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•

Paga 12-lhe Deily Sentinel

BIG BEND. ••

Wedn.tay. Oc:toblw 3, 1.0: .

Ohio·

Major
Hoople's ·

Your Locally Owned,.
LOW-PRICED
SUPERMARKET

Ohio Lottery
(

Major Hoople's
Plck·S: 882
Plcll-4: 2381
Cards: ,
2-H, 4-C, A·D, 8-S

!orecast
•

•

Page 8

A FESTIVAL OF.STOREWIDE SAVINGS

•

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Vol.41. No.107
Copyrightod 1990

3 LIS.
01 MOlE

IONEUSS WHOLE

TENDEIIEST
1

.

U.~.D.A.

RIB

CHOia

BONELESS

.CHUCK ROAST

59

E·yE· .

ll.

·

.

·

· @:~

$ 399.
suCED
·
FREE

IONIUSS WHOLE

N.Y.

SUCED

STRIP

FREE

..

IONELISS WHOLE

SIRLOIN
TIP LB.

Sl 99
.

.

SUCED

. FREE

2 S-lont, 16 Poges

26 C.ntt

A Multlmocllo Inc. Nowapopor

Pomeroy celebration
in final big weekend

Sl 69

LB.

•

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio; Thuraday. October 4, 1990

TEN.D II.ST UAN IDF

GOURMET
GROUND

Oear tonight. Low In mid
408. Sunny FJ'Iday. Hlcbs Ia
mld7~ .
.

.

The last big weekend celebra ~
a ribbon In the shape of ·Meigs Anyone·lnterested lnenterlngthe
tlon of Pomeroy's sesqulcenten·
County with Pomeroy's sesqui- parade should call Mary Powell
nlal, 150th anniversary of lncor- centennial logo. To receive IVY at 992·5000.
poratloa, will be held Saturday. (International Volksport Ver·
At 5 p.m. on Saturday Denver
and Sunday.
band) credlfimly, the fee Is $5.50. Rice will perform with his
The weekend, ' 'Ethnic Settlers
Those par~clpallng In the concertina, an accordlan type
Fest," .will feature a variety of
Volksmarch may begin between lns,trurnent, and guitar.
entertainment and Qther festiVI·
thehoursof9a.m. and 3p.m.and
Saturday'S festlvltlas will COO· •
. ties geared toward children:
finish time Is at 5 p.m.
·
elude with a dance on the parking ·
Those attending the celebra-. . Postal •butts. wl)l have the · lotfro!fl 6 to9 p.m. Music (or the
tlon oil Saturday can enjoy the· ·opportunity to obtain a commerri- dance and concert will be by the
Or.atlve · United States Postal German Band, '.'On Tap. "
·
Volksmarch, au organized hike
or walk. The 10K (6.2 mite) route
Canqellatlon Stamp on Saturday
Sunday's activities begin with .
will begin at Pomeroy VIUage
from 9 ·a.m. to 1 p.m. at the a canoe r.ace at 2 p.m. across
Han. From t)lere walkers will
Pomeroy Fire Station on Butter· from the former Pomeroy Junior
travel down Main Street through
nut Avenue.
High School. The race '¥111
the Pomeroy Historic District,
Beginning at 8:30 a.m. on conclude at the levee and there Is
turn left on Butternut Avenue, go
Saturday the Pomeroy Cub Scout a $5 entry fee. Check-In time for
up Uncoln Hill to overlook the
Pack will sponsor a bike rodeo In the canoe race Is 1 p.m.
bend ortheOhloRiver, and cross
the downtown area. There Is a $1
The German folk dancing
a section of tbe flood.road to t)le
entry fee and participants may group, Folklanderslnternatlonal
Sugar Run area. From Sugar ·register upon arrtval. There wil) . Dl!nce Troupe, will perform at 3
also be children's games begin· p.m., followed by the Welsh
Run waJkers will gp to Mulberry
Avenue turning ·left ·to Beech
nlngatnoonontheupperparklng singing group, St: David's Cho.· .
Grove Cemetery where they will
lot In Pomeroi.
rus, from Gallla and JacksQn .
pass Samuel Willis Pomeroy's
Entertainment begins on Sat- Counties at 4 p.m.
grave and then on to The Maples,
urday at 1 p.m. with the English · Sunday's entertainment will
: : : : : : : : TROPHIES ....: Tbese
rodeo and canoe racee. Activities begin Saturday
which was the former children's
comedy and music group eonclude with a perfonnance by
are the tropllles that will be presented to the first
momlng and wiD conclude Sunday alteraooa. For
Home.
"Patchwor k, " a two·pe,rson The Zucchini Pickers at 5 p.m.
place winners Ia tbe Ethnic Settlers Fest
lnfonnatloa oa aay of tbe activities, call Mary
From there the route co11t1nues
team featuring the talents of The group plays a variety of folk
actlvlll_,es, Including the Kinder Parade, bike
Powell at 992-&amp;00Ci.
, .
to Union Avenue onto Osborne
Mark Purnell and NancyHarlett. mu"slc for children and adults.
.
.
Street and back to Mulberry.
. AKI~erParadewlllbeglnat.4
On both days, Saturday and
From tbere participants will
p.m. and categories for judging Sunday, European horse drawn
walkbytheSugarRunFiourMIII Include · wagons, bicycles . and carriage rides will be available
.
.
.
.
.
and Sacred Heart ca:thollc
costumes. Awards will ~ given during the afternoons. In addl·
Chureh to Second Street. The
In an adult diVIsion and a tlon tbere will be arts and crafts,
rouie will then continue past the children's division. First place In clowns and balloons .
. Meigs ·County Court House and each category will receive a
All entertainment Is scheduled
Jail
~:l;yc~ore
§~t
Q.nd
t~n
,
t~P,!IJ...and,
a
$5
gilt
certificate.
to
take place at the parl\lng lot
'
--~-·
- • ext!listotl l&gt;!:..200,.,...ra•
.. J'G~II'
metering•
·system ·ellsurlllt' •tha:t
.:. ,.t&lt;av CHARLENE H()l!ifiT t{)tt;
onto ·Maln.~ ,l~.n:. JI(~~I! .. J:l\~I!;WII!' awards will be given sla,&amp;e In Po111eroy on both /Jays.
the reservoirs rem alii ' tn~
tlfle&amp;i to•'ll'l!l•t'lll!fti!'"Was set at walkers wlii"c'ofi'c1ud~ !11!!11' trip · for the children's , division Jn ' to ··register 'tot any oi these
:" .• , '"Seallaet!i(elfi'Stlilr ' ·
$8,000.
· Seven projects were funded by service the 149 houses In that
at village hall. .
addition to an Ice cream cone events or for further lnfotma·
section
of
the
community.
Donald
Poole,
Tuppers
Plains·
Only walkers wbo pay the certificate, donated by McDo· lion, contact Mary powell at
~~L~~Jigs .·eoun~ Commission·
el's wltb COmillimlty Develop· ·· A total ot $15,800 was approved :Chesier Water ·District superln· registration fee of S6!Day receive nald's, McClure's, Pleaser's, 992-5005.
tendent, also present for the
ment mock Grant monies total· for tile Tuppers Plains-Chester
a clolssone medallon attached to Adolph's and Dairy Queen.
Water
District
extension
ot
ser·
m.eellng, acknowledged the
lng $93,760. at Wednesday
needs lor both areas to be served.vice Into· the F1ora area. Five
afternoon's m~tlng.
resldents
from
that
area
l}lel
Asked about district funds, he
The commissioners approved
with
the
commissioners
WedneS··
said
that plan I expansion Is the
•
$30,000 for the Middleport VIllage
day
to
explain
their
needs
and
next
priority
project
for
the
sewage lagoon project. -Kim
District.
Shields, development director, urge suppdrt of the project. They
The fourth project funded at
reported that tbe Ohio Depart· were Helen Swartt, Bobbl Pau·
yes.t erday's meeting was that of
ment of Development ha!l asked ley, Eugene Frost and Mr. and
.
the Sulton Township Trustees,
the commissioners to allocate Mrs. Art Shumway.
In funding the project, Shields
$21,160, for corrective work on
the original es tlmate of $1,125,000
A: total of 22 proper!les are
the $30,000 for the project.
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
not~:d
that
many
of
the
w.ells
In
the
east
side
ot
Welshtown
Road
Involved
In the Kerr's Run-Nye
by
the
state
engineer.
After
Sentinel News staff ·
He said that the amount serves .
that
area
have
already
fall~d.
or
which
collapsed
In
the
spring.
Avenue·
area In the . overall
of
the
bids
received
on
eval
uatlon
as leverage for $700,000 pledged
The $1,447,360 bid of the. Alan
are
falling.
The
need
for
ex
ten·
The
urgency
In
getting
the
repair
project.
Of those properties, ,
Sept.
28
and
the
engineer's
toward the projeci already Stone Co. of Chesterhill · for
three
slon
of
water
service
Into
that
work
done
this
fall
before
freez.
are
business buildings .,_ ·
assessment
were
reviewed,
the
$500,000 from the U.S. Army
culvert replacement and high·
area
has
been
presented
to
the
lng
and
thawing
sets.
In
was
the
White
ilouse, the Roedel
deciSion
to
award
the
project
to
way relocation at the lntersec·
Corps of Engineers, and $200,000
commissioners
several
times
stressed
by
Engineer
Phil
Ro·
the
lowest
bidder
was
made,
·
building,
which
Is right In the
·tlon of State Route 124 and U.S.
from the Ohio DeparUnent of
over
thepastfouryears.Another
berts
and
Tad
Warner,
highway
Intersection,
and
the Jenkins
Leach said .
Development. Middleport Vll·
. Route 33 has been accepted by
on
the
reCompletion
date
water
project
application,
the
superintendent.
.
Ready-Mix
plant.
Four
homes
lage has already agreed to
the · Ohio Department of
placement
of
the
culvert
under·
Shields recommended that the Transportation.
will also be affected when the
provide $12,000 toward the prob- Vance Road section, was not
'
project be bid under the lmml·
lem of containing the sewage approved although the commls·
Work Is expected to begin on neath the road on Route 124 has Intersection highway replacebeen set for Feb. 28, according to ment begii!S, a's will one mobile
nent threat danger and specify a the first phase which is the
lagoons, a situation created by sloners were sympathetic with
Leach.
the
application
and
encouraged
completion
date
this
year.
The
.
home.
erosion of the Oblo River bank.
culvert replacement within 30
As
for
the
second
phase,
which
representatives
frOm
that
area
to
development
director
gave
some
While the Intersection has long
· Also funded by the commls·
days , Joseph Leach,. Dlstt:lct 10
Is
the
relocation
and
Improvere-apply
next
year
..
Ronnle
Hub·
general
assurance
that
tunils
for
been
recognil:ed as a problem
sloners was the Pomeroy VIllage
Deputy Director for the Depart·
ment
to
the
Intersection
area,
area
bard,
who
lives
In
the
area
not
the
project
b~ause
of
Its
emer·
with
several trucks having
ment, announced this morning.
project at a cost of $14,800- the
LE!ach
said
that
will
start
In
April
struck
funded,
reported
that
he
had.
gency
nature
co~d
be
released
the
corner ot the old ·
The Alan Stone ·c o. bid was the
money to be used to provide a
and
has
a
completion
date
of
Aug.
attempted
to
get
water
from
the
this
fall.
Plans
are
for
plies
to
be
Roedel.
building
In turning from
telemeterlng system fcir &lt; the
lowest of three bids submitted on
.
Water
driven
near
the
area
·
which
31,
1991.
.
Tuppers
Plains-Chester
Route
124
onio
Route 33, the
the project, but was higher than
Uncoln Heights ~servo Irs which
The
depuiy
director
said
that
area
became
an emer·
general
.District
but
that
the
cost
for
an
Continued
on
page
12
will provide a remote control
rights of entry have been, ob- gency when the nine-foot stone
tained from property owners so arch under Route. 124 near. that
iHat there will be no Interruption . lnlersectlon coUapsed on Feb. 2.
In the work on tbe project. He
The Ohio Department of High·
further stated that he antl~lpates ways at that time had to build a
that no building or housing temporary rOad to bypass the :
demolition will be required dur- section where the massive cave- :
Ing the cul\rert replacement.
In occurred.
..;...--;:
A " Meet the Candidates ,..;.-.
Night" will be held on October 17
at the MeigS County ·.Multlpur·
pose Center •. M)llberry Heights,
.
Pomeroy .
EVENTS OF THE ETHNIC SETI'LERS FEST
· . A ·public dinner will begin at 5
Saturday ,
.
p.m . . to be followed by the
9
a.m.
to
3
p.m.
:Volksmarch
begins
at
Pomeroy V!Uage
candidates' or their representa·
Hall.
Finish
time
Is
5
p.m.
·
tlves' presentations beginning at
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. - ; Commemorative U.S. postal cancelation
7 p.m.
stamping
at Pomeroy Fire Department.
The rules under which the ·
Noon
Children's ·games begin on upper parking lot In
publiC forum Is to be held are as
follows :
Pomeroy.
.·
1 p.m. -Patchwork, ilb English comedy and music group.
- Each candidate will be
· 4 p.m. -Kinder Parade.
·
allowed tbree mlnu(!!s to present
, 5 p.m. - Denver Rice, concertina and guitar concert.
his or. ber views. A fee will be .
6-9 p.in . - On Tap, a German band. for listening or dancing
· cliarged for each additional
.
·
•
pleasure.
· minute with all fUIIds being used
for tbe. Melgl Senior Citizens'
- - """"
.
Sunday
·services.
1 p.m. - Check·ln for canoe races.
- Slace the program Is not a
2 p.m. - Canoe races begin.
debate type forum, no questlous
3
p.m. - Folklanders.Internatlonal Da.nce Troupe, a group of·
will be accepted from the au·
Ger man folk dancers.
dtence. TblsevenUun opportun·
4 p.m. -St. David's Chorus, a Welsh choir from Gallla and
lty for tbe voter,. to bi!Sl' the
•
JackSon counties.
.
candidates outline !belt views on
· 5p.m. ~Zucchini Pickers, a group that performs a variety of
lssuea which concern all
'
folk music for children and adulls.
constituents.
· - Melp CoUIIty Republican
Both days will feature European horse drawn carriage rides
Party Cbalnnan George Collins
during
the afternoon and arts and crafts. Bring along a lawn
nAG PIUEaNTa) -AD Amll'laaa aarQllb. r. •...., tile tlaa lo a.- Oliver,
and DemocratiC Party Chairman
P• I e•led lo llle llelp Collllty MultJ..Parpole
•
chair
and
enjoy the festivities which are scheduled to take place
ee•••t dlneCer a&amp; the eeater, II Dbel Bart, Sue Matson will determine wblcb
halor enter .... ..,. •• beball of tbe
at
the
parking
lot stage. ·
member of tbe Modern Woll!lulea (llab.
candidate - Incumbent or oPJIO'
Bvl....em ........ WoedmeJ~ of Amerlcallllllor
· Continued on' page 12

·seven Meigs projects
funded with
.
..:Development ·Block Grant monies

ROCKY TOP

•PLAIN .•SELF II SING

GOLD MEDAL
FLOUR

•

All PURPOSE fLOUR

_____

........~s

POP

LB.

BAG

•

SUAVE
SHAMPOO

MORTON
'

Pumpkin Pies •.!

.

99

••

ODOT accepts · Chesjerhill
·finn's bid for~ Rt. 1'2 4 project
.

Meet the
candidates
fete slated

______...______

..

Sesquicentennial .schedule
"

"

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-

Civic Center
SATURDAY1 .

OCTOBER 13, 1990
P.M. .

....

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�.,
· Thursday, October

Commentary

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomaoy-Middlepor.. Ohio
Thursday, October :4· 1990

..

•

DOE won't budge~·.___:::Ja=ck:.:. . :A:.::nde==r=so..;,::_n.:::.and=-=D..::..ale_Van_A_tt_a.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St. .t
Pomeroy, Olllo

\

WASHINGtON - The Bush
administration and Congree
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
seem hell-bent on continuing an
11~ . I'
.
did American tradition - ml·
ili!m~ ......,__,._-r,,........ t:::loo=o
shandling nuclear energy to the
point where lack of public trust.·
~v
.
.
makes !bat energy ·option no
ROBERT L. W,INGETT ·
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
option at all.
Publlskr
General. Manager
Amerlcans- can hardly be
blamed for heating their homes
with
Imported oil arid blackening
~~
P!\T WKITEBE!\D ·
the
·skies
with coal-fired · power
· Assistant Pablllber/Controller
plants when tbe nuclear alternatlve has been so badly botched.
A .MEMBER of The Untied Press International, Inland Dally Press
The latest bungling surrounds
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
.
the ad · nauseam process of
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
choosing a national dump site for
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
nuclear waste. To some key
name, address and telephone number.•No unslgued letters wUI be pub- t'
decision makers In Congress and
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not persona II·
the administration, Yucca Moun·
ties.
taln In ihe Nevada desert is the
most likely spot.
Never mind that the Energy
Department's oWl!' chief geolo· ' gist on the project has deemed
the site unsafe. Never mind that,
as we recently reported, another
eminent geologist chosen. to
The Meigs County Park District discuss consensus of the· review that finding has corrobo·
rated It and agrees that an
would like to thank those who meeting.
earthquake Is highly likely to
at tended the meeting of Sept. 23
'We would also like to extend a •
· of the Shade River Land Owners. · special ·thank you to .the Boy
It was- a very .Informative and Scouts· of America for use of
educational experience. We espe- Camp Klashuta apd 'Bob Arms,
cially thank everyone for their scoutmaster, who played a very
Input and suggestions. The dis· Important r ole in the success .of
cusslon and lnteres t w111 serve as this meeting.
a foundation for possible future
Again, we thank those who
. ·development of those areas attended the me~tlng for their
discussed.
supporl and Interest.
We will be In contact with each
Mary Powell, Director
individual Shade River property
Meigs County Park District·
owner In the near future to

.

.

Letters to the editor ·

Appreciates public input

Yucca Mountain within the next
even tQe permits needed to do government tllat Nevada Is not
10,000 years- the government's
exploratory drUIIng on the site.
the elace. The Energy Depart·
working number for the life of the
Meanwhile, no one 1s satisfied menf bas tried to cast doubt on
dump. If !bat seems like a long
with the sluggish progress In the warnings of Its own geologist,
time Into the future . to worry
developing the dump, even as the Szymanski. But . the ell!lnent
about, consider thatltlsmerely a
·chief g~loglst .on ·the proJect, geologist who was on an 'lnde·
blinK In the lifetime of radloac·
Jerry Szymanski, has raised . pendent panel to review Szy.
Uve spent nuclear fuel.
questlons .that to any reasonable ·manskl's findings, Charles ArWhatls troubling in !be shorter
person would' end consideration cham beau of the University. of
of the site Immediately.
Colorado. has already told us he
run Is !bat the government
doesn't have to bury Its nuclear
Sen. Richard Bryan. D-Nev .,
agrees with Szymanski - It
waste In an earthquake zone. . was one of· tllll' first to take
would be folly to bury nuclear
Critics of !be Yucca Mountain
Szymanski's fears seriously, . waste In .Yucca Mountain.
plan have been touting safer,
even when Szymanski's bosses at
A spokesman for .Bryan told
cheaper options, and key policy
the Energy Department were
our associate Dan NJ!!gomlr !bat
makers are Ignoring them. The . dismissing them. Bryarrhasbeen
Archambeau's opinion will boisgovernment seems stuck on
pushing a bUI In Congress to store
ter the· Nevada case. "I'm not
Yucca Mountain, despite ' the
waste temporarily In metal or
surprised. No one ever viewed
hazards It poses.
.
concrete casks .
Szymanski as 'less than credl·
As early as 1987, Congress
The Bryan bilL would let
ble," said spo)&lt;esman Jim
voted to make Yucca Mountain
utilities store spent nuclear fuel
Mulhall.
the only site to be studied for use
rods at the slteswherethey'were
The Energy Department's
as the nation's sG-called r~poslused tn the first place, !bus , boss on the project, Carl Gertz,
tory of high-level waste. Nevada,
avoiding tbe need to' haul the
told us he Isn't taking sides and
of course, balked and has been
dangerous waste across country
will continue to collect data. He
·battling the federal government
to Nevada. Cask storage would
said he Is stlll'i'i50klng for a "show
'. ln _court.
.
also save the unkhown costs of
stopper" - scientific findings to
Registering their, displeasure
developing Yucca Mountain and
signal thumbs down on Yucca
at being targeted for the dump,
buy time for a better option.
Mountain. But, he said, that
Nevada officials have denied
Yet science Is telling the
hasn't happened yet. ·

SECOND PLACE HONORS - Seeond place
wlaners Ia the SUS 1\thlellc Booste.r ,Car Sho.w
were front, l·r, James Starcher, Jim Starcher,

clnilatl's Jose Rljo.
By RICK V1\N S!\N'J'
"The first game Is !be easiest
UPI Sports Writer
CINCINNATI- Two days late one to pitch," Walk said. "If you
because of the preseason lockout, · mess up or lose that one, you still
baseball's playoffs begin Thurs- have time . to redeem yourself.
day night with the slugging It's the fourth or fifth game when
Pittsbur.gh Pirates meeting the It starts getting nerve-wracking.
If you lose that one, you might not
~ rejuvenated Cincinnati Reds for
get another chance."
the.National League pennant.
Fpr Rljo, the first game Is .a .
The lockout? Remember. the
·
very. big one.
lockout?
.
"I've
always
wanted
topltchln
That was when a lotpffaris said
they'd never forgive greedy ..Ill~ playoffs and to be picked to
owners and rich players. Well, 1fiirt .the opener Is an honor, r•
the lockout has been virtually said Rljo, who will quickly see
forgotten · In places like Pitts· honor turn to challenge when !be
burgh and Cincinnati where likes of blasters Barry Bonds and
brilliant baseball has been Bobby Bonilla come to the plate.
The Pirates naturally figure
played !be past six months.
It's been a particularly pleas· hitting will be the key. And, since
lng season for the PJrates and Cincinnati's strength Is relief
Reds because It's the first time In pitching and defense , many Reds
11 years the clubs have made see that as !be plvotal .polnt.
".O ur power hitters might be a
postseason play.
little
bit of an advantage," said
Pittsburgh's "Lurrtber Com·
Pittsburgh
pitcher Ted ·Power, a
pany" and Clnclnnllll's "Big Red
former
Red.
"They've got Eric
Machine'· of the '70s hit the
playoff jackpqt a . half-dozen Davis, Chris Sabo and Paul
times. But both were blanked In O'Ne!U, but we've got some .
pretty good power hitters In
the 1980s.
So, when 1990 brought back Bonds, Bonilla, (Andy) Van
winners to the pair 9f Ohio River Slyke and' (Sid) Bream."
Cincinnati hitting coach Tony
cities, It was goodbye lockout
Perez remembers some slugf.
· bitterness; hello playoff fever.
"It's crunch time," said Pitts· ests between these teams Jn theburgh's R.J. Reynolds. "There's '70s, but contends the 1~champ
a different Intensity (for the will survive on pitching. .
"What I remember from those
playoffs) . · Some guys choke.
old
Pirate-Red games Is a lot of
Some dc:m't. It brings 'the best out
runs ," said ·Perez.. "They had
In some hitters and pitchers."
The starting pitchers for Parker, Clemente and Stargell.
Thursday nli;:ht's opener of the We had 'Bench, Morgan and
best-of- seven game se.rleswlll be Rose.
"B\lt I think the key now Is
Pittsburgh's Bob Walk and Cln·

"'

way, dcies any~ne remember
when the Gallia, Meigs and
Athens areas had so much
attention from Columbus. Cot
with Senator Collins.
So let's go on the trutH of what
has been done for our area and
vote In a person wlw has big
Issues to tight. So for now I hope
the people out there will go vote
but I hope they vote for a person
that runs a kind campaign,
Floyd H. Cleland
Middleport. Ohio

r-.. -.- ·--,1 r--: .

Responds to recent letter

·-'----:'1 1

I would like to respond to the aroGii'd they would find that In
letter wrltte.n by Betty Baronlck Meigs County there· Is a lot to be
about the conditions that exist thankful lor. Take the beautiful
throughout the county.
' hills that surround all of the' area.
I agree with !Ier about wanting
No matter how you come lrito
io continue to live here with town you see the beau tlful Ohio
prjde.
·
· River. Perhaps it is just taken for
. 1 was raised in Pomeroy but granted.
llke so many others had to seek
Meigs County Is also noied for
employment elsewhere.
having no cross streets and are
:My husband and I often talked fortunate to have Carleton School
of returning upon retirement. pluu a host of friendly people to
.
Ohio Bo{lrd of
has biennial budget. Whether or 110t
Unfortunately he became ill and welcome a person. This Is not
unveiled
a
plan
to
Improve
the all the proposals are adopted, the
passed away before that dr~am found in a large city. ·
qualify of Ohlo.' s higher educa· plan · represents . a bold .step
was fulfilled for him.
Just this pwst week I noted the
· : Two years ago I moved back river banks have been cut and tlon program. The goal, says • forward In attempting to prepare
regents VIce Chancellor Mat· today's young people for the
·'home" only to find complaints that adds beauty to the river.
thew v. Flllplc, Is to avoid a challenges of the ~st Century.
because things wera not getting
There are beautiful churches "grim" future of Increasing
A key go ails lowering the cost
done as fast au some would llke. for every c hoice of worship. I,
numbers
of
Inadequately
edU·
of
a college education. Several
Don't they realize that all this too, say let's all help to keep the
cated
Ohioans.
new
or expanded programs
cost money , This is where Mrs. coun(y beautiful. Do take time to
The
plan,
a
laudable
one,
calls
would
be set up achieve this.
Baronlck Is so rigqt. Let eve- smell the roses,
Increasing
state
subsidies
for
·
Among
these are:
for
ryone keep their property look·
higher
education
over
the
next
•
An
additional
$554 million In
lng neat, free from wrecked·
back
home
two
years
by
$900 million. The direct state subsidies to pubUc
Grateful
to
be
automobiles and debris laying
Joan Mescher · spending plan, which covers !be colleges.
around.
Syracuse period from July, 1991, throligh
'An additional $42 million to
If people would lust look
J ne, 1993, would Involve a state finance higher Ohio Instructional
,__ _,_....,_ _ _.;...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~----Investment of more than $4.3 Grants available to students
I
f billion on state colleges and from families with annual In·
i · universities.
comes below $;12,000.
Jhe
plan
Is
sure
to
be
hotly
•
'An additional $37 million Into
c
.
'
debated on the Senate Education the Student Choice program, In
Committee, on which I am the. wblch selected students are
ranking Democrat, when. the given direct state grants to offset
General Assembly meets early college .coats. S~dents partlCI·
next year to consider the next paling In this program can 'get

n

W~,~~eJ~f ...
,,

· Regents :Unveil higher education plan
~e

.
I BerrY S
SAVi

ME!

Reg~nts

w0 r td

SAVE·
ME.

.,

TOO!

I
I
I'

.

"

.

.'

.taking their
· .cue not from Okla·

·

:

must' be done to encourage young
Ohlpans to stay In state, and end
the so-called brain drain that In
recent · years bas occurred as
some of the state's most talented
young people leave Ohio to
pursue their educations and their ·
careers. ·
Matthew Flllplc 1s right when
he says Improving educational
quality Is key to ensuring a bright
future for the state. Until stu·
dents In all parts of .the state,
Including southern Ohio, have
the best quality educational
~pportunltles possible, we cannot
aU prosper.
If you have questions on this or
any other Issue, don't hesitate to
contact me, State Senator Jan
Michael Long, by writing me at .
the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio
43215, or by calling me at (614)
466·8156.

.Major league
final $t&amp;n:dings

,

NATIONAL LEAGUE
E01t

Team

~~:~::. :::::

Eliot
Team
W
Boston ~ ............. 88
Tormt o .............. 86
Iletroti.. ............. 79
INDIANS ........... 77
Baltimore .......... 76

·
:
'
.

L Pet. GJI
74 .543
7~ ..'131
2
83 .488 9
8~ . 47~ 11
85 .472 11\!

c 414

Mllw~:::::: i~ ~
~ew

I rk....

Oakland ... .... .. ...103
Chicago ............ 94
Texas ............... 83
California ...... .. . 80
Seattle .............. 77
Kan!8s City ...... 75
Minnesota ......... 7 4

59
68
79
82
85
86
88

:457 14
21

.636 .580 9
.512 .20
.4!N 23
.475 26
.463 271!
:457 29

. LOcAL ENtRY - Thla beauUful red t11urlng

of the winning entries In
Car Sl!ow. .

car owned by Kin! Neal of Masoa, W.Va., WaS "One

9r 7~ :~~

·4
77 . 52 ~ 10
85 .475 18
85 .475 18
92' .432 25

WCBt
REDS ................ 91
Los Angeles ....... 86
san Franclsco .... ..85
San Diego .... .. .... 75
Houston ............. 7~
Atlan ta .............. 65

71 .562
76 .531 5
77 .525 6
87 .463 16
87 .463 16
97 .401 26

result•

C.llfornla 11. Oaktand 6
Detroit 10. New York 3
Bostoo 3, Clllcago 1

TbUnday"• 1aine
NL Champl-lp Serleo
Pittsburgh (Walk 7·5) at Ctncln·
nat! (Rijo 14-BL 8 p.m. EDT.

Baltimore 3, Toronto 2
Milwaukee 6, Texas 3

The Daily Sentinel

By POHLA SMrrH
UPI Sports Writer
CINCINNATI-Fortheyounges t generation of baseball fans,
the 1990 National League
playoffs between Pittsburgh and
Clnclnilati will be a novelty.
But for the baby boomers who
produced, today's kids, the matchup Is' as familiar as a Johlmy
Carson rerun.
The Plra tes and Reds were the
only National League teams \hat
didn't make the playoffS at least
once during the 1980s. But they
seemed to be the only teams
allowed In during the '70s.
The series they begin Thursday night Is their fifth head-to·
head postseason meeting, mak·
lng It !be mostfrequentmatchup
since baseball began divisional
playoffs In 1969.
Between 1970 and ·1979, , e"ch
team made six appearances In

the third annual Raclae

:

·

NEW · KNOXVILLE, Ohio
(UPi) - This week's Ohio high
school volleyball ratings, c ompiled by Chuck Braden, former
president of the Ohio High SChool,
.Volleybaii ·Coaches Association,
_and distributed by UPI. (First
place votes and team ·records In
parentheses) :
·
INw'IIIQIII
Team
1. Ely !Ia

(6)

(I~

Pts.

I ........... ,............... 190

2. Canton McKinley ill (U.{) ) ........... 189
• 3. Cincinnati Setoo (111 (10.1! ........... 188
4. Stow (1) 112-21 .............................. 15~
~. Westerville South (14-01 ................ 129
6. Reynoldsburg (9-1) ....................... 77
7. Grfld Hts Trinity (1) ( 1~1) ........... 73
B. Strongsville (14·2) ........................ 67 .
9. ee11na m (1T.{)J ........................... ss
10. Cuyahoga Falls (11·2) ....... .. - .. ...... 50
Second ten: 11. Cncinnatl Oak Hills (1)
20• ll. Centerville 18: 13. Toledo Central
C.thoUc Ill 17: 14. Oregoo Clay 11; 1~.
Chllllcothe13; 16. Rocky RlverMagnlftcat
12; 17. Mentqr II; 18. (tiel Cincinnati Mt.

Notre Dame, Ctncinoat1 UrsUllne and

Piqua, 10 eacb.

DlvloiM II .
T~

hL

I. Dayton Chamlnade (9) (13-21 ........ 2~

2. Dresden Trl·\!alley (5) (lJ.O) ........ 210
3. Marton River Valley (7) (lJ.O) ...... 208
I. Salem (2) ()~) ........ : .................. 148
5. Akron Hoban 141 (1:W) ................. 142
6. an. Mother or Mercy 121 (13-2~ .... 122
7. Brecksville (11 (13-41 .................... 101
8. Lebanon ( 11 (15-11 ...................., ... 61
9. Clyde (U-3) .... ... .. ........................ 57
10. " " -

,.

Otto Weelt ................................... $1.40

I

,,J

Dlvtoloa Dr

WfS'

a ......

·s.

Today's

Has

chard RJverctaYe (1) , Ueach.
Dlvl•lon IV
Team
. ...
I. Archbold (10) (llf0) ......... .......... ... 23J
2. Hardin-Northern 121 (13-0) ......... ... m
3. Centerburg ~1) (14-0) .................... 142
4. Ashtabula Si&gt; John (31 (17.{)) ........ 121
5. !lopewell-Loudon (31 .(1J.II ........... 111
6. New~ry 12~ (16-11 .................. ..... 1112
1. Col. Crestview (21 (H&gt;11 ............... 85
8. OJI. Wehrle (2 ) (IH) ...... .... .... .... . 77
9. New KnO&gt;tvflle (134) ........... .. ....... 71
10. KldrCil Cent. Christian (12-0) ........ 65
Second ten - 11. ltlel New Rl"'el (21
and Newark Catholic ( 2) , 57 each; 13.
Stryker 55; 14. Fairlawn 52; 15.( tle) Miller
Gtty and Tlpp Oty Bethel, 45 each; 17...
Convoy Crestview 44; 18. (tiel Fort
Recowry and Frankfort Adena. 37 each:
20. WUIIamsburg 11~ 18.

Ft•.

"From Ashes to Glory"

bufa. (:retllt will be f]ven carrlt!r •ell

ConfNcts •d VIctories Beyond
tho Football Field
With

BILL •cAITNEY

13 Weelti .............. , ................... $19.:U
' · :1$ Weeltl ........................... .......
52 Weeltl ....... .... ....................... f7f.
Otollltlo lletp CJouiJ ·

1!7.=

Head Football Coach,

Unlwenlty of Colorado

13 Weeltl .................................. ft0.80
21 Weeltl •.: .............................. :fj0.30

. 52 Wee1t1 ... :.............................. 17$,40

f

ft~

I. Heath &lt;121 (11-1) ..... : .... .. .............. 208
2. Buckeye TraiJ.(3) (14-2) .............. . 173
3. Co Dins w.
(~ (13.{)) ........ 145
4. Fairview Park (2) ()2·2) ............... lll
5: st. Henry (I) (14·3) ...................... 98
6. Oak Harbor (10-4) ... :.................... 78
7. Hurm (IJ.2 ) ................................. 73
Medina Highland 121 (11·21 ............. 71
9. Otsego (Iii.{) ) ................ .. .............. 66
. 10. Fort Frye (13-1) ........ ... ................ 53
Seooad ten -11. UsbOn Anderson 37; 12.
Paint Valley 30: 13. Columbia Station 23;
11. Jacksoo·Mllton 21; 15. (tie) Shenan.
doahandEasl'fOod.l~each; 17. PlalnCit y
Jonathan Alder 1.2; 18. (tie) F1nneytown,
Milford Centef, FalrbaJ!kS and Mt. Blan-

Sublcrlben aot d•lrtna to pay tlteW·
ner may nrnlt lD advance dlreet to

M.U lla_.,.t..o
boltlo llolp CJouiJ

'II .

Tam

Dolly .. ,.,...... :...... ... .......... :.•• 25 Ceato

to

" """"'
""
J'

I~()(Jl

'Shelby 10. .

TO AUfOGIAPH . COPIES
.. OF HIS NEW BOOK

No IUiilcrttnt- by mao permitted In

.'

446 4524

news on
•.

'

F.riday, October 5
10 A.M. to 3 P.M.

PBICB

. ''

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

and Cantm South, 16 each; 18. (tie)
Louisville and Circleville, 1::1 each; 20.

IN POMEROY

one Month ................. .. ......... ..... $6.10
One Yoar ................................. $12.80
SINGLE COPY

areu wbore b"'!"' cll'rlt!i' oervtce
available.

Game 2.1s In Cinclnilatl Friday .
afternoon. Saturday and Sunday
will be off days, with the Reds ·
remaining In Cincinnati to prac- .
!Ice both days because the
Pittsburgh Steelers will be play.
lng In Three Rivers Stadium
Sunday. The series resumes
Monday·afternoon In Pittsburgh.

SecOnd ten - 11. Watkins Memortal50;
12. Avon Lake 38; 13. Perrysburg 30; 14.
Teays Valley 18: 15. Canal Fultoo
Northwest 17; 16. ( tie) Hebroo Lakewood

KROGER BOOK STOR£

a,. Canter or•Motor Bollte

-·

·

. WILL BE AT THE

SlJB8cBIP.l'ION RATI!8

'lbo DaUy Sentinel on a 3,1or 12 m1111tll

series.'' .

DAVE DILEs·

to 'lbe Dally Senttnelc lll Court St..
Pomeroy, 01\10 f5768 .
.

. The Pirates and Reds split 6-6 .
during the season, witlif!onilla
hitting five home run~ In the
dozen games. ·
..
"It looks to me Ilk~ we're
pretty even," Pirates Manager
Jim Leyland said. ''They've got
an excellent club. We feel we do.
It should be a real exciting. .

Author /Sportscaster

Published. every aftemoc:m, Monday
throogb Friday, lll Court St., Po·
meroy, Oblo, by the Ohio Valley PubIIJhlDI Company/Multimedia, In_~
Pomeroy, Ohio 411'769, Pb. 992·21116. lit'·
eond class postage pild at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

POSI'MASI'ER: Send addreu Ch811J1!1

''

what was then . a five-game
series. They played against each
other four times. The only
divisional playoffs In which their
comlngled fans ot western ren·
nsylvanla, Ohio and West VIrginia had nothing to cheer or argue
'about were In 1977 and lin8.
The Reds dominated their
playoff matchirps with Pitts-.
burgh, winning three of four
series and nine·of 14 games. But
the action usually wasn't as
lopsided as· those S•tatiStiCS fndl·
cate, for both teams were true
powerhouses throughout the
decade.
Pittsburgh and Cincinnati each
won two World Series during. the
1970s, the f'lrates In 1971 and 1979
and the Big fted Machine In 1975
and 1976. Veterans of Pitts·
b~rgh's '71 team believe they
'might have won back·.to- back
Continued on page 5

(USPSifJ.HI)

A 01•111.. of Mtdtlmodla, lac.

Newspaper Sales, 73) Third Avenue,
New York, NeW Yort: 10017.

·

l

Dibble, Randy Myers and Norm
Charlton.
While Pittsburgh admittedly
doesn't have as wicked a bullpen
as .Cincinnati, Van Slyke COD·
tends It's good enough, even .
thOUgh some may find his analogy all wet.
"People say we don't have a
stopper, but It's just like not .
haVing a stopper In the bath tub,''
VanSlyke reasoned. "So, you use ·
a towel. The towel might leak·a
little bit; but It holds water. It's
good enough to get the job done.' '
Clilelnnatl will be without
second baseman Bill Doran for
the playoffS. Doran underwent.
back surgery Wednesday.

· Logan sextet lOth in D-11

uw1 ................................. n

Member: United Press·International,
Inland Dally Pre.s Auoelatlon and the
Ohio Newspaper A11oclatkJn. N•tlonal
Adverttstne Reprtsentatlve, Branham

•
' '

O'Neill. 'That's why I think we'll
do well."
'
After Rlfo, !be R~ will start
lefties Tom Browning and Danny
Jackson. But the real sotrengths
of the Reds' staff are self-styled
"Nasty Boys" relievers Rob

Reds, Pirates ruled
NL playoffs in 1970s

7

Montrear... ......... 85
Philadelphia ...... 77
Chicago ............. 77
St. Louis ............ 70

Wedllesda~'•

MJnnescta 7, Seattle4

pitching, especially our starting
pitching. If our starters can hold
them down, we think we can get
enough runs to win. In a series
like this, pitching Is the most
Important thing."
• 'Pitching always takes over In
~
set les like this," echoed

W L Pet. GB

New York 6, Pittsburgh 3
Montreal 9, St. Louts 2
San Francisco 6, Atlanta 3
Houstm 3, Cnclnnatl2
Chicago 4, Philadelphia 3
San DiEgo 7, Los Angeles 3
(end reauJar seasm)

Wedneaday's result.
Cleveland 5, Kansas City 2

Vincent Carroll .

~

, (end regl.tlar seas011

AMERICAN LEAGUE

.. _

nlzed the Inevitable..
homa or California, but from
Even It courts rule agaln~t the would soar to 98.5 percent In 1988.
Colorado. That's because Coloright of states to limit congres- Still another change from the
rado Is the only state now
slonal terms by law, Americans e,.rlter era: More than 90percent
attemptlngtollmltbothstateand
will still possess the ability to ~ of today's Incumbents re 1arly
congressional terms - state
ltmlt congressional terms by choose to run again. · 1111
otflces to eight :years and Con·
constitutional a,mendment. And
And why not?· For many
one will become more likely as modern represe11 tatlves, pultllc
gress to 12. The man behind the
movement In Colora!Jo - state
most state lawmakers have their service Is their Only chance to
Sen. Terry Consld1ne - reports
own terms fixed.
·
·
achieve power, riches and pres·
that lnq~lrles concerning hls
Up until 50 years ago, !J!OSt · tlge. Theirs Is a lifetime career
approach are pouring In from
members of Congress considered privilege, one they defend with
around the country.
.
their service temporary- and as every weapon within reach. ' ·.
. But does a state haye tbe
a result. the U.S. House was a
Fortunately, . they· have no
authllrlty to limit the terms of
true citizens' legislature. Mean- weapon to defeat a grass-roots
U.S. senato~ and repmentl(, · while, challengers regularlY de· . polltl~al movement seeklnl to
tlves? No one knows, as Conal·
feated between 10 percent and 30 llmtt their terms. All they can dO
dine Is the tint to aa,mlt. The , percent of Incumbents. By 1950,
Is ragelmpotentlyasAmertcans,
Issue wUI have to be tested In
however, nine of 10 Incumbents frustrated too long take matters
court. But Consldlne.doel cite a
were belna re-elected, a rate that
Into their own hands ·
hopeful precedeD! or two.
Lut year, he DOtes New
.
Hampshire p•ned a law limitlag
,
how much coaareulqDal candl·
datea could ~peed oa thefr
By Valled Prea lalernatlollill
campatana, .nleh bu 10 far
witbltood cballenp. Ia· tbe 19th
Today Is Thunday, Oct. 4, the 277th day of 1990 with 88 to fo~w.
The moon .Is full.
centlll')', for that matter, the
states Independently. belan to
Tbe mornlag stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evealag a tar Is Saturn.
·
·
elect anators directlY, rather
than permit J.ealslaturea to make
. Tb01e born on this date are under !be sign of Libra. They Include
the selection. In ratifying the
.Rutherford B. Hayes, 19th pr:esldent of the United States, In 1822;
Frederic Remington, painter of the American ·West; In 1861.
change, Coagress merely recog. .

Tooay. m. history

Scoreboard ...

1'\

Sen. Jan Long '

!Life ti•ne .politicians..~face · extinction

Turn on C-Span some night and
View with pity the pack . of
dinosaurs waddling ·about the
nailon's Capitol. They are the
last members of · a doom·e d
species of politician.
These hoary creatures, some
of whom have Inhabited their
Washington lairs for a 'Quartercentury or more, possess no
.,
other livelihood than passing
laws and bullying citizens who
appear before , th,elr congres·
slana! committees. Llkemandar·
Ins of old, they've actually 'c ome
·to see their privileges as tbe
natural order of the world. Poor
things; They Ito not yet realize
that a revolution Is under way.
Oklahomans fired the firsts bot
r~ntly. by voting to limit terms
of sUite oftlclala. Californians
and Coloradans'\I'UI foUow suit tn
1
November, at least If voten In
I both states are telling poilsten
the truth. But tbe real action In
limiting terms Ia likely to begin
after November, ·as citizens 1n
more thjln a dozen statea - and
.
:
perhaps as many as 20 - betrln
.·
·~
organlz!J)g for the 1992 electlolll!.
~
"() .'
'f) 1990 by N~ . ,nc. ·r
Increasingly, citiZen gro11ps
L..-----.-~--------r-;....--------' . Interested In Umltlng terms are

..

grant money evenlf;heyattenda
private college In the state.
'A new, ·$86 million program to
begin In 1992-1993 providing tultlon scholarships on Incoming
college freshmen. Named the
Freshman Foothold, the tUition
plan would pay up to 50 percent of
a college freshman's fees at twoand four-year schools, at an
estimated average of $1,293 per
student.
Other proposals Include higher
state grants to colleges · that
rectult so-called "eminent scho·
Iars'' to their faculties , refunds to
schools for a variety of research
. programs and $5 mUllan .In ·
addltlorial money to finance new
libraries. ·
The Ohio Board of Regents has ·
come up with a hold, Innovative
plan that should stimulate lots of
debate about the quality of Ohio
higher education. Everything

Opal Grueser, Loren Ne&amp;!, Harold McCiaakey.
Back·Duaae Weber, Paul WDIIams, Boger IDea,
Sherman Parsons, and Bill 'LaJJtbert.

Cincinnati, Pittsburgh begin 1990 playoff series tonight

A lot to hide?
· Well, voters, how about that
sheriff running for the Senate.
Mpst people I've ialked to wou.ld
say he too has a lot to hide.
·What ah election campaign
this Is. I don't feel anyone that ..
has to run for office should sound
off like '!his or Is this the only
thing that this man has to run on.
I would only say It put .a bad
name om the Republican party . .
I, for one, don't want elections
run on such name calling. So my
.own choice this yrar will be to
stay with someone who has real
issues a bout our area. By the

1990

·.,.

..

Look for speciaL sa~ngs in our
color inserFin today's paperl
.

... '
',

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·,.

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•

:

P1tu•

4 The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. October 4. 1990

POmeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

.

"
• ,.,' .._ ,., ''

I

¥¥L$UY

614/992-2136

~0\lfl

For All Your Prescription and
Simdry ~eeds See Us"
.,'

THE BOB HARMON FORECAST
sat., Oct. 6- Major cOlleges. Dlv. ·1·A'

&lt;J

992-2057
698 WEST .MAIN
POMEIOY, OHIO

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE
111 East Second Street
Pomeroyr Ohio
992-2342

• Air Foree
30 ' tlavy
.
..
• Akron
24
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Alabama
28 'SW l.ouisiana
Arizona
26 'U.C.LA
".Arizona Stale
24
Washington
Ari&lt;ansas
30
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27
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23
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24
Ohio U.
Centraf Michigan
33 • Kent State
• Clemson
21
• Georgia
Cclorado
35 'Mis souri
• Cclorado State
28
Ulah
·East Carolina
· 28 . South'n Mississippi
'Florida
28
L.S.U.
Fresno Stala
31 • Northam Illinois
. Geoi'Qia Tech
22 ' Maryland
• Hawa1i
213
Maine
Houston
33 • B'aylor
tlinois
23 "Oh1o State
Indiana
35 • Northwestern
• Iowa Slate
20
Kansas
• Lon~ Beach State
26
New Mexico State
• Louisville
20
Tulsa
• Miami. FL
23
Florida State
Michigan
40 • Wisconsin
• Michigan Slate
23
Iowa
• Mississippi
26
Kentucky
Nebraska
49 • Kansas Slate
• Nevada-Las Vegas
26
Fullerton State
• New Mexico
27
Texas·EI Paso
• North Carolina State 30
Appalachian State
"NorthTexas
21
S.M.U.
•, Notre Dame
24 ' Stanford
Oklahoma
42 'Oklahoma State
• Oregon
45
Utah State
• f&gt;enn State .
38
Temple
• Purdue
28
Minnesota
San Jose State
26 • Caifomia
·Southern California
23
Washington State
Syracuse
30 ·Vanderbilt
Texas
27 · Rice
• Texas A &amp; M
31
Texas Tech
• Tofedq
14
Eastern Michigan ·
Tulane
23 'Memphis State
• V.P.I.
24
Wes1 Virginia
• Wake Forest
21
-North Carolina
·Wyoming
31
San-Diego State
Molor Collegn • 01•. 1-AA
• Alablma Slate

21 ·

Jack6on State

• ArlwlntM State

23

NW Louisiana

27

Soulhem u

ArkantM -Pine Blul1

• Bucknell

'

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•
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55'5 PAll ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·••n

Towson

3D
3D

• Saniord
• West8rn Carolina

COig-'•

28

• Vale

27

• Eaaam Waahlngton
• Furman
Georgia Southern

23
28
24

Grambling
• Hatvttd

28
20

•
•
•
•

28
&lt;21
30
20
33

HOly Crou •
Howard
lelatto
Indiana St&amp;l•

• Jarne. Madilon
Lalayette

• liMny
WICidll TennMa"
Womana
NE Louiliana
...
Nll'¥ada-Reno
New H~thlra

• Nictlollt Stat•
North Carolina A " T
N(/fthtrn Arizona
' Nont111n Iowa
. • Pannavtvania
' Prlnceolon
• A~t flland
S. F•.Aultln
• South CWollna State
• SW Mtuourl
TtnnHMI Stilt
• Ttnnn... Tech

• Tenn.·Challanooga
T•x• Southern
YlllafiQ¥1
William &amp; Wary
YoungsiDWn

7

24
1~

' .Western Illinois .
Weber State
V.M .I.
• Marsl\all
Alabama A &amp;~ WI
Cornell

23
24
40
23

Massachuaens
• SW Te•a•

28
22
24
21

· Austin PN.y
Morehead State
East Tennet&amp;ee
• AlCorn
' ConnectiCut

77
27

' Delaware
' W•tefll Kentucky

23

B60ornaburg
' CaJHotnla State, PA
• Dk:kl,..oi-1, PA

23
27

49
27

Holatra
Indiana u .• PA
Juniata
' Kull1own

38
41
28
21
30
23
48
31
27

Mon1clalr
' Muhlenberg
Plymouth
• Rarpapa
Sua quehanna
Tulia
' ·w..t Cheater State
Wect Virginia WeBieyan
• Widener

24

• Central Oklahoma

21
21
cs

• Olivat. Ml
• Saginaw Valley
Norlh Park

31

• Ohio Northern
Sethii.I(S
W,.c T•ru
Hainline

' Bethany, KS

27
24
27

' Cameron
' Carlill:on
' Central Mluourl

23

• Coe

40
24·

' ContOl'dia, loiN

' Milsiulppl Collage

"'

21
• 21
~1

22

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17
10
20

10

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14

12
23

)

28

• COMa
• Emporia State
' Evangel
F•ril
Heklelberg
llllnc»s Wesleyan
' IOwa Wesleyan
• Kansas We&amp;le!~ll'l
• l akelal)d
' Mankato
• Mlllil!.in
' Ml11ourl SouthBI'n
Missou ri Valley ·
• Moorhead
Muaklngur'n •
' NOI'th Oakoia State
' Nonh Dakota U.
NorthWOOd
Pittsburg
' SE Milaouri

13
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24
37
· 38

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' SE Okiahoma

So uth OakOla State
• Southwestern, KS
' St. Cloud

St Thwas

25

Wilc»rilln -Stevens Point
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Catnba
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Fenum
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Jackaonville State

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Morrla Brown

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North Caro~ na Central
• Rando/ph-MIIICOI1
Rhodes
Savannah State
Teru A I I

28
40

l111kegee
' Yaldo1ta
Virginia Unton
Washington &amp; Lee
Weal Virginia Tech
' Wingate
WotrOfd

Azu&amp;a

31

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HutTt&gt;oldt
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lawia &amp; Clark
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POIUand Stahll
' Redlands ·
San otego U.
Santa Barbara

Santa Clara .

Sovihem O•egon

• Southern Utafi

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W.tern New M4!dco
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27

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DETROIT .................................. 13

VIkings hold 37-18 aariaa lead, winning lal171n a row. La.t fall, in 24-17 win. Vlkea
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N.Y. JE.TS ............................ ..... 23

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SAN r;AAN. ,..... ~ ................ ~ ..... 31
••HOUSTON ............ •. .......•.•..... 1.3
49ara have won thraaatraight ovar Olleri In 8-gama all'les. Hou.ton'a fortunes dipped
with two opening lou11. 8 . F. looks to continue .tNdy march towIt'd 11nother NFL'thla.
SEATTLE ................................... 23
""NEW ENGLAND ................ . .... 17
In 19B9 match-up, visiting 811h1wk1 dominated Peta. Q8 Deva Krieg throwing three
TD p a - for 21 points II\ 2nd quarter, Seattle winning 24-3. S•hawkalo.t 1trt 31n
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992-6491 .
..::

Ailing Reds provide
worries for ,Piniella
By RICK VAN SANT
result wu only five hits and no
UPI Sporta.Wrtter .
rims.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Eric · ''Seems like some of these guys
· : Davis's bruised shoulder and Bill would want tocometothefront to
• Doran's bad back are giving make the playoff roster," PI·
Reds manager Lou Plnlella a nlella said. "But I wasn't lm·
headache ·
pressed with anything I saw ."
· This
·not the condition he
Still, there are regulars who
wanted to find his team entering Impress Plnlella as the playoffs
. Thursday's opener ot the Na· .near. Catcher Joe Oliver, who
:tlonal League playoffs against platoons with Jeff Reed, stands
PIttsburgh.
'out. His extraordinary plateDavis, paid $3 f!lllllon a yea~ to, blocking recalls the defensive
·hit homers and drive In runs,. gems of Johnny Bench.
Last Thursday, Oliver made
bruised his left shoulder c~ashlng
·hi to il wall last Thursday and himself a human wall between
,hasn't played since. Pinlella said Atlanta's Dave Justice and the
Monday Davis won't test his plate. ·while Justice slid and tried
·shoulder until Wednesday's • to figure out how to maneuver his
·:regular-season finale.
feet toward tbe plate, Oliver took
Doran's case looks worse. The the ou tfleld lhrow and applied the
'veteran Infielder was acquired tag.
from the Houston Astros a month
"He had that plate sealed off,"
'
ago to give the keels another · Justice said.
dependable hitter for the
The. next day, Oliver pulled the
·postseason.
·
-s ame tactic on San l&gt;iego's Blp
. ·• But Doran, troubled by a bad Roberts with similar results .
One of Clnclnnatl's most plea·
back, was admitted -t~ Christ
Hosplal Sunday for observation . san t surprises has been first
and the Reds acknowledge he Is baseman. Hal Morris, who took
''questionable" for the playoffs. over at mld·sea,son for slumping
That hurts because Doran has Todd Benzinger. Mon1s has
been hitting .373 since joining the . became the team's top hitter at
.344.
.
Reds.
If Doran can't play, Mariano
• 'The Information I have about
Doran Is not very good," Plnlella · Duncap (.304) will be at second
said. "We'll see over the next 48 base, backed up by veteran Ron
hours. It's a problem. I was Oes ter. The Reds are solid at
looking forward to having his bat shortstop and third base with
In the starting lineup or else Barry Larkin (.301) and Chris
coming off the bench to help us." Sabo the club's top
. home run
Davis expects ·to be In the hitter with 25.
In the oulflel!l, Davis Is joined
starting lineup tor the playoffs,
but concedes he won't be at full by Billy Hatcher ( .277) In center
and the rlghHield duo of Paul
strength:
"I ·won't be completely healed . O'Neill (.270) and mqscle-tnan
Glenn Bragp ( .299) .
until after the season," he said.
The titartlng pltcbers will be
•'The· shoulder Is stiff. and sore.
strikeout
arUst Jose RIJo; Tom
But I should be . able to do
Browning
and Danny Jaclcson.
something In the playoft.. fll be
Tbe
key
relievers
are ,JI\Iddleswinging as best I can and If It
man Norm Charlton and closers
burts, It hurts."
.
Plnlella, faced with the likely Rob Dibble and Randy Myers -:
proposition of replacing Doran the Naaty Boys.
"OUr ·bullpen Ia stronger than
on the playoff roster, h.a s seen no
strong candidates surface from Pittsburgh's," Browning said.
"And we're.KOtne to need every·
hiS expanded roster.
lhlq
we've KOI agalnlt Pitta·
'The Reds played ~rly FJ'idfY
The Plratea are a acrappy
burgh.
through SUnday In dropping a
U!am.
a
hungry team. They come
~game aertee to San Diego.
Sunday, Ptalella atarte4 a half at yciu hard for nine lluliDIJ."
'
dozen beneh.warmera and the
• • •
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I

Explr• to-u.to

TAMPA BAY ........................... ... 16

Tampa Bay looking to possibly break thru with fi.r.t win in their history over Cowboys,
Dallea having WOI! alllix meetinga. Toaa up hare, however. neithtar being conslatent.
KANSAS CITY ............ .. ... .. ....... 24
""INDIANAPOLIS ...................... 10
"t!oma Sweet Hoina" where Colta will be for fQur straight weeks. may not be va vlalt·
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""ATLANTA .... .......................... 20
NEW ORLEANS ................... ..... ~?
Saints looking for 7th itraight win over Falcons, N.O . won 20·13 at home. 26-171ii
Atlenta last year, 2nd game needing 14-point rally in 4th quarter to win ... hello. Fal.
conal · ·
·
·
**CHICAGO ........ .. .................... 21
GREEN BAY .... ......... ........... . .... 10
Bears put big damper on "Pack ia Bad" chanfers i.u st three weeks ago in G.B .. beating
Pack 31-13, Chicago defenM regl.terlng aix sacks. QB Jim Harbaugh throwing for two
TDa.
.
CINCINNATI ........................ ..... 30
""L.A. RAMs ......... ... ..... ............ 24
Bangala leed brief aeries 3-2. Rams returning after weak off. holding 1-2 record whh
upset louea. Bengal• off to 11rong atart, but needed rallies for wins over· Jets, S.D. ·

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"As anodtflelderyou'retaught the ninth inning when the score- teammates Roger Marls and you do It, if not, you have had a
Only Ted Williams and Honus
to think certain things," said . board In Memorial Stadium Mickey Mal! tie hit 61 and 54 great season."
Wagner won titles at art older age
. Brunansky, "It was just lostine- replayed Brunansky's effort.
respectively In 1961.
In Cleveland, George Brett than Brett, 37. Brett won batting
Moments later, Mickey Tet·
In addlt!Gn, Fielder became singled In his only otf!cial at-bat titles In 1976 with a .333 average
The rlght·fleldoeorner is now as tlve. U I had to go back or!fhehlt
much a part of Boston Red Sox · it down the,ltne, I was going to tieton blasted a leadoff homer to the first Detroit player to hit 50 and became the first player In and In 191KI with a .390 mark.
lore'as the left-field wall.
dive for it- take a chance.
lift the Orioles to a 3-2 victory.
homers In over 50 years. Hank history to win a batting title In
Brett's single for~ed Oakland·~
TomBrunansky'sslldlngcatch
As Brunansky scrambled to
'_'This team battled all year," Qreeitberg belted 581n 1938.
three different decades.
Rickey Henderson to go 3-!or-3;
Of Ozzle Guillen's liner down the get to his feet, and with Red Sox Toronto Man~ger ctto Gaston
"I have a feeling offelle!,"
Brett, a .200 hitter on May 7, • which he did not do. Henderson
right-field line with two on and fans pouring onto the field, there said. "They were 61·2 (games)
said Fielder. "There Is a Jot of won the AL battirigcrown with a removed himself after going
two oulln the .top of the ninth wasstlllamomentofuncer~lnty back Xin early September) ; and pressureoffme. Mywife(Stacey .329avera·geandalsobecamethe 1-for-3 and wound up at .325. .
,In ning Wednesday night clinched as to whether Brunansky had they came back. I'm proud of . Granger) told me 'If you do It, thlrd·oldest man to do so. .
•
the Boston Red Sox third division - . made the caleb.
them."
H h.
tltlelnthelastflveseasonswlth'a
"Yeah,lhul\iontolt, " hesald:
Tettleton's season-ending ,
splwol nqtes...
3-1 victory over the Chicago "I just wanted to get· my hat. I blast, his 15th home run of the D
White Sox.
,
said to him (!lrst·base umpire season, tagged Tom Henke with
•
Red Sox fans In Fenway Park Tim McCileland), take the ball. his fourth loss against two wins.
surely had visions ·of dlsasll!rs It's In my glove."
The Red Sox dramatic clinch·By GENE CADDES
· Bryon Combs passed for four added run~ of 43 · and 39 yard!O.past - Bucky Dent's gameBoston was paced by the strong lng was!l't the only major story In
UPJ Sports WJtler
touchdowns and ran for another In among his 12 carries.
;•
winning homer and Bill seven-Inning perfonnance by the Amer ica n League
COLUMBUS-Ohlohlgllscbool Plymouth's.4l.OwlnoverDanbucy
A-mlssedtwo-polntconverslonlb
Buckner's game-losing grounder veteran Mike Bodd!cker, 17-8, Wednesday .
football notes from aroond the Lakeside Frlday night. Combs overtime was the difference Friday.
- when Guillen ripped a pitch and a three-run o!fenslve burst In
At · New York, Detroit's Cecil state:
completed 10 of 2l passes for 211 night as unbeaten lloardrna!t
from Jeff Reardon that had the second Inning.
Flelderl\ecamethellthplayer'ln
KevlnPorcohada careernlghtin yardsand'I'Dtosseson5, 14 ,15 and nipped No, 1 (Division Ill) Young•
- . double written all over 11.
The plleayolnf!s,halcrehmah tAc'h of the major league hls!Dbyrybetoltinhlth50I Mantua Crestwood's ~27 victory 10 yards .
stown Cardinal Mooney 17-16;
, Brun!Uisky, 'charging toward 1988 ser s w
t e . s swept homers In a season ·
g s oVt!r - streetsboro Friday . night.
Tim Plantz ran for205yards in 25 handing the Cardinals their ·first;
: the l!ne, made a sliding grab on the Red Sox, are scheduled to 50th and 51st ln. the Tigers' 10-3 Porcocarl1ed 2Stlmesfor 2S7yards carries and 8 pair of touchdowns loSs of the season.
:-the warning track out of view of begin Saturday at Fenway Park. victory over the Yankees.
8nd all seven touchdowns as the Friday night to pace Genoa to a . ~man broke a 10-lOtielnthl!\
television cameras , preservihg
Boston's victory came even as
He became the first major'
~ Devils nin their record to 6-0. . 31-18 w1n over Pemberville East- overtime on a 22-yard pass from•
. theleadandsendlngtheRedSox ~cond·placeToronto, wasflght· leaguer to hit 50 homers In a Po
had TO
· flO 291010
wood. Plantz had 'I'D runs of tWo John Ryan 'to Chris Diffley and:
II! to the American Leagu~ Cha~·lng to prolong the ra.ce In season since George Foster hit :!2 . .45, ~ and 10~! ~so 'set' up
and 31 yards. The Comets' Andy Ryan's conversion kick. Moone:{.
. plonshlp Series against the Oak- Baltlmo,! f. The Blue Jays were In 1977. He .a lso became the first final 'I'D with a pass Interception. . He~ also scored twice on nms of scored on a pass from Jolur
land Athletics . ·
taking thl,.fleld for the bottom of , American Leaguer since Yankee
Steve Frimkhouse completed 16 fl~ and 39 yards and ended the Campbell to Chuck Marbwe. &lt;&gt;n"
ot 29 passes tor 302 yards and three
night with 85 yards on nine carries. the two-point conversion try, how·
touchdowns In Galton's 27·14 w1n
Unbeaten and No. 5 ranked ever, Marbwe, on a rever!l', was
Continued from page 3
•
over Upper S&amp;ndulky Friday night. (Division I) Warren Hafdlng !a!Jkled short of the end zone by.
·championShips, too, but for. one gles. Vlrdon replaced Giusti with bases· loaded walk, but the Reds Aarm Adams caught five of tho!l' turned five Canton McKinley tur· soPhomore defensive back Jasat
scored twice off Ramon Hernan- .passes for 160 yards, Including TD novers into touchdowns Friday Trtveri.
•
heartbreaking wild pitch by the Moose .
dez
to
wi
.
n
the
game
and
'the
receptions
of
78
and
53
yards
.
night
tor
a
34-15
victocy
over
the
Probably
the
state's
most~
late Bob Moose that ended the
Moose got Cesar Geronimo on
-rv111e So uth Bulldogs. ~
rtenced overtime team this seasar
How much did Wes~
fifth and .decisive game of the a fly to deep right, and George pennant In the lOth.
Four years later, Plttsburg!J miss the . services oi all-Ohio
KelliQ' Daniels scored three flnl ~ Cambridge - played Its fourth
1972 playoffs.
Foster, pinch-running for Perez,
fans
got
even
wh
.
en
the
aging,
.
running
back
Kljana
Carler?
Friquarter
IDIICbdoWDI and p!4ed up and lost Its third extra period game
That series was by far the most took thl.1'd. Darrel Chaney
""
layln
nlyhl
188
--"-ln-...
ad Frld
_ ay night, drop'plng . a 17-14
d
lght
Car
ay n •
orr, P
go
s
Y'"""' .......- fourcard fill ID ...
"'
exciting and competitive of the · popped out and HalM'cRaecame Stargell, now called "Pops" by
•
-~•• '7 ·•"'ft-·
'"''-·
·
four.
···-··~ Valley to a ..,.
..~J decision to Union ·Local. ' ""''
"
up to pinch-bit for ~ellever Clay his younger teammates, led second .game o! the year,rushed .or
"'The
Fam-A·Lee"
to
a
three221.
yards
and
two
touchdowns
to
over
Patriot
Soudlweslern
Frlda,y
Otte8en,a!oreign
~xchangestudent:
J&gt;lttsburgh won the first game Carroll. Moose then threw the
lead the Wildcats to a 14-7 win over night. Daniels had firS-qUarter '11) from Denmark, kicked a 19-ya.nt
5-1 - In Three Rivers Stadium infamoUs wild pitch that bounced game sweep of the Reds.
Cincinnati,
however,
did
not
·
Upper Arlington. Carler, who nms of 28, 88 and 94 yardll.
.
field goal for the game-winner. :
-behind the eight· hit pitching of In front' of home plate past
!Wke MoJ'IIUI p1111aed five yanlll
· Steve Blass and Ramon Hernan· catcher Manny SanguUlen, and yield easily . It required extra mlssedthe!lrstgameafterartbros·
dez and the hitting of AI Olive~, Foster scored to give Cincinnati Innings tor the Pirates to win the roplc surgery on a knee and the last to John Realty wllb 26 llOOIIIId8
SPECIAL SALE DATES
first two games at Riverfront. three with a br&lt;*en hand, had 'I'D remaiDIDa to 1Ift tmbeaten Jadrwho was 2-!or-4 with an RBI the pennant, 4-3.
.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER
triple and a two-run homer.
The Reds swept the Pirates In Stargell produced a three-run, runs of 32 and 60 yards against to a 21·17 victory lwer Medetta
Friday nlgbl. The wiDniDI m
Cincinnati rebounded to win three games In 1970, built took 10 11th-Inning for a 5·~ victory In tough Golden Bear defense,
29 &amp; OCT. 6, 1990
Caslalla. Margaretta scored 30 came after the lrGmnen recowred
Game 2 5·3. The Reds scored four Innings for them to post a 3-0 Game 1. Dave Parker singled In
FEEDER CAnLE &amp;
alurnbleonllle11ger32wlth2:351o
of their runs ln the first to chase victory In Game 1. Their next two Omar Moreno for a 3·2, lOth· unanswered points In the second
halt Friday nlght!or a 30-14 Victory pla,y.' Jackson fullbadt Marty Ex·
Moose 'before he retired a batter; triumphs also were nail-biters Inning triumph In Game 2.
YEARLING
Back
home
at
Three
Rivers
for
over
Oak Harbor. 1lie Polar Bears line rushed for 185 yards on 32
but It was the wtnning relief work decided by 3-1 and 3-2 decisions.
TIME: 12:00 NOON
Game 3, the . Pirates. finally went ahead to stay with 11: 34Ieft In
carries.
;
.
of Tommy Hall that made .the
Cincinnati ·also swept fillS·
struck with a 7-1 triumph as their the game, 18-14, when senior
Mike Compton rushed !Or 193
AT THE GALLIPOLIS
difference. He came}n for .;rack burgh three games In 1975, but a
yards and a pair of touchdowns
:Billingham with two out II) the · 21-year- old rookie southpaw black and gold·bedecked wives linebacker David Cress scooped up
STOCKYARD CO.
Friday night )a pace unbeaten St.
·fifth, the Reds up 4·2, two Pirates named John Candelaria allowed climbed onto the dugout roof to · an Oak Harbor tumble and re.GAWPOUS,
OliO 45631
Marys Memortal to a 4~ win over ·
:on base, and a two·ball, no-strtke Pirate fans to go hGme feeling · lead the fans In a sing-along to the turned it 47 yards for a touchdown.
PHONE 446~7U2
Pirates' disco them song, Sister 1\vo more Oak Harbor fumbles !l't
ottawti.-Glandor[. Compton had 'I'D
_count on Willie Stargell. Hall got good anyway :
"
up the final two Margaretta TDs. · run o! 8? and s'lx yards and also
·the slugger on a called third
The Reds took the first two Sledge's "We Are
:strike.
games by scores'{~! 8-3 and 6-1,
Pittsburgh came back from a
but the Pirates, 'i-n,spired by
:2.0 deficit to win 3-2 In Game 3 at Candelaria's heroics, battled
:Riverfront Stadium, but Cincln· • bravely before conceding the
•nat! evened thhe series with a 7-1 pennant .In the lOth Inning by a 5-3
, thumping In Game 4. ·
·
score.
The Pirates took a 3·2lead into . Candelaria took a 2·1 lead, a
the bottom of the ninth of Game 5, one-hitter and 12 strikeouts Into ·
:and Manager Bill Virdon called the eighth and then struck out the
on right-handed-relief ace Dave next two batters for a pll!yoff·
·Giusti to protect It against the record 14 Ks. But then his control
'Reds' right-handed power hit· · Jell him: He walked plnch·hltter
ters. But Giusti proved to be Merv Rettenmund and P~te .Rose
pitched out: Joh~ny Bench ' followed with a two-run homer,
.greeted him with a score-tying.. for a a:2 lead.
·home run, and Tony Perez and
Pittsburgh tied the game In' the
~ Derils Menke followed with sin·
ninth on Rawly Eastwlck's

. owns ·
coreo scores .seven to.uchd

7

P.O. Box 339
Tuppers Plo 1nS. OH 45783
ou..J oo?-Jtet

The Daily Sentinei-Paga

.!H.,

253 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.... -

~lN0€11

2t t West S.cond Street
P.O. lox 626
Po"*ov. OH 45709

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992-6669

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-1:J

Member F.D.I.C.

Ohio

By TOM WITIIEJlS ·
UPI Sports Wrller

Prescription Shop .

Farmers.
Bank
&amp; Savings Company
-

Pomerov~ Middleport.

Boston Red Sox ·Capture AL East title;_f~ce A's Saturday

Football ;90!
Catch All The
Excitement! !

Your Bankfn~...

·FB

Thut'lday. October 4. 1990

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691 WEST aAINS nlft' ·
;oMIOY, OHIO
' ttt-2057
' C

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Page e-The Daly s-tinal

Tht.nday, October 4, 19~

Pom•ov-Middleport. ·ohiO

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

DON~T ·
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Thursday. October 4, 1990

The Daily

~inai- Page

7

ISS ·THE OKTOBERFEST .SAVINGS!!
NOW .GOING ON
AT ·

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SAVIN G·S ·

SCHEDUlE 0-F EVENTS
ETHNIC FEST ·.

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. "COME JOIN THE CELEBRATION"
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. SHOP .ALONG
THE BEAUTIFUL
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Oct. 6-VOLKSMARCH-9:00 a.m.-3:()() p).m. Po·
meroy Municipal Building, registration route
etc. Finish time 5: 00 at Municipal BuDding.
Oct. 6-Commemoratlve u:s. POSTAL CANCEL·
LATION STAMPING 9:00 a.m.·J: 00 p.m. Po·
. meroy Fire Station, Butternut Ave., one block
.
from 2nd Street.
Oct 6-BICYCLE RODEO-Bicycle checks 8:30 a.
m: $1.00 entry fee. Call 992-5005 or 992·7616 for ·
.
more Information.
·. · . '
· ··
- Children's games 12:00. Children through 4th
grade upper parking lot.
··
1: 00-"Patchwork" -English comedy &amp; music.
· BRING YOUR CHAIR.
4: 00-Kinder Parade-Wagons~ bicycles, costumes-first prize In each of these three categories-Trophy &amp; $5.00 Gift Certificate.
·
4: 00-KINDER (children) PARADE-Three cat·
egories (BICYCLE,' WAGON, COSTUME)
5: 00-Denver Rice-English Concertina arid gul·
. '
tar;
6: 00-9:00 p.m.-"Ori Tap" a German Band for lis;
tening or dancing pleasure. .. .

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· oHIO RIVER IN HISTO IC _PO EROY!

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DON'T MISS THE SUPER SAVINGS THAT WILL BE
FOUND WHEN ·YOU · SHOP WITH THESE .ME·RCHANT·s
•ANDERSON'S
•BUnONS .&amp; BOWS
-•PLEASERS

SAVE!!

ON SELECT GROUP .OF
~~~~

'

s~tt
.

•to DAYS
SAME AS
'-" CASH

'

LIVING ROOM SUITES
~ CHAIRS • SECTIONAL$·
itrlrliM, lowe, (roftmalftr anti Mort, ·
Many Ntw Stylu ond Fallrics.

SOFAS • LOVESEATS

$4 99 SOFA &amp; CHAIR

.SALE PRICED
.FROM ONLY

********

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COnn1~·

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Oct. 7-i: 00 CHECK IN CANOES.
2: 00-Canoe Race..:.stli:rt point, across from Po·
rheroy old Jr. High. Race ends at )evy. $5.00 en·
try fee .
. · · .
3: 00-Folklanders International Dance Troupe German Folk Dancers. BRING YOUR CHAIR
4: 00-Welsh Chorus (St. David's Chorus) from
Gallla &amp; Jackson Counties.
5: 00-Zucchinl Pickers-Fun with music for cildren
and adults.
Oct. 6 &amp; 7..:.European horse drawn carriage rides
during the afternoon.
'
Arts and Crafts-both days-afternoon and evenIng. Clowns, balloons and fun for everyone.

THE MORE YOU BUY
TH,MOREYOU
.

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ANDERSON'S

Soft Spots

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DINING ROOM SALE

Our aeleetion h11 never been bener. We have tile top tablae, trestl•

tables, farm tables. round and rectangular tablea. beautiful china
cabinets. hutchea and corner cupboards, Formal and everyday ttylet .

'

TAKE 20~/o OFF .

Layaway

DRESS

.,
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For

BISCUIT AND SAUSAGE

Chrietma•!

AN.D II!EG. MAXWELl HQUSE COFFEE
.

01

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AND lEG. MAXWELl HOUSE.COFFEE

.,.

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YOUR CHOICE
.

~

Sepsible prices made possible by group buying

Prices vary with stone selection
. MEMBER 'M::IA.LO'S L.t.RGEST &amp;UYING GROUP

~~PINOENT JEWU£RS C&gt;JtGAAilAJION

99 ( 1o~3~~

· Your Dependable Jewelet

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SELECTED FIOM OUI SUPER
SELECTION·
OF FALL
SHOES
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SURGE AS-and CHICKEN

;

BUY 1st PAIR at.20°/o OFF
BUY 2nd PAIR at 25°/o ·o,F
BUY 3rd PAll at 30°/o OFF

Rugged as the men who wear them~

And a whole lot more to taste .

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212 E. Main, Pomeroy

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Oiler expl!Jis December 31 . 1990

~~~==~~===
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Super .
Savings '-·
Will Be

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During

rh·
. IS
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1990·
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NOW
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SAVE THIS WEEKEND

TENNIS ·SHOES

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by LA Gear, Conw~n~, losslnl I • - . • •

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GIRLS

.

.

BOYS

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SIZE
2-7

.

REMAIItiNG ·
·sUMMU ""
MERCHANDISE

. ,'

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•••

.·•
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50°/o-7 5°/o OFF
·,

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113 COIIIT
POMEIOY, OH.
992-2054

:~

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20°/o OFF

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DRESS CLOTHES

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20°/o·· OFF

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$1
$231
$2 71
$31

19" REMOTE

25'.' REMOTE

.. COLOR PORTABLE
ONLY $299

CONSOLE

27" REMOTE
STEREO CONSOLE

. ONLY$569

' ONLY

S899

Now's the time to buy! Our sale prices are
low and the extended warrbnties are FREE. ·

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BUTTONS
AND BOW$
ttl-5177
220 lAST •liN

IMPERIAL .WALLPAPER
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Gun
Cabinets·

(Excluding Holiday!

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•LA Gear JEANS &amp; JACKETS

Oktoberfest
HOOD
F
Y
SHOES
'.
,.,••0,
' . Celebration · 21 0 lAST MAIN
992·6254

Enjoy t~e fall sports and new programs an a 1991 Sylvania Color
Tolnision. They're all on solei Plus - wit~ the purlhose of any ·
13" .to 27" Color TV 'you, receive a FREE S Year Exte'lllled Picture
Tube Warranty and a FR(( 2 Year blended Servi11 WARRANTY.

SALE I

. FALL DRESSES

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by Naturalizer, Hush Puppies, Jubil11,·
Western &amp; Nurse Mates
•Men's, Ladles &amp; Chlldrn;l

5249.00 ........ SALE
5289.00 •..•.•.:SALE
5339.00 ........ SALE
REG.. $399.00 ........ SALE

aunorts,&amp; aows

;~~;;~;;~~ ~~

Watches •••••• ~.................. 25°/o
14K Earrings ................. ~ 5°/o
Diamond. Earrings •••••••••• 2 5_0/o .·
· Necklaces ..........~ ••••...•.•.• 20°/o
Diamond Rings ~:···~·······~· 2S0(o

TELEVISION .SALE

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AT ,

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PGMEIOY'S QUAUlY SHOE STOlE

....,.

1Lac:roue loots
•Ftorsheim, ·'t
Hush Puppies &amp;
Cherok11

AUlJIO •VIDEO

WAlLAWAY RECLINER,
ROt~K-0-LOUNGERS end !!:tWIIVI=I
ROCKERS.
Beautiful fabrJ~• plus Berkline's
Limited Liftetime Warranty.

OCTOBERFEST
. SAVINGS .

I,

IIIII.
DRESS· SHOES
TOU
•Ladies Casual &amp; Dress Shoes

Found
'•

20
°/o OFF STOREWIDE
.lied Wlng .Bootl;

SYLVANIA··

·t

Chapman Shoes

"'

. 2325 JACKSON .AVI.
n. PlEASANT, W.VA.

PO.IOJ

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MIDDLEPORT

'

698 WEST MAIN

(

-"o •. 2ND

,OURJXJRYDAY ~OV( PRICES ·

""

SALE

. SPORT ·
Now with any Carhartl purchase. yi:&gt;u can
get this cu,stomlzed .1-quc;ut Carhartl Thermos•
lor just $700 plus $2.50 lor shipping and
·
. handling .' Perfect lor hot coffee and sciups
or ice cold lemonade and tea . For more
. details. stop in today.

.,,

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CASUALS
· Our most popular Family Rings. The perfect gift
for Moms and Grondmoms: Each ring is set with colorful ·
birthstones that represent each member of the family. See
these and all of our different styles in either 14K or 10K
gold and with either genuine or synthefic stones.

•

BERKLINE
.
RECLINER

BISCUIT AND BACON

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11. ft..

POUIOYI OHIO

Hunting season is
here and we've..
.· reduced the price .
on our gun ·
cabinets. Oak, pine
· and cherry

HUNDREDS OF PATTERNS. MOST
ARE PRE-PASTED, WASHABLE.

Reg. 5329 6~Gun Oak ••••• Sale.5269
Reg. 5389 6-Gun Pine ..... Sale 5309
Reg. 5429 8-gud Oak....... Sale 5349
R~. 5499 12-Gun Pine ••• Sale 5399
Reg. S$59 8-Gun Oak ..... Sale 5449

AS SEEN IN

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Featuring Teflon
coated wall
coverings, the most
exciting innovatiqn in
· all paper since .
lltrippability. E11y
clean and durable at a
value price .. The Iateat
in colora and deaigns.

Better .

4

~.
MAGAZINE

... .

r

STOlE HOURS ·
M.tday
· . 9tiO·IaOO

r...-,.s.tunlay

11~1v-.tPK I

FUINITUIE, APPUANaS, TV'$, FLOOI COVEIING

. 9:30-5:00

.

I

'Ta GuiiiiiN Appt~oent 1

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992-3671

DOWNTOWN PO.IOY, OliO

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�Thurwday, Octoba' 4. 1990

Sa awl

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'tHURSDAY
BRADJ;!URY -Revival at the
Bradford Church of Christ will be
held through Friday at 7: 30 p.m.
nightly. Evangellst.w!ll be Phil
Strunk. Nursery Is provided.

RACINE -The Racine American Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. The 1990
dues are due. Refreshments will
be served following the meeting.
FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Revival at the
Rutland Bible Methodist Church.
will -be held Friday through
Sucday at 7 p.ni. nightly with
Rev. Creed Thomas. and Wayne
Oal!On Family Singers. Rev .
Ivan M~s Invite~ the public.

CHESTER .,... The Chester
Nazarene Church will have reviREEDSVILLE - The. Olive
val through Sunday at 7 p.m .' Township Trustees will meet
(Sunday, 6 p.m.! nightly. Nelson Friday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
Perdue will be the spea~er.
Reedsville Fire}louse. ·
. REEDSVILLE - The Joppa
· Church will have revival through
Saturday with homecoming and
dinner on Sunday at 12:30 p.rri.
Th.e re will be special speakers
and singers nightly. ·
·

Back, Todd ~cln!lo, :-.t1ht taelde 1111d ceoter;
Ja&amp;OII Ba1er, right pard 1111d llllebacker; D_o ug
Ml!ler, rlpt tackle and linebacker; Steve
Barnett, left guard 1111d left tackle; and Mike
Wheeler, tackle.

EASTERN LINEMEN - These are the seven
men who lllbt It out weekly In the Irene~ for the
Eastern E&amp;,~lee varsity football team of Coach
Randy Chuitlla. Pictured are, front, l·r, Michael
Smith ttrbt ead and defensive end; and James
McD..;.lel, Rlabt · Tackle · and Deienslve Ead.

SOllTHEBN LINEM.KN - 'l'bese ellbt men ,.
tlte purple and pld are the ones fl1hling for
control of the nne of scrlmmqe each Friday
ewaln1 for Coach David Gaul'• Southem
Tornadoes. Pictured are front, 1-r, JllmlliProffttt,
tl1ht end and defeasive end; Ru-n SlnJieton,

wing pard and tight end and Sh1111e Circle, pard
and dele111lve ead. Back row, Jerry Bayman,
rl1bt tackle and deleulve tackle; Todd Barrllon,
rllhl pai-d; Kyle Wlcklbie, ceater and defe111lve ·
tackle; Kevin Grady, left guard; and Jamie
Smith, Left tackle.
·

Southern faces ·Southwestern; ·Eastem plays Oaks ~)friday
•

The Southern Tornadoes and
Eastern Eaglas wade headlong
into the season's homestretch ·
this Friday evening In area high
school football actjon, which pits
Southern against Southwestern
in Patriot and Eastern hosts Oak
Hill.
Eastern Is now 3-3 overall,
while Oak Hill Is 4-2, 3-0 In the
league.
Last week Eastern had one of
Its finest defensive games In
limiting the strong KC of!lense to
just lQ~ yards on the ground. but
KC was able to capitalize on
mistakes and put the ball In the
endzone when it needed. Overall
Eastern limited KC to just 158
total yards. ·
If Eastern hopes to pull of! a
victory In front of the hometown
crowd this week It will have to
have a stmllar defensl.ve display.
James McDaniel, · Jason
Hager, Doug Miller, Steve Barnett, Mike Wheeler, Michael
Smith, arid Todd Marcinko anchor the EHS line with McDaniel
· and Smltli on the ends.
EHS will have to look for the
likes of quarterback Allen Potter
who Is equally successful In
running the ground game and the

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Southern will have to watch ror
passing attack. Potter's favorite burst through the line for consist·
QB
Aaron McCarty and his
aerial target Is Shane Maynard, . ent short yard distance and the
favorite
receivers Kevin Kiser ·
the versatile three-sport athlete s tam in~ to go the long distance.
and
Kevin
Carter. In the back·
with very good hands and keen
Oak Hill limited North Gallla to
Kevlc
Gillman. Willy Gilfield
quickness.
just 95 total yards.
bert,
and
McCarty are the ·
Southem Game
At Palrtot, the Southern TornaLast week NG double teamed
Maynard to limit him to one
does and Southwestern Highlandcatch. but the other phases of the
ers match up well. Southern Is
OH offense picked up the slack.
. looking for Its second straight
In the opening days of football
Mlka. Simpson became the
win In an upbeat season, while
practice
for teams of all ages,
hero, catching. 7 passes for 147 Southwestern Is looking forward
many
players
are faced with the
yards, a season high lor him.
to getting back Into the win
reality
that
not
everyone can be
If that Isn't enough OH has a
column alter coming off a 38-7
the
quarterback
or the heir to his
. tough ground game, although ·· loss to Symmes Valley .
crown:
somewhat alling In recent weeks.
Southern defeated Hannan
Bill Potter, fullack, Rob AdkinTrace 28-0 last week.
Not everyone can be in the
s,and Phil Kuhn can all move the
Southern Is 2-4 and Sou·thwest- backfield
either, thus some folkS
ball well In addition to the
ern also 2-4.
running abllitlas of Allen Potter.
No matter what, one can't are sent to the proverblal"llne'';
not an ancient form of punish· But, OH, as Its record shows,
count a Jack James Coached ment,
but the heart of any
can be beaten.
·
team out of the bunt, however, If !ootbatr team; A place that
Eastern has the catalyst to do
SHS ever had an opportunity to
a lot of guts and little
so In a line backfield run by ' end a good seauon with big signifies
glory.
·
junior Wes Holter. Freshman
results, lhls should be a good
R9bert Reed last week got the
start. .
.
•
start and was 5 for 9 for 49 yards,
· Last week Southwestern tal·
Unfortunately, being a linewhile hlttlng targets Mike Smith,
lie!} Just 110 total yards, 67 on the men Is not ~lorlous, but It can be
Chad Savoy, Holter, and· Tim
grOund and ' 55 In the air: The "lots of flin. II Is a position that
Bl~sell.
·
Southern defense on a given night provides a lot of satisfaction far
Blnell, one of the area leaders
Is capable of malntalnlcg those the ' Individual that . consistently
In rushing, tallied 172yards on I8 numbers, bu't must watch out tor manhandles his competlto1- on "
carries, Including one 84 yard
the big play potential that has the other side .of the 'line' .
ramble. Bissell has the speed to · hurt them In the past.
The Importance of a line and Its

The· high flying Wallston
. Golden Rockets will soar Into ·
Pomeroy Frlpay night to play the
Meigs Marauders In a key
· ··
Tri-Valley match-up.
The Rockets are 5-1 on·the year
· and 5-0 In the TVC. The only loss
for coach Bill Fyffe's crew was a
season opening 33-14 setback to
arch rival Jackson. The Ironrnen
currently sport a 6·0 record.
The Rockets welcome back
seven starters on offense and.
etgpt on defense from last year's
4·6 team.
The Golden Rockets run out of
the · veer set and sport a very
qulck-hl\ting offense, The quar• terback for Wellston is- Junior
Shawn Buescher, 162 pouilder,
who started. the last four games
for Wellston and threw for over
100 yards In three of his starts.
Chris Vartin· a 6-2, 188 Junior
and Mike Rlppeth a 5-7,144Junlor
will lead the Rockets on the
ground. Martlnreturnsfronllaut
years team where he rushed tor
624 yards In 138 carries.

also come close to breaking Hudson blocked a punt and
klckofi returns on more than one returned It 11 yards for the other
score.
occasion.
l',felgs hold a 15-4-l edge In the
Junior quarterback Jeremy·
Phalln has had· an outstanding serlas that dates back to when
this year throwing for 705 yards both teams were In the SEOAL.
this year and. eight touchdowns. Last years games was a classic,
Last week Jeremy showed thai played In a sea or mud acd a·hard
ttie area defenses have to respect rain from the sforrns !rom
him as a runner, as he carried
two times tor 33 yards Including a ~~c~~:u~~h~~ ~~r~~~~
Wellston 25-19-ln four ove~ltmes
25 yard touchdown.
Tight end Shawn Hawley Is the on Frank Blakes nine yarcii,run.
A win lor the Marauders'• wlll
Marauders leading reclaver, the
junior has hauled In six of put Meigs right back In the TVC
Phallns ' scoring tosses . Kevin title hunt as the Rockets still
Musser, Robby Wy11,tt, and Matt have.ioplay Nelsonville-York on
Haynes has also had good sea- the road and host VInton County.
A big crowd should be on hand
sons. Other threats for the
Marauders are Kurtis English · as It will be the Marauders
Homecontmg. In pregame ceand Eric Heck.
The Marauder defense has had remonies either Missy Nalsori,
outstanding games ln the win· ~is ten Sian ley, Tara Humph·
ning •streak scoring fl~e touch- reys, Jennifer Taylor or Kristen
Terry McGuire paced the.Ma· downs In those three games, in · Slawter will be crowned MHS
rauders on the ground early' this · last. week's 44-18 win over Fed- Homecoming Queen for 1990.
year has shown conslstentcy all eral Hocking, defensive tackle · Homecoming ceremonies will
year. Last week, McGuire Bill Anderson recovered a tum- get under way at 7 with the
rushed tor 36 yards In only four ble In the Lancer endzone !or one kickoff at 7: 30 from Bob Roberts
Field In Pomeroy.
carries. The speedy junior has six pointer land freshman Heath

The offensive line returns tour
of six. starters Including seniors
Kory Dever (6-3, 222) and Ken
Frisby (5·7, 211) at the tackles;
senior Brian Jolley (6-0, 185) at
guard and tight end Glenn Bryan
a 6-2, 236 pound sen19r.
On defense the Rockets return
the enttralline and all but one
linebacker.
The Marauders come Into this
week's game winners of their last
three, probably the biggest rea' son for that Is the fact ·that the
maroon and gold are healthy.
. The Meigs offense has kicked
In high gear the last three weeks
after struggling early. Frank
Blake who Is over the Illness that
slowed ·him early In the year .has
rushed for 243 yards In the last
two games In 31 carries an
average of 7.8 yards a pop.

Hurricanes can't swallow Seminoles

Bait State 17 •Mtaml (Ohlol13
'Boston College 14 Rutgers 10
Wllard of Odds
·Bowling a.... 38 onto UnMnlty 1
'I!Ucknell21 TOWIOil Stele 12
Egad, friends! The piece de resis- 'California 29 San Jooe Stele 27
tance this Saturday will be served up 'Cifmson 20 a-g~a 14
'in the Orange Bowl. The Miami Hur· Cotori!Cio 33 "Mfllourt 1
ricanes are ready 10 renew their • Colo&lt;ado Still 42 Utah 22
fierce intrastate rivalry with form!- Cornetl24 •HIIVItd 21 ·
dable Florida State (on CBS-TV).
"Florida 22 Loolltl.,. State 18
These were two of the bMt teamaln Aorlda State 28 "MI8ml (Ftorfdlll24
. college football in the 11101. Miami . Fr-o Stata 27 • Northern 1Ainoll .11
won nallonal .tilles in 11113, 1167 and
21 Virginia Mlllt.ry 22
1PI9. Florida State flnlofted either a-gte
'FurmanTecll21
'Maryl8nd 18 .
second or third in the Jl!ltional rank· •Grambling 31 Atebeina A&amp;M 30
inp in 1987.1t88 and 118P. .
"Haw11141 Milne 27 ·
Whatever tbe Mlami·FSU series HOly Crou 35 o.rtmouth 14
ladla In loncevlty Is more than made HOUlton 42 ·a.ytor 21
up lor In llltenslty. The teams flnt llllnot128 •onto Stet,22
met In Miami In lt~l. witb tbe 'Canel lndfln.l 48 •Nonnuu .... n 12
wlnnlag, 3~13. To date, Miami boldl "Iowa Still 26 KIIIIU 21
the edge, 11·1~. against the Seminoles. Llll)'eltl 21 •eoturnbll8
Bat·FSU won last year in Tallaha" re, • Long a-n St. 28 New Mexico St. 24
Z4-10. banding tlte Hurricanes their • Loulavltle 3-4
14
ooly lOA on the way 10 lhe national •Mal'llllll 38 Georgi~ Soutnein 23·
cllampiOIIIhip.
·
· Michigan 41 "WIIconlln 18
"Miclltgan s- 35 1ow11 25
) 'Millllllppl-38 Ken1ucfcy 27
SATURDAY. Oct. 8
Nebrllka 41' "Kanlu 8 - 14
• N1 Force 24 Navy 7
•Not,. 0..... 38 Sianlord t7
, _ . 21 ·sw Louleiana 14
North Carolina 18 "Wake FONII t5
Atll0nl28 ·ucLA 15
"N. C•olna St. 41 Applleclllan St. 21
• Alt&lt;an- 33 T - Chrtollan 20
•North T - 28 Soulfltm Matflodlll20
•Atflty24 Duke2t
Oklah!lma 42 "Oklll!oma Sllte 10
• Auburt1 35 Loulllaria Tecll 18
45 Utah State 7
By Maj. Amos B Hoople

·o.-

"'\,
,.

TVC standings

TVC Football staadlnp
(All Games) .
• Princeton 31 Brown 30
Team
W L
P
OP
Purdue 32 Mln0111101a 29
Wellston ........... , 5 . 1 164 75
•Southern Cal 49 WUhlngton State 35 Belpre .. ...... ....... 4 2 102 ·51
Southern Mloalaaippl30 • E. Carolina 21 VInton ............... 4 · 2 189 98
Syracuu 24 'Varid..-bllt 21
Nels-Y9J'k..., .... .. .. 3 3 198 112
Taxu 28 •RICe 8
MelgsS .....: ........ 3 3 149 152
.'TOKU MM 21 TeKU lec;n \1 .
Trimbie ............ : 3 3 106 82
•Totec~o 28 Eutern Michigan 23
. Miller ........ :....... 2 4 46 185
Tuline 34 •Memphil Stat-_ 3,J.o
Alexander ... .. .... 1 5 20 152
'UNLV 35 Cal $tat•Fullertbfn 26
UTEP 27 •New MexicO 23
Fed-Hocking .. .... 1 5 30 234
Wlllllngton 31 •AriZona State 20
Fl:ki&amp;J'• cames:
Wilt Virginia 25 'Virginia Tecll23
Meigs at Wellston
' Wyoming 36 San Diego Stile 20
Federai Hacking at Nels-York
·va~e 24 Colgate 11
Trimble at Miller
·
County
at
Alexander
Vinton
("ltiOtMTum
• Pennsytvanla

can be a lot of fun

linemen has never been quest!·
oned, however, the lineman hasno place on the stat sheet,
especially the hard-working of·
fenslve lineman.
·

. Coach David Gaul of Southern
also knows the Importance of a
strong front line and commends
his Tornado crew for doing the
Job up front, giving the new look
SHS offense a chance to get
things ·In motion.

Defensive linemen sometimes
get some recogn'ttlon. but which .
Eastern's linemen .a re Michael ·
way the other team runs, and the
Smith,
James McDaniel, Todd "
strength of various sides of the
Marcinko,
Jason Hager, Doug ·.
line somellmes limit th'e number
Miller,
Steve
Barnett, and Mike .
of chances a player has to make a
Wheeler. ·
tackle. Much of the. time It Is a
matter of being In the right place
Southern's linemen are Jerry
at the right time.
Hayman, Todd Harrison, Kyle
· Coach Randy diurllla of EUt·
.Wickline, Kevin Grady Jamie
ern commends his ltrie for their
Smith, Jamie Proffitt, Russell
effort this season. Sometimes
Singleton, and Shane Circle.
going against mi!C!t bigger foes
Like a back, you don't seethelt .
the EHS front line has held Its
!aces, but more often or not you
own and been ' a big 11art · of
know they·are there, doing their
Eastern's comeback season with
Jobs fallhtully on each snap. The
a relatively young team.
notorious lineman.

..

OUR BIGGEST SALE EVER

.2 DA~S

ONLY!

•'

Carry Sale

.30f)/o·60°/o OFF
"EVERYTHING

Slitulerella meets ·

Benjamin J. Sol; M.DI
Obstetrics and Gynecology
Trained in Childbirth and Women's Disease&amp; .
Both Medical and Surgical

![or f.fppointment, Ca£t675-3400
Montilly-1ritfay, 9 a.m. · 5 p.m.
•

PVH Medical Office Building
Suite 215, Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV
ID OB-GYN
Practice eiDce 1975
.,

lltU.l!!!JLllftl.l

•

ts

IT'S OUR BIRTHDAY' AN·D .
YOU GET . THE PRESENTS!
•

You're Invited To
Our Silver Anniversaey
Celellration •
.
.

'

,.

..

.

•

You'll have Fun, Fun, Fun at Peoples BWk's Silver Armiversary Celebration!
. Wake Up, Uttle Susie· Come to the Party! Monday, RockTober 1st through
____, Saturday, RockTober 6th at all three Peoples Bank locations.

•

There'll be mu&amp;Ic to remember, free Coke and popcorn, birthday cake, music on the Jukebox, free
·b,alloons, a special "Birthday" CD. recqrd-breaking rates on car loan~. free candy, car-hops, and dozens of
door prizes~ including:
..

PILLOW

ARM
SPECIAl

A $500 Shopping Spree on your Peoples Bank Visa or Mastercard!
Free Club Checking for a year!
Interest on a Million Dollars for a day! ·
A Free Payment .on yotir Peoples Bank Mortgage Loan (Up to $500)1
U.S. Aiilertcan Eagle Silver Dollars!
A Free Peoples Bank Safe Deposit Box for a year!
Last day to regiSter for door prizes IS Friday, October 5th.

•

And we'll kick off our party with a FREE Concert by
Phil Dirt and the Dozers at the Point Pleasant High School Gym
on Monday, RockTober 1st at 8:00. p.m.
Good Golly. Miss Molly! Peoples Bank is having a party!
An old-fashioned soda shop reco/d hop- aild you're invited. .
Don't Walk Away, Reriee •• come andjoin usl Do Wah Diddy Dlddy, Da Doo Rgn Ron!

FISH FRY

Hl\PPY BIRTHDAY TO U~ ... THANK~ Td YOU!

MIDDLEPORT FilE DEPARTMENT

.· SATURDAY, OCT. 6
FISH SlftDWICHES..:..$1.50
SEIYING IEGiftS AT 10:30 A.M.
.r

MASON
778·5514

POINT PLEASANT
675-1121
Member F.D.I.C.

NEW HAVEN
882f2135

..

the Riverboat Inn in Middlepot!
for a potluck diMer and party. In ·
order to get Into the party, .
motorcyclists will be required to :
donate a new toy or pay $5 to go •
towards the Christmas benefit. :
In early November the group
plans to put canisters Into business places orthe county with the
contrlb.utlons to go toward the ·
prC?Ject.

An Old·F•shioned Soda Shop Reeord Bopf

FRIDAY &amp; SA-n.DAY-OPEN 9 A.M.·6 P.M.

~n

'

•
•

IWHILE QUINTinES LIST)

Cash

..

' POMEROY - T)le Romeroy
· POMEROY - The Spiritual
· Group ·or A.A. and AI-Anon will Faith Church will be having a
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the benefit yard sale at the home of
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Lula ·Schaffer, Dark Hollow
Call 1·800·333-5051 tor more · Road, Pomeroy, on Friday. Saturday and Monday from 9a .m. to
. infomiatlon.
4p.m.
POMEROY .,... The XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma P,hi
SATURDAY
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7
BURLINGHAM - The Burp.m. In the conterence room of lingham- Modern Woodmen will
the Senior Clt~ns Center. Bring l!ave a fish and chicken dinner
necklaces. Rush party has been and bake sale on Saturday from
postponed.
11 a .m . to7 p.m. Proceeds will go
toward a new roof , on the.
COOLVILLE - The Bethel Burl!ngham Community Church.
· Church will . be hOlding a yard
sale on Baker Street in Coolville
SALEM CENTER - The Star
on Thursday and Friday begin- Grange and Star Junior Grange
·
ning ·a t 9 a.m.
will meet In regular session on
Saturday at ·8 p.m. at the grange
TUPPERS PLAINS - The hall. Refreshments will be
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 7053 served.
Ladles Auxiliary will meet
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m.
BASHAN - The Bashan La·
·dies Auxiliary will have a smorCOOLVILLE- The Lottrldge gasboard dinner on Saturday
Community Center will have a from 5-8 p.m. at the Bashan Fi~
. potluck dinner on Thursday at 6 House. Cos tis $4.50 for adults and
· p.m. followed by the · regular $2 for children 11nder 12.
meeting. The center Is located on
Athens County Road 53 S. five
REEDSVILLE.-Therewillbe
miles west of Coolville. .
a· yard .an\1 bake sale at the
Reedsville Fire House on Satur·
RUTLAND - The Rutland day from 9:30 a.m. ·to 5 p.m.
Township Trustees will meet In sponsored by the Faith Gospel
· regular .session on Thursday at Ladles Circle. They will be
6: 30 p.m. ft the fire station. The serving hot soup, hotdogs, pie,
public Is Invited to attend.
' pop and coffee. Eat In or bring

The annual toy run of the Meigs
County Motorcyclists will be held
at 11 a.m. Saturday.
.
own container.
FOREST RUN - The Forest
The group will corigregate on
Run United Methodist Church
Pleasers parking lot .and leave
· PORTLAND - 'I'he Portland will celebrate Its 75th .anniver!rom there for a trip through
PTO Fall Carnival will he held
sary on Sunday. Regular servl·
town. The toys will go to the
Saturday featuring the .group cas, 9 a.m.; carry-In dinner,
Salvation Army tor thetr annual
"Sliver Whigs. " Serving will 12:30 p.m. ; special anniversary
proJect of remembering children
begin at 5· p.m.
program , 1:30 p .m. }'ubllc Is · at Christmas.
Invited.
·
Following the cruise around ·
HENDERSON ~ The Gallla
town, the motorcyclists will go to
Twirlers Western Square Dance
POMEROY - The annual
Club will hold a dance Saturday homecoming pi the United Faith
•
from 8·11 p.m. at the Henderson Church, Route 7 bypass, PomeCommunity Center, Henderson,
roy, will be Su!lliay with worship
In the Tuesday night Mason
W.Va. Jim Wilbur will be the at 11 a.m., basket dinner at noon
.
Class,
Carol McClure lost the
caller.
and gospel sing at 2 p.m.
most
weight
·and the runner up .
featuring the New Gabriel
was
Lots
Ann
Reltmlre. In the
MIDDLEPORT - There will Quartet, Harvest Trio,' Johnson
Biil!by
Jo McClure
teen
class,
be a hymn sing at the Middleport Family. and other local talent,
lost
the
most
weight
and Angela
First Baptist Church on Saturday · Public Is Invited.
McClure was 11\e runner up.
at 6: 30 p.m. Jan and Kathy and
Next week's class will hokl .a
The Children of God will perGALLIPOLIS _:. The River
diet dish dinner.
form. Fellowship wi'll follow. Valley Her))allsts will meet SunNew members are being ac·
Rev. James A. Seddon Invites the day at Bob Evans Restaurant at 1
cepted
Into the classes.
·
public.
p.m . for lunch and a tour of Cora
Mill Antiques and Herb Crafts on .
POMEROY - "Star Trek: Cora Mill Road near Rio Grande.
City on the Edge of Forever' •will
lie presented at the Meigs County
SYRACUSE ~ A chicken bar· Public Library In Pomeroy on becue will be held at the Syracuse
Saturday at 2 p.m.
Fire Department 0n Sunday at-11
a.m. Cost Is $3.50. Desserts are
SUNDAY
extra. All proceeds go to building
HEMLOCK GROVE - Home- lund. Menu Includes half
coming at the Hemlock Grove chicken, baked beans, toll and
Church will be held Sunday.
coleslaw.

18 Lelqh 12

•!'«M&gt; Stile 35 Temple 15

-r-

"·

· finally p~t It all together to play a
threats.
complete game of four minute
Southern has steadily • linfootball, the way the are capable
proved all -J~easori long. They
showed some class and charac· · of playing.
Southern's Todd Grindstaff
ter In a five overtime win over
was the big ground gainer with .
Ironton St. Joe and last week

Being a lineman

Meigs to -host high-flying Rockets
BY DAVE HARRIS

_....&lt;

BURLINGHAM - The Bedford Lodl · Township History
Group will meet Friday at 7 p.m .
at the Modern Woodmen Hall.
Anypne Interested may "tend.
Bring h\Story related Items.

OaiiV Sentinel-Page 9

Annua{ toy run set Saturday

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear tWo daqa be.lore an event
and tl'ie day of thai event. ~!lis
m1111t be received In advance to
Insure publication In the
calendar.

1

The

Pomeroy-Middleport. .Ohio

�•

,.

I

'

Paga 10-The

Fatnily medicine...·--,-~By_J_oh_n_c._~_ol_'f,_v._o.
QUESTION - I would Uke to
know how tbe federal govern:
men I decides If a medlcatlon.wlll
be sold as a prescription medication or as a non-prescription one.
I thpnk that It Is particularly
curious that Ibuprofen (sold
under brand names like Advll,
Nuprln and Motrln) Is sold In the
200 mg slrengtb without a prescription but with directions tci .
take two. Four hundred mllll·
gyam strength of Ibuprofen ll; a
prescription-only medication.•
ANSWER ~ Tile ways of the
(ederal government seem a bit
mysterious. to most of uu. Tlie
O.s. Food and Drug Admlnlstra·
tion (FDA) Is resjlonsible for
overseeing the safety of our
n~tlon's !o~ products and medl·
cations. Tlie Food, Drug and
Cosmetics Act defines the opera.
tton of the FDA and establishes
panels of experts who advise the
FDA. Each group reviews · the
products that are Within Its area
of exper,tl$e on an ongoing basis .
Products deel!1ed safe and generally used to ·treat Illnesses that
the average citizen could be
expected to accurately diagnose
are made available Without a
prescription. Medications used
tt&gt; treat lllnesses that generally
~ulre a physician's exl'!!rtise to

diagnose accurateiy, or those
and proven benefits of the
medication were a part of the
with some potential to prpduce
reasons that the FDA allowed
undesirable side effects, are only
marketlngthe200mgslrengthas
available with a presCription.
In addition to the . regular
a non-prescription product. The
review of medications by the !100, 600 and 800 milligram
FDA panel, manUfacturers of sn-eng!hs remain as prescription
medications must submit to the
drugs, even though they are the
FDA a request to market their same · medication· as the nonproduct. lengthy .scientifiC stu·
prescription 200 mg Ibuprofen.
dJes evaluating the benefits and · The higher strengths aren't ·
side eHects of the medication are
available without prescription
a part · of thll; process. The
because taking Ibuprofen In
company also IndiCates If It
larger amounts can cause probthlnks the medication should be · lems, and the medical conditions
marketed as a prescrlptton or · that need these higher doses
non-prescription product. So the
require a physician's care.
drug manutacturer'srecommeli·
You also asked about the
·dation Is an Important part of the
seeming contradiction of having
declslon-ma,king process th\11
recommended dosage of two 200
determines whether or not a • mg pllls for over-the-counter
prescription is needed to pur·
lbuprofenbutnotallowingthe400
chase a particular product.
mg pills to be purchased without
The FDA panel of experts
a prescription. This Is a very
examines all proposals and · g,ood question. The answer has
judges them. against established
m9re to do With psychology than ·
policies - whether they started
with science or logic. The FDA
panels inust consider the strange
as part of the. agency's periodic
review process, or as.theresult of 'notions some peoplidtave abOut
taking medications.
a dtug company's request for
For Instance, soine people feel
approval of a new medication.
The medication that you men- · that If a llttle Is gOpd, a iot Is
lion, Ibuprofen. Is a good exam-' · better- so they take more than
pie of this process.
the package directions recomIbuprofen bas, been available
mend. If the IOl mg strength of
Ibuprofen was taken two, three or
for many years as a prescription
produc~. 'Ole long safety record
four at a time, serious compllca-

1990

Octoblr

Ohio

October 4, '1990

local women iake
Wisconsin Dells tour

Pictures
are sought

Ohio University
CoUege of Osteopathic Medicine

Familr ·
Medicine

The Meigs County Pioneer and .
IUstDrlal Society will be copying
photos for the new Pictorial
·HistDry of Meigs County on
Monday evening from 7·9 p.m .
john C. Wolf, D.O.
and· Wednesday ·afternoon from
1-4:30 p.m.
Associate Professot
Photos are needed of grist and
of Family Medicine
saw mills on Leading Creek, all
ihe' advertisements to branches of Shade River, Kingslions could result. So, the FDA
has limited the non-prescription " tlnd truly helpful products. These bury Creek, the Adams, Cross,
strength oflbuprofen to 200 mg to · things have changed·. The FDA Portland and any other mills that
protect us from the results ofthls
has been a major factor .In the eXisted In the county. ·
Other. types of pictures needed
Increased satety of the medlcakind of thinking. Pseudoephedrlne, hydrocortisone and other
tlons avallable to the citizens of ,are blackumlth, harness and
tannery shops; · road building;
products are available in non· our country.
If you would like more informa- early bridges; Sunday School
prescription and prescription
lion about the FDA~ write: !food picnics; dedications; bands; ball
strengths for much the same
reasons.
and Drug Administration, &lt;!flee teams; lumbering; harvesting;
I'm glad lhal the fDA does an . of Consumer Affairs, 5610 haymak!ng; maple and cane
effective job of ensuring the
Fishers Lane, Rockville , MD sugar making; bu tcherlng; lee
wagons; early mining; salt
quality of our foods and medica- 20857.
works; and vllla,ges. Anything
tions. Before the FDA was
"Famlly Medicine" Is a
that pertains to Meigs County
.es tabllshed, the shelves of every
weekly column. To submit ques- · history over 50 years ago Is
store were · fllled with' patent
.
lions, wrtte to John C. Wolf, D.O., nl!elled. ·
medications, wondrous medical
For further lnforlliatlon, call
· gadgets of no value, and unsafe · Ohio University College of Osteo·
food, along with good products. It .pathlc Medicine, Grosvenor the Meigs COunty Museum .at
992-3810.
was 11early Impossible to wade. Hall, Athens, Ohio 45701.

Cruises of the Wisconsin River
Whlle In Wisconsin Delis, the
with walking tours of tbe Dells group stayed at the lovely Inn of
were one of the activities enjoyed the Dells wbere they were
by members and guests or the
treated to a Speciality Dinner one
Daughters of America as they evening, the menu consisting of
toured Sept. 11-15. The sandstone foods famous to the area. An
cliffs displayed various species evening at the Wisconsin Opklry
·of ferns and . other greenery · with live country milslc was also
dotted with waterfalls.
well received by the group.
Watching the world famous ·
At nearby Spring (;reen, Wis.,
Wisconsin cheese . being made a tour to the well-known Holiseon
w~ 8111nterest1ngth1ng to see as
the Rock proved to be a hlgbllght
the group rode · througb the of tbe trip. The design of tbe
countryside and observed the house built on a 60 foot ~lgh rock
many beautiful farms along the clltf, was fUied with various rare
way.
books, paintings, furalture and
A stop In Reedsburg was made room size music machines. The
to observe over 4000 paintings on complex surrounding the house
display at the Norman Rockwell featured the world's largest
Museum. COvers on the Saturday carousel with 20,000 sparkllng
Evening Pos I as well as a video of lights and animals seven
the famous artist's life were also abreast.
·
featured. ·

P~ople

contest held for the carnival were
announced this week, Each
·WJnnerwlll receive a ribbon and
a ·Cash award from the Chester
PTO. Winners in first, second,
and third places were as follows:
In session 1 of the kindergarten
Class, the winners were Carrie
Crow, Jason Kimes and.Jennifer
Thoma. In session 21the winners
were Miranda Buckley, Nicole
Honaker and John Curtis.
In the flrst grade the winner
were Jon Louks, Michael Taylor
and Tiffany Hensley, John
Krawsczyn.

Jeae

Winning the second grade were
J\111 Bailey, 'Vada McBane, R.J.
Gibbs and. Tiffany Hollqn.
Third grade . winners were
Chris' Krawsczyn; Scot Needs
and Molly Heines.
Fourth grade winners were
Angle Taylor, Matt King and
Melody Lawrence.
In the fifth grade winners ware.
Bethany Cook, Renae Pooler and
Kelll Bailey.
Winning In the sixth grade
were Lisa Stethelli, Robbie
Reeves and Laura Eastman.

'

.· POST CONTEST WJNNEBS -

Wlanen Ia &amp;be
theater Elemeatary Sebool Fall Clll'lllval Poster
~ate.t for ldlldercartea
&amp;be t111n1 IJ'8Cie
were, front, 11ffaay Be...aey,
KraW.C.JD,

.Jo• Loulrs, Mlcbael Taylor, Nicole Boaaker, John
Cl1111s, Mll'llllda Buckley. Back, Mo@Y Heines,
SooU Needs, .JuU Bailey, Tlffanyl(oUoa, Vada
MeBane, IU. Glbbll.

The La-Z-Bo ·All the
Comforts
o
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comfortable price! ·

'

.

.

Quirks
.. the news

in

:Elec&amp;loa raises grave conceru

'

Melody Lawrence, Matt King, Bethany Cook and
Kelli Bailey. Back, Laul'll Easlrnan, Usa
. Slethem, Ranae Pooler and ADgle Taylor.

GUYMON, Okla. (UPI) - A
Judge has been lying In his grave
since August but his supporters
say the dead jurist Is the best
available cho.lce.
Sam Fouquet of Guymon,
chairman of a group called The
Friends of Frank·ogden In Texas
County, said Tuesday more than
a dozen people ar~ serving on an
OI(Jahollia Panhandle committee
bac;king Ogden's posthumous ree'!!c;tton to the state district
Judgeship.
{ "lnvestlgate the two candl· .
dates and you rillght find In this
cue the dead man Is a better
candidate," Fouquet said.
Ogden, who served the fourcounty district since 1917, died In
August . after flUng for re·
election.
His timing• was i&gt;oor: He died
too. late to have his name
removed from the Nov. 6 general
election ballot.
The only candidates on the
ballot are Ogden and Josh J .
Evans.
It lnltlally appeared that .
Ogden's death would clear the
way ~or Evans' election, but
supporters of the deceased Judge
are: urging voters to cast their
ballots for Ogden.
Fouquet said ogden's reelection would result In a decla·
ration of vacancy. followed by a
Judicial nominating committee's
statewide advertisement for applicants. He . said Ibis would
pro(luce a gubel:Diitorlal apjlolnt·
mel! I for a Judge lit the district. ·

..

Gragan birth·is ·announced
. Pat and Kristin (AndersOn)
Gragan, Marietta, are announcIng the birth of their second c hlld
Jared Michael, on Sept. 19 at st:
Joseph's Hospital In Parkersburg, W.Va.
The lnt6n t weighed 10 pounds
11 ounces and was 23% Inches
long.
Maternal grandparents are
Gene and Jennifer Jewell, Le-

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FIVE GENEa.,.TIONS - Gatberll~&amp; lor the 87th bllihday . of '
Battle Salser; Mansfield, 811d a five generation photo are Carla , ,
Browning, daughter of Carl Chlcl!esk!r, grilndfather, both of
Reedsville; Battle Saller, great rreat grandmother, . Violet .•
Bauman, rreat crandtilotber, of Howard; and twins, Bridget and
Brandon Browning.

Sf'ORS~

McMIIIIonalre on easy street
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) -"
An 80-year.,old government retiree ate breakfast, lunch and
dinner at McDonald's, watched a
little television that night and
woke up a McMilllonalre the next
day. ·
.,
.Chester Dorough received a
winning ticket worth $8 million In
the McDonald's and NBC McMllllons contest Monday at one of the
company's restaurants In the
Birmingham Suburb of Tarrant.
The winning ticket was confirmed by McDonald's Tuesday.
Qorough retired In 1961 after 33
years of employment with SOcial .
Security in Alabama. He has
been receiving a $1,277 Social
Security check each month, but
· within. the next 30 days, he'll be
given hll; first $264,000 Installment of his winnings.
He or bls heirs will continue to
receive a $264,000 check each
year for the next 30 years.
I. Dorough said he routinely eats
at McDonald's twice a day, but
Monday .he ate breakfast, lunch.
and dinner there, keeping all
three of the contest cards he
received with his meals.

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Dollar opens lower in Europe

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Quirks in
the news

By REBECCA KOLBERG.
UPJ Science Writer
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
study of thumb sucking among
fetuses show~ the tendency to be
left-handed may start In the
womb, researchers reported.
About 10 percent of the adult
population Is left-banded, and
scientists have long debated
whether tbat preference stems
from genetic factors or Is caused
by some kind of InJury, perhaps
occurring du,r lng birth. Now,
Irish researchers said Wednesday they have found evidence.
some fetuses display a preference tor , sucking their \eft
· thumbs as early as 15 weeks after
conception.
Using ultrasound to examine
the fetuses of 224 women who had
normal pregnancies, the researchers found 12 of the 224
·fetuses.- or about M percent - .
favored their left thumb. The
posltio'Ds of the fetus In the womb
had no effect on thumb
LONDON (UPI) - Tlie U.S. 31.76 Belgian francs vs. 31.88, and
- preference.
dollar
opened mostly lower 1,156 Italian lire vs. 1162.15.
Follow-up observatiOns or 17
Thursday
against the major
Earner In Tokyo, the dollar
fetuses Indicated ''preference for ·
E!lropean currencies In the wake slipped against the yen to Its
a partlcula~ thumb Is maintained
·of comments by U.S. Federal lowest close In 19 months. ·
during pregnancy," · the reReserve he~d Alan Greenspan · The U..t. unit closed at 135.90
.. searchers said:
s~,~ggestlng a lower U.S. Interest
yen, doWh from 136.65&amp;1 the close
rate.
·
In a Jetter published In the
·
Wednesday.
'British jounlal Nature, Peter
In London, the pound gained
It was the lowest closing rate
Hepper and bls coneagl!es from
marginally against the U.S. unit, since May 5, 1989, when the dollar
Queen's University of Belfast · opening atdlrsl.9010againstdlrs ended at 135.80 yen.
said their study "demonstrates
1.9005 at the close Wednesday.
The Greenspan remark at a ·
for the first time the 'exls tence of
In Frankfurt, markets reo- congressional hearing that u.s .
behavioral asymmetries before
pened followiiiiJ a one-day boll- Interest rates would decline after
birth."
day marking German unification a budget &amp;gti!fil.ent was reached
Furthermore, the work raises
and dollar dropped· to 1.505 sparked Tokyo tradln&amp; In the
questions about theones that leftGerman marks aplnst 1.55'19 .
dollar.
handedness Is a result of Injury
The dollar opened , sJJahtly
''Forelp InVestors mainly
and "supporta (elletlc explanahillier In Zurtcb at 1.2860 SWiss IOld tbe dollar on Greenspan's
tions of u'ndedness," the refrancs from 1.28ll0.
comment," said Mutazu Kim·
The dollar opened lower In ura, • · curreacy dealer at DalBearcbera 111d.
Dr, Stal)ley Coren, a UniwrParis, Brussels and .Milan, at Ichl Kangyo Bank.
. slty of British Col!mlbla psycho!- . 5.1645 French francs vs. 5.1980,'

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tart, W.Va., and Bill &lt;and Jean
Anderson, Stoutsville. Maternal
great grandparents are Mary
Elizabeth and Geqrge Morris,
Pomeroy; and Esther Hardie.
Marietta.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Audrey Gragan, Alton,
Md.
'fhe couple has another si&gt;n,.
Andrew.

now authorized to fill .your
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Hines,
Ina Harr, Dorothy Hawk, Eliza·
heth Hayes, Opalllollon, Marcia
Keller, · Faye Kirkhart, · Janie
Lawson,. ·Virginia Lee, Mae
McPeek, Ethel · Orr, Pauline
Rldenour,Lllllan Stalnaker, :VIrginia Stalnaker, Sharon Swartz,
Thelnia White, Eloise Woods and
Jo Ellen Woods.

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Left-handedness
may
.
begin in the.womb

'

.

EnrouiJ! to and from the Dells,
the ~stayed overnight In the
Chicago area.
Tour members and guests
were Mary Andrews, Ada Bissell, Nancy Bond, Eileen Clark,
Erma Cleland~ Arlene Crider,
Brenda Cunningham, Bonnie
Dalley, Jean Frederick, Charlotte Grant, Dorl, Grueser,

Huron wants Loch Ness fame
HURON, Oblo (UPI) - U It
worked for Loch Ness, officials In
Huron on the shores of Lake Erie
figure It can work for them.
Huron City Council members
will consider a measure next
week that would designate the
clty4s the National Live Capture
and COntrol Center for the Lake
Erki Monster.
The alleged monster has raised
eyebrows and skepticism across
the state this summer with
slghtings reported from the Sandusky area to Erie, Pa. The
slghtlligs describe a Sllllke-llke
creature about 35 feet long
moving along the surtace.
Two firefighters In Huron
claimed they saw something they
didn't recognize while standing
In a condominium several weeks
ogist who has studied left- . ago.
.
handedness for 20 years, called
The slghtlngs prompted the
the findings "a cute,llttle study" owner of Huron Lagoons Mru :na
that provides the first direct to offer a $5,000 reward for the
observations hinting that live capture of a monster.
handedness may exls I prior to
Thomas Solberg, who placed a
birth. However, be said he thinks sign In front of his marina
the conclusions drawn by deslgnatl'ng it the ''Future Home
Hepper's team are too broad.
of the Lake Erte Monster.''
"My major concerns are presented the council with his
whether thumb-sucking really proposal for the national title.
grows Into handedness and the
"Thll; Is going to be so big,
fact they havj! so few left- we're going to share It with the
banders." said COren, noting that whole town," Solberg said ear·
he smokes his pipe with his left · Her this week.
band even though he · Is . right·
Solberg has walled off part of
handed.
·
his marina to hold the monster
The Clinadlan researcher said once It's captured. To certify the
about 15 percent of young chlld· monster, Solberg has arranged
ren are left-handed, compared to for the forme~; director of the ·
.the' 5 percent of fetuses tha.t Ohio State University's Stone
sucked their left thun'tb. Stresses · LaboratoryonSouthBassisland,
during . pregnancy or difficult Charles Herdendorf, to examine
dellverles may accourit for that whatever Is brought to the
difference, he added.
· marina.

Aroaz.

, WINNERS - Winners In &amp;he fourlh, fifth and
slx&amp;h crade p&lt;!8ter contest for the Chester
Elementary Sehool Fall Carnival were, front,

news~~

By WILLIAM C. TRO'IT
United Press International
UP IN THE SKY, ITS SUPERCANDIDATE: "Superman"
star CbrlsiDpher Reeve has been giving some thought to
rWinlng for office. Reeve hosted a fund-raiser for Baney Gantt,
who Is trying to unseat. conservative Sen.
Helms, R-N.C.,
In New York recently ' and discussed his own political
aspirations with the Jljew York Dally News. ' 1 was In
Washlngton yesterday and some hlgh-ranklng members of tbe
Democratic Natlon,a l Committee took me aside an&lt;l said, 'It's
time we had a serious talk With ·you .about running,"' Reeve .
said. ' Tbere was some Idle chat about running In '92.but from
where? I live In New York and Massachusetts and both of those
states are pretty well covered whim it comeS to candidates."
Nonetheless, Reeve Is Intrigued by the possibility or being a
candidate. "I'd enjoy It," he said. " It's not an ImpoSsible
. thing." .
.
.
EVERT SERVES REHAB PROGRAMS: Chris Evert· Is
touring Floiida drug rehabllltation programs to determine
which will be the benefiCiary of her Pro-Celebrity Classic tennis
tournament Oct.13-14. After meeting with pregnant addicts and
drug-addicted mothers at the Gratltude ·House In West Palm
·Beach Tuesday, Evert said, "Everybody bas the ·same
problems. It's just the way that we deal with them that 's
different." She formed a drug education program, Clean Start,
In June and pledged the money from her iournament. "So far
we've raised a half·mllllondollars. I think people who are In the
public eye can make a little bit of d!Herence," Evert said.
lmOLER ON MOVIE-MAKING: Bette Mldler Is revlv!IIIJ ber
singing career with a new album, "Some People's Lives," and Is "
contemplating a return to the stage. "The longer I do pictures,
the more I wish I were on the stage," she told The New York
Times. "I especlaly think about It at 6 In the morning when
they're slapping makeup on my face and pulling my hair. In the
movies you can wind up working l9 hours a day. In the theater,
you. come in at 7: :Jl, go on at 8 and come home at 11. You can
have a Ufe."
BALL CHEERS YOUNG CANCER PATIENT: Arsenio Hall
brightened the spirits of a young · cancer patient in
Ben~ttsvllle, S.C. Hall called Jason Knight, 7. this week and
talked for 30 minutes, making Jokes, discussing his talk show · ·
. and promising
to be Jason's friend for lite. "It .made me feel
.
very good," said Jason, who faces surgery to remove his
cancerous right leg as well as lung cancer. The firSt-grader says
Hall also has promised to get hlm In touch with rapper MC
Hammer.
THEATER LOVES LUCY: The I.Jttle Theater of Jamestown:
N.Y., wblch gave IAicUle Ball ber start on stage 60 years ago
\vlll be renamed In her honor. Robert Ostrom, president of th~
theater, will put the name change before lis board of directors'
but the vote Is considered a mere formallty. Ball, a native of the
Chautauqua County COIII!IIunlty of Celeron, not far from
· Jamestown, made her first stage appearance In 19:Jlln a play
entlt)ed ".Within the Law" at the Players Club In jamestown,
which was predecessor to the Little Theater. Formal dedication
of tbe Lucille Ball Little Theater Is scheduled for ·December,
with the posslb111ty of an appearance. by Ball's daughter,- IAicl

Chester .Carnival scheduled Saturday
The Chester Elementary
S:c;.hool will have its annual fall
carnival on Saturday from 6: 30 to
8: 30 p.m. The 25 c~nt admission
charge entitles P!lrtlclpants to
games, door prizes, cakewalk. a
haunted house,
and
refreshments·.
In conjunction' with the carnival, there will be a Jltney supper
at the school cafeterias tarting at
5 p.m. The menu Includes homemade chlcken and noodles, green
beans, hotdogs, pizza. homemade pies and drinks.
· The winners of the poster

in ihe

ERMA CLELAND, MARY FOWLER

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Pomaroy-Middlepori. Ohio

PriQ1 12-The Daly Seutinel

· .Local news briefs---.
Deputies probe theft.complaint
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department Is lnvestlgatln!f a
report from Mary Roberts of Racine, whq told the department
that her pune was stolen from her vehlclew)llle it was parked at
Southern High School on Saturday during the Racine Fall
Fas dval parade.
·
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby also reports that
Vlkkl Miller of Letart told the department Wednesday that her
son's bicycle has been stripped and spray painted In the last
couple of days.
Ms. Miller told the · departinent that her trailer and an
outbuilding were also painted. ·

the weekend.
By United Preas IDternatioD&amp;l
Tbe National Weather Service
After from one-quarter to
said
It appears unseasonably
one-half Inch of rain In most
warm
weather could continue
·areas of the state Thursday, dry ·
next
week
as the jet stream stays
weather Is expected Friday artd
north.
this weekend.
The six- to 10-day outlook for
Thu~sday!s highs In the upper
Tuesday through next Saturday
60s tO' middle 70s are expected to calls for temperatures to aver·
drop to lows of 45 to 50 Thursday aae above noJ'!llal. Precipitation
• night, with temperat\1fes moder· next week should be near
atlng In the 70s to mid 80s through normal.

Squads have six eallS
Six calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs
County Emergency Madlcal Services on Wednesday.
At 10:07 a.m., Racine squad was called t&lt;l Third Street for
Gladys Shields. Shields was transported to Veterans ~mortal
Hospital.
.
·.
At 1: 19 p.m., Syracuse squad went to Bridgeman Street for
Ruth Moore who was treated but not transported. Racine squad
was called to Durst Ridge Road at 4: 10 p.m. Margaret Holter
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Syracuse squad was
called to Nye Avenue at 5: 22 p.m. Garnett Brown was taken tb
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 7: 06 p.m. , Racine. squad was
dispatched to Bucktown Road for Courtney Jones. Jones· was
treated but not transported. Rutland squad was called to
Harrisonville at 8:38 p.m.; Sadie Carr was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

•

.,

• Dally slock prices
(As oll0:30 a.m.)

Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
·Apl Electric !\ower .... .... ::-: .. 26%

AT&amp;T .... .. ... .. ...................... 31%
Ashland Oil ............... . :.......31 \1,
JJob E\lans ..... ....... ............... 12
. Charming Shoppes ............... 8%
City Holding Co .... .............. 15~
. Federal Mogul. .:................, , 14
· Goodyear T&amp;R . ............... ;.. 16%
Key Centurion .... .. .............. 10~
Lands' End .................. :...... 10%
Limited Inc ......................... 13
Multimedia Inc ................... . 60
Rall Restaurants .................. %
·Robbins 8r Myers .. ... ............ 17
Sboney's Inc ....................... 11',2
·star Bank .........:, ................. 17
Wendy's Int'l. ......, ............... 5%
• Wortlilngton Ind................... 20

..

J:lospital news
•

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions
James Wyatt, Pomeroy; Garnett
Brown, Reynoldsburg.
• Wednesday discharges Ellen Young, Hligh Bearhs, E&lt;\'
gar Brewer.
·

.l.E

percent hit, Finney said. The
proposal calls for $13 billion of
the proposed cuts to come from
the five-year farm program
being worked on In conference
committee. It Is anticipated $1.3
billion In cuts wiU come the first
year.
"The only way Congress can
get those kinds of reductions In
farm program spending Is to
drop target prices or cut .the
amou11t of acres farmers can
receive program payments on,"
Finney said.

Sno"

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•

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.,....... ::~~?"''"'

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.
/
.
.
.
..
WEATHERMAP...,..TheremalnsoftbestroJigstomuystemthat
· ' bas swept tln'o'lgh the cj)untry_the last few days. will btlng more
. scattered tbunderstom~~ from southern Texas along the Gull
Coast to F1orlda. Aaolher storm system centered In soulh central
: . Canada will be ldckinJ off showers in the Upper Midwest as well as
fro111 Montana to llortbern..Callfomla. (UPI)
-"
··
'
·
,
- - - - - - - - - - - Weather_...;._-.--~-

·CHICKEN
BAR-B-Q '
.
OCT. 7TH - 11 :00 A.M.
$3.50 A Dinner

1/2 chicken, Baked Beana/Roll, Cole Slaw
Desserts Extra ·

'

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All Proceeds Go For Building Fund

'

'

Lottery numbers ·
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Wed·
nesday's winning Ohio Lott~ry
numbers:
Plck-3
662.
. Plck-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,369,233, with a payoff due of
$365,420.50.
Plck-4
2364.
Plck-4 ticket sale~ totaled
$259,233, with a pay01f due of
$215,900:
Cards
jack of hearts.
four of clubs.
ace of diamonds.
eight of spades.
Cards ticket sales totaled
$121,949, with a payoff due of
$43,360.
.

o

i

..
'

SAVE 162.00

-

.

-Conlnll. Chml--..
ONLY

534400 ·

• Space Comm•nd

'

-

,;."'

SS201SW

:noo R~mo1e ConttoL

ZENITH .VH' VCR wit• NQ, Rmt04~ 0•·
lkrtft ~~~~Mel TViVCI Uallkd

• Cllromacolor Con•r•l PK:ture Tubi: lor

drunatic con1rn1 ~r~d color fide lity.
• Ouanz-controlled Electronic · lunina
fCIIIUriA(t 1.57 chantl Cll(llbilily (inti.
101 cubic cluonnda}."
• Def~end•ble Duuu:ch Chassis tor

Rernott COittrel • \'RG75

• Easy-To-Reid Men111 Guide You
Thrnu~ Progr1mmin1 lllnd Se1-Up ln-

fonn•••on Stcp-By-Su:r.

•I Year, 8 Ew:n11'i111cr.
•
• 1!1~ Ctalllnnd 0\llrt:~ Electronic Tunin&amp;
_s rncm witlt urto 9!1: C:illlc Channel~.

m.:.uim1.1m rdbllil ily :tn~l luw ,.,n~r con-

sumption.

• "·----... ..,•hie F•voritc Ch•nnel Se:.n.

ton, Columbus; and several
nieces and nephews.
Heilry Ihle, 86, died WednesServices will be held Saturday
day at Riverside Methodist Hos· at 10:30 a.m. at the Boulevard
plta:J In Columbus after an Presbyterian Church, 1235
extended lUness.
Nortliwes t Boulevard, with Rev .
A retired C &amp; 0 Railroad Russell Crabtree officiating.
engineer, Ihle was a member of
Burial will be at the Union
the Boulevard Presbyterian ·Cemetery.
Church, the IOOF Lodge 262 and ·
Friends may call at the Deyothe CUff-Heights Seniors Club.
Davis Funeral Home, 1578 West
Ihle also did volun~eJ:jood First Avenue In Gr4ndview
service to food pantries tarmany Heights (Columbus) on Friday
years In Columbus.
from 2·4 and 7-9 p.m.
.
Donations may be made to tlie
. He Is survived by· his wife,
Utreva; three sisters, Christine American Heart Association or
Beegle, Pomeroy, Leasley Hy· Boulevard Presbyterian Church
sell, Ravenna, and Martha Bar· In his memory.

.
ssed
Divorces
proce

.,.

solve problems, that we can go
out and· get something done and
put this nation back on the path to
long-term economic growth.''
On Capitol HlU, however,
members of both parties agon·
!zed. 8oth sides. predicted that
while the plan shOuld pass, In
part due to Bush's personal
lobl),Ying of. Republicans, the
outcome remains In doubr.
The vote appeared partlcu·
larly tough for conservative
Republicans, who were fore!!(~ to
choose between Ideology and
political ioyaity · to a popular
pres'l dent · who Is putting his
credibility on the line to win · .
passage.
"This Is an agonizing process,"
said Rep. Henry Hyde; R-DI, who
said he was "Jeanlng no."
· Hyde said he declined repeated
Invitations to meet with Bush at
the White House because "I don't
want the pressure" and because
· "I want to decide my vote
without extraneous
considerations·. "
"I don't want to decide this
Issue on the basis of loyalty but
what's good for the country and
the ee&lt;,&gt;nomy," Hyde said. "I
don't expe~t to make up my mind
until the (House electronic vot·
lng) board Is lit up and the time Is
getting down to the precious few

Wl7150

SAVE 1200.00

54400

!U109P

ZINITII 27" ....... IYmM 3

........ Caoolral Color TV"IIE17etP '

OIU Y$•

5 2.200,

~•YI
...

$1'1 7

·
ZENitH 1S' ........ ctJSTOMS~IES
Rnno~e CIOMnl C..... TV e sJo:l509H
• Computer Sptft Comm~~nd 3!100 l"VI

~ouncemenla----

•aoo

PJmmunity) will begin Sunelay
·and continue through Oct. 14.
Rev. Donald Bender, Cham·
bersburg, Pa., wiU be theevange.
list. Services begin at 7: 30 p.m.
nightly. There will be special
singing tbroughou t the week. .
Rev. Robert Sanders Invites
the public.

•

~n.

• EIKII"OIIk hlnin&amp;.

• Super VHS whh over~ lines or resoh.1•
lion.
• Hi&amp;h&amp;~ Sensitive 112" CCD for superior
rotor and tharpcr det•ib.
·
• HO Circuitry with Detail Enha~mcnt
l nd incrcmled White Clip level.
'
• ITL A.uto Fottu lmK&amp;C ~n~ng Sr1tem
with fll.4-2 .2two speed 8:1 vowu-wom
•

•

'

White Balance and

&lt;

.,,.,

'ZtNirN iJIGITAL

,_-

••d

VHS 1! llM7) SO

· l~ni.

• C.pueer Sf*l Command SCJ800 Rc·
mate Conuol.
• ~-I"Uimabll F~'I'Orire Dl•nnd ~. 1111 .
1:
• On·ScreeR Displ1y.
• 1111 Channel C11p~bility indlldinc 122
~ cbiUiel,,

VCR Rcmo1~ Control.
• Chro1111IICO!o. Cnn1r~s1 PC!urt T11he fflr
dr;~ m~tk c:''"lra!\1 anti mtur l"i&lt;.k:l!l)".
• Quuru:o('Oruroll\rd Elcrtrunic tunin1
ftatu ring 17M t'h:tnnfl Clll,;lf&gt;i!ity lilll."l. '
122 Cllh!c. chan~M. IIR(', ICC'

SAVE

• M'l~ liMrto SOund l)'ltlm ,
Olrocnaca~or Coni rut Plcl11rt Tube ror
t•C!P'ionll Cf~llr~i and co~ fidcliiy ,
• ~al..nt Cha•• Willi Hll% MOdul~r ,h:·

ZENITH'S !Wpn- VHS Full Sbe
C.m~ ~~~
Playoo 811P" VHS ••II

SYSTI" I

Dllivery
•loy
A

35• I DIIECT VD

Way
eCI'IIIit .
Terms

seconds."

·

PTO meetlq

z... ...-, ...............
rv-s,- ........ wltfi . . ."

The Portland Elementary PTO
will meet Tuesday at7p.m. at tlie
school.
Fish fry
There will be a fish fry on
Saturday beginning at 11 a.m. at
the Middleport Fire Deparbnerit.
Tnutee. to meet .
·
The Chester Township Trus·
tees wlll meet Tuesday at 7: 30
p.m. at the town !tall.

ONLY

I

DllllY S2199DD
.

C..tnl • P¥4671

5219900.

SAVI SJOO.OO

ELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELl

106 N.·lfiD
992-2635 .

,

.
V:ISA -

'.

. ··. .

.

By NORMAN D. SANDLER

WASHINGTOIIV(UPI) - Fac·
lng twin crises that will test and
define his presidency, George
Bush shrugged off the political
! pressures of the threat of war ln.
• the Persian Gulf and a deficit·
Induced economic recession.
"Look, nobody said It would be .
' easy," Bush said at a news
conference Wednesday. Asked
wheth!!r his presidency Is "on the
line," he noted that "every once
, In a while the going get~&gt; a little
; tough," but, "I don't feel em·
' battled at aU/'
Fielding questions from repor·
ters for out-of· town news organ!·
zatlons, Bush spoke with gratl·
tude of the broad support for his
policy In the gulf and with
• passion of the need for a S500
billion deflclHf!Cluction plan before Congress.
Ins comments also revealed a
certain "I told you so" attitude
critics and skeptics who ·
•· toward
have questioned the decisions
left In the wake of his passage
from hoheymoon to hot seat In
the 20 months .he has been In
office.
''I try not to sound egotistical,
but we've been right on German
' unification," he said as Germans
rejoiced In the end of tbelr
postwar division. "And yet, I
remember many people saying,
'It's bnposslble, the Soviets ar·
en't going to permit a unified
Germany to be In NATO, It Isn't
going to happen, you can't have a
unified Germany before you
have two peace treaties with ·
: Poland."
! In fact, Bush did not respond
wllh emotional fervor last year
at the early events · that In a
, matter of weeks snowballfd Into
• the uillflcatlon juggernaut. On
: Wednesday, however, t~ re: emergence of a single, strong
• Germany was trumpeted as a
: dramatic vindication of his re: pea ted talk over the last year of a
• "Europe whole an~ free. "
; ' For
politician previously
; accused . of 141cklng vision; It
: smacked of special significance ..
, BUt Blish, riding high In the polls,
: denied ihinklng In polldcal
: terms, saylog, •'The American
, people are entitled to sometlilng
t .a little bit more broader-gauge
· than that."
: "l gul!lslt's aboui as compll·
• cated period as we've had since
: I've been president," he said,
; "butl'mnotlooktngatltinterms
: of re- elect!OII."
•
. Bulb winced at a comparison
: to Jimmy carter, who wa• voted
• out of office after belnar doged
, by ener~ and lloatqe crllea of
: his own, and Jndlceted be would
not allow his.current problems to

g l.m.-

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

9U-5335 orel5.~561
laou fi'OII! Pen Office
. . POMIIOY('OIIO .
lo/30/'191fn

614 ·992-5114

Banks
Construction
992·15009

~Gutter
~Helmet'

,

..

MASTER - DISCOVER
.

MIDDUPOIT .
1·100·426·5511
•

'

••

'

Residential e~d
Commerciel

IEWIIING AND

~

'7

FIT and TRIM
· .fJCTOBER

BUILDING &amp;
REMODELING

SPECIAl

Commercial •
Relldentiel
•Roofing ,
•Siding
•Windows
1111'1 It WGIIh Doing lijlt

10 VISn5 $2900
OPEN IY
APPO~ENT

992-3033

9/27/'90/ l ....

R~

L HOLLON
TRUCKING .
CHEnEI, OlftOt .
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHINJ,l
.A T AL~

985-4422

CAIN'S

ol Nlddlepm

UPHOLSTERY
614·992·2328
We Say Whet We Do.
We Do Whet We Say.
9·6-1 mo.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

. BISSELL
SIDING CO.

8oo4 Lor4y,
· Look Who's

...............,

"Fret Eatlmatea"

4TY

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860

u••• J.

110 SUNDA fCAUS
4-16-16-ttn

Real E1tat1 General

RACCOON VALLEY.
SPORTSMAN CLUB

GAME ROOM

•MobUe Jlome

NOW OPEN
Wed. thru Sat.

lli..!'J.! . •

. •Mobile Hciii'ul'
Renllll

lt. ,.3 3 N•rth of · ·
. P-ray, ·Ohio

REMOVAL·
·uGHT HAULING
•fiREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269

• Starting at 11 :00 A.M.

usm RAILROAD nES
e-12-90

9 · 12·'90·1 mo.

Perms ~ Price, Heir Cuts
Price - 1 Week Only

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT-992-5107

•N•w •-•• .

ALL MAlES

•Garages

Bring It In Or We
Pick Up. ·

•Complttt
ltmadtllng
Stop &amp; c-part

KEN'S APPIUNC~
·
SERVICI~. ..

Fret Estimates

992·5335 or 985·3561

985-4473
667-6179

A&lt;rou From Post Offke
217 E. Soc. PoMeroy
POMEROY, OHIO

tfn

3/6/'90/Hn

GUN SHOOT

RACINE
'
GUN CLUB ·~

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashan Building

GUN SHOOTS·

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

1:00 P.M.

SUNDAYS

12 Gauge Factary
Chokt only

Fectory Choko
· U Gaup Shotg101s Only
· Strktly Enforced

SHOOTS· START
SEPT 16,Sept.
1990
4.tfn

9·25-'99·tfn'

STEWARTS
GUNS &amp;

Announcements

SUPPLIES

3 Announcements

205 N.•Second SlrMI
•DDLEPOif, OHIO 45760
Offici 614-"2·2116
HOME 614-992-5692
DOTRE S. TUINEI,IIOKER
We Need tlollngo!
9-21-10. 1 ••.

Publlt; Sale

"\'

.

'

)

At Tuppers Plains, Ohio
One block .off Route 7, at the. old
laundromat. Follow signs.

~

MICROWAVE
O~EN REPAIR

CONSTiiUCnON

Gold Credit C.rd, cash ldlflnct
progn~m. Vlaa/Ma.ter card guar.

No 1ecurttr depoell. 1-90o;.446-

0040,$25.

.

o•.
NEW STUFF
EVRY WEEK

All dtalers weko•.
Terms of Cnh or Check with Positive I.D.
Not Responsible for Accidents

AUCTIONEER: BILLY STALDER

, L-~----------~~

WANTED
LOW GlADE OAK
SAW LOGS

$1 50 ,J!':.nd .
DEUVIIED TO

OHIO PALLET
COMPANY .
POMIIOY, OH.

1/27/..0/1 .... .

.

HeartHUch alnat•• networjL
An exchlng way ro mNI tomltont ·apecltll. wm. Heartttareh,
P.O. Box 1043, GollipoU., Olt. ,
45631.
No lrnspiSalng or huntlrt9,
Ha1tie RHd farm , Vernon A'1 ,

4

TRUCKLOAD
Sarah end Teri

Between
Wilkesville and
· Salem Can.ter

completely Nmodellld. new modem kJtchen
Including etloppllonCN, cerpet throughout. Iorge
patio ond wortclllop. fuM bleoment, new vinyl siding
with ln•ul•tlon, 1110 blown In lneuletlon. new ttorm

· door1 In~ wlndow1. full length aunporch, out
buAdlng ond omolt gorogo,.
REDUCED TO t28,000 FOR QUICK SALE

'

Every Sunday

L.atart 1 WV.

EVERY FRIDAY NITE
AT 6 P.M.

FEATURES - SPECtALS

SHOOTING
MATCH.

All utlltleo Including TV cabto, 1'h batho. now roof,

'

~~~!~. HAIR GO ~q~~£

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMAN CLUB

. DIMand

10-11 mo.

ON I·ACRE LOT

CONSIGNMENT
AUCTION ·

10:00 A.M·?
234 MULBERRY AVE:,
POMEROY

9-12-'90-1 mo.'·

SHRUB &amp; TREE

OPEN MON.-fll. 10·5
742·2421
36496 SIITH RUN RD.
IUTIAND, OlilO

&amp; Auction

FRI., OCT. 5, SAT., OCT. 6

and Salem Center :

1-12·'11-Hn

Buy. Sell or Trade
Guns

·FOR SALE

. 8

GARAGE SALE ·

HRS.: Wed.·lhws.·Fri.
5:!)0 p.m.- II :00 p.m. '
Sat. 12 Noon ·II p.m. •
Between Wilkesville ~

•Lot&gt;Ran1al8

HOUSES•LOTSIIFAAMS
tOMMERCIAL

...

0.11••·

COUNTRY
MOBIL!
HOME PARI(

SH Us For Your
Sporting NHds

lr'• Mile Narth of P-oy, Oh. on St Rt. 33

AaiES - 4 BR, 3 bllhs, 2g11111ges, ll!flled I
BR apartment Proj)elly induds pond, aplfCJX. 4,SJO SQ. ft. fwm bilk and mobile
home. A ,.1 blrpin II $89,900.
CAll 614:992· 7104 FOR APPT.

992-5009

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

201311
2-STORY HOUSE

VERY NICE LARGE t«lME ON AfPROX. 31!

. BANKS
. CONSTRUCTION

992-7479

CALL

Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes
.36 l'eaft Lperlen~e

FOR SALE IN RACINE

TROUBlE SHOOnNG
Certified Electricians
Fret Eti-tes

10.11 MO.

. PH.

a

.

COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICE

lacated on Safford Sch.eol ld. off lt.' 141 !::
1'14) 446·9416 or 1·100·172·5967
.;,

GUARANTEED I
FREE ESTIMATES

•

•

,.,.......

BENflm'S MOBILE HOME·
. H(ATING &amp; COOLING ·

NEVER ClEAN YOUR
GDnERS AGAIN

•

t

992.2196

Middleport;~·::-:_

MOBILE HOME .FURNACES fttEAT PUMPS
ALL FURNACE PARTS .

GAiiAGU

PUBLICATION ~

PAT' HILL FORD

Stock fl.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE

out radiators. WtaiH
repair Gas Tanks.

Now In

·BANKS
CONSTRUCnON

BULLETIN BOARD

hlater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod

PAYING AS OF TODAY, SEPT. 11, 1990
#1 Coppet' •1 per tb.;
Cleen Dry Aluminum Cane. 46¢ per lb .,
Clean Auto Rlldiatora 44C lb.; Blltterie1•1 ~ 26ea.
Yellow ilre11 40c lb .; Alum. Sheets 40C lb.

Hyde said that for most Republicans, he felt "the politics more
than the economics" of the vote
992·15009
will decide the outcome because
IOol·l ..,
"It's a leap In lhe dark
economically."
.
"I was trying to flild some way
/
to help him out and I just can't,"
said Rep. Robert Dornan, R·
Calif., a Bush backer. "I agon·
!zed .to find a way to. help the
president. .. . I l!ept looking
CUSTOM BUILT
around In tlie manure pile for the
HOMES &amp;
pony and guess what? I couldn't
"At Reasonable Prices"
.
find the pony.'' . .
949-2801
Rep. Pat Schroeder, D·Colo.,
$Bid she was ,undecided but ·
~r Res. 949•2860
dislikes the plan. . .
Day or Night
"I really think II stinks,"
NO SiiNDA Y CAllS
Schroeder said. "I .thlnk all
4-l&amp;-86-tfn
Democrats look at this package
and wonder how they keep a
large 'D' ·behind their name and
vote yes. It:s very unfair to the
5
Happy Ads
middle class." .

exact a heavy toll, at least for leadership, whatever the poilU~
cal costs, It was not until early
now.
• "We've got two big things summer that Bush and Congress
coming together now," he said. began, negotiating a fiscal tlx to
"One Is the deficit and one Is this . the deficit mess, their effort
crisis halfway arounil the world. prolonged by stubborness on both
sides, seen perhaps most vividly
But I'm telling you honestly I
In
Bush's down·to·thecwlre cling
don't look at It In terms of
to
his call for a lower tax on
whether It's good for a Bush
capital
gains.
presidency or po·pular
Bush Is counting on military
polltlcaJJy."
Intimidation and economic depri·
In the conlrontatlon with Iraq,
Bush at times has exercised vatlon to force a retreat by
decisiveness with aplomb. Saddam Hussein and . congres·
Clearly more comfortable with slol!lll approval of an unpopular
foreign paUcy than domestic budget .compromise to reassure
aiialrs, he has seemed lnvigo· the financial markets and res·
rated by the challenge, as evl· tore confidence In the economy.
Bolh are gambles that will
denced by the scores oftelephone
determine
the difference becalls and meetings he has held ·
tween
war
and
·peace, recession ·
with U.S. friends and allles since
and
prosperity
.
Try as he may to
the onset at the crisis two months
brush
them
as
Ide as simply
ago.
"difficult
times"
·intrinsic to a
Bush has been less aggres~ve
In the budget debacle. Though he tough job, Bush will not be able to
has spoken frequently In recent Ignore the political consequences
days ot the need for assertive of success or failure.

We can repair cind rt·
~ore radiGton ·. and

ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. &amp;0 &amp; S.R. 143
NEW HOURS:
,
POMEROY:
7 p.m. 7 Dave
ALBANY: 10 a.m.·&amp; p.m. II Deyo, CIOHCI Sunday

'

a

•S.vla
Dept.

Sentinei-Page-13

.

lfFitGEIIATOI$-$100 u~,
IIAIIGIS-Gu·Otc.-$125 up
FREIZER$-$125 Mp .
ltCIO OVU$-$79 up

.:' Twin crises that . test· presidency

Henry. Ode

D of A meeting
District 13 Daughters of Amer·
lea will meet on Saturday at 1
, p.m. at the Chester Lodge Hall.
A dliio,:ce has been gran ted In
Mefls County Common Court to Smoq;aabord dinner
There will be a smorgasboro
i&gt;ale E;dward Taylor lrf?lll Mary
~
dinner
Sunday from noon-2 p.m.
Ann Taylor. Divorce actions
-at
the
Lottrldge Community
have been flied In the court by
Center
west
of Coolville. The cost
Sheila Connolly, Long Bottom,
Is
~
for
adults
aDd $2.50 for
against Michael Connolly,
·Tbe public iS
chUdten
under
12.
· }teedlvltle; and Michael L. Con·
Invited.
noUy, Reedsville, against Sheila
Offloee cloeed
·a. Connolly, Long Bottom.
Planned Parenthood of Sou·
theast Ohio Patient Services
offices will be closed Monday In
obs.e rvance olt Columbus Day.
· A marriage Ucense have been
Offices will reopen Tuesday at
..-anted In Melp County Probate 9:30a.m.
Court to John Leon Jeffers, 21, ·Bevtval
and Debra Lynn Eslep, 32, both
f\evival at 'the MI. Herman
gt Syracu.e.
· United Brethren Chureh (Texas

WASHINGTQN (UPI) - As
creases to the rate of Inflation, a
the House moved toward a
$60 billion cut In Medicare and
showdown vote on a bipartisan
new tax breaks for Investing In
small companies.
_budget plan, lawmakers I~ both
partles_agonlzed over their decl·
Failure to adopt the deficit
slons Wednesday _and President .. cutting package by Frlda;S'. and
Bush warl)ed that · unless It
to .pass separate Implementing
passes "we are courtlngdlss,s~r
legislation by Oct. 19, would
In this country."
trigger up to $105.7 billion In
The Housewas set to take the
automatic spending cuts re·
first critical vote Tbur$day on a. qulred under the . Gramm·
budget re_solutton thatadopts the · Rudman balanced bU\Iget law.
outlines of the bipartisan agreeThose cuts, spilt between de~t~ent reached Sunday between ,fense and domestic programs,
Bush ani! congressiOnal' leaders would devastate federal serVIces
after four montlis of hard
from air traffic control to meat
bargainlitg.
Inspection and disease research.
-Head counters on both sides
l).t the Wblte House, Bush
sa1d Wednesday the outcome was
canceled a New England politlstUI In doubt, but one ·key
cal swing to continue meeting
Democratic congressman said , with and telephoning undecided
chancl!$ were ''better than 50·50' ' . or wavering House Republicans,
the measure would pass.
who apparently hold the key to
''I think It's up In the air," sal&lt;! - the plan's success on Capitol Hill.
. Ass.l stant House Republican ' A majority of House Democrats are expected to back the
. leader Newt Gingrich of Georgia,
who has broken with Bush and
plan, although there Is slgnlfl·
who opposes the plan. ·
.
cant liberal opposition, and It
At . the White House., press
appears It will pass the Senate,
which has scheduled a ·vote for
se.c retary Marlin Fitzwater said,
"We're getting close but.we do11't
Friday.
have the votes. yet."
So most altentiQD bas focused
· He said President Bush had a
on House Republicans, where
morning meeting over coffee several GOP leaders, Including
with 40 or 50 House Republicans . Gingrich, are bucking Bush and
to discuss the vote. Afterward,
House Republican leader Robert ·
Bush planned to telephone
Michel of Illinois and opposing
members· and meet with some · the plan.
,. ·
one-on-one.
A majority In each party In
In addition, the president will each house must vote to approve
send a letter to an members of . the plan toensure.passage. That
the House hoping to persuade will prevent one ·party from
them to vote for the bipartisan blaming the other for the polltl·
agreement.
cally ,painful parts of the agreeThe· way was cleared for the
ment a month before No·
showdown vote Wednesday when
vember' s congres slon al
a House- Senate budget confer· · elections .
ence committee quickly ap·
At a news conference, Bush
proved a budget plan that substl· warned that failure to. pass the
luted the bipartisan agreement's
plan would create economic
numbers for those approved chaos.
,
earlle~ In the year.
"If we Unger along and don't
The House vote Thurday also
get a deal, I'll tell you we are
: will Jnstrucf various House com,
courting disaster In 'this coun·
try," said Bush, who appealed
· mlttees how to Implement the
specific tax Increases an!i spend· for support In a nationally
lng cuts contained In the $500 televised address Tuesday night.
bllllon deficit-cutting plan.
''The overall good things out·
·;
The flvecyear plan includes
weigh the negative. And besides,
• $134 billion in new gasOline,. the country has got to be
: cigarette, · alcohol, airline and
governed."
, othertaxesandfees,$67b!Uionln
He urgedoCongress to support
." defense cuts over three years,
the plan "and to prove to the
;· limiting domestic spending In·
American i&gt;eople that we can

..

_ _ Area deaths _ _

___ Meigs

.

of rain Monday . Highs will range
from the upper 70s to the middle
80s Saturday and Sunday, and
from the upper 60s to .the middle
70s Monday. Overnight lows will
be between · 45 and 55 early
Saturday, and between·50 and 60
Sunday and Monday mornings.

Soulh Central Oblo
Clear Thursday · night, with a
low between 45 and 50. Sunny
Friday, . with highs · between 75
and 80.
·
· ~xtended Forecast
Saturday througb Monday
Fair Saturday, with a chance
of showers Sunday and a chance

· · Continued from page 1
nent- shali speak first by a coin
toss on October 15.
For further Information, con·
tact Executive Director Eleanor
Thoinas, Meigs County Council ·
on Aging, P.O. Box722,Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy. You may also
call Thomas at 992·2161.

'

represents one of the greatest
broken promises ever made to
the American people," Cele·
brezze said. "What makes this
broken promise so bad Is · that,
once again, . the Washington
bunch bas decided that the
common men and women, the
working famUles that make this
country strong, are being asked
to .shoulder most of the new
tax-and-slash burden·..
''I say It's ·a bad deal and the '
administration and Congress
ought to go back to the drawing
board. U they need $134 billion In
new taxes, they should distribute
the burden on those.who can best .
afford It," Celebrezze said.
Meanwhile, Fred Finney, pres·
!dent of- the Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation suggested an across·
the-board spending freeze at 1990
levels for all federal depart· .
ments as the most equitable way
to reduce the nation's budget
deficit.
"For quite ·Some time now,
we've supported the. 'no new
taxes' Ideal and a freeze on all
government s(iendlng at 1990
levels," Finney said. "Congress
really needs to look at Its own
actions before It starts asking the
American people to bear the
brunt for something ouv elected
officials In Washlngton_..shOuld
have been able to do.' ~ '
With the proposed deficit re.
duction agreement, the nation's
farm programs would take a 24

.,

Meet ...

•

Celebrezze opposes · co_mpromtSe;
~ Farm B11:reau offers ··idea, criticum

:Stocks

For the farmers, strong winds promote growth.
Producers should monitor stor·
could cause lodging In corn and
age
bins for 'temperature and ·
beans as well increase fruit drop.
moisture
content. These mild
Rainfall will supply topsoil mols·
.
days
could
favor development of ·
ture for fall seeded grasses and
mold
In
stor!!d
grain.
·
grains · as mild temperatures

collapsed. .
completed but that some patch·
The fifth project approved was lng remains to be done.
for $2,000 to the Bashan Fire
Shields noted that the Planning
baparbnent !or the replacement .Commission will meet on Ocj. 22
of two garage doors . The Jlnal and told of the Critical Issue
two projects given approv111 were Grant he has recelvea and his
to the Chester Fire Deparbnent plan to be out-of-town on meet·
and the Syracuse Fire Depart· lngs pertaining to the grant at
ment, both for $5,000, to be used that time. Since he represents the
tO purchase eQuipment tO meet COmmisSIOners at that meeting,
fite fighting standards as man- he asked their opinion on return·
d:a ted by the state.
·
lng. for ·the se.sslon . . ·It was
Bobby Arnold met with the generally agreed that his pres· .
commissioners on the appllca· ence at the meeting would•mit be .
tlon for money for fire equipment requlred&gt;and his pla!med activity
for the SCipio Fire Deparbnent. would be more productive for
'While· the project was not funded him. The commissioners will
It was noted by Commissioner attend the Planntn·g Commission
Richard Jones that projects have meeting.
.
, .
·
been funded for the past two
A resolution was passed all6w.
years.
lng the Southern· Ohio Coal Co.
·Engineer Roberts discusSed acces~ onto '&lt;;ounty prQperty, the
Pilgrim Ridge, a- narrow town· fqn;ller Joseph Nelson la~d In
ship road , o~ which the. county Salem Township, so tliat a small
plans to do some workJater this ·; stream which iscauslngtloodlng
month. It was noted that a scho()l can be cleaned out.
bus tra';els th!! (Oad which has no · · Manning Roush, preskl'ent,
space for passing. The county conducted thetneetlng, with both
wlll •be widening the road and Commissioners Richard Jones
making some passing places, and David Kablentz attending,
Roberts stated.
along with Clerk Mary Hobstet·
It was reported by Roberts that ter, Shields, Roberts and
the paving projects have all 1&gt;een Warner . .

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bush pushes, House ·members
Busine·s s Services·
SID10 • .
.
k- b d t ( lt===;usn;::::=;APPU;::::u:::cn=rTi=~T;::RI=:·C~OU:;N~TY~R~EC~Y~CL~IN~G~lt=:;;;;;;;;;;::::;
-e mze over ey u ge vo e •on:.n"Eis-•:!.,,s,~.~pupum . OF~O,E2R~~~~:o~SR~o7:~:.~~~""
SER~ICE

~~ert... __c_o_ntl_n_u_e_d_fr~o_m~p~a~g~e_1_·--------~------

A Pomeroy man escaped Injury Wednesday when the car lie ·
was drlvlog struck another car head on on State Route 7 In
Meigs County.
·
.
· .
··
Dellllls Boothe, 40, was south bound In Salisbury Township
when he attempted to pass on the lett another south bound car
that was making a lett turn. Jjoothe went· lett of centl!r and
struck an oncoming car, driven by Jim Weese, 41, of Syracuse.
Weese's car continued on after Impact and struck a guardrail,
accord IDS to a report from the Gallla·Melgs post of the State .
Highway.
·
:
·
Boothe and -Weese were not Injured. Boothe was clled for
driving lett of center.
·

COLU!IffiUS, Ohio (UPI)
Democratic gubernatoral noml·
nee Anthony ceiebrezze opposes
the budget compromise because
It hurts the working famutes:
And the proposed budget aJso
received criticism. Wednesday
from the Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation.
"They say It's the Democrats
who are the tax-and-spend
, bunch, but the job the current
· administration In Washington Is
: doing to the working fammes In
; ~erlca makes them the great
· slash·and·tax bunch," . Cele· ·
breue said In urging Congress to .
reject the plan.
''For 10 years this country has
been slowly transformed Into .a
two- class society by massive
redistribution of tlie wealth- the ·
two classes aTe the haves and the
havenots. Therlchand the.restof
us. And the rest of us pay the ·
bills," be said.
· "From what rve learned a bout
the Budget and Tax Plan under
the disguise of a Detlclt Reduc'
tlon Act, It's safe to say It

Thursday, October 4. 1990

Dry weather
expected
to
rett••n
to
Ohio
. ..

M~ ~ropes injury in wreck '

..

Thursday. October 4, 1990

.,

Giveaway

1 mtlt German ShtphtrdJ. abou1
1 yMr old I 5 Tom \0111 "'
remalt cat. 614-251-1330.
·,
2 fra• puppiM, approx. 8 wuJta
old. ~14·9411-2682.
·
Adorable tre;e kht•ns to good
hom•, two black and whitt, 1

calico.

814-117~205 .

Ad1.ilt while t.rn-.11 ~t. IndoOr
ptl very aff.ctlonlfe, and good

wit.h children, 114-446-2313.
Darling little black

•

a whtte pup. .

pill. To good homn. Parent• :
both' nry ,811\111 dog1. 11~
7!:18.

F,.. pupa. Pltn Collie and
Australllan Sheppard. 614-Dtt- -

7651.

.

.

Gtntlt kltt.ns tD glvtaWiy, 814-

367·n2o. •.

Small black &amp; whlle kllltn, halt
grown whhe cat, t.rgt whtte

Call e14-388·9996.

6

Lost &amp; Found

Found •
female

Colt.

Po~;nery

halt grawn black
puppy,
dawhtown
area. Medium Jtnat.h

hair, IOYIO pooplo. 1141111-3420.

Found: Elaton CNdft Coni In
Big B•ar ANL MUM . catt to
ctolm. 1144711-2!133.

i ti-.NG &amp; IIA11NG
.... lomtlln: .

161 Harth Second

11ij41eport. Olllo 45760

SALES &amp; SER~ICE

w. CIIIV ,......._ .......
Your Phor~•
Bill• Here
PIIIINI

JOU"'

.,.L

Lool: Ono
whho moll 001,
ono greon oyo, ono bluo
1ft
Rod...,,
ti1(~4WOf1 .
._
llp.m.
•

Lool: PQOitat boott, • K - .
Contolnlng 111J _ . . ID'o,

·aMckbool a mulaare ~
Which II noodotl. P - ~
114-I
!.&lt;liil: Whho malo OonMo'
Shophord, Ylclnltv : 01
St rHt, 1~41421'1.

Vtno;

.

�-"'
-

~

1

44

32 Mobile Hornet~

for 8ale
~AL Foo1orJo to you1Nt, 2

3 lr *••••14170 ~ ..
the ..... 0 ,,, . . . . .,

GallipoliS
&amp; VICinity

-·-Cloyt-.

01'

$12.100 -

oticl ... ...

....

Coll-~-­
w,.
dm MII'Ja, ·llii', Col, loullcl-

on

z ..... to, ... Ylnl lliooi: 112
mHe oul OUI'f!l Creel!: Roecl.
r'::"i."nd "'- Oot 41h ... llh.
..:.:r..w-~

35 Lois &amp; Acraage

5-Fomllilo: OCt llh l'rldoJ 1-4; t
dly ontrl N- Donvlllo AI. 32&gt; 1

O.J. Whllt Ad., Z - building
rwoc~y to bulkl ...
rellrlctiod, ,100.114-241-41-

1otii

mU• 8. VInton.

,..

5 Fomlly. 1 doy Ofi!Y. .Fri., 0&lt;1.
5th. 'Roln!Shlno. -- d.
chilnaw, color t.v., Pll!nts,
clo4hlng, 2·112 mi. out Koyolono
Rei. on ilh. 10...

---

ottdolf

r---.· ...

r COl"·

~ 1l1.;:::::,~.~?'rin~ 1----------,.-~------......, 41
18.

HelpWanled

11

1910 t:OOI.m. tin 7 Johrwon'e .;,;,:-:-:-~~~~~~~
AVON - AI ....... Colt Morilyn

wuver 304-812-2141.

AVON I All Arooo , I BhlriipJ
SpooN, 304-671-142&amp;•
Bab~ltt" n•IIIIM In my home
tor 2 ctilldtwn. Mu..- have
trlnlpor'lltlon. 114 441 em.
ConWmpc Flllhlon ..P!"Y. Pilon
c,o. now hlrlna fu!p&gt;11nd Pill
tlmo. 304-875-81&amp;2.
working with pOOplo, be oft~

c ..,.nce MerchadiM Mult' Gol
1'hunl Frt, Sat. z mi. from 141 an
NolghbOrhood Rd, Flrot brick
tta~• on left Pllt cemet.,Y.

Clint end h•ve ,,....,.nae IX•

perlence.

working
condltlono, aood oalory 111a

fringe

carHr

Excellent

blnellte.

Outatllndlna

Slni

opportLmHy.

mum• to: Doctor'a Aulttlnl

P.O. Box 1M llldclllport, Ohio

milo, cOolo, .S.kll bllr, mowot, 4s1e0.
mloc.

=.
1

.

Sole: Fridoy, Sot., &amp;
,
about
112 . mil•
,OH on

-.rt.

Ilia: ocr. 1-a, u mlln
out 211, nrtly olllemL
.
OoraQo

Gongo loll: Thuro I Fri, 1071

Slcoild Avo, Roln/Shlno.

Holl 11hold S.le: 332 Solar
Orlvo, Pllntz Subdlvlolon, Sol
. 2tlh lhru Frl OCt 5th.
Lorgo I lomlly yo'rd alo: 148
Thli'd Avo., w, fij only. Clothn
for I'VIfYOM, • much moN rain

qrahlne.

~1'111 Yord Solo. Sot. only. 2 t/2

ml'-

out

218,

Reei•nc•.

HoffoH

Oct lith. I. th, 1--? It Gollll,
Rt.233. Cur.-, taofa, antlquat,
olothoo, ol oil ltlndo, 114-3712110.

Oct. Slh, I to 4i Good boyo I
glrll wlntw cloln~~, houllihold
- · 430 Lorilt Drln.
Solo In .... 0&lt;1 5th &amp; llh,
1 to 5. Rout• iii -4 mil•• pnll

Rkt Grande, -unlvarslty, .Tum

right on Wolt Run Rd. F1rot
ltOI»&gt;.
'
Sot1 Oct ~1 N; 302 LIGnlndo
BMI. . .~ ,..ae ctoiWng, Cl'llfll,

diOpol,'' ontlqu., •.,.. Very
n• chi._ Clothll a COitl.

nnr., Fri,

lulovllil Rd. Four1h
loft oklo Nor1h ol onrcrooo. -hlng Far Ev..,_l

'"'anted IO DO

...
·- _ -- ~·
-•···· ft-v .~.,. ~-nt-.
-~ - . _ _
Solo, ollordobll, ohlldolre. M.f
~ 1.m. • 1:30 p.m. Agio. 2-10.
- . oltor ..- . Drap-lno
w11c me.114-441~.

--

mr homa. Call 1144411a
Will ...... oore al oldory In tholr
Q.OO por ltouo' I hour
.ttlfte, ,.....,DI1,304-8824723.
F~nanc1al

21

Buslnesa

·

Eam money by tho - . ololn

numbers to Hmouwl•ala

the

"Chrlllm. .Around-T~Worid".
July·Dicembtr. L.Mve ntma,
11ddrt11, and ~ nUmb.r on

answering aerytc:e. 114-~~2-G'~t.

Opportunity.
!NonCE I
OHIO VALLEV PUBLISHING CO.
..-mondo IIIII J011 do bUllwith pOOplo JOU kMW1 Inti
manor ttnough tho
untU you hln _...,..,
lhl-....
0.. JOII'

to-

opponir.,-.....,

Latlllo, llon'o,-~-­
lnloftt/Pnloon,
--,

!:a'l"
- , - · or MotornHy
~. 011.- ellr/Airoblc, Brfdll
Uriaorlo. -

~- ~
ltiWIIIt.
.

•k""

I mlloo oul C..b Crook Rood, 3
bocl-,104-11711-1111.

For Ronl: 2bt -

- o d on
Tabor ' Ad, VInton, OH,
$221111no. noD/Dip. • Roloronoo
required. Coil oltor s~.m.
otl doy lotunlly, 114IlL

=-=r•

ttou.o:

I or 4 BR,
-""
..w.
- Dill.11!11
($40),
ilorgo pnl.
KJIIW
lhOwlng
Lirgo

~.,.

Noiw.lt4-HT-GII70&lt;441htl'IO.

M~.

4 ludroon• houH.
naa
-hiJr "'"" dlpooll. 114ta-7714 """' 7:30 pm.
Spring Volloy - abr 1 112
bathe; lriiiiMIII, Dlrport, $500

....... ,.....
-r..oloro.Add-onolyoll. por mo.

Excolllnt lncomol Eaoy WOI1tl Brond -: LIZ Clotboml,
.A.Mmble .Jmple procfuct• .t. Mon._ lllnil- Anno Kloln,
home. 1·504-141·7771 Ext. 1214. St Mlcholo, Pinky, lugilo loy,
24 houro.
t..vl, ~ _ , Hllo, Llolfl
Foyo,
L
r.;"'~~' 2000 brondo
modilo
IIIII oiloo muNI
Exporloncod
1 prtdng dillcount
repreuntatlvl. BaH plua com· or family 110ft, Rololl
mission. 304-727·7885 call for In· prlooo unbollowoblo
lor top
tervlew.
·
"
quoiHJ Over 250 brendo
HOME TYPISTS, PO Ullrl 2100 otyill. t111eoct. to $2B,eoct:
nlodod.
$35,000
potontlal. Inventory, tra~nlng, tlxtUNt,
olrluo, tirlnd oponrng, otc. Con
Dolollo. (t) 1105-HHOOO Eltt.-II- .
_ 111 dip. llr. Loughlin
4M2.
(112111' 4221.
INTELLIGENCE JOBS. FED,
CIA, US Cultoma, DEA, .ttc. VENDING IIOUTE: ~- Giut
cuh High troHic
~ow Hlrlrtg. Lllllngo. (1) 805- - lillY wclftt. Will Troln.
68UOOO En K-10189.
1-ai0;-28oHMS. .
'
JOB HUNTING? ~EED A SKILL?
TRAIN' PEOPLE FOR JOBS 22 Money to Loan
•• AUto -honloo~_ - · .
LOANS BY IIAIL
,
ln~lna Spoc11llll, Cor·
lllfrtlfl Colmoto!Oglotl, Up lo 15,000 In 72 houfo. Wo
Eloctriclono,
Food
IIIMoo can ._lp you p1 o oianotlft
Worbro, Eloctronl.. Toch- Loon ly MoiL
24 IIOD.
n - . lndullrill Molntononco
Worbro,
Muhlnloto
.Paroilgolo · S..,..lriOa iiftil
Woldoro. il.o111or now tot- Cl...
Real Estate
I!IGinnlrig October \ 11110.
Coli Tri'CouniJ VOoootlonol Adul
Contor II 1-.al'-eiiCII. A
varitlty of fUnding iourcM 10 31 Homea for 5ale
poy lot trolnlng oro ovaliloblo lot
thooo oUglblo.
8ollull 14x7V, w/upondo,
2bt, Z both, lolao pon&gt;hH, CA,
LICENSED .OENT8.' A I H on
112 ION ~ At. :Z. North of Pt.
AGENTS
NEEDED
Ill- ~.~c.
cond, ·PNnch
MEDIATELY, 304-l'P-27117 OA 1· City
Mobllo Homn, 114-,448800-412-11!11.
9340, 3G4-e71-18Q8, 304-671131:1.
.

t.-

.........

n.to- ond ~
~=~~BURN R LTY

42 Mobile Homu
for Rent

Adocjuoto

wlr!"ll

Wontod: 114 BR - 1 0 ,_or
louva.on lind - -- ~

Gii

Merch&lt;mdtse

r========::::=-r::===:=::::=:====1
5B
Frul...
54 Mlacellaneous
Merc.,.ndlse

..

c=,

:12

1NZ 14XSO BUddy. Z boclroom,
-.trot I·~
rn1111 building
$1,100.
-1IIll.
2bt Mobllo Homo, IICUrltJ,
................. nqulrlld.
114-2111'11122.

2111', rnolllle holM, 814-441-7720.
2bt, unhonlohod, with uponcla

up. bUM .,.. oontpllle with

_,...Qtlonduplo$311.
bohr boclo 1111 Man- or
box oprtngo filii or- 171. ftnn
$11,ond Ill.
-1271•
up, K!ng $310. 4 111. Gun Clblnoto I, I, I 10
gun. loby - - ns •
548, Bod I n - 121 OUMn ~ I'M-21S-e:l'11.
SbooQI·Itl---i io.. Good For ••11
1 llloctlon ... -...." ' - . .......
- : -··~
tnlbl cMIMia, h11 A A 1JG burner lnlllrl.. liS. Ortat.O.
Inti up to III.ID dlyo nmo a
Lolor wllh lot' llnploco.
CMh . .h appraued OrHII. 3 m1. leVII'IJ wlloue ol e· pNfllb
OUI Bnlullll Ad. ODen t A.M. to all-lull ofllm~ Ctll .............
I P.ll. lion, tiHu lot. Coli 114- 01IO . . . I P.ll.
441 ~122
Far lola: D o Cou..._ • - " - Ina. Good Room Suhl Tobie, Hutch,
.......--.,. olio. ~ Cholroi14-4*7S1:1.
Ulld''"'
...,._,T.v.
I o.m. to I p.M. llon.-811. t4- FULLER BRIJSit PROOUCT1 lar
441-11f!,.127 W Avo. Gal- your f a l l - Clunlr&gt;a Modo,
llpollo, ""
Call Dolo or W111111 WOD!I, 1-304Do you 111to to llonOy'! 11711-1010.
~ uo coul lor quoiHy tum!bod. Good
_
....,...
_ 114231
ture .., oorplla. - . Fur- -148-442..
nllurl • Col- RL 7 North•
Phone 114-446-11144, Gtllllpollo, King W - 1 Sl.,.., -With
Ohio. ·
bl-r, honiiiKI .·11
GOOO USED APPLIANCES Mcetlllo ~L 14 ln.;' fill w
AI•. IM-MHMO, I~

c-

u--.u-

Dlnl,

.=a

Woohlre,
dryore, rolrlgcnr-,
,.._. ......
Apjol-o,
~ Rlvor Rd. loolclo ~~CNII - - Colllt+44t-7.lttl.
Hotpolnl "'"'" 1111-c'-nlng
own, hood, HOipolnt 18 cu ft no
,.lrlgcnror"-r, bclh
11111 in UN, ovooodl. 304-ll?l-

Unlumlohod,
14112
Norno, '"' ..... 122 Thlnl ....
114-44141111, ~1103.

44

Apanment
tor Rent

cholro,at4-448-3548.
·
PICKENS RJRNITURE
·
~owtUood
•
HoUIIhold turnlohlng. 112 mi.
Jorrlcho Ad, PI, . PI-nt, WV,
cou 304-871·-·
RENT TO OWN
114 411 3168
6 pc. ......, group $14.01

=-

ln. - • .,._
~

For-: Good dllrtlom Wood

aroo.

ono ,... Com Picklr, at4-

4" 23110.

133 a-h

stre~C Middleport. Compl.talr
fumt.hld. New wuherldry«,

IMftt

Rd., oH Plonl
111. 71nEorlv
Chllhlro
bltoro·
Powor
momlngo;

For
1m Fonl Pldwp, 4x4,
runoSoil:
good,IM-441-1708.

7:00 ~at.,Ill W!IMI ol

-=
Sc-

l-'hlulo . ~

Solunlly Oct tMh, 1-4.
hou11 lilhlnd Ctay
Wlnlor ctolhll, hunting
K-. toolo, mloc.
Yord
Brlak

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Gonop - · Oct. 4,1,1. 2923
111p1:1 An. EIICtric bJQOfnll1
goOdmlooKomo.
-

llmiiY 11110111 1110, Ocl. ..
~~ 1:()0..4:00, 30f S.Venlh 91,
-Hawlft. '·
YMI .... C.mp Conley acrOM
~ Lol, Wid l Th·· jlono
. Cllpll
.... ond
pod. owool-

. Yord Bolo, loorl Iodin Rood, Z
miiiO oft AI. 17, F~doy, Solurdly, ......,.. Ono Pick·A -Poo

..r ;,..,;;;

pull~=-- Full or pr. tlmo.
•palonlill. (1)
~
Etl-1018t.

131,

Mull

_of.__. ...
lin oltlllo, -

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

MYI

A.P.
- -31111
to
...._._.
Pon&amp;OJ
RooltotwlnaO Rood -roy,
Oh. 4$111~n: Oltlce .........
No
Tune up job -rch oltlllo.
CII'MI' WOrb •••: rlwt• will
oonducl • _,..,.,. at tho
Point P' 1 n'll Jobhr¥lcl Oct.
11-11, lot' o/TPA i.i!.ibiii

phone---- .

.... VIral. _, •• Ill...-~

Jab-

Inti ~nc~.a..tnr- - I n a
lllil. - - ........
LlmKod _...1_,., For lnlonnotion ool tho
II 30411711-27711 ar
Work• u.
ooolotn, 104;344-2273 EOUI·

eo.

~-H .

12

S~uatlon

Wanted

SIS lllnlrol Hortlngor Porltwoy,
lllciCIIIr&gt;Orl Oclobtr 3-5. Cloth·
lng,
iiiilopreodo, cunolno,
-lntlrior, dlohn,-mloc.
-

--•_

flll!ll, owhc- ...

Rouoh ~. Sllurdly, 0&lt;1.
I, t-1, clothM, miK, IYerythlng
-goiChNp.

-

tnlna.

IRI npt'on181.

m

&lt;'

IIONEY

EARN

1054,

Block, brick, -~poco, winWI
11.._~
1
n...., otc.
Rio Grone~~!, OH Coli ,,._

ron,

lllo. Now thru OCtober

131h."'Potmer rnldenl, Long Run
-

Long lottom.
·
Oot- 41 I • 1. 112 milo North
oiFinPoono.

Witt coro lot' -.y poroon In
my homo. Good core ond homo
oookod moolo.lt4-t4,.2212.

15

Schools~

Instruction
Bo0llhllplngf11CCOUntlng,
Hol-ol
monogomont,
alrtlnM tr11YII, nu,... •kll, lrac-

Oot- 4-e. O.pronlon glooo,
oN lamP!!. _mlac. HouM not lo
llolgll C..ltlo llno.

tor trallar tr~~lnlng, mi..
d.nrn- lludv. Flnonolll old
ovolloblo If quol~ild. Plocomant
aealltance. County Schoola: locat otllce, 2301 Cllmdtn Ava,

Vord

WV. 1-100 118
141\ All_......_tomplotod 1-

Solo.

svl(ony -

-

...,_

pool. Sian 18.1.".::·

ParlwabuiJ,

• illjlfltllo.

lhlngo. 111-?
r
1 344 I Rain Cancelli. 114-112NII.
.

ilv""

::c.=·

proponr.

~lot.

"':b:"="

,.,..

r,+

=.Ji:O.~:.~d;

"'ii; C;

=

!:to!',::"

=

iii:..:...-::.

tor sale

1Zitt0t----·

sr

Instruments

Wlnted IO Buy

brew ....,... . ' ....,..
...... ...... 1111.

140111·I =.-"

=:

Ifill, -

Fruita&amp;

Vegetabl..

qulpf1llnt eo.. Hlndoroon,
3044J'Io11121.

. 114...-tl.

.. n.croo

30!1.•

- . ..,.

Coli ..~~: 114-441-

Cultloln11 ..,._ Ollllono:

c.,.

...._ Lumber ..... ~
P....... 11 1
dllh, AlliN I 11181, wl •
cp l'in a eoan IMir1 auto.

~

.... --~~
-·
.....
OGIWIItlaT
~

'

.•

·

_.,.
......
···r.::::
Cot.....
""""'"'
.......

- - (1)

•

~Ill.

and Usa dlscovar lhe Identity .
of their beby sitter. (R)

~'Vur£. 11M w..ri.

-~Millie Sllop

.BPIInNNawa

0 MOVIE: The Golllhl 11oJ
(2:00)
8:05 (J) MOVIE: World W• Ill

' (3:20)

e

oeBttwettr

'TtiATS \IJI-\11.1

~~ ~D

1:00 (J) e 11) a-a Sam wants

A&lt;rel.EMS ...

eo r-. Rebecca. D ·
(]) (l)e Gtbrlel't FIN Bird
uaes lhe talen18 of a oon
woman to tr1tp an embeZZler.

lflihat Plena -tor a ,_
Polrot
wwn
(I) Myalitryl

w.r....,_• .

Wal\2:00)

Nuhvtlle Now
Ql Top Ranlt IIOldnll
.• ·
• LlnJ King Llvel '
11:30 (J)
11) Gntnd Janice tries
•

MoM

MY
SA.'o'S 1 1M
A RCAI...CHIPOFF

WHeN MY AL-ARM
CLCQ:: WENT OFF
THis !WJRNIN€i". •.

e

to gel her tr1tllor bed&lt; from

THe Ot..D el.Dq':.

an uacrupuiOul repa(rman.
Q
.

10:00 w •

.lET
Alrllfon llotoro, ropalred. a N--bull molcn IIi etock. Ron
EntM'Jri...,

Jeckton,

' '

liD e l!ltr TNk: TIM -" '!"'

'

·!

0.•811on
QIEveninlllllwa

Pnp1rlng Now far lhe
F~

att.r brwlde. HouM Cllle, 1110 ·

-304~
.....- Ohio 114-448-24114.
...... wv ' '

~==Q
liD. Anlnlo Hal

HOW LONG IT'S BEEN SINCE

I ATE OUT?

liJ illlllnl VIce
8 "-! I I Mullo Sllop
lha

'

'

Steno.

''

Sopric Tonk Pumolna 110._Gtllll
Co. RON EVANS tHTERPHISES, •
- '
olooioon, OH 1-ICJO.IS7-ela

'

on One

(I) G"!lll'illllllrnete Q

•

'

BERNICE

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

BEDE OSOL

85 Oentral Hauling
R • A Wo!or lwvloo. 11cto1o. clolorno, _.,m..,.oto-1,Dd0 or
·~-,.eo•-

Ooi.S,Watlll'

.

Haul~,

illLiftutl rat~tt volume tlti- ,

CIOUI'Ite, 1.000 to 4.0DO UDIIOit¥;

0111-. - · - . llil. Co11

,_

o• 'WIIaguy' en Llll

.....

'
ences which are governing roo In the

....'

,

,.

··:~=!ngWIOI!IniJ-~
ra. Tho

......, •• Up"

'

In •llln\lltn
'"""·
Clll
•
• • • fit . .
...

;

A unique collective endeavor that Includes two auoclattll, as well u yourIll!, has·a good cillance of sucpeedlr&gt;a
In 1hl year ahaad. It will be a venture
where eech hal aomelhlng apodal to

oller.

~ (lept. D-Olt. ,D ) AI a Ubran
_you are atwaye lnl6tll0d in malntllnlng
harmoniOUI1esoaii?IOM, but t'lCIIIY you
mighe hove to g.t a Unit touQit ao that
Y!&gt;U 'won't be lllcln ldvantago of by
someone with ICIIIIIh Intentions. Get a
Jump on life by -tandlna t_h llnnu-'

bllhles for success today look promlsyear ahead. Send for your Aatro-Grapll lng, especlotly il there Is some unusual
predictions today by moiling $1.25 to type of trophy at stake. II could be of a
Astro-Graph, c/o this llftlllaper; P.O . material nature or some form or unique
Box 9t428. Cleveland, OH 4410t-:!428. recognlllon. .
.
Be sure to state your zodiac sign.
TAURUS (April »May 2G) ldaas. you
SCORPIO (Oct.l4 Nov.l2) Voor Initial conceive today will be wetl"sulted lor
thooghts might be loc;used today on the advancing yoor ~ ln?ereet , but not
negative aspects
111ua11ons rather -••rlly good lor lhl concerns or
than on their pdaltlve anrlbules. After othiC"S. Don't Ioree them on reluctant
deliberation, however. your optimism · partlclpan18.
.
will reiiHrt itllllf.
· GEIIIII(-11..,_ 2G) Yoo might be
SAGITTARIUS ( - . 21-Geo • .21) Yoo ·. abeiiiC" Jet: II,. thlllarP- today and
might not_be roo lucky tony In lhlnga of rhlre'l a c111n01 your behaVior wlll~rrl­
an aeslhetlc or r!Jftlantlc nature, but yoo late tomeone who leell hllllle hBI!
could be extremity roreunalaln matters_ trMted you -r generously withOUt
that are meaningful to JOII llnenclally.
acltno!Ma~g!Nitt.
CAJIIIICOIIN (Dec- INen. 11) Whfn . CANCall (oiUIIel1......., 12) Don't let it
operating 'within your ephere ol lnllu- · be llkl of you today that you tlfl more
ence you'll manage things -.~ve~y · an.,tlve to and COIIIIdlrate o1 your
todoy. When ·you arep outlide or your · MW lrllnell thin .you . . of your old
belllwlck, yoo. might encounter compli-" pata. T-t . , . )101,. equatty.
carlonl with whiCh you can't deal.
· 1.10 -c.~u~r 11-Aele. II) Serlve to be
AOU!4iiiUS (olein. liH'eb. 11) Don't imaginative and il.,mo lodi!Y where
boasr at:&gt;out your rKenl ouccn111 In your 11 cqn9!llntld. II conditione
front of someone~ you ~now haa Jult sur- hive you itymled. experiment with new
fered a - lllbaclt. Thll peraon rnethodtandpoocedu,., Nothing_.
nelda propping up, not remlndlrs or turecl, not111ng gllned.
lnldequacy.
VIIIQQ
211 Thillhould
PIICII (Feb. 10 Ml~ ao) In
be a reerw pit
11 day lor y o u - .
!odi!Y thlt lncll.!de frionda, rrr to do your IOCIII ~11at Ills lftll petiOIIII ,.._
thlna• that don't coat money. F r i - lionlhfpl . . eot,.nad, but n could be
lUJSUHI with a prlcct tag could tum qui •a dlflll 1111 11o1y In dtlllnP. you have
10 be run. · . ·
.
with peop1o In thl world o1 ciommerce.
ARI!I(Mirah 11-Aplll11) YOur Pll'f"'·

:to=-

.

QI..,.._Tonlglll
0 MOVIE: The Gelaha 11oJ

(2:30)
11:SSCIJIIOVIE:To Have ilnd
Have Not (2:00)

wa-.Q

or

act-

·

COurt

Gil

.Plumbing &amp;
Healing

...........

'

(!)Tole AIIIDUDCid
· (lJ Jolin lie! 17 ghlln'l One

==7=~~~~~~~
Dllvlo
Sow-Voo
hMco, - 1
Oaorg• C..k Rd. Parte, 1up.
pi'-, plcluop, ond dollrory. 114-

84

•'Ia..

QIIIDIIOWIIII
I) Illicit ltiiiiDn
11:30 (J) e Ill Tonight IIMw

::l· ,

.
114-441-3111

5

"

,..J

NORTH

TIIIIMw
·~··
·
•
Now

. IIDe

. !II TIM

........-.

.'

• •lltlriT.....,

,... (]) llliJI:ilr• Q .

111:30 CJl • a ..... 11(1111 Willi
Dltlll1l LllllhZJ , - .. (I) llt10YII: , . , lhoat

--Don, Tllar!

·=,... . .·
~.-

(PO)

II:EIIJFU~ • . .

==..

Nlllonlll .
(T)

c-. ..........

.

OH

12:al(l) . . . _ ......

·

1:GO&lt;IIG.-..,
.'
•
81A•11C

,.

tAKS
.AK82

...
EAST

penuaded bim to rail?! ' • J 10 g

.AK784
tQJB 2

spades illltead, since be was reluc~t . t 10 e 7

to bid no-trump witbout a stopptr m . • 10 7 3

.QJ84

hearts. So Soutb got to four spades.
took the A-~ of hearts and con- ,
1Umtued witb tbe seven-apot. U East bad 1
six hearts origiDally, tbat was a .
1~n~nge play. Wby wouldn't East lead

SOUTH
.AKI0812

•Q&amp;

••u
•u

a heart blper than dummy's " Neither
Vulaerable:
eipt? So declarer ruffed low. Nest be\
Dealer: Nortb
played a spide to dummy's q-n.
Wbea East showed out. there were ap- _ s....
Woo!
Nord&lt;

back

parently two more losers - a trump
trick and a diamond. But perbapa', 1 t
sometbiJI&amp; could be done about it. So s t
declarer played ace of clubs, ace of di-

..

a

Pass
Pass

'

It

Opening lead: 'i J

king. H
bad tbe last club, declar- L-------~----1
er could ruff one l'nore club for 10
tricks and I~ the defenders fipt over 1diamond, holding . on to J-9·3 of
tbe last triCk between tbeir bip dla· trumpa, declarer will exit witb bls last
monel and long trump trick. But East diamond. West will bave to ruff and
followed wltb tbe queen on the last lead back into declarer's"' K-10 of
club. Soutb ruffed witb tbe ace of spades. But West wu on bls toes; be
spades.
underruffed, and South bad to lOll! two
H West carelessly discards his last more tricks and tbe contract.

.·

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACRoss ·
DOWN
1 Thick
1 Feed the
swine
slice
2CQmpany
5 Wrack
symbol
com3 Finished
pletely
10 Nothing, .,. .. 4Wenl
1o nBiters
. biking
5 - cotta
11 Iroquois
6
"Paper
Indian
Yesterday's An-swer
Moon"
12 Anti19 Bohemian
weight .
star
quated
· 31 Prokofiev
7 Brit brew 20 Short13 Pact
term
hero
&amp;Deed
140naof
worl&lt;ar
·
33
Demonic
D Place
·the
Sociely .
21. Scope
34 Columnist
· down
11 Kitchen
22 Drawn out
Batretl
Islands
16.Samoan
25 Caron
35 Dark
fixture
role
36 Grass
15 Founc:la·
skirt·
26
Wealhor
coating
tion
20 Writer
map linus 37 Pitching
17 "- lot All
Gay
Seasons"
28
Chalstat
231mpair
lenged
38 Fall
18 Wind
24 Wear
· poinler
30 Overbehind
away
25 Edna

'".,

...

,.,

...
'

,

.
, ...,

•..

32 Vitamindetk:lancy
diSease
36 Leave out
38 Stratford's
river
40Wipadoul
41 Skating
site
42 Casino
ection
43 Do in

•

..
•,

DAILY CRYP'IUQUOI FS- Here's how lo work II: 10/4
AXYDLBAAXR
IILON.GF.ELLOW
~
One letter staitds for another. In this sample A is USI'd
.for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the length and (ormation of the word~ are all
hints. Each day the code !etten are dlffe~ent.
.
CRYPTOQOOTE
,
.

11110 lhe Nlglrt Stereo.

12:00 (J) •

•au

port

Ql l7ltr 8llol Clay Target

Rotary or cable t~ drilling. ~ ,~
wollo complotod amo
Pumldlel and ...vlcll,
•

Co~or'ncloHPiumblng
•
Ntlng
Fciur1h ond Plno ·
' Gtllllpolll, Ohio

\

GJIIIn

PAW .II DO YOU KNOW

Roofing, polnllng, corpontory,
Dlumbtng lfMI ICC
riM.
Ouuonliod _ . wHh relorln- · Con' bill thlll p!'iclo,
........... 114-441-7212 ... :10411711-111114.
.
.

I

10:30 e CIOOit a ChaM
11:oow• w w• 111 Ge

Aon'o TV llorvlco, opocllllzlna • ,

In Zonllh oloo III'Yiclng moil • •

82

4

Farber
novel ./ _
27Chess
pieces
28 Mickey's .
company
29 .American
Samoa

0 700 Chib lptc 'et

::--c:---=::-=--:-----,--::-:-- - .

441 .. 214.

1IJ Law a 0n11r Q

(J)..... •
(]) (I) • PrbwllMte LIM Q
(lJ (I) lil'vlvel IDeolela Q .

Comploto I I - Homo otit upo •
I ropolro, oliO f'IUIIIbiiiG "
'
llleclrlcaJ, rooftna, r.modeltna, '
011101 I tlocko olio. REMOOE[·
INOI · Rolor11-. Elllmotn. • .114-~1111.
.

...

MUidlr, Sill

w- lllnllr, Mlmlr on !he

F101 - · · eon oo11oc1 1·
'*~ doy Or night.
Rogoro -monl

011. ~.. 528.

loams

=plane
... - MO.Yii

0

BASEMENT
WATERPRPOANG
,
Uncond"lonll lllollmo guoron- ,
IN. LoaaJ ,......,. fum.......

Evan1

Q

80nStage

Homa
lmprovemlnls

ling.

10210

Ba~ Hilla. Stereo.

DAYS... ALEADER Wm-1 ~
GOT R€AC1100 10 mRlD

Services

'

.

· 1:30 (J)
11J DllleNnt World
Freddie tries to find an
adopll¥e home for an
Qrllhan. D
(!) Wild Mtettca Q
Hlb,
Two teenagert· experilnce
problema when !hay move to

wllor tonk, '.
• $500.° 304- i•

•.:!:t=
,...... .,_ ..... .,....., ....,......
.:'
_,.........
tomp. -ltll. onlllook . . . - ;

...... .. . . . . , : :

on -od tot, oon bll movld,
S4,100.1--l

llttMIIII

Accessories

81

3

amonds~ of clubs and a club ruff.
He p
a diamoncfbact·?o dummY's

liD. The !limp-. Bart
_

-~ ::87~~U~p~tio-:1at-e-ry-- ..···

ar, ,,.._, loolh • 112 ,..., -..

iJi ltonletillte Q

., _. ••· t14-241-

IUI eomo.., RoiiY Sport,

-

o.t your ahl:ln ...
liNWood eauon,

SliM! Hill

- - ·.......
tlnol goodoor
cond,
....,.
-lint
""

Vloglnlo,-

9

1111 '"'110,

z.

YugO G.Y., ltondord,
MIIFII lteNO
...., l&amp;r, low

~

r==E-.~yj"~

oao.

fk
om:·: : :·-----;---

1f7V--~-~­
--t2168304-

n-

=

ltd~ =cltl....,ll 4~e.:"'"'

Md I 11M11 lltllrootn~. 2
. . _ ........ tti,OOO • • ,.
304-m-eMil or nlghlo ~

- . . _--=pony

1ea o••

..._51-

Mr1tartea Father Dowllna

'baltlea lhe-

•-.lc•
box,~
....

-

Brace
~~~~~r-~::=~~:1

j

Auld Pa11s &amp;

1117 Chowy Novo. 2 ~PO
our-tic. GooCI
ion.
WOOarboll-. 11411t2·"10l11.

"*"•
~~..--==:;:::::::::=j.::::;::-=::=====-l4p

=.-:it;':·1..,_ . .

Altair (2:001
(]) We Filler Dow•ou

1172 Ito,.,.,. truck oompor, •

F'
,."*"•

on - l o t , Cllhon, WV. IIorgo

PubHcSale.
&amp; AuctiOn

MW llaatd..

•-n.

QIC.O..IIre

ill !De MajoHeague

4
1111-3335' fiiC

2

.Q7.5

heart IM!miU

7:31.(J) The • ...._..
. 1:00 (J). 11) C9ebr .,_ Theo
olf8rt to plan Martin's
bachlklt lrty. D
. (I)IIOVIrWulilr ....

Molar Homes

ms.

Q

oe
n-·• = r·
Ql Lercllee Plo - - - · T-

campe,_ &amp;

Aut08 tor 5ale

v.c:.,T""'

(l)eMI1M'IFIIIIIIJ

lor-·

71

lll

(])
· · Enlallilll-1t
Tonight

~-=-::=-:---::-.....,-:-7-c-=
1unk~.... :
retrlgoraior IIIII - r i c Hoit tot- •to. Round ond tlqUore
llo.._ Ail aciOcl -'t1nf1 oondl- bollo. Call 114-14..2344 oltor I 1.;.;.;...;.;.;;...;......;,.....,...._ __

··=·= ======

•port-

7:30

::::..

Building .
SUppi'A
,•
'""

1 t 1 1 I' I' I' I' I
I I .I ·I I
I

trump opealnp of 12-14 bip-card
poiats. So Nortb opened witb one club,
lnteDdl!ll to rebid one IIO'trump to de- WEST
scribe 16 balaDced poinls. East's one- t J e1 3

.BOATERS
,
Mercury Morout.- Spoc:lotllt .
Foclory Trotlnod Bondod. Procloion llobllo Moilno. Wo oomco lo ,
youl8t441Nill.

Hoy, ..,_ 104-1"1US71.

billoW.

Pantry - Emend- Rodeo- £1estow --, BEDSPREAD
.''There's nothing wrong with this lace," the dry cle.aner
informed the lady. Sighing the lady replied ," When I
brought it in here, It was a BEDSPREAD!" _ ·
_

·

Alumn 12 ft V boet, 304 112r3311. ,'

p;n.

from~ No.3

you dovelop

b•M Lin -ANswas .

7:05(1) Happr Daya

=.,:-:.u=•od~.Dol::;::vo::-:;oho::;ft64
·..;......:.H,.:I::y~&amp;;;..;G:.;ra..:,..ln,.......,.,....
, _ whh b'.J.. R:,.,CC:.. $2300. 2••
~:.=r
~ ~..,~ 11~~~~~;j~~~
114 Ul 1031oftor llplft.
••F--'-n &amp; .•
;;tton.::,:.,:l14=::-t8-2801.-:=:::::::===:WHrTE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron .UU... 1210 Sooond Avo,
Gtllllpoflo, OM~--

e ~~~~~M~LE FORI

tloo chuckle quolod

by filling In t1oe m;u ;ng -ds

0 Sea,_ and Mn.ICJntl

·~bloc"
ooll, top lllood lno, IOIIcl
"'
oppiolt. 100 lb. CCIII otllr
8:30p.m. 114-211 ei02.
Ch~·-104-e71-252l
-·-

::U::..,::
·-::,11;-_
1r.;;N..
oon

8 ~:i~'M UMBfRED I'

Iter IOUI. D
\fl R - 10 lave IIIII Planet

76

L.---L.-1

'•

'•

OMIOGt••

Storcrolt Til-Hull ,

Boat. 121 HP, E¥11wudl Enalnl,

L-.1...-.&amp;..-.&amp;..-

:==:- . .

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

ft.

T RET 0 N

The man answered the
phona and called to his wife,
"It's the pest control man. He
;~~~~~--~~--~~.ak to you abouc

1--r-1
l ;...-T,-=-ri,,~,i:,.;.;..,lr--11G Complelo

(I)
(J)MaciiiiiAinr

il=..eo:nna

KXIO. In Exootlonl oondHion.
114-1112-7041.

tt72 17

r

•h."or ••••
e lnalde
l!dltlon

fllaeHour

.

cttoA--. Smi'Mnlal, Ella"~ club

et.•..

.,...m.

®
(])
Cll

0

=-~~-::;~·~-==~·~~

•

I

.

,:;L~Y~-1,
.. J ·
I' 1 ~ ~

L.

n',':.
8
!De CBS NeWaQ

• """'
Orllllth
QIUvrt
lw
0 IIIKic lt.. m
1:31 (J) Andr Ollllltll

•••

Nlod drlvor lot' , _ . ,

2-AWeAIICNewiQ
bbott and CatiiiD

fUmh~n,

Livestock --

· 1. I'

e:oew ......, ••• .,.

.

.

!,-I.....;.A.:....:;Nr.=--1

1:30 (J). Ill N8C Nl(lhllr .....

WI oro nowWINTIRIZINOJ111r1ll.
John Doore 1Z ft. ~: HrviCI, ICCHIOI'IM. Wt lnatll
Good _.Kion.l14-247-34144.
SHAINKWAAP.
RIVERSIDE ·,
MARINI Gtlltl ...lo, 011. 114-441room toblo, ilompo..,
lobloio oo• 2424, 1.-.nto021&lt;t.
mloc. k - . 114-211-1168.

2 bod,_, untum- - ' "
in lllddl1pcrt. Newtr
241-1121.
1tet Cut- S u - Oklo,
,.- d ltd, cenln~l hNt Md air.
304-17W1tt.
ond rotrta-lor, llvlna room All utiBIH Incl-. 1271 1 Sore • ...... _ ottolr, rocr1ner 56 Pets tor Sale
•• ·~
1
- Buick -w•
·~-~.gooneulle, 2 ""bedroom auRa, fur. ~- 1200 lllpMII. 114- choir I _
, . , unH. No ~~::0::~:--i:::~::-;:;:RMCI, 2 ....,. otd, r.w hot 04
bllwlen 7 am and 7 roooonoblo ollor
· Coli 2 polr Po1000k, :104-773-UTI.
dMion. PO lrlfiiM.
It+
wotor tonk; · now kltchon oink, Pill·
I •• ••• -31 oltw • p.m
••• 3152
~··
•
·
a ....._ 1 thru a. All itro
utiiH~ vory rUoonobil. Lot 2
,_ . 1
both, newly
11171 Chov. Monto eorto, v-e,
111r1otl. 114111112-7883.
llzi ...xso. 118,&amp;00 linn. 814- Nmo ~oilldJ. $200'- AN utiHin AUCTION ISWAIN
RJRNITUAE. 12
2dr, A/C, good Work cor, 1141124'771.
Included, ue..-n ~ulr-.d, 114- Oihro St., Dlllllpollo. Now &amp; Uood Groom ond SupP!J Bh:r, .t&gt;.l 1112-32211.
~
both, corner 1o1, 441•7733,1Mn441 UD.
z .,..,.roQiftl,
. tumlture. hMtere, w•am a Grootnl!lll- A l l - All fiH.
limo Ptl Food Docoilr. Julilo 11171 Chivy llollbu, 304-871~h •nd dec:lc, HendrtNOn, AJMirtment~ . 2 ilediOOhlll, rica, Work - · · 114-441-3111.
6813.
Caiii14-44W231.
304-e7&amp;-"111•.
304-17Ht04
Whl~pool rolrlgwllor. Coil 114- Ponrillo
BonMvllio
3 112 ml,_ out Crib Crlok BEAUTFUL APARTMENTS AT 441-4140,
AKC Rog. lloogloo. AU . . op- 1m
pool. one , _ ond rumlr&gt;a. Broughin!, loodlcl, ...,. tiroo,
Rood 2 • - • - - now •-·• -·-·~•
~. BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Prlood on lbllfty. ~00. 114- ..,. g-.- 22 .,.ubllr _,~.
-~ oldlng, roo!, lurnoco, ESTATE~... , 131 ......... Plkl 52 Sporting Goods
IMWMS.'
outo, -lliiHC. 304-.7281.
-.trolo r, ZOX40 lnground pool, loom IIAimo. Will to oltoD I
.~:;:.=:::..~::-::=-:::::-:::::;:
Buok llovo, lltollfto dloh, op- mov•. Colla14 Ul2681. EOH.
A~gor 317, Mognum MVIr ulod, · AKC Rog. milo Bhlli-llu, block 1111
ExD. Cond.
polntnw~~ only, 1104-871-1112 or
POQ. It4-241-R141.
·
1 whfto. ,._.. - . ..... golc!. 114-4411-1DZt.
11711-'1'725.
Fumlahotl EHiclonoy, 1171,
llolh 1 - · ald. Hoi nilltocl.
I
~
Utlln•- -lei, Gtllll......._ 114- Wlnclnolor llodol 1900, XTA
tll2 Ford E!~~.-". oun
3 - - houto, ilond con- ••• • --::, r:_.... ....... '
....
fHOftbor, 1200, .- . ~--"'~-·- only-,~'!!::· IDOl, 11,200• ......,.,..,,_ .
triiDI, 304-175-5104.
- _ . , • ••12 gege dMr elug. ac. cond,
- - ""P
• ,.........,..
1
Dill• ...... door. Exbod- !'~·~-!::13~3~1;_
• ..:....::......._~ ~
7 room 1-112 both, 1.3 •• ,.., od· Groctouo 11v1-.
·~ 1 ond Z
VI"·
-~ ~n
dHionol 33 ocreo hunting ond raom
II vmogo S3
AKC roglolored bloclt •N wn I ootlonl oondhlon. Air, crulol,
topo, ~.100. 132 .......
umber. "114-w.t-7111 ., 1-384- ~~~IIIII
' AAntlquea
IMillllilll ~. 1~t~~r
Apo"mlfl1oln Mldcl-. From .,....-~~==-=--:--=-=~ lint _.'Ifill, 1121.
- nutP..._.
••••·
1111. Col 114-IIZ·TIIt EOH.
Buy ow loll. Rl..tno Antlquoo, 3177.
•
1114 M~• Corli!J ¥-a, loll or
7 roomo 1 112 botho, country
lurnlohod moblil...._ 1 1124 E. lllln • - · P-ovy.
.
~
rarva:::. nuck .. lonn
living but ctoie to Molga eohoOI NlcliY
,......,
Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 1:00 An bNid pol
2t tredl
~- ·
. · 1114 Koyooton
ond
111. U-4 illno, milo boiCJW townb=:okl~ P;'!'tr!"!ldoy. 1 :00 ro 1:00 p,fll. ,..,. , . _ . - .
TGWn~hlp Rood 27. Flrot rood to
CA, - ·
' R • ~~---.
~lmt~aa. • n o - ·
rlaht_. ~11114-112·7118- 1-384a
_
.,. •11 033'
- · · ......- ......
1111 - 1 UmKIII. VI,
2m •
Nloolf Fumlehod -~~· Homo
""~d
Doltl-...
IIUIItil-. bom Aua. PI, PB, AJC. '11k whMI,
ng
GOVERNMENT HDIIES trom II In ctfy, CA. Su111blo lar 1
poinllngo, ~. ar entire IOioto !!:., ~1,!!1
. •_ AKC ·,IIIW f'ltlloloNil, wlndcssa. new bf'lkM.
$4,700 114-lllz-2211 """ 5 pm.
(U ropol~. Dollnqllllll tu
•o.p lllqulred 14- coli oolloot 1104121 3271, ar 304- -~·R-llliono. Your
112M1114.
Dno-lt"d c.ttory Ponton, 1111 ~ Cllllgor, Zdr,
hltchblclt. illtlto,wlth red lnllr•reo 111 - - Eltt. G\1· One tiodroom op11. 1ar renr.
, Ml
II
·
I I • - tllld Hlrnolopn lor, AMINI I 1Jd, PI MW ·n41112 ,-.,; ..,,.., repo 1111.
P21 "*""- Dopool ,......red. 54
ICe aneous
11• nuu4 oftlr 1 p.m. ,
hlllll, 12.100. 114-4411-H
114-11122'11 aftarl p.m.
. Me-hancl,lte
a~g o.ka~o
Homo: 1u1n on
...
• - "N~r'.- ~~,... Chow. Conllor, lllttlon
1
121.. . • • * 12 hp Wnhm ollie
. . _ 4 Dr., AI:, out_o.J 1tll
Fonl Tompo, 4 Dr. 4 CJI•o AC,
F9o' 1111 o r - . 2 ....., _ 1:001 I :OOPII.
304- fltoh Tlnlt, :Mt1 OllokMn ,.• ._ IUIO. 114-446-2300.
'
·
-_ . . , ~ t 112_ Twlnllh!onT-Houolnglar
s.
·
PolntPinn~.--S,10
Mooon COunty, ~rhl Eldorty ...r Hlndiooppod. 4 aood OIIICiy - - pi Ill ilp
IIIII 1D pi 1111 PIYI c ill! Turlolno, 12,1110,
•ut.om~llc, -'*i 1N4 Daytona 5
Prlold .on lnopiOIIon. I bod- ~- now ovlloblo-&lt;ont- 304177S-&amp;11.
,
......,.... t4UL
opd. tz.zoo..114-2111-1270.
roomt, z · botho, Ml 11-..t Ina lot' 30% ol odlullld
0no Jllr old- Lhou " ...._ ~nl.
l
hZ4"-14
=-~ond
St.
•
coli
71.000
ITU
FUll
011
HMtor
1111 lulloru lour drive
,•
,
IOIIoon, Atoo, 271 1111. ilnk iiii2iO Wotolorful poi,ID4 IU41».
OL1D Turllo WogotJ. Loodld, oxUpololrs untum- Apor1· pl. full oH.114o:IIU4t:l._
Roglotlloclt
a......, col- -loil. Pornway. 114-A,._ 304-e7&amp;-17JI.
'
d
,
no
plio,
utiiHin
Antiquo
ond
A_,
•
11omoo,
8he@hlod
Pufilo
1100
-"114- 11124141.
Ohio
to •Ill 1
-w 814-441-113!
·
ltomp~-"-~'.,,114-44144t1. 2411133, • 111 11111DI After 1N7 Thuncllrtlln:l, lallcWcf, 3.8
-HOUII I 4 loiO, -llw, IIVtnt,
LY-e, ' 41,000· m. .IJrc. cond,
•ntna.
• tomltr room•nnOnalrig
;::::·m
::·-::::--:::=~-::::= fl,aaa.
e14-3P0214.
,
_,..hod, UKC Rot Tonto•
-Ia,
IVIIilblo WI~ d~
h-ob,._ 2 ,.._
114-441,... Chocoool arey, lroo
tSNAFU~ by
Beattie
lootlod, owory Cflllon llCipt Ttopo,- r ; ; 1GMII!.~.ooo
MUalcaJ · .
miiH,· II\- Will
32 Mobile Homea

z boclroorn -

WAS TI-IAT ?

compllto top, now uphololory. ,
Colll14-211-t3tloltor7:00 p.m. .

Jlm'o Form Equlpmon14-4f'' 31,
Will ~~~. 114
VTTTi
Wide arlvt'n ,... I ...a! farm
troctocw I lmplltt.ototo. Buy,
Nil, trade, l :oo.&amp;:OO welkdlyt,
Sot.dll-.

1: ;;=-=-=-:-:7.":""-::::::::- 63

:"-..!.POl~~~='" =-~ 55

,......wit h 4 ChiiiO~.7.,lltJ por
dlnotto
WHk. lloilic Chof 1~ cu. ft.
Aolll(lorotor 112.111* Wlllk, 15
cu. ft. lr-or. 110.110 por
wOolt.VI'Ro Furnhuro. 111. 141, 4
mil• oft At. 7-contoctctrr.Opon 7
doyo 1 w""'-

Uftil

2 ton GMC Farm Truck, or canle,
aroln · 1 H)'droulic Dump
200- of llrow, 114-2_,
Ilk lot' ,Joy.
For Solo: Formal Troclor, Supor
C,IIIOO. .-1-4411.

.

D'tlrdtl•

5ft."'--·'"'·

~llll;l.~~~~~:;i:ii
opoocl ~
10

Moving Solo: living room. ouHo,
roll · IWIY bod, 4 dining ..,.m

tom - requl.....
l)lotrlct,
No ·""""""
l14-241-11122.
Nioo lbr; wllh oxpondo llvlnb
nMMn, Lll...- prd, afty eahocil
cjlllotot. Af 1M oonw o1 Rind
ond Sr., Konougo, 114441-11113.

WHOSE IDEA

i

41or - - llobllo -

oZiw--.---

AND THE 61l.OOND WILL
BE COVERED WITH SNOW ..

.

• .._Today

Chorolc•.

4234.
OUIIfty brldot I hood
'~'II
•
·.
~~
t
In
ood
dreu.
Size
1f.
Half
,:;·
. -:104-e75-J1131.
typo
ozor, II
coriii,IIIO.
, !lortouo lnqu..,_ only. 1
-

•

SUMMER IS OVER ..PRE TT'(
SOON IT'LL BE WINTER.

*"

In C_l.._ Aof 'I Doi&gt;, ,.
114 Ul 4111, 304.f71-

J::'

THAT'S ·

•llwtl11r Tltoraughbnld

Dlgea

Concroto I pi~
ilnito, f!orlll!m M - 11 tho June- . 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'a
• - Rout• sa ·ond 124, 1,.,==~~-=:-::-::::::=.:Roft- Ivane Enltt'IM'I•n. Jack· tion
w111 or Llngmlll, Ohio.
1m ChiYy Von, 350, outomotlc1 :
eon, o:t4 1.aoo.o7..121.
rocllo hNtor, aood dreo, ohon .
whMi a... Wi"ld m1ka •xcel· •
IElttrtl t.ovy with
conYef"S6on van. e14-tt2· '
uoal- -ion.
Farm Suppl1es
2111.
.
:
IISO.- 1111
&amp; Livestock
tm o1oop
414, :104- •
Flrwwoad lor •Ia. Cut allbe.
171-1111 or 17541111.
:
•-·111 ar 1114-211 14111.
81
Farm
Equipment
l'knoocl; illrgo pioluor. lood. All
74 Motorcycl's ·
lladii 0 ~ Cill - - · a t +
~·
··..1ilO
MF a,110· 131 MF 1110 Yornoho 421 IT, good cond,
44&amp;-41..,..
-~-. Ulod Sft. Buoh $450. 304-871-2411.
'
For ........ .......,... . .
Hotr,
• Ulod Bllldo,
1•11
KA-Itl
Nlnjo
&amp;00.
Auno
·
IIDli; will nnonco. 114-211For Solo: 11111 Cho., ""'"' owner
~- good. 11350. :
l:onvorlolort
Von.
Loodod, 1122.
II,Doo. a-1 ono - - · Coli Z loltion 2,200 bu com crlbt
1•n Suz. Kotono . 100, 7,100.
1~
$800•. IICh, Will til' for mUM; "' Red" Hlw MMzl\IW1 like
For Bolo: .eo... Connon~~. $200. ntro.·:104m-at48.
nowl Coil Evonlngo: , 114-4*

--":'+-

j1---r-(.;;j o,lf:...:,
jsHIJ

Q

0 CMoon &amp;pr.n

a
. 6ECAUSE

•-l'lflll- tlmoo.

2

.

~:zan.

A iul ...... 1171 Chew. 4x4,
ton pickup. - i c TrOno
31111 lrlfllno, runco 11-1 AMIFM
oooMito- • op'*on. a- ,
tlrw, aU lnlnt n
p.art•
roploood - · coot 1422.00. Cob
good bod bod. tt 000 or boot otlor. COn - 11 .\7U Clrllvol Hln,
toto

I
-1· IINSHAV
I 1 I'-I .

Cll~WcQ

a-. oulo

_.,lei

$511. 11oo11_. 1225 ro Q7L
lonopo $21 lo 1128. Dlnlll•
llotllllluptoMII. Wooclloblo
w-e
oholn 12811 IO IJII. Doolto
IIMS up to 837L Hullhlo 1400 I

a.-

&amp;

--~~~~~~--~

Hoooftl

12ill0 2br, illrgo lot, · ~40/mo;
-urfty Dlptlltt, 114-441-

!...

ITS AUTUMN

.•

•

ill !D.

1:00 (J). (]) \1).

1120.

Wlilnted to Rent ·

£!!!.-go MIIM'

THURS•• OCT. 4
EVENINO

1168 Rongor Pick-up, 114-441-,

H - Plt1t,
n, o1 Pooo-.
~,~.... porto, - - Coli

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
8oloo ... priood 13t1 to ltll. To-110 ond up
to 1'121. Hldl 1 b1d1 tsto to

Chomlcoi, GtiiUpollo

ltoulfw

M

eo. nit y lloblio

1114-241--

_

112 ton. 310
Run1 good,

lllr, Pro-lonllly iHuiM onl~":'"blo tluak, 14.1!10.

wtth~... ~ng.

·Household
Goods
3bod _ _

engine.

1. . -Fonl F-350, now

48 Space for Rent

o..na.

2 bocloOIMI , _ hauH, po~ly
tumlohod. hN IIIII, IIIII
depooll. 114-182-3122 "'-'ololfiO.

Chi-.

11U ,_,114 T. Pickup.._I GYIInd«, autorMt:kl. PSIP•, H.O.
$h"h, $1,200. 814-441-22'13. ....

Atoo tllllw - · 'AH nook-upo.
Col .. . . 2:00 p.lll., 304-7'/3.lllt, Ma.on WY.
.
•

Rio
n -' """·
....

Houses for Rent

/VC ,,._- -

0111

'
jH4. Frloahlllnor whh' 45 lt.
lrolilr. llf,l)OO.I14·1112-UM.

\

s,.o.e lot wrltahop In o. - r

Will Iron In

Doctar'a aeeiatant. Muat likl

Avo, Frl Oct l!lh. '"?

o...-.
S.a.: Fri., hi. Rouah
Lono, a-h!N. Clothll, dlohoo,

..

1fT

Rentals

...

=:...~,t~,;.lll~

·-lii?V.

"He's a lousy watchdog, but
a lot of fun!"

· a ' mil-. South on Route 7,
Frldoy, s..o.-;: ,-~horsaw Box,

Church Rummage Sale: Eastern

1171

rebull

Ufllllllo., Fuml-. I - ,
bidh, clliul, ..,. WUf\ldrY. .....

...,Ina ,_..

-~

1112..S2211ft"!' .,....

·.

ROOIMfow..., _ _ or-.rto.

a

llorkot Sooond Avo1 R~r or
F1f111 Ave, Many nou11 hold
lterM, uMd otfb equl~ent
ond now Homo -~~
- I bUilno-. Spon-~
by: Ulddllton bY~• to Btnerlt
AMI.,..• Chrlll:me&amp;
·
Boya., lldl... winter dolhll,
oolo, choir, dlnoltl, I~ 0&lt;1.
Slh, lth. t-4. 181• c 11 '""·
Roln Concllo.

'*•-

.
114-

ltortl.... I12D/Iolo. llolllo HobL
11t Uf.IIID. ·

3 Fomlly Gtlrogo Solo: Frl I Sot.,
1-7 Adull
Olllldnn clolhlng,
ho\lll.~d goocta, mt.c, 12"4

ALLYord S.illo- 81 Paid In
AdYinoa. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho dly bo..,. tho od 1110 ruri.
Sundly
odltlon odHion
- 2:00- p.m.
Fridlf. llondly
2:00
turdl•
p.m.
•·
BiaYordiW•.--IIII:o.tl,

tt111 ,_, Roncltoro, llltll lop-

Rooma'

33 Farms for 8ale

r..:..

1

UpoiMo, illlr, . , . . , - . -

~-

Television
Viewing

72 Trucks tor S.le

' """ •..... lurnl-.
.....,....

Qooi-

Thuro, F~.

BraD uttll, .

Apartment
tor Rent

lng, oltlr11na. on lot In Qud =·~Ill '"!-"'
.c-.
-~-City
MobHtttoa.e.l1t 'tt,lltD.
45
Fumlehecl

~l·--T~c::
ptllloihl
_...,
0

·- ·

_~-MidtfaPQrt.
Ohio
-- .
·-~-·

-

" LAFF-A-DAY

..

Yard Sale

7

October 4. 1990

Octoba' 4. 1990

Ohio

IE.~. ..,..

HJ ·

DSCJX

NZ

I

PM I.

HUHF ,I

Cl
J)

· 11 .11

S II It
Mt/1

( .

.

CrJPI•41•ote:

THERE IS

..,.
•

•

UN

7. 0 II .I V !J c·. •I

B C Z A

Yeet..-••r'•

A

STRENG'IJf OF QUIET ENDURANCE AS SIGNIFitANT OF COURAGE AS THE MOST DARING Ff:A'JS
Of PROWESS. - HENRY TUCKERMAN .

.

'

l N M

J N . . _A II 0 () S Q I.

I.NMO
E .

II"

ATDOHRHXHJKA

·-

..

.-

'i.·'l

•."

"'
· t

'

. ·'

'

�P8a•

18-The Oily Sentinel

Poriwlloy-Midclepol't. Ohio

l3eiJt of the Bend

What a .way to ·win
By BOB HOEFLICH
There must be a delicate way
to tell you about this activity. In
many Instances
In this day and
age, apparently
some donn'!
have to be con·
cerned a bout
deltcale Jan·
guage -or plain·
just aren't. Hqwever. being from
the old school", I somehow feel
that ~omtng right out with
·:blunt" jusnsn't my bag. ·
Now, about that activity.
The annual Racine Area Road
Apple Contest will be held at 1
p.m. on Sunday, Ocl. 21, at the
farm of Tom Hamm on the
Forest Run Road. Now, If you
. are also ftom the old school, after
A few seconds of thinking road
apples, you think of horses. At
last year's conte$t, that was okay
- 'cause they used horses.
However, this year two Holstein
cows will determine the lucky
winner of the contest.
Here's the way It works; A
!lei~ will be mar)!.ed Into 300
numbered squares and the
squares will be sold at $10 each.
Tbe two Holsteins will be put Into
the field and the owner oft he first
square In which one of the cows
deposits manure will win $1,000.
There will be judges and ll Is
hoped that the contest doesn't
end up in a tie- or whatever.
Proceeds from the event will
go to toward paying for a trip to
Washington, D.C., for eighth
·graders of Southern High School.
All eighth graders are selling
squares or those Interested may
. purchase their squares by con- .
tactlng Bill Baer or VIckie Hill at
the school.
There! I hope you understand
It all- and I hope I was delicate.

Pirates
capture_
Game One

include some iCebergs and Ice
glaciers.
Finding a balloon on your
property Isn't that unusual these
days since balloon launches
seem to be a sign ot the times.
However, 48 balloo1111 .Is a
dltferent story.
We(lnesday nliht, 48 _orange
· and White balloons, all tied
together landed on the property
of Mrs. Junior Hunt In the
Chester area. There was no
. Indication -,- and that's unusual
as to who launched ~he balloons.

*90 MODELS UST· GO*
1990 DYNASTY

Month-In and month-out, our
excellent squads making up the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services are ml!klng over 200
runs.
· September was no exception.
Squads made 223 runs which
included 73 by Pomeroy; 56 by
Middleport; _291;)y Racine; 27 by
Rutland; 19 by Tuppers Plains;
n by Syracuse, and two by
Columbia . Township's unit.
Squads took 105 patients to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 40
to the Holzer Medical Center; 11
, to Pleasant Valley, and 19 to
other hospitals.
In addition, there were another
47 runs made by the Transfer
Squad and three LlfeFJight and
SkqMed calls were handed by the
services during the month.
Bob Byer, director of the
services, provides the statistics
which point up how dePillldentwe
are on the sq11ads. • ·

Canis:

1990 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER S.E.

1990 JOD.GE DAYTONA

DESCRIPTION
'

ill!

PLYMOUTH VOYAGER S.E. FWD
BLACK CHERRY PEARL COAT PAINT
SEAT TRIM-DELUXE CLOTH. VINYL
POPULAR VALUE PACKAGE
7 PASSENGER SEATING PACKAGE
TRANSMISSION-3 SPEED AUTOMATIC
ENGINE-3.0L OHC MPI V-8 .
AIR CONDITIONING
LUGGAGE RACK-ROOF MOUNTED
AM/FM STEREO CASSETTE.!'I API~ W/CLO
TIRES P196178R14 SBR BSW-4
.

1'990 DODGE D-1' 50

.

-1

,

WAS S11,941
'.

DODGE DAYTONA-2 DR. HATCHBACK
FLASH RED CLEAR COAT
SEATS-LOW BACK BUCKETS AND SPLIT
POULAR EQUIPMENT DISCOUNT PACKAGE
TRANSMISSION-3 SPEED AUTOMATIC
ENGINE-2.6 LITER SOHC EFI
CASSffiE RADIO UPGRADE

-

1990 DODGE DAKOTA 4X4

THE 2oo CLUB - James Anderson became the
' first m~mb.er of the newly organized 200 ,Club of
the Melgs.Jsand Boosters Thursday. Membership
fee for the Club Is SlO. Debbl Buck here accepts the
first ~embershlp from Anderson. The moriey will

WAS S14,05·2

'

DESCRIPTION
D160 131 WB DODGE SWEPTLINE PICKU~
COlORADO RED ·
I ..
BENCH·SEAT-CLOTH Ill VINYL TRIM
AP LIGHT PACKAGE
ADVANTAGE PAC I
AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
318 CID V-B ENGINE EFI
WINDOW REAR SLIDING
,
AP MIRRORS-BRIGHT 8"X1 " LOW MOUNT
AP WINDSHIELD WIPER-DELUXE 2 SPEED
BUMPER REAR STEP TYPE PAINTED
.
AP RAM'S HEAD HOOD ORNAMENT
AP FUEL TANK-30·GAUON FRAME MT.
AP 2 STEREO RADIO SPEAKERS .
P216/78R18 BSW/SBR (Iii
AP WHEEL COVERS (4)-BRIGHT

1990 DOD-GE DAKOTA CLUB CAB

HOOVER•
legecy"
UprtghtV-

HARRY MESHEL
Senate Minority Leader

123.9 WB DODGE DAKOTA SWEPTLINE
SAND, ME-T AUlC
.
BENCH SEAT-CLOTH Ill VINYL TRIM
AP LIGHT PACKAGE :
ADVANTAGE PAC I
4 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRASNMISSION
3.9 LITER V-8 ENGINE EFI
AP WINDSHIELD WIPERS_;INTERMinENT
REAR STEP BUMPER-PAINTED
TIRES P231i/78R18 XL BSW SBR (61 .
OWNER COMMUNICA110N PROGRAM
MANUFACTURERS STATEMENTOF ORIGIN
7 ADDIITONAL GALLONS OF GAS
6710/ G.V.W. PACKAGE

....,

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ALL PRICES AFTER REBATES
TAX 8a TITLE NOT INCLUDED.

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AilE

OPEN MON., WED., &amp;
· FRI. 8·7 .
TUES. &amp; THUR. 8-5:30
SAT. 8·4

. •.•.

State Sen. Harry Meshel, the
minority leader of the Ohio
S!lnaie, will be 'the featured
speaker at the Meigs County
Democratic Party Fall Dinner on
Saturday at the Meigs Senki.r
Multipurpose Building in
Pomeroy.
Meshel represents the 33rd
Ohio Senate District, located In
the Youngstown and Mahonlng
County area.
Meshells an adjunct professor
of Political Science at Ohio
University, and holds a Masters
Degree, ln. Business Admlnllitra·
t!on from Columbia University:
According to Democratic
Party Chairman Sua Malson,

there were an addltloruil 101,000
By VINCENT DEL GIUDICE
people our of work· last month,
UPI Business Writer
. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The · Including a bout 42,000 tern porary
civilian unemployment rate census workers dismissed as the
jumped to 5. 7 percent In Sep· government's 10-year population
tember - the highest In more count neared completion.
The latest data were In line
·than two years - as factories
with
economists'. predictions.
laid off more workers, the
·
September's
unemployment
government said Friday. '
rate
the
highest
since 5.7
The job picture 1.n the services
percent In March 1988-follows a
Industry also failed to Improve.
The Labor Department said 5.6 percent ra,te in August and a

WAS S15, 189
130.9" DODGE DAKOTA CLUB CAB-2W
COLORADO RED
STERLING SILVER. METALLIC
SPLIT BENCH BET-CLOTH
AP LIGHT PACKAGE
ADVANTAGE PAC I
TWO TONE PAINT PROCEDURE II
REAR BEAT
•
4 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
3.8.LITER V-8 ENGINE EFI
AIR CONDITIDNI ..G
AP WINDSHIELD WIPERS-INTERMmENT
REAR STEP BUMPER-PAINTED
FUEL TANK-22 GALLON
POWER STEERING
TIRI!8 LT211171R-11 ISW SBR I
DELUXE WHEEL COVER-BRIGHT 4
OWNER COMMUNICATION PROGRAM
MANUFACTURERS STATEMENT OF ORIGIN
GASOLINE 7 GALLONS
18101 G.V.W. PACKAGE

·.&lt;

.'

.

Story said Jewell was one of 12
people Indicted by a July grand
jury. Tile Indictments came after
a year,Jong investigation by the
, prosecutor's office, the Sheriff's
, · Depar'lment and the Bureau 'or
Criminal. Investigation and
Identification.
Jewell, represented by Meigs
public defender Charles H.
Knight, was a co-defendant with
her husband, Manford "Terry"
Jewell, Who is serving a setence
for cocaine sale stemming from ·
an unrelated offense.
He Jewell Is scheduled for trial
on Thursday,

--.

Meshells a "veteran legislator of
i9 years, unparal_laled In the Ohio
Senate as a producer of major 1
legislation."
.
· "He Is a strong supporter of
workers, consumers, and senior
citizens, as his record proves",
Malson said.
The dinner will be served at 6
p.m. , with the program beginning at 7 p.m.
State Sen. Jan Michael Long .
and State Rep. Mary Abel will
also be on hand, along with other
state and local ·candidates.
Tickets are · $7 and may be
purchased from any DemOcratic
committee person or at the door.

..

5.5 percent rate In July, accordIng to the report compUed by the
.department's Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
Counting mUitary personnel,
the ·nation's total jobless rate
s~ood · at · 5.6 percent In
September.
The number of jobs lost last
month was the most since 104,000
In June 1986, . a 'Labor .Department spo-k esman· said.
The number of factory jobs has
been slashed by 520,000 positions
since peaking In January 1989 · and tl!at severe trend continued

BACKSTREET VIDEO_ Ralph and Sue Hall
are the new owners of Backstreet Video, located
at 113 West Second Street In Pomeroy. The store Is
open from 10 a.rit, until 9 p.m. Monday through
.

Thursday and 10 a.m. untll9: 30 P-Ill· o.n Friday
· Saturday. In a ddlli on to popu1 ar vid eo till es,
and
Backstreet Video rents Nlntendo games and sells
soft drinks and snacks. Pictured are Sue Hall, left,
and employee Unda Gilkey.

;:;~\~~~~~r~~~~~~7.1g~~ Disappointed Bush consultS

•th Ieaders on next move

seasonal adjustment," the Labor
'
.
Department said. "Durable
g~s Industries continued to
account for most of the declines, · . ;' ·
· ·
as transportation equipment, · ,'
electronic equipment, and InduswASHINGTON (UPI) - A veto another stop-gap spending, · l. bu&lt;jg~t agreement that proposed
trial machinery each near l0$t disappointed President Bush be- measure, called a continuing . a c,omblnatlon of· spending cu'ts
15,000 jobs In September.
gan a rourid or consultations wiih resolution, to avoid a shutdown of
and tax Increases to reduce the
:·smaller but sun stgni11cant congressional leaders Friday on the government.
soaring federal deficit by $500
losses occurred In fabricated
the nexfmove to keep the federal
"There 'are so many different
billion over the next five years.
metals, furniture, and stone, clay
government In business after the posslblilttes," Fitzwater saillln
The continuing resolution,·
and glass products," the departHouse's stunning rejection of the discussing Bush's next move.
which expires at midnight Fi'rment said.
budget summit agreement.
"We want to , see what the' day, would trigger domestic and
Over the past two months,
"We've got a lot of conversa- ' leadership has In mind In terms ' military spending cuts as man115,000 factory jobs have been tionstoholdtoday,"WhlteHouse of . a resolution" to maintain · dated by the Gramm· Rudman
eliminated.
press secretary Marlin Fltz· federal spending -until a budget
balanced budget law.
In the services field, which has · wllter ·told reporters. "First ott,' package Is passed. .
The cuts threaten tlfe furlough
been a pillar of strength for the
we want to talk- to the congres·
"No decisions have ' been
of federal workers and the.
domestl~ economy, "only a few
slonal leadership because this made."
disruption of public services
' Industries provided evidence of was part ot a joint effort. We·
Fitzwater said Bush was
naiionwide. Experts said just
employment growth In Sep- want to talk to them on where awake in the early morning
·about every American would feel
!ember," the Labor Department they want to go."
hours and Informed of the defeat.
the pinch of the Gramm-Rudman
said.
.
Bush worked against the mid· Bush showed up for work In the
cuts. Bush has said that such a
Health led the way followed by night deadline of a stop-g,ap Oval Office at 6 a.m.
drl\stic scenario would spell
hiring ln_local government and . measw:e to avoid an automatic
House Speaker Thomas Foley,
hardship for the nation's
transportation, mainly on SeP- $105 billion acr0$8-the-:board cut . 0-Wash., promised to counter
economy.
tember Increases of teachers and In government spending.
_Friday's defeat of the bipartisan
While Democrats and Republi·
school bus drlv~rs as schools
."Sure be -was . dilappolnled," budget aareement on (;apltol Hill
cans flirted with political chaos
re-opened, the department said.
said Fitzwater when asked for by seektna a stop-gap spending
.on Capitol Hill just weeks before
But lhe~e were offlet by loues the president's reaction to the measure to keep the government
congressional elections. flnanin the financial Industry, refiect·. 254·179 House vote.
,
operatlng.
cia! markets ap-peared lndlffer- ·
lng hard times in banking and
Fitzwater appeared to be edg· · Foley told reporters of his plan
ent to the twists and ~urns of the
real estate.
·
lng away from Bush's threat to after the House. rejected the · budget package .
W
'
I

•

COATS FOR IUD8 -Bull O.e, for~ Iouth eo-eutfve year,
Ia apouor~n&amp; tile Coa&amp;a for Kldi Pl'OJI'IIIII at Ita bruellee. The

'
l'

'

~

.·
...........
,.. 'INGELS FURNITURE
............
.,

· the roof on a house owned by
council at a cost of $810.
Mayor Pickens
announced
that the fire department will be
attending schooling on the handling of hazardous materials.
It was announced by Connolly
that no bow and arrows are
permitted In the village as they
are considered firearms.
Others attending the meeting
were Janice Lawson, clerk treasurer; Kenny Buckley, Jim Pai&gt;e,
Katie , Crow, Teresa TysonDrummer and Minter Fryar,
. council members.

Jobless rate hits 5.7 percent
DESCRIPTION

CieMiklg 8yetem

go Into the band's unlfonn fund. As a part of the
program, a SilO and two $211 bonds will be awarded
at each home boys' basketball game for the
season. Membership tickets will go on sale tonight
allhe Meigs football games.

Democratic dinner features state
Senate minority leader
Meshel ·
...
- . ' c.-.... -

WAS 513,594

' VIlA - MAITitl - DIICOYIIIII

. By KATIE CROW
$502.50 to place concrete at the
picnic shelter located at the park.
Sentinel Correspondent
Syracuse VIllage Council It was also noted that the parking
Thursday night noted that two area at the pool had been
completed and that no trucks are
one·ll)ill levies, one a renewal,
permitted on the .new par king
will be voted on in the November
election.
·area. This was done through
Community Development Block
Residents are reminded that
Grant
. money by · the Meigs
the one-mill renewal will be for
County
Commlssloijers and the
street lighting but wm be listed
cost
to
the
village was $1,600. The
on the ballot as current expenses.
grant from the commissioners
The new one-mill levy Is a fire
was approximately $13,000. department levy for the purCouncil approved the purchase
.
chase of equipment.
of field glasses for police chief
· Mayor Eber Pickens anJim Connolly, and also to replace
nounced that he Is proclaiming
Oct. 27 as Marcia Karr Day In
celebration of her tOOth birthday.
Miss Karr is the village's oldest
resident.
. A Langsvtll~ woman has. enIt was noted that the new street
tered a guilty ,plea to drug
signs for the village have arrived
charges In Meigs County Com:
apd will be placed as soon as the
mon Pleas Court.
necessary hardware Is received.
,_Joyce Jewell, .46, entered her
guilty p)ea before Meigs County
. In other businss ' council ap- / Commori Pleas Court Judge Fred
Proved the third reading of an . VI- Crow -~II on Thursday to two
ordinance accepting the petition ·counts or sale of cocaine.
According . to Meigs County
for annexation of the Lawrence
Grueser property. Greg Bailey,
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story, Jewell was sentenced to
who j\'lll be building apartments
for the elderly, In that location,
five to 15 years on one count and
was present and thanked council . five to 25 years on another, with
for their cooperation. He also
actual time to be served of five
noted that Ihere was nothing new · years, as prescribed by law .
to report.
·
,
Fines of $3,000 and $5,000 were
as welL • ·
Council accepted a bid of

Jewell .enters guilty plea

A typing class Is being scheequipment, Including new IBM
duled through the Adult Services P$-2 computers, a network sysDivision of Buckeye Hills Career tem, and the newest Lotus 1-2-3
Center beginning Oct. 18. Tbe version.
six -week class Is for beginner or
The cost lor the course Is $100.
Intermediate typists and will "Interested persons are encour·
meet on· Wednesday and Thurs- aged to register early as a strong
day evenings from 6 p.m. to 9 response Is expected for the
p.m. The fee for the class Is $72.
course offering.
A class on using Lotus 1·2-3
Those who . are Interested In
software, America•s·most popuparticipating In either class are
lar computer spreadsheet pro-' encouraged to register by send-.
gram, will be of.fered by Buckeye
lng a check or money or;der to
Hills beginning 0ct. 29.
·
Adult Services, P.O.,Box 157, Rio
The course will be offered
Grande, 45674. Checks should be
Monday and Wednesday even-' · made payable to Gallla-Jacksonings from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. for five
VInton JVSD.
consecutive weeks in the Buck· For more Information, contact
eye Hills Computer ·Lab. Stu- Buckeye Hills Career Cen_ter at
dents will be able to take 245-5334 and . ask for Adult
advantage of state-of-the-art Services.

s,,,,.__,
=
--==
. . ..... .
·-·-.::::-·-.·-

2 SeCtions. 14 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Syracuse ·residents to
.vote on one-mill levies

WAS SJ6,922
DESCRIPTION
DODGE DYNASTY LE 4 DOOR SEDAN
BLACK-CLEAR .COAT
SEATS-60XIi0 CLOTH BENCH WITH CA
LUXURY EQUIPMENT DISCOUNT PACKAGE
RADIO-INFINITY I SOUND SYSTEM
TRANS.-ULTRADRIVE 4-SPEED AUTOMAT
ENGINE-,3.3 LITER OHV MPI V-6
'
SPARE TIRE-CONVENTIONAL
TIRES-P196176R14 WSW STEEL BELT R

'

.

'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday, October 6, 1990

WAS S18,271

Typing classes offered
by Buckeye Hills Center

---.
---

•

•

--------

1601

. Clear toulght: Low In mid
50s. Sunny Saturday. High In
nild 80s.

Vol.41. No. 108
Copyrighted t990

DESCRIPTION

-

5-H, 8-C, 4-D, 7-S

Page 3_

•

Looking ahead, the Ladles
Auxiliary of the Tuppers Plains
Fire Department has set Its
annual turkey dinner - which
always packs 'em In -for Nov.
10 starting at 5 p.m.

SAVE

Lott~ry

·Piek-3: ·891
Piek-4: 3787

•

We tend to become complacent
John and Ann Williams must a bout actions taken by our public
be exhausted after chalking up a officials. Too soon, we forget that
month-lobg, 11,000 mile trip to they do. ~nee you don't want to
Alas.ka.
join the . revolution, perhaps, It
Tbe traveled to tile Baylands, would be well for you to revisited the famous Walls Drug member that we do vote them In
: .Store In Walls, S.D., and Yellow, · and they are
supposed to
stone National Park on their represent us. Keep In mind If
way.
They went as far as they don't do that, we can atso
Fairbanks and loVed the beaut!· vote them out. Hold that thought
lui scenery which, of course, did and do keep smllmg.

IIlli' L l " '

Ohio

'

....··..

PNII'8Jll, whJeh will nn Oet. 11 Uarqh Dee. 14, provides col&amp;a for
the eillldrea oftbe area. All col&amp;l doal&amp;ed (for children onb') will '
be dry-elellllell by Cra.Jc Cleaa... ln Bl)llq, W.Va., dlraqlt Ule
Fabric Shop In Pomeroy. Pfo&amp;uted 11 Ami Lambert of tbe Fabl1c
Shop aDd Gerrl WaJtu _of llaak One, Pomeroy, Allyone wlahlq to
donate a coal. 'to the program
. may de ·so at Baak One.

'
'

~

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