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Ohio Lottery

Pirates cop
NLEastem
Division·tide

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1 Section, 10 Page. · 25 C..U
A Multimedia Inc.

HERB FEST '91 - Herb Feet '90 seemed to be
Clll!te a IUCCIII OD Sll&amp;udq 81 the River Valley

Berballata .,,.. tbelr herbal displays. Pictured
'-41 Collide
left, ortaal:ler ol tile p-oup,

mo.

explalnlnr ber maa:r crafta 'oa display to .Jaclde
Hl..ebraod, Tbe Maplea. May ol the club
members had cralta oa display. The River Valla,y
Herballlta plaa to mAke &amp;be feat an annual event.

SAMPLING THE SAMPI.ml - Eva Robaoa,

rllllt, II pictured explalalDg the maay t)rpea

of ·

fooda prepared wltb berba to Nancy, and Mark
Yoacbam, Racine, who were among many wbo

atteaded Saturday'• Herb Feat '90 apooaored bJ
the River Valley Herballlllla tile miDI park Ia
Pomeroy.
·

Three
men Ch . .
u
:
d
are cfwoged
rrstr.n.e ~ armon crowne .
.. . wil~J . B ~•. E .. Racine· Eqll Fest:ival Queen

I'W. iUHVAL COURT- Cbrlltlae Harmon wai croWDed
Baallle Fall FeaUval Queea on SaturdiQ'. Plchired lollowtnr Ole
........., are, froat to back, Ma11a Yoacbam, Bannon, Sbe~
WIMIIreaaer and llerrt Porter. Flowera lor tbe queen were
provided by FraDcls F1orllt of Pomeroy.
·

Three Meigs County men have
been char&amp;ed with the breaking
and entering of three Pomeroy
establishments.
·
According to Meigs County
$hertff James M. Soulsby, J8.
year old Donald . Edwards . Is
being chargec:twith the breaking
and entering of tbe Corner Bar,
Excelsior Station and Dave's
Small Engine, along with one
charge of disposing of stolen
property.
Also charged Is 28 year-old
Danny E. Norman of Middleport.
Norman Is charged with breakIng and entering as an accessory
In the Excelsior Station and the
Dave' a Small Engine Shop entrtes. He also Is being charged
with disposing of 'stolen chain
saws.
InvesUaatlng offlcar Rober.t
Beegle believes that two more ·
Continued on page 5

Mayla Yoacham, the daughter
The crowning of the Racine
of
Mark and Nancy Yoacham,
Fall Festival Queen was one of
was
one of the queen candidates
the highlights of the annual
on
Saturday.
She will at eelld Ohio
featlval .th~re on Saturday
University
following
her gradua·
morning.
Christine Harmon, the daugh- tlon from Southern to study
ter of Jim and Linda Harmon, performing arts.
A third candidate, Shelly Winewas cr-owned queen following the
appearance of the candidates In brenner, Is the daughter of Mlck
the festival parade. CbrlsUne Is and Cindy Winebrenner. After
the daughter of Jim and Linda graduation, Shelly plans to atHarmon. Alter her graduation tend Ohio University to major In
from Southern High School, - chlld psychology.
Kerr! Porter, daughter of
Christine plans to attend Ohio
Frank
and Ann Porter, was the
University In preparation tor a
fourth
candidate.
After she grad·
law career.

uates, Karrl plans to attend
Middlebury College In Vermont,
where she will major In Soviet
studies.
The parade featured entrtes
from several local greups, In·
eluding theSouthemHlgh School
marching Band, scout troops,
local politicians and the festival
queen candidates.
The streets of Racine were
lined with food and craft booths
for the fesUval, sponsored by the
Raclne.merchants, and country
music filled the air In the
afternoon.

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BACINB CAR SHOW WINNERS - 'neae
lalla. wen llle llrat place wlaQera Ia the tlllrll ·
1

q 1

llanea&amp; MMD F•tlval Car Sbow . , _

. .... ., ... .._.... . .UIIIeUc Booaten. Pkl&amp;ured
. . . . . . . 1-r, Geae Wllaley, Sheila ......._,,

ud

~ooaatlq,

Batcla Orr, Baa RID, ud Bob

lpaaa of Minto HID' a Cl...c Can. Back•Veraoa
CoWIII, Glea GolDa, Leoaard Deal, Dave AileD,
Tom Smltb, Reward Caldwell, Gaey Warrea, PhD
Correll, Ro:r G1'118Mr, aad )larry Plckea.

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tile

SPB(:IAJ. TROPBQ!'.S - Tbeae ladlvldNia
were the wt....... of the apeelal ca&amp;erorlea lD tile
uaual Bacble ~Car Sbow beld Ia coaJIUICUoa wttll

Mul llt1nWeJ, JI4HIDq Poe, Smith Aaaoclatea

aarve.a MOGD Featlval Ia Racine. Pldured

are 1-r, Ropr Bleb, Opal Graeaer, Gene Whaley,
PiaU Correll, and Du RID. .
·
·~

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Approxim8tely 60 atitomobiies ·entered in Racine car show .·
•

IICO'l"'' WOLFE .

Claiming . top honors In the
Ia~ with tbe Racine
event were local bluineuman
Villalt tall Featlv,.-a. the South- , Gene WbaleY of Darwin for Beat
... AtN ''c! Boollll''a car abow of Sbow-orl&amp;~Dal for bll 1958
111111 Dtarda)' at Star Mill Park Edlel, aad Pldl Conell of l'(ew·
II . . . . . Wll a bale IUeftll.
port,OialofWBeltoiSIIow.stnet
•
MaebiDe
for bll Chevrolet Nova
-~r
ol tile f~t
' •••
'hi Ia .... Tri:St&amp;tt entry.
'l'llrouiiiOut the day neerb' «10

*•:::
....,

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people visited the car ahow,
wblch featured Steve Klll('a
"Mualc Mania" disc Joclcey ahow
wblcb featured top bill from the
nftlel, Slxtlel, aDd Seventl•.
Kl........... In rich tvfttl
aDd iaaba from Murryavlllt, WV.
Splelal tropiiiM Wlllt tD ftoler
Hldll of Madlloa, WV wllo WOD

.

the "Best Mopar" (Dod&amp;el
award; Dan Hill, Galloway,
Obfo.Best GM and the lo1Jiesl
traveled trophy (68· mllel); .and
ltD)t Gruuer, Pomeroy, Best
Ford.
Tile Beat Overall Paint Job
...t to Geae Wbaley, Shade;

BettJnterlor, Leoaard.Deal; and

Best Overall En&amp;lne, Butch Orr
from Parkersburg.
In all47 tr9phles we~e awarded
and dash plaques were presented
to each entry. Eacb year tile
ulill81 Racine event, now In Ita
third yeaf, pta blair lied , .

bet.!~a entrlei Included tbcite of
~

•

•

Max Hill from Max Hitl's Country Corvettes and Marvin Hill, of
HIU's Clasalc Cars.
car show spokesman Roaer
Sboulta aald. "~would like to
tballk all of the. par~ta for

eam1111 to tbll Y"f"• tvat and ;, ·
Coatla..d •

,..e I ·

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Commentary

2..0 win over Cardinals.
1

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t'

Pittsburgl•-wins NL East ch8mpio~hip

Paga 2-The Oily SSIIil•

Pomaov-Midtlaport. Ohio ·
' Monday. October 1. 1990

~==~~~--~~~----------~------~~--~~~

"The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Oblo

•

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
A~ .
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• ~~ .....-...;.,.._...,...r~c::lu=• .

ROBERT L. WINGETT
'Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manacer ·

PAT WHITEHEAD

A88lslanl

Pu~llsher/Conlroller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
·Associ alton and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters.are subject to editing and must be signed with
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be put).
!!shed, Letters should be In good taste. addressing Issues. not personalities.

GOP thwarts Dems on
·issue of abortion
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter •
COLUMBUS- Democrats have been continually thwarted by
Republicans in their attempt to make abortion a major Issue in
this year's gubernatorlill campaign.
And they dug a deeper hole for themselves last week when they
were forced to adinlt they had secretly financed a pro-choice political
action . cpmmlttee, which paid for television time for Ant)lony
Celebrezze Jr. to advertise his newly found pro-choice position.
Celebre:ize and the Democrats had hoped to keep .the $25,000
donation and another $25,000 loan quiet until closer to the election,
when the lnformatioill!1lght·have less Impact.
RepubliCans have been trying to prove there is a direct link between
Celebrezze, the Democrats and Choice '90, which descril1es itself as
Independent and bipartisan.·
.
.
Choice '90 may have RepubliCan members, but the idea it is trUly
bipartisan Is laughable. Several of its rounders have ties to
Celebrezze and Secretary of State Sherrod Brown.
And state Sen. Linda Furney, D-Toledo, another ·leader of the
group, gave away 'the charade last week when she bitterly accused
"sexist Republican men'' of trying to shut Choice '90 up. "I think.they
are out to get women," she sald.
Democratic 'State Chairman James Ruvolo ls doing .a slow burn
over the lnablllty of his party to publicize the difference between
Celebrezze and Republican gubernatorial nominee George Volnovich, who takes a restrictive position on abortion.
That's why be 'fessed up last week - to get the focus off the
relationship between the Democrats and Choice '90 and back on the
respective stances of the two candidates.
"I think it'&amp;Important to get the issue back on the front pages of the
paper," said the chairman.
Pollsters believe a pro-choice sland on abortion can swing 5 percent
to 6 percent of the vote to a candidate. That's just about how far
Celebr~ze was behind ln a survey of voters earlier this month by The
Plain Dealer of Cleveland.
·
Speak.lng of choice, the great advocate of choice on abortiol!. Gov.
Richard Celeste, sings a different tune_when lt comes to gambllng.
Celeste came out last week against Issue 3 - the constitutional
amendment permitting Lorain citizens to vQte on whether to have a
casino In their area.
·
The governor, probably correctly, believes gambling ls not a sound
mechanism on which a state should base Its economic develoment.
But when his Inconsistency on freedom of choice was pointed out, he
took exception.
)
.
.
"The people will choilse,"_-l!e said. But he·was referring to the
people of Ohlo, ·and not necessarily the people-of Lorain, where the
casino wlll be.
. ,.,.
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J~st 'say

--'---'-o-;_____;__ _

WASHINGTON - American available on hlm lists his last rylng more than half an once of us.
Malayslaq due ·· procj?Ss has
Kerry Wiley picked the worst occupation ~~~ "computer · lec- heroin, seven ·ounces of mariplace in the world to get caught turer from Sacramento."
juana or 33 ounces of opium.
been slow for Wiley. It took 10
wlth a pound of marijuana- the
How Wiley got Into thts mess ts ThQse- caught wlth leuer months before prosecutors presSoutheast Asian nation of Malay- difficult' to say. He was at the amounts often get Itfe ln prison, ented their evidence to a judge at
sia, where possession of more home of a Kuala Lumpur resi- or, at the very least, a whipping a hearing early this month. The
than an ounce means the death dent when pollee raided the home with a "rotan," a. thick piece of prosecutors q11estioned only half_
penalty. Unless Wiley, 37; can and seized 1.1 pounds of "ganja." bamboo. The beatings are so of their scheduled 2ll witnesses
prove thal ·the pot wasn't hls, he In the United States, conviction brutal that a doctor Is required to and then delayed the rest of the
wUl be hanged.
hearing until October. Presumafor such a crime would earn up to stand ln.
It has been almost a year since
Whether the heavy-handed tacbly Wiley will be able to tell his
five years . In jail, and first
Malaysian -police handcuffed Wi- offenders would probably skate tics work ls debatable, but U.S. side of the story. the.n. He must
ley and led him quietly of! to the . with a suspended sentence.
Drug Enfor.oement Administra- prove the marijuana didn't besordid Pudu prison In the capital
At the foot of . Malaysia ls tiOn officials told us that there is long to htm. Otberwfse a "compuclty of Kuala Lumpur. Authori- Singapore, a drug traffickers' e\tldence Southeast Asian drug ter lecturer from Sacramento"
ties there have clamped the lld on haven before Malaysia and Sin- runners are picking other routes, wUI die tn a foreign jail - a
any Information a'bout his case. gapore decided the best way to Including through Hong Kong or · symbol of how desperate · the
But our associate Jim Lynch derail business was _to start overland across China.
world has becOme to ·stop the
traveled, to Kuala Lumpur and haagtng people..
The U.S. Embassy ln Malaysia
drug menace.
was able to find out more about
For Malaysian Prime Minister
The penalty for drug trafflck- says Wilw's case Is a top
the American on death row.
that doesn't mean . Mahath!r Mohamad, the Issue Is
lng has not been kept a secret. priority,
Photographs o! the manacled "BE FOREWARNED," say Ma- tbe embassy can do anything simple. As he told .Us, "We think
Wlley don' t look Ilke the stereo- laysian Immigration cards. . about it. Embassy officials are j drug deateri) are kUiers, betype of a drifting drug dealer, At "DEATH FOR DRUG TRAF- reduced to prison checkups to cause so many of these, young
the time of his arrest he was fit F.ICKE;RS UNDER MALAY- make sure Wiley Is well. "There boys who have taken these drup
and handsome with a neat SIAN LAW." ·
Isn't anything else we can really are dying' or dead. It's ~urder." '
mustache. The little Information
The noose awaits anyone car- do," an embassy spokesman told

bu"

-=~ @)1~!10~ ·1'10~ $"D&gt;.~~t.I!G~

~ULMS

'-D

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~e,..

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_By ~ling Boston 10.5 Sunday,
•

The American League East

,Military kids

des~

consideration ·
Sarah Overstreet.

•

Toronto beat Boston 10-5 Sunday, pulling within one game of
the lead on what wouiC have been

osep

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Adama, left, are Greg MIIIII, store manager;
Roseoe Mills, owner; and Denny Evans, a
member of AdiUilll' crew. The Pomeroy, 61pley,
aad Spencer McDonald's Restaurants are sponsors ollhe .\.diUilll car, known In lhe racing circles
as the "Bandit".

Tiffm, Shawnee State fall to RG
The Redwomen had posted a
The University of Rlo Grande be a tougher match, but I thought
pair·
of wins last Thursday on the
we
played
well.
·
We
.
had
better
volleyball team, ranked first las.t
road
over Alderson-Broaddus
defense and b~an playing more
.week ln District 22, opens thls
(W.Va.),
15-3, 15-6, and West
.
week's action with a 11ood chance effectively." \
Virginia
Wesleyan,15-5,15;7,1n
a
Blllina Cooper led the Rio
at hanging on to the top spot after
triangular
match
ptayed
at
the
posting five wins over the last Grande offense with 12 kUis.
Shelly Hoop added 1() kills, and A·B campus In Phlllppl. ·
. few days.
·A balanced team effort put the
In a PBI'ents Weekend home Teresa Zempter · and Shannon
matcb SaturdaY, the Redwomen· Huston had five each. Hoop Redwomen ahead of A-B when
boosted their overall record to recorded three block solos and Hoop poured In eight kills,
. 22-3 after defeating MI~-Ohlo c;oope.- bad two. Huston posted Zempter seven, Cooper stx, HusConference newcomer ·Tiffin, 15- 11\ree digs and added two serving ton four and Spears two to
complete ~he offense. Zempter
4, 15-9, 15-4, and Shawnee State, aces to the defense.
a~ added four block solos to her
i5-3; 15·7.
Fields hailed setter Robin season
stats, while Hoop and
"I really expected .more out of Sharp, a junior from Tarlton,
Cooper
posted
three apiece.
Tiffin," Coach Patsy Fields Ohio, with much of the team's
In
addition,
Cooper had four
remarked. "We figured It would success to this point.
serving
aces,
Zel!Jpter
three and
· ''W)th Robin, you don't see a lot
Sharp
two.
Shoring
up
the .deof stats, but she Is the key reason fense was Cooper with slx
digs ·
The Daily Sentinel
for being where we're at today.
who
recorded
five.
.
'and
Zempter,
She Is a consistent player and a
(VSPSJfl.lll)
In the Wesleyan contest,
very
big asset to this program,"
A.DI•- olllaiU- Joe.
Cooper
had eight kills, Zempter
Fields said.
.
Publllllecl every afternoon. MOaday
Sharp contributed two serving . six, Spears four and Ingram two.
~ Friday. Ill COUrt S!.. Poaces against Shawnee State, In addition, Hoophad three block
merOf, Oblo, by llle Ohio Valley Pubsolos, Zempter two block solos,..
llahiJIII CompanyiMuHimfdla, Inc..
while Zempter h"d three block Huston five dlgs and Neff two .
POmeroy, Ohio 157611, Ph. 912-21:16. Sesolos and · Mlcbeile Spears two.
~'JU I&gt;OI!aiP paid I! Pomtroy,
Memra Ingram recorded three serving aces.
Now 4-1 In the MOC, the
dlp ·to lead the defense. Offen·
u~ned Pnt• ln!ei'IIIIUonaJ, slvely,
Redwonten
renew conference
·Cooper added eight kllls
Inland Dally Prflo Alooclatlonlllcl tho
action
against
Mount Vernon
to her seaaon stats, Hoop had stx,
OldoN""'IP'I~Iatloll: NaiiODal
at
home
at 7 p.m.
Nazarene
Adverllalnll
!alive, Br~m
Zempter five and Tiffany Neff Tuesday.
Neorr- sa
733 Tlllr4 A"""ue,
two.
l'leW Yoi-1&lt;. N.,. Yolt&lt; 10011.

hS
rpear

but passing thought to. throat; that new products ·are
That's why Normal People clogging grocery store shelves;
should stop and tender thanks.
that people wlio jog In the
Do Y0\1 realize that •without mornlnll might be more suscpetl• Cornish: "The 1990s wUlllkelybe
Serious Worrkirs you would bletoheartattacks; thatplzzatn · themostworry·fllleddecade~at
never have become aware of the . the '90s wlll probably be topped . mankind has ever experlen
"
potential hazardsofeatingtoma- .wtth pineapple, spinach, goat
The . National Aiudety
r
toes grown from seeds that were cheese and cauliflower and paid (P.O. Box 40, Maplewood,
In outer space for stx years? As 11 for by credit cards that wUI be 07040) serves as a filter of
turns out, we are probably not Instantly verified via a satellite ' worrisome things. Founded .alid
going to be wtped out by Mutant communication system; that directed by a nimble wordsmith
Killer Tomatoes, but If It were cremation Is polluting the air named Alan Caruba, a former
not for Serious Worriers nobody with yaporlzed mercury from journalls and current columnlat,
would haveeventhoullhlaboutlt. dental fflllniiS- ·
lecturer · and public relations
Wllhol!l Serious Worriers, you
.J mean, hey, ft takes real pros couilselor, the center publishes
would never have known that to come up with wonclertul pamphlets, news releases aud ·a
men can get cancer of the • . worryln11 material like that quarterly newsletter that 11 de11enltals from sunbathjng In the people with natural talent who slgnedtoseparatethesipUicut
nude; that unchewed tortUla 'are well trained (I learned from worrying stuff from the rubbllh.
chips can rip a hole In your my paternal grandmother. - a
Says Caruba: "AmertcaDI are
,
world-champion worrier, .: God belnll subjected tQ an endless
ryost her soul) aud who keep their series ofsca~:ecampa1ps, 'Thole
Instincts honed by steeplnll them- · relit purpose ofien seema to he
selves In the professional · fund raising, 11et~g TV ratlllp
literature.
·
- and the banning of every cbeml.'
Four years ago, for example, callmnwntomauandGod."Laat
·
By Untied Prea lalernatlollal
the Union of International Asso- Deceniber, Caruba publlahed ·a
Today Is Monday, Oct. 1, the 274th day of 1990 with 91 to follow,
elations In Brussels published a· . list ,of "The Top 10 1'1111181 to
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its fu~ phase. ·
list of 10,000 world problems. Worry About Plus 90 Othen."
The morping stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter:
Serious Worriers are still poring
So, you see: The re&amp;IOII NorThe evening star Is Saturn,
·
()Ver · that dfflnltlve pii!Cl! of mai.People can aetawaywltlnlllt
Those born on this date ar~ under the sign of Ubra. They Include work. The Congressional Budget . worrying Ia bec-.use p!'Cifasloa·
naval Capt. James Lawrence, hero ofthe War of 1812,1n 1781; novelllt Office .Ia a dependable 10urce of · ala are dolnglt to&amp;!, them. Tlllak
Faith Baldwin In 1893; pianist Vladimir Horowitz In 1904r Jimmy grlevoill proJectlo~, as Ia · the al)out that and maybe ralR a
Carter, 39th president of the United States, Ia 192G (age 66); fanner Congresaloaat Office of Techno- · mud-la·your.eye J(au to Sertou
batting champion Rod Carew In 1945 (age 45); , and act~ Waller logical AllesSment.
Worriers as we begin the DR
Matthau In 1920 (al!e 70), JamesJI'hltmore In 1921 (age·69), .
Says IOclety pr,.ldent Edward . seaJOn.
·
•

Today in history~

•

race now depends on what
happens on the first weekend of
the season.

STOCK CAB ON DI8PLAY- LoCal drlvlq ace
and' newly ci'Oinled utO La&amp;e Model Stqck Car
Cllampt.li Bob Ad-, Jr., wu on hand al the
MoDoaald'a store in Pomeroy Saturdar
...._.. wbere children aad area fans got lo see
llnU--bud whal a·dJrt s~k car looks like. Adams ·
t. the six-time Champion at Skmae. Pictured wllh

. So far the country hasn't those children tohavepsycholog- ·
required women to register for leal security as well as physical
the .drafl, so I realize I've been care ..
-.
able to hold these views phlloso~a tie Sherrod, writing In the
my . friends .was killed In the
phlcatly without having to live St. Louis Post-Dispatch, believes ~ongo (now Zaire), and the rest :
them In reality. Had that
"It, js no easier for a child to of the family put Into horrifying
changed, I would have registered contemplate the loss of a father peril.
for the draft without hesitation. 1 ln war than the loss of a mother."
We don' I require that at leaat .
never thought that I or any other
I agree with Sherrod's vlew. one parent In a clvUian family not
woman deserved "safer" duty
Yet Fields goes on to raise engage In dangerous &lt;icclipatlons·
than men, just duty that matched another powerful issue: the psy- or even riskY hobbles. We Ieaveii •
our skills.
chologlcal well-being of children to parents to choose their activiIn recent editions of two of the when both parents are called to ties and care for thewell-belngof
three Sunday newspapers! read
dangerous mllltary duty. It's their children. It doesn't always
I was Interested to find diametrl:
tempting to wish the military ·•· worl&lt; out so well for the children,
. cally opposed viewpoints, from
would just adopt a rule that when but that ls what we do.
women, on the subject of women
m!lltary couples have children,
The decision t.o pu't In for
whose mjlltary service takes . one of the parents would auto- non-dangerous duty !sn',t somethem from their children and
matlcally be put Into a job that thin g that can be made during a
places them at risk.
would not require that parent to crisis when tbere Is, ho trained
Suzanne Fields, whose column
be taken from the chlidren In the replacement to assume a parappeared ln the Kansas City
event of dangerous action.
ent's duty, but lt certainly Ia
Star, .thinks forcing women to
However, _we've never res- . something that can be decided
leave their children whUetheygo
trlcted civilian parents go to beforehand. Can we expect to
to perform dangerous mllltary
lands that are virtually powder attract and keep the best people
service Is ignoring the rights of · - kegs, oflen .taklng their children In the mllltary If we don't allow
with them. The father of one of them this basic parental right?

As we enter the offlclal1990-91
worrying season, 11 would be
appropriate - and humbly apprectated - If you would pause
for a momen.t and acknowledge
the Serious Worriers of the world
and all they do for you. ,
For the uninitiated, the worrylng season runs from Labor Day
to Memorial Day, with a catchyour-breath pause between
Christmas and New · Year's.
During these extremely Intense
nine months. Serious Worrier}
fret and fume non-stop over the
economy, the. environment, the
·InfrastructUre, the energy crisis,
the drug epidemic, global warmlng, Korean reunlftcatlon, bias ln
the medta and t!ll,usanda of other
things that Normal People 111ve

OLD MOTHER HUBBARD
WENT TO THE CUPBOARD ...

.

't.O'·

We worry so .oihers don't have toJ

~ ~byNEA. Inc

By MIKE TULLY
UPI Na&amp;lonal Baseball Wrller

.

~

-.

PIRATES CELEBRATE - Pittsburgh Pirate hurler Doug
Drabek jumps Into the arnis of firstbasemanSid bream as catcher
Mike LaVaiDere (12) and · Jo&amp;e Lind (upper left) Join - ·
celebration of the Dues' 2-0 victory over. the host St. Loulll
Cardinals• Thai win gave Pirates tbe NL East tUie. (\11'1)

. lays cut Red Sox's AL East lead to one White Sox fans bid

..

. .

BJ PAUL DEFEDE
decisions.
the first run and Van Slyke's Montreal, Wes Chamberlala
IJPI8porta Wrllef
"I don't consider myeelf the groundout to first gave Pittsscored the first run and slngJed
Alief the Pittsburgh Pirates ace," Drabek said. "It would _ burgh a 2-0 lead.
hOille the winner pacing Phuatalted'thespol)aofvlctory,Andy have been nice, DO matter Who
''J'mrealproudorthewaythls delphta. It was Montreal's ninth
· Van Slyke gave the New York won todaY."
team handled the challenges this loss In Its laat 10 games. Terry
Mets a bitter ptllto swallow.
To Vau Slylle, wlanllla lbe NL
year." Leyland said. "We just Mulbo1!aild ltnprove4__ to 9:10:
'The biggest nallln the coffin Eaat title with tbe Pltlllburgh stayed after It and we were Rookie southpaw Chris Nabholz
1s that the Mets' game wasn't meant more to him than tbe one pretty consistent. But the thing
sUpped to 6-2.
overbeforeourswas,"VanSiyke he experienced with the C&amp;rdl· I'm proudest of Is that this has
Padres 3, Reda 0 - At
Cincinnati,
DerekLlllJquist, 5-11,
said Sul!day after the Pirates nals back In 1985.
. been a f~ yellf thing. We've
clinched their flnt title 1n 11
''Whel\ I came here (In 1987) It gone through a lot of hHrtache permitted four hits over . slx
years with a 2-0 victory over t)le was the worst situation ln base- and a lot of tough times."
laDings while Joe Carter and
st. Lou1J ~lnals.
ball." Van Slyke said. "We
He added, "Everybody Is on Jerald Clark singled In runs to
"A lot of people went home on finished laSt three straight years. our bandwagon today; It wasn't carry San_Dlego to a three-game
series sweep of the National
the subway very disappointed." But (Jim) Leyland did a great· that crowded four years ago."
The Pirates clinched while the job. He was the foundatiOn for the '-In other National League ac- Legue West champion Reds.
Metswerestlllplaylngandmade turnaround In Pittsburgh.
liOn, Chicago edged New York Greg Hartis pitched the. final
the three-game series beginning
"(Leyland) believed' In us 6-5, Philadelphia shaded Mont- three Innings for his ninth save.
Monday between the two clubs a when we didn't believe in our- real 2-1, Salf Diego blanked . Jose Rljo fell to 14-8.
Astl'OII 6, Braves 2 - At ·
meaningless one. The fans at selves," said Van Slyke, whO Cincinnati 3-0, Houston 'pounded
Shea received the.news when the drove In Pittsburgh's second J,"Uil. ·Atlanta 6-2, and San Francisco
Houston. Mark Portugal allowed
three hits over seven Innings and
resu,lts flashed on the Shea
Van Slyke wasn't the onlt ., ,I!JIIIImeled Los Angeles 8-2.
Stadium scorellard.
Pirate to credit the team's
In the , American League It
Casey Candaele added a two-run
single to lift Houston. Portugal
Tile ni!W!I was a lot better for skipper for their success.
was: New York 7, Mllwau)!:ee 2;
Pirate fans.
"Jim Leyland kept reminding Toronto 10, Boston 5; Baltimore
Improved to 11-10. Jlm Clancy
pitched two Innings for h!l first .
Ace pltche.-Doug Drabek fired us all year thatwewerethe best 6, Cleveland 31n the first game;
a three-bitter and Gary Redus's team In the National League Cleveland 7, Baltimore 3 In the save. Tom Glavlne, 10·12, took
sacrifice fly broke up a scoreless East," Redus said. "He kept second; Detroit 1, Minnesota 0;
the loss.
.
elglith Inning to help Pittsburgh saying we were going to win lt, · Chicago 2, Seattle 1; Oakland 4,
Glaata 8; Dodgers t - At San
earn the right to face the West but we didn't always believe Texas 3; and Kansas City 2,
Francisco, Robby Thompson hoDivision champion Reds In the him."
•
Callfol'l!la 1.
mered and added twotlngles and
NL playoffs ThursdaY. Clncln''We've all gone through the
. Cub116,Mets5 ..... AtNewYork,
Rick Reuscbel pitched five shunat! and Pltlsburgh split 12 bad times, and we've all gone Ryne Sandberg broke a lle wlth a
tout Innings to guide San Frangames tbil seaso~~&lt;
through the good times." Drabek bin th-Inning ground ball lifting cisco. Reuscbel, 3-6, making his
''We came up with a pretty said. "It's nice to get It over with Chicago. Howard Johnson made second start slllte coming olf the
good guy,Justa! the right time," because no one thought we could an error on the play, allOwing the
disabled list Sept. 17, notched his
run to score. Jose Nunez, 4-7, got first victory since April 29.
Pittsburgh manager Jim J.,ey- hang on this long."
r the win. Mitch Wllllams got one Raphael Novoa . pitched four
land said on Drabek. • ·
Drabek, 22-6, burled his third
Joe Magrane, 10-17, dueled out ·for his 15th save. John Innings for his first save. Fershutout of the year, bls ninth ~bek unW the eighth when Franco,5-3,1osthlsthirdstralght ~nando Valenzuela, 13-13, was the
loser.
declslqn.
complete game and won for the Pittsburgh licored 'twice.
Redus's sacrifice fly produced
PhDBee 2, Expos 1 - At
eighth time In his laat nine

-_.:_Ja_ck_A_:_nd~er_so_n_an-:--d_D_a_le_JI;_an_A;,.._
· t--"-ta .

no:--.

The prospect of mllltary servlce ls something I've thought
about since I was a college
Paul Pfeifer and Lee Fisher, the two state senators who are running freshman, when my male friends
for attorney general, traded heavy punches last week In a debate at were being drafted for the
Vietnam War and I wasn·~- They
the Press Club of Ohio.
"You can learn more from holding a cat up by Its tall than by had to consider the draflflrstand
reading a book," said Repub!Ucan Pfeifer, trying to emphasize that · then plan their Immediate course
Democrat Fisher has never tried a case in court and ls unquatllled-to of action, sometimes putting
their plans for the future on hold.
be attorney general.
I
didn't. I could go to college llke
' Pfelier has had experience as both an assistant attorney general
l'd always planned and get on
·
and assistant county prosecutor.
· Undaunted, Fisher tried to take advantage of Pfeifer's with my life.
I didn't think It was fair then.
fast-and-loose campaign style. "Get your facts straight, Paul " he
chided. :'As a lawyer, thl!l's probably the most imporlant tht.g you and 20years haven't changed my
can do. Get your facts straight, do your homework and tell the truth." perspective. Although we were ·
. I
far t.rom h11v!ng equal opportunlty and equal rights at the'tlme, I
believed then, and I believe now,
lhJll the Ideal of equal rights
carries the requirement' of equal
responsibility. You can't demand .
equality In the work place and
then say, "Oops, I didn't mean
that, take IJ!Y name offthellst,"
.
when the country demands mll.
ltary serytce.

Berry's
. World

I',..

the season's last day. Instead,
the lockout left each club facing
three games - g8JJ!es originally
scheduled for the first full
.
weekend la AprU.
''There's no relle!:• Boston
outfielder Tom Brunansky said.
"Now. there's three more emotlonallypac,ked games. We're not
going to guess that we'll get help
from Baltimore."
Toronto faces the Orioles In
Baltimore on Monday, TuesdaY
and Wednesday. Boston plays In
. Fenway against the White Sox
!he same days.
Those three games might have
meant nothing If Toronto had
handled the Red Sox head to head
In 13 regular-season games. But
Boston won 10 of their meetings.
." If we lose, maybe we can say
we lost because we didn't beat
them," said wlnnlnll pitcher
Jimmy Key,l3-7.
J:1oston even took the weekend
series, two games to one, which
accounts for Its one-game lead.
•'They won the big games and
deserve to win," Toronto's Kelly
Gruber said. "For us· to win at
this point would almost take a
(See AL on Page 4)

farewell to Comiskey
Park Sunday "
By CARRIE MUSKAT
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO (UP!) -Donn Pall
arrived early. Sunday to hls place ·
of childhood worship and adult
employment.
It was Comiskey Park's'last
day.
.
"I walked around the upper
deck and the lower deck and sat
In some of the seais where I sat as
a fan," said Pall, a native of
nearby Evergreen Park and now
a Wblte Sox relief pitcher.
"I remember where I sat for
Disco Demolltlpn Night," he .,
said. He recalled that he brought
a record to take advantage of the
98 cents admission, but balked at
throwing It onto the bonfire . . .
"For the '83 All-Star Game, I
sat.ln the 'Bob Uecker' seats In
the right-field corner," he said .
Pall said he will take hls
memories, and nothing more,
from · the park, · which closed
_Sunday with Chicago's 2-1 vlc·

tory over the Seattle Mariners.
"A tot of people want to take ·
the seats or chisel a brick out,"
he said. ! 'If I dld that, I'd
probably throw tt In the attic
after a while and then sell tt at a
garage sale. '"
"All I want are pictures of the
place and memories."
,
. . Frank Scheuerell, Pall's peewee baseball coach, said he saw
his first Comiskey game May 27,
1938.
''Pete Gray . I remember him
playing," Scheueren.sald, recalling the one-armed · outfielder
whO played for the St. Louis
Browns. "My favorite was Luke
Appling. There are so many
memories . I can see Luke at
shortstop. Ted Lyons. I can see
Ted Lyons pitching. You just see
so many." ·
A crowd or 42,849 viewed the
final game ln,the majors' oldest
(Continued on Page4} .

Approximately... continued from pag~ 1
thank those who came to look. We
Duane Weber; and Mini Truck·
felt we had a very IIOod show this
Gene Whaley, Jim Starcher.
yearland are looking forward to
Mustang-Howard Caldwell;
nel(t year. We are all thall:ktulfor
Production 1940-57 Sheila Whathe beautikui day that we had."
ley, Vernon Cowan; Production
Others InvOlved with making
1958-69 Sheila Wpaley,. Rgger
the shOwia success were Gary
Picks· Productlon 1970-75, Dave
Wlllford, Mary Shou.1ts, Eric· _Allen.' and Steve Shriver; and
Shoults, Todd Grindstaff, Mlka
Special Interest, Gene Whaley.
Spence.-, and Brtan Lawrence.
Marvin Hill. . '
FolloWing will be a lilt of
In the Model Car division and
winning entries In the event with
contest Rodney Poe and Troy
flrstplaceentrlasllutedflrstand
Rawltns were the winners of the
second place winners second:
6-12 year olds; Donnie Keels and
Street Machl11es 1949-62 Butch
Eric Shoults won the 13-17 year
Orr; Street Machines 1963- . old division; and Ray Laujermllt
74,Phll Correll and Sherman
won the 18 thru adult.
Parsons; · Street Machines 197590, Harry Plckens,Harold
McClaskey; Street Rods · thru
1949-Kim Neal, Max Hill; Muscle
.Cars, Dan Hill, James Starcher; :
and all Model T Fords, ·RoY
Grueser and Roy .Grueser.
. Mopar, M'a rvtn Hill and ·Loren
Neal; European Cars-Smith Assoclates and Accounting, and
Paul Williams; Chevy 1955-58I
Tom Smith, Blll Lambert;
Corvettes, 1976-90 Leonard Deal;
Original Truck-Glenn Goins;
~tom Truck-Gary Warren,

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514
12 . ,5

M~GAUI

MTIJIIEES SAT\IIIDAY &amp; SI.IKM,Y
Sl. 75 LUIGAII l!IOHT TUESDAY
(UCEPJ "CHOST•I

HONEY

•,

PORTRA,TS

·.

P.HOTO SPECIAL

,;rber:

'
POil'l1oiASTER: ch._
!o 'l1lo Dilly S.UtiDel. 1ll Court Sl,
POsi•oy. Oldo e'N9.

.,_....,.. IIUIIIC:aJPTIC)N UTili

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IINOLBCOPY
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Dolly ................................... 25 Cen!l

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Tile Doll!' -oo a 3, I or 121110111b
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Ill
Ill

4-8"10

4-Sx7

.MUS Volleyball teapn wins
15th encounter of campai~
The Meigs Marauder varsity
and reserVIL_ volleyball teanis
continue to roll over lbeir opponents. Bpth teams are 15-0
overall and 12-Q In theTri-Vallay
Conference.

,

.(a action recently agalaat
Trimble, coach Rick Ash and hlu
varalty team defeated the Lady
Cats15-7 and15-t. TrlclaBaerted
the way with 8lx points and four
aces, Kim Hanning ad4ed flve
points and four kllls, Jennifer
TaYlor five points and four aces,
Kelly Smith four polnll, Amy
Wagner three points and five

asslsll 1 and Chrtusy · Weaver,
Tara Humphreys and Jodi Tllllu
sc!Ored two points each.
Coach Dale Harmon's reserve
team continued to roll over It's
opposition with a 15-0, 15-8 sweep
of Trimble. Chrissy Taylor led
the way with 11, Carne S.i'tels
added stx and Anna· Chapman
five. The reserve team has swept
all15 matches In the minimum of
two games each match.
Both teams will put their
perfect records on the · line
TuesdaY evening at home
ap!Mt Wellaton with there&amp;erve
match getdJQI under way at 5: 55.

·48-GiANT WALLETs··
IN UVING COI.O.II

queodon
about your
medication?
Call your
Fruth •

•3.00 Depo1it .When Photographed
No Aga limit
·· ·
No Extra Charge For Gr.oups Taken
$23.9&amp; Balance Upon Delivery

••

-·
..

PLUS
fr• 11 x14 &amp; 1 ICty Ring With Paitl Packllftl
Check w•dow Signs For Time -.1 Date

DATE: vredntsday, Oct. 3
HOUIS: 10:00·4:30
PHOTOGUGPHEI WILL IE AT
ANDIISOii'S FUIIIIIIE

'\·
t.

--•

..
•

•
•'
•'

�·P II 4 1ht Delt Ia

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The Daly S lliiNI

TWo blocked punta and u

error-tree game by quarterback

•·. ~

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AMBIIICo\N L&amp;\OvB
ltut
T..,

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llosiOD ....... .. ...... 86
Tor&lt;~~to.............. 85
O.trolt ......... .... .. 77
INDIANS ........... 7~
llllum....... .. .... 11
Milwaukee ......... 72
N... Ydrll .......... l6

73
'II
82
8:1
84
87
93

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111;
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Chlcoro ............ 93
.Texu. .......... .. ... 82
CaiUomlll ..... .... 78
S..tde .............. 76
KlDMI City ...... 15
Mbllltlata ........ . 72

77
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Bootat7. Torauo ~
Milwaukee I. New Yorll: 1
BaiUmCftatClewland,ppd. r.ln
Chlt'OIO 5, S•tile 1
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KanMI City 9, Co1Uomlll6

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Cleveland 7, Baltlm.,.. 3. 2nd

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t'oronto10. SO.ton 5
Now Yol't 7, Mllwoukeo 2
ChiC8&amp;o2, Sl!lltUe 1
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Kon- City 2, Cot Uomlll 1

.

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

DetrolliTIIIIIIIIJ!.8) 11 Nt!WYoli&lt;
. !Cory 6-11). 7:30p.m.
ChiCIIOIHibbard 14.91 llllootoo
tKleclter J!.9!. 7:35p.m.
Toronto fWeliJ 11 ·5)at Baltlmcn
·IMesa 2·21 , 7:35p.m .

Seat de fSwan 2-2~ 11 MlnDHOCI
tTopanl11·8i, 8:05p.m.
1'exas tWUI17-101 at Milwaukee
1Robln1011 12-41, 8: 35 p.m.
California (Crabe 2-4) 11 Oak·

lllnd ISI&lt;wart22-10i.10:05 p.m.

·nae...,·........

Det rolt at New York. nlaht
Chtcoro a111o11on. nl&amp;ht
Toronto at BIIUrnore, nl&amp;ht
Kan111 Cit)' ai-"CIMiand. ntpt
Seattle at Mlnne&amp;cU, nll:tit

rex,. at MllwaukH, nllht
CaiUomlllll Ooklllll4. nl&amp;ht
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San FrucUoo I. Loo Antol• 3
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...... fDII•II• 7·12) al O•

'

11J Valled Preulalenalloul

" It's a ud commentary on Ibis
coacbing starr when IOlllebody
blocks two ktclls the previou.l
week ·a nd then they block two
kicks aga!Qt us," Browns head
coach Bud Carson said. ''I've
never been so sick about somethlltg In my life."
The Cblefs were prolecllni a
10.0 lead with t: 5f left In the half
when Charles Washlllgtonlooped
around the outilde and IIDO·thered a punt ·by Brown kicker
Bryan · Wagner. Chris Marlin
41·7 the previous week.
gathered In the ball and ran 3l
Jets rookies Rob Moore, the top . yards untouched tor the score.
auppleltlental pick, and Blair
'1'hey were double-teamiDg
Thomas, the second O\llerall clio- Albert (Lewis, who has blocked
Ice In the draft, finally shone
three punts In three gamesl, like
after shaktna off Injuries. Moore. any person with any .sense .
, caught nine paases for 175 yards would," Washington said. ''They
· and one touchdown and Thomas forgot No. 46 (Washington) was
ran tor 100 yards on 20 carries.
over there, and I made them
Brad Baxter, the bulldog of'a Pay."
lilllback Who )las come through
"After Charles broke free ,on
1
lnfn
afte
d
the outside and got hll (block) ,
s nee Ira
g camp . r spen · that openecllt up tor me, .. Marlin
IDg last season on the de»elopsaid;
mental squad, scored tWo touch·
Carsoll said wben the Chiefs
downa. Ken Q'Brlen completed
19 of 28 passe$ for 282 yardS and ran the blocked punt back for a
oDe touchdown to help the Jets score, It turned the game.
move to 2-2.
''I never thougl)t for a minute
· "l'hey gritted their teeth, ac- we couldn' t come back anc~ wl1\
cepted the criUclsm last week the football game and then they
anil kicked (butt)/' Jets head blocked that punt," Carson said.
coach Bruce Coslet said.
· Lewis got the next one, with a
The Patriots may have far half a mlilute l~ft In the third
more to accept. Team owner ' quarter· Kevin Ross Picked It up
VIctor Klam, who Initially and careened four y~rds Into the
blamed Boston Herald reporter end zone for the score.
Usa Olson's presence In the
Tbe Chiefs pushed their record
locker room for abusive behavior to 3-1 while dropping the Browns
by the players Involved, Sunday to 1·3 aDd dealing Cleveland_its
vowed there would be shakeups third loss In a row.
In management but was told by
DeBerg hit 12 of 21 passes for
league commlsloner Paul Tagll· 189 yards and two scores before
abue to hOld off unUJ the giving way to backup' Steve
InVestigation Is over.
Pelluer '¥hen the game was out of
'.'1 think we really have to look reach In _the fourth quarter.
at our~lves.'' Patriots defensive DeBerg has not yet thrown an
end Brent Williams said.
Interception thiS season.
The game was played before
Cl~eland quarterback Bernie
36,724 spectators at the 60,794· Kosar, ott to his worst start In
seal Foxboro Stadium with 647 seven seasons, waa sacked twice
n«&gt;-shows In the wake a boycott and pressured throughOut the
call.
·contest. Bac!Qjf Mike Pagel,
given more practice Ume this
week by Carson becauSJ! or the
beating Kosar has beeft takiDg,
took over after the third quarter
and finished out the game.
Going Into the game, the
dnnott tBrownbli 1~91, 7:35p.m.
Browns were worried about their
St . LoulliSmlth 9-Siat Montreal
Inexperienced offensive line,
!Farmer 0..5) , 7:35p.m .
which has four new faces, and the
Chicago !Collman IJ.II at Phtlil·
delpllla iDoJeaiUI 6-8). 7:35p.m.
weakness showed. .
,
·Ail&amp;Dta !Smeltz 13-lh at San
Tbe
Browns
came.
out
atrilrig,
Frondoco !WilsOn 11-61 .1~ 05 p.m.
drlvtng to the Chiefs' tbree-yard
San DICO !Benes 10.101 It Los
Allgeleo 1Martlnezlll-61 ,10: 35 p.m .
Une In their first possession on
running ot Leroy Hoard and
the
'heldiJ'• pmtll
Kevin Mack, who returned after
ChhiCI(O II Pblladolpllll, night
Allanta at San Franchco. nlgh.t
missing two gamea with an
Houatm at Clnd.nnau, nl&amp;ht
InJury.
On first down at the three,
San Dti!RO at Los Angel .., night
hOwever, Kosar paS'Sed to Hoard
In the flat, who was bit by Nell
Smith and lilmbled to Chiefs'
Ohio ooUege
nose tackle Dan Saleaumua,
football action
eliding the BroWils' only real
Salanlqo, Sept II
,
scoring threat.
USC 35, Ohio Stale 26
Chiefs head coach Marty
~II State 16. Bowling Green 6
Scholtenhelmer, who coached
CentrolMidllpn 31, Mlaml7
Clnclnnatl27, Kent State 24
. the Browns tram 1984 until he
Toledo 27, Olllo Untver•ty 20
was fired In 1988, said there was a

..

oi

Younpt.Wn State 211. AkrOD 23
Alblllld 27, Wayne Slate 8
·

Balc!wln·Wallacto45, Marlttta 17

Mount Untoo16, Capilli 6
Heldelberx 20, Ohto Nortliern 10
Mulktnaum 21. Hlrom o
Jolu! Carroll :U, Otterbein 28
W001ter 22, Case Reoerve ~
·WUtenbefl U, KenyCil7
Ohio Wesleyan lB. Oberlin 6
Dayton 50. Mercyhursljll
OIIYO!t !Michl 33, Blufltml2
Findlay 42, Kalamazoo IMidi.) Ot
CampbeUsvtlle tl&lt;y.) 33, Mt g
Joseph 13
Geneva 30, Tlft.ln o
TbloW ....'.I
Ohio Col..e FoCIIbiiiSdudole
SM....,,Odf
Jlllnola at Ohio State

Ball State at MlamJ

Ohio Untv at BowUrig Green
_ Central Mlcblaan at Kent State

E111ern Mlc:blgan rlt Toledo

1

Western MldJipn at Akron
Youn1atown ·st at Western
Kentucky

Alhland at Sartnaw Valley (Michl
Bal~·Wallace at Ohio Northern
"· C.pllal at HlrJm
Heidelberg at Otterbtln tn)
Mount Unton at JQbo Carroll

Mullttnaum at M11'1et1a
lolll!lhmy (Pal at Wonoter
Wittenberg 11 &lt;:;ue Reoerve
Ohlo We.leyan at Dealsoo
Ktnyon at Oberlin
lonttNYi It Dayton
.
North lilt Mlasour1atCentral State
Tlmn at Bluitt'"'
Northwood IMtchJ 11 f'!ndlay
Mount St. Jo•ph at Georaetown
iKy)

·

Wllmbletaa at Urbana

••tclllaame

NO.. action
NAftONAL FOMII.u.J, LI!AGUE

Su.. q'a retui•

NY Gt1n11 31, Dallu 17

Butralo 29, Denver 28
lndtonopou-·2t, Pbllodelphla 23
Mlam1211. Pltt.burth 6
NY Jeu-37. New Entlond 13
Green Bay 21, Detroit 21
Tampo Bay l:l, Ml.....,o 20. OT
Kanou City Jl, Clmlond 0
· Houst.., 17, Sin Oleo 1
· LA Raiders 21, Chlco1o 1~
Wultl"f:.CIIIII, l'llorntx 10

~t:.":

Cinel-li
p.m. .
.....,.0&lt;1. 7
Del rott at Mlnne~Wi, 1 p.m.
,
Kan- City ot Illdl1napol.._ t'
p.m.
.
New Oranaat Atlula, 1 p. m.

NY Jota It Mtun• I p.m.
11M 01110 II PII-!Jh, I p.m.
San Franc~o at Hou1tm,l p.m.
Sealile 11 New ED.IIInd. 1 p.m.
'rompo Bay It Dallu,1 p.m.
Gre• Bay II II Chi&lt;IBO, I p.m.
Qaelnr~~tt 11 LA Rom, I p.m .
LA Rlld.,.. 11 BuUIIo, 7:30p.m.

......,,0&lt;!1.1

. a ....llldat Don..r•.9p.m.

I ..

•".:

'

.HATIOim WUTHER FOREC.AST FRill.! 1 AU l»tii TO I "' I~J.IG

FOlJB.WIIEELIN'IUilS- YonnptersareiiWQI popalar Ia
paradee, ~ Satuday'a Fall Feetlval Plll'ade In Racine no
exceptloa. The~e eblldreD look to their veblclesln the parade ud
were a bll bit wUb the folb who Uned lhe stre• of RaeiDe to take
Ia tile excitement.
·

·EMS has 10 weekend
•
Units ot Meigs County Emerseney· Servtcas responded to 10
calla for assistance O'Ver the
weekend.
On Saturday at 1:40 a.m.,
·Middleport squad was called io
the sce11e of a gasolllll! splll at
Norfh Second and Mill Streets. At
:5:45p.m., Po111eroy squad went
-to·. Spring Avenue aDd trans·
' pOJ'ted Denzll ·Hudson to Veterans Memorial Hospital. AI 7:53
a.m., Middleport squad was
caiJedtoBalleyRunRoad; Leora
Strom was transported to VeteraDIMemorlalHospllal. Rutland
squad was called to New Lima
Road for Icia White at ll: 27 a.m. ·
Whlte was transported to Velerans Memorial Hospital.
. At 3:14 p;m., Racine squad
. tjf_ported Donald BoiJ1esS

CORRALLING CHRISTIAN Okoye (with ball) . down tile Kan- City bruller In tbe - n d
lan't an eu7 leak for 11UU1J1 of the NFL's premier · quarter of Sunda,y's game In K~sas Clly, wMcll
defensive linemen, much leu Browns safety Felix lhe Chiefs won·SH. (UPI)
. Wrlpt, but that's wba&amp; Wright does after bringing
•'Big Time" difference between
.Sunday's lfkme and last year's
. 10.10 lie on his return to Cleveland Stadium.
"We wanted to do tli:at jthe
shutout). for Marty," Smith said.
"He was real excited about
winning. You wan I a goose egg
sometime during the season."
Kan5as aty scored one posses- ·
slon later In the first quarter,
bringing a near sellout crowd of
75,462 Into the game for the first
time.

After the Chiefs took over at
their 42, DeBerg hit Stephone
Paige for slx yards, CbrlsUan
Okoye picked up five for a first
down and then DeBerg hit
wtdeout Robb Thomas who had
sUpped by the Browns secondary
for a 47-yard touchdown.
Tbe Chiefs drove 37 yards In
eight plays opening the second
quarter, but stalled and Nick
Lowery kicked a 39-yard field
goal.
After that kickoff, Kosar

AL acti. OD···------(Continued from Page 3)

.

moved tht Browns across rrild·
field, hlttlng wldeout Eric Mel· ·
calf downfleld on the left side.
Metcalf ran 31 yar~~
dropped the ball making
·and Martin recovered
nd
Cleveland's only o.ther scoring
threat before the game got out of
hand.
Pagel twice pushed,the Browns
Inside the Kansas City 30 In the
final quarter, but each time the
Chiefs stopPed the Browns on
tourth·down attempts.
After Martin's touchdown on .
the blocked kick In the second
quarter, the Browns stalled.
again and punted. Naz Worthen
returned It 37 yards, hla tong~t
ever, to the Browns' ~9. DeBerg
punched II In sjx plays later,
liltllng Emile Harry for the final
six yards with 18 seconds left In
the halt.
Lowery hit a 34-yard field goal
early In the third quarter prior to
Ross's score off of the second
blocked punt.

fluke."
hitter, leading theTlgers. Detroit
It the clubs are lied at the end flrlt baseman CecU Fielder.
of the regular season, they would
needing one homer to become the
meet Thursday In Toronto for a firSt major leaguer to hit 50
one-game playoff. Boston team homers In a season since Clncln·
physician Dr. Arthur Pappas
nail's George Foster hit 52 In
said ace right-hander Roger 1977, had a single In four lrtps to
·
the plate.
Clemens would be avalla ble to
pitch that game.
·
A'1 t, Rangen I ~ At ArUng·
"Now It's ours to win.'' Bru- ton; Texas, Terry Steinbach's
nansky said. ''If we can take care ground-rule double keyed a
cif the Wl)lte Sox, It's oul'S. If we
three-run eighth, boosUng Oakdon't they (the Blue Jays) are land. The Athle~lcs broke the
Fruth Phormoc:y
sUit going to have to win
majors' single-season recbrd for
(games)."
road atlendance. In his final
Fills Mor&lt;Z
Two weeks ago, the White Sox
appearance of the season, Nolan
Pr&lt;Z~cri ptions !
Ryan, 13-9, struck out 11 to raise
swept Boston In a four-game
series while Toronto was winning
his career record total 5,308. ·
ThQr!Z Must
three of four against the Orioles.
Royala 2, Angels 1 - At
The Blue Jays had lost all six
Anaheim, Calif., Bo Jackson
Good
dellvered
a pinch-hit home run to ·
previous games at Fenway Park
R&lt;Zason!
Ibis r season. This time they
open the ·ninth, lifting Kansas
battered tlve Boston pitchers,
(Continued fronl Page 3)
City. Jackson stroked a 3·1' pitch
hilling 17 singles. But they
over the right-field wall for Just
ballpark. Nearly 73 mllllon peostruggled to capitalize, stranding
the third hll off Ieser Scott Lewis,
ple have passed through the
13 runners, Including 11 In the
1·!· Kevin Appler, 12·8, scattered
gates, which opened July 10,1910,
first five Innings.
nine hits over 'the flrsl eight
when the St. Louis Browns beat
· ''The guys came In pretty loose · Innings to snap his four-game
the White Sox 2·0.
.
today," said Toronto manager · slide.
Everyone attending Sunday
Orioles 6-3, Indians 3-7 - At
Clio Gaston. "I don't think they
received a cerUflcate. Cameras
got down," about losing the· Cleveland, Candy Maldonado
abounded. A few fans caught
drove In three J;'l,lns with a homer
series' first two gaines. "I don' t
baseballs that Wblte Sox abort·
and pair of singles to help the
think you can get down and play
stop Ozzle Guillen tossed Into the
Indians end a four-game sUde. In
like we did today."
stands before lbe game.
the first game, Bob Mllackl
Fred McGriff collected four
Mayor Richard M. Daley
hits and three RBI to help the
pitched seven shutout Innings,
wasn't as forpmate. He missed · Blue Jays end a four-game losing
notching his first victory since
catching a foul ball in the Seattle
streak.
June 30. Rookie Charles Nagy,
third IMing and w~ booed.
''It was a win and they d.on't
2-4, won the second game, with
Call: 992 6491
Roland Hemond, former White have to be pretty," McGriff said,
Doug Jones getting four outs for
Sox general manager who holds
Middleport
saying that his team shouldn't
his 42nd save.
the same position with Balli· blame a division loss on the
more, left his club to attend the . weekend's results. "We gave
final weekend of games.
away a lot of games this season.
"I find myself exhilarated We can't say this series cost us
today," Hemond said betore the season."
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL .·
joining friends In a remote
In other American League ·
corner. ''It's a celebration otall games, Chicago nipped Seattle
the joy and happiness and the 2·1 NewYorkrappedMilwaukee·
high spots.
, 7-2: Detroit .shaded Minnesota
· '1 can't .remember any sad- 1·0 Oakland defeated Texas 4-3
ness, any of tbe tosses," he said.
Kansas City downed CalltorRoger Merrill wore a license nla 2·1. Baltimore and Cleveland
plate around hla neck that said, apllt a double-header tl}.e Orioles
"Win Sox." He traded an extra winnfng 6·3 and the Indians
ticket to a fan outside the white answering 7-3. ·
brick watts.
Wb1te Sox 2, Mariners 1 - At
•.
Chicago, Dan Pasqua capped a
"He got a deal and I have two-run sixth with a bad-hop RBI ·
· Porn ..ro~·
somethiDg for my den," said triple alld Bobby Thigpen earned
Merrill, a season ticket-holder..·
his 57th save io help the White
"My flrlt game here was Sox win the "final game In
Hoous:
·
1961," said Merrill, 37. "I saw the Comiskey Park. Thigpen entered
II
arit
m
Mid.
Sun.·
ThuiS.
Yankees beat the White Sox. In the ninth and retired Harold
II
am
ro
I
am
Fri.
&amp; Sill.
After I moved here In '62, I Reyno!~ on a grounder to second
started comiDg regularly, espe- for lbe final out In Comiskey
clally when I 1101 my driver's .. Park history.
'
.
llceftaa,"
~
l'utr• 7, Brewera 2 ..l. At
Jeanne Steeves, a White Sox Milwaukee, Don Mattingly and
tan for 68 yean, ·munched her Jesse Barfield drove In three
• turk'\Y sandwic~ In the left field
run• apiece to pace New York.
picnic area for the last lime. She Dave Eiland, 2·1, allowed two
was .flanked by her son Bill, who runs on six hits over five Innings.
Ignored his 12th wedding annl· Greg Cadaret pitched four perry to attend, and hla ·10. feet lnnfnp for his third save.
old daughter, Courtney.
Reliever Tol!l Edens, 4-5, took
y
.
ck then, Nellie Fox waa one the lOll.
'11pnl, Twl•l -At Detroit, ·
ofmyfavorltesandLulsApartclo
•tiiODemia'a"-. ...
._...,...r,• ....,
and BIIJr, Pierce waa my favorite Walt Terrell and Jerry Don
,
Y..-I&amp;NID CA11p ~
AVAILA&amp;.
pitcher, ahe said.
Gleaton combined on a 'five-

---Area deaths-.D8le Smilh

caster; five ·grandchlld.ren;
three great·grandch!ldren; two
•
.
Don Smith, San Fran·
. Dale E. . Sm Ith, .7• , Logan, died . brothers,
""llf
1
.Sunday at hli residence following c sco, "" · and Guy Smith,
an extellded Illness.
.
Lancaster; two sisters, Georgia
He wu born December 20, 1915 ~J':.~gca~~~~ 'ca~!~ /nd
In Pomeroy, .tbe son ot the late
Funeral services will be atl: 30
~~':~ and Maggie · Hellman . p.m. on Wednesday at Heinlein·
He was retired from Sidwell . Brown Funeral Home, 204 West
Coal company In zanesville, and Main Slreet In Logan, with Rev.
was a member of the 10 len Gary Atkins officiating.
Memorial United Methodist
Frlendl may call after 7 p. m.
Church In Logan.
on Monday and from 2-t p.m. and
p. m. on Tuesday.
He Is survt ved by his -wlfe 0 f 51 7-9Burial
will be In Oak Grove
years, Anna Mae (Levacy) Ce
Smith; · oDe son, E4rnest ~·
metery In Logan.
Smith, Logan; one daughter,
DonatloDI may be made to
Mra. Mike (Joan) Largent Lan· Hospice of HockiDg County, P.O.
•
Box 527, Logan, Obto 43138.

1

Fruth
.Pharmacy-

Low Prices And
QualitY
Pharmaceutical
Carel

!

·I

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc:.

and

.,

"WE HAVE HEARINS AID$"

.

(304) 675-1244

992-2124

2 MEDIUM

~!PPERONI DOUBLE CHEESE ·.
ONE·FOR

$7 99

SEC~ND PIZZA'$400 MOlE
o.,.....,.
,.,___
.. .....

. . . ., ··
---·---- -=••----

from Station -a&gt; to Veterans
Memorial.
·
At 6: 43 p.m. , Syracuse squad •
went to Morning Star Road for
Corisa Multord. MuUord went to .
Holzer Medical Center. Racine
squad was callecJ to the Southern
High School field for Jas~
MuDans at 7:53p.m. He went to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
10:26 p.m., Pomeroy squad went
to Union Avenue for Anna Greenlee. She was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. Middleport
squad went to Short FOurth.
Helen Augusten was treated llut
not transporll!d.
.
On Silnday at 5:07a.m., Pomeroy went to Forest Run Road for
George Fobner. tobner went W--. Holzer Medical Center,

men will be charged In · the· · .Storms was reportedly driving.
Incident; their names are being
Storins who had been using the
withheld pending the t.lllng ot name Robert ll:vans, Storma Is
charge~. · .
·
confined to the county jaU to face
Norman and Edwards are theMelgsCountychargesauwell
· as being held tor WashiDgton
confined LD. the county jail.
·
The-cash register, stoien fl'om County.
Also over the weekend, Blll
Excelsior, waa recovered ' but
damaged. The two saws were Hayes of Syracuse reported !hilt
allo recovered.
.
his wife, Patricia, was missing
Sheriff Soulaby also reports from their l'l!llldence. Mr. Hayes,
that. Randall Storma, 24, . of whO worltl on the river, had just
Snowville, wu apprehended In . returned home..
Mrs. Dude Gibbs notified the
Pomeroy on Saturday afternoon.
Storms . was wanted on a department that a mower had
charae of assault and a criminal been stolen from her property.
damaging charge In Meigs The mower was later fbund along
Countyalongwlthabreaklngand Ball nun Road.
·
entering charge In Washington
Nancy Circle of Racine ·reCounty.
·
.
..
ported on Sunday that at around
~cording to Soujsby; Deputy
2:15 a.m., her mailbox and
Beegle was traveling on Main
newspapar tube were damaged.
Street and spotted the van that

BIZ fi

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

l1lllS

\.

•
WEATHER MAP'- HlppresiiUI'ewillbrlnla ver)'ll'lea"ntdar

to m• of the eutern third of the countey wltb the exc.,...n of a ·
feW Mattered llhowen ID Maine ud -them Florida. The npper

Mldweel cu expect abowera while the Great ..W.. wU1
experience acattered tbunderator1111. (VPI)

_.;..----------Weather......----~

South Ceatral Oblo
Tonight, moaily clear. Low
near 50. Winds west 5 to 15 mph.
Tuesday, mosily sunny. High
near 75.
Exteoded Forecut

the department, Sheriff James
Soulsby came to the conclusion
that the odor probably orgtnated
from a barge that was traveling
down river past Pomeroy.
He did report a small leak at
the Ashland Bulk Plant at Ml·
nersville, but reported Monday
morning that the teak was
unrelated to the odor.

alinoun
.· eements
- ----Me;.,.
-eTla&amp;l!• to meet
The Scipio Township Trustees
will meet Wednesday at 6 p.m.
Trull plcknp
Trash pick up for the VIllage of
Racine Will be on Tbllrsday
ln~tead pf Tuesday this week.
CoiiiiCD to JMel
Racine Vlllaie Council will
meet tonight "(Monday) In council chambers.
llerballltl to meet
The River Vallay Herballsll
Will
Tuesday at the hOme of
Unda McCoy, Millwood, W.Va.,
· at 7 p.m. ·
,

meet

lle¥1valln
. The Racine
· ·Baptllt
· - Cburch II
boldlna .tevtval aervtcea nlgbtly
lbrCI\IIh Tburlday .at 7:30 p.m.
with teacblni atlO a ,m.
, SllndQ achool night will be
oblerved toJIIIbl; pac:k·•·-pew
Dllbt, ,'l'ueaday; family · night,
.Wedar.dq, wttb a ~
•lvr at I p.m.; ud -lOr
I•

clttiens night on Thuruday.
Dr. James Pen~IDglon Is the
evangelist. The public Is Invited
to at llend.
Pomiii'O)' Lodp to meet
·The Pomeroy Lodge No. 1~ F
and AM will meet Watlnesdr.y at
·7 p.m. at the Mldddleport
T emp~.
·
There wllllbe presentation~ of
65 and 50 year pins.
Ratreshmenla will be served.
All Maater Muons are Invited. ·

CLEVELAND (UPI) .- Satur·
day's winnfng Ohto Lottery
numbers:
Plck..J
147
.
Plck-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,447 ,688.50, with a payoff due or
$968,
Plck-t
5676
Plck-4 ticket sales totaled
$277,533, with a payoff due of
$121,000. .
.

. OUlSTANDING OF SHOW .;_ Tbe Best of Sbow wlaners ln·Ule

Racine Car lbow abown with their trophies are Gene Wbale:r, left,
aad PbU Correll of Newport, Ohio.

an.

,,

[J~~~.fJJ:J...

•

''I

'

Veterane Memorial
Saturday admissions - Leora
Strom, Pomeroy..
Saturday discharges - Clara
Phillips.
Sunday admissiOns - Shirley
Roush, Middleport; Edward
Dreyfuse, Pomeroy.
· ·
Sunday discharges - None.

j

t

~-

~• '

.

··'

Div91,ces proeessed

\

A an action for divorce has
been flied In M~lgs County
. , ~mmon Pleas Court by Janet
Barnett.lteedSville, against For·
rest Roger' Barnett, Tuppers
Plains.
A divorce has been gran ted by
the court to Tammy Carol
Tibbetts from John Edward
Tibbetts.

s.

\

·
CLEVELAND (UPI) - One
Super Lotto player holds a ticket
with the six nu~bers chosen t.n
Saturday nlihl s drawing, the
last under the fonnat of 44
numbers.
Tickets are now on sale for tbe
new game, with 53 number~th
the tint drawing Saturay tor a
jackpot estlmat!!d to be $20
mllllon.
Saturday nli(Jtt's big winner,

Stooks .
Dally stock prlcea
(Aa of 11: a.m.)
Beyce aad Mlll'k Smltb
of Blunt, BUll 6 Loewl

ae

Am ElecctrlcI Power ..... :... .. 26~

mas"

,

eo.................

Hoapilal news

.

Holzer Medical Center
Dllchll'l• for 8ept. 18 ,
Esther Baker, Mrs. Gerald
Bright and SOD, Mrl. Larry
. Campbell and son, Mrs. Fred
Coffey and son, Peart · Colmer,
CharlOtte Craig, Anna Glbbl,
Geneva Howell, Anna Hysel~
Forest Loftis, Kathryn Marshal~
Grace Miller, Lawrence Mohr, , .
Cbartes Murray, Debra ROlllli, ;. ·
Betty Shelton, BaJ:bara Smith,
Ge.r ll!dlne Stover, Gertrud'
Swackhamer, Molly Webb and
Mrs. Andy Wickline and
djlughter . .
Births for Sept. 28
Mr. and Mrs. ·Marren Ball a
son, ,VInton. Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Canterbury, a daughter, Langs.
v!lle. Mr. and Mrs. Brtan Rus,
·
sell, a son, BidwelL

The
LasfDay
To ·Make
Payments On

I

, .
forajacki»otoi$9mllllon,comes
on the numbers 3, 15, 22, 25, 32,
and 43. Ohio Lottery officials said
Sunday the wlnnlnt ticket was
purchased In Oxford.
The holder can redeem the
ticket and bcome eligible for
$355,250 ~ year for 20 years.
Another11711cketshaveflveof
the numbers, tor $1,000 each. and
6, 363 have four of the numbers
for$75.
The Kicker number at 343407
• produced one . winner, for $100
000. Seven more had the flrslflve
numbers, ·good for • SS.OOO;
another 72 had the first four for
$1,000 each; 689 had the first
three for $100, and 6,901 had the
first two for $10 dollars each.

sought

Cardll

five or hearta.
· eight of clubs.
ace of diamonds.
four of spades.
Cards ticket sales totall!d
$148,m, with i payoff due of
$65;470.
Super LoU.
3, 15, 22, 25, 32, and 43.
,
Super Lotto ticket sale~ totaled
$4,718,363.
Kicker
. 343407. •
.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$767,322.

Please Note

EDUCATIONAL DISPLAYS - Bobbl Karr ''created this
educational dlaplay oa herba l'or Saturdr.y'a Herb Feel '80
spo-.1 b7 lbe Rivet Valle)' Herballlts. Many people attended
the fe~t whlcb offered arle and crafts and IIWI)' other herb related
lteDII.

AT&amp;T .................. .. ...... .. ..... 31%
Judgment
Ashland on ........................30%
A judgment action has been
Bob Evans ......................... .-12%
CblrmiDg Shoppes ......... .... :. 9% • filed by Home National Bank In
Racine against Malcolm
to betfa
City Holc;ltng
,.15
Guinther,
Syracuse In :, the
. A llx·Week aerll!ll of aloQtna • . Federal Mogul ............... :.... l33t .
amount
of
$4,240.40
..
Goodyear TI:R .............. .. ... ~7%
'cluses; "Cloning. tor Grand·
will bq1n Wednesday at
Key Centurion .... ........... .....10~
the Middleport Arll Council.
Lands' End ........ : ........... ,.... l0¥.1
Paulette Harrllon will be the
Umtled Inc........ ................ 13=1(
·Instructor and clas• will 'be
Mulllmedls Inc: ............ ; ..... 59¥.1
held ftom 10-11:30 a:m. eacb
Rax Reataliranta....................1 .
Wednesday. The I'OIIIs $:1.50 per
Rabblns a Myera .. ;................18
. ~ marrlaae ucanse baa been
lasued In Meigs County Probate
week and pre-rqlltrat~ II not
Sboney's Inc........................ 11
1
to W1111am Martin Weaver,
Court
Deeelll.l'y.
Sfar Banll ............. ~.......... .,.J116,
Jr., 23, Pol1lti'O)', and Sondra
Fclr l'llrtiMr infOnl)aUOn call · Wlllll;y'l Int'L ................... ; .~
l;)lane Lone. 31, Pomaroy.
Mn.• lfarrlloo a t . . - .
;. . WortllnltoiiiDd. ............... ,.llij
l·

a-

.

Hospital news

':

Fumes investigated by sheriff's de.,Uties f Player claims Super Lotto pnze,)l ·
The . Meigs County Sherlfrs
Department received several
calli reporting lilmes In the
Pomeroy area over the weekend.
Accordllig to Meigs County
Sherltt's Department, a powerfUl ·
kerosene or diesel fuel odOr was
z:eported from Mlddleqort to
Syracuse.
F~'fNing an Investigation by
Ij
·

WedneldQ lbroqll Jl'riiiiQ'
Fair wednelday. A chanCe of
showers Thursday Into early
Friday. Highs mostly ID tJie '101 •
Lows In the mld-401 to low 501
Wednesday and mostly In the 501
Thursday and Friday.
~-

----lottery numbers---!'""'

··Three... cOntinued tram page 1

io

White SOx

\

.

were expected to produce no the middle part ot the week: l"Oll
more thaD a tenth of an Inch. In ~mwat\IJ'el 1bould con!lnue to
some areaa over the next few
averaie ID the 601.
days, pan evaporation rates
A brief look II the 30-day
could be u . high u 0.15 lllcbes. · ouUook tor October llldleates a
Where Initial moisture content of tendency -to above-normal
mature corn Ia 25 percent to 30 temperatures_ and ne&amp;Niot·mal
percent, that would translate to rainfall amounta.
drydown of 11 much u slx· or
On the early morntq weatbar
seven·tenlhl of a percent a day .
map, high preuure waa over
The mild periods will provide
Ohio and a cold front extellded
iOOJS Qpporlllllltle~ for the harv- from Mlmlesota IIi'' Nebruka.
est of fru:lt and veptable ~ops Tbe high will move ~t
and moderate nlgbllme temperatbrough the day, Wblle the coli!
iui'es should allow produce to front movea tbroup the atate. By
remain unharmed In the field . Tuesday momtna, ·anot11er .!liP•·
LoJ:V tentperatures are forecast
pressure area. will have rnowd
Iii the mlll-40s to low 50s through across Ohio behind the cold trout.

the ·state Tuesday and Wednes·
day, with highs of 65 to 75
Tuesday and In the 70s Wed.nes·
day. There'aa chance ofshoweril
Tbunday and early Friday, but
temperatures will remain miJII:
erate, mostly In the '101. ·
· •
SunahiDe oVer the next few
days will belp spur drylq.. Tbe
weather will also provide the
opportunity for the harvest of
com and beans.
· Recent rains have been fairly
light, with a few execplloD$, nd
showers In the north Monday

Tile work week dawned clear
alld coolin Ohio on Monday, lluta
fast· movina weather 1yatem
wu expected to hrlq lhowen to
the IIOI'tbern counllea by the
after1100n. ·
At dawn, sldel were mostly
clear, wtth temperatures moatly
In the low 408, although there
were a few readings In the 30s In
the extreme northwest. Wghs
. Monday were ex~ted to be
around 65 to 70.
Ii will be mosily sqnny a~s

Steve DeBert Sunday carried tbe
Kan•a• City Cblefl to a 3«:0 rout
of the Cleveland Browns.·

Patriots find gridiron
rio place t~ hide after
37-13
.
.loss to lets
II)' LIM JIABBIS
UPI8porta WrlteJ'
Now.theNewEnglandPalrtC)Ii
may not want to talk about
tootbal~ either.
.After' controversy over the
sexual harassment of a female
sparta writer by five players
· · became natlonal. news and
prompted an NFL legal lnvesllaatton last week, the Patriots
·
t ld
wanted only to get on the le .
The 37-13 trouncing by the New
York Jets Sunday abould have
bad thePatrlotslonglngtobldeln
tlleir locker room ..._ no matter
who was In lt.
"lt wasn't a normal week,"
said New England quarterback
Marc Wlllon, wlio completed
only 19 of 41 passes and was
Intercepted three times.
''1 don't thlllk anyone would
~y It was a normal week but I
dOil't think any of ui could use
that as an excuse,"
V)
Whlle the Patriots endured a
ton&amp; 111eek, the Jell contended
(
with a short one tollowlng a
Monday night drubbiDg by' the
Buffalo Bills.
· New York responded witn 499
~yardlln total offenie. The team
· that allowed Buffalo 292 yards slx
days earller tC) rank last In th!!
league against the run surrendered 89 rushing to the Patriots.
New England tell to 1•3 and
suffered Its second straight bl«&gt;woul since the Sept. 17 dreulng
room InCident Involving Olson.
The Patrloll lost to ClnclnnaU

S

Clear, sunny weather expected most of week .,

Blocked punts ·push Kansas
City to 34-0 rout of Browns
· KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPll -

~~

·

Your·
1990 Christmas Club Is
October 6, 1990
J

1991 Clubs Will Start On

October 22, 1990
Thanks For Banking With Us!
.

.

PEOPLES BANK ·
..

MEMBI!R F.D.t.C. .
.

NEW HAVEN
1182-2135

POINT PLBASANT
~1121

~·

�.

-

..

.

,., ......

·~

.

..

.

Dar Au l.a"CCen: I just read
E.F.'s IOIUiion 10 lbe "buy me ... •
syndrtJme dill c:hildrcn IOIDCiiJnes
fall inlo when shopping. I woUld like
. to offer a 110lution that worked for

me.

WILLOUGHBY K. HILL

FRANK A. PARKER

~

;. Eastern grads earn scho~arships
to help students Interested in
·
becomlrig
professional service
~ radu a t rs han• been awa~ded
technicians to further their edu·
&lt;c hrllarships throu!(h the FEL·
cations and to help meet . the
l' R() Au tomotive Scholarship
demand .!or quallfle4 service
),l'rr•gra m. Skoki&lt;'. Ill.
personneL
., .:rh&lt;' schr,larships are designed
The,· recipients. are Don . A.
son of Alan and Jane
Harris,
.; ~ .·
H~rrls , Ji&gt;omeroy, who attends
classes at the Nashville (Tenn.)
;~
-. ==~~~~=========== Auto DleseJCdllege; Willoughby
(Community Calendar Items
K. Hill, son of Jo Hill, of Long
:··appear two da,vs before an event
Bottom; a student at the Wa- ·
~ADd the day of that event. Items
shlngton Technical College, and
must be received In advance to · Frank A. Parker, son of Albert
• .·insure publication In lhe ca- and Dorothy Parker, Pomeroy,
·' lendar.)
who also attends the Washington
·'
Technical College.
MONDAY '
FEL·PRO, which Is one of tile
~ BRADBURY - Revival at the
,£ radford Church of Christ will be
.~.held through Friday ill i : 30 p.m.
· nig htl)·. E1·angelist will be Phil
: Strunk. !\'ursery Is provided.
• Thn'&lt;' Eastern High School

' "

4 •

Calendar

We bave three boys, 6, 8 and 10.
For the last three yean 1ft ,have
given them a w'eetly allowance.
Fifty percent Is for spending, 40 percent for savillg, IIIII 10 pe~te~~t to be
given 10 the churth. We PlY them
extra for Wort they do beyond their
regular c~¥ns- This is IIIOIIe}' they
i:an spend on whalcver they wanL
. We.bave laid down a nde: If'lhey
want sometbing that is allowable but
we feel unnece'my, they bave to
buy it wilh their own money.
Now, insle8d or demanding things,
they Iool;; for the iJan they want,
check the price 10 sec if they think
it's worth it, llld decide if they bave
. eoough money to buy it. Then they
have 10 mate up their mft1s whether
or not they Rally want it or if ihey'd
llllher save the money for something
elsq.
,.
When they decided that they
wanted i Ninrendo,lhey pooled their
money for .-ths unlil they had
enough to buy iL They
that if

leading manufacturers of me- ·
clianlcal gaskets and chemical
sealing products for the automotive aftermarket, has long taken
an Interest In the· .education· of
automotive technicians.
·The scholarship programm,
which awards money for uue
towards~ tultlon to qualified stu·
dents In college-level vocational
technical programs, Is an exten·
sian of FEL,PRO's commifment
.'to Improving the quality and
availability of ·automotiva ser·
they want Pmca. lhey must spcn4
vice throughout the industry.
The scholarslllps are admln· their own money tw:anse I won't
stered by the Citizens' Scholar- · buy lhem luxuries.
ship Foundation of America, an · This system has not only eliminated many demands but has turned
Independent organization.
our chikhn into thnullhlf1d awunoen -IIOIIIelbing lhll will sene them
well all their !iva~. - ITS WORK-

know

' •• RA CIJ\'E - The Racine First'
. Bap tist Church wiHiha ve revival
.)hrough Thursday at i : 30 ·p.m.
·.night])· with Dr. Jim Pennington.
' 'There will be special music and
· nursen·
available.
l' .
•

•

WANTED
LOW GlADE OAI

• .The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Ann
Landers

TO PlACf AN AD CAll 992-21 ~6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P-.M.
. , I l.M. until NOON SATURDAY

ANNUNDERS

•1919.,Lo.AnpiN '
Dear Aaa Landen: R~tly, I
Tim .. Syadl.e.. INtd
c....... s,........
read in your column about the
mother who said that when she and
her chihiren go shppping they · $1 raise. If anyone had Ouuide
decide If it's a "looking ·day" or a activiliei or speot the night wilh a
"buying day.' I did doC same wher! friend, . ~ bad 10 PlY his bttodler a
my youn,gstcrs were growing up and q.-.ro do his c:honlllilr him. ·
it wuked wonders.
What run 1ft hadl "' the tiiiiiC
I have [our sons. Every Saturday, time
it helped mike theia respon- 4'
I pve them each an allowance. I sib~ adults.
llqled·a list of chores to the refrigOUr youngeaJ lOll is 22 110W and
erator. AU were assigned. At the end We are exlmnely proud ·of all our
or the week; I paid the children in children. U you'd like to print this
_quaners. Then we'd check the JiSL letter, feel free, but bold the name.
For each chore thai wa.sn't dQne, Just Sign me •• ¥RS. J. FROM
·they'd have . to give me back a PENNSYLVANIA ·
quarter. I never scolded diem. I just
DEAR MRS. J.: Cheers from
took their qqaners. Needless to say, Chicago on. an exceUeot blUeprint
after a while I W&amp;S!I't gelling manY for teaching kids how 10 be responquartas.
sible adults. My
is orr 10 you.
I Sl8rled this system when each
What can )1011 give tile periml whLJ
child IUtned 2. They received $1 a has e~rytlrillg? AM Landers'-·
week. The 2-year-old had four boolclet, "Gems." u ideal fora llighl· ·
chores: picking up toys, saying stand or coffee table. "Gems" u a
"please," saying "thank you· and 'colkction of AM Landers' mo~t resaying nightly prayers. If lte forgot quested poems and essays. Send a
just once dUring the week. it cost self-addressed, long, biiSilless·size
him orie q11811er.
·
enwlope and a check or money o~­
Each child.had his oWn log book. der for $4.85 (this Uiclw.lu postage
At the end the year, ·we'd sit down and hiwlling) ro: Gems, c/o AM
together llld chedt the boo&amp;. The l..atuiers, P.O. Box 11562,,Chita'Bo,
one who had.paid me the fewest Ill. 6061].()562. (Itt CIJIIIlda, stlld
nlllllbet of qUirlei'S would receive a $5.87.)

I

3
6
10
Monthly

$150 ,...:....j
DIUYIID TO

Ovt r 15 Wordl

Rate

Words
15
. 15
15
15
15

Days

SAW LOGS

•

14.j)0

16.l)O

.20

.30

44.

$9.00

.60

113.00

.05/ doy .

11 .30 / doy

OHIO PAU.ET
·COMPANY
POMEIOY, OH.·

8/ 27/'10/1 mo.

'""''"""' ·50 dilcourtt for ads paid il'l advance.
"FJH 1d1 - Giv..way and Faund 1d1 ui'K1•11 Words will be

run 3 d-v• 1t no ch•ge.

.

2 ~ 1n

Card of Th.,ks

Happy Ads

In Memoriam '

Vlf'd S•l•

515- BuKding Supplill

66- Peu tor Sal"
57- Mutie.t ln,lrumetltl

7- Y•d Sale (plid in advan ce)
,8- PLiblie Sel• a. Auction
9-Went.t 10 Buy

•
"A c:ltnifi.t advtr1iMm.,t plaeed in The Oalty Sentinet Ctll. ·

58- Fruhl 6 Veg .. •bill
59- For Sale or.l tlde

- 11 :00 A.M. SATURDAY
- 2'00 PM MONDAY
- 2:00P.M . TUESDAY
- 2 '00 PM. WEDNESDAY
- 2 '00 P.M. THURSDAY
--;- 2 :00P.M. FAiciAY .

MONOAY PAPER

"w~EJetsyo~~p~:PER

'*

12 - Situa1ion Wanted
13-lnlurence
14-Bu&amp;in•• Training

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

.

THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDA'( PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

62 - Wanted to Buy

992 - MiddiW~Ort

Pomeroy

3.,-Ch•hire

98&amp;-Ch•tt~r

lii-Vin1on

843-Portllnd

24G-fllo Grinde
256-Guven Dist.

74- Mo1orcvelet
75-Bo•1• &amp; Mot ors tor Sille
76- AutD P•ns &amp; Aceeuoriet
77-- Auto Repair
78 - Camp ing Eq\.l i pmt~nt
79 - Campers &amp; Motor Homes

for Sale

for' Sele

6715-Pt. PleaNnt
458 - LIOI'I
576 - Appll Grollfe
'·· 773- Mason

~71 - WIInDI

742 - Rutlend
617 - Coolville

137-ButfaiO

"At Ata10nablo· Pricts"

94~,.2101
or les. 949•2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY

PH.

44- Apartment tor Rent
45-Furnithed Room1
41-Sp•c• for Rent
47-W.,..ted to Rent
48-Equipment for Rent ·
49 - For le•e

let RecuJtc ·Fad
ULL.~TIN

Servtces

41-Houses for Rent
42 - Mobile Homes 1or Rent
43-Farms lor R1nt

Oorage

~Helmet "

GUARANTEED I
FREE 15S'rtM

81 -· Hom• Improve menu
82 - Piumbing &amp; Hut;ing
83- E•c...,ating
,
84-Eiectric• • Refrig••tion
8!5 - Generat H.uling
86 - Mobile tiome Rep•ir

·291h thN

Mon,

,.~

~pter

r..POMEROY

-The Salisbury
: Township Trustees will meet In
;''regular session on Mg~day ~t 7
p.m . at the home of the clerk,
:·sarah Gibbs, Bal'l Run . Road,
;:Pomeroy .

--- -

90 DAY

wanam

WA$HERS-$100 up
DRYERS-$69 up

87 - Upholstery

.
IEFRIGER&amp;TORS-$100 up
RANGB--Gis·Eiec.-$125 up

FREIZERS-$125 up
IIICRO OVENS-$79 up

•

liEN'S APPLIANCE

BOARD

SERVICE
992·5,~35

p. rush party was held recently

..

PAGEVILLt - The Columbia
: :rmrnshlp Trustees will . meet
·: 'Monday at 7: 30 p.m. at the fire
. station.
..

~~

., RJ:;:EDSVILLE -' The River·
view PTO will meet Tuesday at 7,
·-p.m . at the school. There will be
babysitting and a movie,, "The
Little Mermaid ."

.

~ r·

'

.

PORTLAND - The Letart
.Towns)llp Trustees will meet
...Monday at 7 p.m. at the office
''bQildlng.

Mitch and Nancy Toto

Totq anniversary to be noted·

PORTLAND - Mitch and
Nancy Toto, .. Portland, cele·
brated 'their ~th wedding ann!·
versary wltb their family and
~ · POMEROY -The Disabled
friends at a party given In their
· American Veterans will meet in
•
honor
on' Saturday at Seneca
special session Monday at 7 p.m.
Lake:
·
' at the h~ll , Bulternut Avenue,
The couple was marrlad Oct.l,
) 'omeroy.
'
1960
at St. Casmlr's Parish lri
·'
Adena.
.. SYRACUSE
The Sutton
.Township Trustees.· will meet
· Monday evening at 7: 30 p.m. In
,
.th e .· Syracu se Municipal
liulldlng.
, ...
By United Press International
.·
JAIIJIOUSE ROCK: Papa'.s
,
TUESDAY
got
,a brand new sound. James
"' MIDDLEPORT- The MiddleBro:wn, now ln. a work-release ·
-por t Arts Council will · meet
progrllm In South Ciiroilna after
Tuesday at 7 p.m. In council
15
months In prison, says he
~hambers .
cameupwlthanewmuslcalform
'
while serving hiS sentence and
, , POMEROY - The XI Gamtl'la
has written eight .pew.sorigs. "I
Mu Chapter, . Beta Sigma Phi
got
a universal Sound but It 's
. ;.l;ororlty will meet Tues d~y -at
going
to be James Brdwn," he
,.7: 30 p.m. at the home of A.R.
.told
the
Lqs Angeles Times. "If
·Knight in Pomeroy. ·
~our living In Australta, you're..
going 'to say, 'That sounds like
~=·· :POMERQY - The American
somethl,ng we do.' If you live In
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39
Brazil, you'll be saying, 'That
.•• will meet Tuesday at 7 pm.
sounds Latin,' andlfyou'rellvlng
•.Binner will be served.
'
1n Germany, you 'll say, 'SomeWEDNESDAY
.
_ .MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- ·
,~M?.rt Literary Club . will meet
.
&gt;Wi!dneday at 1: 30 p.m. at the
m{Xttng
set .
-home of Mrs. Richard Owen.
"Mrs. Bernard Fultz will r~vlew
'!Jle Middleport Literary Club
·"Extraterrestrial Civilizations"
II¥ isaac Aslmov. Roll call will be will hold Its first meeting of the
year on Wednesday at 1:30 p:ll).
. '-to·-tell a UFO story.
.
at the home of Mrs. Richard
Owen.
"
·
/ ~; RACINE - The Racl(ie ·First
. Baptist Church will present · Mrs. Bernal)(l Fultz will review
: 'J{ow to Help Your Child Say No · · "Extraterresttai CiviliZations'-'
by Isaac Aslmov:
··
·!•.Sexual Pressure" on WadnesRoll
call
wllllle
to
tell
'i UFO
'day at 7:30 p.m. Call949·2867 for
story.
·
tntormallon. Public Invited.

He IS a project engineer f!Jr
Olin Corporation of South Cha·
rleston, W, Va. She volunteers at
the Portland Elementary School.
Th~ couple has three children,
Chris Nicholes, Medina ; Mitch
Toto Jr. , Belmont; and Barb
Toto, Belmont; and three grand·
children.~ NlcheUe 'and Justin
Nicholes, and Brfttany Toto,

at Main Street Pizza In Pomeroy
by members of the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi SororIty for new pledges Lowry Crow,
Vera Holliday, Kim Dent, Sherry
Chapman, Julie Zirkle, Sandy
Butcher, Becky Trent and Patty
Taylor.
The group will sponsor a
halloween dance on Oct. 20 with
tickets selling for $5 per person.
Debbie Evans was chosen
valentine queen to represent the
chapler this year.
A magic show was presented
by Michael Mullel) for the cultu·
ral report.
The next meeting will be held
Oct. 9 .a t Meigs County Public
Library.
·

prlc. ., .05 cent1 ~o $1.00.

FIT and TRIM
OCTOBER .
$PEC/Al

BiSSELl &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION .
•New Homes
•Garages
eComplet•
Remodlllng ·.
Stop &amp; Compare
Fr.ee Esthnates
985-4473
1»67-6179

Six family: Thu,.,' Fri. 9orno- '

lhlna lor ovoryono. Second
Tr•lrer, .. ,. Rt. "' Rowh lAne,
Ch..tl.lr1.

Winter POfCh 8ale: Alln or '
ohlno. 8:00 lo 5'~L OOt. 1, 2,. &amp; 3.
1184 Moped, lz-.mi Oatil Oym,
S75i Lota of sw.tera . .ta.

10 YISm $2900

814-:J88.1820, Old tiO IJI POnor.

OPEN IY

·Yard Sala: Colot'lld r••lon,
~v•ut,
craft.• ,
Nny·
tlo~M:ehold h~m1. 1.33 St.ta 9t
· Fri. Sot. 101.m.-7p.m. &amp;M-441-

APPOINTMENT

CALL

a:wa.

992·3033
9/l7/'90/l mo.

Shain birthday

Emily Shalri celebrated her
16th birthday recently.
The celebration started with a
bouquet of nowers sent io her
.J
school by parents, Ruth and Sam
Shain.
thing's very European here.'
A weiner roast was held later
That's th~ way I'm going." ·
at her home .
VANDALS AT GRACELAND:
Attending were Sam and MatElvis Presley's Graceland man- thew Shain, Rob ·Hill, Kelly
sian 111 MemphiS, Tenn., was hit Powell, Rebecca Wiles, Ronnla
by vandals Thursday night b~t and Rhonda ·Spaun, Jackie
officials says Elvis's grav.e was ·Hayes, ShellY Winebrenner, ·
not dlstur~&gt;e~~. Pollee said some- Kevin Surgess, Sheila Lattimer,
one scaled a fence surrounding J.ennlfer Proffitt, Chrystal Pothe estate and ·spray-painted well and Herb Casto.
obscenities on the walkways.
During the party a singing,
telegram was sent by Keith
Spencer and Benny Bryant who
with Sara Wiles were unable to
''""f
attend.
Prior to the ll!!rty a piZza party ·
Steven and Julie · Stanley, was lield by ~bers of her
Athens, are announcing the birth famUy.
of their first child, a daughter. ·.
Attending were her parents,
Emlly Chrlstlne, on Sept. 20 at brothers, grandparents Dana
and Bernice Winebrenner, Mlck
O'Bleness Hospital. ·
The Infant weighed nine and Cindy Winebrenner, Shelly
pounds four ounces and was 21 Winebrenner and Kevin Burgess,
Inches long.
.
.
Gary, Sandy, Amy and Brittany
Grandparents are Duane and Jiysell, Kel~ Spencer, Benny
Hazel Stanley and David and Bryant and Tiffany Hal!hW.
Lena Napper, all of Pomeroy.
Sending gifts· we~ Larry and
Margaret Hysell, Pomeroy, Is a · Suzanne Farrar, Patty Wlnegreal grandmother.
brenner and Beulah ,Ward.

. Reo·ple .;n the·new·(' ___.·

.

Literary:
. club

. •GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
. •FILL DIRT

. Isn't

Y1rd Salt: Monday 11t, ,......,.,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
3 lomily aoio. October 2· 3.' 487

S.

AT ALL
'

985-4422 .

or V15-3561

.

dlahu,

*Worth Doing R9ot

· .. COOLVILLE -Tiie CooMile .
·VFW J&gt;ost34781s haVing a hunter
'w ety 'course at the Lions Club
. ·,auuding on Main Street In
&lt;::colville on Wedne.s day, Friday,
6ct. 10 aild 12, 6-9 p.m. Call
Roberj v. Pulllns, 667·3831 or
J;dwai'd Wigal, 667-6657 lor
lllformatlon.
7

Sorority

to meet·

The XI Gamma ipsUon Cpap.
ter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at tHe
,senior Citizens center ln ·
Pomeroy.
The . rush partY . has been
poslponed. Srlqg necklaces.

·Chester Church of the Nazarene

OCT. 3-i - 7100 P.M.
SUNDAY EVENING SEIYICE 6:00 P.M.

day and Sunday. Betty Ohlinger
and Corma Custer will work on
-Saturday and Velma Rue, Clar·
Ice Krautter and Reva Vau'ghn
will work Sunday.
It was noted that the group will
. still collect aluminum cans. .
A discussion was held on the
Christmas parade to be held Nov.
25. In Pomeroy.
The service committee · reported that !·shirts have been
•
ordered and that cans are being
§jiVed to help keep the environ·
The social committee an·
nounced that the group will tour ment clean.
Refreshments were served fol·
Fenton Glass on Oct. 11. ·
lowing the meeting by Vera Crow
The ways and 'means commit·
tee reported the group will h;lve a and Norma Custer.

810 Souih

Oct.

ol Mlidfl,oH

heater corn. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. Wt also
repair Gas Tanks.

UPHOLSTERY
36 Year~ E~:perlence

PAT' HILL FORD

614·992-2321

.

FirOI mobllohome on loft bohiiod

Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes

11

.

"

Molgo lolrground. October 5, 1.
Toy1, clean clothM. rMny
ltema.

Firat time llle, OctOber 1.2,3.

Antlquoo, womon'o · -hlng
·10/12, pllnto, lumlturo. 10.7.
9oll0cln olgno II I.Ndlna Crook,
5$4, Rullond. 5t4.1112-llrl2.
Largo tomlly 111o, I-S, Octollor
2. l.ots or fall and winter
clothle, COllie; ·all IIZM. ,Much
· mo,.,
Woodrow
Mort!
,.oillonco1 Rt. lilt .1/4 milo - h
of Rwe P01n11. •lnlahlne.
·
aco- 1-1. To!t8. lltlo too,.
clot~ ntoo n... l Ito oubdi¥1•lon bOhlnd St. Poul.. Cllbulkltl)9 In Tup...,. Ptoiolo.

'{! ~ "

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~-&lt;'

... ..

"'--·-·

1-1

I

...... U

II

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'

it.

...

MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS
_ _ . , _ _ , . . . . - · .... '

I-

I &amp;'o

~. ~

St;llf, W'l1port VIII-.

_:ow

I

·

I

.

.w. c..-.y Fishk19 lupptt•
Your Ph.o11.e

.

(304) 675-5236

.•

·

.

Here

We Need Llotlnpl
·
,.2..10. I •o.

RACCOON · WIUl'

SPORISMAN CLUB
$~OOnNG

Exit.

HOT SPRING
SPA
3~

/

~

.....,. you live
In Olllo -

In

lEN'S

.,...

FUmlh..-e,

-...AmerJc.,.,

Clolhlng, Mloc.

Ylrd ••le. October .1-1. 210
Souoh F"""h Avenue Mkl-

dlopool.

. Pt. Pleasant
&amp;VIcinity

.

SERYICI

Retreat.

992:5335 or 915-35~1
Across,,.. Post OHko
217 S.C.
POMEIOY,

E.

•-•Y

RACINE
GUN .CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
1:00

P.M.

12 Gl!uge FICtory

REMOVAL

SEPT 16, 1990

. Chelte anly

SHOOTS START
Sept. 4.tln

"LIGHT HAULING .

"FIREWOOD

.

.

·BAUM

LUMBER

,
~-Yo.l, If Y"'ll

1

CHESTER '

985·3301

NIW- REPAIR

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

bedspre1dl,
couch,
chlilnNws, ltw.o.

992-5009

·'·

949·2161

1·7·'·1

'.

Oct. 1,2.3. 10:00-?. 24QO Modloon
Ave. t,;OIII, winter clothlt,

tap,

h1lred blby kftltnt,

·

~

2066.

Spani1l. Just ovtr 1 year old to

.

RAC(OON VALLEY
SPORTSMAN CLUB

GAME ROOM
NOW OPEN
HRS.1 Wed.-Thun.·Fri:
5:00 p.m.·11:0Q p.m.
Sat. 12 "-·11 p.ftl.
Between Wilkesville

and Solem Center
t·l2·'10·1 mo.

6

LOst&amp; Found
h•lt . grown bl•ck
·puppy, . downlcrwn

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

'

• 1"

Rick PNrtOn Auction Company
now booking aue11on1, ••·
perlence mak81 lha dlffe~nce.
LlcenHd Oh!!._ Kentuclcy, Wnt

VIrginia, 304-773-11785.

9

Wanted 1o Buy •

Acerago wtth lim~ or form
wnh Umber, 51.....381-v-.sM.

flmlll
Pomtry area. Medium llnath
luok, lov• pooplo. 814/8112-34:!0.

Home brew bottlw· &amp; bo4111
coppor. 614 445 65511.
•

LOST flmlll SII~MI Cit, Tuu,
PM. layne Stroot, Now Ho...,,
30&gt;4-882-2131.

NHd 911 hiNder,. vented with
blowor. 614·742·28511 bllwooh 10
•m
pm.and 2 pm or •nytlrne 1ft., ,5

Yard Sale

7 od-:-:l:-o-:a=-u-y:-..,.Jun-:-k-,Aut,..,.-oe
::,w,c:ont
or wllhout mot- Call

.::::.==.;;______ 'I
7

LIYiiy. 614 381 8303.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Employment

•;

Serv1ce~

Help Wanted

,

$2,!00 CREDIT CARD! · •

GUII~ntMd

ame day. IPPfOWIII

Aloo q,.llly far NO dopOiiO
VfSAIMC 1nd caah actva~M~~~~~o . "t-

COUNTRY
· MOBILt
HOME PAD

• ••

•Mobile ·J fomi'

•

....· ··Mobllekoml
Ren•w

992·7479

FREE ESTIMATES

'

Orph1ned 4 WMk Old lo~' 1:1.

'

BANKS
CONSTRUCnON

... 949·2101
or 1ft. t•t-2160

Gutt•r Cleaning
Painting

Jtran~

female adult c•t. &amp;M..Q92-7177.

good home. 614-1185-1484.
Wood In backy•rd, lonMi
bl'llnch•, a old Wood tiding,
you como pickup. 8-1·1473.

•Lolli~

Gutters

Jetre..on

One ftm•le 1nd two m•l• kit·

25lHI554.

PUPPIES • Mothor O.rm111
Shophorll. Phono 304-&amp;?S.2905.
Regl.ter.ct
·Bilek
Cocktr

"FIM Eltlmoteo'

tiO SUNDAY

2221

Ave, Tu" l Wed. Mena

32·34, 10me tumhur..

IEWIIING AND .
TROURE SHOOl'I&gt;IG
C.rllflotl lltctrlclaM
FrMitiNGtts

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

Downepout1

•

Reeldentlol end
, Commercial .

0

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

·ROOFING

COMPLETE
EUCTRICAL SERYKE

O.n1ga 1111,

·

AuMIIIBiue He111r mix, 7 moe.
Old. Fem11e. To good home. 114·

Wed. thru Sat.

SHRUB &amp; TREE 1
TRIM' and

USED RAILROAD

America's favorite
Portable Spa

-

Adame, Muon, wv.

7 · very att.ctlan.te ldttiln•,
oboull wluo. otd.l14-148-3383 ..

Found •

..

992-2269

.

Ill

Your
Day-A-Year

i :OO 1111 3:00. Corner Fnt ond

10.11

APPL~NCE

BILL SLACK

Uv.._,

(1111 Ill· 1112.

iLl MAlES .·
Bring lt. ln. Or We
. Pick Up.

Between
Wilkesvi111 and
Sal11m Center ·

SUNDAYS

OHIO AlYEA BINIENO • HERI CO. .
. P.O. Boo 2347 lit. At. 287)
',
Eut
Ohio 43820
Ph- (21i) 311·1132
Mllololll MoCulougto • Ownert
Cell uo ony limo for (lllall lnar
or oloon!IH

La-.

OVEN REPAII

HOUBI!I•LOTIIIIFARMS
COMMERCIAL

thon llfiYOriO. We 1101ho only compony In Ohio
with o Fodorol Olnoeng hpon l,lco-. Don't IN
loolecleny more. oii!P yourgln..,otoHong Kongwhh
uo. W. don'j "Brecll"" you• gln10ng but H you hove
· primlum rcioUo WE PAY. oJIIro Iorge PREMIUM
· PRICES. Wll ore your friend~ end .wo·wln moke you
lou of eactre money. Come ... u1. You mey onty heve
"'Aoott" but we rHCt •• though It wu IOid.
4 1-' locotlono !n your eru:
TUESDAYS; 8 o.m. t~ 11 om. JICk1011, OH. et the
,
Certified Boo Station. At. 31
,
12 Noon to 1:30 p.m., McAothur, Ohio It lhelron'
Kettle A-...1'1111 on 111. IJ) Eioll.

At. 31

~

205 N. Soconol Strtot
IIDDLIPOir, OliO 45760
Office 6 I4-992-2116
HOI!E 614-992-5692
DGniE 5. 1UINU. 110111

zCo.
p.m.·l:30 p.m., Cool a-. Ohio\ t'~ t;,.~
Lot. Rt. II • 243- 11om
,.. .,..o

'l'IIIIHrVIoe II
II•• &amp;Iw-... a....... .,..... ef ... Vlllap
ol MNeop'lri • • tile
Ollloe .or Afp•lacMa. =.!.
j

Point Pleasant, WV

POll 1M

~lveaway

tene. 1 w.kl old. TWo year old

Starting at 11 :00 A.M.

URNCilRc,;ny

FRIDioYS: 8 o.m. to 11 o.m., Boillpollo, Ohio II tho
llue Fountoln Motel, lloorn 34, lit. 7 Iouth lull

Offk1s

Gev__.•

,,,

WAITED
GINSENG ROOT
YELLOW lOOT

.·

PtiOM (614) ft2·6782
I1C1

.

,,

Y•~ 111e. Oct. 1-1. 3'1U;41 Rocic.-.
oprtngo Rood, " - o y. Jnt

2 bolutllul whtto long holro&lt;j a
wkl old kitten• flmlle and
malo, llltor troiniid, 304-882·2717
or 882-2774.

Located on SaHord School ld. off It, 141 !:!!
f614) 446-9416 or 1·100·172-5967J.

Every Sunday .

gu1ororo.O. you *20.00 to *100.00 more per

----If .you do~ Contact Jean Trus•IL Housing
237

.

.

Would you like to purchase a SOx 100 ft. building lot in a good location for only S3500? .
Would you like to build. a new home and pay·
no real estate taxes for 15 years?
·-would you like to have .up to ssooo FlEE
for site improvements o.n your building loti ·

,

e-re

•.

Q~lo Lawry Orgon.

Yard Soia. 11o1&lt;n
Syracu10 pool. Sign In yard.
Gold CNCflt Card, Cllh adVInce Mony nlco lhlngo. to-? October
progntm: vtNIM..tar c1rd gu1r. 1·2-3-1-5. Roln C . -. 114-tnNo IICUrlty depoelt. 1~6- 11855.
0040, $211.
.

4

SALES &amp; SEIVI(E

PHONE

54 · Miscellaneous
Merchandise

-I~ lloo

· Specialist, for further Information.

Ntw IAKalion:

Billa

Apply to Terri Halley, R.N., Director DfNurslng
' Pleasant Valley Nursing
Center

'

. EMU.Y SHAIN

PlUMIING &amp;

Services

Long:term Care Experience Preferred.
12-Hour Shifts AvaUable. Excellent benefit
package, including shift-differential..

I,

t-.

Hul"ttiii'Ch alngl• nttwork.
An uc•lng WIY fo mHt aorneone 1peclal, Wrhe He•rt ... rch,
P.O. Box 1043, Gallipolis, OH.
451131•

Stoekfr'

BENNm'S· MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING ·

161 North Stcontl i
Mitldl1p01t, Ohio 45760

R.N. Charge Nurse
Positions Available

AGEIIIS SIIYIIIG -~
. MEIGS COlin r ·
SIIICI 1868 . .,

.

Business

"'........ Care Nursing

. YOUI IIDIPIIDEIT

l

.

MATCH

INSURANCE
111 S.Contl St., Pomeroy
i

3 Announcements

DlrectiOJoolligne Will IN up.
2 11111 1 0:00 to 1:00
pm.
I A Morltal-ltoJtlanl,
W.Vo. Fu'10itu,.,
Antlquu;
Mc1N1ca, ClothN,
RaCIIN,

5 flmlly Y1rd 5.118, ()ct. 2,3,4.

Rewarding
Career...

DOWNING.CHilDS i'
MUlLEN MUSSER I,'
\~

Clean Dry Aluminum Cana, 46¢ per lb.
Clean Au10 Rediators 44C lb.; Batteolel '1.26 ill.
Yellow Bra11 40c
Alum.
40¢ lb.

MOBILE HOME FURNACES • HEAT PUMPS
All FURNACE PARTS

Help Wanted

A

The Middleport Arts Council
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the
council chambers.

..

Announcements

.INTEIRJIRM.

Hdci~,

C.rpo~ - . Oct. 2-3, Two.,
W.cl. · 3352!11 9R31, P~.
Boys, men•, women"• clothla,
booka, new nntty mirror,
e~~blnat, -.c. heme. f-?

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

Now In

!*ond Mldd-.

1.e. Clothing,

llnena,
dryerl,
cw111..,
opraodo, dlaiiH1" lumlt....,, oppllonceot,.-ooc.

PAYING AS OF TODAY, SEPT. 11, 1990
#1 Copper '1 per lb .;

8flltii8Y DfS¥llj

Arts council'meets

SPIAIII WU .• THI

wm r•o• IMilllas Ptuc.
NIUON·-·

Perms Y.! Price, Hair Cuts Y.!
Price - 1 Week Only_

twe~per.

lobar 4-5th.

•

Wt can r~ir tiitd rt·

992-21
Middleport; ·

atllrio,

lo~ly yord oolo. Chlldo;on'o
cla1hlng and holM Int.,._. .t
Connie Tucker'a, Racine. Do-

CAIN'S
p

. ~")'1,

clothing,

I

10.1·1110.

~· • radiators · and

MlddlopoJt.

31imlly yord ulo 0:00..:00, ()c.
Iober 2, 3, Wom.,.., mena, &amp;
child,.,. cloth.., odd• a ...
tumnurt.3173i Dead MW
Curve, PomerOy. .

. 992-5009

SER~ICE

41h,

children'•

BANKS
CONSTRUCnON

•ANYTHING

...

2nd, Wed, 3rd. Jay Drlw aero.
from Clntlnll Thelit.,,
··

Commercial&amp;
Relldentiel
•Roofing
•Siding
•Windows

CHESTEI, 01110'

. Sarah and Teri

fundraise~·' In Pomeroy on Satur-

"This Summer I.. ." was the
theme of Ute program held by
.members of the Preceptor Beta ·
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority when the group met
recently at the Grace EpiScopal
Church Parish Hall.
·
Velma Rue · presided at the
meeting. Communications In·
eluded an lnvl,tatlon Iron( Ohio
Eta. Phi to attend a halloween
party on Oct. 20 at the American
Laglon Hallin Pomeroy.

773-5404.

FEATURES -SPECIALS

Sorority chapter meeting .held ·

Sta'"'""'' birth

REVIVAL .

MASON, WV.

.

.

I AAvruT ~IJ SWJ
11-\f: 0"!1-IE:.R $VW l.ttf

.

REMODELING

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp;. S.R . 143
ALBANY. OHIO: At. &amp;0 &amp;. S .R. 143
NEW HOURS:
·
. . . .POMEROY: 9 o.m ... 7..p.m . 7 Doya
ALBANY: 10 a.m.·&amp; p.m. 8 Daya, Cloaod Sunday

JANET'S HAIR GO ROUND

From Portor:!i·

lhlne.
' - r
Oct i, ~. 3. 111-4~1M Soulh
on 218, Ceramic.
lo RtJint,
C8r Hat, str~ller.
•

OFFERS 2 LOCAnONS YO SEIYI, YOU." •

PS, PB, AC, AM/FM cassette, auto·
matic, 4 new bres. Gets goQd gas
f!lilea~!!,'!!Y qne qwn~r. Must sell,
Miii!Offer. 614-~92-2377
FIVE GENERATIONS - Five generatlou of tbe Orris Harrill
famUy galbered recently for a pboto. Pictured, are Sarab Roush,
Jlreal grandm~ber, Orrlll Harrill, great sreal granclfalller, lleelly
Roush Creelman, mother, Sarah Elbabetb Creelman, baby, and
Greg Rouih, gt'&amp;ndfalher.

Oct lllh.

742-2421
3649l 5llfH IUN RD.
IUTl&amp;ND, OltiO
10.1 I mo.

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

CAR FOR ·SALE
1987 DODGE COLT DL

..

F~

OPEN MON.-FRI. 10-5 ·

USED APPUANCES

I0/30/'8911n

held by

'r-

-r

Drive, Plar)l• tlubdlvlalon,- Soot

,

,

....

mile · down ButaviiS.
t.
HouHhold ml.c .,
c
· ,
books, t•bJM , •a. Rain· or

•

Acr- '""" Poot Office
1 .POMEI0\';;-0 .

Rush party

.

HouMIIokl Silo: · 1:12

Buy, .Sell or Trade
Guns ·

NEVER CUAN YOUI
GUnERS AGAIN

Rt.!IO, ·· Old

,Qf;t. 4t~,lth .

See Us For Your
Sporting N•ds

R'!Gulter

Soil:

Evergre.. Rd. Crafla, avon, ""'"
,., R.rna, TKUI R. . . . . ..

BUILDING &amp;

cysTOM JUII.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

247-le1an Fills 882-New Haven
949-Racine
· 8915 - letar1

• 43-Ar•bi• Oi11

your family! Your plan sounds

72 - Trucks for S•le
73- Vans 6 4 V!tD '1

Real Eslate

M••on Co ., WV
Area Code 304

992-11009

BUILDERS .·

71 - Auro• ·tor S.le

23-Prof•liorwll Services

foUewing telephone exchanges ...

Construction

BISSELL.

Transportation
21 - Buain•• Opportunity

GallipOliS .
' &amp; Vlclnl1y

STEWARTS
GUNS':&amp;
. SUPPLIES

Banks

63 - Livenock
64 -~a., &amp; Gra in
65 - Seed &amp; r:ertil i:ter

22- Mont¥ to Loan

441 - G•IIipoli•

·
Choki
12 Ga,.. ~~~~IOnlr
Strktly I

61 - Ferm Equipment

1&amp; - Schoolt &amp; lrtltructiDn
11-fbdio, TV I CB Rep•ir
17-Milcellaneous
18-W•ntel!l To Do

Classified paf{es ,cot·er the
Meigl Co~ntY
Area Code 614

6:30P.M.

&amp; Ltveslol:k

11 - Help W•nted
.

EVElY .
SAT. NIGHT

Farm SuppliP.s

Si)[VICP.S

:NIII tlto eppear in the Pt. Ple•ant Aegi11ar and the Galli ·
polls D•ily Tribune. re•ehing O&gt;Jer 18, 000 homn

•'-

!Jashan ·Buldlng .

Fmplny111enl

c:ept ""':" cl•tified dt.pl-v . lutin•• C.rd tnd legal notic:H)

COPY Dt:AtiliNE - ·

RACINE
.FIRE DEPT.

53- Ant iques
&amp;•- Misc. Merchendisit · ·

4 - Giv..w•v
5-"H•ppy Adl
6-lost end found

for arron flrat ff-v ad runs in paper, . Call befcira 2 :00p. m

d., after publicrtion to mike correction.
"Ads th11 must be Plid in 1dv1rice life

GUN SHOOT

5·, - Hou•-"old Good•
5;2-lpanlng Goods

Memory

3-Annouc:emtr'l11

_7_v_drd_s_ale_ _

Qctoblr 2nd thru lih. RoUte 7,
ChNhlrt, nice Clothlna, chelp

MerchanrJ1se

, 1-Cird ot Th'. nk.

""ice of ad for til c:..,k•t l•t.... is double price ot ad colt.
•7 poifl'l line type ont, ultd.
"S•uinel it nat r•pontible tor erroulfter first dllf . !Check

·. ttnific. Jhclrtily m:ommend iL .
Read on for another eumple of
wise parents! straJegy:

' •" CHESTER -There wll1 be an
:::SPE!n house at Chester Elementar)· on Monday af 7 p.m.
.1ollowed by a short PTO meeting
•"ari,:
30 p.m.
All parents
are
urged
'
"
.
'
.)oat tend. .
· ·' .

I .

6

Page

ices
Business Se

Classifie

Monday. Qctober 1. 1990

.

·The Daily Sentinel- Page 7

'

INO IN CALIR&gt;RNIA
DEAR CALIFORNIA: What
l..:ty kids 10 bave beeR bool iniO

.•' .

I' "

.)_,,Monday. October 1, 1990

.

Responsible·.spenders;
kids are good consumers

" DON A. HARRIS

..... ·

The Daily Sentinel _·
.

•......

~

·~

By The Bend

.;/

....

••·
as
P-rey;

•f

80Q.27N7U Exl. 02Q4, ·

.t,VON ' All ~~~.C. II Morllyn
WHver 304-8&amp;2~ZMI.
.
AVON I All Arwoo I lioi~"'l'
Spun, 304-675-14211.

�)

.

'

~-- ·~--

. PaQe-8--'Thfi Daily Sentinel

;; ,_.,R ... .i - -

..

~

""(r --

54 MisCellaneous
· Merchandise ·

U\11 -A-UJ-\ t

"Doc:tor'e _ lltiet~nt. Must · llkt
wortdng wlh poof!io, bo oH~

~~ ,---

,_..... ,

..

"",-'t ;" " - - · •

·.

"'

;i,

Monday, October 1, 1

Pomai'oy...:..Middleport. Ohio

11 • Help Wa,nted
~t.nt

.,

•

Television
Viewing

5I

and hlln. lnau111nee ex·

P•ri•JtCe. Excellent ~lng
condltlor.., .aood aallry· and
fringe biA.Ika. Outttandlng
t: W:reer
.opportunity. · Send

· CtMO TV Ulllng inc. ,_Worth, TX

res ume to.: Doctor'• Aulstant
P.O. .811&gt;&lt; 164 Mldd!Oport, Ohio

4 aood condy
3041173-5851.

4!7&amp;0.

L 0 WL H Y

.EVENING

meehlnll.

8:00 (l) •

· ':"Full limo bobyolt11ng pooltlon

W

1IJ) Newa
(!) Cllallee' tn
(l) 3-2-1 Cont8Ct

avallab~ In in_y home. Send
. resume to P.'O. lOx 21, Kerr, OH
45643. .
Help Wanted: Lot Attendant,
Apply In poroon Smith Buick
Pontl3c.
. . .
HOME .TYPISTS, ·PC . usero .
nOeded. '$3S,ODO potential.
Details. (1) 805-687-6000 En. B·

l!ll.

C!l &amp;quare 0r11
ALF

([j Cailoan

.

ill @.

(I) (J).

E..,....
..

IITi m ~iate neecUor 8xperlenced
· nursing assistant tor .prlvl.re
duty ~a ses , Mu$1: be dependable, have phone, and rehabJe
transportation.
' easel
in
Franklin
and . surrounding

.

. .

.· ·lj Abbott and Coltll~

.

counties. Cal\ .1-81)()-879-1088 for

(I)

l

.jld·~--Q

.I

.. .

·I

I I I t_
H A L T c ·l·fl ·
.
'
Is I I r :~ 1 "Just breathe in and ou•: the
. _ _ _ . a anesthet1st . Informed the

I
I' I 0

·

E CN Gy T

I

. 17 .. ,

· patient. . Groggily the patient
asked, "Is there any--------?" .

'--i-1..-....L-.......L. ......1.-L
. .....I .

cont8ct8

[E3-2' 1
1111 IIJ) • CIIS Newe Q ·
il)). Andy Qrlllilh
·.

___,

• iritervlew. EOE.

I

'I3 TROOBI·I

Q

.
. .·

• _Molo-'«1 .
8 World To&lt;hly
8181man
8:05 CJl Be,.rty Hlllblllle.
1:30 (l). 1IJ) NBC Niglrlty New1 ·

4562. '

1

11 . 1- 11

_;.~.,~;-~"'- (
..::..."'/.;

-Complete lhe chuckle quoM&lt;f
. by 'filling lo tho ljlisslng

_.ds

you develop from at,. No. 3 .below ..

IZISDoltlt.ooll

8

Maniac MeneiOII

11:35 (J) Andy Grttltth
7:00 (]) •

1111 IDl Wheel of

Forturil Q
·&lt;ll 1DI'Mm

.

·

SCIAM Lin .ANSWIIIS
,. 28
Infirm - Scour :._ Plant- Negate- FANTASTIC
Granny told my sister that babies were always more
trouble than you thought and even more FANtASTIC!

ol Jeannie
(I) (J) • ln&amp;lde EcliiiOn
·(l) C!l MacNeil Lehl!lr
N.W.HQur
·
I!]) • Night Court Q
ll2l 111 eu...nt """'r
1IJ MacQyver
ID SportaCenter
8Moneyllqe ·
0 Scarecrow and Mrs. King
7:05 (J) Happy Dayl

o

BRIDGE

•u
tAQ

a

7:30 (]) • 1111
Jeopardy!
&lt;ll Major Lwg• BeHIIIft

......

. (I) IIJ) II) Entertainment~
Tll!nigllt
,(J)
M,ma•o Family .

a

Til-'• Company

l!ll •

ID MotorWeek llluetnlled
13 Cro11flre
7:35(J): The Jeltei'IOIII
1:00 (]) • IIJi FNIII Prince ol
Bel Alir Will lries-lo smOOih ·
relations when Phillip's
counlry_parents visit.
(I) (J)
MacOrvor Mac
helps a friend wrongly ·
accuSed ol murder. Slereo.

'

Q

'·

- ~Efl/101

W.ATCH

&lt;1Tl%.~N .

fO~

NV PI
,6ACH ·
- ~ ' ··

GOLPIN
~-

O#..PIES

What
IUI:ty
110 ba-n: been born into
· yo!lf family! Your plan . sounds
la'rific.I heanily recommend iL
llead qn for lliiOihci'. cwaple of
~ parcnlal Sttlltcgy:

IDlmedla te opening for RN · assessment coordinator. Hours
usually Mondi!Jr. thru Fridar. 8:00

2br, Kerr OH, 5 min. from Holzer

mo.

~otphal.

$25,000:. 114-441--9137,
814-448-4118.

New . Hlrl~ · Liatlnga. (1) 805-

687·6000 EXt. K-111189.

time ulel; poaltlon,
opply Oct. 1, 2'- 3. !Oa.m.-12.

Part/full

lpPe Fumhura, 1:n Second Ave,
GalflpoUI, No phone caltl.
PriVate duty AN's and LPN'i
needed Ia provide excellent
. care. Are• of e~pertilt nMded.
Pulmal"'lry cere, l*llatrlca, IV
ca1n. nurologlcar cart. Caan
in Franklin and surrounding
counll11., Call1-800-8nl·1088 for

Rush party
held by
chapter

·

For lfooit: 3br trollor. 814-4461891.
llobllo Homo Ront: 614-386-8473
No ct~lll .tter &amp;p.m.

614-446-7112 by Oct- 3, 1990.
INTELLIGENCE JOBS. FED, .

etc.

AJ)artment .
for Rent

7 room• 1 112 ba~ country

living but cl- t.o Molgo SChool
an~ town.
Rt. 33-4 lant,
Townohlp Rood 21. Flrolrood to
~.' C..il614-992-7118 or 1-3114-

1 bedroom oportmenl
dl..,.,rt. TotlilelRtrlc,

45

rn· Mid·

wa.. 1nd

kHohon lurnloherl. $210 monthly
oluo doPQOit. 614-992-3667 or
1114-992'3312.

GOVERNIIENT .HOMES from $1
(U ropol~. Oo=nt tu
properw. Repou ·
a. Your
orosj11 --10110 Ext. GH4562 or CUmnt repo lilt.

~

~~~~~~~~~

$35,000/yr. Income potential . (1)

1'.SOO.S89-5TIO.
1980 Frsodoin, 14x711 mobllo

MONEY
typing,
wordproces•ing, personal computing. At home. Full or pt. time.
005-607-6000 El. 8-10189.
SALES • · $32!5 day possible!
Take Phone Orders. people call

youi Phone 614-446-9358
·1
:,.:.::.:..:.,==-=-~==:;.
·
"StJc r.tar.yJAeceptlonist. ' Must
posses 'VPI~g, swttchboard and
commumcatlon ak1lls, also have
knowledge of computers and

-=-

A.P.

Submit

resume

to
36759

· Amerleara . Pomeroy
Rocksprings Road Pomeroy
Oh: 46769 Attn: Office Manager:
No p_hona call~ pla1u.

Chapter,
Beta
Sigma
Phi Sot:orlty for new
pledges
Lowry
Crow,
Vera Holliday, Kim Dent, Sherry
Chapman, JuUe Zirkle, Sandy
Butcher, Becky Trent ·and Patty
Taylor. ·
The group will sponsor a
halloween dance on Oct. 20 with
tickets selling for S!j per person.
Debbie Evans was chosen .
·valentine queen to represent the ·
· chapl.er this year.
A
show was

15

$4,1500. 61~2..·1a37.

18

'

Wanted to Do

Experienced ch)ld care in my
homtt, Mo"day~~jrlday, 6:30
am till ! :30 pm,
75·2021. ·
Fumltur!l refinishing ·and repair,
quality work and frM tttlm.Wel,

304-815-7WI.

'

Got your choln -

sol-vicod lor
fhwood aNSOn, Sldt1'8 E·
qulpmonl Co., H'""'"'-, WV.
304.e7G-lll21.
. Mogle Yosro. Ooy Coro Contor ............
~dlbiO, .
tiHI'IH, qllllhy chHd Dlfll. Man·
dlly lhru Friday, 7:3a till 5:30.

F01 mare · hlfOnnatfon or to

..g~o~.. 304-175-1847.

Poot

~aii.oiir:;;.; Smoll

.,

Wltl drt ..,..,.,..,.. ln~mo,
~ c1orilloiJiet,
0&lt; - · N
304-e75- Point
.
ochool
J

e

·

'2311. Tofly

wllh .l&gt;oihroom,
I. 0 ..1 whoilo, $1,06.

114-211-1!22.

.

jFrank1121111
Murphj Brown
relies on his ·

Services

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
u..
.-oonidlftllu.ii-..1 ......., guoran- - ,
loo. Locol rolononcoo, lumlohod. ,

6LJT "THEN I. NOTiCED 'THAT
IT W!oe AlaEWAVATING
MY F34-RE:Nn$,

________ '
Waterpr~

.' .

1

'

e

,

521.

e

o-rd&amp;l';

,

@~~ IT SHORE IS

.-.

1171 Clio¥. ....... !)1111, N,

::-..§ ..... - - . -

·' ..... """ d... - ·

SWAIN

AUcTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12

Hou... for Rent

F10:30 ()) New1

121 Crook

NINE.
CATTERSH

.

'

Olivo 81., GIIIIIIOIIo. -

&amp; Uoad

fumhure, ......., Weetern a

Antlquea

53

lluy or -ooll. Rlvorlno Antlquoo,

1124

~

0 Ncrwa: CoM,IM-11,__ i~
.. lp.m.
. ,

Main .,..., ,Pomoroy.
Hou,., II.T.W•.10:oo o.on. lo 1:00
P·m.:Onrloy 1:o.o 1o 8:00 p.m.
114
-21121.
.

r1ann11111 ,...._ volume dlj..

'

--.
......... - ....r-c.u ... .
IOWlHIII

- · 1,000 10 4,0il0 Ol""&lt;!hY,

111.

Upi!Otatery

'

.

·~

~'o ' Uphafot~ ........ . ,

fntllrl CIO!'n!Y -

:.-3
-

:til JO!III. Tho ... .
In - U N UpiiOIOiorlng. "•·'

~14 . . . tree . ~ ~; .

Grltllm UDhollt.ry C.er, 103·

·~-~'

-op Dr. Coli IDr oaoollllmonte .,,

&amp;..UmoiOO. Coli l'f4.UII411•

,

a Chaoe

11:00 (l) 8 1111 1121• IDl NIWI
()) Night Court Q .
(l) NIWIWatch
il)). Amnia Hell
«JJ Miami v~. •
121 Goepal JubiH ,
BeHblll Tonight
8M-ytlne
·
0 Maniac Monelon
11:30 (]) D IDl Tonight Show
Stereo.
()) To Be Announced ·
(l) Eurot18an Journal ·

a

l:l~~~'tas Lalo

veals which signa are romaoJ icolly per- ~RIEB (March 21·Aprll11) You're likelY'
feel lor you. Mall $21o Malchmaker, c/o 10 do betler today In lliluatlonslnlllaled
I
lhls newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleve· by others than those Whlcll you person·
land, OH 44101-3428
ally orlglnale, especlolly II y!JUr CounterSCORPIO (Oct.I4-Nov. 22) Focus your pari's obtectlves are more reallallc lhan ·
eHorls and lll*giea on lhe lmmedlale yours.
and lei tomorrow llll&lt;e care of Itself: TAURU8(Ajlrll20o-MIJ20)·1fyou're)ryYol!'re on a roll and you should be'mor~ lng to"slrlke bargalnJoday, negollale
BERNICE .
su6ceaslul handHng mailers wllh which lor vlllible quanllltea ralher lhan for ·
BEDE OSOL
you're currently concerned.
somalhlng vague or·uncerlaln, evlillf II
SAGITTARIUS CNov. 23-DC. 211 A deal lookl like you can make a bellor· deal
!hal haa ·beln rather Iough to lie down· foculf!lg on·.~ laU.:
eoulil be concluded lo your Sa,ljsfacllon GEMINI IMQ 21-.lune 201 Where your
loday. You'll come oul OK, bul you career Ia conC8fned loday; lhere Ia· an
mlghl have 10 give away a bH more lhan ally you can now develop who could
you aniiCipaled.
prove vary helpful tor you In the neer ruCAPIIICDIIH IDeo. 22.....,, 11) A friend lura. 11'1 a l)4nO!I older or more experllor whom you've gone ,to bat recenlly anced than you.
.
.
haan'llorgotlen lht loyaHy you've dla- , CANCER 1....... 21-.lutr 22) Today II
plaYecl. Thlllrtend 'haa eornelhlng In moy . appear M lhOUQh : someone ·you
·mind loday 111111 could poaalbly bol&amp;"f' know aoolal~ 1o lrylflll to monlpulate
OcL2,·111!1
lht account
·
·you lor a special purj)OH. Ironically, It
·'I n lhe year
you may ..... an op- AQUAIIIUI 1olM. »F-. 111 Things will ' be you alone wh- alma Will be
portu~lty 1o eetlblllh eeplrate frlencf. ShOuld worlc out llllllactorlty fOi you lulfllled.
.
lhiPI Wllh lhrile v.y unuaull ~- loday wtlh people wt11t Whom you'll be LIO l.ltllr lii-Alltlo 22) Stop avOiding
' Each wtH Introduce uniqUe beneflle lnlo , Involved bu._wtse, ·bul yo~~· mlghl lacing up lo a serloue develop,_l.
:your IIIII.
not lara equolly M w1111n your per1011a1 · This maller can bt llfeCtlveiy handled
LtiiiA (leiiL a-"oct.lll ~all condl- relellonlhlpa:
·
·
loday and It won'l·bll hall aa palnlul u ·
Uona 1001c prom- for you lodly eo- PIICII CM. :Ill llarch :1!11) Your be- you've led yourMIIIO belieVe. .
· clally 11 well II ,_.ally, Thilll one of havtor wtll ·wln you lhe - 1 ol your ¥11100 IAIIIJ. . ...,.. 22) The WIY you
1MM d-' w111re you rn1g11t ~ lblllo ·.· ~1111parlriH today, beciUH IIIey' II ' canduct_yourNII wllll olhen today will
caa11 In at.bOth w'o.a-. Know Where to 1 r8111ze you are a per1on who keeps your Jlelp 'onhanoe your reputation, btcauH ·
look far r - and yOu'll lind n. The · word and commllmentl, -you yOu'll bll tough u Will u tender when
· Allro-Onipll Mlitchmaker ln11181111y re- · flnd lllncon..,lent lo do eo.
clrcumatancee dllltalld ll

Nlg!it

a on Slage

1D llportaCa13 llporta Tonight
.
0 MOVIE: lilac~ Belllly· .,

a

rMtrlot*-,

Renta ls

PAW·!!

. YEP--IT'S
ANOTHER ONE
OF THEM

ASTRO-GRAPH ·

Heating '

O.J. WhHih Rd., 2 oCroo Woodad
building 101, rudy to build on,
rootrlclod, ...100. IIW4M1115. .

wet•, no

NIPPY TONIGHT,

=

p.m . ..

publlo

Mlohlloll Dry WiMid
W - Sill Tour Anals from
San FranciSco. CA (T)
8EvenlngNewe •
illl 700 Club Spacial:
Prepaotng Now for lhe

•

5 .1Crn lAnd on At. 2 Eckard
Chopot Rood, 30U'I5-31DO.
81'1 oc- 8clplco T_,.hiJ!L In•
cludoi ono houoo. unly
$138,000. 8141316-4110 onor 7:00

I:J.:,

.

0

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Routo
z Mltlon, .1 ..,.
mi!Oo __ h QoiHpollo

co-workers Wtten he lhrows
an annlver_sary party.
«JJ Prime Time Wrlllllng
121 Nalhvtlle Now
ID Oftohore Prole~lliOIIII
loll Racing Taur From
Grand. Havan, Ml (T)
13 Llny King Uvel
8:30 1111 1121e Dellgnlng Wonien
Chtrlene decides to qu~ lhe
llrm to spend more time wiiH
her bapy. Q
10:00 Ill Mlljor League leHblll
· · · ' (l) (!) Survival Splelall Q
1111 ll2l
Trtalo ol RDIII
O'N. . Rosie has !rouble
delencjlng a case .when a
curse Is placed on her. Q
il))'
Iter Trek: Tha Next.

81
Home
__·.;;.lm-"p:;,.rov,;,;,lim,;,;en~•t;.:s__ •:

82 · Plumbll)g &amp; , /'" . .

Windsor 14x10, 2br, CA, bUildIng. oklrftnQ, on lol In Quoll
c.-ok. -Gooil . - . Fronch City
llobllo Homoo. 814-441-1340.

Work boote.tlt 111 tl51~ · .

. Mloo Poulo'o Doy eo.. Contor.
Sor., oftonl•blo, chlldcoro. 11-F
6 ri.m. - 6:311 p.m. '~ 2 ·10.
B...,., oftor ochool. Drop.lno
WilD Mflt, 114-446-822:4,
Will .....,.. my llorrte, · noar
Joe"-! Plko, · on Bulovlllo
Roadfl~cod
' Roforona..
2141.
.

1121f\o10VIE: 'A
NBC
Manclay Night,at 1M Movlal
(2:00) .
.
(I) (J)
ABC Mondlly Night
. .
FIIOIHII E;l ·
(l) C!l American Expei'IIIICe

p

,

ra.

g monthl.

•

l

$'12,fll00 delivered 1nd .., up.
Coli 1-800-729-4045
dotallo.

dent/home lltudy, Financial aid
available It qualified. Placement
·asal.tance. COunty Schools local office, 2307 Camden Ave
Parkersburg, WV. 1-800-640:
6411. All programs completed 6-

·

..

Prom111 lo Keep'

Rooflng, pointing, WI poo... y, ,
~t~umblitg
•nd · •
11M. .
Qu•r~~ntied work wHh referen- r
· - · Con' boot th- prl- :
"""'ntoo. 114-44f.7282 or 304- '
75-1'1154.
___.....,
~olory or coblo looi drilling. '
-willa cornplotad oomo
Pump ...._ llid _.,Ice,
Ull102
'
'iloplla Tonlo Pumclng 190~!J..olllo
Co. RON EVANS·ENTERP,.,.ES,
Jocklon, OH 1-t00-837.0528.
Dlllllo
Saw-Vsc · SoMco ' ·
Gao~ CrMk Rd. P1rtli", eup! ~
=~kup, ond dallvoryt,t: .

198ii Oakwood 14x711 mobllo

airlines travel, ·nurses aide, trac:·
tor lralier 1'\lnlngi, r..l.

8. Llko now. $2,700.114-

MNMI. ,

·

9:00 (]) 8

!VIlli Joyco fold down campor. :
Fumance, alnk. . gaa ttove,

Comploto Mobil&lt; .Homo oot upo '
I ,_,., lloo plumbing a
oloctrlcol, 109flng, .-doing,
potloo &amp; ile. REMOOELINOI Rolorw-. Elllmoloo;
814-2!41-1611.
Ron't TV Sorvlco, opoclollzlng ·,
In Z.nHh oloo I«VVccng moot ' '
othor bnndo.-·80IM
•Pilrflance' ,..,.......
WV '
304-llll4atlll Ohio IIU48-2414. ,.

5p.m.

Bookkeipingia
unting, •
Hotel/motel
· · management

of-

(1 :30)

7

OH.1~

1982 Townhoua,, 14x7'D, double
expando, CA, On .Drlvate renled
lot In Radney. 114!441--153fllafllr

or 3 bedroom14x'JG models
.tho . unbollovoblo prlco

'
Map&amp;lne
0 MOVIE: llacll Beallly

.•

Ev1na E=rllll, Jlc

a
ns.-3673

SPECIAL Factory 1o Y9U111111, 2

aon- ·
1D liiFL'"if'.ay Niglil

JET
Aeration Mal:art, rapalred. HIW1 N-buiH mo1oro In ....~.r,'::'

horne, 3 bedrooN, ·2 bltha, ah1

el~arly.

=

RogeM BaMment
.

1981 Tindall 't4x70, 3 bedroamt, bath halt •• 500. 304895-3842 or
ifier 7:00.

Prefer retired age. 614-386·8193 ..

IDl Ferrll lueler .
Ferris helps Cameron wtlh an
ldentlly crisis. Q
. ·
1111 1121• Major Dad Polly Is
hired as a new editor at lhe
Marine-base nawapaper. Q

•

11i75 20 II. Chew 1Ro1or 110.....
~~P~ :nanco.
Runo :
.8
.

ling.
___::...._

·Or 882-3704.

Room &amp; board, Free tor person
to live-In &amp; do light WQrk at

Private Hom. Care lqr

Merchandise

electric. 1\ke new,
new houBI . furnllure with
washer •nd dry..-, 304-882-3245

2br," trailer, bath &amp; 112 tatalelec.,
on rented 1~1 ct~n be moved,

1:30 (]) •

e-5- .

79
campers&amp;
, .. Motor Homes

·

(1:55)

Tronsmlooloilo, Ulod a'

FrM: Htlmat•. Clll COllect 1· •
814-237.j)488, dor ' or. nlghl. · •

h~• total

on 100x150 lot,.'&amp;Ote of -1xtru,
304-682-33154.
.

""ono

Ylrdan Auta Salvage. Fanlgn &amp; ·

on TV~ Call El ... Home Canter

Situation
Wanted

12

xzx.

'

·

Uncle Buell Uncle
Buck lurns lhe cily of
Chicago againsl him. Q
. ii))II)MOVIE: Amadeul ~PI1
Ql 2) (PG} (2:001
11J Murder, She Wrote Q
121 Qoepal Jubilee
ID ESPN'o Zenith NFL
Monday Night Match-Up
13 PrlmaNewi
0 Modettne
8:05 (J) MOVIE: The Jark (R)

Dom Porto buying funk coro. •
114-388-11062.
,,

in,c ludH, O.poah ~ulr.d, 814--

441-7733, 114-446-4222.

(c~r-

.

robuT~. olortlng ot $aD;
51177, 614-379-22!13.

by members of the Ohio•Eta Phi

·2 ,_,o I . both, nfwly
romcdalod. $200/mo. All utl~loo

.EARN

2 Michelin Tlroo, 155 SA 12
Phono 3a~W710.

Budall

--;;;;~;[~~~~d
A tush party was held recently
~
at Main Street Pizza In Pomeroy

jntorvlowo. EOE.

$40 DOWN on eny n.w eingi•
wide, plu. tn •nd IItie tO
quoiii!Od buyoro.. Ao odvortlsod

ft'ereo. D

'all ·IIJ) •

A4to Parts&amp;
Accessories ':,

8141HZ.e:M4
numbor). .

2br, unturnlahld, wMh upando
In Choohlro. Rol . a Dop, roqulrod, 814-448-4368, 304475-

.

-to ,.4:30 but may vary. Contact · 3 bedroorM howe, land cOn·
dlreetor of "unalng, Pin~tereet troct, 304-875-5104;
Care Cent!."!.\ 170 PII')KTH\
Olive, Gllllpu~ll, Ottlo 4563'1.
CIA, U$ cu~om:a, o~.

_fJ

402 ChovY big block molar•.

2 . bedroom., bath, corner lat,
and dllck. ·Henderson,

304-&amp;75-71118.

S!, .(!)Infinite Vo~age

-

••

-;JL_

a

a

(2:30)
12:00 (I) (J)

-.

'

('

~

Newe

.

•

·
Nalhvtlle Now
NFL'e 0 - - M o -

0Lombardl

.

. .

.

ONawiNtght

,·

~b
~~
Zone
...._......

12:31 (I) Nlghtllr• Q
12:41(J) Woilci·OIAUdllbon
1:00 (J)
Into 1M Night Sterab.
8 MOVIE: Chill oflr8n (RI

e

(2:00)

.

IDlellennJHII ·
Ill ......

0 Tile Naw Milia~
1D NI'L'e OI•UallloiMIIIa

'

'\

Superatara: Mill Dllka
8 lllowllll Today
\

.K -

.A

EMf

! WEST

•QJtilila

•9842
. t . 73

to look
-foolish

tKI0642

•u,
SOUTH

4AKQ1082

.QJU6
.AK
• J 985

By Jamea Jacoby

+H

Jokes abound about careleSI'lY
Vulnerable: Both
trumping your partner's good trick.
Dealer: Soiitb
Sure, it's a ridiculous play, and the .
crime is compounded If the trump you Soli"
Nor" Eul
use lor ruffiDg is the ace. But some- 1 • .
AUpaa
times it's the only way to beat a
Opening lead: +K
contract. ··· ..
Against four spades, West led K-A
and then· the queen of clubs. On the
third club, Ellst discarded a diamoqd. clubs. Then East would perlulpe II! .
Declarer tufled and cashed tile A-K of sacrificing a trick by trurilplng witll
hearts. Then be finally led a trump. the ace. But surely be would 1t111 lilt·
The kiDg aDd ace fell together, and the contract, Iince be would return tbe'
East was on lead. U be led a heart, queen of hearts and eventu.lly m.U'a ·
South would ruff, discardiDi the queen trick with the kiDg of dlamaada. At
of 'diamcmds-from dummy. And if he worst, tbe contract would be set oaly·
led a diamond, .it ·would be into the one trick.
;
jaws of the A-Q. How could East tell
The other side of the coill Ia thallt Is'
that the right play was tO ruff the third crucial for East to tuff the third clab'
club with lhe ace of spades?
. to avoid the endplay. It's an -..ec:F
For starters, a wlnerable overcall ·ed . dividend that partner Wnt holds
at the twO-level is a little dangerotl!l thetonekingofspades, wltbtbebappy. .
with only a live-card suit. However, result that the defenders now tate fi""
suppose that West did have only five · tricks.
.;
.' .

••

.'

RD

by THOMAS JOSEPH
48 Old photo
ACROSS
·.color
1 Segment
DOWN
6 ~era' s
1 Pea's
nation
place
11 Man-·
2 Wrath
made
3 Wing
fiber
4 Kitchen
12Red
Item
Square
5 Computer
VIP
13 Dutch
key
6 Optician's 20 Gov't
earthen·
. agents
concern
ware
7
Dress
·
·
21
Kitchen
14 Rectify
item
edge
-+SG-men
24
TV's .._.
8 Freshly
17 Method
Peaks"
9 Ship of
18 Loan
25 Pocket
. 1492
com pula
waste
. tO Amos's
lion .
26
Termini
pal·
22"The
28 Bridge
16 Society
Eternal
type
newcomer
Cily"
31 P1cnic
23 Scarab'
tB Eye
vis~or
27 Bumbling · colorer
34 JobS lor
29 Ushered 19 l';ilch
to the
• room
30 Madrid
I
Mrs . .
32 Compas sionate
33 Dance ·
cost , in
song
35 Michael
Jackson
h~ .
38 Copy
39 T.S.41 Play a
banjo
45 Use ·.
46 "My Fair
lady"
heroine
. 47 Director,
Louis-

..
"&gt;

Sam
'Spade ·
35 Rafter
36 Edison's ·
·middle

name
37 Radio
feature
40Texan
Industry ·
42Shred
43 Terrorist's
gun
44 Calf cry

-.
.'

.,

~

One letter stands for another.

In this sample A is used
for .the two O's; etc. Single letters, ..
. a~trophes, the length andfonnatlon of the words ~~ all .

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Page4
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Vo1.4l, No. 101M
Copyright11d 1990

......

.

illniDk't laU moved up aacl llowD aa11 ..,...,.d
periodically. · Operating . It lrGG~ . lalt• tile
, structure were fteiMII ~e and 8ar&amp;b 'DDbJ.

TQ CATS' TAKES FIBST - Tbls'

a,.&amp; .

lly the Junior claaa of Soutl!ern Hlg!t

· ICMol tor the kadlllonal· homecoming parade
· a.lk ...._ plaee In the competWon. Tllelarre blf'ck

:Homecoming
· panlde brings

PlACE
Tbe .Mnlor elus ·of
Sebool uae!l a remOile eoatroled
Ita ''Mow Over tb.e Cat•" &amp;hem~

.

nesdq. Hlp near Ill.
of rain • pereent.

I

Pomeroy·to. pennit
frre parking· for '90
C • tmas shoppers

f!oat In Friday's homl'eomlng parade before tile·
·rame be&amp;ween tbe Soutllern Tomadoet aad 1111
.llallnan Traee WUdeate.

' I'''

·

i

,.

I

:Out creativity
. . Tile Junior class wltli lis
creative "Stunk' the Cats" float
took first place In the judging at
•!be annual Southern.High School
iiQIIIee:Oinlng parade , Friday

.
By BBIAN I:REEI\
.· Seuttlnal New• !Matt
Pomeroy Vllllge Council voted
, to provide free parkltie during
tbe Cbrlltmas shopping Mason
at Ita regular meetllll at VI~
Hall on Mollll~ even~n&amp;.

· afteriiOon.
.·
..
.. Tile parade marked the· begin·
lllq ol. festivities as students ·
&lt;prepared for the gave between
tbe Tomadoes and the Hannan
Traee Wildcats Friday night.
'l'aklng second place In the
JUIIIIDc wu the senior class float
wlllcll can1ed out a "Mow Over
tile Cats" !)Ierne, while third
place went to the freshman class
'With Its "Pound the Cats"
tlllmed float.
Led by tbe · SHS band the ·
jl? ,.de m!)Ved from . the high .
ICbool 1hr~h downtown Ra· :
CIDe. Besldel
floats 'from the
llllh IIChool clasleS, homecoming
c•ndJdates rode on convertibles,
tile football players and cheer·
leaders rode on a flatbed truck, a
IJ'OUP'or baton twirlers marched
aiollg, and emergency vehicles
and fire tnieks, · along with
THIRD PLACE' - ''P9und the'Ca&amp;a" .Utile
RVel'al decorated four wheeler s
theme of tbls lrelllmao c1aaa D.U eate~ 1n tile
ftl'e In tlle.Uneup.
llomecomlng parade a&amp; S,utll. . mlli ......

Annie Cllapman, Vllikl Ferrell,

tllld .Joe and Suaan Qark, all

the

..

WIGGINS RECOGNIZED - Kenny Wiggins,
left, was presented an outstanding service award
lrom Buckeye Hills Resource Conservation and

BOMBCOMING QuEEN - Junle Beegle was cruw•d
,. bomeoomln1 queen In balt~e ceremonies at Fl'klay nlgllt'l
pme betweea the Southern Tomacloea and tbe B••a" Trace
·wUdeate. Tile 1989 bomeeomlnl queen, April Nuar8WJCI,
crowned ber •l!C~aor .who was escorted by Jere1117 Role,

~"

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The merchants aleo reported to
co.uncll that new Cbrlsbnas
banner5 would be In place In the
dOWDtowD irea for the sllopjltng
season.
'
Counell also voted to approve a
. three-bour beer oermlt, Jiendlng

.,.
~
~~~E~~rrr·;c
loi't

;

Flu shots slated to be given this

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Two
nUnols lawmakers from aepar·
ate aides of the ,aisle aareect
Tuesday the Midwest would be
particularly hard hit under the ·
new federal budget.
.
As explained by State Health oecupatlon, behavior, travel to
· Adult Immunization AwareCongresswoman
Republican
ness Week Is Oct . 21-27 and In Director Dr. Ronald L. Fletcher, other counttles, or IDCreaslng
Lynn Martin dete:rlbed the lf!lla·
conjuncllon with the State De· many deaths and serious II· · . age.
latlon
as. "Juat a~l" tor lbe
The 1990-91 vaccine protects
partment of Health's program to lnesses occur eacll year from
·
reliOD
wblle DelliOCrat R)cbard
stop preventable Illnesses and diseases that can be prevented agalnsttbeTypeA-Talwan, Type
Durtlln
said cu !backs In Medl·
death, the Meigs CoUnty Health with proper Immunization. He A-Shanghai and 'l'ypa · B·
Department will be offering flu · encourages all Ohioans to be Yamagata strains of lnDuenza. · care WQIIId result In llospltel
cloelngs.
certain they have been properly Infiueriia Is a respiratory dla·
vaccines on Oct. 18, 19 and 22
'lbey were lnlerviewed oa the
ease,
caused
by
viruses
that
·
immWtized.
Health. Deparbnent personnel
"Fox
Moi'IIIJII News" p~am
WilDe the emphasis at tills time often spreads In epidemic prowill be at the Senior Citizens
from
Wublqton.
portions. Each year, thousandsCanter on Oct. 18 from 9 a.m. to of year ·Is on flu shots, Dr.
Durbin Aid be hadn't decided
noon and 1 to 4 p.m . to give shots Fletcher reminded adults that of Ohioans experience flu symp~ow
be would vote on ~be budget
toms that Include sudden fever,
to senior citizens and to those there are vaccines available for
willie
Martin Indicated she didn't
who are disabled, and on Oct. 19 ·pneumococcal, measles, hepail· sore throat, cougb, and muacle
like
any
part ol tbe Jllopoeal.
and Oct. 22 from 9 a .m to noon tis B, tetanus, d!ptherla, and · aches .
Is a partial trans·
Followlna
. The vaccines are very effecand 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at the Health rubella.
crlpt
of
the
lnlerview, u proAdults may need these vac·
tlve, according to Dr. Fleteller,
Department.
vided
by
Federal
News Service:
cines because they ware not and often lessen the severity of
The cost for the disabled and
Q.
Congteuwomall,
let me
an Inness, even when thelmlllun·
properly ·Immunized as children,
senior citizens Is $1. Costs to the
or ·require vacc!n{ltlons because izatlon Is not one h11ndred. per- . begin with you. You've had some ·
general public for the vaccl~e Is
pretty strona lanauaae. You say
of special llealth conditions, cent effective.
$2.
this Ia "muaer• In plnattlpe .
sui~." Wbal'a your reaction to
·
thll deal?
.
A. I thlDk eapeclllly again It's a
bill that does dlaparalely affect
varloua reglou o1 the collntry
and for the Midwest It Is a bill
A planning meeting to organize a support group for. people
that Ia Jult·awful. Tile only way
with arthritis and their famUy members will be held Oct. 24
my sta~ even geta money baek
trorn JO: 30 a.m. to noon in the conference room at the Senior
WASHINGTON (UPII -In an from th'e recter.l aovernnient
Citizens Center, Mulberry Helgbts, Pomeroy. The public Is.
baale~ly Is !be road PI'OIII'Bm. It
unusua' move Tuesday, tbe Pen·
invited. For _additional information residents may call992-2161.
.tegon sent tbe aircraft carrier

month at county healih department

I

'. 1

'

about you ·
medication?
can your
'

. ·Fruth

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Pbannaci8t today:!

',

· He cares
.

ta.bodt vour h~th!

. iiONOR GUARD._: RalllM Po1t tot of l!le Amfrlcan Lellon led
lk JNIPde a&amp; tbe Rllellll! Fall I'~Wtlval ed IWardq mo...q.

.... aM local political candlllatea, were In tile parade.

.

TUESIAY
. NIGHT
' . SPECIAL

Pr Vlllted Preas International
Tile

~rd

!JIJaraine, !I kind or

l)lllttlnl billldache, •Is derived '
tram tile Grftk word "bemlkra·
Pia," meaalnl pain on the side Of
· tile bead or face.
.•

Support group- to be organized

.

Introducing High Country

.

"' NoW You Know

LeMay family resided in Meigs

I
I

)
Pr tided PreM International
Prwtdellt Bush announcing
, . . _ , on ..o~~CUng the na· ·
. .tlil'l ll•tatt clellclt. by $500
llllllae over flw years:
- if
"It II bll&amp;nced: It Is fair; and
fa 1111 view, h II what the United
-.. . . _ til Amerlca needa at this ·
.... .. tlllllltDry:"

1Dinint . _ Chllyl ONLY

pollt-.

Served with whlpp,.t
oht.....,
Uml'(. cole ot.w, hot nil end butter.
Sorrv. no aubotM- ucapt ....,~
, · · willlldditiOIIII pr~.
·

FOI JIST

$3 •s

. I

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,

. NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL

· CIOW'S F
Pl. t92•5412
·'

Y MS1A.AN1 .

PO"NY, 01.

. .Ia' ··"· . , ....... Qhbc .

.

.,

1-_c_o_Ne&gt;_•_•_•_s_..._._••__•.;,"_u.a.____c_,..;.,_....;.,....:.;________•~"'_'~.._.•

• goes
C81Tler

into. gulf area

Get natural tobacco satisfaction
· in a larger, moister. pouc~ ·
Only from High Country. .
You can't beat the taste..

.'
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Qtiote of the Day'

.

Looal news .briefs _______, U.S. aircraft

leu:w!llanagroup~,laclll!lliagthe!loutlternmgltSchooiMarclllng

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•• l!Jieesldve
aVI@!

~ w ...,!"'

· 91'
Richard
Seyler.
....

·
' ··- · Approved the Mayor's Reo.
'portfor September in the amount
of $2, 70o.50 tor fines collected.
·- Agreed to seek further
clarification from legal counsel
onanordinanceregardlngspend·
log limitations in the village.
Present were Seyler, Shank,
Werry, Baronlck, Young, Coun·
ell member .Bruce Reed, Pres!·
dent Larry Wehrung, and Clerk
Brenda Morris.

budget hits Midwest hard

'

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.

reservoir and bo06ter plant.
When asked a bout the progress
on the proposed sewa,g e treat·
ment plant, Anderson ' lnd!~ated
that the Environmental Protec· .
tlon Agency is In the process of
approving a permit to constrUct.
The estimated stert time for
the plant, according to Anderson,
1s spring or 1991.
Council member Tom Werry
asked Anderson to look into the·
possibility of grading wnus Hill
Street and Young mentioned the
need to curb a portion of Lincoln •
HlU.
1n other action, Council:
• - Passed a re.solutlon apwov·
1ng a routine transfer of $40,000
ofrom the general lund to the
street fund for current operating
!!xpenses.
- Set Trick or Treat for
October 30from 6: 30 to 7:30p.m.
in the village.
-Moved to approve a malntenance agreement of village com·
puterequlpmentln the amount of
$648.88 through NCR.
'
- Heard suuested changes to
the .propol8d fire department

T~J Dliri~is taWmaked say

~

Wiggins was honored for hls
service and dedication In the
area of natural resource conser-

CANDIDATD ON PARADE- '.fhe candkla&amp;ea .
lw P · h• Fall Feshal Queen rode on
oo..ed~ In the lesllvnl
prior to the

repreaenliJII the Pomeroy Mer·
cbante AaiOCiatlon, .appeared·
before co.unc!l to appeal for the
free parking for their customers.
.'' According to Cllapman, last
year's free parking helped
"maintain a sleady flow of
customers and provided good
public relations."
FoUgwlng the merchanta' pres·
· entetlon, council voted unan!m·
ously to suspend metercoUec:tlon
from Nov. 24 untO Dec. 27.

bratwurst, aaurkraut and Ger·
man potato salad will be 'SI!l'vid
In connection with the fes11val.
. Counc!lman ·Bryan Sbank op- .
poeed the permit, citing the
vlllaae's recent efforts to "clean· .
up" the parklnl lot area and
eliminate drinking In the parking
lot.
Powell . reminded council that
'lbe permit would not be effective
unlelaapprovedbythestete,and
said lbat II the permit were not
approved, soft drinks would be
sOld in the taakarda.
Council had the first reading on
an ordinance giving Christmas'
bonuses to full· and part-tlii\e ·
employees or the vllllge.
Two more readings wiU be
required before . the ordinance
goes Into effect.
The current weed-cutting project now ullllerway In the village
·was discussed by council, with
counc!l member Bill Young stat·
lng that he bas heard "nothing
but good comments." Council
member · Betty Baronlck re.minded council tbat tile village
still has a
way to 10" on

weellelld'l
debrll and blgh grass.
Mary Powell.
·
Administrator John
Pomeroy Sesquicentennial Coni·
Anderson told council tbat an
Wayne Schafer, RCt.D Ban·
vat!on with a wooden plaque
mlttee, told ·eouncll that the application for Community Decarved In the shape of Meigs quet Committee Cllalrman,. con· . permit would allow aaleolbeer ln Vl!lopment Bloek Grant Fund
, dueled the awards ceremony
County.
arestrlctedareuuri'oundblgthe ~ monies was submitted to the
· Also recognized by the RC&amp;D with an executive council
stage In !be mnn!ltlpil parking Meigs County CommlssloDCrs
Executive CouncU were Barbara member from each county preslot duriq tllll weekellll's Etbplc lut week.
Gaddis, Athens County; Ed Far· enting their respective awards.
Selden FelL
The monies, In the amount of
ley, Belmont County; David · Also higbllgbted'durlng the even·
In addition to beer, which will $14,000, would be spent for an
tng's activities was the recognl·
Brandt, Fairfield County; John
be sold lniOUvenlrtenkardalfthe autolllatlc control device to' be
ttpn of the 23rd anniversary of the
E. Hockman, Hocking County;
permit II approved by the state, used on the Lincoln lnll water
William Thomas, Monroe
Buckeye HUis RC&amp;D. E r
activities Included a ca
County; Jeff Shaner, lttorgail
County; Fred Powell, Noble . dinner and door prizes. En r·
tainment was provided by ..the
County; Jim Young, Perry
Barber Shop Quartet who sang
County, and .Doug .Mercer, Wa·
favorite songs during the meal. . •
shlnJrton County:

Kenny Wiggins, Pomeroy, was
one or 10 recipients of outstand·
lng service awards at the recent
Buckeye Hills Resource Conser·
vatlon and Development's nlrith
annual banquet held on the
paddlewheeler Valley Gem In
Marietta.
·
Approximately 110 RC&amp;D Ex·
ecutlve Council members and
. guests attended the affair.

.

I

Develqpmenl by Tbereo• Jobnaoa, Melp County
executive member (center), and Wayne Sebafer,
RC&amp;D banquet cllalrman.

:Wiggins presented service
-~~riWo;rd ~at -·9 th ·RC~D-Iiaifquet·~ ·~

'

· n~

· 1 Section, 10 Pages 25 Cenle
A Mullirn.dlalnc. Novil-or

Pomeroy-MiddlePort. Ohio, Tuelday, October 2, 1990

MARCH Aln FORCE BASE, Calif. -Gen. Curtis LeMay, the
, blunt· spoken warhawk who helped sm~sh Germany and Japa~,
then comll)lnded America's airborne nuclear delerrent at the
. height or the Cold War, Is dead at 83.
LeMay, a legendary soldier who ran for vice president with
GeQrge Wallace In 1968, died Monday of lleart failure at the 221M~ ·
Strategic Hospital near the · retirement bome ror Air Force
otflcen where he had spent bls decllnlnl years.
·
Regarded .u the father ot the Strategic Air Command, the
airborne arm of America's three-pronged nuclear deterrent, .
LeMay bad lived ror. a number of ~an at Air Force Vllla1e
Wetl, a retirement community about 6mlles from the SOuthern
CalifOrnia air bale.
.
'
· · He was the son of Zona and ErVJng .LeMay of Columb\ls and
·
Continued
on page 10
· ·
·
.

.

.

tekea part of that out and puts It people in the Midwest, as Lynn
Into the glint maw of the deficit. has said, are paying $1.40 a
Even things such as home - gallonlfthey'relucky,!ftheycan
beating oU, that's what lbe poor find gas that cbeap, this Is not the
In my stele have. They put a tax kind of proposal that I think Is
on that, and more money goes lor right lor the economy or right tor
the people that I represent.
oU exploration - whlcb sounds
But I think the ·thing that
good rtght now, but auess what
regions that benefits? Between bothers me the most are the
the savinp and loan and tbls bill, Medicare cuts. This is the "rural
We ml&amp;bl as well 'teke tbe hospital foreclosure act of 1990."
Midwest and j.ust strip all the This bill will result !II the closure .
money from Ita pocket, and say to of at least one bosp!tel in my
DUnoll, why don't you pay tor the congresa!onal district, and perhaps t~. And as I talk to
country.
For the old, for farmers, for · members from across the Mldw.
anyone trying to make their WilY est and other rural areas, I find
'
that they are facl'd with the same
In this nation, all this does Is
protect the stetus quo. And a thing. You just can't make this
quick nUillber should help you. deep a cut In MediCare without
Revenues are up this year four closing down hospltels and really
percent. Spending Is up 12.8 denying elderly tbe basic medi·
percent. That's the real problem. cal services they deserve.
Rep. Martin: There's one other'
This bill Is almoet all taXes. To
call a !few tax on the elderly thing l think we shotild say here.
•'"'ving" Is the cruelest hoax or This Congress for years bas been
playlq With more and . more ·
all.
·
money, and people- anyone who
Q. Con1reasman Durbin,
what's your reaction to this? votes against these big spending
Wllat are your . ~DCenis about biUs tekes poUUcal beat. People
then ar~ told "you're against
this compromlae propoeal?
A. Well, I don't tblnk this women, or children , or
budget sUillmlt alfl!8meat Is farmers." Now , though, one
thing we have . Is people are
IOini to win aay beauty conteat.
Wlten 1 take a loot at the finally saying you're going to d
propoAis to IDCreaae the aas tex have to pay for tl)!s. I say you pay
Continued on page 10 .
6n the verge or a recession wben

~:o:=:=~~J~::::t~:
.vo~et
r_p'ui_ctration
deadline Oct . .9
warships have been damaged by
. •.
"
· 'l' "-""
.·
Iraqi mi11Ues IJid Iranian mines
Aa fall telilpefltUI'II cool
addition, the office will be . which can also be compkited at
ln ~nt years.
do-.
poUtlcal campaignl heat open on Monday - ColUillbuS
the board office, explains to the
Tile nuclear-~ lnde-'-,lip IJid !be. dHdllllel far vo1er Day -from 9 a.m. untll4 p.m. · appllcaat that there ·are eleven
In

pellllebce, the first carrier 1ent rqlltratlon qldelllY IPproacb.
In~ the waterway llnc:e 197'Jue ~,.dlrectof ol tile
Melp Cciwlty Bolrd cl EleetiOna
carries a erew of about 5,000 and
some '15 combat pllllel, IDCiud·
balll. .h rwtfMer lllat voters
log F ·U Tomcat and FA-18
wbo '111111 to reP!IIr to vole or
.
cl!l!np lllelr .or address
Hornet ftabten.
· Navy leadera refilled to aend
muatdoaoonorbelbre0ctober9.
carriers Into the 1J111f dllrlna lite - at 9 p.m.
eecort operation lnvolvlq Ku·
To uallt diCIIe wllo muat meet
waltl tanlrerlln 118'1, arptqthe
t1111 dlldl!;',:,.,tljl Bolrd · of
• "' MedWIIc .
huge lblpa wo!l)d 111 a 11rae · ElletkiDI
~get In a 1111111 area and were at
StrMl will be opea tin Oetober 9
Contin~ on pap 10
· WIUI I p.m.
•

~

FryJnyeraleonotedthatablen·
tee ballotl wW be available from
October 3 ~h November 3 at
DOOD.
Applications for abaelltee bal."
Iota maybe req-ted bypbontng
the ol1lce at 11!12-:118t7.
·
Frymyer llald that the appUca·
. tlou are pneraliY mailed out to
tbol8 mq-tlnllbem wltilln a
.day or two.
·
. The allllle·page application,'

quallf)llq 1'eUOIII for voting by
abaenllll baUot.
·
AmOIIJ the qnallflcatlons tor
votlq ll)t ablenlee ballot are
heiDI 82 years o1 age or older, ·
~ awet from the county on
e!ec&amp;n ~. llolfltal, Jail or
lm11hiiiO!!al conftttement, pbyllcal 1nn.1 or dlaablllty, active
duty IUrpnllld inllltla, be!JIIa
110u worar, Of rellaloua reuona.
Elec:tlon day Ia November 6.

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