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I

~:Pa:n:MW::ov~:M~~:~=•a:~:on~,~Oh~~:_. . . .~. .-~·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~~~.Odobw18,1989

•

Ohio U.ttery

Series may
·r esume on
· Tuesday
Limit Quantities

UORE HOURS

298 SECOND ·Sl.
POMEROY, OH ; ·
PRICES EFFEcnVE SUN., OCT. 15 THRU SAT., OCT. 21, 1989

Vol.40, No.115
Copyrlghtod 1889

$

. FRESH PORK BUTT

!
I...

Steaks/ Roasts •• ~.
ECKRICH
.
$1e
49
Bologna.............. ·
CAR?LINA PRIZE .
2/ $1
Shced Bacon •••••
I-LB. PKG.

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,.

monies to fund resurfacing on
to tne formal and final approval
refurbished to the county. The
By NANCY YOACHAM
County
Roads 55 and 10 have still
of
the
annexation.
second
lowest
bidder,
whose
bid
Dally Sendnel stall
not
been
released from
Bids
received·
recently
for
the
was
recommended
tor
approval
The Meigs County CommisColumbus.
sioners have received needed refurbishing of an ambulance for by the EMS Board, was returning
Roberts said that project
Information from Middleport VII· the ·Meigs County Emergency the chassis.
agreements
from this district
Return of the chassis was not
lage regarding the proposed ·Medical Services were rejected
listed In original specifications. "are being redone" which acannexation of property to the by_ the commissioners with the
U awarding of the bid Is hinging counts for the hold liP In the
refurbishing proposal to be
village.
··· upon return of the chassis, then funding process. Project agreeThe Information, which was readve;tlsed.
The commissioners moved to
the commissioners feel that ments throughout the state have
prepared by Triplett Engineerreturn of chassis should be made had be be revamped , Roberts
Ing, has been subm(tted to reject after learning that the low
apart of new bld ·speclflcatlons . . said. If the state 'funds are nof .
County Auditor William Wickline bid was not recommended for
EMS
Board
of
Engineer Philip Roberts and released In the near future.
approval
by
the
for required verification. Once ·
Trustees,
since
the
lowbidding
Superintendent
Ted Warner of Inclement weather could hamper
the auditor has approved the
not
offer
to
return
the
county
highway
department ,resu1aclng procedures on the two
company
did
Information as presented, the
the
old
chasslsofthevehlcletobe
.,.
reported
that
State
Issue II roads .
commissioners cim then move on

.I

Cube Steak.......'!.S2
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
.
$ 89
T-Bone Steak •• :•• 3
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS .
$ .69
Chuck Roasts .•:•• 1
FALTERS OLD FASHION
.La.$1·
19
Bone~ln Hams ••••
49

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By LEE ANN WELCH
OVPNewaSWf
Elected representatives from
this area met today. with
members of the Chamber of
Commerce highway committee
and other Interested people to
discuss the US 35 bypass In Gallla
County. ·
State Sen. Jan Michael Long
(D·Circlevllle) and State Rep.
, Mary Abel (D-Athens) met at the
Chamber o!!lces to get final facts
and figures on the project, In
preparation to meet with Gov:
Richard Celeste later today.
According to Highway Com·
mlttee member Tom Wiseman,
the two left Galllpolis for a
meeting with the governor. who
Is taking a final look at the

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Grapes
•••
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8
9
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FLAVORITE . ·
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MI.
I
k
$1
59
20/0
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••••••••••••• .
.
PLASTIC GAL.
••

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69(
.
Med. Eggs ••••••••':!·..

.GRADE A

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BANQUET

21-32

oz.

$1 49

Family Entree ••••
Coca-Cola •••••.!~':••• 6
. 9
$
GALA
·,:,.59' ( BORDENSCream. .. . ~-,.·
lee
Paper Towels ••••••
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JIIMIO ROLL
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GeMS.. Oct. IS
Sot., Oct. 21, 1919

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MAXWELL HOUSE

MASTER BLEND COFFEE
34.5

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oz. •

LiMit I P• C11t.,.•
Cl...t thllr At Pewoll' 1 S.,•-kot
, GNt1 Su11, Oct. IS tin Sit. Oct. 21, 1919

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR
5LI.

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99C

llnoll I hr (UitGNII o.tr At Pewoll't Sup,_kot
llooof S.11, Oct. IS tin Sit. Oct. 21, 1919

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SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) ''Thank God for the volun:'
Crews pulled vehicles from ari leers," Bush said during an Oval
Oakland freeway flattened by a
Office photo session with Skinner
devastating earthquake . but and VIce President Dan Quayle,
found no signs of life ThurSday who briefed him on their tour of
while Transportation Secretary the area.
Samuel .Skinner said the governAt the Oakland freeway, res·
ment would examine the wreck- cuers using listening devices and
age to learn what happened.
specially trained dogs saw their
Several moderate aftershocks hopes rise Wednesday whe!! they
rumbled early Thursday In the · heard a voice coming from
Santa Cruz Mountain area, the among the scores of cars enepicenter of Tuesday's devastat- tombed In a :•sandwich" of
1ng quake, but ,no, )njuries or
500-ton slabs of concrete.
. ~~erious damage were reported.
The voice t11rned out ,to be a
" _,;;!Jll!l*l ' Ill a UIIU111Mill!dll&lt;of·M1-radlo e"" ~ ., ·
· · ·· .
•
bodies will be found when crews
''There are no survivors." said
dismantle the wreckage of the 1
%-mile section of Interstate 880
In Oakland that crashed down on
rush-hour traffic In Tuesday
evening's powerful quak,e.
Workers recovered 11 cars and
one tractor-trailer rig through
Garbarge collection rates for
the night, but there was no
official count of the victims residents of Racine and resldentlal customers served outside the
lnslde them, pollee Lt. Chris
the quak&amp;strlekea San Franclaco Bay area. • wraa
said.
·
coi'Jll)ratlon limits are going up.
Emergency units are being dtspatclhed to areaaln
Assistant Fire Chief AI Sigwart
Meeting Monday night, Racine
need of assistance. (UPI)
said crews were shoring up the
VIllage Council adopted an ordl·
highway's underpinnings to
nance which raises village restmake li safe for salvage crews. dential collection rates from $15
. By morning, they had covered
to $18 a quarter, and outside
just one block.
vlllage resldentlai collections
"We haven 't found any sign of
from $16.50 to $19.50, effective
Ufe In any of the cars that we
with the current quarte,r of
found," Slgwart said.
service.
proposed projects statewi.d e. '
Oakland Pollee Officer GreDiscussion on Increasing rates·
A decision on which of the
gory Hibbard, one of the workers
has been ongoing with Council for
nearly 30 projects will be funded
who crawled through narrow
several weeks, brought on by the
Is being made this week, and
openings between the smashed
tripling of landfill fees which
announcemen Is are expected
freeway lanes. said every car he
must be paid to dump garbage.
shortly thereafter, he said.
found had been crushed to a
Other area Increases In collecGallla County Is seeking aphelght of about 181nches.
lion rates were noted Including
·proxlmately $82 nillllon to con"I saw slab afteralab (offallen
Pomeroy, Middleport and Syra·
struct a four-lane highway
concrete)," he said. "I knew
cuse where the rate has been
through the county, from State
those were tombs, that there
Increased to $10 a month, the
Route 160 to Thurman.
were people Inside. 1 wondered
Dorcas community where resiBoth Long and Abel have
who they were, what they had
dents pay $9 a month, and In
looked like, where they were Nelsonville where res.ldents pay
placed the highway at the top of
their priority lists. "I wlll be
golng. lt was numbing."
$25.50 a quarter.
doing everything · I can do tq ·
State disaster officials put the · Council passed the ordinance
make sure that money Is fundeath toll at 273, then said they
under emergency measures
neled Into Southeast Ohio," Long
could not be sure how many Monday night after having resaid ln.July,
vlctlms are In the 150 to 250 viewed It several times In prior
Abel said at that same time she
vehicles, Including buses, burled ~meetings. The rate Increase Is
wanted to see the project mateIn the freeway rubble, from
effective with the current quarrialize because "It Is paramount
whlch about a dozen bodies have
ter, according to Mayor Frank
been recovered.
Cleland.
According to the ordinance, the
President Bush announced he
would visit the stricken area
regular rate covers pickup of
Friday for three hours.
four bags each week. There Is a

Oakland Fire Department Capt.
Jim Hah,n.
Marty Boyer, a spokeswoman
for the Alameda County Oftlce of
Emergency . Services, said:
"They so desperately wanted to
find some hope down there, to
find something."
A 6- year-old boy rescued from
the tangled mass of concrete and
steel remained In critical condl·
tlon Wednesday at Children's
HospitaL A surgeon reached him
by cutting througl! his dead
mother's body, !nd had to
amputate1!1! ieg I tree him.

R acme
. • counc h•k
I es
• k up rates
garb-e
s.Die p•c

2

RED OR WHITE SEEDLESS

A request from the Scipio
After meeting. with Teresa
Township Trustees to close Drummer, representing the
Township Road 458 has been colmty's community corrections
received by the comriilsslon~rs . program, the commissioners
Pending; the submission of addl·
agreed to apwove new budget
tlonallnfonnatlon from the trus- figures. llt'Pding receipt of a
tees regarding . the road, or .. subsidy agreement from the
section of road where closure Is state.
wanted, the commissioners will
Finally, the commissioner
consider the request.
have been notified of the upcomThe commissioners approved
lng seml-t.nnual conference of
a transfer of, funds . within the .the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Val- ••
budget of the Soil ~1\d Water
ley Regional Development ProConservation 'Dtstrlct, pending gram's policy committee. The
approval of funding certification meeting wm be held Oct. 31, 6
by . the Meigs · Budge t . p.m. , at the Lafayette Hotel In
Commission.
Marietta.

Rescue crews find no
•
survr,vors on freeway

1-LB. PICG.

BUCKET

•

g

"

2 S.ctiono. 1 2 Pogeo 25 C.nto
A MutlinMdil Inc. New~llp8r

Meigs Officials receive more annexation data

"'

Ul

Pomaroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 19, 1989
•

Limit
10. Coupons

9(
Whole Fryers •••:-•• 6 .

Clowly lonlght, IAw near 30.
Cballce of snow 31 pet'(lent.
Friday. Hip In mid 30o.
Chaace of snow 80 percent.

•

at

OCT. ·21
.

5-7-11-28-38-41
Kicker ~8686

•

THRU

GRADE A

Super IAilto

Page-4

ALL ·
WEEK
OCT. 15

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

.

277 .
Pick
124.1

\

Wt Reserve The Ri&amp;ht. To

SPRITE OR ·

Pick-3

M

2

•Tiie total value of the
double coupon may not
exceed $1.00,
:•Any manufacturer's coupon greater than 51 C will
be redeemed at face value

I.ooal news briefs,---.

only.

Vilhrge to begin picking up

•Only one manufactur' er: s coupot:~ per item.

leaVes

.

· The annllill leaves pickup wlll begin Monday In Middleport.
Residents are requested to rake their leaves Into the street
aJong the curbs In front of their homes. They will be picked up by
the street department as soon as they are In that neighborhood .
Brush, tree limbs or other materials are not to be mixed In
with leaves according to Mayor Fred Hoffman. This material
cannot be picked up with the leaf scavenger and plies of this type
of material will not be picked up.
Leaves wl.ll be picked up on a dally basis for the next several
• weeks until this year' s fall foliage Is completed.

•The total value of the dou·
ble manufacturer's coupon cannot exoeed the
purchase price of the item.
Money will not be re-

funded.
•This offer does not apply
to Powell's Super Valu
Coupons, free coupons
or any competitor's coupons.

Patrol cites driver after mishap ·
No one was Injured but one driver was cited In an accident at
7:15a.m. Wednesday on SR. 338,0.1of a milewestofmlle'post20,
according to the State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Okey D. T_rlmble, Jr ., 64, Scott Deport, W.Va .,
driving a 1986 Sprint, came up behind another car, swung left of
center causing Chris Wolfe, 17, Racine, who was. driving a 1984
Plymouth Duster to go off the road, striking a tree.
There Was no contact between the vehicles. Damage was
minor to tbe.Wol!e car and no damage to Tribble's vehicle.
The patrol'clted Tribble for left of center.

.•This offer excludes cigarettes, or any other items
prohibited by law.
•Offer· is good only for
product on hand . . No
Rainchecks.

Chnrges pending. sheriff says
'
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Souls by reports that charges
are pending In the Monday night breaklngs and enterlngs of the ·
Howard Lambert trailer on Starhall Road and of a storage ·
Continued on page 12

•Thera is a limit of .1 0
re·

'

,I

'

i. J

50 cent charge per bag If the
number exceeds the four-a-week
limit during the quarter .
For the rate purposes, bags are
· designed as the 30-33 gallon size
or equivalent containers .
Other rates In the village
Including light commercial and
heavy commercial, were also
Increased proportionately and
also carry an extra -charge per
bag over the quarlerly limit.
It was also specified that all
refuse must be placed at the curb
or roadside In containers . of
tensile streng1h to withstand
adverse weather conditions.
Council explained that Its definition of garbage for pickup
excludes leaves, limbs, furniture
Items, tires, lead-acid batteries ,
used motor oil, or anything else
that cannot be compacted In the .
compactor truck.
· Also discussed at the meeting
was the possibility of working out
a special pickup for leaves In the
village.
Mayor Cleland reported that
with the use of the compactor
truck, purchased with Insurance
money following the dump truck
wreck, the village wlll be able to
cut costs In that there wlJI be only
one trip per week to the landflll
Instead of the four or five trips
made before with the dump
Continued on page 12 .

Southern school board settles NHS issue
:

By CHARLENE ROEFUCH
Dally Sentinel staff
The status of Elizabeth Smith
and her membership In the
National Honor Society has been
settled by the Southern Local
School District's Board of
Education.
Tuesday a statement was
Issued. by the Board based on Its.
position · as clarified at the
regular meeting of the.Board on
Monday night at the school. ·
The statement says that "According to the National Honor
Society handbook, there Is no
basis for the dismissal of a
IP"aduate member from the Na·
tlonal Honor Society. At the time
of the meeting of the Faculty
Advllory Council that dlsmilsed
Elizabeth Smith from the National Honor Society, she was a
!P"aduate member and could not
have been removed. Thus, she Is
still a member of the National
Honor Soclety."
The confiict resulted from

contents of the valedictory
speech given by Miss Smith at
the commencement exercise.
Since th·a t time the American
Civil Liberties Union has been
Involved regarding the possible
violation of the student's right to
free speech.
The ruling that the Faculty
Advisory Council has no authorIty to diSmiss a graduate student
came from Ivan Gluckman,
associate counsel for the National Association of Seco"rldary
Scbools, sponsor of the National
Honor Society. I
In other action taken by the
board Monday night Effie R.
Murphy, VIctoria Peavley,
Barry Hayner, Lee Lee, and
Robert Ashley were approved as
substitute teachen.
Several assistant coaches were
hired and lncludeRonnleQulllen,
boys asslltant basketball coe.ch;
Jim Caldwell, freshman basket·
ball; Mlck Winebrenner, seventh
grade basketball; James Law-

'

.

renee, eighth grade basketball Fund. It was reported that
coach; Bill Hensler, girls varsity Southern had 13 students particiasslstani basketball coach; Alan pate In the _1989 Governors
Crisp, junior high basketball Scholars Program. They were
coach.
Jason Arnoltt, Kellle Ervin,
The salaries for all the coach- Michelle Friend, David lhle,
1ng positions wlll be paid for by Mica Jones, Jenny Lisle, Northe Boosters and the Athletic man Matson, Joyce Pickens ,
Department, It was reported. At Carolee Scarberry, Mark Thelss,
the tneetlng the Boosters made Jan Williams Chad WISe, and
another donation of $3,000 bring- Mayla Yoacham.1
Ing their total to $&amp;,000 this year.
Approval was given for main·
· Joan Hudak was approved as tenance work on the high school
yearbook advisor, · and Jane hea~ng system In the amount of
Manual's resignation as a substi- $3,000.
tute teacher was accepted. The
It wss noted that four electric
board approved a contract be- · stoves are for sale by tbe board.
tween the Southern Local Board One, a self-cleaning kitchen
of Education and Educational stove for $125, and three others
Services Institute, Inc. for the for $100 each. Anyone Interes ted
1989-90 school year In the Is Invited t.o conta~t the school.
amount of $21,190to be paid out of
Attending the meeting were
the Disadvantaged PupU Pro- Scott Wolfe, president; Charles
gram Fund.
Norris, vice president; Denny
Kim PhiiHps was named to Evans, Gary Willford, John
handle the $U47.39 from the Murphy, board members, Bobby
Dwight D. Eisenhower Mathe- Ord, superintendent, and Dennie
matics and Sclenoe Educational HIH, ll'ellsurer.

•

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�.
Thurwday, Octola 19, 1989

Commentary
The Daily

111 Couri Stree•

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MAllON AREA ·

.

~~

-

'

..... ...:-c:o..=.

ts:m~ ~ -r-•
'q1v

ROBERT L. WINGE'rr
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ConlroUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

WASHINGTON - Iranian
President Hashemi Rafsanjant,
the man who would be "moder· ·
ate," hosled a secret convention
of terrorists In Tehran last
month. The result may be a new
wave of anti-American terrorism
sanctioned by Iran while Rats an·
. )ani masquerades as an Improvement over the Ayatollah
· Khomelnl.
·
U.S. Intelligence sources and
our contacts In Tehran report

that the terrorists be&amp;an to
gather on Sept. 21 and were stUI
In Tehran as of Oct. 1.
The first to arrive were top
leaders of Hezbollah, the Beirut·
based terroriSt group that ls
directed by Iran. Hezbollah's
bloody ledger lists more than 260
Americans dead, Including 241
U.S. marines killed ln October.
1983 ln the bombing of their
barracks ln Beirut. Hezbollah

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

also tortured two Americans to
death, Central Intelligence
Agency siJitton chief Wllllam
Buckley and U.N. observer Col. .
.Wtlllam Higgins. The group Is
currently holding American
hostages.
·
In the second wave came Abu
Moussa,, a Palestinian · terrorist
who hates Palestine Liberation

LETI'EBS OF OPINION ue welcome. 1bey sb011ld be leoothiD :100
words loa g. All leUen ue oubjecllo edlllnr ODd I!IUII be olped wllh
name. addre.a u• Weplloae number. No ••lcaed let let's wW be published. Lellero sbOtlltl be Ia podiMie, addreumr
nol personal~

Is•-·

Ilea.

Officials
should call
'...
off the World Series
.,

Organization Chairman · Yasir
Arafat and ls bent on assasslnat·
lng him. Moussa has always
targeted Israel for his acts of
mayhem, but judging by · his
appearance at the Tehran gathering, he !nay make America a
target for warming up to Arafat.
· The third wave Included the
Abu Nidal organization and possibly Nidal himself. Since 1980,
Nidal has been butchering PLO
officials and a melting pot of
()ther nationalities. Bankrolled
by Iran, Syria and Libya, Nidal
staged dlachlne gun a\tacks on
the Rome and Vienna airports In
December 1985, ln which five
Americans were kUled.
We tracked Jlbril down ln
Damascus, Syria, last May and
spoke with him for hours. He
dented blowing up the Pan Am
jet, but defended his new alliance
with Iran. "I would have an
alliance even wllh the d.evll lf lt
will help us reach our ends," be
said.
·
The anti-American and antiIsraeli terrorists were greeted at,
Tehran airport by the Iranian ..
deputy foreign minister for African affairs, the notorious Hosseln Shelkholeslam who helped
plan the takeover of the U.S.
Embassy In Tehran ln 1979.
On the evening or Sept. 22,
Jlbrll, Moussa and two Hezbotlah
leaders met with Iranian Foreign
Minister All Akbar VelayatL He
promised them, "Iran wlll continue Its support of the slruggle
against the Zionist regime (Israel), lis backers (America) and
mercenaries.''
On the mornlrig of Sept. 25, our
sources say, Rafsanjanl personally met with the terrorists and
pledged his support: He said
Iranians and Palestinians must
stick together against the United
States and Israel.

By RICHARD L SHOOK
United Press International
SAN FRANCISCO -The World Seties should be called off.
Baseball is giving sports a bad name by even lhlnklng about playing
the Series to conclusion.
There ls death and destruction In lhese streets of San Francisco.
Fay Vincent, the new commissioner, ls tarnishing the legacy of ills
friend, the late Bart Glamattl, by not taking a strong stance and
Immediately declaring lhe Series finished.
Game 3 was postponed Wednesday, with an update due at 8:30p.m.
EDT. Why• To announce the)l've come to lhe obvious conclusion the
World Series has become superfluous?
In some areas you can get a false Impression as to the severity of the
earthquake. Some communities appear to have suffered no damage .
at all.
Business was booming at gas stations and coffee shops. Motels
were full. Lights and toilets worked. Water was clean and plentiful.
· But cross one street and It was like entering a war zone. No traffic
lights, glass blown out of windows, cracks In buildings, loose concrete
or bricks on sidewalks, no lights, no water or places to stay.
"How will my capital gains tax cut help you? Think of It as something to
There i.s merit to the notion people need something as a
look forward to ....:.... something t~at will be there for you to take advantage
. counterbalance to tragedy. But !here Is a tlme to fulfill !he cliche that
sports ls just a game. Now ls that time.
of when you get rich."
: The World Series ls woefully unimportant ln the face of death,
oollapsed bridges, bull!lings and overpasses, power outages and lack
c5f water.
To divert attentlon from the cleanup ls madness.
Inspecting Candlestick Park to ~ if It's safe for 60,000 cheering
people is silly. The engineers are more sorely needed elsewhere.
.,
.
Besides, nobody lives ln Candlestick Park.
of
ethnic
dlscrlmlnatton;
and
time they retire, they'll have on the willingness of America to
It has been a discouraging
Putting 60,000 people'Into one place for a baseball game would tie up
even
from
one
of
the
most
rapidly
helped us at least as much as we serve as a refuge for lmml·
month. for all the J eremlahs ln
pollee, who are needed lor something Important - protecting lives
In
Europe
expanding
economics
help them. Just think of what grants," •Gilder writes. "Yet the
Congress who worry so about our
and property, directing traffic, keeping crowds from disaster sites.
his torte hospitality toward lmml· - Ireland - that cannot create Immigrants have contributed to astonishing feats of the semiconShl!nhe remaining games to the Oakland,Coliseum? Who knows
grants. Now they mUIIt explli)n jobs nearly fast enou11h to take American science ln the 20th ductor Industry, like the earlier
'
whether that facility Is safe?
how Immigrants can be such a care of Its army of computer- century -and not only ln nuclear wartime exploits of the ManhatThat would create a massive ticket problem, again creating lines
tan Project with the atomic
physics.
bane for the United States while literate young adults.
and crowds ln places where they will -hinder rescue and cleanup
We needn't feel noble when
"It seems romantic to see the . bomb, depended on just such
such an obvious boon for a place
operations.
letting such people ln. By the future of a technology depending accidents and open arms."
. like West Germany.
The Bay Bridge wlll n&lt;it be open to traffic for sometime. Continuing
Since the tide of East Germans
the World Series would create traffic problems on the next available
began washing Into the West,
bridge down the bay, the San Mateo Bridge. Untll the cleanup ls much
European forecasters have
nearer completion, that bridge should be kept as open as possible.
boosted their estimates of West
. There has been talk of shifting the World Series to San Diego or Los
German growth for the early '90s
Angeles.
by half a percentage or more per
Why• For what good reason? To fulfill the televlslori contracts? So
year.
baseball won't have to return money to ABC? That's the worst reason
"The Influx ls adding
of all.
strength," says Norbert Walter,
The World Series Is not like the Super Bowl. The World Series Is
an economist with Deutsche
piljyed ln the home parks of the home teams.
Bank AG In Frankfurt.
Shlttlng the Series, complellng the Series, sends the message the
The reasons are not hard to
games are more Important than what happened ln the Bay Area.
discern. Trained East Germans
They are not. They most decidedly are not.
wlll provide badly needed skllts;
The most Important thing Is to clean up the rubble, fix the roads,
their relative youth and hunger
rebuild the homes and businesses, restore electricty and tak&amp; the
for success wUI Invigorate an
strain off' the lelephone service.
aging, somewhat complacent
None of these human concerns would be served by completlng the
population; they'll boost con·
World Series.
sumptlon as well as · support the
Golf tournaments are declared complete after 54 holes tithe ftnal18
growing legion of retirees.
are rained out. Can' I we do that for lhe World Series?
'
· Is the United States really so
Oakland wins, 2-0. Series canceled because o! earlhquake.
different? And If not, why are we
muffing an opportunity to accept
tens of thousands oL equally
talented re~gees alld tmml·
11 onlyl Reg. ss60 ......... ............ Now
grants eager lo start life fresh
upon our shores?
Sinwnons
13 onlrl Reg. SJboo ........ Now
ThOusands of Chinese stream
out of Hong Kong every year,
fearful of Judgement day In 1997,
~®
only! Reg. '1400 .....
when the British decamp and the
colony reverts lo Beijing's con-- ®
•
11 only! Reg. s 1100 ............... Now
trol. Some of these Chinese are
,,
settling In the United States, but
llonlyl Reg. '2200 ........... Now
a disproportionate number are
head_lng for Canada or Australia,
where entry Is easter. As reKing
(1 only) leg. S2100 ............ Now
cently as Oct. 1, Australia
revised Its policy to attract still
more emigrating professionals
under 40.
Our attitude toward Soviet
emtgrees ls even odder. For
years our leaders lectured the
Kremlin about permitting Jews
and other persecuted mlnorltles
to nee to the West. Yet now that
the Soviets have compiled, we've
grown churlish. Of a mere 125,000
refugee slots allocated for fiscal
1990 (which began this month),
50,000 will be reserved for Soviet
applicants. ~eanwhlle, however, more than 50,000 Soviet
Jews alone are expected to seek
admittance - not to mention the
host of Armenians and, Perhaps
mostdelperateof aU, as many as
10,000 Soviet Pentecostals.
· If we were amart, we'd permit
any refu&amp;'ee to Iettie In the United
Stalea wbo dldn'trequtre I!OIIt!mment ualatance. And we'd also
VIS4
welcome any potential lmml·
OPEN DAlY
grant who posseased tralnln&amp; or
.9-5
,kills useful to a modern econ·
omy. The world teems with such
MON. &amp; Fll.
~~~ .. R~"""­
people. They hall from I!COI!omlc
crlpplel such u Arpnttna and
~==~:~
El Salvador; from desP.Jrtng
lands like Poland; from develop"Before I'll give you anythinp, you'll have to
Ing natlonl such u Malay.la,
COMII.Ofw.J&amp;OU¥1
fill out $OmB forms. "
where a talented Chfneae minor· ·
tty chafel! under t., ) heavy hand
I •
•

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Lamb family reunion conducted

Pege-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pornetoy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday. October 19, 1989

·Terrorist.confab interests U. S.

S~ntinel

'

The Daily Sentinai-Pege-3"

Porrwov-Mktlaport, Ohio

QUIZ TEAM - The 11enlor members of tile
Melp Hlp Stlbool quiz team will be In lite first
round competition of .•'TV Honor Soelety" on
Saturday at I p.m. on channel15. Included In litis
' televised honor pl'OJI'am are 21 area IICiloolll.

Melp wiD compete apl•t WIDiamslown, W.Va.
Senior pardclpanls are, 1-r, Nancy Baker, Dan
KenaedJ, aad Krlsdn King. The advisor for the
team Ill Rita Slavin. Absent during lime of photo
was Heidi Caruthers.

Friendly
Circle meets·

Miss Congeniality chosen
Jenny Bell, a senior at Morgan
High School, was chosen as
Ohio's Miss Congeniality of the
International Order of Job's
Daughters at a pageant ln April.
At that !line she was also
serving the state of Ohio as
Grand Bethel Senior Princess
and was also a member of the
Ohio Jay Dees. She was chosen as
first runner up to the Ohio Miss
Job's Dau~hter.
She ls a past honored queen of
Bethel 79, the grand be\hel
.representative to Arkansas and
Is now serving her bethel as

senior princess. She has received
!he excellence In youth award for
Masonic youlh organizations.
At Morgan High School Miss
Bellis a member of the Natlonal
Honor Society, Who's Who,
French Club, study club, library
club, ·advanced biology club,
American achievement
academy, foreign language club,
and has been nominated for the
Daughters of the American Revolution scholarship.
Miss Bellis the daughter of Blll
anct Jo Winebrenner, Stockport,
and Bill and Kathy Bell, Powell.

Rock Springs Grange
announces board election
It was announced thai fair
board etecltons will be held Nov.
6 at the ·recent meeting of the
Rock Springs Grange.
Ba-r bara Fry asked members
to keep the September-October
lssue of the Ohio State Grange
Monlhly.
The officers conference wlll be
In November and the Rock
Springs Grange will ho~t the
Pomona Grange ln November
also.
Opal Grueser gave the leglslatlve report. noting that farm
accidents surpass allolher Indus·
trial accidents.
Kathryn Mlller was Installed
as chaplain and a contributions
was made to the Rock Springs
Better Heallh Club.
Mr. and Mrs. William Grueser

observed their 68th wedding
anniversary on Oct. 13. They
were unable to atterid tqe meet·
lng but were presented a vase or
red roses and cake.
For the program Pat Holter
read an article on· retirement
benefits to congressmen, and
about the American Herllage
Trust Fund Act. Other readings
Included "Profile of a Senior" by
Sara Caldwell. Agnes Dixon
p r e s e n t e d ' ' M e d lc a l
Terminology."
Refreshments of cake, punch,
coffee, and mints were served by
Bunny Kuhl, Agnes Dixon, and
Dorothy Long.
Members reported Ill were
Buena Grueser, Roger Lelfhelt,
Bernest Bruch, and Dorothy
Long.

Evangeline Missionary
Group conductS meeting
The Evangeline Missionary
Group of the Pomeroy Church of
Christ met recently at the home
of Elatne 'Kelly.
Prayer was given by Mary
Lash, president, who also condueled the meeting.
Charldlne Alkire had devotions
concerning the writings of Helen
Steiner Rice. She stated that
people should be content wHh
what theyhaveandshealsoread
Hebrews, chapter 13, verse five.
Roll call was answered with
members naming a scripture on
demons. Officers reports were
given and collections were taken.
Janet Venoy gave the mission
report on letters from the George

.

Pickens and Walter fraxeys
families.
t
·
Cards were sent to the Conrad
Ohlinger family and Ruth
Arnolfl.
Eileen · Bowers reported on a
sunshine box presented to a
member.
The revival to be held Nov. 5-9
was discussed and the evangelist
will be Kevin Yeager. Special
music will be presented each
evening.
.
Prayer for the refreshments
was given br. Pat Thoma and
others attending were Debbie
Alkire, Gertrude Andrews, Eva
Dessauer, Mildred Phillips, Jlll
Rosseler, and Pauline Kennedy.

A memorial service for Mary
Virginia Riebel was conducted
when the Friendly Circle of the
Trinity Church met Tuesday.
Trlbu tes were given by Gay
Perlin and Maye Mora. Mrs.
Riebel was a charter member of
the Clrele which was organized
liy Christine Kuether In 1942 for
· the women of the church.
Diane Hawley presided ~~ the
meeting In which plans were
made for the lay women of the
church to conduct services on
Nov. 19. A tradltlonal thank
offering ln gathering will be
observed.
Reports of the sick 11nd shut ln
were given and plans for the fall
were dlscussed.
Unison . prayer closed the
meeting.
Mrs. Perrin and AI tee Glo·
bokar served a salad course to 11
members.
.
The refreshment table was
decorated for autumn. The cen·
terplece was of dtied material
given to .Mrs. · Perrin by Mrs .
Riebel. Favors were small
baskets of potpourri.

IUJ.'I8l')'lbia week.

.

The Christmas party wlll be

•

Bibbee, Pomeroy; Clay and
Geneva Tuttle, and Flora Marte
Gibson, Middleport.
The aflernoon was spent visit·
lng and playing games.
.
A business meeting was held
with Sherman Summerfield presiding. He was elected president
for anolher year and Lorraine
Lee . was elected as
secretarytreasurer.

Opal Russell, a daughter of
Charles and Statira Lamb, was
the oldest woman; and Earl
Summerfield, a grandson, was
the oldest man. The youngest girl
was Lori Denise Smllh, daughter
of Kurt and Debbie Smith, and
the youngest boy was Dana
Vales, son of Bob and Rena
Vales, and grandson ot Sharon
Swartz.

Pt. Pleasant bazaar scheduled
Point Pleasant and the Recrea·
tlon Department or the city of
Point Pleasant.
The fee for exhibitors Is $1 a
foot of table space wllh six or
eight foot tables available for
use. The committee also asks
that exhibitors provide an un·
wrapped gift of $5 value to be
used for a door prize. .
Pre-registration ls required.
More Information on lhe bazaar
may be obtained by calllng
742·2228.

Area craftsmen are Invited to
participate ln the fifth annual
homemade holiday treasures
bazaar to be held at the Point
Pleasant Junior High school gym
and cafeteria on Nov. 11, IO a.m
to 6 p.m and Nov. 12, 1 to 5 p.m.
The bazaar ls sponsored by the
Cultural Arts Committee of the
Mason County Extension Home·
maker, and the Hero Club of the
Mason County Vocational Center, The Junior Women's Club of

•

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has n::cently joined the
Grange lnsurance cast
of professionals to

.Slug and muzzel
loader shoots set
The Ken Arnsbary Chapter of
lhe Izaak Walton League wltl
begin slug and muzzle loader
shoots on Sunday at 1 p.m.
The slug shoots wltl be held on
Sunday, and again on Oct. 29,
Nov. 5, Nov.12, Nov. 19, and Nov.
26.
Muzzle loader shoots wltl be
held on Dec. 17, Dec. 24, and Dec.
31.
The shoots wlll consist of free
hand and ~ncb rest events at
various distances. Rifle and
scopes will not be . shot '\in- the
same category.
Various prizes of meat and
money will be awarded.

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Wildwood
Garden
Ctub ·meets
'

A worqhop ln which members
made pine cone trees for a fund
raising project was conducted
when the Wlldwood Garden Club
met at the home of Kathryn
Miller for the September
meeting.
Plans were made for the club's
day out ln Nelsonvllle to ride lhe
Hocking Valley Railroad·. .
An tnvltatlon was read from
lhe Vinton County Garden Club to
attend Its 50lh anniversary
celebration.
The region 11 meeting wlll be
held Oct. 21 at the community
building In McArthur.
It was voted to raise due lo $1.
Betty Milhoan passed out the
new program books.
Hilda Yeager had the arrange·
ment of the month of rocks
accenl;!!d with golden rod and
Irises.
The next meeting will be held
at the home of Evelyn Hollon.
The guest speaker will be Kenny
Wiggins who will discuss litter
control.
Cookies and coffee were served
by Mrs. Miller.

Lydia Cnuncil meets
Plans for the program at the
Meigs County Infirmary to be
held Nov. 7 at 7 p.m. were
discussed by members of the
Lydia Council of the Bradford
~urcb of Christ when !hey met
!J.Cently at lhe church.
Pauline Pickens, vice president, presided at the meeting ln
which officers reports were
given.
·
· The visitation list was dlsttibuled and the Christmas ln July
program wu _ discussed wtth
more Information to be given at
the next meeting.
A get well card was signed for
Ruby Hy•ll who underwent

The family of the late Charles
and Stallra Lamb met recently
for their annual reunion at lhe
Star Mlll Park ln Racine.
After grace was given by
Sherman Summerfield, a bas·ket
dinner was enjoyed by the
following.
,
Opal Lamb, Galllpolls: Debbie
Smith, Michael, Adam, and Lou,
New London; Jeff Northup, Cln·
'ctnnatl; Earl and Pearl Summer·
field, Roger Summerfield, Mur·
rysvllle, Pa.; Sherman and
Teresa · Summerfield, Tara and
Whitney, Gerald ,Lee Summerfield, Utile Hock!~; Rex and
Ann Summerfield, Reedsville;
Sharon Swartz, Robin Russell,
Chris II and Carrie, Michelle and
Dana Vales, Coolvllte; Bob and
Tena Harper, Washington,
W.Va.;
Tom and Carolyn Summerfield
and Crystal, Medina; Bob and
Slna M •Y f\1u rphy, Amy and
Tracy, Reedsville; Jeremy
Combs, Long Bottom; .Irene
Parker, Syracuse; Bob and Jan·
lee Parker, Marietta; Bob and
Nancy Campbell, Lori and Ryan
Adams, and Michael Jarrell,
Racine.
Bill and Lorraine Lee, Colum·
bus; Buel and Hilda Summerfield, Harold Lamb, Gerald and
Becky Lamb, Charleston,
W.Va.; Stan and Jean Summerfield, Buffalo, W.Va.; Dave and
Sharon Shortridge, Winfield,
W.Va.; Mildred Caldwell, Kenneth and Sue Ca !dwell, Michelle
and Matthew, Reedsville; Dorset

held Dec. 11 and will be a catered
affair. Secret slslers will be
revealed and there wtll be a $5
gift exchanae.
Devotions on Autumn were
given by Madeline Painter and
Nancy Morris bad the prayer.
Refreshments were served by
Becky Ambereer, Madeline
Painter, alld Diana BIJII.
The next meetllli wtll be held
at the home of Sherry Smith on
Nov.13.
.
AttelldiJii with those mentl·
oned were Charlotte Haning,
Jackie Reed, Shei'I'Jf and Eliza·
beth Smttll, Cherie and Caitlin
Wtulamson, 'Suzie Will. Franm
Hyael~ and Paula Pickens.
1

.The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 1411-HI)
A Dlv ..lon of Multimedia, IDe.
Publlsbed every afternoon, Monday

through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
mft'oy, Ohio, by tbe Ohio Valll"j Pub·

Ushlnr Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
PomeroY. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2156. Se·
cond ctus poataa:e pald at PomeroY,
Ohio.

Member: Unital Press lnternatlo,.a\,

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Pomeeoy Middlaport. Ohio

4 The Daily Sentinel

Thundly. October 19, 1989

!~.!r_!t.?.JI!! "'~ -~~~ ·~!~m~_P.e,!,!!l!n~}J!•~., !!!~:!r., ~~-. "'"'
Marauders will try a nd end a
three-game losing s treak as they
travel to Belpre to take on theTrt
Valle y Confe ren ce Golden
Ea gles.
Slnce theMaraudersjotnedthe
TVC , the championship has belonged either to the Marauder s or
the Golden Eagles, with the

Marauder s two outr ight and a
co-championship,
The Golde n E agles are
coached by Ralph Holder, Holder
In his 29th year at the Washington
CountyschoolhasledtheGolden
Eagles to four playoff appeara nces in the last six years.

5-8, 145 senior . Baker is a threat
a t end. He is a very dangerous
kickoff retur ner, and on defense.
Last week In a 27-12 win over
Mlller, Baker scored on a 58 yard
punt return and a 16-yard run,
Baker carried 9 times for 31
yar ds and caught 4 passes for 48

Swackhammer led! tbe way on quarterback for Belpre last year
the a-round for Belpre, last week as he completed 42 percent of his
tn t'he win over Miller Swack· passes. (The other was his son,
hammer ,carried 8 times for 61 - Lee Holder who now Is a star
yards.
quarterback tor West Virgtna
The quarterback for Coach Tech). Gandeecompleted7ot10
Holder IS 6-3, 185 junior ' Jason passes for 115 yards and one
Gandee. ,Gandeebecameonlythe touchdown last week.
_
·
•
The Marauders are coming off
a 59-8 drubbing to the states 10
ranked team the Waverly Tigers.
The Marauders leading rusher
tor the year Frank Blake carried
the ball only once las I week due to
day," VIncent said of San Fran- wlil not play while the communlllness, and the second leading
cisco and Oakland. "There wtu Ity Is in the early stages of rusher Terry McGuire was hurt
be no World Series games before recovery. We don't want to be midway thru the second quarter
Tuesday. VI'~ presently ex peel conducting baseball while the and didn't return, both are
Games 3, 4 and 5 to be played at hunt tor victims is going on."
healthy and are expected back
Candlestick Park."
The commissioner added that this week. Quarterback Jeremy
Vincent said structural repairs the Series could experience Phalin didn't start last week' s
a re being made at Candlestick further delays if II Is determined game due to an injury but came
Park.
later that the Bay Area would not on in the second hail to throw a 41
"If we are going to put 62,000 be ready to host the games.
yafd touchdown pass to Kevin
people in there, I want to have
" I'm not saying we are abso- Musser.
•
total confidence to put them in lutely cettain we will be able to
Belpre comes In to the game
safely."
·
play Tuesday because the city with a 5-3 record, 5-2 in the TVC,
John Lind, stadium manager government has not given us while Meigs will head into the
for Candlestick Park, said, " Re- . permission. It is our hope and game with a 3-5 record over~ll.
pairing the stadium Is not the expectation to play in Candles- and 3-3 in the TVC. The game will
city's No . 1 priority.
tick on Tuesday."
mark the '18th meeting between
" Our No: Hocus is housing and
'Present at Wednesday's meet- the two schools. Belpre has- won
continued safety for our Ing were representatives of both 11 of the contests, including the
citizens."
the San 'Francisco Giants and last two, 12·7 and 33-27.
VIncent said cancelling the Oakland Athletics, the Major
In last year's heart-stopping
World Series "Is a major step. League Baseball Players Associ·
win over the Marauders, It was
We don't want to do it, given the ation and ABC Television, which
Baker who Intercepted a pass In
decent and prudent ways availa- Is broadcasting the series.
the Marauders endzone with just
ble, by walling a few days. We

World Series may. be resumed . Tuesday
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) Baseball Commissioner Fay Vincent announced Wednesday the
World Series, Interrupted by the
most disas trous U.S. earthquake
since 1906, will not resume until
Tuesday at the very earliest.
" It is very clear to Major
League Baseball that our Issue,
is a . modes I one In light of this
great tragedy," VIncent said at a

late afternoon news conference
announced In a room Itt only by
candles and television lights.
Vincent said he conferred with
San Fr ancisco Pollee and officials told him there are stlll .a
number of dead and the search
goes on for more victims.
"We are not going to be -able to
play baseball In either of these
two communitieS before Tues-

Scoreboard ...
~hllk 17; II. &lt;A!d.-.llle

Prep rat~

knoll l l.

COLUMIItlS - Tld&amp; ~reek' s llllled
Pl'eu IMer.at..J Olllo IDP &amp;:Moil
JlMrd ol Co.ehel le u4ball ratbtp ( with
flnl Jlllt't' veiel ud • ·cut·lolll ~~• Ill

Transactions

,.,eM~teeet ):

Dl\'iskllll

Tum
PoiDI!i
1. Cle'\'e s.. tr•&amp;tus It I) (7-tl .......... n 7
2. O ~~ei••U Elder m 111-fl ............. U2
3. Cl ~t.-.11 PrWrt011 (1-1 ) -·········· U 3

.

If;

a . EMt

........d ....
Buketball
CharlOtte - Walnd fora111rd Keniii.Y

Gattiaon.
Mllwulrr - Slp!!d trrr • Ifill 1(11'-

"-.rd •• C.lemu

5• .,_. . . . .., .. (8-f) ..................... 10!1

to J·yrar co ..Nd ;
mved ,...-d l'rentJa cbeaand forwud

t . c uao. McKI•te)' (1'- U _.............. . 1111

J"ercy Ed tie.

4. L...c•ler (11-t) _ .......................... 145

1. Elldld (7 -1) ..•.•........•............•.._......•77
8. Mu.lo• WMIIInP• (1-1 ) ... ..........U
I . West Cllmter LH• ('7-11 ............. .31
lt.Wurea Western Ratene (Ml .......lll
Seeo.. tea: 11. A.Ual•n Jill ch
U : 12. a.tln•ll lAS&amp;lle !S; U .

MoeiiH II; Ul. Eul LIY~r­
polil ll; IL Gr(IW! Cll)' 11: II. W!lit
Ci~~ela..al

Pllllild8plllll- Waived r..,.·ard ll.elf'
1Jie Cr ou.
,
Collere
!CiCA.A. - Cited die M&amp;r)tland mftl'l
baalteibMII prvpw.m lor IS Nea vtela·llo-. deaied ... appeal b)' b•lcdbllll
plaJer Chril Milia for lmmdiUe ellpbiJ.
lty aft.r ll'lllltferrlnr lrom &amp;eniW!ky to

.v .. o...

Carrollton n : 17. S .... lll)t 11: 18~
{tie ) Toledo Cellt,..Caahalic alii Earit ·
CleveiiM Shw, 10 nell; M. Mlddeaa.·n 1.

Ratwrd - Named Ted Woodward
men'• baslletballan illant .·
FOOiball

Te.-.

b~eker

rolnll
1. fOI!IIori a( 17) (8-l t ........................ u;
't i\ltronlktcb&amp;oel (II" (8-1) ................ nt
3. MJ•r .... { 1) (A-t) ......................... lfl
1. larriaon {IJ {1·1) ..... .......... ..... .. . .. 134

5. P'riUIIdla (8·1) _,........................... 133
S. SIM~benwUie iI I (1-1 I .......... .......... 1!1
7. Gal kin (8-1) ,. .. .... ...... .... .... .... ........ Itt
!1. 0e¥e Sl. 'OIIeph ($-! ) ........... .. .... ... .80
t. Cohunbu Fruldln Bel &amp;WI (8-1 ) ....ill
IO.WIIikiM Memorial (A-I) .................61

Secolll le•: II. Soloa U; 12. North
Cant" Roowr (II U; It Sl. M.rys
~emortal S3; 14. Rl chftftdRevere {1125; .
15. (Ue ) Kent ReOII!"e lt and
Wen thlmH, II each; n . Slmtey IS:
18. C.mhrld(e II: lt." P.,.,.. Hoi)' Name
1; • · Bewlac Greet~ 1.
OlvlllloalU
Te11111
Polnu
l. lr•lion {II ) 18-411 _....................... tiS
2. CAPE I II I ( 8-1) ........................... Itt
'- Urb ... (I-I) ... ............................. 112
:t. l•m•on Balla {8-8) .................... 131
5. Yll!up'-• VI'AIIU• (f.l; _·......... Its
I. CampbeiiMemort&amp;l (1-1) _............ .ts
1. Olterl• Ftrelaa• (8-tl ...................n
S. Orr\'Uho (1-2 ) .. .................... ........ ... .31
I . Stw· 11-l) ~ .......... .............. ........... .25
II.Wa\'erl;y (1·1) ~ ...........................: •.!f
Secoad tea: 11. IJINI ..... !!; Ul.
Ora.p ( I) It; U . .\kronSI. VI!M:!e ..-81.
Mar, II: 1-1. Swut-. 15: 15. OU.R&amp;lbor
It: Hi. CH~toalt; 11. Akron Rebul;
18. (Uri 1t'lllllnl. "*'-W• R..... r ull
St.. O&amp;lrniUe, I neiL
Dh'IMe111V
,......
Pollll•
I. Whelet"ftrt: (Ill { 1-f) .. .............. !tl
t f're6!ril!b-• Ill {8-t) ................ 122
s.
111 (1-tl ............ 111
4. 81Me•.tlle c.tllolk (1) {7·1) _, ... 117
I. BradnrMII III-II ........................... Jt
L W.lerleno• {7-IJ ......... ,'............ .St
7 . Am_.aCle...:reek(7-l ) ~ ......... ....11
I. Vffallll!l (7-1) ..............................72
• . Ar~llbtld (7-1 ) ............................... .i8
........ (7-1) ..................................... .
tea: II. lllar:k RIYrr (I) :n; 12.
. . hllle Oe..- Fork (I ) II; IJ. Eut
c..&amp;. ft: U, C..&amp;OII Cnlnl Cathtllc•; n . M.ro.Muctlaler "liB: 11.
eo.l Ol'ew O.w•• ... P•t IS; 11.
Wllllrlll_. Palal ValitJ ( II n : IH.
(lie) M..WePI.eMUI .... BI'Mkvlllt,
13 eadl;· !t. All~ Eutlt.
DlvlsklnV

•-•a.....,

aee.•

Tum

--

.............. .. . . ......

... Arii•Jt••t3-IJ --············-.. ---........ 111

5. Newark CatiMUc {SJ {Jo-e) .............. Jt
I . 1Aral11 Clr•\11,_ {!e ) 17-1 ) ..............77

7. Ayera"'Ue ( 8-f) .............. .. ..............73

,.._mte. 8&amp;. .Jo••h ( 7-1) .. ........ ..... .IS
t . Mlapt (1-1 J ............................. , ...... 18

II .

II.D!t .... st. JoiiD's 11-1) ............ ....H

Sectllll le11: II. Wa,)'llellflehf·Goshen

' 51; It Jltrla Culler Wntera Bftrrw
IIJU; 13. McDo_.d(I)U; loi. Shaill)'llclr
( IIW: I$. VanS.~ Sl; 11. 81 . flenl")'%7:
li. Glo.-er-TTU.ble II; 18. Spri81fleld

81 ped

fre e- arent llnt-

WS&amp;IIe Har~Rr .
Clnelaad - Sl~d receiYe r \ler••
Jolne• to developmenW
relelllll'd
II (lit ead Rick o\ellt1from develo .... eal&amp;.l
liqUid..
DaiiiUI - lleleaed tiJillftllll 'l'llonion
Ch•ll.er .. d pl.ced rnotde llfht eDd
I eith lnllhlp •• •e adM roater.
LA RUN- Placrd&lt;!Ornerbadr Ill fred
JacUon •• la,t.Rd ~rw : adi\'M ed
ll•backer Matkin' e.

•.-d:

New En-d - R.-•lped offensive
Unemu D&amp;Yid Do-.:tu: • ·al"ed Hlll!b.ciler Terreaee C.Og; re-•pwd cornerbar!k Howud Ft1J1•• and ullped
him~ the developrnealal aq.ad.
PhoeaP: - 1'1-*' cenll'r Den!k
Kea•rd on "fto.,.olball Ulaeaa" reo
~w•••Hockey
Mhuno&amp;li - Bec&amp;IW palkla John
IIR allll W..tr Fl.. l!l'tJ lram llalama:.r:o• of the Wer..t6o ... HOckey Lupe;
aulped lel~mu Rob ZetUer to
Kalamuoo; releaeeddefn.me.DuH
olloycr anll .lord an Fo .. lr ... Kalamasoe.
OlfJ'flpka

-'aSGCiallen ol Sammer OJ;ym,ac llllernatloMI Fedf.nllftM Re-eleded
Prima Netu.. pl'f!lllldelli.

Soccer
Chlcqo (.\18.\)- Slp;ned mldflekler ·
o.e. AJbla...-qye.
NATIONAL ROCKEl' LEAGUE
we-..,.. 'allett~t •

RarUonl t. Buff. I
Mell&amp;real t, CaJpt,. 1
!lt.
I, PIUM .. h S
Terollto 4, V U1C0 II WI' J
New Jehll!)' S. l'hUt.delpNa3

Lo••

Detroit •• ,... . . . . ,

ld.,._.oa'7,WI ... Nt
'1111nwlttr'• Gam•
Hanfo,.llHY&amp;u.,s. 7:11p.m.

Qaebec .a Ollcap.ldl p.m.
Detrllt .a St.
8:35p.m .
J'rWQ'•Gam•
Molllre,. .t l~lalo, IIIIM
Va.conH • Ne• Jeuey, aiJhl
NY laiMIIet'a at WaAiqtoa, 111""

l.o••·

Chlup ll Wlail,e~o alp&amp;
BoMoll at E41mo1Ha. alp.
Major I.e ape Bur hall
l'ollll!- Sehedlllle
W.rtd Serlel '

Po IIIIa

I. Sa....lly !k . Marys ( II J (HI ~ .... Ill
t . Uru CaiiiDUc (~) 18-1) ............... .. 171
3. Mlaller ( -I) ( 1-8)
lll
M

Cbh.:ap -

San Frud~ "- Oaltlud
Bell of!k\"tll
(OaklaDd leadl. aerlet le-G)
Oct . It - Oaldaltd 5, SUI FhlldliCo 0
Oct . IS - Oakliuwl 5, Sa Fra~~claco I

Od. II - No pme scheduled.
Oct . 17 - Game poaiponed due Ia
e.-thq•ke.
• y-Oet. 'U - at San l''randKO, 1: !S p.m.
y-Od . U .-. at Su FrudiK'O, 1: IS p.m.
Xf-Oct. H - at Su Frudaco, 8: :»
p.m.
)'-Dd. t7 - No rame aellelllled.
xy-Oct., 18 - at Oakiud, R: 3$ )l.m.
11.)'-0et. H-at Oaklud, II: SS ,_m.
x-lf

the

game with a ground assau It force
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
that has cranked out at 300 yards
OVP S&amp;alf Wrl&amp;er
rushing at least five times this
Kyger Creek's Bobcats, still
year. Since they started teague
licking their wounds after sufferplay, the Norsemen have aver·
in&amp; a 52-8 thrashlne at the hands
aged 312.2 rushing yards behind a
of Oak Hill last week, have a
powerful
offensive line consist·
golden chance to redeem them·
tng
primarily
of Roy Payton,
selves when they entertain unKeith
Wilson,
Fred
Keeney, Sean
beaten league leader Symmes
Hter'ontmus, Jason Pernestl and
Valley Friday night.
As th~ Valley, Kyger and the · tight end Carl Robinson, among
others.
Hill are all favorites to win their
Running back Kenny Da111els,
season finales (the Vikings play
a 5-9, 180-pound junior who has
at Hannan Trace, and the Bobcats play at North GalUa, while . been a force in the Vikings'
backfield since his freshman
the Oaks host Southwestern) ,
campaign, broke the 1,000-yard
regardless of what happens this
barrier with a 170-yard perfor·
week, It Is Imperative that the
mance in last week's 48-12
Vikings beat the Bobcats It they
pounding of Southern. With 1,077
are to win the title outright.
yards
on the season, he will put
However, lflhe Bobcats (7-1, 4-1)
his
134.6
yards-per-game aver,can pull off the upset and the
ageon
the
line against the Bobcat
Oaks (7·1, 4-1) do what's exdefense.
pected of them In their last roacj
However, Daniels Isn't the
game against Southern, there
whole sbow, as senior tailback
would be a three-way tie for first,
Fred Wilburn and junior fullback
with a piece of the championship
Jason Sheppard have put topte waiting for the trio.
With this In mind, the Valley . gethttr solIll efforts of their own.
Senior Paul Hayes, their dlrninuwill enter tomorrow night's

r:.:.:..:.;=:.....--------,
TVC standings
OP
44
92
114 •

104
195
126
166
183

232

TVC Games Only
Team
W L P OP
Trimble ... .... ........ 7 o .156 44
Nelsonvllle-York ..6 0 174 23
Belpre ....... ... ... .. . .5 2 109 89
VInton County ...... 4 2 165 78
Metgs ....... ... ....... .3 3 86 90
Wellston ....... .. ..... 2 4 76 100
Muter ............ :.... .! 5 43 139
Alexander. ...... .. .. .0 6 27. 165
Federal Hocking .. 0 6. 37 195
Friday's 20 cames:
Centennial at Trimble
Federal Hocking at Alexander
Meigs at Belpre
·
· VInton County at Nelsonville·
Yprk
Wellston at Miller

•

RG basketball
t-eams slate
pres-season
scnmmages

•

Auto. trans., air, rear
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1 171 30
1 % 58
2 61 56
3 63 91
4 47 115
4 43 115
5
0 135

Friday's slate
Eastern at North Gailla .
Southwestern at Hannan Trace
Symmes Valley at Kyger Creek
Oak Hill at. Southern

scrap for No. 1 with Ironton on
lop for &amp;he third consecutive
week.
The Tigers, who led by 14
points a week ago, · saw their
margin sUp to 205-199 this week,
with both teams-receiving liHtrst
place votes. Ironton went to 8-0
Friday night with a 35-7 win over
Greenup County, Ky ., while
CAPE whipped Wyoming 47-6 to
also remain unbeaten.
Urbana was a distant third
again with 142 points, followed by
HamUton Badin with 131 and
Younglifi!Wn Ursutllle with 128.
• Wheelersburt. lleld &amp;he Jarres&amp;
lead tlllll)' of tile five &amp;up &amp;earns,
&amp;he Plra&amp;etl will! an 83-polnt
spread over aecond place Frederlcktowa Ia Division IV, 205-12%.
Wheelersburg whipped
McDermott Northwest 54-0 Friday night while last week's .No.2
team, Amarcia-Clearcreek, was
losing to Columbus Hamilton
Township, 6-0. The loss dropped
·Amanda all the way to seventh in
thiS week's ·ballotlng.
Fredericktown, 8-0, advanced
one spot Into second, with
Warren Kennedy , a 21-20 winner
over previously unbeaten Campbell Memorial on Friday night,
took over third. The Eagles, 7-1,
were eighth last week.
Steubenville Catholic remained In fourth place, with
Beachwood taking over In fifth.
Archbold, ftfth last week, fell to
ninth despite a 20-14 overtime
Win over previously unbeaten
Swanton.

I

Sports briefs

•

Smith-Nelson Motors, Inc.
JOO USIIIAII

'·

J osh Halslop, who has three
100-yard -plus games but has n't
pulled the trick since his 147-yard
effort against Southern three
weeks ago, will get his chance to
run, as will tailback Bill Potter:
If the Highlanders perform as
expected, they are assured of no
worse than repeating las t year's
5-5 finish.
Valley rises to fourth
In the prep rankings , Symmes
Valley rose from fifth to fourth in
Division V, Region 19, behind
Southern Ohio Confere nce leader
Green Local, TVC front -runner
Trimble (a ll three are 8-0) a nd
top-ranked Shadyside.
·
Kyger Creek comes in at 11th,
followed by North Gallla at 20th,
Southwestern at 22nd, Ree(lsville
at 32nd (lied with Gal ton Northmar). Southern at 35th and
Hannan Trace at 36th.
Oak Hill took 16th place In
Division IV, Region 15, one slot
behind Belpre •and four places
behind Nelsonville-York.

•

Linl12

99~

SkUag
The Alpble World Cup Committee hopes to make World Cup
skiing a year-round sport by
beginning the 1991 men's European circuit as early as October.
The plan, devised during a
meeting at Kitzbllehel, Austria,
will have to be approved by the
sport's world governing body,
FIS, which Is meeting next
month at Moscow.

.

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l.iTi 12

I 41:::::..

Olympics
Britain's athletes received a
grant of $480,000 to· help their
preparation tor the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. The Sports Council pledged the mqney as a
reward for outstanding performances 'in this year's European
Cup, which Britain's men's team
won, and the World Cup, in which
It finished third.

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Power
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•

"'·1174

People Eaters. as Racine's success is scheduled to come to the
confines of the James W. Hay man Gymnasium In three weeks.
The morning line says the Hill's
backtl~ld tandem of Rob Adkins
and 1,000-yard rusher Josh Ru!f
should run wild .
SWJI8.Baaaaa'Traee
Forget the fact that the Highlanders haven't put two wins
together since the middle of last
season, when they won four in a
row. The James gang will beat
the Wildcats going away.
The Wildcats have worn the
collar tor the last stx games, and
could very well wear It again
against a ·beefy Highlander defensive front COD$1sting of Brent
Davies, John Sites, Chris Ford,
Chris Metzger and Keith Carter,
among others. Trace can't hope
to make It to the win column !tits
offensive line can't keep the heat
off quarterback J .J . Bevan.
Southwestern skipper Jack
James has said that fullback

-~

Air, auto .• • grtNit running - good looking

cer.

Oak Hill .. ... .. .... ... 4
Kyger Creek .... ... .4
North Gallla .. .. ....3
Southwestern ... .... 2
Eastern .... ........ ... 1
Southern .............. !
Hannan Trace ..... 0

•

'

.,

PF PA

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Wrl&amp;er
· COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Sandusky St. Mary's took over
the No. 1 spot In this week's
United Press International Ohio
High School Football Coaches'
Division V football ratings.
The unbeaten Panthers, 8-0
following a 35-8 win over Clyde
Saturday night, advanced from
their runnerup spot of a week ago
following Newark Catholic's second consecutive loss, a 21-7
setback at tlhe hands of Heath on
Saturday.
That loss dropped the Green
Wave, who had been No.1 for five
consecutive weeks, from first all
the way down to No. 5.
St . Mary's picked up lO .ttrst
place votes and 188 poll points,
while Lima Cental Catholic and
Minster also advanced one s.pot
to second and third with 179 and
169 points, respectively, with
Arlington tn fourth with 119, all
with 8-0 records. LCC and Ml nster each received four first place
votes.
Newark Catholic, now 5-2, still
got three firsts and 94 points in
fifth .
The other four leaders remained unchanged In this week's
ratings - Cleveland St. Ignatius
in Division I, FostOria In IL
Ironton In III and Wheelersburg
In IV.
St. Ignatius, which beat Lakewood St. Edward 21·0 Friday
night to run Its record to 7·0, held
a 237-212 margin over Clnctrinatl
Elder In Division I, getting 21
first place votes to three for the
Panthers, also 8·0.
Princeton, 7-1, inched Into
third place ahead of unbeaten
Lancaster, the V!kings with 153
points and the Golden Gales with
145. Dayton Wayne was In fifth
with 109 and Can ton McKinley
sixth with 108.
Fostoria's lead over runnerup
Akron Buchtel In Division II was
257-192 with the Red men also
holding a 17-5 edge In first pla~e
votes.
Fostoria ran Its record to 8·0
Friday night with a 28·7 win over
Oregon Clay, while Buchtel, now
6-1, beat Akron Kenmore 41·0 on
Saturday .
Minerva, 8-0; advanced all the
way from eighth to third this
week with 140 points, foUowed
-closely-by Harrison In fourth with
134, Franklin tilth with 133 and
Steubenville sixth with 131.
Ia Dlvlaloa ID, lroa&amp;oa 11111!
CAPE conllaaed &amp;heir &amp;wo-&amp;eam

.

~

.

.
live quarterback, has added a Stout back to full form, the
dimension of quickness and Pirates mixed the pass and the
breakawayspeedthathasserved run quite equally for the first
on many occasions to keep time In five weeks against the
defenses awake.
Wildcats, as that game's passTo their credit, the Bobcats / run pulse of 145/198 shows. A
will make sure lhlf VIkings' solid running game, featuring
defense doesn't go to sleep when running backs Billy Williamson
they unleash the crunchback and messenger fullbacks Chris
tandem of junior Joe Edwards Skidmore and Casey Staton, and
and sophomore Phil Bradbury a possession-receiver ·carps of
and speedback Brian Vinson, split end Clinton Kelley and 6·5
notorious tor giving opposing tight end D.J. Hammel, the
def~ses .a choice between dig- Eagles will have their talons
glngtnforhead-knocktngcontact more than full &lt;it the Pirates.
and the fox hunt, with the fox
:U that weren't proof enough,
usually winning. Until _last remember this - at least tour
week's massacre at Oak Hill, players combined to rush for
that was the dilemma that Eastern's 107 net yards In last
Kyger's opponents faced, and week's 26-6 loss to Southwestern,
one that the Bobcats must while Williamson gained 131
present with a vengeance to the yards against Trace.
VlkJngs.
Oak HIU--Sou&amp;hern
After all, the Bobcat backfield
It's been three weeks since
doesn't want to get handcuffed Southern last won a game, and
for 48 yards, as was the case unlike basketball, you don't play
against the Oaks .
the same team twice In the same
Eulern-N. GaiUa
season. After tomorrow night,
For the first time since ending the entire Racine area will be
last !reason with three stra{ght happy for that tact.
wins, North Gallla coupted last
The Oaks, playing catch-up for
week's 32-0 knockout o1 Hannan the first ttme·s tneethetrlastdays
Trace with the preVious week's in the Ohio Valley Conference,
21-0 whitewashing of Southern to know that they must not let the
pick up their second consecutive , Tornadoes gain even one ounce of_
victory. Facing an Eastern · momentum. A victory by South·
squad that has scored a paltry 12 ern, who has absolutely nothing
polftts in Its last tour games, the to lose but pride, would mean
Bulls are the morning-line favor- '-more !hOlD the Tornadoes' second
tte to make like the 49ers and of the seison. The Oaks would be
walk away with their third tn a bumped from the league title
row.
•
race.
By the way, the verdict In the ,
As dangerous as any team In
Hannan Trace game was the Southern's position can be, don't
Bucs' fourth shutout of the year. Jook for any miracles tomorrow
With junior quarterback Brta~ night from the future Purple

Ironton, 'Burg lead
their divisions

1984 CHRYSLER USER TliRBO

WHY YOU SHOULD

I

SVAC standings
l

(SVAC only)
Team
W L PF PA
Symmes Valley ... 5 0 159 40

.-e...,.,.

I

I.

(All games)
Tellm
WL
Symmes Valley ... 8 0
OakHtll .. ..... .. ..... 7 1
Kyger Creek ....... .7 1
Southwestern ....... 4 4
North Gallla ....... .4 4
Eastern ............... 2 6
Southern ....... ....... ! 7
Hannan Trace .. .. .0 8

Redwomen cop MOC title
The teatn may have one more
fense with 17 kills, while Shelly
Mid-Ohio Conference -game to Hoop recorded 15, Sharp had five
play, but ihe Tuesday victory of and Chris Williams and Michelle ·
the University of Rio Grande Spears added four apiece. Hoop
volleyball team over Urbana has · also had four block solos and 14
cinched them their second con- digs, while Zempter and Willi·
ference championship.
ams had two block solos each. •
Playing before a packed house i Shannon Huston led the defense
at Urbana, theRedwomenbested, with 17 digs.
.
the Blue Knights 15-8, 15-10,15-12'
The team continues District 22
to compile a 7-0slandtng, the only play Thursday at Central State.
undefeated team in the MOC.
Overall, the Rio ladles are 31-6.
" It was an important game for
us," Coach Patsy Fields remarked. "Urbana was poised to
upset us and they played as hard
as they could play . But the team
pulled us through. ·we have tile
championship, and no one can
take it away from us."
•
The team' s final confere'!ce
'
match will be at Walsh.onOcUl8,
but the Cavaliers currently have
J;'re-season scrimmages have ·
two losses in MOC action, Fields
been scheduled by the basketball
said.
,
teams at the University of Rio
Fields noted that it has been a
Grande.
good year for an essentially
The Redmen will open a
young team whose tnex~rtence
five-game slate Saturday, Nov. 4
was a concern prior to the
at 11 a.m. at Kenyon. They are
season. However. the coach
home Monday, Nov. 6 at 4 p.m.
noted that the younger players against Otterbein: home, Wedperformed well, par.ticularly so- . nesday, Nov. 8 at 6 p.m. ,
phomore Robin Sharp In the Fairmont State; home, ~'rlday,
setter's position. Sharp Inherited Nov. 10 at 6 p.p1., Ohio Wesleyan:
·the slot from All-District and
and away, Saturday, Nov.11 at 1
All-Conference veteran Krts
p.m., Ohio Northern.
Cochran, who is serving as the
The Redwomen are at home,
team's as sis tan I coach.
Thursday, Oct . 26 at 6 p.m., West
"So much depended upon them Virginia Tech; home, Saturday.
doing things right, but they did it . Nov. 4 at 3 p.m. , Otterbein; and
right," Fields ~aid .
,
home, Thursday,Nov.9at6p.m .•
The Rio ladies won the MOC
Fairmont State. The team plays
championship for the ftr'st time an exhibition game with Shawon Oct. 31,1987wilh a thtee-gam~&gt; nee State on Tuesday. Nov. 7 at
victory, also over Urbana, leav- 7: 30 p.m. at Bloom Local High
Ing the team w(th a 9-1 finish in School,' South Webster.
the conference. The Redwpmen
The men's and women's teams
joined the MOC that year.
open the regular season on the
In Tuesday's Urban~ match,
road Tuesday , Nov. 14 at KenTeresa Zempter paced· the of·
tucky Christian.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

Three-way tie- for first may ·result if KC upsets Vikings

furious Meigs comeback. That
interception was
school's
record seventh of the year for
_Baker. Klckofftime for the game
ts ·at 7: 30.

TVC Football S&amp;andlap
(All Games)
p
Team
W L
Trtmble ...... ... ..... .8 0 184
Nelsonvute-York ..6 2' 146
VInton County ...... 5 3 183
Belpre . ....... .. ...... .5 3 118
Meigs .......... ..... ... 3 5 106
Wellston .. ......... .. .3 5 103
Mtller ....... ........... 2 6 69
Federal Hocking ..0 8 37
Alexander .. ........ .0 8 35

Polnaoy-MidrJeport, Ohio

-·-

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••
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I

Thundlly. October 19. 1989

The o.-y Sa •li•ll

Barrett reunion held
•

Tile serond annual Barrett
famUy reunion for the four
cblldren of the late Clayton and
Iva Taylor Barrett was held
recently at the Rutland Church of
the Nazarene.
Attending were Richard and
Jessie Barrett Grueser, Charles
Richard Grueser, Greg Van
Meter,·Rutland. John an,d Madll"
Barrett File, Lake City, Tennj
VlrgU and Louise Fife Frye,
Andy and Tammy Neader, Gary,
Dan. Sandra, and Tyson, Willi·

Romine, Bickar.
reunion held
The annual Romine and Blckar
reunion was held recently at the
American Legion Eli Dennison
Post in Rupand .
Attending were Charles and
Otnlia Romine, Kenneth, Tina,
and Bernard Romine, Kathryn
Lambert, ali o! Rutland; Alice
Plantz, Annette and Clay Russell, Middleport; Mildred, John,
and Jo Blckar, Theresa, Joey.
and Mike Branoslcy, Huntington,
W.Va.; Charles, Dianna, and
Charles Morris II, Charles Romine, Robert Romine, Steven,
Tammy, aDd Steve Morris Jr.,
Terry, Drema, Teresa, and
Missy Fleshman, Bill Jr. and
Jennifer Romine, Bill Sr., Barb,
and Lorretta Romine, all of
Columbus; Ernest Romine,
Rockbridge; Robert Jr., Cookie,
Jeff, and Crystal Romine, Lockbourne; Scharlotte, Elmer, and
Sherry Morris, Melvin and Jessie
Romine, Groveport; Melvin H.
Romine and friend, Cris Mar·
quls, Columbus; and Larry Romine, U.S. Marines, Cali!.

&amp;1'1\Sburg, W.Va.; Steven Frye,
GeOrgia; Clarence and Jessie
Fife Might and David, VIcki

Might Metheny and Ricky, Latrlcla and Eric, Shane Brown,
Vinton; Bill and Shirley File
Scran and BIUy. WWiamsbllrg,
W.Va.; Margie Swick McLauah·
lin, Gal UpoUs, Clifford and
EvelYn Might, VInton; Robert

and Mary Barrett, Middleport. ·

Shelly, New Haven, W.Va.; Connie Barrett Staats and Laren,
Pomeroy; Candy Staats, Rutland; and Tammy Staats,
Pomeroy.
B.J. Steward, Columbus; Charles, Florence and Marlene Bar-

Charles and Norma Barrett
Stanley, Chucb Stanley, Muon,
W.Va.; ClndyandChariasaStanley, Middleport; Anna Barrett
Collins, Columbus; Roger ~nd
Jenny Barrett, Shannon and

rett, Rutland; Charles D., Ann
Barrett. and Lana, Robin Barrett
Haning and Jtmmy and Joey
Dawn, Rutland; Charlie Barrett
In, Rutland; Kim Stewart, Middleport; John and Florence Taylor Fletcher, Cleveland.

.

Thursday,

Special Ra~e For This Sale Offered By •••
Citizens National Bank* of Point Pleasant, WV
BI1JUIY! THIS IS A LDOT.ID TDIE OFFER!
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FACTORY AUTHORIZED REBATES HAVE BEEN EXTENDED AND INCREASED!

IBID COUGAR LS
STOCK NO. 261

1910 FORD RANGER 412

THURSDAY
POMEROY -TheM! . Herman
United Brethren Church, Texas
community, Pomeroy, will have
revival through Sunday at 7:30
p.m. nightly. The evangelist will
be the Rev. Carsey Knittle,
Lancaster. Pastor Robert Sand.
ers invites· the public.

COOLVILLE -The Vanderhoof Baptist Church, Coolville,
will have Its !all revival through
Saturday at 7 p.m. each evening.
Rev. Mark McClung of the
Mullen Memorial Baptist Church
will be the evangelist. Paster
Cecil A. Morrison Invites the
public.
POMEROY The Meigs
County Democratic Executive
Committee 'will hold Its regular
monthly meeting on Thursday,
7:30p.m., at the Carpenters Hall,
Pomeroy. A member for the
Board of Elections will be selected at that lime.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
group o! A.A. and AI-Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
F o·r InformatIon c a II
1-800-333-5051.
-

.8799181 *

•14,

'DEALER RETAINI RUAlE, TAX I TillE EXTRA

'DEALER IIETAIIII REBAlE, TAX I 111\.E !'XfRA

1989 FORD F·IID

1989 FORD ESCORT LX

. Heidi Cobb, bride elect of Zane
Beegle, was honored recently
with a shower given by Martha
McPhail and Heather, at their
home In Syracuse.
Games were played with prizes
going to Sue Ann Beegle, Tracy
Beegle, and Kim Calvert.
Attending were Carol McCullough, Laura Salser, Ilene Buck,
Sue Ann and Tracy Beegle,
Carolyn Adams, Jean Bowen,
Kim Calvert, Heidi C:obb and her
mother, Sandra Cobb.

RACINE -The Meigs County
Health Department will be conducting a flngerstick cholesterol
screening at the Racine Home
National Bank on Thursday !rom
9-11 a.m. There will be a $5
charge for this service with no
appointment necessary.
STJVERSVILLE - The Stl·
versvllle Community Church will
have its Holy Ghost revival
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday
at 7: 30 p.m. nightly. Larry Nix,
Asheville, N.C. will be the
evangelist. Gary Holter, pastor,
Invites the public.

STOCK NO. 9951

RACINE -The XI . Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, wftl have Its rush party

Class set for
basketbaU
officiating

p.m. Denver Hill, Foster. W.Va.
Will be the speaker. The public Is
Invited to attend. •

EWINGTON -The Ewington
Church
of Christ In Christian
TUPPERS PLAINS - There
will be a special meeting for the Union will host the "Country
VFW Auxiliary on Thursday at Hymn Time Reunion" and hymn
7: 30 p.m. to make plans for the sing on Saturday at7: 30p.m. The
turkey dinner to be held Nov. 11. event will be under the direction
Ail members are urged toattertd. of Dan Hayman. The public Is
REEDSVILLE -The Ohio invited to attend with the former
Division or Wlldli!ewill sponsor a Country Hymn Timers for this
hunter safety course on Thurs- special occasion.
day, and Oct. 23 at Eastern High
POMEROY -The singing
School from 6-9 p.m. each
group,
"Chosen" from Rutland,
evening. Preregistration Is rewill
perform
Saturday at 7 p.m.
quired and class size will .be
at
the
Pomeroy
Church or the
limited to 40 students. Call
Nazarene
during
revival servi1-800-282-3557 to register. ·
ces with Rev. Chris Meenach,
ROCK SPRINGS -The Child ventriloquist, from Franklin
Conservation League will meet Furnace.
at 6: 30 p.m. on Thursday at the
· RUTLAND - There will be a
Rock Springs grange hall for the
round,
square, and slow dance at
Halloween party .
the American Legion Ell Denison
Post 467, Rutland, on Saturday
FRIDAY
from
8 p.m. to midnight. "CounMIDDLEPORT -The United
try
Combinations"
will provide
Pentecostal Church In Middle·
The
public Is
the
entertainment.
port will be serving and deliverInvited
to
attend.
Ing chicken noodle dinners I&lt;;&gt;
local resldenls and businesses on
SUNDAY
Friday Pat a cost of $3.50.
COOL
VILLE
-The Coolville
Deliveries will be made between
Grace
Brethren
Church
will have
11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Call 992-3824
Sunrevival
services
beginning
for orders.
day atlO a.m. and 7:30p.m. Oct.
MIDDLEPORT -There will
be square dance at the American
Legion Annex on Mill St. in
Middleport on Friday from 8
p.m. to midnight. The Country
Combinations will perform and
the cost Is $5 per couple or $3
single. The public Is Invited to
attend .

23-25. Jim Harris will be the
evangellst!rom Camp Hill, Pa. A
carry In dinner will begin after
Sunday morning services. There
will be special musk each
evening. The public Is Invited to
attend .
·
POMEROY -Dan Hayman
and the Faith Trio will' sing at the
Hysell Run Holiness Church at 7
p.m. on Sunday . Rev. Bob
Grtmm invites the public.
LONG BOTTOM -The gospel
singing group "Called Out" from
Calvin, Ky., will he performing
at the Faith Gospel Church In
Long Bottom on Sunday at 7 p.m.
The public Is Invited to attend.
RUTI.AN::l -Eddie Mollahan
will preach at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church on Sunday at 7 p.m.
RACINE - Sue Avery, Director of the General Board or
Global Ministries of the United
Methodist Church, will be the
guest mission interpreter at the
11 a.m. worship service at the
Racine U.M.C. The public Is
Invited to at-tend.

Plans were made to go shopping In Lancaster on Nov. 11 at
the recent meeting or the Reedsville Nazarene Womens Ministry
Society when the group met at
the home of Sue Douglas with
Marlene Putman as cohostess.
The meeting opened · with
prayer and Barbara Master gave
the devotions on "H.ow Much Do
We Really Know About the
Bible," and read .a poem, " Are
You Listening Lord."
There were 52 shut in calls
reported and the group also
signed cards for the sick and shut
in.

Attending besides those mentioned 1rere Carol Kanawalsky,
Judy Elkins, Robin Putman,
Linda Putman, Wendy Wilfong, •
Cathy Ma~ter , Bonnie Richards, Tam! Pulman, Lisa
Putman, S
SuUle, Mamie •
Buckley, A anda and Rebecca
Richards, Anna Undeman,
Brenda Hand, Cindy Stoyner, .
Johnathan Douglas, Wesley Ka·
nawalsky. Joshua Wilfong, and
Dereck Putman.
The n~xt meeting will be held
Nov. 2 'With Judy Elkins as
hostess and Wendy Wilfong as co
hostess.

True Friends reunion held
The "Old Friends are True
Friends" reunion was held recently at the Racine VIllage
Park.
A covered dish dinner was
enjoyed by the group following
grace by Denver Rice.
Pictures were taken and pictures from previous years were
shown.
A card was signed for Lena
Jones who Is ill.
. Attendjng were Bill Russell,
Tom and Mary Bowen, Marge

Reuter, Cecilia Mitch, and Edle
Sisson, all or Pomeroy.
Peck Jones, Minersville; June
Sayre, Joan Mescher, Syracuse;
Allan and Kathryn Reeves, Cin- ·
clnnati: Denver and Nora Rice,
Middleport; Jim and Jean
Roush, New Haven, W.Va.; Phylls and Ernie Baker, Racine;
Martha Joseph Henderson; and
Mary and Eddie Farley, Monroe,
Mich.
·
The next reunion will tJe held
the second Sunday of October In
1990.

Special Offer from Hallmark!

. DANVILLE - Revival will be
held at the DaD\•tlle Holiness
Church Friday through Oct. 29 at
7 p.m. each evening. Rev. Elbert
Barrow will preach.
MIDDLE;PORT- Revival will
be held at the Middleport Wes·
leyan Bible Holiness Church
Friday through Sunday. Rev.
Marshall Smart will speak each
evening at 7:30 p.m.

BIRTHDAY OBSERVEDCharles Dill was honored
recently wllb a party lor his
71sl blrllld&amp;)'. Attending were
his wife, Belly, and Dick,
Sharon, and Danny Folmer,
Bobby, Unda, Bob, Missy and
Ryan Fosler, Adam Marlin,
Calby, Glu, and Corllley
Searberry, Richard, Roberta,
Tanya, and Riehle Dill.

SATURDAY
BASHAN -There will be a
weekend meeting at the Red
Brush Chu·rch of Christ on
Bashan Road qn Slitu,rday at 7
p.m. and Sunday at 10 a.m. and 6

.

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Gospel concert
set at Syracuse

(Choo.!!c from Two DC&lt;Iligns.)

Ron Jollllson, gospel soloist,
will perform at the Syracuse
Nazarene Church on Oct. 27 at 7
p.m.
Johnson has traveled through·
out the United States and Canada
since 1975, singing gospel music
In numerous local churches for
concerts and crusades, as well as
conventions.
The concert will include some
old and some new selections, plus
a variety or styles.
The community is Invited to
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Recuperating

Your Good Neighbor Bank

Mrs. Guy (Ruby) H)flell hu
underaone a complete blp replacemeat at St. Jo.epb Hospital
iD Parunburg, W.Va.
Cardl may be · .eat to her at
Room 234, St. Joleph Hotpftal,
Parlril!rabUrg, W.Va.
.
J

at the home of So ya Wolfe on
Thursday at 7 p.m. Members are
to meet at 6:15 p.m. at the
Syracuse Pool parking lot.

Women's group meets

OPEN ~YOUQ-

'

The Athens Basketball Of!lclals Association will be conductIng an adult education class for
basketball o!!lclating.
Under new Ohio High School
Athletic Association guidelines,
a person must at tend classes in
order to obtain a permit to
officiate basketball.
The class wUI start Oct. 25 at
Meigs High School at 6:30 p.m.
Further information may be·
obtained at the first class or by
contacting Dave Jenkins in the
evenings at Jl4-882-2976.

Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

Communit calendar

POMEROY - Revival servi·
ces will be at 7p.m. nightly and 6
p.m. on .Sunday, Wednesday
through Sunday at the Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene with
Rev. Chris Meenach and Lester
the puppet. Special services each
evening for children. The public
is Invited to attend.

Bridal shower
held for Cobb

Mr. and Mrs. K.C. Welsh spent
a few days with her sister and
bi'Otller·ln-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Tbeo Hindi, Zanesville.
Mr. and Mrl. Robert Alkire
vlllted Sunday with Mrs. Ed
Bresler and Mrs. Ava Lutz,
t.ancuter .
. The former Mrs. Daisy Mar·
kina, of Zaneaville, visited Saturday with Mrs. Frances Young
and other lrlenda.
Mr. and Mra. Babe Whaley
returned to their home In FlorIda. They vblted two weeki with
hll sister, Margaret Koadval,
and mother, Edith Whaley of
Athelia. They also ,visited rei•·
tlves here.
Mrs. Nellie Lowe Is visiting a
tewweeklwith her slater in West
VIrginia. ·

October 19, 19f9

MASON
773·5514

POINT PLEASANT
.675·1121

NEW HAVEN
882·2135

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Gallipolis
Full House of Cards
· Silver Bridge Plaza
446-7330

Candies Bloomers
Court Street
446.;1777
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- --

-~--

hga 8-The Delily. S ttinal

Announcements
Sh•J aad mliUfll loader llbools

baseball and football card sale on
The Ken Amsbary Chapter of Nov . 11 at Meigs High School
the Izaak Walton League will from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. sponsored
begin slug and mUZZle loader by the Meigs Band Boosters.
shoots on Sunday at 1 p.m. The Admission will be $1 for adults
slug shoots will be held on and $.50 for children under 12.
Sunday, and again on Oct. 29, Cnntact Peggy Lewis at 992-2673
Nov. 5, Nov.12, Nov.19, and Nov . for information.
26. Muzzle loader shoots will be
held on Dec. 17, Dec. 24, and Dec.
Square duce
31. The shoots will consist of tree
A square dance will be held at
• hand and bench rest events at the Amel'ican Legion Annex on
varl~us distances. RUle and , MIJI St. in Middleport on Nov. 3
. scopes will not be shot In the !romS p .m. to midnight. Bernard
' same category. Various prizes of Connolly and the Traver lets will
meat and money will be perform. The costis $5 per couple
awarded.
and $3 single. The public Is
Invitzd to attend. The caller will
Trick or treat
be Ronnie Woods.
The Orange Township Volunteer Fire Department has anTurkey dinner
nounced that trick or treat will be
The Ladles Auxlliary of the .
held Oct. 30 trom 6-7 p.m.
Orange Township Fire DepartThe Chester Volunteer Fire ment are planning a turkey
· Department has announced that dinner on Nov. 18 beginning al 4
trick or treat will be observed p.m. at the !Ire slatlon.
Oct. 30 from 6-7 p.m. The siren
will sound to begin the trick or
Flu shots
treat hour and It will sound again
The Meigs County Health De·
to signal the end of the hour. partment will be administering
Firemen will .b e throughout the flu vaccines on , Oct. 25 from 9
town for the protection of the a.m. to noon and 1-3 p.m. !or the
children.
seniors and disabled at !he senior
The Olive Township Fire De- c.Itlzens cenier. On Oct. 26 at the
partment Is announcing trick or samettimes for the general public
treat for the Long Bottom and at the health department. There
Reedsville areas on Oct. 30 from
will be a charge of $.50 for senior
6-7p.m.
citizens and the disabled, and $1
. The Rutland VHiage Council is for the general public. A make up
·announcing trick or treat for Oct. date will be held on Nov. 3 from
30 from 6-7 p.m.
noon to"4 p.m.
· ·Donation auction
The Eastern Local AcademiC
Boosters will be sponsoring a
consignment and donation auc·
:ucn on Oct. 28 at the high school.
. ;contact Anna McCoy at 985-3907
1&gt;r Kathy Manicke at 667-3730
"tor information. 1.0. McCoy will
serve as the auctioneer.

Veteran day dinner
_ The Racine American Legion
Post 602 will sponsor a dinner of,
bean soup, corn bread and ham
'Sandwiches at the post home on
Nov .11 at 11 a.m. A salute will be
given to commemorate Veteran
Day. Any person who has worn a
service uniform Is invited to
attend.

Thursday, October 19• .1989

Pomeloy-Midciaport. Ohio
Mllllllon Interpreter
The East Letart Unlll!d Methodist Church will host a Mission
Interpreter on Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. VIrginia Snavely, Monti·
cello, Ind., ••rho with her hus-

children. The River Junction
Bluegrass Bahd will perform.
Special meetillc
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will have a special meeting
on Tuesday at 7 p.m . at the town
house. All members are urged to
attend.

band, co-founded Grace Child·
ren'sHospltal in Haiti, will be the
speaker. The Rev . Roger Grace
Invites the public.
Bo.lera meeting

The Southern Junior High
booster association will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the junior
high school building In Racine.
All parents of junior high stu·
dents are urged to attend.

Classified

INGELS CARPET
OCTOBER

MODEL OPEN DAlY MONDAY
TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATUIDAY
SUNDAY

SPECIALS '

you'w worlled long. h.-d hours
to .ubliloh ond buld your . ·
IUCCIIIful bullnMI.

·VINYL
FLOORING

But. how would you INinoge ·
to~.... your bualneo• going if
you were to become uneble to
work - to ., UI18Jipected
dilobillty from ICCI-t or
alc:tcneio 7 would pey thoae
ongolnv expen--rent. hut.
oiOC1rlclty, Mlorlll7
.
Notlo-ldo h• tho '1111wer.
With NMionwiclo'l Buain••
.Ovorheed Expenae Progronr
you eM pt., oheed to help
protOC1 your imp-nt
bualn.._
Soe
tocat Notlonwiclo
ln11•ro••ce ogont for dMolla

lEG.

~~[:::::~
.
.....

.

.

PIICI ss.99

sq. yd.

Go:lha or Muon counrt• must D" pre

•ReCiiwe • .&amp;0 dilcount lor ads Plid in ad\lnee
'Freeldt - G.weM~Way and Found ads una• 16 words w11l be
"'" 3 O.,a at no ch•ge
'Prlc. ot ad for all ~ftll l«tert 11 ooubte pnc:. of ad coat
'7 point .......,"Oft~ Ulld
-

s399 ~Q.YD.

S6 99

SCULPTURED
CARPET

•&amp;entin .. IIJ not ,_DOnsibte for .,-ron attar f1r11 d.,. rCh.O

tor errors ftrst d., ad runs '"p..,., ) Call before 2:00p .m
dt¥ lh• .,.._,a.hon 10 m•• correeuon
'Ali• th.a mun be ,.id '"advance ••
Card of Thlf"'ICI
In MemertM'I

SQ. YD.

Turkey dinner
The Ladies Auxlliary of the
VFW Post 9053 in Tuppers Plains
wlll have a turkey dinner on Nov.
11. The menu wlll include turkey,
dressing, mashed potatoes and
gravy, noodles, hot roll, dessert
and tea or coffee. The price will
be $4 for adults and $2 for
children under 12. Serving will
begin at 4 p.m.
Bake and card sale
There will be a bake sale and

WIEDNEIDA"r' PAPEP
FRIDAY PAPE~
SUNDAV PI\PE•

IANGA·BACK
(No

Plllldlng

Nledetll REG. PIKE 11D.99

Steve Tracy of Pomeroy has
been selected as this year's
Klamfoth Memorial Scholarship
by Washington Technical
Colllege.
The scholarship was established for second year students in
welding fabrication technology.
Tracy, a 1988 graduate of-Meigs
High School, Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jay Tracy, Pomeroy.
The Klamfoth Memorial Scho·
larshlp was established last year
In memory of the late Dave
Klamf~th of Belpre, an original
merfl ber of WTC 's Board of
Trustees, serving from 1971
through 1986. He founded Klam"·
foth Sales of Marietta, a welding
supply business which his family
continues to own and operate.
The scholarship, given to a
second year welding student in
good academic slandlng, can be
applied to the student's tuition,
books or supplies at WTC.

beans, corn bread, cole slaw, pie,
cake, and hot dogs will be served.
The public Is Invited to attend.

Bazaar slated
A Christmas bazaar wUl be
slaged at the Heaih United
Methodist Church In Middleport
on Nov. 11 to raise funds with
which to purchase Christmas
gifts for residents at American!·
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Shirley Quickel, Amerlcare
activities director, and her department are handling the fund
raising activities. A variety of
crafts as well as special holiday
decorations, and some good used
rummage will be for sold from 10
a.m. to 3Jl.m. Mrs. Quickel noted
that Marilyn Meier has donated a
number of homemade country
crafts for the bazaar.

·

Dean's list
Two Meigs County students
were on tire dean's list of
Mountain State College for the
summer quarter. The two earnlngagradepointaverageot3.5or ,
more were Cathy Spencer, Long
Bottom, enrolled In the medical
asslsling program, and Angela
Damewood of Reedsville, en·
rolled In travel and tourism with
accounting.

.30
.42

19.00
113.00

.10

•d•.

rtao

pafle·• cm,er thE' ·
following telephone exchanfles ...
O.lha Cou.nv
.,,..codel14

M••vs County
ANa Code 614

M.. ort Co .. WY
Are• CocH 304

U6 - Gall ...... •
367-Ch•M•

··2-Middi.,DM
Pomerpv
185-Che&amp;ler

675-Pt P•..anl
•H-L..an

318-Vimon
2oi&amp;-Rlo Grande

2•6-Gu.-n Di.._

loi3-Arabie Dttt
379-W .. nut

M3-Portillnt:l
2o17-LM•n F•lll

Mt-R•ctne

576-Appte GrDVe
773-Masol'l
182-111~ H.,•~'~

IH-~

137-auttelo

742-Rutl.,t:l

167-COOh'iUe

Oet Retaltt Fast

tlon and all amounta due

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCE8B OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION .
NOTICE Ia horoby given

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On October 18, 1989, in
tho Molgo County Probete
Court, Cue No. 28392.
Roootto Miller, 360 Irwin
Rood. Dol-o. ONo 43011,

INGELS CA.RPET

.175 N. 2ND AYE.
MIDDlEPO_n , OHIO

that you hiVe been named a

Dolendont In tho action en·
thled Diomond SIVIngo &amp;

992-7028
CAll TODAY

.

o.tendllnta

Loan· Comp'eny, Plelntiff, Yl.

Will.-d G. Dural, Jr.. 11 ol.,
Oefendanta. This action ha

boon 101lgnod Cou No. 89·
CV-187. end io pending in

rhur~uav-

the Court of Common Plua

NOW IN PROGRESS .....

of Meigo County. Ohio.
•6789. Tho proyor of tho
Complllint dorn.,cla judg·

Friday Saturday -Sunday &amp; Monday

·onu. Monlfoe !. Blevina,
Tino 8levlno. Wlltor&lt;l G,
.Durat. Jr. ond Noncy M.
Durot. oil jointly ond NVM·

ment egMiat the Defend-

elty. In the aum of Nineteen

Thou_,d Fifty-- DoNora
jiOd -ty-lix
Centl
jt19,0111.78) whh lntoroot
ther.on at 1 rate of t6.86
per doy from May 23. 1989.
1nd COI;I oflhlo oetion: the mortgogo nomed In tho
Complolnt be loroclooed

lwenty-olght 128) doyollftor
tho t.t publlcotlon of thia
Notice, which will be pub·
llahed once 111eh week for
llix 18) aucc••lvew-. tho

loot dllo of pubilootion wll
remoln on tho 1Ith doy of
October. 1189, and lho
-nty-olght 128) doya for
••~ wll'

comm•ce on

thet dtrte.ln tMce~eofyour
tellure to anawar or otlwfwlae r•pond u requetted
by tho Ohio RuiM of "CivU

Procedure, jUclgmMit by dofauM wUI be
rM!dored
ogllnat you ond for tho rotlef
domonclod In tho Complaint.
Ootod thia 1 t th doy of
September, 1989.
Lar.., Sponcer,

Clork of Courta,
Molgo County. Ohio
1111 14, 21, 28:
(1(1) a. 12. 19. &amp;tc

Read the Best S*r
Read the

CLRSSftD RDS
3 Announcemams

11nd that the 11.,1 end/or in-

ter•ta in or on uid prop.
arty, if.j any, be marahiHed
.,d the rMI •tate title be

SlOO,OOO

inventory must go by
Monday, Oct. 23rd
item in our store
w be reduced 10°/o
.below our everyday low
••
·prices.

quilled 111d aold property
10ld in the foreclo•ure ac-

2

In Memoriam

thoroln, onTu•doy. thoaev.,oth doy of November.
1989 tho q-tion of 1...,1ng

LINDA'S
PAINTING

1111'ERIOR.UTERIOR

We'D be waiting....

•wNo•s

Mon. thru Thur.
9 Ul te 6 P.M.

Freezers Dishwashers
Microwaves
TrashDiashers

TV's
Stereos
V.C.R.'s
Big Screens

OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 5

7:30 o'dock P.M.
By orclor of tho Bo1rd of
EIOC1iona, of Molgo
County, Ohio
Evelyn Cl.-k, CholrmMI
Jona M. Fl'(myer, Director
DATED SEPT. 12, 1989
(10) 13. 11, 20, 27:
(1 1) 3. 5tc

614-915·4110 .

Fri. 9
Sat••

A.M. tH I P.M.
A.M. tl 6 p.M.

ELLIOTT'S
sava ••aar PLAZA

il

z

*****
125'- PIICE GUAIANTEE!

If you buy tornething from e•oa·•· end
within 30 deya find It for le•et anarMr localnoc~ingdoalo&lt;, Eliotl"owll..tundlllo
diffe,.nce plu1 21% of the difference upon

proof of 1 -prlco.

L.&amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING
Will Video Tape
Weddings,
Birthdays,
Reunions, Interiors
of Homes for
Insurance.

Call 742·2486
After 10·2·
5 ~·"'·
89 ·1 ma.

222

East&lt;lllain
POMEIOY, OH.

99 2 " 6}[~9-tfn
I

GUN $HOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
BaSham' BuHding
EVERY
SAT. 1NIGHT
6:30P.M.

' Fattoty Cholco
12 Gauga Shotg1011 Only
Strictly Enforcod
t0-9-Hn

ROUSH

ISt1111'h at 1:00 P.M.

Will have loJs of Christmas gift items,
·tools, toys, clocks, watches, jewelry, alec·
tronics, fun and games, decorations. je·
welry boxes, dolls, large sale, hundreds of
items. door prizes and give aways. Terms
cash or check with proper 1.0.

Foltary Cholitd 12
Gauge

CIIES!JI, OliO

9-20-ttn

d.

He.n.L Writurl

1,000 GAllONS

ROOFING

POOLS, WELLS

· · - IP'AIR
Downspouts
Gutter C~ening
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

CaD Anytime
'

992-2371
4·25-'89-1 mo.

949-2161
• !1-11-"ft.l ... ..,

ALLEN'S
HAULING

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

· ·KOO GAllON
WATEI SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
DIRT HAULED
992·5275

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD "

BILL SLACK
992-226t
EVENINGS

. BISSELL
BUILDERS

./1189 / tfn

UN'S APPLIANCE
SIIYKE
992-5335 or
. 915·3Sll1
1-27-'lll·tfn

POMIIOY.UIIIS
CLII
224 E. MAIN ST.
·HI-t17e

-.u. ...

- · Ll. ""'
s ,....
...

~ H.D.

r.::::.PII!I.tl .

... ~. of 1111. H.C. ,._
. . Lilli I~ ••

.. l!~ .....
o.;1tt ~ ..s.oo

~ ...,..11' .... 1·J.I•'

DUMP TRUCK
Send-Stone-Dirt

(6141 667-3271

. CUSTOM IUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Pritu"

· PH. 949·2801
or "Rts. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, P-oy Ohio

TEMPS TAR
. BOB'S
HEAnNG &amp;
(OOUNG
SYIACISI

991·1611 ...

'S

AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE
SYIACUSL OliO
MoltForllgnond

Oom•lc YoNcl•
.11/CSonoloo

AIIMijor.MI-

r ,._....

NIABE c;ortlllod Mo-lt

CAU 992-6756
"DOC"
c... lftod

Announcements
'

3 AnnDuncem8nts
I will not be rnponllble tor any
debts oth•r than my own • ol
10119189, L•st•r Young.
Melq-

County

Falrgroundl.

and Gradiit 0..
wereoma. Hunted under U.IC.:t.
NIH. 70% payboek. 110.00
ontry
8:00p.m. lllgn up
d..clline. 8:30p.m. Tr•lng c.,_
A~•slertd

t".

taat. For more InformatiOn call
614-985-3527, 614-667-41351.

No Hunting or

Tmpa~

on

Plckana Propeny at Fllilrocll.
lllgnodP.A.Pick.,..

4

Giveaway

2 black kltt•ns. 1 mall lind 1
••mala, 304-675·7474.

I Wk. aid puppy, ml•od,l)lrt German · Shepherd, IOrM
801ld white, 614-367.0185 or

lrM puooiH, ligloly
Part White O.rm.n

· colof8d.

S - d . Nico
18GS after 7p.m.

Found email gray kht•n. C.mp

COUNTRY

MOBILE
'HOME PARI

SUN'S UP
TANNING

lt. 33 llorth of
r-roy, Ohio
1-12-' 81-1111

992-7479

6

Lost &amp; Found

Conl.y arM, ,...., caN 304175-4181. '

742-2778

,

36425 .... oprl.... lei.
,_,.,, 01.
992-6155

HANDWDvtH BASIETS
IASI!T WEAVING

DAVE'S
SMAll tNGINE
IEPAII

l..._
.. llillcllofort, Oh.

Loaolltlat Yalloy

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Mo•t 2 and 4-cycla
enginai

Siock Porta for
Homlilto.WHdootor.
Tocum..h. 8rtggo &amp;
Stratton.

-HDliSF FOR SALE

CLASS£5 OFfERED

Jorrlcho Rood, 304-67S.3851.

LOll IMIW btack wau.r .._k'a
parll.ing 1o1 •tnall , . . . , no
quMtion• ..k, 304-87W201.

Loot-Red Tick temolo Wlikor,
Comllalk Hunting ground, 110
return, p~ona: 114-:ZU-1101..
Loll: Callie dog, llioslna 1 wl,
name, Jas~r. to• rn 141
Vlclnily, IU-446-21115.

Loat Ring of keys wiWhlt• pia•

Uc lag, lOst at Olllipolil Fl•
Marbt on Sundq'. 304-47521(19.
Lo.t: red, whltl ,..,..... and
black, whit• mala •·~- LDIII
Oct. I, Sycamore Gn:tve Rd.,
Raclrw. 61.-843-5171.

1

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclnhy
ALL Yard Salet Muat Ba Paid In
Advtnca. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

ll'le dly bllfore Utt ad • to Nn.

UGLE mGE

edition • 2:00 p.m.
Monday edition • 2:00

Sunday
Fri~ay.

p.m. Saturday.

Oct. 20 &amp; 21, t-5, plnll crib,
beda, Plantz Sub. 359 Circle Or.
Gallipoll•, 614-446·1944.

New faii/Winler Hours
Thurqs 10:00·3:00
Slturdlys 10:0().3:00'
" · ' ·9·28·'11'1 mo.

.

LOST1 black brown and whne
Beegl• w•artng r.d collar on

THE
BASin WEAVE

SUSAN (OUMAN

giH1 01.._

PH. 992:5612
or 992-7121

742•21

u- ltl. in
lutlantl, Oh.

H2·7382 der 5p.m.

Cull

Puppl" lo good homo, t27
Ho""ard St., Ntw Haven Helghta,
304-882-3713.

4-25-tfn

2'1• Miles Out lllew

C.llco kiH•n to good home. 114-

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
~l•o Tr••••IIIIOI

•Mobile Homii
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rantala
•Lot Rentals

G~A.~~~I'-P-H~.~~~~!~!2

At Jet. S.l. 7 &amp; 143
On The BJ"!.~u •·

114-367-7750.

985·4422

NEWLAND
fNTERPRISU

992-5114

Money Hunt. Oelober 21,1111.
Shade River Coonhunt.,. Cklbo

"

1st visit FlEE
-Possibly mora.

Make•- Gas or
E illctrlc, Also Part•
for AH Makes.
CAILIIOW

Chlcktd.

' HOURS

Gutters

CISTERNS

Cell for Fell Speclelt

We Service All

Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless Steel;
7 Days A Week
9 a.m.· 7 p.m.

•GRAVEL
/ •LIMESTONE
'·•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

DOZER .
SITEWORK - ROADS
CLEARIUG

Non Ferrous

1-800-535-2199

SUI'I'liS
It's Tiltlt Now!
Hav1 That Furnace

We But AI

Tel FrH

WATER '
SERVICE

9- 21-1ll-1mo

POMEROY, OHIO

ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
Member Nation•l Pest
Cont1ol Assn.

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

$45,000

R.;L HOLLON
TRUCKING·

RECYCLING

SIIICE 1976

RUTLAND TOWNSHIP

Shott- Only
Factory Chob
STIICn Y ENFOKEDI
9-21-89-1 mo.

HARTFORD, W.VA.

STEWART
TRUCKING

HIGLEY FARM

G~~t~~~

111-coum

TRI·CO. TEUITE
I PEST CONTIOl

bottom, hill land,
timber, 2
ing gas we11s.

EVERY SUNDAY ,
Beginning Sept. 17

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hcts, Pomeroy.

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-Uc

145 acres, barn,

GUN SHOOT

z

r1pair Gas Tanks.

FOR SALE

CONSTIUmON'
GllGI. IOUSM
' GENERAL

RACINE \
GUN CLUB

::1: ~614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213.
- Gallipolis, Oltio 45631

9·7· 89· 1 mo.

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

at the Hartford Community Bldg.

102 IITB 8'111DT, hiiW BAVD, WV
For Appolllln•diSirlollllnqu. . - PIIIM Call:

or No....SUNDAY
949-2860

lt. 124 .., ....
Wilkomtlo anll
S.IHI C•t•

Sunday, Oct. 22, 1:00 P.M.

ADDRESS:

Pll. 949-2801

also odd boil and rod
out radiators. We also

L. W.

listeninc Devices
·Dependable Hearinc Aid Sales &amp; Sentictl
'Hearin&amp; Evaluations For All Ages

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S. ·
~ Licensed' Clinical Audiologist

radiators · ond

PAT Hill FOlD

HAYIIEFIHIKES

&lt;.:J

We con r~ir and ,..

VUY IUSOIUBLE

pal•ti,.

MARnN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

Golly GHI
look who's 431
HAPPY BIITHDA yI

- SERVICE

core

992·:l22S . . ·

or

9 / 181 1 mo. pd .

heater car1L We can

ALL MAKES AND
MODELS

Business Services

CHRISTMAS
AUCTION

•BREAKFAST, LUNCH, SANDWICHES &amp; PIZZA
·ISTABUSHED BUSINESS PORt YEARS .
oQOOD GROWTH AT 1ft PER YEAR .
•LOCATED' BY 3 LAROE INDUSTRIAL PLANTS

992·9922

PuUino

"FREE ESTIMATES
Take tho pain out of
let - tlo
it or you.

SWEEPER REPAIR

A.M. 1nd remain open untl

RICHARD REYNOLDS
AUCTIONEER 301-89

Refrigerators
Ranges
Washers
Dryers

Probeto Judge

Leno K. NOI. .Ood, Clerll
(10(19, 2&amp;: (1 1) 2, 3tc

IOidEiec:tion
wNI beop.,oite:30o"ctoc:tc

12

t Forget· We
Will Rent To Own
Any of These·Items.
at the
Reduced Price.

Robert E. Buck.

caedlng 'h. milia for eiiCh one
dol• of volulllon, which
amountl to five cent•
t•!jo,:IH~ each one hun~
of VII!UIItion, for

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB

·

•

ond opemlng cernotert..
Sold tu being: ., eddltlonlltox of 'h miH to run lor
five (5) yearaat • rate not ax:

Cell Any Board
Member or Our
New Office at 382
E. Second St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992·2403
Public lnvhed

Public Sata
&amp; Auction

ty, Ohio. 4&amp;7el.

tho .P u - of molntolnlng

GUN SHOOT

Sadly ml•ed by
Daughter and
Husband and our
families.
Grandchildren,
Great·grencl
children

E-Pom-.

- _.-ot.m
of
lllo-eofJohnL.Moro. Do-od,lalloof41999S..Drt.o.
Molgo Coun-

• tu, In exoeea of the ten
mHIIimitotlon, for tho bon•
fit of Selem Townahlp for

Yo• ~rtlllfHt4

8

All Inventory
Priced for Cush
&amp; Corry!

,

the regular pi8CM of votrtg

Oct. 19, 1988

Who passed

'

If You

of tho Boord of
_;,t;nhe~ T;,ow:nahp
0 Ohio.
,
doy of
wll be
Oubmlti~ tO I Yotl of the
poople of 10ld Solom Towilahip ot o GENERAL ELECTION to be hold in tho
County of Molgo, Ohio, et

away

Of
ELVA DAVIS

·

'

thl't In pursuance of a Rea·

Steak Dinner
Door Prizes.
Entertainment .
"Jan and Kathy"
They're G,...t

In !\~!amory

..

"'·•'.

Meigs Co. Farm
Bureau AMual
Meeting Tuesday
Night, Oct. 24,
1919, 7:17 P.M.

Pizza·Subs·Salads-Dailv Soecials

POit~terG•Y,

Locolly Ownod &amp; Operllod by Bill,

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
. ·· INSULATION

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

~~~0c~~~!~G~.~tlff
VS •

POMEIOY AIID MIDDLEPORT'S OIILY
LOCALLY OWNED PillA SHOP.

614·992-2471

P. 0. Box 207

1/4/89-ttn

Public Notice

proceedl of the aile.
You are required to enMer the Complllnt within

SATURDAY

Monthly
16
11 . 30/ diV
.05/day
Rat• we lor con•cutiW ryna, broken upd~twill bec:hwotd

Public Notice

CASE NO. 89-CV-187
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION.
TD: Noncy M. Durot. wh01&gt;
laat known Heir•• wu P.
0. Box 326, Utchfield Pork,
Arizono 86340.
You oro hereby notified

LOWEST NICES TIIS YUI
EXPERT INSTAIUnON AVAIUBLE

Visit Spooky
Street-

~

10

16.00

Public Notice
Plaintiff be pold from the

IIGHEST QUAliTY

FlEE lOCAl DEUYEIY

FAMILY HOMES INC.

wor_•
20

Public N otlce

et el.,

Over

canlo, fromCarltonCanla.

11 :00A.M SATURQA't'
2:00P.M . MONDAY
2 :00P.M TUEIOAY
2 :0D P.M WEDNESDAY

- 2 :00P.M . THV,PlSDAY
- 2o00 P.M FRIPAY

WILLARD G. DURST, JR ..

Coal miDera Jamboree
The UMWA Christmas Committee will present the fourth
annual Coal Miners Jamboree to
benefit area childrens services
on Nov. 4 at 7 p.m. in the Meigs
High School Gymnasium.
Tickets can be purchased at the
door for $5 for adu Its and $2 for

An aillefuDofHallu..oen

'

9~,, 16

Ratt
&amp;4.00

...._....

OVD 300 PAnDNS

Cbrlslmu party ·
The VFW Post9053 and Ladies
Auxiliary In Tuppers Plains will
have a Christmas party for
members and family on Dec. 16
at 6: 30 p.m. The auxlllary will
furnish the meal and everyone Is
to bring a covered dish. Santa
Claus will be present to give out
treats and a gift exchange for the
kids with a $3 ltmlt.

In the Monday . night Five
Points class of SUnderella, Cindy
Lambert lost the most weight.
In the Tuesday night Mason
class, Jane Johnson loyt the most
weight and In the teen's class,
Angle Seidenable lost the most
weight.
New members are now being
accepted for the winter classes.

Worcll
16
, fi
16
16

sq.yd.

~~l~. 20°/o~~F

will have a craft show and sale on

Dec. 2 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Soup

SlindereOa class
meeting held

1
3
6

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
,

MANNINGTON

The Ladles Auxlllary of the

STEVE TRACY

D•v•

Hfree E1tlmart•"

VFW post 9053 in Tuppers Plains

Scholarship
awarded

-

THIIU

LOWEST PIKES

.1:00 P.M.·6:00 P.M. or Cal For Appointment

DAY BE'FORE PU8Ltc.t.T!ON

COPV DEADLINE MONDAV PAPE~
TUESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

Craft sbow aud sale

Boy scout meetlilg
Boy Scout troop 245 of Middleport will have its first meeting on
Oct. 23 at the Presbyterian
Church in Middleport at 6 p.m.
All boy scouts are urged to
attend.

s...

will alao app.., in the Pt Pi-lint Reotlter and the Gall•·
pohs De~ TribUne. ,.ach~r~g owr 11.000 homm

'

Smol'(asboard dinner
The Bashan Ladies Auxlllary
wlll be sponsoring a Smorgas·
board Dinner on Nov. 4.

111PDY Acil
V ard

•A cranittecl edlfert•m~• pl.c«i rn The Oaily Sant.n-' ,..,. .
cept - cl•tif•.t diapt...,, 8us•n•• C~rd tnd 1. . -' nott~ ·

IScotchgardl lEG. NKE S9,95

CARPET

MODULAR HOMES
SINCE 1970
ianth, Cape Cod I 2 Story

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

..

MAIN STREET
--- PIZZA

A HOME?

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
TM Big On•, til kinds, 81z•
nlc• clotl'ling, coeta, fllnl,
d!llparl••.z. Lewla Lant, Stndy

Heighll, I huro, F~ . 8:30.

SMALL ENGINE

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

.......

Frlday,Oct.201h. I :DO-I:DOp.m.
Bop and girl• cloii'IH, •izn 1·
18. Sm1ll Duncan Phyftl drop

YANAIIIIOWBS
ECHO SAWS &amp; .,._IS
OlltOII IAIS, CUIIIS

IYAII"WHCI aNIU
Parts &amp; Senko 0.

itlt
I

VISA • M.IIITERCHAIIGE

HOURS: Mon.-Frl 9·1
Sot.9-6
Cloaed Suncloy

····2969

16/10/81 tfn

tour

-n

choi~

:l3li1U

andrtd.
Laurel CIIH.

Mondor.

Rain or ahln11. Oct. 11.11,20.
1:00.7. So,. new clothing end

-

Pko now. tchlkl,..,. and

adulla), cotta end IWMtara.
suo
- .,-_ _
ot ...~ .lo'o
Gilt Shop,
- · ond Thur. 2 - · llyootl
llun.
Qulllo,IWn
houM wafW.
orehlna.hlyo,

11

wamact to Buy

brlho
I,._,....
r,t::" being ..w. Colt.,......

-....

~-enUre'*

••

�October

1 0-The Daily Sentinel

. LAFF-A-DAY

""'*--.-

9

Wanted to Buy

44

-

·Apertment
for Rent

.

a,.Uc:A
..............
, : .•••r
~ IR

Col """' L.Miy 114•nn
Pl'e IMO ..... lvty -lon.
CMft Pold. Coli 114 H2 tu7 "'
11W12-HI1.

. _ ......

~. .

51

JUT N' CARLYLE~ by Lury Wrlaht

HOUMIIOid
Goods

19, 1989
•

71 Autoe for Sale

Television
Viewing

1111 Font c.-n Vlctorill, miiHo. tt,OOO. Uood King clr·

7po. dlnollowood--,
AGO. IOU'II-32111.

-~~~--·_,

AQO.I04-fl1-3114,

•

1111 .......... 0111. CIMn, -

tlroo.- otter. Coli 11•1127111.

Ueed tumlture •

e {I) (J) e (J) IIIII e 1121

IIINftl

. _ turnlturw lw tho . , - Of

Employment

1

• all Andy Grlflllh
IIJI w- today
IHl Cllelleo In Clllrge

IT's ALWA'fS APLEASURE
TO TALK WITH A WORLD
FAMOUS ATTORNE'f..

Serv1ces

Do you remember when
dates would come to the house
to meet the parents? Now they
,..:--------, come to--- the .....
~

1!11 Jem
121 Amaricen M..lllne
1:061]) S.••erly lllttiMI11
1:30. C2J OJ NBC Nightly Ne-

Help wanted

11

1

(!) Shining Tillie · - a_
(J) ...... One TV (0:30) c;J

Mltlng.

114-742-.

I

(!)

(JJ

Complete the chvckle ~voted
by titling in tke missing words

L.-L-..L..--1--4-....1.--' you develop from step No. 3 below.

ABC Nftl t:;l

8

llodJ Eloctric

Ill 3-2·1

I

1--T-1PLAOED
-TI;..;_,:;17:-_'T.I"'"-r.larl
0
.

/Ji SportiLook (0:30)
(J) •

NENKLE

1~ r s rT' 1
: , ..;
5~-.y.C:...I ~.:;K~H:.....;.I_T..:,--i
1
. L .

L••a• • ..._..,,

®Metor
a-Ge-.

814-742·

boo

'12 1111

'

fifcCDI'IIIICII ~

the

low to form four Jirnple words

I

I:OO(JJ-Anct

hr 1 hoW

....... houlohotll -

O four
Rearrange '-tten of
tcrombled words

EVI!NINQ

,..

~· Cll ~ Phont

sou

'::~::~' S@~~1A- "V..!f~e tAMI
- - - - - - 141tH loy ClAY I. POLlAN_;:__ _ __

THURS .. OCT.19 •

IEqutp.

....... C.lh - - ....... ~­
=PM· 0 :t'p"i, oH 11 ..

m.

The Daily Sentinei~Page-11

Ohio

c-ct t:;l

18,e;.~=

PRINT NUMBERED
.lETTERS IN SQUARES

.IHl WKRP In Ctnclnnetl

1!11 HI-Men

. 1:311]) """' Grllltth
7:00
ttou•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWIRS
"·' &amp;
Dumbly-Shiny- Grove- Unlock-DOING MUCH
One elder to anothet: 'Anybody who can stall do at
seventy what they were' doing in their twenties. wasn't
DOING MUCH!"
.

rn ou,

•C2JPMMegulne

(1) SpooiiC:erMt
(I) •(J)
Altair
(!) (!) Macllell/ Letnr

e-m

NeweHour (I :00)

~l~WMMOI

BRIDGE

Court t:;l

• !Ill

a

1!0

No Exit

VldeaCountry

7:0&amp;W ,_,._,.
7:30. C2J Fltlllly F (J) lplldwllk

WE.......,._ Tonight

e

(J) USA Today

.,.,A,~yiQ

PERSONNEL

01 Ctol8llre
9 Night Court
QITOIICerd

7:31 (]) Sanford And Son
1:00 ()) MOYIE: F - F -

(2:00)
II C2J OJ Colby Show Theo

is diagnosed as having
dysle•la. (0:301 Q
1D Mickey Tbonipson'o ott
10-19

Road Cltetnplonlhtp Grand

Prix

W II (J) MOVIE: 'Flrelox'

ABC MoYie Spedel !Rl (3:00)

g
Cil Thll Old 9 • Gl 48

.liD

Q

Moun t:;l
MOVIE: tlteckout (2:00)

OIPrimaNaw•

9 1be Thom Blrdl (PI 4 01
5) (2:00)
11J Mll'ller, She Wrote Simon
Says, Colot Ma Dead

a eo.......11on With Olneh

1:0&amp; (]) MOYIE: The Incredible

Shrtnt&lt;lng w......n !PGl (2:00)
8:30 · ·(ll OJ Dt"-•t WOIId
Wattar and Jateese ctaah
over discipline In tha dorm.

~~k PreYieWI 11oM
VIdeo

Cil Trytng 1'lmM A man
suddenly placed on a hit list
;s·protected by 1 seductova
9:00 IIi (ll OJ Clltal8 .Cliff hears

belli When hla ronner postal
Margaret, retums.

tr-.

(0:301 D
1D NHIIA 0181 Rac:lna Chief
Auto Parts Nationals from
Dallas, TX

Campers&amp;

Ill Myeteryl Anonymous
.. tor campion;
Ha~ won't divulge Info.

(!)

Motor Homes

~e~~er~ .rr~

1115 I t - , .llrw :II ft Uh

~ ~iw-OITM

-utr10, •'!'!!!!·
All .......... Ill
Sl :1,100. iii4.iiiN801.

211t.CenlurY Racltel McUsh
.is laaturad In a oertes of
dramatic encounters which
confirms the VIIUI of
physical accomplllhment and
mentalattltudel. (1 :00) Q

Serv1ces

-lful,-

84

·-~bfU8II
plcll C
ot litter, .,..,.. flmatt
- · lfonton,I1413Wm.

Household
Goods
MidFURNITURE
dleport. 131 Hucloon 91. SolooLAYNE'S
ond
cholrw
!rom
$225Jmonth plw dopoolt. 114- ""to Htl. Tobloopriced
•ao
eRd
up
892-315t.
lo 1125. Hide a bad,l IHD lo
Uti. llecllnoro U2l to t371.
42 Mobile Homes
Lampo ~ to 1121. OlnoiiM
11ot ond up to Hll. Wood
for Rent
lable w-1· ch1h S2U to 1701.
21R mabMt Mnw at EvergrMn. Ooollo 5141-"p lo U71. Hutchoo
HOO &amp; up. aunk OOfftptoiO
IIWN-2171.
with mon,... t2t1 oncJ_ up to
Z b1droom trtller, large prlvlte nes. lllby tno - tot, lloltlpotll .... Col
lull or twin
....,.,221 ...., 1:30 .. from "'m, ornrmbor...-,
ariCI-.
au.n
1:30 e.rn..a p.m.· 81...U.Z1M.
1111 $271 I up, King f:IIO. '4
drMMr chlel $111. Cluri Cablnlle
211r., f I IM~ lamltr' !..!• I 10 gun. loby _,,.....
n:111111 AC, 1ppl
tu; ,... lid
' Sin
"'· t31
Bod &amp;l king
n -l r
tal.
2mtloern.n-aa- ...
Oueon
-

Counolor:

Complu

trolnlng, obovo • - l retiNMwelcan.e,l14~a.3e15.

in tloml
of lldortJ lody no _., or ..,,
lnooloed, .,.._ 111110 -

lousiiiOM to 1..., OWl'

-ont

wei~ Md

ter;

swls•a• In tht a.f.

wtrle •

101 P-211, cere of

POint
R-•· aoo
Moln 91, Pt. Pl., WV fUIO.

Tablcco Work.,. Worrlod, NOf·
man Young. IYHak), WV, 304-

n74530.

- o n - l o t lOt Cliln'Y

91, lllnton,Ohlo,h:iii0.*-

813-.

----.2
PlY"*"

-ng
coete to uaume loin on very
No - .

Of

bdJ uom t1o1ne lluon, WY.
...h prtco 111,100. -727-

7110 ar :JD4.722-121 :z.

plul utNitloo. - · ond ......
NCN~·14·4 .. 1121

at&gt;r,llr,

-hod.,:••
qulol,
, KonioGL

a:r.:..--

I

bolulltut rivor

Porto,,,..

ar,
Wluporoom,- un~,
no ,.-:e,
- · 1110 ...... 114-441.17.

I -~ _.._
•
-·· 1 0
·~~ "'··-•
lot,.~~ -~-· ••~oo

•

~

_.............
----·
. . a.--..
- - ... _,_. ~·-·

-rdt

SIO. Good oolec:llon of tiOdroom
...

Q.E.

~

portllt

1274.·
114-211Gold ooln. 1121 G- lrttojn.
Voluod II M21. Wit _..,. ~
oftlr.•, 11M421.
~ .... miiii'IN.

leo--

111-TAAIIINOWI BOUTHIUttRII
COUICII. at ollclceon
PIU.

Colt 114 4. 1:117. """ No...
11-10111.

I

I

1111. Purtno- otog-(1141UI'4310

WATERPROOANO .
~ tltotlme , ......
tM. LOCII Nfwen,ll tum . . ..

......
ol hoy, ' "
-"- 114-44f.IOS2.

~~~-. dey Of night. A o

7TW310.

3 pc mopto dlnotto Ill HO. Mot·
1 - ond foundlllon 110. 3 yr Kltclien Aid Undof C.. Mel Dllh
old good cone! 304-171-5773
Wo-.•75. 211nch oolor T.V.

llkldllpotl. In

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Tr" nsportat 10n

-Vll71 Autoe for Slle
1t74

2,... old. HAPPY JACK TAIVEAIICtOE:
lllootlnllld ulo • .. by

uo..

1111.

U.S,

·-

of

l o•t~W­
-Cieii,_.JD-h
PI alia ...
~
Jeak
Trtwuttllltr.

~-

t~J

ri1

••n•ln ... l -.1 l a

Of

......,

eobto toot -'lltng.

-

-

-

c.n.... Plumbing
ond HillinG
Fourtlund Pfne

1m

Clolllpotll, Ohio
llcinlobody
Col1o.
- ...
·
,.,. _.t.
lair,• 11,000'
gotlo!O, or
tor uwk " 114-441--

¥M.IIWTN401. .

1mc.rto.- - ·
runegood.,1100.1141414424.
1m T.,... 'loio!'P. AC. 1813

84

Electrtcal &amp;
Refrigeration

85 General Hauling

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

~~••1....... ,......... -

IIIII-. . &amp;
...

oollaonlor,nof'::t,Al*VIow,

::'ill.........
..... klloMft.
uot dry
....,. No ......

-a:-.. .
.-

, ........ 0111 .,. .....,

I

illltvooy. CoM-

~tor
OriiYII,
- - C olire,
o \ -.... .,...,

Fot-~--­
IIOW.,._.

"Thl$ Is
depr~

to make me forget I'm
about losing my hair?"

''

1114 -

~lr, ...

=..a.~
I

----·---- -- - ----·

.... -

·=

11:00()) ......

AS'l'R~RAPB

tlonshlp worl&lt;. Mall $2 to Matchmol&lt;er, ARIES (March 21-April 111 You're ca• (J) • (J) 11m
OJ
Howl
p.0. Bo• 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101 · pable of achieving critical objectives tow 9port1 car Club 01
3428.
day, but you might offend others In the
SCORPIO (Ool. -v.22) Try to keep process. Try not to leave angry assoc l)llen
ln mind today that you are not tho only elates In your walce .
ellll Araenlo Heft (1 :001
BERNICE
one among your contemporarlos who Is TAURUS (April .,_., 20) Your
01
BEDEOSOL . capablti or coming up with clever Ideas. aourC~&gt;s of Information today might not .
®NewMtt
Your palo wttl,_,t your lack or appre- be aa accurate or valid u they uoually
II) Mtemt Vlco One Way
elation for their thoughts.
are. To be on .the sate-· don'l ban
Ticket Stereo.
IAGITTARIU~ (Nov. zs.Deil:, 21) Be
Important Judgments on heanay.
121 VlcleOCountrr
cautloul today regarding lnvol.,.,...ents GEMINI (May 21-.1,_ 20) Occasionally
11:101))......
.
- . n oppear you only have to put In a old obllglltona have a way o1 rearing
• w
01 Ctno~t
IIHfe money to get something big going. their ugly ha!tdl at lnconvenlorittlmea.
Yow hopei could be prediCated upon TOday - a l you'\18 _ , trying to
wtlhfullhlnklng.
keep submerged may Wiggle their way
CAPRICORN (Die. 22-.len. 11) Part- to the surfece.
--.ap atrlngornenll won't work too CANCell(.lune21..Ju1J22)0ne-to-ono
well at thll tlmall there 11 • lac:k ol can- .relltlonlhlpe might be a bit dllltc:ull lor
. dor In the alliance. &amp;cit party must be you to manage tOday. The fllllta yo11
g ........ IIIIIMFacund
You'll make more ropkl prog,_ In the totally truthful with the Olher.
lind In your c:ornpanlonl may be a reHand RoM
v- lhaad 11 you lhare the good that AQUAIIIUS (.1111. • M. 11) There Is nectlon or your own lnadeq-.
121
CniCik a ChiM
bellltlyou with people who...,. 11-. - y o u k~ rlther well wtto Ia LIO (olulr.:~::J· Zl) When dUly calls,
12:00 ()) MOVII!:
fllllllle
hllplui.No-whetyou'lglwaway, -loltllllad~olr-rnueh · strive to
promptly tOday, be(2:00)
you'll alwaya get more I!Kk.
you do. Tllll ~ Ia likely to be lllam-. -.rbllltlel you fell to all8nd
a.--. (lept. 21 Clot. 21) Ewn lldvlce mlng alii! on thl complaint dllk again to Will with neglect. Don't let
from welf.lnWIIIOnltd !rleudlle not like- today.
,
tltlna- pile up.
1y to be Mit .-lwei by you today, 111- PIICIS(Peb.. Maull •1 It tlmpor· , ~ (Attlo 21 ltpUI) In youriOCial
pac:1e11y 11 -~~ pertain to tent you dO not
mutual friend I - l l today you might not cb0 Aftlr .... (0:30)
your doll Wile alllllrs. 1'rrtng to patch In front_!~'
_ _ I 1111
"'.': ~~
~~~hIIIII. !'!!; ,
lllalflllll
111
up 1 brOklll rornanoe'l 1be Altro- penon """"'• YG!:" -·~·.,,... ...,,
you
a,. I,.......
11J
New-.
To Kill :
Graph lot8lchrltaker can help you to un- - • whet you .. .,._...,.,lng behind rapport may be the orw.who annoy you ·
A Friend
·~ wttat to do to melee the reta- their t.ckt.
the molt.

-

Molle,..,.

Cit"'"· good ...... 114441-4113.

torRent .

Follow a family of
nard-wortting English
6000tilfle8 during WW II.
(1 :30)Q
.
til Rren'• Den
·
• !Ill- Twtttght z1210nltete
.

Plumbing 1

Heating

- · IIllO., .700. 11~
0710.

Aplrtment

-l'lnt-1

Danny continues his secret
lava-affair wlllla awaiting
Val's answer. D
eiiJI ~Wa'll:h Tonlglil
01 Evening lien
10:05 (I) MOVII!: ...... Tile
10:10(!) ....... ,1111 ~

~

~-

llll IIIII Knoll Landing

........ 304-

ttnw. ...... nm .......,,aoo.

Ill.

()) Under l'lrl

Clrlcle (A) (2: 15)

1m
lbllory.nonlll
01c1o eut-.. .- , . .
._
·

7p.a .,.,.

- ......--.

Laguna Saca, CA (R)
IIJNe-

(!)

11oM ..... ODI'flpiMid . .,... dl~.

82

0_
.
...,_.
_
_
-·""'-.
"""""'
••
tOJ·~-:~

ALL YOU NEED
NOW IS A CAR,
MISTER SMIF !!

BUMPER STIGK&amp;R tl
Rollly

RIRW...--.oa.

17 Mt.cella1180U8

againSt • wily delen18
attorney. (t:OO) D
1D Auto Rlclng CART '
Marlboro Challenge from

HOO.btii. - 1
m-·---...... 11tM111H

...,, on -..1 lot In 441-7111.

Owen aqu118&amp; ott In court

- - 440

l'lorlilfiooo 12111, ar, 1

.r, c.u ...

10:00 (J) 700 Club With Pel
RllblrtMft
•(J) Ill) L.A.I,aw Van

I_ • r a I • • • rn • n 1

otght. -

I!MQN.

n

,...,._,...

WHAT ABODACIOUS

"""' ...... ""'* Ono

1m

.

Frwo ootlmotoo. Colt aottoct 1·

An.

z,... ••t••=••ln
-lnooglliiM-."""""'
...

11127-a.• rar-.y.

SChOoll &amp;
1n81Nctl0n

IIJ Thundar Night Flghll
Ql Nallltvlle Now
1:30 11 w-OJ Deer ololln Ralph
announces he Ia re-marrying
Blomllka. (0:30) Q

BASEMENT

.trilldlng ond .,...... bird . . - .

Point Plnnnl, SM.f7a.aoa. 10
gol 011 up _.1~-· lnd 10 gol

Hood lloord lOIIi lull olD boo

taOO/mo. OlD.
IOCI'd. tl..-nS7 or llwMo

15

_.,.... __

Tank, a.11 ...

-

... 1 1/2lillh, ......., IUm'ed,

MIJOII wine

0 Larry King U..l

Improvements

1no. IMeb'llhed

-r• boloo of hoy •uo. *'

•
•
.
.... ...,., 110.114-tlel-lllll.
1 ' 1 we::, 1pproa. 4 mH• ~--..:__ _ _...,._J.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~
..... _ . , Of

IIIII.

Home

81

11lo11Tt.

oablnlle, $100. Aleo. ~edi'DOIII Miitl wlh
t30 ond up to 111. chMI, dNk lftd ohllr, tull llle
10 Dye ..,.. n 01eh wlh apo boloorlngti~nd llllt-.
prot~H ONdlt. 3 mi. out lu..wiU. old. S~IJ:I1411M'J!M.
Rd. Opon t A.ll. to I P.ll. Man,
Eothru lot. C.lll14-441-0322.
blloo HO. Wood- 1110. Cl
Tell•
t21.
10
ft
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$20. IIIII
Can be converted to bunk bede. POL o. ,.,....1.. IIW $20, Lorgo drll $20. 304•no.oo c.H 441-2111 .
Millet,

~tulle

:r:-..=~· hoy ..........

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An unorthodox takeout double can
get you into trouble in more ways than WEST
EAST
one. West traded on favorable vulner· • QJ 9 3
+642
· ability to double one heart after his • 7 1
f863
partner bad passed. He·had spades and +A K a 7 3
+J96
something resembling a cheesy open- +J 7
+QI043
ing bid himself. When East responded ,
SOUTH
with a bid of two clubs, South doubled
+K 107
to show that his opening bid was very
.AKJIO S
strong, and West ran to (wo diamonds.
tQ2
North now supported hearts, and
+AK6
South bid game.
.
Vulnerable: North-South
West took the K·A of diamonds and
Dealer:
East
switched to the queen of spades. Declarer took-· dummy's spade ace,
Nortll East
played back to his heart ace and
Pass
cashed the A-K of clubs. It was appar· 1 ;,
Dbl.
Pass
2+
ent that West held only two clubs, so llbl.
2+
2.
Pass
All pass
an extra trick could not be developed 4 •
there. But there was a different
Opening lead: +K
chance if West held five .diamoods
originally and only 'two hearts. So declarer played a low heart to dummy's L---,.....---,:-.,..-----....1
nine and then ruffed dummy's remain· double uiat aeCiarer played lhe hand.
ing diamond. Next came king and 10 of well. But suppose West simply made a ·
spades, and West was back on lead. He two-diamond overcall. If South now· ·
had to play either a diamond or a arrives in lour hearts, won't . he go .
spade. Either way, declarer would ahead and play for the clubs to be ~3 ·
ruff with dummy's queen of hearts and as a chance to make the hand, particu·
shed his club loser.
larly if West plays K-A and another di-.
Of course you can say that it was not amond, and sits back and waits with·
because of the unortbodox takeout his Q-J-e-3 of spades?
·

..

s..,.

CROSSWORD
by lHOMAS JOSEPH

3 Enthuae

ACROSS

4 Friend

1 Get lostl

(Fr.)

8 Or.

Huxtable's 5 Photo-

;y=~~

.,,,''

lt-lt-81

.Q92

·sy James Jacoby

QManeyiiM
. 1!)1 Clleln

I[) Miami Vice

NORTH
.... 85

graphic

son

lechnlque
8 Bunna's

10 Texas

attraction
11 "1Anyone •
Till You·
13 linda
oi"AIIce"
14 Point
of view

15 Dutch

U-

7 Chlneae
dynasty
I Rim

9 Unique

12 To a(exactly)
17 Function 25 Spanish

queen
commune 19 Seabees
28 Marsh
18 Barret
motto
18 Hurricane 20 The best 27 Bring
center

21 Success

22 Counl 19 Oelhl .
soctal
down
class
word
21 Trtbule
24..0i!Parted
28 Sllf(
29 Eating

lo trtal

29 Multiform
31 Golf term
33 Cautious

place
30 lncllne 31 Prayer
32 Edible oil

34 Naaty
37 Shoe width

38"1-11
My Way"
41 Dwelling
· 43 Pay boost

45 AI no time
46Tendon
47 Disallow
46 Vestibule

DOWN
1 Counter
sign
2 Dressed

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOJUI- Here'1 how to work It:

10111

A:XYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stlnds for another. In this 9Bmple A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the lenlth IUid fOI'IIIItlon of the words are sll
hints. Eich day the code !etten 1re different.
Cllm'OQU01E

....,
KUR

FRMP

EBS

GUA

MCORF

PAL

BMASR,

M C 0 R' F

PAL

KUR ERBSRFK EALKBM DSAGS .
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ECMMRL

Yul 1 hr'eCa:ei&amp;CIIIItBif'SSED IS 1HEMAN
WHO, HAVItO N011tiNO TO SAY, ABsTAINS FROM
GMNO WORDY EVIDENCE OF 1HE FACT.
GEORGE EliOT
.,

.•..

�Pag

Pon'•ov-MicUaport. Ohio

12-llw Oily Sa 11inel
Dall~ atock prices

eontinued from page 1
building on the Shay Noble property on Horner Hill. Names are
belq wlthbeld pendlq fWng of the charges.
Tbe breakiJII and entering qf a trailer on Happy Hollow Road
Is also beiJII lnvestieated by the sheriff's department.
According to the report, thl' trailer, owned by Milo Huti:hlnson,
Route 1, Rutland, had been t-lltered sometime between Oct. 15
and 17. It was reported that a wetdry vacuwn. exteliSion cord
and a camouflage coat were taken. The door of the trailer had
been klck!!d ln.
Sheriff Soulsby cautions motorists to use care 011 wet
leaf-ro~~ered roadways. ''The leaves can be dangerous when
app)ying your brakes," the sheriff says.

Lands' End .... ... ... .. ........... .. 26%
of 11:48 a.m.)
Limited Inc.. ..... .... .......... ...36\l
Bryce aad Mark Smith
Multimedia Inc........ ...........98~
of Blunt, Ellll 6 IAewl
Rax Restaurants ... ...... .. .... ... 2~
Am Electric Power ........... ..30~
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ . 1~
AT&amp;T ... ... ................ ...........42i1
Ashland 011 ..... .. .. ....•... .......37¥, Shoney's Inc .. ..... .. .. ... ..... ....10*
Bob Evans .... ...... .. ............. .13* Wendy's Inti.. ................. ..... 5%
Worthington Ind .. ..... ....... ... :23%
Charming Shoppes .............. 13~ ·
(Heck'~ baa cbaaced tbe name
City Holding Co .... ..... ....... ... 15
of Ita steres to Take 10 Dl.lcount
Federal Mogul.. .... ..... ......... 221(,
Club)
Goodyear T&amp;R .: ... ..... ......... 49%
&gt;
Heck's ........... ... .. .. .. ........... ....7

Rutland marshal probes incidents

Hospital news

Rutland Marshal John Spires Is Involved In the Investigation
of three Incidents over the weekend In which windows were
broken out df vehicles In-the Salem St . area.
The first two Incidents took place Friday night, Spires
reports. The front windows on the drivers' sides were broken outof two different vehicles.
The third Incident took place Saturday night. The same
window was broken out of another vehicle, Spires says.
Spires reports that tbe vandal, or vandals, appear to be using
some type of sharp lnstrwnent to do their damage. He
conchl!led this after examining a mark on a door of one of the
damaged vehicles. It looked as If the vandal missed the window
and struck the door, leaving a puncture mark In the door metal.
.

(A&amp;

Papers filed

Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown reported ·today that artl·
cles of Incorporation have been
flied with his office In Columbus
by Tropical Seas Plailt Care, Inc.
of Portland. Robert J. Gall is the
incorporator and Jeffrey C. Harris of Route 1, Portland, the
agent.

Veteran• Memorial
Wednesday admissions - Roy
See, Bidwell; Dana Wyant, Mid·
. dleport; J ante Allen, Middleport.
Wednesday discharges
James Meadows, Leona Wal·
lace, Ella Schultz.
·
l

activity, and residents wanting
to participate are encouraged to
turn on outside lights. Council
members urged parents to park
their cars and walk with their
child or children rather tban
drive them trom street to street
which In the past has caused
some traffic and safety .
problems.
The need for approval of the
village and township fire levy
renewals In the November 7
election was discussed by
Council.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Cleland, Clerk Jane Beegle, Council members,"Bob Beegle, Carroll Teaford, and Rl·
chard Wamsley, and st{eet
commissioner Glenn RIZer. Next
meeting was set for Nov. 6.

trUCk.

Starting next week refuse
collection ·will be on Tuesday of
each week.
Complaints of curlew violation
were reported by Council
members. The mayor advlaed
that Ordinance 273 provides !bat
youngsters under 18 years of aile
must be off the streets by 9 p.m.
October through AprU unless.
accompanied by a parents or
guardian. The only exception, it
was pointed out, Is the 30 minute
period following the close of
some organized activity. Parents
may be fined up to $50 and
violators cited to JuvenUe Court,
according to the ordinance.
Trick or treat night was set fQr
Oct. 30, 6 to 7 p.m. The siren will
blow to begin and end · tlle

Ohio Lottery

Aftershoeks
rock Bay
•
area agam

r - - - Local news briefs·-- ----Stocks---...;._ Racine... _c_o_nti_n_ued_rr_om_p_a_ge.....l_ _ _ _ _ __
Key CenturiOn ............ ..... ... . 15

Pick-3
044

•

Pick

Page 7

Chance of preclpltulon 60
percent.

•

•

e
Vo1.40, No.116 M

SnoW stonns leave
140,

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Mitchell Charles Holly, Sr., 65,
of1109 Drake Ave., Panama City,
Fla., a former resident of the
Eagle Ridge community In
Meigs County. died Tuesday In
Panama City following an extended liiness.
· He Is survived by four children,
Mitchell Holly, Jr., Tampa, Fla.;
Christina Shields, Panama City,
Fla.; Jerry Ho)ly, Rutland, and
Michelle Pollock, Lexington, N..
C.; five grandchildren, one
great-grandchildren, a sister,
Melva Hobbs, Tampa, Fla., and
his second wife, Evelyn Holly,
also of Panama City.
Funeral services will be held at
the Smith Funeral Home In
Panama Clty, ·Thursday. Burial
will also be there.

nephews.

Besides his parents, be was
preceded In death by three
sisters, Melva Radcliffe, Mabel
Deardolif, and Lena Gorslln.
Private gravesldt- services
were held on Oct. 13 at the Glen
Rest Memorial Cemetery' In
Reynoldsburg. The Cotner Fun·
eral Home handled the
arrangements.

Tere~a Swalzel
Teresa G. Swatzel, 72, Pome- ·
roy, died Wednesday evening at
Overbrook Center In Middleport
fo1lowlng an extended Illness,
Atrangements will be an·nounced by the Ewing Funeral
Home.

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said late Thursday. "The pancaked section 'Is a total
mystery. ' '
Nature was not being kind to
the Bay Area. Rain was expected
to pelt the quake scene by late
Friday, raising the threat of
mudslides, especially in the hilly
areas of Santa Cruz County
already ravaged by the kll)er
quake.
Bush flew from Washington
early Friday to lour hard·hit
areas or the San Francisco Bay
.Area. Plans called for Bush to
land at Moffett FGleld Naval Air
Station north of San Jose, then
via helicopter visit damage
areas Including the stretch of the
Nimitz Freeway where many are
stili entombed.
. Officials said earlier that 200
· bodies may be burled in the '
rubble from Tuesday's quake,
·which WIIJ! stili sending off
aftershocks Friday.
Bush also plans to visit Santa
Cruz, near the quake's epicenter,
and meet with local · officials,
according to the White House.
The quake· hit at 5:04 p.m., a
halfJ!our befo~ the opening of
the th lrd game of the World
Series In San Francisco's Candlestick Park. Tremors regis·

I..ocal news briefs-Stress in work place is topic
Rhonda Dailey, RN, BSN, director of nursing at Veterans
Memorial Ho,spltal; presented a program on the topic "Stress In
the Work Place'' when she spoke at the September meeting of
the Middleport-Pomeroy Branch of the American Association
of University Women.
'
The meeting was held at the Racine United Methodist Church.
Dailey's topic was selected to coincide with September's
designation as Women's Health Month.
Plans were made during the ·business portion of the meeting
for the group to attend a production of ''The Messiah" on Dec.12
at the Rio Grande College-Community College. Before the
performance, AAUW members wpll be gathering !or a
Christmas dinner at 5 p.m. at lhe Gallipolis Holiday Inn.
The next AAUW meetine will be Tuesday, Oct: 24, 7:30p.m.,
·
Continued on pa11e 10
·

992-3671--· ·--DowlitaWII Pa11nroy, Ohio

•To Quod- Appll-•

reuatrey, Ohio
"2·205.

-..~.~

....

I

,'

lines;'' she said. "A lot of people
(are) without electric and heat, a
1 shopping center In Western Hills
(Is) without power, a Kroger
store In College Hill (Is) without

and publiC Input from that
hearing will be Included In the
final environmental document.
Leach explained that since the
Pomeroy to Ravenswood connector has been ongoing for quite
some time, ODOT feels the Nov .1
· meeting is necessary to "let
people know where we've been,
where we are now and where
we're going," as well as provld·
ing an opportunity for public
Input Into the project .

pOwer.''

Ohio Edison reported about
20,000 customers out for much of
the morning In Akron and surrounding areas. Another 2,50tl
customers of the Cleveland
Electric Illuminating Co. were
without power for a time. while
Toledo Edison Co. reported out·
ages affected about 10.000. A

President Bush visits Bay area

"FREE DELI~ER~"
OPEN: MONDAY
9:30 A.M.-8:00P.M.
TUESDAY THRU
SATURDAY
9:30 A.M.-5:00P.M.

....

.

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) President Bush flew to the Bay
Area Friday to check the damage
from this week's killer earth·
quake and officials said the death
toll on a mile-long section of
· Oakland's Highway 880 may not
be as high as expected.
As of Friday morning 19 bodies
had been recovered from the
pancaked remains or the twolevel freeway, Alameda County
Coroner Charles Plummer said.
"We've got 19 ·In the morgue
right now and I think based on
what we know now, we'll probably come In under 100 (fatal!·
ties}, I hope," Plummer said.
The final death toil may not be
compiled for some time but most
!eel It will be much lower than
Initially believed. Authorities
have located a total of 52
vehicles, 31 of which cm\talned
bodies. Only nine of the vehicles
containing bodies had been re·
moved from .the rubble.
It was not clear how many
people died In the Cypress
Avenue structure.
''It can take up to three months
. to take (the crumbled section)
down and haul It away," Carl
Nelson. a spokesman for the
state transportation department

PIP .

19 INCH REMOTE
COLOR TV

on.

A public meeting will be held 7 project, including the schedule
p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 1, con· for completion· of a required
cernlng the State Route 124 environmental document tor the
'Pomeroy to Ravenswood Bridge pr,oject. Personnel from ODOT
.connector, according to Joseph and the consultant on the conn~c­
Leach, District 10 Deputy Dire- tor project, Woodrufflnc. , of the
' tor for the Ohio Department of Cleveland area, will be on hand to
discuss a "preferred alternative
Transportation (ODOT).
The public meeting will be held route" for the road, according to
' at the Meigs __CounJ.ll_ Senior Leach.
Upon completion of the envir·
Citizens Center In Pomeroy.
onmental 'document, another
' The pu.rpose of the meeting,
according to Leach, Is to inform . publjc hearing will be scheduled
'the public of the progress of the

PtrftC:t For The Kitchen

Programmi119

Walnut Grain Cabililt

SUNDAY 5:30
- POOl TOIIINA.NT

..

13 INCH REMOTE
COLOR TV

20 INCH-REMOTE

teac h er conferences. Here Bracey Kon takes tbe
blood pressure of Ellie Blaettnar, a teacher, as
Lara Hall, another student In the procram looks

ODOT to hold public meeting~;~~~~~iit~~tr;;l~i~
on
bridge
connector
proJ·
eel
·.
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denta of the new Meigs IUgh School Nurslnc
Assistant Procram conducted a blood pressure
clinic, their first volunteer health service,
Thursday ntcht at Melp High during parent·

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without power

By United Press International
Up to 6 Inches of snow fell on
parts of Ohio late Wednesday and
early Tpursday, snarling rush·
hour traftic and cauing power
outages for about' 140,000
customers.
·
The worst of the snowfall was
in the Onclnnati and Dayton
areas, with 4 to 61nches, while up
to 3 inches fell in northwest Ohio
and about 2 inches blanketed
nortb central ·Ohio. Northeast
counties, protected by the warm
Lake Erie temperatures, re·
celved only a dusting.
ancinnatl was the hardest·hit, ·
with power out Thursday morn·
!ng for more than half the city.
Onclnnati Gas &amp; Electric Co.
estimated 100,000 customers
were without power.
Bruce Stoecklln, a CG&amp;E spo·
kesman, said It would be late
evening or Friday morning before all power is restored.
"You name a neighborhood,
ld
we've got an outage,:• he sa ·
Cincinnati pollee officer Oda
Marcum, who usuallY works the
street, was working the desk

SALE

.._VIED

--Area deaths-Earl Alkire Hart, 86, Reynolds·
burg, formerly of. Meigs County,
died Oct. 10 at his home following
an extended Illness.
A retired co-wner of Coe and
Hart Poultry, Mr. Hart was born
on Oct. 15, 1902 at Pageville. He
was the son of the late Frank and
Druzllla Alkire Hart.
He Is survived by his wife,
Clara, of 64 years, two daughters
and sons-in -law, Jean and
Max Lerner. Joan and Wes
Riffle, Columbus; five grand· '
children, 10 great-rndchlldren, a
sister, Mrs. Weber (Murl) Wood,
Pomeray, several nieces and

A Muhimedi• Inc. New .,eper

. .

Seven calls for assistance ;,.,ere answered on Wednesday by
units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services. ·
At 9:12 a.ni., Syracuse. went to White Oak Road for Edna
Leach to Veterans Melnorlal Hospital.
At 1: 46 p.m., Middleport was called to State Route 7 for Edna
Chrisman who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 2: 42 p.m., PomeroY was called to State Route 143 for Iva
Johnson to Holzer Medical Center.
Rutland at 6:54 p.m. was called io Happy Hollow Road for
Dana Wyant to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
· At 8: 15 p.m. Syracuse went to Chester Hill Road tor Robert
Riffle to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·
Middleport awas called at 9:04p.m. to Railroad St. for Janie
Allen who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 10: 27 p.m., Pomeroy was called to the AmerlcarePomeray Nursing Center for Glenna Soulsby who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Mitchell Holly

2 Sectiol"ia, 14 P•gn 215 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio~ Friday, October 20, 1989

Copyrlghtwd1989

EMS has 7 callS for assistance

Earl Hm

Low lonlcht I• mlcl 3fll.
Cbaace of oaow 90 -percent.
Satuntay, hlch Ia mid co..

7005

,
' ,p

tered 6.9 on the Richter scale,
compared with the estimated 8.3
rating of the great 1906 quake
that killed more than 700 San
FI:anclscans and razed the city.
Search teams completed their
review of all44 collapsed 90-foot
sections of the highway using
dogs and special laser scopes.
The Office of Emergency Servi·
ces said 18 bodies had been
extracted from the highway
rubble by Thursday night.
Oakland Mayor Lionel Wilson
said late Thursday that the
number of people not accounted
for had dropped to 83.
"We round many empty vehl·
cles," said Assistant Fire Chief
Andy Stark. "Many people were
able to escape apparently.
"We're always hoping for a
mlraclJ!, but I'm not conildenl
about finding anyone alive," he
said. "But there was a miracle In
(Soviet Armenia}," where quake
survivors were found weeks after
the event.
As crews worked into the night ·
Thursday to cut thro~gh the
rubble and extricate cars and
bodies, Firefighter , Daniel Ge·
treu described pulling out the
bodies of a woman and child.
"They were dirty. They were
crushed. And they were dead,"
he said. "There was a space of
about 1 Y.. feet from the top of the
car to the bottom. "
He said dozens of bodies were .
trapped In the 100 yards of
concrete he was searching.
In Sacramento, state Senate
Leader David Roberti, a Democrat, expressed fear that the
temblor may have damqed the
Diablo Canyon nuclear plant
about 100 miles south of the
quake's epicenter In the Santa
Cruz Mountains.
Roberti asked the chairman of
the Nuclear fteeulatory Commla·
slon to "lriunedlately send a
team of eqlneera and· poJo.
glals" to determine wbetber the
plant "suffered undetected
damage."

'

J' L

' \\\

,
-. ~II
' ' DAMAGUt COA J. CONygyoa DISMANTJ:ED u.S.
Route 33, above ·New Haven,
Tnesdsy evening w"n a
coal coaveyor over tbe bigbway
at Philip Spon Plant WIS b~vily
damaged wht11 bit by a dlerry
picker beinll hanled oa a lowboy,
was reopened at about 3 l.nr.
Thul;lldaJ, acco~lnr to the Wt.
Pleasut olllce Iii tbe West Vlrglala Department ot Hl1hwa:ys.
Trallle WIS rerouted wblle PbWp
Spor11 worllen dismantled tbe
cooveyor. Above, Fred Lewis and
Gene Gray art now. under lbe
coal cooveyor Wedaesday morning wblle poww cablel were
belnl relocated prior to tbe achlal
Tile piiDID at
rilbt eb- wllert lbe CODveyor
I

.d

'

d..._

- broka by die ..pact. It reported tile COIIW)'OI' was moved
- · 10
It - bit. 1be
dla.ulled CllllftJOI' Is DOW 011
the lf'OIIIICis of tbe power plant In

n. ••

hropleces.

number of Toledo traffic signals
date on which measurable snow
also were knocked out.
.
had fallen in records dating back
to 1911. By 8 a .m., 4 Inches had
In central 'Ohio, temperatures
plunged to near the freezing · accumulated.
mark around 4 a.m., resulting in
The average date of first .
some broken power lines and lost snowfall in Dayton Is Nov. 21, and
power to 10,000 customers, the average snowfall then. 1.1
.
mostly residential. A Columbus Inches.
Since most trees have not lost
Southern Power Co. spokesman
said most had been restored by their leaves, the weight of the
snow on the leaves was enough to
about 10 a.m.
, "The temperatures were near cause branches to crack off onto
freezing and Ice was building Up power lines and disrupt service.
on tree limbs and power lines and
"You can see a lot of trees are
that added weight caused some suffering," said Jerry Lindsey of
problems," said spokesman'Bar· the National Weather Service.
"Hopefully, people will take long
rle Brandt.
·
In Dayton, two-tenths of an sticks or a broom and brush the
inch of snow fell before midnight heavy snow from the smaller
- making Oct. 18 the earliest trees."

Senate has ..taken lead
in drug war
Pfeifer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) State Sen. Paul Pfeifer said
Thursday the Senate long ago
passed bipartisan legislation
containing many of the provisions now or Interest to House
Speaker Vern Riffe.
But Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, told
reporters the Senate bill has
langulsbed In committee. and
only Wednesday did Riffe call for
a House task force to begin
looking at drug.'flghtlng
legislation.
Pfeifer, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee,
which Is currently conducting
hearings in major urban areas on
the drug problem. said ·Senate
Bill 76 passed unanimously last
May after two years of
discussion.

Pfeifer said that bill increases .
penalties for drug peddlers,
requires the Office of Criminal
Justice Services to seek funds
from the federal government for ·
drug education programs In the
·schools, and provides stiff penal·
ties for operating a " crack"
house.
The senator said these measures were all part of a proposal
Introduced Wednesday at Riffe's
request.
"I'm truly frustrated by the
fact that we spent two years
listening to the public on this
Issue," said Pfeifer. "We've
heard from as many drug addicts
as politicians. We have chosen to
keep a fairly low profile In what
we've done.

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