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..

'-8 I

Monday, October 16, 1990

Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

10-The Daily s8ntine1

'

Ohio Lottery

World Series
begins tonigh
at Riverfront

Pirk-3: 595
Pirk-4: 8856 .

Cards:
7-H, 4-C, 5-D, 4-S

Page4

Partly cloudy Tuead
Dl«hi, with a low Ia llle m
Ms. Partly cloudy aad
WedDesday, with llilha Ia
mid 1G&amp;•

•

e
Vol.41 , No.115
· _Copyrighted 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Tuesday, October 16, 1990

1 Section, 10 Pogeo

25 Cents

A MuHimodio Inc. N-~

Pomeroy Council OKs
easement to ODOT
'

';

'

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr

THANK YOU!
FOR 4 YEARS OF PATRONAGE
AND HOPE YOU CONTINUE
· TO SUPPORT US!
VIsit OUr Store Oil Wednesday
AluJ
Cake And Coffee With Us!

Have

,Free
: Trick-Or-Treat
:Bags On MondQy
;While They Last!

·
APPRECIATiON· A plaque was presented by the Meigs County Bikers to the Meigs Coonhunters
in appre~iation for use of their building for various benevolent and social actiyities over the past year. Here
Patsr Pri~e presented the plaque to James Stewart, Coonhunters vice presidenL Looking on are children,
Codt DaviS and Hannah Woolard, and front row, Brenda Davis, left, and Nancy Woolard, with Price and
Stewart, and back row, Jo Frye, Terry Congo or the Coon bunters, and Sherry Swisher.

...

I

COKE

President's popularity drops
WASHINGTON (UPI) -PresIdent Bush's popularity h;~s
plummeted In a month, with
nearly 1!0 percent of Afil~l'lcans
saying they feel the country Is
headed In the wrong direction, a
new poll pubHshed Tuesday,
showed.
·
The Washington Post-ABC
News Poll also Indicated Americans are losing patience with the
handling of the Persian Gulf
crisis.

2 LITER

DEUCIOUS

TEENAGE
MUTANT NINJA

"

TURT\.E
CRACKERS

oz.SJ74

~BANAN"'~·

c

.,
'

.' .

. ·-.

LB .

'

~-

~ :~

•

.. ~EDIUM YELLOW

.

C

......... 3 LB. BAG ............44
.'DNIONS
..naa YAMs
......... LB................34C
U.S. No. 1 Russet

POTATOES
15LB.
BAG

8114

1LB.

VUie
fteq

.. n.a.am
w·•~,.,
•
u
FrfMiJ

.

5 -- 1 LB. LOAVES

._..

SPR.EAD QUARTERS.......................12

.

100Z.

.·

100Z.

oz.

.

ITE:KAS BUTTERMILK BISCUITS..... JIIO
12 OZ. NATURAL HARVEST

BUDGETGOURNIET ENTREES...•I.41

ENGLISH
. MUFFINS.~......................480-

.

.

.

.

BANQUET TV DINNERS ••, .......... ~ ••

.

ooz. .
"'TIES....
BANQUET CHICKEN PAt

..,.. [II-

SNACK SIZE 12 OZ.-16 OZ. BAG

CANDYBARSASST. '1.48
loiOANIN' GEMS

CQRNFLAKES
ROBERTS 12 OZ.

/lllbl"

'

•

r:JP-.... ..,Mtlle.,......klllla
-

• t- .

VANILLA WAFERS
&amp;lilAC 13 oz.

SToRE HOURs: Monclay-SituniiY, 8 am-8 pm; SUnday, 111111-8 pm
Mike Mczrn,Jaout, OWner

IIFANI' FOIIIULA

Loo

'1.71

L;j

,..

HOAIIEL

IICIIO MEATS
COUNTRY BIW«ll6 OZ.

BO!.QGNA

Loo

..... r;J
-

C aHBROWN or

.POWDERED SUGAR

EAS10NS 320Z.
.
1DU IUCE, WHOLE, SPEAR . .

r

BLACK PEPPER
CAREY

SALT
UllBY'S290l

PEACHES

. [.:;:] kURlZ 20.5 oz.

-

MUSTARD

.....
.....

100°/o

FROM

OCT. 151HRU
OCT. 21, 1990

MOrfEY..BACK
.
'

GUARAN'l"EE
Rr. 62 NORTH

(304)

'

67~-1155

POINT PLEASANT. WV

\..

'

.

formed council that the "w buggy" on the main well needed to be serpurchased b;v the village would be viced as soon as possible. ;
picked up wtthin the week.
Council member Deity B~
Morri~ also expressed, on behalf informed council of a ~f~
of council, .appreciation 10 'the received from Sco!! Dillon of LinMeigs County Commissioners fot coin Tenace conceriling stales
its
granting of .. Community needing 10 be replaced at the foot
Deveiovment Block Grant monies of Lincoln Hill.
for the tnslllllation o(a telemetenog
. According 10 Baronick, the
system. That grant will amoupt 10 s10nes were removed for the . P'!r·
nearly $15,000.
pose of_repairing sewer lines and
The monies, which will provide were never replaced.
,
a remote control metering system at
Dillon is requesting that the
the Lincoln Hill water reservoir, stones be replaced from their curwere granted 10 lhe village earlier rent location behind the firehouse.
this monlh when CDBG funds were
In other action, Pomeroy VIllage
announced for the county.
ColDICil:
·
Mayor Richard Seyler 'reported
-discussed good comments
to council membm present that a received on the new village stn:et
water pump on lhe village's main signs;
water well had broken last week,
-lleld discussion on purchase in
and that repairs to that machinery the near future of a replacement for
was reported 10 be an estimated· the village's older police cruiser;
$7,000.
.
·
-diseussed the need for painting·
According 10 Seyler, fine sand . of directional arrows a1 the inlli-'
from the pump's filtering system , sectiQil. of West Main Street and
entered into the pump· housing and Butternut Avenue, as introduced by
caused damage 10 the pump's . Council member Bill Young;
.
motor.
-discussed the possibility of
Seyler reported that he would purchasing a welder for the ·village;
a finance commilleC meet·
contact Village Administrator John ing-set
for
Monday
at 7 p.m.
Anderson 10 investigate the
Present
at
the
meeting were
progress on repair of the equip- Seyler, Morris, Baronick,
Young,
meaL
ColDICilmen Bruce Reed · llld
The mayor indicated that lhe vilWerry and President Latry
lage was now being . ~rviced by a Thomas
Wehnmg.
' ·.•
"standby well". ani! ihat the pump

Harris to seroe 18 months on
charge .of obstructi"g justice
Instantly after being struck by a
By BRIAN J . REED
occurred, was sentenced after
· Sentinel News staff
pickup truck In Chester on the · pleading guilty to charges of
A Meigs County man was night of June 2.
aggrav11ted vehicular homicide,
sentenced _Tuesday morning In · He had been attending his high gross abuse of a corpse. and
Meigs . County Common Pleas school class reunion In Chester tampering with evidence.
Court for his Involvement In tl!e when he was struck.
Throughout the lnvestlgatlnn
· Will's body was found the and court proceedings Sl!rroundJ .une death of VIctor Will.
Douglas Harris, ~7, had m, following day In the West Shade lng the Incident, off!ctals have
tered a gull ty plea on Aug. 21 to a area of Meigs County where It credited Harris' testimony as
bill of Information filed by the had been removed from the truck being .Instrumental to both the
Meigs County Prosecuting Attor- bed and thrown over a creek arrest aild conviction of .Riggs,
ney's Office ·charging Harris · bank.
and the recovery of Will's body
Jason Riggs, 18, Reedsville, the day after the Incident.
with obstructing justice.
Following the sentencing hear-·
Obstructing justice, as named was sentenced In September to a
In the Indictment against Harris, prison sentence of7-10 yearsfor lng this morning, Harris was
Is a fourth degree felony and Is h!s participation In Will's death. remanded to the custody of the
Riggs, who testitled to driving Meigs County Sheriff ' s
punishable by a maximum sent·
ence of 18 months In prison and a the truck when the Incident Department.
fine of $2500 or both.
· Several members of W1Il's
tmmedla te family were In the
•
court gallery as Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge Fred
W. Crow III sentenced Harris 10
18 months In priSon, In accorRex 'E. Shenefield, Langsville, discussing possible policy which
dance with' a plea bargain has been named to the Ohio Farm would benefit farmers and l'llnl
agree men I reached between Bureau Policy Development Com- residents. Final recommendations
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. mittee for 1990, which met for its will be presented to, and voted all·
Story and Harris' attorney John first session recently in Columbus.
by, the Ohio Farm Bureau delegate
R. Lentes.
Shenefield has been a Farm body at the organization's annual
Assistant Prosecuting At tor· . Bureau member for 40 years and meeting November 27 and 28.
•
ney Linda R. Warner Informed currently serves as president of the
the court that the prosecutor's Meigs County Farm Bureau.
office would recommend thaf
The Ohio Farm Bureau Policy
Harris be granted shock proba- Development CommilleC coosists
tion after 90 days.
of 10 ·county ,presidents · and nine
Those family members, state trustees from throughout
through their attorney, Charles Ohio. They review policy recomH. Knight, waived their right to mendations from resource people,
make a statement to the court, which include directors of the Ohio
a.lthough permitted to do so by Department of Agriculture, Ohio
law.
' Department of Transportation and
Although no tine was Included the Ohio Depanment of Natural
!n the plea bargain agreement
Resources and the vice president
between the parties, the maxi- for agriculture at Ohio State
mum fine of $2,500 was Imposed University. There were also about
along with court costs.
1,500 policy suggestions from
W111, a Meigs County native county Farm Bw-eaus.
who lived In Canal Winchester at
The commi!!eC spends four days
the time of his death, was k!lled accepting testimony, writing and
REX SHENEFIELD

·Shenefield member
of policy committee

DeWine wants Dems . to release
names of top campaign contributo~

.

PRICES IN EFFECT

tir&lt;JIOD STAMPS
I'ERSONAL CHECKS
OUPONS
1FT CER'-I'IF-1CATES

liAISON ROYAl4 OZ.

11or. $1 19
. ' s KING SIZE BREAD
.
. ................. ~.............
. ·~........2.LOAVES
STORCK
•

w~c.

-

·

Lao

..

1

IMITATION SHREDDED MOZZARELLA;ISO

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

d.Ug.charges

•J

-

DAKOTA BREAD DOUGH........... •41

oz.

Jewell sent~nced on

By BRIAN J. REED
ment-against Jewell is the result of
"We're batting a thousand",
Sentinel News Starr
a year !!lid a half investigation Story said. "I hope that we have
· The . eleventh of 13 defendants being conducted by the BCI, the made a major-dent in dru~ ttaffick·indicted on drug cluuges earlier this Meigs County Prosecuting Attar- ing, especially cocaine lnlfficking
summer, a previously convicted ney and the Meigs County Sheriff's in Meigs County."
··
drug offender, entered a g)!ilty plea Department.
The twelfth mdividual who was
before Meigs County Common
Jewell, who was represented in indicted in July is scheduled to go
Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow ill last coun by Athens AtiOmey John to coun next week.
week.
Lavelle, was sentenced to 3-15
Tony Hutton, 31, of Rutland was
. Terry Menford Jewell, 59, for- years in prison and a fine of $3,000 indicted on one count of aggravated
merly of Langsville, pled guilty to on lhe second degree felony and 6- trafficking in cocaine.
two cluuges of trafficking in 25 years and a $5,000 fine on the .- The cluuge, as listed in the in·
cocaine, one charge being a- first first degree count
dicunent against Hunon, is a third
degree felony and one charg~J a
Jewell is currently serving a sen- degree felony.
, felony of the second de~.
tence of three and a half years at
In addition to the I 2 indiclments
According 10 Metgs County the Hoelting Correctional Instiru- filed in July, a secret indictment
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.' tlon on a previous drug- conviction. . continues 10 pend agaiilst another
Story, Jewell sold cocaine 10 an
Story reports that Jewell was defendant whose name has not ·
. agent of the Ohio Bureau of seDienced in August on that cluuge. · been released by the prosecutor's
Criminal Investigation and IdentifiProsecutor Story said Monday office.
,
cation on two separate ocassions in that he is Jlleased with the re~ults of
Prosec01or
Story
said lhat inApril, 1989.
.
the mvesbgauon and resulung in- dividual has not been arrested and
Story said that the July indict· diclments.
is believed 10 have fled the state.

• . PRODUCE DEJ'ART.MEN'I'f
"'........
.f. GOLDEN RIPE

--~ z

Asked If the country Is •'gener- had been a month ago, the Pos 1
ally going In the right direction, said.
or do you feel things have gotten
Tile__ppll suryeyed~,006 adults
pretty seriously off track," '79 .nijtlonwltle ·Oct. 10·14 and 756
percent _said the country was on adults nationwide Oct. 5-7. The
the wrong track, while 19 percent . survey had a ·margin of error of
disagreed.
about 3 percentage points.
Forty percent said they disapThe percentage of Americans ·
prove of the way Bush Is handling who belteve the economy Is
his job as president, while 56 worsening t.ncreased from 64
percent said they approve, 19 percoo:nt to 77 percent In the past
percentage points lower than 11 month.

A resolution granting a temporary easement 10 lhe Ohio
Department ·of Transportation was
approved by Pomeroy Village
Council when it met in regular session on Monday night at Pomeroy
VIllage Hall.
.
The granting of the easement follows a request from ODOT for use
of lhe former sewage treatment
plant property near Minersville for
the parlcing of its equipment and
vehicles.
The depanment plans to use the
property when consttuction begins
on the Nye Avenue intersection
project.
Council also heard the second
reading of three proposed ordinances.
, The.first ordinance concerns the
annual Christmas bonuses for vii·
lage employees, while the second
pertains to the salary of the current
village clerk.
The lhird ordinance, if approved,
would allow lhe village to vacate
Steep Street in Pomeroy:
The Steep Street issue was approved by residents with property
on lhat street prior to the introduc·
tion of lhe ordinance, and costs of
the vacation action will be borne by
tllo~ owners. .
Village. Clerk Brenda Morris in-

'

.

'

By United P.-- laternauonal
election campatglt made public
Rep. Michael DeWine, the the names ot those who have
Republican nominee for lleuten: donated more than $10,000.
ant gcvernor, called on the
Meanwhile, In Cleveland, DeTOYS FOR TOTS • Hundreds of·toys to be dlstrlb•ted by tile Salvation Army at Cbrlstmastlme opposing side Monday io release mocratic gubernatorial nominee
have beeD contributed lly tile Melp County Bikers • the ftlll1t Ill their annual toy run. Representatives the names of top contrtbulnrs to Anthony Celebrezze Jr. told a
rrom tile Bikers were 011 lumd to praent tbe toys to Don Wl~::f the Salvation ArmJ and ller volunteer Its campaign.
assistant, AliDa Lemley, r!Pt. In the Jll'OUP from the left were c
ren, Codl Davis and Hatlnab Woolard,
At a press confetence In business executives' meetlag he
and .Nancy Woolard, Jo Frye, Sherry Swisher, Patsy Prk:e, and Breada Dam Appllc:atlou ror foocl bu- Columbus, DeWine said his run- wanta to set up a new state center
kets and toys ror uaderprlvlltaed children Will be accepted In November and DMember at the Salvation ning mate, George . Volnovlch, · to help businesses d(\velop envirArmy. Toys are sdll be collected by tile Blken.
\
·
,
~,has . twice during the. ·general onmental techriologles.
·~

1

y

-

Melinda Swan, Celeb1'1!Z21!'s
campaign pres's secretary, said ..
the voluntary disclosure of con· ..
trtbiltors by Volnovlch was a
"public relations ploy" and a -.
voluntary smokescreen" be- :
. cause there Is no requirement .
.that the-ttlaclosure be accurate.. ,
"We would have been happy to ·
do It If It were put Into law and
enforced," &amp;tid Swan.
'
1

�..
TU81day, October 16, 1990

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

/

Commentary
.

.

.

Eagles rally to defeat

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepot1, Ohio
Tuesday, October 16, 1990

.

By JOE CJALINI
Barnett and on field goals of 38,
UPI Sporls Writer
30, 29 and 19 yards by Roger
PHn.ADELPHIA (UPI) -An- Ruzek·.
thOny Toney scored on a six-yard
Mlnnesuta, 1-5·, scored on Ganrun with 3:01 to play Monday non's touchdown passes of 42 and
night to llfl the Philadelphia 78 yards to former Eagle Crls
:E:agles to a 32-24 come-from- Carter, on Rick Fenney's onebehind victory over the Mlnne- · yard run and on a 33-yard field
sola VIkings.
gqal by Donald Igwebulke,
Toney's touchdown came one
Toney's touchdown came only
play after Mlnnesota'·s Rich 59 seconds after Philadelphia
Gannon fumbled the ball when he had closed within 24-22 on Cunwas hit by Seth Joyner. Clyde nlgham's 40-yard pass to
Simmons returned the ball 10 Barnett.
yards and Toney scored on the
. Cunningham's pass was tipped
next play to put Philadelphia by the VIkings' Michael Brim,
ahead 29- 24 and band tbe VIkings bounced of! Phtladelphla's Cal- ·
their fourth straight loss.
vln Williams and was grabbed In
Philadelphia, 2-3, also scored mld-atr by Barnett, who shuffleon Randall Cunningham touch- stepped Into !'he end zone.
down passes of 19 yards to Calvin
After Toney's touchdown, FrizWilliams and 40 yards to Fred zell Intercepted a ·Gannon pass

.

Th~

Daily Sentinel

Pay raise ·s aid dirty issue
'

l11 Coart Slreet

Pomero:r, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTEBII8T8 OF TID!: MEIGS·MASON .tREA
A~

S!m~ f"'T"L--L--rti""'"'E!!!d·~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

an

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gee~ral

WASHINGTON - More than
any other member of Congress,
Rep. Newt Gingrich, R·Ga. , ts
the one that Democrats would
early
like to see dispatched to
retirement at the polls on Nov. 6.
The only person who can do that
Is David Worley, the Democrat
running against Gingrich.
So why hasn't the National
Democratic Party given Worley
a penny for bls campaign? Wby
hasn 't Worley gotten so much as
a friendly phone call from the
party? Because be has Ignored
the contemptible pact that both
parties agreed to - that their ·
candidates would not ·use the
massive congressional pay raise
against one another In this .
·eJection.
'l'he agreement was struck last
· November In writing and signed
by tn~ natio_n al Democratic and
Republican leadership. In It,
both sides agree that the pay
raise ts not"an appropriate point

Manarer

PAT WHITEHEAD
!ulstaat Publlahor/Conlroller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclallon.
LE i.i ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less ttuin 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&gt;
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addresslng.bsues, not personal!-.
ties.

Letters to the editor
Support sought for departments

of criticism In the coming
campalgils."
·
House lncumbants who voted
themselves a $35,000 raise more than most of their COII$tltuents make In a year - would
prefer tbat !'he Issue be forgotten.
Worley Ignored the pact and,
more than any other candidate In
the country, has used the pay
raise as !'he centerpiece of his
campaign. He disbursed fake
$35,000 bills around Georgia with
the slogan ''Boot Newt" beneath
Gingrich's mug.
When Worley ran against Gin·
grlch In 1988, the Democratic ·
Party was behind him ioo percent. He received the maximum
$50,000 _contribution from the
· Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.
The committee told us that It Is
honoring the spirit of the agree:
ment with the Republicans, but It
Is not withholding funds from
Cal}dldates for that reason alone.

lack Anderson and Dale Van Atta·
nien why IS Worley · suddenly a the floor for a vote. Rep. WIU!am
pariah? No comment.
Ford, D-Mich., the chairman of
· . The pact, which only the the committee "Isn't going to let
Democrats seem to be taking tt out of committee," JacObs told
serl(lusly, Includes some lan- us. Ford ))ad no comment.
guage gu atanteed to ~ag the
The pay raise Is also being
voters: "This agreement demon- attacked from the grass roots by
strates our commitment In help- consumer advocate. Ralph Nader
Ing to provide a 'positive political whose group, the Congressional
. and ethical environment tn which Accountability Project, Is tourqualllled people can serve In Ing ·the counlr)t with the slogan,
government." In other words, If "Let's Repeal the Congressional
It threatens tbe paycheck , It'S
Pay Grab." ·
dirty campaigning.
Meanwhile, In Georgia, Gin·
Rep. Andrew Jacobs, D-Ind., grlch Is defending himself
accepts no money from .the against Worley by saying that the
Democratic Congressl~nal Cam- . pay raise wtll cost him money
paign Committee, so he can because Congress agreed to cut
afford to Ignore the rules. Jacobs out honoraria at the same time. If
has proposed legislation to re-: thai Is such a compelltng argupeal the pay raiSe, but he told us ment, then· why did bOth parties
the committee overseeing It will ban the subject rather than tout
make sure the blll never gets to their noble sacrifice?

Dear Editor~ ·
rely on the support of'lvoters to
pass tax levies to buy equipment, ·
Another Fire Prevention Week
bas come and gone with Utile
or simply to operate .
fanfare, and as I realize that-this
And even with tali money It Is
IS probably the only time of the
necessary !or each department
year that most people give any · to have some sort of fund raiser
thought to the fire service or the
to make up the difference belocal !Ire department, I thought I
tween the tax money and what Is
e~acTt.V
would take a few minutes to write
required to maintain a btgh level
this letter.
of quailtY In the department.
Fo~
The fire service In general goes
Although the cost of providing
fire protection Is a problem, the
unnoticed during the day to day
routine operation, and the
btggest ·cont!ern of most' departments Is the shortage of avalla·
months of Inconsequential fire
and EMS runs between the more
ble personnel. As older members
serious ones that make the
are leaving or taking a less active
headlines. However the probrole, and young people are
!ems faced by local fire departleaving Meigs County for jobs or
ments, In dally operations and In
to further tbelr education, fire
maintaining the proper training
departments are · seeing their
and equipment, are becoming
active rostera drop to dangerous
harder to cope with every day.
levels, especially during the.
J3elng a firefighter for the past
daytime working houra. Many
16·years, I have witnessed many
active members are !acing the
cli'anges and Improvements In
very real posSibility of "Burfl(e equipment and training.
nout" where they have simply
Some of t!te latest changes,
had all they can take, due to the
alfhough for the better, are · decrease In memberahlp com·
pounded with the Increase In
strillnlng the capabtlllles of most
sm_all departments, sucb as the
iralnlng requirements, fund rals-.
tng, and other duties to take all of
ones In this. area.
One example Is the new regulatheir free time.
tlons concerning protective cloThe Immediate need Is for
~
•
thing for flre!tghttng. In order to
dedicated peop~ willing to docomply with these regulations,
nate lime to protect their communlties and Meigs County. The
most I! not all of the existing
protective clothing wUI have to
most valuable toolS In the fire
hi!· replaced. Complete outfits
services are the .Individual fire~t In the range of $000 to $1000
fighters. Without them all of tile
pei' person. The burden of this
other equipment Is useless.
expense rests with the fire
Please support your local !Ire
ttWartments or l'h~ local governdepartment and EMS service
Int body, with only minimal
through their fund raisers, tax.
uslstance available from outlevies, and other acttvtties. Or
slae agencies.
even better, If you are at least 18
; )Vhen expenses such as tbls are
years of age and out of high
Aren't these super reasons? un-prlvatlzlng the economy.
In Massachusetts, voters swho
BUDAPEST and LONDON allcled to the normal operating school, drop by your local fire
They answer everything except
There
Is
bad
news
and
good
·news
that
democracy IS self-renewing,
In
the
land
area
now
known
as
co'ilts and the cost of replacing
department to volunteer your
what
caused
the
other
nine
on
the
global
economic
front.
the
Soviet
Union,
there
will
be
and
even
Democrats vote against
~lpment that wears out or
spare time to help the communpost-war. recessions.
too
much
dumb government.
are
not
only
different,
but
of
markets.
As
CIA
man
Jack
Ryan
They
~mes obsolete, _operating a
lty stay safe;
(Flash!
Experts
unanimously
Elsewhere, the "Uruguay
says to tbe Soviet submarine
fi&amp; department becomes a very
Fire Chief Jeff Darst different sorts. The good news ts .
agree
that
the
new
congressional
more
Important
than
the
bad
Round''
of trade negotiations, the
.
commander
at
the
end
of
"The
ell;penstve business that must
Middleport Fire Dept.
summit budget deal, which may Hunt for Red October," Welcome
most ambitious amity and sannews.
or may not actually pass the to the new world, sir."
The most publicized economic
Ity, ts moving silently ahead.
Congress, may or may not yield a
'news concerns recession coming
In Baghdad, Ills dawning upon
In Prague, Mrs. Thatcher,
recession,
sooner
or
later.)
to
America,
and
perhaps
reces·
says
there
will
he
·
a
band
of
Saddam
Hussein, the bandit who
Dear Editor:
deceased spouse had been the
Upon
such
a
playing
field
of
slon
coming
everywhere.
markets
democracies
and
free
tried
to
steal stablltty, that be
· :I'hiS election, Ohio voters will
one qualifying !or the reduction.
certitude,
mortals
may
cavort.
The
roots
of
the
gloom:
soaring
stretching
from
"the
West
Coast
will
pay
!or
II. Other bandits will
tiave an opportunity to determine
Issue 3 would aiJow casino
wUJ
explain
why
Accordingly,
I
oil
prices
due
to
the
Gulf
criSis,
a
of
the
U.S.
right
across
to.
the
011 prices will
think
twice.
tJie quality of
In Ohio for
gambling In up to elgbt locations
the
economic
situation
Is
much
Far
East."
·
Soviet
sluggish
economy,
plummeting
decline.
slicceeding generations.
Saddam
may soon be
In Ohio.
·
than
It
·seems.
In
Budapest,
Prime
·
MiniSter
very
dead.
better
stock
prices
and
real
estate
: ~y voting "Yes, Yes, No" on
As caretakers of 'God's crea·
Recent economic philosophiz- Joseph Antall says \hat · the ·
The bad news Is mostly transiJta!lot Issues 1, 2, 3, Ohioans can
tlon, we are entrusted with the values, higher Inflation and unIng
restates a powerful theme: central Europe must pay attentory. The good news Is now deep
make housing more accessible
responsibility of doing what we employment, bad bands and bad
What makes people prosper Is a tion to "the Atlantlc.ldea." He ts
In the economic and political
ani! affOrdable fOr our citizens- can to make our living environ- loans.
culture of political freedom and talking about America, freedom,
culture.
Behind the headlines we get
especially low- and mlddlement a place of safety and
free markets, which buttress and .markets.
• .
The global population will
~ome and elderly citizens security, where we can grow In profundity: Experts say we may
each other and buttress other
or may not already be In a
On Oxford Street In Londo!\,
double , If additional ·people ar·
and can keep casino gambling
the fullness of God's Image.
roots of bulllshness - stability, the stores are jammed, the
rive In cultures that are free,
qU! of Oblo.
.
we· at the Ohio Council of recession, If we are not, we may
motivation
and
creativity
among
merchandise
or
may
not
be
In
one
soon,
such
a
sensation!!!.
tl!e
·'lssue l ·opens the door to decent
they
wUJ advance the sum of
Churches believe these . three
service remarkal)l!l !!lid typl· . global well-being. Every once In
anil af!orda ble housing for many Issues address the quality of life recess Jon may or may not _be them.
The culture . of freedom and cally rendered py clean-cut )'lip&lt;)Jtloans without Increasing
a while, a cliche Is accurate:
we want for our children and mild, may or may not 'be long,
markets
Is
expanding
at
remar·
we
or
may
·
not
know
the
pte
clerks
with
p~I
I:IJI!!sh
They
gain, we gain.
and
t!ll&lt;es. Passage would allow the
grandchildren, and votes of
kable
speed.
Here
Is
a
medley
of
accents.
Mally
~
tbeb'
parents
It's
not all peache5. Free
remedy.
Thanks.
ie,Islature to enact laws for
"Yes, Yes, No" on Issu~s 1, 2 and
validation
from
a
recent
short
there
Is
no
dearth
of
Luckily,
Jteus!ng It Is now prohibited !rom 3 are of tile.utmost' Importance If
. came f.r om "~tail; Talk about
economies stUJ seem to be
trip overaeas:
motlva~n.
opinion regarding the cause of
d4ing by the Constitution..
cyclical. There Is stDI political'·
we want to build a better and
In Hungary, the debatels about
this long, short, shallow, deep,
Back In America, Congrees
volatility. Debt must be paid.
; 'lssue 2 enables certain survlv- brighter Ohio.
Tbstc~Je~jam, IIIII· :pro .and COD,
.may~ an lntelllgent Immigrareal, not-real recessl(/n. The.cwes
There has been no moratorium
Iritl spouses to maintain the
Sincerely yours,
on stupidity or venality.
b6mestead tax reduction, I! the
we hear most about are: greed, .l)lu.t .wbldl-.Jor j18!'ty·:ln11!1re tion bill, raising the number of
Carlton N. Weber
akllled
legal
tmmlgranls.
They
debt,
deficits,
LBOI,
profligacy,
We may, ·or may not, bave
·
s
n.
Execu tlve Director
· .1e
·MJ:s. :'flll~ber do more for an economy than a · some short-term difficulty. It's
junk
bonds,
corruption,
R!lu4'
•
A lot to be proud of
not great, only better.
ntsm, Thatcherlsm .
naay be tn poUtk:~ ~. bllt capital gains tax reduction.
••
bel: op110nenta darfi i!ot Wk jlbolit
In extra curiiculat acttvttles :
i::am very pleased to be able to
Mr. Tony Dingess has done
slltlre with the parents, residents
such
a wonderful job with the
arid taxpayers of Meigs ~1 --"
hand. This balld Is one ofthe best
· sCiiools the many good things
In this area, maybe even the
tllat are taking place In our dispears not to be Intimidated by
WASifiNGTOI'; (NEA) :...
· ~~;~f':/ta,grelsslon by either
state. We all can be proud of
trict. Let's begin with the Acathe military buildup or the
two
major
holidays
at
the
~a('
~t.&lt;
Saddam
these kids.
demics. ·
trading blockade.
each year .have vlrtuatt¥ U.Wt~r'
The Girls Volleyball Team:
.l. Many students take the A.C.
almost certainly will not
Bush's brilliant orchestration
sal significance In our IOCiety Just super. A job wen done, girlS.
T·.:test across the nation In prepabut lhe upcoming Thanksgiving be able to satllfy the demands of of those measures has gained revenues.
A job well done by Mr. Ash and
ration for entering college. The
But clandestine Imports of ·
and Christmas will be especially an.Increasingly ImPatient nation him global arelalm. His Initial
Mr. Harrllon. We all can be
D!lllonal average score tor last
strategy of produclnl an aweby 'rbankaglvlng. Moreover, a
Important
for
President
Bush.
goods
needed fOr Iraq's survival
proud of. these girls.
year was 18. Meigs Local stu- by dhows, the small trading
It will be on those occasions wltbdrawal by Cbrlltmu ts only some show of force without the
The Golf Team: Coach Krawdents had an aver are scorl!'o!22,
· u.se of force waa precisely the
boats that ply the Persian Gulf,
that domestic p:essure will begin marginally more Ukely.
sczyn and these young.men ceror:4 points higher than the nabold yet restrained response the and by trucks and cameiJ enterto
mount
to
"bring
the
boys
(an
!I
Auumlng
tllat
the ptesldentls
tainly; did a wonderful job In wintlq)lal average.
belatedly .considerations . In- situation required.
girls) home" from the Middle
Ing the country through remote
ning
the T.V.C Championship.
When the level of ability ts
East, where more than 100,000 volved (wblc:b he was not on
But
nobody
knows
whether
border
crossings - are likely to
ctJinpared wttb the level of · Another job well done. Jamie I,ltU.S. troopa have been dlapatcbed • Labor Day), he would not make Iraq's wnt was strengthened or continue.
tle told n\e back In Augtlst Ibis
ai:blevement our 4th, 5th; and 8th
his traditional holiday retreata to weakened by the eight years of
Supplementing those products
was tbelr year.
llt4dera scored at or above state
deprivation Ita people endured
tbe family ctJmpoulld In Maine.
are
food and other commodities
The Cl'081 country team, foot- years. This money cannot be
a~race In the areas ot· reading
during the war with Iran. Thus on hand when the embargo was
Indeed,
White
Haute
oHiclals
ball teams, cheerleaders, every- used for any ware Increase fOr
ami math on tile state mandated
already are hlnt'lng o( a Bush far, there Is no reason to dispute
Initiated ll.lld stocks plundered
one, bas bad a super year. We all any employe. It can be used only
teits last spring.
visit to the troopa 011 Tbanlclgtv- Puueln's claim !bat his country from conquered Kuwait. The
ahould be proud of these achlj!ve- for lmprovementa of our build·
3- We had a dozen students In
lnl. Tbat wm buy blm some time,
Is prepared fOr additional sacribest available estimates suggest
ments.
lngs or buses.
V«atlonal programs who placed
but the confrontatiOn wltb Iraq Is fice and sufferlnr.
that, with rationing, Iraq can
We, the parenta, residents and
I would like to·ask you to supor~on In lkUI competition at the
Moreover, the economic sanerap!dJY uaumlng lhe charactersus.taln ltselt under current con·
taxpayers, wm •be going to the . port this levy for the benefit of
RUJonal and State Ieveli last
Istics of a stalemate.
Ilona
Imposed
against
Iraq
are
dltlons fOr six to elgbt montba.
poJIJ to vote l'hll comlnr election, oiJr children and grll.lldcblldren,
year. One of our students won the
HUIIeln, a despot cold and likely to produce only mixed
In thlli country, Bush may be
Nov. 61'h. The MelaB Local &amp;:boo I for the studenta w11o have
state competition.
.
calculel'lna
enougb·
to
routinely
·
resultl.
Exports
of
crude
oil,
able
to successfully deal with the
fl*e th!Dp allow that we are · District will have on the ballot a 4 ' worked 10 bard to gtve us all order the summat)' execu tiOna of whlcb earlier accounted tor 95 current
standoff on Tbanlclgtv.
mm (no new tax tor the tax tbesa tblnp that we bave to be lllbordlnatel llllpected of being percent of Ita foreign exchange Ina aad Cbrlatmu
produclq JWults whlcb are
In 1990 but be
payer) levy !or 5 yean tllat proud of today,
above the av«ace In many
leu tbu ablolutely loyal to him, earnlnp, appear to bave been alm01t certainly cannot ftnesie
Robert Barton,
arau, Collep Prep and Voca· would aenerate S400,000 llollan
baa emerged u a fOrmidable almolt totally staunched, dep~lv· Its perpetuation to Ea1tm1 and
per yur or $2 million over the 5
·Melp Local &amp;:llooJBoard
tiOnal.
opponent. ~ally, "he aplng Iraq ~ t80 billion per day In
Memorial Day In 1991.
·

SaY,

NoW THaT We.'f?e
t--i'IRRieD, WHaT i$ iT
THaT You Do

a

l.iVit.JG?

....

Things are not grea~ only

bett~r _~_att_en_be~-=-'15

~ =; Feels issues. address qoolity of life .

life

....

_
,.,.lid,

..

.·

Bush m•t ·

· way to bridge the gulf .

1:11.(

Robert Walters

:1.

I

I·

.•

r

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

BYARS ~TOPPED - Pblladelpbla'1 Keith
Byars ( 41) · Is caugbt between Minnesota's
linebacker Ray Barry (left) Bile! safety Darrell

fuWngton (rqbt) after making a 4--yard cain
durlnc second quarter play Monday night. The
Eacle• won, 3Z.Z4, (UPI)
··

As, Pirates, Mets dominate
UPI's 1990 All-Star teams
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The. outfielder Darryl Strawberry,
Oakland Athletics, Pittsburgh left-handed. pitcher Frank Viola
Pirates and New York Mets each and relief plf;Cher John Franco.
named three players to United
Press International's 1990 AmerRound.Jng out the AL team are
Ican and Natlonal League All- first baseman Cecil · Fielder of
Star teams Monday In voting Detroit, second baseman Juno
conducted of UPI's baseball Franco of Texas, shortstop Alan
correspondents.
· Trammell of Detroit, third baseThe A's were represented on man Kelly Gruber of Toron.to,
the AL squad by outfielders outfielder Ken Griffey Jr. of
Rickey Henderson and Jose . Seattle, catcher Carlton Fisk of
Canseco and right-handed Chicago, left-handed pitcher
pitcher Bob Welch. The Pirates Chuck Finley 9f Calltornla, relief
named outfielders Barry Bonds pitcher Bobby Thigpen of Chiand Bobby Bonilla and right- cago and designated hitter Dave
handed pitcher Doug Drabek to Parker of Milwaukee.
the NL team and the Mets were
Others named to the NL team
represented on the NL squad by are first baseman Eddie Murray

'

·of Los Angeles, second baseman
Ryne Sandberg 'ofChlcago, shortstop Barry Larkin of Cincinnati, .
third baseman Matt Williams of
San Francisco and catcher Benito Santiago of San Diego.
The closest votlng In the AL
was at catcher where Fisk won
by only two votes over Sandy
Alomar Jr. of Cleveland. In the
NL, Strawberry nipped Len
Dykstra of Philadelphia by only
one vote tn the battle for the third
outfield position.
Twenty-three UPI baseball
correspondents participated In
the voting and Henderson and
Sandberg wer11 tl)e only players
named on every ballot.

Cooper again feeling heat at OSU
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio State coae!h John Cooper
was on the hotseatagalnMonday
for his play-calling late In Saturday's 27-27 Big Ten tie with
Indiana.
Cooper was widely criticized
two weeks ago for agreeing to
end the Ohio State-Southern
California game wl!h 2: 36 1'1!malntng and the Buckeyes trailIng 35-26 In the midst of a
thunderstorm.
In the closing minutes at
Indiana Saturday, Cooper reversed a play call by offensive .
coordinator Jim Colletta with 51
seconds remaining and the Buckeyes with a third · ilnd seven
situation at th.e Ohio State 23.
· Colletto called a pass play from
the· press box, but Cooper,
standing on the sidelines, called
tor a draw play. Raymont Harris
was stopped for no giltn, the
. Buckeyes punted and time ranout on Indiana.
•'In my opinion, we bad a better
chance of moving the football
down the field running the play
that we ran rather than throwing
the football," Cooper explained
Monday at hts . weekly press
luncheon.
"Indllina was In a nickel
defense, playing what we call
brae kat coverage," added
Cooper. "They were doubling
both of our wide receivers and

(USPS I - )
A Dtvloloo ol Mlllllme&amp;, Joe.

Monday
through Friday, Ill Court Sl., PomerOy, Oblo, by the Oblo Valley Publlshlllf Company/Multimedia, Inc.,

guilty to DWI

Published every attemooo,

Pomeroy, Ohio f5769, Ph. 992-2156. !lecond eta11 J)Oitale paid at PommJ)',
Ohio.

Member: United Preas International,
Inland Datly Pl't'll A•oclatlaa aad tbe
Oblo Newspa~AaoelatloD. Natlollal

eseatattve, Br~am

Newspaper Sa es, 733 'Third AWDill,

New York, New York 10017.

.

POS!'MASTER:
Send ·Ill
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Pomeroy, Ohio - 8VB8CBIPTION IIATICII
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No sublcrlptlon• by mao permitted In
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. SUS MIUtN MATINEES SATUIIIAY I SIIIM.Y
S2 . J5 IAIU.II 111;Nf JUESO..Y
(UCEVJ •MJ5r•)

001: a= •• iiN •

,,

j

:::::J

BREAKS THROUGH - PbOadelpbla running back Anthony
Toney (25) breaks through the Minnesota defense,ashesUpsaway
!rom llnebacket AI Nop (left) for a six-yard gain In the first
quarter of Monday night's game In Phlladelphla. Toney laler
scored a touchdown lu the fourth quarter to push the Eagles to a
32-:U comeback victory, (UP I)

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'·.

and returned It 37 yards to the:
VIkings' 5. Two plays later,
Ruzek kicked a 19-yard field goal
. for a 32-24 l!lad with 1: 53 to play.
After falling behind 9-0 In !'he first
quarter, the VIkings scored three
unanswered touchdowns to take
a 2i-9 lead by halftime.
Gannon found Carter, who was
released by the Eagles on Sept. 4
and claimed by the VIkings on
· walvf'!rs, for . the · first of his
touchdowns on a flea-flicker
play. Gannon ha:nded the ball off
to Herschel Wl!lker, who tossed It
back to the quarterback, who
found a wide-open Carter for a
42-yard touchdown with 5: 22 left
In the first Quarter.
Carter, who · caught 11 touchdown passes for Philadelphia
last season, entered the game
with only two receptions for 23
yards.
The VIkings went ahead 14-9 on
Fenney's one-yard run wltb 7:14
to play In the secolld period as the
VIkings moved 57 yards In 11
plays.
Minnesota needed only three
plays to cover 96 yards, capped ,
by Gannon's 78-yard . scoring ;:
strike to Carter with 2: 45 left tn ·
the first half.
On the first play, Gannou
passed to Walker, who appeared
to fumble the ball to Philadelphia
but the officials ruled he ·was'
down by contact and the VIkings; :
retained possession.
·
Two plays later, Carter got .·
behind Philadelphia's Izel Jen- ·
klns and caught Gannon's pass '
for a 21-7 Minnesota lead.
Philadelphia closed within 21. i2 on Ruzek's 30-yard field goal' ·
with 8: 47 to play In the third .
quarter.

446 4514

. OFFEI GOOD THIU
OCTOBII 20, 1990

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio State lallback Carlos Snow
pleaded guilty Monday to a
drunken driving charge and bad
his driver's license suspended for
180 days.
In exchange !or the guilty plea
eQtered In FrankUn County Mu·
nlclpal Court, a second charge of
drunken driving and failure to
control his vehicle was dropped,
Judge Robert Wasyltk suspended a 180-day JaU sentenre
. and placed the Cincinnati native
on probation for one year, The
judge also ordered Snow to
complete a three-day alcoholism
program, and fined him $400 plus
court cos lB.
S
22
b ged fie
now, , was c ar
a rhe
drove bls car Into a gasollne
. pump alld a wall at a servlre
.: station near the OSU campus
, June 22. A breath teat ahowed hla
blood alcohol level was 0.17
percent. A driver who tesiB 0.1
percent ts ctJIIIidered drllllk In
Ohio.
Snow; who II sitting out the 1990
season while recovertna tram hlp
aurpry, ts expected to return to
the Buclteyei next year.

•

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

Snow pleads

The Daily Sentinel

Advertll...,

•
At the time, I did what I thought
was best for our football team.
Given the ~me situation, I'd
make the same decision again.
Pert&lt;Xt."
.
The Buckeyes led Indiana 27-17
after three quarters and between .
quarters, members of the Buck·
eye defense held up four fingers,
slgnltylng, Cooper said, they
planned to dominate the fourth
quarter.
Following the game, IU coach
Bill Mallory and some Hoosier
players said the·four fingers only
tended .to fire them up.
"That stuff doesn't bother
me,"
s~ld Cooper. "Acknowledg"If you guys go to l'he players
Ing
our
fans doesn 't bOther me as
after the game ask 'did you want
as
you back It up. That's
long
to plsy for a tie ora win,' what do
what
I
told
our players -back It
you think the player Is going to
up.'
If
you're
going to hold up four
say," said Cooper. "Sure, some
of the wide receivers would fingers that you're going to
dominate the fourth quarter, do
rather you throw them the ball.
It.
Don't go out there and let them
But the running backs probably
the fourth quarter. If
dominate
would rather carry the ball.
you
say
It,
mean It."
"Our foolhall team needs to
Cooper
called
Indiana "a' good
worry about their position," said
football
team."
Cooper. "Take care of your own
''It's not the old Indiana team
position rather than worry about
that
Ohio State used· to beat up on
what decisions the head coach
all
the Ume," ·Said Cooper.
and assistant coaches are mak· ·
"Their
ability to take the football
lng. They need to worry abOut
their own play. If some of them and run right at us ts was one of
bad played a little better we the most disappointing things
wouldn't be In that sltuatiQ~.
.. that happened during the game."
usure.'' said Cooper, "every!&gt;
ody wants to gamble, but they
want to gamble with my money .

playing man underneath against
the other guys with l'he safety tn
the middle of the field.
"You're either going to throw
the ball to one of your backs
across the middle or you're going
to. run what we ran, the draw
play. I also thought there was a
lot less risk -Involved running that
type of play than throwing the
football."
Cooper said there was no
disagreement with Colletto on
the play call and downplayed
negative comments made by
some of the players following the
game.

v·

�Page 4--Tha Daily Sentinel

Tuesday. October 16. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Oakland, Cincinnati square
off in 87th World Series
left· handed hitters Paul O'Ne!U has .made a habit of performing
· CINCINNATI (UPI) - On the
ev~ of t.lte 87th World Series,
In right field and Hal Morris at brilliantly when It matters most.
'.'In tllese kinds of games I
Cincinnati · Reds Manager Lou · first base In Game 1 against
Oakland right -hander Dave believe I tiave just as gQOd or a
Plnlella decided Eric Davis
better chanc·e of beating
would remain his club's cleanup
Stewart.
Lefty-swinging catcher Jeff anyone;'' said Stewart, a ~er
hitter and not bat leado!f against,
Reed, though, Is expected to of seven of his last eight postsea·
the Oakland Athletics.
·. ,
But to put it more accurately ,It
begin on the bench. Joe Oliver son decisions.
Rljo, who came to the Reds
seems the decision was made for
batted just .179 against rlgl!l·
hlm. Davis, you see, is refusing to
banders this season but wlll from Oakland In a 1987 traa"e"\or
even consider a move up In the
probably be behind the plate slugger Dave Parker, went 14·8
with a 2.70 ERA durtng the
order.
because of his strong arm.
"I'm not leading off," he said
Rickey Henderson - now regular season. Last week he
Monday following batting prac·
here's a guy who enjoys leading · criticized the A's for mlstlsing
lice at Riverfront Stadium. "I
off - will be the focus of Oliver's hlm during his stint In Oakland,
don't see any reason why I should
attention. The outfielder swiped but Monday Md nothing but
change the way I approach the a league-best 65 , bases ln. 75 praise lor h~ former club.
"They ·bave a great team, an
attempts In 1990 and topped the
game.
" (Clean up) Is where I've been
majors with a .439 on-base awesome team," he said. ''They
are a team you want t9 face. U
hitting my whole career, almost.
percentage.
you beat the Oakland ~~~ou've
I've been producing In the
Oliver said he welcomes the beaten a great team ...
four-spot for five years."
With each learn sporting a
DiiVls, bothered by a sore chance to gun down Henderson,
shoulder, produced just four hits who Is just three steals shy of strong bullpen, 'tbe key to victory
and one RBI In 23 at-bats against passing Lou Brock and becoming In the Se.rtes could be taking a
lead Into the late lnnlngs~:nt,at
Pittsburgh In the National the game's No. 1 all· time thief.
"I like the challenge," said would, ln effect, close the door on
League playoffs. Plnlella said a
move to leadoff could allow the Oliver. "There's more Incentive the closers .
Dennis Eckersley had 48 saves
Riverfront Sta1llwa Monday since there Is no DH
slumping outfielder more chan· to throw out the best basestealer.
STI!:W~lRT TAKES BA1TING PRAcnCE during
the season and two Tlltte
I
like
throwing
against
rule
Ia
tbe
National
League.
(UPI)
(St
.
Louis
ces to utilize his speed on the
Oakland's Dave Stewart takes batllag practice at
speedster) Vince Coleman and In the ALCS to run his postseason
bases.
record to 10. The Reds counter
Davis,. though, likes where he guys like that."
The Reds, who are making with the . flrebaiUng "Nasty
Is, Besides, he doesn't think. It
makes any d(fference where he their first Series appearance Boys" -Randy Myers, who had
since 1976, are decided under· three saves In the NLCS; Rob
appears In the order.
dogs
In this matchup. They Dibble, who fanned 10 Pittsburgh
"You
have
to
bat
somewhere."
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Lou · Russa. "He was a. smart hitter
World Series?
appear
to be relishing the role, batters In four Innings, and Norm
he
said.
"I
don't
get
pitched
Plnlella's memortes of his play·
he knew how to play the outfield
"Really," said Plnlella, "the
but
what
else can they say?
Charlton.
(differently)
because
I
hlt
lng days with West Tampa (F1a.)
and even though he wasn't a fast thing that will help me morre .
Oaklancl
won
103
games
this
With ihe designated hitter not
fourth;
I
get
pitched
because
of
American Legion Post 248 are
runner, he was clever on the · than knowing Tony for 36 years Is
In
use In the games at Cincinnati,
year
and
then
swept
Boston
In
the
what I do on the field. If I hlt-flfth
'dimming, but one recollection
basepaths.
the fact thaU ·managed against
AL
playoffs,
allowing
the
Red
Oakland
will be without Harold
or second or thll'd or ninth I still
remains vivid.
"I was very Impressed with hlm for two and a half yearS' In
Baines
Sox
just
one
run
In
each
contest.
In
the starting lineup. It
get pitched the same way ."
"I was a better hitter than
how he managed the Yankees. the American League.
might
also
be missing center
Davis', who described a Mon· The A's have won three straight
Tony La Russa," Plntella reHe went Into a tough situation In
"We still enjoy chatting with
fielder
Willie
pennants
and
their
last
10 post·
McGee, who has
day meeting with Plnlella about
called with a blg laugh Monday.
New York with no managerial each other. but Tony's a little bit
the shift as "blunt," batted season games. They stand on the sore ribs. Dave Henderson, still
"There's no doubting that,"
superstitious. · If he's managing
~xperlence and was a winner
leadoff just three times his brink of a dynasty- 11 they're somewhat slowed by a knee
responded La Russa. "Lou was
against you, he won't talk to you.
right away."
Injury, would start In his place.
season.
Shortstop Barry Larkin not already there.
the most · talente,d guy on our
But,
If
he
beats
you,
he
starts
So, what does this chummy
Meanwhlle, Oakland Manager
Stewart,
who
starts
against
Is
expected
to
remain
at
the
top
of
team.''
relationship mean when the looking for you."
the order when the best-of-seven former teammate Jose Rljo, Is a Tony La Russa said Walt Weiss
Plntella and LaRussa, whose "Tampa Two" face off In the
Series opens Tuesday night (8:32 prominent reason for Oakland's will not play In the Series. The
friendship dates back 36 years to
recent dominance. 'The Most shortstop has not recovered from
p.m. EDT) on·the Reds' turf.
Colt League and American Le;.....-----Spor18
b
r
i
e
f
s
Valuable Player of last year's · his knee Injury he suffered In the
Plntella
would
not
reveal
his
gion baseball In their hometown
Series
and .this year's ALCS, he ALCS.
lineup but was expected to use
of Tampa, renew their relation·
agreed to terms on a four-year
ship as rivals Tuesday night.
.
, Baseball
Hall of 'Fame pitcher Juan . contract extension. Dickerson Is ·
Plnlella will manage hls Cln'
Marlchal and long-time radio scheduled to practice with the
c!nnatl Reds against LaRussa's
broadcaster Juan Vene will an· team Tuesday and will likely
Oakland Athletics .In the World
nounce the World Series for · play In Sunday's game against
Series. From Tampa teenagers
· Pittsburgh In . i!o National
lone effective starter.
'
to managing In baseball's big·
Major League Baseball's Span· Denver.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - One
League playoffs.
Hockey
gest show. It's been a pleasant Ish language broadcast. Marl·
reason Jose Rljo never deve·
"There are people who think
"He's been pitching well for
Steve Maltais of the Baltimore loped as a pitcher with the
and rewardlll!l journey for the chal, who. won 234 games In 16
I'm
too cocky," said Rljo, a
us," Reds' Manager Lo\1 Plnlella
seasons, was ·Inducted to the Hall Skipjacks was named the Amerl· Oakland Athletics was he ap·
childhood chums.
said. ''He can be overpowering son·ln·law of former San Fran·
"I've know Tony for 36 years," of Fame In 1983. He Is the can Hockey League Player of the pointed his own pitching coach.
as long as he stays ahead In the cisco great Juan Marlchal. "I'm
said Plnlella, 47. "We went to father ·ln-law of Cincinnati Week for Oct. 8-14 . Maltais . Another reason was the guy he
count and doesn't walk many. I'll not cocky. I just believe In
different high schools, but played pitc)ler Jose Rljo, the starll!r in swred four goals during the appointed - legendary hothead
tell you what: he's going to glvea myself."
Colt League and Legion ball Game 1. The Series will be week and on Sunday was pro- Joaquin Andujar.
The A's believe In Stewart In
good account of himself."
togeiher. Tony was a fine short· carried live to Central and South moted to the Washington
Rljo, who will start lor the
the
postseason, especially after
Added
Stewart:
"I
alw~ys
felt
stOp and a pretty good hitter. AJnerlca and will be broadcast to Capitals.
Cincinnati Reds Tuesday night
he
won
twice In the AL playoffs
Even as a kid, Tony knew the Cuba for the first time since 1957.
Honors
against Oakland's Dave Stewart . a good young arm Is something
against
Boston to capture the
that needs walling oil, needs to
Paula Newby-Fraser, the 1989 In Game 1 of the 87th World
game . well. He was always
Chess
MVP
award
In the series. That
mature. The end product Is what
studious on the f!eld. I knew he'd
Organizers of the 1990 World Ironman Triathlon champion, Series, was only 17· 22 with the
came
on
the
heels of the top
you see now."
Chess Championships an· was named Professional Sports· A's from 1985-87: The right·
.m ake a good manager."
A's Manager Tony La Russa Individual honor In the 1989
nounced that ABC's "World woman of the Year by the bander had the outstanding fast·
saw
it coming, but said the Reds World Series against the Giants.
News
Tonight
on
Sunday"
will
Sports
Foundation.
Women's
ball
he
does
now
but
lacked
LaRussa, 46, so studious off the
Stewart, a 20-game winner for
Insisted
on Rljo as part of the
feature
weekly
highlights
of
Lori
Norwood,
winner
of
the
1989
polish, dlsclpllne - an&lt;!, appar·
field that he earned a law degree,
a
fourth straight year, said
Dec.
1987
trade
that
brought
matches
between
champion
Modern
Pentathlon
World
Cham·
ently, the proper guidance.
has managed Oakland to three
pitching
so much In the postsea·
slugger
Dave
Parker
from
Garry
Kasparqv
and
challenger
plonshlps,
won
the
amateur
Andujar, like Rljo a native of
consecu live American League
son
he
began with the Dodgers
Cincinnati.
Anatoly
·
K
arpov.
The
first
half
of
award.
the Dominican Republic, took his
pennants .and Is shooting for his.
In
1981
has made It easier to
Soccer
"I remember Jose as a very
the championships Is being held
fellow pitcher under hls wing
second straight World Series
perform
In
the playoffs.
exciting talent and the kind of
at New York's Holl!l Macklowe.
The U.S. Soccer Federation, when he pitched for Oakland In
championship.
"If
you
have
12 kids, by the
guy you'd love to have and
"I remember Lou as the most Entering Monday night's match, gearing for the 1994 World Cup, 1986-87. According to Stewart,
time
you
have
your
12th you just
Kas parov leads Karpov 1 1·2 to announced Budweiser as Its flr~t Rljo listened to Andujar when he
develop," said LaRussa, . who
talented guy on our Legion
back,
"
said
Stewart,
who
kick
full sponsor. The USSF also will should have been listening to A's
said Rljo "Introduced his own
team," said La Russa. "I also 1·2.
Equestrian
pitching . coach (Andujar)" to had . a career-best 20·11 record
coordinate marketing with CON·" .Pitching coach Dave ·Duncan.
thought he was the best all·
and 2.56 ERA durtng the regular·
The
U.S.
Equestrian
Team
has
CACAF,
the
soccer
group
rep
res·
hlm.
"He
was
Influenced
a
lot
by
around athlete In the city of
season.
.
selected
Tony
Font,
Allee
De·
enting
North
and
Central
Amer·
"But
when
our
team
was
being
Joaquin,"
Stewart.
who
first
met
Tampa. He was a great basket·
"I
don't
know
how
many
times
bany,
Hap
Hansen
and
David
lea
and
the
Caribbean.
..
.
put
together
we
looked
at
a
Rljo In 1978 In the Dominican
·
· ball player.
left·handed hitter as crucial for I've pitched In postseason play
· "He was very emotional even Raposa as Its squad for the SportsChann~l America will tele- winter leagues, said Monday.
Washington
our
offense. You don' t ever get a (12) but It's been quite a few
International
Horse
vise
15
Major
Soccer
League
"He tried to do a lot of things
)lack then. He'd kick water
guy like Dave Parker unless you times. It gets easier to win, I
Show Oct. 21-281n Landover, Md.
games each of the next two Joaquin dld.
~oolers and break bats just like
guess, · b~ause I have had
give something."
"Joaquin's success wasn't
he dld when he played with the The U.S. will defend Its title seasons . .. . Bayern Munich,
·
12-tlme German national cham· very good (with the A's). butRljo
Rljo , who came to the blg prac11ce."
Yankees. A lot of guys are against · teams from France
leagues In 1984 as an 18-year-old
emotional, but Lou could back It Great Britain and Canada: · pions, have come under harsh · being young and linpresslonable,
France
and
Great
Britain
won
with the New York Yankees,
criticism
from
fans
and
the
he
tended
to
respect
what
Joa·
up with talent. I thought I was a
Size of Earlb
media
for
the
gold
and
sliver
medals,
recent
lackluster
play
planned not to speak with repor·
quin
said
more
than
what
the
good player, but I kriew Lou was
ters this week. He said he gotlnto
a great player."
. respectively, this summer at the and In-team bickering. Bayern, pitching coach said. It caused
The Earth is the fifth largest planet
regarded
World
Jumping
Championships
as
the
country's
top
trouble for prOClaiming "It and the third from the sun, notes The
some
problems."
As a manager, Plnlella com·
club team, was shut out by FC
might as well be over" after the World Almanac. Its mass is 6 sextil·
Rljo admitted Andujar - who
pUed a ~24-193 record with the In Stockholm. ·
Football
Cologne,
4-0
this
past
weekend,
Reds
took a 3·I lead over lion, 588 quintillion short tons.
threw an embarrassing temper
\' ankees from 1986-88 and guided
leading
club
.
President
Fritz
tantrum and .was ejected from
Eric Dickerson passed a physl·
the Reds to the National League
Scherer to say: "Looking at Game 7 of the 1985 World Series
J)ennant In his first year In cal Tuesday. clearing the way for
5ome of our players, I had the - wasn't the best guy to have
his return to the Indlanapolls
Cincinnati.
Impression they came straight around In Oakland.
Colts.
Dickerson
and
the
Colts
"I'm not surprised Lou Is a
from
a girls' school."
"Joaquin Is a great guy, a
settled
their
differences
Satur·
good manager because he was
great
friend," Rljo said. "But
day
when
the
star
running
back
smart as. a player." said La
he's
got
a big mouth. Let's leave
Root ~eer
.It at that."
Two seasons removed from
Hires"root beer began as an herb
Oakland
and Andujar, Rljo has
tea, explains The Kids' World Alma·
nac: It was concocted by Charles blossomed at age 25. He finished
Hires, a pharmacist from Philadel· 14·8 with a 2.70ERA thlsyearand
phia. In 1876, at the World's Fair, he paced the club with 152 strl·
sold a package of dry herbs. bark and keouts. When the Reds faltered
w..t
roots to be brewed at home. By 1886; down the stretch, Rlj6 was their
NFL ·standings
San Fran . .... .... 50 0 1.000 127 91
Hires
root beer was sold in bottles.
Atlanta ...... .. .. .. 2 3 0 .400 137 139

Piniella, LaRussa childhood chums
.

Rijo to face Stewart in Game 1·

Sco reboard ...

NATION.U FOOTJiALL LEAGUE

Amerlcu Confere~~ce
I!Mt

Team

•

W J;T Pet. PF PA

Buf!alo .. .......... 1 I 0 .800 130 99
Mlaml .............. l 1 0 .800 108 73
India napolis .. ... 2 3 0 .100 81108
N.Y. Jets ..... .... 2 4 0 .333 107148
New England ... 1 I 0 .200 80 152

Cenlrol
Ctnclnnatl.. ..... .4 2 0 .667
Houstoo .......: ...a 3 o .500
Pittsburgh .......3 3 0 .500
a .....Jand ........ 2 4 0 .333

"''"'

L.A. Raiders .. .. ~ I 0 .833
Kanoas City ..... 4 2 0 .667
Denver ............2 4 0 ,333 ·
Seatlle ............. 2 4 o .333
San Diego ........ 2 4 o J33

154
146
102
. 98

153
125
1m
139

123 93
160 95
141 161
12~ 1211
114 108

eo.r-•

Team

NlllEMI

W LT Pet. PI' PA

N.Y. Giants .. ..5 0 0 1.000 130 ~7
WuhliiiiCII ... .. J 20 .600 121 75
Phoenix .......... 2 3 0 .400 60 121
Philadelphia ... 2 3 0 .100 123 119
Dallas .... .... ..... 2 I 0 .333 73 122

Ceolrol
CIIICIIO .. .. .: .... " ..11 0 .833 1~ 75
Tompo Bay ....... I 2 0 .M7 13il 124
Detrolt ...... ........ 2 I 0 .333 141169
Green Bay ........ 2 I o .333 103 146 .
Mtnnetoto ...... ... I 5 0 .167 ItO 135

New Orleans ..... 2 3 0 .400 95 100
L.A. Rams .. ..... l l 0 .200120149

SuDda,-'ll&amp;m•
New Orleans 25, Cleveland 20
San Francisco 45, Atlanta 35

Houatoo 48. Ondnnat117
Kansas City
Detroit 24

n.

. Tampa. Bay 26, Green Bay 14
San Dl"o 39, NY JeuJ
Phoen 1x 20, Dallas 3
L.A. Ratders24, Seattle 17
N.Y. Glants.21, WuhlnrtCII 20
Ptttsbul'lh 34, Denver 17
Clllcago 38, L.A . Rams 9

Randall F'. Hawkins~ M.D.
Internal Medicine

The 7-Day-Premium CD
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· Philadelphia 32, Mlnneso!&lt;l 21

Thu.....,.'•l'ame

New England at Miami, 8 p.m.

lloodaf, Oct. II

Dallal at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Denver at IDdlanapm.ls, 1f .m.
New Or~ns at Houltc:m, p.m.
N.Y. Jet• at Buftal~ 1 p.m.
· Phlladolphla al Wuhlllflm, 1

p.m.

.

.

Atlanta at L.A . Rams, 4 p.m. '
Konsu City at Seat de, 4 p.m.
Phoenix at N .Y. Giants, I p.m.
PlltlbuiJb at San Francisco, t
p.m .
L.A. Raiders at San Diego, 4 p.m.

•

Motodaf, Ocl. H

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By The Bend

'

The. Daily Sentinel

. .-,

TU81day, October 16, 1990.

~·

Riverview Garden Club meets

Afternoon Circle notes
member's 90th birthday ·
A birthday party was held In
.observance of Nan Moore'.s 90th
birthday when !he Afternoon .
Circle of the Heath United
.Methodist Church met recently
In the churcl! social room.
Jen Cheshire presided at the
meeting and read a poem, "A
Small Glimmering Light." Devotions were by Buelah McComas
from Luke and an article on joy
being a funny medicine. She·
closed with prayer.
Clara Criswell presented a
revle:w t1f the ninth chapter ot the

group's study book, "Rice lq the
Storm." Her topic was "When
Did We See the Lord" dealing
with the struggles of the poor Jn
.the Phlllpplnes.
Euvetta Bechtel read a poem,
"What I. Live For" from McGuf·
fy's fifth grade reader.
The meeting closed with
prayer.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess, Nellie Zirkle. A cake
with candles was pres en ted io
Mrs. Moore along with a floral
centerpiece.

Officers were Installed at the ~giving a "memorable school
Sepl.tmber meeting of the River· experience.••
view Garden Club held at the
·
home of Mary Allee Blse with
·Plans were made to eat out at
RuUJ Anne Baldersim serving as .the Eletsy MJUs ·Ciub at Marietta
co-hostess.
·On Oct. 25 at '6: 30 p.m. Members
Officers are Ruth Anne Balder· will also tour the museum. ·at
son, president; Maxine White- Marietta.
head, vice president; Betty
The club went on record as
Boggs, secretary; Margaret supporting the fire levy .for the
Grossnickle, treasurer; Opal 0 '11 v e To .w n s h 1p F 1 r e
Harris . scrapbook; and Mary Department.
.
Allee Blse, flower fund.
Cards were signed for sick
The meeting opened with the friends and Gladys Thomas artd
club song, "How Great Thou Opal Harrts extended thanks to
A:r:t" and the Lord's Prayer was the club for flowers, cards and
repeated ' by all. Grace Weber visits when they were IU.
concluded devotions by reading
Mrs. Balderson presented pot·
"Heaven's Grocery Store." Roll ted mums to Mrs. Putman and
call was answered by members J11nlce Young, outgoing pres!·

CHRISTOPHER M.

LAUDERMILT

l.audermilt birth

Beegle's have reunion

Del and Renee {Nonnan)
Laudennilt are announcin~ the
birth or a son, ChristOPher Mtchael,
An open house was held re- Fitch and Brandon, Long Bot· on June 27 at Holzer Medical Cen- _
cently at the Beegle home In tom; Rodney Beegle and friend ter.
Dorothy Smith gave a report on with live pine trees and
Racine.
Debbie Downie. Pomeroy; · Mr.
. The inram weighed eight pounds
the Biltmore Estate In Asheville, poinsettias.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Beegle · and Mrs. Robert Schott and Ruth ten ounces and was21 inches long. ' N.C. durtngtherecentmeetlngof
entertained with refreshments Biber, New , Washington; Mrs.
Maternal grandparents are Garry
Doris Grueser presided at the
the Wildwood Garden Club held
for Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Brewer, Tlney Spencer and Clara Mash, and Cnrol Norman, Philadelphia,
meeting and read "Uncondl·
at the home 'of Peggy Moore.
Minnesota. He Is a retired college Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Pa. Maternal great gr.mdparents
In her report, Mrs. Smith tlonal ·surrender." Evelyn Hoi·
professor and Is preparing to
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Brewer Harold and Juanita · Nonnan,
stated that George W. Vanderbilt ton had devotions from the Upper
write a book about the .history of left for Medina to spend time with Pomeroy.
built his 250 room home on land Room followed by prayer'. She
the Brewer and Erwin families . slster-ln-lllw, Mrs .. Ella Mae
Paternal grandparents are Ray
consisting of 8000 acres and also read the poem, ''Life Is a
Brewer before returning home.
and Cheryl Laudermilt, Racine.
Attending were Edgar Brewer,
lavishly planted formal grounds . . Garden··· by Heien Steiner Rice.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schott . Paternal great grandmOther is Mrs.
the only living son of David and
These ,beds are replanted three For roll call members named
and Miss Ruth Biber remained Alice Laudennilt, Mason, W.Va.
Emma Brewer; Mr. and Mrs.
times In the growing season, first their favorite place for vacation.
· This is the couple's fustchild.
Bill Doneall, Columbus; Emma for a visit at the home of David A.
It was noted that reservations
with tulips, swamer bedding
Brewer In Stlversvllle. They also
Lee Brewer, Reynoldsburg; Mr.
plant and llnally with fall chry· are to be taken for those
and Mrs. Clyde Close, Water· visited .cemeteries and went to
santhemums. The rose garden attending the fall regional meet·
the Pomeroy Library for history
ford; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
contains 3000 variety of roses, lng on Oct. 27 at Grace United
and to the museum.
Ashley, Letart; Marilyn Beall,
and from Thanksgiving to New Methodist Church. In Galllpolls.
Mr. and Mrs . Schott and Miss
Columbus; David A. Brewer,
Years the house Is decorated The morning speaker will be
Biber returned to their home on
Portland; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Brewer, LongBottom; Mrs. Jane . Wednesday.

Officers were elected at the form an" annual reports were
recent meeting of the Harrtson· given. The budget report was
given by associate matron Janet
ville Order of Eastern Star.
Officers ·are Janer Bolln, Bolin. The trustee's. report was
given . by Marjorte Rice. The
worthy matron; Charles King,
audit
report was given by Ava·
worthy patron; Pat Arnold, associate matron; Larry Wlll, asso- nell~rge.
.
. Bob Reed gave the blessing
cla~e patron; Gracie Wilson,
secretary; Donna Nelson, treas- before the group entered the
urer; Pauline Atkins, conduc· dining area where they were
Irons; Avanell George, associate served refreshments by Mrs.
conductrons; and Dana Hof. Pearl Canaday, MrS: Neva Nl·
cholson and Mrs. Margaret B.
fman, trustees.
The ,meet!ng opened In regular . Weber.

Opening arguments
set for 2 Live Crew

ASHLEY KAY JOHNSON

johnson birthday
Ashley Kay Johnson celebr~ted
her third birthday recently at the
home of her parents, Brian and
Brenda Johnson, Mason, W.Va. The
couple operates Johnson's Variety
Store in Middlepon.

Tuesday.
The diverse panel was selected
on the sixth day of jury selection.
It Included a middle school
assistant prtnclpal, a young
diesel mechanic, a retired hospl·
tal administration worker, a
sociology professor, a retired
cook and a young general office
clerk.
Two white men and a black
woman were selected as
alternates.
Defense lawyer Bruce Rogow
has said that In order to have a
fair trial he needs jurors who are
black and have knowledge of rap
music or at least have an open
mind about sexually explicit
lyrics.
Broward County Circuit Judge
June Johnson did not swear In the
jury Monday and allowed them to
spend the evening with their
famllies before they wete seq ues·
tered once the testimony begins.

I

Gary Grtfflth, Juanita Griffith G. Martin, 1.025 acre, Chester.
Ona v. PUlars, ilec., by persoto Gary Griffith, 0:31 acre,
Melgs.
..
nal ~epresentatlve, Forest A. Pil·
: Gary Griffith, Juanita Griffith Iars to Paul E. Clendenin, Patti
't() Gary Grtfflh, 0.355 Acre, Ches·
.J . Clendenin, 47 acre, 90 rods,
ler.
..
Rutland.
: Gary Griffith, Juanita Griffith
Robert s. Hersman, Maggte
tll Gary Griffith, Minerals, Ches· · M, Hersman to Robert R. Hersr
:ter.
man, Maggie M. Hersman, ·1
· · Juanita M. Griffith io Gary acre, Salem.
Griffith, parcels, Chester.
Harold L. Spencer, dec. and
· Virginia E. Hartley, fka Vir· Vicki Spencer Merryman, affl•
Jlnla E. Vltatoe to Tim E. Kauff,
davit, Chester.
l;.Of9 acre, 'Rutland.
Henrietta . V. Bootlie, dec., to
•· HarOld Graham, Janet Gra· Olin D. Boothe, affidavit, Ches·
tiam to G. T.E. North Inc., :Ease· ter.
ipent, Scipio.
Paul A. Hupp, et al, Sandra K.
: Henrietta v. Boothe, dec., to Hupp, et al, Richard LeMay, et
Olin D. Boothe, affidavit, Meigs. al, Sue LeMay, et al, Sue Collins,
:' Dl811\0Dd Savlnp and Loan fka, et al, Hazel m. Harrelson, et
~o. to Tammy C. Tibbets, lot 139,
alto Edward Werry, Phillip Ray·
Middleport VIllage.
mond Werry, Joy.ce Ann Weerry,
•, Aline H. Weaver, dec. to Mar~
parcels, ~ Interest, Letart.
vlaT. Hlll,JennlferJanHlll,cer·
Don E. Rea, Marie Rea to
tlflcate of transfers, Racine VII· Charles F. Chancey, Paula J .
lqe. ,
Chancey, parcela,.Sutton.
Ttm E. Kauff, Usa A. Kauff, to
Charles R. Alktre, Dorothy
Jean Alkire to Margin T. Hill,
David T. Hendrix, Janl L. Hen·
Jennifer Jan Hill, pt. lot 28,. Ra·
drlz, 1.(17 acre, Rutland.
cine vlllqe.
Bernard J. Might, Sherrie A.
' Sophie Peari.J)avls, Dec., to Might to Kathy S. Haley, tracts,
juaJJita Davia 'Jenkins, Steven Pomeroy ~tillage.
Buftlne, Sberrl Huftlne, Rog~r
Wallace L. Reuter, Judy E .
HawldDJ, Terry HlwldDJ, certl· Reuter, nka Jude E. Oleton to
fteate of triDifer, Bedford.
Farmen Blnk aJJd Slvlllp Co.,
Albert L. Mll'tln, Eileen Mar·
aherlff'l deed, Middleport vii·
tin to Ed-rardm. Martin, Colleen !age.
·

•••

John ~Oomberg, Parkersburg,
W.Va. who will show slldes of
birds on the Ohio River. Linda
Blazer of Athens will have the
afternoon program. Her topic
will be "Holiday Magic."
For the arrangement of' the
month, Heidi Elberfeld · had
"Summers . End" using yellow
and purple .c hrysanthemums,
marigolds, yellow shasta daisies,
has !a leaves In a white basket.
Mrs. Grueser read an article
on helpful household hints.
· Refreshments were tben
served to the members and
Evelyn Hollon won the hostess
door prize. ·

People in the news _______

Harrisonville OES meets

f· Meigs Property Transfers

dent and vice president.
For the program, Grace Weber
Introduced Alison · Cauthorn
Krless, attorney, who told the
group how Important It Is to have
a will, correct way of writing
checks, how to handle credit
cards, etc.
Mrs. Weber presented Mrs.
Krless with a gift.
For the soCial hour refresh·
.ments and favors were served to
the above named and Janet
Connotly, Marilyn Hannum,
Phyllis Larkins, Ella Osborne,
Na.n cy Wachter, Nola Young,
Nell Wilson and Margaret Cau·
thorn. Mrs. Osborne received the
door prize.

Wildwood Garden Club meets

are

FdRT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
(UPI) - Three members of the
Miami rap group 2 Live Crew
have two strikes against them In
their obsenlty trial with a com·
tempt ruling and a judge's
decision that race was not an
Issue In jury selection.
The controversial band has
come under fire from F1or1da's
governor, conservative groups
and a federal judge for the lyrics
In the album "As Nasty as They
WannaBe."
A federal judge's ruling that
the album was obscene prompted ·
the current charges against band
members Luther Campbell,
Christopher Wongwon and Mark
Ross stemming from their per·
formance at a Hollywood night·
club In Jpne.
· A jury. of four men and two
women - lncluc;llng one black
woman - was selected Monday,
and opening arguments In the
case were scheduled to begin

6

By United Press International
KID STUFF: The New Kids on
the Block are getting more bad
publicity - this time with their ·
manager, Maurice Starr, linked
to a Boston-area criminal. The
allegation surfaced In a federal
bankruptcy suit In which Jeffrey
Furst claltned that hls partner,
James Martorano, 48, who has
been convicted of being an
accessory to murder, loan·
sharklng and fixing horse races,
loaned $50,000 to Starr In ex·
change for a 25 percent Interest
In the Kids. Starr says he met
Martorano "once or twice" at
social events but never turned
over any ownership In the New
Kids to hlm. Starr also says he
borrowed $175,000 from Furst to
open a recording studio but paid
· It back within a year at atiout 30

O:&gt;rnmunity calendar
TUF.'IDAY
POMEROY - The Rabbit
Breeders Association w!U meet
Tuesday at 77 p.m. at the Meigs
County Extension Office. The fall
fantasy rabbit show,to be held
Oct. 28 at 9 a .m . at the Ru !land
Civic Center, will be discussed.
WEDNESDAY ·
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
port Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Bernard Fultz. Mrs.
Chester Erwin will review' 'Hat·
shepsut." Roll call will be to give
a sign of ancient Egypt in the 20th
century.

REEDSVILLE- The Eastern
Alumni Band will practlceThurs·
day at 7: 30 p.m. at the high
school, Anyone Interested In
participating with the band Is
Invited to attend.
POMEROY - XI Gamma
Epsllon wlll meet Thursday at
6:30 p.m. at the senior citizens
center In Pomeroy. Come prepared to make necklaces.
POMEROY - 'rhe Pomeroy
Group of AA and AIAnon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church In
Pomeroy. For more Information
call1·800·333-5051.

INSIDE BOOTHS FOR SANDWICHES OR BUFFET

SANDWICHES, FRIES, ONION ·RINGS,
SUNDAES, ICE CREAM, YOGURT, et(.
MOND4Y-Roast IHf, Chicken Wings, Spaghetti
TUESDAY-Meatloaf, Cabbage Ralls, Chicken Wings
WEDNESDAY-BBQ Roast IHf, lief Liver &amp; Onions,
Saurkfaut &amp; Wieners
THURSDA.Y -Fried Pork Ctwps, Salisbury Steak, Chicken
Wings
FRIDAY-Stafaod Day- Fish, Shrimp, Oysters, Clams,
Hushpu~es
.
SATURD~Y -Fried Chicken, Salisbury Steak, Noadles,
''Stuffing
·
,
SUNDAY-Roast Turkey, Stuffed Peppers, Noadles,
Stuffing
·
lncludu: Ytgatallla• and Deaart and full Salad
Bar, and lolls.

write five sequels to her new
historical nOvel, ''The First Man
In Rome." ' 'The story I'm telling
Is so big I can't contain It In one
book," she said.
MARLA'S MONEY!: Marla
Maples apparefltly Is · laying
claim to some of Donald Tnmp' s
dwindling fortune. In an Inter·
view In Vanity Fair, she scorns
Trump's estranged wife, Ivana,
as a spendthrift and makes
Interesting use of the word "we."
"She wants a billion but we just
don't have It," Maples says. The
magazine says Maples's IUestyle
lateiy Includes an apartment on
New York's East Side, a $10,000a-week suite In Aspen, Colo.,· a
luxury suite reserved for high
rollers In one of Trump's Atlantic
City, N.J., hotel-casinos, a littleused apartment In Los Angeles
and recent summer weekends on
Martha's VIneyard but still she ·
considers Ivana to be the high
roller.

Christmas bazaar

Revival set

THURSDAY

DAIRY DELITE &amp; MARTY'S BUFFET

.

percent Interest. "He claims he
gave me the money for·the New
Kids but !hat was not the deal,"
Starr says. "The deal was, 'You
don't pay us, you· lose your
house.' I'm trying to run a good
clean business and this guy Is
trying to.destroy me but I'm not
going to let him do It." Two of the
New Kids have been Involved In
scuffles In the past few months.
ROMANTIC THORNS: Colleen McCullough, au thor of the
best seller "The Thorn Birds,"
. rejects the labe'l of romantic
novelist. "I am not a romantic
novelist. I never have been a
romantic novelist," she says.
"Romantic novels are a genre
and It's not a genre I've tried yet
and, to be honest, I don't think I'd
want to. 'The Thorn Birds' Is not
really a very romantic novel If
you look at it. Nobody ends up
happy." McCullough says she's
generally opposed to the Idea of
sequels but nonetheless will

Revival services will be held at
the Middleport Church of the
Nazarene Tuesday through Sun·
day with Rev. Joy Slzl!more,
McArthur, as evangelist.
Services will be held nightly at
7 p.m. and at 10: 30· a.m. and 6
p.m. on Sunday. The public Is
Invited to attend.

The Ladles AuxUlary of the
Mason Fire Depar!meJ!t will hold
Its annual Christmas bazaar on
Satur(!ay, Nov.10from9a.m. to5
p.m.
Any person or group wanting to
rent a table may do so by calling
773-5437 or 773·5414 or by contact. lng any auxiliary member.

PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL
Do you have facial hair that is causing you ambarau, mant. such •• a beard, hair on the upper lip or aidaburns 7 If ao, hare 11 soma good free advice. If you Ire
tweezing or waxing STOP right now. Don't do any
more damage to your face than you have already
done. Tweezing or waxing will do the followJng: 111
· Causa your hair to get darker and coarser. 121 Make
the hair follicle papilla rebuild a stronger and coarser
hair than before. 131 Causa the h1ir to become Ingrown in the skin. (41 Causa scarring.
The only way to permanently gat rid of unwanted hair
is to have Electrolysis. don't.,. fooled by any devlcea
•
you can buy. If it pulls the hair out It's the same aa
tweezing. and will lead to the above problems I have
listed. I don't recommend bleaching because It lrri- .
tates the skin. If you Irritate thaskin by bleaching you
will causa more hair to grow and to becomastrongar .
and darker. The only thing that you can do wltflout
really doing harm to your akin i1 to shave. that is if you
don't have Electrolysis.
We do offer .a free complimentary consultation. Wa
will also remove 6 hairs to lat you feel the sensation of
Electrolysle.
.
Priceureas follows: 1 hr.- 830, 'h hr.- $20; 16 min.

•• 10.
Where Electrolysll Works: Chin, upper lip, eyebrow,
blkinllina. face. chest. neck, braalt, hair llna, top of
nosa. shoulder. beck. abdomin. buttock. ear lobe.
arm. hands, ligs • toes.

· · EIUOY HOME COODD fOOD AND A RIEIIDLY·
ATMOSP..U
,.
ALL YOU CAN EAT SJ.99 + TAX
DIINIS EXTliA

~

CANDY'S ELECTROLYSIS

HOURS: 10:30 AM-7:00 PM

6000 Grand Cllltral Aft,, Suite 1,
Vienna, WV

Dairy Delite &amp;.Marty's Buffet

295-4533

Ntw floul'll '

•·• pm Yua.·Sat.

Selltl ftr free lndlurt ..

CAU IN OIDEIS WELCOME - 9t2-2414
St. lt. 124 &amp; Ballty Run 1_, YowanllutiiiiMI, Ohla

L....:'·:··:·:·:·~..~·=--::...~------~~~~..1 ·
•

I,

'

••

�-

.

Page 6-The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

-Nadia: I was beaten, blackmailed
_by man .who helped me escape
.

WASHINGToN (UPI) - Tuberculosis Is reslirglng after
decades of decline, killing nearly million people worldwide
annually and. threatening to claim ev.en more unless quick
action Is taken, health officials warned. .
The World Health Oranlzation re[}orted Monday that progress
against TB, a contagious diseases of the lungs and other organs,
has "come to.an abru[}t halt" In some Industrial countries, like
the United States . .Furthermore, the number of reported TB
cases have almost doubled In some east and central African
'
nations over the last four to five years, WHO said.
Currently, about8 million people,annually develop new cases
of TB. About 20 mUIIon people world&gt;Y!c!e have active cases of
TB, and another 1. 7 billion are TB carriers.
.
TB Is caused by airborne bacteria, called mycobacterium
tuberculosis, which are coughed up by an Infected person and
Inhaled by the healthy. The bacteria settle In the lungs, where
the Immune system attacks them, f6m)lng abscesses. From
'' there, the bacteria can seep Into the blood stream and attack
other organs.
The Initial TB Infection may be so slight that a healthy perso11
may have no symptoms. Yet the bacteria remain In the body ,
dormant, until years later when the Immune system Is
weakened by old age or disease.
"Countries with lhe highest rates of HIV (AIDS virus)
Infection and high numbers of TB carriers are recording
explosive ·rates of TB," said Dr. Arata Koehl of WHO,
explaining that people whose Immune systems are crippled by
the AIDS virus are more susceptible to TB.
WHO estimates about one-thlrd of the estimated 8 mUIIon to 10
mtlllon people Infect~ with HIV worldwide are also Infected
with the bacteria that causes TB.
"It Is becoming a parallel epidemiC and It Is this trend that has
public health officials , worried," said Dr. Hiroshi Nakajima,
WHO's director general.
,
The dual-Infection problem appears worst In parts of Africa,
where an estimated 2.4 million people are Infected with both
HIV and TB . About 300,000 people In Latin America are thought
; 'to be slnlllarly Infected; 200,000 In Asia and 150,000 In the United
1
States and other Industrial nations.
1n developed nations, most TB deaths occur among the
elderly, ethnic minorities and Immigrants.
"Our biggest problem Is Implementing drug therapy and
getting all Infants vaccinated against TB," Nakajima said.

a

Adam

Q

better and he (Karpov) has failed
to come back from his defeating
position, " he said.
Both grandmasters will meet
Tuesday at 5 p.m. to continue the
game, although Karpov may call
a draw at any time before, Black
sat d.
"The game was extremely
hard to read," mack said.
"Black actually sacrificed his
queen. Eventually, he won his
queen back. He had such pressure against Karpov's white
pieces that Karpov had to give
tils queen back. In retrospect, It
was a temporary sacrifice."
"Nearly all the commentators
here felt that •black had a big

advantage," he said. "However,
this extremely complicated
game had left both players very
short of time. In a tlme.scramble,
they took the last 14 moves at a
very quick speed."
During that part of the game,lt
was ·,Impossible" to determine
who was winning, he said.
"Thoughout this, black maintained an edge. It went from
looking as If black was winning to
looking like black was slightly
better," Black said.
Kasparov , an aggressive
player known for his willingness
to sacrifice pieces for position
and his penchant for disconcertIng moves, used his Ruy Lopez

JeuUng test~

TIIM 'and

REMOVAL
"LIGHT HAULING
"FIREWOOD

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UPI) - NASA engineers plan to
pump rocket fuel back aboa~d
the shuttle Atlantis next week In
a key test to prove theshlplsleak
tree and ready for launch around
Nov. 10 on a long-delayed milItary flight.
'
The shuttle Discovery, meanwhile, bolted atop a NASA 747
jumbo jet, was expected to land
at . the Kennedy Space Center
early Tuesday after a two-day
cross-country filght from Edwards Air Force Base, Call!.
. Discovery gilded to.a smooth
California landing on Oct. 10 to
close out a successful four-day
miSsion. Officials said the shuttle
came through Its launch and •
landing In excellent condition
and that no problems were
antlcl!);lted readying the ship for
Its next flight In February.
On launch pad ·39A, engineers
were readying Atlantis for a
C'rltlcal fueling test next Wednesday to prove a leak that grounded
the ship In July has been fixed.
WhUe the leak Involved hydro- ·
gen, supercold liquid oxygen will
be pumped aboard as well to
make·sure no critical propellant
llries were damaged when a
70-pound beam fell Inside Atlantis's engine room earlier this
month.
If all goes well, Atlantis and Its
five-man crew should be ready
for launch around Nov. 10, three
days or so later than had been
planned before the embarrassing
beam accident, officials said
Monday. A firm date will be set
. after a tw!Hiay flight readiness
review Oct . 29 and 30.
But as usual with such military
flights, the exact launch time will
not be revealed until nine minutes before liftoff and no details
will be released aboul the ship's
classified cargo.
NASA's thlrd shuttle, ·eotumbla, remains grounded because·
of an elusive engine room hydro-·
gen leak blamed In part for
volunteering: by this gorup," charities are needed more today
scuttling
three launch attempts
'
O'Connell said. "These In· than In the past.
In
May
and
September.
At the same time, It was low·
creases, plus the group's changHauled
to
launch pad 39B
Ing attitudes and valbes reflected and moderate-_lncome people
overnight
Saturday,
Columbia
In the study make the picture for who were most responsive, the
will
be
loaded
with
fuel
around
future giving and volunteering In study found.
29
to
pinpoint
the
location
of
Oct.
In 1989, contributing housethis country very bright,"
the
leak
once
and
for
all.
Independent Sector Is a coali- holds with Incomes under $10,000
Depending on the results, a
tion of national voluntary orgapl· gave 5.5 percent of their housesecond
such test may be ordered
zations and donor groups that hold Income to charity. Those
before
a launch attempt In
work to encourage giving, volun- with Incomes between $50,000 . December.
·
teering and the non-profit sector. · and $60,000 contributed 1.7 perColumbia was _grounded May
The report, "GIVIng and Volun- cent of their Income and tho.se
29,
the night· before Its planned
teering In the United States," Is between $75,000 and $100,000
liftoff,
when sensors detected
the second In a ser les conducted gave 3.2 percent and those with
hydrogen
gas leaking Into the
every two years by lndependent Incomes over $100,000 gave 2.9
ship's
engine
room.
Sector and provides comprehen- percent.
The
leak
ultimately was
"Even though giving among
sive Information on. trends and
blamed
on
damaged
seals Inside
motivations In giving and the wealthy has Increased from
a
17'1nch-wide
fuel
line
"discontwo years ago," O'Connell said,
volunteering.
nect"
fitting
that
latr
was re•'Fortunately_.. at a time when "that group cannot be described
placed. But during fueling for a
needed most, giving and volun- as generous. Many wealthy peoSept.
6 launch try, It became
teering are up In almost all ple are wonderfully generous and
clear
that
at least two leaks had
categories," said VIrginia Hodg- this raises the dollar average and
been
present
au along and that
kinson, vice president for re- caring profile of their population
only
one
had
been
fixed.
group, lending the Impression
search of the group.
The
location
of
the
engine room
She noted that 86 percent of that such generosity Is routine
leak
remains
a
mystery.
Last
Amerl.cans between 35 and 44 for families with upper Incomes.
week
technicians
found
and
"In fact," he added, "most of
years of age contributed to
replaced a second damaged seal .
charity In 1989, up 9 percentage America's well-t!Hio are not
In
a fuel line valve leading to
points from two years ago, and 64 generous. In comparison to lo~r . main engine No. 2, but engineers .
percent of persons between 35 Income families and, In contrast
were reluctant to speculate on ·
and 44 volunteered time, an to their disposable Income, most
whether that might have elhnl·
Increase of 10 percentage points. wealthy Americans have to be
nated the leak.
·
·
And, perhaps reflecting a re- characterized as stingy."
The study also showed Americognition of the deep budget cuts
cans
volunteered a total of 20.5
of the Reagan era, especially
billion
hours to charity with a
among programs for the poor
dollar
value
of $170 billion.
Flag ellqaette
and needy, an overhwlmlng
Religion
also
plays a major
majority - 81 percent - said
According to custom, all personSrole : In stimulating charitable
present
should face the U.S. flag, ,
behavior, the study said, with 80
stand
at.attentlbn
and salute on the
percent of those affiliated with
followlnc
occasions:
1) When the flag.,
religious Institutions repordng
is
passing
In
a
parade
or In a review; .•
strategy Wednesday In a sur- household eontrlbudons to char2)
During
the
ceremony
of boistlng or •
prise move that defeated Ity and 59 percent volunteered.
lowering;
3)
When
tbe
National An· ,
Among those not affll~ted , 63
Kaqiov.
them is played; and 4) ·During th~
percent gave money and 42
Pledge of Allegiance.
·
percent volunteered.
.
. "";

WOIIHINGTON (ENTER
FOR

992-2922

•Resume Formatting and Completion
•Personalized Repetitive Letters ~
•48 Hour Turnaround Guaranteed
•Lifetime Computer Storage

PSYCHIATIIC ASSOCIATES

3198 COllE ROAD
Park.,.burv. Weat Vlrvtnle 28104
304-4811-151 815
Robert E. lama, M.D.
Harry J . Cofflle. Ph.O .
J08eph P. Norrlt. M.D.
JemeoJ. Heyeo. Ph.D.
MlohHI E. Fr11mpton, M.Ecl.
Thomoo R. Footer, Ph.D.

We are Pleased to Announce
our relocati~n to Oxford -Square
,
loeated at the corner of
36th Street and Core R-oad
E,Q:;,ctive October 1, 1990

We can repair ciild re~e rad1ators · and
heater corH. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

STATUS CHECK - A U.S. Coast Guanlaman
surveys tbe &amp;eene Monday and checb the status
ol the oU retention boom around the dinner crullle
riverboat "Empress" which sunk at dockside on

Adult a Child
lotry, l'eyohologlcal A-••16ntt, llo·FoodiMick
tndlll-. MeriW, Pamly a Group Paychotll.,.py
F-lio ' NIUro Paychology

•cOMPOSITION SEPARATE PRICE

y-

~i~~~i.up
KEN'S APPLIANCE
•

Days

Aaass From

WANTED

15
. 15

6
10

Monthly

paid.

aA•ceive $ .50 dis count for ads Pllid in advance.
.
•free ads - Giveaway and Found ads under 15 words wtll be

run 3 d"it 11 no ch•ge.
.
·
•Price of ad for ell cepitell.tters•• double price ot ad c:ou.
•1 poin\ line type only u,sed.
' .
.
•Sentinel is not resports1ble for errors after first diPi . (Check
for error• tint d..,. ad runs in. papert . Cal~ before 2 :00p .m .
d.., after publication 10 mike correction.
•Ads that l'fiUit be Plid in actvan '-e 1ft
Card ot lhenk1
Happy Ad•
In Memoriam
Yard Sales

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION

FRIDAY, PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

15

1 - Card of Thtnkt
2 - ln Memory ·
3-Annoucements

4 - Givuwav
• 6 - H-ppy Adl
6- Lo•t and Found

Employmenl
Scrv1ccs
1 112131415-

Fmn Supplies
&amp; Liveslor.k

Help Wenled
Siluetion W1nted

- 2 ,00 P.M . MONDAY
- '2 :00P.M . TUESDAY

- 2 '00 P,M , WEDNESDAY

1 7 - MI'IceUaneous
18 - Wanted To Do

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

lih6hl4611
Classified paf{es ,corer the
foU6u:ing telephon-e exchan~es ...
G•llia County

Meigs County

M .. on Co., WV

AntaCode614

AreaCode614

AreaCode30"'

••&amp; - Gall ip olis

992 --Middleport
Pomtrov .

458..:.. leon

367- Ch•hire
388-Vinton
245- Rio Grinde
256 - Guye.n Dist .
843 - Ar•bi• Oist
379-Walnot

Re31 Estate
31 - Homn for Sale
32- Mobile Homn for Sal e

33-Farms tor Sale
34- Busin•s Buildings
35- Lou &amp; Acreage
35-Rul Ettate Wanted

675 - Pt . Ple111nt

676 - Appl·e Grovi
843 - Ponllnd
773- Miaon
247 - Letlr'l Falis . 882-New Haven
949 - Rac:in e
·896 - letan
742 - Rutllnd
937 - Buffalo
9815-Chnter

I;IQIII'I
41 - HOUHI fOf Rent
42 - Mobile HomH for Rent
43 - Farms for Rent

667- Coolv ille

.\4 - Apartment tor Rent

46 48 47 48 48 -

Oet Recuftc fast.

61 - Farm Equipment ·

62 - Wanted to Buy
63 - l ivestot:k

64 - Hay &amp; Gr•in

66 - Seed &amp; Fertili1er

Tr ansnorlation

21 -Busineu Opportunity
22-Money to Lo1n
23- Prof•lional Servlc"

71 "....!- AutoJ for Sale
72 - Truck l for S•le
73 -~•n l &amp; 4 WO 't
74-IW!otorcvclel
75- Boats &amp; Moton fof Sale
76-Auto P1rts• Ac:c•sori•
77--Auto Repair
78 - camping Equip"!ent
79-Campers 6 Motor Homes

Serv1ccs
81 · -Home lmprovemet~ts
82 - Phlmblng 6 Heating

83 - htiVating

Furnished Room s

84 - Etectrl c ~

Spac e for Rent

'

&amp; Retrlgeration

85 - General Hauling

Wanted to Rent
Equiprnent tor Rent
For L•••

86 - Mobile Home Repei'
87 - UphOIIti!Jry

•

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE .
4: 30P.M. DAY BEFORE
fUBLICATION

OLD TOWN FARM INC.
675-3963

.

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE

In acconlance wltll Seclion 307:11 oltloe Ohio Re·
vllld Code tooled bldo wHI
1&gt;&lt;1 r.celvad by tllo Mllgo
County IMrd of Commit·
olonero In their office Ia·
catad In the Courdoouoo. Poonoroy, Ohio, untl noon on
OC1. 24. 1810. Th• bldtwHI
1&gt;&lt;1 OJ*Iad 11 2:00 p.m. on
Ootober 24, 1880 and rNd
otoud for the following
building !Noe. Etch bid to

maet tho oondltlono ond

..,..,.flaadono u followo:
~ - t o houoo tha
Milo• County o.t&gt;llrtment
ol Hum.,· · ·~ loolal
...,.... Dlvlalon. 1088
oq-. fMt minimum 10t11

I

I:

FOR SALE IN RACINE

\

I;

.,,

.. offl-.
-·

VERY NICE LMGE lllME ON AI'I'ROl 3\!
ACRES - 4 BR. 3 bllhs, 2glflllll,llliled I
BR apartment. Property indudel porod, tpJII'OX. 4,Pl sq. fl ~m bid&amp; an~ mobile
bome. Ar•l blrpin II $89.900.
CALL 614-992-7104 FOR APPT.

.,..
Conolltlno of

minimum
of 4
10M1t foalllt!N
tar rMn and wo111111. Bold
oHiaa apace oloell -both
-fng.,d air aondltlonlng,
..d PfOI* lighting tao- offl..

1:
I'
'

•

1

"-'"' ....,.,. tor llld

.

IJulldlna 111d ........

flalt~

HI ollould ba brallan 'd otar 1.two (2) yur IMiolt. All
c

"

\

,.1. ~ \

·-.

5-31-'90 lin

Merch~nd1se
51 - Household Good11
62- Sportln" Goods
53- Ant iQues
54-Misc . Merehendi!le
56 - Building Suppli•
56- Pets for Sal ft
57-Muticaf Instruments
58 -F ruits• Veg«•bl•
59-Fo t Sale or Trade

bldo otooukl Indicate nocooOiry ,.ntal for bid~r to provid• malnt.nanc• for the ex·
tll'lor 1nd Interior of tha
building .
TIMo Board ~ Counly
Commlaalonlt'a m1y requireadditional contract provlolono with the ouceoolful
bidder. lncluolng but no1
llmltaol to tiMo right of the option to Cllncel the ..... H naceooory by giving • minimum of olxtv 110) dev• wilt·
t1n notice.
Tha front of the -llopto
enctolllng lloe bid mutt IMI
marllaol "Suled Bid", Sod .. larvlcn Dlvlolon . Bid·
dar ....II furnloh their awn
bid form.
Tha Boord of Counly
Commlnloniro rMY -~
the lo-ilt blcl or oaloct tho
·blot bid for tha .tnt..dad
purpoM eel rrn w,e thl right
to rojact any or •II bldo, and
any port - eot.
MllgoCaunty
Cammtnlonero

YourPho['le
ble Billa Here
IUSIHISS PHONE
141

OH.

_

R., L. HOLLON
TRUCKING -·.

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

CHESTER, OHIO' ·
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT

CEDAR
CONSTIUCDON

992-6648 or ·
698-6864

98

10- 12·'90·1 mo.

98$-4473 .
667-6179

. .06 / doy ,

· $1 .30 / doy

lnturence
Busineu Training
S chools &amp; lnsrrtJction
16- Fhdio. TV &amp; C8 Repair

-11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY

MONDAY PAPER

s13.00

7- ·V•d Sale (paid in advancel
8 - Public Sale &amp; Auct lon
9 - Wint.t to Buy

cept -:- cllllsified displ..,., Busin•• Car~ and l09al not•ce~ !
will el1o appear in the Pt. Ple•ant Reg111er and the Galh·
polis Daily Tribune. reaching over 18, 000 hOmes.

. 4~.6

$9.00

16

Announcemenls

•A class ified edvertiaement pl~e~ in The Daily Sentinel. I ell ·

TUESDAY PAP,ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

.

Stop &amp; c-pare
Free Estimates

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We C.,.-y Fiahing SuppU•

OHIO PALLET
COMPANY

..... .

Remodeling

Over
· 16 Word1
. 20
.30

Rat e
$4.00
$6.00

Rat• arli for coneeeutNe ru"'· broken updiiYI will be charged
fnr ea~h tt ..... as HParate ads.

Meigs. Gailie or Mason counti.t mu st b'e pre-

COPV DEADLINE -

16

't:iilliOO&lt;m

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMAN CLUB

FCIIkon II+ acres ina
w~h a garage

SHOOTING
MATCH

II i~~;~u~~~~d~g acres,
$34,000.
barn,

shed, and nice home located
on Gold Ridge wnh 3 gas
wells. Good ·giazing farm.
$50,000.
EAGLE RIDGE - Newer
white brick wrth 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room
on I acre. Very private location. $65,000.
SYRACUSE - River front
property next to the marina.
2.5 acres for fishing mitemen!. $20,000.
CHESTER' - Nice 3 bedroom home with new roof,
remodeled with large modern kitchen, close to town
but yet with a lot of priva cy.
$18,500.
.
POMEROY- Excellent starter home just out of town
with a yard and next to play·
ground, 2 bedrooms and full
basement, plus a carport.
$16,500.
MIDDLEPORT - Large business buildino in town just
waiting for your adventure.
• 'lill-ii:liR1 ~E-EDUCED $16,500.
•'
- 3 bedroom
home w~h excellent
llocatii,on in a nice town and
neighborhood. $15,000.
RACINE - Business build·
ing wnh four rental ap'artments, aII in full operation.
Let this investment pay for
itself. $45,000.
'
POMEROY - 3 bedroom
mobile home on rented lot ..
all electric, very modern. A
good buy at $7,500. ·
MINERSVILE - 3 bedroom
house with a full basement,
I ~ baths, new roof, great
place for' a yoong family.
$15,000.
POMEROY - 2-3 bedroom
with two sundecks viewing
the river,
nice bui~·in
kitchen, all elactric, fully
carpeted. $16,000.
GALLIPOLIS - 3 bedroom
OJnch in the country w~h full
basement and 2 car garageon
0'181 2~eres.

$21,000.

POMEROY- 2 houses- 5
rental unns. live in one and
let !his pay for ~sell.
$25,000.00.
HUD Holies Anllabla
WE NEED LISTINGS
Dala E. Taylor 992·3129
R.A. '(Val) Vllentln•

446-9172
Bruce TNfard, Broker
HOUSING
. I,
Mary
Clerk 11.,;:!:!:;~~~~:...1
(101
11,Ho!Mtmer.
2tc
11

Every Sunday
Starting

at 11 :00 A.M.

Between
Wilkesville and
Salem Center

g. 1 2- ' 90· 1 mo.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
1:00 P.M.

SUNDAYS

&amp;

161 North Second
Middloport, Ohio 45760

DEUYEID TO

10-11mo.

•New Hames
•Garages
•Complete

LUMBING

New Location:

$150 T~~~nd

GUARANTEED I
FREE ESTIMATES

CONSTRUCTION

. I

SAW LOGS

~Gutter
~H~lmet·

___..__
BISSELL &amp; BURKE

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

Offica

110 SUNOAT

We Need Liollnl!ll!
9-!1- '911- 1 mo.

___

New Homes llotllt
"Free Estim'atas"

SERVICE

NEVER tLEAN YOUR
GunERS AGAIN

Words

,
3

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

992-5335 or Vl5·3561

992-5009

Real Estate General ·

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDIIilG
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

up .

205 N. StcGIMI StrMI
lliDDLEPOIT, OHIO 45760
Office 614·"2-2116
HOME 614-992-5692
DOJTIE S. TUIINEII, IROIEI
HOUSES•LOTS#FARMS
COMMERCIAL

RATES

TO PLACf AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
'
CLOSED SUNDAY

.f

-

• The Area's -Number l Marketplace

HAY FOILAGE, SKID lOADER
MANURE HANDLING EQUIPMENT

'

.Located on Safford ScbCHII ld. off Rt. 141
(6141 446·94a or 1·100-172· 5967

992-3033
91!7/'90/ I mo.

Banks
Construction

Classifie

'

Sl.SO/D.S. Page

(AU

the Delaware River at Philadelphia over the
weekend. Salvage crews have been worklnl! to
right the steam-powered ship, which _sunk when
the ·rising &amp;Ide flooded all three decks early
Saturday. (UPI)

·~

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

LOW GIAOE OAK

'

I

MOBILE HOME FURNACES • HEAT PUMPS
All FURNACEPARTS

'

992-2196
Middleport;

GEHL FARM MACHINERY
OCTOBER DISCOUNTS

f

Now 111 .
StoekU

OPENlY
APPOINTMENT

PAT' HIU FORD

.

'

10 VISITS$2900

SER~ICE

.
, o

I;i

SportlngNMd1

10-01-'80-1 mo .

515.00 every day
•Brochures
•Letters and Term Papers
•Mailing Labels
•Press Releases
•Newsletters .

See u1 For Your

FIT and TIIM
OCTOBER
· $PE.C/Al

U496 S1111!11UN ID.
lunA•, OliO

BULLETIN BOARD

W'ordprocessing Services Include:-

61.t-992·2321
We Say What W!J Do.
We Do What We Say.
9-6·1 .mo .

U2-2.t21

t

For a Resume tbat interviews as well as you do!

36 Yean E• 'p erJence

Buy. Sell or Trade
Guns
OPEN MON.-SAT. 10-5

.

JOB WINNING RESUMES

Ml"lf'"'

POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. Tllo S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 60 lk S.R. 143
NEW HOURS:
.POMEROY: 9 a .m.-7 p.m. 7 Days
ALBANY: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 15 Dayo, Closed Sunday
PAYING AS OF TODAY, SEPT. 11. 1990
· #1 Copper •1 per lb.;
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans. 45¢ per lb.
Clean Auto Radilton 44¢ lb.; Batteries '1 .25 •·
Yellow
40C lb.

Hand Tufting

· STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;
SUPPLIES ·

RECYCLING ·

OFRIS 2 tOCAnGJIS 10 SEIYE YOU.-·

Custom Drapes

8-12-80

I~

.

Daily Sentinel . Paga 7

Til·

UPHOLSTERY

USm RAILROAD nES

. ~" :
\\~l

..........................
· -----------------------------~-~
n r~~.

• of

BILL SLACK
992-2269

'

./~ /f'u

CAl .'S

SHRUB &amp; TREE

Karpov, so far, fails to. reverse crushing defeat
NEW YORK (UPI) - Anatoly
KarpPv, trying to bounce back
tram a :'crushing" defeat In the
24-game World Chess Championship against champion Garry
Kasparov, failed to gain the
advantage In a game that was
adJourned M&lt;!nday night, game
officials said.
Kasparov, playing black, actually had the upper hand when
play was halted, even though be
w:as forced Into a ''temporary
· sacrifice" of bls queen, said
Black, a championship
spokesman.
Play In the thlrd game of the
championship, which Kasparov
leads 1 %· %, was scheduled to
resume Tuesday evening.
The challenger began by movlqg his king-pawn to d 4 and by
the fourth move It was clear that
Kasparov had responded by
using the King's lndlan Defense
wltti his pawn to d 6. Later,
Kasparov Introduced the Gil·
gortc Variation, Black said.
'The game went seven minutes
o~r Ita five-hour . limit before
Kasparov sealed his final move, ,
giving Karpov no chance to study
the move overnight, the spokes- ..
man said.
'
"ln game 2, when Kaaparov
• ··· won, . It waa such a crushing
· vJctory !bat • It put' a lot of
Importance on Karpov winning
toqllt," Black IBid. "Karpov
b8i tried to do Ill llld yet tonight
w have 1111 adjoanled poaltlon.
"Most people teet black Is still

The

Business Servi es

Baby·boomer8: from getting
to giving, wealthy still 'stingy'
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Greedy baby boomers, who spent
the Reagan -era In an orgy of
conspicuous consumption, are
showing a new spirit of caring for
others - giving both time and
money, · a new study said
Tuesday .
At the same time. the new
study by lndependent Sector,
showed that the wealthy are still
"stingy" and the less affluent
still more generous In terms of
making monetary sacrifices for
charitable causes.
The study showed that more
than 98 million Americans - a
whopping 23 percent Increase
over 1987 - volunteered their
time and talent to charitable
endeavors In 1989.
It also found that 75 percent of
American households are contrl·
buting to charitable causes, with
. the average contribution of a
household $734, up 20 percent,
after Inflation, from two years
ago.
"The dra!Datic Increase In
donating time and money among
the baby boom generation Is good
news for today and may suggest
even better news for for the
future as this very large population group assumes community
responsibility," satd Independent Sector president Brian
O'Connell.
"Previous surveys Indicated
rather disappointing giving and

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio ·

Atlantis,
Columbia,
readied for

Constantin Panalt, the self· want to elaborate. She said she Is
• NEW YORK (UPn - Nadia
employed roofer who helped her still recovering e!flotionally.
:eomanecl, the gym~tlcs da' ' He beat me," · she said.
flee
Romania and soon dmnl·
"l'llng of the 1976 Olympics, said
nated her life.
"Tilere are some things I don't
'the man who helped her flee
' 'I am not a scandal pperson. " even want to ,femember . "
Romania last year, · far from
Comanecl said she did not go to
:being her lover, kept her prisoner ·she said. " This Is not my Image."
At a HoUywood, Fla., news t he pollee or take · legal action
l n the United Slates, beat her
conference just over 10 months against Panalt because she did
Teguiarly and cheated her df
ago, Comanecl said she was not understand how to hal)dle
:SlSO,OOO In Income.
~
Involved with Panait and did not such things.
• Comanecl said the ordeal
care If he was married. She
" I come from a communist
:lasted three months and took her
stoked romantic flames, hinting country," she said. " We learned
· on a harrowing journey through
they would set up house;_She 11-lso nothing of lawyers, nothlqg a bout
Florida, California, New York
said at the time she wanted rights , I don't know what to do.
and Canada . .She said shortly
nothing to do with her celebrated He said, 'I'll send you back to
after arriving In the United.
coach, Bela Karolyl.
States . that she was locked In
Romania. ' It was like I was
dropped
from the sky. I knew
hotel rooms and a Los Angeles
· Comanecl qow Insists that
nothing.
I
was scared."
-"
apartment and liot allowecj so
Panalt was not her lover, but her
Comanecl said she had few
much as to answer the phone.
captor. She added that ·she
"I was In a tree country," she
speaks often with Karoly\, a resources when she anlved, but .
said. "But I was not free."
Romanian who runs an aC: Income from Interviews, photoComanecl, 29, said she has · claimed gymnastics school In graphs and a fashion spread In a
settled since February In MontHouston. Karolyl was not Imme- London magazine produced
real, where she Is planning to
diately available at tils school to about $150,000. But she said she
becOme a Canadian citizen, stage
confirm the account of his most was not allowed to cash a check
gymnastics exhibitions and per. and never saw a dime. "He used
famous pupU.
haps enter coaching.
' 'Wilen I came ro the United me for money," she said.
·The woman who scored the
A network of Romanian friends
States this guy kept me like I was
first perfect 10 In the Olympics
came
to Comanecl's aid, IncludIn a prison," she said of Panalt.
said the Florida roofer with
" He didn't let me call anybody. I Ing Stefu . She said she and P a nail
whom she was romantically
couldn't call my farnUy In Roma- traveled to Canada In February
llnked had taken her earnings
nia. I knew something was because of the prospect of
from Interviews and magaZine
wrong .... I couldn't go anywhere lucrative contracts.
tayouts and returned with his
That was where she finally rid
alqne_, ·I moved from one apart·
TELLING HER STORY- Nadia Comane~l, the gymnastic star
wife to his native Romania .
herself of him. Apparently, Pa·
ment to another. "
of the 1976 Olympics, tells reporters Ia New York oa Monday that
: Comanecl spoke at a ballroom
Comanecl said she did not nail feared Stefu or the . poUce
the man who helped her nee Romania last year, Constantia Panalt,
table to a handful of reporters
speak of Panalt's abuse because would Intervene, and the roofer
kept her prisoner In the United States, bea&amp; her regularly and
after being honored by the
he· was her lifeline to this ran off to the airport at dawn,
chea&amp;ed
her of S150,000 Ia Income. She said the ordeal lasted three
Women's Sp.o rts Foundation.
country. She also feared more leaving Comanecl behind.
months
and
took her on a harrowing journey through Florida,
Wearing- a crisp gray business
.Comanecl said she Is glad to
beatings from him If she did not
New
York and Canada. (uPI)
Callfomla,
suit and a white blo\lse. she said
return to Montreal, the site ofller
cooperate.
!n nalting but capable English
"He punched her, black ·. and great . triumph, wl!ere as a
that this was the first time she
blue," Alexandru Stefu, Cornane- winsome 14-year-old she mes•
has spoken of her travails In
cl's manager In Montreal, said as meriz!!d a global television au- sliver and a bronze, In Montreal Into disfavor with deposed ruler
_
America since her perUotis eshe pointed to the side of his face. dience -with her grace, strength and two golds at the 1980 Nlcolae Ceausescu.
"He didn' t like anybody more
. cape from Romania on Nov. 28,
and acrobatics.
Olympics.
"The guy Is a bandit."
Her first perfect 10 on the
But all her medals were left famous than himself," she said.
1989.
Comanecl was asked I! she was
Panait held an exit permit and
She said she wan ted to clear
behind In Romania, where Cosexually abused by Panalt. She uneven parallel bars was one of
her name after Innuendos surdid not reply. She admitted to the Olympics' finest moments. manecl said she was once the assisted her escape:
rounding her Involvement with
"little princess" but had fallen
physical punlshmen t, but did not She won three gold medals, plus a

TB surges worldwide

'

Tuesday. October 16. 1990

The

OVEN
ALL MAKES

GROOM
ROOM

Bring It hi Or We

Pick Up.
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Grooming
for All Breeds ·

EMILEE MERINAR

992-5335 or 985-3561
Post Offlca
Pa01aray
OIIID

Across
2.17

Owner &amp; Operator

614-997·6820
Pomeroy, Ohia

~====10-6

GUN SHOOT

1 mo.

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMAN CLUB

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

GAME ROOM
NOW OPEN'
Wed. thru Sat.

Ba1han Building
EVERY
SAl. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

HRS.: Wed.·Thors.-Fri.
5:00p.m.- 11:00 p.m.
Sat. 12 Noon·11 p.m.
·Between Wilkesville .
and Salem Center

fachory (hob

12 Gaugo ~~~~Only
5tric.tly I

12 Gaur. Factory

Cho e o11ly

SHOOTS STAll
SEPT 16, 1990

. Sept. 4,tfn

WANT ·
ADS
WORK!
2

In Memory
In Loving Memory Of
ASA E. JORDAN
who paned away
Oct. 1 e. 1 911
Remembrance is a
golden chain
Death trill to bruk ln
vain; ·
To have, to love. end
then to PM't
11 the gr1111t11t sorrow
of one'o heert,
Tile yeera may wipe
out many thing•
But thl• they wipe out

never:
The memory of thoae
hippy diYI
Wa epent together.

Sedly miHad by
wife Nora

..

BUILDING &amp;

BISSELL
BUILDERS

REMODELING
Commercial &amp;
Residential
•Roofing
•Siding
•WindOWI
lrro't • Warth Doing 1911

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGU
"At Reasonable Pricts"

PH. 949-2801

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION

or

Re~.

949•2860

Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CAUS

,4-16-16-tfn

LINDA'S
PAINTING

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIP,1ATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do
it for you.
Very Reasanable

have References
614-915-4180

10-10-'90-1 mo.

--

Announcements

3 Announcements
Credit Plus, Gold Credit Card:
VisaJMastarcard
GUirlniMCI.
Cash advances. Na seeurtly'
deposit. No credlf check. 1·f00..
226.0048. $19.95 ....
Gold Credit Card, cash adv1n011

program . Visa/Master nrd gulf,

No sacurlty daposlt. 1~ 441 ·
0040, $25.
-

Hear1uarch sl ngln network '
An ..citing way fo m... ....._..

ont special. Write Heart ... rda.
P.O. Box 1043, GolllpoUo, 01(
45631.

COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICE
Rllldentfal end
Commerclol
. IEWIIIIG AND

TROiillE SMOODNG
Certified llectrldano
fr• ltllllllltll

BANKS

-CONSTRUCnON
992-6009

tll-11 mo.

.

No Hunting or Trespanlng on

th• A. H. Rickel farm Hlrltonl,
WY.
Vlololiln
_.
..

prooocuoaol.

4

Giveaway

2 lomalo coto lmor

lrol,....!.to~

all white blue .,... Mid 1
and whlta. 30U71..UIM.

Cat to giveaway. MouN

Oink "11..,..41-1117.

k
,

llrobn.,

Gray, lo~olrao17- atolldt1ono to o aood home. 814- '
27M after 4:30 p.m.
Holt COIII!L FrMI Loawo, uga, 114-2118-1121.

�•

LAFF·A-DAY

:

· Giveaway'

- --·1fT Wlnted

41 HOusesforRtnt

1uesaay, UctODer ·1b, 1 ::I::IU

KIT 'N' CARLYLE.® hy Lll'ry Wrlpt

71

W.nl to rent I II ' wn 1toue1

Kilton haW Pwolon IJid IIIII

,,

..._..ran •nd: Stub taU , ...
eel. IO+f7$-3080.

-n
n:

LMmo1 ... fum1oe,

lng. l-o/IM8.
Po~

2

AehtglrltOf Ft'MZer, -avacoto,
~nt 1t CU.

11 11.

For Lease

'!fti!IO,

goad

mllll, mini
1112.

ft. to QIVNWI)'.

br Newly
PotMroy1 1300.

,

.

#t~Jh~,-·

..... :w4-17S.Z417, 17!r.al44 ..
17S-7tl5.

"If

LOST: Golden Ratrlner puppy.
Appra1. ...10 WMU old. BlUe
ey11. Loet lut Friday In
Pom•oy ,,.., REWA~D. 114-

114 ••

to

J?!!

then send t h. e ·

1

boloprlnga_fllllorlwln.~nn

~ ~ 01~"':,!21ls5o~
111 , . . _ ouitaa.
-~~ oobl.-, - - 130
ond up to MUD dora.,...
cooh wlh '""""'" crodl 3 ml
IIIICIIoft

C"
1111;m,mo.

_

pi•••

5

12,1411) B"':, ~~:101, Mloc.
. IB-11, t-?61'
13'10.
OWNER/OPERATOR NEEDED:
Study work IVIIIIb... MuM
1145
A-hodulod Yord Silo II:
h... flllblclo wnh lorp. 114-884~o~h Avonuo, Mon., Tuoo., 1511
Wed. Jl.? lllnr llonw. Roln can·
POII'Ion lor lull limo woll...1..
In pereon. VIllage Plzzei
Sold H..... Conlin'. for Hit: apply
3004 Jac~n
Avo, Point
t'P - r 15 1&lt;1·."-·h•rhlr: Plllllnl, wv.
. to'6~.~~:,\.:.:C~· :'n, ;;:RH.c,l==,pono.cl;;-b;:lo"""'--:r-:oot=o=-u:-,.:-.,.
19" tv. I llond, 8' couchJ wolkoro. Apply In poroon, oftor·
lllutoman, 2 rocQr recllnll', .: noona. Contact Tammy Hupp at
liook lhelvel, gllhWift, Mom'•
SmoiJI..bard

~:~ T:~ ~mpi.::Z..:~~ ;;.R•.:_•,c.'"-='"::•-••::d:':,:W
-;;
M-:1::-VI-'rJII'::nn:::lo:;.=:Vinton S!:
Tomporr port limo mornln~•·
Yord solo: At. IIIII, :1 mil• rrom· =:i~1 ":0::''"'~
town. Wodn-y, Ocl. 17, 8-5.
1824123 oftor 12:00 noon.
·
b p o - I!Ntlng ond /loJC
Pl. Pleasant ·
lnlt•ller., eend rNu.,. ta Bo.::
P 12 C.O PGinl P-onl Roglo&amp; VlclnHy
lor,
200' lllln
PI
wv. SI'!!'J
25DDU Pofnl
ou
01Mt ronl •lo !&gt;olow Sldoro
knoW
ollhloid.
r
"--J lhN SIIUrdiJ. Tiroo,
glldlr, - . loolo, lol 01
mhc.
15
Schools &amp;
Instruction
Public Sale
8

om'::';'.o.

St.IIIMi.

441..,_ or a14-ztl8.1103 boforo
lp.m.
14K70 Mobu. Home, 1 t.e Nnt 8 a.m. to I tt.m. llon•..a.t. &amp;1431 HomiS for Sail
• -ponolblllly, wllh hlohl)l 448-1111!.,,127 AM. Clotlunolloftl~ MIR _... "For ..ll,po::::llo,::..:""::.;,._,--.....,,.---:c
,__
......,
=
2 IIO&lt;J ,_,.., good cond, dolollo ool 114 441 Z!IL
Do rov llkl to .,_-,.
-lblo
lond
conlroct with
•-•
lumll"·" Chock ,. 0111 fort'J:IIIy IUrnldown ,_yll'llnl 304-175-1130
2
-room
n!KI
d
ioha F
~
'
'
wahorllfrr-. '$Za5 monthly IUN on Olrpoll.
n u~
3 bodroomo houN, lind con; piuo ~ .I ulllll•. 11141992· . nHuro l
Rt. 7 N~h.
lriCI, 304-175-1104.
111711. .
.~:' 8
11144, Golllpollo,
3br, brick homt, 1 111 bollho, Zbr unlumlohod 11; oond, coblo

=•·

m

Kountry, Klde Chlkt

304-..~...

=-

Apt. Mlddllpoll, Ohio, 117. N.
FourtiL 2 bo...oorno, lumilhod,
lnd d-11. 304-81Z.
BEAunFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
~A~~W~Ik ' : 'n~Pl&amp;jkl'
1ow
•• Cllll14 ua 25e&amp;.
mo-.
E .
Fum. olflcloncy. All utipold. Shorw both. $135/mo. VII

Employment Services
Help Wanted
11
AVON • All lllltl, Coli Morl""
Woov•-·2MI.
Acl

Howl

EI:CIIItnt

weg•l

No ••po!lonco.

c.u •·

s-o- --bly. E-r WO&lt;k
oi -

-·77111 Eld. 5214. Open 24
howl, Including ~ndiJ.

AVON I AH Arooo I Shirley

llpoo11, 304-8'15-loiZI,

a."

- . r ..o.dln my home,
Q.all(poll• Ferry trll, evening

f."'

S.r., aftord1t)le, ' chlldcllre. M-F
I o.m.• 5:30 p.m. AJIII 2 -10.
laiiJ'!IIIor/hoUIIkMPir,
full Boloro, oftor ochool. Drop.lno
111M In my home, to et1rt In
w -. I14-448-B 224·
Jonuorr, call 304-t'l!l-71211.
wa• 10 do 111 klndl of
eu..-,
...
..,lno
•~&gt; mocllanic _,. 1110 _ h ond
pllolliorio tor lull or port-limo wul ngeoro. ·- ~,~.
hJiiolno pooii!On. MUll Will do odd jobo. -~~~~. cuibe IO proclloo In IM
at Ohio. Aoou.,.. moy be ling bNIIo or fl&lt;1 od,
Mnl: ell 041, c/0 Oolllpolil d~-r r-lr. Othlr. I-JI.
Ot!IY Tribunl, 125 Third olvi, 1223.
Qolllpollo, OH 45131.
WOUld like IO do bobplltlng In
homo, w-; ~~ only. Hilve
Eom by IM WHk. Join my
oi1H.
tho ....,...... lo domonolrllo Aetwenc.,l
"CIIrloi-Aro&lt;lnd-T.World".
Julv.l)loemblr. LAve .,...,.,
. . , _ ond pflono numbor on
Financ1al
-ng-o.I14-IIIZ&gt;I3ID.
..,., World Ercollo,. 11-mol
BusiDeSI
tor Noll-"11 21
eo
.. nowpl1onM
hlrtng, will train, 3CMOpportunity
171-7711, Elll. 11'11
hoon; 304-17&amp;-Z025.

4

•I•
INOTlCEI
....-~lllwo. Booo plw com· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
- - · --727·7115 coli for In- nocommonda lhll JOU do - .
.-v~...
n... with people roou know 1nd
HaT to oond money llv;;;,;;j, lho
FEDEIIAL OOYERNMENT IS moll Unlll JOU hiVI lnvloiirgitod
HIRitiCl $11,000-NZC ,..,. tho otto~no
1101 114
011 111
~;::'~-'
Locol Vondlng Roulo. Hoftlll
1
Now Maohlnoo. CASH BuoiOonm--811111 Joho1_ oKCII- ....HOO-'JII1-444tEill. 1013.
lonl PlY aood bonH,.., tor
dolollo eoN Z4-178-TII1, olll. G-1 Locol Vondlng ROUio. Hoftoot
Now !lochl... CASH Buol·
HOME TYPISTS, PC _ . . . . . .1-8CIO-'JII1-444tEKI. 1013.
· 111 $3S,OOG
potEJd.
...lal.
MonutiCiurw lllllng wolor m••
Dololil.
-.eaMOOO
a· · chiMo,
411:1;
iocal r0u1o for Nlo.
A1p11t
.,_,,_._
Above
HOII.E TYPISTS, PC u.... avorogolncomo. ztl-:112-1490.
· (1) ':Jo~
polonllot
Dolollo.
.
'1000
El. 11- Own yaur own •Pflllral or •hoe
More,
chooH
from :
10111.
J M - - r . Ladloo, Mon'o,
INTELLIGENCE JOIIS. FED, lnflnliPflloon, ~
..1,
CIA, US Cuolorno. DEA, lie. Polho or llllornny
, DonHlri!!JI. Lllllngo. 11) - . --r!Aorablc, Bildll
,
11UC100 lit. K·IOI•.
SOCk Shop,
atcwo.
oolor onolytll. Brond
u..ln-.; ...r 11; .,. olllld Add
_
, Liz Clol~l .Manhl
....,, ,.to 1821hnon11L A - MlnlaluNI Anno ,._, . Ill
~.,:a':.'"1011 wl!lbo pold. Michllo, Pinky, luglo Bo¥, Lavl,
Comp ..-r:~=·· IAel!" Foyo,
bob¥ ollt• Luato. Cl'lor
.,.._ olio,
....... ...., ollor - · -~ rllr llriclng or
Drive ~OIR liON. - I I pricH
~s - ~·1or top q~
· : ~. ~•r ' ...
- ~~ol-1111
Cl'lor ZIO IMondi
.. do lltft! IIJIII. ,$11,100 •• Ut,IOO: InIna 1 plooM, • - voniO&lt;J,
lrolnlna. ftlliUIH,
441D4 ~ E..nlngo, llllwwn alrtoro, arond oporilng, ole. Con
lpA ~7p.lll.
If dip,. Mr. -..,hnoldor
40UN-3:111.
INTELLIGENCE JOIB. CIA, US
Cull- DiA, 110.- Hlflna. OWnor ...... ,.Mfing roull
Col 11) Ext R- lmtlono, inook •
1011t.
•
~nk _ . - ·
.._
Exlll-

.....

kc_,•

-":aPort

Till lloiJIII CouniJ ~ ol
CaiMIIIraa ...U prqf~ '~
10 . . Euoul- -N
-lopmlftl

=-=

Dl-.

~;.:r...:o:,

lnqWIII Only! zt6-7IWOZO.

VENDING AOUTE: !Mol. G-

cMh

Income.

H''"h

"P•••
01. OH 411711. _..lion
••• s • Oot- :n, JHo.

:~;;:~=--;;";;t,:-ANN;;;,;NG=-=a=Eos=-.-=c""om--

1

--

U!llla.

6909

Graci-

1 ond 2 bod-

room lpirlmentl: 1t Vlllg•

Minor
1nd
Rlvorolilo
- - · In Mlcfcl-n. From
Silt. Coiii14-IIZ-778t EOH.
Modom Zbr aport..nl. 114-4480390.

..__.. lurnl
. noobllo llomo, t
;ni;"'below
town overlooking
mor CA hNt bojiciOii Rtf.
• ·
114 441 0131. •

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Ono bedroom oplo. for rom.

SZZ5 month. DoPoon raqulrocf.
I"M-112..D18 •Iter I p.m.

~C:~rsJ

304f7'71.a111.

7100 Wlndullrlo!Oonorolor, tin-

illood nollor, ... n lr~llor
5h
f:ll~ roiOIII 1
•-•
or,
.... lp.m. • ..-..,.. •

=;5:i.

Aluminum lromod llonn wl,.;
41o':!!l: :::~
glaH.
• 1--6120.

ConrorMa 1:

eeptlo tanka,

-rod

~~

cpaintings,
'•
qu •,
or • I ,
loyl, or entire Mtata
call colloct :104-525-3Z75.

Twin Rlnro T - Houllna lor
lhl Eklor!y and Hondlcopj1od.
Aporlmonll IVIIIO-Ina lor""' of ociiUIIOCI lnoomo.
200 locond St or c111 :JO.Wn.

1---------54 Miscellaneous

11711.

---------11 -......___

Merchandise

Upololro unlumilhld A11tf.:·
mont, _,..,oct, no poll, uti It!•

-

• D-4, Col.

Or1gonwynd C.ttlfY -.,..n,
Sl•m- and llllllllpn ldltono.

114-448-3844ofllr7p.m.

Good oond,

M,1100. 114-448.ao311.
Mldlo hCockor BponJol. 7 moo.
Flrowood lor lliol. Cut ollba. ol . ••oo. 114 415 2017 ·~· 5
114-ztii.IIID or 114-Z!I.f411.
p.m.
1e12 Tawn~tant, 14x10, double \Jplllal.... Furnllhed, 3 roome,
'-;t;;n;;;-c;;;;midAiiiUiiii
IKpondo, CA, On prlnlo ronlod bOih, cl. .; lir, wuhldrr, F!rowood,
opiM
dollvorocf 0no JoiiOw ClONIOid Amuon
lot In Aodnoy. 114-448-153D 11tar carpll, no Dflll roloronco, llookocl. 140 lood, 114-3174131, Pl"ol Ono Jllr 3 monllll old
HpOIIHI14~44-151•.

5p.m.

2 bod ....... Llbort~ltr, - - 45
17S-225D or :104-8
•
SPECIAL Ftoc!O&lt;J to youiDOI, 2
m~

or ·3 bedroom14x7U

IM 4111133

For -

Furnished
Rooms

'*'·

Roome IVIillble for 2 or 3 oan-

lho unbllilvlble of atno:tlon wortooro, 3114-882·
$12,000 dellv.-d 1nd Mt up.
Coii1-IIOO-'IZM0451or -no.
Roorno for ront • wook or month.
Schullz 1Zd01 2br, 13,500. 114- Slorllng II s-mo. Qolllo Holo!.
441.ersv, &amp;14.. 41-11815,
114 441-1880.

~Nooplna """"" wflh - n g.

33 Fanns tor Sale
Z12

acre

firm

In

Allo troll• -·All --.,po.
Coli oftor 2:00 p.m.,

81lem

Townlhlp,
- · awn. will
urry contn.ct . .,..1112-2812.

1111,111_, WY.

.

-.Jn.

1711-tiiO
m
·
For Solo: a.., ooblnol, wild
chorry, 3 -Mr lnoh wood, In
good condhlon; microwave lor
Mil
IIII'KWI
MW;
Srftall
rofrktlrllor lor aampw or
lloiJilo llo!no, lor ·1111, 11122
brand new· UlnleN M,el elnkj
II;'CM=II':'Ic:'.m'::c:h";:;nJIO:Imo.=.:';,-;:==::
-bed, _,.,..t
Bomi-Eioalrlo Mopllal
UOO. P~obiol
MMW

--oolzot-10.12 .....

13 lonG.
lo...... ,..... .... lng. 304.f75.4141."-ndMionod _.,.,., D.,...
QuorontM prompt ..viM lor
111 mokll, -.11. Tho -hlr

......., .... 41 -

Prlcl to ..U. 114 311 . .a.
1 .. ,., -

COli I ltl ,

......

Moblll Home Park.

-~.:m•ll.
u. - porll,o1 - P-ror.
· Col!

""'
- .. -P-.o,
...... .torrico .....
A~ol
WV

·-r

I
11111.
or 372-2171.
Q,.. Bhbppo. 114-44141144.
0 ·J • Wh"I Ad ·• 2 wfth
.....
•
.._._
11•
••
=.·
billidlng lol, roodJ to build on, • 01.........•" ool ..., 114- A~or and F -• •••··
reltrk:t:id, $8,100. 814-24S-e585. ~-===-------...1;1;;;;::;714;;;;;•;;;";;;";;;1;;;:3Gp;;;:·:::m:::
.
Aoillo 2 AII'Aon, 1 ooro !011, S
mll11 ooulh GoiMpollo Loollo,
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
l"'bllc wllor, no -rlctlono,
oomo wllh ~- ll'oniiQI. - .

304-372

r

;:::..j

1171-Z:IZI.

:;::=-:::-:--::-:::-;;:::-==-

Trollor IOC to&lt; ront $10 ~~
Mlddlopoll, Ohio. oftor 5 1"11·
·
36 Real E. .....
••••
Wanted
Wan!od to ..... wllh Ollllan ot
lond Oonlllcl: homo, 3
br oomo ·..- . Coumr
IChoole. 114-44~-ft~~ 1ft1t I
p.m.

..,.

...
....
: ..,.
.....
··.:.~

\

I

Coolv!IIIIMIH'»&gt;I4.

Aoolll- ......,_,
Pupo 2 block mo1oo, 1 block I

•••

lomo~e. 114-245 513:1, .......

441.fll03.

Musical

57

- ' t::t' '-

From

..99.00 L8111pe-Loll-MoftiiiiJ ,.,.,.. ' Ao $11.00. CIH Tocfly FREE
Color C.talog. 1-100-221-tm.

Brand Till-. IKII

Blrllahl Hftch Sleek Trollor,
12,1Cibj b:11 QaaUMCk •oo11
Trlllor, $3,:100; Laral 8oi10Uon
Of ~ock, Fill 1 UIIIIIJ
Trlllora IJ Hll-.o Dlllo
• ~"''"I
PoiHiol ooo, I J.l., A10o ..,..
Hllleboro Alii Truck Beda. CliM
3 lloc- HlloMI For Plollupo
Solo Prlood Froa •·oo lnllllllid.
o.l Trollor

::'1" ......,

::.~y_ :O:;'C::lc~s:

WANT ME TO GET
STRAI61-lT fJ\5 IN SCI-lOOL,
A~D DO EVER'(~IN6 PERFECT!

\ ~\

7·

114111..

63

Run Aooolullon wl"n
papn. f1.100. - -·
hoa to&lt; o~~lo Wolghl
1101ba.114114W017. '
Bllll

a.-

NIH~·

e.......,. old,

1100.
I.
.
OuoiiiY Dulrtor For ..... 114-DI.022:.

111(.S17..771Q.

Transportation

71 Autos for Sale
INI
Ponlilo
L8mono
•-o.r. wlolr, 14,000; ltM
Oo¥ton. rult&gt;o !opd1 olr ,oond,
fZ,bOO; 11181 Fora Rongor,
$3;000. For •It or !rode, t14Zio:.IZ10•

.

1ff7 corwno 23,GIIII mlloo,
$12.000&amp;'-!:l
Eo.Oii
C!".t..·~i
1111
LX, ll,uuu;
1...
Tlluncltrblrd, - .
blullnl-,_~. or
1m Oldtl ...... 111-. old

ou..-n FfUII F1r111 lull olllr
111 . 1111 ol Allllnr. Wo. _,o
""'-· _ , ol oPIIIII.
- · lodlon oorn,
7 • .,
-lloo~J
N ••
I"N
-·

. . . . . . . """=· .

Suppl10•,
&amp; LiVI'O,IOCk

OJtbo

tor

1

1117V Chi\'IOiol Cullom Von, ·
NOO. :JO.W'IS-I:m or 175-3711.
1171· Ford Bronco. 480 molot.
boollorll condhlon. 114·11112·

-.. .I GUf&gt;&gt; THeY
Ttl INF. you $HO.UJ.J&gt;I
li $EEN ANP

1182 Gofdwlna lntorolllo, 11,000
mllll, llkl now, ,_ tlno, I lolo
of chrome, 1 acceteorl•, 1144484424, 114-251-ei&amp;O.
1183 7SO Hondl Shadow, 114-

4484&amp;41.

NOT' ffiA/lf&gt;.

75 .BOatS&amp; Motors

10-/"

for Sale
1m 17 ft. Sloreron Tri-Hull
1011. 125 HP, ~vlnru• Enalno;
COII'Ipillll tap new uphol1lery.
Collti4-Ztl8-13tf altar 7:00 p.m. '

ICOIIIO~II. Wt fnolll
$HAINKWAAP.
RIVERSIDE
MARINE Qolllpolil. OH. all-4482424, HIOG-'I:tt-ozi!l,

76

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
1m c..-o .,.no, 304-875-nsT.
¥Inion Aulo Bolngo. Foro!gn I :
Dom Porto l!uylng junk caro. .
a14 3NIOIZ.

even though he doesn't

IICII, wll -

-

1J.\ElR &amp;DS...

Services

a

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPAOOFING
Unoondltlonll lltlllmo g~oron-

F- oollmotao. Coli colilcl 1· ,
&amp;14-237o0488, dor or nlgill .

(!) (!)

11112 CMvlllo, - . llr, AMIFM
Cll""!l.e.. Low mlillgo, 4dr. 114-

Ylct-.

Complolo Mobllo Homo Ill u111
6 1'11111,., olio plum~ •

--nl-

LTD CroMI
-.,O' balh
· 1m
Ford Flllta.
111111
to.opproclolo.
114-MJ.
Ita

.1tl4 -·
Fiero,

·- ---·- .

toldld, $2,100. 304-

1114 Tompo, $11111. 111115 Tompo,

A4N. 1111 T-, ~IL 11181
Covo!lor, 12415. 114/tiZ-7'184.

1'" lron0o II, 4~, ftc, concl,
lOW m~-.- klpt, I'M-Z45-

104t

11181 Chevr Clvolltr, 4 cYIInclor,
4 - · Eooy ... 4411.

114fll85.

"' a c.nv.1

FROZE:N PIZZAON-A-STICK.

G8neratlon

a

··-ole.

raatlng, rom
na•
REMODEL·
ElllmNL
114-211-1111.
Ron'o TV BoMco, -lollzlna •
In zonllh olio oomalna moot ,
othlr brands. HouM caiTt, alao ,
oomo appllonoo IOPII,., WV '
304.all-ll301 Ohio 114-448-2484.
"R-oo-:n=-,na-.-po-l'"'nt-.-lng
- , -oo--~.-,...
,...,-, ·~~

guo-11. 114-448-7212 or 304·

'

Rotll')' or Cllble tool *IIH~

"

1'15-11114.

- wllll complllod umo doy.

1117 C.nwv, Z-21, brlghl rwd,

....., 1411071.

1111 a-. Colobotty, M.SD_Ii
liN ~100,14,111· IDN
Font To~M ; 1iin Pont.
·
:.=0 ltN
IAinone;
_,
INI Pont.
Oldo
Collie
111115 0oc1oo
ta
_!!oft=-.
loial, tl. -·
; ti!M- TChrr.
- I.W.,
..... 12.!!!; 1113 Chry. La
'""""tl,.,.., 1111 01• CUI!ow
·~ P-. ,..,..
11M,..,. E - I.W.

...:..-:zL~I4;~:· t~

YOU SHORE GOT
HOME EARLY
TODAY,
JUGHAID !!

THEY GOT
A NEW
YARD DOG

""" III'VIoo, 304-

Dnlll
S.W.Vu
Sertk:a, .
0.1argee Creek Rd. P111a. aupo ·'
pnoo, pick.., ond doiiVOf)'. t14- •:
441..0214.
. ....

olr, 1111, onlllo,
·· 25 mpg. hwJ. 114-

BARNEY

.ncl ICCIUOiill.
QU1rtl11Md -'&lt; wnh rotoron· •
OM, Clft't belli 1heel prieal1 I"

laptlo Tonk P....... $10~Golllo
Co. RON EVANS ENTERP"ISES,
JKUon, OH 1.eoo-137-8521.

~!._,..,.1,

11:oo·rnll

plumbing

- ~Chi._. be.
oond., AIIIFI&amp;'Cin., 2.2 ltl•. 5
PB, AC. 114-

Robertson
10:05 Cil MOVIE: Ame~can Ol'llfflli
(PG) (2:30)
10:30 ®Crook • ChaN
@ IROC HlghHghlo

patlM
INGI A • • n .

""""' 1114102.

,

~·

lkylort, ....,

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
-~~.;.;:;...-'
Co~or·o Plumbing
ondHIOIIng
Fouoth ond Plno
. Clllllpollo, Ohio

.

Send tor your As!ro-uraph ptedlctlons

Astra-Graph , c/o lhis newspapet, P.O . . day, provided you and your coonterparl
Box 91428, Cleveland . OH 44101 -3428. are both on the same wavelength. A

114 441 , • •

..

•'.
Electrical &amp; ·
Refrigeration
Rlli.,.lll or oom,_lll
wiring, .,.. ..moe or ,.,.Jra.
LlconOod
Rlclonour

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

-n.

I.-

Wtftoroon'o Wallr Hlullng,
_..,oo,volumodloooune., 2,DOG to 4,000 ca.-ctty,
o111orno,
304-a-·
. - · lie. Coil

Ocl. 17, 1880

-h.

"I hate duck-hunting sesaonl"
,~

'"

'

The year ahead can be 8 vfi&lt;Y rewarding
one lor you ma!arlallr, provided you fln•ish !hal which you slart. Oon'llry to balance -~~ enlorprlaes In the air slmulla~. Focus on lhe best.
LI8RA (Setit. 23-()cl. 2J) Yoo'll valiantly
defend lhal wh~h you believe to be
rlghltoday, but make certaln,IKl-.
you taka Into conllideratlon olhar peoP\8'1 vleWpO!nll and nol jut! yoor own.
. Libra, lreal youraelllo a bll'ltlday gill.

.

.

l\ .

ARIES (Morch 21· April 191 A P$rtner-

for 1he year ahead by mailing $1 .25 to . ship arrangement can be productive to-

ASTRO-GRAPH

3 blclroom 111 "'nrd, -Ill. Mo,IZIO.
-.oo.~diPOIII.•••
-lrod. CiH ....... 1:00 Pll,

®

(I) a

91

@

Be sure to state your zodiac stgn.

harmony of purpose Is a must.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Even
lhough your powers 10 probe, research
and detecl will be sharp !oday, you
might slill be too negative 10 take. lull

TAURUS (Aprii20-Mor 20) Your monelary prospac!s look reasonably encouraging today, but there Is a posslblllly
you mighl no! capllallze on !hlngs to

advantage of what your Investigations
uncover.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 211 If a

careless.

your maxlmum advantage. Don' t get

,

GEMINI (llay 21-June 20) Desirable relriend who asslsled you In the past re- sulls will_be achieved today In slluatlons
quests a favor from you today, go out ot you personally direct, bul !he same
your way to help lhls person, even If you mig hi nol be true In developmenls
have to lncut e•penses in doing so.
whete you have to share yout authorl!y
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jan. 18) Your •wllh ano!her .
problems won 't be centered on yout In- ;· ·CANCER (June 21-July 221 Melhods
ablllly to achieve yoor objectives today, tand procedures that are effec!lve for
because analnlng goals will come rath- you might no! work equally well lot your
er easr tor you. The hard part will be assoclales. Oon'l do things Ia please
knowing what 10 do wllh your vlc!orles. 11hem, make :yoor primary concern getAQUARIUS (JlHI. 20-Fell. 18) Being ling the job done.
open-minded end lrlendly loday Is well LEO (Juty23-Aug. 22) II mlghl be a trifle
and good, yet II would be .wise lo be difficult lor yoo !o concentrate on your
cautloos regarding who yoo take ln!o mundane aoolgnments tOday, because .
your confidence. Someone rou leasl · rour energies may be geared to acllve
suapect might be!ray you.
lrlends whO are benl upon having fun.
PIICII (Fell. ZO-M.oh 20) II mlghl , VIRGO (Aug. :a-s.pt. 221 In ardor lo
prow very wise 10 11ay out ot the bull- ; advance your personallntarnt today, II
.,,... affairs of friends today and to keep mlghl be nec-rr lor you lo be a bll
lhem oot ol youra. Each could throw a ,bolder and mote 0118rtlve than ueua!.
monkey wrench ln!o !he olher's com- 1 However, what; works In the world of
' mercJal machinery.
. commerce won I play socially.

&lt;11

tUI Newa
C!l Night Court Q
(!) Newawatch
[!) 18 A111enlo Hell
llll Mlam.l Vice
® Church Slreel Station
a Monerllne
IDI Big Brother Joke
11:30 (})II 1121 Tonlghl Show
Stereo.
(!) Todar'a FBI
(!) Adam Smllh's Moner
Wortd
(I) I!J NlghUfn• 9
91 Nlghi_Court Q_
t!Jl .. 'WIIIQUJ' CBS Uole
Night
Qt On Stltge
@ SportiiCenler
Spol'lll Tonight '
1D MOVIE: WUd Times (PI 2
, of 2) (2t3o)
11 :35 (i) Cheers Q ·
12:00 (I) D Into the Night S!ereo.
11m MJI!Inum, P.1.
I!D 18 My Telk Show
il]l The Equalizer
® Nuhvllle Now
@ Lighter Side ol Sporto
(0:301
a NewaNighl
12:05 (lJ Nighlilne Q
12:30 (2) II t!J) Late Nigh! Willi
· DavldL..,.,....n
(I) MOVIE: W (2:00)
I!D 18 Twlllghl Zone
·@(II Peroonolltlol
@ Nationol Old Time,.•
BaHbell Claallc From
Buffalo, N.Y. (RI
t 2:35 CIJ To Be AMouncod
(lJ lnolent Rtcllll
·1:00 (I) Fall Guy Q
11m MOYIE: Super l;uu (PG)
(2:00)
liD• a.nnr Hill
1!2leNTill New Mike Homrnor
Showllz Todlly
1:05 (l) Love c-aon
. 1:30 (2) II t!Jl Later With Bob
Coote•

a

82

84

Evening Newa

1D1 700 Club Willi Pal

ZIIH.

-

job in New York. Q
Power In lhe Paclllc
China and Japan change
draslica~ attar World War II.
Stereo. Q
·
[!) • Slar Trak: The Next

.

chlmnor chockod during our
opoclolf . t-40.00 I * chlmnoy
cllackod I IWIPI. llpoclal ondo
Oct31, 1990. lnt- • Ell·
, _ Como&gt;ony, 4 IIIH c-11,
Qolllpoliol, Ohio 411U1, · -

UI I !MM.

crisis when she is onered a

l•a·"Mnt Wal:lrproo-

Flro, Bmoko, lnd - I Don, Ill
wlnlor bilm rou up. Ool IIIII

,

mm

IJJI-\Ol!JE:r

..~
ptuo ...-.~3170,
114-t41-!34CI.

I

while on •duty raises an
issue. C
'
Fronlllne Q
il]l Budweiser PreNnta:
Tuesday Nlghl Flgl!ls
® Nuhville Now
13 Larry King Livel
9:30 (i) (I) Coach Hayden
allows a woman to join in a
pol&lt;er game. C
13 NHRA Racfng Quaker
Slate Northstar Na!ionals
from Brainerd, Minn. (T)
10:00 (!) News
(i) (I) D !hlrtyaomel!llng
Gary and Susannah lace a

LAWY£l&lt;S

Upholste,.Y

..._

f'oseanne'$ sister's injury

Motor Homes ·
1m Oodo• Sprinter, 2!Jft.,
~.ooo actuol mllll $5,000. &amp;14-.ellll.

11112 eo-ra, wHh Tolof&gt;lo, good
ooncl, aood cllln car, Marroon

-

spaak it. Q
®On Stage
@ Mickey Thompson's Off
Road Champlonahlp Orand
PriK
9:00 (i) (I) D Roseanne

EEK AND MEEK

79 . campers &amp;

llng.

loodld. Ono

7:05 rn Happy Dart
7:30 rn II lill tUI Jeopardy! Q
(!) Nighl Court Q
Cil 1121111 Entertelnmenl
Tonlghl
(I) D Mama 's Family
[!) . . Three's Company
@ SuperBoute 1972: All vs.
Quarry
Crosslke
7:35 ii) The Jtillersono
8:00 (1) II a1J MOVIE: 'Daniello
- Stoel't Fine Thlngo' NBC
Movie of II,.. WHk (3:001 Q
(!) Kennecty, Part 2 (1 :57
CD (I) Ill Who's tile Boll?
Angela's lila is taken over by
her new boyfriend. Q
(!) (!) Nova The mission ol
the Voyager is chtoniclld. Q
11m 1121111 Major League
Baseball
[!) • MOVIE: Pnvate School
(A) (2:00)
llll Murder, She Wrote Q
® Church Slreel Station
PrimeNewa
(l]) MOVIE: Wild Tlmal (PI 2
ol 2) (2:00)
8:05 C1l MOVIE: The People Thai
Time Forgot iPGil2:00)
8:30 (i) (I) Ill Head ollhe Cla11
Billy agrees to teach French

a

•
:
.
'

e

o
a

I!D. Bemer Mm,t

a ChiN
NewaNigl!t Upclale

Qt Crook

a

'

~~
'r

o

UB E G
1--,
· -"TF"-r-'""'11~'
My neig~bor and. I atte(lded
5
I 1 ·'
a time capsule ceremony. My.,
0

I

L-....&amp;.-.1.
. ..,..1.1.....-L----'·

~~-~--~-~~t time capsules are the

AL E F 0 R .

I I I I Ii
•

•

•

•

friend sighed and said, "llhink

1G

•

Complole tho chucklo q~

by filling in the milling words

you develop !rom slep No. 3 below.

I

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS
FOR ANSWER
•

SC:U.M LITS ANSWIIIS
Plaqve - Fight - Joust .:. Vortex - GETLO$T

a

19111 D!&gt;daob4K41 hilt ton, 51,000

301, M, IM417•7710.

..,.--:o--------61 Farm
,=:; .,,it
Equipment .

IM/247-4212.

~

n:r,·

F.~r 1n

-•1 top, runo good. M95. '

1171 Chewolol lllllbil a-la,

av,
.-.-1.

..,.;;.t_,.j....:..L,.:-t..:.;,;Ht--111

€)

Q

1111 Bronco 4x4, 302 ellndard,

1M. l..oal Nftrwno• fumlehed.

ownor.

3

r.-1

'•

r-~--~~===---~

BRIDGE

NORTH

+J 10 2

10·11-M

'I'KQ 10
+A J65
+ 10 7 3

By James Jacoby

It's usually not a good idea to waste
your high cards, but West Coast expert ' WFST
EAST
Kemp Hiatt lound a defensive excep- · + A Q a 3
.765
lion to this principle, as he led declar- • 9 5 2
• J 61
er astray in a three-no-trump con- • 2
tQ9713
tract.
+!, J 9 8 2
+61
Weslled the eighl of clubs and dumSOUTH
my's .10 won the Irick. South now
.K94 ·
guessed to play a diamond back to his
• A 8 73
10. He followed · with a diamond to
t KJO 8
dummy's ace and then led the spade
+KQ5
jack. When declarer played low from
Vulnerable: Neither
his hand, Hiatt won the trick with the
Dealer: South
ace rather lhan the queen . West continued with the jack of clubs. Declarer ' Sour•
West
North Easl
won, played a hearl to dummy 's king t NT
Pass
3NT
All pus
and then took another finesse in the
spade suit. After all, since the jack had
Opening lead: 8
forced West's ace, East must hold the
queen. Surprise! West won the qu~n the spade ace, if declarer·s lite &lt;leo! spades and cashed three more club pended upon his making the contract,
he would surely play three rounds of
tricks to set the contract.
II West wins the lirsl spade trick hearts ending in the dummy . When
with the queen, declarer will surely they splil, he would not bother with a;,
play hearts helore playing a seco~d second spade finesse, but would sim•.
spade, Since hearts spht, declarer Will ply go up with the king and make 10.
·lake four heart tricks, lwo clubs and tricks. But .overtricks are cru~ial in
lhree diamonds to safely make his tournament competition, and it's rare
contract before letting a defender gel indeed thai a player wins a trick with :
an ace when he could take it with a
back in with the ace of spades.
Even after West deceptively won queen.

+

CROSSWORD

r;;r;T;'T=

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Toy car
· sticker ·
6 Bullalo
playsr
11 Banish
12 Ram

sign
13 Gentle.man's
gallant
remark
15 Rink
surface
16 Regret

171988
·· oannis
Quaid
mavis
18 Pours
through a
colander
20 Mira
21 Squid's
squirt
22 Hand, to
Jose
23 Auctioneer's
word .
26-Combos
27 Litter's
littlest
28 Tear29"-a
Wonderful
Life"
30 Blue
gray
cat
34 Winler
ailmenc
35 Ailing
36 By way of
31 Rosalynn,
Nancy,

and ,
Barbara
40 Still
41 Debonair
42 Peter and
Franco .
43 Dial
sounds
DOWN
1 Sandwich
shops
2 Prscise
3 Apple
drink
4 Actress
MacGraw
5 Ogling
6 Vaults
7 "Exodus"
hero
8 "The-of
Alcalraz"
9 Echo
10 Los -

Yesterday's Answsr
Unidos
14 Want
under
19 "- Mis · behavin'"
22 Ship pole
23 MeiV24 Silhouelte
25 Under·writer
26 Balloonisl's bags

28 Ellronlery
30 Catchers'
needs
31 Frenc h
resort
32 Colandar's kin
33 Moves
carefully
38 Hit show
sign
39 Pair

...
.. ''
__,

...

. ..
,J

.

"'

. ·. ,
.

···'
· ~·

..

..,

DAILY CR YPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It: 10116
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for anolhe~ . In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ·
apostrophes, the length and fonnalion or the words are all
hintS. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQlJQTE .

WXR

CRNW

CSKKM

NKPR

W D P R

YKKS

KQ

T

BRW

GDSS

D ZW K

TW

T

PKNVEDWK

'

TENWDZ
K'PTSSRH
Yeeterda11'• Cr11ptoq•ote: A FRIENDSHIP
FOUNDED ON BUSINESS IS BETTER UlAN A .
BUSINESS FOUNDED ON FRIENDS~IIP. -- JOliN D..,
ROCKEFELLER ..
'

C\1990 bY'K1ng Fea turas SyndiCal!!, Inc:

l'

IO · Ir'

There are three categories· in which to place
inanimate objects... those that don't work, thoss that
break dowr1 and tho~ that GET LOST.

a

IIJio ..., -11. 3fM.e7&amp;.24a7.
1171 Tro-"m. Ct..- - .
, _ - l o n . jllll
Npioood onglno(3IOI. Robuln
400 h•dll nM« uMcl. • .

color, ....., •• 1117.

tho
below to form four lirnple words.

.r. PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

Night C.Url 1;1 ·
1!2llll Current Affair
il]l Macorver Q
@ SporlsCenter
Montyllne
® Scarecrow and Mro. King

bioi-· 81

--1.

0 four
Roorrongo letters of
ocramblod word1

I. 7

NeWaHo"u r

'U Cllov Altro MlniV_!I!!z AM-FM
·ourtolna.
Wlctoc:k,Z3~m
"""• mlloo,
Mini·
bllndo,
30W8Z475G oftor 8:
.

~· 114-441 4101,
1t7l -

a

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

-'64-,,....H,.BY~_,&amp;,G_ra-:l-:n:--,:-- . wa 110 -WINTEAiZINGpo~ol

:-:
~--. n h
:::..: ::::. ~ Flold;~\1;
24IIIN
lily: AOWMI - . ..0.00 Elcl!.

6:00 rn II (l) (I) D 11m 1121•
lUI Newi
(!) ChaMa In Cha~a Q
CD 3'2-1 ConlaCI
Cll Malh Leamlng our
[!) . . ALF
llll Clrtoon Expreu
@ Danakln's Running and
Racing
1'/o~d Tbday
®Batman
6:05 Cil !!everly Hillbillies
6:30 ct) II t!J) NBC NlghtiJ Nawa

[!) . .

~

Bllok ~UI RtglltiNd Herd
Bull. Four ~ 10 old. Bon ot

~ "'t'!lo

Vegetabln

1110. N. 4 mlloo N. of Holur, a
448-181$, l~llli.
1111 Rlngor, 4 cytlndlr. 5 opcf,
t4 I 000• 114-448
7720 •
.
•
11811 Oodgo Dakota 13,000
mll111 Doiyo: 114-211 8814, .
Evonlngo: 814-Z51H13ZI.

Sentinel-Page . I

INRUTE

CD Wild AliHir!Ca Q
®I 1121 .. CBS Nawl Q
[!) • Andr Orlffll!l
1D Spon1Look
® Big Brother Jake
6:35 m Andy Grilfll!l
7:00 rn 11 11m t!Jl Wheel ot
Fortune Q
(!) 1 Dream of Jeannie
CD (I) D Inside Ed111on
(!) (!) MacNeil Lehrer

_74:::;-;;:M;:;o:::;:to::rc-::::y:::c::le'::s::-:::::::

Livestock

•

&amp;\ Abb~tt
and Collello
flJ AIIC NtWI Q

:."..!171~.!;~:'s!:!, c~

.........18,70 .11"1-:258-aOI.

~
dliC.

." - Oolllpollo.

Fruits &amp; .

-·-

\~\

~· ~

THIS LAST

1m
1115
ctoov. Tn·
e. 1 P.!J.;4••·
1111·P.u.,
GMC B-15,
P.U., lonG boa; 1.3 a-. 8-10,
liaZor; 1l82 Ply. Vor-. Poot.
Von; Chev. SIIVIrOdo, P.U.;

M, Sat 8-3.
.
~~~~-~;;'~ kl ond

OCT. 16

(l) (I)

hD Auto Bello,
· ....... ~
· lfwY. 1410.J mltol N. ol - . . Ellclrlco~ 30WJI-1711 .
IN --~--- ............. ~~··-·· •. -..,.;;;=;;.;.;..;.;.;..;.;.;;;;;__....,. "·
u.
• ..., Hoa. ...... 404\rt:
·-·
t-lonll wlt
-~loodtdwllh~ 85 General Hauling
F l - 11- . R i l l ; - option - · T~- 21.000 R I AWolor ....loo. - ., oloJD .• DIMol JO Loodor, lhlrD. l!illll,- - · lhorpn1 In torno, ..... l~dllo-1,000 or
.. - - - - . I , . _ 10M!, 1101 100 or S3U.M . por
·-· - - ...
.
- - .,~ 44111111.
==~- •lovory. Coli • '

I

IN ~101.

I READ

. ~r,

2br - · .. Mill C...k,

or.,.

WH ILE

I'M CRACKING UP, CllARLES..

XLlJ Vo8, outo;
oona, 304-ln.
'18.z521.
.
Rood ~-----•-

•ltol.

41 HoU188 for Rent

J04..171.3111

KEEP TALKING

T~E'I'

?•

or:IO
~·
.,."',.

TUES.,

Daily

_TM.'u;._~~-~-~'_.;.S_CC.;:;.~!~c~L~~S·

EVENING

1112
leNBuick
Chftcilto
Reali
FontDick-upl'114-446-1711.

.U. Firat For Fat, FrllndiJ s.r.
vlca. Ph. 81C-44UU2, Mon-Fr• .

nzoo. -

. lnstrumente

58

-

11181 Chryolor Loo., 2.2 Tlllt&gt;o,
••12.1100. oaoJ,!~
Mor!"'J'
- .......
4
• ...••

2 lohlon 2,:1110 bil -

'

I'

Renl als

nnr - - . bwulllul AiiO oclull doaa. L8rgo oogoa.

=·

:;

Ducko.
......,...

P.-.

$3-re;

171o65311.

;;Poocllll:
::::::a.::=:-:::::::--:-:::-:::::--::::::'
lora, 1-upe. AKC.

1nt-1p~~~.

..... illlhlr - . .... 44. 2

2 loll, lmlll - · AI. 1114.
APPIOK.

ANtOMblo

154

- - eMir $40. 114-1112-

46 Space for Rent

·35 Lots &amp; Acreage

1710Whh-ee.IM-IIZ..,_,

now Plllota 71c Pl-kl, - · · I

- h 080 - - rock 304-

-·

It

Hko

_.

Oa c11 n ack H.D. Flit bed TNRer
Wao $3,1175, N•
lv..,., "- P.- On on-

11112 LTD

Flllo 'lllnk, 2413 Joe,_, Avo.
Poln! P-nl. ~.10
gol Ill .up
114.N ond 10 pi
oompiii
.4:I.ZI.

pold. IM-44f.1~7.

4172.

Eulom

1m

-1

~338

$40 DOWN on onr now lingleWldo, pluo IIX ond IHio to
qualified bUyera. AI adverton TV • Coli El- Homo Contar
1-B00·58H710.
12KI50 lrolltr, 121110 add-on, 3
oulbulldlngo, corport, Groior
Rood, •• ,., $24.1100. 304-1175'
1.111 oftor 4:00PM.
1m Schunz14~. CAC.t;loclrlc
hNt. AoklllJI 14,000. 114-448-

Evono llotaro: -

e·

NIMIJ Fumlohld Mobllo Homo
In cllr. CA. Bultablo tar 1 por- · Rot. IDop Roqulrod Ill-

·

32

ll~lng.

Merchancll88

==::o-"·--

Fumillood Elllclll)CJ, $171,
UIIIKioo Polcl, Ooalpolil. 114441-4411, ofllr 7p.m.
~~~~-- Aportment In tawn,_ 2br,
--.- a
frta.
rt

.S
· mInuttl Irom town. omtrvllle
Roally, 304-675-3030 Of 87~431.
REPOSSESSED HOUSES
•. PIIICI for HlndJmon
1. Bulovlllo Plko IOM ooro) MIL
2M/., ~,?0
dlr Rldgo.ltl!l•:••ro
...00 Down w
Crodll - • Plrmon• lllli'J,
5th. Conlact; John "BalltyJiM
WALTER HOMES
l-800-448-lll1o .,. uoo 448

54 Miscellaneous

lraftlc

lallry loclllone. EIIY wort;'W WIN Troln.

IO: iMwll' E - .
Cl1ofl=·•
1111111 Co. Chl-r
efCwa- liN L Moln-

USED APPUANCES
dry.-, rafrlg. .tON,

can. The ~~~~.~~~~~!!• ~n~":d'·~~~ -~ce 11~i~re:~:=- Pit:. : ..k~•
mo.
·

llo 614
2 ='-·
2
"::":-·
:....,.::.:;:::·
--:--:-:LioN would llkllo caro lor olck
or lld~y In Ullir llomo. Hove
np~rlonco In both nurllna
homo ond hoopltal. 11411185'
4202.
Y
Ill......
- llrl OIJ Core Contor
I'IIIIONblt,
dependable,
liM- quolhr child coro. Mondly thru F~dlr, 7:30 1111 1:3o.
For more lnfonn1tlon or to
roglator 304.f7U847.
·Morr'• OUIIhy Clllld caro: Solo,
•n..doblco, nulrkloua mnlo.
Foncod
oroo. Any ohlft. 81444&amp;-4:11 ·
Mill PoUII'I Do• Coro C.ntor.

Farm Equipment

~~~~~·~~"tr::· ::: ~~

Seaoncf Ava. 114 441 310.

~~nd::,•tc' ~to ln.•0~ 1 'fo:a~ ~t~"!Ju~:r!:,7'::;,. C.:~l'rl::

L8rry LIVOIJ. 614-388-9303.

•

cob.

Stump ........1, ,.,., ww~c,
Sluconod llh, o111, hlckO&lt;J
::,1101~:.
· .,--,---:----:-- tlrowood,
dolhrorocl
.,ct
Kina 1111 ..n_L."!~_;-'•- llockod. 151. 114-44.-.
ancf frlme, 'J04.flo-w3" itt'fr
I OO
Warm llomlng Woolf lumlng
:.':.:.::·======-::-- Sloovo,IZOO. 11'4 181 N01.
PICK=::ruRE
WHITE'S IIETALDITECTDRI
H
•·•• lu lolol
1/Z ml Ron Alllton, IZID Bocond """·
OVM~
m ng.
· Glllfpol.lo,OHI14-448-4331.
Jorrlcllo Rd. Pl. P I - , WV,
caii30U7S-1450.
55
\ Building
Rlfrlgoralor, 2dr, Whllo, $15;
Suppllell
Rlfrlglf'IIOr,
11opponono,
Fra8tlrte, $125; A•frlg.rator Block. brlok. ....- ......._ winoldtKIIdo, Wlolta Ulco Now, d-._ flnloll, ole. Clilildo WinOnondo, OH Coil 114$115; Gu Ronat.~..3o Inch, HI~
voo1 Gold, $115· "'" Rartao, 3t1 56 PatS fOr Sale
Inch, Whn~1~!iil; EIICirlo R'ongo, """=~~.....;..,..,..;.........,::-30 Inch, wnno, $1541; Elocfrlo 2 AKC REg- Bo--. Fawn
Rona•. 40 Inch, Av1001o, $15; IJid whno. 0no Olllo, 2 ,_.
Wlliln~houoo O,o~; Kon- old •oo· 1 to-•lo 10 -~
moro rrN11 ~25·
· •• '
"~ ' ·
·~
-·
• •' -~ old, $1150; H ooulcf-tau both "00
All
In
Condlllon
Ano
11.
E
1
~
~~
1
GourontMI
Sklggt
Ap. '" ~ •~o. -"
plloncoo7:j1171 u - Arvor Rood, 01011 flll8.
&amp;· ....a . M
Duhund, Nil. I . . . . old,
-~-~--==·
lomoiol
1110, Plllly RENT TD OWN ·
brokon. Mull otll, rncwlng: Illl14-446-3l5&amp;
lm.aa&amp;l or 114-111Z-3114.
B pc. wood greup $14.01 por 5 puro block 011111111
wMk. 4 ~ter bedroom 1ulte,
co.:f.l-'1 $15.20 per w..k, Shephlfd~;:,~lblaadtd.No
popon. •
1335.
4
7
·: .
:!';c
G,_m one! Supply llhOp.Pol
Retr1g1r1tor t12.85 per.week, l5 Grooming. All brloda. AU oivtoo.
cu. ft. frMzor, $10.90 · por lamo Pol Food Dlollr. ~uliol
.
wHk. VI' Aa Furnllure. Rt. 141, 4 Wobb. Colll14o44HZ31.
mllll ott At 7.C.ntonorr.Opon 7
AKC
mlnoiUro
Ooolnlund1
dip I wook.
-'-'---=s"w"A"'IN:---- wormod
Cocklr IIDonlelo,
· ano
1 :IO+tMI13 or 304AUCTION 1o FURNmlRE. 13 581-301•.
Olive Sl, Qolllpollo. Now &amp; u.
roollllllnoluro
Jumnwo, hNt.,, Wlllorn 1 AKC
~-~- 111 111'31ScllniUZir i&gt;uppltl, $100. HCh,
"go(
a.
u•.
304-a~ or 171-2483.
53
A I
nt ques
l-,..
Z1
-:::':~::-:":::-~~~~=- A
yooroloxportonoo.
•Buy· or olll. Rlvorlno Anllq-. only.
1141992-6820.
n
o
.
1124 E. Moln It-, p._,.,, IHvem•••IL
Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to e:oo
p.miltSundly 1:00 IO 6:00 p.m. Dog - F e r .....
614- 2·2521.
alz-. 1 1/Z mllll aul Rt. 141.
Top Cooh pold. Old !umhll'o wayne Shoeli abr. ·~
ubo1 n!
In
I n1 1 OID3.

-ion•.

anxlot.is 10 1111 thll 2 It~

44e-8iKIO.

-

KB.,utchmorobloo~op~~:=:
•••

=·

Co.

W1nllll To Buy: Junk Autot
with or whhoU'I molora. Call

0000

114-245-5141, Ill
103D.
Pork, 1114-448·111t1Z.
7 room, 1-112 bo!h, 1.3 ocroo,ld- Zbr, . 4 mllll from Golllpoi!J,
1
111 441 8038
:~=
:~:g::,,:uo::n~~
1331/mo. No port,
·
20f1i
44 · · Apsrtmant
·
7 room• 1 112 bath, counlry
for Rent
llvJ~ but ceo. to 1111at School
ond town. Rt. 3S4 line, 1l:l.:cwo • 1 ofo~ !u~
T-Ip
~-·
ri ht ca Rood 27. Firat ""d lo n
I
niU'
I
_..,,
I 614-112·7'1110&lt;1·384· Ool. lflllo.
.
Zbr Apl. ~t IIIH $3150 lo
OOYERNMENTIIOMES!rom$1 $421 por month. lncl- 111
(LI r-1~. Dollnquolll llll '"llllloO, DlpooH roqulro!f. 114pJOport,. Ro1
Your 441-7733, 114-44B-4ZZI.
~ c : = l..~· GH- API~f~. 2 blclroorno, nlco,

=

1m Ford
:;I..,
1•~

w....._
~
r;:;·AI.:-e~ a:r.r:•:.:.::; ::0, &amp;t~r:o:..'="• Jilek·
CNIIIIolol. Coli 114-440:.7311.

lot.l Ilea. full bl'umant, 1 1cra, available, be1utltU'I rlvar vJew In
ahadld tot. 7 mllea tower Rt.7. . Klnauga, FCIMer'e Mobllt Home

BookkHplngtaccountlng,
&amp; Auction
Hotel/motel
management, B~ O.ll:ot1 F1rm Homt: Built on
Rick Polroon Aucllan Company alrUnea tn1v.., nursn aida, Irae- JOUr lol. 131,11115 6 up. &amp;14.flllnow booking IUctlone, IX• lor ti'IIIIF tr~lnln;,· rMI·
Mritrtc. makie the dlff•nnct. dent/hOme etudy. FINinclel lid 7311.
· Ucen•d Ohio, Kentucky, Well lvlillbl• If qu•llfltd. PI8CIImtnt For Aloo or - · 3 boclroom
IUiltlnCI. CoLJnty Schooll 10- - ·
Vltglnlo, 304-773-5785.
405 Spring Avo.,
CII office, 2307 Clmden Ave, Pomoro.{ 1141448-7311 doyo,
Ctlrllbnl8 •uctiDn. Sund•y-oc- Pllrkenburg, WV. 1-800 148 5141441 325 ....,lngo. Will fin.
lobor 21, 1:00 p.m.al lho Mit All progromo complolod 0:. once.
Hlrtlord Communhy Building, t monthl.
u ••.•• and 10 10-WV
· Brood Run
Hlrtlord, W.V. 2 big ln~ck-lolldo
~
Rei,
Now
Hlvon,
(Muon
of Chrlllmu mon:llandloo. 18 Wanted to Do
EvlrJihlng from condy lo corn- :::':~::::'::'""~~~~~~ County). Rural wllor, clblo
pur.ro. Richard Rornoldo- Bobyollllng In my tromo. ltio'llolon, block top I'Oid. 10
mlnut•• tram town &amp; 1wround•uctlonttr. Uctn.. no.
•~2-2220.
powor
125,000. 304BoouiiiY rour cor &amp; p~ICI 11 Ina
BIIZ-2421,
Ds.3&amp;53
O&lt; 3049 Wanted to Buy
from wf.. or- . , ~mo. .E•pon 17!1-1111.
W1nt to buy wood eook aton, oulo cloonlno ·Jnoldo • OUI. ~- 1 .,..11 homt1nd
Alvereldt Auto Det111lng. 814- ..........--.
304.e85-3487..

~

9113.ood o-..lon. $300. 1141H2· twice, artaae 1 8tranen engine
U!O. lloCUI- 11" clooln IIW,
~---..c. ._. 11 ~ lno. ft~ llkl ,_ 1110. SDWl&amp;-2111.
~... , ..,.,.
UM lppl-. T. • 1111. Ot&gt;ln 4 aood oondJ IIIIlCh!-.

Mxll 2 unfurnished Mobile holM,
no ~~ :IZZ Third A..,uo, 114-

·

Dr
,,1,

ou!BulovliloRdO 01&gt;1n 1 A.M. to
Fllhlr Morino ••• Boll, a='~ o.Oollt':~· Trol~
~:;:""· lhN Sat. Coli 114- loocfod, 11 Inch aluminum 4lll Tift - · 1150; 5K8 nn Bod,
whnuto
. ••lr,ffw1,110
'01Colfo.:"P.'!31' .11uo .1721; axe .Wii'IMP Gllo, $811;
4pc. br oulta. pluo bo• oprlngt
'o
' •• . 14' IKID nn lad, $811• Odw
1 ma~'"""i' E••· oond, lolling l41-l1 14·
~llioo: Now 1181 Hllltllolo,
prlco 1700.,. ••
... 11""
G-noel!
_._.,..
-·
25M eolor TV,. Nl'ftOte oonlrol. .1•11,
Wll 14.7'00
Now 8100k
n IOOjTrollor,
New
Buulllul oounlrr bluo . 11on1 $1011. Pick ..-oompor top. 1100. 1110 Doll.o, IKII Gi.Oiitntck
couch. Hoo ruftled okl~ and 5 1_ _ . 411•
··
.Block Trollor, Woo $3,11:11, Now
Nlllod pill-. CM!Iily modo, I hp L.o- Chill llllor, 111,100; liDO Dlla 20 ft.

: '": :· _-:-:====---

lntktl yard ul .. l111c'1 Aucllon fonn•tlon
aontacl Karltl
uu. Clolhlng ' (mono 34~ Huntar, 111ill1nl Dlroctor of
no, mod. lhlrts); womono Hurling ol1114-lm.a47Z. EOE.

Alt'~

,or::e:·-:::::'"":·:::::;:.=::::;::::=:~~ •:;,•~~:::.::;=:.::.·~~on,
- ...~ •.
-:-,.-,::-:-:-~""

BunlattoAddn, 1_.14-77&amp;-7731.
In ... ··~·
11
Help Wanted
22 Money to Loan
noocl'
un
-·
.
to
,.,..,
nolgllborGallipolis
Now toklng aJ&gt;Pilc111ono ror full g:~:rVI=iat:'~ ~=:!
r.:t'~
1.p
I
port-llmoA
cOollilr'o,
&amp;
IM.
Cuh
Advoncot,
no
Dip. Aoqulr.d. tM-371-2773.
&amp;.VIcinity
Pl[!~~r~. sC~~ =~~:..
no crodh Po
bocl- houoo
ALL Ylnl. Sliolo Mull Ill Pold In 2.
~
chiC~ . 1.to6.221-004B. . &amp;lUI .
...,.,. 3.
._...
.
Advonco. DE,IIDLINE: 2:00 p.m. Overbrook Contor i1U lm· .
~L.~~IIy.. Dlpooll roqulrod.
•- d.,. .......
•-~ ,. t•-•J a.
I ~
opporl
"I lor PI rt~
·~tn.
,.. I d .I• 10 run • m-.
lnlunn..
LOANS BY MAIL
r,:;.Y M:/!';' odhr;;~o. ~;Ol; ~;!O:.:=r.. 'G!li;'"'!C:::::;',~ Up lo N,OOO In 72 houro, Wo 42 Mobile Homes
p.m. SolurdiJ.
ouroto whh npoMnco ond con help you gl4 1 'i"~~
for Rent
obovo ocalo. For oddlllonol In- Loon BJ IIIII. 1-100-2
.

-"'"' do-.

Cf~. '!Vl1

1!!7_illaYY_
.
.Truck, 1 CJI., 145~.
1 -1-1l'SO

t::::J ·

... oun eo111 .... 1, .. 1
gun. Baby - - $35 '

.::"f4
~:::::f:a:.t:h:e:::r:-':'===T::=::;::::=:==:::=;::::==1 =:."~·c.:z:
lurnl-·--~'
~.
1':£

~

72 Trucki for Sale

c::Jq

l:o'P. King 1310. 4 11,...- ohiiM

803-'J:111.4781Eld. R5214.

=w

or

$141, ond ne. OUNn- .. ,. •

Repcnn•hna. 24 hOuN. 1·

to my

$110 111 -

belly -

(U-

~

•'IlL

..:!.'.!'.

my illness is hereditary, - - t o r ..
rwpolr). Doll_., tu praportr.
b '(}

-loft, ·--

lHmWH?lH~

•

seo

..·

.

10 - "

!liM~ Me
Cl=THH~

The

Television
Viewing

'115(.l., Al&lt;l'IIIOW'

!.AYNI'8 FURNITURE

9otH and obal,. Priced from
Dopo11t Roqulrocf.
4222 · $315 $til. T.ond up
twtwe:~nl&amp;11.
to .,._ Hlda a bldl AID to
F- blclroom homo, $1411. ~lnoio S3ZS to 1371.
-lrocf, no pol0. 114.f4t-Z213. ~
....~: ,!o...~w!t": .
Fumlllood Small " - · 3 · :,~. _ , .
~o
.~
roomo, bollc,cl_., nlcolor ono. • - up lo -·· ulohlo..,.. •
t~:.r
rof, Dlpoof~ · - ~~~~llld-::.plolto•
_
~~ _.

rwm a ria lad,

MCHTIIt_Mml BroWning, eall H

7~_ _v_a;,.rd_S_a_le___
~

~$121.

Goods

Found • half gro.wn bllck
f11m111
pupp\1, ·downtpwn
l?ofnery area. t.l.dlum lenat.,
hair, loVM people. 614/992-3420.
LOST ~Hawn mala Cli,lookt IIJtl

992-311711.

.12/mo,,

Household
Fot - o r Fer Solo: I

AA-H.o\, 'TAAT

m-··
-nr.!t'

'

Lost &amp; Found

POf!iiii'Oy- MKtdleport, Qhk:l

BORN LOSER

IIIM'I Aulo Slloo Announcing
t .K F!nlnclng on Ill Vlhicloo.
1111 Pon!IIO Gland PrlK
.. - . . -., 1113 Buick Roaol

Me rcha n dise

To glvoowor to 1 aood homo:
gonllo, lona·hllrecf km.... 4
moo. old. 6WVtz.7382.

6

. . . . ..

fiiO. inontl!, nlcO Jlld, no
boll&gt;-, ...--~ ...- .
S
mH• boct&lt; ol · LOilfO
Huollao.~.

puploo.

Shophord

elorJ houu,

Autos for Sale

1111 T.,.... Comry, oHrooj fully
.._.....,., except eunroo , •·
9ef*" ,ooncltdon, 24,000 m11e1,
114-44U!IO, oft•llp.ln.
Fer 1177 T-Bird, II,OOG

.........

-~ud,tot

49

wtth duck·

I wU. Old. -0:.1420.
•

to Rent

.
......
'

_,

�Paa•

Tuesday. October 16, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinlill
'

'

.........,._.looal news briefs----. Pleasant fall weather will continue in Ohio
.

'

Man arrested by deputies
Meigs County SheriH James M. Soulsby reports that 30 year
old Ronald E . Johnson, Painter Ridge Road was .arrested
Thursday night following an execution of a search warrant fot
his residence by sheriffs deputies and BCI agel)ts. A qua}ltity of
marijuana was seized from the residence as was some cash.
Johnson Is charged with possessing marijuana In an amount
equal to or exceeding three times the bulk amount and with
cultivating marijuana.
Johnson appeared In County Court and was released Friday
afternoon after posting bond .
Deputies are investigating an assault case that allegedly
·occurred In the pat king lot at 'The Watering Hole' on State route

7.
Chuck Blake, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, reported he was assaulted by 5
subjects when he left the establiShment.
Charges In that incident are pending.

--Area deaths-great-grandparents, Larry
and
Sarah Craig of Carroll, OH.
Graveside service will be held at
10:30 a.m. ThUrsday, October 17,
1990, at the Yauger Cemetery, Ten
Mile Creek Road, Leon. Burial will
follow in Yauger Cemetery~ There
wiD be no visitation.
Arrangements are under the
direction of the Crow-HusseU
Funeral Home, Point PleasanL

fair, except for a slight chance of
By United Press International
• Pleasant fall temperatures showers lingering In the norwill continue In Ohio through theast Friday. Highs will be In
.Thursday· before a surge of the 60s Thursday and Saturday
and In the 50s Friday. Lows will
Canadian air arrives .
High pressure set tied over · be In the 50s Thursday and In the
Ohio during the night and the . 40s Friday and Saturday.
The slx-to-10-day outlook for
mercury dropped Into the upper
30s and low 40s. There were some · sunday thrrough Th11rsday calls
douds ovel' the northern part of for both temperatures and rainthe state, but the skies otherwise fall to be near normal across the·
were mostly clear. Patchy dense stat~.
The milder weather moving ·
fog -develoPed In . some river
Into
the state will help boost
valleys, but fog was burning off
drying. Pan evaporation may
rapidly Tuesday morning.
As the high moves east of the exceed 0.15 inches a day, particuregion Thursday, that will allow larly where sunshine dominates.
south winds to develop. Skies Models suggest that should transwere to be partly to mostly sunny late Into moisture reduction In
with highs ranging from the corn in the field of 0.6 percent to
upper 60s to lower 70s.
0.8 percent day.
'
The winds, gusting to more
South winds will continue tonight and that will keep readings than 20 mph Wednesday, will
In the 50s under partly cloudy help pull moisture from surface
layers of the ground. That will
skies .
·
A developing . low pressure Improve conditions where recent
system over the upper Missis- rains were heaviest. Soli tempersippi Valley Wednesday will atures will continue to average In
cause breezy conditions In Ohio the 50s while ·sunsine pushes
with highs Into the 70s. The rain afternoon readings to past 60
should hold off until Wednesday degrees at the 4-inch level.
Daytime temperatures Into the
night and Thursday as a cold
70s across the state will be higher
front marches across the state.
Cold air will pour into . Ohio than optimal for stockplling of
sugar beets through the middle or
Thursday night.
·
Friday and Saturday will be the week.

On the morning weather map
high pressure was over Ohto. The
high, will move to the Ea·s t Coast
by even in g. Low pres sure was
over Montana with a cold fron t to
New Mexico and a warm front

from Oklahoma to Arkansas. By
sunrise Wednesday, the low will
be over Minnesota with the warn!
front north of Ohio and the cok!
front located from Minnesota to
Kansas .•

Ohio .L ottery

Cincinnati
•
•
WillS senes
opener, 7.0

Pick·3: 127
Pick-4: 2377
Cards:

'.

2-H, IO.C, K-D, A..S

Page3

NATIONALWEATHER FORECAST FROI,, 7 At.1 10·11-90T0 1 Pl.1 11).1 8·90

•

Vol.41 .. No.11tl

a

Meigs County

~ourt

___ Meigs announcements --.....-.....

Hospital news

3 FREE PINTS

Stocks

RECEIVE ONE FREE PINT ·
OF COLE SLAW, MASHED
POTATOES AND GRAVY
AVAILABLE NOW THRU
OCTOBER 31ST AT
CROW$ FAMILY
RESTAURANT.

.--------

·I

REVIVAL

EVANGELIST STEVE HOSKINS

Rutland Church of God

OCTOBER 14- 19-7:00 P.M. NIGHTLY

,

'

-----..,

Buy A 15 Piece or 21 Piece Bucket
of Chicken and Receive a FREE ··
Pint on Cole Slaw, Mashed
Potatoes and Gravy.

A Mu,ltimedia Inc. NeWIPIPer ·

Ground is broken ·for
•
nver access to park ·

- - - - - - W e a t h e r - - - - -9'

Meigs sqU.ads an8wer eight calls ·

2 Sections, 14 Pagel 25 C.nti

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 17, 1990

Copyrighted 1990

Emma ·E . Salser, 84, of Racine,
died Monday, Oct. 15, 1990, at
WEATHER MAP - A large cold front moving across the :
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Midwest
will bring showers to the' Great Lakes region and the •
Born Aprlll8, 1906, at Indiamipo·
Upper
Midwest.
Another storm system will be approaching the
lis, Illd. , she was the daughter of
Pacific
Northwest
bringing a few showers. Parts ol the Gulf Coast :.
the late Rev. Ivan C. Lucas and
could see a lew Isolated thunderstorms. (UP I).
Fannie Meyers Lucas. She was a
•
retired Southern Local School
District cook.
.
Mrs. Salser was a member of
Tennant Holland
for a chance of showers In the
South Central Ohio
' the Racine Baptist Church, and
northeastern part of the state.
Tennant
Holland,
79,
of
Leon,
Partly
cloudy
Tuesday
night,
attended the Dorcas United
Fair
statewide Saturday. Highs
died
Monday,
October
15,
1990
at
with a low In the mid 50s. Partly
Methodist Church. She belonged
will
be
In the 60s Thursday, and ln.
Holzer
Medical
Center
in
Gal·
cloudy and windy Wednesday.
to the Racine Chapter of the
the
50s
Friday and Saturday.
lipolis.
$150
fine
and
jail
suspended
upon
Meigs
·county
Court
Judge
with highs In the mid 70s.
Order of the. Eastern Star, the
Overnight
lows will be in the 50s'_
He
was
a
retired
·employee
of
enrollment
and
completion
of
RTP
Patrick H. O'Bnen processed 29
Extended Forecast
Unll!!d Methodist Women of
early
Thursday,
and in the 40s;
Virgjnia
Iron
Company,
Point
West
school,
suspended
operalnr's
Thursday through Saturday ·
cases last week.
Dorcas, and the Ohio ASsociation
Friday
and
Saturday
mornings . .Ple11sant, where he had worked for
Fined were: Linda S. Jones, . license and completion of . RTP
A chance of showers Thursday,
of Public School Employees.
48 years. He was a member of the Middleport, speed, $25 and costs;
with fair weather Friday except
school, opeiator's license suspenShe Is survived by four sons Good Shepherd United Methodist Timothy Patterson. Racine, failure
ded for 60 days, speeding, $23 and
Charles Lvan Salser, of John·
Church.
to display front license plate, $10
costs; Larry Bishop, ReedsviUe,
stown, Grover C. Salser, Jr. of
Born
October
16,
1910
in
and
costs;
Christopher
Allred,
domestic violence, $400 and costs,
Racine, Lowell E . Salser, of Los
p.m. Chicken wtll be prepared on a
Southside,
WV,
he
was
.a
son
of
the
Peebles,
failure
to
register,
$10
and
30 days in jail, suspended, two
Meigs County Democratic
Angeles, Calif., Ronald Lee
wood
cooker by Everette Holcomb
late
Thomas
Henry
and
Victoria
costs; Wesley M. Smith, Pomeroy, · years probation, resuaining order
Salser, of Racine; four daughters
Meeting
and those attending are to take potissued; Rosalie M. King, Pomeroy,
- Manon Adrian Thompson, of (Foglesong) Holland. He was also speed, $21 and costs; Scott K.
in
death
by
live
brothers,
preceded
Maddox, Kenova, W.Va., disobeyed . discarded trash along the roadway,
Meigs County Democratic Ex- luck. There will be games and all
Blairsville, Ga., Carol Yvonne
one
.
greattwo
sisters
and
ecutive Committee will meet atl07 members and friends are invited to
traffic signal or device, $10 and
$50 and costs; Brian Richan,
Birch, of Bellvlew, Rosemary
granddaughter.
_
Sycamore Street (Democratic party attend.
costs; Erustas Ingram, Rapid City,
Evans, of Rio Grande, CarmenL.
Syracuse, criminal damaging, $50
He
is
survived
by
his
wife,
Vrrheadquarters) on Thursday at 7:30
Price, of Connorsvllle, Ind. ; one
Mi., speed, $22 and costs; Larry
and costs, 30 days in jail suspenannouncement
ginia (Adkins) HoUand; one Lee, Pomeroy, assault, $100 and . ded, restitution, probation of one
slater- Nellie Wirt, of Wooster;
p.m.
daughter, Phy!Us Sargent of Leon; costs, ~0 days in jail, suspended to
19 granchlldren and 14 great·
year; Carl Hall, Pomeroy, reckless
Sam and Nancy Davis wiU Ile
three sons, Clarence R. of Gal- time served, criminal damaging,
Candidate's night
grandchildren.
.
·
operation, $100 and costs, $200 ln
conducting
missionary services $t
lipolis Ferry, Robert V. of Cheshire, $100 and costs. 30 days in jail
Besides her parents, she was
Law Enforcement Trust Fund;
the
Calvary
Pilgrim Chapel, Rou!C
A public dinner and candidate's
preceded in death by her hus- OH and WiUiarn T. Holland of suspended . to time served. restituSharon Donahue, Point Pleasant,
143,
Pomeroy
Thursday evemng.
night presentation will be held at
band, Grover L. Salser, Sr .. an Leon; three daughter-in-laws; one tion; William E. Arnold, Pomeroy,
W.Va, passing bad checks, $25,
There
wil!
be
no
service on We4son-in-law; 10 grandchildren and speeding, $22 and costs; Robert F.
the Meigs Multi;purpose Center on
Infant son, a brother, John
costs and restitution; . Larry
nesday.
The
Rev.
Victor Roush,
13 great-grandchildren.
Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy on
Lucas, and a grandson, Scott
Lawson, Reedsville, assured clear
Barnhan, Albany, riding passengers
pastor.
invites
the
public.
·
Funeral service will be held at 2 distance, $10 and costs; Chris
Wednesday. Dinner will be from 5
Salser.
in rear of truck, $15 and costs,
p.m. until 7 p.m. and the canFuneral services will be held at p.m. Thursday, October 18, 1990 at Lane, Gallipolis, speed, $23 and
resisting arrest, costs, five days in
the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, costs; Damon Moles, Red House,
didate's presentation wil! begin at 7
1 p.m. Thursday at the Dorcas
jail; Dean WhittinB\011. Middleport,
United Methodist Church. The w'ith the Rev. Louis A. Hussell W.Va. speed, $27 and eosts; Daniel
p.m.
disorderly conduct, $50 and costs,
Rev. Henry Baker and the Rev . oflici~ting. Burial wiD follow in Palmer III, Ravenswood, W.Va. no
resisting arrest, $100 and costs, 30
Homecoming
Steve Deaver will officiate: Bur- Forest Hills Cemetery at Aatroclc.
medical cen., $25 and costs; Todd
days in jail suspended, two years
Ial will be at. ·Letart falls ·.. Visiting hours w~l be held at the . Grover, Middleport; speed, $27 and
probation; Robin DeLeon, MidThe Morning . Star United
·eemetary. Friends may call at
funeral home on Wednesday from costs; ' John ;G. Richards, ·R!M;ine, .· dleport, passing bad. checks, $25
·
Methodist
Church will have
the Ewing Funeral Home· 7-9 5-9 p.m.
unsafe vehicle, _ $10 and costs;
and costs, restitution; Roland Lan- .
homecoming
on Sunday with worp.m. Tuesday, and 2-4 p.m . and
Leesa Murphy, Pomeroy, speed,
daker, Pomeroy , discarded trash
Dr.
Charles
Brown
ship
service
at
9:45 a.m., Sunday
7-9 p.m. Wednesday.
$20 and costs; Gary D. Reese,
along the roadway, $50 and costs;
A business insurance peek·Dr. Charles Leonard Brown, 77, Portland, failure to control, $30 and Randy M. Nichols, Brook Park,
school at II a.m., carry-in meal at
age. that is. It's SERIES
of Point Peasant died Mooday, Oct.
12:30 p.m., and afternoon service at
costs; Marvin D. Randolph, Racine,
speed, $20 and costs; Carl R.
ONE. a broad-coverage.
15, 1990 at the Pleasant Valley
1:30 p.m.
failure
to
control,
$30
and
costs;
Grimm, Letart, W.Va., salety violacompetitively-priced
plan
Maleolm lngra
Nursing Care Unity in Point
At 7:30 p.m. Dr. J.J. Davis will
Cynthia S. Martin, Marlena, OWl,
tion, $50 and costs.
for retail stores. officea.
present a slide show of his tiip to
$300 and costs, lhree days in jail,
churches, apartment~ and
Malcolm Ingram, 82, of Ru- Pleasant.
EgypL The public is invited to atBorn January 13, 1913 in Point
drug
stores. Call us for a protland, died .early Tuesday morn· Pleasant, he was the son of the late
tend.
and quotation.
posal
!ng, OCt. 16, 1990, at Holzer
Charles
Wesley
and
Mary
Virginia
Medical Center. Funeral arranThe Rutland Fire Depanntnet
The Pomeroy unit was called to
Eight calls for assistance were
'g ements will be announced by (Love) Brown.
Ladies
Auxiliary will meet WedHe received his elementary
504
E
.
Main
St.
at
5:56
p.m.
for
answered Monday by units of
the Fisher Funeral Home,
nesday
at
7:30 at the Rutland Fire
Mary
Garnes
who
was
taken
to
education in Heights Grade School
Meigs Cotinty Emergency Medical
Middleport.
Station.
New
officers will be elecand . Point Pleasant High School, Sel"{ices.
Holzer Medical Center, and at
ted
and
plans
made for the annual
graduate of the Class of 1930,
Pomeroy squad was called to 9:08 p.m . the unit went to the
turkey
supper.
Gleftn Cunningham
All members are urwhere he was salutatorian. In 1931
Tuppers Plains at 2:.16 a.m. Lyle sheriff's office for Greg Haynes
ged
to
attend.
he entered West Virginia University
214 EAST MAIN
Nichols was ttansported to St. who was transported to
Glenn R. Cunningham, 80, of
in
pre-medical
training.
After
this,
Veterans.
Joseph's
Hospital.
At
8:53
a.m.,
Point J'leasant, WV, died Monday,
POMEROY
halloween party
October 15, 1990, at the Pleasant he entered the West Vuginia School Racine squad went to Bashan Road
992-6687
of Medicine, where he was a memfor Emma Salser. She was transporValley Nursing Care Center in
Annual
halloween
party
and
potber
of
the
honorary
Medical
Fraterted to Veterans Memorial Hospital
Point Pleasant, WV.
.
luck supper of the Star Grange wiU
Veterans Memorial Hospital
He was a relired employee of nity, Phi Beta Pi. He graduated with at8:53 a.m.
be held Saturday at the hall located
honors,
receiving
a
Bachelor
of
At 12:16 p.m., Pomeroy squad
-Kyga- Creek: Power Plant, where he
on
County Road I near Salem CenMONDAY
ADMISSIONS
-John
Science
degree
in
Medicine.
He
was called Ill Butternut Avenue.
WlliUd from 1955 to 1974 and was
ter.
There will be costume judging
then transferred to the University of Rose Dearing was transported to Metzger, Middleport; Sondra L.
1ft eleclricsl area supervisor. He
at
6:3Q.
~o~owin!!.~Y the supper at 7
School of Medicine in Veterans. Middleport squad was Boothe, Racine; Jeremy Council,
was a member of SL Paul United Louisville
Marvin
Teaford,
1939, where he received the degree called to Cheshire at 2:44 p.m. Langsville;
Methodist Chwth, where he taught
Racine;
Edna
Reitmire,
Hartford,
of
Doctor
of
Medicine
on
June
3,
Delbert
Russell
was
treated
but
not
Smlday School and sang in the
.
!941. After completion of the.State
transported. Pomeroy squad was ' W.Va.
cboir. He was a member of the
MONDAY
DISCHARGES
•
Board
examination
he
began
pracdispatched
Ill
Chester
for
Rex
Mi11turn Lodge# 19, A.F. &amp; A.M.,
None.
in
Kentucky.
He
accepted
an
was
taken
to
Veterans
at
Bailey.
He
tice
Poinl PlelsanL
internship in CharlestOn on July I, 3:16 .p.m. At 3:39 p.m., Chester
Friday Admissions - Nellie
Bern October 31, 1909 in Luka,
1941.
After
several
years
of
pracwas
called
to
assist
Connolly,
Middleport; Kenneth
WV. he was a son of the late EJ.
tice
in
West
Virginia
he
returned
Ill
At
6
p.m.,
Life
Flight
took
Hysell,
Rutland;
and Raymond
IIIII lhe late Ida (Clark) CunninBailey
to
Ohio
Slate
University
Louisville,
KY
where·
he
studied
Justis , Pomeroy.
gham. He was also preceded in
one year of pathology and three HospitaL Tuppers Plains squad was
Friday discharges - Alfred .
de8lh by four brothers and two sis·
years of general surgery. During called to Reedsville at 10:12 p.m. Frank, Walter Roush, and Lewis
tm.
.this time, he enlisted in !he United for Belinda Bailey. Bailey was Smith .
He is survived by his wife, Helen
States Army as Chief of Surgical taken to O'Bleness Memorial
(McHenry) Cunninghan; two sons,
Services,
his rank being Major, but Hospital.
Gerald G. Cunningham of New
was promoted six months later Ill
Ha~. WV and Emet L. CunninUnits · of the Meigs County
Lieutenant
Colonel. Before coming
gham of Wesi Lafayette, OH; lhree
Emergency Medical Service re- Dally sJock prices
dalghters, Mrs. Daniel (Patricia} . to Mason County, he practiced for
sponded to· six calls for assist- . (As of 10:30a.m.)
two years in Logan and one year in
Bllley of Columbia, TN, Mrs.
ance Friday. .
·
Am Electric Power ........... .. 27%
Madison. In 1944, he moved Ill
Donald (Nancy) McClintock of
At 4:11 a.m. the Rutland unit AT&amp;T ... ........ .. ....... ......... .. ..32\1
Point Pleasant
Spencerville, OH and Mrs. Lynn
was called to Meigs Mine No. 31 · Ashland on ........................29~
Brown was married to the late for Mike Lambert who was Bob Evans ....... .. .... ... .......... ll%
(Janet)Casto of Spencerville, OH;
Melba Irene (Postlewaite) Brown. transported to Holzer Medical Charming Shoppes .. .... .... ..... 8
ooc sister, Gladys Hamilton of
He was also preceded in death by a Center.
Fairmont, WV; 11 grandchildren
City Holdlng·co .. .. ... : ......... .15~
son, Charles L. Brown, Jr.; four sis·
IIIII eight great-grandchildren. .
The Racine Unit, at 11:04, went Federal Mogul. .. ... ........ ., .... 12~
I
ters and two brothers.
Funeral service will be held at I
to 49765 McKimie Ridge Road for Goodyear T&amp;R ... ...... .......... . 15
I
· Surviving are two daughters, Carol Taylor who was laken to Key Centurion ....................10%
p.m., Wednesday, October 17, 1990
-I
Patricia Suzanne M~lcley.of Winter Veterans Memorial Hospital.
at lhe Crow-Russell Funeral Home,
Lands' End .. :................ .... .. 9%
I
Park,
FL. and Nancy Jane Browil of
Point Pleasant, with Rev. Clifford
At 1: 41 p.m. the Pomeroy unit Limited Inc .......... ............... 14
I
Gallipolis, Ohio; one son, James · responded to a motor vehicl!' Multimedia Inc . .................. 54%
N. West officiating. Burial &gt;yill fol·
Thomas Brown of Point Pleasant; accident on Route 33 in which Rax Restaurants .. : .............. 1\1
low in IGrldand Memorial Gardens.
one sister, Mary Elizabeth Smith of Delbert Fridley was transported Robbins &amp; Myers ........ :·....... 17'4
I
Charleston; five grandchildren and to Veterans. The Syracuse unit Shoney's Inc ....................... 1014
· Visiting hours .will be held at the
I
live step-grandchildren.
· was called to assist and transport Star Bank ................... .. ....·..16'A
(uneral home on Tuesday, October
I
. Funeral service will be held 81 11 Minton Geary to Veterans .
Wendy's
In
!'I.
.............
........
5%
I
16,1990 from I until9 p.m.
a.m. on Thursday, OcL 18 at the
Coupon Expire• October 31, 1990
WOrthington Ind ...... ,........... 20%
I
Crow-Russell
Funeral
·Home
in
,James RU88ell
I
Point Pleasant with the Rev.
I
.
,
.
.
James Andrew RusseU, infant Michael Chapman officiating.
~-----------------~---------~
1011 d Ronald and Debbm (Craig)
Burial wiU foUow in the Suncrest
RUSICU of Letart, died Monday, OcCemetery. Visiting hours will be
!Dber IS, 1990, at Ohio State held at the funeral home on WedEXPERIENCE A 1ST CENTURY OUTPOURING
Uai~ty Hospital in Columbus,
IN THE 20TH CENTURY!·
nesday, Oc:L 17 from 6:30p.m. to 8
OH.
p.m . .
AdditiQnal survivors include one
lilller. Asny RUSICU; twO brothers,
Dwl IIIII Greg RusseU; paternal
, Roger and Dorothy
r\ marriage license has been
St. Rt. 124, Rutland, Ohio
·
f Mason; maternal granted
in Meigs County Probate
~n!S, 'Austin ''Pete" and Coitrl to Randy Everett McDanie),
. Craig lif Logan. OH and 34, and .Lori Ann Wyne, 30, both of
JOHN f. CORCOR
Pa1tor • 742-2060
01111 Cnlig
of Point ~leasant and Pomeroy.
r·
.

Licenees ~ted

•

·•

.'·

Low tonlghl In mid 50s.
Windy. Chance of rain 90
percent. Thursday, high In
mid 50s. Chance ol rain 88
. percent.

FORKED RUN GROUNDBREAKING • Ground Willi l!roken near Forked Run State Park 011 Tuesday
afternOOD for the construction
a new boat laiiDching facility. Pictured, left to right, are Forked Run
Slate Park Manager Randy Wachter, State Senator Jan Michael Long, State Representative Mary Abel,
and Contractor Rex Maiden of Maiden. &amp; Jenkins Company in Nelsonville. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J .
Reed)
··
.

or

.Housing startS decline
WAsHINGTON (UP!) - The
housing Industry suffered
through another miserable
month In September as new
construction plummeted 0.6 per·
cent for a record eighth consecutive monthly decline, the government said Wednesday.
Applications for building· per·
mils dropped 4.2 percent.
The grim picture of an Indus try
In .deep recession waa. ~enerally
ii1 Jlpe Wiil\ foh!casl's bY prl~ate
economists, who expect more
bad news through the flrstpartof
1991. 1n August, housing starts
were off 1 percent and building
permits tumbled 3 percent.
A Commerce Department spokesman said September's approximately 1.14 million housing
starts, adjusted for seasonal
factors and calculated at an
annual rate, was the worst
showing since the recession of

1982.
Last month's 1 million appl!ca·
· ilons for building permits were
also the worst since the last
nationwide economic malaise
eight yt)ars ago.
,
"During the first nine months
of this year, 963,100 housing units
were started compared with
1,074,500 units during the same
periO(I In 1989," the Commerce
Department said. "This is a
decrease of 10 percent."
Building permits, meanwhile,
were down by about 12 percent

~.6

over the same period last year,
the department said.
"I think the bottom Is pretty
near." said David Seiders, chief
economist at the National Association of Home Builders. "We are
looking for some further gradual
decllne Into the first quarter of

next year."
But Selders said his forecast
assumes a "sensible 'decision"
by Coligress and the White House
on· slashing ·the· federa~- budget
deficit, a gradual easing of
Interest rates and a stalmate In
the rnllitary confrontation with
Iraq.
Construction of new apartment

percent

buildings of five or more units
tumbled 17.8 percent in S~p­
tember , dragging down a 4.3
percent gain In construction of
single-family homes and a 16.1
percent surge in apartment
buildings containing two, three
and four units.
Richard Peach, an economist
with the Mortgage Bankers Association, attributed the decllne in
apartmeni, COl\Structlon .in part
OJ! developers •·•tryrh~'lo.beat the
. deadllne" on federal regulations
requiring expenlve modifications to make buildings more
accessible to physically disabled
people.

What now appears to be just
another cornfield near Reedsville
should look much different by next
summer.
Groundbreaking
ceremonies
were held Tuesday afternoon at the
future site of an Ohio River access
site for Forked Run State Park.
. The ceremony was attended by
state-level . staff of the Ohio
Depannient of Natural Resources,
state legislators 3lld county
officials.
The property, totaling 75 acres,
is located south of State Route 124
near the cl,IITent ena-ance to the
park. It was purchased by ODNR in
September of 1989.
The project will cost over .
$732,000, and will include construction of a two-lane boat launch
· ramp with a courtesy dock, a boat
tie-up area, and a paved parking lot
to accomodatc 25 cars with trailers.
The bid for the construction of
the project .was awardC!i to Maide11
&amp; Jenkins Company of Nelsonville.
Construction is expected to
commence within the next several
weeks, ill though it wiD not begin
until Phase 1 and Phase 'l ar-

. cheological studies are completed
for the Ohio Historical Society.
. As soon as those studies are
finished, the full construction permit is expected to be granted by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
According to Project Engineer
Pixon Jenkins, the project should
be completed by June of next year.
. Jenkins reported yesterday that .
due to special erosion )lroblems in
the area, shrub-type wiDows will be
planted along the bank following
the construction of the facility.

Jenkins alSo said that future
development of the remaining
property has been discussed by
Columbus-level officials, including
possible expansion in the parking
area and · installation of picnic
facilities.
"The big push" for the project on
the local. level, according to Meig:s
County Commissioner Richard
Jones, came from Commissioner
David Koblentz .and Horace Karr of
Chester, who is also an official of
ODNR's Division of Wildlife.

Firm hired to do district's testing
Site Scan Incorporated has Dale C. Teafored as substlt11te
been hired by the Southern Local bus drivers, Evelyn Foreman, as
Board of Education to do the a substitute cook and substitute
teacher aid, and Joan McLain as
district's Petro testing.
. This is the first year that Petro substitute cook.
The resignation of Howle Cald·
testing has been req11ired by the
well
as boy's reserve basketball
state. The cost to the district to
coach
was accepted and John
meet that requirement Is $1,000.
Manuel
was hired pending certibennie Hill, district treasurer,
reported at a meeting this week fication as junior high girl's
that the b\Jard hired Daniel · basketball coach.
Charles Norris presided at the
Murray as a substitute teacher,
Judy Parsons as a substitute meeting attended by Denny
cook and substitute custodian, Evans. Sue Grueser and Gary
Tom Theiss, Dale W. Hill, and · Wilford.

Three hired by Eastern board
A basketball coach and two
assistants were hired for the
1990-91 school year at a special
session of the Eastern Local
Board of Education Monday
night.
Hired were Dawn Heideman,
girl's varsity basketball coach;
Bob Lang, assistant girl's basket·
ball coach; and Greg Oltman,
assistant boy's basketball coach.
The hiring of the head boy's
varsity basketball coach was
tabled.
The board approved the agreement between the Meigs County
Board of Education and the
Eastern Local School District to

maintain the severe behavior
handicapped unit for the current
school year.
·
A resolution of commendation
to elementary students who
made the honor roll for the first
six-week grading period was
adopted. The board authorized
the issuance of the first nineweek honor roll for the high
school students.
A special meeting was set for
Monday at 6 p.m. In the high
school cafeteria.
Attending were Charles
Knight, vice president; and
members B!ll Hannum, I.O. '
McCoy and Jim Smith.

Meigs deputies probe 3 accidents_

ISSUE Z FUNDS AT WORK - Work In front of
the Syracuse Elemenlary School l.s underway to
correct a drainage problem which has b~en a bone
of contention ·for several years. Contract for the
project, financed with Issue 2 funds totaling
$14,600, went to Jeffers Trucking and E;xcavallng,

Pomeroy. A 10-inch culvert Is being lnslalled In
the ditch with llleet of concrete to be poured In
that area, along with a four-foot sidewalk.
Working on the project with Bob Jellers are Mike
Green, Lester Frank and Dennis Long.

At the time of the theft the
Several juvenues have been
Meigs County Sheriff's depu·
ties Investigated three auto acci- questioned In the theft of two vehicle was parked at the
stainless steel ornaments from
residence.
dents Tuesday eVl!ning.
At 4: 40 p.m . the department the arch on the cemetery gate. ·
On Saturday afternoon Jimmy
Charges,
according
to
the
Jo
Hawley, Kingsbury Road,
investigated an accident on
reported
that a battery and truck
Route 338 near Racine, where dpartment. are pending.
Becky Barner, Carpenter. re- topper had been stolen from his
Thomas Grady, Antiquity, was
southbound on 338 near the ported that sometime over the residence.
Sheriff Soulsby also reports
weekend, someone stole a 75American Legion Hall.
As he went around the curve In pound pumkln that she had In her that thedepartrnentls investigatIng the theft of a 22 magnum
hls 1977 pickup truck the pas- front yard.
senger door came open and . The department Is also Investi- piStol and holster.
Grover Klein, Naylor's Run
five-year-old Matthew Milliron, gating the theft of a battery from
the vehicle of Dale Colburn, Road, reported the gun missing
fell out onto the pavement. ·
The Racine squad was called Hiland Road.
on Monday.
and transported Mllltron to Vete· .
rans Memorial Hospital for ob·
servatlon. Grady was issued a
warning for not using his seat
belt.
At 7 p.m. the department was
called to Route 248 when Jane A.
A Syracuse woman suffered hospital spokeswoman.
Harris, Pomeroy, struck a teleserious Injuries Tuesday when
London was not cited In the
phone line that was across the
the car she .was driving flipped .accident.
roadway .
over on Its side on U.S. 33 in
A Long Bottom girl suffered
According to t"e department
Meigs County.
minor Injuries Tuesday when the
report, a vehicle hauling a load of
Naom~ K. London, 69, was
car she was riding In overturned.
hay, had gone ·through earlier
northbound when shewentoffthe
Holly Cleland, 12, was riding ,
and pulled down.the wire.
right side of the road. Her vehicle with Carol S. Kimes, of Long
. Ught damage was sustained
then rolled over on Its side and Bottom, when Kimes apparently
by Harrls'l986 Chevrolet.
slid Into a traffic sign.
lost control of her car In a curve
The department . was sent to
London was not wearing a seat on Meigs County Road 28. Kimes
County Road 20 at 9: 45 p.m.
belt at the time of the· crash, ran off the right side of the road,
James H. Qulvey, Pomeroy, was
according to a report from the came back onto the roadway and
southbound when he struck and
Ga!Ua·Melgs post of the State went off the lett side, striking a
kUled a deer that ran Into the
Highway ~atrol.
·
mailbox and a fence. Kimes' car
patb of his 1985 Ford.
Lol)don was taken to Grant then overturned and slid Into a
Qulvey's vehicle suffered modHospital In Columbus by a · tree, according to a report from
erate damage.
•UfeFlight helicopter around 6 the Gallla·Melgs post of the State
EllS QUEEJII CANDIDATES. These three Eaten!
Sehoollelllon 1re candidates for Eastern Hlg~a
Deputies are also Investigating p.m. She was admitted to the Highway Patrol.
School Homecoming on Friday night. Left to right are
HOI, daughter or Ron Hill or Chester; Leigh
a report ol theft from the Letart hospital's Intensive care unit and
Kimes was not Injured . She Anne Redovlan, daughter of John IIDd Tuni Redovlan
Pomeroy; and Suzanne Clay, daughter of Ronald
rownshlp Cemetery received was IIi serious condition Wednes- was cited for failure to control.
and Gayann Clay or Chester. (Sentinel phpto by Brian J, Reed)
.
' .
·
· ' frol'!l the township trustees:
day morning, according to a

Car flips over, Syracuse
.woman is seriously injured

or

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