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-

Page-D-8- Sunday Times- Sentinel

October 16. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Prices...

Twenty-five ways
to spell 'Gallipolis'
BY JAMES SANDS
GALLIPOLIS- It would seem
that natives of Gallipolis would
from
have a leg up on
other communities In terms of
study habits. It
takes ~orne
mental discipline just to be
able to correctly
,
pronounce and
spell Galllpolis . We have written
at other times of the pronunciation debates, but this week we
discovered a column from the
November 30, 1908 edition of the
Gallipolis DailyTr ibune1n whic h
postal worker Oliver Lyle revealed 25 different ways that he
had seen Gallipolis spelled on
maiL Following is the Jist shared
by Lyle: Galioplse, Gailipois.
Galllopolis, Gallpolice, Galipolls, Galiposis, Call\polis, Go!oplls, Galllplies, .Galliplo!s, Gallopolis, Gallopo)lce, Gallepoils,
Galoplis, Gallioplis, · Gallopes,
Galapolis, Galpoleace, Ga!la plois, GalleipoUs, Ga!liapolies,
Calllopolis, Galplles, Gallaplis
and Gallipolis.
We are sure, given that early
mental disCipline of Galllpolltans
in correctly learning to spell and
pronounce their hometown' s
name, that the library Is an often
used building in town. We have
· pictured today the building tha t
served Gallipolis as a public
library from 1905 untU the late
1970's. However the first public
library In Gallipolis was opened
November2, 1898 in the Lupton
Building at 326 Second Avenue.
A public library was founded in
the Old F renc h City by the
Thursday Club which was a
group of women who met for
study and literary reviews . Beginning about 1895 the Thursday
Club began planning for the
library, with Addie Vanden providing much of the leadership.
When the first public llbrary
opened on November 2, 1898, the
library owned some 996 volumes
with a bout 'h of those bei ng
donated by the Thursday Club. In
the first two days of operati.-n 297
books were loaned out. By 1904
the library had grown to some
3343 volumes.
In 1902 some members of the
, Thursday Club along with officials from the Gallipolis Public
Schools led by Professor C.J.
Britton petitioned the Andrew
Carnegla Library Fund to be
granted money to build a Carnegie Library in Gallipolis. Portsmouth had been granted funds in
1901, but Wellston, Jackson and
Pomeroy had been unable to ,
raise local monies demanded by

Continued from D-1
trades ex-dividend on Monday.
Wickes Cos. followed, down 3Y.
to 7% , after a management group
terminated its proposed $12-a.
share tender offer.
Hospital Corp. of America was
·third, up 3% to 48%. A management group In this case offered to
increase Its takeover offer io $51
a share from $47 a share.
IBM rose 1% to 119% - IBM .
reported a strong increase In
sales and shipments in the third
quarter. Earnings rose to $2.10 a
share from $2 a year ago.
AT&amp;T added% to 26% .
Among other blue chips, General Electric was up y. to 43¥.,,
Eastman Kodak was up %'to 48,
American Express was up % to
,28'h and Merck was up %to 58% .
Prices closed slightly higher In
slow trading on the American
Stock Exchange.
The Amex market value index
rose 0.51 to close at 302.55. The
price of an average share gained
2 cents. Advances led declines
262-244 among the 806 issues
traded. Volume totaled 8,354,590
shares, compared with 9,190,600
Thursday.

Carnegie. In 1912 Pomeroy did
qualify . Carnegie usually
granted $25,!XXHo smaller communities to be used to erect a
library building. All books, furniture, etc. had to be furnished
locally. And additio nally the
local community had to make
available yearly 10 percent of the
original money granted to be
used to maintai n and staff the
library.
By 1902 taxation was bringing
in for the public library abou t
$1,000. Professor Britton, whodld
much of the paper work and
correspo ndence, did not believe
Gallipolis cou ld raise the extra
$1,500 ann ually · and prevailed
upon Carnegie to break his rule
about giving less than $25,000 to a
comm unity. The Carnegie LIbrary was built in 1904 and was
opened to the public in January of
Hannan Trace. From left to right ~e queen
BAILEY CROWNED QUEEN - Christa
1905. Carnegie donated $12,500
candidates Lovel Forgey , Christy Lewis and
Bailey. third from right, was crowned Southwestwhich was approximatejy the
Brenda Stanley; Batley; Seleesa Slover and
ern High School's 1988 Homecoming Queen at
cost of this building on State
Stephenie Peck. (Times-Sentinel photo by G.
ceremonies preceding Friday night's game with
Street. .
Spencer Osborne)
,_,
We note that in 1904 and 1905
several civic groups held fundraisers for the purpose of
buying books and equipment for
the library. The Elks brought to
the Gallipolis Theatre the "Colonial Motion Picture and Vaudeville Co," on March 14, 1904 with
William. Whitney, Ph .D ., Direcror
all proceeds going to the public
library. In February of 1904 the
Young Ladies Guild sponsored a
concert by Prof. J .T . Lewis'
Orchestra. ln 1905 this group
presented a play entitled: "The
Merry Milkmaids" for the purpose of buying books.
So me of the books purchased
for the J uvenlle section were:
"The Wizard of Oz" and "The
Marvelous Land of Oz" both by
Frank Baum . There were4 books
252 Jackson Pike
446-7076
by Margaret Sidney : " Adventures of Joel Pepper", " Five
Little Peppers Abroad", "Five
BUILT in 1904 wtth money donated by Andrew Carnegie, the old
Little Peppers a nd Th ei r .
Ubrary on State Street is now nsed for city school
GaiUpoUs
Friends", a nd "Five Little
offices. A public library was opened Nov. 2, 1898, in the Lupton·
Peppers at School". Therewere3
Building with 996 volumes · under the auspices of the Thursday
books on football by Ralph
Club.
Barbour, and three books by
Myrtle Reed and books by
authors like J ulia Magrudes and
Stewart White.
According to the history of the
library written in 1940, by that
year the library had 17,000
volumes and that it was receiving from taxation $3,200 per year.
Also in that article we learn that
POMEROY -Judith A. Williit was in 1937 that free Ubrary
. . . , . . (QCOIJii• )
ams, Brogan-Warner Ins urance
service was extended to Include
Service, Inc., Pomerov was
the whole county. The first
"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
1·ecen tly honor·ed by W~stfieid
I rustees of the library were:
Life Ipsurance Co. as one of the
Roscoe Mauck, J . Ingels, C.J.
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR
top 60 producing agents.
Brltlon, O.W. Henking, Amy
STORE"
The presentation was made at
Nash, Mrs., Hollis Johnston, a nd
Wes t1J eld Life's 25 tll Anniver- 1--- - -- - - - - - - - 1
Mrs. Char les Stock hoff.
sa ry Celebration held at The
cf&gt;ACHES SHORTS
Cloister in Sea Island, Ga.
Jerome T. Linnen, vice presiGYM SHORTS • SOCKS
dent, marketing, made the
presentation.
BAll CAPS • BAGS
To acliieve this recognition
agen ts compete in a year-long
T-SHIRTS • &amp; MORE
contes t. They mu st di splay top
salesmanship, superior use of
Auctioneer Association aod the
-Custom Transfers
products a nd great tec hnical
National Auctioneer Association.
abi!l ty to win this award. .
and' LetteringHe has served as Instructor In the
MODEL A104
Westfield markets Its products
Missouri Auctioneer School in
through 2.700 agents natio na lly.
Kansas City , Missouri. He is a
me mber of the American Hereford Cattle Association and Ohio
Hereford Association, in which
You Don't Ho ~e To Look fgr
he has served twice as Pres ident
· ~ASH &amp; CAllY
To Spy the 6est 6uys In
of this group.
I he Clouifieds.
A good title for Mr. Marlings
MIDDUPOIT 992-5627
• Lasts longer, needs fewer
speec h would be "Let's La ugh at
Ourselves" .
repairs and costs less to
Ticket s for the annual meeting
service
and banquet are $6.75 eac h. The
• No. 1 preferred brand
meal. to be served by the Eastern
(based on consumer brand
Band Boosters, will consist of
preterence surveys)
baked steak, mast.ed potatoes,
• Large capacity
gr avy , green beans, slaw, rolls,
pie or cake, ice tea an d coffee.
SoU judging, outsta nding .farm
family , goodyear far m of the
year, wildlife and affiliate membership awards will be pres e nted
throughout the eve ning.
Election of two supervisors for
three year terms will take place.
Candidates for supervisor e lections are Ja net Bolin, Rodney
Chevalier, Alan Holter, and
Leroy Welsh.
Tickets must be purchased by
Nove mber 4, from SWCD SuperIFOIMEILY VILLAGE PHARMACY)
visors, office personnel , or from
the SWCD Office on the second
floor of the Farmers Bank
"
Building.

POMEROY -Emerson Martfog , Livestock AuctiOneer, Washington Courthouse, will be the
featured speaker for the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
District Annual Meeting and
Banquet to be held on Tuesday,
Nov. 15, at 7:18 p.m. al Eastern
High School.
Marting js one of the busiest
speakers in the Midwest. He has
been speaker for many different
organizations In at least 85 of 88
counties in Ohio.
Marting is an a uctio neer specializing In pure bred livestock In
27 States and Canada. He farms
1400 acres In the corn-belt of Ohio
with an opera tion of corn, beans,
and livestock. He linds ti.me to
speak an average of 2 or 3 times a
week to service clubs, farm
organizations, sc hools, and youth
gro.ups, etc. Whiie he is co nsidered mostly a humorist he likes
to speak of the opportunities and
privileges of being oorn and
raised In Amer ica.
Mr. Marting has been in many
local and civic organizatio ns, he
has also been an active member '
In the Washington Courthouse
Llons .Club for 35 years, in which
he has held nearly all offices. He
Is also a member of lhe Ohio

YOUR FALL HUNTING
HEADQUARTERS
•GUNS
•AMMO
•BLACK POWDER
•CLOTHING
. •MUZZLE LOADING
SUPPLI ES

•TINGLEY RUBBER BOOTS

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
196
Pick4
3145
Super LQtto
31-16-3-29-18-1

'

,u. S. economy poses
problems for cha•·ity
needs," explained James JoWASHINGTON (UPI)
American business leaders ex- seph, president of the survey's
pect to face future economic non-profit sponsor, the Councll
hardships that could damage on Foundations. "However." he
their corporate ability to contrib- said In remarks prepared for
ute to charity, a survey Indicated delivery today , "they recognize
their capacity Is limited."
today.
The poll by The Daniel YankeCharitable commitment relovich
Group In~. was based on
mains widespread among chief
Interviews
with 225 CEOs of
executive officers, the study
leading
compan
tes and 100 execfound, but the business leaders
utives,
Including
sales, financial
ar~:soncerned about. ~eclines in
·
and
division
officials,
who are ·
profits, which hurt contributions
considered
likely
future
CEOs .
to various social causes.
The
council
sought
the
survey
on
"Clearly, U.S. corporate CEOs
behalf
of
the
many
charitable
express a willingness IQ do what
they can to address ctJmmunlty foundations it represents.

A private psychological agency
offering Individual, Couple and
Family Counseling for a sliding
fee· - Medicaid cards accepted.

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DELIVEIY-INSTAUATION-HAUL AWAY

1 Section, 10 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc:, Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 17, 1988

A BETTER CHOICE

Williams
~-bdk·ll'
honored in
·===~
top 60 agents

Chance of rain 100 percent
tonight, Low in ISOs. Tuesday,
highs In 50s. Chance of rain 60
percent.

••

Announcing....

Marting named guest
speaker for banquet
BY OPAL DYER, DPA

Dodgers lead
World Series
2-0 after win

DEMOCRATS STAGE FUND RAISER- Over
210 Melp Coantlans attended a Democrat fund
raJBID1 d l - beld Saturday night at the Meigs
County Sealor Cltlze1111 Center In Pomeroy.
. Pictured at the event are, front, I to r, Jolynn
Boster, candidate for reelection as dlsll"lct
representative; State Senator Jan Michael Lon1;
Susie Soulsby, representln~~: her husband, James
Soulsby, candidate lor Meigs County SheriH;

back, I to r, John Buchanaa, Athens, caadldate for
representative to the U. 8. Conlftlli Jud~~:e
Lawrence Grey, Athens, candidate for reelection
to the Court of Appeals; Allee· Roble knick,
Toledo; candidate for the Ohlp Supreme Court;
Don Ml chael MuUen, candidate lor Melp County
Court Judge, and Henry Hunter, chalrrnaa of the
- Meigs County Demooratlc ExecuUve Committee.

jAround 200 protesters are
arrested near. Pentagon today

~ ~A'SHINbTON'' !OPII ··:::.

Nearly 200 people were arrested
as hundreds ofactlv!Sts marched
on the Pentagon this morning,
obstructing two entrances to the
.facility and vowing to risk mass
arrest while protesting U.S.
policy In Central America.
About 600 people gathered ,at
the Pentagon's south parking lot
by 6:30 a.m. EDT, chanting
"shutltdown" andcaUlngforthe
Unlted States to remove Its
military advisors from EI Salvador. The demonstrators also

placed several hundi'i!d crosses · more precise number was. not
on one side of the Pentagon to available. Metro pollee had not
memorialize those who have yet compUed the number arbeen killed in the war between rested, a spokeswoman said.
the U.S. -backed government and
Beth Perry, spOkeswoman for
leftist guerrillas.
the demonstration, said It was
As of 10:45 a.m. EDT. liB "unclear" how many had been
people had been arrested by arrested. She estimated there
Pentagon pollee, said Pentagon were at "least a thousand"
spokesman Jim Turner.
demonstrators. The pollee estlAnother "70 or so" had been matedthecrowdinthehundreds.
arrested by pollee from ArllngPerry had previously estiton County and the Metro translf mated there would be 1,500 to
system, . said Arlington spokes- . 2,000 demonstrators, 500ofwhom
. man Barry Hulick. He said a
(Contbrued on page 10)

Nine out of 10 executives said
their companies made charitable
donations In the last year totaling
a median 1.7 percent of pretax
earnings, which means half of
the contrlbu Uons were larger
than 1. 7 percent and half were
smaller.
About 71 percent of the CEOs
described themselves as "highly
involved" in corporate giving
activities, spending an average
of four hours a week both during ·
and after business hours, the
survey said.
"(But) you never know from
Continued on page 10
•

Meigs Local School District
obs_erving 'Drug-Free Week'
Meigs Local School Dis trlct is
observing Drug-Free Week to-·
day through Oct. 21 with the
slogan, "Be Smart, Don't Start".
The elementary schools will be
using McGruff work sheets In the
classroom which deal with the
subject of drugs and alcohoL
Students will view a video
starring McGruff and live klds in
a 23 minute video with an upbeat
message about kid's abllltlles to
say "no". They will also be able
to use a computer game on upper
grade levels which; ~eals with
drugs. Students will be able .also
to enjoy an audio cassetle with 11.
catchy tunes to "say no".
Ninety-nine percent of children

6-12 know who McGruff is and a
phenomenal 97 percent try to do
what he tells them, promoters of
the observance report.
Thanks are extended to the
National Crime Prevention
Council, the U.S. Department of
Justice, and the Texize Division
of DQw Consumers Products,
Inc., for providing this kit to
Meigs Local for use during the
Drug Free Week observanc.e.
In addition, students will have
book marks to co lor and will have
the opportunity to make a poster
depicting the evils of drugs and
alcohol. St~dents will receive
certificates for firsi, second,
third places and honorable men-

lion for their posters.
Gar! Hysell, Meigs Coiunty
Juvenile Officer, will speak to the
elementary students throughout
the week about drugs , will
present a slide show and will
allow time for question and
answer sessions.
Just Say No membership cards
will be provided to each elementary students The card has a
place for students to place their
name and address and to pledge
to lead drug free Jives.
At Meigs Junior High today
students are to have small group
sessions durlng the day with
Betty Ryan from the Ohio Youth
Continued on page 10

Riverboats draw thousands .~
for .'Tall Stacks' celebration
Betty Mohring, 65, said the trip
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Several named for the smokestacks
hundred thousand people turned __perched atop the steamers and reminded her of when she used to
regularly ride a riverboat shuttle
out this weekend to watch a sternwheelers.
14
passenger-carrying
riv·to
an amusement park. She
The
unique gathering of 14 old-time
erboats
all
docked
at
the
Clncln.
recalled
"sparking" on the top
riverboats on the Ohio River In
comm~:moratlon of Cincinnati's
mitt shoreline and the gleaming deck.
white vessels made a majestic · "You know - necking, holly bicentennial.
"Being on the river on an portrait against a soft blue hocking, smooching;" she said.
Many other people were getIndian Summer day, what could autumn sky.
While thousands of visitors . ling their first look at such boats.
be better?" said · Sue Bourke,
toured the boats at dockside,
"I think It's neat," said 17aboard the "Southern Belle. ''
· Other riverboats like the hundreds of others purchased year-old Carrie Crutcher. "I've
tickets for short sunrise, brunch. never been around boats like
''Delta Queen," ''Belle of Loulsluncheon, dinner and moonlight this."
vllle" and the "River Queen"
"This Is thrilling, " said Norma
participated In the weekend-long cruises.
Wilson. "I want to come back. I
celebration of "Tall Stacks,"
want to be here for the
trlcentennlal."
As a backdrop to the boats, the
riverfront was filled with roving
entertainers and actors dressed
In costumes from a century ago,
as
bicentennial celebration orJames Souls by, retired Pomeroy Postmaster and a candidate
ganizers tried to shOw visitors
for the post of Meigs County Sheriff in the Nov. 8 election, Is
what a bustling shoreline looked
doing well at University Hospital in Columbus where he was
like
a century ago.
taken following a heart attack last Tuesday night.
"It's a beautiful and colOrful
Soulsby, who Is also a part-time sportswriter for The Dally
part of America's history," said
Sentinel, may be returned to his home on Union Avenue in
Sara Backman, spokeswoman
Pomeroy this week. Cards may be sent to the Car~ta~ Unit,
for the Cincinnati Bicentennial
Room 822, Rhodes Hall, University Hospitals, Columbus, Ohio
Commission. "It's a celebration
43212.
of · river development In the
United States."
The 14 boats participating
were the "Delta Queen" . of
Two people were Injured In accidents occurring within a few
Cincinnati, the "President" of St.
hundred feet of each other -and a few m lnu tes of each otherLouis, the "Belle of Louisville,"
Saturday at 7:48p.m. in Olive Township on S.R. .681, according
the "Island Queen" of Memphis,
to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol. ·
the "West VIrginia • Belle" ol
Injured were Betty Stephens, 61, o! Akron. and Denzil L.
Huntington, W. Va., the "South- .
McKay, 22, of Parkersburg, W.Va. Both were taken by the
ern Belle" of Chattanooga,
Meigs County EMS to Camden-Clark Hospital in Parkersburg.
Tenn., the "Bonnie Belle" of
Both were treated and released.
Evansville. Ind., the "Mark
Stephens was a passenger of Charles F . Bailey, 36, of Akron,
Twain" of Hannibal, Mo., "The
who was driving west In a 1977 Buick Regal when hewentof!the
Queen" of Cincinnati, the '
right side of the road and hit a tree. &amp;lley was charged with
"Becky Thatcher'' of Cincinnati,
DWI and· cited for !allure to yield and driving without a license.
the "Spirit of Cincinnati," the
McKay, driving a 1975 Ford Mustang, was heading west when
"P.A. Denny" of Huntington, W.
CHlJGGING ALONG
Ra!lllell Sarna of
he went off the right side of the road. He hit an embankment.
Va., the "River Queen" of
HIU.boro, Ohio displayed his Model Geller Steam
The patrol said neither accident was related ·to the other.
Knoxville, Tenn., and the "Queen
Entrfne at the Bob Evans Farm Fe1dval over the
Continued. on page 10
City Clipper' • of Cincinnati.
weekend ID Rio Graade. AI the enctne ran, biDows

.Ill• .· , r:..Y

Local news briefs.--

Soulsby is 'doing well'

Two people injured in accidents

.

. II

ol black smoke poured from the stack. Acconllng
to Bob Evans Farms otftclala, a re"conl-llettlng
35,001 people visited the three-day event. See
'
addiUoaal photos on pace 5.

�...

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
&lt;
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~. ~.:_~ •.......,c:!oo=o
~V ·

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
P.AT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher(ConlroUer

BOB HOEFLICH

General MaDaser

A MEMBER ofTbe United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leu than 300 wc,;."'!ls
long. Alllettersare subject toedUlngand must be slgn.B:l with name, addreu and
telephOne number. No unsigned letters wUI be pubUshed. Letters should be In

good taste, addressing Issues. not persooauues.

Metzenbaum ducks debate

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, October 17, 1988

Marijuarla growing big business
WASHINGTON - Marijuana
Is a huge cash crop In the United
States, bringing In more ihan $10
billion each year. And that hasn't
escaped the notice of organized
criminal groups, which are lnfll·
!rating the business, sometimes
resorting to murder .to protech
their loves lments.
Law enforcement officers who
deal with the problem tell us It Is
no longer the enterprise of 1960s
dropojlta who just want to grow
enough dope to keep themselves
high Into the next century.
The flower children have long
been overrun by gun-tDtlng thugs
and behind-the scenes "lnves·
tors" who use hired help to till the
fields.
Sometimes the hired help are
undocumented migrant workers.
According to some of 0ur pollee

FOXBORO, Mass. (UPT) New England Patriots Coach
Raymond Berry said his team
would have to control the clock
and avoid turnovers If they were
to have a chance at knocking off
the undefeated Cincinnati
Bengals.
The Patriots have had little
success in those departments
recently, but on Sunday, New
England played virtually fl'!Wless football and upset the
Bengals · 27:21 before a sellout
crowd at Sullivan Stadium.
While New England's offense
had time on Its side. the defense
made quick work of Bengals
quarter~k . Boomer Eslason,
intercepting him five times.
Eslason had thrown three Inter- .
ceptions prior to facing the toughNew England pass defense. Cin"
clnnall alS!) fumbled once.
Two of the Patriots interceplions led to touchdowns·. New
England did not turn theballover
once. Cincinnati dropped to 6·1,
while New England improved to
3-4.
''Our defense did a phenomenal job," said Berry. "We got
turnovers and we stop(llid a great
oUense." The Patriots held Cincinnati - averaging an NFLleading 405 yards per game- to
365 yards on offense.

. -..

and "patch pirates." The pirates . "''
'
raid pot patches that others have
grown. A high-yielding pot plant
can bring more than $3,000.
•
In 1987, the Forest Service
logged 409 Incidents of lnttlnlda·
tlon bY pot growers against
••
rangers or bystanders;
In·
valved shots being fired, serious
injury or the threat of death.
Josephine County, Ore., Sheriff W.E. "Bill" Arnado &lt;!stl·
mates that If a marijuana grower
In his region raises a mere 10
plants, bls potential ir~ss In·
come from these plants could be ,.
anywhere from $36,000 to $72,000.
',
(The per-pound street value for
different types of marijuana ' .·"·.virrles, and each plant will yield
from one to three pounds of •....•
marijuana.) The average field In
•
Arnado' s area Is 60 plants per
patcb, which means from
$216,000 to $432,000 per field.
Usually, the organized criminal
groups have multiple fields. If
one or two are discovered, there
are others that can be harvested.
In business, It's called
diversification. ·
The organized criminal groups
thai law enforcement officers
are uncovering are Increasing In
size, a reflection of the lucrative
. nature of this business. The
biggest group found to date was
stumbled upon when Its 355-acre . ·,
farm In New York Mills, Minn.,
was raided last year.
There Is also· significant out·
side Investment from amateur
criminals. Investors ranging
from stock brokers to construe·
tlon workers are providing growers with money or land, or both.
Some of the Investors have never
•'
grown marijl!ana before; others
are former growers who llave
graduated from tilling the soil to
'jexecuttve" status.

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or JOBS - program offering
education, training and work
activities ranging from high
school to community jobs.
- Under the ''workfare' •provl·
slon, starting In 1994, one adult In
each two-parent welfare household would have to participate In
a job search and, falling to find a
job, work 16 hours a week In a
state-organized work activity. A
young parent could Instead work
toward a high-school diploma.
- States would automatically
· withhold wages from a noncustodial parent who owes courtordered child support and Isn't
paying. States would also receive
federal money to set up computerized systems to better track
and monitor chlld·support
enforcement.
The child-support collection
provision Is the most popular,
because most people are familiar

with the enormity oftheproblem.
The most unpopular Is the
"workfare" provision. True, It
may not work. But It's a better
way to approach the problem
than the way we've been doing it,
for two reasons:
First, by trying this approach
we will watch th~dynamlcsofthe
program unfold. If It doesn't
work, we will understand why,
and we will be closer to reaching
a more workable system.
Second, I don't believe any one
group of people are "entitled" to
be supported by anyone else,
unless they are physically or
mentally Incapable of working.
We've gone through 25 years of
letting our welfare system be
guided by · the assumption that
because the rest of us didn't
make the economy good enough,
one group of people Is "entitled''
to support.

0

•

'

We've been paying for programs that foster dependency
and create resenlment among
those who support them. During , .
a few of the trail "workfare"
programs of the late '70s and
early '80s, critics argued that
these "professionals" created
nothing but "makework" for the
poor that did nothing but pen·a uze
them for their benefits.
If these professionals can't
come up with work opportunities
•
that enl!lntce their communities
•0
and give the workers a sense of
•1
worth, then that's the first place
I
we can save money, by firing the
!
'.
program administrators.
l
We can get people off welfare
'
rolls and Into jobs. If our first
•'
plans don't work, we can modifY
.•
them until they do. What can't
•
' work Is what we've been doing
••
for the last 25 years: virtually
•0
nothing.

...

By IEFF SHAIN

GAME DELAYED- Llnemea for the New Eaclud Patriots
and lbe Beaphlare ready lolllal1 biUinceaeholller, buta01ewlth
Beopl qWII'Ierbaelllloemer Eslall• (7), who walled lor more
Ihall live miHtes belore Pine late lldlo• because of cbeerllll1 lam
at Sullvaa stadl11111 Ill Foxbo..., .....,.. Tbe crowd made It
Impossible lor &amp;lie lleaphllo bear &amp;......,.• slpals. Tile Patriots
wonfl-llteb... tbelleaplstllelrftntloulnseveni-.(UPI)

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"Excuse mel Didn 'I we meet st sn esr/ler snt/sbortlon demonstration?"

.Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Monday, Oct.17, the 291st day of 1988 wlth 75 ttl follow .
The moon Is In Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are under the sign of Libra. They Include
Jupiter Hammon, AmeriCa's first published black .poet, In 1711,
actress Irene Ryan In 1903, playwright ~rthur Miller In 1915 (age 73),
actress Rita Hayworth In 1918, actor Tom Poston In 1927 (age 61),
newspaper columnist Jimmy Breslin In 1930 (age 58), daredevil Eve!
Kntevel In 1938 (age 50). and actress Margot Kidder In 1948 (age 40).
On this date In history:
In 1777, at one of the turning points of the U.S, Revolution, British
Gen. John Burgoyne surrendered to American Gen. Horatio Gates at
Saratoga, N.Y.
In 1945, Juan Peron became dictator of Argentina. He remained In
power tor 11 years before being overthrown.
In 1967, the rock musical "Hair" opened at the Public Theater In
New York City.
·
·
In 1979, Mother Teresa of Calcutta, a Roman Catholic nun who
cares tor the sick and poor, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
.In 1986, Congress, preparing· to adjourn two weeks late, passed a
· landmark tmmi.lfratlon bill. .·
·
·
•

¥

e

!!on were between Lloyd Bentsen
and Dan Quayle, the Republl·
cans, at this point, would have
cause for concern.
In tbelr debate In Omaha,
Neb., on Oct. 5, Bentsen's seniorIty, suavity and wit told heavily
In his favor. Quayle: clearly
under Instructions to look serious
and stress his own experience,
acquitted himself honorably. He
certainly dldn' t come across as
Irresponsible or uninform~d. and
he probably managed to assure
most voters who are leaning to
Bush that he Is no disgrace to the
ticket.
But that's not quite the same
thing as saying that he looked or
acted as "presidential" as Lloyd
Bentsen. Moreover, the one
"sound-bite" of the evening the moment that Is guaranteed to
be replayed and remembered
forever - was Bentsen's
"You're no jack Kennedy." The
Democrats In the Omaha audience roared with delight at that
zinger.
The problem, though, from the
Democrats' standpoint, Is that
the presidential election this.
year Isn't between Bentsen and
Quayle: It's between Bush and
Dukakls. And there Is a real
)1086iblllty, It seems to me, that
Bentsen will hereafter be perceived by many Americans as
towering not only over Quayie
but over his own running mate.
Let's face It, Mlcliael Dukakls
Is, !rom a crudely political
standpoint, de!lcent In almost
every attribute that makes Lloyd
Bentsen attractive. He Is shorter,
and just generally less "pres!·
dentlal" In his demeanor. He has

;c,

Dukakls, perhaps, as his vice
presidential running mate)? The
answer, of course, lies In the
composition of the modern Democratic Party, especially as
reflected In Its national conven·

tions. The national Democratic
Party today opposes practically
everything Lloyd Bentsen stands
for and vice versa. He Is on Its
ticket at all only to conceal that
fact.

Berry's World

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first loss, ·27-21

Players praised the New Eng. -In the second half to keep the
land defensive line with forcing Cincinnati offense on the sideEsiason to throw a few errant lines. Quarterback Doug Flutle
spirals.
mixed the run and short pass,
"I thought I made·an the right and Cincinnati hurt themselves
(defensive) reads. You are going with penalties.
to have those days. There is
For Instance. on the Patriots'
nothlngyoucandoaboutit,"sald final scoring drive, cornerback
Esiason, who completed 18 of 28 Eric Thomas was flagged for •
passes for 239 yards and two holding on third and 13 that
touchdowns.
resulted In an automatic ~ew
''We made some mistakes," England first down on tbeCincln·
said Bertgals wide receiver Ed- nat! 11 yard line. ·
die Brown, who caught three
"We bad a let down. There was
passes for 67 yards and two no ques !ion," said Cincinnati
touchdowns. "Butweknowwhat Coach Sam Wyche "The locker
we have and that we would be room was different and the
able to come back, but the clock pregame meal was different. It is
didn't work with us. We didn't my fault."
New England held a 14.0 lead at
have enough time."
ThePatriotscontrolledtheball the half. John Stephens recofor 16 minutes in the first half. vered teammate Robert Perry.compared with the Bengals 14 man's fumble in the Cincinnati
minutes. In the second half, New end zone early In the first quarter
England held the ball for seven for his first NFL touchdown, and
minutes in the third quarter and Tatupu banged over from three
12 minutes In the fourth quarter. yards out just before halftime.
''We tried to get some control
Interceptioris by Johnny Rem·
as far as keeping the ball away bert and Rod McSwain set up
from Boomer, which Is pretty both of those scores.
muchtheoffenseweusewhenwe
The Patriots took the second
play against (Miami's Dan) half kickoff and marched 72
Marln.o ," said New England yards, Reggie Dupard running 10
back Most Tatupu, who scored a yards for the first of his two
touchdown.
touchdowns. Teddy Garcia
The Patriots used two long missed the extra point and New
scoring drives - 72 and !!0 yards England led 20.0 wltb just over 11

F..aball
rlared U•haeker llmm)'
ad1Yalr4

Mik:•f!ll.

Fa mer, 3 7-year-old Marcel
Dionne.
Skating behind the Vancouver
net , Dionne passed to Lafleur In
the slot, and Lafleur directed a
shot past Canuc;ks goaltender
Steve Weeks to give the Rangers
a 1-0 lead.
"The goal was a bang-bang
shot," Weeks said. ·"On a play
like that, I have to cheat a little.
When the pass starts coming, I
have to go right out there and I
havetoknowexactlywherehels.
"It was a caseofgoodtimlng,a
good pass from Dionne and his
be
r~::f i~e~~ right place at the
Lafleur added an assist on the
second goal, helping to set up
Brian Leetch for his second goal
of the year. Wben Lafleur first
-retired from hockey, Leetch still
was in high school.
Normand Rochefort padded
the Ranger lead to 3.() at 16:46
with a slapsh&lt;itlrom the left point
that deflected off a Canuck
defender.
The Canucks used a pair of
Petri Skrlko goals In the second
period to trim the New York lead
to :i-2, but could not get the
equalizer.
The victory was the Rangers'
first at home after two losses and
continued their domination of tbe
Canucks at Madison Square
Garden. Vancouver's record In
New York is 2-15·2 over the last19
contests .

In other games, Boston riddled
Chicago 10-3, Quebec topped
Buffalo 5·3 and Edmonton and
Winnipeg skated to a 3-3 tie.
Bnllls 11, Blackllawlls 3
At Chicago•. Cam Neely had
seven points with his sixth career
hat trlckandfourasslsts.Neely's
performance matched the club
mark of seven points shared by
Bobby Orr. Phil Esposito and
Barry Pederson. The Bruins
broke a 3-3 tie with lour straight
goals in the second period
against rookie goaltender
Jimmy Waite.
No~lques $, Sabres 3
At Buffalo, N.Y ., David Latta
and llro Jarvi scored third·
period goals to break a 3-3 lie.
Latta put tbe Nordlques ahead
· lor good at 7: 48ofthe third period
when he backhanded a bouncing
puck Into the top corner of the
net. Jarvi slipped a Walt Pod·
dubny pass by goalie Tom
Barrasw at 11: 15 for the final
goaL
Jets 3, Oilers 3 (lie)

At Winnipeg, Manitoba, Alain
Chevrier made '13 of his 34 saves
In the third period to help
perserve the tie with the defend·
ing Stanley Cup champions.
Edmonton had pulled even 3·3 on
Mark Messler's first goal of the
season, coming 51- seconds Into
the third period. The Oilers.
playing their first season after
the trade of Wayne Gretzky, are
just 2·2-lto begin the year .

Ell..-.. L WWI.-,q I

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L.&amp; . a~~Nrn• NrwOrle.... l • ·• ·

Inland DaUy Press Association lllld tbe
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative. Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

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Thrills. Chills. Laugher, and
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OCTOIEI 22, 1988
2:30 &amp; 7:30P.M.
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Member: United Press Intematlonal,

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The Daily Sentinel

v.... wrs

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" - Alllllfe.:lll c.I..-J.I: II p.m .

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"You're doing a George Bush, sre(l't you. trying to lower my expectations/" \

minutes left In the third quarter .
Cincinnati made il 20-7 with
five minutes left in the third
quarter when Ickey Woods
scored on fourth·and·goal from .
the Patriots' 1-yard line. The
scoringdrlvecovered80yardsln
12 plays.
On Cincinnati' s next posses·
ston, Esiason took the Bengats 59
yards in five plays. hitting Eddie
Brown with a 26-yard touchdown
pass to make the 5core 20·14 with
a minute left in the tii'lrd quarter.
Then came the decisive New
England drive, in which Flutle
ran l4 plays. mixing the ground
game and air attack. Flu tie was 6 ·
of 7 lor 64 yards on the drive.
capped by a JO.yard run by
Dupard.
Esiason then led the Bengals80
yards in seven plays, hitting
Brown with a 16-yard scoring
strike to make the score 27-21.
Flu tie. who tossed three interceptlons last week In a loss at
Green Bay, completed 10 of 14
passses. for 165 yards and no ·
touchdowns .
In addition to· Rembert and
McSwain. Fred Marion, Tim
Jordan and Jim Bowman
chalked up interceptions for New
England. Marion also recovered
the Cincinnati fumble by Woods
In the second quarter.
The Patriots totaled 311 yards
on offense, 140 on the ground.
Stephens led the Patriots with 56
yards on 16carries. Cedric Jones
caught 3 passes for 60 yards for
New England.

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Transactions

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&amp;~'He

UPI Sports Writer
The last time Guy Lafleur
scored a goal, . he was . only a
future Hall of Farner.
Lafleur scored a goal and
added an assist Sunday night
during a three-goal first period
for the New York Rangers,
leading to a 3·2 victory over the
Vancouver Canucks .
The 37-year-old right wing Is In
the midst of a comeback after a
retirement of nearly four years.
signing with the Rangers just
three days a Iter being inducted
Into the Hockey Hall of Fame.
His last goal came Oct. 25, 1984,
against Buffalo's Bob Sauve.
"Four years Is pretty big
slump." Lafleur joked . "It's nice
to get out of it. This Is special
tonight. It makes me (eel good
and reminds me of the good
times."
La !leur en'tered the season 11th
on theNHL's alHime list in goals
with 518 and in points with 1,246,
coming In 14 years with the
Montreal Canadiens.
Lafleur opened thescortng7: 22
Into the first period with some
help from another future Hall of

•

' W•W•RJ••I\., NN' .ler.,. I

NY&amp;MJ~PHI.

Gr~..,

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had much less experience In
almost every category relevant
to the presidency. He Is, moreover, far to the left of Bentsen
on practically every Issue before
the voters this year - a fact so
damaging that Dukakls has done
his strenuous best to conceal It
altogether.
Putting Lloyd Bentsen before a
national television audience (as
distinguished from using him In
states, such as Texas, where lie
has special strengths) merely
emphasizes how many of his
attractive qualities Dukakls
lacks. What's more, Dukakls
himself Is next at bat (In the
second and final presidential
· debate), and the voters will be
waiting to see If he can lord It
over George . Bush the way
Bentsen lorded It over Quayle.
For the presidency, after all, Is
the real Issue this November. I tis
altogether proper to give due
attention to the selection of the
man who wlll be "one heartbeat
away from the Oval Office"; but
we cannot afford to forget whose
heart Will, In all likelihood, be
beating In that OvaiOftlce. And II
the Democrats win, It won't be
Lloyd Bentsen's; It will be
Michael Dukakls'.
Whatever Its shortcomings,
the Bush-Quayle ticket at least
has Its priorities In the right
order. The presidential candl·
date Is taller, older, more experienced and warmer then the
vl~e presidential candidate.
O.Jer In the J¥mocratlc camp,
precisely the reverse Is true.
Such reflections may lead one
to wonder Idly why on earth the
Democrats didn't nominate
Bentsen tor the top spot (with .'

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Is it Bentsen vs. Dukakis? ___w_u_tiam_Rus_he_r

The Daily Sentinei- Page.--3

Rangers edge ·Canuckt, 3-2

..

welfare reforJn is worth a tcy___;s=a:::..=ra::..=...h. : :. ;Ov:. .:;.;er.. :;. ;.st,;. .; . ree.; _t

Berry's World

Patriots hand

,.

Jack Anderson and Dale Van. Atta ;• ·

sources, there are lncre~~Stng
reports that Instead of paying
these Illegal aliens, the pot
If the workers are U.S. cltl·
growers sometimes kill them zens, Instead of Illegal aliens who
when the job Is done.
can be easily disposed of, they
The U.S. Forest Service has can make · good money. Some
noted the Increase In organized collect as much as 60 percent of
criminal groups- though not the the profits after sale of the
Mafia. Forest Service agent marljua11a - others as little as 5
Frank Packwood has seen the percent. Otherwise, the reports
Increase during his years of · • are that the "brokers," who
busting pot growers on federal
make . mUllons of dollars annuland In northern California's ally from their patches, hire local
three-county "Emerald people for an average of $200 per
Triangle.''
day.
On a helicopter fitght over
Across the country, the U.S.
prime pot-growing forests, Pack· Forest Service figures that about
wood explained that lncreas· 800,000 acres of Its land Is unsafe
lngly, the people being arrested for public use because of Illegal
In the plots are merely grunt pot growing. The patches on
laborers working for "brokers" public land are surrounded by
or "Investors" who never dirty booby traps and armed guards
their hands.
who shoot at Innocents, pollee

• By LEE LEONARD

UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - They say Americans are growing soft, and what
better example of this than the underbelly of Congress, where
Incumbents are able to slt with feet up lor 20 or 30 years, counting
donations from PACs and brushing would-be challengers away like so
many pesky flies? ·
Representatives and· senators In Washington live In a different
world; a world In which they may set their own pay, write their own
retirement plans and generally live by rules that apply only to them.
Thus It was last week that Sen. Howard Metzenbaum decided It was
beneath his dignity to engage In a face -to-face confrontation with his
challenger, Republican nominee George Volnovich. So Metzenbaum. that great sejf-descrlbed. fighter, picked up his ·
ball and went home, foreswearing any debate with the Cleveland
mayor.
The reason? Volnovtch had the temerity to call Metzenbaum a
" liar." Several times. And Voinovtch said the senator was tolerant of
chtld pornographers and he would not stop others from calling
Metzenbaum a Communist sympathizer.
Naturally, we are to believe, Metzelibaum has never uttered an
ugly word or charged his oppo 0ent with falsehoods, especially during
his heated 1974 primary campaign against John Glenn.
Charges and counter-charges, however tiresome and underhanded, have never been part of American polttlcalcampalgns. Sure,
and TV commercials aren't repetitive.
Apparently the agl,ng Metzenbaum, who has grown comfortable In
the Senate seat he's held for 12 years, and maybe bas lost a step or two
from the lack of a good re-election fight, decided he wasn't up to a
slde-by·slde comparison wlth his opponent.
He should have said so.
Instead, Metzenbaum chose to hide behind the accusation that .
Volnovich was running "a negative and mean·splrtted campaign of
smears, sleaze and gutter tactics."
.
Then Metzenbaum untlateralty set the ground rules for being In the
Both houses of Congress have
Senate: "His (Voinovlch's) conduct In thtscampalgndlsqualifles him
passed the Family Support Act, a
from serious consideration as a worthy candidate for the United
welfare reform bill that's the
States Senate,"
first major overhaul of the
' What we have here Is a senator who awakened one morning to find
welfare system In 25 years.
himself sitting on a 15- to 20-polnt lead In the polls .and decided to
HarcH!ne conservatives say It
button It up and play a prevent defense lor the rest of the campaign.
won't
do wat It alms to - cut
II there were no debate. there would be no gaffes, no danger of
welfare
rolls and save taxpayers
exposing a weakness. There would only be rallies before friendly
money
and hard-line liberals
troops and television commercials - hundreds of thoj}sands of
It's
unfair
to poor people.
say
dollars worth of television commercials yet to come.
I
say
It's
a
start,
and high time.
. The high· handed judgment was: voters, you don't need to decide.
How
the
country
has stood the
Volnovtch Is dlsqualllled.
welfare mess as long as It has
It seems the Metzenbaum campaign decided to take a calculated
without polarizing Its citizens
risk - accept the heat over the lack of a debate and avoid
endangering the frontrunner's status.
even more than It has, I don't
know.
Is It ,a ny wonder that Congress acts_the Wl\Y It does when all the
Certain features of the bill, I
electlon-orool Incumbents 2Pt to2Pthf&gt;r?
.•-believe, are positive steps that,
even If they don't work exactly as
planned, are at least In the right
direction:
- Welfare parents with child·
ren older than 3 years old wouid
have to participate In a new Job
' Opportunities and. Basic Skills-

Pomeeoy-Middleport. Ohio

'

........

.

.
...
•
..

''

�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-4-The Dailv Sentinel

Browns stay alive with -1
•
WID over Philadelphi~ Eagles
CLEVELAND ( UPI)
Among the millions watching
Randall Cunningham's sterling
performance agalns't the Giants
last Monday night were the
Cleveland Browns' defenders.
Sunday, they proved the Phlla·
delphia Eagles' quarterback
Isn't quite ready lor the Hall of
Fame.
·
In the B~owns' 19-3 victory,
Cunningham managed just 114
yards on 15 completions In 27
attempts - and was sag_ked nine
times for 66 yards In Ibises.
The Cleveland pass · defense
also kept alive Its perfect scoreless record, breaking Cunningham's streak of 18 straight games
with at least one touchdown pass.
Cornerback Frank Minnifield
also Intercepted Cunningham
twice, breaking his streak of 94
passes without an Interception.
Philadelphia coach Buddy
Ryan appeared shellshocked.
''I think they have an excellent
defense and they do what they
have to do to win," Ryan said.
''And today, they kicked our
butts pretty good. I think they're
a helluva football team."
Free safety Felix Wright said
the defenders were lmp~essed but certainly ·not daunted - by
,Cunningham's 31-of-41 performance against the Giants Monday night.
"We knew he was a good
ballplayer.'' Wright said . "We

•

CARTER UPENDED - Philadelphia Eagle
wide receiver Cr., Carter Is upended by the
Browns' Frank Minnifield alter catching a pass

lrom quarterback Raadall Cunningham In the
third quarter ol Sunday's game In Cleveland. The
Browns won 19-3. (UP I)

·Hershiser stops Athletics, 6-0

'

LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Ore!
Hershiser' s latest shutout makes
you wonder If the Oakland
Athletics will win a game In this
World Series .
Hersh!ser pitched a threehitter Sunday night and added
the best hitting performance by a
World Series pitcher In 64 years,
moving the Los Angeles Dodgers
halfway to a sweep with a 6-0 rout
of the Athletics:
"Nobody said lt would be
easy." said Oakland Manager
Tony La Russa In a voice
approaching a whisper. "I just
told them not to be disappointed
and not to be discouraged."
First, Kirk-Gibson beat theA's
with a ninth-inning homer. Then
the National League's leading Cy
Young candidate dominated
them.
" After the dramatic finish of
last night , I didn't want to let the
club down /' Hershlser said. "I
fel t the same way In the last
ga me of the playoffs."
Hershiser triggered a five-run
third inning with a single,
knocked out loser Stor m Davis
with a fourth -inning double, and
doubled again in the sixth . Mike
Marshall backed him with a
three- run homer, gIving the
Dodgers a 2-0 lead in the
bes t-ot-seven Series.
" I have never seen anybody
pitch like that and continue It the
way he has," Los Angeles Manager Tommy Lasorda said. "He
is wilhou t a doubt outstanding. A
tremendous competitor. Wants
to beat you at all Urnes."
"! was extremely tired most of
the game but l fell good on the
mound ," Hershiser said. "I
was n't tired from pitching but
from running the bases ."
Trying to avoid their first
three-game losing slide In two
months . the A's return to Oak·
land, &lt;where former Dodger Bob
We lc;h opposes Los Angeles lefty
John Tudor on Tuesday night.
Oakland has arranged a voluntary workou t on Monday .
No team has swept a World
Series since Cincinnati manhandled the 1976 New York
Yankees. The A's have not lost
three straight games since Aug.
18-20.
In his first World Series appearance, Hershiser showed the
competitive streak that made
hlm MVP In the National League
playoffs. He allowed only three
hits. all to Dave Parker. The first
two Urnes, Hershlser followed by
throwing a double-play grounder
to Mark McGwlre . Hershlser
ended the ,game by striking out
Parker.
Hershlser, whostruckouteight
and walked two, became the first
pitcher to throw shutouts In both
the league championship series
and World Series in the same
season. He shut out the Mets In
Game 7 of the National League
Championship Series.
The Dodgers, who won 10 fewer
regular season games than Oak·
land, entered the series as
underdogs; even though they
upset the New York Mets In the
NLCS.
.Hersh Iser sho'{ed no letdown
after the five-run outburst, strlk-

Contributions were made to the
American Indian Relief Council.
•POW-MIA , and Covenant House
when the ·Lewis Manley AuxilIary 263, American Legion, met
at Dale's Restaurant.
VIrginia Stalworth was hostess
for the meeting with Mrs. Mar_garet Bowles presiding. A communclatlon was read from Mrs .
Mary Moose, · Eighth Dis trlct
presl"dent, announcing the
Eighth District conference to be
h!!ld at Lafayette In Gallipolis,
Oct. 20.
was noted that the unit has
made goal In membership. Mrs.
Ada Franklin was welcomed as a

\It

A men's prayer breakfast and
fellowship dinner were noted at
the recent meeting of the Lydia
Council ol the Bradford Church
ot Christ held at the home of
Sherry Smith.
Of.ftcers' reports were given
and !hi! group arranged to
purchase cards to be sent to
church members who are not on
the monthly visitor lists. Diana
Bing will send them.
A su{ishtne basket was prepared for a shutin. The Christmas In July project was discussed. Madeline Painter had

.

Sports briefs
Boxing
Juan Jose Estrada of Mexico
stopped Japanese challenger Takuya Mugu rum a at 2:07 of the
11th round to retain his WBA
junior featherweight championship.
It was Estrada's first
defense of the 125-pound crown
he won from Bernardo Plnango
of Venezuela In Mexico. Mugurums, a former WBA bantamweight champion, fatted ·In his
attempt to win lf!Orld titles In two
ditferent classet. ·

DOMINO'S '
PIZZA
D£UVEIS
FlEE.
West lllln St.

"2-2124

.....

DINNER POR POUR
LARU 11" I·ITIII PIZZA

v. WIIhP.,.-....I ...... MulllrOOMI, :

Oitlo•••o...t ,.,,....

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$9:6gg'minks

Uooitd hll•ory .

st•

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OILT

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11

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M.s..

DIIINIR POR TWO

Lunoh Spec...

AllY 11" IITUII'IDA
PWS 2 · 16 oz. Softdllnka

PWS 2 -16 oz. Sohdrtnks

12' 1 ITUII'IZZA

devotions on "Worry" and Nancy
Morris had prayer.
A surprise layette shower was
held honoring VIcki Smith. Refreshments were prepared and
served by Mrs. Smith and Carolyn Nicholson. Attending were
Jackie Reed, Paula Pickens,
Cherie Williamson, Becky and
Bethany Amberger, Diana Bing,
Suzie Will, Renee Stewart, Cathy
and Janelle Spencer, Delores
Frank, Sherry and Elizabeth
Smith. Next meeting will be held
at the home ol Madeline Painter
on Nov. 14.

GUEST SPEAKER - The
Rev. Don Bock will be spetiker
for revival services to he held
· at the Rutland Church ol the
Nazarene at ~: 30 p.m. each
evening beginning · Tuesday
and at 10:30 a.m. and 8:31p.m.
on Sunday, Oct. 23.

I
'

I.

ON THE FARM- Blacksmithing was demonstrated b:r Bill Preston, who told the tbouS&amp;llds of
visitors to the Bob Evans Farm Festival of the

RUTLAND - New officers
were elected at the recent
meeting of the Rutland PTO held
at the school. ·
'
Elected were Teresa Patterson, president; Sandy Hysell,
vice president; Lilly Kennedy,

I

secretary, and Valerie Sawyers,
treasurer.
Several money-making projects were discussed with proceeds to be added to the new
playground equipment fund.
Plans were discussed for a

Visits in Meigs
Mrs. Stella Atkins and Miss
Ruby Diehl spent several days
recently visiting their c&lt;iuslns,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Chap·
man and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Schantz and family of Silver
Springs, Md. They also visited
Mr. and Mrs. David Ray Riggs of '
Greenbelt, Md. and stopped at
Brookside Gardens.

'.

·-

family entertainment night on a
monthly basis. At the next
meeting the sixth gra.de will have
a program. Klndergarteen class
had the largest percentage of
parents attending.

·-~!...., r­

.,.,r "'"

·tt~: "'~r:
~·7:

T,;ij

Grande made their own fun In sun - and bay shrelklng, running and throwing fresh hay on
each oUter. (OVP photo by Lee Ann Welch)

OLD FASHIONED FUN- In the "old days"
kids made Utelr own fun, at least that wha~
grandparents tell kids today. Here, oome young
visitors to the Bob Evans Farm Festival ~ Rio

Community calendar

MONDAY
POMEROY - A gospel meet' , tng will be held at the 'Westside
'" Chu,rch of Christ off Route 7,
• • through .Oct. 21, 7:30 each even' · lng. Landon Hope of Henderson,
W.Va. will be the speaker.
REEDSVILLE - Revival services will be held at the Eden

United Brethern Church, Reedsville, through Oct. 23, 7 p.m.
Charles Norris will be the
evangelist.

Orders may be placed with Clara
Criswell, 992-3626; Jen Chesher,
992-3335: br Nan Moore,
992-5345.
,

___

POMEROY - Racine ElemenMIDDLEPORT - Pecans are tary PTO will meet Monday at 7
for sale by the United Methodist p.m. at the school. The second
Women ot the Heath Church. grade class will present the
Middleport. Cost Is $4 a pound program.
·
and the pecans will be delivered.

.,

·'•

.

Study to begin at church
tries, Inc., offering audio and
video tapes, as well as printed
te~chtng aids to those In need. In
addition she holds ministry seminars on pertinent topics con·
Holmeg will continue to teach cernlng the whole woman.
She has been the guest speaker
on Monday and Wednesday at 7
on CBN, TBN, and PTL Netp.m.
works, and Sunday Night Live,
Theda Holmes has spent more hosted by her pastor, J. Don
than 16 years teaching the George. She also ministers on
necessity of praise and holiness Christian radio, coast to coast.
at churches, conferences, and
She Is the author of three
retreats throughout the United ' books: "The Holiness And Honor
States. She Is also actively of p 1 " B td p 1 h
Involved as Director of Woman to Inc., ra
se · Names
• r geof God;
ub IsStudy
lng,
"The
Woman, Theda Holmes Minis- Guide", and '.'Hath God Said?".

The Living Word Church has
Invited ThPda Holmes to conduct
a Bible stud,. on Praise and
·
Worship.

ANOTHER TIME- William Henry-Young ol
Germanlown, Ohio, demonstrated broom making \
at the Bob Evans Farm Festival In Rio Grande
over the weekend. Young, besides being an expert

laid down In a street in Nashville
so ll truck would run over him
and h·ls ou tlng smoking a joint on ,
the While House roof with an
unnamed high-level member of
father, ex~on Bill Bonanno. In Gloria stelnem and many more. the Carter administration.
"You remember Suzy,'.' Smlth's • GLIMPSES: Michael DukaLos Gatos, Calif. There was a
column
said. ''She used to toll for kls's mother and George Bush's
14-plece orchestra, a menu Inthis
newspaper
before she began sister are going tothesameparty
cluding shrimp, filet mignon and
bUcking to get on Mount Rush- on Nov. 7, the night before the
asparagus, a large Ice sculpture
and a replica of the ~veJl·tler more or declared herself to BE presidential election. Euterpe
wedding cake Bonanno cut at his Mount Rushmore." EarUer this Dukakls and. Nancy Bush Ell.,
1956 wedding. "My friends , they year, an upstart Newsday gossip are the honorary co-chairs of a
all say, 'Bill, we always know columnist goaded Suzy by point- bash at the Faneull Hall MarketIng out that she had written a place In Boston, ,according to the •
when you've put something on,"'
said Bonanno, who was choked first-person account of a party sponsoring League of Women
up.when It came time to give his she had not attended and Suzy · Voters. Amoong others expected
daughter away. "I don't know If went alter him with both barrels. at the non-partisan event are
KINKY CRfriC: Kinky.Fried- rock composer Frank Zappa and
you'd call it crying but, yes, my
man.
the country music satirist actresses Mor1an Fairchild and
eyes were moist. Now I'm not
turned
mystery novelist, has ·Meg Ryan ... Edward Woodward,
saying It's not OK for men to cry,
turned
critic. Friedman re- who plays the vigilante-for-hire
but ... OK, so maybe I did cry."
viewed
"Willie,
" Willie Nelson's In "The Equalizer," Will be given
Joe Bananas couldn't attend
autobiography
with
Bud Shrake, a citation from the NAACP
because of Ill health. He also
missed the marriage of Gigl's for The Washington Post, prais- Monday pn the show's filming
brother two years ago because He Ing It as "the unselfconsclous site Monday In New York.
was a guest of the federal offer lng of a man who Is not
government In Leavenworth, afraid of life.' In places, It Is as
poignant, powerful and pure as a
Kan.
gypsy's
love of the road." Fried·
GOSSIP BATTLE:: Keep your
man,
who
has penned three
head down - there may be
detective
novels
about a characanother gossip war brewing · In'
ter
much
like
,himself, says
New York. Syndicated columnist
Nelson's
book
Is
lull of wild
Uz Smith of the New York Dally
stories,
such
as
the
time Nelson
News !Ired a shot across the bow
of Suzy, the syndicated gossip
columnist from the New York
Post this weekend.lt started with
a Suzy column that said the 70th
birthday party lor choreographer Jerame Robbins was
"the only place to be Tuesday
night." Smith took offense In her
Sunday column, by saying that
the benefit that same night for
one of her pet causes, Literacy
Volunteers of New York City,
was hardly a bust, attracting,
Co. 1111.
Pwch Fork ld•
Malcolm Forbell, Barbara Wal·
len, PhU Do~Jieverly Sllls;
THEDA HOLMES .

'

\'

--People in the news _____. . . .

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
Untied Press International
TAKING WING WITH WIN·
GER: Dedicated Democrat De-bra Winger was on the West
Coast campaign trail with MIchael Dukakls Friday, making
• campaign appearances and pok·
lng fun at reporters. The actress,
, who earlier this year was In the
Jesse Jackson camp, did not
speak at the rallies In Sacramento, Calif., and Seattle, but
Dukakls made a point of Intraducing her to warm applause. On
the Dukakis plane, dubbed "Sky
Pig" by the campaign press
corps, Winger mingled with and
teased reporters. reducing hardboiled male scribes to Jell-0. On
reading one reporter's story, she
turned to its au thor, The Boston
Globe's Thomas f)llphant, and
said, "How come you're so funny
In person and so boring In your
stories?" Dukakls came .Into the
press section at one point and as
" reporters clamored lor his attention, Winger told him, "If you
don't talk to them, they're going
1 to make me the sacrificial
i virgin." Winger added quickly,
"That would be stretching the
truth a little bit" Dukakis didn't
even smile.
':1
SHADEs OF 'THE GOD·
:·I FATHER': The wedding of Felippa "Gitrl" Bonan011 was a
: [ lamlly affair. The 24-year-old
·' granddaughter of former Mafia
chlel Joaeph "Joe Bananu"
Bollllllno was married to her high
school sweetheart, Chrl1topher
Russ. In a lavish weekend ceremo!ly arranged by the very proud

':. j

r

PAT'S
GREENHOUSE
IS NOW OPEN?

o,..,.,

. "Q,i
Now/11 PHIIUI"
992-5590

---

II

method, now seen almost" e&gt;&lt;cluslvely In craft
shows and on western movies. (OVP photo by Lee
Ann Welch)

. PTO elects officers for next year -

Walsh victory keeps
RGC in No. 2 spot

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST ~
"WE HAVE HEARING AIDS"

new member. Pennies are being ·
coU\!Cted for the foreign relations
prQgram with Dorothy Casey In
charge.
Lula Hampton; legislative
chairman, reported that the
Veterans Administration spendIng bill has been passed by the
Senate with programs lor the
remainder of 1988 and 1989 being
funded.
Lorrene Goggins will host the
•next meeting to be held at Dales..
Singing of "America", a prayer
for peace by the chaplain, and
remarks by the president, closed
the meeting.

Lydia council meets

5--2, notcped their 11th straight
road victory . The Rams dropped
to 5-2.
Broncos 30, Falcons 14
At Denver, backup Gary Kubiak, r.eplaclng injured John
Elway, threw tor one touchdown
and Rich Karus kicked three
field goals to lift the Broncos 4-3.
Kubiak's 68-yard touchdown
pass to Steve Sewell with 7:30
remaining pu't the game out of
reach. Karlls booted field goals
from 47,41 and 50 yards, allln the
second half. The Falcons
dropped to 1-6.
Saints 20, Seahawks 19
At Seattle, Dave Waymer ran
58 yards with a blocked field'goal
to lead the Saints, 6-1 , to' their
sixth straight win. New Orleans
' has won 15 of Its last 16
regular-season games. The Seahawks sllooed to 4-3.

JOHN A. -WADE, M.D., Inc.

Page-5

Council gets contribution
from Ladies Auxiliary

Jackson paces Raiders win;
Houston pounds Pittsburgh

By CHARLIE McCARTHY
UPI Sports Writer
Bo Jackson returned to his
"hobby" and Warren Moon rebounded from the Injured list
Sunday to lead their respective
teams to victory.
Jackson, who spends his
ing out the side In the fourth. and run the bases. The only
summers as the KanSas City
Through six Innings, only two Los pressure !s'throwtng the ball."
Franklin St11bbs and Mickey Royals left fielder, carried 21
Angeles putouts came In the
Hatcher
singled home runs, with times lor 70 yards and a touchoutfield.
Hatcher
taking second on the down In his 1988 debut to help the
No pitcher had coUected three
throw
to
third. Marshall then · Los Angeles Raiders earn a 27-17
hits In a World Series game since
lifted
a
shot
over the le!t-!leld triumph over the Kansas City
Art Nehf of the New York Giants
just
beyond
the grasp of Chiefs. Los Angeles Improved to
fence,
did It In 1924. Hershlser became
3-4; Kansas City fell to 1-5·1.
the sixth World Series pitcher to 6·foot-5 Parker.
Alfredo
Griffin
.
singled
with
Last year against the Chiefs,
record three hits In a game.
one
'out
In
the
fourth
and
scored
Jackson
gained 1 yard on three
Of the 38 previous teams taking
on
Hershlser'S
liner
Into
the
before
leaving with an
carries
a 2-0 World Series lead, 28 wound
That
gave_
Los
right-field
corner.
ankle
Injury
.
that
sidelined the
up as champion. However, of the
/Angeles
a
6-0
lead
and
the
A's
rest
of
the
season.·
Sunday, his
last 16 teams to take such an
1
needed
to
score
six
runs
to
tie
fourth-quarter
score put
1-yard
advantage, only seven have
against
a
pitcher
who
has
only
27-10
with 5:49
the
Raiders
ahead
prevailed.
allowed
five
In
the
last
seven
left.
With no score In the third,
At Pittsburgh, Moon comHershtser slapped a 3-2 pitch up weeks.
Hershlser,
who
takes
a
pleted
11 of 19 passes with no
the middle, then raced to third on
regular·season
record
of
59
conInterceptions
lor 174 yards and
Steve Sax's single.
secutive
scoreless
Innings
Into
two
touchdowns
to spark the
"I went from first to third
next
season,
has
also
amassed
a
Houston Oilers to a 34-14 decision
because this Is the World Series,"
Hershlser said. "I wanted to go string of 19 1-3 scoreless Innings over the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The Walsh volleyball team, Hoop had three digs and
Pittsburgh, 1-6, extended Its keyed by the performance of Schmelt?..er one block assist:
as far as I could as hard as I in the postseason. He has allowed
could. The little boy comes out In no runs since yielding two losing streak to six games - the - veteranAnnAipeter, maintained Hoop also had' one block against
me when I'm given the opportun- against the Mets in the sixth team's longest since dropping 16 Its hold on the top spot In the the Lady cavaliers. now 9-0 In
consecutive games In 1969 and Mid-Ohio Conference Saturday conference play.
Ity to do things like swing the bat Inning of Game 3.
1970.
by turning back visiting Rio
In the Mercyhurst competi"He still has It," tight end Grande 15-6, 15-51n games played lion, Zempter pumped In eight
Jamie Williams said of Moon. at Canton.
kills, aoop six and Kris Cochran
"As long as we keep him healthy
The Redwomen, now In the four. Schmeltzer and Headings
we'll be competitive."
MOC's No. 2 spot at 6-3, rallied to contributed two each. In addlGiants 30, Uons 10
hand NCAA Plvisibn II Mercy- tlon, Cochran had .two serving
At East Rutherford, N.J, Phil hurst !Pa.) two Iosses,15-10 , 15-5. aces. Hoop netted four digs and
Simms passed lor 320 yards and
"It was a frustrating loss Schmeltzer and Chris Williams
two touchdowns and Raul Alle- because we coull;ln' t get any thing had three .digs each. Headings
gre 1\lcked three third-quarter started," Redwomen Coach supplied three block assists_and
field goals to lift the Giants. New Patsy Fields said. ''Walshplayed Hoop had two.
York, 4-3, held Detroit to 113 total wellandwedldn't.AnnAipeterls
"! think that win said a lot
yards - -13 In the second half. .the best all-around player In the about our team, that they can
Detroit fell to 1-6.
conference and when she plays leave the court after a loss and
Bears 17, Cowboys 7
come back five minutes later to'
well, her team plays well."
At Chicago, Jim McMahon
Lisa Schmeltzer, Shelly Hoop win," Fields said.
threw· a touchdown pass and and Teresa Zempter led Rio's
The Redwomen (21-7) are to
Dennis McKinnon ran for offense with three kills each. play the University of Charleston
another score to lead the Bears, Sharon Headings added two kills. and Glenville State on Tuesday at
6-1. The Cowboys, 2-5, were held Schmeltzer and Headings had Charleston and travel on Thursscoreless until late In the fourth two serving aces apiece, while day to face Capital.
quarter to avoid their first
regular-season shutout since November 1985.
Packers 34, Vlklnp 14
At Minneapolis, linebacker
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL , ·
Tim Harris scored a touchdown
on a blocked punt and a collected
safety and Max Zendejas tied a
Green Bay record with lour field
goals. Minnesota, 4-3, fell two
games behind the Chicago Bears
In the NFC Central. Green Bay Is
2-5.
'
CALL (614) 992-2104
Redsklns 33, Cardinals 17
(304) 675-1244
At Washington, Mark Ryplen
threw tor 303 yards and four
touchdowns, two apiece to Art
DOUBLE PLAY - Dodger second ba&amp;Jman steve Sax leaps
Monk and Gary Clark, to lead the
over Oakland's Dave Parker aa he sUdes Into second bue In the
Redskins, 4-3, over NFC Eastsecond Inning of Game .2 of the World Series, played Sunday night
leading Cardinals, who·fell to 4-3
In Los Angeles. P artier' sUd trying tel break up a double play lltarted
after lour straight victories.
by a ground ball by teammate Mark McGwlre, but Sax got the
Colts 35, Buccaneers 31 ·
throw away In time for the double play. The Dodgers won 6-0.
At
Indianapolis. Eric Dicker(UPI)

Monday, OCtober 17, 1988

.

just threw a lot of different looks Uor receivers) ."
at him. But when our up-front
Asked If his line falli!d to
people put pressure on him like protect him, Cunningham said,
that, It's easy for the secondary " I accept my fault , but I'm not
to look good.
going to point ·fingers at anyone
· "Every time I looked back at else."
With nine sacks, the Browns
him, he was struggling to get
away ."
, came within one of matching
" It was a personal challenge to their total for the season. Other
us, because no one had scored on than the Eagles' line. which has
us (through the air) through six now surrendered 34 sacks In
games this year," said line- seven games, one factor may
backer Eddie Johnson. "It was have been Charles Buchanan, a
an added Incentive knowing he lreeagentwhowasjuslactlvated
had done It (thrown a touchdown alter recovering from back
pass) In so many (consecutive) surgery.
games."
Buchanan had two sacks and
Mike Johnson, the other Inside his strong performance could put
linebacker, also spoke of the another defensive lineman's job
challenge the team felt alter In jeopardy when quarterback
watching that Monday night . Bernie Kosar Is activated off
game.
Injured reserve this week.
·Co 0erback Hanford Dtx.on was
·'He looked very near perfect
last Monday night," he said. "It exuberant about the pass rush.
was a question of what we had to
"Since I've been here with the
do to make sure he didn't do that Browns (he was a llr~t-round
to us."
choice In 1981) ..I have never seen
But not only did the pass rush that kind of rush on the quarterhamper Cunningham's passing, back," Dixon said. "They just
the rushers . rarely gave him had Cunningham shaking back
enough room. The second- "!'here."
'leading ru.s her on the team
Dixon said he's proud no
coming Into the game, with 231 passer has been able to throw a
yards, Cunningham ran only scoring pass this season. but
added, "Still, we're not In first
three times for 22 yards.
"It wasn't just their corner- place. Sure, we've kept them out
backs," Cunningham "said. "At of the end zone, but we've got to
tlm!!S. when I was dropping back;·· . get a winning streak going
I didn't even have time to look again."

son scored two touchdowns and
Indianapolis barely survived
VInny Testaverde's best passing
performance as a professiona 1.
Testaverde completed 23 of 36
passes for a career-high 469
yards and two touchdowns but
the Bucs fell to 2-5. The Colts are
2-5.
Dolphins 31, Chargers 28
At Miami, the Dolphins, 4-3.
converted two Lionel James
fumbles Into second-half touchdowns and Dan Marino had his
first 300-yard game of the year.
The Chargers, 2-5, committed
four second-half turnovers.
49ers !4, Rams 21
.
At Anaheim, Calif., Roger
Craig rushed for an NFL seasonhigh 190 yards and three touchdowns, Including a 16-yard scorIng run with 12_:21Ieft. The 49ers,

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

,·

broommaker, could spin a tall tale or two wllb the
crowd, which would listen with IJ'eat Interest,
while working on a broom as he talked. (OVP
photo by Lee Ann Welch)

-· When you talk
about breast cancer,
it's .certainly not the
end of your life ...

__

_.___

__ ~-

One in 10 women in this country will develop
breast cancer durin~ her lifetime.
·
.
But with early detectio~ and prompt
treabnent, the disease
need not be life threatening.
In fact, breast cancer can be found
at the earliest possible stage when
chances for cure are nearly 100 percent.•
See ~ phyalclan or tlli'Seon for regular breast nama.
Ariel for IDformalion ab011t how rou can esubllsh a
pmopal plan of ac:lion for breut heallh, call
'

Tack M. Levine, D.O.

- &amp;!neral and G~l.oidc Surgery
Suite 211 • PVH Medical 'Office Building
(304) 675-1460

�,

__

------ - C

Pomeroy-Midrlapat, Ohio

1.,--U..o.iyS llilliill

Pilot.tnistakes highway .f or runway; 30 die in planecrash
BJ PIPIIHiY f'OI,II;
ROME iUPII - A Upnda
Air... Ba P4 707 jetllaer
crulted -.rt e1 .a fliC-WI cied
IWWi.f at L.l!ourdo da VInci
Air(D1_..,.~,Jdllt:IC38af
~ S2 I
e :a aad ~
alleanl. pr+e:zpuiECL
11R pilot appanstly mPsiOok
u,e Jlilita of VIa Poat bPz7 uy l'or tile tawsy u lie
7111 approacb on a tllght
flwll r.o.dall'.s C.twlck Airport
III.Eatellllevtall8me,lllltllarltles
said
:ri!I!J*ae'slllldercarr)age and
o• wlnt&amp; d\l(led a construction
pn;uJet.t a lllue Ill· lll'ldch
can 1 Itt .._klli:ID!elzte, Ills
wile ud tMar ddldna ·~
sleeplltl. Dni ~ iiiiHMed sUgbt
1zMd lljurlea.
As the pUot tried to ' regain
tbe clamqecl wiag fell
Gil udiiiUIShed Into a rental car
pnaae wba'e II aet 10 cars 011
tin, •thorttles said.
'l'1le rest or the plalle hurtlil!d
dP •
lly acrou the highway,
d
J'MIEW trees and ePectrlc
wfioa, and brQire In two.
.ii:IPI houn after the crash,
wwllets had JCCDvered
wllat appNI'f!cl to Pie the remalu
of . . . . .t Z3 d. the 30 peopPe
t
"
sed killed. Pollee said two
odl:n died at lbe hosplt.al. and
lile -1"'211 bodieS probabPy

...se

=-*·

n-

._trappedbeataththetwls~
...S OJ ·~wreckage.

NNZ'IY alllbolll! aboard were
Us "• businessmen or vaca-

th

a ·returnlag to the East

African republic from London. A
list of the 52 people aboard the
plane Pssued by Rome pollee
badquarters silo sed only four
aames tbat did not appear to be
UgaDdaa.
Pollee said the IUI'vivors tied
or~ t
•ed frGD the caliln
belore It e•pL dod Jato fllunes.
'!be force et tbe crash setJt the
leCIIon coiiSistlnl&amp; of the coekplt
and the other wing 300 yards
acrou .a fie~.
'lbe survivors lncPuded John
Harlgye, a Ugudan busineSsman who formerly lll!f\led as bls
couatry's unbulador to .~hi!
.VatiCan. He said Pie escaped with
miDor :.juries becauE be was
slttlnghftPdeana-geoacyexlt.
Harllye, gl;rtq to lepui -.rs
at Sant' o\80stlllo Hospital In
tbe towa of Ostia near lhe
airport, said the pPaae pulled
out of Its first PaDding approach
and a stewardess told him there
was "some fog and we would
have to try to lalld again after a
little while."
"After about 15 minutes, the
plane repeated the maneuver
and It was at this point that we
felt a very violent crash and fire
broke out Immediately after;" he
said.
"I was hit by something
bumlag and I protected mysePf
with a hand !bat, in fact, was
burned." Harii:Yesaid. "My seat
was overturned.hut I managed to
undomysafelybelt openllieexlt
door and gel die woinan who was
near me out.

. '.

?11'-PI '' t(Jw -~·
I a!...._{:nwe,cilillrnuuft!leVAjM:IIcllzlefiiGI

........
•n-

'v aUS:epn

•!'

.. . . . Jwl!ze n

z

,z2 p

II

••t)ililaeeada)'afloel'·
•
aeiV.S.
a:ll'JER

GeiUa Countv

approadl to Rome'• Leo
peaple. REU'I'ER

7
•

Da Vlaei Airport Meaday, kllllis •

workers protest new bases ag• eement

MANILA, Philippines (UPl)About 1,000 leftist workers
screamed "Y.ankee go llolnEi"
and demanded thedlsmantling of
viW American military lnstallatioas In the PhiUpplnes In a
pmtl!st today at the U.S. Embas'sy on the eve of the signing of
a ni!W bases ag1eement.
About 50 riot pollee armed with

to be signed Ia Wasblaglon today
- Tuesday PhiPPppines time by Secretary of State George
Shultz and Philippine Foreign
Secretary Raul Manglapus.
The two groups blasted Presl·
dent Corazon Aquino for her
"mendicant posturing" and said
the new pact lays the basis for
extending the 41 -year-old treaty
beyond its expiration In 1991.
''Tile regime has found It more
comfortable and appealing to
undress ltlll!lf right ln·front of its
imperlaPlst master than In front
of the Flllplllo people," the
without oamagmg the normal
alliance said.
human cells.
Aquino ssld Sunday that ManOver the years the pair's glapus had Informed her about
the agreement reached In Waresearch phiPosoplly has fonned
tbe basis for deve1opment of new sbington but she declined to
· drugs against a variety of dis- elaborate. When pressed by
reporters, she said today. "Why
eases, Including leukemia and
malaria In the 19SOs.
don' t we just walt until all the
A recent successfulapplicatlon details are Paldoutandexpressed
of their research Ideas Is exem- by Secretary Manglapus."
pilfied by Acyclovir In 1977, the
Adm. Wil77am J. Crowe, chairfirst effective drug In the treat· man of the U.S. Joint Chief of
Staff, caiPed on Aquino at the
melit of herpes virus Infections.
''An even more recent applicapresldentlaP palace In the course
lion of these Ideas Is the develop- of a three-day visit .
ment of azidothymidine (AZT) ,
Crowe said his discussion with
which was described In 1985 by Aquino did not touch on Clark Air
other scientiSts from the same Base and Subic Bay Naval
~Wellcome) Institute, and which
complex, the United States' s
is the hitherto best documented Pargest overseas military
drug In the treatment of AIDS," lnslallations.
the Institute said.
A State Deparbnent spokeswo"l think It's wonderful for my man In WashlngtonaPsodecPined
family and my children, " HltcbJ substantive comment, saying
lugs said today from his home In only that, ''We hopP to be able to
ChapePHIII, N.C. "My real award conclude the agreement on
comes from meeting individuals Monday ·" i'
\
,
whose Pives have been saved·
Reports In Washington said
from drugs I worked on and Manglapus had backed down on
children. When I first got Into hlsdemandfor$1.2bi1Pionllieach
research, acute IPukemta Pile of the final two years of the
expectanacy of children was treaty, accepting the U.S. offer of
three months. I've lived long $481 mU:ton annually, or a totaP of
enough to know 80' percent are $962 million for the next two
cured and It's wonderfuP. The years.
thrill for me Is mi!PIIng lndlvldu·
Washington currently provides
als whose lives have been saved ManDa $180 million In aid aanu·
by something I've done."
aiPy for the bases.
mack, In re&amp;Parch separate
The agreement covers adml·
from that of EPion and Hitching, nlstratlve and financial arrangerealized the great potential of ments In the last two years of the
receptor blocking drugs.
1947 bases treaty, which expires
In 1964, he dev.eloped the first In 1991.
clinically useful beta-blocking
The agreement, reached aftl!r
drug, propranolol, which is used Intense negotiations that started
In the treatment of coronary April 5, Is expected to result In
heart disease and heart attacks, renegotiation of the pact on 'Its
high blood pressure, .. migraine - expiration.
headaches and hyper-thyroid
Aquino has said she Is keeping
conditions.
her options open on the long· tl!nn
Beta-blockers slow the heart future. of the bases that house
rate, IOWI!r the blood pres~ure 17,000 servicemen plus depend·
and Improve the heart rhythm.
In 1972, Black charactl!rized a
new group of hlstamPne receptors, h2·receptors, which subsequen tly led to a new principle In
the treatmea t of pPptlc ulcer.
truncheons allowed the protes·
tl!rs belonging to die trade ulllon
group KMU, or May 1st Movement, to hold a rally In front of
the embassy for 15 minutes, then
told them to dlspPrse amid a
rush·hour traffic buildup.
KMU and the leftist political
group New Nationslist Alliance
Issued stateme•ts threatening to
mount protests against the pact

Two.Amaimns, Briton receive Nobel Prize
treat deadly acqlllred Immune
deflcleacy syndrome, was developed by one · of Ellon's coWOiiiers.
"Without the research of Ellon
and Hitching, this medicine
diJ r-. tnM•edt• AIDS. beart
attacks aDd lru!aPmla -re against AIDS could not bave been
wwtided tbe :n. Nobel Prize for developed," he said. "AZT has
an .impressive etfl!ct and extends
MediciIll!. the Swedlsll Karolluka Institute announced die life considerably lor AIDS
todaY.
.
victims."
EPion, .reached at her ChapeP
Tile Institute awarded thepriU'
tO. Sir James W. Black, 64, of HHI home as she was preparing
Kbl(a CoJieae ~lal MediCal · for work, learnedofthehoaorina
So • 114 Ill Loadon and Gert:nMte phOIIe call from United Press
B. - Ellon, 10, IJid George H. InternationaL
"It's elation, surprise," she
~blap. 83, bolh of Burroughs
WeUcome ~h Laborato- said. "1 still don't believe U. I'm
rift In Research Trlallgle Park. very excited. lt's after so many
years of work, you don't bePieve
N.C.
people wlllPook back that far. lt' s •
.:rile three sllared the prize for
nice to know I've made an
t~ dlsc0wri8 of "Important
prblclples for drug treatment," acltleYement peqple consider
tile Karollnska Institute worlhy or tbe Nobel Prizf'."
The research work by Black,
allllllqiiCed.
ion and Hitchings also has had
El
Erling Norrby, spokesman for
a
more .. fundamental
the awardlne: Nobel Committee.
significance.
said azlclolhymldlne. the drug
" While dr~ development bad
~ as AZr that Is used to

earl5er mainly been built on
chemical modification of natural
products they jntroduced a more
rational approach based on the
understaading of basic blocheml·
cal and physiological pro·

cesaes, " a press . re Iease

a-n~

aouactng the win-s said.
The dlscoverJes by the three
have Ped to drugs essential to the
treatment of a number of disorders, mainly myocanllal ischemia (angiDa pectoris or severe
chest pain), hJgh blood pressure,
gastroduodenal ulcer, leukemia,
gout and Infectious diseases, the
Institute said.
Ellon and Hltchlngs, biochemists who have worked together
since 19&lt;15, demonstrated differ·
ences In nucleic acid metabolism
between normal human cells,
cancer cells, protozoa, bactl!ria
and virus, the Institute said.
On the basiS of such
differences a series of drugs
were developed that block
nucleic acid synthesis In cancer
CPPls and. noxio~s o':&amp;.anisJliS

Queen takes historical step in Spain
IL'R 4

BJ
8 NICHOLSON
MADRID, Spain . ( UPI)
~ Ellz:abetll II of England
arrlftd In Madrid today under
__, aldel for an hiStoric
fM.day stall! viSit, the flrstever
by a retcnlll&amp; Brltllh monarch.
Tile uit Ia viewed as usllerlng'
Ill a new era of friendship
betWUil Brllaln and Spain,
w11DR reJatlons bavP bePn
c•w!ec! for t:elltllries by their
dllpll~
091!1' SOIIII!I'I!Ignty of
allnHU'.
Q eell Elllabetll, wearJng a
ror-1 bllll! suit aad matcllille bat,
sllllled llll'aadly as abe walked
flwll tile ..... .Wild eaclwl&amp;ed
kllln wltll Prince Felipe, hl!lr to
tile Span· ' ru-.
'"~'» ld8tarlc mcanent has
COIIIr - tR quee~~ Is stepping 011
Sppllll .aD," Aid aa IUIChorwomu l'or SpuMI! television,
wlllcllla ndn•t tile arrival live.
"IIere IFIIe Ia, with Eagllsh
p; r•lt)'.-' euctly 12:20."
P'l-.a BuaiM Jall!rliUJDIIal
A1rp1rt. EHiiiliMII ud ller lws·
bMd, PniWA! Plllllp. ~ to E1
PII'IID P ' "'· tlllllft tlley were
·i ittl J by Kbil.lua Carlaund
Qaeee lllnfta l'or the offlclal
azk : a pny, tacludlag
a 21..- .-Julie udl'eview of the

.,aJ..,..S.

,

El P.-clo, aa Jltkelltury
12 miles ...111 or
Macl1ll. ..ut be 4lle rwllleace of
die 81 J( 7 .. royal OllloiP"" dlldnC
, tllelr stay. Tilt pa'''¥• a fl\le.
~ ~

mlnule drive t hrough oakwood
forests to the Spanish royal
family's palace. was oace lbe
residence of Gen. Francisco
Franco but Pt Is now uaed for
visiting heads of state.
The Spanish press baUed the
visit as a sign that GlbraPtar,
occupied by Britain since 1713.
would no longer be an overriding
factor In Anglo -Spanish
diplomacy.
Relations between the two ·
monarchs. who are couslns 'and
whose blood ties stem from
Queen VIctoria, are known to be
partlcularPy war m. Both their
lpo"i s are alao members of the
Greek royaP family.
Spanish Forelgii MJftlstry sour·
ces said the Queen's five days In
Spain mark her longest state
visit to a country ou tsldP the
British Commonwealth.
The Spaatsh monarchs were to
bost the British royal couple to a
state hallqul!l Mollday night at .
the lavish 171h~eatury Easll!rn
PalaCP In Madrid.
Fonnal relations between the
two monarchs -.eel In 1981
when Klag .Juan Carlos boyl!otted 1be 11e •:r•c of Prtace Cha·
rl8 and PrlneeU Diana because
Gibraltar waa lbe flrat sllip on
tbetr bolleymooei c:ndse .
BUt Britain's qreement In
November 191M to negotiate the
future of the Rack of Gibraltar.
on the iiOUibenl tip al tbe Spaalah

mainland, promp111 a dlpJo.

following telephone exclta"n ges ...
Mei gs Count y
Area Code 814

Mpso n Co . • WV

992- Middlopo rt

876451 578773-

Area·c ode J04

Pomeroy
985- ChMiftr
U3~ Port\a n d

Falls
949- Racine
247 ~ Lal a rt

742 ~ Rut l and
887 ~ Coolv iUe

Public Notice

f•

.,RM••z
UNO
STOCKHOLM. Sweden (UPI)
· - Twa~ aDd a Briton
wlliR dtlim-lel lll!d to drug
ti&amp;lblll!lltS for a variety of

Classified pages cuver the

Pt Pleeunt
Leon
Apple Grove
MaiOA

882 - New Hav en

895 - leta rt
937 - Butftllo

'

By FERNANDO DEL MUNDO

I 'S

Uganda Airlines has two BoeIng 107s It uses for International
flights.

448 .... Gallipol is
387- Ctumhin
lSI- VInton
245- Rio Grande
251- GuY.n Dill.
843- Arabi a Ois l .
379- Walnut

Le~st

p

Dhillon.

matlc thaw tbat was followed by
the state visit of the Spanish
royal couple to Britain In April
1986.
Queen Elizabeth's ageada Includes an addresS to Parliament,.
a visit to the Prado Museum and
a key-giving ceremony at City
HaPI Tuesday. and a .t our of the
roy I!I monas tl!ry at El Escorlal
Wednesday.
On Thursday King Juan Carlos
and Queen Sofia will accompany
the queen to Seville, In the south,
and then on to the northern port
city of Barcelcma.

The BritiSh royal coupPe will
offer a fan!WelP ceremony to
smne :tlO guests aboard their
yacht Britannia In Barcelona
Friday night. 1'hl!y wiPP sail to
MajOI'Ca for a private weekend
with the Spanish king and queen
before Oylng hack to England
Monday.

I

a

==---------------

171 •• •• Sua.. A••••
••••part, OW. U760

, .. (614) 992-7075
S.ufr. - "1·7ot46

We're Open!

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

sALEs - sERVICE • rEsnNG

aOWI &amp; SIOUFFB
FilE &amp; SAFm EQUIPMEIT

ents and aiPow Washlagton to
support military operations In
the Western Pacific and the
Indian Ocean.
Philippine offlclals said the
negotiators In Washlagloa also
were working on a " creative"
portion In the coptpensatlon
package.
Finance Undersecretary Ern·
est Leung sa,ld today this In·
eludes Pblllpplae proposals for a
reduction Ia Manila's autstaad·
lng foreign debt of S28 bPIIlon.
But Leung said It wouPd take
"at least one to two years to work
out the mecbaalcal side of lt."
Sen. Wigbet"to Tanada said
today he planned to questloa the
agreement If It does DOt "respect
moral and constitutional require. meats of a nucPear·free Philippines." The PhWpplne Senate
last June pasaed an antl·nuclear
bill, which awaits action by the
House of Representatives..
.
"I don't think It Is enough to
set tie the Issue of compensation .
if the threat of natPonaP destruction due to aucPear weapons and
the derogation of national sovereignty : Is stiPI there, " Tanada
said.
Reacting to reports of an
impending agreement, the leftist
trade union aPPiaace, May lsi
Movement, Issued a statement
calling for a concerted action ''to
gel rid of these military lflises
and aPI fonns of U.S. domination
In our land ." .
The statement conderltned
· "thts treacherous act of the
government In betrayPng the
people and selling our nation's
sovereignty."
On Friday, poPice said SUS·
pected leftist vandals using dynamite blew up a statue of Gen.
Douglas MacArthur on PaPo
beach In Leyte Island. The
Incident occurred five days before the 44th anniversary of
MacArthur's historic landing to
liberate the PhWppllles from
Japanese occupation during
World War IL
"Whoever did it must havP a
very strong dislike for the
Americans ," LPyte Gov. Leopoldo Petllla said. "1 think it's a
symboliC act against the Amerl·
can peop5e."
Workers are restoring thP
10-foot statue depicting MacAr·
thur and his U.S. and Filipino
aides wading ashore on the beach
3GO miles south of Manila.

lf••uty Ylltnp ,.., •crl

II•• M••••••••t

r
..ALL YOUR Ht:ALTH. CARE NEEDS"
FREE

DEUYEIY. -

IN STOlE CHAIGES

STORE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9 A.M.-6 P .M.
Swturdlly 9 A.M.·1 p.M.

992-6669 .

171 llort• S.COM

•iddlapert, OW.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

• The Area's Number 1 ·Marketplace
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
. 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Notice of Election on Tax
Levy in E•cas of the Ten
Mill Limi1etion
NOTICE is hereby given
thet'' in pureuance of a Resolution of the Board of Edu·
cation of the Eeatern Local
School District, Reedsville,
Ohio. pauod on the 27th
day of June, 1988,~there will
be submitted to a vote of the
people of said Eastern Local
School District at a GEN·
ERAL ELECTION to bo hold
in the Eastern Local District
of Meigs County, Ohio, at
the regular places of voting
therein. on Tuesday. the
eighth dey of November,
I 988, tho quoatlon of lwy·
ing aUix . in excess of the ten
mill Umltatlon. for the bene·
fit of Eastern Local School
District for the purpose of
current expenses.
Said tax being: an addi ·
tio11111 tu of 12.4 milia to run
' for a continuing period of
tima at a rate not exceading .
12.4 mills for each one dollar of valuation, which
amounts to ona dollar and
twenty-four cents for each
one hundred dollars of
valuation,
for continuing
period of time.
The Polls for said Election
. will be open at 6 :30 o' clock
A .M. and remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M .
By Order of the
Board of i:Siectiont·of
Meigo County. Ohio
Evelyn Cla.rk. Chairman
Doted July 8, 1988 _
J,ne M. Frymyer. Director
(101 lo; '17. 24. 31 , '4tc
·

Public Notice
Notice of Election on Tax
Levy lh Excess of the Ten
Mill Limitation
NOTICE is hereby given
that In pur1uance of a Resolution of the Board Of
Township Trustees of the
Township of Salisbury.
Meigs County. Ohio. passed
on the 1st of &lt;lay of July.
I 988. thoro will be submit·
ted to a vote of the peopl~ of
said Selisbury Township at a
GENERAl ELECTION to ba
held in the Township of Salisbury of Meiga County.
Ohio, at the regular placee of
voting therein, on Tuesday.
the 8th doy of November.
1988. the question of levy·
ing a tall , in excess of the ten
mill limi1ation. for the bene·
fit of Salisbury ToWnlhip tor
the purpose of maintaining
and operating cemeteries.
Said tax being: an additional Ia• of 1 .0 mill to run
for fivB (6) years .. at a rate
not exceeding 1.0 mills for
each one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to ten cents
($0 .10) for each one hundred dollar~ of valuation, lor
five (5) .yeen.
The Polls for said Election
will bt open at 8 :30 o' clock
A.M. and remain open until
7 :30 o'clock P.M.
By Order of the
Board of Elections of
Meigs County, Ohio
Evelyn Clark. Chairman
Doted Sept8t)1bor 1. 1988
Jane M. Frymyer, Director
(10) 10, 17, 24. 31 . 4tc

PubPic Notice
Notice of Electron on Tax
Levy In Excn1 of the Ten
Mill Limitation
NOTICE io hereby given
that in pursuance of a Resolution of Board of Town·
ship Trustees of the Township of Rutland. Meigs
County. Ohio. paned on the
7th day of July. 1988. thoro
will be submitted to a vote of
the people of said Rutland
Township at a General Elec·
tlon to be held in the Town·
ship of Rutlond of Meigo
Count-.,, Ohio, at the regular
placet of voting therein, on
T.-d~rt. tho 8th diiY of Novemba'. 1988, thequootlon of
levying a tax , in ellceaaoftha
ten mill limitation. for the
benefit of Rutland Township
for tho purposa of providing
and melntllning fire appera·
tuo. oppllon-. bu Kdlngo. or
litn therefor. or aourcn of
water supply and materials
ttHwefor. or the ntabllshmant· and maintenance of
linn of fire alarm telegraph,
or the payment of parma·
nent. part-time. or volunteer
firemen or fire fighting com·
pan I• to operate the ume,
inoludlna tho payment otthe
ffremen employer'• con·
trlbutlon required undllf' ..c.
tlon 742.34 of the rwllod
code. or to purchae ambulance equl'p ment, or to provide ambulance or emergency medical servlcee op-

,. .

Pu.blic Notice
erated by a fire department
or fire fighting company.
Said tax being: a ran8wal
of en existing .3 mill levy to
run for five (6) year• at a rata
not exceeding .3 milia for
each one dollar of valuation,
which am~unts 10 three
centa (10.03) for each one
hundred dollars of valuation.
.for five (6)_veara.
Tho Polio for uid Election
will be open at 6:30 o'clock
A.M . and rem1in open until
7 :30 o 'clock P.M .
By Order of tho
·Board of Elections of
·
Meip County, Ohio
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Doted September 1, 1988
Jane M. Frymyer, Director
(10) 10, 17. 24. 31. 4tc

PubPic Notice
Notice of Election on Tax
Levy in Excns of the Ten
Mill Limitation
NOTICE is hereby given
that in pursuance of a Resolution of Board of Township Trustees of'the Township of Orange, Meigs
County, Ohio, pae•d on the
8th dey of August. 1988.
there will be submitted to a
vote of the people of said
Orange Township at a Ge·
neral Electton to be held in
the Townehip of Orange of
Molgo County. Ohio. anhe
regular place of voting therein. on Tuesday. the 8th dey
of November, 1988. the
q1 :eetton of levying 1 tax. in
exces1 of the ten mill limitation for the benefit of
Orange Township for the
purpose of preventton, control. and abatement of air
pollution.
Said tax being; an addi·
tional tax of 1.6 mill to run
for five j6) years at a rate not
exceeding 1.6 milia for each
one dollar of valuation.
which amounts · to fifteen
centa ($0. 15) for each one
hundred dollars-of valuation.
lor f ive (61 yeoro.
The Polls for uid Elecdon
will be open at 6;:l0 o'clock
A.M . and remain open until
7 :30 o' clock P.M .
By Order of the
BOard of Election• of
Meigs County; Ohio ·
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Doted September 1, 1988
Jane M . Frymyer, Director
~10) 10. 17. 24. 31. 4ti:

PubPic Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columb&lt;Jo. Ohio
Octobe• 7, 1988
Contract Salas
Legal Copy No. 88· 795
' UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed propoNII will be
received It the office of the
Directpr of the Ohio Department ofTransporUtton, Col·
umb&lt;Jo.Ohlo. untU 10:00A.
M., Ohio Standard Time..
Tuood ..... No118111ba' 1. 1988.
for lmprovemlnta in; Meiga
County, Ohio. on MEG.e81 J9.68-17.66), State Rou18
681 , Meigs County. by 101ur·
faOng with Mphalt concteta.
Project and work length;
81 ,662 feet or 11 .66 nil•
Pavement width: V•louL
.. The date eat for completion of this work shall be aa
sat forth in the bidding pro1
poul ."
Each bidder shall ba required to file wrth hit bid a
certified check or caahiar'a
check for an ~mount equal
to five per cent Of hit bid, but
In no evant more than fifty
thoueend dollars. or a bond
for tan percent of hit bid,
payable to the Director.
'
8 \ddaro muotopply, on tho
proper forms, for qualifications at leut ten days prior
to the date set for opening
bids in accordance with
Chapter 5525 Ohio Revised

Code.
Plans end apecifications
ere on file in the 0f'J)artment
of Transportation and the of·
fica of the District Deputy
Director.
The Director res erves the
right to reject any and all
bids.

•

BERNARD B. HURST
" DIRECTOR
~1 01 17, 25. 2tc

Public Notice
ORDINAt.iCE 674
BE IT ORDAINED by the
Council of the Village of Pomerov. all members there1o
concurring;
. Sec. 1 : That the tllary of
the
Mayor
shall be
U600.00 per yoor. and in
addition thereto the Mayor
shall be enthled to ell other
benefits provided any other
employees of the Village of
Pomeroy under its insurance
programs.
Sec. 2 : That this Ordinenca Is hereby declared to
be 1111 emerganey ordinance
neces•rv for the immediate
preaervation of th public aa·
foty in said Village of Po·
meroy and s tlall go into im mediate eHect .
ATTEST;
Jane Walton, Clark-Treaa .
Larry Wehrung,
Pres. of CoUncil
1101 17. 24. 2tc

PubPic Notice
Notice of Election on TaK
Levy irl Excan of the Ten
Mill Limitation
NOTICE is hereby given
that in pursuance of a Re·
solution of Village Council
of the Villega of Pomeroy.
Ohio, paued on the 11th
doy ofJuly.1988, there will
be submitted to a vote of the
people of said Pomeroy Village at a General Election to
be held in lhe Village of Po·

Our sincere thanko for
tho inany kindnossas
oxllindod to u1 during
tho illnon and ot tho
death of our bofovod
wife and mother. Kate
Bachner. Your cardo •
wordo of sympethy
and o!har axproooions
of concern are deeply
appreciated.
Everett Bachner,
husband; Connie
Thompoon and Karon
· Brown. daughters

TUESDAY,

$4
E. Moln ....~

STEAK DINNER
ADULT • $15D·cHPLD

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT :.. 2 slory home
located on a good street 3
bedrooms, ni ce large rooms,
many ni ce features. ASKING
$27,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT LAND
CONTRACT- Very nice and
neat 3 bedroom home on a
big corner iol. Nice kilchen,
FAN.G. heat, and much
more! Call for more details!
PRICED TO SEll AT
$32, 90(100
MIDDLEPORT -1978M0d·
home sitlingon 2 1ots in
. 2 car garage, N.G.F.A.
garden area . Also has
sel f-contained AC unit Many
olher nice leatu res. ASKING
$39,50000.
EXECUTIVE HOME- Reaii y
beautifu I newer coioniat
home close to town. Nice
featu res such as 3·4 bed·
rooms, basem ent, garage,
in·g1ound pool, WBFP, and
muchmore! Nestled on a
beaulifuily shad ed lot Cali
for del ai ls.
MIDDLEPORT - Unique 3
bedrm. home in good co ndi·
tion. Equipped kitchen
washer and dryer included:
Fireplace, front sitling
porc h , l ill bath s.
$17,500 00.
POMEROY - Frame house
wilh upper and l owe~ one
bedroom apartments. Good
~e n t al i nve s tm en t!
$300.00/ mo. potential in·
come. ASKING $14,000.00
MIDDLEPORT- 3 bedroom
2 st ory home. Nice kitch en,
WBFP and mu ch more'
REDUCED to $16. 500.00.
NEW LISTPNG - Reedsville
- Beautilul view oftheriver
!lorn this nice 3 bedr oom
ran ch home on 1.6 acre lot
Many nice features' Well
insulated, modern equipped
kitchen, central air, Gio·
Thermal heat, mature fruit
tr~es, rose gar den, .gafage.
Pnvacy. Call for appoint·
men!. $53.000.00.
•

HENRY E. ClEIA"u
Jean Truuell .... 949·2660
Dollie Turner ... 992·5692
Trocy little ...... 949·2807
Jo HiiP... ............ 985-4466

Office .............. 992·2259

m·

REAL TOll
NEW LIST! NGS
NEEDED
We have buyero for
Meigs County
Properly. Li st with us
tor b ast results.

Certified licen sed Shop
5·25·tln

7

168 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

PLiJ[I'BING &amp; HEATING

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fishing Suppll
Pay Your Phone
_ and Cabl e Bitls Here

BUSINESS PHONE

(6141 992·6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
16141 992- 7754

PH. 949-2B01
or les. 949·2B60

Middleport, Ohio

NO
, SUNDAY CALLS
Hl·tln

1·28·'88·tfn

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Basham Building

EVERY
SAT, NIGHT
6:30 PJA,
12

Write11l

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTPMATES
111· 11·'88·1

mo.

DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
• •Refrigerators
"Must It Repalrolile"

992 3410
7

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985·3561

7

Factory Chob
Gougo Shotgun• OnPy
Strictly Enforcod
10-J,tfn

949-2168

WANTED

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

We Service All Makos

1/ 22188/ tln

SER~ICE
We ran repair and recore radio tors ond
heater cores. We con
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
ropair Gas Tanks.

Rt. 12 4, Po moray Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Trantltlttlu

PH, 992·5682
.or 992·7121

PAT HILL FOlD
992-2196

•CUSTOM KitCHENS 6 lATHS
-EXTENSIVE REMODELING
•VINYL SIDING. ROOANQ
•METAL BUILDING&amp;
HOUSING·· APT. PFIOJECTS
SINCE 1960

DUIO ST. STUDI.

ELIM HOME

YOUNG'S

• - &amp; Soard For
Senior CltluN and

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Good Ratee
T.L.C .
2&amp; Yrt. Exp.
Referancea

- Addona and remodeling
- Rooting and gutter WOf k
- Co naate work
- Plumbing

and

el ectrical

work

992·6173

IFREE ESTIMATES)

Jot or

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PauPoy lowland

209 South 4th St.
Middloport, Olt•

992·621 5 or 992.7314
Pomeroy,

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949·2969
YARDMAN. &amp; ECHO

Located Halfway
between Rt. 7 &amp; Bashan.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS

"LOW PIICOIIE NOME"

Ohio

) . IJ: 88· tin

Product•
8 .7 Financing on Yardmen

Service on AU Mlkea

We Honor MC/Disc/Visa

OHIO
PALUT
COMPANY
POMEROY, OHIO

9-1·83-tfn

FIREWOOD

MODEIN GUN

SUPPLIES

CHERRY

S3S

Munltloading SuppPits
Modern Gun SuppPits
GuM • Ammo • Slugs •
22 Ammo

PER lOAD
DEL!YERED

BILL SLACK

124 Eost of Rutland
Acro11 Happy Holl~w Rd.

992-2269

, •• 614·742-2355

9120/ lfn 1 m.. pd.

· H ·88-tln

•12 Years Experience
45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

R10sonable Prices"

Fealurins : Conoolidated, Duieh
Weu. Brunco, At~hley
LOWEST PRICES
WE TRADE

Has always offered
THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST PRICES.
If any local
competitor offers

better deal,
tell us and we'll

you a

match itl
AlSO" ..

HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
UNDER $300
MAIN STIHT PillA
Our Delivery Staff
Know• Where You
Li ve.

CaH 992·2221
or 992·9922
10· 12·11· 1 mo.

GiVOIIWay

Nice bebrt kittens-long &amp;. shon "~
hair. B wke . old. Call 614-44$-, .

707&amp;.

• •

Puppies to gNe away-3 femel•........

3~ode.
mel•·F1thar
Mother
'It Tzu,
Terrier.
1-\ •'~
Shih
8 wka.
old. C.ll 114-317-0104.
· ~.J
2 pu..-ptrt Twrler • Poodle. 1-"~
mele. 1 famlle. 4moe. old. can :~
-=·=-·4-~44.:..•:..3;_39:;:.::8;,
. _ __ _ . ,
Mile dog. 1 YW old. BIOflde}"J
long hlir . Loves chHdr.-.. To ·~
good home. 81.,992-3577. • . ...

6

Lost and Found

· J

.,

----..,--__;·~
"

LOST; Milling Walker Hound·
Centenary- 141 ....... No collw.
Extrem_,. thy. Raward. If seen
coli 8t4-44e-2729 "' 317·
7102.
•

white

,..p. Cl•k· ChiPel Rd. Coil 11438a-9fl34.

7

Yard SaPe

Centenary Townhouse. Tun. •
Wad. 14 ln. tire rima, 16 ln. rirn1
&amp; tir1111, stereo, tv, ruga, 11bte.
h.,d toolt, dot'*'v • mlec.

·······p'fPleaiiant·--···
&amp; Vicinity
~

Rollins . New

Everything.

.

,

.,

.

,

.

,

.

Havs4'
-~,

Y•d 1811 1409 Uwla St,
Chit*'"· adult clothing. dr.,..: '
Everything cheep. 10-e p.m
:

~8aft~~~~~·;;;;;;:,::;::;
· PubPic Sale ' Z

~

It Auction

Ric* Pe•aon Auction..,. ilcen•ed Ohto 1nd W.t VirghNs. -~
Eatlle. MtJQul. f•m. lhtuld• •
tlon ..... 304-n3-&amp;785.
t ,,

;::::::;;;:::::;::;::;~=:_''I
9

Wanted To Buy

- Jim.....
""'1
Mink Chav.- Oidllnc. 1 71· • •
Bill Gene Johnson
114-441·3172

:;:12_

.h

Comploto hou-ldo o1 """"ll
lure a. en1iquat. Alto wood ' ~

COli heaters. Swt~ln' l'fW"nltU,..,
Auction. Third • OlhA.a.1.,
_
1
1
~
4--44
~
·~3.:..
11~9.:..·~----~
·· ·•, :•
:0
Went ta buy: Used furniture end
antlqun. Will buy entire hou. .
hold furnishing. Marlin Wad• 1l
meyer. 114-241-11152.
· ··~~
&amp;

FurNture end appllencw br' tfte-! 1
piece or entire houMtlold. Flir-t,.
prices being paid. Call et 4-441- ·
3158.
.
.. 1-

'v.

Uood Mobile Hom•. Coli et4-l
448-017&amp;.
.

We buy Blldc Welnute. Fu~d
raising opponu.rrity . George
Shlo- 114-992-31191 . For
delivery lnatructlone call 1-800·
9911-0727.
. :•

..

tiii!IIDylllenl

698-6121

S;:rv1c1~ s

4·16·86-tln

••

,..,.,r

TOP CAl H p.td for '83 modet
and n..v., uled c... Smklt- !
8tick-Ponii1C. t9t.1 Ealtem}J
Golllpollo. c.u e1 ......,... o?.

CARPENTEI, OHIO (Off St, It, 143)

.•..
'•

T.r=;:;=.::::;;=;::::::;::::::::::: "
11 Help Wanted
-::-:--:-:---.,..,-:----,.-...,.-

' I

Wendy's now htrlng. Apply II) "~ :

penon Monday-Sunday be-

Television

BOGGS ·
Your Homelown Place

4

:::-----c--:----:-::--:--'-:-~1! ~.

Junk C.n with or wtt~V'
motorl. Call Larry Uvety-11-t:.· -.
38e-9303.
.

WOOD STOVES

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

AIID

OAK. LOCUST.

BISSELL
BUILDERS.

"At

HILLSIDE MUIILE
LOADING

992-6461
. MAIN STREET
PIZZA

7'--=;~c::::::::'::::=...::..·" ~

-----------------··~
WepiP(cashforlatemodet deWI· n

•

Servko Conlor fer Ryan

DELIVERED TO

..,
•i_l

AililOIIIICC IIIP.ll Is

lk

haler for

$14 PER TON

992··611
·3· 30- ~1 7 tfn

• - I " ' _ _ , , ., ,.,, , ., • • , ••

leo10nable Ratos

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

Middleport, Ohio " ·~

largtiimovlngvardaale. Oct. tB

OWN!II, GIIIG ;;~~;'.':,:;"

9i l5188/ tln

.•

• 19th. 9 :00 • .m. COrner of 4th

Business
Services ~ RESIDENTIAL
~ COIIIIERCIAL

56 'STATE ST, .
GALLIPOLIS, OH,
446·3487

•''

VALLEY LUMBER . ..
&amp; SUPPLY
:•

6·17·1fc

pd.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Complete Drywall
Sarvice
FREE ESTIMATES

Authoriud Strwi&lt;t
&amp; Parts
Briggs &amp;. Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eat er
Ho'm elite
Jacobsen

MiddPeport, Ohio

Call 992·2111

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

SMALL ENGINE •••
- ·'
REPAIR

FOUND: Utile black •

Roger Hysell
Garage

·'

. • I

BISSELL ·
SIDING CO.

319 So. 2nd Ave.

~

Ll!l/'81-ttc

•VINYL SIDING '
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Now Homes luiPt
.. Free EstimateS"

.,•

~

446· 7390

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

r - - - - - -- --.rl t---------"1'!

GUN SHOOT

CAll AMY CARTER
or lOB'S ElECTRONI CS

RACINE, OHIO

992·6282

I / Z8 /UI'I

&amp; Slicln ower t o 1051 VMS . • •:

GUN CLUB

8115/ Hn

CARTER'S

8mm MOVIES &amp; SliDES t o
YHS TAP E
Let us convert those ol dMov tes ...

RACINE

CaPI 992·2772

HUDNALL

ENTERTAINMENT
Public Welcome
for Tidc ..s or Ret:enotiom

POMEROY. OH.

992·2259

EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 p.M,

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
RepPacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doo~ &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates

"DOC" VAUGHN

Howczrd L.

MEIGS COUNTY FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL
MEEnNG WILL BE HElD

I

CALL 992-6756

3 Announcements

OCTOBER I I, 1911
AT 7:12P.M. AT
EAST£RN HPGH SCHOOL.

101

Moat Fore ign and
Do mestic Vehicles
A / C S ervice
All Major 8t Minor
Re pairs
NIASE Certified Me!:h..II C

•

GUN SHOOT

J&amp;l
INSULATION

SYRACUSE, OHIO

regular
vo1tlno t herein. on
Tuesday. the
day of No·
vember. 1988, the queltion
of levying a tax, in ellceas of
the ten mil&amp; limitation. for
the benefit of Pomeroy Vii·
lege for the purpose of
providing and maintaining
fire aPparatus. appliancM.
buildings, or aitfll thuafor.
or sourca of wa1er supply
and materials therefor, or
t he
establishment end
maintenanCe of lines of fire
alarm telegraph. or the payment of permanent. pertt ime, or volu ntaer firemen or
fire fighting compeni• to
operate the tame. including
the payment of the firemen
employer' s contribution re·
quired under section 742.34
of the revised code, or to
purchae ambulance equip~
ment. or to provide am bu·
lance or emergency medical
services operated by a fire
department or fire fighting
company.
Said tax baing: a renewal
of an existing 1.0 mill levy to
run for five (8) veers at a rate
not exceeding 1 .0 mills for
each one dollar of valuation,
whicl1 amounts to tan cants
J$0.101 for each one hun·
dred dollars of valuation. for
fivo 151 yoou.
The Polla for aaid Election
will be open at 6:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open until
7 ;30 o'clock P.M.
.
By OrdOf of the
Boord of Eloctlono of
Meiga County, Ohio
Evelyn Clark. Chairman
Dated Septomber· 1. 1988
Jane M , Frymyer, Director
1101 10, 17, 24, 31 , 4tc

992 ·6191

1 Card of Thanks

Page

Business Services

Classified

Area Code 114

W'QI'IW&amp;nl!: - Beane wlll'kers CllllDllne tile wreclulp! al a
Usudaa Bo'l!iwc '111 Jedllller aft« It u •ed Ia Poeav7 fo.: 011

•
.. tJA.ftiiLIPI'INB M ' '

lion and another died on the way
to the hospital.
In · Uganda'5 capltaP of Kam·
pala, large crowds gathered at
the Ugandan. Airlines office to
study very sketchy bulletins
about the crash posted there
today .
'lbe paslll!nger Ust published In
Kampala appeared to contain
011Py seven non-Airlcan names tllree members of afamilycalted
"Watts," a Mr. and Mrs. GaPt
and an Infant Gait, and a Mr.

perPmeter at about one kllomPter
watchman who was one of the
(.62 miles} from the threshold of
first on the scene, said he saw
the runway ," he said. " Locating
survivors run screaming from
the place of the Impact, aPrport
the wreckage. One woman aprescue teams, firemen, ambulan·
peared badly burned, he said.
wt
said.
'lbebody0faglrlofahout5lay ces, pollee and Carabinieri were
immediately seat."
. Airplrt director R,affae!e Ca- ni!IU'by, be said. .
Rescue warkers wearing fire&gt;
sagraJidl! said the plane, Flight
An off-duty policeman who
proof
gloves pulled victims from
QUT/5. left London at 9: 19 p.m. lived ftl!arby said be found a baby
.
the
wreckage
as fPremen fought
with 45 passengers and seven girl nexttoherdeadparents, but
tbe
flames
.
They
used short
crew aboard:
by the time he carried her to an
stakes
to
mark
·
spotS
where
''The' provisional balance of .ambulance she died.
thrown
from
vlct:ms
were
found
the acddeilt 1s iJbe following: 24
Casagrande said that at a bout
the
plane.
survlvillg passe~~gcrs quickly 12:30 a.m., the ·airport tower
Officials at Sant' Eugenio
sent to Sant' Eugenio HospitaP, authorized the plane to land on
HospiW,
which has · a bum
Sant' Apstlnll Baspital 1n Ostia, the No. 1 runway.
cen(l!r.
said
five of the survivors
SaD Camlllo and San GPovannl, "
"A fi!W seconds later die plane
Casagrande tepor~ at 7 a .m.
hIIdle ground outside the airpl)rt were admitted In critlcar condi'
Stefano Pensabeae, a night

' 'Tiien we began to run and we
•b eard a second explosion In the
plane," be said.
'!be dead Included at least two
cblldren aad a pregnant woman,

· The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Monday. Qctobal17, 1988

._.;

SALES &amp; SERVICE

CJ

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

De~endable Heario1 Aid Sales &amp; Servi•c•

tween 2-4. 310 Sliver I rldgt 1 ."/
Plan. Gelllpoli.. Ohlo. E.O.E . • ~~.

Hearing EvaPuations For All Ages

AVON-N"dl 6 ledi• t o Sell"lt

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

~

614-1162-3821

.Licensed Clinical Audiologist

l: (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second AYW!Ue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hcts. Pomeroy.

Aulhorized John
D8ere. Now Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equipmen1 Deltlar

:z

Flr111 Equlp111111
Peril &amp; Service

1·3-'!IHk

Avon. Cali 114-~6-3358.

"•''

UPto11SHOUR PAOCES SING'
MAIL ~EKLY CHECK QUA• , .t

RANTEED. FREE DETAILS •• .,
WRITE: SO. 1057 W. Phllodo~ •
phta. Suite 239-10, Ontario' , 1
Calif. 91782.
·
.' ·~.J

Experienced Bartender fo r'~' •

downtown Gslllpolls ntabllshmenl. Fl•lble houra. s.nd r• .. ,
eume to 8011 Cia 175. c / aGaft(.: ~ ­
polil Da»y Trlb.lne, S:tl!!i Third ' ''~
A.,.., Gallipoh, Ohio 4&amp;131 . •,;t'{

Wanted vocllllst, mila oi' filmlla •"-·..1.

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer • Bacllhoe
· •Will Do Hauling
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Bulinea1
WANT TO IUT WRECIID 01

JUNK CARS OR TIUCKS
- Fill ISTIMAIESFor '"'Y of thosu•wim cafl

614·742·2617
lotwsan 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or lean

.. -

Lead or beck up. Csll 814-441- '1 '

.'·

.

'

. •':'

MARCUM CONTRACftNG.
CHESTER. OHPO
•HOME BUPLOPNG
•ROOM ADOPTIONS . .
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODEUNG 1!c REPAPRS
PHONE DAY

OR

EVENINGS

9815 ·4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS

References

10·4·1 mo.

1

7697 for IUdttlon sppointmtn1;.'
Le~~~te name/ number.
I~

I

�-

----

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
11

·---------

--·------~----------------------------- -----------

Help Wented

·~----------·--·

--~

Monday. October 17. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
42

LAFF-A-DAY

•

HOME ASSEMilY INCOME

Mobile Homes
for Rent

44

71

Apartment
for Rent

1982 FW.tJird. Exeel. oond. c.•
514-37S.2282.

AeMflbl• procluaes at home.
Pwt•1fmt, EII&amp;Pif'l.. at UnMCtl-

3 btdroom Mull In Mln.-Mie.
Cent111l air, g•-ae. t2::t8 plus
depoell. Refertnee. No ptts.
814-992-3159.

...... Dol do. Clll I 1:J. 327·
08H. ht. o.1 1 49.

PAAT·TIME OR FULLTIME
COUNSELOR. Mattoro Dogroo

pr.,.,.IKI, Strong bM*ground In
1dcldlon recavery .,d Idol•·
cent progremmlniJ H'e..._,

ch•

..,llinV and r•ponUIII• po.ltlon
aweli.We in M adDI..nt ,.._

d.mltll pro...,. b ,.._, ,...
atJOMibf•ln*kll ... Cant-=t:Or.
Joe O.V. Ph.D .•
Hou...
P.O. l!ooc 724,
Ohio

•...n
A-.·

9VriDIN. 2 bedroom mobtle
home. t150monthplotulflltlll.
e 14-992·1732.

'

2 IMdroom mobile homt h•f
mile out Jericho Aoa:f. ref•tn011 requHd, cau tftw 5:00PM .
304-1711-1012.
2 tt.droom mobile home, quiet
neighborhood. phone 304.1761082.

w~h

41701 1814-114-81011

·~-of Intent lftd 3 , ...... CIIl

b¥ N....,bor 1, 1981 E.O.E.

wat.- .. d ltiNer Included. 304871-1076.
•.

p•rson who It energetle.
c~tp.,debl•

6 m•kM·

lng min did. S..dr-.mtto lok
C1• 171 c•e of the GlllltoaH.
O.ily Trlb..lne. IH TNrd Aw ..

TWo bed room Hoi tv Park mobile
home with half acrt lot. 30,._
671-3030 Of 576-3431 .

Golllpollo. Ohio 41131.

Oov.mn.rt Jot. t18,040 ·

tl9,230 .r. Now hirlna C.H
1 ·801-117·1000 Ellt. A-9801
for cuntnt tic* II 1111.

a.._,...,.
Jobol ••a.o37. 10
*18.401. lmmedl•• Hiring!
Your .,..,

Call (Refundebf•

1· 118-41S.3111 EXT. F1822

for Fed• .. Uat 24 hrs.

44

"I'm too tired to cook
tonight, Henry, so ·we're
having sushi."

Have an Avon J*tY or_. Awn 1-;;:;::~~~~~~~~'T----------j
whh n.oo ..._
_ Moro I 31 Homes for Sale
int•,...,lonaoll814-99:i-7110.
.33
Farms for Si~le
AVON . AI ..- . Cell M.l...·n
..,.

We••l04-882-2148.
AN'S &amp; LPN'S -PH. fuM time &amp;
. , limo
l... lo
:cceptld -:;_ Ple•n:::.•Yall:
N 1n ~- C
Hoo ......,
,.._ "" g - o -or.
Contect P•tonntl 304-17154 340. AAEOE.
AVONaU •-IISt*lltt' ap ..,.
30~17&amp;-1421

·
. Llceneed Soclll Workw In

MIIIV

long t.m c.e feciUty. I!'IIP•
rlanoepr"'-red. Commtneunrt:e
....., tnd ben . . .. E.O.E . Mell
rooumo to Admlnlotmor Core
H.ven of Point lll._ant, Rt. 1
Box ;121. Point Pl. .ent. W. Vt.
251150.
·

.J:'

w.u..!'!.,,.llke f to ....hwe 1'tfl.'
oo .. ....-. n. .,., age 4 _.....,,
phont304-875-7879.
Pl8111nt v..1_. Hosoh:-' 11 cur~
rentti accepting IPPiic:ttlonl for
fultdme ..dpM'ttfrne.AN'e.CIIII
304-875-4340 for mortlnformOIIo" A"· EOE.

v.., lltr. .lwebrldl4be*oom.

:Z blth. femly room with fir•
pf.aaformetcHnqa. .. llvlng
roDm, 30ft. ouiComo*ldtohan
cobln.._ oolt W-orl&lt; llnloh
b•emant. 2 c• g•ep. llll'al
l.,do..,ed lot. 4 miM from
Holnr
off Rt. 31Port•brook Su~lllon. 0111

Hoo-

114-441-4188.

fun.._.......,. •

4·BR ..
v•lllll&amp;
1111¥ corpoted t o - MWj .
Prlctd to teN. c.n 114-4410271 aft• I PM. WMicendl

ln\'tlma
3 bedroom furnlehtd. 1 ICI'I or
I • • 1 • OOO OO 1,.
mON '""""
w,
•
•
'"'
mU.efrom41ane .. dC.nt.-vlle
on County Ad. 8. 814-2419279.
3BR .• 1 t.:h home. Cent1'81..,.
h••· GartGe&amp;w~hop. RivtrviiW'. Cel 814-307-04871ft•
I PM.
1 Bectoom homewhh 1~ tote.
Moe•mlllhomt.W.selwllhor
wl'-tfllrnfti,.O.Cotl814-4*8•109 Of 37S.2740.

Port limo typlot podlon In
fMt· PICed proftltionlf pr.c- 2 •tory, 3 BA. hou-. b•.ment.
tice. F!eclbl•work.c:h..,ltwlth c•port, looetlll 1 mle from
av•age -of 32 t.»un per week. Gellipolle. Cai1814-441-M11
Aeptr : lax p .14 In c•e of lit. 3 bed-oom hou• Urge ba•
A. . n Aegist•. 200 Mel!\ St. ment. e~mlnum •c~~:~a lilt¥
Pt. Pl. 21115b.
• ..,......_ 1n PomOtoy. tin 114Wanted doptr~dable pnon to 192-7187.
are fof children 8 .,d 8vrs old. For ult or ,.,._ 2 bedroom
In mv home pan 11ma 30~8715- new• home '4 mile out Beul•
7349.
vfttePioolnGoltlt&gt;ollo. Oh. ~OG'o
AN, Director ~Nursing. n•ded fanOid-lnyerct. Jtcngtlallclng.
for intwmedl•e hHfth c•• CloH to hoephlend thopplniJ.
toclllty. E_,.,codlnlongtwm City ochoolo •co.ooo. -...
care required. Sal.., and btnef- t1800 down wllh FHA Lotn.
it• com~erat• wtth •pe- Cell 814-446-8177 tveninga.
ri.,oa Send re.ume to Box P
HS. c•• of Po.l "' Pl. .ant: 8 roo,. • d blth In Hemlodl:·
Aegiltw. 200 Meln St., Point Grove. Vinyl eldlna new winw v 2"11Ut.
dow• and a.ptnd. Alldng
PI
U1.000.CoU814-992-7207or
· · •· • - ·
W.,.ecl lood IJI•ortot clrummor 114-99:!-2338.
end k8¥' boW I'll¥•· m.te or In count-wllhland. Goodfem•• for Rock Bend now
·r
for
304-87~15370 aftw huntlno. 18 mil• from Att.tnt.
p
12 ml• •om Pomwov. c.n
&amp; ·•
NO
.
.
814-91:!-1841.

mint.

12

Situ lltlona

m•

114-912-8815.

. 15

or

C.ll

Schools
Instruction

Hou" • Ferm for eale,
• 8. 000. 00 down eaurrwble 8'h
P• cent loen to qu.tlfl.:l blyer,
very low doting oom. IS acr•
wfth 7 ve• old ced• cont.,.
por*Y homo. p~cod r..,codto
•ee.ooo.oo. Phono 304-8711951 GoUipollo Forry. W.Vo.
2 brectoom

hou•.

120acref•m.32croplencl 35
P81tUIW. barn1end oulbulclngs,.
l•m hou• (frN g•l iutt II
mM•fromtown. CIIISom.-vlle
Rootty 304-871-3030 Of 8713431.
101 prtve1e act• whh. eaav
eccees. Gllllpolll l;trry~ nt'IN
honw
2 lot• wtth welt.
*70.000.00. 304-878-4131 .

•o

36

L

ota

...

&lt;a

A

craage

Approx, 5 acr• .....,.._ GeHia
Co.- 3 mil• from Vlritan on
Jecltaon Co. Ad. t8,000riegiotf.
eble. Cell 814-491'-4325·
Columbut, after 15 PM
•••u•v•.
•-1
bul~
-non. · •ve
"""g lot1.
mobile hom~~ permtttad, public
wot•. eloo rlvw ~ Clydo
-....Jr. 304-5711-2,338.
1e
eut.,l river lat• mtM:rep~t,
public
Cfydt B~nWF~, Jr.
304-571-2338.
211 •cr• Broed Run Road. New
tt.ven. Owner financing avtll•
blo. 304-882-3394. ·I ·

wM•.

Lou, one acre. lwei, wooded.
ctty 'Mit•. Jerioho Aoed. owner
flnan~g. good term., 304372·840~,.. 372·2171.
lJJtt and tc:rltgt on Rayburn
Aoed. CoH John D. Ge~ach.
304-17.8253.

Renlolo
41

Homes for .Rent

Nlcetv furnllhed 1,m1l houl8.
Adutt1 ontv. Ref. teQUINd, No
pOlo. CoM t14-4411-0331.
3 BR .. AC. c•pet pooL g•~ ..
2 flrapltee~. tenet. Good toea·
tlon. Call A· 1 Aell Eltate
......... 304-871-1104.

Wanted
'Mil c•e for lld«ti
wom1n in our home.

1

Unfurnlahed hou•. 2 BR.
Nolghbor- AdJ • 221. Aeler·
en011 6 depoeft l~a:~ulred . c.n
US.441hftor 7 PM.
One bedroom hou• loceted
1701 Ch•trart. •ove.,.drtfl'ilt
...tor lurnlohod. n50.00 w~h
f75.00 depo11t, 814-446·
3870.

Eldrll lot.

Apartment
fOr Rent

1978 Dodgo h""Y clltv hell.
CJII! -""'f!l!!to114-387· 0188.

46

73

Furnished Rooms

Furnithtd room-919 Seoond

bath. C.tl ~....-18eftw7PM .

Aoorm: b ,.,.. ...,.. or month.
lllrtlng It I 120 a mo. Ollila
Hotol· e 14-us. 91ao.

Upttolro unftornlohod opt Cor·
PCid. ut.. l• Jllld. No children.

r.

Furniehed .,._ Ntw. Ne.. HMC.
1 BA. •275. UtiiMI• ,.ld. Coli
448-4418 eft• 7 PM.
Apertmant1 end hou••· C.ll
304-8711-1104.
.
•.
Furnltt.d ap.-tment•1 bedroom •240 &amp; up. UtHitiM paid
Cell 44S.4t11ofter 7 PM.
Fllrnlohod elfloloru:l* t145 &amp;
up. Utllltl• pllld. Sh•• blth.
Cell 441-*415 oltor 7 PM.

APortmon1o fur the Elderly.

o..•r... "''

Otllla Minar Apwtmtnta. 1&amp;5
Buhl Morton Road.
the Sonlor CMinn 162 older!
., dHanclct1pp .. p . .~ . Equal
hou•ing opportunity. AppUe&amp;tlof)l ml'f be plckedupet Spring
Velle;o PI••· 529 Jecklon ~ke
or coli 814-*4&amp;-4139.
Furnlthed 2 rooms with private
b•h. Second A'A. $160 a rno.
Utllhi• ... d. Coli 114-4482380.
Mod•n 2 BR , IIPir'tm.rt for
rent. o.p, • rlf. Cell 114-4481079.
1 lA . ap ... ment,. 101111 elec.
•161amo. ln Ak)Q,.,da C.ll
814-241-5223.
effldtn(f(

..,.,ment.Firttftoor.

n.-n htM. Clntr11lly loCittd, all

ut:llll• f-'d. 8125 • mo. $315
dop. Col 814-441-0544.
Modern 1 8ft downtown, cor.
plete kitchen. air, c•pet. Dep·
01tt, no pets. C.H 114-4410 131fNanlnge. eft• l!i,

51

Large Chine Tub on 1101. E.:el.
cond. *100 o r - offw. CoH
814-*41-.705 .
Chtllft frllltr for HI&amp;

114-388-8871.

67

e221.-WIH 1111 •ep•81e. Extre
nlc», 814-317·0822.

Mu•lcel IRttrument - Bundy
trumpel wtlh c•e. 181. Call

114-4411-3481.
Premier

Household Goods

63

lndfvkklal guit• l••ons. l)e.
glnnn, Nriou1 gu. .rilt. Bruio
c•cHt Mu1lc. 114-441-0187.
Jeff W.mtl., lnltruct:or, 114441-9077. Um~ed op.,lnao.

Antiques

~WAIN

AUCTION •

COUJ1ty Appllanoe, Inc. Good

uMd epplllin011 111d TV •••·
Op• BAM to &amp;PM. Mon thru
Sat. 814-C418-1899. 127 lrd.
Avo. Golllpollo, OH.

Buy or Sell. Riverine AmlqUM.
1 1 24 E. Meln Street, Pom•ov.
Hoo"o: M.T.W 10o.m. 10 llt&gt;.m .•
ilklndov 1 10 &amp;p.m. 814-992·

2821.

f

64 Mile.

Wheelohalr•new or ulld. 3
wheeled .eiiQirlc aaoot. .. Cel
Ra~ Mobllty oollec:t. 1·814870-9111.
1--~------­
7 ft aoln op•MIII pool t*e.
1988 Honde Shtldow &amp;00. 2
Suzuki Quad runntn 181 and
125. Aoltypocllnobu . .. Coli
oft• 5:00. 814-2411-9185.

.

.········-·.

90 D•v• ume •• c•h with
approvad credlt. 3 Mil• out
Bul•ille Rd. Open tam 'to 6pm
Mon. thru Set. Ph . 814·448·
0322.

pr.,••

•of• •

1---------l.....------~

lo-

*•

•eo. .,...,

d.,,,

.,

Merchandil8

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

Sof• end chairt priced from
f316 ~ t995. Tabl• f50 and
UIIIO •us. Hld•l·bedl 8390
to 1696. Atclin•• f22B to
8375. Lamp• e2a to •121.
Dlnlf1*1 t1 09 and up 10 •4&amp;5.
Wood llbl• w-1 chlllra t286 to
f791!i. Dnk t100 up to t375.
Hutch • e.aoo end up. Bunk
bedl t complete w-mantr•'"
129151nduptot39&amp;. Blbv bedt
t1 10. Man ...... orboK • •
full or twin 188, firm 878, and
taB. Queen lltl 1200 &amp; up
King 1310. 4 drawer ch•t 889:
Oun c~neca I gun. a.by
mettrn'" t36 6 f41. Bed
fr•m• UO, 130 • King fram•
f50. Good ..lection ofHdroom
suftH. metal clblnet1. head·
~lrd• t30 and up to ••e.

.,.,her
'"""'be

'
,.,.' .

Honda XAIOI dirt billa .cc
oond. 0500.00. 304-578-2193.

'
,.,.'

'!19 Sportlt•

10 per Clnl

68
.

&amp;

. Fnlit
Vegetables

•

~-

76

'

"'·
'•
,.,.''·
,.

8t Acceaories

. .•.

We tile uttd aato pM'b for aK
typee of on. Cllt 114-3889082 or 4:41-19~0.

l.atemodM 2.2Chry ..•engtne.
Coll814-742-2411 .

79

Red ....owdoll-o.M"'ooo·
Joneth.n. ldertd. WlnHep,
Orinwe. Ro-;.:.::1•. lorgturn.
hon-v a
_..._., food
tttmt. OunrovinFruii:F•m-181
-oiAJ-,..HouroP-8.
Clo"d Manday . 114·· 1188298.

f .Jill'

~·

...
..
\ ·olo

. .'

a

FRANK AND ERNEST

'

......-·..,

SEFor&lt;E

'

Motors Homea

&amp; Campers

/

.·,

1971 21' Swcrolt comper llllly
Hlf oontain... air ooncltlon.

nM tlr•. ornt condition.
n.ooo.: 1171 CapriCI Ettet:t
-n-nc..,pert-"'9
pec:kega
aoncltion. em-fm
rldlo, • • aondltlon . .,,eoo.
8oth .... 000. Coli 304-87120118 or 871-4111.

/'; IIVi!SIIII

h

61

Almo•t ntw electric water
heat•. c.n 114-2111-14315.

121115 Ollrer 4 WD dl•lll tNCtar

Farm Equipment

w / lllows. dl1c. cultlvetofl,
edt&amp;. Lltt moc:lll ...41ntwn•
tlonal cl•ll nctor. PS. wfde
front 3 pt., 831815. OwiW wiH
fln.,oo. Coli 814-298-8522.

rwetv trec:tor.

81

d.,.,,,

~

Slmmentel llul for •le. I
month• old. C.ll 8·1 4-949·
2822.

64

Hay

Grain

Sh .. l_. aorn. premklm Alfllfa
ltriiW .,d twr. Morpn• WoodI-n Form, lit. 35. PNnv. 8:00
tHI 12:00 Mondlv lhru SlturdO¥. 304-937-2018.

81tsv bed .,d mttt,.., good
cond, *41.00. 304-882·2245.

f I ~11SJ111ri~IIIJII

19 cu It .... upright " -·
good oond. *250.00. 304-57114831 .
.

55

&amp;

71

Auto's For 'Sale

Building Supplies

Bull... g Motorlolo
Blodt. brlclc. ....,. piP•. w~
dow1, tfntels, etc. Cl~a~de 'Nint••· Alo Grtnde. ·0 . Can 1142411-1121 .
ConcrMe bfocb- til •II• yard
or delivery. MnonllftcL Oellip4&gt;
Ua Blodc Co .. 12:MI Pine St ..
Galllpolit, Ohio. Cell 814-4482783.
WESTERN REO CEOAA
• Ch ..nel Rustic
.. d llovoled lop 81... g
• Otcfl: Met•lllll '
Guor..tood Quollty
CETIDE. INC.. Athono·S14·
594-3578

66

Pets for Sale

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Voh&gt;
d • from noo. Fords. Mtrctdll. COI'Yitt"· Chwv•. Sur~
plu•. luyart: Guide . C1J
101-1187·1000 EJO. 8·10189.
1114 Cam•o. PS. PB. AC.
AM-FM 1t~Ca11. 13995.
1980 Dotlgo 14 tun true*. hod ..
one owner, 88, 000 mltee,
e 1891. Coll814-2811-1122.
DR~•

lomlv cor 1979 8uldc
EloctN 4 door. 52.710 octiMI
mil•, good tlr•. A·1 m IChenf.
eel. all power equipment.
•3.580.00. SeeThlrdendOIIve,
I 14-448-4107 or 4411-2802.
1911 Che¥Y Cavalier AS
W1gon. 37,000 mil•. auto .•
AC. cruloo. tilt, AM-FM. Coli
· I 1 4-38S.8240.
1981 Ofdf, CUIIM,·CIIall. Ell·
tre1, law mlleege. Extrt nice.
Cell 814-4411-1418.

a...

,·

'~
. _,, ,,

••

"

SWEEPER tnd NWing machine ' ·v'C
reptlr. ptrlt. and tuppll•. Pick ... ~~
up ond - ...... Dovlr¥oa11om ·~!
CIHntr. ont htlf mile u_p ~. '(1
Olor- c.- Ad. C1U 614-' . ~
448-0294.
• . ,·
'

·'••''

·',,
.,.,,,'

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES·
Soptle tlnk pumolng- •so per
loed. Coli 1·8011-637·9128.

'..•
,.'

Magazine

9:00 1J (D I!]J MOVIE: 'Double
Standard' NBC Mondor
Night at the Movies C
l!l 'Ciouic Summer (A)
(I) Ill (iJ Monday Night
Football
(!) 11) Campaign: A View
from Abroad From fore ign
tele~ision reporting ,
commentar-y and analysis ,
learn how the American
presidential campaign is
viewed by the rest of the
world. C
tml II) I!}) MOVIE: 'Out ot
Alrlcl, Port 2' CIIS Special
Movie t;1
«1J Larry King Uvol
!!) MOVIE: Eyos of a
St•ange• IAI (1 :25)
9:30 ® New Country
10:00 (D 700 Club
l!l Wate• Skiing National
Wate• Ski Championships
from Wast Palm Beach.FL

I

...

RON'S Television Servlct. .. ••
Hou .. cell• on RCA. Ouazer, ~
GE. lkoeclollng In ZtinMh. Coli 1 ...'11
304-5711-2398 or 114-441- ". ~
2414.
.;·;.

,.
,.,.
. ,,

Fetty Tr.. Trimming.. ttump
removol. Coli 304-8711-1331.

Aot•rv or cable tool drilling.
Mo•t well•complal.ttamed-v.
Pump • • and .-vk:e. 304891-3102

AND

D!&lt;l~ A

NEW

CADILLAC' EVERY

YEAR.

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
houl8 olll terVIcing GE, · Hot
Point. w11her1. dryers and
........ 304-178-2398.
.
Ak•• TrH Trimming and Stump
Rtmawl. Free lltknltet. C.ll

30 4-875-7121 '

82

Plumbing
8t Heating

BARNEY
,.
,.

CAATEA '8 PWMtltNG
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Golllpolo. Ohio
Phono 11 ... *411-3888 or 514448-4477

84

&amp;

Electrical
Refrigeration

'

,•

,...
..

..

1 MET OUR
NEIGHBOR--

NEW

lOA IlLLI!

DON'T JEDGE
IDA SELLE BY
HER COVE~

Ll KE IT WAS
HUNG IN TH'
MIDDLE !!

LOWEEZ.Y !.

SOU IRES

(R)
(!)

Relldentill or comm•cill wfr.
In g. New HrVIct or replllrs. '
'· ,.
U~ennd electricill'!. Eltimlte
frea Ridenour Electrical. 304875-1788.

. . ..
. -..

-

::;:;::::::;;::=:::::;:;::;::::::;;:::: '

•••oo.

.

;

Bernice Bede Osol

'\bur

ldeaa Moyers talks with a

CBirthday
. SAGITT.IIRIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 This
Oct. 11, 1188
Is a good day to get togethe• with people who are in the same ffetd a s you.
A side interest you've never eKplolted Something dynamic could result
could occupy a substantial amount of CAPRICORN
(Doc. 22-.lan.
181
your time and attentton In the year Changes that are stirring could result In
ahead. Your efforts won't be wasted increased earnings. Luck will be as big a
and the results should prove profitable. lector as your abilities.
LIIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Oon't turn AQUARIUS (Jon. ZO.Fob. 111 Self-Indown lnvitetlona today where you might terests can be advanced tp,day in ways
have an opportunity to make new con· that associates wtH n61 find offensive.
I acts. People you meet could prove ex- Instead of resisting, they are apt to
tremely lucky. Know whore to look tor jump on y()&lt;jr bandwagon.
romance and you'll lind it. The Astra- PISCES I Fob. ZO.Morch 20lln o•der to
Graph Matchmelcer lnstan11y reveals add to your resources today, you might
which signs are romantlc~ly perfect for have to use some bold and Imaginative
you. Mall $2 to Matchmaker , c/o this strokes. Think carefully and act
n....,spaper. P .O. Box 91428, Cleveland, positively.
OH 44101-3428.
"RIES (Mirch 21·Aprtt 191 The•e are
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NO¥. 221 You could · good uses lor recent Ideas. However,
make money today from something you they sh~uld be Implemented as soon as
consider a side venture. This situation p~aalbte while opportunities are at a
has much more pol8ntlai lhan you htgh level.
. think .•
· TAURUS (April 211-Moy 20) The fruits of

I!!J News

l1l Statewide
18i!ll Bamoy Miller
ll2l Evening News
® Crook and Chase
10:05 (1) MOVIE: Tho Duchon ond
tho Dlrtwater Fox IPGI (i :451
10:30 (!) EaotEndoro A continuing
chronicle of the tlves of
residents in London's East
End . (0:30)
CD l!ll Odd Couple
® VidooCounlry
11:00(D Remington Steele CoHee ,
Tea or Steele
U (}) 1111 lllil2l IUJ Nowo
(!) Major League Btoeboll'o
Greatett Hits '75 World
Series: Reds vs Red Sox(Rf
(!) 11) Bill MOJirS' World of

'''··
. ..::'·
.r•

...

·- ........

~ NFL Monday Night

.. ...
' ,!

Palnt"'g: lnterkM' • Extwior.
Fr• eetlmltn. can 814-44.
8344.

38.ooo
1911 curl••
Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All bnedt ... AII mil-. 4dr, Sh•~•5391. 1110 85 , General Hauling : \~
ttvl11. IMnt Pit Food o..... · Bulcfl Rlverla-e2100. 1815
Julie Webb I'll. 814-4*1-0231 . -w~Lymt Wagon-'30""'.
1982
mou1h Chomp-f1700.
HAPPY JACK TRIVERMtCDE: 1811
teun 210 Wegon· Dlllerd Water s...,lce: Poolt,
rteognlzed • • • effeotN• bv t1000. 1811 Mlfeury Lynll· Clttemt, Wells. Delivery AnyU.S. B...., ot VoterlnO¥ Mod~
•1400. 1984 Ford Aangor II, time. t":lll 814-448- 7.a4-No
cine eglllntt hook. round, •
V-1. euto .. 17.000 mil ... Sundev ctll1.
llpiWormt In dogt • c••l U111. Coli 814-38.\MI15.
J &amp; J Wlter SIIFVk:e. Swimming
BI~LL CASH FEED. J . D.
NORTH PRODUCE.
1978 PDntl.a Orand Saf•l pool•. cilterna. well•: Ph . 614llatlonW•gon. PS, PB. AC. One 246-9286.
Draganwynd Cettr;- KM'Intl. owner. Ecel. oond. C.ll 614R II R Water Service. Pool1.
CFA P. .t., and 81.mllle kit·
*41-3411 .
cltterna, wells . lmmedleteten•. AKC Chow puPOI•. New
Htmol..., kin.,.. Coli 8141118Z·21. T ·toP. euto.. loeded. 1, 000 or 2, DO(j g.UontdtiNery,
441-3144 oil or 7 PM.
48.000 m1111. •saoo Firm. c.n Coli 304-675-8370.
514-UB-2071oftor 8 PM.
Sllvar Toy Pooth. AKC Ala 11
Water detlvery. 1000 gallons.
moo. old. Wolgltt· 4 lbo. Coli
1175 Nove Umlt.t. 8odf grHt A••onable prl011. lmmecfllle
814-*411-0444.
ohopo. Au• good. *BOO OBO. delivery. Cell 814-992·5275.
••
Cell 304-878-1370.
ll•tlful 1 mo. old Cook•
Watlenoi'l' • Water Hauling,
Sp.,lel. Roglot-. CoH 814- 1183 TPWI•AM . Auto.. V-8, r••onable ret•. lmmedllle
448-2200 Of 448-3131 .
crot•flre Injection. Loadtd. 2. 000 gallon delivery, ain•n11
pool•. wd, etc. Cll 304--878""'· •aooo. Coli 114- 2911.
AKC regilttNd butl code• 211.000
441-4031
.
opinlel pu,... 20 w,.. old. oil
1hot1• .,21. Ca.ll· 1·211-1318 1881 Ma:da RX 7, EJCtl, cond. Petrldc'• Wet• H1ullng. 2.000
8 :30p.m.
Coll814-3117·03oll.
• .. dol~ ...... 304-57$.2311 0&gt;
14-«8-4081.
~.I"
AKC PRkt•e 7wkt. old. 1 rft11e 1817 ·a....,ette . 15 •peed.
1 f.male. Wormed _,d 11t. 21.000 '""•· 1 ow,...., Asking
'~.
ohoto. *150 ooch. 814-992· *4200.
Upholstery
CoH 304-77:J.I9*4 Of 87
8798.
114-992·2898.
'•
AKC roalotored 81borl., Huoby ' 1973 Corvette Convertlblt.
·puppl-. blk lind white. blue , Mlmbln m•ch. All original.
•Y••· 2 miiH 4 femel11 . :11.000totuel mil•. Documen*271.00 ..ell. 304-175-2483 tation. Expenalve . 814-247Ilk forJMnH•.
it811 or 114-148-euto.

•fl•

NFL Monday Night
Match-Up Bullalo 611/s at
New York Jets
(I) .Ill (J) MocGyver
MacGyver, Jack Dalton and
Peter -.:-hornton are stuct&lt;
with a baby. (R) C
(!) l1l Dlocovor. Wo~d ot
Science Investigate bizarre
creatures living more than a
mile beneath the sea. C
tml Ill il2l 80 Minutes 2bth
Annlvoroary: Tho Second 10
Yaoro Highlights of
broadcast reports originally
atred from 1978 to 1988
include a blend of
investigative reports,
provocative interviews,
features and profiles . t;1
CD l!ll I!!J MOVIE: Tho
Holcroft C011onont IAll I :52)
tm PrimeNowa
!!) Murder, Slle Wrote !;I
® Nuhvllle Now
8:05 CD MOVIE: Harper Volley
P.T.". IPGI (1 :421
8:30 1J (D I!]J Tho Hogan Family

.,

1150 Ollv• D••tl trautor, uc
cone!. 304-8711-3190.
' Con a-... ltptlc T.-.111 • 1000
gal., 11i00g... end Jet Aerttion
ovotom. Foctory trolnal •opolr
ohop. AON EVANS ENTER·
Livestock
63
PRISES• .leek•·. -,, Ohio. 1-800537-8528.
I ve• IPPIIoOII m••· Good
trail hor•. f400 . Cell814-3792.13,

lil

ALLEY OOP

...
•'•

115.8 Froat prorrf FrigideWe dHp
frteZll. Uke niW'. 2 ty,_.,rtt...
pollcetaenn•. 11._8t2-7111.

tpd. wl:hrolllry mower•.plow &amp;
oUikv. Lillo..-. Coii114-*4S.
4149.

·.,

~
BASEMENT
WATEA PROOFING
Un aondtionll llfal:hN .,.,.,.
,,j
'"' Loclll ref•.,.,. furnlet.d.
F,.. eitlmlt•. Cllll oaHed 1- "oo'
1-814-237-0418. dO¥ Of night.
AogersB•Jtment . '"Pj
-r,
w•wprooflng.

BuyMWehelnuwchelnendgat
old one •lwiMned FR !E, Oat - onlv. Sidon Equloment,
Hendoroon. 304-1711-7421.

Surplus army cemoufl.. ge, d•
nlm, flntll, Clrh.- dotNng.
Smtll army accealtorlll. Frt.
Set, Sun, noon .. 8:00 PM.
INO\II, Dec open 7
Stm
SometVIIIt't. Eaat~Aavantwood
Junction lndeptndence Aoed.
old R1. 21. IN- E•ol ·lnouloted
camouflage ODVer•l• t27.10,
304-27:J.I811.

I

l'·l,l'

Warm Morr*lg Wood Bum•.
Brlak-lned, cast iron lire boa.
Good oandiUon. c.ll 114-&amp;12·
1191.

Be• WhlteteU hunter bow 30 ..
draw. •10.00; Be• Pol• LTD
bow. 31'• dUIW . e.S.()O. Cell
304-773-5104 oft• I o'clodL

IN OU~ f~EE
LITE~ACY COUR~E?

'

.I

Home
·Improvements

0

Spo Sole, bo.,tllul quolltv built,
buy from W.Ve. menufecturw
end uve. For infor"*lon and
prl- coli 1·304-5Z:J.8298.
_,dol' tlwu FridO¥ 2:00PM til
8 ,oo PM .•

elec. ttlrt. 8

S1:rv1G1:s

Quilt llll'ld for ..... 821 ftrm.
AntiQue
for 111fe. Clll
8f4-992-3S40 oft• 3:30p.m.

dr•,.

$1R 1 wouL.p you
1-1/&lt;E ME To eN~OL.L

*

'

w~ .5TA~.

Sii!IIJII!!S

28 cu . fl. ,.,.lg. 0,.. cond. Ice
mak• • other IPICIII tutura
•300. Coll614-*411-9718.

Mlxtd hlrdwoodal .... 112p.bunolo. Con-Ing opJ"'". 1V.
ton: C*lo Pill• c-o.. Pom•ov.
Ohio. 814-912·8481.

7:00 &lt;D Our House Family Secrets
U (D PM Magazine
l!l SportaCentor (LI
(I) Ill (J) Current Altair
(!) l1l MacNeil/ Lehr.,
NowoHour (1 :001
tml lllll2l I!]J Wheel ot
Fonune 1;1
CD l!ll Three's Company
I!)) Moneytlno
@Cheers
· !!) Miami Vice C
C•ook and Chase
7:05 (1) 9 to'S
7:30 U (D· Family Feud
l!l NFL Trlva
,
(I) Entonolnmont Tonight
0 (J) USA Today
tml lllll2l I!]J Jeopardy! 1;1
CD l!ll M•A•s•H
I!)) Croa•llre
(g) Night Court
® VldeoCountry
7:35 (1) Sanford and Son
8:00 (D MOVIE: The Kid l•om Lett
Flatd INRI (1 :20)
U (}) I!]J ALF The Tanners
allow Mr. Ochmonek to move
in after.a fight with his wife.

your ambitions can be greater than usu·
al today. II you have something big that
YoU are anxious to pull!, this Is the day
to do it.
GEMINI (May 21·Jun• 201 Matters that
are under your direct supervision
should work out the way you hope 10
day. Do not delegate to cithe•s things
lhat you can do better. ·
CANCER (Juno 21-.luty 221 The beat
way 10 achieve your ends today is indirectly. In situations where you anlidpate obsttlcles, devise methOds to out·
llank them.
LEO (JuiJ 23-AUII. 221 Your ablll1y to
assess sttuatlons accurately 11 very
keen today . You may now lind two solutions to a problem yoo thought had no
answers.
VIRGO (AUII. 23-Sept. 22) The larger
lhe objective today, the better y()&lt;j
should be able lo cope with lt. This
could be especially true where your career goals are concerned.
4

wide variety ol people about
America's choices. (NA)
llll!ll Love Connection
tm Moneyllne
@ Teleo trom tho Dolkolde
(!J Miami Vlcl t;l
® You Can Be a Star
1 I :30 U CD !ISl Tonight Show
l!l SportoCenter (L)
(!) European Journol (0:30)
1111 USA Todly
18 [I) Nowlywed Game
«JJ Sporta Tonltlht
11)\12) 'Hunter' CIIS Lote
Night Hunter and McCall lind
thalr kidnapping homicide
case hamperad. (RI
181 Hill Street Blues Lite,
Death, Eternity
9 American Mlgallno
12:00 (D Popor Ch111 Mlsteken
Identity.
(!) NFL'o Oreallot Moment•
History otlhe AFL (R)
(I) IJ (J) NIWI .
(!) l1l Sign Oft
tm Magnum, P.l.
Ill [I) Twilight Zon•

~-!'!~~~Night

.

•

•

1~-1;;r;i-:.:.;A:I"'.;:y.·;t~;~:~~~~~~~:.

'

6

f

Granny to teen , " It 's always bes t to
travel in pairs , so you can blame
someona e lse it something is ·- - ..

I

I TCEN

If--.,-fl'".-.;I'B.:...,I~.:~,_::c_r:l",...j .0 . Compi~le
. .....1.
L-J..- ..L.-.J.- -.L..L

Blai• Underwood (A)
·
(I) Ill (J) ABC NewaQ
(!) Body Electric
l1l Nightly Buolno•l Report
tml lllii2J CBS Newa
CD l!ll WKRP In Cincinnati
tm Inside Politics '88
IHJ WKRP In Clnctnnltl
!!) Cartoon E•preoo
® You can Be a Star '
8:35 (1) Andy GriHith

I·

Auto Parts

'

Fandango
8:05 (1) Laverne and Shl~ey
8:30 (D II)J NBC Nightly NtWI

'

304-112-2888. .•

I I' I I I'

a

--

I~
~i

TROOM

!!) Fat Albert .

Motorcycles

1911 Yam~• 250dtrt blkawhh
-d. ••zoo. eon 814441-11538 Ilk for Chris.

NL A T Y

CD l!ll Happy Doyo
II2J ShowBiz Today
IBJ Facto of Lito

'

oowor

't Wo&lt;111. TX

R
00 Sll,Shol Aollie Fingers &amp;

I
I

GOOD USEO APPUANCES
Wqherl, . dryen, refrigeratora.
range•. Sk1gg1 Appliance•.
Uppor River Ad . booldo Stone
c - Motel. 114-4*1- 7318.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

In•• Drurft, wtth a -

""· lwtct;' Trumpet. Both •·
oell ... condhlon. C.lll14-9928181.

liE doubt• ov., ronge, good
cond. *110.00. 304-171-8000

FURNITURE 12
Olive 51 .• GaiiiPc*.
NEW- I pc. wood group- t 391.
Living roam tultft· f199-•1599.
lunt bade with bedding- *249.
FtAI 1ln mitt,_ • foundttlon
•tertlng- •11 . Aecllnert
"'""'~~" f99.
USED- · dr ..... bo-m
1uht1. Dttkl. wringer wethtr. 1
complete line of u•ed tu rntture.
NEW· Wlltem boott- •35.
Workboots fi18 • up. ISietl •
10ft toe). c.ll 114-441-3119.

Musical
Instruments

'(OU FEEL GOOD ALL OVER ..

'·

;;;;:::;;;::;:==;:==
74

low 10 form four simple words.

5

WI-lEN HOTI-UN6 15 600D
FOR 'fOU, '(OU I-lAVE TO
PRETEND TI-IM EVER't'TI-IIN6
15 GOOD FOR VOU !

JELL'( DOUGHNUTS MAKE

'·
':·
',.
,.I•,.
,.
,,"

con'IPI•• beskat .,_. .. 1500.00

U11d TIPptn S.S. bultt·in cw.w
tnd ttcwe top, d •ell or tnNtt
for oquolveluo. 304-871-2508.

ch•.

'

Clll

M1vt1C1 arto wutw. GE dryer.

·-he•.

- .. t

Ponwreni• pup1. 2 male. 1
,...,..,, Flnt shot• and wormMI.
f100. 814· 742-3110.

or 1711-2191.

.51

Pats for Sale

- - - - - - - - --

Mt:rcllaniiiSI!

304-171-4314.
RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS 3 beltoom horne. 1Y:r b•hl.
Vall~ Furnttu ...
3 Bedroom lurniar.ct home for
far rent. •226 e
COUEOE. 529 Jeck1on Pike. C.peted. centrll
to- rent with ewlrnm'nr poal. Nice Apartnwrt
Ntw and uttd furnitut11 end
month. Oepo•tt required. 814Call441-4387. Aeg. No. 8&amp;. 1 1· e•ed In Point PI-n. c•
814-441- 892-5724. Alt., llt&gt;m or 992· IPplioanc••; Call 814-441·
1Col
10IEI .
304-175-2702 Of 304-171- .neighbor-.
7672, Hourtl-5.
4109 or 379-2740.
1119.
2147.
J &amp; 1i FURNITURE
Houltln oountryforrent. Dep. 6 Grlldou• lving. 1 lnd 2 bed1416East•nAve.
1 8 Wanted to Do
r.t. required. 1 Clll 814-387· room ep . . ment• at VIllage
32 Mobila Homas
4
drawer
t48. 5 drewtr
oS3a.
I
Menor and Alvtrtklt APirt·
•54.915. 15 pc. wooden
for Sale
m.,tt in Middleport. From ChNt.
Nloet';' furrlil:hed tn-.1 hou•. 1 f182. Call 814-992-7787. dlnrHtttetatl, •199.9&amp;.
Dorer &amp; B1ekhoe Work-8150
be*oom. One ar two etd•ly EOH.
PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Cue dor:er. Ae•onabte rttt81.
p mpla No pet•. Ref. rwqulred.
Complete hou•hald furnl•hExperience operator. CremMnl Lind contract llrge Hwlng room Colll14-*411-2843.
2
bedroom
Apt:s.
for
rent.
w/ellpando room. 2 BR.,
lngs. 1h mile out Jerrlcho.
ConOI. Coli 614-268-1718.
Corpetecl. Nice oanlng. Leu ndov
w/v.l c•pat. air aondlllon.
304-875-1450.
•
31A
.
hocity
""'oolo.
*300
fecllll• avalllble. Call et•
w / arw-hout llrntute. rut. t•
Painting • roofing S. c•pentry furnece
• mo. S.c. dip. • ref. ntqulred. 992-3711 . EOH.
on
lot.
M.,
,....
.For ~ prices on Quality Carpet
work bv the hour or job. Call lot. Call 5 to 8 PM, 114-648No p«s. Cell St:utet Real Ethte
&amp; Furntture come to Mollohan
614-379-2418.
'
814-4*1-4208.
.
Newt{
l'ld4corlled
epartment•
1409.
Furnltu,..Upp• River Rd., 114walablt. Utilttl• pelcL t225. 441-7444.
\Nould like to do bab{afttlng in 1988 New' Moon 1211150. 21A . 2 8R. hou• clo• to Oa!lipoh. P• month. depotft rtqulred. Clll
Double t•l9• • fuN tt.ement. 814-992-15724 1fler 8:00 'or
my home. Dey or night. •1 .00 • _"'"' Coli 81 • *4"0l90.
P• hour. Call 614-388-8885.
.cUV\1.
.,.
Ktnmoreweshllr t75.00, Speed
• 300 J* mO. Oep. • ref. Call 992-1119.
Queen dryer t71.00, 2 door
814-*411-3541.
1987Felrmont
1&lt;11c70.
oft
oloc:t·
refrig~~r~~lor 175.00, ap.-tment
Tree work wanted: topptng.
pruning. removal•. bushel ric with hell pump. tetelllttdtlh • be.oom ~-· 4 mil• from Furnil:hed. 1 bedroom apart· 11ze r111ge *915.00, gu rMge 30
in
Ouol
c.814-241-1294
hoeDhal on 110. t3BO. Call m..,t depo•tt required. No p&amp;tl, In avocado $65.00, g• IPICI
trimmed. Free 81tirNte. C.ll
,.._ a.
uti~•• ,.,~~. 814-992-2937.
11eet• ee&amp;.OO, e1ee1ric rtnge
44 2581
614-446·8076 "' 304-87&amp;· 2 mobile hom• lnCenttnery on 1
avocado t95 . 00. Hoo'tler
4863.
New
1
bedroom
furnished
or
Rt. 141 w/~ ••• lot. Wlltlll
t1&amp;0. unlnr*hed.ln Middltport. Call w11her $75.00, Hoover dryer
Exp•ienced pt., 0 Teach• de- moblehom•.ndlottogllllwor 4perbedroomt.lnSy...,M.
•75.00, g• renga20in •811.00.
month plus utlltl11. Em· 81 .. 992·5304.
air• ttudl!lnts r. the Add~WIIe- liP-e. C.ll81~441-4109or
Skaggt Appliance.. Upp• Rlv.ployed p-.., only. Coli 814•
Kyger Creek aree . Cell ' Ketle 3:_7:_!9-::_::;27:_40:;::_
. - - -- -- 843-1188. 1
Syrscu•e. 1 be"'oom apart- Road. 814-441-7398.
1MD bit Homt
Sprow, 814-446-1838.
for &amp;tie. 1231150.
VIRa's Furniture
Hou• wtlh,b•h. N•• Recine. e:t&amp;:~35~~-nthpkt•ulliti•.
Interior cleaning of homes end Cell 814-MI-2001
Open dally, Mon.-Sit.
Nice v•d. o•dln tPKe. Cell
9AM - 8PM
office~ . 6 ve•• e~tperlenellt In
APARTMENTS. mobile hom.,
!'roftulonel de~ning. A•feren- 2 lr.• 1972Eiaono1~86t,.H• I 1 4-992·8118,
Sun .• 12 noon · 6 PM
hou
....
Pt.
PINNnt
~ndGelllpo­
C81. Free •tiiTII'tU. Call 114- for •le. f3SOO. Call 114-44..
Attractlvt one floor home qn lie. 814-441-8221 .
246-6556.
8 336.
Complete ho~1thold
Mulblrry Aw., Pam.oy. Two !- --..:.....:....:.::.:....:.....___
furnishing• AH bedding. n.tltlc
be~oorr. . khch1n with 1tow 8e ...._ 8
Ml
0
end r.trl ....lor, living room,
Nurs•Aideworkinlheirhorni'. 1173 Skylne mo .. e home. 2
"'" trNt. ddleport, hlo,
•
2 beG-oom furnished IP.,ment. bunk beds whh Nttlc ch•t
.44"2427
bedroom~. 1Zxl50. v• ft.uneca
Ca II .1 .....
chaln:·•ll on
dining
room.
towly
•~
porch.
utlttl•
ptld. rflf•encet. Phone varl«v of
u·
rM~ge a rllfrlg. •3100. Cell
11le. Excellent ulld •,pllan0111.
Corpeted. droperloo. lull b•• 304-882·2118.
McD., i~ Cu.tam Buthering. 814-448-7285or4tle.3831.
Chriltmu tov• now in dock.
ment. Clntrtl hHI, Wlthtr·dryer
hookup. Sorry, no Pit• . or Now ecceptlng appllc.lltons for Olrlltmu layawaye now being
open 5 day• 1 week. call For Sele or twnt-1211:115 motile
teken. Plu• financing wellable
304-8e2·3224.
chllot.O(l. /0226 pluo depooh and 2 bedroom aptnments. fultyo
home. St. At. 7-1 mi. •· of
with approved credtt. Rt . 141 In
uti•••·
Phono
514-992·1292
c.-pettd.
appll.,.-.
weter
and
Will do bab¥ tfftlng in your Eureka d.m. Call 814-2158Cent.,ary·1f4 mile on Unooln
1ft•I:OO.
treal1
pldrupt
provided.
Malnl•
homa, any age, would p.t. 8089.
Pike, 814-448-3168.
nance tr.. llv lng dose to thopd~rt•. h...,B rllferenCN. cell 304- 1918fl. .wood. 121154. bonle
2 nmy. 4 bedroomt, 2 bitt., ping, banks ., d IOhools. ' For
Info -~ ell 30 _..
Vlctorlen anttqut 11iving room
femly room, loCIIted PerkO rive,
&amp;75-64 81 .
g• hHI and hot w.~•. UOOO.
t310.00PII'month. daposhend more
r....uunc
... 882·
tuh, 2 chllrt, roektr. kwtltlt.
Coli 114-843-1310 or 5140 .:.·H:_._ _ _ ___ $250 c.n 814-441-3481 .
rlf•tROerequlred. clflworkd., t 3_ 7_1_1_· E_..::
143-8401
onv11mo.
Aok
to•
304-575-4340 eok lor M•. , .
'
F lllonm I
Donny.
I
Gooch.
1971 Wlltch•t•. 1ZX70, 3
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
bed-oorn. utllty room. .aep42 Mobile Homes
Business
21
down Mving rOO"\ 10.10 bulldlno. 114-742· 2171
for Rent
Opportunity
2 -oom 12ol0. •1900.
304-878-2722.
Newlv docomod. 2 8R .. flllly
,
I NOTICE I
c•petld, all utHttiM Plld •clf)t
THE OHIO VALLEY PUSLISH- 198~ Scott Energy Hbult.
electric. S.c. dtP. •uh'ld. Clll
INO CO . NCOmmtn. ttwl you 2&lt;11cl0. 3 boclroomo. 2 bOiho.
814-4*1-8568.
do butln ... &gt;Mth peopte you centrtl lif. King wood ..,rntr.
know ,' ~d NOT to lltnd money
new drepet, front poroh,
Nt• W.r.te»2 Br. c..,,
ttwouuh thl milt undl you h•e e17.ISOO.OO. Kanatge Mobtle
•125 a ma. Aef. • d• . Adult•.
lnv ... igM:ed the off•lnO·
HDm•. Kana~g1. Ohio. 114FunW.t.d. Cell 114-641-7714
4411--2.
·or 143-2844.
Own yC...r epperll or lhoe ttcn.
chooee from: Je ... lportiWtlr. 1170 Wln.or, '12JIM, ~
Two be*oom unfurnllhed 111
ledlet . Men'•· chlldren - burner,
and dryer, air
, eiiCII'Ic wllh wood burner, At.
matnftv, l•ge aide. petite. co net
mawd. 304-885181 prNoto lot O&lt;llho only.
den~..,- Mrolllc. brldll. fi~
3102. .
8 14-4*1-4107 or 44&amp;-2802.
g•ie or ec~• ll:bN. Add
ootor . . . . . lf'lnd nem•: Ur: 1979
moblo homo.
3 lA :. 2 1111 botho, c•pot.
C~borrw.
HflfthttK.
1&lt;11170 with 7&gt;&lt;21 .........
Fait ... I MoblaHomePerk. Cell
L.oo. It Mldlelo. Foronn, lugle phone 304-175-1141 .
114-*48-1102.
Soy• ._L Comp lovorty Hille.
Org•l~ Orown. Lucf&amp; crAP
11841chult, 14a7U•wtth 7d1
For8 .. torRent-21R . Add.,llle
2000 ot...S. or f13 .98 OM eapendD, ell ..ed:rlc:. 2 bedSchool Dlti. *ZOO a mo. Coli
prlct delign•. multi t • priclng roome. 2 b•hl.. ,centllll
114-441-8341 oft• 5 PM.
dhcount or famlv· .me ttore. undlrptnntna .47 acre lot.
RetaN price~ unJ*I4IftllblefortDp •33,100.00 firm . 304-8782·2 BA. moblo homoo. • 1 eo,.,
quoiMv ohooo nprmolly prtcod 1343 ceil •oulll 5:00PM.
mo. •100 dip. Ref. r-.uired.
250
from t11. to
Col 114-:1117-0132.
br.. do 2800 ...... ., 7. 800 to '11 Recfmln moblt home, MC
Cl " " ..........
ezaeoo, 1..-tory. trolnlng. """"- 2 bodroomo. good lot
2 be*'oom on Happy Hallow Ad.
fbctures. ..,.,..., grend opentng. lo,..lo" Gollloollo. ,.,,... ~~~~
I UOO. per m ..... oluo utllhl•. • •• "' "Don't wony. Rhino horn is grealtor medicinal
Ito. Cln open 11
Mr. nlohoct 304-1171-3779.
. Colt 814-742-2781.
Louf#llln 16121819-4228.
purposes. I'll use some on you H you ge t hurt ." .

a,.,,,

66

Household Goods

8

l1l Dr. Who Mind of Evil, Part

. ·.

br.a-.

latters of the
four scrombied words be"·

Ill (J) 1111 .. \12) •

l!l SportaLook
ID Coloraounds

,~

1971- oqulpped lor tlohirtg.
hunting. camping, New
pllnt fob. 318 motor, hud•e.
.700. 814-91:1-11881 .

17

•

Q Rea rrange

8:00 &lt;D Bonanza: TM Loat
' Epieodea Uhle Girl Lost
. . (D (I)
II)J Newa

1885 TO.oto &lt;llc4 Dldolp. Good
oond. Roll ' -· .Aum. wh. . .
ttc. 1•.100 mil... Atklng
•eooo. co1 &amp;14-317· 0349.

t:;;::;~:;:;;:;~;;::-r;;;=~~~=~~~

OCT.

r:~~:t;~v S©\\J.l}A-~£cffS®
~:::
by ClA V I . POLlAN _ ;:__________

_....::.;:..:,:::.::__.:=._= Edltod

EVENING

..,.

1171 a-.v... •teoo. F~m.

COUNTRY MOBILE HomePoo~
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
ftelotUI t ...... Call 81~992·
7479.

MON.,

fH!Me Tn.l'HJtiii'IQ Cllou,L Inc

4W.O.

co11 11 4-44s.anz.
Large trail• apec:e. 8"•111•
Addison. Cllll 114-448-42111.

1WXJ61.Cr...

•

1813F-110 11114, """'Htonaino.
PS. Pll, tool boa. bed fln•.
ru-g bo•do· M300. Col
114-4411-0212.
.

Space for Rent

Lo••

-du...

Vans&amp;

Television
Viewing

~ 11\Eil, ~ 1t:l Pt.WC. Of\00\l , ~~L~ El.(l£~ ~ OOT M&gt; v-Ial-TO-tO f6
~~

1984 Ford Eoonoline 110 Co.,..
v. .lon V• . 311 HP. Pl. PB.
AC MIMI· roof, c•n. ehtira.
bOd. EIICei. '"'"d. Coli 114-4*113411 .

A'A . , Ollllpolfl. t1 35 • mo.
Utlllll• .-ld. Slnalemlle. Sh••

46

'

for Sale

apt In Hendlnon.
~04-875-1972 oltOt 1:00.
bt~oom

· Spadou• mobile home lot• for
rent. hmlty Pride MoblltHomt
2 BA . aptt. 8 cloa«•. kttcher:t- P•~ Golllpolo F.,ry, W. Vo .
IPPL furnlthed. WMher-Oryer
hooltup. ww c•p«. nMiy 30 ... 671-3073. .
Plintld.deck. Fromt175. Now
comm«dol ,.gh trolflc
accepttng HUD. Rtg.nt;¥. Inc. retell location. plenty perking.
Apto. Coli 304-875-5104, or foot of Shadle Bridge corner
SecondandVIendltr•t. 30487&amp;-S31eor 17&amp;-n38.
522-4128 or 304-1523-7277.
Ne. w completely furnithad
~partmtnt • mobile home In
ctty . Aduhe onty. P•klng. C.ll
114-641-0338.
49 For Laase
IEAUTIFULAIIAATMENTSAT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 131 Joclcoon
Pike from e18-3 a mo. Walk to Commercial Building for .._..
Pt. Ple~Unt. Call 304-8711shop end moviel. 814-648- 1104,
2668. E.O.H.
No ptll. Call 114-441-1037.
Fwnllhtd- 3 rDOml • beth.
ct.... No peh. Ref• • dapot:lt
-ulred, Utll~leo
turnio•-d.
11
A
'"" ·
"" ·~• onty . c.ll 814-4481119.
Luauriout Tara Townhou11
ap.trnent1. El111ant 2 floors. 2
IIA., ful beth uDitalre. powd•
room downetelrt, CA.. dllhw.etw. cHepoul, pr1vMe entttnca prw.te endoHd petlo.
ool. . ptO¥gr'"'nd. UtH~i- not
ndudtd. St.-tlng et e299 P•
mo. Coli 114-317-7810.

Truckl

72

2 be$oom unfurnished t,.il•,

Profeltlonal office n. . . • eteff
frltn&lt;lv .

Furnilhed on• bedroom apt.
Ml.lttt only, M pttt,. cell att•
5:00. 304-175-3788.

The Daily

Pomaoy-Middleport. Ohio

Auto'a For Sale

8

PR INT NUMBfRED

LETHRS

. . UNSCRAMBLE
~ ANSWE R

··.

qool~d

.'he chuckle

by ldimg 1n the m1ssing words

you develop from sfep No. 3 below.

I' I' 1 I' I' 1· I' I' I' I
3

.

I I II I I I I1

FORI
.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Prying - Juico - Icily- Coarse - LOUSY
Finance clerKto man: "We' re going to repossess yOur car.i.
Man: " But you said I could pay
driver."

as I drove, and I'm a

BRIDGE
By Jamea Jacoby

LOUSY
11 ·1~11

NORTH

.AK62

•

• 864

•

Today's declarer found himself in
one no-trump with less than half the
high ca.r ds and very few important
spot-cards.
South saw that if the defense played
with reasonable accuracy, he wouldn' t
have time lo set up the hearts. The defenders would get at least two spade s ,
three hearts and two diamonds. Even
if South were able to set up the hearts,
his diamond entry would probably be
gone.
Declarer therefore looked elsewhere for tricb. If he could get three
clubs, he would have six tricu, for one
down. Since playing on hearts could
lead to three down, declarer decided
to hold his losses.
This was excellent thinking. Faced
with a neariy hopeless contract, South
didn't charge ahead blindly but considered possible goals and selected a
practical one.
Declarer won the . spade lead and
played the ace and jack of clubs. East
did I,Us best by holding off with the
king. South's instinctive move at this
point was to play his low club and hope
West would capture . the jack. If West
bad started with doubletoo king, he
would have to take it. But. with more
than two clubs, West could duck if he
wished, and SoUth knew that West was
a good defender who would do just

.·. .

• J 642
+AJ

.J

EAST

WEST

10 7
• ·A Q9
t K 10 6

.Q851
.KJ
. tQ987
+K7 6

+sa 6 4

·.

SOUTH

'

'

•s s

.107!32

tA3

+Q 10 3 2

l.

Vulnerable: BOth
Dealer: North ·

West

Nort~

Eut

Pass

It
1•
Pass

Puo
Pan
Pas:!

Pass

Opening lead:

.....''

-.

Soutb

•' '

l NT

..·

.. ...

+J

'·"'

~

•.

•
that.
, .•
South had one last option. He over- •
took dummy's jaclt with bis queen and
then. led the three, which dropped
East s k1ng - -an exciting sill: tricks · '
for down one
·
What South did was to welgb fthe : ; ·
chances of West's havlog doubleton ••
king a11ainst the chances of East's hav- · ,
ing tr1pleton king. Since a 4-3 split is .
more likely than a 5-2 split South's
play was correct.
'

&lt;

·.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Hanoi
I "-

and
holiday
Cora-Cola" 43 N.V. time
4 Dadt was
DOWN
one (abbr.) I Remunerate
7 Olympian
English
goddess
river
8 Sly gaze
3 Mlltlary
I 0 Document 4 llostlle
11 Boleyn and
look
namesakes II Bard's
13 Gotcha!
adverb
14 ~oor
6 New
18 Unsightly
covering
effort
plant
18 Night
· 7 Sound21 before
. track
Jeff
17 Crazy
sound
22 Expensive
19 Clammy
9 Famed
23 Was lach20 War of
alannist
rymose
Jenkins's
10 Nonsense! 24 Deseech
12 Assemble 25 Porter's
· 21 Japanese
U Train
"- of
scltedule
Those
ship
abbr.
, 22 Bethlehrm f.'Xport
25 Mint. -

z

and

·.
Answer
2 7 - -relief
29 Thorax
30 Manifest
31 Levy
32 01'
Blue
Eyes monogram
37 Compete

.,

..·...

.,

39 -

L

de
deux

"'

26 Wateh
·,

over
27"- Not
for Me·
.28 "l'lease

"

Don't -

the

Daisies•
29 Set sail
33Go wrong
34 33rd U.S.
pres.
311 By way

..

or
361rk
38Unfolds,

as a
map

40

Danquet

·.•.

platform
41 Loki's son
10/IT

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

.-

One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words.are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dlff~rent.
·
CRYPTOQUOTES
QV

OYDDK

RJ

DK

HXLQ

HXZ

EYMZ

T YJ H•

OVDDK .

.·

VO
'

RQHYDZMLQH

RFZLDRJE .

URQJHYQ
TXNMTXRDD
Ye~~terda:r's Cryptoquote: U)(,)K OUT FOR THIS
MAN'S MUSIC: HE liAS SOMETHING TO SAY ANI)
KNOWS HOW TO SAY IT. -, HERBERT PERRY ON

ELGAR

'
- ~ 1188 .K'"II Footur11 Syndicoto. Inc.

1

.

-.

'

.·

�•

Local c~~!p~~iefs...-HiJil pelts parts of Midwest early today .

Jets bounced
by Bills, 37-14

western Lake Erie and northw· southwestern New Mexico.
Rain also was scattered early
estern Ohio and Into central
today
over Idaho, North Dakota,
lndtana.
South
Dakota. DlinoiS and Into
The dlme-stzed hall reported
the
T!!nnessee
Valley and the
near Wolcottville, Ind., late Sun·
day all bu 1 disappeared early lower Great Lakes region . .
High winds swept through
today, the NWS said.
Colorado
Sunday, · reaching 63
In the Southwest, thunder·
mph
at
Rollinsvilte,
Colo., the
storms over Arizona also were
~~~S •••._________G_~~.n_tl_n_ued--~tr~mn~pa~g~e~1~---------- losing
'
NWS
said.
A
high
wind
advisory
their punch early today ,
was
In
place
lor
the
area
today.
after dumping ~eavy rain over
Services. On Wednesday, the guest speaker thiS week to
It
was
cloudy
over
the
Pacific
the region Sunday. Bisbee, Ariz.,
junior high students will meet In discuss the effects of drugs nad
Northwest, the upper Mississippi
Nine calls for assistance were ,a nswered by the Meigs County
a general assembly to hear Jeff alchol on the body and how these received linch of hall overnight, Valley
to the Carolinas and the
Emergency Medical. Service over the weekend.
·
and high winds downed trees and
Montglomery from the Kansas things affect the ability to drive.
Mid-Atlantic
coast. Dense fog
At 2:16 p.m the Racine unit went to Main and TYree for
power lines In the area ..
City Royals speak on "Just Say
Art II classes and members of
blanketed
parts
of Rhode Island
Rebecca Ward who was transported to Veterans Memorial
The Arizona rainstorms also
No". Students will also be mak· T.I. will be making signs promoI·
and
coastal
Southern
California.
Hospital; at 2:25p.m. the Middleport unit went to South Third
caused local flooding that was
lng posters dealing with drugs lng, "Be Smart, Don't Start".
Most
or
the
rest
of
the nation,
Street for Marla Ault who was taken to Holzer Medical center;
reported In thesoutheastetnpart
during their art classes. Students
The climax of the week's
meanwhile,
woke
up
today to
at 4: 36 p.m. the Rutland unit took Anna Searles to Holzer; at
wlll also view a video from the activities will take place at the · ofthe state, the NWS said. But as
clear
skies
with
temperatures
6: 32 p.m. the Middleport squad transported Floyd McClellan
the storms weakened, only a: few
NBAstarringMr. Thomas speak· Meigs-Belpre game Friday even·
from Race St. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
showers
lingered early today headed for ihe 60s and 70s.
lng on Just Say No.
ing. For all elemj!ntary students
Temperatures around the na·
At 6:42 p.m the Racine squad transported Joyce Manuel of
over southeastern Arizona and
At Me(is High School a banner attending the game, during the
lion
early today ranged from 35
Front Street to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 6:03p.m the
contest wlll be held.for all ~tubs, pre-game festivities, a giant
degrees
at Hibbing, Maine, to 78
Syracuse squad took Anna Hllldore to Veterans and at 7:27p.m. '
organizations and teams. The balloon launch will take place.
degrees at Phoenix.
the Middleport unit took Donnie Van Cooney to Veterans.
ban.n ers wlll be placed on the Students will be at the scoreThe Tuppers Plains squad and a fire truck were called to the'
fence on the south end of the- boar!! end of the field to get their
Rice Run Road for a car wreck. Denzil McKay was taken to
Veterans Memorial
stadium on Oct. 21. Prizes will be balloons. They will circle the ·
Lottery numbers.
Camden Clark, and the Pomeroy unit was summoned to assist
Saturday admissions - Delawarded and announced during a field and let the.balloons go as the
at 8: 09 and transported Betty Stephens from the scene also to
Whaley, Middleport, and
ballon launch.
football team comes onto the
CLEVELAND ( UPI) .,.. Satur·
Camden Clark.
'
.
Joyce Manuel, Racine.
·High school students will also field. The balloons have been
day's winning Ohio Lottery num·
Another wreck occurred at 8: 49 p.m. on Ball Run Road and
Saturday discharges - Ethel bers: Dally Number
have a· t-shlrt day on Friday. All ·labled, Me~ · Local Schools,
the Pomeroy unit responded but there was no one there when the
Reeves and Joseph .Reiser . .
students who wear an antl·drug Drug Free Week, Be Smart
196.
squad arrived.
Sunday admissions - James
t·shlrt will be given a ticket by Don't Start. Sponsors thankTwl~
PICK-4
At 4:50p.m the Rutland fire department went to Romine Road
Kelly, Coolville, and Anna Hll·
the homeroom teacher. A draw· City Motors for a reduced rate on
3145.
for a camping trailer abd brush fire. The Salem department was
ldore, Syracuse.
ing wlll be held during the pep helium for baloons and Francis
Super Lotto
called to assiSt. While on the scene Mark Richmond, a Rutland
Sunday discharges _;_ Randall
rally with a prize awarded the Florist for help In getting the
31, 16,3, 29, 18, 1.
firemen. Injured his knee and was taken by the Rutland squad to
HarriSon. Bernard Rairden, and
winning ticket.
ballons for 'Meigs Local at a
Kicker
Holzer for treatment.
Delmar Whaley.
Members of H.U.G.S. will be reduced price. Special thanks
08()!34.
At 6:03p.m the 'Syracuse squad responded to a call for Anna
selling chemiCal free popcorn In are also ·extended to Janet
Hllldore, Seventh St., Syracuse, and she was transported to
whiskey bottles to make the point Williamson for helping prepare
NATIONAL ·WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 10.1NI
Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at 7:27 p.m. the Middleport
that the only corn that anyone packets lor use In the elementary
unit t?Ok Donnie Van Coney from North Seventh to Veterans
heeds from a bottle Is popcorn. schoolS.
Memorial.
The drug free sehools currlcu·
. Members wlll also help Inflate
balloons and help with the lum comm lttee reponslble for
elementary students preparing planning the week's activities
for a balloon taunch ..
Include Karen Walker, Saundra
.H.U.G.S. members who at· TilliS, Sharon Birch, John Redo·
. tend the advanced skills training vlan, Dale Harrison, Mlck
Two Meigs Countlans have been given determinate sentences
In Dayton early this week will Childs, Jeannie Taylor and coor·
of six months each at the Orient Correctional Reception Center,
conduct a panel discussion and dlnator, Wendy Halar. The com·
according to entries filed In the Meigs County Common Pleas
presentatlon for the T.I. meeting mlttee extends special thanks to
Court.
on Wednesday. H .U.G.S . Walker and Taylor for "extra
Both Jerry R. Moore on a charge of grand theft and Johnnie K.
members will assiSt Carl Hysell efforts" In planning and to John
HarriSon on a charge of recelving stolen property entered pleas
at the elementary schools during Arnott for arranging speakers at
of qullty when they appear~d before Judge Charles Knight.
the week.
the junior high.
Meigs High also plans to nave a

. Patrol also reported a Langsville man was Injured Saturday
at 2:30a.m. In Salem Township on C.R. 1, about three miles
north of S.R. 124.
Darrin K. Johnston, 23, was taken to Holzer Medical Center by
a family member. He was treated and released for facial cuts.
Johnston, driving a 1981 Ford ·Mustang, was heading north
when he swerved to avoid deer crossing the road. Hewentoffthe
right side of the road and hit a telephone pole.

The National Weather Service
said the thunderstorms that
produced heavy,rain In Michigan
and hall in parts of Indiana were
weakening an!l breaking up.
Only scattered showers were
reported early today · across

By Unlled Pre.s International
Thunderstorms that dumped
rain and hall overnight on
Michigan and Indiana began to
weaken early today, as did the
rainstorms over Arizona and ·
N~w Mexico.
·

,Daily Number
975
Pick 4

Page3

7238

at

Sta(e board approves
14 more school loans

Hospital news

mar

.

A

Two Meigs men sentenced

By United Press lnlernatlonal
At least 13 people died during
the weekend In traffic accidents
occurring across the Quckeye
State, Ohio Highway Patrol offl·
clals said today.
·
One viet~· Kelly Gambler, 23,
Bryan, was killed Saturday In a
one-car accident on Ohio Route
66 In Defiance County. Patrol
officials said she was attempting
to miss a deer and drove off the
road.
Also killed this weekend were:
Friday
New Philadelphia: Patricia
~nnlngton,
59, Newcomer·
stown. In a two-car accident on
Tuscarawas County road.
Batavia: Kyle Banks. 18, Cln:
clnnatl, In a car·truck accident
on a Clermont County road.
Cincinnati: Michael Vlegler,
40, Cincinnati, in a two-car
accident on Ohio Route 264 in
Hamilton County. ·
Canfield: George A. Campbell,
17, · Salem, In a orie·vehlcle
accident on a Mahoning County
road.
Saturday
Ravenna: Darla Edenfield, 25,

--Area
•

Charles Robinson

Vugil Lee Lewis, 64, West
Columbia, died Saturday, Ocl 15,
1988, at Vetetan 's Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy.
Born May 31, 1924 in Wesl
Columbia, he was a son of the late
Harry B. and Lola Mary Fisher
Lewis.
He was an operatOr of the Vista
Station in Mason. He was a World
War II veteran, serving in the U.S.
Army, a member of the American
Legion Smith·Capehart Post 140,
and the VFW Stewan-Johnson Post
9926 of Mason. He was a member
of the Peniel Uniled Methodist
Chwch.
, Swviving are his wife, Margie
M. Lewis, West Columbia; one
daughter, J())'ce L. Keams, Clifton;
one son, Terry L. Lewis, West
Columbia: one sister, Sheila J.
Henry, Gallipolis Ferry; two
brothm, John N. Lewis, Mason.
and Richard L. Lewis, Letart; two

Graveside

a

deaths-~-

Virgil lewis

grandchil!lron.

Berlln Center, In a one-car
accident on Ohio Route 14 In
Portage County.
Findlay: Motorcyclist Jimmie
R. Copus, 40, Findlay, when
struck by an automobile along
U.S. Route 224 In Findlay.
Terrace Park: John W. Woo.lum. 39. Blanchester, when he
lost control of his car, which
struck utility pole.
Sundq
Bellefontaine: Terry Kreglow,
30, De Graff. when h.l s speeding
piCkup truck crashed along Ohio
Route 47 In Logan Countv.
Hebron: Lonna Sunkel, 22,
Columbus, in two-vehicle accl·
dent on lnterstate·70 In Ucklng
County.
Warren: Scott A. Marlett,
Southington, along Ohio Route
305ln Trumbull County, when his
car overturned at an apparent
high rate of speed . .
Canton: Herbert Brown, 67,
Louisville, killed In two-vehicle
crash along Stark County road.
Canfield: Duane Nemitz. 29,
Alliance. kllled when be was
struck by a car while crossing
U.S Route 62 In Mahoning
County.

service

.

will

be

Tuesday 81 11 a.m. 81 the Kilkland
Memorial Gardens, with the Rev.
James Lewis officiating.
Friends may call Monday from 7
to 9 p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home.·

Word has been received of the
death of Charles K. Robinson, 54.•
Hawaii, formerly of Mason County,
who died Sunday, Oct. 16, 1988, in
Hawaii.
Born in New Haven Feb. 12,
1934, he was a son of Clara Staats,
New Haven, and the late Harrison
Robinson Sr.
Besides his mother, he is survived by his wife, Maggie; one
daughter, Rosemary, Hawaii; two
sons, A11en Brian, Charles Kevin,
both of Hawaii; two brothers, Harrison Robinson Jr., Clifton, Earl
Robinson, Gallipolis, Ohio; two sisters, Emma Boswell, Point
Pleasant, Clara Gordon, New
Haven; three grandchildren.
Milileni Mortuary Home of
Hawaii is in charge of arrangements.

U. S.

only tia percent of those
rE:ductlo.ns.
Vice President George Bush,
the Republican nominee for the
White House. bas continued to
look to private voluntarism In·
stead of government
commitment.
The executives surveyed said
they expect future corporate
contrlbu tlons to be more
communlty·based with educa·
tlon getting the ·mbst attention;
three ot four CEOs of Fortune
1000 companies Identified educa·
tlon as a top priority.
Joseph suggested, "Corporate
America can help engender a
new spirit of charitable entrepreneurism by accepting the chal·
lenge to help solve emerging
problems despite new limits,
both publiC and private, on the
resources needed to address
those problems."

CLEVELAND (UP I) -No one
The correct numbers are 1, 3,
was able to match all six 16, 18, 29, and 31. ·
numbers In Saturday's Ohio .
Kicker sales totaled $573,366,
Super Lotto drawing, which will without a single ticket having the
make Wednesday's jackpot numbers In the correct order.
worth $6 million, the lottery Five tickets bad five of the six
numbers correct for $5,000; 47
commiSsion said.
Lotto sales totaled $3,617,993.
with four numbers for $1,000; 519
There were 116 tickets with five with three correct tor $100, and
of the six correct numbers worth 5,049 had two of six numbers
$1,000 apiece, and 5,511 with four . correct for $10. ·
of six for $75.
~·····

-- ....,

.

'

•

•

,,'

• &lt;l
TOPS IN ORIENTI\TION - Middleport Boy
Scout Troop 245 look first place In the orientation
course compellllon held at Camp Cornstock Park
In Point Pleasant over the weekend. Scouts In the
winning group were front, Jell to right, Alan

.
Durst,

•

Jeremy Hartson, Dodger Vaughan,
displaying the plaque, Willie Johnson, and Ryan
Rowe, second row, Matthew Craddock, Bobby
Jokllson, Denis Little and Sam Cowan, along with
scoutmaster, Don Vaughan and assistant, AI
Hartaon.

G2:1SHOw .
FRONTS:

II Warm

-RAIN
"

Cold

.a

fZ'EJ SHOWERS
Static 9W Occluded

By CHARLES A. Mi\SON
OVPStaff

WEATHER MAP ..:. During earty Tuesday morning, rala uc1
showers are forecast for pari&amp; of the Great Lakes, tile upper Oblo
Valley and parts of the north Allanllc Coast states. Sbowera and ·
thunderstonns are poi!Sible In most of the Ohio Valley. (UPI)

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Norma Jean Perry told jurors Monday afternoon that Ft'elll Facemire, a
man 13 years ol\lbr lbal1 h~r that
police say she killed last year, was
a heavy drinker who beat his
children and her.
"I loved him," Perry said. "I still

IT'S

do."

Around 200•.
(Continued frcm page 1)
would be prepared to be
arrested.
Asked how long thedemonstra·
lion would go on, Perry said,
"For as long as It takes to get
arrested.''
She said Daniel Ellsberg,
David Dellinger and Daniel
Berrigan, veterans of the
Vietnam-era October march on
the Pentagon two decades ago,
were among •those engaged In a
sltdown blockade or the south
parking entrance.
A few Pentagon workers tried
to run the blockade, with pollee
running Interference. One Navy
officer was slapped on the back Of
the head. according to a pollee ·
officer. who declined to give hls
name.

Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T ................ .. ... .. .......... 26¥.,
Ashland Oil ........................ 33¥.,
Bob Evans .......................... 16~
Charming Shoppes ....... ....... 14'&gt;fl
City Holding Co ................... 34
Federal Mogul... ................ .48¥.,
Goodyear T&amp;R ....": ..............52%
Heck's ................ :................ y,
Key Centurion ..................... 17
Lands' End .......................... 29
Limited Inc ......... ... ............ 24~
Multimedia lnc ................... 72Y,
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. 1¥.,%
Shoney's Inc ............. ........... 7~
Wendy 's Inti ..........................7
Worthington Ind .. ........ ....... 22~

meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday at
the hall.
Festival Saturday
The Syraucse PTO fall festival
will, be held Saturday at the
school. Dinner will be served
from 5: 30 to 7 p.m. wltb games to
be conducted trom 7 to 8: 30 p.m.

riYiew the 1• colt ,...

-L

Be A Donor
• lED ClOSS BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOUI 19
PoiHI'oy Senior Cltlun Center

1:00 ·5:30P.M.

•n•• AIII\OCtdlaiHI
~what you get! P.. 100% beef hamburger that lOoks.
"""""""""""' and~ homemade. A small order of crisp
fries. YOur favorite soft drink. And to
. '
off. a cool and creamy 5 oz.
QUEEN- SOtl Serve Sundae.
Head for '{ClUr partlc1Da1tng
DAIRY QUEEN- BRAZIER• s1ore for the
Homes1yte Burger Full Meal Deal!"

Local new

"Dukes of Dayton" bowling
shirts with a caricature of
Dukakls's nose and eyebrows.
Jim Strusbagh, a model
builder at a General Motors
plant, asked Dukakls about his
plans for helping old people,
saying, "!.don't want to see my
parents eat cat Iood and things
like that. I want to see the elderly
taken care of and with dignity."
'With Mike Dukakls as pres I·
dent of the United States (Social
Security Is) going to be very
safe," the candidate said.
"Mr. Bush flew clear across
the country In 1985 from West
Coast to East Coast to break a tie
so that there would not be a
cost-of·llvlng Increase tor Social
Security recipients," he said .
Ray Back, pres ldent of a
5,000·member steel union in
Middletown, asked Du'kakls what
he would have done about the air
tralflc controllers who were fired
when they struck, saying "Mr.
Reagan, In my opinion, dld a
terrible job."
"As you know, they did not
have the right to strike and they
understood that," DukakiS said.
"But I always had the feeling at
the time that somebody In the
administration was trying to
teach somebody a lesson."
After the session, camera
crews lined up along an alley and
Dukakls rolled a seven and a
gutter ball.
_
At the North Coast Brass and
Copper Co. In Euclid, Dukakls

North Second Ave., Middleport, Ohio ·
Dairy Queen• lt0f81 ore proud IPOOIOf1 Of tno Clllkjren't Mlrocle Nelwork
T...ll&gt;on which benefits local holpllals for children.
.
\
Cl NID.Q.COrpJIIII

TM.,...-m.rtr:AM 0.0 . Corp.

eA111111

1

ec1'1t-*•llltk11MO.O. ~

..

briefs-~

Pomeray Council session brief

WI11U1'10U..W•

......

.

~

......

.

where. no school tax levy has
passed in 10 years.
Van Keuren told the board the
district has lost$62 million worth
of assessed property valuation
since 1985 because of the closing
of a utility power plant.
Van Keuren said the district,
which borrowed $850,513 fNm
the state In 1981 and paid It back,
is operating below state min·
lmum levels In the number of
classroom teachers and
teachers' salaries. A five·mlll
operating levy is on the ballot
next month.
Shawnee Local School District,
Allen County, was approved for a
$1.3 million loan. Van Keuren
said voters In that district
approved an emergency levy last
year but a loss . of industrial
property taxes since "knocked
the socks of! them."
Eighty·four percent of Shawnee's school funds are raised

locally, the department said. The
district 's tecacher·pupll ratio
and average teachers ' salaries
are below state minimum levels.
These otber loans we re
approved:
Bridgeport Exempted Village,
Belmont County, $213,000; Cres t·
view Local. Van Wert County,
$321,000; Fairport Harbor Ex·
empted VIllage, Lake County,
$117,000; James A. Garfield
LOcal, Portage County, $157,000;
Mathews Local. Trumbull
County, $443,000; and Milford
Exempted VIllage, Clermont
County, $474,000.
Also, Nelsonville· York, Alhens
County, $113,000; New Miami
Local, Butler County , $154,000;
North College Hill, "Hamilton
County, $683,000; Northeastern
Local, Clark County, $287,000:
Northmor Local , Morrow
County, $326,000; and Ravenna ,
Portage County, $958,000.

'

I'

Perry testified that she snuck out
a bedroom window with a basket of
clothes to go with Facemire to Lancaster, Ohio, and eventually live
together. She told the jury she
sep!lfllted from Facemire, going to
live other places, including a sheltcr in Parkersbutg, When Facemire
would become violent ·
She said Facemire mistreated her
son, Brian, but once their daughter,
Hope, was born, he would favor the
girl over the boy.
It was, as she described it to the
jury, a love-hate relationship. She
went back to living with Facemire
several times after initially•Ieaving
him. Facemire, she testified, indicated that he would change his
ways.
"(There was) the usual line of
bull - and I fell for it, more than I
would like to admit," she testified.
Perzy testified that she was slapped around by Facemire, although
he was about the same size or
smaller than her, and testified that
Facemire one time picked up the
older boy, Brian, by the hair and
slung hi~ llCfOSS a room, and then
slapped h1s ·own daughter, Hope, in
the fW:C hard enough to leave a
handpnnt.
After that incident, Peny tes·
tified, she made plans to leave.
'When ,I left. I had $15 to my

..

name, (but) I didn't care."
That time she went to the shelter
. at Parkersburg, but was forced to
come back to Point ?k.asant to live
in order to keep he' re.sidence, she
testified.
In earlier testimony Monday, Dr.
Kshirsagar testified that he found a
slug inside Facemire's sinuses from
the gunshot wound to the head, He
also testified, with Morgan
demonsD'ating by slumping down ·
in the two-cushion blue loveseat in
front of the jury, that Facemire had
to be in a slumped position when
he was shot in the chest, otherwise ""
the bullet which traveled through
his body and the love seat to finally .
hit the back wall, could not have
made that path.
The doctor testified that the butlet would have been stuck inside
the body had it been positioned
another way, such as Facemire
· leaning foward in the love seat in a
struggle as the defense auomeys .
have asserted.
Later in cross examination
defense
auomey
Raymond
Musgrave did get the assistant state
medical examiner to admit he had
tolp the auorl)ey that the \(un could
have been fired at about s1x 10 nine
inches away from Facemire, a fact
that would suppon Perry's claim of
Continued on page 5

Dukakis talks .jobs, drugs during. Ohio visit

Bush plans media
blitz next 3 weeks

covery rot• of Columblo

'VI NEED BLOOD

Perry, 30, is charg¢ with the
first-degree murder of Facemire in
a shooting police say occurred
March 8, 1987 in the living room of
a residence at 2411 Lincoln Ave.,
Point Pleasant. A 10-woman, two·
man jury and Judge Clarence L.
Wau are bearing the case in Mason
County Circuit Coun.
Monday's testimony was highlighled by Perry taking the stand af.
ter Prosecutor Damon B. Morgan
Jr. rested the state's case after call·
ing a dozen wiinesses.
Previous to resting his case,
Morgan called Assistant Slate
Medicial Examiner Dr. V. H. Kshirsagar to the stand. The doctor testified that he believed 11 38-caliber
revolvet confiscated by police in
the investigation was fired from
about 21 inches from Facemire's
chest, causing one of Facemire's
two wounds. He was not asked his

opinion on how far away the gun
had to be fired to create a second
wound to Facemire - a gunshot to
the top of the head.
The doctor said Facemire - a 53, 116-pound individual - died
from the two $11nsbot wounds.
The assistant state medical examiner said he could not say, based
upon his findings of an autopsy just
after the murder, which shot was
fired·first.
Perry told the jury that she met
Facemire through writing to him
while he was in Vietnam with the
service. She was 12.
"He's 13 years older than I am,"
Perry, dressed in a blue sweater and
a blue and lightly striped dress, tes·
tified. . .
. Perry described their relationship
has one that grew. "It just didn't
happen overnight," she testified.
Perry testified that Facemire had
his own way of doing things that
was hard to explain to t)Jc jury. "He
could be sweet, kind, and loving
and sometimes he playild games
with the kids - sometimes he was
the best person to be around."
She added, however, that
Facemire also had a dark side, a
habitual drinking problem that
would change his mood. "He'd get
mad at TV shows and take it out on
the kids," she testified.

By ALISON GRANT
United Press Inlernatlonal
A shlrt·sleeved Michael Duka·
kls sat on a scoring table at a
Dayton bowling alley Monday
and talked to 30 adults and
children about drug problems,
loan ptograms for college stu·
dents
and keeping Social Secur·
WASHINGTON (UP!) -VIce between now and the Nov. 8
tty
strong.
President George Bush plans to election.
'We ought to start with the No.
Sources told the Post that the
spend more than half of his $30
1
one
concern that I heard and
mUlion fall advertising budget to document is a stale·by·state
drugs," the Democratic
that
Is
bl liz the.alrwaves during the next operating plan for purchases or
presidential
candidate said bethree weeks, with special empha· television and radio time and
fore
hearing
from southwestern
sis on Ohio, California, and New reflects major elements of the
Jersey. The Washll)gton Post Republican campaign strategy Ohio residents about peer pres·
as It was being formulated last sure and the financial incentives
reported Tuesday .
of selling drugs.
The newspaper , citing an Inter· week.
Ear Uer In the day, at an
campaign
sources
told
Bush
nal campaign document It ob·
employee·owned
factory In subthe
Post
that
although
the
docu·
tal ned, said more than one third
urban
Cleveland,
Duk1lkls acment
indicates
that
no
further
of the Bush campaign's $15.2
cused
the
Reagan
administration
television
dollars
are
to
be
spent
million local television budget or $5.3 million - has been In Texas- where Bush Is leading of abandoning the blue·collar
earmarked for California, with Democratic candidate Michael factory worker.
At Dayton's Varsity Lanes,
Continued on page 5
43 percent of that to be spent
Dukakls talked about his plail to
allow college students who don't
qualify for existlng loan and
grant programs to get govern.'
men!' money that can be paid off
once the students graduate and
begin work.
A large bill from Pomeroy VIllage's trustee bank was a
"One of the things I hope we
matter of concern when VIllage Council met Monday night In a
can do Is stop this annual attack
brief regular session.
-on PELL grants and loans,"
The trustee bank. Bank One, of Columbus, submitted a $7,300
Dukakls said.
bill to Cierk·Treasurer Jane Walton. Normally, these bills run
The 35-mlnute discussion was
about $3,000, Walton said. However, the village has not been
held against a backdrop of a
billed for the advertising of trustee bonds for the sewer system
bowling score card showing
since 1985. The new bill reflects the advertising costs since 1985.
Dukakts with a perfect 300 and
In another financial matter, Bank One requested Council
Vice President George Bush with
·
Continued on page_L
zero. Lane employees wore

Tho Public Utlltloo Comminion of Ohio hM HI
.for public hoarlng C.o
No. 88·24·GA·GCR, to

0173.

,.

BUSH CAMPAIGNS IN ILLINOIS- An aide holds an umbrella
as Vice President George Bush campaigned In Skokie at the
Holocaust Memorial In a heavy rainstorm late Monday afternoon.
Bush spoke of the tragedy as ''here is sadness. Here too Is hope."
(UP I)

UGAL NOTICE

011 otOhlo,lnc., thooporotlon of Ito PurciiMed
Goo Adjuolmtnt Clau•
ond roloted
Thlo ·
ho•lng lo och....locl to
begin ot 10:00 o.m. on
T-diiY, Novern.,_ 1 B.
1888, et the oftl- of·
the Commlollon. 1880
Eoot
8rood
8tnol,
ColumbuL Ohla 43281-

·
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS -The state Con·
trolling Soard has approved
another $8.2 mill ton worth of
state loans to 14 school districts,
bringing to 45 the number of
school loans approved In 1988.
James VanKeuren, director of
the Division of School Finance In
the Ohio Department of Educa·
lion, told the board Monday that
about 10 percent of all Ohio
school districts are tapping the '
state for funds to remain open.
Under Ohio law, schools are
forbidden to close for financial
reasons. The districts taking
loans to remain open for the rest
of this year must be certified by
the Ohio Department of Educa·
tlon and the state auditor as
unable to operate without the
money.
The largest loan of $2.5 million
will go to Ohio Valley Local
School District In Adams County,

.

Defendant testifies as Nonna Perry
murder trial resumes in Pt. Pleasant

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis ' Loewl

0

Ohio Super wtlo goes unclaimed

&lt;

Stocks

Announcements
To Meet Tuesday
XI Gamma Epsnon Chapter,
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, will meet
at 7 p.m Tuesday at the Senior
Citizens Center, Pomeroy.
AuxUiary To Mee&amp; .
The Women's Auxiliary of the
Rutland Fire Department will

'

~conomy.. ..__;;.;co;.;:n.::tin.::u..:..:ed:..:':..:rom.:.:.:..::p.:..:ag:.e_1_ _

month to month about your
profitability anymore," com·
plalned one unidentified execu·
live . ."And If profits sl!p, you
have to be ready to move. It's not
a time for long·range commit·
mentstocauses,nomatterhow
good."
Efforts by many businesses to
achieve a "lean and mean"
standing, so that a minimum
number of workers are on staff.
also have an Impact, according
to a CEO from a medlum·sl2ed
company.
''It's hard to justify (giving) If
you're laying off left and right,"
the executive told the poUsters.
Four of every 10 CEOs said
they expect both cash and
non·cash donations and match·
ing gifts programs to Increase In
the near future. But Joseph said
such a level of charity activity
"by no means would be able to
address the dramatic Increases
In need that have been generated
by cutbacks In government .
funding."
Since the start of President
Reagan's adminiStration, · go·
vernment support tor charity has
been cut by $30bllllon, the survey
found, with corporate and prl·
vate lll?~ey able to make up for

· 1 Section, 10 Paget 26 Cents
A Multtmedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy--Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday. October 18, 1988

Vol.39, No.114
Copyrighted 1988

Partly cloudy, low In mid
30s tonight. Wednesday, variable cloudiness, highs In mid
50s, Chance of rain 20 percent.

•

•

Squads receive 9 weekend calls

Ohio records 13 highway
fatalities over weekend

~ttery

Ohio

I

said the Republicans are already
celebrating a victory, bu I vowed
he will rally with a message lor
the nation ' s "I ndustrial
heartland."
"I'm here today In America's
Industrial heartland because I
want to be the president who
stands up and fights for you,"
Dukakls told factory workers in
the Cleveland suburb of Euclid.
· Most studies show that Vice

President George Bush has a
clear lead In probable electoral
votes, with Ohio being one of the
states leaning toward the Republican. Ohio, however, with Its 23
electoral votes, Is considered a
key state for Dukakls.
' 'The Republicans wan I to put
you to sleep. They're already
celebrating; they're popping the
champagne corks In their pent·
Continued on page 5

DUKAKI!l GREETS SUPPORTERS- Democratic presldenllal
candidate Michael Dukaklll p-eets supporters In Columbus
Monday 1111 he launches bll campaign lor the final 21 days before
the election. GGvernor Richard Celeste, left, and MarUn Luther
King Ill Introduced Dukakl8. (UPI)
I

l'

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