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I

Pea•

CLEVELAND (UPII - FB(
agents are puzzled by a rub of
tJank rojlb@rles In the Cleveland
area, already Sllrpalllnll tbe
tolal for all of last year.
There were only 12 bank
robberles durlnll tbe first seven , ·
month&amp; of thla year In Cuyaqa
County, but tbere have been 34
more bank robberies llnee tbe
Aug.1.
·
That brings to 46 the number of
bank robberte. Jn the Cleveland
area during 19911, compared wltb
43 all of last year. II'• believed
that nljle of tbe l'Qbberles were
committed by one · woman,
Odet!&amp; Renee Jordan, but e~n
without !bose robberies, the
number Is hJab.
FBl spoke1man Robert Hawk
said· agents cannot explain the
Increase In bank robberies dur·
· lng ~nt month&amp;. . . . ·

or

-

-- - -

- __

-

~-

• •

A reception honoring lhe winners

~,.

_·t''\,-

j,
,,.,...

Sunday. Burke also recelftd Best Oppollte, B..a

6 Class and Best In Breed ror his rabbiL The
sbow was held at the Rutland Civic Center.
~

. .

Auxiliary prepares care ·servicemen packages

.

pennon.
·
The students' essays and pictun;s
, of the Yesteryear essay contest held
Boxes of cookies, personal
in conjunction with lhe RSVP from the 199() YesltlyW' program items, and . games are being
prognun at the Meigs .)'dusewn last were on display, and paren!S were prepaied l)y lhe American Legion
· spring, was held Tuesday night at. given the OWOfi1Dlity to express Auxiliary, Feeney-Benrieit Post
their appreciation and satisfaction 128, Middlepoo to be mailed to
the Multipurpose Senior Center.
Reprcsematives of the Meigs to the RSVP staff for inii'Oduclng servicemen in Saudi Arabia.
School Sysr.em, the Meigs Histori· 'their children to new experienoes
A box will be mailed to each loand
for
the
skills
and
kllowledge
cal Society, RSVP volunteers and
cal serviceman whose name has
advisory board members, parents gained lhrough the program.
been submilted to lhe Legion next
and family members were present
Thursday wbich has been set by the
for the recognition program.
Postal Department as the deadline
Fiflh grade students who par·
. for holiday mailings.
licipated in the J.'I'08Ili:ID submitted
By United Press International
essays aboUt !hell' projects and ex·
Washington, D.C ., Pollee Chief
periences. The essays on learning Isaac Fulwood criticizing a
· experiences were judged and judge's decision allowing a cbaptrophies .were awarded to lhc first ter of the Ku Kl!IX Klan to march
and second place wi~ers from thro~~Sh the predominately black
each participating schools.
city:
A plaquc·was presented to Libby
''We gave them a permit for a
King, daUghter of Mr. and , Mrs. ShOrter route, but the judge
Ttm King, Middleport, who was the tho~~Sht they had an Inherent
county winner in the essay com· right for a longer route. That's
wrong. We're the only experts In
this goddamned town. If people
weren't messing around With us
there would be no problem. You
can quote me on that." : ·
WHITE PIGEON, Mich. (UPil
- Michigan State Pollee say 18
SPRING VALLEY r.IN FMA
men were arrested on sex
4'b 45 Z4
. ',' "
charges during an eight-day
S2
.
75
MflliAIN
MTI"£8
SAJUTCIAI li SWI!At'
sting operation at two highway
S2.15 IAI&amp;A.IJ 11111111 Tl.r:SIUIY
rest areas In so·uthwest
I• oca . .FRIOAV
. nt~wm
*t
tltn. niiiSOAY I
Michigan.
The men, from Michigan,
7:00,9:10 Ql.lll'
( 11\\l l\ 11:()
FRJISAT LATE
Indiana and Ohio, were charged
SlOt 11 : 30
' \ IIII I
SAT I SIM MTIIUJ
with soliciting to commit prostl·
J:CXI
•o• l (J
tutlon among males. The charge
carries a 90- day sentence for a
first. offense.
. Troopers said 17 of the men
were arrested at a rest area on
7:1~.SI:ts Dl.tlt'
&gt;~\. "" ·• hU'• .... ~ lfio ""
FRI/SAT lATE
U.S. 12 between White Pigeon
;;Vto;1 !:~~D
and Sturgis. The other arrest
1&amp;~-l~\~., .\IT'Ifl
Occurred ai a re5t are'a on M·60
w~t of Vandalia.

Quote of the day

LA Rams

Clear tonight. Low In mid
Sunny Wednesday . High

Page 3

~Os.

in mid 70s.

•
Vo1.41. No.134
Copvrlalft'ed 1990

Cookies will be baked by , the
auxiliary. members on Monday and
Thesday at the Legion Annex an!!
contributions of sugar, Hour, peal)Ut
buller and olher ingredients, but not
chocolate cbips or nuts, are being
accepted !here Saturday afremoon
and on bolh days when' lhe bating
will be~ place.
.
The auxiiUII)' is ii\,R5d ~l­
ing boxes which may be left at the

annex at the same time. Mrs. Vuxil
Parsons said lhat s))oe boxes are ihc
right size for mailing cookies and

Bend center
gets $200,
federal grant

that boxes large enough to accom·
modale toilet li~uc, three packqes
of four rolls each, are needed since
that will be among lhc items sent to
the servicemen.
She furlher advised that games
such as checkers and cards will also
be sent and contributions may lie
left at lhe hall.

dllco•••

The otato'o 84,242 mllet of IOida Ul'
. ohowll ,Ill deto!L Towu. dtlot aad
v111apt an IDduecl aJid locatod, aad
th. . 11 miJCb addltloiW lllformatkln To
order Woot VlqiDia {laomty lllap book,
'eend 118.86 (Jirlco' !ncJnd• dtlhoryl.
VISA and MaitorCanl ........

........ .

PREMIUM ALL·SEASON

Other State c-ty lllap Boollt anllahlo
lllcludo: All, PL. IN, XY, NC. OH,
PA, SC

and TN.

WASHINGTON (UP I) - Sales
of new single-family homes de·
cllned 21 percent In September to
an annual rate of 503,000 units
from 638,000 units in the yearearlier period, the Commerce
Department said Tuesday.
During the first nine moriths of
the year, sales fell 15 percent to
an annqal rate of 435,000 new
homes, compared with 512,000
units for the same period the year
before.
·
The department said the me·

SJOOO

' Even trudwear

• Smoorh, comlottallle r•de

FIRESTONE FIREHAWK
216 66 SR16 OWL

'SJOOO

By VINCENT DEL GRJDICE
UPI Business Writer

$1695

.

-~- Master

13"
1S5 10 113...- ........... 43.00
165 10 113 ................... 41.00
115 10 113-................ 46.00

lnltaler of
NAPA Front-end
Parts and Brakes.
Call Us For
Eitlmatn- Lowest
Prices In the
Tri-County Area.

1""

Prktt 6ooll Tlw..... II /3D/tO

Full rich flavor, not fuU price.
'

Available 1n lC1ngs 8r lC1ngs Lights.

'I

I

I
I

75
75

75
75

15"
1115-...............59.00
115-·-··"·"·00
115-----·60.00
RlS--...--63.00

.
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking

By Pregnant Women May Result in Fetal
Injury, Premature Birth, And Low Birth Weight.

Rutland ·Jire Sales &amp; Service

••••••

· 742-JOII

Midwes tern new home sales
dipped 2.1 percent during the
month and were down 10.7
percent from year-ago levels.
The sales slowdown Is· taking
Its toll on housing prices. The
median sales price for a new
home declined 2.8 percent during
September to $115,000 from
$118,400 In August.
The average' sales price fell1.6
percent to $142,300 from $144,600
in August, the department said.

Six U. S. sailors
killed in accident
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A news reports the boller had
burst of steam from a boUer on actually exploded. He said it was
_the !J,SS.Iwo Jim~ 11f.QlQy.eQlll.the ., rro! ~le&amp;r if a _pipe ruptured or.
Persian Gulf killed six American
what caused the acclde~t but
sailors and injured four others ' added that even a leak is serio us .
Tuesdayasthehelicoptercarrier
"Steam is hot ," he said,
was embarking on amphibious
Navy spokesman Cmdr . J.D.
exercises. Navy officials said.
Van Sickle in Dhahran. Saudi
Navy spokesman Lt. Cmdr.
Arabia . said the Iowa Jima was
Alan Dooley said the steam
scheduled to be par t of amphlb·
leaked from one of th e two boilers
wus exerc1ses Tuesday at the
aboard the 18,000-ton ship at 8:15
time of the accident. The ship is
a.m. as it ·was getting under way
part of the U.S.-!ed international
after a port call in Manama.
forc e deployed m the gulf after
Bahrain.
Ir~.q·s Aug ..2 invasion of Kuwait.
" Initial reports are that six
The shtp had JU St gotten
crew members were k!lled and
under way" from Man ama, Van
four others injured,' ' Dooley said
Sickle to ld the Cable News
from a Navy command center
Network. . 'Shortly after it got
near the Pentagon. "The injur.ed
under way, the ship suffered a
have been transferred to the
leak In a steam line. a rupture in
hospital ship USNS Comfort for
a steam line In the boller room.
medical treatment. "
resulting in six deaths and four
serious i~juries .'.'
Dooley said the 602-foot·long
amphibious assau lt ship was
Van S1ckle sa1d lhe wounded
being towed back .to port in
satlors all suffered steam burns
Manama after the engines were
and were taken by helicopter to
shut down as a precaution, He
the Comfort.
said lhe ship, which carries 685
, "The dead will be. taken
tm~ed!atel y f~~m Bahram to the
offlciers and enlisted personnel
and can carry 1.100 Marines, is
Umted States. Van Sickle sa~d .
powered by two steam boilers.
Dooley sa1d all the casualttes
"The steam Is und er very high
were Na,vy personnel and no
pressure in excess of 800 or 850
Marines were involved. He said
pounds ~r square Inch," he said.
the ship was based in Norfolk,
Dooley said the accident was
Va. and left port en route for the
being investigated and denied
gulf on Aug. 20.
1

showing,
But the. data ls subject to
change. The Commerce Department will revise the· numbers In
November and release a final
estimate In December.
Two gauges of Inflation tied to
the report indicated a mixed
picture In the aftermath of Iraq's
Aug. 2 Invasion of Kuwait- and
the worldwide ballooning of oil
prices.
Consumer spending leaped to
$23.9 billion, not counting inflat!on, In the third quarter from
$1.5 billion In the second quarter.
Spending on durable goods -

WASHINGTON- The nation's
total output of goods and serv!ce5
jumped an unexpected 1.8 per·
cent In the third quarter on
strong consumer purchases of
cars, vans and trucks, the
Commerce Department said
Thesday.
Pr.lyate economists expected
an Increase of only 0.8 percent In
the government's Initial estl·
mate of the real gross national
·product during July, August and
September as recession fears
swept the nation.
The $18.5 billion surge In the
real GNP for the th.lrd q"arter,
The Ohio DeparJrnent of
adjusted for Inflation, follows a
Transportation will conduct its an$4.5 billion - or 0.4 percent gain In the second quarter,
nual check on snow and ice equipaccording to the department's
ment at lhe State Highway Garage·
Economics and Statistics ·in Meigs County on Thursday at
Administration.
8:30a.m.
In the first quarter, the real
Joe Leach, lhe OOOT District 10
GNP was up 1.7 percent.
Deputy Director, announced the in·
Two or more consecutive quarspcction, which will take place· at
ters of negative growth In the
each OOOT county facility.
real GNP Indicate the economy
Several ·areas are covered in the
has slipped Into recession. An
inspections, · wbich assures lhe ·
advanc.e of less than 1 percent Is . dwnp truCks and plows are ready
generally considered a weak
fo( opralion before the first snow-

expensive Items made to last
three or more years -climbed to
$3.,2 billion In July, August and
September from a decllneof$10.8
blllion in April, May and June.
A Commerce Department spo·
kesman attributed the bulk of the
increase io automotive purchases, which were up$3.4 billion
in the third quarter vs. down $6.1
billion In the second quarter.
,Spending on non-durable goods
increased to $3.8 .bllllon from a
decline of $4.4 billion, and spendlng on services Increased slightly
to $16.9 billion during 'the last
quarter, the government said.

Winter ODOT inspection schedwed

115 75 114................52.00
195 75 114-.............-54.00 .
. 205 75 114--..- ..-51.00

205
liS
225
2U

dian sales price of new homes , tember and were 12.0 percent
was $115,000 in September whll&lt;i' below year-ago levels.
the average price was $142,3000.
Western real estate markets
At the end of September, the appeared to offer the greatest
seasonally adjusted estimates of monthly reslstence to weakness.
new houses for sale was 337,000,
New home sales fell only 0. 7
nr ~n R 4-mnnth cmnnlv .
percent in the West from August
Sales were down In all regions to September, bu t were dowil a
of the nation, with the greatest sharp 36.4 percent from year· ago
monthly decline posted in the levels.
beleaguered Northeast. Home ,
Sales of new homes In the South
sales In that region fell 15.6 declined 7.8 perceni from August
percent from August to Sep·
to September and were down 14.2
percent from year-ago levels.

strumental in the project from the
beginning . "It would n01 have been
· possible without his suppo~ and
approval of th1s grant request.
The gram IS the cltmax of over
14 months of work that began when
Mason County Commissioner
. Larry Sayre asked Simms to ~e
on !he proJeCt upon h1s appomt·
ment 10 !he RC&amp;D.
.
Accordmg to Stmms, lhts gram
represents the effons of hundreds
of people. From a start of eight
people who first met with John
Perdue, !he Governor's Exccuuve
Ass1stant. to all ,the people who at·
tended the pubhc mceungs, served
on the construction commi!lec,
answered mcome _surveys...and sup·
ported lhc fund raiSing actrvltles.
."I think !he amazing thin~ about
. th1 s proJect 1S all of the d1fferem
Contin.ued. on page 10

GNP clunbs unexpected 1.9
percent during third quarter ·

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

,

By RICH EXNER
· The casino proposal Is known :soutn uakota: Missis~ippi, Illi·
t~ repel negatives often assoUnited Press International
on the statewide ballot simply as nois and Iowa mlegallzmgcasmo
c1ated wnh gambhng and 1t has
·Lorain car dealer Alan Spitzer Issue 3, but it's the Issue I hat has gambling games..
the support of the police union in
unveiled what many people gained the most attention for the
Casmo gamblmg has been
Lorain .
.
General Election. legal for years m Nevada. It was
A group called Ohwans
lhought a pie-in-the-sky idea
nearly three years ago when he
Approvaloflssue1wouldallow legalized for Allantlc Ci!y, N.J..
Against Casino Gambling. how ·
announced plans for a · $300
the state a nd various local in 11)76, and for Deadwood. S.D .,
ever, has campaigned strong ly
million riverfront resort wilh a
governments to provide or assist in 1988. Riverboat gambling ls , again,SI the proposal.
cas ino serv in g as the
inprovidinghousingandhousing permitted · on the Mississippi
"Weknowthatwhatgambling
centerpiece.
assistance by grants. 'loa ns. River in Mississippi, illinois and
brings to society as a whole
Iowa .
definitely is not optimum ecoHis proposal gained credibility
subsidies and other m ea ns, .,
in MarclT 1989 when It sailed
The Ohio Constitution now
' And constitutional ame nd'
nomic development," said Kelthrough the Ohio Hou~. 57-41,
a flows only one method to assist men ts to legalize gam bling in
ley Simpson, spokeswoman for
in providing hou sing - making various forms are on ballots in
Ohioans Against Casino Gam·
but it was killed two months later
loans available at below-market Nebraska, Louisiana. Colorado .biing. " It 's a trade off and not a
by the Senate Ways and Means
.committee.
rates.
and North Dakota.
good one."
So Spitzer Is taking his propApproval of Issue 2 would
"We're talking about one sin·
Thatgroupclaimscasinogam·
permit the General Assembly to gle casino and not Atlantic Cily,"
bUng will Increase crime. drugs.
osal to the people of Ohio, asking
allow surviving spouses .of~opie Lorain Mayor Al ex Olejko said. . pr~s~t~~on ang , corruption. In_~
them Nov. 6 to approve a change
!~ tl! e Ohio Constitution to allow ., rece!ving-a·ho~estead_tllln't!duc- • '1h!f]lroj~~ti2~}~~1!latwe·would
Oh!o, , &gt;\I'll) mcreqSE} compuls ive
tSraln voters to decide whether
lion at the tim e of d'eath to probAbly have 10,000 peo ple a ga mbling , ~Ylll encourage child ·
they want a single casino oper- ~ontinue receiving the reduction day at thepeakcometothe cityof ren and te~na gers to drink and
a ted iii their clty·on a trial basis.
1f the surviving spouse is at least
Lorain."
gamble, w1ll create additional
If, after three years, the Ohio
60 and continues to live in a
Supporters of th e Ohio casino burdens for Ohio's welfare and
General Assembly determines
qualified homestead .
proposal, including Olejko. look human service sys tems, will
the project to be a success, the
Th~ Ohio Constitution now
at it as a way to rebuild the bring false hope for economic
state would be divided Into seven
restncts reducing taxes on land
economy of a city decimated by development, and will create a
to residents who are at least 65
the loss of thousands of steel jobs multimillion-dollar machine to
districts and one casino In each
district could be allowed to open
years old or are permanently and
and a shi pping company. the site corrupt Ohio's political. process .
totally disa bled.
for which, Spitzer has acquired
Oh1oans Agamst Casmo Gam·
with approval by both voters in
the district as a whole and the
The casino Issue, If approved
for his project. Oljeko said the bllng said It ha s received finan·
Nov. 6 and subsequently ap·
city has lost 20, 000 jobs in the last eta! support from the horse
community where It Is proposed.
If the Lorain casino Is deterproved by ·Lorain voters in a
15-years.
racing industry, an industry that
mined not be a success, it could
separate election, would place
They say enough safeguards would face increased competiOhio with Nevada, New Jersey.
have been built into the proposal,
Continued on page 10
be closed after five years.

New home sales are down in ·S eptember

236 76 R16 AWL

lt'Ud. ra1'l. and snow
• Supertl, respoos.ve
handling

Casino issue highlights statewide ·ballot
.

UNIROYAL LAREDO A/S

• Si4lfi'O lfiCIIOtl 1ft

Planning and Development; State Senator Oshel Craigo; Gary Jones, building construction committee; State Senator Robert Dittmar· Dari
Edw!lrds, bu~ldin.g constr.uction ~mmittee; Commissioner Tuck~r Mayes; Ra~dall Lewis, Regi~n II; Gov. Caperton; Commissioner K~nton
Sheline; Delvm S1mms, C1ty of Pomt Pleasant RC&amp;D representative; Lowell Wilks, RC&amp;D coordmator; Scott Simms, county RC&amp;D represen·
tative; Tim Howard, past New Haven councilman; Commissioner Larry Sayre; Dave Michael, Region II; and Phyllis Ashley, New Haven recor·
der. (Register photo by Mindy Kearns.)

C..ty .....

Lpot. Btatla WIIIIMC

Governor
Gaston
Capcnon
presented Mason County officials
w•lh a Small Cities Block Grant of
S200,000 Monday for the construe·
tion of lhe 'Bend Area Recreation
Center in New, Haven. The presen:
tation was made in Charleston.
The grant brings !he total amount
for lhe recreation center to
S275,000, with $225,500 of that
amount in grants. That is a match
of nine grant dollars for every dol·
I¥ !he Mason County Commission
provided for the project. .
_
"We owe Gov. Caperton many
thanks for making the dream of ~
youth and community center in the
Bend Area a reality," said Scott
Simms, one of Mason County's
represen!atives to the Greater
Kanawha RC&amp;D, who was in·

RECEIVES BLOCK GRANT • Tbe Mason County Commission received a $200,000 Small Cities Block Grant from Gov. Gaston Caperton
in Charleston Monday, f(!r the construction or the Bend Recreation Center in New Haven. Pictured,. left to right, Michelle Craig, Region 11

1121-~

SPECIALS

mEL-BELTED RAIIAL

By Mindy Kearns

pt oft tho boa* path of tho 1111 "'"-:.
hJPwayt. aad bad! OD oplll aftor
oampllJIIIUIUI\Itl ollopplq, dlllbll aad
1eilw'l

1 Se'ction. 1OPages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, October 30. 1990

-taln•

j,

TIGER PAWXTM

~-

Cards: 9-H; 6-C;
4-0; 4-S

A book coaca!ab&gt;J oil of W•t
Virpil't 55 001111ty mapl Ia avollablo.
Printed OD 16z21 lad&gt; doubll opnod
pasoo, each 001111ty bu a _..y map.
The book
144 .......
II )'OQ drive aal)' thlbl-t.. )'OQ
m1u wbat'a nal IDCI tnd'•ineel Ill

18 arrested at
highway rest stops

.•

- ....

· Pick-3: 341
Pick-4: 3388

~ ~lllapomabolt-lo

---Essay winners . .

.....-

Ohio Lottery

IN STATE BOOK

........... .
YOUfH CLASS WINNERS • tim Burke was
the wilmer of the Best iD Class for Youth at the
SoutheasteR Ohio Rabbit Breeders AssociatiOn's "Filii Fantasy Rabbit Show," held on

_.~

•

W.COUNTY
VIRGINIA
MAN

or

or
or

.

Steelers
romp over

8Qn.k robberiel
surge in Cleve'W

OPEN CLASS WINNERS • Wiuuers
the Southeastern Ohio
Rabbit Breeders ,USOClatlon's "Fail Fautasy Rabbit Sbow" in Opeu
Class were Bob aud Babe Eaklus of Jamestowu, Ohio. The Eakins
were awarded tropbies in the Best 6 Class; Best Breed aud Best
iD Sbow. Tropbies for the show, held iu RutlaDd ou Sunday, were
donated by Wbaley's Auto Parts, West Farms Albany, Rutland
Furniture, Rainbow Rabbit Equipment RadDe aDd the Aliliocla·
tiou.

---

Monday. OnloW 28. 1880

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

12-The Deily Sentinel

-

IITUJID,OI.

'

Mfr's. suggested retail pric1.

Kinp Llgbta; II mg "tar;' 0.7 mg nicatiH-Kilttll: 14111
"l,lr; '1.0 111Q nil:otineav. per ciQirelll by FThltfiDd.

. '· '

·----

fall. inspecting lhe equipment are
personnel frolll; safety, equipmen!·
mccharucs, mamtenance and radio
coinunications.
OOOT is trying to conserve salt
use as·its sole ice and snow treat·
ment by using a SO·SO ratio~ of salt
and cinders. Leach said lhatlhe 50·
50 ration lowers salt damage to the
road's surface and · is more
economical due to the 33 percent
rise in the eost.of salt over the last

three years.

ALL-ACADEMIC • Members of the All·
Academic team Introduced at the rau sports
bauqoet at Meigs High School were in Jbe front ,
row from left to right: Chrissy Weaver, Tricia
Baer, Jennifer Taylor;"Amy Wagner, and. Darci

Wolfe. Secoud row: Joe McElroy, Aaron Sbeets,
Robby Wyatt, Frank Blake, and Eric Heck. Ab·
sent wbe11 picture was taken were Kristen Slaw·
ter, Missy Nelsou and ,.Tara Gerlach. (See addi· ,
tiona! plc1Ures and story 011 page 4)
'

�~

•

Commentary
The Daily Sentip.el
111 C011rt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio .
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE ·~EI08·MASON AREA
J'l~

~m~

qjV

,....,..,__,

'
ROBERT L,. WINGETT ·

Publisher

'-"""T""I

'

,..,.....;ac:::l•~

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mana~er

PAT WHITEHEAD'
Assls&amp;ant Publlsher/Conlroll~r

..

A 1\JEMBER o!The United Press International, Inland Da!ly Press
Association and the American Newsp~per Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words tong. All letters are subject to editing and must be stened with
name, address and telephone number. No unstened letters wW be pub'
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall· ·
ties.

UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - Here Is a suggested !JIInorlty report io ponder:
The failure of the so-called bipartisan budget summit agreement may
have been the best thing to happen to the U.S. poUtlcal process In
years.
There was a lot of moaning and weeping when rank-and-file
members of both parties In the House turned down the budget
· deficit-cutting plait worked out by Democratic and Republican
congressional leaders and reporesentatlves of President Bush during
protracted negotiations that began last spring.
The flop of the budget agreement did cause some discomfort for
people who wanted to .visit national parks, monuments and museums
during the Columbus Day weekend and found the doors locked.
But It did not lay the United States open to attack by foreign powers
or leave the streets unprotected from rampaging criminals. And,
while a cessation of non-essential federal activities durtng the work
week would discommode more people than the earner shut-down, It
would not end civilization as we know lt.
However, there really Is not much danger of a protracted
suspension of federal operations for the simple reason that all of the
people Involved - at the White House and on Capitol Hill - have a
major stake In their continuation. In fact, If the government Is not In
business, thj!re Is no reason for them to draw salaries.
But that Is not to the point, which Is that both the Republican and
Democratic. patties may be better off because the budget summit
flopped.
One of the problems ·the two parties have had ln·recent years Is that
the .voters ln~;reaslngly have abandoned partisan allegiances and
turned to following political personalities.
The reason for this has been debated at length, butoneofthemaln
reasons Is that It often Is difficult for the ordinary citizen to see a real
basic dl!!erence between the two parties. That Is not just a
paraphrase of George Wallice's "not a dime's worth of dl!!erence"
description of the Democrats· and Republicans - It meshes just as
well with the conclusions of many politicians and political sclentlstB
that both parties have moved Into a common mainstream of thought ·
over the last several decades.
" .'
The rise of Ronald Reagan did sharpen the differences between the
parties at first, but the Democrats got so scared when they saw him
and his friends winning, they moved to the right. The Republicans did
much the same kind of movement towerd the left wlien they we.re
faced by the popularity of Franklin D..Roosevelt.
Bush tried to resurrect mainstream politics with his call for a
"kinder, g~tler A,merlca" and his preference for negotiation aver
confrontation In executl.ve-leglslatlve relations. The budget summit
was an example of a situation where hath the Republican president
and the Pemocratlc congressional leaders saw a chance to divide the
blame for nasty choices that had to be.made.
But the rank and !lie wouldn't buy It and both sides were forced to
come up with their own plans for cutting the deficit. This In turn has
revealed some vecy different Ideas about who should bear the bulk 9f
the burden of new taxes, and In that, folks, there is considerably more
than a dime's worth o difference between the Republicans and
Democrats. That might even give the voters next week some issues to
consider In deciding who they want to run the governmentfor them.

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I

Berry s World
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e t9110 Dy

WAFFLEMAN

~EA . Inc

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','ultimatum" that was "unequl.v·
ocal." If lie didn't leave Kuwait ,
"he could expect war with the
Soviet Union," according-to our
sources.
The usually unflappable Sad·
dam was taken aback. He had no
Immediate response except to
soften his rhetoric about staying
In Kuwait. It didn't takeSaddam
long to regain his composure and
threaten the Soviets In return. On
Oj:t. 12, the official Iraqi news
agency quoted a mllltary spokesman warning the Soviets that If
they shared any Iraqi military
Intelligence with the United
States, gleaned !rom the long
a111ance of Iraq and the Soviet
Union, Iraq would hold Soviet
cltl2ens as hostages.
"We warn them against such
behavior If It happens," the
spokesman said. " If the Soviet
Union gave the United States the
Information It was seeking, we
would be forced, unfortunately,
to act In a way that protects our
national security. Among those
measures would be to halt the

departure of Soviet nat urals."
We recently reported that the
So\~els have already begun to
leak Intelligence to the United
Stales about Iraqi weapons capa·
bUlly. We .also revealed that the
Soviets are soon expected io
provide even more vital Intelligence on the performance of
Iraqi soldiers and weapons durIng the long Iran· Iraq war and
profiles o! Iraqi mllltary advls·
ers. Those profiles could tell U.S.
officials which Iraq! officers are
likely to defect, surrender or
even overthrow Saddam.
With .~at Information passing
from the Soviets to the United
States, Saddam will soon have to
decide whether to follow through
with his threat to hold Soviet
hostages. Our sources estimate
that there are about 5,000 Soviets
In Iraq, .among them 500 to 1,000
mllltary advisers.
If Saddam makes them his
unwllllng "guests," our In tell!·.
gence sources say, It Is likely that
Gorbachev will follow through
with his ultimatum and send

~ SORcf:l~ APP~ce

1l1

Help for hostage
As many Amerlcilns await the
release of family members held
hostage In Iraq, It's good to know
an Ohio-based group of psychologists has organized to help the
situation.
USA-GIVE, a .vOlunteer net·
work of psychologists based In
Columbus, has been ·set up to
connect !amllles of hostages with
psycholotrlsts In their hometown.
By calling 1-lrJO..USA·GIVE, each
American hostage~s ·family Is
referred to a psychologist who
has volunteered his or her
service at no charge.
The service Is the brainchild of
Dr. Leslie Kern, a Columbus

By CHUCK MOODY
UPI Sports Writer
PITTSBU.RGH - Bubby Brls·
ter passed !or four touchdowns,
Including two to Merrtl Hoge,
who also scored on a 1-yard run,
to lead the Plttsburgb Steelers
Monday night tq a 41-10 rout o!
the Los Angeles Rams.
Brister completed · 15 of. 24
passes - for 161 yards as the
Steelers Improved · to 4-4 and
climbed within a game of first·
place Cincinnati 'in the AFC
Central Division. The Rams,
preseason favorites to reach the
Super Bowl, fell to 2-51n the NFC
.West.
Brister threw . touchdown
passes of 6 and2yards toHoge,17
to rookie Eric Green and 8 yards
to Dwight St&lt;:&gt;ne.
Gaston Green opened the game
by returning the klckof!100yards
for the Rams' only TD. Green
took Gary Anderson's kickoff at
the goal-line, ran up the middle,
cut to his left and ran up the left
sideline untouched Into the end
zone 16 seconds Into the game to
give the Rams a 7-0 lead.
The Steelers tied the score 7-7
on their .next possession on a
6-yard touchdown pass from

Soviet soldiers to join American
troops In Saudi Arabia.
President Bush has already
paved the way for that deployment. At the September summit
between Bush and Gorbache.v In
Helsinki, Bush dropped long.
standing American objections to
a Soviet military presence In the
Middle East.
There Is a hint that the Kremlin
Is still banking on Gorbachev's
ultimatum. On Oct.14, the Soviet
news. agency Novostl reported
that Saddam may be willing to
get out of Kuwait In exchange for
some strlltegtc land. Navostl also
said that Prlmakov had warned
Saddam that Gorbachev would
not stand In the way of a U.S.
military action.
The official Iraq! response to
the Novostl report was that
''Kuwait was and w111 continue to
be Iraqi land forever."
FOREWARNED - Congressional leaders have been alerted
that military action will probably
be necessary to oust Saddam
Hussein's army from Kuwait.
The offensive would probably
begin In winter when temperatures In Saudi Arabia are more
tolerable for U.s: troops, and
when the U.S. deployment Is
complete. The response from the
congressional leaders was that
they want to be consulted before
anything happens, and they want
President Bush to Invoke the War
Powers Resolution.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Whlle
members of Olngress were ·
struggling to.trim the budget and
forestall a shutdown of the
federal government, one man
showed why the cuts are long
overdue. Secretary of the Air
Foree Donald Rice new !rom
Washlngton to South Bend, lnd .,
for the Air Force-Notre Dame
football game Oct. 13 and spent
$5,700 on the bit. of boosterlsm.
(Air Force lost.) RlceusedanAlr
Force C-20 Gulfstream Jet that
costs $1,892 an hour to fly. With
that talent for wasting other
people's money for personal
luxuries, Rice mlsse,d. his calling.
He should have owned a savings
and loan.

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million of the 400 million acres In
cultivation nationally. About 20
percent of those holdings were
purchased for Investment purposes, but the remaining 80
percent was acquired through
foreclosures.
That development disturbs
many farmers· concerned about
responsible land management.
"The big Insurance companies
are the ultimate absentee landlords," says Mark Schulz of the
Land Stewardship Project based
In Stillwater, Minn.
He and other critiCs assert that
the Insurance companies, Inter·
ested principally In quick profits;
rent their farms to operators wlio
often abuse the land because they
also are primarily concerned
with short-term results.
In a Minnesota case, the John
Hancock Mutual Life Insurance
Co. of Boston foreclosed on a
model daley farm, then leased
the property to a tenant farmer
who proceeded to bulldoze carefully landscaped terraces and
otherwlae wipe out 27 years of
conservation work. The u.S.
Department of Agriculture found
that soU erosion Increased ten·
fold after Jolin Hancock assumed
ownership.
In a Missouri case, tile Mutual
Benefit Life Insurance Co. of
Newark, N.J. rented a foreclosed
farm to a similarly uncaring
tenant wbo bulldozed terraces
and windbreaks, uprooted trees,
obliterated ponds and de~troyed
other conservation measures
carefully put In Plllce over a
,period of almost 40 yeara.
,
The IDiurance companies say
they'd prefer to sell the lud back
to farmers who pre~umably
would have a long-term commit·

ment to their own property. But
they're generally unwilling, for
example, to participate In the
various state programs that offer
financial Incentives to attract
young people to farming.
Moreover, some Insurance
companies' financial packages
are structured to appeal · to
agribusiness corporations rather
than family (armers: Until late
last year, for example , Travelers
had a $1 million minimum on the

Bi-lster to Hoge. Brister rolled to
his right and hit Hoge on the
8-yard line, and he ran Into the
end zone at 5: 05 of the first
quarter.
Mike Lansford missed a 48·
yard field goal attempt on the
Rams' next possession. The kick
was wide to the right with 4: 54
left In the first quarter.
Pittsburgh's David Johnson
intercepted Jim Everett's pass
and returned It down the left
sideline 34 yards to the Ram 17 .
with 2:011eft In the first quarter.
On the nel&lt;t )&gt;Jay, Brister hit Eric
Green In tile left corner 0! the end
zone with ~: 5~ reinalnlng ln -th&lt;
first quarter to give Pittsburgh a
14-7 lead. It was the first-round
·draft c'hoice's sixth touchdown
catch In 11 recepUons.
Lansford kicked a 32-yard field
goat 45 seconds Into the second
quarter to cut the Pittsburgh lead
to 14·10, The kick was set up by a
43-yard pass Interference penalty against Thomas Everett on
a pass from Jim Everett to
Flipper Anderson that gave Los
Angles a first down on the Steeler
23.
Anderson kicked a 42-yard
field goal at 4: 36 of the second

'

quarter to boost Pittsburgh's '
lead · to 17-10. Rod Woodson's
49-yard kickoff return to the Ram
39 set up the score.
Lansford missed a 42-yard
field goal wide to the left with
three seconds left In the first half.
The Steelers Increased their
lead to 20-10 . on Ander~n·s
30-yard · field goal on the first
series or the third quarter.
Woodson returned the ktcko!f 45
yards to the Ram 45 to set up
Anderson's kick at 6: 10 ..
Hoge scored his second touchdown at 11: 12 of the third quarter
on a 1-yard run off right tackle.
The Steelers took over the ball
three plays earlier when punter
Keith English was tackled by
Stone at the Rams' 6. ·
Brister completed his third
touchdown pass of the game, an - •
8-yarder to Stone, seven,seconds
Into the fourth quarter. Stone
juggled the ball before falling ,• • ·
into the end zone along the rtght ;;
sideline.
·
Brister threw his fourth TO; ,
pass and second to Hoge, a · -,
2-yarder, with 2:42 left In the ' ~

~~~~.~~;;:[o ~1 ~r~rease Pitts-

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NEW YORK (UPI) -VIrginia Georgia Tech, with the ACC's Paclflc-10 Olnference victories. ·. ~·
Nebraska, two schools whoSE' au tomatlc Citrus Bowl berth on
No . 21 Penn State Improved '•.'
high ranklngs have been critic· the line.
three places on the heels of Its 9-0'· :··
Nebraska defeated Iowa State shutout at Alabama and No. 2:i · "'•
tzed because of .w eak schedules,
get a chance to overcome those 45-13 to Improve to 8-0 heading Louisville moved up a spot after
Into next Saturday's game beating Western Kentucky.
doubts next week.
··:
The No.1 Cavaliers and No .2 " against . Colorado for the Big
No. 23 Southern Cal dropped :· ··
Cornhuskers continued to hold Eight title and Orange Bowl three positions despite a 13-6
victory over Arizona State In ·.•,
the top two positions Sunday· In berth.
GREEN GOES ALL THE WAY- Los Angeles'
98-yard touchdown in first quarter action In
"We just hope we play well this which quarterback Todd Marino- '·
the United Press International
Gaston Green returns the opening kl~k·off for a
Pittsburgh Monday. (UPI)
college football ratings, with week," Osborne said . "We've vtch did not play because ol a ' · "
Notre Dame jumping oVer All' still got Kansas and Oklahoma suspension for skipping class. ; ·•
after th'at, so we're still In the
burn Into the third position.
Texas A&amp;M · and newcomer
VIrginia received 35 of 56 tough part of our schedule."
North Carolina., tied for 24th, with · :"
No. 3 Notre Dame used a 31·22 the Tar Heels entering the ' ·..
first-place votes cast by the
59-member UPI Board of vtctocy oyer Pittsburgh to move · ratings for the first time since · ·' ·
'•
Coaches and finished with 807 of a past Auburn, which. held on for a October 1986.
possible 840 points. Nebraska 17-16 victory over Mississippi
The only team dropping out or'
received 16 first-place votes and State by blocking an extra-point the ratings this week was Texas •·
attempt'wlth 2:33 remaining.
Christian, ranked 19th before fts : ' '
•
there's no quesUon they 're · a to the Raiders , whose only . 773 points, while Notre Dame was
By LISA HARRIS
No . 5 Washington, which re· 27-211oss to Bavlor.
·,.·
at
the
top
of
one
ballot
and
earned
UF:I Sports Writer
· notch above the rest of tile setback was agalns t the Bills,
celved
the
final
first-place
vote,
700 points and Auburn led three
Four NFL teams trail the New National Football 'Conference, " who got trounced by the
moved up one spot after. ham·
ballots and had 630 points.
The Daily Sentinel . '
.York Giants and ·San Francisco Bears Coach Mike Dltka said . Dolphins.
merlng
California
46-7.
The
HusThe high ran kings of Nebraska
49ers by one game - and maybe ' 'Then we fall In that second area
NFL types preface all evaluaand,
· to a lesser extent, Virginia kies swltc.hed places with No. 6
(USPS 111-. . )
light years.
somewhere.
tion with "there's a long way to
Dllnols, a 21·3 winner over
A Dlvlllon of M.._tlmedla, 1~.
·.; '
have
been
criticized
by
those
who
"We don't rank with those go but" - yet some have played
Through seven games, the Los
-\,_~
Wisconsin.
say
the
teams
play
In
weak
Published every aftemCQ\, Monday
Angeles Raiders, Buffalo Bills, teams, we're not as good as the . the 6-1 clubs enough to get a
No. 7 Colorado Improved one
coo!erences and did not have a
through Friday. 111 Court' St., Po· "·· ''
Mla!DI Dolphins, and Chicago other two teams. Maybe if we handle . . ,
"
. ·- .1
meroy. Ohto, by the Ohio v aney Pub- • ; •,
place after a 32-.23 triumph over
strong
non-co'nterence
schedul~.
Bears are 6-1. New York and San keep working at It we might be.
llshlng Company / Multlm«&lt;la, Jne.,
•'
"I don't think you can put them
However, both schools face OklahOma, and No. 8 Miami also
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se- • L
Francisco are the teague's only But were not in the same on that level," said New York
cond class postagp paid at PorriProy, , .. '.'
critical tests this week, with New moved up a spot following Its
categocy as the two.
unbeaten teams at 7-0.
Ohio.
··
'.
Jets General Manager Dick
45·10 victory over Texas Tech.
Year's
Day
bowl
bids
on
the·
line.
. "Anybody In the NFC, to go to
' 'There are probably a couple Steinberg of the6·1 teams' merits
No. 9 Brigham Young fell two
Member: United Press International ' ·-...;
the Super Bowl, Is definitely teams In the American Football compared with the Giants and VIctories next Saturday would spots despite a 55·31 victory over
Inland Dally PrE-ss Association and t~ -' '
give
the CavaHers. and Corn·
going to have to make trips Conference that can play with 49ers.
Ohl? Newspaper Association. NatiOnal , , ,
New
Mexico,
and
Tennessee
huskers a defense against
Advertis-Ing Representative, Branham
through these two teams, no them," Dltka said. "Right nowlt
"The Giants clearly have es· detractors.
remained lOth after an idle week:
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
quesUon," said Washington del· looks like Miami Is really going to tabllshed a wide edge and are
New York, New York 10017.
No. 11 Florida State remained
"
I
don't
know
how
these
people
enslve tackle Darcy! Grant, become a good te~m. and Buf· playing very good football . I'm
unchanged,
while
No.
12
Texas
POSTM'As't'ER: Send addreos cllanROS
•
whose team lost to the Giants !ala, and the Raiders are an . not talking about the (49ers') .think, " said Nebras ka Coach
jumped two spots after beating
to The Dally Sentlriel, lU · COun St., '. ' •Tom
Osborne,
who
has
said
Sunday for the second time this outstanding football team. So Team of the 1980s but right now,
Pomeroy, ONo 45769.
··• •·
Arkansas. Iowa remained 13th
season.
there are a few teams that can I'd say the Giants and 49ers are several times this year that the and No. 14 Georgia Tech dropped
SUI!BCRIPTION RATES
That g't.ves the Bears the probably play with them, but pretty close- the best two teams Cornhuskers' weak.schedule was
By Carrier or Mottr Ko•te
two places despite a 48-31 victory
the
result
of
last-mtnute
scram·
toughest mission among the four they look like they're head and in the NFL - 1990."
One Week .. .................... ... ..... .. ... S1.40
over Duke.
bllng caused by opponent cancel·
One Month ... ......... ........ ... ...... .... S&amp;.lO
shoulders above everyone."
- the rest being In the AFC He stressed the va lue of lations. "We just play the best we
No. 15 Mississippi, No. 16
One Year .............. ..... ...... ........ $72.80
although Chicago may be the
The Bears fell apart after four experience for Chicago and Buf· can."
."
Wyoming, No. 17 . Clemson and
SINGLE COPY
best among teams with one loss . straight victories to finish 6-10 I ~ falo among the NFL's second
• 1;
PRICE
No.
18
Michigan
won
to
maintain
The Cavaliers, 7-0, were Idle
Dally ...... .... .. .. .. ... ...... ..... ... .. 25 CPnts ~ 'l~
"The Giants and the 49ers, 1989. Ravaged by Injuries and tier.
Saturday
In preparation for next their positions, while No. 19
Dltka 's sel!-!ulfllllng prophecy
SubscribE-rs not desirtilg to pay the car"Miam i and the Raiders are
week's Atlantic Coast Confer- Arlzon~ and No. 20 Oregon each
rier may remit In advan&lt;"e direct to
that they probably wouldn't wln teams that are just now on the
moved
up
two
places
after
The Dally Sehllnel on a 3, 6or 12 month '-·· '
another game, the. Bears lost come - this is a turnaround for ence showdo·wn against 6-0·1
basis. Credit wUI ~given carrier each
week .
'
their last six .
them . I don't think you can put
The defensive line has re·
them on the same level of teams
No subscriptions by mall permltled In
areas where home carrier gervJce 11
turned to form, bringing back a
who have been go od for a number
avaUable.
SCHAUMBURG . IH. (UPI) feared pass rush , while the
pair of fumbles In the Illinl's 21-3
or years like the Bears. who have
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI) ''
Mall Subecrlptloas
been to a Super Bowl. Buffalo Is Ohio State quarterback Greg win at Wisconsin. He anchored
Larry Bird scored 28 points offensive line Is outstanding
lulde Melp Couaty
Frey
and
llllnols
nose
tackle
Mel
let
Chicago
quarterenough
to
the
defensive
unit
that
allowed
ring-wise.
If
I
had
to
go
to
war
Monday night and Roberi Parish
13 Weeks ......... .. ............. ... ...... . $19.24
right now, I would go with A.gee were named Monday the the Badgers just 15 net. yards
added 23 as the Boston Celtlcs back Jim Harbaugh get by with a
26 Weeks .................. :.... : ... .. .. .. . 137.96
Big Ten players of the week on rushing. Two of his five solo
52 Weeks ....... , ................... ...... . S74.36
Buffalo."
compJe.ted their exhibition sea- control, short-passing game.
Oulslde MeiJI' Cofflaty
offense
and
defense.
The
Bears'
onlv
loss
so
far
was
tackles
were
behlrid
the
line
of
son with a 120-102 victory over th~
13 Weeks ......... .. .. ... .. ................ $20.110
Frey, a senior from Cincinnati, scrimmage and one was a
26 Weeks .......... ..... ,.... .............. $40.30 •
Utah Jazz.
1
52 Weeks ... .......... .. .. .. ............... m.w
1
accounted
for four touchdowns quarterback sack !or mlnus-11
Bird missed the previous two
\
and passed for 257 yards In the yards.
games due to a lower-back
'
Buckeyes' 55-23 win Saturday
strain, The Celtlcs finish the
over Minnesota .·He completed 16
pre-season with a 6-2 record and
•
of 28 attempts with three TD
open the regular season Friday
J'
pas5es
and
scored
another
on
a
with a home game against the
1-yard run . He currently ranks
'•
Cleveland Cavaliers.
13th
nationally
In
pass
efficiency.
Karl Malone totaled 31 points
•
Agee, a 6-foot-4, 285-pound
and 15rebounds to lead the Jazz,
senior from Chicago, recovered a
who complete the pre-season
with a 1·7 mark. Utah files to
James, Matousek
Japan where It will start the
win OAC hono1'8
regular season with a pair of
TOLEDO (UP!) -Ohio North·
games against the Phoenix Suns.
ern running back Brian James
In ttie contest at the Provl·
and John Carroll outside linedence Civic Center, Boston took
backer Rick Matousek were
the lead for good midway
selected theOhloAthletlc Confer·
through the second quarter ,
ence players of the week
using a 10-4 surge to build a 43·38
'
Monday.
advantage. The Celtlcs conJames, a senior from Poland,
nected on 17 of 22 field-goal
Ohio, rushed 16 times for 182
attempts In the second quarter,
Enjoy the flexibility and liquidity of. a CD ,
yards and 4 touchdowns and
for 17 percent shooting, and held
. caught a pass for 14 yards In Ohio
which is autOmatically renewable and redeemable
a 56-46 halftime lead. Parish
Northern's
50-30
·
w
ln
over
Ma·
paced Boston with 21 points and 9
at each 7 day anniversary
rletta. His touchdowns came on
rebounds In the first halt.'
runs of 50, 48, 10 and 5 yards.
• The Celtics led 77-66 late In the
The 7-Day-P remiuin CD
third quarter then use&lt;l a 9-2 run
is
a not~e r example of our
to take an.l8-polnt lead. The Jazz
Commitment To Customers.
I
drew within 92-83 early In . the
' .
fourth quarter but Boston put· the
Call or
your nearest
game away with a 13-3 run.
l"or ,the Jazz, Thurl Bailey had
Central
office for ·details today.
18 points and John Stockton 17.
Utah coach Jerry Sloan was
10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT
•
ejected from the game early In
' '
!
Maximu1t1 deposit 599,999.99.- Subsranriol penalty for ~or~· wirhdrawal
the fourth quarter during an
•
Inlert~t paid tqprlndpat ~ comp'1"nd&lt;d weekly . Rates err.(:u,.. Sept . 21: I910
'"
argument with referee Derek
!
and subJect rn rh:. n~e w1rhnut nurece. Y1eld as5u1ncs rho~! ~ro.rHf ratr r~mains
Staffoi'd.
•
constant for a full year With no wirfldro.w:1lJ tff int tte!ll nr prim:ipal.
••
Boston's Kevin McHale ,._fin·
lshed with 15 points and Kevin
'
Gamble had 14. Parish and Bird
The Bank That .Wakes Thing&amp; Happe.n.
'
l
each grabbed 11 rebounds.
· ATTEMPTi'! SHOT - Karl Malone of &amp;he Utah Jazz, a&amp;templll a
· Bird con~ed on all 23 freeMiddleport
Galllpoli1
tlofe,ber FDIC
ahol
agalDI&amp; Kevin McHale of the Boalon Cel&amp;lca during flnt
throw attempts In the pre·
quarter action In the pre-aeuon game In Providence. (tJPI)
season.
an~

Giants, 49ers · have.perfect
records after .seVen weeks

.....

.

Spectrum ·care, the Columbus
Medical Bureau, Klnko printers,
the Ohio governor's office and
the Ohio Psychological Association all deserve our gratitude.
The USA-GIVE service Is to
remain In operation untO 30 days
after the last American hostage
In Iraq or Kuwait returns borne.
If you need more Information
on this service, or on any state
Issue, don't hesitate to contact
my office either by writing me,
State Sen. Jan Michael Long,
Statehouse, · Columbus, Ohio
43215, or by call1ng me at (614)
466-8156.

..

-.

c=Aelti~s ()C)llll&lt;l

Frey, Agee Big I 0

Jarz, 120-102

Robert Walters
size of the loans It was willing to
make to those seeking financing
In conjunction with the purchase
of previously repossessed
farmland.
After more than a year of
protesting, cajoling and bargain·
lng, LSP convinced the Insurance
company to slash that minimum
to $100,000 - a manageable
amount for Individual farmers.

..

Today in history

hono~ees

.

By United l'resa International
Today Is Tuesday, Oct. 30, the 303rd day of 1990 with 62 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its !ull phase.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercucy and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio: They Include
John Adams, second president of the United States, In 1735; French
Impressionist painter Alfred Sisley In 1839; French poet Paul Valery
In 1871; poet Ezra Pound In 1885; strongman Charles Atlas In 1894·
actress Ruth Gordon In 1896; film director Louis Malle In 1932 (ag~
58); rock singer Grace SUck In 1939 (age 51) and actor-director Henry
Winkler In 1945 (agP 45) .
·
On this date In hlstocy:
·
·
In 1817, SlmQn BoUvar established the Independent government of
Venezuela.
In 1938, Orson Welles triggered a ·national panic with a realistic
radio dramatization of a Martian Invasion, based on H.G. Wells'
"War of the Worlds.' '
·In 1941, more than a month befor&amp;'the United States entered World
War II. an American destroyer, the Reuben James, was torpedoed
and sunk by a German submarine.
In 1975, as dictator Francisco Franco Jay near death Prince Juan
Carlos assumed power In Spain.
·
'
In 1983, the Rev. Jesse Jackson announced plana to become the tint
black to mount a !ull·scale campaign for the Democratic presidential
nomination.
·

- .~

Virginia, Nebraska await big tests

Insurance firms own many fanns
KIMBALL, Neb. (NEA) -The
owners of much of the farmland
here In Nebraska - and elsewhere throughout the Midwestare neither those who work the
soli nor local banks. They're
companies .named Aetna, Eqult·
able, Metropolitan, Prudential
and Travelers.
If those names are familiar to
city dwellers as well as rural
residents, It's because they be·
long to some of the nation's
largest diversified Insurance
companies. During the last de- cade, they also emerged as
leading agricultural landlords.
Precise ownership figures are
difficult to obtain because the
Insurance firms often are secretive about their holdings. But
th~y are believed to own 1ll to 30
percent of the farmland In the
two-county area where wheat
and pinto beans are the 'principal
Cf!lps.
Much o! the mortgage flnanclnll for agricultural land comes
from the Farm Credit System
and Its Production Credit Association, seml-autonomowi' ·agencies established by the· federal
government. Commercial banks
In rural communities are relatively minor participants In the
process.
"Most of our lending Ia for
farm operatlonns· - crop loans
and Implement financing," explains an officer of the American
Hatlonal Bank here In Kimball.
"We mlllht alao get lnvo!Yed.U a
farmer II buying a (160 acre)
quarter or something like that.
But we don't have the capacity to
finance entire (640 acre)
HCtloDI."
By the late· 19801, Insurance
companies ·owned more than 5

...... - .

,•

families._~~-se_n._Ja_nL_o___;_ng

clinical psychologist. She
hostage family members. Those
founded the network last month
emotions are expressed differwith the aid of two Columbus
ently In children and adults.
colleagues, William Benninger
For example, children often
and Karl Bachman.
have difficulty concentrating In
The service proved to be school, develop behavioral probpopular almost Instantly, with lems or express usuaual concern
six families using the S!!rvlces of for the parent not being held.
USA-GIVE In the first seven days Adults, Kern said, may expeof · the hotllne. It has received rience "rage without a focus"
national attention, with an artl· because there Is nol time to
· cl4i In the "Washington Post."
prepare for the loved one's
Kern said she developed the sudden, !&lt;:&gt;reed departure.
system because the need was · This Is a great public spirited
there. Families of hostages natu· service, an effort worthy of
rally feel pent up anger and praise as . well as publicity. Dr.
aiiXIety as they await new~ about Kern and others Involved-In this
effort, psychologists, U.S. SI&gt;rlnt,

.~

•'

Soviets send strong message __·_Jac_k_A_nd_er_so_n_
WASHINGTON Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbache.v Ms
threatened Saddam Hussein,
SJIYing that I! he doesn't pull out
of Kuwait, he will be looking
down the barrels of Soviet guns. /
High-level U.S. · Intelligence
sources told us that Gorbachev's
secret ultimatum was delivered
by a special envoy Ye.vgeily
Prlmako.v on Oct. 5, when he:met
wlt}l Saddam In a visit billed as a
discussion about Soviet citizens
trapped In Iraq .
Prlmakov, 61, Is a confidant of
Gorbachev's and an economist.
He held a press conference after
the meeting with Saddam and
reported, "I am not pessimistic ·
any longer toward the prospects
of a political solution for the
crisis."
.
What he didn't reveal was why
he was no longer pessimistic. He
had threatened Saddam With
Soviet military might, and Saddam was visibly surprised.
Knowledgeable U.S. officials
with access to highly classified ·
Intelligence reports say that
Prlmakov Issued Saddam an

...

Pittsburgh rips Rams 41-10 _;
..
as Steelers improve to ·44

TlHIIday, October 30, 1890

'
A thoughtfor the day: Ezra Pound wrote In his "ABC of Reading": ·
.
"Literature Is news that stays news."

-~

;T;u;e;•d;ay;·;Oa;;:ob;~::30::·:19=9=0============~~~~~~~~_:Po~m~~~oy~~M~i~~~~~rt~.~O~h~~~---------·--------~--------~lh~e~D~a~ily~Se~m~i~na~!P~ag~-~~3~· ~

Pege-2;....The Deily Sealiudl
Pomeroy-Midclepowt, Ohio

The budget summit
flop may do some good ·
ByABNOLDSA~SLAK

... ...

!

Trust

---2j
I

'
,J

'

"I

visit

s

t

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPAN"Y
992-8881
448-0902

,

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J

�•

Pega 4 The Daily SantiiMII

Tuaaday. October 30, 1990

Porneroy-Midcleport. Ohio

Meigs fall athletes honored
lmbodcn, Alny Searles, Missy
crown in the schools histtYy and is Jodi
NeUIZling,
and Magan Bll'lds; varSeatiDel Dl!'lll lllllf
ranted 1Sih in the State.
sity:
Abby
Blake, KeUy Doidge,
The anmal Meigs Higb School . Thalli members jntmd•red were Krislen Slawter. Darci Wolfe,
Fall Spons btquet sponsored by Jodi Tdlis, Thra Humphreys, Amy L!M'ena Oiler, Ronnea Davis,
the Meigs Local Board or Educa- W~~f.~C!:. Kim Hanning, KeUy Michelle Young, and Michelle
tion held Monday nigbt 81 S101th, Tricia Baer, Jenni£er Taylor, Whiltingtorll'
.
Me. High School
and Clrissy Weaver. All-TVC first
·
Coach
Mike
Staggs
and assislant
of Ceremonies ror the team awards· went .to Jennifer · coaches Bill R~ and Daryl Owens
evenilg was athletic director and Taylor, Amy Wagner and Kell' introduced members or the reserve
assistant princi{lle Gordon Fisher. Smith. Smith was named the Tri- rootball team, Pli!yers inll'Oduced
· Followina the mvoc:ation by Rev. Valley Conferences Most Valuable were Eric Wagner, Mall Cndock,
James Wdon, die M~Cbes intro- Player. Fisher also presented Ash Bryan I;loffman, Scou Peterson,
duced players from 'their respective with the TVC coach or the year Tom C~eans, Shawn Cremeans,
awanl.
teams.
Jim Oliphant, cross country Ronnie Diles. Kevin Lamben, Matt
John Krawsczyn introduced
Toily ~~~. Chad Dl!ncan.
members or the 1990 Tri-Valley coach and assiStMI coach Mike Clark,
David
Rees,
Kevm whobrey, Scott
Confereace c=non golf team. Kennedy, presented awards to the Gardner. Jake Kennedy, Jeff Tracy,
·Golfers inlrod
included Jney cross country teamS. The girls team
Dowen. and Jason DeUavaUe.
Little, Phil HoYIIIer, Jay Harris, 6nished third in the TVC, and fifth JeffCoach
Staggs and assistant
Tim Pctmon, Mike VanMerer, and in the distticL The boys . team coaches Bob
Wesry and Joe
Jason Han. The golf team finished 6nished with a 73-22 record and Johnson inlroduced
members or the
the year with a61-13 reccid.
Placed second in the TVC and fifth varsity football .team which went 5AU-TVC performers were Jay mthe dislrict.
Members or the p-ts were Missy 5 overall and 5-3 in the conrerence.
Harris, Phil Hovaaer and Jamey
Players inlroduced were Mike ..
Little. Liule presented the Nelson, Rcsa Harris, Tara Gerlach, Welsh, Jeremy · Phlilin, · Steve
Parker Long-Rodd . Harrison Aprol Hudson, Nina Overhagebach,
Memorial • Goff Award for the Katrina Thrner. Missy Sisson. and Caruthers, Frank Blake, Robby
team's most Valuable golfer.
Elill!beth Downey. AII-TVC Wyau, BiD Harless. Eric Heck,
Musser, Terry McGuire,
Reserve golfers introduced were awards went to Elizabeth Downey Kevin
Mall
Haynes,
Joe McElroy, Steve
John Benlley.Jay Cremeans, Chris second team and first team Missy
Swatzell,
Mike
Cremeans, Heath
Knigbt, Scott WhiiJalch, Adam Nelson, her third year as a member
Hudson,
Aaron
Sheets,
Dave Lesof the lirsueam.
Little and Adam Krawsczyn.
ter,
Jeremy
Rupe,
Mike
Call,
Boys cross country members inReserve coach Dale Harrsion inDanny
Lewis,
Burt
Ken~,
ll'Oduced members of his volleyball lroduced were Ryan Lemley,
team. 'This ~·s team was 19-1 Jeremy Heck, Chris Slcan, Phil Chuch Mash, Mike Mayer, Curus
and capwred the Tri-Valley Con- Smith, PJ . Chadwell, Nathan Dalton, BiD Anderson, Shawn
ference reserve championship for Baloy, Bobby Johnson and Mike Hawley, Geoff Cogar and Richanl
Stewart.
the thin1 Year in a row. The team 81 HaD.
First team All-TVC members in·
one point in the season l!eld. a 35
All-TVC awards went 10 P. J.
uoduced
were Frank Blake (second
game winning streak- In the last ChadweU first team, Nathan Baloy ·
year),
Geoff
Cogar, .arid Burt Jf..c;Jthree years the team has sported a and Bobby Johnson second leaqi.
nedy.
Kennedy's
!illher, Perry, was
58-6 record. .
· The most improved runner award
the
SEOAL
mOSt
valuable player in
Team members introduced were we111 to Ouis Sloan, and a special
1967
as
a
member
of the first
Chrissy Weaver, Ginger Holcomb, team award was presented 10
Marauder team. Honorable
Lee Henderson, Sarah Pullins, f~ ~change sllldent Nina Meigs
mention
honors went 10 Aaron
Nikki Meier; Yevette Young, Carrie Overllagebaeh ..
Sheets
and
Shawn Hawley.
Kathy Doidge, cheerleader adBartels, Anna Chapman and Misty
Gordon
Fisher
inlroduced memvisor, inttoduced members or the
Burcher.
bers
of
the
AII-TVC
Academic
The Tri-Valley Conrerence cheerleading squads. Freshmen: team i.n foolbaU. They were:
Aaron
champion volleyball team was in- Oanielle Crow, DanieUe Gray, Sheets (4.0); Eric Heck (3.509);
troduced by Head Coach Rick Ash. Tracy Fafe, Cassie Howard, Marlo .
Blake (4.0); Robby Wyatt
The team finished with a 21-1 White and Dawn Hockman; Frank
(4.0);
and
Joe McElroy (3.955);
record and the first conrerence reserve: Kyla Sellers, Mary Stein,
cheerleaders: Kristen Slawter (4.0);
Dan:i Wolfe (3.828); cross country:
Missy Nelson (3.93); Thra Gerlach
(3.92); and ·voUeyball: Jennifc:
Taylor (4.0); Amy Wagner (3.895);
Tncia Baer (3.689); and Chrissy
Weaver (3.918). To gain a spot on
CHICAGO (UPI) -At the 1989 say I don't care about tomorrow. the team the lllhlete must be at least
a sophomore and maintain a 3.5
Let's win today."
All·Star break, Jeff Torborg's
Torborg's positive feeling go- grade point average.
Chicago White Sox had already
Rev. Seddon closed the evening
lost 56 games and were 20 12 Ing Into the '90 season was.
games out of the American · reinforced with the While Sox' with the bendiclion.
Opening Day 2-1 victory over
League West race.
That's when the makeover Milwaukee on April 9.
"We won the game using the
began for lhe team that chalSTATE AUTO
whole
bullpen, the kid (Scott
lenged the Oakland Athletics for
got
In,
Me
lido
(Perez)
Radinsky)
the AL West title this season.
OFFERS
That turnaround earned Torborg did a goodjob-westartedon the ·
t.Jnited Press Internallonal's right track," Torborg said. ' 1
SOMETHING
American League Manager of thought 'Here's a club that was
deep In last place last year, then
the Year announced Monday.
SPECIAL
"You can't re&amp;~lly call It a to be surrounded by all the hoopla
dream season when . you don't (regarding Comiskey Park's fl.
win," Torborg said, "butlt was a nal season) and sllll win, that's
really something. •
special year."
It's the SERIES ONE
. "(Coach) Joe Nossek kept
Torborg ran away with the
business Polley...
award, claiming l8 ofthe22votes saylne 'Ifeel magic in ChiCago." • packaged protection for
The White Sox manager sa·
cast by UPI baseball correspond·
retail stores, offices,
vored
the mystical season, the
ents. Tony La Russa of Oakland
churches,
apartments,
collected three votes and Joe last at 80· year-old Comiskey
drug.stores. Simplified
Morgan of Boston one.
Park. He kept the lineup cards
In content, convenient
The White Sox were In Kansas trom each win, writing dowll whO
In format and very
City on July 6; 1989. about to homered, who· was the winning
begin a three-game series before pitcher. who got the save, or hOw
affordable_
the break, and Torborg, then In the game was won. Torborg said
his first season as the ~lcago he sllll shuffles through them,
ROGAN
manager, held a one-hour, back· reminisCing.
RR2.G.!~ER
The year ended In Boston with
to-fundamentals workout. He
even brought pizzas for the makeup games Oct. 1·3 and
players. It was 100 degrees In Torborg said he found himself
Kansas City that day, a day looking around the. White Sox
214 EAST MAIN ST.
Torborg said showed him the clubhouse at lhe young faces,
POMEROY
' character of his ballclub.
none of. whom had played base992-6687
Despite the team's record and ball that late in the season before.
the unbearable heat, the players First baseman Frank Thomas
conllnued to practice on their was in the Instructional league in
own nearly three hours lifter the the fall ' of '89, while Radinsky
scheduled workout ended.
was en route to his California
''That said something about home and pileher Alex Fernan·
the character of this team," . dez was sllll in college that year.
Torborg said. "they never give
up."
It also said something a bout
Torborg.
"I told the coaches, 'Let's go
one game ata lime. What we can
do II siart the second half as a
new season,"' he said. "The
standings didn't mean anything
to us. Wegotofftoagreatstartand 1 kept harplne on thein that
· that's the way we should play."
. Aod from ·the second half otthe
'89 season throueh this past
. campalp, the White Sox played
well. Very well. They threatened
•Referee hearins ca- In
the defending World Series
the Athens County Com•
champion Oakland ·Athletics In
mon Pleu Court
tbe American League West,
•Aetlns
Judp In the VInfinishing 94-611, the White Sox'.
ton
County
Court
bes 1 record since 1983 when they
•VInton County Aselstanl
won 99 games and fhe.dlvilion.
TorboJ'I' 1 phU010phy was simPaoueullns Attorney ·
.• '
••
ple. The White Sox, the youneest
•Chief PI'OIIeeutor for the
team in the majors, won 94
City of Athen1
games b)' dOinf the little tblllp,
experlenee
.COUrtroom
Bunt1n1, . hil-and- run, speed,
hoth In a judlelal role •• a
solid defellae' and a bullpen
trial
attomey
anchored by 57-game saVIor
'
•
Bobby Th~Gen.
TcirboJ'I, •· repeated cllcbes
'''
•
and they worked: stay foeuled,
'•
take II olle game at a Ume.
VOTE
FOR:
Ellhty-three of the White Sox'
pmea were decided by leu than
INTEGRI'n' • FAIRNESS • IMPARTIAUTY
two runa. Torborg aald bls
•'
stomach ta just now 1 tardng. to
•
•
aetlledown.
'1 kept telling Sammy (Ellis,
•'
pitching coach I that we're I(Oing
•I'
to play each alabt llkell'athelut
game ·of the World Series,"
•I •
Torbol'l said. "He'd (EIIIal AY
, ...... . .., ... MeteD Judll CIJLII~ N. RIIMrt . . . . , ........
pWhat about the bullpen?' and I'd
,01 N. • ,..; - - · OHio HH,

BY SCOIT WOLFE

=

•

: ALL-TVC FOOTBALL • Memben of the

1990 All·TVC football team From Jel't to right

!Iff: Shawu Hawley (bon. men.); Frank Blak'e

.

(lsi team); Second Row: Aaron Sheets (bon
men.); Burt Kennedy (1st team) and Geoff
Cogar (1st team).

.

Torborg named UPI
manager of the year

'·\
: ALL-TVC VOLLEYBALL • Members of the
1990 All·TVC volleyball team were From left to
right: Jennifer Taylor, 1st team; Kelly Smith, lsi
•
•

team and most
ner 1st team.

~aluable

'player; and Amy Wag-

••

.

.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Forest Run·· Church
has·.75th.anniversary
The 7~th anniversary of the ·
Forest Run United Methodist
Church was celebrated on Oct. 7.
. Being World Communion Sunday,
canmunion was given to the congregalion by Rev. Wesley Thatcher.
Rededication of the newly res·
tored pews and pulpit rumiture was
made by Rev. Franlc Rowe, district
superintendent of the Athens Dis·
ttict, United Methodist Churches.
After a carry-in dinner at noon,
attended by approximately 150
people, there was an afternoon
prograril. Featured were song by
the Jenkins family,the children, the
church . choir, Carrie Pugh, the
United Methodist Men. John Lisle
and RoseAnn Jenkins. Rev. "'en,..,
dell Stutler, the Jenkins and Hauber
Quartet and Roy Jenkins and Rick
Hauber duel.
.
Leah Nease, age 95, the only·
continuously active living member
of the church was given a special
ttibute.
A brier history of the founding of
the church was given by Edith Sis-

Wendeli Stutler, Athens; Rev.
Richard Jarvis, Lancaster; Rev.
Harvey Koch, Ketiering; and Rev.
Kandy Burch, Dayton.
Sunday school teachers and
church officers were introduced by
Lay leader Dan Nease.
Riclc Hauber gave a brief oulline
of the present activities and futllre
goalsofthechurch.
o
As a memen10 or the imniversary, a booldet about the history or
~church was.J!repared by .the an·
mversary committee and grven 10
those au.ending.
FoUowing the program, birthday
cake and punch were SCI'Yed in the
church social rooms.
0u r
ttendin .
t o county guests a
1g m
addilion 10 those named were Bertha Baily Arnold, Stewart; Jennifer,
Megan and Laura Harrison,
Cheshire'; , Mr. and Mrs. Hiram
(Yvonne Roush) Richardson, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom (Rachel Roush)
Gorman, Angela and Gregory
Bahen; Hazel Wynkoop, Fay DeWees, Mr. and Mrs. Walter (Barson.
bara Roush) Goodrich, and Virginia
Given special ·reeogn· ilion were ' Deavers, all of the Columbus area; ·
those baptised on June 14, 1915, . Mr. and Mrs. RusseU (Connie Will·
the day the cornerstone was laid,
ner) Saunders, Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Altona Baily Marshall. Helen
Houdashelt, Beverlee Houdashelt,
Grueser Maag, Elmer Grueser, and Lee Ann Nease Smith anti Joshua,
Mary Baer Grueser. Also recogGallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Walter
nized were the first confirmation
(Lela Grueser) Ervin, Mr. and Mrs.
classes, descendants of the
Herbert (Margaret Nease) Davis.
founders o£ the church and those
Athens; Irene Grueser Shone, Whitmarried in the church.
tier, Calif.; Jill Warner Pugb and
Past mini~ters atiendinR and
D!:Ua and Carrie, Mr. and Mrs.
speaking bnefly were the Rev.
Rick Knight. Scotl Depot. W.Va.

Tuesday, oCtober 30. 1990
Pega &amp;

Glmmunity qtlendar
Community Calendar items appear two days heron: an event. and
the day or thai event. Items must be
received in advance to insure publication in the calendar.
TUESDAY
RACINE Rae' Viii
Tri k '
me 6age c7
or lieat on Thesday from p.m. -

home of Mrs. Wendell Hoover.
Mrs. James Diehl will review
"Faily Tale~ of the OrienL" RoD
call will be "a favorite fairy tale.•
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
Junior High Academic Boosters
P·~·ASHAN _ Bashan-Keno Trick Association will meet Wednesday
or Treat on Tuesday from 6 p.m.• at 7 p.m. 81 the junior higb school
7 30
in Middleport
: p.m.
LONG BOTIOM -A "hallelujah
ters?~~~~ofl'~ pany" will be held 81 the Mt. Olive
Local ' SchoOls obsene Parent Ob- Community Church on Wednesday
servalion Day on Tuesday. Chapler at 7 p.m. Singers include the Joy
1 ~ms invited to au.end classes Singers and The Dailey Family.
Wlth their children. Call school for Refreshments will be served and
·nr ·u·
the public is invited 10 attend. Pas1
~OY _The monlhly mee1- .·. tor Lawren&lt;:e Bush invites the
· c ty L'"- public.
1·ng or the Mergs
oun
.....
CHESTER - The Wildwood
Control Advisory Board will be Garden
Club will meet Wednesday
held Tuesda 81 7 30 .tn All
members are~ a~. p .
at 7:30 p.m. at the home or Evelyn
POMEROY
Americare- HoUon. Dress for llalloween.
Pomeroy will host a safe trick-ortreat party for children or all ages
THURSDAY
on Tuesday rrom 7-8 - p.m. Free
TIJPPERS PLAINS • The Tupbags will be provided 81 the door
and prizes will be awarded. The pers P.lains VFW Post 9053
Auxiliary wiD meet Thursday at
public is invited.
.
MIDDLEPORT _ Trick-or-treat 7:30 p.m. The district 12 president
in Middlepon will be held from 6-7 wiD be a guesL A potluck wiD be
held.
p.m. on Tuesday.
POMEROY • Orders for the
SYRACUSE - Trick-or-treat in
Syracuse will be held from 6-7 p.m. 1991 Meigs Marauder year book
will be taken at the high school on
on Thesday.
EAST MEIGS - Trick-or-treat in Thursday and Friday. Cost is $20
Chester, Tuppers Plains and and engraving is an ad\litional 52.
Reedsville wiD be held Tuesday Plastic covers are $1.
RACINE - The Racine American
from 6-7 p.m. The siren will sound
Legion
Post 602 will meet
to stop and start.
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Rerresh- .
WEDNESDAY
·
POMEROY - The Meigs Soil menu will be served.
POMEROY - The Salisbury
and Water Consei'Yation DisDict
Township
Trustees will meet
8
Thursday 81 the home or the clerk,
Sarah . Gibbs, Ball Run Road,
Pomeroy. The public is invited.
LOTIRIDGE - The Lotttidge
2
Community Center wiD meet
Group 11 or the Presbyterian Thursday at 7 p.m. A pOIIuck din·
Ch11th of Middleport mel recenlly ner wiD be held at 6 p.m. The
at the home of Velma Rue.
public is invited.
Betsy Hurty gave the opening
RU1LAND - The Rolland
prayer. The secretary's report was Township Trustees will meet
given by Elizabeth Burkett for May Thursday 81 6:30 p.m. at the Rutand September. The treasurer's land Fire Slalion. The 'public is in-

Napper bridal shower .held ~~~t~~J ~=:u!
Becky Napper, bride-elect of
Bobby Foster, was honored
recently with a bridal shower.
Cake, punch, chips, nuts and
mints were SCI'Yed.
Attending were Bobby Foster,
Linda and Missy Foster, Lena, .
·Beverly and Roberta Napper, Helen
Blackston, Norma Baker, Elsie
Folmer. Helen Partlow. Suzanne
Richmond, Bonnie Miller, Frank
and Evelyn Leach, . Betty Dill,
Sbart!n, Folmer, Michele Showaltqr,
Clllhy ·Scarberry; Roberta Dill,
Beula Grate, Vicki and Hollie Fer- .·
rell, Darlene See and Kenda Kloes.
Sending girts were Nora Jordan,
Rose Patterson, Lisa Darst, Greg
Cunningham, Violet HyseU, Agnes

Holiday bazaar
The 1990 Holiday Art Bazaar
will be held Saturday from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. at the Shoemaker Center
on the Ohio University-Chillicothe
Campus.
Over 65 artists and craftsmen
will be reai\Ued.
Admission is Sl and a door prize
wiD be awarded at4 p.m.
Refreshments and rood will be
available.

~~:

Dixon, Dorothy Jeffers, Bob and
Judy Miller, Steve, Julie and Emily
Stanley, Roger, Lenora, Dorothy
· and Michael Leirheit, Frances
Goeglein, Wendell, Thelma and
John Jeffers, John, Gloria, Aaron
and Tamara Grate, Bertha Foster,
Nina Cumings. Helene and Avery
Goeglein; Bertie Koehler, Anna
Frank, Wather and Katherine
Evans, Esther DiU, Dennis and Pam
,The group agreed 10 go to the
Wolfe, Bill and Louise Radford,
legiol)
hall ..in Mi!ld\CP!Xt Jor, its .
;Rollin and .Nancy Radfqrd, and"
dinner
on
Nov. 20 and then return
Cliff and Mildred Jacobs.
to the church for boolt study.
·
me~ for the Least Coin
land a l/ reStiVfll,
~
· ,_/ wasThegiven
by Kalhryn Brown, "Me,
ut, . ,
Tell
Me
About
Jesus."
plan"""d
C'at
-.1 _
Betsy
Horky
read an article from
,..,, . Or "'
Ideals, "Slow Down Oclober." She
. The Rullaod PTO is sponsor- also rend fiom A Guide to More
Your
Lire,
ing a fall restivaJ on Satur.day from Spirituality in
6-8 p.m. Special entertainment will :•spiriiUality in Aclion."
be provided by the "Monster Mash
The )look study was by Kathryn
Miller entitled 'The Two Ways."
Band" from 6-6:30 p.m.
A spaghetti dinner w.as anAdmission is free and the
kitchen wiD serve beans, cornbread, nounced for Sunday and the Halcoleslaw, hot dogs, and sloppy jces. loween party is 10 be held 81 the
There will bC 11ames, face paint- Middleport Churc~ on Thursday,
The meeting closed with prayer
ing, hair decora1111g, country store,
and
a dessert cour:se was served by ·
bakery, doorprizes and cakewallcs.
the hostess, Velma Rue.
The public is invited.

Group

team ALL-TVC) and Jamey Little (1st team AU·
TVC and Parker Long-Rodd Harrison
Memorial Golf Award).

"'•

EXPERIENCED!

t

second row: 'hr11 Ger~ (All-Aeademk)· Ryla
Lemley (senior); Natbaa Baloy (second team ,u.
TVC); PJ; Cblchrell (lint team AJI.TVC);
Bobby Jolmloa (seeold team All-TVC); IIIII
¥na Overbagebacb (apeclal team award).

X· -.PETER B. ABELE

'

&amp;

Emy Olivare~·Orteza, M.D.
announce the opening of their
· practice in

General Pediatrics
and

Adolescent Medicine
at
2907 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, West Virginia

Seeing patients

9 .a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
For appointments call

(804) 675-4107

171.1 PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

. . . . Tire lomily of prolessiona&amp;

.

V*t Driw, Painl Pleuan~

wv 25550 (3041 •~

~rtwasgivenbyKathrynMiU~ ;:·ted~··. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~::::::::::::::~~~~==~~========:::

R

ATTENTION VOTERS·

R

fi

U7uaJ

BIG
HALLOWEEN

SAVINGS AT
YOUR 3 AREA
FRUTH

WE SUPPORT THE CARLETON .SCHOOL/MEIGS IN·
DUSTRIES LEVY TO FUND PROGRAMS FOR PEOPLE
WHO HAVE MENTAL RETARDATION AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES.
THESE ·PROGRAMS MEET OR EXCEED .ALL STATE AND
·NATIONAL . STANDARDS FOR SERVICES TO PEOPLE
WHO HAVE THESE HANDICAPPING CONDITIONS. .
YOUR VOTE YES .WILL MAKE UP THE $250,000
SHORTFALL IN THE 1991 BUDGET PROJECTED TO MEET
. THE SERVICE NEEDS OF MEIGS COUNTY CHILDREN AND
ADULTS WHO HAVE MR/DD. YOUR VOtE YES WILL
STOP THE BOARD ·Of MR/DD FROM MAKING THE
CHOICES OF THE LAY OFF OF.UP TO 1S OR MORE EMPLOYEES OR, CLOSING THE ENTIRE AGENCY FOR UP TO
FOUR MONTHS AYEAR. YOUR VOTE YES WILL ALSO
. KEEP $250,000 FROM LEAVING THE MEIGS COUNTY
'·
ECONOMY.
THE AVERAGE ' HOME OWNER IN THE COUNTY
WILL ONLY PAY $21.00 PER YEAR OR JUST .06
CENTS ADAY. WE ARE' NOT ASKING YOU TO VOTE FOR
HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS IN PROPERTY TAXES.
WE ARE ASKING YOU TO VOTE YES TO QUALITY SER;.
VICES FOR QUALITY PEOPLE.

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SAVE ON .ALL

HALLOWEEN

•COSTUMES •DECORATIONS
PRICES DRASTICALLY REDUCED
: WED., OCT. 31,-:- 9 AM·9 PM

'

. T·HANKS FOR YOUR SUPPORT,
THE CARLETON SCHOOL/MEIGS INDUSTRIES LEVY
COMMinEE
DOUGW umE, CHAIRPERSON . SHARON CARD, tREASURER
NORA RICE • DENVER RICE • GRACE WEBER • LEESA UPIIY

Judge, Court of Appeals

:CROSS COUNTRY AWARD WINNERS •
c$11 CIIIIDtry award.wluen at die Mlnlldtr
...... blllq.et were: Ellr.aHib Doney (seeond
AIJ.TVC); ~1 Ne'- (lint team AU·
TtC); 81111 Reaa H,rs (IIDior). Pichred In the

E. Neal Orteza, M.D.

meets

~-.

"•TOP GOLFERS • Golf award winners introdleed were: Mike VanMeter (senior), Phil
a.,vatter (1st team AU·TVC), Jay Harris (1st
•

MIDDLEPORI' - The Mid·

dlepon Lit.eraty Club 'wiD meet
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. 81 the

~~~!~~~ee?~o~~?oafl~ ~

wiD be staged Wednesday nrght ror 1!Je youngsterS and there will.be
from 610 10 p.m. at the Middleport a .w1ener .roast ·Cider and donUts
Marina under the joint sponsorship . ~ . also ~ served. All or die ac- .
of ~iddleport Village and Feeney- uv1ues w1ll be held on .the ftal
Bennett Post 128 American · grassy area above the marma partLegion, and its Auxil~.
ing lot.
.
.
.
Frremen and VI.Ua~e police.~
A feawre or the party will be
haunted hayrides through "Sleepy be on ~ 10 assrst m supemsmg
Hollow" where a dozen scary ac- the acUYIU~.
.
.
lion sceaes have been created.
The hayrides are lalcing place m
Those atlending will be ~ven a the wooded .area adjacen.t 10 the
ticket as they enter the manna area marma parking lot whiCh was
for the hayrides.
recen.lly purchased by the village. A
Costumes wiD be judged in wmding roadway .has been creatt:d
several categories in age groups through the woods. Bob Gilmore IS
with prizes being awarded to the general chairman of the community
'
party.

2111 .. 1 ld"""-"

164 h-1- ""

PPI Polltfo81 Ad by Sharon C1rd, r,....,,.,
1310 C1rteton Streit. Syracue1. OHio 41'771

~.., ..... - 104-671-1101

614-446-..lt
Ill. G7.. - 614-tti,Mtl

OIL G611 -

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6-The Daily Sentinel

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·~

The , Soulhem Junior High
football team and cheerleaders
1 ftlCently enjoyed an end-of-theseason party at D &amp; M Pizza in
Syracuse.
Advisors and coaches attending
, ~ were ~omaine Frederick, JU3J!ira
• ;; Fn:denck, C.T. Chapman and wife,
: :· Tarnr~:~y and children, Rachel and
~ ;, Ryali; Jeny Wolfe and wife, Dixie,
; -.;; DOnald Shaffer, Debbie Offenber·
~-..Jer, Debbie and Marty Morarity
~ daughler, Britrany, Bill and
t"l'hyllis Edwards and son, Mike and
~ .Hank Oeland.
' . Cheerleaders atlending were Jes· : sika Codner, Kendra Noms, Traci

~

•

Working mothers need support,
help of those -~taying at home·

.

Pick.en, Brandy Roush, Sherri
Frederick, Erica Dugan. Sammi
Sisson, Jennifer Lawrence, Jessica
Chapman, Rochelle Jenk.ins, Jyl. ·
Mathews, and Chanda Mulford.
Team members attending w~n:
Cass Clelan\1, Scou Hubbard,
Adam Triplett, Travis Mugrage,
Jeremy Hill, Donald Shaffer, Chris
Brown, Steve Edwards, Craig
Knight~ Jimmy Randolph Chris
Hendricks, Eddie Friend, Grant
Circle, Luke Holman, BJ. Ervin,
Jamie Rizer, Justin Hill, Richie
Wamsley, Kevin Porrer,, Scott
Grace, Jeff Rose, Chris Proffitt .and
Jamey Nelson.
· '·

i ,.Star·grange meets

·s~per-moms."

KENNETH c, PAYNE

Kevin Payne and Lori Frye,
Harrison'(ille, are amouncing lhe
birth of their first child a son, Kennelh Charles Payne, on June 14 at
tiolzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed nine pounds
five ounces and was 22 inches long.

Wimers from lhe Halloween potluck supper was enjoyed by all
featuring . chicken prepared by
' party held recently at Srar Grange
• ·Wen: as follows; ages 0-7, scariest, Everette Holcomb on the wood
i !ric Monlgomery; prettiest, Chel- cooker.
Games were enjoyed by lhe
L. ;)ea Montgomery; most original,
Whitney Ashley; funniest, Ashley
children following lhe meal includryColwell; ugliest, Dustin Erlewine; ing donut eating, bubble blowing,
•! e"urest. Jennie Bolen and Emily Simon Says, beach ball game and
~ ~A$ley, best turtles, Mike Macompin the srem on lhe pumpkin.
' ber and Devin Erlewine: ages 8-16,
Olhers attending were Dorplhy
• si:ariest, Lee Bolen; prettiest,
Bolen, Patty Diamond, Kenny
; Rachel Ashley; most original Bryan
Bolen, Charlotte Erlewine, Ann
; Colwell; funniest; Melissa ErHalliday, Geraldine Reed, Pauline
' lewine; best turtle, Chip Macom- Rife, Christine Napier, Freda
Officers were elecled at lhe
:, ber; most original Scouy Colwell
Smilh, Woodrow Wilcox, Kenneth Octobei- meeting of lhe Meigs
and Ginger Holcomb.
Wilcox, Binda Diehl, Rick . Genealogical Society held at lhe
•· · . In the adult women's division, Macomber, Jan Macomber. Sracey Meigs·Museum.
~ prettiest, Emma Asbley; most
Macomber, Ryan Watson, Lany
Officers are Mike Trowbrid~e,
~ original, Pam Bentz; and prettiest ' Montgomery, Ray and Bernice
· president; Lloyd Blackwooll, vtee
• ·•wirch, Linda Montgomery. In lhe Midkiff, Maxine Dyer, Opal Dyer, president; Sue Hager, recording
· -aault men's division, lone ranger, Patty Dyer, Virginia Carson, John secretary; Karen · Werry, cor,._Alan Halliday and most original, Colwell, Neva Nicholson, John responding secrelary; and Margaret
Keith Ashley.
Holliday, and Ralph Macomber.
Parker, ueasurer.
· Following lhe costume judging a
The group announced two additional township eemetety books
would soon be available through
,
lhe copying of Christine Fruth and

Genealogical
group };as meeting

~ ·IALeche leader attends

seventl others. These townshi~ are

seminars

Chester and Olive.
A discussion was held on future
program malerials and workshoJ,lS
for individuals getting started m
basic genealogy. A1sci a program
will be held on where to locale
needed items in the court house.
The next meeting will be helcl
Nov. 18 at 2 p.m. at lhe Meigs
Musuem. The public is invited to
anend.
The door prize was won by
Joyce Davis.

· ~ .E'

rai.ne Matheny, La
Leche
which
encourage
successful
.
, • League Leader in Point Pleasant, breastfeeding.
~ •:W.Va., recently attended two semiMrs. Matheny, along wilh two
.. -oars on breastfeeding.
LLL members, Angela Wamsley
,_.._ On Oct. 16 she traveled to Bal· and Julia Messick, attended a
[ )!Pore, Md. for a workshop for lac- recent workshOp in Coshocton
E lalion · · specialists
entitled, which covered a wide range of
~ "Breastfceding: Critical Early Intopics of concern to nursing
' rervention" sponsored by ta Lee be mothers.
.
~ , League International.
.
La Leche League of Point
· .. The topics of the workshop m- Pleasant will meet Thursday at 7.
~ eluded indentifying breastfceding p.m. at lhe Pn:sby1erian Church on
{ success during the first five days of . Eighth and Main Street. Any in1Jir·
~ an mfant's life and determmmg mes1ed women are welcome io atlOIYil
1 rervention strategies if needed, Also or call 1-304-675-4439 or 1-304covered· were hospiral policies 675-5142.
•

t

~

By WIL~ C. TRO'IT
the Clown on the "Howdy Doody" show:
UnKed Press laternallonaJ
TWO TRAVOLTAS: Jolm Travolla will make a
ROPE FOR THE DESERT: Bob Rope Is cameo appearance In the sitcom' 'Friday Night at
dreaming of a sandy Christmas. Hope plans to the Movies" now being shot In Housto.n and
continue his tradition of entertaining American staqlng his brother, Joey . Travolta told .productroops abroad by visiting the Gls Involved In ers he would do the cameo to help Joey with the
OperaUon Desert Shield hi Saudi Arabia. "I'm project but he refused to travel to Houston to fUm
going over there about Pecember the 20tb," Hope so the producers, Panda Entertainment. Group,
said Sunday while vlsltlrig a'San Antonio air base. flew a crew to Los Angeles to shoot his scene. In
"I want to be there for Christmas. We're going to the sitcom, Joey Is an actor In B movies and his
have a ball over there." Hope said he plana to brother, played by John, Is a star. In one scene,
spend about a we!lk In Saudi Arab.la during the Joey calls him but the brother won't talk to ltlm
Christmas holidays, performing at desert out· ' and hangs up on blm. As the audience hears the
posts and on naval. alrcra,lt carriers poised In or dial tone, Joey mumbles, "I love you, too."
near the Persian Gulf. Hope was visiting
PALEY RElliEMBERED ON HIS NETWORK:
Lackland Air Force Base In San Antonio for Dan Raiher will anchor "WWiam S. Paley:
ceremonies renaming the base's Thunderbird Tribute to a Broadcasting Giant," the hourlong
Theater the Bob Hope Performing Arts Center.
special that CBS will air Wedneaday on Its late
KANGAROO FOR CLOWNS: Captain Kanga· founder. The program will include reports from
roo .has a new command. Bob Keeshaa, who has CBS stalwarts Waller Cronldte, Charles Kurall
played the role of the captain for 35 years, will and Morley Safer as well as a look back at other
serve as honorary chairman of the Clown Hall of CBS newsmen like Edward R. Murrow, Douglas
Fame and Research Center In Its drive to raise Edwards and Eric Sevareld. There also will be a
$250,000 lor a new headquarters In Delavan, Wis. review of entertalnrnenttlgures Lucille Ball, Jack
Keeshan joined Red Skelton, Emmett KeUy Sr. Benny, Jackie Gleuon and Ed SuiUvan who
and Larry Bannon, creator of Bozo the Oown, starred on the network under the guidance of
eljrlter this year when he was Inducted Into the Paley, w~. ~~ed Friday.
Hall of Fame for Ills work as the original Clara bell

~

up with women who snipe at odler . W1thout the stay-at-home m~
women for choosing to wm: llllhel . many working mothers would 1\ot

than stay at home with their have full-time b&amp;bv sinen or uanscbildren. M 1 mother and 1 teacher, porWioo for their children to and
1 can 1e11 you duilsllyin&amp; at home from school. Nor would tlley have
does not always rmure aoocJ J*· 10111e011e to.caD in case Qf an cmerenling. The weU-adjusled children I geney.
have taught .have lll!d both ·s tiy·at·
~ ~ women have been
home moms and working moms..· fighung for tile rilbt 10 choose. Too
The same is true !If problem o{ter), the ones wlto make us feel
children.
guilty for tile choices we made are
I have dec:idcd that this will be O!Mr WOIIItiL
my last year of teaching for a while.
.When will women _n:alizc that they
1don't believe this proves !love my • hive become thetr own· worst
child more than a working IIIOiber enemy? We will never be trealed
loves.hers nor does it prove that 1 w:ith the ~~ and eq~ity we
am a better parenL The truth is, deaerve until we Sl8lt ~ each
however I CIIR no longer cope with Olher &lt;!eeently. The fem1rusts who
lhe phys'ical exhaustiOn of holding blame men for their inability to get
down two full-time jobs. At the- ahead in the world are blltiDJ up
time, I admire the SWDina of women the wrong tree. Just sign me ••
who can. Without them we would TIRED OF THE BACKBITING IN
not bave enough 1e8Cilers, n~. HAMU.JJ;)N, ONTARlO
social workers, etc.
DEAR TIRED OF THE BACKThe doctor who delivered my son BITING: Thal 'makes~w~&gt;ofus.- You

would not
the
letters 1 receive from women
lambasting their siJias who choose
to stay 11 home with their children.
• Barbara Bush did a magnificent·
job of pilttins thcae typeS in their
place wben, in her ~nt
address 11 Wellcsley, she pra1sed •
homemaking as a noble profession.
Her comment n:ally seUled their
hash.

.

Salisbury Fall Festival

•

Glassi

...By Cindy S. Oliveri

'IN'IEIIIOI • EXTERIOR
FlUE ESTIMATES

r• the pain out of
painting. lit mt do
it for JOU. .
Very
havt lltftrtnctl

.__.It

~~ :,.':,.~11

Bring It In Or Wt
Pick Up.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

21!7~
~~i'Y:
I'U

COMPLETE
ElECTRICAL SERVICE
· R oaldentllll and

GROOM
ROOM
ConiiPiiil Grooming
for All lreecls
UILEE MERINAR
Owntr &amp; Operator

Corroll)arc;lol ·
HWIIING AND

TROURE SHOOliNG
Ctrtlflecl llectrlclam
frM llllllllfM

BANKS
CONSTRUCnON

•

1

3
6
10
Mon1hly

GUN CLUB

GUN SHOOTS

15
16

16

1- Ctrd of Thenkl

. 2-ln M•mory

•7 point line type ontv used.
·
•sentinlll is not rnponsible for errors after first d-,. . IChecK
for atrOI'I first d., ad runs N1 paper} . Call before 2 :00p .m
d., aft• pubhcMiop to m•• correC1ion.
•AdS th.t must be paid in advance are
'•
Card ofThMkl
Happy Adl
In Memoriem
Yard Sales
'
•A clanili" advartiHm.,t placed in The Dlily Santin&amp;! Ia• ·
CIPf ':":' cl•lifitd dl1pi1Y. l1.1sfn•• C~rd and lagal notices)
will also .,pa., in the Pt. Plaaant Ragillar and .' he Galli·

3 - Annoucemlf'ltt
4 - GiweMWy
5 - H•ppy Adl

6-lost end Found
7- -V•d SII41Piid in Jdvtnct'l
8 - Public Stll &amp; Auction
9-Wtntedto Buy

11 1213 14 ,&amp; 11 -

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00A.M. SATURDAY
- 2 ,00 PM, MON0,6.Y
- 2 :00P .M . TUESDAY
- 2 '00 P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2 '00 P.M. THU~S0,6.Y
- 2 :00P .M. FRIDAY

446 - GIIIipolil

992- Micldlapon

F111o11C1al
21-Butintll Opportunity

245-Rio Grinde

Pomlf'DV
98t-cn.ter

843-Porl ..nd

773 - Mason

256-Guyan Oist

247-lellrt Fans

882-New H1ven

643 - Arlbil 0111.

949- Riclne
'742...: Rutllnd

937-Buftalo

'

667-Coolville
________

..:;~;.....

to loen

23 - Prot•llontl Serwicn

Rea l Estate

Area Code ~04

175 - Pt . Pleuant
458-Leon
576 - Appl• Grovt

31 - Hornes tor Stle
32 - Mobilt HomH tor Sale

33- Ftrms for Stht
34-Busin•s Butldtngs
35 - ~ots &amp; Aer ..gl
31-FI•• htate Wanted

Sl 50 n.!:-1111
DEUVEIED 10

OHIO PALLET
COMPANY

"At Reasenable Prkis"

57 - Musielllnstrumll'ltl
&amp;8- Frwits • Veg.cibl•

POMI!~J,

PH. 949·2101
or las. 949·2160

59- For Salt or Trade

_ _ _ _ _...

41-Housn fo.r Rent
42 - Mobile
Hom•
43F•rms tor
Rtnt tor Rent

.t4-Aptrtment for Rent
45-Furnish~ Rooms

. 4t - IPICI lor RMt

47-W•nttd to Rerit
48-Equipmtnt for Rent
41 - For

L•••

6l - F1rm EqUtpment
62 -.Warned to Buy
83 - Livlltock
84-HJV &amp; Gr1in
6&amp; - S..d &amp; Fertilizer

4 TON MIN. LIMIT

$50.00 porl8n

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;
SUPPUES

Transportation
71 ~Autot f~r S.le _,..
72-Trwtks for Stle

73- Vtns 6 4 v-tD ' $
74- Motorcvcllf
76-Bo•t• &amp; Mltors for s .. e
76 - Auto P.,ts &amp; Acc•sori•
77 -- Auto A1p1ir
78 - C•mping Equipment
79-Cempeu &amp; Motor Homet

Lump or Stoker

286-2689

See us For Your
Sport!.. IHds

10-24 I MO•• pd.

Buy, Sell or Trade

· •Remodeling and ·
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

Gun•
OPEN MON.-SAT. 10-5

742·2421
. IUilAJe, 01110

10.01·'90·1 mo .

81 -· Homelmpro'4ments
82-Piwmbing &amp; Heaing

83-ElC..,Iting
84- Eieetric• &amp; Aefrigerttion
85-GenerJI H1uling
86-Mobile Home Aepai'

CEDAR

CONSYRUCnON

~J .. , ~

8 7 - Upholstery

992-6641 or
691-6164

Rc.an

10·12·'80·1 mo.

Public Notice

BULLETIN BOARD

.r'

~

, $"

,; Hymn sing set at Hillside Baptist
':.~:

There will be a hymn sing on
· Friday at 7 p.m. at the Hillside Bap..-.:tist Church located on Route 143
'" just off Route 7.
of
..., Singers include The. Children
...

. ...

;

God Angie Willett, The Redeemed
Quartet and The Carriers from
Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
PastOr James R. Acree Sr., invites lhe public .

-wedding addition announced
w-

'"'' : In the recent marriage an~ 'OOimcement of Cynthia Lynn
Crooks and David Charles Spitz,
,;:·.woo were united in marriage on
; ~Atig. 11 at lhe First Presbyterian
':;;"d lun:h in Middleport, the couples'
1 - - ...atioo should bave read as fol""1qws.
• · · . The bride
graduated
from
Muso
- ..
.
. .
t ........

l'.h'

VERY NICE I.NIGE tllME ON API'ROX. 3~
ACR£S - 4 BR, 3baths, 2garages, oented I
Ill apartment. Property indudes pond, ap111111, 4,1100 lq. II. f•m bldg. and mobile
home. Arill! blrpin II M9;9fl8, S84.900.
CALL 614·992·7104 FOR APPT.

AMANA 18 LB. ELECTRIC DRYER · .
ONLY 2 YRS. OLD - $125

. '

..· 4 •

YOU SELECT A FIXED DOLLAR AMOUNT
THAT FITS YOUR WEEKLY BUDGET

k.ingum College, received her master:s degree from Ohio Stale.
University irl education and administration, and is teaching in the
Washington Local School District.
The groom graduated from Ohio
State University in marketing and
is a territory manager for Lennox
Industries in tjle northwest Ohio
region.

175 N. SeCOild Ave., Middleport

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614-992-7028

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~ourB~fn~···

~;Carleto.n School festivals

-]tanned for this Satur~y

Farmers

.FB

• - A pencake brunch and craft show
wiU &amp;e held Stmday from 11 a.m. to
4 p.m. at Carleton School in
~-SyacnSe. Crafters inreresled in
•reaerving a space should call 992-

cake; and prettiest plain jane calce.
Call' 992-6681 for more informalion.
A costume coolest will be held
on Sunday at the school for
:~1.
children a~e 12 an&lt;l under. Judging
,.. 11. cake conteSt and auction wiD will be in four age groups, 0-2
be held on Sllllllay at lhe IChoiH. years; 3-5 years; 6-8 years; and 9··TIIIeo ClfiiOriea will be IIICllt res- 12 ycars. For more infonnltioi\·caU
•lift holiday cab; best ocmjon. . ,,, 992'6681.
'i

INGELS APPLIANCES RENTAL
AND KUTRITE CARPET

2. Standard Selection •

I

'

.

••

1

Bank

992··2136

221 WEST SECOND
OliO

MEMBER FDIC

. f
......._....__

--

.

---·-·~-·

. 915-3315
STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PlAINS, OH.IO

____

..._,.

__

--

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS .
Molga County Doportmonl
of Human Slirvlca.

1711 Roco 81root
Middleport. Ohio 45780
8-r... -led bldl lor
the conatructlon of •n eddl·
tlon to and the renovation of
the Moloa County Deport·
ment of Human aorvlcoo wNl
be r . . . - ot lhtt olflco of
the Molgs County Commlsalon-. Malga
County
CourthouM. Pomeroy; Ohio
411781 until Z:OO p.m. (lo..l
timet on the 20th of Novombor. 1180 ond thon 11 oold
oftl .. publicly - e d ond
- d 1loud.
WORK
by tho
Contr•ct Doaumenta In·
cludo lho following 1tem1for
which bldo wlllbeoccepted:
Addhlon to and R.,ovatfon
of tho Molgo County
Deportment of Hu""'n
Sorvlcll
•
A now buldlno addhlon lo
tho oxllllng Deportmont of
Humon Sorvlaoo with lnt•
rlor renov•tione to the exlat·
lno building togothor whh
tho ,...,,..., opportolnlng

oov-

FOR SALE IN RACINE

"NOW OFFERING 2 TYPES OF

-'

'IJ·'

BUI . I . ETIN BOARD DEADUNE
4: 30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
.PUBLICATION

COUCH FOR 'SALE
86" single seat
cushion couch,
medium blue .
background. Five
Ia rge ruffled pillows
(3 are back cushions).

614-992-7563

205 N. Secltld Str11t
IIDOIIPOIT, OHIO 45760
Office 61'·"2-2116
11011!( 614.992-5692
DOniE S. TUIINEI, lllOilER
HOUSES•LOTSIIFARMS
COMMERCIAL
We Need Uallnp!
t-ZI- '10- I oo.

2

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

Aluminum C1n1, 46C per lb ..
FiacAetcn 44C lb.; Blttarl11 '1.2fi !II·
Sheela 40C lb. ·
... , 1-'10-lfn

oen...

3 . HVAC ......... 142,771.00
4. Plumblno ...... 31.110.00
Tho Controct Documonto
""'¥ bo uomlned ot:
Tho Office of tho Molg~·
County Commllllo-•
Moloa County Courtltouoo
f'omonly. Ohio 411711

.

lu_. a Nlpll, Llmhed
t424 Emeraon Avonuo
l'e...,.llurv, Weot Vl•glnll

H104

Coplea of tho Controct
Document• mor be obUinld It tho of
lu_. a Nlplo, Umlled,
loootM 11 t424 E - n
A - . l'llll. .
Weot

bolrv.

mont

....,.

of l'ltly
Dollero
1*10-001. NONE Dl' WHICH
WIU IE II!PUNDID.
ly ..... of 11M Molp
County Co_,llllo-a.
RloheniE.JConllniSJIIRW
21.:10:
11, , .

(t1Ji.

RACCOON YAL~Y
SPORTSMAN CLUB

~Guller
~H~lmet '

NOW OPEN·
Wed. thru Sat.

GAME ROOM.

992-6009 .

HIS.: Wld.-lhurs.-Fri.
5:00 p.ni.-11:00 p.ll.
Sat. 12 Noon, 11 p.m.
'· Between Wilkesville

NEVER CIIAN YOUR
GunERS AGAIN

and Salem Center

BUILDING &amp; ·
REMODELING

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
"LIGHT HAULING

Commercial Ill
Relidential
•Roofing
•Siding
•Windows

*FIREWOO.D

lln't It .... Doing ._,,

BILL SLACK
992·2269

BANKS
CONSTRUCnON

992·5009 ' '

RAILROAD nES

ID-1·1 ...

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

l .e .. odeling

Stop &amp; c-pare
Fr.n EstlmatM

5-31·'90 ttn

IN LOVIN«;;
MEMORY OF
DORIS IRENE
MILLER
Passed away

C

Bashan Building

Sadly miased by .

husband and
family
· . Ronnie Miller

'S

ol MINI'''"

UPHOLSTERY
MkNieport
· Hand Tufting
Cuetom Dropea
36 v.... Ex,...~e...

614·992-2328

WO Soy WhM W. Do.
wo Do Whet We loy,

10-19-t liD.

Rail Estate General

PROPERTY FOR SALE
100 ACRES WITH
APPROXIMATELY 2 ACRE
,OND, GAS WEll AND
FREE GAS.

992-3033

9/27/'90/t 110.

Factory Cholta
12 Gauga hill• O.ly
Striclly Enf--'

Announcements

9-25-'99-tfn

_ _ _...__..;._....,., · 3 Announcement!' ,

USED APPUANCES
90 DIYWillllm

WASHERS-SlOG up
DRYERS-S69 up
&gt;'
IEFIIGEIIATOIS-SIOD up •

u•GIS-Gas-Eiec.-St25 up

FREEZUS-SI25 ~P
MICRO OVENS-S79 IP

KEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICE
992-5335 or fSS-3561
la-ou FroM Pest Offkt
.POIIIIOY,'OIIIO .
·

ID/30/"19 Hn

RACCOON
SPORTSMAN ClUB

SHOOTING
MATCH
Every Sunday
Starting at 1.1:00 A.M.

Betwun
Wilkesville and
Salem Canter

Croclll Pl.., Gold CNdft J:onj.
VINIMIIIIfCIRI
Cash 1dY1nca. No
dtpoalt. No credit

G•-·
Me.=!
chllclc.
1

~

226-C1048.tiU51oo.
HurURrch

.ana•

l1llhifark.

An oxcftln~ - fo moot ......
o~o -111. Wrho ~~-lith.

.

P.O. Boz 1043, Gtlllpoll•,, OH.
4-~-

No Hunting or Tmpooolng. on
th1 R. H. Rickel farm Hlrlford,
WV.
YJolattrs
will "~ be
ptOMCutec:l.
....

Una«acllocl? Aru Sln~lnl!
Communlc1tlon Whh You.
tldonllol

Into. . ·

o:

104~; Qal.

• '

Giveaway

4

•'

2 yr old malt Border Callla to

good homo, 304-67!1-41191.

2-1 Wool! Old Gulnoa Pip, 'ilofJ
Cute. 114 441 0020.
:;:
3 khlono, 1 gray, 1 - . ' r Aolk
and whht, litter trained, 304675-2288.
4 black pupploo. 114-HII-Zl24.

5 I'U--1 3 flrniiM, 2 lftiiH,
acforibto, moolly Coon Hound,
304-1~.

Frl•~=~ Bltck r:.mal• Puppy,

614-

5823. 614-245-8884.

Poodli, 2 YIIIW old to I HfJ
aood home. Hit all thole.

114/DQ2-3877 ony11mo.

Pupploo. 8 - old. 4 - . 3
....... 1o ao,.,..

SERfiCE

We can rtf.oir cind re!Oft rod aton · and
heatar corn. Wt con
also ocid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
r~p~~ir

Gas Tanks.

992-2198

Middleport; Ohio
• 1·13-Ht

114/143.1131.

\

Smllllndnolllko

2233.

Lost &amp; Found

6

Block loot on -t·o
parlllng lol. Conlol,. "'-'""'

--71'14

plpon · - with ......
1'-o.
REWIJIOI
or IMIIIIZ.5813.
,
\

Found
ftmtle

o holt orown billet
puppyl _ doWntown

Pomery arwa. · Medium lliialh
hair, lovee peopte. 11411124411.

Loll : loblo l WhHo Sholllo (
COIIIo)1
In • lho
SyCIMOI'W • Fourth Avenue A,..,
Sablo holr lltloood In _.., no

Mtnlolu,.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

LOCATED IN SDnON.TOWNSHIP
OFF DOICAS lOAD.

BISSELL ··/
SIDING CO.

CALL

"Fr11 Eatlmllt•" ·

992-2136

CALL

6:30P.M.

PlT' IILL FOlD

FARMER$ BANK

APPOIITMEIIT ,

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

213 ••• Sec011d

Oct. 30, 1986

S290o

10 VISm
OPEIIIJ ·

HHrt ... rch, P.O. Box
llpolla. OH 45631.

985-4473 ..
667-6179

In Memory

FIT andTRIM
OCTOBER .
SPECIAL

GUN SHOOT

•Complete

BIDoroto Contrecta lor
.,d Archltecta Eatlmotolor:

1.
l ... .. tl88,112.00
2 . Eloctrlcii ..... 1ZI,I1Z.OO

Banks
Construction

•Garages

work.

vtralnte 21104 -

OIL

COAL
UNLIMITED

36496 SMIIII nN ID.

•

Christmas shopping will be more enjoyable when you put
away a little money each week. The interest you e~rn will
help you get extra special gifts for ·every~ne on. your list.

#1 Copper '1 per lb.:

II- ,.2-90 rfn

NO SUNDAY CALlS

li VI~'tock

URNCil

Children "Of God

e

PAYING AS OF TODAY. SEPT. 11. 1990

~m

Doy or Night

SuppiiP.S

8915 - Lelart·

-

LOW GUDE OAI

CUSTOM BUll .
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

56-Pets for Slle

II

Ma~on Co .. WV

Meigs Coumy
Area Cod~ 614

BISSELL·
BUILDERS

53-Antiques
~
54-Misc . Merchindise
65- Buildina SuppU•

Halp Wtnted
Sh:utdbn Wanttd
lnturJ('IC:I
lusin'•• Tttining
Sci-tools &amp; lnttruction
Rtdio, TV &amp; CEi R..,tir

17-Mitcelltneous

exchanges ...

Ar., Codi 614

Hera

SAW LOGS

51-Household Goods
62-Sportlng Goods

Farm

22-Mon~

Get Recuffe Fast.

..

POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7 . S .R . 143
ALBANY. OHIO: Rt. 60 • S .R. 143
NEW HOURS:
. POMEROY: 9 a .m. ·7 p . m. 7 01ya
ALBANY : 10 a.m.-IS p.m. D1ys. CloMdsunday

WANTED

·-

SPrv ICf!S

1 8-W•ntd To Do

." Classified pa~es cowr the

..... ...

i

OFRIS 2 LOCA11015 .10 SIIVI YOU•.••

GUARANTEED I

Sopt. 4,ttn

'}·

Empl11 y nn: nl

,Polis Daily Tribuna. ,.aching o'* 18. 000 homes

379-W•Int~t

'

.;.

TII·COUNTY RECYCLING

FREE ESTIMATES
lo.t lllo.

SHOOTS START
SEn 16, 1990

Merchandise

•Price of ad tor all CIPital ••••,. is double price of ad coil.

JaUnu.~in/{ teleph~mf&gt;

Bills

SUNDAYS

I I . . P•••t••ch,

run 3 d.,f at no chirge.

F~IDA'(' PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

C.V Fishing SuppH•
Your Phol\8

1:00 P.M.

Over 1 5 Wordo
Rata
.
.2Q
14.00
.30
111.00
89.00
013 .00
.05 / day
81.30 / day

•free ads - Givaaway and Found ads und• 15 words will be

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAP'E~
THURSDAY PAPER

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We

eon•eulive runs. broktn upd~rfswill bech~rg.t

paid
.
•RaceNa 1 .10 ditcour-t for ads paid in advance,

COPY DEADLINE . MONDAY PAPE~

Now LOcation:
161 North Second
Mlcldlotio&lt;t; Ohio 45760

RACI,NE

I

Words
16
15

Davs

Meip1 Gallia or Ma~on counti.;, must be pre·

318-Vinton

NOW

0

E

Lo.,.ted 011 Safford Schoel ld. off lt. ,141 ~

IIJ.lloo.

12 Galli' Factory
Cholia only

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

317 - Ch•hire

•

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COO~ING

992-5009

614-992-6820

PI.UMIING ·&amp;

18

TO PLACf AN AD CALL.992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.

Galli• County

IT PAYS TO THINK AHEADJOIN OUR 1991 CHRISTMAS SAYINGS

IAOBILE HOME FURNACES • HEAT PUMPS
ALL FURNACE PARTS

(614) 446-9416 •• 1-100-172-5967

10-t0-10-1 ...

The

Stoekfl

.

992-5335 or 985 ;3561
laea
Poat Office

614·915·4110.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Remember · a family crisis by ljfe themselve·s at times, and
generally lasts a long time. A who'llhave groWn stornger .beyear or twQ, or even three years cause of the storms .. It takes
of tough times are not unuslial ·courage to care for other human
when It comes to trouble In a beings. II takes courage to stay
family. Therefore, It Is Important with them In Iough times. Those
lor people outside the family to who have courage are afraid of
remember that the family Is · pain, loneliness and tears. But,
probably still dealing with a they know that we gain strength
crisis, even though It has been from our loved ones and friends
several monthS or even years.
and can best lace the pain,
It doesn't hurl to bring up loneliness and tears together.
"Joe" who died In an automobile
Touch people · All of us
accident three years ago. II experience times when we would
doesn't hurt to ask how "Mabel'' · like to curl up under Qle blankets
Is doing with Iter arthritis even of our bed and suck our thumbs
though she's ~ad It for seven until we fall asleep. People who
years. It doesn't burt to ask how are skllllul In helping others
life Is going lor someone who has through crisis realize that there
been laid off work. People are times In life when. we are all
generally will not think you are children.
being snoopy. Rather, they will
We all need a "security
be glad you remembered.
blanket," a little chicken soup,
Don'l be afraid of grief or tears and someone to· hug us.and love
· The PeoPle who are really of aid us and hoid on until. the darkness
to others In a crisis are those goes away.
people who have been battered

'91

0

PAINTING

10·11 1 mo.

5 p.m. followed by games at 6:30
·p.m. Over 60 door prizes will be
given away. Those at1ending could
also win a Middleton Doll and Nintendo game boY as well as a $50
bill and'$100 bill.

••o:r.

'

7

ir==U=N=D=A='S==~=;•;,cl;o=wA;Y=E~~~========~Ne:f:l•==;

,_,,, Ohio

..

'TWAS
THE YEAR
BEFORE
CHRISTMAS

The Daily

·B usiness Services

The Salisbury Fall Festival
will be held Sanuday beginning at

·ContemporarY living...
Every family an&lt;! every ln&lt;)l·
vidual at some time In their 11te
experiences crisis. Some crisis
may be greater than others. But
whatever the degree, help Is
appreciated to get a person or
family through a crisiS situation.
Here's what you can do:
Uslen · Really listen. Don't
think you have to come up with an
Instant solution because most big
problems aren't solved In a short
time. People Just want a friend ·
that will stand by them when the
going gets ·rough and helping to
come up with a solution Isn't
'
necessary.
Do a simple kindness · Send
cards and letters, call on the
-phone, care for · the· famlly's
children, bring food, do housework, help with the chores. The
list Is endless. By doing !helle
things you are not going to make
things better overnight, but you
are giving a strong message that
you care.

Pomaroy- Middlaport, Otiio

1990

...--People in the news·---------.--,

o~ADJ!!-::on:=~= ~ =-~~~'t~ ~~ Ann
column Iince lwua ~~~e~~-aaer. 1 ! ·would have done without her
have never beell 111gry enough to compassion and suppon. I do 1101
write until now.
feel. however. thai these women are • Landers
I want io say that I am tqCally fed
I
that lcrtll.

Payne birth

••t ".

~ ..breastfeeding

Tua~dlly, ()ctobar 30. 1990

Pon•oy-Midclaport. Ohio

Southern Junior High
f foOtball party held

Tuuday, Octota

........ llltlt

Pl. 949-2101
or 1... 949·1860
110 Slllll&amp; y

taga. Vory Timid. Homo II Jock.
Loll 10120180. 814-44&amp;4131 . .h
In-Ion.
Fami!V
PM.
Roioard.
Loll: Shoplllnl Mlxod Doa. Moll
In
814-3111~

7

-A. ..

Yard Sale

G1Hipo118
&amp; VIcinity

'•

�•

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel .

Oc:tobllr 30. 1990 ..

Ohio

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

·.•

42 Mobile Homes
• torRent

LAFF·A·DAY

·-.. ...·--- .. --·-

VllAT

roes IT CO YJII6/.l

Viewing

lTW~OP-;

•

•

o•-rango ,..,...

TUES.. QCT. 30

!/

...

of
lour acromblod ~· ·
low to Corm four ;;implo - •·

•

-....

OGLI .NE

EVENINO
1:00 (J). (I) (I). Ill

IIJINewa ·

tat•

·.

.

.I

I'

(!) ChaMa In ~Q
(l) :1-2·1 Coni8C1
(J) Math Leamlng

Qll.

ALF

oea-~ ,

D NIA Toclaty

Pomeroy,
Middleport
·&amp;VICinity .
Gonogo Solo,

a Wotld Today

1

BIJT li-IERE 5 MORE TO

Dia-n
I:OS Cll lavtllly HUIIillllee
1:30(1). iiJI NBC Nlghlly ......

· LIFE THAI-! 6EING CUTE ..

Del- 1·2. _1:00

a. m.~' M the comer
or · ~ Rd. and

the

~ Abbott and c:oat.11o

com~~r

Murroy Hill
Rd., at WIIPO. 01111 clothIng and mii:C. H•n.

.8

RlckPuroonAuc:ltonCornpony

=.,:.a~'&amp;:'!:.:.:

dish?!"

---------1

Employmenl

lim-

Ptlod, playgnM~nd lor chlldrwn.
Ctooo to aro• ..I

mutt again aid his !lid ·
nernesla, Murdoc. (A) Q

In ~. _ ,
,... Jll1cl. c.ntraf hMt 1nd air.
All ulllltM lncllidod. S27ll ptuo
. . , dlpoltt. 114 • • 2217 bet·
- 7 am ond 7 pm.
mont

. _ , tneutat:M, eome new
Wir1!'11 TP w.tw 1yM1m.

,.,,100. 11t 112

~=~o:t1.~

&amp;H.

....... --......

..,. Ford ¥M. 11p

lncl-

Help wanted

~~~::::::::-::::::-~=-:: _.. hoof. 814-441-ml, H no
Chrlotlon mother wHI bebpll In ::"""::::,.·.:.44::f.:.71::;14.:·~,.--:--.­
caOIIPa&lt;t...n~oo. Paf, _..., adv-. M.K.G. mr homo. 1141112-6111.
52x24 ooollonol harno, tor uto,
~ - • tor you. For man
IItie,
$12,000. 114-441-3541.
lnlormltloll oond S7.10 to M.K.G.
or.go tor - - loo. tilV 12x4e Good Conc!hlon. ,._
Jo~ SorwlcM. N Cloy Uck
14-fi2-5105 bolwoMI 9om- king $4,000. Coli 814-241-1214.
Rood, Northup, DH 41U8.
tZpm,llondor_..,..,_
COMMUNnY SKILLS INSTRUC.
Foctory to youtllt, Z
wt1 do bo~ In ..,. homo, SPECIAL
TQR WANTED In llolga County oil
ohlflo, 1
In nurolng. or 3 bedroorn14x7U lnodtte It
tho unbollovablo
of
Hlvre referent ... 114-DI2-3188.
n
$1Z,UOO -•rod on Nl up.
CIII1-IIOO-~
tor
dllollo.
cornmunfty ond - ' Wll I1U CIN of yoUr toviMI
oldllo to oduBo with ilo(nlng one~~ lor the winter. "Have room
llmftollolll. Houro: tp.m. Frl • tor • rn1n and wife ar two ln- Trailer far ..... .10'152'. $2,000.
IP·'"· SUn: 1111p a_, .. f'IJqulrld. dtvkluat.. Have ,..... anee •nd 5141188-4302.
lnformll -lng. Vorlouo oklllo 20 .,............- . Cll
and' tolonto noOdod. ,ll you llko onrtlmo 614/14S-3014.
33 Farms for Sale
to cook,
prden1 fWd,
212 acre firm In sa;llft
or driVe - we IMJ' have 1 job
Townehlp, wooded. 0Wn1r w?ll
tor_ )'OIL Wo'ro looking tor 18 wanted to Do
Pl9t&gt;lo - enJoy-_.,.., &amp;.utlty your car a protect It carry conlract. 814·742-2852.
WhO can tMCh vartou. akJIIe to flam
oon I grlmo. E""""
othl"' who .,. an~Uve, and auto clllnfna 11111d1 a out. Farm Rlduced 12 112 acrn, 2
willing to - " oo port or on Rlvoraldo Aufo Dotolllng. 614- berne, tobacco ba1 $38,000.
Trollor, 3 bodt oomo, 2 batho,
ontjrgotlc IMm. Hl9h ochool -. .._..111111.
contralalr M,OOO firm. 304-1143g111, nlld drfvlr'o llconoo ond
good dffvlna requlrod. lloglo Yoora Dor Clro cantor 81111.
Slllry: JS.OCI.'ho..-, to oflllf. Ill... ..-.uto,
.._,.,.blo,
,.,...... all 114-2M 1031 no 1oonoo, quollty olllld CON. M.,.. Prlto roducod too· ..,.. jolno
Com St1lk ground• wnh am•H
totO.. than~
tor doy IIIIU FrldiJ, 7:30 1111 5:30. cobln&lt;~~.ooo. Sortouo lnqulroo
Chrtoly.
unity For rwore lntonnatlon or lo onlr....osJ&amp;-2587. .
£mplo:wer.
owglolor 3M-87WI47.
COIIIIUN'TY SKILU INSTRUC. Milo Pouto'o Dor Clro Clntor. 34
Business
TQR WAIITUI In llolgo County Silo, aHo-. chlldelro. 11-F
e o.m. • a:30 p.m. Agoo z -10.
• Buildings
Sotoro. oft• ochool. Drop-lno QFFICE SPACE FQA LEASE on
••Icc me. 1~224.
2nd Avo., Golllpotlo. Clooo to
·-.......,..,-~
1111111
to odufto ""h looming
Houoo. 1 room, 2 rooma,
-lollo. Houro: llpm Frldoy· Will t1kl car1 of eld1r1y pirsons Court
lplll IWit llllp Dolr required. In rftJ. horn1. I have r•rencaa. 3 1001110, 4 roomL All nlcoly
dooorotod, olr conditioning,
mol -tng.
oklllo 6WMZ·7227.
~r 1nt1r I ..._.bill IN pala..
and . - o H you Uko
Moko your cllolco now. No
~~-~·
Financtal
quatoo ovor tho phono1._you
or drha . .
,_lor
mutt - thorn. Phonl . , on
,.... ..... _..., lor ........
oppolntrnont. e....-7591 day,
~1S311¥e.
,
0111 tllidl varloUI iklha to 21
Business.
olhora, ON 0111llvo, ond
willing to - " oo port of on
OpPQrtunlty
............. HWt echo~~~ ...
,fiiQTICEI
QHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CQ.
fllllrr: M.~ to olori._ IH ln- ,._,mondl thll you do busl·
....... call IM--1031 na , _ with poopto you know, and
to aond monoy through tho
-CftrlotY.- Equol
·-;.-~.tor NQT
IMII until you hiM lnvnttgaled
tho ollorlng.
Ia t 2 ;ar.

l

t-

Top Calli paid. Did luml'"
cuboorda, . qu..,
-al,
potntlngo,
or ontlro ootote
call catloct
11211 1m.

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1:::::01 IMI~;,. ':Jm:

GNCIOUO living. 1 and 2 bodIOOift opanmonto 11 V l llonor
ond · Rlvorolilo
Ap;;~monto In lllddloport. F"""
$1111. Calll14-012·7111. EQH.
Lorgo Sooond Floor Aponmont,
KHchon Furrlthod, 238 Flrot
Avonuo, 1280/mo. pluo utllftloo,
&amp; m•onc:o. no polo,

-n

••..alae,

wl,..,

·-&amp;p::

Mlse&amp;ll!lneGU8
Merchandise
lonolrig.

-

-

Building
Supplies

12 ft. 1/{fy 01' ..""' ,..,,. $200.

Rogltt-

-Iiiii

1111

Tliii~Mffoct,

Sl'N751.

tor Soli. 114-

loauo'

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-. ....-.
_..,..line •
......

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QroOrn aillf ..._., ltlap PIC

Q.....l.... Altlriidi. A l l -

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- Ul · Julio
Webb. I'll
Cll 114
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A.K.C. R.,.W - - tor-, I ·Old, lf4-

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1110

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--· ~ma.

12110."1141843-6453.
argon &amp; bonch .. Chlldo
I ohM', quill, •ntlqUI
Aport·

c1ow •• ara

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;

0140,.

8:30 (I)

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TIU&amp;i
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a widow collides with a
murder investigatiOn. Stereo.

.............. I

__ ._........ . . .
-

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- pluo .......
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fill

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Dololfo. '(1) 105417..f000 Et...

48 Space for Rant
Rentals

6113o.

....tty-·
,_

no

clleek. lol06-221 1041
IJWj8

crodft

$11.15

BY IIAIL

r.&amp;nat-

-lot

•~-~oil,
11171. p;;rto, - · Clll

-

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Pl-.
-.t

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210- •

only. -

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~ raaaft1ut llkM a ...r.
.......-. 1221 mo. Doooott ...
qulrod, 1 _ . - . fdaot l!&gt;r

For Soli: 1112 Morcury Morquo,
111 power,loeded, 114-211-'1431.

..

=--=~~..,_=---.-:---=-

....

Clralld ........

bod-

51 .

HOL!Ithold

~Ne. .

I TRIED TO WALK
THRO A DADBURN

PAW II WHAT
HAPPENT
TO YOU?

MUD PUDDLE II

1!111' PUDDLE AN'
IHALLDW LAIGS !!

HOW COME YOU
WENT .IN OVER
YORE HEAD?

®e

· aener~~tton

a Ev111lng Nawa

Goods

~

10:30 Q!l Crook and ChaM
. D UBHRA Mud lind MotiTtuok Racing

-

10:35 Cll MOYIE: Talaa froin tile

. .

-.

Pl~nblng

82

tte.tlng

yourself to a birthday gift. Send for your

Clltw'8 fillyllllll..

aood

0~

111 t•

AS'l'ROORAPH

..:=.'=..
a - · Clllit
G

1

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL .

110111 TTPIITI, PC · (1) 135,000
potontlll.
Dotallo.
IOWIJ4000
E111. 11-

4111.

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.
.
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,

Oct. 31, 1110

,,

I' ".CillO&amp; . . . . . . . . '•'

&amp;ii-~'7Jri.":
72 . 1'IUCIIrl for .... .

A IOCQndary lnte...St you've been. cultl·
vatlng but have '"""" trtec:t to d-.,p
comn .. clallymlghtflndl1awaylomarket In the year ohood. The results might
be better lh.. you antlclpatld.
ICOIIPIO (Oct. :M Mor. ll) You could
·be axtrem.ty lucky today In eleva!~
thai 11ave strong, competitive el·
- • •· When thoae that ~
'lgllnot you . . (lllping lor air, you'll be
811tlng a - " ! wind. Scorpio, t,..t

"*'"

.

(

r

(frypt (PG) (2:00)

11:00 (J). (I) (I). 1111

&amp;

-

'

•

o
® Night Court Q
(l)-.mctl

Astro-Graph predictions lor the years TAURUS (Apri120-Mar 20) In order to
ahead by moiling $1 .25 to Aatro-Graph • . advance a matter of personal lmporclo thiS newspaper. P.O. Box 91428. tance today bold. imaginative measures
Cleveland. OH_44101-3428. Be sure to might be required. Be resourcelul. think
state yowr zod1ac sign.
.
creativety and act positl-wely. ·
BAGITT ARtUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Social GEMINI (May 21Nuna 20) Although
contacts you make at this time could you 're apt to be reuonably lucky In
turn out to be"more than merely plea- · most areas today, ·your greatest stroke
s~rabte dinner companions. These indi·
of fortune could come from an endeav'.
viduats could play helpful roles In yoiJr or that has ·recently captured your
affairs.
·
·
·
·. Imagination and hOpes.
CAPIIICORN (Qec. 22-.lan. 1~111 there CANCER (June ~1-Julr 22) Lady Luck
Is 60melhlng significant you ve been may be inclined to favor you today In a
wanting to finalize this Is the right day to situation that Is meaningful to both your
do something about II. even If YC?Ur pall . finance~ and reputation. I( everyihlng
~orts have ·been rather futile. Today comes together correctlY. the reoulta
•t s a new ball gome.
.
will be impressive.
AQUARIUI (JM. 20-Fell. 11) It's beat ·- LEO (JuiJ 23-Atlll. 221 You "ll be happlnot to make any major declslono today_
, , oot today doing exciting things that are
especially of a social or llnanclal nalure departures 11om your usual rOUtlnea.
without flrsl conllidllng your lpotoae tile has been boring lately, seek a sale•
whOHid- m~:_:ner lhlft yours. adYtlnluroua dlltrac11on:
PISCES (Fib.
h :1.0) II you are VIIGO (Aifll. a Sept. 221 Your pooslsttlvihg tor flniiiCfal objecllva today, blllltellor fulfilling your material objtle·
your .chancoo lor attttlnlng them are uvea today are wry strong. You have
good. provld.cl you are bold, lndualrl·
tht• big factors gOing tor you: motiveous and aren"ttrylng to get aomethlng
lion. amblllon and luck.
tor nothing.
LIIIIA (lapl. D-Oot. :D) You're giHid
AR•I (Marcil 21·Aprtl 11) Don't .ba
wHhtt;ubllltytoputtogetherconllruc·
, liOOitant aboutt~l~lng ·altop wllh people 'live aiHoncal or . p8rtnarohlp arrangewith whom you re Involved ooclally to- . mento that produce mutual benellll.
. day. Tile big ,.order you couldn't ctoae In Today you·might do aome ol your liaet
a commerctat environment might .,.
work.
'

••

... ' ·

tat•

Qll.

done in a convivial· atmosphere .

Arallllo HaH
11J Miami Ylca
ta Church 8trHI Slatllon

a.._,una
8
11g

lltother Jake Stereo.

e

11:30 (J)
0 Tonight Show
Stereo.
·
(!) Today'a FBI
(l) Adell! Smtih'• M-r
Wotld
(J). Nlgldllna8.

l£"'cer"..:W.c;~
D8p=a ~ Tonlllhl

o lllli:Ma: aonao a- to

ca11111 (2:00)
11:351D CltaaN Q
12:00 (I)

a
(I]).

lniO the Night Stereo.

tat••

,'·'·

Tilt Show ·
CIIL.IIIta

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•

NoW

.Ug...............

~lghl

12:101E.! .=.n
12:11(1)111116• Q

...

'I

EAST

WEST

••o

.AJ 83
•

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9
.10712
+ KQ7
+J75 3

32

+AQ10642

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SOUTH

Agift

"'

.KQJ963
tt061

+98

not taken

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: South

By James Jacoby

,•

4.

2'

Soulb
North Eaot
lead would always set '
Allpuo
four hearts. West. however. didn' t ·
Opening lead: A
think declarer had the club king and
did think his partner might hold a sin·
gleton dub. so he led the club ace. He
then shifted to a diamond.
Declarer ducked in dummy and
East won the queen. East returned a
·'
club. and declarer ruffed low in dum- cashing a second heart. lead up to the' ::
my. Now came ace and a heart. De- K-Q of spades. West should still duck. .,
darer drew t r umps and played a but declarer can now return to his ·•
spade up to the dummy 's K-Q. Nato· hand via the trump left in dummy :;:
rally West played low. Declarer '(taking the marked finesse), draw the '"
played another spade from dummy. rest of East's trumps and lead up to. :
West won the jack and tried to cash dummy"s remaining spade llonor once · ~
the queen of clubs. but South ruffed .
again . As a result. the contract makes." .:
Eventually South had to try a fi.
What about five dubs• With the ace '
nesse against the king of diamonds. ol diamonds onside. West rould mate ::·
Too bad. East had the king. so lour 11 tricks if he's smart enou(llt to drop •·
hearts was set. even without the best the singleton king. but that bid seems '
opening lead.
like a tough deciSion for East'to make ·.:
What went wrong? Decl arer was a with his meager cards.·
••
little too conservative in his use of
J~m'es JM:flby's books ~J,coby ~ Brldlf" ud .-

A diamond

....

+

dummy's trumps. When the second . ~J,COby onC•rdG• mn ~ rwrlttM witb~t•u.r. ~ 1
club is played. he should ruff with lhl! lllf' Oswl ld JM.YJbyJ.•rr now INU.Ift ·" I,
dummy's ·ace or hearts. Now he can book~o;: ':!:;::::;:::,.~::....
lloob;.~·:
play

a heart

to his hand and. without

·

· '

...'·

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
4 Constanl
1 Mirror
yakker
sights
5 Actor Tom
7 Anatomy
&amp; Math ratio
subjact
· 7 lab
11 African
vessel
nation
8 Hockey' s
12 Penn. port
Bclbby
13 Military
8 PQQrly trt
salute

15 OeSQiate
seats

21 Charry

bomb
sound
22

Bucca·
near

24 Ralnlxlw
shape
25 Sister

.,

..
• •
. ...
23 Corn

SQrts
serving
ln11rtion 25 Potne
indicator
denial
17 In a limaly 28 Conse-

way
111 Dowser's

quenctt
211 Four

lind
' pecks
20 longhorn · 31lrllloria

35Swlss

camon

-.·•·

36 Brownish
shade
37 Gelid, in

Tijuana
31Company

.,

VIP
38 Hayar-

staple

21 Prohibll

..

340andy

. 1&amp;

26 Earl Gray, 22 WM's
e.g.
WQrdptay

27 Nerve call
211 Ballpark

... !.

1 a PQpular

answer
16 Fossil fual 14 Basketball
. 18 Flock's
score, ol

33 Not aa

dahra-·

Ttkl .

much

,.....,.......,.....""lr-nr-.-

'·

.,

beverage

30 links

' .:..

areas

31 CAl's
sound
34

8QQk

.,

-.

. ..
..
. ..,
-

by

Alvin
Toffler
40 Spoken
41 Soui1d
aystam

~

"~

...
'·

··, ·

42Pub
• measure
· 43Tavem

DOWN
1 litda.devil
2 Damage
3 Pub quaff

.,

brt-++-

..

.

DAILY CRYPI'OQVOTES- Here ~a bow !AI work It:

1~

...

AXYDLBAAXR

...

IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this aunple Aia URd
for the three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten,
· apoltrofiiB, lbe Jenclh and fonnation ol the wonts are all
hints. Each day the code !etten are diffmnt.
CIIYPIOQ(IC)ft

,UYA

K A A,

Z C IX

•·

'•

-

.\.

..

..·-

NO·

YAC

~

. 'u

..

NO UYA WRXXAC .
'. FRWUCS
i
UYA
Y I 0 AS
QGG
. :A Q U W

.•.
,/ ,

,.

' TNOUAC. - WIRCJA

ROMOITO
DiE OLD
AGE OF YOU'Ilt: FIF1Y IS ntE Yount OF OLD

Y1 , .....

,.,

.. ....
.

e 11110 "' ICing ,_s;, ,. . tnc.

.,

~

CaiPII . . IIa FORTY IS

AGE. -VICTOR HUGO

Nlgltt Willi

'

.K

32 Miser
Marner

0 700 Cttib Willi Pat

- 1 0 .......... 130, 1:»

,,

(I) (J) • lhlrtyeomathing
Michael is haunted by one ol
the DM loundere. Sttreo. Q
(l) (J) Po- In tl1a Paclftc
Ending the Cold War In tile
Pacific ls_:p&lt;ovlng to be more
dlfficun. 1;11_
Ster Trek: The Next

vlgetable8

1:11- tlwu Frl.y.

'"" .. -

(I)
Coach Hayden and
Lulliar tal&lt;e a lrlp to pursue a
recruit lor the team. Stereo.

BARNEY

.IMC&amp;-

-··

e

1:30 (I)

NHAA Racing AC Delco
Heartland Nationals from
Topeka, Kan. (T)
10:00 (J) • iiJI Lllw I Order What
first appears to be a
mugging laacls to a city
corruption scandal. Stereo.

~aad.~• .

W¥.~7111.

.,., •.ooo Wllw

TuttidQ Night Flgli1l
Q!1 Naahvlla Now
- a Lllrry King Uvel

g

~1111nPoint
" • n-,.._
a·s;y- 200
21110.
· •.

hauN. ?and

WHEN "THE:V'Re ·
CO\\tN6 lOTAKE
HI.M.AWAY.

'•

~~= -t:lll'll.
h HIM1111 I . IM-

bldllOOI'I hoUie In Point

"-"-·
31 Homes for Sale
PolntPI
t ~a J -;a. lldl. oomer tot, 3 ...._
_... ond .... - . . . . .
I l:lldFWW

.
'·

11)1

Point
a - . ilnlti(J ond
=._-.zcor-J

trect.~

·,

Tulodq

(2:00) Stereo. 1;11
.... Praaents:

Mcrila

•••

oond,

(J) Frontline Q
MOVIE:

'Fa$•'1 cas

~-·......... .
3

Real Estde

I

g IIJ e

Muelcal
lnstNmenta

H.U.D. •

··-

H; for
-·---~
....-. can Joon IIMIIr · -

'Sf

H - Park,

AoiiiO U. North ot -roy.

CREDIT Pt.US. OOLD CREDIT

Up to ..,... In 72 houiW. Wo
-1..-nholp
0
ly ,...
IIIII. ...
,....
1100.

-~~-·--·
---DI=-+=
- .....,................

Coo .,, -

CARD.-nl ...ra""
tMd. Cuh Adftlteel, no

22 Money to Loan

Roseanne is mtstekan lor a
Lobo Lounge patron . Stereo.

Ca twille114110M01.

I
41 Houses for Rent :
Wo-: !loop r alllt porty to
I
Full
at..
pool
toblo
wMh
bello
tor
"""·
304-871-1071.
z liodroom-. untumlohod.
payntdllfo
_.,.
on. . .-. _ . .""""""
ond . .... :104-871-711111 taU
point, oorpatod. DoFooll ...
For I AA
.......,,....,.,, uyii:TL
-,..114-441•1710 awaii:J9L
polo.
2 ...ty b u l l - - unlo. :;:~· _ , 4 Fi!VOO Wll CAIII..U.M ( - &amp; llol
, niDI locdon. ftC!O '
lliPIRt
2 ':dtnlli DeDal 8lrtlll, RIA- -""" ft.- MilO I ......... . I
aotng ptloo. cau 114-~ -PIANQ "CAAll" lor .........
lind. am iMnlli. 1100 ....,... .Jechl .. Ohio. 114411-7044,
"CAM".....(JitW22:1~
,.._.
and
•...,.. an
....U:M •nu
4ZI1.
' _
.....
QoH cart, good cord, 30W7Si
·~-114/litN-- _
r.1erchandtse
2 b I 'I'OOiftl fuin~~Md, ..
58
· Fruits&amp;

1.-m.tl11.
WOLFE TANNING BEDS. Com·
rnerclalltoml Un111. From
$1ft.OO. Llln....Lotl-"cCHMonthly PnmO,.o Low
Ao 111.00. COli T..... FREE
~CAiolog. ·~ '21".

Biodldcut (1 :00)
(I) (J).Ra...nna

Paa:r- . . ,
~. NIIJ.
Ttnr ........ -.atful li&amp;I Fair

Vendll10 • No Inventory. $200.00
• $800.00 Wookly from oach
auarantMd loc.tion. 1.fJ00..228-

01101

~ MOVIE: My118fY

'•.,

.,

1111

t..ClCAL iiOUTE: All Cloh. No

-

"XL

,.

ventory for ~.. than COlt, n•w
bobylno """'· 304-875-7516 or
•614-3e7-G311.

Elpo-

· Nationals from Da~lnglon,
S.C. (T)
1:00 (J) 8 0 In the Heat ol 1M
Hl(lhl Bubba's r~nce with

\l-\£.Y SAID

,.

r, • 4:30.
0011111. ...-..
•
Doro ......., liurtol ..... .....

.,,

BOn Sl8ga
D IHAA Racing U.S. Open

....,;. ,;: o\ . 01 .... ...
"""[ t:-Mt"\ . .• OU I

-::

Servtces

lualneM for Ull, WDIMnt
rehlll clothing, flxtum and In-

VENDING RQ\ITE: ~Mat. GNII
caoh lncomo. Hi9h traffic
IOCOI~. Eooy - . Will Troln.

(J) • Haad of tha Clau
Billy haa the claas wrlle
papers on gun control alter
he Is robbed. Stereo. Q ·

10W1H11t..

mloc. a...-

...,.....nlly

DIIYI&lt;OI

0 MOVIE: Bonzo Qoa;a to
Col1ga (2:001
8:06 Cll MOVIE: Burnt Olltrlnp
(PG) (2:301

-·11 .......

rj w::.:-r~:=..=

Qwnoro I Qporotoro noodod •
IIMdr WOik IVIIIIbte • Mutt
hovo l'lo- ond Torpo • ea..
t11Ct 114 M4 te11.

121 PrlmaNe. .

.............. Ml.l1tt•

=
a.......
--top c:.!-1.
__
,.....,_ ........ ..............
..,..._0..

c.dar gWI ClbJMt. Hold• I
guno wHh ototal doplar onc1
ltorage clbl..t undemMih.

®e

-.1~·-

COI:z~r,··

Chair I

L ..

~ c:.-1111" ...,_ - -

- R-.
::.

Upattiro untumlohod
rn~nt. Cllrpi!IR, no peta, utllltiM

I

_CI_Ciiowf......,.,_ . 1'.

OCM: . . . . tsoo:IMJII2 Mil '

Fumlohod Efficiency,
IUitlblll for 1 ~~ Clr:l.....
· p;;rtclng, d - I
ret.r«tce,I14-(4M1311~

c r'rt

- . .... ~u... 10 .._ . . . u:

58 ·I Pets tor Salt

Ro[

SmoH

plathora or activities to help
Billy aclluat. Sllreo. Q
(l) (J) !love The liistOf)' and
· future or alrehlps are
examined: !;!
«&lt;Il IIJ. ReiCUI: 111 A
woman lias near death from
a spider b"•· Stereo. Q
MOYIE: Ove;t; aard (PG)
(2:001
I!J·Murct.r, She Wrote Q
ta Church 8nM Statloit

--U.aood-1 .

overlooktna

'o.POOii,

lurlaaque(1 :00)
(I)' (J). WhO'I tile lOu?
Tony and Angela plan a

uw....,._
_ . . . - -:=~·:.

1171 Ford ...._

oHor.

,oo fl. ...... link - 31' high,
gotol pool $75. 304-815-5203

ovTGO C::AN''I"
Jt:ffP up WITH foil'(

}.~.:.. ·. -r~~=.!.-. IO~JD

Auto.,.,s&amp;
Ac:cesiOrlea

fMIIIII:I-14Zl'01114/11112-

_ , lumlohod mobHo homo, 1

mile below town
rlV"'J ~.! hOot:
114 ••• w38.

=·.!"J~ii'k

MUCH A$ MY

GONEWENT'·

~ ... Chlit 01 · - -..
128wflh~di"

55

ltagto, 7
&amp;14-441-41121.
monilia old ruJIIIIng, 1100.
MOdomZI3bld;oom Fomolo Boaglo ~ yra, good aun
ip;;rtmonto In Pomoroy. 1 112 ::t=-. 1111 T·Binl-. 301-

botho, carpot, oqutppocl kitchen.
oo-n a rotoronco roqutrod.
8M/885.4448after 1:00 p.m.

'r

10'x20' ot~ building ilnd

-

olJTGC, A$

--.-- .....,.. oliantlll.-......
....

I=:L, IMI~~I:
k""'

~

''

-n . .-.

wit

li!,S' f'IOT Tl'fAT MY IN~O/olifEI
/ CAN.'T' y;e~p IJf WITH /YIY

'.

4-le.aooz.
· 1417V w/-ldo, s Br., z bath,

JAMES
JACOBY

Cll a

--=-==""=' '

~:""'

•An

IIIII
~ r.&lt;rn:.etnmant

Tonillht Stereo. . ..
Men;e'e Famly
(IJ) II ThN8'a Compan,
D SupariiOull 1989: DUran
VS. Barkley
.
acroaaflr'a
7:35 (I) The Jelleraone
1:00 (2) 8 0 M8l1ock A singer
and compulotv•gambler IIi
accusecl ol murdering hla
bookmaker. Sllreo. 1;1
(J) MOYIE: CaMnova In

)I·H·II

·tAJ9 8

7:05 (I) Happy Daye
7:30 (J)
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2br,
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wuher a cfryer tM-441-1211, or

Situation
Wanted

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75 Bolts. Motonl
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NORTH ·

.KQ762

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Sca~raw and Mrw. King

tNr Qlooy COliN- \'on,
11,101 - . A-1

32 Mobile Homes
tor sale

12

BRIDGE

D flportoC.w

2br Apt. Loloyollo lloll PliO to
$421 .... all
uiHlloo, Do!*l NqUirod. 114441-7732, 11H41 1222.

Services

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I!J Mac:Gyvtr MacGyver

()pportunlly. .
2 bulroom wdumw..d •f*!.:

IR, LA, DR, Kftchon, and
Mill, full bleementL two car
carport, ,.., porcMS com-

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Racial- Eerie- HBJem- WlndQw- ONE CHAIR
Famous quote, "f you try to sit on two chairs you will fall
between them. For life, you must choose ONE CHAIR."

NeweUaur

..- . . . . .... .,.. Cll
:1111411D4711. Equol Houolng

Okl TIXII . . . . Onl t.Crll.

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ID (J) • tnalda Edition
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Aport-., ... and OOOfgo
........ Undol ,_ -~
mont. KHohon
car-

Honw tor aale. ChMtN arM on

Horses &amp; Ponies; 814-446-2107,

514-388-8504.
Standing Timber, Small or l a rg~e
ICirtago, 514-367-7519.
WantN To Buy: Junk Autoe
I'll~ or without - - . Clll
Lafi'Y U110ly. 614 3. 1111 3

1:35 Cll Andy Ottlfltli

2 b1du-.m wv.
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31 Homes for Sale

Help Wanted

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l.ietnMd304-7'73-5711.
Ohio, K1nlucky, WMI r' - - - - - - - - - - -......
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Public Sale
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Sentinel

--Area deaths
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Bend
...
Continued from page 1

Memory Gardens.
, Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 m 9 p.m. on TueSday.
Military graveside services will
be conducted by the Albany VFW
Post No. 9893.

funding sources tnat nave come
together to s-upport the Bend Center. They 8111 the State or West VarFred 0 . Searls, 90, Cirtleville,
ginia through Gov. Caperton,
formerly of Cheshire, 6ied Monday
Mason
County Commission,
Oct. 29, 1990 at Logan Elm Health
Claude WonhingtOO Bcnedum
Care Center in CircleviUe.
Foundation, Thwn of New Haven,
Born on Feb. 3, 1900, he was the
Hubert Stafford
Rotary Club, other clubs and orson of the lare John A. and Anna
ganizations.
. local mdustty and
Mae Gardner Searls. He was a coal
Huben Stafford, 77 of Wolf Pen busin~sses, and the people of the
miner and a vereran of World War Road, Pomeroy, died Sunday Oct . Bend Area through local fund-raisII.
28, 1990, at Americare-Pomeroy ing aclivities," state Simms.
He is slli'Vived by h.is son and Nursing . Center followng a brief
''That kind or support sh~t
daughrer-in-law. Martin Leo and · illness.
how much this center is
,
Sue Searls of Cirtleville; three
Born on i'eb. 16, 1913 at Fort and the determinillion and ability of
grandchildren; one great-grandson; Gay, W. Va.; be was the son of the the ~pie living in the Bend
four brothers. Cecil Searls of Mid- late Hamuel Stafford and Lizzie Area, • continned Simms. ''Their
dleport. Ray Searls of Rutland, Bartran Stafford. He was a veteran spirit or cooperation and never-quit
Clarence .and Pearl Searls. both of of World War II and a member 9f attitude continues to move this
Cheshire; two sisrers. Lena Bunce Feeney-Bennet!
Post
128, project forward."
of Middleport, and Lillie Reedy of American Legion. and the Fraternal
The facility is scheduled to be
Somerse~ and several nieces and
Order or Eagles, Arie 2171.
completed next faU. It will consist
nephews,
·
He is survived by a daughter, ·of an area suitable for the playing
Besides his parents he was Louise Payne of Pomeroy; a or regulation basketball, fold-away
preceded in death by his wife, Mar- daughter, Mrs. Sam (Mary) bleachers to provide seating for
tha Searls; a son, David A. Searls;
Simonds of Pomeroy; . a son and events such as basketball games,
and two brothers, Stanley and Roy daughter-in-law,
Marvin. and community meepngs, and plays. A
Searls.
· Wanda Stafford, Rockpon, Ind.; . portable stage will be available,
Funeral services will be held 1 two 'sisters, Todd Mays, Hun- along with locker I'QOIIIS for inp.m. ThurSday at the Fisher Funeral tington, W. Va.. and Mrs. John (Bil- dividuals using lhe facility. There
Home in Middleport, with the Rev. lie) •. Rhymer, ln!liana: eight will also be a kitchell and meeting
Merliri Teets officiating. Burial will · grandchildren and four great- rooms.
be in the Gravel Hill Cemetery. grandchildren.
The next step in the process, acFriends may call at the funeral
Besides his parents he was cording to Simms, will be for
home on Wedne5day 2 to 4 and 7 to preceded in death by his wife, Region U Planning and Develop9p.m.
·Frankie Stafford in !980; a brother, ment officials to work with officials
I
Tom Stafford; two sisters, Melda from the Town of New Haven and
Payton and Jessie Stafford; and a Mason County to secure bids to
IUeen Swain
son, Norman Cummings.
determine the exact cost . of the ,.
lleen E. Swain, 70, 39131 Locust
Funeral services will be held facility. Those working on the •.·
Grove Road. Reedsville, died Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the building will then know if enough
Monday Oct. 29, 1990 at Camden- Ewing Funeral Home. Mr. Robert funds 1\ave been gathered to comClark Memorial Hospital in Purtell wiU officiate and burial will plete the cenrer.
Parkersburg, W. Va. , after an exten- be in Meigs Memory Gardens.
"I would like to exp~ thanks
ded illness.
·
friends may call at the funeral to the County Commissiooer Larry
Born in Atl!ens County, she was home from 2 to 4 and 7 to·9 p.m. . Sayre, the Mason County Commisthe daughter of the late Joseph and Tuesday.
sion, John Perdue, State Senator
Martha Pickering Barnhart. She
Robert Dittmar, Carolin Carperter
was a retired cook for Eastern High Elizabeth Pullin
of the Benedurn Foundalion,
School and a member of the Ohio
Lowen Wilks of the RC&amp;:D, Phyllis
Elizabeth
Belle
(Howard)
Pullin,
Associaton of Public Employees, 92, of Point Pleasan~ died Monday, Ashley, Lois Bumgardner, Tim
Long Bottom Senior Citizens and October 28, 1990, a1 Pinnacle Care Howard, Hilda Smith, RandaU
the Keno Church of Christ.
in Huntin~on. WV. after a Lewis and Dave Michael of Region
She is survived by her husband, Center
long illness. A retired schoolteacher II, along with those who served on
James 0.; one daughter, Mrs. Gor- and
in Mason County, for the consauction committee," condon (Jill) Holter of Long Bottom; a overprincipal
50 years. she was the wife of cluded Simms. ''They have put a lot
son and daughter-in-law, Lyle J.
of time and effort into this projecL
and Mary R. Swain of Reedsville; a the late Hoy F. Pullin. She was a
member of the . Good Shepherd
son, Lee Swain and his fiancee.
Megan Smith of Reedsville; four United Methodist Ch~h in
grandchildren, Joy and Jay Swain, Flatrock.
Born June 18, 1898 in Letart, she
Meigs County Emergency Mediand Wes and Martie Holter; four
was
the
daughter
of
the
late
Steve
cal
Services units responded to five
sisters, Helen Sprague at Tuppers and Alice (Rickard) Howard. Becalls
for assistance on Monday and •
Plains,
Josephine
Young,
side!!
her
parents
and
husband,
she
early
Thesday.
Reedsville, Clarice Willford of
was
also
preceded
in
death
by
two
At
8:57 a.m. on Monday, Racine
Rushville, . and Mary Large of sisters, Vrrginia Wolfe and Melinda
squad
was called to Mile Hill Road
Rushville; and one brother, Max
Gerlach
and
two
brothers,
Oak
for
Icy
. Tucker. Tucker was
Barnhan of Coming.
Howard,
Sr.
ani!
Mack
Howard.
transported
to Veterans Memorial
Besides. her parents she was
She
is
survived
by
her
son
and
Hospital.
preceded in death by two sisters,
daughter-in-law,
Howard
F.
and
At 5:57 p.m., Rutland squad
. Jessie and June Barnhart; and three Vivian PuUin, Sr. of HuntingiOII;
went
to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
brothers, Grant, Thurman and Joe
two
sisters,
Grace
Evans
of
RichRobert
Dorsey. Dorsey was
Allen Barnhart.
mond,
VA
and
Rose
McDade
of
transpOrted
to O'Bieness Memori~
Services will be held Wednesday
Middleport,
OH;
'
two
brothers,
Hospital.
At
II: 30 p.m., Middleport
at 2 p.m. Ji1. the White-Blower Steve Howard of New Haven and
squad
went
to
Riverside
Funeral 'Holle at Coolville, with
Russell
Howard
of
Van~a. OH; . Apartments. Jennifer Hendrix was
the Rev. Roger Spring officiating.
grandsons; six greattreated but not transporred.
Burial will be in Success Cemetery. . four
grandchildren;
and
one
great-greatOn Tuesday at 5:19 am., Mid,
Friends may call at the funeral
grandchild.
·
·
dleport
squad went to Bradbury
home today (Tuesday) from 6 to 9.
Service - wiU be held at 10:30 Road for Henry Carsey. Carsey was
p.m.
a.m. on ThurSday, Nov. I, 1990, at transported to Veterans. At 7:36
the Crow-Russell Funeral Home in 1\.m. Middleport to Page Streel.
Wayne Zeigler
Point Pleasant with Rev. R. C. Virginia Thome was taken to
Browning and Rev. John H. Icen- Veterans.
Wayne 0. Zeigler, 60, Route 2,
hower officiating. Burial will folAlbany, died Monday Oct. 29, 1990
low in the Suncrest Cemetery in
at Americare Pomeroy.
Point
Pleasant. ·
Mr. · Zeigler was born in
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Visiting
hours. will be held at the
Delaware, Ohio,.the son of the late
MONDAY ADMISSIONS • ElCrow-Hussell Funeral Home, WedErren and Audra Frost Zeigler. He
nesday, Oct. 31, from 7 p.m. until 9 len Young, Racine; Arletta Young,
was a construction labor worker
Mason, W.Va; Michelle Whit•
and an Army Veteran during the p.m.
tington, Pomeroy.
Korean ConHict and a member of
MONDAY DISCHARGES •
the Albany VFW Post No : 9893.
James Minshall and Betty Archer.
Surviving are a sister, Murl
A marriage license has been
Boudinot, and a stepdaughter, Bon- granted in Meigs County Probate
nie Bennett, both of Albany; three Court to Kevin Aric Barley, 25,
step-grandchildren; four uncles and RuUand, and Pamela Sue Wilson,
33, Albanv.
Continued from page 1
an aunt.
Besides his parents, ..o was
lion tor the gambling dollar. But
preceded in death by an uncle.
the group said the merits of
A divorce action has oeen riled in legalized horse racing gambling
Services wiU be on Wednesday
at 1 p.m.' a1 Bigony-Jordan Funeral Meigs County Common Pleas should not be dlseussed when
Home in Albany, wath Rev. Phahp Court by Paris R. Hess, Delbarton, debating caslon gambling.
W.Va. against Paula Ann Hess,
W. Romine officiating.
"That was something decided
Burial will be in Athens County Middleport.
back In the 1930s when they
allowed parimutuel gambling In
Ohio," Simpson said. "Thatls not
the Issue. The Issue Is whether to
allow casino gambling."
Racine Halloween Party
. Olejko countered: "They're
ied.
The Racine American Legion
spending thousands of doUars
Post 602 and the Racine Volunteer
DAV to meet
.
clrculatlong erroni!Ous and false
Fire Depanment wiU have a HalThc·Disablcd American Veterans Information In regards to our
loween pany for the local children will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Lorain casino. ...1 absolutely feel
immediately following lrick-or- hall at 124 Bunemut Ave., It's 1,1nfalr and hypercritical."
ueat in Racine at the fire station at Pomeroy.
Gov. Richard Celeste and
gubernatorial candidate's An·
7 p.m. Tuesday night.
thony Celebrezze and ~rge
Church Women United"
'Bow making class
Church Women United of Meigs Voinovich have all said they are
The Middlepon Flower Shop County will have a World Com- against the casino Issue, as have
will offer a bqw making class at the munity Day meeting on Friday at Cleveland Mayor Michael White,
Middlepon Ans Council building I:30 p.m. at SL Pa~l Lutheran Columbus Mayor Dana Rinehart
on Thursday at 7 p.m. The cost is Church in Pomeroy. Dues of $5 and Cincinnati Mayor Charlie
S5 which includes all supplies. Par- will be paid and S5 blanket certifi- Luken.
ticipants willleam to make two dif- cates may be purchased.
ferent types of bows, a ribbon bow
Movie to be shown
and a paper twist bow. These can
"Rabbit Hill" is the movie that
be used on anything from packages will be shown at the Meigs County
to .wreaths. Reservations must be Public Library in Pomeroy on
received by tomorrow. To . register Saturday at 2 p.m. The public is inSouth Central Ohio
call Sue Baker at 992-7733.
Mostly clear Tuesday night,
vited to attend.
With a low between 40 and 4,,
VFWDance
Alcohol group to meet
Sunny Wednesday, with highs
There wiU be a round and square
The Pomeroy Group o( AA and
between 70 and 75.
AI-Anon will meet Thursday at 7 dance at the Tuppen Plains VFW
Extended Foreeut
p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic Building on Salllrday from 8-11:30
Thunclay
thrOUJh satvday
Churcll: For more information call p.m. featuring Tnae Counuy
Fair
and
UJIS!!UOnably
warm
Ramblen. The caller will be Jim
1-800-333-5051.
With
highs
ranging
each
day.
Carnahan. Cost is $2.50 for adults
from near 70 to the middle 70s.
and $1 for children under 12. The
Friendship meeting
Overnight lows will be mainly In
The annual friendship meeting of pu6lic is invited.
the 40s.
.District 13, Daughters of America,
Supper and bazaar
·
wiU meet ThurSday at 6:30 p.m. at
The
Carpenter
Baptist
Chun:h
on
Belle Prairie Council, Belpre. A
143 will have its armual sup- . Leading Creek Conservancy DispQdUCk su~r will ~e the Route
per
and
bazaar with serving beginlrict will holtj. il special meeting on
meeting whach wm .began at 7:30
ning
1\16
p.m.
oo
Saturd8y.
·
Wednesday
at 9 a.m. at its office.
p.m. District ofli~ers will be instal·

Fred Searles

Ohio Lottery

Meigs EMS runs

Major Hoople's

Pick-3: 653
Pick-4: 1335

.

Prices Good Wednesday1 Oct. 31 1 Only!
······················~ •••••
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MOUNTAIN TOP

Vol.41 , No.136

Two new levies face Meigs voters ·Nov. 6

~

..
CARROTS
::
9 ( _ :;
LIMIT 1 PlEASE

LB.
BAG

• By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel news starr
Meigs Local School Dislricl
voten will decide on the two new
tax levies when they go to the polls
on Nov. 6.
A new four mill levy for five
years for pennanent improvements
will be on the ballot as wiU a one
mill Continuing levy for current ex c
penses.
A continuing levy is put on ·the
ballot at each election by the Meigs
Local Board of Education in order
to comply with the contract which
the board bas with the Meigs Local
Teachers Association.
·
The one mill levy will generate
$105,606.34 a year for the general
operating fund if the levy passes

TueSday.
Of that amount, nearly 85 percent .will go into teachers' salaries
and benefits. Once passed the levy
is collected for a "continuin~
period of time" which means that ll
continues indefinitely without
having to be put before the voters
again.
The four mill levy if passed wiU
generate about $422,400 a year for
~arten~ . irnprove~~ts-those
· things whach bave a lifeume value
of at least five years.
· ·
·Supt. James Carpenter noted that
if the four miU levy passes it "will
not reflect an increase in taxes for
residents of the district."
This, he explained, is because in
December the bonds on Meigs

High School wiU be retired and
taxes will decrease by four mills. A
vote for the new four mill levy will
· not increase wes, the superuitendent said.
Supt CIU])Cnter said that the
permanent irn~vements for which
the money will be spent, if indeed
the four mill levy passes, "will be
going for things wnich can actilally
be seen, for something concrete, in
places and for things where the
taxpayers i-ealize exactly . where
their money is going,"
Particularly mentioned by Carpenier was the purchase of school
buses. He said that the district now
has 18 non-diesel engines and that
some of them have over 100,000

::

Good Only At Powol's Super Valu
. God
o W1dnesday, Oct. 31, O
. nly

16

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••••••••••••••••••• ••••••

was found to have archeological
value.
Hedrick reported that the many
studies required before completion
of .the planning stage, which included a wetlands study, a study of
historical and archeological significance, and a new hazardous waste
study, are now complete.
. Those studies, Hedrick said,
have presented no problems that
would slow the project down.
''We are,' I feel, 90 pc:n:ent complete toward reaching the public
hearing sta~e bf the project,"
ODOT District Director Joe Leach
said.
The project bein~ discussed as
feasible at this poml is the first
"leg", that section. between Rocksprings and Five Points.
structure.
Leach projects ground turning on
The second farm, the Theiss
that
section, if approval is received
homestead at Stale Ro.ute 124 and
from
Columbus, in approximately
338, wa5 saved for the same reason.
The third change in the align- three years.
Several individuals whose homes
ment skirts an area near the Parsons
·would be lost in the construction
Church and Cemetery.
·
According to Hedrick, that area process were present at the meeting.
.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel Newi Starr
Three proposed changes to the
alignment of the upgraded State
Route 124 project, lcnown as the
Ravenswood Bridge Connector,
were presented at a public meeting
at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy on
TheSday evening.
The Ohio Department of
. ~nation's Tom Hedrir;lr;
presenlled; . the three aligrunent
changes, which were made to
preserve historical structures.
The first change was made to the
Carleton farm was found to be of
"National
Historic
Regis!Cf
quality", and thus the department
rNiiglw:d the rol.t 10 avoid the

oz. ans.

Plus Dtposi t

FLAYORITE

Marriage license

GALLON

Statewide...

Divorce sought

Melp County Senior Citizens Center In
Pomeroy. A large delegation of those wbose
properties are affected by the construction littended the meeting, tbe fourtb to be held on the
projecl

STORE HOORS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND Sl.
POMEROY. OH .

!ion said that there are no plans for
eonstruction projects at any of the
schools nor are there any plans .for
closing any schools, a malter considered by the board several ·
months ago. He did indicate,
however, that a new bus garage
would probably save money in the
longrun.
Currently buses are repaired in
the back of the old Rutland High
School bnilding but the space permits only two buses to be worked
on at the same time.
More immediate problems, Car-.
penter said, and things which
would lit into the permanent improvements
category, · are
replacef,11ent

·· Though none of those who rnacJe
statementS were opposed to the
road consauction, many voiced
their frustration with the alignment
"I am not against the highway,
but I am very disappointed in
ODOT and its engineers," said
Cecil Rice.
Rice, who lives in the Morning
Star area, contends that by redirecting pan of the new road,
several homes could be saved.
Kathy Grady, whose home will
be losi in the second construction
phase . between Five Points and
Ravenswood, objected last night to
the deparunent's use of a traffic
count to determine the construction
schedule.
"Because of this (ll'lfllc count),"
Grady said,"this road will never be
finished."
"Nobody wants to navel that
road now because it's crummy,"
Grady continued. "Right now, there
are 15 roads being traveled because
you don't have a decent highway to
navel on."
,
"

EconomiSts split on outlook
•
tn light of t~i.rd-quarter data
cenUn .the third quarter of this
year, stronger than expected and
Well up from 0.4 percent In the
second quarter.
Analysts agreed that brisk
sales of cars and trucks, encouraged by incentives held out by
Detroit au tomakers, drove the
statistic higher. So did a surge In
consumer spending on bJg. ticket
durable goods, In particular.
What the experts could not
agree on was whether this

Indicated SOI'l)e underlying economic resilience - or a last
hurrah before the slump.
"This contradicts those who
believe we are In a recession or
are about to enter one," asserted
Commerce Department official
Michael Darby ~ predicting
steady but modest growtli the
rest or this year and Into next.
Chief economist Gall Fosler of
the Conference Board business
group alao was optimistic. ''This
'
Is not a bust scenario,'' said
. Fosler, who correctly forecast
the GNP number. "This Is jus tan
economy which Is sloppy and
slow-growing."
Edward Yardenl, PrudentialBache Securities' chief econoconsumption was the largest mist, agreed that the figure
since a 1.2 percent hike In June. reflected some resilience
In July, personal Income through September and possibly
gained 0.5 percent, personal "forces a lot of economists to
consumption Increase!! 0.6 per- push out their recession
'
cent and the rate or savings was · forecasts ."
But
rlslng
.unemployrnent
and
4.4 percent.
falling
consumer
confidence
The Commerce Department
also reported that disposable since the end o! the period have
personal Income, which Is In- chipped away at the rather
come after taxes, Increased 0.4 sanguine view Yardenl had been
percent In September after In· ' advancing. The economy "fell orr
c hlng up 0.2 percent In August. ln a cliff'' in early October, he
stated.
July, It gained 0.4 percent.
Yardenl still thinks the United
In September, personal savStates
could avoid a recession,
Ings totaled $4.7 trillion for t)le
but
only
If the Federal Reserve
month, an Increase or $23.8
keeps
loosening
Its credit policy.
biUion. Personal outlays for the
Merrill Lynch Capital Markets
month totaled $3.8 trUIIon, an
rnacroeconomk analyst Bruce
increase of $40 billion.
"Wages and salaries Increased Steinberg acknowledged that the
$17.4 billion in September, corn- GNP number was on the high
pared with an Increase ·of $600 side of what most experts exmillion In August," the Com· pected, but Insisted that "It's a
rneroe Department said. "Per- fairly feeble economy outthere."
He voiced skepticism In particsonal tax and non- tax paymenta
ular
about the strong .consumer
Increased $6.2 billion In Sepi&gt;attern reflected In the
spending
tember, compared with· an In·
crease of $3.4 billion In ¥gust." .
Continued on page 9

RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTER
GROUNDBREAIUNG - U. S. Sen. Rob!lrt C.
Byrd was one of the pest speakers during
croundbreaklng ceremonies lor General Dynam-

Pel'8onal income up
0.5 % in September

Weather

To meet .

.ALTERNATIVE ALIGNMENT . REVIEWED
- A map sbowlng the complete route of the
Rav.enswood Brid&amp;e Connector was centerstage'
at Thesday evening's public meeting concerning
the Raveliswood Bridge Connector, held at the

By BRENDAN MURPHY
UPI Dullness Writer ·
NEW YORK- U.S. economic
expansion was surprisingly brisk
Ill the third quarter, but leadibg
economists disagreed whether
that meant·. the country might
avert recession or was about to
· go off the high jump.
The Commerce Department
said Tuesday that gross national
product, the U.S. output of goods
and services, expanded 1.8 per-

GROUND
BEEf
$ .,09

· In additiorf to the need for new
buses, Carpenter said that a survey
of needs from the principals or
elementary schools indicated that
they needed new blinds. .He said
that in most of the schools the
blinds either do not operate or 8111
in deplorable condition, or both.
He said thai computer equipment, other teaching 8lds and eqttipment as well as some replacement
furniture are needed. New furniture
was put in every elementary bttilding six or seven years ago but because of the use and the fact that
some of it has been shutded b8ck
and forth, the district now needs
some replacements.
Carpenter in response to a ques-

Proposed changes for bridge
connector presented ·by ODOT

............................ .
••
'

miles which is at the point where
trading them in should be considered. "So", said Carpenter, "we
are looking at replacing most of
these buses within the next five
years.
A diesel bus costs between
$48,000 and $50,000 each, according to Carpenter, who noted that a
large portion of the money from the
tax levy, if passed, would go for
thaL
.
The ~upc:tintendenl · explained
that the dislrict is in the process of
changing to diesel buses because
they wiU operate hundreds of
thousands of miles, and allow for
replacement of the body without a
change of the chassis.

:;

DR. PEPPER
7 UP
a PAK

3 Secttona. 24 Pages 26 Cants
A Muhlmadia Inc. NewiPaper .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 31, 1990

Copyrighted 1990

:

................. ....•.. .. ... , .................
::.

·Clear tonight. Low In mid
488. Sunny Thursday. High In
mid 70s.

•

••

•

::

·Page 7

••••••

'

••
••

9-C;5-D;9-S

Hospital news

_Meigs announcements __

'

Card8: 2-H;

WASHINGTON (UPI)- U.S.
personal Income Increased 0.5
percent In September while personal consumption leaped 1.1
percent over August, the Commerce Department said
Wednesday.
The Income figure was In line
With private forecasts, but the
consumption figure was higher
than expected and appeared to
reflect Increased costs for oil In
the walle or the Iraqi crisis.
In Auailst, personal Income
edged up 0.2 peroent while
personal consumption was up 0.5
percent, according to, the depart·rnent's Economics and Statistics
Administration.
September's savings rate was
3.5 percent oflncome, l9wer than
a rate of about 4.1 percent In
August, the government said.
A governrn~nt spokesman said
· September's 3.5 percent savlnp
rate was the loweat since 3.3
percent In October 1987, and that
the 1.1 . percent Increase In

'

'

lcs' research and development cen&amp;er Tuesday in
Apple Grove. The Mason TechnoloiJ' Cen&amp;er Is
scheduled lor completion In the spring oll991. .

At Apple Grove ·

Groundbreaking ceremonies
held for $3.5 tnillion facility
some time he had worked to set the
state to move into !hi 21st century.
Mason County was visiled by. Byrd said some people refer to
both U.S. Senator Robert C. Byrd West Vuginians as "hillbillies". The
and Govemor Gaston CapertOn senator stated he feels SOO¥ for the
TheSday, when General Dynamics· people in wban areas, with . their
Land Systems Division ·broke drug and other problems, and weiground · for a new technology corned General Dynamics to the
State of West Vuginia, ranked 49th
facility in A,pple Grove.
The facility, ·t,fason Techology in crime in the nation.
Gov. Caperton, too, welcomed
Center, will be used for reseati:h
and development of potenlial the new industry and assisled in
electrothermal gun technology ap- groundbreaking activities. General
plications on main bailie tanks and Dynamics wu the second stop of
three for.the governor Tuesday. He
other military hardware.
began
his visit at the Mason County
Five struCtures will be built on
Vocational
Center with a jobs
the 264-acre site, for appoximalely
forum
in
the
morning, and later that
S3.S million. Amon&amp; the structures
will be a IBIJCl 8JIIa with a canopy, day at groundbrelkin~ the new
an instrumenlllion buildin&amp; 111d a Ashton Elementary Sc I.
"We're delighted to be in West
power supply bl!ilding. Complctioli
Virginia." said Robert W. Truxell.
is scheduled for Spring 1990. ·
Senator B~ si8ICd that . for vicc-presidenl of the c:orjlbnllion
By Mindy Kearns

I

and general manager of Land Systerns Division. "Everyone here has
made us feel welcome."
Employment at the facility could
eventually reach as many as 25
people, but wiU initially require
only a few people for security.
Electrothermal (ET) gun iechnology is a new patented process
that replaces conventional gun
powder with a high energy eleelrical pulse provided to a chemically
. active but non-explosive propeUant
in the chamber of a gun.
"General Dynamics is at the.
' forefront of a potential revolution
in gun propulsion tcc:hnology," said
Gordon England, vice-J-ident of
resean:h and engineenng. "Using
electrothermal tcc:hnology insle8d
· of a conventlonal chemical J-.I!Pel!ant ~lild ~nerare ammurution or
Cantin~ on dage 9

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