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Page 3

8 AM-lO PM . .
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298 SECOND SL· '
POMEROY, OH; .

SUNDAY
SEPTEMBER 24
MONDAY •
SEPTEMBER 25
TUESDAY
SEPTEMBER 26 .
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By NANCY YOACHAM
Dally Senlinel Staff
An amended property annexa·
lion proposal from Middleport
Village was accepted Wednesday
by the Meigs County Commis·
sioners, ''pending'' receipt by the
commissioners of an official
description of the revised PNP·
osal, and all other necessary
documents to complete the final
transaction.
Middleport VIllage Council
voted Monday night to amend the
proposed annexation to elimi·
nate several properti es on ihe
west side of State Route 7 from
Inclusion in the village. Thirty
properties on the east side of
Route 7 to the Ohio River are to
be incorporated. Upon receipt of
needed documents from Middle·
port, th e commissioners will
begin legal proceedings to final·
ize the Incorporation of the 30
properties.
Bruce Teaford, representing
the Teaford Realty Company.
approached the commissioners
Wednesday regarding the possi·
bllity of the county buying the
Pomeroy Masonic Butldln~.
which sits beside th e courthouse.
The building lot, an adjoining lot.
and 12 feet of right-of-way whicb

·

Authorities probe cause of blaze
The fire which destroyed the house and garage of John C.
Welch, Buck Run Road, Dexter. early Wednesday morning is
under investlgation by the Meigs County Sheriff's departmenl
and the State Fire Marshall's office.
According to a repor t from Sheriff J ames M. Sulsby, the fire
was of undetermined origin. In addi lion to the house and garage
a Massey-Ferguson tractor was also destroyed in the fire.
The Vinton County Sheriff's department was notified at 4:54
a.m. Wednesday that the ·house was on fire. That ·department
radioed the Meigs County Sheriff's office which t)1en contacted
the Meigs EMS who dispatched Columbia Township Fire
Department.
Mr. and Mrs. Welch were in Florida when the fire occurred.

Hit-skip mishap investigated
A hit -skip accident on the Big Wheel parking lot is under
investigation by the Meigs County Sheriff's Department .
According to the report, Scott T. Curl, Middleport, reported
that he had parked his 1988 Chevrolet pickup truck and had gone
Continued on page 12

the reading of the charges
against their client, at Wednes·
day's hearing.
·
Judge Cain explained that the
penalty upon conviction for ag·
gravated murder was life impri·
sonment with the possibility of a
death sentence.
Attorney Carson waived a
formal request for ·a change in
the amount of Baisden's bond.
However, the attorney entered
an oral motion to review the
amount of bond at next week's
prelbnlnary hearing.·
Judge Cain continued
Baisden's bond at. $250,00, cash,
no 10 percent ball bond.
Baisden is accused of stabbing
three people to death last Sunday
at a Kanauga. residence. The
victims were Marvin W. Wears,
94, andhlswlfe, Beulah, 81, of415
Pike St., Kanauga, and Mrs.
Wears' daughter, Mrs. Audrey
Foster, 58, Milton, W.Va . .
Autopsies were ordered on the
bodies by Gallia County Coroner
Dr. Edward J . Berkich. The
bodies were taken to the Franklin
County morgue at Columbus.
Results of those autopsies were
released Wednesday by the cor·
oner. Mr. Wears suffered four
stab wounds to the neck; Mrs.
Wears, two knife wounds to the
neck and Mrs. Foster one major
Contlnued on page 12

runs from the masonic building,
along the back of the courthouse
and county sheriff's office to
Second St., are included tn the
$35,000 package.
Tbe commissioners told Tea·
ford however that the county
would no( be interested in the
building, but might consider
making an offer for the one lot
between the masonic building
and the courthouse.
Teaford told the commissioners to prepare an offer. but made
no promise that the package
could be divided for sale.
Teaford also expressed an
interest In selling 670 acres in the
Pagevtlle area which he feels
would be ideal ·for landfill
purposes.
The commissioners explained
to Teaford that any deciSions ..
regarding landfill development
in Meigs County must now be
made by the six-county solid
waste district, to which Meigs ·
County belongs. The commissioners referred Teaford to
Sarah Hendrlcker, of Athens,
who serves as chairman of the
Solid Waste District's Policy
Committee.

Salem Township Trustee John
Colwell spoke briefly with the
commissioners regarding the
widening of a road wblch leads to
a site where Southern Ohio Coal
Company Is drilling a new mine
shaft. The coal company will be
paying for the materials to widen
the road which lies on "township
and c.oal company rights-of-way.
Once the new shaft and accom"
panylng construction is com·
p!ete, the coal company · is
planning to build a new paved
road to the new shaft site. The
paved road is then to be turned
over to the township to maintain,
with the coal company providing
money on an annual basis to the
township to pay for the added
maintenance expenses asso·
elated witb a paved road. The old
road. even though it Is widened,
is then to be abandoned.
Required legal procedures in
such a transaction were mentioned by the commissioners, with
Colwell assuring the commissioners that legalities have a!·
ready been reviewed, and that.no
property owners along the road
targeted for abandon111ent.'
Continued on page 12

Ferdinand Marcos,
72, dies early today.
HONOLULU (UP!) ~ Ferdi'
nand E. Marcos, who lorded over
the Philippines for more than 20
years until a "people power"
revolt forced him Into exile, died
early Thursday, facing charges
of looting his island nation of
billions of dollars .
He was 72.
Doctors said Marcos died of
cardiac arrest at 12 :48 a.m.
Hawaiian time (6:48EDTi at the
St. Francis Medical Center,
where he had been hospita-lized
since Jan. 15.
·
"He was unable to be resuscitated with medica tion in the

FERDINAND MARCOS

usual method," said Ferdinand
"Bong Bong" Marcos Jr., Mar·
cos's son. "God has taken this
great man from our midst to a
better place more deserving of
his presence."
Friends and family said Mar·
cos's wife, Imelda, who also was
indicted for stealing from the
Philippines to finance their lav·
ish lifestyle. accepted his death
with dignity.
.'
"She's doing very well, thank
you." Ferdlpand Jr. said.
Marcos supporters gathered at
the hospital as word of his death
spread and pollee sen lin officers
to maintain security.

Meigs poll workers are recognized
Twenty-elgbt Meigs County
poll workers with service of more
than 25 years each were honored
at a recognition ceremony and
presented certificales from Se·
cretary of State Sherrod Brown
Wednesday afternoon at the
Meigs County Board of Elections
office, Pomeroy.
Michelle Jenkins, Brown's
field representative, joined local
board of election officials includ·
ing Jane Frymyer, director, and
Evelyn Clark. chairman, for the
recognition prograll!.
Ms. Jenkins commented on the
importan4 role which poll

workers play in the election
process . "Nothing could take
place without the poll worker,"
she said in introducing the
honorees as the cer tificates were
prese nted.
Several of the workers had
personal remembrances, like
Dorothy Smith who recalled that
her fi rs t pay for the day was $6.50
In the early 40's. She also
reflected on the year voting took
place in a school bus.
Refreshments were served to
the following: Ruth Balderson,
Martha Beegle, Belle Biggs, C.

Arthur Crabtree, Agnes Dixon,
Wanda Eblin, Hazel Pauline
Eichinger. Evelyn Gilmore, Len·
nle Hap tons ta ll, Bernice Jeffers
Sylvia Midkiff, Bernice Nelson:
Maxine Owens, Golda Reed,
Dorothy Ritchie, Rose Sisson,
Dorothy Smith, Betty Templeton, and Florence Well.
Those qualifying for an award,
but unable to attend were Ruth
Ebersbach, Louise Ellis, Evelyn
Hollon. Gloria Hutton, Doris
Koenig. Phyllis Larkins , Mabel
Moore, Marjorie Reuter, and
Audra Well.

Y.OU MUST
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GAL.
·$149
••••••••••••

Wednesday where Judge Joseph L. Cain set
Wednesday, Oct. 4, for a prelbnlaary hearing and
continued bond at $250,000. Baisden Is accused of
killing three people Sunday at Kanauga. In the
background Is Worthy G. Siders, Sr., Henderson,
W.Va. , who was at court on another matter. .

By DICK THOMAS
. Baisden was at the arraignOVP News Staff .
ment with his court-appointed
A preliminary hearing date co-counsels, Attorney Herman
was set Wednesday afternoon in ·Carson of Athens and Attorney
Galljpolis Municipal Court for Ronald.R. Calhoun of Gallipolis.
Dennis J. Baisden, 18, of the
JudgeJosephL. Catnsetlp.m.
Point Pleasant , W.Va . area. on · Wednesday, Oct. 4, as date for
three counts of aggravated Baisden's preliminary hearing.
murder.
The defense counsels waived

(Maximum soc
Value)

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Commission accepts
Middleport's proposal

Baisden·· · scheduled October 4 ·

We will·
redeem up
to 5

2 Sections. 12 Pages 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 28, 1989

•

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WHITE BREAD

Vo1.40. No.101 M
CopyrighiOd 1989

Pr~li~Jnar:y
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9 LIVES

•

LEAVING COURT- Eighteen·year-old Dennis
J. Baisden, Polut Pleasant area, charged with
three counts of ar;gravated murder, Is shown
leaving the GaiUpoUs Municipal Building In ·
custody of .GaiUa County Deputy Sheriff Kenny
Fuestel.
Baisden was in municipal court

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Partly cloudy . Low In 50s.
Friday, partly cloudy , high in
mid 70s.

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150 YEARS AT THE POLLS- Among &amp;bole
recopbed and pret~ented certltlca&amp;es by Sllerrod
Brown, Secretary of stale, forllli yearsofworldng
a1 the polll were l)orodty Smith who started In
.
I

1~. .

'

Arthur Crabtree In 1988, and Le!lille
· Haplonstall, 19.85, plc&amp;11red lei&amp; · &amp;o light, with
Michelle Jenkins, field representative from the
Secretary of stale' a citrlce.
.

AWARDS OF RECOGNff10N - Certulcales
were pret~ented to poU worken of 211 or more years
by Secretary of State Sherrod Brown Wednesday
afternoon. Present for. the cerem~ny were.left to
right, seated, Ruth Ann Balderson, Martha
BeeJie, Bette Blgp, Apea Dixon, Wanda Eblin,

and Hazel PauUne Elchlqer; and back, Evelyn
Gilmore, Ylorence Weill, Maxine Owen1, Rosie
Slt180n, Betty Templeton, Sylvia Midkiff, Golda
Reed, Dorolhy, Ritchie, Bernice Jefiers, .and
Bernice Ne~ f!everal who qualUied for the
award were d.ai!Je to attend.

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Poma'OY-Middlaport, Ohio

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 C..n Street
Pomerey, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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ts:m~
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~._.....

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ROBERT L. WmGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Muacer

PAT WHITEHEAD

Aallstanl Publlsher/ColllroUer

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They ohould be less Ibaa 310
wordo loa(. AU letlen are abject lo edlil11 aad mult be olped wllb
name, addr- andlelepllole aumw. No uMJped Jelten will be published. Letlerollhould be 111 (ODd IMie, addre~alncllo-. no1 peroonallllel.

America's troubled schools
WASHINGTON -One In four American high school students drop
out and an estimated 13 percent of adults cannot read. Generally. too.
pupils In other Industrialized natiOns do tar better than U.S. children
In math and science.
·
Since 1980. u.s, spending on publiC education. adjusted tor
Inflation, has risen 29 percent. Yet there has been little If any
Improvement In achievement.
These are among some of the facts of academic life In America that
President Bush's two-day summit with the nation's governors In
Charlottesville, Va .. must address,
.
The unprecedented meetln~t was opening Wednesday with
educators and public officials warning that the United States' role as
a world leader is in jeopardy unless there are dramatic classroom
improvements.
·
·'On a per capita basts, we spend far more thi1n Germany. far more
than Japan. Yet we are not achieving like they are," Bus!) noted
Tuesday . ·'We've got to see what we are doing wrong, how can we be
accountable."
': . . more
One difference may be the number of hours students spend In the
. , classroom.
'
In Japan. the weekly figure Is 32. In Tawaln. the number Is more
than 40. In the United States, students are In the classroom an
• average of less than 20.
Another di f!erence may be parental Involvement .
In Korea, where students also score higher than American
youngsters In standardized tests. youn~tsters get two copies of each
: textbook. One Is for themselves, the other Is for their parents who are
• : · expected to be lntlrnately familiar with their work and progress.
: •. Earlier this month, U.S. high school principals Issued a "report
.: card ... that gave American education a "C-plus." compared to an
- ~ "A-minus" for South Korea and a. "B -mlnus" for West Germany.
• The report by the National Association of Secondary School ·
:: Principals differed from others that have found American young
people lagging by examining not just student performance, but the
, overall commitment to education In the three societies.
•
The study graded the countries In 15 categories and found that the
• United States rated as high as South Korea and West Germany In just
one- Its commitment to compulsory education.
Otherwise, American younr:sllers spend more time watching
:: television or working at outside jobs and less time In school or doing
, homework. Also. they are more likely to take drugs and live In
, crime-ravaged l)eighborhoods or In single-parent households.
•
A study earlier this year by the . National Assessment for
• Educational Progress, "A Worlq of Difference," compared math and
science sco res of U.S. students with 11 other populations groups In
.. Canadian provinces, Ireland. Korea and the United Kingdom, U.S.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, September 28, 1989

A worthwhile-addendum to Bush's plan
WASHINGTON - President
Bush's strategy to win the war
against drugs overlooked the
rnost effect lve weapon of all. The
surest way to put drug traffickers out of business, In our
opinion, Is to go after their
profits.
We urge Congress to create a
"National Finance Guard" to
· track: Intercept ancl seiZe clrug
profits. This should ~ an elite
Ioree of the nation's sharpest
financial experts, empowered by
Congress to monitor banking
transactions, subpoena financial
records and confiscate assets
that are Illegally acquired.
The National Security Agency
already has the resources to
eavesdrop on the drug rings,
Intercept their comrnunkatkins
and trace their banking transac-

..

·· students ranked ninth -in science, last In math.

..

''The Ionge~ you are in school In America, the dumber you become.
~
relative to students in other countries," says former Education
~
Secretary William Bennett, now the nation's federal antl-drug chief.
, " You don't start out dumb. "
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas, Issued his own analysis of
~ ·comparative academic studies laJt week that highlighted some other
chilling facts.
For instance. more than 90 percent of Japanese youngsters
complete the 12th grade, compared to just 71 percent of American
students. In addition, the student absentee rate In Japan Is less than 2
percent, compared to 9 percent In the United States.
·•over and over, the figures speak loud and clear." Bentsen said.
"We aren't doing a good enough job of educating our children . We
aren't adequately preparing them for today's increasingly
technological and highly competitive world ."
The Education Department cites a 1982 study by the Census Bureau
In estimating that 13 percent of American adults are functionally
illiterate. Some &lt;&gt;xper ts say the actual figure might be higher. Others
say It may be lower.
, Regardless, illiteracy remains a major concern that will be
s potlighted at Bu sh's &lt;&gt;ducatlon s.. mmlt.
Another troubling fact in the nation' s education system focuses on
teachers. Studies show that the teaching profession is not drawing Its
share of the nation's best and brlilhtest students.
In fact, surveys show that high school seniors who say they Intend to
become teach&lt;&gt;rs score. on average, well below the median on the
Scholastic Aptitude Test. a college entrance exam.
Many educ ation experts say for the nation to attract better teachers
It needs to make the profession more at tractive.
Some, like Marc Tucker, head of the National Center on Education
and the Economy , an independent, non-profH research group In
Rochester, N.Y., says there are two major ways to accomplish this:
, -Give teac hers more authority in the classroom, provided they are
also held more accountable for results," Tucker said.
-"And Increa sed their pay," he said. The average teacher salary
Is now about $29,000. "It needs to be close to $40,000 - that's the
_median."

Today in history
By Unlled Press International
Today Is Thursday . Sept. 28, the 271st day of 1989 with 94 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
The morning star are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They Include
German social philosopher Friedrich Engels In 1820; Frances
Willard, founder of the Women's Christian Temperance Union, In
1839; CBS chairman William Paley In 1901 (age88); TV variety show
host Ed Sullivan In 1902, German heavyweight boxer Max Schmeling
In 1905, cartoonist AI Capp In 1909, actors William Windom In 1923
(age 661 and Marcello Mastroianni In 1924 (age 65); and actress and
animal rights advocate Brigitte Bardo! In 1934 (age 55). .

On this date In history:
In 490 B.C., the Greeks defeated the PerSians at Marathon. A Greek
soldier ran 26 miles to tell Athenians of the victory, providing a model
for the modern marathon race.
.
In I9W, In baseball's blgest scandal, a grand Jury Indicted eight
players of the Chicago White Sox tor throwing the 1919 World Series
wtt h the Cincinnati Reds.
In 1982, the first reports appeared of deaths In the Chicago area
from Extra-strength Tylenol capsules laced with cyanide. Seven
people died and the unsolved case resulted In tamper-proof
.
packaging for consumer products.
In 1987, a federal appeals court declared Boston public schools
officially desegre_gated after a 13-year effort.
A thought for the day: French auth.o r Anatole France wrote, "One
can and should say everything - It one knows how to say it."

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estate schemes, junk bonds and
other high-risk ventures.
That strategy worked Initially.
In the four years between late
1984 and late 1988, the value of
Lincoln's real estate investments
soared . from $300 million to $1
billion, and Its deposits rose
almost as spectacularly, from
$1.7 billion to $4.1 billion.
On April 13 of this year,
however, American Continental
declared Itself bankrupt by filing
a legal petition seeking court
protection from Its creditors
while conducting a financial
reorganization under Chapter 11
of the federal bankruptcy code.
The following day, federal
regulators seized control of Lin·
coin, asserting that its parent
company was operating the S&amp;L
In an "unsafe and unsound"
manner and was dissipating Its
$5.3 billion In assets.
This spring and summer three
civil suits were filed by the
Orange County Superior Court.
They allege that Keating and his
colleagues engaged In deceitful
practices that defrauded · more

holdings knowingly purchased
with drug money should be
subject to penalties or
confiscation.
While · these measures are
drying up drug profits. stronger
measures could also be taken to
dry up the drug market. By their
purchases, drug users have
brought a plague upon America.
Recreational users and llard·llne
addicts alike are accomplices to
the murder and misery that the
drug gangs have spread.
We should declare drug users
to be Public Enemy No. I and
treat them as such. We sould call
for the prosecution of every user
who is · caught and a stiff fine
against everyone who Is COJ1·
vlcted. The fines should be In line
with the user's ability to pay, so
the penalty hits the rich as hard
as the poor. The money should be
spent confining the addicts .to
drug treatment centers until they
are cured.
To stimulate enforcement,
Congress should authorize a
reward for Informers. If their
Information leads to convictions
and confiscations, they should
receive 10 percent of the confls·
cated assets. This would unleash
a horde of modern bounty hun·
ters upon the pushers and their
customers.
There are naysayers · who
claim that the anti-drug fervor
among Americans could lead to a
trammeling of constitutional
rights. That is a legitimate
concern, but It shouldn't scare
politicians away from exploration of an all-out legal offense
under the broad pow~rs of the
Constltu lion. Let's not stand by
and watch our nation destroyed
because we do not trust the
strength of the Constitution or
our public commitment to it.

than 22,000 bondholders, many or
them elderly, out of $200 million
they Invested In junk bonds
Issued In American Continental's
name.
The holders of those bonds,
sold in the weeks Immediately
prior to the company's bankrup)cy flUng, probably will be
among the last to be repaid In the
financial reorganization. AI though the debentures were sold
at Lincoln' s offices. they were
not Insured by any government .
agency·
In mid-September. the new
federal agency charged ·with
cleaning up the S&amp;L industry, the
Resolution Trust Corp., flied a
civil suit In federal court In
Phoenix accusing Keating and
his associates of directing a
racketeering scheme, repeatedly violating government banklng regulations and engaging in
fraudulent practices.
·
The lawsuit further alleges
that Keating's group backdated
and otherwise forged documents,
concocted phony financial !ransactlons, used Lincoln's deposits

w.. .

li.Oak...d .................. ..H II .Ill -

Ku . . CNy ................ JI 17 .111
Catl..,.llla .......... ..........118 •

Tnu .,. ........... .......... ~ .81
Mla~RA_ola ...................11
9elttle ..... ,, ;,.,,,.,.,., .... ,7t
Clllicqo .......................n

Troops and guns won't stop drugs
Teddy Roosevelt would have shutting off the supply of drugs Is
winced at the way his motto, wildly lrresoonslble.
Re!Yiel'nber the campaign
"Walk softly but carry a big
against
heroin production In
stick," has been turned on Its
Turkey
some
years ago? It
head by the current president.
worked,
so
production
transRather than mimic Roosevelt,
ferred
to
Mexico.
And
when
it
George Bush noisily proclaims
was
choked
down
in
Mexico,
It
his Intention to tackle problem
after problem - terrorism, for expanded In the Middle East and
one recent example - and then the Golden Triangle of Southeast
offers us a warmed-over solution Asia, where It remains to this
at best or even no solution at all. day.
So long as heroin can be
Sometimes the administration's hollow promises are produced In so many poor counmerely Irritating. Sometimes tries, supply will always meet
they are worse. Following the U.S. demand.
Marijuana production has fol·
Colombian crackdown on Its
lowed
In so many poor countries,
drug lords, rhetoric· from Wawill always meet U.S.
supply
shington turned baldly dishonest,
for It raised expectations that demand.
Marijuana production has fol·
simply cannot be met.
The United States can no more lowed a similar country-jumping
stanch the foreign supply of profile. Even If our borders could
drugs than it can stop the now of be sealed altogether to marl·
juana Imports, domestic growers
the Mississippi.
Rather than acknowledge this -could quickly take up much of the
rather obvious truth, administra- slack.
Turn up the heat In Colombia,
tion ottlclals struck a steely pose
·
.
and
the drug chieftains wUI
and pretended that a few more
simply
relocate. Most coca Isn't
helicopters and U.S. advisers,
grown
In
Colombia anyway but In
coupled with new-found resolution by South American govern- Peru and Bolivia - In dirt-poor
ments, could finally turn the tide regions that could care less about
U.S. anguish over crack houses.
against drug suppliers.
For a few bizarre days, the Even If the Peruvian .governpresident and Attorney General ment wanted to clamp down, lt;s
Richard Thornburgh briefly already fighting a vicious war
cracked the door to possible use against communist ·guerrillas
of u.s. troops In Colombia. and barely controls large coca·
before coming to their senses and producing areu.
Let
the
Colombian
government
denying that they'd entertained
suppress Its drug lords for Its own
such a foolish move.
Good politics? Probably, since reasons, not ours. Drug traf·
polls show that Americans are tickers have poisoned Colombian
Intensely concerned about drugs. society, terrorizing officials and
But good politics or not, talk of undermining respect for law. To
'

the. modest extent the United
States can help_that country. we
should.
Meanwhile, we should combat
the menace of drugs here at
home by reducing demand - by
changing public attitudes toward
the substances, building on the
success of the past few years.
Yes, success. Use of many
drugs peaked In 1979 or '80, and

17 .51!1 1:1
1t1 ,,.,,. 17'ft

Dh· h~n

. By TIM McMANUS

UPI Sports Writer
The San Francisco · Giants
could not clinch the title against
Los Angeles, so they relied on the
Cincinnati Reds for their second
NL West championship In the
past three years. ' ·
San Francisco entered Wt!d·
misday night needlilg a victory
against the Dodge~s or a Clncln·
natl victory over the secondplace San Diego Padres to clinch
the division. After the Giants lost
1-0 to Los Angeles, they walled
through a 13-innlng, 2·1 Cincinnati victory over the Padres to
celebrate.
"We wanted to win it on the
field, but It's getting to the point
where we 're sitting around here
and we'll take It any way we can
get it," San Francisco first
baseman Will Clark said. "It's
s~spended anfr11ati!m."
"I'm gonna give tClnclnnatl
, Manager Tommy) Helms a
quarter-share (of the playoff
money), " Giants Manager
Roger Craig said.
With a four-game lead In the
standings and three games to
play, San Francisco avoided a
showdown with the Padres In the
final three-game series of the
year. Instead, the Giants begin
preparation for their League
Championship Series against the
Chicago Cubs, the NL East
champions. startlng Oct. 4. · ·
San Diego Manager Jack

V

Team

.

Polnl.s

. I . Nn ·ukC~ttholk (18) (S..Q ) "'" "" ":I H
· 2~ lJmaC~atholic(J) (5·l) ...... ....... .... llll
3. SudiiAky Si . MarJll (~l ts-G ) .... .... U8
• • (Ut) MI . . . . (3) CS.O) _.... ..... ....... lSI
4. (lifo) Mt·Donald ($--8) .. .... . ........ ..... IJI
t1. ,\rllnlf.on (5-I) ..................... ..... ....111
1. Delptilu st.. olot.n',. (5-D) .................. 7l'!
K. LoniDOe•~-· (I) ( ...·1) .............. 75
!t. A._,.raviUe (5-ti ............ .... ... , .... ..... JO
Jl.f'rf'mont St. lo..-.h ( -1·! 1 _............ .53
!!k'oo_. left: 11. Monrvt!viiiP 52;
Sb...,. Mid. 31; IS. Mi11110 31; U . Canal
Wlneltf'!IU!r !3: IS.
Buren tt; It, St.
H~l'J2I: 1'2. W11JnellflelcJ.&lt;ioKhNIS; 11\.

. we.-..,.,·.fteiulhi
N"'· Yerk'J, IIGMoat .

TorOiio 8, Ott roM 1

"tl•nrs-.a 1, Qh.·aao 1
Baltlmort t, Mllwau lire U
Cle\'eiMII •• &amp;.alit I
Oatluiiii, Telallt

.Ku• CMy 8, Callfou~a :s
Tllunclll.t''S G11mH1
Tnaa (Barfli!ldt-1) atOillllandtMoore

u.

1!4-lli,J:IIp.m.
Mll..,..kl!'e (.\ups&amp; Jt-111 111 BoMion
! Bocldlc.'ker IHO, 7: 31 11.m .

v.,.

01!\'I!IMI IBIMil ll-111 -' Sulik
CHolmu HI), ll:llp.m.
...... City IMeWIIUMUI t ·l) ~
Calllo•llla (Witll-14), ll:ll·p.m.

. S.a:artrell'k G.,..wlQ' (I)_ 1-1; II. Eul
ba•IZ: 8 . (lk) llerbC•nierWe~wr•
Rf'Ben~ and GI~..-._...·Trlmhle, !t eacll.

F•IU)I'II GamM

Dnroit a1 Ntw York. nllhl
Milwaukee at BoiK• allfll
Balllmo"' a1 To•onlo. nllhl
·OeYeiMAd at Chh:ap, "liN

Transa~ions

Mlnnesalallll Selltle, 1111111
KanMU Clly M OakiMIII, nl.

Wrd11!14..r'l 'S,Oit8 TranM~&amp;cUofl!
Bile ball
llou••-:- lllkl*r Crall Reynolds
u..u .. d laiK rrtlt'fmenteftet.tl\'e lllhl'
e... of lilt ~••
NN Vor. tAL) - Ohtalntd pllcllff'

' Texu a1 CaiUorllla. niPt
NATIONAL LEA.GIJE

""''

W L Pd .

GB

•-CIIIc&amp;«e .. .... .... .. ....... .11
Mt. Lolds .......... ............ .llll
New Yo•k ............. .......IU
Me•reaa~ ........ ............ .IU
· PMI~rp ...... ............ :a
Pllllldf!lpN.Il ................l l
Wtttl

Ill
7t
i1
7K
Mt .

•..SIMI Fran ..................11
~aa Dlep- .. .'................ .11
Ho•lha ...................... .Jt
LoN .-~ .................71
. Cl•ln..r.l ...............-.....1'1
"tlallbi ........................IS
i-ellncbl!d lhilllo_. tllle.

M .5'7! 7t .141 -1
71 .IlK 1

·

·

we•IIIIMif'"

.111

an earltr dell.
Bullethall

7%

·

PHerwn.

u

Rf&gt;"lllt" .;·

,
CGI~p
Cal Pob Pomo• - Named Ltroy
WMIIIIII&amp;oaiUid 'hm SaltDitelaa11Matanl

.n11 u
HI .til 11
M . • !A

Pete M)'Haaad lor-Nard K~ BrrM·n.

huiDftblllc:u.e.._.

~

GII'Dt\'a (Pa.)- NanttdWUUunGII!IMt

..... rter or

N•••· Yo•k :t

"'Clnd•.-tiZ,
IU&amp;a I . HDu•on-'
Kaa DlrKft I, l:llnn.

, .,_.,...,,II 0...,8

Lo11 .-\a . . sl, s .. Fnu~dM.'O A
No l{lllnflll a.iiiPdllld
•
Frl.a,y'!t G&amp;mPM
N~· York Ml PIUHhur'l{h. I,

-.

.

twt-nl~

Ohio (UPH

-

~his

Hl,;h School Board ol Ce.lll.'hi'H foodtall
rallnp ( wli.h DrMt plac~ voleli and
M&lt;'on-lolll ret-al'lh In )llli'riiUit'IW!t) :

I

Ttoam

.

Polnl11

I . Clnc:ln•tl Prlnutna (Ill (1-01 .. .. . :-Ia
"!. l1t"Vt- ~ . laatiuM (1 !11 (,.·1) .. ..... .. . %31
3. flncln..tl Mof'UII'f' (!h (:l·ll .......... !:tl
~ . Ca•ton Mt·Kinlry U·D) ............... .. 1-13
l . nn.:ln•ll FJ.,.. iS.OJ ...... .. ..... ...... J.:t
' 6. Uma Se-n6ar {5-I) ...........................9-t
': . Llllk'*lll'r IS.I) ........................ 1... ..11:1
H. Gahan .. Unf:oln (5·1) .......... ..........51

!1 . Ma~~lllill011 \\'..~a,;ton i-1-1) ...... .......50
. Ill. Day loa WQIIl' (5-I) ...................... .... 5
S.c..vnd IPJl: II. Euclid !UI; 1!. Wf'lll
CarruUt .. !II; 13. Au~tJntMn Fitch
' • 21; I,., EMt Clt&gt;niMIIII !iha•·!G; 15. Tolt•do
OeVII_bt".,: IS; II. UppPr A•ll . . onU: 17.
, . Kllftdaslq 7: Ul. Uil") Toi.Pdo ,. CIPatNI

Wt&gt;tl&amp;ll'rn

~

·!iifrw, H•mlton lllld Chford Tala Wan dll.
lll'lich.
Dlvilllon II
Tum
Polnb
I. C'ltovt st. ,JoMeph (I H) t 5-11) .......... ,, '!:4&gt;1
'l . All run Buehttl (3) ca-l) ................ 1711
3. F0!1tori11' (2) (5-0) ......................... 160
-1 . ( '~tmbrld,cll' (I) ( 5-t) ~.. , ................ 1 125
;, , Steuh•n~llt (+I 1 ......................... 111
II. ~olon Cl) (U ) .............................. 111

': . Mlilll'rva (5-I) ....................... ..........17
II. Franklin (5-I) ........ .. ............ .. ....... .83
!t Ule) Galion ~5-0) ........................... .31

!1. (lho) HarrboGnl -\.11) ........................ ~t!l
Stc..'llJII II'•~ II . ('vl...-.t.,. Fnulldl•
Hf"l-!1 3:1&gt; 1!. CUII'I Nolih Caoto•
Hoow,r IUid Col.-nhu" DI!'Salefl, t! ut·h;
&lt;• H. Kt•nt RoowvC'It Ill; 15. W.tlliM
Mf'morlal Ill: II. Bowll•~~: Grt&lt;en IS; 1'7.
f'.oh.n hull lk&gt;C'ciM.oroft 1.1; Ul. (11•1 Parma
Hoi, NIIR'k' autlll 81..,., II nc..·h; !0.
Lo~··
01\'lMI.On Ill

Tum

Pol"!:

1. fA.PE (Ill (1·0) ............................. 11'
';!. lrollllon (Ill (HI ........ ................... 171i

..'

!1. UrhiUI.Il (5-0) ......... ......... .............. I'M

1. Kentonl~tn ..... ......... ....... ..............IIS
5.. l'ounpt&lt;M·• Ursnllnt• (.\..0) .............16

11. ('~m~rll Mt'mortlll15411 ...... , ....... :; ~
i. Wllll.rd I I) (1-Ut ....................... .. .. ..IU
!l Orr~u.. ( -1-1 1 ....... ........ .......... ..... ....a:i

!t (tiP) H~t.mUion &amp;.din t5·0) .. ........... JIC)
It (tir) .-\llriW! Nt . Vhl't'nl !3-1 I .. ........ .liG
!W&lt;.'ClNI te•: II . Sprtnlllflt'ld North•••l·
t'f'n ·u : J.'l. cud l"ollll•"*" ('ardl ..l
~oonry and ,\shta '*Ill HathOr I 1). 18
rat·h: 1.... I th•l Ulnll BIMIIIUICI S~A' IInlon, K
t•IM'h; 18. Clirl Oltrt'Ua Flrrlandoi :utd
TwlnftrKChamhP•Hn.ti
IlL 1\kron
Hoban :1; lt. !ilt&gt;l a ·a\'M'Iyalld fGiwnbu•
Hamlllon TOM.'OIItip, -1 f'W.'II,

Vincent
Carroll

•·•h:

has been declining since. Cocaine
Is the exception. The federal
government reported that TT
million Americans used an Illegal drug In 1988, a huge drop from
38 million In 1985.
The U.S. war on drugs must be
fought within our borders, not In
faraway Andean valleys over
whlcl! ultimately we have no
control.

Mar)tHII ' - ln*fi~IJ au•pended
&amp;afl!ly&amp;n .. F...,IkafnmlooihiiUearn.
· Uf 8.... larban. - Named Don
Lowi'J adlnl aea• roath.
BaRala-Sikatilwldrftcelwrolam"
LeHo11: walwd · lt1Wb*=lt'r Ronnll'

'

By PAUL DEFEDE

UPI Sports Writer
For the Oakland Athletics, the
road. to repeating as the American League West champions -was
a struggle, but In the end it
proved to be more satisfying than
last year's title.
•·
The A's, who ran away with the
division In 1988, clinched the
championship Wednesday with a
5-0 victory over the Texas
Rangers with only four games
remaining in the season.
The A's are the first AL WesL
team to win back-to-back divIsion titles since Kansas City did
so .In 1984 and 1985.
Oakland clinched despite a
rash of Injuries to several .top
players and stiff challenges from
the California Angels and Kansas
City Royals.
"It's better because of how we
won It," Dave Parker said. "We
· .didn't have Jose Canseco going
40-40 thorne runs and stolen
bases) like last year. We had a lot
of guys come through for us.
Guys like Tony Phillips and Mike
Gallego."
' The A's were able to repeat as
champions Wednesday night
thanks to Jos&lt;&gt; Canseco's two-run
hamer and seven Innings of
' one-hit ball from Mike Moore.
Moore.19·11, was never threa·
tened as he allowed no runner to
advance past first. Moore was
also helped by second baseman
Gallego, who supplied a number.
of defensive gems.
After Dave Henderson's one
out double in the first, Canseco
ripped a 2-1 pitch Into the second
deck for his 17th home run off
loser and starter Jaime Moyer
4-9.

trrr."Y Ghlnt11- Pl~~ePclllnetut.cker ~Pvt•
QtoOwKIII' on lnju..-d """"'"' llnd IIIJM"d
·· lllll!tllr.t'kl'r La..lioalll' Har pl'r.
SIUI Franci!K'O - DI'IM!4VI!' Pnd ,Jl'ff

!Stowr

rel~d;

rf'!&lt;lllftl'd ufet.v Tom·

Holmot&gt; •Dill ··" ·alved ll..,ha.cke• Sten
Ht'ftdrk•lr.Hn.
Selllk&gt; - Relelllt'd flllfl!t.V JoMalt•
,JohnKOil IUtd wldt" recPh'B Willie Bou·
yer; · lli!IPM'd frl'e-aa:l'ltl ~ltc.V David
Hollis 11nd wldl' n&gt;ct'lvl'r .Jeff ftladwkll• .
Hockey
Wll8tllftllo• - St'• aoal&amp;eftder Byren
Dt'fOt' to Po-rdll•d of lht Wt&gt;Htern Hoclcl!'_y
Le~CWHLI.

Hotllf' RIK'Iftlt
York SUIIf' Raclna:~&amp;nd Wlllerlnt
Bo.rct - o\cceplt'd i'ldllll llc•e •HP ol
JOl'key Chrts Miley.
•
N~·

NFL Game.

Sullie'" Gllmet~
lndl. . . .olla a1 NV It~ a. I p.m . ..

· AIIMbl VI, Grern IJQ' .. Mll"·auk ~e . I

p.m.

.

nnclnJatl a1 Kan••Cily, 1 p. ~.

Dt'onw• I&amp; Clevelpd, I p.m.
Mlawnl at Houllloa, 1 p.m.
New DrAtan• at Buffalo. I p.m.
PlllftN rlh at Bet rok, I p.m .
W•hl••onatNewOrltan~~o I p.m.
Tampa Bay at Ml•~n•. I p.m:

NV Glan11111 Daltu. ... p.m .

lA Ran. a&amp; SuFranc-hw:o.,.p.m.

San Olep at Paonix, ,. p.m.

Sea&amp;Ue .a LA Hal~. -1 p.m.
Moaday'H Gamr
Plllldei,Wa a1 Chleap. 9 p.m.

ThundiQ''K Sperh Calendar
8nln111
WBA.IumorLI.Ww.lpi.11llf'
LrwJMto .. M.aiiW'- Brian Mlh-hrU
ln1na: Mllcllrll
Wll'l&amp;ei'WI'IA'tM
AUanl:lt• CliJ,, N.•J. - Gll'nwood
Brown,.,.. Do•va• Bolle Iter
1..11{111 HuvywPI!Iflla
Al.lllllth' City, N.,J. - MUw p,.p
tirt'l{ Evel'f'll

v&gt;o~.

"~

othM"
Mo,wow

-

H' orld

Am:~~ll•ur

C'humpktlll'hiP,11

Golf
•
St. Alldrt'wll, S(111llaad- Dunhlll ('up
Tadlahllllwt. Fla. - 1':54,1111 Cr'ntel
C'IQIIk

G)'mnMdCJI
~IU'Il)f'Vo,

\ '..-olltlvla- 9'o•hl RhyCh·
mil' Chlmplo.Wp!l ._/)'
'i :

Tf!nlli11

1

Bordt•x. Fran&lt;.'(' - · lt51,01)t Grand

Prb. P•ll•lfl Shot.
Sa•Fruc..iwo- hl':,t• VolvoT.-nrtill
ol S.n Fnnl'l•·o Tourumf'ftt

the D
. U
1'or~wPft
'WOo .!'1,.

Berry's World

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9:30 a.m.-10:30 a.m.
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(614) 446·6446
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. '

_,

..

•

Montreal 7-2.
(
., .
Pirates I, Cardinals 0
The
Daily Sentinel
At Pittsburgh. Doug Drabek,
14-12. tossed a !our-hitter and I
(USPS IU·103)
Dann Bilardelio drove In Jeff
A JMvllllon of Multlmedia ln c.
King with the game's only run.
?fibllshed ayery afternoon, Monday
Joe Magrane, 18-9, was the loser
through friday. lll Court St. , Po·
meroy, Ohi o, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
for the Cardinals.
ltshlng
Company/ Mu ltimedia. In c.,
PhllUes 5, Mets 3
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Cc)nd class postage paid at Pomeroy ,
Ohio.·
bel ted a two·rl!n home ron and
Darren Daulton si ngled In two
Membei : United Pr ess In ter:national,
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· At Houston. pinch hitter Oddibe McDowell belted his seventh
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1

A's win, repeat
in AL West

lh.. backer 'nm M!)ure ol 11M' dnl'lopo
melttllj ,.quad.

M&lt;'l'f'k'M Unll.ll'd PI'I'Mi'l IDlt'rl'lllknlll Ohto

W•ft'ft

11p11rt11

McKeon•wasn't bitter, however .
"Let's give the Giants credit.
Evidently they're the ~st team
this year. _Our hats off to them."
The Giants, who won the 1962
NL penn;Int at Los Angeles In a
one-game playoff, have collected
151eague titles and three division
crowns.
· The fifth-place Dodgers, the
defending World Series champions. did their best to thwart
their long-time rivals . They
registered the first sweep of San
Francisco this year.
Tim Belcher. 15·12, allowed
just four hits In his major
league-leading elghthshu tout.
The right-hander had 11 strikeouts - one shy of his career
high- to reach 200on the season.
He also retired 18 straight
batters at one point.
. Mike Davis drove In the
game's only run with a one-out
RBI single In the first.
Belcher, scheduled to' undergo
surgery to remove bone spurs In
·his pitching hand Thursday,ls 7-0
In his last eight starts. He leads
the league In strikeouts . and Is
tied for first with 10 complete
games.
"I think this was my best
outing of the season, given the
situation." Belcher said.
Elsewhere In the Natlonal
League, Pittsb4rgh blanked St.
Louis 1-0. Philadelphia stopped
New York 5-3, Atlanta nipped
Houston 5-4 and Chicago crushed

Siding
Organizers of the 1991 World
Alpine Championships at Saalb·
ach, Austria. said new runs
especiallY built for the competition will be ready for. trials by
·
late December.

'

Dalla. - Prometd dtffiiNivE" b!K'k
J;:rk J:~rown tram lht deYfiOJITit'n&amp;ld
!'MIIIIld; addl'd l.ll{tt rnd W•ft'allont a.d
defftblive hack Guy WlllltrMO• to Ctlr
dewt'lo'pmenlal !lqlMd.
Grpf'ft BJI,)' - lteleUt"cl t•o rnerbat·k •
Mlcbllt'l ~cG• ... •r aadpl•·edhlm ont•t'
Mb:-rn• dPVII'IOpml!'ntal Mqlad; M'».l\'ed

Prep ratings

('alltell«',

maiiD .. ..,.

W.-A811lo&amp;

Phlllt.delphla. nl~
Lo.i A.n ~"' .111 A.lllt.nbl., nl~
Hou!tlonal Clnc..-ln.W.tl. nl~
(blc..·~ al St . LeW11, nl~
SMn Frafttkeal SanDll'~, nll{hl

Dlv~ktn

p11hUt

lldormation.

......u

Montrui~U

~OLUMBUS.

Golden Slatt' - Traded crneer Rldpb
S&amp;mJII'DII to Satramtftlotor fonw.rd Jim

CJrtaado- Slpd_cent.er Jim Grandhobn. forwardtl Bill MIU'IIn ~Utd Ben
PoqMeUt• and pard Perry MOM8.
Rapr.d Cll)' tCBA) - Traded forward
Leo.:rd T.,lo• to San Jo~~e lor KUard

Chlcap 1', Morlrul t
PM.I ... I'Kh 1. sl. Loul• ct
Plll ... delphl• S,

FTedTeltve, trorn the Padret~IO L'Ompltle

.171 .131 I

.519 II
.• IM IIi%
115 ..u n

(joins '1!faus

WI-'~T

:1
7

.113

KK .• U II
91 .... u :el
~~:-eiiJM:h~ dMIIion Ulle.
.

Robert Walters
to finance real estate speculatlon . wrongfully siphoned
hundreds of millions of dollars
from the S&amp;L. made Illegal loans
and paid excessive compensalion to some owners .
Last month. the Federal Home
Loan Bank Board released a
report based on a study conducted by an Independent audl·
tor. It concluded that millions of
dollars Improperly recqrded by
Lincoln as profits on real estate
deals were actually the prQduct
of "accounting gimmickry." The
outside auditors examined 15
Lincoln transactions and coneluded that every one was
fraudulen t.
·
Still underway are a _federal
grand jury Investigation as he Is
tall, Insists he is Innocent oi all
charges. He says hostile federal
regulators drove American Conttnentallnto ban.kruptcy because
he was outsi&gt;okenly critical of
them. The government vendetta
now has been perpetuated, he
claims, with th_e ·filing of the
"mean spirited" lawsuit.

••v.

CliPYe~Md ""''"""""''' '7'1 llf .... 111 l ... lfl
Oel•c* .... ~.................. .$&amp; Ill .Hi II

This S&amp;L had spectacular rise and fall
SANTA ANA, Calif. (NEA) _
In Orange County Superior Court
here, In u.s. District Court In
Phoenix, Inside a federal grand
jury In Los Angeles and at the
Securities and Exchange Commlsslon In Washington, the name
of Charles H. Keating Jr. Is being
heard with lncreaslngfrequency.
Keating's claim to fame _ or
Infamy- Is his role In presiding
over what Is believed to be the
most expensive collapse of a
thrift -Institution In the nation's
history, the failure of the Lincoln
Savings and Loan Association In
Irvine, Calif.
Keating moved from Ohio to
Arizonaln1976toheadaPhoenixbased real estate developm nt
company. The firm, American
Continental Corp., purchased
Lincoln, which had 26 branches
In Southern California, In early
1984.
Like many of the other nowfailed S&amp;Ls , LlnCQin quickly
moved away from the Industry's
traditional business, making
home mortgage loans. In favor of
Investing In get-rich-quick real

West.lefterMJn (f) (5-1) ........ , .. ... .. 1.7•
AmullaCI•aot:rerkltl ($-I) .., ..... lll
tl'derk:ktown (ll (1-t) ...... ... ....... ltS
~~ C...to. (s.t) ...........................IS
&amp;IIIMI (I) (W) ...................... ........ .85
t..uii..OIP o\q•lnu (I) (3-!) ........... .11 .
t . ..\rchheld (._,l) ........ ....... .............. ...lt
II.M'M"I'ftl KPnnPdr (I) (I-I) .. .. ......... .9
t!iec.."O .. II : II. Steubto n~llco Catholk 58;
IZ. _(tie) WlwiiiP flew Forkud
lluc:lnr- 47 II'Kh; J..l.. \ 'fi'IMIIIPti
(I) 31; 15. Hanalhal Rive• 13; 11.
Abon Much•ieor I!) tt; 17, C.hmllu11
Hartlf-y 25; Ill. !11•1 Black Rlvt'r,
PymaJ.ualn,~~; \'ldll'y and •ook\o'llle tl
t'iath.
.
'

ret.

-....llte......... .........

w•eeJenbllr&amp; ~~~ 11-11 ................. Me

I.
4.
I.
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1.
IS.

W L
Gil
TH. . e "''' '"' '"''"' "'''.11' 7! .141 S.hlntote ................... JII 71 .141 I

'ack Anderson and
. Dale VanAtta

tlons electronically. Since the
1
Medellin cocaine cartel of Colom·
J
bla Is a subterranean superpower that threatens U.S. secur- dealers of their assets. Billions of
Ity, the National Security Agency
dollars should be barred from
should focus Its all-seeing and
access to th~ International monetary system.
all-hearing devices on the drug
These moves would perrnlt the
traftlckers.
Washington should then call "Finance Guard" to intercept
upon all nations to ;~dopt emer· drug profits before they can be
gency laws and treaties that . laundered and strip · the drug
would authorize the confiscation dealers of their assets. Billions of
of drug money, with severe dollars should be confiscated,
penalties against banks that enough to finance the continuing
knowingly launder dirty dollars. war on drugs.
Congress should also empower
Nations that refuse to cooperate.
such as Panama, should be the "Finance Guard" to trace
barred from access to the Inter- laundered money that Is Invested
In legitimate enterprises. Undernational monetary system.
These moves would permit the world Investments contaminate
"Finance Guard" to Intercept legitimate businesses, underdrug profits before they can be mine their Independence and
laundered and strip the drug obstruct · tree comJ)etltlon. Any

!.

AMDIC.\N LEAGUE

Sports briefs

Giants clinch -NL West title
after Reds edge ·Padres, 2-1

OlvlMo•IV
Te8111
Polats
1-. cuto.CentNI C.ah (Ill c•11 ...... eu

lly Vatled Preu lntf'tlltlo•l

The Daily Santinei-Page-3

"It was a lough season." said
Canseco, who missed nearly 100
games due to injuri&lt;&gt;s.
Besides Canseco, Mark
· McGwtre was out for 15. shortstop Walt Weiss65 days and relief
ace Dennis Eckersley 40
contests.
McGwire. who overcame a
nagging back injury, echoed his
teammates' sentiments .
"It was a tough road so Its
better than last year, "said
McGwire. "I think a lot of people
wrote us o~fearly when Jose went
out and Eck (reliever Dennis
Eckersley) went down and then
Walt Weiss was Injured. But
through It all, we never gave up
on ourselves."
Elsewhere In the American
League, New York shut out
Boston 3-0, Toronto trounced
Detroit 8-1, Baltimore zipped
Milwaukee 4-0, Minnesota
whipped Chicago 6-1. Cleveland
zap.ped Settle 4-1 and Kansas City
blasted California 8-3.

FACTOIY AUTHOIIIED SEIVICE
Golcllfar
Sam sung
S·oundtslgn
Zenith

Emerson
Shin tom
Multi Tech
Scott

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DAILY SENTINEL
FRIDAY
OCTOBER 13, 1989
992-2156
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OCTOBER 6, .1989

R'''''' Vou1 Ad Sp•~• Now/
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~·

�•

Pllge'-4.:_1he Daily Sentinel

'

..
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio ·

Thursday, September 28, 1989
Thursday, September 28. 1989

KCHS, Symmes .Valley favored to stay on top of SVAC
per·game r ushing average, need
By G. SPENCE.R OSBORNE
thelr39 ·14 win over the Hi ghland·
only 25 ya rds to cross the
Tribune staff Writer
ers . In addit ion, the de fen se
Atter two weeks of SVAC 1,000·ya rd r ushing mark as a
denied the sweep and forced the
league action. Mel Coen's Kyger team , a marktheywlll morethan SWHS runn lng game to go Inside.
Creek Bobcats and Merrill Trl· likely cross before the end of the
The Pirates, held to 83 total
plett's Symmes Valley VIkings first quar ter. They have done this yards against the Oaks; have the
share first place in the confer· withou t a ny of the ir running unenviable distinction as having
ence and are unbeaten at the backs having a 100-yard ga me, one of the least productive
though junior fullback Joe Ed· offen ses In the league so far ,
halfway point in the season.
Both teams have powerful wa rds came close with a 93-yard sco ring a mere 63 points (Ha nnan
rushing attacks, and both have performance against E astern Trace has the least productive,
won games In overtime. But last we ek.
with 16) . Since the Bucs' '46·0
In the Bobcats' win over blowout of Xenia Woodrow Wll·
there Is where the similarity
Eas tern, KCHS quarterback son in the seas on opener, the
ends.
Cha
d Johnson teamed up with Bucs have generated a mere 17
In the las t two weeks the
receivers
Brlan Vinson, Rob points. which has translate d into
Bobcats used their strong run·
Gilmore
and
another unna med one win and three -losses .
nlng game to notch wins against
receiver
to
put
together a 41·yard
teams that did little to stop them.
The Vikings' running ba cks,
passing
e
ffort,
the best Kyger whom Triplett said ca n be nc h 500
while the Vikings used their
defense to capitalize on their ·has done In the air all year.
· pounds In the squat press, will be
Pirates· VIkings
op!JOnents' offensive mistakes
tough .enough to bring down. bu t
If things weren' t tough enough the offensive front wl11 make life
and s_tall two dangerous offensive
In last wee k's 24·2 home loss to easier for them as they ir y to see
attacks.
In any case, both teams are Oak Hill, North Gallla jumps whose turn it will be . to have a
good bets to go 7·0, but the from the frying pan into the fire 1()().yard game.
Bobcats' stiffest test will come in when they travel down the
Eagles· Oaks
two weeks , when they travel Ironton P arkw11y to take on
When it rains, it pours.
southwest to face Oak Hill. But Symmes Valley.
Such has life ·been for the
Triplett, expressing concern Eas tern Eagles this year. When
thls Week, the Bobcats will have
that his Vlkln_gs would suffer a their offense scores in double
to take on Hanna n Trace.
against Southwester n figures, they have· won two of
letdown
The 17-man Wildcat squad has
after
opening
the league season three games. Otherwise, they
broken the 100-yard plane In total
Win over Oak have lost.
with
an
emotional
offense only once this year, and
Hill,
found
relief
after
the Valthey did it against a similarly·
The Eagles, who were held to
ley's linemen controlled both 50 yards In the air and 70 on the
sized Ironton St. Joe team in the
sides of the line of scrimmage in ground In las t week 's 23·6 1oss to
season opener. Trace lost that
game, just as they have lost the
next four. In the wake of last
week ' s 12·0 loss homecoming loss
to fellow basement dweller
Southern, the Wildcats, who
haven' t scored since their 49·16
loss to Huntington Vinson four
The Me igs Marauder volley·
Hovatter also leads in a ces
weeks ago, could be on their way
ball
team is off to a good start this with 51, followed by Bae r, 37 ,
to a winless season.
year under the direction of Head Taylor, 25, and Douglas with 21.
The Bobcats, who will be
Coach
Rick Ash.
· looking to boost their 195 yards
Douglas lead~ in kills with 59,
The Marauders are currently Kelly Smith is second with 42
in second place in the TVC with a followed by Taylor with 20.
7·3 record (9·5 overall) behind
.Taylor leads in assists with 38,
the Class A lOth ranked team In Hovatter has 26and Amy Wagner
the state the Miller Falcons.
has 25·. Meigs will host Trimble
The Marauders have picked up Thursday with the reserve match·
wins over Nexander. Eastern, starting at 5: 55p.m .
Federal Hocking (twice each )
Team members Include se·
alpng with Belpre, Nelsonville· niors Heather Hovatter, Kelly
York once. Losses have been to . Douglas, and Deanna Haggy,
By DAVID MOFFIT
Miller, Athens, Southern, Vinton Juniors on the team are Jennifer
UPI Sports Writer ·
County, and Trimble.
Taylor:. Kristen Stanley , Amy
The Tennessee Vols are about
Leading scorers for Meigs Wagner, Kelly Smith, Tara
to learn whether their , turn·
include Heather Hovatter with Humphreys , Kim Ewing and
around is for teal.
93. Jennifer Taylor 87, Kelly Jody Tillis. They are joined by
The No. 12 Vols are 3·0, a
Douglas, 81 and Tricia Baer. 80. sophmore Tricla Baer .
complete reversal from a year
'·
· ago when they wen I 0·6 over the
first hall of the season fcir their
worst start ever. On Saturday
they host No. 4 Auburn as a
flve·point underdog.
There's no doubt that Tennes·
The University of Rio Grande block solos, while Shannon Hus see, which also won its last five
volleyball
team took its unbroken ton posted five kills, four serving
games in ··SH and thus has an
string
of
victories within the · aces and 14 digs. Michelle Spears
elght·game winning streak go·
Mid-Ohio
Conference
to four offered five kills and 15 digs for
ing, is a bt;tter football team than
when
the
Redwomen
Tuesday
Rio Grande, and setter Robin
It was at this time last year.
defeated host Ohio Dominican, Sharp was responsible for three
Prior to last year's Auburn
15·7. 15·7' 15·3.
kills and 12 digs.
game, which the Vols lost 38·6,
"Ohio
Dominican
·
r
eceived
the
In addition, Kyoko Kawakami
Tennessee, having obvious del·
ball
well.
They're
not
a
bad
served
up three kills and Chris
ensive problems, was beaten
team,"
Redwomen
mentor
Pat
sy
Williams pumped In 18 digs for
28-17 by Georgia, 31·26 by Duke,
Fields remarked. " We didn't hit · the Redwomen.
..
and 34·9 by LSU. This year , with
the ball we ll, but we played good
The Rio ladies ended the first
. Doug Mathews ·coaching the
defense, and that kept Ohio round of conference play with OD
defense as he has since just after
Dominican from scorin g too and will resume the race for the
las t year's Auburn gam e. the
much ..The defense won it for us." MOC crown on Oct. 3 at Mount
Vols have allowed only 26 points
Junior Shelly Hoop took a Vernon Nazarene.
In (Jlre e games - beating Colo·
strong
hand in the offens7&gt; when
Now 17·3 overall, Fields' club
rado State 17·14, then· No. 7 UCLA
12
kills
over
the
she
posted
will
battle Wilmington and Wit·
24·6, and Duke, otherwise aver·
to record·
Panthers
,
in
addition
ten berg in a triangular match at
aging 30 points per g a me, 28·6.
ing 22 digs. Teresa Zempter Wilmington on Saturday, s tart·
Majors says his former defenfollowed up with s ix kills and five ing at 11 a .m.
sive coordinator. Ken Donahue.
tried to have his charges do too
mai'lY th lngs . · 'We were trying to
trick people too much ," Majors
sail). "We were too confused on
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
fundamental s a nd techniques. "
446 .4524 "'llOUTE
""""'
''"
JS WEST
Mathews, who is a fundamen·
ta lis t, says, " We te ach our
players as much as we can
without going over that line
where we a re confusing them."
However, the Vols are still
giving up a lot of yardage - an
average of 337 per game - and
Saturday can expect a lesson in
de fense from Auburn.
Auburn led the nation last year
in scoring defense (7.2 ) , rushing
defense (63.2) and total defense
( 218 ) and , d espite losing a
firs t-team All America and two
second· team All Americas from
STms OCTOBER 6TH TOM SELLECK in 'AN INNOCENT HAN'
Its defensive line, has picked up
right where II left off.
The Tiger s - while beating
Pacific 55·0 and Southern Miss
24·3 - again lead the nation In
defense against scoring (1.5) .
rushing (28 ) and totlll yardage
ST. IT. 7
POMEROY, OHIO

Meigs volleyball team
off to a good start

Number 4
Auburn to
face Vols

Ohio Dominican victory puts
Redwomen at 4-0 in MOC

FIVE POINTS EXPRESS

(137).

992-6891

Rutland Pony League
team posts 16-2 mark
The Rutland Pony League
team completed a successful
season under the direction of
coaches Dennis McKinney,
Wayne Adams and Jack
Peterson.
The boys finished with a record
off 16-2 overall and 9·1 In the
league and was crowned league
champs along with winning the
1989 Middleport Pony League
Tournament. The league crown
marked the first time that
Rutland has won the title outright, while the champs came out .
of the losers bracket to defeat
Eastern twloe to win the Middleport Tournament.
· Team members Include Keith
Jones, Jake Kennedy, Scott Peterson, Billy Jones, Jason Delta·
valle, Shawn Ingles, Abby Welch,
Jeremy Rupe, Frank McGee,
Terry McGuire, Eric Peterson,
Kevin Musser, Tim Peterson,
Gar1 Adams and Randall
Johnson.

DRIVE THRU CONVENIENCE STORE
I

NOW CARRYlNG
A FULL UNE OF

Kyger Creek, are likely headed
Can Southwestern bounce back
for a n even more dismal time from their fiasco against
than this against the Oak~ . who Symmes Valley last week and
will be hos Ung them this year.
pick up their flrstleague victory?
In las t wee k's win against Or will Southern let the good
North Ga llia , the Oaks crossed times roll from last week's happy
the 1,000-yard rushing mark as a note against Hannan Trace and
team , a n a ct directly traced to lay the groundwork for a winning
the 279-yard effort of senior streak?
ta ilbac k Josh Ruff. His .perfor·
The smart money goes with
mance, which to date Is the Southwestern, because the Highleague's individual hlgh:water landers are cap_able of gaining
rushing mark, toppled the 181· major yardage by land or by air.
yar d effo rt of Symmes Valley's However, In order to do this, the
Kenny Daniels against Unto to Highlanders must control the
',
four weeks ago.
line of scrimmage on both sides
The E agles' salvation seems to of the ball from start to finish.
be in the ai r, where quarterback That gives them · the option of
Shaun Savoy has proved in the allowing the backfield tandem of
pas t tha t he and receivers Scott Josh Haislop and Bill Potter to
McDonald a nd Jeff Horner can break free and help pad the
make -a difference, but the Oa1&lt;s team's 180.6 yards·per-game
have a solid secondary that will rush!rig average or time to allow
be looking for such a challenge.
6-2 quarterback Chris Metzger to
Wghlanders·Tornadoes

SVAC standings
(All games)
Team
WL
Sy mmes Valley ...5 0
Kyger 'Creek ....... :5 0
Oak Hill ...... .... ... .4 1
Eas tern ............ .. .2 3
Southwestern ....... 2 3
Nor th Gallia .... .... 2 3
Southern .. ... .. ... .. .. ! 4
Hannan Trace .....0 5

·.

.110 IDD TO 111¥1
. SIVIUl ..US;
Wnl GOT IT.

By GENE CADDES
ton Wayne. Gahanna moved Into
UPI Sports Writer·
eighth after a 28·14 win over
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Upper Arlington and Wayne took
The Cincinnati Academy of Phy s· over tenth after beating Beaverleal Education and Ironton con· creek 21·6.
tinue to wage a torrid bat tie for
Cleveland St. Joseph, 5·0 after
the top spo( In the United Press a 21-0 win over Akron Hoban,
International Ohio High School stretched Its flrsl·place lead In
Board· of Coaches Division III Division II over runnerup Akron
football ratings.
Buchtel to 234-176. The Vikings
tAPE, a 32·12 winner over cornered 18 first place to only
North Bend Taylor Friday night, three for Buchtel.
remained the No. 1 team In
Fostoria remained In · third
Division III. but the Crusaders place with 160 points, with
saw their already slim margin of Cambridge advancing one notch
a week ago trimm'e d almost to from fifth to fourth with 125,
nothirig.
Steubenville going from sixth to
CAPE, which ledaweekagoby fifth with 119 and Solon falling·
a 182-175 margin over Iront~Jn.
from fourth a week ago to sixth
held.only a 177-176 edge this week with 116 points.
and the Crusaders and Tigers,
Canton Central Catholtc •. a 12·3
both 5.0, each had nine first place victor over Elyria Catholic Sat·
votes; The first week of the urday, again was the top team In
balloting, Ironton was No. 1.
. Division IV. The defending
Ironton went to &amp;·0 Friday · champion Crusaders held a 253·
night with a convincing 44·6 win 206 margin over Wheelersburg,
over Logan.
which advanced all the way from
Urbana, also '5·0, remained In · fifth last week Into the runnerup
third place for the third consecu· spot. Wheelersburg beat Wav· '
live week with 124 points, fol· erly 21·8 Friday night.
lowed by 5·0 Kenton, which
advanced from No. 71ast week to
fourth with 93 points, Young·
stown Ursuline with 76 and
(All Games)
Campbell Memorial with 75.
p
Team
W L
OP
The only other division with a. Trlmble ............... 5 0 103 15
current race tor the. No. 1 spot
Vinton County ..... .4 1 ' 113 48
was Division I, with Cincinnati
Nelsonville-York ..3 2 90 43
Princeton, Cleveland St . Ignatius
Meigs .:......... .. ..... 3 2 80 92
and · Cincinnati Moeller all In
Belpre ................. 2 3 47 58
contention.
· Miller ...... ....... .... .2 3 44 89
Princeton held the No. 1 spot
Wellston ..·... .. .... ... ! 4 60 84
for the second week in a row,
Alexander ...... .... .0 5 28 156
picking up 248 points and 11 first
Federal Hocking ..0 5 25 113
place votes.
St. Ignatius won the battle of
TVC Games Only
first place votes, receiving 13,
Team
W L P OP
but wound up nine points behind
Trimble .......... ...... 4 o 75 15
the Vikings with 239 poll points.
Vinton County ....... 3 0 95 12
Moeller was third with 221 points
Nelsonvllle·York ... 3 0 78
7
and three first p)ace votes. All
Melgs ..... ........... .. . 3 1 74 46
have ~·0 records.
Belpre ... .......... .. ... 2 2 38 43
.
Miller
......... .. ...... .. 1 3 31 82
Canton McKinle);' remained
Alexander
..... :...... 0 3 20 89
fourth In the big school voting.
Wellston
.......
... .... . 0 3 33 58
Cincinnati Elder at!vanced from
Federal
Hocking
... 0 4 25 97
sl'l!!l to fl~th _and Lima Senior
Friday's
games:
from elghtli to sixth. with Austin·
Meigs at Nelsonville-York
town Fitch and Upper Arlington
both dropping from the top ten Alexander at Wellston
after suffering their first losses · Trimble at Federal· Hocking
Vinton County at Belpre
of the season.
•
at Zanesville Rosecrans
Miller
That made room for newco·
(Saturday)
mers Gahanna Lincoln and Day·

6 MONTH CD.
NOW!

(SVAC only)
Team
W L PF PA
Sy mmes Valley .. .:.. 2 0 59 28
Kyger Creek .. .. .......2 0 46 6
Easte rn .. ..... .. ......... 1 1 41 · 23
Oak Hill .. ..... ... ..... . .1 1 38 22
Southern ......... ....... ,! 1 12 23 '
North Gallla .. .. .... .. .1 1 8 24
Southwestern .......... O 2 14 45
Hannan Trace .. ... ...0 2 0 47
Friday's contests
Easte rn at Oak Hill
Ha nnan Trace at Kyger Creek ,
No rth Gallia at Symmes Valley
Southwestern at Southern

If you've been
· is available for a
holding back waitlimited time only.
ing for a great. rate,
For more inforthis is it. But you've
mation contact
got to act fast.
your nearest
This offer from
Cenlral Trust office
Central Trust
ar ~ G.. ail 446-0902
Middleport 992-6661

THE .WATERING
HOLE
POMEROY, OHIO

Proudly Presents

"Biitzkraig"

.THE CENTRAL TRlBf CO~II~NY
The BaWt Thai MriiiS ~ lftJppen.

SATURDAY
SEPT. 30, 1989
Rod tnd Roll At
lt'f Belt!

:DISCOVER
· AN
HO

..
.'

'

•'

Tvc·grid battle Friday ·

offense will be hard-pressed as completing 5 of 13 passes for 52
the Athens County team has only yards (all In the fourth quarter
given up 7 pOints in three TVC and overtimes) and one touch·
games, aqd 43 In five games . down. while adding another
overall (30 in the season opener score on the ground. "We have
scouted Meigs several times, and
against Athens.
·
Hayes Dean Is a four·year they are a much better team then
they were at the first of the year.
starter at quarterback for N· Y.
They
are pr obably the most
The Marauders are coming off
team In the ·league, "
improved
an hearl·stopplng 25·19 win Qver
Wellston in four overtlmes 'last Buckeye Coaci:t Dave Boston
week. Frank Blake leads the said. " We must stop Blake and
Marauder ground game with McGuire, but we know that
over 500 yards rushing on the Phalln can throw the ball,"
Boston concluded .
year.
To compound matters for the
Jerem~ Phalin Is coming off a
Marauders,
at least four key
good performance at quarter·
players
will
not
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sickness or Injuries. Tight end
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down the the nu. And Ed Crooks
who calls all the defensive
coverages Inju red his shoulder In
last week's game at Wellston, ·
although It dosen't to be as
serious a s expec te d he will miss
at least this week' s game. On
bright note. Meigs junior flanker
Kurtis English Is a probable
s tarter for Fr iday's ga me. Eng·
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Ne lsonville·York and is one of the
most respected coach!!$ in SI)U·
theaster n Ohio.
The strength of the Buckeyes is
In their line. Both of the starting
tackles o! a year ago return ln-6·5
298 Chad Cummins and 6-0 245
J.D. Steinbrink. " They have the
best line that we will see all
year," commented first year
Maraud.e r Coach Mike Staggs,
•'they throw the ball good and run
the ball real well." Jim Monk will
handle most of the ground duties
for the'Buc)&lt;eyes.
Monk a 6·0, 190 senior Is also
and outstanding linebacker lor
the Buckeyes. The Marauder

TVC standings

Tri-County Vocational ·School ..

"UH OUt DIIVE THO FOI ALL YOUR lEEDS"

are Ued with Vinton County fo r
second place 1·2 game behind
Trimble who Is 4·0, one fuU game
ahead of Meigs which owns a 3·1
conference record (3·2 overall).
Coach Dave Boston is In his
24th year as the head man at

.CAPE, Ironton top
Division III teams

INVEST IN A
CENTRAL TRUST

The Adult Education Center

a•

The Meigs Marauders head
Into the meat of their schedule
this Friday night as they travel to
Nelsonville to take on the
Nelsonville· York Buckeyes.
The Buckeyes are currently 3·0
on the year In the Tr l Valley .
Connference (3-2 overall) and

WHY YOU SHOULD

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Marauders at Nelsonville for key

find senior wideout Joe Ham·
mood downfleld,
Apparently the Tornadoes
have found terra firma more to
their liking, since 595 of their 703
yards In total offense so far have
come on the ground. But those 595
rushlrig yards have only produced two touchdowns; both of
which· came last week against
Hannan Trace. The other touch·
down came via the pass against
Warren Local three weeks ago.
VIkings second
In this week's computer prep
ratings, Symmes Valley was
rated second In Division V' s
Region 19, · behind Newark
Catholic.
·
Among other ar.ea teams In
that region. Trimble was ranked
third, Green Local took seventh,
and Portsmouth East camP In
eighth.

The Daily Sentinel-, Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

I•

�Pagl 6 The Deily Sentinel

Thursday. September 28. 1989 ·

Pomeroy Midcleport. Ohio

.

Thursdily, September 28, 1989

Interest and need," said Michael
Audett, Stouffer's new ventures
marketing manager. "I think the
tinning Is just right for us."
Audet t said the entrees will be
packaged to lncludeeasl.ly reada·
ble charts .t hat al.Jow consumers
to compare cholesterol, salt and
fat levels with , those recom·
mended by the American Heart
Association. He said each entree
will contain less tban a third of
the AHA's dally limit.

Whitney Nlchoki Smith re·
ce.ntly celebrated l!er first birth.
day with a party given by her
parents, Homer Jr. and Rita
Smith.
The party followed a popular
anlnnated character theme.
. Attending the party were Bud
and Wanda VIning, grandpar·
ents, Ruth Smith, grandmother,
and Goldie Graham, great
grandmother.
Also attending were Lena and
George Nesselroad, Beverly and
Beth Roush, Sherr!, Corey, and ·
Christopher Darst, Terri, Shan·
non and.Matthew Smith, Whitney
and Breyden Haptonstajl, Con·
nle, C)lristopher, and Brandon,
Susie and Patricia Smith, Howle,
Teresa, Sarah and Brltlney
Jeffers, Steve, Cindy, and Anna
Marie Hartenbach, and Andy
Phalen.
Sending gifts were Robert,
Barbara, Todd, Jody and Adam

Right Course Is Stouffer's
biggest product launch since
1981, when the firm lnh'oduced Its
low-calorie Lean Cuisine line.
Stouffer officials said Right
Course wllJ be aimed at people 35
years or older. The entrees,
Including Chicken Italiano,
Shrimp Pr!nnavera and Beef
Ragout, will have suggested .
retail prices ranging from $2.49
to $3.19 each.

Quirks in the news-------By United Press International

A grave error

SORORITY OFFICERS - New officers have
been elected by the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Slpna Phi Sorority. They are pictured left to

right, Kathy Haley, corresponding secretary;
Julie Dillon, secretary; Judy WIIUams, treasurer; Betsy Jones, vice president, Wid Linda
Jones, president.

VideoView:

Horror so tremendous ...
By Jeff Hilleary
Imagine for a moment that you
are doing your job In a totally
allen environment that at any
moment could become Incredibly hostile and lethal. That you
are only five miles from any hope
of rescue and It might as well be a
billion light years. And then you
encounter a horror such as even
your worst fevered Imagination
cannot even begin to dream of.
That, dear reader' ls the pre·
mise behind Leviathan, the latest
MGM /UA release to make Its
way Into my clutches. Running
for 1 hour and 38 minutes It takes
you Into the very 'near future
where we learn the darker
meaning behind the saying
"Look Before You Leap" as we
watch a group of . undersea
miners fight ,for their lives and
sanity againSt a man-made mon·
stroslty that will not die as one by
one the crew begins to die and
become part of a creature that
combines the. worst of fish,
snake, octopus and man.
Tantalized enough? No? Let

SPERRY, Okla. (UPI) -Don
and Iva Wilson visited . their
'burial plots recently and found
someone else had gotten there
first
".I couldn't · believe what I
saw," Iva Wilson said. ''There,
big· as day, were three freshly
dug graves that didn't belo.ng to
my family."
·
The couple said they bought six
city cemetery .plots near her
parents' graves In 1973 for
themselves and their children.
City records showed the plots
were repossessed. for non·
payment and resold to three
other couples. But the Wilsons
had kept contracts and receipts
showing they had paid In full.
1'he cemetery b~rd sa ld H
could provide new plots of equal
value or refund the couple's
' money.

This !lim boasts as Its starts
me finish the job, then.
While doing routine work ore such well·knowns as Peter
mining, one miner, Slx:Pack by Weller of Robocop fame and ·councilnnWI's mother busted for
name, goes too far and falls over Richard Crenna who played the
election fraud
a ledge and lands In ihe remains only friend of Rambo In the three
JACKSONVILLE BEACH,
of a Russian trawler called films that ranked from beautiful
Fla. (UPI) - A city council·
Leviathan where he and another to bad to very good. And the
man's mother i~ charged with
miner bring the remains of the monster, It comes from the brain
casting 23 fraudulent ballots In a
safe lo the base. Upon opening of the man who gave us the
recent election and ·authorities
the contents they find that there monsters In Aliens and Pumpkin·
are trying to determine If she
Is the usual junk belonging to the head, Stan Winston. The music Is
may have rigged an earlier race
crew and also a bottle of Vodka. pure Jerry Goldsmith who , her son won by one vote.
Six-Pack confiscates It and then turned out some of the most
Arlene Cooper, 57, mother of
he drinks It only to find that he Is memorable Twilight Zone music
Councllnnan Bill Cooper, was
going to get · a tot worse than a from the original series.
charged Tuesday with 23 felony
The film Leviathan has an R
hang-over. What starts out as
counts of fraud In casting votes In
just a normal horror story rating for the language and the
a May 30 recall electlim for ·
becomes an exercise In subtrac· · violence but you forgive · It
Jacksonville Beach's city clerk,
tlon Stephen King style and you because it does what you el&lt;pect a
Frankie Knight.
·
are left with the survivors horror and science fiction film to
Six of the alleged Illegal
fighting not only the monster but d(): it entertains without grossing
absentee ballots were cast In the
the Intellects of their friends and us out and It scares without name of dead people not yet
as the base goes Into convulsions resorting to blood and gore.
purged from voter registration
and begins to collapse around Believe me you'll .Jove this and
rolls and three others were cast
them they must find a way out or want to see it again. I know I do. for people who actually voted In
end up as human sushi.
the election. .

Assistant State Attorney .Bernie de Ia Rlonda 5ald the forged
ballots were cast In the names of
residents and former residents of
the Cooper· Ho It Manor retire·
ment complex, operated by Arlene Cooper.
The Illegal absentee votes did
not affect the outcome of the
recall election, In which voters

·-

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1984FORD
ESCORT ...., .,.

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1984 MERCURY
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-------1984 PLYMOUTH

IIW

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1984 CJIEVY S.to

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I.'EBAJlON

PHILLIP C. HOLTZ

::&amp;:
-"rr"...- - - - -

Holtz birth

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love being outside this time of year and walk·
ing around the beautiful grounds here at Over~
brook; I also enjoy my new friends, it is just like .
·home. · ·
O.Jl _

0:~~~

John Cooper, Resident

Come Visit, And Experience First
Hand The. Overbrook .Difference.

lOW

1984 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUI$

-..............
...............,.,. .

WAS
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lOW
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8281&amp; .

__----·
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1989
9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.

6 5°/o OFF :E~~~E:~~~E
JOSHUA STEPHEN TAYLOR

Mayer, Marie Hauck, Mildred
Arnold, Eleanor Werry, Barbara
Riggs, ·Clarice Erwin, Dorothy ·
Woodard, Maida Mora, Elaine
Freeman, Jennifer, Julie, and
Jackie Buck, Melodle Holliday,
Gay Perrin, and the honored
guests Miss Perrin and Johnson.
Sending gifts were Clarice
Krautter , Martha and Joe Stru·
ble, Robert and Debt Buck, Peg
Harris, Elsie Hines, Linda Lear,
Dottle Musser, Lucretia Smith,
Mary Elizabeth Chapman, Annie
Knight, Sarah Gibbs, and Evelyn
Gilnnore.

"GREAT CHRISTMAS GIFTS"
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1985 PLYMOUTH HORIZON

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WHITNEY N. SMITH
Smith, Jane Frymyer, Michael,
Diane, Jessica, Tommy, and
Michael Corey , Cheryl Willford,
and Basil and Kathleen Cre·
means, great grandparents.

1984 RENAULT

WAS
$3495

far
MEDKAID, MIDICAII,
Worllen COIIIpOMGtlan,
PriYate l•ur•u Pratram,
As
as
s.lf-Pay lesldenh.

A bridal shower was held
recently for Beth Perrin, bride
elect of James of Johnson, at·the
Trinity Church hosted by the
Trinity Choir.
Gaines were played with prizes
awarded to Maye Mora, Mary
Skinner, and Pat Holter. The
door prize was won by Tara
Erwin.
In addition to the above named,
the shower was attended by
Diane Hawley, Allee Globakar,
Alien Skinner, Mary Stewart,
Norma Jewell, LoiS Burt, Becky
Depoy, Trevor Depoy, Carolyn
Thomas. Linda Mayer, Pauline

•

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,
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Last Cha•ce To Buy Before
Christmas

Bridal shower held for Perrin

J.979GMC

....
-.
• .-.

.
/
Twelve members oi the Area
Room at Holzer Medical Cente.r .
Diabetic Support · Group ga·
Pat StanleY. R:.N .. B.S.N.,C .D.E.
thered lor a picnic meeting on
1Certified Dlabetlc Educator)
Aug.· 14 at the Holzer Medical
from Port~inouth Is schedull:d to
Center recr eation area. The speak. ,
:::::
thunderstorm and blowing .rain
Anyone who has
! ·· ·
dampened the food a little but did has an Interest In diabetes g not dampen t.he spirits of the .welcome and encouraged to
· - - -attend the meetings. ·
people.
The next meeting wllJ be Oct.
Contact Dottle Esque, R.N. at
12 at p.m. In the French 500 446·5246 for further Information.

A Marshall, WVU, Or Ohio State University
Throw For Only:

----.
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Stephen and Brenda (Miller)
Taylor, Noble Summit Road,
· Middleport, are an nounclng the
birth of a son, Joshua Stephen, oli
Sept. 6, (his mother's birthday)
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Infant weighed seven
pounds and seven ounces and
was 19 Inches long.
Paternal grandparents are the
late Wayne and Hazel Taylor.
Maternal grandparents are
Robert and Judy Miller, Noble
Suinmlt Road, Middleport. Mat·
erna) great grandparents are
Bonnie Miller; Middleport, and
Christine Haley, Middleport.

*299&amp;

..,...,.., __
...--••.-.v
,..
lOW
WAS
$3695

Diabetic grotiQ:_~s·. picnic

•

__
_
-=···----·
·--c..-.·--.
1986 CHRYSLER

The family of Florence and the
late Theodore Custer held a
family reunion recently at the
home of their son and his family,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Custer and
Jody.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Dale (Janel Sayre, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Sayre, Adrienne and AI·
mee, Mr. and Mrs. Tim Sayre,
Megan and Jeremy, Jim Custer,
Darla and Jackie, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. J.e rry Custer,
David and Aleasha, Minersville;
Janet Smith, Mindy Custer and
Hollie, Jean Custer, Middleport;
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Triplett, and
Betty Triplett, Pomeroy.

lOW

$1295

HOR'ZON

Custer family
reunion held

WAS

.•.•
..,_
....... . .__
--h····-··
.
.
.
.
.
--···-··. ---lOW

%98MER~URY

Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Holtz are
announcing the birth of their first
child, Phillip Christopher, born
Sept. 7 at Malcolm Grow Medical
Center, Andrews Air Force Base,
In Maryland.
The Infant weighed eight
pounds and eight ounces, and
was 20\-1 Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Machen II of
Augusta, Ky. Maternal great
grandmothers are Mrs. Mae
Shaggs, Sandy Hook, Ky . and
Mrs. Omega Machen, Olive Hill,
Ky .
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Swiger, Syracuse.
Paternal great grandparents are
Mrs. Eva Leach, Wellston, and
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Swiger,
Core. W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Holtz are both
stationed at Andrews Air Force
Base.

tal ISsues.
The Applachlan Ohio Public
AOPIC serves as advisor and
Interest Campaign Education
supporter to citizens groups
,Fqnd, Inc., a regional non-profit
social justice advocacy,organlza·
throughout southeastern Ohio
tlon, will hold· Its eighth annual
Involved with environmental
dinner In the basement of the problems.
First Methodist Church, 2 Col·
In addition .to monitoring re·
lege St., Athens, on Oct. 14 .
glonal issues, AOPIC also pro·
The evening will begin at 5: 30 vi des speakers and written mate·
p.m. with an Informal reception rials to schools, churches, and
other organizations on a variety
for Mary Abel, new St'!te Repreof topics, Including Incineration
sentatlv~ for the. 94th District
representing Gallla, Athens an.d processes , pesticide-herbicide
Meigs Counties. Rep. Abel, a usage, groundwater and air
life-long resident of Athens contamil\atlon, solid waste man·
County, will speak at 6 p.m. agement and recycling.
sharing her views and concerns
Besides being an annual socialabout the · environmental Issues informative event, this Is also a
facing southern Ohio. Oinner will fundralser for the AOPIC organ!·
be11ln about 6:30p.m.
zation which Is funded by re·
After dinner, AOPIC Director gional membership and founda·
Jim Hart will summarize the lion grants. Cost will be $10 per
organization's work during 1989. -person with arrangements being
Representatives of the various available for senior citizens,
local citizens' group affiliated students and persons of low
with the organization will also Income. Reservations may be
speak aboutvarlousenvironmen· made with Jim Hart at 593-7490.

.... 11• • 1., . . . . . qlll . . . t1Dt*, . .

~----·

lOW

. The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Taylor birth

Dinner ·slated Oct. 14

___.....,_.,._
......... ,.._
--···-·.,.
............. ....

,..

WAS
$3495

"Special Care For People Who
· AreS ecial To Yo·u "

ousted Knight.
But Investigators said they
also are trying to determine
whether Illegal absentee ballots
were cast In the 1987 election Bill
Cooper won by a single vote.
De Ia Rionda said neither the
councilman nor any other public
official Is expected to br
arrested.

KEEPING IN TOUCH- Peter Connolly .~enlor vice president of
Hyatt Hotels Corp., struggles with a luggage cart in front of the
Downtown Denver Hyatt yesterday. Connolly traded his desk In
the corporate office for a day on the street as a doorman in a
program lo keep the company's corporate officers "In touch" with
the llotel chain's operations and people. (UPI)

1984FORD
MUSTANG

.

Smith birthday

Stouffer to introduce new food line
SOLON, Ohio . !UP!) ·- The
Stouffer Foods Corp. says It will
Introduce a new frozen food line
next month, aimed at the health·
conscious person.
. .
Officials of the suburban Cleve·
land firm said the line, called
"Right Course, " will Include 11
entrees low In cholesterol, sodium and fat .
" Nu trltlon and diet and the
effects of diet on health have
become a growing consumer

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

333 PAGE STREET

992-2174

MIDDLEPOU, OliO 45 760

MAIN
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Og{Lty51fT

S219 500

Smith-Nelson Motors, Inc~

(614) 992-6472

A 7HROW
D lift A ·GREAT

POMEROY, OHIO

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PEOPLES BANK
New Haven
882·2135

MEMBER F.D.I.C.

Point Pleasant
675·1121

Mason
773·5514

SUbatantlll Penllty For Early WlthdriWII

�Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

.Community calendar

People in the news-THURSDAY
RACINE -The MI. Moriah
Church of God In Racine Is
havl!lg revival through Friday .
Joe Goodlow Is speaking. Servi·
ces begin. at 7 p.m . nightly .

ByWD:.LilM C. TIWTI'
Unlled Pra.Interlll&amp;lonal
BONFIRE OF TBit REALTORS: Writer Tom , Wolfe . Is
studying up, on re;tl estate for his next novel. Wolfe, whose
, ''Bontlre of the Vanities" chronicled the tall of a Wall Streeter.
Is In Boston this week observing a,trial between two developers
to get a feel for the tleld. " Real estate development IS one of the
, themes I want to elabor11te ron) tn the novel I'm workmg on
now," ,he said. "Along with Investment bl!nktng, It is one of the
two Industries that set the ,tone of the period. Here are two .
developers In a lawsuit- lots of things In the business will come
forth. One of the great things about lawsuits Is they tend to pull
the rovers off of things.'' Lalt week Wolfe was In Atlanta doing
some real estate research and during the Boston trial he spoke ·
to a convention of the International Council of Shopping Centers
and. Inviting the crowd to tell him lurid anecdotes a bout the real
estate game.
UNION LABELS: Two wee~~s ago Wayne Newlon refused to .
cross mus!c.tans' picket lines In Las Veeas but Tuesday night he
changed his tune and crosaed with the strikers' blessing.
Newton. who lost about $250,000 for each week he honored t!)e
strike, performed at the La.s Vegas Hilton after the union called
a one·day moratorium when Hilton management Indicated
bargalnmg might resume. Muslclims Union Local369 wellton
· strike because of a trend In the showrooms to use taped music
rather than live musicians and entertainers like m!lnll Ross,
, Rodney Dangerfield, Georae ·Carin, Willie Ne.tson. ·Sammy .
D"vis J,r. and ~all M..-t!a. have refused to cross their lines to
perform.
.
.
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NOTHING liP HIS SLEEVE: Steve Martin Is the kind of guy
·who will stand In front of PreaMent Bash, unzip his own pants,
reach into the fly and pull out scarves, eggs, a lighted cigarette.
a singing puppet and a ringing telephone. Martin's appearance
as the mute magician the Great F1yd!n! was . part of the
entertainment Tuesday night at the American Film Institute's
25th anniversary party in Wuhlilgton. The night also Included
celebrities quoting well-known lines from the movies with .
NBC's Braadon T..-llkOff reading· the "mad as hell"· speech
from ·'Network," Defense Secretary Dick Cheney saying.
"May· the Force be with you," and Buslfturnmg to wile Barbara
and domg his best Bogart, "Here's. looking at you, kid." The
flock of celebrities at the celebration Included Goldie Hawn, ·
Kurt Russell, Mar .. n .s co.._, Stephen Spielberg, CharKon ·
Heslon, Jane Alexaader, Cllrlstopher Reeve, Douglas Fait'
banlq; Jr .. Sharon
Lou Diamond Phillips, John Travolta,
Norman Jewlson, Walter CrOIIklte, Barbara Walters and Phil
Donahue.
PEOPLE OF THE 'Ia!!: The '80s wouldn't have been the '80s
wlthou t the likes of Donald Trump. Madoua and couch
potatoes, Pet&gt;ple magazlrie says. In a special edition looking at
the decade, the magazine named the people who helped define
the '80s by being "bold, greedy. tragic, wacky, wise ... Trump
was cited for his ability to hype himself and Madonna was
praised for being. "Marilyn without martyrdom for a decade
that loved a winner." Also on the list as the.shapers of the ·sos ·
are Ronald Reagllll, Mikhail Gorbachev, Indicted . junk bond
king Michael Mllken. Oliver North, Jesse Jackson. Princess
Diana, Rock Huds011, Michael Jackson, Jim and Tammy Faye
Bakker. kids on crack. Bruce Sprlllpteen, -Bill Cosby ,'Shirley
MacLaine. Baby M, MlkeTya.~, Stephen King and "E.T."from
the movies.

REEDSVILLE -The Joppa
United Methodist Church will
have revival and homecommg
through Sunday at the church on
Route 681 near Reedsville. There
will be specla.l singing and
preaching.
·

WAVERLY -There will be
dinner, at the Or lent Lodge 363 In
Waverly to honor Otis Park.e r, a
~6 year mason, formerly of Meigs
County and the Pomeroy lodge
164. The dinner will begin at 6: 30
p.m.

EAST MEIGS - A special
meeting of Eastern Local Board
of Education will .be held Thurs·
day, 7:30 p.m .. for the purpose of
extending temporary
appropriations.

MIDDLEPORT -The Rev.
Bob Laflm. Santa Rosa, Calif.,
will be the guest speaker at the
Rejoicing Life Church tn Ml.ddleport on Friday and Saturday at 7
p.m., 'a nd Sunday at 10 a.m.

POMEROY ~The Women's
Fellowship of Meigs County
Churches or Christ will meet at
the Zion Church &lt;;~f Christ, Wolf
· Pen, on Thursday at ·7: 30 p.m.

POMEROY -There will be a
free blood pressure clinic on
Friday from 10 a.m to 4 p.m. at
Rite Aid Pharmacy in Pomeroy .

.·

Open house
The Sacred Heart Catholic
Church will have an open house
on Oct. 8 from 4-6 p.m. Vespers
service will follow at 6 p.m. The
public' ls invited to attend .
Car show to be held
The Oldies But Goodies Car
Club of Meigs County will have
its first annual car show Oct. 14
on the Pomeroy parking lot.
There will be 17 classes offered to
exhibitors with two trophies
given per class. Dash plaques
will he given to the first 50 cars
that enter. Registration begins at
9 a .m . and the fee is $5. Call Gene
Whaley at 992-7013 or Bill and
Sharon Neu tzllng at 985-4317.

Rumfllage ~le
The Applegrove United Methodist Women wlll have a rummage
~ale on Oct. 2 and 3 from 9 a.m. to
4 p.m. at Linda's Lady Fair In
Racine.
Date changed
The Bashan Ladles Auxiliary
has announced that the Smorgasbord dinner, which was to be held
on Oct. 7. has been changed to
Nov.4.
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Salon to meet
The Meigs County Salon 710
Eight and Forty wlli meet Tues.,
Oct. 3, at the home of Rhoda
Hackett at 1 p.m. Dues are
payable at this time.

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+ (304) 882-3134

OF ,

Chill soup supper
The annual Bissell chill-soup
supper has been set for Oct. 7.
Special music w111 be by tile
Bissell Brothers . gospel group.
Other musicians will be an-

LAKE SNOWDEN
ALBANY, OHIO
CAMPING AVAJLABLE

MORE THAN 25 ACTS INCLUDING:
REASON • LOKHART - TRANSPARENT • THE GOSPEL UGHT .
TRIO - KAY CARTER . SINGERS. • THE GOODWtNS • NEW UFE
PRAISE .&amp; WORSHIP TEAM • BRAo &amp; TANA ROSE- SANDIE
McMILUN - DEBBIE POUNG • RICH STARUNG • UNDA LEE
WHITE· ADA STUMP _. JACKIE LaRUE -ROBIN &amp; MATT SMITH
- UNDA DURAM • JA!RO ARVIZU - PHILLIP VENRICK •
PHYLUS YERIAN &amp; STEVE COX - KATHY TAYLOR , - TIMIKA
&amp; TAMARA LEWIS - SCOTT HESKffi • MARIE BENNETT
- DAVE &amp; TERESA SOUTH - RANDY &amp; Be:m' FULKS LAURA HAWTHORN • ALLEN· STACK • AND OTHERS

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Portland PTO Carnival
The annual "Fall Carnival"
w!ll be held at Portland Elemen·
tary on Oct. 7. A supper w!ll be
served beginning at 4:30 p.m . ·
and willlnclud.e chill, vegetable ·
soup. sandwiches, desserts, and
chicken and noodles. "Silver
Wings, " a country and western
band will provide entertainment:
There will also be games, door
prizes, a country store, cakewalks, and a dance. Admission Is
free.
QuUt show
The Mason County Extension
Homemakers Cultural Arts Committee Is sponsoring Its annual
Harvest of Quilts II Show on Oct.
7 and Sat theW est VIrginia Farm
Museum. The show Is open to all
exhibitors. Call (304) 675-3435or
675--2198 for lriformatlon.

.......
... ,,
:

Square dance
There will be a square dance at
the American teglon Allnex on
Mill Street In Middleport on Oct.
6 from 8 p.m. to midnight. Music
-will be provided by Bernard

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UADS80
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1.1£
DIAal. .

992-2156

1-89-1 mo.

'A ClaSiiti8£l ·a av•rtumtnt piiCIId 1n Th• Dlily Sentltiefle• ·

cept - d•tffied dilpl~ . Bus•n•s Card end •-.• not1ce1 )
witf•l•o epp...- '" the PI Ple~n1 Aegis .. , ""d tt"le G1lh ·

'Potis O.ily Tribune. r. .c.l'ung Ov.r .1 8.000 home~

·

located at Y. .y Luntbor

!n·Mio!tlleport, 011.

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 and 4-cycla
.en gin•
Stock Porta loi

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY

Homelite, Weedeater.
Tecumseh, Briggs 8t
Stratton.

PH; 992-3922

· Public Notice

·Vacation
- Money .

tho Ohio Elderly and Handicapped TraMil Foro Aula'

Procedure, judgment by do·
fault will b8
rendered
·against you end for the relief
demanded in the Complaint.
Dated thio 11th dav .of
September. 1989.
·
'
lorry Spencer,
Clerk of Courts.
Melgo County, Ohio
19114.21, ::18;
1101 6, 12. 19, 81c

Vaughon. Guardian .of lhe
PoraonandEotetoofMaryE.

tance PJ:ogram on behalf of

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Cr.ckman, an lncompet•nt

tho Village of Pomoroy.
Par•on.
Unleo• excop1ion• ere
SECTION 2: The Viii ago of
Pomeroy dooo not ·intend to
filed thereto. said accounts
apply for gr111t lunda within
wll be for hearing before·
• N
tho •eo •orved by 1he u-aaid Court on the 30th dav
P
bl
· u IC otice
aidotlixiprogromoorviceod·
of October. 1989. at which
minilt•ed by the VIII-of
11ine oald accounts wilt ·bil
NOTICE TO B!ODERS
Middleport.
conoidared and continued
· Soiled, proponl• will be
SECTION 3. That thlo Ra·
from dav to dav until fin'aily
received on 1heconatruction ·•olution ahell taka effect arid ,
PubliC Notice
diapoaed of. ·
of 8 60'x100' tllry 'Stlirago beinforcefromandaftorthe
Any peraon intoraoted
IN TH£ .
may file written exceptions
facility . to be _ IQf:B~ed at eerlieat period · allOwed- by
39581 Bar 30 Rood. Raeda. law.
COMMON ,PLEAS COURT . . to laid accounts or tl/ miltville, Ohio. The bUilding to.
• ' Richard Savior,
PROBATE DIVISI(IN
er• pertaining to the oxacube conaiructod in accor- ·
·
Mayor
MEIGS COUNTY. ·oHIO
ttih.oann ';[v~av"•uot,prio~ot~ 1
dan.c. e with opocifica1ions PASSEO:.,Sept. 18. 198.9
IN THE MATTER OF
·
d-e
lor hearing.
which may be picked up al ATTEST: Lorrv Wohrung
SETTLEMENT OF
"' set
Robert
E. Buck. Judge
the office. 39661 Bar 30 Pomeroy VIII- Council
ACCOUNTS.
Road,
RaadavHia, Ohio.
ldo.horobycertlfythetthlo PROBATE CCIURT
Common Ploao Court.
phone 986·3316.
. io • true copy of R•olution MEIGS cOUNTY. OHIO
Probate Div.l•ion
Accounts ond vouchero of
Mol go County,'Ohlo
Blda •hall be sealed and No. 9-2-89, puaed by Po·
addroo•ed 10:
moroy VIllage Council on tho following named fiduci- 191 28. 11c
Tuppers PlainsSept. 18, 1S8S.
arioo have' been tiled in the - - - - - - - - Ch•ter Water District
Jane Walton. Clerk-Tr-.
Probata , Court.
Melgo
Public. Notice
391181 Bar 30 Road
,
' Village •of POmeroy County. Ohio. for approval
Roodovillo, Ohio 46772
191 28, 1tc ·
and alllttatn~~t.
.
Marked "D,Y Stbrago Fa· 1 ---:::-~---o.,.,...~-~
ESTATE NO. 24836,- .Fi.
PUBLIC NOTICE
1'
cillty bid:'
'P bl' N ·
nel andDlStdbUtiveAccount
NOTICE Is hereby given
All bids 19. be received . at
U IC otice
ol GonoJaffer•: •dminiatra- .
that on Sat~"fday, Sitptem~
the ' Water Office no lotorl~-------- tor of tM ~otote ol Lowell
bar 30th. 1989. at 10:00 a.
than
Th~radav. October
IN THE
Road ~offer•. O.caloed. ·
ESTATE · NCI. 28263 :... · m. ; a public sale wHI be hold
6th, 1989 ot 2:00P.M. a1 . COMMON PLEAS COURT
which time all bida .,will be
OF .
.
. Firtt and Final Account of at 106 Union Avenue, Pom·
opened.
DI~EMIG SNDC'DS.UANVTY!NG, s0'!10.
Dougl,l$ ·w. Little, Guardian eroy, Ohio, to sell for caoh
tho following collateral:
The DistriCt r•erves the
~
a~
of the Peraon •n~ Eatete of
1 988'12 Ford Eocort LX
righ1 to reject or acc0 pcanv· lOAN COMPANY • Plaintiff Ma,Y L. Menodlth, anlncom/ or all bida.
VS
potent PertQfl.
.
191 22: 24, 28; (101 1 41c
.WILLARO G. OURST. 'J R..
ESTA:rE NO. 26942--:- FiThe• Farmers Bank and
at ol..
Dol.,danta nalandDillributiveAccouril
Sovingo Company. PomCASE
NO.
89-CV·187
ol
Unda
Stobilrt,
Executrix
Public Notice
erOy. Ohio. reserves the
NOTICE BY I!UBLICATION ol the E.a tato of Edith L. Forright to bid at 1hio Hie. and
TO: Nancy M. Durot. who to root. Dace• ad.
to withdraw tha above coUa·
RESOLUTION NCI. 9·2·89
laot known eddroo• ..,., P.
ESTATEN0. 26804-FI·
.
A RESOLUTION
0. Box 3211. Litchfield Park. naland Distributive Account terol . prior to ulo. Further.
The Farmers Bank and Sav·
MANIFESTING THE
Arizona 86340.
oi,Jamoo B. Thom• Exaculngs Company reserves the
INTENT OF THE VILlAGE
You are hereby notified tor of th.o Estate ol Groce E.
right 't o reject anv or all. bids
OF POMEROY. OHIO TO
that you have b.., n•med • · Gardner. Deceaed.
oubmi11ed.
COO .... RATE WITH AND
Defendant in thil &amp;C11on on·
ESTATE N.O. 26114 · ~
Further. the above colla- ·
. AUTHORIZING THE
titled D.lomond Savings &amp; Fourth Partial Account of
teral will be sold in the con·
VILLAGE OF
Loan Company, Plaintiff, vi. Trove Kim• . . Guardian. of
dition it is in with no ex~
MIDOLEPORT, OHIO TO
Wilt•d G. [)urst, Jr.• et at.. Beuloh Gav Ran•oni, on In·
pr•oed or Implied ,warranPREPARE AND SUBMIT
·
Defendants. This action hu competent Parson.
ties given.
AN APPLICAT!ON . TO,
ESTATE NO. 28024 bean assignee! Cou No. 89·
ANO EXECI!TING A
CV-187, and ia pending in Fim Account of Louie B. ·191 27. 2.8. 29. 3tc
CONTRACT WITH, THE
the Coun of Comm'on Pleas ~.;.;,.....;,;,;~.;.;...;,._ _..L......,_,..._~---~
of Moigo County, Ohio,
OHIO OEPARTMENT OF
46789. Tho pr..,., of the
TR~~:~g~~~1~'l:tEo~ . Complaint
domMdl judgment ogllinft tho Dofond-FROM THE OHIO
anl$, Menifee E. BltiVin•.
ELDERLY AND ..
Tina Slevin•. Wlll11rd G.
HANDICAPPED TRAN$1T
Durot, Jr: . and ~ancv 'M.
FARE ASSISTANCE
Durft. all jolmly o~d •everPROGRAM.
WHEREAS. 1he Village of oily. In the oum ot;NhMI_,
Mi~illeport il llllminiotoriiJII' Thouund Fifty·.,. Doll••
the u-·lido tul ptogrom and Seventy· II• i Cent$
3.425 lacksprlnt• ld.
· WOOD STOVES
...,lng tM .IIIII eO• of Mid' · t•19.061.781 wltlHntenlt
Pemoroy, OH.
..
tar,•t•,
OH.
Off
143
dlaport ond Po'mliroy on be· thereon ot o rate ol e&amp;.86
per day from ·Miy 23; 1989,
992·6855
haH of both Vittagoo; and
691-6
WHEREAS. tha Vittagil lnd co1ta oi thi. •ction: that
HANDWOVEN BASKETS
of Middoport and Pom•oy the mortgoge named In tM
IASIIET WEAVING
oro eligible to receive lunda Complaint ·ba farocto•ed·
SUPPLIES
through t"" Ohio Elderly and and that tho·lieno ond/or lnHondc-ed Tron•~ Fore toraol$ In or on nld prop·
CLASSES OFFERED
Aulotance PrOQram; end
arty, H anv. be marshalled
WHEREAS. t!la VIllage of and tho real aototo title be
21/t Miles Out Now
Pomiii'OY h• det•mlned quieted and ..id · property
in
that ,it Would be more econ~ •old In tho foroctpaun acomlca!ly IHIIblo for the tio,. and all amounta due
llltland, Qh.
elderly ond h111dl-ed to Plaintiff be paid from tho
u .. die taxi 1efvic8 jwithin prOCIIIIda ol tho ,nlo.
SUSAN COllMAN
tho Villages ol Middleport
You are reQuired to an7.42-2778
and POmeroy when far• are ower tl)e Complaint within
reduced.
twenty-eight (28) days lifter
C1ll for Fell Speelllt
NOW. THEREFORE. BE tho lut Pu.b licetion of this
1s.t visit .FlEE
IT RESOLVED by tho Coun- No1ico. 'w hich wHI be pub·
eli oft he Village ol Pomeroy, liahod once each weok for
-Possibly more.
che majority Of ott mombero aik 16) SUCC. . Sivl WHb. tfie
9-2 ·•9·1 mo d.
elacted thereto conairring. t•t data of publication wll
that:
romeln on tM 19th dov of
SECTION 1. TheM•yorof October. 1989. and the
tho VIllage of Middleport II twonty·olght 128) day• lor
hereby authorized to· submit an.wer wll commence on
on ~ppl!aetlon to. Mtd enter that dote. In,IM c•a·of your
into 1 contract with. the failure to •n•w•r or other~
Ohio Oap . .ment of Trona- wlao r•pond .. raqueoted '
portlll~n ~for a grant :undtr by tM Ohio Ruloo ol ClvH

TANNING

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&lt;&gt;LIGHT HAULING

614-992-2095.

-•FIREWOOD

Labrador Retriv1r, 8 months old,
nMdl 9.ood cOuntry · home,
lov11 children, 304~n3--5241 af..

742-2421

BILL SLACK

,., 6 :00.

992-226.

homo, 304-895·3013.

EVENINGS
4 / 6;1 89/ ttn

9· 20•1fn

FOR SALE
HIGLEY FAIM

RUTLAND TOWNSHIP

145 acres, barn,
bottom, hill land,
timber. 2 producing gas wells.
' $45,000
742-2143
· S-26-'BS·1 mo.

•VINYL
•ALUMINUM
•BLOWN 11\1 .
I.NSULATIDN

ALLEN'S
·. HAULING ·

BISSELL
SIDING CO".

'1600 GALLON
WATER SERVICE .
UMESYONE
SPREAD
DIRT HAIILED

New

.._..Built

"Free Eatimotea"

PH. 949·2101
.or IlL 949-2160
'. NO SUNDAY

992-52

,

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2 ROLL PACK .•••••••••. ~ ••••••.• $749

BISSELL .
BUILDERS

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New Colognes Arriving

OBSESSION, 3.4 oz. Spray .................................... ,............. *46.00
KNOWING, 1 oz .. .' ...................... ~· ........•............................ ..... ·'35.00
ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW. 1.B oz ......... , ......................... *14.60
ELIZABETH TAYLOR'S PASSION, 1.6 oz .............................. ·*27.00 .
OMBRE ROSE, 1 oz............................................... :.............. '16.00
SHALIMAR, 1 oz............................................•...................... •23.00
GLORIOUS by Gloria Vanderbilt, 1.7oz................................... *24.00
OPIUM, 2 oz ...................... ;.~ .................... ·............•............... '47.60
OSCAR, 2 oz.~················ · ······················ : ............................. :; •29.60
LIZ CLAIBORNE, 1· oz .... ;.... ;............................................ ;...... '22.50
CALIFORNIA by Jacklyn Smith. 1 oz ..................................... *17.60
CHER'S UNINHIBITED, 1.6 oz .............................................. *30.00
LIZ TAYLOR'S PASSION GIFT SET .......... ........ .' •. \ ................. *40.00
ANNE KLEIN II, 1.7 oz .........................................................• •32.00
CALVIN KLEIN ETERNITY, 3.4 oz.................. ; ...................... *48.00
OSCAR DE LA RENTA GIFT SET .......................................... *40.00
PRIVATE COLLECTION GIFT SET ......................................... •&amp;&amp;.00
GLORIOUS GIFT SET by Gloria Vanderbilt.. ........................... 1 20.00

CLEVELAND BROWN
.

.

OR

OHIO STATE
PIN
~ 't::=

WITH PURCHASE

Bring In Top Of Card .That Says "FREE
GIFT FROM KODAK" and ieceive
"FREE" Developing On One Roll of 24
Exposures.
. THIS INCLUDES DOUBLE PRINTS
A $5.99 Value "FREE"!!

··PRESCRIPTION

PRESCRIPTION--SHOP

992-6669

271 North
Second
;

D~ily!

992-6669

Middleport,
Ohio

-271 NORTH SECOND f

•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TEMPSTAR

I

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

•Mobile Home
, . .Part!.
•Mobile Kome
Rentals
•Lot Rentali

"At Reasonable Pri&lt;es"

· PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860

992-7479
lt. 33 North of

Day or Night

NO SUNDAY

. BOB'S
,HEAUNG &amp;
COOUNG
SYRACUSE
992·2621 'or .

992-6872
6·S·'I9·1fn

POMIROY, OHIO
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NEWLY REMODELED -ln·town tWo·story, 3
bedroom, vinyl siding. low Maintenance! 158
.S. ·3rd St; Middleport. .Old charm, modern

i. PEn .CONYROI

5111(11976
ROACHES. e FLEAS

convenie nee priced at .80% of appraised •
value - $36,000!
·
CONTACT: Md..ning Klots

Central Trust - .992-6661
G!lod Investment Property! Financinl

available throqh Central Trust (lr .make
•r prefetred arranaen~Jnls. Central Trust of•• .fers competitive rates and friendly service!

TERMITES o ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES •WASPS

. ...... llltlonat l'ltl

.. .........

Colllrol Ass•.

1~100·535~2199.

Reward! Lost Golden
Retraiver, Gal lia Centerpoint Rd.
~issing since Aug.6, Answero1
to Luke. 614 -379-2447.
.
Found: Kyger Creek ·cliee ring
Sept. 23rd, In Mlddlipoltc &amp;14843-5176.
.
· Rd.
Loll: · NolghbQrhood
Slbodan Husky, black &amp; ,.hlto.
Antwll'll to Frtud. Reward. 114446-3625.
Loel : Tan 111/lblack pug face .
Raccoon· Crwk area .on . 1~1 .
Anawal'll t~ Butch, hard of
hearing, Reward · oHiirect 1~4-

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

3 Family Yard Sale: Sl. At.
Just oH 141. Sat· 8-?

3 Family: State Rt.160 in Vinton, ,
Fri, Sept 29th, lhru Sat. Oct 7.

9a.m..Sp.m. Evorvlhlng Chaapl

Children•, ed~lt clothe•~

ALL Yard Sales Mull Bo Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the dey Htora the ad 11 to run.

•\

'

'•

RADIATOR

RQOFING

NEW \.- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE E$TIMATES

949·2168
•. !-11-'lf.l .... 11'1:

· sER~ICE
We can r~ and .recare r..!tptars and
heater cares. We can
also ll(id boil and rod
out radiators: We also
repair Gas .Tanks. .

PAY HILL FORD

• . 992-2196

RACINE
GUN. CLUB
GUN SHOOT

&amp; dls"'h11. Firat whlta houu on
D.J. Whllo Rd: otl 160. " -

EVERY SUNDAY

b1hlnd

Sept. 17
St1,1rts at 1:00 P.M.
Factar y Choked 12
Beginning

'

Northup. S.cond · house acrOss

bridge In Northup. Flowers,
1man clothing, Indian corn.

Frldoy, 29th.
Sot, Sun, 11-4. McCormick Rd.
Am•~lcan

or ·~rythlng.

Legion. Lot1

Sept. 29, 30; 4 Family Salo: Old '
160 In Porte;, chain saws, &amp;
misc., children clothes; adun

cloth81. 614-388·9696.

.

Pt. Pleasant

Gauge

· Middleport, Ohio

, &amp; VIcinity

1·13·tfC

Garagl Sale, .32M Jlekaon Ave,

USED FURNITURE
LIVING ROOM SUITES

SUITES
DINETTE SETS
"NEW" RECliNERS
BEDROOM

Located Behind&lt;
Tractor Dealership

MORRIS .
EQUIPMENT

742·2455
Salem
Rutland

LINDA'S
PAINTING

IMTERIOR·EJCTERIOR .
FREE ESTIMATES
Ta••. tho pain out of
pai"!ing. Lot- do
· tf for you.
,

• VEIY IEASONULE
HAVE REFEIENCES

614-985-4180

Roger Hys~ll
· Gorage

JONES
CENtER
• New S. Used Tires
•Custom Pipe Bending
~Oil

Rt. 124, Pomoroy Ohio

Cha!1ges

AUTO -&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

•Grease Jobs

•Gen.-al Ch•sis
Maintenance ·

.

~Ito

•Computerized Balancer

992-3897

!Next to

3 BR ranch home, 2Y•
baths. full basement 2
car garage, 10x60 ft.
deck, 3 acres plus I y,
acre lake. Mint cond.
$120.000 firm. All new
drapes, fully carpeted .
Built-in lg. TV, stove &amp;
refrig. See-through fire·
place.

992-26

'

Top

Thuro, Frl, Sat, 9:00 till?. Utllo
bll otovorythlng.
Garatg• 'sa .., $eturdly1 9:00 to

3:00, follow 1lgns on _,irch Ave
In Moodowbrook Adclil.

Yard Solo• 2325 Lincoln Avo, Frl
and Sot, ~opt 29 &amp; 30. .9:30 till
4:00, complete twin bed, canopy
twin bad, dlshaa. glassware,
lamps, bicycle, MdapNadl,
curtains, eoppetona stove top .
and wall ov·e n, Barbie toyi!J:,
cloth•, galvanll.td rlnu tu~s.

IOta of mi8C, rain or ahine.

PQmeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity .

" 4-25·tfn

It's Time Now!

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

Han That Fur!lace
Checked.
We Service All
Makes - Gas or.
Electric. Also Parts
for All Ma.k es.
CAI.L NOW

SYIACUSE, OHIO

Moat Foreign ·a nd ·
Domestic Vehides
A/C Service

All Major &amp; Minor
Rep•irs

· KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVKE
992·5335 or
985·3561 .

NIASE Certifill!ld M1chanic

CAll 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

8/4/89-tfn

-HOUSE FOR SALE

TtantMittllin
.,,

PH; 992-5682
or 992-7121

St.' Rt. 124 ·
Middi&amp;IIOrt. Oh.

QOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

WATER
SERVICE

NEWLAND
!NTERPRISES

1,000 GALLONS

POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS ,

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

Call Anytime

(614) 667-3271

992-2371

GrGnt ~. N!'~~~f!~lc!

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

SPECIAL AUCTION, Fri. S..pt
29th, 7:00 .PM. Big truck load
new m•rc:handlse a11o Hembur•
2190 cents,

9

Wanted to Buy

A baby ftmale whitt or tan

Chuohuo. 814·245-9558.
Ano Sn,614-446-4417.

Furniture and appllanen by th1
piece or entire h.ouaehold. Fair

prlcoo baing paid. Coli
3158.

81~48-

cart with or
motors. Call ~rry Llv1ly

38841303.

Oulllo
Pre 1940 quilts. Any condition.

Cosh Paid. Call614-892·5657 or
814-592·2461 .
TOP CASH paid lor 1983 model

and 'newer used cars. Str.lth
Buk:k·Pontlac, 1911 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 15144462282.

Used furniture and household

appllancn.
2048.

_Phone

614·142·

.

Used furniture by tha place or
entire household also selling.

ij14·742·2455.

&amp; high

STREET

PIZZA

.PLUMIING
• Now illaltlon: .

LOWEST PRICES
HIGHEST QUALITY

161 Hortll
-45760
Milllls.ut,
Ohio·

· SALU &amp; SERVICE . ·
Pev Your Phone
...,~,Bille Here
IUSIIISS PilON(
1614) "2·6550
m11•a PHONE

W1nted To Buy: Used Mobile

Employment Services

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.
Pizza~Subs-Salads-Daily Specials
·

992-9922 or 992-i22il

9/11/ 1 mo. pd.

Announcements

4

Giveaway

''"n:z·
otwn:z·

, 112par atd ""' to
Holt 11p11z, heH - · 11
7423.

HOURS
7 DIYI A Week

-·

4 Torrtor Jlllllllloo to
Soe II 1M·~ II

p.m.

992-5114

At Jet. $.1. 7 I l 43

614-

Home•. 61 4-446·0175.

FREE LOCAL DEliVERY

On'lhllv·l~n

,.
•

p.m. ·

SUnday edition - 2:00

'

'•

ns.

p.m. Saturday.

Wt Buy AI
Non Ferrous
Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless Stt... l
9 a.m.· 7

Caah

Gorogo S..lo: Thurs &amp; Fri. Toola ,

H-cwtiLWriteMI

Wo Corry Flohlntl luppH• .

JII-COUNIY
RECYCLING

Lost&amp; Found

F.rldoy. Monday odlllon • 2:00

· MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE
222 East.in
POMEROY, ON.

446·7646.

MOBILE ·
HOME, PARK

All MAKES AND
MODElS

''

Young female bltigle dog, to
giveaway, 614·446-4479 ~ 614-

7

SWEEPER REPAIR

.'·•'

Whili. tlutty kittens to • gOQd

379·2957.

''

1
'
•,

Kitten1. Male, 5 wks. ald1 1 sol.id ·

gray, 1 brown stripe witn white.

•Gravel
•Limestone ·
•Fill Dirt

6·11- '89-lfn

u.,... ••.

!

STEWART
TRUCKING

Have 2 kittens, 7wks. ald. litter
trained, y•How •v•a, 1 ,gray, 1
,
·
tan. 614-446-n41 .

6

DAVE'S
SMALL INGINE
REP All

Public Notice

.

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

L. W.

runs. broken updevs wilt be(hlf!ged

\ "sUN'S UP

,

George Halllo perform
George Hall, well known organist, will perform at the Reeds·
'ville United Methodist Church on
Oct. Bat 7:30p.m. Hall wlli play a
variety of go&amp;pel and fnsplratlonal music. Including audience
requests. The public Is Invited to
attend.

•

STRtcnY ENFORaDt

.THE
BASkET WEAVE

sr :

" ~····,·~..

· Factory Chok•

.42
.60
.05 / dov

~ lj~rp~:S97JW377889

SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 30 .
NOON · MiDNIGHT

0

15

n Gaugo SholgiRII Only

.30

0

CHRISTIAN MUSIC

!ofOlSDIIID

. 64 .00
S6.00
&amp;9.00
s13 .oo
S1 .30 , doy

15 .
15 '
16
15

:!

,

TWO DAYS

Revival
The Mission Church in Syra·
cuse will be having revival
Sunday through Oct. S at the
church ·beginning at 7 p.m.
nightly. The church Is located on
Cherry St. · just off Route 124
North. Tum right on the next
street past the fire station.
Pas tor Mark Morrow Invites the

OV'r 15 Words
.
.20

Public 1\1 otice

992 .. 2156

Formerly Bend Area Medical Center

Revival
The Unlt.ed Brethreq In Christ
Church, located two miles north
of Reedsville on Route 124. will
have revival Oct. B-15 at 7 p.m.
nightly. The evangelist will · be
Robert "Bobby" Wiseman from
Point Pleasant. W.Va. There will
he special singing each evening.

c..,., •.
EVElY S.UNDAY
11:00 A.M.

WANT ADS bring
.

Office Staff:.
Mary Dillard,C.M.A.
Gail Hoveatter
Linda Trent

Rete

Wordr&gt;

' 3
. 6

until NOON SATURDAY

•Re&lt;*l!le .1 .50 dlseoun1 for edf . ~id m •dv•nce
• ,.,. . .. .. :_ GIVeew•v •nd FouQd . .. unci• 15 Wt'fCII will Df:
run .3 d~• a1 no ch..,a• '
•Prtce of ld tor ell c•ital •.,.,, 1s aouble rmee of aa cos t
•7 poWit tine ry" Only u.id .
'
·
•aentlfl-' t1 not -rnponarble tot errors after htst diP!' 1Cnee1&lt;
tor •rror1 fitlt d., •d runs tn p~ l C1ll befo~e 2 :00p.m
d-, aft.,.·P41blt~i0n to m•• correction.
· ·
•Ad• th-' must be' P.id 1n •ctv•nce •t"t
Cera uf Thtnks
Heppy Ads
In Me&gt;mo~itm ·
y.,a Sa••

Appointments and Walk-ins Welcome

nounced after confirmation.

,,

Dev f

OUI,~dt MeigS. Gelhe or M11on cauru•• must b~ P~. F- peid.
.

,.
Accepting New Patients
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
· 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Wednesday
9 a.m. -Noon -

KICKOFF
CONCERT

TO PLACE AN AD CALL . 9~2·215,6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY a A.M. to S P.M. ·

Monthly

'•

Rt. 124 htw•n
WillctiVillt and

RA

10

Dr. Daniel

138 Main St., New Haven, WV

RACCOON VALlEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB
Sa~

aA.M.

SUNDAY. OCTOBER t
2:00 P.M. - 9:00 P.M.

Trustees to meet .
The Stltton Township Trustees
will meet oil Monday, Oct. 2, at.
7:30p.m. In the Syracuse Munlcl'pal building.

The annual FaU Carnival will
be held at Riverview Elementary
in Reedsville on Oct. 7. A supper
will he served beginning at 5 p.m .
and wlli Include Kentucky Fried
Chicken, steak, noodles, mashed
potatoes and gravy, cole slaw,
green beans, apd roll, as well as
other desserts. Hot dogs and
popcorn wlli be sold after 7 p.m.
Games will start at 6 p.m. There
will also be a country store. door
prizes, cake walk and a split the
pot. Admission Is free.

.

'

Family Practice

Announcements .
PTO Carnival

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport First Baptist Church will be
conducting revival Sunpay
through Tuesday. 'Fhe theme Is
"Commitment, Getting Behind

GUN SHOOT

• The · Area's Number . 1 Marketplace

ROCK SPRINGS '-The Rock
Springs Methodist Church will he
showipg a . film ·'Expos tog Sa·
tan's Power by Ben Alexander on
the Qulja Board" on . Sunday
beginning at 7: 3iJ p.m. The public
Is invited to attend . .

R. Trent·

SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE
-Child
RUTLAND -The Friends and
registration
will
be
held
SaturFlowers Garden Club of Rutland ·
will be holding its annual open day from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
meeting on Thursday at 7:30p.m. Harrisonville Masonic Lodge.
at the Rutland United Methodist The event will record a dlscripChurch. Judy Snowden will be tlon and fingerprint of 'children
having the pri:lgram. Everyone for their protection and records.
Ali children welcome. There is no
welcome.
charge.
REEDSVILLE -The River·
MIDDLEPORT . -There . will
view Garden Club wlli mliet on
be
a mens class D softball
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
·
tournament
in Middleport on
home of Ruth Ann Balderson
with Mary Allee Blse as co-hos- Saturday and Sunday. The entry
tess. A guest speaker wlli be fee is $60. For more information
contact Rick Stafford at (304)
·present.
882-3205.
POMEROY -There wlli be a
RACINE -There will be a
free clothing day at the Salvation
hymn sing at the Fellowship
Army on Thursday from 10 a.m.
to noon. ·Au area residents iil Church in Racine on Saturday at
ne.e d of clothing are welcome to 7 p.m. Singers will be Servants
· ·
·
attend.
Quartet. from Parkersburg,
W.Va. Pastor Charles Bush In·
POMEROY -The Precepto~ vites the public.
· Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
ROCKSPRINGS -The M-G-M
Phi Sorority wlli meet on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Grace Cub Scouts Bike Rodeo will be
held on Saturday at the Meigs
Episcopal Church in Pomeroy.
CountY Fair Grounds. Registra·
CHESHIRE -The Gallia
tlon will begin at 9 a.m. ·

Connolly and the Travelers. The
cost Is $5 per couple ancl $3 smgle.
The public is invited to attend.

ClassifieCI

RUT.LAND -There will be a Jesus." The revival will begin
square, round, and slow dance at with Sunday morning worship
the Ell Oentson Post 467 of the service at 10:15 a.m. Evenmg
American Legion In Rutland on services will begin at 7·p .m. Re:v.
Saturday from 8 p.m. to mid· . James Seddon Invites the public.
night . There will be music by The.Oct. !evening service will be
Country Connections, a snack "youth night." Bill Louler Will be .
the evangelist.
bar, and retreshm·e nt stand. ·

Meigs (:om.munlty Action
Agency will have free clothing
day on Thursday from 9 a.rn. to
noon at the old high school In
Chesn!re.

FRIDAY
RACINE ~A blood drive wl)l ·
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
group of A.A. and AI Anon will be held Friday, from 10 a.m. to 2
. meet on Thursday at the Sacred p.m.. . In the gymnasium at
Heart Catholic Church at 7 p.m. · Southern High School.

Gl-.

Hymnsmg
The Fellowship ·. Ch!ltch of
Racine will have a hymn sing on
Saturday beginning at 7 p.m.
Featured singers will be "The
Servants Quartet" from Parkersburg. W.Va. Pastor Charle$
Bush Invites the public.

The Daily Sentinei- Page--9

Ohio

Thursday. September 28, 1989

l•

;

�Paga 10-The Daily Sentinel

11

Help

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

LAFF·A-DAY

W.nttd

44

Apartment
for Rent

51

Thursday;
72 Trucka for Sale

Household

nn ChoYJ 1 ,., '""- runo
aood. t1400 cr blat ortw. hell
{101 Cllollnut 81. Qalllpolio.

Goods

AVON I AI I Slllrloy
"*'ra,IOW7S-H2t.
AVON • AI lfOIO, CaB Marilyn
·
2 bodroom opto. for ronl. Car- For Sale: E!Oclrlc Rango, $71;
Woovor 304-112-2141.
~
I\..
potod. Nlco Ollllng, laundry , dryor $50· Sldo by lido
~-- "·II •·•·o ~-'tlon
v ~
facllll~l IVOI~bll. Call 614-IU2· ·llfr!g'orotor, ' $ISO; Ali In good
__ _
-~ · 3711EOH.
cond. 614-441-2310.
Malo or Jomato. n you hlvo oold
. ~oca'=r~~ ~7~~~~~~h~. ~~~ · Four Royhltf Uvfng Room
coornotlao, f n a - roof 1110, or ony product ouc44l-lllll for moro lntormollon
Tabl11, Exc. Cond. S50 oach.
-•fully, you may "" tho ,.,...
·
814-44..1485.
""" who wfH oom 140,000 or
3 roan~ and both apl, 304-1175...,. thll yurt N o c o o o a r y 4.02;=.3·:.._-,....,......,....,...,----,-.,...
DrOducl no olodlt tum -no.
.,.
tomDiele tral~. No travlol.
35 W. 1pt. 2 br., 1 b,th, privata
114~4i=3115.
·
onolooad polio. C!ooo to
grocery etOJM • ahop~Mng canB,.nch Ubrara.n MICitd. Dull..
fer, . watar,
nwer.L tr11h
lncludo: Cllldron•o Sorvlcao,
provldod. t215/mo. &lt;;all &amp;14Ro,.,_ wooil. Cln:ulallon
"6-8727.
Dulloo. ExpoMMO wcrking wfth
.:.:.:...:..:.:::.:..:...._ _ _ _ _~
children and/or library back·
3br,
klt.chln
w/1tova,
refrlgtr11ar, $250/ma., plul
ground nace. .ry. llbrertln will
wiNk appr01:. 30 hour.t w•kiY at
~ utllltTH, dep, &amp; rat, no patt. I
tho Muon cny Branch. AP"
Court St. 614-4-928.

r.A 14.

ember 28, 1989

. . Porneroy-Middleoort. Ohio

BORN LOSER

Television
Viewing

lJ' . .

A

I

1

1 ,.

will

1:00

(J) Major

HE SA'fS IT'S TERRIBLE TO 60
TI-IROU6H LIFE W15fliN6
'(OU WERE SOMETHING ELSE

ceetry.
Hair StyU•t wanted: tor Hair
Hoppanln" s:xn- Salon. Full ar
••rt·llmo."
an·~'?,"'" llconoo
,...
reC:fd. For lntarv ew call &amp;14441-3353.
Holr otyllot with Ohio Managor"o
Llconso. Bond n~aumo to P.O.
B~x 122, Middleport, OH.
.
Job Hunting? Nood I okill? Wo
tr;ln peopla for Jobs 11 Auto
._chonlea, Carponloro CO..
mllologlata, Olverallled Medical
P1n111galt,
Workers,
Eltctriclanl, .Food Sarvlce
Workara. Elactronlea Tech·
nlcl•no, fnduotrlal
Wo(kiN,
Nur8lng filolntononce
A11lstant1
end
Ordtrllas,
Maehlnista,
OHica Worklra end Waldtre.
no·w ~·
-~,.
R-lator
-..
""' cl•~In; Oct-r 2nd. Call
riCounty Vocational AduM Center
at 114-753-3511 Ext. 14. A
vorloty ot lundlng ...,,.." to
po·y tor trelnl-.,. 1vaU1bll for
...
tholl tllgib~.
NMCI horse l,.lntr to ahow &amp;
train q.-rter hoi'IM In weatam
pl-..•· 814-286-1522.
Occllslonal baby litter tor a

i

6 1. m. .. 5:30 p.m. Agll 2~·1 0.
BetoN, lher achoo( Drop.ina
wttcoma. 114-1464224.
Pllntlna, Interior &amp; txtertor, t5
yra. experience. Gutter cleaning
&amp; recoiling l root -ling. Frao
aoUmato. 8!4-3711-2920.

'REMODELING INTERIOR, EX·
TEAIOR PAINTING, ROOFING,
CONCRETE ·
WORK,
ELECTRICAL a PLUMBING EXP.
N
HAS .REFERE CES. PLEASE
CALL A'FTER 5P.M. 81 4-2561611.
Wlntld IO do hoUNCI.. nlng,
heva raftrencn. 614-256-878~.
114-258-9323.
Will taka cere of aldt.S~ or de
housadNnlng. 814..
222.

21

BUslness
OppOMUnlty

proximately four acm II
heyfield aulteble for bulldlna
end the rast Ia woodlaind. Excer.
ltnt huntln"
• 1r11. Electricity
end TP&amp;C Water avalleble
noarbJ. $10,000; or wlll ..lltolal
21 acrn pi"" cobln lor $27,500.
Call 614·949·2381.

l NEVER WANTED TO BE

ANI(THIN6 BUT A DOG ..

Ashton, beautifUl One acrw lola
with river frontage, public water.
Clydo/Bowon, Jr. 304·576·2338. ·
Ashton, largo building lots,
mobila homea permiUtd; public
water, prieta reduced, Clyde
Bowen, Jr. 304.S76-2338.
For Slit: OnaiCre level lets, 7
mlloa north ·or Hollor HoapllaL
:.
&amp;1:..:4.:-3:.:88:.·:.864=U·:...·- - - - ThrH 4 acre tl'lcta; 3.
acrn/pond. Ow nar tIn anc 1ng,
$100. down. 90 ac- MIL
Meldowfwoodt, spring, gu
royanln, $45,000. Gunvlilo
Road. 304-675-7887.
Wooclend, 132 1cr11, $35,000,
Rt 7, below Euroko, Call 614448-4416 anor 7 p.m.
•

*

Smell fum. houta. eultabte for 1
or 2. 11~6-0338.
Ta,. Townhouea Aplt, 2 br., 1·
112 batho1 CA, dlohw11hlr, dlo·
poa~l, pnvat• •ncloald patio,
pool, playground. Water, ..wer,
tresh fn(:IUdld. Startl.ng ••
$28ilmo. Call 814--387·7850.
Twl
· n Rl vere •.owtr-H ouaIng t or
the Elderly, Hendlcapped and
Dlubled.
Located
naar
Paint
Pll111nt,
downtown
h
30u7• ••7•
E 1
P ono
~ ~ •·
qua
Houelng Opportunity.
Uppor Rlvor Rd. 2 apl. upotalr,
2b t
· t wotor
b o
'1 • eve, ra ·•
• gar ag
plcoup.
Dopoolt roq"d.
1
downatalra, 2!&gt;r', wat•, gar~ge
plck·up, 114-446-3940.

a

~ SpofttLOOk (0:30)

S3

Antiques
~:.....-~:.::;~:-::--:-::~::Bu~ or oall. Rlvorlno AnUquoo,
1124 E. Main Stn111, Ponta"!Y·
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
p.m., Sundly 1:00 to 1;00 p.m.
614-1192-2526.
Top Cash pold. Old lumlluro
cuboards,
qullll, . orlantal,
paintings, toya, or anUra ntale
coli collect 304-1525-3275, or
304..523-6854.

(I) AIC New1 E;l
&lt;II llody Eleclttc
(!) 3-2· 1 Contact E;l

1111 Dll2l CIS Nria E;1

-•ur1nt Equlpmont, locltod
fn Oolllpollo, tor ...,. lnfor•
motion. 304-343-1111 .
Sogo Syolo"' with llahl phaoar.
4 gamoa. $120. 114-112·3511.
Stalo of IM art PoaVIY XRUOO
mixing conaole with m1nual
oporolor guido h50. 304-11122312.
Two automatiC tl'llnamlaalone,
O!do, Buick; 3 - d Chivy
tnnamllelan; 3 goata, 2 nanniH and a Roglollnd billy; top. peri O.E. calor t.v.; ve , ea,.
boretor and 1u1t Pump, almott
now. 114...7-1110. ( . ·
Uttd furniture, _, 1m11 1p.
pllancol, , •• raneo. Lab dog 1
~r old! could 1111 rljllotorod fiao
hid I I ....oil, ~Uy lralnld,
304-8711ol485.
I
Vlvnar

Photoa"!Ph~

and

WHrTE'S METAL D~TECTORS
Ron AIIIOO!!t.1210 Socond AYo,
Galllpollo, ott 114-446-4336.
Want To Buy, old tubo rodloo,
wonted macro blloiao 11142, pa•
11c or - · lorgo or -11.
Don' hovo Ia work ot 111. Poy
$10; to $100. tor moat bronda,
304-882-2220 .ook for ChU&lt;:II.
1\'hlllcholro • now qr 18od. 3
whooled oloctrtc oeootor. Call
Rogorollodlcaf,1-I!OO Ill 2104.

Woodon III"'IJO - · 11a7
modlclno coblnot wHh tlghto.
42x34. Call oftor lpm. 114'4413830.
.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

55

19n Ford F·250 4 whall d~v•
truck· $2,500. WoOd burning
otove wlblowor $250. 1174 Win·
nebligo motor home $4,000. .all
IXC concl, 304-685-3613.
2 pootobla 1rH oitanda. $25.
lOCh. 614-992-:Jntl.

Block, brick, - • olpoo, windoww, llntolo, ole. Claudo Win1111, Rio Onndl, ON Calf 114245-15121.

56

Building
Supplle.s

Pets for Sale

2 eduh Red Chow Famaln, 1
!NOTICE!
Upotal'!, unfurnfahod aJII. Cor· Auto waahlr StOO. Schwinn blue mole chow, $100 aa~h. 114OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINO CO.
polod. NO palo, lnquin1 II 300 blko $40. Lown mowor $15. 3711 ••••
~-·
Four1h
Ave.
·
rtcommanda: thlt you do
Satollllo dish $800. Mlcrowovo 3 ChOl' Puppt.o. $50-$71 114Rentals
handicap ct,lld, Sylvia Joh1110n, bueln111 with people you know,
$100. 304~75-6495.
441-1309.
304·773-81~ or m-.1541.
.45
end NOT to ..nc:t mon•r
Furnished
CombustlonHr Stoker Coal 3 poundo, a mo. old PakingoM
through tha mall until you ha.va
41 Houses for Rent
o~nlng
tor
raglst•red
Rooms
Stov• -for nle. Set of email &amp;14-446-6376.
Anporatory Therapist at 12_8 lnvntlgettd tha oft.rlng.
1how pony ham11111. 614·742~
$300. month plua deppalt. Jack· Room• tor rent ·week or month. 2234.
bed acute Cllrtl hospital. Com100% CASH INCOME
3yr. ole!, Rat Torrlor, 2 yr. ofd
petltl\11 salary and benatlla. Op- $300-$700 oach Amunmonl eon St, VInton. 614·388·11360.
Starting It $120/mo. Gallla
Jomor. HOI Torrloro I wk. Old Rot
COrnputlir
tor
1111:
TASo.ao
portunity_ for management ad· Gaml
pt~r
wMk.
Prime 2 bedrooms, bath, newly Hotel. 614--4.t&amp;.ll580.
Torrtor
Fomllo, Sell 11 logoiMr.
MARK
IV,
'Computer,
Manltor,
vancemant whllt applying Itch· locellona. 100% return of ln~ decorated, clun, nlca. 61 4-1192·
SIHplng room1 with cooking. printer, c:over &amp; papeo~ dl1k tya- 114-441-3413·
nlcal skills. Parsonntl Dept. vntmonl GUARANTEED. Call1·
5858.
Also traller apace. 'All hook-ups. llm &amp; sup1r script ~,c. cond. AKC BHIOII pupploo. Ready to
PINUnl Vaii•Y Hospital, Point 800-446·5443 NOW.
PLaasant.25550, 304..87~340,
gal Franclo BIMdum lt4-M7•
:z br house, loeetad 52 MIll Call atttr 2:00 p.m., 304·m· 614·245-5627.
Crulll Agancy: If you 1;1 lnter- Cr11k, Stove &amp; retrlg, tum'ed. 5651, Mason WV.
EOE/M.
3851
·
Dakota Farm Homo buill on
•sted In owning your O'l\ln
Point Pleaunt B1.1slMsa, e. crulsa egency calr Crul11 World $165/mo. $100/dop. 814-446- 46 Space for Rent
your lot, $13,995 6: up. Sit our Beegle pupa $25. 11ch. 304-1753670.
tabllahment ne.cta pert time . 1-8~27·5533.
modo!. 614-886-7311 .
5451.
Janitorial halp, epproxlmately
3 br, farm house 1 112 ml1es Commercial apace, 1400 aq.h. Electric built ln. ovan .&amp; rang'•·
Orogonwynd Catllry Konno!.
10.12 hrs per week, avenlng Shoo S!on1 and Vldoo Storo !rom Rl. 7, Euroko, OH 304·675- Carner Stcond ancf Pina. Ample
gluawar•. Antique Penlan,
.. Slama111
end
hourt, $35. waakly. S.na combined tor aale. In Pomeroy 5104
parking. c.ll 814-44&amp;-4249, 448· Carnival
treadle sewing machine. 304- Hlmala~a~ klftono. Ch- otud
resume 10 Box S.28, care Point araa. 814·992·3830 or 814·192'·
2325, or 446-4425.
458·1806 aftor 6:30.
Urvlct. 814-44e.3844 •fl•r 7
Planant Rt;later, 200 Main St., 2571.
4 bedroom brick, b11em1nt,
gal'lga, large yard. Gunvlllt Country Mobile Home Park, Firewood for ..11, $30. lead, p.m.
Point Pleasant, WV 25550. .
Road. Lease, deposit, rafaran- Rout1 33, North at Pomeroy. 304-458·1881.
Fith Tenk, 2413 Jeckaaft Ave.
Skllll got you jobo. Tho adull
cn. $450. month {lnclud11 gas) Lots, rentals, parts, sa111. Call
Real Estate
10
welding program 11 Tri-County
614·982·7479.
304-675·7887.
For Sale • Concrete and Plastic Polnl Ploooonl, 304-675-20&amp;3,
Vocational School gat1 you
go! oot up Sl4.11t and 10 gal
.
.
All
alzll.
RON
septic
tanks
skills. Woldart oro hlg~l~ oklllod . - - - - - - - - - - 4 bedroom houia for rant. $250 large mobile home lot {•Ingle) EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack· campllte$4 3·25·
month. Coli 614-882-3531 or on term 20 mltet from Point son, OH. 1..S00 ~5 37·9528 .
workars. Racolvo tho training to -31 Homes lor Sale
Full bloaclod boxer pupploo. a~
614 ~ 992-2851 .
.
PL1111nt, Rt. 87~ county watar,
become that hlghly·tklllld wtl·
aaWar. References required. ·For Sa let; Amana air condiUoner, 1or I, 614·25e.atl67.
der In lell than one yaar. Call 2 br, cottaga. Nlca retirement
the Adult Education Center at home, located 295 Lower Rlwar For Rant: Hous•ln Rio ·Granda, 304-815-3001 or 904-1175-4138.
8300 BTU. $250. 614-44__.2 .
Oroom and Supply Shop-Pot
$275/mo. plus depoait, 614·682·
614·753--3511 Ext 14 to register Rd. RiverVIew. 614-44&amp;-2300.
brooda. Alf ot~loo.
Groomlng.
One acre lot, trailers allowed, Good hard eplit firewood. $35 ~mo Pal All
7874 after 5p.m.
lor claan• blginnlng October
Food Doalor. Julio
city water, Gallipolis Farry. 304· load . 614~992-5707.
.
2
story
brick
home,
over
100
Wobb. CoA &amp;14-44&amp;.0231.
2nd. You may bo ollglbla lo yeart old. Approx. 7 1cras. Far rent or salt, two bedroom &amp;75·2722.
rtcelva financial aid to halp pay $40,000. Owners will conelder house, Lincoln Htt . $200/month.
Ha~ for ealt. Round ' baln,
HAPPY JACK SKIN BALM:
tor yoUI training, call and ask
Call 614·992·2720 or 614·U92· Tw.o trailer tpacts, Route One clover &amp; timothy. Stokarm1Uo Chtckl
ICr'IIChlng &amp;' relleVII'Ir·
about our llnancral aid tources. land contract Loeatad Eureka 3589.
.
Locuat
Roed
on
right,
304·675·
ato'lle.
1968
Stake
body
truck,
behind Cia~ School. 614·256rllatod okln wHhoul oloroldo.
good
condition.
2
new
front
1078.
Promotn hooMng ll hair prowth
Sal•• parson natdld must be 1678.
House for .Rent or 5ala: 2103
iiras , goqd rear Urea. H~.draullc on dogl ll catol Bldwot Caoh
able to !Itt &amp; work flexlbla hours:
Chatham.
814-446·3834.
taU lift. 614-245·5117.
Food Jll North Produca.
Vl'ra Furniture, 4 mi. out 141, 3 bedroom brick 11ouae with
Merchandise
large lot, Mid Way Drive. New
apply In person.
Holiday
Freezer,
like
nlw,
10x4
Happy Jack Sldn Balm: Chockl
Havtn. Good Cond. 304~77J. 42 Mobile Homes
cu. n. $150; Satollllo dish com· ecratchlng a raUIYII lrrltal:lcf
Som1t0na to siMp ovar In home 5881 .
for
Rent
plat• wiAnclerson control &amp; akin without atercldt. Promotn
of elderly lady no wortc or care
51 · Household
rocolvor, $500; 614·446-0038.
hoallng 6 hair gr'!Wih 1111 dogo 6
lnvohitd, pltau state asking 3 btdroonf home llvlngroom, 2 BA, 1 mila from town on 588.
Goods
bell't.
ComP'ttely
wage, and retrencas In first let- kitChen,
Doposll roqulrod. You pa~
Kjng.slzod watar bod. Atklng COlli R &amp; 0 Food &amp; Supply 31111
and
out.
remodeled
lnaidt
W. Main Sl., Pomoroy.
ter, wlrtt to Box P·25, cara of
2 olocMc mull! poalllon adjus- $250. 614·949·3038.
,
Point PIH..nt Register, 200 $32,500. Owner tlnancid, Leon ulllilloo. 614·386·8~04.
aru. 304·586·2482 or 586-4374. 2 BR, references &amp; dtposiJ ,... tabla bldll $150. 17 cu ft Ladles alze medium blue fox UKCf Registered m111 Blue Tick.
Main St, Pt. Pn., WV 755!0,
qulrad. 614 •256-1822.
Frlgldert re, frost 'frH. 304.a7S.. jacket, blut topaz &amp; dla.,-tond 8 months old. $1150. or trade for
TYPIST. Muot bo ablo to typo 60 5 room• and bath. Bullt·ln
88f3.
ring, all porcalln col leeton doll, gun. 614·M1·24!S3.
$13,500.
Needs
eome
porch.
wpm. Knowledge of word
2rat.brreq'd.
moblloCall
homu,
Doposll,
&amp;
614-446·2564.
Musical
614·892~2363
or
614-982·
'·
repair.
atter 2p.m. 614· 24 Inch gaa range with full size
procHslng tqulpmant halpful.
57
.0
ovan,
wflltt,
2
yaan
old.
$175.
llwlng
room
suite,
for
u
ta,
llkl
I
st
t
.
Knowledge
of 5601 .
448 527
medlcaUpsychlatrlc terminology 811utUully melntalnad. Prater·
614-985-4145.
now, 614-446·0n4.
n rul'(len s
pref•rred. Sand resume or call red nalghborhood. Walk to 2 br, moblll homo, dop ll "''· 9x12 carpal, $50; roll ca""t54 a London Fog Coot olzo 14, long Bundy Ftuto fcir oalo, 1175. 114Sandre McFarland.L. P1r1onnel everything In Gallipolis. Defi·
1
country style drtll worn twlc•, 441-4421.
Officer, Woodland wnte,.., nc., nltely a must to AI. 614·256- Q~I Cell aftar 2p.m. ' ~ yard a upj 61'1-446-7444.
toaster ovan, etrollar. 114·24&amp;412 Vinton Plko, Golllp&lt;&gt;llo, OH 6655.
County Appllanco Inc. OoOd 5476.
Clarlnol. Uood ~~./;oar. $300.
45631, 614-446·5500. Wooaland
2 br., opaclouol ottachod family used appllancn, T.'v. nlo. Opon
114-441-0511 or . 75-3281. '
Cante,.. II 1 EEOIAA acllon Exc. cond., 2 story brick room AC,Iroappl Holanc•• '!'!"lthld 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 614· Lumm Trailer Awnings, 15ft.
1" -50/mo.
employer - end dOM not dis· w/basament. 3br, . 2 bathe, heat 2 m1111
m
446·1699, 6:Z7 3rd. Ava. Gal· $175. 614·245·5873.
l
For S1t1: Cl1rlnet, I~ 1171
Audl 5000. 114-446-I4D aftor
erlmlnatt on th1 b11l1 of pump, CA, new garage, 23 pluo utiiiiiH. Plpooll end rofor• !!polio, OH
Panasonlc Video Camere6 VCR 6
r.llglon, race, color, uw, a~ , acraa. Near Leota. A"fler ~. 814-- naces requlr•d. 614-448-1825.
·oP::·m::·..,....,.--,..,---:-Estale Sale: Wa are aelllng an· $950j 614-446-0644 or 114-446- :national origin, handicap or an- 25H412.
2br, mobile homt at EvergrNn. lire hou11hold. Anything you 7602.
'
lndlvldu1l
gu"•
lenona.
cestry.
7
Fer 1111, aavan ytar old rtneh 6l4-:J g.2671, no Sunday Callol
nood. Somo ontlquoa, 614·256·
boglnnoro oorlouo gulla~ot.
Th• Mtiga Local School Dlatriet style houu. 3 bedroom with 2br, mobfl• heme, naar Aodn•y, 6855.
Portable Llghltd Arrow Signa Brunicard1• Mualc '114......,
11 currently Hiking apo two y11r old Lennox Heat Pump Dop • Rot. roq"d. 614-446-4344.
$299. (Froo Dollvory/Lottaro) 0887, JoH Womoloy lnolruclor,
plication• from certified ap- on 1.1 ecre, Flatwoods Rd. at
For Solo Frigidaire. Choot Plastic Lo.tton~ (Half Prlcol $50. 114-44..10n, Umll~ oponlngo.
plicants tor 1 Boya' 9lh Grado Flva Polntt. Contact Dava Fox 3 bedroom In Ky;or Crook 2F4ro5~!9•4r746
. x27 lncha. $60 614- box. Explrea 8/28188. 1-800-533Baakltblll Coach, Boyt' Blh at 614·992-nos or 614·892· · School District . HUO opprovod.
~
3453. Ahytlmo.
VIolin ll110n1, highly 1rolnod
Grade Baakttball Coach, Boya' 6646.
protoaolonal
••poot.nold
614 •57 ~·2
71h Gr11d1 Baeketball Coach,
~ ~ ·
Good Gibson Rolrlgorolor and Raro 36 Chevy, 2 dr. Sodania~x lradltlonal I. Suzuki lochlng.
Boyt' Head Track Coach, Junior Llka new 3BA homa. 90% new, Trailer nice cltan untumlshld, gas range. ·Raaaonablt. 814· aharp. $7900 or 1r1d1. 114·
R~lai•ICI with Suz.ukl AaiOC.
High Track Coach, Aaaiatant evarythlng remodtlad, with rotoronc11 roqulrod, Routo Ono ~9::8::2·::2:.:66::8:.::;::;::;::;::;::;;;.L73:;;;;;n::.::;::;::;::;::;::;:;:;::;~~ ol Amorlco, 304..75-4323. ,
Junior High Trock Cooch, Hood oomo brick. Prlcod right! 614· out loeuot Road on rl;hl, 304BaMbllll Coach
A11latant 368-6711 .
58
Fruits· &amp;
675·1071.
Banbllll Coach, Glrtt' Aasarva Price reduced, nice 3br, 2 bath,
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
Vegetables
Softball Coach and Girts' Junior AC, bllemant, gartgl, faneed 43 Farms for Rent
High Batbtball C011ch tor the back yard, larga deck, f~lt
1tee.80 achoOI yaar. Appllcanls trHI, 1.54 acr11. Bec:kyard 3br, farm house, unattached
Rod Rlallllrrloo r.. Solo! Frozen
lorrlnl Pick JOUr-nor rudy
muet hold a valid Ohio taachlng flahlng &amp; boating, Reccoon Ad. gar191' on Jecklon Ad. n•ar
Mudjock.
$100/dopooll,
certlflc111 and tor COiichlng 614-4(6-3431 .
r,cko~IOrl lorry PliO~.
poehtonl mull milt cer11tr~
IHiOJma. 114·746-8g2a eher
14
-2
•
cation .wquRmanll af Ohla tor SmeH 2br, houu w/2 ctr 1.5;::P;;;·m:;;·_ _ _ _ _ _ __
aport1 medicine end CPR. Par· garage. 2 miiH out 141 $34,500. I"
'
eon1 lnlernted ahould contact 61444&amp;-0335 1ftor 5p.m.
44
Apanment
I 1: 1)1 ;)lif,f)llf' •
Jim carpen. ., Superintendant
of Moi~o Loci! Schoolo, at P.O. 32 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
' i fiJ•''~ItJ1,1'
loa 272, 320 Eaot Main St-lln
1BR unlum. 11&gt;1. Rongo l roklg.
pomeroy, Ohio.
for Sale
provldod. Walol', HWago, garTobacco Workera Wented, Nor- 12x80 IUddw, 2br, 111
naw bage, pal~. Pop. &amp; Rit. 114-446Man Young, Bufl•~. WV. 304- eerpll, AC, 1970 llka naw ·~~
61 Fami Equipment
.
137-2530.
through out, $&amp;4!0. 614-44&amp;- 1br, furnl1hld ttfk:lancy, cer·
0175.
tOM Cleo DloOII - ·
palod, AC, prfvato, vory nlco,
Situation
12
R,IIO!l~- wflh 1ft.
14x70, 1.3 ac~, 2 BR, 2 lllltho, ldtal fer 1 ptrton. 721 SecQnd
. , . . 1200 lllwld
Wanted
flrop!OCI, 10x"" lront porch. Avo. 114-446·2602.
' ..... Coli, 14.-;
Priced to ..u. $12:,500. 11 ..a. 1br. portia!!~ lum"od, In Vinton.
He'll room, board r.nd.. cart tor 8702.
114-381-1121. .
110 JD Dour, I •Y blodo, good
oldlfly.
Rnoonoblo,
In
oond. IIOidJ to l!fOoiL 114-44&amp;1973 Llborly moblt. homo.
l14-1112.fl01 . .
1~do:pOrtmont, Ill utMkiH tn11044.
Ux55, •• po ndo1 aood . eotld, cl
1300 por mo. Dop. noq'd,
Mothtr, wife of toochor would mu.t Mil, 304-e1:t·1138.
114-441-4222 bolw- I ll 12
Jlm'l Ftrm Eau~ Qa~
fl~ 10 llllbvlft In hlf homo,
Hpotll bu¥, ..._. trade, Mlflt.polt. f14-1112-1131.
1174 u • .
Park
l'"lml tNclm. ....,. 100 finn
Modol
with
Up-out
air, 2 •rrtmontl, oach 4 roomo •
WIR do ""l&gt;l'4fltlng In my homo. apart~~·•
lm,..,.,oln P-tap~~~ IIIII , 1 tumlohod, I unfur1~ Kfllg Kulllr Parll.l14-441Mondoy throllifl Frltfay. 114- ~00. Calll14.f4g.231[
nlohod,
114
441
0444.
rtTT7.
e 'Oh' '
10 ' . : nt = R "
112·7454.
=' *itt
++ ..... b

G••·

.,......

-Of·

c-......

......

:d

,.

•

I

0

8

(I)

1V:..:e:;st:.:..:OC.:.;.;k;_,.~­
.:6;3=,.;L:,
ATTENTION HarM C)wnoro,
Paint Piuo lo now corrylng tack.
Paint PLuo, 2411 Jackoor\ Avo.,
Point Pt.ooant, phono 304-6754084.
CorrJidall 1hllp, ew•, tor
oalo. ~ hood. 114-742·2262. 3
milia ol Harrloonvllfo,
Mudtorll Rood.
Ooacl ooloctlon ol Duroc looro.
Roger lontt.y. 513-184-2311.
Plgo 820.00 •ch, Rlco'o Pig
Form, Ton Milo Road oH Rt. 12.
Loon, WV, 3114-458-1683.
SPECIAL I'EEDER CALl' SALE:
Wodn-y Oct 4 1:110 p.m. All
brHda, con oalo. Including
Hototolno. Cattlo .-Plod an
dey Tu-y, end up till 4p.m.
Wodnooday. For fnfonnatlon
114-aiz-23:12 or 114-tea-3531 ·

:~~~: ~e~.1 ~:~~i1 K~~=ttr_: :;::~':l~l~=rr.:!r':~30~'-· .:64..;__H:..;:;ay:....::&amp;~G;:;r:.:a::.:ln.:___

room Suite, Reg. $1800, noW
$898. 30 day1 warranly on 1poo
pllanell, Maytag .Wuhlr &amp;it &amp;
up. Cryer $75 &amp; up.

League IIMball'a ·

o-teat Hila (0:30)
(II lhlnlng Time Station
S.:lternar breaks his Pfllll1ise
to Stacy when he's in t:harge
of station . C
(!) Square Ona TV (0:30) E;l
Dllll Andy Oilfflth .
1Hi Chtrlet In Charge
I[IJem
a 'American Magazlna
1:05 (J) IIYirly Hlllbllllel
8:30 D (2) !Ill NIC Nightly Newo

"J' m out f fjJ m.

tlan 8 acc:apted. .
Quiet one bid room unfur·
nlahed apt, nice neighborhood,
reflrance and dapoell raqulrad,
185. per month, 304-675-1550·
Regency, Inc. 2BR, apt., naw
plush carpal, now point,
utlllt1 11, paritally paid. $175/mo.
Ca1130•·175-l5104. .

IJl Hardcaotle &amp; McCortnlck
i C2l ()) • (I) 1111 8112)
1111 Newt

.'"n•.

~~?~:j ~:rn, ~~~~lc;;.xor~:~! =~. :-~~~b~~yc~rdr:a;~~~ ~·:., ecr:ryon :~~\~. AI~~

THURS., SEPT. 28 •
EVENING

f!l-

fJ!"::!.""~::~ 'P"~~t· L,~!:
1 ~
1/ c::--L..
~ . ··
~rm•n1 Jcir
:104-s7s•nd
1111 accoptod until 1:00
,_..,..
~
PM Monday, Oct. 2nd.
- •• -·r, lll
. r. .
·- ~
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
•
F
I
Mlc
Cl••·
...
,
...............
ll'c ...............
BUDGET P.RICES AT JACKSON
COSMETOLOGIS •·
an °••
ESTATES, 531 Jockoon Plko
Som'o w ! U - - Guaron,
I"
tram $192/mo. Walk to ohop l
tood · - ptuoo commtooton
0
I
paid vacallono. Monagora i "========~;=:"j==::i::===~===i movill. Call614-446-256t. EOII.
Olylloll -dod. &amp;14-182-7011 1
Fum. EH!cloncy $150 utllllln
12
Situation
32 Mobile Homes
""· Shan~ both. 507 Sa&lt;:ond,
anytime.
EARN MONEY typing homo.
tlolllpollo, 814-446-4416 oftor
Wanted
for Sale
&amp;p.m.
·
$30,000/yMr rncomo potential.
SWAIN
Dotolll, 105-1187-6000 Eot.lll"n Camorvn 1_ 50, .partial~
Furnlohod opt, adulll, 304-875- AUCTION ll FURNITURE. 12
4!112.
Wantod: Punl molallood olngorl •
~
2357
Olivo St., Galllpoflo. Now ll Uood
Seeking a pure m1111 graup to fumlahed, c•ntrat elr, axe con , ==~·.,-.,-....,..-,---,-=-::; tumitura, huter., w....m •
EARN MONEY t~Plng 11 homo. hook up wfth. 1 nood group lhot $7,500. Nood to Bolli 304-895- ·Fumlahod apt. 1 br, $225, Work booto. &amp;14-441-3161.
$30,0001year Income potential. 11 wtlllnp to go to the topl 41(. ,318
·;;.:.:7..:..- - - - - - - - utllltai pr~id, 920 Fourth Gal·
Dotolla, 1-105-117-1000 Ext. II- 251·111 aoklorLao.
•·
Npolio,614-448-4418aftor7p.m. Trl Star Compact vaquum
10181.
1882 Oakbrook 14x70, 3 Nd•
cleaner, run1 11~1 naw wtat·
W• care for ·.aldtrty 1nd han-- roome, 1 owntr. axe cond, 304a . Furniahed apt. 1br, $210, utilltal tac hmanta, $189. 114.o448-0411.
EARN MONEY typing al homo. dlcapood In our homo. 21 yoaro ~ ~l[=-75:.·7~4llll~.;;;;:-1i;?O:--:Bt;;;:
paid. 701 Fourth GaU!polla, 614$30,000/yllr Income ~entlal. •xparlence. LPN on call. Low .., - - m 121 _. 81 ....,,, 4~1-1411 1 tter 7p.m.
Vel lay Fumhure
Plllllo, (I) 1105-187-6000 Eot. II- fncomo homo. CaN 614-9112-G873 •
,
••
••
Now and Ulld lurnlturo lnd IP4512.
etter 7:00 p.m. tor mora lnlor• nfrlg . .tor, " .C., tQtal electric. Graclo'aa llvJng. 1 and 2 bad· pllancll. Call 814--4....7572.
metlon:
·
Goocl clean condition, under·
room apartment• et Vlllaga Hourt 9-5.
Eem monay typing at home. ~;::=======::. plnatd, wlnttrtzed. Reedy to Manar
end
Alvertlde
$30,0001ytlr Income pottnllal. ..
move ln. At New Haven. $&amp;000. Ap~rtmentt In Middleport. From
Wra Fumltu .. 6 Appllencn
Dilallo, (1) 805-e87-6000 Eot. a- 15
Scltools &amp;
304.aa·2466.
$184. From Soptombor 15th to Rt. 141, 1/4 mi. on Lincoln Plko.
11105.
Would you llka 0 n- m"oblla Novambar 15th, first month rent Mon~Set 9 a.m.-&amp; p.m. Sun 12·5.
••
r - to t•-o who quallly Call Calt till9 p.m. for appoint mente,
Instruction
homo boforo wlntor'l Coli uo at
· •
614-44 .. 3158.
Flnoncln~
"HELP WANTED: TYPIST. Mull
bo abt. to typo eo wpm.
RE·TRAIN NOW!
1-1100·721-4045. Wo toko riding
614•112·n87. EOH.
avsllabt. .with no monoy dowrl:
BUSINESS m-ro. tractoro, motorcyclla,
Nico 2 BR, 4 1/2 mi. !rom Gal· Sola &amp; C.halr, Rog. $&amp;1111 now
Knowledge of wcrd procooolne SOUTHEASTERN
oqulpmont ~otptul. Knowlodgo COLLEGE, 5211 Jackoon P!ko. aulomobi!OI and truckO on !!polio. No poll. $235/mo. 614· $228 (11 In alock). WoOd
of
modicallpoych~lrlc llf• Colt 814-44!1-4387. Ro;. No. 86- ,t.;;:ra::;d•::·------~- 448-8036.
Groupo, Rog. $529, · now $291
pmornd.
Bond 11·10558.
,.
v1 In llock). Sloopor Sofa,
mlnology
"''un11 01 call S1ndro Me3.5 Lots &amp; Acreage
Now accoptlng oppllcotlono tor
h
ott 1 11 ~ ~
.~.....
Paroonnal OHicar:,
2 bedroom apt, full" ca.......ted,
aug an 8 •••
n rsp n.
F ~-....
18 Wanted to Do
'
·~
Rog, $8911, now $368 ( I In
W-and Cantoro, Inc., 412
.
1 acn1 lolo Gllllpolio Forry, city
~pllanc11, wotor ond trash stoek). ouun Anno Coffn &amp;
Vlnt011 Pika, G.tlllp()118, OH
water, 304-f75-2722.
ckupl prowldtd. Malntenenc• End Tabla• $149 1 . .t. 5
45131, 114-441-6500. Woaclland Do e-ntry work. Building l.::::.:.:::.:.:..:..::,o:-::::..;:::.....-,-,-:-;rn livl~g clooo to ohopplng, varlolies ol Bunk Boda, $141 &amp;
Cent.,. It 1 EEOJAA action hamH to remodellno. Havt 1 amall lot At. 7, 31arge lot, Adbank• end echoola. Fer more In· up. Twin ' Full MattriiHI wu
omployor and " - not dla- roloroncn. Aak ·for Chrlo. 114· dloon Rd. $75. Wardo Trollar Jormalion call 304-812·3718. E·
1
crlmlnota on tho botlo of 441-6488.
Park. 114-44&amp;-4265.
quo! opportunll~ housing. Soc· !r:ck~. u8u.';~w J~~~:. &lt;'g~

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Largo "'und INIIH ot My, $15
oach. 114-441-1012.
fcir oar.. $1 .50 111110. 11481 44i-4111 EYonlngo: 114-44&amp;7157

Dllll Th-'• Company
II]) SllowBiz Today

tt71.1oop. CJI, now tlroo, , _
mufflor, t1500. 114-441-4141 of.
·
tar I arM ••ken•

IHi WKRP In Cincinnati

OHe· Man
6:35 (J) Andy
7:00 Cil Our Houaa
D C2l PM Magazine
(J) Sporttc.nter
(I) D CIJ Cu...,.. Affair

Grlff!lh

117t OMC Van. I oyt, 3 ~.
Rune, noodo wo,r&lt;. 1400. linn.
114-8112-6411 ofllr 5:00pao.
CJI Jel~it, u:o oond,
R,500. 3-75-2311 oftor 1:00.

,_.0

&lt;II

1181 314 OMC, 4 -~~ drlvo
INCk, 01 cond. 304-675-2131 .

NawaHour (t :00)

Motorcycles
74
.:...;:_..:.:.;:..;.;:..:...;;:..;;:..;.;:....
__
1114 Hondo moton:rct. arlrodo
fcir 2110 4-w-r. 114742-21141.

ill

Honda 1110 wllow "'lloogo, 114388-11331.
75 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

II]) Crounre
IHi linton

P5CJO..

aTop Card .
7:35 W Sanford l Son
8:00 Cil MOVIE: The Benlker
CJang (G) (2:00) .
D C2l 1111 CoabY Show E;1
(J) COIIega Foolbell

7:00 p.m.

11n Norrllcroft 17 112 ft.
f5 hp lYOn, , _ botlorloo ana1
many oxtrao, $3,150. call 304171-26611
1;00 am and
5:00 pm.
1111111111. La- Booo Boot, til
H.P. Moroury outboard mo)ar.
Mercury loot con!rollod trolling
motor. 11100. 114 411 1110.

-•n

71

Autos for Sale

1.:..:_:..;::::;:..:;:;_::::.:__
111t Dodgo - · Runa
aood, hlo oood Uroo, trHn,
rHo tltln 50,fl00 mlloo. 11~K2·
F338::::3::·:,-..,-,..,--=-.....,=
11172 Ford pic:'~· 350 oulo, PI,
run• goOd."
.-e. .
1173 Plymouth liuotor, cylln·
der . aWomatlc, 71,000 aetull
01:.:4~
1 ·:..__
1:m::'=•::·!..:·*':::::95:..:.11:.:4:..:4::41:.:.
1171 Mullang u, ~work - .
u 5o. Boo " on 101 0. _ 1rom

e

1171 Buick lloaa1.'!~2 - .
goOd cond, t!IOG. 3.-711-23811.
117&amp; CadiHao - n DoVIIIo,
- r ovlovlhfng oaa cond,
woll molntafnod, U,OOO mlloo,
Pricod on lnapoctlon, 104-17..

lmpotolble The IMF turns
the boss or a drug canal
against each other. C
Uz Carpenter Ana The
Good '01 lop
(!) VIntage: A Hlatory Of
Wlna The Devastator
1m! D1121 41 Haurt C
181]]) MOVIE: Tank (i'G)

m

L - 11112 ft. Olumlnum """"
bolt: Marowy axo mo1or. EJi.
1111, w"h trollor. Cal OYOfllneo
::11;:4-8:;::112:.-1.::1;.::1:.;:1·;__ _ _ __

Vlf~gol'lzza.
79
j.:::::!:..:.:=,_..,..--__,._

DCIJ Mlulon:

(I)

t881 Boht 111 8unoport 350
Chovy 8.8. Prop, AM·FM o1oroo.
Opon lhorp "''· 112,500..
'1wt:z.2i'ai,l1wt2-4241.

(2:00) E;l

II]) PrlrnaNewt
IHi MOVIE: Silent llage (R)

campers&amp;

(2:00)

·0

Murder, She Wrote One
Good Bid Deserves A murder
a Convereallon Wlllt Dinah
8:05 (J) MOVIE: A llumor Of Ww
(3,15)

Motor Homes
1171 T1uru1 Campor. 22 ft. Ex·
carront oondlllon. $3300. 81414U411.

mo.

8:30 D

1171 Cllny Mollbu Clalolc
Wagon. $UIIII. 114-11112-3010.

Whldey meets Dwayne on
the plane and Is impressed
with him . C
(!) World Of Cartooning
SCrook&amp;Chau
1:00 D (2) '1111 Cheere Sam tries
telling RebeCca he. has deep
feelings for her. C
(I) II CIJ Young llldera
Settlers in Sweetwater fear
thalthey may SC&gt;Orllace an
Indian attack. C
(II (!) Myoteryl A deaf man
lipraads a converSation about
bribes. than he dies. C
1m1 111112l Top Of Theliill
Congressman Befl helps a
1ermlnafl~· 11 woman lind her
mother.
II]) Larry lng Llvel
1[1 Thuroclay Night Flghta ·
9 Naohvllle Now

1171 Honda Cfvlc, nHda paint
mochanlaolly goOd, 1100. 114I;441:::-3::4::'::'":.....--.,---11110 Corvana, blaick. autom1tic,
I ownor, low mllugo1 IICOiflnl
condition. $10,000. Pnono 3041:2:.:73
.:-3::;:;07t:;:.·- - - - - - 1181 E.cM SW, SO Trlntml•
alon, goOd cond. 8895. 114-245-

,~~=·----------------

,.
1181 Olda Boughan fully
loadod.l .onlY 311~ mil Uko
newl wa~l alter. Dfl.m. 114-4461748. · - - - - = - - . , . , - 1U2 Q8maro T·Tape, V..S, 4
j:I::!P::-::d:!.•.:304=:.f:.:7W=3:.:0~1.:..__ __
11182
Oldamobllo
Cullan
Sul)reme, v.e, good cond, 304175-2223.
,
11184 Dodge Daytona Turbo Z. .
58,000 mtrn, black, gray lntorlor. All turbo optional. $3100.
114-185 3311hltor 1:00.
1881 Moroury Lyna •~lion
wogonc!ShPB, AC0..*1,11H. 30487S.12ttU I tr D:OO PM.
1881 Chryotor Fffth AYonuo. Ea·
lnl ~"""'· 112,000 mlloo. 114-37112721.

.....Dacia•

1111 Dodgo Amnf, oulomatiQ l
!!!._ 43,1100 mlloo, $2500 114-:mt..

1111
Arloo, ~r. tao 11..,
lutO, .!.1"-.cloth fntarlar, m&amp;0.
114-4....111 .. 814-7104.
11188 Dod~ ~ aut-lie I AC. 111,000 miiH.
:11:.;4::;4:.:7f..::;:2:;111:::..
· ----a.u-•h R 1
~
1881 ••, .. -..
ol ani. - ·
PI/PI, ""'~r~ AC, roal nloo
t3400. 1141.

z.

1111 Cavolor Z24, rMI oood,
an. ah. ., blaak. 114-141-0347:Dod D
....... z.
1MI
01 ayt.,..
All opt!- Low
lacol1-:..c::~0~~~ ·2871, 01
11
· •
·
110 Solv•a• CaN s - of ~net
wllh 28a30 bul!dl.114-218,...
6522 .

vn...,.
""'::f.l·

I ft olldo In 1ruck compor, both,
lumoco, good cond ~. 3041714570.
Collrl Campor, 30 •·· 'wHh lull
alzo bod end ""'"' ot Rlolno.
$3100. 114-14..:1140.
Mull •!!. 1911 T!I"Y Taut\11281
Trovol 1 n~llor In otorogo In
Flo~dl.
Claln, IIIIN nlco.
11,1100. 8orl0&lt;10 lnqulrloo on!~.
114-1112·2110.

.

'

81

BASI'MENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltlonlll llflllmo guarontoa. Local ,.,.,.,coolumlohod;
Fno Hllmatoo. Call colt.ct 1·
&amp;14-237-0418, day or night. R o
a_ • r • a • 1 e m • n t
Waii'!IR&gt;Oflng.
c. W. Dovleon Plumbing I
l,.,.hing, for atl water I droln
,
IIMI, 114-441-:0151.

Patty Troo Trllllmlng1 _ otump
,.maval, Dlll304.a7J.f»1.
Ron'l TV Sorvlco, opoolai::J
In Zonkh IIID oorvlclng
othlr brondl. 01111, olao
oomo opptlance npoln~. wv
304 ..71-2211 Ohio 114-4412454.
Rotary or 01ble loot driiHne.
Moot Willi aomplotod .._ day.
Pump IIIIa lnd WYioo, 304195-3502.
Dovle
-.voc
Sorvlco,
Goorgoo Creok Rd. Porto, oupli.~~!Qup, ond dollvory. 114-

Th- 1117 Chlv- 4 . . .IIIIi I two door ~;
~

7:l

.,.._

Trucks for Salt

1117 toni ton truGit. R -.
Rune ond looU good. 1100.
11WU.71l11.
1m Font l'lllllod Ton "lruoll.
11,000 ""'"'"' .. . . ....
oondftlon rnao. 11~a
arllwta-7111,bolh~

~ l..::=:::::..._::==-----!11

MAY'i3f3. HE GOT"
MARRIED AND
IS RAI51 NGA
FAMILY.

'

I

WS~RM6"'&lt;

•

-·~ •,.,. ,._,. . ;,,,..&gt;&lt;_ . "'"'·c-'~!

"'".~. . .c~\'"'· . ·-··· ,. ,.,_. ;.. ··-'"·-·-:;
~

! ·J&amp;

BARNEY
MY BIG TOE
PURTY
WEATHER!! · TELLS ME IT'S
l'IXIN' TO RAIN

SICH

IT SHORE
DON'T LOOK

LOOKY OVER BY
PINEY RIDGE

LIKE RAIN

82

11:00 (l)llatmen

D (]) D Cll 1m! Dll2l 1111

J I J WotOf . . , _, lwlmmlng
t':'.:z:allmo, Willi. Call 114'

II I II Waior IIIVIco. , _ c1oo
t - , wollo. """""'"'-"1,000 ..
Cafl304lllull!!tf,

-nil, :1,000 ID 4,000 Olpoc"~'

87

Upholstery

.~ I I' I I' .
....;:,L.:..;Ar...:M.;,.;:...E. .:.;R,. . . .~I ·

eon
j

BERNICE

BEDEOSOL

Graph Matt:hmlll&lt;er can help you to un"
demand whallo do to mike the rei•
tlonohlp work. Mllll S2 to Matchmlkar,
P.O. Box 81428. Cl..ellncl, OH 44101·

3428.

ICOIIPIO (Ocl. 1M No a. II) Don't pasa
up .ny opportunitlee todtty that giYe you
a chiiiiCe to liDCIIIIIIe with lrlenda.
Somethlntlldvwt~

.A oa.r .
~'Birthday

.........

Small thlnga will fiave a way of adding
up benellcllllly lor you In the year ahead.
ltap by,...clllna by line you might
_ , llirpflll your111t regarding wliat
you'll be ... to ach'- and

ICCIItiiUIIde.
.
u.tiA (.... D4ot. D) Your Intuition

II likely 10 be IliON accurate than 1111181
todly, 10 1 ,a(l 011 a peniltent hunch .
IIIOUt _,..hlng, It will prCMI wiN to
held your Inner YOica. Trying to patch
•\Ill a .llrolten rD~M~~Ce? The Altro-

could diMIIap !rom dlecuolonli with"ptla.
IAQITTAIIIUS (Nolr. D Deo. 21) Inca..... lltuatiDM today, It look1 Hke you'll
be able to come up with 110n1e bright
ldeU that could put you a lew flllCM
ahead of your competition. Don'l be

afraid to teat what you concalwl.

CAI'IIICOM (Dee. ....,18) Treat all
or your experlat- pltllolophloally todlly, even the good lind the HI!. Thlo
wll 8Mble you to 111 operly cope with
anytfllna that might ..,..,.,.
AQUAJiiUS (.1111. • l'eb. 11) Keap In
mind that a 11111811 profit II always batt.
tllln-. You -.•t be dllllppalnled
IOday H your expectatlonl ar. In !Ina

wllh wttatJOUnlegitl!natlly .n~n~ec~.
PISCIII (PW. • P' 7 lilt . , Instead of
llde lltPPin8 dltiiGult deQ!IIo.18 lodtty,
, _ litem ~· l!tlng lnd«&lt;llvaor ~ n the only lhlnOt,
that 0111
you.
. .e (PIIrlllt 21•Aprtl18)1nataad of,

merely doing only what II axpacted or
you today, exer1 yourself and do a ·bll
mOJe. You're I~ will not go
unnotlc:ed wllh the bou.
TAUIIUS(Aprii»Mer 20) You'l be en
enjoyable pllt'IOII to be around today,
becauee you're not apt to take youraell
or drcutnatencet too ·llt'louaty. Your
~ will encourage otlten to do
llkew!M.
011111 (Mer 21..,._ 20) H you haw .
any ~~~ wllh your mate todtty. do not be o'oHifly ln......, upon aet·
ling lite lUI ~ ln. lnataad, let the
matter drop 10 thai It doll not grow
Into tornalltlng more lnlante.
CANCIR ( , _ 21-- Ill Your lkilll
u a IIIII paraon will be 1H11Y tfftcii\HI
today. nlllouldn't be too '*d lor you to

come ftiY with lite ordlr, regan~tMa of
hOw tougfl your pr oapect II to Ill.

uoc...., ..Aifl.., 1n ~or n-

=

lllllCfll matMfa IOday 1111811, but t1a1 polnta IIIII Olhlrl NY 0\WIDDk ·

won1 .c~~~e your llteltllon. Thll will
111 edge In your d..rlnga.
(Aug.
D) In rolel

=:! your

..... you muat

llllhorlty
today, uudei•IQI won't mind doing .

your bidding .....,'" wMI ,OU'I Mk Oi l
them wll be VOiced

.tltwl • odmmand.

... ,.q_, rather .

I·!

RE T T I

I

1-.......,:.:.....:;....:...,~:..--!
5
L.
. ....JI_.~,I....,...~r_.~,l....,...~.

le

k7,.......,1,:;H:....:;EI_
. :..:M.,IO::..,.Y:,.I..:L:....,.,I'-1
•
.
•

(J)NFL Thaatre
(I) Nawa
181lll Araanlo Hall (1 '00)
II]) ll!lonayllna
lBi TaiH From The Darkokle
Fear Of Floating
0 Mllml VIce The Home
Invaders

~ ~:::;,= E;l

&lt;II Dna On Dna
D

f.;.""=: R

llpitltaToniild

DID Pltll)alllhow
1Hi Magnum, P.l. The Sixth
Poeillon

.
• Crook &amp; Chaaa
12:00 ()) MOVII!: the llanlllar

Gang (0) (2:00)
(J) 11eat Cit Amn*•~lllcCialln

Co~plele

lhe chuckle quoted
P,y filling in tha missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

~~• L
P .14 .1.5 .I' .I' .I' .I

~ r:mR~Y~amo
SQUARES

I'

A
V

I I IBE I I· I I I

A

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER

J

SCRAM-I.m ANSWERS
Hl
Escape- Crumb- Spoof-Retire-COMPUTERS
Nothing can spoil a party more than running into the
guy who married your gir1, has all his hair, and got rich
from COMPUTERS :
.
.. ·

BRIDGE

NORTH

1·11·11

.Q7 32
.AK
tAJ2

··~ 13EAST
.10 8 4
.742
t91H
.1082

In today's deal, correct counting by
declarer enabled bim to play bill sidesuit to maximum advaatage. West led
the king of spades and iben switched to
a trump. Declarer won dummy's king
of bearts aad led a club back to tbe
jack. West took the queen and played a
second heart. Another club was played
fr;om dummy. West won the ace and
played a club to East's 10, ruffed by
declarer. South cubed the queen of
bearts, dlscardinfl a spade from dum·
my, and then played a low diamond to
dummy's jack. When that won the
· trlct. be ruffed another club as East
discarded a spade.
.
What ,ltould declarer know about
West's band? Fint, that West bad A·K
Gf spades, king of diamonds and A-Q of
clubs. Second. It is almost certain tbat
West started with five spades, With
Gnly four spades lind four clubs, and 16
Gr 17 bigiM:ard poilU, be would surely
llave opened,_·no-trump. If West began witlt five spades, four clubs aad
only two hearts, bow many diamonds
was be dealt? Right, two. Ancl that
meaas the klllg of diamonds will be
played next, recardless of ,wbicb dia·
mond South leads. So South. played a

SOUTH

.•

·~

.QJ10953
tQI043
.KJ

Vulnerable; East· West
Dealer: West
Eul

Pass
Pass
All pus

Opening lead: • K

low diamond tO tne ltlDg ana ace, and ;·.
the Q-10 of diamonds took the rest of ·
the tricks. Had declarer carelessly led ·:
either his queen or his 10 of diamonds;.:.
East would have eventually taken the •
setting trict with his diammd nine. ·. :
JII1Jel J.oolly'• •JM:Oby"" Brllllo'llllll .
'JM!Oby"" C.rrl a-· (rmtl•nrltb bi6l•tbe&lt;. •
tile UU! OnraJd Jacoby) lte IVIJII/lle It, •
boobtorw. Botb •n pabiJt;tttl by Pbatw Boob. •
. @ IJif. NEWSI'o\PER I!!&lt;TEfU'IUSE ASSN. .: .: .

. ,.

CROSSWORD

.•

by JHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
46 Baptism
1 Spy In
Canaan
8 Indian

and others

DOWN
1 Roman

weight

...

statesman

9 VIvified

2 Syrian city

10 Lacerate

'

12 Basic

3 Press
fabric

precept
13 Law and --

4 Night before
5 Amid
·

15 Unclose

8 Petrified

(poet.)

7 Poetical
adverb

18 Gained
.18 Frost
19 Indigent
21 Summit
22 Scottish

24
25
14 Remunerate28
17 Poem

20 Do

river
23

23 ·Auld
32 Tennis
..:.. Syna•
great

I Extreme
11 Disavow

One of the

newsroom

work

Tumara
24NATO

FaciHtate 38 Canal city
Placard 37 Ascot
Arms
and
depot
others

27 Cocktail 39 You (Ger .)
bel 41 Hawaiian
31 Perfume
game

29 Glory

country
27 Saline
21Wine

29 Hollands
30 Feminine
suffix
31 Marsh

IJIIW
33 After
prtnlemps

34 Passing

mark
35

Old

hand .

31 Slow·wftted hr+-+40Dear one
(Fr.)

42 Hollmari'a

"-Man"

neat

43

Lofty

44

ParmH

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here'• bow to work It:

1128

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

11:30(l)llatmen

D C2l 1111 Tonight Show

bOsses

Sign that hangs in
of·
is based on
courtesy, respact and the suspi·
~~--~~t the other person ...

fica: 'Tolerance

.

I

Newt

·85 General Htullng

.
104ol"114t11
- . . roooto.. - · ""·

z-

Merle Helllllrd On Treck
Country music legend Merle
Haggard .performs In concert
before a capacity crowd at
Church Street Station In
Orlando. FL.

ASTRO-GRAPH

I I I 1I

I

e

a

Healing

W.tor

• RobertiOn
D (]) 1111 Hlordball (I :00) t:J.
(I)
(J) PrlmaUme Live E;1
CZJ IHi Newa
(!) Healllna: A World Of Red
Ink Look at the problem of
massive International. debt
that plagues much ol the
world, causing severe ,
economic, social and political
it'Stability. (1 :00)
1m! ., 1121 Knoll Landing
Paige Is hunted by Greg and
Ted because ol evidence
about a murder. Q
. , I]]) Crlmewatch Tonight
II]) Evening thWI
10:30 (II Maoterplece Theatre
David Is secure and happy
Hvlng with his aunt and Mr.
Dick. C

181lll Raw Twilight

Ph,lmblng &amp;

_ _..

C2l 1111 Ollterent World

9:30 D C2l 1111 Dear John 1;1
10:00 (l)700 Club With Pat

"YOU'Ve 5URe
&lt;SOT" A MORI31D
eEN5EOF
HUMOR.

Troo &amp; otump romoval. Shrubo,
-oonod " " ' - · cny ....
Country $55. !Old. Don'o
Landlcopoo. 114-44...

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OOYERNMENT IEIZED - o o
lrom •100: Ford. M-dlo.
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lupro ~uldo (I) IGI-II7
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Soptlo Tank Puftll'ingjiO._O.JH•
Co, RON EVANS ENTERP"I&amp;EI,
Jock-, 011 t-800-137-11521.

a

1G1-117

.

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

Home
Improvements

Far - : 1m PJyntoutit ~
Eltctrtcsl
loran PntnJor..... 4 dr, !HM1J 1n 84
Rlfrlgeretlon
good lltopo n,I!IIO - · , .
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wor11, allor 1:30 1 - R•ldo,.lal
or oommoralill '
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Servtces

Cartor'o Plumbing
Far Solo: 1171 Ford 4 · ondHootlng
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complat~~opi 1 :.':..~~!:,Z;

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Boat. 121 HP, l.vlnrudo En;lno,

be·

low 10 form four ~mplo words.

II]) M-ytlne

a VldeoCountry
7:05 (J) Jeffereono
7:30 D (2) Family Foud
(J) Speadw"k
(I) Ent-lnmenl Tonight
D (J) USA Today

WOlD
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tho

Counting
prevents waste

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1111 bJ NU,,Iroc

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1111 Dll2l 1111 Whaol Of
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hints. Each dly the code letters are dlffe'l'ent.

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12:01 W MOVII: IICIIII fnilll
The " - ' Of Thl ApM &lt;01
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HJNK
CPPFVPN
Yeater• ., e c,.t..•etel PEACE ITSELF
MEANS SELF-DISCIPLINE AT HOME AND INYlJL.
~DJTY ABROAD.- GEORGE SANTAYANA
' C) 1118 K~ FaalurH Syndicatt. liw:.

V P L N M

1

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...

·..·

�·12-The Deily Santinel
Pomaoy-Midtlaport. Ohio
r---Local news briefs............___, Commission accepts.:~ntlnued from page 1
from page 1
·
P.aga

~ontlnued

'

Inside the store. Wilen heTeturned, he discovered that the front
end of his truck had been heavlly damaged.
·
Anyone who saw the accident is asked to contact the sheriff's
depariment.
· ·
·
·
.

No one hurt in accident
No one was Injured In a one car accident at 7: 25 a.m.
Wednesday ori SR. 124 In Sutton Township 0.4 of a mOe west of
mUepost 31, according to the Gallla,Melgs Post, State Highway
Patrol.
Troopers sald a 1988 Honda Civic driven by Julie M.
Randolph, 27, Racine, hit a dog and went off the road. The
v,ehlcle came back onto the roadway, went off the right side of
tbe road again, landing ln a ditch. Damage was minor.

--Area deaths--Survivors include three sons,
Joey, James and Harrison, all of
Audrey Doss Foster, 58, ofOna, Columbus; two daughters; one
W.Va. died Sunday at the home of sister. Easter Brown, of Toronto.
her mother and step-father, 415 Ohlo; a stepmother, Elva Rood,
of Reedsville; a stepbrother,
Fourth Ave., Kanagua.
Born Oct . 26, 1930, In Mason Foster Rood, Reedsville: a stepCounty she was the daughter of sister, Marjorie Rood, Reedsvllle: and several uncles aunts.
the late Everett E. · Doss and
nieces and nephews.
Beulah Doss Wears.
He W&lt;\S preceded in death by
She is survived by her hu shis
parents. two brothers and two
band, Coy Foster; son Jeff
sisters.
·
Foster of Milton; two sisters, ·
.
Friends
may
call
today (ThursGoldie Estep of Rowlett, Texas,
day)
from
6to9p.m.
,at the White
and Elizal:&gt;eth Drennln of Maservl·
Funeral
Home.
Graveside
rietta, Okl.; and brother, James
ces
will
be
held
11
a.m.
Friday
at
" Pete" Doss of Nashville, Tenn.
the
Rood
Cemetery,
wlth
Rev.
She was an e_mployee of FasChek. She was a member of the Jeff Burdsall officiating.
Mt. Zion Baptist Church and the
VFW Auxiliary.
Joint services with her mother
· will be Friday, 11 a .m. at the
Heck Funeral Home In Milton,
wlth the Rev. Richard Black and
the Rev. Charles Gibson.
By Untied Press International
Burial will be in. the White
South Central Ohlo
Chapel Memorial Gardens in
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a
Barboursville.
low In the lower 50s. Winds
Friends may call Thursday , 6 southwest less than 10 mph.
to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Friday: Partly cloudy, with a
high In the middle 70s.

Audrey Foster

·Weather

Beulah Wears

would be landlocked by the
closing.
.County Engineer Philip Roberts reported that State Issue II
appllcatiOI\S from District 18,
which Includes Meigs County,
"are being processed now " ln
Columbus. Roberts anticipates
that funds for the district may be
released next week.

Stocks
DaltY stock prices
(As of 10:40 a.m.) ·
Bryce and MIU'k Smltli
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .............. 30
AT&amp;T ........................ ......... 42%,
Ashland Oil ................... ,....40%
Bob Evans ... :............·.......... 14~
Charming Shoppes ............. .14o/s
City Holding Co .... , ......... ..... 15
Federal Mogul .................... 23'f4
Goodyear T&amp;R .............. ..... 52~
Heck's .................... :.............. %
Key ·centurlon ..................... 15
Lands' End ......................... 27%
Limited Inc ............. ... ... ...... 39
Mu ltlmedla Inc ........ ............ 99
Rax Restaurants ........ ........ .. 2o/s
·Robbins &amp; Myers ............... .. 15
Shoney's Inc ....................... 11%
Wendy's Inti ........................ 5%
Worthington Ind ... ... ........... 23%
(AT&amp;T Is ex dividend today.)

Extended Forecast
Beulah Marie Doss Wears, 81,
Saturday through Monday
415 Fourth Ave., Kanauga, died
Fait during the period, Highs
Sunday at her home.
will range from the mid 60s to the
Born Jan. 16, in 1908, in Mason . mid 70s Saturday, ln the 70s
County, she was the daughter of Sunday, and from the mid 70s to
tlte late Matt Long and Thelma
the lower 80s on Monday.
!Wallace) Long Yorke.
She Is survived by two daughters, Goldie Estep of Rowlett,
Texas. and Etlzabeth Drennln of
Marietta, Okl. ; one son, James
"Pete" DossofNashvllle, Tenn.;
two step-daughters, Margurete
NOTICE is hereby given that on SaturEngel of South Side, W.Va. , and
Mrs. Virginia Hansley of Pickeday, September 30, 1989. at 10:00
rington, Ohio; one step-son.
Emanuel Wears of Pliny; two
a.m., a public sale will be held at 1 05
sisters, Mrs. Bernice Stover of 'u
Florida, and Mrs. Edna Wray of
Union Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell
Apple Grove; one half-sister,
for cash the following collateral:
Mrs. Orma Barker of Glenwood,
W.Va.; three half-brothers, Mat- .
thew Long and Bob Long, both of
Ashton, W.Va.; and Max Long of
Ohto: step-father, Bruce Yorke
4 Dr.
HB - 1FAPP9597 JW377869
•
of Columbus; three grandchild·
ren and two great-grandsons.
The Farmers Bank and Savings
Services will be Friday ,11 a.m.
at the Heck Funeral Home In
Company, Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves
Milton, with the Rev . Richard
the right to bid at this sale~ and to withBlack and the Rev. Charles
Gibson.
draw the above collateral prior to sale.
· Burial will be in Mt . Zion
Cemetefy In Fraziers Bottom.
Further, The Farmers Bank and SavFriends may call Thursday, 6
to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
ings Company reserves the right to re-

EMS receives $ix Wednesday calls

Units of the Mell!li County · ! a struc-ture flre · on the John
Emergency Medical Services Welch. property ·on Buck Run
Finally, upon the recommen·'
answered
stx calls for assistance ·Road.
dations of Roberts apd Plghway
on
Wednesday.
Tuppers
Plains
at
5:12 .a .'m ,
Superintendent Ted Warner, the
At
~:
3~
a.m
.,
Rutland
was·
went
to
State
Route
7forWUUam
commissioners accepted a bld
called to Meigs Mine No. 1 for . Grueser who was takep to Holser
from Pat Hill Ford, Middleport,
Jeff Kennison who was taken to Medical Center.
of $13 1395 for a pickup truck for
O'I$leness
Memorial Hospital. · . At 9: 5~ .a.m., Rutland treated
the county highway department.
Middleportat4:
18a.m. went to but dld not transport Randy
Bids from Pat Hill Ford and
Page
St.
for
Nora
Mllls to Harrison, Dexter.
Gibson Inc., of Athens. for dump
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
At 3:13 p.m.; Rutland was
trucks, remain tabled.
·
At 5: 03 a.m ., the Columbia called ·to Fort Meigs for Matthew
Continuedfrompage 1 Township and Salem Township Cotterlllwhowasalsotreatedbu~
Fire Departments were called to not transported.

hear;ng
• •
Pre l lmlnary
" •••
sta b wound to the neck. AU three
victims died from
hemorrhaging.
In addition, Mrs . Wears suf·
fered bruises and contusions of
the head, along with brain
hemorrhaging. Mrs. Foster also
had major bruises and contu·
sions to the face and head.
Officials are trying to determlne lf the victims offered
resistance during the· klllings.
Scars on Baisden's face were
rtrst mentioned yesterday al·
though the scars were vtslble on
Tuesday when he was first taken
to court for arraignment.
The bodies of the vlctlms were
discovered around 9 a .m. Mon-

Thursday.
September 28. 1989 .·
..

.

day by a housekeeper who
workedfortheWearsthroughthe
week. Mrs. foster was visiting
her· mother and stepf&lt;~ther on the
weekend.
Baisden was arrested ' around
10 p.m. Monday. by the Mason
County Sherilf's Department on
SR. 2 south of Point Pleasant.
Prosecuting Attorney Brent A.
Saunders said yesterday, "
We've asked the BCI crime lab to
perform flrigernail scrapings
from all of the victims to see ilwe
can get a comparison," ( ln other
words, to determine If any of
Baisden's flesh can be found
under any of the victims' nails) .
Officials aree awaiting results
of the tests before they,declde on
asking for the death penalty In
the case.
Two knives, one believed to be
.the murder weapon, were sent to
the BCI crime lab at London for
tests. The knives were found In
the house during a thorough
search of the Wears residence.
According to Gallla County
Sheriff Dennis SaUlsbury there
was was no slgnofforcedentryat
the Wears' house. Time of death.
was placed .between 4 and 7 p.m.
An uneaten dinner was on the
table.
·
Officials say robbery could
have been a motlve for the
killings. However, between $500
to $600 was taken from Mrs.
Foster's purse and a dresser
drawer In the bedroom.

CLEVELAND (UPI) .,.. Ohio's
.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions
None.
Wednesday discharges- Gary
R. Dill, Rose Genhelmer, ThoCarper, Allee Koenig.

mas

1
'Qyt • /2 PRICE
5 OJ-, sH-E-R...-LDHs E

by London Fog
and Sherwood of Ohio

REDUCED

Harrison Ollle Rood Jr., 66, of
Cincinnati Ridge, Coolville, died
Tuesday evening at his home.
Born June 11, 1923 In Toronto,
Ohio, Mr. Rood was the son of the
late Harrison and Daisy Rood.
He was a farmer and a U.S. Navy
veteran.

,through

Monday,
October 2,

Kennoth McCullough, R.Ph.
Ch•t• Rlfllo, R. Ph.
Ronlld Hanning, R.Ph.•
Mon. thru Sit. 8:00 a..,... to 9:00p.m.

E

Sund~

SCRIPTtONS
lin

10:00 a.m. 10 4:00 p.m.
Sen~ice

20°/o

BAHR MIDDUPORT
CLOTHIERS

Vol.40, No.102 M
Copyrighted 1989

Meigs board approves . replacement projects
Rutland Elementary School
will get a new furnace and Meigs
High School a new roof as the
result of action taken by the
Meigs Local School Board of
Education at Thursday night's
meeting held ln the board office.
The board declared both situations emergencies and approved
the lnstatlatlon of a new roof at
-Meigs High School by the Trocal
Co., at a cost of $43,300, and a new
furnace at the Rutland Elementary school at a cost of $30,248 by
the Columbus Heating and Venti·
latlng Co.

Harold Graham was hired as a
Several regular and substitute
teachers were employed Includ- driver education Instructor at a
Ing Julie Hubbard as . head rate of $12 per hour for a total of
teacher for the year at the 47 hours; whlle Sheryl Gibbs and
Pomeroy Elementary School, Shirley Smith were employed as
and Robert Ashley, Jr. as a · driving Ins true tors for the driver
education program at $6.50 per
junior high footbatl ~oach.
Substitute teachers employed hour. The board also hired Carrie
were Penny Burge, cosmetol· Morris as a bus driver.
Maternity Jeavewas granted to
ogy; Grace Hawley, Robin PreKim
Adkins from Aug. 31 through
ntice, and Carolyn Robinson,
Oct.
6, and Marge Barr until the
elementary; Effie Murphy,
end
of the.. semester. Also apkindergarten -elementary, and
proved
by the bpard for Denise
Robyn Ptlzer, comprehensive
Williams were dock days for Oct.
buslnesss education.
.
·
The resignations of Karla 2, 3 and 4. .
The board entered Into two
Brown, Victoria Diddle, and
Marie Mulford · as substitute · purchased services. contracts,
one wlth Shirley McDonald to
teachers were accepted.

WnH REMOTE
•REMOTE CONTIOL eCABi.E READY
•PECAN 01 MAPLE FINISH

$549°0 •
CLOSING DOORS -Today was' the final day of business for

1\J~:f;;~~

LINOLEUM
SALE

Congoleum vinyl floor
coverings
No-Wax cushion floor

-12 ft. width
-New patterns

.Sale $-5 49 Sq. Yd.

$307°0

'&amp;\.E...
WOOD ROCKERs·

.

.

.

SERTA

CARPET SALE
Now you can reploce your old
carpet ond really san.

PREMIER COMFORT

TWIN .
MlniESS 01101 SPRINGS

saaoo
...
OPEN
Mondlyolaturdly

1:30.1:00

(hoost Scotchgard Stoln Rt·
lta11
Dupont Sttinmasttr

FW

MAmESS 01 lOX SPRINGS i

S10800

or

carpth.

,

H•rrv I• ~efore the
Sale E..,, · ·

992-3671
.Downto.wn P.-roy, Ohio

Farm_City, Inc., closing
doors after half-century service

After more than a half-century
of business on East Main Street
In Pomeroy. MGM Farm City,
Inc., originally the Farm Bureau
Co-op and later M'eigs Land·
mark, Is closing Its doors .
The operation will cease at the
close of business today (Friday),
according to George Holter.
corporation president.

NEW YORK tUPil - Borden
Inc., the nation's largest dairy
company, sald Thursday It is
cu tUng back Its dairy business by
one-third and will lay off 7,000
workers. or 15 percent of Its work
force, ln a massive

It's All ON SALE

--

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
government's gauge of future
economic growth, pushed up by
stro.ng orders for co~sumer
goods, rose 0.3 percent in August
for Its second straight monthly
gain, the Commerce Department
said Friday.
The Increase In the Index of .
Leading Indicators, Intended to
forecast economic activity six to
. nine months In advance, followed
a revised 0.1 percent gain in July,
· • the department said.
Economists hesitated to place·
' too much importance In the
Increase, however, because the
index has been· up and down all
'y ear, ctlmblng four months and
falUng four months.
"It hasn't l:leen consistent, "
said David Wyss, c hlef econo·
mist with Data Resources Inc., a
consulting
company in LexingM-G-M Farm Cl&amp;y, Inc.
ton, Mass. "We've had a couple
of up monjhs after a couple of
down months, which suggests
that the economy is. just sitting
there.''
"! don't think It's telling us
much In short-term," agreed
·Jerty Jordon, chief economist
took over as manager when Jack
with · First Interstate Bankcorp.
Carsey af)er 40 years of managIn Los Angeles. "!still think the
ing the lluslness resigned In 1987. . fourth quarter will be very weak
The Farm Bureau Co-op Assowith possibly a slight recession."
ciation was organized in 1937 and
Of the 11 Indicators that make
many years later white remainup the Index. only five were up
ing a co-op changed Its name to
Meigs Landmark. About six
years ago the business was
re-organized into MGM Farm
City, Inc.

Thls Includes all facets of the
business, the feed, seed, feqllizer and farm supply part, as well
as ·the petroleum and gas station
services.
Ten employees are affected by
the closing. a spokesman
reported.
Manager Jack Miller was not
available for comment on the
closing of the business. Miller

Borden announces dairy cutbacks

Huge selection of styles and wood
finishes. Oak, Maple, Pine.
Reg. S119.00......... Sale S9S.OO
Reg. $169.00.;.... Sale S13S.OO
Reg. S179.00....... Sole S143.00 .

tutor a student not t{) exceed five
hours per week at the rate of $10
per hour and the .other with
Charles Leach to transport a
student to the Ohlo State School
for the Deaf.
Stephany Gardner was accepted as a tuition student for the
year, and the board agreed to pay
Mr. and Mrs. EarlFleldsandMr.
and Mrs. Greg Gatrell the
amount as calculated by the Ohio
Department of ·Education In lieu
of providing transportation to the
GaiUa Christian School.
A ·resoutlon was adopted designating thls as the "Year of
Reaching for the Vision" In
accordance With a statewide
campaign. The superintendent

was directed to prepare a policy
for the board on classroom
recitation of the t[le pledge of
atleglance. and If oral recitation
Is recommended, to establish a
time and manner for such.
The board agreed to enter Into
an agreement with Southern
Local School District providing
that Southern Local will trans port a student of Meigs to Rio
Grande, and Meigs Local will
transport a student of Southern
Local to Racine.
A price list on ala carte items
for the limchroorri program was
presented and adopted by a vote
of.four to one, wlth Larry Rupp
casting the no vote.
Dedication of a plaque at the

Meigs football field honoring Bob
Roberts was discussed with the
board voting til take care of the
dedication ceremony.
Approved by the board was a
field Irip for VICA students, and
a payment for footbatl field care
of $683.17 for a period not covered
by a previous contract io Charles
Chancey.
Following Ihe open meeting the
board moved into executive
session to discu ss personnel and
pending litigation.
Attending were Supt. Ja mes
Carpenter, Treas urer Jane Fry,
and board members, Robert
Snowden, Richard Vaughan,
Larry Rupe, Jeff Werry, and
Robert Barton.

Nation's leading economic
indicators up 0.3 %_in August

25" COLOR· CONSOLE

~

3 Secttons. 30 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 29. 1989

§rLIIAIVIA .

Single, Double or Triple Dressers.
Chests, Beds, Night Stands, Hutches.

Great Se!tction of
Cardigans, V·NecM,_
Puii-Ons, Turtlenecks,
Crew Necks
Sweater &amp; Skirt
Sets

at

FALL SALE

•CABLE READY •REMOTE CONTROL

•

•

I

GS

Bedroom Furniture MW or ou RrtSH

New Fall Sweaters

Page 4

Open w~~ Night• 'til 9

19" REMOTE
COLOR TV

Parrty cloudy tonight. Low
In mid 50s. Chance of rain 20
percent. Saturday , partly
cloudy . High In mid 70s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.

Pick-4
6990

Pom•ov. OH.

OPEN STOCK

LADIES

942

1989

PH. 992-2955

Friendly

SALE - SALE - SALE

REDUCED

Harrison Rood, Jr.

Offer Good

Pharma c y

Further, the above collateral will ~e
sold in the condition it is in with no expressed or implied warranties given.

Coats and Jackets

Pick-3

crown

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Dally Sentinel Stall

SUNGLASSES

ject any or all bids submitted.

LADIES

Super Lotto jackpot ·went uriclalme&lt;l Wednesday night, ln'.
creasing the top · prize to $9
· mUllan for Saturday's game.
None of the tickets sold for the
midweek drawing llsted the six
winning numbers -17,19, 30, 38,
39 and 40, a lottery commission
spokesman sald Thursday. The
jackpot was worth $6 mllllon.

COMPLETE STOCK

19881/2 FORD ESCORT LX

Marvin W. Wears, 94, 415
Fourth Ave.. Kanauga, dled
Sunday at his home.
Born Sept. 5, 1895, in PI In , he
was the son of the late Fran and
Iva (Coleman) Wears.
Also preceding him In
were two wives, Lena
(Dunn) Wears and Beula
arle
(Doss) Wears: step-da ghter,
Audrey Foster: two daughters.
three sisters; eight brothers; one
granddaughter: one grandson:
and one great-granddaughter.
· He is survived by two daughters. Margurete Engel of South
Side, W.Va .. and Mrs. Virginia
Hansley of Pickerington, Ohio;
one son, Emanuel Wears of
Pliny; half-sister, Lena Mackey
of Naperville, Ill.: one step-son,
James ''Pete" Doss of Nashville,
Tenn.; two step daughters, Goldie Estep of Rowlett, Texas, and
Elizabeth Drennln of Marietta,
Okl.; 10 grandchildren; three
step-grandchildren; 15 greatgrandchildren; and two stepgreat-grandchildren.
A World War I veto;oran, he was
a member of the Slloam Church.
He was a former employee of the
Marietta Company and was a
retired farmer.
Services will be Saturday , 2
p.m. at the Mt. UniOn United
Methodist Church in Pliny with
the Rev. Marlin Campbell.
Burial will be In the Slloam
Cemetery. Military rites will be
conducted by the American Legion Post 23. ·
Friends may call Friday, 6 to9
p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home.

eye AL East

Super Lotto jackpot up to $9 million .

HOME FURN

PUBLIC NO.TICE

Marvin Wears

Ohio Lottery

Blue Jays

restructuring.
The Columbus. Ohio, company, which also makes a variety
of food and consumer products
Including Creamettes pasta,
Wise snacks and Elmer's glue,
said it intends to close or sell65of

Riffe still not. sure
.
abou~. governor's race
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI) Ohio House Speaker Vernal
Riffe, still undecided on whether
to run for governor next year,
will make his decision known In
one week.
The Columbus Dispatch, ln a
copyright story. said Thursday
the Wheelersburg Democrat is
expected to announce that he will
not be a candidate for the 1990
gubernatorial race.
Riffe, who ha·s served In the
Ohio House for 31 years and as
Speaker for 14, Is to reveal hiS
. plans Thursday at a luncheon
' with fellow House Democrats,
then repeat. lt that evening at the
annual Scioto County Democratic dinner.
He told the'n ewspaper Wednes,
day that he Is "just not sure"
about running for governor, but
said he will make up his mind by
next Thursday.
He had planned to make his
announcement around Labor
Day, but that was postponed
when the speaker's father was
hospitalized.

The paper said that In recent
interviews w'ith Riffe about the
governor's race, he often mentions advice from his father- "If
you're not sure, don't do it."
He has also mentioned he
might consider running for governor lf he were younger .
Rllfe, 64, Is the longest-serving
speaker In Ohio history . He was
elected to the House In 1958 and
chosen speaker in 1975.
In honor of his lengthy service,
a recently completed state office
tower across the street from the
Statehouse was named for him .
A few weeks ago, Riffe toured
Jackson wlth former Gov . James
Rhodes for Rhodes's 80th birth·
day celebration. At that time
Rhodes, a Republican, said Riffe
was the most qualified person to
become Ohio's next governor.
The field for Democrats Is wide
open at this point, with no
announced candidates. Attorney
General Anthony Celebrezze and
Auditor Thomas Ferguson have
set up exploratory committees.

Insurance
firtn helps
Hugo v.i ctims ·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) its 265 plan Is around the world
Nalloliwlde
Insurance Cos.,
during the next two to three
whose
claims
adjusters have
years. Spokesman Nicholas Iambeen
handling
record
number of
martino said the company ex·
claims
after
Hurricane
Hugo,
peels some plants will be closed
said·
Thursday
Its
home
office
before year's end, but refused to
employees
will
collect
Items
to be
specify the operations thai will
sentto
help
the
storm's
victims.
be affected.
Beginning Friday and for the
"We want the employees to be
next
week, the 6,500employeesat
the first to know, then our
the
insurance
company's headcustomers," he said. Iammar·
llno said further announcements quarters In Columbus will be
would be made In the next week collecting money and badly
needed-Items to be sent to victims
to 10 days.
in
the affected areas. Some of the·
About 20 closings will Involve
·
Items
needed In the hard-hit
· dairy plants In areas where
Carolinas
are batteries, building
Bardon says Intense competition
tools
and
cannedgoods.
from cooperative and regional
·'Hurricane Hugo has devasdairies has stymied growth.
Borden said layoffs will reduce tated many areas where NationIts work force from 46,000 to wide customers, agents and
39,000. The company has dairy employees live," said Raymond
Wilson. senior vice president of
operations In 38 sta\eS.
corporate
services. "The collecIammartlno said the cutbacks
tion
effort
arises out of concern
- which also Involve pulling the
for
them
and others, and In
company's Borden. Gold Mearesponse
to
employees here and
dow, Viva and Lite-llne milk,
In
our
regional
offices throughout
cottage cheese, yogurt and sour
the
country."
cream from certain markets In
The Nationwide Foundation,
the Easj and Southeast - will
-which
supports corporate human
reduce annual dairy sales by $700
service goals and helps out In
mllllon to $750 mllllon.
·
communities
where the company
Borden said the cu !backs will
does
business,
has contributed
not affect Its position as the
$35,000
to
the
local
chapter of the
country's No. 1 dairy company.
'American
Red
Cross
to assist the
Borden's ·dairy product restorm
victims.
venues amounted to $2.4 . bllllon,
Iiems the employees coUect
or 30 percent of Its $7.24 bllUon
'
will
be shipped to the affected
revenues In 1988. But the division
areas
while cash donations wlll
provided only 14 percent, or $102
be
sent
to the Red Cross and the
mUIIon, of the company's opera!·
Salvation
Aarmy .
lng Income - lagging behind
Hugo
tore
through the Cariboperating Income contribute!! by
Industrial proc!ucts, snacks and bean before hitting South Carol·
Continued on page 10
Contlnued on page 10

goods, a drop in sensitive mateduring August while six fell. But
rials prices indicating less de.a big .58 percent Increase In new
.
mand
for materials used In the
manufacturers orders for consumanufacturing
process, and a
mer goods and materials and a
.24 percent·jump in stock prices decline In consumer confic!ence .
The department's index of
propelled the overall Index upward, ac cording to the coincident Indicators, designed
to track current economic activdepartment.
Other indicators driving the Ity, rose 0.4 percent in August
index were a decrease In average after being unchanged In July .
The index of lagging Indicaweekly Initial claims for unemployment Insurance, increased tors. designed to reflect past
building permits and a rise In the economic performance, rose 0.9
,percent in August after falllng0 .5
nation's money supply . .
On the down side were . a percent In J u.ly.
Meanwhile the department resho11er average work week,
faster vendor performance indi· vised downward its estimate for
eating less demand for products, the June leading Indicators from
fewer unfilled orders for durable ·uncha1Jged to a 0.1 per,cent drop.

Shooting vi~tim
in stable condition
A Pomeroy man is in stable
condition in the Intensive care
unit at Veterans Memorial Hospital as the result of a shooting
incident on Butternut Ave.
Thursday night and his wife is
confined to the Meigs County Jail
pending charges to be filed ·
today .
Dennis Boyd. 45, of 138 Butter·
nut Ave., was transported to
Veterans by the Pomeroy unit of
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service at 9:28p.m. and
underwent emergency surgery
overnight.
He reportedly had been shot in
the stomach with a 22 handgun
following a dom es ti c quarrel at
the residence. His wife. Betty
Boyd. 35, is being held in the
• Meigs County Jail.
The Department of Meigs
County Sheriff James Soulsby
reports that charges will be filed
against her today through the
Prosecutor's Office. The charges
to be flied against Mrs. Boyd
were not specified by the
department.

~Local

Also arrested at the scene late
last night on c harges yet to be
flied were . Minford J ewell,
Langsville area, and Charles R. ·
Stewart. Florida. Both are con- .
fined to the Meigs County Jail. II
was reported that there were
several other people al the Boyd
house when the shoo ting
occurred .
According lo the Pomeroy
Police Chief Gerald Rought and
Deputy Sheriff Jlmmer Soulsby,
the argument and ·shooting incident took place o~tyide the
house. After Boyd was shot he
reportedly ran into the street
where he collapsed.
Cocaine was founc) in Boyd's
clothing, Deputy Soulsby reported.'· The Ohio BCI has been
called into assist local officials in
the Investigation of the incident.
On the scene las t ni ght and
until abou t 4 a. m. this morning
were several officers from lhe
Pomeroy Police Depar tm en t and
the Meigs Co unt y Sheriff's Department . along with the Prosecutor' s office.

news briefs,-._,

Donations sought for Hugo victims
Area 4-H Clubs and Girl Scout troops will have a bu sy
weekend as they scour Meigs County collectinJ:t donat.ions of
money, clothing and non-perishable food ilems for the victims
of last week's hurricane in Charleston. S.C. The donations are to
be shipped to South Carolina on Tuesday. Any money collec ted
will go directly to the hurricane stricken area via a local church.
Anyone with donations for the drive should drop them off on
Monday at the new Meigs County Public Librar y. between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m. And anyone who has items or money to drop off
and ·can't mak e It between 9 and 5, just call Faye Clifford, a t
992-7201, who will arrange to be at the library parking lot at a
designated time on Monday evening to tak e cha rge of the
donations .
All 4-H Clubs and Girl Scout troops, and any other groups or
organizations, are welcome (and needed) to .participate in the
drive.

.

EMS has six Thursday calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to six calls on Thursday.
.
At 4:49a.m. the Racine unit was called to Trouble Creek Road
for Raymond Kerns who was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At
4:13 p.m. the unit transported Seth Stobart from Racine to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. The unlt went to Fifth Street at
5:58p.m. for Wanda Powell w)lo was transported to Veterans,
. Continued on page 10

~------------------------------~--~~
, ''

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