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                  <text>Paa•

Tuesday. October 16, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinlill
'

'

.........,._.looal news briefs----. Pleasant fall weather will continue in Ohio
.

'

Man arrested by deputies
Meigs County SheriH James M. Soulsby reports that 30 year
old Ronald E . Johnson, Painter Ridge Road was .arrested
Thursday night following an execution of a search warrant fot
his residence by sheriffs deputies and BCI agel)ts. A qua}ltity of
marijuana was seized from the residence as was some cash.
Johnson Is charged with possessing marijuana In an amount
equal to or exceeding three times the bulk amount and with
cultivating marijuana.
Johnson appeared In County Court and was released Friday
afternoon after posting bond .
Deputies are investigating an assault case that allegedly
·occurred In the pat king lot at 'The Watering Hole' on State route

7.
Chuck Blake, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, reported he was assaulted by 5
subjects when he left the establiShment.
Charges In that incident are pending.

--Area deaths-great-grandparents, Larry
and
Sarah Craig of Carroll, OH.
Graveside service will be held at
10:30 a.m. ThUrsday, October 17,
1990, at the Yauger Cemetery, Ten
Mile Creek Road, Leon. Burial will
follow in Yauger Cemetery~ There
wiD be no visitation.
Arrangements are under the
direction of the Crow-HusseU
Funeral Home, Point PleasanL

fair, except for a slight chance of
By United Press International
• Pleasant fall temperatures showers lingering In the norwill continue In Ohio through theast Friday. Highs will be In
.Thursday· before a surge of the 60s Thursday and Saturday
and In the 50s Friday. Lows will
Canadian air arrives .
High pressure set tied over · be In the 50s Thursday and In the
Ohio during the night and the . 40s Friday and Saturday.
The slx-to-10-day outlook for
mercury dropped Into the upper
30s and low 40s. There were some · sunday thrrough Th11rsday calls
douds ovel' the northern part of for both temperatures and rainthe state, but the skies otherwise fall to be near normal across the·
were mostly clear. Patchy dense stat~.
The milder weather moving ·
fog -develoPed In . some river
Into
the state will help boost
valleys, but fog was burning off
drying. Pan evaporation may
rapidly Tuesday morning.
As the high moves east of the exceed 0.15 inches a day, particuregion Thursday, that will allow larly where sunshine dominates.
south winds to develop. Skies Models suggest that should transwere to be partly to mostly sunny late Into moisture reduction In
with highs ranging from the corn in the field of 0.6 percent to
upper 60s to lower 70s.
0.8 percent day.
'
The winds, gusting to more
South winds will continue tonight and that will keep readings than 20 mph Wednesday, will
In the 50s under partly cloudy help pull moisture from surface
layers of the ground. That will
skies .
·
A developing . low pressure Improve conditions where recent
system over the upper Missis- rains were heaviest. Soli tempersippi Valley Wednesday will atures will continue to average In
cause breezy conditions In Ohio the 50s while ·sunsine pushes
with highs Into the 70s. The rain afternoon readings to past 60
should hold off until Wednesday degrees at the 4-inch level.
Daytime temperatures Into the
night and Thursday as a cold
70s across the state will be higher
front marches across the state.
Cold air will pour into . Ohio than optimal for stockplling of
sugar beets through the middle or
Thursday night.
·
Friday and Saturday will be the week.

On the morning weather map
high pressure was over Ohto. The
high, will move to the Ea·s t Coast
by even in g. Low pres sure was
over Montana with a cold fron t to
New Mexico and a warm front

from Oklahoma to Arkansas. By
sunrise Wednesday, the low will
be over Minnesota with the warn!
front north of Ohio and the cok!
front located from Minnesota to
Kansas .•

Ohio .L ottery

Cincinnati
•
•
WillS senes
opener, 7.0

Pick·3: 127
Pick-4: 2377
Cards:

'.

2-H, IO.C, K-D, A..S

Page3

NATIONALWEATHER FORECAST FROI,, 7 At.1 10·11-90T0 1 Pl.1 11).1 8·90

•

Vol.41 .. No.11tl

a

Meigs County

~ourt

___ Meigs announcements --.....-.....

Hospital news

3 FREE PINTS

Stocks

RECEIVE ONE FREE PINT ·
OF COLE SLAW, MASHED
POTATOES AND GRAVY
AVAILABLE NOW THRU
OCTOBER 31ST AT
CROW$ FAMILY
RESTAURANT.

.--------

·I

REVIVAL

EVANGELIST STEVE HOSKINS

Rutland Church of God

OCTOBER 14- 19-7:00 P.M. NIGHTLY

,

'

-----..,

Buy A 15 Piece or 21 Piece Bucket
of Chicken and Receive a FREE ··
Pint on Cole Slaw, Mashed
Potatoes and Gravy.

A Mu,ltimedia Inc. NeWIPIPer ·

Ground is broken ·for
•
nver access to park ·

- - - - - - W e a t h e r - - - - -9'

Meigs sqU.ads an8wer eight calls ·

2 Sections, 14 Pagel 25 C.nti

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 17, 1990

Copyrighted 1990

Emma ·E . Salser, 84, of Racine,
died Monday, Oct. 15, 1990, at
WEATHER MAP - A large cold front moving across the :
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Midwest
will bring showers to the' Great Lakes region and the •
Born Aprlll8, 1906, at Indiamipo·
Upper
Midwest.
Another storm system will be approaching the
lis, Illd. , she was the daughter of
Pacific
Northwest
bringing a few showers. Parts ol the Gulf Coast :.
the late Rev. Ivan C. Lucas and
could see a lew Isolated thunderstorms. (UP I).
Fannie Meyers Lucas. She was a
•
retired Southern Local School
District cook.
.
Mrs. Salser was a member of
Tennant Holland
for a chance of showers In the
South Central Ohio
' the Racine Baptist Church, and
northeastern part of the state.
Tennant
Holland,
79,
of
Leon,
Partly
cloudy
Tuesday
night,
attended the Dorcas United
Fair
statewide Saturday. Highs
died
Monday,
October
15,
1990
at
with a low In the mid 50s. Partly
Methodist Church. She belonged
will
be
In the 60s Thursday, and ln.
Holzer
Medical
Center
in
Gal·
cloudy and windy Wednesday.
to the Racine Chapter of the
the
50s
Friday and Saturday.
lipolis.
$150
fine
and
jail
suspended
upon
Meigs
·county
Court
Judge
with highs In the mid 70s.
Order of the. Eastern Star, the
Overnight
lows will be in the 50s'_
He
was
a
retired
·employee
of
enrollment
and
completion
of
RTP
Patrick H. O'Bnen processed 29
Extended Forecast
Unll!!d Methodist Women of
early
Thursday,
and in the 40s;
Virgjnia
Iron
Company,
Point
West
school,
suspended
operalnr's
Thursday through Saturday ·
cases last week.
Dorcas, and the Ohio ASsociation
Friday
and
Saturday
mornings . .Ple11sant, where he had worked for
Fined were: Linda S. Jones, . license and completion of . RTP
A chance of showers Thursday,
of Public School Employees.
48 years. He was a member of the Middleport, speed, $25 and costs;
with fair weather Friday except
school, opeiator's license suspenShe Is survived by four sons Good Shepherd United Methodist Timothy Patterson. Racine, failure
ded for 60 days, speeding, $23 and
Charles Lvan Salser, of John·
Church.
to display front license plate, $10
costs; Larry Bishop, ReedsviUe,
stown, Grover C. Salser, Jr. of
Born
October
16,
1910
in
and
costs;
Christopher
Allred,
domestic violence, $400 and costs,
Racine, Lowell E . Salser, of Los
p.m. Chicken wtll be prepared on a
Southside,
WV,
he
was
.a
son
of
the
Peebles,
failure
to
register,
$10
and
30 days in jail, suspended, two
Meigs County Democratic
Angeles, Calif., Ronald Lee
wood
cooker by Everette Holcomb
late
Thomas
Henry
and
Victoria
costs; Wesley M. Smith, Pomeroy, · years probation, resuaining order
Salser, of Racine; four daughters
Meeting
and those attending are to take potissued; Rosalie M. King, Pomeroy,
- Manon Adrian Thompson, of (Foglesong) Holland. He was also speed, $21 and costs; Scott K.
in
death
by
live
brothers,
preceded
Maddox, Kenova, W.Va., disobeyed . discarded trash along the roadway,
Meigs County Democratic Ex- luck. There will be games and all
Blairsville, Ga., Carol Yvonne
one
.
greattwo
sisters
and
ecutive Committee will meet atl07 members and friends are invited to
traffic signal or device, $10 and
$50 and costs; Brian Richan,
Birch, of Bellvlew, Rosemary
granddaughter.
_
Sycamore Street (Democratic party attend.
costs; Erustas Ingram, Rapid City,
Evans, of Rio Grande, CarmenL.
Syracuse, criminal damaging, $50
He
is
survived
by
his
wife,
Vrrheadquarters) on Thursday at 7:30
Price, of Connorsvllle, Ind. ; one
Mi., speed, $22 and costs; Larry
and costs, 30 days in jail suspenannouncement
ginia (Adkins) HoUand; one Lee, Pomeroy, assault, $100 and . ded, restitution, probation of one
slater- Nellie Wirt, of Wooster;
p.m.
daughter, Phy!Us Sargent of Leon; costs, ~0 days in jail, suspended to
19 granchlldren and 14 great·
year; Carl Hall, Pomeroy, reckless
Sam and Nancy Davis wiU Ile
three sons, Clarence R. of Gal- time served, criminal damaging,
Candidate's night
grandchildren.
.
·
operation, $100 and costs, $200 ln
conducting
missionary services $t
lipolis Ferry, Robert V. of Cheshire, $100 and costs. 30 days in jail
Besides her parents, she was
Law Enforcement Trust Fund;
the
Calvary
Pilgrim Chapel, Rou!C
A public dinner and candidate's
preceded in death by her hus- OH and WiUiarn T. Holland of suspended . to time served. restituSharon Donahue, Point Pleasant,
143,
Pomeroy
Thursday evemng.
night presentation will be held at
band, Grover L. Salser, Sr .. an Leon; three daughter-in-laws; one tion; William E. Arnold, Pomeroy,
W.Va, passing bad checks, $25,
There
wil!
be
no
service on We4son-in-law; 10 grandchildren and speeding, $22 and costs; Robert F.
the Meigs Multi;purpose Center on
Infant son, a brother, John
costs and restitution; . Larry
nesday.
The
Rev.
Victor Roush,
13 great-grandchildren.
Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy on
Lucas, and a grandson, Scott
Lawson, Reedsville, assured clear
Barnhan, Albany, riding passengers
pastor.
invites
the
public.
·
Funeral service will be held at 2 distance, $10 and costs; Chris
Wednesday. Dinner will be from 5
Salser.
in rear of truck, $15 and costs,
p.m. until 7 p.m. and the canFuneral services will be held at p.m. Thursday, October 18, 1990 at Lane, Gallipolis, speed, $23 and
resisting arrest, costs, five days in
the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, costs; Damon Moles, Red House,
didate's presentation wil! begin at 7
1 p.m. Thursday at the Dorcas
jail; Dean WhittinB\011. Middleport,
United Methodist Church. The w'ith the Rev. Louis A. Hussell W.Va. speed, $27 and eosts; Daniel
p.m.
disorderly conduct, $50 and costs,
Rev. Henry Baker and the Rev . oflici~ting. Burial wiD follow in Palmer III, Ravenswood, W.Va. no
resisting arrest, $100 and costs, 30
Homecoming
Steve Deaver will officiate: Bur- Forest Hills Cemetery at Aatroclc.
medical cen., $25 and costs; Todd
days in jail suspended, two years
Ial will be at. ·Letart falls ·.. Visiting hours w~l be held at the . Grover, Middleport; speed, $27 and
probation; Robin DeLeon, MidThe Morning . Star United
·eemetary. Friends may call at
funeral home on Wednesday from costs; ' John ;G. Richards, ·R!M;ine, .· dleport, passing bad. checks, $25
·
Methodist
Church will have
the Ewing Funeral Home· 7-9 5-9 p.m.
unsafe vehicle, _ $10 and costs;
and costs, restitution; Roland Lan- .
homecoming
on Sunday with worp.m. Tuesday, and 2-4 p.m . and
Leesa Murphy, Pomeroy, speed,
daker, Pomeroy , discarded trash
Dr.
Charles
Brown
ship
service
at
9:45 a.m., Sunday
7-9 p.m. Wednesday.
$20 and costs; Gary D. Reese,
along the roadway, $50 and costs;
A business insurance peek·Dr. Charles Leonard Brown, 77, Portland, failure to control, $30 and Randy M. Nichols, Brook Park,
school at II a.m., carry-in meal at
age. that is. It's SERIES
of Point Peasant died Mooday, Oct.
12:30 p.m., and afternoon service at
costs; Marvin D. Randolph, Racine,
speed, $20 and costs; Carl R.
ONE. a broad-coverage.
15, 1990 at the Pleasant Valley
1:30 p.m.
failure
to
control,
$30
and
costs;
Grimm, Letart, W.Va., salety violacompetitively-priced
plan
Maleolm lngra
Nursing Care Unity in Point
At 7:30 p.m. Dr. J.J. Davis will
Cynthia S. Martin, Marlena, OWl,
tion, $50 and costs.
for retail stores. officea.
present a slide show of his tiip to
$300 and costs, lhree days in jail,
churches, apartment~ and
Malcolm Ingram, 82, of Ru- Pleasant.
EgypL The public is invited to atBorn January 13, 1913 in Point
drug
stores. Call us for a protland, died .early Tuesday morn· Pleasant, he was the son of the late
tend.
and quotation.
posal
!ng, OCt. 16, 1990, at Holzer
Charles
Wesley
and
Mary
Virginia
Medical Center. Funeral arranThe Rutland Fire Depanntnet
The Pomeroy unit was called to
Eight calls for assistance were
'g ements will be announced by (Love) Brown.
Ladies
Auxiliary will meet WedHe received his elementary
504
E
.
Main
St.
at
5:56
p.m.
for
answered Monday by units of
the Fisher Funeral Home,
nesday
at
7:30 at the Rutland Fire
Mary
Garnes
who
was
taken
to
education in Heights Grade School
Meigs Cotinty Emergency Medical
Middleport.
Station.
New
officers will be elecand . Point Pleasant High School, Sel"{ices.
Holzer Medical Center, and at
ted
and
plans
made for the annual
graduate of the Class of 1930,
Pomeroy squad was called to 9:08 p.m . the unit went to the
turkey
supper.
Gleftn Cunningham
All members are urwhere he was salutatorian. In 1931
Tuppers Plains at 2:.16 a.m. Lyle sheriff's office for Greg Haynes
ged
to
attend.
he entered West Virginia University
214 EAST MAIN
Nichols was ttansported to St. who was transported to
Glenn R. Cunningham, 80, of
in
pre-medical
training.
After
this,
Veterans.
Joseph's
Hospital.
At
8:53
a.m.,
Point J'leasant, WV, died Monday,
POMEROY
halloween party
October 15, 1990, at the Pleasant he entered the West Vuginia School Racine squad went to Bashan Road
992-6687
of Medicine, where he was a memfor Emma Salser. She was transporValley Nursing Care Center in
Annual
halloween
party
and
potber
of
the
honorary
Medical
Fraterted to Veterans Memorial Hospital
Point Pleasant, WV.
.
luck supper of the Star Grange wiU
Veterans Memorial Hospital
He was a relired employee of nity, Phi Beta Pi. He graduated with at8:53 a.m.
be held Saturday at the hall located
honors,
receiving
a
Bachelor
of
At 12:16 p.m., Pomeroy squad
-Kyga- Creek: Power Plant, where he
on
County Road I near Salem CenMONDAY
ADMISSIONS
-John
Science
degree
in
Medicine.
He
was called Ill Butternut Avenue.
WlliUd from 1955 to 1974 and was
ter.
There will be costume judging
then transferred to the University of Rose Dearing was transported to Metzger, Middleport; Sondra L.
1ft eleclricsl area supervisor. He
at
6:3Q.
~o~owin!!.~Y the supper at 7
School of Medicine in Veterans. Middleport squad was Boothe, Racine; Jeremy Council,
was a member of SL Paul United Louisville
Marvin
Teaford,
1939, where he received the degree called to Cheshire at 2:44 p.m. Langsville;
Methodist Chwth, where he taught
Racine;
Edna
Reitmire,
Hartford,
of
Doctor
of
Medicine
on
June
3,
Delbert
Russell
was
treated
but
not
Smlday School and sang in the
.
!941. After completion of the.State
transported. Pomeroy squad was ' W.Va.
cboir. He was a member of the
MONDAY
DISCHARGES
•
Board
examination
he
began
pracdispatched
Ill
Chester
for
Rex
Mi11turn Lodge# 19, A.F. &amp; A.M.,
None.
in
Kentucky.
He
accepted
an
was
taken
to
Veterans
at
Bailey.
He
tice
Poinl PlelsanL
internship in CharlestOn on July I, 3:16 .p.m. At 3:39 p.m., Chester
Friday Admissions - Nellie
Bern October 31, 1909 in Luka,
1941.
After
several
years
of
pracwas
called
to
assist
Connolly,
Middleport; Kenneth
WV. he was a son of the late EJ.
tice
in
West
Virginia
he
returned
Ill
At
6
p.m.,
Life
Flight
took
Hysell,
Rutland;
and Raymond
IIIII lhe late Ida (Clark) CunninBailey
to
Ohio
Slate
University
Louisville,
KY
where·
he
studied
Justis , Pomeroy.
gham. He was also preceded in
one year of pathology and three HospitaL Tuppers Plains squad was
Friday discharges - Alfred .
de8lh by four brothers and two sis·
years of general surgery. During called to Reedsville at 10:12 p.m. Frank, Walter Roush, and Lewis
tm.
.this time, he enlisted in !he United for Belinda Bailey. Bailey was Smith .
He is survived by his wife, Helen
States Army as Chief of Surgical taken to O'Bleness Memorial
(McHenry) Cunninghan; two sons,
Services,
his rank being Major, but Hospital.
Gerald G. Cunningham of New
was promoted six months later Ill
Ha~. WV and Emet L. CunninUnits · of the Meigs County
Lieutenant
Colonel. Before coming
gham of Wesi Lafayette, OH; lhree
Emergency Medical Service re- Dally sJock prices
dalghters, Mrs. Daniel (Patricia} . to Mason County, he practiced for
sponded to· six calls for assist- . (As of 10:30a.m.)
two years in Logan and one year in
Bllley of Columbia, TN, Mrs.
ance Friday. .
·
Am Electric Power ........... .. 27%
Madison. In 1944, he moved Ill
Donald (Nancy) McClintock of
At 4:11 a.m. the Rutland unit AT&amp;T ... ........ .. ....... ......... .. ..32\1
Point Pleasant
Spencerville, OH and Mrs. Lynn
was called to Meigs Mine No. 31 · Ashland on ........................29~
Brown was married to the late for Mike Lambert who was Bob Evans ....... .. .... ... .......... ll%
(Janet)Casto of Spencerville, OH;
Melba Irene (Postlewaite) Brown. transported to Holzer Medical Charming Shoppes .. .... .... ..... 8
ooc sister, Gladys Hamilton of
He was also preceded in death by a Center.
Fairmont, WV; 11 grandchildren
City Holdlng·co .. .. ... : ......... .15~
son, Charles L. Brown, Jr.; four sis·
IIIII eight great-grandchildren. .
The Racine Unit, at 11:04, went Federal Mogul. .. ... ........ ., .... 12~
I
ters and two brothers.
Funeral service will be held at I
to 49765 McKimie Ridge Road for Goodyear T&amp;R ... ...... .......... . 15
I
· Surviving are two daughters, Carol Taylor who was laken to Key Centurion ....................10%
p.m., Wednesday, October 17, 1990
-I
Patricia Suzanne M~lcley.of Winter Veterans Memorial Hospital.
at lhe Crow-Russell Funeral Home,
Lands' End .. :................ .... .. 9%
I
Park,
FL. and Nancy Jane Browil of
Point Pleasant, with Rev. Clifford
At 1: 41 p.m. the Pomeroy unit Limited Inc .......... ............... 14
I
Gallipolis, Ohio; one son, James · responded to a motor vehicl!' Multimedia Inc . .................. 54%
N. West officiating. Burial &gt;yill fol·
Thomas Brown of Point Pleasant; accident on Route 33 in which Rax Restaurants .. : .............. 1\1
low in IGrldand Memorial Gardens.
one sister, Mary Elizabeth Smith of Delbert Fridley was transported Robbins &amp; Myers ........ :·....... 17'4
I
Charleston; five grandchildren and to Veterans. The Syracuse unit Shoney's Inc ....................... 1014
· Visiting hours .will be held at the
I
live step-grandchildren.
· was called to assist and transport Star Bank ................... .. ....·..16'A
(uneral home on Tuesday, October
I
. Funeral service will be held 81 11 Minton Geary to Veterans .
Wendy's
In
!'I.
.............
........
5%
I
16,1990 from I until9 p.m.
a.m. on Thursday, OcL 18 at the
Coupon Expire• October 31, 1990
WOrthington Ind ...... ,........... 20%
I
Crow-Russell
Funeral
·Home
in
,James RU88ell
I
Point Pleasant with the Rev.
I
.
,
.
.
James Andrew RusseU, infant Michael Chapman officiating.
~-----------------~---------~
1011 d Ronald and Debbm (Craig)
Burial wiU foUow in the Suncrest
RUSICU of Letart, died Monday, OcCemetery. Visiting hours will be
!Dber IS, 1990, at Ohio State held at the funeral home on WedEXPERIENCE A 1ST CENTURY OUTPOURING
Uai~ty Hospital in Columbus,
IN THE 20TH CENTURY!·
nesday, Oc:L 17 from 6:30p.m. to 8
OH.
p.m . .
AdditiQnal survivors include one
lilller. Asny RUSICU; twO brothers,
Dwl IIIII Greg RusseU; paternal
, Roger and Dorothy
r\ marriage license has been
St. Rt. 124, Rutland, Ohio
·
f Mason; maternal granted
in Meigs County Probate
~n!S, 'Austin ''Pete" and Coitrl to Randy Everett McDanie),
. Craig lif Logan. OH and 34, and .Lori Ann Wyne, 30, both of
JOHN f. CORCOR
Pa1tor • 742-2060
01111 Cnlig
of Point ~leasant and Pomeroy.
r·
.

Licenees ~ted

•

·•

.'·

Low tonlghl In mid 50s.
Windy. Chance of rain 90
percent. Thursday, high In
mid 50s. Chance ol rain 88
. percent.

FORKED RUN GROUNDBREAKING • Ground Willi l!roken near Forked Run State Park 011 Tuesday
afternOOD for the construction
a new boat laiiDching facility. Pictured, left to right, are Forked Run
Slate Park Manager Randy Wachter, State Senator Jan Michael Long, State Representative Mary Abel,
and Contractor Rex Maiden of Maiden. &amp; Jenkins Company in Nelsonville. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J .
Reed)
··
.

or

.Housing startS decline
WAsHINGTON (UP!) - The
housing Industry suffered
through another miserable
month In September as new
construction plummeted 0.6 per·
cent for a record eighth consecutive monthly decline, the government said Wednesday.
Applications for building· per·
mils dropped 4.2 percent.
The grim picture of an Indus try
In .deep recession waa. ~enerally
ii1 Jlpe Wiil\ foh!casl's bY prl~ate
economists, who expect more
bad news through the flrstpartof
1991. 1n August, housing starts
were off 1 percent and building
permits tumbled 3 percent.
A Commerce Department spokesman said September's approximately 1.14 million housing
starts, adjusted for seasonal
factors and calculated at an
annual rate, was the worst
showing since the recession of

1982.
Last month's 1 million appl!ca·
· ilons for building permits were
also the worst since the last
nationwide economic malaise
eight yt)ars ago.
,
"During the first nine months
of this year, 963,100 housing units
were started compared with
1,074,500 units during the same
periO(I In 1989," the Commerce
Department said. "This is a
decrease of 10 percent."
Building permits, meanwhile,
were down by about 12 percent

~.6

over the same period last year,
the department said.
"I think the bottom Is pretty
near." said David Seiders, chief
economist at the National Association of Home Builders. "We are
looking for some further gradual
decllne Into the first quarter of

next year."
But Selders said his forecast
assumes a "sensible 'decision"
by Coligress and the White House
on· slashing ·the· federa~- budget
deficit, a gradual easing of
Interest rates and a stalmate In
the rnllitary confrontation with
Iraq.
Construction of new apartment

percent

buildings of five or more units
tumbled 17.8 percent in S~p­
tember , dragging down a 4.3
percent gain In construction of
single-family homes and a 16.1
percent surge in apartment
buildings containing two, three
and four units.
Richard Peach, an economist
with the Mortgage Bankers Association, attributed the decllne in
apartmeni, COl\Structlon .in part
OJ! developers •·•tryrh~'lo.beat the
. deadllne" on federal regulations
requiring expenlve modifications to make buildings more
accessible to physically disabled
people.

What now appears to be just
another cornfield near Reedsville
should look much different by next
summer.
Groundbreaking
ceremonies
were held Tuesday afternoon at the
future site of an Ohio River access
site for Forked Run State Park.
. The ceremony was attended by
state-level . staff of the Ohio
Depannient of Natural Resources,
state legislators 3lld county
officials.
The property, totaling 75 acres,
is located south of State Route 124
near the cl,IITent ena-ance to the
park. It was purchased by ODNR in
September of 1989.
The project will cost over .
$732,000, and will include construction of a two-lane boat launch
· ramp with a courtesy dock, a boat
tie-up area, and a paved parking lot
to accomodatc 25 cars with trailers.
The bid for the construction of
the project .was awardC!i to Maide11
&amp; Jenkins Company of Nelsonville.
Construction is expected to
commence within the next several
weeks, ill though it wiD not begin
until Phase 1 and Phase 'l ar-

. cheological studies are completed
for the Ohio Historical Society.
. As soon as those studies are
finished, the full construction permit is expected to be granted by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
According to Project Engineer
Pixon Jenkins, the project should
be completed by June of next year.
. Jenkins reported yesterday that .
due to special erosion )lroblems in
the area, shrub-type wiDows will be
planted along the bank following
the construction of the facility.

Jenkins alSo said that future
development of the remaining
property has been discussed by
Columbus-level officials, including
possible expansion in the parking
area and · installation of picnic
facilities.
"The big push" for the project on
the local. level, according to Meig:s
County Commissioner Richard
Jones, came from Commissioner
David Koblentz .and Horace Karr of
Chester, who is also an official of
ODNR's Division of Wildlife.

Firm hired to do district's testing
Site Scan Incorporated has Dale C. Teafored as substlt11te
been hired by the Southern Local bus drivers, Evelyn Foreman, as
Board of Education to do the a substitute cook and substitute
teacher aid, and Joan McLain as
district's Petro testing.
. This is the first year that Petro substitute cook.
The resignation of Howle Cald·
testing has been req11ired by the
well
as boy's reserve basketball
state. The cost to the district to
coach
was accepted and John
meet that requirement Is $1,000.
Manuel
was hired pending certibennie Hill, district treasurer,
reported at a meeting this week fication as junior high girl's
that the b\Jard hired Daniel · basketball coach.
Charles Norris presided at the
Murray as a substitute teacher,
Judy Parsons as a substitute meeting attended by Denny
cook and substitute custodian, Evans. Sue Grueser and Gary
Tom Theiss, Dale W. Hill, and · Wilford.

Three hired by Eastern board
A basketball coach and two
assistants were hired for the
1990-91 school year at a special
session of the Eastern Local
Board of Education Monday
night.
Hired were Dawn Heideman,
girl's varsity basketball coach;
Bob Lang, assistant girl's basket·
ball coach; and Greg Oltman,
assistant boy's basketball coach.
The hiring of the head boy's
varsity basketball coach was
tabled.
The board approved the agreement between the Meigs County
Board of Education and the
Eastern Local School District to

maintain the severe behavior
handicapped unit for the current
school year.
·
A resolution of commendation
to elementary students who
made the honor roll for the first
six-week grading period was
adopted. The board authorized
the issuance of the first nineweek honor roll for the high
school students.
A special meeting was set for
Monday at 6 p.m. In the high
school cafeteria.
Attending were Charles
Knight, vice president; and
members B!ll Hannum, I.O. '
McCoy and Jim Smith.

Meigs deputies probe 3 accidents_

ISSUE Z FUNDS AT WORK - Work In front of
the Syracuse Elemenlary School l.s underway to
correct a drainage problem which has b~en a bone
of contention ·for several years. Contract for the
project, financed with Issue 2 funds totaling
$14,600, went to Jeffers Trucking and E;xcavallng,

Pomeroy. A 10-inch culvert Is being lnslalled In
the ditch with llleet of concrete to be poured In
that area, along with a four-foot sidewalk.
Working on the project with Bob Jellers are Mike
Green, Lester Frank and Dennis Long.

At the time of the theft the
Several juvenues have been
Meigs County Sheriff's depu·
ties Investigated three auto acci- questioned In the theft of two vehicle was parked at the
stainless steel ornaments from
residence.
dents Tuesday eVl!ning.
At 4: 40 p.m . the department the arch on the cemetery gate. ·
On Saturday afternoon Jimmy
Charges,
according
to
the
Jo
Hawley, Kingsbury Road,
investigated an accident on
reported
that a battery and truck
Route 338 near Racine, where dpartment. are pending.
Becky Barner, Carpenter. re- topper had been stolen from his
Thomas Grady, Antiquity, was
southbound on 338 near the ported that sometime over the residence.
Sheriff Soulsby also reports
weekend, someone stole a 75American Legion Hall.
As he went around the curve In pound pumkln that she had In her that thedepartrnentls investigatIng the theft of a 22 magnum
hls 1977 pickup truck the pas- front yard.
senger door came open and . The department Is also Investi- piStol and holster.
Grover Klein, Naylor's Run
five-year-old Matthew Milliron, gating the theft of a battery from
the vehicle of Dale Colburn, Road, reported the gun missing
fell out onto the pavement. ·
The Racine squad was called Hiland Road.
on Monday.
and transported Mllltron to Vete· .
rans Memorial Hospital for ob·
servatlon. Grady was issued a
warning for not using his seat
belt.
At 7 p.m. the department was
called to Route 248 when Jane A.
A Syracuse woman suffered hospital spokeswoman.
Harris, Pomeroy, struck a teleserious Injuries Tuesday when
London was not cited In the
phone line that was across the
the car she .was driving flipped .accident.
roadway .
over on Its side on U.S. 33 in
A Long Bottom girl suffered
According to t"e department
Meigs County.
minor Injuries Tuesday when the
report, a vehicle hauling a load of
Naom~ K. London, 69, was
car she was riding In overturned.
hay, had gone ·through earlier
northbound when shewentoffthe
Holly Cleland, 12, was riding ,
and pulled down.the wire.
right side of the road. Her vehicle with Carol S. Kimes, of Long
. Ught damage was sustained
then rolled over on Its side and Bottom, when Kimes apparently
by Harrls'l986 Chevrolet.
slid Into a traffic sign.
lost control of her car In a curve
The department . was sent to
London was not wearing a seat on Meigs County Road 28. Kimes
County Road 20 at 9: 45 p.m.
belt at the time of the· crash, ran off the right side of the road,
James H. Qulvey, Pomeroy, was
according to a report from the came back onto the roadway and
southbound when he struck and
Ga!Ua·Melgs post of the State went off the lett side, striking a
kUled a deer that ran Into the
Highway ~atrol.
·
mailbox and a fence. Kimes' car
patb of his 1985 Ford.
Lol)don was taken to Grant then overturned and slid Into a
Qulvey's vehicle suffered modHospital In Columbus by a · tree, according to a report from
erate damage.
•UfeFlight helicopter around 6 the Gallla·Melgs post of the State
EllS QUEEJII CANDIDATES. These three Eaten!
Sehoollelllon 1re candidates for Eastern Hlg~a
Deputies are also Investigating p.m. She was admitted to the Highway Patrol.
School Homecoming on Friday night. Left to right are
HOI, daughter or Ron Hill or Chester; Leigh
a report ol theft from the Letart hospital's Intensive care unit and
Kimes was not Injured . She Anne Redovlan, daughter of John IIDd Tuni Redovlan
Pomeroy; and Suzanne Clay, daughter of Ronald
rownshlp Cemetery received was IIi serious condition Wednes- was cited for failure to control.
and Gayann Clay or Chester. (Sentinel phpto by Brian J, Reed)
.
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day morning, according to a

Car flips over, Syracuse
.woman is seriously injured

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·c ommentary

Wednesday. Oc:tota 17, 1990

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Page-2- The Daily Seutinal
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, October 17. 1990

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Poland itching for U. S. bu.siness ties

The · Daily Sentinel
Ill Court street
Pomeroy, Oblo
· DEVOTED TO THE INTERI!'.STS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
~~~
~m~ ~'--.-.f"'T"'Ee=•F=l
~v
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ROBERT.L. WINGETT
Poblillher

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manaser

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assllltlllll Publlsber/Coatroller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
, Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sboold be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wttb
; name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will bepubllsbed. Letters should be In good taSte,.addresslni Issues. not personall·
ties.

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The symbolic shutdown

GDANSK. Poland - Lech
Walesa thinks Americans are
missing a prime opportunity to
Invest 1n Poi and, simply because
they can't function without fax
machines and car pholies.
Between the lines in his recent
Interview with us was a message
that Is spoken more bluntly by
other Poles - that tbey wUl do
whatever is necessary to attract
American business, Instead of
Ger·m an business.
The reunification of Germany
concerns many of the Eastern
Bloc countries that were occupled by the Nazis. but none more
than Poland. The ·Nazis used
Poland as their primary slaugh·
terhouse. It there ls to be a new
prosperity in Poiand. the Poles
would , rather share It with
Amertcan entrepreneurs.
Walesa was expansive as he
told us about the Polish desire to

.

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

CUltivate economic ties with the
United States. The Poles have a regimes. Walesa told his two
lot to otter; he said. It .only U.S. " favorite" examples:
entrepreneurs could put up with
"The great and beautiful Katosome Inconvenience.
wice Iron Works was buUt there
"You Americans don''t know , just because Soviet . General
how to make goQd business,"
Secretary Leonid Brezhnev hapWalesa chided. " You do business pened to drop a ,pen on that exact
in a definite, technological way. spot on the map!
You need telephones, you need
One of the early and Inevitable
faxes, you need planes to do costs of the quick Polish conver·
business. And thats · what we slon to capitalism has been
unemployment. Work was guadon't have. So you say It's
difficult. But you can do good
ran teed under communism, even
business here."
If tjlere was nothing lor the
The Poles are famous through·
worker to do. Now, more than
out the Eastern Bloc · !or their
500,000 Poles are out of work. But
low•tech successes. They have · there has been a sharp decrease
set up shop on the backs o[trucks
In absenteeism, and a wllilng·
from Berlin to Buchares f
ness to take menial jobs at lower
Their circumstances have
wages. In the American business
taught them that they have no
formula, those are pluses.
choice but to do thingS the hard
The Polish finance mln ]ster
way, given' the business choices
clilled the overnight conversion
made for them under communist
to capitalism "shock therapy."

Others caii It the " big-bang
theory'' o t e con om 1c
transformation.
The government droppe,d
many price subsidies Including
one on bread, which. had kept the
price so tow that · Poles used
bread as pig feed. Prices rose
rapidly , but leveled ott, and now
the stores are full of food and
other necessities.
Poles have been stole through
the austerity that the change has
Imposed on them. That Is astonlshlng In light of the fact that the
anti-communist riots of the past
were often triggered by a rise In
food prices.
No other country has atteinp·
ted such .an eronomlc conver~ion . Now Waiesa hopes American entrepreneurs will have as
.much faith in the Poles as the
Poles have In themselves.

By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP!) - New Supreme Court Justice David
Souter, not noted as any kind of social butterfly, was spared a
reception, and President Bush, big on activities athletic, lugged his
.own suitcase Into the White House.
Welcome to the Great Government Shutdown 1990.
With Bush and CongreSs unable to reach agreement on the budget,
the federal government officially closed at midnight Friday, Oct. 5,
justin time for the th;ee-day Columbus Day weekend.
Despite all the . dire. warnings about furloughs of go'vernment
workers and the cut In all but essential services, shutting down the
government Is hard for anyone to Imagine.
So Bush, as every president has before him, resorted to gimmicky
symbolism, knowing full well that the government never really works
on weekendscwhether they last two or three days.
To make his polnl, Bush returned from the presidential retreat at
&lt;&gt;amp David, Md., In a four-wheel-drive utility vehicle, disdaining the
helicopter that he usually uses. Manfully, Bush carried his own
suitcase into his home.
, Never mind that the helicopter, on standby al Camp David, has to
fly back to the nation' s capital empty.
And poor Judge Souter, entitled to a small White House reception
after his swearlng~ln, had to go somewhere else to get a cup of coffee.
Not enough staff on hand to set up the party.
True, some people, those unlucky to draw weekend shifts, could not
work and might have lost some of their pay, and. some tourist
atrractions were closed.
· The Smithsonian Institution, one of the most popular attractions in
the nation's capital, was locked. So was Ellis Island in New York and
National Park playgrounds. The trash on the mall In downtown
Washington was not spirited away.
An irate Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., called the actions "the baloney
:kind of political and symbolic posturing that got us In this mess In the
1irst place. "
· Bush and Congress temporarily resolved thei.J differences before
·Tuesday, the day when the government was due to return to work
'anyway. No one was laid of! and no services were jntetrupted.
. Yet, the possibility of a government shutdown or a mandatory
·across- the-board cut in federal pay and programs remains, with the
next doomsday date set for Oct. 20.
· Should that ever happen, 1!. will·mean, as Leahy pointed out,· 'more
't han the inconvenience of having some of the national monuments
Closed."
· " It means that those on parole will not be supervised; that the
savi ngs and loans crooks cannot be prosecuted; that school lunches
will not be served; that Meals on Wheels will not' be there; that the
Head Start programs will not exist; and that our educational system
Wtii fall even further behind Japan. Europe and the rest. " said Leahy.
. The Vermont Democrat could have mentioned many, many more
programs that would sutler and bring denial 't o mUUons o!
Americans.
.
; "These are the real effects o! a sequester even if they do not
P,hotograph as well or show as well in a 10-second cut," Leahy said.
.'No matter, because they are far .more deadly to the United States."
: :rn the event of a real shutdown, Bush wlllliave far bigger decisions
to make than how to get home from Camp David or serving coffee to
.)'udge Souter.

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Budget blame spreads .far and wide

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WASHINGTON (NEA)- Per·
haps the most revealing Indica·
tor of the abysmal stale of
governance in the capital Is the
appalling timing of the budget
legislation that generated so
much heat and shed so ilttle light.
Inept scheduling of legislation
authorizing substantial tax In·
creases only one month before
elections - tor all House seats
and one.third of the Senate seats
- is not unprecedented but It
certainly is extraordinary.
Indeed, sophisticated but risk·
averse officeholders bave long
understood that It tax increases
are Imperative, they should be
enacted early In the politician's
terms so the memory of the
unpleasant experience will fade
In the voters' minds before the
next Election Day arrives.
In recent decades, Congress
frequently approved revenue
measures shortly befo,re ad·
journlng In the autumn of evennumbered election years. But
they Invariably were dubbed
"Christmas tree bills" because

they were larded with favorable
tax breaks for assorted lltlerest
groups - not unpopular 'reductions in Medicare benefits and
agricultural subsidies accompained by tax increases imposed
upon beer drinkers. cigarette
smokers and gasoline users.
Under those circumstances,
nobody should have been sur·
prised that the ensuing events
disgraced both the Democratic·
dominated Congress and the
Republican White House. In·
deed, there was enough humUia·
lion to be shared by everyone
Involved .
In a futile effort to secure
desperately needed political support tor the Initial deficit·
reduction package, President
Bush abandoned both the' "no
new taxes" pledge he repeatedly
made during his 1988 campaign
and his crusade to secure reductions In . taxes Imposed upon
capital gains.
He then made an unprece·
dented nationally televised ad·
dress seeking grassroots support

(" This is the !lrst ttme In my
presidency that I have made an
appeal like this to you, the
American people") that was
Immediately rejected by an
angry and frustrated electorate.
On Capitol Hill, poilticlans of
both parties hardly .refurbished
their sagging reputations as they
bickered among themselves,
lurched from one stopgap formulation to another and evaded the
hard choices they should have
made .
Rep . Newt Gingrich of Geor·
gla, the second·ranklng House
Repubilcan, said he abandoned
the president because he could
not support the White House
position with a clear conscience
- an astounding claim from
politician with a reputation as a
sUck self-promoter.
Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas,
the Republican leader in the
Senate, brazenly perpetuated a
shameful relationship with the
Archer-Daniels-Midland Co., In·
sistlng that the budget bill extend
tax benefits for ADM that do not

a

Robert Walters
even expire untO the end of 1992.
Democrats fared only slightly
better. The party's leadership
endorsed the Initial package but
was unable produce the votes
required to pass It In either the
House or Senate.
That first proposal was strik·
ihgly specific In lndentlfylng the
sources and amounts of modifl·
cations in taxes and benefits.
That should have been a positive
attribute but instead it provided
an appealing target for a selfish
electo rate unwilling to partlcl·
pate in even-shared sacrifice.
Sen. Warren B. Rudman, R· .
N.H., openly speculates whether :
"the three branches of govern· ·
ment are really working any .
more." Rep. Lee Hamilton, D~
Ind., says "The most serious ·
consequence .. . may be that :
we've lost our credibility."
Denigrating the hapless polltl· ·
clans is easy. Resolving the ·
fundamental problems will. be ·
far more' dilflcult.

a chapter at a time
··

·

Joseph Spear

Today in _history

1-

I

NATIONAL HOCKEY ,LEAGUE
Wales Conference
Patrick Division
T_,
WLTPILGFGA
NY ~ers ................ 4 2 0 8 25 16
Philadelphia ............ ... 4 2 0 8 2517
New Jersey ................. J 217 24 23
Ptttsbul'[lh .......... .. ...... 3 3 0 6 25 25
NY Islanders ............. .2 3 0 4 15 17
Wuhlagton ................ .2 4 0 418 24
Ad&amp;llll Dlvlaloa
Bosl&lt;ll ........................4 11 9 2416
Hartford ........ ............. 3 2 2 8 23 22
Montreal .....................3 21 719 20
Quebec .......................2 2 3 7 23 27
Buffalo ........ ...... ......... 0 3 2 217 21
· . Campbell

With apologies to John Stetn: triples to $3 trillion and the . Chapter 4: Gutless lncumbents, political hacks and special ot national self·indulgepce." Se· ,
beck, the past lew months have lnterest on It alone eats up $200
Interests rise In rebellion. The nate Minority Leader Robert
tJeen the summer of our demo- billion a year.
Chapter 2: George Bush chants . right-wing screams about higher Dole o! Kansas: "You pay a
cracy's. discontent.
taxes. The lett-wing screanis penally for leadership." House ·
The story of the great budget a demagogic read-my-lips, noabout spending cuts. The senior Minority Leader Robert Michel
battle has been one of greed and new-taxes refrain. Like Reagan
citizen lobby protests the extra of Illinois: "We can pick apart
lies and craven politics. The most before him. he promises a tree
$5.68 a month In Medicare the agreement with 1,000· points
depressing chapter to date was lunch. Like Reagan, he blames
deductlbles and premiums that
composed the night our lnglor· Congress for the deficit. Like
of spite. It we do, we'll not only
would have to be paid next year.
tous legislators turned on ·their Reagan, he submits his own
lose the agreement but out ability
The smokers snarl about the
colleagues and devoured them by budget and the bottom line Is
to govern."
extra 4 cents a pack they'll be
' voting down their compromise written In big red numbers. Bush
Chapter 6: The night o! the
called on to pay. The boozers
·' strategy !or the war on the sends bls economic wizards to
great slaughter. The saboteurs
deficit. Where wUl the plot go Capitol Hill to outline preposter: bewail their 16 cents a siX pack
who live to destroy - led by the
from here? Will it darken and the ous projectlops of economic sacrifice.
Georgia Gerbil, House Republl·
nation slip Into fiscal holocaust?
growth. low uhemployment and
Chapter 5: A courageous lew can Whip.. Newt Glngrlcll- draw
reduced deficits. Finally, they
speak out. President Bush: The their long knives and slash
Or will some clever scenartsts
emerge who can contrive a
give the president the bad news : deficit Is "a cancer gnawing anyone In sight, Including tbelr
brighter tale?
,
The economy will be consumed away at out nation's health." president. The compromise Is
Flip through a few ofthe pages
by the de!lclt dragon It we don't Senate Majority Leader George killed.
. that have already been written:
slay It now.
Mitchell of Maine: "Tonight we
The Jien Is In your hands. Let's
Chapter 1: Ronald Reagan and ·
Chapter 3: George Bush calls reap the bitter harvest otlO years see how well you write.
his supply-side theorists feed us
!or a budget summit. For five
paln·klllers and tranquilizers
months, the 'participants play
and we gulp them down with
their usual poker games. The
abandon. Massive cuts In taxes
Democrats don't want to trim
will stimulate economic growth,
spending. The Republicans want
they say, and produce such
more tax breaks tor the rich.
By United Press JaterDAtional
prodigious government revenues
Finally, with the Gramm·
Today
Is
Wednesday,
Oct. 17, the~ dayofl990with 75to!onow.
that the budget wUI be balanced
Rudman automatic reduction
·
The
moon
Is
waning,
moving
toward Its new phase.
by 1985. But the very rich find
sword hanging over their necks,
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
new and creative ways tO keep
they forge · a malodorous
The evening star Is Saturn.
· ·
their profits. The national debt
compromise.

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who

eo.,........

..Budget tale

•

By MIKE BARNES
UPI Sport&amp; Writer
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Eric
Davis awakened from a post·
season slumber with three RBI
and Jose Rijo put to sleep the bats
of his former team Tuesday
night, lifting' the Cloctnnatt Reds
to a 7.0 victory over the Oakland
Athletics In Game 1 o! the. World
Series.
Davis,
batted a paltry .i74
with one RBI tn the National .
League playoffs, walloped a
two-run homer In his first career
Series at-bat off seemingly un· .
touchable Dave Stewart In the
first Inning, then delivered au
RBI single In a three-run !ltlh.
The bard· throwing Rijo, show·
lng none of the inconsistency .that
marked his three-year career In
the Oakllind organization, scat·
tered seven hits In a seven· Inning
~rtormance that would. have
made Hall of Fame father-In-law
Juan· Marlchal proud .
Billy Hatcher, a career .349
hitter In the postseason, went 3
for 3 with two doubles and three
runs scored as the underdog
Reds took the opener o! the
best-o!·seven series with surprls·
lngease.
The stunning loss before 55,380
rred-clad !ans at Riverfront Sta·
dlum snapped a 10-game postsea·
son winning streak tor the
defending champion A's, who
stranded · 11 baserunners and
went 0 tor 8 · with runners In
scoring post lion.
Oak!and, looking to establish a
dynasty, Instead might be !acing
a label as one of history's great
underachievers. The A's Tues·
day night looked more like the
team that was stunned by the

" Nonll Dlvlat•
Toain . .
WL T Pll. OF GA
'Chh,.go .......... ............. 3 o8 2217

:. A thOught tor the day: Playwright Arthur Miller wrote: "The task
ot the real intellectual consists of analy:ztng Illusions ln order to
discover their causes."

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Reds ·pound Athletics 7-0

NUL results

.NOW 1'\E~?
M'f f'L.~ .. ;

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ln World Series opener,
Dodgers in 1988 rather that the third.
overpowert.ng outfit that swept
Hatchertonowed the walk with
the Giants last year.
a double Into the ieft·fleid corner,
The ·Reds, making tlielr first and Larkin raced home when
Series appearance sln.c e 1976, shortstop Mike Gallego's relay
can take a 2.0 lead Wednesday sailed over the head of catcher
night when they send le!t·hander Terry Steinbach, Tbe error al·
Danny Jackson against 27-game lowed Hatcher to continue to
winner Bob Welch.
third, and he ~ored to make it 4·0
Stewart, who entered with a 7·1 when Paul O'NeUI grounded out.
record and 1.99 ERA for his
Meanwhile, the A's- who had
postseason career, .lasted only five days off before thli Series as
four Innings and 64 pitch!!!!. He
they dld In 1988- were falling In
walked '! our - as many as he he the clutch. Gallego fanned with
did in 32 Innings during the 1989 · 'runners on first and third to end
Series and 1990 AL playoffs, and
the second, and Willie McGee
and Mark McGwlre each
two of th~m eventually scored.
With both bullpens expected to bounced out alter Rickey Hend·
dominate, each club thirsted for erson. who had three hits,
the early lead. The Reds needed · doubled with one out In the third.
just four batters to get 11.
After Stewart departed !or a
With one out in the first,
pinch hitter In the !lfth, the Reds
Hatcher walked, and one out blew It open with three runs in the
later Davis - who Monday bottom of the Inning . .Hatcher
lnsls.ted on . batting cleanup again doubled to left, · and after
rather than leadoff - cracked O'NeUiwalked, Davis Singled !or
the first Series pitch he saw wen a 5·0 lead. .
· .Hal Morris' groundout moved
beyond the center-field wall.
The drive soared at least 425 · · the runners to second and third,
!eel and made Davis, who has
and they scored when Chris Sabo
been bothered by a sore shoulder,
grounded a single up the middle.
the 22nd player to homer in his
Lansford got to .third In the
first Series at-bat.
sixth with one out, but Wllile
Stewart, themvplnhlslasttwo
Randolph and Gallego meekly
postseason series, escaped a lam
popped out.
·
In the second when he walked two
Rob Dibble and Randy Myers
more, butaleadof!passtQBarry each pitched an inning !or the
Larkin got him in trouble In the
Reds.

Cincy executes plan

·.to perfection vs. A's
Cinclnliati Reds did In Game 1 of
By MIKE TULLY
the World Series.
UPI National Bueball Writer
Forming a strategy and exe·
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Your .
cutlng
It without flaw, the Reds
broker should deUver the way the
looked nothing like an underdog
Tuesday night with a 7·0 rout of
the Oakland Athletics.
"We proved we can play with
them," Cincinnati ttrst baseman
Hal Morris said.
Phoenix ...... .... 2 3 o .400 60 121
· They did more than that. They
Philadelphia ... 2 3 0 .400 123 119
did
everything manager Lou
Datlas ........ .'.... 2 4 0 .333 73 122
Pitilella outlined In previewing
Centnl
the Series. They scored runs
Chicago ............ .5 1 0 .833 142 75
against
starter Dave Stewart,
Tampa Bay ....... 4 2 0 .667 134 124
daved
Oakland
to hit the ball out
Detrolt ........ ...... 2 4 0 .333 141169
Green Bay .... .... 2 4 o .333 103 146
of the park, forced the A's to use a
Minnesota ......... I 5 0 .167 140 135
plncli·hitter early. and entrusted
West
the game to their bullpen.
San Fran ......... 5 0 0 1.000 127 94
This parlay furthered another
Atlanta ............ 2 3 0 .400 137 139
part of Cincinnati's plan,
New Orleans ..... 2 3 0 .400 95 100
L.A. Rams ....... I 4 0 .2110 120 149
namely, blocking Oakland's mo·
mentum.
The A's had won 10
Su.Dday'll&amp;mM
straight post-season games,
New orleans 25, Cleveland 20
san Fra,nci!IICO 4!5, Atlanta 35
making a shambles of three
Ho\istM 48, Ctncinnatl17
Series
In a row.
Kansas Clly 43, Detroit 24
"Everyone said they were
Tampa Bay 26, Green Bay 14
San Diego 39,. NY Jets 3
going to sweep us," right fielder
Phoenix 20, Datw 3
Paul O'Neill said. "It was great
L.A. Raiders 24, Seattle 17
for us to get off this way."
N.Y . Giants 24. Washington 20
Pttt.sbul'[lh 34, Denver 17
The plan depended on starter
Chicago 38. L.A. Rams 9
Jose Rtjo keeping Rlcj(ey Hend·
erson out of the game, and he did
MoDday'll&amp;me
Philadelphia 32, MJnnesota 24
so by striking him out In the first
Inning.
Thuisd&amp;J'• pme
Four batters Into Cincinnati's
New England at Mia~ I, 8 p.m .
lineup, Eric Davis rewarded Rijo
Saaday, Ocl. %1
with a two-run homer. Stewart's
04lllas at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
wildness set up the Inning. He
Denver at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Houston, 1 p.m.
walked Billy Hatcher with one
N.Y: Jets at Butralo,1 p.m.
out.
Philadelphia at Washlngtm, I
"~ think one of the keys to the
p.m.
Atlanta at i..A. Rams, 4 p .m .
· game was we didn't swing at too
Kansas Cily at Seat de-, 4 p.m.
many bad pitches," second baSe·
PhCl!'nlx.at N.Y. Gi~nts, 4 p.m .
man Mariano Duncan said. "We
Pittsburgh at San Francisco, 4
p.m.
said we had to be patient and
L.A. Raiders at San Diego, 4. p.m.
that's exactly what happened.
&gt;
"Any time a pitcher has a fast
·
Moadll', Oct. Zll
Cincinnati at Cleveland, 9 p.m .
runner on first, he' s going to use
the fastball."
"! thought Stewart was pretty
good,"
Morris said. "His ball was
This week's Ohio
moving but his control was way

Scoreboard ...

•

J

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Detrolt ........................ 3 2 2 8 25 28
St. Lout.s .. .. ....... .......... 3 3 0 6 15 20
Minnesota ...... .............1 41 3 1!123
Tormto.... .... : ......... :....O41112 25
Smytlle Dh·lalon
Los Angeles ..... ....... .... 4 II 9 29 16
Calgary ............ ......... 4 2 0 8 22 18
Vancouver ................. .3 2 0 61916
Edmmton ................. ..1 2 2 4 17 20
Winnipeg ....................! 5'i 3 20 23

Tueldii'R.-o
Philadelphia 5, Plttol&gt;urgh 1
Hartford 1. Quebec 1
NY Islanders

4. Wlnntpeg

1

Detroit 3, Chicago 2

st. Louis 5. Edmontm 2
Wodaeodii'Gam..
Hartford at Torooto, 7:30p.m.

Montreal at Butralo. 7:35p.m.
Winnipeg at NY Rangers, 7:35
p.m.
Washington at New Jer,.y, 7: 45

p.m.

Minnesota at Los Angeles, 10: 35

~m .

,

Boston at Vancouver, 10:35 p.m.
ftunday Gunet
Queboc at

Philadelphia, 7:35

p.m.
MonUoeal at Detroit, 7:35p.m.

Toronto at Chicago, 8:35p.m .
St. Louis at Calgary, 9; 35 p.m .

NFL standings

oollege football slate

NATIONAL·FOO'ni.U.L LEAGUB
Ama-lca:n O:lnlereace

By Vnlted Proto loteraotlonal
Solurday, Oct 18
Ohio State at 'Purdue
Eastern Michigan at BowUng
Green
Toledo at Central Michigan
Ohio University at Kent State
Akroo at Ftortda
Cinclnnatl at East Cardtna
Youngstown St at James Madison
(Va. I
Ashland at Grand Valley {Mich.)
BaldwiD-Wallace at Capital
Heidelberg at Mount Union .
.Hiram at John Carroll
Marietta at Ot11!rbetn
Ohio Northern at Musklngum
AAllegheny ~Pa.) at Kenyon
Case Resene at Ohio Wesleyan
Oberlln at Denlsoo
Ear)ham (lnd) at Wltli!nberg
Woos~ at Carnegle-Melloo (Pa .)
Knosvtlle !Tenn. I ot Central St.
Gannoa (Pa.) at Dayton
• BlufftCJ' at Mount St. Joseph
Urbana at Deftance
Findlay at Tlllln

Eut
Team ,
WLT Pet.
Bulfalo ....·... ..... 4 I 0 .800
Mtaml .............. 4 1 o .800
lndianap(jls ..... 2 3 0 .400
N.Y. Jets ........ .2 4 0 .J33
New Eniland ... 14 0 .200

PF PA
130 99
108 73

81 108
107 148
80 152

Ceotrol

Cincinnati .. ......4 2 0 .667 154

!53

HouS!m ........... 3 3 0 .500 146 125
PittSburgh .. .....3 3 0 .500 !02 101
land ........
0 .333 98 139

a ....

n

West
L.A. Ratders .... 5 I 0 .833 123 93

Kansas

Clly ..... 4 2 0 .667 160

95

Denver .... .. .... .. 2 4 0 .333 141 161
Seattle ...... ....... 2 ,4 0 .333 125 128
San Diego .... , ...2 4 0 .3~3 114 108

NaUoaal Conference .
Eut
'
TeiRI ·
W LT Pel. PF Pol.
N.Y. Giants ....50 0 1.000 1311 67
Washtl!llon ..... 3 2 0 .600 121 75

off.''

Stewart's wildness may have
led him to seek a quick strike on
Davis. Stewart threw the strike
and Davis hit It 425 feet.
"We got the two-run lead we
were looking for," catcher JQI!
Oliver said.
"When you go out zero-zero, it
makes It a little toughger," Rljo
said. Instead, wlth thatlead, Rljo
made the pitches he had to:
He got Mike Gallego to strike
out with runners on first and
third with two out In the second.
He ~ot Mark . McGwire on a
grounder with two on and two out
In the third.
Leading 4'0, the Reds forced
Oakland to hit !or Stewart In the
fifth. Later that Inning, Rljo
popped up McGwire with the
bases loaded.

pitcher Dave Stewart. The deep driVe helped push.
the Reds to a 7.0 victory, (UPI)

DAVIS CONNECTS - The Reds' Eric Davis
crushes a two-run homer In the first Inning of
Tues.day night's World Series opener olf A's

A$: too·many walks, no·clutch hits.
By RICK VAN SANT
UPI Sports Writer
CINCINNATI ' (UPI) - Walks
started Oakland's downfall Tues·
day night. No clutch hitting
sealed II.
With ace Dave Stewart Issuing
four quick walks which led to four
quick runs and cleanup hitter
Mark l'flcGW!re falling miserably
in the clutch, the A's made F's in
an embarrassing 7-0 World Ser·
ies opening loss to the Cincinnati
Reds.
"We did a lot of things poorly
tonight," said Stewart. "I didn' t
pitch well and we had a lot of
situations where we got guys on
base but didn't get them ln."
Stewart, who had walked only
two batters In 16 Innings of
pjayo!f pitching, walked four of
the first 10 batters he faced and
two of them scored. Twice In the
opening three Innings he walked
leadoff hitters. ·
It was a walk that made
Stewart pay double for his worst
mistake of the night -serving up
a fat first pitch to Eric Davis in
the first Inning that the Reds' left
fielder swatted over the center·
field waH for a two-run homer.
Two batters before Davis, Ste·
wart had walked Billy Hatcher.
. "Walks will kill you,' "Stewart
conceded. "They gottour runs on
only two hits. When you walk
guys and then give up a hit, you
don't give yourself a ehance."
Lack of a designated hitter in
the National League park also
hurt Oakland. Desperate for runs
after falling behind 4·0 In the
ihtrd Inning, the A's couldn't
afford the luxury of waiting to see
if Stewart would settle down and
had to pinch·hlt for him in the
fifth.
"My best inning was my last

with two out, but Gallego weakly
Inning," noted Stewart.
struck out uoder Rljo' s heat. .
Removing Stewart proved to·
"When they jumped out In
tally disastrous In the titth when
front,
we needed some runs right ·
reliever Todd Burns was lmme·
away
to cool them ott," said
dtately pounded, giving up a.
leac!off hitter Rickey
Oakland
double to Hatcher, an RBI·slngle
Who went 3 for 5. "We
Henderson,
to Davis, a walk to Paul O'Neill
got
runners
on, but didn't pick
and a two-run single to 'Chris
them
up.
We
made
It easy for the
Sabo.
to
buDd
momentum."
·Reds
While the A's were able to hit
starter Jose Rijo, they never did
In the clutch. Oakland rapped out
The Daily Sentinel .
seven hits and drew two walks
over seven Innings against Rljo,
(VSPS 145-Btll
A Dlv ..loo of Multimedia, lac.
but could never score against the
flame-throwing rlghHander.
Published every afternoon, M011day
In just two at-bats, McGwire
through Friday, 111 Court St., Po-meroy, Ohio, by the .Ohio Valley Put)..
stranded five runners. In the
Ushtng Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
third, with runners on first and
• Pomeroy, Obto 45169, Ph. 99'1·2156. S&amp;- 1
cond class pe~~tagP paid at Pomeroy, '
third, McGwlre ended the Inning
Ohio.
by grounding . Into a '!!elder's
choice. In the fifth, with the bases
Member: ' Unl~ed Press International,
Inland DatlyPnoss Association and the
loaded and two ou IS, he popped
Ohio Newspaper AsSoclalion. National
up. McGwire was hitless for the
AdvertL&amp;Ing Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
night.
New York, New York 10017.
"It wasn't so much Rijo. it was
'
me," admitted McGwire. "He
POSTMASTER: Send address changesto The Dally Sentinel. Ill Court St.,
left a couple of sliders out there
·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
tor me to hit. I just didn't. I like
those RBI situations. That's what
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
they pay me for. I didn't earn it
One Week ........ .:......................... $1.40
tonight. lt"s not a great feeling to
One Month ............ .................... .$6.10
One Year ............... ........,......... $72 .80
get shut out. "
Before the series started, Cln· ·
SINGLE COPY
PRICI!
clnnati's Glenn Braggs said,
Dally ..... ............ , ..... ............ 25 Cents
"The A's won't make many
Subscribers not desiring to pay the car:
mistakes." But he was quickly
rler may remit In advance direct to
proved. wrong.
The Dally Sentin·el on a 3, 6or 12 month
basis. Credit wUl bf&gt; gtven carrier each
Stewart's mistakes with walks
week.
were compounded In lhe third
No subsCriptions by mail permitted lri
will) shortstop Mike Gallego's
areas where home carrier service Is
error on a relay throw which
available.
permitted Hatcher to continue to
M·• ll Soboertplloao
third after a double .. Hatcher
Iukie Melp County
later scored .
·
13 Weeks .................. ................ S19.2t
26 Weeks ........ .... ....... .... .......... . $37.96
Gallego also failed at the plate
52 Weeks .... .... ..... ...... ....... .. .... ... $74.36
In the second when his club had
Oulakle Melp County
an opportunity to change the face
13 Weeks .. .... .. .......................... $20.110
26 Weeks ....... .. ......................... $40.30'
of the game; With Cincinnati's
52 Weeks ........... , ........... :... .... ... 175.40
lead at 2·0, Oakland had two on

.

SAVE ON A 1990 DODGE- DYNASTY LE
FACTORY LEASE CAR
AT PAT HILL CHRYSLER-ILYMOUTH DODGE

Sports briefs
Baleball
Chicago White Sox chairman
Jerry Relnsdort denied a published report he has already
tabbed Oakland Athletics ad·
vance scout Ron Schueler as the
successor to ousted General
~anager
t.arry Hlmu.
Schueler, 42, a former White Sox
pitcher and pitching coach, completed his scouting duties for lite
World Series, and the Athletics
granted him permission to speak
with the White Sox.
... The s1x prJme.tbne baseball
playoff eamea OJI CBS averal(ed
a 13.5 rattq, down 10 percetlt
from last year's nilbt eamea on
NBC. The numbers on lite three
day iametl will be available
Tbunday. A ratlnp point repres·
1!1118 1 percent of all U.8.
hoilleboldl with television ll!tL A
.sbare poiilt equals I percent of all
sets being watched.

••

1990 DODGE DYNASTY LE FAC~~

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI

LEASE CAR

-

INCWDES 7170 DIIYE TIAIN WAIIANTI

•

FISH TAIL

S1.24
ma.........

·· Willi

f.l.l9

ADOLPH'S DAIRY YALUY

"At till W .t till P•u...,_' Ill •1•11"
PO..OI, U.O
Pl. "1·1556

CHRYSLER
n ·. , .. ... ,r
t 1:r:,uu ,1

90R

Jsl 0
~-~!AX
1TITLE
NOT INCLUDED

PAT HI·L

Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
399 SOUTH THIID
MIDDUPOIT
992-6421 or 992-2196

OPa •oNDAY, WEDNESDAY &amp; FIIDAY 1·7 ,

IUISDAY &amp; n•IISDAI 1·5:30

'"r

.•

SAIUIDAY :1-4 ·

�~---·

---~

.

- ~- -

*- -- --··-

· - -·-- - ·-~ - --

... - -- --

0

'-a•

yvectnesday, October 17, 1990

Pometoy Middleport. Ohio

4 1he Daily Sentinel

Meigs squads have/nine ealls

Kaff·kaff!

1990
World
Series
notebook
...
Irish lull-a-BYE will rock 'Canes

By Maj. Amos 8 Hoople
-...n~.fa.a

..

Major Hoople·5

Epd, frieads! Not loa&amp; ago, it wu
blUed u "The Game• oi 1990 in col·
lep football - Nott:,e Dame vs. the

Miami Hurricanes.
·
Now It's lost a bit oi &amp;litter. Each
team III'IDia a blemisbed record into
tbelr sbowdoWD on Saturday in South
8eDd, llld. Yet It's still a very bit!
pine. In fact, tbe WIMer probably
bas a real shot at tbe national title.
ADd, of ~. there's no love lost
betweeo these two bitter rivals.
Notre Dame fans have been count-

in&amp; the dllys sloce Nov. 25, 1989. 1n the
Oraoae Bowl, a house of gloom and

doom for the Irish, Miami posted a 2411 will, eodio&amp; N.D.'s 2~game winning

strio&amp; and back-to-back national title
hopes.
This week (oa CBS-TV) the Irish get
a cbaJice to repay the favor.
Miami woo the final No. 1 r&gt;inking
in 1987 and 1989. Notre Dame claimed
tile No. I spot In 1988. The Irish felt
that th~ir 124 record and Orange
Bowl victory over Colorado were bet·
ter last year than Miami's IH tally
and Sugar Bowl · triumph over
Alabama.
Needless to say, both teams will be
at an emotional peak.
It's also the last regularly scheduled game between these fierce foes.
After 22 contests since 1955, Notre
Dame leads, 14·7·1. The Irish won 11
straight from 1967 through 1980, then
Miami took over. From 1981 through
1989 Miami woo six of eight meetings.
With the exception of the 58-7 humiliation of the Irish in 1985, the games
baVe been hotly contested.
Miami, as always, bas an explosive
attack. sparked by Heisman-hopeful
QB Craig ErickSon, super receivers
Randall Hill and Wesley Carroll and
FB Steve McGuire, a punishing run'
ner who gave N.D. fits last year. Their
defense is superb, with All-America
candidates DT Russell Maryland and
LB Maurice Cl'um.
Notre Dame, likewise, is loaded
' with talent. The names of their four
co-captains read like an All-America
lineup: NT Chris Zorich, CB Todd
Lyght, TB Rickey Watters and senior
center Mike Heldt.
Throw in such sterling performers

as Fl, Rocket lima II. TB Tony Brooks
(a 1988 reCiJlar) and LB Michael Stonebreaker (a 1988 All-American) and
you've cot the nucleus of a creal
team. Another plus for N.D. is sopb
QB Riclt Mirer, who is maturing
week-by-week.
There probl!bly 11ren't two more
evenly matched teams In the country.
So batten dOWII the hatches, the big
blow is about to bit South Bend.
.Because of tbe·lrish
playing at
home and trYiD&amp; to avenae last year's
shocker, The Hoople System sees NoIre Darpe winniDg a thriller, Sl-24.
M
hll Mi""''
·
h
eanw e,
•'JUg&amp;n, very rnuc
in the national title .hunt despite its
loss to Notre Dame, Will move a step
closer to the Big Ten crown. The )¥oi'
verines will notch a 35-21 win over
Iowa (on ESPN-TV.)

are

Look for Auburn to ·burn Florida
State in their annual slugfest. FSU bas
been through two tough tests: defeat·
ing a rejuvenated Virginia Tech and
getting whipped by Miami's Hurrl·
canes. Now Auburn. with the homefield advantage, will defeat the Semi·
noles, 27-24.
Virginia will tune up for its ACC
showdown with ·Georgia Tech nest
week by rolling over outmanned Wake
Forest, 49·15, Har-rumph!
SATURDAY, Oct. 20
• Army 28 Lalayetle 14
• Auburn 27 Florida State 24
ClemSon 35 • North Carolina State 25
Colgate 42 "Fordham 21
Colorado 31 • Kanaae 27

• Holy Crou 24 Lllllgh 22
Houoton 49 •Southern MethodiSt 14
"lltlnoia 25 Michrg.tl State 20
Indiana 38 "Minneoota tO
• Louiliana State 22 Kentucky 15
Loulovlll8 25 • Pltttburgh 21
"Martha« 20 UT.Chatlanooga tB .
. ·Maryland 31 'Duke 28
·
• Mil:higan 35 lo- 21
'111111 tlppl 26 Arkanaaa Stale 20
• Millourl 35 Kanau State 28
NeDrlll&lt;a 38 • Oklahoma State 11
• Northern llllno11149 Murray State 14
• Nort-lern 2 t Wisconlin 21
'
•Notre Dame 31 Miami (Florida) 24
Ohio State 30 "Purdue 21
"Oklllloma 34 Iowa State 12
• Oregon 42 Arizona State ,22
. Pennsylvania 14 'Brown 10
Penn Stale 24 "Boston COllege 18
'Princeton 19 Har;ard "
·San Jose State 26 Utah State 10
'Southern Cat 40 Arizona 14
· •South Carolina 33 CHadel 23
•southern Miss. t8 Memphis St t4
SW Louisiana 35 "Tulsl 28
•syracuse 24 Rutgers 20
"Texaa 28 Arkansas 18
"Texas A&amp;M 21 Baylor 20
Texas Tech 24 •Rice 21
"Ten38 Alabama 27
Toledo 27 ·central Michigan 24
"Tulane 21 MISSissippi State 19
"Utan 17 UTEP 14
UCLA 26 'California 24
VIrginia 49 •wake Forest 15
Virginia Tech 28 "Temple 21
Washington 28 • Stanford 25
Washington State 39 • Oregon State 8
·western Michigan 27 Ball State 21 ,
• Wyoming 49 Weber State 20
'Yale 21 Columbia 14

(")Home Team

Eastern Michigan 27 • Bowling Green 21
"Florida 38 Akron 14
• F1'11000 Stat0 36 Long Beach State 24
"G&lt;torgla 28 Vand8fbilt21
Georgia Tech 33 "North Carolina 26
•Grambling 27 Jact&lt;aon State 17
• Hawaii 49 Cal State-Fullenon 21

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) -The
followtns: m-.ke up the 1990 United
Press International Ohio high

school football ratlnp boards:
DIVISION I

Don Andersm, Painesville RtversJde; Mike ~derson, Xenia;

Phil Annarella, Wuren Harding;
Grell Bailie, Toledo Central ca.

tbollc; Ron Balcont, West!rvme
North; Bob Brl&amp;atl, West CArrol·
tton: Jim Caserta, Findlay: Don

Coiuut, Colerain; Bill Conley,
Dublin; 4rry Cod&lt;, Sandusky;

Brian Cross. Grove CJty: D:&gt;n

Tom Fasko. Bruuwtck; Steve

Cort&gt;ln,Sidney; BobGregs.Cenler·
ville: Pat Gucdardo, Toledo
Wbltmer; Dave Hartman, AusUn-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) · This week's Ohio High School
Athletic Association computerIzed football ratings (the IOJI four
teams In each region qualify for
!hi! playoffs):
Division 1 .
Repon 1
1. Clevelan(l · St. Ignatius
115.71; 2. Boardman 105.42; 3.
Warren Hardlilg 100.71; 4. Aus·
tlntown Fitch 90.92; 5. East
Cleveland Shaw 90.50; 6. Painesville Riverside 86.50; 7. Middleburg Heights Midpark 84.5(); 8.
Berea 80.14.
·
Repon 2
1. Massillon Jackson 99.00; 2.
Massillon Washjngton 95.50; 3.
Sandusky 85.00; 4. Canton GlenOak 80.07; 5. Toledo St. John's
79.00; 6. Stow 76.42; 7. Toledo
Whitmer 74.00; 8. Elyria 71.00.
Repon 3 .
1. Columbus Brookhaven
109.00; 2. Worthington 101.50; 3.
Grove City 100.00; 4. Piqua 89.50;
5. Mansfield Madison 87.00; 6.
Chillicothe 77.00; 7. WesterVille
South 72.00; 8. Mansfield Senior
71.50.
Region 4
1. Cincinnati Moeller 103.50; 2.
(tie) Cincinnati Princeton and
Oxford Tala wanda, 102.00 each;
4. Dayton Wayne94.00; 5. Middletown 79.21; 6. Dayton Meadowdale 78.50; 7. West Chester
Lakota 70.00; 8. Cincinnati Oak
HIUs, 64.50.
Division II
Region 5
1. Uniontown Lake 71.50; 2.
Beloit West Branch 65.00; 3.
Rayland Buckeye 64.50; 4. Gen·
eva 60.00; 5. Greensburg Green
59,00; 6. Chardon 55.00; 7. Steu'
benville 51.50; 8. North Canton
Hoover 51.00.
Region 8
1. Fostoria 61.50; 2. Vermilion
. 61.~; 3. Anthony Wayne 59.50; 4.
Maple Heights 57.50; 5. Solon
55.50; 6. Toledo DeVIlbiss 45.00;
7. Oregon Clay 44.00; 8. Holland
Springfield 40.00.
Repon 1
1. Columbus DeSales 80.07; 2.
Athens 69.28; 3. Columbus Beech·
croft 62.00; 4. Warsaw .River
View 58.00; 5. (tie) Columbus
Brtggs and Watkins Memorial, ·
57.00 each; 7. Jackson 53.00; 8.
GalHpolls 50.50. ·
Keeton 8
1. St. Marn Memorlal85.00; 2.
Cincinnati Northwest 83.50; 3.
GosbeJI 82.50; 4. Dayton Dunbar
SUO; 5. Cincinnati TUrplD 66.00;
6. New Richmond 60.57; 7.
wapakoneta 58.00; 8. Bellefon·
talne 54.00.

DlmloaiD
Repoa9
· .1. Yotlllgltown Mooney 85.14;
2. (tie) Lake CathoUc and Wick·
llffe, 76.00 each; 4. Youngstown
Unullne 71.!10; 5. Canfield 52.50;
6. Dover 51.00; 7. Canton Central
Cathollj: 19.50; 8. Brookfield

'411.00.

Region 10
.
1. Akron Hoban 91.57; 2.
Willard 85.50; 3. Orrville 78.50; 4.
Rossford 76.50; 5. Rocky River
68.50; 6. Richfield Revere .68.00;
7. Avon Lake 67.50; 8. Mlilbury
Lake 55.50.
Keeton 11
1. Licking Valley 67.00; 2. New
l-exington 62.50; 3. Ironton 62.21;
4. West Portsmo11th 62.00; 5.
Thornville Sheridan 56.50; 6.
Columbus Hamilton ToWnship
56.00; 7. Bloom-Carroll 53.50; 8.
Belleville Clear Fork 52.50.
Repon 12
. 1. Springfield Northeastern
79.00; 2. Ha!Rilton Badin 66.00; 3.
Kettering Alter 59.50; 4. CAPE
55.50; 5. Trenton Edgewood
51.50; 6. Kenton :;11.50; 7. (lie)
Eaton and St. Paris Graham,
· 44.00 each. .

Dlvillon IV
RectonU
1. Campbell Memorial95.42; 2.
Gates Mills Hawken 63.15; 3.
Warren Kennedy 54.50; 4. Perry
51.00; 5. Steubenville Cathollc
47.00; 6. AkronManchester41.50;
7. Rootstown 38.00; 8. Lisbon
Anderson 37 .00.
Becton 14
1. Lorain Clearview 64.00; 2.
Loudonville 59.50; 3. Smithville
· 45.50; 4. Htiron 39.50; 5. (tie)
Black River and Wynford, 38.00
each; 7. Collins Western Reserve
36.00; 8. Ot~go 35.00.
ReponU
1. Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant
76.49; 2. Crooksville 67 .00; 3.
Wheelersburg 52.92; 4. Heath
51.00; 5. Paint Valley 50.50; 6.
&lt;:;ardlngton 47.00; 7. P!ketr,n
32.50; 8. Bflpre 30.50,
Region 16
1. Versailles 66.50; 2. West
Jefferson 58.50; 3. Brookville
57.50; 4. Columbus Academy
47.00; 5. Allen East 45.50: 6.
Columbus Hartley 44.50; 7. Read·
lng 34.50; 8. Williamsburg 32.57.
· Dlvillon V
Repon11
·1. Fremont St. Joseph 56.00; 2.
Sandusky St: Mary's 49.50; 3.
Mogadore 44.50; 4. Lorain CathoUc 37 .00; 5. Klrtljlnd 35.50; 6.
Gibsonburg '28.00; 7. Dalton
27 .00; 8. McDonald 2ti.50.
Repan 18 '
1. ' Archbold 57.50; 2. Minster
44.40; 3. Ayersville 41.00; 4.
Fostoria St. Wendelin 36,:ill; 5.
(tie) Bluffton and McCom!, 26.00
each; 7. Arcadia 25.!10; 8. (tie)
Van Buren and Hardin Northern, ·
25.00 each.
ReponU
. 1. Caldwell 44.50; 2. Berne
UniOn 40.50; 3. Franklin Furnace .
Green 3U2; 4. Woodafleld 36.01;
5. ShadyJide 34.00; 6. Newark
Catbollc 30.110; 7. Caraway 29.00;
8. Danville 28.00.
Becton tO
1. . Mariemont 53.50; 2. St.
Henry 49.50; 3. Ti'l· County North
42.50; 4. South Charleston Southeutern 39.50; 5. Cincinnati
Country Day 311.14; 6. New Miami
35.14; 7. Ansonia 32.00; 8. Springfield CathoUc-28.00.

•',

· Don Fehr, executive director
of the Major League Baseball
Players Association, said It was
with • 'great pride the players
demonstrate that they and all
Americans care."
... otf1clals announced .Tues·
day night that President Bush
hilS canceled plalis to lake In
Wednesday night's Game 2 and
throw out the ceremonial first
pitch. There was no Immediate
reason given for tbe cancellation.
Tile President also bad lntentled to throw out a ceremonial
first pltcb to open the regular
seuon In ClnciMSll last AprU,
but tbat wu scrubbed when the
owners' lockout pushed the Reds'
borne opener back by two weeks.
... Jose Rtjo's fatber·ln-law,
Hall of Farner ,Juan Marlehal,

Ohio prep football ·rating boards

Eppert, Columbus South;

Ohio .grid computer ratings

The request was made to
baseball by tbe United Services
Organization.
"AI much .aS anything In this
great land of ours, baseball Is
America," said Admiral William
Crowe, Jr., former cbalrman of
tbe Joint Chlil!ts of Staff. ''This
patriotic 1esture Indicates
throughout the world that the
AmeriCan peopie s1and behind
their country."
Addede Baseball Commls·
sloner Fay 'Vincent: ' 'We are
grateful to have this opportunity
to demonstrate our support for
Americans serving their country
In the Persian Gulf."

'

"Cornell 21 Dartmouth 14
'Eul Carolina 19 Cincinnati 8

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Oak·
land's Dave Stewart became tbe
first man ln 14 years to make
three consecutive World Seriesopening starts. Don Gullett began the 1975 and '76 Series for
Cincinnati and repeated for the
Yankees In '77.
.
The start did not go well. By
allOwing a flrst-lnntng, two-run
homer to Eric Davis, Stewart
yielded as many runs In one
lnnlng as he !lad permitted In two
playoff starts. By walking Barry
Larkin to start the tblrd, !)e
equaled the amount of passet four - he had allowed In the
entire 1990 playotrs an.d 1989
World Series. Two scored.
... Don't tell tbe A's, but
Cincinnati Manager Lou Plnlella
has already declared the ~
winners of the World Series.
''When this thing Is all said and
done, the World Series champion·
ship Is going to be right bere In
Cincinnati,~' I Plniella told a
cheering throng of several thousand fans at a Tuesday noon pep
rally.
Plnlella appeared at the rally
with Reds' owner Marge Schott
and her St. Bernard . dog,
"Schottzle."
· ... The American Flag patches
worn by players, managers and
coaches In the World Series are to
"demonstrate their support for
our armed forces serving In the
Peroslan Gulf," according to
Major League fflctals: .

town Fitch: · Ben Hubbard, Fatr-

lleJd; Tom llclako, Lorain Admiral
Klnrr: Jell Jones, Upper Arllngtm:

John Kelley, Mount Vernon; Dick

Keracbbaum,

Mentor;

Steve

Klonne, Clnclnnatl Moeller; Bob
, KlotZ, Cincinnati Oak Hills;
Doua Kraus, Oxford Talawanda;
Jim Ladd, Tr(twood-Madtson; Pat
Mancuso. Cincinnati Prtncetm:
Tom McCurdy. Lilncastl!r; Tb&lt;m
McDaniels, Cantm McKinley; Bob
McFarland, Wooster; Jim

McQuaide, Lak.Wo&lt;d St. Edward;

Tom Mental, EastCievel8.ndShaw:
Bob Mon1s, East Liverpool; Lee.
Owens, MassUlG'I Washlnatlll:
Mike Hatch, Akrcm Kenmore:
Clareace Perry, ZanesvUle;
Jim Place, Middletown; Tony
Pusater~

WestervtUe South; Rex

Radelolf, Frem&lt;11t Ross: Stevt&gt;
Rasso, Onclnnatl St. Xavier; Jeff

Rleoen, Elyrla;

Mtk~

Schneider.

Daytm Wayne; Elmer Schuetz,

MasSlltll Jack.-&lt;ll: John Sines,
ChUlleothe; VInce Suriano. Clncln·

natt Anderson; Tom Watts, North
Olmsted; Dana Wocdrtng, Mans-

field Modlsm.
,

Dick Ptedmm-e. Gallon;

DIVISION D

Jotm Aregood, Franklin: Skip

·st.

Dunlop. Columbus Beecllcrol);

Jeff Gafford, Columbus Franklin

Hefahto; Bob GosEr, Alhens; Ed

Glus, Nor1h Cantm Hoover; Jeff
Uniontown

Lake:

Blll

Gutbr&lt;d, CIE'III!iand Sl. JoEph;
Bob Herpy, Geneva; Ed Herrldc,
Brect&lt;svtlle; Bob Ja&lt;Oby, Colwn·
bus DeSales; Tom Kalter, Bly

Df\?SIONID

Dick Angle, YoungstaNn Ursu·
line; Bob Brenning, Urbana;

..•

Randy Baughman, Licking Valley;
Da:ve Lewts, Onclnl'iall GreenhUs:

Bob Braman, BJanchester; Dave
Ferry~

Rob C.r-

peilter, New Uxtn11m: Barry
Lytle, Paulding; Jim Coi..,l~
Milan Edison: PaulCUM!r, Tbom-

vllle Sheridan; Keith Downlnl.
WIUiamsport Weot!all; Chuck Ellerbrock, Lewistown Indian Lalte;
Craig F1erch,.., Mlll'lon 1\Jwr
Valley; Bill Hartmeyer, N.,. Con·

DJVI8IONV

Clearcreek; William James, Med-

Ina Buckeye; Joe Jelwald, Girard;
.Joe Kasper, B)'l!llvtlle M...dow·
brd&lt;: LoM!II Kltnelolter, Caotm
, Central C&amp;thollc; Br\lCe KoUlnskl,
Columbus HamiltCII Towuhlp;
John Kuczykowskl, Wintersville;

Rob Lee, Upper Sanduliky; .
Roy Lucas, Washlnglm Court

House: Wade Lucas, Coshactm:
Bob Lutz, lrcntm; Dale Mardnl.
Uhrlchaville Claymont; Bm
McMillan, OrrviUe; GregNackley.

Grabam, NNuk Catbollc; Dave

Tobill, Covllllllm: Geolll• Ham·
mmd,.P-nla Woolridge; Toby
Hammood, Sanclullly St. Marys;

Wlck!Ute: Ron Neenen. Eatm;

Tom Hannan, Lor.tn CathoUc;

Mark Pallante, Mopdore Field:
Joe Pappa.nn, Rhiltleld Reowre;

llerrtdc. MIDfiO; Eugene
Homfnl, Anomia; Creg Holbert,

Mike

Gary Quisao, Oak HarbOr: Nick

Roberts, Warren Cbamplon; Kent
Robinson, Greenon; Otarles Rels. land, Orange;
Chris RoArk KetiPr'lng Alter:
Bucyrus; Gre&amp;

Ruthl!!ford, Pemberville East·
wood; Mike Schmitz, Altr&lt;11 lfo.
ban: Ride Schalfller, Bloan·

, Car roll; Jeff Souers, Doyer; Dan

Sparks, Bellvii~Ciear Fodt: Mtke
Slrohl, PhUo; Jim Whlttlngtm,

Norwalk;

Jerry Wasserman,

Springfield

Northeastern;

Mike

Youna, St. Oalrsvtlle.

DIVI810N IV

BJll

Aaona,

.

Garrettsv111e Gar-

Reodtrw; Clluck MOJVU. Oberlin;
Jim Mnrrll, llelplloo Jeflenoa;
Gacy Nowane, Point Valley;
Ralpll Orut, 0...,... Strlll:h; Ken
Osbome, WIUilmtiNJV:
KeoPorile, PymatwdagVolley;
David Rote, Wtndbun; Paul Hu·
lea, Columbiana Crestview; Ed
Terwtlllfler, Oleatu&amp;Y: Mtke Car·
roll, Cardlngtoll; Ttm (;Iauer,
Frl!!lerlcl&lt;tow~; Craig Tumer,
llroolrvttle: Keith Scllroek, Smith·
vlllo; Terry Sn""'Jy, Hannibal
Rlwr; A!lln Y-. Blade Rlwr:
Bob WoYtek. Vlenu . Mathews;
Jerry Y-er, Brooklyn; Howard
~.Sparta IUihiADd.
Altlllllft. I.ettonla; Lowell
BaC&lt;II, Cblllmblaaa; Jim Berry,
Cory·Rawson; nm Boe~a. Sl.
Henry; Bill Broom. Grandview
Heighto: David Curoll. Edoa: Jay
Ctrcosta. Wooda!told: Mel Coen.
Kyger Cr .. k; Rick Blusl ,
Wayaesllold·Gosllar; Jotm Dow·
ney, ArcbbOid: Cli~~Ck Downfnl,
uma C.llloUc: nm Dunn, Oncln·
noll Country Day; Ty Fleming,. ,
Sbadyad~
.
Larry Gerken, HofBate; J.D.

Bexley; Ron !Untm. Amanda

Scotl Roddy,

Brld,.ballgh, Huntlnglm:

Art

cord John Glenn; Thane Hecox,

Gl&lt;alStrr TraJble; Waym! Hinkle,

Gollm Nortllmor: Nidi Huial,
Mal..,...; Ken James, Toledo

.

Northwocd;

· Wally KesUna, Falrpcll't HarbOr:
Joe Llllce, Independence: Nonn
Ullllle, Mogado~: Rex Ungruon,
Uberty Center;, Chet Lomey, How·
ml Eut Knooc: Din Mlll!r~ Van
Burea; Crall! McCan!. A.)oersvllle;
Joo Metl8er. ArUngtm: Tom Nar·
d1aed, Fremmt S1. Jooepb; Ken
Newland. Mlnater:
$!eve

Rlagholz.

serw;

C.lhollc: Keith Bodecke&lt;, ,Root·

Zlflor, Atu.. -

Massie; Marc BJelac, SteubellviU~

stown; John Boles, Genm; Mlke-

Moiii'GPVIIie:

Larry Rocers. Coyahqra Holghts:
Enlle Simpson. Trtad: James
McPike, Edrrertm; Art Teynm',
TuiClii'IWU catJiouc; Bob Tope&gt;
11!111~ llerUa Cellter Weol!ro R.,.

field; Jack Arnold. Burton Berk·
shire; Pat Balllllier, ClndnMti
Indian Hill; Don Sizer,, CllntCil·

Mike Wetal, 'AIIt..-p;
Mark Wltbrolr, 911--lr; Vic
Wlllllnlo Delphclo St. Jolla's; Joe

Traek
The organizers of tbe .1991 DN
Games Indoor track and field
meet In Stockholm have cleclcled ,
against Inviting Canadian sprln·
ter Bell Johnson, the Swedish
· dally Expressen reported. John· .
son recently.returned after serv·
lng a two-year suspension for .
steroid use. Johnson said ·t his '
summer that the DN Indoor '
Games was one of tbe events he "
planned to compete In, but
organizers made It clear he was ·
not welcome In the Swedish .
capital.

Counselor to conduct SBD conferences

''

.OET READY
FOR WINTER

Man arraigned in stabbing
death of 12-year-old girl.

WE HAVE ALL .
YOU NEED TO
CLEAN &amp;
SERVI(E YOUR
KEROSUN ·&amp;
TOY ·0-STOVES

Pickens
, USOIII, WY.

.

Crawford; Dan Cocke, Tontcwany
OtEgo; Scott Bartholomew, Oak

Hill;

Robert

Dardlnier, JoJuutown
CJ't'g Dee!, North Galtla;

Monroo;
Jotm DIRenzo, Petersbu111 Sprlnfl·

quette, lloWUOI Gre..: Ralph
Mayer, Vermlltoa: Darrell Mayne,
Elyrla w .. t; Tom Montgomery,,
Day toll Dunbar; Corey Clum. Port
Citntm; Bob Noppert, Cincinnati
Tal!: Dave Pappada, Niles McKln·
ley; John Pefll, Carrolltoo: Ron
PobOIJJh, Rayland Buckeye;

ter; Dick Geyer, Colwnbui Har·
lley; Jim He....,, Orwtll Crond
Valley; AI Hetnck, Versallleo:

For

fteld; Jim France. AkrCilMaDCha-

Tom Hoch, Lorain Oef.n1ew:

Ralph Holda', Belpre:
Howe,

Johnstown

Frank

Northrldae:

Gary Jump, WyomlD&amp;: Jim Ku·

HOme

'.

and

KEEP

••

buske, New London;

Cal Fenellgas
.
..

KENTUCKY
FRIED
CHICKEN LIVERS
DINNERS
ONLYS3 99

PINTS

$225

low pressure storm center was
over western Iowa with a warm
r·
front to Michigan and a cold fron t' from the low to Colorado. The~
warm front will continue to move
north . By sunrise Thursd ay the
low will be over Upper Michigan ·:~
with the cold front across Ohio td,,.:
Louisiana.

ture on the ground will slow
drying, Field work delays can be
expected to last through the
weekend. Adequate soil moisture
and the return of mostly sunny
skies will be favorable for the fall
development Of forages and
winter wheat.
dn the morl)lng weather map a

· ~ .'

• 1&lt;,

.'

.,.
...,,

. ..

..,

WEATHER MAP -The large cold front will be sitting along the
East Coast, bringing showers and thunderstonns to the enHre '•'
Atlantic Coast. The next storm system will be bringing some
sca.ltered showers lo lhe Northwest. The Great Lakes region could "
see some snow, as warmer air wraps around the low pressure ..
center. The rest of the country will see mostly sunny skies and fair
temperatures under high pressure. (UPI)
1•

------Weather-------

Providing you and your neighbors with friendly, safetyconscious propane service is a Ferrell~s commitment.
For 50 years, we've han~led the eYeryday and emergency
needs of families like yours.
Fe(rellgas ... 1he folks lo rely on whether It's the
coldest day of 1he year. weekends, evenings, even
holidays.

Lottery numbers
'

'CLEVELAND (UPI) - Tuesday's winning Ohio Lottery
m1mbers:
1
Plck-3

Extended forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance of showers in the .:
northeas t part of the s tate
Friday , with fair weather state· .
wide Saturday· . and Sunday . . ,.
Highs will be In the 50s Friday, in .·· ,
the 60s Saturday, and ranging ···
from the mid 60s. to the mid 70s "I
Suhday . Overnight lows will be in "
the 30s Friday and Saturday ..,
mornings, and In the 40s early ·
Sunday. ·

South Central Ohio
Windy and becom ing cloudy
Wednesday night , with showers
and thunderstorms after mid·
night, and a low between 55 and
'60 .•Chance of rain is 90 percent.
Showers and thunderstorms
likely Thursday morning and
becoming partly cloudy and
windy during the afternoon, with
highs between 55 a nd 60. Chance
of rain is 60 percent .

Stocks
Dally siock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi

..••

..

Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T ................ ::: ............ .. 31\4
Ashland Oil .......... ,.... ......... 29\4 1
Bob Evans ........ ........ .......... 11
Charming Shoppes .............. 7%
City Holding Co ................. .15Y,
Federal Mogul .................. .. 12*
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .... .... ....... 15.\',
Key Centurion ...... .............. 10*
Lands' End ......................... 9Y,
Limited Inc: ....................... 13\4
Multimedia Inc . .. ...... .. . .. .... 5711,
Rax Restaurants ...... ........ ... 111,
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 17 \4
Shoney's Inc ... ........ .. .... ...... 9Y,
.S tar Bank ........................... 16\4
Wendy's Int'l. ............ ......... 5%
Worthington Ind .. .............. .. 20Y,

•

•

*

.-'' '
'.

...
' l' •
l t(l

~'" .-

Hours:

i'

992-2124

II am to M1d Sun· Thu1'5
I I am to l am Fri &amp; Sat.

One SBA loan approved for Meigs

Hardware
'

' Units of the Meigs County . ted to Veterans.
Temperatures will drop off
By United Press Internal lonal
Emc;rgency
Medical
Service
The Pomeroy Fire Department,
rapidly ' behlnd the front. Highs
Ohio was enjoying balmy !ali
responded to nine caUs for assis- at5: 13 p.m., was called.to Route 33
Thursday afternoon statewide
temperatures and mostly sunny
tance on Tuesday.
for a motor vehicle accident in skies Wednesday morning, but a
will only be in the lower 50s with
At 9:12 a.m. the Tuppers Plains which Naomi London was traospor·
partly cloudy skies.
strong cold front was approach·
unu went to Coal Street for Lawa ted by Lifcflight to Grant Hospital
Some clouds and showers will
ing ominously from the Great
Scott who was taken to Veterans in Columbus.
linger
In northeast Ohio ThursPlains.
·
Memorial Hospital.
At 8:50 p.m. the Middlepon unit
day night. Elsewhere, With deA strong southwest air ilow
At . 10:06 a.m. the Racine unit went to Custer Street for Mildred
creasing clouds and . winds,' the
was to cause temperatures to
reSJX?nd(.d toRoule 124 for Alben · Milbourn who was Jal&lt;en to
mercury will fall Into the low to
climb to near the 80·degree mark
Stoky wltq was taken to Veterans. · Veterans.
mld·30s .
statewide Wednesday , nearly 20
At 11:06 a.m. the unit transponed
The Pomeroy unit, at 9:09 p.m., degrees above normal.
So.ne lake eUect showers may
Mary Kearns from Trpuble Creek transponed Agnes Brown fmm
Unger In the northeast Friday
But a cold front that was over
Road to Holzer . Medical Center. Mulberry Aven\le to Veterans.
and highs will be In the low to
· Plains states Wednesday mornGoldie Lawson; Barringer Ridge .
The final call for assistance came ing w)ll move into western Ohio
mld050s across Ohio. High presRoad, was taken by the unit at 2:45 at 10:50 p.in. when the Pomeroy
sure will move east of Ohio
toward sunrise Thursday and
p.m. to Veterans, and at 4:41 p.m. unit went to Rose Hill for Orville
Saturday and, with south winds,
leave the state by mld·mornlng.
the unit w~t to Yellow Brush Road Hill who·was taken to Veterans.
·the mercury will try to get back
Clouds,
and'
winds,
were
.to
for Matthew MiUiron also transporto normal In the 60s and above·
Increase Wednesday night.
normal Sunday With dry
Showers and thunderstorms will
··
· be ahead of the fron t and some of · ·conditions.
The brisk winds were to keep
the thunderstorms late Wednes·
drying rates fairly good Wednes·
day night, especially over the
day, but also carried the threat of
western two- thirds of Ohio, co uld
in creased problems with
be severe.
lodging.
_
Mas I of the rain should end
Although
winds
will
be
fairly
Thursday morning, but some
strong from the west In the wake
showers may move back Into
WASHINGTQN (UP!) farmers In areas where climate
of the front Thursday,. lower
northwest Ohio late In the day.
Farmers will be stuck with an dictates the choice of crops, such
temperatures as well as mots·
unfairly large pardon of federal
as wheat In the Great Plains, or
spending cuts under the farm bill tl)ere Is lillie c hance to market a
awaiting final congressional ap- different crop.
pr~val, two major farm organiCongressmen said t he triple
zations said.
base was the most equitable way
2:30 to 9 p.m. and alter 10 a.m. on
Malcolm Ingram
The final version of the bill was
to make budget cuts among the
Saturday. Funeral services will be
approved by House and Senate
major crops covered by the farm
Malcolm T. Ingram, 82, Rutland, held at the chwch at I p.m. on
negotiators early Tuesday after
program . There was little appe·
died Tuesday at the Holzer Medical Thursday with the Rev. Tony
a 1;:1-hour conference committee Ute for further cuts in target
Center,
Vance, the Rev. John Evans, and
~Reeling. It would cut farm
prices.
Born on July 28, · 1908 in Salt the Rev. John . Corcoran officiating.
program spending by 25 percent
Assessments would be charged
Lick, Ky., he was the son of Charlie Burial will be in Miles Cemetery.
but try to make up for It by giving against dairy, tobacco, peanuts.
and Sara Belle Ingram. He was a
honey, woo land mohair to assure
farmers more freedom to seek
retired coal miner and for many
money-making crops.
they also contrlbu ted to the
years a\tended the Rutland Ch.urch
"Farm bill negotiators were
budget cuts.
of God.
faced With a set of bad choices
He is survived by his wife, . R. Neil Sloane
from the beginning and their end
Mildred Ingram of 57 years. a son
The farm . bill generally would
Memorial services for R. Nell
product only re' arranges a manand
daughter-in-law, Fred and
freeze support prices and target .
Sl93ne,
21, Athens, !ormerljl of
dated decline in farm Income,"
Joyce Leddingham, Grovepon;· five
prices at · their current levels.
Syracuse,
will be held Friday at 7
.said Del Weideman, president of
seven
greatCrop loan rates would go up · grandchildren,
p.m.
at
the
Seventh Day Advent the National Association of slightly .
grandchildren, a brother, Ray Inist
Church
on
Morris Avenue In
Wheat Growers.
gram, Holden, W. Va., and two sisIn addition, it creates the
Athens.
The American Farm Bureau
ters, Mrytle Hopkins, McConnell,
first·ever marketin g loan for
Sloane died Sunday morning in
Federation, the nation's largest
W.
Va . and Mattie Caserta, Baroilseeds such as soybeans and the
an
automdbile accident.
farm organization, said the bill
bersv ille, W. Va.
first uniform national standards
In lieu of flowers the family
would complicate the farm pro- lor what can be called organic
Besides his parents. he was
requests
. t.h at contributions be
gram at the same time It
preceded in death by a brother and
. food.
made
to
Carleton School Meigs
provided less of a safety net for
two sisters. ·
The Farm Bureau questioned
Industries.
P.O. Box 307, Syrafarmers. The Farm Bureau
· Friends may call at the Rutland
the 2 percent loan origination fee
cuse,
45779
.
objected to the $13.6 billion In assigned to the soybean 'loan.
Church of God, Wednesday from
cuts assigned to agriculture for Like an American Soybean Assothe next five years . That means
ciation lobbyls\. the Farm Bufarm spending of about $41 billion reau noted the potential for the
througl\ 1995.
A. counselor will be conducting
The Small Business Developfee to be extended to other
Negotiators tried to balance commodities in coming years.
ment Center, Division of The individual client conferences by
the budget cuts and farm pro·
Governor's Office of Community appointment at the Point Pleasant
The Farm Bureau also was
gram goals by freezing crop critical of a decision to alter the
and lndastrial Development, is a Main Street Office at 305 Main St.,
target prices but adopting the
resource service that assists in stan- Point Pleasant, W. Va .. from 10
sugar program to guarantee
so-called· triple base program .. lt foreign producers the chance to
ing new small businesses and helps a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 26.
would declare l5 percent of a
existing
businesses encountering For appointments or additional in·
sell 1.25 million tons of sugar
farmer's wheat, feed grains,
formation, residents · may contact
problems
in
West Virginia.
annually In the United States. A
cotton Wid. rice land JnellglbJe for
the Point Pleasant Main Street
Assistarice
is
also
available
for
system ,pf marketing quotas
sullsldil!s:• tl'a'r'it!er~ would be
office
at 675-3844.
those
businesses
wishing
to
bid
on
would be Imposed·If U.S. producallowed .to grow crops on the
state
procurement
contracts.
·
tion Impinges on the guaranteed
land, however .
foreign sales.
The triple base would be
coupled With a voluntary 10
The farm bill also makes the
percent "planting flexibility"
current
milk support price,
program. Land enrolled In It also
$10.10 per 100 pounds, the min·
would be Ineligible lor subsidies
imum milk support price through
but farmers would have freedom
1995.
It also requires the Agrlcul·
Mathias is accused of killing
By MELINDA POWERS
to experiment with new crops.
ture Department to conduct a
Stacey R. Lucas , 12, of Gallipolis.
study of how to limit milk
The man accused of stabbing to
Lucas had been missing since
Analysts say triple base could surpluses In the future without
death ·a young Gallipolis girl was
Saturday, Oct. 6, according to a
result In lower farm income cutting the support price or
arraigned Monday afternoon In
report filed by her mother,
because of smaller government paying farmers to quit the
Gallipolis Municipal Court.
Elizabeth Masters at· the Gallipopayments. Critics say the free- business - a prescription that
William Mathias, 23, Galiipo·
lis Police Department. County
dom to switch acreage among seemingly can be filled only by a
Us, was arraigned on one count of
and city polic emen located Lucrops
may be of little value. to two· tier support price.
aggravated murder a nd had a
.
cas' partlally·clothed body off .
cash bond set at $100,000 by
Poplar Ridge Road Friday mornGallipolis Municipal Court Judge
ing. A preljmlnary autopsy re·
· Joseph Cain.
port revealed Lucas died of stab
Mathias' attorney, Ctlarles
wounds
to the chest and ne.ck.
Only one SmaU Business Ad: were approved in 38 of the Dis- Knight, of Pomeroy, pled for
Earlier
Monday, Mathias had
ministration (SBA) Loan was ap· trict's 60 county territory in the leniency from Cain when set ling
suffered
a
black eye in an
proved ' for Meigs County during northwest, central and southern the bond.
altercation
with
other Inmates In
the fiscal year which ended Sept. Ohio.
the Gallia County Jail. Deputies
Any small business or individual
30, I 990, according to Frank D.
"Since this a serious offense,
In
the jail separated Mathias and
SBA
financing
should
interested
in
Ray, Dirctor of the Columbus Disbut not a capital offense, we
the
other prisoner, and pla ce&lt;j
contact
their
local
bank,
the
lrict Office of the U.S. SBA.
would like the court be as lenient
Mathias
in his own cell.
SBA
office
at
85
MarColumbus
The repon stared that the loan
as possible," Knight said. Cain
A
preliminary
hearing for
coni
Blvd.,
Columbus
or
the
Cinwas in the amount of $80,000 and
denie d the request and agreed
Mathias'
case
was
scheduled
for
Cfllaled ore new job and assisted in cinnati SBA bffice at 550 main St. , with Assistant Prosecutor Mark
.
Oct.
18
:&lt;t
10:30
a.m.
in
the
maintaining two others. In the stare Cincinnati.
Sheets that the bond should beset
Gallipolis Municipal Courtroom.
of Ohio 381 loans were approved
at no less than $100,000.
totaling $100,5809,239 with 2,508
jobs being created and 5, 7ffi being
maintained.
~y said that this year's activity
is . up 13.4 percent continuing a
positive trend of growing utilization and effectiveness of ,the SBA's
financial programs. Sixty-three of
the · 381 loans approved were in
· arqounts under $50,000 and loans

-----.Area deaths---

--Sports brlela--

Eut.

St;rong cold front approaching Buckeye state

Fanners say fann
bill unfair in cuts

cautey, North Robinson Colmel

Vlllarre: Dick Kldwell, FoJiorla:
Vern Long, Westlake; Bob Malta·

rtch, Weet Holmes: Dennis Mar-

SleYe

Jert Wblttaker, O:m·
.. neaut: David wn~. Parma Holy
Name.

Bruney, Mardns

!law Thlet..,, Plaia City Jona·
tbaa Alder; TODf Lepndo, Hurm;
Clluck McMulm, Rldtfewood:
Robert Rudder, Wellavlllo; Dove
Metz. West Jeffi!I'SCIIl; JCton Mlntr,

mlnetm;

Gerald CIHKe, Watkins Memorial;
Tom Blake, Columbus Independ·
ence; RJck Crislip. Louisville;
Gary DeLuca, Lima Bath; Tom

,.

Rloe, Gosllen; Byrm MoJVu,
Solem: Larry Shaw, Amhent
Steele: Don Grear, DoytmC&amp;rroll;
MlkeSlaflgs, Pomet'oyMelp; Ron
Stepsls, Shelby: liDs,.. Ds. WU·

RoS!Ier, Fairfield Unl&lt;ll; Jerry

Baughman,
Marys Memorial;
Jerry Berton,. runtua Crestwood;
John Breoovaky, Lorain South·
View; Dave Brown, Delaware;
Mike BurLe, Napoleon; .T.Im
Carver, Columbus St . Olarles; Don
Schulz, Chesterland West Geauga;

Durbin,

Jeff

Conroy, Miami Trace; George

was on hand to watch Rljo pitch
In the Series opener Tuesday
night ·
. Marie hal no~ only watched, he
worked. The forrner San Fran' •
cisco star right·hander served as
an announcer for Major Leque
Baseball's SpaniSh language
broadcast of the Series. ''Woad·
erful Juan' • won 243 games In 16
sesons, primarily for the Giants.
... Milwaukee's Dave Parker, a
former Red and Athletic, visited
tbe field before Game 1. He was
walkln&amp; on a cane, the result of
surcery to remove bone spurs In
his knee.
.. ; Oakland's Rickey Render· ·
son boaSts a post·season 13-game
hitting streak. The versatile
leadoff 'hltter went 3-for-~ Tuesday night. His last hitles1 post· ·
season game·was Game 1 of the
1989 playoffs.
·
·... 'llle "Nasty Boys" continue
to be extremely so In post-seuon
play. Cincinnati relievers have
posted an . 0.44 .ERA In the
playoffs and Senes, allowing just
one run In 20.1 Innings. Tuesday
night, Rob Dibble and Randy ' ·
Myers each permitted one hit In :
one scoreless lnhll!g apiece;
.
... Billy Hatcher's 3-for-3 per·
formance In his Series debut was
sensational, but Hatcher needed
two more hits If he wanted to set a
record. Milwaukee's Paul :MoB·
tor collected five hlta In his debut
In 1982. In the same game, Robin
Yount got four bits In his serieS
Inaugural.
· :.. Oakland's Mark McGwlre
·helps power the club durin&amp; tbe
regular season, but not In tbe ·
Series. The A's cleanup liltter
went 0-for-3 TUesday night to
lower his career Series total of
6-for-37, a .162 average.

The Daily Sentinel Page 5 ~

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

,•

2 MEDIUM

PEPPERONI DOUBLE CHEESE
ONE FOR
SECOND PIZZA

$7 99

$4 OO MORE

(,

...
•••

• 1990 Com~no ' t P.rn Inc Out driv..,t C«f\11 1111 lhlrr 120 00 Otlova"' ••u t.mrrtl! t o en ..,.e
tale dtOVtnQ. Vehll •• pa,.. • C• p~r~ onq IOC.l&lt;Onl only Sat• ••• alld" oCIIYI ... httra .,opl&lt;c tbll! I&gt;AAT
TIME ANO CAREER OPPORTUNITIES NOW AVAI~ABLE 1

L...-~...:.::.;;;~~.::.:.:.::.::.::.::.::.:.:.:::.:.:...~__J

.

,

..,

MARY ..
'·

.'.

.&gt; '

State Representative

•.::'

STANDING UP FOR US

, •.

' .,

..\
.

h27.
:Plck-3 ticket sales totaled
$1;,159,323.50, with a payoff due of
$1, 705,164. Plck·4
·

Cell about otir IIJICial Customer Prc91ms: ·
• 24 Hour EmerQency Service
• Level Paymem Plan • Ferrellgas Installation Review

MARY APEL
UNDERSTANDS
THE NEED FOR
A CLEAN, SAFE
ENVIRONMENT

'2377.

flck-4 ; tlckei sales totaled
$21!1,319.50, with a payoff due of

Stf.• 700.

Cards
hearts.
~0 of clubs. •
fG ng of diamonds .
1\.ce of spades.
j::arcls ticket sales totaled
S1P2,592, with a payoff due · of
$41.,270.
~of

ttl-50,7
PO-OY, OliO

..'·

I

I

~

Hospital news

J

"We cannot allow our area to be used
as a·dumping ground for toxic waste
and excess out-of-state trash.''
-Mary Abel

']\ VETERANS MEMORIAL

.
"'

MARY ABEL believes we
must preserve and protect
,land resources for our
children ..

•

i TUESDAY ADMISSIONS •

RusseU 'l'ucll:er. Rll:ine; Agnes
Brown, Middlepon.
··
TIJESDAY DISCHARGES
Sandra Boothe and W'tlliain Smith.

•

·u
I,'

"

' l'
.)

.

...
'

•

I '

'

'.
'
'

L----..;._----..-----......---------------··
Paid for by Abet for Sute Repreaentetly~. David Fty, 26 Weat Waahlngton, At~na. OH .·46701 .

I'

�(

Support. Local Schools with Our
•

.For
REG. or LITE
CHICKEN OF THE SEA

TUNA
6.5 oz.
CANS

2

$1

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

.

PEAS • CORN • CARROTS
· BEANS • POTATOES • MIXED ·

FOODLAND
VEGETABLES
TENDERBEST QUALITY ·

FRESH WHOLE PICNIC LB.

PORK ROAST
TENDERBEST 80% LEAN BEEF

GOURMET $
G·ROUND s :.~R LB.

oz.

16
CANS

59

~~~A~icr!lf2·4 9
ROU

ASSORTED

. PORK
CHOPS

9

10-11 lB.
AYG • .

FOODLAND

""- ~··
...- ~-,~~RANGE

JUICE

LB.

TENDERBEST PORK OR BEEF

·BUCKET STEAK

Wadnesdav. Octoi:Mr 17, 1990

Wedneedav. OctQI:Mr17. 1990

Sentinel

99

Save-A-Receipt Tape Program

~- Farm

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

-Arourld town...

Bureau

------41'-

. elects

:.officers
By Julie E. Dillpn
Sentinel News Stair
. . Approximately 200 people at: tended last night's annual meeting
· of the Meigs Coimty Fann Bureau
· held at Eastern High School.
· Preceding the meeting a "Meet
· the Candidates" reception was held
in . which those attending had a
· chance to speak with each candidate to gain a better understanding of his or her platform.
Following a dinner served by the
Eastern Band BOOsters, members
voted on and passed eight county
resolutions. 12 state resolutions and·
12 national resolutions. Members
alSo voted on truSteeS for each district and a delegate to the 1990
, state.convention.
Trustees elected were Alvin
' Tripp, Pomeroy, for District I,
~ Olive,
Orange and Qhester
Townships;. Aaron Sayre, Racine,
; for Dislrict 2, Lebanon, Letan and
. Sutton Townshi~s; Ziba Midkiff,
· Pomeroy, for D1suict 3, Bedford,
: Scipio and Sutton Townships; and
• Larry Montgomery, Langsville, for
: Dislrict 4, Rutland, Salem and
: Columbia Townships.
. • George Holter, Racine, was elec; ted delegate to the state convention
: with Pauline Atkins, Rutland, as al. ternate.
,
: The meeting concluded with the
: recognition of new memberS and
•. presentation of pins to tong· time
; members.
New members are' William
• Amos, Ralph Ballard, Jane Banks,
· Danny Brickles, C. Thomas Chap. man, Ed Cozart, Lawrence Cundiff,
: Ronald Donaldson, Jwnes and
' Frank Drehel, Laurance Ebersbach,
• Michael Elberfeld, Gary Gibbs,
, James and Robin Haning, George
: Hawley, Carl Hicks, Craig Howard,
• Larry Lavender, Jan Michael Long,
: Ryan Mahl, Gloria Michael,
, Thomas Molden, John Murphy,
• Dallas Sayte; Dan Smith, Ernest
t Smith, John Smith, Hanison Smith,
; Fred Staley, Kevin Venoy, Hershell
, White, Terry Wayland, Margaret
' Wood and Larry McM~y.
Fifty-year pins were presemed to
! Gene and Mary Kay Yost. Presen• ted 45-year pins were Frank Dorst
' and Leodell Davidson. Fony-year
: pins were presented- to Starling
· Massar and Oris and Orion Roush.
: Receiving 35-year pins were Char-

·
.
In conjunction with Pomeroy's Sesquicentenn~l, the lSOth anntlveiF
RECOGNIZED • These members a1 the Meigs County Farm Bureau were recognized and presented · sary of the incorporation or the village, Bank One in Pomeroy,
membership pins at Tuesday night's annual meeting a( the organization. Members with 25 or more years · sponsoring this photo Identification series. The photos feature
of membership, are, 1-r, Hayman and Dean Damitz, Gene_and Mary Kay Yost, Virgil and Delores King, chitectural detaUs o1 buildings within tbe town.
and Leodell and Mary Davidson.
The pictures were taken around town and are featureced~-:in~.C:~~:Jf.
day ellit.ions of The Daily Sentinel. Answers, by mail or dt
be received at The Daily Sentinel office by the following M~1ndl1y
winners will be listed in Tuesday editions of the paper.
Winners will receive a landmark Christmas ornament from
One and when the series concludes all people who identified the
lures correctly will have the chance to win a savings bond from

~iddleton Doll factory I

-recognized by.ODA

award~
~

.

The City of Belpre and Development Block Grant Bl~
Washington County was recognized Small Cities Economic DeveJ&lt;t!for the Lee _Middleton Origi~ ment Loan for $130,000
Dolls expansiOn · at the Ohto secured through the Office of LoeB!
Development Associatio!l'S Awards Government Services and ~
dinner Tuesday evening in-Belpre.
Washington County Com milBelpre Mayor Lewis Vaughn --:as sioners, a $60,000 local Revolv~g
presented
the
- Community Loan Fund was provided ~h
Achievement Award as the Out- the Buckeye Hills-Hoicking Vall. y
standing Small Community in .~hio Regional Development D' · t,
for the Lee _Middleton Origt.nal 1 and Belpre provided $10,000 in
Dolls expansiOn by C~arles A. cal match for the EDA Revolvi!J!
Heller, Jr., pres1deOt, Ohro Po~r Loan Fund Program, with a I~
The
Coml!lumty donor providing $5,000 in loci!
LONG-TIME MEMBERS .• Members or more than. SO years in the Melts Cl)unty Farm Bureau were Company.
recognized at last night's annual meeting of the organization. Piclured, 1-r, are, front, Grace Furbee, Ada Ach1eve~ent Award recogmze~ a · match. On the job training fun~
Holter, Daisy Blakeslee, Sylvia Midkilr, Mildred Gaul, Pauline Atkins, Nellie I'Jirker and Mary Easterday. commuruty development J&gt;rOJCCI rounded out the funding for
~
Back, Raymond Furbee, Harry Holter, Joan Wolfe of Bank One, Alan Holter, Millie Midkiff and Scott Dil- that demonstrates a coopemove ef- facility in Belpre.
lon of Bank One, Charles Blakeslee, Ziba Midkilr, George Holter, Jacob Gaul, Howard Nolan, Alvin Tripp, fon by !ocal Bl_ld state governmem . 'The Ohio Pooled. Bond -~
m asstsnng busmesses.
.
provided $550,000 · toward col·
·
and Don and Maida Mora.
Numerous Me1gs Counuans are smx:tion of the new facility ~
among the 135 people which now the Ohio Industrial Tniinn,
work at Middleton. Many started Program provided $10,907.44 '"
les E. Yost and Virgil King. Thiny- Johnson, Roben Lee, Ramond Fur- day, Donald Mom, and the Poole with th~ doll company when II funds to train employees. TOe
year members recognized were bee and Howard Nolan, all 51-year and Parker Farm, 54-year; w.S. open~ lf:S doors ~n ~e old bank project resulted in completion o~ .
Theodore Pullins and L.R. Glusen- members; Ziba Midkiff, C.E. and Michael and George aitd Harry build~g m Coolville m the early 37,000 square foot facilit~ in .
cam!), and . 25-year pins were Daisy Blakeslee and J.M. and Holter, 55-year; Ada Holter, 60- . 1980 s.
. · fa!! of 1989 for Lee Middle
presented to Hayman Damitz, Clif- Mildred Gaul, 52-year; C.E. year; and Pauline Atkins and Helen
The move to Belpre cwne m Origt.nal Dolls. Fifty-five new JO s
·
1988 w1th the company consohdat· have been c~ted since 191!8.
~
ford Hill and Grover Salser.
Humphr\ly, Virgil Hamm, Eloise Nease, 72-year members.
Entertainment for the evening mg _!herr. operahons _from five
Coordinanon of the proJ~I "'fS
Members of more than 50 ye;u-s White and Rowland Dais, 53•year;
locations mto Oft!l fac1)1ty !ffid s1g- through ·the Oh1o Cooperative -EKrecognized
included Thereon Bank One of Athens, Mary Easter- was by the gospel group, Sunrise.
•
.
mficantly expandmg opemoons. .
tension Service,
Office ~f
Belpre offered an 8.5 acre Site Economic Development, and
they owned to Lee Middleton Ohio Department of Developmen
.
.
.
Original Dolls, a Community
.
,
• The Tuppers Plains Fire dressing, homemade noodles,
Depru:tmetit Ladies Auxiliary will mashed potatoes and gravy, green
have its annual turkey dinner on beans, cole slaw, rolls, homemade
A bridal shower was held Marge and Bob Purtell, Irene "V·
pie or cake, and bevemge for $4.
Nov. 10 beginning at4 p.m.
The fifth binhday of Brittany
recently
for Becky Napper at the nold, Ann Williams, C~eryl Holley,
The menu includes turkey with The public is invited to anend.
: Powers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Zion Church of Christ She is the Mamie Swauger, Toammy and IWI
• Roben Powers, Pomeroy, was
bride-elect of Bobby L. Foster.
Dummit~ Kay and Bill McE;y
: celebmted at the home of her
The social room WIISI decomted and famtly, Bertha Bmg, ·Don
: grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
with pink and lavendar balloons, Davidson, Iva Johnson,· Mary d
• Powers, Middlepon.
bells, .ftowers, candles and crepe Loren Coleman and fwnily, Alin
; On ber birthday, Oct. 10, a ~izza
paper. .
Lambert, Virginia Wyatt, Helen dd
: party was held with a Urucorn
Several
games
were
played
with
Henry Eblin, and Suzanne Jiame( __
Mark and Deborah (Cmft) Mc• theme carried out. A Unicorn cake
prizes
awarded.
The
door
pnze
was
Cann, Vienna, W.Va., are announc, was served to Bob and June
won by Ada Hess.
ing the birth of their first child,
: Powers, Ruth Powers, Peggy HutRefreshments of cake, ice cream,
Heather Marie, on Sept. 13, at St.
, ton, Gmce Pratt, Jackie Hoover and
mints,
nuts andpunch were served.
Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg,
' Corrie, Debbie Jones, Mica Jones
Attending
were Lena Napper,
W.Va.
• and Tim Ryan.
Beverly Npper, Roben Napper,
The infant weighed nine pounds
' On Oct. 14, a dinner pany was
Bonnie Arnold, Margaret Hysell,
and seven ounces and was 21 and
held with a mouse cake being serJulie
Stanley, Betty Dill. Linda Fos·
BRrrTANY
POWERS
one half inches long.
• ved to Ruth and Frank Powers,
ter,
Sharon
Folmer, Kathy Hess,
Maternal
grandparents
are
: Grace Prau, June Powers, Pam fu;ld bie · and Mike Jones, Mica Jones
Peggy
Bole,
Ada Hess, Anna
Roben and Carol Craft, Tuppers
l Charlie Marshall, Columbus; Deb· and Tim Ryan.
·
Grube,
Wanda
Mohler,
Hazel StanPlains. Paternal grandparents are
ley,
Pani
Arnold,
Dorothy
Reeves,
•
Charles and Emma McCann,
Freda
Elwn,
Ida
Murphy,
Kathryn
' ·.;,,
Elizabeth, W.Va.
Johnson. Mary Pavidson, Wilma
Maternal great-grandparents' are
Davidson, Carolyn Chapman,
Myrtle Cmf~ Tlippers Plains; Gay
Kimberly
Chapman, Charlotte Hess
'
and Laum Fields, Coolville; and
'
\
.
.
and
Becky
Hess.
&gt;
"Fall, Changes All Around" Master Patty Dyer.
Edith Wires. Stewan.
Others
sending gifts were
·. was the _theme for the literary
Community service chainnan
Paternal great-grandparents are
Rosalie
King,
Jeff Arnold, Flossie
· program· conducted by Katherine Bernice Midkiff asked members to Callie Sheets, Cleveland; and
Elmer
Hysell,
Wilovene Ba~ey,
and
I
Riley at the recent meeting of Star save Campbell's Soup labels for Roselee Johnson, Charleston,
- Grange held at the grange hall.
school children.
W.Va.
HEATHER MCCANN
-.' Readill$s were "This is Aurumn"
Announcements
included
:• by Christme Napier; "Fall Is Set- decorating for the Halloween pany
.' tling · Down" by Ann Halliday; at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday; Hal· "Autumn" br, Virginia Carson; "I loween pany at6:30 p.m. on SaiUr.• Would Have ' by Katherine Riley; day followed by a po~uck supper at
; ''Ready or N:ot Here Comes Win- 7 p.m. with chicken being cooked
. ter" by Rick Macomber and Opal by Everette Holcomb qn the
Meigs · County
; Dyer;
"Jokes"
by
Larry woodcooker;
: Montgomery,; "At the Close of Pomona, Grange on Nov. 2 with
· Summer" by Freda Smith; and potluck at6:30 p.m. and meeting at
i "Slow Down October by Patty - 7:30 p.m.; Gallia County Pomona
' Dyer. Songs included "For the Grange will visit and install
Beauty of the Earth," "Shine on officers; Star Grange officers conMichael J. Owens
Harvest Moon" and "Let Me Call ference on Nov. 3 at 7:30 p.m. folYou Sweetheart!'
lowed by regular meeting at 8 p.m.
M.D.
Members answered roll call by
A discussion was held on cOn• naming a change in their Jives. A tests and programs for the coming .
game, "In Grand~Dother's Trunk I grange year. There were 22 mem• Found," was played by all.
bers and five juniors present for the
Tbe
meeting
was
conducted
by
meeting.
.
.
.

+

t1f

~ Powers

:r

Turkey dinner set for Nov. 10

birthday
: ir observed

Napper bridal shower held

·~

McCann birth is _announced

64 oz.
'CTN.

LOUIS RICH
-SLICED OR SHAVED

TURKEY BREASTS
$29~

LB.
DlUXE CLUB

KAHN'S

.BOLOGNA

.

:Star Grange meeting held

HOLZER CLINIC

SWEETEST.OA Y:

. WELCOMES ...

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20

.

·. . ----A'rts Council program--.- - •

Kay Cecil, local antique
dealer, will conduct a free antique
and collectible identification clinic
on October 24 and 6:30 p.m. at the

i' Homecoming set
,
The St PaulUnited Methodist
, ChiD'Ch at Tuppers Plains will have
• its annual homecoming on Sunday.
~ s~ school begins at 9 a.m., .
•w
81 I0 a.m., carry-in dinner
• 81 I~: p.m. and afternoon service
: at~.m.
: There will be special singing by
• the ''Children of God" from the ·
: Hillside Baptist ChiD'Ch in

• Pomeroy.
.
• The SL Paul Youth Group will
• 111o sing. Rev. Sharon Hausman

..• .invites the public.

Middlepon Arts Council on North ·
Second Avenue. You may bring two
items to be identified as to age,
make, type, etc.

-·
GOOD USED
WAS.RS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. UNGES

COUNTY_
APPLIANCES
627 3rd Awe., Gallpolls
PH. C46·1699

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Sweetest Day is to show how
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If You Want Quality- .You Want

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843-5178
PORTLAND, OHIO

To

Internal Medicine

A native of southern Ohio. Dr. Owens earned
his M.D. at the University of Cincinnati. He did
his Internship at Wright State in Dayton and
completed residency at the renowned Mt. Sinai
Medical Center in Milwaukee.
His training and expertise are evidenced by his
certification as e Diplomate of the American
. Board of Internal Medicine.
Dr. Owens is now practicing within the 14member Internal Medicine Department at Holzer
Clinic on Jackson Pika in Gallipolis.
. For A• Appolntllllnt, Call

446-5131
.,HAIL OWIIS, M.D. -

CONTI-11111 , .. RADITION OF MEDICAL
IICIUIII~

'•

�•• ' •

Wednesday, October 17, 1990

Pomeroy-· Middleport, OhiO

Cub scout pack 245 of Middleport will be having a circus
theme costume party at their
regular pack meeting on Thursday
at 6:30 p.m. The meeting wiU be
held in the basement of Dan's on
· the comer of North Second Avenue
andWalnuL
The pack will also be signing up
new scouts that evening. Any boy
age 8-10 may join. Registration
....
fees are 57.60 fa- the year. A parent
t,
or legal guardian must accompany
each boy signing •up. New boys
' I ; l.
wanting 10 become scouts are welcome to attend the party that evening. They should ~ up as any
circus character they Wish: clowns,
performers, side show acts or even
animals. Games will be played and
prizes and treats will be awarded.
Cub scouting offers chances to
explore and learn new things as
weU as reinfon:ing the parent-child
relationship. Scouting emphasizes a
duty to God, COumry, community
dua
and the family. For more informaAWARDED SCHOLARSHIPS - Frank Parlcer and Willoughby Hill, both Eastern High School gra tes
lion call 9&lt;)2-3289 in the evenings · have been awarded scholarships from FEL-PRO. Both are students in the auwm~ve and diesel truck sys.tems
or 992-6769 anytime.
technology program at Washington Technical College. Left to right are Carson Miller, WTC prestdent, Parker,
Hill, and Jack Wilson, automotive-diesel program direclOC. ,
·
.

WEDNESDAY
will be bide Mackey, Wooster.
REEDSVILLE - Revival at the
HENDERSON • The Gallia
Fellowship Church of the Nazarene Twirlers Western Square Dance
will be held through Sunday at 7 Club will hold a dance Saturday
p.m. nightly with Rev. Timothy from 8·11 p.m. at the Henderson
Bender as evangelist. Public is in- Community Center in Henderson,
vited.
W.Va. The caller will be Herb Shel·
POMEROY- Candidate's Night 1011
and diMer at Meigs County Senior
BASHAN _ ·There will be a
Citizens Center · on Mulberry meeting at the Red Brush Church
Heights in Pomeroy. Dinner from 5 of Christ on Bashan Road on
p.m. until 7 p.m. and .candidate's Saturday at7:30 p.m., Sunday at 10
presentations at 7 p.m. Dinner to a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill, Fosconsist of hoagy roast beef
w" ·u -·" Publ' ·
sandwich, cole' slaw, chips ·~OOd. .•a. WI • .,.._.
lC mbeverage and dessert:
LONG BOITOM _ The Long
. SYRACUSE - The Third Wed- Bonom Community Association
nesday Homemakers Club will will have a smorgasbord dinner on
meet at the municipal building on Saturday beginning at 5 p.m. CanWednesday at 10 a.m. Project is didates will be there to greet the
making favor$ for the nursing public. Cost is SS for adults and
home.
.
$2.50 for children. Menu includes
RACINE - Revival at the Racinec several meats, homemade noodles .
Church of the Nazarene will con- . and dressing, desserts and drinks.
tinue through Sunday at 7 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tupnightly. Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6 .
Plains .fall carnival will ~
p.m. Special singing each ni$hl.
Saturday from 5-9 p.m. with
Evangelist is Rev. Jeff Adkins, Soup sllpper at 5 p.m. and games at
Marietta.
·
THURSDAY
6 p.m. Public is invited.
TUPPERS PLAINS - There
MIDDLEPORT - Middlepon CCL will be ~ round and square dance
wiU have a Halloween party at the on Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m. at
Rocksprings United Methodist the Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
Church on Thursday at 6:30p.m.
featuring the · True Country
POMEROY - The Meigs Ramblers Band. Caller is Jim CarCounty Democrat Executive Com- nahan. Donation at door of $2.50
mittee will meet at 7:30 p.m for adults and Sl for children under
Thursday at 107 Syrarnore SL, 12. Public invited.
Pomeroy.
, MIDDLEPORT - The Grubb
SYRACUSE -The Syracuse Yil· Family Singers will be at !be Ash
lage Council will meet Thursday at Street FreewiU Baptist Church in
7 p.m. at the village hall.
Middleport on Saturday at 7:30
RACINE - The Racine Post602 p.m.
American Legion wiD meet . COOLVILLE _ There wiD .be
thursday at 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy square dance at the CoolviUe Lions
Police Chief Jerry Rought will be Building in COolville on Satlll'd.lly
the guesL Refreshments after meet- from 8-11 :30 p.m. Music by Happy
ingHARRISONVILLE - Mis- Hollow Beys. $3 single and SS per .
couple.
sionaries from Mexico, the Rev.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Sam Davis family, will be holding Seventh Day Adventist Church on
services Thursday and Friday ~t the Mulberry Heights will have a
· Calvary Pilgrim Chapel and the seminar "Meeting Jesus" on SaturHarrisonville Holiness Chapel. day at 4:30 p.m. This event wiD
Both services are at 7 p.m.
ongoing for several weeks.
SATURDAY
POMEROY - The movie at the
POMEROY - The Bel!es and Pomeroy Library on Saturday wiD
Beaus Western Square Dance Club be "Legend of Sleepy Hollow" and
will spOnsor a dance Saturday at "The Puppy Who Saved the Cir·
the Senior Citizens Center in . cus." Movies begin at 2 p.m. and
Pomeroy from 8-10 p.m. Caller all children are welcome.

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Halloween party

f,

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STUDENT OF THE WEEK - Suzanne Henderson Is tbe out·
standing student of the week at Meigs Junior High SchooL Suzanne
was rec.ognized recently as an o.utstanding Reading and Spelling·
student at the school. Sbe ·is pictured 'bere witb Mrs. Suzanne
Bentz.

C

Scholarships awarded at WTC

For more information call Vugil
·.. . The Eastern Local Band
and
Gerri Holsinger at 378-6253,
Bposters will sponsor the Third
Two Meigs County srudems at
Annual Ans and Crafts Fair at Charles and Theda Dailey at 378A Halloween party was an- the Washington Technical College
EBstem High School on Nov. I0 6447, or Bill and Twila Buckley at 'nounced
for OcL 30 from 6-8 p.m. have been awarded $500 scholar992-2996.
.
!'rom 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
at
the
recent
meeting of the Bashan ships form the FEL-PRO MecklenEntertainment throughout the
Items will be available for creaLadies
Auxiliary.
burger Foundation.
tive Chrisnnas and fall gift ideas, day win include acts by local
Becky Pullins presided at the
ceramics, wood working, baskets, schools.
Frank Parker of Pomeroy and
meeting and Lou Pitzer gave the Willoughby Hill, Long Bot10m,
rugs and dolls.
treaSurer's report,
bOth second year srudents in the
Tables may be rented for SI0 or
It was noted that the smorgas- college's automotive and diesel
two for $15 and are available on a
bord dinner 'was a success. Winners truck systems technology program:
first come first served basis. To
of
prizes were Ruth Pullins, afghan; They were selected by the FELThe Long Bottom Community
reserve a table, mail a check to Ray
Rose
Wolf, magazine rack; and PRO scholarship committee on the
and Patty Pickens, 36215 Texas Association wiU have a "Meet the
Candidates' Night" beginning at 5 Paul Riley, pillows.
basis of academic excellence.
Road, Pomeroy. 45769.
Refreshments will also be avail- p.m. Saturday night in the community building.
able.

.Candidates night .

According to Jack Wilson,
. automotive-diesel program clirector
at Washington Tech, the annual
Automotive Technicians' ·Scholar-.
ship program is very competiti'o(e,
limited
to
500
applicants.
nationwide. The award may be
used toward college expenses at
·accredited sch(Xllsoffering courses
in automotive technology.
This is the sixth consecutive year
that Washington Technical College
students have received FEL-PRO

scholarships. ·
Both Parker and· Hill are 1989
graduates of Eastern High School
in Megis County. Parker is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Alben Parlcer,
Pomeroy, Hill is the son of
Josephine Hill of Long Bottom, and
Larry Hill of Apple Grove.
FEL-PRO was founded in 1918
and is one of the world's ~est
makers and marketers of automotive industrial gaskets. The com·
pany also make~ adhesives,
sealants, and specialty lubricants.
Middleport-~, Ohio

..'"·-

992·34t1

·g People in the news
';:

By WILLIAM C. TROTF

UNLIMITED DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY
UP TO 50¢ • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
STORE HOURS: DAILY 6 am-12 Midnight • Sunday 8 am-10 pm

; • MOVE ON, GOOD KNIGHT: Newly ·knighted Peter U~llnov
· : says he now prefers to be called Sir Peter rather than Mr.
' Ustlnov. The actor- writer-director was dubbed Tuesday by
i Queen Elizabeth II In a BuckJngha111 Palace ceremony that
: didn't leave much time for small talk. "She said, :1 hear you are
• still as busy as ever,"' Ustinov said. "I said, 'Yes, thank you
: very much. I have just been to Australia and New Zealand.' And
: by that time, the next man (In line to be knighted) had come."
~

GUNmER TAMFS LEGISLATURE• Guntller Gebel: wmtamo, the legendary animal trainer 'performing his last
• season with the Ringling Bros. and Barnum &amp; Bailey Circus
: after a · 20-year career, was honored by the Massachusetts
: Legislature Monday with a joint resolution. The resolution
; applauded the an.imal trainer's "contributions to the harrnon,•lous relationship between humans and wild animals and
;.expressed thanks Jor his memorable contributions to the
.:enjoyment of the families.of Massachusetts." ,
,
;• ROYAL. BUDGET: A royal lifestyle isn't cheap. ·The bean
.• counters at Buckingham Palace say !twill cost the equivalent In
: pounds of $106 million this year to keep Queen Elizabeth and her
: family In the style to which they have become accustomed. The
;.queen !s getting a very generous raise from $9.6 mlll!on to $15
• mUllon a year, but otherwise the royal family has been
;:successful In keeping down expenses, having increased
&lt;spending only 4.6 percent per year since 1983, compared to the
:: national average of 5.6 percent According to the Civil List, the ·
; budget set for the royal family by the government, washing the
• royal dirty clothes will cost about $119,700 this year, while
; $24,700 Is earmarked for newspapers and $404,700 for four
~ annual garden parties. Other expenses Include $34 million to
. :·keep the royal train roll!ng for the past six years and $59 mlll!on
. i_;on two years of upkeep on the yacht. Prince Charles and his
•, wife,' Diana, are not Included on the Clvll .L!st, because they
' ' have chosen to l!ve off the income from their estates .
SOUNDS LIKE TROUBLE: Rock guitarist Carlos Santana
says a M:IUer Lite beer commercial sounds too familiar.
Santana .Is suing Miller and the New York ad agency o! Baker
. Spielvogel Bates Inc. for unspecified damages, claiming the
commercial violates trademark regulations by using an
,! mitator to perform his 1970s hit "Black Magic Woman" In his
•style. A Ml!ler spokeswoman says the company acquired all the·
:appropriate rights to the song, but 'Santana's suit contends
Miller tried to pass off the "sound-alike" as If It were actual!y
him. thus·confusing the public. Bette Mldler won a similar suit
Involving a Ford commercial in 1988 and Tom Walta triumphed
, In a case over an ad for Dorltos corn chips .

THURSDAY IS
SENIOR CITIZEN'S .DAY
5% DISCOUNT ON
ALL PURCHASES
(Excluding Cigarettes)

IIIUST PROVIDE GOLDEN BUCKEYE
CARD OR ORIYERS UCEHSE

BOYS &amp; GilLS

TENNIS SHOES
(OIIYIISE, U. Gill
IAIIGAIOO

pound

MEIGS·. JUNIOR HIGH STUDENT • Student of the week i.n
pre-algebra at Meigs Junior Higb School Is M.icheUe Ward. Watd IS
pictured right with her teacher, Mrs. Stephan1e ,-\sb.
·

Former resident receives ·
honor .for electrologists

MASTER
BLEND

-~~3.99
&amp;9C

SMITH

' • ·, • • • • • • ' ' • • • ID-

Gokl DeliCiOUS,

$1 Zl

~JO;i.7a ba9 •1.89)
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Auorted Vari8ties
Powdered Laundry

DRESS &amp; CASUALS
lll1UIAUIIU
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'WINTER.BOOTS HA~E ARRI~ED

HOOD
FAMILY
SHOES
992-6254 .
POMIIOY OliO
I

OFfEN NECES·
SARY
FOR DROPPED BLADDER
•
Question: ·My doctor told m~
tbat have · a dropped b bidder.
What causes tbis condition?
Answer: The condition your doctor called a "dropper bladder" is,
for reasons I'll explain later, only
found in wom((n and is technical!y
known as a cystocele. The l!rlnary
bladder is a sack-lilce organ located
on the front surface of the abdomen
in the area protected by the pelvic
bones. Doc10rs describe this region
as being "within the pelvis". In addition to the urinary bladder, the
female pelvis contains die vagina,
uterus, ovaries, fallopian rubes,
colon, an\1 oth~r things like blood
vessels and mllscles. In men, the
pelvis contains the urinary bladder
and colon as well as blood vessels
and muscles, but only one
reproductive organ, the prostate.
·The remainder of the male
reproductive organs are located in
· the scrorum outside the pelvis.
· The clifference in anatomy between men and women is responsible for cystocele being a problem
afflicting women but not men. In a
woman, the urinary bladder is
located. behind the pelvic bones and
in front of the vagina. Injury to the
tissues supporting the bladder
usually rroduced during the
process o childbirth, allows the
bladder to drop as if it we.:e going
to fall throu~h the opening of the
vagina, and m severe cases, it ac·
(ual!y does this. When this happens,
the bladder can be seen as an obvious bulgmg at th.e opening of the
vagina.
The change in the bladder's
shape and position that accompanies this shift in position
produces problems with control of
urination. Most women with this
condition leak urine when they
cough, sneeze, run or perform any
strenuous activity.
The amount of uri)le leaked often
gets worse after menopause even
though the ·underlying problem, the
cystoce,e, has been present for
many years. A few drops leaked is
unpleasant; a·bladder-ful! leaked is
very embanassing.

lPPl£S

ALL LADIES

20°/o OFF 20°/o OFF

SURGERY

o£\.\ctous

.

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OUtSTANDING STUDENT- Susan Page was recently named
the outstanding Health student of the week at Meigs Junior Higb
School. Presenting her award is Mr. Bob Ashley.

Washington State
Extra Fanc~•88 Size .

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Corner of Gen. Hanlnger Pkwy.
and Peart St.

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United Press lnternallonal
• RICE AS A SEDUCTRESS: Donna Rice Is back, In the
· spotlight, albeit not a very bright spotlight. Rice; a model and
aspiring actress when her relationship with Gary Hart
torpedoed his presidential campaign. Is appearing In a
• production of "Largo Desolato, " a play by Czechoslovak
·. President Vaclav. Havel in Alexandria, Va., according to The
·, Washington Post. Rice, who has been llvi!'g quietly In the
·,: Washington area In recent years;ls listed on the playbill simply
as D.L. Rice. She plays Marguerite, a student out to seduce her
professor.

TIDE

5.99

9

8

FRESH

GROUND
CHUCK

Ll.

A former Meigs County woman
is one of 75 certified electrologists
to be selecled to assist the International Board of Electrologist Cerlilication in. development of new
CPE Tests.
Candy Cox of Vienna, W. Va.,
operates Candy's E!ectroloysis at
6000 Grand Central Avenue, Suite
I, Vienna, W. Va.
She was reared in Portland,
daughter of ·Harold and Eula
Proffitt, and selected her career on
the basis of her experiences with
excess facial and body hair.
· Her story of her struggle with a
malfunctioning adrenal gland
· which created the excess hair
· problems and her difficulty in getting the condition cliagnosed has
. been pubtished in the quarterly
"Journal of Electrology." The
journal is distributed to the organization's 2,000 members in the
United Stales, Japan, Indian, Saucli
Ambia, and Sweden.
The problein which Cox experienced goes back to when sbe
was 14 and a student at Southern
High School. Hair staned to grow
. on her chin and upper lip, sideburns
developed and before long hair was
growing on her breast, stomach,
back and arms. While she was in
~igh school her parents took her to
several doctors, but it wasn't until
six years later that She found the
cause of her problem,
Cox went 10 Johns Hopkins
Hospilal in Baltimore, Md. and it
was there that they found she suffered from a rare hormone disorder
which created an adrenal gland
deficiency. This caused het body 10
produce 10 a male honnone which
causes hair to grow. The genetic
cmdition was treated with Prednisone, 1 steroid.that suppresses the

Pancake·brunch slated
A pancake brunCh and craft show
will be held at the Carleton School ·
on Nov. 4 by the Employee CoWK:il
.of. Me;ig~ Industries and ~c. Meigs
Assocu1110n for Rclllrded Ctuzens..
The craft show wiD be ~ld from
II a.m. to 4 p.m., wtth the brunch
. to be served ~m 11 a.m. to 2 p.m . .
Anyone wanung to ,reserve a space
for Craft displays may contact ~6681. The charge for a space ts
SIO.
. One fea~ of _the afternoon ~n
be a calce Judgmg and aucuon.

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EHS arts, ·crafts fair set

The Daily Sentinel Page

Community calendar .

Cub Scouts -pk.m
circus costu.me party

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October 17. 1990

Ohio

; FEATURE TWIRLERS - Friday night's bad weaihel' may
:· have forced tile Melp Marauder Band out ol tbelr unlfonna'and
:: · Into street clotbes, but that didn't stop tile award winning
Marauders from giving anotller outstanding perfonnance.
•: Pictured are feature twirlers, April Hudson, left, a junior, and ber
. sister, Heatber, a freshman.
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adrenal gland. She still lakes the
medication.
Cox at thai time also started
electrolysis treatments to remove
the excess hair, and she credits the
Prednisone and electrolysis with
being able to "face" the world
today.
Cox's history in published
works, her training and certification
in the field of electrology were all
considered material in her selection
to serve on the board which wiU
develop the new Certified Professional Electrologist examination.

Question: What Is tbe difference between a gynecologist's or

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Honor roll
The Rejoicing Life Christian
School of Middleport has announced its honor roll for the latest
grading period.
·
·
Named to the honor roll were:
KINDERGARTEN, Joshua EBg(e,
Amanda Fetty and Ashley Whafey;
GRADE I, Brandon Wary, Ehran
Wilson; GRADE 2, Chasidi Biggs,
Erin Harris, Isaiah Kebler, Jenny
Long, Rose Schrock; GRADE 3,
Luke Grueser, Tawny Jones, Joseph
McCaU, Aaron Schaekel, Candace
Werry; GRADE 4, Shannon En- .
right, Jacque Hall, Rachel Pangio;
GRADE 5, Aaron Pangia, Steven
Rice; GRADE 7, Shawn Rice;
GRADE 8, Emily Asbeck, Mandy
Jones and Kristen Torres.

3188 CORE ROAD
Perkllraburg, Weat VIrginia 2&amp;104

··- ·- .... . . . . .. .

304-4811-111 811
Robert E. Bema, M.D.
Harry J; Coff... Ph.D.
Jam. J. Heyea. Ph.D.
Joaeph P. Norrta,. M.D.
Mlchul E. Frempton, M.Ed. ·
Thome• R. Foater, Ph.D.

D8WNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

We are Pleased to Announce
our relocation to Oxford Squ·are
located at the corner of
36th Street and Core Road
Effective October 1, 1990 ·

INSURANCE

111 Second St., Pomtroy

.

YOUI lNDEPENDIIR
AGENTS SIIY.G
MBGSCOUm
SIIICI 1161

'

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Six of the 19 students listed on
the honor roU for the first six weeks
grading period of the 1990-91
school year at · the Syracuse
Elementary School received all A's.
Those studeniS were Joshua Larsen, second grade; Joshua Davis
and Steve tackett, third grade;
Evan Struble, fifth grade; and Brian
Allen, Jason Lawrence and Amber
Thomas, sixth gnule.
·
Other honor roll students were as

Bookmobile
schedule
The schedule for the

foUows:
.
Grade two: Cara Ash, Sarah Ball,

1:~F~=~i~~ner.
~

. Grade three; Adam Cumings,
Tiffany Hickel, AutiDRn Thomas:
Grade four. Bridget Cross, Ashli
Davis, and Kim Sayre.
Grade five: Cynthia Caldwell,
and Jennifer Friend.
·Grade six: Kevin Fields and Hillery Harris.
•.

Clothing giveaway

•

Adult • Child Paychllltry, Payaho........l A un•,.ntl. llo-FNdbeck
Individual. Morlbll, Femly • Group PlrahOiherllpy
Fo-olo • Neuro Paychology

.
~

Clothing will be distributed at
the Meigs Cooperative Parish, 311
Meigs Condor St, Pomeroy, from 9:~0
County Bookmobile is as foUows:
a.m. to noon Thursday. Anyone II!
Tuesday: Americare Pomeroy, _ need of clothing is welcome to visit
10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Hemlock the center.
·
Grove, I p.m.-2 p.m.; Burlingham,
2:30 p.m.·3:30 p.m.; Wildwood Estates, 4 p.m.-5 p.m.
Wednesday: Racine, 12 noon-5
p.m.; LetanFalls,6p.m.-7p.m.
Thursday: Tuppers Plains, 12
noon-4 p.m.; ReedSville, 5 p.m.-7
p.m.
Friday: Syracuse, 12 rioon-5
p.m.; Chester, 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. •
Saturday: Rutland, 9 a.m.-! p.m.;
Danville, 2 p.m.-3 p.m.; Salem
Center, 3:30 p.m.-5:30p.m.

Revival

Revival services wiU be held at
the Enterprise United Methodist
Church beginning SWtday and continuing through Tuesday 7:30 p.m.
The Rev. Bennie Stevens will be
preaching. On Monday evening Jan
and Kathy will be providing special
music .

STEVEJII E. GRADY

Grady on Midway

'\.

Steven E. Grady, Airman Ap-:
prentice Seaman E-2, is serving·
with the USS Midway in !be Per- ~
sian Gulf. A 1989 graduate or:
Southern High School, lie is the son •,
of Paul and Cathy Grady, Racine. ;

',

Band Uniform

fohn C Wolf, D.O.
AssOciate Professor
of Family Medicine,
a urologist's repair of a dropped
bladder?
Answer: Your question jumps
over an important consideration • is
surgery necessary? Medication
brings relief to 5ome women with
cystocele. But, as your doctor has
obviously 10ld you, surgery is often
necessary to remedy the condition.
There are sevl'fal surgical methods
used·ID treat this bladder problems,
but they .all attempt · to the same.
thing • restore the bladder to its
. normal position and therefore, restore normal control of urination.
Gynecologists are trained to perform surgery for the repair of cystocele, and they feel that their train·
ing uniquely qUalifies them to per·
form this procedure. After all, it
does involve surgery on a woman,
and it is related to the reproductive
ana10my. On the other hand,
urologists are trained to treat the
disorders of the urinary system.
Conditions of the uri,nary bladder,

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Family
Medicine

PSYCHIATRIC .ASSOCIATES
CANDY COX

•war-

uono.
r
11'0 II. annou'ncnd·
J:1.
tt
"'

Ohio University
College of OsteOpathic Medicine

WOITHINGION CENTII
. FOI
"' '

Cakes wi!l be judged in three
categories with prizes 10 be
ded in each category - the Jilo8t
festive holiday cake, the pretti$t
"Phiin Jane", and the best occasiqn
cake {birthday, shower, or wedding). Anyone wishin~ to donatc:a
cake for the event should call m 6681. •
•
A costume contest will also lje
held with details to be aniiOUIIC8d
later. There wiD be prize drawinjs
throughout the day.
•

including cystocele repair, are
routine operations for urologists.
Swgery is a competitive business
just like selling cars. Ford implies
that ·you would be making a serious
error to buy a Cbevy, and vice
- versa. Urologists ..d gynecologists
are equally qualified to perform this
lype of surgery just as Ford and
Chevrolet each sell good cars. The •
selection of your surgeon should be
based more on the individual's surgical and social skills than upon his
or her medical ~ialty. Tali to
your family phySician for recommendations; he or she should know
the docta'S ·in your area who are
most skilled at this operation,
whether they are gynecologists or
urologists.

Need Dry
Cleaned?
BRING IT TO
Buttons &amp; Bows!!

Complete

Uniform ....... SJ.SO
Pont s Only ... q. 7 S

I

School
I
Jackets ......... $3.9 5 '''
\

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BUTTONS

. Family Medlciae Is a weekly
column. 1b submit q•estinns, ·
write to Jobn C. Wolf, D 0~ Ohio
University College ~ Osteopathic
Medicine,
GI'OIIVenor · Hall,
Athens, Oltlo 45701•

AND

BOWS
'192-5177

220 EAST MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

DAIRY DELITE &amp; MARTY'S BUFFET
INSIDE BOOtHS FOI SANDWICHES 01 BUFFn

SANDWICHES, FRIES, ONION RINGS,
SUNDAES, ICE CREAM, YOGURT, etc.

•
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'

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'MONDAY-Roast letf, Clicken Wings, Spaghetti
'
TUESDAY -Meatloaf, c....ag. Rolls, Chicken Wings
•••
WEDNESDAY-IIQ loast a.f, letf Liver &amp; Onions,
'
Saurkrqut &amp; Wieners
,
THURSDAY -Fried Pork Chops, Salisbury Steak, Chicken :·~~
I

~~·

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FRIDAY-Seafood Day- Fish, Shrimp, Oysters, Clams, ~
Hushpuppies
·
~
SATURDAY-Fried Chicken, Salisbury Steak, Noodles, ;
Stuffing
'
.
;~
SUNDAY -Roast Turkey, Stuffed Peppers, Noodles, ; ~
Stuffing
!:
Includes: Vegetables and Deatrt and full Salad
': '
lar, anti lolls. ,
ENJOY HOME COOIID FOOD AIID A FIIIIIDLY
ATMOSPMII
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AIL YOU CAN Ell S3.99 +TAX

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D...SEmA

HOUIS: 10:30 AM-7:00 PM

Dairy Delite &amp;Marty's Buffet
CAlL IN OIDIIS WELCOME - 992-2414
St. lt. 124 &amp; ltley I• loailloward lutlond, Ohio

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Math, science

Middl .

10-The Daily Sentinel

classes stressed
, for successful
. future: study
.

Wednesday, October 17, 1990

Wednesday. October 17. 1990

- ~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~=~~Pomer~~o~v~=eport==·=·IO-~;:~-----::~:~::~--~---:::,

·I

;

STORE HOURS

'

WASHINGTON (UP!) - As
· studies pour In about dismal
: studentachievementinmathand ·
· science, a report Tuesday shows
poor, mostly minority c hlklren
with average abilities are excelling In a d~andlng special
program stressing . math and
.science.
· The study of more than 3,000
students who participated In
Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation .
educatio-nal programs cor:nes as
educators are emphasizing the
benettts of a solid math and
science background.
One of President Bush's na- .
tiona! educational goals Is to
have American students be first
In the world In math and science
achievement by the year 2000.
But the report follows last
month's Nation's Report Card ,
; showing most students can't
: handle moderately challenging
: math problems and have limited
· scientific knowledge.
: The Macy Foundation supports
· lour-year high school honor pro: grams stressing math and
: science for predominately mi. norlty and low-Income .children
: who are neither the most gifted
· or the iowest achievers. The
: foundation's goal is to Increase
: the number of minorities enter. lng health-related professions.
· The 39 "schools within
: schools' ' are In New York City;
· Tuba City, Ariz., on a Navajo
: reservation; New Haven, Conn. ;
: and rural and mosliy white
· schools In western Alabama.
· "This Is a good news story,"
· said Fiorella McKenzie, the
: former superintendant of Wa: shlngton, D.C., public schools
: who studied the performance of
. Macy students. "The record of
: success remains Impressive."
· Her study found 90 percent of
: Macy students attend four-year
: colleges and universities, many
receive scholarships and financial aid for college costs and
about 40 percent pursue college
studies In health- related ·fields,
math and physical and biological
sciences. Of the students nationWide taking the SATs In 1989, only
18 percent .Indicated they Intended to major In these fields.
In addi lion to rigorous academ ·
lcs, the Macy program offers
before- and after-school tutorIals, college-sponsor.ed study and
research courses, summer academic camps, field trips for
hands-on research experiments.
SAT preparation classes, extra
. counselors, peer tutors and flnan: cial aid counseling.
· "The programs might simply
· be characterized as 'good schoolIng.' But unfortunately, this level
of 'good sc hoollng' Is too often a
rare occurrence and therefore,
the Macy programs are worthy
of some keen attention from the
·larger education arena:" the
report said.
In a speech Monday to a
conference of math and science
educators, Education Secretary
:Lauro Cavazos said student
' achievement in math and science
is critical to the nation's competl- '
Uveness In ihe world economy.
, "High quality programs and
·talented, dedicated teachers are
.needed to maintain our lead In
•basic' science and technology and
;to build a workforce for the 21st
;century with unsurpassed tech'nolagical skills," Cavazos said.
: But he. noted It will be a difficult
:roM ahead, 'since U.S. students
scored last or near the bottom on
every recent international test of
math and science achievement.
Meanwhile, 215 of the nation's ·
top math and science high school
teachers were honored Tuesday
In Washington. They received
Presidential Awards for Excellence in Science .and Mathematics Teaching, sponsored by the
National Science Foundation.

Oh"

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., OCT. 14, THRU SAT., OCT. 20, 1990

,.

USDA CHOICE BEEF LOIN

$449

.

T-Bone. Steak ••••• ;:·
'

'

· DALLAS (UP!) -The government says thrift king Don Dixon
cost taxpayers at least $1.2
. billion In thrift-financed cruises,
hunting trips, payoffs to political
candidates, prostitutes and otlier ·
Illegal expenses.
"We're talking about a man
With a golden appetite; " said an
Investigator close to the case.
"He may . not have been the
biggest thrift (owner) , but he
w11s ·certainly the most
flamboyant ."
A convicted madam has
. agreed to testify to that point,
flying In Saturday at the behest of
prosecutors to appear at Dixon's
trial, which was to begin Wednesday with jury selection. Karen
Wilkening, serving a 44-inonth
sentence for prostitution, said In
affidavits that Dixon often engaged the services of her San
Diego call-girl ring.
U.S. District Judge Joe Fish,
who has placed prosecutors
under· a gag order, au thorlzed
officials at the California Reha. ·b!Utatlon Center In Norco to
·· release Wilkening to the custody

LB'
.
$269
Cube ·Steak ••••••••••

of the FBI so she could be flownro
Dallas.
Dixon is charged With mlsapplying funds of the Vernon Savings
&amp; LOan, leading to the thrift's
collapse In 1987. The now-defunct .
Federal Savings and Loan Insu- ·
ranee Corp. estimated the loss
from the collapse at $1.2 billion.
"He used the (call girlS) to
entertain clients and encourage
them to Invest," said the -Invest!gator, who asked to remain·
anonymous. "Pretty women became an ornament at his
parties."
There were other ornaments..
According to Industry regulators, Dixon was a Dallas developer who purchased a small,
well-run S&amp;L In Vernon, Texas ,
and rapidly built a thrift emplte
With branches and as~ts In
Texas, Florida and California.
In the process Dixon amassed
a collection of six aircraft includlng three baby-blue jets - the
largest, a Falcon 50 jet, looks like
a replica of a Boeing 727 . He kept
six pilots and several flight

.

Chee$e...................
11

s
·
9
(
Whole Ch1cken .••L:... . _·
•

'•

Wieners •••••••••.•••• ;:·.

•7

ad1

. ,

all eapi1alli!tt.Hs ''double pr• ce o f ad co11

li

only used

'

·

for errcn fir11 d~rV ad runs in paper) , Call. before 2 :00 om
diY after publici1+0n to make correction

• Ads that must be paid In advance are
C:1rd ofTrtenks
Happy Ads
In Memori1m
Yard Sales

~

red

2'00 PM . MONDAV

~

2 ·00 P.M TUESOAV
2:00P .M . WEDNESDAY
2:00P .M . THlJRSOAY

-

2 ·00 P .M

-

FRIDAY

paf[e .~ .corer 1he

Gallia Counly ·

Meigs County

A,.l Code 614.

Are• Code 614

Meson Co . WV
Area Code 304

446-Gallipolis

992- Middleport

675 - Pt . Pleasant

Pomtroy

367-Ch•hire

-

4S8-leon

25&amp;-GuVIn Oist
843 - Ar~b i a Oist

949 - Racine

576 773 882 896 -

379-WIInat

742 - Rutland

937 - BuffaiO

985 - Cheste•

843 - Ponland
247 - leun Falls

.

Apple Grove
Muon
New Ha11en
Letart

_,________

.

....,;~;..,..

TID£ DETERGENT
136

$679

oz.

GIIOd At Powtll't S!lfMr Valu
Good Oct. I 4 thru 0&lt;1. ~o. 1990

MUELLER'S OLD FASHIC)N
. MEDIUM, WID£, X-WIDE

NOODLES

~ oz. PA~

3I Sl

Gootl At Powtll'• Super Yalu
Good Oct. 14 thru Oct. 20,1990

Announcements

'

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

GEHL FARM MACHINERY
OCTOBER DISCOUNTS

HAY, FOILAGE, SKID LOADER
MANURE HANDLING EQUIPMENT

OLD TOWN FARM INC.
675-3963

34567-

CAT FOOD
6oz.

6/$1

10.75

Good At Powell's Super Valu
Good Oct. I 4 thru Oct. 20, 1990

oz.

5 f$ 2
4

.

Good At Powlll'1 Supll' Valu
Good Oct. 14 thru D&lt;t."to, lftO ·

AI utllhteo Including TV Cllblo, 1'h bltho. now roof,
compt.tely Nmodelod, now modern khchon
Including ol oppllonCft, corpot throughout lorgo
polio •d worllohop, full bloomont. now vinyl oldlng
with lnaul•tlon. alto blown in lntulltfon, new ltorm
dooro Md wi.-L full tongth ounporcll, out
buldlno ond omollllll'll•·
REDUCED TO U8.000 FOR QUICK SALE

SHOWN 8Y APPOINTMENT-992-5107
114 . . North ef ,_.,, Oh.

011

St. lt. 33

Starling at II :00 A.M.

Between
Wilkesville and
Salem Center

'·

i

90 DAY WADANTY

REFRIGEAATOA~$100 up
RANGES-~s-Etoc. -$125 up

KENfS APPLIANCE
SERVICE

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION

56 .,.. Building Supph•

56- Peu for Stlfl

Thanks for the
happiest day of
my life, Oct. 17,
1987. I love you
with all my heart.
Love

57 - MuticallnltrLJmetlts
58 - Fruits &amp; Veg .. •bl•
59 - For Sale or Tr1de

Farm S11pplies
61 - F•rm Equ1pment
62 - Wanted to Buv

63 - Livestock
64 - H•v &amp; Grain
65 - Seed &amp; Fert iliLer

47 - Wanted to Rent
48 - Equipmel'lt for Rent
49 - For leue

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;
SUPPLIES
SH us For Your
Sport11111 NHds
Buy. Sell or Trade
Guns
OPEN MON.-SAT. 10-5
742-2421

Homes ll!ilt

"Free Estimates''

PH. 949~2801
or Res. 949-2860

364 .. SMITH IUIII ID,

71 72·73 74 -

AulosforS.t.l e
Trucks tor Sale"
Vans 6 "4 '/(D ' s
Motorcvcle:s

77 -- *uto Repair
.
78 - Camping Equipm,en1

E . M•i-n...
POMEROY,O.

ea

992·2259
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
brick home, balcony and
porch with view of river.
Conveniently located close
to stores in Middleport Nice
woodwork. 2to 3 bedrooms,
utility, small storage building. $19,900.

81 -- MomelmproV.menu
82 - Piumbin'il &amp; Hetting
83-Exc~rvaling

84 85 86 Q? -

•New Hom•s
•Go rages

CHESTER, OHIO' .

GUN SHOOTS

•GRAVEL

l:JIO P.M.
SUNDAYS

•Compl•t•
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

•LIMESTONf
•FILL DIRT.

12 Gauge Factory
Choke o11ly

•ANYTHING
. AT ALL

985-4473
667-6179

985-4422

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

76 - Boau &amp; Moton for S.tle
76 - Auto P.trn &amp; Aee~iM

79-Cai'Tipers &amp; Motor H

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

R., L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

RACINE
GUN CLUB

4.tfn

Transportation

Eiectrical &amp; Refrigerat ion
GenifJI H1uling
Mobile Mome P.epaU
Upholstery

POMEROY - 4 un it apartment building in Pomeroy.
Potential. Monthly gross in·
come $400.00. ASKING
'17,500.

MERCKE~S

.
CHOCOLATE..........................5235 lb.
AMBROSIA
.
5215
CHOCOLATE.........................
lb.
SUGAR LAYONS
FOR CUPCAKES &amp; COOKIES
ASSORTED COLORED SUGAR
CANDIES FOR TRICK or TREAT

POMEROY - New wiring,
new plumbing, new drywall,
new roof are already
completed in this 4 room
home w~h 2 bedrooms.
Could have 3·4 rooms upstairs, lull basement. Great
lor a rental. $7,000.

ALL MAKES
Bring It In Or
Pick Up.

SUCKER STICKS

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS

POMEROY - Brick Ranch
home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
carpet, nice front porch.
Garage with door opener.
Heat pump. Really nice
home and well taken care of.
See This One!.

Wo ~copt
Footl Stompr
Houn: 9·5

Public Sale

RACINE- Appx. 32~ acres
w~h 2 bedroom mobile
home with porch plus 14xl8
log and pole buildin&amp; cellar
house, utility building, and
8x35 New Home trailer.
Beautiful s~e. Private.
$26,500.

&amp;Auction

lUCTION

THIRD STREEI- MIDDLEPORI - Totally remodeled
2-3 bedroom. One floor
home. Beautiful cond~ion ,
carpet throughout. New wir·
ing, vinyl sidint one car garage, insulated and all
storms. Nice lot. $29,900.

Corner of Mill St. and
Factory Rd.
Consignments Taken
Monday thru Thursday
From 1:00 to 6:00 P.M.
For More Info.
Call 797 ·2648
Auctioneer:
Richard Workman

1990 Ohio Hoasinr BOttd
Money Now AYiilable.
7.75% Fixed Rite
Intere1t/ ht ye~r, 1.25%
Flxtd Rate lnterelt/2nd
Yur thru 30 ,ears.
COME IN AND CHOOSE
JOUR lEW HOME!!!
We Have IIIJirl tor Melas
County Property. LIST
. WITH US TODAYIII
MAY liiPP ••- .•. 949-2257

Ifill IIUSIEU .... 949-2660
JO

HIU...-····-···· 915·4466

OFfKL...•... - •..• 992-22 59

l

OFFERS 2 LOCAnOMS TO SERVE YOU ••••
POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7l!o S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 60 l!o S.R. 143
NEW HOURS: .
POMEROY: 9 a.m.-7 p.m. 7 Days
ALBANY: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 6 Day1, Closed Sundoy
PAYING AS OF TODAY, SEPT. 11, 1990

We

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

#1 Copper '1 per lb.;
. Clean Dry Aluminum Cans, 46C per lb.
Clean Auto Radiators 44C lb.; Batteriet '1.21ijltl.
Yellow Brass 40c lb.; Alum. Sheets 40¢ ·lb.

992-5335 ar 985-3561
Across From Post OHico
217 E. Sec. Pomoroy
POMEIOY,

9 ·1 1•'110· tfl'l

•Remodeling and

Now.In
Stoekff

Home Repairs

•Roofi!'lg
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

MOBILE HOME FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS
ALL FURNACE PARTS

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

BENNEn'S MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG &amp; COOLING

992-6648 or
·698-6864

The

CAIN'S

GROOM
ROOM

UPHOLSTERY

for All Breeds
[MILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

Custom Drapes

10-B 1 mo.

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMAN CLUB

Guarantltd.
Cash advanc•.. No Hcurlty
d1pcait. No credit check.
226.0048. $19.95 ... :

Gold Credit Card, cash advance

614-992-2328

No security daposlt. 1-tJ00.44&amp;.

•uGHT HAULING

•fiREWOOD

HRS.: WecJ .•Th..-s.-Fri.
S:OO p.m.-11 :00 p.m.
Sat. 12 Noon-11 p.m.

BILL SLACK
992-2269 .
usm RAILROAD nES

·Between Wilkes,ille
and Salem Center

9· 12· '90-1 mo.

e -12-90

BISSELL·
BUILDERS

FIT and TRIM
OCTOBER

SPECIAl
10 VISm $J900

CUSTOM IUU
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
nat RlaiOIIablt Prico•"

OPEN IY
1

1~

36 Year8 E!l:perience

REMOVAL

NOW OPEN
Wed. thru SGt.

PI,., Gold Credit Cord.

Yisa/Maller~rd

SHRUB a·TREE
TRIM and

GAME· ROOM

4-16-16- tin

Credit

We Say What We Do.
We Do What We Say.
9-6-1 mo.

Pomeroy, Ohio

NO SUNDAY CALlS

Announcements
- - --··
3 Announcements

Hand Tufting

614-99~-68~0

Day or Night

-

------

of Mlddi•PD'I

Contalite Grooming

'"· 949-2801
or Its. 949•2160

ci
E

Located on Safford School ld. aff lt. 141 ~
(6141 446-9416., 1·100-172-5967
a.

10·12·'90· 1 mo.

!UPPERS PLAINS - 3 bed·
room, Ill bath, bt1ck ranch.
full basement. Garage, large
lot. Fenced in backyardw~h
above ground pool. Lots ol
shade trees. $48,000.

~~t3s~.~~~. . . . . . . . . . . $200 EACH

8

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
. INSULATION

992-21

Middleport;

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

SHOOTS START
SEPT 1 . 1990

Serv1ces

46 - Sp•ce for Rent

PAT· HILL FORD

·54 - Misc. Merchandise

l;bfillhl
Mobill! Homes for Rent
Firms for Rent

992-5335 or 885-3561
AaOP Fro11 Post Offict

lllow

·

~re racbators · and ;
heater corft. We can :
olso acid boil and rqd
out radiators. We alsa
repoir Gas Tanks.

FREEZERs-$125 up
MICRO OVEN~$79 up

Ills' t h Warth DaOig Ri9st

~e·

We can repoir tind

.NO SUNDAY

&amp; Livestock

32 - Mobile Homes for Salfl
33 - Farms tor Sale
34 - Bus•nes! Build1ngs
35 - Lots &amp; Acruge
36 - R•al Estate W.tnt.ed

SER~ICE

WASHERs-StOO up
DRYERs-$69 up

Commercial 8t
Residential
•Roofing
•Siding

•
•

USED APPLIANCES

62 - Sponing Oooda
53-Antiques

E1nploymcnt
Serv1ces
1 3- lnsurance
14- Busineu Tram 1ng
.15 - Scrtoo lt &amp; lnstrucl ion
16 - R•dio. Til&amp; CB Rep11r
1 7- Miscelllneous
·18 - Wanted To Do

205 N. Second Stroot
ltiDOLEPORT, OHIO 45760
. OHill 614-992-2116
HOME 614-992·5692

s.

BUILDING &amp;
REMODELING

Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do
it for yau. ·
Very Reosonable
hove References

ALBANY, OHIO

FOR SALE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Every Sunday

INTERIOR - EXTERIOR

6:30 ·

Real Estate General

New lo&lt;otion:

. 161 North S.Cond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

.60

GUARANTEED!
FREE

POMEIOY OH.

SHOOTING
MATCH

FREE ESTIMATES

NEVER ClfAN YOUR
Gunm AGAIN

OHIO PALLET
COMPANY

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION

.4,. .

THURSDAYI OCT. 18

ON 1-ACRE LOT

NOODLE SOUP

Annoucement'
Giveaway
Happy Ads
Lost and Fountf
Yard S•le Ipaid in advance)

S14 East Main
P-roy

THiS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE '
AT ss.OO PER DAY ·

DEUYEIED TO

PAINTING

.05/ doy

992-15009

$15 0 lh:!~....

51 - Household Good11

(614) 992-69

I

CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN

T~anlcs

44- Apanmant for Rent
45 - Furnisfled Rooms

20R3BR
2-STORY HOUSE
TWIN PET

Happy
Anniversary,

Merchandise

2 - ln Memory

42_____-4 ' 43
-

,•

WH0-0-0-0

"!ho o thought or
during the deoth ol
our filth•.

Ov•r 1 6 W.or~s
.20
.30

$1 ,30/ day

41 - Houses for Rent

BULLETIN BOARD

•••••••••

013.00

31 - Homes for S•le

Get Reeuffs Fast.

·z·

16

16

Real Estate

667 - Coolville

7' 5

$9 .00

21 - Business Opportunity
22- Mon-v lo Loin
23 - ProfesSIOI'III Ser\IJees

JoU6u·in/( f elephom' exchan/les ...

'

15

1 1- Help Wanted
12 - Situalion Wanted

- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY

16 OZ. CANS

Rate
84 .00
$6 .00

9- Wanted to Buy

DAY BEFORE PUBliCATION

KEMP PAIL

Frto11dly Nolghboro Club

ond 1111 Trinity a..rc11
Frtondly Circle lor _ .
lng tood. thooo thot .,,
- . or - · lho l!ov.
Lomor o·a-.. ond thooo

ar.t'l rtiiY as HD.Ir8H! ads

1- Card of

SAW LOGS

REWIIING AND
TIOUILE SHOOnNG
C•rtlfletl Electrlda111
FrH Etlmat"

LINDA'S

Words
15
15

10

eep1 -;- cl•sified displfY, Busin•s Car.d 1nd legal notices~
wiH 1lso 1ppear in the Pt . Plea11nt Register and the Ga lli·
polis Oli)V' Tribune. reillching over 18.000 homes

381!1-Vinton
245- Aio Grande

.

I

3
6

•A cl1uified lcl\iert lse'ment pl•ced in The Daily Sentmelle .. .'

.

The fllmtty of
HENI!Y J . WEI!I!Y
-.td,..to-Brendl
Dorot. Ewing
Funorol
Homo, Ponwoy Frro Oopt.
end Em-cy SqUid, the

Happy Ads

8 - Pubhc Sale !!o Auction

" 5 QUART

992-2156
--.

1

JW~id '" act..an ce

•Sentinel is not responsible for errors after first day. !Check

PAIL $2 99
Zesta Crackers ••••• 99·( Ice CrJtam ••••••••••••
24 PAK CASE ·
FOX DELUXE
·R. C. Cola ........••.. $499 Frozen P··z· a
oz. 69&lt;

yw?
· CLASSfiED
· ADS

Days

- Giveaway and Found ads under 16 words wtll be

no ch•ge.

29
Chicken Breasts ••t$1
ECKRICH
$1 39
Bologna ·············'~-·
HOME-MADE
$1 09
Sandwich Spread .. ~

POUND BOX

1 Cllrd of lltanxs

Banks
Construction

LOW GlADE OAK

Raoidentlel and
Commerl:ial

SPORTSMAN CLUB

A etft are tor conMcutWe run1, broken updtvtwill be charged

"R,~~~":'-',* 50 discount lor

Med. Eggs •••••••••••••

Only

WANTED

COMPLETE

EL£C111CAL SERVICE

•Windows

Monthly

•F

GRADE A

Facta&gt;ry Chob

12 Gauge
Strictly

RATES

TO PlACf AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
'

KENTUCKY BORDER

Yellow Onions ••. 2f$1
FLAVORITE
$
89
0
2· /o Milk ........... ~~.. 1

6:30 P;M.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

.

·

EVERY
SAT.· NIGHT

Classifie

.•,

$1 99

3 LB. BAG

Bashan Building

The Family of

tnr

GRADE A

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Honrv J. Worry

DOZEN

can help

attendants on the thrift's payroll.
In . addition, Dixon owned
through Vernon a helicopter aDd
a 112-foot yacht - the High
. Splrlts-berthedonthePotomac
to entertain Influential Washington politicians.
The government has accused
Dixon of using several California
" holiday " homes -written off as
business expenses - to reward
clients and high-yield employees
with liquor and sex.
Onecontractorwhodldworkat
one of Dixon's homes said It was
"wall-to-wall hookers'" during
the pafty season.
Dixon was well-known In other
parts. Because of largecontrlbulions to . the Roman . CathoUc
diocese of San Diego, Dixon was
given an audience With Pope
John Paul II (n 1985. At that
audience, he presented the pantiff with a $40,000 Impressionist
paintlqg paid for by Vernon's
depositors.
''I fell! was in the presence of
someone very special," Dixon
was quoted as saying later.

•

COlBY LONGHORN

GUN SHOOT

•

'

BEEF BUCKET

Busine-s s Services

: Trial begins for Dallas thrift ·
boss in $1.2 billion failure

'

.

The

APPOINTMENT

•

CALL

992-3033

9127/'9011 ....

program. Ylu/Meater Clrd guar.

0040, $25.

Heanaear"ch alnglu network.

An exciting way fo mM1 10m..

one special. Wrh• H..rt. .reh,

P.O. Box 1043, Gllllpolla, OH.
45831.

No Hui111ng or Tretpanlng O!\~
tl'la R. H. Hickel farm Hartford,,
be·
W"'.
Vlol•\•rw
will
proucuted.

4

Giveaway

2 female eatl liner t1111ntd1_one:
all while blue ey• and 1 ola~ ­
and whlta. 304-875-1184.
·

....

2 holt Slam- ldltono, 304-e75-·

5043.

.

Cat to glvaaWiy. HouH
Gentle,"iM-44&amp;-1117.

bro!wn,:

; (

FrN puppiH to Q004;t homtt. 3_:
ftrnlln, blaeklwlth Whitt flit'·
po~ Sponlal. 114-441-7131.
·:
Kitten half p.,.lan and halt;
Himalayan and Stub tall milt,

cal. ~3080.

Propono Goo -

,

HNtor 6 z:

FomoiO Klttono. 114-MNIZO.

To Sllva.way to • good home: .
gonllo, lona.ftolnd" klttOill, 4·
moo. old.IWHZ-7112,
:

6

Lost &amp; Found
Found a half gi'CIWII W.ck:
1eml..
P'IPPrt . cla.nt•nPomtry 1reL lhdlum tlnalh ·

holr, to- poopo. 1141t11442!1. :
FOUND: 1tt0 cl- rlng, CIA'
304-&amp;~ one! ._1., col '
•"• 4:00PM •

�p 81 12- The Dally SentiNI

Pomeroy

Gllltpoll8
&amp; VICinity

.300

butkllngo.
monthly pluo
daDOiit. Ao,.,.ncoo raqulred.
814-1182·2311 dlyo.
For Rent or For Sill: l br Nawty
romodolod, Pomlf&lt;!Y, •• !300.
Dopoolt Roqulred. 81......,..222,
- 1 1 1 1.
Fow bodroorn h -. doDOOII
required, no pete. 614..041-~53.
Fumlohid Small houoo, 3
root'M, beth, clean, nice for one.
:.rto, rot, Dopotlt, 614-446-

AU.--- ...

ln
...._.._ DIADI N : lePold
1.:00 p.m.
ltedoy-tllaocllatoNn.

roo

" -._
.. Auction
- ""
Ctothlna
._.
Mo32

5

no, mod.;..;;-ii'bi-llllc.
-.o), - - .
G,12,1C;tl)
• ~11...7-fM..iii:""M.

contonto tor , .,

$Old -

....... _11ioq. 1 . , - 1
;;;;.:;, oat, 4 - ., and

Ia.,._ hll~ h•• c:1, ...,,
11• t.v. I lhlnd, I'· QOUCh,

=-"'.:.,.:ur ~
d-. 1-7 T~
Wad., nan. 7 114-441-211:11,

· ·· .... ·-~~ ....... ·· ...... - -...

..;,p.

t,_..,

1

.'.

The Daily Sentinel-

W.nl to renl I houiO
nonh of Polnl .Pioooont, Hud

I EEl" IT. ..~
'()U Tal. HE.._ ......

•ptMlOwM, ~10.

For Lease
"'2-.-.,,-:-bu-:
.
ta=-c.,
,..m,..m-,..'".,....=-u-n='Ho.ft
"
h
1100 .... . · 50 • monl •
Jeckaon, Ohkt. 114-2-..1044,

49

IF

IM IZ....url

Television
Viewing
W

WED.. QCT. 17

211~111,

o-.w ())• •

If,

Goods

Government Homes lor S1 CU.
repolr). Dolln~uont tu propo~y.
Ropoooou lono. 24 houro. 1·
803·739-0781 Ext. R5214.
HDUU ..,r Sale ar l.Aaa, 3br, 1
112 Mth, 2 · car g_arage, 37
Porta: mouth Ao1d, $350/mo.
Dopo4H Roqulred. 814-146-25112.
HO..H tar ronl , $275. month,

SEE I-lOW M'( HANDS SIIAKE.
. C~A~LE5? IT'S 6ECAUSE

OF ALL Ti-lE PRESSURE ...

M'&lt;

PARENTS

W~EN SIIE WAKES

TI-IINK I .

HOllE TYPIST$, PC Ullfl
noodod. $35 000 potontiol.
Dotollo. (.1) aos::ii7.aooo Et · B·
10181.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity
5 111mlly. Del. 111111. H. Boby,

Hiourly CUnlc Aldo -

port·
tlrno to worlt tn ,.mit~ pfoJIIIng
Nood - · 10 do light cloln·
lng
~~
46114• eo'""tt-Evor n"E"'o,'
"
'"
-~
Sp.m. &amp; 7p.m.
HOME TYPIST$, PC - .
noodocl. $35,000 _ . , . .
Dotollo. (1) 805-187.eotl0 Ext. II-

chlldrwn. aduna. atonn doors,
coliN lllllo, iompo, ole. 1-4110
mite from Rt. 124 on ..._ Lima,

Autlond. Aoln Conol10.
Largo Yord Solo ot Protto Fork
SR )3 on Oct. 11. 11, 20.

8

1018• ·

· Public Sale
&amp; Auction

INTELLIGENCE JOBS. CIA, US
Cuolorno, DEA, lie. Now Hlrin~.
Rick Puraon Auction Company . co,.J,1,(1 I 805..87-6000 Ext. •

now

baaldng

oertenca maO.
Liconoo~

••

auctlona, IX·
the dltt.,.nce.

·

Ovo-

lmmaclloto -rtunMI• tor pon·
I I - tnlnOd ond tootad nurolng
aulltante. Salary commtn~
a&amp;.~.ra-. wfth expert.nce and
•bow 8CIIIJ. For ldcltlontl Information
pto- contact
Hu-. aoallllnt
OlnoctorKarla
ol
rlt
E

Ohio, Kontucky, W111

Vlrvtnio, 304-77:1-5786.

CMotmu oUctlon. SUndoy.OC·
tobor 21, 1:00 p.m.at tho
Hilliard CommunHy Building,
Hilliard, W.V. 2 big lruck~oocro
at
morchondleo.
Evorythlng 11om condY to cornputoro. Alchord ftoynold•
IIICiioniOr. Ll-4130.

en.-

9

·

Cantor

hlo

"1111114-112-M72. OE.
OWNER/OPERATOR ,.EEDED:

Nu

UP, GIVE 1-1 ER A

SHOULD GET PERFECT 6RADE5

r--~ _..~COOKIE ..

IN EVEMlliJil6 EVER'&lt; DA'&lt;!

Wanted to Buy

liSt\

,....aurant

Rllponllble

wort... Apply

In perwon, lfler-

,_,., Contact Tammy Hupp ot
s---~llom'a
~niWOOd, W•t VJ;:gi~;,-..

W.nlod To Buy: Jomk Auloo
wllh or wHhout mo10ro. 1;111
Lorry Lhloly. 814 3BB 11303.

Schools&amp;
Instruction
Baokkoot*lglaccounllng,
Hatall..-1
....._nt,
alrttn. trnel, nur11.. aide, tractor troller . trolnlng, r10l·
dontlhorne lludy. Flnlinclot old
OYOHobto II quolfllod. Plocomont
_ ..... -. County Schaolt to-

Employment Serv1ces
Help Wanted
123,7GO PER YEAR TO START,
Ph• ben.h u.s. Poetal s.,.
11

vic• &amp; U.S. GovernrMnl soon lo

oppllcollono In Gal·
llpolfo. For more lnlannatlon,
COli (211) 882-.
AVOfl • All ,,_, Coil llorilyn

-opt

Act Howl bcotlont wogool
Spore limo -ombly. Eooy - k

·It honM. No azperlenca. Clll 1·
1!04+tt ·7778 Ext. 8214. O!&gt;on 24

....._._

houro,lndudlng SUndoy.
AVON I AN Anloo I Shl~oy
Spoaro, .......,..__
.

tun place to ••Y· whtr1
lrlondohlpo boaln. G - locolion. 814*2·'1532.
.
llaglc Vooro Doy Coro Contor

Gallfpcillo Foory oroo, -lng

........ 304-67S-21!25.

llobyo--koopor,
lull
tlnM In my homo, to llort In

Na~,
brwe, ~lhy

de~~

Currenlly

occaptlng
apo
ptlcatlono tor tu• or polt-tlmo
dontal hyglono pooHton: lluol
be llconoOcl lo proctlca In tho
- o al Ohio. Aooumoo moy bo
oont: ell 048, C/o Galllpollo
Dolt~r,.1:~· 825 Third Avo,
Go
OH45831.

roglotor 30U75-5847.
llory'o Ouolty Child Coro: Solo,
rntilla.

llffordabfe, · nYiritloua

Fonoodl..Y 1r11. Any ahltt. 114-~31

IIIIo Pouta'o Doy Coro Contor.

s.•, aftonllble, chllclcare. M-F
I a.m. • 8:30 p.m. Agoo 2 ·to.

lloloro, altor ochoal. Drop-tno
w-.614-448_.224.
Wonl 10 . do Ill klndl or

mechanic wark al.a wlllh 1nd
............. 30-W71-3011.

Will

l&gt;allnft In my home

are~, $50. per w.k.
304.a75-621fl.
Will do odd jobo. llawlng, cut·

Amtm.t.

&amp;a.-rleucad hMUng and NC

cr-., ropolr. OlhOr.

,........,., IMid reoumo to So•
P 12 C.O Polnl P - Roglo-

tlng

bruah

or

ftriWDOd,

614188~

tor, 2110 lloln ~Ja~ POint
PtMIJIIII, WV,
• Our

0223.

il:perienc:ed
media
Nl•
NIPNIIIfttati¥8. BIM plus com.
m'-lon. 304-127~7881u.ll tar ln-

IIOior.,_, IM-448..,111.

Financial

t.m-.

Business
Opportunity
FEDERAL LAW ENFORCEIIENT
ATF, U.S. IIARBHALL$,
hlllng.call
In-Ion
882-1131
Ext. OH1111Lm.
7 doyo.

!NOTICE!

Fore

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO..
recommendt that you do busl·
,_with_.. you know1 ond
NOT to .-d money througn the
mall until you have lnvutiglt4td
the offering.
Local Vending Routt. Hottut

QowlllWMftl411tl Jobl. UCIIo
Ioiii PlY aood . banlllto, lor

dallila .... Sl4-678-7ll1, .... G-1

.

Now .. MachlnH.
CASH Buol·
D.v~o. _ _... . . . . r_
n-.~·.,~~··· 1013
L.ocal Vending Route. Holteet
New Machlnn. CASH Busl·
n-.1-800·741-4445Ext. 1013.
ManufactUNr aalllng Wlttr ma•
chlnee, tOCIIII route tor ·u.te.

Holp W.nlod; -

Clinic Aide
noldod porto(lma lo worlt In
family ptonnl"'l all._ In

-..,,

Galflpollo
and
hoYO
high
ec
dlplaml or equtnllnoJ'i
goad aarnmunlcellon aklllli ao. _ , wHh fig-: modlcot
oHico uporlanco holplul; will Repeat
bu.an-..
Above
troln - - lndlvlduot lo IYiflllolncorna. :IW-:192·9490.
rlfiiOdUaiiYI
- tor
oltoollonlo.
Laoklna
. . . -.. who • allkeeulli ; •

C1J.::r=:· -

and ... _
. . . . poollonMill ....... Polltlon .......

,.........
'lf11l IMWJ

....,.,.an
••••·
Md SeltTdq'

=- ·

~
holft .,. to be '
Dofr1 to out of

Bond tottor "' .......
Mdtwo~ilhiiiMtl
lo Ptannocl Poior1d ood of

VENDING ROUTE : Loc11. Qreat

cuh

'act, nvee

lnooml.

H~

trtfflc

Retrtg~ratar,

:Zdr, White, $95;
Rolrlgoratar,
Coppo~ono,
FrostlrH, $12tl; Aefrlgeralortldexlkle, White, UM New,
s25o; Kenmo~ Waeher, $95;
Whirl~ Wather, Llk• New,

56

'

36 · Real Estate

tr..h

Wanted

Farm Suppltes
&amp; Ltves1nck

Form Up To~. Lond Controct up IO 10% Down. Ctooo IO
GaiHpolo. f14.4o4U241 Ext. 48.

Ren1JIS

CARD. YIIIIMOIIorcard guoron·

LOANs BY IIAil

'"'or •••-rt

eohoal
1\1
gooll 1 lhWIInllaa 1111111; eo-

- IIMoportOtlon.
,.,..,_
- y.....lng and lllurday

Cllllo,. Ohio-.
- •
-. ........
•

•

I

. 0111 b ... 11111f.IOIUP.

I

I by
ld

com,

=:: !e=:,':J~= ': :'.;

Mya-•

75 BOatS ·&amp; Motors . ; ·
for S&amp;le

· CD Kenllldy, PerU (1:57) .

e

Cll (I) TIMI Wonder Y..N
Kevin reluctantly llfre&amp;l 10
.escort Paul's slater to a
dance.
CD Mac~H LahNr

1m 17 tt. 81an:raft Trf..HUII

- · 1211 HP, Evlnrudo Englno,
-::;.:._op,_!Jft
uphola!ery..
COli
oHor7;00 p.111. ..

.

a

.

~1m

Mlreclel (2:00) Stereo. 1;1
liZ • Major Logue

,.......

ill)

76

Auto Pans

a.

liD • MOVIE: Roctcy (PGI
(2:301

.··
,.·.•

Accessories

a=;.=-~=~
Trella Randy Travis and

'

11177 c-o po~.. ,.,...7.1!3(
Ylntan Auto Salylga. Forolgn • :
Oorn Porta bU)'Inl junk Clrt'11+38MOI2.

lrlandtt hit tile trail on an
au111entic M9"tana cattle

:·

79 · ·campers &amp;

Drive·:

(2;001
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Red Son)lt (PG13)

Servtces

(2;001
1:30

Home

flng.

of Sporll
9:00 CD. 0 MOVII!: 'Oppotlttll
A_,- NIC Movie of till

Week (2:0011;1

e

Cll ()) Dorigll Ho.,....,
· M.D. Doogle treats a
. homeless man who claims to
be a legendary jazzmen. D

••

Fire, - . ond $ootl Don't lot
wlnlor llum you up. Got that

Oct:n,•=·
-ny,

CD Uve from UI1COin Cenfer
11J MOVIE: Wall of Deceit
(2:00) Stereo.
·

olllmnoy ..,..kod durlna our ·
-'111 840.00 por ohlmnei
aMakld

a

S.-cial ..da·

a•

tnlllllor ......
4 IIIH Creole, ·
Gantpollo, 01110 48831, a,..__,
2111.
-:
CAmfl&amp;. llabiJ. Name eet upe:
I

1

:C:,.•roollna,
•• ptum:J.
..,

111~1,

=

conlklared . D

&amp;:·

ng~ .

..-ar-lfool ~
Women's Straight Pool,
Mataya va. Flahor tram
London (T)

lNG! Reter.ncM. Eltlmltea. 1
114-251-1111.
-:
Ron'o TV lervlco, opoclollzlng;
In Zlnlth • • MI'VIalng , _ ..
olhlr brand•. HouM CIIITI, alao

oomo apptiMco _,,._ wv.
304.alt4118 Ohio 814-448-2184:

Roollng, p11lntlng, .,...,_.... ,~.

·

.ec-w•~
wllh ,.~ ,-

end

Gyorontlad _.,
-uorontM.
· Con' I'M-448-7212
• - or
p;tooo,
304- :.
71-liiM.
.,
RoiiiJ or cablo tool clrllln~· :
11001 Willa complotocl . . .
~- ond oorvlca,
_.:

l

AN' WHEN SAIRY·- MAW If YOU
' l\N' WHEN SAIRY-- SOUND LIKE
AN' WHEN SAIRY-A BROKE
RECORD!!

AN' I DON'T WANT
TO FERGIT WHAR
I LEFT OFF--

I WAS TALKIN' TO
ELVINEY AN' SHE'S
GONE TO CHECK ON
HER ·POLE BEANS

· ' ueull.

21,000

LSC, 11.aoo

.,......,.,

$1G0

......

--

~ee...-c-~y

1211!
...... 1111 700 Club Willi Pll
Rablrtaon

10:06 (I) MOVIE: Midway IPGI
(2:12) _
10:30 liD. M'A'S'H
• CIDOit a ChaM
0 latlr~uldlnO NPC
Women's Junior USA

..

Charnplonaitipllrom New
Brunswick, N.J. (T)

. 11 :00 I]) •

.

85

General Hauling

R I AWotws-too.
-~·
tei'Ttl,
wile. liM&amp; dl. .1
\or
:r.ooo aan.o. . dolhory. Col . ,
I'IMI70
----L
Wluwrwan'e

W.•

Hlull~,

- . - . - d..

..........

--. a,ooo to 4,ooo ••r ....
~

ff1 Upholltery
. •.
::
...::::.~,.,~..
::;::Upl-=::~.,..~.;::;.;;:~;.:ng~
...-~~10-"'
lng trl ~.,. =-~
In -uro
.
Col 1G44711-411M lior ,.. . ..

..
"":r:=-

-~.,-

~Dr.
. . .. call "

--- -

......

'

·

114JI. ..

'

.. .

-----

a brol&lt;en romance? The Astro-Grapl1
- - - - - - - - - - - - - Matchmaker can help you to under·
stand what to do to make the -relationohlp work . Mall $2 to Matchmaker, P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland. OH 44101-3428.
SCORPIO (Oct. M-Ho¥. 221 Something
beneficial whlclt' might no1 be lmmedl·
ately evident at this time Ia going on beBERNICE
hind the scenes tor you. Some delightful
BEDE bSOL ourprlaea could be In the oiling.
SAQITTAIIIUS

(Nor• . -

21)

you negotiate today could have tar
reaching, promlalng polonllat, eopeclalty II you make aure It's equally as good
lor thll other guy as Ills lor you.
TAURUS (Apr1120-MrtJ 20) Some Inter..,lng develop11*11&amp; may take plllce today where your work or 11 concerned. What 1rensplree could help you
lulftll your ambllloua oblectl- more
easily.
.
(lby 21-.1- 201 Thla II a
good time 10 r-aanlze a allualton
Nltiellls of Importance to you prnortal·
ty. Adjustments can be made to help
you derl'le 1he reward• to whiell you're

-NI

Frlenda will atart playing more prom!nent roleoln your affairs. Thlllr Input will
be politiYII and coneltuetiYII, except In .
mltler8that pertain to finance or - .
. -. Keep pels out of • - ereaa.
enlllled.
CAPIIICOIIIf CDac.IWan. 111 You are CANCIR (olune 21-olulr 22) Before benow In 1 good trell--.1 cycle, but .. glmlng any new endeavora, complele
you might be 1he her- penon to con- . tho onoo on which you have-~­
Yince that flllels true. Don't 111 negative ·' lng. When brought to (Nitlon, wh81
thinking re~trlqt or pu1 lfmna on your you'll gain could excood your lnlllal
~bllltlee.
expectlllonl.
AQUAIIIUS (.lift. »Paal. 11) KlloWf. LIO C.lulr 11-Aug. 221 Do not d'-"'1
IJ&gt;thll,.. .-you could be exlreme- edge you'YII gained 1hrough pereonA\ '""Y newideai.OI' concepti you gellotflo(rgll lillY may be ralher
ly lucky - . . lriendlfllpe ... c:on- expar lauce will ba Uled to your ldvan- day, 111111
ovw
the coming -'&lt;1. This will grtllldiOM In nature. You're now In a cy.
CII ned. Your lriend8 will helP" you real- .
lno"your hoptl and you, In tum, will do gl'le you an edge In altuallonl thll hM ell wltlfl you could be WJY lucky when
thinking big.
alrong compllltlve - 1 1.
ail you aan tor them.
PISCII
(l'eb.
1D
It
cit
20)
Ellher
CAIIJ. D lapL DIAl of today,
u.u C..,._ • oat. D) You are now tllrOUgh dnct or Indirect rnrMIII8 you VIIIQO
~r linlnCial trene1t could .,.,. to ta1ce
entering a cycle w1t1r1 you~ IIOpM and mlgttt bl touted onto aomethlng at Ibis .,. upwttrd awing. Prolltlble ,....111.,.
BIIQaCIIIIonl will exollllnl
cl)8f!OIII of bllna rnlln ~ . II you opar- 11ma th811s llnanclally beuellclll. 11 your Uklly, provided you dOn't let your extriVIgeiiCI n* the rooet.
afe to 1he t.t cJ your 8bllltlel, luck will IOUn:e Ia reliable, explore n In detal.
o\1!111
(Mrtrclt
21•Aprll111
AQIBBiloentl
· ftl In the bare apofa. Trying to plloll up

oat.,.,,.

..

"

Ill!

Cll (I) •

ONawa
CD Nlglll Court r;J
CD Na111awaleh
liD. AraeniD HaH

82

Carwott.a -

oolllllbr--

10:00(!)
· Cop RDCIC
(I) (I).
LaRuaoo Ia ~ and
charged wl1ll murclor. 1;1
(J) Oil 1111 Line -

AN' WHEN SAIRY·-

!:l'·

.

Naohyllla 10ng uve~

~.any

8:30 Cll (I) • Manlld Peopla
Nick and Olivia's dreams
abou11helr son are

llllloo A docko olo. REMODEl: •

plumbing

w
()). Growing , . .
Ben Juatlflea a dote with a

girt scorned by his poera. D
0 Ooulnne• R_,.a Wodd

lmp!'Qvements
. BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Ht.tlme guef'lln:..
teo. Loool ,.,_... tumlohod.
Freo ootlmatoo. Coli cotloct 1•
114-23to488, doy or night.
R - -mont W.tori!(OO-

=

- . 1n .aoa1po11a a q,~o
noot-. 00111-1182.

• I

Stihl Timber Sporll Seriea.
Albany Timber Clmtvallrom
Albany, Ore.
8 Pi llitiNeWI
1111 MOVII!: lalk-an

Motor ttomes
11178 llodgo lprintw, .2Ift.;:
:14,000 octual mllol $1,000. ·
44M1N.
.
·,

81

··''

OOotaJI~ni!­

EEKANDMEEK

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
I---:::Co::':ri::':,.::,;:",;:;;Pium::::::bl:::ng::--4K4, ~4!15; 1183 Chry. Lo
and Hooting
Baron, tt,lNi 111'1 01• CUdla
Fewth end Pine
T~opo, ti,188j!· 111114 P - l_unGalllpollo, Ohio ,
bird· 1184 ord Eooort S,W. 114-448-3188
.••
.sad: 1182 Ford Oronodo, S4111:
1881 Ford LTD, $411: 1181 llulck 84
Electrical &amp;
'
Skylor'!,_II8U; BID Auto Soloo,
Hwy. 1oo, 4 mtloo N. of Holzar,
Refrigeration
114 liB IIIII, 1,...._.,11.
I ~;;jd;,;i;;j'"~;""";;;;;;;;;i;i
1888 troc-Z. toodocl with
I Raitdonllal . "' _.,.tar
wiring,
,.RIHnour
..,..,...
option QDepl T~ope, 21,
Ucenlecl- 1110111Dian.
mlloo, t10
one800 or 1234.14
oho,_ por
In 1;;;.;=;;;:,;.:;.,;,.;.;;..;,:.;;;::,.
Eloctricol, :IOW76-178B, _ _

g:~:,.,'kiiiJ.
a.~
Boron, $i,iill: iia4 T-I.W.,

4•4'1;

----~-~-

::=..

7:31 (I) TIMI JaflaiMnl
1:00 CD • 0 Unaalved
Aro aspiring
jOurnalist and a crew ol14
diaappear from their boat. 1;1

::::=·~~~=
1m

AUCT10N SAI.III. Fram

I

1Z1 *lot Laagtoa la-H

Soptlc Tank Pumplna 110._Galllo ·
CO. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES; :
Jackoon, OH 1-IONJHUI. • :.
1H7 lroc Chevro4et, laMIId,
17.800. 304~-2131.
Dovlo
-.v.c · SlfYico,::
"0101~ Cnllc Rd. PMtl, lUll-.·
=::,kup, ond dol Ivory. 114-.·
Ford r•..," $4,1111;
Pant.

Chowyo, - . -

-·
-lot.""'7 bmi...- .- · I '""!!
Rt.7.
~·~14!::14~·~·~141,~11~1~4~11!:!10~·'!:....~

Cll e Mama' a Famllr
liD • ThrM'I Company

Transportation

mil•, rurrv IDadod, can 114 441
4053 anc1r.ave m1111...

,..no..

'

TDIIiglll

;=:64~~H::.;a;::y:...;;&amp;;.:G;;::ra~l~n;;::= new, 114 441 1054.

tue ..-.. lllllt

poyiMnl, 304-e71-A30. .
.................. Tro~ll
Dlltl to 0111 of _..., a-. 3 br_,. - · land conllorlll of . . . - . ....... .-,104-171-1104.
, Md two ..._,101111
t;:;==:.::;.:,.:.:,:....:.:=:-:::-::-::-'
.. """""" ,...., , , of .... - . 1 112 bllha,

King

~"l'•=inmant

Black Angua Rogtotarocl Hard 74 ·Motorcycles
Bull. Four yoaro ald. Son of 1-,-::-==--~~::-:::::::
Slota Run Rovolutlon whh 1182 Gotdwlng lnllflloto, 17.000.
_ , .. $1,10G. 814-992·11111.
mlloo, lib ,_, now tlroo, &amp; toto.
chr-il14-2Se,.180.
&amp; · - - · 114'·
Nlca Solllllm Colt, I montha old, of
4411:2424,
$4(10. 304-171-2224.
1183 7SO Sltodow,. 814;
44114148.
•
Show Ouol!'t Ouo~or For Solo.l14-..ll e522.
118D Suzuki Kotono BOO, "Rod;
new .CZ.Ier'll, 1;100 miiM, like

&amp;OM.

2 olorJ- - ocinlroot
· aood cond,
with

-

ac•- and Mra.

7:30CD. Ill IIJ ~~I Q

-o
·b - poymanlo.
, muot ~~
l
I ::: ~

- · - • - ta illfi.MaiiVatad
Homes tor Salt .
paollon- ,.,· 31
,...,.-..,.,....,.---...,.-..,.

success

7:05 (I) Happr Daya

Livestock

,... ~d uu ,_,

-al--tor

- ..

Maoooy a5 with roko and - ·
$14115. 8141143-5281.

1888 T-81!!!1 Tultlo Coupo,
-.ll,ouu. 1114-44a-7720.
·
1Ne 2 err. Chivy Covlllor, 1
"'!'!!!. 11,000 1111., 5 apd., air,
....ltaf.
M · - · Clarago kiopt. 114A
441

llgune;
.......
offiH
..,..,IADI
~
wfll
lnll1duill . . . . .
w!llll• aiD ; • 'whldlt

.... 7

.AKJI0 3
tAK8S2

.K

Don't be fooled

a-..vttne

ll·l~M

NORTH

lal Dellala

g·~~Jil
~~

rtnanco. IM-2"88-D.

-

:r=:.

IIJ Wllatl of

Na~~ralfa•

10
1;1

,•• "

Tliurtfl- Clash-~ - Loafer- CHILDREN
My neighbor and t attended a time caJisute ceremony.
My friend sighed and said, 'I think the best lime capsul~s are the CHILDREN."

(J) MacNII Lelnr

'a.:i

Hay tor Sale. etover I nmotttY.
Round BoliO In tho Flotcl. 81424H!It8
Hoy For Sala; nu por Sole,
Mulch +tty, $1 per Bale, 11441~
0512.
Hoy: Round Batao, $10.00 Eoch.
614-387-71110. .

.SCI•M UTI ANSWIIS

(!) I Dreai1t Dl JHMie

ID "' ' r mt Ia

Dlggor $250; 3 Bottom - ..
$395~ Bti. Trano~ Dloc,
an. uoh Hoa, ~!!i. Ownor

t-. 1 4 "*""•

ta.ooo In 72 houro. w.
Olft holp you gel •
u.n ., .... 1~
.

Poonory, -polio and Up to

Indian

p'""ptdno, and gordo. i-7 dolly,
cl-d llcintlay. 814.a-2118.

-lono. Eooy work. Will Train.

-In
_ .. _,...high
........
.,.... -UIIt
. . . -_Ill . . _,lifo -

cldll',

=-"

I .I I

II

.UNSCRAMBLE .AIIOYE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

AnciJ ontlltll

; : Looking lor

*•

...,, Cllh Advancoo, no
-urlty - "· no credM
ct.dl. 1..eo6.22&amp;-4048. $18.811
...

110111 TYPISTS, PC nudsd
111.000 J)CIIendal.
Dofalla, (11 .....,.... Ext. II4M2.

=::-::= -.=

B:;d"a~b~:;-;::'.::

63

·•

w ()). (nelda l!dltiDn

11.::N::;oon::;::..
S=o::t:..:1::
!&lt;Ito modot 1212 ColO oa·••
·~
Brown Dt-1 Troctor, PD!:i
Loll llodol liS ColO

Pets for ·S&amp;Ie

'"!•

576-2338.

7:00
.

:

:rs·i!

1-727-.
1.;.;=
.===----22 Money to Loan

·

, · -· :

,;:..::=-==~~::-;;::::~;;::::::::
2 AKC REglatered Box.,... Fawn
and white. One male, 2 yeare
old. $100; 1 llmale, 10 montha

SOlO~ ONO, IIIII ~ 1 .=~:-,~~~~~~
Athono, Ohio o15101, by 'CREDIT PWS. GOLD CREDIT

Qat- 31, 1110.1ClEII!!IP.

wwtootdoiOIG~pollonaw,S:~
-·ton
a
tootractl~!!•.', ~-oo'o't1oyuyo,,

BEAIITIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
f S&amp;l
· Joe
Ptk
ESTATES,
536
koon
I $195: Goo Rona-. 30 Inch, liar- old, ti50; 11 coutd... ko both ti0071
·=-Aut-=o_s~o_r_-:-e~~
from S1i2fmo. Walk to shop a v•t Gold, $15: 0.1 R.nga, 36 HCh. E.,. done, ell Sholl, bath -.
·
movloo. Coll614-146·2588. EOH. Inch, WM~,.siil: Eloct~ Ringo, groot. pota. AKC Roalotored 19811
Pontiac
~&lt;~mono.
klch, white, $150; Electric Oaahund, Nd, a w.b old, IIUtomltiG.l w/ai~.':·OOOi cond1184
Dalux:., 2br, equlp,.t kitchen, 30
Rongo, 40 lnci),_Avocoto, $95: tomato $150, portly houoo- Daytona Jurbo
"1 air
'
l•undry room, exc. location, no WHflnghou.e
vry~~ $95; Ken- broken. Mulll .. n, moving. I'M- $2,000; 1181 Fora Ranger,
fMIS, ..c, dep. 814-446-1817.
more Dryer New Model, $125· 992-1111 or 114-1112-3154.
$3,000. For Mil or trade, 114'bcOitant Ska
-CondHian And
_258=·1::,270,.:.:. =-:::-:::-::r-::;:-~;;Fum. efficiency. All utllhlts AII In ntHCII
A
5 puq ·bNd black Genntn -::
pold. Share bath. $135/mo. 919 0 aura
ggo
P- a•ophord pupopo,, lullbloodad. No 11178 Conrotta, T.topi, air, ·PW,
pllance" 571 Upper Rrver A01d, .;Jill
'M-3aa.8335
•uta, •m. con!lt !!.* mill,
So~ond Avo. 614-446-3945.
140 DOWN on ..,, new olnglo114-441-7318.
,..,.,.. 1
·
••king 11.200. •~·7041.
wlda, plue tax .end thlt to Furnished
EHiclencr, $175,
RENT TO OWN
GlOOm and Supply Shop.Pot 11178 TrtJAm. Chromo -Ia,
quattllocl buyoro. Ao odvonlood UtllltiH Paid, Galllpollo, 614·
on TV • C.ll Et. . Home center .t46-4416, after 7p.m.
114.44W158
~=m::'J· 1~Mdo::_::. -~~
••heu.tltranamlalon, )ull
8 pc. wood group $14.01 por Wobb. Colt 6~6-11231 .
roplocod anglno(3&amp;0). Robulh
1-800-589-!i710.
Qn~cloua llll'lng. 1 and Z bed- Wllk.
4 potter bedroom IUltl,
400 h•de-MVII" uild. $100.
'12x80 lrallar Wllh 12121 ex· room apartments 11 VIllage comptllo ti5.20· por -k. AKC
reglllorod
Mtnaturo 814·247-3881.
and
Riverside dlnllto wHh c clullro $7,50 por SchnoUZO&lt; puppiH, ttoo. aach. ~;.:.:,:=:.::.,-:-;,..-;;:-==
pando. toxiO lot, Clifton, WV. 3 Manor
e.rga and 2 email bedroom., 2 Apartmanta In MldcUtport. From WMk. t..glc Chef 14 cu. ft. 304-11I·Z233 or 576--2483.
1171 CMvrolill Utllbu ClaMic,
Refrigerator $12.95 per week, 15
305, V-8, 014-317'·7710.
olorogo bulldlngo, $13,000. Dayo tiiMI. Coll614-992·778l EOH.
304-773-5541 night 773-9140. .
cu. H. lrMzor, tiOAIO . por All breod pot glOOming, 21
h ~·
Sl nt I
Modom 1br, Apt. ~14-4411-03110.
wHk.VI'Aa FurnHure. At. 141, 4 yurt experience. ~ppoln1m_entt 1171 Plymout ...,.are. I
•
1974 Schuttz 14J:U~AC/Eiectrlc Mod..-n 2br aP.r1mtnt 114-448- mllll ott Rl . 7-Cintenary.OIMf17 only. &amp;wtl2-6820. If no anawer, euto, ntw tirft, $800. 114-441leave millage.
0276, aft« lp.m.
hool. Aoklng S4, • 61~46-03
-·;.::9.::0.:_,..-:-7"7"-:-:::_.,..--:- dlya a week.
4672.
:-:
·
1982 Comoro, with T-topo, good
Nicely furnished mobile home, 1 Soft • chal_r, aaod cond, $200. Dog HouHI Far Sale: Several cond, aood cllln car, Merroon
1978 12x80 Govamor. 2 bed- mile
614-387·7120.
ofzoa.
1
112
mttn
out
Rt.
141.
below town, overlooking
room, all gu, cornea wfth
SWAIN
Wayna Shoomokar, 514-448- color, f'M--311 8a&amp;7.
wahlr, dryer, Nfrlger.tor and river, CA, heat, Dt~. Ref.
0513
114
448
0338.
19112 LlD C'l loodad. Ono
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE.. 82
·
atove. Asking 14,5CIO. 614-Mg..
OWnll•. $111. 114114:1-8281.
Olivo
St.,
Golllpollo.
Now
&amp;
Uood
.
Dr~~gonwynd
cattery
·
Pe,.la_
n,
2594 bll-•n 12:01»:00 pm.
One bedroom apia. for rent.
fumlture, huil•rw, Wnt..,. I Slam... and Hlmaltyan kht1n1. 1983 ChoYotto, outo, olr, .....,..
$225
month.
Dapooll
roqulred.
197814•70 Sayvlow.Folrmol'!l. 2 114-992-2218 aftor 8 p.m.
814-446-3844 oftor 7 p.m.
caooatto, .._ mlloogo, 4*. B14WO!Io - ·· 114-441-3181,
bedraom aood condition all
448.a5114 . .
aloctrlc. $7,!00. 614-'1112-2889.
Fl•h
Ttnk,
2413
Jackton
Ave.
Small Furnlahod EHicloncy, 53
Antiques
Point Pl1111nt, 304-675--2063, 10 1983 Grand llliqulo, arc cond,
outtable
!Of'
1
poroon,
contoral
:::::-:~:;;;.::-::::=::::~;::;:::::Prico
Aoclucodl
1182
ptrk~nf4
dtpaeh 1: Buy or tell. Riverine Anllqutl, gol oo1 up $14.99 ond 10 gol ,.... MW II,_ and brakel. NIW
TownhOUII, 14x10, double IX• heat,
rolaroiiCf.
81
8-0338.
1124 E. Main Stroll, Pornoi'Of. comptllo $43.28.
gaaechac;ka. High mileage. at.
pando, CA, On IM'tvat• ranted lot
1Win River. Towers, Houalng tor Houre: M."~W. 10:00 a.m.JQ S:OO Mille Cocker Spanltl• 7 mOl. 675-50117 aft« B:OO Pll.
In Rodney. 814-44&amp;..1530. ·
tho Eldo~y and Hondlcapjlod.. p.m., Sun Y 1:OO 10 a: p.m. old. $100. 114-4411-2027 ·aft or a 1983 LTD Cr_, VIctorian,
SPECIAL. Foctory to yau1191, 2 •
= 5·..,..,--::c:-::--::-- p.m.
now avellabiHinl• 1I :.t714:..;192-:::.::252
IOidod. 1m Ford Floota. 111111
or 3 bedroom14x7D fnodefl at ""Pir1ntentl
lng
for
30"'
of
MIJuated
Income.
Top
C.h
paid. Old fumhure One yellow crOwned Amazon the unbelt.vab1e DriCe ol
both 1o oppreclllo. 114-lot3200
Second
Sl
or
ctll
3Q4..I75.
cubOude,
qutne.
orllntal,
$12,900 delivered and Nt up.
p1rrot. One y11r 3· monU111 aid 5350 IVInlngl.
8171.
pilntlngt,
toye,
or
entire
Mtate
CoN 1-800-m-40451or dllollo.
$750 with cago. 6!4-62-5320.
call colllct 30~25-3275 .
1984 Tompo, $1195. 1185 TornJ&gt;!&gt;1
Schun 12x110 2b p 800 81,._ Upllolro unlumlohocl Aport·
P11cackll, Qoel8, A Oucb. 32415. 1111 Tompo, $3115. 1811!i
.a
nz
...
___:
...
_!•-R
•
·
ment,
e~~rpeted,
no
peta,
utllltiH
54
Mlsce
·
llaneous
446 1
R..aonable Prlce1. 614~388- ' COvollor, $2495. 614111112-7184.
··~~pold. 614-446-163l
·
·8!146.
1985 Bronco II, 4a:4, nc. cond,
Merchandise
33 F; mns for Sale
Upetalra. Furnlahed, 3 rooma,
PoodiH: toya, tucu,-, AKC. law mlln, garap kept, 11of.2~
bath, clean, air, wuhldry, new 10 ft. llborglo• Wlloon Sotolllto Tiny mtln, betutltul f•maln. 5047.
212 ac... firm In 8111111 car~~_ no pete, reference,
dleh wHh all ~ulpment $800. Al.a adult doga. Largt cagee.
Townohlp, woodocl. OWnar will dopoon 614.ot46-1519.
1985 Chov~ Covollor, 4 CYIIndor,
114-182./Jftllftor 4;30 pm.
Coolvllla 8141867·3404.
carry controct. 814·1112-2852.
4 door. Eaay on goo. "4/U$25"' color TV, Nmote control. I!I:."7
4418.
45
Furnished
Musical
35· Lots &amp; Acreage
$100. Pick up campor top. $100. ""'
11185 Chryotor ~r. 2.2 Tultlo,
Rooms
81411185-4418.
Instruments
2 ~ate, .....n ..._, At. 114.
loodod 1.12,500. 0~ 0 !~83 II•
, nice,
Prlco to oaiL 114--J.
Raoma available for 2 or 3 con- 3 hp Lown Chlal llllor, uood WE CARE..JIII (Joouo &amp; Mo) cury Melero, 4
ltructlon work1ra, 304-882- 1Wica, Brlaaa l Stronon 101glno PIANO SERVICE olloro EXPERT $1,200. $00 II 2e Control
Approx. 1 ..,., waodocl lolo, 2586.
$280. llcCuliOCh 11" chain - . ~lano "CARE" far thOle who Avenue, OelllpoUa.
chv wat•1 owner ftMnclng, Jerllkl naw $180. 304-11711-2111.
CARE" about tholr plo,_, Bill 1185 Doctgo . Chargor, be.
rica R...,1 Point Pleuanl, WV Raoma far rent -weak or month.
cond., AMIFMJCue., 2.2 lher, s
304-372,.•05 or 372-2111.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallla Hotel. 7500 Wlnduolrial Oenorllor, fin· Word. 304_.112-2325 (Pro• 22:1~
lehed nailer, email trel._, Shp,
114-441-9580.
211-30 mpg, PS, AC. 814yardmon rotollltor, 114--441-0'121, 58,
847.
O.J. White Ad., 2 acra wooded
SIMplng
rooma
with
cooking.
11-F ohor llp.m. 01 wookdlyo.
building
-~ to build on,
1087 Ford Tompo LX, loodocl,
l'll .. rlctiM:I, toa,toO. 1.....245-9185.
Aleo t111ll1r apace. All hook-upe.
unllmnld mileage werranty until
c;ou
oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·773Routt 2 .bhton, 1 ICI'I lata 3 81!1~ Ma~on WV.
Dunrovln ·Fruit Farm h.-t oft Sr Marth '13. $5,900. or t.l otter,
mll10 oouth Golllpollo ~o,
681 ull ol Albany.
accopt 304.a75-3852.
public wltw, no ,..ltrictlone,
food etampe. Variety of appltl,

aome with rtv.r frontage, 304-

PRINT NUMBERfO LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

1:31 (I) At!CIJ ontlltll

Jlm'o Fonn Equt-nl1 _sR. H,

1:;.;;;.:.;.=;;.;;.;.;..===--

Would Uh to do babyoittlng In
my home, W•lldap only. ~•v•

_.pi ;wsknawofthiled.

COinplotw tho chucklo qualod
-.1-'-..L....,I-....t..
__.
by filling In tho - . g -ds
1..
you devolop 1.- otep No. 3 bolow.

~ =cw'J~L.:::: K·l Cap 1;1

011, YOU li.OOW \1/IIAT
'IIlEY ARE!

ntw

child 011111. Mon·
day lhN Fridly, 7;30 Ill 5;30.
For more lntonnatlon or to

........,, Olli30W15-7121.

reloronco ond clopoolt. 304-882·

I

ARTONE
~--~,~5.:;-1~,..:;:_r;-;--1-i •

;ra:-a.~ t;1

I!]) •

::':'::-=::=::-----=-.-.--

K - , Kldl Child Coro. Tho

Baby lllttllr rlelded In my- home,

DEA,

=for

.l'!l::"•

w... 304-182-2141.

For

2516.

Plaque on wall of counselor:
·sticks And Stones May Break
L.-..L
.........1.-..L
• .....,j.L....J.
But Words Can
. - - - - - - - - - - , Break Our ---··."
.

plano parodleelampooning
Ifill nation's laadert and

-opor·

REPOSSESSED HOUSES .
Perec:t tor HlncfW'mtn
1.
BulaYUio
Plko (ono· aero) MIL
Dill otftce, 2307 Camdlln Ave,
Hoodty Rldgo. (ono oc10l
Po-rv, WV. HIOH4B 2.
MJL$500 bown With Approved
141\ All _,.ma cornplotod a- CrocltCOriiOFirll p1
Jonuo;r.
lmonlho.
5th. WALTER
ct:
BolloyJ
HOMES
18 Wanted to Do
1-80~1110
or 1-600-4488110,.
Boo'"IIY your car &amp; protoct h
from wf~• una Grima. Expert 32 Mobile Homes
•uto cl•nlng l•lde I aut.
Rlvoroldo Au!o Dotalllng. 814•
tor S&amp;le

I I' I I--11'!=•1 .Our Bones,

lplclll Mark Ru11111 ·

Sc,':.:

Fourth. 2 bedroomt, tumlehed,

1-"TN..;.....,U.,.E;;.....,..;Q:.....,E

proYidn outrageous
one-linen, aonga anti savvy

$225 monthly. DopooH roqulred.
7 room 1·112 both, 1.3 acroa, od· 114-182-6SIII.
dHiono1 33 ocroo hunting ond
tlmbor. 114-9ji2·Tt18 or 1·384· Smolt FurnlohOd houoo, tocatocl,
20117.
735 Rim Third Avo, $150/mo,
!!!•_
dopoo
. h, a_ M-441-3870, 1147 ..,..,. 1 112 botho, country - 1340.
lieu. n. chHI ,..,.., EJ!calllnt -ood,
oplh
dollvored
:!,ng ~:,.:,toooR~~ ~
. Mobile Homes '
leon~~d~IU~on~.~61~4~4~46~35~4~1·-=-=::: H:~,f~::cr~6~~~f:0~3~·-:'•::•d;·~l;::11::;~:::-'01.;31,
T-hlp Rood 27. Flrll road to 42
3 pc living room ouJ!~1 ftoor I;
rlaht_. Coli &amp;14-62·7111 or 1·384·
for Re.n t
moclol TY, aftar 5:00 I'll, 304Nlo llh naw Pollllo 7~
2IJil
871-5e&amp;B:
080 cantract rock 304·
14K52 unlurnlohocl Mobllo ho-.
B71-1f50.oxt. :197.
'
GOVERNMENT
HOMES
tram
ti
Third
•
a
llolutllul
country
bluo
·
llnl
(U
lr) Doll
no poto, 322
~vonuo, 14- couch. Hoa rulflocl akin ond 5 lnvacaro S.mt-E toctric hoopltal
Aepooo.:\~~~ v!~~ &lt;Me.IJlllo or 814-251-1803 boloro NHiad plttowo. QuoiHy modo, _ bod, cornptllo $500. Portabto
(I) 105-1187-8000 Ext GH
lp.m.
good condHion. $300. 11141812• oornmoda choir $40. 814-992·
cunent Npo lilt. ·
• 14x70 Mobile Home, aha,. renl 7543.
14M bltw..n 1-1 pm.
.,
Aero ond holt or moro bohlnd I reoponllbiiHy" whh highly County Appllonco Inc. Good Lodloo Diamond Clllllor ring.
tho fllrgroundo on Crow Rood ~":l/:':Pa1~2::."· l'or uoad applloiiCM, T.V. aolo. O~n I:$35;-0_t...,lnn,..
. l_14--:992=,.....,...'1_.
4 - =-In Po/IIOI'oy. COli 814-112-5303.
8 o.m. to I p.m. !!on..Sol. 14- Rocondltlanod WaohoiO, Dryo.ro.
2
bod,_,,
tumlohod, 448-186, 827 3nl. Avo. Gol·
Big Dokot0 F
H
8 IH
Quar~~ntMd prompt llfVIce loi"
arm orno: u on waohorldryor. S235 monthly '"llpal=la::•.,:OH-'::::-:-::::-=:-==:::;; all mokM, modolo. Tho waohor
~r1 lat. $31,65 &amp; up. 614:886- pluo dopooH &amp; uti!Hn. 814/112- iio you lib to aavo lllonay'l Dryor Shoppo. 814-4441-2944.
ill78.
ChoCk Ul out tor quiiMy tuml·
·
FORECLOSED or HIZICI homes Zbr unfumlehld elr cond, cable tuN llld ce,.,.ta. Mollohan Fur· Slump Nmoval, yard work,
(lrom $101 attet'ld by GOVII'f1· evall1bl1, blautftul river view In nlt1n I CllrPICI, Rt. T North. S.aeonMI ••h, oak, hickory
ment from flllld Savings 1: Kana~•· Foater'a Mobile Home. Pho.n1 OM-441-11144, GalllpoU1, firewood, · delivered
anct
• -HUD, • nd 1ox ,..
•·tt nquon 1 Porlt, 4-446-1102.
= 8--.;116:..4:=,6-. ;:;::1:.ll:;•::c:::kod=.1.::5:::5.:..:6:.:.14:..-44
-no,
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1
propertl•. lo bltuctlaned niJt
Surplus army camouflagef C.r·
month In Gallloolla, ond Ohio. 2br, turnlohod trollor, natural GOOD USED APPLIANCES luln, Donlm, Ronlol Clothing.
catl (211) 812-G024.
·
011 hMI, 8"14-36'J.."3:8WI....,., drylrli, r~~frlgeralora, Decron ln1ulallon Covel"lllt,
ond 10
Brood Run 44
rongoo. Skilggo Applloncoo, Comauflogo $21: Som $ o Apartment
Uppor Rlvor Ad. Booldo Stano rvlllo'o, Eoot of Rlvonowood.
Rd, N8w Hllven,
(MelOn
CraM ~1. call 614-44&amp;-7'311.
PM
County). Rurol wator, cable
for Rent
F~. Sot-6 Sun: Noon-7:00
.
tllwtalOn, black top ro1d. 10
Kenmore Por1abla Olswaehlr. 304413 655 ather dtye.
mlnuttl from tow1~ I eurrouncl- 1br Move &amp; refrigerator fur- Butch block top. $75. 814-992· WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
lng powar Pilnto. S:i5,ooo. 304- nlohocl, nur haopllol, $238, 1 690D.
Ron AllloiJ!! 1_1210 Socond Avo,
882-242e, :104-8i5-3553 or 304- vocont Oct. 15th. 814.ot41-2D57. 1
Golllpolto ""014-448-4338
671-1815.
icing elze man ..... , box •P.rfnge
•
·
2br Apt. Lof11youa Moll $350 to anlf tnmo, 304-G7W028 otter
Building
55
0Wnoro- I amoll homo ond $425 por month. lnctudoo all 5:00.
omcioua to ooll thlo 2 llory utiiHioo, Dopooh raqulred. 114Supplies
CO!onlololylo, 4 bodroom, 2 112 &lt;Me-7733, 614-446-4222.
PICKENS RJRNITURE
batho, larmol dining and ll~lng
Now/Uood
Block, brick, aawer pipet, wfnroam, flrnlly room, 2 car a•rag• Apiirtments, 2 bedroom•, nice. Houllthold fumlehlng. 112 mi. daWII,
llntela,. etc. Claudt Wlnout building, I acra land. Few 304-675-5'104.
Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Pleaunt, WY, tlfS, Rio
Grande, OH Clll 61.$.
minute~ frOm town. Somerville
call304-875·1450.
245-512\
Root~, 30U71-3030 or 675-3 431 . Apt. lllddloport, Ohio, 117 N.
.,.

o .a a-n

~&amp;·..:.~ . .
(!)Mark.._

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15

1--TIFRAGT
~I'~I..;,.-tl

tl) Abbott and CalttHO

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·

StNdv ovollablo. Mull
haYI ftatbodo wMh tarp. 814-884-

II

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1:30IJI• 11J NIC N(ghiiJ Nawa

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Ia Woold Today

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low to form lour riiiiPio wwdo.

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Conl8ct
· t;1.
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"You've got . tO be kiddin.g! S2GO.
VInton SL
Can be • n 44
Pt. PleaSant
. You mean there's a . recipe
surdottoAddn, , ..,...ns-r138.
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In cHy., 3br, .unlumlohocl, CA,
&amp;VICinity .
10f
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toncad yara, good notghborGiani yord boiGw llldoro I
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$375/mo. gar••·
llol I
=-=-~~~-::::=:-::z:'":=========r-=========i
hood,
attlichld
'!:'*"'Y~c~ _......51::/:Y· J":O 11 H.elp Wanted
. 31 Homes for Sale
Dop. Roqut..cr. aM-m-27'13.
Pom,roy. 3 ' bedroom houae.

""

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WHCEES

I :OOille

Household

13

O ._range
t.tten of. the
lour ...,....,lad _. be-

EVENING

Merchandise
51

........

AulDs tor Bale. •• :

71

41 Houses for Rent
3 badloom houoo, 30U76-38811.
4 bedroo~~~ fllnn haUII with frM
gu end •llr. 130 tcrll. out-

a.,.,~~

'

KIT••N' CARLYLE&lt;Il by Larry Wriabt

LAFF-A-DAY

7

Wednesday, October 17, 1990

Middleport Ohio.

=··

IIJ Miami VlCI

. • Randy Trarlo • Happy
Trella Randy TraYII and
trientlo hH 1he traM on an
authentic Montana C8tll8
DriYII.

t211Monavttne

1111 Rln Tin Tin, K·t Cop Q
11:30 CD. 11J1 Tonlgltt IIIIDw
Slerao.
()) Thl Rou1Ura

CD Atnellel'a ~
Maultor .

·(J)EB
I.

'CIS L8le

Nlgfll

z=T=""-

By James Jacttby

12:00(1). lnlll 1111 NJtM Stereo.

. -

~~~!"'

EAST

.Q3
.Q986
t1o 54
.JI095

•a

'

Eiperienced flayers know that an
SOUTH
initial successfu finesse is not an iron.K654
clad 1uarantee tbat the liJtesae will
.7 2
succeed the second time around, Just ·
tQ7
as a declarer can make a holdup play,
+AQ873
so too can a defender. But blithely let·
Vulnerable: Neither
tin&amp; declarer win tbat trick requires
Dealer: Wesl
cool nerve when the contract is a ·
slam.
Weot Nortb EoN
Today's South worked his way into Soatll
Pass 2+
Pass
sii no-trump alter North bad opened
3+
Pass
s•
Pass
with a stron&amp; artificial two clubs. The
Pass 4t
Pass
openin&amp; lead was the jack of spades. 4NT
Pass 5.
Pass
Declarer won the king in bls band and 5NT
Pass 6•
Pass
played a low heart to the jaek in dull)" I NT
All pus
my. East lollowed low. So declarer
Opening lead: J
cashed ·dummy's kin&amp; of clubs, came
to his band with the queen of diamonds
and played A-Q of clubs, throwin&amp; dia·
monds from the dummy, Sure, the dia•
monds might be splitting 3-3, but the
heart finesse was already proven, by this ruse. If he continues with A· K
right? Now another heart was played of hearts aUer his finesse to dummy's
to dummy's 10. Devious East took the jack has won the trick, be loses a trick
queen and cashed bis now good jack of &lt;irtly when Wesl started with four
hearts to the queen. And be avoids the
clubs to set the slam.
Easy to see now, but probably de- disaster of going set in a contract that
clarer should not bave been victimized _always should make.

3•

+

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Private
denial
6 Elmer's
tormentor
10 Sheepish
11 Class;
kind
12 Pitcher
Mclain
13 Eroded
14 Refinery
· needs
15 East or
West
islands
16 Craze
17 Archaic
18 - out
.
(get by)
· 19 Bam boozle
22 Canadian

flag

symbol

accessory
42 Seasonal
songs

DOWN

1 Fall
asleep
2 Complete
3Whhout
setting a
date
4 Hostels
5 Actor
Fernando
6 Rosary
.hem
-?loosen
the laces
8 Zorba, for
one
9 Feet
11 Parisian
policeman
15 Poorly
17Time
away

from

23 Decays
260dd or
fanciful .
object
29 Beret
32 Starting
eount
33 Earth ·
bound
bird
34 Early
calculator
36 Publisher
Adolph
37Wisdom
looth
38 Novel by
Anatole
France
39 Redatts .
40 Usher's
milieu
41 Photag' s

Yesterday's Answer
work
20 Gullel
21 Cut hay
24 Start of.
any
Perry
Mason
title
25 Euphe ·
mislic

name
27 Ollice·
holders
28 Tousles,

as hair
29 Ship of
the desert
30 Dwelling
31 Monly
Python's
Michael
35 Garfield .
and
Heathcliff
36 Buckeye
state
38 Earth
color

DAILY CRYPTOQVOI ES..;... Here's how to work ll: 10/H
One letter stands for anG~r. In this sample A is ~ed
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, .
apostrophes, the length and fqnnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

e1p1 tcCiallil

(2:30)
11:• (I) Cllnra Q

WEST
.JI0982
.54
tJ96
42

.CRYPTOQUOTE
VRS

DSZTQG

VRS

VRS

VDZGTYDSTTQD

K T

OSWZPTS

K V

1-ZC
KT

QN
RZDA

KT

TQ

0 .....,.. Car Club of

Alru4IIIOil
eNaalflgltt
12:01(1) ....... r;J
1I:JO CD.

11J Ula Nlghl Willi

DIVId LAI&amp;

.,

iiiM

WDQLASA. -. M'KG
RfOOZDA
Y•etenleJ'•
THE BEST BLOOD
WILL AT SOME TIME GET INTO A FOOL OR A
MOSQUITO. -AUSTIN O'MALlEY

c.,.•••••:

'.

.,

�Paga 14-The Daily Sentinel

Quirks
in the news
Fonner inmate lives It up
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - Richard Cheney decided·I() live It up
when he ended a 10-month
sentence at Stillwater State prison last week.
He went to the plush Whitney
Hotel in the down town area and
regtsiered as a guest of the
Pillsbury . Co., running up_ a
$938.32 bill.
Cheney, 28, of Nortbfleld,
Minn., appeared In court Monday

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

on a charge of theft more than
$500.
The hotel checked on Thursday, the day afier he checked In,
and found !bat Pillsbury had not
au tborlzed his stay.
The complaint said .that Cheney told police he had no cash or
credit cards. a nd that the only
lde.ntlflcation he had was a card
from prison.
· Cheney had served time for
helping an offender avoid arrest. ·

church." said the Rev . Alexander Wangler .Of Our Lady of
Sorrows ChUrch in San Antonio.
"We just wa nt her to sing the
same thing everybody else is."
The lawsuit he filed against
church member Elojia Macias
said the woman's·slnglng caused
"confusion and disruption," and
he accused her of later trying to
"conduct her singing at tbe altar
and over the sound system, "
. A hearing In the case Is
scheduled in state district court
Legal leud over choice of songs. In San Antonio Thursday.
SAN ANTONIO (UPI) - A ·
pries t is taking a member of his
Finley sends glow-in-the-dl!l'k
cp ngregatlon to court for singing lootballs to Persian GuH
CHICAGO (UPI) - Former
her own hymns. Instead of the
songs s ung by the church choir. Oakland 'Athletics' owner Char- ·
''We don't mind her coming to lie 0.. Finley has sent 1,000

Wednesday, October 17, 1990

glow-In-the-dark footb alls to
troops participating In Operation
Desert Shleldjn the Persian Gulf. •
"They wilT be easler (or the
troops to see at night to play
football when it's cooler," Fipley
said Tuesday. '7hey should be
tbere by the middle of next
week."
Finley, the colorful owner who
presided over 'the Athletic's
dynasty In tbe 1970s, was known
for his innovative Ideas, including a failed attempi to Introduce
Day· Glow orange baseballs to
the big leagues.
Finley owns the patentto the
Rawlings footballs, which are
· marked with bold. flourescent
yellow stripes.
In a letter last week to

satlons with troops In Saudi
Arabia.
The two have mounted "Operation Two Ply," asking Phoenix
residents to donate toilet paper
Wednesday at Park Central
Mall.
"One pi;r or_ two, white or
decorator
colors. plain . or deFo!'Kel books, Gls need toUet ·
signer floral prints, all will be
paper
PHOENIX (UPI) -Despite all accepted," the radio station said.
Jima Peterson, promotion dithe talk about sending books,
rector
for KMXX, said " Drew"
cassettes and games to relieve
and
"Zip"
have been contacting
tbe boredom of U.S. military men
Gis
in
Saudi
Arabia by calling
and women in tbe Middle East, a
outlets
of
American
fast-food
Phoenix radio station says
companies
in
the
Middle
East.
there's a more pressing need.
1
Peterson
said
the
idea
for
~~ orew" and • ~Zip, .' morning
"Operation
Two
Ply"
blossomed
personalities for KMXX Radio,
in a conversation with "a guy
said they've received complaints
New York who said, 'I wish
from
about toilet paper In thelrconver- .
we had better toUet paper ....

Secretary of Defense Richard
Cheney seeking permission to
send the ballS. Finley called on
the sports wqrld to' 'let our troops
know we love them and appreciate the sa~rlflces they are
.making for our country.
. ·

COPYRIGHT 1990 - THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES 'GOOD SUNDAY, OCT. t4, THROUGH SATURDAY; OCT. 20; 1990, IN POMEROY
.

Ohio Lottery

Reds up
2-0 in 1990
World Series

Pick-3:ll8
Pick-4; 7253
Cards:
K·H, 9-C, IO.D, 4-S
Super .Lotto

Page4

•

•

at
Vol.41, No.117

Mountain Top
Cherry Pie ·

A Muttimedia Inc. Newtpaper

.

Conunission·
moves foward
with project

item purchand.

26-0Z. PKG. FROZEN

2 Soctiona, 14 Pages 2&amp; Conto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday. October 18, 1990

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY-Each of these advenised items is required to t)e reacfilv available for
sale in each ·Ki'Oger Stora, ex~ept as specifically no~d in this ad. If we do run out.of an
adVertised item, we will offer you ;your choice of a comparable. item, when av~1labte,
reflecting the same savings or 8 rain check which will entitle you to purchase the advertised
i'lem at the advenised priCe within 30 days. Only one v~dor coupon will be acceP~ed per

UYONE

Pak

'

Ice Cream

ggc
~ - Gallon

By Brian J, Reed

GET ONE

Sentinel News

FRE

_,
•

fJ9

.

""----

- - - -- -

. ---

-...

DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES- This architectu·

GET ONE

rat readerln1 shows how .the Meigs County Department of Human
Ser~cea olllce on Race Street In Middleport wUI appear .after

EE!·

According to Sheriff James M.
The shooting death of a
Soulsby,
Donnie Nlxten, Story's
14-year ol~ Cheshire boy Is
.
Run
Road,
was at the Ferguson
· being ruled as, accidental at this
residence
near
tbe Gallia-Melgs
.time.

SugarTwin
Sweetener

GET ONE

e:,

C&gt;

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1-LB. ROLL WAMPLER / LONGACRE

1-LB. PKG .

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Deli Buttery
Popcorn REGs~L:Lv

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12-0Z.

Russet
Potatoes

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Hormel Canned
Ham Patties

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Yellow ·
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3-lb. Bag

15-lb. Jlag

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Diet Coke or
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Skim
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6-Pak 12-oz. en

48

line when he was allegedly shot
by another 14-year old .
Soulsby says that the department was assisted by agents of .
the Bureau of criminal Investigation, County Coroner Douglas
Hunter, and Mldd.leport Emergency Squad.
:--Nrxt.en·was ·tbe··son of-Pamela
Casiqn and a seventh grade

student at Meigs Junior High
School.
According to Soulsby, Nixten's
body was removed to Ewings
Funeral Home.
•
Hunter has ordered an autopsy
In the case.
No charges have been flied and
investigation ·Into i thE!. Incident
continues.

"A miJ\ion dollar building owned
by the county and paid for by the
state," was Meigs County Commissioner Richard Jones' description of
an addition to the Meigs County
Department of Human Services,
which was approved for bid advertisement on Wednesday at the
commissioners' regular meeting.
The construction project will
provide a three-story colonial-style
, addition to tbe existing Race Street
. facility.
.
According ·to Department Direc:
tor Michael Swisher, the county
commissioners
authorized
a
feasibility study for work to consolidate the offices, currently scattered in buildings throughout Mid·
dlep&lt;&gt;n, foUowing a recommenda·
lion from the State Deparmient of
Human Services to do so.
That study, conducted by the ar·
chitectural finn of Burgess and
Niple, Limited or Parkersburg,
W.Va., was completed in March.
After considering the several options revealed by the study, the
commissioners authorized the
-preparation of Door plans and ar·
chitectural renderings or an explin-

2-Utar

Bottle

SJ29

E. Buck of the Meigs County
Common Pleas Coun's Probate and
Juvenile Division, who is opposed
by ·Pomeroy Attorney D. Michael
MuUi:n for that office.
"During my term," Buck said, "I
have received 10 awards for superior judicial service. That represents
a current docket"
Judge Buck . also stated that he
had received word yesterday of the
· awarding of a giant from the State
w his court, which would provide a
"state of the an" wristband radio
for use in monitoring juvenile offenders.
Mullen made a pledge last night
to he a "full-time judge for a fulltime job".
Mullen said that in his ex·
perience as an assistant prosecutor
in Athens County, he had dealt with
child abuse, neglect and dependency cases that involvecj children
ranging in age from 18 years to 28
days.
"If problems like this are not
dealt with responsibly at an early
age," MuUen said, "they will
probably end up in a higher court in

later years."
State Representative candidate
Richard Jones, a Republican and
incumbent Meigs County commis·
sioner, scoffed at the recent an·
nouncement from the Ohio
Department or Transportation that a
feasibility study on the replacement
of the 70 year old Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge would he conducted
"Give us modem highways to
bridges we've already got," Jones
told his listeners.
However, Jones sees education
as the "number one issue" in his
race against incumbent Democrat
Mary Abel.
"Our students
are being
shortchanged," Jones said. "It's
time to face the reality that a real
estate tax means of funding our
schools entirely does not work."
The imponance or education was
one thing that Jones and Abel saw
eye-to-eye on at'last night's forum.
"Equity in education is a right,
not a privelege based upon where
you are born," Abel told the
audience. "Students from Meigs,
Athens and Gallia Counties must he

A fundraiser for the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center and
its progi'ams allowed interested
residents to hear presentations from
26 political candidates or their
representatives at the ·center on
Wednesday evening.
Candidates representing and
seeking
offices
from
the
"statehouse to the courthouse", to
quote one speaker, were aUowed
tbree minutes of free time to
FAMILY PLATES - ' Sue Malson, Meigs County deputy
present their message concerning
repatrar, dlaplayelhe new famUy plates wblch are now available
their roles in the upcoming elec·
at the local Uceue bureau on Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. The red
tion. After their three minute time
and gold plates are reserved for can owned by persons whose
frame
elapsed, they paid $5 a
drivers' lleen- have been suspended and license plates
minute
to
speak their minds.
lmpoullded. They are luued where occupational driving privileges
Eleanor
Thomas, Director of the
are granted by the cow1 or to members of thai person's famUy.
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center, introduced the speakers and
mediated the sometimes heated
presentations.
First on the dais last night was
Judge Fred W. Crow III, who spoke
Courts in Meigs County which violations, or to misuse of the oc- on behalf of Dr. Douglas Hunter.
handle traffic violators are being cupational driving privileges."
Hunter, a Republican, runs unopurged to take advantage of their
Prior to now family plates have posed in the race for Meigs County
authority to issue "family plates."
been issued only thmught the Coroner. Hunter was unable tc&gt; at·
These special license plates are Bureau of Motor Vehicles in tend the event.
now available at license agencies Columbus alld it sometimes took as
Incumbent Republican William
throughout Ohio.
long as 30 days from tbe time of R. Wickline, also running unop''Family plates are reserved for application to receive the plate.
posed, spoke brielly to the crowd
cars owried by persons whose
Un~r the new drunken driving about tbe duties he held as M:eigs
drivers' licenses have been suspen· law, · issuance. of. plates is now County Auditor. ded and licen~ plates impounded, handled immediately by 'the 203
Janet Howard, a Democrat from
often for a drunlcen driving convic· hcense agenc1es m Oh1o. Ap· Harrisonville, said it was "time to
tion," , explained State Highway · piications for the pla~s can he have a IYio-pany system in Meigs .
Safety Director Wiliam M. PICked up ~t the Me1gs C:ounty County".
Denihall
Deputy Registrar's office or m any
Howard, who is opposing in·
The j,erson driving a vehicle counroom.
~andling , traffic cumbent. Republican Manning
with this special plate is either a v1olators, IJ!CI_uding mayor s courts. Roush for his seat on the Meigs
convicted traffic offender who has
Any vehicle owner whose County Boanl of Commissioners,
been granted occupational driving registration has been impounded ~Y said that "Meigs County has been
privileges by the coun or members the coun may. &amp;JllliY for special standing still for too long.•
ofthaqierson's family.
plates. The appl_lca~on must heap"It's time," Howard told the
audience, "for a change.·
The plate alerts law enforcinent -proved by the blal J_udge.
.
If elected, How.ard pledged to
authorities that the vehicle's owner
Ohio law ~reatmg the special
is a convicted traffic offender with plate des1gnanon dates back to help the county "put our hands out
limited driving privileges, said 1967. However, use _
or the plates to welcome small business and big
Denihan. "And it certainly serves has been !ow, averagmg about 200 business alike."
Roush, in the meantime, circd his
as a deterrent to similar fuiure per year in. the last five years.
record as a two-term commissioner.
''The responsibililio$ of this .
office have changed ~the P,ISl 8
years," Roush said. "o_\/r ettizens
demand and deserve ljctter sa-·
missing.
Meigs County Sheriffs Deputies are investigating the breakJuanita Allen, Syracuse, re- vices." ·
Citing , improved
county·
Ing ~d entering at the Dana
ported Wednesday evening that
maintained
roads,
a
county
helipon
Williams residence on Hysell her chlld 's bicycle had been
Run Road.
stolen from her front porch. The and improvements ~ the Meigs According to the report Willi- bike is a red and black 20 Inch County counhouse, Roush stated
ams reported that his trailer was BMX.
that he has "bled to represent each
entered sometime between 1Q
Anyone seeing that bike is and every person .in a fair and ima.m: and a'p.m. on Wednesday.
·
asked to con~ct the Meigs partial manner."
MEET THE CANDIDATES - Eleanor Th•
A silver dollar belt buckle and
Also standing on a two-term · mu, director of the Melp Ceunty SeDior Cltbens
County Sheriff's Department.
gold bracelet · are reported
record of service was Judge Robe~
Center In Pomeroy had the Job of latrtlduclq a

'Fahlily 'plates' are available
at license agencies in Ohio

Kroger ·
Ibuprofen

FR-EE!
IN THE DELl-PASTRY SH
liOZ. LOW SODIUM OR 11 -0Z.

nearly a million do Bars in expansion Is
one-story portion of the building shown far left Is currently In
place. (Courtesy of Burcess &amp; Niple, Limited)
·

Sentinel Staff Writer

1.25-0Z. REGULAR, HOT OR

McCormick Ch1
Seasordng Mix

--..._
~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::::~:=
---- .. __
=-

By BRIAN J. REED

BUY ONE

Fischer's Mellwood
Sliced Bacon

·~

''

able to com~te with students from
richer areas. '
"I have sponsored legislation to
that effect." sbe said.
"Being the State Representative'
from this district requires a special
kind of leadership - effective
leadership," Abel said.
"I have produced the results that
effective leadership brings," Abel
. told the audience.
Delllocratic incumbent State
Senator Jan Michael Long informed his audience that "together, we
have. made some accomplishments".
·
Citing his work with the Governor's Office of Appalachia, the
Senate's Appalachian Delegation (a ·
bipartisan group in the senate) and
his work to save OVAL from "drastic budget cuts", Long said that
government was "there to help
people".
·
"Government," he said, is also
proof that "people work best when
' they work together."
Long's Re!Jublican opposition,
Dame! R. Hierommus, told . lisContinued on page 7

Meigs deputies probe B&amp;E

"
l

S~ff

sion of the current building.
The
commissioners
voted
yesterday to advertise for bids for
the construction of the expansion
project.
·
Jones explained that the commissioners will purohase the current
building, owned now by the Mid·
dlcpon Housing Authority, at a
price based upon a state-certified
appraisal.
.
''The board will then issue notes
for the money needed to purchase
the building and for new construction," Jones explained.
"Upon completion of the build- ing, the county will convert the
notes to general revenue bonds and
those bOnds will then be sold,"
Accordi11g to Jones,. "the county
will he re-imbursed by the ODHS
in the form or rent on the new
building."
Bids on the project will he
opened in a special meeting of the
commissioners on November 20;
completion of the work is expected
in late 1991.
In other action, the commissioners voted to transfer $3,000
from the contingency fund into the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
gasoline account.
Athens•:l'.ttornej' K. Robert Toy(Continued on Page 1)

Twenty-six candidates take part in·forum

FRE

lb.

-

Boy's shooting death is ruled accidental

10Q-CT. PACKETS

Pick Of
The .C hicken

-

--·

MASHED POTATOES

imply Fresh
Brown Potatoes

U.S. Grade A Perdue

Low In mid 388. Chaace of .
rain 30 percent. Friday, high
In mid $05.

3-5-28-3841-52
Kicker 237722

myriad of caadldata and cudldate.' reprulllla·
Uvea at WedDII4ia¥ .e.veniD('I Candldata' Nlclit
at tbe ceater. Tbe event Ia an annual fuDdraiMr.

\

'

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