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                  <text>Page-1 0 The Daily Sentinel

Quirks in the newS'_-,---_______

People in the news---.
By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Press International
WRITER JOINS PRINCETON FACULTY: Prize-winning
novelist Toni Morrison Is Princeton-bound to teach cr~atlve
wrltlng. "I take teaching as seriously as I do my writing, 'said
Morrison, author of "'Beloved" and ""Tar Baby." Princeton's
notion of what constitutes serious teaching dovetails with mine.
You can get a small number of students who are working on
projects and stay with them for a year or even two.' ' Said Robert
Connor, cha irman of Prlnceton"s Humanities Council: "What
excites her most is also what matters most to us: the
opportunity to work closely with young writers, to share with
them most fully the lessons she has learned about her.-craft."
Morrison, who becomes a member of the Humanities Council
that already includes au thors Joyce Carol Oates and Mona
Simpson, also may work In Afro-American studies, American
studies and women's studies.
FIGHTING ALZHEIMER'S: Pri ncess Yasmln Kahn, whose
mother fUm star Rita Hayworth, died this year after a long
fight w'tth Alzheimer's disease, presented $330,000 worth of
checks to scientists who are researching a cause and cure for
the disease. She gave the donation, which was raised frot;n
contributions by New York area researchers, during a mayors
conference on Alzhelm~r ·s Friday In New York. Deputy Mayor
Stanley Bruenort presented the princess wlth a citation
honoring her contributions for combating the disease. Mayor
Edward Koch was away In Nicaragua.
A PAm OF MILTS: Two !Yllltles got together last week in New
York. Milton Berle was on hand at a black-lie dinner In the home
of Edgar Bronfman of the Seagram &amp; Sons distillery to honor
· philanthropist Milton Petrie for his years of work on behalf of
the United Jewish Appeal. A spokeswoman for P etr ie says he
gives $15 million a year to char1tles and maintains a staff to help
him find people in need of his charity .
ORANGE STARS ON THE WALK: Hollywood doesn't have
the only famous sidewalk in California. The Orange County
Walk of Stars was unveiled last week In Anaheltn. Calif., to
.honor Orange County residents. The first batch of stars includes
Steve Martin , Gale Storm. IJuddy Ebsen, ,Jose Feliciano and
Bill Medley and Bobby Harfleld, who are better known as the
-Righteous Brothers. "'When I first came to Orange County, I
came with no money and no prospects of work," Feliciano said.
" I met a Jot of nice people in the community and they always
supported what I have done. Thank you for accepting me in the
commu·nity." The en tertainers· signatures were etched in
bronze, surrounded by a circle of 14 bronze stars set in terrazzo.
TAMMY AND SPUDS NICELY DRESSED: People magazine's best-dressed list includes a dog and an even bigger
s urprise - Tammy Bakker . The magazine's judges designers Oleg Casslnl, Arnold Scaasl and Adrienne Vlttadlnl,
modeling agency owner Jerry Ford, Allyce Beasley of
"'Moonlighting·· and novelist Tama Janowitz - were given
pictu res of several celebrities and gave Its highest ratings to
canine beer commercia l star Spuds McKenzie, Elizabeth
Taylor, Iran-Contra scandal star Fawn Hall, Farrah Fawcett
and Madonna. The next highest rating went to Bakker, Whitney
Houston, Faye Dunaway, Robert Redford, Corbin Bernsen and
Princess Diana . Bakker appeared wit h less makeup than usual
a nd Casslni said he found "nothing wrong" with her
conservative denim jumpsuit.

'

Manday, November 9, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Menu announced for schools

. Even though a teach ers· st&lt;'i ke
Monday: nor clog, sa uce, peas.
is looming in the background in
fruit , milk.
the Eastern Local School DisTuesday: chili, peanut bl!lter
trict, the cafeteria menu for , sa ndwich. relish tray, fruit, milk.
schools of the district for next
Wednesday: chicken patty.
week ,Is announced as follows:
green beans, fruit. cake, milk.
Thursday: meatloaf, bre&lt;id,
Caff eine
butTer, mashed ptoatoes, gravy,
How much caffeme !S in a cup of applesav uce, milk .
friday: fish. cole slaw, baked
coffee' "'The Complete Book of Food"
reports tha t 1t depends on how the cor· bea ns, fruit. milk.
fee was processed and brewed. smce
caffeine is· water soluble. A cup of
drip-brewed coff.ee contains 110 to
The Consumer Information Catalog
!50 mg. of caffeine: pe rcolated coris
listing of more than 200 of
lee. 64 to 124 mg.: insta nt coffee. 40 to thea freebest
federal
consumer
108 mg .. decaffmnatcd coffee. 2 to 5
publications.
mg.

'Huinan barge' towed ashore
by rescuers: RIO VISTA, Calif.
(U PI) - A Coast G11ard crew
found a 320-pound man thrashing
about In the Sacramento River,
but he was too heavy to be llfed
out of the water.and had to be tied
to his boat and towed 300 yards to
shore.
The embarrassed middle-aged
man, wno declined to be Identified , fell into the water while he
was untying small boat and the
curren t ca rried him
downstream.
His cries for help were heard
by Coast Guard crewmen return·
ing from "a training mission,
officials said Sunday.
The Coast. Guard boat pulled
alongside to take him aboard but,
try as they might, the three
crewmen were unable to lift the
320-pounder from the water.
The crew finally threw out the
book and resorted to a llttleo
ingenuity.
They lashed the (llan to his boat

a

.

with ropes, handed him a life
ring, and towed him 300 yards to
a boat ramp.
The · embarrassed mariner
thanked the crew, decUned treat·
ment, and slipped away.
The Incident happened Thurs·
day but was made public Sunday.
Greeks vote nevel' on Sunday:
ATHENS, Greece (UPI)- Rest·
dents ot Metaxourglon, the red·
light district of Athens, have
voted overwhelmingly for a
proposal to remove most of the
brothels from their neighbor·
h09d, officials said.
Results of the referendum
organized by the city showed 98.4
percent of the voters want the
brothels closed down, a spokesman for the municipality said.
The S.942 registered voters of the
dis trlct voted In 10 polling sta·
lions Sunday from 9 a.m. until 5
p.m. when the polls closed.
After the results were announced, Athens Mayor Mlltiadls

Evert, who called for the referendum as a method of "direct
democracy," said he wlll present
the results to the ministers of
Public Order and Social Affairs
and "ask them to enforce the

law."
The president of the 3,000member campaign committee of
Athens prostitutes , known as
Belinda, said the. referendum
was "not genuine."
Under existing law ,12 brothels
are allowed to operate In each
pollee precinct. In Metaxourglon, referendum · organizers
said, there are 90.
VIsitors to Kansas' tallest
building must pay steep price:
WICHITA, Kan. (UPI) - Kansas' talleSt skyscraper Is only 22
stories, but Its owners think the
Epic Center l.s tall enough to
attract King Kong and plush
enough to charge $35 - about
$1.~ per floor for anyone
wanting · to attend Its grand

opening.
The $35 ticket price Is for a
Tuesday night charity benefit at
the Epic Center, built by Garvey
Industries of Wichita and opened
to Its first tenants In September.
At 22 floors, the $28 million
Epic Center Is scarcely the
Empire State Building, but Garvey Industries officials will still
ha ve an actor dressed In a King
Kong suit atop the 22nd floor to
pose for pictures with guests.
The building's atrium was to
open to the public today for free
coffee and doughnuts. Activities
this week Include a fashion show,
a state lottery, dance demonstrations and comedy shows.
Formal dedication of the build·
lng Is scheduled for Thursday,
featuring Epic Center developer
Wlllard Garvey and Wichita
Mayor Bob Knight . Following the
dedication, officials will celebrate the opening of the MidAmerica World Trade Center on
the building's 18th floor.

Jail favored .over fines, probation: survey
concerning the levels and
WASHINGTON (UP!) - them with fines or probation, a
Americans favor sending criml- national survey by Bowling
amounts of punishment for a
variety of crimes."
nals to jail rather than punishing · Green (Ohio) State University
researchers shows.
Most of the people surveyed, 92
The repo,rl was Issued a week
percent, said armed robbery in
after new sentencing guidelines
•
which a victim Is seriously
went Into effect for the nation's
lnj ured should be punished wl th
federal court system, requiring
judges to Invoke stl(fer penalties
"Hypertension·· will be the an average recommended prison
sentence
of
lOyears,
according
to
on
a uniform basis .
subj ect of the November series of
the
Justice
the
poll
released
by
U.S. Sentencing CommisThe
Health Maintenance programs
Department
Sunday.
sion,
which
established the guidesponsored , jointly by the Holzer
For rape, 94 percent of those
lines
that
became·
effective Nov.
Medical Center and the Holzer
surveyed recommended jail,
the
rules would
1;
predicted
Clinic des igned for community
with
an
average
sentence
of
15
In
a
substantial
population
result
residents who are age 55 and
years
or
more.
For
selling
Increase In the nation's prisons
over.
cocaine,
they
advised
10
'h
years
by
the next century".
Featured speaker at Tuesday's
behind
bars.
program at the Senior Citizens'
Researchers at BGSU conCenter on Mulberry Heights will
The majority of those surducted
the survey of 1.920 Ameribe Dr. April B. Magnussen, from
veyed,
71 percent, said a prison
the Internal Medicine Depart- cans for the Justice Depart- sentence was the most appropment's. Bureau of Justice
ment of Holzer Medical Center
riate punlshm~nt for 24 crimes
Statistics.
and Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis.
·
Bureau Director Steven Schle- ranging from rape and assault to
The group will meet at 1 p.m .,
singer said as far as he knew , property damage and drug ofNovember 10.
·'This Is the first national survey fenses. Respondents recomDr". Magnussen received her
of Its kind on public attitudes mended terms "much longer
BS from Marietta College and
M.D. from the Ohio State Universit y College of Medicine. She did
her internship at Riverside Methodis t Hospital In Columbus, and
her res idency In Internal Medicine at Western Pennsylvania
Hospllai in Pittsburgh. Pennsyl vania. She joined the Holzer
Clinic a nd the staff of the Holzer
Medical Cent er in September
1978. She beca m e a diplomate on
the American Board of Internal
. Medicine also In 1978.
Making the arrangements on
behalf of the hospital and clinic
fo r this co mmunit y Information
program on "'Hypertension" Is
Mary Harr ison. R.N ., staff development coordinator, along with
Alice WamSley , Director of the
Meigs Sen ior Cen ter acllvllies.

Hypertension
sess1on set

than (average) sentences actu ally served" for the crimes, the
report said.

r,::::::::::::::::::::::::;r- _ ~.,_.

CLOGGING
~H'-')'&gt; WORKSHOP

"'-"122 &lt;J-: "Y.,_,

Sponsortd ly

The Shady River Shufflers
Clogging Team

Veterans
Day

Daily Number

556

•

e

Vot.37. No.129
Copyrighted 1987

Pomeroy~ Middleport.

Meeting In . regular session Monday night,
Middleport Village Council passed a resolution
protesting the proposed rate hike of Genera l
Telephone Co. of Ohio.
The action was taken upon the recommendation
of Consumers' Counsel which sent the sample
resolution to Middleport officials. The resolution
Includes aspects of high unemployme nt and low
Income In the community as being among the
reasons the Increase should be turned down by the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio. The
resolution will not only be sent to the PUCO but to
elected state and federal officials.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported that the Ohio
Department of Development has approved the
pre-application of Middleport for a grant with
which to make improvements to the town' s lagoon

sewage dtsposal system. The town now has 30
days In which to fil e the application·for the grant.
The mayor,_i\lso reported the approval of a
$38,025 grarit ·Irom the Ohio Department of
T ransportation to pelp with the public transportation system for the elderly and handicapped
during this fiscal year. The public transportation
system being operated Is the Blue Streak Cab Co.
Council gave a first reading to an ordinance
providing Christmas bonuses for town employees
this year. Last year the bonuses wer e $150 for full
time employees and $75 for part time employees.
Mayor Hoffman said that even though v1llage
finances are " light"" . he was recommending
bonuses of $200 for full time employes and $100 for
part time employees this year. Total cost to the
town will be $4,000 and council 's resolution was on

FREE 12·

page money
management
guide

Fifteen lhoiJ.Sllnd people who care.
BANK ONE, ATHENS. NA.
Alhens, Ohio Member FDIC

\ t AHl

f&amp;li iB

I,_J
DOI:t

~

8 CoMICUtlve Tumley1
S2 Donation P..- Clan
Location:

, '.

Pomeroy Municipal Building

!tr"lllf..
\101-

J"

lllth School!

AU lGIS WILCOII

AllY um CLOGGII-W1111 01

WnNOUT IXPDIIIKI
LOTS.Ol·fUN

HELP the VETERANS ·- Meigs Counlians
needing help with veterans affairs may secure the
aid of Meigs Chapter 53, Disabled American
Veterans Service Officer, Denver Curtis, at the
left. A work station has been established In the

Pomeroy
· of the chapter
necessary
forms and paperwork can be done. Here Curtis
assists Bernard Diddle, right. Those needing help
can phone Curtis to make an appointment.

Iraq ~omplains to U. N. over
Iranian missile attack on Baghdad
MANAMA , Bahrain (U PI) Iraq, stung by a des tructive
Iranian mi ssile strike on Baghdad that le ft 10 people dead,
attacked an oil tanker off the
northern Iranian coast and a
vital oilfield In southern Iran.
An Iraq i military spokesman
said Iraqi warplanes attacked ··a
large naval target" - Iraq 's
usual term for an oil tanker - off
the northern Iranian coastal 2:37
p.m. Monday . the Iraqi News

Money Solutions Magazine.

·

Agency reported.
The attack was not confirmed
Immediately by Independent
shipping sources. Tehran rarely .
co nfirms attacks by the Iraqis on
Iranian-flagged tankers In the
Persian Gulf.
The reported Iraqi attack was
the first since Wedn esday , when
Iraqi warplanes struck the Iran-_
ian tanker Ta!tan off Kharg
Island, lran·s main offshore
oil-loading terminal.

That attack sparked the Iranian strike Friday on the Gr!lnd
.Wisdom , an America n-managed
tanker carryi ng Kuwaiti oil off
the coast of the United Arab
EmirateS. U.S. forces stationed
In the Persian Gulf could do
nothing beca use the vesse l is
Panamanian registered.
An Iraqi military communique
said jet fighters attacked oil
Installations in the Marun oilContinued on
5

,

For Subscription or Advertising Information

Call 992-2156
• Whe~ questioned if they had read a daily or Sunday newspaper in the past week

92% of tho se who had purchased an automobile within the past 2 years said "Yes"
Street---'------------------------------

City

..:....-------~ State ____ zip ________

Source: Market Opinion Research

of the recreation commission. the bid was tabled
to give members of the commission more time to
study the proposal..
Mayor Hoffman sugges ted council members to
review the past month' s financial statement.
which . he said. shows that a balance of about
$2,500 will be all that is in the fu nd as of the first of
December and the general fund will probably not
have any balance by the first of the year.
The report of Mayor Hoffman showi ng receipts
of $7.782 in fines and fees for the mon th of October
was approved.
. ·
Attending the session were Mayor Hoffman ,
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck, and Councilmen
Dewey Horton, James Clatworthy, Bob Gilmore,
William Waters and Jack Satterfield.

lion and that tne manufacturer
terminated the plaintiff as a
buyer or refused to supply
requested goods or services to .
the discounter.
· The bill is designed to assist
discount outlets that sell products below the suggested retail
price aJ;ld believe that competitor s or suppliers are trying
force them to sell products at
regular retail prices . The measure is supported by discount
chains, among them Burlington
Coat Factory, a New J erseybased chain of 100 discount
clothing stor es which lobbied
vigo rously for Its passage.
Discounters have compla ined
tha t under a 1984 Supreme Cou&lt;t
ruling, an unfair burden was
placed on them In proving that
conspiracies lo fix prices exist.
Under the current law, therefore,

to

many cases are rejected by a
judge before a jury has had the
opportunity to judge the facts.
Rodino said during floor debate that the high court ruling
established "almost Impossible
evidentiary standards." The bill,
he said, Is designed so plai ntiffs
"won't be turned away from the
jury's door."
.
Opponents of the bill, primarily retailers that do not discount
prices, maintained the current
evidentiary rules are adequate
and that the bill goes too far to
assist discounters.
The measure was approved
with bi·P&amp;rlisan support. Co.sponsor Henry Hyde. R-Ill .. said
the bill "recognizes the val ue of
discount reTa il outlets ... and the
precarious state of discounte rs".
ca used by curre nt law.

Cleveland grocer}' workers ,go
on strike; talks continue today
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Some s tores; Hei nen's Inc.; First Na- and a 40-year e mployee In the
2,300 union employees at 26 tional Supermarkets, operator of food industry, said he was
Cle veland-area grocery stores P lt;:k·n~ Pay and Flnast and Stop- concerned that ••J will be told that
I won' t have a job when I come to
we nt on strike today , triggering n-Shop. operator of Catalano,
work
one day. "
the closing of about 90 other Co untry Counter and Gi unta .
He
said
the industry has been
supermarkets In Cuyahoga and
The Cleveland Food Industry
"slipping
fast""
over the pas t 40
Lake counties.
Committee also represents
Picket lines we re set up at the s tores In Ashtabula, Geauga, · years. He said although he
earned more than $12 an hour and
26 strike-targeted stores at 12: 01 Huron. Lake, Lorain and Medina
was the senior worker In his
a. m., a few hours after negotia- counties.
depa rtment, there were no guation s between Local 880 of the
Gil Szaraz, a sta ff representara ntees and that he could lose his
United Food and Commercial tive of Local 880, sa id the strikers
job at any lime.
Workers union and the store were prepared to '•stay out
Robert Paranic, also a stat!
owners broke off, said Joe longer' than the snow flies" to
representative
of Local 880, said
Kapzath. a union organizer.
press their demands for greater
strikers would begin earning $40
The union struck 11 Rlni, 10 job sec uri ty.
a week In strike be nefits after the
Rego and five Reider stores. ail
"Job security is th e No. 1
seventh day of the walkout.
operated by Stop-n-Shop In Issue." Szaraz as he walked a
The last strike was more than
Grea ter Cleveland, although it picket line at Rinl" s supermarket
20 years ago .
was negotratlng with ail stores in In suburb an Brooklyn early
A few stores. such as Giant
the Cleveland Food Industry today .
·
.
Co mmittee.
'"We wanted 50 percent of the Eagle supermar kets in Solon and
Committee spokes man Rober t full-time jobs to be he ld by Rocky River, are non-union and
Duvln said betwee n 90 and 100 members of local 880 and the will remain open regardless of
grocery stores in Cuyahoga and management would not give in. the negotiations.
A news blackout had been
Lake counties would close their When you consider the number of
doors today , locking out a n high school students and bagger- Imposed on the co ntra ct talks·
a dditional 7.000 union carriers (holding jobs). by the that a federa l mediator convened
employees.
1990s the super market Industry last Thursday between the union
The companies taking part in in Cleveland will be a part-lime · and the committee. No new ta lks
were immed iately sc heduled.
t he lockout include Fisher Foods, Industry."
operator of Carl's and Fazio
Jer ry· Sykora. a union stew.a rd
Continued on page 6

Four are injured in bus, ambulance.
accident on Rt. 35 in Gallia County

'

Name __________________________________

the higher figure recommended by Mayor
Hoffman .
A first readi l)g was also given an ordinance
providing for h(gl\er pay for member s of cou ncil
and for the .b oard of public affairs. Under the
ordinance, council members would go from $12 to
$25 per meeting; council president would go fr om
$14 to $30 a meeting and board of public affaIrs
members would go from $8 to $15 a meeting.
A discu ssion brought out that council member s
spend many hours on village problems and that
attending a council meeting Is only a phase of the
job of servtng on council.
A bid of $14,570 · for the construction of a
miniature golf course at Hartinger Park was
received from the Mini Golf Co.,lnd., Jessup, Pa.,
the only bid received on the project. At the req uest

WASHINGTON (UP! ) -Heeding the pleas of discount stores,
the House approved legislation
that would remove a legal
obstacle to discounters who
pursue price-fixing cases against
competing retailer s a nd
distributors.
The measure, sponsored by
Rep. Peter Rodino , D-N .J., chairm a n of the House. Judiciary
Committee, and passed by a
volce vote Monday , would establish the presence of two factors as
sufficient to raise an inference of
a price-fixing scheme and therefore permit a plaintiff's case to
be heard by a jury. '
The plaintiff In a price-fixing
case.would have to show that the
manufacturer received a communication from a competing
retailer regarding pricecompeti-

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House passes bill to_reduce
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Middleport Council objects to G-T rate hike

When it comes to a buying·decision for automobiles
more than 92% of Ohioans use_daily newspapers.*

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2 S. Court St. •
Athens, OH 45701

•

Ohio, Tuesday, November 10, 1987

•

BANK.=LJNE.

entine

aty

What are you in the market for?

borrowing • Making the move to your dream
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• Coping with the cost of college
• Tax strategies for 1988

Rain, mixed with snow.
Cloudy, low tonight In mld-28s.
Sunny Wednesday. Highs be. tween 40 and 45.

Pick 4
0160

Page 2

Ieginning:
November 10, 1917
11:30-8:00 " ...

(fO&lt;morfy Pomeroy

Ohio Lottery

Veterans Day,
November 11

-INSTRU(TOI GARY WIWAMS-

If you've been wondering
how to·- more for your money
these days, take a look at
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ine!'
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Need help managing your money? You'll
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•

patient, Beatrice M. Potts, 83, of Sunbury, were
taken to the hospital after th e ambulance took the
worst of the damage In the accident. De p11ty
Sheriff Robert Nance, right, looks on as th e
ambulance Is being towed aw ay. (Tribune photo
by G. Spencer Os borne)

' AMBULANCE DAMAGED- Three people and
the driver of this High Point (N .C.) Rescue Squad
ambulance were Injured In an accident with a
Gallipolis City School bus Monday, at 3:08p.m., at
the railroad tracks on U.S. 35,' near Holzer
Medical Center. Three paramedics and a heart
-

An 83-year-o ld Delaware
County woman and three paramedics were Injured In an
ambulan ce-sc hool bus accident
Monday. a t 3: 08p .m., on U.S. 35,
at the railroad tracks, according
to the Ga!lla-Melgs Post of the
State Highway Patrol.
Beatrice M. Potts, 83, of
Sunbury, Ohio was listed In
guarded condition In the Intensive care unit at Holzer Medical
Cenfer In Gallipolis today after
suffering multiple fr actured ribs
and a dis located hlp in the
accident. · A heart patient , she was being tran sported from
Greensboro, N.C. to a hospita l in
Columbus by High Point (N.C.)
Rescue Squad.
Paramedic Pamela Whitaker,
33, of Tr In tty, N.C., was reported
In sta ble condition after suffering
. an open compound fracture to

her right leg. A pas senger riding
In the front, she was tem porar ily
pinned inside the ambulance.
The portion of the a mbula nce
where she was riding sustai ned
the most damage.
Paramedic Evil Cooke, 48, of
Jamestown, N.C.,, was In stable
condition In the progressive care
unit at last report. She suffered
fractured ribs and multiple facial cuts.
The driver, paramedic Brenda
S. Wrenn, 42, of Jamestown,
N.C., was treated and released
for bruises a nd scrapes.
Raymood A. Po t't s, 45, of
Greensboro, N.C., the son of
Beatrice Potts, was riding with
his mother In the back of the
ambulance. He was not Injured .
Nine student s riding Gallipolis
City School Bus No. 21, driven by
Marilyn A. Corwin, 44, of Rl. 1,
Northup, were take n to Holzer

'

f

j.

'

•

'

'

Medical Center for observatio n.
They were treated and released:
The patrol's report said that
the ambulance, which was owned
by the High Point, N.C., Rescue
Squad, and the bu s were heading
west when the bus followed
standard procedure a nd stopped
at the tracks. The ambulance
failed to stop In time to avoid
hitting the bus in the rear .
Wrenn was cited for not mai ntaining . the assu red clear
distance.
The Jaws of Life Rescue ·
equipment wa~ called in by
officials to assist In extrication of
the victims. Officers from the
Ga llla County .Sheriffs Department assis ted the patrol In
directing tralfic.
Ga ll-1a County Emergency
Medical Serice and the Point
Pleasa nt EMS transpor ted victims to Hol zer Medical Center.

'.
r

'·

�The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Tuesday, November 10, 1987

Commentary

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, November 10, 1987

.Has Nazi past ______B__:y::__Ja_c_k_A_n_d_e_rs_on_an_d~Jo_s_ep_h_Sp_e_ar

The Daily Sentinel
Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

111

DEVOTED TO THE lNTEUESTS OF THE MElC.S-MASON !I !IE,\

~~

~m~ rTO.....JL--r-• ,...,.-.e;;!d· ~

-q;v

•

.

HOBERT L. WINGETT
l&gt;uhlisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manal(rr

. PAT WHITEH EAD
A"isiant Puhlisher iControllcr

A MEMBER nf Thf' L1ni1Pc! Prrs&lt;.. lnH'I' narion ;JI. lnl :wcl Dail .\ PIT!'"'
A:-;~c•l'b t ion a ntl 1h(' AmPril' ~• n NC'\\" ~P~• prr· Pu blis hl •r ~ A:-o~(lci;tl ion ·
LF:TTl: RS ()p OPTI'\10!\ :Il l ' wtkr•mP Tht"' ... hou id rw if"•" lh;m :\11(1

'"'HI~

Vm ~ ~AI\.IPHI't"'- .n I' '-Uhi~"• 1 l l l(•dllinc , ,1)~1 mu"l tw ~lcn••d '' 1111 n.1m1 •. ;Hidn·'-!&gt; and
tf'IT·phnn!' numJw 1 No1 un, 1gn r'l:l H•ll••l'" ''ill IH' pufJ ii .. twd Ll"'l ll 'l''- "hould I)(' In
~rond t:,,l!., :tlldr' • ..,,dng [..,-.UI"•. nr ot pr•r-.om; •l lli!'"

Veterans Day - a time
to he proud of all veterans ·
By John P. Corner
National Commander - The American Legion
During 1987 our nation celebrated the 200th birthday of our
Co nstitution. Since 1787, the U.S. Constitution has been the docu"'!~nt
that serves as the foundation for our government ... a government by
the people" and "for the people."
This veterans Day has a very special meaning to the millions of
Americans who have worn the uniforms of our nation's Armed
Forces. America·s veterans know firsi hand what the C?nstttution
means to this country and sactificed to keep our foundalion sohd.
Veterans over time were called upon to serve and defend the
Constitution and they did so without reservation. Beginning with our
struggle for independence, citizens have taken up the challenge... serving in such places as Valley Forge, Gettysburg, Mexi~o •. Bella
Woods, Tripoli, Wake Island, Inchon, Da Nang and Beruit. Millions of
America's veterans defended the co nstitutional ideal to the end.
The sacrifices of veterans have touched the lives of more than just
their families. The fat hers, mothers, brothers, sisters and children of
this nation have also felt the effects of their service. The results are
the freedoms we have today and that are enjoyed by all our citizens.
Through our veterans selfless dedication to the ideals of freedom,
this nation remains a beacon of hope for freedom lov ln g people. For
more than 200 years, the citizens of the world have come to our shores
to share in t he liberty that is America.
Veterans Day 1987 is a time to be proud of the men and women who
have worn the uniforms o! our nation's milit&lt;~ry services. For without
those men and women, we would not have been able to celebrate the
200th birthday of our Constitution.

The cliche expert
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI! -However much I hate to disagree with a
member of Co ngress, sitting, standing, reclining or in some other
posture of servitude. my favo rite congress ional practitioner of the
interlocking, or overlapping, clic he was Rep. Tom Steed.
It was the Oklahoma Democrat who once said, "Th e ch ickens co me
home to roost when you get down to the meat of the coconut."
.
Hear! Hear' If that's not telling it like it is, I don't know what
bromide fusion does qualify .
So much for Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz. , a nd his new book, "Too
Funny To Be President. "
·
Admit tedly, I haven ' t read the whole thing, but in the published
.
..
excerpts I saw there was n_o mention of Steed. .
How Udall could have overlooked him in a ny d1scuss1on of pohtlcai
malapropisms is beyond me.
Steed certainly served in Congress long e nough to overlap Udall a
bit. As to whether his pollical service was of the cliche variety, lieave
to others to determine.
A coupic of co lleagues I told of Steed's " malapropism. " ?oth
recalled how talkat ive he was. Clearly, he could not have mamtmned
that pace without rubbing two or more cliches together occasionally.
Anyway, Udall. who once ra n for the White House a nd whose
brother was a member of the Kennedy Cabinet, has been around long
enough to recognize a political malapropism when he sees one.
However. as he has amp ly demonstrated. a presidential candidate
doesn ' t have to enter the 1988 campaign to provide a barrel of laughs.
All that is necessary to fill one's laugh quotient is to be a regular
reader of the Congressional Record.
1 don't now recall the circumsta nces under which St~ed made his
historic utterance. All I c&lt;. n say is I have q uoted him co rrectly. · . .
Not only did Uda ll fail to cite !hat quote in the printed excerpts of h1s
book; he likewise made no reference to Richard Sheridan, the Irish
playwright who gave us the term "malapropism."
Sheridan did this is a 1775 play titled "The Rivals ," one of whose
characters was a Mrs, Malaprop. That she became famous for her
humorou s misapplications of cliches and other phrases is th e sort of
stuff of whlch stage history is made.
I'll leave it to others- perhaps recumbent members of Congres s,
perhaps voters in Ok la homa - to determi ne whether Steed's
overlapping bromides were stronger than aspmn and hence proper ly
belong in a piece devoted to political malapropisms .
.
Beyond doubt. however , is the fact that he d1d ha ve a way with
words.

to an American. a nd an embassy
spokesman said the van Wells
will probably remain in this
country.
Aller several unsuccessful attempts to meet personally with
the ambassa dor, we sen\ him a
copy of his )'&lt;azi Party m ember.
ship card through an aide. V.an
Well then issued this stateme nt:
"This copy is • known for 40
years. Party membership was
never active because I was
drafted in the Wehrmacht early
1941. This suspended mem hership. I was a soldier until the end
of the war.,;
We have no evidence to contra dict van Well's claim that he was
hot an active m ember of the Nazi
Party. But several experts we
consulted said they had never
heard that party membership

A bout future talks ...

~~~

Incidentally, a U.N. press
release of June 5, 1981, noted that
van Well presented his credentla)s there to U.N. SecretaryGeneral Kurt Waldheim. Now
president of Austria, Waldheim
has been accused of participat ing in German atrocities In the
Balkans during !he war. and of
lyin g to cover up his Nazi past.
The J ustlce Department has
placed waldhelm on a list of
individuals · who may not be
admitted as private visitors to
the United States.
Footnote: Two months ago,
Bonn 's co nsul general in Rio de
Janeiro, Ha ns Joachim Dunker,
acknowledg&lt;;.d he is a former
Nazi. lie remains at . his post
despite the revelation.
SAVE THE CHILDREN -The
poignant story of Vietnam vete·
ran Barry Huntoon had a happy
endin g. He spotted a photo of a
young girl in Life magazine two
years ago, l'faS struck by the
strong family resemblance and
last month was finally reunited
wit h the Amerasian daughter he
had left behind In Vietnam in
1975.
But as we repor ted last year.
there are perhaps 12,000 children
of American fathers stili langui s hing in South VIetnam,
w h ~re they are discrimln.a ted
against because of their mixed
parentage. The situation has
grown worse since the Vietnamese suspended a makeshift
program that had allowed s uch
rare success stories as
Huntoon's.
Reps. Robert Mrazek, D-N.Y .,
a nd Tom Ridge, R-Pa. , have
introduced legis lation intended
to make it eas ier for these
·"children of the dust" to come to
the United Slates. The bill, ilke
an indentical measure in lhl'
Sena te, would cost an estimated
$11 million or more - a modest
price to meet a responsibility
that Americans owe to these
blameless victims of the war.

was suspended upon entry into
the armed services.
His official biography states
t hat he was on .active service
until 1945. After \he war he
stud ie d at Bonn University,
where he earned degrees ill both
economics and law. He entered
t he diplomatic service in 1952 and
after an assignment in the
personnel office he was sent to
the West German mission at the
United Nations In New York in
1954. In 1962-1963, he attended
Harvard as a fellow at the Center
for International Affairs, and
was then ass igned to the Tokyo
embassy for four years.
After serving in various highlevel pos ts at the foreign office In
Bonn, van Well was named West
Germany's ambassador to the
.United Nations in 1981.

Wt:LL , MY BRoKER
~AS THIS IDI 0 T, AND
THIS IDroT SArD...

· c.

runs streak to four
games, defeats· Bniins, 6~4

- By United Press International
Quebec's Mike Eagles, faced
with executing a rare hockey
happening, decided to enjoy the
moment.
Eagles scored the gamewlo.nl!lg goal on a penalty shot at
15: 32 Of the second period Monday night to help the Quebec
Nordiques extend their unbeaten
streak to four games with a 6-4
victory over the Boston Bruins.
"T was nervous a t first, but
Peter (Stastny) told me that the
score was 4-2 and that I should go
out and have fu n," Eagles said.
The penally shot was awarded
while the Nordiques were killing
off a two-man Bruins' advan tage. Eagles, skating in on a
breakaway, was hooked by Boston rook ie Glen Wesley. The
Nordiques center then execute d
the penalty shot by healing goalie

DoUg Keans to the glove side.
''He played to his blocker a nd I
just shot the puck the other way,"
said Eagles, who had never
scored a power-play goa l In his
hockey career. "You have to
skate and not coast into there
because Its not go\)d. You have to
put yo urself In a game
situation."
Keans credited Eagles '
strategy.
"If I had to do it over again I
would like to stop it," Keans said .
"It was a good good shot and I
was beaten cleanly."
Quebec's Anton Stastny broke
a 2-2 tie with his third goal of the
season at 8:44 of the second
period. He added his second goal
of the game at 13:46 on a
back-hand shot after Bruins
goalie Doug Keans made a save
on a shot by Peter Stastny.

Congress's two masters _____R_o_be_rt_~_a_lt_er_s
WASHINGTON (NEA )- Like
Riegle Is a favo r it e of the securities industry, are well
represented on the list of Riegle' s
a mythic love affa ir that sur- industry because he is a senior
mounts great distances , Sen . member of the Senate Ban king major donors.
"I have been a bl e, over the
Donald Riegle and the securities Comitte and the new chairman of
years, to get financial support
industry have _. overcome the its securities subcommittee.
Neither . the senator nor hi s from people on all sides of a n
problems posed by physical
separation in nurturin g their benefactors are accused of any issue," says the senator. ''I'm
political romance.
legal or ethical transgressions. most comfortable with th at. It
Democrat Riegle represents · Indeed, their link is typical of the preserves my fr eedom of
Michigan, a state more than 600 symbiotic relationship b~een action."
But Wa shington attorn ey John
miles west of New York City, many members of Congr'€ss and
headquart.ers of all the country's the interes t groups affected by T. McEvoy, ·who represents
leading securities firms - but the politicians' committee and Lawyers a nd Lobbyists ior Ca mp a ign R eform, rejects that
tens of thou sands of dollars in subcommittee decisions.
A vocal advocate of public reasoning.
campaign contribu tio ns have
"Many argue that PACs exerspa nned that gap.
fi na nc ing of congressional camDuring 1986 and the first half of pa igns and limit s on campaign c ise ..no s ignif,icant Influe nce on
1987, donations to Riegle's camspending, Riegle is sensitive the · legislative process, e ither
paign treasury from political about the fina ncial support spe· because. members of Congress
actio n committees inc lud ed cia! interests have lavished upon ignore their pressure or because
$7,000 apiece !rom E.F. Hutton . him - but he also is concerned members of Congress ignore
and Drexel Burnham Lambert.
about collecting $4 million to their pressure or because PAC
$6,000 from Shearson Lehman
wage a re-election campaign cont ributions cancel one another
out ," McEvoy notes.
nex; year .
Brothers a nd $5,000 apiece fro m
· " But if PACs do not exercise
Thomson McKinnon, Morgan
In defending his fund -rai sing,
Sta nley and Bear, Sterns.
he notes tha t the large donations . pignifican t Influence on legislat ive decisions , it Is not for want of
Also,. $4,000 from Merrill often come from groups with
trying," he adds. "The fact that
Lynch, $3,500 from Prudential· confli cting legislative goals and
most members maintain their
Bache, $2,500 from Dean Witter, thus neutralize or offset each
$2,000 from Donaldson, Lufkin &amp; other. Indeed, co mm ercial consciences in a sea of tempta .Jenrette. $1,500 from Paine banks, and savings and loan tion does not redeem a system
Webber, and $1,000 apiece from
associations, both of which re· that perm its a 'growing wave of
Smith Barney a nd Salomon centiy have been at odds with the PAC money to flood the field of
Brothers.

politics."
Resisting the lure of those
dona tions is not easy when there
are more than 350 PACs spon·
sored by companies or trade
associations In the securities,
banking, savings and loan and
related fields.
A compilation produced by
Michigan Republicans shows
that Riegle coil~cted slightly
more than $116,000 from· donors
in his home state from 1983
through 1986. During the same
period, he raised $111,600 from
New York City benefactors, all
except $10,000 of which came
from the securities a nd banking
industries.
"tJitlma tely, the public has to
as k why there is so much money
fro m out of state and from
PACs," says Michagan Republican Party chairman E. Spencer
Abraham , who ma y run against
Riegle next year .
But Riegle's record is neither
better nor worse than many of his
peers. Many members of Congress increasingly find themselves with two principal constltuences- those tha t vote lor them
and those that finance them.

He-tilting media ___~____B_e_n_W_a_tte_n_be_rg
tn Reaganland , b ut he too is
hard-nosed on most issues.
Richard Perle, former ass istant secretary of defense, writes a
monthl y column. He is a hawk.
ivlichael Kramer, recently poiit·
lcs editor lor New York maga-

zine, writes weekly. He has a
liberal sens ibility - and yet
recent pieces were pro-Bark and
procontra. One might describe
his politics as "neoconservative
with a hum an lace."

Berry's World
FOR WH1.CH OF THE DEMOCRATlC
CANDIDATES WOULD YOU VOTE.
T'f THE ELECTION WAS HELD
TODAY?
/'

denies
.report

Boston scored a pair of goals in
the fina 1 minute of the second
period to close the gap to 5-4. Rick
Middleton scored at 19: 03 and
Randy Burridge beat Nordiques
goalie Mario Gosselin at 19: 2~.
The Bruins 'are 1-5-2 in their
last eight games.
Elsewhere, Montreal defeated
Toronto 3-l ..
Canadiens 3, Maple Leafs 1
At Montreal, Claude Lemieux
and Stepha ne Richer scored in
the first period to extend the
Ca nadiens' unbeaten streak to
seve n games. Montreal, which
leads the NHL with 23 points. ha s
not lost since dropping a decis ion
to Calgary Oct 26.
Le mieux drove a wrist sho t
past Toronto gD&lt;ilie Ken Wregget
at 11 :43 to tie the score 1·1. Peter
Ihnacak had scored at 10:28 for
the Leafs.

Pirates, Gou agree
to terms Monday

I"

As we keep seeing. from North !act-oriented~ trend -oriented but
to Bark, media is power. And so, never trendy, solid, useful, someif the pattern of media cha nges , times boring t"U.S. Snooze"). It
the distribution of power can was a generally conservative
magazine - but never regarded
change.
The case has lleen made that as a bi g player when it carne to
there is a liberal tilt to the major influencing national opinion.
Then, three years ago, U.S.
lions have been oneslded to say
American media establishthe least, fabrications to say the
menls. Of t he eight big influen- News. was bought by zllllonalre
most. What the Board presented
tials that are said to set the Mortimer Zuckerman. Editors
to the public as demands made
national agenda, seven are co ns!· and consultants have been hired,
bv the E.L.E.A. were, In fact,
dered to have a liberal mindsel: quit, hired, unhired. The layout
p~oposais from · which to begin
the Ne.w York Times, The Wa - has been souped up. New colum·
negotiatio ns.
shington Post, ABC, NBC, CBS, nists have appeared. It 's become
With a one year contract Time and Newsweek. Only The a much more lnteres tln g magaagreed upon and extending to
Wall Street Journal is regarded zi ne. Rumors fly: Zuckerman is
August 31, 1988, it is our sin ceres t as partly conservative.
a genius, no, Zuckerman Is a pain
hope that futu re contract talks - Now, this does not mean that in the neck; there is chaos, no,
can be done honestly and fairly
the seven Lib-Tilts sit around there is firm direction;· it's lost
by the Superintendent and the hatching plots. l repeat the term a n audience, no, it's gained an
Eastern Local School Board. "mindset." That's where the tilt audience. It's about what you'd
Perhaps next year we can leave comes from, a mlndset, ossasion- expect in a high-rumor business
th e spreading of natural fertil - ally In the ownership Of the full of people with ta lent and
Izer to the fa rmers.
enterprise. but more often. these tem~r.
But behind the hustle-bustle,
. days stemming from the wor king
George Cagai journalists' view of the world- something important is aborn·
Member. E .L.E.A. adversarial, anti-esta blishment, lng. The magazine is on the
Athens , Ohio negative, self-righteous, all those threshold of becoming a major
unhappy marching adjectives of soldier in the opinion wars, and,
modern liberalism. It Is mindset irt that combat, U.S. News will
that determines what's consi- not be one of the liberal troops.
Look 1t the people who write
dered news and who gets to
signed
opinion pieces a t U.S.
explain it.
.
News.
Zuckerman describes
But change is afoot. The Big
himself
as
a "pragmatic conserEight may be expandi ng. USA
Today and Cable News Network vative"; he's tough on foreign
may have joined the club, a nd &lt; pollcy and economics, liberal on
while neither is conservative, some social matters. Editor
David Gergen, former commun i!hey are not liberal.
cations
director for Ronald Rea· And consider now U.S. News &amp;
gan,
was
banged upon by conserWorld Report.lt had been around
vatives
for
being too liberal when
for a long time: a staid gray lady,

Letter to the editor
Editor,
For the past (5) months the
Eastern Local Educat lon Associ ation , through their negotiating
team, has been in co ntract talks
with the Eastern Local School
Board. A new contract has been
ratified by the E.L.E.A.
Throughout these negotiations
the E.L.E.A . has tried to confine
contract talks to the negotiating
table. As a matter of good faith
bargaining, proposals a nd counter proposals are mean1 t.o be
dealt with by the bargaming
units. Many times in the past two
(2) •months, the School Board. in
general, Dr. Apllng, Eastern
Superintendent, In particular,
has chosen to negotiate through
the newspapers. These presenta-

WASHINGTON- Gunther van
Well, who served as West German ambassador in Washington
f~om July 1984 until last week,
has a documented Nazi past.
We have unearthed a Nazi
Party membership card issued
to van Well in September 1940. It
snows the date and place of the
future diplomat's birth: Oct. 15,
1922, at Osterrath, near Krefeld
in the Rhineland. He was given
party membership number
7767073.
According to van Well's official
biography, provided by the embassy, he graduated from high
school in 1941. The biography
does not mention his party
membership.
Van Well's tenure as Bonn's
ambassador to the United States
ended a few days ago, and he
decided to r etire. He is married

Q~ebec

WELL ROBED - Brian "The Blitz" Nitz of Middleport will be
well-robed when he fights In Madison .S quare Garden Thursday
night. This robe lettered on the back "Meigs County, Ohio 'The
Blitz"' was sent to Nltz Monday by Meigs Juvenile Ollicer Carl
Hysell who along with other fans bought the robe for Nitz'
appearance In the New York arena •. Nitz left Sunday for New York
and on Thursday evening will be pitted against Aaron Davis in an
eight round bout to be shown on the Madison Square Network.

PITISBURGH (UPl) - The
Pittsburgh Pirates Monday announc ed that rig h t- handed
pitcher Ji m Gott agreed to terms
of a new two-year eon tract with
the team.
Gott, 28, would have been able
to file for free-agency at midnight Monday.
"This is . a n a nswer to my
prayers and dreams to be able to
contribute on such' a young
team, " Gott said. "Our main
objective when the season ended
was to let Syd a nd 'the people in
Pittsburgh know we wanted to
stay there."
In 55 appearances during the
1987 season, Gott was 1 -2 with 13
saves and a 3.41 ERA, according
to team spCikesm a n Greg
Johnson.
·
Pirates General manager Syd
Thrift praised Gott, who was
acquired f~om Sa n Francisco on
Aug. 3. .
"Jim Gott made tremendous
contributions to our last season
surge with 13 saves In 16
opportunities ," Thrift said. "He
is a great addition to our club,
both on and off th e field. "
In other transactions, pitcher
Dorn Taylor underwent arthroscopic surgery Monday on his
right elbow. Johnson said the
tea m ls optimistic that the
right-hander from Wiiiow Grove,
Pa., will be ready ln time for
spring training.

SQUEEZE PLAY- Quebec Nordiques Steven Fhm is squeezed
hy Boston Bruin Randy Burridge ( 12) and Nevin Markward ( 17)
during first-period action ol NHL at Quebec Coliseum. (Reuter)

Harper to have more .tests on foot
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP!) Cleveland Cavaliers gua rd Ron
Harper is to have anesthesia so
he can have more tests done on
his broken left foot, the team
announced Monday.
Harper had a chip break away
from the bone along the bottom of
his foo t when he collided with
tea mm ate Tyrone Corbin during
Saturd ay night 's l13~ 105 loss at
Atla nta. Th e players were at:
tem pting to block a shot.
Harper, a 6-foot-6 guard whOse
22.9-point average was 16th in th e
NBA last year, was examined
Monda y at the Cleveland Clinic
by Dr. John Bergfeld.
Bergfeld decided that further
tes ts were needed, and scheduled

them for today a t the Clinic.
Harper is stili expected to be
sidelined three to four weeks.
Also exami ned by Bergfeld
were forward John "Hot Rod"
Wllliams and rookie forward
Kannard J ohn son. Williams, Who
did not play in the first two
regul a r-season ga mes, is hampered by a sprained left ankle he
suffered in the preseason.
Johnson has a bru ised left
hand . Both hi s and Williams's
availability is on a day-to-day
basis.
Cleveland, l -1, will open its
home schedule Wednesday night
against Milwaukee. A team spa·
kesman said tlckefs are availa ble· for the game.

PONTIAC, Mich . iUPI)
Oet roit Lions rookie defensive
end Reggie Rogers, whose
'brother died of a cocaine overdose two years ago, insists his
treatment at a counseling center
is not for drug abuse .
"That's a lie," Rogers said,
according to today 's editions of
the Detroit Free Press when
asked abl;)ut a report on CBS-TV
. that he would soon begin drug
· treatment.
"Why would anybody just up
and make that up? Yeah, I guess
I do'n•t have to ask the question .
That's all part of the problems."
Problems have recently engulfed Rogers, a 6-foot-7, 272pounder who was Detroit's No. 1
draft pick.
His brother, Don, a safety for
the Cleveland Browns , died of a
cocaine overdose. His sister,
Jackie, recently disappeared for
.a few days while visiting Rogers
but turned up okay after a
missing person 's report was filed
with Auburn Hills police.
Rogers ' mother, Loretha, of
Sacramento, Calif., who suffers
from a heart ailm ent, said her
23-year-old son reported to the
counseling cen ter on Monday.
She would not identify the center ,
bu.t told the Free Press thatit was
in the Pontiac area.
"For the first time in my life
I'm helpless to do a nything for
him ," s he said. "Because of
Donald a nd the way Jackie has
acted, there is all of this speculation about drugs and Reggie. It is
so unfair. For the rest of his life,
he ha s to prove he.' s not on
drugs."
Ro gers. an Ali·America player
at the University of Washington,
has not practiced with the Lions
si nce Nov. 2. He told his coaches
that he needed some time to
straighten outhis life.

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week.

No o;ubscrip!lons by mail permilt£'d in

areas where home carrier service is
avallablP.

Mall Subscriptions
Inside Meigs County

J:l Weeks ................................ $17.2'3
26 We&lt;'ks ...... .................. .......... $34.06
52 Week s ......................... : ........ $66.56

Outside Me igs County

MISSY KITCHEN
ALL·SVAC SECOND TEAM VOLLEYBALL
HONOREES - Kyger Creek's Missy Kitchen of
the championship Bobcat squad was named to the
Second Team AII-SVAC. Memra Hill of Oak Hill
was the only sopliomore named to the Second

DENISE PICKENS

a bout last Saturday. I'll be doing
everything for Iowa ."
After Iowa, the 5-3-1 Buckeyes
close the regular season at
Michigan.
Despite the disppolnting season, Bruce defended his overall
record during his eight plus
years at Ohio State.
" I'm very disappointed in this
season as it stands right now ,"
Bruce said. "I hope by the time
the season' s over, we can put our
head s up high, but I'm not sure
·we're going to be able to do tha t.
That has to be dete rmined. lt' s
going to ta ke a great effort.
"But , I have no pro blem with
the record Earle Bruce has. I
don' t like It all the way, but I can
la ke it, I guess. Nobody else ha s
tha t record."
Bruce is 80-25-1 in hlselgh tpius
years at Ohio Sta te, a winning
mark of 75.9 percent. His predecessor, Woody Hayes, fin is hed
his 28-year career at Ohio State

at 76.1 percent (205-61-10).
Bruce praised the play of his
d efense aga inst · the Badgers,
who totaled only 233 yards
overall and only 46 in the second ·
half but still won.
"The defense played just outstanding," said Bruce. He
singled out tackle Ray Holliman
and linebacker Chris Spielman
from among nine defenders who
had "winning pe rformances."
"As I watched tha t game and
they (Wisconsin) kicked the field
goals (four) and everything
happened , I looked at our defense
and l couldn ' t believe they could
play that hard that long ," said
Bruce. " I mean they were givi ng
effort you wouldn ' t believe to win
tha t football game."
Tom Tupa, whocompieted13of
17 first half passes for 159 yards
against Wisconsin, was only 3of7
in the second half for 28 yards and
had two intercepted.

RUTLAND TIR'E SALES
"8ETTIN8 ~OU THERE SAFEL'I"

LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCK TIRES
'·

VICKY HAMMOND

MEMRA INGRAM

52 Weeks ..... ,..

.. ... $67.60

Team. Southwestern's Vicky Hammond, Eastern's Amy Berkhimer, Denise Pickens of Nort.h
Gallia and llannan Trace's Terri Queen round out
the 1987 Second Team selections.

Bruce 'can't believe' Wisconsin loss
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPl) Ohio State Coach Earle Bruce
was stili scratc hing his head over
Saturday's 26-24 loss a\ Wisco.nsin as he began preparation for
this week's invasion of Iowa.
"I can' t believe that you could
lose thai kind of football ga me,"
Bruce told his weekly press
luncheon Monday, "but we have
done it a few times against
Wisconsin.
"l can't believe we lost 6- 0, 1
ca n't believe we lost 12-7 and now
1 can't believe we lost 26-24,' but
we have. I don' t know what the
devil It is."
Ohio State had 514 total yards
to 233 for Wisconsin and 27 first
downs to l1 for the Badgers but
still came out on the short end of
the score , due mainly to seven
turnovers, s ix of those in the
second half.
Ohio State's eight second-half
possess ions ended in four intercepted passes, two lost fumbles
and pair of missed fi eld goal
attempts by Matt Frantz, the last
a 22-yarder with 6:57 remaining.
"I don't feel too good about
any thing right now." Bruce said,
" bu t I'm going to build myself
up. Who· isn' t depressed. If I feel
this way Friday, I think I'd get
out of coaching. But, I hope by
Friday, it's all over .
•'When you· start to work today
for Iowa, you get into the r hythm
of things and last week is
forgotten. When I walk out of
here. 1 won't be doing anythtng

13 Week,: ................................. $18.20
26 Week s.......... . .. .... ........ .... . $35.10

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�Tuesday, November 10, 1987

UPI ratings
NEW \ 'ORK ( U l"l ) - Tht&gt; UnHed l"re!i!i
lntf' rMtkulill Board of Ca.lldlf'"' Top !D
l'Uih•gt loolhall rallngs, with llrtl- placr
,·~t""' and recvrd In parenlhf'&amp;eti, total
polnl!'l (hi!."il"d on 15 polnt'&lt;li for first pla.ce,
14 for !II"~Ond . f'tC . ), and lui wee k'li

WPdiM!sd».f '~ Gam~ •
htdJana at Bo•ton...PlJht
Chklago at New .lllrllt'.y , night
Allllllta at Ne"· l'ork, ntcht
PhUadelphia 11.t WMhl.,ton,

Solmers
still tops
in poll

night

MUwaukee id. C l e~tohmd , nls:ht
DaiW at Utah, nlghl
Plloenlx at Gulden St., ul&amp;:ht

mnatlrw:

Team

1'1llnls

2. Nl.'hnr.,;ku {1 0) (t-O)

135 I
113 2

I. Okl11homal:iti) (f.-Ol

....
... '

a

3. Miami ( l l (7-01
4. t-,orlda Stalf' (S. l )
5. Ul'Li\ (8- 1)

u~

6. Syn\cmoe (I) (S. fl )

5Z5 8

"''

7. Nvire Dttme (1'-1 )
II. ~orgla (i-2)
9. ('lt&gt; mson ( 8- 1 ) ~'
10. Alubama P -2)
11 Louisiana St . O'·H)
12. Auburn (1-1-1)

.
.

S08 I I
306 10

us 15

2ill I

~"'

J3. Mkhlgau Stat~'! {6--2-1 )
lS I 13
14.StJuthCarollrui. (6-2)

100 14
1'1 1'7

15. lndlar1a ( i -2)
11. l'enn State (1·2)

$S 18

S4l It
,.,8

17. (MI.Iahoma. St.att' ('M )
lit. Arkan:otL'I (1-2)
19. Tenl11'8.'tfl! (fl-2· 1)

I

16 2(1

28. Tua..&lt;i A.&amp;M (6-2)
.. 1
t·unranlted
04 hen rece lvtD!!: ,- CJte~o : lnwa, Mi c higan, r ttL.Wurgh, SanJOSf' Slall', Soulhern
Cal, Wyornlnft'.

NFL results
SATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
A.merlcan Co nfcrenct
Eas1

·W L T Pet. PF PI\
BuJ/11iu
IJidlnnapolls
!'11tlml
Ntlw En~rland
N \ ' ,Jets
Cleveland
Housto n
Pittsburgh
C'tnd nrw.tl

4 4 0 .®0 H3 197
" .. 0 .500 153 Ill!
4-10 .500 223111
.. .. 0 . ,50() 149 168
4 -t 0 ,$00 II$ 177
Centf'\11
I 3 0 .6%5 ~ ll 110
I 3 0 .6%5 2t0 180

'

2

3 0
6. b

.625

na

112

.250 138 1711

"' ~t

Sun Ole.Ro
"' I 0 .105
Se1u tle
5 3 0 .it5
Denver
4 3 I .$13
l.1\ R~lde r 11
3 5 0 .lU
KanSilli City
I 7 0 .It'
N11tional Co nre~n ce

1"16
2CI8
198
169
133

141
li5
110
119
:l49

£aj;l
WIL~hlngton

Dalllllii
Philadelphia
St . Ll!ui11
N\' Giants
fhleago
l\1\!ltl('S()t.il
Tumtll Ba,\1

'
'4

' 0
'4 0
0

3

5 0

2 ntral
' 0
Ce

'
'
•

."/M 204 139
.501) 185 185
.500 IRt \!13
.:175 "IR2 ~08
.!SO ItO 185

' 0
• 0
• 0

.m 2n 129
,5011 170 1110
.5(10 192 159

.431! J.l~ 164
.250 l-I B t30

Green 8:1y

3

4 I

~tro it

'

6 0

West
7 L o .ns 22G 174
St~ n Fra n.
5 3 0 :6'Z5 211 13'7
Nt·l'. Orlt'a n "'
~
6 tl .230 I'ZO !54
Atlanta
1 ' o .m 13t !U
I.A Rams
Su nd11,y's Rt!sults
PiltSbLlr~th 17, Kantia.."i Cit )' 16
(lp~·~1 11 nd 311, Atlanta 3
Ch icago 26, Grt!en &amp; , 2-1
Buffalo 21, Denver 14
MlrtiKl!lota 31, LA Ra.lden; 20
San DleKO 16, lntll anapolls U
St. Lollis 31, Tampa Bay 211
Philadelphia 31, Washington '!7
Detl'()lt 21, Dallw&gt; l7
San Franci!'ICo 27, Ho.ust on 20
,\UIUT1 120. Clncinnalll-1
~ew Or klans 31, L.o\ Rams It
N\ ' Giants 17, Nl'w En~la nd 10
MO I ~a.J' '!I ftesllit
~ ,.. Jet!i 30, Seat tie 14
Sunday 's G~t me~
,"i,. ,Jets at Kansa.'! City, I p,rn .
BLlffulo at C l e~e l and , I p.m.
Dallas at New En~and , 1 p.m.
Detroit al W».Shtngion, I p.m .
H o~to n at Plt~burgh , I p.m .
lndlanapoll!l at Miami, I p.nl .
L,\ Ka.m!l at St. Loul!i, I p.m .
TM1po Bny at Ml nne!!ola , l p.m .
N1"Giants11.t PhUadelphia, ~p . m .
New Or leans at San Fn ncl ~o.-4 p.m .
Chtclnna.tl al Atlanta,~ p.n1.
Gree n Bu,y at Seat tle, 4 p.m.
L'\, Ra ldf!rs at SIUI Di ego, II p.m .
M o nday'~&gt;

Game

(.'htca.::o at Denver . 9 p.m.

NHL results
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAG UE
Monci~ 'R

Ke8Wis

Montf'eiiJ 3, Toronto I

Quebec 6•.Bos.On 4
Tltt!Sd~Q"'s Games
Se"' Jt.rsey at NY Ranpr$, 7:30 p.m .
WMI\in~on at NV hl._nders, 8: 05p .m .

~

Philadelphia at St. Louis, 8:35 p.m.
ca lrary al WlnaiJ*J• 8: S5 p.m .
Ed m ooton at LOs Angt.les, 10: ali p.m .
·
Wednt&gt;!idiQ·'• Gamet~
,
Montreal at Bostun, nlj!:bl
\\' ashlnrtoaat Pltillbllrth.. nlrht
Boston at Toronto, night
Mom real at Hartford , night
Detroit at Ollca1o , nl1hl
Calpry at Mlnne!Wta . nlxht
Burtalual \ ' ancouver, nl~;ht

Transactions
Blu!ehllll
Baltimore- An ooUJICt!d outfielder .Jim
Dywer hiUIIllftl!d to~ one- yu r .:ontn~cl .
Clnclnnat i-Sipdcatc he r 8o Diu to
11 lwD-yelll' contract.
P hllad ~lphla - Annc.HitJced third h!L'K.'"
man Mille Sdtmldt agreed to a hm-yellt'
conn,.ct .
"
Plltsbura:h - Allnou.aced pitc her J im
Gott agreed to a two-year conh'iact.
81. . Louis .,.... Wah'ed fir s• b ueman Pan
Drlet~t~e n.

Toronto - J'tiamed Winston U em!!i
mlnol"'ltague roving tnstruclur.
Basketbllll
ChiCII!IO - Wail!f!d fo~llrd Ric kie
Winsl ow: s lgnt&gt;d center Granvi ll e
WIIJt crs.
Footbllll
Detroit -Claime d tight end Vyto Kab
on wa l\'ers from Cle,·eland .
LA Rams - Re instated eomerback
LeRoy Irvin to 50-man roster.
N'' ,Jels - Waived rw.•lng back Eddie
Hunltr and tackle Ken Joae11. Actl~ated
tac kle Regj(l(' McElroy off lh e phy!ih:al ly
unable to perform ll!it. Acthate d ufety
Lester Lyles olt Injured re~;erve.

Ohio standings
Ohio Co llege Football Ret.'Onl);
By United Preu lnternallunal
MID·-'MERICAN COII(FE RENCE
Conference Ovent.H
W LT
W LT
F.a!ik-rn Mlch
6 10
~ 20

Miami

S 20

5 H

Bowll nll (lreen
Kent Stalt"
Ce ntral Mlrb
Tnlto.do
" 'e!itern Mlcb

f

20
-1 3 0

-1 :1 0
6 30

3 30

5

~

0

3 40
3 60
3 40
4 60
Da ii Sta t~
2 50
3 60
OhioUnlv
0 60
I 80 ,
OHIO CONFERENCE
Raid-Wallace
6 10
7 20
Caplt111 l
5 1I
I I 2
Mnunt Unlun
S 20
$ -10
WIUe nhe r,;
5 20
6 30
Muskinltllll
4 'l I
4 -1 I
Ohio Northern
S -1 II
4 50
Marietta
2 ~0
3 6 II
Otterbe in
I ~0
I II !I
He idelbe rg
0 ~II
I II 0
NORTH COAST CONFERENCE
A.llea:t.enl'
6 00
II 0 I
Ohio We11 leyan
~ ~0
5 50
ca!ic Ruerve
3 90
3 II 0
Woosto~ r
3 311
5 40
Denison
2 ~0
5 ~ 0
Oberlin
~ 40
2 111
Kenyon
I 5 11
2 711
BIG TEN
5 0I
6 2I
Ml e ttiJ~: a n St
5 10
7 211
Indiana
-1 2 0
1:tD
Iowa
.. 2 0
6 90
Ml t: hll" n
330
531
Ohio Stale
231
351
llllnolii
2 40
5 H
Mlnnet~ota
~ 6 I
2 H
Purdue
1 5 £1
I 7 I
No rthl''l'lilern
1 5036{1
" l!tcom•in

NBA results
R o~ton

Mo rtd&amp;..l' 's ·Res Lilt
f!ti. Ne " · York Kl
Tu csd ay 's

Gamu

IJtttrolt a t I ndiana,~ p.m.
at Atlanta. S p.m
W ll~hl nit on at Milwaukee, 11: :10 p.m.
LA Lakers at S an Antonio, R: 3tp.m .
Goldl' n StatJ! a t Phoenix, 9: 30p.m.
Utah at LA Clippers, tO: 30 p.m.
l&gt;e n\-e r a t Sacra m tn lo, 10: 30 p.m .
lluLlston at Por11and, J0;30p.m .
nalla.~t at Seattle, 10: 3ll p.m.
t'hka~o

Ohio Outdoors

Calendar
Soecl'r
Major In door Soccer Leape
Baltimore at Cle vela•d, 8: 05 p.m .
Tennis
C hll'III IO - SU0 , 1)8{1 wumen '11
touriUimcnt
· Co lo,;ne. West Gerlllllny - Sll7,too
m c n'li Gr».nd Prix tournament
London - $465,100 me n's Gu.nd Prb
toLlrnam e nt

O'BRIEN SCRAMBLES - Jets' quarterback
.Ken O'Brien sera'!' Illes out of the pocket to gain 10

yards as he is chased by Seatlle,llnebacker Fredd
Young in the ti..St. quarter ol Monday night's
acllon in the Meadowlands. (UPI)

Jets .even mark at 4-4 with
30-14 victory over Seahawks
.
EAST RUTHERFORD , N.J.
(UPI ) - The New York J ets
snap ped their two·week malaise
to construct an unprecedented
tie.
The Jets, berated by Coach Joe
Walton for their spiritless play in
back-to·back post-strike losses,
rega ined their enthusiasm and
their winning touch Monday
night, rallying to defeat the
Seattl e Seahawks 30·14.
The victory Improved the Jets
to 4·4, placing them in a tle with
the other four members of the
AFC Eas t. It is the first time
since the NFL-AFL merger in
1970 that every team in a division
has been tied this late in the
season.
" It's a bonus that we let two
games slip away from us like we
did and still are tied," Jets
defensive end Barry Bennett
said. "That's nice. Now we have
a seven·game schedule and everyone has a shot at it. I'll tell you
one thing, there won't be five
tea ms tied In seven weeks."
The Jets crawled into this
logjam by outplaying a tea m
,generally considered the presea ·

son favorite to represent theAFC
in the Super Bowl.
However, now Seattle is 5·3 and
two games behind surprising San
Diego in the AFC West.
"We knew all the advantages
of winning tonight, of being 6·2
and keeping up with the
Chargers, " Seattle quarterback
Dave Krieg said. "We weren't
flat. They had incentive too,
knowing they could tie for the
lead in he East. "
Wa lt on had blamed lack of
emotion as a key to the J ets ' two
pos t·strike losses. His most significant move, besides constant
yelling at his troops, was to bench
struggling star halfback Freeman McNeil in favor of Johnny
Hector.
However, as Walton promised,
McNeil did receive playing time,
and the seven·year pro who had
never been benched before
responded.
With Seattl e leading 14·13 late
in the third quarter, the Jets
worked a fle a-flicker . But
O'Brien's two downf!eld receivers were covered, so he maneuvered ou t of the pocket and

Lawhorn listed as 'one of
nation's winningest coaches

Lawhorn 's record at R·lo
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
basketball mentor John La· Grande is 177-61. The winntnges t
whorn, leader of one of the to p coach in NAIA is Ken Anderson
teams in the nation in Its div is ion, of Wtsconsin-Eau Claire. who In
Is listed as one of the wlnnlngest 19 years of coaching has won 447
coaches, according to the NA J ~'s and los t 101.
A 1962 Rio Grande graduate,
new list of top coaches and
Lawhorn
has an 'overall coaching
teams.
The Redmen were selected for recor d of 450·160. He began his
would be pointless anyway.
their
performance In the pa st career as a coach at Belfast
If you pla n a hunting trip with
live
years,
while Lawhorn made Loca l Hi gh School (1962·64). and
people you don 't know, you're
the
Jist
based
on his won-los t continued at East Clinton High
already operating in the blind.
School (1964-69), Circlev ille High
percentage.
Most hunters are very picky
Schpol (1969·75). and Warren
The
Redmen
,
who
went
to
the
about the people with whom they
NAIA Nationals In Kansas City, Reserve Hi gh School (1975-80).
go afield.
He came to Rio Grande College
In 1985 and 1987, ranked 20th
Mo.,
Still, a new. friend who Invites
in
1980 and was named District
on
a
list
of
26
schools
in
the
NAIA
you hunting for the first time is
Coach
of the Year, MOC Coach of
unlikely to be turned down. On listing. With Its 135·42 record in
the
Year
and NAIA Area 6Coach
the other hand, increasing the last five years, Rio Grande
numbers of hunters are making it has won 76 percent of its games. of the Year in 1984-85. He wa s
again named Jlll'OC Coach of the
clear in advance that the invlta· The list was topped by Cumber Year at the end of the 1986·87
land
(Ky.
)
College,
which
has
tion is accepted with the underwon
155
and
lost
17.
season.
standing that game Ia ws will be
Rio Grande was 27-7 In 1981-82
followed to the letter and that
and
was a runner-up in the
there wli l be no drinking until the
Mid-Ohio
Conference. The Red·
hunting has ended for the day.
men
were26-ll
in 1982-BJand was
I don't know about you, but I
runner·up
fo
r
the MOC a nd
CINC INNATI (UP! ) - The
always do that. I can't think of
District
22
championship.
With
a
Ci.nclnnati
Reds Monday signed
any person I trust enough to
28-8
mark
In
1983·84,
the
Redmen
catcher
Bo
Dlaz to a guaranteed
allow them to walk along behind
was
again
second
in
the
race
for
two-year
contract
worth a total of
or beside me with a loaded
the
conference
and
district
titles.
$1.75
million.
-12·gauge shotgun when they are
They hit the jackpot the follow·
Diaz, who would have been
·:not in total control of themselves .
tng
season,
going
31-5
and
netting
eligible for free agency, will be
And there are too few I trust even
the c hampion's spot in the MOC
pa id $850,000 next season and
then.
$900,000 In 1989. Diaz was paid
Drinking and driving is illega l. and the district. The 1985-86
$825,000 this past season, when he
So Is drinking and hunting or .season saw the Redmen place
batted .270 in 140 games, with 28
shooting. An d just between you second in th e confer&amp;nce and the
doubles, 15 home runs and 82 rims
and me, If you do either one, I NAlA playoffs with a 22·10
record, but in 1986-87 ret urned to
hope you-get caught.
bat ~ed in.
,
ihe winner's circle in the confer·
D1az was named to the Na·
ence and the district.
tiona! League All·Star team and
Lawhorn, In his eighth season
was the league's most valuable
at the helm, ranked eighth on a
player in J uly, when he hit .351
"The inju ry and the stri ke list of 26 coaches with winning
with
five home runs and 23 runs
really limited my opportunities teams in the past five years.
batted in. ·
here, and I'm sorry about that. I
was flying back and .forth be·
tween Cleveland and my home In
Philadelphia for some months
this spring and summer; and I
put in a lof of 1ime getting In
s hape."
Kab was Phila!lelphia's third·
round pick in 1982. He caug.ht 31
•
passes for 332 yards and fi ve
touchdowns in 51 games before
being waived on October 8, 1985.
The 6·foot-5, 240-pounder was
signed by the New York Giants
and played In 11 games before
being cut during t he 1986 training
Paid for by ca ndidate, Paul S. Moore, Rt. 1. Racine, Oh•o
ca mp.

Drinking and
hunting don't mix
By ,JERRY PICKRELL
Outdoor Writers Association
of America
Distributed by UPI
Mothers Against Drunk Drlv·
ing elevated the nationallev'el of
co nsciousness about the dahgers
of driving under the influence of
·alcohol.
They were able to accomplish
tha t because literally thousands
of innocent people were dying
every yeer in acCidents caused
by people tearing along the
roadways blitzed out of their
mi nds.
Some hunters . n)ight be un·
aware that a law against dri nk·
ing and hunting also exists.
Act ually, the law extends beyond
hunting to include even the use or
carryi ng of a firearm wl)ile
under the influence.
That means yo u can't even go
out and targ_et shoot alter you've
been parta king of the bottle.
Just as some drivers still
tgnor~ the law, there are hunters
who do likewise. It would be hard
to pin down which of these
offenses is the more serious. It

Reds sign Diaz

Browns waive
tight end
•
BEREA, 'Ohio !UP! ) - The
Cleveland Browns placed vete·
ran tig ht end Vyto J:(ab on
wa ivers · this past weekend and
Monday an nounced he had been
_ c laimed by Det roit.
Kab, 27, a five· year veteran out
of Penn State, was signed by
Cleveland in March but suffered
a ba ~k Injury and was placed on
Injured reserve. He was waived
two weeks ago but re·slgned last
week.
"I'm glad T'm getting a chance
alter being in limbo for so long, '.'
sa td Kab. " I just want to play,
and I'm really excited about
going to tho Lions.

Tuesday, November 10. 1987

TO THE VOTERS OF SUTTON '·
TOWNSHIP MY SINCERE
APPRECIATION FOR YOUR VOTE &amp;
SUPPORT .IN THE RECENT ELECTION.

PAUL S. MOORE,

Clerk ·of Sutton Township

dumped to McNeil, who slashed
to a 26·yard gain to the Seattle
4·yard line. On the next play,
.o'Brien tossed a 4·yard touch·
down pass to third·strlng tight
end Billy Griggs to put New York
ahead to stay, 20-14 .
On Seattle's ensuing possession, the Seahawks faced a
thlrd-and-2 at their 29. Krieg
dumped to Curt Warner who was
held to a 1·yard ·gain on a strong
tackle by free safety Harry
Hamilton. who also had two
interceptions. Ruben Rodriguez
then got off just a 1a.yard punt.
Two plays later, McNeil zipped
through left guard for 17 yards
and 15 ya rds were tacked on for a
late-hit foul against safety Eu·
gene Robinson. Five plays later,
Hector leapt into the end zone for
a 27-14 lead.
"This win falls under the
category of not panicking, con·
centrating a liltle more and
coming together as a team, "
McNeil said. "We showed poise."
The Jets had built a 13-0iead on
a 91-yard punt return by Jo Jo
Townsell - the second-longestln
club history- and field goals of
36 and 35 yards by Pat Leahy,
who would later hit a .26-yarder.
But Seattle, which had three
first·half turnovers , recovered
for a 14·13 lead. A Townsell
fumble on a punt led to Warner
slicing 3 yards for a touchdown
and ~rleg threw a 29-yard
scoring strike to Steve Largent
midway through the third quarter to put the Seahawks ahead.
Largent extended hls NFL record for consecutive game with a
reception to 145.
'
But the Jets struck back with
an 82-yard, ll·play drive, lasting
5: 57 in which O'Brien completed
5 of 5 passes, including the TO to
Griggs.

'

By DAVID E. NATHAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI ) - In a
different decade and a different
league, Earl Morrall accomp·
Jlshed a feat that Charles Thompson hopes to repeat.
Morrall, taking over for an
Injured Bob Griese, led the
Miami Dolphins to a 17-0-0season
in 1972. Thompson, a freshman,
is replacing injured Jamelle
Holieway as quarterbacl( for
Oklahoma and Is entrusted with
maintaining the Sooners' perfect
record.
Perhaps because of the loss of
Holieway and starting fullback
Lydell Carr, No, 2 Nebraska
Inched toward the Sooners In
voting Mond ay by United Press
International' s Board of
Coaches. The teams meet Nov . 21
in Lincoln, Neb.
The Sooners, who beat Okla·
homa State 29-10 over the .wee·
kend, earned 38 flrst·place votes
and 735 points, their lowest total
in eac h category this season. The
Cornhuskers, who routed Iowa
State 42·3, earfted 703 points on 10
No. 1 votes, their best totals of
1987.
Oklahoma a nd Nebraska, both
9·0, have run 1-2 In the rankings
all season. The 32 points separating the teams is the smallest
marglp this season. Oklahoma's
largest edge was 187 points In the
preseason rankings .
Holieway, a leading contender
for the He ism an Trophy, under·
went surgery Sunday. Carr was
the Sooners' No. 2 ground gainer
behind Holieway. Rotnei Ander·
son takes over for Carr.
''We have good, young talented
players to replace Jamelle and
Lydell but they are not ex perienced," Oklahoma Coach
Barry Switzer said.
Miami remained No: 3, earning
a single flrst·place ·vote and 652
points after thrashing Miami of
Ohio 54·3, Florida State again
was No, 4 (603 points) after
downing Auburn 34-6.

.·

fields in southern Iran Mond ay
a!ternoon, the Iraqi News
Agency reported.
The Iraqi strikes appeared to
be 111 retaliation for the Iranian
missile attack Sunday night on
Baghdad that killed at least 10 .
people and wounded scores
more. Iraq vowed to avenge the
attack.
Six Iranian missiles - beJleved to be Sovlet·made ScudBs, long -range surf ace· tO·
surface missiles capable of
carrying warheads packing 900
pounds of explosives ~ have
crashed Into the Iraqi capital
since the beginning of October.
In one of the bloodiest Iranian
missile strikes on Baghdad, a
missile slammed into a primary
school Oct. 13, killing 29 children, three adults and wounding 218
other people.
Iraql Foreign Minister Tareq
Aziz, in a letter to the United
Nations on Monday. protested
the Iranian mlssle attack, which

To sell operations

devastated blocks of homes and
By United Press International
shops.
Diplomats and representatives · A "pretty good soaking rain"
of International organizations was forecast today for the
based In Baghdad toured the Southeast, where wildfires have
destruction Monday, the Iraqi burned 350,000 acres , while plummeting overnight temperatures
News Agency said.
A U.N. spokesman sald In New sent shivers through the Plains
York on Monday that Iraq agreed and New England.
National Weather Service fore··
to a request by Secretary ·
caster
Pete Reynolds said a
General Javier Perez de Cuellar
half·i
nch
to 2 inches of rain was
to send representatives to the
forecast
for
the,f;Qutheast, where
United Nations to discuss terms
timber
fires
have sent smoke .as
for a cease·flte In the ?·year·old
far
as
north
as New York City.
war .
The spokesman, Francis Gluli- Rain Monday was light.
Rain fell early today over
ani, said Iraq had agreed to send
Aziz to discuss the cease-fll·e Florida and along the southern
under the terms of Security Atlantic Coast with showers and
thunderstorms reported over the
Council Resolution 598.
Senior Iranian officials In central Gulf Coas t, the Tennes·
recent days have made lncreas- see Valley, .Kentucky and West
ingly hostile statements about Virginia .
"It's good new s," Reynolds
the U.N. -sponsored peace lnltia.
said.
"It looks like a pretty good
tive and Iran has not responded
soaking
rain will occur from the
to the Perez de Cuellar message.
Tennessee
Valley to the central
The resolution, passed July 20,
..
Appalachians
calls for an Immediate cease·!Ire
"Rain
is
forecas
t today over all
and the formation of a committee
to determine which nation is the Southeastern states with
responsible for starting the war . better than a 50-50 chance of rain
Iraq - which struck first in most a~eas and up to an80to90
militarily in the war, bombing percent chance from the Carol!·
Tehran airport In September 1980 nas into Virginia."
Fires have burned 350,000
- has agreed to accept a
acres of timber In the South this
cease-fire if Iran does.
month and claimed two lives.
Fires were burning out of control
Monday in isolated areas of

Divorce actions have been filed
In Meigs County Common Pleas.
Court by Ronald Lee Wagner,
Racine, against Betty Louise
Wagner, Dorcas: Paul K. Arthurs , Portland, aga inst Ca therlne R. Arthurs, Riverview, Fla. :
Judy Ann Jewell, Rutland,
against Pear lie Jewell. Rultand.
A restraining order ha s been
issued against the defendant in
the J;,well ac~ion.
A dissolution of marr iage has
been granted Delores Barber and
Jerry Barber. Delores Barber
has been restor ed by the court _to
her maiden nam e of Adams .

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

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-·
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•

Plains states. portions of the
Tennessee and North CarollAa Pacific Northwest.
Clearing" skies sent overnight
Missis sippi Valley and southern
and ·parts of KentUCkY, where
New England .
more than 113,000 acres of _,_lows plummeting across . the
woodlands have burned in recent
days. ,
In West Virginia, fires hav e
recently burned 150,000 acres.
No serious fires were reported
Monday in Florida, Georgia,
Alabama, Mi ss issi ppi and
Maryland.
Rain Monday dampenned
Southern woodlands, bringing
relief to weary firefighters, but
there was not enough moisture to
break a severe drought.
Officials were hoping to get an
Inch or more of rain from a low
pressure area tha t swept mols·
ture from the Gulf of Mexico
northeastward through the ,Mis·
sisslppl Valley, but reports early
today Indicated Mississippi, Ala·
bama, Kentucky, Tennessee,
Georgia and West VIrginia got
70
Jess than a quarter inch .
-RAIN
SHOWERS
L···.'ISNOW
Elsewhere, rain mixed with
. . Static . . Occluded
snow was reported from sout h
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
central New York into central
WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms will extend
New England , and snow showers
central and northern Florida through Georgia and South
from
were scattered over much of
.
Carolina,
with rain likely lrom Alabama across .eastern
Michigan, with an Inch of new
Tennessee,
West VIrginia and the middle Atlantic Coast states into
snow reported at Sault Ste. Marte
New
England. Rain will be mixed with or change to snow
southern
as of late Monday. Showers and
in
parts
of
Pennsylvania,
New York state and central New
thunderstorms were reported
England.
Raln
will
also
fall
across
the Paclllc Northwest. Winds
today for parts of Pennsylvania
be
strong
and
gusty
across
sou
til
ern Texas. Much of the nation
will
and New York state.
will have hi~ temperatures in the 40s or 50s.
Rain was forecast fo r the

fLm

11

.

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Rear·mounted engine improves
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When You Open Your

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ST/HJ.:,

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.

South Central Ohio
Rain, possibly mixed with
snow, today , with highs near 40.
Mostly cloudy tonight, with a low
between 25 and 30. Mostly cloudy
tonight, with a low between 25
and 30. Becoming mostly sunny
Wednesday, with highs between
40 and 45.
The probability of preciplta·
tlon Is 70 percent today , 20
percent tonight and near zero
Wednesday.
Winds will be from th e no rtheast at 10 to 20 mph today and
from the north at five to 10 mph
tonigh t.
· Ohio Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Fair Thursday and Friday,
with a chance of showers Satur·
gay. Hi ghs will be in the 50s eac h
day. Overnight lows will be in the
30s Thursday and Friday morn·
ings, and in the 40s early
Saturday.

.

A. Glass Canister or B. Serving Bowl FREE
with a $5, $10 , or $20 Club
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Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a .m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .... .. .. ..... 253,4
AT&amp;T ............... .. .............. .. 27'J&lt;i
Ashland Oil .................... .... . 51
Bob Evans .. .:.................. .. ... 16
Charming Shoppes .............. 14 \12
City Holding Co ........ .. .. ....... 33
Federal Mogul.. .................. 29\6
Goodyear T&amp;R .......... ...... .. .46Yz
Heck's Inc ........... .. .. ....... ..... 2\l.t
Key Centurion ..................... 35
Lands' End .... .............. .. .... .l4\l.t
Limited Inc.. ........ .. ........... .l8,Ys
Multimedia Inc........... ...... .. 46\6
Rax Restaurants ........ ......... . 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................... ?
Shoney's Inc ............ , .......... 21%
Wendy's Inti. ... .... ..................6
. Worthington Ind ........ : .......... 16

•

Ornamen·t Your u·~rt.. ~
With Festive Holiday Glassware

Weather

State lute
ltmJrailce

5

Southern firefighters wanting more rain

Seeks divorces

•
'

-Iraq ... - Continued from page 1

J

The Daily Sentinel Page

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

PEOPLES BANK
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�''

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

r---Local briefs-__,
Veteran s Day celebration Wednesday

Robert Riffle, .32, Pomeroy,
entered a plea of guilty to
receivhig stolen property when
he appeared Monday In Melgs
County Common Pleas Court
before Judge Charles. Krllght.
Riffle was sentenced by Knight to
one-year in the Orient Correc. ·Ilona! Institute with the sentence
to commence on Jan. 5,
In othe~ court matters, a
judgment entry confirming sale
has been filed in a Meigs County
Common Pleas Court foreclosure
action by· Bank One, Athens,
against Homer L. Bonecutter Sr.,
et al.
,

The annual Veterans Day program on the steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse will begin at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday with a
special flag raising ceremony. A new POW-MIA flag,
commemorating the prisoners of war and missing In action In •
VietNam and a)l other wars in which the United States has been
involved, will be raised. This years' program is co-sponsored by ~
the Drew Webster Post of the American Legion and the Meigs
County Commissioners .. The commissioners are urging all
Meigs County residents to attend the Veterans Day program.

Squad has three __calls Monday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services· reports three
calls Monday ; Racine at 1:40 a.m. to Front St. for Fred
Scarberry who was treated but not transported; Pomeroy at 1
p.m. to Route 681 for Juanita Hoschar lo Veterans Memorial
Hospital, then to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 11 p.m . to
Happy Hollow Road for Amanda Richmond to Holzer Medical
Center.
'

Chester Carson, 76, of Tuppers
Plains, who died Sund ay at
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital,
was the son of- the late&gt; Mae
Carson Stiles. He was reared by
his gra ndparents. the late Hampton and Mona Carson. He was
also preceded in death by his
stepfather, Dell Stiles.

Ruth Darst
,

Ruth Francis Darst, 69, Route
2, Albany, died Monday at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Darst was born Jan. 20,
1918 in Cheshire, a daughter of
the late Pleasant A. and Vesta
Mae Little Ellis . She was a
registered nurse.
Surviving are her husband,
James Meredith Darst whom she
married on Aug. 17, 1933; two
sons, James Eddie Darst, AI·
bany , and Sammy Lewis Darst,
Carpenter; three daughters,

Band boosters
The monthly meeting of Southetn Band Boosters will be held
Thursday, 7:30p.m., in the band
room. Parents of ali band students In the district are urged to
att,end.

.,, ,

'•

;~

Tuesday, Novem!)ei"' 10, 1987
Page- 7

.,

Daughters of America conduct meeting

I would like to thank all persons who voted and
supported me in the November 3rd election. Special thanks to my wife Thelma, Charles Lantz,
Donna Reed. Lisa Welch, Mike Lance, Paula Lantz,
Gloria Wheeler, Marg Bennett, Cathy Hetzer and
Danny Joe Lantz, Jr. for their help on Election Day.

Installation of new officers was
a feature of friendship night of
District 13, Daughters of America, held recently at Belpre, with
Belle Prairie Council 269 . being
the host 'group.
Installed by Esther Ha rden,
district deputy, were Lora Damewood, councilor; Margaret Cotterill, ·associate council; Faye
Hoselton, associate vice councl·tor; Erma Cleland, junior past
councilor; Mary Moose, associate junior past councilor; Mary
Donna Davis, conductor; Margaret Tuttle, warden; Jo Ann·
Baum , inside sentinel; Alberta
Hartshorn, ·outside sentinel.
Appointed were Everett and

JOE E. LANTZ

Pd. Pol . I'd by Candidate, 51059 St. Rt. 681, Reedsville, Ohio

New &amp; Used Cars &amp; Trucks

Iman said that this much
needed project was a great
transportation project. He mentioned the numerous dedications
and ribbon cutting ceremonies
this past weekend and compared
the same bottleneck problems
for truckers on 35 to the bottleneck problems being resolved
with the dam.
Boster said that this project
shows her that the government
process · have can work. The
elected officials, appointed officials and community 'Input got
this project done. She said that
the input from the people convinced those with the pursestrlngs the need for the project.
The state kept Its promises to
the letter with this project,
Boster said. And without the
input from the people, the project
wouldn't have gotten started or
finished. She encouraged ' Dougan and the people In the area to
" keep hammering for 35."
Long congratulated Gallla
County on its efforts for the
project. He said he looks forward
to the ribbon cutting and dedication of St.Rt. 35.
The project, which took a year
to complete, was ·considered to
allieviate congestion due to he
number of businesses on Eastern
Avenue.

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____________________________
992-2196

,,

#~,..,...

Chapter In August. Pictured from the left are
chapter members, Uoyd ,Johnson, Steve Eblin,
commander; Oris Hubbard, Kenneth Cundiff,
Robert D. Ashley and Denver Curtis. A new
women's auxiliary unit bali been funned in
conjunction with chapter aclivltles.

also, it was noted. Arrangements
were made to have a Sunday
night choir with others of the
church to be Invited to sing with
the group. Sunday at 6 p.m . will
be the first practice.
At the December meeting,
months to host meetings will be
drawn by the members. At that
time new officers will also be
elected. Dale and Marjorie Watburn will have the Nov. 19

: A$50contributionwasm&amp;deto
the local tuberculosis nurse for a
special assistance program at
Monday night's meeting of Salon
710 Eight and Fort;, held at the
A~erlcan Legion hall in
Pomerdy.
·
. Veda Davis, chapeau deuxIerne, presided at the meeting
with Julia Hysell, children and
youth chairman, reporting that

The annual thank offering was
taken following . a program on
Thanksgiving given by Ruth
Shain at the recent meeting of the
Asbury United Methodist Church
Women at the church.
· "In Everything Give Thanks"
was the theme .of the program
using scripture from Psalm 100
and the song "We Gather Together." Harriet Sinclair and
Mary Lisle were the readers. As
each presented her thank offering, she read a part of how the
offering is used. Mrs. Shain read
a poem which she had written
entitled " Why I Am Thankful."
Kathleen Fryar was hostess

Clela nd, district councilor, pre- .
sided at the meeting. The death
of Faye Hoselton's brother and
the Illness of Elizabeth Hayes
was reported. Esther Smith is
asking membrs for old ragged
quilts to be used as a special
money making project.
An auction was held at the
close of the· meeting with proceeds goi ng to the national ways
and means committee and District 13. Attending were
members from Perry Council
283; New Lexington; Guiding
Star Council1 24, Syracuse; Ches ter Council 323, Chester, and
Belle Prairie Council 269.

Junior garden
club meets

she has been unable to contact party and gift exchange.
the family with the cystic fibrosis Partners were reminded to take
·child. She also reported that food for a Christmas b&amp;sket.
there Is a another child with a
Lula Hampton presented the
lung disease which the Salon may scrapbook which she had made
be able to assist.
· during the 1986-87 year to Pearl
Plans were made for the Knapp, chapeau passe. Mrs.
annua!Chrlstmasdlnnerpartyto Knapp and Mr. Hysell served a
be held at Crow's Steak House. dessert course and coffee. HasFollowing the dinner, the·group tesses for January will be Mrs .
will go to the legion hall for a Davis and Loretta Tiemeyer.

then introduced Mrs. Gaskill who
reviewed the book, "Run with the
Horseman" by Farro! Sams . She
noted that the author is ·a
practicing physician In Fayetteville, Ga. where he was born and
raised. This was his first novel,
she said, and It is marked by
humor and detailed plctl.\res of a
mischievlous Southern farm boy
named Porter Osborne, Jr.,
trying to make it through adoles-

cence during the depression days
on a red clay farm in rural
Georgia. It details his closed
frlendshp with a young negro
named 'Buddy ,"
For roll call members gave a
personal incident of childhood
mischief. Candy, nuts and snacks
were served to the members and
guests by the hostess. Next
meeting will be held on Nov.18at
the home of Mrs . Hackett .

Community calendar
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
CHESTER - Chester Town- ·' Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
ship Trustees will meet Tuesday, Sorority will meet Thursday,
7: 30p.m., at the town hall.
5:30 p.m., for dinner at the
·
annual Sacred Heart Church
WEDNESDAY
Bazaar .
POMEROY - A committee
RACINE - Southern High
meeting of Scout Troop 249 will
be held Weanesday, 8:30p.m., at School Athletic Boosters will
American Legion Post 139 in meet Wednesday to finalize plans
Pomeroy. All members are for the football and volleyball
banquet to be held Sunday, Nov.
urged to attend.
22, at 1:'30 p.m. All interested
parents are urged to attend.
THURSDAY
Anyone
who doesn't have a
CHESTER - Shade River
s'tudent·lnvolved
but Is interested
Lodge No . 453, Chester, will have
In
attending
the
banquet
may call
election of offlcers ·at the regular
Martha
McPhail
at
992-5762
by
meeting on Thursday at 7: 30p.m.
Monday,
Nov.
·
1
6.
Refreshments will be served.

REEDSVILLE - Youth revival starting Monday at Reeds ville United Methodist Church
running through Nov. 14, 7:30
each evening with Jim Stewart,
Albany speaking. Fellowship
each evening following service.
Relocated
MIDDLEPORT - Big Bend
Clvltan Club has relocated to the
basement of the old American
Legion Hall, 4th St., Middleport.
The organization meets the first
and third Monday of each month.
The first meeting at the new
location will be 7: 30 p.l'(l. on
Monday , Nov. 16.

Arrangements to pay the balance of the mission pledge were
made at the recent meeting of the
Temple United Methodist
Women held at the home of Leah
Crabtree. The Wo rld Bank offerIngs were presented at the
meeting.
·
Kathy Jordan had devotions
_using Thanksgiving as the
theme. She was assisted · by

World
Community
Day held
The annual World Communty
Day program of Church Women
United was held at the Rutland
Methodist Church Friday.
Mrs. Charles Searles presided
at the meeting with Mrs. Harvey
Erlewlne as the leader. Theme
was "Sojourners for Justice."
The progam was written by six
persons who live on the South
Texas border, and stressed loving sojourners as we love
ourselves.
Taking part In the program
were Mrs . Arnold Richards, Mrs .
Charles Goeglein, Miss Rhoda
Hall, Mrs. Jamers Titus, Mrs.
Ervin Baumgardner, and Mrs .
Dwight Wallace. .
The offeratory prayer and
benediction were given by the
pastor of the host church. Ushers
were Mrs . Ka.r!Grueser and Mrs .
John Caldwell. Church organist
was Mrs. Carl Denison. Dues
were collected and blanket certifIcates purchased by the various
churches represented

meeting. It was noted that a
dogwood has been planted in
honor of Sabrina Drake and that
the Clvltan Club sonsored a
Halloween dance and furnished
refreshments at the school. An
afternoon party was held for the
younger students.
Several teachers attended a
two day workshop at Marietta.
Dr. Lou Brown of Wls~onsin was
the leader. Katina Karoulls from

-

the Department of Mental Retardation will be the speaker at the
December meeting. The Southern Local School District will
have a program, "Everybody ·
Counts" which is a study of the
hearing impaired, blind, mentally diS&lt;! bled, and physically
handicapped.
A nominating committee was
appointed and will report at a
later

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THE PROFESSIONAL TONING SYSTEM

A

fter just a few short weeks of regular visits; you will
flrm up sagging muscles, increase your flexibility,
tighten skin, and relieve tension. Best of all, you will
begin' to reduc!l cellulite and lose inches.
You'll experience fast results with no muscle strain,
sweating or fatigue. You will begin to notice the many
benefits of improved circulation. The Toning System uses
motorized machines that combine Isometric and isotonic
exercise with a remarkable principle proven effective
by physical therapists.
Call or come by today for your complimentary session
on The Professional Toning System and relax your way
to a beautiful, new Image.

CALL NOW FOR AN APPOINTMENT

FIT ANoTRIM
992-3033

105 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio

WHAT SHOULD I DO FIRST?

several others. Westlna Crabtree
will be hostess for the December
mee ting with a gift exchange to
be held and secret pals to be
revea.fed.
'
Plans were made for a birthday party for Jesus at the church
In December with the young
people to present the program. A
family potluck supper will be
held prior to the program.

I WISH TO THANK THE MEIGS
COUNTY VOTERS FOR THEIR
SUPPORT. IN THE NOV. 3rd
ELECTIONS FOR COUNTY BOARD
OF EDUCATION.
HAROLD G. ROUSH

from the Barbers at 'Sine-Cera
for a box recenty sent them.
The health kits for the Festival
of Sharing are to be at the church
Sunday. The annual Christmas
dinner wil be held at noon at the
home of Beulah Ward with each
member to take a $3 gift
exchange, a toy for the hospital,
and a card for her secret paL
Everyone is also to take a
covered dish lor the dinner . . ·
The sprltual life closing by
Mary Cundiff was "Quality
Time" and a prayer . Refreshments were served to those
named and Marie Houdashelt.
Harriet Sinclair was welcomed
as a new member of the unit.

The newly organized junior
garden club, The Junior Growers
and Showers, will meet at the
home of the advisor, Sheila
Curtis, Wednesday, from 2 to 4
p.m. anyone inters ted In joining
the club at !hat time are Invited
to attend. Wreaths and Christmas ornamets wlli be made from
natural materials to be entered
in the annual Christmas flower
show, Nov. 13 and 14, at the
Senior Ci tlzens Center. Anyone
wanting additional information
about the club may call Mrs .
Curtis, 992-6501 or Peggy Crane,
992-2538.

Middleport Literary Club meets .
Mrs. Walter Crooks, Mrs.
Charles Blakeslee, and Mrs.
Cash Bahr were guests at the
recent meeting of the-Middleport
Literary Club held at the home of
Mrs. Charles Gaskill.
Mrs. Geoge Hackett , vice pres!dent, cooducted the meeting in
the absence of Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter. The group sang
"Happy Birthday" to Nan
Moore, member of the group,

for the meeting ·which opened
with the study of Rebekah, a
woman of the Bible. Irene Parker
gave devotions taken from
Guideposts, "Let's Vot On It",
and scripture was taken from
Duet. 14.
There were 28 shutln calls
reported during th e past month.
Freewill and birthday offerings
were taken and the birthday of
Marcia Karr was noted.
Helen Teaford read a letter
from Jean and Denver Stone,
missionaries in Singapore who
will be retiring soon after 32
years In mission work. Ann
Sauvage read a thank you letter

MARC announces available ?,rants

meeting with a turkey dinner to
Grants to provide transportabe served.
tioil
for handicapped persons to
For devotions Riebel used
Ruth 24 , 13-18 on the theme of .- their places of employment have
doctrinal statements. The Rev. been applied for, It was reported
at the recent meeting of the
Dwight Anderson had prayer .
Others attending were Man- Meigs Association of Retarded
Citizens held at the Carleton
ning and June Kloes, Howard
School.
Wagenhals, Jean Thomas , RanIntroduction of parents and
dall and Carolyn Davis, Corrine
teachers
attending opened the
Ambrose, Kenny Imboden, Sis
Van Meter, and John, Riebel, Jr .
a guest.

Temple UMW meeting held

See Riek Tolliver, Jay Hill or Pat Hill

CONGRATULATIONS

~

Eight and Forty has meeting

PER MONTH
48 MONTHS 10.75% APR

1983 GRAND
MARQUIS

$1 7910

NEW FLAG - Chapter 53, Disabled American
Veteral)s, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, are proud of
their new American flag sent to the chapter by
Con g. Clarence Miller. At lhe request of
Congressman Miller, the flag · flew over the
Capitol in Washington, D. C., for the local D.A.V.

Several holiday activities were
planned during the recent meetIng of the Golden Rule Class of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church at the home of John and
Glenna Riebel.
: Helping a needy family was
!Jiscussed and arrangements
made to have an auction at the
December meeting to help build
JIP the class funds . Members are
still savlng pennies for that fund

1986' ESCORT GT

V-6, auto. trans., speed control,
tilt wheel, power windows.

48 MONTHS 10.75% APR

'

1985 FORD
TEMPO GL

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f.
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Golden Rule Class has meeting

4

48 MONTHS 10.75% APR

2 IN STOCK

Sarah Mae Gillman, Hamden;
Ruby Eloise Simpson, Pomeroy,
and Shirley Louise Will, McArthur; 14 grandchildren, eight
great·grandchlldren, three sis.
ters, Eunice Christy, Pomeroy;
Ka thleen Lowe, Columbus, and
Roma Litton, Delaware; two
bro thers, Loui s and Pleasant
Ellis, both of Middleport, and
several nieces and nephews.
Preceding her In death in
add ition to her parents were two
sons, Larry Meredith and Charl es Darst, and two infant sons;
three sisters, Virgie, Vesta and.
Etta Mae Ellis; two broth ers,
Sidney and Maynard Ellis, and
three gra ndchildren.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower Fu neral Home in Middleport with Bishop John Pollard
officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery at Cheshire. Frie9ds may call at the
funeral horne from 2 to4 a nd 7 to9
p.m. Wednesday .

$1933

Charlotte Grant, color bearers;
Helen Wolf, pianist; Esther
Smith , captain; Opal Hollon,
treasurer; Janice Lawson, secretary; Mary Moose , Mary K.
Holter, Eileen Clark, trustees;
Betty Roush, Eileen Clark, Alberta Ha rtshorn, nominating
committee, and Mrs . Holter,
publicity .
The district deputies and past
counclors will have jheir Christmas dinner on Dec.'!; at I: 30 p.m
at the Western Sizzlln' Steak
House, Athens. There will be a $2
gift exchange.
A potluck supper was held
preceding the meeting wlth Mrs.
Harden giving t\le bleslng. Erma

Asbury UMW_meets; plans projects
/'

and that the money has gone
where the most good can be done
for the most people.

Don, missed 4 of the 2 6
games in the Daily Sentinel
co-sponsored football page.
Don tied with one other per·
son. With the luck of the
draw, D.on Kay is our final
•
w1nner.
'

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

__

By The Bend

NO PAYMENTS 'TIL FEBRUARY 1988

Local 880 spokesma n Irv G! !lin
said the union is prepared to
resume negotiations.
"Union employees would say
that th e last thing in the world
that they wanted was a strike,"
said Gitlin . "But the issue of job
security is so vital, so important
that there was no alternatiye."
Talks are also goi ng on be- Licences issued
tween the union and the AkronA marriage license has been
Ca nton· Food Industry Commitissued
In Meigs County Probate
tee, which represents several
_Court
to
David Lee Vance, 24,
union stores in Trumbull, MahonMiddleport,
and Annette Rae
ing, Co lumbiana, Stark, Summit
Fitch,
18,
Long
Bottom.
and Tuscarawas co unties.

Chester Carson

Meet Nov. 15
•
The new Ohio chapter of Gold
Wing
Road), Riders
(G WRRA
which Association
includes
Meigs and GalUa Counties and
the surrounding areas, wm meet
9 a.m., Nov. 15, in the ban.quet
room at Shoney's in Point Pleasan!, W.Va.

Veterans l\lemorlal
Monday Admissions - Lawrenee McQuaid, Pomeroy; Le-

The Daily Sentinel

Buy Now, Pay Later!

Dedicate new three
lane project Monday

Area deaths

I

land Saxton Pomeroy; Robert
Willis, Syra~use.
Monday Discharges - Anna
Koenig, Edna Deem, Ricky PhilUps, Ne1iie Perry, Mary Barrett,
Oren Wright.

PAT HILL FORD, INC.

All Middleport vi llage offices will · be closed all day
Wednesday, November 11 , In observance of Veterans Day.

Cleveland
...
:.:ontinued from page 1

j

• 1
Announcements H08plla neWS

.

Middleport offices to close

By MARGARET CALDWELL
OVP News Staff
The three lane portion ot Ohio 7
(Eastern Avenue) betwee n the
Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza
a nd Pizza Hut was officially
dedicated Monday morning at
the Gallia-Meigs Metropolitan
Airport. The dedication was
Intended to be at the KMart
parking lot but was relocated due
to the rain.
Speakers for the dedication
were George Dougan, Ohio Department of Transportation District 10 deputy , Dale !man,
Galli polis city manager, Jolynn
Boster, state representative, and
Jan Michael Long, sta te senator.
"I feel that this project was
signlflcant in means of better
transportation a nd econo mic
growth in Gallfpolis," Dougan
said.
For better transportation, Dougan said tha t now .that this
project was completed, maybe
US 35 would be concentra ted .on
next. In the past there has peen a
lot of competition for the money

Meigs County
Court news

'.

Tueaday, November 10, 1987

h8 hours following the pauing of a loved one areal difficuh. Oaciaiona muat be made. arrange·

must be put into action . It' a important that you
how to go about making thit time altttle easier.

-.

turvivor moat seriously affected by a death, . ~

)

--:---

11

,spc&gt;use lor example, should be comlo&gt;rrt~:e:d :b~y ~~:~;:~~~
can h~p with the little things like tt
family clergyman should be notified as soon
for he will want to offer suppon to the be·
And a call to the funeral director to make ar~
for sorvicu or to put into force plans that - .Vf':l
--•••••• previously made. should be made as quickly as
lpoult&gt;le after the daath. That means anytime, day or ........II
We are available 24 hours a day to serve the

of our community.

·~cru)ol~~~~::d~::S'::f'.:;:r­

. Business associates, relattvesand close friends
_.._ be told of the death, so they ean attend funeral aervices ,o r "to be of whatever asaistance is needed.

~f!/1~- .
!#;MH~ ytf/UJ

,.

In any case the primary concern is for those cloaest to
the deceased, for they will feel the loss most deeply .
Your questions and com menta are invited. We will answer them privately or publicly through this column.
5TH STREET
1614) 667-3110
COOLVILLE, OHIO

(614) 992 -6141
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Paid fol"b candidate Harold G. Roush Rl. 3 Box 18 Racine

. ·-

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•

'

r

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�Tuesday, November 10, 1987

Tuesday, November 10, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Business
Services
r=~:::=:=:::=~=::::=~fli==========tr.:========:::;1

People in the news-----. .Ringwald movie begins filming· in Cincinnati
By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press lnternatlomd
THE MOURNING PROGRAM: CBS's breakfast-hour failure, ·~The Morning Show," doesn't go off the air for another
couple of weeks but Marlette Hartley is cutting out early.
Tuesday will be the last day for co-host Hartley, who already
has a new JOb lined up. Hartley heads to Atlanta Wednesday to
begin work on a feature film. As of Monday, the folks at CBS's
Black Rock headquarters In New York didn't even know they'd
be without a host on Wednesday. The last "Morning Show" is
Nov. 27 and then CBS News takes over the time slot.
GODFATHER IN JAIL: Soul singer James Brown is in
trouble with the law again and this time he's cort)plainlng about
the way he was treated. The ·:godfather of soul" says deputies in
Aiken, S.C., bound him with wire alter he was arrested for
crashing into a car near his home in Beech Island la te Saturday.
A tussle broke out when a deputy tried to arrest Brown and
several citizens had to step in and help the deputy . Brown was
charged With leaving the scene of an accident and resisting
arrest but is out of jail on $10,000 bond. "Tirey tied me up with
wire, " he said. "Yes, they tied my hands and feet . It's very
inhumane what they did to me." The Sheriff's Department
dentes any wire was used. This arrest follows one in September
in Augusta, Ga., when Brown was charged with speeding and
eluding police and another in July when he backed into a car in
Richmond County. Ga., a nd was charged with operating a
vehicle without proof of insurance.
BRIDE i\ND BEi\CH BOY: The Beach Boys went to the
desert to marry off one of their own. Carl Wilson, 40, married
Gina Martin, 31, daughte r of singer Dean Marlin, Sunday in a
Presbyterian church in Las Vegas. Wllson's children from a
previous marriage, Jonah and Justyn, served as best man and
maid of honor and the rest ofthe Beach Boys- Wilson's brother
Brian , Mike Love, AI Jardine and Bruce Johnson - also
attended. The father of the bride was accompanied by his
ex-wile, Jeanie, the bride's mother. Wilson, 40, wore a dark
gray tuxedo wh~e ,Martin wore a turn-of-the-century Elizabethan off-whfte gown with lace !rim. She carried a bouquet of
lilies of the valley and champagne roses and wore a matching
garland.
DRESSED TO KILL: The late &lt;.;ary Grant was so stylish that
he still made the Tailors Council of America's list of
bes t-dressed Americans. Grant was named the best-dressed
man In Hollywood because of "the lack of any current motion
picture actor who sartorially represents the motion picture
industry,'' tbe organization said. Some of the others on the list:
Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., in politics, Ted Koppel in ·t he media ,
Earvln "Magic" Johnson in sports, Don Rickles in comedy,
Andy Williams in music , former "Let's Make a Deal" host
Monty Hall for philanthropy and Lee lacocca in Industry.
CAREER BOOM: The career of Tony Melendez , the armless
guitaristfrom Chino, Calif., who touched Pope John Paul II with
his recital in Los Angeles, is booming. Melendez, 25, has
high -powered agencies like William Morris and the Brokaw Co.
representing him and he just performed at the Universal
Amphitheatre In North Hollywood as a warmup for Latin pop
star Jose Jose. Meledez's managers are pursuing a recordiug
contract they believ14 can cover four different markets religious , pop, Spanish and Instrumental. Melendez, who plays
the guitar with his feet 'because the drug Thalidomide caused
him to be born without arms, says his father has been a big
Inspiration. "My fa ther, he had a good ear for music and he was
always a •-getter," Melendez said. " My mom when I was little
would waWt to do everything lor me. But he would say, 'Aw,let
him dolt himself.' So between the both of them, they didn't spoil
me in any way_"

GLIMPSES: Former CBS newsman Walter Cronkite will
receive the Spirit of Liberty award from Norman Lear's People
for the American Way group Wednesday in New York ... More
awards will be passed out in Washington Tuesday when the
National CDmmission on Working Women of Wider Opportunities for Women passes out its Alices for the ninth time. Linda
Lavin , star of the "Alice" TV series, and Betty Thomas ,
formerly of " Hill Street Blues, " will be passing out the honors to
. the likes of Susan Ruttan of "L.A. Law ."

6f Cincinnati senior who mee1s,a extras.
local young woman (Ringwald)
Monday' s first scenes were
with a questionable past, and
fllmed at a farm in nearby Union,
becomes obsessed wittfher.
Ky., with horses Included as a
Much of the filming wlll be . symbolic metaphor for the title,
done !!round the university area
''F resh Horses," meaning to
- including a major scene to be make a new start.
shot Saturday at Nippert StaOther scenes will br filmed at
dium · while the University of
the Newport, Ky ., American
Cincinnati plays Austin Peay in
Legion 'hall, a Covington, Ky.,
football. Filming also includes a
home with a view of Cincinnati's
1
tailgate party, the marching skyline, Americana amusement
' Hoosiers. ''
park, Winteriest at Kings Islat\d
McCarthy plays a University band, cheerleaders and about 70
amusement park, two mansions
In Cincinnati, a 24 -hour grlll,
University of Cincinnati classrooms, cafeteria and a sorority
Dec. 5 at ;he Senior Citizens house. ·
Holiday plans were discussed
Center Pomeroy, with music by
at the recent meeting of the Xi
One of the key supporting
Mlck Childs. There will be a
Gamma Epsilon Chapter, Beta
characters in the film will be be
dinner followed by a dance.
Sigma Phi Sorority, held at the
portrayed by a 15-yea r -old CinAgain this year the chapter wlll cinnatl .· lligh school · junior,
Senior Citizens Center,
have a lunch with Santa for the Christy Iiudlg. She attends the
Pomeroy.
members' children on Dec. 12 at School for Creative and PerformIt was noted that the chapter is
still making necklaces for sale . the Pomeroy United Methodist lng Arts. Film producers asked
Church. The Christmas gift ex- school officials for recommend aand will continue to do so until the
change party will be held on Dec.
holida:;.s are over. Orders may be
lions for the part and Budig
15 at the home of the sponsor, wasn't
placed with any members.
Included. However, she
Phyllis Hackett, Middleport.
Next meeting will be held on
auditioned on her own and won
Hostesses were Debbie Jones, the part.
Nov.l7 with a progressive dinner
Lynne
Crow, Jenny Smith, and
for members. The couple's
"I'm not putting down the
Nancy
Hill.
Christmas party will be held on
school, because I like it there,"
she said. "But, they do have
favorites and I guess I'm not one
of them ."
Her first impressions of RingWanda Shank was the top loser was noted· that there are stlll wald, who has starred in several
and Cathy Coates, the runner-up epenings in the 'Tuesday night
teen-oriented films and was on
a,t Monday night's meeting of class. At the Tuesady Mason
the cover of Time magazine last
Siinderella held at Five Points. It class, Nlda Kearns lost the most
year, ." We've said 'HI' a couple of
weekly weight and thete was a tie
times. She seems a llttle shy, but
for runner-up between Enid
she's not unfriendly ."
The American Legion roundup Adams and Joan Vaughan. PrlShe's more taken with
train wlll be in Middleport to pick Vate counseling is also available McCarthy.
"Th.e fourth time they called
up m emberships at noon on from Mrs. Newsome.
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Filming began in the Cincinnati area
Monday !o~ a $l2 million Molly
Ringwald movie that will include
some area events and local
people.
"Fresh Horses", a contempor-·
ary love story, pits Andrew
McCarthy across from Ringwald. Oirecting the film is David
Anspaugh, who directed .

Xi Gamma Upsilon has meeting

Slinderella class gathers recently

D'sch
ds
1
arge recor

Rock Springs Grange wlll meet
at 7:30 p .m. Thursday at the
grange hall.

m em bers.

Field Service
Plans have been announced for
fie ld service orientation to be
held from 1 to 3 p.m. on Nov. 22 at
the American Legion hall in
Middleport. Mrs . Elzlna Wagner,
Department of Ohio field service
dirctor, will be conducting the
session. Registration fee Is $2.
Anyone may attend.

rt===========::=;;-r-;:===========~ti

THANK YOU••
To the Voters of
Sutton Town~hip
for your support
in last Tuesda¥'s
election.
DELBERT
SMITH
Paid for by candid'ate.
Delbert Smith, Rt. I Racin Ohio

1 WISH TO THANK
ALL THOSE WHO
HELPED .ElECT ME
. TO TRUSTEE OF
BEDFORD
TOWNSHIP.
ELMER- Paid
F. forBAILEY
by candidate,

5Jl JACKSON PI&lt;E·At3&amp; WEST
PhOne 446· 4624

WJEH 990 AM RAD IO PRESENTS

TUESDAY BARGAIN NIGHTS :
All S'EATS $1.99

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Locust, Oak, Cherry

$J500
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Per Pickup Load
De)ivered
SWORN IN - 'Minter Fryar, left, who was
electe d to fill a council seat at the November 4
eleCtion, was sworn in Thursday night by Mayor

Board approves state health care contract
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The state Controlllng Board has
authorized new state employee
health care and vision care plans
costing the state $2.7 million to
administer over a two-year
period.
The board Monday gave the
Department of Administrative
Services permission to contract
with Blue Cross and Blue Shield
of Ohio, Cleveland, for $1.76
million to administer the health
. care pl an, while Vision Service
Plans, Columbus, will administer the eye care services at a cost
of $82,971.
· Edward Seidler, chairman of
the State Employee Compensatio n Board, said the total cost was
calculated for the entire -bien-

RATES

- -

1C1 OAYI

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&gt;oo"'" •~•o••

Our survey shows more than83% of the people in Meigs
County read The Daily Sentinel.**

We Deliver
For Subscription or Advertising Information

CALL FOR DETAILS

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

Don 'I Mi11 Thi1 Evenf/

-

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__
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Call 992-2156
• Source: Market Opinion Research
"Telephone survey of 2,000 Meigs county residents taken November 1986
through january 1987.

Cou11try. Gifts
and D1cor

fti - H_.,_

..._

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT
JUVENILE DIVISION OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
iN THE MATTER OF :
INFANT MALE DOE
dob 6-21 -87
CASE NO . 26653

2

In Memoriam ·
In Loving Memory Of

BUD MILLER
Who Passed Away
· Nov . tO , 1979
One day when you

were in the hospital you

DONELLI'S
PIZZA ·
992·6167
121 II-INCH 8 ITEM

95
$9
Green/ Black Olives,
PIZZAS

PeP.peroni, . Cheese.
Onions, Green
Peppers. Sausage,
Ground Beef.
NO SUBSTITUTIONS

days wore

ha~py

and bright. Since you
swent away they a:ue

lonely and dim.
Love you .

rents'

consent.

It is further Ordered that the
known parents appear personalty ~r!l' this court at Po-

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

OPEN FOR

BUSINESS

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER
WHIR IIIU RD.
RUTLAND, OHIO
742-203$

11-3-1 mo. pd.

BINGO

EAGlES (LUI-POMEROY, OH.
IHURU PM-II 6,ts

ing issued wherein the said
known parents could be put in
jail for · ten 11 0) days or
fined One Thousand Dol-

lars ($1,000.001 or both.

Robert E. Buck,
Judge and Ex Officio
of the Ju~Jenile Court

(10113, 20, 27: tttl3. 10. t7

4-16-86-tfn

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

4-22·87-tfo.

NOW HULLING
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lan:w~:• 'S SUNOCO
IT. 7, CHESTER

INOW THRU NOY. 14th
MON. THRU SAT.
9:00·4:30
$8°~ per 100 lb.

985-3350

6-!Nfc

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
Riverine Antiques
1124 East Main St.
Pomeroy
HOURS, Mon.·luei.·Wed.
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. ·

Sunday: I p.m.-6 p.m.
By Chame or Appointment

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE,

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
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TOP SOIL
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6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10-7-tfn

ELIM HOME

Room &amp; Board For
Senior Citizens and
GoOd Rates

T.L.C.
25 Yrs. EKp.

Home &amp; Auto
16141 992-3718
Add on mini fuel computer
system. Fits any car. Instant
miles per gallon readout.
Know your 1uel consumption
from one block to hundrads of
miles.
Commercial : '
Store to Job Cost
Taxi Service

Before and after auto tune·up.
(Comparator) Fill up your
tank, and watch it subtract and
display fuel

consumed.

UNDER '90
Monitors for MCF·CCF used
for furnaces . calibrated to

your &amp;as

992·6873
Joe or Pouley Bowlond
209 South 4th St.
Middleport, Oh.
"LOW INCOIIE HOME"

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFINQ
·
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK

Phone Day •r lvenlngt

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

Announcements

meter.

Middleport-Coli! Ohio

11 . · 87 · 1 mo.

'185-4141

GEIIDAL CONTIAUOII
Reference•

11 · 3-ttn
f

-

AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF SOU THt;,ASTERN OHIO- AAA
If you are interested In a setling
career in the Galli a County area.
why not contider AAA. Send us
some irtiormation aboutyouuelf
and your work history. We will
contaat..you for an interview.
Send to: The Automobil eC tub of
Southeastern Ohio - AAA ,
P.O .Box 371. Porttmouth. Ohio
46662, Att : Bob Bates.

Experienced body men needed .
Col\ 614-3a8-9616.

lege! Secretary. Experienced
preferred. Send resume 10: Bolt
POSTED! No hunting or tres·
969 Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
passing on ·following properties:
G~ry Dill,. Steve Dill. Keith
Would like someone to 1.each me
Ridenour, Junior Hunt , R.H . "guitar lessons in my home. Call
Boatright.
614-446 -3805 after 5:00pm.
Piano leesons. Now accepting
students. BeginnMs through ad·
vanced . .Call 614·949-2890
evenings.
No hunting o~ treapnaing on
Eldon Morris property, Bailay
Run Rd.
MASTERCARD-VISA! Regard·
less of credit hiatory . Also, nsw
credit card. No one refused! For
information call ... 1-3, 5· 733·

6062 ex1IMI2947.

4

·

Giveaway

7 wk. old kittens. Call614-4467100 .
firewood . Call 614-446-3870.

10-8-tfc

References

ll.;[. .;;;. '"'5!.

1-3-'86 tfc

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

ROOFING

10-9-'87-1 ino.

Far111 Equlp111ent.
Parts &amp; Smlce

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860

Howard L Writesel

992-2526

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Form Equipment
Dealer

"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

SPECIAl RATES FOR STUDENTS

Witness my hand and the
seal of this Court this 9th

RUSS MOORE

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Also Transmission

&amp; Good 1-'ur

Basham Building

10·8·1 mo.

BUILDERS

t~e

tion without the unknown pa·

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

God thought you had
and
took you home with
Him.
When you were here

17th day
of Oecember, 1987, at t 0:00
a.m. Failure to appear m"i result in a contempt citation bemeroy. Oh10 on the

Child. dob June 2t. t 987.
may then be placed for adop- day ot October, '1987.

Business Services

BISSELL

enough

will be pe""'"""tly divested
of the parental rights and prNileges with respect: to sakt Infant Male child. dob June 21,
1987, and the Infant Male

Public Notice

1

said . you were coming
home. but you went to
another home. Guess
suffered

pear on December 17, 1987
to Answer Qr to otherwise respond before December 17,
1987. the unknown parents

10-16-1 mo . d.

2 traes in City to giveaway for

1-----------+---------i;::::::::::::::::::::=:;l

glected and dependent child, I
on June 25, 1987, will take I""
notice that a Motion (Complaint) has been filed in theJu!Jenile Court of Meigs County.
Pomeroy , Ohio by the Meigs
County Department of Human
Services, formerly the Meigs
County Welfare Department.
Children's Services. request·
ing an Drder of the Court that
;nfant Male Doe be committed
to the permanent custody of
said Meigs County Department of Human Services .
The :said unknown parent&amp;
are hereby notified that if the
demand in the Motion (Complaint) for permanent custody is granted that the un·
known parents will be permanently divested of all parental rights and privileges
with respect to said child,
Infant Male Doe, and the
child, Infant Male Doe, mav
then be placed for adoption
withbut their consent. The~

H••ulth~

i, __ _ ,__,

., ___,
u-,.,-•..-

In case of your failure to ap·

a ne-

II ',. Fuu ,

~t~.:.~~-

··-

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

You!-Hrin!! 4. 'rrlt•nd.

10..5·1 fllO .

•JT..aufl·· -~

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Help Wanted

Televison Advertising needs
high energy persons tor the
Gallipolis ana. Possible further
management opportunity . Part·
time, full· time. base end com·
mission. Call 9-6. 304 -7677881 .

MASTERCARD / VISA! Regardless of credit history. Also , new
credit card. No onBrefusedl Fw
information call... 1-316-73:!6062 Ext. N · 2758 .

Hysell
Garage -

Too C11n Look &amp; Ft•t•l

11

Buying Roots,
Beef Hides and
Deer Hides

Rog~r

Ht&gt;ttt·" At 'rill.. , Fltn..r~" Cluh!"

PH. 992-2300 Or Stop By
115 W. Se&lt;on~, Pomeroy

said uhknown parents are entitled to Counsel and if the
unknown parents are with·
out funds to hire an attorney,
an attorney will be appointed
to represent them without
any costs to the said unknown parents.
' The unknown parents are
to answer the
required
Motion (Complaint) within
twenty-eight (28) days after
the last publication of this
notice. which will be published once each week for
six (6) successive weeks.
and the last publication will
be on November 17, 1987.

heretofore ·adjudged

''Yt~u

Services

3 Announcements

HOURS
Mon .-Sat. 2 to 9 P.M.
Sunday 5 to 9 P.M.
10-15-1 mo.

FULl BODY TONING
an~ FIRMING

Emplovment

• NITE-LIGHTS
WHEATE LIGHTS

614-664-4761

••

742 - ~328 .

NEW AND USED
WIDE
SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 74'2-2315

TR~.fPING SUPPLIES

FITNESS CLU0'

Cash for standing timber. We
buy veneer white oak and
walnut. Call AI Tr omm. 614·

PARTS

!J281Hfi

~~~

QUILTS
High prices paid for pra-1950
qulhs. Applique. pieced. any
condition. Call 614·99-2 ·2101
or 614 -992-6667,

v.w.

BUSINESS PHONE
(6141 992-6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
(6141 992-7754

GEORGE BUCKLEY

60.000 BTU

Buying daily gold, silver coins,
rings, jewelry, sterling ware. old
coins, l•ge currency. Top pricea. Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd . Aye. Middleport, Oh. 614·
992-3476.

l0/28/1 mo .

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here

Cross Stitch Supplies
SO% Off
Basket .Supplies

sto~te .

&amp; up. Call 614-367-061.3 .

Rai!4e,. ..

We Carry Fishing Supplies

SALE

Gas heating

"It.'s A G~eat Fund

SALES &amp; SERVICE

SIXTH ST., SYIACUSE, OH.

·

Wonted to buy- standing timber.
Call614-379·2758 .

SUSAN COLEMAN
742-2778
or
SHIRlEY COLEMAN
742-2125

New Location:
1~8 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 451~0

3-11-tfn

'

e ..tern

614-446·

Junk Auto' s with or without
motors. Call 614· 388· 9303.

TO BE A REPRESENTATIVE
CALl

ALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEAliNG

No Sunday Calls

BERRY BASKET

OR

992 -2196

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801

1911

Call 614-446-3159.

FOR FULlER BRUSH
PRODUCTS

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

"Free Estimates".

Buick-Pontiac.

WANTED TO BOY : Uud' wood
&amp; coal heltlfs. Swain's Furniture. 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Gallipolis.

WE'RE STILL ALIVE!

PAT HILL FORD

New Homes Built

and CASti
newer paid
u18dtOrcen.
Smith
TOP
' 83 model

m2.

Guarcintnd the Same Far
It Ytars

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

BISSE"
SIDING CO.

.,.._,.,-

Public Notice .

Sadly miss~d by
Mom&amp; Dad.

-·

·:~=1~~-

•-co
"'-C _ ._.
W.

Public Notice

June 21. 1987 a.•d who was

1

n--11••

Public Notice

who are the parents of lnfnat
Male Doe. Who was found in
the back of a pickup truck in

We Always Knew Pe~ple
From Meigs County Were
Abo"e A"erage!

c....,

.._.,.,_

248. whose date of birth is

I

131'"'

.... ._g_
,.....,.

~~~:n"~n'~~\f:JICN

(O~o

Survey d\J,ta shows 71% of Ohioans re~d a daily newspaper in the past week. •

446-2691
992.2os4

on

::~· :::

,_........

ClaUified pages I."OVI!r 1he
following relephofle uthano!feJ ...

G. . .

The Daily Sentinel

.J.J. =~~
'(J/fW
v=

RADIATOR
SERVICE

*VINYL SID! NG
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
.• INSULATION

Wanted To Buy

Ave .. . GalllpoUa. Coli

10/2,/1 mo.

11 · 4· 1·

10-1 9-87

9

FACTORY CHOKES

Insured/ Licensed

20% Off

""'"""~'"" .. ""'" .. ..,_, ~-- •&gt;OOo m

Meigs County on State Route

I

OU 1111

.~~:

.....................
.........
... ..... _.......................
'

OIOONT"

·~~~· ::,~OI ~.....:~-:.;:• '"""" ' " ' '"""' 11 ......, woO bo

unknown
parents.
whose names and addresses
cannot be ascertained, and

THURS., NOV. 12th-11 AM-8 PM - POMEROY
FRIDAY, NOV. 13th-11 AM-8 PM - GALLIPOLIS

11-a\Wollw
••aa ••·•-ot
1100
.,.

G&gt;~l-01

10-11

I:::: ::::

The

BE SURE TO MAKE IT A POINT TO STOP IN AND SEE
THIS GREAT SELECTION OF ESTATE JEWELRY.

S92-6226
Middleport

'ITIJ~)];ill

NOTICE
TO : THE UNKNOWN PARENTS OF INFANT MALE
DOE, dob 6-21-87, WHOSE
NAMES AND ADDRESSES
ARE UNKNOWN :

Christmas
Layaways Welcome

Evenings

IQ/17/1 mo.

Alleged Neglected and
Dependent Child

Necklaces
Cameos
Watches
Pins

with the $6.21 the state had been
paying.
The board approved a $1.5
mllllon low -interest Joan to Clark
Reliance Corp., Strongsville, for
bringing to its site a receittly
purchased industrial valve company from Burlington, Mass .
Tlie Ohio DepartmentofDevelopment, which . requested the
10-year loan at 5 percent Interest,
told the board the venture would
, create 22 jobs, and that·· 102
existing jobs would be retained at
thel company, which makes industrlal gauges and valves.
The board also approved:
-The state's $238 million
sehool subsidy payment for
November.

614·992-2269

614·992·5082

.........................""'

ONE DAYONLY

•
•
•
•

plum ending June 30, 1989.
' Seidler said Central Benefits of
Columbus now uses Blue Cross of
Northeast Ohio to administer the
employee plan for 24,707 state
worlj:ers .
Although strict competitive
.bidding was not done, Seidler
said the Blue Cross plan was
compared with others from Cen -'
tral Benefits, Amerltrust of
Cleveland and Community Mut ual (Blue Cross) of Cincinnati.
Seidler said Blue Cross was
able to offer the largest hospital
discounts, 17 percent in Cleve·Jand and 4.5 percent elsewhere in
the state.
He said the cost of administering the health. care plan wlll be
$5.95 per employee, compared

BILL SLACK

Discount on Selected Items
HOURS: Tuea.-Sat.
10 am lo 5 pm

..;::!..
.... ••.....~0-1·"'"' ....._·-- ...........

Chester King, the elected delegate from Meigs County
Granges, at.tended thje annual
session of- the Ohio State Grange
at Hudson. He served as chairman of the taxation committee
and presented the resolutions
pertaining to tha t subject to the
delegate body .
·
Mr. and Mrs . Arthur Crabtree,
sta te grange deputies from
Meigs County, were . also in
Hudson for the annual sesson and
part icipated in the activities
planned for deputies to help them
in their duties as deputies in the
county.
Other Me igs Coun ty grangers
thete were Maxine and Patty
Dyer of Star Grange. .

THURS.,' NOV. 12th-11 AM-8PM

Rings
Pendants
Brooches
Earrings
Bracelets

Gbry Cummins

-!WI

Wit!AfJ=~ :~L~~~~~

•
•
•
•
•

Eber Pickens. Fryar was sworn In prior to
.January due to a vacancy on council created by
the resignation of Glenn Cundiff, who moved to
Florida.

Elmer F. Baile, Rt. 681 , Shade, Ohio

Attends meeting

F

ELECTRIC

Ron Diles or

FIREWOOD
. ,. _.)

~ ...._

l'o.i(

11 / 2/ a7 1 mo.

I

TO PlAU AN AD CAlL 99)-2U6
MONDAY thru FJIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.
J A.M. Until NOON SATUIIDA r
ClOSED SUNDAY •
I'OUCIU

or one day only, visit our store
to select from a beautiful collection of fine jewelry obtained
from estates across America and
save 25%. Choose from fine
gold jewelry; enhanced with
diamonds, rubies, emeralds
and other precious stones. Sub- •.
ject to previous purchase.

~

....

Makes:
PH . 949-2969

j

SLUG SHOOT
EVER'!: SUNDAY
IN NOVEMBER
1:00 p.M.
AT THE
KEN AMSBARY
IZAAK WALTON
LEAGUE

DON'T -lET YOUR EIECTRI·
CAl PROBlEMS BECOME A
SHOCK TO YOU!
CALL

Parte &amp; SeNice on all

Libraries closed

Grange to meet

EAGLE· RIDGE· SMALL
ENGINE CENTER

Localad half way betwaan Rt. 7 and Bashan.
Yard Man mowers , Echo
trimmers . saws, blo~ers
- Snowo11 ·blowers, uregon saw parts.
Winter Spetiats: push mow·
ers picked up and tuned and
returned r2o.oo.

·-

In conjunction with the upcom- .
ing Veterans Day, Emmogene
Congo, Meigs County Recorder,
urges all armed forces veterans
to have their service discharges
record ed at her office In the
Meigs Countv Courthouse.
Once recorded at the office of
Mrs. Congo, the discharges become permanent records and
copies can be made to help
veterans and their famiUes with
necessary paperwork In apply·lng for benefits. There Is no
charge for the service at the
office of Mrs. Congo.

Train

Saturday. A Veterans Day dinner
wm be ser ved that day to the
legionnaires and auxiliary

h

me back (for audlt.ions), 1 had to
audition with Andrew McCarthy
and I was just stunned- I mean
devastated - because I . had
never seen him in person before.
We read from the script and all I
could do was laugh and laugh and
laugh."

The Pomeroy and Middleport
Libraries will be closed Wednesday in observance of Veterans
Day.

The Daily

Ohio

6 mo. old kittens to give away to
good home. Call 614- 256-

6639.

Cute puppi~~&amp;. Will be small dog.
Call 614 ~ 388 - 8132 .
Cute little kiitens -to g.ive aw&amp;y,
304-676-6747.
Puppies to give
3579 .

6

ewav.

E11ecutive Secnrtary. EKPerience
necessary . Send retume to: Box
Cia 110, c/oGallipolis Daily
Tribune 826 Third Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
Disherwasher &amp; Bar Tender
needed. Apply in penon only at
The Down Under Restaurant. No
phone cella Please.
WANTED: CHECK THIS JOB
OUT
Tired of being unemployed1 Last
chance for 6 girls or guys over 18
from this area, 10 tra\lel Alabama , Kentucky . Florida
beaches and return. Car transportation and axperisea furnished during our 2 weeks on the
job training program. Earnings
f176 to *360 weekly with f150
Christmas bonus, paid annually
with 2 weeks vacation. For
interview see Mrs. Theresa
Ethridge, Wed. only, Nov. 11, 1
PM . sherp to 5 PM at Best
Western Motel. Parents Wei·
come at interview . No phone
cells pleue. Apply in person.
Dominoi Pizza now hiring. Must
htNe valid drillers license&amp; proof
of insurance. FQr more infOrmation call614·446 -4040.

304· 896Resumes being accepted tor a
full time Maintenance Technician. Must h8\le at least 5 yrs.
experience in general maintenance. We offer group insurance
end paid vacation. Send resume
to : Box Cia 111, c/o Gallipoli•
Daily Tribune. 825 2nd. AVe.
Gallipolis, Ohio 46631 .

Lost and Found

LOST: Small mostly white with
til ack dog. Wt . 8 lbs. Mostly
Chihuahua . Vicinity of BobMcCormick Rd . &amp; 588 . Could b11
to stay part-tim• with
on Texas Rd . Antwerl!l
i ~ olderl• lady . Call 614-256 ·

"Bones". Call 614-446-7783. "

LOST: Dog· Blue Chow puppy,
about 9 weeks old, behind
Southeastern Equipment. Judy
Benn&amp;tt. Reward. Call61 4-446·

Government Jobs . $16,040 •
$59,230 yr. Now hiring. Your
are•. 806 -687-6000 Ext. R9805 tor current repo federal
list.

(free Estimates)

LOST: LadiB&amp; Bulava Watch in
vicinity of Am811 or K· Mart. Call
collect 614-992-3041 .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Found Bassette Hound, 304·

Part time collection person
needed. Typing required . Send
resume to The Daily .Sentinel,
Box 729H. Pomeroy, Ohio

Addons and remodeling
Roofing ancl gunor work
Concrete work
Plumbing and electrical
work

992.6215 or 992-7314
Pomer.oy, Ohio
4·15·'86·\c

HILLSIDE ·
MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP
•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES
OPEN 1 to 9 P.M .
Rt. 124 Acrou from

Happy Hollow Rd .
RUTLAND

614·Jn.nss

· 1-1·6· 1 mo .

HOUSE FOR RENT
107 LOCUST ST.

PONIROY-985-3561

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All Makes

3016.

675-1303.

Found black andwhitemaledog,
English Pointer?? Letan-Board
Church Road ana. 304~895•

3624.

Lost or strayed, red-white face
cow, spot under eye. Vicinity
Salt Creek-Redmond Ridge
area. 304-675· 3463.

7

Yard Sale

·..... ·Ganrpolis.. -- ----&amp; Vicinity
·········~·-··· -· ···--··

'

.. ··· .. ···

Michigan Sale- 50 Nell AYII ..
Battery operated Motorcycle,
clothes. tricycles. Christmas
items. toy chf!I!!Jt. bedding.

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

·······p·om'iirov--·--··--··
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges •Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

··········-~·········-·-······· ·-··

WE SEll USED APPLIANCES

Gange Sale Nov. 11th, 12th

4-5-!lc

and

131~.

9:00-l S1. R1, 143,
1.

No . 39144, 2 milee off Rt .

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Swim Molds • Interpreting Services

~ LISA M.. KOCH, M.S.

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

~

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
::t 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
z Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy, Ohio
''8-13 tfn

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pear&amp;on Auctioneer lic~nsed in Ohio. and Wett Virgl"'•·. Ettate, antique, fl!l"m, liquidlltton sales. 304-773 -5"786.

9 ' Wanted ·To Buy ·
We pay c•h for late model dean
used cars.
Jim Mink Chev .-O ids Inc.
8111 GeneJohnsoo

614·446-3672

45769.

The Meigs Local School Distrid~
is currently seeking applications
from certified applicants for a
Girls Junior High Basketball
Coach (new posit;onl. A11istant
High School Track Coach Jun·
ior High Track Coech, As~ist.nt
Junior HighTrackCoech. Assistant Baseball Coach and Qiris
Reserve Softball Coech for the
1987-88 school ye• . Appli·
cants must hold e , valid ohio
teaching certificete and for
coaching positions must meet
certification requirements of
ohio for sports medicine and
CPR . Persons inter"ted should
contact Den E . ..-orris. Supwin·
ten dent of Meigs ~ocal Schools.
at 621 South Th~rd Avenue in
Middleporrt. Ohio.
Earn excellent money in home
Rlsembly work. Jewelry. toys
and othBfs. FT &amp; PT available.
Call todHV I 1 ·618·469-3635
(toll-r6fundable) EXT 81622 24
hrs.
Wanted to pay off loan on pickup
truck. Call 614·992· 5282 .
AVON - All areas. Call Marityn
Wew.~er 304 - 882 ~ 2646 .

" HIRING "\1
Government ·jobl • your area
815.000 • $68,000 . Cali
16021838-8885 ex1 I 203.

Excellent Wages tor spare time
assembly work: electronics
Crafts . Other lntormatio~
{604)641 -0091 ext3667. Open
7 days. Cell nowll

REPs·NEEDED
for businassaccounta. Full-Time
•so.ooo.sao.ooo. Part -Ti me
$12,000·818.000. No Selling
rapea1 business. Set your ow~
houn. Training provided. Call
1 -612 -938·6870, M-F. Sam to
6pm {Central Standard Tln:t,el,
Herdsmen, Jefferson County

W . Ve .: to milk 200.cows.onca ~
d av and feed 6 days per week
Must hav e references, exc houa:
and pay. 304-725 -8308

8:00-9:00.

Dependable peraon to help with
Herald-Dispatch P*Per route
Must h.,e own automobile. Fo;
more Information call 30 4 • 675•
7699 between 6 &amp; 9 PM .

1

�•

12

Situations
Wanted

LAFF-A-DAY

Roo m and board for eldtfty, care

13

Z bedroom furnised apt, ref and
depoalt, New Hav en. W. Va ..
304 - 882 · 3~87 or 304-7736024.

Insurance

One bedroom furnished apt .
Extra clean and nice. Adult•
Ontv. No Pets. 304· 676-1386.

Call us for yoYr mobile home
insurance : Millar lnsurancfll ,
30 4 -882-2145 . ·A lso: auto ,
home. life, health

18

Mt. Vernon Ave ground floor, 3
rooms and beth, private en·
trance and parking, respon sible
single or couple, 304-675-4680
or 676 -1962.

Wanted to Do
Two bedroom apar1ment Gallipolla Ferry, 304-676-2648.

House Cleaning or office cleening by day . Can give rehMence.

Furnished etf. g•age apt. Pt"ivate. 1 working gentlemen.
Utilities paid. 1180.00 Per
month. Phone304·676-2083 or
675-8689.

Im maculate cleaner. call 614·
446-8106.
Christian Nursing Anin.nt will
babvait in home. Also care for
elderty. Call 614-446 -9636.
Will do babysitting in my home.

Call 614-446-7681.

Need a baby sitter whll e you
Christmas atw p7 Call 614·446·
6985. Can give references
Can do ligh1 hauling and roofing.
Reasonable rates . Marion
Snfder. 614·949 ·2629.

46

"I sure wish they made cars

like they used to .. .for $6,000
instead of $26,000."
t:::~;::::;:;::::;::====r:;;:::;;;;=;::;:~:;;;:::::1
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBliSH ING CO . recommends that you
do business with people you
know, and NOT to send moniiJI
through the mail until vou have
1nvestigllled the offMing .

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

living room sofa. Muat •e to
appreciate Call 614-448-1423
Victorian mobile home. exc
cond, garden tub , den. fireplace,
121116 foot deck. price reduced.
304-675-1317.

Patriot V1llage Call 61 4-4461340, 446- 3870 '
4 BR .. fireplace. full basement. 3
mi. so. of Gallipolis. $34,900.
Call Days· 614-446 -1615, attar
5:00· 446-1244
N•ce clean home Lefge kitchen,
appllanGI'IS, A C, utility room. 3
BA , carpet thru-out, masterBA .
· ceiling fan . Finished garage.
Price $37,500. Reduced &amp; neg.
Call 614·446-1358.
Brand new 3 BR . near Galhpolill
LOcks on Rt 7 . 2 car garage, nica
lot. Immediate possession. Wit1
co nsider trade m of Mobile
home, property. etc. Bargam
priced. Call 614-446-8038 .
For Sale: 3 bedrooms. bath&amp; %,
kitchen, living room with fireplace, &amp; din ing area. Attached
garage, basement. Good condition . Ready to move into. First
St. west of Holzers. Call 614446-3601
Neat. clean ranch. Restricted
s ubdiv is ion . Hannan Trace
Schools. Payments la wer than
rent. Beautiful v1ew. Call 614·
256-6200.
House for sale. At . 33. level lot,
2 BRS .. 2 b!dhs, 2 car garage,
swimming poo.l. satmte Close to
Salisbury &amp; Meigs High. Call
614-992-3264.
Government homes from S1 (U
repair), Dvlinquent tax property.
Repossessions. Call 805-687·
6000 Ext. GH -9805 for current
repo list.
Owner financing . 4 bedroom
fra me ho me on 40 acre~ . 20
acres wood ed. Meigs Co, Gibson Rd. $38 ,000 . 61 4·664626 4.
2 BR .. big bath. l1ving room.
51;i tchen. Beside R'utland Fire
Ce nter. Call614-742-2744.
large houe and lot In Pomeroy.
6 14 -992·6059 or 614-992 75 11 .
6 roo m house. 2110 N . Main

Street, upper 20 ' s. 304-458·
1875.
For Sale or Rent .. 3 bedroom
house on Sand Hill Road , lot
1 20x 127. fireplace, good location, 304-773· 5974 or 304675-6045.
3 bedroo m. 1 Yz baths. dining
room. family room, double gBrage. new fuel eHicient furna ce
304-675-4604.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1981 Nashua 14x65 , All elect-

nc. "Unfur!'lished. 2 beUrooms

w ith room for a third. air
conditioner, stove, refrigerator.
large de ck and storage building
included. Park Lane Court. close
to hospital and Spnng Valle;o
lhopp ing. Call 614-446-7366
or 614-446-7374 aftet" 6pm.

1983 Shulh. Mobile Home.
. 14•65, Cent . air, total elec.
89500. Call 614-446-0912
19 87 14x70 Fairmom. Furnilhed, all elec. w / heat pump
Satellite dish. In mobile home
park. Immediate possession.
Call 614 -245-6294.
19 84 Triumph II 141170 cu11om
made. Exce. sliape. All electric.
s9:000 . Call 614-596-4429 .
1985 Overlend Perk 14x64 , 2
BR ., tota l gas, rented spot. Excel
co nd. French City Bro kerage.
Call 6 1 4 -446-9340.
Pre-owned Ho me Sale. Yea. We
h!We 451 Tax &amp; title down Fre8
delivery. we tinance. Call todlt'Y
fo r best Slllection. ELSEA Home
Center•· 1-800·826-0762 Ohio
Wats.
1974 Co ncord 14•70, 3 BR .,
tots I e lec . new carpet. Extra
nice through out. 86900 Call
13 14-4 46·0176 .
.
12x80 wit h expando. 10•13
addition. Completety furnished .
Woodburner or fuel fumsce. Call
,6 14· 256· 6556.
1

Mobile home 1978 Windsor, all
electric. 3 bedrooms. centr11l air,
buitt In microwave and 1tereo,
turnithed ,- phone 304-676 5360 aft..- 5:00.

Homes for Rant

Two bed room house in Point
Pleasant, NO PETS. 304-676·
1386.
2 bedroom houiB Y2 mile out
Jericho Rd. Call after 5 PM·
304-676-8483.
'

Small totally electric houae on
Ohia St ., reasonable rent, call
after 5 :00 304-875-5711 .

42

34

Mini farm for rent- 32 acrea. 2
BR . mobile home. Patriot area.
$200a mo. Ca11614·379·2880

Business
Buildings

Commercial buildings for lease
Downtown Pt Pleasant. Storea,
offices. A-One R8111 Estate,
Carol Yeager. Broker. Call 304675·6104.
749 Third Ave. Presently The
Gift Shop. 1 BOO sq. ft. Commercial or warehouse. Parking on
s1de. AdJACI!IInt to Third &amp; P.neSt.
Call 614-446 - 2362 for
appointment.
100 ft. by 200 ft . butlding for
sale Perfect lor warehouSI!II.
rvcycling butin•s. etc 614·
992· 5113 .

35

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

2 Building lots· 1 'h 81:"81 each
wh:h county water. Jerrys Run
Rd. Apple Grove. W. va. Call
304-676-2383.

Rentals
41

Homes for Rant

Unfurnished house. 3 br. Rodnev VIllage IL S250. Call 614446-4416after 7 :00PM.

3 br .. CA., basement. garage.
patio, carpet. 1 cut stone
~ireplace, &amp;. 1 brick firaplace,
tnground pool Ref. A-1 Real
Estate. Carol Yeager-broker.
304-675-5104.
Sell-Rent: Nice home. large
khchen, 3 BR ., garage. Must
have references. Call 614-446·
1368.
Roddnev Villegell . 3 BR . ranch
Style home. Rent, $285 plu•
dep. Call Blackburn Realty614-446·0008.
3 SR . home on Rt. 141 in
Centenary. Dep. &amp; ref. Call
614-4o16-6668.
Partty furniahed 2 BR'. house on
Cox-Mercerville Rd . Adulta only .
Ref. required. f200 a mo. Call
614· 266· 6201
2 BR . Oupl.: for n~nt : CA. stove.
refrig., dishWIIher. utility &amp;
atorege rooms. Carport. Large
country lot. Appro•. 4 mi. from
town . Call 614-446-3888 or
446·4491 .
•
2 BR ., 3 story houae on Rt. 7 .
Dining, living room. ba~ement .
S326 a mo. For more info. eall
e14-446-0476.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1 2x60 2 8R. Mobile home In
Evergreen. 2 mi. ft'om Holzer
Hosital. Call 614-446·3697.
1 2x60 2 Br. Mobile Home,
furnished. Gallipolis city tchool.
2 mi. from town 1200 a mo.
plua dep Cell 614-446-2390.
New 2 bedroom. loc.a:ed in
Harriaonville School Dis. Country setting, 4 miles so . of Albany,
Ohio. 8260 per month. Call
e1 4 -698· 7245 .
2 bl!lldroom mob•le home furnished. 8200.00 per month plua
$75.00 depo1it. Phone 304·
676-6512 or contact Ethel
Burril, 8 &amp; J ' s.
Trailer for rent, 14x70. Hud
accepted. can 304-675-3843 or
675-2969

44

Apartment
for Rant

1 and 2 bedroom apartments for
rent. Bille rent tor 1 bdr.,
8183.00; 2 bdr.• $219.00. Also
required a 1200.00 security
depotit. CONTACT: Jackson
E•tates Dept. Ph 446-3997
Equal Housing Opportunity.
2 BR apts. 6 clo1ets, kitchen·
appl. furni1hed, Wash..-·Dryer
hook-up, ww carpet, newly
painted. deck. Regen~. Inc.
Apta. Call 304·676-7738 or
675-5104.
Furni1hed apt. next to library.
One profaaaronal adult only.
Parking Call 614-olo16-0338.
1 br. apt. n88r HMC . Stove.
refng .. drapes furnished . $226 a
mo. Dap.-Ref. required. Call
614-446-4782.
11 Court 2 br., 1 "h bath, kitchen
furnished . carpeted. Rear parking. $360-mo. &amp; utilities. Dep. &amp;
Ref. Call 614· 446-4926 .
Downtown- Modern 1 BR .•
complete khchen. carpet. air.
electric heat. Call 614-4464383-dll'fl, 446·0139-even. &amp;
weekenda.
Brooklida Apartments- Large
country kitchen, stove &amp; refrigerator. Unfurnished. 1 BR. bath.
quiet area Call 614-448-1932 .
Nice 2 BR . apt . Stove, refrlg.
furnished W1ter &amp; garbage
paid. Ne• Skyline Lam•. Call
614-446-7025.
Garage apt .. furniahed . 1 BR .
&amp;225. Utllitiea paid. Call 4464416 after 7 :00PM .

6 room houae. 1tt Ave .. Gallj..
poli1. Off atreet parking No
pet1. Ref. &amp; dep. Call 614-2661629.

Elttra nice 2 BR . apt. 1 block
from ahcools. AduHs onty-. 8225
per mo. Call 614-446· 2300 .

Nice 3 bedroom home- S276 per
month. Ref. ' &amp; nc. deposit
required . Call 614· 446-6189.

2 OR . Stove &amp; retrig. furnished.
Carpet&amp;d. Euy walk to downtown Gallipolia. $260 e mo. Call
614-245-9595 .

2 BR , stove &amp; refrlg. furn.
located 19281h Cheatnut St
S175 mo. $75 dep. Call 614·
446-38JO.
2, 3, or 4 bedroom houl81 and
apt In Pomeroy area. Pay own
utilities. depo v•t required. Cell
614-992-6113, 814·992·6723
or 614 ~ 992 - 2609 . Call after
6:00, pie••·

2 bl!lldr.oom house for rent.
Unfurn11hed. Storm windows
and doort, Insulated. Nice and
clean. No inside pet1 Deposit
required. 614-992-3090.
Newly renovated. all elect:rlc
wi'ih heat pump and ce ntral air. 3
bedrooma, plenty yerd and
g .. den space in Ponland, Ohio,
5 miiM from Ravenswood, W .
Va Cell 614· 843-6309.
3 bedroom unfurnished houae in
Middleport. Depostt required.
614-992· 2606 or 614-992'5983 .
3 bedroom house for rent. 8200
per mont~ Mulberr; Ave. Pomeroy , OhiO. 614-992-6687 or
e14-992-7450.

2 BR . glWage apt.. 3 Br. upatairs
apt , stove, refrig., water, aewer
&amp; g.-bage furnished- bothapert·
menta. Call 814-446-0284.
Rio Grande- Nice 2 BR. Stove.
refrigerator furnithed. $225 No
p8ta. Call 614·446-8038.
Furni1had: 4 rooms &amp; bath
Clean. No peta. Adults only. Ref
8t dep. requirad . Call 814-446·
1519.
ff

E 1ciency apt.· 1 room. kit·
c h8fla«e &amp; bathroom Privata
parking&amp;. prNate entrance. Nice
for ling! 8 Of older person.
Ground floor . $176 a mo. Dap.
&amp; ref. required. Call 614-446·
7516.

One or twq bedroom house in
tow n. Furnis hed or unfurnished .
Availeble lmmedistely, Ca11614·
992-67 23 after 5 :00 . Anytime
weekends.

2 t;edroom apts. Nice setting,
close to achoola and town,
c ar~eted . Refr igerator and stove
furnished . Call 614-992-37 11 .
EOH .

FORECLOSURE HOMES! From
8 1.00 on up tnd local tax
delinquent properti111. Call 1800 -634 -7247 . Al so open
evenings .

Furnished room. $100. Utilities
paid. Sh.-e bath. Single male.
919 Second. Gallipolis Cell
446-441e af1or7pm.

46

Space for Rant

Office Space for r&amp;nt . Excel.
downtown Gallipolis location.
Inquiries call 614-446-4222.

Trailer lot for rent: Addison.
Ohio. Call 614-367-0208.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk.
Route 33. Nonh of Pomeroy.
Rental trailen. Call 614-9927479 .
Spece for small traileu All
hook-ups. Cable. Also efficlen01
rooms, air and cable. Maaon.
W.Va. Call 30ol-773· 6651 .

49

Household Goods

KIT

Sof•wlngback-3 cushion,plaid
aart htonee. Excellent condition.
- ~• 116, 4·ol46·2833.
Like new· 5 cubic ft. chest
freezer . Like new Gibaon electric
dryer Traditional 1ofa. 6 ft .
porch glider.- white baby bed
with mattreu. Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture Co. 955 2nd. Ave.
Galli polis. 614-446-1 171 .
Double bed with new mattreu
and box springs. Excellent con·
ditlo n. Call 614-992·6298 .

74

3 piecl!ll living room 1utte. Very

1986 Honda. Founrax. 260R.
Stodc.. $1400. With extras.
81900. Syracuse. 614· 992·
7258.

good condition. 51 50. 2 water
beds, like new. 1 king iize,
8360. 1 queen size, *260. Call
614-992· 6e90 or 814·992·
3e43.

76

New 16 lb. Hot Po1nt Washer
and alec. dryer with vent kit and
pig 1811 lor 0650.00. 304-675·

54

Misc. Merchandise

Plastic cistern atate approved,
plastic septic tanks. plastic
culvert s, metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jack·
$On, Oh. 614·286-5930.
Ouahtv firewood, all hardwood.
for sale. $26 a pick-upload. Call
614-367-0669 .
Big Dakota Farm Home- built on
your lot only. 812.995 &amp; up. Call
614-886-7311 .
Atari with 33 games &amp; super
ch.-ger. $140. Call 614-446·
9700 ask for Joe.
50.000 BTU circulattng gat
heater, 3 spd fen. Used one
winter. Call after 4 PM - 614·
446-1164.
Woodburner- Long mfg. Co.
Excel. cond. Elec fan. Real
energy aaver,. Must sacrifice.
Calle14-446-19e5.

Copper-nosed Beagll!ll pups. 212 9u . shot guns: 1- 1148
Remmgton. 1· 58 Remington.
1916 Honda. Call 614-3677230.
Catelylic converters. only
$89.96 , Most models lns.tall•
tlon also available. Muffler Man,
9 St im,•on Awe.. Athens. Ohio.
1-800-843 -3767.
Mhced hard wood slabs. $12 per
bundle. Containing approx. 1 V:!
ton. FOB. Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. 614-992-6461 .
Mastercard-Visa! Regardleas of
ctedit history. Also, new credit
card. No one refut5edl For
information call 1-315-7336062 Ext. M2766.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigerators.
ranges Skaggs Appl iances.
Upper River Rd. beside Stone
Crest Motel. 614-446-7398 . ·

For sale. King size waterbed and
headboard. Queen sb:ewaterbed
and bookcase head board . Call
614·992· 6723 after 5 00 tinytime weekends.

lAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Color V.W. dark room 10 inch
planer. crown graflax ..4JC6. c•
mere. Call 614-992-6229 after
5 .00 pm.

Jult arrN-ed· 3 truck loads· New
living room suite~ ; n~ wood 6
pc. living wood suites. 8399.95;
ahest of drawers; twin mattresses. 896 set, m•crowave
oven stands.
THE WORKING
MAN "S FRIEND

COfrlf'llm:. DArB
w,~R-~

YCV Mt',A.N TO

.we w~ &lt;;a MU.- &lt;SVITW,

Tai..ME '{Q!
STCCP lllAT

I

!'tq: I' I0

UfJ~TAND~Cf(..IDeD

tv\" TO. o;;HOW ffiH~ .

I!P?'

DP EJCerc1se Bike for sale. Cell
614·992· 2679 .

64

Misc.

Sturdy 8 ft " Maaa" tabla. half
price, uaed once, auitabl e for
church or club. 304-67&amp;-2111
after 1 :00 pm.

55

Building Supplies

Building Materiels
Bk&gt;ck. brick, sewer pipes, windows. lintels. etc. CIIIUde Win·
titrs, Rio Grande. 0 . Cell 814·
2ol6-6121 .
Concrete block• all sizes yard or
delivery. Maaon •and. Gallipolis
Block Co .. 123% Pine St. ,
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 61 4-ol46·
2783.
Ready mix concrete and all
concrete aupphes. Call u•Vallw,'
BrQok Cement and Suppliee,.
304· 773-5234.

56

0
0

Motorcycles

CAPTAIN EASY

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himalayan, Persian and
Siameae khten1. AKC Chow
puppiaa. New kinen1: Persi.na.
Call 814·••&amp;-3844 aft• 7PM.

8 mos. old female Schnauzer.
AKC registered. Cell 814-4468024 after 6:00PM.
AKC Reg. Min. Dachahund
puppies. Has had flr1t shott &amp;.
wormed . • 1 60 . Call 614-3792273 .
AKC Reg. Cocker Spaniel pupa.
1160 aoch. Call614·388· 8890.
Chihuahua-None registered.
1mall femall!ll. 21h yr .. old, very
nice. $86. Can-v, singer. 1Va
yrs. old. nice cagl!ll. $46. Call
614·448·4676.
fOf sal• AKC Reg . Bauen
Hound pupa. Call 814-4460974.
11 inch long Tiger 01car fiah.
Also several aquarium• • equip.
Call 614-446-7781 aher 6:00
PM .
B~ack &amp;

white pony. Very gentle.
With saddle. $260. Call 614·
245 -9157.
One, 8 wk. old fameleSiam•e
Ieinen. Blue poinl. littar trained.
wormed. 614-992-7201 .
Registered Siberian Hu1kie.
Male. len than 1 ye.- old.
8100. wh.h dog box. Call 61.t992·66B6 or S14· 742-316ol.

Cro!IS bow for sale with arrows.
150 lb. pull. Call 614-742·
2773.
F ~rewood for sale. Delivered
fln ytime. $30 .00. 304-895·
3446

For Sale: Spinet-Cantle Piano
8argein. Wanted: Rnponaible
part to take over low monthly
payments on Spinet Piano. See
locally. Mr. White. 800-327·
3346, E "'· 102.
Kay Gprlght Ban Fiddle. $600.
Call 814-246-6668 eak for
Connie or 2ol6 · 5096 leeve
m••ue.
Filrlll

Firewood. S1 6.00. pick up load,
call 304-675 -1178.
'

Warm MOrning heater, gaa,
85.000 BTU. automati c blower.
See 1110 2nd. Ave. Gllllipolis.
New Turtle queen tile waveless
walerbed. Box spring &amp; hetNy
duty frame. 8276/ best offer,
Call 614• 446 . 4220 ,

Frost free Glbaon freezer.
8150 .00. 304-895-3436.

•n

Chev. Blazer floor model
stereo comb. Ibn as guitar. cell
altar 4 :30 304-e75-5460.
Camcorder, Sharp VHS, six
month• new, stereo, autofocu1.
many extras. deposit will hold
until Christmas. More tnformat•onphone304 -675· 5119.
Electrolux sales and suppllee,
Leon. w. Va. 304-4158-1041 ,

rL..-----=~---":""..:.:..J.;;~::::::~:::::;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;..I
SNAFU® by Bruce

Beattl"e

Suppl res

&amp; Lrve~tock

Custom draperies. 1 ·· mini veni~ian bl inds, louververt•cal blinda,
mstalled . 304-458-1078. P. A.
Sayre.
Buy 6 Toniing Tabl9!1 and receive
a free Suntan bed. Ofttw good
until Dec 30, 1987. Call Carib·
bean Tans. Inc., 304-422-4200.

Musical
Instruments

61

Farm Equipment

62

New, turnithed, 2 bedroom
apanment near Melga High
School. Call 614 - 446 - 889 ~ or
614·992-5304 .

Now buying shell corn or e•
corn. Call for latest quotet. River
City Farm Suppty, 114-4482985.

" i don ' t ca re how quick ly he's outgrow in g
s hoes .•. we don't rent by the week ."

,

Wanted to Buy

RALZIO

ll!jNtwl·l r

i

~

,-T-M:....:.;Ar.:;N.,U:...;R:;...-ll •

.

Cll I) I]) ABC Newa p
(!) Nightly Buolnaaa Report
~ II) l!2l CBS N-1
I!J) Soapbox with Tom CotUe
Teenagers explore the issue
of family commumca1ion.
l1)J ShowBI• Today News of
the entertainment world IS
anchored live from New
York. (0:30)
@ WKRP In Cincinnati
fll ill Too Close for Comfort

.

.

I

.

Good mixed hav for sale. Call
814-949-2237 .

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
ArouS8 -

Midst -

Auto's For Sale

1&gt;0 You THIN!&lt;
ADMINIS"f'AATIOtJ I&lt;NOWS

'WHAT IT!.S D~INcS?

I

1973 Starcraft camper. 23 ft.
self contained. 304-676-3427

1947 Wilty Army Jeep. $550.
Call 614-U8·0812.
1983 Olds 98 Regency. Excel. ,
cond. 74.000 mi. Loaded. C•ll
614-446-0796 .

OH, :t WOULDN'T
/ ~:?f THAT HA~P
ON THEM.

Services

Blaek 1988 Cam•o- 95 percent
tolalty reslored. Call 614-446·
7672- d.,. 446· 1522- night.

81

1988 VW Scirocco. VfJIIy sharp.
Coli 614-387-7897 or 367·
0397.

Home
Improvements

•I

"

1976 Pinto. rellabll!ll. 8175 or
best off•. 1972 Nova, fair
condition. $360. reliable. Call
614-388-8647.'

.
'

A newlywl!d was heard to say, "Buying a house is easy. All
you need Is a lawyer, a real estate agent and a winni ng LOT·
TERY ticket"

BRIDGE

NORTH

HOLY MACKEREL! IT'S THOSE
REB SOLDIERS! THEY'RE
LOOKIN' FOR THEIR. BO/&gt;.,T!

SWEEPER and sewing mechine
repair, parts, and 1uppli81. Pick
up and delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georg• Creek Rd Call 614446-0294.

1972 Duster 8300. Call 614·
448-6423 .
Wanted: Jeep. Good condition.
Call 614-448-2745.

His own
worst enemy

t98 764
4AK 5

1969 Camara- 327. new bodv
perts, new t1rea. Blue with dver
stripes. Good cond. $2600. Call
614-446-9370.

(A)

WHAT !.X£&gt; &lt;rt::L'iO 00,
[)(ME., ..ea.F, EOUIIJ3,
fOK£R IJJmllH£ eatS?

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304-876-1331 .

1983 Buick Regal SW. 6 cyl. ,
auto. t4300. Call 614-448·
3249. 448 -1339, 448·1'828 .

I HAVUJ'T M£T
HIM 4t.T '

I ())Jr kf.DU..

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Molt wellscompl••d ••mediV·
Pump sal• and service. 304·
896-3802

1986 Ford LTD II . Uke new.
12,800 miles . Auto., PS, PB,
AC, tilt. cruise. Cell 614-388·
8240.

Tree trimming &amp; lntarior ptMnt·
ing Cell Mark 304-676-2386 .

82

'

MORTY MEEKLE AND .WINTHROP

Plumbing
Heating

MY #.OM 6AID CHIPS
IS qETTINE&lt; FAT. ..

&amp;

New Information! Jeeps, Cars,
4x4'1 seized in drug raids. Buy
from 1100. Call for facta today!
(213) 631 -1201 ext. 6"66.

80 SHE R.JTHIMON
A VEG-ETARIAN
DIET. ..

SO IF YOLJ HAVElV
WALK R&lt;!.STN\Y HOWSE,
BE CARE"R..lL.

1978 Buick Regal LTD . 2 door
coupe. Automatic. 9 :00am until
dark. 666 Diemond St .,
Mlddll!llport.

I:;;7~2;::~T;:::::;k=::;::=:;;s:::;=
rue s for ale

1-- - - - - - - - - -

1985 S-10. PS. PB. Extra1. Call
anytime, 814-2415 -15626 or
446-9613.
1987 Dodge Ram· ISO . Ca11614·
446-25&amp;7.
1980 Short wheel baae . ChiiiVy
truck. Low mileage. 8 cyt. , 4 apd.
Body in fair condition. $2600.
Call 61ol-367-0149.
1974 Ford pldtup lA ton. Good
rubber. 360 engine. 4 tpd. 1800
or beat off«, Cell 114·4•1·
1528.
1978 Ford F-160 Ranger Lari•t.
sir, cruise control. $1 ,200.00
firm, 304·676·8799.

·'

84
&amp;

expans1on of the American

Electrical
Refrigeration

ME AN' MY

INJUNS?

or commercial wlr·
service or repaira.
Lccensed elecuiclan. E1tlm11e
tree. Ridenour Ell!llc:trieal. 304676-1786.

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l!2l Moneyllne Current

Dillard Water Service Pools
Cisterns. WMit . Oelhlery Any:
time. Call 614·448-7404-No
Sunday calls.
J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming

poole, cisterns, walla. Ph. 614·
246-9285 .

P" YEP.. 'life\lrf\ n: an
JSiniC state
hy

Paul Aupe. Jr. Water Service.
Poolt, cistern•. wells. Ca11614446·3111 .

ReuphOi storv. St. Rt. 7 Crown
City, Oh 614-266· 1470 , Eve.
614-446-3438. Open daily 9to
4 ,30, Sat 9 ,30 to 1 ' 30 . Old &amp;
new Uphostered.
Mowrey's Upholstering serving
tri county area 22 ya.-a. The best
In furnit ure upholsterinp Cell
304 - 6 75 4164 for free
eshmfltes .

11:301Jill I!J) Tonight Show
(!) SportoCenter (L)
Cll Cheers
llt (I) NlghUine Q

P.1.

I!J) Only One Earth Villa El
Salvador Is a shantytown in
Peru w ith plans for the
fu1ure .
l1)J Sports Tonight Action
packed sports highlights with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.

••

38 Jewels
39 Hamme r
1 Bistro
part
5 Appraise
DOWN
9 Iranian
coin
1 Frenzy
10 Coach's
2 Troubled
concern
3 Take form
12 Associate 4 English
13 Heed
cathedral City ,
the alarm 5 Late
14 Oriental
"Laugh-hi"
cymbal
comic
. ll Re lated
24 Pronoun ce
15 Handwoven 6 Coach
-· maternally 25 Elk
rug
Parseghian 15 Nothing(Fr .)27 Singes
16 A Gabor
7 Move in 18 Adolescent 28 Furious
17 Issue; copy 8 Ennoble 21 Masculin e 29 "Gigi" star
19 Granary I 0 Clint
22 Staining
34 Gypsy
menace
Eastwood 23 "Some husband
20 Poetical
35 Lacuna
ACROSS

~~never"

21 Apportion
22 Actress
Anna
23 Judge's
concern

24 Any minute
25 African
republic
26 Hint
27 Of humor
30 Totally
31 Farmer's
need
32 Pitcher's
stat
33 Coronets
35 Snarl ·
36 Audience
call
37 Spanish
law ~uit

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

tlll!2l

OUR SPECIAL TON 16HT IS
•' CRISP POTATO JACKETS~~
IF '(OU'RE I-lOT ESPECIALL't"
fiVNGR'(. 't"OU CAN JUST

EAT THE S.LEEVES!

'[llamonda' CBS Late
Night Insurance agent sells a
policy and offers to help kill
the Insured.
@Magnum, P.l. Professor
Jonathon Higgins
• (l) M•A "S'H

12:00 ill Bumo and Allen
(!) Quarterhoroe Racing
Breeder 's Trust Race from
Los Angeles, CA (T)
Cll Nlghtllne Q
I) ill Fall Guy
llD Sign Off

11110

AXYDLBI\AXR
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
11-10
LCYNQH C

w

YNAAXF

w

CSCKZFDWAO

(0:30)

Upholstery

R &amp; M Custom Couch01 and

and financial news with Lou
Dobbs . (0:30)
@ Jefferaona
fll ill Love Connection

~- Magnum,

'

Coal and limestone delivery
phone 304·676-31 90.
'

87

•

reports on world economics

A &amp; R Water Service. Home
cisters, wells, pools filled . For·
marty James Boys Waters .Call
304-675-6370.
'

l.·-::--:--,-------

frontier ennched the
vocabulary.
~ t111!2l The Law and Harry
McGrew McGraw skates on
thin ice to help his minor
league hockey Idol.
I!J) (B) Newa
l1)J Evening News A wrap up
of today's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (1 :00)
10:20 Ill MOVIE: San Francisco
(NR ) (1 :55)
10:30 ill Celebrity Chela
I!J) Tony Brown's Journal
f1l !Il Hogan's Heroes

General Haul.ing

Watterson's Water Hauling.
reasonable rates , immediate
2,000 gallon delivery, cisterns,
paola, well, etc. cell 304-6762919

by THOMAS JOSEPH

newsmakers and celebrities .
10:00 ill Straight Talk
IJ
I!Jl Crime Story
Torello's blrlhday par1y
Krychek is shot. C
(!) The Story of E'ngllah The

~esident1!tl
·~g New

85

(!] The Ring of Truth
Geologists search for clues
to the pas1 10 find ou1 about
our planet. C
~ t111!2l Joke and the
Fatman McCabe protects a
new bride from her
'
gold-digging husband.
l!2l Lllrry King Livel In depth
in1ervlews with top

becomes a nightmare as

Electric al!llwer eleMing. gas.
water, &amp; 18'&lt;N8f tarviees. For all
your plumbing needs call the
PLUMeiNG DOCTOR . 1-6826e63- 24 HOUR SERVICES.

1986 Chrvsl• LeBaron, GTS
turbo. AM-FM CIIIBtte, cruise,
AC. PS. PB. Call 614-992-'
7722.

~

rn

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446 ·3888 or 814446-4477

1980 VW Rabbit. Gasoline
cerburator. Caii614-949-2B49.

.K 5
• K5
4Q 7 6 2

~M't}lfd'

(2:05)

8:30 ill Butterfly Island
Cll I) I]) Growing Pains
Carol breaks up with her
boyfriend when the new guy
asks her out. t;1
9:00 ill 700 Club
It (2J I!J) J.J. Starbuck
Starbuck aids some
American executives who are
being held hostage .
Cll U (I) 'Napoleon. and
Jooephlne: A Love Story,
Part 1' ABC Movie Special
·

Starks Tree and Lawn Service,
lawn c••· landscaping, stump
removal. 304· 676-2B42 or
578-2903.

Stainles• s1etri exhaust aystema.
Now custom made for your
truck, motor homeorcl••lccar.
With life--time warranty . Muffi.Men. 9 Stimpson AYI .. Athens.
Ohio. 1·800·843-3767.

EAST
+J97 63

8:05(I) NBA Basketball

RON'S Television Service.
House cau. · on RCA, Ouazer,
GE . Specialing in Zanith. Call
304-676· 2398 or 614-4462454:

1986 Cutlass Supreme Brough·
man. 2 dr.. V-8. Excil. cond. Cell
614-448-9442.

WEST
+Q 5 2
• Q J 10 9
• J 10 2
410 _9 3

Some players would immediately
bid three no-trump with the North
SOUTH
+A 10 84
hand. They would reason that the
7:30 1J (2J Hollywood Squares
.A 7 2
(!) Monster Trudk: Legend
spade king strengthened stoppers in
.AQ3
of Big Foot
.
that suit, and their fear would be that
4J84
Cll Newlywed Game
playing in hearts would place game in
Clill Judge
jeopardy if hearts split badly: This
Vulnerable: Neither
~ Wheel of Fortune t;1
particular North did use the Stayman
Dealer:
South
l1)J Crouflre (0:30)
convention
to
search
out
a
possible
1111121 I!J) Jeoperdyl t;l
Soutb
North Easl
West
major fit.
@ Barney Miller
I NT
West
had
the
spots
to
lead
hearts,
fll ill WKRP In Cincinnati
Pass
2+
24
even
though
he
knew
dummy
would
Pass
7:35 Ill Sanford and Son
Pass
3NT Pass
have four of them. Fortunately for the Pass
8:00 ill Croubow
defense, Willy Nilly was stroking the Pass
IJ (2J I!Jl Matlock Matlock
dummy . He ducked the opening lead
Openmg lead: • Q
defends a pro wres11er on a
as East put on the king, and then won
murder charge .
the next trick with his heart ace. He
(!) NHL Hockey
played a spade to dummy's king and
Cll U (I) Who's the Boss?
took the diamond finesse. When his
The family is shocked by the
queen held, he promptly played ace and Willy had once agatn gone ,et in
sudden dea1h of Tony's
and another diamond. That put West ma":'ble contract. . .
father In law . 1;1
'
(!) (!] Nova Techniques 10
on lead to cash two more heart tricks
Wtlly needed to mamtam safe compredict when and how
as Willy threw a spade from his hand. munication between the dummy an~
forcefuil volcanoes will
Willy was then ready to take his nine · hiS own hand. After the succ!'l;sful f1 -.
erupt.
tricks with a spade return, but West nesse of the d1amond queen , he should
~ til
Houa1on Knights
was not so obliging. He led a club. Wil- stmply play a low diamond from his
La Flamma· and Lundy lose a
ly had no recourse but to play low and hand . Whatever happens then, Willy
prisoner, who escapes with a
hope that West had been forced to lead can get back and forth between the
gun . t;1
l1)J Primenewa Wrap ups of
away from the queen. No such luck. two hands to make nine tricks.
the day 's world news and In
depth feawre reports. (1 :00)
@ MOVIE: Ml10lng in Action
2: The Beginning (R) (1 :36)
fll ill MOVIE: Walking Tall

Mullins Siding. BNnd nama vinyl
siding &amp; trim. Roofing atartlng at
seo per hundred square f,t .·
lnal811ed. Free astimstea. Call
61 4-367·0613 .

1986 Della Royal B8 Olds.
13,000 mil•. •9800. Price neg.
Eatate Sale car Call 614-.t.t&amp;4823.

U-10-87

+K
•s6 n

a

ALLEY OOP

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gueran·
tee. Local ret.-ences furni•hed.
Free estimates. Call collect
1-614-237-0488. d-v or night.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

1973 Buick leSabre and Jeep.
Both in good running condition.
Call 614-258-1439.

•"

Ruble - Flatiy - LOTTERY

7:051ll Andy Griffi1h

1984 Terry Towers 28ft. travel
home. 88600. Air, awning.
ttereo. Mint condition. For more
Information, call614-986·4202
evening• or 614· 986-4100
davs -

1r~ns~ortation

"

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARE S

ichaera
fll ill M'A'S"H

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

-

ch;ck le quoted
by l11iing in the m1Ss•ng words
you develop from ~tep No 3 below.

L._.J.L--1.-..l.._.l._..L._j_

~Newo

Dobbs. (0:30)
1111!2l I!Jl Wheel of Fortune

.

I

7:00 ill Remlng1on Steele
It (2J PM Magazine
(!) SportaCenter (L)
Cll Entertainment Tonight
llt I]) People's Court
(!) (!] MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewoHour (1 :00)

reports on world econom1cs
and financial news w1th Lou

.

T Ry Ap I
something for ~7;-;lr..:.r~~-i-~;_;:,l....::-r.l8:--l 0 Comple!e !he

6:35(I) Carol Burnett

l11J Moneyllne Current

The nurse. gave me a shot
whi ch caused me immediate
agony. "What was tha1?" I yelled.
The nurse quipped , "J u st

I I' I I :

5

~NBAToday(D

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

79

ve•.

For rent In Syracuse, apartment
andmobilehome. Call614-992·
5732.

I

By James Jacoby

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S . 36 West, Jack 1on, Ohio. 1985Y2 Ford EKort . . 22,000
614· 286·6461.
· miles . Excellent co'ndlt Ion.
Maa1ey Ferguson, New Holland, 13760. Cell 614-992-6304.
Bush Hog Salet &amp; Service. Over
40 ual!ld tractors to choOse from '79 Pontiac Flrtbird. V-8 luto&amp; complete line of new &amp; uaed matlc. good cond, $1 ,800.00.
equlpmeot . largest •lectlon in !::3-0~4-_6_7_6_·7::3_7_6_._ _ _ __
s .E. Ohio.
For S1le: 1987 Cavali• Z24, AT,
AC, AM·FM - Ca~tette , PS. tilt .
1973 lnt'l 168 dl•al tractor crulle control. 1un roof. V· 6,
W/ plowt &amp; tranaport diac.
$47&amp;0. 2010 JD tractor w/ 2 mutt!· port F inj. 8700 mil•. 6
50,000 mllewerranty. Call
row J D corn planter. New Idea
310 1 row corn pick•. 13960 304-67&amp;· 292&amp; anytime.
C1ll 614-286-6522 .
Beautiful 1977 Lincoln ContinMark V, low inileege. exc
6 &amp; 10ft. whaal dlokl- 1360. ental
cond,
304-676· 3029 or 876Gravity bed wagon- •360 .
872:7.
Wheat drill· •260: Massey Fer·
guson mower· $360. Pickup
dilk- $27&amp;. International TPO 1 9B1 TC~yota Corolla, needs new
manure spreader- $775. Corn- motor. Hat n81N tires end
piclcarl Oth• field re8 cty equip- battery. 304·176-1 109 aftw 6;
ment. Howe'a Fafm Equipment- 3_o_4_·_8_7_s-_2_4_1_9_a_rw.:_tl_m_•_·_ _
At. 124 &amp; MayhiiW Rd. J1ckaon, 1
Ohio, 814-288-6944.
1979 Ford Pinto, 4 tpeed, good
cond. UOO.OO. 304·676-31 1e.
3 tobacce bill era. Call81•·266- '78 Thunderbird. air. no rust.
8639 .
$900.00, 304-875·6464.
Sale ot Trade: 6 HP Troy Built I ___....:_....:__ __.____
till•. New tin•. new furrow 19800odgeColt, wrecked, runa
marker. •100. Call 814-388· good, phone after 6 :00 PM .
8619 .
304-895-3471 .
New Holland end of ae•on h..,.
tool sale. All hay tool• at del..,
ooa1; plus lnter•t free financing
uniH June1 . 1988 with normal
downpayment . Two461,3pt,7
ft mower• 12, 100 ,00 . One 311
3 joint PTO, 1t.ndard tlr~
regul• pickup, $6,600.00. One
472, 7 ft h.,bln8. t5,900.00.
One 47ol', 7 ft hayblne
$6,400 .00 . Keetera Servlc~
Center, St. Rt. 87, Leon. W. Va.
Phone 304-896-3874.

8

8:051ll Allee
6:30 IJ ill I!J) NBC Nightly News

Grain

Pats for Sale

Groom and Suppty Shop-Pat
Grooming. All breeds ... All
style~ lams Pet Food Oeai•JuliaWobb Ph. 614·446-0231 .

l .R. style Warm Morning Woodburner, excellent condition. No
blower . 8225. firm. GravlfPf
Snow Bladewithrunners. used3
times . $150 . firm. Serious calla
only, e14-992-6720 .

&amp;

Good miud hl'f. Call 614 ·949·
2273.

71

57

Hay

TUES., NOV. 10

u

Budget Transmiuiona: Used and
rebuilt, all typea. Guaranlee 30
day •· Call 614·379·2220 or
304-676-4230
63 .
Livestock
--------::--Chevy small block 202, amall
chamber heads. Completely re- ·
done. Comes wrth roller rock era.
Registered Quarter horae. Sor- Call 614· 448· 7672 or 448·
rail Getdln~;~ . Bam May 11. · 1622 It 6 00 PM
1986. White blut w / 3 white - -a-er-: - - ·- --lofeet. 30 days professional train·
Dual exhaust klta. 899.96 In·
ing. $860 . Call 614-288-6622 . stalled. Most Fordl. Chwy
trucks, Vans. 4x4's. Mufti~
9s ·
A
Ah
Reg. American Saddle Brad M
Horus for sale. Good bloodline.
an ,
timpson ve.. 1 en1.
Ohio. 1-800· 843· 3767.
ReMonable prices. Call 614·
448-8387 or 256-8461 after
5:00PM .
77 Auto Repair
Percentage Simmental Cowa
bred to full blood Simmental
bull. C~ll 61 4-949-2e22 .
Struts, 8119 .95 pair, lnatalled.
Most modalf,-, Muffler M1n, 9
Pigs fot aala. 304-882-3764 .
Stimpson ANa . Athena, Ohio.
1-800-843 -'3 767.

64

8

WORD

GAM I

6:00 ill Cra&amp;y Like a Fox
IJ ill Cll
(I) 11m t11 1!2l
I!Jl Nllwo
(!) SportaLook (t)
(!) Dr. Who
•
crJ) Square One TV Q
@ Facto of Life
Ill ill One Day at a Time

!-----------

ChriltmaaTrees, •20.00each, 6
f1 ~o 16ft, 3 mil• out Sand Hill
Road on left.

Log splitter for sale, 5 HP, on
wheals .• 8300. Water bed, king
SIZe, Best No WBVe Mattress,
$200 . Call614-247 ·3261 .

ValiS\~ Furniture
New and used furniture and
appl icancel . Call 614- 446 7672. Hours 9-6 .

M, erchendise

Television
Viewing
EVENING

~~,~~~;;=~=~::~~;;~~~~;;~

Cellahon'sUsedTireShop.Ovar
1.000 tires, sizea 1 2, 13, 14, 15,
18t 16.6. 8 mil• out Rt . 218
Call 614-266-6261 .

Doors. windows, wooden mantels , sc hool dest' s, over head gaa
heaters. 1 ton crane. Misc.
items. 614·992·6113 after 6
p.m

PARSON'S FURNITURE

fP,l./ li\D Tfl!:;

5760.

County Appliance, Inc, Good
used appliances end TV sets.
Open SAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614·446-1699, 627 3rd.
Ave . Galhpolia, OH .

90 Oays same u cash wnh
approved credit. 3 Milos out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9anl to Spm
Mon. thru Sat . Ph. 614-446·
0322.

BORN

11

Santin

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'77 International Scout II. oood
running cond, AM·FM, 304 cu
ind-1, 3 speed, 4x4, cllll 304676·2670.

Merchandise

Sofas and chairs priced fr om
$395 to $995 . Tables $50 end
up to 8125. H•de-e-beds 8390
to 5596. Recliners S225 to
8375. lamps S28 to $125 .
Dinettes $109 and up to $495.
Wood table w-6 chairs 8285 to
8795. Desk $100 up to S376.
Hutches $400 end up. Bunk
bvds complete w·mattresse•
5296 and up to S396. Baby beds
$1 10. MattreUel or box springs
full or twin .$68, firm 1 878, and
$88. Queen sets $225. King
$350. 4 drawer chest $89 . Gun
cabinets 6 gun. Gas or electric
range 8375. Baby mattresses
S35 &amp; S46 Bed frames 820
$30 &amp; King frame 550 Good
selection . of bedroom suites,
metal cabmets, headboards S30
and up to S66

Tuesday, November 10. 19 87

W.O.

'78 Dodge, 4 wheel drive, pick
up half ton. 304-1578-2979 .

Desk, bookshelve. clothes.
household itema- Mu1t takeall$36. Firm . Swing set- good
useable cond .. $26. Call 614·
446-9633 .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St ., Gallipolis .
NEW- 6 pe. wood group- $399.
Living room &amp;uite•· S199 · S599.
Bunk beds with bodding- 5199.
Full size mattress &amp; foundation
starting - S99 Reclin e rs
starting- $99.
USED - Beds. dressers, bedroom
su1tes, 8199 -$299 . Desks,
wringer washer, a complete line
of used furniture.
NEW- Western boots· $30 .
Workboots 818 &amp; up. (Steal &amp;
soft toe) . Call614-446-3159

&amp; 4

1985 Ford ·v.n. Starcraft . GT
aeri• conversion. A.C .. Excel·
lent condition . Low mileage.
114· 992·5113 after 6 p.m.

For Lease

Household Goods

Vans

1975 Ford Window Van. $260 .
Call 614·266· 8046 .

400 sq. ft . commercial space
suitable for offices. retailing, or
serv1ces. Prime locat•on-corner
or 2nd. 8t Pine in Gallipolis.
Ample parking in rear.. S350 per DP Body Tone 300. Used a few
month. Call 614-446-4249 o'r ... tim~ . Ca11614-256·1100after
5.
446-2 325.
Firewood· all hBrdwood. Large
pickup load. $35 delivered. Call
814-446-1437 or 446·9266.

51

73

'N' CARLYLE ®br Lllrry Wright

Gibaon refrigerator~ Almond,
8260. Almond Electric lf.ove.
$260. Zenith stereo. t76 . Table
&amp;··1:hain, 880 , Caln614·3670506.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apanmentt at Village
Manor snd RNerside Apartments In Middleport. From
$216 including utilities. Call
614-992-7787. EOH

Apartments for rent in Pomeroy .
1 and 2 bedrooit!l. 61 4-9926215.

1968 K~tkwood . 2 bedroomt .
366 E, Main, Pomeroy . lmmedi ste pouesruon S300P. Call
614· 992 7314 or 614-742 ·
2053

Rooms for rent, dar. week.
month. Galli a Hotel. Call 614446-9680 Rent aa tow as 8120
month.

51

Modern 1 BR apartment Call
614-446-0390.

3 bedr'oom country home. nawty
remodeled. Deposit required.
l,mmedi ate Qccupancy. Ca11614·
742•2427.

In Rutland , 3 bedroom•. total
electric. fenced-in yard. No peta.
Ca1161• ·742-2286 .

Furnished Rooms

Mobile Home lot. 60ft. or less.
920 4th., Gallipoha. 876 . Water
paid. Call 614·446-441 6 after 7
PM.

12x65 Mob1leHomewith 12x24
add-on with extra lot. 304-676·
7569.

1979 BayvifWII 14x70 with 24x7
e•ten Front porch, carport.
endosed back porch or shop
area, woodburn at ori 1 .4 acres.
f 15000 or best offer. No•
Crew n C1ty &amp; Mercerville. Call
614-446-7602 or 26&amp;-1638 .

..

41

1982 Ventura. 14x68. 3 bed·
roo m. all electric. 304-6757476.

W ill h&amp;lp finance or land contract . 10 yr. old house. 3 Br..

32

Apartment
for Rant

APARTMENTS, mobile homes,
houaea. Pt. Pleasant and Galli polis. 614-446· 8221 .

ALL

for handicapped. Call 614· 992·
7204 or 614-992-39a3.

44

.·

Tuesday, November 10. 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

AX F
F DC

p

F

K CIQ H C
HXT C FDW AO

X.

EX

wu u
E X

F D N F

~

w

YN A

C S C K C F F
Yesterd~y's

E X

C E P N K E

D N U C

Cryptoquote: THE EDUCATED SCAMP

IS A SCAMP STILL AND ALL THE MORE DANGEROUS
TO THE COMMUNITY. -THEODORE ROOSEVELT

•

�..
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Vietnam, atom bomb books
NEW YORK (UPI)- A novel
chronicling a Vietnam veteran's
painful return from war and a
detailed history of the political.
scientific and social events leading to the development of the
atomic bomb won the National
Book Awards.
Author Larry Heineman's
novel, "Paco's Story," won)he
National Book Award for flctlon
and Richard Rhodes' "The Making of the Atomic Bomb" took the
non-fiction award.
The awards, a $10,000 prize and
a plaque, were presented at a
gala diner at the Pierre HoteL .
"Paco's Story," published by
Farrar Strauss Giroux, foilows
young Paco Sullivan from a

Tl!esday, November 10, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

ferocious flreflght In VIetnam In
which he was horribly wounded
back to the United States.
Sullivan, the sole survivor of
the battle, settles for a life'
washing dishes in a short -order
restaurant. But every day,
awake, asleep and in daydreams.
the character remains haunted
by the waf and by the ghosts of
his comrades.
Heineman, a Vietnam veteran,
was born in Chicago where he
lives with his wife and children.
His first novel, "Close Quarters," was published In 1977 and
his short stories have appeared
in Harpers and Tr!Quarterly .
Rhodes, in "The'Making of the
Atomic Bomb," takes the reader

recogn~d

from the moment the Idea of an
atomic device entered the mind
of famed theoretical physicist
Leo Szilard to the apocalyptic
moment when the United States
dropped the bomb on Hiroshima.
The book, published by Simon
&amp; Schuster, examines the Impact
of the bomb on society and details
the scientific breakthroughs that
led to Its invention, as well as how
the achievements were given to
the government, sparking t~e
arms race.
Rhodes has written four novels
and four non-fiction books, Including "The Ozarks," "Looking
for America" and "The Ungodly," and is a frequent contributor 'to a hosi of magazines.

Veteran parade marcher
says he's slowing down

The Other four authors nominated for the fiction award were
Allee McDermott for "That
Night.'' Toni Morrison for " Beloved." Philip Roth for "The
Counterllfe," and Howard Norman for, "Northern Lights," his
first noveL
Nominated for the non-fiction
award were James Glelck for his
book "Chaos: Making a New
Science," Claudia Koontz for
"Mothers in the Fatherland "
David Herbert Donald for "Lo~k
Forward," and Robert A.M.
Stern,_ Gregory Gilmartin and
Thomas Melltns for their work,
"New York 1930: Architecture
and Urbanism Between the Two
·
World Wars."

Texas Eastern agrees to PCB cleanup

•

HOUSTON (UPI) -A record Clearly, Texas Eastern, not Its
$400 million will be spent by customers, should bear . the
Texas Eastern Corp ..to clean up burden of paying for the costly
toxic PCBs at 89 sites in 14 states, cleanups.
"I stillbelievethattheEPAdid
and the firm also will pay a $15
notmovequicklyenough
togetto
million fine for dumping the
the
bottom
ofthiS'.
The
EPA
knew
. suspected cancer-causing
about
this
problem
for
19
months
chemicaL
But one senator from Louisi- before it began conducting on site
ana is concerned Texas Eastern inspections of the pits. That was
will pass the cost of the cleanup to 19monthsinwhichtheEPAknew
of these pits, but did nothing to
customers.
Texas Eastern signed the determine the extent . of the
agreement in principle with the problem or the extent of the
U.S. Justice Department and the
Environmental Protection public."
potentlal
health
to the
The EPA
said hazard
final cleanup
Agency, officials said Monday.
PCB, or polychlorinated bi- costs to the company wlll set a
phenyl, is a suspected cancer- record for an agency-negotiated
causing- chemical banned by settlement. Texas Eastern also
Congress in 1978. Laboratory agreed, without admitting fault,
tests on animals show PCBs can to pay a $15 million fine for
harm reproduction and growth . violating the Toxic Substances
and can cause skin lesions and Control Act by dumping PCBs,
said EPA spokesman John
tumors.
. The agreement affects sites . Kasper in Washington.
Although Texas Eastern "be·
along a 10,000-mlle pipeline running from Texas to New Jersey, lieves such a penalty Is Inappropand provides for the complete riate, It has agreed to the penalty
evaluation of contamination and payment in order to expedite a
cleanup of soils and PCB disposal settlemeqt and to avoid the
uncertainties of litigation," said
pits, the EPA said . .
. Texas Eastern. based In Hous- a statement issued by Texas
ton. said the agreement is not Eastern.
Payment of the fine is subject
binding, but sets the basis for
to
negotiation of a final agreecompleting a consent decree
ment
with the EPA, the company
under which Its subsidiary,
Texas Eastern Transmission said . .
The agreement resulted from
Corp.. will complete the PCB
cleanup program at its compres- six months of negotiations on
cleanup of sites where the
sor station sites.
Texas Eastern said it expects company drained PCB to complete work described In contaminated liquids into pits.
the agreement over a 10-year . The agreement also calls for
period at a cost of about $400 extensive off-site testing of soils
million, which it will try to and groundwater monitoring.
"We feel it's a significant step,
recover through insurance and
a
signlficapt milestone, for the
other claims .
company
to be able to complete
"To me, that means they're
going to pass along the cost of the effort that it began in 1972 to
their very serious mistake to rid the pipeline system of PCBs,"
their customers, and that's not said Texas Eastern spokesman
right," said Sen. John Breaux, Fred WichlE!p .
The EPA said tests had been
D-La. "While I'm happy this
agreement has been reached and conducted by the federal agency
I applaud both sides. I have and several states on soils,
serious concerns about this. sediments and water at some

slssippi, Missouri, Arkansas.
· dump sites.
Louisiana, Maryland and Texas. ·
"Although these tests found
Once finalized. the federal
PCB contamination at some or
consent
decree will not su~r­
the sites, none of the sites was
sede
any
agreements Texas
found to present an immediate
Eastern already has reac.hed
public health threat," the EPA
with those states, the company
said. "Most of the sites are In
said.
remote locations, and the PCB
levels found were generally "' "The company does. however,
hope that the states will find the
low."
national agreement to be a
Texas Eastern found PCBs at
satisfactory basis upon which to
pits In New Jersey. Pennsylvaproceed with the cleanup,'·
nia, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, KenTexas
Eastern said.
lucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mis-

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - After marching 48 consecutive
years, Ralph Thornton says he's proud·to be a.veteran, but age
is getting the best of him and he plans to step off only part of
Wednesday's Veterans Day parade.
''I bellev~ In the stars and strl~s. very much so," Thornton
said. "If It weren't for us veterans, there wouldn't be any United
· States of America."
The east Toledo Army veteran said he has marched in every
Memorial ,Day parade since joining a Cl'.•lllan Conservation
Corps camp in 1939, and has participated In most Veterans Days
events with collegues from the American Legion and Veterans
of Foreign Wars.
"I don't always march the full distance anymore," he said.
"My legs can't take it any longer."
Thornton, 67, jollied the Army In 1942 and served at an air base
in Anchorage, Alaska. Four years later he returned to Toledo
.
and joined VFW Post 606.
· Besides Veterans Day, Thornton said he tries to march In two
parades on Memorial Day .
"That's my major parade. I'm very pro11d to march," he said
during a break at a health spa where he has worked as a
masseur for the past 16 years.
Thornton works three days a week at the spa, wllere groups or
men one third his age put their arms and legs through workouts
that will eventually draw them to his massage table and his
fingers to seek relief from cramped muscles .
"It's a full-time job," he confided.
He began a career ·as a masseur In 1951, when he went to
Chicago to study at a Swedish massage schooL For
entertainment, he listens to classical music and·pantamines to
the music of AI Jolson at a community center.
"I don't smoke, drink, or take drugs. I feel terrific," he said.
·"I've gone 26 years without missing a day's work.

toxin .
"It takes time, uses tots of

animals and is expensive. so a lot
of potential toxins are no t tested.
We need a new method that is
quick and cheap, but still accu rate, so we · can test more
chemicals while we can still
conserve animal resources .''
Instead of using l}'lany rat s for

one test, Teylor can test many
substances using one rat.
"We utilize a preparation
called a brain slice," Teytor said.
"We keep a small portion of the
brain of a laboratory rat allve in
a special little chamber ... We
expose that little portion to a
toxic substance. The experiment
Itself takes a few hours as
opposed to several weeks."
The method, which has passed
all validation tests so far, is
l ntended to measure a ccu te
exposure to toxins, as opposed to
long-term exposure to small
amounts. Teylor predicts the
prcx;ess will not be useful to test
potential cancer-causing agents,
for example.
" We'd like to start looking at
Industrial solvents first," he
said. "They are pretty common
and abused. Right now , we
depend on some physician treat- ·
ing a group of patients, who finds
it curious that they all work in the
sa me factory and all suffer the
same problem . Then the problem
is lnves ligated.
"Ulti mately our goat Is to ·
identify toxi ns before they are .
put into the environment."
The Environmental Protection
Agency Is funding the project
with $300,000 over three years.
Teylor and Ms colleagues are
about halfway through their
, research and hope to apply the
process to "real-life situations"
within two years , Teylor said.

Baby saved after mom dies
CLEVELAND (UPl)- A premature baby girl was born today to a
Cleveland woman who died from gunshot wounds.
Police said Jennifer Coyne, 18. was brought to a hospital shortly
after mIdnigh t after being shot In her abdomen. chest and head.
Doctors were unable to save the woman's life, but were successful
(g delivering the baby who weighed 4)1, pounds.
Police were seeking the woman 's 2~ - year-old estra nged boy friend
as a suspect In the shooti ng.
Hospital officials said the baby was tn·intensive care In serious but
stable condition .
.
Officials said the mother had been dead for about 25 minutes before
the baby was delivered.

.

'

predictions ·

Daily Number
970 ~

Pick 4
"

'

4228

Page 5

•

Clear tonight. Low In upper
20s. Sunny Thursday. Highs

near 50.

&amp;:..

•
Vol,37, No, 130

•

2 Sections. 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 11, 1987 ·

Copyrighted 1987

25 Cents

A .Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

·FultZ ·tells chamber

advertising paying off
The positive aspects of operatIng bread and breakfast inns
were highlighted by Mark Fultz
at Tuesday's Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce meeting.
Fultz was representing Pomeroy's recently opened Holly Hill
Inn.
Hotly Hill Inn is now advertisIng in the national publication
".Country Home." Fultz explained that already, the national
advertising Is paying off In
overnight guests .
Fultz said there are many
travelers who need to come to
Meigs County for one reason or
another &lt;1nd are in need of
overnight lodging. "We want
them to stay in our area," said
Fultz, "not outside. And not just

' rii~ii~liiji~~·=~~ii=ii~~-iiii-========================ii

to benefit Holly Hill Inn," he
added, "but to benefit all area
merchants."
He pointed out that many Holly
Hill guests are looking for
antiques so Holly Hill is planning
to combine advertising with local
antique stores.
Holly Hill will also book parties
of not more ihan 30 people, Fultz
said, with catering provided
from outside establishments.
'A second bread and breakfast
establishment. this one In Middteport,- is expected to be opened
by Fultz In the sprjng. .
Brenda Wyatt of Fit and Trim ,
Pomeroy, explained the concept
of the exercise program offered
by her shop. Seven electronic
machines are used to benefit

specific areas of the body. she
said. It takes about one-hour to
complete a workout session and
'three workouts a week are
recommended for maximum results. The program is good for
inen as well as women, she
added. She also explained the
costs for the program.
Jennifer· Sheets announced
that Big Bend Varieties or '87wlll
be presenting a show on Nov. 28
at Meigs High SchooL Advance
tickets for the show will be on
sale soon, she said .
Paul Gerard announced that
the annual Christmas parade will
be held Sunday, Nov. 29, starting
at 2 p.m. , with more details to be
announced later.

Republicans ask Celeste to
consider dismissing official
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Republicans on both sides of the
Statehouse called on Gov, RIchard F. Celeste Tuesday to
consider dismissing Roberta
Steinbacher, administrator of
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services .
And Ohio House Republican
leaders asked the U.S. Department of Labor to expand its
Investigation Into allegations of
wrongdoing at the troubled state
agency which provides services
for Ohio's unemployed.

2.00

LESS
CASH REFUND

-$2.00

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DRIIORAL
TIIUTS

19 .

REMEMBER mE VETERANS'- The U.S.
Rag flys over the monument at Naylor's Run
Memorial Playground. The monument was
erected In memory of Howard M. Crary, Rodney
D. Hlnl!!l, . Charles A. Runnel and Philip E.

Kelllnger, who died In World War 11. Remember,
today of all days, the many Meigs Countlans who
gave their llves In service to their country, and
those veterans of the service who still Uve.

Season's first snow hits area

YOU PAY ONLY

GIRL

"I think there have ·been
enough problems so that · the
governor ought to consider asking for her (Steinbacher's) resignation," said Ohio Senate President Paul E. Gillmor, R-Port
Clinton. " The governor, for his
own credibility, ought to consider
asking her to leave."
Rep. John Boehner, R-West
Chester, ranking member of the
House Commerce and Labor
Committee, was more blu.nt.
"Enough , is enough," said
Boehner. "It's time to clean

Meigs local sttike in fourth day

FEATURE PRICE
ONLY

Researchers evaluate
toxicity test in Ohio
By JEANNIE REALL
AKRON. Ohio (UP!) - Northeast Ohio researchers are
evaluating a testing process to
determine the J?Otential toxicity
of chemicals before they reach
the environment and reduce the
amount of time. money and
laboratory animals needed for
testing.
"There are about 100,000chemlcals used today and less than 5
percent of them are ever tested
for toxicity," Timothy Teylor, a
professor of neurobiology at
Northeastern Ohio Universities
College of Medicine at Rootstown, said Monday In a · telephone interview .
NEOCOM is a consortium
among Kent State University,
the University of Akron and
Youngstown State University.
"About 5,000 new chemicals
are synthesized every year," he
said. "Many of those are introduced to the human environment. a nd only a small fraction
are ever tes ted. Most methods
today employ lots of animals that
are dosed up with the suspected

•
'

By JIM SIELICIU

Ohio Lottery

~Major Hoople's

•

C .. DCEUZPIII
I JILT SIIILE PICI

,o~.

.,.1\lll

age

VAW!S ·
TO 11.09

By United Press International
Icicles, snowmen and numerous fender benders were all a
'part of the activities in southern
'Ohio In that area's first snowfall
o! the season.
. Although the National Weather
Service reported a trace on the
ground at Its official stations,
some higher elevations and outlying areas had measurable
amounts.
"We had close to three inches,' ;
silld Dispatcher M.E. Williams
at the State Highway Patrol post
In Marietta. "The ground Is still
covered. and snow Is still clingIng to the trees. It's pretty."
She said troopers investigated
a lew accidents. but "nothing
major. We were very fortunate.
. "If they make It through the
!irs t snow o! the season. they
start driving more cautiously,"
she said.
A couple of inches of snow,
mixed with a little bit of ice, was
reported In the Gallla-Melgs
County area . . State Highway
'

~.

Patrol troopers investigated 24
accidents in a 12-hour ~rlod,
most of them fender benders.
However, by this morning, the
roads were clear so the buses
could run and take children to
schooL
In the Martins Ferry area,
residents awoke to find icicles
had formed. A couple inches had
fallen in t)le St. Clairsville area
and children made their first
snowmen of the season.
Ohioans marching In Veterans
Day parades had to bundle up
sjnce temperatures hovered
around the freezing morning by
the time the parades pegan as
clouds moved out to make wa:Y
for the sun.
High pressure building over
Ohio will take more control of the
weather, pushing farther Into the
Atlantic Ocean that low-pressure
system that brought the snow to
the eastern part of the country.
The strengthening high pressure will clear the skies today ,
but the sun will have little

warming effect. Today's high
will be around 40.
Skies will remain clear tonight
and Thursday. but some westerly
winds by Thursday will producer
warmer temperatures. Lows tonight will range bet wen 25 and 30,
but highs Thursday should range
between 50 and 55.
The cold air blowing across the
Great Lakes will keep producing
snow flurries In the eastern
counties today ,
This morning's weather map
showed low pressure extended
along the East Coast from
southern New England to Georgia. An area of cold high pressure
ran northeast to southwest from
the Great Lakes to south Texas.
A cold northeast flow of air was
between those two systems from
extreme eastern Canada to the
Gulf states.
There Is a chance of shoowers
Friday, but fair weather Is
expected tor Saturday and Sunday . Highs will be In the !lOs and
lows In the 30s.

A teachers strike In the Meigs Local School District moved
into Its fourth day Wednesday with apparently no negotiating
sessions set to Iron out contract problems between the board of ·
education and the approximate 150 teachers.
Teachers went out at 12:01 a.m. last Friday and are picketing
the ilchools of the district. Schools were olllctally closed on
Monday.
The Meigs Local Board of Education meqn special session
Tuesday night to discuss aspects of the strike. The meeting was
In executive session with no report given as a result.
· Teachers have established a strike headquarters but have not
issued any statements in regard to the strike.
Supt. Dan E. Morris Indicated that since the negotiations
were In the hands of a federal mediator at the time the strike
began, that a mediator will again enter the picture and
encourage. a return to the negotiating table.
Meantime, a movement was underway for all parent-teacher.
organizations within the district to hold a meeting In attempt to
learn the problems and any solutions thai might be worked out.
Leaders from the administration and the teachers will be
invited to attend the meellng and explain the situation to the
parent-teachers organlzallons, It was reported.

house at OBES. Ms . Steinbacher
has amply demonstrated that she
is not now, and may never have
been, running a tight ship at
OBES."
Steinbacher has been under
fire In the media for questionable
telephone equipment leases and
charges of sexual harassment
within the agency, She also upset
some legislators when she closed
and consolidated a number of
dis trlct offices to trim a $12
·million operating deficit.
But Celeste stood by Steinbacher earlier this -week, saying
she has saved the taxpayers far
more In the recovery of Comprehensive Employment and TrainIng ACt funds than may have •
been lost in unwise telephone
leases and office operations .
The Cleveland Plain Dealer
reported Monday that some
$228,000 in state money is paying
for expensive phone systems
taken out of closed offices in
Cincinnati and Massillon. and
stored In a warehouse for $4.000a
month.
The sophisticated electronic
p)lone systems were acquired on
no-bid contracts from TeleCommunications Inc. of Brook
Park last year, the newspaper
reported. TCI had links to a
major contributor to the governor's 1986 campaign.

.
'

I

•

...

Japanese tanker att~cked early today
'

was able to quickly control the
.The Iranian speedboats, usuMANAMA, Bahrain (UPI) Iranian speedboats attacked a blaze and the stricken vessel ally used by the Iranian RevoluJapanese-managed tanker In the required no assistance, shipping tionary Guard for attacks on
third-party shipping In the gulf,
southern Persian Gulf outside sources said.
The attack on the tanker. attacked the Liquid Bulk Exthe StFait of Hormuz today three
hours after Iraq said It attacked a · which Is managed by the Japa- plorer about 25 miles west of the
tanker off Iran, shipping sources nese shipping firm Tokumaru of the emirate of Umm al
Kaiun of Tokyo, was the first by Qaiwaln.
satd.
.
The area is about 50 miles east
· The two Iranian vessels at- Iran in the Persian Gulf since
Nov.
6,
when
an
Iranian
vessel
of
the two oil platforms destroyed
tacked the Panamanlan attacked
the
by
the United States last month in
U.S.-managed
oil
_reglstered tanker off the United
Arab Emirates three hours after tanker Grand Wisdom off the retaliation lot an Iranian SllkIraqi ' warplanes staged their United Arab Emirates while It worm missile strike on the
third strike on tankers oft Iran in was steaming down the gull with U.S.-reglstered Kuwaiti tanker
a load of Kuwaiti cr.ude.
Sea Isle City In Kuwaiti terfltor-24 hours.
The United States did not lal waters.
The two Iranian speedboats
U.S. officials said the platswept toward the 7,060-ton Liquid retaliate for the attack on the
Bulk Explorer outside the Strait Grand Wisdom because it flies forms were used by the Revoluot'Hormuz at 10:30 a .m. alld sent the Panamanian flag. Eleven · tionary Guard, a separate force
several rocket-pro~lled gre- Kuwaiti tankers have been charged with protecting Iran's
placed under U.S. registry and Islamic revolution, to carry out
nades crashing Into its hul).
The grenades started a fire naval protection. and Iran has attacks on shipping. They
aboard the tanker, a chemical · struck back with Silkworm mls· claimed the attack damaged
products carrier, but the ·crew sile attacks on Kuwait.
Iran's a~llity to strike vessel~ :

.

SNOWMAN BITES mE DUST - Tuesday's
suprlse snow didn't go unappreciated on Spring
Avenue In Pomeroy. As soon as enough of the
white stuff was on the ground, Richard, Paul and
Rodney Smith, left to right, were out building a
snowman. Unfortunately, Just before this picture

could be snapped, the six-loot Frosty tumbled to
the ground, carrot nose and all. "I guess It had too
much of a lean," said Paul. Oh, well. The boys
have promised that when . the next good snow
comes, they'll build another snowman.

l

. I

I

I
t!

I
I
I

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