<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12976" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12976?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T04:25:25+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43948">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/d4b97f91e7e53f1fa4194ae85fe9ddca.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1d31a386ba2b70ee5cbacba52ecaea11</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40703">
                  <text>~ E-8-The Sunday Tn'lu Sentinel

Pomerov-Middleport_:Gallipolil, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

.November 2. 1988

·America's young ·professionals revive -croq~et.:.s ,· popuiW.ity
· ··:

ByWIUJAM D. MURRAY .
SAN FRANCISCO tUPii-Once
~ leisurely pastime for the rich and
famous In places like Palm Beach,
' Fla., tbe serious sport of croquet Is
grabbing the attention and dollars
of America's young professionals.
' The upturn on the ecanomlc side
' of the sport Is the latest twist In what
~!,as been croquet's multimillion
do.Uar oouble life in tbe United
States.
: The sport's blur-roUar exlstenCI'
~as center«:! al'ound the Al11('rican
backyard during holiday gather·
l!lgs, A rusting set, usually costing
between $25 and $50, Is rolled out ri
the garage and · set up In a
haphaZard way. No one ever seems
to know the rules, but the sport

provide!; several ·hours ot prebarbecue entertainment.
.
. That ·Is recreational croquet,
sn.ubhed by the cognoscenti.
Croquet's elite life rel'olvei;
amund the manicured la wns ri
private clubs, where pmper attire,
rules and bloodlines are strictly
follow(!(!. It !sa placewhereasingl'e
mallet may cost as much as $185
and the wickets weigh six pounds a
piece.
The serious game of croquet is
pla~!'d on a Ia wn 25 yards by !!!!
yard!;. Tbesix wickets are placed at
preclst- coordinates. The winner Is ·
the ftrst player to. make It amund
the course.
It was on such private cluti
croquet greens that "friendly "
matches were played for wagers of

thousands of clollars during tbe
19lls, pitting the East Coast literary
establl$hment against up;tart Hollywood rmguls. Even today, lar~
wagers 11re knpwn to chan~ hands
on a sing!~ match.
"The true beauty oft he sport is Its
diversity, " said Jack R. Osbornr, ·
president of . the U.S. Croquet
Associ at iln. "Anyone can play.
Whether you are six or 70, rich or
poor, It's truly a womb-to-tomb

sport.''
Industry ' sources said sales ftg.
ures so far this year Micale tha t
the sport wlll move more than
lJO,OOO croquet sets sold · in 1915.
There Is, however, no breakdown
available bet\M'en which sales are
backyard sets and which are

professlpnal-caU~r.

,
"We sold a lot inorecroquet-sets
in the last year or so than In the
previous yt-ars," Ben Mawhinney.
a SjXlkesman lor General Sports·
Craft, a New Jersey-based sporting
goods distributor. "I think It Is
partially because of the new ·
houslr)g starts. Lawn sports as a
whole did not sell well up until a
little ovt-r a year ago. That's where ·
t.he (sport's) volume growth Is. The
per('('ntage growth Is In ihe high
end where a guy wtli IllY over $100
for a single mallet."
. .
Osborne said the spo.r ts growth
has also been the result of there
being mor'e places for the serious
player to play.
"We are also seeing a tremend-

Active U.S. enyoy, leader cross swords
J

By DANIEL DROSDOFF
UPI Senior Editor
ASUNOON, Paraguay (UPI 1 President Gen. Alfredo Sti'Ol'Ssner,
Paraguay's dominant political fig.
ure for the past 32 years, now
·shares tbe limelight with un
unwelcome upstart: U.S. Ambassa .oor Clyde Taylor.
· The 4S-year-old Am~rican envoy
has outraged senior governmmt
officials by overtly meeting with
members ri oppositi.on political
parties, most of them banned from
operating legally.
As. a result, Taylor, forrncr
assistant secretary of stat~ lbr
:lilternatlonal narcotics affairs, has
11ecome a controversia l personality
In Asuncion. the hot and humid
subtropical capital of one of South
¥nerlca's poorest nations. For the
,opposition, he has become a hPro
since he arrivrd in Nov~m~r.
.mainly because of the attacks be
,has drawn from Stroessner
loyalists.
The Interior minister, Sabino
Montanaro, second only to
·!)troessner in political clout. has
.repEatedlyaccusedTaylorof vlolat·
lng protocol.
"We deny his authority to meddiP

ous growth ot prlv~t~ . clubs," h~
Sears. We al~o have sets sold In
said. "Over the next 12 months, our • sporting good !;!ores."
WhiJe Corbin did .not disclose his
· figures show that a;er 100 new
company's Dgures for last year,
clubs will he open. But 1 want to
point out that they do mt have to he
Industry sOurces place the comcroquet-only clubs. They are counpany's sales at about~ million last
try clubs or resorts putting in
year on between 2i0,000 and llO,OOO
croquet greens."
.
set.s.
Tbe sport - which was more
While Forster Is capturing much
popular than tennis In the 1890s '-of•the blue-collar inar!E t, the pros
also h&lt;!s caught on at collegr
wtll only buy their equipment from ·
campuses around the country ahd
one company: Jotm Jacques and
wtth the young professional set.
Sons Ltd. of Lonoon.
From the University of California
Jacqul'S makes the Solomon, me
. at iDs An~les Westwood campus
Louisville Slugger of croquet
to the hallowed halls of Harvard . mallets. The square-headed mallet ·
University, croquet h.as become a
sells lbr $185 and Is oust om made of
popular pastime away from the · llgn·umvltae-ahardwood~ln ~
books.
marine and machine bearings, ·
"The sport srems to tlave
casters and pulleys. The mallet
captured the College Belt." said · weighs between three and four
Dick , Corbin, president of Forster , pounds and has a ~-Inch shaft. The
backyard sets generally have
Manufacturing ri Wilton , Maine,
the only oomestic croquet equipshafts of 18 Inches.
ment maker. "I think it has also
"Aserlouscroquetpayerusually
caught on with the- 1don't like to
carries around about $.&lt;JXl worth ri
use the word- yuppies."
mallets to his match." Osborne , ,
Corbin said Forster; a privately
said . "He's just llke a golfer."
. held company, has numerou s
However, unllk~ golf, players can
plants In Malile. CroquN Is not the
use only one mallet In each match .
company's ooly market. Forster · The U.S. Croquet Association,
also Is a leading maker of wooden
holds one ri tbe American dlstribu·
clothes pins, toothpicks and plastic
torships for Jaques. Osbornt&gt; said
picnic cutlery.
;Jacques - which commands the
"We oon 't rcteas~ any sa les
internatimal croquet market figures, but croquet 1.&lt;; a major part
American sales were up between :rl
of oor bu siness," Corbin said. "Our - percent and 25 percent to about
products are marketing ina variety
$llO,!Ol last year. This year,
of ways. We are distributed through
Osborne said early figures show

Washlngtoo.
regularly banned the rmst comba ·
In our country's Internal politics, "
Reagan
singled
oot
Paraguay
live
opposition parties from elecMontanaro said after Taylor met
and Chile last year as the two
lions, and he has governed with
wtth members of the tlJposilion.
powers of a state of siege that give
Govemment-inspirrd press ·at - rernalnlngrolllltriesinSouthAmcr·
taclls on Taylor -have been vitriolic. lea with "entrenched .mllltarv ( :._pollee unlimited power,
rule," Paraguay's · neigh..Jio~s,.)Lr' Only a handfulritoken tlJjlosillon
The newspaper "Hoy," owned by
Brazil, Ar~ntina, and Uruguay , 'In
poli~lcal parties are allo~ to
Stroessner's son-In-law, · warned
the past three years have replacrd
OJlt'rate legally. A dissident faction
that Taylor may provoke antt·U.S.
military regimes with democratic
ri Stroessner's own Colorado party
acts and labeled him a "dan~rous
governments.
has been ootlawed, a long with
specimen." ,
That trrnd left Chile and Para·
Otr!stian Democrats and Uberal
The pro-government newspaper
guay out of step.
Party factions.
"El Dlarlo" compared Taylor to
Taylor, in pressing for grmt~r
The Communist Party and MarieLibyan leader Moammar Gadhafl
liberalization and human rights, is
1st parties arE' also outlawed, but
and commented I hat since his
arrival "we have had agitation on
followtng a prec&lt;'dent of act lvlsm
they have not been as prominently ' r;m:":"':':m:a:r:ke:tP:r:s:l:lk:e:K::m:ar:t::an:d::=a=no:t:he:r:su=bs=ta:n:l:la:l:sa:les
=il:c:r:e:ase::;
.
oor streets."
_ by U.S. ambassadors start&lt;'&lt;! by
active as tbe conservatlvt&gt; and
Taybr defends his meetings with
Robert White, tbe American envoy . centrist opposltkm group;.
the qJpOSition as a normal part of
between 1976 and 1979.
Paraguay has 9J far eseaped tbe
his dutk's, conducted Ullderexrress
Whit~. who later broke with tbe
armc.:I, !cit-wing guerrilla warfare
orders from Waslington.
Reagan Admlnlstrat ion over Cen·
that In the past ~ade has plagued
. "I am cartylngout Instructions to
tral America policies and r!'ltfed . Ar~ntina, 'Uruguay, Colombia,
lllff't with all political group;, and
from the foreign servlee In 1981, still
Peru and Chile.
that Instruction Is common
keeps up an active interest In
Stroessner's tbllowers are al·
throughout our diplomatic corps,"
Paraguay.
ready c ampaigning lor his re·
Taylor told UPJ..''My government
White was beaaten by poliiT on
~lee lion in 1988, plastering the walls
expects me to tJe informed."
of Asuncion with posters that carry
June 24 In a scuffle at Asuncion
Y1'1 his p~bllc state!IJ{'nls em- airport while he was accompanying the. slogan "forever," but a new
phaslzlng 'President Reagan's de·
exiled political leader Domingo
term i&gt;r tbe aging strongman may
sire to sec democracy extended
Laino on his fifth unsuccesshi 1 be more difficult than previous
throu!(hout the Western Hemlsattempt to return to Paraguay.
political battles.
phel'(' have given a clear signal te
Paraguay Is economically deStroessner, 73, a form~r artillrry
Sti'OC'Ssner that his authoritarian,
commander who originally seizro
pendent oo two powerful nrighbors,
A9greaive '111--.on lnNld
p£rsonallst style is out of favor in
power In a coup d'eta t. is not as
Brazil and Argentina; bothofwhich
deli9n lor ezcellen! traction in
secure now as he was during the arr pr&lt;'Ssurtng Stroessner to
White years.
changp his ways.
al!--lher ccmdlllolla
Street demonstrations by stuThe Catholic church regularly
Low rollin9 reaiatance
fuel
denTs, workE'rs, and political roesspeaks out against authoritarianWide block tread ¢¥81 oubllandIsm and economic problems a nd
unheard of only two years ago ing bandltnq
are now a Olmmon occur:rencr dur
has called for a dialogue of all
. to an ecooomlc crisis and specula- political sectors.
·
tion 1n political opposition group;
The government has publicly
GRAND OPfNING
MONDAY'
swamp," he said.
that they must rress for change&gt;
rejected the church call. but at the
NOV. 22nd
But the Dismal Swamp Canal has
now. befor~ the aging president
sa metlrneconduct dlscrcet converhistoric claims ri Its own to tbe
dies.
sat ions with members of the
UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP: MAC WILLIAMS
waters, wlich pour rut of Lake
SII'OC'Ssner has been clectrd Ca tholic hierarchy.
WE ACCEPT ALL STATE AND NATIONAL ACCOUNTS
Drummond In the heart ri lhe
president seven dml'S, the first on
Public d ~monstratio ns arr
swamp and oown a 312 . mile-long
Au!(. 1o. 1954. He makes frequent
quickly repressed by policr, but
ditch to feed
of the natiln's. Pllblic appcaranCI's, and, though
jJolltical prisoners are usually
ear liest transportation
overweight, he appears to he
rclmsrd within 4R hours of their
improvements.
mentally alert and In good health.
capture, a departure from the older
•
: .
·
·
according to Wl'Stern diplom ats.
practic~ of keeping the prisoners

aU~~wealher traction.

B/r steel helted radial.

BUY 3 TIRES
GET THE 4th.ONE

sa-

Upo'n famous sw·amp
By MIKE McLAUGHLIN
ELIZABETII CITY. N.C. !UP!)
- The Grea t Dismal Swamp has
for ITnturlc•s fueled the visions of
men - from George Washington,
who wantrd to drain it, to famous
poets who found It a source of
passion.
Today, howevN, the 1.20,(0) acre
reserve on the North Carolina·
seems less
than
great
aVir_glnla
nd moreline
txodraggled
than
dismal.
Land-clearing operations have
taken hugp bites lor agriculture and
development. Most of the majC'Stlc
j unlper and cypress stands tlavr
faiiPn for timber. and 150 rnlles of
drainage ditchl'S and canals havt&gt;
siphoned off enough water to keep
much of the land rrlatlvely high and
dry .
Prrservatlonlsts are laying ambltio~s pla ns to recapture enough
wa ter to make the swamp swampy
again. But they face an uphill fight
against competing water uses,
lncludln!( tbe 22-mUe long Dismal
Swamp Ca na l, which sucks out
IIXl,OOI gallons each time pleasure
boats are loc~ed through Its gates.
"Most people think of the Dismal
Swamp as a swamp a nd not at all
Ilk~ the drain&lt;'&lt;! land that I've
Sl'('n," sa id Cliff Phillips, district
superintendent for the North CarolIna Division of Parks and Recrea tion , which owns a 14,macre
chunk ol tbe swamp. "It's a svstem
of canals and paths through thE-re."
, Evm in its r~latively dry statr,
the Dismal is an oasis comparm to
tiM' land that abuts it - the
urbanized Hampton Roads area ri
Vlr,;nla and vast stretchC'S of ilat
North Carolina farmland .
The swamp Is a last rrmainirig
!l'fui'J' for t!X- EastPrn block bear.
Birdwatchers flock to the tng to
catch a glimpsr of rar~ warblrrs.
waterfowl, and cv~n oold cagll'S
that !Omrtimes clrr.lr abovP the
trwtops.
Virginia whilrtail dc&lt;'r ar~ in
such abundancr that wildllf~ offl·
clals havr institutro a ron! rollrd
hunt to "hmvest" about .101 d&lt;'l' l'
t-ach year.
nie swamp hosts a div~rsr plant
comni~nity, including mrr spcciPs
llkl' the log fern and tlv' dwarf
trillium . And there are typical
swamp vPrmln - ticks. y&lt;&gt;llow
Dies. IJats and and at i&lt;'ast thrw
varict i~s of poisonous snakes.
Jim Oland, manager of ltv' Great
Dismal Swamp Na tional Wlldlifr
Refu&amp;J', faces the near· imtmslble
task of rcverslng llOyearM&gt;I Pflorts
to wrestle the ·swamp away from
Mother Nature.
"'They've been working on drain ·
lng It for :m years," Oland said.
'"l~y have succeeded to Dbe
degree but never enough to reM
reclalrn tt." He said that altllbullfl '
he does not want the Dismal
Swamp Canal closed to boat tratllc,
" when yoo get rmre water yoo get
more swamp."
·
"All that water that's !liEd for
navlgatkln, If It's blocked off,
there's that much more bt the

THRU

STARTS

OHIO VALLEY JI·RE OUJ.LEJ
675 5332.

one

Rl. 2 ·South Gallipolis, WV.
r--------_;_----~Du=r:in:g~h=ls~32=·y=e:ar:..::tm:u:re:.:h:e~ha=·~s-f=o~r~lo=ng:..:pc':rlods=~o~f~tl~m:c~._ __.:.j~=======================~·

This is the one that will make··you take n·otic:e.
.G. '700.00 111

QUEEN SET .G. '100.01 In
KING SET •G. s1ooo.oo 111

S~ttllj $19900 sn

S~ttlll $.29900 sn
Speelel S39900 sn
Spttlel $4 9900 sn

IIG. 1600.00 111

FULL SIT .G. 1100,00 111
•
QUEEN SET •G. 11•.oo in
KING SET •':'1loo.oo111

$J JfOO Sit
Speeiel S37900sn
Sp11111 S47900 sn
Speelll S57900sn

· SpHIII

LUXUIA 102•

••••,.,
TWIN SET
FULL SET IIG. st".OO liT 'Stptlll
QUEEN SET .,. 'll".oo 111 Speelel
IIING SET Ill. 115".00 Ill Spttlll

.

$34900 sir
$44900 sn
$54900 sn
$69900 SIT

~--aftllo

lla

"'''a Mlllma
11t'

.,

'

.CAIESS ·aACI·SUPPOftEI

"* sn

.... '1""'

111

. ,.. ,.,

S499so SIT .

•~·,:-;!.

Avt.

CC.flcl

liNG SET

... IJ1".10111

lt~~lll

Phoftt ••6··,.05
Golli•oli I

$99950 SIT

r
,,

•

'•

•
•

I

.

.

'

4

,.

... • •

.. •

•

•

..

•

•

Lotto

24-5-14-ll-33-27

•

•

at y
Vot.36 , No.127'

enttne

Pomeroy-. Middleport. Ohio, Monday, November 3, 1986

, Cbpyrigh!ed 1986

2 Section s, 12 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc , Newspaper

Freed hostage
·

Athens
•
survtves
street
revels

11•

says capllttves

I ,

'are in , h·f~~ll'
By WILLIAM POOLE
WJESBADEN, West Germany
IUPi i - David Jacobsen. freed
by pro-Iranian Shiite Moslems,
arrived from Le banon today
after 17 months in. captivit y,
say ing he had " mixed feelings"
because other American hostages are s till "In he ll. "
" I ca n' t te ll you how very, very
happy I a m here today," Jacobsen told reporters on his
arrival at the Army 's Wlesbaden
Air Base.
"But, it Is really mixed feel ·
lngs ," he said, referring to the
fiv e American hos tages he left
behind In Leba no"' "The guys
are In he ll and we've got to get
them out."
J acobsen was chec ked Into the
hospital a t the a lr base near
Frankfurt soon after his arrivaL
Jacobsen. clad In a m aroo n
sweater with blue and ta n stripes
and brow n trousers, sported a
trimmed beard. He looked hag·
gard but was talkative and
obviously in good s pir its despi te
his long ordea l. He decli ned to
describe the 17 months in
captivity .

Jacob~;

en, 55, was freed Sunday mor nlng in Be irut after 17 .
months o f captivity by a Shiite
Moslem group callin g itself Is·
Iami e JLh1ad. He was r!ieed near
the abandoned U.S. Embassy
compound .In Moslem West Belrut and take n by U.S. Embassy
officials to the new embassy In
Christian. East Beirut.

J ude, who was undt-r an earlier
lndlct men 1t for ·rape. escaped on
both occa:;;ions from the Athens
Menta l Hf·alth Center. where he
was being held awaiting tria l.
In the Aug. 41ncldent, Jude was
recaptured wit hin hours by
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
and retu1 ·ned to Athens. He
remains ail large following the .
Sept. 5 esc ape.

tonight, with a
chance of showers and · a low
lietween 40 and 45. Cloudy·
Tuesday, with ·a chance of
showers and highs between 50
and 55. The probability of
precipitation Is 40 perce nt
tonight and Tuesday.

TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION DAY - Approxl·
mately 200 senior students from eight area high
schools attended a Technology E4ucatlon Day at
Rio Grande College and Community College
Friday. The students, who had ex P'essed an

Interest in technical education, were given U1 e
opportunity to get hands-on experi ence with the
machines, equipm ent and computers cutTently
usl!)l in Rio Grande's tec hnical programs .
y

·RGC-CC conducts technology
program for area students
RIO GRANDE - Appr oxi·
m a te ly 200 s tudents from eight
area high schools attended a
Technology Education Day at
Rio Grande College and Com munity College Friday.
The t-vent , sponsored by lhe
Sc hool of Te'c hnologles, was
designed to allow high school
seniors a nd their teachers to tour
Rio Grande's technical facilities
a nd equipment.
In ' ad dition. the program gave
the s tude nts" an opportunity to
talk wit h college stude nts current ly enrolled .in technical progr~ms a t the college and to
dL,cuss thost- programs with the
tech nical faculty .
Schoo ls partlclpating in the

program were Buckeye Hills
Career Center, Buckeye Valley
Career Center. Ma&gt;on Count y
Vocational School. Pike Count y
Joint Vocational School. Wellston High SchooL Oak Hill Hi gh
SchooLW aver ly High' School ·and
Huntington High School of Ross
County.
"The day wa s des igned to
en able hi gh school students to see
our programs and toseea college
campus from the ins ide, " sa id
S.a n iord La n e, dean of
technologies.
"Technology is an Impo rta nt
part of th e environment In
southeastern Ohio," he add~d .
"We hope-the day's experience
will allo w the s tud ents to realize

th e options available to them a s
th ey ex plore their educational
and professional development."
The high school st udent s were
encouraged during t·he tour to get
"hands -on" exper ience with the
machines and eq ui pmen t used In
tec hnical c lasses at Rio Grande.
Each stude nt was givPn the
opprtu nl ty to vis it up to thr ee
group sess ions, wh ich ra n co n·
currently, to Jearn more about
particu lar programs.
Technology programs availa ·
bleat RioGra nde includ ecompu ter science, draftlng/ deslgn .'dle·
se l a utomotive , el ectro nics.
manufac turing, medica l labora ·
tory. nursing and secretariat
science.

According to Paul Gerard.
investigator for Meigs Cou nty
Prosecuting Attorney Fred W.
Crow lll, eac h escape Is a fe lony
of the fourth degree, ca rryin g a
possible penalty of six, 12 or 18
months in prison . Such sentence
must be served In addition to any
other sent e nce which Jude may
receive on the earli er rape
charge. Gerard sa id.

Jude is described as a white
ma le, five feet, eight In ches tall:
135 pound,, with brown hair a nd
eyes. Anyone seeing Jud e or
having information as to his
whereabouts is asked to ca ll the
Meigs County ·sheriff's Deparl ment at 992-1!89 or 992-3371.
Duan e L. Jones , 22. of Rt. l.
Dex ter, was charged with cult i·
vat ion of mari,juana as a result of

concentrated ef f orts this
summer by Meigs Cou nt y Sheriff
Howard E . Frank's Department.
wirh t~e hel p_o fBCI. to loca te and
destroy mariJUan a.
Jones was char ged with culti·
vatlon in connect ion with a n
incident on Aug . 19 . in which
nearly 2.000 plants were seized .
Cultiva tion Is a felony of th~
(Continued on Page 6)

ATHENS. Ohio (UP! ) - The
an nual rite of Halloween In this
southeastern Ohio city drew
fewer revelers than in recen t
years. but morP arrests were
made on drug viola tions . officials
said.
"If there Is any thing unusual
about the number of arrests from
the crowd thi s yea r. it's that
there were more drug -related
arrests, " Lt. Howard Frost of the
AIhens Police Department sa Id .
" It's just a bunch of peoplP
going ou t to get drunk a nd
. Illega lly taking over t he street,"
Frost sa id at the end of his
12-hour shift Sunday. ·
Frost said . 88 people were
arresled Saturday and 80 were
arrested Frid ay night. but he
could not estimate how many
were charged wit h drug law
violatio ns. Other charges were
open cont ai ner violations. assau lt, and di sorderly conduct.
He said many had posted bo nd
an d were releast-d by Sunday
afternoon .
Frost estimated · be tween 6.00
and 7,000 people swarmed Into
downtown for th e ,;Big Bash on
Halloween Street." a smaller
crowd that last year when near
200 arres ts were made and a fire
set at the Ohio University foot ·
ball ' stadium .
Saturday night, cost umed students and vis itors took the main
street through downt ow n at 8:-50
p.m . and remained there until 3
a.m . when police c leared par ti·
ers away.
There were no reports of major
damage on the street which had
been closed to traffic.
Larry Rlt-hl, director of securIty at Hocking Technical College
in nearby Nelsonville, sa id he
thought there were mor e parties
on the campus thari usual , thus
keeping the crowd in the downtown area s maller .
· lOne!' they get the rowdies off 1
the street, everybody leaves."
Riehl sa id. "They get tired a nd
realize it's time to go home."
This Is t hP third year that Riehl
has ta ken his Hocking Tech
security officers a n dl awenforce ment class st udent s to Athens to
help Sheriff Robert Allen and
Pollee Chief Ted Jones . The class
helps with booking those
arres ted.

Rhodes, Cele!,te take turns
blasting ·each other in.·debate .

LUXUIA 676
TWIN SET

749

-Page 3·

The MPigs County Grand .Jury
met last week in a one·day
session and returned four indictments against the following
persons.
JlmmiP .Jude, 30 , former ly of
Rose Alley Road. PomNoy, was
c harged with two counts of
esca pe in connection with separ·
a te in ciden ts whic h occurred on
Aug. 4 and Sept. 5 of thi s year .

LUXUIA 461
IIG. '500.00 Ill

•
•
In
rattn.
gs ·

Meigs ·Count~l grand jury issues four indictments

•

TWIN SET
FULL SIT

Daily Number

He wa:•; th e adm inistrator of
the Ame~r · ican Univer·stty Hospi tal in Bel rut when he was seized
by his L•.ebanese kidnappers on
May 28, 1 985.
Hopes 'that five other American host .ages in Lebanon also
might be freed soo n were dam·
pened by the fact that Waite, who
tr ied to n egotlate their relesase.
left Beln•t with Jacol:lsen.
Before leaving Larnaca with
.Jacobsen, Waite t old reporters:
"I hope t o be back in Leba non
soon to p·,Jrsue the course of the
ot her hos tages."
Jacobst·&gt;n was filled with a mix
of joy &lt;md concern for the
remainlng hostages .
" I feel just great, . absol utely
great . " be said wit h a broad
smile. "It Is a tremendous
Chur.c h of E ngla nd hostage
pleasure t o be here.
mediator Terry Waite accom·
·:The jo!y is only greatly les'panlm Jacobsen to West Ger• sened by the fact that Terry
many In a governmen !·chartered
Anderson and the ot hers arc st ill
orange and white Learjet "tha t . hostages.'' Jacobsen said . ·' My
landed at the air base at 11:45 closest pNsonal fr lend, Joseph
a.m. After a br ief news confer· Cicl ppio, i,; still a hostage. I pray
ence , he was taken In a black to God that Joe will get out."
limousine to the Air Force 's
Cicippio .. 56, deputy comp·
nearby Regency Medical Center
troller ar Beirut's America n
for medica l tests.
But before he slipped again out University was kidnapped by
of public vlt-w, Jacobsen thanked fi ve gunmen on Sept. 12. An derPresident Reagan and the U.S. son, :18, Beirut bureau chief for
officials w ho worked for his The Associated Press, was ab·
release: say!ng: "T hey are great due ted March 16, 1985, by three
gunmen.
people. "

·F-REEl

•
J
' ces.
-ClVI• IZ.ati.OD advan

Marauders
finish 6th '

•

_.

.. ... . .

J

By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI tUPil -A tele·
vised jXlliticaldebatc took on TV
soap opera dimensions Sunday
night with Gov . Richard Celest~
accusing former Gov. James
Rhodes of "gay-bas hing" a nd
Rhodes offering a rPward for the
co nv iction of .a "homos~xua l
rapist."
The spiry hour-long deba te,
beamm from a Ci ncinnati TV
studio to viewers around the
state. included Rhodes ca llin g
Celestr a liar and the 48-year·old
Celestr cla iming the i7-vear-old
Rhodes' best years are behind
him .
Unlike many televised political
debates In which lhP candidates
arc nervous and stumble throug h
co nv ulut ed s tatemen ts. both
veteran gubernatorial cand l·
dates appeared very much at
ease and were able to make
strong pitchPs on the Issues they
believe can make or break them
In Tuesday's e lectio n.
Celeste, a Democrat, Is seek·
lng a second four-year ter m and
Rhodes, a Republican, Is b'ylng
for an unprecedented fifth term.
Some of the bluntest deba'te
language was over the disease
AIDS' and homosex ua ls, with
Celeste complainin g about "con·

cocting i.,,ues that ha ve to do
with thing5: like gay-bashing. as
Jim Rhode •; has done."
" What's l1appened In the final
weeks of this cam paign," contended Ce'tes te. "is · that Jim
Rhodes. i111 desperation, and
some of ttl!' people around him
have reac hed out for an Issue."
Rhodes. h owever. co ntinued to
press hom o.sex ua lity as an issue
In his closin. g statement by noting
· that last wE' e k In Columbus. "an
11-year-old boy wa s raped by a
homosexuall ."
"The man got away and they
still haven '' ! found him ," said
Rhodes. "T:hat m an could have
AIDS and the boy's life may be
ruined .
" I will pu&gt;t up $2 ,500 reward for
the apprehe-nsion of that man for
tht- most ho·rrlble crime a nyone
can perlorn-r on .a n lndlyldual. ·1
want you, D1ick. toputup$2,500so .
tha t there wIll be a $5,000 reward
for the arrest a nd conviction. of
this homose .xual."
Celes te an •d Rhodes also traded
barbs whe11 debating whether
James Rogers, an ex-Ce leste
ca·btnet me inber who was re·
cently convl o:ted of extortion, had
been fired or· permitte d to-resign.
"The fac l of tht- mal ter Is th a t
Jim Rogers wa~ told to resign,"

declared Ce leste. " When we
confr ortt a mistake', we need to
confront it square ly a nd . Jim
Rogers was a mistake. We
provided the Information tha t
was tbe basts on wh ich Jim
Rogers has been conl'icted . It
sends a sign al that Dick Ce leste
will not tolerate wrong-doing ."
Rhodes Imitated Pre;ldent Ro·
nald Reagan's "There he goes
again" debating style In his
reply. "Well. I h ate to say It,"
began Rhodes, "bu t there he goes
again.
"Mr. Rogers re; lgned. They
hated to lose him . He (Celes te)
lauded Mr. Rogers as one of the
great cabine t m embers and sa id
tha t he would miss him. And then
he turned around and go t him a
state job th at paid $50,000 a year.
to go around the sta te and see If
the helmets fit on a cons tr uctlon
job."
Ce leste denied getting Rogers
the job.
•
" I think he (Celeste) lied about
Mr. Rogers to all the newspapers
and everybody In the state of
Ohio," continued Rhodes. " He's
not telling the tr11th now and he 's
never told the truth concerning
Mr. Rogers . Mr. Rogers was not
fired, he was permitted to resign.
Never, never have tliey ever

BEFORE THE DEBATE - Gov. Rlchurd F.
Celeste shook hands with Republican c hall en ~r
attempted to fire Mr. Rogers . I
think he knew too much to be
fired ."
Rhodes also asked some openended questions about Celeste's
actions just before last year 's
Home State banking crisis, In
which some Ohio savings &amp; loans
had to ·be closed fo llowing the
collapse of a Florida securities
firm and the ·Cincinnati-based
Home Stale bank.
"Celeste has claimed that he ,

''
•

James A. Rhod es Sunday prior lo the candidates'
tele•lsed dehate In Cincinnati . (UP I )

knew nothing about Hom e State
until .the collapse began." said
Rhodes. " Is he telling thl' truth?
Has he told anybody about his
secret flight to Florida on a s tate
airpla ne. at taxpayer' s expense.
t he weekend before 1he collapse?
lsn' t It true I hat you did know the
collapse might be coming the
following week?"
Celes te maintained th at " the
Home Stat e crisis was caused by
the failure of a government

securities trud ing firm In Florida
and none of us rouid control that
here in Ohio. I acted firml y and
boldly. We moved to protect the
deposits of :iltii.OOO individua ls
and we were succPss ful. "
Although Celeste said Rhodes'
age (77) s houldn 't be a n lssu~ in
the election. he claimed , "The
problem Is. his !Rhodes) best
years 'are ~hind him ." Ce l~st t&gt;
a lso alleged th:•t nca r the end o(
R hodes' last trrm, " he could not

cope.''

·

�.Monday, November 3, 1986

.,

Comffientary

.

Page- 2-The Daily Senmel·
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio '
!lllonday, November 3, 1986

I

"

·State uses rare tiebreaker
rule tor playoff· ~ecision

r=~============~=f~--~~~~~~~~~~---·i----------~~

The 'Daily Sentinel

,

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~lh

..... ,........,c:::~,"""

ts::m~ ~.._

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/Conlroller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPTNION are welcome . Th ey should be less than 300 words
long All leiters are subjec t toedltmg and must be signed with name, address and
telephont&gt; numb!'r No WJ slgntd let1 ers will De published Leuers should 00 In
good tas tf', addressmg 1ssues. not persOf!allties

U.n derstanding Dr. Koop_

When Dr. Everett C. Koop, wto
Is the surgeon general of the
United States, Issues a report on
sex education, tak ingthepos!tlon
oormally associated with the
permlssivists, one draws back
from the conventional position
and reflects. Is there something
to recommend "sex education"•
It pays to remember that Dr.
Koop Is not mer ely an M.D. He is
verv much the moralist. Well
before he became the surgeon
general, he teamed up with the
Rev. Francis Schaeffer, the late
theologian, and produced a six·
hou r documentary on the subject
of abortion. which in Dr. Koop's
judgment is out-and-out mu rder.
He IS a practicing Christian and

Washin!(ton Window

Thoughts on the
way to the polls
By ARNOLD SAWISIAK
WASHI NGTO N 1UP!t ;- Tomorro" is your lucky dav.
Tomorrow, you ca n vot~ for people to run the government for the
next couple of yC'ars
If you want to know why thai makes you lucky, close you reyes a nd
put your finger on n map oft he world. The chances are you touched a
placr whrrr peopi&lt;' eit her don't get to vote or don't have a choice if
they do.
There Is a modC'rn theory of politica l science that a low turnouJ on
electton day means that the people are satisfied with the public
officials who alreadv are in office.
There is an older theory that could Ill' applied to voting: "Eternal
vigilance 1s the price of liberty "
The seco nd one probably is older because it is tru~r .
. Some peop!C' who don't go to the polls say one vote more or less isn't
going to makr a d1ffC'rence.
Two years ago, four votes decided a eonwessional elect ion Ill
Indiana The man who lost says he was robbed and Is running agam
this yea r All he needs to do is find five people who believe their votes
don't mean mu ch and cha nge the ir minds.
Ja ck Pa ar used to tell the story about an elderly woman who. when
as ked ho" she cast he!' ballot In the presidential electio n, replied,
"Oh, I never vote for any of these candidates. It just encourages
them, you know."
Th at's probablv as logica l a rC'ason as anyone has ever g1ve n for not
votin g.
We CC' ICbJ'atcd the centennial of the Statue of Liberty last J uly 4, but
the reallOOi h b11thday of the great symbol of freedom was just last
week.
If it see ms to bra bother to go out ofyourway .to vote tom01 row, you ,
might reflect on the distance that was traveled by the millions of ·
people who passed the Ladv in the Harbor on their way to new homes
. and, for many, th e n ~w privllegt;&gt; of voting
If ypu don't like the way things :are bemg ru n m the countrv,
re memb&lt;'r:
Bullet s arr th~ ballot' of tvra nnv.
Ballot s arc thl' bullets of democracy.

Letter to the Editor
Lice epidemic underway
Hundreds of our school child·
ren contact head lice each year.
Unfortunately , the close contact
wit h so man y children that
schoo ls mu st provide is an
excellent breeding ground for
lice. Playing closely, simple
exchanges of hats tbrushes·
tcombs, and other personal arti·
clcs can resultm transmiss io n of
hC'ad lice from one child to
anothC'r
Norm a Torres of the Meigs
Cou.nty Health Department
wishe s to inform the public tha t a
liCC' cpldf'm lc exists in our county

a! present. In the interes t of
serving the public more fully. all
the Superintenden ts. school prin ·
cipals and school nurses of the
county

hav(' Jx'-cn

invitrd to

attend a m!'!'ting with Mrs.
Torres on Fridav. November
Hth fro m 1·3 p.m at the
confC'ren cc room of the Hea lth.
Department in Pomeroy . The
thrus t of the meeting will be
discuss ing the possibilitv of
adaptinl! one. standa rdized·. uni ·
for m po!tC)' to be followed by all
sc hools. Mrs. Torres has contacted two Ohio DC'partment of
Health Consultant s from thE'
Communicable Disease Divtsion
In Columbus tMrs. Judv Ford
and Carl Jacobson!. they agr!'!'
with her cont en tion that a " Nit
Free Policy" is the policy which
has demonstrated thC' most suc·
cess In CUJ'blng thC' problem .
This policy. In essence. savs
that once a par e nt ·
vol untecr 'teacher / prlnctpal ·
t nursr identifies a chtld as
ha ving lice and tor their ni ts
1eggs 1. this child is excluded
from their claqs and taken to a
designat ed area tl.e , nurse's
ofJ;Ice, principal's office, library,
etc.t until their ride comes to
take them hom&lt;'. Anyone ca n be
taught to check head s for lice and
Mrs . T01 res would be willing to
do training ses sions to lnter!'S ted
parents /Volunteers if .!hat's
wtom the schools would deslg·
nate to Initially chec k the child·
ren A once a week level of head
checks would be advised. Anyon e
who was sus pected of having
lice / nits would then bNrcated by
their parent lguantlan with a
syeclally -medlcated shampoo

treatment (called a pedtculo·
cidet - exa mples of shampoos
that can be bought wittout a .
prescription as Pyrinale, Pyri·
my I RID andA·llO Examples of
prescribed treatments are NIX
and Kwe ll The instruct ions on
their labels v&lt;(ry a bit from
product to product but oone of
them are n·uty 100 percent
efrect1ve at killing nits, no marl er
what the label says. Some
treatments tn cl udC' a spec ial "mt
comb." Tr eatmC'nts musl all be
repea ted in one week even If the
child Is "nlt free." Be on the
look-rut for a child with intense
It ching on th e back of the neck
a nd heaq. It is also the responsi·
billty of parmts 'guardians to
che,ek their childrms' hair for
lice nits several times WE'f'k l ~ .
There are no t ~nou gh school
personnel. sdlool nurses nor
Health Department nurses to do
thi s on a weekly basis for the
thousands of childr m In our
sc hool sys tC'm.
Ltcc are ra s il~ spread from
one pB'son to another Make sure
that persons with llce l nlts do not
share perso nal items tsuch as
comb;, brushes, towels, hats ,
sca rves, ptllows. berP!s, sport'
gC'ar, Nc .t that ha' e oomc in
co nt act with their h~ads. tnecks
or stouldC'rs Combs and brushes
sto uld be soaked In tot soapy
water for 10 minutes . Hot water
sto uld be used to wash liceexposed clothes, toW€ls and bed
linens. Articles of clot hin g lhat
canoot be washed sho uld be dry
cleaned cr scaled in a plastic bag
for at least two weeks. Vacuum
carpets. upho ls tery, pillows and
mattr~ses which may have been
ex!XlSed to persons with head
lice.
Don't think "my child doesn't
have It" or " my, school district Is
actively ,check lng so I don't have
to worry ." Lice lay six eggs per
hour so it only takes one to
ultimately create a problem for
all of our comm unity.
• If you have any ques tions, call
Mrs. Torres at 992-Ql26 Monday
through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4
p.m.
Sincerely,
1
I
Norma
If.
Torres,
R.N.
I
Nursing Supervisor

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A rare tie-breaking proQ@_dure
had to be used Sunday by the Ohio Hlp Sdtool Athlellc
Association to determine thai Tlflln Calvert wu the final
Qualifier In Division V, Region 18 lor next weekend's slate
football playolfs. , ,
Both Tiffin Calvert (8·2) and Delpllos Jefferson (11·0) finished
with 59.00 computer points and deadlocked lor the lourthspolln
the final OHSAA computerized football ratings ol the year.
Since lite lop four teams In eaeh reKion qualify lor the
playoffs, association officials had 1o 10 to the tNrd level of
computer points, not used since tiJe early 19111s, 1o determine the
outcome.
.
A team earns points when thai team wins or lies another
team. Those are "lltst level points." A team also eU"m further
points when a team It has defeated or tlet1, defeats or lies a tNrd
team. Those are "second level points."
,
To break the deadlock between Calvert and Jellerson, the
runnerup lo Newark Catholic last :feU" In Division V, the
OilSAA went to "levellbree," awarding points lor teams beaten
by the opponent's opponent.
"When w~ did thai," said Fred Dafter, associate commls·
stoner of the OHSAA, "II wesn'l even clolle.

William F. Buckler Jr:·.

an evangelical, and now he to slow down the spreatd of the
comes out for sex education of disease to protect the un contami·
tbe kind ge nerally opposed by nated. That's easy: Don't use a
mor,alists of Dr. Koop's persua· needle for drugs , and d1 n't have
sian. What are his arguments?
sex except with unconta minated
The 34-page report issued by people. But the troulb-le with
the surgeon general's office is the advice that simple, Dr. Koop
first that address.es directly the (and, of co urse, orhers) are
problem of AIDS. It begins by saying now is .that we· are not
telling us something evE:rY news· talking about eounsels •Of angepaper reader knows, namely that lism We are talking, l.o use a
the disease continues to spread, phrase, about how tile world
and that the figures are very works
discouraging. Fifteen ttousand , On the matter of lnt r·avenous
people are dead of the disease infection. proteetion Is as simple
already. and 12 times tha t as using a needle t lla I isn't
number will be dead of It within Infected, and that is n' I all that
difficult to do provided the
five years.
Now Dr. Koop dld not need to needl e-user breaks out of the .
tell any informed American how hypnotic a llure of needle·

\

s harin g, an d Insists op using a
hygienic vehicle for his polson. In
the matt~r of sex, "the best
protection against Infection right
now, barring abstinence," writes
Dr. 'Koop, ':ts use of a condom."
So therefore? Teach children to
use condoms.
We got that right? No no ~o:
Teach children NOT to Have sex,
Dr. Koop the moralist would say;
but then teach t~em that should
they fall into the temptation of
doing so, they should use a
condom. What Dr. Koop opposes
is "s ilence" on the subject. "This
silence must - end. We can no
longer afford to sidestep frank,
open discussion about sexual
practices - homoseJmal and
heterosexual. EducatiOn about
AIDS should start at an early age
so that children can grow up
knowing the behaviors to avoid to
protect themselves from exposure to the AIDS virus."
One greets such adviae, so
apparently reasoned and compelling, with residual reservations. To begin with, we know
that there seems to be a negative
correlation&lt; between sex educa·
lion and pregnancies. The great
Scandtnavian experiment, which
is now over a generation old, has
brought to tha t part of the won~
not only sex er.lucalion, but an
Increase preg nanci es among
children . It mi ght be argued that
th ere would be still more preg·
nan cies but for the sex educ ation,
but Dr. Koop does no t appear to
be saying the equivalent ·thing In
respect of AIDS. He says that If
the sex education he favors were
undert aken, one mi ght save
14 ,000 lives by 1991.
Surely there l,s something to be
said for the stimulation of a
national habit

..··,

......
··....
..
..

··..,

..··.,.
••·.
. ·.
'

.•.
'

. .

~

.'•

the directive co nt end that It could
also put th~ vas t amounts of
compu t erlz~d information on In ·
dlviduals under the control of the
military.
AsslsJa nt Defens~ Secretary
Donald Latham disagrees. and
argues th at the precautwns are
essential to protect sensitive
government Informatio n. Be·
cause not all government infor·
mation falls Into existing catego· r·
rles of classi ficatio n, NSDD 145
created a new category- not yet
defln~d- of material that can be
kept from the public. The ' Pen·
lagon has denied that this n~w
category wiiJ be used to cover up
embarrassing Information.
Tha t may be so, but the
omi nous direction the policy
could tak~ Is suggested by the
fact that the National Security
Agency refused to let our associate Donald Goldberg see docu ments that described the debate
over the satelllte policy -even
though the docum~nls are not
cl assifl~d .

We obtained from ot h ~r sour·
ees, and they turned out to

contain no mformation ·tha t co uld
remotely be considered danger·
ous to national secutr lt y, They
did. however , lncludlo2 ~mbar ·
rasslngly candid criti&lt;!lsm of the
sa t ell lt ~ policy by ex&lt;' cutives of
GTE ·Spacenet , Westf:rn Union.
RCA and other majoJr satellite
companies. These inclustry ex·
perts complained that the Pen·
tagon's policy was "Yijogue," and
questioned whether , "such a
mandate was In the bo o·st In terest
of the country."
The minut es' of a c losed-iloor
meeting of Industry and govC'r n·
ment officials on Jan . 29, 1985.
mak~ one thin g c Iear: The
Pentagon' s InsistencE• th at tts
security standards aor~ necessary left the Industry Jr.epresenta·
lives tota lly unconvin ced.
For example, when the govern·
ment argued that terr•orlstscould
wreak havoc by sen•dl ng false
co mm ands to a sat ellit~ with
their own electroni c ·~ q uipm ent,
a n Industry expert , offered a
devastating rejolndet•: Terror·
Isis could achl~ve th1~ ir purpose
much more simply by heaving a
grenad~ 'over the fpnce of a

r·'

.

•

n

tt

0
I

44 41
4t 35

S .J
tl
5 Iii 1 11
N) RIUI«t&gt;l'll
'! 5 t
K
Adam11 Dlvllllo n
Qiletltc
6 :t: 4 18
Montreal
G :1 3 15
H11rtford
.f :J 3 II
BMion
5 G I II
Bulllllo
3 7 % M

tli

3t

51
-19

~

314

4t

41

31
40
SK

.U

.

PI~ .

WL T

DecroU

Mlnne!!OIIl
Ch lugo

I
,I

I
2

~

{:al~~:ar)

1

ln11 AnreiMI

3
2

Y~tnL'OU\I'r

Butf~o

I
5 I
7 t
K 1
II I •

.•'

BufMo 7,

....

12
.fl

Jl

3'

II

Hawaii II, Utah U
Hayward St. 11, H•mboldt&amp; !l
ldaht 1!. Montana Sl

U
fl
i

n

5

'!8

~

li
fi

:J

tJ ~C

,.

,..•..·

,.·
•'

,·

('levrland

Pllt!ihUI'JI:h

' '3 0
:1 6 0

.
.·' .
....·.

Houston

1 !I I

Ot'nVf! r
Kan!!ll."i City

JU;I t30 l.t$
6tii 203 IRS

)olt•llltlf'

WH I
K I 0
II 3 0
S I 0

LA K.v.ldt'l'l'

5

I 0

~~

San DII',I;U

I

!I 0

Ill IKII UK

•

.i
••

'

Nutlon~~ l

6fi1 1!1!1 lltt

:tl3 J.l2 19:1
Ill lS~ D

~6

Ul~

m

I~A

1611

( 'onfen•Mt'

f.ast
T&lt;wt'l' GIWJts
Wao&gt;hln,l;ton

Sl

1. T Pel 1'1-' I'A

.,

2 "

n11 11141 IZI
1711 21! IK:t

' '0 lll't ~f) lSI
:1
i 0 .:J.t.'! 1:11 ''"'
2 i II ~2 1111 \!0-1

l,nul~

•,

"

67
.1

DttiiWI
Phltudrlphlu

O..tmll

Taunpu

Ru~

CJn•l' n Bay

In

;

I 0

IIi!\ IIIli

~

411

r46"ml$i4

,\

6 0 .~tl Hll li7
i II . 2!2 IGI Ull
K 0 . 111 Ill U9

:!

I

""'

l .A Ham ~

II

2 D

750 144 1:!7

!ol~Ut

l
5

3 I
:1 I
;J 0

.till 'l ll In
.611 IK-1 157
.44-t 17$ lit

.&amp;

UNLV 11, N TPUJii sa S

W C'olorudq1, M New Melllro 3
W. Or..,;on -11\, E. Oreron 23
Wyomln,1; 3$, Ni'W Mexil'O II

.. I
.. I

fhh u!lo i&amp;ITumpaH~ay.l

lndhtntAJUJito;,

I

u1Grrc•n Bay, I Jl m

l'llbohurj(h .11 Huff11lo. I p.m
N\ (i lani M:II l'liludtolphll&amp;, I p.m .

I.A Hllld t&gt;n~a l Dallllo;, I p.m
St l.uul!!ul Sant' rllnt ,,.,..,.; ~p.m .
san Dlt'ji;o la t Dt'nwr. 1 p m.

n,,, \1t adu" duh' .1.-1. ll1n Hl'lmn nt 11
1-'.llqmrl ll urtll1r 1!1. ( t•nh•rhur~ t

.

'
' ''
•' ••
•

.

•

follnumr 13. Lt •d~~:Nnunl

••
'•
'

.
.' ,.

• ill&gt; '

I~

Hud"m \\ ~n 1(•7' t:l . ( ' lo• l 'nh St h 'l
l.uli t'\Oo •~1111-' 11" urtl .14, t.tvrl .t ( alh /1
l'.tlno .. , lllo• ll ,ar' 1',\ !II , ,\,.~nhulu II
l' ••t l'ro;l • ur ~: :'&lt;i)trlrlx IIi. !&gt;0 H•tn~l' 6
J(m k\ HIH•r ! I .\mht'l'l' l l!t

s1 11 ""n ri . nrrtnt "'"''• n

Tnl st :IM :!II Tnt~ . l nl•t' ~ II
Tnl n u"' ~ twr m. Tul \\ lMHM urd fi
Ta1o;k,\ \' .11 1! Tu .. h ('I' I
\' ,,Ill'\~ .\ ; ,

......

, &gt;n

~l

( 'It• C'(' 14

lit•llf'nt•dlt•tlnc• 17, l111rm-. P"dul&amp; 6
( oiUt•Snh" :!ll, l nl H».l11t •y II
t n llln ~ "lift Rr.s

18. Norwalk st Puull

f'tmuUon \ ' 111 :n . Ell-~1 Knoll

l' ulrln~

I~

The Daily Sentine·t·

for

thb " 'l'f'IU'nd'!l l!!th ~nnu11l •lrl!! !!Wit•
\illh•y hllil lnurnll.mt'fll ut lhf' Uftl\ f'r
•IIY
1111&gt;11 \' IDn

NP"'
(~'!

Published every arternoon, Monday

( h....!O ,\
Rmkt•)'t• frnlrul

through Friday, Ill Court St , Po·

" alih lnK{nn

meroy, Ohio, by the Ohto Valley Pub·
Co mpany /Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy1 Ohio mS9, Ph. 9!12-2156. Se·

1\ I

, ~('a nal

\\l•thl"!ltt•r

om .

•

( ' I Ilii~

(2;·n , Friday I

llshlng

cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,

Ohio

,\.&gt;\

Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. Nallonal
Advertising Representative, Branham

Ttllnunty N 0

\t•rmlllon l.ll.nralu~ltllh\ilt'Vo n

.

Mllt011•f 'nlon ttG·I }, Satunl11y, 11 : :10

Newspaper Sales, 73J .Thlrd Avenue,

New York, New York 19017.
POSfMASTER· Send address changes
to The Da.Uy Sentlnel, Ill Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohlo 457111.
SIJBSCIIIPTION RATES
By Carrier • Mot• ao.te
One Week ....... .............. ........... ... 11.2~

Sllt urduy, fi p,m

8rt'tkli\UII•

( '""" 1\J\ ,\
l~f.tl

\~

PONTIAC. Mich. (UP!) P r epar~tion was •the key to
success for the Cincinnati Ben·
ga Is this week
Angry over last week's ~- 9
drubbing at the hands of the
Plltsburgh Steelers. coac h Sam
Wyche ran hls squad through a
grueling week of practice and the
Benga ls responded Sunday with

, ,.

Member: United Press Inter national ,

\!&lt;i t'alnlf"o\ Purk t'!i
Salurd ll), tO !Ull
Sprin,rflt&gt;ld NorttMf'"tl' rn (:lt ll

Gruraltl¥ Wi 'll

,,
'm
.
t'lnals

1111-HIIl
MuiHmedta, Inc.

(liSPS

A Dlvtalon ol

('lnt·lnnatl

h1n
(tlt·9), M"turd11y, I p.m .
SI.IM' tU-.1) \!II \hr'"'W Rht'f\' lt'W (2i'!) ,M.Uurday , t: !Ill p.m .
St

FlnMIM: ~urday, 1:• ,.m ,

f.,

I

One Month .. .. , .. .. .................... J5.f!i
One Year ........ ..,....... ...... $65.00
SINGi.I! COPY
PRICI!

Bengals slip past
Detroit, ~4 t~ 17

••
.,

..'
...
•
'.
•

('ln ,\lk••n

, I ),

Thin

I

Akr l 't•n Ho"'''' 2!, i'UtrKt•nmon• R
IMhdr•• ~1 ..John '"' It, 8~arhl.'li\llltK
fttu lt.. ,, . ~ l!l, lku·kl'yt'S2
lkwkt'yt• Trull .11. Zwuo~ Hmwt run ~ II
( antn• Mt ·Kinh•y t:l, Mll..:odllonli

st . Ht'nn (:!1·81 v" Sldnt•v Fnlrhtwn
t'l6 11. Fr1dll\', ;:,10 p.m.
Flllllt.. Sulurday, 1.:10 p m

Pn•p srores

'

HI~ SC Mnl
Fnoth»..l Rt"'ulb
lil41 urdll.)l

"* at. thyiiP Salt' 1

Or\YTO:-ri . Ohio Clll'l l -

•

comfortable.
That's why the heat pump could be callep the comfort pump.
But whatever you call it, you can't beat the heat
pump for reliability, efficiency and affordable yearFound comfort.
Get the full story by contacting your power
company or your heating
and cooling dealer today.

Ohio

.Volley hall pairil)gs

l\o1 .lt•J, 111 t\llunlu , I p.m
St •aUII• ~tl K1111!i!lll ( ' Itt. I p.m .

•

Ohio foDe•"' Foothall St-orftl
Ohio !«ale al,lowa 10
Northem IIll MIA II, BowUna:Green M
Ml~~ml5t, Central MlchiiiUI tl
Kent liCaU~ 17, Ohio Unlvf'rlllly 13
Tftk'tlo II, Wlfllk'r• Ml('hlpn 'l
( 'htclaAtltl, lncltanaSiatt' 1-1

.c.

p.m

Jl lll.

Berry's World

Ohio scores

l lrh11.11alll, O.Dilllt., U
Fbtdlay
Drak ~ a
Hlnm 31. Oh6o Wt.,.IPran II

•

Ham~ at Npw Orlt&gt;anli, I p.m
~ llnn i'Notrt at Drtroil , I p.ni

" 'u;h l n~wn

[lad}

AIIC'I(fMon)' 21. Kc!nyon 3
D("IIIIM tJ, Cauw Hf'llo(' r w II
Rotfl!..tt•r II, Wot.Mit'r 3
Bhdfttn ll, Aldt'M4on I)

L,\

Ill

WA.f (PM) ut lohn farroll

Marh&gt;Ua S, Oherlln It

l' hulnn ltl lalllnuldoo , lpm
t:n11land

nrwllay \'II Tllfln (FoMiorla)
Hiram at Thiel (Pill

Wlltf'nht'rl( WI, Ohio Nol1hern fl

Lt\ Hum ~ al Chl ca.,o, !tp.m
Su nday. Nov 9

,

"Here's why the heat pump
can be called the
comfort pump." VILA~

Pfk•nl V..01 %1 , Mu111dnpm M

Monda)' , Nnv , :1

N1ow

Au,..ln P I'Jq Ill Akr011 ,

1'ounl"'t-• Stat Mur.-.y !\t
F~rrum (\Ill at DQIDft
f&lt;'ntral St aU Alahm». A A M
A.hlud at Valparaillo
BaWwla WtllacratO-..aNorthHn
f11.pllalat Mount Union
Marlot'Ua al Heldtlhrl'l'
Mullkin,I;U mat 0 llrrht:ln
m.h) Wf'tllt&lt;yan at Wllte1ht&gt;r•
" 'IUIWIIdGn CMotatCil*' Rl'lll!fWt'
IIUHMJG 81 111 Dt•nlllon
lkony• Ill CNirt&gt; (Ky)
M'o•~r al Oberlin
llallo•"r (lad) MI Blolltoo
O.fhuu.oeaiEarlham lbldt

He ldfltwora: •· f11p11MI ~

" ·L'Ihl nj(ton J.l , Mlnnt'!&gt;iolu :t! (OT)

••

Ohio tJnlv at Wf't!lern Mlth
r.tndnruUi at AU)um

tbklutl•. Pr110kJin 1-4
lkhlwln·WII lace •• Oltt'rbtoln I

Kam,.W~fll y ~.Sun DI~;"Ko 'Q

·- 1

Tolt'do at Ct!ntral Mlch
Mlamlll.l K!':lll Slalt'

Cntr..

Ml11mi '!II, H~u ..too 7
N\ ' lt•l!! .IH, Se111tlt· i
llt' ll\'l'r %1, 1.A Ka ldt•NI IU

1

JOHN A WADE MD Inco
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
HAVE HEAR/Nit A/Otl"
A

Sl&amp;lurd.,-, Now. tl
NnrthwHtt'ra 111 Ohio SIMI I'
BlliiShdl' 111 Bowllnl Gr~n

An~n1on

,_

w.

011\ot'ollea:r
Foothall Scht'du ll'

Vrhanaal

Division IV, Region 15, behind 105.50; I . Campholl Memorial 103.110; i .
By JIM WEIDEMOYER
line; GARS averages 11l0.
Wkir.Jiffe M4.00; G WIU'ren Kennedy )10.00:
flfth·place
Amanda Creek . ·
And Hobart WilSon, Jr.,
Winner Advances
7 1\.kron St: \Jincent-St Mal')' 79.11: K.
Final Computer Ratings
OVP Stall
Winner of the GAHS·Mifflln
Cleveland Oranr;e 73.50.
IIA!glon 10
More Information will be re· contest will battle Saturday's
Here are the flnal1986 compu·
I.
Napoleon
94.77:
2. V~tn Wert M.50; 3.
leased today ·eoncerning Gallla Steubenville (10·0) and Wooster ter ra tlngs:
Elyria Catholic 113.00; ~. Fostoria A2.00; 5.
Academy High School's Division (9·1) winner on Saturday : Nov.
COLVMBVS, Ohio IVPII - The lop Bryan IU .SI:l; 6. Bellevue 69.50; '7. Oak
llllrhor OU(J, l\ Uppfl' .Sandusky 62.(10.
II, Region 7, semifinal playoff 15, at a neutral site.
elr;hl teams In each region in the flna.l 191!6
Region 11
mat¢hup with Colum!&gt;us Mifflin
The school to rate higher than Ohio Hlth School Athletic Assoclallon
I. Jronton 1-1 .. 50; t. Thorn\lllle Sheridan
&lt;.."Grrttulerlzed football r.ltln gs. The lop
Saturday night, lncl4dlng how Mlfflln In Region 7 was Wooster, four qualify for next weekend's. regional 109.50: :1. Orrville $9.50 : 4. St. OWrsvillt•
)tfS.OO: 5. Li cking Valley 1'12 00; 6. Poml'roy
many t)ckets Blue Devil fans will w!lo received m points. Defend· playofftt:
Mel~ MO.OO; 7. Canton C'ertral Catholi&lt;
be furnished In advance.
ing Ohio Division lli champion
Division I
70.:SO; IS, Cunal Fulton Northwest G9.5ll.
'
B
1
Region I
GARS Athletic Director l I De Salles, despite a :!J.l4 win over
1. Berea 149 ~u; Uokewood st. Edward
ReKIOn 1%
I. Wheelt&gt;rshura 10~.~: 2. Clndnna U
Wamsley received confirmation top-ranked Hartley Saturday, 141118; 3. Mtddtehurg lletghts Midpark
Pur~ 117.50; 3. CAPE K2.$0; .J .
from an Ohio High School At· failed to reach postseason play. t4t 110; 4. Wuren Howland m 110; '· Fon'§t
I.J&gt;vel:vtd 79 00, 5 ·waverly 7~.00; 6. North
6
hletlc Association representative De Sales finished fifth with 105 ~::'.:':~·~~:'E'!':"~:~!i!'::d s~~~· .P~;;:,:; Rend Tuylor 6R 00: 7. l..ogan Elm 67 00; H.
UUic Miami 00.00.
via telephone Sunday afternoon points, Ashland sixth, 102; and each; !. Mayfield 111.00.,
Division IV
I that the Devils had indeed Logan seventh, 98.5.
Regioo!
Rex:lon 13
1. Canton McKinley 162 50; 2. Aul'ilintown
qualified for their second consec·
The "Sweet 16" in Dlvlson II . t' llch 144.110; 3 Groveport-Madison Ut.5U;
J. Loui.-ivlll l' 1\ quinas AA 00; 2 GatPS
utlve Ohio football playoff berth . Region fare :
• Walsh ''"""140.00; 5. Wesl.rvllleNorth Mill~ Hav.: ken iV.OO; 3. Grand Vu.lley b1 .&amp;4;
"'indh am 66.12: 5 Lisbon .4.nders0n
GARS qualified last season In
Region 5
t39.ll0; 6. Boardman 123110; 7. Mas.,non .J. 62;
6. Chagrin Falls 60.00; 7. Toronto
.Division III.
North Canton Hoover, Young- Jucto•on 1!1.00; R. J.oraln Admir.~ Kin g 65
5:U.3: R. Nor(h Lima South Range 51.1tJ.
Region I~
The Devils, 10·0, will-be travel· stown East; Youngstown South
Regions
I U..rain Clearv lto" 90.50; '2. Rittman
lngtoColumbustotackleanother and Beloit West Branch.
1. Toledo Whltm,..177.7!; !. Worlhon•·
H9.00; :~. faslalla Murgaretta M.OO; 4.
undefeated school In Mifflin. The
Region 6
ton 100.110; 3. Chllllt~lhe 118.110; 4. To·oy Jluron
11 1.;)(1; 5. Avon 73.00; 6. A:.rchhold
JOH.TI; 5. Toledo St. Franus 107.14, ti .
Punchers, who defeated Colum·
Cleveland Benedictine, WI!· Toledo Central Calhollc tOLfil&lt;; 1. Lonm GI ,KX; 7. Bl w: k Hi\ l'r 61.00; K. Pemberville
Eastwood 57 00.
bus South 21·3 Friday, finished Iough by South, Vermillion and Sen tor 951!1; 8 Fremoot Ro" 93 22.
Rt1:1on 15
.the season computer-rae
t d se· Maumee .
Region
4
t. Centerville t66.ill; 2. Falrftctd 151.17,
I C..o h.J.mhus Acudf'my m\.00; 2. C'.olu•nbus Uartlc}' ~.50, .1. Fredt:rll:ktown 75.00:
cond In Region 7 with 136 points.
Region 7
:1. Milford 14!.ill; 1. Daylon Dunbar 12K.H;
t
Co-.1 GrovC' Daw!;On Bryant 67.50, 5.
GAHS, who blanked Jackson 48-0
Wooster , Mifflin, Gallipolis 5. ~IIddle! own !2!.33; 6. Cincinnati SL i\m;uuia
Ch•.trcn..'t'k 5K.50, 6. Belpre ~SO;
•
Xavier 124.61; 7. Clnclnnali Moell er
Friday, llnlshed tied with Steu- and' Steubenville.
113.66; K. llaylon lleadowdate m 511 .
7 Oak Hllllil .33; It lbrnesvllle 46 50.
Regio n 16
benvllle for third with 124.5.
Region 8
Dtvt,Jon 11
1 \' t•rsaill es ir. 00; 2 Coldwater 67.00: 3.
Game Starts at 7
Cincinnati Purcell Marlon,
Regtoo'
Arcanum 6G.49; t Wt•!&gt;OI ,JeUerson 66.00: 5.
I. Nor th Cnntoo Hoover 1-UI .50; 2.
The Devil-Puncher matchup Lemon MoJU"oe, Wapakoneta and Youngotown East lltl.50; :1. Youngstown Brookville 6.'i.!l'!: 6 LimaCuthoU &lt;· 51.00; 7.
will be played at 7 p.m. on uefendlng Ohio Dlvlson II cham· South 101.110; 4 BelollWesl Rranrn 105.72: [)J.~'tl)n Oakwood 19.5060; R. Springfield
Mifflin's home lleld. A represen· pion Galion .
5. Kent no.,on•tt tOUO; 6. Gr..·nshurg Calholk 19 0000 .Division V
Gncn 103.50; 7. A~htuhula Ed~ewootl
tative of the Central Ohio Dis·
After· the Nov . 8 Regional 92.00; It Ravennll90.1t.
Regio n 17
I. Mogudor(' 72 00; 2 McDon.tld 69.25; 3
trlct, Mifflin High School Is Semifinals, the Regional Finals
Rert,.. 6
BrUilanl 8nt'k t'Yf' No rth 67 .$0, -1. Conotton
located 3245 Oak Springs Road are Nov. 15. State Semifinals are
I Cleveland Benedictine 166 00; 2. Valle)!
65.61 : 5 Fairport Harhor MU4; 6.
\Villoul(hb)
SQulh
155.00,
:J.
Verml110n
northeast of Columbus. The MRS Nov. 22 and State Finals In 113.21, 4. Maume~• t08 t6, ;. Bmksviltc C~Wah ogu ll el~ hts tW 00; 7.
stadium seats approximately Columbus Nov. ~- One of the t03lJO; 6 Tiffin Cotumhtan 101.2!; 7. lki.Uoo 5:t00; K !iloulh Arnher~l # .00.
Rc..oglon IK
4.500.
,
above 16 teams will be crowned ~l.~ountu Nnrthvto•w 116.50; K Bay Vlltagl'
I. A,yers~lll e 63.00: 2. Fostoria St
Wamsley said he will contact 1986 champion two days after
Region 7
Wendelln I:IU.G:J; :J. Elmort' Woodmore
Mifflin Athletic Director Robert Thanksgiving.
t. W••~ler tlt.Oo; !. Coturnhu• MJI!IIn 60 00; ~ (tit ) 'rlfUn C'al\lerl and Delpho!f
Jetferson . 59 00 ('ach; 6 Edgerton 3:1.00;
Jones today for exact location
Three schools that have been 136.110. 3. (lletGalllpott•andSteuhenvlll c, C.Hf'Y
5~ 00 K S) camon• Mohav.: k 4,g,5(1
I~UO each; 5. Columbus UeSales 105 .00, 6
IC('g!on 19
and directions to the stadium. GARS opponents In past years Ashland to!.OO; 1 Logan 9ll.ll0; ' · cotum·
1. Oh•) Crooksville und Brrnr Union.
GARS scouts said you turn right will accompany the Devils Into hus Franklin Hctghls Kt.50
71-1.00 (':tch: .1 . Newark C.a lholic 71.00; 4.
off Rt. 23 north at the Morris playoff action this weekend.,
1 Ctn etnnu&lt;l fu~~~~ ~lartan 152.00, 2. Ponsmooth Notn• DarrK' 70.R3; !5. Bellalr('
Road exit, go east to Sunbury Ironton, rated as the best Dlv· Lemoo·Monrox• 127.110; :1. Wapakooetu St. ,JuiUl 61 61, ij Eust Knox 57.7'.l;7.
Road, and stay on Sunbury until Islon m school In the state, has lti.lJO; 4. Galloo 111.110, ~. Belldontaint• ('uldwell 3~.33; lt lndiM Valle}' North
you hit McCutchlnson Rd. ,Turn easily captured a home-field site 106.110. 6. Ill&lt;· I Vrbanaun~Lehanon , 104.110 4!!.00.
ll1•glon 00
eat-h; It K etter lnx Alter 10:150.
left off McCutchlnson onto 0 ak In Region 11 playoff action.
I Cln d nnal i Country Day 59.19; 2.
01 , 1,1.., m
C('darvlll c 50 50: :t St. Hf'nl')' -19.50: -1.
Springs Road.
Wheelersburg qualified In Div·
Region 9
Williamsburg -lli Kt: 3. Twin Valley South
Officials from neither school 1s ton III, Region 12; Coal Grove
-15.72: 6. Fulrhanks -l'l.MI: 7. New· Mlumi
1. Gu.rflcld Uclght~ Trlnit~ 117.50; 2
had any imput on the playing wUI travel to Columbus Hartley Youngstown Moonev t_IS.IK; 3. Kcnstoo -10.150: It Min ster lK.OO.
site; It was determined so ley by for a Division IV, Region 15,' ,....._::__ _ _...:__ _ _ _ ____._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,..._
the OHSAA.
semifinal contest. The Hornets ,
Wamsley saldhedoesnotknow tied lor fourth In the region with
how many advance ticket s GAHS Dawson Bryant at 67.5 points ,
I
o o
1
wlll be provided for Saturday's won a tie-breaker to ear n the
contest . Devil fans were pro· playoff berth.
vlded 1.000 tickets to last year's
Division I, Region 3, Chilli·
playoff game at Ironton.
cothe also qualified for postsea·
Advance Ducats $3.50
son action, while Mel~ High
·
Advance tickets may goon sale School failed to quality, finis hing
as early as Tuesday but no later sixth in Division III, Reg ion 11,
IIIJlf
than Wednesday, depending on 4.5"polnts behind fourth-place St.
17
,)
when Wamsley receives the Clairsville.
( Ll (614) 992 21 04
tickets . Once delivered, they will
Another Tri·Valiey Conference
be on sale from 8 a.m.-3 p.m. school. Belpre also failed to
(304) 675 1244
dally at
thethey
GARS
. Be~lp:re~f~ln~ls~hed~s~lx~th~l~n~=======:====·==~====~
office,
while
last.principal's ...~qu~a~l!!y~
Advance tickets will cost $3.50.
At the gate, the tee will be $4.
GARS will receive 12 percent of
the proceeds from advance ticket
sales; attbe gate, GAHS receives
zero percent. ,
Coached by Bob Orgh since
1971, Mifflin has won three
Columbus City League cham·
plonshlps (1974, '19 and this
season 1, The Punchers play a
basic 4· 4 alignment on defense
and are led senior Inside line·
backer Riehle Evans. The 5-foot·
7, 170-pounder received AII·Ohlo
BOB
Class AAA last seas oo.
HOME IMPROVEMENT EXPERT
With good size, Mlfflln utilizes ,
Its quickness and s~d to mak e
In the winter, the flameless electric heat pump keeps
up for any weight &lt;llffence,
you warm and comfortable.
according to Orgh. The Punchers
average 180 pounds acrtlls the
In the summer, it keeps your whole house cool and

Mid 'rt..M'!IIHU, l'tlnpiOWaSiate ll
Dlt)'ht~tll, WI!RI \'lrJIIlla \\l!lllt'yan II

flnc·lnnattSt.Jk'trolt r:
('l ~'\f' l und 2-1. Induanapolk 5
,'lfr Giant~ n . o-.n.,. u
."'I l~ul s 1:1, l'hlladelphh1 10
Nr"' Orli• an~ "t.:l , ~an Frant•l!!t•o 10
Plltshur•h 11, ON't·n B11y !I

~

•

211 .ltrlzon11. 13

The Qaily Sentinei-Page-3

Meigs finishes s~th . in final ratings;
GAHS'. pl~ys at Mifflin Saturday night

Akr011 ~ Tt'IIIM'IIIW'f' Tt'eh I:J

Nl'w F.n,l;tM~~d ~. ,\Uunta li
Tampa Bay ll. lklffalo 2!l

•I

12

( n·nl.,hl pam•}

r.·ntr;~l

( !lit&amp;jtO
Mlnltf'!lolll

~l».tt•

Saturday's games

Sundur. Nov. 2

.'

12, Wu hlna:tnn

U.l ' Davlll 1!, Sonoma St I
UC1.A •· Or~oa &amp;at eO

NI\TIONAL fUirfB,\LL LEAt.Ut:
A.mt!rlt•an Confen•nt• •
Eallt
W I. T l'tl PF 1',\
Nl' ,ftotll
'- II I 0 lll\9 2-U li.l
Ne" EnJI'Ia.nd
6 :J 0 661 Ul 13'l
Mlllml
~
" n
~~~ 2'tti !W
fMftdo
!! 1 o .:m 113 ws
Indianapolis
t !I t
000 !II !:MI
('.,ntru.l
('lnc lnn~&amp;ll
6 l 0 667 209 Ut

Fun.
Atlun la
Nt'W Orlran..

-

Lutht"ran 84 , "'hllworth M

,•

.. '

!ib,te 14, Utah !htt'3

Monlanll Slale -141, Nor1krn low.v. 25

~unford

:1, V~&amp;fH~UVt"r a
Mnndat.y' 11 Gwnf'

NFL results

,.
'

J,_._ I Clarll.1

Pol"'land St 911, Cal Poly SLO 1
&amp;cramento ~ - IH , C'a&amp;l Lutlll'rilll 1;
San Dl eJo Sl 11, Colorado St.~
Simon Fr&amp;~~er ·I I, " t'Ntern WWihlnj(ton
I!
'
St. Mar)l'li lfJ. Ulllv. Of San Dlert 7

Tut'l&gt;dlly'l'i Gam~

,·

Lonrlle~~~eh

Paclflt

Mhml pt•!' at Qut•hfot . nt,;ht
NPW ,J t•nu•y Ill r hlladelphlll, nla:ht
\ 'ant'Oa\t•r .v.t Pltl&gt;ihura:h . nl~~o:ht
"a.~hlnJ{on al Nl ' (,.Ianden. , nla:ht

'

Unfl ekl d,

....,ldWSt. J.l
Northem Arl1 11 BoiMe Stale U
Nerthrltlgr Stair :Ill, Sula Claru .tt
Orea:on !7 Callfornl1118
Orea:on Treh 1:1. WUhuneur 10

lm; i\nl{el~ at fal11ary. 9· 35 p.m

.,

n, A.IUllliSbtf'i

FortLl'wlllo

N~ Rew~o

H11rtfuni l,Qutht~ :l( th•)
1&amp;1 i\na:t&gt;IH .'i, EdmiJft&amp;on 5I IIe I
\\lnn lpt·g~ N\ RW1 JII'Tli .. (Uf )
Montrtl&amp;l

,

r.

1

(hit~~~

Colorado MIIH!!I :11, Colorado Coiii!IU'

II

Eutc&gt;rn WMhlnJton .n, \\'eherSblll' 31

3, St. i.oul~&lt;; ,\ lilt•)

~ton

0

Ill

Suaday'N R e!&lt;ull"'

st. Laulo; 7.

AruJW. Paclne 2M, S.F SllitP.I7

Claremont-Mudd • S!, Pomuna-Pitzt!r

H

I .

:1, New Jt&gt;r!II'Y 1

PIUllhUrkh

Issue, there will be no real
progress in reducing.terrorism in
thC' Mediterranean .

w...

.n

Phlladrlptual, Ro!itnn 2
Qut&gt;h\•t 2, Hartford 2 ( tho)
fa iRan t Ww;hlnj(ton I
Toronto 2, Detroit 0
( hltaa:o I, Mlnn e~~ltl~&amp; 5

If thC'rC' is no progre; s on this

U-Ark. Monllcrllo23,HartllngtArl111

9
II

Saturdll)''N Rf'flull»
Nl' Man den; l , Winnipeg .J

,.

'f'llhla 31, Wlt·hHa&amp; Still~ 10

OF Gi\

Smyth!.' DlviKion

\

Teku A6M II, SMU S5
Tt'ku Tec:h t3, Tnu !ll

Arlzon11 Stalt' 34 Wuhlna:ton U

: J U ! I 6 31
:1 II
34 ll
l II
:11 . 31

II
5

.,

41, Uah-01 8DUIIItt
Sui Rou 18, Austin Collea:e !t

II

fi'!
-1 :1
5 5

6
II

ArkansaH 41, Rl~ 14
Cameron!l, Ge•tralstatt' n
Central (A.rkl It, Ark. T ech I!
Colorado 31. Oklalloma State 14
E NewMu . n,EulTexul
Hendenon (.(rkl H, So. State(Ark l lt
Louisiana Tech 31, Lamar !Ill
Ouac h . . (.\rkl :n. t\rii.·PIIte Blwn
Ro~~t.-Huknu

.t'!

Tortlnlo
St. Loul"'

Edmonl(lll
\lolnnlpt-11

,•'
,•
,•

7

Cumphrll Cenferent!'
Norrl.. DiviMion •

•

satellite facility.
The company r~ps were understa ndab ly concerned abo ut who
wil l foot the enormous bill for the
NSA·dl -rected satellit e security.
The gover nment's answer con· '
firmed t h~lr worst sus picions :
The satellite industry will pay.
The cos ts would be su bstantial.
A Pentagon study three years
ago esti mated that protecting
satellites to conform to NSA
sta ndards could add $3 million to
the anginal cost of a sa t~Illte and
S1 million a year to Its operating
expenses. These cos ts would be
passed on to consumers.
Adding to the Industry's dis·
romflture Is the fact that no
specific NSA guideli nes have
been issued s.o far. This forces the
satellit e makers to take their
protection plans to NSA on a
time-consummg case-by-case
basiS .
As a practical matter, some
sa tellit e compa ny execu tives
told us t~ey may simply stop
solicitin g government contracts
because the costs of meeting the
NSA securit y standards w111 be
prohibitive.

· Understanding and compas·
sion wil l not end all terrorism,
but they are better Instruments
of peace and justice than
bombers and dislnformation
campaigns

5

&amp;

l(l' blan~r"
Wqh\nl(on

How. not to fight terrorismtl.__G_e_or_Ke_M_cG_o_ver_n
When the Reagan admJmstra- deal tng with th eir soc ial by aggravating th e cyc le of
tion came to power In January difficulties.
hat red and revenge .
"\.981, it announced that " human
'"It is an outgrowth oft he social
What th en Is the an swer to
rights" - the keynote of the dynamics of particular commun- terrorism ?
Carter administration's foreign Ities wh ere Individuals feel them policy - would not be the miw selves to be beleaguered and
There is , of course, no ('asy or
admlmstra tlon's ce ntral co n· ignored both at home and by the
sure
answe r. But in ·the case of
cern. Instead. countering terror· international commu nity."
the
Middle
East. tihe answer
Ism would be Its new priority.
Beeman defines terrorism as begins by confrontln11: fa1r ly and
Whether this was a wise "Illegal acts of violence, carried
courageously the A t·a b·lsrae!J
change is open to question
out against defenseless targets. Pales tin ian conflict
It wou ld a Iready seem, how- in order to achieve political
ever. that the campaign against goals, perceived as unaddressa terrorism has not been a success. ble in an y ot her faslion."
The rhetoric and tactics have
In a sense. terrorism is a sign
accelerated, but few would argue of powerlessness and hopelessthat terrorism has abated.
ness. eomblned with a sense of
· No reasonable person can being )VTOngc•d and Ignored.
disagree with the admmtstra ·
The terrorist -prone group
lion's desire to curb terrorism
ca n't se nd an aircraft carrier
But what can be questioned Is the Into the eas tern Mediterranean
str at~gy pursued by Mr. Reagan
Nor do they have access to the
and hIs team.
halls of political power and ot her
We need to consider whether channels of peaceful change .
the president and his associates
So after years of be ing abused :
have made a serious effort to or denied their perceived rights ,
understand the causes of terror- or Ignored by the international
Ism and why It take:; the 'form It community , they use the tools of
does.
terrorism: the plastic bomb. the
Why is it that certain groups truck loaded with explos ive devi·
are more prone to engage In ces driven by a youth willing to
terrorism than others: Catholics die for hls cause. the hij ac king of
in Northern Ireland, pre-1948 an alrp!an (l.4)r ship, the holding of
Middle Eastern Jews - lnclud · hoslages The hope , of course: Is
lng Menachem Begin - striking that this wlll ail be dramatized In
out against British rule over the media.
what was shortly to become
Reacting to these bloody at ·
Israel, ShUtes ·In Lebanon, Pales· tacks, the Reagan administra·
tinlans .in the Middle East, Sikhs lion has heated up Its rhetorical
in India and some of the Inner· thr eats, dispatched lis aircraft
city neighborhoods of America ? carriers to troubled areas, forced
What do these groups have In down im Egyptian plan~ carryIng the hijackers of the Achille
common ?
Last ·spring, In a perceptive Lauro and lau nched a bombing
article In the American-Arab attack agaln~t Ubya .
The trouble with these tactics
Affairs Quarterly. Professor WI!·
Is
not their objective, which Is to
llam D. Beeman of Brown
University wrote that terrorism 'reduce terrorism, but th eir fall·
is a '"form of social violence ure to get at the roots of
manifested by peoples who !eel terrorism and , Indeed, their
they have no other recourse In tendency to make things worse

s

New denwy

.-..

"

Solllltw~

By Unlled Preo~A lnternallonal
\hleA Conlen.'nce
P1trick DIYI~Ion
W L T Pta GF Gi\
Phllttdf'lphiM
t ! 0 IK U U
Plllftharwh
II
1
n .n

'

.

Saturday ILHMilN

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE

. .....

."
...

College seores

NHL results

•

Satellite control _____Ja_c_kAnder.mn &amp; Dale VanAtta
WASHINGTON - The Pentagon Is quietly pressuring com·
mercia! salel ll te operators to
take costly precautions agai nst
terrorists and prankst~rs, even
thouglb man y industry officials
are convinced I he safegua rds are
unnecessary and a waste of their
money .
The controversial sa t~lli te·
security policy , put in effect by
1Defense Secretary,Caspar Wein·
berger a year ago, Is based on
President Reagan's Nalional Se·
curity Decision Directive 145. It
requires operators of commercial sat~ Ilites to lease channels to
government agencies or contractors to meet expensive standards
approved by the National Secur·
lty Agency for all satellites
launched after 1989 . The intent Is
to protect th~ satellites from
unauthorized commands that
eould disrupt national securityrelated communications.
NSDD 145 gives a government
task force, headed by the military, the authority to protect all
types of governmen t Information
and communications. As w~
previously reported, critics of

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Dally ...

.. .... ,

......... ..... 25 Cents

Subscribers not desiring to pay the car·
r1er may remit In advance direct to

The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month

boola, Credit 10{111 be given carrier ..,ch

week .

a 24-17 victory over the Detroit
No aubscrlpttons by mall permitted In
are~s where home carrier service Ia
Lions.
available.
The win enabled the Ben gals to
Matt Subocripllono
remain In a first-place tie with
Ins
ide Melp County
the Cleveland Browns In the AFC
13 Weeks. ........... ....... .. .. 117.29
Central Division with a 6·3
26 Weeks ................................ $34.116
52 Weeks .................................. $61Ui6
record. Detroit dropped to 3·6
O.lolde Melp c...ly
with Its third straight defeat.
, 13 Weeko ......................... .. ns.20
26 Weeko .... ......................... ..... $35.10
"This week was a commitment
• 52Weeka .... .............. .. ,.... , . ... $67.611
Continued on page 4
\

I

-

-----·

'

Ohio Power Comoany
'

Part of American Electric
. ~ower
'

0

�.

.

'

~~~e--4~-·~
___
o._·~~~--t-~~~--------------~--~~~----P~---o~v_._MTi~
....
- .O·h·~--....~~.........~.-~....~M·oo_.~.v•.•N.~.am
. .~._3•.•1--1
Bengal~ .. ~ .
Contin ued from page ;,
to themselves." Wyche said of
his players. "They worked
harder than they thought they
could work and they went Into ·
this gam e prepared.
"I n las!· night 's meeting_. we
co uldn 'I lin ish a sentence before
they were answering our ques ·
tions. That 's how you prepare to
win ... Wyche sa_id.
While Wyche was elated oyer ·
his tea m' s performance. Lions
coac h Darryl Roge rs was
disappointed.
·
The statis tics were almost
ident ica l. Detroit co llecting 365
yards In total offensetoCincinna·
ti's .189.
·•t don't give a rip what the
stats are." Rogers sa id ., "The
COMPETITION PARTICIPANTS - Members of the Budoryo
ont,· thing I'm concerned about is
Dojo ol Meigs County partlcipatlngln recent competition are, from
the dumbgameandwedidn' t win
IeH, W.T. English, sankyu (third brown belt) , Jerry Massie,
it.
sandan (third degree black helt) , IUid Aaron Williams, sankyu.
"We had O!'port unities to win
it. but we didn't get a chance to
put it away like we wanted to,"
Rogers sa id .
It was a 49 -yard interference
Students and Instructors of the tourna ment victory fo r bo th of
ca ll on Detroit safety Demetrious
John son that turned the game Budoryo Dojo from the Me igs them .
and J ackson County branches
W.T. E nglish and Aaron Willi·
a rou nd .
competed
in
the
Fourth
Annu
a
l
a
ms.
both brown belts, competed
Johnson was pen a lized for
Pu!hpkin
Pat
ch
'
Open
Kara
te
In
only
the ir second tour nament
bumping Bengals receiver Crls
Tournament held at Washington _ after nearly a year's absence
Co ll insworth .at the Lions' tl.
from competition. This was their
Fo ur plays later. with only 40 Court House.
Pa rti cipants fro m the Me igs first tournament competing as
seconds left in the game. Ci nci n·
dojo included Aaron Willi a ms, brown belts and both had eyenati"s 260-pound fullback. Larry
W.T. English and lhedojo 's head opening experiences. Williams
Kin nebrew plowed Int o the end
instructor , Jerry Mass ie. Partie· launched a strong kicking a ttack
zone from the one with the
!pants
from the J ackson dojo in his opening kumite match. but
win ning touc hdown.
included Bob Stoneking and his lost to a more experienced
"If they do n' t iniE!'fere it' s a
touchdown," said Bengals quar- 7-yea r· old son , Ty . Danny opponent who blocked well and
McCarty and Russ Browning.
scored repeatedly with counterterback Boomer Esiason.
Da nny McCarty, a white belt. punches. English, fighting for the
That didn 't ease the pain for
competed in the junior 15·16· fir st time In the adult divisio n.
Rogers and the Lions .
year-old division in kuinite (frPe faced the same kind of scenario.
"It's always a crim e lo lose on
an offic ial's ca ll. " Rogers sa id . fighting), and In his very first Though he scored to the body of
tour nament won all of his his opponent he forgot to mix In
"As liberal as pass inter ference
matches against under blac k· attacks to the head. and was
cal ls are in the NFL these day s
belt opponents. Finally in the . finally outpoint ed by his
it 's difficult to swa llow.''
J ohnson didn 't think the pe· semifinals he los t to a black belt, opponent.
placing fourth in the overa ll
Jerry Massie. head ins tructor
na lt y was justified .
standings. Russ Browning. a red of thew Budoryo Dojo, had a
" I don't know if that should
have been called In t hai sit ua - belt (6th kyu), then beat the pretty good day. He won thir d
black belt his do jo partner had place in the Black Belt Weapons
tion ." Jo hnson sa id . "T he ball
los t to, and thu s found himsell In Kata with a Tonta Kata, second
was in the air and I was just
the finals. He finally lost his last placeinempty handKatawith an
trying to break up I he pass."
match to anothe r blac ~ belt who ancient Korean form, a nd look an
The interference call was one
is the current No. 1 junior easy first place In Black Bell
of 10 penalt ies called agai nst the
competitor
on the U.S. National Kumlte, winning a ll his matches
Lions.
" I don' t know tif the penalties
Karate Team . Browning placed 3-0.
second In overall standings.
Students and Instructors from
were deserved 1." Rogers said.
Bob Stoneking and his son Ty the dojo will next compete In the
" I haven't seen the films yet. I do
gave their usual solid perfor· Home of the Samurai Champion·
know we've been sparsely penal·
man ce. Both yellow hells. Bob ships on Saturday in Newark.
!ze d in eight games. I don' t know
Stoneking won second pl ace in Ohio. The Budoryu Dojo will be
if it 's nit· picking or we're doing
kumlte In the seniors novice hosting Its own lnterclub tour na·
something different ."
div isio n, while Ty look second ment in Meigs County in late
Stanley Wilson had touchdown
place In kumlte In the boys' pee November.
ru ns of two and four yards for the
wee div ision. This is the third
Bc ngals while Jim Breech ki cked
a l!·ya rd. f! el d ~;v~!!!.-------------------------"----1

Take part in recent tourney

Moo~y. N~ember 3, 1986

,~;;.·southern· snaps losing streak with 31-_1 6 win

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
PRE-WINTER

By Scott Wolle .
EAST MEIGS ··~ Sen lor run- .
nlng back Scott Burris ran for
four toucljdowns and passed for
another as the Southern Tor nado es soared an Impressive 31-16

I •

..
::t
.\;
')

. I

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.·,..,

·~,';.

come-from - be~tnd vic tory over

the Eastern Eagles her e Saturday evening In the sliver anni versary edition of the "Battle of
Meigs County" . The win lifted
Southern to 2·8 on the season and

.,

FIBERGLASS
·ROLL INSULATION
141/2&lt;

3112"x16'

.aa.1 sa. FT.

I

·T.t

I.

i •'

,.•.'
., '

..

\

.,..
'•

,.

241f2C

6"x16'

n.

SQ. FT.

$12·00

Ph lOLL

Insulate
·Now
And Sa~e!

'.

''

...,

n ..

$12.78 /ROLL ·

PEl lOLL

48.96 SQ.

SQ.

..

241/2&lt;

6"x23."
75.07 SQ. FT.

SQ.

$18 40

PER lOLL

....

ROLL

/..

n.
ROLL

... ..,,,
•·.
·•....

·'

• ••- .. ~ 1.

WHITE, GREEN,·BLA(II, BROWN

90 LB.
ROLL

$99 9

ROOFING

ROll

'\

1/2" 4x8 BLACK.INSULATED .

$375 SHEET

SHEETING

;;&lt; J;.&lt;, i, n!'

.

DAVIS PUNTS - Eastern's Kyle Davis (44)
punts In Saturday's game against Southern. The
Eagles lost. 31 ·16 in the sea.~on finale. Southern'•

Eastern dropped t'o 3· 7 a nd 2·5 In · 195 ya rd s r ushing on 31 carries.
Burris . . h.lm self wa s ren.dered
· lhe SVA.C.
Burris, an undls coverl'd secret somewhat questionable . as a
weapon wM moved Into · the . st a~ter , · because of- ail ·ankle
power back pbsltlon vacated by Injury , but erased all doubt about
lu~dor talent Pete Roush,
his abilities with a tandoul
per fo r mance.·
.
The Souther n win marl«&gt;d only
the second time In the history of
the ·series th at SHS has ·won two
consecutive games over the
Eagles. Southern last performed
that feat during the 1972·73
seasons with 6-0 and 7.0 wins.
Southern won last season ~- 6.
Eastern leads the series 18·7,
this bein g the 25th meeting.
Eastern took early control of
the game. casting an air of doom
and continued frustration for the
Tornado es. as the Eagles
marched at wlll65 yards into I he
endzone. The twelve play driv e
ended with a pE!'fectly executed
Mar k Griffin -to-Steve Horner
25-yard touc hdown play. Kyle
Davis added the extras and
Eastern led 8-0wllh 5: 40 showing
on the firs t period clock.
Aft er twelv.e consecutive min·
utes of a ha rd -nosed, well-played
stalemate senior Scott Burris
finally got Southern untracked
wlt.h a fou r yard surge into t he
endzone. The TD scamper completed a nine play , 77:yarddrlve .
however the PAT run fell short
and EHS he ld a narrow 8-6 lead
with 5:06 remaining In I he half.
Southern's success came as a
res ult of al) out determinat ion
and the ability of its offensiv e line
to control the line of scrimmage.
Eastern enjoyed limited success from sever al· fin e individual
effort
s . bu t untim ely penalties
Mike Wolford (86) and Scott Gru eser '(51) put
thwar ted any momentum the
pressure on the play. On Ielt is Eastern's Mike
Eagles co uld muster. Jeff John ·
Wehher (72).
so n, Doug Beaver. ii nd Ky le

Final SVAC
,standings

NAIL SPECIAL
8 COMMO~
. 16"COMMON

SO _LB.

(

$1600

.

CTN:

(Overall)
Team
W L PF PA
Oak Hill .............. 9 1 249 125
North Ga llla .... .... B 2 184 00
Southwestern ....... 6 4 154 103
Kyger Creek ..... .. .5 5 121 125
Symm es Valley ... 5 5 192 170
Ha nnan Trace .... .4 · 6 157 243
Eastern ........... .... 3 7 11 2 294
Southern .............. 2 8 132 217
(Conference)
Team .
W L PF PA
Oak Hill ............... 7 0 225 90
North Gall Ia ......... 6 1 155 74
Southwestern ...... .4 3 124 76
Symmes Valley ... 4 3 156 102
Eastern ............... 2 5 94 212
Hann an Trace ..... 2 5 00 217
Kyger Creek ........ 2 5 &amp;! 100
Southern ............. .! 6 00 "143
Friday's scores
Oak Hill 43 , Southwes tern 24
Nor th Gallia 24. Kyger Creek
12
Sym mes Valley 54, Hannan
Trace 12
Saturday's score
Southern 31 Eastern 16

'

I

CELOTEX CEIUNG .TILE
12"x 12" PLAIN WHITE

29&lt;

SQ.

'· .

n.

• 12"x 12" BAHIA
SQ. FT.

PlASTIC GUARD SHIELD

44&lt;

12"x12" RONDELAY
PLASTIC GUARD FINISH

SQ.

SCRUBBABLE
PATTERNS

n.

.•.,.'
..

.•

S GAllON

MADE IN USA

ROOF
COATING

BARBED
WIRE

FIBER ED

H .In side the . SVAC; · while the Southern offense as. well with ·great carrer with 76 yarqs on

.·'.

.

.

...

WAFER
BOARD

LINOLEUMS

1/4',

"I did It lllflllf eilthlon floor
eoverlng"

,,lllln

Elegant Chrysler Fifth Avenue .
Cadillac
Sedan lleVlllel"
· ·

Priced . . $5,0110

I

.

$l S 666
.

I

"Sticlcer price comparison or baSe modelS. Standanl equ¢.ent iMlS vary.

..

INTERIOR
PRE-HUNG

MAHOGANY
DOORS
Split J~mbs.- casing awlitd, 3
hingtt, bored fDr lock.

. PRESSURE TREATED

FENCE POST
3" to 4" DIAI'tiTER
SMAll END

30"x6'x8"
32"x6'x8"

8' LENGTHS

I~:

.

So. Third

992·6421

The E',aster n .Ju nior High Ea· third per iod after the Oa~s
gles co ncl uded the ir season with fumbled a snap on· a punt
a co nvincing 14-8 win over Oak att empt. Jeff Du rst slipped Int o
.the endzone from one ya rd away
Hill.
The Iii tle Oaks scored on a on a quarterback . sneak to
, Sm lth-to-. Boggs 40 yard pass In com pl ete a 20-yard drive and
the fir st qu'ar tcr. then lrd R·Oto give EHS •a 14 -8 lead as Tim
Bissell pulled down the PAT
t 11&lt;' hall.
Eas tern 's Aaron Wil so n pass.
,Jason Hager and Del Lau der·
capprd a 65 yar d Eagle dr ive
sta r flno,.., t. hr second half as he milt lPd the defense wl t'h several
· rambled fl"vr yard' for the score. big ta ckl es. while Steve Barnett
The PAT ' Durst-to -Tim. Bissell tn·ew severa l key blocks on the
; ·pass wa s no good and Oak Hill E·HS li ne.
m ain taincc1 a 8-6 lead.
Eastern fini s hed the season at
Easter n , too k ro nt rol in the 3-4.

,r·.

r·

;:
:.
,.

. GALVANIZED
ROOFING J:r

l~ VIy

8' LENGTHS ........ s5.12
10' LENGTHS ...... S6;39
12' LENGTHS ...... $7:67

."

••

'
. ·--= il

Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge, Inc.
)99

.

Middleport

·PHONE

( ~l o

The Protector
~our ·House
Needs •••

Our Kid s Won'l Havf'To)

• . *TAKING APPOINTMENTS NOW* •

.

~GARRY HUNTER
STATE REPRESENTATIVE
(MARRIED TO Til FORM:R BECKY SWINDUll

P1urchase One lot and Receive

"'\r
.'..

I

.

Thle Adjoining lot For Only $".500 .

1' AKE CARE OF THIS TOGETHER
WITH SMALL MONTHLY DEPOSITS
AND NO FINANCE CHARGE

--------..-.------~: .....
•

oall 304·422·41"
or 614· 742·2882

. ~t&lt;-1.

FOR A VERY LIMITED TIME

.

•'

Husband
And I Just
!'1 1ade Our
Cemetery PreA, rrangements ...

••

UNLY•

773-5554

For Information

llanagoMont

:: I ~J1•st~~rn junior high defeats Oaks

• Dealer price e&gt;dcxtes tilfe, laJatS and destlnatJOO chalges.

.COOPER.

lauonable
Sot·Up lotos

Under Now

s
.,----------r
:
·
·
•
·
sv

HOGG'.~ &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO. CASH &amp; URRY.

SEE YOU IN APRIL

Dealers Wanted
Buyort Wanted

'

12' LENGTHS ...... 58~ 90
16' LENGTHS .... S10~ 22

We've got just the.car ·for youl. See us today!

7 DAYS A

NOVEMBER 7 - 8 - 9, 1986

ll'i.

.. I

$ 4.9 SHEET ~

~--------'"'!" l"""____.._____

EVERY

LAST SALE OF THE YEAR

T!RAPPED -Southern' s Mike t\mos (~4) has EHS running
.back , Jeff Johnson (36) trappc'll on this play In Saturday niFht's
•.. ·svAC lin ale at Eastern. The Tornadoes won, 3J.16.

j:

$4-~ 5 so. vo;

Following an Inspirat ional per·
formancc by the award winning
Eas ter n "Green Pride" m arch·
lng band , the large crowd was
fired-up for a wild second ha lf.
The EHS band had earlier won a
seco nd pl ace effort in slate
competition at Lancaster as
seve r a l sec ti o ns s upe rio r
ratings .
Playing cont rol football, South·
ern fought off Eastern's defensive stunts to fabricate a 14-play,
59 ya rd drive to start the third
quarter. The Tornadoes rpaped a
six point harvest on a five yard
Burrls -to-T ony Connolly touc h·
down paB,s, giving SHS a n 18·8
!Pad with 4:39 left In Ihe third
round. .
·
Co nnolly. who was having
quite a ni ght of hi s own , e nded a

POMEIOY, 01110

~

Electrifying deals on every new '87!

r-;:=====:;;====~=i~~~~~~~Et

but isreceived
no pay-offs
the.
Dav
all had several
key runs
remainder of the first hal f.
Southern again str uck p ay dlrt
with just :44 left in the hal f as
Burris agai n squirted through
the line with fine second effort, ·
s haking off a would-be tackler fOr
the score. The nine yard run
capped a six -play 47 yard drive
tha i gave SHS It s flrs i lead. The
PAT ki ck was blocked .

MEIGS COUN1'Y FAIR GROUNDS

•

' .

Seemingly on the road to
recovery, Eastern m ade Its final
mark as Mark Griffin completed
a tm yard TO pass to Davis.
Beaver added the PAT's to end
the 12 play , 51 yard drive at the
:11 mark; That soore was set up
by a coupl e despera tion fi rst
down runs by the hustling
B eaver; the net result being
quit e a ga me at.lB-16.
Eastern's frustra tio ns sUr·
faced In the !ina! round , which in
turn hampered the ir com eback
ability and set up the next SHS
score. Twice multiple penalties
in excess of thirty yards proved
to be fa ta listic to the Eag les .
SHS ~cored ag ain at the :45
mark on a 45 yard jaunt by
Burris . Mark Porter ad ded ex tra
point kick for a 25 -16 advant age .
The penalty plagued finale was
very exciting · as Eastern never
gave up in its fight to pull off the
win, however. Southern's perfect r---4--ifl.:.A~ ri"-:!\~-.:---,--4!41 ·'1:
execution wa s too mu ch.
A final sta nd by Burris gave
SHS Its biggest riva l victor y ever
(a 15 point sprea d) as a s~ven
yard TD blitz with 15 seconds
r emaining yielded the 31-16 final. .
Burr is and Connolly led SHS
with 195 and 76 yards respec·
lively, while Beaver ended with
8-ZI for EHS and Davis 16-33.
Steve Horner ended a great
season catching four Griffin
passes tor 57 yards. J eff J ohn son
netted 3 fo r 30. Connolly was 2·11
for the winners.
Leading the SHS defense wa s
Co nnolly arid Chris Stout with 8
tackles . Stout also a dded fumble
recovery and int ercepllon in a
good defensive effort.
Jeremy Barber a nd Rex Justis
had nin e tackles for Eastern.

·FLEA MARKET

..
$1995 :~
•'

seven carries.

·~

'1-593-5245 or 1·446-361'5 ·
ME:IGS COUNTY MEMORY .GARDENS

PAID FOR BY HUNTE~ FOR STATE REPRESENATIVE:
EVERETT RIDGE . nEAS .. 22 S. MAY AVE., ATHENS, OHIO

GARRY HUNTER

•

�.

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

,......___.Local Briefs:-~
.Racine Council meets tonight
Racine Village Council will meet tonight (Monday ), 7 p.m., In
council chambers at the Shrine Club Park.

Rutland EMS sponsoring bazaar
Rutland EMS is sponsoring a Christmas Bazaar on Saturday,
from 9 a .'f!l . to 5 p.m. , at the Rutland Civic ~nter .

Wrestling match ,.,[ated Tuesday
Racine American Legion will be sponsoring a wrestling
matc h Tuesday, 7:30p.m .. at the Racine Junior High . Midget
wrestling will be featured in addition to other matches .
•

Church sponsors rummage sale
The Happy Harvesters class of Pomeroy Trinity Church is
sponsoring a rummage sale Thursday and Friday, 9 a.m. to 3
p.m.

Middleport lodge meets Tuesday
Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday, 7:30 p'.m .. in
regula r session, for e lection of officers. All members urged to
attend.

Election day dinners planned
Chester United Methodist Church will be serving election day
dinner starting at 11 a.m. Tuesday. A bakesa le and bazaar will
. be he ld in conjunction with the dinner .
·
The Reorganized Churc~ of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints,
beside the Lebanon Toll(llship voting precinct, will be serving
election day dinner from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m .. Tuesday. Menu will
include vegetable soup, chili. hot dogs. sloppy joes. pies, cakes.
coffee a nd soft drinks.
Forest Run United Methodist Church will serve election day
dinner from 11 a.m . to 6 p.m. Tuesday. Vegetable and bean
soup, sandwiches, pie, cake and beverages will be served.

Chapter 53 of the Di sabled American Veterans is having
Forget-Me-Not-Day today tMonday). All donations will be
appreciated.

Sutton tru.,tees meet tonight
Sutton Township Trustees will mee t tonight (Mo nday !, 8
p.m .. at the Syracuse Municipal building.

Letart trustees' meeting tonight
Letart Township Trustees will meet today (Monday), 7 p.m.,
at town hall.

Lebanon trustees ineet Wednesday
Lebanon Township Trustees will meet Wednesday, 7 p.m .. at
the Lebanon Township building. .

Sorority schedules meeting
Zi Gamma Eps ilon Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
meet Tuesday, 7 p.m .. at the senior citizens center in Pomeroy.
Mrmbers are asked to bring canned goods.

Bazaar location corrected ·
Syracuse First Church of God is having a holida y bazaar and
bakr sa le today (Mo nday 1 and Tuesday at Kroger, not Syracuse
Ch urc h of the Nazarene. Gifts, candy and otht&gt;r items will be
sold .

Monday, November 3. 1986

Gr~nd jury

(Continued from Page 11
fourth degree, carrying a possl·
ble penalty ·or. six, : 12 or 18
months.
..
David Paul Cain, 4.'\, Goose
Creek Road. Albany, was also
charged with cultivation of marl·
juana, as a result of an incident
which occurred Sept. 11 in which
approximately :)')Q plants were
seized.
In addltjon, Cain's Indictment
also specifies that he )lad a
firearm on or about his person or
under his control a t the time he
was committing th e offense.
According . to Gerard, the fire. arms specification can add three
years to any sentence Cain may
receive on the cultivation
charge.
Johnny Cleveland Eblin, 35,
Pomeroy, waschaged with felon·
ious assault, with a firearm s
specification, In an incident
which occurred Sept. 19 in
Pomeroy in which Charles T.
Napper was shot in the left leg,
Gerard said. Felonious assault is
an aggravated felony of the
second degree, carrying a pcssi·
ble penalty of three to 15 years in
prison. The firearms speclfica·
lion could add three year.s to any
sentence Eblin may receive.
Grand jurors also considered
possible charges of vehicular
homicide in connection with two
separate fatal accidents which
oee.Jrred earlier this year, but
declined to Indict either.
Arraignments of Jones, Cain
and Eblin are expected ear ly this
week in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court before Judge Cha·
rles H. Knight.
The grand jury will meet again
1 on Wednesday, Nov. 19.

By The Be11d

cqr meeting topic teen births

BAND PLACES SECOND - T~ Eastern High
School Band, shown here performing at Saturday's Eastern-southern game, placed second In .

Sa turday Admissions - Har·
vey Morris Jr .. Portland.
Saturday Discharges- Edwin
Burnem, Darlene Hicks, David
Spencer, Anna Sidwell, Harvey
Morris Jr .
Sunday Admissions- Kenneth
White, Pomeroy; Linda Persons,
Long Boll om; Karen Wise. Che·
shire; Ronald Miller, Racin~.
Sunday Discharges - Sharon
Henderson. James Rickman .

.

.

By BUD NEWMI\N
WASHINGTON (UPil
Oregon voters. In what might be
called a "reeferendum," must
decide if lhey want to buck a
national anti-drug trend and
legalize possession and use of
small amounts of marijuana.
Th at Is just one of more than
200 controversial. trend-setting,
offbeat or merely Important
issues that will appear on 43 state
ballots Tuesday .
Voters across the country will
be asked to decide issues such as
the fate of statt-funded abortions
In four states, whether to ban
AIDS victims from teaching or

The probability of precipita·
tion is 40 percent tonight and
Tuesday .
Winds will become northerly
near 10 mph late tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday lhrough Friday
A chan ce of rain Wednesday
and Thursday. with partly cloudy
skies Friday. High s will range
from the mid 40s to the low 50s
Wednesday , rising inlo the 50s
Friday. Overnight lows mos tly
will be in the 30s Wednesday and
Thursday mornings and ranging
from the mid 30s lo the miil 40s
early Friday .

Zion Freewill Baptist Church, Lower Plains Road, Ohio 682,
will be in rev iva l Wednesda)· throughSunda yeveningsat 7, with
Rev . Allie Skaggs, eva ngelist.
Specia l ·singers will be Zriica Smith, Wednesday; McDaniel
Trio. Thursday; Wayne and Linda Rhodes. Friday; Gospel
Rays. Saturday: Narrow Way Singers. Sunday. Rev. Eddie
Boyrr. pastor, Invites the public.

Squads respond to 12 calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 12 calls
over the weekend, six Satuday and six Sunday.
Saturday at 10:44 a.m .. Tuppers Plains to Ohio 7 for Althea
Barton to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at I p.m.
to Minersville for Harold Davis to Holzer Medical Cent er;
Middleport at 5:55p.m. to Beech Street for Francis Lukehart
who was treated but not transported ; Tuppers Plains at 7:16
p.m. transported Millie Reed from an auto accident at the
Intersection of Ohio 7 and Ohio 681 to Veterans Memorial
Hospital lor treatment of minor i njur i~s; Tuppers Plains at
10:03 p.m . to Eastern High School for Jody Brown to Veterans
Memorial Hos pital; Rutland at 10:24 p.m. to Main Street for
Audrey Patterson to Holzer Medical Center .
Sunday a t 4:39a.m .. Middleport to Oliver Street for' Frances
Lukehart to Veterans Mem orial Hospital; Racine at 7: 19a.m . to
Front Street lor Fred Scarberry to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine ·at 10:05 a. m . to Apple Grove-oO'r cas Road for
Charles Wolfe Jr. to Veteran s Memorial Ho spital Middleport at
4:53p. m. to the Middleport Sundry Store for Rober! Burris who
was treated but not transported; Middleport at 7:20 p.m.
treated Greg Hysell at the fire s tation ; Pomeroy at 8:39p.m. to
Morgan Road for Perry Riggs to Holzer Medical Center.

:

GENERAL ELECTION-NOVE"BER 4, 1916-MEISSCOUtm'

**
~

::: To"''' 1..

1/'r

the numbft fGf ~set of

,.

andidltet of your moirt.

.*

IVoi..,Oimo,.t!uo"""i

*:

Bank·BV·M-aill

*
rt-

lt-

.ofOITJU

••T"'
""t11P11ArU

For Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court

lt

{Vole for not mort than onel

BANK

"The Better 8anlc"

t

\

1986 PoftderOSA. Inc .

,.

· Jt-

**

;

·*
: ...

2212 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, W.Ya.

New HMn, W.Va.

675-1121

812-2135

.

5tlt Stl18t

JtJt- •

..-,

MARY ELLEN WITHRCW
""""'""
JOHN GLENN
"""""TIC

..

i
~

J~~oc":!£HAEL LONG

:
:
Jt

•:

JOL
YNN BOSTER
D.I!MOCu.nc

Jt

FRANK D. CELEBREZZE

:

*Jt'

:

FRANCIS t SWEENEY

:
&gt;t

Jl-

IP ull T""' Com"""'ln8 1-1-871

*
..
lt

!Vo4efcoi1DI...,.Jhao-}

For Justice of tire
Supremo Court

ot

HERBERT R. BROWN

*

Commrncinf 1·2-87)

:

(Vote for not more lhln ontl

lf-

t

m

.
'
THE POJ.LING PlACE ,~fl\ . ~I :~1.1 . 992·52o5

C-...LW"'-t.Trt~~.,"'Ehllntrk.,.....,,fl'. fl711

.

!.-

*

..

*

'l****************************'lir********.
'
'

.

1,

The holiday s are fast ap·
proachlng, a busy time lor one
and all. Holiday entertaining and
even family meals can benefit

CARDS
ASSOR'TMEN'T
VALUE PACK
BOX OF 32 CARDS
WI'TH ENVELOPES

LISTERINE
ORAL
ANTISEPTIC

CHRISTMAS

GIFT

32 OZ. BOTILE

99

WRAP
30 INCH WIDE PAPER

lOO SQ. FT.-5 ROLL PK.

VICKS

FORMULA
44M

COUGH MIXTURE

39
AFRIN

NASAL SPRAY

OR 12 HOlJ-R

~ VHICH WITCH? -Five-year-old 1\my Beth Johnson, of Kacln•e,
wa,; one of many wllches at Racine's community Halloween party,
held Thursday night and sponsored by the Racine Volunteer
· Fir•emen and Ladles 1\uxlllary. Amy Beth, daughtw of Judith
Kn :lpp, Racine, and Robert Johnson, Pomeroy, tryed to throw a
rin.t~ over a wllch's hat. 1\nd guess what? You got to choose a neal
prt:.te out of a hox, whether you put the ring on the hat or not.

ue ca nned ·fruits were given in
respomse to roll calL Mrs. Vercia
Stout gave timely gardening tips.
and J\lrs. Dorothy Stout had the
verse of the month. Devotions were
given by Mrs. Elsie Culley. Bolht~
hoste,;s gilt and the trav~Jing prize

Mrs. Fetty presided at the
meet lng hosled by Mrs. Reynolds
and Clara Conroy. The verse of
th e :tmonth wa s "Thoughts on
Your Birthday" by Mrs. Conroy.
New:; items were reported by
Mrs. Reynolds. Members report£'d Ill were Beulah Strauss,
Veda Davis. and He len Sauer.
. Mr s. Reynolds had the arran ·

4J
JOHNSON'S

BABY

P~YYPz.~!

were won by Mrs. Rubal Caldwell.
For the program. Mrs. Grace
Stout gave a program on crafts for
homemade Christmas tree decora·
lions. The hostess served refresh·
ments carrying out the halloween
theme.

gemenl of the month featuring
roses from the garden of Art and
Beulah Strauss. A dessert course
was served from a table center
with roses also from the Strauss
garden. The November meeting
will be held at the hom e of Mrs.
Crooks with Grace Pratt to be
co -hostess .

.

item•;, toys , woodworking Items,
leathtergoods, baskets, wreaths,
rag r'Ugs, ceramics, pillows·, tol e
painted Items , Christmas deco ·
rations, knit articles, etc.
Sau1dwlches, soup, chili and pie '
will a lso be available both days of
the s.ale.
Art&gt;a craftspersons who have
acce pted invitations to sell craft s
are Dorothy Downie, Judy Wells,

from quick and easy techniques
the microwave oven.
The· Meigs County Cooperative
Extemsion Service will conduct a

~sing

Harrisonville PTO tneeting held
The Harrisonville PTO meet · · a '!al ii fes tival. The PTO also
in g recently a t tire sc hool voted to spcnsored a halloween dance and
give $7!i to the school to purchase party for the children
-bails.
McCall called attention to the
Dorothy Frum presided at th e fifth grde science poslers on
meeting and Greg McCall, prin - display and dicussed the perfect
cipal, gave the prayer. A Avon attenc!.ance certificates lor a
representative was there to ex - meal :at Ponderosa. The group
plain a furyd raising l?roject. dlscu s:;ed sendin g luncheon me·
Harold Graham and Debbie
nus home with each child and
Lowery volunteered to rewrite McCa ll will have this done. The
fiflh grade won the room count
the by-laws .
A program of finge r printing and till! $10award . Refreshments ·
"the · ~chool children was dis- were served by the fifth gra de.
. cussed, and plans wer~ mad e lor
)

•

Ag •e 6-12, Andy Robbins, Becky
Karr and Steven McCalla, most
orlghoal; Bethany Clark. prelti·
est; Kelly Satterfield, ugliest ;
Ronrile Casto, funniest ; Megan
Swearingen, Tara Erwin and
Taba tha Swearing~n. sweetest;
Nathan Baloy, scariest; Kelly
Doldne. most patriotic .
Ag·• ~ 13-18, Kip Grueser and
John Perez , most original;

Shirley Huston, Iris Baker,
Tamie Stevens, Mary Ann
Shoults, Geri Gibson, Barbara
Murray, Co rbett and Daisy Pat·
ter son, Brrnda Nollgc, Darrell
Brewer, Anna Rose Fitch, Ruth
Moore, Barbara Pierce, Mary
Bradford , John Dudding and
Wllll~m Grueser. /
.
The public Is invlte d·to attend .

Microwave cooking class ·scheduled

rt-

..*·
11- :

"·

An arts and crafts show and
sale will be held ' by area
craftspersons at the Meigs
County Senior Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, 'on Friday,
from I to 8 p.m., and Saturday,
from 10 a .m. to 5 p.m.
The show will include many
different types of handmade
crafts. including, dulcimers,
quilts. dolls, doll clothes, crochet

,..

Supremo Court

.COLOR FILM
DEVELOPING*

Candy Hensley , scariest; Armaln Caughey, ugliest; Ste·
phanie Gardener. funniest.
Age 18 and over, Allee Gar·
de ner, Twila and Christopher
Traitor , and an elderly couple
who remained anonymous, most
original; and Pat Thoma,
sweetest.
Poster contest winners were
Annie Jessie, first place; Terisa
Devin Simpson, second; Vincent
Broderick, third; and Kelly Sat·
terfield. honorable men tlon.

Show and sale Jet for Senior Center

1
~

J~~.~.C BUCHANAN

· For Justice of the

.\N'O
• NE NEF.DJNG A JUDI:

'

If
JI-

(Fullltrm &lt;ommendna:1·1-87)

ffull Ttnn

.

: :
,.

' ......... ., ... .,__...., .

' .._

li~

f\'o te for not more lh1n one)

,.

·: :

MEMBER F.D.I.C.
Second St11et
Mason, W. Ya.
m-5514

:!

11-

IVott for ftDI morr thin ontl

*
*II.*
,:

: -

IVote for not mltft than Drn!l

(94th District}

Installation of officers by Ell·
zabeth Burkett highlighted the
recent meeting of the Middleport
Amateur Gardeners held at the
home of Rose Reynolds.
In~talled wer e Gladys Cum·
mings, president; Jean Moor e.
vice president; Marjorie Fetty,
secretary; and Emogene Crooks,
treasurer .

*

SHERROD BROWN
"'""''"r'c

For Stole Senator
(17th Dittrict)

and Jerry Clark, Bobby Roush
and l'vlia Bass, funniest.

Amateur Ga.rdeners hold recent meet

1;:

(Vote for not ~than one)

11-

1

*
*

___ :

For Ropresenlali~elo
Congre11 (lOth Didrict)

Mrs . Jo . Ann Trueblood of speaker at .the Meigs Count y Members and guests enjoyed a
"October's Goals" were given by
Hillsboro, South District vice Women's Republican Club at a potluck dinner preceding the
Helen Blackston. For roll call
pres id en t of the Ohio Federation recent meeting held at the Senior program.
members gave an opinion on
of Republican Wom ~n. was Citizens Ce nt er in Pomeroy.
abortion. Plans .' were made to
cpllect diapers and baby clothes t-~----------------------------------­
each month for the pre-natal
clinic at the Health Department.
The name of Becky Broderick
was submitted for membership .
The traveling prize was donated
by Helen Blackston and won by
Peggy Houdasheit. Mrs. Black·
stan won the hostess prize.
Refreshments were served by
Susie Abbott, Ann Colburn, and
Thelma Sines. The November
meeting will feature a speaker
from the Cilrleton School.

WITH COilNSTARCH

39
--

Jt:lf-

(Vote for not more IMn ontl

Fo~ Stale Repretentotlve

,...-

:

D!MoctATtc

,

!*

A (our of the Stahl Nursery
Christmas shop followed by dinner
· In Parkersburg was planned for tbe
November meeting when the Rose
Garden Club met recently at the
home of Mrs. Doris Koenig.
Comments on vacation and favor·

It-

THOMAS E.. FERGUSON

For Secretory of Stole

:
:

*

PAUL R.
LEONARD

Republican 'women conduct meeting_--:---:--------

.Rose Garden Club conducts meeting

Jt-,'

For Auditor of Stole

ForTreuurer of State

.:
:
Jt

AND

(Vote for not more lh1n one)

:

lt-

RICHARD F.
CELESTE
DDIOCIA'nC

Page-7

At the Monday night Five
Points class of Slinderella, Chris
Nichols lost the most weekly .
weiJ~ht in the men's class , and
Melissa Foster was runner-up in
the !teen class. In the adult class,
Cal hy Hudson lost the lost weight
and1 Maxine Jordan was runnerup.
li .t the Tuesday night Mason
claiss. four new members were
we:!comed. Ilene Mossman lost
the· most weight and In the kid 's
cla.:;s, Kristin Torres was the top

I
Tracey O'Dell lost the most
wc•ight and Diana Herdman was
n\rmer-up at the Monday night
m &lt;'l"ling of tbe Five Points S!inder·
eUia Class.
, In the teen class. Missy Foster
was a top loser, and in the men' s
cLass, Gene Hudson lost the most
'l'eight. At the Tuesday night Mason
class, Kristin Torres lost the most
~"eight In the kids class. and in the .
a.dult class, Norma Torres was the
top loser and Lois Ann Reitmlre
&lt;vas runner-up.

-**

(Vole for nol ~thin OMI

(Vote for nol mort 1h1n Mtl

*

Far U..tonool

Go&gt;omo.'

Monday, November 3, 1986

los·~r.

-:

ANTHONY J. CELEBREZZE, JR.
0 '"ocunc

:
· .,.. For United Stoiet Senator

PEOPLES .

1

: :

For AHorney General

ltrt-

*

'ltn!IIAII'I'
If lll•tl lD

G.,.,., Mol""''"""'

GovtrMr, punch OM hoJe betide

:

rt-

fo&lt; &lt;m.mo"

For Governor and
Lieutenant Governor

It-

FREE

PICK UP ASUPPLY OF PREPAID ENVELOPES
AT
OF OUR THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

Slinderella
m1eetings held·

&gt;t

SAMPLE BALLOT

rt-

lt-

We Pay The
Postage Both Ways!

i

**********************************
***!·
.:
UNOFFICIAL
:

:

-IIIIII

Winrroers of cost~me judging at:
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Comlliercp's annual Halloween ·
party,' held Thursday eveQing,
. were: .
Age 0-5 category, Odie Karr
and Cory Reed, most original; ·
Wes Thorne, most partiotlc ;.
John Hili. most seasonal; Stelanle and Christopher Pickens,
prettiest; Christopher Darst, ugliest; ' Diamond McClure, sweetest; Jason Chapman. scariest;

I Area deaths . I

'

The Daily Sentinel

Co:stw;ne judgiqg held in Pomeroy event

I

Teachers (m strike

between 50 and 55.

.

.

handling food in California,
Again this year, taxing anil
whet.h er to scrap all property spending questions arE'Ithe mosfl
taxes In .Montana or increase common ballot issues. if not
education funding In several n e c e s sa r i I y the m o s.t
sta tes.
newsworthy.
It seems a sure bet that
lotteries will be, legalized in at
Most of the headllne-grabbin g
least live of the six states which
issues - such as the AID - ~
have the issue on the ballot.
question and an effort to rna~ :.e
Twenty states and the District of
English the official ian~age in
Columbia a lready have them .
California- got onto ballots v•Ja
And Kansas voters appear
the lnitiativ~ process. in whi\ 'h
ready to approve horse and dog
citizens can force questions to a
racing. But polis show casino
vote by gathering enough slgm~
gambling appears headed for a
petitio!l'·
·
second big defeat in Florida .
In Or ego n, It appears an 'e ffort
to legalize sale a nd use of
marij uana will be defeated. du ~
in part to tlle new nationa l
anti-drug mood.
'
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio iUI'li
North Dakotans likely will let
more retailers open for business . - Teachers in the Fairland
School District of Lawret:1ce
alter noon on Sundays while
County set up picket lines toe lay .
Kansans prob ably will approve
as they went on strike over ~ :200
the sale of liquor by the drink . on
and some non-monetary issu1"s :
a county option basis , the polls
Superintendent Jerry McC on;
say .
neil . sa id he called substitute
teachers to conduct classes for
the nearly 2.000 students i,n the
two elementary schools. , •one
junior high school a nd one sei 11or
high
school on the campus in !I hi s
Eva M. Smith
southern Ohio county.
·
However. the president of t h~
Word was received Saturday
that Eva M. Smith. sister of Mrs. Fairland Association of Class·
Charles Blakeslee. died at Win· room · Teachers warned that
tcr Haven, F la . Mrs. Blakeslee "scabs are not well thought p ! iry
was with Mrs . Smith at the time !he area."
Th~ district has 98 teachers
of her deat h.
and 95 belong the the te ac hers '
The fun eral will be held at
. union.
Auburndale. Fla., on Tuesday at
FACT Pres ide nt Mike Wag·
the Kersey Funeral Home.
goner said 91 perce nt of t h~ 90
Mrs. Smith was born at Grand teachers who attended a mc '£'ling
Mar ais. Mich .. later moving to Sunday voled lo strike.
'
Newberry . Mi ch. She spen t most
Waggoner said teachers t-vant a
of her married life in Chi cago.
basr sa larv of $15.570. bl .lt the
111. . moving to Florida in 1980 . board offered $15.550. Ht ·~ also
Burial will be bes ide he r hu s· said te achers want fai!l· and
band, the !ale C.C. Smit h a! equitable treatment lrot •n the
Janesville, Wis.
board .

r------------------------1 *&gt;t

Area church slates revival

state competition at Lancaster earUer Sat.urday.
The band received §everal superior ratings.

.

.

Ohio, area weather scene

Veterans Memorial

One o~ tof every three pregnan - have been born to Ohio teenagers
des In l'lleigs County will be to a with 1,883 being born to teens
teenagj'-, Norma Torres, R.N ., unde·r 15.
Meigs ::ounty . Health [)epartTh !rty-one states have a lower
ment urslng supervisor, told teen birth rate than Ohio, sbe
, membe1rs of.the Middleport Child said:· Half of ail teen pregnancies
· Consed•ation League at its re- occu1: within sill months after the
cent m~·etlng.
g!I:II;tecomes sexually active.
Mrs. ;'Torres gave statistics on
Ba'bles born to teen mothrs are
adoles(:ent pregnancies and nearJiy twice as likely to die in
talked iabout the greater risk of their first year of life and the
death t-ela ted to pregnancy and mottiE'rs are more likely to suffer
Its complications in that age . toxer nla , anemia, and other birth
group..
complications.
The 1nurse said that statistics
Na.ncy Morris presided at the
show that two out of every live meel;lng which opened with the
teens :in America are sexually pled(!:e. The Mother's Prayer was
active. Since 1980 117.863 babies give111 In unison, an.d devotions.

Numerous issues to confront,
voters 'OD 43 state ·ballots

'

Snuth Central Ohio
Cloudy tonight, with a chance
of showers and a low between 40
and 45. Cloudy Tuesday, with a
chance of showers and highs

Forget-Me-Not day today

'

•

workshop on using your microwave oven to Its best advantage
during the holidays and every
day.
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs County
home economics and 4-H agent,
and Betty Reese, Athens County
home economics agent, will
share their Ideas on Tuesday ,
Nov. 11, from 7 to 9 p.m., al the
Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service office, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
The class will Include Ideas for
quick snacks, main dishes, des-...
serts and holiday entertaining.
Registration fee Is $2 and is
limited to 30. Pre-registration Is ,
needed by Nov. 10. For lnforma- '
lion and registration, call 992·

6696.

1002.
BOTTLE

AnENnON
DIABETICS
KNOW YOUR INSULIN 13
PAMPHLET IS
AVAILABLE AT ALL
RITE AID PHARMACIES .

GENERIC
DRUGS COULD
SAVE YOU

~· vgso%
ON YOUR NEXT
PiESCRIPTION
ASK YOUR RITE AID
PHARMACIST FOR ·
COMPLETE DETAILS

SAVINGS VERYDAY RITE
IN EVERY AISLE AT. • • •
WI! IIIEM THE tiiOitlTO IIMII QtWmTII$ • I'IIClS lffiCTM lfOtll. 2 1HlU 9, 1916 • NOT USPONSIIIE Rltt T\'POillAPHICAII..OU

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OH.
.PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

�'

Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

!lomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.
..---Peopli?in .the neu;sMonday, Novembti·r 3, '1986

------~--~--------~------~----~--~~~~--~--~--~~--~~.!

Flower· show plans announced by. chairmen
'

Plans fo r the !Ill nu al ho liday
flower s how of the Meigs County
Ga rden Clubs Assoca tion to be
held Nov. 22 a nd 23 at the S.enior
Co tizens Center have been an·
nuunced by Peggy Cra ne and
Sheli a Curtis. chairmen.
Theme will be "The ABC's of
Christmas." The show will include artiS tic arra ngments in 18
classes fo r g arden cl ub
members. juniors and nongarden club members, sunprlnts
and Christ mas wrapping for
JUnior ex hibitors, horticulture
cl.as scs a nd two commercial
non·competitive dis pl ays.
The variou s garden clubs have
bee n assigned show respons ibili·
ties as follows: Chester Garden
Club. sta ging eommittee; Ru ·
tlanct Garden Club, entry. classi ·
ft cation. a nd placement: Star

Garden Club , re gistrat ion: Wild· reserve best of show. and creatlv·
wood Garden ·club. class name tty. In each class , a blue, red.
cards: Shade Valley Council of yellow and white ribbon wil be
Floral Arts, entryway theme placed. The creativit y awa r d, the
decorations: Fernwood Garden chairmen point out , need not be
Club, ribbcns; Winding Trai l presented to a blue ribbon
Garden Club, publicit y; Rutland winner.
Fctendly Garden Club, photoThe show will be open for
graphy, and the Middleport publicvie wing fromnoon onNo v.
Gal'den Club and the Middleport 22 to 5 p.m. and from noon to 4
Amat eur Gardeners. best unit. . p.m on Sunday.
Ther e will be special ex hibi ts
All en tries must be in place by
by Steve Powell on th e stat e and ' noon and judging will begin at 1
co unt y programs of litter con- p.m. on the opening day. There is
no registration required to ex·
trol. and Francis Floris t.
Several special awards will be hi bit in the show.
The rul es specify that plants
given. In the junior division a
bes t of show will be awarded in entered in the horticulture dlvartis ti c arrangements, a nd a
ison mu st be ow ned and gown by
the exhibitor for at leas t three
horhculture sweepstakes award
will be presented.
months prior to the show. No oil
For adult exhibitors the special or polish IS permitted on the
a wa rds will include bes t of show, foliage and a ca rd accompanying

tions wr re a harves t cornucopia

and pumpkins. Favors we re
bas kets filled with Halloween

Family medicine:

candies.
Elea nor Essman. president.
conducted the meeting with
mem hers signing gel·well cards
for Faye Sauer and Harriet
Wood, and a friendship card for
Maxine Philson. A thank you
card from Viola Get ties was read
and programs for 1986-87 were
distr ibu ted.
Next me&lt;&gt;ting will be held on
Nov. 22 at 12:30 at the Hamden
Masonic Temple with a sil ent
auction to be held. Meigs County
mem bres attending were Lee
Lee, Fern Grimm, Martha
Greenaway and Nellie Parker.

the plant is 10 list both the
common name and the bOtanical
name. An exhibitor may enter
more than one specimen lh a
class ln the horticulture section
providing each · en try is of a
different variety.
A horticulture sweepstakes
award will be given on tbe basis
of points accumulated- five for
blue, three for red, two for
yellow, and one for white .
In the artistic arrangements
classes, an exhibitor may make
only one entry per class. Bau·
bles . glitter, snow, bac)&lt;grounds
and accessories are permitted In
all classes providing they add
distinction to the design. Whjle 11
classes are restric ted for exhibit
to memhers 6f garden clubs in
Meigs County, there are four
classes
for
ic exhibit.

s200.ooo.

in fection. This can happen by
to uching a sore or lesion or through
sexual eon tact. Anywll&gt;refrom 5 to
20 million Americans have genital
herpes alone.
Question: What are tIt&gt; signs of a
herpes infectio n?
Amiwer: Both types of tx&gt;rpes
share similar symptoms. Genii a1
ll&gt;rpes ts sign a led by swollen lymph
glands in tte groin, a nd both
varieties cause fever. headaches
and joint pain. Additionally, itch·
ing. burning sores appear around
thE&gt; mouth and in the genitals. These
lesions go away in two to three
weeks. but the virus has not
disappeared.
Rather. it Pnt Prs ttx&gt; nerve fibers
surrounding the 9Jres and makes

HAPPY LAP - This "old gentleman' In the Halloween dlspl~
on the porch of Gary and Linda Evans, 30519 Valley Bell Road,
Racine, looded so real even the dog didn't know. Otis McNutt,
Dally Sentinel carrier klok this photo.

purney down the btrth canal.
Genii al herpes can. in some cases.
increase the risk of cancer of the
Periodicallv. however, the \1rus cervix.
travels back to the skin again and
Question: Can herpes be cured?
sorE'S reappear. This can be caused
Answer: There is no cure for
by such factors as stress, fewr. tx&gt;rpes but there is a new and fairly
wootiJ&gt;r changes. lack of sll'&lt;'p or crfective medica tion called acycevrn tight clothing. Herpes victims lovir 1a·&lt;igh·klo-vi.'E'r) available
may ex f"'rlen ce one to six such tha i. for the majority of cases,
rocurrenees annually. These may shortens ttx&gt; contagious period of
last from several days to a wi.'E'k.
ttl' virus.
Besides these symptoms, people
~wom en with genital "'herpes
with an active herpes sore can should have a pap smear at least
spread the infection to other parts of · onee a year (because.ofgreaterrisk
til&gt; body. For example, touching a of cervical canet&gt;r), _!llld anyone
sore and then rubbing the eye can with genital herpes should· refrain
cause an eye lnfl'&lt;'tion. A pregn ant from sex when sores are present.
woman with herpes can pass the See your physici~n If you have more
infection to tx&gt;r child during it s qJestions or concerns.

Ohioans receive Career·Medals for works ·

0

He is also the first non - British
recipient of the Queen Elizabeth
II Coronation Award given by the
Roya l Academy of Dancing.
The Ohioan a Poetry Award of
the Helen and Laura Krout
Memorial ·Fund wa s given to
Alberta T. Turner who has taught
at Oberlin College and Cleveland
State l.(niverslt y. She was ho nored for her "dis tinguished
tea ching ... thoughtful editing
and publishing ... Imaginative
an d original poerty."
The Ohioana Day honors works
and achievements by or abOut
Ohioans. Other presentations
include:
-The Ohioana Award fo r Edi·
tori a! Excellence wa s given to
th e literary magazine MidAm erlean Review, Robert Early,
editor. The magazine, begun in

of poetry and prosea ndwasciled
for Its outstanding and ra pid
growth and dedicated ques t to
publish the newest a nd best
literary work.
- The Florence Rober ts
Heard Memorial Book Award to
thl late Grace Goulder Izant for
her bOok "Hudson's Herita ge"
pubis bed in' 1985, the year alter
her death. Mrs. lza nt , who wrote
under her maiden name, was the
fi rst woman writ E'!' hired by the
Cleveland Plain DealE'!' and
wrote for many years of Ohio
people and places and had
written three other books .
Oh;oa~a :;oo~A~ar~s ~~~t to :
- re a os e oc o o urn bu s. In the biography category,
for her book " Colonel Cogge·
shall: The Man Wbo Saved
Linco ln ."
-Donald A. Hutsl ar of Yellow

POM EROY
Monday is
Forgct ·Me-Not -Da)' for Meigs
Countv Chapter 13 of the Dis·
a bled Amer ica n · Vetera ns. All
do nations will ti&lt;' apprectaled.
SYRAC USE - Sut ton Town·
ship Tru stees will meet Monda.v.
8p m ,at theSyracuse Mum cipal
Building.
LETART FALLS - Le tart
Township Trustees wil l meet
Monda y, 7 p.m .. at the town hall .
ORANGE TWP - Ora nge
township trustees meet Monday.
7 p.m., hom e of Dorot hy
Calla way.
CHESTER - Ches ter PTO
meets Mond ay , 6:30 p.m., at the
sc ho ol. Ma ke · lt. l ake · it
workshop .

Ordf'r of the Eastern Star meets
Mondav , 7:30 p.m., initt atton.
Refr es hmen ts.
ROCKSPRINGS- The annual
Meigs High School fa ll s ports
banquet wlll be held at the high
sc hool ca fet eria at 6:30 p.m . on
Monday. Those attending are to
ta ke two side .di shes, either
vegeta ble or dessert. The format
for ordering game ta pcs of the
1986 season wlll be ex plained.
MIDDLEPORT
Meigs
County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, will meet Monday evening
at 7 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Flo rence Richards.
SYRACUSE - Revival servi·
ces will be held at the Syracuse
Mission Church, Nov. 3 to 8. wllh
17-year-old Rick Weaver. Mt.
Alto, W. Va'. as the evangelist.
Services will be held at 7 p.m.
each night. Pastor Jim Evans
invit es tile public.

REEDSVILLE- Revi val begins Mond ay, co ntinuing through
Nov . 9, Eden Unll ed Bretheren
Church. Scrtves ljt 7 p.m., with
Rev. Robert Blain speaking.

TUESDAY
MINERSVILLE - Forest Run
United Met hodist Church will be
serving election day dinner on
Tues&lt;jay, from 11 a. m. to 6 ~. m .
The menu will include vegetable
and bean soup. sandwiches, pte.
ca ke and beverages.

RA CINE- Raci ne Chapt er 134

CHESTER- The United Meth ~

'

'I

Tho Tuppon 'Ptoina-Cheater
Wet• OiotriCI II 'inViting bidS
br a 1987 1-tun cob Blld
chassis with thO following:

1. Hecrvy lllty standard 4
IPead m111ual tronominion. 2.
Duato on 1911-wtlh rrud .,~
snow titel. 3: 6 ply tl&lt;•, flont
and rear. 4. SUJbilizer bar.
tront. 6. Weot Collll 'nirroll.
1. Ru-floolmatl; 7. Heavy

duty IAnyt .... 8. Sp•o wheat
and 6 ply tire. 9. Hecrvy lllty
-i!iO!Y nliiflpring. 10. V·B.
360 111 380 Slgine. 11 . Power
at•ring. 12. Dome ta1!'4' 13.
Clganme tighter. 14. Red in
color.16. 130" to 140"wl\eel

,

btiso.
Two bids ere rt;qu.-tad , one

with trade·in ot 1983 Chey.
roltt

1'h&lt;&gt; flr!i1 s(x "-f'f'ks grading

l)'r

iod hono r

roll a! lh£' R aC'In€' EIC'mrnt!lrv School tm.s

tx:m allnounc'C'd

Maki n~!

a gradp of B ur

abov(' ln all t hi'ir sub]('('fo; to bf' n.rrt rfd tot hr-

roU wrrn
SECOND GRADE: An~l r lt'ar lr 1nn
Krl•Hf'n Hl'nslrr .liX' l&lt; lrhv. Tam:ll' ll Marlin,

Jfi1'SC Mav n;ud .•JC'nmC' S&lt;'ar lx'rr v. Bot:bv
Wrlf('S('!

TlltRD GRIIDE:

EAST MEIGS - A hunt er
safety course is being offered at
Eastern High School on Nov. 4
and 5 and Nov. 11 and 12 .. from 6
to 9 p.m. Indi vidu a ls must attend
ail the sessions to pass· the
course. Pre·regislratlon Is neces·
sary. To pre· register. or for mor e
Information. conta ct Keith
Wood, Meigs County game protector, at 985-4400.

HARRISONVILLE
Zion
Freewill Baptist Church. Lower
Plains Road, Ohio 682, will be In
revtval Wednesday through Sunday with Rev. Allie Skaggs.
evange lis t. Services will begin 7
p.m. 'nightly. Featured singers
for the.week will be Zellca Smith
and Singers on Wednesday;
McDaniel Tr io, Thursday; ·
Wayne and
Linda Rhode s.
Friday: Gospel Rays, Saturday;
Narrow Way Singers, Sunday.
Rev. Eddie Boyer , pastor, lnvites
•
th e public.

PT. PLEASANT - Revival
services will be held at tbe Point
Pleasant Wesleyan Church Tuesday through Saturday with the
.Rev: Lel!llld Alm an In char ge.
Services a ( 7 p.m.

Rummage sale
POMEROY - A r ummage
sale w111 be held at Grace
Episeopal Church, Main St.
Pomeroy, Monday and Tuesday, .
9 a.m. to 4.p.m.

WEDNESDAY
PORTI..AND- Lebanon Township Trustees will mee I Wednes·
day, 7 p.m., at the Lebanon
Township Building.
Dail'ville Holl·

•

t

Blld ono a

truck and paint to match.
Bids will beoPenedMonday,

November 10. at the oltice of
the 'DIStrict. 39481 !lor 30
Road , Readsvile, Ohio at

Public

GREAT BEND ELEORIC, Inc.

m etters have been sche -

duled to commence m Frl -

tho offices of tho Commls·

sion. 180 East Broad

•Residential
. .•Com.mercial
· •Industria·!

Street. Columbus,
43266·0573. F':,';~~:,::
mation may be'

contacting the
sion.
It is, therefore,

RAYMOND E.

tlan d. and Svr ac=-lla'&gt;ho•ufdll
have receivers appoint 'ad
for the protection of ttw
public be initiated. It is,

Office 949-2438

,,,, ·'
P.iillii[
vomber 21, . 198. otarting
II··
JA.'1fll
at 10:00.a.m., altho officaa
of the Commlnion, 180
East Broad Street. Cotum·
How to make a golden retriever
bua,further,
Ohio 43266-0573.
ft~-----:....~fee=l~~~----:---4
is.
'
· ·
ORDERED, That notice of
Pulilic Notice

Public Notice

tho ha aring be published
LEGAL NOTICE
accordance with Finding
Notii'O Is herel&gt;y given lhat
No. 7 It is, further,
tho Public -Utili!ias CommisORDEREO, That a
Ilion of Ohio •has initiated
..,.

of this Entry be served upon

inveltigations 10 det«mine if

Racine Ga'a and StHvica
Company, Rut! Wid Fuel

Racine Gas end Servtee Com·

Company, and Syr acuaa

I ..
f--

1.:
I,

Home Utilities Company .

.

.

Commission of Ohio has
mit• a ted investigations to
determine if R seine Gas
and Service Company, Rutl and Fuel Company, and
Syracuse Home Utilities
Company ,should have re·
ceivers appointed for the
protection of the pubhc.

Jo lm

Card., Adha1·a

Or asko. ,),rson Hudson. Paul lh '('.

FIITH f:RADE: Christi(' Coo!X'f. .J am&lt;&gt;v

r-----------

C'r.u ~

MugraJ!f', KPndra Norris. Co urt n•P\' Rous h,

.k'm StfWart
i'
F1FTH GRAOE· Bf•th C1.rrk Rachaf'l

pony, Rutland Fuel Co1!'4'any,
811 d Syracuee Home Utiltias

: •

Ch iirm ill
William H. Brooks

have been scheduled to commence on~ Friday, November

Glori a L. G
Ashley C. Brown
At an .

21 . 19B6 alerting at 10:00
a.m.. at the offu:eo ¢ the
Commission,'1BO East Broed

Entered in

A

".

In Memoriam

Street .

Nancy
1

Columbus : Ohio

43266·0573. Further information may be obtained br.

Wolpo contacting the Commission. ·
Secretary i1113;11c

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

CHE51'ER-98S-3307

-

z

-

I

•

-

·

i HUNlrER SAYS [
i
i
:* vo··rE .FOR i*

*

*

I,.

BClST.ER

i

::,.

THIS IS TO ANSW!R THE N~IN'I' INQUIRIES I HAV! R!C!tVEO. I AM NOT A
CANDIDA Iff: FOR STATf IEPR!S!NTAT!V!. '

,.

• 1. SUPPOR1~ JOLYNN BOSTER :

i)~

*

1
*

i

HI!NRY ·L. HUNTER
37r6113 TEXAS ROAD
POMl:IROY, OHIO 45769

,.

·~

:

!

Paid for by Meigs County Democratic Party ;
Catherine L. Welsh, Tmas., 106 Ebenezer St., Pomeroy. Oh . 45769 ,.

.
~
..!t
\ *·***********1Ar**********************..n
.

&lt;

~

''

"

POMEROY - Sma ll bustness
located tn t~~~&lt;n Gatage and
land 1deal for mechani: MAKE
OFFER. $10.000 00.
SYRACUSE - Really ntce 2·3
bed room tanch style home on
a level lc&lt;. FuI~ equ1pped
klchen all in good condition
Must see. $35,900 00
LONG BOTIOM - Aneat 3
bedroom ranch "'th spawus
lamt ~ room krtchen with
but~ · tn range and oven unrts.
separale d~1ng area Gas FA
heat plus woodbu rner. 2 car
garage. approx. 1 acre wrth
garden space and outbut~&lt;n &amp;
$32,00000
~enry

E Cleland, Jr
992·6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949·2660
Oolite Turner ..... 992·5692
Office ................ ~2·2259

A03

JO' S GIFT SHOP

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

In Syracuse, Ohio
"YES, W£ ARE OPEN."
THURS.·FRI.·SAT.
9 to 5

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

more

•

Lsyswsy Fot C~tlnmu

YOUNG'S

CEMENT HORSES
DEERS, RABBITS , OOGS .
CATS. EAGLES . VIRGIN
MARY . WHITE ANGELS
ALSO LARGE BIRD BATHS

CARPENTER
SERVICE

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

Roger Hysell
Garage

·

NEW FOR ONLY $1
96-page, full-color ·Cata·
log of Crafts - patterns,
books, SIJpplies. crewel,
cross stttch, neediepotnt, '
latch hook , quiiijng, and

Rt. 124, Pomeror Ohio

OLD TIME

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
. REPAIR
Alto Traumlttlon

HEATING CO.

PH. 992-5682

701 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

or 992-7121
6-17-tfc

~~~ MllY ' AM-S PM,

- Addona and remodeling .
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical
work

RIASON~BLE

RA!fl
10· 30-'86·1 mo

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Meket

11 PM 'TIL 7:30 AM SHIFT
For 35 Bed SNF-ICF Unit .

•Weshers •Dishwashers

•Range•

Conta&lt;t Rhonda Dailey, RN or
Apply at Veterans Memorial Hospital
11 S'12 East Memorial Dr.
Pomeroy, Ohio 457 69
CALl 614·9'12·2104

•Rafriger•tors
•Dryer• •Freezers

PARTS and SERVIICE

BISSELL
BUILDERS

'' An

C~STOM

BUILT ..
HOMES &amp;GARAGES

·POSTAL·· J-OBS·

,;AI Reasonable 'Prim"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

CLERK l CARRIER POSITIONS
($9.92/hr to start)

Special announcement lor all candidates planning to sign up for the Clerk·
Carrier Examination at the Pomeroy Post OHice as wall as many other Post
Offices In the 457 Zip Code Area when It Is ne~t announced. [And since It
won't be oHared again for at least 3 years, don't miss out!)

4-HOUR WORKSHOP
Score 95·100% or Your Tuition is Refunded!

NOW IS the Ume IO PftPIII The prtSIUrt II DR tO'ICOtl II IMgb II poasibll fO get lh• job Carnr hstal Wllrbifl will now
earn a IIJrllng 11lery Ill SH,113.10 plnlttrnlfiti - wtth n ICCIItrllad st1p krcrtlh ,1111. men 111d women, rtQirdltu ol
tge, are eligible. The Ortllllf toward 1 1mt11 nrvlce c--:nr 11 get11nQ your name onto Urt ·:Regratlf ot Elltlllles," wlllcll
11 acCMpllslitd by piUIJif 11111 Edll'l. To be 1111 Dt t~t flttt fttred , yau 11etd 10 get one ol the hlglllr scoml And to be "red
IIIII dvrillg llll IIIII lhrH yun, you will DHd to SCOII If le.,t i5%.
This wocksllop is being ot!ered now. pr10r 10 the tor mal annoonceme nt of the eKam1nation dal es to give you adequate t1me to prepare
for the test Mant post offices IJeOII'I lES!Ing Within a weelt ot the announcement whiCh 1sn't enough. time to pr~p are properly By
iilaniog now. you 'n be tfady to attam high scores usmg our methods when the test Is giver~
Come to rhe workshOp II yOtJ dOI'l 'I feel. at tlte end of the course, that It w111 help you ach1011e a score of 95%
or better don't pay for ths worl!i hopl Futthennott, It your ICON 11 /ell than 95% on lhl otllclal txam arttr
using our technlqu ... we wf//lmmtdlttt/y refund your fu/flon In lull!

WANT TO RELOCATE ?We are me publishers of Till hltll Allfl, the lli·weekly newsletter glvmg ~ou postal eKa m d~tes nat1onwrde
Only The Achlewment Center ~ ro'lldes t ~ls serv1ce. Leam !'lew you can relocille to any area ol the counuy you lrke
• You are IO\Jited to bring your tape recorder 10 record the workshop for personal e~am re~~ew
You may attend as A! any extra ~ssl ons of the workSIIop as you tiki! (on aspace available baSIS) wi!I1Clut a(kfltional tuitlon ch&lt;~rge
WOfi.:SHOP TUITION - $40 (Includes guarant&amp;ed 4·11our Workshop, Tl'ie Corey Guide ro J&gt;o!tal E".lrams jWJIII 6 complete
pracfleelestsj a ~mole Eum with Answers Worblx!pWorkbOOII: ·· 121mportanl Sreps for Getting Hlrtld into the 'U.S. Pastil
Service" Booklet Folow·Up COnsuttation Privileges Achrevernent Award 10 HrQh·SCOI!fS andPractiCe Kif containing ~~ Addltiljnat
practice hams with Answers Memel)' Test Fl ~s h Ca rds, 'Sr mulated Exam' on cassette tape, and ANNOUNCEMENT WITH SIGN·UP
OATESMAILED TO YOUR H!Jt!El PlefH bnng two sharpened No 2 pencds with you to the Worlshop
1
Sealing Is limite!!: p~e·r egrstratlon by phOne IS !(IVJSed Otherfflse, vou may ffiiJISier by a rn~lrl!l thirty minutes earty TulhOn1ft '!f\l~
at me door by cash cherJt motley order. MasterCard, VISA or Amencan Express

*

ia

CHOOSE f OF 2 WORKSHOPS
TUES., NoYember 11111 - 1 pt!1·5 pm; 6 pnt·10 pm

MEIGS COUNTY MUSEUM - POMEROY
144 Butternut Avenue (Off Rte. 33)
For Instant WORKSHOP RESERVATIONS
Cali Today- TOLL FREE 1·800.233·2545, Ext. 8832·A
(Between 8 am • 8 pm EST., Mon. • Sat.)

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY

!Fraa Estimates)

V. C, YOUNG Ill

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

992-6215 or 992· 7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

New Lo&lt;otion: .
168 North Se&lt;ond
Middlep~~rt, Ohio 4S760

4·15-'86·1C

We Cany Fishing Supplies

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

6 Lost and Found
&amp;1 00 reward for return or
mform ation leading to the
Labroac;tor lost m O.J Whtte
road area. Cell614-446 -0370 .

446-2342
Found· Small pony, Lrttle Bulls·
kin . Call 614· 256 -1772
Found on N Mam 011 New lrma
Road in Rutland . small Beegle

LOST female, SprmgerSp aruel ,
7 months old, choool ate brown
and whtte, in New H avto area.

304 -882 3681 . 882 3729 .
882-2915

7

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

BUSINESS PHONE
16141 992-6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
1614)992·

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Authorlud John DHre,
Ntw Holland, lush Hog
Farm E~uipment
Dealer

Far111 Equlp111ut
Pith &amp; S1rttilaa

GUN SHOOT

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

3/11/tfn

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
· 6:30P.M.

RADIATOR
SER~CE

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

Fa&lt;tory Choice

12 Gauge Shotg...,s Only

10·8-tfn

- DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992'-2196

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

992-3410

EUGENE LONG

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
.TOP SOIL
Fllt DIRT

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VINYl &amp; ALUMINU Iii

·complete &lt;i~tter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20yeara
"Free Eatimatos"
CALL COLLECT:
Ph. (614) 843-5425

!O·S·tfc

An nou ncemen Is
3 Announcements
SWEEPER end sewl1g m DChine
rep air, parts, and supphn. Pick
up end deNvtry, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one hatf mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call 614·

THE QUALITY

PRitn. SHOP

446 ·0294

An y,, '''''"I Nuh

Save your loved ones ., me of
the sorrow &amp; eJC pense. Purch es·
ing memorial propenv before
need is just good common sense
Call now for brochure Ohio
Valley Memo ry Gardens. Call

PLUS: OffiCI ltrAOiies &amp;
Furnituro, Wedding
and G1aduation
Stalion11y, Magnrtic
Signr, Rubb11 Stamps,

lusineu Forms,
Copy Services, Etc.
255 Mitt St., Middltport
104 Mufborry Av., Pomeroy

Home National
RACINE, OHIO
PH. 949·2210

Nov 5, 6, S. 7 9· 4 Di1he1,
radio s, TV . braekhJt 1811,
clothing S. much more.
Nov. 3 &amp; 4. 9·1 Many hems 64
Sycamore St. If ra1n , Nov. 6 81

7.

Centen ery

town

house·Wed .

Porch Sale, 714 Second Ave.
Tu es Nov. 4 &amp; Wed Nov. S.

Nov. 5 &amp; 6, lincoln Pike. second
bri ck on right, Crocheted items,
babv· tduh clothes More.

....... p....................... ..
omeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

....... .......... ······ ... ····· ...

Yard Sale Tue1dsy, Nov 4th
and Wec:lnftld ay, Nov. 6. 10 00
am .· ? 234 Mulbeny, Ave ..
Pomeroy
Yard sale 144 Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy Nov. 3· 7. Clothes
misc. furniture.
'

9

Wanted To Buy

We p av c e1h for tete model
clean used c ar1 .
...
Jim Mlnk Chev.·Okts Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson

610·446-36 72

TOP CASH paid for '83 mod el
and newer used cars Smith
Buick·Pontiac . 1911 Eastern
Ave . Gathpolis. Call 614· 446·
WANTED TO BUY used wood &amp;
coal heaters. SWAIN 'S FURNI TURE. 3rd. S. Oh ve St Gellipp·
li1. Cell614 -446-3159 .

.

10-60 • cres in Cheshire·Kygar
School Di1trict . Call 6,4· 367-

0298.

Buving daily gold, silver coins.
rings, jewelry. sterling wara, old
c:oif"!t. t arge currency Top pri·

ces Ed Burkett BaJber Shop.
2nd . Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614 ·
99 ? · 34761
Buying junk'c ers. Ca ll614 -992 ·
6648 afteJ 5' 00 p.m
Wanted to Buy It anding t1mber .
phone 304·676-4412 , 8:00·
6:00 PM after 6:00 PM 304 ·
675.3924 or 304~372 · 5192 .

The oldest and mo at relieble fur

hide and herb dallier in the Oh ~
Valley. Been i'1 bu sines sinoe
1936 In the same location

since 1956 We are rnterestect ln

all ~peices of wrld fur. Pre1ently
b~ymg beet and de er hid e~,

gtnseng , mayapple end yellow
root. Phon e 304-nJ.5296 or
come visit wit h u1 at 104 Brown
Street, Maso n. W V a Olaton
" Nick" Wrtght , Owner and

Operator

Emltluyment

Servrces.,..
11 Help Wanted

shot gun• .

Whut li1o1. Also buying Gin ·

Rainbow Ridge in
Chester Township.

lnslde·218 Thrrd Ave Former
Alli1on Etoc. Wed .. Thurt., &amp; Fri.

F actorv Choke , 12 gu age

312/ffn

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

•All Types of
Excavating
•Landscaping
•Basements
•Sewage Systems
•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Water Well Orilling
•Trucking

Northup Patriot Rd between
No nhup Bridge &amp; 775 Nov Jrd
thru 6th. 9 :30 ttl dark, lots of
everything, new handmades,
material lace. kits , craft boolcs,
dishes, temps, good clothet.
coats. quilt and tops

R acme Gun Shoot 1ponsored by

R acrne Gun Club . Every Sun·
day, beginning et 1:00 p.m .

Trapping supplies· Nite Utes,

110 acres on ,

Gar age Sale Bldweii ·Rodney
Rd Jrd house on nght off At. 36 .
Children' s clothes and a little of
everythtng. Tuet .. Wed and Fri.

6 14 ·448-3615 Me igs Count'l
Memory G erdens Ca ll 6, 4.
592· 6151

992-3345

Unimproved
Land For Sale

&amp; Vicinity

2282.

PAT HILL FORD

Real Estate General

·· .G.iillii&gt;olis ....... ..

Lallie Sale at 834 E Mam,
1
P~meroy November 3, 4 , 6
J,.::.-...:...----~~'1 N1ce clothes, stereos. tapet,
toys, fumituJe, etc .

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

F11

YardS ale

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

11 ·HJ ·88

Bank

,,

Free two trees to be cut for
firewood , 109 Vansickle Court.
Pornt Pleaunt

bedspreads, sewing machine.
winter Ctl ats, adult &amp; children
clothes, bikes, toys , etc.

lashan Building

IMMEDIAT~LY

Red tick coon dog 1 year old .

Call 304 ·773, 9122

Nov . S. 8:30 ·6 :00 Curtalna.

10/!l/ 16/ttn

POMEROY - RIVER VIEW c~te home . !hat looks good
Front ~ntn g porch 3 or mtire
bedrooms. neat k»chen and
large lw1ng room OWners wtll
sacrrtce al $19.900.00. .

'It*************'''**********************~
,.

~Sin. Pltltm -

6768

9-1

SALES &amp; SERVICE

62-\11 Nortllom lltvd., "'a aIt 'Ill,
NY 113n Print ttemo, Adifnu,

608

MIDDLEPORT - Fan!ast1c
home wtth a g1ganl~ lamtly
room. wilh a b€autrtuiltrepoce.
large livmg room 3 bedrooms.
21 baihs, lull basem ent, and
approx I' acre ol grllllnd.
MAKEOFFER$45.900 00

411/lfn

J: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Fllldo&lt; MliiJ 9 1

E. Ma1n
POMEROY,O.
992·2259
BEECH GROVE ROAD - Apptox 2 acres with a 3bedroom
It. ~ory home, Eq utpped
krtch en. outbu11dm&amp; d~1 n g
room and much me~e
$26,90000

Point Pleasant

•ZEN ITH
•SYLVANIA
iSPE!O QUEEN LAUNDRY

a:

10-21-86·1 mo.

PART. nME REGISTERED NURSE

.. _COMPtEIE ! LINE dr.' MEDICAL CARE EQUIPME.NT. ·

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AN 0 SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS fOR

Shop Techw1e1aa
., Dutt
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

... lorton, Owner

The Daily Sentinel

Cute cuddly ktttens . 304 ·676 ·

puppy Nocollar Call614-742 ·
2648.

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
CJ Corrc&gt;uterized Hearing Air Selection
Z Swim Molds - Inte111reting Services

PH. 992·9949

MlliAi*nSPaltlml,

304· 675·6781

•SATELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Have AFull Tit~~~

190 MULBEIIY AVE.
POMEIOY, OH.

$3.25 tor each pattern.
Add 75e each pattem for
postage, handling.
S4Nito:

One 11 ye ar old male Chihu • ·
hua. ont 3 V ~ lf pet rabbit

Found-eet o1 keys on Locust St.
by Wiseman Agency. Call 614 ·

Service

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

TRANSMISSIONS
54 Misc. Merchandise

1290.

•

'
REASONABLE
· REliABLE

Debbie Meadows- Owner; Imojean Blevins
loretta Holsinger, Shelly Ohlinger
Melissa Downing, Merri Ams

AUTOMATIC

NEEDED

•WE BILL ALL INSURANCE
• PURCHASE AND RENTALS

1011 Viand Street

'

Nice c ats, good hunters. Aho 3
cute yeJiow kittens . Call 896·

where jab out s of male black

6I 4-843-5248

271 N. 2nd,
992·5766
OPEN:Mon.·Fri. 8 am-9pm-Sat. 8·6
Walk-ins Welcome
EAR PIERCING, MANICURING, PERMS AND
ALL YOUR STYliNG NEEDS

.ll

4025-Ragtan sleeved
lt~ed sutt is so easy to
wear. Top stttching and
pockets add dash to
simple lines . Use wool.
Misses Sizes 10 to 22.

old Nttens. Cell

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Soles
Installation
Electronic Organs
'Mobile setvice

IJ

Real Estate General

•

•24 HOUR SERVICE:
•FREE DE LIVE RY

I mo.

co~ 111 y ~kl have rtlleiv-

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES ers appointad for the potac:COMMISStON OF OHIO' tion of the public. Public
·Thomas V. "!hem a, 1 hearings on these matters

I . I'.,.

J.R.'s REPAIRS

I

' Emergency 949-2516 ;

ICUT OUT fOI fUIUR! US!I

.
•
PJ1LEASANT
VALLEY'
HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

(MAC)

hearing• oh these m
be hold on Frld ay..

that tho fublic U1ilifios

Smith
SIXTH GRADE Nick AdHm.:; M~ th af'l
F.\ un.... EctdiC' H~rris Krnnv RI1C'r, K rist\'
RlzN Rnrhaf'l Rosr Barbl&lt;' Roush. ~l 1 a wn
WO\fC'
DH
fhr'lli. Hc1mm . Jam~ Pai':sons

P~OFFilT

RACINE, OHIO

further.
ORDER EO. That public

Notice is hereby givtll

IN LOVING MEIIORY OF
GEORGE McHAFFIE SR.
WHO WENT TO MEET
THE LORD
NOV. 1. 1982
I wi Ill ifl up mine eyes
unto the hills from
whence cometh my help.
My help cometh from
the lord which made
heaven and earth.
Daddy, I can almqst
see you as you put your
hand oul and our lord
and Master took hold of
it to help · you as you
crossed over the river
Jordan to go to your
heavenly home.
There's an empty
place in your home as
we go.to see the rest of
the family you left be·
hind. but someday we
will all meet again. But
until then, we will all
miss and love you very
much.
Sadly missed by Wife
Hazel; Children, Gr.tnd·
children and GteatGrandchildren

CAll 9'2·6505
992-5427 or

m~r.?nER!ee,,~ha~~n:O"'"
determine if R ac

Public Notice

2

'

starting at 10:00 am .. at

reserve&amp; the right to r&amp;Ject any
Blld all bids.
1101 26, Itt I 3, 2tc

LEGAL NOTICE

SOCIETY HAS BEAUTIFUL
KITTENS and CATS FOR
ADOPTION
. 55~ Adoption Foe
lntludes Wormed and First
tnnotulations
HALF COST'ot SPAY /
NEUTER at time of Adoptiod
Balance Paid monthly to
Humane Society

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

d av. November 21, 1988

Three 7 wk

614 -446·7100 '

old oragne 'rturle cat.
~----r-~~------~--~----~ 2Alsomonth
have 4 &amp;·month old cats,
some toms All orange. Call
•
IIIIGS CO. HUMANE .
614 -446· 1822.

SNAFUTM

noon . The District

12 ·00

. Kmgh1. Rlrhlf' Wams!Py
FOURTH GRADE. Erlr,t DuJ!;m . .J&lt;.~ ~on
Ervin., Scou Gmr('. KC'V in lhi·C ·. Travlo;

. '

MIDDLEPORT
Tomm y
Hawk , will presen t " How To
Walk In Love." in special ser vi·
ces at Rejoicing Life Baptist
Church, Middleport, Sunday 10
a.m and 7 p.m., and Monda y
through Wednesday at 7 p.m.

will

tNc:tc.

existmg utility: bed on the new

Honor Roll[..,___ _ _ __

·'

ness Church begins rev iva l Sun·
day. continuing through Nov. 9,
with eva nge lis t Rev. Arthur
Je nnings. Spelcal singing; servi·
ces 7 p.m

MIDDLEPORT - Middlepor t
Lodge :16:1 F&amp;AM will mee t
Tuesday, 7 :10 p.m., in regu lar
session. Officers for coming year
will be elected. Refres hments
be served. Ali members
asked to att end .

ton

atraight out purdlae· Bidder
will be roquireo;l to inotait'

~---------·~----------------··

n•

odist Wom en of Ches ter United
Methodis t Church are hav ing a
dinner and bazaar on Tuesday at
the church.
' ·

DANVILLE

1

Business Servlices .

PHONE
992-2156
Or WI D1illy Stniil!tl Cl11tilt1. Dtpl.
itt

PUBLIC NOTICE

Hill joined the wit miss protection program 6\o) years ago .and
says he has made $5(iJ,OOO - some from the government ,md
some from the publls Jn,er of "Wiseguy. "
GLIMPSES: Slgour 'liJey Weaver will have a four -week run in ,
Ne w York starting Dnc. 14, starring as Portia in "Merchant of
Venice." Her husbancl •, James Simpson, will direr! ... A former
Notre Dame basketb&lt;.all player is reported to be in line to
succeed the retiring rn:ev . Theooore Heshurgh as president of
the university. The U:ev. Edward A. "Monk" Malloy. 45, Is
.expected to be named at the Nov. 14 trustees meeting at the
Soyth Bend, Ind., cam.tpus. Malloy, at heologian who specializes
in ethics, is an associ. atte provoot at the school.

=p=ro=d=u=c=ti=on=s=.================1=9=8=l,=p=r=es=e=n=ts=a==di=·v=er=s=i!=ied==b=l=en=d===S=p=r=in=gs==,i=n=t=h=e=h=is=tor==y=c=a=te~go==ry=,===a=n=d=m~us=l~ca=l=h=is=t=o~rl:an~.=======

MONDAY
SYRACUSE - Syracuse First
Churc h of God is having a holiday
ba zaar Mo nd a~· and Tuesday at
Kroger. Gifts. ca nd ~ and other
lt~ms will be sold

....;....,.__.:..,.

Public hearings 00 these

lor his book "The Architecture of
1'm ford
Migration."
S{XTH GRADE Jrrrmy Dill. T·()rkl Gra{'(''.
-Hugh Nissenson, a native HNr lhr r Hill, .JuliC' Hill, Nikki l ftl f'. ChrLo:;H
New Yorker. in the fi ction Mal dm~ . Eddlf' S:1" ~ M's , Rust\ ~ ~ni th , Krrt
1
category for his book "The Tree Wh!Ja k('l , M(l!"an Wolfe.
'
of Life,' a novel of an Ohio
T!w fir !&lt;11 sLo,; .., ('('ks gT'crd In):! pl'r•10t1 hOnnr
pioneer during the War of 18~2.
roll al lhr Por1land Elr&gt;mr nlwv S1'hool hJ:-;
- Nancy Pelletier of Marietta , brofln announm l M akmg a grat!o 01 B 01
abovf' In c111 1m-h subj('t'l:-; to b.' n ~ rr wd Jot hr
in the fiction cate~ry for her roll
wrrC''
bOok "The Rearrangement."
SF.C'OND GRADE. G.1ry Cooprt. Emil y
Ohioan a Citations for dls tin· Duhl. Hlllrr:v Harris. Grr-g MeKin ri ('\ , A.rrn
. Jus! in Midd!f'!'wan Sarah W11llbrown
guished service to Ohio were Rlzt•r
TJ-D RD GRADE : C.J H.u r 1~ .. Woodv
&gt;
presentedtoDonDennis, palnter Richards Of'nl&lt;:(' Rou " h
FDURTH GRADE . Mu::hPik Harris. F.rlkH
and teacher who has exhibiting Nm·man
Da\'ld Pl ckm ~
paintings from New York to
Norway; Ellen Carter of Co lum- , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' ' - - - - - - - - - - - . . , .
Ill s, a teacher, organizer and
poet; FfrAkances f"Fhran " B. Mh"
~· ~·
phey o
ron. or er moret an
40 years as a reporter for the
Akron Beacon .Journal ; and an
\'WE SPECIALIZE IN CARING"
Ohloana Music Otatlon to Ellen
~l,i,~
Jane Lorenz Porter of Dayton , a
composer, publisher, teacher\

.Community calendar / ·area·: happenin[!,s .

-

The Daily Sentinel

Publjl: Notice

HrnsiPr .. lt'nni Hlll , Rvan Holhi'r . D.wid
.JustLo.;, Br ~mdl M &lt;~llory F rrddlr• M ;rfo.;on,
JPrrmy Norl hu p. Rushpl R0\4'1.' An~da

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio rU Pl i Cleveland nati ve Glen Tetley. a
reknown dancer and chorea·
grapher, has won this year's
Ohioana Career Meda l.
The award, gtven · by the·
Martha Kinney Coo per Ohioa na
Library Associat ion at Sat urday's Ohloa na Day, honored
Tetley for his "h igh ability as a
dancer ... unequaled power as a
choreograp he r ... your cons ta nt
s tr ivtng toward grea ter
perfect ton "
The award also ctted him for a
meritorious career that "has
added luster and distinction to
t h~ 1. ~e~itage of our stale and
.
na
Tetley. born in 1926, made his
debut as a choreograp her in 1962.
He has danced in New York City
Opera productions, and helped
stage and dance in many

-

up."

I

its way up to ttit&gt; nerve root s. wli&gt;re
It lives permanently.

Pomeroy- Middleport,

l I 1Ce~rl St , PGIIItiO,. OlliatS7&amp;9

DO YOU KNOW ME! ~: Rosanna Arquette is still frus tr.ated by ·
"Desperately Seeking: Susan." Arquette had top billing in the
movie but Madonna, ~~!, ho was making her. movie debut, ended
up with most of the ao:/clalm.
' 1
'Tm the girl in tht.~! Madonna movie," Arquette said in an
interview with the Nt! 1w York Dally News. "Madonna · was in
'Desperately Seeking ;;usan,' it made a lot of money an C:l that's
how I'm known. Peop:le qJme up to me all the time a.nd say,
'Aren't you the girl in : the Madonna movie?' You know, I ~en
won an award in E:mgland for that perlbrmance and the
category was best sup porting actress!"
Arquette's appeara1~ce on "Saturday Night Live" Oct. ~!5also
was upstaged .by the !llxth game of the World Series we!lt into
extra Innings. Instead! of being on live. the taped version of'the
show will be aired lat.t,r.
"I can't go lntb part t·culars but J.will say I did somethhitng on
that show I've never t!'one before, 1• she said:
ONCE A WISEGUY ... : What'st hedlfferencebetweenbeinga
Mafia underling and p•:,art of th'e federal witness· protection? "I
can go to sleep at nigh l',t without worrying about getting~ .c all in
the middle of the night, that I might have togo bury a body," says
Henry HIII.
Hill, the subject of Nicholas Pileggi's best-selling bOok
"Wiseguy,'' was part •CJf the $5.8 million Lufthansa heist lri New
York in 1978 and wa s s ;,pi:wsed to have receiv ed a $500.000 "hare
but ended up with only t about $30,000. He decided not to pre!l s his
case when other members of the·cr ew started dropping.
"They wound up lcilling all the players who were in th e
scheme and a couple o·f women, " he said in an in terview wi.th a
New York television !:tation. "They got like savage animals.
They w~nt nuts with t lntat much money and didq't want to give It

Herpes: help, but no cure

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
AS'iistant Proles.'iOr
of Fa mily Medicine
Ohio University Collegt&gt;
of Osteopathic Medicine
Question: Mv brothe r recr nliv
discovered- he ·has tx&gt;rpes. Wtuit
exacliy is h('rpes and how co ntagious ts if ?
An•wer: Herpes is an infection
ca used bv the herpes simplex \i rus.
'!'he re are two va rielles of this \1rus
- one causes co ld ron&gt;s or fever
blisters around ttx&gt; mouth. while til&gt;
ot tx&gt;r resull s in ttx&gt; sa mPsy mpt oms
on the genit al, ,
Herpes i' vrry eonlagious and is
passed on b.v ha1· in g rlosr contact
wtth soll'lf'onr who has an active

Monday, November 3. 1986

~iLLIAM TRoTt

By
c.
.
Unll t&gt;d Press International
LOVELACE NEED:lO HELP: linda Lovelace, the porn queen
turned anti-porn crut/; ader, says she is dying and nreds
donati9ns to help pay ~.1 1er medical bUis . The "Deep Throat" star,
says she faces a life-thrieateningliver Illness and breast dlseas.e.
"It's Iough to have 'lp ask for help," Lovelace said from her
Long Island home. "I like to do .th ings for people and it feels
awkward to be the omi: asklng."
Lovelace, now J)larr ied to a plaster worker and the mother of
two, said she suspecls.t her liver disease may have been caus~d
by the breast-enla,rgin h silicone injections she had 15 y,•ars ago
or by a bad blood tran/sfuslon in 1970.
Lovelace ortglnalljil had planned to undergo a ·double
mastectomy for the bi·ea st problems that she also lin~s to the
silicone. She said shi' will die if she ooes not have a Uver
transplant within' four ' to eight montlls.
'
"!don't want tocjle,'' she said. "I want to raise my children. I
want to see my grandclhildren." Lovelace says she needs abcut

Delta ,Kappa Gamma members
take examination at meeting
Members of the Alpha Omi ·
cron Chapt er of Delta Kappa
Gamma took a lest taken from
the Genera I Eduealion Examina tion fo r Teacher s when they met
at Christ United Method isl
Church. Jackso n, recently.
The test includ ed questons on
written Englis h expression, sent·
ence correc tion. humanities, li
terature. fine arts, science and
mathematics. and ma rh
Nan cy Kible r gave the invocation for the dinner served bu the
women of lhe church Decora-

--!·

seng. George Buckley. 614 ·
&amp;84· 4761 Mrt1. 2 -9 p.m . Mon ·

Sat. Closed Sunday.
Need 100 overweight people to
try new Merbal Weight Control
Program No drug s. m exercise

Call614 ·99 2·5007 .
Toy store open 32 4 E. Main St
Behind Cit y H all. Open 10 -4.
Man through Frl
or treap assing ,
located Chestnut

Coli:

• Hay 6 Coal.

\

aECTRONits APPRENTICE
Entr'l level position avarllble
Fully p aid training provided t~
h1gh IChool Qrld , -ue 17-30 in

epod health. Will reloc ate IUC ·
applicant at our eJC·
penu. Call 1· 800· 28 2-,384
Monday· Thursday, 9em .2pm.'
oeasful

•II

M ake Christmas IT"()ntv,
Make 45 percent Call

Avon

61 4· 446 ·3358 .

.

E~thu ri astio - en ergetlc person

w1th go od co mmunu:at lo ns
skills. Position avail abl e to -work
for Southelltern Oh io 's fintlt

w tdoorrecreadon firm, No ••P
neceuary. wrll train. st.n im :
mediately. Call betwMn 10&amp; 4
~;J . &amp; Tues. Cal &amp;14 · 211 ~

•

�Page 10-The Daily Sentinel
11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Help Wanted

LAFF-A-DAY

Part lime AN po11t10n ovoooo•-.r
ble Apply at Scenic
Nurllng Center Monday Fr.k hy, lAM 4PM

....

Regency Inc 2 bdr , ~rtchen
nice. good locatton, reaaona·
bit Call 304-875-5104 or
304-175-7437.

'

N"d babylitter1nmy horre, Rio
Grandi dly &amp; evenll'lg Pay

negotiable . Call 614-246
!il211

Duple• for rtnt 146 Sacond
AVI • Gall !polls 3 bdr hvin·
groom, dinlngroom. new kit·
chen, b adlyard. refrtg. &amp; range
t285 plus utlliti• &amp; Hcurtty
dapolit Call 614-....,6-0890

W .,ttd -P an 11mt adm1n1str at•ve at111tant Mutt type 60
WPM accurately Good verbal
skills I. wntten oorrmuntc at•on
skills requ.red Good flUng shills
reqUired , Must be able to work

Nrctly fumiS~I!Id mobile holM
CA &amp; heat. excel. loCittOn r
ftlults onty. Call 614-448 0338

well under pressure Knowledge
of shorthand. OO"l'Uters, &amp;
word proces10rs benef1ct al
shar~ng
po 11h0n Hours are

6t3'h 3rd Ave 1 bdr private
bat h. t 140 per mo. Dept?sit
required Call 814-446-4222
between 9 &amp; 6

S am 4 30pm every Monday &amp;

Tuel dly &amp; every other Wednes day Send resume to SEOEMS
Rt 4 Box 144 Galhpolts, OH
46631 by Nov 10th

Furnrshed apt. *235 UtllitteS
paid ,1 BR. 920 4th Galhpohs.
448-4411 eft!r 7pm

S alespeople-Full Of part 11me to
sell ~emetery &amp; IT'!8rch

Call

614 446-3615 or 614 692
61 51
3000 Go11ern ment Jobs ltst

R 9806
Need women who are lookrng
forward to Chflstmas Help put
the grfls under th e tree by h avrng
a Fnendty Home Party at home
1

0

""""
dloosetrom• Getvou"
ftetl from your party Cell your

Fnendly Horne deaktr now and
book a party M agnoh a N1b
614 992 3561 or 614 992
6654 or 614 -992 -5729
- - - - -Sab2 fclas71
Man to work 11 retail store
Mu st be lttle to meet pubhc and

mech ante ally 1n cltned Send
resume to The Da1ly Sentinel
Box 729 R Pomeroy Oh•o
Awon Open temtor•es In•
ava1lab le 304 675 1429
Help Wanted
Phone Sales
Hourly wag e evenngs 304·
~ 5 3398 Ask for Marv

18

Wanted to Do

Sept1cTank Purrpmg Cammer·
cut &amp; resident• al 2 trucks for
prO!l111 serVIC8 $80 per t 500
gal 1o ad RON EVANS ENTER
PRISES Jackson, Oh Call
colleet 614 286-5930

t;;::;;~:;;:::::;;;;~:;:::-r.;;;:~;;;~;:;;;:;~~
32 Mobile Homes
41 Houses for ' Rent
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 Ml
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. AT 36
PHONE 614-446-7274
1 976 14x 70 GeHysburg, 2 bdr ,
2 full baths porch &amp; awning, 2
AC ·s, all elec . exc cond Best
offer Call 6 14 256 6520 or
614-256-6502

w.u

do house d eanmg 5 days
week 304 675 7298

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

NOTICE I
Tt£ OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends that you
do busmen wnh people you
know. and NOT 10 send money
throu~ them atl until you have
•nvest'{Jatlld the offer1ng
I

1 2x65 Vrnd ale 12x6up ando, 2
decks. wtth awnrng , central e1r,
underp1nn1ng. woodburner, dtl
hwasher $7 500 Call 614·
256-1508

2 bdr fully furn1!ihed adults

Real Estate
Homes for Sale

3 bdr , air, poo l.
Commercral
loti P.r hrghw •:,, ~~·;;:g:~~~~!
Withua Weh~1

oroo•":v:

3 bdr t bath new carpet&amp;
I
paper out11de newty p a1nted.
part furn ished good lo c a1ton &amp;
ne~ghborhood 566 J IV Or Call
614 -446-1683
S mall 2 bedroom house 5 mtles
south of Gallipolis on Kr.nat
Ridge Road, frrst house f'om At
218 Priced to go. Call 614
446 ·2917.
6 roomhou1e. 1 2 acras Double
c ar g srage Located on Rose
Hit! Bargain pnced t20,000
Call 614· 678 -2613

380 Grant St . Middleport 6
,ooms bath, garage. wor~
shop good loc at1on. n.~ce tot
Call 614 992 -2802
In H amsonvllle 1'h story 3
bedrooms, bath gas heat,
Clflll ' r garagl large outburld·
ing JA acra tt4 ,500 Owner
f1nanctng possible Call 814·
992-5164
2 br, ~rt t hen , bathroom. w•th
1aundry room living room &amp;
dmmg room, all alec Approx 7
miles from Pt PI on Rt 62 2
tr sets approx. t ICNJ more Of'
leu overlook ing K an awh e
Rwer 840.000. Call 304-675
6440 between 8 30 and 4 30.
Log home 3· 4 br. all elec fullv
c arpeted. finished b uement
Ambt'o sl a 7 m1le1 from Pt PI
on Rt &amp;2 City Wlter, paved
driveway &amp; 1eptlc ttnlt, aitu
1ted on % acre. owtrlook•ng
K an .wh a River 810,000 Call
304-675 5440 betwten 8 30
and 4 30
2403 Mt Vernon Ave new
house nception al qu ahty
24031h two untl apt burlding,
111.c cond good rncom, produc
1ng iUI14 Lincoln Ave lxc con d.
enetgy afflclent 304-876·4580
or 875 ·1962
3 bedrOom houM, fireplace, 1
acre lot wid ace apt tr ade-ln 9
rmles Jro m Point Pleaunt.
304-675-3073
3 bedrooms, 1'h b etha, formal
dining. rec room, 2 c If g 1r age
c an walk to town 304·875·
4804

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1974 Hollyporlt. 100•100 lot.
chain link fence . Plymale Road.
G alii polls Ferry. 304 · 675 ·
2028
For ule 1972 12111~0 Arlington
homa ru,nilhld. underpenning I 11110 out·bullcUng.
304-815-7310

rnobl~

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park
Route 33, North of Pomeroy
Large lots. Ce11814 992 7479

2 bdr mob1le home near HMC
no pet!i, $165 water mcluded.
S100 depa11t Call 814--i48
3617

1978 Governor Tra1ler 12~t66
for sale 2 bedroom, full bath.
hv1ng room, d1nrng room and
k1tchen comtuned, l"'!ft~ger.tor,
stove and microw eve oven
Underp1nning Front and bee~
porches Call 614-742 3075
after 5 00 p m or contact John
Ash

Tra1lor for rent m county No
pets Call 6t4 441 · 8318 or
B &amp; R Mob1le Home Movers, 614 -446-9204
rn!iured. reasonable rates , calll -,-,--------,.--,---,.-304-6.75· 651 2 or 876-2485
t011SO 2 bedroom mobile home,
near Racrne Call 6t4-992·
14x70 Commumty trarler, com· 6858 Avarlable Nov 2
pletely furnrshad With water
bed , arr cond, underpenning, 2 mob•la homes for rent 2 and 3
porches Everyttung goes 304· bedroom Fuml!ihed S186 and
773-5945
8210 month plus utillt1n and
dtpo111 614·992 7479 or 614·
992 3638
Farms for Sale

1 bedroom Duple11. trailer for
rent •t25 per month for one
and *140 for other Partly
furnished You pay utilities,
owner peys water end sewage
Cell 614-992-2394

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

Takmg applications on e•,ra
cleen 3 bedroom, total elec,
70~t14 mobile home, secunty
depo11t requtred, 8300 00 304·
675-3002 .

I::--:----:--:-----:---::

Taking epplicettons on four. 2
bedroom mobile homes
$110 00 per month plu1 gas
t200 00 deposit , 304-675·

3002

Two bedroom, all fumi1had
mob1le home, 10 mil• South
Point Pleasant St Rt 2, half·
41 Houses for Rent way
between Goodyear and
Stauffer pl~~nla, 1v elleble Nov
2 bdr house with garage 1 Hud approved Air cond. ge1
carpeted curtam1. drshw uher turn ace, City Wlltr, nrce lave!
a refng Near new city pool lot, 304 •678 2132 or 578 ·
105 Kin eon Or Rent 8300 mo 2083
dep 8t lease raqutred Can
614 446·4347
For rent 1Ox50 tr aller. 860 00
deposit t135 OOmonth Wiler
5 room houte, good locatiOn &amp; tr11h pickup lnc1uded 304·
S225 mo pluuecurltydep Call 676-2247.
614 448-8657
Two bedroom mobtlfl horne
For rent Of w1ll1ent w1th optron located Burdena Addn, Point
to buy 3 bdr 2 bath, fam1ly rm, Pleasant. W V1 304 676
2 c er g arage City school I 3334
Deposn required C111614-4464348

I-::--:-:--:----:-:-- -

3 bdr bath &amp; Y2 family room
located 3Y2 ml out At 588
1325 mo plus deposit Call
614· 256-8789 or 614 -266
6205

44

Apartment
for Rent

couple, apphcat10111 taken now
Call 6t4 ·446-1759
2· 3 b&amp;clroom house m Pomeroy
Unfurnished. Sug If Run area.
close to tchool, ll'lfY met Pay
own utrhtres and deposit re·
quired Day 614·992 -2381 or
614 -992 2720

3 4 bedroom houl8 1n Pomeroy.
fully turntthed , w·d , m)cro·
wave. newly ramodeled tee:
room P IY own utllht•, depo11t
requ1red Call d •v• 8t4·992·
2381 or 814·992 2720.
Be autlful 3 bedroom houH In
Syracuse Oepoalt and referen·
Cfll required Call 614·882·
6298 9·5 , Monday through
Saturd1y

3 bedroom home in Chuter
Prlfar retired couple No chlkl·
ren $200 per month plus
utthttfl and depot~t Call a14
9U-4300

49

Unfurn11had 1p artmen1 4
rooms • beth, centrally lo·
cated Ref &amp; see depotit
requtred Call 614 448 0444

Very nice large 5 room unfurnished apn f1rst floor. ref St
dep requrntd U215 mo pius
utilities Call 8t4·«6· 4425 or
614-448-1819

Neat 4 rvom. blth home in
Middleport, aH ached g area•
Carpeted. stove and ratr'gtrl·
torprovrded Justnghtfon1ngte
or workrng coupl1 •17&amp; month
plus security Qepotlt Phone
514-992-5292
,
3 bedroom housa in Henderson,
304-875· 7448

w v0

3 room furnished apt. 2 bdr
houte, no pets . Call 304-1175
2453
S room house, will Nnt with
optton to buy Owner Ftn ance
304-678· 1090
Ideal fo, oouplt, 2 bdr , full
banment. t175 mo , pay own
u11ht1n Dep • ref. required. No
plls. 3218 Howard Ave CaH
304-878-6621
Two bectroom houM. 304-875·
5753

Household Goods

County Appliance, Inc. Good
UJ.t appliances and TV Mil
Open 8AM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat 814 446 1699 , 627 3rd
Ave Galhpoht, OH
Y alley Furniture,

new &amp; used

Large sactron of qu ehty fum!·
ture 1216 Eutern 4ve ,
Gallipolis
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sot •• and chairs prtc.d from
t395 to t995 Teblet t60 and
up to 1125 Hide-a -bech 8390
to t595 , Recllnlf'l t225 to
•376 Lampt 128 to S126
Dinat1es t109 and up to 8496
Wood table w -6 chant t285 to
•796 o"t •roo up., S37&amp;
Hutchn t400 and up Bunk
beds compMitl w· m .nressn
1296 and ~ _, t39&amp; Baby
beds tt10 &amp; 1176 Mettrea'"
or box IPrtngs full or twrn tel
firm 113. and 183 Queen
*226, King *350 . 4 drawer
chHt 165 Or"'"' 889 Gun
c•binets8. 10 &amp; 12oun. Gasor
electric range 13715 B ebv mat·
triiMI 835 &amp; 145 Bed fr am•
•20. 130 &amp; King fnme S50
Good selection of bedmom
1tH, metal cablr'letl, he ad
1rd1 t ,30 end•up 1to t65
Uted Fumiture• W uher &amp;
drysr, electric range, gas
r~nge wood table &amp; 2
t.nd'ln, beds, drQ•er &amp;
recltntf 3 m1lea out Bulavme
Ad Open tAM to 6PM, Mon
tftN Sot. 814 445 0322
GOOD USEO APPLIANCES
W eahert, dryer~ , "'big er I tors
r .,..ges Skaggs Appllanoes,
Upper RNer Rd betide Stone
Crnt Motel 814·441· 7398
Goodulld colored TV 's fora ale
Coli 614 ·446 -1149

Ap anments for rant m Pomeroy
One and two bedrooms C 111
514-992·6215

Washer tnd dryer. t160
Fr"zar •too Gas clothn
dryer, 1125 Wa1he,, $86. Call
614-742-2352

2 bedroom, htm11hed apart·
ment for rant Adults only Cell
614-992-2749

Plckena Used Furniture Good
quality used fumrture Open 9to
8 o' cell for ..-o.ntment
304·675-6483 or 675-1450.

Clean. roomy 2 bedroom apart·
ments New Hawen. W Ve Cat!
lt4-992 -7481 A.IIO commer·
clalsp ace

231ndl Zenith color TV oontole,
needs WDrk, tt 00 00 0 8 0
304·875·8&amp;04

I -- - ------.,.--

2 bedroom partly furnl1hed
ap anment ott Spring Aw
Pomeroy, Ohro largepttlo '"d
yard Call 514 992-8881 after
e .OOpm

E~tctlltnt Chrlstm 11 Gift ,
" lh trp " C lrOUI II, mt COr •
w lYe, 1 cu f1 with cookbook,
er5o oo 3114-67&amp;· 1145

1 bedroom furnr~hed apt k'l
Middleport All utHitiel paid
C•li614 992-5084

UHd Cl..,lllng, appro It 18x12
Bluo 304· n3-M40

APARTMENTS mobile homoo,
hou'" Pt P!uunt •ndG•Hi·
polls 114-446-8221

54 MiiC . Merchandise
_____ ..._____

I :------,...---:3 room apt Adults
304-875·1090

Only

Small cottage, ~etly fur·
ntohod. e115 00 ront, e100.00
deposit. plus utllitietl 304·173·
5944 Reference~ r.~ulfed
'

1

Five bags ger,ge ule 1tems
t11 00 Famous name brand
tkln care oosmatlcs lkauid ation
. .,., 304·17&amp;-2341
Atgh ens for • •· IM at 20 23
Jefferson Avenue. Point
Pleasant

\

J;

Nice Gibson ..trig • couch &amp;
chair, ch11drtn' 1 maple btd·
room 1u1t, full bed. chest. lamp
8t coffeetl!lbles Call614-448·
3224
Fr anlthn turn ace wood bumtr
wtth grate Good cond t&amp;O ,
Coli814·446-3217 after 6 30

Mrxed hardwood IIMI t12
per bundle Contai"ena approa.
1"h tons FOB Ohio Pellet Co
Pomeroy, Ohio C1M 814-882·
6461

A"C blonde poodle pups
Champion lined Wormed a
tailed $126 each Call 614·
446-7372
SchniiUzer-Min . male, AKC
bl eck &amp; ttlv., 18 wb E ar
cropped,
Call 814-441 ·
2817 after &amp;PM

.
'

Auto Parts~

&amp; Accessort~s

1I I I I
2

(j})

I
It-r-1r-1..-1~,1 1
BRIO~

~G.;.,.A. ;.;~_,.;Y-'0,. - 1,. ,: :,:

. 1~ I I I .
t-1

P AR R E D

Ausulaliln Blue Httltr. lost
around O.J . 'Nhlte Ad. Offering
reward C1ll 614·446·7596 or
814-446-9786 .

57

Musical
Instruments

Prtno for ule. "W .,ledf"
Ruponlible party to
smal monthly payments, on
modem style conaote pi eno.
M IY be IHn IDcely PluM
call Manager 1·800· &amp;23·
2890 .

••me

Low_,. Donie Orgon 1300 Col
614·388-9306 ,
Hondo Ouitar, •17&amp;. Rocll:m en
X 100, e175 Ood FX·1U otereo
Hanger, teo. Dod FXII Amerl·
cen mltal distortion, til . Call
614-992-7231
Prlcoo
negotiable

58

Fruit

&amp;

Frrewood for sale. 135 per 1o ad
or 5 loads tor &amp;1&amp;0 Oelhte.-.d
and stacked Cell 114·949·
2801 lftor 5·00

Rough Lumber 0 ak end poplar
t126 00 to 1150 00 ""'1 ,000.
11eorted l~ngth sea10nld wal·
nut Can deliver 304·175·
4412, 8 am to IS p.m. Can IH
Wal~ers Wrecker, Henderton,
WV, Rt 36,

Vegetables

APPLES, plonty ....... lwgo

•n. aH vertety, •• fruhi end
produce Jacks Market, Rt. 35.
Htnderton .

I '"'' ~1111111'''
&lt;';I til 'I111J

--:-::::-:- -le-

Childs 4x4 battery operated
truck, 16 inch boys bicyele,
aewtng m achlne. truck teft'41er,
Coil 814 986-3931 or 614986-3839 .

Baby Holsteln. helfer calves AI
bred Call 614·388·8624 no
a.nday calls.

61

Farm Equipment

CROSS 1!o SONS
U 8. 35 -1. J.,.oon, Ohio.
814-2116·MI1
M ....., Fervu•n, New Hoi
l•d. Bush Hog S ..... Service.
Ovtr 40 &amp;aed trectorsto choo•
from &amp; ODntJieteline of new a
used equ.l'l'llftt Larveat ....c:.
bon InS £. Ohio.
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER SR 31 W OolllpoOo,
Ohio. CoU 614-441-1777. ovl
114-448 3592 Up front trac·
tors with warrenty over40 used
tractors, t 000 tool•
Bidwell Caah Fe«&lt; Store Spe·
elats thru Nov Wild !Mrd uad 8t
211% Super Sport dog food
Along whh all drtln t*l Call
lor prleao 1t 614· 388-8888 .

Autos for Sale

1918 Llncon Towncar, li~entw".
fuly eqUipped, 4 door, 51 ,00
rNies, new lir81 Call 814-446·
7804
51 lnternatinalpic:kupleesthen
1.000 mllu on motor 1,200 or
boot ottar. Coli 814-398 -9922 .
cal anytime
19715 AMC Hornet Sport about
AC, PS. 4 way AM -FM, Ex
cond 1900 Call 614·4463487
1884 Pontiac Trent AM ex
cond , lowmil•age.lo aded with
options ca• 614-448-01188
1912 2 dr. Ford Oren ad a, auto
al,, newexhault U198. Johns
Auto S alii BulaYIIIe Ad
Galhpolis
14 Monte C erio SS mth perform•otpackage Specra!Good·
ric::h tir• on Rally wheels
Mechum blue, ctoth rnterlor
Z),000 m11.. . $7800 Call
114-446-1822

11978 Olds Delta 88 , Wrlltrlde
for nrce 14 1-P or
riding
I awn mower Call 14·44117&amp;8 .

1111'

1982
Ford Mustang.
Autoellicel·
• PS,
P&amp;. T-Top,
bucket •att.
tent condnlon t3800 614a 7-3421
1986 Monte Carlo SS. black.
23,000 rriles Call 814·992·
6421 ,
'83 T-lird PS . PB. AC, reer
dltagger One owner CaH814 ·
1182·3703.
1978 Monarch Very good
condhion t1200 Call 614·
742· 3033
19n Dodge A!pan

PS . PB

318 .,gins, auto, t450 614

John Deere oo .,..In• with com
._ad and grtln pl1tform
euoo 304-461-10110.

'fi1 Mercury COugar, v.e, auto,
PS. PI, rodlo , .aoo 00 firm.
304-675·4216

For tale 2 mm gr.vitytMcts. one
1974 Super •••• Votk•••·
.-n Ont 2 row complcker.
304-678-3308 .

Thr• 235·70R11 Genertal
RWI. tlroo e110 00 1874 Oldo
Cutl111 304-87&amp;-29115 work·
d •vs after 5 00 PM

lntarn atlon al 12&amp;0 Grindtr
Mixar, axceUant condhkJn, 304273·4215

'74 Vogo noo 00 304 ·882·
21144

62

cruloe, high milo oge, n 200

1878 Ford LTD

by Quality

animal
estimates
5762

Wanted to

Buy

Now buying shell com or ear

56

com. CaM for latelt QUOtfll,
Pete for Sale

A.KC Rtgltterad male Shthie;
Registered maleCOctler&amp;p enlel
pup, Mlnlarura Schnauzer pups.
Calll14·992·2107,

Awar City Farm Suppty, 614·
441 298&amp;

W tnttd To Buy. CCC Oanwlc
Cortfflc•t• Ph. 3114-1175-1807
evwri'!ga

Cuddloy Toddy Bearo MC I ~=--,U;;.:--=::-::-k;:-rog,.torod Chow Chow pu'"'leo. 83
VeatOC
Reidy to go ho.,.. Nov. 11 . red
M'ld blacll . ne blood 1inn,
PIYt'!~l plan anllllble The
llovlotorod Anti" I buill. Aocltlng
'*'~' Chrlatm • gift 304- G ~ ench 11 oHitlng two out676-1799 oltor 5 30 PM
If and~g young bule for 1111
One Is 11 mont._ end lhe
AKC Silver Min11Ure Poodle for MCOnd Is 11 month• oW. loth
Stud Service~ , phone 304-773· bulls h IYI Net lin and ar• et
9197
pot.. tiel .. herd bulls. C ••
614-742-31133
SPECIAL NOTICE I Do you .,joy
thopp lng at PET STOR ES7 How U\restock 20 he eel cro •· brad
about H088Y SHOPS?' Our IIOdl cowe, vat ahtoltld for
brand ntw mall ord• c ate log it • arlv c atv• end II tal. V ecci·
rtadyt The catalog It FAEE ··IO
n tliDnt 304-273-2141 lfttr
11 the phone caM to requllt ~our 8.00PM
eopyll CALL TODAY 1·1110·
345· 1826 Oreenbriw Pe1 &amp; Sm•l pony, gentte, wNI fo el
Hobby Supply, Ltwisburg, W
~no1167 , uao.oo 304-175 -

Vo ,

GBI.

(!)NFL Films
fJl (!I Too Close lor Com·
fort
llJ CIJ Judge
ill Flpe Romance
® Wheel of Fortuna
OJ (j}) il1l Jeopardy
@Benson
7:35 ([) The Honeymooners
8 :00 0 IIl (jJ) A,L.F. In Stereo
(]) Father Murphy
(!) Magic Years 1n Sports
CIJ CJ CIJ MacGyvor (80

8646.

""ell

8 I

Game

1984 hcort ex cond, red, air
new radials. auto. •4. 210 Call
Dons l.,dtcapmg 814-441-

".,.'*

Concrete block I all til" yard or
delivery Mal&amp;onsand GelhpoHs
8tock Co , 123Va Pine St •
Gall1p0Ns. Ohio Call 814-446 2]83

ET v1s1ts actor Mel Gibson

Transporto tiun

Special 1973-80 Chevy truck
front fenders t34 96. doors
t89 . bed1N111 •n5, chrome
grill 139. 1981-81 Chevy front
landers e49 , hood 499, 1973·
79 Ford truck front fender~ t36.
1980-88 Ford truck tenders
t49 . We have 1 huge inventory
of domettic 8t forergn replacemMt body parts Conoco anti·
frMze 12 75 gelon C 6 M Auto
Parts. 5'.1 m1les N of Holzer
Hospital on A, 180 C1ll
814-448-8227

A~condhlonar.

1971 ClldiiiC c ... p DaVIII,
new tr ••mission loth good
condition. eeoo 304 6761721
1982 BuldtContury, 2door, PS,
PI, auto., 1ir, AM-FM, U500
304-675·3401

72

Trucka for Sale

77

Auto Rep air

1814 Dodge Cuev1n,
.7 •• 0 .00 304-675-3100 6t
875·114108.

~AFFIC

Ll&lt;SHi
:r.'vt: Evep.- ·
.......;.·
· .5'EEI'J •I
...........
· ··:~

'

Dream' Part 1 of 2.

ill MacNell-~ohror Nawllt·
our
®Ill (j}) Kate &amp; Allie (CCI
Allie must have a woman·
to-woman talk with Jennie
after she realizes that her
r,rat1onsh1p
daugh1er's
wi1h her boyfnend IS growing more serious
(j] Wondarworka: Bridge
to Tarablthia (CC) Two
eleven-year-olds form a

ALLEY OOP

Home
Improvements

,, •

;

'

BASEMENT -"'
WATERPROOFINq;
Uncondrt•onalllfetime g\4;aran·
tM Loc•l reflt'encesfurt)llslled
FrN est1m1111 Call eollect
1·614-237-0488, day 0n:nrght
Rogers Basefl\ant
W eterproofrng
:·

spectal friendshtp 1n a rural
!arming communtrv. (60
mm.l In Stereo.
@MOVIE: 'Bordarline'
8:05 CD MOVIE: 'The Priaoner of
Zenda'
8:30 II IIl (jJ) Amazing Storiaa
A harried wile and mother
contends wtth a g1antlurry
creature that wreaks havoc

Dogwood, Blue Spruce St12 50
Trees. nurrcn &amp; leave• re
moved, mulch, f1ll dirt, firewood ,
coal Don' t Landscapll,• 614441-9148
,
RON'S Teltv1110n i•rvice
Housa ca ll a on RCA. Ouaut.
QE Spectating in Zenhh Call
304-576· 2398 or 814 -446·
2464.

tn her orderly home. In
Srerao.
(!) Zenith NFL Monday
Night Mlltch-Up
® OJ (j}) My Slstllr Sam
(CCI Patti struggles to mea·
sure up to Sam when Sam

"

."'. EEK &amp; MEEK
. ,,,.

Fetty Tree Trimming. 1nump

••

i ·~~~~c:·~·~30~4~-~67~6~·1'~33~r~

RINGLES'S SERVICE .' ••P•·
rltnced carpwrter. electrtclan.
mason. parnter, rooftng Clnclud·
lng hot tar appllcatronl 304
675-2088 or 676-7147

lands a nat1onal magazme

cover photo
9:00 IJIIJ (i)) MOVIE: "Rage of
Alllltlo: The Story C&lt;intlnuaa' (CC) Part 2 of 2, In

'

Stereo

(]) 700 Club

Star~•

Tr" and Lawn ~ervice ,
Hedges . shrubs , bushes
trrmmed , landscaping and
ttu~ removal Leaf removal
304-676-2010 or 676-2842
Rotary or cable tool ~rilhng
Most wellt complltld 1 same
dey Pu,.., ul" and tervice
304-886-3802
,
Ashby Constructton,' -carpentery, remodeling, room .cftdltlon
cemenl block worlc, rtloflng,
Interior end exte"rtor peln1lng
old"'\· Roo~ Frea estimate•
304· 71 544 or I 7 ~ -&amp; 152
,
·

B2

Plumbing
8t H a ating •'

•

B3

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

HOW TALL
AREYaJ ,

! 'M NOT'

WE"LL,HOW

OH 1 ABQJT

T.ALL, IM

SHORT

AV6RAGE .

SHORT.

AREYOO'f

WINTHROP~

r

LOVE:

ITWHEN HE
~T5ALL PLJRPLE IN
THE ~CC UKE THAT.

1

"

'

•.

'

.'
..,

BARNEY

MAW!! WHAT'S
TATER MAKIN' THAT
UGLY FACE FER?

Genor al Hauling

'

.

Dillard's Water Dehver-v C1st
erna, POOl &amp; well An~'tle but
Sunday, 61 4·446-7404,
W atterson 't Water Hauhng
rea son able rates immedr ate
2 000 gallon delivery , ci,l terns
pools, well etc cell 30f·576
2919

Coal and l1me11one delivery
phona 304-e75·3190 "

A' &amp; M Custom Couchn and
Aeupholstery, St. At 7 , 1 Cro~n
City, Oh 814· 266-1470, Eve
81 .. ·448 -3438 Open dltly 8to
6,Sat 930to1 30 Otd,new
Ut:~hosterld

Mowrey' 1 Upholstering servmg
tri county ~rea 21 ye .,, The
belt In fumltuN uphols~rmg
c.rr 304 ·876 -4154 for lree
..11m••••

knowledge

" examined. (80 min I
® OJ (j}) Newhart (CC)
Srephanie
attempts to
make Michael jealous at
the station's annrveraary
perty after he leaves her for
another woman Part 2 of

2

Exc av at in!!

Coal. limestone, grave! etc
Dehvered 1 ton end up Jrm
Lamer, 304-675-1247 tit 675
7397
.

standardizing

•,

Good- 1 Exc av ulng, b.eu
menta, footen, drrvew aya, sep
tic tanks landsc aptng Call
anytime 81•·446-4537. J ames
l . DIVIton, Jr owner

85

(!I Skata America 1988:
Wamon"a Competition (60
min I
C1J Cl ill NFL Football: Loa
Angalaa Rema at Chicago
8eara (CC) (3 hrs I
ill Day the Universe
Changed: A Peraonel View
by Jamaa Burke (CCI The
invention of the Gutanburg
press and how 1t revolu·
110mzed the merhods of

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

1(1

. ~·
'·'"
'•
. ,,
,_,

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING · ~ ~
Cor Fourth and Pin'
G alllpolit, Ohro
Phona 814·446·3888 ol 814·
448·4471

1. .5 Chavy S -10 plck·up.
3),000 niles 1 owner. C 111
114-1112-11421 •

•rp.

.

mm)
fJl (!I MOVIE: 'Hold Tho

~

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec Ave , G lthpolrs
814 448· 7833 or 814 446
1833

8~
1 OW"ner conwrak&gt;n van
1914 Chevrolet 21.000 mu ..
Col 814-1182-6421

\

'lv

Se rvu: us
81

GREEN . .i'tiAT~
THf- WO~ST"

"'~·

Front O'isc Br Ike Seritce for
molt can, t66 99 lnaUII new
disc p ada tumid end true rotors,
repack bearing• . .,.~ cahp·
era, replace f..,id, Phot!e 304·
f715 · 2tl3 after 6 p m :

1~=-..,.,:-:-;-:--"'r-­
87 Upholstery

73

W~LL, l"r~ fiNALLY . . .

We rep ai1 automatic trensmrs
lions Call 614· 448·0956

1911 14 ton JMp pldl.up, auto,
loc:ltlng 1'111&gt;1, PS. Pe. orr,
AM.fM Coli 814-248-&amp;841
ttftor 4PM.

ien Cltovy Luv plclt-up e686.
CoK 614-742-3082

Maguine
(]) Hardcastle and McCor·
mlck
(!) SporuCantar
CIJ Entertelnmant Ton~ght

an the set of his latesr film,
'Lethal Weapon"
fJl (!I M'A"S"H
CJ CIJ Paopla"o Court
ill Nightly Buslnoas Report
®News
(J] MacNaii·Lehrer N-sh·
our
Ill (j}) illJ Wheel of Fortune
@ Berney Mirror
7:05 ([) Sanford and Son
7:30 0 IIl C1J New Newlywed

"•

Surplus · Army. Denim, Rental.
949-2144.
C1rhert Cklthlng, Kid• Cemou- .
JIVIOUI'S FARM EQUIPMENT 1879 Ford a...sung PS PB,
fltge (FrH Helmet with Com·
pfete Sun Purc:h 111 whh copy 114-441·11 75 ChiCk our ape·
auto, 302 ., ....
-'- e. 2 do or, grty.
clel price 01'1 Hu-.v am 1 c:h a in sunroof, AM -FM8·tnckltereo
this AD II Ragular Price) Fn
saws.
Long
tractor,
l
Vermeer
Sat Sun. 12 00· 8.00 p m
n2oo 614-816 0302 .
hay equipment
Other 0 •v• efter 4 p m E "t of
A cofll)tete line of bale 18811 Dodtr• Shelby Ch org• 5
R evenswood. H.O. "Sam "
handling • t..d.,g eccestoria•, apMd
Somerville. (T · Sgt U S A F
Turbo, good cond, 30"·
Rot I
mixen. wagon, rotMV .2 3141.
t1lltra. rot ery cun... blades.
Tony's Gun Rep lira, hot rtb..,e· cultivatofs, diiC , plows. Hfld· 1172 Corvene. 4&amp;,000 miles,
en. poll drivll't, wood·splin•a. exc cond, t6,800 00 . 304-876·
&gt;ng Opon 9 00 AM to 7:00PM
g at11, he ed · g ates. power· •oe cw 575-8719
Coil 304-676-4631
w11hers, WhHI Hor11 lawn a
For ule Traln.t Beag18.. One Garden! Bankfeaden&amp; trlllllf'. 1812 Ten CaValier, 2 door,
squirrel dog, Rough H •Y· 75c USEO EQUIPMENT
standard. good gas mileage.
Us«J tractor~ , round baler, 03,1100 Oil 304·675·3797 or
bale: 126 Yamaha 304·4&amp;8·
1818
W IQOftl, tObaCCO IItten,
675-3816
IPrayer, cuttiveton , whatl·
dltc plows, rak•. sq. balw1, '71 Cutle11 Supreme,
large wood burner. gl111 doors
a
mowi'\g mKhlne. cuhlpeeker, trnle war~. 304-875-6241
axe eond , 8400 00
Dis ·
hwwasher $100 .00. Ping-Pong hay bklds, menure spread•.
Ubi• U5 00 304· 875· ,751 , SH ... for a co~ .. te !Ina of ,•79 Ford T·Bird, P· ltlenng, tilt
parts &amp; urvlcel
675 5546
wh•l • ano. rrens. Good
Cond Call 304·4158·1904 or
N.wanduled PlrtsforWhkw, 304-418 1727
Oliwrt, M·M. Deub 1ractora
55 Building Supplies Sldoro Equlp..,.t Co. 304- 1882 Otevy Chwelle ha1ch·
875 7421
b1Ck 3034·176-6375
Building Material•
Block, brick, stvver pep01 . win ·
dow1. lintels, etc Claude Win tars, R1o Grende, 0 Call
814 246-6121

Dodnll's Auto Pana. l\IJ mt
Nonh of Vrnton on St.
160 15
the pi ace to buy you'
auto
paru You'll reeei : fast .
"iendty .MrVice 9 lhe
t used
parts avalleble Calll14-388·
9616 .

1 S Holstein Springer heifers
A.l. &amp; caH hood vac. Call
nam~g• 814 379-2400

71

II Ill PM

7:00

•ho••·

Firewood for sale 135 picll·up
load Dellveted Hup Vouchert
accepted Call 814· 7·2-2486

30" Norge electric range whh
Mlf·clunlng oven, Avocado
1100 Call614-448 3467

1 bedroom apartment Newly
carpeted HUD lppro~td
402Yt 24th St P1 . Pluunt
Coll614-992-5858.

Dregonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA Hlmaleyen, Peralan enCI
Siamese kiH.,, AKC Chow
pu'"'l" Coli 614·448·3844
ahar 7PM

FirtMood tor 1111 t36 pic:lr: ·up
.., ld Oellverld Hup Vouchers
accepted

SWAIN
AUCTION 1!o FURNITURE e2
OllveSt .Galllpolrs New&amp; used
wood·co ai stove1, 6 pc wood lR
suhe 1399, bunk tM&lt;ts t199,
antron rec:hnefl t99 . new P.r
uaad bedroom su1tes, ranges,
wnnger wa1hers. &amp; lho• New
INingroom suites 1199 -8599,
lempt, also buying co al&amp;wood
ltOVH Call 614-446-3159

hou~e.

unfur
Adults only

Bids now bernu accep1ed tlr
uaad off1ce furniture and mfac.lleanous Items Will accept
tealed bid1 only lids acc:;wted
until 4.00 p m. on 11 011-88
Items on display from 9 00 a m .
until 4 00 p .m on 11-03
through t1 ·08 ·86 at Woodl .. d
Centers. 412 Vinton Pike, Gtlli·
polls. OhiO Woodl1nd Centers
r81trvel lhe rtQht to accept or
reject any bid

-::---:-

51

Ill CIJ • CIJ liD •

m

1979 Kawasaki 6150 rf.otorcy
de new' tlr•. good d;!ndrtion
Will ucrifice tor s&amp;OO 304
-n3 9648 .. 882· 33M.

HUGHOT

1

illJ Newa
(]) Big Valley
(!I Mazda SporuLook
fJl
Jefferson•
ill 3-2·1, Contact (CCI
(j] Sacret City ·
@ Facta of Life
8:05 ([)New Leave It to Beaver
8:30 1J 1IJ il]l NBC News
(!I Action Outdoors with
Jullua Boros
CIJ Cl CIJ ABC News
fJl (!I Hogan's Heroes
ill Docfor Who
® Cll (j}) CBS N-1
(j] Body ElectriC
@Good Times
8:35 ([) Down to Earth In

•
aocf

AKC reg. o.,m.,. Shepherd
pups Ch emp10n bloodlines
Sire &amp; dame Ready for lmme
diateule Cell8t4-448-4211

-:::---:---::--'" -lc-

Merchandise

Furnrshtd apartment. upstairs
Adults only. all ut1ht1es pa id
Call 614·44e-9523
1 bedroom apt for rent. 8111c
rtnt suns t2t6 • month that
includes an utllitill Deposit
requrred of 1200 Cont ac1 Vlt ·
I age Manor Apt MiddlepMt
614-992-7787 Equal Hou11ng
Opportunity.

Gas range teO. refrig 1160,
t160. 1971 VW t150,
76 Chevy Imp 'Wtth AM.fM
ces11ne, PS , PB, AC, t300.
Buck tlo'll t?&amp; Call 114 4463040

oo can

Bolt action m a user rifle, 7 mm
dated 1926, With 100 fOunds
emmunlt10n •too Can 114·
448-1822

For Lease

"t'

New 1 bdr house for rent , no
pets. 1 person or m arrled

Sma• 4 rvom
nrshed tor rent
e14-949-2619

Apply now reeetve fu·st month
rent FREE Family Pride Mobrle
Horm Part. Galhpohs Ferry,
where we cater to hmdles.
304-675·3073

2 bdr trailer on flat land One
acre compratety furnished. W·
D Near Porter Clll614 388·
8469 after 5 30 PM

'81 W"'dsor 2 br large living
room &amp; kitChen, 2 porches a
underpenning great cond Must
aell 304-882 ·3715

Mtm farm for ule 3'h acres
1974 Buddy House Tta1ler.
t2x65 with t21140 bullt·on
26.48 garage and out-bu1ld1ng
comblned Woodshed 24lli24,
barn 28x60 wnh treated oak
floor1nstaHs Appro• 1/4 mileoff
State H1ghw ay on C R 50 City
w atM. electrrc, 1000 gat septiC
tank t15 ,000 080 Call 614·
378-6474

Mobil home lots, am ell ch1ldren
accepted, At 1, Locust Flo ad
Mobrl home lots. Ohro R1ver
Road and Poners Creek Route
1 304-675-1076

2 bedroom mobile home Lo·
Cited wrt~rn crty limits Heat
turnrshed Call614-446-1232

Oak rolltop d11k. not antique
bcellwrt condttlon Call 81444e·4044

Space for Rent

Trailer space for rent. Loceted
on Rocttspnngs Road , 1 mtle
from Mergs H1gh School Call
evemnga 61 4-992·2941 d aya
614 992 6461

12x60 2 bdr unfum w atherdryer hookup. At 35 . depo11t &amp;
reierMces requ~red 1 on Geo·
rege1 Crook rd C 111 614 446
4369 Of 304-675 -9760

Rent als

31

2 bdr Crown Crty erea C11!

614 ·266-6484

23 Professional

Starks Tr8e and lawn Servu:e
Hedges shrub a bushes
trimmed l.. . dtcaplllg stump
and leaf removal. 304-576·
21142 or 676-2010

46

I

Stereo -

Rktlng lawn moWer elee lowrev organ 3 wh..ler. Call
814-448-7414

only, ut1l paid Call 6t4·446
4110

8:00 . .

1177 Ha(ley 0 avidaG'n TourGlide Run• good.
cond
Coli 6 00 p.'l) 304· 67o·6268

76

OR•o .. ongo leners ol

EVENING

1985 Horloy Oovidoonl FXRS ,
with h•dllng packagt 4198
mllao t6250 Coli ,J..,.-949 ·
:1497

Snow bl Ide wtth hydniluDc
controls for Jeep, good condt·
tlon, 4660 Call514-448-3232
after &amp;PM

PUULU

11/3/86

Motorcyclerl

Cycles • rebuilt cycl• .. p erts
torula Cell 614 448; ~414

C tblr'ltt lenit~ style stereo
•2715 G •• hot w eter ttnk 30
gal Tr a iter ateps 20 In dirt bike
24 tn x 28 in 10 tpd brke. CaN
614-367-7216 or after 3 814 387-0522

TMAI DAILY

IOIJr S&lt;ram~led
-~~:r~:~.~r:; :•t;
~~---'"'~~;:-~j----ro,;-r.n;;;m
four s1mple

I

Finwvood for sale 130 00 PU
loa! Call Roger Meade. 814 388·9341

1 bdr apt over lOoking city
p ark, I(-D S160 per month Call
P J'a 614-446 1819 or even·
ings 6t4-446·2326

Rooms for rent. d -v weelc
month GaiUa Hotel Call 614446-9580 Rent as low as tt20
month

I'L,..,,,.,,,.,
.AttJ I I10TI

custom van, 74 A am Cllarger
.,od oondlt10n 72 El Camino
Clll 614-446-8113 "' 614448 8201 .

74

Television·
Vl"ewi·n

1'5 JI!ST

78 thevv custom van "' Fotd

Plestlc clsttm ata,te tj:)proved.
pl11tlc IIPIIC tanks, piastre
culvens. meul cutverts RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Joek oon, Oh, 814 286 -11930

Long woodbumar front Joading
wtth gh11 door. 14ft chimnly'
pipe and ICC81s, limitled used
Call814-446-1986.

For r8nt Sleeprng Rooms and
ltght Muse keep1ng rooms P ~rk
Central Hotel Call 61 4 -448·
0766

2 bdr . all ut1lmes p atd e•cept
elec , turn or unfurn , sec
deposit requrred Conven1ent
locatron Call614-448-8658 or
814 44e 4178

B1g 1 avmg &amp; big select ron of
used S. bl!ln~ reposuued mob1le
home Call Kanauga Mobile
Homes. 6t4 446 9662

33
Services

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LOSER

Cahtun's Used T1re $lop
Over t ,OOO tiru, s4us 12 , 13.
14, 16,11 11 .1 lmiiHoutAt
218 Calle14 -256-6261

Nicely furn11hlld 2 bdr apt
Adults ontv lnqurre at corner
Ftrst &amp; Olive St at Shepparda
S aln &amp; Sei'Vlce

Furnished Rooms

: . : . Monday. November 3, 1986

1181 Ckevy Con'N4J9n v en
ralsedroofduai air. loaded low
mlloo. C11i 114-387-0567

Fumrshed 3 rooms and bath,
clean, adult• only, no pets Call
614 446 1619

45
42

Tr u h hauling honest depen
dable You pack It we stack
11 ·Call 614 -388 8813
L'{Jht hauling &amp; trash removal
yard cleantng Ca ll 614 446
3176

Nice 2 bedfiiom houae, good
clean, dtpotit
requrred nove fum•ahl!ld , b •••·
ment. call 304-676-1301
ne~ghborhood.

.

KIT 'Nr CARLYLI ®br LIIITJ Wright

Furmthed effrciency t150 ut1h·
tl• pard, share bath, 701 4th,
Gallipolis Cal1448-4416 after
e pm

"Don't let 'em fool you. No
one has any change."

C all 805 - 687 6000 Ext

or
eskrng
vourtriends
for
an usl
ordeby
r from
a book
Over 700

March andiH-

Furnrshed apt. 1 bdr 1235
utrlhlet paid 701 4th G allipohs
Call 448-4416 aher 6 pm

S16 040-$69 230 V' N.9W HtrlnQ

114 Mite .

Rent

,.

.· .....

Monday; !llovember 3, 1986

,_ '

I'M

I
I

ASHY,
HARMLESS,
DOWN-

"IRODDEN

, ,-· PEANUTS
Hi,MV NAME

IS TAPIOCA
PUDDING

M'&lt; DAD IS IN
LICENSIN6 .. M'I' PICTURE
IS 601N6 TO BE ON
6REETIN6 CARDS,T·5HIRTS
AND EVER'(THIN6!

WOULDN'T 'r'OU LIKE
TO HII.VE A LUNCH BOX
WITH M~ PICTURE ON IT?

W~AT'5 WRONG
WIT~ THE

PICTURE ON
THIS LUNCH
BOX?

(j] Making of a Continent:
Collision Couraeo (CC) A
look at how North Amen ca·s mountain ranges were
spawned from the Eorth's
crust (60 mm.)
9 .30 ®
Cll (j}) Doalgnlng
women Mary Jo relucrantly. begins dating ag11n
and Julia is horrif1ed to
learn who IS audit1ng Sugarbakers' tax returns
10.00 (!) Champlonahlp Roller
Derby (60 m•n)
([) World of Audubon Spa.
ciala: Galepagoo lolands
!60 min)
fJl (!I Odd Couple
ill Story of Engllah: Loaded
Weapon The Irish Influence on the English lan·
aua11.0 is srud1ed (80 min )
llDI m (j}) Cagney &amp; Lecey
(CC) Cagney and La cay are
aSSigned to give a tour of
the precinct 10 the beaullful star of a TV police
show, who wants to learn
how reel-life women de1ecrlves work. (80 mm )
(j] lHI News
10·30 (]) Celebrity Chefs
fj) (!I INN Nowa
(j] Thlo Old House (CC)
11 :00 IJIIl ® Ill ()}) il1l N-a
(]) Hardcalltla end McCormlok
(!I Hilton Meatera of Aero.
batlos From Homestead,
FL (A)
(]) 8onan••
, fll (!I M"A"S"H
ill Managing Our Miracles:
Health Care In Ameriqa A
panel d•scuts10n reviews
tho un1que health problems cauaed by the AIDS
epidemic (80 min.)
(j] Story of English: Loaded
Weapon Tho lneh Influence on the ' Engl11h lanauage is studied (80 min )
1HJ Tho Honeymoonora
11 :30 II IIl llJ) Beet of Carson
Tonlghl's
guesta
are
Buddy Hackett, Jennifer

The right idea
..
but the wr_
ong play,

II,

NORTH
+,10883

11·3·8e

9 AK •

~M~ ,.
1
+Q J 9 H

By James Jacoby

I

There IS nothmg wrong with playing' '1
bridge imaginatively to prevent the
dangerous opponent from gaining
lead Yet it's regrettable 1f the declarer sees that play but m~ somethmg
more obvious.
•
"
Since Soutb was not a newfangled
Player, he did not have the negative
dooble available when East over·

I

EAsT
• 41 A Q 9 7
0
9 QJ 8 2
t J 93

+2
SOUTH .
'· · • K1 4 ,
~

't ' 19 7 6' 3
' +Qat
• A'ao,8 3

j;~f::,~~J:;~~~~~el·ther

called
SP,llde.
(Such
would with
showone
four
hearts
anda double
would
command North to bid ) So he took a
!M!n.tible choice when he btd one notrump. North had no trouble ratsmg to

11

game.

Declarer won the Jack of spades
with his kmg. Realizing the danger of
allowing West to gain the lead, he re·
fused the club finesse. After all, there
was some slight chance that West
would hold lhe smg4eton king And
South did not mind 1f East made a
trick with the club king, since the I 0-8&amp; of spades m dummy would then provide another stopper. Alas, West won
the second club and produced the two '
of spades to set the contract
Declarer must overcome hiS natural brrdge Instincts to male the con·
tract. He should allow the spade jack '

--

~~""*"'"§('
br THOMAS JOSEPH .
ACROSS
I Fre nch

pamter
6 Thyrmd

'

3Was
rampant

4 Gold (Sp ) ,

5 Anxiety
6 Forest

or
pancreas
opening
II Chica•o
7 Meat cut
8 Gardner
airport"
9 Lendl's
12 Bulwark
13 "Paint
barrter
Your - "
10 Scotlrsh
(1969 film)
river
1-&amp; Playmg
17 Symbol or

marble
15 Prior to

mdustry
20 "Smgm'

16 Downcast
m the -"
18 Radiation 21 Wee h~rd
unit
22 Anger
19 Passivity
23 Scottish
2-&amp; Fiery
county
25 Ethereal
24 Suggestion
28 Abe's home
29 Bishop's
r.-r,-n--r.-r::""'
symbol
30 Related

31 Shoe shade 1:::-t-t-t--r.i'
32 Cougar
34 Hoofed
mamm al

37 Consume
38 Rita -

39 ('andll'
43 Italian

(romh
45
46
47
· 48

form )
llede&lt;" k
New
Ghaplam
Clumsy

DOWN
I Crou &lt;h

m fear
2 "A Rage
LO Ltve ..

autho~rr 811,.;~~;;;;;~;"i;l~r~O,
-WIII'j(
~·

DAILYC

AX Y D LBA A':\R trl ,( •

lsLDNGFE~ '&lt;.OW~~·i~'~ '•

·1'

lp ..

One letter stands for another. •lrl:tlr!s samP,Ie •I\ ts used
for the three L's, X for the two~·;,; elf: Single letlfrs,

'9;1 or~ lVOrds a ~e all

apostroPhes, the length and fonJl!
hlnls Each day the code letters a
11·3
EIH

1. ~

fe

CRYPTOQU~'•lJ'-1
l~~·
~1
,. ' ...

i" .

V D [) Y T Y

ZXZTQZH

'

'.(

\

•

I

..

'

1 •

t

:

'·

~

I rX• Ud'

,~ ,W Z

.X,

.A V

1(,' J0
ll"t~

TYQY G ZSU

'

I

, H

.

•'·s..v (.1
' !

• l&gt;i vr
' ~;. ~
ZWS.IZSQ

Tilly and saw player David
We1.. (60 m1n) (A) In
Stereo
(!I ~rtsCanter
II) CD Taxi
ID@ Magnum, P.r.
Ill (j}) Simon &amp; Simon The
S1mons are hired by the
daughter of a murdered
cartaon1st. who behaves

'

R

~ r••
I

�Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

Monday, .Novambar 3, 1986

.,

British 'industrialist files ·report in Gpodyear takeover _try
By JEANNE REALL
takeover of Goodyear, an- . percent. .
AKRON, Ohio. (UP!) - A . nounced Friday that Goldsmith . . "An~. his . Ql'ganlzationS have
. 70-page report reportedly filed had flied papers with the SEC at been selling stock backandfortl!
with the · Securities and Ex- 4:50 · p.m .. declaring his to each other," the source said.
"He hasn't given us much to go
change Commission by James Intentions.
Goldsmith contains lots of deThe SEC requires at least 24 on."
ta ils, but few answers. say . business hours to process docuWhile the copy lists a comple1C
skeptical sources close to Goo: ments and verify they have been web of corporations in which
filed .
Goldsmith Is involved for the
dyear Tire and Rubber Co.
"The copy contains ml} ny
The sources close to Goodyear purpose of acquiring Goodyear,
not-so-well-hldden subtleties," speculated during the weekend it makes no mention of Hanson
sa id one source, who requested that the70-pagecopyprovidedby Trust. Many analysts have specanonymity. " It also Is filled with Goldsmith's lawyers might not ulated that Hansan Trust would
difficult-to-confirm tracks
be the final product submitted to figure prominently In the tatrails whose directions ar.e lllu- the SEC because It lacks signa- keover attempt.
tures of Goldmlth and highAmong the companies In which
slve as to their final pos.ltlon.
"Let'sputitthlsway: Ill were ranklngofflcialsofhlsnumerous Goldsmith lists Interests are:
a corporate raider and I didn't companies.
General Oriental Ltd. of Cayman
want anyone to anticipate my
In the copy, Goldsmith claims Islands, West Indies: General
next step, I don't think I could to have acquired only 11.5 per- Oriental Ltd. Partnership of
cent of Goodyear's stock, while Bermuda; General Oriental
have done a better job."
Merrill Lynch, retained for $5 Wall Street oblervers have est!- Partner ship of Delaware,
million as Goldsmith's exclusive mated the British industrialist U.S.A.; General Oriental Corp.
financial adv isor in an attempted has obtained rrore than 20 of Delaware; General Oriental
Investments Ltd . of Cayman
Islands ; Campania Ftnanoerla

Akron-based poll gives
Celeste wider -margin

AKRON. Ohio (UPI) - A
recent poll shows Democratic
Gov. Richard Celeste has widened his lead over his Republican challenger. former Gov.
James Rhodes, in the gubernatorial race.
Democra ts also are leading In
other major Ohio races. according to the poll by the University of
Akron. the Akron Beacon Journal, WKYC-TV In Cleveland and
WCMH-TV In Columbus.
A September poll showed Celeste with 50 ·percent of the vote
and the Republican Rhodes with
30percent. Twentypercentofthe
respondents were undecided.
The latest poll of 876 adults, ·
conducted Oct 22 through Nov. 1,
shows Celeste with 60 percent of
the vote and Rhodes with 25
percent. Fifteen percent of those
people polled were undecided.
In one sectio n of the survey,
voters were asked to list reasons
for their choice . The moot frequent response - 41 percent was dislike for their candidate's
opponent.
Celesre has made headway into
Rhodes' traditional stronghold In
southeas t Ohio. winning 53 percent of the support to Rhodes' 35
percent. In northeast Ohio, Celeste's home territory, he has
garnered the laver of 67 percent
of those polled. to Rhodes' 18
percent.
The survey showed Celeste
also has won the su pport of 31
percent of Republican voters.
In the state races. Attorney
General Anthony Celebreeze has
lost very Utile ground to Republican Barry Levey .
Iq,September, Celebrezze was
shown with the support of 44
percent of the respondents, compared with his opponent's 20
percent. Celebrezze now has 49
percent and Levey 27 percent.
Twenty-four percent of the voters remain undecided.
Rep. Jeffrey Jacobl, R-Bay
Village, has gal ned ground on
Treasurer Mary Ellen Withrow,
a Democrat s~ekl ng her seco nd
term .
In September, Witlrow was
shown with Jl pwcentofthevote
and Jacobs with 22 pE!'cent.
Forty-seven pE!'cent of those
people surveyed were undecided.
The recent survey shows Withrow with 42 percent of the vote.
Jacobl with 32 percent. and 26
percent of 'the voters are

, Lido of Panama; Enderbury
Goodyear annually contributes income of $412.4 millloll. The
·'Financial Inc. 6f Panama; and . more than $930 million directly . company's sales during the first
. Brunner Ia . Foundation of and .$6 bllllon .!ndirectly to the . halfof1986were$4.~bllllpn,up5
Liechtenstein.
local economy . and employs percent !rom $4.75 bllll~n last
In the document, Goldsmith 13,000 people ~ about one of year.
apparently contradicts himself, every 16 1n tbe area.
Goodyear businesses require
saying he has ''no plans to close · The company had 1985 net . an estimated $700 million to $1
any of the company's operating sales of . ~-5 billion and net billion a year to maintain.
facUlties." Laterwithinthedocu- r-;===~=====:::=========~==::::;
ment; Goldsmith says he will
"determine which assets or the
company principally unrelated
to the company's core rosiness
should be sold.''
"What doe~ he define as 'rore'
rustness?" .said anotheF source,
who al~o asked not tp be ldentlfled. " It's all left Up in the alr.
Givenhispasthlstoryasonewho
tears companies apart after
acquiring tbem, It's hard to
believe hedoesn'tlntendtodothe
same here."
Goldsmith Is Well-known as a
CONSIDER:
corporate raider who dismantles
the companies he conquers.

WILL YOUR
UTILITIES.,
PUT YOU IN .
THE POOR
HOUSE THIS
WINTER?

undecldep.
. Incumbent Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown, a Democrat, has
advanced his lead over Republican VIncent Campanella to a ~
percent to 22 percent gap, with l)
percent undecided.
Thomas Ferguson, the Democratic Incumbent auditor, Is
leading Republican Rep. Ben
Rose of Lima by a pE!'centage of
ill to 21, with ro percent
undecided.

. COMBINATION
ER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

Served with whipped potatoes, chicken gravy,
cole slaw, hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry,
no substitu'tes except beverage with addi·

FOR JUST

S3.25

•Income guidelines have recently bien extended.

FOR FURTHER DETAILS CAU TODAY

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

1-614-992-7022 .

POMEROY, OH. ·

PH. 992·5432

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
215
PICK~4-

-Page 3

2184-

Otcaslonal rain ':'D~~~::~~~;~j
Wednll!iday, with a low
In the mid tlls and
Wednll!iday In the mid 50s.
prohahillly of pr~ipllation
Ill percent tonight and
per1.-enl Wt'dnesday .

•

at y
Vot.36. No .128
,Copyrighted 1986

•

enttne
3 Sections. 28 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc : Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, November 4, 1986

Project will extend water to Stiversville area
Adminlstrallon.
Included . In the extension, In addition to
Stlversvllle, ' are small lines on Sklimer Road In
Orange Township. Rowe Road In the East Letart
area and Minersville Hill Road .
The new line will tie In with the district 's
existing line at McKenzie Ridge where a
127,000-gallon "'stand pipe" tank will be lnstalled.
This tank will supply customers on the extension
and existing customers on County Road 28
between the Bald Knob-Stiversvllle Road and
McKenzie Ridge junctions.
Altogether, 12'h miles of water line will be

By NANCY YOACHAM

Sentinel Stall Writer
it won't be long before the St!versvllle area of
Meigs County becomes part of the Tuppers
.. Plains-Chester Water District network.
The water district has already begun advertls- ·
ing for bids from contractors to extend the lines.
according to Don Poole. general manag~r of
Tuppers Plains-Chester.
The e1C tenslon: called the Phase III project, will
cost an estimated $451,000 to construct. Phase III
is being funded by a $352.000 grant and a ~9.000
loan . both through Farmers Home

Installed. with 53 new taps.
Construction of the Phase III llnewlll culminate
efforts that h·ave been underway since 198l to pipe
water to Stlversvllle.
A date for start of construction cannot be set
until FmHA approves the water district's choice
of a contractor.
Water district representatives are also attemptIng to secure funding to e1Ctend water tines to the
Silver Ridge area of the county.
Poole reports that preliminary engineering on
this project, called Phase IV, has been approved
by the water district board. and those preliminary

plans are now being readied for submission to
FmHA.
Water district representatives were in Scioto
County last week to Inspect a booster station
similar to one which may be needed in Sliver
Ridge .
Other Meigs County areas lncl~ded In Phase IV
are Letart Falls, Kingsbury Road, Court Street
(near Racine) and the connecting roads of West
Shade and Spencer. County Road 53, in Atlx&gt;ns
County. Is also Included in the Phase IV extension.
It is still too early for time and cost estimates In
. the Phase IV project.

Goodyear
may try
to derail
takeover

Fried Chicken

By JEANNE REALL

.

'

.

(

·.

:
~:~

.. .

. .- : . •. 1'

AKRON, Ohio iUPI)
Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Co. may sacrifice Celeron
Corp. In an effort to thwart a
takeover attempt by corporate raider James Goldsmith.
Company officials an nounced Monday they are
seeking buyers for Celeron. an
oil and gas subsidiary. and Its
$867 million oil pipeline.
The act ion Is part of a
restructuring designed to
thwart a takeover threat by
Goldsmith, a corporate raider
Who has acquired 11.5 percent
of Goodyear's stock.
Goldsmith,· a British Industrialist. has acknowledged he
owns 11.5 percent of Goodyear's stock. Goodyear chairman Robert E. Mercer said In
a news release Monday that
more details of the · a ntitakeover restructuring plan
'should be released in the next
two weeks .

Cambrid e
blowsawa

7 die over weekend
By United Press International

Seven people, Including a motorcyclist and a pedestrian, died
In accidents on Ohio roadways
during the weekend, the state
Highway Patrol reported today.
The victims were killed in
separate accidents. including
three Sunda y and four Saturday.
None of the auto crash victims
was wearing a seat belt, a patrol
spokeswoman said.
The patrol counts traffic fatalities resulting from accidents on
the siate's public roadways each
non-holiday weekend between 6
p.m. Friday and midnight
Sunday.
Killed were:
Sunday
Kenton : James A. Yoakam, 29,
Lakeview, In a one-car accident
on a Hardin Co unt y road.
Columbus: Scott K. James, 24.
Grove City, when his motorcyc le
crashed on a OJiumrus street.
Batavia: Rebecca A. Hunley,
29, Milford, In a twc:n'!'hicle
accident on a Clermont County
road .
Saturday
Cincinnati: Rodney S. Bethel,
21, Cincinnati , In a one-ear crash
oil Interstate 7!i In Onclnnatl.
Cincinnati: KennethRoach,42,
Ludlow. Ky., In a one-car mishap
on a C!nclnna t1 street.
Ironton : Linda Blankenship,
34, Huntington, W.Va., while she
was walking along Ohio 7 In
·Lawrence County.
Circleville: TIDmas S. FrazIer, 17, Groveport, In a one-ear
accident on· a Plckaway County
road.
·

Rams hand
Bears second
season loss

· ~\

Taste breakthrough~

generic price!

Regular&amp; MenthoL
Kings&amp;IOOs

. /oo.s

Mlr SIJI]Qe~ed retail price.
12 mg "tar;' 0.9 mg nicoline av. per crgarette by FTC method.

~

Ptllllp Morrillnc 1986

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Result in Fetal
Injury, Premature Birth, And Low Birth Weight.

\

Celeron of Austin. Texas,
employs about 350 pco pie and
has assets of about $1.7 billion .
It Is the nation' s third-largest
independent oil f!rm In terms
of crude ·oil reserves . The
company had 19&amp;'; rllierves of
121 million barrels . said William Newkirk. a Goodyear
spokesman.
The pipeline. which Is to run
from the California to Texas
Gulf coasts, Is about 75 per cent complete and shluld
begin operation In early 1987,
Newkirk said.
Gale Galloway. rece ntly retired Celcron chairman and
once the · major· Goodyear
~lockholder on Gooc;Jyear's
hoard of directors, said he
believes Celeron was on Its
way to making maj or contrlbullons to Goodyear. ·
"I think in time. with its
good crude oil reserves and
lhe pipeline, Celeron would
have contributed 25 pwcent of
the consolidated earnings of
the Goodyear family, " Galloway said in a telepoone
lnten;ew from Austin. "That
was our f." I. l think It was
attalnabl .
In 1985. Celeron comprised
about 1.2 percent of Goodyear's total operating Income of
~0 million.
"These are attractive properties. and II the decision Is
made to sell them. they'll
fetch . a handsome price,"
Gallowa y said.
·
Galloway retired elleetlve
Oct. 7, the day the Wall Street
run began on Goodyear stock.
which he said was a
coincidence.
"To soow you how attuned I
was to that . I sold about m.ooo
share; of Goodyear stock
ahout seven months ago for
$..1.1 a shar·e." he said, adding
that he retains about 25,.000
shares . "There have been
rumors that I'm part of an
Investment group, but that's
not so."
Goodyear stock on Monday
closed down %at oil~ - With 3.8&lt;
million sharlli traded, it· was
the second most-active Issue
on the New York Stock
Exchange.

Meeting could focus on weapons control
WASHINGTON !UP!)_. .- The
first post -summit meeting be·
tween Secretary of State George
Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minis·
ter Eduard Shevardnadze could
·locus on arms control - but
within the larger . context of
human rights. a spokesman says.
Their first meeting since the
Oct. 11-12 summit In Reykjavik,
Iceland, will be at a review
conference In VIenna lor the
Helsinki Agreement. signed In
Helsinki, Finland, In 1975 by 35
nat Ions pledging to observe basic

planning two private-meetings on · known as ''Star Wars."
Both super powers have said
Wednesday and Thursday.
Accompanying them to VIenna they are willing to continue the
will be their top arms control negotiations based on proposals
advisers and negotlatc:rs, raising that were on thetableatlceland.
Thomas said Shultz will stress
the possibility that they might
resume negotiations of the arms that a close relationship exists
control package put forward at · between security Issues and U.S.
Insistence that international
the Iceland su mmlt.
The summit ended without commitments should be honored.
He said the U.S. position In
agreement because of a break·
VIenna
will be lotry and pressure
down over the Issue of the U.S.
Strategic. Defense Initiative, the Soviets and eastern EuroPresident Reagan's ground- and pean nations to improve their
space-based anti-missile shield, human rights performance.

U.S. doctors label ex-hostage's condition 'good'

David Jacol.ea
I

human rights.
· Charies Thomas ,' deputy · assistant secretary of state, said
Monday, "The stark reality Is
that the Soviets have not lived up
to their commitment."
Thomas said the United States
Intends to draw a connection
between the need for •the Soviets
to live up to International agreements on human rights and the
poosiblllty of new agreements on
security Issues, such as arms
controL
Shultz and Shevardadze, are

IV

By WILLIAM POOLE
WIESBADEN, West Germany
iUPI) -David Jacobsen passed
his Initial physical and stress
tests with surprising ease lor a
man who spent 17 months In
captivity, · but the continuing
agony of his fellow hostages was
still on his inind .
Jacobsen checked Into the U.S.
Air Foree· Regional Medical
Center at Wlesbaden Monday
after telling reporters he had
''mixed feelings" about his freedom because other kidnapped .
Americans were still prisoners In
war-torn Beirut.
"The guys are In hell and we've
got to get them out," Jacobsen
said as he arrived on a
government-chartered Learjet .
Monday at the Wlesbaden U.S. ~

Air Base near Frankfurt.
Jacobsen. 55, was admlnlstralor of the American University
Hospital In Beirut before he was
kidnappecf May 28, 1985. He was
freed Sunl!ay by ShUte Moslem
captors In West Beirut and began
his long journey home to Huntington Beach, Calif., - via
Larnaca, Cypress, and West
Germany.
•
His daughter, Diane Duggan,
and his sons, Eric and Paul, were
to arrive In Wtesbaden !rom the
United States today for a reunion
with their father.
CoL Ken· Moffett, commander
of the Air Force hospital, told
reporters late Monday tbat most
of the eJCtenslVe medical and
psychological tests on Jacobsen

would be completed today and
tha't he could be dlschar~d In a
couple of days.
Moffett said his. staff had
already tentatively. found Jaco.bsen In "very good" physical
condition. He said the patient
showed no sign of peyslcal abuse
and had "dealt with the stress of
his C$ptlvlty extremely well."
Jacomen's eyes looked bloods lilt
when he, climbed out of the
Lear jet along with Terry Waite,
a Church of England mediator
who helped win his freedom . But
the bearded man In the maroon
and blue sweatw and tan trousers was talkative and ol:Niously
In high spirits.
"I C!ln't tell you ho,;, very,
very )lappy 1,1am here today," he

told repor-trrs on the tarmae.
"The joy Is only greatly lessened
by the fact that Ter ry Anderson
and the ot hers are sti ll
lx&gt;stages."
Jacoooen praised Waltr as "a
man of hope In our darkest
hour." In contrast to statrments
he made while In captivity that
were critical of U.S. efforts to
free the hostages, he thanked
President Reagan and all U.S.
officials who wc:r ked tor his
release. calling t bern "great
people."
Waite's departure !rom the
Middle East wlth Jacowen
seemed to dampen hopes for thr
speedy release of the other ftvr
Americans being held hostage In
Lebanon .

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="210">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2800">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="40705">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40704">
              <text>November 3, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
