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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinel

Paga

---Area deaths-- Quickel
Margaret Spent'.et'
,
addresses
Margaret A. Spencer, 71, ·Of
Route 3 in Pomeroy, died on Sunday.
A housewife, she was born on
January 12, 1919 in New Lexington, the daughw of the late Fred
and Ruth Young Harper. She was a
member of the St Paul United
Methodist Church in Tuppers
Plains.
.
She is survived by four
daughters, Sarah Josephine Showe,
Toledo, Connie Ballard, Chester·
ville Brenda
Weber and Loreua
.
Brown, both of Pomeroy; an aunt,
Edith Harper, Pomeroy; several
nieces
and
nephews;
10
granchildren and four great
grandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Anhur L. Spencer (in March,
1990), a daughter, Audrey Jean.
Spencer, and a sister, Audrey
Powell.
.
Funeral services will be held on
Thursday at 1 p.m. a,l Ewing
Funeral Home, w1th Rev:' Sharon
Hausman officiating,
Burial will be in Keebaugh
Cemetery.
·
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
on Wednesday.

.

.

Rhoda Worthington
Mrs. Rhoda A. Wonhington, 90,
of Ravenswood, W. Va., died Sunday at the Village Health Center at
Ravenswood after a brief illness.
Born in Gallia County, she was
the daughter of the late Thomas and
Lena Nibert She ,.as a housewife
and · member of the First United
Methodist Church at Ravenswood.
She is survived by four ·
daughters, Beryl Rowley of
Ravenswood, W. Va., Mrs. Faye
Elder of Minerva, Mrs. Mabel
Frazier of Columbus, and Mrs.
Gloria Wagner of Racine, 12
grandchildren,
22
great·
grandchildren, and four great-greatgrandchildren.
·
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Francis Worthington, in
1963, and one daughter, Jean Cecil,
in. 1973.
Services will be held Wednesday
at 11 a.m. at the Straight-Tucker
Funeral Home at Ravenswood.
Rev. Van Hogan. Burial will be in
the Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeraf home from 6
to 9 p.m Tuesday. In lieu of
· flowers, memorial contributions
may be made to the American Cancer Society.Hannan obit

Richard Fortney
Richard R. Fortney, 85, South
Canaan Road, .Guysville, died
Monday evening at his residence
after an extended illness.
Born in Harrison COunty, W. Va.,
he was the son of Harter Fortney
and Evah Robey Fortney, He was a
retired construCtion worker with
Brewer Construction in Lancaster,
and a member of the South Cannan
Baptist Church.
He is survived by his wife,
Catherine Homer Fortney, one sister, Gladys Fuller, The Plains. a sister-in-law, Beuy Fortney of
Guysville, several nieces and
nephews.
Besides his parents he was
preceded in death by an infant
brother, Donald, and a brother, H.
Paul Fortney, two sisters, Pearl
Croy and Virginia Hesson.

Funeral services ·will be held at
11 a.m. Thursday at the White
Funeral Home with the Rev. David
Couto officiating. Burial will be in
the Bean Cernewy in Guysville.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday 7 to 9 p.m. and
Wednesday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

•
team IS
announced

students

Pick-3: 616
Pick-4: 8670
Cards: 9-H; 5-C;
2-D; A-S

Page4

Lenville Hannan
LenviUe R. Harman. 68, Slate
Route 124; Rutland, died Sunday at
Camden Clark Memorial Hospital ,
Parkersburg, W. Va. · ·
.
, Born on May 4, 1922 at MeCodde, w. Va., he waS ·the son of
William Clarence Harman and
Thelma Mitchell Harman Ashworth. He was a farmer and former
superintendent for BabCock and
Wilcox Construction Co. He was a
member of the Boilermakers Lodge
667• W.mfi etd • w· Via., the Mlt.
Moriah Masonic Lodge 037' F. and
A. M., Beverly, and .a vetei:an of
World War U.
.
He is survived by two sons and
· Ia G
d B
daug hters-mw, ene an
arbara Harman, Vienna, W. Va.;
Michael Dean and Linda Harman,
Grayson, Ky.; and a son, Larry R·
Harman, Rutland; a daughter and
son-in-law, Sheila and Timothy
McDaniel, Rutland; a brother and
sister-in-law, William J. and Diane
Harman, Sunberry, and a sister and
brother-in-law, Saralyn and Don
Drenner, Pipersville, Pa., seven
grandchildren,
two
step.ldre
d
grandch 1 n, an two greatgrandchildren, along with several
nieces and nephews.
.
'
Besides his parents he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Mabel Julia Williams Harman in
May, 1990, a sister, Martha Lewis,
and 'a brother, Boyce Gene Harman.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at I p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. Laura
ShrefOer will officiate and burial
will be in Riverview Cemetery.
Frien(ls may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.

· A citizenship assembly was held
Monday at Pomeroy Elemenwy.
Guest speaker for the assembly wa5
Bill Quickel, member of the Meigs
County Board of Education
owner of Davis-Quickel Insurance
Company in Pomeroy.

•

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·

During the assembly a student
from each class was chosen by the
teacher for his or her outstanding
display of good citizenship. Receiving certificates in ·Mrs. . Mary
Carolyn Wiley kindergarten classes
were Kayle Davis, a.m., and Corey
"'--•
I grad. 1 6 the
nuuus, p.m. n
es •
recipients were, from Mrs. Jamie
Blaettnar, Danny BuffingtOn; .Mrs.
Carol Ohlinger, Crystal Lemley;
· Ashl .....~
Mrs. Becky Trent,
ey ...vmas;
Mrs. Suzy Carpenter, Emily Stiver;
Miss Kathy Haley, Melissa Davis;
Mrs. Linda Zamoch, Whitney
Thomas; Mrs. Judy Carter, Jenny
Clark; Miss Carol Smith, Amanda
Buckley; Cliff Kennedy, Jason
Boggess; Mrs. Julia Vaughan,
Rachell Davidson; Mrs. Marjorie
Gibbs, Kasey Williams; Mrs. Linda
Stanley, · Danielle Grueser; :Mrs.
Debbie Sebert, Jerica Clark; Mrs.
Julie Hubbard. Shawn .fife; Miss
Becky Tripleu, Tara Grueser; Mrs.
Joni Jeffers, Reatha Bush; Mrs.
Janet Ho.an, Jessica Roush.

GOOD CITIZENSHIP WINNERS • Receiving
certificates ror good citizenship at Pomeroy
Elementary on Monday are, 1-r, front, Kayte
Davis, Danny Buf'6tlgton, Crystal Lemley, Jes,.
sica .Roush, Jenny Clark, Corey Woods, Reatha .
Bush, Ashley ThOmas and Amanda Buckley.

.Weather
Soulll Central Ohio

•

Most Meigs incumbents post wins

Back, Bill Quickel, guest speaker, Kasey Williams, Tara Grueser, Jodie Sisson, Danielle
Grueser, Jerica Clarll;, Jason Bogg~s, Shawn
Fife, Melissa Davi$ and RacheD Dav1dson. Absent for the photo were Emily S!i~ers and Whitney Thomas.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr

his bid for reelection as Ohio's
AuditOr: His Rep.ublican opposition, James M. Petro received 3,319
Meigs County voters pulled few votes.
SecretarY. of State Sherrod
punches in Tuesday's general election, endorsing a Republican Brown, a Democrat, was defeated
Gubernatorial ticket and voting to in Meigs County. Brown received
retain nearly all of the incumbent 3 060 votes to his Republican chall~ger Robert Taft's 4;593 votes.
office holders on their balloL
· Democrat Mary Ellen Withrow,
Republican Gubernatorial candidate George Voinovich and his Ohio's incumbent State Treasurer,
running mate, Michael DeWine;· won in Meigs County over her
were the victors in Meigs COunty, challen~er, Judith Y. Brachman; a
capntring an unoflicial4,333 votes. RepubliCll!l, 3,920 to 3,444 votes.
Their Democratic opposition; AnClarence Miller, a Republican,
thony Celebrezze and Eugene received '5,205 Meigs County votes
Branstool. received 3,372 votes.
over Democrat John Buchanan's
In the race for O~io Attorney 2,605 votes in the race for U.S.
General, Paul E. PCeifer, a Representative in the lOth District
Republican, won over Democrat
In the race for State SenatOr for
Lee Fisher by a wide margin, 4,657 the 17th District, Incumbent
votes to 2,744.
Democrat Jan Michael Long was
Incumbent Democrat Thomas E. the victor in Meigs County, receivFerguson received 4,189 votes in ing 4,742 votes over Republican

·Soapbox derby meeting slated Thursday
• •

Mostly clear Tuesday night,
with a low near 35. Becoming
partly cloudy Wednesday , with a
chance of afternoon rain; and
highs In the low 50s. Chance of
rain Is 30 percent.
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
A chance of snow flurries In the
northeastern part of the s ta'te and
fair weather elsewhere Thurs·
day.

A meeting for all persons interes·
ted in bringing an area · soapbox
derby 10 the Meigs County area has
beenscheduledforThursdaynjght
at 7 p.m. at Middleport Village
Hall. Roger D. Williams, recreation
director for Middleport, encourages
auendance at the meeting· where
questions will be answered ·and
plans. developed Anyone · with
questions should contact ,the Mid-

Raymond Sterling Roush, 70,
New Haven, died Monday, Nov. 5,
1990, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born July 20, 1920, in the Broad
Run Community, he was a son of
the late. Okey W. and Alma M.
(Pickens) Roush.
A coal miner, Roush attended the
Broad Run United Methodist
Church.
~
Survivors include hiS wife,
Evelyn 0 . Roush; son and
daughter-in-law, Jerry R. and
Tammy Roush, New Haven; two
daughters and sons-in-law, Joyce
M. and Steve Gillispie, Gallipolis, ,
Janie A. and Danny Gillispie, New
Haven; five sisters, Elsie A. Lieving, Estyl L. Clark, both of New
Haven, Fannie L. Clark, Louise K.
Gibbs, both of Letart, Irene L. Jus·
tis, Mason; mother-in-law, Eunice
E. Martin, New Haven; six
grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
He was preceded in death by
three sisters, Estella llene Roush,
Eunice M. Hart, Freda D. Henry,
and a brother, Hazen H. Roush.
The funenll wiD be Thursday,
1':30 p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with Rev. Merlin Teeks and
Rev. Clyde FerreD officiating.
Burial wiD be in the Graham'
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Wednesday, 2 to 4 and 7
to9p.m .

is coming to our area'

dleport Recreation Department at .
992-6782.
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&gt;

Hospzta news ···Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted:
Flossie
Stanley,
Shade.
Discharged: Laura Arnold;
Mildred Blankenship, and Laura
Scott.
·

"RockTober" is almost over, but the beat goes on!
Jazz up the holidays by opening your
1991 Christmas Club at Peoples Bank.
Simply make 49 weekly payments and we'll make the
final payment for you ... it's a great way' to save!

ROBERT BUCK

(County Commissioner)

challenger Daniel R. Hiercinimus, in her rae¢ for the lOth district of
whO toOk 2,061 votes. Independent the State Board of Education. She
candidate Ron Eastman received ' received 4,437 Meigs County
1,194 votes in his home county in votes.
·
his bid for State Senator.
In Meigs County, ·incumbent
State Representative Mary Abel, Andrew Douglas received 3,913
a Democrat, lost here to the . votes in his race against Stuart .J.
county's native Ric bard E. Jones by Banks for a seat on the Ohio
754 votes, Republican Jones receiv- Supreme Coun, for that term coming 4,368 votes to Abel's 3,614.
mencing January I, 1991. Banks
In a close race for a seat on the received 1,535 votes, In the second
Meigs COunty Board of Comm!s- Supreme Coon race, for the term
sioners, Janet L: Howard, · a commencing January 2, 1991,
Democrat .in her first bid for a Stephanie Tubbs Jones was the
political office, was ~efeated by ~ winner in Meigs County, defeating
1ncumbent, Republican Mannmg the incumbent Craig Wright and
Roush .. ,Rous~ took 4,069 votes and ~ challenger J. Ross Haffey. Jones
Howard rece1ved 3,859 votes ..· .
took in 2,687 votes while Wright
Me1gs County Auditor William received 2,393 votes. 610 votes
R. Wickline and Coron~ Douglas were cast for Haffey.•
D. H'!'lter, both Repu~hcans and
Peter B. Abele won Meigs
both mcumbents, rece1ved . 5,877 County voters' endorsement for his
'VOtesand6,109.votesrespecllvely.
retiring father's seat on the Fourth
Mary Goodrich was unopposed District Coon of Appeals, winning

Despite sometimes furious ef.
forts by their opponents to unseat
them, Meigs County's two rejlre·
sentatlves In the legislature were
chosen to return to Columbus In
Tuesday•s· voting.
Sen. Jan Michael Long, D·
Clrclevllle, defeated Republican
· challenger Daniel R. Hleronlmus
and Independent candidate Ron
Eastman ~or a second term
representing the 11th Senate
District, which Includes Gallla,
Meigs, Athens, Jackson, Law·
renee, VInton, Ross and Plcka·
way counties.
Mary Abel, D·Athens, appointed Jn Aprtl 1989 to fill the
unexplrffi term of Rep. Jolynn
Butler In the 94th House District
of Gallla, · Meigs and Athens
counties, turned .back the chat·
lenge from Meigs County Com·
missioner Richard E. Jones, a
.
Republican.
''I think this has been a vote of

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ' Riding the crest of a ' 'throw the
rascals out" wave, former Cleve·
land Mayor George Voinovich
trounce&lt;! Attorney General An·.
thony Celebrezze · Tuesday to
become Ohio's first Republican
governor In eight years.
Volnovlch, who was credited
with rescuing Cleveland from
bankruptcy during his 10 years
as mayor from 1979 to 1989,

'

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MEMBER F.OJ.C.
&gt;•

'1;

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confidence, a strong one, and I
was very happy with the turnout
for my campaign In Meigs
County," Long told The Dally
Sentinel late. Tuesday from a
victory celebration In Chill!·
co the. "My plan Is to continue the
formula for communities In my
district, to continue working on
legislative Issues that will benefit
the district."
Because of computer break·
down In Athens County, results of
the race were not complete until
Wednesday, but late Tuesday
Long had won an unofflclal total
44,497 votes In the other seven :
counties, Hleronlmus had netted
33,321 and Eastman had 4,331.
From those results, Long's
largest lead was In Ross County,
where he polled. 11,171 votes.
Hleronlinus defeated Long only
In Lawrence County, receiving
9,724 ballots to Long's 8,575.
Eastman's best showing was In

a

Meigs County, ivhere he won
1,194 votes.
Considered one of the hottest
Senate races In· the state, the
campaign was highlighted by
Hleronlmus' accusations that
Long lied to the voters In 1986
about the legal status of Sen.
Oakley C. CoUins' holding down
positions as a legislator and
·school superintendent at ·,t he
same time.
Hleronlmus, serving his third
term as Lawrence County sheriff. conceded the· election to
Long around 10 p.m. Tuesday
from his Ironton headquarters.
He told a Huntington, W.Va.,
television station that he didn't
think the controversy surround·
lng his attacks on Long contributed to hiS defeat:
"I don't think so," Hll!rnonl·
.mus said. "The campaign was
too aggressive and I apologize for
that, but I thought · It was a

matched his performance in the
pre-election polls, defeating
Celebrezze by 12 percehtage
points. He will SUfCeed two-term
Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste In January.
The final unofficial results
showed Volnovlch with 1,917,161
votes to Celebrezze' s 1,523,098.
Volnovlch rebounded In .convincing style !rom a humiliating
defeat In 1988 at the hands of Sen.

Howard Metzenbaum, D·Ohlo,
who tried to help Celebrezze In
the latter stages of the campaign.
Votnovlch captured ~11 but the
most Democratic areas of the
state in carrying 56 perceniof the
popular vote against ·Cele·
brezze' s 44 percent. Celebrezze
could win only a dozen counties,
many of them In the eastern coal
region and In southern Ohio._

Meigs County .Fair extended ·to six days
;

An EQual OpporMllty Employer

JAN LONG
·(State Senator)

.Voinovich rolls to victory

Choose from a

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The L•t•yeltll Hotel
101 fltllllt Bt.
Mll'lflttl

(Probate .Judge) ·

j

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The 1991 Meigs COunty Fair
will be a six day evenL
The Meigs County Agricultural
Society meeting Monday night in
the secretary's office o.n the' Rock
"' Springs Fairgrounds voted to extend the fair by one day. It has tentatively been scheduled for Aug.
12-17. .
Plans call fer the Meigs County
Minilterial Association to hold
religious services on Sunday evening to open the fair. Camival rides
on the midway will begin at I p.m.
on Monday and there will be an attraction that ,evening at the

~

grandstand.
.
.
In other action the 11oard ~ot.ed to
ban out-of-county youth from participating in the Meigs County
Junior Fair. While It was not a
~polar decision, according to
Mary Gilmore, secretary, the board
decided that only Meigs COunty
youth can belong to a Meigs
County 4-H Club. Several in the
large crowd attending the meeting
proteSted the ban. A board member
explained that this is an action
being taken by fair boaids across
the _.tate~ It was pointed out that the

limitC4 bam . space at the
fairgrounds, as well as livestock
sale dollars, were facrors considered in the dec.ision.
Adopted by the board was a constitptional amendment in whicb it is
stated that if a person behaves in a
manner which the Fair Board
de~:ms impropef while at the fair,
the board has the right to discipline
and possibly even ban them from
participating at the fair fer a period
of three years.
The Ohio Fair Manqers Convention to be held in ColljlllbUS was

4;189 votes to William K. Shaw,
Jr:'s 2,068 votes.
Incumbent Probate and Juvenile
Judge Roben E. Buck was retained
despite opposition from Pomeroy
Auomey D. Michael Mullen. Buck

received 4,971 votes to Mullen's
2,739. .
.
All vote counts are unofficial.
The official count by the Mei~s
County Board of Elections w1D
take place on Nov. 1'7. ·

Eastern school levy
approved; others
rejecte~ ·Tuesday
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr

A five mill emergency tax levy
billed as the last chance to save the
financially troubled Eastern Local
School District was the only sehool
levy in the county to pass in
Tuesday's · general
election .
M~anwhile, Meigs County voters
rejecte9 a.county'wide levy for the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental
Disabilities ruul school levies in the
county's other two districts.
The levy in the Eastern Local
District, a two year emergency levy
of five mills, was approved by a
vote of 1,009 votes to 860 votes
against the levy.
The Meigs MRDD 1.5 mill continuing levy, the only county-wide
taX issue to be decided in yester'
day's general-,· • election, •. was
defeated 4;095'10 3,768 votes.
In the Southern Local School
. District, voters defeated their 4.0
mill, three year levy 810 voies ·for
the levy to 947 votes againsL
MARY ABEL
Meigs Local School District
(Slate Representative)
voters defeated two proposed taX
levies. The first levy, a four mill,
three year levy for pennanent im·
provements, was defeated 2,381 to
1,446.
A second levy, a continuing levy
legitimate Issue," Hleronlmus.
for
operating expenses in the
said.
amount
of one mill, was defeated
Lortg and Hleronlmus dis·
by
a
vote
of 1,290 for the levy to
cussed several major Issues In
2.493 votes against.
. the campaign, Including educa·
In Rutland Village, a Police
lion and highways, In forums
Protection levy in the amount of
throughout the campaign. East·
1.5 mill for fiVe years was defeated,
man, a Meigs County farmer,
81
votes for the levy to lll votes
stumped on a platform of reduc·
against.
A second levy, a 1.5 mill,
Ing taxes and Increasing local
five
year
current expense levy, was
control of government.
defeated
119
to 79.
Abel won her own term In the
Voters
in
Syracuse Village apHouse outright when she talUed
proved
a
current
expenses levy of
an unofficial dis trlct ·wide total of
1.8
mills
for
five
years.
The vote on
21,331 votes to Jones' 13,188.
that
levy
was
224
votes
for the levy
County-by-county, Abel defeated
and 115 votes againsL Syracuse
Jones In GaiUa, 6,553-4,378 and In
voters also approved a levy for fire
Athens,l1,164·4,442. Jones won In
protection in the amount of I mill.
Meigs County, 4,368-3,614.
for five years. 214 votes were cast
''I'm very pleased with the
in favor of the levy, while 124
results, I appreciate the vote in
votes
were cast against it..
Meigs County and the confidence
.
the voters there have shown In
me, " Abel told The Dally Sen·
tinel from Athens County Democratic Headquarters late Tuesday. " I will continue to work hard
for the district and continue with
the plaUorm I have put forth for
By Charlene Hoe8lcb
the residents of the district."
. Sentinel News Starr
Somewhat quieter than the
The ballots cast by voters at the
Long- Hie~onlmus-Eas tma n
Board of Elections Tuesday in
race, the Abel-Jones competition
compliance with House Bill 237
saw the candidates mostly In
were not counted last night and
agreement on major Issues,
could,
in some cases, actually
dlffertng only In approach . Abel
change
the
result of a close race.
ran on her 19.-month record In the
According
to Jane Frymyer,
House, while Jones attacked the
direc.tor of the Mei~s Board, a total
Celeste administration in Columof 59 Meigs Counuans voted at the.
bus for corruption and told voters
Board of Elections office Tuesday.
he would work with George
These people were registered
Volnovich should Volnovich win
voters who bad moved before Oct.
the governorship.
9 but had not reported their change
of address to the Board prior to the
deadline for making that change.
The new bill, implemented this
year, was passed by the Ohio Legislature this past summer, so this
announced for Jan. 2-5 with C. W. year's general election marks the
Henderson to serve as delegate and · first time the new law has been m
Laurie Reed as alternate Several effecL
other board members will be atThe purpose of H. B. 237 is to astending the meeting. EntertainmetU sure every registered voter the right
for the 1991 fair is cun'ently being
booked, Mrs. Gilmore reported.
The election of board members
was held at the meeting with 107
voting for the candidates. Re-elecMiddleport police are con_tinuing
ted for three yeai terms were Vugil an investigation into a breaking and
Windon, C. W. Hendeoon, and entering which occurred at. .the
Laurie Reed. The new members Sears Store in Middleport ovenught
elected to the bolrd were Jim Monda~
.
AccOrding to Police Otief Sad
Sheets and Charles Shain.
'
Little; entrirn:e was made, through

Long, Al?el retain legislative seats

OPEN YOUR
1991 CHRISTMAS CLUB
NOW AND RECEIVE'
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2 Sections. 14 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio, ·wednesday, November 7, 1990

Vot.41. No.140
Copyrlghtec! 1990

Low tonight In mid 20s.
Thursday, high near 511.

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and

Raymond Roush

The Ohio Lottery

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Ohio Lottery

·All TVC

A 3 mill, five year current expenses levy in Racine Village was approved by voters there yesterday,
with 239 votes being cast in favor
and I00 votes cast againsL
Middleport Village voters approved a 1 mill, five year current
expense levy, with 439 votes being
cast in favor of the levy and 390
~ing cast against
In Salem Township, a half mill,
five year levy for cemetery
maintenance was approved by a
narrow margin. 136 vQled in favor,
while 122 voted against the
measure.
Suuon Township voters also approved a half mill, five year
cemetery levy. 669 votes were cast
in favor and 585 againct.
In Olive Township, a 1.5 mill,
five year fire protection levy was
approved. 332 voted in favor and
253 voted against.
.
Voters in Columbia Township
cast 198 votes in favor of a .fire
protection levy for I mill and five
yerits. That levy received 84 against
its passage.
In Chester Township, a I mill,
five year levy for cemetery
maintenance , was approved by a
vote of 519to 389,
Two of three proposed constitu·
\ional amendments were rejected in
Meigs County.
The first, concerning governmental provision of housing and housing assistance, was rejected in ·
Meigs County. That vote wa13,234
for the proposed amendment and
3,726 against.
A second proposed amendment,
which would allow the spouses of
homestead exemption recipients to
receive the exemption after their
spouse dies, but who would not
otherwise ·qualify for the exemption, was approved by a large margin. 6,224 voted in favor, and 1,254
voted agaipst the amendment
Thinlly, an amendment which
would allow casino gambling in •
Lornin as a pilot project was rejected by vote of 5.477 against and
1,877 for.

59 Meigs voters cast
ballots at courthouse
to vote even though the voter failed
to report the address change 10 the
Board of Elections.
However, those ballots were not
counted in the results Tuesday
night. They will be counted during
!he official count next week and
then only after if it, has been.
verified that each voter.did not vote
at his previous polling location.
Also the local Board expects to
receive more absentee ballots from
military personnel stationed overseas. Those voters had until yester'
day to exercise their voting right
absentee. The ballots must be
received no later than Nov. 17.
With the large number of servicemen now stationed in the Middle East, this 100 could affect the
final outcome of close races, Board
of Election officials report.
The official count, as set by State
Law, must take place between Nov.
17-22.

Middleport police probe B &amp; E
the back wall of the building where ·
a hole had been cuL Five Camcorders and two VCRs, valued 11
$5,800 had been taken from the
store owned . by Bill HaptoriStall. ·
The QCI has been called in to ISSist
in the investigati011, police te(IOr\•

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.Commentary
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The Daily Sentinel

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DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·Mi\SON A~EA

A~
e!i!m~ . ........_.._..,.., ~=·""'
~v .
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ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFl-ICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assllllant Publloher/ Cnntroller
A MEMBER o!The United Press Internatlonai,Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he less than 300
wonls long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will he published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.
·

New rules of the game
By STEVE GERSTEl.
,
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Only after the .carmige ended and the
blood was sponged dry, did members of the Senate and House assess
the affect of their self-lnfllcted wounds.
Congress, which for a long, long time piled perk upon perk lomake
sure of the re-i!lectlon of Its members, finally pulled back In the dark
hours before the session ended.
One of the most prized benefits of office has always been the frank
-the little mark In the upper right-hand corner ofthe envelope- that
permits members of Congress to bombard their voters with mall,
.
wanted or unwanted.
U members of Congress went mall-crazy, as they usually .did; and
they spent more than they allocated, the Senate and Hou~ would
approve more money or just tell the· Post Office the a~~&amp;orb the
overrun.
The Senate, after several furious fights, began cracking down by
limiting mass malllngs, trying to enforce a ceiling on costs and
requiring disclosure to the public.
Qnce, having cleansed th_emselves, senators started putting
pressure on the House to do the same. The House finally succumbed.
Under the new rules, each House member will on the average get
about $178,000 a year for franked mall that -If everyone goes to the
limit- will cost about $80 million, around what Is was this year.
Congressmen will be permitted to transfer a maximum $25,000
from other public accounts under their control for mall but will not be
allowed. to take money out of the franking kitty . .
And the mall money cannot be used for express mall, certified mall
or for other special classes of mall. That kind of mall cost taxpayers
$9 million last year.
·
.
.
Not to be outdone, the Senate stashed its malllng account from $35.5
mill!Qn to $30 million and prohibited the ~se of campaign funds 'to
supplement franked mall next year. Beginning In 1992, campaign
funds cannot be used for any office expense.
The big fight came, however, whr,n Sen. Dan Nickles, R-Okla.,
proposed and the Senate reluctantly accepted a new rule that bars
senators from transferring franking funds to other senators. It Is
believed senators not running help their colleagues who are up for
re-election. .
·
Somehow, the final version of the blll applied the restriction only to
election years.
Just In case anyone believes that members of Congress aren't.stlll
looking out for themselves, consider this ploy, which was narrowly
avera ted In the final hours of ·the session.
.
Working on the deficit-cutting package, the House Included a
provision exempting members of Congress from a provision that
prohibits lump-sum retirements payments to government employees. Only after Sen. William Roth, R-Del., and Rep. Bob Walker,
R-Pa., strongly protested was the provision stricken.
And, of course, Congress did not touch the pay raises that go Into
effect Jan. 1. From the current $98,600 House members go to $124,600
for senators to $104,600.
For House members who won re-election Tuesday, that fat pay
raise translates Into huge Increases In their pensions. A member's
pension, generous enough, Is computed on an average of his top three
years salary and will make many of them millionaires once they
leave Capitol Hill.

Berry's World

Blackman's jumper gives
Mavs 96-91 win over Knicks

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Agency ·h as risky loan policy_

Ill Couri Street

Pomeroy, Oblo

z....w DiiiiY-s. • •

hga

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WASHINGTON - The loan bly for the tiny Caribbean Island
requirements of the Overseas · of Antigua - .ended up In the
Private Investnient ·corp. read hands of Colombia's Medellin
like those of any bank In the · drug cartel .'The Anllguan InvesUnited States.· The only differ· tigators now claim that Maurice ·
en~e Is that OPIC Is a govern·sarfatl, an Antlguan melon
ment agency and If a borrower farmer and former Israeli sold·
welches on a loan, American ler. brokered the deal along with
taxpayers are the losers .
· other middlemen.
Under the circumstances, one
Sarfall's melon business was
would expect OPIC to be tight bankrolled by· $1.3 mllllon In
with Its money. But one would be loans from OPIC In 1985 and 1986.
· disappointed. In recent year But OPIC later suspected that _
OPIC, which loans money for not all of the money ended up In ·
business ventures In developing melons. In 1988, OPIC sued
countries, has come under In- Sarfatl for defaulting on the
creasing scrutiny for risky loan loans.
..practices. Now an lnvestigatiop
OPIC has recovered $1.1 milInto an arms deal threatens to lion . from Sarfall, but OPIC ·
resurrect one loan· that OPIC officials told us that It . was
. woj,ald just as soon keep b)lrled.
Impossible to trace where the
, Vast spring, U.S. authorities
orlglilal funds had ended up If not
fQilnd out that a huge shipment of In the melon bustness . .
Israeli arms -bound tnexpllca.-

_;_Jac_k_Ande~r:so_n_

Our associate Dean Boyd has tng Office looked lntoSarfalland
learned that the Antlguan tnves- found that If OPIC had looked
tlgallon Into the arms deal turned closely enough, It would have
up a $24,000 check written to found that the melon buslnes,s another Israeli man suspected In was showing a loss before OPIC
helping to arrange the arms deal. · gave Sarfatl a secoild'loan.
· The check appears to be drawn
sBrfatl was not OPIC's first
on the bank account where bad loan. Ill 1983, OPIC gave
Sarfatl kept the f!J.rm funds. The $375,000 to American John Hull
date on the check Is Illegible and for a Umber farm In COsta Rica.
the reason for the payment Is A Senate subcommittee later
unclear.
concluded that Hull was uslngthe
Although there Is no evidence "farm" as a base from which to
that Sartati was Involved In arms resupply the Nicaraguan con·
trafficking at the time the loans tras. A 1987 Senate Investigation
were made, court documents Into Hull showed that even the
from OPIC's 1988 lawsuit when most cursory check of his flnan.
Sarfatl defaulted Indicate he was ces would have been enough to
a risky loan nevertheless. OPIC raise OPIC's suspicions and
did a marginal job In checking reject the loa!) appllc;atton;
out Sarfatl before handing him
OPIC now says It has beefed up
Its credit reviews of applicants
$1.3 million.
In 1988, the General Account· for loans.

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Har-rumph!

· Fig~~ing Irish·outrank v ·olunteers

~·Look

on the bright side ... we've virtually eliminated voter. apathy ... "

The 1Olst Congress
The curtain fimilly fell on the one week before voters were to go
101st Congress and for most the to the polls.
end could not have come too soon.
It was the latter fact that
For members It was a most became a major factor In the
trying and agonizing Congress actions of Congress as the~esslon
and for the public It likewise wore on. Conscious of the restless
caused more than Its share of mood of the electorate for conheartburn.
structive action on the spiraling
As a session, It wlll be noted
budget deficit and cognizant of
both for Its historical happenings
the public's growing Impatience
and for Its partisan posturing.
with efforts to address this
The early resignation of House concern, the mood of the Con·
Speaker Jim Wright and the gress turned ugly at the end.
early rejection of John Tower as
At one end of Penhsylyanla
President Bush's nomlness for
Avenue was a President preoccuSecretary of Defense set the tone pied with thecrlsls In tbe Middle
for what became one of the most East but nevertheless devoting
fractious and confrontational substantial energy to engineerCongresses of our time. It will. Ing an acceptable budget com:
also be a Congress noted for what promise. At the other end of
It did accomplish, while at the · Pennsylvania Avenue stood a
• same time being crltized for
Congress divided.
what it didn't accomplish.
The House favored one apIn terms of history, It was the
proach, the Senate another,
first time a sitting .Speaker had
Republicans wanted wholesale
been forced to resign In the spending cuts, Democrats called
for more revenue raising meacourse of a session and In terms
of length, It was one ofthe longest sures. Cooperation turned to
sessions to be conducted In an
confrontation, and common
election year. concluding only

Cong. Clarence Miller
sense and the common good took
a back seat to political grandstanding and gamesmanship. In
the end a budget package was
passed, but II was a package that
was badly damaged In the course
of Its delivery. ·
Another dark cloud that ominously hung over this Congress
was the Savings .and Loan
scandal and the fate of the
Keating five. Tile escalating cost
of the Savings and Loan problem
only added to the already bleak
budget situation.
In way of legislation, the
Congress passed a series of
measures that will have a major
'impact on American society as a
whole. Legislation to extend
further rights to the disabled was
passed, as was a bill to provide
lax credits and direct grants for
child care. For the first time In a
decade a clean • air bill was
passed and · though this may
prove beneficial for the nation as
a whole, I opposed It because of
the Inequitable burden It wlll

place on midwestern consumers
and workers. •
Also, for the first time In a
decade a major new housing bill
was passed. While this bill
basically expanded existing programs It did contain a creative
proviSion which should encourage tenant acquisition of ,public
housing units. A new five-year
farm bill was also enacted which ...
should . serve to put American
agriculture on a more market
oriented basiS.
.
When I look back on the
22-montbS of the 101st Congress, I . .
do so with concern; concern that , .,
the legislative process Is no
'
longer working as well as It used . · '
to, conc'em that the Congress Is
Increasingly becoming a body
more concerned with popular
causes. More ·and more, Congress Is becoming a captive of
selfish concerns, a Congress that
thinks of Itself first and the puijlc
that It Is elected to serve second.
It's time It .got Its priorities back
In order.

..

Virginia dreams of howl date

Today in history
By United Preas International
Today Is Wednesday, Nov. 7, the 311th day of1990wlth 54 to follow .
The moon Is .waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
.
The evening stars are Mercury and Venus.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
Marie Curle, wbo discovered radium, In 1867; Nazi s.s. leader
ilelnrlch Hlmmler In 1900; French novelist Albert Camus In 1913;
evangelist Billy Graham In 1918 (age 72); jazz trumpeter AI Hlrt tn
1922 (age68); Australian opera star Joan S\ltherland In 1926 (age64) ;
anclllngers·MaryTravers In 1937 (age 53), johnny Rivers In 1942 (age
48), and Jon! Mltcjlellln 1943 (age 47) . .

On this date In history:
In 1805, the Lewis and Clark Expedition arrived at the Pacific

Oceall. Inll74, the first cartoon depleting the elephant as the.syrnbolof the
Republican Party was printed In Harper's Weekly.
.
In 1914, Bolsheviks overthrew the Russian government In St.

LOS ANGELES (NEA)
A
6-year-old glrtts shot by an angry
17-year.old gang member at a
birthday party In overwhelming
black and poor south-central Los
Angeles.
·
Two young people (a 24-yearold man and a 16-year-old girl)
are killed and four others are
wounded when a fist fight at a
party In nearby Paramount
escalates Into an ugly street
brawl among rival gang
members.
A 12-year-old boy walking on a
sidewalk near his suburban
Santa Ana home - an Innocent
bystander - Is fatally shot after
a drug deal goes bad. Gang
members "have very little If any
remorse for Innocent victims,"
says a Santa Ana pollee lleuten·
ant. "There Is no concern" for
people - young ·Qr old - kllled
Inadvertently.

A 2-year-old boy is sliot as he
plays with a toy In front of his
home In suburban Lynwood.
Police believe he may have been
.struck by a stray bullet during a
gang shooting - but also consider the possibility that the
toddler was targeted by a gang
member.
"Just when you think you know
the limits of the Insanity, something like this happens," says a
spokesman for the Los Angeles
Police Department.
At a time when the nation Is
seemingly transfixed with an
upsurge of gang-spawned violence 111 New York, equally sharp
but less widely publicized In·
creases In gang-related crimes
ranging from murder to mugging
are being experienced In Los
Angeles and other clUes.
In Freano, Calif., five teen-age
ganr members . embarlt ·on a ·

Petersburg. Because It took place under the old czarJstcalendar,lt Is
known as the October Revolution.
In 1916, Republican Jeannette Rankin of Montana became the first
woman elected to the U.S. House of Representatives.
~ In 1972, Richard Nixon was !'~'!-elected to a second term as
president, defeating Democrat George McGovern,
In 1983, a bomb exploded In the U.S. Capitol, causing heavy damage ·
just outside· the Senaie chamber but no· injuries.
·

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bloody rampage tl)at leaves one
man dead and eight other people
wounded by random, senseless
gunfire.
In San Francisco, a young
woman who Is'the Qnly witness to
a fatal shooting allegedly c:ommltted by a trio of gang members
Is herself shot and killed. Her
body Is dumped In a remote
section of the city.
In Chicago, a single weekend
produces 75 gang-related sbootlng Incidents. Dozens of people
are wounded. 13 are kllled and
hospital emergency rooms are
overwhelmed In attempting to ·
deal with carnage.
with their parents - many of
them poor and non-while -away
from home much of the time
because . they must work at
multiple jobs to earn an adequate
Income, youngsters suffer from
"emotional neglect," says Ar·
mando Morales, a psychiatry'
professor at the University of
California at Los Angeles.
Los Angeles has more than 750
gangs with an estimated membership of almost 100,000. Of that
total, 46,000 are Hbpanlc, 30,000
are black and the rerni.lnder are
Asian (a classification that Includes Japanese, VIetnamese
and Korean youths) or whltl!.

During the 1980s,- more than
3,500 people were killed by gangs
In Los Angeles city and county.
More than 550 were slain last
year alone.· The rate now has
dropped and gang slaylngs thiS
year average slightly more than
three per w.U.
"It's not enough (of a decline.)
We're losing II," says one senior
Jaw enforcement officer here.
·"We will find ourselves with ati
organized crime problem that
will put the Mafia to shame,"
adds the U.S. attorney In Los
Angeles.
·
One of thoSe communities Is
Westwood, at the edge of the
UCLA campus. l'Wo years ago, a
gang fight erupted there and a
bystander was killed when
struck by a stray bullet. This
year, a fight among 60 youths
ended with three Injuries and
nine arrests.
On recent . Saturday nlgbta,
Westwood's major streets have
been barricaded to prevent UD·
ruly crowds from gat~ In an
area that long wu one of the ·
city's most popular weellend
destinations for young people.
Until the malevolent culture
that spawns gang ¥1ole11Ct1 11
deal~ with eftectiVety, the terror .
will continue to spread.

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UC football tough on scalperS:~.

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By RICK VANSANT
total of 146 points In their last " UPI Sports Writer
three outings, the Bearcats finish · · •
CINCINNATI (UP!) - One · the season this Saturday and the ·'
hour before kickoff at a Univer- following Saturday at F1orlda ··. • ·
slty of Cincinnati home ·football State and Alabama .
·., '
game, one of the few remaining . - - - - - - - - - - - - .
Beare at fans approached a
The Daily Sentinel
scalper.
"He wanted $10 for a ticket,"
(UBI'S ltWtl)
reported the fan. ''But It only
A Dlvlslo:a of Multlmedla, lac.
took me a bout a minute to talk
Published every attemooo, Monday · :.. '
him down to $2."
thr®gh Friday. 111 Court St., Po- :
Such Is the ·state of Clncy
m£&gt;roy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Putt. _ . _
llshlng Company/ Multlmedta, Inc..
J football today. It's a scalper's
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769,
Ph
.
992-2156.
Se··.
nightmare. And, the nightmare
corid c!ass postage paid at Pomeroy, •&gt;. .
·of just about anyone who appreOhio.
ciates good, competitive football.
Member: United Press International, ..
Cincinnati Is a very bad team
Inland Dally Press Association and the ..
playing a very difficult schedule.
Ohio Newspaper Auoclatton. NatiOnal •
· AdvertiSing Representative, Branham • 1·
may
be
yet
to
And the. worst
I
Newspaper Sales, 738 Third Avenue, , •
come.
New York, New York 10017.
. After losing eight of their first
PO:ti'TMASTER: send address changes
hlne games and surrendering a
to 'lbe · Dally Senllnel. 111 Cow1 St.,

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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

If You Missed
Our last One,
Don't Miss
Our
5°/o .OVER .
DEALER COST SALE!
MONDAY NIGHt
6 pm 'til 10 pm

ELLIOTT'S
SILVER BRIDGE PLAIA

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·-·0.·-..

1
I

1
1
2
3

111-1111......
W L Pol. 011
Sa a Antmlo ......... 1 0 1.000 DIIIU ............. ..... .2 1 .667 ·Utab .............. .......1 I .500 II
Boullm ....... .. ...... .. 1 2 .333 1

or-

•

MID- .......:......1 2

Den- ..................0 3

Orllndo ............... ' .0 3

P1411De-

.il33 1
.000 2
.000 2

Portlalld ..:........... 3 0 1.000
Saltt» ........ ,........ 2 0 .1.000 11
Go-ltato .......... 2 I .117 1
LA. QIJII!era ...... ... 2 I .667 1
* ••

Seattle100, Dot roll 92
Golden State 130, LA Cllppars
109
.
Portland 125. L.A. Lakera ·123
(QT)

Atlanta 102. Sacram•to U

SPECIAL
OF.. THE WEEKI
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SIRLOIN STEAK
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One Weelc ............ ... ...... ......... ..... IUO

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Wuhlftllm 11 New Yotlt, 7: 30
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Miami at New J.,...Y, 7;30 p.m.
Pldlldelpltla at MUwaukee. 8: 30

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ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
"At tile W ef tile ,_...,... n• .,.., ..

POMROY, OliO

p.m.

PIL 992·1556

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SubscribE&gt;rs not desiring to pay the car- . ~
MM may remit In advance direct to .. ..
The Dally sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month "' ·
basis. Credit wut be gtven carrier each
week.
No subscriptions by mall permitted In

areas where home carrier service ts
available.
Mall SubecrlptiOIII
IDJide Melp Counly

13 Weeks .................... .............. $19.21
26 Weeks ........ ............ , ............. 137.96
52 Weeks ......... .............. ........... 174.36
O.toolole Melp Couoty
13 Weeks ......... .. ............ .. ......... $20.110
26 Weeks ... ...... ...... ................ ... $«).30
52 Weeks .................................. 175.10

The Ohio Lottery
1s coming to our area!

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San Antmlo 11 Utah, 9: 30 p.m.

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One Month ........... ......................16.10
One Year ......... .... ................ .... $12.80 •,:.
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etoar- at a
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CbiCIIO ai Mla.,.ota. 8 p.m.
Oenwr at San Ant CillO. 8:30p.m.
Gold4!11 Sial* II PhoeniX, 9: 30
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Oetrolt II L.A. Olpparo, 10:30
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SUIISCKJI'TION KATES

Scoreboard ...

Ceatnl Dlvlotooi
Atlanta .. .......... ..... 3 0 1.000
Detrolt .... ............. ..2 1 .667
Charlo!!* ...:.... . .. ... 2 1 :667
lndlana .. ................ 2 1 .667
Mllwlllllee ............. 2 I .667
Ctewilnd ...... ........ 1 2 .3.13
Chkqo .. ........ ....... 0 3 .000

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Celllcs 110, Bulls 108 - At .while Orlando Woodridge finIshed with 26 points for the 0-3
Chicago, Brian Shaw's follow
Nuggets.
shot at the buzzer lifted the
undefeated Celtics over the stillSonlcs 100, Plsums 92 - At
winless Bulls . Shaw finished with
Seattle, Xavier McDaniel scored
20 points, while Larry Bird led 12 points In the last712mlnutes to
the Celtlcs with 24 . . Michael
iead the SuperSonics. The PlsJordan had a game· high 33 points
tqns, 2-1, were outscored 18-2
and just missed the. block on during a six-minute span before·
Shaw's wln.nlng shot,
WIll lam Bedford . made three .
· Hornets 113, Nets 105 - At
three-point shots Inside the last
Charlotte, N.C., Tyrone· Bogues minute after the Sonlcs had gone
scored five points, assisted on ahead 95-82 with a minute to go.
two other baskets and added two
Warriors 130, Cllppers109- f.!
steals In the last four minutes,· Oakland, Calli. , Chris Mullin
scored 26 points to lead the
helping the Hornets send New
Jersey to Its 31st consecutive Warriors. Mullin made his only
road loss. The Nets are one three point attempt, which gives ,
defeat away from tying the NBA him a career markof170, making .
him the most prolific three-point. ·
record of 32 straight road losses
_,
set In 1954 by the Bal tl more scorer In Golden State history.
Trail Blazers 125, l..akers 1~ ·
Bullets.
·
Cavaliers 102, Magic 9$ - At
(OT) - At Inglewood, Calif.,*'
Orlando, Fla., Larry Nance Terry Porter nailed a jumper:· ;
scored 23 points and Cleveland with 11.6 seconds left In overtime
as Portland scored the game's
used · a 9-0 run midway through
flnal
eight points to rally past the·.
the fourth quarter to hand the
Lakers.
Portland, 3-0; Is off to its -, ",
Magic Its 16th consecutive
best start since 1981-82. The , •
regular-season home loss, breakLakers have dropped their first
Ing the NBA record of 15 set by
Cleveland In 1982-83. Nick Ander- two games under new head coach ,_ ..
Mike Dunleavy; their first 0-2.-·., ·
son scored 20 points to lead
opening since ·1984.
.
Orlando .
Hawks 102, KiD&amp;s II$ · - At . _
Rockets 145, Nuggets 135 - At
Houston, Kenny Smith scored 35 Sacramento, Calif., Sidney Mon- ... ,
crlef scored six polrits as Atlanta:-~..;
points, Including six free throws
In the final 1: 09; and handed out outscored the.Kings 21-9 to open,·
11 assists to help the Rockets win the '!ourth quarter In blowing ; .:open a close game . Dominique., . .
their . first game. Todd Licht!
paced Denver's "organized Wilkins drove for a layup with :..
chaos offense" with 27 points 4:43 remaining to give the Hawks•
a 96-76 advantage.

I

Why gangs Seem (0 thrive, ____R_ob_e_rt_~_al_te_rs

"Are you trying to prepare us· for use of the
MILITARY OPTION?"

By DEAN SCHABNER
UPI Sports Writer
Rolando Blackman only gets
one chance a year to show his
friends back home In Brooklyn
what he does for a llylng, so he
likes to make It count.
Blackman drliled · a Jumper
with 37 seconds left Tuesday .
night that gave Dallas the lead
for good, sending the Mavericks
to 96-91 victory over the New
York Kn leks.
"I want the ball at the end In
game situations," Blllckman
said. "I gre11· up here and some of
the old Knlcks are my heros. I
always have a lot of people In the
stands, so I like to do well."
Dallas head coach Riehle Adu. bato had to be glad somebody
wanted to sjep forward. In the
first half, he had a bard time
finding his team at all. ·
"In the first half they (the
Knlcks) had seven uncontested
layups and were driving down
the middle like there was no one
there," Adubato said. "Last year
they destroyed us In here on
rebounds 63-39 and I thought It
was going to be another one of
.
.
those.
" J!
'
. "The key to the game was
'l: 1 :·"'
(Charles) Oakley got In fo.ul
trouble 1(1nd they didn't have
(injured forward Kenny) Walker
to come In," he said.
Led by Oakley and Patrick
Ewing, .the Knlcks controlled the
boards, 44-33, but when the game
.. '·I
.
was on the line New York simply
failed to execute. They allowed
durlnglbe first quarter of Tuesday night's game
CHASE LOOSE BALL- Atlanta guard Rumeal
Blackman and backcourt runnIn Sacramento, Ca!U., which the Hawks won
RobiJIIIOD (22) steps ahead of Sacramento guard
lngmate Derek Harper to disrupt
102-8$. (UPI)
Rory Sparrow In their chase for the loose ball
their Jtalfcourt offense and were
unable to stop Roy Tarpley or
Blakman down the stretch.
"It's a long season, but perhaps we've set the tone," Tarpley
, said after riddling · the Knlcks
defense for 29 points, scoring
By Maj. Amos B Hoople
Notre Oaine's offense is a solid
seemingly · at will on power
PlgskiD Propllet
combination of passlllg and running.
moves Inside and 10- to 12-foot
Soph QB Rick Mirer, a 80 percent
jumpers. "I never thought we
Egad, friends' The Notre Dame- passer, bas big-play receivers: WR
couldn't
conte back because our
. Tennessee football game promises to Rocket Ismail, TB Tony Brooks and
offense
Is
on top of Its game and
be one of the most iffy and interesting TE Derek Brown. The Irish ground
'D'
could
stop them. "
our
of the college season.
tack rolled up 276 yards against Mi·
The
Kntcks
a have seen a tone
IF .Notre Dame is to gain a second ami, which previously had allowed · -~..........~~~-..;
but It's Ollf!
eslablJshed,
too,
national title in three years, it MUST only 62 yards per game rushln1.
they'd like to change. In all three
In a barn-burner, Notre Dame, Jed SATURDAY. Nov. 10
beat Tennessee. IF the Volunteers are
to get back into the race, they MUST by coach Lou Holtz, will overcome
Air Force 21 •Army 18
games this season, the New
Tennessee's home-field advantage
• Alabama 24 Louisiana State 17 ,
defeat the Irish.
Yorkers have squandered large
• Arizona 27 Stanford 24
~ Amazingly, these two major pow- and win, 31-24.
first-half leads, losing twice and
Now let's turn to this weekend's
Arizona State 31 "Washington State 20 only managing to win In overtime
ers have only met twice: In 1978, No: •Auburn 24 Southern Mississippi 22
tre Dame won at home, 31-14. In 1979. sterling conference clashes:
against the. third-year Charlotte
· I h n• C B lgh
u
d •Baylor 28 Arkansas 14
lbe Vols won at home, 40·18.
Hornets.
• n t e nA • r am 10 unB an
Brigham Young 42 "Wyoming 38
· On Safurday,there will be a capaci· Wyoming's Cowboys will get it on for Central Michigan 49 "Ohio University 7
"We've shown that we're capaty crowd of more than 90,000 at Ney- the 61st time. BYU leads in the series,
"Citadel 38 Wofford 17
of playing good basketball,
ble
land Stadium in Knoxville, Tenn., to 29-28-3. Close, eh what? In another
"Colorado 42 Oklahoma State 24
but
I think when we have the
root agaitl5t Notre Dame.
close one, we look for QB Ty Detmer
"Colorado State 35 Tulsa 13
we don't continue to do the
lead,
They will see two of the strongest to. pass the BYU Cougars to a 42-38
Cornell 33 "Columbia 10
same
things that we did to get us
teams in the country. Yet bolh have victorv.
Dartmouth 30 "Brown 14
lead,"
said Knlcks head
the
had shocking setbacks this fall. Notre
• One of the oldest rivalries in the
Delaware 27 •Richmond 15
coach Stu Jackson. ''They exeDame bad a mistake-prone loss to South pairs Virginia and North Caro"EasiB&lt;n Mlcloigan 21 Ball State 18
cuted
down the stretch. We just
Stanford, 36-31. Tennessee was upend· lina in their 9Mh performance. North
• Florida 38 Georgia 27
ed, 9·6, by a last-second Alabama Carolina leads the series, 52-38-4.
did not."
"Florida State 49 Cinclnnati20
field goal.
,
Oakley had given the Knlcks a
But, alas, we have bad news for fans
Furman 21 "East Tenn- State 18
· Coach Johnny Major's' high-scoring of the Tar Heels: VlrBlnia will prevail,
91-90 lead with 1: 38left when he
·Fresno State 35 Paclflc 32
Vols average 37 poin~ per game. 33-28, in this.ACC contest.
•Georgia Teoh 31 Virginia Tech 21
jammed In the rebound of a Mark
.They playeil t:olorado "to a 31-31 tie in
Jackson miss. Ewing then
•.In the West, powerful Washington
Harvard 24 •Pennsylvania 17
the season-opening Disneyland Clas- will roll over struggling UCI.A, 38·21,
Holy Cross 42 "fordham 14
blocked a layup by Blackman,
sic. In a bruisin2 SEC contest. thev in a Pac-10 fray. ·
Houston 37 ".Texas 25
. but the Knlcks did not score after
fought .(Ough Aubutil to a 26-26
• The Florida-Georgia clash in the
llllnifls 24 ."Mk:hlgan 21 .
that.
standoff.
SEC is always a crowd-pleaser. This
"Indiana 36 Wisconsin 21
Elsewhere In the NBA Tuesday
Tennessee's offense Is built around year's 1ame at Jacksonville, Fla., will
'Iowa 27 Ohio State 20
night,
Milwaukee overcame MIQB Andy Kelly. an excellent passer; be, too. Georgia bas a 44-22·2 edBe in
·Kentucky 24 Vanderbilt 14
apd RB Tony Tompson, who averages the series. But look lor the Florida
ami
106-94,
Indiana nipped Min'LongBeachSt31 Ca!St·Northrldge 18
100 yards per game rushing. The Vol Gators to win this one, 38-27.
nesota
98-96,
Boston edged Chi"Louisiana Tech 33 Akron 27
·
offensive line. with huge tackles Ancago 110-108, Charlotte tripped
• Finally, a pair of BiB Eight meet"Louisville 28 Boston College 22
tone Davis (6-foot-4, 310 pounds); and ings will find Colorado knocking off •Memphis State 17 Miulsslppl State 14 New Jersey · 113-95, Cleveland
'Charles McRae (6-7, 291), is one of the Oklahoma State, 42-24, and Nebraska
"Miami (Ohio) 24 Kent State tO
stunned Orlando 102-95, Houston .
best in colle~~:e ranks.
outscoring Kansas, 4f&gt;-10. Har-rumpll!
Missouri 21 "IOWa State 19
outran Denver 145-135, Seattle
Michigan State 44 ; Minnesota 18
knocked off Detroit 100-92,
Nebrasl&lt;a 45 "Kan888 10 ·
Golden
State shot down the L.A.
• New Mexico 35 Utall 32
Clippers
130-109, Portland out"North Cllollna State :i4 Duke 14
lasted
the
L.A. Lakers 125·123 In
Northern llllnlos 30 • East Carolina 20
rigl\t
now,
lt!s
been
a
screwy
overtime,
and Allan ta clawed
• Northwestern 20 Purdue 18
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.
year.''
Sacramento
102-85.
Notre
Dame
31
"Tennessee
24
· (UPI) - Virginia's 9th-ranked
·oklahoma
47
Kansas
State
17
Saturday
was
particularly
Buckfl106,
Heat
94- At Miami,
Cavaliers will play In a New
Oregon
35
"California
28
27 points,
Alvin
Robertson
scored
Four
of
the
top
five
screwy:
Year's Day bowl despite their
teams
In
the
country
lost.
16
of
them
In
the
first
quarter,
to
• Penn State 21 Maryland 18
41-38 Atlantic Coast Conference
To get to a New Year.'s Day "Pittsburgh 38 Temple 24
lead the . Bucks. Mllw.ukee took
loss to No. 7 Georgia Tech,
control of the game with a 12- 0
Virginia athletic director Jim bowl, however, the Cavaliers , 7-1 ·Rice 21 Southern Mathodiat 14
, run early In the third quarter.
overall and 4-1 In the ACC, will 'Sail Diego State 34 Hawaii 28
Copeland predicts.
San Jose St42 "New Mexico St2t
The Heat was led by Glen Rice
·"I think we have a real good have to shut the Georgia Tech
Southern Cai31 "Oregon Stele 10
with 19.
chance of going to a New Year's defeat out of their minds and
•South Carolina 37 Southern Illinois 17
Pacers 98, Tlmberwnlves 98dwell
on
their
ACC
game
SaturDay bowl," Copeland said MonSW Louisiana 24 •Art&lt;ansas State 20
At
Indianapolis, Vern Fleming
day
at
North
Carolina.
day. "So much ts up In the air
•Syracuse 27 Tulane 25
tipped
In the winning shot with
"T- Cloristaln 31 Texas Tech 21
three
seconds to play . The
"Toledo 18 Navy 15
Pacers
did not lead until LaSalle
Virginia 33 ·• North Carolina 28
sank an Inside bank
Thompson
"Washington 38 UCLA 21
shot with 5: 10 remaining to put
W. Michigan 24 "Bo'!fllng Green 21
West VIrginia 22 • Rutgers 13
Indiana ahead 86-84. Fleming
WIUiam &amp; Mary 28 •James Madison 14
scored eight of his 19 points In the
.•vale 17 Princoton 14
final 4: 13. Scott Brooks missed a
Youngstown State 40 "Towson Stat.e 14 12-foot jump shot at the buzzer
Phoenix
................
1 1 .59CJ Ill
NBA action
L.A. Lakers .... .. ....0 2 .000 211
(• 1Home team
lor Ml~esola.
Sacramento
...... ..... 0 3 .000 3
Eutern Coafeftnee
A&amp;lalodc Dlvloloa
~·aretulb
Team
W L Pet. GB
CllaTioUe 113, New Joney lOS .
· Bostm ................. 3 0 1.000 ladlana 98, Minnesota 96
PhUadelphla .. ...... 2 0 1.000 II
Milwaukee 106, Mlamt91
Mlam1 ..... .. .... ........1 1 .500 111
Dallas 96. N.W Yort&lt; 91
Wqhlngtao ...........1 1 .500 111
Cl~tand 102, Orlando 9~
New York .............. 1 2 .333 2
Bostm 110, CloiCBIO 108
New Jersey ............ 0 3 .000 3
Houstoo 145, Denwr 135

~

.

~-

.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3 ~: •

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

. Pomeloy-MIIIdlport. ONo
WedniJclay, NcMiml:a' 7, 1990

.

'

Wadn81day, November 7, 1990

•

\

..

...

~

' -· .

�Wadneeday. November 7, 1990
Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomerov-'- Middleport, Ohio

goaltender for the Philadelphia
Just a week ago, Peeters was Boston In 1983 and led the league
Flyers.
ticketed for Philadelphia's In goals-against average as rePeeters stopped 25 shots Tues· minor-league affiliate at Her· cently as 1987-88, but age had
day night, posting his second • shey · of the American Hockey slowed down his skills.
straight win In leading the Flyers League. Once one of the NHL's
Now with both Ron Hextall and
to a 4-2 victory over the Winnipeg dominant goaltenders, Peeters . Ken Wreggett sidelined with
Jets.
·
·
won the Vezina Trophy with Injuries, Peeters has been per·
forming at a level resembling his
play five years ago.
;.
''I have no long-range plans,"
Peeters said. "They have a
commlttment to Hextall and his
contract, and Kenny has played
so welL Where I fit In the picture
- It's turned out really well with
Kenny and Ron hurt.
"Some days you're down, but
the majority of the days (I have)
the support of my wife and
family . Having a strong belle!,
something will work out down the
line."
Rick Tocchet collected a goal

65-BURT 'KENNED\"
First team aiJ.TVC

and an assist In the third period
as Philadelphia broke a 2-2 tie.
T~chet sUpped Kjell Samuel·
son's rebound between goal·
tender Stepbane Beauregard's
pad and the pipe at 6: 01 of the
period to give the Flyers a 3-2
lead. Atl4: 42, Tocchet led a pass
to' Sutter, who slipped a shot
through the Winnipeg defense to
forge a two-goal cushion.
"When you're 2·2 alter two
(periods) on the road, you feel
you are In the game."" Tocchet
said. · "Everybody concentrates
more. The concentration was 110
percent."
Prior to Tocche,t 's heroics,
Beauregard had slngle-handedly
held the Flyers at bay. One of the
Winnipeg goaltender's saves In·
eluded sticking his head In front
of a Ron Sutter shot.

83-GEOFF COGAR

First

teiun all·TVC

ByBOBKEIM .
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Art
Modell gave Bud Carson a
. mts,slon: get to the Super Bowl.
Fast.
While the mind and spirit may
ha\'e been willing, the team was .
not able to purge Modell of the
one great disappointment of his
NFL career. The Browns have
never been to the Super Bowl,
and no one takes It harder than
the man who bought the Browns
on March 21, 1961, and won a
world charnplonshiD lust four
seasons later.
The team Carson inherited
from Marty Schottenhelmer was
on the decline, and possibly the
worst thing that happened to
Carson was taking an average
team to the AFC Championship
game. Being blown ·out by .
another mediocre club, the
Denver Broncos, was forgotten
over the long winter, and by the
time spring· rolled around the
Browns' front office was looking
at the upcoming season through ·
rose-colored glasses.
Rebuilding was lor other clubs,
the Tampa Bays and Atlantas 6!
the world. The Cleveland Browns
were different. Just like great
college football programs, they
dldh't have to rebuild. They
would merely reload.
·~keep heartng about rebuild·
ln(," Modell said Monday when
asked about the turnover of 20
ne\f faces on the roster. "Re·
buOdlng what? j'l lne months ago
we· were one game away from
gothg to the Super Bowl ... I can't
ac~ept the. fact that we're in a
transition. "
this comes despite the fact
thai a rebuilt offensive line has
made great enough progress that
it now can be considered merely
below average Instead of horrl·
bl~; despite the fact that'they
ha.ve oo.e n unai,Jle to find a
successor to Ozzle Newsome fn
tht last live years; despite the
faN that the holdouts made all
thf players bitter, a bitterness
m~t still feel today; and despite
the fact that the Browns were .
lu~ky to beat Buffalo In the first
ro~nd of the playoffs last season.
'fhe list of deficiencies could go
onl and on, try figuring out What

''That third period was lnexcu· ,,.
sable, Intolerable and embarass-'. ·
lng," Jets left wing Doug Small ' ;
said. ''That should never happen· ·
In your own building. We should ' .
never be outworked in our own '
building In a 2·2 game. There are '"
''1' '

no excuses.''

.

In other NHL garnes Tuesday ' 1:
night, the New York Islanders .'':
nipped TorontO 4·3; Plttaburgh ,: .
outlasted Calgary S-5, Washing· · '
ton bombed Quebec 4-1, St. Louts :~
edged Edmonton 2·1, Vancouver "
doubled up Detroit 6-3 and
Hartford and Chicago tied 1·1. ,
••
blalider• 4; Maple l.eafd- At .I···
Uniondale, N.Y., Randy Wood ,
scored two goals to help the. . \
Islanders hand Toronto Its !ourtli - ;
straight loss. Toronto has lost all '
eight road games this ~ason and ': ·•
h;ls the worst record In the ~HL :
at 2-14-1.
,.
Peagulns 6, Flames 5 - At 1
Pittsburgh, Paul Coffey's power· ' 1
play ·goal with 14 seconds left In ' 1
the third period lifted the Pen· '
guins to victory. · with · Doug
Gilmour In the penalty box for

.

! '

..
DOWNING CHilDS
MULLEN MUSSER

l '

.~

recovery and two interceptions.
Also named to the honorable
mention ream were Vince Kisl! and .
Mike Daniels of Alexander, Craig
Carpenter, Rusty Jacobs and Shawn ·
Hayes of Belpre, Richar~ Deaver of
Federal Hocking, Jim Horn and
Keith Procter of Miller, Glenn
Flores and Brice Pick of Nelsonville, Sun Leeper or Trimble, Rick
Patton, Jim Sparks, and Fred
Wright of Vinton County, and
Glenn Bryan, Ryan Reed and
Shawn Buescher of Wellston.

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No team escapes draft day
blunders . No team escapes lnjur·.
les, retlr.e ments, unreached
potentiaL
Chuck Noll and'Shula will be In
the Hall of Fame the year after
they retire, but not even they are
Immune from the cyclical nature
of the NFL. The Dallas Cowboys
had 20 straight winning seasons
under Tom. Landry, butthatls an
exception, not the rule, and one
reason Landry now has a bust In
Canton.
tt Isn't often a team that has
appeared In the playoffs four
years In a row cha nges coaches,

but the Browns ctld, and when
Carson came here, he knew that
he was brought here to take the
team to the Super BowL He
became the first rookie coach .
since Red Mlller In 1977 to take ·a ·'
team to a conference champion- ,
ship game, again an example · '
that rookie coaches usually need ··
time to adjust, time to put their
imprint on a team.
Time, however, Is one COI'fl·
modlty few coaches In Cleveland
will have much of, especially as
Modell grows older and his
obsession with the Super Bowl
grows even greater.
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signed to promote parity .
"We changed a head coach on
the run and got away with lt."
admitted executive. vice president Ernie Accorsl, who recom·
mended Carson for the job.
"Maybe some of those things
Caple back to haunt us this year."
The Browns h'ave made their
share of mistakes, certain.ly, but
so has every team. Look at the
Pittsburgh Steelers ·last year,
starting the season by being
outscored 93·10 in their first two
games. The Miami Dolphins
struggled for th e ·last ha lf o(the
1980s under Don Shuhi.

CEDARVILLE, Ohio (UP!) Blu)'fton running back Darryl
Gatd and Wilmington corner·
bacl&lt; Kevin Thomas·Lott have
· beeh selected the NAlA District
22 rjlay~rs of the week.
G!lrd, a senior from Akron,
rus~ed for 132 yards on 28 carries
an~ both touchdowns In Bluf·
Ito'\~ 14-7 _win over Defiance.
Gap's 21-yaPd touchdown run
wltb 1:0!! remaining ln the game
profed to be the' game-winner.

.:- r;,

PILLSBURY.

That 's not to say Carson is
immune from criticism. For one,
his defense slipped dramatically
this year, and he never has been
able to adjust his game plan
effectively while he was wlth the
Browns . Buffalo beat the Browns
Sunday using the same game
plan they used in the playoff
game. Cleveland knew what the
Bills were going to do, yet were
unable to stop lt.

Carson's firing was inevitable
after the blowou t loss in Kansas
City. The question wasn't If he
would get !Ired. only when the
axe would falL
Modell's club has had a great
run the lB'st five years, going to
the playoffs after each season. In
40 years, the Browns have been in
the playoffs 22 times, tying the
Rams for the most post-season
appearances in NFL history.
But what Modell refuses to
accept is that appearing in the
playoffs five years in a r!)W Is not
the norm. It Is an ·abnormal'
acptevement in ' a league de'

.

'The SVAC girls' basketball
preview has been scheduled for
F~day at 6 p.l)'l. at Kyger Creek ·
High School. The boys' basket·
ball preview will be played on
Friday, Nov. 16 at KCHS.
(n both cagefests, ·Southern
will play Oak Hill at 6 p.m.,
followed by Hannan Trace vs.
Ea,i;tern at 6:45 p.m.. Kyger
Creek vs. Southwestern at 7:30
p.m. and North GalUa at
Symmes Valley at 8:15 p.m. All
sc~lmmages will feature two
sta,~dard elght·mlnute quarters.

LB.

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The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

Modell expected rebuilding Browns to get to· Super Bowl

(See NHL oa Pap! I)
. ·-·
•

Five Marauders named all-TVC
Tri- Valley -Conference co-cham- touchdown. He had 38 tackles (16
pions Nelsonville·Yori&lt; and Vinton solo, 22 assists).
·
County head up the TVC aU-conJoining Bingman on the team
ference footbaU team picked by the from Trimble was Charley Gatchell
league's coaches. Both Nelsonville ami Jason Guffey. The Wellston
and Vinton County placed five Golden Rockets and Belpre Golden
players each on the first team.
Eagles · were represented on the
Top individual honors went to team with two players each. Kory
Roger Deaver and Chad Walker were
Trimble . quarterback
Bingman, he was the league's best named to the . team from Wellston,
offensive player. The defensive and Scott Lacaria and Jason Gan·
honor went to Nelsonville nose dee from Belpre.
guard Jay Hook and the coach of
Rounding out the first team were
the year went to Nelsonville coach Joe Vincent from Alexander, Jason
Dave Boston Sr.
Arldey from Miller and Jerry Buck
Boston led his team to a 7. 3 from Federal Hocking.
record overall and 7 ·1 in the TVC
Named to the honorable mention
after starting the season at 0-2. The team from Meigs were Aaron
co-championship was the first · Shee.ts and Sha'wn Hawley. ,
championship for Nelsonville in
Sheets, a 6-0, 250-pound twoeight years.
.
·way tackle, was third on the team
Bingman, a 6-2, 195-pound with 34 tackles (8 solo, 26 assists),
senior, · was the area's leading four rackles for losses and two
passer, completing 150.of 272 pas- fumbles caused.
ses for I ,653 yards and nine
Hawley, a 6" I, 170-pound tight
touchdowns and 14 interceptions.
end and safety, led the team with 36
Hook, a 5-6. 160-pound senior, catches for 718 yalds . and 10
had 51 solo hits, nine raclcles for touchdowns. On defense Hawley
losses, three sacks, three fulnble had 26 rackles (9 solos. 17 assists),
recoveries and two caused fumbles. two fumbles caused, one fumble
On the first team from Nelsonville was Heath Savage, Ryan
Mitchell, Jay Hook, John Corwin
and Jason Conkle. For Vinton
County, it was Tom Reid, Shawn.
Speakman, Artie Hammond, Jason
CaudiU, and Ryan Zinn.
The Meigs Marauders placed
three players · seniors Bun Kennedy, Geoff Cogar and junior Frank
Blake. -on the first team.
Kennedy led the Marauders in
tackles with 89 tackles (15 solo, 74
assists). The 6-2, 210-pound senior
recoveted two fumbles and caused
two fumbles. He also had two sacks
and nine tackleS for a loss.
Cogar. a 6-2, 200 pound defen·
The quick, easy way to
sive end was second on the team
colorlul decoratln1 Kheml'l
with 78 tackles (25 solo, 53 as·
without objectionable palott
sistS). He recovered a fumble and
odors. For all Interior walls.
caused two. Cogar had seven sacks
Wuhable.
and 11 racldes for a loss.
Blake, a 5-6. ·160-pound fullback
and defensive back; was the
Marauders' leading rusher with 579
yards in 112 carries for an average
of 5.2 yards and seven touchdowns.
MASON . WV.
Blake also led the team in interceptions with four, returning one for a

.

4

Peeters rettJrtts to old fonn to lead Flyers past Jets

9·FRANK BLAKE
First team aii-TVC

·:

The Cleveland Beat

Wednesday, November 7. 1990

In Philly's 4-2 win over Winnipeg,

By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
Pete Peeters, a one-time Vez·
Ina Trophy winner who has been
plagued by Inconsistency for the
last two ·years, suddenly has
become a valuable stop-gap

..

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

'

· rt:ontlnued from Page 4)
• Coffey's wrist shotlrom
hoo1ting,
50 ~l sailed over goaltender
Mllq! Vernon's left shoulder to
give Pittsburgh Its. fourth
straight victory.
C&amp;pltals t, N'oriliques 1 - At
Quebec, Peter Bondra scored
twl&lt;',e and John Druce added a
goa~ and two assists as Washing·
ton handed the Nordlques their
seventh straight lo&amp;s. The Ctj.pl·
tats :scored power-play goals on
the •first two penalties by the
Norjllques and never were
cha\Jenged .
Bluea !, Oilers 1- At St. Louis,
. Bre(t Hull scored hiss league·
leading 17th goal and Geoff
Courtnall added another goal to
spal!k the Blues. St. Louis Is 8·1·1
In Its last 10 games, while the
OUers have lost a club-record
sev!ln consecutive games.
CltDIICka 8, Red Wlnp 3 - At
Vancouver, · British Columbia,
Tr~or Ullden ~~:ored one power·
pia~ goalaild ualsmd on anotller
41 leCOndl later to spark a
four;"'l(lat Vancouver outburst
late; In llle. third period. The
· barrap a!IDwed the Canucks to
frorn a 3-2 defiCit.
"JJI** 1, BliiCkhawb J- At
Hat1ford; Conn., Pat Verbeek
sco~ at 1:31 ot lbe third period
to llelp liJe Wbalera end their
stx~'arnelillllll•trelk. Hartford
ttl ftnl"poillt'llnce an
Oct. 1'1 ,.-m. 11. TQfOIIIo. Steve

rant

re .....

Thofnu ~ for Clltc.aa.
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500 EAST MAIN • POMEIOY
(614) 992-2174

�•
Page-6...:..The DailY Sentinel

' 7, 1990
Wednesday. November

..

·The annual f[iendship meeting of sociate !PC, Faye Kirkhan; Doris
World Community Day was held
Pisllict 13, Daughters of America, Grueser, district associate vice Friday at SL Paul Lutheran Church
was held recently at the Belle councilor; Bette Biggs, district in Pomeroy by the Church Women
Prairie Council No. 269 in Belpn: conductor; Betty Spencer, district United of Meigs CoWity. The
with a potluck supper at 6:30 p.m. warden; Robert Harden, district in- theme, "Women for Justice-Justice
Esther Harden asked the blessing.
side sentinel; Betty YO\ing, district for Women," was written by ChrisEileen Clark, district councilor, outside senti1lel; Opal . Hollon, dis· tian women from Arizona
presided at the meeting. The district llict treasurer; Nathan Biggs, three·
Dues from each church were colJPC read from John I. The Lord's year district trustee. Helen Wolf, lected and blanket cCrtificates wen:
Prayer and pledges to the Christian disllict pianist, played for the meet· purchased.
and American flags were given in in g.
Mary Frances Baumgardner
unison.
The district deputies and past conducted the meeting and the
councilors' club Christmas Dinner program leader was· Rachael
Those received officially were and meeting will be held Dec. 1 at Downie. ladies taking pan in the
Esthe~ Smith, state councilor; Es- 1:30 p.m. at the Quality Inn in Nel· . program were Doris Gru~. Edith
!her Harden, District 13 deputy; sonville. There will be a $3 gift ex- Sisson, Faye Wallace, Ada Titus,
Eileen Clark, deputy of Gmdin~ change. Memb\:rs are to notify Glenna Rummell, Lola Hampton,
Star Council; Essa Varner, deputy Erma Cleland if they are going to Florence Richards, Mary Hamm,
of Belle Prairie Council.
attend.
.
and Rev. Laura Shreffler. ·Dorolhy
'the minutes of the previous
Attending were Bethel Laird,
meeting were read by Dorothy Rossie Johnson, Edith Berry, ·
Ritchie: . and . approved. The Genevieve Hopkins, Iva · Shutts, ·
treasilfer's repon was given by Essa Varner, Florence Aeming,
Opal Hollon.
·
Belle Prairie Council; Robert and
Reported sick were Faye Hosel· Esther· Harden, Nathan and Bette
ton, who will enter the Cleveland Biggs, Eileen Clark, Betty Spencer,
Clinic soon and Edna Bonfield who Guiding Star Council; Kathryn
is in the hospital. They are mem- Baum, Thelma White, Jo Ann .
bers of Belle Prairie.
Baum, Helen Wolf, Betty Roush,
. Elizabeth Hayes .Cead . _the Mary K. Holter, Everett and Charnominating repon and the dislnct lotte Grant, Betty Young, Faye
officers were installed by Esther Kirkhart, Esther Smith, Doris
Harden, district deputy. They were Grueser, Opal Hollon, Dorothy
JoAnn .. Baum, district.. councilor; Ritchie, Ethel Orr, Elizabeth Hayes,
Thelnra·· White, districl associate Jean Frederick, Marcia Keller, and
councilor; district junior . past Mary Jo Barringer, Chester
councilor, Eileen Clark; dislnct as- Council.

Family .
Medicine

'•

john C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

•

.. Incontinence common problem
•

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:•
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QUESTiON • Incontinence has
become an embarrassing problem
for my husband recently. He is 79.
Is this common with older men?
jiis doctor also told him that he has
an enlarged prostate. Could these
two problems be related?
•
ANSWER • · Urinary incontinence is always a socially and
medically troublirig condition for
men and for women. As l explained
in a previous column, incontinence
is a relatively common· coodition in
women, but no.t in men. When older men do develop winary incontinence, it is typically because of
an obsttucJion due to an enlarged
prostate. Sometimes there is also a
bladder infection present, and on
.rare occasions, a bladder infection
alone can cause these symptoms. In
your husband's case, though, it is
unlikely that the prostate problem
is the cause of his incontinence, not
urinary infection.
QUESTION • The doctor
recommended surgery for my bus• band's prostate. What do you
recommend?
•
ANSWER - Enlargement of the
·: prostate is a· very common problem
for men over the age of 70 and occasionally for men who are much
' • younger. Let me Jake a m&lt;IR!ent and
explain what happens dunng th1s
'· condition so that you can undet. stand the lrelltment for it.
'·
The winary bladder is drained by
:• one tube, the urethnL The urethra
;: serves double duty in that it carries
•, semen out of the body dwing inter·
course as well as carrying wine
'
•, during voiding. The urethra passes
.; through the center of the prostate
, • gland which has many sma~
• openings through which the semi: nal fluid is forced dwing ejacula•

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The prostate gland slowly increases in size with the with in' cn:asing age. The growth tends to
squeeze in on the urethra so that
there is less space for wine to pass.
This is what happened to your husband. Treatment for the enlarged
prostate is intended to remove the
bloclcage of the urethra and restore
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Sa~ings

Wedding
reception changed

Smith.
Refreshments were _served 10
those named and Gerry Lightfoot,
Jackie 'Reed, Janice Fetty, Diana
Bing, Carol Anderson, Nancy Morris, Becky Am berger, Madeline
Painter, Jane Hysell, .SuSie Will,
Sherry Smith and Elizabeth, Cherie
Williamson, Bonnie Warner, Paula
Pickens and Vicki Smith.

·"
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NATURALIZER

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A hymn sing was held at flillside

Baptist Church on Friday.
Singing were Miss Angie WiUett,
The wedding reception of Laura
Hall and Jerry White, which will be
Mason, W.Va.; Willing Heans, a
held Saturday at 2 p.m. at-the F"ITSt pan of the Redeemed Quartet;
Baptist Church of Middlepon, will · Chris and Marlo . White; The
be held at the church basement Redeemed Quanet; The Carriers,
rather than the Meigs County Parkersburg, W.Va.; and the
Children of God.
Pilblic Library.
·' . '
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6 pm 'til 10 pm

ELLIOTT'S

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CHAPMAN SHOES

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ON
WOMEN'S DRESS PUMPS

Lydia Council discusses projects
The Lydia Council of the Bradford Church of Christ met recently
at the church.
· Karlita Stump opened Jhe meeting with secretary and treasurer
reports given.
· It was noted that a chair drive is
in progress to purchase chairs for
the church. This will continue
throug!l November.
The
annual
Thanksgiving
program to be held at the Infinnary
on Nov. 16 was discuss.ed.
'The Lydia Council Christmas
pany will be held on Dec. 10. An
ornament exchange will be held
and secret sisters will be n:vealed.
The next meeting will be held
Monday at the home of Sherry

••

'
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COUPON

f

·-•
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·Fall

"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio45701.
·

$299

,

.· The "cup of justice" was passed
as each person pu\ in a slip of P.aper
on how justice could preva~l fl&gt;r
women of the world.
. .
Refreshments were ·served by the
women of the church.
••

.

Chicken Beast
lB.

and

Jenkins disDibuted .programs.
she, along with Theresa Schaad,
collected the offering.
:
Songs sung included "God bf
Justice,
God
of
Mercl:j ''
"Sometimes I . Wish My Eyes
Hadn't Been Opened," "Spirit bf
the Living God" and "Let There ~
Peace on Earth." Pastor Shreffler ·
sang the "African Alleluya" Or:
ganist for lhe meeting was Margaret Blaettnar.
:·

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·n oz.
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· it to its normal .size. The mast
cixnmon method of accomplishing
this is by perfonning an operation
called 11311sureUual resection of the
prostate ('IURP). A telescope·IYJX:
instrument called ..a cystoSCope .1s
passed through the penis until the
prostate glaDd is reached. An
· electrical cutting wire is passed
tluough the cystoscope until its tip
can cut away slivers of the enlarged
prostate gland. The.cutting is continued until the opening for the
urethra is Iaige enough that it won't
close up again. · · · ·
· The surgery doesn't Jake very
long and the recovery from it is
relatively quick - a day or two in
the hospiral followed by a week or
two of quiet activity at home. My
patients who have had this surgery
tell me that they are pleased with
the results. They typically have not
more troubles with winary infections, incontinence and ·frequent
night-«ime urination. Most also
repon no difficulty with sexual per·
fonnance. From the information
tlili.t. you have given me, your husband probably needs this surgery.
Since his doctor - who has personally examined him • says he
needs the surgery, I would follow
that advice. If this surgery is per·
fanned, I hope that it is as successful for your husband as it has been
for most of my patients who have
had it.

)

SEMI·SWEET CHOCOLATE

49

tion.

t

Women United meet

D of A.hold annual meeting

Ohio Universitv
College of Osteopathic Medicine

•

The Daily Sentinei-J~age'"1'7

Pomeroy - Middleport. Ohio

';

364 JACKSON PilE

· 786 NORTH SECOND AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

614-446-6620

614-992-649.1

I

�;.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

November 7, 1990

\

Wedn,sc!ay, November 7, 1990 .

WINNING
ELemell·
t!lry PTO recently held their
pumpkin
decoratln1 conteSt. Winners are list~ first,
second and third place. First grade: J, C. Estep
(not pictured), John WithereD; second grade:
Carson Midkllr, Billy ~ulsby, and Yancey Hunter; third grade: KiDI Conde, Morgan Matthews, Anna · Story. Second Row, fonrtb
Ryan Ramsburg; filth grade: Myca

day. The church located on Route
14 3 just off Route 7.
Prior to the actual contruction of
the new church a new bridge was
built across the small creek. This
was completed with work by members of the church.
R.ev. James R. Acree Sr. invites
the public to attend.

and
pictured);
grade,
Peavley, Melissa
Whaley and Josh Witherell. Third row, participants: Marjorie Halar, KiD! Peavley, Beverly
Burdette, David. Grueser (not pictured), third
grade; Heather Whaley, .second grade; Daniel
Hysell, third grade; Steven Hysell and Tara
Michael, filth grade; Jeff Michael, third grade.

•
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COPYRIGHT 1990 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. NOV. 4. THROUGH SATUR·
DAY, NOV·. 10,.. 1990, 1NPDMEROY
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
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SOLD TO DEALEI\S. .
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ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY--Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for
sale in each Kroger Store , except as specifically noted iri this ad. If we do run out of an
adVertised item,
will offer you your choice ·of a coroparable jrem, when available,

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reflecting the same savings or a ra lnch~ck whic'l;l will entitle you to purchase theedvenised .

item at the advertised price within 30 days. Only one .-endor coupon will be accepted per
item purchalltd .

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Shelled .
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REGULAR

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POMEROY · Portland basketball
players and cheerleaders wiD spon·
sor a bake sale at Kroger in
POMEROY - A kid's festival Pomeroy on Saturday beginning at
will be held at Pomeroy Village 9:30 a.m . Proceeds will go toward
shoes and new cheerleader
· uniforms.

Cheerleaders
presented awards
Valerie ConnoUy was among the
cheerleaders. presented awards by
Sandra Baer, advisor, at the Sunday
Soulhem High School fall sports
banquet held at Charles W. Hayman
Gymnasium. Her name was unintentionally omitted from the list of
cheerleaders recognized.

If You Missed
Our Last One,
Don't Miss
Our

5°/o OVER

DEALER COST SALE!
MONDAY NIGHT

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... !HIS SALE ENDS NOVIMBIR 30.
o~omonc:H and cz·s ore oYO•Iuble
101 on ewtro enotga

OFFERED EXCWSIVELY BY ·R. JOHNS,

LIU•'tl

6 pm 'til 10 pm

ELLIOTT'S
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
PROJECT • The Women'a Awtlllary or
Veterans Memorial H01pital recently took on tbe
projector pr~~vidlng a 46 Inch big screen television set for residents or tbe hospit!ll's SkUled
Nursing Facility. Cost involved in tbe project
totals _ajlproxlmately $1,750. The group was
given $500 on the cost or the big screen TV by
Mrs. Edna Triplett, Pomeroy, through tbe Gans

r - - -·

212 E. Main, Pomeroy

Estate. The pubUc Is being laVIted to help on the
cost or the project and may sent contributions to
the Women's AuxUiary, Veterans Memorial Hopsital, US East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. Pictured witb the new televisioo is Mrs. Jessie C.
White, ,left, AuxiUary presideot, and Mrs.
Triplett, who provided tbe first $500 on the pur·
chase and who is also an Auxiliary member•

Around town-----.--------,

AROUND TOWN • In con·
juoction
with
Pomeroy's
Sesquicentennial, the 150tb anniversary or the incorporation or
. TUPPERS PLAINS - The ThP.:
the village, Bank One in ·
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 will
Pomeroy, is sponsorinJ this photo
ineet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
identification
series. The photos
post home.
feature arehitectural .details or
buildings within the town. The
FRIDAY
pletures were taken around town
LONG BOTIOM • The Faith
and are featured in Wedaesday
Full Gospel Church wiD have a
editions of The DaUy Sentinel.
hymn sing on Friday at 7 p.m. wilh
AllSWers, by maD or drop-off,
Special program
must be received at The Daily
Sentinel ollke by the following
A junior church program entitled
Monday and winaers wUI be lis"Dressed and Ready to Go~ will be · ted In Tuesday editiou or the
presented Sunday at 10:30 a.m. at
paper. Winners will receive a
the New Life Covenant Church of
landmark Christmas ornameat
God, Chester. Beverly Rupe is the · from Bank One and when the
director assisted by Andrea Powell.
series concludes 1111 people who
Pastor Gary and Deanna Hines inIdentified the pictures correctly
vites the public to attend.
wiD have tbt cbaace to wiD a
savlnp bond l'rom Bank One.
Six calls for medical assistance
and one fire call were answered by
units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service Monday.
At 1:44 p.m. the Middleport unit
rook Flossie Stealy to Veterans
Memorial Hospital from her
residence on Norlh Second Ave.; at
2:10 p .m. the Syracuse
uansported Doug Lavender
the Syracuse fire station to Pleasant
Valley Hospital; and at 9:04 p.m.
the Racine unit went to the Perry
Run Road residence of Gerald
Moore and took him to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 9:14 p.m. the Pomeroy squad
w.:nt to Condor Street and transpor·
ted Tabitha WatsOn to the Holzer
Medical Center; at 10 a.m. the
Racine sqUad took JiDI Teaford
. from Water Street to the Holzer
Mecical Center, and at IO:SS p.m.
the Middleport squad transPOrted
Patty Lavender from North 1&gt;ourtb
to Holzer.
At 1:22 p.m. Mondar:.==
the Pomeroy F'IIe
I responded io a car fire on Llwd
Clilf Road. Aftt:r llpOIIin&amp; the carbnretor fire on the roadway, •
employee from Big Wheel got a
fire extiquiaber and had the fire
-. out when tho PonnsU) d6pMtn,...
got to the ICelle· There - minor
· damage to the car owned by
· · r ...ni'IIP. Folly and being drivt11 by
~wiie.
·

1:::

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE
BLUEBERRY OATBRAN, SOUR CREAM OR
CINNAMON APPLE

••

MIDDLEPORT - Tbe Gabriel
Quanet will have an anniversary
sing on Satunjay at the United
Faith Church in Middleport at 7:30
p.m. Others singing will be The
True Gospel Sounds, Charity, and
Jan and Kathy._ ·

PoMEROY · The Fifth Annual
Coal Miners Jamboree wiU be held
Sarurday at 7 p.m. ·at Meigs High
School. The cost• is $5 for adults
and $2 for Students with children
under six admitted free. Music wiU
be provided by Tbe River Junction
Bluegrass . Band, Country Blend,
The Rarely Herd and olher local
talent.

Along in November, when cbil&amp;i
was the weather,
.-;
Two baUolS were cast in a bOlt'·
together.
:~
You couldn 't tell the one ~
the other.
:One was cast by a cunning okl'
brewer.
·
:
And the beer that he m~.
wasn't fit for lhe sewer.
The other was cast by a Suild&amp;y
Schoolrnan.
-:
But he cast. it in fav!l' of IIi:':
brewer's plan.
•·
This Sunday School man. nO:
man could be truer.
,
Kept busy all summer, denoun&lt;;.::
ing the l)rewer.
:
He prayed up his prayers with :a;
Holy perfection,
·
. ··:
And knocked them all down on
the day or election.
.
The cunning old · brew«. 90
cheerful and mellow,
, Said he, "I love that Sunday
School fellow."
He is true 10 his church, but to
his party he's truer, . ·
H(l,!B!ks to the Lord, but he votes
for tlie brewer."
,
Opie Cobb
•
.
Middleport, Oh;)
(The above poem was pubiishiia
in the Point Pleasant Register in t1ie .
late 1940's.)
"
•

KENTUCKY
FRIED
CHICKEN LIVERS
DINNERS
ONLY$3 99

PINTS

$225

EMS runs

••
t•

••

•

COUPUI GIDI Sl.lliiOY. f..IAT. 111¥. 11. 1 •

•••••••••••••••••••

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak

.•
-.,•••..,

14.515-oz.

~

. GOV'T GR'ADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

...

.

Stokely's Finest
Golden Corn ·

Armour
Sliced Bacon

·~

POMEROY
Tbe Pomeroy
Lodge 164 will meet at 7:30p.m. at
the Middleport Temple. All master
masons are invited.

VA 01 ~iro~c

PEAS

12-0Z. PKG ,

.=:.

-..
.••,
·--

ASSORTED

BUY ONE

~

' REEDSVILLE • Tbe EaStern
Band Boosters.will.have an arlS and
craflS fair lin Saturday at the high
school from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. There
will be"food and entertair1'!,'.enL

MIDDLEPORT • There will be a
bookfair at the Meigs Junior High
School Thursday through Tuesday.
AU students will be permiued to
purchase
books,
posters,
boolcma)'ks, e~e .

POINT
PLEA J.liiT
WVARNG Point pj;;J;.t. Family
Support Group wiU meet Thursday
at 6:30 p.m. at the Armory Day
Room.

;:!

'"

OES. instaUation set for December 7

ROCK SPRINGS - Tbe Rock
Springs G1311ge will meet Thursday
at 8 p.m. Patry Dyer, delegale to
Ohio Slate Grange will give a
reprOL

"'"'\7

ii-

the day of tbal evenL Items must be
received in advance to insure publication in lhe calendar.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE • The Racine Post 602,
TIJPPERS PLAINS - There wiU
PAGEVll.LE • Scipio Township . American Legion, will meet Friday be a round and sqaure dance at the
Trustees meet Wednesday 6 p.m. at the baU at 9:30 a.m. to go 10 Tuppers (&gt;lains VFW Pest 9053 on
Township Building.
Portland SJ:llde school for Vete1311s · Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. featuring
RunAND - The Village of Dayactivnies. · .
the Rocky Mountain Bluegrass
Rutlllnd will have an easement
band. Caller win be Red Carr. Cost
meeting on Wednesday at 11 a.m.
POMEROY
The Senior is $2.50 for adults and $1 for
and 7-10 p.m. at ·the civic center to Citizens Dance Cub will .have a · children.
discuss lhe viUage sewage system.
dance Friday from 8-11 p.m. Music
is by the Happy Hollow Boys from
SATURDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Voice Athens. Bring snacks for the snack
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Thpof Democracy Contesi will be held table. Tbe public is invited.
pers Plains Ladies Auxiliary will
Wednesday at the Thppers Plains
have ilS annual wrkey dinner on
VFW Post 9053. The public is inLOTTRIDGE - Country Music Saturday at the fire house at 4 p.m.
vited.
.
. THURSDAY
WELLS'IO~ - Tbe Wellston
Ohilloc Society wiD present a
Plans were made for a grand in- and blue blouses.
baseball card show on Thursday
stallation
at the recent meeting of
Katherine Miiehell was apfrom 4-9:30 p.m. at lhe SL Peter the Evangeline
Chapter No. 172, pointed contact person for f!lfreshand Palil Parish Hall, Wellston.
Order or the Eastern S181', for menlS which will be sandwiches
Friday,
Dec. 7 by Worlhy Mab'On and relish plates. Her phone numMlPDLEPORT • Tbe Heath Bea Kuhn
at the Middleport ber is 742-2544 and members are to
United Methodist Church will have Masonic Thmple
7:30 p.m. Tbe contact her by Dec. 6.
a rummage sale on Thursday from installing officers at
will
Plans were also made by worthy
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Friday from 9 . mab'On Mary Porter. be past grand
mab'On
Lmda Cramer for a '$5
a.m. to noon at the church baseOfficers practice will be Nov. 18 Chrisunas gift exchange at the
menL
'
and 25 at 2 p.m. Chapter dresses regular meeting on Dec. 6.
will be star points black skirts and Refreshments for that meeting will
POMEROY • Tbe Sacred Heart blouses
the coiol' of the star poinlS. be salads.
Catholic Church will have its
Otber officers will be black shirts
nual bazaar and dinner on Thursday
from 5-7 p.m. There will be crafts
and games roc everyone. Door
prizes awarded every half-hour
from 6:30-8:30p.m.

Cost is $4 per person for turlcey, HaU on Saturday at noon. There
dressing, mashed potatoes and wiD be games, prizes and refreshgravy, homemade noodles, green ~nlS. Tbe event is sponsored by
beans. cole slaw. roll, pie and drink. . the Midnight Cloggers apd aU
proceeds will go · towards the
MASON • The Ladies Auxiliary group's 1991 California Thur.
of the Mason Fire Department wiU
hold its annual ChristmaS bazaar on
RACINE - The Racine American
Satur!lay from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. CaU Legion Post 002 will hold its an773.5437 or 773-S414 10 rent a nual beans and corn bread dinner
iable.
for Veteralis Day on Sarurday
beginning at. 11 &lt;~.m . The public is
TUl'PERS PLAINS • The VFW . invited.
Post 9053 in Tuppers Plains is
having a turkey supper on Saturday · POMEROY • "Paddington Goes
at 4 p.m.' Cost is $4.SO for adults · . to the Movies" will be the movie
and $2.50 for children under 12. shown at the Meigs County Public
The Buckeye Travelers will enter· Library on SaiUI'day at 2 p.m. AU
tain. The public is invited.
area children are invited.

POMEROY· Tbe Preceptor Beta
Beta ChaP.!Cr, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority w•U 111eet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the Grace . Episcopal
Church. Hostesses will be Jane
Walton and Reva Vaughn.

~

·'!

the Raye Gospel Singers, the Night will be held at the Lottridge
Dailey Family, and other local Community Cenler on Friday from
talent, Refreshments will be served · 6 p.m. to midnight. Refreshments
and the public is invited to attend. . available. All bands welcome.

CHESTER - The Shade River
Lodge No. 453 will meet Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. at the lodge hall.
RefreshmenlS will be served and all
members urged to attend.

.U.S. Grade A
(4·10-lb. Avg.)

·~

Poet's Corner

. POMJ;:ROY • There will be a
FaD Open House at Meigs High
School on Thursday from 5-9 p.m.
The public is invited to aaend. An
open kettle ham and bean soup
supper will be held sponson:d by
the band boosters. Cost is $2.50 for
adullS and $2 for children.

. Ruffles Brand
® Potato Chips

·-,....

Community Calendar items appear two days before an event and

an-

Pound

The Daily .S entinel-Page 9

Community Calenc/4r

Hillside Baptist celebrates birthday
The Hillside Baptist Church wiD music wiD be featured at all chun:h
be observing ilS 6rst anniversary on services. A nursery service is
Sunday. Services begin wilh ·Sun· provided. .
day School at 10 a.m. and worship
The church was established on
at 11 a.m. Sunday evening services Nov. 11, 1989 and previously met
will begin at 6 p.m. Cake and at lhe home · of Pastor James R.
refreshmenlS will be served after Acree Sr. The church was conSllUC·
the morning worship to mark the ted by Larry Haynes. 1be first serfirst
of the church. Special vice was held there on Easter Sun-

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

'.

or Pepsi Cola

,.

•

Library to hold
bookmark contest
A bookmark designing contest
wiD _be held at. the Meigs ~ounty
Public Ldnary m Pomeroy m conjunction with Children's Book
Week next week.
·
Children in pre-school and grade
school .may obtain a plain
bookmark at the library for designing. There is no particular tlieme
for the COnteSL
The winning bookmarks wiU be
printed and distributed tbroushout
the county. For more infQrmation
on lhe contest, contact Ruth PowerS
at the library.

GOOD USID
WASHUS, DIYIRS,
IIFIIGIUTOIS, TVs,
GAS &amp; IUC. RANGES

COUNTY_
APPLIANCES
617 Wlwe., ••••••
PL 446·16ft
IOIISIIAJL.6P.II,

Introducing Dr. E. Neal Orteza
and Dr. Emy: Olivarez·Orteza

P

•• !IP.

1easant Valley .Hospital Is ple"ed to welcome f.. Neal Ortela, M.D. and Emy L Olivarez.
Orteza, M.D. to Its medial~- The husband and wife pedlatrldans open their ollke at 2907
jackson Avenue. I'Qint P1euant on Nov. 1. Prior to coming to Point Pleasant. the doctors
completed three-year leSidendes wltlt the DepMment ol Pediatrics at Unc:oln Medical and Mental
Health Center·In New York. Dr. Neal Ortela, who Wl5 Ufl Mint chief raldent durin&amp; the llnll year
o1 his residency prosram. has a special Interest In neonatology and endocrlnolo&amp;Y. Dr. Emy
~has a special ~llelest In allerBY and dennatolo&amp;Y- 8oth doctors are boird qualified
In l'edlmlcl. ll'ld belanl to the Amelk:ln Audemy ol ~ and the ~ Medial
Allodatlon. The pa1811sola 1~ daughter. Mllllla llaae, they enjoy teMis, the meMes
.nd the ttl tr'!. Appoliib IIWIIS I:Jrdlllclren ll'ld ado let CeiiiiSJIIIIY be ftllde bqlnnlnJThunday, Oct.
25. by callln&amp; !3041 675-&lt;6107. Olllce hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
The family ol professionals
Valley Drive, Polnl 1'11111nt, WV 25550

..'

,

~) 175-4340

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Court

VOTING - Rhoada JustiS of Village Greea Apartments,
Pomeroy, and Cheryl Call, Route 143, Pomeroy, were among 59
persons to vote at tbe Meigs County Board of Electioas Ofllce
Tuesday under provisloas or H.B. 237 passed this summer by the
State Legislature, Implemented ror the first time this election, that
bill allows those who neglected to report their change or address to
the Board of· Elections before tbe deadliae to vote at tbe Board
office.
.

,

Weather

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

South Central Ohio
Clear Wednesday night, with a
low In the mid 20s. Mostly sunny
Thursday, with highs near 50.
Extended Forecast
Fridi\Y through Sunday
A chance of rain or snow each
day. Highs will be mostly in the
40s Friday, and ranging from the
mid 40s to the mid 50s Saturday
and Sunday . Overnight lows will
range from the upper 20s to the
mid 30s Friday .and Saturday
mornings, and mainly In the 30s
early Sunday.

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
y

.

...

..

. "

,.. ....
... ' ' . . .

Stocks

Wilmette I A'lifheit

TbiiDksgiviag diaaer .
There will be a Thanksgiving
dinner at the Racine Grange Hall
on 08k Grove Road on Nov. 16 at
6:30 p.m. Ham and tultey will be
furnished. Bring table service and a
covered dish dinner. Public invited.
Mett.IDI date cban&amp;ed
The Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter,
Daughters .of . the
American Revolution,
buffet
hmcbeon has been poStponed until
Friday, Nov. 161112:30 p.m.
A deer jumped into the road and
SII'IICk a truck being· driven by
Larry Lehew, 44, Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, early Wednesday morning as he traveled along West Main
SL
PIPotl lmiC:IC10m·y Police reponed that the
accident happened at 6:25 a.m. Tlie
deer came frOm the Ohio l:Uver side ·
of the road, struck the left front of
the vehicle and then moved on up
the road. There was modelale
damage to the truck.
A few hours laler the depannient
niceived a call about a deer which
hid been found dead several
hundred feet from where the acci·
clentoccumd.

616.
Ticket _sales: $1,291 ,986 .
Payoff: S882,593.
~
Plcll-4
86'70.
Ticket sales: $239,957. Payoff:
$54,900.
Carib
nine of hearts.
five of clubs.
two of diamonds.
· ace of 1pades. •.
Ticket sales: $900;225. Payoff:
. $26,650.

.(

•Price of ad tor all c•pital letters •s double pr• ce o f ad cost .

"7 poin1 line type only used .
•Sentinel is nat nnponsible for 1mors a her tirsl d., . !Check
for errors tint d~ ad nm• in paper ] Call before 2 :00 g m
dl¥ tfter publication to mMe correctiol'1
•Ads thl1 ,utt be t~tid in 1dv1nce are
Card ot Th-.ks
Happy Adt
In Memoriam
Yard Sales

..

'

"A classified advertisement placed il'1 The Daily S e ntmel l e~ ·
ca;tn -:' clasified. displ.tV. Busi.,•s C.srd and legal notices!
Will also app•ar m 1f1e Pt . Ple•ant Register and the G1ll t·.
polis Dli,ly TribtJne. te1chmg o1.1er 18,000 hOmes
COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP,ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPEf'

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION ·
- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY
- 2:00P .M . MONDAY

-

2 :00P .M. TUESDAY
2:00PM . WEDNESDAY
2:00P .M. THURSDAY
2·00 P .M . FRIDAY

Classified pa/[es corer I he
JoUtJtA.'ing telephonl' exchan/[es ...
A,.• Code 614

Meigs County
Area Code &amp;14

Mas on Co . WIJ
Area Code 304

446-Gallipolit
367- Ch•hire
388- Ylnton

992- Middlepo"
Pomlf'oy
985- ChMier

245- Aio GJande

843 - Port ..nd

256- GuVJin Disl.

247-Le11rt Fills

379 - WIInut

742- RutiM'Id
667- Coolville

676 - Pt . Ple11ant
458-Leon
67&amp; - Apple Grove
773 - Mason ,
882- New Haven
896 - Letarl
937 - Buffalo

Gellia Colinty

e-43 - Ar•bia Di•t . 949- R•cine

•

.

you want it ...
you ·ve got it, ..

.SALES AND RENTALS
LOCALL! OWNED BY GREG &amp; CONNIE KAYLOR

CONT
INUITY
OF
CARE
• MEDICAL EQUIPMENT &amp; suPPuEs'

Am Electric Power .............2814
AT&amp;T .................................34t,i,
Ashland on ........................29t,i,
Bob Evans ........................... l2
Charming Shoppes.............. 872
City Holding Co . .......... ....... 1772
Federal Mogul... .................. 11
Goodyear T&amp;R ........... ... .... .15t,i,
Key Cen turton ..................... 11
Lands' End ......................... 914
Umlted Inc........................ 14t,i,
Multimedia Inc........ ,.. ........ 52~
Rax Res tau rants............... .. 1t,i,
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 17
Shoney's Inc....................... 972
Star Bank ...........................15¥.
Wendy's lnl'l. ..................... 6\1
Worthington Ind ................... 20

507 MUIIEftY HTS.
614-992-2310
OFFICE

304-882-3529
IESIDDIU .

54 · Miscellaneous

MONEY SAVING COUPONS ~~~ lhe Sunflowo •&lt; G&lt; u up
r

l
I

•

9:00 P.M. TO 1:00 A.M.

SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER
GARY STEWART QUINTET

Donations $2 5.00 Per Couple
B. V.O.B.

FOR TICKET IN FORMA nON
CAll MEIGS INDUSTRIES - ...992-6681 ANYTIME
· lEESA MURPHEY 992-3643 AFnR 6:00P.M.
I

[NTHI

PO.ROY, OH.

Hell•ay Seaton Baking
· Time It Here!
RED GLAZED CHERRIES .........5300 LB.
.GREEN GlAZED CHERRifS ..... 53oo LB.
GLAZED PINEAPPLE .........'....:.5325 LB.
CHOPPED DAnS ...................5247 LB.
GOLDEN RAISINS ...................$269 LB.
RAISINS .................................s153 LB.
MINCEMEAT .............:.............s2zs LB.
· OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

9 AM TO 6 PM

..

ClouiL
-==-hagroncenee---•1·

Ba1haft lulding

EVERY
SAT. NIGHt
6:30P.M.

Ohio Valley Bulk Foods
514 EAST
MAll
PO.IOY

992·6910
We Accept
Food Sta...s

&lt;J

1

3
6
10

.20

.30

.42,..

$9.00

1~

.60
.05 / doy

013 .00.
81 .30/ day

15

15

Monthly

.

84.00
16.00

1.5
15

R•t• are tor eonMcutNe funs. brokef.1 updwswill bech•gect
tnr ••~h t'llw as "perate ads.

AllllUU rt ce Ill t:rt Is

Merchandtse

1- Cird of Thtnks
2- ln Mem~ry
3 - Annoucements

51 - Hous... old Good~
62- Sporting OoM
53-AntiQues

4 - Giv..WIV

54 - Misc . Merchendise

5-Happy Ads

6 - losr 1nd Found
7- ·Yard Sele(lllid in advance)
&amp;- Public: Sale &amp; Auclion
S- Winltd to Buy

S5 - 8uilding Supph•
58 - Pets for Stitt
57 - Musicellnatfum .... ,,
58 - Fru its I. VegabiM
59- For S1le or Trade

Emplnymenl

Fum Suppl1r.s

Serv1r.es

a Li vesluck

11 - Help Wanted

12 - Situltio., W1nted
1 J-lnsurti'1Ce

61 - Farm Equ ipment

14-Busin•s Train ~ ng

62 - Wenled to Buv.

·

6~ - Liveatock

15 - Sehoolt &amp; lntuuetion

64-Hay &amp; Grain
66 - Saed &amp; FertiliLar

1 6 - Aadio , TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Mis-ctlllneous
18- Want•d To Do

Transporlalwn
21 - Busln•s Opportwnity
22-MontY to lotn
23 - Prof•atol'111 Servicn

Real Estate
31 - Homn tor S1te
32-Mobile Hom•• for Sale
33 - Farms for Sale
34- Busin•s Buildmgs
36 - lots &amp; Acraage·
36 - ~eal Estate Wal'1ted

41 - Houses for Aen I
42 - Mt:ibile Homes for Rent
43 - Farms for Rent
44- Aparlment tor Rent
46 - Space for Rent
47-Wtnted 10 Renl
48 - EQuipment for Rent
4.9 - For leMe

71 - Autos for Sale
72 - Trucks for Sale
73 - Va.,s a. 4 WO 'a
74 - MOIOICYCI•
75 - Bcau &amp; Moton tor Sale
76 - Auto P~ru &amp; Acc•sari•
77 -" Auto Aeptir
78 - Camping Equipment
79- Campers 6 Motor Homes

IAZAAR &amp; DINNER
Th• SKBCI Hurt
Church. Pomeroy,
will hold Its annual
blzaer and dinner
Nov. 8. Dlnn•
Mrv.cll--7pm.
Creftll!nd pma•

for -rvone.

Come One, Come "All!

Door Prlzea every
Y, hour

8:30-8:30 .m.

Offke 614--992--2116
llollll 614-992·5692

oomr s. ru111a, uom
WE NEED USTINGS !

H-5·90-tfn

Want Ads

Never lithe a Vacation
They~ AJ " - '
'! I!I!IF\

Real Estate General

.

Serv1ces
81 -· Homelmprottementa

82 - Piumbing &amp; Healng
.
84 - Electrical &amp; R•frig•ation
83-Eac~~ttting

BS - G•n••• Hauling
86-Mobile Home Repeir

HILL'S DEER
CUniNG
CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING
BASHEN RD.,
RACINE

949-2206

87 - Upholslery

ST. RT. 338 - House 1nd
lot - Needs some repair .
River view with potential ofa
cabtn. $5,900.00.
POMEROY - Thts handicapped accessible home
has ramp ways, special floor
· covering, special bath fix·
lures, etc., all designed wdh
the handicapped in mind. 3
bedrooms. fireplace, basemen!, large modern kitchen.
$34.900.00.
PORTLAND - Appro&lt;. 8
acres. two attached mobile
homes under shingled root.
3 bedrooms and bath. Built
on utility room. 30&lt;30 storage building. $16.500.00.

MOBILE HOME FURNACES • HEAT PUMPS
ALL FURNACE PARTS
MOBILE .
HEAnNG &amp; COOLING

CHRISTMAS AUCTION
SAT., NOV. 10- 7:00 PM
AUCTIONEER~AN SMITH
SYRACUSE FIRE STATION
SponsoreH by
S racuse Vol. Fire De I.

JANET'S

HAIR-GO-ROUND

Featuring Specials for
Sarah and Terri
'10 OFF Spirals, Directional
and Regular Perms
s10 OFF Highlighting

WE ALSO SPECIALIZE IN
ALOETTE MAKUP

773--5404

.

Specials good thru November .
GET AN AVERAGE COUCH AND
CHAIR CLEANED FOR ONlV
139.95
CAll 446-4604 or
304-675-2295
CAPTAIN STEAMER CLEANERS
EX~R£S

NOV. 3D 1990

Congratulations, Todd
Johnson, on your graduation
from Rio Grande.
· Congratulations, Scott
Johnson, on your graduation
from Ohio University.
· Con,ratulalions, Lee'a
Johnson. You made it through
the 1st Quarter at Rio.
Con11ratulations, Gina Johnson!
On Honors Program at Rio.

MIUrice and
Mlrl&amp;rlt Johnson

'•

-

locatld on Safford Sdloolld. oH It, 141

'

. (614) 446--9416 .er 1 ~100·172--5967

TRI·COUNTY RECYCLING

.•..

OFFEIS 2 LOCAnONS TO SIIVE YOU.".
POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 60 &amp; S.R . 143
. NEW HO~AS :
POMEROY: 9 a.m.-7 p.m. 7 Oay1
ALBANY: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 8 Deya, CloHd Sundey

-,,

PAYING AS O.F TODAY, SEPT. 11, 1990
#1 Coppet' 1 1 per lb.;

. Clean

.
44C .,.,,,;e. ·1.2s
• . ..,
40C' Ib.

Aluminum Cans, 46C per lb.

Ctoen Autorn:.~ro~~

Yellow B

lb.;

..',._

equipped kitchen, family
room, 2 car garage in basement. Sitting on 1.6 acre.
Beautiful country setting
with a nice view. $59.500.
RUTLAND- BRICK STREET
- 66d66 tot, I floor home,
2 bedrooms. I bath. Nice
kitchen cabinets. $21,500.
MAE HUI'P ----949--2257
JEAN 'IIUSSEU-949-2660
JO
915-4466
OFFKE ·--·-·-·-- "2-2259

Hill---·---·

'

1'"+,_----'&lt;". :
APPUANCES
~

BUILDING &amp;
REMODELING
Commercial &amp;
Residential
•Roofing
•Siding
•Windows
Isn't • Worth Doing R9t 1

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
992-6009

"Banks
Construction
992-6009

GUN SHOOTS
1:00 P.M.

SUNDAYS

12 Gauge Factory
Choke only

· SHOOTS START
SEPT 16, 1990

&amp;opt. 4 ;tfn

GUARANT!:EDI .
10-l

Con~pii~ft Grooming
for ·All Breeds

EMIIII MERJNAR
Owlllt' _&amp; Opwotor

614--992-6820
Pa1111roy, Ohio .
10-6 1 'mo.

CHECKlHE

SER~ICE

w. can repair and re-~·

radiators · and .

hlater corn. We can .
alsa acid boil. and rod
out radiators. We also
r.epair Gas Tanks.

PAT' HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport; Ohi.o
•

H3-tfc

PLUMING J. HEATING
No" location:
168 North Stcond
Middloparl, Ohio 45760

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

We C..,.-y Fishin·g Suppli•

Your Plrort.•
Billa Hare
IUSINESS PHONE
992-6550
'JJESitOOICE PHONE

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•Complet•

HAVI IUTEIS UIODIG FOI
. MEIGI COUNTY PIOPOTT. IF
. fOU WANT TO 1111. WI
(!lUND IWTf 10DAT AND
un wmt USII WE SRVICE ·
OUilliTIIGSIIt

R~modeling

·

Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

985-4473
667-6179

Real Estate General

5-31-'90 tin

~ l - ~­

SHRUB &amp; TREE

TRIM and

-rui!NE:R At AITT

OP!'0111lJHI\'V

~·---

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDL£PORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992-28B8/HOME 992-6892
DOTTIE S. TURNER. BROKER

BAILEY RUN RD.- BEAUTIFUl STAIT- This 1973 ~irk·
wood mobile home has been reconditioned. Has new carpeting throughout, new outer doors. looks like new. Nice bay
window and two bedrooms. Plus appro&lt;.one acre ot nice laying land .
IIUST SEE $14.~
RACINE -ACRES- ACREAGE -ACREAGE- Approx. 26
acres of land. Has approl. 6 acres tillable. Great place to put
a home.
$14.500
MIDDLEPORT- RUTLAND ST. - Anice big lot with a1973
Ritz Craft mobile home. Home has 2 bedoroms. large living
room, lactory made awning, with atrealed wood deck. Stor·
age building and small garage.
.
$9,000
MIDDLEPORT - Grut nli&amp;hbarhood - Comer lot. all on ·
one floor plan. 21o 3 bedrooms, large pantry and apart base ment. Enclosed nice front sitting porch and a nice lot.
.
.
$27,900
POMEROY -LINCOUI HTS. - "Cute as abutton- Neal as
a pen" describes this two-bedroom home with an equipped
kitchen. carport. and part basement. Has afloored attic and
50x288 foot lot.
·
$25.000
NAYLORS RUN- Beautiful, corner lot wilh 2.15 acres. Has
natural gas across the road , electric available. Older drive

~-

"~

LETART - lllinttnanc1 Frtt Exterior - ·4 bedroom s. 2
baths. 3 sitting porches, and a dining room. Nice·big level ·
yard. Fenced aoea with bam lor animals. and afree house lor
children. PRICE REDUCED - Ws $44,900.
lUST SEE $42,500
0

llrDDuPORl'.- HiStorical looking corner store. Has 6
aplrttnfntsUi)and another slore down. Sllrt your own business. Has lois of room.1nd has an income. Call for more details!
LETART - lET YOU'LUOVE IT-Just right lor afamily. Has
4 bedoroms, dining room, new kitchen cabinets, new r1nae,
and entire home hu been remodeled nicely - inside and
out. Also hu 1 ¥iell ol the river.
StUOO

992-5335 artiS--3561

'·

Aa-ou ,,...

COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICE

•

~ -

R81ld..,till end

Comiliercl•l

REWIIItG AND
ROUILI SHOOTING

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

..
•'

Certified llectrlchtM

..
BANKS
CONSTRUCnON ..
992-6009

10-11oo.

COAL

·"'-•
.

UNLIMITED
4 TON MIN. UMIT

sso.oo ........
Lump' or Stoker

286-2689

,---....
BISSELL

.'

'
•

,,
..
'
\

..,
.•.

::

BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

•Garages

liEN GOOD AND WE STil

'-

10-24 I mo. pd.

•New Homes

vow• HAS .

SERVIC.E

I 010.

The
GROOM
ROOM

•,

FREE ESTIMATES

RACINE
GUN CLUB

au wdlun

WASHER$-$100 upp---- •
DR'IER$-$&amp;9 vp
,
REFIIGEIATOR$-$100 "/
::~&amp;?.~~~r~, 112 up
IICRD OVEN~ up

liEN'S Am,IANCE
NEVER CLEAN YOUR
GUTTERS AGAII'f

10+1 mo.

RACINE -Rindt Home-

EQUAL H0UMt0

Stoekl!

'

1 1-15-90-1 mo.

ROCKSPRINGS ROAD Appro&lt;. 80 acres of vacant
ground. Appro&lt;. 20 acres tillable. All minerals, water
and elec. available. Good
hunting land. REDUCED
$27,000.

ou1 wn

Mow I•

.,

WE IIEED LIST.. tll

BULLETIN BOARD

OFfER

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

205 N. Second StrHI ·

(jii)J)lfPOIT, OliO 4576

2 bedrooms, I balh, fully

Get two ovorogo slzt rooms •2too each.

3 Announcemems

Bmllll't-

HOUSES•LOTS•FARMS
•COMMERCIAL

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

MEIGS INDUSTRIES
FIRST ANNUAL
AUTUMN BALL
·FUND RAISER
SATURDAYI NOVEMBER 17I 1990 .

FREE SET-UP (hors d'oeuvres)

inc.

I:.'TflfllfRM.

RACINE
FilE DEPT.

. 992--22S9
SAlEII'iWP. - Appro&lt;. 50
acres of vacant land, im·
mediate possession. Old dug
well. minerals. and coal.
$16.800.00.

Over 16 Words

Rate

Words

45 - J:4rnished Rooms

8et Ruufts fast

GUN SHOOT

POMEROY, 0 .

RATES
Days

i;:=======;t=--..;_..:,..:,::...;::,!-.=:....=~:_..:....=:.t~=.:::.____

E . Moit~l.lolll

'

Lottery numbers
Pick-S

"' ~

Invacare
Patient room Accessories

A IJ!lllriage license has been Dally atock price&amp;
granted to Alben L. VanCooney (Aa of 10:88 a.m. )
20, and Teresa Sue DeLong, 19: Bryce IIDd Mark Smith
Pomeroy.
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

Announcements

7:15 &amp; 9:15
MILY

outsKie Meigs. Gall ia or Mason count•• must be pre ·
paid
•Aec.ive I .50 discount for ads paid in advance
•free ads - Give.way and Found 1d1 und• 15 words will be
run 3 dws 11 no ch•ge.

. ...

Lieenses issued

Besides his mother, he is survived by his wife, Nancy, Uttle
Hocking; a son, Jeff (Susan) Gandee of Coolville: two sisters, Eloise
Simpson and Thelma Griffis, both
of W'CII Palm Belich; two brolhers,
William Gandee, Jr., West Palm
Beach and Roben of Two· Riven,
WIS.; and lhl= grandsons.
Funeral~ will be Friday at
I p.m. at While Funeral Home in
Coolville. Burial will be in
Coolville Cemetery.
· Friends may call at the fuDeral
home on. Thursday from 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9 p.m.

Veteraas Memorial Hospital
TIJESDAY ADMISSIONS Gerald Moore, Long Botl!lm·
Robert Canailay, Pomeroy.
'
TIJESDAY DISCHARGES Helen Edwards, Mona Sarra, and
William Hughes.

TO PLACf AN AD CALL 992·21 56

Wilmeua Leifheit, 76, of
Pomeroy, died Tuesday at her

Vetaans.

Mrs. Charles (Kay) Williams,
Shade, was last weekUs winnet of
the "Around Town" phol!l identification series.
She correctly identified the phol!l
as a detail on the facade of the
Swisher and Lohse Drug Store on
Main Street.
Mrs. Williams will receive a
landmark
sesquicentennial
Christmas ornament from Bank
One.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Two were fined and eight others license and $48, $PCCding; Lori
residence.
51H I SUI I'IU!II[ES
Born in Middlepon, she was the forfeited bonds· in the court of Thomas, Coolville, $49, $PCCding;
3:15
~ ! ~ Iii I :III'JIII
daughter of Ernest and Carrie Mayor Richaid Seyler Tuesday Deanna Coates, Columbus, $46,
U.1TD ! U
$PCeding; David Burr and William
night.
Beabout Burton.
•
7:00 &amp; !l:lC
Fined were John Clonch, Deem, Colurn bus, each fined $63
She was a homemaker, belonj!ed
MILY
LH 1\ I\ II\ II
SAT I a lll.fi•D
to the Rock Springs Uruted Pomeroy, $25 and costs, failure to · and costs on a ch31ge of consuming
3:00
v \1111 I v
••
urn a 1
Methodist Church and was a appear, and Terry Day, Me· alcohol under age 21; and Ricky
Connelsville, $10 and costs, ex- Koenig, . Tuppers Plains, $44,
lon~e member of the Rock
7:00 ' 9:20
pired registtation.
Spnngs Grange.
$PCeding.
MllY
SAT • SUI! ""-TUIUS ·
Ch31ges of assault against Violet
Forfeiting bonds were Ernest
She is survived by a son and
3:00
daughter-in-law, Roger and Lenom Mock, Stalesville, N. C., $44, Jeffers, Pomeroy, were dismissed
Lc:ilheit, Pomeroy, a brotller and $PCeding; Randy Fmyer, CoolviUe, by Mayor Seylor in an earlier court
sister-in-law, Elmer and Betty Bur- $63, squealing tires; Usa Allen, session. It was erroneously reported
ton, Columbus; a sister-in-law, Columbus, $63, no opemtor's mthattimethats~Mdbeenfined , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. -. . . . . . . . . .~
on the charge.
·
•
Mary Burton, Pomeroy;. two
grandchildren,
Dorothy
and
Michael Leifheit of Pomeroy, and
several nieces and nephews. . ·
Preceding her in death besides
her parents were two brothen, William and Eugene Burton, a sister
Ernestine, and her husband, Clif:
ford in 1968.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at I p.m. at the Fisher
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Kathryn Riley and the Rev. Mel
Franklin officiating. Burial will be
.,
in. the Rock Springs Cemetery.
Fnends may call at the funeral
home after 2 p.m. on Thursday. The
family will be there to greet friends
from 6 to 9 p.m. Memorial contributions may be made to the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church
Acomplete line of products including beds. safety bed rails.
building fund.
·
over bed tables. palient lifts. trapeze bars to meet all your needs.

Dewey Benjamin Gandee, 70,
of 22 Pine Drive, Uttle Hocking,
died Tuesday morning at the
Vetaans Administration Medical
Caller in Clarksburg, W.Va.
He was born in West Vuiginia,
the son of the lale William Gandee
and Grace Feaell Gandee of West
Palm Beach, Fla.
He was a member of the Jordan
Ught Baptist Chun:h, a Vetei3D of
the U.S. Navy during World War n
and a member of the· Parkersburg
Chapter of the Disabled American

Name contest winner

•
Classi 18

17'&gt; ;JJ
/ JC) 9

f;'lt

d

en maJTiages

'il

If/
/?4

:

At 2:04 am. on Wednesday,
Pomeroy squad was called to ·Burlingham for Samuel Williams. Williams went to Veterans Memorial
HoSPital. At 2:09 p.m., Middlepon
squad was called to Page Street for
}oe Bishop; who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

/O j /JI

9~

.. 0

property reportedly stolen from the
residence of Meigs County Engineer Phil Roberts' residence near
Syracuse. .
According to the repon, the
residence was entered on October
I , and that several items were
stolen, including a hot water tank, a
. toaster, rugs, lamps, a ponable gas
grill, ceramic ducks, a l31ge picture
and other personal items.
According to Oeputy Raben
Beejlle, that investigation is continumg and additional arrests are
· expected.

Hospital news

:z,,

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m
:10:
117

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If/

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)'8

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A divorce has been granted in
Metgs County Common Pleas
At 1:13 p.m., Middlepon squad . Court to Paula s. Mayes from
went to Guiding Hand SchOol Mathew Mayes. The court has
Keith MeCany was treated but noi granted a dissolution of marriage to
transported. At 2:35 p.m., Pomeroy· Gail Ellen Ferry and David Alan
squad was sent to Peacock Avenue Ferry.
for Roben Canaday. Canaday was
taken to Vet~s . Memorial
Hospital. ,

lrll'

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1$'6 AA.l

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for assistance were
answCle!l b.&gt;:: units of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services.
At 11:26 IIJII. on Tuesday, Rutland squad was called to State
Route 124 for Lucy Chippes, who
was taken to J;&gt;leasant Valley
HoSPital ..

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Three persons have been arrest·ed
·
are to appear in Meigs County
Court on .. charges . of receiving
stolen propeny. It is charged that
lhe three individuals, Robert Talbott, Peggy McBane and Brenda
White, received or possessed

Fiv~ ~s

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~~I:~~::----~~~~~==~~~~~~---:----;P~o~m~er~o~y~M~id~d~I~~~·~O~h~io~--~--~--~-----,--~--~~~~!D~a~il~y~Se~en~t~in~a~-~P~~~1~1 ,
iEMS
has five
Three arrested by Meigs deputies
. 8. US I. ne
'
·
s
s.
Se'
'
r
vi·
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~
calls .Wednesday

W8dnesdaV. November 7. 1990

\

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1:1

lfe''}J et&gt;ta•Jj

Wednesday, Nbvember 7, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

s.,,..sx;~

IJellt~MI"

.,

.

REMOVAL

*LIGHT HAULING

*FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

992-2269

USED RAILROAD nES
tl-12-90 tin

STEWART'S

GUNS &amp;
SUPPLIES
Su .us for Your
Sporting .NHtls
Buy, Sell or Trlldo
Gun•
OPEN MON.-SAT. 10-S

742-2421
36496 SMil1l UN ID.

IUTU. ., OliO

10-01 -'10-1 mo .

::~:oR~::~~
ALL MAKES

Bring It In Or Wi
Pick Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992·5335 or ~15;3561
Acron ,,.. Peat Office
217 E. S.C. P....,.y

· I'OIIIIOY, OliO
316(90/lfn

"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2101
or ReL 949-2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS
4-l&amp;-16-Hn

r----.... ."-.
•Remodeling and
Homo Repair•
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUcnON
992-6648 or
698-6864

·...:

--·..

·,j.,

,,'

10-12-'110-1 .....

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

1
BISSELL
SIDING CO. . ....

.... "-· """

"Free Eatimatea"

-~

.,.._

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949·2160
110 SUNDAY CAUS
4-16-16-lfn

LIN.DA'S
PAINTING

'"·-

..

·~

...
--·

INTEIIOR • EmiiOI
FREE ESTIMATES

Take the pain "t If
painti... let mi dO
it for you.

j

howRtfertncn

.. .

v.-,leo-11111

614·915-4110

10-10-10-1 ...

�..-

'

.

.....

·

iiPageiiii;ii1ii2iiiiTheiiiiiiDai-·lyrSent
__•n_ei_~-::::--:-=-:-:-:-----E=:=::::Pom=:::::=er=o=y~=M=iddT-I::::ep=&lt;Ort==·=O=hio===r::=::-::-::::::-:::-:--:--....._.:w::ed=nes=:;day. November 7. 1990;'
LAFF·A·DAY
3 Announcements
Credit PIUI, Gold Cr.dll Card.

Yisa!M•st•card

------------,.---,..----.
....-·--

G~o~~ranteed .

CIA

Cash advancn. No eecurily
deposit . No cr.dlt chac•. 1·100-

226.0048. $19.95 ....

No Hunting or Tres,-sslnll ·on

tho R. H. FHcktl larm fta11lord,
wv.. Vlolat.,. will b4
prosee:Uitd.
l.,lnatlached? Area ~ngiM Stele
Communication With You. Con-

=r -.. .

44

- . 1. a 112 ....., 10 iovol,

, . _ boM. I .llrve borne
137,DDD.

Rentals

e.-

41 Houses for Rent
3
lr . epiH-1,
,_ly
1 MJIIImD., Depo.ft
MF $,.td.

~--

·

210 State a , 4 Nom I laalh,
~ Nmadalad ~~ove
rwt.

Giveaway

a

hlmllhod, 132&amp; mo. oo-11 ,..

::tear-"

qulr'Mt,- 1 ,_, - - · Ideal tar
or couple. 814-

1 112 yr male while red epcMI,
good wllh kids, HI- vorioty,

:!04.e75-2075.
3 Badh:»om
ne~-;"ood,
I
.

I

KIT'N'CARLYLE®byl..arryWrlght

72 TruCks for Sale . :,
111'1 While Rood

day ..b.

4441 1lli 6:00p.m.

Nlooly~mlohod-llomo.1

,
114·--··
!larth Thlnl IINOI, MldcllopOrl, ·

...n weklhlown.

..-and.._" r.qulrOd,
3DCII22111.

t7 AH,t.iCil g:'ENW PoW !} li'i I~LI... '(l(.i, l ~~~

Fla.!.

&lt;jOCH A LITTL~

OUT .;remo ANALiet.l,
llO 11/:RE, 11-WllHIS

•

C~T~ ~

H\i:&gt;H!

D

dump truck, now pornt

GUESS WI-IAT I I-IAIIE FOR
LUNCH . MARCIE... TI41RW· ,:w E
· FORTUNE COOK I ES ~ ·

14,1100. 114-11112-3114.

1111 Dodge !lam, D-150I ROI'II
SE poc:kaa., EliC. orlalna coridJtlon. 14.~. 114-24!1'11884, 814245-5823.
'

houM. DOOd
304-m-IleA or

· I!VI!NCNG

11

Wf.iAT DOES TI-I AT
01-&lt;E SA'(, SIR--:

'

I:OOtlla Cll ())•
IIJ Nfta
(I)CIIarlaOin~Q
II) :1-2·1 Conl8ct
(!)lquaNOna
Q
oa ALF
0 c.rtllon Expraaa
ill Wllfld Toclllr
o .........,stareo. Q

.urt:

1!171 c-ao -.on CheYI' truck,

•

PIIIUI

a ••

cand, 111,000. 114-441-1117, MOll'
Frt,U.
1977 One ton Ford truck.12,000;

I

lrnoM Fumolwd EtllGioncyl
iull..... lor 1 ..........._,.

Wi-1 0 FIXES .YOUR
LUNCi-1 , KID? "

1:30

\J2 a

11J NBC ~

I 111". 1 '

II I I
5

Nawa

I

Andy Orlltltll

(l)lllleain of olaM4ila
Cll (JJ lnlkla Edition
II) (!) MacNeil Lahrer

59

OMacGr"r

For .. 1, or tradi. Turtceya. 11..:
11112-71142.

QJ~

0

Q

AM-FM CI8Htt, rea end tllwr;

miles, $4,600. o304-415'

FRANK AND

.

F.R.NF.~T

Cho.Y Allro . MI,.,;Van;
-0!1.
AC.
anglno,
mil•,
after
111111

V-6

Si'l lnt'l Tractor with Loader,
111,850; 404 lnl'l with plowLCu~

llvllor Mowing Mochlnl, Hake,
Balor Hay Coi1dhlonor, 13,950;
445 MaUna 11,881. 0WMr Will
Finance. 114-286-6522.

•.

'

1181 Hondll U.gn11, 4,400 acutal ,
mini
condHion; .
wfrd:hleld. Priced to Mil. 114-:•

mlloo,

ill Croaaflre

:

1m a..-necl'lft 32ft. ho· ,,.,,., ~
and tr11llar. 110 hp Chry.l_tt .

(P0t3) (2:001

c:-.1 HoUr I
Host Oleic Van Pattin
introduces comedians Bill
Engv111. Steve Harvey.
Pamela MstiMOn and Oan

Ql) ~

•

We eN nowW1NTERIZINGprl!"!; •
ecceaaon.. We lrmaar ..

SHAINKWRAP.
AIVEASID&amp; :
MARINE GolllfiO!'!.._011. 614-441:".~

2~24, 1-8Q0.7214.t:Jif.

Menendez.

CllliCL ate of l,..ct

' .'

Accessories

1 year old ConiUry llborglln
plclwp 1 -. Groy, longbod,

1300.31N-17~.

B - Tnlnomloolono,

t1 PtllnaNawa

"' •'
?:
..

Auto Pan!l &amp;

l*d

.

a· •

5JJ SHE:S (1-\((KII..JG ~E:R
FILE-S fCR A W VJI-IOSE.

Ylriton auto Salvage. Foralgn .I
Dom Pot1o lluylng funk con.

CHART SPh'S
11-\II..J6...

114-1002.

2411-4&amp;118

8

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

~

ollport8
8:00 (])a 11J1 Dear John John
giYII Ka.. moral SUpport II
her aunt' a funeral. Stereo. Q
Cll (JJ • DoogilltowiW,
M.D. Wanda become&amp;
inlatualld with a vain modal.
Shlreo.Q
ill!
Jeka and 1ila
F - A dOctor"&amp; jilted lover
- • revenge against !lim.
Sttreo. C
·
t1J MOVIE: llurlad Allva
12:001 Stereo.
Qll IUaltvllle Now
ill Lany King Llvll
1:30 (])a 11J1 Tlta FallllliiOJI
OOm'a masc:ullnlty Ia
challenged by hit new
girlfrtand's lather. Sltireo. Q
Cll (JJ. Maniaci Paclpll
Rusaell Ia COiarnall about
his impending fatherhood .
Stareo. Q ·
1D EllpacJitlon Earll!
10:00 (])a 11J1 Hunter Hunter
conlronll Dev1111 about
poslibla loan-shari&lt; ·
connection~. Stereo. g ·
Cll (JJ. Cop Roell POtts
laces the lhreall ol his
follow ollicela. Stereo. Q
ill! ae WIOU Uz
overampa her authority when
llhl opena a Cltild
molaslltlon story. Stereo. Q
IIlla ..., rre~c: Till Nallt
OIMrlllon
Ql CNN EvenlngCill 700 Clutl With ,...

SAM£

a•

10 ft. alld•ln truck Cllm~r, liM ·

now. tt,ooo linn. Coli 614-448-

4211.

Transportation

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

l1allon IIIIUmliPO) (2:001
1:05 (I) MOVIE: llontatNng About
Alll8lla (2:00)
1:30Cl) (JJ. a.o..~ .. ,_
Mike ..u.a Jeson and. Ma~
into buying a trip to Pans. li!
1D Quln- 11-a Worlil

·
:

rabulll, ltartlng at llli 114-2• r
5877, 814-371-2213.
•\ ~ .

Hoy lor SoiL C10¥or I llmothY.
Round BoloO In the Flold. IM-

1173

-

Corulr 25 ft. $11100 with
hitch, 304·773-51167 alllr

5p.m.

Serv1ces

BASEMENT

Wlntod to 8"1': Sta~ 11m!!!!, Small or 11rvo . . , _ IM....7Stt,oftor7 p.m.

1171 TronoArn. Juot

roploced tv·

8)
engine, now ........
trlftlmilllon.&amp;. C!M'OrM wh..la,

W.nted To Buy: Junk Autot1
with or without moton. Clll Will do t.brlllttlng In my home,
Larry Lively. 614-3aa.9303.
•I Milia, trained In nursing.
Wanted To Buy: Usad mobl5e Hln rwleiencee • .W.II2-3181.
homu, call &amp;14-448-0178.

18 wantecltoDo

Employment Services
11

Belutlty your car &amp; protld II
fnlnlllifntor ..n I g~mL Elpo~

auto ctoonlng lnokle I out.
Rlvoroldo AUto Detailing. 614-

Help Wanted

- . . . llrlck, . . . . lint•, .ta.

..._

AC, PS, PI, 304-47&amp;-4452.
1180 Cornaro, Z-21,
""" good, looU

win-

11184 Oodgo Dmnl, g,...l eondl·

Mtoa Pouta'o C.y C.. Cooler.
Solo,a-• .-..11-F
8 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. ~ 2 -10.
20 motlv111d people In locll llo!oro, oftor oohool. Dtop-lno
noon. 514-44~7470 .

304·937· 247~.

AVON I All Arooa

Spoors, 3-75-1429.

Shirley

Mo-

~-loW

roglotor 304-6l'a.t847.

Service Industry. Frontier CIMn~
lng. Cell biiWHn e a.m. &amp; 12

ment

,..

poWft*de, ttU/mo. wnr oo11 tor,
14,100, ouh, 114 381 1157.

For more 111!10rmellon or lo

mltoo, 13,500. 114-:MSo

Uncondilionll IWhn. auar1n- ·•

FrM MllmatN. Clll collect' 1~- ~
Buem~nt

Ragen:
ling.

Wat•prDOodt

.

·'

CoiYin'o Cullom Coblnote .•'
epoclallzlng In country olylo
kithonl onil coblnoto. 114-:Jt4..
2570 or 114-ll12-2a78 lor 1roo oo- ·
Uobllo Homo 001 upo •
rOfll!lro, olio plumbing; &amp;'£
olect~cil, roofing, romOdellnli, ..:)
potloo &amp; -lea ale. REMOOE[~ ·•
INGI Roloronaoti. Elll......_ .. ,

Complete

I

114-211&amp;-1111.

'

.•

Ron'e TV Sonloo, .,......lzlng
In .Zenith otoo -lng moat.
o t h e r - - eotlo,- .
-~~_1 ... wv . ..'
304-lli-2SII
Ohio 11'-'41-~.-;

wolle complolod umo•
;
. z·
.and eervlce,
, :.

~So::.pttc::=:Ttmlo==P::-u~mplng-:--J-::HO~Cial:-;::-lla

11:00 (]). (I) (JJ. Ill

111i

Ou~ CrMk Ad. P1rta. tupw- ! ;.

C.Yolior, 118S

Chevy

-V.c

7184.

...,....

~·

v:::,r.=-:;

1111 Ford •uo~ana:;cL, 11,231

82

Plumbing &amp;

The Astra-Graph Matchmaker can help
·- - - ' - - - - - - - - - - you. to understand what to do to make

Heat Ina
Cot1or'e Plumbing
and Hooting
''
Pourtti and Pfne
Golllpolla, Olllo

rnlioLColll1~·

814-448-3888

••eel. GLB, 0 ,....
GM twf• FWD, AT, Pl. P8,

84

1111 llr.'~·

.

.....

Electrical &amp;

~.... e... Colld~:M 1'Ul'r.• ;:::=i:R:i:e:Ffr..:!lg~e:;.;rat:.:l~o:::n=-:-:

sa.- ::l:: "'
1N8 olhror.
-

GrandAm. · Rootdoirlll or
miiOO. Allllng wlrlng, - -

~

114-M~

---niLI

m,..n.w...r:l ,";In

1N8 ~::'~ 11ca

,....,

2\000

110114.

.

'" • , . .._ tor ... Throuoll

111o u.a. GaoM

eon rror , .....,

comrnorclal
or -Ira.
R - r- •

-rlclon.
EliiCir1eol, 304-47!-1781.
Llc:orMd

• . .

85 General Hauling
ol~
lmmtelat~1,00G or

R I R Wiler lorvleo. ·-lo,

terne.

wells.

~

dollvory. Col~

. . . . Dllld. l4tl.

THE

- - l'loro QT._loW .,..__

CWRD

_............

OOnd, ....... ao..-1114.
. I

the relationship work . Mail $2to Match·
maker. P.O. Box 91428. Clevelaod, OH
_ _ _ _ _._.;;;_ 44t01-2428.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23•0ec. 211 When

BERNICE
BEDEbSOL

something

importaht

brewing

that

could be meaningful to you materially.
don't put things oil until tomorrow. Your
chances or fulfilling your expectations
are good now.

._
•

'i

21 Or: e·org.

you weigh and balance critical situs·

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) How you perceive yourself to be will have a direct re-

tions today, put the emphasis oo the
positive alternative. ·It's important that

sion yourself

you appreciate the positive&amp; far more

lationship tO .events ·today. If you envima~itest

as lucky. It lhould

itself in reality .

CANCER CJune 21.Ju(J 22) Something
lhan the negatives.
·
• CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jen. 111 1n situa- good you already have going lor yourtions today - e you earnestly strive self has chances Qf being Improved
to be of assiotance to others, pleasant upon today. While the trends are stirsurprises could be in tl)e oiling, be- -ring in your favor, make the moot or this
cause the one you'll help the moll is opportunhy.
LEO CJIIIJ 23-Aug. 221 You are someyou.
AQUARIUS CJen. 20-Feb. 111 Condi- times ~lltr ablt to handle llllnga or a
tions could take a turn lor the better In grand.design much more capably than
the romance dapatlment today. espe- . the mund1111e. Todly you could be excially 11 you haven 't had much to cheW tremely fortunate where large endeav·
about lately. Cupid haan't torootten ora are concerned.
VIIOO (Alii. 13-lepl, 22) People with
NO¥. I, 1110 ·
you.
,
. PIICES .(Fab. 20-llarch 20) A ,_ in- clOut are tilt ones wilh whom you
ln .the year ahead ~ou could be more tereat in ·whlch 'you·ra involVed has lor ahOUid deal today, eapaeially' where
fortunate than you have been lor some greater potential than you may realize. your . career is conceri1acl. · WHh their
support, you'll be able to accomplilh
in mattera that pertain to your ce- Today you might llnllly begin to- evtthings that couldn't be ICIIIIYed
reer and umlnga. L~ will 1111 in apots dence of this ..
_ . unablato cover.
ARIES
21·Aprll 11) You have otherwise.
14 Nl¥. 22) Your great- the ability to deal with others extremely UIAA Clepl. DOc!. Ill) Tlltre Ia Juetl·
that . llcatton lor your hOI* 8nd expectatoday .,. likely to come effec11vety today. They"ll tiont running ratlltt ltlgh today. You're
thlnga you man-oe lor others and you're 1 poaltlve catalyst and Ju.r lor youi'Mif. 11 you do a good thing l~y could develop when you're In a lortunata C)ICII.....,. delireo could
become realltre..
, you'll be rawartlad proportionately. around.
to patch up a broken rom~-? TAURUS CAprii20-IUJ 20) II you have

companill
31 Old horse
32 Arthur
Marx
33 Appends
34 Sidewalk

(IJ.

'.

stuff
37 Hoss's
blot her

. 38 Rabel!
43 Aclraas
Hartman

~.

• Monaylinl

44 Soar
45Genesil

Ill) Rln Tin Tin, K·t Cop

Sttreo. Q
.
11:30(])a 11J1 Tonight &amp;how
Sttreo.
(JJ Matt ......

lilting .
41 Tidy up
DAILY CRYP'I'OQUO'I'fS ..:_Here's bow 1o warlllt:

fD~'IDafanH

1111 n

a.

II LONGFELLOW

Courtc

a Amnii fonlgllt
Ol~a ISCan...

1D

·=Tonigh1
u

One letter !Iandi for anatlter. In 1his 111J11111e A is tiled
for the three L'a, X .for the two C)'s, etc. Slnafe letters,
apoltnlpla, the 1engtll and fonnaUon olthe words are all
hints. Each ~Y the code leUers are different.

'11tdldulil C.. (2:001

11·7

liej
•

G

110'1 • Tlta - . . . . 111111'111 (PG) (2:00)
11:31(1)a-.Q
12:01(1) liON: .........1..111:

C8VFIOQIJ01E

(JJ ...... Ill ....... Stereo.

a

.l.
Tlltlllow

·cu~

i:r-=:

.. . . . . Amide an 1-'1

8NuatiWII

12:DIIJ) Nlglsa•

.l

11/7

AXYDLBAAXR

(JJ ~tlu!tlllhl Q

c-

N.IIDO:
- - ...~-~
4701. ii•*+·IMi
1111

72 1Nckl fOr 8811

..•.

C~y

player
42 Corral

bowl~­

(JJ Night Cour1 Q
(l)Newwwatclt
IIlla "-10 Hal
t1J Miami Vlca
8 c-ady c:-.1 Hour I
Holt Olck Van Patten
lntrodUCH comedians Bill
Engvall, S - Harvey, ·
Pamela Matteson and Oan

,..,.,.,. , .

Tempo. 1111 Tempo. 1114111112· .r:.,::-up. and dollnry. 814- • •

111811 Doclgo Dmnl. 21,000 IICIUOI

ONawa

.. :. :.

40 Wrasl\e(s
need
41 San Lake

27Wrath

ill ~ and Clla11

Co. RON EVANI ENTERPRiSES, ..;
,,

fire•

, "John·
36 Calhedral
part
37Pubquaft
38 Par- ·
formed

21 Argument

1G-.30(JJ .....

1114 Okfl Toron1do, loaded,
eftor 4:00

4

ACROSS · DOWN
1 They aeH
1 Butter
wares on
serving
the way to 2 Writer
the :air
Lavin
7 Aficio3 Sea llyar
nado
4 Heart
11 Get to
5 Divisible
12 Lustrous
by two
gem '
6 Nautilus
13 Bika type
caplain
14 Grand .
7 Liquors
leners
2; Wanderer
Ole 8 Advan·
15 Forty
1aga
22 Bucks
winks
Sl Remota 24 Athlete's
17 Soda
10 Sea 44
TV .
shop
Across
. graaling
ordar
16 Playful
25 Mine yield
20 Shore
mammal 30 Evolution·
flyers
17 Parada
ary link
23 Put
1101d
33 Court2ct He's
markal
• yards
a "ball ol 1 Illike lhasa 35Walsh

21 Sugar

a Amulng Oantaa

JlcUon, OH 1.-IOG.a37"'521"

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Mini (1 :551

::.r.c:-

.CROSSWORD

Robar11an
10:05 (JJ MOVIE: Thia Cllild Ia

llo4ory or collie 1001 drllllnl-

DoYle

have ret....nc11. C.ll 114-~ .
8111 (If no anawer, all 114-3177NI).

WHAT IT 15 ··IS A
ICIDDY·SAtfDIN II

DUtfN LUICEY'S HIDE If
liE SAID THAR WAS
A 1141 SCHDDL OF FtSH
DOWN HERE IN TH' CREEK!!

: :;

~~- 304-8824050

we-. 114-441..!1224.
Would like to do .....,.,..lng In
my homo. All ehllll, ·oil ·~·

CAFETERIA ••.

T~Y.

• 114-

Comoro, T-lope,
loW ml~ good cand, eloon
car, 001 aid• laking .,...
1113

dependable,
2 ptr1-t1mt emp~.... Mutt rauonable,
hava tl'lnsportatl!)fl to and from licente, qu.Utv child care. Mon.
Galllpolle. Day A/or night work. day ttuv Frtditr, 7:30 111 &amp;:3o.

area, IXPirftnces In nl•, Plld
thi'H · WI;)'S, will tn1ln, appoint·

bltlM'J.

· -· t14-25J-12711.
1182 Ford EXP, noodo anglno
work. 1480. 3041773-&amp;30&amp; .....
1:00 p.m.

.Domino'• Plzu of Pomtray Ia Interior I Exterior Point, 10
yeaN e • - ' -· Froo &amp;now hiring. 614fi2.z124.
llmlloo. Atoo do iool rolling,
AVON • All ar..., Call Marilyn 304-47W7118.
Waver 304-IG.a45.
ll•glcl v.,. O.y ear. C.ntar

10..20 houre ~ manlh only.
COuld bll more hours later on.

tl,.., load

oulo,

d.ude Win- 441·1025. onytlmo.
,..., Rio Orondo, OH Coli 814- 1184 C.ytOM paaa. 1111 Ford
24U121.
llongor plck-41p 13100. SOli or

441..!1180.

· CRI81eAT5CHOOL-

. ··

too. l.oclll ,.,...ncoo hlmlohod. ·

= ·--

1f'11 .Ford Q,.ndl, 2 door, I cyl,

Building
Supplies

WATERPROOFING

rune good. .., olio&lt;. 114-241'- 114-237-0481, · day or night. ·'

Wood llumor lor . .lo .. Phone 3881.

11WII2-7111oftor Spm.

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP
r HAD L..U\'o.IQ-I IN THE&lt;
I 1-VD AN I DeNTI1Y

Home
Improvements

81

lieoll

I) MOVIE: Tlta

tQS

EAST
K 962
+QB4
In his rush to make an overtrick, de.Q9
42
clarer missed the best chance lor the tAI0612
t K98 7
contract. West got oil to an apparently
Q9
+J 10 s 2
sale trump.lead. Declarer played low
SOUTH
!rom dummy and East played th~
+JJOS
nine. South won the 10 and cashed the
.AK10
7 65
ace. dropping East's queen . Next
• J3
came the A·K ol clubs•.followed by a
+AK
heart to dummy's jack. Next came a
Vulnerable: North-South
club ruff. in the hope that the defendDealer: South
ers had both started with three clubs.
No such luck. Declarer now had to
Wtll
Nortll East
struggle with a side-suit position in Soolll
I
•
Pass
2
•
Pass
spades that just did not lend itself to
Ali pass
producing more than one trick. So de- t •
clarer lost two diamonds and two
Opening lead: • 2
spade tricks for down one.
Sure. declarer would bave had 11
tricks il the clubs had split. But nather
than sacrifice his commumcation with
dummy after playing the A·K of clubs. ve\op a second trick in spades via the
he should sim!&gt;IY 1et off lead wilh a di- stre~gth ol the J-10 .
amond. The defenders can take two diThe defense can prevail only if the
'amends in anv order. but what is their opentng lead is the ace and a diamond .
next step~ If East ends up on lead and East can win the second diamond and
plays a club. South can ruff , get to play ·back a club, and declarer wUI
dummy and rufl another club. and surely lose two more spade tricks
dummy's last club is now set up for the when he is forced to tackle tbat suit on
game-going trick. A diamood continu· his own.
· Ids as IuII ·ucoby
Jt~mes Jaooo.v ·~ boo.ts "JI«Jby on Brid#" Mid
at'JOn by elther def en der yte
onC;miG~mes~ (wrilt~n•itbhillatbrr.
and a ruff. And il the defenders play . the l•te Osw•ld J•coby! ,,. now ..,;,,'* .,
the spade suit. South will be able to qe· hooli5torr,. Both ,,. pt1bllshetl by 1'111,.. Books.

0 Mu-, .... Wrote Q

~ lor pllt1i, comolototy ool~ ·
contained. Stoopo i . 114-11112- ·

U-7-H

By James Jacoby .

0 a MOVIE: Sl.__

Yol¥o englnl wtth 2 extl'll -.rf: •

NORTH
+A 7 3
• J83
+87643

~NIASa~
Cll lila Till w- vaa~
Kavtn reluctantly agrees to
escort Paur·a alster to 1
dance. Stereo. Q
II) (J) L.lvtl From Uncoln
Cenltr Stereo.
~ a~ 41 Houra Stereo.

..mce

A3-3
pipe dream

My-•

for Sale
11172 17 ft. Staroroft T~-Hull ,
Boat. 125 HP, E•lnrudo Engine.:•
comp!Me top new uDholltM'y. ;
Cal! 814-28J-1ill alllr t:OO p.m..

11117_.

JACOFN

7:361]) Tlta Jellereona
I:DO(I)a IIJI UnaoMd
Evidence
concemlng the
disappearance or Amelia
Earllart is examined. Stereo.

~ TfA~P CAT

:;;21111;;..;3:;;373;;;.
. - - - - - -:·:

Yard Sale

1

CHMfP ~AflJ---\.
1AF;.EP AT' l16~fft pOG _.
~ MACEP &amp;Y MAILMAN

==~::--::;:-;.::.:;_~~-:-·:''

75 Boats &amp; Motors

r:-

PI~EC"((f!Y ·

1:00..

Motorcycles

74

'

24,000::

304-882-37B(f

PM.

'

JAMES

Tonight Stereo.
Family
liJ) • ThrM'I Company
ill Major Lllfllll Sall!laN
Matll- ·

1185 110 Blllzw, allj 1111, crufat1

61 Finn Equipment

Dav-

=lnntant
Ill• -·•

•uto. AC,

~

BRIDGE

~ r.

4410208.

11,000
3324.

No. 3 below,

11ep

7:30 (I) a a 11J1 JIIOIIIRIYI Q

lUI, AM·FM, 304..!17$-6373.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Sc•- and Mrl. King

7:05 (J) Happy

1182 GMC Hall Ton, $2,800, 114.
1085 Bla•r 810, 414,

rou dwe\op fr001

ill Monaylltta

11111 Dodge Rom Cll.lrgor, •
wt..l Drive, Rune good. ~
Nil. $850. 114-251·1253.

For Sale
or Trade

q......,

SC. . M LIYS ANSWIIS
".,
Tomcat- Fling- Lanky- Bridle -'- FAMILY
Overheard outside a diet clinic: "The toughest part of
a diet isn't watching what you eac, it's watching what
your FAMILY eats."
·

NawaHour
liJ) .Night Cour1 Q
aacunent Anaw

.

chuc~l•

by filling In Ill.....,. words

A PRINT NUMBERED
~ lETTERS IN SQUARES

a

pb.l\200. 114-111124801.

I

L.--'--..L---L-..L.-.1...__.

Stereo. Q
.
1:31 (J) Andy Orlltltll
7:00 (I) a tiL IIJ Whlll of
F-1;11

Yoy•gor. lluo;

was with helping his dad build

1--r-l·~~7::..-rl. . :.l. ,:. . ,. ,.la-l 8 c_1o,. "'"

o lltn nn Tin, K·l Cop

311 engln., amlfm et•eo. pa.·

:!-

an addition. When the doctor
r----:~~~~-...,.,
. taped his knee, my son
A HL E T Y
replied, "Did you find·-··-·?"

8

or.'

~~

L..__._.._....
__.__-1..--J. •

!IJJ..·~..... Q
(!) 3-2-1' ContaDI
111 aecuNawaQ

1151 CJS IMP. good lor lomt
hunting, Tom R-h. 304-lll'ih
4082. .
.·

~~

D0 S 0 T
On a routine doctor's visit I
1':-..,-""T-r---r.--i'" . found out how Involved my son

~ Allbott arttl CD II Ill D

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

.

TYPIS . II

1

1:051]) ......, H l -

liJ) •

1171 PlYmouth

.......

The Daily Sentinel-Page 13

•

WED .. NOV. 7

........

304..7WOI1.
• •'.
1m lnte,..lonal olngle ulr

0

Ono bod.- ...... tor - 1311 - h . DoPooll r.qulrod.
_ . oftorl p.m.

-..._~
- poot&lt;lna. . doOHII

...111~ ~ 1W( ~l£ E4'·
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1m Cllo•rotot El Camino.·- ·
oWner, far Aio or trodo, 1700,

Oh-. I •• d!OOIII turnllhld • •

...,..,

Television
Viewing

-no.
.-e.
coil!.,~ boHory. 1300. Con..bo.

lftllt betoW townb~":;t;•~'na
m~~--.
Ref.

.

...,

Comrnolldor;
now periL

81'- 311hftor 1:00 p.m
:•
1171 Ford F·150, U,OOO ml...r
AUIQ., good llroo, lair coot!·
11700. 114-3714152.
·•
1171 GIIC 314 ton Uatbod, ~­
R..,. gc&gt;OC!. but

bod_,

Pon~~e~or, Cerpll,
1 112 bollia, 0 1 1 - ...

z bedroom houll, untumlahe;d.
Now point, earpotod. Dopaolt
NqUirod. Na IMido polL

lipolls, OH 45631.

Apartment
for Rent

-» -•rh'.M,nt•2 1nend

,.-..1r81t. 114 ••• 1m

Udantial
Info.
Wrtte:
Hear1search, P.O. BoK ,043, o. ...

4

_ ·------

35 Lots&amp;Acreage

Pomeroy- Middaport. Qhio

1:1

V N, O ·L L T

..

UX

VLGJCOLLT
DUPN

G J

VW~SUPUW.I.-MLOS
Y1111 . . . . . C. ;pia 1 ••• I WISH

G

GVUS
GKKO~

1HE11E

WERE

WINDOWS TO MY SOli.. SO YOU COll.D SEE
SOME OF MY FEELINGS. - AR'I'EMus W:ARD

�•

P.g1 14-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 7, 1990

Pomeroy -- Middleport. OhiO

Casino
•
ISSUe
defeated
By RICH EXNER
llded Preu IDteraatlonal
Developer Alan Spitzer's plan
to make a casino the centerpiece
ot a $300 million riverfront resort
complex In Lorain was rejected ·
Tueld!IY by voters asked to
· ch!lnge the Ohio Constitution to
allOw a fourth form of legalized
.
gambli.Jig.
Final unotflctal figures showed
there were 2,®,007 votes, or 62
percent, against the proposal,
compared with 1,259,914 votes, 38
percent, In favor. Two other
statewide Issues, Involving hous·
tng loans and homestead exemptions, both passed.
Approval of Issue 3 was needed
so there could be a separate vote
· at a later date tn Lorain to clear
tile way for ·caslno gaines to join
·11Qr9e racing, bingo and the Ohio
lottery as legalized forms of
gambling tn the state.
The proposed amendment
would have given the .Ohio ·
General· Assembly authority to
close thecaslnoatter three years
U It was not determined a
success. It a success, the state
would have been split into seven
c.-sino districts, with one casino
permitted in each district with ·
both dis.trlct·wide and local voter
approval.
"We need·to slt down and take a
very good look at the vote," sald
Terry Pederson, spokeswoman
tor Yes on Issue 3. "That wlll
, determine where we go from
here If anywhere."
Spitzer financed the pro·casino
campaign and the horse racing
Industry tlnanced tbe antl·caslno
effort.
·
· Issue 1, which would allow the
state and various local govern·
ments to provide or assist In
providing "tlouslng and housing
assistance by grants, loans,
subsidies and other means, won
In a close vote.
There were 1,689,729, or 53
percent, In favor ot the proposal, .
cqmpared with 1,507,768agalnst,
47 percent. ·
The Ohio Constitution now
aljows only one method to assist
In' providing housing .:... making
loans available at below·market
rates.
Issue 2 won easUy, allowing the
General Assembly to permit
. aurvtving spouses or people re·
celvtng a homestead tax reduc·
lion at the time ot death to
continue receiVing the reduction
It the survtving spouse is at least
60 and continues to live In a
qualified homesiead.
· There were 2,941,901, or 89
percent, In favor, and 382,010, or
11 percent, agalns t.

-

STORE HOURS -

298 SECOND ST.
_P.O_MEROY, OH.

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., NOV. 4, THRU SAT., NOV. 10, 1990 .

at

2 Section•. 1 4 P•ges 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 8, 1990
•

LB. ·

Breasts ..••..••.•••..•••
GRADE A. . . ·.

•

.. .

$ 19
. .

(

BUTTERBALL 10-22 LB. AVG.

·FLAVORITE ASSORTED
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

$2 49·

·. .

TRUCKING THE DIRT AWAY- Many truck·
lOads of dirt area are daily leaving tbe Kerr's
Run area where excavating to Illy a new culvert

is takingJ place. The culvert will extend 270 feet
from the river to the upper side or the White
House.
·

Chuck Roast ••••••••
HOMEMADE

·

Sausage ...•••••...•.'!.

Senat~ GOP /thrilled .by wins
"We felt all along we bad a Don Hill a lot of credit in the face
chance or winning," Jim Tilling, of a Republican landslide. He
chief executive officer of .the made It quite a race. "
Senate, said of the Sinagra-Butts · A third Republican- yet to be
race.
"Sinagra Is very well named - will be among the new
known and popular in Lakewood, . people in the Senate ln January .
which 1a:about. one 'third or the ·The • Repil~llcan Caucus ~.' will
district'. Wewereabletosneak up name a successor for Sen. David
on Butts ,... we · caught him Hobson who won the seat vacated
napping."
·
·
by Mlke DeWine, who ran for
attorney general.
Brans tool's seat had'eluded the
He said he hopes to have that
GOP tn the last couple of successor named In a week or so.
elections. Tilling said that seat
They may have to go through
had been created by the the same process when the result
Democratlc·controlled appor- of the deadlocked attorney genertionment board rorBranstooland al's race Is known. Sens. Paul
hewasanoutstandlngcandidate.
Pfeifer and Lee Fisher are so
' 'We felt If we got the right close In that race, and the ballots
candidate and had a neutral or cast in the boards of elections and
the late-arriving abstenee ballots
Republican at the top, we could
win," he sald. "You've got to give · will decide that race.

By SANDRA L. LATIMER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Republicans found the right
candidates to help them extend
their control In the upper
chamber by winning two seats In
\
' .I.J
•
TUeMay-'•
elections.
~ . ·: " ·".
The GOP upset ~n: Cbarll!s
Butts, D·Cieveland, and took the
seat ot Eugene Branstool, the
lieutenant governor's candidate
on the Democratic ticket.
That gives the Republicans a
21-12 advantage In January for
the new governor, George
Voiovich.
Lakewood· Mayor Anthony Si·
. nagra snuck up on Butts, while
State Rep. Steven Williams
downed .Licking County Commissioner Don Hill in that other race.

.•

LB.

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
culvert is expected to be completed ley of the Ohio Depanment of
Sentinel News Staff .
by Feb. 28.
Transponaton, who was at the site
Work on t.he Sl.8 million culven · ~e :;econ~ phase of the Pt;Uject Wednesday afternoon to col)fer
replacement and highWl!Y reloca- wht~h ts reaii.grunent of ~e lll:ter· . with Jim McG111w of the conuactor,
lion project at the intersection of . :;ecuon ~ htghways leading mto Alan Stone Co.
State Route 124 and U. s. 33 in It ~til be81!1 m ~ly March and the
The intersection has long been
enure proJ,CCt ts expected to be recogliized as a problem area with
Pomeroy is underway.
Heavy equipment of the Alan comple~ m August.
.
several trucks having struck the
Stone Co of Otesterbill who was
There ts a to1a1 of 22 properues comer of the old Roedel building in
awarded ihe project on OcL 4, has involved in .the !Cerr's Run-Nye turning from Route 124 onto Route
been moved into the area and ex- Ave. _area whtch wil:' be affected by 33.
.
cavation has staned on the river the htghway relocan~n.
The deteriorated condition of the
side of the highway in preparation
qf those. p~es. three l!1'C culven was also known by ODOT
for the tunneling and laying of steel .buStness buildings -. f!!e Wh1te but the problem did not become an
pipes under the roadway.
~ouse. the ~oe&lt;!el buil~g wh1ch emergency until Feb. 2 when a secThe pipes will extend 270 feet IS located n~ht tn the mtersecllO!J . tion of the nine-foot stone arch onfrom an area just above the White and the Jenlcins Ready-Mix plant- der Route 124 collapsed. It was
House to the river with the flow and four homes along Nye Avenue. then that ODOT built the temporary
AU wiJ! be
before !he wortc, of road to bypass the section where
line being 28 feet deep.
The tunnel and "installation of t.he rel~tmg the ~tghway mtersecuon the massive cave-in occurred.
beg~ns, according to Kenny Buck-

raze&lt;!

Round Steak ••••• ~~. ·
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF LOIN
$ 79
.r-Bone Steak .•..•L~ 4
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS

'

Work is underway on
replacement project at
Rt. 33-124 intersection

1
Whole Ch1cken .. ~~.• S9
Turkeys ••••••.•••l!·•••••• 99&lt;
Lunch Meats .••. ~B···· 99&lt;
CHICKEN

Low tonight In mid 30s. )llgh
Friday In mid i!Os. Chance of
rain 80 percent. ·

•

•

Vol .41, No.141
Copyrighted 1990

$l99

$ll 9

Fisher leading in squeaker

Tomatoes •.••..• ~~..... 49(
FLAVORITE
$ 89
2°/o Milk ••••••••• ~~L··•

·1

$ 69
Parkay ·Spread ..•• 1

JUMBO BONUS 4 LB.

BA.NQUET FROZEN ·

.
oz. 99&lt;
D
1nners
....••.•••••
TV
Crackers •.••.•..••~.~o:.. 9 9
24 PAK 12 oz. CANS
$499 MOUNTAIN TOP.PUMPKIN 0~ oz. $ 129
R. C. Products •.•••
Appl~ P1e •.••..••.••••
ZESTA

. ·

. (

.·

10·12

26

The Leadina Creek Conservancy

Smid1.

Page 3

6-21-26-45-50-52
Kicker 817791

e

. .,

Disaict will be ctosed Monday in

In a reCent aliicle regarding t.he
SVAC Quiz Bowl League, it should
lla¥e lilted that lhe top scorer for
Soudlern High School was Jennifer

Pick-3: 240
Pick-4: 9697
Cards: 6-H;. 4-C;
. K·D; 5-S
Super Lotto

8 AM-10 PM

LCCD co close

Clarification

honored
by MAC

Monday thru Sunday

The Ohio Constitution now
restricts reducing taxes on land
to residents who are at least 65
years old or are permanently and
totally disabled.
Pederson said there was support in both Lorain County and
northeast Ohio as a whole for the
casino proposal, but!! was hurtin
southeast Ohio. For example, ln
Cuyahoga County, Immediately
to the east or Lorain County' 53
percent favored Issue 3.
"It came down to an educa·
tiona! effort. The people who
were educated on the Issue were
comfortable with It," Pederson
utd. "The people ln Cleveland
would have been affected and
they accepted it. It was ex·
iremely wei! supported ln.Lorain
()Qunty ..... People ln Cincinnati
have no connection with people
up tn Cleveland or Lorain, and
they couldn't See lt as an Issue
that would benefit Lorain."
Cilslno gambling has been
legal for years in Nevada. It was
leJallzed for Atlantic City, N.J.,
tn 1976, and for Deadwood, S.D.,
IIi ,1988. Riverboat gambling Is
permitted on the Mississippi
River tn Mlss!sslppl, Dllno!s and
Iowa. ·
Supporters of the Ohio casino
proposal, Including Lorain
Mayor· Alex Olejko, looked at lt
aa a way to rebuild the economy
of ·a city crippled by the loss of
tbousands of steel jobs and a
llllpplq company, the site for
which Spitzer has acquired tor
h~ project. Oljeko said the city
hal lost 20,000 jobs In the last 15
years.
They said .enough safeguards
were built into the proposal to
repel negatives often associated
with gambllng and it has the
aupport pf the pollee union In
Lorallt.
•

olllcrYIIIU of Vetenln's Day. Water
billl due on SaiUiday would have
been considered as on lime ' lhat
dlle. 111erefore, payments received
1'uada)' will be on time payments.

Ohio Lottery

~gle

9-UVES

CAT FOOD

. 4/SJ.
:

,llood at l'owtll's Super .Valu

, Good Nev. 4 thru ·""· I 0, 1990

• DOMINO SUGAR

:a~·

$159

Good ~ Powell's Super Valu
Good 'Now. 4 thnl Now. I 0, 1990

DUNCAN HINES

CAMPIEU:S CHICKEN

CAKE MIXES

NOODLE SOUP

1·~ts3/S2 .

...

Goad at Powell's Su)Mr Valu
Good Now. 4 thru Now. 10, 1990
.

..~

10Jf4

• oz.

S/S2

Good at Pawtlf's Super 'Valu
Good Nov. 4 tlwu Nev. I0,1990

EXCAVATING BEGINS - Jim McGraw of
·Alan . Stone co;, cont.r actor for the culvert
replacement under Route 124 at Kerr's Run,
and Kenny Buckley, iru;pector for tbe Ohio
'

Department of Transportation, look over thf
area being excavated m preparation for install·
ing ftow lines 28 feet below the surface and un·
der the roadway.

MUS
band earns excellent
..
rating in OMEA contest

Meigs deputies
investigate B &amp; E
at home in Dexter

'

The Meigs Marauder Marching Band received a superior rating at
Band completed its 1990-91 com-. _ three different contests, Portsmouth
petition season Saturday at Cooper East, Portsmouth West and Fon
Stadium in Columbus at the Slate Frye. Only about 30 percent of the
Band Finals.
bands .that compete are rated supe. The Mawader Band received an · rior. This was the first time that
overall rating of a II or .exceUent Meigs High School has ~?een to a
with the auxiliary and field com· state contest.
• The Marauder Band is under t.he
manders also both receiving ratings
of 11.
direction of Toney Dingess, assisTo qualify for state contest, ted by John Van Reeth, with Kathy
bands must first be rated superior at Price, flag instructor, and Susan
an Ohio Music Education Associa- Clark, field commander coach.
lion sanctioned contest The Meigs

Screening clinic set Nov. 16
A finFtick cholesterol screening clintc will be held on Nov. 16
from 1:30 to 6:30p.m, at the Meigs
· County Health DepanrnenL
· The testing will be doneo by appointment and residents may call
992-6626 between 9 and II am
and 1 and 3 p.m., Monday through
Friday to make anangements.
A tolal of 50 tests at a cost of $5
each will be offered and only toilll
blood cholesterol will be determined, accordi!!ll to Nonna Tol)'eS,

R. N. NU1$ing Direcror.
. 1brrel pointed out that bean and
heart-related conditions are t.he
!IUijor cause of death. More than

one half of all Americans have
blood cholesterol levels l)i~h
enoogh to . be at risk for heart. disease, she said.
The nursing director said that the
American
Heart
ASsociation
recommends being screened for
cholesterol and if the level is 200
t.hen a change in foods to a low fat
diet be made, with retesting after
three months. A level or 200-239 is
considered a border·line high risk,
over 240 a high risk for heart disease. It Is recommended lhat family.
p!!ysicians be coru;ulted if the level
IS OVer :WO.

·

·

A breaking ani! entering at the
David McDonald's residence is
being investigated by Meigs
County Sheriff's deputies.
According to the report, .Me·
Donald, who resides at Dexter, has
been on vacation and returned on
Wednesday at discover that his
house bad been entered. It was
reported that t.he house had been
cbeeked on Tuesday and everything
was fine.
According to Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, a VCR, a microwave,
stereo and speaken, CD base sta·
lion, a rifle, shotgun and food from
the freezer were taken.
Ric liard Reuter of Ball Run Road
in Pomeroy reported Tuesday that a
McPherson bow and accessories
and a 2-ton ftoor jack had been
laken from his residence.
Sheriff Soulsby again urges
residents to record the serial numbers of their items such as
microwaves, TV's, guns, etc., so
that in case the items are stOlen .t.he
numbers can be entered in the
computer system.
Soulsby also SU8$ests that lhe
owner's social secunty number or
birth date can be engraved on items
with no serial numbm or IICria1
numbers on easily-removed slick-~ ers.

servicemen and service women
reporting the Geauga County
the Middle East to vote.
tn
vote moved Pfeifer even closer
All
of those ballots will be
tha'n the 2,926 margin Fisher
counted within two weeks, said
enjoyed early Wednesday
the secretary of state's office.
morning.
"We are feeling very optimisSecretary of State Sherrod
tic," said Fisher, a state sena tor
Brown ordered all ballots sefrom Shaker Heighis. He ap·
cul'l;!d in preparation tor a certain
peared with his wife, Peggy , at a
recount.
Brown's office said 15,000 to ·press conference where he removed his shirt and displayed a
20,000 "walk·in' ' votes remain to
T·shirt showing a frazzled cat
he counted. They were cast by
voters who changed address . hanging upside down. "Not
nearly as calm as I look," said
within their county since the last
the Inscription.
election, and were allowed to
"We knew lt was going lo be
vote at their board of election on
tight,"
said Fisher . "I 've always
election day.
In addition, up to 5,1100 m!litary been .the underdog."
"I never expected to be part of
ballots may be outstanding,
history in this way," said Pfeifer .
many of them from Operation
a fellow senator lrom Bucyrus.
Desert Shield -permitting Ohio

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stalehouae Reporter
COLUMBUS - The race for
Ohio's attorney general ttght·
ened Wednesday to a record
degree, with Democrat Lee
Fisher leading Republican Paul
Pfeifer by a mere 874 votes out of
more than 3.3 million cast.
Fisher claimed an "unofficial
victory" based on the returns
counted, thus far, butJ&gt;feifer5aid
he expects to win when all the
votes are counted and recounted.
Final unofficial returns, minus
some outstanding ballots, gave
Fisher 1,668,097 votes and Pfeifer
1,667,223. Fisher had 50.02 per··
cent of the vote and Plelfer 49.98
percent.
Correction of an error in

Meigs man seeks judgmeni on claim·
A Pomtl{Oy man has filed a so ouuageous in character and so
judgment action against his estran- extreme in degree, that it went

beyond all possible bounds of
decency and is regarded as atrocious and utterly intolerable in a
civilized community," tht complaint states.
No specific dollar amount is
named as damages in the suit, a!-

ged wife and BIIOther , Pomeroy
resident, alleging that t.hey attempted to poison him.
In a civil complaint filed on
Wednesday in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court, Gary
Snouffer alleges that defendants
Sarah Snouffer and Danny Zirlde,
acting . together, "injected lethal
poison into his perSon, rood and

drink".
The alleged poisoning is said to
have taken place from September
to December, 1989.
·
Gaiy. S!Kluft'er alleges' that he has
been severely inlurcd by t.he actions
of his wife and 2irlde, stalin.l in t.he
complaint fi.led ~y ilw he
has CJI.perienced ' Cll.treme pain, sufferinJ and _anguish and emotional

distress".
"As · the direct, ac11181 and

proximate result of Defendant's
the complaint says,

conduc~:i

"PiainWI suslliJicd severe mental
angiliJh coupled with phyJical injury thai no JeiSOIIIble man could
be CJI.pec:ted to endure.. .
''Tite ~endants' condul;t was

though Snouffer does demand
:'judgment against the defendants
jointly and severally for attorney
fees, costs and a monelal)' amount
that exceeds the maximum Plaintiff
is allow.ed · to state in hi.s
pleadings."
No criminal charges have been
filed against Sarah Snouffer or
Danny Z~e to date.

Fall ·open ·house tonight
.

The Fall Open House at )'deigs
High School wiU be held tonight
(Thunday), from 5 to 9 p.m.
The evening will begin with a
soup supper sponsored by t.he
Meigs High School Band with serving from 5 to 6:30 p.m. Cost is
$2.50 for adults and $2 ror
children.
Following the supper, members
or the National Honor Society; the
band and the choir will present an
informative
and
entertaining
program In t.he IICbool cafeteria.
Guests will then be invited to view
the display representing the
variety of clasles offered at Meiss

High School. Visitors are being asked to observe the talents of
students in an as well as the tiro8d
range of tesearch materials offered
to students through lhe library.
Tours of t.he building wiU foUow
at 7:15 p.m. Teachers wiU be on
band for conferences with parents
until 9 p.m.
A cookies and punch receptiOO
for guests will be t:e~ by the
Creative Cooking C
in t.he
school libraly between 7:30 anct
8:00 p.m. The public Is invited to
auend t.he program by Fenton
Tay!Qt'; ~pal.
.
'
.
.,..

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