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il•cho~•lly a whole
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 7, 1989

11111 11011

BARB
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8' X 8' .................$425
8' X 10' .,............$525

· EARLY
- Voting precincts around
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needed to cast ballot&amp; before golag to work or
school. In Syracuse VIllage precinct, Mary Ann

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CElLINI PANELS

3111" X 15"-~~!;~.S1235 roll
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65 roll

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MONTEGO ....... _SQ. FT........
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· TRINIDAD ......... SQ. FT..... _..

POLY GUARD PIPE INSULATION......................$305
HEAJ TAPE............................................................•12so

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10'....................... 64.95

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30 GALLON GAS................:..s1412o
---.

WASHINGTON tUPil - The
While House, preparing to help
host a global drug summit early
next year. is considering having
the meetipg held In Colombia,
Peru or Bolivia, administration
sources said.

30 GALLON ELECTRIC......s1412o
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5 PIECE TUB SURROUND

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tlon, criminal justice and em· of the ~ard: and Sens. William
p!oyment problems affecting Bowen, D·Cinchinall, Theodore
black males 16 to 26 years old.
Gray, R-Upper Arlington, and
The Department of Admin is· Robert Ney, R·Barnesvi!!e.
trative Services recommended
The controlling board also
that bids be waived and the voted Monday to transfer $80.9
contract awarded to Sykes and mUllon In state and federal
Lynch Brown because depart· money to the new Department of
ment officials said the project Alcohol and Drug Addiction
needed more consultant's hours Services.
than offered by the !ow bidder.
The departnient will have $28.4
Recommended were 2,311 mll!!on to spend In the next eight
hOurs, compared with 632 hours months and another $52.5 million
proposed by the Dayton firm .
for the fiscal year beginning July
"It looks . fishy to me," said 1, 1990.
stale Rep. Robert Netzley. R·
The board also approved a$2 ..7
Laura, a member of the control· million contract for Evaluation
ling who voted against the · Research Corp. of Fairfax, Va ..
contract award. "Of the five . to review all 800,000 pending
people on the (Administrative child-support cases In the De·
Services) . Committee that re· partment of Human Services .
commended this, at least three of The federal government will pa.y
them were problalily hired by the two thirds of the cost of the
guy that's getting the contract." contract.
State Rep. Robert Hickey,
The goa! is to gel rid of cases
D,Dayton. also voted against the that should have been closed,
contract.
giving workers time to focus on
Voting to approve the contract active cases.
were Robert Prosser. president

"We'd like to go right to the
heart of the problem," one
source said Monday, adding that
Colombia appears to be a top
choice. "Of course. we're not
going to put the president's life in
danger."

White holds slim lead
ii1 poll over Forbes

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TUB FAUCET ONLY________
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52 GALLON ELECTRIC.....:s1597s

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPil Tile State Controlling Board has.
approved a $91!.500 consulting
contract for two Columbus com·
panles despite lower bids from
two other firms .
Tlie \JOard voted 4·2 Monday to
approve a contract for Sykes
As~lates and Lynch Brown and
Associates to coordinate and
manage the newly created Com·
mission on Socially Dlslldvan·
taged Black Males.
Sykes Assoc!a tes is ·owned by
William Sykes, who served as
administrative services director
In the Celeste administration
from 1983 until 1988.
Sykes currently is chairman of
the Ohio Civil Rights
Commission.
The two other companies
which submitted proposals lor
the contract are CarltonGroupof
Columbus, which bid $98,100, and
Multi-Western Cos. of Dayton,
which bid $55,300.
The new commission Is to do a
year-long study of health, educa·

WASHINGTON (UPll - AI·
though an off-year election that
In other Urnes might hardly be
noticed. the contests being declded by voters Tuesday had the
potential for making history and
moving blacks to a new level of
American politics .
Three campaigns - guberna·
t,or!al battles in VIrginia and New
Jersey and a mayoral fray in
New York City - have grabbed
most of the attention, pr!mar!!y
because of the efforts of a pair of
black Democrats: Virginia's
Douglas Wilder and the Big
Apple's David Dinkins.
Gclng into Tuesday 's voting,
the two men, both ahead In the
polls, appeared confident they
were on an unprecedented jour·
ney - W!!der with his drive to
become the nation's first black
elected governor and Dinkins
with his effort to become the first
black mayor of the country's
largest city.
Slill, their RepubliCan oppo·
· nents - Marshall Coleman in
VIrginia and Rudolph Giuliani In
New York City - pushed to the
end, appealing Monday to undec!ped voters and trying to rajse
ques Uons about the Democratic
candidates' integrity.
·
At the same time, polis showed
Democratic Rep. James Florio
running far ahead of Republican
Rep. -.James Courter In his' third
attempt to be governor of NeW
Jersey . .
Also at stake Tuesday. were a
host of other mayoral contesij;Including big-city showdowns in
Cleveland, Detroit, Houston and
Seattle - and one congressional
race, to fill the Texas seat left
open by the death this summer of
Democratic Rep. Mickey Lela1Jd. who was k!l!ed in an
airplane crash in Ethiopia.
Eleven candidates were in that
contest.
In addition, voters in 13 states
'.
c~'l)s!dered a wide range of ba!lot
qllestions. Although there was no
overriding theme among the
referendums, the Issues lncludPd
busing and money matters.

Reuter says
it's not too
late to mail
holiday cards

White House eyes South America
for glo~al drug .summit next year

BOt

1 PIECE.......:.....WHITE............'189.95
2 PIECE.............WHITE ...........$259.95

Winebrenner registers with workers (left to right)
Naomi Loatlon and ESther Harden. Harden has
been a precinct worker "for 40 years." London Is
also a long-lime precinct worker, "but not that
long," sbe points out.

State Controlling Board OKs
e9ntra'*:
•te,, lower bids

(WHITE ONLY}

MANVILLE INSULATION
6" X 15"....~'!:';~.....S11

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Off-year election has
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LANDSCAPE TIMBERS

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Pick-3

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Niners
capture
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SKILL

I

II

ODD
·'ODD

Monday, November 6, 198S:. ·

Pomeloy-Midclaport. Ohio

Plla• 12-The Dilly Sentinel

CLEVELAND t UP!) - State
Sen. Mike White takes a shrink·
lng lead over Council President
George Forbes into Tuesday's
election, which will decide Cleveland's first new mayor since
George Volnovlch was elected In
1979.
VOinovlch, who defeated in·
cumbent Dennis Kuclnlch 1111979
and won re·eleciion ln. 1981 and
)985, decided not to run for
re-electiOn this 'y ear because of
his 1990 candidacy for governor.
Forbes, who has worked
closely w!lh Votnov!chduringtbe
las I 10 years, said he would not
run against Volnovlch . but decided Ill get into tbe race once
Voinovich was out.
The 16-year president of city
counc!! was an easy winner in
last month's non-parli118n prim·
ary - 38 percent to 2~ percent. bu 1 While Immediately took a
large lead 'in early . general
efcl!on polls.

Both candidates are black. but
While has picked up much of the
support given the three defeated
white candidates .
A poll ljy The Cleveland Plain
Dealer published Oct. 22 showed
White with a 19-po!nt lead over
Forbes. A WKYC·TVpoUrelased
Wednesday showed the lead had
narrowed to 16 points and the
most recent pol! released In
Sunday's Plain Dealer showed
the lead had shrunk to eight
points, 41 percent to 33 percent.
"We're . not sitting on any
lead," White said. "We know that
if there's a low voter turnout on
Tuestlily, I could very well be
s!ltina' at home on Wednesday
thinking about the state Senate."
II 11 generally believed among
poUI!cal analysts that Forbes'
supporters are more loyal. He
has a strona backing In the city's
blaci community and has received endorsements from most
of the major u~ns in Cleveland.

"It's not 'too !ate to mall
hOliday greetings and gifts to
faraway countries If you. use air
mail service," says Pomeroy
Posimaster Tom Reuter. "And
parcels sent to m!l!ta~y person·
The sources said Puerto Rico nel in the Far East and Southeast
also is under consideration, al· Asia can still be shipped via
though the administratiOn would Parcel Airlift Mall !PAL) and
rather have the summit in Space Available Mall (SAM) cocaine-ravaged South Amer!c" depending on the destination."
Reuter recommends that you
for symbolic reasons.
"We'd like to hold it In check with the Pomeroy Post
Colombia, Peru or Bolivia," one Office 111 992·2235, or find the
source said. "If we didn't hold It desUnatlon and deadline on the
!n.a ny of those countries, it would chart !!sled below.
"PAL packages are a!r!!fled
be bad for sym\JOIIc reasons."
domestically to a U. S. gateway
facility, . then airlifted on a
The presidents of Colombia, space-available basis to an APO
Peru and Bolivia last month
(Army or Air Force Post Office)
announced they would hold a or to FPO (Fleet Post Office) .
summit and Invited the United Packages weighing up to 30
States. :rhe administration,
pounds and measuring 60 !nc~es
which has long promised to host. in combined length and girth
such a meeting, promptly may be sent to military ad·
accepted.
dresses by PAL," Reuter says.
On Nov. 20, representatives of
Postal customers pay theregu·
the four nations are to meet to Jar parcel post rate to the U. S.
develop an agenda, select and gateway. plus a small fee for air
announce a summit location and service. The air service fee Is 30
to extend Invitations to other cents for parcels weighing two
countries.
pounds or Jess, 60 cents for two to
About a dOzen nations are
three pounds, 90 centy for three
expected to attend, most from
to four pounds, and $1.20 for four
the ~eric as, along with at least
to 30 pounds.
one representative from Europe.
Parcels up to 15 pounds and 60
The summit is expected to be inches in combined length and
held in January or February.
girth can be sent by SAM to
Colombia has been rocked with
mU!tary addresses overseas at
bombings and shootings since regular parcel post rates.
escalating Its war on cocaine
In the 48 states, SAM man is
car leis last summer. ·Admin is· carried by surface vehicles to a
lratlon sources said the summit gateway exit and flown on a
would be hl!ld there only if space available basis to its
officials conclude adt!Quate se'· destination.
cur!ty can be provided.
Continued on page 10

!\

In San Francisco. where citi·
zens are still recovering from
October's devastating earth·
quake. voters were faced with
whether . t,:, vote for a new
. baseball stadium to replace
Candlestick Park. Even before
the quake, the NatiOnal Leauge
champion Giants threatened to
move if they dO' not get a new
place to play.
.
Also, San Francisco voters
decided whether to keep a,law
allowing unmarried couples,
both homosexual and heterosex·
ual, to register. with the city. In
some cases, the law would give
partners rights ·normally ac·
corded to a spouse - a prospect
that bas upset many religious
groups.
As tney ctosea aown their
campaigns . Monday, the candi··
dates in the three major races•
put In frenetic days.

Accompanied by Incumbent
Democratic Gcv. Gerald Baines,
who is limited to one term, and,
Sen. Charles Robb, D·Va., Wilder
was undaunted as he confronted
a handful of hecklers who com·
pia! ned a \lOut a tape recording in
which Wilder purportedly prom·
lsed to help scuttle the state's
rJght-to-work law.
"I'm going to tell you a \lOut a ·
tape you can bring to the
lnaugura!orbrlngtotheceremonles tomorrow evening because
remember I told you here. I will .
be elected the next governor of .
Virginia," Wilder argued in ·
Arlington, Va.
Coleman. accompan led by Republican Sen. John Warndr.
R-Va. , turned In a similar stalewide blitz and contended that'
despite polling numbers . that
showed him traU!ng, the momen· .
tum was shifting to him.

Russians observe
72nd anniversary
of .'17 revolution
MOSCOW (UPll - Mikhail
Gorbac_hev, ca!IIDjt his nation's
economic crlslt a "sword of
Damocles," led a subdued Revolution Day celebration Tuesday
marked by a smaller-than-usual
mU!tary parade and the first
lar,ge-scale counter·
demonstration In Soviet history.
The annual Red Square display
on the 72nd anniversary of the
.1917 Bolshevik Revolution was a
shadow of previous trumpetings
of Soviet military might.
AI Moscow's Dynamo Stadium
several miles from Red Square,
10,000 protesters' staged a
counter-ral!y , walking 10·
abreast and hoisting signs that
read "A fish begins to stink at the
head" and "72 years leading to
nowhere. ''

Protesters entering the sta·
d!um at one point nearly co!l!ded
with workers on their way to Red
Square to march in the official
parade but pollee prevented the
two columns from meeting. Pollee did not Intervene in the
counter-ra!!y.
AI the Kremlin, only 183
military vehicles, a fraction of
earlier armadas with hundreds
of arti!!ery pieces. roiled .across
the vast cobblestone square.
Previous mainstay portraits of
the. ruling Politburo mem'b ers
· were absent and the \JOmbastlc
banners of the past were re·
·placed by signs urging "action.
not talk."
In another first, Gorbachev
gave an Interview to Soviet
Television from high atop the
Lenin Mausoleum where the
other Po!!tburo members joined
him in viewing the annual
parade.

•

"The expression I am a bout fu .
use Is~ \OIIib one but .I want to ·
say ft," OortiiCIH!Y Hid. ''L.IIre
the sword of Damoci!!S, the
problems of food and our market
sit ua lion are h anglng over everyone. It makes them anxious
and troubles them."
According to legend, Damocles, a courtier in ancient Syracuse, was seated under a sword
suspended by a single hair to
teach him a lesson a \lOut perU.
Will) his arch-conservative Politburo member Yegor Llgachev
casting wary glances over Gor·
bachev's shoulder, the Soviet
leader said the parade this year
was less pompous than in the
past.
First lady Ra!sa Gorbacbev,
bundled in a black wool coal and
blue fur on a damp autumn
morning, watched the celebra·
lion from a stand for special
guests .
In a sign of the country's
nationalist unrest, the Latvian
Popular Front in the restive
Baltic region and activists in the
southwestern republic of Molda·
via had urged their followers to
snub the natlonal.oUday.
·
At Red SquaJt., the state
fes tivltles began when the giant
clock atop the Kremlin's Spasky
Tower chimed 10 a.m. and
Defense Minister Dmitri Yazov
reviewed Soviet troops bedecked
In formal ho!!day uniforms of •
green, grey, blue and brown.
Only 25 tanks led off the display
of military hardware In a dellber·
l!te symbolic expression ·of the
"new poUtlcal thinking" heralded by Gorbachev and For·
e!gn Minister Eduard
Continued on page 10
.

Local news briefs-...:...
Meigs ha_s brief board meeting
In a brief special meeting of the Meigs Local Board of
Education Monday night, Darla Kennedy was hired as an
' elementary teacher. She has been assigned to the Salem Center
School, Supt. James Carpenter reports.
Attending the special meeting were I;tobert Snowden, Larry
Rupe, and Bob Barton.
·

State stores to close Saturday
Director John R. Hall of the Ohio Department of Liquor
Control announced today -that wholesale only liquor stores and
departmental offices wl!l be closed on Friday in observance ol
Vl!terans' Day .
·
·
All ret-aU liquor stores and agencies will be closed on Saturday
in observance of the holid&amp;)l.
It was also noted that the Ohio Department of Liquor Control's
officers, state liquor stores and agencies will also be closed on
Nov. 23 in observance of Thanksgiving Day .

Flu vaccine still available
A small supply of flu vaccine IS still ava!la ble from the Ml!lp
County Health Department and will be available to the public:
from 1 to 3 p.m. on Nov. 15 and Dec. 6.
Continued on page 10

�Pomeroy- Middleport • .Ohio

November 7 1989

•

Commentary
·The Daily Sentinel
•

Ill Court Street
Pemeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO 111E INTERESTS OF TBE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

.....

ts:m~ ~.._ , ~=·"""

qfv

ROBERT L. WINGETT
'Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant P•bllsher/ ConlroUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geaeral Manacer

. A MEMBER ol Tile A-MNJ!e!ed Press, Inland Dally Praia AssodMion md the American NewiiP"''ft" Publishers Aasoclllilon.
· LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They ahould be INoi lhan 310
wordo lool. AD loiters are subject to edltlal and mull be sii(Ded wltb
name, addr..s and telephone noamber. No unslped loiters wW be published. Leiters should be In 1ood tule, addreoslnr lssueo, not peroonall·
ilea.

..

.

Pega 2- Tha Daily Sentinel
Pomaoy-MidciiPClft, Ohio
Tuaaday, November 7, 1989

Drastic measures needed to win war
tap." ~

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

networks
WASHINGTON - Along the near the
U.S.-Mexlco bo!'j!er, shrewd go- aren't likely to trust a low-level · countries popular pll stops for
vernment agents run what tbt&gt;y courier with $500,000 In cash.
drug money. Other nations are
call " reverse stings." Instead of - The Bush administration Is considering requiring banks to
posing as drug buyers, they blindly devoted to stopping the report deposits of $10,000 or
advertise themselves as sellers. now of drugs, but some strate- more, as In already done in the
They coax inajor drug deail'rs gists In the drug war are starting United States.
into a trap by offering cocaint- by to realize that'taklngdrugmoney
One vett&gt;ran undercover narthe kilo, then confiscate suit·
out of circulation bas a more cotlcs detective tor the Washingcases of cash and toss the duped devastating effect on the market. ton, D:c., pollee department told
kingpins Into jail.
Restricting the drug supply our associate Jim Lynch that
Reverse stings are part of the simply drives up the price and U.S. banksgetotttooeasUy,even
nt-west, and perhaps wisest.
makes ·tht&gt; business even more with the. $10,000 reporting reform ot combat In the drug war appealing.
quirement. He thinks banks
going after the money instead of .
Finance officials from 15 na- should be forced to report other
the drugs.
!Ions met last month In Paris to suspicious deposits - such as
We talked to two federal agents try to tighten International con· multiple deposits In one accoun~
who regularly impersonate drug trois on drug money laundering. of $9.999 each. The detectlvt&gt; goes
lords. They claim tbt&gt; revt-rse Banking laws In Switzerland, so far as to suggest th~t banks
Luxembourg and some Carib- that don't report obvious drug
sting is far more effective than
bean nations have made those transactions should be publicly
undercover drug buys. "It's the
only sure fire way to bust anyone
·•

Dirty politics or
liard campaigning
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The 1989 Virginia and New Jersey
gubernatorial contests ending Tuesday have been roundly criticized
as exercises In negative campaigning, the kind of politics that turns
ott the voters and damages the democratic process.
Negative campaigning has been around as long as there bas been
any kind of campaigning, but it has gained new attention in recent
years because of Its widespread use on television, first by so-called ·
independent political action commltees In the early 19110s, and more
recently by candidates, notably in the 1988 presidential race, by
individual candidates.
Crlilcs, in the media and el.;ewhere, have deplored the recent
increase In negative campaigning, citing the tactics used last year
when the RepubliCans used the case of Massachusetts prison furlough
runaway Willie Horton to picture Democrat Michael Dukakls as soft
on crime.
Nobody is in favor of dirty politics. but it might be a good idt&gt;a to try
to defint&gt; just what Is meant by negative campaigning and to examine
whether everything that qualifies for that label is bad.
For example, some of what went on In' Virginia , whe re the
campaign seemed to find its focu s on the issue of abortion, consisted
of efforts to contrast the rt-cords of the two candidates.
·
That kind of campalgnlng_usually is negative In that it Is done so one
candidate can criticize an opponent's record, but It Is not necessarily
unfair or unethical If it is accuratt&gt;. It a candidate's record is
accurately portrayed, it is not dirty campaigning for an opponent to
cite it and to Interpret that record as good or bad. Differences of
opinion of that sort are what makt&gt; good political contests as well as
horse races.
For examplt&gt;, if a candldatt&gt; opposes abortion in all cast-s, it is not
dirty polltics for an oppont-nt to point out that such a ban wouidoutiaw
· abortion to save the life of a pregnant woman or incases of pregnancy
due to rape or Incest.
,
Conversely, It would be out of llne to describe a candidate' who
Would permit abortion In some cases, no matter how limited, as a
person who would deny all choice to pregnant women.
Somt&gt; critics of current campaigning bellevt&gt; there ought to be a
way to punls)l those who take tht&gt; low road in politics. that all too often
It Is the negative campaigners who win elections. These folks would
somt-how requirt&gt; candidates to "stick to the issues," which
apparently means they would give their own opinions without
contrasting them with their opponents' views.
Asidt&gt; from the obvious assault on free speech such a requirement
would entail, it is possible that a campaign restricted to· a flat
· recitation of candidates' opinions would anestheslze more voters than
a dirty mud-slinging campaign would offend. And in elther event, the
democratic ideal of maximum citizen participation would suffer.
There is a way to cure politicians whO Insist on using nasty
campaign tactics. Vote for the otht&gt;r candidate.

Letters to the editor
Stop and think ... !
Well. it's over for one more Christmas for fear of offense,
year.
.
nqtblng Is .said of the many
Tbt&gt; great celebration we know displays relating to, yes, relias Halloween has comt&gt; and gone gion, the religion of witchcraft at
for Mt-lgs Co. Weren' t all the ·Halloween.
itttil' ghosts and goblins cute?
.Our preoccupation with the
Don't we all just love this evil side of darkness and death as
wonderful t . when we can' reached an all'tlme high when we
Innocently allow the llttlt&gt; bit ·of allow our chlldrt&gt;n to be obsessed
· "evU" in us to be acceptable and with and enjoy slasher movies
considered harmless•
like ''Friday 13th", " Halloween"
My question to parents and etc.
adults is, how far does evil have
What kind of society are we
to go today to be still considered
living in that would consider It
harmless and fun? True, for
normal or " just fun" to have as
most, what we know as " Trick or
heroes, Freddie Kruegger or
Treat" and dressing up is exactly " Jason"? Why do you think so
that fun and mostly innocent. But
many violent' crimes are being
also true is the fact that Hallocommitted with no remorse?
ween is the High Holy Day tor
Our children are desens ltlzed
Witches, and they admltedly are
from watching the "thrill" of'
surprised at how many people
kUling and maiming.
help them celebrate their Holy
I beg you , Moms and Dads,
Day.
talke to your young people, guard
I, personally, am shocked year
their minds and spirits- you just
by year at how this ct-lebration
may save their lite!
11J"OWS and Is promoted in every
.
Thank you,
bUsiness place and public school.
Gloria Johnson
Whereas, teachers are afraid to
Rutland, Ohio
put up a manger scent- at

Today in history
By United Preea lnternlliloaal
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 7, the 311th day of 1989 with 54 to toUow.
This Is election day.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward full.
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars art- Vt&gt;nus and Saturn.
'IboiM! born on this date are under the sign at Scorpio. They Include
Marlt&gt; Curle, discoverer of radium, In 1867; Nazi SS leader Heinrich
Hlmmler In 1900; French novelilt Albert Camus in 1913; evangelilt
Silly Graham In 1918 (age 71); jazztnvnpeter A1Hirtln1922 (age I'll;
Australian opera slar Joan Sutherland In 1926 j age 63) ; and singers
Mary Traver~ In 1937 (age 52), Johnny Rivers In 1942 (age 47), and
.Jonl Mitchell In 1943 (age 46) .

On this date In history:
· In 1105, the Lewis and Clark Expedition arrived at the Pacific

Dcean.

In 1874, the first cartoon deplctiJII the elephant u the symbol o1 the
Republican Party was printed In Harper'• Weekly.
Ill 1914, Bollbevlkl over lb.- !be Ru•laD 10vernrnent In St.
Pet«•ra; becau~t took p~ Ullder tile old c:zarlltcfleadar,lt Ll
1111 ua • tile O!:tablt lbYohllloa.

named so their hOnes customers
can takt&gt; their business elsewhere. " People are concerned
enough about drugs that I don't
think they'd bank somewhere
that did business with drug
money," the detective said.
He also thinks car dealers
sh()uld have to report when a
customer pays cash for an
expensive car. Thatwouldcrlmp
the drug dealers' style. "It they
can't buy anything with all that
cash, It' becomes just s~cks ot
paper," the detective said. He
wants car dealers to face lines If
they take $20,000 Jrorn a jobless
kid and lgnore'thel source of the
·cash.
Tbedetectlveandotbernarcot·
lcs officers also advocate more
flexibility IJI the law when J)ley
seize the posse~loils of convicted
drug dt&gt;alers. Now they have to
prove an ltenl' was bought with
drug money before they can
confiscate it.
John Yoder, the first director ·
of the Asset Forfeiture Office of
the Justice Department, has
been poundlna on doon at the
JustiCe Department and White
House with another proposal to
change market factors In . the
drug business. But ht&gt; gets little
response.
Yoder advocates making It
more profitable to rat on drug
dealers than It Is to deal drugs.
He recommends that anyone who
helps pollee bust a dealer should
get as much as half of the seized
assets. Yoder also wants am·
nesty for drug traffickers who
cooperate with pollee.
"The risk of getting caught Ll
so slim and the economic rewards so iucratlvt&gt;," Yoder says,
that the current laws · about
contlscatllig" the possessions of
drug dealers art-n ' t enough to
slow tht&gt;m down.

Vans may still be 'unsafe at any speed'
Robert Walters
The "Big Three" domestic were Injured In commerclall!ght
WASHINGTON (NEA)· - Afi!Uto-makers - Gent-ral Motors, truck accidents last yur. No
ter years of Inaction, the federal
Ford and Chrysler - for many action to address this problem
government has taken the first
steps to require that light pickup years opposed all of these safety was taken during the eight
Initiatives, claiming that ·the laissez faire years of the Reagan
trucks, mini-vans and four·
wheei-drlvt&gt; utility vehicles meet vehicles, which are classtfiro as administration.
NHTSA 's nt-w headrest rethe samt&gt; saft&gt;ly standards as commercial light trucks, differ
automobiles - but much more markroly from autos In both quirement should sbbstantially
form .and function. That argu-· reduct- whiplash injuries, which
remains to be done.
The good news: The Depart- men! was Initially compelling · total almost 20,000 annually, but
ment of Transportation's Na- because in earlier decades few other improvements must be
tional Highway Traffic Safety ~pie bought vans or pickups as mandated to bring multlpurpost&gt;
vehicles up to auto safety stand·
Administration recently man- household vt&gt;blcles.
During the 1980s, however, ards. Among them:
dated that tht&gt; front seat.s In those
- Steel beams to enhanre
multipurpost&gt; vehicles Include consumer preferences and vehithe same headrests that havt&gt; cle designs have changed side-door strt-ngth can protect
been required in passenger cars · markroly. Industry officials now occupants in the side crashes tht
estimate that small pickups, account for one-fourth of' ali car
since 1969.
The bad news: That require- minivans and four-Wh(&gt;(&gt;i drive fatalities. They have het&gt;n rement wUI not go Into effect until utUity vehicles account f6r al- quired in autos since 1973-and artproduct ion begins on 1992 mod- most ont&gt; of every three vehicle voluntarily included by various
els, almost two years from now. sales. Indeed , many "multicar" product-rs of Imported muitlpurMoreover, federal regulators famllles no longer own a single pose vehicles -but the domestic
industry has resistro making
havt&gt; still not taken longoverdue auto.
According
to
Sen.
John
Dan·
slmila~ improvements. ·
action to extend to multipurpose
forth,
R-Mo.,
a
proponent
of
- High, center-mounted rear
vehicles several other poten·
tougher
safety
standards,
almost
brake
'lights have been requlrro
!Ially life-saving requirements
8,300
people
were
killed
and
on
cars
sjnce 1985 but nt-vt&gt;r on
long applicable to passenger
approximately 500,000 others commercial light trucks. Again,
cars.

•

several Japanese automakers
already Include them In their
vans, but domestic producers do
not. ·
- Crush-resistant roots , to
prevent injuries in rollovt-r accl,
dents, havt- been required in cars
since 1971. They are especlaUy
important for mini-vans, whose
high et&gt;nter of gravity makes
them twice as susceptible as cars
to rollovers, but are not required
in any multipurpose vehicles.
Other potential safety en·
hancements recommended by
the Center tor Auto Safety, a
public interest group based in
Washington, Include rear seat
lap and shoulder belts, anti-lock
brakes and Improved Interior
padding as standard equlpmen!
on all commercial light trucks.
California safety engineer Stephen Syson, who formerly .
worked for GM, suggests that
untll those Improvements art-:
made "you'd be a lot better oft
buying a big old station wag9n·
than you would a new minivan."

• •

nice, crtSicS~~----------------~B~e~n~W&lt;~a=tt=en~b~e~~
Do no
ubt, notfor a moment, marine life when it Is broiled,
environmt-ntallst is the squlrtro with lemon and eaten.)
test game In town, sweepjng
Television is never far behind a
all before It, in hallowed grovt&gt;s trendy trend. In the year to come ,
of academe, In holy . places of we wlll be able tune out environ·
religious thought, In legislative mental specials, environmental
bazaars, on entertainment k1ddle shows, and trlillonaress
soundstages, and in the sacred Barbra Strelsand cci-bostlng a
temple of the free press.
two-hour Earth Day program
It' s a grt-at crisis all right, and entitled "A Practical Guide To
what It all shows is just how very How You Can Save the Planet. "
healthy modern society is.
(Probably by putting the st&gt;eond
At a recent conference, Cha· Rolls on blocks.)
rles Alexandt-r said, "As the
The president and Congress
science editor at Time, I would · are seeking new standards for.
freely admit that on this Issue we pesticides in a rhetorical atmos- ·
have crossed the boundary from pbere that one public health
news reporting to advocacy." worker calls "anti-science."
(Surprise.)
All this proves not pollution,
A full·page advt&gt;rtlsement by but health.
the Jewish Theological Seminary
The environmental crisiS, re.
at the time of the Jewish New member, Is a crisis engendered
Yt&gt;ar headlined "WHAT ARE by people living better. If you're
WE DOING?' quoted Psalm 104 g9lng to have a crisis, that's tht&gt;
counterpoised against the horror place to start.
of modern despoliation. Some
Next,lntermsofwbathasbeen ·
examples: "You make the grass measured by the Environmental
grow for the cattle and herbage Protection Agenecy, the environ·
for man's labor, that be may get ment Ll healthier than It used to
food out of the earth" (toxic be by far. Pollution bas dlmln·
pesticides), "There Is the sea, lshed in fairly direct proportion
vut and wide, with Its creatures to the amount of money spent to
beyond number, llvlna things dlmlnilh it. That's not something
small and great" (oil spills) .
that can be said for every crisis.
So, the JTS bas divined that the
And finally, despite all that,
divine wlll is anti-modern- there isn't lt)uch of a down side to
agronomy, and antl-marlne- paying some attention to the
tr a ns portatlon-of-petroleum- panlc-monaers. It' 1 probably
products. (Does that mean God 11 even good tor us If we don't IJll
for rotted crops and expensive overboard. (It's certainly good
enel'll)'?)
tor wbales and elephants.)
A leading private IChool baa
A few hundred billion dollars
canceled the relea~e of bellum for environmental apendlnJ
balloons dui'IJII Ita Halloween won't llurt ua .much. We're rlcll.
Pl'OII'am. The balloona · mlJht At worst, It will make thlnllt
ultimately come down In the IOIDt!What nicer for the aestllell•
Potomac: aJid harm marble lite. fially llllnded, aJid 10mewllat
I You llloukhee what Jtapp • to ~for tile. poor.
th

'

Environmentalism is the nice
crisis. It's the one that a
clvlilzatlon arrives at when there
is no war , when the totalitarian
threat is shriveling, when the
t&gt;eonomy Is doing pretty well.
Environmentalism Is the resld-

uai crisis. So, thanks environmentalists. Thanks for a crisis
that is never-ending, never provablt&gt; or disprovable, perennially
partially conquerable, and psychologically nec~;!ssary wht-n
there is no other gs,me In town.

..

Berry's World
••

By JOHN SWENSON
UP! Sports Writer
Tht&gt; New York Rangers, widely
regarded as a team In disarray
heading into the season, have
emt-rged as an NHL powerhouse
Instead. Beset by Injuries to key
players and-coming off a demorallzlng loss to the Canadlens In
Montreal, the Rangers were ripe
for a letdown Monday night at
home against tht&gt; Detroit Red
Wings.
Instead, the Rangers clobbered Detroit 6·1, demonstrating
•rel!'lllrkable balance and depth,
to raise their record to 10-3·3.
"Before the gamt- the guys told .
me they weren't going to lose two
In a row," sal9 Rangers coach
Roger Nt&gt;ilson.
Neilson was Impressed by the
way tht&gt; Rangers responded to
the loss of cl!ecklng foiWard
Chris Nilan and defenseman
David Shaw .
" We knew we had 25 pretty
~ good players and Lindy Ruff
proved it with a strong game,"
said Nlt-lson. " He took Nilan's
place wlthout,, missing a ,beat.
Horava came r!ilht in and scored

a goal'. "
Nt&gt;llson also singled out backup
goaltender Bob FrOt&gt;se for
praise. "It was·a good game !rom
FrOt&gt;se," said Neilson. "Ht&gt; ht&gt;ld
us in tonight, butwt-were getting
the goals.
"I'm glad to contribute," said
Froese. "I'm glad to play. The
deft&gt;nse prevented second shots.
It 's nicetoknowwe have so many
· guys on tht&gt; bench who can do the
lob."

..

"HONESTI., Yl Would you mind trying to be a
nttle mDIW 111rt mo« men and 11/dinQ your

lltUI(JM("

•

• •• •
•
•

•

OSU 'Iaugher' bv~r
Northwestern-a relief

fivlng everybody. But we gave
tht&gt; game ball to (Coach ) Matty
(Guokas) ."
Guokas said his tt-am played
with determination the t-ntire
game .
"That's what we need to do to
win," ' Guqkas said. "One of the
things about this team is that
they were able to put Saturday's
loss behind them and come out
ready to play."
Orlando ct-ntt&gt;r Dave Conine
finished with 19 points as did
Catlroge. Patrick Ewing scored
29 points for the Knicks, who
converted just 3 of 13 3-polnt
shots.

Fairmont state
•

.

fr,e[d hockey champs

J'

• COLUMBUS. Ohio iUPil Kettering Fairmont won the girls
Ohio High School statt&gt; title
Saturday, deft&gt;atlng Hudson 1-0
in a pt-nal.ty stroke situation.
The two teams were scorelt-ss
after rt-guiation and two 10·
minutt&gt; overtime periods. They
then went Into a penalty-strokt&gt;
flick-o!fwhert&gt; five strokers from
each team wt&gt;nt one-on-one.
Kettering emerged tht&gt; victor
after Its first three players beat
their opponents.
Hudson advanced to the finals
with a 2·1 win over Cleveland
Heights, also in a penalty-stroke
situation. Kettt&gt;rlng advanced
with a 1·0 double overtime win
over last year's champion
Worthington.

By J}ENE CADDES
Bryant, who also caught a
UPI Sports Writer .
46-yard touchdown pass from
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Greg "Frey, was named the
Ohio State's first real "Iaugher" offensive p)ayer of the game,
in John Cooper's. two seasons as while Lee, ·wh&lt;i carried 24 times
Buckeyt&gt; ht&gt;ad football coach was and scored thret&gt; times, was \be
a welcome relit&gt;(.
offensive back of the game.
"I think It's good to have a
The Buckeye, staff, however,
gaine llkt&gt; that, simply because It picked no dt&gt;ft&gt;rl~ive player, of the
gives you a chance to play a lot of game.
.
players," Cooper said Monday of
"We just didn't have anybody
the Buckeyes' 52·27 win ovt-r we felt deserved ~o be named
Northwestern. "I liketoplayalot defensive player of the wee_k,"
of pl&amp;yers. We played two often- said Cooper. "Zack Dumas and
slve teams and two defenslvt&gt; Bo Peilnl made a lot of tackles,
· teams at Tulsa (wht-re he pre- but that's a pretty good lndica·
'
vlously coached) almost all the tlon that you'rt&gt; not playing real
time Just because of team good dt&gt;ft-nse when your defen·
morale:
slvt&gt; backs .lead · the team In
CEDARVILLE, Ohio I UP!) "Yt&gt;sterday at practict&gt;, you tackles.
· could
the kids who normally
"Wt&gt; try to be honest with our Bluffton quarterback John
dOn't pia~ In tlie ball gamt- but playt-rs. I told them last night Tabler and Urbana free saft&gt;ty
got a chance to play Saturday;
we're not very happy with the Elgin Card were picked Sunday
they came out there bouncing way wt&gt;' re playing right now on as theN AlA Dlstrict22playersof
around. They felt like they were a defense. I think It's ridiculous to tht&gt; week.
Tabler, a senior from Bluffton.
part o!the team. Thfi·' btorale and single out anyone as detenslvt&gt;
attitude was excellent." ·
player of .the week when they threw tor a school rt&gt;eord 338
. · It was Ohio State's fourth win didn't play real good. It's some- yards and three touchdowns in
In a row, making tbt&gt; Buckeyes thhig you have to earn. You've Bluffton's 44-14 victory, over
6-2 overall and H lri the Big Ten got to make that award Wilmington. He completed 17 of
31 passes, incidlng TDs of seven,
heading into Saturday's game in important."
Ohio Stadium against lowa.
Besides Bryant's Injury, 70, and 38 yards . He bad four
The lopsided win alsa ·anowed strong~tety Jim Pt-e! sprained other passes for mort&gt; than 25
Cooper to rest No. 1 tailback his rlgllt kft(&gt;(&gt; against . the Wild· yards.
Card , a sophomore from Wa·
Carlos Snow the entire second cats and will miss at least this
shlngton Court House, recorded
half. Snow, who rushed tor 100 week's game against Iowa.
yards before he left, and two
But. Cooper said, inside line- 10 solo tacklt-s, two assists. and
other Buckeyes surpassed the )Jacker Derek Isaman, the Buck- Intercepted one pass In Urbana's
tOO-yard mark on the ground eyes' inspirational leader as well 18-6 win over Union (Ky.) . He
sophomore fullback Scottie Gra· as top tackler, whO sat out last also brokt&gt; up thrre passes .to
ham WT.!J and freshman tailback week's game with bruised ribs, Is ·earn his second defensive weekly
honor Ibis seasop.
Dantt&gt; Lee (157).
expected back.
But tailback ·. depth suddenly
~
becamt- a problem when senl9"'--"'
·
Jaymt&gt;s Bryant, who scored two
touchdowns , one on a 63-yard
run, suffered a broken collarbont&gt;
'and is lost for the season.
That lett just Snow and Lee at
The Houn In Friday's Ad Wtre Wrong.
tailback, backed by freshman
Raymont Harril, who Cooper
Should Read Open 9:30·7:30
had planned to redshlrt.
"We don't want to use a
freshman," said Cooper, "but
we' 11 bring Raymont up and work
with him, take him to the
Michigan game. But, If It's an
t&gt;mergency situation, we'd probably move Scottie (Grahalnl
· back tht-re and play• Tyrone
Harrison at the f\lllback spot as
oppoSed to playing Raymont
Harris in one game."

=-=·il·'

' •t •
.,
•

• •t

.~

• • ' •••
' •
•

•
crease durin~ the first period of Monday nl~ht's
game In Toronto. The Maple Leafs won 2-l. (UP!)

CHECKS GOALIE- Mlnnesoto's MarkTinordl
checks Toronto goalie Allan Bester in the goal

No. 17 Virginia relishes first
ranking in four
By LISA HARRIS
·
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK I UP!) -Virginia.
tbt&gt; first victim this season In
Notre Dame's quest for a second
s traight national title, Monday
cracked ·United Press Intt-rnational's colle_ge football ratings
atNo. 17, itsflrst ranklnglnmore
than four years.
Notre Dame. 9·0 after ' a 41-0
demolltlpn of Navy Saturday,
matched the school's longt&gt;st
wlnningstreakat21g'ameswhlle
remaining lhe Board ofCoach't-s '
top pick since Oct. 31. 1988.
The Fighting Irish rt-ceivt&gt;d 45
of 50 first-plact&gt; votes and 730 of
750 possible !lOinls to lead No . 2
Colorado by Tl points. Tht&gt;
Buffaloes , also9 -0wlth their27-21
triumph over previously thtrdranked Nebraska , staye~ second
with 723 points, 103 more than No.
3 Alabama.
The Crimson Tide, 8-0, took
advantagt&gt; of Nebras ka's loss
a nd a 23-10 victory over Mtssis·
sippi. Stale to move up one spot
into third, followed by Florida
State and Michigan . .
Tht&gt; Irish opened thetr season
with a 36-13 rout of Virginia in tht&gt;
Kickoff Clas sic.
.
"It came early and tt cam t&gt;
bad," Cavaliers coac h Gt&gt;orge
Weich said . "1 think a lot of
people turned their te levision
sNs orl on us after that but we
played Pt-nn Statt&gt; nine days later
and won. Psychologically. I'm
sure that helped us as wt- we nt
through tht&gt; schroule."
The Cavaliers, 20-9 winner s
ove~ previously · 15th-ranked
North Carolina State Saturday,
· are 8·2 and In contention for the
Atlantic Coast Conferenct&gt; title.

ye~s

Tht&gt;y las t appeared in tht&gt; rankings in Se ptember 1985, also at
No. 17 .
.
No . 4 Florida State, 7-2 after
beating South Carolina 35-10,
moved up ant&gt; spot and Michigan
improved two plact-s after a 42-27
victory over Purdue. To retur n to
· the top flvt&gt; after its season·
opening loss to Notre Dame, the
No. 5 Wolve rines ovt&gt;rtook Nebras)&lt;a -which ft&gt;ll three places
to sixth -and Miami.
The Hurricanes, 7-i. dropped
one plact- into seventh , followed
by Illinois, 7·1. and Southern Cal.
7-2. remaining eighth and ninth.
· Tennessee, 6-1 and idlt&gt;. stayt&gt;d
lOth but was joined in a tie by
Arka nsas , 7-1.
The middle of lht&gt; . ran kings
stand s to s hake next week when
Michiga n and Illinois have tht&gt;lr .
Big Ten showdown and Miami
plays No. 14 Pittsburgh.
Auburn, 6-2. moved up a spot
into the I2Ut s pot , previously ht&gt;ld
by Wes t Virginia, which tumbled
Into a tie for 19th after a 19-9loss
to Penn State, 6-2. As a rt-sult , the

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

$2.50

.. ,, "'" •.

!h 1J I

.......... -

l'l't

~

(

Nittany Lions jumped four pia-'
ces into No. 13, followt&gt;d by idlE:
Pittsburgh, 5-1-1. Clemson. 8·~.
fllls out the top 15.
·
At No. 16, Tt&gt;xas A&amp;M , 7-2,
t&gt;dged VIrginia by one point.
Brigham Young. 7-2. returned to
the r ankin gs after a one-week
absenct&gt; at No. 18, followe d by
West Virginia , 6-2·1, and Tt&gt;xas
Tech·ln a tie at No. l9. Tt&gt;xas Tee!)
made its first appear an ce in the
ratings since Nov. 14, 1971 by
knocking out last wet-k 's co-No.
19, Texas, 24·17.

A buill 111 in...-ence peckage, lhlt is. 11'• SERIES
ONE, 1
bload-coverage,
competitively-priced plan
for retel stores. offices,
chwches. epartmenu and
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..... -

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AN . ~

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RNER\.~ ·

Tabler Card named
District 22 POWs

see

••

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Orlando team scores first NBA wr,n
ORLANDO, Fla. (UP[) -The remaining.
The Magic preserved the vic·
Orlando Magic took just two
tory
at tbt&gt; foul line, connecting 8
games )oestabllsh themselves as
of
8
free
throws after Newman' s
winners.
long-range
jumper. Theus conReggie Theus and Terry Canected
on
4 of tht&gt; final fr(&gt;(&gt;
tledge combined for 9 points In a
,
throws.
key 11·2 run In the fourth quarter
Monday night to lead the expan· ' "'Didn't you see the gorllla fall
slon team to its first victory, a of! our backs as wewalkedofftht&gt;
118-110 dt-cislon .over the New floor," said Theus, who finished
with a team-high 24 polrits. · 'That
York Kntcks. ·
t&gt;xpanslon
rponkey would h4ve
The Magic. 111-l061psers to tht&gt;
gotten
bigger
and bigger as tbt&gt;
New Jersey Nets in Saturday's
season
progressed."
season opener, were not ex Tht&gt; Magic used an 11·2 run at
pected to match up with tht&gt;
1988-89 Atlantic Division cham- the end of the third period to take
a 90-82 lead into the final period.
pion Knlcks.
"It was the first real run we
Cattedge completed the. run
had
made as a team and gave us
with a slam dunk that gave the
Magic a 105-96 lead with · 3: 55 confidence as a tea!ll;" Orlando
remaining. ·· Tbe closest the ct-nter Dave Corzine said. "Com•
Knlcks came thert&gt;a!ter was lng Into tht&gt; locker room after the
110·107 on Johnny Newman's victory was just like being back
3-polnt shot with · 32 seconds in coUt&gt;ge. Everybody was high-

• • • •'

• • "' .;. ,.•1f
•

•

They

1

~

• Tony Granato and rookie cenHorava, the n James Patrick put
them up 3-1 wi th a power play
ter Darren Turcotte put on a
daz?]lng offensive display . Gr ascore.
The Rangers s urg ro to a 6-1
nato scored a goa l a nd two
It-ad in the third on goals by Mar k
assists, and Turcotte picked up a
Janssens and John Ogrodnlck.
goal and an assist.
E lsewht-re in the NHL: ·
' 'That was Granato' s best
Blues 3, Canadlens 3
game of the year," said Neilson.
"I've been really happy with his
At Montreal. Ru ss Courtnall
scored his second fluke goal with
play. For a guy his size he plays
reaily big. He and Turcotte, with
less than three minutes to play in
their speed they're really a
regulation, lifting tht&gt; Canadlens
to a tie. Courtnall, s kating Into
threat out there."
Granato gave the Rangers a
the corner of the rink, took a
commanding 4-llead wlthonlyl6 desper ation backhand shot
seconds remaining In the second which struck the stick of Blues
period when ht&gt; intercepted an defenseman Mike Lalor and
t-rrant clearing pass by Red dt&gt;fit&gt;ett&gt;d Into tht&gt; St . Louis net at
Wings detenseman Mike O'Con- 17:51. Courtnall madt&gt; the score
nt-ll and bt&gt;at goaltender Greg 3-2 at 11: 31 of third period.
Stefan with a slap shot from just Courtnall's backbander went
beyond the right taceotf circle.
into tht&gt; St Louis net after
"When you first start wltb a defeicting off the skate of Lalor.
new coach you never know, but
Flames 5, Oilers l
Roger's been great 'to me, "
At Calgary, Alberta, Doug
Granato said. "I haven't been Gilmour scored two power-play
scoring like I did early last year. goals. helping the Flames t-xtend
He told me not to worry , keep their unbeaten streak to eight
making the plays, k(&gt;(&gt;p working games. The Flames took a 2-0
hard and It would happen, and lt&gt;ad after the first period on
he's right."
goals by Gilmour a nd ·Gary
Detroit took a 1-0 lead at 2: 45of Roberts. Joe Nieuwendyk and AI
tht&gt; lint period on Jimmy Car' Macinnis scored had the other
son's first goal since coming over Calgary goals.
to tht&gt; Red Wings In a trade with
Maple Leafs ~. Nortb Stars l
the Edmonton Oilers.
At Toronto, Tom Ft&gt;rgus
Tbe Rangers tied tht&gt; score 1-1 snapped a 1·1 tie with a second·
on Turcotte's lltb goal of the periOd goal and Allan Bester
season at 10:23 of the first period . stopped 25 shots for Toronto.
Turcotte took a pass from Gra· Vince Damphousse set up tht&gt;
nato at tht&gt; red line, split the . game-winner when he dug the
defense and shot the puck past puck out of a scramble and fro
Stefan while falling to the let&gt;.
Fergus, who beat Minnesota
The Rangers took a 2·1 lea~ at goaltender Jon Casey.
15: 46 of the period on a goal by

CORRECTION

.,.NIA, ...

.
.
..
.

••••••••••••••••llllli•••••-

tl ...

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

Ne Y. Rangers show depth
in·6-1 victory ·over Detroit

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i\

2.~

POMEIOY

YE ARS

�November 7. 1989

Pomaoy-Midclaport. Ohio

Niners post 31-13 victory over Saints
sacks In the last three contests.
Montana would take a three-step
drop and fire either to hls backs
or to his wide receivers coming
underneath or on slant patterns.

By WILLIAM D. MtJJ&amp;aAY
VPI Sports Wrt&amp;er
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Joe Montana neaated the New
Orleans pass rush by not allowIng the Saints time to build
momentum.
Montana connected on his first
11 passes for 139 yards and two
touchdowns Monday night to
dishearten the New Orleans
Saints en route to a 31-13 rout.
The victory Improved San
Francisco's record to 8-1 on the
season and gave the Nlners a
three-game lead over the Los
Angeles Rams in the NFC West.
New Orleans dropped Its l!rst
game tit the last four to fall to 4-5.

"He (Montana) was real
quick," said Saints linebacker
Rickey Jackson. "He kept us off
balance. He just didn't give our
rush any time to get to hlm. I
don't think he took a five-step
drop alii) tght."
Montana was not sacked and
finished by completing 22 of 31
passes for 302 yards, three
touchdowns. and ran for another
score.
"It was scary how they went
around ' us, over us and through
us, every which way," said New
Orleans coach Jim Mora. "We
couldn't slow them down In the
first half. We played like we were
In a daze." ,
'
In all, the 49ers rolled up 397
yards In total &lt;?{fense.

"It seemed like he (Montana)
was possessed." said Rice, who
caught six passes for 93 yards
and a pair of touchdowns. "You
could tell he was on."
The 49ers used a game plan
designed to stop the Saints pass
rush, which had accumulated 17

•'I think lt would be hard for us
to play any better than we dld the
first lour or nve times we had the
baU, " Montana said. "We sputtered a little at the start of the
second half, but that was my
fault."
San Francisco scored on Its
opening possession, marching 78
yards in eight plays. The touchdown ~arne on a 32-yard pass
from Montana to Rice on a slant
pattern.
" Jerry Rice Is a great athlete,"
said Niners coach George Set·
lert. "Our system lends Itself to
exploiting his ablllties."
New Orleans managed to tle
the score 7-7 late In the first
quarter when Dalton Hilliard,
who gained 51 of his 80 yards In
the opening quarter, dashed In
from the one. Hilliard was a
potentweaponearlyln the game,
but was shut down In the second
half.
"We thought we could run the
ball early and dld," Mora said.

·'Then they made some adjustments and It just wasn't there
anymore. Even without Michael
carter (San Francisco's All-Pro
noseguard who was out with an
Injury) they are very tough."
San Francisco pulled away for -·
21-10 halltlme lead on Montana
touchdown passes of two yards to
Rice and 45 yards to John Taylor.
New Orleans could muster just a
39-yard Morten Andersen field
goal to round out the first hall
scoring.
San Francisco sputtered to
open the second half. The Saints
started their first two drives on
the 49ers 30 and 41. but managed
justa23-yardAhdersenfieldgoal
and never scored again.
The 49ers Increased their lead
late In the third quarter to 24-13
on a .44-yard Mike Cofer field
goal. Montana gave San Franc'isco Its final margln, .runnlng
three yards around right end for
a touchdown midway through the
fourth quarter.

a

Browns ·Mack released on· shock probatiot,t
RICE SCORES - San Francisco wide receiver Jerry Rice
catches this Joe Montana ~s for his second touchdown In the
second quarter of Monday •lght's game against the visiting New
Orleans Saints..The 49ers beat the Saints 31-13. (UPI)

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o•

· Novotna, Zvereva are upset
victims in ,Slims tournament
'

CHICAGO &lt;UPI) '-Fifth seed
Jana Novotna and eighth seed
Natalia Zvereva of the Soviet
Union lost llrst-round matches
Monday night · In the $250,000
Virginia Slims of Chicago.
Bettina Bunge, ranked 95th In
the world and atiempting to
make a comeback froin an
injury-plagued 1988 season,
knocked off 11th-ranked Novotna
6-2, 6-7 (4-7), 6-0. Marianne
Werdel, ranked 109th, easily
defeated 21st-ranked Zvereva
6-2, 6-3.
"It's certainly an upset - a
huge one," said Bunge, of Monte .:
Carlo, who was ranked as high as
sixth In 1983,
Bunge lost the second set
des pile winning the first two
points of the tie-breaker. She
regrouped to easily win the next
six games and the match at the
UIC Pavilion.
''I'm very proud because !won
It In the third set," said Bunge, a
wild-card entrant and still
hobbled by an Injury. to her left
knee. "I didn't letlt gettomethat
I had It In two. That to me Is a
very big accompHshment."
Werdel of Bakersfield, Calif.,
took the first four games of her
Jllatch and broke Zvereva's
serve three times In the first set.
The 18-year-old Zvereva broke

Werdel In the fifth game ot tne
second set, then held serve to pull
even at 3-3. But Werdel. a former
Stanford All-America, broke
serve In the eighth game, . then
finished Zvereva off In her sixth
attempt at match point.
"Definitely one of the better
matches I've played," Werdel
said. "I was a lot more consistent
today than I have been In the
past. I think she was expecting
me to make a lot of winners but
also make a lot of errors. I did
make a lot of errors, but I kind of
did 'em at not so crucial times." .
Zvereva, - the highest-ranked
female Soviet player, made It to
the finals of the Chicago tournament In 1987 before falling to
Martina Navratllova. She won
the women's doubles at this
year's FrE'nch Open with fellowSoviet partner Larlsa
Savchenko.
"I just don't think I'm ready to
play right now," Zvereva said.
In earlier matches, Pilar Vasquez of Key Bascayne, Fla ..
defeated Kate Gompert of Rancho Mirage, Calif.., 6-3, 6-2; Kathy
Rinaldi of Amelia Island, Fla.,
upset Amy Frazier of Rochester ·
Hills, Mich., 3-6, 7-5, 7-6 !8-6);
and An~ Smith of Dallas defeated Eva Pfaff of West Germany 6-3, 6-3.

far. As long as I work hard and
continue to do that, I feel I should
be granted this second chance."
Mack wr.; arrested JunE' 28 and
charged with lour counts, tnclud-.
lng drug trafficking, but the
serious charges -were later
dropped and Mackpleadedgullty
to using cocaine Aug. 30. At the
time, Mack, his lawyers and the
Browns expected hun to bE'
placed on probation, but McMonagle .sentenced Mack to six
months In prison.
He also was suspended for four
games by the NFL. and underwent arthroscopic knee surgery
Sept. 25. While there are no legal
obstac'!es to rejoining the
Br!)Wns, Mack's physical health
deterior-ated during his prison
term.
He was not able to run, and he'
lost weight. His knee did not get
tbe treatment It would have
received had he been able to use
the Browns facilities, and that
places him · behind In his
rehabllltatlon.
Gold said he thought Mack
could rejoin the team before the
Cincinnati game Dec. 3. ·'He's very anxious to get back '
Into football and back Into action
and out of orison." Gold said.

"

Mack, 27, listed at 6-0, 230
pounds In the Browns media
guide, was sentenced to the Ohio
State Reformatory In Mansfield
by McMonagle, but spent nearly
the entire month at the Frazier
Health Center of th~ Orient
Correctional Institution outside ·
Columbus because of' his knee
problems. He underwent treatment three limes a week at Ohio
State University Hospitals.
Gold said the conditions In
prison were appalling.
"He had a dlfllcult time
describing lt," Gold said of the
conditions at Frazier. "He's
never seen pla~s like that. It
was cold and dark and he saw
rats running around and Insects.
This Is In the hospital area."
Mack was chosen lly the
Browns In the USFL supplemental draft In 1984, and he joined the
team In 1985. That year he
teamed with Earnest Byner to
become only the third set of
teammates to rush for more than
1,000 yards each In the same
season.
,
Though he has been hampered
by Injuries the past three years,
hls absence has been sorely felt
by the Browns, who miss Mack's
wwerfullnslde rushlnlt.

fURNtTUFIE

1M C'hlnao. Mp.m.

BoMDnid. Mll•aullfot', ll; :ll p.m .
hrthllld M HeullloLII: •p.m.
Ch•httr 111. MI-.Uk'. II p.m.
rhOI'IIb JU Lr\ Laker"' 11: 3tp.m.
lA Ol ....rlilltGokiPnstlltt&gt;, II: :II p .m .
0.1._ .. ~at'f11mf'tllo. 11: :11 p .m .
M' tdll"•~hG''" G :unr~
Miami Ill Phlllldrtphla. j ; 31

p.m.

ftoMIOa lit t\'»hl ... on. 7: Jll p.m .
Or .. ndo ... n~.-lalld, 7: JIIp.rn.

SENIOR PRO llASEBAL
Mo .. &amp;J&gt;'IIRH•a
Go tel CVMI 7. Fort Ai,t'f'a I
St. FWri'IKI 111 II, Wl*r Hnen I
Tut!WI q'11 GamH
Fort M)IM'11al GoliiCOMt, 1: Hp.m .
Wet~l Pll.lm Buell Ill At.. ~Mdl", O: IS

Wln&amp;er Haven .t ~t . PetfortiNII. 1:15
p.m.
'
t\'t'dntlld.Q'• G1mont
Or\aadD Ill Brll.dl'ftl~tn. 1:01 p.m.

\\'t'!ll Palm Beii&gt;h at 51. Lul'lr. 7:11
o.m .

OHSAA considers cutback in playoffs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPil The Ohio High School Athletic
Association Is considering cutbacks In most of Its sports,
Including a reduction In the
number of teams which quall!y
lor the annual football playoffs.
A 10-member panel of educators and administrators, appointed by the OHSAA, made the
proposa Is after concerns were
raised about the overlapping o!
&gt;ports from season to season.
Included among the proposals
made by the panel was the

reduction in the football playoffs
from four weeks to three and
from 80 to 40 the number of teams
quall!ytng.
Currently, 16 teams In each of
tbe five divisions take part In
post-season play,. The proposal
would trim that number to eight
In each dlvlslon.
Other proposals would cut the
number of contests In other
sports and redu~e the season
length In most, begtnnii!J with
the 1991-92 school year. They will
be voted on by the OHSAA Board
of Control at Its Jan. 25 meeting.

CALL

REG. 5169.00

SALE

S99~0
.

Gallipolis ·

Mi~dleport

446c09()2

992-6661

or visit your nearest Trust office for details
on your· next 7-Day•Wonder.

$1 0,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

(5 ,., .... 14" till. 111111 4 ,..wH

-•tnt

PORTLAND - The Portland
PTO will serve election day
refreshments on Tuesday from
6:30a.m. to 7 p.m. at the school
gym.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Lodge F and AM will meet
Tu.esday at 7:30 p.m. to elect
officers. All members are urged
to attend.
POMEROY -The Drew Webster Post 39 In Pomeroy will hold
Its annual oyster stew on Tuesday at 7p.m. at theposthome.AU
members and guests are Invited
to attend. Members may bring
prospective new members.

Community projects were discus~ at the October meeting o!
1he Reedsvllle Community
Builders Club held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Osborne. . The business meeting was
conducted by Osborne and the
remainder of the evening was
spent watching the world series
and visiting.
.
: Refreshments were served to
· Mr. and Mrs. Donald Myers. Mr.
aM Mrs. Warren Pickens, Mrs.
Denver Weber, Mr. and Mrs.
Lyle Balderson, and Mr. and Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead.
: The next meeting will be held
Nov. 25 at the Weber residence.

Enjoy the flexikilit! ~f commtting for only 1 .
· week, the l1qu1d1ty of a CD which is
automatically renewable or redeemable at each
7 day anniversary, and the security of FDIC
insurance up to $100,000. Yet earn at a rate
normally found with much longer terr~ CD's..

,.m.

TUESDAY
SALEM CENTER -The Salem Township Volunteer Fire
Deparlment Flrebelles will hold
an election day dinner on Tuesday at the fire house tn Salem
Center. The menu will consist or
vegetable, bean, and chill soup,
sloppy joes, hot dogs, and pies.
Bring containers for carry out
orders.

c;ommunity Builders
hold meeting

Mafllreal at NV Ra.lll'r"- 7:Up.m.
Qui' tiN' atNr"' Jrrl'fl")' , j : Up.m .
\lam:ou\-er 111 \\"lnlllpt"lf, 11:31 p.m.

Mu.imum deposit S99.999.99. Substantial penaky for rurl)' withdrawal. lnrcrfSt
paid u1 P.'incipaland a1mpounded w~kty. Rues ~fecti"to Nov. 3', 1989, and I
subject to chanse ~ithout notice. Yield assumes char snred rare remains cunstam
for a

fuU

year ~ith no _,..ithdraw1lt of inu~rest nr' principal .

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
. . The S.nk Th•t M•kes Things Ha1J1Jen.

Afftl1ate: Tht Central Bln1D1'por1tion, Cincinnau, Ohiu - \/ember fDJ&lt;.

amounts of solid waste and Is
facing a landfUI crisis.
Wiggins noted that the Ohio
Envlronmenta·l Protection
Agency estimates that over hall
of Ohio's counties will exhaust
approved s·oud !"aste landfUI
space within the next five years.
He noted that recyclable Items
are newspapers, glass, aluminum cans, corrugated cardboard, high grade paper, tex tiles, motor oll, appliances, steel
cans, plastics, and organic waste
for composting.
Wiggins also noted that all law
enforcement officers are enforcIng Utter laws. He concluded with
a question and answer period
from the members.
Mrs. Miller then conducted the
business meeting noting that the
group will meet at 1:30 p.m. on
Nov. 16 with the garden club at
the GaiUpolls Developmental
Center.
Juanita Will and Janet Theiss

Garden club
tours factory
A tour of the Middleton Doll ·
Factory In Belpre highlighted the
October meeting of the Riverview Garden Club.
Following the tour, the group
ate lunch on the Becky Thatcher
tn Marlet ta.
· Attending were Delores Frank,
Cathy Spencer, Debbie Pickens,
Opal Harris, Margaret Grossnickle; Ella Osborne, Pauline
Myers, Maxine Whitehead, Betty
Boggs, Mary Allee .Blse. Ruth
Ann Balderson, Janice Young,
Mary Grace Cowdery. Nancy
Wachter and .son, Grace Weber,
Phyllis LarkinS. Marlene Putman. Sue Douglas, Janet ConnoUy, Polly Baker, and Klla
Young.
~ The next meeting will be held
~ov. 16 at the Reedsville Church
of Chrllt and will feature a
ChrIstman workshop. Members
are to brtnaaltts tor patients at
the Amerlcare Nursing Center .

at the Chester United Methodist
ChurCh begtnplng at 11 a.m.
There will be ham loaf. soups,
sandwiches, pie 11-nd cake.
MIDDLEPORT TThe Middleport Order of the Eastern Star
Will have an elecllon day dinner
with vegetable soup, sloppy joe.
cole slaw. coffee and tea for $2.75
In the basement of the Masonic
templ.e from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. .
CARPENTER - The Columbia Township Volunteer Fire
Department Auxiliary, "Bucket
Bridge" will serve fOod all day on
election day at the firehouse on
Route 143 near Carpenter. There
will be donuts, hot dogs, bean
soup, and corn bread, pte and
beverages.
FOREST RUN -The Forest
Run United Methodist Chruch
will have an election day dinner
from U a.m. to 6 p.m. There will
be Homemade vegetable and
bean soup, sandwlcbes. pie.
cake. and beverages.
PORTLAND -The Portland
PTO will have an election day
money maker from 6:30a.m. to 7
p.m. at the school gym. Food will
be served.
SALEM CENTER -The Salem Township· volunteer fire
department will hold an elecllon
day dinner at the fire house In
Salem Center. The menu will
consist of vegetable. bean and
chUte soup, sloppy joes, hot dogs,
and pies. Bring containers for
carry out.
LETART FALLS -The Letart
Falls PTO will meet on Monday
at the shoo! at 7 p.m. Bill
Downie's class will have the
;&gt;rogram. 1 Plans for the fall
carnival to be held Nov. 12 will be
flna)lzed. All parents are urged

to attend.

,

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - The film ''The
Pretender" will be shown on
Wednesday at the Racine Nazarene Church at 7 p.m. The public
Is Invited. The film Is geared to a
younger generallon.
TUPPERS PLAINS -The
Tuppers Plains VFW Auxiliary
9053 will sponsor the Voice of
Democracy for students from
Eastern, Southern. , and Meigs
High Schools on Wednesday at
the post home In Tupj)('rs Plains
at 7 p.m.
·
MIDDLEPORT -The MiddlepOrt Amateur Garden Club will
meet at the home of William
Haptonstall with Gladys Cummings as hostess on Wednesday
at 7:30p.m.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the social
room of the Grace Episcopal
Church. Cindy Oliveri will be the
guest speaker.
POMEROY -The Laurel Cliff
Better Health Club will hold Its
anniversary meeting on Thursday at 6: 30 p.m. at the home of
Marge Fetty. A. potluck dinner
wlll take place.
POMEROY .:._ The Pomeroy
group of A .A. and Al-Anon will
meet on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
J.T.P.A. office on Second St. In
Pomeroy. For Information call
992-5763.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers ·Plains VFW Post 9053
will meet on Thursday at 7 p.m.
All tickets are to be turned In at
this meeting.

Hassle-free holiday
class scheduled
Are you looking for ways to
have more fun and enjoyment
this hoUday season with. less
hassles? If so, plan to attend the
meeting sponsored by the Meigs
County Extension Office on
Thursday from 10 a.m. to noon at
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center.
The program will be presented
by ~cky Culbertson, Ga lila
County Home Economics Agent,
and Clridy Oliveri, Meigs County
Home Economics and 4H agent.
They will share ways to reduce
stress during the holiday season.

Entertaining Ideas, reducing
stress, microwave hoUday recipes, time management tl'chntques, creative gifts, and creatIng new traditions, will all be
discussed and demonstrated.
Participants wlll receive handouts and recipes and a taslng
session will follow the program.
The re"glstratlon fee Is $2 per
person,jlnd Is pay!i,b le the day of
the class.
For additional Information, or
to register, call the Meigs County
Extension Office at 992-6696.
Reglstratlo·n deadline Is
Tuesday .

Long Bottom news notes
By MELODY ROBERTS

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Woode,
Jeromesville, and Fred Wo!JIIe,
Ashland, spent the weekend with
their 'cousins, Ada Bissell and
MaeMcPeek.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Ferrell and
Leota Ferrell, Medway, spent
some time with Ada Bissell and
Mae McPeek.
JoAnn, Rebecca, and CoUeen
Hensley were 'guests of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Hensley, and Dick.
Wilma Wamsley and Betty
Lolllln, Cheshire, were overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsel Larkins.

Omitted
In the recent report of bridal
showt&gt;r held for Michele Folmer,
tht&gt; name of her grandmother,
Cora Folmer, was unlntentiOn·
ally omitted. ·

•

•

showed pine cone angels which
they had made using pine cones,
dried milkweed pods, and hlck.ory nuts.
Also discussed was the flOwer
show to be held Nov. 18 and 19 at
Royal Oak Resort.
Betty Milhoan had the Installation of officers with Kathryn
Mlller, president; Janet Theis.
vice president; Doris Grueser.
treasurer; and P(lggy Moore.
secretary. "Each were presented
candles In different shapes.
For roll call members exchanged tulip bulbs and Evelyn
!Iollon had the arrangement of
the month called "October
Days" using yellow chrysanthemums. pyrethrum, gum leaves,
and dried wOod on a round wOod
base.
The meeting concluded with ·
Mrs. Hollon serving refreshments and passing out a variety
of house plants to members.

Community calendar

CHESTER - There will be an
election day dinner and bake sale

falpry 1111 LG" .411...,...; 7: 11 p.m.

p. m.

Evelyn Hollon served as hostess for the October meeting of
the WildwOod Garden Club.
ThE' meeting opened with devotions by Dorothy Smith's reading
of . "Tips for Spiritual Health"
and "Renovated and Repaired"
' from the Upper Room. She also
had two poems. "Give Thanks,"
and "Pumllklns In the Cornfield"
from Ideals,
Kathryn Miller, president,
read a poem, "Unconditional
Surrendor," and then Introduced
the guest speaker. Kenny Wiggins, who swke on litter control.
Wiggins showed a video on
various recycling centers
throughout Ohio. He spoke of why
It Is necessary to recycle. According to· Wiggins, Ohioans
generate a staggering 10 mllllon
-tons of garbage a year, to which
each person contributes slx
pounds a day. At the same time,
Ohio Is producing massive

MIDDLEPORT -There will
be a special Alzheimer's Support
Group meeting on Tuesday at
overbrook Center at' 7 p.m.
Qanlel 0. Trent will speak.

•Durable ateln- lftistent fabric
and wuhable vinyl
•Chip .a nd ocretch rHiotent
baked enamel flniah
•Paddad table top
•Choice of 3 colors

.Holiday
parade
slated

Wildwocxi Garden Club. meets

: ROCK SPRINGS - There will
1¥! an election day dinner at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church on Tuesday beginning at
10 a.m. There will be vegetable
soup. bean soup, corn bread, hot
dogs, sloppy joes, pop, coffee and
desserts.

•

Tuesday, November 7, 1989

Paga 5

POMEROY -There will be an
election day luncheon at the
Episcopal church In Pomeroy.

Unfold A New Convenience

0
Samsonlte·

By The Bend.

•

S('w· l '•rll Ill

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" ' .... lflltnn ld .-\abulia. j : :fe
n.-ttcMI

Calendar

('harkllif' 1111 S!•IIUIP, Ill p.m.

( "t•ntrul Divl"lon

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This week's games

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with rl'roniiUtd

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IO. tlk') r\rlan~" 17·11 ............... !7~ II
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.,

NEM" \ 'ORK (UPI)
IJI~~&gt;rno~.lloral

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131

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• ••••

College ratings

something, sir," McMonagle told
Mack, "If you have one dirty
urine (sample), I'll send you
back to prison."
Mack appeared In his prison
outfit and tennis shoes, and hls
wife, Ava, also was present.
Mack left the courtroom by a side
door after McMonagle announoed the decision.
Before announcing his decision, McMonagle gave Mack a
chance to address the court, and
the player said his prison term
had been a shocking experience. ,
"l"ve just been around people
I've never seen before and never
really confront£d before," Mack
said. "It really scared me and I
just feel that given al)other
chance. I can turn my llle around
with the help of God and the
friends I have and the program
that I'm trying to work oui with
AA ( Alcohollcs Anonymous).
"It's been real tough, but I
know I can do II. I've made II this

ByBOBKEIM

UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
judge released Kevin Mack from
prison on shock probation Monday and the two-time Pro Bowl
fullback was hopeful of reJoining
the Cleveland Browns as soon as
his health permits.
Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Judge Richard McMonagle, who sentenced Mack to slx
months In prison Oct. 3 after the
luUback pleaded guUty to using
cocaine, a fourth-degree felony,
told Mack he was getting "a fresh
start."
Mack will be on probation lor
two years and subject to rigorous
urine tes ling. He also will take
part In the Browns' Inner Circle
program, as well as various
other sell-help activities. Mack
also must submit a report to
McMonagle by Feb. 1 outlining
his employment plans for the
off-season and after football.
"I want you to understand

The D·aily Sentinel

'

Phyllis Larkins and Shirley
Salisbury, Galllpolls, spent a day
In Columbus recently.
Derek and Tyler Winebrenner,
' Allred, spend several days with
grandparents, Tom and Sue
Hayman.
.
Mary Ellen Andrew and Mary
Ann spent the weekend with
Francis Andrew.
.
Callers at the Paul Hauber
home have been Phyllis Larkins,
Lucille Kimes, and Mae McPeek.
Also, Wilma Wamsley and Betty
LOudin, Cheshire.
To place news notes, call
9115-4275 or write Box 7, Long
Bottom. 45743.

Smorgtnboard set
The Scipio Township Senior
Citizens, Pagevllle, will have a
smorgasboard on Friday from
4·7 p.m.·
The price Is $4 for adults and $2
for children under the age of 12.

"Christmas Along the River"
will be the theme lor tbe 19R9
Pomeroy-Middleport Christmas
Parade.
The parade will be held Sun1 day, Nov. 26, with line-up to be •
behind the old Pomeroy High School. The parade will proceed
- through Pomeroy beglimlng at
1:30 p.m.. and then on to
Mlddtewrt where It wlU disband
at the Holzer ·clinic parking 101.
The parade Is being held In
conjunction with an Open House
by area merchants. The Open
House will be held from 12 noon to
5 p.m. to kick off the Christmas
shopping season.
Area high school bands are
encouraged to participate In the
parade, as well as floats and
other units. Anyone wishing to
WINNER -Robert Lee Henderson, Alfred, Is sea&amp;ed on hla new
participate should complete the
Yamaha ATV, which he won during a Modern Woodmen of
accompanying registration
America, Camp 101011, Matching Fund Drive to benefit. the
blank and return It to the
CooMile Lions Club building lund. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
Harold Lee Henderson, Alfred.
Office, 204 East Main St., Pomeroy, 45769, or call the cham~r
office at 992-5005.
\f : .
Merchants and chamber supportors hope this year's combined parade will be the biggest
and best ever.
.

Woodmen celebrate
fund drive success .
The Modern Woodmen of
America, Camp 10900, celebrated Its completion of the 1989
Matching Fund Drive with a
victory barbecue at lhe Hocking
River Campgrounds In Coolville.
The drive Included a street
dance and bazaar.
A check for $8,817.94, including
$2,()()() matching funds from Modern WOodmen of America Insurance Company, Rock Island,
Ill., was presented to the Coolville Lion's Club building fund.
The mo~y Is for renovating
and furnishing the Lions newly
acquired meeting hall at 13 Third
St. In Coolville. The building will
be available for community
recreational gatherings by
spring of 1990.
It was announced that during
the matching fund drive, Gary
Hart, Coolville, was the winner of

a Christmas angel doll. and
Robert Lee Henderson, Alfred,
won the Yamaha ATV.
Danny Brookover and James
Moore, Coolville, were also ,
awarded prizes, and John Breedlove was presented the Ringmaster award lor his outstanding
leadership during the drive.
The Woodmens creed service
was led by Paul McPherson,
Robert Pullins, and Ralph Henderson. Coolville.
Marjorie Malone accompanied
the group singing with the
autoharp.
A sliver collection was taken
for the Torch Fond Pantry to help
with provisions for the needy of
the area . Doris and Ronald•
Eastman, Pomeroy, were welcomed as new members. and
cheer 'plates were delivered to
shut in members.

Graduates announced
Chuck Edmonds recently graduated from Texas Aero Tech In
Dallas after receiving his certificate In aviation maintenance and
acquiring his A&amp;P license. He
has joined Continental Airlines
Express. He and his wife, Lisa
and their s()n, John Charles, live
In Houston, Texas.
Roy Edmonds after gradual-

lng from Texas A &amp; M-Unlver·
sity, has ~en commissioned a
second lieutenant In the U.S.
Marine Corps and Is stationed at
Camp LeJeune, N.C.
Both Chuck and Roy are sons of
Walter C. and Bonnie Edmonds
of San Antonio. Texas and the
grandsons of Irene Edmonds
Arnold, Pomeroy.

POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT
CHRISTMAS PARADE
(Christmas Along The River)
NAME: -- .. -- ... - .. - ... -.- .. -.- -- --- -- .. --- -ADDRESS: ... -. - . - - .... - - ....... - - . - -.. - ; . - .
PHONE: .................... . . . ... - . -... --- . TYPE OF ENTRY: .............. -- - .. -.- . .. Please Circle One:

WALKING UNIT or RIDING UNIT
RETURN FORM TO CHAMIER OFFICE

FAMILY DENTAL CARE
2924.JACKSON AVENUE

POINT PLEASANT. WV

IS NOW SCHEDULING PATIENT APPOINTMENTS
EVENING &amp; SAnJRDAY HOURS AVAILABLE

MICHAEL B.

(304) 675-1932
DDS GENERAL DENTISTRY

Eastern banquet set
The Eastern athletic boosters
will hold their football and
volleyball banquet on Monday at
6:30p.m. at the high school.
Each family Is to bring three
dishes, a meat dish, a dessert,
and a vegetable dish or salad.
Table service and drink will be
provided.

Revival scheduled
The Pomeroy Church of Christ
Is having revival throughout the
week at 7 p.m. nightly.
Kevin Yeagar Is the guest
speaker and the public Is Invited
to attend.

�Pea•

Tuesday, November 7, 1989

6-The Dllily Ssttittel

Sorority Mystery Tour conducted
Alpba Omicron Chapter, Delta sett history.
From there the group went to
Kappa Gamma, conducted its
Blennerhasset t Island on the
Mysll'ry Tour recently.
ReRarcb committee chair· stern wheeler .. After a greeting
. man, Carolyn Smith, assisted by and short history of the Island,
Margaret Benson, was In charge they toured the Blennerhassett
mansion. The first tour was In the
. of arrangements.
kitchen,
the best furniShed In the
Twenty five members of the
eastern
United
States. The pide
:. society and three guests, Eleanor
demonstrated
ways of cooking
· Smith, Ruth Tate, and Lynn
around
an
open
fireplace. The
· Wenschoter, met at Elby's in
second
tour
was
of the main
Belpre for lunch.
In the afternoon the group. mansion house where the plde
toured the Blennerhassett Mu· spoke of the uses of the 12 rooms.
On the return trip, Rebecca
seum In South Parkersburg, and
viewed the video of Blennerhas· Zurcher, president, thanked

Miss Smith, and her committee,
as well as the hostess committee.
for an enjoyable oudng.
Susan Wlll, first vice president,
dlstrlbu ted programs lor the
1989-90 year. The next meeting
wlll be at Saints Peter and Paul
Hall, Wellston, on Nov. 20 at 6: 30
p.m. A silent auctto11 will be held.
Members present fr&lt;m Meigs
County were Carolyn · Smith,
Rebecca Zurcher, Sheila Bevan,
Twlla Childs, Pauline Horton,
Nellie Parker, Chris Rouse,
Rosalie Story, and Dorothy
Woodard.

.Middleport Literary Club meets
Mrs. Forest Bachtel reviewed Vienna love to dine, drink their
the book, "The Waltz King" by wine, and listen while muSic is
Han Fan tel at the recent meeting being played, and that even the
of the Middleport Literary Club poorer class of people enjoy the
when It met at the home of Mrs. music.
Wilson Carpenter.
Mrs. Bachtel pointed out that
Mrs. Bernard Fultz, program Yohann Sr. was a good musician
chairman, Introduced Mrs . but that his son, Yohann Jr., was
Bachtel who noted that the two a musical genius. The father was
JohannStrau·s s's. father and son, · jealous of his son's success,
, weretbewaltzklngs.Shewenton however, the younger Yohann
to say tbat Vienna is the land of always gave his father credlt lor
. the waltz, and that no other city his musical talent. "The Blue
bas ever been so Involved by an Danube Waltz," "Tales of
art as Vienna was by music.
Vienna Woods," and the "Em· 'The book tells of the people's peror's Waltz" as well as many
tnwlvement with music which more, werewrlttenbyJohannJr.
was shared by noblllty and shop He wrote over 300 pieces of music
keepers, as well as janitors. It from the time of his debut until
went on to say that the people of his retirement. Mrs. Bachtel

went on to say that his mother
had been very influential in
fostering his musical talent and
saw that he had training. '
The business meeting was
conducted by Mrs. George Hackett Jr. who welcomed t~o guests,
Florence Smith, and Mrs. John
Yeary.
Members sang happy blrthbay
to Mrs. Nan Moore, and Mrs.
Hackett passed out parts for the
play that the club will do at the
next two meetings.
Roll call was answered with
members telllngofthe first time
they dances.
.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess.

World Community Day scheduled
:
·

;
·
'

"To Pray is to Rjsk" was the
theme of the World Community
Day service held by the Church
Women United of Meigs County
at the MI. Moriah Baptist Church
In Middleport on Friday.
The program was wrlt ten by
Korean·ARlerlcan women who
have lived Immigrant lives in the
U.S. and have been involved with
Koreau·Amerlcan women and
men suffering from adjustment
dlf!lcultles and poverty.
Mrs. Mary Frances Baum·
gardner presided at the meeting

.

in which church dues were paid
and blanket certificates were
sold.
Mrs. Baumgardner was the
leader lor the service, and Mrs.
Florence Richards and Mrs.
Faye Wallace read articles of
preparation before the program
started.
Mrs. Fran Parker was the
pianist, and Mrs. Richards sang
"Sweet Hour of Prayer." Two
other songs were sung, " Joyful,
Joyful, We Adore Thee," and
"Kum Ba Yah."

Other ladles taking part as
Asian women were as follows,
Rhoda Hall, Doris Grueser, Ra·
chael Downie, Edith Sisson,
Margaret Bowles, Marya! ice Sa·
muels, and Patty Craig.
Scripture readers were Glenna
Rummell -a nd Lulu Hampton,
off~&gt;rlng collectors were Mary
Pugh and Betty McGuire. '
Approximately 50 peopll' were
present and the ladles of the
church served refreshments in
the fellowship hall.

iSll:Ittering least of life's problems
Dear Ann Landers: I was cares? When I remarried reinterested In the column you ran cently, we said our vows In
• about stutterers. It referred to unison and it was beautiful. "Jimmy," a 12·year·old who C.W., Bridgeport, Mich.
Dear C.W.: Thanks for shar·
couldn't get a sentence out
without stuttering. Here's my ing. I was Inundated with letters
on the subJect.
story:
~NNUNDERS
.. 1989..... A.........
I am a 36-yl'ar·old woman who
Read on:
Tim""' SyiMIIcwlr -d
. was a Ilfelong stutterer. I have
· From Las Vegas: My ·Iieart
c-.... !1!'......
painful memories of my child· goes out to that young lad who
hood. I was laughed at in school,
stuttered. I had _the same probmimicked, rejected and made to lem and it caused me untold
Uttle Bock: Stutterers shOuld
· misery. I sweat blood every time·
feel inferior.
sing
their messages Instead of
. My parents spent a great cteal I was called on In school.
speaking.
I have cured a dozen
of money on therapiSts with no Although I was an A student I
stutters
with
thiS technique. I
positive results. Today my couldn't respond orally to the
don't
know
why
it works but it
speech Is perfectly normal. T simplest question.
does.
I
urge
all
stutterers
to try lt.
work in advertising ,a nd tea~h at
I was an embarrassment to my
.the college level. I also teach sisters, who would tell me to shut
Swlday l!Chool and am socially up whenever I started to speak. I
actiVe. What happened? How did ran away from home at age 15. I
I overcome stuttering?
was amazed to find that when I
. My husband died suddenly was away from my family my
·. when I was 25. It was a terrible stuttering immediately eased up
~.I decided that stuttering andeventuallyltstopped.Wheni ~onduaed
small potatoes compared return home to visit I find myself \,.'
wtlh being a wldow.ltold myself stuttering again. It's not hard to
.
that everyone has a cross to bear figure out that stress was the
Betty Fultz and Bernice Durst
alld stuttering was mine: Once I main factor In my case. I have a lost the most weight at the recent
accepted ·stuttering, In the same hunch it figures in other Ins tan· .• ml'ellng of Ohio TOPS 570 when
way that I accepted the fact that ces as well.
the group met at the coonhun·
my thighs are too big and I can't
Sarasota: Our son began to
ter's lodge at the fairgrounds.
grow plants, I stuttered less and stutter when he was 3 years old.
The runner up was Rose Knapp
· I~. After a while I barely Our doctor held out a pencil to
and the best preteen loser was ·
stultJ!red at all.
·
him and he took it wlth .hls left
Krlstm Torres with runner up
1'llere are stlll some things that . hand. We were told to placl'
Amy Smith.
I won't do, such as calllnforma· everything in his )eft hand. We
Lennie Aleshire ope,ned the
tiOII and give my credit card did and that put an end to the
meeting with prayer and pledge
number on the phone. But who boy's stuttering.
and \"eicomed a ni'W, adult
member and a new preteen
member.
'
It was noted that Peggy VIning
resigned· as assistant leader and
DOris Bailey will take her place.
Ola Sinclair regained her
KOPS in Walling status and It
was voted tohaveasilentauctlon
In the spring.
·
All funds from the silent
auction
go toward Area
Recognition Day which will be
held In Grove City.
The group sang· 'Walk Around
the Block" and Mrs. Aleshire
read "Masterpiece."
. The Christmas party will be
held Dec. 12 with a covered diet
dish dinner. Secret pals will be
BEA KUHN, GRAND ORGANIST, OES
revealed and each member is to

Ann
Landers

Triplett to speak locally
Bennie S. Triplett, overseer of
the Cb.urch of God In Southern
Ohio, will be the featured
speaker at special services on
Sunday, at l: 30 p.m ., at . the
Chester Church of God. 'rriplett
will be conducting the dedication
of the Chester church, along with
Rev. Gary G. Hines, pastor.
Rev. Triplett is the former
director of Forward In Faith; the
radio and television department
of the denomination's headquarters In Cleveland, T~&gt;nn. His
. ministry there was heard each
.week through some 350 radio
stations. Rev. Triplett has served
pastorates In North Dakota,
Tennesse~&gt; and Georgia. He is a
former overseer of North and
BENNIE S. TRIPLETT
South Dakota, Indiana and Flor·
Ida. He served on the World
Missions Board and was elected
The Senior Citizens Dance Club for threl' terms as a member of
will have a round and square the General Executive Council.
His travels have Included Rus·
dance on Friday from 8-11 p.m.
Music will be provided by the sla, China, India •. Japan, Korea.
True Country Ramblers.
Those attending are to bring
snacks for the snack table,
The dance is open to thl' public.

Seniors dance

Country music night
· The Lottrldge Community Cen·
ter will have Country Music
Night Saturday starting at 7 p.m.
All bands and singers are invited
to participate. Food will be sold.
The center IS located on Athens
County Road 53, Lottrldge Road,
five miles west of Coolville on
Route 50. Admission is 50 Cl'nts,
and the public Is invited.

Veterans Day
program slated
Drew Webster Post 39, Ameri·
can Legion, will hold its annual
Veteran's Day program at the
Meigs County Court House Satur·
day at 10:30 a.m .
Joe Struble, a veteran of the
Korean Conflict, a past com·
mander and life member of Drew
Webster Post. will be the
speaker.
The local post is Inviting all
veterans organtzalions to partie I·
pate in the Pomeroy service with
their own color guard and colors,
and all Meigs Countlans to join In
a tribute to those who served In
the armed forces .

Africa, Europe, Romania, Yu ·
goslavla, Central America and
the Caribbean. He is a frequent
speaker at camp meetings, con·
ferences and lnler·church
gatherings.
Rev. Triplett Is known for his
ablllty to share the gospel in both
sermon and song. He haS released 12 albums anq has composed and published over 200
hymns and gospel songs, many of
which have been translated to
other languages. He Is also an
au thor with several published
books.
A native of North CaroUna,
Triplett was reared in the Church
of God Home for Children and
received his bachelor · of arts
degree in religion and philosophy
from Tennessee Wesleyan
College.
He and his wife, Helen, have
one daughter, Rene, ,one .son,
Steven, anti·!our'grandchildren.

Head Start meal
guidelines announced
The Gallla-Melgs Head Start
Program, a division of Woodland
Centers, ;nc. announces the
sponsorship of the Child Care
Food Program. Meals wlll be ,
made available at no extra
charge to children at the centers
listed below and will be provided
without regard to race, color,
national origin, sex, age or
handicap.
Listed are the Income EligibilIty Guidelines for Free and
Reduced-Price Meals which are
effective July 1, 1989 through
June 30, 1990.
Free Program: Family size;
Year ; Month; and Wel'kly
income.
,
1 member: $7,774 year; $648
month; $150 week.
2 members: $10,426 year; $869
month; $201 week.
3 members: $13,078 year;
$1,090 month; $252 week.
4 members: $15,730 year:
$1,311 month; Sll3 week.
5 members: $18,38~ year;
$1,532 month; $:j54 week.
6 membecy $21,034 year;
$1,753 month; 5405 week.
7 members: $23,686 year; ·
$1,974 month; $456 week.

8 members: $26, 3:IM year;
$2,195 month; $507 week.
Each additional family
member add: $2,652 year; $221
month; $51 week.
Reduced Program: Family
size; Year; Month; and Weekly
Income.
.
1 member: $11,063 year; $922
month; $213 week.
2 members: $14,837 year;
$1,237 month; $286 week.
3 members: $18,611 year;
$1,551 month; $358 week.
4 members: $22,385 year;
$1,866 month; $431 week.
5 members: $26,159 year;
$2.1811 month; $504 week.
6 members: $29,933 · year;
$2,495 month; $576 week.
7 members: $33,707 year;
$2,809 month; $649 week.
8 members: $37,481 year;
$3,124 month; $721 week.
Each additional famlly
member add: $3,774 year; $315
month; $73 week.
Any person who believes that
he or she has been discriminated
againSt In any U.S.D.A. related
activity should write imme·
dlately to the Secretary of'
A~fr:~Culture, Washington, . D.C.

Tttllday, November 7, 1989

will

l:'C" member namnd to state
a gift for the gift exchange.
post bring
Norma Torres will have a
0 '.C.:.J
"speak on" on the subject of
V'

Bea Kuhn, 171Portsmouth Rd.,
Galllpolls, has been appointed

the Grand Organist of the Grand
Chapter of Oh lo Order of the
Eastern Star.
A member of Evangeline OES
172, - Kuhn Is a past worthy
matron of her order, but was
III!Yer organls11ocally, however,
sill' bas played for numerous
apeclal functions. She Is also
acUve In the .Order of the White
Sllrlne of Jeru.saleni and La·
fayettle Shrine,
She will be
repusmUng her chapter an'd
d.lll'Icl throughout Ohio during
tile next year as the grand
cdleei 1 perform their dulles in
1M 28 dt•trlcts.

ICtiiiD said thll II the second
OICI-tcr:t=u•dve )'l!ar a member of

Evangeline chapter has been a
grand officer - Chorls Gaul of
Pomeroy was Grand Adah last
year.
She Is marrted to Bob Kuhn,
who is chaplain at Gallipolis
Developmental Center and an
American Baptist minister. She
attend~ Calvary Baptist Church
in Rio Grande where she Is
organist, choir director and a
member of the board of deacOns.
Kuhn Is also a member of the
baord or the GaiDa County
Council on Aging, a volunteer
organiSt at GDC and at the
community Lenten services, and
is vice president of French City
Shrlnettes. She Is an Avon
representative and organist at'
Waugh-Halley·Wood Funeral
Home.

diabetes at the next meeting. .
The group Is now meeting for
weigh In at 5 p.m. with the
meeting at 6 p.m. every Tuesday
evening at the coonhunter's
lodge at the fairgrounds.

0

· ed

ffiltt

Several names were unlnten·
tlonally omitted from an earlier
account of the !50th anniversary
banquet of the Homebuilders
Class of the Middleport Church of
Cbrllt.
Pastprealdentsatlendlngwere
Marie CUrd, Flo Grueeer, and
Bud WU10n.
Others atll!ndtng were Shellle
DuBose, Mrs. Cecil Hellman, and
Ben Reapp.

Rio Grande. Students may regis·
ter on the first ev~&gt;n ing of the
class at the high school or
through open registration at
Davis Career Center on the
University campus. Open regis·
tration will be held on Monday,
Nov. 13, from 3 to 7 p.m.
Fur furthl'r Information on
these classes and registration
information, residents may con·
tact the office of Continuing
Education, Box 878, Unlverlslty
of Rio Grande, or call 1·800·282·
7201.

The University of Rio Grande
will host two community coUege
classes In Meigs County this
winter.
Meigs High School will be the
site of · bOth classes offered
through the Unlvl'rsity with
classes to be~rln Nov. 14.
The classes are "Introduction
to Business" to be offered on
Mondays, 6 to 10 p.m. and
"Principles of Business Management'' to be offered on Tuesdays,
6 to 10 p.m.
Both courses are fully accredited through the University of

Craft show

Days

DAY IEFORE PUBLICATION

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

•Gravel

•L•lmeSf One
•Fill 'D irt

..919 NEASE HOLlOW ID.

IACINE, 0110

GUNS • AMMO
12Ga.DEERSLUGS ... $2.20sox
GUITARS &amp; GUITAR STRINGS
" OPEN 9 AM-7 PM Monday-Friday
Saturday 9 am-5 prn

locksprinp ld.
•-roy, Ollie

PH. 992·3561
Buying Hours;
7:30-8:00
Mon. thru Ft1.
7:30·4:00 Saturdly
(1117·'19-lao.

EAGU RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
YARDMAN MOWIIS

lCHO SAWS &amp; TIIMMEIS

OIIGOII IAIS, CII&amp;IIIS

IY&amp;N SEIVICE CEN!EI
Parts I S•Yic• On
. . . . . .s

VISA - MASTEACHARGE

HOURS: Mon.-fri. 9 -7
Sat. 9·5
Cloaed Sunday

I
I
I
1.

~~~

224 E. MAIN ST.
992·9976

I'
1
1

,

TilliS. E.l. •:45 P.M.

r

su"~:i~~.....

I ~~~R~::I:'~"r."~~' l

:'I1ace.
1. coupon I* cus. I
·t -Lim~
per biOll) IOSSiOII.
I

w.
r.. •so.oe '" Gomo
O..r Ira Pooplo'65 DO · I

·I
'I

Por Gomt

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

I

.

__:_~-~.J.t

HUDNALL

PI.UMIING &amp; IlEAliNG

••~"'r:!:'::O.-.... '

NEWlAND
ENTERPRISES

Middleport, Olio 4 57.0

SALES &amp; SERVICE.

We Cwry Ftlhlng Suppliei

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt ·

Pey Your Phone •
end .Cable
Bills Here
_,
IUSINBS PHONE
(6 t 41 992-6550
HSIDENa PHONE
(6141 992-7754

(614) 667-3271
Grant A.

9U·2969

..

I· ,o,:.~~o11s
· II
CLUI

1.

949 2168
~=====~·~===::::==!. llu::.~:~.:_

4/l/89 / tfn

411-6 - GalltpOIII

317 - Ch•h•r•
318 - Vinlon
245-- Rio Grande
25&amp; - 0uyan Diu
643 - Arable Oist
J79 - Welnut

15

54.00
$8 .00
59 .00
$13.00

....••
•

10/ 10/ 89 tfn

51 ":- Houl8hold Good!O

' 152-Sportinv Goads
5J - Ant1QUIIS

Farm
&amp;

11 - Melp Wanted
· 12- Situttion Wanted

Mason Co .. WV
Af .. Code 304

882 - N.w Hav!'n

89!i - Letart
937 - Buffalo

14 - luain•• Training
16-Schools Instruction
16 - Fhdto, TV 1 ca Rep•"

62-Wanted to Buy
63- livestocll
64- H•v &amp; Gratn
65 - Seed &amp; Fert~Uer

a

17 - Misc:ellaneous
18 - Wanted To Do

7J-Vans So 4

blale

Public Sale
&amp; Auetion

(Candle Nollncluded)

1:00 P.M.

1

.

t: .._

LOCATED ON SYeAMORE ST, NEW HAVEN, WV.
TURN AT CHURCH OF GOD AND FOLLOW SIGNS.

ltiiS. GBBS HAS SOLD HER HOlE AND WILL IE SEU.ItG
THE FOU.OWING:
HOUSEHOLD I IIISCELUNEOUS: lleMIIiful king liH
walalbed, Bpiece dning IOCIIIIIUite, 2pieoe lYing IOCIIIII,..,
lounge oluir. zs• Sears color TV, RCA a white TV,
duk, colt" table, table I 6 ehUI. 3 nice bor stools, lllge
Kenmore micrawave OVBfl, chuen, chelle, mople pooler
bed. baby bed, K.,IIIOIII w....... I dryer, -.1 P.,. &amp;
speabrl, fan, Home lnltriar, coalolr, • ..tlinet, gtus ••·
IIIII ol in!n ltane dllna, lgurintl1, gu gril, lawn flanlltn,
lotclilltl &lt;Nirl. lllroMrw hlallr; SINrs
11 liP
I IMMIIII dllck, Wiard push - · C......
WMCiwaeMr, .tum.lloddor, plywood, welghlllencll&amp;-'lhll,
-r.mpo&amp;,.....

c.•-

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

.,

RICK. PBAIL80N AUCTION CO.
MASON, WV

'175-5715

owm PAftDA o TERMS: Clllll!f ChiCk WIIIIID
Not Rs Sf Clllllble Far A«kllnll Or Loll Of Praplrly
L'llllldUrnHIII

IC

.IWV, . .

wo ·s

31 - Hom" tor Sale
32-Mobile Homes· for Sale
33 - Farml tor Sale

34 - Bulln•• Buildings

79 - Cempers &amp;. Motor Homes:

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEl
SERVICE.
SYRACUH. 01110

35 - l.9tl l Acreage

Mott Foreign and
Domestic Vehidel
A/ C Service
All Major • MinOt'
Repairs
NIASE Cllftifiad MachiWlic

36 - R..I Estate W1nted

1;1§111)11

Services
81 -- Homtlrnprawments
82 - Piumbmg • Hul:ing
BJ - EAcavatmg
84- Eiectncal &amp; R•frigerat ion
85 - Genf!l'al Hauling
86- Mobiltl Home Rfpair ·
87- Upholstet.,.

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified llcen1_. Shelp
6· 25· '88- tfn

Public Notice

Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Cue No . B9·0R·26B
RUBY RUTH
YARRINGTON.
Plaintiff

vs.

ARNOLD LEE
YARRINGTON. JR.
Detitndant
Amold Loa Ylln'lngton. Jr ..
whou 181t known reaidena.
woo Racine. Moip County.
Ohio. but whose ~ent
wh•oobouto lind rHidonco
• • uNr.nown, will ••• notlc!t
thll on the 26th dev of Oc·
tober, 1189, Ruby Ruth Yarrfnglon filld hor Complllnt
for Divorce ogolnat him In
Cuo No. B8-DR·26B in tho
Common Pte• Court of
Moigo County. Ohio. dem.,dlng that ohe bo dl·
from him 011 tho
groundo thlloho ondtheO.
fondant havo lived ond port. without ln-uptlon ond wMiaPt oohobltotion for one yur or more:
thot
be - · and
- ....
0011111.....
belongingo
elflc:to
now tn her pounlion, and
for auch other relief • may
bopr-.
You ere notified thet you
mull . , . _ tho Complaint
for Divorco within 21 doyo
the ,.. pubiiC8tlon,
which wit be mlllfe on the
11th ...., of
1181.
or judgment by tlet..tt will

o...........

tu-

.........ad ........ you.
You.,.
- a d that
tho final - . In , ....
couMwlll be 1111:10 e.m. on
Jenuary 21. 11110.

LorryE.a-..r.

Mol.

I'OMIIOY 01110

10/30/'19 I

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

WANT ADS

Basham Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
forlory Choice
12 Gaugo Shotg'"" Only
Stri&lt; tly (nforod
10-9-tfn

'

Ctert.ofCourto
County, Ohio
Marl.,• Hanioon, .,.,.,.,
(10131; t1117. 14, 21, 28;
t12) I, 8tc

NOTICE Of
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On OCtober 28. 1989. in
the Meigs County Probate
Court. COlo No. 2641B.
Lois SaUer Harkins. 12 N.
Shafer Str.... Alhono. Ohio
46701-2303 "!at appointed
Executor of the ntete of
Lewis H. Sauer, deceM eel,
lete of 36 Rutland Street,
Midtloport. Ohio 46760.
Robert E. Suck.
Probata Judge
Lena K. Neaaedroed, Clerk
(101 31; t1117. 14. 3tc

11

POMEROY. OH.

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARI

992-7479

ROCKSPRINGS RD. - Ap·
prox. 80 acres o( vacant
ground. Approx. 20 acres Iii·
Iable. All mineral s, waler
and elec. ava&lt;lable. Good
hunttng land. $29.000.

lt. 33 Marth of

Help Wanted

REGISTERED NURSES
Immediate lull tlme and part tlmt openl111s are
eveilablt to! 111istertd nurses to 1t0rk in lilt Special
Clrt Uwil and the Mtdicai/Surcical Unit. Salery
commensurate with uperi•nce . hcellent lrlnp be·
nefits.
Contact:
Rhonda Dalley, R.. ll., Director olllursinr
Vettr1ns Memoriel Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomtroy, OH. 45769
(514J 992·2104. Elttt!!Sion 213

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

MIDDLEPORT - SMALL
HOUSE in Middleport, on a
good street. Small prtce,
would make a good rental in·
vestment. $7,000.00.

ANTIQUITY - St. Rt. 338
- Hou se and lot. Small
house, small pr ice, river
view. With a little work and
!ixing up could be a nice
summer cabin or would be a
good location !or the deet
hunters.

•Mobile Home
Parts
•.Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

992-2259

POMEROY - LOCUST ST.
- Old frame hou se on
40x 120 lot. $5.000.00.

HUNTING ACREAGE - Apple Grove·llotcas Road letart Twp. Approx. 107
acres wooded land with 2
bedrooms, I bath, furnished
cabin. TPC water. Ideal se·
tup for hunters. 14 mile to
river lor the fisherman .
$45,000.

.... · - · luilt
"Free Estimates"

- PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY

Vaterana Memorial Holllitll, •JCAHO-accredlted, not-lar·proftt hoapltal, 11 Sool!ing
for 1 Pallen! Review Cilordln1tor. Th1 P1ti·
1nt Review c-dlnetorwllbe r11p1mllllie
few the 1-IIIIMIII, ......... llnplement1·
tlon, and aveluetlort Qf the hOIIIItel'l Qual·
lty A•urann end
M1n1gement
Pllin1.
..
Oulllfloldonl l1111lude a llegltMred NUfle
with i o~~nent Ohio nunlnt ln-. Prior
Quilty AillurlliiCie.,.. Utllullon Manqament ...., ........
PIMH Cll or Hnd I NIUIM to:
MIIJINt Holm. Alllltlflt Admlniatrator
V.._1n1 M1morllilf.oepltal
111 E. M1rnorill D e
Pomeroy, OH. 417 I

u•••tton

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
Beginning Sept. 17
Starts at 1:00 P.M.

Factory Choked 12
Gauge

DAVE'S .
SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

a-tell at v•y L.....,
In lllcWioport, OIL
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moat 2 and 4-cycle
en gin•

..,.,Nil.

PH.

112·2104

Puahfwel) no Jlunlfna or 1,..
on
lhe
oJd Joftn
Holidoohon property, Foroot

1:t1na

Run Rd., Pomeroy, OH. Ett.cllve
Nov. 3, 1989.

4
2

Giveaway
bloclc kiltono with whitt -

:IIM-875-1'136 "'675-8311.
2

coonhound pu,P.•bl•ck • tan. 114-441-

,_

BluM~k,

1213.

Adorolllo knlono vory playlut,

:IIM-875-11128.

•

Earty Amorlcan plold couch .
Flit cond. 614-446-4328.
:
Fomolo Alrdl!lo-typo puppy. Ap.
prox. I month• old. 8J•ck and
tan. Sman. HouHbroken. 614742·2258.
Part German Shlph1rd puppl...

6

Lost &amp; Found

doa btk WIWIIho choot,
•nswtrw Jake, pl.... can Z.ke
or Lito 30W7s.531M.
LOST: Rei Terrilr ,_ring Net
cotlar • Thurmen-Cent~U•

LOST

•r•. 114-245-9630.

Loat: I mo. old brown • white
moJo booglo, Cloy Ch!!pol,
F~tndly Ridge Vlclnny. 614·256t!MI~.

7

Yard Slle
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

ALL Yonl- -

8o Paid In
Advonco. Dli:ADLINE' UO p.m.
tho day beloro the ad lo to run.
Sunday ldlllon • 2:00 p.m.
flldoy. llondoy odltlon • ao

p.m. saturday.
Rain .Stur.. 3 Famllr patio aale.
Wed. Nov. 7, M S mlln out
1160. Look tor eigne.

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; Vicinity
320 Mech1nlc St .,
Pomeroy. 1 :00-5:00. Now.81h,91h.
Fwnltwe and antlqun.

WMI Video Tape
Weddings.
Birthdays,
Reuniona·. Interiors
of Homes for
Insurance.

.Call 7U-2486

9

Wanted to Buy

Junk care
motora. Cllt

388-8303.

wtth or wllhOt.#f

Larry Uvely nt·

OJ IIta
Pre 1940 qullta. Any condition.
Cuh Ptld. Coil 614-!192-5657 0&lt;
.14-!82·248t.

Slondlng llmbor I papor wood,
l14-388:tto&amp; or 614-388-0617.
UMd fumiiUf'l and household

applltncet.

2041.

Phone

114·742·

After 5 @·m·

10·2· 89· 1 mo.

Mtip C01nty
Propertyn II you want to
sell pluse CIH Tod.,. We
will Service Your listin~
Buyers For

IIIIIT I. QUIID

JB

102-142-1017 .... 112101.

tnt~.

L&amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

IIEW LISTINGS NEED·
. ED-Wt •• a Full Timt
Mtias County Rul htlle
Company and Wt Htvt

OIRa-m-IUt

Anyone can Al)ltlyl GUirantMCI
VIIIIIIC, US Cliaigo. bon with
bH crealt. No one retuwd. Call

Stock Pllrt1 for

LETART'- DEER COUNTRY
29 acres of mostly
wooded land, building srte
for a home or huntmg cabtn.
Minerals. Only $14,000.

DOml--tti·J6tl
JO IIU-tll-44&amp;6

3 Announcements

Homefite. Weedeeter.
Tocumooh. Brfgp &amp;
St...tton.

PORTlAND - 40+ acres
ol vacant ground. Southern
Oistrict. Good location to
build a new home or set a
!railer.
Good hunt in g
ground. $13,500.

tti·""

Announcements

0185, 317·7750.

MIDDLEPORT - Rem~
deled home, 3 bedrooms,
basement, small yard wrth
privacy fence. Nice front srt·
ting porch. PRICED TO
SEll! 1 $24,500.

JUII TIIISSBl-t4t.26M

,

•

2 moiH, 2 lemaloo loft. 614·317·

~

PAYIINY IEVIEW COOIDINAYOI

9'12-5335 ar 915-35111
&amp;cross ,,_ Post Offq

Middleport.

................. c. .....
JOU ...... ........In . .

801
E. Mtlll ...ll.l;

SEIVICE

992-2196

AUTO ·&amp;.TRUCK
REPAIR
AI•• •lr•••ltslo•
•
PH. 992~5682
or 992-7121

74 - Motorcycl•
75 - Bolts &amp; Motors for Sale
·7 6 - Auto PMts &amp; Aee•.torl•
77 -- Auto Repair
78 - Cemping Equipme"t

lEN'S APPUAJICI

PAT HILL FORD

b-S·'19-tfn

7, - Autos lor S e

ltiASHER$-$100 up
DRYER5-$69 up
REFRIGERATOis_ $10~ up ·:
RANGIS-Gos·Eioc.-1125 up
FREUER5-$125 up
•
IICIO OYENS-$71 up
,

cort - radiators and
healer cans. We can
aha acid boil and rod
aul radiators. We aho
repair Gas Tanks.

992-6872

72 - Trucks for Sale

cutri• of the e1tate of Robert

M. Doiley. decoued, tate of
15 Oow Stroot. Middleport.
Moigo County, Ohio.
45760.
Robert E. Buck.
Probete Judge
Maigo County, Ohio
Lena K. Nnselr&lt;Ntd. Clerk
110131; (1117, 14, 3tc

222 East ann
POMEROY I OH.

'90 DAY W&amp;nAIITY

We can r~ir and re-

4-25-tfn

22 - Monev to loan
23 - Prol•slonal Servic.s

Re~l

MAmN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

USED APPLIANCES

SER~ICE

lt. l24, r - o y Ohio

Lii'I~Slllt.k

11 - flerm Equip_men1

41 - HouHS for Rer\t
42 - Mobile Homes tor Rent
43 - Farms tor Rent
44- Apartrnflnt tor Rent
45- Furmshed Rooms
46 - Spect fot Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
48 -- Eqwpment for Rent
49 -- For luu

Public Notice

THURSDAY, NOV. 9

Roger Hysell
Garage

Siill!llle~

13- lnlurance

All MAKES AND
MODELS

5- :7-tfn

54 - Misc . Merchandise
55- Building SuppltM
56-Pets for S•l~
57 - Mu.aic:al InstrumentS
58 - Fwils &amp; Vegalabl!ll
59 - For Sale or Tr-ade

2 l - Butm•• Opportunil'j

247 - leUrt Falls.'

·puBLIC
AUC110N

.OIS / dey

Merchand1oe

St:l Vlt:t:o

SWEEPER REPAIR

'MOO GALLON
WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPIEAD
Dill HAULED
992·5275

En'ltioyment

cot·er the

949 - Racine
742 - Rutlend
667 - CoolvWie

Give your home a festive glow with our
8-1/4" Brass and Glass Hurricane Lamp.

.20
.30
.42

.60

$1 .30/dey

1 - Card of Thanks
2-ln Memory
J - Annoucements
4 -G iveaway
5 -- Happy Ads
6 - Lost and Found
7- Yard Sale (pa1d in ad\lanctl
8 - Public:Sele&amp; Au\:tion
9 - Wanted to Buy

992 - Middlepon 17&amp; - Pt. Ple•ant
Pomeroy
• 451 - Leon
985 - Chtster
571-Apple Grove
843 - Portllnd
773 - Meson

8

.

lihfihiijijll

M••gs CoUnty
•Area Code 614

Aru Code 614

ALLEN'S
HAULING

Ov•r ,15 Word•

R•te

Announcements

- 2 .00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
-. 2 .00 P.M . THURSDAY
- 2:00P.M FRIDAY

'

MEMBER PVlC • SUBSTANIJAL PENAL'FY PUR EARLY Wllli'DRAWAL

RACINE GUN SHOP .

•

STEWART
TRUCKING

EVENINGS

Ratts''' tor conNcutM! runs. broken up day swill beeharaed
tnr e1r:l'l ftJN •• yparate ads. '

follou:ing
relephonP Pxchanw•s ...
,,
Gal he County

Monthly

6

- 11 :00 AM . SATURDAY
- 2 :00P.M . MONDAY
- 2:00P.M. TUESDAY

C/a.~sified paw'.~

10

15
16
16
15

3

POliCIES

"A cl"ttttld ech-ertilement pland in The D•ilv Sentinll( I •~ ·
c~l - &lt;=l•sifiwd d11~. IU1in•• Card and leg.l notic.tl
wiU alto appear in the Pt . Ple•ant Register and the Gatlt·
polis Oaily 'Tribune. ,reaching over 18,000 homn

Words

1

"Ads outside Me•gs. Glillia or Pthun counti• must be prepaid.
"Receive S.SO d1scotmt for ads paid in advance
"Free ads - Givuway and Found ads under 15 words will be
nm 3 d-vs a1 no ch•ge.
"Price of ad for all c;apitalletters IS double price of ad cost
"7 point ltne type only u.ed
"Serttmet 11 not '"pons1ble tor euOt"s after fiut d-v - ICttedt
for errors tint d.,_ ad runs in paper) . Call before 2:00p .m
d-,. afttt publtc:.t•on to mae correction.
·
"Ads ttlat must be paid in •dven~ are
Card of Ttlenks
Happy Ads
In Memori.m
Yard S•l•

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On October 24. 19B8. In
tho Molp County Proba10
Court. Cl!u No. 2839-l.
lrOIIWYn Wltllonut, 16 Dow
ltroot, Middtoport. Ohio.
46760. wu appointed Ex•·

NEW HAVEN
882-2135

0

BILL SLACK
992-2269

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

Public Notice

Your Good Neighbor Bank

Licensed' Clinical Audiologist

r---~--

L W

•FIREWOOD

WANT ADS WORK!

PEOPLES BANK

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
"ulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Obi

742-2421

I

YOU MAKE .49 PAYMENT&amp;
AND THE 5orn 18 ON U&amp;!

W. Ya. Chippi111,
Inc.

% '(614) 446-7619 01 (614) 992-2104
z 417 Second Avenue. BOll 1213
...,. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Tammy Faye Bakker Is the
sentimental sort. Bakker
preached Sunday to a crowd of
100 in ·the Orlando, Fla., storl'·
9-20-tln
front church where her husband, ~~=======~
Jim, had held forth until he was
•SHRUB &amp; TREE
sentenced to 45 years In prison
TRIM and RE·
forfraud. ·
MOVAL

.· a few' pennies 'spent here
comes back folding money

.$10 AND ~0 CHQI6TMA~ · CLUB6

CIIPWOOD
WANTED

l/28111n

.$1. ~. and .$3
CHQI6TMA6 CLliD6

POINT PLEASANT
675-1121

TAMMY FAYE'S ORDEAL:

~

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

(Choo!!c rrom Two DC«~igns.)

MASON
n3-5514

DINNER: Richard Nixon was
back in the White House Sunday
but it was only a visit. The former
pres !dent briefed President Bush
and adminiStration ollicials ·on
his six-day trip to China. White
House press secretary Marlin
Fitzwater wouldn't reveal• 'thl'
specifics of Nixon's report but
said Bush found Nixon's views to
be "quite Interesting and produc·
tlve." After the discussions and.
dinner with Bush, Vice President
Dan Quayle, WhlteHousechiefof
staff John Sununu, national security adviser Brent Scowcroft
and CIA Director Wllltam Webs·
ter. Nixon flew home to New
Jersey.

Classified

Oet Results Fast

~ CHQI6TMA6 CLUB

I

ON CHINA OVER

•LIGHT HAULING

Have an
fashioned '-"''"'Wll'U"'
with our Antique-finish
&amp;nta Claus Tree Ornament.

(Ballcrics Nol Included)

.Television Listeninc Devices
Dependable Hearine Aid Sales &amp; Sttn•irJill
CJ Hearinc Evaluations For Ali Ages

Vatted PreiS International
NIXON

Plans are being made for the
annual New Haven Fire Depart·
ment Auxiliary Christmas baz·
aaron Dec. 2, 10 a .m. to 4 p.m. to
be held at the New Haven Fire
'Station.
As In previous years, the
bazaar is open to all arell craft
makers including Individuals,
organizations, churches and
clubs. Anyone.wanting to reserve
· a table can do so by sending $10 to
Shelby Duncan, P . 0 . Box 137,
New Haven, W. Va. 25265,

While Quantities Last

Light llie way for your holiday
visitors with our
Cordless Brass Candle Light.

Business Services ·

By WILLIAM C. TROTT

Bazaar set

There will be a craft show,
rummage sale, and bal&lt;ed goods
sal~ 1.at the Heath United Metho·
dist Church in Middleport on
Saturday.
All proceeds will be used to
purchase Chrlstmans gifts for
the resident of Amerlcare Nurs·
lng Home.
Shirley Quickel, activities di·
rector, ·and the families of the
residents wlU be in charge of the
sale.
The Methodist ladles group
will serve a meal.

OPENYOUQ
·l------======1 1990 CHQIC&gt;TMAC&gt; CLUB
AND ·QECEIVE A
TOPS
•
fQEE GIFT!
meet 1ng

w•

People
in the news

College classes scheduled

7

The Daily

Ohio

1

BISSELL
BUILDEIS
·cUSTOM •r
HOMES &amp;GARAGES

Wanted to Buy: s.tqge a bur·
ned Fa"" Ttacton or Eq&amp;Mp-.,..,.
114.. . . . _
...

........,..

wanted 1o lur: Ulld -11--71.

fmpiOjlllt'lll

:;t IVICPS

"At ...soaalll1 Prkls"

Pl. 949-2101
wleL949-11"

'

Day. fiaht
NO SUNDAY CAUS

11

Help Wlnttd

AVONIAit_l.......,
.,..IJ'
o 30M11-14ll.
'

�•

P-a•

8-The [)My Sentintll

LAFF·A-DAY

Helpw.ntld

11

ldarWA l

1 .......

-lY

Apertmtnt
for Rent

__...........
. ..

• w......
•.•
,...a..
.......,... . ..•.

llor, 1 ..... , _

tor

Noox·

....

- - -. For-Int
... , .., .......... Exf.
TVIIZI.

's"'•-

.....

i!=''MO:.

4414111.
4 ~ JJIOIA.

,..-.In ntr ttofM
lwl1/2yoorold&amp;l-old.

..... •JOhHI. -

-

pasulf J

=:--·Jlolll•rov ... et4-ii~

.........

-~~~­
llolriol tar

&amp;:=.n,.:::r~.l:

·-::.=

4111.

----...1-...1

,_.

n azPeteey tor 1 prol ulaN.,

.....,.., ..-oc~ ,..... -

sa

..

toP. 0. loX 11, Point

"-"~, WYIUIO.

lrd. -

-

USED AP~
- - . . . . _ rolo .......
Al!lill
Upper Rl* Ri.
81....0
CiMt- Colllt4-4-

ro-. -

11 ,_. 11,.f•-·..--

~gloobl

EARN IION(Y R d'
hO,_,.. pal-ol.
Docollo. (11 - 7 - Ell. V·

. ., _.........._.......

.........
~ -:.'::'.~

"Just remember, Mom,
under
'
all tht's tltu
· d I'm stt'll the on1y
child that you think the
world of!"
I

::..

()
0

WE AADA

-recwd....
-.lt. ,..,., cablnM
1n1 llahlliO. alw 1:00

~~:.0,111*~~....~:

Dilallo ( 1 1 _ 7 _ Ell. K·

ue2.

-EIECIITIV£
DINdor
DIRECTOR.
ol
El·
tar
upo1n
--AoqulriO .....

Salary on .., . - and
naUab!a buillll· Dutloo In....., bUI .,. noe llonltod ,.,
....-.letldhid de 111o11 •nl o1
and co11oo1
loillla undor oppooood plan;
;;nd oubonM - a 10
~~- ---•
noc~
- o r • rnpon11Je
l¥otr
':~
op&gt;CY; 11111 -~ atoll Md
riiunllll'
dsu ' ; meut
p:....,..; ect u llaiMn with
OINt ..-nc'- and thl camonoonlty. .Glf_thrM
. -r.k:ca
·-_
.
MMM
lo:
TOifi 117 W. locond
Poojoofoj, D1i 45TH Doodllno:

,..ital.

'TODA'f
DIDN'T WE7

r:*if~:=··=:
1111.

Milton.

tr~ct,

$5,000 down. 304-175-

~ii.l~~....

Lll'll" 2 t:lr ~ oom apt. In
~or • ' - to ochool and
51110
•-·
$20111month,
dopoolt roqulml. 114-112-3121.
S...l tum. hcall:e.IUitablli for 1
or 2. ll&gt;l-4411&lt;0Upllalrw, iii'llumlahod opl. Cor"'eel. No peta. Inquire at 300

FoUrthA-ve.

R1. 7, botow Eurolu!, Coli 114441-1411aftor 7 p.m.

36

Real Estate
W8nted

.

Furnished
Rooms

r- ,

R - In ntco -iiilry - · lor
ronl,
114-37Nial.

.,. . .,

ID••I-

...

-::--

-,.:,ra=~-P.o.,_aox••~.
- orolltablo
Rn...
~ _...
bulinlll.,_
114oo44f.IIG2
..., tor
RaWUIII a Qd.
211M.
·
waoto'd •
d ~7-:--::-'7"':"-.....,.-room

loliP.

-111•

-

:ma.

-

copltai to puoe~~uo •
auiDmtnl tor tM•In111 81artup.

41 Houses tor Rent

ol-11"1

AlnO&lt;Inl 815,000. PIW•
c h - equipment and oool ...

1 bacii'OOIR houoo In Pomooor. Country Porto,
S17G.month.~eio-- 11, Nar1lo ol
~pota.. 114...11-71 or 114- l.o!"I~io, porto,- Coil

iOD:I
p.w I naloncl

IOOd ~· ......

-

eom.. , ••-:'a.: Ull 1.00 eq.ft.
Comer
.na Pine. Amp..
portdng. Coil 811 Ul 4a41, 441cir uu421. .

....lftlfllgrr. lftUII

trolnina and

- . - ba

...,_ 1o
,_,.
moo1ag•. P. 0 .
1134,
~~a...a od, W¥21114.

toto lor coilotorat. Par
bacll -lyra. at 15"' 1n1. 114'
117-7511.

~ .:;"l:'~W:.~
IL ~~~

hdG1

~.,;.,:,1 12": 1lolnl

,.,..

11po11o Oh 45131.

--Lot:

__

11....,..7419.

10mMo botow
2 Rio Orondo • - (glrtol1o GoiiiP'!IIa. 1 mila oil R1. 7 on
allaro
homo
alloor
girl.
2
T_,a
A..,
Rd.81 4-441_
....,_puo.No

~:'~~.:=,:.

--=
1$1111

A-..rln110
Ad.,
PPooOimnoiW"'oorr, Oil 45111. E.O.E.

PIAIID FOR SALE
Wo-: IIMpanolb!a polly 1o
--~a
onon plano.
II'
810-locOII)&lt;.
Coli . . _ 01 HOM:JS.Tin

••rtn.

51

., • ....,_7450.

4 ,_, iOcolod In Comp
Conley woo, lor mora lnfar.
matlan call 304-171-3112 after

llunlng .- n t..
ADPtY In ~~ .. Amerlcar11,

c:Ou~ -=~ ,::::0.;'::"'.J

3 lltd oom hoc-. on Mullwry
Awo.L __Poma,..,. S111Jmonl~.

1n our home.
111 . . . AU
Ullllto.l111--11.lo labyolt

-~....

lal•l -.ctrtc. On
Broodwor, Wddl-. 81 4-112·
1880 doyo ori14.00Z·ns. oltor
1.110.
3

t

d

110m

I ,_,. and bath. On I 1o 4
ICNI. W_.polnt Rd., Hartlon:l,
W.V. $22,100, Al.a, front IGt, one
Mel four a.nthl acrw. Wll • •
laot.- · · 1..14-2112-tZII col-

1:00PM.
Far Rant: a or 3lacl,_ houoo
on AI. 110 nNI' HMC. 11 .........
11127.
~ f'lmOdslsd, 2 bulroom,

t - w.. clooln S28l to f!H,
Doolull141 up to 112711. Hulunfutnlohod,I225.DI.. - . 1400 • up. bUnk blda con pliCa
H-. app1~1d. 304-875444.
wlttt ...a.,... $211 end "'Il to

Mdroom 1pt. II 1121. pw
-.114-tl2.a117.

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

(I) lpD

.tlJ llon.JIIIte

' IDle-.
iiJ Miami VIce Castillo

VI'AA FURNITURE
RT. 1~4 MILES
L
CE
NARY
RENT TO OWN. 4 - . - •
Slirto., bunk bod aanoplo1o ·110
wk. Swlvol n&gt;oloor • 15 wk.,

cooperates with a

government agent. Stereo.

a VldeoCou ab,
7:06 (I) Jef.._11

7.:30 D ()) Femlly , _
(J) Major LMgue a.le111..
..,,.al"
MlfiU=I(0:30)

dinotto 101, 4 c:holra • 87.10 wk.
Roallnor • S1 wk. LOW CASH
PRICES
....
·~
C8oh
Clodlt I- Lm.
onlloblo. !)pen
Mon.-811.
to I P."'-1 Sun. 12 noon lo I p.m.
814-1411'11SI.

())EftG~nnt Tonight
DCIJUIAT-.y

.IIIJ ar""'"J4Jeol0plpa'"""~Y''
r;J
Cl'tlllftre

Tooloo Coral
114t4113tT
w·
._Col
11 ......

53

-.
12

Ci':~= 1 :GO

lo I:GO

-.--

wanted

~ """""' - n l

_.

........

-...

mo.

-

-_.... __ __

I oklo,
Ralrtgorotor, - · 1144,._

Coonmaclortl Colt Campootw with

-lei

For Solo • - . . . . , . . Plolllc

All ADN
BIWI1 llonl
rocllow
8150.- 1SI5 • CUUooo
EVANS tonka.
ENTERPRISES, JocloC'- ropolto 11.-oGI eon, OH. 1.....,..31·1121.
Far Solo Sharp rnoc1o1 1110 cooh

N&lt;Hwr, ' d..,.nononte
30W75-4014.

szeo.

""VI

~30dJ
S~y .
hurricanes - lurking giants

'
.I

waiting to destroy cot11tal
araes. (1 :00) r;J

•

1110 011110, 1815.
111r. 304-

1111

1·

w-.

'

.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale
Dnaanwvncl Cdory
.. _,...
--

=

1m

~.

a- -and ..,_. baloo of hor 11.00.:104-

- · 111 14131144 ..... 7 ~"'·

p.m.

ellll MOYII: sec.at 01 Mr
Iii:: I It (PG131 (2:00) r;J
til PalmwHwwe
9 MOYIE: lnln Eagle (PG131
iiJ MuiWr,- Wrole Cune

,.".,.

Of Till Dannnv

• c:on-aon - Dlnlll
1:06 (I) MOVIE; Tell In The
Blllldll (1 :45)
1:30 ()) e (1).Till Wondet' y..,.
Kevin runs the IPQIIIoht for
tile school pill:_ starring

••

11 a. 11wwo11 111-Hul
.................
- · top. Uf!hOIIi
•.
Coll114-211-t311a. . 7:00 ....... ::

IIOA'IIRS: -~
F1oh
2411_·
.....
io
n •1
Point ,.,.,
-.
. ._,
10
dod.
11WINI!I.
....... up 114.11 .... 10 .... - - - - - - - - - ::::..::::.:::~:.:::.--- .;;

=..,=m~.,...~·:::::;
•=:::=:--::-=:::
0..
and "'
011 - . _

olrio, 1 112 ••• 4110513,

71 Autoe tor Sale

Auto Parts &amp;
AcceiiOI'Jta

76

0U1 Rt.141.
.,..

;~rL
1;00 e (II Olin Till 01
Thl Nliht Chief Gillaspie

,...

sell a trap to .,.,. a pair of
illicit loverl. (1 :001 r;J

•'

Shoemekw.
Groom and lupply

(J) ProfHIIotlll lloldng

()) e CIJ Rotnnoe

~ Pol
-All-All-

Cd 114
11t0211.
-Webb. Pol
Food
· ....

IW'PV .lACK TIIMR-:
...... tiiW ..... .:twtlw br
U.B. of' Vol ...

l

Rooeanne lndiJigelln a

laviSh, llrOICIW!r·&amp;tyle

1170 ....... JOf Milan tla P~
P.l.,
C.llt. c.. lx·

*• ......._

1m-111o11~

~- - . 81000. ., ..
•·r =••-... 11aa1 • cat~I aw.. --~­

Modalnooaoi!AI-.-·

"""
C..h Pra liuce.

J D North

-....... -.-,
...
Hippy

Jack

Trtvennlclde:

Ideals and contradlciiOOa In

lila. (1 :00) r;J
1111
Waif Tony
uncovers 1 gun smuggling
operation u~ local
fiall6fman. r;J
IIJ LI"J Kltig Uval
-

SPrv1ces

1171 Ford ..!.1,100. Coli
--PM.sot-1801.
81

. -TntDoclal ct1dlngtr.
,_
~-·--.,
Jt)
111A po-.
u.s. · - ol V o l - ,
~ I fl rw, Coli lfteiep.m. 114•~•"orn•1n 1c9 a catellf a 14
G Food a 8upjllj lit W. -

lantlsy. (0:30) r:;J
(I) (!)Anoetic In i!apllllnce
Ballblllreftlctl bolll till

I'VE.AI..WA'rS eEEN A
BETT'ER ~ 1"HA.t-;
I AM A WHIM~ER.

---.-.114447-1.

Home

--~~~~~!..­

iiJ MOYIE: PeriJ L.lloe (AI

1SI1 0111o T - - . _ . , .

e
t.:~~~ :St;::::

lrom Michael. (0:30) r;J

1;50 (I) MOVIE: Fort Apactoe

l CAN'T NOWISE
UNDERSTAND IT!!
MY SIGN'S BEEN
OUT THAR SINCE
. SUNUP

TWo or three ~1d1001" ttou.lor
l - I o n »M7Wt11

after 4:00 PM.

(2:45)
10:00 ()) 700 ClUb WMII Pat

Rcb1rtton

e

(II 1111 Mlclotlght Celllr ·
Jack gill I n - In 1 fight

tq kelp drugs out ol tile
nelgllborhood. (1:00) Q

Fruns&amp;

It-

()) e (J) tlllrlyaomtollilng

vegetables

Mellaaa WOi'i'leol

=r:;'o.ln ...

lor oldo!1y and loo;n.
hon!o. 28 ,....
, LPN on coli. ~
-homo. Coiii1UII211n
7:00 ,.... lor ..... lnlar-

(!)

America Olinda IUI"f11l It

the end of ww 11. (1:001 r;J
1111 • a ....... Son Sam
has pr-s dealing with
his friend'S dllbltlc

.'

7

I

Schools&amp;
Instruction

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

5TIWNNOWI
IOIIYMIAITERN
CD' I 101, 121 I Mft Pike,
Col Ill til alT . ..... No. . .
I

tt·-·

to lnJeat

=::a......,.. .....

.M,..,_ Col-

1.000I'IHm. .
Wihwn'e....,

----·-- •.....,_. aa=..l=·
h

7L.,. 11•••n.

-._·

Clyde-.
.. .,...,....,
...
----·

Upholallry

•

.r.-....,
dM _ _ _ .
ll
l t - 1 1 1•xu
'•lTll

·-

~
~ w1u1ne die;. ,

"'"""'1.000. to 4,11110 oapa=

2 •, tjllloft. ~ tuuuileiSiild,
• . - ..........., ..

Ed conq-. hll , _ of public tpeeklng by
llp.synchlng to a tepept hit apeech.

IIJE-'"IINewl
10:30(!) F - Toxic

vol&gt;emaols tOihly, becalltl someone
with whom you'll come In conlact mar
hove a proposal lor you that Is tailored
to rour - t needs.

Gl!.. (...

Leveii/Q1110'1 Wl18rWIJI

ellll- TwiiOM z-

AS S I 0

,,.,tl.,.

NI

llmt•&amp;rnu lflr.

.

(J)

• &lt;D w • CIJ 1111 • a
0 I.Jghl8r
1 - Bide Of .......
Holt Jim 'IItVlN). .........

=

eAIIC.::'.. 21.... Ill Till w.y
you'l

nllllete todlr •

- Ollltlillt' aporll gr.HCIIwelk 11 .... 11 un&lt;que
...S h u - ' rpanlng
from IIOUI1CI the

hllp tn-

.._,.,.... 11n1ge. You'l ·bllek

* tollh actlllnl 8iftd yow
will be IIPPIW'Wecl by pa110111
whom

. you1

have

with

,.

14 RIC. a) Even In chlok. Condltlonl In general look r.ctM .......... Unit up with pa110111
lhougllyaulliiWIIOIIoe-ofHyou'N• hopeful, 10 n.ww1111 the tide.
' wiiO.._I_~'-·
PreJtillll ........ todlrJ- wtJ malll, . . .S (lllnilt .,_..,.. 111 f'ollowlnll ~ ..... OtiL II) FOCUI yow ...
yau motlllh ICIM 1t1an U1U11 to mem- your hunolllllodlyGOUIII tum out to be larll tc*iYDII•IM'IInl- . . ,._,_
11M fl/11111 appollle
an
procedure. TNy lngflillll you
waya. You're ,
~-· 110
JUII~ IIIOUid PttHide yau - ....ble In- ·lucky- atlmpitMt"' your lolln 1111·,
1
• •·
, _ .....
· - """""on-- to halclll-"'- ~ftn
...
..
Ptlll- " ' -..... lolook lor too ..,..,_
-•·
"'""" 4m!Cbj.

.
=-..•r;:
=

· -IOID'•

_

I

10

I

•

-L-...I,......J-..L-.....L---1

L..

.... PRINT NUM8ERED
'1;11 LETTERS IN SQUARES
.' •

UNSCRAMBLE tETTERS
FOR ANSWER

'

Compleoe llle chuc&lt;le quoted

by fillinljl in the missing words

you develop from stop No. 3

below.

1· ,1 r I' I' I
I I I I I I I I .1·

I'

5

.

..
'

SCIAM LIT$ ANSWIU
•l· &amp;
Plague - Valid - Patch ..: Curfew - TWELVE
Four year old to mother who was in ho8pltal, "I'm not
old ~ to vtsit you, ao I'll see you when I'm

•

•

~=·~----------~

nMEWE.

BRIDGE

NORTB

tAit 12
.AKU ,

Clever
defense

tQS

..J.,..

~u
::1~

WEST

By J1111et Ja.-y

:.

teu .

ttl
tAKJiiJ
Brltilll apert Sally Horton
ber • A p
tltJI07S
busballd Mark defended earefully to:
defeat today's part«ore eGDtral:t of
two beartl. Some pla,en mJ&amp;bt haft
bid two dla.,.... owr rme beart wltll
tile Welt cards, but Sally took a cooW!1'11atlve appnlldt bee&amp;- of tlllfavw-&amp;ble: Eut-Welt
-.ble .w-tbiUty. 011 a different
Dealer: Welt
auction. Nortb ml&amp;ht haft bid more,
but Soutll wwld bave jtunped In belrtl 'witlll or 10 poiDia after a tatewt doup..
ble
0 of di•!!MW ... 1 •
Ut8iy a
card, 10 Nortb limply railed to lbe two-level.
OpenJnc lead: t K
After K·A of diamaDtls, wltb Eut
slpalllll• doubletoa, Welt eoatiDulld
wllb .the diamond jack. Soutll made a
.-ble play, diJcardillg a low club was- plaJI!d. Declanr diiCirdad a •
from du5n1m
• East played the jack of IID8de from tlturully, Eut rafted wltll ·.
clube,
ltreiiiiiL Sally koew !be 10 of beu1l, aad . . . . ""d'nl of
tbatthejac:k clubedeaiedlbeqaeea. · J .......... , ted to tbe lll'loii :
(With Q-J·lO, East would play the trick. A Dice clef-. INt It wwld DOt "
queea.) So East IDtllt lloJd !be c1Db bave !ilea ptlllible wllboat tile Wider- ..
Armed with !bat ~ledle. lead 1111 tile - of clabi.
.
Welt led tile Dine of clut.. Eut woa
,_~-·~·.._._,
tile kiD&amp; of cl1lilll and retarDed a club. ·~·Coni_.,_-~~~~-.
Sallytooktileaeeofclubi.TIIedefead- u.•-~.'f".-" n 'I • .
en bad five trlcb. A fourth diamond lo • .. - , . , • • ,~ry,.,._

8Dtl

-••

8Dtl.:u3:!:

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

Cl-.---·

·CROSSWORD
by fHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

DOWN

1 Trim oft
1 Outmoded
2 Russian
5 Mama's
mate
lrade
9 Sandarac
guild
tree
3 Create a
10 Phil
dislurbance
or Julie
4 Go
12 Prison
wrong
(sl.)
5 Mucilage
13 Direcllon
6 Yeaterdey's Answer
on ship
Buchwald 18 Boaslful 26 Cap
14 His (Fr.)
7 Touchy 21 Israeli
27 Scrap
15 Bang
spot
dance
28 Candidale
18 As writlen li Broadcasl22 Vocal
Hst
(mus.)
period
offering
29 Lotus17 Ennoble
10 Wesl
23 Indonesian 34 Peruvian
19 Gielgud's
Indies
island
city
IIIIa
country . 24 " -·s a
35 Medieval
20 Anktabones11 Trap
Lui In
· French
21 Scottish
15 Suspend
My Life" .
tale
philosopher r.--rr22 Voucher
23 Dullard
24 AI a time
25 Reveal

•

.

•~

28 carrier
27 Reversion

30- long
31 Swiss
canlon
32 Palm leal
33Gorge
35 'South
Pacific"
role
3t Evoke
37 Poker term
38 Dash
39Roman
hlghway

hr+-+-+-+-11--

DAILYCRYPTOQUOIES-Here't how toworlllt:

tl/7

AXYDLBAAXR

laLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formaUon of the words are all .
hints. Each !laY the code letters are different.

eoAit.nr. Hal(1:001
Ill II

a s•• .

I =-VIMdellng
Cnw:llllll ,
W\101
in'J ...,. ... •

(J)i:te--

11:3011 · -

In_..,

ft .

1 I I I' I
7

I

~Wilkin

-t =~cw"
----djlng.

ICOIIPIO (

. aremlr~~hertogotoher

W

- " '· (0:30)

-'&lt;Ina

.... 11)

=.

T RE

11:00()).._

ach
~culble obJectives.
todar and
I'm ....
t•lng about muftlple
Don't belfrald to go ener -81 goals

"Don't lorQet Shake 'n'.

5

~~~Q~OniUgl

21....... m) Major

f)wqrJu- uo
w1w elliWa.
._ ..,•IIIII._... ......_
. your pattern loday. s-at 1*110111 tlonl
wlilcll !/OU'N vltllly 111-ld
Now.7.·with whom you have an arrangement . . llklly ro ..idltgo c:lilngM tOihly
Your material MCUrlly Ia llcely to be..,. CGUid 1um aut to be inllrumentl of yaur 11111 yau lllould llntl to your Hlllng. s hanoed In 1111' ~ thi'OIIIIII .the
tol'1unl.
wll be vlllble, otllerlwon't.
ippllcltlon of yow own lkHirandS (l'ell. m :C ell . , If yaur VIICIO ( - a IIJL II)
yau
1111. Addltlot..... -......
"-and
IXpiCielkinl atilt Nnnlng 1 cannor -•••• on your own at IIIII
love may;;~-~ of lltlttthlgh tDihiy, don't lrytohold thlm . ---WtleJidlntllltlemwlthii-

•

----··"'-

'inatllllllltlc, tum

TAUIIUS(Ajwu m...,. 10) Do not be
reluctant to I*UCIPitl In group In·

nlllltiOrJIIIIOIIIIIIIflln.,.PIMilllllln

7

2--lor-.--.lor

_,..,.10

oil till IWIII:II.
. ACI!.UliJIUI (.1111. •

RIRWotw--cloo
.......... ktii
'1 1,060 Of

~-·-

;

.....,.. COIICililild. If - · trill

J. J WM• - · lwlmonlna
Caiii1C:

'I

m111ct1 and yoti'll lind it. The AstroGraph Matchmaker Instantly reveall
.rtlclulgns . . romantically perlectfor
you, Mall $2 to Matchmaker, c/o this
n~. P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland,
OH 44101-3428.
SAOITTAIIIUS
2J.Oec. 21)
;,.~·;-~=-~~= are
favor
this
of aatcomnatiU'e. Don't melee
"'· -.:o:"·· tor chto!1111Uice.
...,_ 11) Oell,.,.....
IOdaY IIIOuld

":::~tobellvflrutuxperllt-lor

85 Glneral Hauling

fiFIF

=~li~w- Tonight

•

ASTRO..QRAPH

35 Lots &amp; AcrMge

-··Century

(I)-

&amp;ojlllc T-* PuoooDINIIOLGallo
Co. RCNIYANS INTIRPniiEI,
o,OH1.-.a7.eaa

WO -

ovw hlr ~

dlfflllliCI with 1.11. (.t :00) ...

Dunnw1n Prul Pilrili wll • -.11th,
I I_
-,
.
ooloo. • - ooli prliecl,
~U1a.'ll
lof-.y,
11 ..IIIII .

..,....,

=,

IIINalltvllle1;30 ())
CIJ Chicken Soup

..'

- _...._ Good oiM-IliiOO.If-N021.

,.... lot. 114-tl2-3104.

32 Moblll Home•
for Sale
will

ea

(2:00)

.

ia

marooned at ... without
loocl or
D

!'
T..-; 250oll,- - . , - •
utl'lle prloecl to MI. 11......._ ;"4
7121.

e a RIIC _. 111 An

~r.okJ COUple

Musical
Instruments

a~

Tony 11 concel'lied Samantha tlkea on
ma~ng a new rock group.

171-7111.
Por lllr. 1111 ..... ,...

~974.

llfown Whl~pool -

MA-Women'a Competition m

()) e CIJ Who'a Thl IIMI? ·

480 · - bltoo,

1 • Hondi2:SO. 4 at

loot 18 lncll I baoma. . . _
lorol Concl. Coli - . . . 814-

- - .... lo babyoolo In
""
Hill orN,
N11rnnt'
I'IIIM,
anytime
304-

15

Troclar,l1448'7·1101.

3M.f

11~

dec~ OnRIU.

from Worcester,

::l':"t·~~~:s~:.;= :

tf

with enalne and

llociJbulltll,. Ms. AmeriCa

~-~ 11• C~IJali .. 1 - 1100 i
GaiM-..IntMitlllej, 1171 cttw. 1
• ....... plcloup 10'-&gt;. '

1.~o.·~:::

.. Ill. 1 Bol ta A. ....
C' tt ,WVZUIJ

-

...........

tlttloll.
Aloo 11111 llk"' biU. ExctRnnl oondldon.
- · qorogo ilopl. 114-802-

nu -

814-441-llll.

(I) WOinen'l PrGtetcloriel

tow '
_,
Prloe f'lduoecl llc•••nc eon-

P·"'·l

11ft. IIOIId 011k church pML
Ooool-lon. 811 885 , ....
1t8211 HP Bolano riding - r

...

D ()) 01 M111ock Matlock
tries 10 prove the lnnocanca
of an old friend. (1 :001 r;J

....... Wlnclehllld. oruiM,

-;t~4="

112:)440or1

s

CI-TIG f. luptr

1175 -

1111 -

= :.: :_. ,

(2:00)

c "" II¥ NU., n;

Motorcycles

74

Top Cooh pold. Did lumllun!
cuDrda,
qultta, oriMtll 1
palntlngl, lop, ., . . . . . . . . .
call colllcl 304 121-327'1, .,
304G3 1114.

1i yr. old Hall, 100,000
htmlel, down flow,
Sl14.

Ql TopCIIrtl
7:31 (I) S.nfanl And Son
1:00 ()) MOYIE: LMr And Oodlr

1"~-&lt;M ..

Buy ,. aoll•. R - Antlq..o,
1114 I. llaln Stroll, -noy.
........: III.T.W. 10:00 1.m, to I:OD

......,.., .... ..... pump,
c._ to -=hoG~. nice laciUon
-

Situation

11-7

Antiques

tachod
bath. FlrOplaao In living """"•
wit~

1Di Night Court

I

.I
I;
I I' I I ~ ~~e~J::C:.~w':

F-g

-doll-.

ollor. 4 Olumn o1ot whMio,
5 bol1 unllog 1100. CoiUOIIblo
Bora 1o opoiool biU. Nu ._
145. :104-47~1·7 blhlllii
noon and 1:00PM.

I
I IJ 1~ I I ~

t.center

ellll Night eoun r;J

s

BAFEL

~=·:=-1111
• a 1111 WhHI 01

a;_, lizla . . . king F145
l -1125
125 •- . . . ooltor
110. Goocl MIIIOikMtaf tiildfOOin 811
oui1IO,
-al
.. lp.m.
- S i O ... up1oSII.
80 dayo . . . . . •oh . .~ .... - · .u hard wood. . . .
crodft. 3 mi. out lulnlllo ~p loocl, $35 dollvwod. 8i4Ad. Ql!on I A.M. lo I P.M. Man, 44f.1(3TI1~.
thrU sat. C.l 114 111 0322.

-

I·.s c

()) e&lt;Jl CurNnt All81r

.... -...--. -·I-B!lclo homo wlh

1111 • a c11 r;J
eO'I'1vM'I Con panJ

e

*•

3 br, utllltr, alnglo goJOgO, 2
mlloo ol HOtnro, oil At.
II. 811,500.114-441-1351.

s , -.

~.::~-r;J

lAM I

Rearro... lollaro of 1he
four ocromblod -dt below 1o form four ~mpr. wordo.

iiJ He-llen

Nizla I bad'-" · Fomlfr
rooon,lr_age, hum.n~, forced
air 1oo IWOoclod ...... bam.
5271. month~)&lt;, 8100.......... No drww •-Ill. Guri Colllnalo
lnoldo P!la. 10 EOII 81., l.l,.,o ........,._b
.. Couch. kwe ...t, ..tvll rock.M',
PoiMroy. Cllll14-423-8211
au. • 141. .... hmee $21, 2 end teblll. 114:25113115.

bad,.,..,-

_
_, • Main Point
PI
• oolo lor loll~
Md fiPPd hu II City Hal.
. . . . '&gt;M IIIDr: Cor'lllpt••
boololloog Mit -...... 814 UIM11.

?I&gt; lpartaLook (0:30)

-

•

1:31 (I) Andy Goitllth
7:00()) Our Hotlae
(J) PM Mtigallnl

Coii14-1112·748T.
....
babf
suo
... • bail ....._ lull • twin Collelo • 2 clloln, .... llool, 2
PI, ftnn
aM .... au... twin - · 2 ~o~~~-. and oo~
114 4411MIO.
olla 112711 • up, 1&lt;1ng hiO. 4 110,_,

Tllroo
lor Nnt.
S125Jmonlh plua uiiiMIH. Two 2

bad!, ill"
-· 4 Point Rood.
122.000. Front Woot
lot 1.4 ocroa IIPH... Call Collect, 1.f1~
21241211

a(ld .... ,... prtcod -

5315 to ftiS, Tobin tao and up
to t125. Hide 1 b11'1 1310 to
1111. Rocl'- 1:1211 to h75.
Lampo 1:111 1o 8121. - S1DI and ' up to ..... Waod

Pon:h St, Konoup. 1 1 7473.

r-.

Household
Goods
LAYNE'S R.IRNITUAE

-

- a bod,.,.., - . Cit,
. . - llotflct. Nice yard. 31t

HARTFORD ·I

-101'·

::aonollllo hamololan larm
Ung. 114-7424011.
AI
bod,_
11ouoo
Golllpalia
2
Forry, 30W'IU335.
3001 or 304-eTI-4111.
2 1:11 droom houM .., . ldlahen 1Wo ......., ..,..... louie OM
.... - - ..lah- Locult- .... .....,..
hood, largo 'ar!!f :IOU71-i21 I.
1071.
'
3 ~ I I'FMm houN In MlddllpOft.
Merchan:J1~e
R.... ooiGO
NCtulrod.
CoN
ewenlnp. l1t IUI417.

~ 31 Homes tor Sale

1:30 • (J) iiJI. Nic: Nightly ......

1.-=':.:.·;;...:

lla,.

•-lao

1:06 (I) . ....,v 11.1'1 •

9 WKIIP In Clnclooild

EIPERIENCED HEATING AND
Guanl .... m«~ntod INSTALLER WhiAND
· R-~---ar--h. Von
hell•• Ullllll only 1 ,_.. WIN
APPLY 1.17 DHIO ST.
INOTIC£1
- " • •~
~·
ooll
tar
5110. Aftw 4 p.on. 114HALL, INC.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Land W.nlod: 100 • - • up. ~ntl 4 ,
... 1t~ 80
ZWmo. Gollllo
317·7171.
recolnrMnde
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8125; .,... .110;
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Stnp'nt ftMNIII wttll cooking. 11110i.!!ntl"' 11110;
ol oc-ng, th""''h tho moll Until you hove Land worolod. 100- and up. trolw- All-.upo. rof!tgoootora
... onil inventory. 1M '-"-•od tho llarl
w...d, otroamo, .-,CoN 1· Coil - 2:00 p.m., :104-Tn- dloh ........ ...; hoo!l"'
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and
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TOMORROW'

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Television
Viewing

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51

Ohio

November 7. 1989

Ohio

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SHOWS WHICH WAY DIE HOT AIR BLOWS. - 0 .
HENRY

••

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•"

�I

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•

10-:rM Oily Sattinel

Ponwov-Middlaport.

r-Local news briefs...-~...,
Continued from page 1
The charge for senior citizens Is 50 cents, and the chargz for
the general public is $1 .
This year's vaccine protects against Type A·alwan, Type
A·llanghal and Type B-amagata strains or influenza.
According to Health Department personnel anyone with lung
or heart conditions. diabetes, severe anemia and those
undergoing cancer therapy are strongly encouraged to receive
flu shots.
ThOR who should not be given the flu shot include those with
an allergy to eggs, anyone who has ever been paralyzed with
Gulllaln Barre Syndrome, women who are or might be
pregnant, those who are Ill or have a fever, or persons on
antibiotics or who have received a pneumonia shot within 30
days.

EMS has three calls Monday
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
responded on Monday to three calls for assistance. .
·
At 5:20 a.m., Rutland was called to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
Harry Van Meter who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport was called at 12:29 p.m. to Cheshire lor Keith
McCarty to HolZer Medical Center. .
At 5:27 p.m., .Pomeroy went to the Amerlcare-Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Edith Ryther who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Vehicle strikes, kills deer
TheGallla·Melgs Post, State Highway Patrol, Investigated an
accident at 6:30p.m. Monday In Meigs County, onSR. 1.7 miles
north of the Gallla·Melgs County line.
Troopers said a 1985 Dodge pickup truck driven by Raymond
E . PrOffitt, 65, Racine, struck and kUled a deer. Damage was
moderate. No one was Injured.

VA has 800 number
Ohio Tenth Oisirlct Congressman Clarence Mlller has been
requested by the Department of Veterans Affairs to acquaint
Ohio veterans, and their dependents with the new toll·fn;e
telephone service Initiated this month by Department s
Cleveland regional OffiCe.
.
Miller says this Is to promote a greater awareness of the
constituent service programs offered by the federal
government.
When In need of assistance, . Ohio veterans and their
dependents are urged to contact the .Department's Cleveland·
Regional Office (the office responsible for handling veteran
· matters for Ohio) by dialing 1·800-827·8272.
Department ofllclals requested the congressman's assist·
ance In making t\lls new "800" number more widely known
because they realize there will be a delay before it Is published
in the local directories.
Miller says, "It you are an Ohio veterans, or a dependent of an
Ohio veteran, and have a problem or concern involving the
Department of Veterans Affairs, you can obtain immediate
assistance bv 1:800-827-8272.

----Court qews _ __
judgment of the plaintiff.
A foreclosure action has been
filed by Farmers Bank and
Savings Company, Pomeroy,
ag11lnst Matthew C. VanV·
ranken, Pomeroy; Grace Wha·
ley, Pomeroy; the Ohio Bureau
of Employment Services, Colum·
bus; the State of Ohio Depart·
ment ot Taxation; Office of the
Attorney General, Columbus; et
at.

In a Meigs County Common
Pleas Court foreclosure action,
Home National Bank, Racine,
has received a deficiency judg·
ment of$50,737 plus lnteresttrom
Coal Power Inc., et al. An entry
confirming sale of of 11\e property
and ordering distribution of
proc o1J trcm tile sale hu been
flied lffth the court, wltb the bid
purchase price ol $37,628.31 to be'
credited to the original $88,365.31

• RS
RUSSUI

... ____ ___
Continued from ::.....:::..,_
page 1

troika- action, not talk," "Only
lnteiUgence and labor can lead
the country out of crisis,"
"Break the command admlnis·
tratlve system."
1\nother banner, expressing
the concerns of the country's
escalallng environmental movement. read: "Saving nature
cosiS money." ·
Instead of the flattering, monu,
mental bust portraits of Leonid
Brezhnev and other former Soviet leaders, a single large
photograph o' Gorbachev
showed him in top coat and his ,
trademark derby, exchanging
views with average citizens on
the streets of Moscow.
. ''Some people believe that we
in the Soviet Union have nothing
In particular to celebrate today,"
the ol!iclal Tass news agency
said. "Well, one might think that
looking at an Industrial downsw·
lng, inflation, transportation
malfunctions , coal miners'
strikes and semi-barren shelves
of shops."
But Tass then listed the demo- ·
cratlzation reforms achieved
under Gorbachev's perestroika
renewal drive:
''The first Congress of People's
Deputl~ was held and became a
poUt leal sensation," Tass said.
"The first 'real' Supreme Soviet
began to function. Television
broadcasts from Its sessions
attract many more people than
even the most popular films."

Shevardnadze.
"This Is a tangible reminder
that the numerical strength of
the Soviet army has been reduced this year by 6,680 tanks,"
Yazov told the crowd after he
mounted the granite mausolem.
The government, laCing a $192
biUioti deficit this' year, had also
said It was planning a scaled·
down celebration to cut
expenses. ·
'"J'be Soviet Union and Its
Warsaw Pact a lUes are directing
their efforts toward reducing the
mWtary threat," Yazov said.
The exhibition of mmtary
vehicles lasted only six minutes,
obe·thlrd the time of previous
displays. ,and the Soylets: giant
red-Upped strategic ICBM mls'
sUes were excluded lor the first
time.
'.'~t's changed," said a man
watching from the special guest
section. ''They've made It more
modest. The slogans are more
businesslike. Before they were
more rhetorical and boastful."
The man, who said he was
attending his fifth Revolution
Day parade, declined to give his
name but said he was an engineer
and a Communist Party
member.
The banners held aloft by
workers' brigades from Mos·
cow's .J4 districts bore the doml·
nanl themes of the Gorbachev '
era and reflected his emphasis on
hone~t self-scrutiny:
"Peres·

By 1Jalled l'reu laternaUonal
Severe weather swept across
the Midwest early Tuesday and
threatened to spawn tornadoes In
at least four states while heavy
rain drenched the South and
dense fog blanketed 'the East.
The National Weather Service
said a cold weather front and

driving rains from the Great
Lakes through Tennessee
dumped more than 4 Inches of
rain on Durant, Miss., and
caused nunleroua power outages
in central Mississippi.
Lightning was reported In
Kei'ltucky as thunderstorms pro·
duced heavy .rain across the

Meigs area announcements
Gran~re

to meet
Rock Springs Grange will meet
Thursday evening at 7:30p.m.

Divorces soUght
Divorce actions have been flied
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Bobby Gene Swiger Jr.,
Reedsville, against Cheryl Lynn
Swiger, Naoma. W.Va.; and
Marilyn Lucille Powell, Middle·
port, against Terry Lee Powell
Sr .. Pomeroy.
A divorce has been granted to
Timothy Todd Klein from Lisa
Jane Klein.
An agreed entry of divorce has
been filed In the case of Robert E.
Bishop agalns t Glenda G.
Bishop.
Donna Rife and Kenneth Rife
have been granted a dissolution
of their marriage.

Zimmer uPI's NL
Manager of Year
CHICAGO (UPI)
Don
Zimmer, who guided the Chicago
Cubs to an improbable 'division
title, Monday was riamed United
Press International's National
League Manager of the Year.
Zimmer, relying for much of
I he season on a three-man
pitching rotation, a few veterans
and a batch of unknowns, produced a 93-69 record In his second
year managing the Cubl!.
The division crown came one
year after the Cubs finished
fourth in the NL East with 85
losses, 24 games behind the New
York Mets.
Zimmer, involved In profes·
slonal baseball for 41 years,
Including 27 In Jhe majors, was
named the Cubs' 40th manager
on Nov. 20,1987, by Frey, whom
he had known since high school. .
He was the· third·base coach
under Frey ln1984 wheli the Cubs
won their first NL East title.
Zimmer, 58, received the same
honor last week from the Base·
bail Writers' · Association of
America.

Hospital news
.Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions -Bernice
Fry, Pomeroy; Charles Cook,
Long BotloJ11; Beulah Ransom.
Racine ..
Monday discharges - Martha
Anderson. Mary Huff, Linda
Persons. Elma Louks.

CIIR¥'81.1R
MOTORS
AUTHORIZED DIALER

.Papers filed
Articles of Incc;&gt;rporation have
been flied ·by two Meigs County
businesses wltb the offlce of
Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown, Columbus.
Filing lor Incorporation were
Red-Ace Consulting, Inc ., with
incorporators Larry G, Brunger
and Judith L. Mora, with Bunger
as agent; and Home Creek
Enterprises, Inc., with lncorpor·
ators John G. Bailey and James
W. Clifford with John Greg
Bailey as agent.

Dr. Wilma Mansfield of Pomeroy has completed continuing
medical education requirements
to retain active membership in
the American Academy of Fam:
Uy Physicians, the national as sO.
elation of family doctors.
The requirements call lor ihe
members to complete a ·min·
imum of 150 hours of accredited
continuing medical study every
three years. The Academy, the
country's largest medical association with more · than 60,000
members, was the first national
medical group to require
·members to keep up with medl·
cal progress through cOntlnulng
education.
'
The •Academy, founded In 1947
and he.adquartered In Kansas
City, Mo., was Instrumental In
the establishment of a new
p~!mary - specialty in family
practice In 1969.
·

Stocks ·
Dally stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce.and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis a. Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 29%

AT&amp;T ................................. 431(,
Ashland 011 .... ..................... 34'h
Bob Evans .......................... 13Ji,
Charming Shoppes .............. t'1%
City Holding Co ................... 16
Federal Mogui... ....... :......... 19'Vs
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ............... ,.46%
H.eck's ............ .......... ... ........ 6Ys
Key Centurion ..................... 15
Lands' End .... ......... ............. 26
Limited Inc ........................ 35~
Multimedia Inc.................... 94
Rax Restaurants .. .'............... 21(,
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 141(,
Shoney's Inc . ...................... 10¥8
St.ar Bank ............. ............... 22
Wendy's Inti.............. ......... ... 5
Worthington lnd.................. 24Y.
(Limited Inc.'s third-quarter
Oct. 28 net $.47/share vs. 1.39)

Soap, 15, of Point
PJaunt, W.Va., died Monday
IIIOI'IIlng at Babies' Presbyterian
lbpltalin New York City, N.Y.
AmlnpJJil!llts will be an·
IIOIIIICed by Wilcoxen Funeral
HGIIIe of Point Pleasant.

1

Dec. l. Dec. 1, Nov. 24. Nov. 13.

:u.

1

* MlcldleEIIat. NOY. :ll, Nov. k Nov. 10.
Sooat- Alita, Nov. :11. Nov. 'JIJ, NoY.lO.
C..trallllld SouthAm.-lca, Doc. I, Doc.
I. Nov. :H.

••

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'•
•
•
•

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•

'f?.illsNOW

-RAIN

~SHOWERS

.O hio Lottery

topple
Suns

Pick-3
Pick

5640

Page 3

South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy Tuesday night,
with•a chance of rain and lows
neu 50. Chance ol rain is 40
percent. Occasional rain Wed·
nesday, with highs between 60
and 65. Chance of rain is 80
percent.
,
Extended Forecast
Thursday lhrou~rb Saturday
A chance of rain Thursday.

•
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'
Copyrighted 1!189'

Vol.40. N0.128 M

•

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'

CLEVELAND !UP!) - Monday's . winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK·3
431.
PICK·3 ticket sales totaled
$1,286,392.50, with a payoff due of
$901,515.50.
PICK·4
0373.
PICK-4 ticket Sales totaled
$233,357, with a payoff due of
$58,500.

Fire issues approvM
·
.

Tax levies soundly defeated by Meigs voters
By CHARLENE HOEFLlCH
Dally Sentinel Stall
Sch6ol levies for the Eastern
and Ml!lgs'Local School Districts
as well as theonefortheCarleton
School-Meigs . Industries w~re
soundly defeated by. voters · In
Tuesday's general election.
In the Eastern Local School
District voters turned down by a
vote of almost two to one, 588 for
to 1,103 against, the three-year
emergency 8.9 levy which would
have generated $275,535 annually

for gerierai operating expenses of money to the annual operating
funds of the program.
the schools In the district.
By a vote of 832-2,093, Meigs
In Meigs County the 0.5 mill
Local School District voters •levy lor the Gallla·Jackson·
turned down a 2.0 mill continuing -1 1Melgs Mental Health Board was
defeated by a vote of 2,318 to
tax levy.
The1. 5 mill three-year levy for .\4,126. It also went down In Gallla,
2,513 to 6,438 and in Jackson, 2,318
the Mental Retardation and
to 4,126 for a final unofficial
·Developmental Disability Pro·
gram and Services (Carleton grand total of 7,681 yes to 16,073
no In the three-county area. A
Schooi·Melgs Industries) was
majority vote In the three coun·
defeated by a vote of 2,379 to
ties was· required for passage of
3,708. Passage of the levy would
the levy .
have added $312,734 In new

a•n ••.so

GaMII for

AI

Ewerro'' Weleo~e
I'OIIE~Y,

OHIO

•

:

THANKS
Cleveland City
Council Preslden~ George Forbes thanks all
Involved for
contrlbudona to Forbes'

campaign In the mayoral race against State Sen.
Mike While, aa oae of Forbes' daugl!lers Is In tears
al right. Forbes lost the election. (1JPI)

· Whit~ new Cleveland mayor
CLEVELAND (UPI) - State
Sen, Mike White ~llmaxed an
ll·month campaigri Tuesday to
easily defeat Coun~ll President
George Forbes and I become the
second . black mayor in Cleveland's history.
With all but lour of the city's
695 precincts reporting, White
had 85,370, or 56 percent. to
67,838, or 44 percent, llor Forbes.
It was the first general election In
Cleveland to feature two black
candidates .
The only other black mayor
was Carl Stokes. wpo In 1967
became the first black to head a
major American city.

i

November 9th
Friday, November lOth
and
S~turday, November lith
Look For Details In ..
Tomorrow's Sentinel.

"1 stand here .with a mandate
from the people,.. White told
about 700 supporters. "(BUll I
wlll not dwell on this victory. I
wlll extend ... my hand to alllhe
people of the city of Cleveland.
whether they were with me or
not."

White, 38, wlll take o!llce in
December, replacing Republl·
can George Volnovich, who de·
clded not to seek re-election so he
could concentrate on his 1990 run
lor governor.
Votnovich defeated incumbent
Dennis Kucinlch In 1979, and won
re-election in 1981 and 1985.

'
A ~izona man
waives extradition

.

I

Christopher A. QlGlulio, 42, of Arizona, recently residing In
Pomeroy, waived rxtradltlon and agreed to voluntarily return
to Arizona to answer a charge of trafficking In stoi'en property.
DIGiulio Is wanted!on lhecharge by Maricopa County, Arizona.
He agpeared Tues1ay morning in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court before Judge Fred W. Crow IIJ.
Digiulio was remanded to the custody of Meigs Sheriff James
M. Soulsby to await the arrival of officers from Arizona.
• Prosecu ling Attorney Steven L. Story represented the State of
Ohio at the hearlrlg. DIGiulio was represented by Pomeroy
atttorliey John R. tentes.

'

Np o~e hutt in Meigs mishap
The GaiUa-Melgs Post of the State ·Highway Patrol
Investigated an accident at 2:45 yesterday in Columbia
Township of Melgs iCo!lnly, on SR. 68, 0.8 of a mile north of
milepost one. No on~ was Injured. ·
The patrol said Todd D. Wiggins, 22, Fultonham, Ohio, driving
a 1989 Ford truck, w11s lowing a trailer. The trailer came loose,
went off the road, ddwn an embankment and overturned. There
was no damage. ac&lt;jordtng to the patrol.
·

Gallia teach!ers plan strike
•

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'

399 South Third·
Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992-6421

,

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Teachers In the Gallla County Local School District have
. voted to go on strikeI beginning all2: 01 a.m. Monday, Nov. 13.
The teacilel'lllave lleen werk... witltollt a tz8WI
Alii.
31.
t
Attempts to secu':,ll a new contract began on June 15, when
negotiation teams ffom the Galllll County Local Education
Association and the Board of Education met. The two sides have
met several times a!bce.
On Sept. 20, the GCLEA declared an impasse In negotiations
and requested the ~sslsiance of a mediator. A negotiations
session with the medfator was held on Oct.18. Another meeting
Continued on page ~2 .
t

America's

New levies lor cemetery main·
tenance and operating expenses
In Salisbury and Salem Town·
s\Jips were defeated.
In Salisbury Township where
the levy was lor0.2 mills. the vote
was 795 lor and 915 against the
levy, while In Salem Township
the 0.5 mill levy was defeated by
a vote of 110 to 128.
Fire protection levies, all renewals for live years, In lour
political subdivisions all passed.
In Racine VlUage, the 0.7 mlll

was approved by a voteof265-56,
In Letart Township the 1.0 mllls
passed 216-61, in Lebanon Town·
ship the 1.0 mill was approved by
a vote of 261-135, and In Sutton
Township the 1.0 levy received a
vote of 879·221.
Meigs County voters approved
State Issue 1 by a voie of 3,Q34 In
favor and 2,872 against. The
proposed constitutional amend·
ment provides lor the appoint·
ment of a lieutenant governor In
the event there Is a vacancy In

that office.
By a vote of nearly three to one,
Pomeroy voters approved the
repeal of Pomeroy Ordinance 573
which provided lor the Historical
Preservation Commission and
Its operation In the village. The
vote was 424-159.
More than 50 percent of the
county's registered voters cast
their ballots In the election. Of
the 13,094 registered voters, 7,069
voted, and of that numbPr. 618
voted ~bsentee.

Voters elect board members
in all three Meigs ·districts

NOV. 9th

CHILDIEII 52.25
Door Prizes, Crafts and

New~aper

.

Annual Bazaar
Ham or Turkey Dinner

A Multimedia Inc.

'

SACRED HEART·:
CHURCH ...·
Serving At 5:00P.M.

2 Section•. 1 &amp; Plges 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, November 8, 1989

with hlghs · In the 50s and lows :
near 40. A chance of ralnorsnow ·
Friday, with highs near around :
40 and lows between 30 and 35. ·
Partly cloudy Saturday. with :
highs near 40 and lows near 30. :

Lottery numbers

Low tonight In 4jls. Chance
of ·rain 60 percent. Sunny
Thursday. High In mid~.

f

------Weather-----~
By United Press International

(

300

FRONTS: "
Warm "
Cold
. . Slallc " ' Occluded :
Map shows minimum temperaiUres. AI teasiSOo/oof any shaded area is forecast '
to rave precipitation indicated
UPI
WEATHER MAP - Rain is forecast for parta of the Pacific
northwest. upper Mississippi Valley and North Atlantic Coast
States Wednesday. Showers are possible In most of the Ohio Valley
and Gulf Coast.regions. (1JPI)

Th~rsday,

Aultralll, N9Y. ~.Nov. 24, Nov. :W.
'JIJear-.., DPc. 8, Doc. 8, Nov. 24, Nov.
Eu~,

~EATHER
SERVICE FORECiAST T07 AMES~ 11..W9~·
.
.

I ..akers

Local :news briefs-.. . . .

Alana. O.c. I, Dec. 8, Doc. 1, Nov. :u.

F1r Ea~t, O.c. 1. Dec. l, Nov. zc, Nov, 1.1.
lre.lud. Dec. 1, Dec, 1, Nov. Nov.

I

1

Hawaii, Dec. 8, Doc. 8.

Amy

NATIONAL

nsylvanla, Delaware, Maryland,
WashlJIIIon and Into Virginia,
the NWS said.
Cloudiness prevailed across
much of Texas, with showers and
thunderstorms along the middle
and upper Gull Coast stretching
Into Louisiana. the NWS said .
A Pacific storm front brought
rain to Wll$hlngton, Oregon,
Northern Idaho . and Montana
overnight and was expected to .
move east to the Rockies .
.,
Snow was falling in the moun· ;
talns of north~rn Montana and :;
about 6 inches was expected In ;:;
the mountains of northern Idaho •..
during the early morning hours~ ~.
Snow also was expected In the : •
Cascade Mountains of Washing-.;
ton, the NWS said.
:·
Showers were forecast in most::
of Oregon Tuesday and Wednes.. :
day, the NWS said.
.
::

PAT HILL

Interutkmal aDd mUitary maU outbound olr mill.
DHt-tlon. llr parcel~, air IItten,
PAL, and SAM lilted to tbot order:
Africa. Nov. 20, Doc. I, Nov. 10.

Amy&amp;.l@p

nation's midsection a11d threa·
tened tornadoes In eastern MIS·
sourl, southern Illinois, western
Kentucky and west Tennessee,
the NWS said.
Strong winds and large hall
also threatened the region early
Tuesday as the storms stretched
from Missouri, IllinoiS, K~·
tucky, Arkansas and Indiana,
with temperatures In the 30s and
40s across much of the area. The
northern Plains reported
temperatures Into the 20s.
Scattered showers .rolled
across north Georgia and Into the
Carolinas, the NWS said, and
severe storms threatened to hit
Ohio.
A' combination of high humid·
lty and light winds prnduced
widespread log In the mid·
Atlantic states, causing poor
vlsibllity In New Jersey, Pen·

Completes
•
requirements
.

addresses, the Postal Service's
quickest method of shipping
Items abroad, Express Mall
International Service, is avalla·
ble to more than 100 countries,"
Reuter says.
To ensure the llmely arrival at
overseas destlnallons for Christ·
mas delivery, post all mall in the
contlnen~N United States on Qr
before the lollowlng dates In 1989,
he adell.

Area deaths

Tunday, November 7, 1989

Cold weather front moves into Midwest

Continued from page 1
Reuter···--------The ptocess Is reversed ·for
parcels mailed by way of SAM
from mmtary addresses over·
seas to the U. S., except the size
limitatiOns are up to 70 pounds
and 100 Inches In combined
lenatb and girth.
1Express Mall Military Service
Is an option available to more
than 200 APO and FPO facilities.
"For mailing to non·m~ltary

Ohid

•i-

.

~

Forbes, 58, one of the most
controversial politicians in the
city's history, was council pres!·
dent for 16 years. A Democrat, he
worked closely with Voinovich
during the last 10 years and did
not announce his candidacy until
after Volnovlch confirmed he
would not seek another term.
Forb.es, who said earlier in the
day he was relieved the cam·
palgn was over. was conciliatory
In his concession speech.
"If he (White) wants my
assistance." Forbes said, " all he
has to do Is call me.
"I wanted to run for mayor, I
wanted to cap off a career. of 26
years In government · and I
wanted to take the opportunity to
go around the city of Cleveland
and tell my story," Forbes said.
"I went to places I never thought
I would go. I was well received.

Tuesday's general election in and Roger Ritchie" received 184
Meigs County saw races for votes to become a trustee. In
school board seats in all three Rutland Township, Charles Ban
local school districts as well as rett, Jr., received 289 votes, and'
for the Meigs County Board of Charles· E. WliUamson, 196, to be
Education.
reelected trustees.
Five candidates sough! terms
Two trustees were elected in
on the Meigs County Board of each township.
Education with three to be
Salisbury Township had ·stx
elected. Winning the three seats candidates seeking the lwo seats
were Harold Lohse, 2,705 votes; · with Edward W. Durst leading
Robert B. Burdette, 2,495. both the way with 699 votes and
Incumbents. and Blll Quickel · Richard Bailey, an Incumbent,
with 2307. Defeated were David winning also with 595. Votes
King with 2,281 votes and Dorsel received by other candidates
E. Larkins with 2,094 .
included: Bernard Gllk~. 552;
In the Meigs Local School Nathan P . Biggs, Incumbent,
. District where two board 526; Richard A. Flniaw, 365, and
mefubers were elected. the In· John H. Manley, 299.
·
cumbimts, Roller I E. Barton with
Sutton Township also had a
1,511 votes, arid larey W. Rupe slx•way r•ce' 'Wflh Incumbents.
with 1,405 votes won reelection. Otis F. Knopp, 450, and .Forrest
Defeated were Bonnie Turner· Van Meter, 431, emerging as
Bennett who received 1,274, and winners. Voles received by other
Arthur R. Kapczinsky who re- candidates were Dennie E. Hlll,
ceived 543.
311; Bill Harris, 300; Dennis M.
Incumbent James R. Smith Wolfe, 252, and Larry R. Hub·
won reelection to his seat on the bard. 246.
Eastern Local Board of Educa·
Two townships - Olive and
Uori with 792 votes. Winning the Columbia - both had live candl·
second seat on the 1board was Bill dates vying for the two trustee
Hannum who ch~lked up 1,077 posts. In Olive Township, .Paul
votes. Defeated .was Incumbent, Life, 289, and Ernest Barringer,
Kathleen Manicke, who received 261, both Incumbents, won reelec·
576 voles .
tion. Chester Wells received 133
In the Southern Local School votes; Martha A. Durst,127, and
Dis ti'!ct where three board L. Brian Collins.102. In Columbia
members were elected. two
Township, winners were GranIncumbents were reelected. ·ville C. Stout who received 131
They are Scott Wolfe who re· votes, and James Gaston, incumcelved ~votes , and G. Denny bent, 128. · Dessle I. Perry,
Evans with 955. Moving ontci the incumbent, received 80; Allee M.
board was Susie Grueser with 994 Llevlng, 69, and Gordon N.
votes. The fourth candidate, Perry, 67.
Incumbent. John E. Murphy,
In Chester and Lebanon Town·
received 743 votes.' Wrlle·ln . ships, four candidates in each
candidate, Carl Robinson, re· sought the trustee posts. In
ce!ved 47 votes for the Southern Chester Township, Gary R. Dill,
Board .
394 , an Incumbent, and Waid
Spencer, 382, won the seats
Meigs Trustee Races
Races for trustee posts laced defeating Elmer C. Newell, 373,
MeigS County voters In 10 of the and Rodney G. Chevalier, !ncum·
county's 12 townships at Tues· bent, 281. In Lebanon. the lncum·
day's fall election.
·
bents, Eugene G. Long, 297, and
The only townships not having Morris E. Teaford, 199, won over
trustee races were Orange and James W. Hayman, 93, and
Rutland. In Orange Township, Winston Varney , 89 . .
James E . Watson, an Incumbent,
Robert F. Hawk, Incumbent,
received 221 votes to be reelected with 175 votes and Virgll King

Four are arraigned
on various charges
Arraignment proceedings for
lour individuals recently In·
dieted by the Meigs County
Grand Jury were held Tuesday
morning In Melg$ County Com·
mon Pleas Court before Judge
Fred W. Crow III.
Michael A. Pierce, 31, of
Pomeroy, appeared on a charge
of escape, In connection with his
earlier arrest on another case. 1
Pierce was earlier· charged with
v.andalism and domestic vio·
lence. That case Is still pending
before Judge Robert Buck.
Escape Is a felony of the fourth
degree and carries a possible
penalty of six, 12 or 18 months In
prison and a fine olupto$2,500.In
addltloll, It Pierce is convicted in
the ,...... c - a1141 the escape,
any sentence of confinement
ordered on the escape must be
served consecutively to wha·
tevet Is ordered on the e,a rller
case.
Charles H. Knight was ap·
pointed to represent Pierce upon
a finding of I!KIIgency. Trial, to a
jury, has been set forDec.19. at 9

' was set in the amount
a.m. Bond
of $25,000, the same as was set by
Judge Buck In the earlier case.
Ronald E. Coates, 31, of Pome·
roy, appeared on a charge of
aggravated burglary In connec·
lion. with an Incident which
occurred In August at the Harold
Reeves residence. Aggravated
burglary Is an aggravated felony
of the first degree and carries a
possible penalty of five. six,
eight, nine or 10 to 25 years In
prison and a fine of up to $10,000.
Charles H. Knight was ap·
polnfed to represent Coates upon
a finding of indlgency. Jury trial
for Coates was set for Jan. 16.
Bond was set · at $10,000 and
Coate1 was Ol'di!red taken to the
. AtlleM Melltal Health Center for
evaluation, on application of the
prosecuting attorney .
Michael P. O'Neil, 36, of
Pomeroy, appeared on a seven·
count Indictment which Included
the foUowlng:
Count one:
Trafficking In
drugs.cultlvatlon of marijuana,
Continued .on page 12

... .............. .
~

with 164, were trustee winners in
Bedford Township defeating the
third candidate, Gerald Douglas
who received 139 votes.
In Letart Township, Don R.
Hill, an incumbent, received 184
votes,and W. Dave Graham, 164,
. to win the trustee seats. Defeated
was Incumbent Walter Herbert
Roush who recel ved 100 votes.
Bobby Arnold with 230 votes
was a winner In Scipio Township
and winning the ·second trustee
post with 148 votes was Harold D.
Graham. The third candidate,
Robert Jewell, received 118
votes.
In a three-man race in Salem
Township, H. Dannie Lambert
received 154 votes to win a
trustole p3SI alonl' with Incumbent, Cecil L. Stacy with 109. The
third cand'idate, incumbent,
Stanley E. Hutton received 101
votes.
VIUages Races
Middleport Village Council in·
cumbent, Jack Satterfield
racked up 267 write-in votes
during Tuesday's general election to win reelection to his seat
on council.
Four council members were
elected and besides Satterfield,
the other three incumbents, all of
whom were llst.ed on the ballot,
were reelected also. They are
Bob Gilmore, 353 votes; Dewey
Horton, 349, and Paul Gerard.
336. All are Republicans . De·
feated In their bids for council
seats were Robert Pooler, R., 243
votes, and E. F. Glass, D., 205.
Bruce Fisher was elected to the
Middleport Board of Public AI·
lairs with 401 votes.
In Pomeroy Villag~. five candi·
dates were seeking the four seats
to ,be filled on vlllage council.
lncumbeniS. Betty Baronlck, 342
votes; William A. Young, 338
votes, both Republicans. and
Larry Wehrung, D., 341 votes
won reelection.
The fourth
candidate to win a seat was
Thomas J . Werry, 313 votes, with
Mary R. Powell, R., losing with
308 votes: five under Werry.
Continued on page 12
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• • • • • • • • • • ! .' ' •

BIKE WINNER -X,Ie Werrr, lioa of Bob aM Karea Werry
Middleport, wu lbe w l - al the 10 ipeecl blkt&gt; at Kln~r'a Servtc~
Star Hardware In Middleport. Tile bllre wu lhe prize In a contest In
which lhe correct number of mllel bad te he determined for a
period Nov. H. The bike lraftletl 113.1 miles and t1t1a little guy
guealtedlli4 mllee. Luclry ,luct17. Pldured with Werry Is Tim Klq
of the newly remodeled bull-.
'

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