
about the public's attitude to·
cause public · op inion opposed

I~N

AffAIR

FINDMV

~ACY?

The AIDS COnfusion

By Robert Walter..,

Networks criticized

Polls should not ,.run .politiCS.__By_V_i_nc_en_t_C_ar_ro_ll

•

Today

•
Ill

history

Berry's World
·I II

\~~~ ~h~

emdud~

•

Marauders take on winless Rock· Hill in Lawrence County
By JIM SOULSBY
Coach Lou Mains' Rock Hill
eleven has not made the win
column in the 1987 seaso n but
don't take them lightly co me
Friday night or it could be a long
trip home for we Marauder fan s.
Rock Hill, who Meigs met for
the first time ever last year and
was defeated 36 to 0. would like
nothing more than to avenge that

'

loss and break their lo si ng streak
very impressiv&lt;' both offensively
at the expense of Jhe visiting
and defensively and have such a
Marauders. Their s ix losses this
well balanced attack that il wilt
year have come at the hands of . be difficult to stop them. He
Wayne, Ceredo-Kenova. South
hopes to take away the passing
Point , Chesapeake, · Wheelersgame with a strong pass rush but
bur-g, and Fairland . According to .sa id that he cannot ignor&lt;' the
Coach Mai11s, they have man - ru nning game with the threat of
aged to stay in most of those a ny one of the Meigs backs being
· contests with only the Chesa - a bl e .t o break for the big gainer.
peake affair be ing a compl ete
Meigs wHl have to play headsblow-ou I. Las t week, for in" up balllf they are to make ll two
sta nce, they lost to the Fairland In a row over " the Lawrence
Dragons by a 6-0 · score in Countlans . The Marauders will
overtime. ·
be without the services of Dennis
·From all reports, they have a Booth a nd Wess Howard and
very promising young quarter- Doug Stewart is questionable
back In sophomore Danny Cox since he has befi'n unable to
. who, · Incidentally, gu ided the practice thi s week. Also on thl"
squad a t Marau.der stadi um la st
year. Cox Is a roll out type signal
ca ller a nd has comp leted almos t
.
.
50 percent of his passes this year
Meigs ' Cross Country runners
for sosme 500 yards, a figure
won
a tri-meet at Alexander.
which compares to Meigs' Mike
defeating the host school and
Bartrum's slats.
On the receiving end of Cox's Trimble. In the Boy 's divlslonl,
aerials , you'll see eit her Ira Meigs captured .second, fourth,
Hayes. who has 17 receptions to fifth , eighth. tenth a nd fou rteenth
date, or Lee McCormick, who ha s places with Rod Brewer, Chris
grabbed 12 tosses. Cox has been Stewart, Cary Betzing. Rob
the lead ing scorer for Rock Hill. Jacks, Keith Mattox a nd Bret
although Lou Mains stated that Li ttle fin ishing in those respectheir offense has not been real tive postion s. Chris Burdette, of
Tr imbl e, wa s first in the mal~
productive in touchdowns.
When asked about the Meigs division .
The Maraud0rett es won their
squad, Mains sald that they are
meet by' a forfeit wit h Oee
Henderson finis hin g second.
Wendi Kloes fifth . Missy Leach

"iffy" Jist is Senior Brent Biss~ll may see some action at the tackle
who handles the punting chores
position.
for the· Marauders as well as
Me igs Coac h Bob Ashley has
being a n out sta nding defens ive the difficult task of geiting the
back . So the backfield wilt Maraudsers fired up for the
pr-o ba bly be Bartrum under contest and to get them to
center, with Bryan Durst and d J;rega rd Rock Hill's season
Jeff "C heez" McElroy behind
"c · rd . " The big job will fall
him and )landy Hawley at wide upon our defense ", Coach'" hley
receiver. l:hrls Smith will be at stated. " We arc hurtin g in our .
sp lit e nd : .Matt Peterson . and offensive· unit due to so many
,Jerry Jacks , filling in for dis- starters being unable to play.
a bled Scott Hanning, will be at . Th~ heavy load will fall upon the
tackle: Jared Sheets. · Steve defensive unit which will have to
Tracy a nd Ed Baer at at the contain Cox, thei r roll out , spri nt
guard slots a nd Wes Young wfll out type quarterback who can
s nap I he balL • According to
coaching -sources, Tony Miller

hurt yo u with the p;JSs -run option.
This could be one of the toughest
tea m s we ha ve faced thi s year",
As hley said. " We will ha v~ to be
prepa red me ntally a nd try to
mainta in the int ensity we showed
la st week", he concluded.
F:or those of you who do not
~now how to get to Rock Hill . you.
have two options. Yo ur ma y tak9
SRi towa rd Ironton a nd t"f!ke t~e
Roek Hill exit or go to Ga!lipoll~,
out Route 35 to Ce nter ville,
then ce to Oak Hill and travel
Route 9 ~ south which will lead
you pa s I the Sl&lt;\9l um.

rr;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;;;;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;;;;;:;.

NEW MEN'S LEVI 55 7

has been progress ing nicely and

Meigs cross country results

Volleyball team
loses two matches

WHAT CLOSeT

wHeRe I'D

Page 3

'

NAr..NCY...

WAS IT,A6AIN,

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio ·

PLAYER OF WEEK Meigs' Mike .Burtrum was
named Meigs County Jaycees
"Piayer-ol·the-Week" lor his
efforts against VInton County
last week. Bartrum, 6-5, 205pound senior quarterback
completed II of 19 passes for
232 yards and two touchdowns
while rushing for one. He
kicked three extra points In a
44-14 victory.

Redmen·willtake
part in Queen City
Invitational
RIO GRANDE - The men's
cross country team at Rlo
Grande College and Community
College will compete Saturday
against l1 other regional teams
at the Queen Ci ty Invitat ional at
Mount Airy Forest in Cincinnati.
Set to run for Rio Grande will
be senior Curt Her ron, juniors
Brian Lugenbeel and Tony Fatica, sophomores Tim Warnock,
.,, Jim Lute. Bob Fritz and Troy
Cochran and freshmen Mark
Cline, Je ff Savage and Rusty
Edens.
They face teams from the
sponsor school, the University of
Cincinnati, as well as Eastern
Kentucky University, the Uni·
versity of t,ouisvllle, Northern
Kentucky University, the University of Dayton, Wright State
University, Xavier University ,
Cedarville College, Wilmington
College, Belmon t College of
Nashville, Tenn., a nd the Norwood Striders.
The Redmen finished 21st out
of 40 team s in the All-Ohio
Championships at Delaware,
Ohio, on Oct. 9. In the men's race,
Lugenbeel. a n engin eering major from Clarksburg , Ohlo,
placed 24th out of 265 runners ,
a nd Cline. a chemistry majo r
from Chillicot he, was 26th .
"We'&lt;e looking forward to it ...
Rio Grande Coach Bob Wllley
said of Saturday 's invitational :
"We' ll get to see some tea ms we
haven't seen thls year."
Followi ng this, meet. the Redmen will prepare fo r the MidOhio Co nfere nce and NAJA Dis·
trier 22 Championships, set for
Oct. :n at Defiance.

Long hall helped
sink NL West team
ST. LOUIS 1 UPIJ - The St.
Lou is rardl na ls. unable to steal
bas es against Sa n Francisco,
swiped the Giants" winning for·
mula Wednes day night to advance to the World Series :
The long ball and double plays,
the keys to the Giants' ear ly
domina tion in the NL playoffs.
wound up being th e Cardi nals'
weapons in th e seve nth and
deciding game. _
.Jose Oquendo. with two home
runs in 903 major league at-bats,
proVided the mu scle with a
three-ru n homer in a· four-run
second.
St . Louis' defense, outplayed
by th e Giant~ear ly in the ser ies ,
turned thre~ double plays to bail
Danny Cox•out of three separa te
jams in the 6-0 penn ant -cl in ching
vic tor·y.
"A ll we heard and all you guys
wrote abo ut was how great the
-Gian ts' defense wa s. Well, Wt;&gt;
don't take a back seat Jo anyone
on defense," sa id St. Louis
short stop Ozzle Smit h. who was
In on alll-hree double play s. ''Our
pitching ,was great , we helped
them with our play s."

Tilt ('ancelled
Th e Fres hman football game
scheduled for tonight agains t
Vin ton Cou nl'y al Marauder Sta·
dium has been ca ncelled by
mutual consent of both sc hoo ls-

Nelsonville· York. Southern
and Belpre handed the Marauderettes, both the varsity a nd
reser\'es, defeats In last week's
volleyball act ion. Against the
Lady Buckeyes, who tri umphed
15-10, 15-5, Shelly Stobart, Wendy
Fry , Heather Hovatter and Elise
played their usual good court
game. On the reserve kunit,
lo sers 15-9, 15-12, Klm Osborne,
Tracie Richmond, Jodie Tillis
and Kelly Smith were the Ma rauder leaders .
Dropping a two game set to
Southern by ident ical 15rll
scores, Shelly Stobart was ere·
dited with 11 serves, 4 spikes, 10
sets and 2 ass ists. Wendy Fry had
5 serves, 3 blocks, 4 spikes, 2
aces, 1 set and 1 ass ist . Ma r y
Butch.e r had 8 serves, 1 spike and
3 se ts: Elise Meier 4 serv.es, 4
spikes, 8 sets, 2 assists; Sheila
He ndlrcks 1 serve, l ace, 6 spikes
and Lesley Carr 2 serves and 2
spikes . The reserve squad also
lost a two game set by 115-12 ,
15-5 scores with Kim Osborne.
Deanne Hagg:,-, Tara •Humph·
reys, Kelly Smith!, Amy Rouse
and Kim Ewi ng turning in
c redit ab le per forman ces.
The Marauderette Var ;,Jty
played toug h in the first game of
the match against the Belpre
Golden Eagles before falling
16- 14, 15-ll. Again Shelly Stobart
was the team leader with 12
se rves. 1 block, 1 ace an d 21
assis ts. We ndy Fry chipped in
with 3 serves, 2 blocks, 10 sp ikes.
5 aces a nd 1 assist . Elise Meler
had 7 serves. 2 spikes. l set and 8
assists: Mary Butcher 6 serves, l
ace and 1 spike and Sheila
Hendricks ~ servess. 1 bl ock and
l spike. The reserve unit r£&gt;·
mained winless! by 16-14, 15-3
scores as Deanne Haggy had 2
servess. 1 spike and l ace; Amy
· Wagner 2 serves a nd 1 spike;
Kim Ewing 5 serves and 1 ace:
Amy Rouse! 6 serves and Tara
Humphreys 4 sPrves.

Straight Leg, Pre-Washed

eighth. Monica Turner ninth and
Resa Harris tenth . Alexander'&gt;
Juli e Lewis took first place in this
event.

$1899

Buys fifth team

z

-By United Press International
Baseball entrepreneur Larry ·
Schmitou of Nashville has purchased his fifth minor league
team. Sc hmitou, who owns teams
in Nashville. Wichita, Greensboro and Huntsville, Ala., has
purc hased the Columbu s, Ga.,
Astros of the Class AA Southern

lei

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Sht&gt;ffield free on
bond after arrest
By United Press International
Gary Sheffield, a shortstop in
the Milwaukee Brewers organization and -c ou sin of New York
Mets pitcher Dwight Gooden,
was free on bond following his
a rrest for drunken driving in
Tampa, F la.

The Daily Sentinel

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Subs(Tibrrs not dcs ir ln~ to pay th('car·
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�•

Thursday•. October 15, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, October 15, 1987

'

St~ ~ Louis

Record

ST. LOUIS ( UP l i -'A doze n
moun ted police l anguished un U$ecl In rlghi fi eld Thu rsday nigh t
as St. Louis f ans stayed off th e
Bu sch Stadium field and instead
celebrated the Card inals' Nation al L eague pennanl in lhe
~
streets.
Th e mountics c hased people
out of a fountain al the B owling
H all of F am e across the s1reet
fr om the stad i um afl er the
Cardinal s 6-0 victory over the
San Francisco Gi ants. Thou sands of people fr om the St. Lou is
area converged on the downtown

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel - Page- S

crowd celebrates Carllinals
home-run perform ance in fhe
seven-game-series.
"There w er e onlv four or five in
the bleachers," said Scott Wlnn,
17, of the Ch es ter field ar ea of St.
L ouis County. " Bu t Jl. gave s·a
· much attent ion to L eonard. It
should have b4i:en Pena or
Oquendo."
A crowd on the blocked off
street on the nor th side of the
.stadium improv lsrd profane ly r -

area , joining depar ting fans In
honking car s tha t stretched for
blocks.
J im Fum aga JJi , st ood on the
si dewalk In a suit of red fel t wllh
a yPIIow beak fo r a ha l th ai hi s
w ife had se"{ed es pec i ally for. the
playoff s.
·
" 1 was a card in al 'a couple of
gam es before l he pla yoffs and
ev ery_ game in I he play offs, "
F umagi alli said . "Now thai
we've made , it to the Seri es,
"Lo r i' s makin g a not~e r pn e for
herself."
The Fumag allis j oined a cr owd

triump~

ics to 60s rock so ngs bl ared form
a sound truck by, a loc al radio
stallon.
" I wa s a little as ham ed of the
Sl. Louis fans f or throwing
arti cles on t he fi eld," sa id J ake
Rafbiey, 56, of M r. r,a r mel. Ill. ,
who clutc hed a white towel
si milar to thousa nds fans had
waved during games. ·
The Worl£1 Ser ies between the
Car dinals and th e Minnesot a

Twins wi ll now be a match· up
between l ea rns whose fans wave
whit e fla gs for support, not
·
surrender.
M i ke Sc hlueter. 19. of St . L ouis,
stood on a tra ffic i sland wa vin g a
towe l over his hea d and blowing a
r ed pol ice whistle.
" This Isn't a 'hom er hankie."'
Sc hl ueter said, referri ng to the
flag s waved by Twins fan s. " It's
a vi ct or y towel. "

__Double plays SF downfall in tilt 7
SOUTHERN RESERVES - The Southern
reserve volleyball team is enjoying a fine ll-6
season under Coac hes Suzanne Wolfe and Tonja

Hunte r . Pictured are front , 1·r, Mica Jones,

Back row - Coach Suzanne Wolfe, Jayne Ann
Williams, Tracy Norris, Junie Beegle, Chris
Harmon, Trlcia Wolfe. Aimee Hili, and Coach
Tonja Hunter.

Andrea Theiss. Cheryl Pape, and Tonya Ingles.

Look for Cowboys to pull big upset
By Maj. Amos B Hoople

wilh a narrow 31-27 conques t of
Pigskin Prophet
·
hos t Alabam a (on E SPNJ.
T)1e Vols al tac k spark les wit h
E gad , frie nd s! The first "cruati ve perform ances f rom
superl
cia l " conference gam es of the
QB
Jeff
Franc is and fr es hman
college football season highlight
'RB Reggie Cobb. T he Crim so n
this w ee k's sc hedul e.
Tide's RB Bobby Humphrey will
The bigges t gam e of day iS in
give the Vo ls defense some
the B ig Ei ght . wher e highl y
anxious momenls bul il won ' l be
regarded Nebrask a v isits Okl a·
enough.
hom a Sl ale.
Tht Michigan Wolverines . eyeThe Hoople Sys tem sees this .
ing the Big Ten lille and I he Rose
battle prov idin g thr biggest
Bowl assignmcnl. enl ert aln lhe
upse t of the season to dal e. Y as,
lroubl esome I owa Hawk cy.;s (on
dea r r ea ders. l he rugged Okl aABC-TV J. Pl ay ing at home bPhoma Stale Cowboys will hand
fore 106.000 f ans, lhe Wol ves
the Corn hu sKers a 23-21 defea t.
fi gure to take a 28-24 dec ision.
Har- rum ph!
· M eanwh i le. in l he Pac-10. the
In lhe individual duel of Heis·
rev ived Soulhern Cal T r oja ns
m an hopeful s. look for lhe
w ill journ ey to Sea tile lo m eet the
Cowboys se nsalio nal RB Thur·
Was hi nt on Hu skies (on ABCm an T homas 10 out shine Nebra sT V)
ka's sci nt i l l a lin g QB St eve
In an aeri al duel , Troja n QB
T ay lor.
Rodney Peel e will o'ut shoal I he
Th e i ndepenlent sl ate. by lhe
way. prov id es a no1her spect acu - Huski es' br illl anl QB , Ch ri s
Chandler. Give II 10 So uthern
lar sur prise.
Cal . 31 -28.
Wal ch for I he 5- 0 Orangemen of
ln the rugged SWC. Tex as
Syr acuse to upend P enn State,
A&amp;M had their hopes of a l hir d
27-25. Syracuse hasn' l defea led
consecutive tl ll e dimm ed by an
Penn Si ale si nc&lt;' 1970. And II
upset Joss lo T exas Tec h. Th is
has n 'I gone undefea l ed sin ce 1~59
week life Aggies gel a n opportu n- bu l thi s cou ld be t he year.
il
y to pl ay I he "spo(ler" rol&lt;•. The
l n Bermingha m . Ala .. • lhe
HooJlle
hunch Is I hey wi l l dn jusl
Tennessee Volunt eers will m ove
a st ep closer to lhc SEC lhronc

lhu t in thei r game wllh Baylor.
We ar e ca lling .i l for the A!(gles.
33-31.
.
•
Ralei gh, N.C.. 1vill be l hc
srlllng for the an nu al ACC
backv ar d braw l between 1he hos t
North Ca ro lina Sfalc Wol fpack
and I he neigft boririg Norl h Ca rol·
ina Ta r Heels. In 76 pr evious
meelings lhc Tar H eel s hold a
lopsidr&gt;d 51 ·19-6 'lead. ln w hal
shapes up as a pas sing game, we
see thr T ar Heels ' senior QB
Presion P oag of N .C. Sl ate. Go
w ith Norlh Ca r oli na, 31-27.
In a high -sco ring Pac-ifi c Coas t
Co nfer ence c lash . we see San
J ose Sl al e l opping Fresno Sl al c.
49-38 (on E SP NJ.
SATUR DAY. OCT. 17

Akron 27 DC'la\l.·ar(' Stat(' 11
Appaluch ian State 17 F'urm un H
AI'IZOnJ 42 0r£&gt;gOn Starr 28
Ari zun~r ~tal&lt;• 3fi Was hi ngton :-:i r;rtf' 12

1\rmy :\:1 Colgat f' 21
Auburn~ -~ ( Oc&gt;orgla l'f'C'h 21

Brown 27 Cornf'Jl 21
Cll'mson 29 Dukr 12

ColorJdo 40 K~ n sas i
EaSI ('rn Mlf'h lga n a3 Bu ll SlciiC' 12
Florida 35 Tf'mpl£' H

Flori d ~

Stat&lt;' :13 Ld ui~, · iiJP 17
Grorg!&lt;~ :J;; Vandrrbilt 21
Hai'Vi.ll'll 2R Dartmouth :?2

:n ,~. i ~consi n

lll i nol~;

lndi&lt;~n.r

31 Minnosow 20

Luu l.. ia n ;.~ S!a tC' 32 K&lt;.'n! Uck.v :?7
Mittmi (OhiO I 40 Ohio UniVI'I''-ih· 10
Michig.ul :.!fllo"·d 2-l
·

OkL!hQmu

In Ju ly, All-America n r ece iver
\ris \arter wus• ruled inel igi bl e
for signing a co nt rac l wi l h an
agenl , while the &lt;)!her r·cturn ing
Harri~

\vas ruled

16

.Jamrs Ma d ison .11l Vlrglnic~ Mll i td tT 211
' Lon~ ·nrd t h Sr ~ 4 Nrw Mf'xico St 14

COLU MBUS. Ohio iUPfl His offmse sputT er ing badly,
Ohio Slate coach Ear le Bruce h a~
sw i lched Vi n e~ Work m an from
lai lbac k to flan ker forSa iUJ'da v's
·
·
gam€' a1 Purd ue.
The Bucke.\'es have sco r t'd onl y
one louchclow n in eac h of ! hei r
last thrf'P games - a 1ie. a wi n
and a loss - and appmr to be
suffrri ng from a lack of 'lu a lil ~·

rcccl\·crs.

BEREA, Ohio tU Pl i - CleVP·
crossed I he pick,cl line since lhe
Bengals voted un;
land Brow ns owner Art Modell strik e began - lineba cker Reg ,
animously lal e Tuesday night to
said he doubl s I hal Wednesday's
gie Williams and defensive end
eonlinue lo strike, player spokesman Crls Collinsworth .
rei urn of eighl slr'iking pl ayer s Edd ie Edwards.
wo uld ca use any lin gering dis· r.;_,--------------------~.:_-,...---,­
scnsion w ithin his tea m . , ,
Model l. who walc hed hi s tea m
work oul al Baldwin -Wallace
College, rcael ed sharply to strikin g cor nerback Frank Minn ifi eld 's ca l l for
new t eam
capt ains.
Minnifield becam e angered
af1 er t ight end Ozzi e New some,
1he Brow ns' of fensive caplaln,
r cporlcd 10 camp. He said lhat
Newsome and def en sive end Carl
Hair ston, I he defensiv e caplain.
had bel r ayed !hei r teammates.
" I res pccl Fr ank Minnifield,
bul I do not accept lhe facl lhat
wal k ing a picket l in e is necess arily a sign of leader ship," said
Model l.
"Once we gel back. I t~ink
you ' ll fi nd I hal winning w ill be a
fasl hea ler. There w as a g realer
sc hism las I vem· aft er I he los s to
Denve r 1in '1he A F C Championship ga m e\. l l's on/&lt; hell of a
differ enl picl urc tod ay ."
!\'l odcl l in si ste d lhe NFL
ow ners were "no I tr yi ng to break

~Tat£' 3;'"1 N O I'IhWP~If' r n 'j
39 IOWil SIJIC' l~
Mi~sl~sippl ~ 1 Sout hwc•st Lo uis iana 2~
...;, ,nh Carolina .'\1 North C'a r·oHn;• St 21
1\:ntrr O;.~mP 3,1 Air Fort'"(' 24
Mi~snur·l

S t~tl('
01\ l. rh o m~;~

Ohin

28 Pu rcluf' 22
fi4 K &lt;tnsa ... StatP 7·

St:.tlf' 2:1 Nobr:.t"lw
P&lt;' II A"''I\·:m i&lt;l 2~ NJ\'\' )0

21

Prinn'on 1~ Lf' hlgh 1-i

Rut~w '" :!0 Bo!~tnn C u l lf' gC' 24

Sun Di&lt;•go St;.rt(' 27 Stanfotd 2 1

S :.t r.. to ,f' St :1If • ~~J Frf'~n o St &lt;tiC' :1R
Sou1!1Pr n Cal
Wush!ngton 2~

:n

South Cu rolin :r :!-1 Vil·ginia 17 "'

So :'vl L"'"h"ippi :l~ M l s~h-::.ippl Stall' 31
S\"r..Jt'UI' P :!i Pf'nt! SttJI(' 2fl
Tonn r ~ s r t · :n AlabHnt,t 21.
Tf'x &lt; t~ :!'2 ,\rk:ms;t ... '20

Tf'"ia" A&amp;-M

:n Bel\ lor

TPx :ro.; thn~lian
TPx ~ r"

:!R

~l

~or l h T&lt;' :&gt;. ,t" Sl-:.ltC' :!I

El P.t~ l' :~ L.tmar 11
Tl"xa" Tc\:h -10 Rlt'&lt;' lf1

Tul ano .1 1 Ml'mpt'll!i St.1IC' ~:!

UCL A 1h

On · ~un

26
Crah SrutC' l i P:.tritl t· 10
V i r~lnla TPCh '21J C u ~t C.1 r·olin;t 1~
Wakt• Forl&gt;'!-.1 :!R M arvlaml 21
Wf'~t \'i r gi nia 29 Cinf·inn;•ti l i ·
W~· oming :J:;i Hou!;t 0n :!:i

Yal(• 3:\ Co lumbia 1I

thaisDave
Rimington
lookploul
key
and scra
l chcd the
ayerhis's
ca r s," Brown said . Th e club ha s
been v ideota pin g pickrl s' acliv ilies 10 bac k up a ny c lai m of
illega l activ ity.
No Bcnga ls regu la rs crossed
l he pickcl lin e befor e Wednesday's league-I m posed 1 p.m.
deadl i ne. The player s had 10
rejoin I heir tea m s by then 10 gel
!heir firs! payc heck in fou r
week s.
The only lwo Benga Is to have

T l1c Philade lph ia Philli ~s hired
l hrce new t'oachcs a nd rcporlrd
I hat conlracllalks arc underway
wi lh l hi r d basema n Mi ke
Sc hm idt. Hired 10 ass lsl ma nagC'r Lee' Eli a wer-e Dove Brislol.
who wi l l make his second slinl as
lhr !ram ' s l ll ird -base coach.
Tonv Taylot. who wi ll beco me
firsl basr coach. an d Jack
Turner. whosr dul irs will inc luae
l hrowi ng baiti ng prac1ice and
c harting pilchcs. Sc-hmidt and
learn presidcnl Bill \.i les have
mer to discuss a new contract for
1he AII-Sl ar lhird basema n. who
bccam&lt;'a free agent al l hrcndof

VolleyhaU
ratings
Nt: W KNOX \' II,I.E, Ohln tl ' I'll - Thi~&gt;o
Ohln hil:h 'odlllnl \'OII ~·yhall
r:1tln~. o·umpilo•d h)' OIU I'k Bradt•n ,
pr•·~ldt•nl uf 1111' Ohin Hi~;h ~oit'houl
\'oiiiPvhall ( ' lllK' In.,. tb ... udutltll'l , 11nd
dl..,triltuto•d hy t'l'l. (lo"ln;t pl11n '' lltt· ~
and to•u.rn rt•••urd.., in paro•nlh••M.,; ):
nu.. . s .\A:\

••••dt' .,

•

'

.

TE M1

L

tl 1 I 1.1-U)
llurdln ~urtht •rn 1 l l tl~ll l
:\t' 14'Utk nr.lh { I·HI )
Fulrhunk...; ( I t I l:i· ll)
Knwr ( 'r•·•·k (1 .1· 111
~- St . Roornard II~ I)
!1. llnpc'Wt&gt;ll· l ..oudlln ti M-Ill

t~:::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

TOTA l~~

26

92

"

Kingsbury Home Sales
900 EAST MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OHIO
992-5587

NHL results
:0..: .\TIOS.\I. IfO('Kt:l'

'

~ ··"

·lt·r .....v I. llartftJrd I
:\linrt&lt;•..,nla I. 1'.,ronln :1

Yes, the American Dream of
Home Ownership Can Be Yours!

I !•lnll!:" :;, Sl. l.mal" :1

I a l r.:t•r,\ ~•. F.tlmunlun I
1'hul'l-da,\ ' '" lianu,..,
S\' l s ~tndt • r.~ :11

N\' llalll.:•'f " ul 1'111:-hur,::oll. 'i::lll 11.111 .

..

~

.....o~.v4Z H•. a....&gt; : ":zc~
·. ~ ·~~ . ::: ..

"'fl'tr •

TOTAL ELECTRIC HOMES
ARE AVAILABLE!...,..._

_.,

-.,,

....,._..,_ _ _ _ There's a family feeling at Ponderosa: _ _ _ _ __ _,

ut St. Loui s,

~1inn• • ,ota

al st. l,nui s.

It '! .1 p.UI.

:\ ·Thur. Ot·t . 2'!.- .\linn&lt;'Molu ul Sl.
l .uuh, ~ : :!3 p.m.
:d\nt . Ot•t. ;: I st . l..uttl" :tt
:\lhtrH•suta. I p.m.
'\ •SIIIl . Od. ~ ~ st . l..tllti..,' al
\lhllll':-ou\a , J(: ~l p.m .

•·

Transactions
Rast•h.,tl
llntl'l un - l'n •.. hl••nt aud l~•· llt •r;tl
:\lan :,~o: t•r llid• \\'IIJt:lll'r ""'IJ{nt•d t•JII•t·l ht•
ON . "!:I.
l'llil:ldt •lphla - lflrt•tl • · n:~duos Ua\t'
Hri~ltll . Tun.\ Ta~· lnr antl -l ud, l'lrrtw r lnr
llw IIIKK ~•· m.un.
Kaskt•lhllll
fltit-a~u
SIJ:IIt'd lurwartl S.:·ull
l'l fltli n.
0&lt;'tl\t' r - SIJtnt•d lnr\l·. ~rd .\ndr• •
.\JtJII I'l'.

lndlu.rH.tpol b - C' ut flll'\lo':trll .\nl ho1•.\'
F r t·dt·{it 'li..
J.,\ ( 'lippt-r .., - S i~nt•tl lllrllurd .Ju ,
\\'toll.
l'lt"t'lll.., - ~ :um • d Uit·k \ :u• \l'l'otla!o·
\il' t• l"'"id••nt . llar\t',\ ·' """"" \ItT
jtr••:.ldl'nt uf IIHirt.t'ihlll :11111 T&lt;tlll \m·
llrt~t· \ 'lt·t• prt•..,illt•nt nl fH.t'llk rt•lalltln!&lt;l .
-~lll ' fl tiiWnlll SIJI'nt•d gn urtl Ko•nn;\·
Smillll tt a 1·,\'t•:.r o·nntr:..-1 .
( ',.J t.•,;t•
"''~ \nwri•·"n ( unfl'r•• nt•t• - ltt•prl·
m :mclo•d K••nt !'il:ilt• ltHllhall t·u:wlt ld t•n
:\1 :tsnn and ll~~il&gt;t.ant Hoh fo't•lln lur
t·rltir'bln.:: .::amt• rlffldut"' .
N1nllll'rn I al - lla .. kt·lhall n •nlt•r r ·, ,rr
1•ollarll It'll .., -hunt ,
l-'unll1 :tll
\il:111la - ,\o·•tuln•tl dt •ft · ~~ht • !illl'lll:I.H
\ ':m llught•" l'mm S• •:utk lllr t' ll"'h:
rt•lt•:•,.t•tllltlt'l ladwr 1\t· n n ..wt·n' untl14'itk
rt•t ·t•ll t•r Kwant~• llatnptun. :o; l ~nt • tlh.lt ' kit•
llun Kuhln-.nn .
( lt•ll'lantl - S i~TII'tl JIUIIlo·r ( ' rai~
( ' ulctulll. IJI•arlo·rh:lt'k ll:ll't•hl S111ilh .
''"~'~~'''' h ;u · k Uar,, ·l ll :trl, rtnfnitt,:c h : ~k
(;l'fii'Jll' S~o~arn ;tull lllll 'h llt' lwr Tla' •
Rut lt•r: ( 111 tt uarlt•rh:wk -1m• l'iu u. "ldt
r• •t•t•h l' r (ht,\ ' 1!111 R• ·:mh~rtl . t'llfl)l'fh owk
f&lt;:a r'n• ·~t ~h1n rt • and kkkt·r fitmlll
l.in,.,"'th·rth.
lndi ;umpnl i"' - S i gno•d IJIIHI'h •rhat·loi ·
So · an Snll~hu r,\ .
:\11ntw~•~a \\ ;d\ 1' 11 tjtmru•rhat•k
l..arn , llllt•r, ..:11&lt; '1\ ( 'hud; (' !antun.
J::ll :. uil ~l :lf It 11:1 n!&lt;I!Jil, iJullil 'f" l)a\ ,, 1\runu
and .tul'l ~kb••n , ~ i~o:m · tl v.!dt· rl· t·t·in•r
WI lilt • (II 1~~~~~it·, It wtrll·rh:u-k Tudd
Krm·~· · r. v.·tdt • rt 't'l'i\t'r ' l 't•rr,\' l.;••·uunt .
runn ing h a dt. IJa\ ill l..t • ~o~ j..,, gu:1nl T· ·tl
Jlilll !lft. punlt•r lhu·k,\o· So·rihn••r , and
t•urn•·rh iU"It "a,l"DI' Smith .
"'' · h·l.~ - -'"l~nl• d ljlw.rtt•rh :u:lt Tum
t 'lit•k 11nd" Ill• • rt' l't•lwr~&lt; Buhll'' Rill'\' and
Rt' KKil' !'irullh ; waht•d wldi• r••t•;•lwr
.John Fttlfi'IJ ,
' l'ltlladi'IJ1hlu - " ttlnd ddt•ns!\'t• t•nd.., .
.11m .\tll'r and ((a.\' 0 Jnlln. and Ugh\t •nd
Rid1 Hutlnwr.
~a11 IJII' Jl;ll - S! J!:llt' d llm•h:u·ltt•r f';~t
~1 1 11t • r ; '
pl :u •••d !lm•h :u· ~· · r ('h,u·k
l-' altt'l'lt•• un lnjurt•d rt•.~l' f\'1 '.
1'ampa Bay - Signl' d quartt•rh ut•k .Jtm
Zurn, t:u·klt• -lim Huddlt~tlln ~nd wldl'
N• t•t•llt•r Slanll•y ~hak&lt;'SPt'urt• .
Hu t"kt•y
:\'\' Kun~~:t• r:. ~ lldt•n"Cmun Rurr,·
Rl•t·k rl'llrt•d.

jackp9t's
grow1ng!

Defenders win two
The Ohio ,Valley Chrislian
School volleyball teams cap I ured
both malches Tuesday nigh I
again st the visiting Southwesl·
ern Highlanders. as 'tne ·varsity
D efenders won 15- 8 and 15-6.
Junlor Marla Roach served 12
points, nine of those coming in
the second game. Rachel Danner
contributed six for the match,
followed by' Tract Sisson and
Becky Danner had five ea ch, and
Beth Wood, with four .
From the . spiking line, the
Defenders were 1~ of 24, lnclud·
ing 12 kills. Sisson had five kills,
while Roach had four. Roach had
two blocks and Becky Danner
had one.
The junior high Defenders
dominated their match , winning
conseculive 15-2 games. Belh
Blevins Jed in serving points with
11. followed by six each from
Pam Holley and Jenny Hughes;
four from Cindy Sheets, two by
Mer edith Pollard and one from
Julie Hardest y.
The victories put the varsity
Defenders at 15-0 and the junior
high l earn al 8-0.
OVCS soccer
Th(' OVCS junior high Defend er s soc cer learn beat the Mid America junior higli team Tuesday a II ernoon 5-0.
jamey Bl ack. Kenny Coleman.
Benton Hall. Dax Hill and Tom
Raw[jngs seared each of the
goal ~ for the Defenders. Goalie
Matt' Ray had lwo saves.
Th e Defenders had 26 shols on
the goal. including four each hy
Black, Hall , Hill . Rawlings and
Wra\·, two each by Coleman and
By ron Wallers and one by Eric
Burges s and Jakim Lanie r.
'
The Defender s' next conlest
will be Friday, at 4: 30p.m. in
Relpre again s t Fr eedom
Ch r istian .

On
The
Spot
Financing
To
Qualified
Applica

..

"''" SIX .

T .-.,.P_&gt;
'c!in;~.?~r!:!o
--·-

Post Times: 1:30 Matinee, Wed., sat. I 7:30 Evenings, Mon. -Sa t.

Reservations: 77&amp;5000

lnfo""ation: 776-1000

Huge
Selecti
To
Choose
From!

•

I '

.

.

1986 CHEVROLET

1987 FORD
ESCORT

1979 FORD
FIESTA

Stodr #72531. 4-dr hardtop, fr-olteelrrn.. 4
cyl. enr.. 5 sp-tr.ms .. stand. tr.rns .. am radio,
radials. bucket seals, lupge rack.
SALE PRICE

Stoct #74441. 4-dr sodan, k-llleet rrn.. 4
cyl. enr.. fact. air rond.. auto. tnns..
p-steerin' p-brakes. stereo tap~ bucket
'"'ts. rear winti&gt;w del .. 11.000 miles.
SALE I

Stoct 118m I. 1-dr coupe. k-olletl
eyt. enr.. 4-sp trans..
i p-IM'alte•
arn-fm. stereo lapa radials.
47.000 miles
·
SALE

1984 CHEVROLET
C·10 PICKUP

1976 CHEVROLET
EL CAMINO

1984 NISSAN
KING CAB

engine, 4-sp trans, p-st~ring, p-brakes •
am-fm, radials, •;, ton pickup, short
wide bed.

Stoct 1183422. 2-dr. v-8 enlline. fact. air
cond.. auto. trans.. p-steerin' p-bratres.
am-fm, radials, bucket ""''· •;, ton ricl&lt;up,
short lllide Ired.
SALE PRICE

NovA

391.

766.
Stock !f74072. 2-dr. 4 wh-driVe. V-8

SALE

1983 TOYOTA
TERCEL

1974 CHEVROLET
C·10 PICKUP

Stock #83811. 3-dr coupe, k-.tl-drive. 4 cyl.
enr.. fact. air cond .. 4 sp-tr.rns .. p-brakes.
am-fin. bucket ms. rear winti&gt;w defol!l"'.
SALE PRICE

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1987 FORD
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8,500 miles.
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,\LL GAMES

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Oak Hill .............. !; o 169
Hannan TracC' .... . ;; 2 1•0
Svmmcs Vallry .. A ~- H2
Easlcrn ...... .. :..... ~ :l
fifi
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Sn ulhern .. ... .. .. .. .. . 1 .5 89
SVA(' ON LY

I . ~o·tom (~I ) ~ ltj.t\ )

flu~h,ll ;II

SPa~wn .

TEAM

rnlnt!'&gt;

To •nnl

.

Sirloin

!

.....-... '

hung on every pitch . Th e sports
post-season play . •
bar has been the scene for man y
" It was an excellent season, "
San F r ancisco celebrations in Ole
said Gary Beers, the pub' s
1980s, Including two Super Bowl • manager. "They will be back
vic-tories, being along the route of
next y ear . Jeff Leonard never
a vi sit by Pope John Paull! and
should . have talked so much
the 1987 Gi ants division
becau se he woke up a sleeping
champion ship.
g iant."
But on Wednes da y night, under
Ne arb y, a y oung lady who
the watchful eye of eight San
wanted only to be identified as
Francisco police officers and
Su san from the University of San
glaring television cameras. the Francisco slood with her
crowd never got out of hand. boyfriend .
Instead, a nearsllencecreptover
"lt's too bad they didn 't win
I he bar as Sl . Louis eliminated it ," she said. "It would have been
the San Francisco Giants from fun to party I he rest of the nigh!."
Across the city the scene was
much the same as Gianls fans
mourned the loss.
The city greeted the end of the
game in dead silence with I raffle
well below normal. police said.
1\11'. O..•t. fi St . 1-otli:-o '-. S11n
A number of fan s promised lo
Frand.,&lt;·v :1
\\t•d. Ott . ; ·- San t ' rant•i"''" l. ;.tt.
greet the learn at San Francisco
l..tiUI~ II
International Airport when 11
l' rl. Ut·L !t - Sl. Lout~ ti, S:an
1-'rand ... t·u :l
arrives home Thursday
Sal. Od . Ill - San Frant'i!'ot'll I, .~t.
afternoon .
l.unl"' :!

Scoreboard ...

CI NC I NNATI iUPl l - Cinc innali Bengals assistanl gene ra l
m anager Mike Brown said Dave
Ri ming! on. l hc l earn' s a lt e r~ale
union represenl al ive. scr al ched
l h0 ca rs of l wo repl ace m ent
playrr s Wedn esday on I he pick et
' l ine.
Abou l 30 players pi ck c l ed the
tea m 's Spinney Field pra ct ice
fa cllit ~· ror I he fir st l imr in abotll
two wee ks.1.
"The v ideota pe shOws c learly

Phils hire three
By U nil ed Prt•ss lnteruat ional

-· ~ ·

the union."

Ut;.~h · t 8
Hoi\' CI'Os ~ -l -l B ucknPII :? 1

:Vlichigan

acadPmi ca ll_
v ineli gibl e.
Jn Salu r da)·'s loss 10 Ind iana.
two kcv t hi rd-do wn passes were'
dropped by frrs hm an To ny Cupc
and flank er Fvrrt&gt;ll Ross.
T he new al ignment . announced
Wc dnesdav bv f1ruce. wi ll move
Ross to sp ilt e.nd . Jim Br yant wifl
si an a1 la i lbat'k. backed up by
fres hmun Car los Snow.
" I said althe beg inni ng of I he
week I wan l ed our bes I l l players.
on the fir ld," Bru ce s&lt;j id. " l l hin k
l his pui s our best 11 of fc nsi\•.e
player s on I he fi elrl. and wr w ill
be a bet ter tea m beca u s~ of il. "

..

•
Striking

Hcm c.lii :H

Move Workman .to flanker
for Saturday's tilt at Purdue

thf'

Mandie Harris. Back row- Sharon Baker, mgr.,
Amher Short, Lore Burke, Toby Hill, and Edna
Driggs.

Some Browns cross picket lines

Kaff-Kaff

receiver. NatC'

EASTERN RESERVES - The EHS reserve
netters have been doing well this season. Pictured
are team m embers, front 1-r , Lorrie Baker, Carrie
B ernard, Angie Chapman, Heather Finlnw, and

SAN FRAN CISCO (UPli The chan I s of " Gianl s, Gianl s,
Giants" grew quiet er each
inning.
Th e hopes of the San Francisco
faithful, the product of nearly 25
y ears of frustration, dr ibbled
away in the wake of three
crushing double plays until the
St. Louis Cardinals emerged with
a 6-0 victory in Game 7 of th e
National L eague Championship
Series Wednesda y night .
·
At O'Sheas saloon along San
Franci sco's Geary Str eet an
overflow crowd estimated at 700

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Page- 6-.-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, October 15. 1987

Clark still. big ·questio..mark
for '87 World Series-Herzog
ST. LOUIS tUPIJ - A simu· a grea t high. We think we can advers ity all year, and in this
lat~ game at the Metrodome
score some runs in their place ." · series," Smith said. "We aren ' t
may tell the St. Louis Cardinals
Regardless of the outcome of getting the credit like the Giants
how effective they will be against the World Series, St. Louis were getti ng."
FQr the Giants, they will have a
the Minnesota Twins in the 1987 shortstop' Ozzle Smit h said the
World Series.
•
club has passed it s expectations. winter to try to figure out why
The Cardina ls, who won the
"It doesn't matter If we win or their big bats went silent in
.National League pennant with a not. We ca m e back from " lot ol Ca\'Nnous J:l li SCh ~ t adiu m .
6-0victory Wed nesday night over r--:o
San Francisco. find themselves
In their us ua l predicament of
having several players hurting .
Again, the focu s goes to
slugger Jack Clark, who was
limited to one pinch-hitting appeara nce in the seven-game
NLCS.
" We'll see how he can run tn
the s imu lat ed game we will
have," sa id St. Louis Ma nager
Whitey Herzog. " I really don' t
know how he ' lldo : lf he can runa nd that's the key - then we'll
know.''
Bill Dawley and Steve Peters
will throw In the ga me to
determine who will be the ninth
pitcher on the roster. He rzog
plans to cut a position player off
hil s 24-ma n roster.
Wednesday night's National League final against
GAME-WINNING Hfl' - The Cardinals' Jose
Terry Pendleton suffered an
Oquendo, smUing broadly, is greeted by team·
the Giants. The Cardinals won 6-0 to win the
~
',
injured. ankle before the third
mates Tony Pena, ielt, Danny Cox (34), Vince
National League pennant and the right to lace the
game of the playoffs and injured
Coleman (29) and Jack Clark, "'Iter hitting a
Minnesota 'fwlns In the World Series, which
his ribs In the second inning oft he ·
three-run homer in the second hinlng of
begins Saturday In MinneapoliS. ( UPl)
seventh game.
"Knowing Terry, he'll come
back but I frankly don' t know
what I 'll do if he can't play
thir d.' ' Herzog said.
Th e Cardinals' pitching staff
appears to 'be healthy . Greg
Ma thews, taken out of the fou rth
game with a leg Injury , can pitch.
But the Cardinals are unde·
we came in here and got no runs outside the stadium. That's when
ST. LOUIS (UP!i - The St.
cided about their rotiltlon.
in two ga m es. I never expected I kn ew it was a home run ."
Louis Cardinals bring a reco rd
tha t," sa id Giants Manager
"I'll sit down with 'Whitey and
string of scorPiess Innings to a
"No one expec ted Jose to hit a
Roger Craig.
World Series in which they face a
make
some decision s," sa id St.
hom e run ," sa id Cox. "We seem
Louis pit ching coach Mike
Cox cla imed his second title- to have a 'diffe re nt hero every
s lugging tea m ihat plays in a
ballpark suited to power hitters.
clinching v ict ory this season. He game and today's was J ose. We Roarke. " We would ha,ve used
a lso won the game in which the seem to find a diffe rent way to everyone but (John) Tudor Wed·
Danny Cox pitched an eig~t · hit
shu tout Wednesday ni ght In St.
Cardinal s eliminated the Me ts win each time we pla y."
nesday night."
from the NL East race.
Herzog tentatively plans to use
Louis ' 6- 0 victory over the San
St. Louis added two ru ns in the
Francisco Giants that earned the
sixth on Tom Her r 's bases- Tudor in Game 2 at the Metrodome and bring back Danny Cox,
Cardinals a World Series berth
loaded single.
"He's just a COlllpetitor. It is as
aga inst' the American League simple as tha t,' ' He rzog sa id of
the winner in the seventh game.
Going into Game 7, Oquendo
in
Game 3 at Busch Stadium:
champion Minnesota Twins.
and
Herr
were
hitting
.100
and
Cox . '•Before the series started l
St. Louis ' victory in the deci· wanted to pitch him in Games 1, 4 .182, respeciively, in the series'. ' Veteran ri g h.t -hander Bob
sive seven th game of the Na· and 7 and we got him in 4 and 7
The hits eased a ny pressure Forsch a nd Mat hews - and not
t ional League ChamplonshipSer· because of his neck injury ..
rookie southpaw Joe Magranethat was on c~x .
are
ca ndida tes for the opening
ies gives the team its 15th
"M
y
adrena
!ine
was
really
"Going back to 1985 when he
a ppeara nce in the World Series, clinched the division agai nst the
gam
e
ass ignmen t.
pumping when I saw...us with six
its seco nd in three seaso ns and Mets, Da nny has always been and the Giants wi th nothing,''
"I don 't know who I 'm going to
thir d in six years . The World there when we needed him."
pitch. I don' t want Magrane
Cox sa id. "I hadn't pitched a
Series begins Saturday in the
shutout a ll yO"ar a nd l didn ' t have go ing up there against that noise
"I think I'm just in the right
Metrodome at Minneapolis.
place at the right t ime," Cox that many co mple te ga mes. I a nd the crowd, " Herzog said.
"Any time you win a pennant.
really want to finis h tonight ."
Tudor , a former Red Sox
said. "We got eight runs when we
you are happy,'' sa id Cardinals' clinched the divis ion against
pitcher., Is one of the few
Gia nts outfie lder Jeffrey LeoManage• Whitey Herzog. " But
nard hit .417 wiTh four home ru ns Cardin81s with experiences in the
Mont'rea i a nd six tonight. Hon·
this is a three-ste p thing. First
Metrodome.
in the series and was voted the
es tly, I think these a re the only
comes the division. then the
" !pitched there once before. I
two good games I pitched a ll MVP of the NL playofts.
pennant. then the Series.
know what it's like. It 's like
" It 's going to be a long, hard
year."
pitching anywhere. Th ere's As- f-------------- - - - -- - - - - - - "We lost the Series in 'So a nd
winter,' ' Leonard sa id. " Hope·
T he Ca rdinals spotted Cox a 4-0
that's the first time I've had that
troturf,"
Tudor said.
fu
lly
,
time
will
heal
what
hap·
lead in the second . Terry Penawful experience. T hat's the big dl eton, Tony Pena a nd Willie penf'd here. Th ere's really not
St. Louis will enter the World
ODE'."
Series as the favorit e, the same
much else to say. "
McGee eac h single d to account
The Ca rdinals' offense arrived
" No run s," Cra ig said · when as they were in 198.'\ when Ka nsas
for the first run a nd Jose
from unexpected sources. while
Oque ndo hit a 3-2 pit c h in to the asked to sum up the series. "I' m City rallied a nd beat the
rlie Gia nts failure ' to produce a
s ta nd ing-roo m on ly crowd proud or my team . We've come a Cardinals.
run extended their scoreless
"The Twins have the advanbeyond left·field to drive In three long way in two years. We'll have
s tring to a playoff. record 22
nothing to be ashamed of all tage in the home fi e ld which wa s
more.
innings. On ly one Gia nt got as fa r
a big factor in both our series and
"I hit it well. but I thought it wint('r.
as third in the final two ga mes of
''You have to credit their their's, " said St. Louis second
was just a line drive to the
the series.
baseman Tommy Herr, who had
ou tfield and I ran real hard to pitching ··taff. No runs In t\vo
"Arter we won two in a row a t
first base," Oquendo sa id . "Then gam t·' . They were great. I hope a · two-run s ingle Wedn e&gt; day
thf'v wi n t 1\e World Series."
night. " W&lt;; are both coming in on
hOme (to take a 3·2 se ries lead }.
I saw the booms I fireworks)

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Cards blank Giants, win 15th
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Leonard MVP, ·but not happy ["iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
ST. LOUIS tUPll - Jeffrey
Leonard treated hiS MVP trophy
with almos t as m~ch di~~aln as
the St . Lour s Cardtnals . This IS
probably the only thing I'll ev~ r
have on my mantlepieCe that Will
remind me of something awful ,"
said Leonard as he accepted the
MVP trophy. "The MVP does n:t
feel too good right n'?w ·, I don t
know why. It JU St doesn t mean
much .rig ht now."
Leo nard. who spoke crit ica lly
of the Ca rdinals throughout the
ser ies, toned dow n his comme nt s
so mew hat after the Cardina ls
adva nced to the World Series
Wednesday night with a 6·0
vict ory over the Giants.
He referred at one poin t to a
fourth -inning ·seque nce where he
s lid Into shortstop Ozzie Smi th
a nd the pair exc ha nged glances.
"He didn ' t say any thing ,"
Leonard said . " I g uess he wa s
mad because I rouched him ."
" It wa s a cheap shot but I kind
of expected him to do It ," Smith
said. "Those guys did. a lot of
talking thi s who le playoff a nd if
that's the way they want to play
it that' s fi ne."
Leonard spoke boldly before
the playoffs between th e St. Lou Is
Cardinals a nd Sa n Francisco
Giants began.
He taunt ed. He baited . He
prPdict.ed. He al so enraged the
Cards wi th his di stinctive hqmerun trot.
like so
know it

long ago I don't remember wh a t I
even said. " Leona rd said. "I
always talk . Tha t's ju st me. Alii
think 1 sa id was after the first
game was that they wou ldn ' t
bea t us four games if they played
!Ike that . Truthfully, 1 don't know
how they did it.
wasn't tr yin g to psyche up
St. Louis or ta ke pressure off my
team mat es. 1 was ju st being
m t•."
·
Leonard did his part for the
Giants. He batted .417 in the
seven- ga m e series and tied
Nl.CS records with 10 hit s a nd 22
total bases wh ile matching an NL
playoff record wit h four home
runs . He was the fi rst player in
the playoffs to hi t a homer In four

:·1

Happening at Nationwise
Auto Parts Store NOW!

consec utive games .

ln winning the MVP Award,
Leonard ea rned a n extra $50.000.
He had a clause placed in
contrac t for such a payoff.
Leonard said he would prefer
to be In the World Series lacing
the Minnesota Twins rather th an
recejv ln g the MVP trophy In a
los ing cause.
'.'This ,is painful," Leo nard
said. " It 's going _to be .a long, long
wint er . But our heads are up. We
played a tough series. We' ll
rebo1.1nd over the wi nter,"
The Ca rdin"a i fa ns ret urned the
ta unt s to Leonard . The ca pacity
crowd of 55,331 hurled insults hi s
way. They began a sing-song
chant of " Jeffrey, Jeffre y."

1

1984 NISSAN 200 SX
84
84
84
87
84
84

Dodge 600 ...................................,S102.29 mo.
Dodge Aries ...•.••.•••.•••.••.....•....•.•••.• S102.29 mo.
Ford Ranger Pi,kup ••••••••...•...• ,,,,,,S127.89 mo.
Plymouth Hori:zon ........................ ,S163.10 mo.
Olds. Delta 8 ••••.••.•.•••••••••.....•.•...••. 1179.1 0 mo.
Plymouth Reliant Wagon .............. S179.1 0 mo.

Look for our color insert in today's
paper packed with autumn values.

_84 Olds. Cutlass ................................. S179.1 0 mo.
87 'Nisson Pickup ............................. :•. S209.73 mo.
85 Dodge D.1 50 Pi,kup ...................... S230.30 mo.
85 Chev. Cl 0 Pi,kup 4X4 .................. S235.42 mo.
8 7 Dodge 600 ..................................... S2 40.04 mo.
87 Dodge Aries Wagon ...................... S240.04 mo.
85 Plymouth Yoyager ........................ S255;91 -·
87 Chrysler Lebaron ........·................... $256.36 mo.

Mrs. Sandy W.est rPad 'What
Jesus Said Abou t Heaven." The
November program will be b y
Mrs. Robin Putman and Mrs.
Judy Elkins .
Mrs. Pearl Baker won the door
prize, and Mrs ..Jud y E lkins wa s
wel comed as a new member.
Mrs. Sue Douglas arid Mrs .
Marlene Putman will be ho stesses for the next meeting.
Others attending were Mrs .
Mary Blse, Mrs. Annabelle Van
Meter, Mrs. Emma Durst, Mr s.
Nelle Wilson. Mrs. Ruth Grate,
Denise West . Mrs. Linda Put.
man, Mr s. Tammy Cowdery,
Mrs. Violet Satterfield , gues ts;
Mrs. Mamie Buckley, Mrs. Barbara . Ma sters, Mrs. Virginia
Walton, Mrs . .Verna Rose, Mrs.
Lillian Pic~ens, members.

Clonch birthday is ·observed
Martha Clo nch of Pomeroy
-was honored recently with a
dinner part y a t the home of her
daughter and son-in -law. Ronald
a nd Linda Holt er .
Atlending were Rondo! and
He len Marie DeBord. Charles.
Sa ndy and Chrissy Hol stein. a nd
Ronnie, Beverly, Stacy, Regina
and RonniE' D e Bord of Charl es·
ton. W. Va .; Geneva. Charly,
Ben and Tara DeBo rd of P ar ·
kersburg; Gale. Linda. ·Mona
and Burl Diehl of Letart. W.Va.;
Thelma Eddy of Killbu ck.
Roscoe and Eve Hollon , Dorma
Morrison , Ralph and Wilma

_...

-Page- 7

Bridal shower is conducted

United Methodist Women meet
A holiday bazaar was' set for
Nov. 7 at the recent meeting of
the Reedsville United Methodist
Women held at the home of Mrs.
Sa ndy Cowdery .
Mrs. Cowdery and Mrs . Dolly
Reed, ·co-hostess, served a tur·
key dl.nner preceding the
meeting.
Mrs. Marlen e Putman conducted the business meeting With
75 shutin calls .being reported.
Cards were signed for several
friends and arrangements were
made for an outing on Oct. 24.
Names were drawn for Christ·
mas gift exchange.
Mrs . Mami e Buckley led in
devotions with Mrs. Sue Douglas
opening with pra yer. Scripture
was !rom John 14 with "Jesus'
Life'.' being the progr am topic.

A bridal shower was held
recently for Brenda Ballard.
bride-e lect of Rydei '!fan Dyk e. at
the home of Elsie Whit e.
Co-hostesses for the shower
were So nia Ci rcle, Sheila
Spencer. and Serena White.
Ca ke, mints, nu ts and punch
were served . Door prizes were
won by Bonnie Rawley , Thelma
Eddy, a nd Suzie McKay .
Attending the s hower were
those named a nd W!lma Ballard.
Janet Dalton. Kelli Clelland,
Rose Wolfe, Macll Rawley, Mar·
garet Hill, Pat White , Donna

Jean Baker, Kathy Troyer,
Glenna Ru th Crisp. Debbie
McDaniel s.
Sending gift s were Doris Hill ,
Evelyn Hollon, Murie l Ours , Ma e
Jones, Karen Pauley, Char layne
Crisp, Kas Bissell, Darlene NeW!Jl1, . Virgin ia Fortney. Ma ry
Rose , Ka rPn Hunt e r. 'llhel ma
White, Louise Pit zer. Beckv
Pullins, Mabel and Ca rol Gofi,
Gloria Oiler, Evelyn Davis. Ma r·
garet McDanie ls, S hirley Sin·
clair, Inzy Newell , Linda Holt er.
and Sadie Trussell.

Eight and Forty has meeting
Fund rais in g projects were
'discussed at the recent meet in g
of the E:lght a nd Forty, Meigs
Count y Salon 710, held at the
American Legion hall in
,Pomerov.
Pecans wi ll again this year be
sold by the sa lon and the knife
sa le will be continued'. Cat herine
Welsh, chapeau, presided at the
meting which opened in ritualis·
tic form. Du es . wen: paid by
· several members.

Ballard, Brenda Ballard, Mar ty
and Cindy Diehl, Jim and Karen
Werry, Randy Werry, Jimmy
Werry. Cheryl Triplett. Sarah
Triplett, James Aaron Werry,
Rick Werry . Darcl Hysell.
Sharon, Aaron, John , Tracy. and ·
Robbiv Card. Helen Holter, Tho·
Plans for a n election day
mas and Evelyn Holter, Kev in
dinner were made when the
Holter, Debbie Holter, Andy
Racine Firemen's Auxiliary met
Ze.nisek, Tammy Holt er. Scott
recently at the fire hou se .
Wickline , Ryan Holter. and R6·
Serving will be at the fi re house
nald and Linda Holter.
beginning at 11 a .m . The menu
Mrs. Clonch also received a
will consist of vegetable b.e an and
call of congratulations from her
potato soup, corn bread, ham
sistPr. Grovie Di e hl of Charles·
sa lad and peanut butter san d·
ton. W. Va .

Juli a Hyse ll. chairman of
children and youth. suggested
purchasing somet hing· for Halla·
ween for ch ild ren havin g cystic
fibrosis or relat ed disorde rs.
For ms to be complet ed by the

vario us

chairmen

IT 7I 143"

POMEROY I OHIO

•'--·- --·,- __......
I

399 S. Third S tre~t

.
I

~

..

'

Middleport, Ohio 45760

STEAM

VAPORIZ~R

Mrs . William F. Smith, state
vice chairman of nation al d£'·
fense. Ohio Society. DAR. wa s
guest speaker at the recent
meeting of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter. Dau ght ers of the
American Revolution, held at the
Parish Hou se of Grace Episcopal
Church.
The speaker asked several
questions rela ting to the Consti·
tution, the need for a ro nstit u·
tiona I Convention. how the dele·
gates should be chosen. how long
it should last. She s poke of ·thP
Council on Foreign Relations
committee. ·whi ch is promoting
the Constitutional Convention.

the purpose of w-hich would bv
provide tor a balanced national
budget. but which . according to
the speaker, could led to th e
replacement of the Constitution.
At the present lime. accordit)g
to the speaker. the Council is
trying to down grade the intent of
Cdngress and the Prf'si den t .' Mrs.
Smith talked on the history oft he
Constitution. how it was draft!'d
and conclud ed with a referenrr·
to Be n Franklin's suggestion to
" pray ever~ d a~·."
Officers' report s were pres ·
ented and the registrar re ported
that thrE'€ members. Althea
Tart a, Ann Hal e. and Celc ilia

Library book reviews:
By Ruth Powers
Pomeroy-Middleport
Librarian
CROSSING TO SAFETY - by
Wallace Stegner. This lat es t
nove l of Stegn er's is a n autumnal
c.Pns ideratlon of life a nd human
r-elationships . Two young couples
!rpm differe nt backgrounds and
r:.eglons meet in the academic
backwater of a Wiscons in univer·
s'ity. At first. they are excited by
- ttre future success they fantasize
about, but soon are confronted by
the threat of scholastic failure
;ind physical illness. Th e bondsboth within the lndlvidlual mar·
riages and between the two
couples remain strong, and despit e separation and disappoint ·
ment. thei r friendships prosper
until the prospect of death finally
forces a brut a l reconsideration of
what life ha s hand ed each of
these four peopl e.
A pROPER WOMA N - B~·
Lillian · Beckwith. This novel
depicts th e la te of Anna Ma the·
son, a sta lwart you ng woman

who loses he r home in a s mall
village in th!' Hebrides duP to the
harping of her brother' s city·
born wife. Since she is too proud
to beg a home from o ther
relatives Anna accepts a m a rriage of con\'en lence with "Black
Fergus" McFee. a n unpleasa nt
viol ent man. Anna relives her
peaceful childhood ~nd the pain·
ful years s pent In a sham of a
marriage. Finally, she find s the
courage of lea ve her village
home, thus prep aring the way for
the inev itabl e happy ending.
TIME OF THEIR LIVES- By
John Nlhmev . In 1934. the new·
born Dionne Quintuplets were
. ta ke n away from their parents
and made wards of the govcrn·
ment. Th ey w ere pla ced under a
board of guardians and locke d in
a specially built hospital. By the
time th ey were a year old, they
were on public displ ay and a
$);,()()million Indu s try . Thi s is the
true story of their parents' eig ht
year battl e to get them ba ck.

,,

Lunch· menus announced
Lunch menus have been an:
nounced for thv Meigs L.ocal and
E:astern Loca l School Districts
eafeterias for the week of Oct . 19
an d include:
M\!igs
·. Monday : toa sted c h&lt;'&lt;'SC sand·
\-Virh, corn . fruit, milk.
.
-: Tuesday:
fish sandw rc ll .
fr e nch fril's, fruit, mil k.
: Wednesday : ~ loppy jocs. pe as,
:n·u it. milk .
. T hursday : no school.
• Friday: no sc hool .

Eastern
Monday: hot dog , sau ce, pot ato
rounds. fr u it, milk.
Tu esdi,ty: ham and cheese
sa ndw·ich . co rn. fr uit. brownie,
milk.
Wednesday: spaghet ti. c heese,
homemad l' roll, butter, le ttuce
sa lad , a pplesauce. milk.
Thursday : gr illed c h eese.
grPcn be a ns, fruit . milk.
Friday: no sc hool . teachers
in -service m eet ing .

w'iches. coiiee and tea.
Ann Layne prPsidetl at th e
meeting which opened with the
Lord's Prayer. Officers' reports
were give n and a vote of thanks
was extended to those ta king par t
in the fall festiva l. A report ·was
given on pr izes awarded at th!'
festival.

Bel us have reques ted tran s fer to
other chapters.
The meetin g opened in ritual is·
tic form with Mrs. Cla ren ce
Struble, actin g chaplain . Mrs.
Dwight Milhoan. regent. pre·
s ided and invit ations from Nabby
Lee Ames and Mar ietta Cha p·
ters. NSDAR. were read.
Mrs. Milhoa n announced that
160 pound s ot' clo thing and bo oks
had been sent to Chillicothe
. Veterans Hospit al. that 12R
pounds of clo thing had gone to
Kate Duncan Smith School. and
that a contribution had been
made to the KDS Store of
melmae and s ta inless steel ta lJic·
war e by Mrs . .John Rose .
Several member s contribut ed

VideoView:

to the Waldschmidt House baz·
aar. Mrs. Clyde Ingels di spla yed
a quilt to be given to Waldsc h
mldt in the na m e of Ret um
.Jonathan Me igs Chapter DAR
from Mrs. Paul 'Eic h. The quilt
was made in 1840 by Mrs .
Dougherty, at age 18, an a ncestor
of Mrs. E ich.
Meeting closed with bcncd itiun
by Mrs. Struble . Hostesses were
Miss Eleano r Smith , Mrs. Paul
Eich. Mrs . Dale Dutton . a nd 'Miss
Lucille Smith.
Accompanying Mrs. Sm ith to
the meeting as Ali ce J e nkin s,
Ann Simpson Davis C'hapter .
DAR, Columbus.
Novembe r meeting will be held
at the old Court House In Chester .

l)ie&amp;lge

POMEROY, OHIO

'192-6669
2 71 N. SelOnd Ave., Middleport, Ohio

Two recent video gems
By Jeff Hilleary
Welcome to the latest excursion in to the v ideo empire where
for a pittan ce you ca n sample the
best expe riences. This.,mon th,
two films which represent the
best of efforts a rc presen ted.
An American Tail (MCA Vi·
deo . one hou r and 21 minut es, G
rating) is the long awaited
co llabora tion · betwee n Steven
Spielberg a nd Don Bluth that
could almos t havP been produced
In the animation de partment of
Disney Studios .
Written bv Da vid Kirsc hner ,
Judy Freudberg and Tony Geiss,
"'ith upllll!]g and e ntertainin g
musi c by James HornPr, the film
teils the story of Flevel Mousek e·
witz and his family who escape
from 19th cen.t ury Ru ssia and the
tyranny of .the vicious cossack
Cat s and com e to Am erica where
they have heard that th ere are no
cats. On the way. du ri ng a violent
storm at sea. adventureous Fie·
vei ls swept overboard and while
his pa rent s arr ive at Ell is ! s ian ~.
Fievel dri fts here in a bottle. The
m ovie concerns his efforts to find
his family a nd the battle between
mice and cats.
From 19th centu ry Eart h we
move to the future Eart h of th e
23rd centurv and a manac lng
· probE' destroy ing thc oceans and
the atmosph ere a nd the only hOpe
is the va liant crew of the USS

E nt crprise. Th e film is Star Trek
JV .. The Voy age Home (Para ·
m ou nt. '119 minutes. PC ratingr,
the lat est cn t r~· in the cont inu in g
a dventures of Kirk. Spock ,
Mc Coy and th e ot hers who go
where no man h as gone befbrc.
Th e movie is part three of a
trilogy th a t b ega n with Th P
Wrath of Kahn, fo ll owed by Th e
Search for Spack a nd ends with
one of the best oft he series which
had one of the wor st beginnings
w ith Star Trek - The Motion
Picture.
·
As the stOI'Y goes. the afore ·
men tioned pn;lbc is d isabling
starshlps and floodin g thc earth
a nd Spack discovers that th e
sign~! being emitt ed is a modi ·
tied wha le song. Since whales do
not exist in , thE' future. havin g
been hunt ed int o ex tin cti on by
man. the .com m a nd·eered Kl in·
gon spaccaship is used lo r a trip
to the 20 th century to brin g back
two hump-backed whales to save
humanity. Th is was a devir f' 1ha1

the TV series used in th e episode.
Tomorrow is Yesterday and use e!
effectively in thi s movie.
There is some swearing but it is
ni cely int egra tPd In th e story.
While ther e is a new syndicated
series set 75 years in the fut ure,
Paramount is pla nning to co n·
t inu c with the original cast in
fut ure movies.

FREE ADMISSION
ADMIT UP TO 2 PERSONS
EVENINGS MONDAY THRU SATURDAY OR
WEDNESDAY &amp; SATURDAY MATINEES

Cross Lanes, WV Exit 47, off 1-64
Post Time: Matinees 1:30PM- Evenings 7:30PM
Coupon good thru November 30, 1987 ,
Cut ollf this cvupon and p ....nt at Admission Entrance

992-5177

Pluvt~

,.

COUPON FOR

MONDAY-FRIDAY 10 A.M.-5 P.M.
SATURDAY 10 A.M.·$ P.M.

.220 EAST MAIN .STREET

$1150

1.2 GALLONOII 1.7 GALLON

were

80&lt; •• • "

-

KAZ

distrlbu ted.
Mrs. Welsh and Florence Ri ,
chards served pumpk in pi e and
coffee at the conclusion of the
m eeting .

IQW«&lt;IIIII~WJO

(614) 992-6421

Now$20 4.9

DAR speaker addresses Constitutional Convention

Chrysler•Piymouth•Dodge, Inc.

FEATURING VAN JOHNSON ·

HUMIDIFIER

Racine fire auxiliary plans

COOPER

R.EAR.VIEW

HANKSCRAFT
COOL VAPOR AIR MOISTURIZER
I 'lo GALLON SIZE
REG. $30.95

41r. ':.;·..:..:~··

•

D~ily Sentinel
Thursday. October 15, 1987

...., ,(lo.,._,l

SEE: CAROL HARPER-MARK-SEARLES-VINCE KNIGHT
MON.-FRI. 9 A.M.·7 P.M./SAT. 9 A.M.-4 P.M.

FRIDAY and SATURDAY

By Th~· Bend

STORE HOURS

Based on local bank •ates and terms. ,All vehicles available
with warranty.

MIZWAY TAVERN

. .-.

·.The

END Of SEASON SAVINGS on high performance
ln•pper mowera, tr•ctora •nd riders.

PRE·SEASON SAVINGS

on Sneppor

olnglo

and

2-at•o• anowthrow•r• .
Snapper ... perlect tor fall clean-up ... Snapper's patented Hi·
Vae System makes a clean sweep of grass, leaves and ather
lawn debris ... and tor Winter-a Snapper snowthrowar will
make snow removal a breeze . . . It's ALWAYS ••a snap with
Snapper".

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TRACTORS 12Yl to 16HP
Save Up To

25.'
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• Choice of tree 33" , 41 " or 48''
mower attachment s

.,

�.'

..

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' ' ' o;H!•l•

Thursday, October 15. 1987

Trick or treat night slated
-Trick or treat in Middleport at
new hall. Cost umes wil be

, Air Ioree bombs own country:
THE HAGUE tUPl i - The
Royal Dutch Air force bombed
the small Dutch town. of Delden
with a practice mi ss il e that hit a
sidewalk, but no one was injured.

th~

judged In the categories of
prettiest. ugliest , funniest, and
mos t original with trophies to be ·
awarded. Refreshments will be
sold and there will be music by a
Jive band.

Chicken dinner
JUNIOR CHEERERS- These are the Meigs Junior High School ·
cheerleaders for the current school year. They are, front, I tor,
Andrea Hale, April Hudson, captain; second, I tor, Candy Hensley,

Nikki Meier, co-captain; third. I tor, Melissa Neutzllng and Lisa
Poulin. The advisor Is M'a ry Hud~on.

Community calendar/area happenings
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Cub Scout Pack 24!\ will hold a
meeting Thursday at 6:30p.m at
the Middl eport Masonic Temple.
Any boys wanting to join the pack
are invited to . attend wit h a
parent.

•

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Chlld Conservation League will
meet Thursday, 7:30p.m ., at the
Ohio Power office. Devotions and
traveling prize will be by Susie
Abbott. Hostesses will be Janet
Duffy and Sus ie Abbott. Please
bring baby items.
FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Square
dance will be held at the Long
Boltom community building Fri·
day evening at 8 p.m .
POMEROY The Uni ted
Pentecostal Church will have its
a nnual chicken noodl e dinner
Friday, Oct. 16, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m .
C'hicken with noodles, green
beans, cole s law. roll, and pie is
the menu for the $3.!\0 dinner.
Dinners caan be carried ou1 or

eaten ' at the church. Orders ma y
be pl aced by ca llin g 992-3824.
BURLINGHAM
Bur ·
ling ha m Modern Woodmen Fall
Festival Sale will be held all da:.·
Friday at the At hens Mall . Baked
goods. plants. crafts, jelly and
apple butter will be sold . Proceeds from the sale will be u se(~
to repair Woodmen Hall.

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Gloryland
Singers will be singing Saturday,
7:;30 p.m., at the Ash St. Freewill
Baptist Church in Middl eport.
WEST COLUMB IA - Wes t
Columbia Elementary School's
annual fall fes tival will be held
Saturday at the school. Soup sale
will be from 12 noon to 7 p.m.
-Games will be played from 1 to
2:30 p.m. and from 4 to 6 p.m.
There will also be a baked goods
sale, cake a nd pie walks. a
country store and prize glvea·
wa ys. Everyone welcome.
JACKSON - The Commun ity
Assault Preventjon Services will
be sponsoring a bean dinn er and
old-fashioned fes·riva l on Satur·
day, sta rting at 9 a .m ., at the
Adena Mu s ic Park in Jackson.
Karen Wyant will be guest
spea ker at noon, lollowed by the
blu e~rass-co unt ry
band "Re·
bou nd " at 1 p.m. Activities.
Including a flea ma r ket, bake
sales, gam('S and clowns. will
continue throughout the day. The
gospe l group "Sounds of Joy"
will perform a bout 5 p .m . Admis·
s lon $2.50 for adult s a nd $1 .50 for
children.

SUNDAY
MORNING STAR - The im·
nual hom ecoming of Morn ing
Star United Methodist Churc h
will be Sunda y. Morning-wors hip
at 9:45. Sunday school at 10:45.
Carry-i n dinner a t 12:30. Bring
tabl eware. Afternoon service to
·follow .
The Meigs
POMEROY Count y Genea logica l Society ..-ill
meet Sunaay at 2 p.m at. the
Meigs Mu seum . Th ere will be
elect io n or officers during a
meeting after which tim e the
group will go to the Sacred Heart
Cem etery for a work session.
POINT PLEASAN T - The
P o int Pl easa nt Wesleyan
Cnurc h. 2417 JeHerson Ave., will
hold a hom eco ming ce le bra tio n
Sund ay starting with Sund ay
sc hool a t 9:30p.m. Therew illbea
basket lunch in the youth center
of Harmon Parker. After th e
lunch there will be a se r v ice with
spec ial voca l mus ic.
MONDAY
POMEROY Mothers

of

Twins Clubs will meet Monday at
7 p.m . at the Un ited Methodist
Chu rch,
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Group II of
the Middl eport Presbyteria n
Church will meet at the home or
Mrs . .William Morris on Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. Mrs . Harley Brown
wil be the co-hostess. Mrs . Myron
Miller will have the book stu dy on
Chapt er 6 of Concer n m aga zine.
Devol ion a! leader will be Miss
Kathryn Hysell.

The U nit ed Pentecostal
Church will have its annual
chicken noodle dinner Friday.
Oct. 16, 11 a.m. to 2 p .m. Chicken
with noodles, green beans, cole
s law, roll, and pie is the menu for
I he $3.50 dinner. Dinners can be
carried out or eaten at the
church. Orders may be placed by
calling 992·3824. ·

Most common c~mplalnts about airline service
Thole compllun.ng wh o had th11 complemt

SUSIE FISCHER

Scottish Rite
dinner slated
The annual joint Gallia ·Mcigs
C'ount y Scottish rite dinner will
be held at the Middleport Ma .
sonic TPmple on Wednesday,
Ocr. 21, at 6:30p.m:
Reserva ti ons must be made by
Saturday. Ocr . 17. Gallia C'ounty
members arc to cal l D. A. Byer·s
at 44&amp;1948 or Bud Harris on at
446·3750. Meigs County members
are to call James ClatwortHy at
992-,1503, Entertainment will be
provided by Scattlsh Rile
members of C'olumbus.

f4:·4•i.J

Fischer 92nd
birthday

Sour ce U S. Department ol Transportation

Susie Fischer celebrated her
92nd birthday r~cenpy with, a
part y at her hom e in Racine.
Gilts and -cards were presented
to her. CaKe and ice cream were
served to Mary and Bill Porter,
John Porter, Shelagh Wilson,
Mark Porter,. Misty Swisher,
Diana and Kara King, Butch,.
Charisse and Craig Knight,
Carol, Stacey. and M.31Jhew
Theiss, Brenda, Benny and Til·
fany Hickel, Shelley and Tara
Wolfe, Gloria, Gerald and Gary

_
,.
•
•

Michael..

....

~

Square
dance
•
A square dance will be staged
at the Long Bottom Commun ity
Building from 8 to 11 p.m .
Friday.

chairman of the American Col·
lege or Obstetricians and Gy neco logis ts. would not comment on
Krueger's action specifically ,
but said performing surgery with
one arm in a cast vio lates the
college's standards .
A surgeon must he ready' for
a ny emergency, Roberge said,
adding, "! can't see how a onehanded su rgeon could )Jandle
these sit uations."
A one-armed doctor would also
have difficulties performing
some delicate ma neuvers In an
op~ra:ion, a na wou ld have trou ble scrubbing his good hand ,
Roberge sa id.
Krueger declined to comme nt.
Krueger was suspended Oct. 5
from St. Al phonsus."

NO CREDIT CHECKS -NO LONG TERM OBLIGATIONS
NO CHA~GE FOR SERV.ICE - NO INTEREST CHARGE
LEN1111lS" Dia&amp;o.W SYSTEM 3 o
BlSllK

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DRYER

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Fall festival winners announced

~

18 lb.

"'
.,
-

ZENJTii .19" Diagonal SYSTEM 3 o

Bl9l6W

.....,

Debbie Drake, second. and ::
W)lmJI Reiber, third.
Winners in the pie eati ng •,
•
contest were Joe Dras ko. first;
Duke Bentz, second. and Denny •
Hill, third.
·

We'll even furnish
the film

19" COLOR TV

18 lb. WASH£R

18 lb. DRYER

$1 QOOWEEK

Sl QOO WE.EK

$7SO WEEK

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roll of· Colore raft Film to play with ...

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DISC, .11 0, 126, 135 FILM ONLY

Bloodmobile
MtDDL EPORT- T he Middle·
port Ch ild Cnservation League
will serve the can teen at the
bloodmobile on Oct. 21 at the
Pomeroy Senior Centers Ce nte r.

Gibson Chest Freezer

ELECTRIC &amp; GAS
RANGE

Sll 00 WEEK

ONLy

FROST FREE

Sl 0°0 WEEK

ONLY

Sl

5°0 WEEK

ONLY

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SWISHER LO HSE

'

Pharmacy
to:r•nnulh M cCullnuqh . A Ph
Churle s Riffle, R Ph
Ron111rt H,onong. A Ph
M on lhrll 5~ 1 8 00 AM IO 9 PM .

i

Sun(t;,.,.. 10 00 A M ,,, 4 ·00 PM
.
PRESCRIPT IONS
PH 992 295 5

t
I
t

Ftoflndlv ServocP.

f

Man!

It

I
_j

Pomerov. Oh

t-----------------Opl!n No&lt;Jhl s ti U 9

•
•'

••

weight and th e ru nner-up was
Nida Kear ns.
In the kid;" class. Christy
M ye~:s lost the, mos t weight. New
m embers are stil1 being accepted
in the Wednesday mornin g and
evening Point Pl easan t cla sses.
Jo Ann Newsome is IPet u rer. ·

The Community Assau lt Prev e nt ion Ser v ices will be sponsoring a bea n dinner · a nd oldfash ioned festival on Sat urda y,
starting a t 9 a.m .. at the Adena ·
Music Park in Jackson. Karen
Wyant will be guest speaker a t
noon. followed by th e bluegrasscount ry band " Rebound" at 1
p.m . Ac tivities. ·including a fl ea market, bake sales. games a nd
Clow ns, will con tinue throughout
the day. The gospel ·group
"Sounds of Joy" will perform
about 5 p.m . Admission $2.50 fo t
adults and $1.50 for c hildren.

cou nt ry," the newspaper sai d .

~

POMEROY - The annual fa ll
festival of the Riverview School
will be he ld Sa turday. A lull
course dinner will be served
beginning a t 5 p .m. Outdoo r
ga mes will begin a t 6 p.m . with
Indoor event s s tarting at 7. Th e
public is in vit ed.
·

CAP bean dinner

NEA GRAPHII

The Department of .Transportation received more than 10,000 complaints
from disgruntled airline. passengers last year , up from less than 7,000 in
1985. And indications are that air passengers may have even more complaints In 1987. Passengers generally only appeal to DOT after·they complain to the individual airline.

•

Holter Sisson, Mrs. Ma rg Har·
tenbac h Ru sse ll. a ll'loca l.
Ma r tha Joseph He ndra iri , and
Mr. and Mrs. 'E ddi e Parley
!Mary J oseph l, Moprw. Mi ch.;
Mr. a nd Mrs. Allan Reeves
!Kathryn Mit ch!. C'im~ nn ati;
Mrs. Joa n H.arbrec ht Mescher.
Lebonan ; Mr. a nd Mrs . Robert
Harte nbac h, Gal li po li s: Mr. a nd ·
Mrs ..James Roush. New Ha ven,
W.Va .: andMr . andMrs . Dcnver
Rice !Nora Harri s) Middleport.

a nd· the actual situatio n in our

De.lrocked surgeo n ope rated
with arm In sling, others say:
BOISE, Idaho iUPI) - A sur·
geo n who was suspe nd ed from a
hospital earlier this month per·
formed two hysterectom ies wi th
one arm in a cast, another doctor
said.
Dr. Philip Kru_eger, an obste·
trician and gynecologist. per·
formed the operations several
months ago a nd both patients
fully recovered. Dr. Darrell
Ludders, a member of St. AI·
phons us Medical Center's peer
re view committee. said
Wed nesday.
· But he said operati ng with one
arm viola ted accepted medica l
practices.
Dr. Richard Ro~rge, Id aho

Fare cos ts and 1ncorrect
mformat1on abou1 fares ·. •. , n ••

Dinner-dance
MIDDLEPORT Jay mar
Go lf Cl ub is sponsoring a din ner·
dance o n Su nday . Oct. 2.''&gt;. ,a t the
Middlepor t Legion Hall. 'Mu sic
will be provid ed by George Hall.
, Reserva tions must be made by
Oet. 20. Th e publi c is invited. ~'or
details a nd reservation s. ca ll
Bob Freed at 992-2044.

2 PC. -

'

Gingerbread Boy Says

You're
In
vi
ted
( ;5)} (
To A Party!
~~ Celebrating
~,
~.;,;
Our 2nd
j \ Anniversary!
~-)

Reunion rheld recently
A group of Jongt im e frie nds
from the Minersvi lle commun ity
ga thered·for the 13t h consecuti ve
year at the Ra cine pi~nic area for
a covered di sh dinner and social
time. The reunion is annually
he ld the seco nd Sunda,v of eol'h
October .
Attending were Mrs. Brooks
Sayre (June Forbes!. Mrs. Roy
Reuter !Marge Forbes), Mr . a nd
Mrs. Wiliam - Russe ll 1Mary
Gr u ~sen. Mr. a nd Mrs. John
Milch rCccelia Harbrcchtl. Mr.
and Mrs . Tom Bowen !Mary
Karr). Mr. a nd Mr s. Peck Jones
t Lera Knopp!, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter G rucser !Mary Ki mes).
Mr. and Mrs . Ernie Ba ker
1P hy llis Joseph I. Mrs . ...fiid ith

official Economi&lt;: Daily s~id
Wednesday in a front -page
commentary.
"I n West ern cou ntries, the
co nsu mption of . beer is wides·
pread," the new spaper said.
."But this can not be so in China.·'
. In recent years. more and
more Chinese have started drink·
ing beer, causin g prod uction to
s hoot up by seven or eight times
to more th a n 7mlllion to8mHiion
tons annually , the comment'ary
sa id.
The beer industry now requires
a t least 2 million tons of grain a
yea r to keep up with demand.
" This does not accord with our
c urrent grai n produ ction levels

WHY BUY WHEN YOU CAN RENT

Reservation s problems

~

Winn ers in the pie baking and
eatin g co ntest held at fhe Raci ne
fall fes tival Saturday have been
announced.
In the baking cont est the
wi nners were Lu la Circle. first :

The m issile was a practice
weapon a nd contai ned no explo·
sive. A police spokes man said it
was "a wonder" that nobody was
injured and that th e damage was
limited to "a shattered paving
stone".
An inquiry will' be he ld to try to
determine how the miss il e got
loose.
Chinese urged to forego beer;
BE IJI NG (UP! ) - Beer, once
considered a Juxur.y drink. is
being g uzzled a t a growing rate
by the Chin ese, a nd they have
been -a dvised to start cuiting
back.
''We should not b lindly e ncour·
age the pur suit of high spending
and the attitud e tha t It's not a
banquet unless there's beer. " the

I"GELS APPLIANCE &amp; FUR.NITURE RENTAL

Slinderella dass meeting held
At th e Monday nigh t Five
Points class. Barbara Hudson
lost the most weight for the week.
while in the Tuesda )· morn ing
Fi ve Points class . Chr isty Rams ·
burg los t the mos t weight a nd
· Louise Chaffee was runner-up. In
the Tuesday night Mason cla ss.
Joan Vaughan lost th e most

An F' ,]6 l'lghter-bomber re·
leased one of its weapons while
on a trai ning flight Wednesday
and the projectile landed on a
sidewal k In Delden. which Is In
the east par t of the country .

UNFRIENDLY SKIES

Community builders
have meeting
Support of the Eastern Local
Schnool District levy to be voted
on . in the Nov. 3 election was
pledged by the Community
Builders Club at a meeting held
recently at the home of Mr . and
Mrs. Warren Pickens.
Mrs . Denver Weber handed out
Information pamphlets entitled
" Why Do We Need the Levy."
A thank you note was read
from the Marion Hall family ·for
flowers received from the com·
munity. Also read was a thank
you from Mr. and Mrs . Ronald
Osborne for flower s sent to them
for their 50th wedding anniver·
sary. Attending the meeting
were Mr. and Mrs. Dcnald
Myers. Mr. and Mrs . Ernest
Whitehead. Mrs. Denver Weber,
and Mr. a nd Mr s. Lyle
Balderson.
Re freshment s wer.e served.

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

Quir:ks in the news____________. . . ;. . _______-....-_

. Thursday, October 15, .1987

village has been sc heduled lor 6
to 7:-00p.m. Residents with treats,
to give to the children are asked
to turn on their porch light s.
Tha t same night Feeney·
Bennett Post 128, America n
Legion, will stage a cost ume ball

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

, 0

ENERGY- Kevin Warren , demonstrator , and s(udent, Hea ther
Hudson, are shown completing an experiment on the use of energy
ai the Salisbury Elementary School. The experiment was part of
the Don Herbert World of Energy show whiclr illustrated vl'&lt;rally
scientific experiments pointing up ways to save •·nergy in every
day activities. The show demons trat ed a lso new and more creative
ways of using energy resources.

c. '

.,.)
J

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BIRTHDAY SALE IN EFFECT WED. ' SAT.

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703 2nd street

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�I

J'

I

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. October 15. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--Local briefs-- Forecast warmer temperatures Friday
Squad receives 6 calls Wednesday

Stocks are doWil" in
early trading today
NEW YORK (UPil -Stocks
prkes t(lday extended Wednes
day's record nose-dive. droppmg
more than 15 points in ea rly
tradmg today
The Dow Jon es industrial aver
age, whtch plunged 95 46 points
Wednesday, was down 15 67 to
2397 03 at 10 a m .
Declines led advances 1.172-139
among the 1.637 Issues crossmg
the New York Stock Exchange
tape Volume was heavy ,
amounting to about 50 62 mtllion
shares dunng the first 30 minu tes
of tradmg
A larger than expected August
U.S trade deficit report Wednes
day left the stock market " dem
oralized and In dtsarray," send
ing the Dow Jones Industrials on
a record dive amid warnmgs of
rising Inflation. analysts satd
The government satd Wednes
day the U S trade deficit nar
rowed to $15 68 billion In August
from $16 5 btlllon tn July, but the
fmanctal markets had expected a
figure closer to $14 btllion
''The markets are demoraltzed
and in dtsarray, • satd Hugh
Johnson, head of the mvestment
policy committee at First Albany
Corp ·'The trade figure suggested that the dollar will decline
further, that inflation will nse
and that protecttomst sentiment
will be revived It completely
shook the confidence of the credtt
markets "

Respond ing to the record fall,
President Reagan said he didn ' t
thmk the stock market drop
meant the country's economtc
recovery was coming unrave led
Wednesday 's drop exceeded
the Dow 's prev ious record loss of
91 55 points Oct 6 The 3 81
perce nt drop was sl!ghtl} more
than the 3 47 percent decline on
Oct 6, bu t far from the record

'

12 9 percent drop In the stoc k
50
m arket cras h Oct 28, 1929
" The market ts basically In a
freefall ," satd Ed Shopkorn,
partnet m c harge of inslttuttonal
eq utltes at Mabon Nugent &amp; Co
"People d tdn ' t like the trade
number, long term bond yields
went above 10 percent and stoc k
Investors )lave gotten ver y

Former governor asks
10 charges be dismissed
COLUMBUS, Ohto !UP!) l'-ormer Gov .J ames A Rhodes
1986 campatgn has as ked the
Oh10 ElectiOns Commtssion to
dismtss 10 a ll eged vtolatlons ftled
by thesecretary of state s office
Last month the secretary of
state's office referred the allega
ttons aga1nst the Rhodes for
Governor Commtttee to the elec
uons commtsstOn The ca mpaign
was accused of la und er mg
$148,773 m campa ign payment s
The secretary of stat e's staff
cl)arged that the campaign htd
its involvement wtth seven
smaller polittcal co mmittees

Announcements
Square dance
A square dance wtll be s taged
at the Long Bottom Community
Butldmg from 8 to 11 p m
Fnday
Fall festival
Modern Woodmen, Ca mp 7230
Burlingham wtli stage a fall
festlvi!l a nd bake sale at the
Athens Mali begm nm g at 9 a m
Fnda} . Proceeds wtll go mto a
ma tching proJeCt fund to be used
for com munt ty prOJects
Meigs democrats
The Metgs Count; Democra t tc
Exec uttve Committee will meet
at 7 30 p m Thursday at CarpPn
ters Hall. E Matn St . Pomcro;

Daily stock prices
(As of 10. 30 am.)
Provtded hy
Bryce and Mark Smith
of 81 unl Ell IS &amp; Loew I
Firm
Am Elect n c Power
AT&amp;T
Ashland Oil
Bob Evans Farms
Charming Shoppes
• llty Holding Co
Federal Mogul
Goodyel)r T&amp;R
Heck s Inc
Key Ce nturion
Lands' E nd
Ltmlted Inc
Multimedia Inc
Rax Resta urant s
Robbins &amp; Myers
Shone:r 's Inc
We nd y's Inti
Worth ington !nd

that werE' used tmpt op~rl y as
ex te ns tons ot the gube rnat onal
ca mpatgn
In res ponses liled with the
commtssion. the ca mpa tg n seeks
dtsmlssal of the case and con
tend s th e secretary ot states
offtce based tts allegations on
· conjecture. specult a tton and
hy potheSIS "
The commtsswn Will condu ct a
preh mtna r} revww Fnday The
com mtssto n wtlJ decide whether
to schedul e a heari ng, dts mtss
the m atter, tmpose a ftn e or refer
11 to the Franklin Count}
prosecutor
' There ts nothing on the face of
t he statements ftled by the
Rhodes committ ee whtc h dts
c lose a n;y mtsrepresentatton or
maccuracy, known or other
wtse · the ca mpa tgn sa td m a
dismissa l mo uon
In a n afftdavit Rhodes sa td, 'I
nevet knowmgly co ncea led or
mi srep resented co nt r ibu tions
g " e n . or recetved or expendt
tu res ma de in co nnectiO n with
t hts or an} e lect ton

Hearing W edne!;day
. Gar; J Wo lfe 39, Racine , was
arraigned Wednesda; m Me tgs
Count; Common Pleas Court on
two cou nt s Q! mlimtda lton, bot h
wtlh gu n spectflcattons Wolfe
represented by Pomeroy a.tto r
ne;y Douglas Ltttlc pl ed mnocent
and was re lea sed on $20 000
recognizan ce bonds on both
counts
Public Nottce

Price
28 ~

32%

64
19"4
20\1,

3i

42
~5 Y.

3"4

38\'.
23
28
67')(
4')1,

JO Y.
2574

Sl',
20 ~

Weather

nervous ·
Shopkorn sa id that until the
bond market stabtllzes, the stoc k
mar ket 'won't do anythmg ex
cept go down "
The trade deflctt news pus hed
bond pnces lower and the yield
on the bellwe ther 30 year Treasury bond rose above 10 percent
for the ftrst ume smce 1985
'The double-dtgtt ytelds on
long-ter m gover nment bonds
was a very negattve psychologt
cal factor " Johnson said
Equtttes opened with sharp
losses Wednesday as the dollar
and bond pnces 1 ee led m reac
tton to the trade gap new s
Futures linked selling, whtch.oc
curred when pre mtums on stock
mdex fu lures narrowed enough
to make tt profitable for traders
to buy the futures whtle sellmg
the underlymg cash stocks. und erli n e d
the market s
dtsa ppointme nt
The trade deficit for the first
e tght months of 1987 s tood at
$114 I btlllon. on pace to reach
$171 btlllon lor the year ecltpsmg
last year's record of $156 billion
and many eco nomtsts' predlc
lions of $160 btlllon
' Whtle we are e ncouraged b)
t he contmumg favo ra ble trend m
real te rms. it ts a pparent that our
trade deficit contmues on an
unacceptably htgh pla teau
Bruce Smart. th e acting com
merce secretary sa id In a
s tat e ment

PUBLIC NOTICE
FAIR BOARD ELECTION
The annual electton of the
Metgs County Agnculture
Soctety Dtrectors wtlt be
held Monday. No"'.smber 2
1987, 1n the Secretary '•
Off1ce at the Farr Groun ds at
Rock Spr~ngs Ohto from

59pm
Quahf1cat10ns for dnec
tors are tha' they must be 8
quahftod voter of Metgs
County and must have a
memt,ershtp t1cket 1n sa•d

SOCiety Of 1987
Candidates' pe1111ons
mulrt be ftled w1th the
Secretary no later t han 5
p m M on day October 26

1987

Only

persons

18

yean of age and holdmg a
membership tt ck et at the
close of the 1987 Fatr or at
least (151 calendar days

An Ord1nance to fix ad

GsNow

mE

•

RAIN
SHOWERS
"Cold
. . Stattc . . Occluded
Map shows m1n1mum temperatures At least 50% or any shaded area ts forecast
to rece•ve prec•pttat•on Indicated
UPI

FRONTS: . . Warm

WEATHER MAP - Rain will extend from Nebraska and the
eastern Dakotas across the upper hall of the Mississippi Valley
into upper Michigan. Showers and thundershowers will he
scattered over northwest Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas. Scattered
ralnshowers will extend across Montana witt) snow In the higher
elevations of the northern Rockies. Sunny skies will prevail over
the Intermountain region, lhe lower Mississippi Valley and the
eastern quarter of the U.S. Most of the nation will have high
temperatures In the 60s or 70s.

Dry weather helps advance
com and soybean, harvesting
By l:Jnitcd Press International
Fa vorable weather tn maJOr
growing areas of Ohto allowed
corn and soybean harvesting to
make raptd progress toward
completton the Ohto Agnculture
Sta ti s tic s Servtce re porte d
Wed nes dav
Th ere were 4 9 da} s suitable
for ft eld work mos t of whtch was
devoted to corn and soybean
harves ting, though farmmg ac
l tv tltes mcluded seedmg wheat
dtggmg potatoes, ba limg hay and
pt ckmg fall apples and grapes
the serv tc e repor ted
Corn was almost 52 perce nt
eomplete by Sunday. whtch ts
almos t three ttmes htgher than
thP 18 pe rcent that was harves ted
las t yea r a t thts ttme Th e hgure
ts 11ell above the 20 percent
average for the yea rs 1982 86
Dn weather has allowed the
harvest to make raptd progress
tn western a nd southern coun
ttes We t conditiOns tn northeast
er n cou'ntt es h as s low e d
ha rvestmg
So;bean co mbtnm g, alBo

ahead of last year's pace, was 75
percent complete by Sunda}
Last year only 25 percent of all
soybeans w.ere combtned at thts
time, and the a verage percen
!age for the ;ears 1982 86 ts 45
In western areas of the s ta te
harvest mg is approachnig 8U
perce nt complete, while m eas t
ern states, wet weather has
slowed harves tmg, the servtce
satd
I
Wtnfer wheat seedmg ad
vanced to 65 percent complete.
compared to 16 pe rcent last year
and the average five year figure
of 47 percent The dry wea ther in
western counlies allowed seed
mg to m a ke rapid progress,
although the same dry weather
has slowed germination
Pot a to dtggmg contmued last
week and was 81 percent com
plete by Sunday fall apple
harves t advanced to 70 perce nt
complete, which ts slightly ahead
ol last yea r and the ltve yea r
average Grape harvesting ts 65
percent complete. whtch ts
slightly behind las t year

Retail sales down 0.4 percent last month
WASHINGTON 1UPil - A
sharp decline m automobtle sales
drove retatl sa les down 0 4
percent to $128 8 btlllon m Sep
tember the government re
ported today
Thts compared wtth a strong
I 7 pe rcent ga m m reta tl sales
dunng August
September automobtle sales
were down roughly $500 million
or I 4 percent after a strong
August per formance whe n U S
a ut omakers used mcentives to
mct ease sa les by 5 7 percent to
$~ 1 1 btllwn th e Com merce De
partmenl satd

durable goods - goods designed
to last three or more years- by
0 9 percent
Non durable -goods sa le s
climbed 0 1 percent during the
mon th, wtth general merchandiS·
mg falling 0 6 percent tlespit e a
late start to the school yea r.
which some a na lys ts thought
would hel p department store
sa les

License issued

.-

A marrt age lice nse has been
Issued in Meigs County Proba te
Court .to George Jeffrey Beaver
28 Middleport. a nd Sandra Ly nn
Batley. 18, Mtddleport

Excludmg the dropoff m auto
sales, . total 1 etatl sa les for the
month fe ll JUSt 0 1 percent
Sep te mber's $128 8 btlhon tn
sa les were 0 3 percent below
Se ptembfr 1986, but excluding
the auto ca tegor y. which was 13 2
percent be low a year before,
total sa les we r e 4 6 percent
htgher
The fa ll off m auto sales also
reduced overa llr eported sa les of

Hospital news
Veterans Me mori al
Wednesday Admts Ion s
Etmlla Cassell. Pomeroy, Nellie
Parker, Chester, Brenda Haggy,
Middl eport , Rober t Baker.
Reedsville
Wednes day Discharges
Donna Eblin Kimberly Dent

Pubhc Nottce

Public Notice

Public Notice

before th e date of election
are quahf1ed to vote Petttlons can be obtatned from
the Fatr Secretary
The Matgs County
Agnculture Soc1ety
By Munel Bradford. Sec

cllman Bob Gilmore. 60 RN&amp;r·
VHtW Drive Middleport OhiO
45760, phone 1 -614-992-

pervtsors of the Metgs So11
and Water Conservation D1s
tnct to be held 1n accordance

1101 B, 15 22 3tc

Publtc Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Se11led bids wdl be recewed by the Vtllage of Mtd
dleport at the mayor's offtce,
237 Race Street Mtddl.,.

6128
The Vollego of Moddleport

wtth Chop~r 1615 01 -14of
the ROVIsed Code of Oh•o at

mayacceptthelowettbid , or

Eastem Htgh School on No-

select the best bid for the on- -vember 1 7. 1 987 at 7 1 7 p
tended purpou, and ruerves
the nght to accalllt or reJect
any or all bids and / or any
part thereof
Fred Hoffman Mayor
VIllage of Middleport

:n Nom1nees are Marv1ene
Beegle. Ron Eastman. Jack
Ervtn and Thoma• Thetss
Nom•nattons wtll be at-cepted from the floor at the
ume of the electton Two su-

I 1 01 1 4 21 , 2tc

pervtoon are to be elected

port, Ohio 46760 UMII 3 00
P M November 9. 1 987. for
tl1e purchase and constructaon of an 18 hole m1n1ature
golf course at Ueneral Hart~nger Park usmg a nver
town theme
Any mformatK&gt;n needed

ELECTION lEGAL NOTICE
Tho Oh10 Sod and Water

concemmg this P&lt;OJoct movlje
obtained by contacting Coun-

Consetrvation
CommiSsion
will cause an electton of su

Public Notice ·

,

Jutted rates and charges for

rologlst Pete Reynolds said
today
,
But he predtcted remams of the
front would bring a pre dawn
c hilllnMlss lsslppt,Alabamaand
Tennessee- and perhaps ~ tal es
along the Atlantl~ Coast- would
set record lows Reynolds said a
freeze and frost warning was In
effect this morning in th~
Dakotas
High temperatures In the 40s
were forecast lor Minnesota and

You may cast your ballot at
ttle annual meeting or on the
day of electiOn at Mergs Sod
and Water Conservation Olstnct Off1ce. 221 West Second
Street • Pomeroy
(second
floQr of the Farmers Bank
butkhng) between 8 a m and
2 p m Absentee ballots may

bo secured at tho focal d11tnct
office
1101 15 29 2tc

South Central Ohio
Mostly sunny today, wtth htghs
betwee n 65 and 70 Pat tly cloudy
tonight and Fnday, wtth a low
tonig ht between 40 and 45 and
htghs Friday between 65 and 70
The proba bi lit y of prectpttatton is near zero through Fnday
Wmds will be ltght and from
the south today and tontght
Extended Forecast
Party cloudy and mild Sat ur
day through Monday Highs
around 70 Low tn the mid 40s

---452·

531 JACKSON PIKE RT. 3~ WEST

I

BACK TO 'ntEATAE D«ttl
• SPECIAL PRICE AI»!I!StONS •

winning Super
Lotto numbers
CLEVELAND (UP [) -Three
players pi c ked all stx numbe rs in
Ohto' s Super Lot to drawmg Wednesday mght to become eligible
to split the $3 million jackpot
Th e names of the players wtil
' be announced a ft er they I edeem
thei r winning ltckets a t a lott ery
office, a lottery spokesman satd
toda y The wlnnmg numbers
were 8 12. 14, 27, 28 and 39
Each of the playe rs wtli recetve $1 mtlllon tn 20 ann ual
payment s of $50.000 mmu s
taxes, the spokesma n sa td
.
In a ddtttorl to the ]aci\pot
winners 129 pla} ers c hose five of
the numbers to win $1,000 eac h.
and 6.273 playe rs se lected four of
the numbers to wm $71 apiece
Ttck e t sales for the mtd week
drawing totaled $3,850 272, wtth
the pnze pa yo ut totaling
$3,574,383 The est tm ated Jackpot
for Saturday s drawmg IS $3
mtlltOn

SEC I THAT WHEREAS.
the Votlago of Mtddloport.

•

tmum ch~rgea and t he V1l
lage reserves the nght and •s
obligated to mcrease the
slime at any nme should the
revenues oi the santtary
sewage system and sewage
disposal 1aclh11es "prove m·
sufftctent to pay the operat
1ng and matntenance ex
penses and the debt service
charge of th e bonds to pay
the cost of construct lOg sa1d
facthttes- or e.-:tens•ons to
said system

has heretofore adopted cerSEC IV Should the b1ll
tatn. rates and c"harges for
sanrtary sewage system ser- for any servtce rendered by
vice. and 181d rates and the samtary sewage system
charges need to be adJusted. and sewage dl$posal tac1l1
and
tres not be pa1d wtthln ten
WHEREAS 1t •• deemed days a penalty of 1 0 % o f
nacet~ury and advisable to such billmg shall be c harged
establish cenain rates and If the b1ll 1s not patd wrth1n
charge• for sanitary sewage stxty days the VIllage res
system and sewage disposal erves the nght to cut off the
f.cditMtS servece to be ran sewer serv1ce to said pre
dared to satd V1llage and its m1ses, wh1ch shall then be
""'abitllnts and other users resumed only upon payment
wh1ch w.l produce suff1ctent of an additional fee of $6 00
revenun to pay the operat and further, tf satd btllta not
1ng and
mamtenace ex- p a1d w1thm 90 days, the
pen... of Ita sanitary sewage Clerk 11 hereby authonzed
syatem and sewage dtsposal and drrected to certtfy the
f~1tities end to provtde for dehnquent bill, plus the pe·
Pllvment of the pnnc1pal and nalties to the County AudiIIOIOIM1 of $345.000 00 of tor for collectton as and at
ftrol Mortgage Sewage Sys- the same ttme that other
·tem and Sewage Dtsposal taxes and assessments are
Facilitwt~ Improvement Re- collected
SEC V The owner of pn
Venue Bonds of the V11iage IS·
property
wh1ch IS
sued for the purpose of pay- vate
served or may be served bv
•ng part of the cost of
the samtary sewaga system
.truct1ng sa1d fac•lrtles
drsposal fac1ht1es by ptpes
ellltending utd system
NOW THEREFO{IE BE connected wtth 111d system
IT ORDAINED by the Coun and faclltttes to convey san•
col of tho VIllage of M 1ddle tary sewage therefrom shall
as well as the lessee of the
port, M11g1 County , Oh1o
SEC I, THAT. m connec premeses. be liable to ttre viltton wtth the constructton of lage for all san1tary sewage
•xtenstons
and Improve- to saad system and fac1ht1es
menu to the sewage system from said system and factll·
the followtng shall be the t1es from satd premtses
SEC VI Sewage tap fees
rates charged monthly by
1ho Vitl•ge of Mtddfoport. are as follows
Oh10 for serv1ces rendered 4 1nch connection - $226 00
.by tts santtary sewage sys- 6 rnch connection - $600 00
·t•m to tts inhab•tants and 8 tnch connect1on - $600 00
SEC VII A new tap IS hare:other users thereof
defined to be the lnstallaMonthly rata, based upon
of sewer servtce on a hoe
-water meter raadmgs
0 to 2,000 gallons - per where non~t formerly el'ttsted
and whtch requires the 1nstal
~month •&amp; 36
• 2.001 to 6 000 gallons - lation of new hnes from the
sewer mam to a location not
per month $7 46
• 5.001 to 8 000 gallons - foornlllly seoved by sewer serVICe from the said meter matn
~r month $9 06

SEC VIII Any other moans

of sevvage disposal 1s hereby
, 10,001 to 15 000 gallons declared to be a nu1sance and
ts therefore prohtblted
..... par month $17 05
SEC ~· IX
That all ord1
• 16,001 to 20.000 gallons
nances or parts thereof. tn
.-;- per month '25 55
• . 20,001 to 26,000 g•llons conflict herewtth 1ncludtng
Ordmance No 910 adopted
~ per month '29 80
June 7. 1967 be. and the
All over 26 000 gallons per month $29 80 plus 22 same are hereby repealed
SEC X Th1s Ordmance
per 1 ,000 gallons
Flat rate - non -metered shall take effect and be m
prtvate wells - per month force from and after the ear
I test date provtded by law
•• 65
Pass'ed the 28th day of
SEC II In the event that
one water meter serves September 1 987
more than one domestiC Attest Jon P Buck, Clerk
Dewey Horton,
commerctal or industnat
President of Counctl
unit, the mlnrmum btll of
•&amp; 35 par month. par untt 1101 14 21 , 2tc
or the matured sarv1ce read
Public Notice
1 tng wh1chever 11 the greater
shttll appty Where no water
~tars are •n .. -.lled on a prt
ORDINANCE NO 1188 87
vata well and serv1ce IS pro
An Ordtnance to ftx rates
vtded to more than one do- and charges for water sermestic, commerctal or tn - VICe m the Vtllage of Mtddledustnal unit, the flat rate of port. Ohto
1$8 65 per month per unit,
Be 1t ordamad by the
shall apply A umt sh,all con - Counctl of the Vtllage of
SISt of a sewer connectton as Mtddleport as follows
de\ermtned by the regula·
Sac. I That the followmg
t1on of the Board of Trustees
of Public Affa1rs of sa1d V11
Real Estate General
lage
SEC Ill That t~e V1llago
of Middleport reserves the
nght to requrre the measurement of water delivered to
II"'Y premtses 1n such a man
BUild your home or cabm on
ner that rates for sewage
th IS lovely land IUS! one mtl e
serv1ce can be determmed
lrom OhtD Rtver Woods, se
from such water meter read
elu
siOn and cleared la nd 2
tngs. tn whtch event the
acres up A real barga1n
rates for sewage serv..:es
sti'all be the rates set forth on
Tw o l acre butldmg sties on
a water meter readmg basts
Ltkewtle, any flat user upon
Wnght St Water and sewer
nottfrcat1on to the Board of
Make an oiler
Trustees of Pubhc Affatrs of
the Vtllage shall have the
- N1ce rolling land $6 000
nght to tnstallat h11 el(pense
an approved metertng de·
v1ce for the measurement of
111 water pumped from wells
or other sources grantmg
unto the Board of Trustees
of Public Affatrs the rtght to
rfad the meter and penodt·
1-614-385-6740
cally check the accuracy of
Collect Calls Accepted
such metertng
The foregotng ~c~h~or~g~•;•~ar;.:•c..;,,.,----:-per month $ 10 80

_

GALLIPfLIS

Principles and Practices
Law
,
Finance
Appraisal

Registration Deadline is October 19, 1987

Oon'f Mi1s/f-Call Today 446-4367

LOTS &amp; LAND
FOR SALE-

6 ACRES - SPRING STREET

THELMA
MONTGOMERY
REALTY

11

Help Wanted

Public Nottc e

Publoc Notice

shall be the rat es charged
monthly by th e Vtllag&amp; of
Middleport Ohto f or water
furnish ed by the Vtllage of
M1ddtepon to tts tnhattltants
and other users thereof

make a depostt t o secure the
pa yment for w ater servtce as
follows
Resadent - $50 00
Restaurant - $70 00

METERED SERVI CE
For the f1rst 2 000 gallons

Serv1ee Statton -.- $70 00

per month or less - M1n
charge $5 40
For the next 3,000 gallons
per month 2Z per 100
gallons
For the next 10.000 gal
Ions per m ont!'\ 18 pet
100 gallons
For the next 15 000 gal·
Ions per month ....... 17 per

1 00 gellons

_

All over 30 000 gallons
per month 14 per 100
gallons

LABORATORY
SUPERVISOR

Connie's got the perfect
fashton footnote to your
worktng wardrobe Slyle that
• shows your know-how about
the newest shapes. colors and
textures for fall Sltp tnto th1s
Connte class1c the look that
works for you I In BLACK
ROWN . GREY or RED

$3895

IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR A CAREER ORIENTED MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST TO WORK
FULL TIME IN SUPERVISION.
REQUIREMENTS. MT (ASCP or Equtvalent
CURRENT CERTIFICATION Prefer 3
Years General Laboratory Experience
SALARY NEGOTIABLE
Interested Applicants my call

614·992-2104, Ext. 201
Or Sent Resume To:
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAl
115 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
AnENTION: W S.

Admmtstrolor

REGISTERED NURSES
Immediate opemng for full time and
part time R N 's to work in areas of
•Special Care
•Emergency Room
•Skilled Nursing Facility
•Medical, Surgical Units
Salary comparable with expenence.
Excellent Fringe Benefits

SEND RESUME TO:
RHONDA DAILEY, R.N.
DIRECTOR Of NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAl
ll'S EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 4S 769

OR

CAll99~-2104,
E

EXT. 213

Grocery -

Car Wesh - &amp;225 00

Two Inch meters-

Business
Services
TRAPPING SUPPLIES
NITE-LIGHTS
WHEATE LIGHTS
Buytng Roots.
Beef Hides and
Deer Htdes

GEORGE BUCKLEY

614-664-4761
HOURS

Mon - Sat 2 to 9 P M
Sunday 5 to 9 P M
10 15- 1 010

DONELLI'S
PIZZA
992-6167
12) 11-INCifB ITEM

95
S9
Green/ Black Olives
PIZZAS

Peppefom. Cheese.

900 00
A new tap ts hereby de
ftned to be the tnstallatlon of
water servtce on a hne where
n one formerly ex1ated and
whtch requnes the mstalla·
tton of new hnes from the
water mam and the mstallatton of a new meter and meter box m a locat1on nol
fo rmerly se rved by water
serv1ce from the sa 1d water
mam
SEC V That'" the event
that serv1ce 1s d1scontmued
as provtded herem , a charge
of s1x dollars ($ 6 001shall bo
made by t he V1llage for re·
stonng serv•ce Servtce shall
not be resto red unttl the full
amoun t of the delinquency
1s patd mclud tng the c harge
stated above
SEC Vi Thts Ordtnance
shall take effect and be tn
force from and after the earhast date prov1ded by law
Passed the 28th day of
September 1987
Attest J on P Buck. Clerk
Dewey Horton.
President of Council
1101 t4 2t 2tc

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry F1sti1ng Supplies

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Btlls Here
BUSINESS PHONE
1614) 992- 6110
RESIDENCE PHONE
16141 992- 7754

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

BISSELL
BUILDERS

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
4 16 86 Hn

FULL BODY TONING
and FIRMING
\ uu Too I on L..ook &amp; Ft&gt;t&gt;l
luh• '

lllllt'r i\1 rljl:t'f fliRt"!"(

II~ Fun H.. ahh\ ..'t (, oml For
\ou' - Brmj! A Frlt'nd

!PECI&amp;L R&amp;IES fOR IIUDINT!
PH. 992-2300 Or Stoll BY
115 W Se&lt;ond, Pomeroy
10.5 J mo

RADIATOR
SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

!F ree E:sttmates)

We can repair and recore rad1ators and
heater cores. We can
also ac1d boil and rod
out rad1ators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PAT HILL FORD

- Addons and remodeling
- Roo fmg and gunor work

- Concreto wo rk
- Plumbtng and alectn cal
work

992-2196

992 -6215 or 992-7314

Middleport. OhiO
1-13-tfc

Oh10
4 15861c

*VINYL SIDING

BOGGS

BATHS
•ROOFING •GENERAl
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS

REFERENCES

Phone Day or Evenings

985-4141

CONti&amp;CTaiS
9 28 I mo pd

•ALUMINUM SIDING

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

' BISSELL
SIDING CO.

D~ere,

Equ1pment

1124 East Matn St.
Pomeroy

HOURS Mon •Tuu ·Wed
10amtobpm

Sunday 1 p m -b p m
By Chan&lt;e or Appomtment

, RUSS MOORE
992-2526

•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUN
•MUZZLELOAOING
SUPPLIES

OPEN 1 to 9'P.M

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

WALNUTS
7, CHESTER
h~OWRT.THRU
NOV. 14th

RACINE, OHIO

MON. THRU SAT.
9:00-4:3ll

saoo per

TRI-COUNTY
RECYCLING
Now Open 7 Days
AWeek
DAILY 10 AM· 6 PM
located at Corner of
Rt. 143 and Rt. 7,
Pomeroy
Purchastng all
types of
non-ferrous scrap
GLASS ... 2¢ lb.
#1 Copper
Current 53¢ lb
Top Grade

Alummum

40¢

Sh&lt;&gt;••t~ · l--l-1lb

Alumtnum Cans

34¢
'

lb
9J II mo

SYRACUSE,

CALL 992-6756
"DOC"

VAUGHN

Certdted licensed Shop

9-10- 1 mo

Kittens to lovtng homes w11h
children accompan1ed by par
en1s ptckmg them out Call
6t4 843 5445
K1ttens to g1ve away to good
home Call614 9•9 2682 after

needs

Buytng da1ly gold sliver co1nt
rtnga 1ewelrv. aterhng ware old
co1ns large currency Top prices Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd Ave Mtddlepon. Oh 614
992 3476

Wanted to buy stand1ng timber
Call AI Tromm at 814 742

2328
QUILTS
Htgh prn;:es patd for pr•t950
quilts Applique pteced any
co nd1t1on Call 614 992-2101
or 614 992 5657

c..h

for standmg ttmber We
buy veneer whtte oak and
walnut Call AI Tromm. 614742 2328
Old furniture toys qutl1s dlshware etc One prece or whole
household caah paid 304-676·
7216 or 675-6899

Full size mattress and box
sprtngs, 162 Park Dr1ve
Ten puppies to good homes
304-675 7896

Lost and Found

Basham Building

FOUND Wh11e Per!nan male cat
Eastern Ave Area 1 blue eye 1
brown eye blue collar Call
ot4 446 782t

10- 7-11n

LOST Male Beagle In v1c1mtv of
lower R1ver Rd Maybe draggtng
a cham Call 614 446 2880
Lost FoJC Hound. reddish end
black Extra large lost In Racine
Gun Club area Call 614 247
2641

ACCENT

FOUND Broad Run small brown
dog tra1ned to hunt sqmrrel
304 882-2662

let Us Fence 'lou In

FOUND , female Doberman.
owner pleasa call 304 675
7710 must desert be

FREE ESTIMATES
RESIDENTIAL / COMMERCIAl

7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis ·

&amp; Vicinity
511/ tln

HOUSE FOR RENT
I 07 LOCUST ST.
POMEROY-985-3561

Yard Sale Inside S. outs1de
Thurs 16th Fn 16th e. Sat
17th l1ncoln P1ke JU•t off 141 at
Centenary 4th &amp; 6th tratler on
leh larg e assortment of ttems
and m1sc

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All Mahs

SYRACUSE, OHIO
•Ohto Souvmers
•Mus1c Boxes
•Candles
•Wooden G1fts
•Prctures

•Pouerv
•Cement Products
"'You Nnm f' It - u ..·, ..
Gol h!"'
REASONABLE PRICES- TIY U~

d

9tllmo

Computerized Heartng Aid Selection
~ Sw1m Molds - lnterpretmg Servtces

-~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ Licensed Clinical Aud1olog1st

~

3 bags of Chtldren's clothmg
Call 614 446 4942

LOST 2 black &amp; white WalktJ
coon hounds on Sr 233 Call
614 379 2506

JO'S
GIFT SHOP

M os t Fore1gn and
Domestic Vehtcles
A / C Serv1ce
All MaJOr 8t Mtnor
Repa1rs
NIASE Certtfted Mecharuc

TV to g1veaway Call 614 446
0927

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Re·Opu for Bulaeu

OHIO

4 orphaned k1ttens needs good
home Call 614 446 7152 or
446 2368

Late model truck 4 wheal drNe
low m1leage Cell 614 446·
3860

Emplnymenl
Serv1~cs

11

Help Wanted

6

9 24- 1 mo

4 5 11c

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

l 1ttle BenJt type puppy Black &amp;
whtte Call 614 388 8510

Junk Auto·a wrth or wnhout
motors Call 6t4 388 9303

EXCELLENT WAGES for spare
ttme assambly work electron
tcs crafts Others Info (504)
641 0091 Ext 2987 Open 7
days CALL NOW I

614-742-2355

10 9 tin

10 8 lf c'

work Call614 256 1436

Maka40 percent Call614 446·

'
WE SELL USED APPLIANCES

985-3350

Sears Kenmore washer Needs

We buy stand1ng t1l"ber Call
614 379 2758

6 pretty k1nen•, part Maltese,
wanl! new home 304 676
6720

•Washers •Dtshwashers
•Ranges •Refngerators
•Dryers •Freezers

100 lb.

WANTED TO BUY U.ed wood
&amp; coal heaters Swa1n a Furnl
ture lrd &amp; Ohve St Galhpohs
Call 614 446 3159

RUTLAND

9- 18- 1 010

NEWELL'S SUNOCO

TOP CASH pa1d fol 83 model
Smith
Butck Ponttac 1911 Eastern
Ave Galhpohs Call 614 446
2282

and newer used cars

Cute ktttens weaned need good
home 304 675 6204

FENCE COMPANY

BLACK

Call 614

Full s1ze canopy bed
repair 304 675 6937

We pay caah for late model clean
used cars
J1m M1nk Chev Oldt Inc
8111 Gene Johnson
614 446-3672

At 124 Auou from
Hoppy Hollow Rd.

10 9 87-1 mo

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

Housebroken

266 6739

Full blooded black Labradore
Ret•1ever 10 months old 304
882 3176

I 2 Gouge Shotguns Only

NOW HULLING

Small black male Terrier type

dog

Wanted To auy

Wanted to buy long wood Cell
anytime- C &amp; R Fnewood Call
614 367 0689

HILLSIDE
MUZILELOADING
GUN SHOP

No Sunday Calls

CLIFTON, W. VA.
BEER &amp; WINE
Happy Hour
6-8 pm-Drinks SO&lt;
VCR TAPE RENTAL
W.VA. LOTIERY
CARRY-OUT

Giveaway

Gentle male dog needs a good
home desperately 304 675
5416 after 4 p m

Fa&lt;tory Choke

RAILROAD
JUNCTION

Riverine Antiques

30 4 675 6B33

367-0322
9 23 1 mo

6:30 P.M.

l 3 86 tic

WILLA S BIBLE BOOKSTORE
Oct 16 and 17 9 30 ttll5 00
416 Mam St (formerly Tlft1ns)
Pomt Pl eannt W Va

700pm

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
3 II tin

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

CHESHIRE

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

New Homes Built
·'Free E.:;timates' '

New Hollond, Bush Hog

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

GUN SHOOT

*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

SALES &amp; SERVICE

GRANO OPENING

•KITCHENS

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
&amp; REPAIR

YOUNG'S

No hunting or treupassmg
P1cken s farm Flatrock all vtola
tors will be ptosecuted

4

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS

GENERAL

NO SUNDAY CALLS

992-35379 18 87

Ca11!304)428 4739 weekdays

8 00 5 00

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

A1ck Peauon Auct ioneer h
censed tn Oh1o and West Vngtma Estate anttque, t ...m. llq1.11·
datton sales 304-773-6786

9

HUNTERS

Hunting rtghls to propentes m
Washington Galli a and Me1gs
Cuunt1es available for lea1e

CHE5TEI, OHIO

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

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

10-8 1 ma

3 Announcements

42287Hn

550 PAGE STREET

Farm

ROOFING

949-2263
or 949-2168

GEARY
BODY SHOP

AuthornecJ John

Announcements

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleamng
Pamtmg
FREE ESTIMATES

S700 00

Pomeroy,

Howard l. Writesel

NEW- REPAIR

S1x tnch ,meters-

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

168 North Se&lt;ond
Mtddleporl , Oh10 4S76D

8

Four tn c h meters-

Deoler

New lo&lt;ot1on

21at Street , 9 00 ttll 1 A ltnle
furntture and k)t• of everything,

&amp;600 00

On10ns, Green

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Yard Sale Thurun.dFnd.,. 805

$400 00

Peppers, Sausage.
Ground Beef

NO SUBSTIIUTIONS

Pt Pleasiinf· ..
&amp; Vicinity

$225 00

Through one -half mch
meters - S5 40 per month
Through ftve e1ghths mch
meters _... $5 40 per month
Through three-fourths mch
meters - $9 40 per month
Through one mch m eters
- $18 .70 per month
Through on e and one half
mch meters - $31 20 per
month
Through two mch meters
- $56 00 per month
Through f our mch meters
- $108 80 per month
Through s1x 1n ch meters -

rendered monthly on the
f1rst day of each month or as
soon therea fter as 1s reason
ably posst ble for th e serv 1ce
rendered dunng the precedtng month Btlls thu s ren ·
defed are payabl&amp; on or be·
fore the exptrat1on of ten
(1 0) days from the date
rendered
Payments after
the exptret10n of ten (1 0)
days are subJect to a penalty
of ten per cent (1 0 %) of t he
amount of the btU but m no
mstan ce shall sa1d penalty
be less than fifty four ce nts
($ 541
SEC Ill Each user o f v1 l
iage water servtce who does
not own real estate shall

11

Business· Services

Laundromat ~ $226 00
Th1s sum shall be held by
the Vtllage wtthout 1nterest
to the depos1tor Upon the
tlfmmatton of water serv1ce
such ~moun t df the depos1t
as Is necessary shall· be ap
pli&amp;$i to th e water bill and the
bplance returned to the user
SEC IV There shall be
charges for an 1nstallat1on of
a n ew tap as follows
Throe-fourths tnch met&amp;rlOne mch meters _.

$202 20 per month
SEC It All b1lls for tho
above servtce shall
be

The Daily

$70 00

MINIMUM CHARGE FOR
METERED SERVICE

1 8 tlo

CLASSICS
THAT WORl£!

•

Ohio

7

OFFERS
REAL ESTATE CLASSES
Estate
Estate
Estate
Estate

t1e1 service for the V1tlage of
Mtddlapon, Ma1gs County.
Ohio, its mhabrtants and
other ueers
Be 11 ordamed by the
Council of the Vtllage of
Middleport as follows

.~

Southeastern Business Colleae
1) Real
2) Real
3) Real
4) Real

Sannary Sewage System
and Sewage D•tposal Fac•h·

: 1.001 to 10,000 gallons

ATTENTION!!!

529 JACKSON PIKE

I

ADULTS $3 50 - CHILDREN $2 50
sATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY ~T!NEES
All SEATS $2.50
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY $2 00

Three pick

Publtc Notice

ORDINANCE NO 1187 87 mrntmum charges not malll

western Montana wtth htghs tn the foothills south a nd west of
Denver Wednesday had melted
the 50s ovet nortfiern Mame
by
early today as hadthe21nc hes
upper Mtchtga n, the upper Mts
just
north of Custer, S D. In the
stsstppi Valley I he northern half
of the Platps, the northern _ Crazy Horse area of the state, the
Rockies and much ofWas htngton 3 mches at Cent ennia l, Wyo , a nd
the inch at Casper, Wyo
state, the NWS satd
Scattered showers were exWarmer temperat ures were
pected for upper J\ilchlgan Wi sforecast for central New E ng
land, North Carolina • the Grea t consin, the UPf""' Mississippi,
Lakes a nd Ohto Valley reg10n, Valley, the easterr! portion of the
Dakotas and th e central Plains
western Kansas the Texas Pan
handle and much of the central wtth snow flurries scattered over
P acific coast wtth highs In the wes l ern Montana
More than 50 record lows were
60
IIATIORAL; WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 10.16-87 ~tgh temperatures m the 80s set from the Plains on east since
were expected across sou thern the weekend At leas t 15 clues
Florida and much of Texas a nd across Michiga n, Indiana. Ohio,
the mla nd Southern Caltforma, Pentisylvanta, Kentucky, Louisia na, West VIrginia. Alabama .the NWS sa td
The 3 mches of snow that fell in New Hampshire, Mlsslsstppi and
Texas reported record lows
Tuesday
•

By United Press International
A Canadian cold front that
drove temperatures to record
lows from the Plains to the East
this week has broke n apart, and
warmer weather was forecast
throughout much of the nation
today and Friday.
" The hig h pressure is weakentng and with all of the sunshine
the states have been getting over
the past few days , temperatures
have been getting warmer,"
National Weather Servlcemeteo

Meigs County Emergency Medtcal shvlces repOJIS SIX rail•
Wednesday, Pomeroy at 8 53 a m to Scout Ca mp Road for
Nellie Perry to Veterans Memonal Hospital. Pomero; at 9 01
a m to the Maples Apls for Et101la Cassell to Veterans
Memorial Hospit a l. Middleport at 10 39 a m to North Second
Ave for Brenda tlaggy to Dr Ptckens' office, Rutland at 3 10
P m to Happy-Hollow Road for Mary Rtchman to Vetera ns
Memonal Hospital, later to O' Bleness Memonal Hospttal wtth
Infant, Olive Towns hip Ftre Department at 7 48 p m to a
structure fire on Route 248 at Long Bottom. Tuppet s Plains at
ll:,l1 p.m to Swan Road for Ruth Stet he m to St Josephs
Hospaal.
~

Public Nottce

.

~

•

Thursday, October 15, 1987

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Oh1o 45631
8 13 ffn

Church Benef1t Garage Sale
Debb1e Dr1ve 16th17th,
9 00 5 00 lnstde Good selection &amp; reasonable pnces
2 mt outlmeol n Pike Frt 10 6
Sweeper bar stools b1cycle
tricycle clothes Infant to adull
lot. ol m1sc
4 Fam1ly Oct 16- 18 9 6 6
mtles north of Hol;~er Hosp1tal
near Porter Cl'uldren 8o adult
clothmg, tools, d1•hes

Four Fam1ly Thur , Frt 23 Pme
St Large womens &amp; men
clothmg Mens &amp; guls Jeans
Funk &amp; Wagnel set Encyclopedias SJOO set askmg $50
Chlldr ens clothmg &amp; mts c
1tems
Yard Sale 28 &amp; 30 Chillicothe
Rd Ctuldren &amp; adult cloth mg
Quilts crafl! books 9 00 6 00
Fn &amp; Sat

Avon Sell Avon for Chr11tm11
3368

WANTED Energet1e, people orIented team member / dantalas
SIStant ro JOin our pract1ce part

11me You II want t d have Ill the
necessary quahttes of a top
notch dental aas1stent (expe
rlence helpful but not neces
sery) W1lhng (oworkhard7 Send
us your resume and salary
htstory to Box Cia 108 Galhpolls DillY Trtburte 8215 3rd Ave
Gallipolis Ohio 46631

I' __:________
Styhst needed with managan
hcense Cell 6'1:4-446 3?03 or
446 8621

Earn extra monev for Chr11tmu
Sell at work to fnends or a
terrnory Avon Call 614 446
2156
Raltable babysitter In my home
one ktndergarten age cl'uld Ref
required Call 614 446 4834
after 6 00 PM
GET PAID for read1ng booksl
$100 00 per t1tle Wnte ACE
33C 161 S Uo colnway N
Aurora, II 60&amp;42

We need a constructton fore
man Needs to be expenenced in
commercial !!. tnduatnal heating
&amp; a1r ln•ulatton &amp; ptplng We
offer good pay vacation hohdey
pay, umform allowance &amp; lnau
ranee allowance Will move the
nght man Wnte 10 Rhod81
Heating &amp; Air Cond1t10nlng
lncorp P 0 Bok 648 Manon
Ohio 43302
WANTED PROGRAM DEVEL
OPMENT SPECIALIST tor Par
ttal Hosp1tahratton Program at
Woodland Centen M ..t8fs De
gree and expenencce With 18
verely mentally dtaablad adults
preferred Coursework or expanence m group process would be
helpful For more informatton
contact Sandra McFarland Per
sonnel Department Woodland
Centers Inc 4 t 2 Vtnton P1ke
Galhpol1s Oh10 An equal oppor
tumty employer Woodland Can
ters does not dtl!iCrtmlnate on the
bas1s of age, co lor creed
nat tonal ongtn race sax or type
of d1sablltty
Someone to hve m &amp; care tor
elderly lady Not bad fast light
housework non smoker L1vea
m Galhpoh1 Call 614 448
2386 or 446 0322 or 446
3617
Deh11ery 8a Prep Person Must
have own car 8o 1nsurance •
Above average startmg wage
Apply m person Donelll s
Spnng Valley Plaza

Fndav 16th 644 3rd Av e
made hv 1ng room sun
hke new Electrolux sweeper

Go\lernment Job a $16,040
859,230 yr Now htrtng Call
806 687 6000 Ext R 9805 for
currenl federal hst

· Pomeroy
Middleport
8t Vicinity

Ekcellent wagas for spare ume
assembly work electronics,
crafts others Info 16041 64,
0091 EXT 3026 open 7 day s

C~s tom

Fnday Oct 16 Jean Stout
restdence Seventh St Svra
cuse 9 00 6 00
Lee and A1tch1e c ~~rport sale
Set Oct 17 9 00 1 Ritchte
restdence, Tyree Blvd Rac1ne
Garage Sale Ratn or sh1ne Oct
16th, 9 00 2 00 JoAnn Cnsp
rutdence, Apple Grove Oorcas
Road Ra cme 11 mile past
Southern High School)

Htr lng i Govern ment lObs your
area S15 000 · .S68,000 C•ll
!6021838 8886 EXT 1449
RN LPN or E:MT to pertofm
msurance exemtnatlons tn M1d
dleport Pomeroy •nd New
Haven are&amp;s Send res1.1me to
PMI P 0 Box 2267 Hunting
ton W Va 26723

Get pa1d tor readi ng booktt
$100 per title Wr1te ACE 31-C..
161 S Lmcolnway N Au,arl ll
60~42

�.-'
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel
11

LAFF·A·DAY

Help Wanted

44

Someone to ..u jewetry and a

Apartment
for Rent

2 bedroom •partm4K1t In Syre·
cuse •160. per month plus
utilltiQ Depotlt. Call 814-992-

&amp;1•· 992· 3703 Dr

114·992·3751 .

5587 o• 614· 992-5732.

AVON • All .,.... CeiJ Marltvn

w..ver 304- 882 -2646.

In Middleport Third Hoor. 5
room and bath, c:loaed-in b•ck
porch . Dapo11t and reference
required. C•lll14-992-8028.

AVON . aU areas, cell Shtrley

Spe. .. 304-176-1429
Radiologic Technologltl
lmmedltta opening f01 regiat_...d radiologic technologiat
Ewnlng thift;-~ ;.30· 1 1 .00 pm
Monday• thru FridiY. Send
reaumttoPie... ntVelleyHotpt-

992-8304 o• 614·445·8898.

tal, O•rector of Pet$0nnel, Valley

llo. 614-446·8221 .

One bedroom furnished •part·
mant in Middleport. Call 814·
APARTMENTS. mobile homes.
houses. Pt PlehantandGallipo·

Drive, Point Ple... nt. W. Vt
21150 . 304-676-4340 ut

2 bedroom furn1aed apt, ref and
depoait, New Hat.~en , W . Va ,
304· 882-3267 or 304· 773·

307 AA·EOE .

5024.

"HIRING"!!
Governnwnt joba • your area

•15.000 · 068 ,000. Coli
{6021838-8885 ... 1203.

A_pt. tn Middleport. 2 br fur·
n1shed apt also two room
efficiency apt. 304 ~ 882-2586

....

Htlting &amp; Air CondtttOning
Service Man wtth 6 y.. rt
tlCpet'ience. Appty Orman Hall
Inc ., 1317 Ohio St .. Pt .
Pltaunt

Mt . Vernon Ave. Ground floor
apt . 3 rooms &amp; bath, 11ove a. ref
'"'""hod.
p.; .... •nl••nc• &amp;
perking, large
porCh. exc cond &amp;

"Jt!s for you, Mary Lou!"
~~=ii;~i;=ii~~~~~r.~~~:=:=:=;=::;;::=~

OeiiYtry
person
needed ,AWl
appty
in 1
petton, 3004
Jack1on
, Pt.

Pit

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
AN Superviaor

One full time nur11ing tupervisor
poaition available, 11 :OOto 7 .00
shift. wrth bur high med1care
CIRSUI we need an AN sup....- I·
IKif with experience in skilled
long term care and rehabilitton
nursing. Contlct Hillview Nurtlng and Rehabilitet1on center.
1?20 17th St, Huntington,

W Vo. 304·529-6031

Wlnted : live in Nanny houukeeper to reloc.te to Charleston. nice home. 2 beautiful
children. ag• II\ and 1 Must be"
over 21 . laYing and retponsible,
non amokw. have driver license
GOOd salary Reply: Dr. and Mrs.
Btteah, 1968 Parkwood Road,
Charl•ton, W. Va. 25314

12

Situations
Wanted

Have room in private home for
llldlr person. Good cere ReeiO·
n•ble. Calll14-256-8609 .
tteve opening in my home for
eldtrty. Reuonable rates. Call
TLC, 614-992-7044 or 614-

992·6817
18 Wanted to Do

Septic tank pumping, residential
1!1: commerical. t80 per load.
Ron EvansEnterpr11et Jackaon.

Ohio Coil 614·286·6930

If vou need an experienced
babysitter call61 4-446-7681 o(
446·9422 Can giVe good refer
Can do light hauling and roofing
Reasonable rete&amp;. Mar1on
Snider 614-949-2829.

2 br new wall~ to · wall carpet, air
cond Parked in Johnaon 'a Mo·
bile Home Plrk. Will 1ell on land
contract . Cltl814-446-41 10 or
446-1409 .
1 970 R1tzcraft 1 2x10 3 br,
trltler. 16600. Call 614 -25&amp;-

1613
1Ox36 Mobile home Gas heat
Good cond t3200. Call 614·

446· 8690.
1973 mod-' Camoron 1 2X&amp;O
C1ntral air, fu-" oil furnace &amp;
wood burnet'. Partly furni1hed.
Good cond t6,000. Call 614245-5240 or 246-9219
1977 Fe1tival 14~t70 All elec ,
central air, 2 br., 2 baths.
Ptrttcally furn11hed . Menr extras Appointment only Call
after 7 .30 weekdays 61 4 - 266·

6708

1984, 2 bedroom trailer 14x60.
large ltving room , large kitchen,
large lot and new garage

614· 742-2770 .

41

Houses for Rent

Nicely fumiahed amall houae.
Adulta only. References reQuired . OH street parking Ph.

614·446·033e.

3 bedroom, partialty furnished.
In Pomeroy., close ln. Available
Oct. 17 . Must ba employed.
Oepoa1t requtred Sand applica·
t1on to The Daily Sentinel, p 0
Box 729 V, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Shown bv appomtment. 3 bed room. 2 bath home 607 4th St .•
New Haven, W Va $260 a
month plua $100 deposit. Call

1317
1 2x65 Mobile home, good condition, good price 304- 675-

5545.
'
4
Holly Park 14x70, central au.
porch. shed . underpennmg
88,000. or best offer 304-6766417 after 4 p.m
1 9084 Nuha mobile home
furnished, 1 acre ground with 2
drilled wells, city Water &amp; large
septic tank. 304· 882· 2684.

7 room house in Middleport
Option to buy Call 614-992-

2353 o• 614-992-7521 .

3616

8abr tlner close to school. has
room for another child. any
hours, 304·676-2784.
I will baby tit In my home, 5 days

o woelc. ll"one 304-675·6022.

Financial
Business
Opportunity

21

I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO recommends that you
do bu11neas with people you
Jmow , and NOT to sand money
through the ma1l until you have
mve1tigated the offenng

Real Estate
Homes for Sale

31

Wtll hmp finance or land con·
tract. 10 yr old house 3 Br.,
P1tr10t Vtllaga Call 614-446-

1340. 446-3870.

4 SR .. ftreplace. full basement 3
mi. so. of Gallipoli1 . $34 ,900
Call Oays· 614- 446-161 5. after
6:00· 448-1244.
House at 60 Chillicothe Rd Very
Cheap. Call614-446 2404
1984 Triumph II 14x70 All
electric- Custom made Excel·
lent shape . 89000 Phone 614·
598-4429 .
~
3 br house in Crown C•ty, 1Yia1n
St. .25,000. Call 61 4 -4461511 or446-1522
1 or 2 houses. Mam St Crown
City: 2 br rental house, S8,600
3 br. qlce. 126,000 Call 614·
• 446 ·1511 or 446 1522.
Handi M•n Spec tal· 6 room and
blth. attic, basement. 1 1 0 State
St. Pnce negotiable Call 614-

992· 3725.
Middleport Lovely tntertor ,
clo" to stores and school. Pnce
reduced 614·992· 5709 1fter
BOOp m
Government homet from 11 [U
repair) Foreclosures, Repos. Tax
Delinquent Propenies. Now selling your area. Call 1 315-7367376 Ext 3P-OH · H for current
1111. 24 hr•
2 bedroom home in Pomeroy 2
baths. 11ndscaped pool. sattli1e.
cloaa to schools Call 614-992 -

. 3254
8 room•. sun porch and car port,
2 out build1ngs 2 lg loti.

614· 742 ·2770.
&amp; room houte in Rutland close to

Post Ofttce and stores t7000.
Phone 614-742· 2460, except
Sundi!IYI·

S•••

For
Lind Contract. 3 br
houn, 2 -story with basement
N10. v, ecre lot 2 -car garage.
n1ce v1ew In New Haven. Terms
1300. down ; *300 month. Call
304-882· 2339 after 6 p. m
For sale or rent. 3 bedroomt. 2
full baths, built-In kitchen, eental
air, barn, pond. 8 1h acret. 3
mtlel from town , Rt 2 North
Will consider lend contract,
:104· 876· 2886. Butch and Pat
CJrMnlee

71 acres· House, barn, outbulld
tngs located In Glenwood aree.
Includes all mineral nghts. Posit·
ble owner financing. Call for an
appOintment : Dave O'Neal Real
Estate Broker 304-676-1580.
Jim Staats 304-676· 331 3. J o
Staats 304·676-6898
136 acres-approx. 20 acres of
bottom land. 2400 lb tobacco
bale large barn, 3 outbuildtngs
Mobile t-lome hook up Nice
house site. Located on Swann
Creek. Call614-266-1774

34

Commerctal butldtngs for lease.
Downtown Pt Pleasant Stores.
offices . A-One Real Estate
Carol Yeager, Broker. Call 304676-5104 .
749 Third Ave. Presently The
Gift Shop 1600sq . ft Cammer·
ctal or warehoute. Parking on
side AdJacent to Th1rd S. PmeSt
Call 61 4 · 446·2362 for
appointment

35 lots

&amp;

Acreage

Acreage. land contract or trailer
lot for rent on Rt 160 Cal!

3 bedroom in Middleport. Oep·
osit requirad Call 814-992·

2606 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 br • 2 very good mobtle homes
for rent . Dep. and ref . required.
Call 614-446-0627 after 2 :00

PM .
12x60 Mobile home ~ mile
from c1ty limits. No pets. Adults
preferred. Call 614 446·1 158
1 2x60 unfurnished wtth washer

&amp; dryer hookup 1/2 mi past
HMO. Ref &amp; Dep required . Call

61 Household Goods

1981 Chevy

5588

Two bed room mobile home
Middleport. OhiO Reteron t aa
and depos1t requtred. 304· 882·
3267 or 394· 773-6024

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 snd 2 bedroom apartments for
rent
Basic rent 1or •1 bdr ,
S18l00, 2bdr.,S21900 Al10
reQuired a $200 00 secunty
deposit CONTACT Jackson
Estates Dept Ph 446-3997
Equal Housing Opportunity.

Furntshed Eff1c1ency 1145. Utilities peld, share bath 607
Second Ave , Gallipolis Ph
446-4416 after 7PM .

614-388-9354
94 acres tn Me1gs County, OhioGnmm Rd off county rd. 35
Portland matl route Mtneralil
with free gas 6 mtlet from
Ritchie bridge Hunters paradisa. 8400 per acre. Call 614843· 5186

2-BR apts. 6 closets. kltchen appl furnished. Washer-Dryer
ho!lk·up, ww carpet. newly
pamted. deck
Regency . Inc.
Apts Cal! 304-675· 7738 or

675-6104

Furnished apt next to library
One professional adult only.
Parking Call614 · 446~ 0338 .

Two lots, 2 acres or more, phone

2' br apartment. Adults only.
lnqutre, Sheppard's. Fttst &amp;:
Olive St. Gallipolis, Oh1o.

Rentals

Furmshed apt . 2 br. 1 136 2nd
Ave GallipoliS I ,.96 Wate~
paid. Call 614-446-4416 after

304·676 -4208 .

41

Homes for Rent

4 BR house' for rent . 3 mi . ao of
Gall1pohs. 1300 a month plus
dep Ref requtred Call 614·
446· 1616 After6·00PM , call

446-1244

7.00 PM

Newly-redecorated apartments
.for rent One-bedroom unfur·
nished , second floor' From
$175, to $225 . per month . Call
evemngs . 614-446 -4425 or
446 ·2325

4 BR . hou 1e on 1 acre. Ex.eel
location Ref Call A-1 Real
Estate Broker Call 304-675·
6104 Of 676· 7738
Unfurntshed house, 3 br Rodney Vtl!age II 1260 Call 614·
446-4416 after 7 00 PM
2 Br. homeforrent. Kyger Creek
Sch. D11t. Sec. dep. required.
&amp;260 e mo Cell61 4 =-4 46-0648
For rent: very mce 2 br house tn
Middleport. Full basement. dishwasher, garbage diSposal. alf
cond. Excellent location No
pets. t260 a mo Call614-446-

9205 ofte• 5:30 PM
3 BR hs 'lOCAted at 661 Fourth
Ave Stove &amp; re1rtg furnlshed
8186 mo. t76 dep . Call 814·
446-3870 or 614· 446- 1340.
' br house In downtown Galli·

polis. 1300 permo Call 614·

446·0844 o• 446· 760.2.

Navy sofa bed. Uke new. $300.
Call 614-446·7892 after 6
G .E. port1ble {apartment •i;re)
w11har &amp; drylt'. 1 1 26. Humidifier. 126 Electron1c air cleaner.
125 Call 614-266·1720
Wooden table with 4 chairs, 2
end llbles, WICker sJand with
glau shelves. Call 614-4481168

Tra1ler pads With tie downs.
large gardenS. yard on At. 180.
S100amo Call614-388 · 9364
Ground floor level- Approx 1550
sq. h. Commercial space. Located at 417 2nd Ave Call
614·446·3432
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers Call 614-992·
7479
Space tof small trailera All
h'ook-ups. Cable. Also efficiency
rooms, atr and cable Mason,
W Va Call304-773-5651
Saddlebrook Inn has a two room
off1ce space available. no City
8&amp;0 tax to pay. an industrtal
growth area. 304· 675-8276

6750

Couch for qfe. 850 00 304-

Plastic c;:istem s,.te approved,
pla1~1c nptlc tanks.
plastic
cul\lertl. metal culverta . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jack·
son. Oh. 814-286-6930
Quality firewood. ell hardwood.
tor sale. $26 a p1ck-up load. Call

614·367·0669

214 length mink coat Worn about
6 times Call aher 6 00 PM

614-245-5046

49

For Lease

Hu!'ters Huntmg rightlto properties m Washington. Gallta &amp;
Me1gs counties available for
lease Cell 304 -428 -4739
weekdays, 8 · 5

MerchancJi se
51 Household Goods

60,000 BTU c1rculatir'lg heater
With 3 apd. fan Used onew.nter
Call after 4 00 614-446-1164.
Early American couch llr. chatr
&amp;150. Call614-446-0123.
140,000 BTU Lennox low-boy
forced air furnace. $160. Call

614-446-7627.

G E. Refrigerator. s1de by stde
SWAIN
AUCTION S. FURNITURE 62
Oltve St . Galhpol••
NEW- 6 pc wood group - t399
Living room suite•- $199-1699
Bunk beds wtth beddtng- 8199
Full SIZe mattreu S. foundatton
star.t lng · , S99 Recltnera
ttarttng· $99.
USED - Beds. dressers , bedroom
suites. $199 - $299 Desks
wrlnger washer a complete lin~
of used furmture
NEW· Western boots- 130
Workboots t18 &amp; up . (Steel &amp;
soh toe) Call614-446-3159
County Appliance, Inc . Good
used apphances and TV sets.
Open SAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614·446-1699, 627 3rd
Ave G..,ipolis, OH

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers. refrigerators,
ranges _Skeggs Appliances.
Upper R1ver Rd beside Stone
Crest Motel 614-446-?398
lAYNE 'S FURNITURE

S275 Call614-446-7513
Catalylic converters. only
$89.96 . Most models lnstalla·
bon also available. Muffler Men
9 Stimpson Ave , Athens, Ohio:

1·800·843-3767.

Mixed herd wood slabs · 812 per
bundle Contatntng appro11. 1V2
ton FOB. Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. 614-992-6461 .
-Jclennox , 10. 000 BTU natural
gas forced a1r furnace. Good
condition $125 614-992 -

•roc:

rI~==========::;;::==========~
54 Misc. Merchandise

63

Complete kitChen cabinetl includes range, sink &amp; microwave.
Sold •• 11. 304-773-6706 after
6 p,m .

Coli 614-388-8476 .

Sl~ding

8 ft pat1o door. ladies
w1nter clothes Site 8· 7-Bisome
new) 304-675-6676

675-8937.

Hot Potnt Self- Defrosting Re·
frtgerator, S100. 5 piece breakfast set, $35. Truck rool box

040. 614·992-7641 .

.

12 h lake johnboat, 7 V2 HP
Sears Motor, 3 HP Sears Motor,
oars, tool box for'Dack of '81
Datsun, campar top for '77
Oodga. Call6,4-843-5175
Con sew upholstaty machtne for
.ale Head only Call 614-949-

2202.

Building Matenals
Block. bnck, sewer pipes, windows. lintels, etc Claude Wintefl, Rio Grande, 0 Call 614-

56

.

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pat
Groomtng . All breeds . All
styles. Julie Webb Ph. 61 4· 4460231 .

0322.
Bedroom suite, livmg room
suite, dinette set. 304 - 676~

13Q6

pm

large round bales of hay . Call
61 4·256· 601,

Coll614· 246·5117.
Slraw for Sale- 11 .60 per bale

15,000 plus 2 140001 buahel
grain bins for rent, Morgan'•
Woodlawn Farm. 304-676·
12B6

Transportation

1984 Dodge Colt . Nice ecqnomy car No rust Stereo call
player. $2600. Call 614-286-

03695 . Call614·286·6&amp;22.

1985V:' Ford . Escort hatchbacM
Am·tm. 4 spd Very good cond
1981 Turbo Trans-"A'rri . New
t11es Sharp Call 614-379-

Beagle pups for sale, call after

57

Musical
Instruments

L1ke new Peavey T-15 elect'rtc
guitar and contour case

$200.00
2548 .
58

Phone 304 -882 ·

2820
19?7 Ford Thunderbird . Excel
cond. Call614-246-9667.

Ounrovm Ftutt Farm · Apples 86 - tO per bushel. cider,
$Orghum, apple butter Numer·
ous food items . 9· 6 weekdays.
9 -15 weekends . Sr. 681 SE of
Albany 614-698-6298
Oua!lty Fruits and Vegetables
retail and wholesale 8 &amp; S
Produce across from Pizza Hut
Galtipohs. Ohto
'
304-676· 4182

Big apples all vtrieties Allire11h
fruita and produce. Open 9 00
6:00 daily. Jack• Market. Route
36. Hendarson.,.W Va

'81 Oataun 610 Wagon. 4 sp
Good machan1cal condition Call
after 5 .00 p m., 614· 992-6041

--·
'

Services

WA.5N'i DRIVIN",

1978 Ford Thundprb~rd , new
front t1res &amp; brakes . No rust
304· 676·3639 after 4 p m .
1978 Chryaler LeBaron, creame
color. all leather 1ntertor. like
new tifes Very clean car
Loaded B1 BOO Cell 304·676·
1906 after 4 p m
78 LTd 4 dr . auto, air, naw
exhaust, exc rubber 304-676·
2646 after 4 p m 2905 Birch
Ave.
1976 Chrysler Cordoba. PS , PB.
good cond, ,304· 676- 7604.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

'" '
_,,

1981 Olds Oe_lta 88 Brougham,
one owner. w11l sell or trade for
pickup, equal value. 304-773·
6631

·

Must sell garage kept 1986
Dodge Daytona . turbo, 6 apeed,
37,000 miles , still under war·
ranty. price negotiable, 304·

2985

'

2464.

..

82

.,

.

'

rn

Dentse must wsar ptg nose

EEK &amp; MF.F.K
HE (HAt-GW Itt'S
IVN.AE TO 'FOPULAR

DEMAND: ..

.'

'..

.
.•..., -

AIJD HIRID HIM5Elf
CVf 10 ADVERTI'Siffi
AGUJ(lES

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I HATE 'lOU EiERMS BECAUSE
YOU'RE i.JNCL61&gt;N AND DIRTY'!

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

YOU'RE FIL1HY!
YOU'RE &amp;RIMY
ANDE&lt;AMY!

CAN I HEL..P IT
IF 5CMEI30DYS
ALIII?'\'15 IN 'THE
A SHOWE:R~

446-4477

IHEM DADBURN
REIJENOOERS

.'

CHOPPED UP

' '

MY

·· POURED ALL MY
CORN-5QUEEZIN'5

attempts to reform campaigh

financtn_g. C
Knots Landing
Abby's contess10n to Polar's
murder ratses dtsturbmg new
queslions 1:;1
•
(!] ®News
l!2l Evening News A wrap up
of today·s news and a look

(SNIF · SNIF) I

®J CD Q2l

STILL AN' · -

Genera I Hauling

J &amp;: J Wat8r Servn;:e Sw1mming
pools, cisterns, walls. Ph. 614-

72

R &amp; R Water Service. Home
cisters. wells. pools filled . Former1y Janies Boys Waters Call

Trucks for Sale

1982 ford F100. 6 cyl. , excel
cond . low mileage 84300. Call

304 675-6370. -

614-446-0644 o• 446· 7802

Paul Rupe. Jr Water Ser\llce ..
Pool1, cisterns, wells . Call614~

19741 ton Ford 12ft. flat dump
tor sale or trade Call 61 4 -388·

:::-:-:-------:----::-:--'
WaUerson's Water Hauling

9303

1977 Che~rolet pick up truok ,
exc cond , 82,000 .00 36 to 40
locust pasta, 825.00 for all.

304·675-1239.

446 ·3171

reasonable rates , immediat8 '

2.0,00 gallon dellverv . c~stern 1
pOQis. well, etc. call 304-676:

2919 .
87

ahead to tomorrow 's news

I

-· CliTE:... ONI.Y AKlP ·

WOUl-D !:AT TI-l~ ;nJNK.
JU7T 10 GET A\!i CEN~ru
7\$£TOI'\ ~'··

.'

4,30, Sat 9.30 10 1.30 Old
new Uphostered

s.

Mowrey 's Upholatering serving
tri county ara1122 years. The best
in furniture upholstering. Call
30_4 - 875 - 4164 tor free
esttmates

stones (1 :00)
til (!) !lenny Hill
10:05 (l) MOYIE: Doomsday Flight
(1 40)
10:30 ill Great American Outdoors
10:30)
I]) NHL Hockey
(!] TBA
fl) (!) Hogan's Heroes
11:00ill Remington Steele

0 CII Cil 0 (I] ®1 Ill l!2l
- (H) News
II) Sign 011
[lJ Upstairs, Downstairs
Hazel , Lady Prudence
d1sgree over ~draw1ng room.

.
.

. .
. •-I'
'•

Gregory returns.
l!2l Moneyline Current

reports on world economics
and fmanctal news With Lou

Upholstery

R &amp; M Custom Couches and
Reupholstery. St Rt 7 , lCt~ll ·
City. Oh 614· 256·141.Q. Ev•
614-448-3438 Open deitV•9 t~

9:30 0 ffi ll}) Night Court Struck
by flghlmng, Bull 1ns1sts God
spoke 10 h1m. (May be
preempted)
® Superbouts 1986: Hagler
vs Mugab1 from Las Vegas

tobacco lawsu1t. (May be
preempled)
IIl The Constitution: That
Delicate Balance ThiS
program looks at recent

-.-

Electrical
Refrigeration

Dillard Water Serv1ce: Pools
Cisterns, Wells. Delivery Any:
t1me. Call 614-446-7404- No
Sunday calls.

newsmakers and celebrities

can t filter his feelings 1n

' '

6 7 6 17

85

Wiseguy
King Live! In depth
1nterv1ews w1th top

l!2l Larry

10:00 ill Streight Talk
0 ffi f!3) L.A. Law Kuzak

I•

Residential or commercial wtr·
lng . New serv1ce or repairs.
Licensed electrician Est 1mate
free R1denour Electrtcal, 304

20th century and makes a
play lor Enc . 1:;1
9:00 ill 700 Club
0 CII lHJ Cheers Edd1e
f1nally asks Carla, who s
prt:tgnant w1th hts twtns , to
marry h1m .
I]) All American Pulling
Ser1es From Charlolte, NC
(T)
Cil 0 (I] MOYIE: 'The
SuNivors' ABC Thursday
Night Mov1e (A) (1 :43) 1:;1
(!) []) Mystery! Lord Peter
lmds the ev1dence to po1nt

iTJ

APPALACHIAN WOOQ STOVE

&amp;

Cmderella comes tnto the

(1 ·00)
@I CD

BATHFlCOM WHEN
I W.ANT TO TAI&lt;E

Cor. Four1h and Pine
Galltpolta, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or 614-

B4

on the day of a biQ date .
(May be preempted)
® 0 (I] The Charmlnga

the finir away from Hamet.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Wood, and coal sto\les, turnaces.
and ml8rts Brunco Ashley
Conaolidated Outch~est. Buv:
sell, trade 1 0 yrs . experience
At . 143. Carpenter. Oh1o 614·
698-6121

rn

depth feature reports. (1:00)
® MOVIE: Piranha II: The
Spawning (1 :35)
Ill (!) MOVIE: Without 1
Trace fPGI (2·00)
8:05 (l) MOVIE: Midway, Pan 2
(PG) (1 :06)
8:30 0
(H) A Dillerent Wo~d

Starks Tree and Lawn Service,
lawn aare. landscaping. stump
removal; 304-676-2,842 or ~
576-2903.
: .. .......
Carpet Installed, work guaran·
teed. free estimates. 304-&amp;761 020 or after 6:00 676-2288

Cheers
til C!J M'A'S'H
7:05 (l) Andy Grillith
7:30 0 Cil Hollywood Squares
I]) Speedweek (T)
(J) Newlywed Game
O(l] Judge
®1 Wheel ol Fortune 1:;1
l!2l Crossfire (0.30)
CD l!2l l!3l Jeopardy! 1:;1
® Barney Miller
til(!) WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 &lt;ll S.nlord and Son
8:00 ill Hell Town
0
l!3l The Colby Show
Cliff and h1s falher pay e v1s1t
to the Huxtables ' ne1ghbor.
® SpeedWo~d NHRA Drag
RaCing: Ch1ef Auto Nationals
from Dallas. TX (T)
(J) 0 (I] Sl{ldge Hammer!
Georgous w1dow has an auto
flxat1on and several dead
husbands. 1:;1
IIl []) Adamo Chronicles
Ab1gaillakes her daughter to
Europe to 'join John and
John Qumcy.
®1 CD f!2)l'our of Duty
Sergeant's pass1on for
comba1 puts all the men of B
Company in danger. 1:;1
l!2l Primenews Wrap ups of

the day s world news and 1n

Rotary or cable tool drilling~
Most wells completed same day ;
Pump aalea and serv1ce. 304J

246-9285

895-3001 o• 304· 676· 4138.

buying shell corn or ear
corn. Call forlatastquotes River
City Farm Supply 614-4 46 .

RON'S Telewiaton Service ,
Haute calls on RCA, Quaur,
GE . Spec1ahng 1n Zenith Call
304-676-2398 or 61-4-446-

676 -1311

81dw~ll Cash feed Store. Oct
197
Spec11l. On Sale now- 6 ft • 6 ft
8 Chevy Silverado '14 ton
&amp; _6V~ ft . steel post Galcho !;larb . 4x4. Call 614-985-4339 after
w~re Call for the aa,est prices _5-::'0=0~p:-.m:-'------'--614· 388·9688.
1984
Chevy truck S -10, V-6,
auto tran1 .. ec. ps. pb. am fm .
N~w Ideal one row corn picker.
good condition. 13, 260 304·
Fuck 3 block saw mill, power
676-3364 or 675 -4437
unct M M Needa rutored Call
614-38e -8478.
1978 Chevy JA ton, heavy duty,
good cond. 81 .960.00. 1973
Chrysler Newport, 4 door.
62 Wanted to Buy
busted fender . good motor, new
exhaust, 8260.00. Call 304~ow

"

.'
.,
,..

good. l =~;~·=:8;6;.~:;=;::;=:;;==

.

t6960. Call 614-286·6522

"'

•

".

614-992-58?0

675 -1139

l)ON'T Nt:ED 'Tb
)Ee '(ov~ PRIVE~!S"

LlCt:N.SE ....
~-;:::.J~~WtfAT You we~e Do•NG

Home
Improvements

WATERPROOFING
UnconditiOflll lifetime gullran·
tea Local references furnlahed.
Free ast1mate1. Call collect
1-614·237-0488. day or night
RogarsBa•eme,-.t

1981 Olda 98 Regency . Good
cond1t1on. PS,' PB. PS , aUto,
AM · FM radiO, atr, new tires. Call
1978 ~4fnaro Rally Sport. auto,
AC. t1lt. AM -FM stereo, a1r
shocks. 360 four berre!l. 304·

.:r:

II

6299.

81

J?~Wtlt-J

FRANK AND ERNEST

Insulated 8 ft truck topper, new ·
porta potty, camper size refriger·
ator, all for $300 00. 304-675-

895-3802

1
1976 Datsun
good
cond. 280Z.
$2,000run
.00 Call
304·458-1871 or 468· 1074

1978· 1070 Case tractor w 1th
ac, no till. 4 row corn planter

" Let's give this a try ... t~ey say It's
. a real morale booster."

-------------'-· ' '

Stainleas steal exhaust systems.
Now custom made tor your
truck. motor home or clasa1ccar
Wtth hfe· ttme warranty. Muffler'
Man, 9 Stimpson Ave . Athens,
Ohio. 1-'800· 843-3767.

'-

Pears pick your own, $6.00 par
buahet. Macel Gandee. Eddy
Chapel Road .

...

•

Fetty Tree T'rimming. 11ump
removal Call 304-676·1331

992-5891

Maney Ferguson. New Holland,
Bu lh Hog Sales &amp; Service Over
40 used tractors to choo 1e from
&amp; c~mplete line of new S. used
equipment Largest selection m
S.E Ohio . ,

l~g

i

Strutl, 8119.95 pair, installed
Molt models Muffler Man, 9
Stimpson Ave. Athens, Ohio.
1-800·843-3767.

1980 Chev Citatton, V-6, auto,
ps, pb, ac, new tires. $1460 or
bast offer. See - 1710Chatham,
Galhpohs

Wrecked 1976 Dodge Charger.
motor rebuilt. S600 Call 614·

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

614·286-6461

1 and 2 bed·
Gractous
room apartments It Village
Manor end Riverside Apart·
manu in Middleport From
1216. including utllltiM Call
614·992-7787. EOH .

Dobbs (0 30)
II) @ (H) Wheel ol Fonune

Wat~trproofing .

71 Auto's For Sale

2 yeer old Pekinese. Reasonable
pnce to good home Female. Call
614-992· 3088 days And 614·
986·4397 evenangs

6:00, 304-675·7187

;. and financ1al news w1th Lou

BASEMENT

667-6957.

SQUirtal dog S600.
Serious 1nqu~rles only Call after
7. 1·304-468·1618

Uol01iOr-l5!

I

Call 614-368·8267.

Call 614-388· 8178,

Excelien~

AR~ Til~ MIYoT U%lt~'i&gt;

Auto Repair

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

379-2662 .

AKC Bassett pups 8 wJJeks old.
Vet checked and shots, health
guaranteed $126. Call 614·

CROSS flo SONS
U S 36 W8st, Jackson Oh1o

Furnished apt 3 rooms &amp;: beth.
1 08 locust St Oep required.
See after 7 :00PM ,

&amp; Grain

T~AT J~lOU~ AiJDGUilT

\

Electrolux Salea and Servle. all
machines reduced: DJ- Sl48
•
now on sele 8499. New Diacd\1'
ery upr.ght 8429 now on sale
"
S349 8-9 Shampooer 8399
now on sale S299. Easy pay·
ment plan available Call 614388-9918
~ •' .

675-6173.

614 446 4782.

Ohio 1-81(0-843-3767.

77

p.m.

Hay

Oual exhaust kits, 199 96 trlatalled Most Fordl, Chevy
truckl, Vans, 4x4'1 Muffler
Man. 9 StlmPton Ave., Athens,

.----:---:~----.

1976 Dodge Charger SE Less
than 70,000 miles. Call 614·

AKC Beagles 10 week 1 old.
Males and females $50. eech.
C•ll 814-986-4143 after 6 :00

6:35 &lt;ll Carol Bumett
7:00 ill Remington Steele
0 ill PM Magazine
I]) SportoCenter (L)
(J) Entertainment Tonlgh1
0 (I] People'a Court
&lt;!l []) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
®1 News
l!2l ManeyHne Current
reports on world econom1cs

ARLO AND JANIS

"

Vinyl Siding, over hang and
gutters Call 614·446-6634.
Free Ett1mate .

Tempco 75.000 BTU LP floor
fumaca. thermostat &amp; vent, pipe
&amp; cap Exc Cond S 1 00 304·

1 br apt nur HMC Stove
refrig . drape• furnished S226 i
mo Oep .- Ref required . Call

Stallion for sale 4 year, black
Reg. Tenn Walker, 15.3 hands.
Into. 614· 992-6&amp;11 after 4 00

304-676·4230.
- - -- - - - - - l c-

1983 4 dr Celebrity Black with
red intertor Auto , pa. pb.
am ·fm , air,lugg1ge rack. Sharp.

Monroe cop1er Model Rt-61".2
under 16.000 copen 304-675:
4067
f

Ftrewood for sale. delivered
530.00 load. 304-895-3446.

1656.

Budget Tranamis11on1 Used and
rebuilt. all types. Guarantaa 30
days. Call 614-379-2220 of .. ,. ...

Peacocks for sale. Call614-44601 69 afteer 6 :00 PM

90 Oays same as cash with
approved credit 3 Miles out
Bulav1lle Rd Open 9am to &amp;pm
Mon thru Sat . Ph 614-446·

Seasoned oak firewood . Call
304-675-2767 aher 4 :40

letter~ of

the
be·
low to form four scmp le words

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

~trombled words

I

•

T&gt;IE ONE WHO WA5
RUI-IHIH6 AROUND TELLIH6
EV'ER~fl.OD'I' THE SK'I
WM FALLING?

TOOK &gt;!ER AWA'f', \.IUH ?
LOCKED HER UP, HUH ?

Dobbs. (0.30)
® Honeymoonera
fl) (!) Love Connection
11 :300ffi 1m tonight Show
Cil Cheers
0 (I] Nlghlllne 1:;1
~ Magnum, P.l.
[]) Dementia ol the
Alzheimer's Type
· f!2) Sports Tonight ACtiOn
packed sports hlghllgh1s w1th
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.
(0•30)
II) f!2) 'Night Heet' CBS Late
Night Eager 19male TV
reporter reports on the
actlvltlas of a mafia (amily

I

ROFOL

~-:--;r--::.1;.-:-Ir--:1~:--~1.

1

I•
}

I

D R E GE

~--r,:...::;.l...::.,:ls;:-:;,16,......
.

_

_

.

.

;;'

. -

r---'-'"-----,

I

My mailman stopped to use our
hose for a sip of water. While he
did so, he watered my flowers, He
says It's just another service from

RAY ELy
lour-postman.
~,.7-,1,:.:...:;.1...:.,,=-.:;lr.,,.:..rl-1 O Comp lelc lhe chuckl e

q uol ed
b y f1l hn g 1n 1he m1SS1ng wo rds
you de...,elop fr o m slep No J· below

L_.J.._.I.L-..1.--.I.L-..l..-.J

York. (0·30)
® WKRP in Cincinnati
fll C!J Too Close tor Comlort

6622

Wmter oniona. phone 304· 8822041

5583.

Rearrange
0 fou
r

•

the entertainment world 1s
anchored live from NeW

'

~

German Short hatr Pointers-Bird
dogs Call 304-676-2159 .

Electrolux Is hevlng a Fall Sale
Super d1scount Call 304· 768·
3213 for tur1her informatton

992-3408

~

SW~EPER and aewlng machin~
repen, parts. and auppllea. Pick
up and delivery, Devia Vacuum
Cleaner . .one helf mile up
Georgea Creek Rd . Call 614446-0294 .

Freezer Beef
Carl Kinnaird

10 m table saw one HP mcUor,
new cond1t1on 8100. Call 61 4·

Quarter Horse. 3yr. old Mara,16
hands. $360. Call 814- 266·

Oragonwynd Cattety Kannel.
C~A Himalayan, Perstan and
S1amMe kattens AKC Chow
puppiea. New kittens, Persians.
Call 614-11\46-3844 after 7PM.
PR -Reg . Plott Hound pups.
Ready to go Will make it 1n the
brush or on the bench. 81 00
e1ch Call 81 4·388-8478.

~

•

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

M1xed hay. 11 .25. Hay for
bedding 60c 304-676-6679

For sale, Dog house for large
dog Well made 61 4-992·

4024.

Guinea• for ule. Call 614-446·
4410

Mixed hay for sale - round bales

304·773· 6234.

..-..
....·~·......
'.

6 yr old· 68"8ey Mare. 1500

64

Ready mix concrete and all
concrete 1uppli11 Call us Valley
Brook Cement and Supplies

WHE'N I REALIZED oHE':Y
WEREN'T COMIN I:&gt; OUT, l
WEI&lt;JT 11&gt;1 . THAn; WHEI\J I
FO UND THE THIEVE~ HAD
\jEAT IT OUT 1 HE BACK
POOR!

I HAV"' oHI;; ~ITTl.E COMPUTER
IN M"/ Ci.\lt, IT A~ERTED ME THAT -' ''"·"'
THE' i!&gt;AI\JK TRAN~ACTION
WA~ !JEll\!(, lilA DE.

~

36 HP John1on Motor, aelf start
with gaa tank 1200 Aun•vood.
good condition Al1o 1 S ft.
flbtfglau boat with tral111r, 90
HP motor
ju1t
rebuilt with power
trim.
$860.
C.ll614·247-41
22.

76

Ou_a rter Hor• gelding Very well
tramed and gentle with children .
Call 614-949-2682 ahar 7:00

Soils And chairs pr1ced from
$395 to 8995. Tables $60 and
up to 9125 Hide-a -beds 1390
to 8595 Recl1ners 8226 to
$375 lamps 828 to 8126
D1nettes $109 and up to 8495
Wood table w · 6 cha1rs 8286 to
$796 Desk $100 up to 1376
Hutches $400 and up Bunk
beds complete w-mattresse 1
S295 and up to 8396 Baby beds
$1 10 Mattresses or box sprmgs
full or twin $68. firm 878, and
$B8. Queen sets 1225. Kmg
$350 4 dra\Yer chest 869. Gun
cabinets 6 gun Gas or electric
range $375 Baby mattresses
$36 S. $45. Bed frames S)O
$30 &amp; King frame S60 Good
selection of bedroom suites
f'(tetal cabinets. headboards 830
and up to 866

Whcte oak firewood for sale
S2S. per load Call 614-247-

Livestock

614· 742·2077.

5e61 .

6_14-992-5858.

I

'

Warm Morntng coal heater used
2 win1'!,rl Bed with bra1l head
bol!lrd, mattress &amp; box spnngs·
new Old ttme table with 4 01k
chairs . Call614· 256-6898.

7850

1

c •..,,ltj'HIA

2783 .

Callahan's Used Tire Shop . Over
1,000 ttres, aiz11 12. 13. 14. 1 S.
1 e. 16.&amp;. 8 milltl out Rt 21 B
Call 614-266·8261

Tara Townhouse apar1mentsFurnlahttd or unfurnished 2 br
1% baths Private entrance:
Enclosed patio. Call 614-367

Coil 814-992-6025 EHO

J.Afe..i
lMUliff

Concrete block a all sizes yard or
delivery Mason ~and Gatlipohs
Block Co., 123V2 Pine St ..
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 614-446-

.

2 bedroom apt. Nice setting.
conw1n1ent to ahopp•ng Ap·
pliances furn1shed, carpeted

75
Boats and
. Motors for Sale

Household • triple dresser with
mirror. headbol)rd &amp; bed frame
full or queen. $120 304- 676~

54 Misc. Merchandise

.CAPTAIN EASY

676·4139 o• 675-6690

24&amp;·5121

Nlca one bedroom apl!lnment.
Newly carpeted, upstalu. 402'h
28th St , Point Pleaaant . Call
3 Br with garage Opt1on to buy
City achoola. $260 1 mo Oep.
req..,ired. Call after 4 .00 PM
614-388-8624

1980 Sliver Honda Civic. 2 door
hatchback. good oond, 304-

676· 2194

4849

WOlD
GAMI

br CIAY R.

6:00 ill Crazy Like a Fox
0 ill (J) ' Iii (I] 1m II) \12)
lHJ News
(!) SportsLook (T)
(!)Dr, Who
[]) Square One TV 1:;1
® Facto ol Llle
til C!J One Day at a Time - 8:05(}) Allee
8:30 0 Cii l!3l NBC Nightly News
® Winner's Circle (T)
Cil 0 (I] ABC New8 1:;1
(!) Nightly Bualneas Report
®1 llll!2l CBS News
[]) Aockachool
l!2l ShowBiz Today News of

4038.

55 Building Supplies

New 16 lb Hot Point Washer
and elec dryer with wnt kit and
pig tail fo!&amp;'S860 00 . 304-676-

r::~;~~' S©~~~-"f,tfSs
ldltod
POLLAN

EVENING

1980 Honda C8900 CUllOm
with windshield. great 1hape.
t 1.1 00. Negotiable. 304-676-

46 Space for Rent

..... 304·8$2-2996.

weu.,UH ,

2496.

8476.

Writing de1k &amp; chair Lots of
household Items. Call614-446·
4914

1-WH '?...

-lc

1986 RX200R Honda trail bike,
1800.00, good cond , 304-876-

2 10hd Cherry twtn beda. 176
each Football drapes II. twin
bedspread Rainbow stnpe cur·
tains &amp;. twin bedspread. Other
varloua curtain1, drapes. II beds·
praeds. 48" bale cabinet with
butcher block top 1 6"x 30"
wall cabinet Call 814-388·

Couch a. chair-len than'1 yr. old.

Television
·viewing

1985 Honda CR 126 . Good
condition Call614-379· 2652.

Valley Fumiture
New and used furniture and
apphcancas Call 8111\-446·
7672. Hours9· S

7444

Coil

t!6~ ...

THE WORKING
MAN'S FRIENO

Carpet. •&amp;.50 &amp; up , Living roam
SUites, 1326 llr. up. Mollohan
Furniture. Upper River Ad 448·

BORN

ton pickup

Motorcycles

74

6 single beds for sal a with steel
frames 1100 each . 2 dinette

614-446·1542.
2 bedroom moj:Jila home m
Syracuse. $160 par month,
$60. deposit plus utlhttes Call
614- 992-5587 or 614· 992·
5732

New wood 8 pc living wood
tuite1, t399 .9&amp;; chest of draw·
ert , 4 drawer· $48, I drawer·
1159.96: manrtN II box apnnga- '
tull1ize: 312 coil, 11-49 95 set;
twin mattre..es. 196
set

G .E. Washer for sale. Look1 •nd T1Letcope, rug shsmpooer. Bear
runs like new 8126. firm . Call ' t:ompound bow, 1ullstze canopy
814-367-0322
frame, 25 gal aquarium, 304·

PM

4~4 ~

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Thursday, October 15, 1987

Trucks ,for Sale

· po. pb, 350, 4 spd.
614-446·1627

Furmshed room $100. Ut1ht1as
pa1d Share bath Single male
919 Second O•lhpolis. Call
1
448·4416 after 7pm

614-446 -4369 o• 304· 675·

Upstatrs unfurmshed apartment
Uttltt1es paid Carpeted. no children or, pets. Cail614 -446· 1637

2 Buildtng lots· 1 V2 acres each
With county water Jerrys Run
Rd Apple Grove. W Va Call
304-576-23B3

Rooms tor rent, day week
month , Gallia Hotel Call 614·
446-9580. Rent as low as$1 20
month.

Mob1le Home lot. 60 ft. or less
920 4th , Gallipolis. 176 . Water
paid Caii61A-446·4416after7

or 614-992-2609. Call after
5.00. please.

2 bedroom , completely turmshed. ptwate lot. washer,
dryer, AC No Pets. Adult&amp;
Preferred, Mason 304-773 ·
5761 or 773-5174.

Business
Buildings

F.urnished Rooms

614-992-5113, 614·992·6723

apt m Pomeroy area. Pay own
utilities. dapotit requ1red. Call

Very nice 14x70 unfurn1shed 3
br . 2 baths He•t &amp; wBt&amp;r
furnished 2 c•r garage Adults
only No pets $275 a mo. Call

Farms for Sale

Only. No Poto. 304·875· 1386.

Offtce Space for rent Eltcel
downtown Gallipolis location
Inquiries call 614-446-4222.

Will baby sit 1n my home,
experienced. non-smoker. between Ordnance and Jr High
schools. refMences. 304-676-

33

One bedroom furnished 1pt
EKtra clean and nice. Adults

~~---------------·
2. 3, or 4 bedroom houses and

Experienced child care tn my
home. Cenng and responsible.
Reference prov1ded. 614-9927038

2269

=19_6_2-:
. --:-----:--:-:---

614-949·2470.

House for rent, 304·676-6720

lmmaculatecon&lt;htion 1981 VIctartan 14' x70', 2 bedroom.
garden, tub. central air. tireplace, den, $13,900. 304- 875-

neighborhood
Quilt single
or
couple.
304-8715-41580
or 075·

45

65x 10 Troy mobile home, Hand· 9760
enon. completely furnished ,
rudy to mOYe Into, $3, 296 00 2 br. tra1ier for rent tn Cheshire.
or beat offer. open houae Sunday S150 a month . Call 614-3671 1 00 am to 8 :00 pm call aher 0181
4 00 for more mformation 304· . . , . . - , - - , - - - - - - - - - 6?5· 1561 .
3. br. double wide (needs some
rep11ra) . Located in Southwestern School Dist. Call 614· 246·

FIREWOOD! Locust, oak,
cherry 135 per pick-up load
delivered. BiH Slack 814-992·

72

PARSON'S FURNITURE

line of other producu tn Meio•
Co. .,.. Good eomrniuiona
ponlble

Thursday, October 15, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARE S

8

•

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER

I

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Cherub - NoiCh - Meter - Naught - BETTER
When oomlng home very late one niglt, the man tripped over
the bedspread. "Ia that you dear'!" mumbled the wife. The
man roared, "h BETTER bel"

BRIDGE

NORTH

11-1$.1'7

+83

•s

James Jacoby

eQJso
+AK872 '

Blue-moon
special

EAST
+JIOU
.Q9742
eA5

WEST
+KQ752
.KJ
eK3

+to 6

+au

By James Jacoby

SOUTH

The type of play depicted here Is
+A9
seen only a little more frequently than
.AI0883
97 &amp;
Halley's comet. Still, readers of this
+Q5
column and those less enlightened
need to be ready for it. Although
Vulnerable: East·West
North's jump overcall of two noDealer: West
trump showed length in both mmors
Nor Ill Eut
and only minimum high-card strength,
Weal
2 NT
I+
South knew his aces would minimize
Pass
Pass
Pass
his major-suit looers. With four cards
iD diamonds facing known five-card
Opening lead: • K
support, and the club queen to solidify
North's holdmg, he was right to go to
game in diamonds. The next task was "··~·------------..J
to make the contract.
With two diamonds and possibly a
spade for losers, declarer had to hope the last club, now a winner, Wll6
that clubs were 3-3 so he could ·rid played.-East could not gain by rulling
himself of his spade loser before at- with the ace of trumps, so discarded.
tacking trumps. So he won the spade Declarer let his remaining spade go,
ace and played Q-K·A of clubs. East and West ruffed with the diamond
ruffed the final high club with the dia- three. West could do nothing better
mond five, overruffed by South. Now than try to cash the spade queen. [)e..
declarer played the heart ace, ruffed a clarer ruffed and a diamond lead
heart and ruffed another club. Another brought down the d~fenders' king and
heart was ruffed In dummy, and then ace together.

eto

3.

~~af-~etlf'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

96 Barracks
1 Humorist
sound
Ruchwald 37 Con game
4 Sailor
(sl.)
8 Faithful 38 Thug
9 Lobster
99 Vedic sky
pieces
serpent
11 French '
DOWN
clerk
1 Shaded
12 Hard
recess
Yesterday's Anawer
to reach
2 Sight10 Mall
24 Woe is me!
14 Actor Lowe seeing
·shops
25 Expres15 Vigor
9 After ess 13 Pitcher
sionless
16 Sound
4 Tirade
15 Entreaty 28- Lama
distortion 5 Syrian city 18 - noir
29 Utah c!ity
17 Hi-li
6 Thrash (sl.) 21 Challenge 3lldol
setting
7 Words ror 22 Warnings 94 Card game
19 - you
a fi:irdle
23 Do road
35 Fit sure?
8 P35try item
work
20 College
in Oregon
21 Coloring
expert
22 Theater
group .
23 Free ticket
24 Towards
shelter
25 Skin
problem
26 Varnish
ingredient
27 Exaggerate
90 Noah's
boat
31 Farmer's
need
32 Hearing aid
33Was
pleased
35 Salt tree
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It: lOt til

•

,_..,....,.,..-ft.:.::

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

. ' 10·15
CW

I E K' A

RWSPWUW

D T W Y V G, A P H V
S E U W
AT W

G K ·1

Y K A P S

N P D H A

p

K
'

ADYW
G N A W D

GAAGXO

WHKWD-WHXTWKRGXT
Yeeterclay'a Cryptoquote: IF WE SPEND OUR LIVES
IN LOVING, WE HAVE NO LEISURE TO COMPLAIN, OR
TO FEEL UNH 1\PPINESS. - JOSEPH JOUBEPrT

"

�•
'

'

Page-14-The

ELBERFELDS

-People in the .newsBy IRIS KRASNOW
United Press Inte rnational
HOT REBA: Reba McEntire, winner o( country music's top
female vocalist award for an unprecedented four years
straight , announced that she will make her New York debut Oct.
28 at Carnegie Hall. '' Her appearance at Ca rnegie Ha II will be
the most significant move we've made In Reba's career,"
manager.Bill Carter said of the former Oklahoma rodPo queen .
"Carnegie Hall is one of the most prestigious venues in the
world and not everyone can, or should play it. Reba is suc h a
powerful voca list and performer. the c hoice in New York
venues was obvious," said Carter. McEntire's latest album is
"The. Last One· To Know," the follow -up to three consecutive
gold albums.
·
MCLAUGHLIN GROUPIES:: Talk show host ,John McLaughlin was surrounded by the Washington powermonger s whOse
a ntics have fueled his popular " The McLaughlin Group,''
Tuesday night at the Rit z-Car lt on in Washington. A beaming
McLaughlin and his wife. Ann Dore McLaughlin, greeted some
400 Capitol Hill heavies who came out for the fifth anniversary
ce lebration of his show , suc h as Rep . Pat Shroeder. 0-Colo. ,
Treasury Secre tary James Baker Ill. CIA Director William
We bster and New York Mayor Edward Koch. The guest who
made the most jaws drop was Fawn Hall who embraced her old
&lt;beau, Arturo Cruz Jr. -son of Cont ra leader Art uro Cruz- but
she came with someone e lse, her attorney Plato Cac he ris . " I 'm ·
grate ful that so many heavy hitters atte nded our party,"
McLaughlin sa id . " I mean, if a mas sive ca lamity had struc k the
Ritz-Carlton hotel la st night. Bruce Babbitt would be o ur neio
presl.dent.'' ·
·
·
·
ROCKING UP THE UNION: Rock entrepre ne u r Danny
Goldberg does more than manage si nger Bonnie Raitt and head
Go ld Cas tiP Records these days . As of Wednesday, Go ldberg. 3G,
replaces Laurie Ostrow. 70, as the new chairman of the
American Civil Liberties Union Fo.undation of Southern
California, a move ACLU officials hope_w.ill serve as an
outreach to youth. , Goldberg Is so lidl y linked to the you nger
genera tio n. He co- produced the "No N ukes" concert, led the
formation of the Musical· Majority coalition opposed. to the
Parents Music Resource Center's drive to rate record albums
and was behind the nationwide " Rock Ag.a inst Drugs" TV spots:
JACKSON SPLIT: Citing irreconcila ble differences, t he wife
of Jermaine Jackson . brother of pop .superstar Michael
Jackson, has filed for divorce afte r fo urteen years of marriage.
Hazel .Jackson seeks alimony, child s upporl and joint custody of
the ir three children, ranging in ages from nine months to 10.
After the original Jackson 5, Jermai ne went on to achieve so lo
success with his million-selling 1980 a lbum "Let's Get Serious."
He married Hazel, the da ughter of Motown founder Berrv
Gordy, a t the age of 19..
·
HESTON'S HELGA: After t he much ba llyhooed de bu t of
Andrew Weyeth's portra its of He lga comes a vldeocasette a nd
laser videodisc narrated by actor Charlton Heston. Heston. a
serious art collector himself, goes on location to Pennsylvania
for " The Helga Pictures", into the Cha dds Ford farmhou se a nd
barns where Wyeth secretly pa inted hi s neighbor. Helga
Tes torf, over a period of 14 years.

•
not1ces

SWEATS

Reg. 512 ......... Sale 59.66
Reg. 514 ....... Sale 511 .66
Reg. 518 ....... Sale s 14.66

MEN'S FLAr,JNEL

MEN'S

SPORT
SHIRTS

QUILT LINED
'

Regular sizes S, M, l. XL plus
tolls and big sites up to 3X.
autton front styles
tryella flannels - acrylic
dress flannels - wool .and
nylon blends and more. All
famous brands.

REDUCED

20.0/o

Page6
.... .

at y

~

I

Sizes S. M, L, XL. Big sizes
and tolls.
Reg. S26.95 .... Sale S2l.S6 .
Reg. S29.9S .... Sale S23.9S

A •~g~nd

in j~ans.

WASHINGTON tUPI ! - Pres id ent Reagan ,
labeling a new $12 billion House Ways and Means
Comt;nlttee fund -raising plan a "Democratic tax
hike," swears he will veto the tax package if H
evrntually win s congress ion al a pproval.
But committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski,
D-Ill., says he thinks R eagan may not r ealize the
package, approved Thursday night on a _23-13
party-line vote, contains many of the sa me
money-raising proposal s he h im self ha s
suggested.
A similar tax package, meanwhile, · waS'
awaiting action In the Senate Fin a nce Comm it tee,
.
·
'possibly as ear ly as today.
Dismissing Reagan 's veto threats as "disgust ·
ing expressions." Rostertkow skl said he hopes the

,

president will not make up his mind on the tax
legis lation un til the full House a nd Senate ag ree
on a final deficit reduc t ion plan to be submit ted for
his approval.
But Thursday, Reaga n reit erated his opposition
to n ew taxes . saying, ''If Co ngress s hould act ually
pas s a tax hike , my a nswer will be simply this:
Vet o.
" This Democrati c tax hike is a n exerc ise in
fi sca l irres ponsibility. It 's a breac h of faith with
th e American people, " the pres id e nt said. " It is
unwise; it is uncalled for; it will not be tolerated
by the American people."
Both the Ways and Means bill and the measure
suggested by Finance Comm it tee Democrats
were written as part of an effort to trim abou t $2_3

. Wrangt~r

WORK

SHIRTS

$2195
·,

STRETCH·
DENIM
JE-ANS

..

-~
''

/ two pockets.

sass

.

~~

$1499

W ONLY

MEN'S EXTRA HEAVY

1884

C•• percent of tatot cooeo)•

FLANNEL
WORK SHIRTS
Rill. sixes ..;,. big sizes and tolls
in solid colors ond plaids. 1DO%
cotton, excellent quality. ·

\Sale Prices
SALE

BEDROOM·

•Totals may equal more than 100 percent because some cases involve more
• than one type of abuse

SUITES.

NEA. GRAPHIC

REG . 5 17'19.00 CHERRY BEDROOM SUTIE includes triple dresser, lri-fold
mirror, full or queen poster bed, chest on chest, night stand.

HAT &amp;
GLOVE SALE

The Tight Seat Is Here!

Warm bonnets and' toboggans

in solids and prints.

•,

Glove and mittens in knits or
lined styles.

The Tight Seat is Here! The problem is solved! No
more worrying with 3 cushions moving up and down
and around . The tight seat is all one cushion with a 3
cushion look . Fastens securely in place .

~~::ed $159

Quality Her Majesty panties in
sites 1 to 14. Choooe briefs, biki·
nies, hiphuggers or rhumba pan·
ties. Nylon or cotton.
Sate Prices
Start at Only

S82JOO
room SUites.

PANTY

SERTA

SALE

Premier Comfort

Briefs, hiphuggers, bikinis, band legs
and sport panties. Acetate, nylon or
totton in si1es 4 to 10.

~~/:ed $1l ~to $359

I

LADIES'
'150

S LE

to $639

LADIES'

LITTLE GIRLS PANTIES

SAVE

BEDR~OM SUITE includes _s. drawer chest, triple
dresser with bookcase mtrror, 2 bookco1e ntght stands, ·bookcase
headboard.
YOU SAVE '700.00!
SALE S]QJSOO
REG. $1095.00 OAK BEDROOM SUITE includes triple dresser with verti·
col mtrror, daored chest, full or queen bookcase headboard.

Buy Now at low Sale Prices!

SALE

2 piece
Early American
Living Room Suite

$)

YOU SAVE ' 400 .00!
CHILDREN 'S

BLOUSE SALE

Many dressy styles in solid colors and
beautiful prints. Long sleeves. Missy sizes
6 to 18 and 38 to 46.
l

Reg. 512.00 Blouses ....... Sale 59.59
Reg. St6.00 Blouses ..... Sale 512.79
Reg. 52 4.•00 Blouses ..... Sale 519.19
Reg. 532.00 .Biauses ..... Sale 525".59

Se~

BEDDING
SALE
Features heavy duty coils for proper support, smooth top construction for comfort, multi·loyerd upholstery. ·

Reg. SJ40.00 Twin Mattress or Box .... Sale SJS.OO
Reg. SJ90.00 Full Mattress or Box .... S.ale SJOS.OO
Reg. SSSO.OO Queen Set ..................... Sale S2JS.OO

ncn ~~
YOUR

CHOICE

'.~579

DUTCH FLOWER BULBS

aur selection of daffodiles, hyacinths,
tuhps and others.
Imported flowering bulbs. Plant them now.

REDUCED PRICES

REG.
5649.00

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

I

•

· billion from th e federa l deficit in fiscal1~88. which
began Oct. 1. Besides new taxes. Congress al so
plans to work out spend ing cuts and other
economy moves.
Under a revised budget-bala ncing law Reagan
signed Sept. 29, $23 billion in deficit reduction Is
required in fi scal 1988. Projections released
Thursda y by the Congressional J:lud ge.t, Office
indicated that . largely because of heav ier-thanexpected spending, the required deficit reduct ion
number mighl climb to more than $24 billion .
The CEO also raised Its estimate of the federal
deficit·in fiscal1988, i! nothing is done to control it ,
to $179 .3 billion, about $1 billion more than
·
previou s forecasts.
The $12 billion Ways and Mean s tax package
includes several controvers ial provi s ions. among
them limi ts on mort gage interest deductions for
people whose homes are worth m ore tll,a n $1
million a nd on home equity loans used for other
purposes.
Other provisions would continu e t he telephone

80% cotton, 20% polyester comfortable stretch fit. Sizes 30
to 42 waist. SAVE!

SPECIAL

In 1984, 1.7 27,000 cases of child abuse were reported in the United States
up from 669,000 cases in 1976. The 1984 ligures works out to 273 cases fa;
every 10,000 Children. The average age of abused children is 7.

. 2 Sections, 16 Pa ges

excise tax otherwise scheduled to expire and
would subject corporate raiders to a 50 percent
non-deductible excise tax on th eir gai ns.
The Finance Committee Democrats, m eanwhile, call ed for $11.5 billion in new taxes,
including an end to the limit on income subject to
health insura nce taxes and stricter collection
req uirements for certain items sold on Installment plans.
The measure also includes a three-year
extension of the telephone exc ise tax, variety of
fee s to be assessed against people who use
governmen t land and waterways and a railroad
retirement tax increase.
The revised bud get -balancing law require~
hars h automatic cuts unless Reagan joins
lawmakers in reduci ng the deficit to the target.
Supporters say the pla n is Intended as an
Incentive for developme nt of carefully des ig ned
deficit cut s to a11oid the automatic cuts that
generally are considered unpalatable.

a

Missile hits U. S. flagged
ship; 18 crewmen are injured
.

MEN'S WRANGLER

Sizes S 114-14'1!), M liS-·
15112), L (16.J61hl, XL
17 ·11112). Assorted plaid

entine

Pomeroy-Middleport: Ohio, Friday. October 16, 1987

Vot.37. No.1 12
topyrighted 1987

Colorful plaid patterns,
warm quilt lining in wes·
tern snap front or button
fro.nt slyle.

FLANNEL

What types are reported

•

•

Cloudy tonight. Low in 40s.
Saturday, highs in mid 60s.
Chance of rain zero tonight, 30
percent Saturday .

Reagan·.abels new plan 'Democratic tax hike'

'

Child Abuse

3683

e

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

•'

987

•

MEN'S WRANGLER
' S12.95 ·

_;.J

Daily Number

Pick 4

•

patterns, luff length toHs,

. 18100

Church
.

WOMEN'S WRANGLER
- MiiSIS SillS S, M, I, 'XL.
-Pull-on"" xip·~P hooded tops.
-Comhrtablo pants.
Yellow, Pink, Gray, Black.

70.7

Ohio Lottery

15. 1987

Middle

ADDITIONAL PARKING - 'One of Middleport's older )tomes at the corner of Fifth and Main

Sis., has been razed and will provide additional
pa rking for the Middleport .Churclj of Christ.

U. S. inflation. continu.es· at
'

moderate level in September
WASHI NGTON (UP !) - lnfla·
tlon conti nued a t a moderate
level In the nation 's wholesale
prices In September after a
one-month break. with a substa ntial Increase in food prices, the
Labor Department reported
today .
The depar tm ent sa id It s producer price index, which track s
wholesale prices a nd serves a s
a n advance Indicator of what wi ll
happe n to consu mer prices,
jumped 0.3 percent durin g the
m onlh. ·
The increas ~ camf' after the
index s tayed · un c hanged In
August :
The 0.3 perce nt jump in Septe mber . matched the average

monthly increase during 1987. a
pa ce tha t if cont inued would put
wholesal e price,s 3.6 percent
hi gher for 1987 t ~ an 1986. .
Wholesa le prices for consumer
foods showed a sub stanti al increase of 1.1 percent after fa"!ling
in bo th July and August while
prices for non-food,' consum e r
goods actua lly fell by 0.3 percent
during th e month.
But prices for durabl e consumer goods rose 1.5 percent In
Septe mber, appare ntly In re·
sponse to the e nd of sales
in centives on aut omobiles.
The September increase is the
largest since June when the.
index rosq 0.4 percent.
T he intlex for a ll wholesale

fin ished consumer good s wa s up
0.2 percent after a decline of 0.1 in
August.
Prices for wholesa le capital
equipment jumped 0.7 percent
Waste a nd water are getting a
during the month alter small
lot of atte nt ion these day s.
in c reases over the summer .
Whole sa le energy prices.
Quality water a nd handling of
which had risen 13.5 percent In _ our wa ste products. both hazard ·
ous a nd non-haza rdous. are cer·
the first eight month s oltheyear.
tai nl y related to health a nd
actually declined 2. percent in
September, the departm e nt said .
hea lth issues.
Co ncern s relat ed to water and
The energy pri ce dec lin e was
waste will be addt·essed in
led by drops in gaso line, diesel
Jackson on Thursday, Oct. 29,
fue l and res idu al fuel. while jet
from
10 a.m. tq 3 p .n;t .. a t the
,
fue l prices climbed .
South District Health ConferThe crude oil index declined by
5. 1 percent fo r it s firS t drop since
e nce, being sponsored by the
Ohio Cooperative Extension
Mar ch following a sha rp upturn
in A,.gust, the de partme nt sa id .
Service.

'

through into the well.
"She's scl·eamlng I ike a ban s hee." sa id Detective Sgt. And y
Glasscock . .
Police spokesman Jeff Hailey
sa id rescuers were try ing to keep
Jessica a lert and awake durin g
the final hours of the · rescue
operat ion. On T hur~day, the
blond, blu e-eyed girl slept and
sa ng nursery rhymes. ra ising the
spiri ts of her family a nd weary

JESSICA McCLURE

fired a missil e and hit a U.S .·
fiagged ta nker wounding the
ca pt ain a nd 17 ot her sai lo rs,
some of them ser ious ly, )n
addit ion to ma ter ial damage.''
But in Tehran, Jra ntan Presi dent Ali Kham e ne i said only that
no one had cla imed responslbil ·
ity for the attack. ·
"Where the missile com es
from. the almig hty know s bet ·
tf'r ," the official Is lamic Re public News Agency quoted Kh amenei as saying during prayers
today.
But !RNA also quoted Kh.ame·
nei as say in g, ''We have declared
that they (the United States a nd
it s allies) shou ld not expec t us to
watch our ship s being attacked
and other ships remain sa le. This
is the na ture of the tension and
how it s preads in the region."
The White House said Pres ident Reagan's national security
a dvisor informed him of the
a tack shortly after midnight.
Deputy Whit e House spokesman Dan !-toward said U.S.
offi cials were takin g a "cautious
approach" to any response the
Unit ed States mi ght take. while
not "ruling anythin g. in or out. "
A Kuwa iti official source
quot ed by the Kuwai ti ne ws
agency . KUNA , sa id the a t tack

occurred at dawn at Kuwait's
Shuaiba anchorage and t he mis·
s il e that hit the Sea Isle Ci ty was
the same type as the one that hit a
U.S. -owned , Llberia n-flagge d su·
per tanker . the Sungarl , on Thursday in the sam e area.
Kuwait said tha t missile also
was fir ed !rom Iranlafl territory .
Western military sources also
co nfirmed the miss ile was the
sa me kind as dthe one fired
Thursday.
Kuwait Prim e Minister a nd
Crown Prince Sheikh Saad al
Abdullah a l Sa ba h ca lied an
emergency session of t he Ku ·
waiti Ca binet to discuss the
" repeated seriou s Iranian aggression. " KUNA sa id .
A sta tem ent issued later said
the "aggression ... constitutes a
serious threat to the securit y and
stability of the region."
Pentagon s pokesman and
Navy Cmd r . Bi ll Harlow said the
Sea ls i!' Cit y was st ruck at about
6 a.m. as the ship left anchorage
to move to a fue l pier. The tanker
had been escorted throu gh the
g ulf by U.S . Navy vesse ls, which
ended their escort duty Tuesday
· and re turned -down the warravaged waterway.
''The wounded are being evacuated by air to Kuw ait ," he sai d.

District health conference
Oct. 29
'

Rescuers: "We know we are there~
MIDLAND. Texas (UP]) Rescuers punched two sm a ll
holes ear ly today through the
r;ock wall between the m a nd the
22- foot-deep a b a ndon~d we ll
where 'I S-month -ol d J essica
Mc Clure has been t rapped for
two days.
"We know we are there. Now
we' re going to ta rt drill ing other
holes in the well so we ca n c hisel
through," Midla nd Police Cpl.
Jim Whit e said. "There's a lot to
go on st ill. There's 10 In ches of
so lid rock to go through to get up
at J essica.''
Volunt eers punctured the well
cavity shortly after 5 a.m . today,
43 hou rs after resc ue efforts
began. a nd were hopin g to
retriev e Jessica a ft er about 2
hours more work, White sa id.
The toddler slid In to the dry well
Wednesday morning.
White sa id rescuers drilled two
3-inch holes a bout 10 in ches apart
a nd were chiseling ou t an area 20
inches wide so rescuers cou ld get
J essica on a backboard a nd Into a
cervica l coll a r to bring her to the
surface.
·
· The rescuers could here Jes -.
s ic a cr y ing when they broke

MANAMA, Bahrain iUPl) -A
missil e s lammed int o a U.S.flag ged Kuw aiti tanker in Kuwaiti waters today, wou nding up
to 18 crewmen, incl ud ing the
America n master of th e vessel,
the Penta gon a nd ·Kuwaiti officials said.
Both . the United States a nd
K11wait accused I ran of firing the
mi~sile that struck the re·fl agged
Kuwaiti tanker Sea Isle City at
the same spot a missil e struck
a nother tanker Thursda y .. Iran
also was accused of that atta~k.
" lt looks lik e a m ajor escalation by the Ira ni a ns," said U.S.
Ambassador to Bahrain Sam
Zakhem In a telephone interview.
A U.S. Cen tra l Comm a nd spokes m a n sa id 18 crewmen were
Injured In the missil e attack on
the Sea Isle City . Col. John Head
sa id ll of the 18 w~re hospital ized, four of them with critical
injuries. The American skipper
. of the 80,000-ton vessel was
among the peopl e hospita li zed,
he sa id .
"None of the Americans
a board the ta nker were on act ive
duty with the U.S. Navy," Head
sa id .
Rashid Abdul Aziz al Rashid~
Kuwait 's minister of sta te fo r
cabine t affairs, sa id " Ira n toda y

.

The meeting will be held at the
South District Ex tension Cen ter
on Route 93. south of Jackson .
Several guest speakers will be
feat ured includi ng Sam Crawfo rd, south d is t rict s pecialist fo r
the state ex te ns ion serv ice. who
will look at the alt er native
so lu tions to problems with waste
a nd water; Dr . Judith Wess~l.
extension specia li st . with the s tate, discussing water quality ,
conserva tion a nd availability;
a nd Thomas O'Grady, litter
control manager for the Athens

Count y Health Department, to
explain how one co mmunit y has '
han dled the problems connected
with waste products.
Registration lee is $2 per
person H paid before O~t. 23 and
$3 aft er th at date . More details
are available and advance regisIra tio ns may be m ade through
th e Me igs Cou11t y Cooperative
. Extension Office by Oct. 23.
Call Cindy S. Oliveri, Meigs
County extension agent. home
economics, at 992-6696 for mo re
details about the program.

.

rescuers .
While sa id Je ssica's par ent s
were calling to her down the sha ft
of t he dry water well throughout
the rescue effort.
"They are giving her word s of
encouragement like, ' We're going to get you out. 1 love you,"' he
sa id .
.Jessica fell into the 22-footdeep well about 10 a .m . Wednesday while playing in her a unt 's
back ya rd. The well 's opening Is
only 8 inches wide and to reach
her , rescue teains were forced to
d ig a parallel shaft , then start
tunneling to the wider sect ion of
the well wher e s he is t ra ppea.
Rescuer Steve Allcorn of
Timber Drillin g In Midland a nd
four oth er volunteers used jack·
h a mm ers, pneumatic d r ills a nd
c hisels to inch toward the gi rl.
"She's getting pretty tick ed oft
, everytlme we s tart work ," Allcorn said. ·'They had me quit for
10 to 15 minut es one t !me because
she just starts hollering a nd
c r ying.
"It's pretty cramped \vork ing
space right now ." Allcorn suid.
" We .keep thinkin g we ' re getting
· Co nt inu ed on page 5

RESCUE EFFORTS CONTINUE - Rescuers
peer down the well hole where 18-monlh·old
Jessica McClure leli Into the shalt Wednesday.

Rescuers are seen working Thursday to pump air
Into the s haft and adjacent .hole they are digging
through to rescure the child. (U PI )

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