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Porr*oy-Midclaport-Galllpolil. Ohio-Point Pha11nt, W.Va.

D-8-Sunct.v r... • Sentinel

October 1, .1989

WindOn
.

(

comp~etes

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•

advanced
course

Engineering society presents
award to University student

1().17-19-26-40-42
Kicker 688149

CERTIFICATION OF COMPLETION - Blair ·
Windon, center, was presented a cerllllcate for
completlbJ au advanced course for soD and water
Cc)nservatlon technicians held at OSU recently.

.

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•

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1 Section, 10 P1ge

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio IUP!) Agricultural trade will have an
$18 billion surplus during the 1989
trade· year,

-----------•.
2) Select heifers that are

These traditional favorites are proof the good things in life stay thal
way. And the reason is comfort. Plain and ·simple. Handstitched TruMoccasin construction and oupple, long-wearing leathe1'5
combine- (or a fit thai molds
your feet. 'liy them on. You'll
walk away fet&gt;linl!; relaxed
.
.
..
and refreshed, ·

loS)FT

.

. lly LEE LEONARD
chamber.
UPI Statehouse Reporter
The walls hav.e been repainted,
COLUMBUS The Ohio
House of Representatives will
color-coordinated drapes !)ave
convene In solo session this week
~n · added, filigree on the
marble columns has been
to take !lnalleglslative action on
a bill setting up a new state
painted gold, and a colorful...
agency •t o coordinate rehablUtarestoration has been done to
tlve programs for alcoholics and
ceiling artwork, whitewashed for
years.
. drug addicts.
The House will meet at 1:30
House Speaker Vernal Riffe
p.m . . Wednesday to vote on
Jr., D-Wheelersburg, Is expected
to tell · 58 fellow Democratic
Senate changes In House Blll317.
The Senate made those changes
H.ouse meml)ers Thursday
whether or not he wlll run for
Sept. 19 and Is out of session.
House action will send the
governor ln-1990, and then repeat
measure, written by Rep. Ray
his decision that night at a
Miller, D-Colurnbus, directly to
Democratic dinner In Scioto
Gov. Richard 'Celeste, who faCounty. The answer Is expected
ALMOST FINISHED ~ The new Auto Bank of drlve-lhrOUI'h bank will replace the one on Second
vors it. .
to be no.
Baak One located on Lynn St., Pomeroy, Is almost St. Tbe facility features a small·lobby as well 811
Speaker Pro Tempore "Barney
The bill sets up a Cabinet-level
ready to open. Land&amp;caplng with shrubbery and
two ilrlve·through lanes with eatrance from
Quilter, 0-Toledo, has scheduled.,
Department of Alcoholism and
fall Dowers was completed last week. The sign
Second St., aad edt from Lynn. The bank
huge fund-raiser for Tuesday .
Other Drug Addiction Services to
will be erected this week and the Interior work
property ex tends from Secoad to Main completely
take over serveral dif(erent evening. Even If Riffe stays ln.
down Lynn with numerous parklllg spaces for
compteted IIi preparation lor a grand opening
programs now In the Department the House for two more years,
expected sometbne later this month. The new
visitors lo the aulobimk.
of Health and Department Of Quilter Is the leading heir apparent for the job when Riffe retires.
Mental Health.
The alcohol and drug recovery
House members, who have
been out of session since July. bill resulted In vigorous debate
will notice the fruits of a $6,000 among various alcohollsm and
Anna K. Pingel, 18, of Colonia~ units were on the scene and The ai:cident occurred In Ru· , remodeling program. In the · mental health groups, some of
Heights, Va., was Injured In a transported both women to Vete- tland. Moderate damage was
Sunday afternoon motor vehicle rans Memorial Hospital for listed to the vehicle butthe report
acCident In 'Meigs County on treatment.
didn't Indicate If the deer was
State Route 124, north of Church
Pingel was cited by authorities · kUled or not.
St. , In Syracuse.
for left of center.
GBI'l - Wolfe, of Carl's Used
Meigs Sheriff James M . .
Both vehicle~ were heavily Cars, State R:oute 124, Rutland,
-· . Soulaby reports that at 2:10p.m .• da.rb&amp;fl8d. • :;\', •• ,.
repjlfted to ·.authorities the!·
.~~w~s '"l"flivellii'it ,;east ··:on ' Also ""· on Sunday 'imernoon, around 1l · •.rn:· '$1iliu'dily : two.
Roullt 124 when she lost control of Kathy Salser, · loss prevention subjects were in a vehicle at his
to West Germany aboard special
PRAGUE, Czechoslova.kla
her 1983 Polntlac In a wet curve. officer ill Fisher's Big Wheel, lot and stole an equalizer for the
tUPI)
Hundreds
of
East
"freedom trains" after commuThe car slid across the roadway reported that while she was stereo system. The subjects left
German
refugees
seeking
pasnist
East Germany suddenly
and struck an east bound vehicle working on Sunday, ·someone slit In a 1975 Thunder Bird. A small
sage
to
the
West
defied
thrE'atsof
to grant them exit visas
agreed
driven by Ruth Arnold, Syra- a tire on her vehicle. Apparently, child was with the couple. ·
beatings
and
Intimidation
by
and
let
them
go West.
.
cuse. (u'nold ·reportedly saw the there were no witnesses to the
Henry Lemley, Route 338,
pollee
Monday
and
sought
shelThe
number
of new refugees,
Pingel vehicle and was' trying, incident.
Portland, reported that someter
In
the
West
Germa,Embassy
plus
some
who
had missed the
but failed, to get out of the way.
At 2:45a.m. Sunday, Otis Ray time late Friday night or early
Mrs. Arnold's vehicle was struck VanMatre, of West Columb\11, Saturday morning, a vehicle only hours after thousands of earlier trains was approaching
their co.untrymen were evacu- 400 by Monday morning, wit·
by Pingel's and went oil the W.Va., struck a deer that ran Into went off the roadway and ran
ated
to freedom.
nesses said.
roadway on !he right .
the path of his 1987 Plymouth . . through his yard, barely missing
Compounding the problem
Refuge!ls.
began
enterlllg
the
Syracuse and Racine EMS
a tree.
fenced-off embassy grounds
were actions of Czech pollee to
prevent the refugees from reach·
after dark Sunday and the flow
contin11.ed. throughout the night
lng the haven of the embassy.
and Into Monday morning. Some Armed pollee dragged would-be
scalecl'the 8-foot·hlgh Iron fence emlgran ts off the embassy fence
and In some cases· they . were
surrounding the compound.
They replaced thousands of attacked and beaten with !run-··
East Germans who were ferried
cheons, witnesses said.
wa.
s
withheld,
was
shot
In
name
LQS ANGELES tUPI) - A were booked for misdemeanors,
teenager and a young man died in . Including drunken driving, nar- the head from a passing car as be
cotics and warrants for failure to sat on a curb about 2: 45 a .m.
g~ng-related violence early Sunday despite a weekend pollee appear In courl. Pollee seized 18 ~aturday, Sgt. AI Yarbrough ·
crackdown on gang activity that guns, 16 of them from gang said.·
Pollee arrested a suspect night
members.
s.aw more than 1,000 arrests.
but he was not Immediately
Officers In the anti-gang task
force dubbed ''Opera! ion
Despite the crackdown, gang Identified.
At least six other people were
Hammer," meanwhile, patrolled violence erupted early Sunday In
wounded
In gang-related shoot·
WASHINGTON IUPil - The -thesda, argued that It was
the central and eastern portions other areas of the city.
lngs,
Including
one
man
by
Important for the high court to
Supreme
Court let stand Monday
oft he city and the San Fernando
A teenager was killed In .a
review the case because "Burn·
Valley,. ,making 1,092 arrests shooting near Hollywood about shotgun pellets In a drive-by
a ruling that removed~ tax ~reak
from the all-male Burning Tree
ing Tree epitomizes thousands of
duringft'two-nlght sweep, includ· 4:30a.m., Sgt. John Waters said. shooting witnessed by two
lndmate all-male and all-female
Club In suburban Maryland, a
lng 629 gang members. detective Anti-gang detectives were lnves· officers.
"Operation Hammer" was Inclubs and other groups that have
prestigious country. club whose
Bob Velasquez said.
tlgating the death. Another
membership has Included high
long flourished in this society."
An extra 400 officers from young man. Identified as an troduced In January 1988 by
. other pollee departments were · associate of known gang Pollee Chief Dar:yl Gates to focus . government officials and · The court, however. In a series
members of Congress.
of recent cases has approved
on patrol Friday and .Saturday members, was shot and killed o.n the South Central Los Angeles
where
statistics
neighborhoods
legal efforts to force such clubs to
court
refused
to
hear
the
The
between 6 p.m. ·and 2 a.m.
near Harbor City about the same
showed a 100 percent Increase In
Integrate.
case brought by the club seeking
The task Ioree made 624 time, Sgt. Tona Rosa said. ·
review of rulings by state courts
arrests Saturday night and 345
The first gang-related casualty gang-related slaylngs and a
general
upswing
In
gang
crime.
that It was Ineligible for a tax
The case stems from a March
, people, about 55 percent of those of the weekend occurred less .
The task force arrests gang
write-off because of Its sexually ruling by the Maryland Court of
. booked, were Identified as gang than one hour after the task force
restricted membership.
members, pollee said. There wrapped up Its first night on duty members for both minor violaAppeals. It upheld a 1986 state
Burning Tree, site of one of law proh lbltlng 11ex discriminawere 468 arrests Friday night, when a man was 'silo I and killed . tlons or felonies In an effort to
keep them off the street and cut
President Dwight Eisenhower's tion by country clubs, such as the
Including 288 gang members.
In Pacoima.
'
gang-related
violence
and
crime,
favorite
golf courses In Be·
Burning Tree Club, that enjoy
The majority of the suspects
The 25-year-old victim, whose

a

feel bea.itiful

.Virgin~ woman hurt i,n wreck

Mon. I Fri. til 8 p.M.
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Marietta man cited in crash
A Marietta man was cited In a two-car crash Sunday at 11:10 ·
._ a.m . In Letart Township !JD S.R. 338, about a quarter-mile east of
''" milepost 11, according to the Gallia-Melgs Post of the State
"-~Highway Patrol.
Michael Piotrowski, 19, was cited for notmalntainlngassured
clear distance when his 1986 Chevrolet Spectrum rear-ended a
1985 Toyota SR5 driven by David A. Vanwey Jr. , 31, Rt. 1,
NewpOrt.
·
·
.
Vanwey and Piotrowski were driving west when Vanwey
stopped for traffic ahead of him. Plotrpwskl did not stop In time
to avoid bumper contact with Vanwey's car.

Clwrges filed against Betty Boyd
•

A charge of felonious assault was flied late Friday afternoon
In Meigs County Court ali'alnst Betty Darlene Boyd, 35, of
Pomeroy . Boyd Is charged In connection with tbe Thursday
night shooting of her husband, 45-year~ld Dennis Boyd.
The shooting . Incident took place sometime after 9 p.m.
Thursday Qoutside the Boyd home. on Butternut Avenue
In
.
·

•

which are still not satisfied.
Twelve reglomil alcoholism
c;ounclls are being elimtpated.
Their functions will be added to
counly mental health boards !nat
least 78 of the 88 counties, over
!he objections of alchollsm treatment professionals.
The state budget already contains $30 million for drug and
alcohol recovery services, and
the federal government Is io
provide another $70 million.
The House also plans to pass a
resolution, sponsored by' Rep.
Michael Stlnzlano, 0-'Columbus,
establishing a statewide task
force to look Into· the availability ·
and affordablllty of health care
services and Insurance.
Stlnzlano says both are lack·
lng, and he hopes for a task force
report In two years.
•
The Ho-.its6plans to act on a
bill putting Ohio In line with
federal requirements on how
much a spouse can earn to be
ellgll)le for Medicaid. A spokesman said the bill must be passed
by the end of !he year.

West .Germany has filed a
formal protest with the Czech
government citing International
conventions guaranteeing access
to embassies .
Angered by the rough pollee
· action, West German diplomats
started admitting new refugees
through the front gate and about
a dozen East Germans an hour·
showed up asking to be allowed
ln.
Czech pollee set up checkpoints ··
on Vlasska Street, which leads to
· the embassy, to prevent East
Germans from approaching and
authorities were checking identl·
flcation cards at a square 800 '
yards away.

•

Supreme Court lets stand
ruling on. ·country club ·tax·

SUNDAY

MON.-SAT.

.

More"East Gern1ans leave
for .Prague. (WeF, weekend -·· --·

More than 1,000 arrested over
weekend in Los Angeles crackdown ·

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A Muttimedi• Inc. Newtp1per

Recovery programs
on Ohio House ·agenda

It's Time for·a
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. surplus expected

It's time ·to prepare lawns for 1990

.

Part!)&gt; cloudy to~~~~M. tow
In mid 50s. 'l'voeH&amp;J. part~)'
cloudy.-IIIJ~ Ia mid tills. ·

•.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 2; 1989

r-----~------------~-------,

technicians In doing the best
possible job In !heir day-to-day
application of engineering and
·designing of soli and water
conse·r vatlon practices.
Anyone In need of Information
concerning specific soli · and
water conservation related
needs and problems Is encour·
aged to contact Windon at his
office, 221 West Second St.,
Pomeroy.
·

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a1

e
Vol.40. No.1 03
coeyrlghttd 1988

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Here Larry Vance, left, chief of the Division, and
Joe Branco, State Conversatlonlst, made the
presentlon at a banquet held at the conclusion of
the week's training session.

"

Super Louo

..

Meigs County Agent's Corner

Ro~te

6643

Page 4

· structurally large, physically
sound, In good.._health and that
have good growth potential
based on perfoqnance records .
!rpm production testing;
.
3) Save more heifers at wean· ·
lng than actually needed for
replacements so the slow grow. lng heifers can be culled before
breeding, and those falling to
conceive during a short breeding
season can be culled;
4) Save only those heifers that
conceive
during a 30-45 day
nltrogen should be · In a· slow highly dependent upon proper
·· By John Rice
breeding season beginning a heat
release form. On most fertilizer heifer development.
cycle before the mature cows.
labels
this fracllon Is referred to
POMEROY - Late SummeHeifers developed properly
Pregnancy check 60 days after
r/ Early Fall Lawn Fertilizations as non-soluble nitrogen, slow from weaning to breeding are
breeding
and cull the open
·- As we approach the first part rel.ease nitrogen, sulfur ci&gt;ated more apt to conceive early as · heifers. Next week we wUI talk
·of October, many of you may urea, etc.
yearlings and calve early during
about nutnltlon and how to have
The third consideration· Is to their first calving season.
want to consider fertilizing your
these heifers ready to breed at 15
apply a complete fertUizer. A
lawn.
They will continue to calve
months of age.
: · Fallis an excellent tlmeofyear complete fertilizer, In addition to early and wean heavier calves
:to fertilize your lawl) to improve nitrogen, will also contain pi!Os- through subsequent calf crops
phorus and potassium. If a soli making them · more' productive
11. To maximize the quality and
J:!auty of your law11 two applk:a· test Indicates deficient levels of lifetime producers.
trrms ef ll!rtDizer should be made an.y primary or secondary nut·
Goals for developing heifers
during the September-November rlents, corrective application of should be: 1) Toreachpubertyby
these elements should be made. 12 to 14 months of agE&gt;; 2) To have
period. The first application
should be applied now. Be aware Most Ohio soUs have adequate a. high percent conceiving early
levels of the necessary elements. In the breeding season and; 3) To
of three Important consideraThese lawns should receive be large enough at first calving
tions In regards to this first
maintenance fertilizer deliver· . time to minimize calving
application. First is nitrogen
lng rhe nutrients In a ratio of dlfflcu lty.
rate.
3:1:2 (I.e. 15-5-10) to 5:1:2 (I.e.
This fertilization should deTo achieve these goals, proper
liver approximately 1.0 lb. or· 25-5·10) . . More later on lawn selection and feeding are neces·
actual nitrogen per 1000 .sq. ft. ,lertUizatlon.
sary. The .following factors
Beef - Selection and Nutrition should be considered when seTherefore. a fertilizer containing
m nitrogen should be applied at - Keep to Proper Helfer Devel- lecting heifers at weaning time:
tbe rate of 5.0 lbs. per 1000 sq. ft. opment- A productive commer1) Select the largest and oldest
The second consideration ln- cial cow herd - Selection and heifers because they-wUI usually •
. volves the availability / release Nutrition - Keys to Proper reach puberty earliest and. are
characteristics of the nitrogen Helfer Development - A produc- usually from the earlier calving
component. Ideally, 30-500: of the tive commercial cow herd Is and/or heavier milking cows:

Upper

Pick-3
947
Pick-4
'

•

POMEROY - Blair WIDdc)n,
district
technician for the Meigs
RIO GRANDI!: STUDENT AWARDED - ne Society of
SoU
and
Water Conservation
· Mu..lldurinc .Enctneen, Mid-Ohio Valley Cbpter Ne, a~.
recently
completed an
Dlsirlct,
recntly presented an award to Joseph C. Relheld, center, a
advanced
course
for soU and
stwlellt at the University of Rio Graade, for outslalidlq Ia his
water
conservation
technicians
nut,lw, maaufachB'IIICiechnoloCY· F1ankln1 Relheld are Dr. Ray
held
at
The
Ohio
State
University
•na.left, vice president lor academic affairs at Rio Grand~, a8d
Agricultural
Technician
InstiTlraallly sexton, assistant professor of Industrial technology at
tute,
Wooster.
Ollie Ualverslty.
He received training In conservation and animal waste management plannlrig. In addition he
gained Information on the role of
the teclinlclan in working wfth
people to get conservation practiRIO 'GRANDE - A student no logy from RioGrandelasrMay ces on the land ..
and Is currently pursuing his
Intensive classroom and field
majoring in manu!act urlng tech·
activities
centered on use of soU
bachelor's
degree
at
the
nology at the University of Rio
university.
surveys,
principles
of planning, .
Grande was one of three scholars
woodland
and
windbreak
Theaward
was
presented
to
plan·
to receive awards from the
Rei held on behalf of the society ning, wildlife planning and envlr·
Society of Manufacturing Eng!·
neers, Mid-Ohio Valley Chapter by Timothy Se&lt;ton, assistant onmental concerns.- agronomic
planning and use of land, types of
No. 323, at Its recent meeting In professor of industrial lechnol·
ogy at Ohio University. Present tillage residue management and
Rio Grande.
Joseph C. Reiheld, son of for the meeting were faculty and
their effects on erosion, fertilizer
William P. and Carolle A. Rei· administrators from Rio and pesticide- recommendation,
water quality, land disposal of
held of Danville, Ohio, was Grande, OU arid .Shawnee State,
presented the award for demon· along with rep!'l'sentatives of
municlpl!.l sludge, and water
stratlng outstanding work In his manufacturing firms from Galli·
rights and drainage laws.
polis and A!hens. ·
field .
Design and coitstruclion probThis Is !he stxtli year that the
The student selection Is made lems associated ~th waterways,
by the staff from the various eml)ankments, and manure star·
awards have been offered to a
selected studenl from ·Rio colleges and is based on attitude,
age facilities were also covered.
achievement,
grade
point
aver.
Grande, Ohio Unlver~ity and
The technician short course
a·ge and financial ' need. Each
Washington Technica!'fCollege.
was sponsored by the Ohio
Federation of Soli and Water
An award to a student from student received a cash award
Shawnee State University is to be !tlong with the scholastic Conservation Districts In cooperrecognition.
ation with the USDA SoU Conserpresented later.
The local chapter oft)!e Societ-y
vation Service, Division of Soil
and .. Water Conservation . .Ohio
Relheld is a 1987 graduate of of Manufacturing Engineers,
Department of -Natural Resour- ·
Danville High School and the like its naiional organization,
ces, and the Ohio State Unlver·
Knox County Joint Vocational supportsthe training and retrain·
slty Agricultural Technical Instl·
School. He received his associate ing of - Individuals in various
of
manufacturing.
'
f
ields
lute
as a means of assisting
degree In manufacturing rech·

Ohio Lottery

Browns,
Bengals
triumph

Continued on page 3

Construction
spending up
-in August

state property tax breaks . ·
The tax bre'aks were given to
country clubs beglnlng In 1965 In
an effort !o preserve open ~paces
In _rapidly urbanizing areas of
Maryland. The statute was designed to relieve, hi part, the
financial pressure on country
clubs to sell out to developers.
The 1986 law Included a provi;
slon that allowed clubs to bar
women from using their golf
courses at certain times or on
certain days, allowing Maryland
clubs such as Burning. Tree topractice what lawyers called -~
"periodic discr imination."

-Heck's emerges from bankruptcy

WA:OHINGTON (UPI)- New
construction spending .rose a
strong 1.8 percent In August to a
seasonally adjusted annual rate
of $421.8 ,bllllon, booste~ by gains
In public and private nonresidential building, the Com·
merce Department said Monday.
The Increase follows a revised
0.6 percent drop In new construe·
lion In July when II stood at an
annual rate of $414.5 billion.
OVerall private . construction
rose $3 billion t.o an annuaf rate of
$335.8 biUion .during August
non-residential building, which
Includes such construction as
factories, office building and
hospitals, climbed from an annual rate of $97.5 biUioJIIn JUQ'·_to
a rate of $100.3 billion In August.

. NITRO, ·W.Va. IUPil -The
Isaac 'said the name change
president of Heck's Inc. said was made "because It descrlb!!s
Saturday the seven-state disexactly what we will be doingcount store chain has a new life offering 10 percent off everything
now that It has emerged from 2\2
id'the store every day to our club
member customers."
years · or · bankrt tcy
proceedings.
· ,
He said . the chaoge, which
The chain finalized It' ecov- Involves the purchase of annual
. ery last week when It ob ned an
memberships to quality to shop
$8 million line of credit frotn the Ill the stores, has already been
New York firm of f!,osenthal and
!n)pl~mented· In about half the
·. Rosenthal.
company's outlets.
While. being supervised by the
During the course of the
federal bankruptcy court, the bankruptcy proceedings, Heck's
company sold or closed more
management' Implemented new
than two-third&amp; of Its outlets,
merchandlatng, marketlag and
leavlllg It with 55 stores. The
per11011nel .policies to secure the
closings trimmed Heck's work·
company's foot!tl&amp; 1n the dis·
force by about 3,000 emplOyees,
count store Industry, .
.leaving the company with about
The reorganization also In·
2,500 workers.
· eluded a plan. that will give the
Heck's President John Isaac ' company's creditors 90 percent
said the remaining stores In the
ofthe stock In the firm. Hallwood
, chain Will now be known as Take Group, which served as a flnan·.
10 Dlscount'Club stores.

as .

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clal consultant for Hec~ ' s during
the bankruptcy, now owns 15
percent of the company and will
occupy three of 11 seats on Its
board.
"We've worked long and hard
to breathe new lite Into the
company," Isaac said. "Great
deal of credit Is due a lot of
people, but much of It to Heck's
as'soclates ,
"Those associates are the
people who had .the most to lose,
but they showed the greatest
amount of falth In the company's
abiUty to em':rge )"lilt greater
vitality .and strength than ever
before," Isaac said.
The company, which will continue to be know,. as Jleck' s;
operates stores In West Vlrglllla,
Kentucky, Maryland, Ohio, Pen-'
nsylvanla, . Tennessee and
VIrginia.

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Monday, October 2. 1989
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nunentary
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The Daily ·Sentinel
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Page-2-The Daily ~enti~

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Pomeroy, Oldo

Sen. BUI Bradley, D·N.J ., SJ!d
Rep. Tom McMillen, D·Md., are
both former basketball stars and
~~
Rhodes scholars and they are
ts:m~ rn.... .....
-.-•....,.c::~......
both
smart enough to recognize
qsv
three-point opportunities Wilen
' .
they see them. How else to
ROBERT L. Wll'lGE'l'l'
the easy shots they've
'
explain
Pulllillher
been taking at college sports
recently?
PAT WJifl'EHEAD
CHARLENE BOEFUCH
Bradley, a futufe presidential
General Manager ·
Assistant
candidate, Introduced "The
. Publlllller/
. ControUer
Student-Athlete Right to Know
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are wetcoriie. n 07 ollollld be teutlula 111
Act,' • which would force colleges
wonlo lone. AD letters are subject to edltfllc Uld muol be sip.. wlih
and universities to file public
name, address and leleplloae IIIUIIbeT. No
letlen wW be pabreports of their graduation rates.
llohed. Leiters llhoutd be tn II'J04IIallle, --~ ...
perooDII~
" Single-minded devotion to at·
lies.
• ··
hletlcs among our nation's
1..----------~--~-----~------',, schools and colleges can lead to
exploitation and abuse of the
student athletes," said Bradley.
He believes recruits ought to.
have some way of fll\dlng out
which schools they are ·least
likely to get degrees from before
they chose one.
' McMillen, wbosomesaywould
By LEE LEONA,RD
UPI Slatello1184! Reporter
CqJ.UMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -Autumn has just begun, but there's a
heavy snow lalllng -and it 's not the white, wintry kind.
•
It's a snow job by the government about what 's being done In the
area of education .._
,
. .
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Nobody's immt~ne. The news media, In their mlmltable pack
journalism style, have made education the "story of the month" and
will soon allow It' to crawl back Into its cave for an·other 10 years.
About 10 months ago, Gov. Richard Celeste came out with Ills plan .'
to. tackle the education problem. It Involved a 1 percent Income tax.
TWo-thirds of the resulting $1 .84 billion was for programs for the
disadvantaged. and new initiatives In primary and secondary
education. Tbe rest was for colleges and universities.
Celeste also deviSed a method of accountablllty for spending the
money and for ensuring good performance by teachers. administrators and students.
Ohio Senate Republicans decided schools could be upgraded In
many ways that didn't cost money. They ended up sharing credit wtth
the governor for Senate Bill 140. which takes effect next week. Net
cost: $90 m.lllion, or about 5 percent of what' Celeste wanted.
Along comes President Bush and calls a "summit" meeting of the
nation's governors:
Celeste, after spending most of this year trying to orchestrate
publicity for his education plan, expresses concern that the president
Is going to make a "media event" out of the summit meeting.
Ohio Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cinclnnatl, author .of
Senate Blll140, warns Celeste not to ''bash" the president at the same
tim~o&gt; the governor wants bipartisan cooperation in Ohio.
Now the education summit Is over, and Celeste concedes Bush was
serious after all. The governor Is proud that most or what . the
governors and the Bush admln_tstratlon recomme~ed were already
in Senate Bllll40.
.
" We've got a jump on them In Ohio ••and !Intend to keep It that
way. " he said.
But only half the problem Is.-being tackled. Ohio's plan completely
ignored the need to revise the dlstrlbutlon of state aid to school
districts, an(l indeed to develop a new system for financing education
- one that Is not dependent on the whims of voter approval of r.eal
estatl! taxes.
Celeste. after beallng the drum~ for the 1 percent Income tax all
those months, was strangely silent about the Issue ot money last
week.
.
·'The resource issue is virtually irrelevant." he said In answer to a
reponer's quesllon. "We' re going to pay for education one.wayorthe
other."
Celeste said he does not favor raising federal taxes to pay for
schools. He ' s also con.lident he heard a new variation of Bush's "read
my lips, no new taxes" theme.
.
George Bush and the DemoThe governor pulled a piece of paper !rom his pocket and quoted the cratlc
Congress went eyeball-topresident from the summi.t meeting: •'If taxes have to be raised , they eyeball on the Issue of taxes, and
ought to be raised at the state and local level."
now tbe Democrats have blinked.
In deciding to battle a revenueIncreasing reduction In the capt· ·
tal gains tax by offering a
substitute plan· that would raise
the top Income tax rate, the
By United Press lnternallonal
House
Democratic leadership
Today Is Monday, Oct. 2, the 275th day of 1989 with 90 to follow.
has
accepted
whatever onus may
The moon is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
be
thought
to
accrue to the first
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
party
that
calls
for a tax
.
The evening stars are Venus and Saturn.
Increase.
Those born on this date are under the sign· of Libra. They Include
To be sure, It would apply only
England' s King Richard 1)1 In 1452; Nat Turner, a black slav~ and
to
' 'tbe rich." Voters may not
leader of the only effective and sustained U.S. sla'!e revolt, In 1800;
to a tax that won't (In
object
German statesman Paul von Hlndenburg In 1847; French military
theaory) affect them person·
comll)ander Ferdinand Foch In 1851; Indian independence leader
nally . But once the camel's nose
Mohand as Gandhi, c ailed Mahatma Gandhi, In 1869; comedians
get
Into. the tent, the whole beast
Groucho Marx and Bud Abbott, both in 1895; British novellst.G raham
Is
shortly.
Greene I• 1904 (age 85); and actor and rock 'n' roll singer Sting
In pledging "no new taxes"
(Gordon Sumner) In 1951 (age 38).
during last year's campaign In a
corner. Dukaklshadpledgedthat
' On this date in history:
In 17!10. British spy Maj. John·Andre was eonvlcted in connection he would Increase taxes "only as
with Benedict Arnold' s treason and was hanged In Tappan; N.Y.
In 1950. the "Peanuts" comic strip by Charles M. Schulz was
published for the first time.
In 1968, U.S. Supreme Coufl Justice Abe Fortas withdrew bls
nomination as chief justice. Six months later, he resigned from the
PETRODVORETS, U.S.S.R.
court, admltdng be had made a fllJ,Ilnclal deal with the Louis Wolfson ....,_The mpst significant ldeologl·
Foundation.
cal battle In the Soviet Unlo_n

like to represent a. constituency
larger thian Maryland's 4th Dis·
trlct, Is sponsoring an lde.ntlcal
bill in the Houle. Their arguments gained credence recently
.when the General Accounting
Office released a study showing
that football and buketball play·
ers at major Institutions haven't
been · graduating at Impressive
rates.
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Are college sportS a no-lose game?

. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE !IIEIGS-MASON ABBA

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PQ1'1'1611 oy-Middleport. Ohio
~onday. Octoba' 2. 1989

Bradley · and McMillen are
well-Intentioned lawmakers, and
there Is nothing wrong with their
proPose~~ legislation. Stlll. thewhole matter makes me queasy.
I can't shake the feeling that they
are running up points ...:. nice;
easy, safe political points. For
several years now, I have ·been
leaning to · the view that the
alleged "corruption" of college
sports Is largely a phony J,ssue
kept alive by dogooders and
wowsers and people who write
and promote books about big·

-.101

Politicians try ·
to score points ··

Joseph Spear

time basketball coaches.
.,.T his attitude .gets me Into all
·sorts of trouble with Intellectual .
frtends who ·view every dollar - come from disad~antaged
spent on a game as a dollar not areas with poor scl!ool systems "
spent on a library. I usually skip and . are .not qualified. Well1
tut-tut my antagonists, then they
the routine observations shouldn'
t be In college.
sports are healthy substitutes for
"What
. wilu·ld these young
combat and cocaine ....: and get
women
and
men be doing If they
r ight to the nitty-gritty. "Tell
weren't
participating
In Intercolme " I ask ' "who
are the
.
legiate
a
thletlcs?
Reading
Plato
victims?"
and
studying
math
or
going
to a
I have never gotten a satisfying
trade
school?
Maybe
some
uf ,
answer to that quesllon. Who are.
them
would,
but
surely
many
of
the victims?
them
would
not.
What
Is
so
Not fans and supporters, obmisguided, so corrupting about
viously. They. take pride In and
these girted athletes In
having
get . pleasure from their teams.
. Not the unlversllles, certainly. · our midst for a while?"
•
They get millions of dollars
If Bradley and McMlllen ha·
worth of publicity and millions of
ven'
t already read it; I recom·
dollars worth or public lnstltu·
mend Dr. Gerberding's analysis
. tlons, higher taxes.
Sometimes, none of this helps. to them~Pondering It Is probably
Some jocks are not especially not as easy as popping treys, but
Interested In academics. Some • they · can handle it. They
particularly basketball players graduated. ·

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yea; !" was their c'!.
Meanwhlle, Bush s refusal had
had another effect: It ratified
and prolonged the slrJ~tegy of
Ronald Reagan, which w;ts \o
battle Increases lnfederalexpen·
ditures by ~lng Congress on
short rations, financially speak·
lng. To vary the metaphor, you
The Democrats Insisted, and can't play poker without chips,
no doubt believed, that J;lush was and tax revenues are the poker
simply lying: that he would be · chips of politics.
·
compelled to ask for new taxes.
The Democrats, · who are no
So, as 1989 opened, they settled · fools, reacted with a strategy
down to enjoy thecomlngRepub- that made up In sheer cynicism
ltcan double-cross of the electo- whatlt lacked In objective merit:
rate. But when Budget Director Whenever President Bush called
Richard Darman bad completed for 11fW expenditures to meet
his negotiations with Congress pressing problems, the Demoover the fiscal 1990 budget, It . crats would call for bigger ones
called - sure enough - for no and let Mr. Bush worry about
new taxes. The Democrats swore where the money would come
that It was a 'trtck, and anyway from.
that Bush couldn't possibly perThus, the president's child·
form It twice. "Wait tlll next care proposal was countered by a

today Is being foUght between
Mikhail Gorbacliev and the ghost
of Yilslf Vlssarlonovlcll Djuas the devil Incarnate, the most
-------:--:-~,---------r---------r---------,
' ,.
bloodthirsty leader In recorded
Public NOtice ~
human history. Hitler gets
Public N~ce
Public N atlce
Public Natice.
marks for speed and creativity,
but Stalin wins the body count
STATEMENT OF
Gr_,... 8. C. 29102.
C.rolino Notlonol Bonk. 01
G. Total: I,IIQO.
through sheer endurance.
OWNERSHIP.
7. Stod&amp;haldots -*'II 1 TruotooorCo·TRI-.142e.. ' Actuol No. Copieo of Sin··
Gorbachev bas conjured up the
MANAGEMENT
-ormoreof___ Mllin St., Columblo. S.C. g1a to- Publlohocl N-oot
real Stalingels t, not the mythical
AND
ou-ldlolg:c.doiCo.. P. O. 21226.
to l'lllngDote:
CIRCULATION
20. a.. oint Or- lila..
8. Portiol hnltlng - · in
10. Exiont Md Neture of slatesman who has been serVed
1. T•le ofPubli . . ion: Tho N.Y.. N.Y. 10274; PNilp J . •-of1-of101111r&gt;- Circulation.
up to Sovlels since be died In 1953.
Dei1V Slntintl. Publi. .iOn Donohue, Tru- VA 210 S. dl .. tldn- Tho Ch- - A. Total No. CnpMi And with the reality comes a
No. 1.41-!NIO.
- · ~e. ~ I. "-llonk.N.w.Ytl'kN . Y. Printod:B,IOO.
national gullt. Gorbacbev's de:
2. o.to of ~g: 0&lt;:1- 2. 10101: L Howto. P.O.
A - No. Copleo Eoch 8. Plid Circulation.
1981.
14011, GiW:Utlltf. S.C. to- During ,_.tina 12
1. let• Thnlugh ONltio Slallntzatlon has mlllloris of
3. Fr-C'f of 1 - ·29141; ~ A. Jalor. Jr., Mnntt.:
ond C1111t.o. Btrwt Vliildoro
wonderlncl! they or their
Doll¥ Mondor"""""" Flldalr. 111 I , . _ lit., O..Wia · 10. E_.,dn-ofCir· ond Cnunt• Ill•: 4,122. Soviets
A. No. of 1-• l'ldihod S.C. 29111; Darathr p, ,._. culodan.
2. MoH .Bulltcrlptlono: •pees tors survived because they
llnnualr: 286
..., I A.F. .....~ T A. Ttllltl No, Copos Prlniod: 3tl.
knuckled under to a maniac.
B. Annual Subecrlptlon Undoi Wttt of Rot-C."-- 1,100.
C. Total Pold Circulation;
People like Nina Andreyeva.
Prlco: e?Z.BO Homo Dollv· C/0 NCNII, Baa 2307, CalB. Pold Clralt•ton:
8.021.
to soothe the pain by perpetry
erod.
.
S.C. 21202; Gone1.............. Ooofh
D. Froo Dlotrlloutlon By
tuating
the myth. ,Andreyeva II a
4. LoMlon of-Oflco ....,. L. - - . 2111 a.- Clriln. . _ Vendors Molt co..ltror OINt Muno.
ofPuiiiMlon: 111.CaurtSt., !lcf., Oiw..... S.C.=21801&lt; •dCou-IMI:4.127.
l.npllo. c.npi-llwy neo-Stalinlst chemistry teacher
PDm•"'~IIND, MoicP C~ - · F . . . _ .
8. Molt lullttcrlptlono: ond Ot'- F- CGpleo: 12. llvlng In Petrodvorets near Le41711.
··-. tr""'-llildlttlltwll
. ....t32.
·
E. Totol
otot-.,: ningrad. Fed up to her .eyeballs
I . Loa- of the Hood- H. "'"- Jr.,
C. TOIII Pofcl · ~ : 1,073.
wtth talk of an evll Stalin. she put
_ . . . t l ' - . . . . ..- -thewlofR!'w.':::! 1,0811.
F. C0D1w NOIDlltrlloutod:
Oflliaoftlte--:111 P. 0 . Baa 10207,
D. FrwDiobl~llutll'fMel
1. Ofloo U.. t..11 Owr. pen to paper and wrote a detente
Caurt .... .....,, OHn. •. c. 21103: lite ...., It c.ntor ..
u..--.......... ,..., of his good points. CoDJiderin&amp;
M1ft11 CGuMy 41711.
Ute A - 0 1 laoioty of , _ ~~::~":'= ML;. end Printlna: 221.
what aile had to work with, the
1. -lw.llillltrt L. - . the U.S., 7871evtnthA.... Ollw Frw
: ~2. I(IIUml fiom ~
esuy
was lOIIIIIi - a full pace In
f1011, 1 1 •
0111o 48771. Yorll, N. Y. 10011;
E. Tt1112- Dllt,.._: . Agenlo: ZOZ.
the conservative new1paper So.._..... Ntor: ~ 21nty I Co-. 440 I. La...• 1.011.
G. Tot.:: l.tiOO.
:?la•a ,_,._, Ohio It_, Cll'ugo. I. 10101;
F. Copilt Nal Dillrtbutld:
I c.tlfy thet the vletskays Rosslya publllbed by
...,.,
...... A MGCIM•. ......
1 , Dffleo Ule t..fl Owr. · !lillltl 11i112e "' 1M - ·
tbe 'Communist Party Central
01111 YIIOI' -lillie Co., Copllol M • • - t Md Unaoaaultlad. lpolod After o r e - Md oarnpl«e.
Committee.
111 ' c-t II.. ""'""'Y· ICM flirt--. 111~"""" Prinfinl: 102.
R - W!ngon,
· Andre)"eva decried peres·
Olllo, -knllla !ftc:.. 301 I. of the A,...icM,
Vorl&amp;,
2. lfeturne flom
l'ubtlo..,
M1f!1 II.. P. 0. Baa 1118, N. Y. 1003e. The Iouth A?llftls: 202.
j10J 2
.
troika as a black bole of moral

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... - ........... ·•·'t· ..... ., .... _.- __ ,_ . ..,. ......... .....

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William Rusher
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far costlier Democratic package.
When he went on national televl·
slon io aske for billions more for
the war on drugs, Sen. Joseph '
Blden followed him within min· ;
utes to complain thai Mr. Bush's ~
plan was miserly and that still. •
more billions were needed. Even !
the·presldent' s request for tens of ;
millions of dollars to help Poland
and Hungary shirt to sounder
economic policies was met by
Democratic complaints that we
should be giving them many
mllllons more.
The House Democrats, or theSenate, may well reverse the
House leadership's call for a tax
Increase. But the spell bas been
broken - and the Democrats
broke 11.

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Jack Anderson and DaleYan Atta
laxity and rocll 'n' roll. She nating a class of rich farmers
, yearned for thi! ·stern kind of known as "kulaks." He forced
fathering sbt: saw In Stalin.
them to c()llectlvlze their farms
Our sources believe that Gor·
and then starved them to death.
bacllev's conservative . nemesis through a punitive famine. He
Ylgor Llgacbev did some heavy t:nade a saint of a teen-ager,
editing·on lhe essay and saw to It : Pavlik Morozov, who snitched on
that tbeplece, "!Cannot Forsake his peasant father, and was later
Principles," was publiJIIed while murdered by family members.
Gorbachev was away In YugoslaUnder Gorbachev, Morozov Is
via on March 13, 1988.
not a boy hero, but a tragic,
· The essay Is stU! reverberat·
warped figure.
lng. The U.S. ambassador to
At least 5 million people were
Moscow Jack Matlock told us
executed or died In prison camps
that the repercussions were
as part or Stalin's great purge
inevitable. is Stalin a vlllaln or
that reached Its peak' before the
Isn't be? And If he Is, Matlock
Wij,r. AlwayS' paranoid, Stalin
said Soviets are ·asklilg them· . deported and killed anyone who
selves; "What did I spend my . looked at him crossways. Some 2
whole life for?"
to 3 million victims were simple
Russians who were sentenced to
Andr~eva bad given a voice to ' labor camps because they
their pain. But she left out some - showed up to work late . or
detalll about the dear father
violated other bizarre labor laws.
figure. At lealt 20 mUllan people
Then the war gave Stalin more
were killed by Stalin between
excuses to kill. He stupidly allied
1126 and 1939. Another 20 mllllon,
himself with Hitler, untll the
maybe as many aa 30 mllUon, . Fuehrer Invaded the Soviet Undied during World War II beIon, Stalin was not reAdy for a
cause of Stalin's foolish allian- .war with Germany. He had
ces, and m01t of their deaths
already kll)ed or Imprisoned
were avoidable.
·
·
35,000 of his· officers. His bun· &lt;'
Stalin busied himself before cling battle plans cost millions of
the war systematically ·e xterml·
lives.

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The Meigs Local School DistriCt is making application to the
State Department of Education, Dlv.lslon of Educational
Services for federal fun available through the Augustus F .
Hawkins-Robert T.
afford Elem~ntary and Secondary
School Improvement
en ent of 1988, PL 100-297 which
Includes t;:hapter 2..
Tile application and all related documents are available for
Inspection and comments to parents and the general public .
Persons Interested in viewing or discussing the appllcatlon
should contact Wendy Halar, Federal PrOgrams Coordinator,
Salisbury Elementary School, '41675 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy.
45769, Phone, 992-3404.

Meig,; Countians are reminded that registration to vote In the
upcoming general election, Nov. 7, closes on Tuesday, Oct. 10.
According to Ohio Secretary of State Sherrod Brown If you
have changed your name or If you have moved since the last
election, you have to update your regis !ration.
That can be done at the Meigs County Board of Elections
office, 108 Mechanic St., Pomeroy, during regular hours
weekdays, or on Saturday, Oct. 7. from &amp; a.m . to noon or on
Tuesday, Oct. 10, the final day tor updating Information. any
time from 9 a .m. to 9 p.m .
·
.
Besides the many. local races and Issues, there also wlll be a
statewide vote on .a proposed constitutional amendment on
filling a vacancy in the lieutenant governor's o~flce.
.
.

State Representative Mary Abel (D-Athens) Is urging all high
school students who have aq Interest In creative writing to
participate In the 1990 Lucille Loy Kuck Ohioana Awards for
Excellence In Creative Writing. Abel said that creative writing
Is an important art form that allows students to communicate
their Insights and feelings.
·
The purpose of the Lucllle I,.oy Klick Oh1oana ·Award Is to
recognize and encourage literary talent and effort. An entry can
elther ·be written form of prose or poetry. ,
The Ohloana Uterary Association and the Qhio Council of
Teachers of Lariguage Arts with a gift ·from the E .R. Kuck
Foundation Is sponsoring the Award. Each high school In Ohio
wlll be receiving a brochure ·outlinlng the requirements for
partlclpatfon In the contest.
The contest Is open to all students I? grades 9 through 12.

Hospital news
Koenig, M.lddleport; Ruth Ar·
nold, Syracuse.
Sunday discharges - Travis
ROseberry, Jljnice Baker.

\Teterans Memorial
Saturday admissions mas Frye. Middleport•
Saturday dlscha!ges cis Lewis , Lloyd Johnson,
Page.
Sunday admissions Genhelmer, Pomeroyp;

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Tho·
FranMary
Rose
Allee

By Unlled Pres• lnlerQIUion!d
Thurtl!erstorms and heavy rain.
swept through the .SOuth and
Mid-Atlantic s(l!tes early Mon- ·
day while parts of Montana
br aced fo r nearly 4, Inches of
snpw and freezing temperatures.
The National Weather Service
posted flash flood warnings In
portions of VIrginia and the
Shenandoah Valley as a slow
moving low pressure system
over eastern Ten11essee .con·
tlnued to pump moist tropical air
from the Gulf of Mexico Into the
Mid Atlantic states.
·
The system caused widespread
rain from New Jersey to Mary.
land, across VIrginia and Into the
Carolinas and through Georgia
and Tennessee. Flash flood
watches were in effect for
Georgia, the Carolinas and Ten·
nessee and a tornado watch

remlined In central and easlern·
South Carolina, the NWS said.
A cold front from the West was •
expected to sweep acr01s the
Northeast and reach the Atlantic
Ocean, forecasters satd, and a
high pressure system over the
Midwest will push dry alr.lnto the
region.
Cloudy skies prevailed In New
England early Monday, and
forecasters predicted a steady,
soaking rain by daybreaj[. Over·
night temperatures ranged from
48 ·tn Concord, N.H., to 54 tn·
Bt.stonas thereglOI)preparedfor
as much as an lqch oj rain
moving from New York.
·
A sharp cold front edging
'across western Mlnnesoia and
the'PlalnsearlyMondaybrought
an end to the summer-like
weather that graced the area
with temperatures In the 80s one

By Unlied Press lillernatlonal
Soulll Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy . Low
near 50. Winds northwest 10 to 20
mph. TUesday, partly · cloudy.
High In the mid eos.
Elltended Forecast Wednesday through Friday

Fair Wednesday and Thursday
and a chance of rain Friday.
Highs will be In the mid 50s to
near eo Wednesday and In the eos
Thu·rsday 'and Friday+ Lows will
be In the 30s Wednesday and In
the 40s Thursday and Friday:

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One Month ........................ ......... $6.10 ,.
One Year ... .............................. $72.80

BINOLECOPY

raJCE

•

Dolly ............. ................. ~ ... 25 Cents
SublcrJberl notdeolrtlllltqpoy tho oar·

rler may remtt In advuce direct to

1

The DaUy Sentlael oil a 3,1cr12 111011111
' b..II. Credltwllbe,Svencam.eedl .
week.

On
Delta
.• ~
A.l
1r 1nes , DELTA

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arms wbere bome carrier aervloe IIi
avallable.

ssool
CASH

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Recei.ve a FRE~ Kodak Camera
Just For Test Driving Kodak
A New Cutlass Supreme .
·.

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1616 USTEIN AVENUE
GALLiPOLIS, OH• ...,;. (6141 446-3672

u w..a~..~-~..... ?....at.ll

21Weella .................................. Nl.ll

52Weea .................................. m.fll
j

446 4524

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. ASK FOR
BRIAN OR DAVE
AD DEADUNE
OCTOBER 6, 1989

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SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

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~t4re, ifo~l(ttJif e~~to~Mq~

21W.-.................................. SII.•
IIW- .................................. 171.•

Am Electric Power ............. 30% • ·
AT&amp;T .. ....... ... ... .. ....... ... ...... 43)'a
Ashland Oil ........................ 40~
Bob Evans ... ..... ..... .. .... .... .. .l4%
Charming Shoppes ..............14)'a
City Holding Co ................... 15
Federal Mogul. ..... ._ ............ 23'n
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................52%
Heck's ................................... '&gt;S
Key Centurion ......... .: ........ .15'n
Lands: End .. ........... .......... ..27)'a
Limited Inc ......... ...............38%
Multimedia Inc ............: .... 100'n
R.ax Restaurants .................. 2~
Robbins &amp; Myers .......... .. ..... 15
Sboney's Inc ...................... .11•4
Wendy's lnt1 ...... .... .......... .... 5%
Worthington lnd .................23%

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...... Ceoll7 SIUI
U W --..................................

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:40 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ell18 A Loewi

PROVEMENT
EDITION
IN IHE
DAILY SENTINEL
FRIDAY
GOOBER 13, -1989
992-2156

OR

•a,., dtj sen.. 11y Dtlta in the tonti11111tal UJ.

No ltljloorlptlcins by 111111 p«mlttal Ia

WINTER

HO

733 1blrd Avenue.

New York. New.York 10017.

•

Stocks·

AND

To.meel Tuesday
l11Jmeroy Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star, wlll meet at
7: 30 Tuesday night at the Chester

Get 2 Round- Trip Tickets

·

Dr. Rizer honored

the six-number sequence that
would have led to a $100,000 top
prize. The ofder In the Kicker is
688149.
.
There were six players that
have the first' five numbe~s
correctly chosen tor $5,000, 77 .
tickets with .the first four
numbers for $1.000, 806 with the
first three numbers for $100, and
8,132 with the first two numbers
for $10.
·
.
Total S~per Lotto sales were .
$5,632,037- and the prize payout
will be $195,575. In the Kicker.
sales were $896;111 and lbe priU&gt;
payout will be $268.920.
~

FAlL

throogll Friday, .Ill Cour1 St., PI&gt;
meroy. Ohio. by the Ohio VaU~ Pub·
llshlnl Comt'lny/Miihlmedla, lne,
Pomerw. Ohio 45789, Ph. !82·21M !le·
·cond cluo pollage pold at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

8UBICIIIPTION IIATIIil
.
. , Carrier ........ - ·
One Week .. .......... .............. .... , .. ,.$1.40

'

CLEVELANO IUPI) -No one
selected all six numbers for
Saturday's $9 million Ohio Super
Lotto'·drawtng, wh.lch allows the
lackpot to roll again Wednesday
· for a $12 mllllon prize.
The numbers were 1Q,17,19,26,
40, and 42, and there were 149
tickets matching five of the
. numbers for $1,000, and 8,421
with tour for $75 each.
Players In the Kicker game
were ·unsuccessful In selecting

___\or-Meigs announcements._-___

.

POSTMAS'rEft: Send oddrell dl•tl!l
to The DallY Sentlllol. Ill Coon St.,

No one claims
. top Super Lotto prize

.

, Publtshed every afternoon, Monday

OhiO Newspa:r, AMoc:lltlolt. NatiOnal
Advertlllnl
re~eotaUve, Braaham

·-··- ·-. .

day earlier.
caused ' mixed rain and snow .
The · merc ury d ropped to 37 showers In Montana and In tile
degrees In Bismarck, N.D. dur- Wyoming mountains as well as
Ing the early morning hours , rain In Wash ington, Idaho and
while readings In the ·40s were Oregon.
rePQrted In Minnesota and South
Scattered .rain and 1now were
Dakota, the NWS said.
expected. to fall both east and
The cold front was expected to . west or the Continental Divide
c1.1t across, Nebraska, Wisconsin Sunday and Monday .
and Iowa, forecasters said ..
Cloudy skies brought light rain
Temperatures remained sea· and cooler temperatures to
sonably mlld across the rest of . northcentral Wyoming late Sun·
the Mldwes t, with &lt;;hicago re- day, and temperatures dropped
porting 67, Indianapolis 65, De- from the 50s down to the 30s and
lower 40s across the northwest
troit 63 and Cincinnati 67.
Cold weather • from Alaska mountains, the NWS said.

--Area-death·s - -

CUTLASS
.. SUPREME

Member: Ualtld Praalnternattonal,
Inland Dally Press AIIOCiatloa and the

.

Dr. Mlllsa K. Rizer of Alexan·
drla , Va., has been named a
Fellow of The American
be In Meigs Memory Gardens. Academy of Family Physicians,
William Sellers
. Friends may call at the funeral the national medical association
representing 66,000 family physl·
home Monday 6 to 9 p .m .
clans and medical students.
William Eugene Sellers, 39,
The Degree of Fellow may be
Pomeroy, died early Sunday Noah Fil~h
·
attained
In either of two waysmorning at !\Is residence after an
successful
completion of 600 or
extended Illness.
Noah Fitch, 77, of Cheshire
more
hours
of accredited conlln·
Born In 'Pomeory on Sept. 12, Route l, died Sunday In Holzer
ulng
medical
study, .Jlr achieve1950, he was ·the son of Paul and Medical Center. He was a retired
ment of diplomat status In the
Hazel Pickens Sellers of coal miner.
Portland.
Born Nov. 10, 1912 In SalyerS· specialty of family practice as a
He was sales manager at vllle, Ky .. hewas asonofthe late ~s ult of passing a certl lying
Landmark, later MGM Farm Steve Fitch and Cora Allen Fitch. examination administered by the
City, Inc., and an associate
Surviving are his wife, Mar- American Board of FamllyPrac·
pastor at the Faith Tabernacle garet Lester Fitch; three daugth· !Ice. Plus. the doctor must he a
Church. Pomeroy. He graduated ers, Bessie Culpepper and Etta membe&amp; tor at least six years.
Fellowship entitles the come- •
from Southern High School.
Jo First, both of Gallipolis. and
Besides his parents he Is FayeHawley,Gretna, Va.; three ree to use the title, "Fellow ofthe
survived by his wife, Pamela sons, Clyde Fitch, James Fitch American · Academy of Family
Rawson Sellers, a daughter. and Ray Fitch, all of Cheshire; 22 Physicians." The , degree was
Kyla Sellers, and a son, Scottie grandchildren and 15 great· · conferred"l;)ept. 19 upon more
Sellers, all at home.
grandchildren; one brpther, Ker· than 500 members of the
Also surviving are three sis· ney Fitch of Muneth, Mich.; and Academy ·In conjuncllon with
ters, Sandra and Jeannie of three sisters, Bertie Whittaker, AAFP's Annual Conveption and
Portland, and Kitty of P.a rkers- Clinton, Mich., Mella Riser and Scientific Assembly In Los An·
burg; his mother-in-law and Mary Riser, both of Dexter, · geles. Calif. Fellowship candl·
dates wore atademlc robes and
father-In-law, Emmett and Zora Mich.
Rawson, Middleport; grandparHe was a member of Madison mortarboard caps. They were
ents, Eber and Goldie Pickens, Baptist Church.
.
,.. recognized according to state
PQrtland, and several aunts and
Services will be conducted chapter and the oath of fellowuncles.
Wednesday. 1 p.m., at Waugh· ship was recited en masse.
The AAFP, headqua~tered In
Funeral services wlll be held at Halley-Wood Funeral Home, the
2 p.m Tuesday at the Rawlings· . Rev. Richard VInson officiating. Kansas City, Miss. was lnstru·
Coats-Fisher Funeral Home in Burial follows In· Gravel Hill mental in establishing the medi·
· cal speclaltyoffamilypractlcein
Middleport with the Rev. Denver Cemetery. •
Rollins and the Rev. Emmett
Friends may call at the funeral 1969. It was also a pioneer in
Rawson officiating. Burial will home Tuesday, 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to continuing medical education
requiring Its members to main·
9p.m.
taln 150 hours of approved CME
credit every three years.
Dr. Rizer ts the daughter of Mr.
and
Mrs. Franklin Rizer,
ball. star points wlll be hOnored.
Gun shoots to resume
Pomeroy.
The Racine Fire Department Officers are to wear chapter
will be resuming shooting dresses.
matches tor the season at their
building In Basban. The tlrst
shoot of the season will be this
Saturday, starting at 6:30p.m.
Plan fall carnival ·
The PTO of West Columbia
Elementary School, West Columbia, W.Va., Is sponsoring Its
annual fall festival on Saturday,
Oci. 14, from 12 noon to 7 p.m.
Games. door prizes, two $50
drawings, and refreshments wlll
be featured . Proceeds from the
festival will be used to purchase
computer so!twater, carpeting
and other materials for the
'
school.

· (VIPiliHA)

· Pomeroy, Olt1o - ·

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Rain sweeps thi-o~gh South ~arly today · ·

" Dtvloloo of Mollbo ...a, be:.

sa a,

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The Daily Sentinei- Pege- 3

Buy Any 1989 .or 1990

The Daily Sentinel

Newspaper

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------Weather-----

Registration closes Oct.. 10

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. District seeking federal funds

Writing contest pal;'ticipants' sought

Soviets still confused over-stalin

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·
Continued from page 1
Pomeroy. The shooting was apparently the result of a domestic
quarrel which beean Inside the home.
Dennis Boyd, who was shot In the stomach; remain's a patient
at Veterans·Memorial Hospital.
·.
A bond hearing for Betty Boyd was set to take place sometime
today (Monday) before Meigs County Court Judge Patrick
O'Brien.
Bond hearing was also scheduled today before Judge O'Brien
for Terry M. Jewell (also known as Men ford Jewell) . of Salem
Township, who was arrested Thursday night on drug charges.

Units ol t,he Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
responded to 14 calls tor help over the weekend.
· On Saturday at 1:02 a.m. , the Pomeroy Fire Department
transported Kenny Carpenter from an auto accident on Union
Ave. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Olive Township Fire Department at 2:57a.m. was called to a
ha{ flre on Route 124. ·
Tuppers Plains was called at 6:04a.m. to Route 681 for Marie
Smith who was treated but not transported. At 8:57 a.m.,
Tuppers Plains went to Reedsville for Bobby Bailey who was
taken to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
At 11:28 a.m., Rutland went to Township Road 175 for Lori
Hoffer to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 7:08 p.m., Middleport was called to the Vlllage Manor
Apartments tor Thomas Frye to .V eterans· Memorial Hospital.
Rutland at 11:22 p.m. went to Harrisonville tor Bobby Tripp
who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·
.At 11:37l).m .; Middleport went to Bailey Run Road for
William Sellers who was dead o.n arrival.
On Sunday at 12:36 a.m., Middleport was called to Page St . for
Lelah McCallister to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
- Pomeroy .at 2: 17 a.m . was called to S.Prlng Ave. to treat
Andrew Morgan.
.
.
·
At 10: 47 a.m,, Rutland was called to Route 689 for Leonard
Quisenberry who was taken'to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
The Syracuse Fire Department was called at 2:09p.m. to an
autn accident on Route 1241n Syracuse. Ruth Arnold was taken
from the accident scene to Veterans·Memorlal Hospital. At2: 14
p.m ., Racine transported Anna Pingel from the same accident,
also to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.. • ·
Middleport at 2: 54 p.m. was called to Page St . tor Allee
Koenig who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
Pomeroy at 8:15p.m. was called to Dark Hollow Road for
Lula Schaffer to to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

T~ay in history

N-

Local news briefs... .....-..____,

Squads have 14 weekend calls

a last
whl~h Is
polltlcales
r the day after
Inauguratio
ay. So the Amerl·
can people were given a clear
choice between ibe candidates on
this key. issue, and Bush was
elected with an unarguable man·
date to oppose any tax Increase.

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio .

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. war cry:. 'M.or-e money.''
Democratic

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·R'''"' y,,, Ad Sptoe .~ort/
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Poruaoy-Midllaport, Ohio .

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MonctaY. pet~ 2, 1989

'Dawg' fans: h,ave big ·say_· ~ _
•
m 16-13 Cleveland victory,
CLEVELAND IUPI)- Unruly
"Dawg Pound" · fans, some
throwing batteries and rocks,
forced ottlclals to 'move the ball
. ·from the ~hadQw of the bleachers
to the closed end or the field In
.Sunday's · ,Cleveland BrownsDenver Broncos game..
The Incident occurred early In
the fourth quarter, with Cleveland ~ding, 13-7; and .the
Broncos on their own 4-yard line.
Denver quarterback John Elway
threw incomplellons on first and
second down and, as the team
huddled In the end zone, the
bleacher fans began throwing..
dog biscuits.
It's been a problem In Cleveland for several years, but this
time the objects started hltting...the offiCials.
"I;lurlng the . llmll out, the
change betw.een possessions (after Cleveland downed' a punt on
the Denver 4), they were throwIng dog biscuits," said referee .
HIGH FIVE . - Cleveland wide receiver
Webster Slaughter (i4) ratelves a hJch-flve-rrom
leammate Re11ie Lupome after calching a

Bernie Kosar pass for a first period touchdown
Sunday In Municipal Stadlwn. The Browns won
with two seconds remaining, 16-13. (UP I)

Majors

''Thi'Y threw a double-A bat·
tery that hit me In the head and,
alter we got them calmed down, I
walked behind the huddle and
they contlnueil to throw things.
After (the Broncos) were ready
to play ,they threw a rock about 2
~ Inches In diameter and they
threw another egg which· bit
(guard Keith Blshopl, and they
threw another egg which- hit In
the huddle as John (EIWay) was
calling the play.
, "They threw one more double·
A battery and J'stpppedlt. I went
to the other end."
Dooley said he decided against
Issuing a warning. "Someone
was going to get hurt by a fl~ng
object and the best way to handle
It was to· take them (the crowd)
out of lt."
But rather than reverse the
field posltjon again - after the

By-The Bend-

Broncos · were forced to punt the ofbcials deelded to.J!eep the teams orleilted In the new
directions.
.
Denver Coach Dan ~eves was
Incensed over the decision.
"I thought we we_re going to go
down there for the one play 'and
get It over wl.th," Jie said. "Then
we thought we .would get the wind
back. Why,the heck should we be
penalized lmd have to play In to
the wind?"
Matt Bah~. who kicked a
48-yard field goal as time expired
to win the game for-9Jeveland,
didn't think If made· any .difference and; In fact, said he wouljl
· have prefl'rred to kick the other
way. .
.
As Bahr lined up lor his
winning ·field goal, the wind at
ground level was blowing agal~t
· hlm, but . tbe flags atop the
uprights w!'re. hanging nearly
motionless: . '

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Monday, October 2, 1989
~

Bengals -d efense shines in
21-17 ·triumph over Chie(s
t'

Pitt rallies
to tie WVU

Tom Dooley, "and they threw
·one egg.

Th_e ·Daily Sentinel

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Cos_nune safet}' tips given
I

-I

· It's · not too soon to begin
thinking about your child's Halloween costume, and according to
the Ohio Optometric Association,
some very simple costume decorating tips can add an edge 0 (
safety to Halloween.
·
·
"VIsibility Is the key to pre·
venting Halloween accidents,"
said the ODA .' "There are two
sides ·to Halloween visibility. A
child must be able to see steps,
curbS and automobiles, and'
drivers must be able to ~e a
· young trick-or-treater In time to
stop safely. Cosiumlng tricks can
help with both."
The optometrls ts recommend
using makeup Instead of masks.
Ill-fitting_masks or those with
small eye openings can block a
child's view of oncoming cars
and ob~ts In hls or her gat h.
Makeup not only gives children
a saf~r; natural view but also
~nfn the non-allergic variety
and adu~ts should double as
makeup ·artists. Makeup particles and applicators should be
kept out-o! the child's eyes.
· Decorating costumes with ·
retro-reflectlve material Is the
most effective way to make

Community calendar

children safely visible to drivers,
the ODA said. Optometric studies Indicate retro-refleetlve
material Is safely · vlslbll' to
drivers even at excessive speeds
of 70 to 80 miles per hour. White_material, by comparison~ Is
sa_fely vl.s lble only up to speeds of
·
50 miles i&gt;er hour.
Retro-refiectlve material Is
available · In either Iron-on or
sew-on fabrics and tape. In some
areas, self-sticking reflective
decals are available. In decorat·
lng-costumes, parents shoij}d be
certain children will lle visible
from front, back and sides.

'
MONDAY
at 10: 15 a.m. Evening services
MIDDLEPORT '-The Middle- wlll begin at 7 p.m. Rex. James
port First Baptist Church will be Seddon Invites the publk:. The
conducting revival through Tues- Oct. 1 evening service will beday. The theme Is "Commit- "youth night ." Bill Loulerwlll be
ment, Getting 'Behind Jesus." the evangelist.
The revival · will_ begin- with
Sunday morning worship service

.

The ODA encourages parents
to discuss safety awaren~s with .
their children . "Trick-or·
treaters themselves can do their
part for safety by walking on
sidewalks or In yards, 'looking
carefully lielore crossing streets,
crossing at corners with street
lights_ and . carrying a baUery-operated light or lantern."
More information on Halloween costume safety may be
obtained by calling doctors lo·
cally wbp are members of the
Ohio Optometric Assoclatlol).

By JOHN HENJ\EL
momentum. He only had one Intercepted again by Fulc,her.
MORGANTOWN,
W.
Va.
The Ch leis kept the ball long
OJp.tu,.a Hb It, HlchmoiWI Hh i
UPI Sports Writer
hand on lt."
By UniWdPreNii blt"'•lloNd
(UPI) - Ed . Frazier kicked a
Day Palterun!2. AnHr!IHI.&amp; t2olr
r\MERICAN l.t.:AGUE
enough
·to punt on their next
KANSAS CITY, Mo. ~ David
E Cit Shaw·5t, PuiJlll 0
42-yard field goal on the last play · Fulcher and Leon White brought
Lewis went untO\!Ched Into the possession put then had' the
Fruit Fur Gl'l'ea !II. Po riM NO e
to climax a furious fourthHtukonW11nlte53%,1Jsld tPaJ.PI't'p%
M' l P(•t. GB
Okoye fumble early In the IOurth
the Cincinnati defense ·out from end zone.
a..dltr~~~.pollt! RIUtr •• Col St CJIM 7
Toronlo ~ ..... .. ........ ... ... .M! &lt;3 .5 -11 q
uarter
rally
and
give
No.
10
Pitt
·
L•ki'Cath.li.Puma Holy Namt1
behind the Bengals' high·
8altlmore ..... , ...... ....... .1i7 7S ,$ 31- ~
"I didn't need a blocker , · period thai completed the day's
LonlaiUftK !t, Laraia ~I
a 31'31 tie with No. 9 West
Bo.flon ........................ .IIS 71 .5 1! •
,
powered offense.
because there wasn'l'"11nybody scoring.
Mar~m... 17, WyomiJIA' I!
' Mllw"llllil't-.. ..... . ....... .. . J\1 IU .5H ~
VIrginia ilesplte four touchdown
' MIU'ID• Cuth II, O'ewtl~~~r. 0
Kansas City, Which switched
Nt"'" \'ork .......... ..........7.a ~7 .~M I_. I-!
Fulcher
Intercepted
three
chasing
me,"
he
said.
1'10 (all Hoowr 1-1, LaUowoood Sl Ed It
passes by Major Harris Saturday
(1,..·ei1M111 .. ... .. ...... ... ....1:1 Iii .UI II
passes, recovered a fumble and
Okoye said he believed he lost starting quarterbacks from
!'l.'ew Nlaml••.aoSurmtM Ctry Oily t
Oe4 roil. ....................... .H 113· .31-1 Jl
night.
Pllttlllt~· CC 1, Ca• McKI•k"J t
White
caused
a
fumble
that
ball after he was d&lt;&gt;wn and St!'ve DeBerg to Jaworski be·
the
"~' 11 IJ .Ill Poru E S!, X~ H
Pitt, 3-0-1, notched 22 points In
Oaillluld ......................
snatched
and
returned
22
yards
Salt'tn
n,
PoUdl
was
waiting lor a whistle, but cause or 10 turnovers In the first
. . . . . . ( ' it y.................u 11 .:.u
..
the fourth quarter, climaxed-by
Sudl*)' MarySI, Sandut~lq P~k8
f.aiiiOr•a ....................ti 71 .ic 11
thrl'f' games, has 16 turnovers
for
the
winning
touchdown
Sunnever
heard one.
I
Sh~all II, Ir..-oa Sl ,for It
Tn., ......................... ,Sl 1t .5 tt II
the tying field goal by Frazier,
·
·
!'itMtfoa\11~
CC
!II,
M'
~lrton
(WVI)
0
day
in
the
Bengals'
21-17
victory
''I was down when he pulled the thls' IDson. ·
Mla.-,r;ru .................. .M lit .tt-l 114 ' 1
WhO had an extra point and a
Tal Cr•rU .a1. T•IStart e
SeanJeo .........................'1J !It .151 ~
The
Bengals
had
switched
over
the
Kansas
City
Chiefs,
ball away," Okoye said, "I saw
Tolllow.« U, To I UhbP.y 1i
(:bl,t. . . .. ......................
to: -~fe ft 1
27-yard field goal at tempt
To I Dr\ollhhs Jl, Ttl I M.-cctmhf'r I-I
boosting the Bengals to3-1 on the the guy running to the end zone· starting quarterbacks, also. Esi·
Sai!Wdll)''~ ~lllh
blocked In the first half.
Mllwaubll' I, l!o!iiH I
" ' llclllne!J ss. Bellaln' 18
ason did not start because or an
year.
· and stlll no whistle."
l\'atld•~&gt; MPn'lortal 13, 1'\'ewark (lith li
Toi'OIIlo i, a.ttllllooll-' 3
Trailing 31-9, Ptlt began their
~--··-·····'·
Zlllf'fi
Ro!M."t·n.n"
H.
Mllll'r
13
"The defense has matured,"
• Kan-.:CHyt,O . . . . I
While Lewis pr_ovlded the Injured ankle. Turk Schomirt,
comeback when Adam Walker
{JIIUKO 8, O'"'f'l•nd !t ~
Fulcher said. "After playing the game-winners, it was amaiing it however, was Injured on thellnal
Nt'W l 'ork I. ·oeholl 't
·
bolted
8
yards
up
the
middle
to
Trans
ad
ions
Se.ttte t, Mln.no&amp;al. I, It Inn.
entire season last year In the took the Bengals that long to grab play ·of Cl nclnila II' s first
cap ari 80-yard drive but a pass
Tf'Xb :!, CalllorNat
'
shadow of the offense and the the lead. Kansas City turned the possession:
.,;,, ••'"' ·, ..,,,..-r. Trm1 .'•tu ·rr,..,
S.nl.,-'!1 IW!.ultM
for a two-point conversion went
lla.. -1..
•
playoffs
we
stood
our
ground
and
ball
over
on
three
consecutive
BoiOlOn 3, Mlhnl•kt'r- I
~ualrul AnnOIIftCed thai thl'f't
Incomplete. Fres!lman quarter- · played hard.
Ddrell J , N£"Yo' York 3
._..._t· ~ will niH l'ftum ~~rr:~tl fit!MOn:
possessions - twice deep In
S..IUmorr- 7, To1"9111o 3 ,
back
Alex
Van
Pelt
passed
9
third· blfle l'Oiit'lt .Jartif! MOUI'fl aDd
"This year we came In with the Cincinnati territory - but the
t"'l'\'et . . d I, Olka«o fl
ftnt-h.,._. COIU:h RlfiEI Lan*-toy " 'IPrt"
yards to Henry Tuten lor a
O.v.klu••· •--cttyl, 11 lnll.
Offf'ftd adler -!ilpmr-llh Ill~~~ OrJ;Uif.
same
attitude as we ended up last Bengals dld not get a 'polnt out of
hl..,..a4.Tf'UIIil
touchdown and again a pass
:at loll ... llhdnrt...cltr.Jot S,.,b will
year.
We want to play like that it. It did seem a matter of time
Sult!f' J. lll•~n• I
join litre Nt'W York l "anllrft' coat'IUn~; "
attempt for a two-point converevery week. ••
s&amp;alt tlell!ltlllve l . . nD.or • • H1n~~tn
before the Bengals woui'&lt;i""'
NATIOSAL LEAGUE
sion failed, leaving Pitt behind
-.111 not 1M-' retalae4 lor tttt: pklltnc
The Cincinnati offenSe was off capltalizlj.
.
F1•1
·
coach Larr)' Bear.... lll aad hulpen
31-21 with 4: 41lefl .
t--oac:h llen Mada will ftl--. lliJll
E"" " . L Pl't . (;8
Its normal game and failed to
"Thete's
no
question
about It,
h*M!r•nlq: la.&amp;I'Udor Temmy Hup{r
Pitt then recovered an onsides
cash In three successive tumov- you have to take care of the ball
('hil-co . .................:.... !3 1!1 ..,'l'l will jeln the eo&amp;rlt.lnl•la.lf.
kickoff at Its own 44 and on th~
l'llf'V.' \"ol'ti ................... JI7 75 .lTo i
N~ York (4.L)- -'a•o.ncedUW.John
l'rs before White took the scoring and today It cost us a touchSl. U . ........ ............. .U 71 .JSI 7
&amp;IPM'M •Ill not hr- MalnPd on the.
seventh play Curvin Richards
PAY:»: 100% Of . Medl·
Into hls own bands.
·Monllrf'al .................... .KI Ml .Itt I'!
down," said Kansas City Coach
""cblft~r MalL
'
ran 6 yards up lhf middle for tl)e
PMWN,.-11 ...................7i IA · ,I$7 II
Phllld@lpihla- F1red nrM hiiM' t'OIU"h
- Kansas City, 1-3, Jed most of Marty Schottenheimer. "That
care's Part A InFllla.delpltlia ................17 '5 .-11-1 N
Toll)' TIQ'klr.
touchdown and an extra point
the game and took a 17-14 edge niakes it very d Iff! cult to g'e t
" 'tosl
kick by Frazier pulled the
hospital deduc;tS" Fru .....................1'! 'l't .HH NFL rtMua"
tnt(/ the fourth period. On the anything started."
Sa DI ...................... Jit 73 .Ut :1
N.-\TIONAL FOOTBALL LEA.GUE
Panthers within 31-28 with 2:55
R•u••n .......... ............ Jrlt -:-t .131 5
lble plus
G:hlefs' second play of thl' quarSund!Q''•Jkotl;lllb
Kansas City took the lead by
remaining. The touchdown carne
lA,. Alllf!l,_ .................77 M3 Alll U
IMI.-pnlls 17, NV .1~1 II
ter,
Okoye
went'
right
and
was
Cincinnati
turnovE&gt;r.
benefit
of
a
Cllk-t ..... I....................7S K; AU 17
on the first play after Frazier
Grena a.,y a, Atllllla tl
Alut. ........................U 17 Jt.1 2K
_
met by Fulcher.
Boomer Eslason fumbled while
Cincln•l21, Ku-. Cltyli
kicked a. 29-yard field goal but
Sill....t 10''" ~ ulh
100% of the Part
C:lf'\-r-lud 11, Dnwr 13
"They
were
.
running
away
being sacked and Blll Maas
l.o!li\lt~t'!t&lt;&amp;l Adiul&amp;a. p!ld .. n.ln
Pitt declined the three points and
IIDI!iH •• Ml-17
(Olxont,
so
they
from
Rickey
covered for the Ch'lefs. Four
•••"'-'· n•·ln•ll!
lkln ..o U, New £11..._. 18
~ deductible and
(1til'apli, St. Lolli!; 4
accepted a roughing-the-kicker
- Pt:lllhu ~ .. tl. n.t.r.M. :1
our
way,"
Fulcher
said.
came
plays
later
Nick
Lowery
kicked
a
....... drl ... l. .. rthn&amp;,..all
penalty to go for the touchdown.
W-"l ....on II, NI'W Ortean!'i U
llrif"A· Vorll7-, PMthrtt .. 'e, lllan.
''He came off thr tackle and 23-yard field goal.
Ml11•11ola 1-:-, TiLm .. Bay 3
~u Dlr-~ 11. ~ .. fnuu+;(.. t
Harris' four touchdown passes,
SY GIMbl&lt;'3t, O.la~&gt; 13
came my way. I just hit hlm with
The Chiefs went up 10-0 early In
Suad~Q&lt;'~ RH~t!O
100%of the usual
LA RamM t:l. Su Frucl~~ee 12
including strikes of 59 and 62
~ ... An~~3 . Auu... l,l:!lnn..l"'t
bad
and
kind
of
stood
him
what
I
the
second
period
on
an
11-yard
San Dl~.- 2t, Phllf'nlx 13
Lo" All~ at r\d . .w. 2JICI um{'
yards, had a West VIrginia
and · customary
St"llll!.o u. LA Raldrr~ :0 .
up.
run by Okoye that completed a
~ - -· ..lord dU• ···· ...... pound!&lt; ,
MOndQ''Ii
G.v.mP
record
crowd
of68,938
going
wild.
PIIIMdf'lphl:&amp; 3, MoMft'all
''Leon' came In and the official 10-play drive. But Eslason kept
PhlbdclJIII!Ia M.l. Cbll'qo, 8 p.m .
Doctor and Medi~""· l ' ork 7, Plttollu ,.-h :\ .
The tie snapped West Virginia's
~-..,. fk:t .•
dldn'
t
blow
the
whistle
because
C'11ic.-,co !i, St . Loubll
,
of
.
the
Bengals
close
with
·a
quick
SVC.Iant JO all'hU.dr-lpllla.l p.m.
regular-season winning streak at
cal expenses
Hou!f.on :!, n ...t._.lll
Bullalo liA lndl .,...oil,., I p.m.
the kind of runner 1Qkoye) Is. He . 4-play possession that' ended With
!'an Pl\"11;0 3. s~ Fr~&amp;nd""·o u
.
·16
' games, the )ongest among
fhk*KO .. T•mlll B.-y , 1 p.m.
can break tackles like that. But a 40-yard throw to a wide open IBc:ne.n t·s· Include: office
flll(•ln...,.llll. PllliiMI~Wit, 1 p.m .
major colleges.
Prep scores
&lt;'I~Miand at Ml.rnl. I p.m.
all day he was breaking tackles, Tim McGee.
Dallu .e Grt'en a.y, I p.m.
but he had that ball hanging out
Esiason's next pass, however, 1c&lt;~.ua, . surgery, ambuOh6o Hll(h !'k·bool Footh .tl KP:.; a*_11
Dftrall .. MIIIW~~ola, I p.m .
Harris,
a
leadingcontender
for
out•patlents. lab
BJ V111&amp;ed Pftll~ .. &amp;N ... iollll
·
Houlllo•J&amp;l s_. &amp;. Pnci. I p.m .
was Intercepted by Kevin Ross
the Helsman Trophy, finished there. ••
s .. wrd..,, s~. •
A.dallt.ll at LA. a-n. . .f p.m.
tests.
x-rays,
and much.
That's
what
got
the
attentlono(
and the Chiefs turned that into a
w...- !:ll. Mar,.lll et
K • - CM)·al St-l&amp;lle, .a p.m.
wllh 250 yards on 12 completions
1\llr Knme~ II, Akr C("a lh•· ;
San ~anci!I('O Ill NPW Orlf'•,;,-1 p.m .
Lewis.
5-yard 'touchdown pass from Ron 11111\.I&lt;.;U
of 24 attempts with one intercep~- VII~ ~ Blly l, aoc k)' Rlvf'r t
"-Or•b: 1M Wulllhrp-. -1 p.m .
"The
defense
stood
hlm
up
and
Jaworski to Rob,)J Thomas. Eslallf-'!111,.... _,. ... "II. Do••• iWVaJii
• SIUI Dlf-'JO .. Dnwr. t p.m.
tion. He completed only 5 of 14
n~ , .... ".,. J.j; nr- Eu:t 1
Mo .. q,Od, t
ball
we're
taught
to
go
for
the
son
went right to work again and
f 'lf' Kn.rllb' U, n~ E Tf"C:IIW
passes In the first half but he
LA R~~o.hlll"f"ut N't' .leh, ,t p.m .
cau '1-800-782-4872 for
then,"
Lewis
said.
"It
was
a
flf'IAU.mu~" II, ln*Pf'•*•ct-!
2:
25later
handed to Eric Ball for
produced 201 yards and three
Information.
touchdowns while another long clean strip. I just took It from a 2-yard touchdown run that left
him. They didn't blow the whistle the score 17-14 at the half.
pass set up one of those scores.
Ask for extenston 603
because he still had forward
Kansas City then hi I the stretch
ofturnovets: Jaworski was InterBATON ROUGE, La. !UP IILSUhoosted itslead' to22~onthe
West VIrginia; 4-0-1, built a 31-9 - - Sports briefs
RICHARD McKENZIE
cepted by Lewis Billups just
·Louisiana State passers threW a opening play of the second quarter
lead with 4:06 left In the third
before halftime; Chris Dressel
McKENZE 14SURANCE
quarter· The · Moun ta lneers
team-record seven touchdowns when Hodson hit a leaping Hal!burSoccer
· fumbled a pass reception at the
r Saturday night -four of them to ton from31yards. The Tigers added
grabbed ~heir 2_2-polnt bulge on a
A qualifying
for was
the r~Be~n~ga~l~s~'~1:;~a~n~d~J~a:w~or~s~k~l~w:a~s~~~~~~~~~~~~~
wide receiver Tony Moss- and another score minutes ·later when
20-yardf.eldgoaJbyBradCarroll English
FA Cup match
at Staines
the Tigers drubbed Ohio Unlver- Kinchen found Moss wide open on a
and a 4-yard pass by Harris to abandoned Saturday when one of
. sity, 57-6.
.
reverse for a 49-yard score and a / ' fullback Rico Tyler. The fourth the teams walked Off In protes tat
·. The seven TO passes brd&lt;e the ~ lead.
to.,.chd~wn was set up by Preston
having three players sent off.
LSU team record of five set three
The Tigers took a 3Sli halltlme Waters 28-yard return of a pass Staines, an amateur club, was
interception to the Pitt 20.
· leading Duns table 1-0 when refetimes, most recently against Cal lead on Hodson's 2-yard toss to
State-Fullerton in 1987.
Moss and a 2-polnt conversion.
On .the third play of the game, ree Stephen Head sent off DunThe LSU onslaught continued in
Harris unleashed a 59-yard scar- stable's Herbie Smith and i:&gt;avld
Toriuny Hodson also became the
1'/.g strike to freshman James
Tigers' career passing yardage the third . quarter when Hodson
Walters for protesting a free
leader, eclipsing Jeff Wicker- threw as 14-yanf'TD pass to Moss Jet!. Pitt retaliated by golng_81 kick. When Michael Cuffle was
sharn:.S 6,921 yards. Hodson has • and Graves hlt Kinchen on a
yards In five plays wllh Richards sent off, also for protesting, the
7.003 yards .
20-yard post pattern for a 5(lj) lead.
plowing 8 yards through the rest of the team stormed off the
lSU Improved to 1-2 with Its first
Moock ·completed the scoring tn rn!ddlefor the touchdown. Frazl· field .and refUsed to continue. · ...
~ictory ever over an Ohio schOOL
theflnalperiodwltlillls73-yarderto er s extra point attempt was ·Rampaging soecer hoollg!lnS
Ohio fell to 0-5.
Jacob.
·
blocked by BasU Proctor.
battled with pollee, terrorized
Hodson threw touchdown passeS
,,
Early In the second quartl'r, passers-by and wrecked bars
of 15. 2 and H yards to Moss and a
Sporltl briefs
Harris threw from his_ 38 to before and alter the English
• 31-yarder to Ronnie Hallb.lrlon.
Regj:le Rembert at the West League Division Three game
Moss caught a 42.y;u-d TD pass
· Auto Racln«
VIrginia 46 where he br~ke a between Blackpool cand Birfrrn&gt; wide receiver Tddd Kinchen
Ayrlon Senna kept hls world tackle and sped down the left mingham. Pollee made a total of
on a reverse. and Kinchen caught a
championship battle .w.lth team- sideline lor the second touch- 60 arrests before, during and
2o.vard 'm pass from backup
mate Alain Pros.t allve with a down and 14-6 lead with 12:45 after the game, a 3-2 Blackpool
qm;rterback Sol Graves. Third·
polE'-to-flag victory In the Span- remaining In the half.
victory. ... Napoli took sole
~:r!od~~~r~~~e~:.~~::.~ha t
Frazier kicked a 42-yard field ·command or the Italian League
string quarterback Chris Moock
goal to pu_ll the Panthers within with a 3-0 victory agal.n st Injurygave LSU Its seventh scoring pass
with a 73-yard bOmb to Wesley
notched the 40th pole POSition of 14-9 with 5. 4lleft in the first half. plagued AC Milan. Napoli has 12
Jacob .
hls career In quall(ylng, overWest VIrginia got the ball at Its points from seven matches to
•.
came qrake problems In the own 42 on a 26-,.Yard punt 21 lead defending champion In~r1
closing laps and a challenge from secon(!s before Intermission . . ·nazlonale wllh 11.
.The :Tigers jumped to a 7-ll lead
l
Gerhard Berger to finish the
afler the opening kickoff when
191.33 mile race In one hour 47
H6dson hit Moss from 15 yards.
minutes 48.264 seconds.
ISU got the ball again on a
•'
turnover, and Calvin Windom
•
Maralhon
scored fran\3-yards for a 12-0 lead.
'
••
8
Karel David of Czechoslovkla
Holder Moock fumbled the snap on
W!,ln the 59!h International Peace
-the extra-point try, but kicker
Marathon
at Koslce Czechoslova.
••
David Browndyke. reccJ\'el'ed and
•
kla
In
2
hours
18
minutes
39
. !brew to Halllurton for 2 points and
•'
seconds, beating out Igor Levat~ lead.
t Oldo ICOred·on its next possession teyev (2: 18: 52) and Alexander
•
l
Vlchuzhanln (2: 18: 57), both ot
0o1ry tau..n•~~ent en proud tPQn101'1 aftheChllci'..,'s Mlroete Networt
•
: wilell ~Greer dived In from l
t......, whlclt
_yard OIIL Holder Andrew &amp;omb- · the Soviet Union. Alena Peter- '
0-D.O. C.,~
TM......._.MID.O.CIIp.
..... U.I.N.o;,MIOA?-+ .
.
'
~ ""' for ~ polnti on a fake kova of Czeclioslovakla was the
•
first
wom~n
finisher
In
2:31:28.
ldcllllut was stopped _short
•
S.ulhl~on

.Smith birth .

7

Farra birthday

1

.

~1

mote.

•••••••••••••

' more

· LSU rips Ohio University Bobcats, 57-6

0

JO""
A.
WADE,
A\D. Inc:
. PIIIUIII V 1R IOIPIIM
· IAI, lOSE I n.OAI .
GIIEUL AUIIIISI
"WIIIMI . . . AIDr'
CJMt 671·11..

...,..,..1•1m
.

.

-IOCOl "'*"""' ""c•--

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A _-birthday dinner, honoring
the 94th birthday of Mona Farra, ·
was enjoyed recently at · her
home by family and relatives.
Attending were Floyd Farra
and wife, Betty; Mr. and Mr&amp;.
G~eg Farra and son, aJl of
Columbus.
Don Heiney, Mrs. Juanita
Beaver and children, New Ma• timoras; Roy and Anna Heiney,
Marietta.
Other visitors to congratulate
her were Golda Heiney, Fair- '
· view; Yvonna Theodore, Columbus; Daisy Sayre, Rod and .
Marjorie Grimm, Garnet Ervine, and Delorous'Cleland, all of
MONA FARRA
·
Racine.
A birthday cake made by her was -served to those
daughter-In-law, Betty Farra, • attendance.

VIncent and DI-ane Smith,
Mason, W.Va., are announcing
the birth of a son, Kyle Lee.
The infant was born on June 10
at Holzer Medical Center and
weighed six pounds and five
ounces and was 19 Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Oscar T.- and Madgle Smith,
Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are
Jack and VIrginia Smith, Hart·
ford, W.Va.
The _-couple · also has another
son, Jeremy Craig, age three.

.....
"""

KYLE SMITH

Church .In Syracuse will be 'Church.
. having revival through Oct. 8 at ,
,the cl!urch beginning at 7 p .m.
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
· nightly. The !;!lurch Is located ori · -The Boa,rd of . Trustees of
Cherry St. just off Route 124
Columbia Township will meet on
North.' Tum right on the next
Monday at 7:30p.m. at the lire
station.
·
street past the fire station.
Pastor Mark Morrow Invites the
POMEROY -The Calvary Pilpublk:.
grim Chapel will have revival
Monday' through Sunday at 7:30
SYRACUSE -The Sutton
p.m. nightly. Rev . Joe Sifford,
Township Trustees will meet on
Knoxville, Tenn., will be · the
Monday at 7: ~ p.m. In the
evangelist. Special singing wlll
Syracuse Municipal building.
be by the Mann Family. Rev.
'
.
Victor R&lt;&gt;ush Invites theopubllc.
RACINE -The Applegrove
The church Is located on Route
United Methodist Women will
147 just off Route 7 bypass.
have a rummage sale on Monday
LETAftT TOWNSHIP -The
and Tuesday from 9 a.m. to 4
Letart Township Trustees will
p.m. at LI-n da's Lady Fair In
meet Monday at 7 p.m. ·at the
Racine.
office building.
"
POMEROY -''l'he Meigs Local
LETART .:_Thl' Letart PTO
Band Boosters will meet on
wili
meet Monday a 1 the school.
Monday at 7 p.m. In the high
Mrs.
Katherine Hill's class will
· SChool band room.
present ~ program. All parents
are urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Garden Club w[ll meet on
MIDDLEPORT -The MiddleMondaY at 7: 30 p.m. at the
port
PTO will meet Monday al
Middleport Presbyterian
7:30 p.m. It will be open house.

.

( 'ol W•Ueno• ti, lhly Qam.Jul i

Cahmh crtst\48' II,

Page-5

Rutland Garden Club·
~-~ meeting held recently

DENNIS D. AND EI,J;;NA PEE~ TEAFORD
Margaret Belle Weber pres- . marigold class.
.
en ted the program "Flowers You
In the zennla class Paullne
Can Eat" at the recent meeting
Atkins received !lrst and third;
oflhe Rutland Garden Club when
-with Dorothy Woodard a third
the group met at the horne of
and fourth In the succulent class. . The First , Congregational the groom. Groomsmen were
Stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl.
Pauline Atkins rece'tved third Church In Ann Arbor,'Mlch., was Eric Cunningham, Syracuse;
-Mrs'. Weber noted that the use
in the fresh everlasting class an(! the setting for the June 24 Blswadeep Gangu-, Belford,
of blossoms· and buds In food go... thJr~ In the flowering houseplant wedding of Elena Beth Peelle N.J.; and George Srftlth, Elk·
back a long \\:BY In history. '!'hey
class, with Binda Diehl a second. and Dennis Dwayne Teaford:
view, W,Va.
are now having a'revlvid, and are
Dorothy Woodard received a·
Merlssa Bell, Portland, niece
The bride Is the daughter of
used mainly for seasoning not
second, third, and fourth In the ..Mr. and Mrs. David M. Pe~lle, of the groom, was the flower girl.
nourishment. Some ol'•J..'IB flowfoliage houseplant class. Fourth Ann Arbor, Mich. The groom is
ers are roses, marlgt&gt;lds, chryplace in the herbal kitchen class t_he son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale C.
A reception was held at the
santhemums, daylllles; violets,
was Pearl Canaday. Pauline Teaford, Portland.
church following the ceremony.
carnations, and nasturtiums.
Atkins was fourth place In the
Serving as maid of honor was Reception hostesses were Nancy
Springtime on a Shady River Jean Peelle, Charlotte, N.C., Jean Bosklrk, Holland, Mlch·.,
Devotions were given by Stella
Atkins who read "Flowers -Leave
class, and second in the Birds In sister of the bride. Bridesmaids aunt of the bride; Mary Raines,
Their Fragrance on Tho$1' That
Flight class.
were Karina Romanelll, G!aston- Stockport; Debbie Klinger, Ann
Neva Nicholson was third In borg, Conn.; Cynthia Cameron, Arbor, · Mich.; and Kristin Rl·
Bestow Thee," and Ruby Diehl
read "Ours For Thee."
the Gathering Basket class. Morristown, N.J.; and Kimberly chards,,Columbus.
The Christmas flower show 'P auline Atkins was secQnd and Llbscomb, Parsons, W.Va .
The couple resides at 3522
was announced for Nov. 18-19,
Binda Diehl was fourth In the
The best man was Dale Tea- Grange Hall Roa!), Apt. 302,
_and an Invitation was read from · Snow Covered Lane class, and ford, J~., Letart Falls, brother of ' Holly, Mich.
Friends and Flowers Garden · Pauline Atkins was second with ·
Club to attend their open Stella Atkins tlilrd In the Church
: meeting.
In the Wildwood class. .
· The regional board meeting
Stella Atkins was first In the ,
will be held Oct. 14 at Chester.
Wildflower class. Fourth place In'
The Family History Commit- in getting Information on the
: The county meeting will be held
Down In the Meadow class was tee of Jackson County, W. Va. is many famllles who traveled
compiling Information for a 1990 from West - VIrginia Into' this
· Oct. 16 .at the County Extension
Dorothy Woodard.
• Office. The regional meeting will
Pearl Canaday, Neva Nichol- Issue on past and present family area. Some of the early sur• be held Oct. 21 at McArthur.
son, Pauline Aikins, Stella At- histories.
names,, according to the group
. The clvlc cornmlttee reported
ktns : Margaret Belle Weber, and
The c&lt;irnrntttee advises that are Staats, Pp.rsons, Kessel , and
on the planters at the park ·tn Ruby Diehl fu_rnished flowers for there Is no charge for 500 words, Casto.
lower Rutland anfl the plans to the churches and o'lher one picture and one signature per
The histories and orders for the .·
household to be placed in the
plant bulbs there this fall. ·
· organizations.
.,
liook
are needed by Oct . 30 and
, Stella Atkins, Mrs. Weber, Eva ____ · Dorothy Woodard .had the Hint book which will sell for $42.50 and
should
be sent to P.O. Box .661.
·Robson', Binda Diehl, Ann Eliza- for the Month on gourds. They shipped postage paid.- The com; beth Turner, Neva Nicholson. should be mature before picking. mittee Is particularly Interested Ripley. W. Va., 25271.
and Pauline Atkins helped at this and hard to· the flick of tl)e
year's Meigs County Fair Flower fingernail. They should be gaShow.
thered before frost with a po~n
Pauline Atkins received a of the stem remaining. They ca
rosette In horticulture and a be washed and allowed to dry
rosette ror oringinallty. Mrs. thoroughly for a lew weeks and •
Robson received a blue ribbOn then shellaced or varnished.
tor an arrangement In a slipper
The door prize was won by
at the fair show. ,
Margaret Belle Weber and DoA report was made on the three
rothy Woodard won the traveling
Ru:tland clubs' combined flower
prize furnished by Binda Diehl.
show.
•
Ruby Diehl Is to furnish the
Pauline Atkins received setraveling prize for "the October
'·
meeting at the home of Pearl
cond on hybrid tea· rose specimen. and first and third In the Canaday- -

- - Teaford-Peelle--

Compiling history for family

Fall carnival scheduled

draWings and refreshments will
be featured.
Proceeds from the carnival
will help the ·PTO purchase
computer software, carpeting
and other Items lor the school.
Everyone Is welcome.

the PTO of West Columbia
Elementary School, West Columbia, W.Va., Is ml!.king plans for
Its annual fal\carnlval which will
he held Oct. 14, from noon to 7
p.m .. at the school.
Game~\ door prizes, two $50

.

.

NOW AT DOMINO'S Pl.ZZA .'

1'

1 . ~·

'

.

'

.INCH DELUXE PIZZA
.t-PEPSI'S, 16 01.

$9~9

SYSTEM THAT DOES
IT ALL.
HEAnNG &amp; COOUNG

Efficiency and
ffigh Quallty (
Make This·On.e
of Our Best
Buys. ·

14 KARAT
.
GOLD and
STERLING
SILVER
·SALE
TUESDAY,
3, 1989
. OCTOBER
.
9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.

6 5 ::./0
0/

0 FF RETAIL
SUGGESTED
PRICE

-"GREAT CHR-ISTMAS GIFTS"
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Oon't Ml•• Thlt Sale!! I
--

._:,
I

I

Domino's· Pizza ..
tt2~2124

WIST MAIN

IT'S THEONE

Last Cha1ee To Bur·Before
Chrithnat ·

POMIIOY, OHIO

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PRISCRIPIION SHOP
992·6669

271 North

Second

llidtlepOrt
Ohio

In

�.

".

.... ,.._ ,

P.u•

·-

•"

,.

6-The Daily Sentinel

•

-

k

•

. .... .. -·-...

•

_

_, _.,._

· Porna-oy-Middleport. Ohio

Mondly. October 2, 1989

Monda~Odobw2,1f~~8~9~----~~~'------:::-~~-:_!~~!:~~~~~0h~io~~~-------------r========~·~~~D~a~~·ly~~~~m~miaiiipi~iiiii7

••

•

· TO PLACE AN AD

~~RE PROUD l'o

f;ElEBRA.TE

CALL 992·21 56

• The
•

Area's .

...
•

In Loving
Memory Of
LEONA B. WISE
Who Passed
Away- One Year
Ago On
October 2, 1988
God looked around
His garden,
And found an empty
place.
He then · loollecU
down upon Hie

Business
Services
r==:;~~===1rt===::~==~=~=::::::=~~===1t=::::::::::::==1~

~

l

36 425

·place

•
•

5

Ads

•

11

HANDWOVEN IASKETS
IASKEl WEAVING
SU!'PLIES
(LASSES OFFEREO

Help wanled

For Youth •••
For·

•

America

Our Area 4-H ClUbs"

. fJ'

ferrellgos

992~5097

..

.-

MINEISVILLE, .OliO

J

992-2342
PO.MEIOY, OHIO

.

. 992-7075
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

EWING
FUNERAL HOME

SMITH-NELSON
·
.
MOTORS, INC)t

PH. 949-2801
NOSUND~

ALLEN'S
HAULING

And
the hHis
to climb,
So He closed your
wary eyelids,
And whispered
"Peace be thine."
It broke our hearte
to lose you,
But you didn't go
1
F!
of us went
with you
The day God called
you home.
Sadly missed
Rev. Cecil Wise
and R 01S&amp;I1ae I
Mr. and Mrs. Phil
Wise and Don

'MOO GALLON
WATEI SERVICE
. UMESTONE
SP•EAD
"'
DIRT HAULED
992·5275

c:;!':i

· WATER
SERVICE

1,000-GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

Call Anytime
992-2371

Veterans Memorial Hospital, a JCAHO-accredited, not· for-profit hospital, is looking
for a Patient Review Coordinator . The Pati· ·
ant Review Coordinator will be responsible
for the assessment, planning, implementa •
tion. and evaluation of the ho.spital's Qual·
ity Assurance and Utilization Management
Plans.
·Qualifications include a Registered Nurse
with a current Ohio nursing license. Prior
Quality Assurance and Utilization Manige 0 .
ment experience preterred .
.
·
Please call or send a resume to:
'
Margaret Holm, Assistant Administrator
Veterans Memorial Hospital
116 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH . 46769

992-2121
Pc.IIOY, OHIO

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

992-2174
POMEROY, OHIO

~GRAVELYTRA(TOR

SALES and SERVICE
"Your

Best

992·2975

"2-2955

Buy For The Long Run"

POMEROY, OHIO

BROGAN-WARNER
INSURANCE

I&amp;C JEWELERS
.992•3715
PO.ROY, OHIO
r

Wilkonillt and
Salton Conlw

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.
12 Gaugo Shotguns Only
, .. ...., (haft

STRicn Y ENFORCED!
9 - 21·89·1 mo.

L. W.

STEWART
TRUCKING

9-20-lfn

I. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

SHO~S

PRESCRIPTION SH,.OP
992-6669 .
MIDDlEPOIT, OliO

992-5627
MIDDLEPOir, OHIO

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

NEWLY REMODELED _, In-town two-story, 3
bedroom, vinyl siding. Low Maintenance! 158
S. 3rd St., Middleport. Old charm, modern
convenience priced at 80% of appraised
value - $36,0001

· VALLEY LUMBER
and SUPPLY COMPANY

1

HAULING
•FIREWOOD ' .

BILL SLACK
992-226!

915'~3301

RIGGS USED CARS
915-4200
.TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

CHESTEI, OHIO

4 / l / 19/ tfn

BANKEONE:

110 OIFFERENT·WOOO
&amp; COAL STOVES.
INSERTS &amp; FURNACES

.PI.UMIIIIIG
• • Now locallotlo

... llorllt Stcond
Mltltl1,1rt, Ohio 45760

SAU5 &amp; SERVICE

ighleen Thousa(ld PeojJ/e Who Ca.

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS

clEARING

APPALACHIAN
WOOD STOVES

.. c.,_..,

ON. Oft 141

NEWLAND .NTERPRISES

698-6121

WANT ADS brilg
llliiiiOIIIWMIWJ

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

FABRIC SHOP
"1·2214

9.92-2039
"2·6454
POMIIOY, OliO

~q;
I

, I

• '',.'" I

CIOW'S
•
PHARMACY'
FAMILY IESTAUIANT . FRUTH. 992-6491

,...,,OliO
tt,l-5432

• DDlEPOn1 OHIO

INGELS FURNITURE
and JEWELIY

992-2156

MIDDLEPORT TROPHIES •
992-6121

992·1635
•DDUPOIT, OliO

AU MAlES AND
MODElS

SfWACUSf, 01110

STATE FAIM IIISURANCE
•11 SWIGEt
992·6615
.DDLIPOIT, OHIO

MAlliN'S

Molt Fort6gn and
Domlltlc VetMd•

.AUM TRUE VALUE
911·1101
Cllstn, OHIO

A/ C l•vica

•'

All Malar • Minor
RepaW1
NIABE Ctrttfi_. Mech ..ic

'.

CALl 992·6756

222 ..If. . .
POIIIIOY, 011.

"DOC" VAUGHN

992-6172

C•rttfttd Lloent.. Shop

6·S·'I9·1fn

I ·ZI·"II· Ifn
I

•

'

''

•

•

Yard Solo: 5 mi. out 218, Sopt.
30th, Oct. 4th, Chlldrens &amp; adult
clothtl.
Yard Sale: Bulavllle Town
HouH, Frl, 29th, Sat . 30th Sun .
101. 8:3().5:0,0.

pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Yard Sale, Tuts and Wid, t :OO
till 1 lots ol everything,

It's. Time Now!
I ~-lift••• That Furnace
ChKked.
We Service.All
Makes ~ Gas or
Electric . Also Parts
for All Makes. - .
CAlL NOW ,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

-HOUSE FOR SALE

3 femlly. 121 S. S.vent tt. Ave.,
Middleport. Old milk bottles,
babyclothtl,
antiques,
2nd,3rd,41h. t :00-4 :00. ,

3 BR ranch hom•J.'h

baths, full baseme ·. 2
car garage, 10x60 lt.
deck. 3 acres plus 1'1.
acre lake. Mint cond .
$120.000 firm. All new
drapes, fully carpeted.
Built-in lg. TV, stove, &amp;
refrig. See-through fire ·
place.
992-2571

liEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
915-3561

9·22-89

LINDA'S ,
. PAINTING

e

Second St, Mason, W'f.

l -7- .... 1mu. d .

· Middleport,

etc.

S family · yard Ule. Ctrolyn
Ad1ms rt~idance. Yellowbush
Rd., Aacln1. Monday and
Tuuday. Oct.213.
810 South Second, Middleport.
Stpt29-0cl.7. Compl•te bedroom •uite, badding, linens,
curtains,· drapes, dis"hes, milk
glass, pans, clolhi~S· 11mall ap·
pllances, lots misc.

Yard

Sale. Furnitur•, misc.
hou..hold
Items,
cJothlng,
electric h~•pllal bed, commod"e
chair, ba6h, games. Coll•g•

3nd Fltth"SifHta, across lrom
.MOBIU
Method/at
Church,
HOME PARK ,: t-------...;j"- I'~Ai•:b::u~ry~~·
Oct. 4.
Monday, _
Gkt. 2;
Oc:t.3; · Wecln11day,

INTERIOR-EXTERIOR

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

•Mobile HomeParts
•Mobile Home ·
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

FREE ESTIMATES
Toke the pain aut of
paint!... Ltt me da
it for you.

614-985-4110

Roger Hysell
Rl. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

JONES 'Q&amp;E
CENTER

992-3897
St. At. 124
Oh .

145 acres, barn,

Beginning Sept. 17
Storts at 1:00 P.M.
Factory Chokttl 12
Gauge OnlY,

11· 1 ' 88-tfn

DAVE'S
SMALL INGINE
IEPAIR

BUILDERS

-~

CUSTOM IUI.T
HOAIS &amp; GAUGES

Its "

..#,...,L..._.

11

I IfI , Olt.

PAIITS AND SERVICE

•11iftl1 Prkll"

For MM 2 -

4-cyCie

.,.:1:~oo

Hamellte.~w.

Tocumoeh. Briggo&amp;

hy. Night
NO SUNDAY

Strettan•

PH. 99t.nu

'

beyond I the
clOthing,
baby clothes, baby items,
mattrnlty clothH, T.V., electric
stov•, Christmas TrM, assorted
dishes and other miac. it•m•.

Oct.

2,3,4.

10 ~ ? .

Bakery.
Curtains ,
lamps, misc.

EVERY SUNDAY

BISSELL

jusl

Anrone who bought or had
concrete poured July 28,
August 8th,9th,10th from Forest

RACINE
GUN ClUB
GUN SHOOT

HIGLEY FARM

risonville

school. All sizes o

Oct. 2,3,4. 623 112 Russell Sl.
Gravtl Hill, behi nd Hieners

61
IIi&amp;

RunAND TOWNSHIP

Neighborhood yard sale Oct.
2ncf, 3rd, on St. Rl.143 i n Ha r·

3 Announcemenls

Top

FOR SALE

clolhls, cloth as.

How•IILWrltesel

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Maintenance

residence. Ra in cancels.

Announcements

Gutters

•Computerized. Bal•ncer

Mondey, Od. 6. Crow Subdivision, lust oft Rt. 7. Adams

· 4-25-tfn

NEW .... IEPAII

•GreueJoba
•Gener11 Chusil

Monday, Oct1 2nd . Palmar and
7th St., Mldoleport. Good uud
baby clothes to size 3T.

Em•rson
Johnson residence, Portland,
OH. New, used clothil'!g, all
aiz1s, Knick·knilcks, etc.

ROOFING

•New 8t Uaed Tirea
•Custom Pipe Bendin.g

.

Monday Oct.2. 4 family. Sue
Hag•r, E:1m St., Racine. Clothes,

At Jd. S.l. 7 &amp; 143
On The Bv·IPass

Alto Ttlllt~~~lt~la•
.
,.
.PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

742-2455
Salem Stl!.~~~~~-

MlddltpOIII,

992-5114 .

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

lnt1rlor,
bedspreads,
clothing, dishtl, cass. racord•r,
misc. 3 family, Oct. 2nd thru 71h.
685 G1neral ti•rti ng•r Parkway,

HOURS
7 Days A Weak
9 a.m.· 7 p.m.

Garage ·

Tractor Doalerahip

Homt

Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless Steel.

8/ 4/ 89-tfn

LIVING lOOM SUinS
BEDROOM SUITES
DINEnE SETS
"NEW" RECLINERS
Located Behind'

good buys. HomamaM crafts.
Starts 9:00.

We Buy AU
Non Ferrous

lt. 33 North of

USED FURNITURE

Garage t:tle. Sept. 2,3,4. BOb
Waldnig rts. St. At. 124. Lots of

POMEROY, OHIO

992-7479

YUY IUSONABLE
HAVE IEFEIENCES

• PH. 94t-2101 '.
or ·a... 949·2160

tains, coatt l clothing, toys,
sewing mach nn, furniture, van
...t, muffler, tlrelwhHI, tots
morol

1-800·535-2199

,PA~ 9~~1 ~:1D

and MOlE

S.t, Sun, 9-4, McCormick Rd.
bllhlnd American Legion. Lolt
of everythin9.
Yard Sale: 10 W. Poplar Av•,
ChHhlrl, Oct. 2-5. Lamps,
IWitptr, afghan, sheets, cur-

Ton FrH

We con r~ and recare radltlars and
heater ·corn. We con
also acid bail anti rod
out radiatars. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

"At I

Garage Sale: Oct . 2·7. 1.2 miiH
out218. Variety of il•m•. 9-4.
•

Assn.

Control

SEhiCE

FURNITURE

Oara9o Sale: Oct. 2·3, 9·5. 1 112
mile, Rt. 160, p11t HMC. Little
girls, boye, baby iteme, lays.

TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES •WASPS
Member Na1ional PIS!

RUUD

$45,000

undlrl

ROACHES • FLEAS

9-22·1 mo.

(614) 667·3271

636 Linwood, Rio Grinde,
Children's clothing, bicycles,
miac. Jttma , Jamt ifemt $1 .00 &amp;

SIIICE 19n

SYRACUSE
992-2621 or
992·6944

Carport Salt: Won. OCt. 2, 9-:J.
1_. .right off B'ulavllle Rd. Teen
Boyt clothu.

Garage Sale: Oct. 2 &amp; ~ ~ 628 &amp;

&amp; PEST CONTROL

. BOB'S
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

·

.

10..2-'19-1 mo.

111:co. TERMITE

TEM PSTAR

Frk11y. Monday, edition • 2:00
p.m. S1turday.

Call 742-2486
Afttr 5 p.m.

Loc811y Owned • Operated by Bill.

SBnd·Stone-Din

SWEEPER REPAIR

.

614-992-2471
P. 0. Bu 207
Ponltrctv.

·r::;.:
..~~":::..~" I~====

SERVICE

\

r

FAMILY HOMES INC.

DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad It to run.
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.

Will Video Tape
· Weddings,
Birthdays.
Reunions, Interiors
of H'omes for
Insurance.
'

MODEL OPEN DAU MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
P.M.-6:00P.M. or CaD Far Appointment

7
._o_ran_,_A_."'..:;;

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL

•DDUPOIT, OHIO

~-- .. lanch, Cape Cod &amp; 2 Story

bottom, hill land.
timber. 2 producin&amp; gas wells.

DUMP TRUCK

u.....o: u,....,

MNX ONE, ATHfNS. NAJA 'Aitr OF THE CARWG rEAM
AtMN, Ohio
M•m~r FDIC

MlB4~fi9

ALL Yard SaliS Mu11 8t Paldln

A~vlnet.

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

MODULAI HOMES
SINCE 1_9 70

•Oil Chengot

EVENINGS ·

992-2104
POMEROY, .OliO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

mo.

•SHRUB It TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAl

CONTACT: Manning Kloes
Central Trust - 992·6661
Good Investment Property! Financing
available through Central Trust or make
preferred arrangements. Central Trust-offers competitive rates and friendly s1rvice!

992·6611
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

992-2506
POMEROY, OHIO

985-4422

.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY .

992-2196
MIDDLEPOO, OHIO

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

..

.
QUALITY PRINT SHOP VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
!
992-3345
.
.

992-6687
POMEROY, OIQO

PAT HILL FORD

OF

Af~'tlll'i":

GUN SHOOT
Rl. 124 letw•n

-Po•:.~~-le~'!.':·

NEED A. HOME?

511!/H tfn

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB

SUSAN CObMAN
742-2771
C1ll fer F1ll S•tllllt
1st visit FlEE

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

or ••· 949•21"60

adult clot hinlil, misc.

5 Family: Monday Oct. 2i 1:00.
517 Magnolla Dr. M•diclnt
canlnel, nlc• winter clot~•·
mie.c.
,

lutiantl 011.

::1: '(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
Z 417 Second AYIIIUI, Bar 1213
- GalliPolis. Olio 45631

..... "Wf
"frM Estlmoteo"

CHESTER, OHIO

heritage house.

:i Licensed' Clinical Audiologi~~ .

a

3 F1mlly: Stitt Rt.160' 1n Vlnton,
Frl, Sopt :Nth, thr~ Sat. Oc:t 7.
h.m ..Sp.m. Everyti'Wng Chup!
Chlld...nt, adull clolhH.

Out New
Lima Ill. in

Run, pie... contacl ,... at 114--

112-6822.

bedding,

Oc:t.2nd,3rd,41h.
725
Page
St.,Widdleport Clost to Heii'lers
Day-()ld Store. Good clean merchandiu.

Giveaway

4

1 Ftuflv groy klnan, found ot

Krodol l&gt;aik. 304-675-44311'.

·3
Kittens,
wks. 2 yellow,
,,.,,
Good I Mouural
814·245-1
464.
3 Mixed Bea~t!..' !~ttHit _pup.

~· lrom ~bug nunttr, pnone
.SJ6..2t1 ·
31ong hal,.d klttans. a wks. old.
White, calico, tan and white.
814-982· 5185 or 114-742-3154.

EARN MON-EY typing 11 home.

$30,000/yur Income potential.

Details, 1) 8C5-687o.6000 Ext.

B~ ~

4562.

11lary • bllnttill. M odern-clea n"
lac:lllty g real tt1tf &amp; realdents. •
Apply CareHaven , At 1 B9x 321(

3 Family Yard Sale: OCt. 2 I 3,
at Swain'• Farm Houae, Crown
City.
"

Mll11

AVON f All' Artll I Shirley
Spttrw, 304-675-1428.
'-

3 Family Y1rd Sale: Oct. 3 • 4.
1-5, • mi a.a from Holur'a on

2 Famllr, Yard Sale: 1 st trailtr on
toh. Cl pper IIIII. . Sot, lion. &amp;
Tutt.

SUN'S UP
TANNING

Help Wanted

Adml.n lon Coordi nat Ot·Soclal:;
Worbr tor · lOng ltrm care .
facility e r; perlence ~rterred •• •

kid•

9· 21··11· 1 mo. d.

2'It

s.. Rio.

111m&amp;.

FIYE POIIInS, OHIO

z LIS'A M. KOCH, M.S.
i:E

mt.

11

Aooort: ol ltomo.

160. B1rbie llems, olher· toye,

614-992-5344

.Jependable Hearinc Aid Sales &amp; ~...i...l
CJ 'Hearing Evaluations F.or All AgeS

IISS.ELL
SIDING CO'.

992-2115
POMEROY, OliO
•'

'

L&amp;L TIRES

INSULATION

God's garden must
be beautiful;
He only · takes the
best .
He knew you were
suffering;
He knew you were
in pain;
He also knew in
Heaven
You would never
,hurt again.

SUGAR RUN
FLOUR MILLS

BLUE STREAK. CAB CO.

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Sa«ials

•BLOWN IN

This P~ge Sponsored By These Many Fine Businesses

FERRELLGAS

SEPT. 29, 1989

•VINYL
•ALUMINUM SIDING

...,..

o.t. 2, 3. o-? 325, 3

SALE STAm

-

Reel Estate General

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN, MUSSER INSURANCE

POMIIOY AND MIDDLEPOU'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PillA SHOP.
Bt 18t 1 mo. pd.

Villl;t~,

Oct . 411'
1 , &amp;h.
in or ahine.
largt
V1rd
Sl'-:Ra
Patriot
a::JO.f:oo. .
Mlchl111n Solo: Evorythlng lluot

m. 141 , y.'t•••• cloth•• and
mloc . ...... ""th·Oc:1. 12.

Mot111t~.;:.~alancttl

FREE LOJ;AL DEUVEIY

~~::::~

Employment Servtces

Gol

13" throuth 205·15"
53 0.OO I Pair

· 992·9922 or 992-:l22S ·.

And saw your tired
face.
fie put Hie anne
around you
And lifted you to

992-2104

•

USED TilE
SALE

LOWEST PRICES
II~HEST QUAlity

01.

992·6155

PATIENT REVIEW COORDINATOR

~~Support

Ill.

He:nfn~he road waal-1-1-..--

lltppg Bl1thdtg
G1sn~mt I.
G1ut Gnndms
Stdle/

.

•--'-.,.1,.1

...,..
P-rey,

reet.

Market

MAIN STREE'EI .
...-:~
PIZZA

THE
BASKET WEAVE

t~arth

~umber

'

0

.•

OCtoblr 2,3,4. Aaron Sayre
larm. tltmt : 1oo11, chlldren,1nd
aduh clothing, blankets, •hHt•,
books. Shlrl1y Sayre and thl

l•ll~a~n~uo~l•~·~·:2nd,3rd.
~00.~-~m~.;_~~~
36000 Rock·
Rd.,Pomeroy.
Sepi.30,0cl.2nd,3rd,41h. At. 124,
Mintrl¥1111. 2 tamilitt. Z color
TV's, nwlng machine c1blne1,
picture developing equl~tnt,
thOI gun l htll loa~er. Intercom
•ystem, 11 lpttd bike, 3 speed
b1kt, many wint•r eloth•s.

'4 Terrt.r puppltl to giveaway.
Stt at 156 Soc:ond. 114-44&amp;- 9
Wanted to Buy
1300.
1.:..-~:...:..:..:...:..::_~--:
A blby f•male YthH• or tari
8 wk. old puppJ.., black •
Chuohuo. &amp;14-245· 0558.
while, medium alze doga, 11431Ht185 or 814-367·7750.

Polnl Pleasent, WV 25550, 304 ..~

675-3005.

.

- -·- EMERGENCY

HELP WANTED

We N"d 20 SllespeoP'•

... •

IMMEDlATE LYI
,
To help co nduct an tm•rgeney .,
1111, No exper l•nc• necessary, ..
good hourly pay w ith tremen· '

do us
bonus!
ttl.l denll · or

'"'ous•wives, ·•

proltnlonal ·
sallspeople r;;an ma ke a bundl•. :

Apply In pe rs on end uk lor
manage r bet ween 1 •

personnel

1 01 . m .~ 4p . m . nt Emplra Fu r· ~~
nllutl Co. 842 Second Ave., Gal- • •
l)polil, OH 45631.
•.

..

COSME ro LOGISl.
Fantastic '
S1m'1 will open so on. Guara.nIHd wages plu t eommission, .
~ vacaliont. Managers &amp; •
llyllalt n.-ded. 614·682-70 18 •
•
tnytlme. ,

Do you hlvt the spirit of • ..
carlnv? TMrt art many Jo-b op- •
·
pon1.1illtlu tor healt h cart · ·
workert. Become a valuabla ,
member of tht htallt'l cart team
in just 18 WHks. Enroll now In "'
tht Nursing Assista nt/O rd erly
program
at
Tri-CoiJnty ' ' "
Vocalional
Sc hool- Adu lt ' s
Educatio n Center. Need mo ney :.,
lor trai ning? We ha ve a var iely ~ •
of funding sources available for ""
those el.lgi ble, Reg isler now for ,;_
tht classes beginn ing Octo bor ~.
2nd, call 614·753-3511 Ext. 14. "·
Cat ch the Spirit!
••
Don't miss Christm as protit s. ••
Slart selling AOJon Now! Can : ...

~·1:.:4;
.g=
g2:,:·7;1~
80~
. ::-:--:---:--

EARN MONEY t yping h ome. '
$:JO,oooryear incom e .Pole ntial.
Details, 805-687 -6000 Ext. B·

4562.

.

=

'.

•

EARN MONEY typi ng at hof!le. ::
$30,000/year Income pot enti al. •.
Cetails , 1· 805·687·6000 EKI. B· ••

1om.

•

Assistant Managemanl &amp; Hourly
Employees, !lOW needed, for
National Pizza Restaura nt com·
lng soon! Please s end resumes,
to P.O. Box 10 Barboursville,

wv 25504.
:.:.:.:=---·.

FlnHt Sales position 1vail abla. •
It you have a can do wi ll be ..:
,dorM att ltuda and are willing Ia .....
laarn we will guarantee you ·•
$3,200. per.month in writing cal- ~
Ung on toea! ~usslntstt . Com- :
plata
tra1mng,
company
banallts, 803·799·1872, Sun. :
Mon. Tu•. .
""'

Full-time bookkeeper needad in
ttlt Gallipolis area ! E:cc. opp~·
lunlly, Nallonal Co, &amp; Exc .
benefits. Position aOJallable Oct
2, 1989. dnlerasled appHca nls
send r•sume &amp; e ovar letter to:
Voca Corp. 450 Second Ava,

•

•
..

~

"'
:-

Suite 100, Gallipolis, OH 45631,

HELP WANTED: TYPIST. Must •
be able lo type 60 wpnl. •
Knowledge of word proc essing .•
equipment helpful. Knowl edge
or medical!psychiatrlc
ter- ',
mlnology
preferred.
Send :·

resume or call

Sandra

Me· ... I

Farland,

Personnel
Office r,
Woodland Centers, Inc., 412
'Vinton Pike, Gallipolis, 014
-15631 , 614-446-5500. Wood land
Centars is a EEO/AA .actiol'l
employer and doH not d is•
criminate on the bas i• of
re1191on, rae• . color, seK, ag~,
nat1onal origin, handicap or SA-

ctstry.

...
..

..
""
'.,.
....
....
.:
~

~

•

Hair stylist wlth Ohio Manager's
L.lcense. Send resum• to P.O.
EloK 122, Middleport, OH.
•

...

Hir ins : Mall.n friendly people
for g1ft shop to be opt necl in
Oh io River Plaza. Must be- bondal;tle &amp; ready to s tart work, 3rd
week
In
Oct.
Assistant
managament
I
regular
•mptoyee• needed. Apply at
Holiday Inn. Gallipolis Meeting
Room Oct. 4,1989. 111.m.-2p.m.

1.·

"'

·~

.:_
""',
..
'··
-...,

'

.

Job Hunting? NMcf a skill? We ~ .
tr1in pe~ple tor jobs as Auto -·
Mecl'lan ies, Ca rpenters
Cost '--1
mttologlsts, Clversilled Medical ,

Workers,

P1ra1egals,

•~

E.l.etriclana,
Food
Servlcl
Workers,
Electronics
Tech- '
niclans, Industria l Maintenance
Workers, Nursing Assls teni s
and
Orderllet,
Machinists,
Office Wo11ters and Welders.
Register now tor c lasses begin·
nlng October 2nd. Call lrl·
County Vocational Adult Center
It 614·753;3511 Ext. 14. A
varlaty of fund i ng sou rces to
pay tar tra ining a re nall able lor
Ihose ellgibll . ·

•
J

1
~~

·,.
,.
••
••

•

Local office seeks frien dly,
lfficient rec1pUon lst, must h a~Je
ucellent telepl'l one manners }
and be famllar witl'l muni lin•
phone eyst.ms and modern
,
offlc:• equipment . Some t ypi ng '
requirltd
shorthand
abilily ..,.
preferred

and

-..~

comp ut er

knowledge helpful. We offar
competltiOJt wage and benefit
ea t wo rki ng en·
package. ~
vlronment.
nd resume an d
tetter •s soo as possible to
Box P -30 cere Poinl Pl easant 1
Register, 200 Main St., Pl. Pit, :"~

WV25550.
'

MANAGERS

AS SISTANT MANAGERS
S A L.ES ASSOCIATES
TEN BELOW
A l adies Specialty Stcre is com·
lng to O hio River Plaza. 15 Up·
per River Rd, Ga lli polis, Apply
m person al ths store on ~!
Tuesd ay Qc t. 3rd botween ...
11a.m.-Sp.m;
~~
Nation al Manu faelurer of paper
5

~j'J7~~~~ t~u~~~~i~~ r!~~~ sto:~~

in immediate area. Pleasant,
creative
part·ti me
wor~,
maintaini ng party. . cente r. Car
required. Call collecl, 6 1 4- ~9 87748 Wed. oOJenlng Oct. 4, 6 : ~0·

•
#&gt;

:
..
~

~;,

•
,

7:30.

.·

Point Pleasant Buslnus, • •
tab;ishmenl n. .ds p.1r1 tim•

:

Froot Frw Rot .. noodo ropalro.
Uoood Tl,.., 814-216-6251.
Will Highland Whho TOf~oro,
AKC, adult 01ock 614-167.o&amp;24.

6

Lost &amp; Found

Cuh Atwlrdl Loll Golden
Allrelver, Qallia Centar~nl Ad.
Mluing tinct Aug.IJ. Anaweres

•

to Luko. 11f-3,..2441.

LOit: Tan wltll•ck JMIG

IIM:f.
141.

Set of flrt Heape sleps. Plea H

to lulch hard of
hnrlng. Reward ~ 114311-2157.

Uoood tumlturt and houMIIotd

Raccoon Crtek •rea on

a........

Yard Sala

caii614-HH822.
lf~.•ncee.

Phone

~14-742·

..
htlp , approKimate ly ' •
10· 12 hrs · p•r w.ek, IOJening ..
hours,
S:JS. weekly. S•n d •
rtsume to Box S-26 care Point ...
Ple111nt Reglt ttr1,200 Mai n St, ,.:

Jln itorial

Polnl Pleasant, Wv 25 550.

~ ~~

POIIII JObs
·! ~
UMCI lumltura by tht place or
Start $10.7iiHA. For eu.m and · · ...
entlra houuhokl alto 11IHng •
lppllcatlon lntormtllon, caR ~
114-742-2451.
,

Gallipolis

21t·769-664g lxt . OH158, 8 a.m..

Uood 1111ypon a hftlh cloolr, .,._ •p.m., 7davs.
2411441.

a. VIcinity

t/2 mlftl lbovo Rood- Plrk.
Blue ho~oe. loll. Clothl!ltl, now
born to ICI~It • -· ll-l'~. lo-5.

.

'

!
4

~... ,.,._n needed mu.t be : •
Wllnlocl to buy, uoecf Scllwtftn tble to lift I work tleJdble holl'tl. •:
Alnlrne ExorciH llcJCio. Yl'ra Furnltur•, 4 lnl. out 14~ ...,.
Hom11 1111111,614-112-3337.

apply in person.

·-1

..,..

�..
'
Page 8
11

The Daily_Sentinel

LAFF-A·DAY

Help Wanted

44

. 51

~partment
for Rent .

Occnalonal blby altl• tor a

ter1 wlrta to Box P-25, carw of

P01nt Pteltant Reaietw, 200
Moln'Sl, Pt. Pn., wv 2'5550.

Sandra McFarland

oau

nc;.1

45631 , 614.-441-6500. Waoaland

Canllf'l ts a £~0/AA action
employer ....J nd doea not cUe·
criminate on the basil of
r.Hglon, race, color, sex, ~~ga ,

plicants tor a Boya' 9th Grade

.

J(·) W

•• •

........................ ,w.
5

CaM . . . """ tw ,,
11.....,tll.
,.,.....

.......

Basketball Coach, Boyo' Slh
Grade
Basketball Coach, Boya'
7th Grade Batkatball Coach,
Bo1•' Hoad Track COICh, Junior

t=========:r=::==:::::=~=:::j

Junior High Trock Colch, HNd
Baseball Coach. Assiltant
B••• b.ll Coach, CUrls' A...r.,.
Softball Coaei'l and Girls' Junior
ht 1... ~
b C

For 11o. - n
old ronch F R n1 u... 1 Rio ft--~h'"'
•
~h
qr • : nvwM n
-•nvw,
.ty11 owe. ,.
roo. l2711mo. plua clepod, t14-682lwon"';
old Lennox HMt Pump 7174 after lp.m.
on .1 .ere, Flolwoodo Rd , 11

41 Houses for Rent

31 Homes for Sale

High Track Coach, A_..tant

c

High Basket au oac or n•
1989·90 achool y.ar. Applk:ants
must hold a nlid Ohio tllchlng
car11ficata and tor coaching
positions must .ri'IMt cartlff..
cation requlremtl'lll of Ohio ror
sports medicine and CPR. Parsons lntartstad -hould contact
Jirll Carpenter, Superintendant
ot Meigs Local ScMools, at P.O.
Box 272, 320 East Main SlrHtln
Pomeroy, Ohio.

FIR Points. Conlact DIVe fox
114-112
• 4 ••2 ,_.,
a1 " 1 ...... , _ Of •
..

6646·

GOVERNMENT HOMES trom
$1 .00 . (U RapalrJ FOrtcloeuraa,
RtpM:,
Tu
O.liquenl
PropartB Now Mlling, can 1-315~7:J6..7375. Ext. H.OR..Q2 cu,.
renl Uata. 24 hrs.
Llka new 3BR home. lOlA. n. .,

evt~rythlng
remodeled
wHh
soma briCk. Priced rt;htl 814oo

Tobacco Workers Wantad, NQI'·
man Young, BuH01Io, WV, 304937-2530.

38:8-1711 .

Nice S blldroom hom. 1 bath,
gorogo ond 111110 lei, Golllpollo
Farry, Priclld mld 40'1 30447S..
. 5725.
.

Wanted
Babyslnlng In my homa, 2-3

4 bedroom hOUH, 1•112 blth.

mil" trom Holzer Hospital. Will
give retereneas. 614-446-2387.

On Grovel Hill, Mlddloporl, Ohio.
Gange. Immediate popealon.
Caiii14·992..S714.

CI1Jld ca.W pravlded. Agat 2.3,4.
Mlddlepor1, acrgss from park.
614.992-6926. Ratarancel lup-

2 br, cotltlga. NiCa retirement

pli~ .

home 1ocattd 295 Lower River

Rd. R1vor Vlow. 81,4-446·2300.

LO"Iing Mothfr, w/24 years of
up; &amp; childeare, will babyllt In
my home, Mon.Sat, all ages, day
&amp; 11ttemoon lima! Call aHir
6p.m. 614-388-9626 In VInton
area.

Portland Rd. 7 room houla, tr.e
gas, complllitly renovattd. New
.,ding roof, wlndowa. doors,
carpeting, plumbing, wirlng,
lights, deck on 2 sidas, pttlo,
landacaping, lg. wtlk In clo..ts,
lg. 1toraga, completely prlnte
on 2 acraL 152.000. Up lo 100
acr• available. 61'-14).5281 af1•4:00.

Mother, wi~e ol tHchar would
like to babysit In her home,

32

Have room, board ilnd care tor
elderly.
Reasonable,
In
Pomeroy. 614·992-6901.

Mobile Homes

Middleport. 614-992-6936.

for Sale
We cart for a\darty and han· 12:x60 Buddy, 2br.1Aall gas, nnt'
dicapped In our homt. 26 )'llrl carpet, AC, 191U lfb new
axpahtnca. LPN on calt. Low through out ~.,450 114-446' ...
'
lncoma homa.·Call 614-992-8873 0175.
after 7:00 p.m•. tor meif a lnfor·
mttion.
· 12x60 on nice laviil lot, nice
15

Schools &amp;
Instruction

concrete wallce, n~ location.
Mutt IIIII It internt.,:l, 614-446-

8005, after 5p.m.

Solo lo Choir, !log. ,..
8221
(11"""In 110olilclo).
Wood
_ ......
-·-.
;;
ONupo,
U2t. ,_ $Ill
111 . 11&gt; · s1 op

U~"'.'~
. •r ~
.. ,_...,.ollLII ~

Anno a.-.. I
11k411- 1 , .....
, 4, &amp;I
IIMI ~.. aun
•- "'WWn a Ful llalrHMI Wll
SII lo ~a $41.11. (10 In

NO ..-

out1hAve.

45

1973 Flamingo, 12x5SI 2br, 1
bath, on ranted lot n Point
Pleasant, Call ·after 7p.m. 614·

446-7556.

Do 'tii'JMOirY work. · Building 1973 Llbel1y mobile home.
homH to remodeling. Have 12x5S, axpando, good cond,
re ferences. Ask lor Chris. 614- must Hll, 304-675·1~38.

446-6488.

3

bedroom

12x70.

S1ovo,

.....

·

42 Mobile Homes

FumloiMrl on~ 11 ullllll•
L"" ·
111
=.:."",.bath, I ""'"'"·•

for Rent

Cancrod~.,

-"'I·

11184 Doublo wide, movocl, Ill•
up. dellveradl Exc, cond. May
fln1nce wldown pal3'r.n1. 114-

46

2 BR, S1711; s br, ·s200 On lit.
Dapoalt. You pay utlllliH. It C..
388-11104.

1 lmlll lol 111. 7, 3 111110 lol, Acldlaon Ad. S75. Wor&lt;tlo Tnollor
Plrk. 11~285.

446·1810. 114 141 4

llnyllmol

,.,.rtnelll
bodraom

lumlohad.

1124 E. Moln Sl-~ P-ray.
Hawo: M.T.W. 10:00 un. to 1:00
1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
14
•
·
'Top Cah polcl. Old lumKuro
cuboordo,
quiKo,
orlonlll,

rt:t:';::':/

· Painting, Interior &amp; .ixlerior, 1~
yrs. IXJ?:Irilnc:a. GuHer clunlng
&amp; I'ICIIIIng &amp; roof c011ing. Fr•
estimate. 614-379·2320.

Would you like a MW mobUe
home before wll'lter? Call ut It
1-800·7~045 .

Wo 1oko riding

mowet'l, trtctorw,
au1ornobllu and
lrad1. ·

motorcyclaa,

trucks on

REMOOELING INTERIOR, EX·
TERIOR PAINTING, !loaFING,
CONCRETE
WORK, 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
ELECTRICAL &amp; PLUMBING EXP.
HAS REFERENCES. PLEASE 1 acre lots Galllpolla Farry, city
CALL AFTER 5P.M. 614·256- water, 304-675·2722.
1611 .

eon. Socon

ond Plno. Amplo
por1clng. 0.11114 448 4241, 4412 br mobllo homos, Depaoli, &amp; 2325, or 4-25.
rol. roq"d. Call ollor 2p.m. 114- Counlry llobllo Homo Poric,
441.01127.
Roulo 33, North ol Pomoror.
2 br, mobllo homo, dop ~ rei. Lolli£ ronlolo, pone, ul~o. Call
roq'a. Coil onor 2p.m. 114-441- ::.11:,:4::=
..=112=:-·7:.;4~71;::·=:--;::;--;:;:=
0527.
Lorge mabllo homo lot (olrrglo)
2 .br., apac:lousl attached family on firm 20 mit• from POint
room AC applancee tumlahed PL.aaunthRt. 81; oiKinty wat•,
2 miJea hem Holzer 1250/mo. ......
elaranoee rwquhwl.
pius utiiiUn. Deposit and rat•· 304-IH-3001 D1' 304.. 71-4131.
ntcll requlred.l1~6-9625.
Ona acre lot, tfllll.,. alklwld,
chy wlter, Galllpolla Ferry. 3042br, hrmlohorll olr ••"'!a coblo 175-2722.
.

,Will take care ol alderly or do
houucleaning. 614-446-1222.

65 Acr-.s, City School1, 5
minutes .from town, tobacco
but, mlntral rights, aood homt
ShH. $25,000. 614·251-1560.

9.04 aerH off Eagle Ridge
Rold,
vtry
privata,
ap.
proximately four acrH ls
Mayfiatd aultabll for building
and lha real Ia woodland. Excef.
lent hunting area. Elactrlcity

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity
!NOTICE!

and

TP&amp;C

Wo1or

•••lloblo

rJ:•arby. $10,Goo; or wlllaall total
28 acrn plus cabin for $27,500.

OHIO VALLEY· PUBLISHING CO. Coll&amp;14·f41·2311.
recommend• that you do
hh
.......
know
I
a~: n':M' 1 :' 0~.Joumo,..Y
throuqn thl mall mtil You han

b

..ln:.:v•:.:•~tJg:'::l:::tadO'::';Ih':o=o~li()a2';:::·, - ]
- 1000 WOLFF SUNBEOS==::
Toning tabln. New tow monthly
payments! Comm~~rclal, Mom•
tanning Bltds. Lamps, lations,
accassorles. Call Today FREE.
Co lor Catalog. 1-800·228-8292

(OH058D~.
Shoe Store and Video Store
combined for ula. In Pom~roy
area. 614·992-3830 or 614·9922571 .

23

Prof.e sslonal

Ashtcm, beautiful ona ac,. Iota
whh rt.,., frontage, publtc water.
Clyde /Bowen, Jr. 3Q4.578·2331.
AthtOI\ III'QI building loti,
mobile home• parmltllef. public
Wltat, prlctl reduced, Clyde
Bowen, Jr. 304-576--2338.
ltn•
•
acre tracts;
3
-J
d Ow
r
1
•cr .... pon .
ntr tnanc ng,
1100. down. 90 acr• MlL
Meadow/woods, spring,
royaltiu, 145,000. Gunvlll•
Road. 304-175--7887.
Woodland, 132 aerH, 135,000,
R1. 7, btlow Eureka, Call 114-

2br, turnlehtd. ld. .l for wortdna
par~on, UIUitaa pakl. On Rt. 7
Cfole to dam, Rent by WHk or
month. 114-258-1378.

Loculi Rood on rlglrl, 304-1751078.
Mere hand ise
Household

114·311.(1662.

Tnliar nke cllan untumiehed,
rtlerancn required, Route One
out Locuet Road on right, 304675·1076.

a••

446-4418 """' 7 p.m.

Services .
STRIP

Rentals

. ·

Fumllure, ,.flnlth and r..-h'.

can soa 9pm. &amp;14-992-7441 .
Real Estate

41 Houses for Rent
2 bedroom in Eutem District.
I2DD month plu• deposit.
Flatarancee ·requlrlld. 614-Mio

2801.

2 eaacftric: multi DOI!tlon ldJu•
tlhle . bed• $1&amp;o. 17 cu ft
Frfaldare rel,trc.t frM. 304-0Ts..

UfS.

1 po Chorry dining roam ouHo1
Duncon Phyte ~- ~ cona
MOO. 304-«575-~. i
8r12 ~rpet. $50; roQ carpet $4 a
yard &amp; up: Mollohand Fumhure
Mudoock.
$100/dopooK, 614-44S-7444.
s1501mo. 114·7"-M2ll ollor I:.:.:.:.:::..::::.::...._ _ _ __
5p.m.
YIAA FURNITURE
44
AT. 141&gt;4 MILES
Apartment
CENTeNARY
RENT TO OWN
for Rent
4 Drl-r Chell: n.ao wki Bunk
Bodo 110_110 wk. complolo.

~i~ partially fur· SWivel

nlahorl.
hbar1racrl
Ad.
AVIilob,. Oct
111. $2110/mo.
114-441-1187 oftor 7pm, 1114-

11or Llrry.

Rocker

honey. 114417-7102.
For S.la; Amua aJr ooncltloner,

1300 BTU. $210.114 441 0142
FoKIIno Co_.nrl c.oo.-, 5
.. ..- . 11511. Call 114-Mt-3050
on• 5:00p.m.
HI! lor lllo. Round blloo,
clovor . &amp; llmolhy. SiQkormotic
body
k
otovo. 1961 Sllkl
1ruc •
good condlllon:· 2 new front
11m, good roor llrn. Hydroullo

$5.00

tlllllft. 114-24U117.

wkj
Dlnlllo, 4 Cholro 17.80 wk.
Rocllnor ... 00 wk. LOW CASH

Hclld- Froozor, lllo now, 10•4
11.-~ 1•• •· Ill"0 ell0 h
cu.
• -; _, "
camptele wfAndarson • control Ia
~CIIIvar, $500i , 1 , 441 0031.

PRICES

Love SN1 1241, ReGUlar S741i

2 oport-, uch 4 ·roome •
~
1 """"'
·-· • ••·
·

Rocker Recliner

un,

Regular

151111; Chool Dno- U4.11;l!ol·
!.~'""
II.IIDior m7.ooN~~
-nory
luo
nlllo,
Solt41111; Complllo
Uno ol·Ooll
21':~·~""'-L""
n~rono.louneo..~
Tabloo,
Clow
Soot;
I
Pl'llo
llock
1
Ch1Iro; -~k CUITlo Co"'nolo
•leo
ovolloblo. Ci 1114~
'
3711 EOH. ·
$211; wHh Curvocl 0 ,.0 Front.
Rail Top
Doell
I Cholh=
T.,...
Avallabte.
• •-~-- unlum~•~ 0 _. Credit
•lccolodHcillorCIInlaaiWV.I14-~
- - '" -u--•·
h
•·
~ 1
1
- Y 1 ru-ou,-r, o.m. •
41U111formoraln..,.,.tion. · e p.m. Surn111: 12·8 p.m.l144414158
S boclraomo, In lllddloporl, Noor
'
echool •nd e1oree. I1'1S.Jmonth OOOd Glbaon R•frlgan~tor 1n~
1&gt;1uo 1100. depooll. 114-ttz. au rongo. R-.oblo. 114-

,,,!'T.',•o'n'i

""a

ond both opl. 304-e711-

Waar:llumer and ADDIIUnM
lor ..... ollor. 114-

742.al2 olor 1pm.

55

Autos for Sale

:::-:-'::---'::--:-:-:::---::::::For l•le: E1tetrlc Ringe, S75i
3br,
kHchon
wloi0¥0, d~r,. $80; Slclo bf, oldo
::i.'f:':-p, 1~· pot~; rwJlloorllor, $150; A/1 n good
c;ourt St. 114'448-4121.
""""· 114.,..1-23110.

lilT Ford LTD. 310 aut!', nte,...

lor, ,.-u Exlro porto, ,...
toroblo. Aoklng 11000. 304-e751112.
111111 Dodge owo · Runo
aood, hoo aood 11- g..on,
rMo lhon 50,000 mlloo. ln·ll2·

Building
Supplies

Apartment tor rwnt, ~7s..
2211.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE!t. 131 ......... Plkl
kom S1V'.urno. Wolk 10 ohoD l
movloe. C.OII814-441-2HI. EOH.
Clean, 2 badroom untuml•had
oporomonlo, down-town Now .
Hovon. llldclloi&gt;Or1 oport.,...,
koo holt. 114-8112-7481.

1 1 ~24 ~~· 7'

qul!lor). 850 lour ball

rn11ln, ,..·.-m, uo trtlnl.,.

1t81 Monte Carlo..
Iundy Clarinll with cua, $125. AIIIFIIICU.., AC, exc. . cond.

Fruits

&amp;

ts,IIO"'i:~~'llraclor wllh lft.

Sat. U.S.A.f. Retired.

.,...

1
'QI l ,....
00

llliiiNKM~

HERE.

.,...

Fann Equipment ·

1030

caoo

D!oool

-.

bu.h
I _,.

, t2.350: 1200 Dlvk:l
•• ·~
wllh ~.
~ .. .,._;
114..all t ' " .
11'17-71 ~, JD Dour, 1 woy
blecle. •-:-;, aoocl .-,d.,

$17,000.11
-1,f14, Randy.
,,
850- Dolor, I
(IGINI

wow-.
11-

oand. AIICiy Ia WOrk.
t044.

-,,!:d ·~:..=':8:

It=·

o30u1 0 Jo"'·--- •• 711 ' aw' •
- -.. .,,
nor
ftiiiiiA 114-2118522.
AIIIIICOIII
IIC.
Cloolng
luel- Jrrlm Dooro.Aci'
..._.,ft lo
1.,.
~ bO!ow"".-;r.l. an .-"':.
q&lt;~l-nl 11 ....._ ,.,._
lol, I Sun. Agrican Ina.
Will

=
,.,..

.,.

•••

~~~~,:-....,.::,:~

Pllnl Pl.uo, 2415 JadtHil ave.
Point P l l -........ 304-47114014.

~.1'.:1.=~ ..,.'- -

oP.rtlllllll. All utiiMIII pold.
BullobiO lor I or 2 odulll. I110J

81

•

1112
T·T- V... .4
___. Cornoro
_._.__ ....
_
.
,
~·~ 1·
-ft·-Z28 _ 1uoa,PS,
1-·~ ..- ·

..

1

114 11143131fttri:OO.

1115 Toyall Von, l&amp;, loadod,
nc. olropo, prlcod tor 1 quick
oole. 814-38U734.
PI
h A I
old
,...
ymaul
ol onl
r.
PSIPI, auto :i'~ AC, rail Net
- · 114-2
1.
1. . cav.n.r DC, r..l oood,

uc. olropo, block,114-14~7.

1. . ChryiiM' LeBaron, PS, PI,
PW, a..-o, owner muet ltllll14a
441 lni.IIC.. oond.
1MI Coroloa.17000 mlloo. Tokl

~
,..,.
e1r1._p.
n..-.-.

lniiWI100.
Caneti:M-ctle~

Fer-=
re.

I

. .

luvwJ' Guide
IOHI7
II&amp;U-1011t.
- - E N T IIIIZED Yolllolll
lram e100. '-d. ll1101d11
Col·-~
- ClrovyL ••. ,....
.,_.
• (1)
bf. a-1
01
1~::.:..;,:=-'=--~~
-::~·-c:
'TIINe
4 ...,pll4:•i I lwO cloar ~I;
~ulroporii....... II4-IG•

-..u.,ii7Qii._

,72
·~.;Truck;,;;;;:;;,;•;.:to;;,;r~Sa:;.:;;le::::::::-

1
Colrl 1 1 llano.
iM7 1an1 1011 '"""" - - .
Col lUI I llo " ' r . A o - . - . NOO,
II
• ,

-114-112-2148.

1 bodrocin IUrnlehod upololro
ool, woohorldryor harrp UJI, 171-1710.
r
11A untum. opt: ~I rolrlg.
prcvlciOd. Wotor, -~~~~. aarbogo, paid. Dop. lo Rol. .114-441·4345.

s

- A L iii'IDIII CAll IALI:
• W011. 4 1:00 II.M. AI
. . . . . . . . . . . lnillddlftl
1111 ' I • Gila. IIIII'Id II
r11r ~ 1M , . 1111 .,._
W-doy. ,., 11tJa
11MIMU1.

Jia •

___

(!)

7:00(J) Our .....

.(J)

8:00 (J) MOYIE: leta- TWo •

bounty lids Mac In Mvlng a
pretty Su(garlan sc:lontist.

&amp;;~~~ ........

(!) T...... T,._l on the •

malliolt St. Helena to the
South Atlantic. (I :00) D
.

n.

amergel:se alert to be

&amp;

Motor Homes

married.

1170 lannar camper. sa..,. 1,
QOOd condition. 1550. Ca.ll 114742.ZHtl.

~

1178 Taurua C.mper. 22 ft. E:x·

\.

(H) TNpper

;

EEKANDMEEK
11-lE.Y't&lt;E.
START1~6

1171

Taurua Mlf-conlalnec:l
....,... 24 ft. Good condHion.

HAl'

a

1171 Plo- T• Truoll.
.... ~ aood
_, . . . 1 - t144aba
• •, ....... 11,Witl......,...

1m hnl ololcua.llllaulo, PI,

rune goocl."l1441'1 1011

.

Footblll

rrs CAL-LSD 'A

Ill

\M?NDERRJL.

6001&lt;.!

•o ""'"*' .._..
teenager-·

·"

Moll 'ails campllled •ma day.
~mf.:IM and ~ice, 304-

WITH

FER A LITTLE

WHO? .

PIGGYBACK
RIDE

:zfllmaginary

23 VIler ..

•

OPnneTimeWNdlng
. • Naalwllle Now
1:30 IIIII
F._ Todclw Z' ·· ,

•o

Teddy's granclrnJ*IS

pred~
Gr~.

tOday. ~~~~ $1 to Aalroc/o IIIIa neullpajler, P.O. Box

91428, CleYIIIncl, OH +41014428, Be
aure to 11811 )fOUr zodllc lllgn. ·
ICOIII'IO COaL lM flo:. Zl) Don't at-

&amp;

Refrigeration

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

J

Hauling

J l J Water Service. Swimming
PD0111 ciatarna. wa111. Call 11,.-;.
_.
245-9281.
~
• • ....
A I R Wlllll' Service. Paola, clio
ttma, wells. lmmtdlat•1,000 or

2~ gollono ·-~· Coil 304lr5-437tl.
Haull~,

nasonlbll rat.. volume dtiaounll, 2,000 10 4,000 copaci11l
olstarns, PGOta. ••Ill, ttc. Cal,
304-l~ailll '
Upholatery
Upllollllrlng · ~~~

.,

~lnf i~::""" ~- ~~".: .',
Uphaiollrlnllo Coli :104-475-41114
IOrfrHUIIIMtM.

lltohlm Uphalolory Conlor, 303
Hllllor, Dr. Call lor oDDOinomonlo
1: Ht mat ea. Ca111,1 ~~14438.

'

IAQITTAIIIUS CNot. 2111ec 21) A
lrlend mlgllt .,.... -'tniiO you today regerdlng _ , . n g rather nol(ll(.

-~

II c:Ncl llhe poalbtllllll._ but don'! get

lnvotvecl W your lnelltiCII warn you
ot,..,.lll,

CAPIICOIII IDeo- INin.11) Conaider youriiH 11 good •~~~yon~ to be lnOot.2.~
YOMid with today. but dcm't "'""' you
· are MAporlor. Snoblllllt blhtlviOr wit ·
Conlactl you'.. eotabllahed wllh peo.. caet you ~ polnll with your
.
po, who 1tve outo1c1e of your lmmallla,. pwL
COUld 111 or ~~r-• - t o you AGUAIIIUI C,_ • 1'111. 11) 1'hCngl,
In 1111 ,_. IIIMCI. Their -'II will In· ahould-- rn1an1b(y.,. far ;.u todly, prOIIIdtd you abkll by the I I I •
owing to an unuiiUII trend ol
del1110pmlntl. '
yooo'.. t•llllltrom 11&lt;1*111 oe fOigo
. . . . Clepl. a-oot. 21) Aollonl pre- meldng llilllhl modllloatiGIII. ....
diGIC upon 1111 ..,_ or k-n-alle - - OOUitfdlllorlllll ,..,._
c:auld ..... you up • blind 811111 today. FIICIS 1M-. II • . , n -*1 b1
You're likely to 1118118 •
mlatllltw II ........ pma lor you • • • tiO llay .
you Iliad om, your own coutllll. Major
~tram IIIIIMikllpiloe II Y11U oan. ;rllltl.
may bl blunlllw In
You ,. wtoattha .,.,.,... call an "lilY llnllll pine. but 1111 big _..
chang II ... llhlld lor Uln In the'tng ,.... Bend lor your AltrO Go . . . ~-··
.. elude you.
.

"

~---

tempi to mlud lhe allalt;a ol an~ unleee you know lor cortaln
you're on flrm ground. Trying to go.a
your way lltOIInd obllac:laa could be
dl-01(1,

..

poet

.

2

translated

."!.

b++.-

, ..

E~lerkn:

0'~"

••

lnte!irlty

..

'

talaJIIIoll. A 10'11 trlanglo

llllloldllmldal
to opsolhe lint~·
111·HIVICI. •
(1 :30)

111ot 01o1t-

hlllllllfllt!llltiOII oi.IOaMII'I

:;

:r::=::.=:n .
·,•

10oil~=-= 11le Wid~
. . . ........
'* ell··. ..

10/2

J

J ~ ' '

. •'
'

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW .
J

....

foi'" the three l.'ll. Xfor the two O's1 etc. Single letters,

IIPQI&amp;relphea, the le14Wt aiid formation ~ ~ wllfd:'l are aII
~hits. ~ch day the code letters art 4111em~t..·.

,•.•

• Meta Its&amp; d Oft 1'r&amp;lllt
Countty onutlci' llgaNI Male

. Chul'c:h . . . . 8tlllon In ' '

it:

!:'' l)··.,.{¥1
·,
'
'
one letter stands for ancitber. In !J!1s sample A is used
•I

J\

lliiiOIIIullllaU 8 ' • '

.

t~~work
. DAILYt'RYPTOQ~-,_.H~n'sh~
.
'
.,
.
.

,,

~l.

··.?.: .

ganing

ann~oiBSC

. Ollltldo.·I=L.

~

slope

,.

::~ ~-,:&amp;;)£

,-

1 Tobog-

I!...............
'
10:30 IIi 1'1111 ...... On The-

•a "'

.. 35 Had
''

··DOWN.

IIJ

Clll

Usehil . , . only
De~!f!Sh ·, , " ·~tre,"

45 African .

c._"""

~lhe '50111

33

LlqtJkt
34
l'l'easure

42

, Rosie

crown.:..
. .,
[II Colouwwatah Tonlglll
Thll oil bUI drama

-a1 ~mmovable

0

blcll 1111 Mias Georgia

•

·

Indian
cymba!s
...... and

47Lane
46 ·sweet

•o Dnl(fnlllll wSuzanne Ia aakod to give

·

39 Attack
43 English

46

Clll

Galllpolla, Ohio
814-44&amp;·3818

-

,.
. ,

·-.,

antelope

- · she shOUld ..... • .
charge o1 Teddy's career. r:;l
10:00 (J) 700 Club Willi Pat
Rabtrtlon
())u.s. Oymne-

laaclnallng 1onn1r Chief
Ju111c:e olllll Supreme Court
teatu'" lnte&lt;vlow wt1h
ordiNJry_ people. (1 :30) r:;l .

Car1ar't Pluml;)lng
1nd Heating
Fourth •nd Pine

24

. · 38 Wonder
•

··
(!) ....,., Chlal •• The uta .
And legolcy 01 l!ttll w~
Thlo provoc:atlvl llld
•
an-1'*'11 ponrlll olllll

Heating

---~~·-·---

· titlti

e~nsion

•,

MMasses
37 Consumed

~

&amp;

'•

31 Rest
32 QOugar ·

1;1

Uncler GlaH, (Pl. 2)

HE'S GONE

Dtvl,
Sow-Voc
Service,
Gooign Crook Ad. Pono, oupo
piiH, pinup, ond delivery. 81444&amp;-0 2M.
•
Sopllc Tonk Pul'lplng $90"Gllllo Co. RON EVANS ENTERPwiSES,
Jackaon, OH 1-800-537·952• .
TrN &amp; att.Unp removal , Shn.tbl,
••11 onad flrewood. City $45.
Countnr
Con's
· • $55, load.
Londocopu. 814-446·111148.

........

26 Send back

vrvr8'· . .

9 TI'IIPPS' John, MD Girl
!

Director
Kazan

30 Jo!e de

A

dead In o8tec:ttve Slkos'

BARNEY ··

:

21 ti~ew. 21 : -·
.
101: Lord.. . overboard I" 41
2~ K(lighC:s •29 .Andlfon . .

~lng

apaitment. (I :00) D
0 L.erry Kille uv.r

2454.
A,.ory or aoblo lool drilling.

87

.

aNewcomer pro&amp;lltullA Is loonld

814...1-

Water

25

go
public wt1h a ptlvlle msno

. ' Murphy wrote.
[II Allen -

city

:• term
' .8 .0oal ·•··
15 Sanskrit,
derh1atiye
school
· 9 Greek
18 Tokyo's
• leHer
·' .
name 10 Permit 28 Cravat
31 "Viva Vila!"
18'GeneratiOn 17 Rul!slan
fabrk;
.
ala! .
19 Admlt'lo
river ! 27 Old mu$k:al39 Briny deep
24 Sylvan
20,Exp!oil . note
40 8jllldlng

10

eome IPP'llnc. repalre. WV

Wanaraon'l

01 Thl w -

11111

Ron'• TV Sorvlco. opoclollzlng
In ZonKh olao Olrvlclng morrl
othlr brondo. Houoe GOlla, oloa

85 General

(!) Art

,

7 Palm leaf

d_eity

Woold Explore the roota ol
Welllm arlin ancient
Greac:e 1nd Rome. (1 :00)

11-.

ResiHntl•l
or
commercial
wlrlng, naw Hrvlct or repalra.
Llctnatd el.ctrlclan. Ridenour
Electrical, 304.. 75-1711.

=Ntglll

1'1111 Tracey 1'htoow. '

Stoiy' NIC
AI ·
The Morin (2:00)
.
()) Aatro Woold
Show
(I) • (J) AIC Monday Night

·,

· 6 Georgia

..

·.

olc;t

C2J QIIIIOYIE: 'A Cry For

~

Local,...,._.

Electrical

. ;·

fl!lmeiJ!J&gt;'
=~·~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond~lonll lllollmo guoron100.
lurillohod.
;,.. etllmal.. Call oollect 1·
114-237-oa&amp;, day or night. R o
g _ar' a l 1 e e m e n t
WOIIrproollng.
c. W. Dlvloon, Plumbing &amp;
lronchlna. lor Ill wooor. I droln
114-148.01511.
Filly Troo Trimming, elump
remanl, ct11304-171of331 .

84

12 Winged
13 Merge
14 Jeweler's

•o

Improvements

Profll
. .
5 Paradol(ure ·

11 FluHer

·•

• ,

4

llunllal (2:30)
1::10 . . C2l 01 Hogso Psnlr
Sandy dl.-ersllll
prlncel8' true ldlnllty. Q
(J) NPL MenDy Night
"
Mlkle
·.·.

·

••

province

6 Hostelry

S1rMt .....liollionn

1:06 (J) MOVIE: Obja:llve,

1:00 •

Plumbing

CIIUicll

&lt;

3:Spehfl!h: ·

. ACROSS
1 Sing

1111
People Door
C l l s y - lnlltuated
wt1h a
Waller" a

Home

Ohio

John, MD Girl

CD,......,.Oou,..t

Services

304oi~HI8

~

~y tHOMAS JQSEPH

Menaee, Anyone?

a

I •

· CROSSWORD

Under Glaaa, (Pt 11
iiJ Murdar, ..,. w-

1

collonl condl11on. $3300. 814143-5481. '

--

Hanson encounters a Iormor
girllrlenrl. (I :00) r:;l
0 PtlmeMewe

'

·

.

.11)21

'
' "''

:

.,.......,.with

•o MaJor .Del htac

1nd Polly O'itll'comtl an

.:..
(

'

•i,.t~~~
; C-up
(I) • (J) Mac0wwer A

Lowt 15 112
11umlnum bees
boat. llarcury 25XD molor. Extras, wtlh trailer. Ca.ii evenings

· •.....,. •

'.

+

W-(2:00)

111

Kit

•

But . ;
trump low, lnd lle!:alie he is eon- 1 NT ' ' p.. 2 •
p. .
fi'CIIIed with. mirror,bml (llllill•ill • ., ' .....4.
All pus
bOtlt lutlttllm the same lellltb~ e.ee:
taally 1te mat try to' lillie • .d ub
()penlnc.lelld: J
..
tr1et, Jt wiD be mach ~ for 111m If
'
bec:lllpenltlde or f~.the defeoltlen, L---.,,...,..~-'=~"'-:'-:-:7-::::~
to lead tbaj key. slclHull Tbe rilbt tblll defender 1llll tbell have to brealt •
play is 'fairiJ llmple.
' lbe ~ali IUit far declarer or elle play · .
Declarer lritit lbe ace of ~ 8lld · eeMfter spatte. Of ceane the play of ;
plays A-lt of bear II. Fortunately botb aniltr- ,spade will allo.w declarer to
OJIIIGDIDII follow. Tbett be casbes"ilte- noffiaoaeJtaadwhiledjleardlnaaloa- :
9111e1; bfi1i ljiide. Nut be plays three lite club frola the otber,slaff aDd ruff).·
rGuatll 'of dl•trm · in and be can even If tlie defeader witlo the lilac trump ,..,.
callt lbe fll!ll'tb cft-"'-t If be wisbes. f - to ruff 10 011 ·the dta~. de-. :
If ·!be .
the 10111 trump c~ em~tually plays a tllird rouDd •
ruffe ia on the disllionds at any time, ,o f
placilll West on lead, to his· ·

18TopC.rd
.
7:35 (J) lon- And Soli

1188 Bolro 11111 Sunoport 350
Chavy S.S. Prop. AM-FIIaterwa.
Open bow, lhorp boll. 112,800.
114-1112-2!121, 814..512-4241.

. .,. ..:

~•,Dea~ Soutlo
- · W.. .: Nor*

clarer requiree fin! of aU I .reuooiable trump dlvlslob. ·He atUI 1111 a

@ Night Court

motor. $5500. 8t4-448-80110.

•.z.•

NIIIITB

~

·.. .'• ,

ID. today'8 foar'-l!ti!a'rt· contract, de-

[II

H.P. Mercury outboard motor.
.Mercury .foat controlltd •rolling

81

•..a.

•oM-A'I"H
till .-,..rdYI Q
IOCntaallre
.

1tll16ft. Lour BIH Booi, 115

:

'.· . · .Jfl'tl
.QHJZ
.. ,I;
; !l'll-*'t
,
., H .
.;, . •' ' • .7U
tU
. Tbe c:oac:ep~ 0t Ute etrip 8lld ~Y · • ~· • f
• ·uu .
is tloai€itfi'"IM!e tr.e
~·
SOOTII
the
II eaD IAfely pii,Y,. llid . ·
., . • .. u .
tben
,lhtm on fll!d 10 lf\at tbey· , · , . .)'!· • .u az
ar1!fon:ed tq play the iult ,00 irish.,
'; u Q 1&amp;2
Tbls net we will ez•mlne .uriOal
' 4i Q 1 z . ·
deale with WI motif, . · . . .
•·· "·'-ble Neltber··.

(I) E - - Tonight
• (I) UIA Today
·

\"-

'

·&lt; ,.;, ,.

• .. ' .
By jamea Ja~
.
.·

*·'

1m Narrlacroft boxl 17 112 11.,
85 hp Evon, now blnorln one
many axtrat. 13,150. cau 304175-2111 bltwHn 1:00 am and
5:00pm.

I ·:: ,

-A tough C::hoic~·&gt;. · :· :..,·f&gt;:;: · ·:~m
,
..
'·
+JH .
.tor West ;... · ::-,
.EABf

i1J Mlallll YICI J'ho Rising
Son Of Death Bterao.
• Vldt aCot
7:05.()) olwllz-•
7::10. (J) fiiiiiiJ Feud '
· ® IFL Tllvlll Game

11172 17. ft. Sllrcron T~·Hull
Boat 125 HP, Evlnruclo Enalno,
complelt top, new uphotatery.
$3500. Call 814-211-1318 onor
7:00p.m.

campers

----:----.,.;.··.....:·":':.·...:,..-:;:;--..:r.
"-l. .

•o;£c-~r:;~
a•••
g c - ... •

~·

' • ' . '• '' .

BRIDGE

118-(1:00) i
~GWhMIOI

Motors

114-112..5111.

'

'

• Cl) (J) IIIGNd/ Lehrer

for Sale

79

11M.... ...

®lpu IICsAer
.·
(I) •(I) Cu osUflelr

AFG. Phono Bob Hoolllch oftor
5p.m. I14-992..S2112.

&amp;

H·1 Conta at r:;1

9 WKRP In Clocl wid
iiJ He 111n
.. 1:31 (J)' Awly Gltflllh

6 Qlld. mint co"dltlon. 1.100
milia. W.tallc'f maroon, loll of
chroma. Windshield. lncludaa 2
full flea helmate, on• bell, one

75 Boats

.(J)UCNeWaQ

I0 If:':=~
Today

742-2545.
Aoducocl. 1187 Suzuki GS 4!50 L,

..... OondltiOA. 114-T4:1·21'fl. · Dr
114-t1N314. D.W-.

Qor. 1174 pcnlloo

111. ,,,. ... ;

lllllotlr llectrlc '

1114 Honda motorcyclll or trade ,''
for 250 Honda 4-wl1Hiar. 114-

1 • !IOdllo Doytono
All .,.Uano. Low mliMgo. EICII-

1522.

•

Alnartc IR Mag•"ne

(I)

.Good cond111on.l14-742·22711.
1171 . Convt~,..lon Van: GDOd
Condition. PSL AC, oulomo11c
t,.niii'I\JI:•Ion. all engine, Captaln Saat1. Mu.t S. to Appr10lotoll 45,000 ocluol mlln
114-245-5152.
.
11H Toraoo 4WD pickup. Eldli
cob, SR5 packago. Excollonl
condlllon. 814-11112·5120.

82
llhllbv z.

10 - • Coro, s aorn allllnd
wHh 2llCSO building. 114-211-

',

0 Awly Qotllllh

. . . CJ) ...

Runs, natds work. $400. finn.

-Pir-o.iowt7·7411.

Orand Prix,
ts71. 304-e711-31Zioltor S p.m.
l'or 1110: 1171 , .... 4 _ ..
-Ro-Rd.
Jolon Dooro 10. Wide ond. _ , lkrly :114 ... tr-. 44,000
rnlllo. - · call JJIY bol·
Coli ..,., 1:00 prn., " - ......
.........14-)R.U11:
:,:7111:::,:;1·~~--~--..,. GOVIANIIENT IEIZED YlhlLIV...,.OCk

Corrlodolo " - • - · lor
oole. 40 hlad. 114-742·2252. s
mliM woot or - 1 1 ,
lludlork Road.
Good Hllctk»n of Dvrac 'Ioera.
Aogorlon110y.l13-llt 2311,

-..n.nt

1

a

IIJJIIII

l14-lt2o5491 oftor 5:00pm.

king $1000, Call 114-185-4242
oft• 5:00. p.m. or an -kondo.

1114 Dadgo Doylano Twbo Z.
111,1100 - · block, groy lnlor•
lor. All IUrba aptlonol. 13100.

...

lkM

111111 -

1
lunroo ,

Sowmlll, 3 bloclo Co~, good

""'L

----·~--~.-~---

•••
-t4~75•
814-245-43141.

c:;:·._ !::W:.
L~

.,.

JJ'

I

D ·
. s.-01OMChoice
111 (0:30).1;1
•

on drl\'11'1 . . . (door

Rod Aoobomoo lor Solol FrGlon
Borrlnl Ploll your awn "' roody
plckocl. Taylon lorry Pole~.
i14-241-1014.

SNAFU~ by BI'IICe Beattie

•

::1chl~~· ~,.!'[.

W,.CIJM

,_
i

T

Ill CllaoiH In Chelge

WELl., I'LL BE!

1171 OMC Von. I cyl, 3 opoed.

I fl sllda In truck camper, baih,
luriiiCO, good cond $500. 304175-3570.

• monthl old. 1150. ........ ...
gun. 814-MI-240.
M
lc I
57
US a
I
nstrumen!S
lor
2 Clorlnoll lor 1110, 1
·mor·

61

rvne·a;

6UE55 .. I MEAN, I'Ll.
SAVI ''GUATEMALA"

' (I} ..... Ame('
' Quia 10:30)

a

'•

. ill lpa Ill a all (0:30)

Civic, polnl
- l o l l y good, $800. 814_,,_
1110 Do1oun 310. Auno aood,
dopo.-... S850. 814-112-1348.
1111
Morrie Carlo T~op.

;;UK~t;;.A:;:ogi:=:.:I..~...O::=::m=.IIO::.:I:::IUI:-n!lt.:;;;;;:::. f 1m -

~~~=;~~~='·on_.,.

14-387·

NO CAMERAs, PLE;:ME! .

1 WAS RI61-!T?

. Jl C2l CJl -tl,CI! •

1175 .....,_ CJI new tlrM, new
multlar, ·1·100. 114~41-4141 lfter 1 or on w.ekenda.

Locoltd on lot In Hccklngpon.
$3000. 114-99:2-2521, "4-51124241.

Equl_.., IOColed
In Qalllpoll.. tor mort lnfor.
... kon. $04-343-1111.
24 ln. Pllnor,

'{c$, MAAM :.WELL, ILL

. ......

MCICu IIICk

'1:10.(2) 81 NBC Nlglllly " -

1171 Jlonl, Town Llndu T·llrd,
Male whHa WnUe. I mont he '71,000. 1111n roof1_ .•~ power,
old. $100. 114-112-3137.
~ ,._ 11000, .....n-4402.

m: ~,....,.=-v.~e.:,g:;~;:;a~b;,;le~s':':'...,.-

Old Ill. 2f, Ero, Jackoon
B"'l'hlll conrplolo · ....,_, Co. "':~ 811, I s .... Noon IIU
IUHo. Full olzo. · llko MW. 114- 8:00PM. 304-273-!MI55.
tii2.Z733 oftor 1:00 p.m.
F.... Efficloncy $180 uiiiHin
Tondy Campulor wllh ocl. Shiro bolh. 107 Socond, ColfN toblo ilko now 125. 11 monHar. Loll lhon 1 yoor ald.
Qalllpollo, 114 441 4111 ollor IW;;•;;;kl;l;l•~ld~A:•:•·:·PI:;;.P~ll.;;;:::::;.1:1311::0.:8:t4-112-::::7487=.::::::~
lp.m.
~
, F'""l- opl, odull, 304-a711-

;::,:, ·•":,:* ..

avenlnge 114-112-1111.

111n Toroto Calico OT, lull lnl.,

Sial• ol tht 1rt PMvey XR1200
mixing contoll wfth manual
;r::ralor gulda $350. 304-882·
112.
Surpluo, Army, Donlm, Aonlol
ololhlng. OUr Zllh yoot, ..;ulor
lttue comollo.- Smllf •
qulr.mom. •uncle.,... Som aom.

Fuel Dll tarde, w1ter Meter,
kltcban
blthroom
tlnk,
Nfrlgendotj etove, tollet..r. motor·
C)'Cio, 304-a'76-451D orllii-1320.
GOOD USiD APPLIANCES
W11~, dryoro, rolrlgoroloro,
.._ . Skip -loncoo,
\IPiior Alvor Ra. lnldo Siano
CNtt MoteL Cali 114-oMI-7301.

Fumlohod rop1. 1 br, 1225,
"'""" pold, 120 Fourth Go~
llpollo, l14-4411-'1418oftorl'JI.m.
Fuml- opt 11H: $210, utiiHn
pold. 701 Fourth Oolilpollo,- 81444f-4418oft•7p.m.
Groc:louo living. 1 rrnd 2 bodAl::r.
.....•nmentt In Mlddlllport. From
...... F
O.N ••• I
$184. rom ..,.a
•~
•
Navombor 15th. IIIII rnonlh ront
rroo to • - who .,.111y. eon
114-11112·1717. EOH.
Nice 2 lA, 4 112 mi. from 0.1llpollo. No
1231/ma. 114448-t031.

Vo'l

58

~r·

I

.

I

Aoln- s

-••rom

I

1:00~ ~~~~~ l

dHian. 114-~1-2811.

,;,.7;.;.4..;.;.;.M..;.o_t_o_rc_y_c.;..le-s--:-

m~4~,=~ .';:::::=;.~· :n.~~· -:=~a~r:Anow

n11 .

441-4727. .

'

~

71

~=· :~=-~:51 ~ro:

P".wl~ noz.

.

vans &amp; 4 WD's

11~41-6748oftor5p.m.

107,ooo· mlloo. $2300. 114-44111127or441-11747. .
1181 -~~- B~hln hrlly
lootlocl
:r. ~IY 31.:-::. m 11.~.~
now1 ""' oltor oop.m.
·~
1741

Alro 31 Chovy, 2 dr. ~n~~:
lllllrp. 171D0 or lrodo. 11

pro'41ded. 1211/mo. . can 114- 2340 anytime.

•

1187 .... p, Ronglor Alii nlcol

Klng-oiZOd wolor bod. Aoldng 114.Qt2-7774.
.
U50.114-t41-3031.
Uood YMr. 1300.
Uvlna room ouHo, lor 1110, llko 614-t_.. or 304..71-3:111.
now, 114-441-0774.
Far - : Clor1
11711
· 11 4
14 ·o•··
Porioblo Llghlad Anow Signo -... ~, $21111. (Froo Dollvory/LOito,.) lp.m.
- l c Lllloro:,toll Pr~SO. "-..-IU•-~•~.. -• IUtllr
"
,
box. Explm
II. 1
33- o...o1nnoro ~riot
3453 A~l
::1!.~-nl'
11..1o
1••••'
· •• ,.mo.
~-~ ro
~
11 00
·

~llt2=.z=-=-·
- - - - - - ~~ .:\~'r...ll":i
For SolO Frlal~-1~. c•- ·~ "3FrMzer 481127 rn~"l80 6i4: ~ ••·

36 W. opt 2 br., 1 bollr, prlvolo :;.::7:::..•-::---,..,.--:-anclaeed ,.U0. Ctoie 10 For Sale: Brown-ttrlped aota
t*"'Y 01&amp; llhapplng wlrl rocker ,..liner. a;;;.d
for,
wllor,
- . _ lrMh ccnd lion. Prlco $300. 114-446-

badiOOIR

«-

W:

":'4a ""'li'i'

24WI47

One

WHITI'IIIETALDETICTOAB
t:l.:=..,~oonoli ~~~ a'i:.Avo,

Clarlnoo.

°

2257"

Ylvftor
p...._,...._
ond
-aplna iQui&amp;.o'iii'tor ooiO.
l750.114olla4ae-4:SO.

••••nod

1---'-----"-=---

4023.

m:m

f31A r

,.,....,--:-=G::ood;:.:;.S:..!.'- - - : 2br, mobile home, ,.., Rodl'ley, 1
1~
Oop &amp; Aol. roq'd. 81~46-4344.
2 INuty Alii bv Blmlllono mol·
trill• 150 Mch, 2..bu.uly Nat
3 bMrDOnt In Kyger Cr-.ek bo1: aDr1na1 U0 ..en. Exc
Sckool Dls1rlct. HUD approv.d. cond. i14~1-4881.

~121.
3 room

1r1r1 .. - , pori!OIIy , _ ,
30«171-1485.

llulclr lor Solo 114·!1JS-J217.
BlrJW for uie. 11.50 bale. 114·
, Evonlnoo: 81~40-

!.:ea.•

Two 1raller spac.., Route One

nsoo.

1078 Ford Bronca 4 '(l'hnl drive.

-:=t·· .....

In

Kanaug.al Foatar• Mobil• Ham•
P1rk. 114--446-1802.

4501 Mk

op-

-ft

P'' 7\0IIa. ~,.....Lab doa'1
rr old, oeUk1 bl ,......... fill

4

I

2 BA, 112

lumft...,

n

Lorvo ....... NIH or hoy, $15
ooch. 114-44'8-1052.

Merchandise

~

ra

.Btock, brick, . . . , DIDet. win~ 3383.
d-._ llnlolo, Ole. Cloil9 Win- 11171 Chlv. Bo~Airo, $400. 814ooro, Rio Orondo, OH eon 114- 441-26110.
24W121.
1172 Pontlao Catalina, 2 door,
56 Pets for Sale
good 404 motor, S2,80. 304-4!11Merchandise
;:.~.;::;.,;:;:.:..::;:.:;-,......,.1 ::.:'14:.::3::...- - . . . , - - - - , . . .
2 aduft Red Chow Femal•, 1 1173 ·Plymouth Dutter, I cyllnblue male chow, S10D • • · 114a der, automadc ~·:0 act Lilli
3711-2!1A.
miiM; sm. 11 4
41 • .
S Chow Pupploo. H0471 114- 1175 Fon1 EIHo,
good
441-9ccnd. 15,000 arlglno mlloo.
3yr. al~ Rot To~lor, 2 yr•• old Auno grool I 1ooU good.
•
· tre-.
,_ a ft . .....
~alo 11 Torrl2 hOrse
goou neck
... 1 ~
wft. old RIII::_S1;.:1::ts::·,:l1.:;4::4:.:t::l::•N::.::.1·--uvlng quonoro. t1soo. 51h- ~~~~,tm~~· s.u ·ouoogo~~~or. 1111 Cllow
2
tor camper. t14-742oo2512.
tlr., rww tr,..,
rabu 1ld
25 lnclr Coiroclo Color T.V. AKC BIHOII ....-. AoldY Ia -11., $100. 304-112-21 ·
Noodo oubo. $50. 81~41-0407. gel F. ronclo 8al\idum 81,....7·. 1171 Buick II&lt;YIIIk. 301 molar
(Local)
3858
and tran1mlnlon. H11 lllght
•Kc
Lh•••~o:=.pln.
dom;c
Biue couch 1nd chair. _g_ood ""
742 4 • •Ia lronl ond. $500. 814condhlon. Aloo whho opcke ~r. Hiah 8a Jo
, Call 304·
- -·
rlmo, 8 lugo. 114-112-3174.
.75-3131.
1171 Ford LTD II, Body, EKe.
Couch, Chair, hide-away bed, .
pups $21. each, ~71- concl. Run. good. 114-245--1&amp;2!.
wooden tablll, chalf'*t twin Met, ._u.
1171 Monte Carlo 305 aUIO en-GE ,.lrlg., boll lprlnga, mol- Drogonwynd Caftory · Konnol. oint, T·T-. olr, 1111, cruiM, AMtreaa. 114-441-3224.
Paraian,
llarnne
and FM ta~M. black with red Interior,
•••on klnono. - - etucl bucket 01 Hat, blauutul car,
D•kota Farm Homa built on Hl...'l"r
-\t'lllll&gt;l:l\
-··1•2222.
rour k:ti..S13,1111 up. Sal our llrllco. 114 4413144 ollor 7 ;-~-~·~~;;;;~;=;;;;;.i;~
modol.l14-161-7311.
~P·::"'::.·-::--:--::-:-c:-:-::--:-1 1m -ogon Rlbi&gt;IIDIMol,
Floh Tank, 2413 Jon- Avo. ~ runnlna
mi. por
Fl ood lor 11I0 ••• load
' -·
'
737.
304-158-10111.
' Point Pioo_,,
• 1•304-475-2013,10
.. 0 nd 10 ••• gollon, ..00.•1
o•l ooo up
•·
. - 1m Iuick Lo Solrro Limbed. 4
Flrwoocl, t cordo ol
.campiii:::.::!=:0::;$4=73::;.25;:·=--:;;::-::-=:: 1 - n . All~- Uko
honlwood. $60 o cord, all lor ~
...- .
• - . You hlul. 814-742-2814. ·
Onoom onrl Supply ShoD-Pol .... S01 VI. $1
11
Onoomln11- A l l - All rriYioo. 1711. ' ·
For Solo • Cone- ond Plllllc lomo Pol Food OMlor. J...
·
u~lc lonko. All ollH. RON Wobb. Coil 814-441.0231.
11171 Cadllloc Sodon O.VIIIo,
•·-•· "_::::::::;:=~:=.=;:::;::::.:=::;:::-1 power everything exc cond,
E ANS ENTERPAIS ES , • - Lobnldor Aolrlovor pupploo. molfl,.fnad, U,OOO ml.. o,
1011, OH. 1~31-lll28 ·
AKC Aoalolorod. lllocko ond - . on lnopoctlon, 30H711For Solo: Mollonl · Drrcko, lo piiOWII. Own olro onrl clom. CaH 2580.

Commercial T.ce, 1400 aq.ft.

£:2•·1410.
utllltloo ~~~~~ doj&gt;aoll. 814·

Ylew

ay

::~~::J'.e:":Joc:'-&amp;~!::r.~a!:

t112·7481.

Wtaherldryar. $235. par month

T.V., Be1utlfu Rlv•

Antiques

•~1q
Buy or 1 ..1. AtvwiM ,_ UH,

Space for Rent

Miscellaneous

304 · - ••••
-~.
1500 Sq. Ft. commercial •Pice'
lor rMit dcnmlown In Haw
54
Mlacellaneous
Haven. Bulking lor ule. 114-

2 BR,
I deposit ,...
quirtd. 61+25&amp;-1822. ·
2

53

Miss Peula's Day Car• Center.
;::;9•!"t•r. A.c., ,...1 -one. 43 Farms for Rent
c:hlldca~. M·F
clean condltlon, under- .,:.:,_~_.:....:...-==-,
6 .e .m. • 5:30 p.m. Ages 21AI·1D. plnrtkl, Winterized. ReadV to 11 ·
Bo!ore, after schoof. ·Drop-In• move ln. At New Haven. $&amp;000. 3br,. farm houee, 1.11\altached
304-882-2466.
gar1ge on Jlck.on Ad. ne~~r
we coma. 614-446--8224.

,_Safa, affordable,

-=.ro:..=:

1121. I vorlotill IIHool led, _ SUllo, Aog. $1100, -

HaOoU14-441 • 10
Slooplna 1'0011111 Willi
Aiao ll'lller lprl~ All hOok...
u n 2 00 ·
':104-773Ca • 1 or : p.m.,
8Q1, ..._ wv.

12x55, 2br, lot•
clot:al tpaee,
awnlnge:, call attar !p.m. 114245-1222.
1965

~~=======r;~~~~~~~~
·54 H &amp; G I

...... .............
A- .... . . . ( I In

12x50 Move, retrlg, tlr, e1~,
t991. ao !I!IJO ........., an .,.
Avo.I1~46-3MS.
' p i - I I O r l o g - . . lo
odgo cf 1own, no poll, d-H.
$150/mo. Gas hut, t14-44&amp;- · - l w . . n t - - w - h, up.Doprl7fl...
7124, 814-441-11107.
so.tJng o1 $ 1 -. ~~~~Dl cablnlll •

~

ao.., 54

~n

~1';.... Se80;

(

Rooms

Roe..·

::.'~~ •. ~:___
..oGIII _ ,

-

Furnished

14x70, 1.3 acres, 2 BR, 2 botho,

flraplllca, 10x20 front porch.
RE·TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS Prlcod lo 1111. $12.500. 61.4-256COLLEGE, 529 Jackoon Plko. 6702.
Coli 614-046-ot387. Roo. No. 8611 ~ 10558.

Upper Alwr Ad. 2·apt. u~.
~L Olove, rol., we,.r, ~rlllgo
~up. Dtootll 1'14 d. -1
doWnttalra, 2br, • • · .....
plcll...,._ 114-44WIMO.
-

i
I'

11

1876 Dodge Van. Good . aon~

Ill. 141, 114 ...... Llrioaloo .....

"

.;

1177 1~\~· 4 wl.dr. Chi•·
1'0111.11
7147,
1181 C1rovy olck·up 9·10. $3100.
814-141-Hit. '
'
73

"For he's ajolly good fellow!
For h~'s a j'olly· good fel-

.w"'"'
~ho~~~="~~~~~~~ol•t:~
pilc•ticm• lrom certlfiid apo

•

1111 1-10, Dorango. Chavroa.t,

VI•,. Fumllur8 I lDDI'tnD II

AVON • AU IrMa, Call Marilyn
304 882 2645
' "
•

· Situation

112'BII on• 4:30.

•

· MON., OCT. 2
01- TY U11nt 11'11. ft Wont!, Tlt

I

1113 DodQI Ram 0.50 4WD.
Sht.rp. low miluge. CIU -114-

$311/1110. Coiii14-:M7·7180.

ctstry.

•

Collollor 5p.m. 814-742·2803.

P!OYarouncl.
-·
aDaol,
.oroih
lilc:iuclod.Wllor,
Storti!'O
II

natfonal origin, handicap 0t an-

•

Truck. New bad, ~ MQint.

SIMI lum. hcuoL oulloblo lor 1
at Z.I14-44HTn T - Aplo, 2 br., 1·
111 bllho; CA. ........ dleo
polll, pnvate analand Pltlo.

412 Vinton Plko, Golllpoilo1 Ot&lt;

12

: ..re=:

•

oruck &amp; owa
1177 GMC H 21 a. not-. 114-387·7533.
117t OMC 700 llorlllo Dump

Trl Com- 1· YIOuum
·
,
_
llkot14- Ut wlot·
tlchmenta. I1H.
0411
•11411211tl.

CoiiSOoUrU'ilt.

Peraon'*

Offloar, Woodland i::antara,

=~J..

&amp;

modlcaUpoychlolrlc l.,.lnology

I'UAIIITURL 12

• ulo
Work-1.11~S1U •

d,
...._
.... - · roqui...O,
..... por - " ' · 304-17&amp;-111111.
Flegancy, InC. 28R. apl., naw

of

l

Galllpolio. -

Qulrrl
blrl ral
- . . . .-~
....., -apl, ~01

TYPIST. Mull bo obie lo lypoiO
wpm. Knowled~ or word
p.-oolno oqul...,..l llolplul .
prelerred. SanG rwaume or

'oav."""'.•··., _.,. -om
A~

1t74 lnlornollonol Troclor. 336
Cu.nlna, new tlral, 311 ,..,.,
ao1o - · pluo log lrolilf. 114NI.ZatS or 114-IIHI81.

,

•

Television
· Viewing

fiOt Choolnul 81. Golllpollo.

SWAIN

•

2. 19'8 9

1111 Chtvy 1 ton reeker, runa
aood. $1•00 01 best ohr. S.. at

..
Hau
...- .....
1111 -hlng. 111 .....
.coii:I04-471-1410.
. . , _ lid. P.l. - · WY,

1br lumlohod, In Vlnlan.
$1T!IImo. 114-311-1121 .

October

72 Trucks for Sale

PICKINI RJIINITUAl

Someon. to aiMp over In home
ol oldorly lody no woril or ..,.
lnYOIYid, plea.. atat. nktna
Wlfl and r..,_noea in first t.f-

~~•dge

DTN'

-

handicap child, S~lvla Johnson,
304·773-9140 ot 773-5541.

.

MOnday.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

.

..

.

CllYP1'0QlJ01'E •.

vs

l;NZU
Z L..DL .J

" t'vvu .
XLN .Z I

..

.J L'Q END L

ov ·o K '.L ·

.J'Ii Q 'A

GBX' CND

KvzvQRXCL
. xA·
..
-

.

XLDVPU

ZLDL.J.IRQ~.'

I

'

'

I

•l

•

ZROKRZ

.'

-·

•

�-Monday, Octoblr 2, 1989

.

~-'

MANY OTHER
PRIZE$

TO BE GIVEN
AWAY!

•

to h
. e '~"atel•

eel! belp Us

.

Stop In And .
Take Advantage Of
Many
Other
.
. . In Store Sales!
•

C&amp; H

VITAL

SUNFLOWER

~IVVIA

Oil

32

oz.

. BTL.

VoL 1,

BROWN SUGAR
or POWDERED

99

$149

LOG HOUSE

140i.
SIZE

99'c

&amp;~ LOW

•

~LOW

£WUjday Low Price!

Price!

·

When Berniece ·A. Clair
started working In the homemaker program for the Gallla
County Council on Aging several years ago, she had no
thought of ever needing the
program for her own use. At
that time, she felt she was
helping to make living a little
easier for the Seniors, but now
she knows just what she
meant. to them, as she relates
to what It means to her and
her husband, Otto. ·
As Berniece· was reflecting
over. past cllel\tS. she had so
graciously served, she noted
that a .few an! still receiving
..the ~ervlce, thus we are stU!
helping thein to maintain
their home and not having to
go to an lnstltutlo!l. She noted
that quite a few changes have
been made since her time of
starting with the program
and her n!tlrement of five
years ago. At the time Ber·
niece started a~ a homemaker, she did eyerythlng
from shampooing carpets to
furniture. Now, the
iU•deltnes have been chaJ)ged

Price!

.... · 'CHEF BOY ARDEE

.~TwiN

'PACK
CHEESE PIZZA

s 99

'2UTER

..

28 7/8 oz. .
PACK

oz.

4.25
PKG.

''MI~E $ELL'S"

ELLIOTT THE BEAR ·
GRAHAM CbOKI~S ..

POTATO CHIPS

SWEET ROLLS

BbZ.
·ASST.

...... ,

GLAZED POPCORN
WITH PEANUTS

12 1/2 oz

.

@v '~. .. '

IYoder's I

CRUNCH N'
MUNCH

DOLLY. MADISON

8 oz.

JAR

,.

FRITO LAY

DORITOS

COTTAGE CHEESE
' 24 oz.

Number B

Homemaker helps

'

-·. j

110Z.

VARIE11ES

••

•

•

. JCE~ CREAM
: ;
...
,
,

~·

MOUNT VERNON .

I

·2% MILK

•-.'

Jool1
'.

f....,
!
oz.
~::. GUPI JWY
IIAMI.IY'S~ 32

-;;;;o;;-

.1M

€

WION-lii.IIG.triiii&amp;(IID

1~':. 1SAI.111 CUOIIIS

~-

I,_,.,I
S!uicK SIZE 120Z ·110ZIIN3
~:;, CANDYBARSASs'r • •41

...

v

•

·'I
,

.,

....

~

.,

.':, VANIW WAFERS

••

..

........................-=17:...:
.

WEULCOME

.COUPONs ·
-GIFT eE'..,k""tD'-ICATES

.POTATOES

8J
4SO

CELERV
. .........J:•..:....~........
.,

STALl&lt;. . •.
'Store Hours: 'Monday.Saturday, 9,a.m. • ~ p.m.
Sunday, 11 Lm.-8 p.m, -Mike ~bout, Owner
~

•WVW.LC.
•fOOD STAMPS
•PERSONAL CHECKS
'•

•'

.

.::. GOlDEN COlli

,....., 1 AIIIIIICAIIIWIIY • 310Z. $
1 Gr.luu&amp;Polllm 1•09
, :,

..::, INFANT FORIIU.A

1

,...

..

~- ~ CHEFIIOI'AADEE7.50l

•':, YCRO IEALS

I-.::,I COUNTAY
IIIWID180l
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&amp;be homemaller propam aM eajoyed helpllll otllen. Now
• Bernice ud Otto eajoy the aervlces of the homemaker pro· ~·
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(304) 675-1155

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Although she and her husband are confined to their
home most of the time, Berniece still keeps In touch with
some of her Senior friends by
pllone. She Is always anxious
to find out how they are getting along and enjoys reml·
nlsclng about enjoyable ilme
spent with thein. ·
Berniece stated she now
knows what a 'Pleasure the
homemaker brhigs. The day
the homemaker Is coming to
. the Clair home, she atl!rtsget·
tlng anxious and can do noth·
lng but sit and walt, but as
soon as she hears the car door
shut, she knows that everything Is going to be alright for
that day.

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VALLEY BElL PREMIUM '

such as · that. Also, clients
were seen'more often as there
was not· the demand for the
services then as we now have.
Berniece's day at the Center
would start at 8:00A.M. and
end at 4:00 P.M. She would
serve 3 or 4 clients per day,
eating a quick sandwich In
her car as she drove to the
next home.

•

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100°/o
MONEY·BACK
OUARAmEE

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In Gallia County

RAKE COCCINUT

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AD Oblo .Valley PubHIIIdng Company Publlcatloa

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Wba* 11118 &amp;be Chol'llll Meut to Me! '·' I like belaaiD tile ehoras for the mule, the
compaalenshlp, ud the opportlllllty to perhape brlaa pleMure to ahut-lu aad aay others. Also It belps milD a small void Ia my own lUe."
Alfred GabrleDI, 8"1
( !l&amp;ory ud More Phet• oa Pqe 18-11)

In Meigs County
One hot nutritious meal a
day may mean the difference
iJe!ween an elderly person be·
lng able to stay In his or her
own home or having to go to a
nurs'!ng home. That person
may neecl some other help
also, such as help with bath· .
lng, shampooing hair, and
household chores. However,
these services may be needed
only on a weekly or monthly
basis, but - It Is that dally
meal-that may be the deciding
factor In whether that person
can continue to live at home .
Persons are living · longer,
thanks to advanced medical
technology, blit the numberof
disabilities and chronic dis·
eases also Increase with age.
Over the past five years fe·
deral dollars have Increased
· very little consequently, the
Meigs County Council on Ag·
lng, In order to help more people, has had to Increase Its
support of this much-needed
service wit~ _apdltlonal cash
from)ocal r,.,urces.• .such as

Hoine Delivered Meals'
donations. The following fl·
gures show the Increase In ho·
me-delivered meals· In the
past five years:
.
1984 - 14,993 .
1985 - 16,227
1986 -16,914 .
1987 - ?D,380
1988 - 24,389
1989 - Averaging 2,065
month- estimated 25,000 by'
end of the year

In Meigs

Literacy Program

The Literacy Program In
Meigs County Is growing
steadily, as more and more
people become 'aware of and
Involved In' helping to erase
this evasive, national pr~
blem. Our First Lady, Bar·
bara Bush, now serves -as hon-.
orary chairwoman of the Bar·
bara Bush Foundation for
Family Literacy. The founda·
tlon will support grants and
!nterprovide help to those
"-4 '
,

•

People who receive meals
donate what they are able, and
families also donate. 1bele donations average $1ft · IJtllO a
month. Approximately '10% are
low-Income, and man~tbe
other :11% have lnco es
t
above the guideline that Is u 1
for low-Income. There were 137
elderly 'persons who had re- .
celved home-delivered meals .
(Continued on Page 2)

•

I

ested In establishing family li-

teracy efforts.
Several volunteers who
took the Laubach tutor trainIng last September are now
working with a~ults, on a oneto-one basis with gratifying
results. We are tentatively
planning a tutor training
workshop Ia ter this fall to secure additional volunteers
and to reinforce training .
(Co~tlnued on Page ,2)

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