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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

TurkeyWalk
scheduled
Oct. 14
"

Pkk-3
409 '
Pick-4

Clearlnr; -tonight. Low near

:10. Wedneaday, mostly sunny.

1700

Below

Hlr;h mid mid 60s.

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ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT AB #7

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iij;;;;;;;;;;.~~~~;;;;;;;;;;~;;--~;;;;~~;;;;;;~;;~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~!!~~~--~----------~=-=------11~S~e~~~~~n~.
A Multimedia Inc.
~10!:Po~gJo~2&amp;C.n1a

Pomeroy applies for
emergency funding
for sewerage .project·
By NANCV YOACHAM
Dally SenUnel Staff
Pomeroy Village Council,
meeting Monday night In regular
session. took action authorizing
John Anderson, village administrator. to apply to the director of
the State Issue II program tor
$3.3 million In emergency funds
for Improvements to the vlllage' s
waste water treatment system.
U granted, the emergency
funds would enable Pomeroy
VIllage to expand Its waste water
treatment system to a degree
that 95 percent of Pomeroy's
residents would have sewage
service, including the Monkey
Run area of the village.
According toCollllCilPresldent

Larry Wehrung, who pres lded
over Monday's meeting In place
of Mayor Richard Seyler, who
was absent, the state has $5
million In State Issue II emergency funds. However, to qualify
for emergency funding, the ~1lage must commit to 10 percent of
the total amount being
requested.
In !he case of Pomeroy, 10
percent would come to $330,000.
Pomeroy had already applied
for funding through State Issue
Ifs annual allotment to District
18, which Includes Meigs County.
However, It Is council's under·
standing, based ·upon Information from Meigs Engineer Philip·
Roberts, who serves on the State ·

Issue II executive committee,
that Pomeroy was fourth on the
list. of priority projects from the
district, and t)le state approved
the first three projects on the list,
. whiCh took all the available
money .
.
There is still a ~hance Pomeroy could receive a portion of
district monies, but because that ·
cbance looks slim, council gave
Anderson authority to apply for
·
emergency funding.
Since Pomeroy Is up against
the wall when It comes to the
waste water treatment system
and .orders from the Ohio· Environmental Protection Agency to
comply with needed ImproveContinued on page 10

HUGO AID - Doaatlolll of
food and clllhlnl to vldlms of
laa.l week's bllrrlcane callulred liP here by area 4-H
ctubil aad c1r1 scout troopli
were loaded Monday ntcllt at
the Melp County Public Ubrary. 'l'lle do...lona from.
here were combined wllh
those frpm Muon County and
shipped via semi truck pr&amp;vlded by Bob'• Markel In
. . . .. ff Giid&amp;A J;tl.
Btactt··ci'IUg, l ' lflrmer Metp
CoUDtlaa, Is coordlaatlnr; lbe
dlatrlbu lion of Bend area
doaat Ions In South Carouna.
Besides the quanlllles of food
and clothing collected by. the
4-H'ers and scouts, many
businesses contributed financially to the effort. The projed
was headed by the Rocklnl
RobbiiiR 4-H Club ud leaden,
Faye Clifford and Slella BlankeDShlp, who were assisted by
Dorothy Stone. Helplnc load
the truck last nlr;ht were
Annie Jessie, Stacy and
Laurie Blankenship, Sarah,
Jennifer, and Mellua
Clifford.

'Apple Grove
man pleads
guilty '

Local news briefs---..
Power ·to be off Wednesday ·

/

Columbus and Southern Power Co., announced today ihat •
electnc service will be Interrupted In the Vinton and Wilkesville
area on Wednesday, beginning at 2 p.m. for approximately
three hours. • ·
,
· The outage Is necessary In order to relocate electric lines on
State Route 160 ai VInton as requested by the State of Ohio
Highway Department In preparation for the' bridge replacement across Raccoon Creek.
·
Special effort will he made by Columbus Southern Power to
keep the service Interruption as short as possible according to
Ronald G. McDade. GalUPQ!ls f!lapager.

Two injured in auto accident
• Two persons were injured In a head,on collision . at 5 p.m.
Monday on SR. 338, 0.2 of a mile south or SR. 124, near Racine,
according to the State Highway Patrol.
Christina L. Gallagher. 18, Ravenswood. W.Va. and Eric V.'
·s mith. 21, Ravenswood, W.Va., were taken to Veterans
Memorloal Hospital In Pomeroy by the_ Meigs Co)lnty
Emergency Medical Services . Both were admitted for
observation and both were reported In stable condition today.
Troopers said tbe accident occurred when Smith attempted to
pass another vehicle and collided headon with Gallagher's car.
Damage !"8&amp; minor to Gallagher's 1983 Chrysler New Yorker;
heavy to Smith's · 1977 Chevrolet Nova each.' There was no
citation. ·
One driver was cited In a rear-end colliSion between
two-tractor tratk!rs at 10 a.m. Monday on SR. 7, 0.2 of a mile
north Of mUeposi'lp, No one was Injured.
Troopers said tl)e 1982 FrelghtUner OIJ!!rated by James A.
Shriner, Jr., f7,.Mt. Vernon, Ohio, stopped In traffic. His rtgwas
hit from be:hllld by 1973 Mack tractOI'·traller by Raymond 1;1.
·
Continued on page 10

SPECIAL CANCELLATION - Marcaret Edwards, Rutland poslmaster, Is seen here getting
ready to cancel a.n envelope with the special
pictorial cancellation stamp of the prehistoric

Rutland Post Office one of four _in
•
'.e St.amps,·
area to. hav_e Unlque
pos t nJr:
~.

Roy Vernon Hill, 26, Apple
Grove, charged with first degree
murder in the Sept.l6,1988, shooting death or his 1110thcr. entered a
guilty plea
Mon~ay ·. before .
By JULIE E. DILLON
Mason County Circwt Judge James
Sentinel News Staff'
0 ' Holliday to a lessor Charge Of
0 ctober h as been d es Ignate d
volllntary manslaughte•.
•·
N tl
1 St
c ·11 tin
· Judge Hollt'day, ·•ter .accepting as
a ona
amp 0 ec g
"''
M th b p tm te G
1
a"""'ment, with Hill, his A on
yF os... as r
enera
the P.l ea ..,.....
th
n ony ran,.
Court-appotnted attorney James
Th e · month Iong ce Ie bra tl on
Casey and Mason County "---ut·
n""""
f
h
hlst ·
one
l·ng Auomey Damon Morgan look- w 111 ocus on 1 e pre
US
k
r
f
·l ng on, set Oct.l9 as the date ~or antma Is bl oc · o hiour
· ·
h
P
sentencing.
ostage stamps w c
were
The judge told Hill he could be Is~~: ~~iJ~d Post Office Is one
sentenced tol-5 years on the volun- of many local post offices across
tary manslaughter charge ·with a
1 be part1c1·
term posst'ble the nation which wll
mandatory ·•-"year
""""' IS
if use of 8 firearm
• .....,.ificed.
pating In various activities that
..,..Hill has been l""ned
in the emph as1ze the en j oymen t of
.....,.
Uectl
ta
·
ng s mps.
Mason County Jail since shonly af. co
F
11 0 f!1 1 lith .
~~112!!l'.of his mother was disour sma
ces n so east·
c·overed in her home·as ihe resulfOf~errr-Ohlo, Rutland being one of
a shotgun wound to the head It was . these, will have special pictorial
reported .during
the
court cancellations featuring . these
proceedings a 410 shotgun was prehistoric animals. These can•Used iJI the fatal shooting.
Cellatlons WIJI be {IVallable
Hill resided with his mother, through Saturday.
Rosalec Hill, 011 lllbnor'M!lOte
These special cancellations
Road at the lime of the shooting are In conjunction with the Ben
dealh. He was taken into custody at 1 Franklin Stamp Club' s fall prothe Apple 0
Vol
motion, the October stamp colDepanlri · mve . unteer Fire . lecting month, and the Issuing of
shoocing~ some lime Iller 1M . the prehistoric animal stamps.
Prosecu
M
.
' Ru !land Is known as the
agreed 10 tor .
Slid he •Tyrannpsaurus Rex Station"
lessor ~l:ec.
!'&gt; 1M and Margaret Edwards, post·
00,... master stated that the offiCe has
evidence of a moti use. the
in and insufllcie ve m.
I· · already received many requests
~ediiation ~~ ~l::ui: for special pictorial cancellation
which thereby excludes first degree stamp.
murder.
.
She also noted that Is quite
. It also was reponed to Judge simple to r~lve your special
. Holliday this m!Xft1na that Hill bad . ptctor·lal .cancellatlon.
lllldel]loaoa.seJiel ofpsychological
All you have to do Is prepare an
~~~ awing the months following
envelope by llllertlng a close
his aq-esl.
fitting piece of . stiff paper or

:mr:10'=

:.00

Is known as the
animal, Tyrannosaurus.
Tyrannosaurus Station. Three other offiCes In
Southeastern Ohio are also participating In the
event which will conclude Saturday.

,

cardboard about thethick"nessof
a post caril.' Thls Is to protect the
envelope and keep · It from
bending. Place a first class
stamp on the envelope, and put
your name and address on the
front of the envelope. A' pencil
may be used to t~o this because It
can he erased, or a removable ·
label may also be used. This way
all that will show on the envelope
Is the spec Ia 1 plctor tal
cancellation.
Next, take your envelope toone
of 't he four Southeastern Oh Ia
offices, the Rutland Post Office;
the White Cottage Post Office,
the Chauncey Post Office, or the
Kimbolton Post Office, or mall It ·
to the office from which you want

the cancellation. If all ' tour
dtfferen t cancellations are.
wanted·, you haveffito send requests to a 1I 1our o ces .
b k
Requests.must eta en to each
of!lce or postmar ked no 1ater"
than saturday b ecause 1hese
cancellations are on 1y available
for s1x d ays, un til satur d ay .
As noted a bo ve, the R utland
office Is the Tyrannosaurus Sta- ·
Uon, the White Cottage office is
the Stamposaurus Station, the
office is the Pterandon
sChauncey
d the Kl mbolton o1lice
tat1on,
an
B
. S
· Is the rontosaurus tattoo:
Why not get _lnvelved with the
.
:other approxtmately 19 million
organized stamp coiiPctors who
appreciate thi s hobby.

Annual Turkeywalk Oct.- -14
The American Heart Associa - more than $40 will receive a free
tion (AHA) Is asking local Turlteywalk T-shlrt. CoHee! $so
residents to tighten their tennis or more .and win a T-shlrt and a
shoes and participate In lhls turkey . Collect $200 or more and
year's Turkeywalk. On Satur- you win aT-shirt, a turkey·andan
day, Oct. 14,-at 11 a.m ., Meigs Amerlcna Heatt Association
County residents will be. walking sweat suit.
at the Meigs High School Track ' · "This event is fun and healthy
Field. Mllllt! Midkiff Is again too! We · hope that everyone
serY!rie .as cbalrman for Turkey- young aitd old .w-Ill support
. walk, a walk-for-pledges event.
Turkeywalk," says Mldkii!.·"All
Turkeywalk $preads a heart- proceeds will support the. AHA ·s
healthy message that walking Is programs In this county Which
a great exercise providing many teach children and adults about
. cardiovascular benefits. During heart health."
·
past years, family, friends,
Registration forms for Turkeyneighbors ind co-workers llave walk are available at Bank One
collected pledges and partici- or by calling Midkiff at 992-2laJ
pated In the Turkeywalk.
or 992-5728.
. ·
Walkers_who collect pledges of
I~

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Tuaaday, Octot* 3, 1989

mmentary

Page-2-The

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Pomaoy-Middl!lpCMt, Ohio
Tueedey. October 3, 1989 .

.

Are co':lg•·essional chairs won or bought

The ·Daily Sentinel
DIIVO'I'BD ro 'l'IDC INTDII8T8 OJ' TilE MEIGS-MASON .\REA

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""-'...............=;ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher

PAT WBtrltiiE&amp;O

&amp;ww•et Pllblteller/Co.UOUer·
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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geaerallll&amp;narer

L&amp;'l'l'EI8 01' OPINION 11'0 welcome. Tlaoy ...... be J... lluuiJN
loq. All .....,.. we ollbJeet 1&lt;1 edlllllc ud mul be olpH wl*b
.... _ _ lolop~oae-ber. No IMipH lottorawtD bepoJ&gt;.

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.................... bela&amp;"dlute, ...... -,..._IIOtponollll~

Harry's ghost
.··

B7 ARNOLD SAWISLAK

UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON -We wandered over to Lafayette Square recently
aDd came upon the shade of Harry Truman taking his dally walk. As
be brjakly rounded the statue of Andrew Jackson and headed toward
tbe Treasury, we- joined the ghostly con.stitutlonal.
"Mr. President, your Democrats haven't been looking very good in
national elections recently. Except lor Mr. Carter, you haven't
elected a president in 25 years," we sat d.
·
Truman gave his ·c ane a sharp whack on the sidewalk.
"I kaow it. It's a constant source old Ismay in the Democratic Past
President's Club. FOR says he can't figure out how the party
lilanaaed to blow the lead he built up between 1932 and"1944. And
Lyndon repeatedly points out tbathealmostput the Republican Party
out of bumess In 1964.
·
"And, of course, wbile I didn't get a landslide In 1948, I did make
IIIDIIkeys of tbe. commentators and the pollsters. Our candidates
receatly bave made those people look like prophets.'' " •
Truman turned down 15th Street toward Pennsylvania Avenue at a
forced march clip. We were·starling to breathe hard, but tri~ to keep
"-"'
the dialogue 10lng.
"Well sir, !be Republicans say you Democrats have been losing
bee&amp;ue you haven't had a new Idea since World War II and
everytlllnl your candidateS say amounts ro nothing· more than 'tax .
and tax, apend and spend.'"
Truman stopped tn .f ront of the Willard.HoteL
.
"That .used to make ~ madder than a wet hen, but lhose
Republicans have made It stick Just by repeating It," he said,
·
"And It's our own' fault. Democrats he,ve let them picture us as
.of!· bel ~e4 do-gooclers who just want to thraw money at crllillnals,
bums andplnkpa In hopes of getting them to stop doing whatever it Is
that we dOn't approve of.
,
"And that's nonaense. I came to Washlrigton In 1935 as a New
Dealer, but I never was a knee jerk liberal and by God neither was
Fraaldle D. Ro a w~elt.
·
'1t'a-tniee 1ft! had 110111e starry-t!yed theorists bllngi.Dg ai'61ll11!, but
the pniii'IIJJI8 we put In during the Depression were des'lgned to
provide jobs for people who wanted work, not handouts. And they did
tbat. And despite. tbe Republican jokes, the WPA and the CCC and the
PWA left beh!Dd parks and buildings and bridges that still serve the
public.''
.
"We also won a World War. Maybe there was some waste and
cheating In defense plants, but I had somethingtodowlth keeping it at
a Jlllnlmum. We·dld a damn good job and we saved the world from
·Hltlet'...
..
Truman. pointed up Pennsylvania Avenue toward tile CapitoL
"Democrats lUll run the s_how ln Coneress. But are theY trying to
really do IOIDethiDJI about the savings and loan pirates who cheated
the people and tlle 10vernment! Are they taking the lead In providing
lb!ilter for the j)I!Op1e Who live down here on steam grates? And how
about the Junk bond takeover crowd and tbe companies that flgllt
r1f!fY effort to stop air and water poilu lion? And drugs, and pitiful
achoolll and teenage pregnancy,? And there's more, much more.
''It Joolu to me lllce my Plfrly's leaders are so worried about the
pilpularlty of tlle other·party's presld,ent that they won't get ahead of
.him on any Issue and all they can add to his Ideas Is more money. If we
. want to get back Into the Wliite House, we're golngtohave.toshow the
people 1001ethlng different, Ilice real leadership." .
That said, the dapper little ghost touched the brlmo!hlshat with the
crook of his cane and vanished.

Ber~y

]ack Anderson and Dale Van

·-

gives 'em hell .

I

~tta
WASHINGTON- Members of pollctea and because he didn't
Congress are frequently critichave the senlotlty for the job.
Ized for allowing themselves to
But Aspln was smart enough! tee lor Democratic consensus. In gress buying chairmanships.
be bought off by special Interests
to see a big fight coming over the the previous congressional elec- Leath t"'d Aspln declined to talk
groups with fBI wallets. But It chairmanship In 1987 and !O line tion, Leath gave only $3,000 to his · to us about the campaign.
The chairmanships are conIsn't fair to say the lawmakers
up his supporters. In the 1986 co)Ieagues. .
·.
are always on the receiving end.
House election, he took nearly • Another candidate for the trolled by the Democratic major.
They're adept at giving too.
$60,000 from his re-election fund chairmanship In 1987 - the one tty In both the House and th_e ,.
The coveted chairmanships of and gave. 1t to oU!er House with the most seniority - was Senate.
The Senate Democratic caucus
powerru I Capitol Hill committees
Democrats. Aspln ·had given Rep. Charles Bennett, 0-Fia. He
don't always go to the person who
nothing to other candidates in didn't give anything to anyone. ·hands out .the committee Jobs
has paid his or her dues. ·They 1984, according to campaign Now he wants to end the practice based on seniority, but In the
House, political pull and phllansometimE:S go to the person who
finance records reviewecj by our or congressional candidates gl\1·
thi'opy weigh in with seniority. It
has paid his or her allies.
associate Scott Sleek. '
lng each other campaign money.
a
member shows up as a high
Take the case of Rep. Les
. One of Aspinl s chief rivals for Ben.a ett ·has Introduced a bill to
Aspln, 0 .-Wis. In early 1987, his
contributor
to others In an
the chairmanship In 1987, Rep, that effeet.
election,
It
is
possible that he or
party nearly ousted Aspln as the Marvin Leath of Texas, tried the
It Is already Illegal for
she
Is
eyeing
an )mporlant
chairman of the Armed Services ·same tactic, with more money. members Of Congress . to husfle
chairmanship or has another
Committee - a seat he had Iri 1986, he spread nearly $75,000 · campaign contributions from
grabbed In 1985 after Democrats among. other Democratic candl· each other. They' can accept !he favor In mind.
forced the aging Rep. Melvin
In 1988, when Rep. Leon
dates. His donations amounted to money, but they can't ask for It
Price from the job. Aspln had ~ $1;000 each and they came
Bennett says his bill isn't sour- Panetta, D-Callf., wanted to be
Irked his colleagues because he
chairman of the House Budget
rpalnly from his own political grapes. ·He simply doesn't like
backed some haWkish Reagan
Committee, he gave more than
action organization, the Commit- the notion of members ~~ Con·
$5,300 to Democratic House candidates: Two years earlier he had
given fellow-candidates only
$1,350.
Rep. Bill Gray, 0-Pa., went on
a philanthropic binge before his
election to the chairmanship of
the House Democratic Caucus
last faiL He lavished large
campaign donations on other
candidates. Tben Gray hosted a
football weekend In Maryland
and Pennsylvania for . 90
members of ConateJIS. They saw
an Army-Navy game and a
Redsklns-Eagles game.
But both Gray and Pan~ta told
us they were not buying votes.
Proponents of the system of
donations !rom member to
member say the money helps the : r
' Democratic Party keep Its
strength on Capitol Hill.
The average person who do• nates
to a favorite candidate may.
have no Idea that the politician Is
givtng the money away In ex-change for power. Some lawmakers even form political action
committees to give away their
money. That allows them to
sidestep tbe limits on money they
can donate as Individuals.

·

lll eoun Slreet
Po"'ero7, Olllo

CHICAGO !UPI) ·-The Phi Ia·
delphia Eagles' losing streak in
Chicago will . enter us second
hall-century.
Mike Tomczak completed 24of
38 passes for 266 yards and ~ hree
touchdowns Monday night and
the defense forced stx Philadelphia turnovers and sacked Ran·
dall Cunningham four times In
taking a 27-13 victory over ·the
Eagles.
"They're a vevy good football
team, and maybe we're a little
lucky," Bears Coach Mike Dltka
said. "But If that's the name lor
what we are, I love It" ·
The Bears, one of three NFL
teams left undefeated, Increased
their record to 13·0 over the
Eagles In Chicago dating to 1939.
Philadelphia, 2·2, ' lost Its second straight game. The Eagles
were knocked out of the NFC

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPi) Ohio State Coach John Cooper
said Monday a "combination of
t- things" led to Boston College's
second-half comebaclc Saturday
against his Buckeyes.
Ohio State won the game, 34·29,
but had a 31·7 halftime lead and
needed a g6al ~line stand In the
final minute of play to hold off the
winless Eagles, who had a fourth
and one at the Buckeye 4-yardline with 50 seconds to play.
"It was a combination of

"'

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New York,

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EDITION
IN THE
DAILY
SENTINEL
.•.
FRIDAY
0
13, 1989

:~

•

to The DollY Seotlllel, U1 Cowl St.,

Po~~~«oy,

T

•

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POSTMASTER: Send addnu ch•gm

Tollp - Womell's Fe ..... II• Otp

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resentatlve, Branham
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BtJIIIIcalP'nON JIATIIiJ

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.,. eatrt. ...........
One Week.......... , ........................ll.fO

Tony Daniel~ ' broke through
Bluffton's defense to score a goal
for the University of Rio Grande
soccer team Saturday, but the
Beaver~ prevailed and posted a
3·1 victory ·over the visiting
~dmen.

Daniels made the goal, on
assist !rom John Kullna, In the
first five minutes ot play, helping
set the tone of the game. Coach
Scott Morrta~ey said It proved
that the Redmen were capable ot
eallln&amp; tbe ahotaln the coalftt.
"We played pretty d«ent and
II

bec11use of that, we controlled the
game," Morrissey commented.
"We had some breakdowna' In
defense, they capitalized on them
and scored."
·
The
led 1·0 at the end
of tbe first period, with Bluffton
rallying In the final half for the
win. Statistically, the vlllton
took 16 shall on goal and Bluffton
recorded 31. Go&amp;lkeeper Chad
Rickey was credlled with 20
saves for Rio Grande.
Now H-1 overall, the Redrrien
bolt Malone on Saturday at 2
p.m.

992.- 2156

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Bluffton nips Rio men, 3-l

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bula. &lt;:..- will be fllvea carrltr -b

Redmen

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'No aubacrtptlo,. by mall pormllted ID
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WINTER
HOME.

tnt and Dally Pre~~ AIIOdattoo and the

PI'IIINIIIII·Ba~lle

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Member: United Press International,

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OhiO. .

' AL PIQofts
TorMie t1 OUIMMI, 8: a p.m.
Orla•dl. f1a. 8tdlrti.I8CI-..Je

this week's Daily
Sentinel co-sponsored
Football Contest!!

cond cla11 postage paid at Pomeroy,

""''"'"
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·meroy, Ohio. by the Ohio.Valley Pub·
Uahtng Compa~~y/Multimedla, lac.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 1!769, Ph. !192·21!16. Se-

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ongratu at1ons,
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A DlvlllolloiMdlm..,a, lac.

......ec~ ._,.,. w•ld•

1"11Wei,Wa-Aulpe4reWnM•k
,..HI', Ttm To*J, rt(lll ..... IIQ
All .... ud dt'f,..mua Bill ArmMronr
Her .. fit' •I lilt .\merle• ~kt.r
~"'..,-i!!!,')'"'""i..,!'J.id~...,iit tender Domfltlt.

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11te Mt)nai
.-Ill ftcri¥t' a
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ll"ltolu'. .
Gerrit• Fe111.e611 Pll Ual&amp;ed Pre.s

~.e..-

wtiAIII•t•• ..tedcr,

11 · 11n.......d

..

..

MAC players of
the·· week ·named

The Daily Sentinel

Nl'R•~H"S-,.\g~rt,Mwl .. lw
... .,, .... to Flllll ol til• ..wr.-ID•I

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••

ball away on the Bears' next the game, would onlY comment: drive by returning an lntereeppossession, Cunningham bit Crla "I hope you Ukef your ham- 'tlon 19 yards toChtcago's49-yard
Carter on pas1e1 of 6 and 37 burgers, guys."
line. The drive stalled, but
yards, setting up a flrot-and·goal
Dltka wu referring to a Philadelphia's Izel Jackson was
at the 2. But the Bears batted televtaed ad by a local fast food charged wltb roughinl punter
down threestralgbtCunnqbam chain featuring Ryan. If the Maury Buford. The Bears got a
passe~~ In the end zone and the
Bears won, Chicagoans got mo- first down at the Eagles 38 and
Eagles had to setile for 1!19-yard ney off on hamburgers; and if tqe Tomczak hit ~cKinnon In the end
field goal by Luis zendejas to pull Eagles won, french fries we.re zone stx plays later io put
within 20·13.
cheaper. At the end of the Chicago ahead Hl leas than a
Tomczak then drove tbe Bears commercial, Ryan remarked, "I minute Into the second quarter.
After the Eagles were forced to
63 yards, wltb 'lbornton pulling In hope you like fries."
a pass at the Eagles 20 and
The Eagles were held to 67 punt on the next possession,
running It In With 6:09 left to cap yards rushing, with \Cunningham Tomczak needed just!our plays
gaining 41. The Philadelphia to connect on his second TD pass,
the sc~rlng.
"It was more of a disappoint· quarterback also took over punt· this one to Subey from a yard out.
ment than last year's playoff lng duties when John Teltschlk . The tou~hdown was set up on the
game," Eagles Coach Buddy re-lnjured his hyper·extended previous play when Tomczak bit
·
Ryan said. "We turned over the knee.
DennisGentryonadown·and-out
ball six times, llpd you can't do
The Eagles also suffered three for a 24-yard gain. KevtnButler's
other serious injuries. Wide extra-point attempt was wtde,
that and win." .
01 tka, who ducked the Ryan- receiver Mike Quick bruised his and Chicago led 1~0 at halftime.
The first-half shu tout marked
Ditka feud all week leading up to knee, safety Todd Bell broke his
leg and tight el!d Keith Jackson the first time In a 40-game span
Injured his back. · Jackson still the Eagles were held scoreless In
was slrtlng on the playing field .a half.
The Eagles finally scored 4: 58
more than an hour after tile
· game, apparently unable to be Into the third quarter on a 47-yard
us a Jitile momentum going Into moved Into a waiting ambulance. field goal by zendejas, pullq
~hlcago safety Shaun Gayle
them within 13·3.
the Big 'Ten conference."
But the Bears responded wtth
set
up
the
Bears'
first
scoring
Ohio State, now 2-1, hfis the
an
86-yard scoring drive on their
road this week at Illinois, with
next
possession to make the
the '2·1 Illlnl well rested after
score
20·3. T,omczak hit all tlve
being Idle last weekend .
passes
on the drive, tbe key
Tbe llllnl, one of the pre-season
completion
a 22-yard strike to
Big Ten favorites, has lost at
tight end Cap Boso. Anderson,
Colorado and posted victories
TOLEDO, Ohio !UPI) - Cen·
who
rushed lor 85 yards on 23
over USC (14-13) and Utah State tral Michigan tailback Donnie
carries,
finished It of! with a
(41-2). OhiO State's loss was io Riley and Eastern Michigan
2-yard
run
with 3: 13 Jell Ia the
42-3.
rover Jerry Smith have been
third
quarter.
"We have to make a lot of selected · as the Mid-American
Improvement on defense to have .COnference players of the week.
a chance to wtn Saturday.'' said
Riley, a sen)9r !rom Grand
SPRING VAllEY WIEMA
Cooper, wbo still Insists his Rapids, Mich.; rushed 31 till)es
446 4524
defensi\le linlt Is better than a lor 138 yards and caught two
year ago.
passes for 44 yards as Central
The major task defensively Michigan defeated Miami, 20·7,
.against llllitols will be to stop the Saturday for Its first win of the
passing of quarterback Jeff season.
George, who Cooper con.sldets
Smith, a senior !rom Jackson,
the best In the Big Ten.
Mich., Intercepted two passes
"He's got a great, great arm," that set up a touchdown and a
Cooper said of George, who took field goal, and made two solo
the Buckeye secondary apart tackles as Eastern remained ,
last year In a 31-12 lliinl win In . u~beaten with a 21-20 triumph at
Columbus. "We've got to do Western Michigan. The Huron "
something to get him off. defense limited Western to 123
balance. And, we've got to score. total yards In the game.
"Illinois has a good offense,"
said Cooper, "but the big problem Is this is a great defenslv.e
football team, far and away the
strength of their team, with guys
like (nose tackle) Mo Gardner
and (lruilde llnebacker).Derrick
Brownlow.''
Cooper said he was not happy
with the Buckeye kicking game
Saturday against Boston College,
but tried to make It a point not to
put the b)ame'on any one player.
Coopef has been criticized lor his
public criticism of players.
Place-kicker Pat O'Morrow
made only two of tlve field goal
attempts against BC, whUeflun·
ter Jeff Bohlman had a punt
blocl&lt;ed after fumbling the snap
from center. The block, at the
Ohio State 24, set up the Eagles'
!ina! scoring opportunity•

TOLEDO, Ohio !UPI) -The
Ohio Athletic Conference has
piCked Musklngum quarterback
Chris Starr and Dave Rastoka, a
John Car roll' linebacker, as_ Its
pla.yers of the week .
Starr, a sophomore from Sales·
ville, rushed 25 times for 197
yards and four touchdowns to
lead Musklngum to a 42·20 win at
Heidelberg Saturday. Starr
scored on runs of 1, 13, 9 and 22
yards, and completed live or 14
passes for 62 yards.
Rastoka, a senior from WillowIck, participated In 22 tackles to
help John Carroll stay unbeaten
wlth a 13-10 victory at Marietta.
He' made 10 solo tackles and
assisted on 12 others( and recovered a Marietta fumble that set
up the winning touchdown In the
fourth quarter.

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Otller• rt'eri¥1111 ¥01etl: AriiOM, F1o,..
Wa. Frn• !Malle, Geollla. lllldllpn
S&amp;aa•. orep., Pella *-tr, UCL.-\,

Muskingum QB and
. John Carroll LB win
OAC grid honors .

Nn lrr., •etl!llermu
Eric Wel.tell to Vlka fll~ AmerkM

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Fullback Scottie Graham, who
rushed for 151 yards, Including a
. 70.y~rd touchdown run, was
selected the offen~lve player of
the game and Inside linebacker
Derek lsaman the defensive
player.
Cooper confirmed that defens lve tackle Mike Showalter made
the "Initial contact" on BC
fullback Ed Toner on the key
fourth down play In the closing
minute, with Spillman and Isa·
man "cleaning up."
"We were happy to win the
garne," said Cooper, "but the
disappointing thing Is we ha.d a
chance to put Boston College
away. Had we been able to do
that, It would have given us a
chance to rest our football team a
little bit and play some of the
guys who need the experience.
"It was a good victory, one that
we needed, and 1 thlpk It will give

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all of which was subsequently
~~ur~ by the senator - after
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troll News linked tbe
money to the pollt!Cal pressure
exerted on Keating s behalf.
; i
K 'rt;~ fh~~ wo~ belongs to .•
ea g.
en 1 e Los Angeles
Times asked If he intended his
political contributions to lnfluence the recipients to take up his
cause, he bluntly replied: "I
certalnly ·hope so ...

~

"In the second half; they made
the plays and we didn't," said
Cooper.
Cooper said outside linebacker
Derrick Foster was the only
major casualty !rom the BC
game. Foster suffered a dislocated shoulder In the second half
and will be loot a minimum of
three weeks.
That Injury moves freshman
Alonzo Spellman lnto.thestartlng
lineup on a full-time basis.
Spellman and Foster had been
sharing the position.

substitution to which

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f(klltr ~... u.w .. frem Vaaee•wr
IAA.tt of Pacllk C.... Leape; ukrd
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Clad. . . l - O.lrtl*cl lafleNPr
Scolllllla.... '-' NMlwiiM (AA.A)ofdle

"""

w••••n-.....
z
............

Will Pat Buchanan ·come home

tou~hdowns.

......,........ Tru•etle•

W L T

NV m...~a ......... .a
Plllladelpllb ...... !

at~ onlnGien:•s behalf.

Today in history

"

The

.o\mniellll C.nlere•ur

l\o'

1

Cooper referred was quarterback Willie Hicks, who replaced
starter Mark Kamphaus to liegin
the third quarter. Hicks, a
scrambler, completed 9 of 12
passes for 185 yards and gullied
the Eagles to thr~e second-half

win.'"

Natloal FDCJ&amp;t~oall l.rllllf'

Robert Walters

Did some liberal at the Har- lor to presidents . •
nomic handmaiden - the free
vard Lampoon steal conservaBut, alas, Buchanan's screed market - yellds prosperity. ·
tlve columnist Patrick Bucha- against expo~tlng democracy Is Conservatives, especially the
a user-friendly world for our
nan's computer slug and file a no parody. Columnist Cliarles old-fashioned kind, know that ·
values.
We still need all the help
spool tha't then appeared In Krauthammer, a wtsemail, says
Ironically, even some Isola· we can get Philosopher Leszek
newspapers under Buchanan's It figures; paleo-conservatives tlonlst hyper-liberals now know
byline?
·
like Buchanan wUI head back to It Disgusted with China, buoyed Kolakowski notes there are other
Judge for yourself. In a recen~ Isolationism as the Soviets fade , by reform In Eastern Europe, goblins out there besides communists. (Anarchy and fanaticism
column .Buchanan deals with away.
reading election returns, there are two.) Without many demowhether America should vigorPerhaps. 1 hope not. Bucha· are exotic liberals who are
ously encourage the growth of nan's primal scream may be becoming commie-bashers and crati9 allies, our values may not
democracy around the world. BuCbanan-speclflc, and ·possibly democracy worshippers. They end up regnant. An America
Buchanan says no.
transitory. Most conservatives, · waffled on the VIetcong and First policy C!ln yield a world
Buchanan says that real con, even the old-fashioned kind, have Sandinlstas, but now want to where America isn't first.
The Cold War Jg probably
servatlves can't sanction "demo- gotten smart.
drive a ·s take through commu- ending. Let's not only end It, but
cracy worship," and that !rom Its
Buchanan says democracies nism's heart In Poland. Just
outset America has been on the havn't helped us recently. Bur when we get some left-right win II. Play offense; America.
· ·
' learn of dictators and monarchs. West Europeans drafted tbelr · togetherness, Buchanan jumps Extend democr~;~cy.
Pat
Buchanan:
Your
iroops
Buchanan speaks admiringly of youth, and 'spent trillions, to join ship!
won't follow you on this. one.
Plnocbet, South Africa and Mar- . us In holding the line against
The goal of recent American Conservatives have wised up.
cos. Buchanan says let's cbeer Soviet expansionism in Europe.
foreign policy has been.to create Come home, Buchanan.
•
for the non-democratic Moalem
More Important thaJi what
natloi)J.
democracies do, t.s what they
Buchanan - yes Buchanan, don't do, like start wars against
not Jane Fonda - says America other democracies. More demoought to "come horne" because cracy means we spend less on
.
B7 United Preu International
we're "not the world's policeman defense. But dictatorships, right
Today is Tuesday, Oct 3, the 276th day of 1989 wlth 89 to follow
nor It's political tutor." He asks, and left, often do nasty things to
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarll!r.
·
"What bave the 'democracies' democracies. We've seen It to
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
often durq this bloody century,
done for us lately?"
The evening stars are Venus and Saturn.
It doea sound like a put-on. and IIIQIIt conservatlvea, even
Those born 011 this date are under the sign or Ubra. They Include
After all, It' I what liberals have old-fuhloned oaes, know that.
Cherokee Chief John Ross, who led opposition to the forced move of
said Buchananlsm 15 ·abOut Democratic governments
his people to what Is now Oklahoma, In 1790; historian George
ham-handed, neanderthal con- don't blow up our airliners; the Bancroft In 1800; political cartoonist Herblock (Herbert Block) In
servatlsm - and liberals are Uby1111, Iranlana and Syrians 1909 (age 80); novelists Thomas Wolfe In 19oo and Gore VIdal In 1925
wrong about those things. In real who do are run by dicta tort. Moat
(age 64); rock 'n' roll singer Chubby Checker In 1941.(age 48) and
life Buchanan ls ·a very smart conservative•. even the · old·
actor-singer Jack Wagner In 1959 (age 30).
·
fellow: premier conservative fashloqed kind, know that.
controveralallst, author ot a
We abould also ~ demoOn this date In history: .
splendid autobio~~ ("Right cracy to tho.e want It becauae
In 1922, Rebecca Felton, a Georgia Democrat, became the first
From the .Beelnn---\, counae-1t' freedom Is moral, and 111 eco- worn'"' to ~rve in the u.s. Senate.
...

things," Cooper said at his
weekly press luncheon. "No. 1,
you sort of lose your momentum,
that edge you might have had In
the first half. ·
"By the .same token, I think
we've got to give Boston College
a little credit They made the
substitution at halftime and their
kid got a hot hand and made a
couple of nice plays."After that,
their football team said, 'hey,
maybe we've got a chance to

NEW' YOKK{UP·I-neU81k!dPrmll

"THING

... ....

Tomczak, \fho recovered fl'om

lly lJnMtdPra•llll!r_.la_.

Ben Wattenberg

"-~• •- . : - . ; ....... _

hump."

NFL standings

S &amp; ~ ··c~ief knew that money talks

registration In California In
addition over a
loci f · al
.
'
per 0 sever
Ytoea,rs. Keating! gave !be lsettnar s campa gn comm ees
$39 000 "Lookl b k fr
' ·
ng ac
om tb~
view of the current climate,
sKaystlnC~anbestohnal,f lnten.;~nlng .on
a pretty
teapld gthls
IItlewas
11 ..
s ~n the 0::~ ~ ~~~- g' fir
'
n s m,
American Continental, contrib~ted
~ 200 • 000~~I the p Natlpnal
0
~~ °~
lc
alley, a
po ca1 ac 1on comm1ttee oper-

one early Interception, con·nected In the second quarter on a
14-yard touchdown pass to Dennis McKinnon and 1-yard TD toss
to Matt Subey. Neal Ander.on
ran 2yards lora touchdown In the
third quarter that put Chicago
ahead_20-3, and Tomczak put the
game out of reach with a 36-yard
scoring strike to tight end James
Thornton In the final quarter.
"We're looking at the season In
four quarters," Tomczak said.
"Now we're 4-0. As long as we
continue to win, we know we Ctlll
get better."
Before that final touchdown.
Cunningham brought the Eagles
Into contention. His 24-yard TD
pass to Gregg Garrity 2: 54 Into
the final quarter pulled the
Eagles within 20·10.
After Anderson fumbled the

divisional playoffs last season at
Chicago in a game remembered
as the "Fog Bowl."
"The Bears are a better team
than we expected," said Cunningham, who set a club recoi'd
for pass attempts, breaking \he
mark of 60 held by Davey 0 'Brien
in 1940.
Cunningham finished the game
completing 32 of 62 pasaes for 401
yards, 3!50 in the secood half. He
was lntercepll!d four Urnes,
sacked three times by Richard
Dent and forced to scramble on
several other occasions.
"I know a lot of people are
going to say now that we are not a
Super Bowl football team." Cun·
ningham said. "But we'll keep
our faith and get over this

Scoreboard ...

·-

are thoroughly embarrassed by
disclosure of their participation.
Oneweeklat«,onAprU.9,1987,
those four were jOined by Sen.
Donald Riegle, 0-Mich., and met
with four high-ranking officials
of the Federal Home LOan Bank
of San Francisco.
The main agenda Item was the
senators • concern · about the
length of time that the regulators
had been examining the finances
of Keating's S&amp;L. The process
had consumed more than a year
Instead of the usual two to three
months.
The senators backed off, however, after the regulators warned
that Llricoln was "a ticking time .
bomb" and announced that they
were going to refer the matter to
the Justice Department for a .
possible criminal Investigation.
. Since those two meetings,
American Continental has declared bankruptcy, Lincoln has
collapsed , and been placed In
receivership, and Keating's buslness transactions have become
the subject of a federal civil suit
and criminal Investigation.
At Cranston's request, Keating
contributed $8!50,000 to three
organiz.atlons ·engaged In voter

DailY Sentinel-Page 3

8uckeyes to begin Big 10 play at Illinois

..

·w"SHINGTON · (NEA) ~ attempt~g to '' make a deal" on
, Even jaded babltuesqf Ibis city's Keatln.g s behalf.
· polltlca1aiena.area8toundedby
Ke~!lng wall chalrman .of the
the circumstances surrounding a Phoenix-based American Conlin·
pair of private Capitol · Hill ental Corp., which owned the
•
i
m(letlngs held In the spring of LI ncoIn Sav In gs an dLoa nassoc ·
l987 but not publicly revealed ation of Irvine, Callt Under
untO this year
Keating's leadership, the S&amp;L
At those ses~lons 'a totaJ ·of five had substltuled high-risk invest·
•
·
ments for the tradlt 1on res lden~
senators
gathered 'at the bebest
of one liustnessman and soughfto tlal mo;tgage loans.
pressure senior officials of an
Grays agency had drafted a
Independent federal regulatory rule that would have prohibited
agency to change their policies to such unconventional practices.
accommodate the executive's Keating, vehemently opposed to
per.110 na1 demands
the proposed regulation used the
·Charles H. Ke~tl;.g Jr., the senators In an unsucc~sful efrrian who organized the meetings fort to have It kllled.
and marshtlled the awesome
"I was flabbergasted that four
array of legislative litfiuence on senators would aske a regulator
his behalf had - along wtth
to wlth.d raw a regulation." says
business associates .a nd
Gray.Heaptlycharacterlzesthe
members of hts family- earlier
episode as "a gross violation of.
contributed more than t1 35
the Integrity of the regulatory
process... for the benefit of one
million to political · commltt~s
associated wtth the senators who
person who happened to . be a
did his bidding.
friend and a contributor."
The first meeting occurred on
Attending that session were
Aprtl 2,1987, when Federal Home
Sens. Alan Cranston, 0-Callf.;
Loan Bank Board· Chairman
John Glenn, D-Ohlo; Dennis
EdwlnJ.Graywassummonedto
DeConclnl, D-Arlz.; and John
a private session with four
McCain, R·Arlz. All derty engagsenators who he says were · ing In any Impropriety, but all
•
,

The

Chicago ·re.Dains unbeaten with 27-13 victory. ~ver Eagles

DailY Sentio1el

.

Pomeroy Midd'apon, Ohio

avaDable.

~-~

ASI FOR ·
.. . -~~ : ---IRIAN 01 DAVE·
AD DEADUNE
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OCTOIEI
6, 1919
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21Weeloa .................................. SI7.96
52 Weeloa ................................. I'IUI
llolp Coouo!r
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52 W- ..................
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iR••~re
~~

•

y,,, Ad s,,,, No•/
"

. 'I.

�'

• n. Dlliy Sentinel

Tuesday. October 3. 1989

NFL injury .
lisi grows

~.

Blue Jays, A's to
;, open ·AL playoffs
at Oakland tonight

•
•

By MIKE BARNES
UPII!Porta Wrller
OAKLAND, Calif. ...,. The Oak·
land Athletics and Toronto Blue
~
Jays were expected to win
:: division championships. The
path to the playoffs, however,
was n't supposed to be so rough .
Along the way, Dakland lost
outfielder Jose Canseco, short·
stop Walt Weiss and relief ace
• Dennis EckersleY for extended
~ periods because of Injuries . If
~
you're scoring, that's last year' s
• Most Valual!le Player, Rookie of
~ the Year and Fireman of the
~
Year.
"
Toronto, meanwhile, changed
·• managers and stadiums In inld·
. stream, and opened the season
~ • 12-24. The Blue Jays were In sixth
:, place and stood as many a s 10
• games out offlrst before rallying
• to finish off ·the amazing Balli·
: more Orioles on Saturday.
Yet when the American
League championship series beg·
Ins Tuesday night at the Oakland
Coliseum .(8:24 p.m . EDT), the
• matchup Is one many had fore..
: casted In March: The A's and ._
•. Jays for ~e pennant.
: • "You can go back to spring
.~ training," said Toronto Manager
,• Clto Gaston, the club's hitting
,., coach who repl!lced the fired
•· Jlmy WIIUams on May 15. "I
~ never thought I'd be standing
; here, but I thought the ballelub
-; would be here."
. Oakland Managar Tony La
Russa expressed similar confl·
•. dence that his team would
;, . advance to Its second straight
:: championship series despite a
-: season fuU of band-aids and
:~ ' plaster casts.

''We · came back time after
time when something happened
that was either bad luck or bad
· playlng,'J sal!! La Russa , who
also lost Bob Welch, Storm Davis
and Mark McGwlre to Injury . .
" We really hung with It, and
that's one of the reasons we had a
great year.
The opener will feature a
matchup between right-banders
Dave Stleb of Toronto and Dave
Stewart of Oakland. Gaston has
also selected Todd Stottlemy re
over Mike Flanagan - 18-7 vs.
Oakland In his career - to pitch
Game 2 Wednesday afternoon
against 19.game winner Mike
Moore.
Stleb, the tpp.winner In Toronto
history, was 17-l! with a 3.35 ERA
and two shutouts this year. He
said his team's down-to-the-wire
regular season will help In the
playoffs.
"(The pressure In the posts~a ­
son) Is not going to be anything
new," said Stleb, the loser to
Kansas City In Game 7 oi the 1985
AL playoffs. "We're not going to
tighten up and not be able to
handle the pressure. "
Stewart, the first since Jim
Palmer In 1978 to register three
straight 20-vlctory seasons, finIshed 21-9 with a 3.32 ERA . He has
a 5-1 lifetime record against
Toronto since joining the A's
rotation, Including a four-hit
victory over Stieb June 24 at
Oakland . ·
This will be the third league
championship series for Stewart,
who has also pitched In the World
Series with the A's and Dodgers.

~ Vols leap to fifth in.
~ ·UPI

college ratings·

;·
NEW YORK IUPI) - The 31-31 tie with No. 12 Pittsburgh.
· Southeastern Conference
No. 9 Southern Cal, 3-I, rose
, , shuffled the Top 20 when Tennes- tw() spots with an 18·17 triumph
, see soared to No. 5 In United over No. 16 Washington State.
. Press · International's college . No. 10 Alabama, 3-0, continued
~ _football ratings Monday on the
Its steady climb.
~ strength of Its upset of Auburn.
No. 12 Pitt dropped two places
'
By beating Auburn 21·14, Ten- despite rallying at West Virginia
'' nessee leaped seven Pll!ces 1!1 th_e .,. to stay unbeaten at ~-0-1 . The rest
-~ ratings while the Tigers drc)ppeil
of the top 15 features two 5-0
', from No.4 toNo.lO,Ieavtngthem schools - No. 13 North Carolina
•. tied with arch· rival Alabama.
State, which Improved one spot,
_.
. Notre Dame, holding No. I and · No. 15 Air Force, which
since last Oct. 31, and the No. 5 jumped four places. No. 14
~ Volunteers were separated by Clemson took the biggest fall,
~ four other schools posting 4·0
from No. 6 after losing to Duke
J
records: No. 2 Miami. No. 3 21-17.
•
' Nebraska and No. 4 Colorado.
Rounding out the Top 20,
"
The Fighting Irish, which has Washington State stayed at No.
won 16 straight games, received 16 despite the loss to Southern Cal
_ 47 of 50 first-place votes from the and was followed by three
UP! Board of Coaches, collecting schools rejoining the ratings: No.
733 of750 possible points, 63 more 17 Illinois, No. 18 Texas A&amp;M,
than the runner-up Hurricanes. and No. 19 Syracuse.
Miami received two No. ,1 votes
Tied for No. 20 were Florida
and Nebraska one.
State, 2-2, after losing its first two
Tennessee has won nine games, and Hawaii, 4·1 . . The
straight games dating to last Rainbow Warriors are ranked
season, prompting Notre Dame for the first time since November
~ Coach Lou Holtz to pronounce the
1981, when they were 16th.
Volunteers the "most pleasant
"I think It takes Into account
surprise story right now ....
not only our record this year but ·
"I knew Colorado was going to last year's wben we went.9-3 with
be good but Tennessee Is riding wins over Iowa and Oregon,"
·' all the things you can't predict- Coach Bob Wagner said. "It
'•' chemistry, momentum. You really Is flattering, especially
,.. can't tell at this stage either, but . when It co!fles from the coaches,
~ It's all chemlslry. Experience
who watch the game film each
matters
but
mainly
It's
a
foeus
on
week."
•
where they want to go."
By agreement with the American Football Coaches AssociaArkansas, 3-0, Improved two tion, teams on NCAA or conferspots to No. 6, overtaking No. 7 ence probation are Ineligible for
Michigan. The Wolverines held the Top 20 and national cham·
• their ranking after Improving to plonshlp consideration by the
: 2-1. No. 8 West VIrginia, 4-0-1, UP! Board of Coaches. Those
• advanced one spot despite blow- schools are Cincinnati, Houston,
Ing a 22-polnt lead en route to a Oklahoma and Oklahoma State.

By DAVE RAFFO UPI Sports Writer
Four of tl)e six NFL teams
~ tarting new quarterbacks In
Game Four lost. An~ that's bad
• news for the Minnesota Vikings
a nd Dallas Cowboys, who will
have to start new quarter backs
next week.
Mlnnesota ~s W~tde Wilson and
Troy Aikman of Dallas were the
latest Injured passers, and both
will miss several games. Tommy
Kramer replaced Wilson In the
first quarter Sunday and threw
two touchdowns In the VIkings'
17.J victory over Tampa Bay that
snapped a h~o-game losing
streak. Wilson suffered a fractured ring finger on his throwing
hand and will need surgery and
miss at least one. game.
Aikman, the No. I p'ic)! In the
fractured left
draft , suffered
Index finger In the Cowboys' 30·13
ioss to the New York Giants. Pins
were placed In Aikman's finger
Monday and h'e will miss at least
a month. Fellow rookie Steve
Walsh will replilce him, but
things can get no worse for the
Cowboys, who are winless enterIng their game at Green Bay.
The Cincinnati Bengals . won
with a new starter Sunday, but
No. 1 quarterback Boomer Eslason actually played most ot the
way In .a 21-17 victory over
Kansas City. Turk Schonert
started because of Eslason·s·.
sprained left ankle, butleft wit~ a
sprained ankle of his own on the
first series. Eslason played the
rest of the way.
"1 had told fCoach Sam Wych)
before the game that I!Turkgoes
down, I could go In and play bu I
that we could'n't run certain
plays," Esiason said. "But after
I started playing, I told him It
didn't matter, that he could call
what he wanted.''
The Bengals' third quarter·
back Is rookie Erik Wilhelm.
Jack Trudeau, starting for
hijured Chris Chandler, was the
other new starting passer to win
Sunday.
·

BACK IN PLAYOFFS- Toroato Blue Jays Lee
Mazzllll, left, and Mookle Wilson, bolb aequlred
from the.New York Meta, work out Monday at lbe
Oakland Collaeum In preparation for tonight's

opening game of the ALCS against the Athletics.
Both played In last year's playoffs against the LA
Dodgers. (UPI)

Cubs, Giants clash Wednesday
ByROBERTJ.MURPHY
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO (UJ;'J) - The CHI- ·
cago . Cubs and San Francisco
Giants enter the National League
playoffs moving In opposite
directions.
The Cubs won eight otthelr last
10 games to win the NL East, six
gaines ahead of the New York
Mets. In 1988, the Cubs finished 24
games behind the Mets.
The Giants, the NL West
champions, stumbled through
late-season Injuries, wlnntngjust ,
four of their flnallO games. They
lost their last two to the San
Diego Padres , who finished three
games behind the Giants.
After an ott day Monday, the
clubs were scheduled for a -brief
Tuesday afternoon workout at
Wrigley Field. The two split their

12 regular-season meetings, half
East after a 9-23 exhibition
decided by one run. ·
record, opened the season with 15
In Game 1 of the National
different players from the 1988
League Championship Series
Opening Day roste r and only
Wednesday nig h! , the Cubs' Greg
three holdovers from the 1984 NL
Maddux, 19·12, will start agalns.t
East champlon~hlp team. The
Scott Garrelts, 14-5. Mike Bie- squad quickly showed It was a
lecki, 18· 7, will go for Chicago In . team of streaks, winning e.lgbt of
Game 2 Thursday against!
Its first 10 before dropping eight
former Cub lUck Reuschel, 17-8.
of nine. Much of the same
The best-of-seven series moves
followed through September.
to Candlestick Park for Game 3 · The NLCS will be a reunion of
Saturday.
sorts for 1 Cubs manager Don
"I don't think It's really settled
Zimmer and Giants manager.
In with anybody what thls team's Roger Craig, each of whom
accomplished this year and the · worked under the other as a
fact that the season Is not yet coach. The two reportedly
over with," Cubs first baseman planned to hav·e dinner together
Mark Grace said. "It' s exciting, Monday night.
but I don't think It will sink In
until Wednesday night."
The Cubs, predicted by most to
finish near the bottom of the NL

Bengals put nine on injury list

992-3~71

~. Throwing objects ~II not be tolerated' - Modell

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the bleachers, have them stand penalized If fans persist In "First of all, we've gotgreatfans
UPJ Sporta WrMer
there and start maklng-'our throwing objects onto the field .
and everyone 'loves the dog
.
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) - The
arrests more visible,
'1'm
not
going
to
tell
them
pound,
but we could have been
· Cleveland Browns will not toler"We had arrests (Sunday) In what to do, bu i they should know penalized for that. Tha! could
: ate fans thrOwing objects onto
the bleachers, but we tried to dolt they"re going to hurt the team,'' have cost us the ball game. It
:: the field and plan to give pollee a
with some discretion." ·
said defensive end AI Baker. doesn't make any sense.
·: · more visible role In controlling
In 1979, officials moved an ''They should be to our advan- , "The very people who want us
:- the actions offans In the bleacher
extra point attempt to t!le closed , tage, not our disadvantage. It ' s . to win are putting us In a bad
:: section of Cleveland Stadium_.
end of the stadium after fans In pretty embarruslrig.'' '
' position. These are the best fans
.DurlngSunday's16-13wtnover
the 'bleachers threw bottles and
The
NaUonal
Football
League
lntheworld,butthat'ssomethlng
Denver, fans In the "Dawg
cans onto tbe field after a office said It had no Immediate that can hurt us In the fUture If It ·
controversial touchdown catch ·statement on the Incident, butthe conUnues."
• Pound" section of the stadium
~ threw eggs, batteries and rocks
by Houston's Kenny Burroughs . Browns know that any further
Baker said there was little
, at the Broncos while they were
Modell banned bottle~ and cans Incidents could force the NFL to security people could do to
~ huddling In the end zone In front
from the stadium after that react In some way:
prevent fans from bringing ob!: of the bleachers.
Incident.
'1t's
a
dangerous
situation,
jects Into the stadlu_m.
~
RelereeTomDooleydecldedto
"Art, on behalf of Cleveland reauy ," said
Bud
move the Broncos to the other Stadium and the Browns, Is
end of the field early In the fourth
uldng lhe fusfor somtcoopera'quarter, a move that angered tlon
on this, but also adds that aa
~ Denwr coach Dan Reeves, who
D~AL
It was two yean ago, IIIII type of
: complained his team had to play
behavior will not be tolerated,"
~~~
2924 JACKSON AVENUE
• lniothewlndfornearlytheentlre
Byrne saJcL ''We'w had 1uccess
:: . second half.
·
POINf PLEASANT, WV
without thele 1ypell of events In
"In Art's terms, (Sunday's)
the Jut year and a halt"
behavior In the bleachers will not
IS NOW SCHEDULING PATIENT APPOINTMENTS
Browns players, especially on
• be tolerated, " spokesman Kevin
defense, often turn to the
EVENING &amp; SA1URDAY HOURS AVAILABLE
Byrne said. "We had similar
•• problems a few years aao with · bleachers and aaiC the crowd to
(~)
start maktne nolle and help
• the dog bones, and one of the lnlplre the team. But team
IIICHAEL B. CARLISLE, DDS OENUALDBif111TRY
• tbl~~g~ we did wu put more members said Monday lana need
: uniformed poUcemen In fr011t of to know the Browns could be
.•.
I

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

Pol1t Pleoa•t n. Millo•

Toastettes

.

EWING
FUNERAL HOME

· ANDERSON'S

CORRECTIO

•

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The would be better than healthy
Cincinnati Bengals placed nine rookie Erik Wilhelm. Esiason
players on Monday's Injury list, · went on to play the rest of the
the result qf a bruising 21-17 "::n game.
over the Kansas City Chiefs on
"! had told Sam before 'the ·
Sunday.
. .
game that If Turk goe~ down, I
·'The doctor doesn't think some could go In and play but that we
of them will be able to practice couldn' t run certain plays,"
mucli this week," said Bengals noted Eslason. "But, after I
coach Sam Wyche. ' 'They' re started playing, I told him It
beat up pretty good." •
didn't matter, that he could call
Quarterbacks Boomer Eslason · what he wanted.
and Turk Schonert topped the
"When you're In there playing,
Injury list with sprained ankles.
you can't think, 'Oh, I'm going to
Running back James Brooks had get hurt, I'd better watch mya bruised shoulder and receiver self.' You have to go out and
Eddie Brown a strained play .' '
shoulder.
Said Montoya of Eslason,
Offensive linemen Anthony " He' s got to be one of the
Munoz and Max Montoya also toughest Qli'!rterbacks In the
suifered Injuries - Munoz a
NFL. "
strained calf ·and Montoya a
However , the Bengals are
sprained ankle. Four players worried that Eslason's ankle
were recuperating .from concus- problems may linger much of the
sions suffered after hard hits year, just as a sore shoulder
Sunday -safeties David Fulcher bothered him the last couple of
and Robert Jackson, light end
months last season.
Eric Kattus and nose tackle
"I don't know If we've proDavid Grant.
longed It and It will be something
Team physician Micha e l
that we'll have to deal with all
Welch said at one point In year long like his shou)der last
Sunday's game "we had three year , " said Wyche. " ! know he's
guys on the sidelines who didn' t going to be sore all week long."
know where they were."
Said Eslason, "I'll get a bone
Eslason's sprained ankle was
scan and we 'll see If we can
carried over from last week and
narrow down what's .wrong with
he was gimpy enough Sunday
it."
that he didn't start. HQwever ,
The Bengals play at Pittsburgh
when Schonert sprained his anSunday. Cincinnati routed the
kle on the first series of plays and
Steelers 41-10 last month, but
couldn' i ·return, the Bengals
since then Pittsburgh has won
decided that a gtmpy Eslason
two straight.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·'

For All Your
Bedding Needs.. .
See A Perfect
Sleeper

a

At lilevelrnd Stadium,

...

· · Tuaaday, Octoba-.3, 1989

I

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I

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•••••••••

• ' •••

•

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••

•••••••••••••

•

"OOOD · LUCK~'
S•ttort ,.,.. Fl•~
Aret·8111
I

•

�The Daily Sent~nel

r
;

Qy The .Bend
By BOB'BOI:n.JCH
So many or you will remember.
Verno~ease - at least you
should. HI! was
a school bus
driver for 32 year~ and headed
the bloodmobile
:visits bY !be
American Red
Cross lor 25
years.
· Vernon Is now confined to the
Overbrook Nursing Center on
!;'age St., in Middleport ·and will
be observing his 91st birthday on
Friday, Oct. 6..Some cards would
perk' him up.
certain
. •.

Southern Boosters at the South·
ern High School football field on
Saturday, Oct. 14.
The actual auction won' t start
unUI4 p.m.
Now - the boosters are anxious to get items donated .lor .the
auction and you can take those
Uems to the field on Friday
evening, Oct. 13, after 5 p.m. or
ali day on the day of the sale
beginning at 7 a .m. If you don't
want to donate your good stuff
you can consign it to the auction
meaning that you will receive the
money but 10 percent of the
selling price . will go to the
bqos,ters.

The boosters promise to have
. Let the good times roll when
the former telephone operators plenty of good food on hand
of the Pomeroy-Middleport - during the sale including fish tall
sandwiches, homemade chili and
area get together.
· And getdng together they will vegetable soup as well as des·
·
be on Wednesday, Oct . ll. They serts and other items.
And, by the way. do keep in
had earlier done this. and the
reunion was such a success that mind that the boosters will hold a
tile group decided to hold reun· chicken barbecue at the Racine
Ions twice a year. These are the Fire House on Oct . 8.
Now-about those items that
girls we talked to years ago when
there was operator-customer you want to donate or consign,
contact Larry D. Circle.
contact.
At any rate, all of · those
Richard Coleman reports that
planning to attend the reunion
are to meet at the old depotonW. . Meigs can boast two retired U. S.
Main St., in Pomeroy no later Air Force Generals.
One, of course, we ,remember
than 5:30p.m. on Oct.ll. From
tllere the gals will travel in .as Gen. James Hartinger.
The second Is Gen. John Ralph
motorcade to Point Pleasant for
their social outing and remem· who was born.at Coalport, the son
of Lester and Bessie Jackson
bering the good old days.
Ralph. He attended school in
------W'
If . you are loaded with fall Pomeroy until the second grade
garden crops, including such when he moved to Bucyrus with
things as apples even, and don't liis family. His mother was a
know exactly what ~o do . with daughter of the late Bob Jackson.
them, I am advised that Meigs
Gen. ·Ralph i~ a retired Air
Industries, 992--'683, will be g!8d Foree general and pilot and is
to get them. Just call tjle number believed to be living In Texas
aod they will pick up any where he Is associated with a
large aviation corporation finn. ·
contribution you might have~
·: Come early and browse
around.
·· That's the woi'd of an auction
.sale . being sponsored by the

And, hopefully, we can now
look forward to October's bright
blue weather. Does that make
you smile?

Announcements .

'

, By Melody Roberta
Mrs. Freda Larkins has returned home after surgery at St. ·
Joseph Hospltallnf'arkershurg,
W.Va .. - Cards would be
appreciated.
The Long Bottolll Community
·Association will ·be staging a
smorgasbord diMer on Saturday, Oct. 28, beginning at 5 p.m.
The ali-you-can-eat meal will
feature sever~tl meats, entrees, ·
desserts, and drinks. The price
will be $4 for adults, and $2.25 for
children 12 and under.
The Long Bottom SeniOr Citl·
zens meet the second and fourth
TUesday of every month in the ·
comm11nily building. Free blood
pressure clinics are held on the·
fourth Tuesday.
Mae McPeek, Ada Bissell, and
Mike Bissell traveled to Medway .,
to see Leota Ferrell.
Dorsel and Phyllis Lar~ins.
and Josie and Harold Osborne
and Gary, have been vacationing
in Pigeon Forge, Tenn. They
went to Do"!Jywood and got the see
the town that Dolly Parton grew ·
upin.
' ,
Ernestine
Hayman
and Lila
LmRARY TOUR - Den 8 of lhe Pomeroy Cub
Roush, aud John Hili. Back row, lered Woods,
be
going
to
Indiana
.Ridenour
will
Scout pack U9 was lreil&amp;ed tour of lhe new
Matthew Justice, Christian Welker, and J.R.
to
see
Cass
Freund
and
family
for
library Ia Pomeroy oa Monday. They are, from
Hoover.
a
few
days.
.
left lo rilbt; froal row, .Jessica Justice, Justin
Brandon· Fitch has started
school at the Tiny Tech · In
Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs . Harlan Ballard
Have returned home after sev·
era! days of keeping an eye on
asked to attend.
· REEDSVILLE -The Olive grandchildren In Westerville.
TUESDAY
Mrs. Vera Weber !sa patient on
Township Trustees wlll have a
LEBANON TOWNSHIP -The
THURSDAY
Lebanon Township Trustees will
regular meeting on Thursday at the fifth floor of St. Anthony's
SYRACUSE - The Big Bend
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
7: 30 p.m. at the Reedsvii Je Fire Hospital, 1450 Hawthorne Ave. ,
Columbus. Mrs. Weber' had back
Service Unit of Girl Scouts of Station.
·
township building.
Ame.rica will meet Thursday, 7
surgery this week and Is getdng
along fine.
SYRACUSE .:...The Mission p.m., at the Syracuse United
Methodist
Church.
Any
scout
CaiErs at the Paul Hauber
ChllfCh in Syracuse will be
•
leaders
who
have
articles
for
The
PTO Carnlv&amp;l
.a home have been Mrs. Inez
having revival through Sunday
at the church beginning at 7 p.m. Daily Sendnel's Girl Scout Diary
The annual Fall Carnival will Spurlock, Tuppers Pl~tlns; Mrs.
nightly. The church is located on should. bring the articles to the be held at Riverview Elementary Barbara Bissell, Pomeroy; Mr.
Cherry St, just off Rou.te 124 meetingc
in Reedsville on Saturday. A and Mrs. Lyle Sinclair, Athens;
North. Tum right on the next
supper will be served beginning Mrs. Ora Sinclair, Pomeroy; Mr.
SALISBURY -The Salisbury at 5 p.m. and . will include and Mrs. Michael Bo~les, Je~ny
street past the fire station.
Pastor Mark Morrow Invites the Township Trustees will meet on Kentucky Fried Chicken, steak, and Nicholas, Middleport.
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the noodles, mashed potatoes and
public. .
township hall.
gravy, cole slaw, green beans,
POMEROY -The Calvary Pil·
and roil, as well as other ChUJ - p.supper
RUTLAND -The Rutland desserts. Hot dogs and popcorn
The annual Bissell chili-soup
grim Chapel will have revival
Township
Trustees
will
meet
in
su])IM;!r
has been set for Saturday.
through Sunday at · 1:30 p.m.
wUJ be sold after 7 p.m. Games
regular
session
on
Thursday
at
nightly. Rev. Joe Sifford, KnoxwiJi start at 6 p.m. There will also Special music will be by the
ville, Tenn., will be· the evange- 6: 30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire be a country store, door prizes, . Bissell BrotherS gospel grqup . .i.
list. Special singing will be by tl\e Stat!O'n,
cake walk and a split the pot Other musicians. ·will be announced after confirmation.
Mann Family. Rev. VIctor Roush
AdmissiOn Is free.
POMEROY -The Public Em·
invftes the publiC. The church is
located , on Route 147 just ofi pioyee Retirees Inc. Chapter wilJ
meet on Thursday at 1 p.m. at
Route 7 bypass.
Maples in Pomeroy. The guest
0.0
MIDDLEPORT -There will speaker will be Calvin G. Lyons.
be · a · regular meeting of the a native of Jackson County . He is
' •~
Mlddleporl Lodge 363 F and AM the director of PERI in Colum·
on Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. at the bus. Appojntment of a nominal·
Middleport Masonic Temple. Jng committee, review of activi·
YD.
Plans will be made for past . ties to date and a discussion on
masters night on Friday, Oct. 27 . "where do we go from here" will
All members are.urged to attend. take place. All members are to
urged to at tend this last meeting
310 STIEU
949·2800
UCINI, OHIO
. RACINE -There wm be a before election of officers on Dec .
·special lJoard meeting of I he 7.
MASTERCARD-VISA-GOLDEN BUCKEYE
Southern Local Schoo!District on
Tuesday beginning at 7 p.m. a\
the high school.

•

'

'

. Ooy•

"A clasttflld edvantfement placfld tn The Daily Senttnelle• ·
cept - cl•tifled dis pt.,, BustnMt C.rd and legal noticnl
will •lso appa..- in the PI Pte•ant R!gister •nd the Gall•
polis Daily Tribune, reach•09 over 18.000 hom"
DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
-'- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY
- 2 :00P.M . MONDAY
- 2..:00 P.M , TUESDAY
- 2 :00 P _M . WEDNESDAY

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPI;R
TUESDAY PAPER
WEONESOA~PAPER

THURSDAY toAPER

.:. 2'00 P.M . THURSDAY

FRIDAY PAPER

-

SUNDAY PAPER

2 :00P.M FRIDAY

.Wordt

Rate

paf{e .~

cot·er the

follou:ing relephone exchan/(es...
Galli• CoYnty
Ar. . Code·614

Meigs County ·
Area Code 614

Mason Co., WV

448-Qaii'J)OhS

9~2 - Middlepon

388.- Vuuon

985- Ct"t•ter
143- Ponland
247 ~ letart Fall•

675- Pt. Ple•ant
451- LitOn
576 - Appfe Grove

Area Code 304

Po....,oy

H"l-ct.,•hif-•

24fi- Ato Gr•ftde

256 - Gu~n Din
643 - Arabia Din
379 - W,Jinut

773 - Mason

882- New ,Haven
89S- Lt11rt

949 - R•cin~

742- Aulland
867- Coolville

937 - Buffato

'

15

$4.00

16

$6.00

. 30

6

15

.42

10

15

$9.00
$13.00

Monthly

16

52 - Sporting Gaoda
!53 - Antiques ·

..

IASKn WEAVING

5 - H•ppy Ads
6 - lo•~ and Fo .. nd

55 - Buildtng "S upplt•
56- Pets for S•lfl ·

,

•

61 - Farm

16-Radlo. TV &amp; CB Repaif'
17 - Mtscell•neous
18 - Wanted To Oo

Rr.ol Eslole

ljiQUtnl

SUSAIII

COLEMAN

86 - Mobite Home Repeir
S? - Upholstery

271 1011111 SKOND

S-17-tln

691-61

}

It's Time Nowl
Have Thot Furnoce
ChickIll.
Wo Servlca All
Mlkas-'- G•sor
Electric. Also Parte
for AU Makes.
CAl&amp; IIIOW

liN'S APfiUAJKE
SDYKE
H2·5135 or

At Jd. S.l. 7 I 143
On 1ho h·Pou
.. 1-21· 1 mo.

.,.~1 o;jl ~, • •

9·28-'89·1 mo.

d.

TRI·CO. TEIMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL

-HOU SE FOR SALE

Big Ylfd Sail, Mon and TuH, off

R~irs

CALL 992-67 56

At 35 Southside oo LIIUa a•
Mila Rd. LH Baird residence. AU,
kinds of tnings.

"DOC" VAUGHN

Garag1 Sell, 1 milt out Sand

Ctr1i1ied Ueensed Shop

Hill R"d. on riGht, watch lor siQn,.

6-21· '88- thr.

.,..,r-=if I Wod, Thuro.

""vo-rd-;-;;Sa:-;-lo:-,-;Tu-::o:-1-=on=d~W::od:::-.=-o,=aa
1111 ? Lals of av•Y\Nng, I
Second St, Mason, WV: ·

145 acres, barn,
bottom, hill h!nd,
timber, 2 producing ps wells.

Yard Sale, Wed &amp;Thurs, 8:30-to
4:30, 166 N. P•rk Dr. Canc•lled
ltnln.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

$45,000
742-21

Brewlr'a, Stivtrsvlll'
OCt. 3rd,4th,5th. Tum right C.R.'
31, Portland. Right Brewe«..
Road, flral houH.
,
Hobton R01d by Tr~ln St1Uo.no.

1:00

Horne

DAVE'S
SMALL INGINE

IEPAII

ln·llldollepert, Oh.
For Most 2 and 4-cycle

engines
Sloclc Pons for
Homelite, Weedeat8r,
. Tecumaeh, Briggs &amp;

6-21· '1!1-lfu

•Oil Changes

•Gre•eJobl
•Geileral ChMsis
Maintenance
•Computerized Balancer

992-3897

Giveaway

mo., female dog. 112 Blu•
A.u .. rall•n HHIIrf MTnlalure Col·
lla. Exc. t)untin~rm dog.

4

St. Rt. 124
Middleport. Oh.

Houst,lcc.lncl. 11 4~46-21 02.

!Next to Hill Top GroQIIf'Y,

I wk. old puppies, black &amp;

,,,levisioll Listenin1 Devices
Uependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Senrictl
0 · ~earin&amp; Evaluations For All Ages

-z ·LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

whtta. medium size dogs, 614317.0111 or 614-367·7750.
Ger~~nlum

Blooming

and

Boganlo k&gt;r polling, bring ""'"

container •nd

sOil.

304-175-

5119~,

Uud Tires, 614-256-6251.

~ .LiGf!nsecf Clinical Audiologist

W... HJQhland Wtltta Ttrrttra,
AKC, adult stock 114·367-o624.

::1: l614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Oltio 45631
.
or at ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
'lulberry Hats. Pomeroy, Ohio

z

C•llh

Rew•rdl

Lolt

Golden

Rotrol-, Goltlo Conlorpolnt Rd.

Mllslng since Aug.l, An.wtr•

to Luke. &amp;14-379-2~47.

FOUND:

Brown

Hors..

on

Rocky Fork, Owner Muat tdtn·
ltfy, .&amp; Par. Food Bill. 114;~~

65'1 3

FOUND: One ~lr lady'a glliiH

3 BR ranch home, 21'1
baths, lull basement. 2
car prage, 10x60 ft.
deck, 3 acres plus 1'1!
acre lake. Mint cond.
$120,000 firm. All new
drapes, fully carpeted.
Buill-in lg. TV, stove &amp;

In parking tot Good Nntt Blpotilt Church. 114-441.0188 or
448-35111.
Found:Tay T11rrl1r, tamale. Black
and whit• spatted. Black hHd.
Hat had collar on. 614·992·2295.

Yard Sale

7

refri1. SH-throuah fire-

place.
992•2671

lmilltdlate full th11 tad part titnt openi!IIS 'art
mlllblt forll&amp;isttrtd illrses to IIOrlt In tilt Speclll
Care Unit, Slllry co~~tn~nsuratt with tlpttitnct.

1,- GAU.OftS
POOU~ WILLS

Contact:
.
Rhondt Dailsy, R.lll:: Director of Nurstnl
Vlttrla..ll11110rial nospltal
o 115 E.Erlll Dri¥1
PDIIIrtl
• 45719
(614)
104, Ext111slon 213'

as11•s

Can Anytl••
992-2371
lltJtnlfll

·,

Fumltura 1nd appllencn by I he,
piece or tntlrt houuhold. Felr
prlcoo bolng paid. Coli 114-4463158.
Junk· cars whh or whhout~
motora.· Call Larry Lively 114:
388~303.

Oullto
Pro 1140 quint. Any condition.
Caah Paid. Call 114-912·5117 or
114·U:Z·246l.

Ualtd furnllur1 b~ lha plte• of
entire nousen~d also aelllrlg. ·
614-742-2455.
•

11

Help Wanled

==:::-::~-:-::==-­
ANYONE CAN APPLYI Guaran-.
t"d Visa!MC, US ch•rge. Even

with bad crtdH . Na one refused.
Call213·925-9906 ext. U2508. '

AVON I All Arwa1 l Snlrtar
Spea.r s, 304·675-1421.
·
All r
C il M 11
304-ai2:2&amp;.. 5.8
ar yn.

I".;:~:=::-:;:;:.:.=7,=-::c--;:-.,-,
Admls,ipn Coordinator-Social

Worker tor long tlrrn Clrl•

flciiH~ experience perferrMt ex
aalary &amp; ben1flls. Modern-ciHrf
facllhy graat •taft &amp; rasidenta.
Apply C.reHev..,, At. 1 Box 326
Pa•nt Pl..ant, WV 25550 304:
175-3005.
•

A11lstant Management &amp; Haurly

112· milo obavo Rood Sldo Pork.

lng soon! Pia..• Hnd l'ftumts
to P.O. Box 7a Barboursville~'
WV25501.
'

Th~.y,

commMials. For a. .tlng lnr.
115·77V-71llolll. T-113.
.:,

11

Madllon

Ave.,

" ,

Unci fumiture end hou. . hold
appll1nces. Phone 114--742•_
2b48.
'

EmployeH, now needed, for•

a. VIcinity

National Piru Rtttaurant com.:•

Friday, t-4, Clhlldrwl'• clothll,
...... -!nolo.

It an

TV monr no-

CRUISE SHIPS -

""fl

hiring oR

poolllont. Bolh oklllod oncf ..,.,

LOWEST PRICES

oklllod. For 1-mollan 6111-71'8-'15507 Exl Hl5l.

IIGHEST QUAUTY

I

Wanted to Buy

Gallipolis

9-22·89

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

~

Employment Services

Lost &amp; Found

6

-.4

Ocl.2nd,3rd,41h.
725
togo
St.,Middlej)of1. Clost to Heinen·
Day-Old Store. Good cltan mer·
chandlst. "

9

Announcements
4

S.A.7. 4 family. oct.5&amp;1, 1Q..
5p.m. Some tumltwt, good
clothn, odds and ends. ~
··

112 mile from 'Mizway avtm.

PH. 992·3922

•Custom Pipe Bending

bedtpruds1

Ocl. 3rd. Sl. AI. l43'rPomoroy, ·

Stratton.

•New &amp; Used "f!res

lnltrior,

Oct. 2,3,~ . 623 1!2 Rustall St.
Gravel Hill, behind Hltners
Bakery.
Curtains,
btddint •.
Iampi, mite.

PARTS AND SERVICE

JONES TilE
CENTER

. '

Mlddlopa•.
·
Noll1 1a Stole Hlghwoy Qorogo

loaltod at Vo6y .._..,

9-6· a9-tfn

· WilER
SERVICE

Wed.

balntub,

clothing, diaha, ceu. r~•
mlac. 3larnHy, Oct . 2nd thru 71h.,
68!1 Gtner111 Harllngtt Parkway,

IIUI hou.e, lett. Clothing, new
bam to odulll-. M-Frl.lll-5.

REGISTERED NUISES

Tun.,

T.V.,

clolhll, tic.

Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Foctory Choked 12
Gauge OnlY.

· '4·25-tfn

MDn,

Boatmotor,

EVERY SUNDAY
Beginning Sept. 17

or 992-7121

...

. David

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

Alee Treee•l••lu
. ,
PH. 992-56'82

Wed, Tnurs, Fri.

Yard Sal•, 1010 VIand St, T._a,

Help Wanted

EOE

v

614·992-S344
fiVE POIIIIn, 01110

8 ·7· 0·1 mo.

992·5114

mo.

L&amp;L TIRES

9:00.3:00, first &amp; Adem., Maeon:
wv. rain or snint.
·'

RunAND TOWNSHIP

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

Tol Fl'ft
1-800-535-2199

7 Daya A Week
9 a.m.- 7 p.m.

After 5 ,.m.

SALE STAllS
SEPT. 29r 1989

5 Family Garage S1lt, Oct. 4,5,1.

NIASE Certifi .t M•ch .. ie

HIGLEY FARM

Roger Hysell
· -Garage

'

Pt. Pleasam
&amp; VIcinity ·

Moat Foreign and
Oom•tic Vehides
A/ C Service
All Mllj01 • Minor

FOR SALE

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Control Assn.

HOURS

can 742-2486

"FREE"

Y1td Salt: 33 G1rfleld Av.1. Oct .

SYRACUSL OHIO

Grant .A.

9-23-89· 1 '

Mounted and laionctd ,

Church.

2, 3, 4.

SERVICE

(6141 667-3271

985-4422

13" through 205-15"
$30.00 a Pair

.VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT All

USED TIRE
SALE

Grtce

Socond &amp; Codor.
•
Moult btyond Jumbo,
Cont~no1ry, Wed. Thurs, Frl, An·
garden tools, apple
I ,

HAULING

~NTERPRISES

CHESTU, OHIO

SINCI 1976
ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
lltmbor Natiolllt Pest

Non Ferrous
Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless Steel.

WiH VIdeo T•po
Wodcilnge, •
Birthdays,
Reunions, lnterlon
of Homes 'for
Insurance.

11

. UMEnGNE
SPREAD
DIO HAULED
992-5275

POMEROY r 01110
We Buy AI

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

1 ()., z. 19·1

"1600 GALLON
WA'fll SIIVICE

Excllltnf frlnp benlflts.

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669.'

I st visit FlEE
-Pnslllly
-•·
8-28-'JI8.1 mo d.

992-6872

NEWLAND

R. L HOUON
TRUCKING

85-Gen•al H1uhng

'Ill-COUNTY
RECYCLING

742-2778

C.ll hr Fill Sptelllt

U2 East-llain
POMEIOT, OH.

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

742·2455 ·
Salem St.6_~~~=-

83-fkCI\IIting
,
84-Etectrical &amp; RefrigerJition

Aumm•o• S11t: Frt · Oct. I,

h .m.-3p.m.

4/ l / 19/ tfn

EQUIPMENT

81 - - Homelmpro~mfflts

Jtans W 28 • 30, woment
clolhn 6 ahott, bk:~IH, and
mite. ltemt.
.,

EVENitGS ·

MORII$

82 - Piumbtng 6 He•ting

ALLEN'S
HAULING

....

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE ·

BILL SLACK
992-22"

Locatad Behi.n d'
Tractor .Dealerohip

Services

for Rent

Yord Sale. Ocl. 5 th. 1-6.• 713
Pine St., Rio ·GI'IIncM. ov•

•FIREWOOD.

DINfnE SETS,

77-- Auto Repair
78 - Camping Equipment
79- C•rnper• • Mc:J1or Homn

WOOD STOVES
.. c_,_..,
OM. Off 143

.

•LJ~HT

ESTIMATES

'"NEW" IEUJNERS

7S - Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
76 - Au,:o Paru&amp;. Acctluc:Jri•

31 -Homft tor Sal a
32-MobileHomes for Sale
33-Farn-u lor Sale
34 - Bualn•s Buoildin ..
35-lots &amp; Acreage
31 - Rul !state Wanted

CIRCe IS,

MODELS

•SHRUB S. TREE'
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

liVING lOOM SIITU
BEDROOM SUITES

74- Motorcycl•

Mary Layn1'1, At. 7, Cheshlrt,
OH. Oct. 4,5,7,1...s p.m. Roln

6-FI'·tfn

USED FURNITURE

71 - Autol for Sale
72 - Trueka for Sale
73 - Vans a, 4 WO ":s

Oct. 4th, lth. Rain or thine.
U0-8:00.

ALL MAkES ANO

lt. 33 North of

RU UD

Fertih~er

Garogo Solo: Oct 2•7. 1.2 mlloo

out 211. Yarilllr of ltema. t-4.
lorgo Vord Salo' Polrlol Villote.

SWEEPER REPAIR

.'"'- 992-7479

9-22-1 mo.

Transportation

ROUSH

2'1• U.s Ollt lllew
. u- .... in
lutltlnd, Oh.

ANNE KLEIN II, 1.7 oz.......................... :·.............. ,................ '32.00
CALVIN KLEIN ETERNITY, 3.4 oz ................................. : ....... '48.00
OSCAR DE LA RENTA GIFT SET .......................................... '40.00
. PRIVATE COLLECTION GIFT SET ................................... ~ ..... '11.00
GLORIOUS GIFT SET by Gloria Vanderbilt ............................. '20.00

SUPIJI IPS

Eq..,ipm~t

65 - Seed S.

21 - Busin•• Opportun•tY
22 - Mon~¥ to Loan
23 - Prol•sional Servlus

!fO ~DAY C~-!ln

SUN'S UP
TANNING

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

94J2·2621 or
4J92·6944

62 - W•nted to Buy
63 - livestock
64 -. M•v &amp; Grain

· 15-Sehooll &amp; Instruction

41 -"Ho~,~ael

Ooy or Ni9ht ·
NO SUNDAY CALLS

· •Mobile Hcimi
1Parta
1 _
oMoblle Hume
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

SYRACUSE ,

&amp; l1veol 11 1:k

11 ·- Help Wanted
1 2 - Situation Wanted
13- lnsurance
14 - lusin•s Training

orbs.M9·2160

9-28·'11'1 mo.

TRUCKING

lOB'S
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

57- Musicatlnstrumer\ts
58- Fruiu &amp; Vegfftabl•
59- For Sate or Trade

Farm

Ser v1ces

PH. 949-2101

New Fail/Winter Hours
Thursdays 10:00-3:00,
Saturdays JO:OD-3:00

STEWART

TEMPSTAR

Employm ent

..FrH Eetimet•"

SUPI'UES
ClASSES OFFERED

. PH. 949·2801
or los. 949·2860

MOBILE
'
HOME PARK

1(4/89-tfn

54-Mise Merchandise

9-Wantlid to Buy

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CC1.

992-6155
HANDWOVEN IASICEn

OBSESSION, 3.4 oz. Spray ........................................ :......... *46.00
KNOWING, 1 ,9z........ .. . ....... . .................................................. ~'35.00
ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW, 1.8 oz................................... '14.60
ELIZABETH TAYLOR'S PASSION, 1.6 oz.............................. '27.00
OMBRE ROSE, 1 oz ...............................................•...........•. '16.00
SHAUMAR, 1 oz.·······························································-- '23.00
GLORIOUS by Gloria Vanderbilt, 1.7oz .................................. '24.00
OPIUM, 2 oz.................. ~ ......................... ~ ........................... *47.&amp;0
OSCAR, 2 oz ..............•..................... , ................................... '29.&amp;0 .
UZ CLAIBORNE, 1 oz................. :.'........................ ~ ............... '22.&amp;0
CALIFORNIA by Jacklyn Smith, 1 oz ..................................... '1 7.50
CHER'S UNINHIBITEp, 1.5 oz .............................................. '30.00
LIZ TAYLOR'S PASSION GIFT SET ..........................~ ............ '40.00

1

Merchandise

7- Y•d Sele (peid ln" actvancel
8-Public Sale &amp; Auctton

•VINYL I
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

36425 loduprh,.. ld.
P-r•J• 011.

L W.

HA YE IEFEBNCES
614-915-4110

.60
.05 / dey

Business erv1ees
THE
BASKET WEAVE

"'At ltaiOidllt Pricu"

949·2"1
··- !1-11-'111-IIH. pl.

YEIY IEASOIIlllE

•

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

12 G..,. Shall.,. tloiJ
Fa&lt;!orJ Choke .
STRKTlYEIIFOiaDi
9-21-at-1 mo.

51 - Household Good!'

3 90-INCH QUILT PATTERNS .......... S498

New Colognes Arriving Daily!

. 20

1- Card of Th~~nks .
2-ln Memory
J - Annoucemenu ·
4 - Giv..w.-y

43- Farms for Rent
44 - Ap•rtmenl tor Rent
4&amp;-Furnilhed Rooms
48 ~ Space for Rent
47 - W.n1H to Rent
48 - Equipment for Rent
49 -~ Fot Luu

Cet Results Fast

3 SPOOLS CRAFT RIBBON....................$229

.,

&amp;1.30 / dav

42-Mobile Hqmes for Renl

3 YARDS EDGING ................ ~............. ~. S1

Down~PC~ut•

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESllMATES

lake tht pain aut of
palntl ... let 1111 ~~
it for you.

Ov,r 15 Wordt

1

liiifilhhbll
Classified

EVElY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

IN;I'RIOR-EXTERIOR

3

Announcements

run 3 d.,s at no ct'l•ge.
"Price of ed tOr ~II capitalllllters es double price of ad ~011 .
"1 l)(itnl line tyQe only uMd.
.
"Stminel 11 nol rapanstble for errCN'i after first d~ !Cheek
• for errors first d., ad runs WI p~r) Call before 2 ;00 p .m .
d~ efter oubliCI1ton tomah correction.
•Adl th-' mual be ~·d in adVance .,e
Card Of Thlr'lkt
Happy Ads
In Memoriam
Y..-d Salea

CUSTOM IUI.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Gutters

fnr ear.h rtMI 11 HParate ads .

"free edt - Gtllletw•v and Found ads under 15 wofdt will be

..

lEW- IIPAII

lt. 124 IJelw...,
Wiluosrilloanol
5alton c•••

FR~E

Rates are tor consecutive runs. broken upd~• will be charged

POLICIES
"Ads outtide Meigs, Gellie or M.son cou~ti• must be pre paid.
•Aecefve 1.50 discount for eds Plid in edvi"flce

ROOFING

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CUI

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

·· BISSELL
BUILDERS

llew-.ILWritotol

GUN SHOOT

LINDA'S
PAINTING

RATES

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

Business Services

8·20-tfn

I

7

The

742-2421

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Community calendar

.,. __

r

some great memories ."
Morgan after being taken out lor
Esasky, like Hurst, is a re· allowing a runner to steal second,
olaxed, pleasant man, for whom third and home.
tirades or complaints about a
During the season, Morgan
ballplayer's lot would be repug- cited the presence of " bad
nant. Both appreciate the fortune apples" on the team who he
of today's professional athlete, hoped would be gone in 1990.
who can turn a lew good years Although Morgan never named
into ' a lifetime of financial these players, the two announced
security. And n~&gt;lther was at departures are those ·of Stanley
home on a team where controv- and the ever-suUen Jim Rice.
ersy and animosity are as Also. the team has said a change
constant as the clubhouse TV.
ol scenery would be best for
For nearly a year, Wade catcher Rich Gedman, who
Boggs' sex life made news, from earned more than $900,000 for
revelations about his four-year hitdng .212 ·with 16 RBI and 4
· affair with Adams to his state· ' homers.
ment that he wasa " sex addict:"
Utilityman Randy Kutcher
. Roger CJemens alienated fans says Boston's players should
with his complaints abo'lit having locus on the field.
·
to carry his luggage in airports.
"Som~ people spend too much
Bob Stanley ·said of Manager Joe time worrying about things that
Morgan: "I hate that rri'an." And aren't th~&gt;lr concerns," said
. reliever Joe Price swore ai Kutcher.

Classified

a

Church will have an open house
The Rock .Springs Better
on Sunday from 4-6 p.m.
Health Club will furnish and
Vespers service will follow at 6
p.m. The public Is invited to
serve and canteen at the Red
Cross Bloodmobile on Wednesattend.
day, Oct. 11.
'' llhow lo be beld
Car
1'1eamarkd
The Oldies But Goodies Car
The Pomeroy Teen Center, at
Club of Meigs County wHJ have
the old Elberfeld's Warehouse,
its first annual car show Oct. 14
wlll hold a flea market on on the Pomeroy parking · lot. ·
Saturday from 8 a .m. to s ,.m.
There willbe 11 classes offered to
Six bY six spaces are being sold exhibitors with two trophies
for $6 each. Call 742-2187 after 5 given per class. Dash plaques
p.m. or contact any commJilee · will be given to the first 50 cars
member to enter.
' that enter. Registration begins at '
9 a.m. and the fee Is $5. Call Gene
Bulland Freewill Baplllll
Whaley at 992--:7013 or Bill and
The Rutland Freew!IJ Baptl~t Sharon Neutzllng at 98!h4317.
Cllurch will have a bake and yard
sale on Saturday beginning at 9 Geo111e Halllo perfonn
a .in. An old fashioned bean
George Hall, well known orga,
dinner will be )!eld at noon. All nist, will perform at' the Reeds· ? MIDDLEPORT -The Meigs
proceeds will go to the church ville United Methodist Church on County Salon 710 Eight and Forty
building fund.
. Sunday at 7:30p.m. Hall will play \l(.lll meet on Tuesday at 1 p.m. at
a variety of gospel and inspira· the home of Rhoda Hackett.
C:blckea barbecue
tiona! music, including alidlen~e Members are reminded that dues·
'l'he Southern Boosters wiU requests. The.public is Invited to are payable.
have a chicken barbecue on attend.
· POMEROY-The Ladies Aux·
Sunday at the Racine Fire
iliary
Fraternal Order of Eagles.
Station. Serving will ·begin at
Portland PTO Carnival
2171
will
have a meeting on
11:30a.m.
The annual "Fail Carnival"
Tuesday
at
8 p.m. All members
will be held at Portland Elemenare
to
bring
a
covered dish for the
Gr11111e to meel
tary on Saturday. A supper will
potiuc~.
·
. The Star Grange 778 and Star be served beginning at 4: 30 p.m.
Junior Grange 878 wilJ meet In and will Include chill, vegetable
MIDDLEPORT -The Past
regular session on Saturday at 8 soup, sandwiches, desserts, and
p.m. at the grange hall. Instal Ia· chiCken and noodles. "Sliver _ Matrons of Evangeline Chapter
t!on of officers will be held. All Wings," a country and western 172 Order of the Eastern Star wilJ
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
members and candidates are band will provide etitertaiJ1111ent.
ul-ged to attend . A potluck supper There will also be games, door home of Kathryn · Knight ·in
~II follow the meeting.
prizes, a country store, cake- M}ddleport. Members are asked
to wear Halloween costumes.
walks, and a dance. Admission is
free.
Bradford Cftftll of Cllrlat
WEDNESDAY
The Bradford Church of Christ
-The HarHARRISONVILLE
will haVe a community revival
QuUishow
r~onville
Holiness
Cllapel
will
meeting 'On Oct. 8-11 beglMing
The Mason County Extension
service
on
hold
a
missionary
at 7:30p.m. nightly.
Homemakers Cultural Arts ComWednesday
at
7:30
p.m.
with
" Jimmy Tingler, minister of the mittee is sponsoring Its annual
Ftaceiand Chrlsdan Church in Harvest of Quilts II Show on Jerry and Jackie Kwasigroh ,
Raceland. Ky, wllibetheevange- Saturday and Sunday at theWest home on leave from BoUnla. Rev.
fist lor the four day revival. 1... • Virginia Farm Museum. The Earl Fields invites the public.
Special music will be provi~ show is open to all exhibitors.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleby various individuals from the Cali (304) 675-3435 or 675-2198
port
Uterary Club will meet at
area.
for information.
1:
30
p,m.
on Wednesday at the
. A nursery for ages (}-5 years
home
of
Mrs.
Bernard Fultz.
will be provided each night.
Squareduee
Mrs.
Eileen
Buck
will review
For more information about
There will be a square dance at
"Imperial
City"
bY
Geoffrey
the revival or the church contact the American Leeton Annex on
Moonhouse.
Roll
calJ
will be
Derek Stump, minister, at MIU Street In Middleport on
·
"what
you
would
like
to
see in
992-5844.
Friday from 8 p.m. to mldaJsbt.
New
York
City."
Musi.c will be provided bY BerSoup and eaatwlell luclleoll
The Trinity Church of Pome- nard Connolly and the Travelers.
HARRISONVILLE- Tile Har·
roy w111 sponsor a soup and The cost is $5 per couple and $3 '
rlsonville
Holiness Chapel will
sandwich luncheon 011 Friday siDcle. The public Is Invited to
have
a
mllslonary
service on
frQIIlll a.m. to 7 p.m. Vegetable at!J.'nd.
Oct.
4
at
7:30p.m.
with
Jerry and
soup, bean SO)Ip, sloppy joes, hot
Jackie
Kwaslerob
who
are .home
dogs, beverages and d•serts
.
on
leave
from
Bollnla.
Pastor
wl)J be available. Advanced BevWal
The United Brethren In Christ Earl Flelils invites the public.
orders for quarts of soup are
Church,
Joea~ two mUes north
being taken and tbeprlce t.S2per
POMEROY -The '' Pomeroy
quart. Orders can be placed by of Reedlvllle on Route 124; will
Lodge
164 replar monthly meetcalling 992-5480, 992-3222, or have revival Oct. 8-15 at 7 p.m.
Ing
~will
be held Wednesday at
992--3777.
nllbtlY. Tile ev. .&amp;ellst will be
7:
30
p.m.
at the MlddiiJIOrt
Robert "Bobby" Wlaeman from
Temple.
Refrellhmeats
wiD be
Point Pleullnt, W.Va. Then! will
served.
All
111a11ter
maaou
are
The Sacred Heart Catholic be spedallllrtetq e.cll evenq.
Health club meet1D1

BOSTON (b PI) - Started in
the shadow of the Margo Adams'
scandal, thej Boston Red Sox
season ended with another top
player likely taking the freeagency escape from this talented
but perpetually bickering team.
Last year, ,the Red Sox were
the champions of the American
Leagoe East, but pitcher Bruce
Hurst used his free-agency freedom to go to San Diego. This
year, former Cincinnati Red
Nick Esaskyi came in ·hit 30
home runs with 109 ·RBI and a
.271 batting average and the
Ge
'
orglan Is expected togoelsewhe~e. - most likely Atlanta.
I m going to make a decision
that's best lor ';ftYself and my
family . I .~aven I decided anything yet, said Esasky, but his
comments about Boston are ailin
the past tense: "I had a great
time in the city". and "! have

Long Bottom
news notes

Beat of the Bend

Let the good times roll...

Boston season: From marg_?·to 'Bad "Adam:s'

Tu a·• ley, October 3, 1989
Paga 8

"'

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

'1989

~Da:';n;;;,":.,:;l:;n:.:;;C;:hri;:o;:-=•-,..--:111:-a."'

FIR LOCAL DIUYEIY

z

fomly Yord Solo: I

laulh on Rl 7. TUfi.Frl.

;OMIIOY AND .IDLIPOU'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWIIID PillA SlOP.

I fomlly

Go-

atlllng
mlln St1rt
814·112·7110.

Solo: Man I

TuH, II 107f Avo.
CldtciNft I odutl ClolhM ......

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Dailv Saecials

4 lollllly. - . , 1'lluiL .., LOio

992·9922 or 992-ll2211.

men~,

. w•••na,

Rd .. 1 II Milo a~ At 211.

••

EARN MONEY IYr&gt;inO _

.•
_.

130,0001yur lneoma potefflill
Dolollo, 105-617- Elll ··,

au.

·- ·

.. Ill homo.·
chll*-na EARN MONEY Ifill~

ctothn, miiiiD. 1 tn mi. on Krlnw

9/11/ 1 mo. pd.

Avon NoW! c.u'""

130.-- .........
Doltllo, l-IOI-U7
1018e.

.. -

· - ...
. -· .

•

,

1

�8- T1Mt Daily Sentinel

Paga
11

P.omeroy- Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY
•

HelpWintect

44

51

. Apartment
tor Rent

EARN IIONEY IJplng ot homo.
130,DDGiyMI inOOnMi potontlot.
Dololta, (1) .....7..000 b1. • ·

Tuesday,

HousehOld

KIT N' CARLYLEell)' Lmy Wript

October 3, 1989

12 TructiS' tor Sl'le

Goods
now· t:!l. 11
Wokoflold AYO., Pl. Pit.
For Solo: ·Etoctrlc Rongo, PI;
dryor,
UO; bY ro~totrotor, 1150; All fn good
cond..l14-44&amp;-23110.
Fu.. oll tank. water Mat•,
khchen
blthroom
link,
r~~frlger~tor, tlovt, toilet malor·
cycio, 30ot-e75-4518 or &amp;75-1GOOD USED APPLIANCES .

Cofloo 10bta tlko

45412.

•

1tl0 0..50 S port Plclc-up. Low
mllu, AC, &amp;mbtlltvabla con·
dltlon. Mu .. IH. 814-7424020.

M

11113 DodfiO Rom 0.50 4WD.
Sharp, low milu~. Call 11'tgZ-2651 oftor 4,30, S3SOO.
,.-.,
11184 Chovrotel 1 1on., 1171 ,

Crttt Moltl. Call 814-«1·73GI.

Mini wa.•har &amp; drjera. dOuble
door ralrigerator, tltc. range,
Stctlol"'llllvlng room auU•, lf4245·8463.

• .

Picky-Picky brings Ramona
end Beezua clotW togatlltr.
(J) Math L 1 = ." - t:;l

~-!ERE'S

WORLD WAR I
FL't'IN6
DRINKING ROOT
BEER IN A 5M,~LL CAFE IN
~RANCE
. 15 DEPRESSED ..

can bt s•n Lsyton•
araQt or csll after 6:00, 3C*

Von. Good con1175 Dodgo
dillon.
114-141-2171.

ltJ J

ori1,..H2·1412.

Hlrina: Mature friendly p1K1plt
tor gltt thop to be opened in
Ohio Ahltr Plan. Must bt bond~ l nady 10 ttart work, 3rd
w..k
In
Oct. · Assistant

fr.

management
&amp;
,.gular
ombtoyooo noedod. Apply ol
Hold.y IM. Galllpollt MHIIng
Roem OCt. 4, 1988. 11a.m.·2p.m.

:7:itot-

JY •nd Varsity ChHr...der lid·
vttor. It lnttrnt.d ctll Charttt

~. Pl'lnclpot, Eootom High
ScliOol. 614-985-3320, 6,Q0.3,:111.
Lo&lt;ol otllco oo.U lrlondty,
,..C~a.t:, must hive
tXCIIIIIMt It
on. lnllnnii'S
ancl be hlmllar wfth multi tiM
phtne ·-•m• and modem

•""=*''

otftt equipment. $orn1 lyptng
re~lr.cl
.tlorthand
abiiH. y
Pl'f7et"rM
tnd
computer
know~g• helpful. Wt otftr
cOII'Ipethri't wa'gl and btntlh
piOkllgt. GrNt working environment. S.nd resume and
lett'r •• toon at potslblt to
Box P-30 c.rt Point Plusant
Attlster, 200 lbln St., Pl. Ptl.,
W~25550.

Monday lhru Saturday, I a.m. to
m. Sund11y: 12·5 p.m. 114-

:.t.-31 58·
Real Estate

31

. A LJdln ~lahr" Slortll comIng. to Otllo Rlvtlr PIIZII. 15 Up-

Homes for Sale

GA1Upo, Rog. 1521, now 12111 ''"'· Rio o..ndo, OH CaD 614111 In otock). StMpor Bolo, 245-&amp;121. ·

btdroorM, 1 bath, 3 year old
fuel oil tumace. carport, ltr~
..oraoe barn. On 1 112 acn lot.
RDH Hill, Pomoroy. I19,SOD.
114-742.a81 1fter e:oo p.m.

Rentals

2 br, oatblge. Nlct retlnmtnt
home, loc.tild as Lower fllver
J bedroom " - " Uvingroom,
kHchen ,
beth.
Conipjettly

2 bedroom In Euttrn District.

Nat ional Manufacturer al pa,-r
panltt supplies, s..ks In-

Nmodeled

1200

dividual to service retell tlore,
in -immedltlt art11. Pl..sanl,
crlltlve
put-time
work,
maintaining party center. Cer
~q~lred.

Call collect, 614-191-

7748 Wed. evening Oct. 4, 6:30-

7,30.

Na~ horse tfalnar to show

r.

traln quarter t'lorses In western
~ .... 614-286-8522.

Non-emoktr to cere lor four
ytlr old In my home Paint

Rd. Rlvor vtow.l14-441-2300.
and

out.

44136.

Point Plelunt Butlnus, H•
tlblllh....-nt nHdt JNift time
help,

Retail Sicurlty In Local .tort,
Dettdivt. Experitnet
prtftrrad but not ntcnllf'Y.

Slara

month

plus

depoeh.

114-882-5039.

3 ~droom, lotll electric, tully
carpeted. On Bro~dway, Mid·
dltport. 614-992..,550 dar• or
&amp;14-IKI2-nsc •ft•r s:oo.

3 br, farm house 1 112 mllet
from At. 7, Eurtka, OH 304·675-

collect

:::;:::;~==:::;-;;;::;;;;-;::;~
By owner hou. nd 50a1!1Giot,
114 Walnut Sl., Pt. Pa. 304-1761011.
HARTFORD • I rooma, bath, 1P"
proz. 4 acrta. Wnt Point Road.

approxlmat.tly
10.12 h.. por -k, OY0111ng
~ours,
135. wMkly. Stnd 122,000. Call Coltoet, H1W82·
1211
rest.~m• to Box s-a, cart Point
Pl ....nl At;lsttr, 200 Main St.. Llkt rww 3BA horne. 110% n.w,
Point Pl....nt, WV 25550.
overy!lllng
whh
Janitorial

Houses lor Rent

7438ofto&lt;6,00 Pll. .

Oil !told ... pumpor. Bodford 5801.
Township or Addleon ToW11thlp
Route. Furnish own tNck. Ex· 1 room• and beth. On 3 to 4
· perience
nec•aary.
Mall acr•. Westpoint Ad., Hartford,
resume
with
Hlary
re- w.v. $22,000. 1~14-282·8218
qulr.mantt lo: Crissinger, lrw:.,

41

132,500. own., linanced, Ltaon Reference~ requlrK. 114·M•
area. 304-181-2412 or 111-4374. · =280::..:1:..·- - - - - - - 1 bedroom r~nch, FfiiWBF, 2 bedrooms, blth, newly
centrtal air, large deck, wooden decol'llttd, CINn, nlct. 114·8112tlorag•
bldg,
Mid SQ't, 5858.
... acfowbrook addn, J04.675- 3 bedroom In Pomeroy. Call

4 btdroam houn, 1· 112 bath.
PLtastnt Monday - Frldtf, On Gr.vtl Hill, Middleport, Ohio.
Atftr~. 3CM-175-~2.
Galrage . lmmtdlatt pou~ulon .
CaH 614·992-5714.
Ckcaa.-... baOp eftMr. tor I
handicap chlld, 9ylwlli Johnson. 1 nxtm11 and bath. 8ullt·ln
304-773-8140 or 713-5541.
113•500· Nttdt aoin•
porch.
NPIIr. 114-62-2313
or 11'-151:1·

9393 Barten Dr., Cleveland, OR

romod-.

4 btdroom brick, baumtnl,
garage, large yari:f. Gunvllle Rd.
Lease, dipolit, ,.ftrtnclt,
1450. month (lncludtagu) 304-

675-:7887.

4 bedroom hOUN for rent. $250
• -2
mo nth · Coil I 1...
,. ..,"531 or

114-812·2651.

In PomtrOy, alao buy an•land
contl'llct, :1 btdroom, 2 bath,

etovt. .2!!fr1Qtrahtor,

dwashorr·

dry.t r. • ...,. mont: , no tpas t.

1s-_1"4_·1_4•c..2:cs.:.26:..._ _ _ __

~~!t~ · A~~~m:.'i~~

cludn Wlltrr tra.h, MWage,
1100 dtpotll. Large Yard. IH at
314 Third St. Kanuaga. 114-441-

7473.

12x60 2 br, locat.ct In Cou~:t

32

plied.

_w,_Clrt

f~r ..tldtrly · end han·
dicapptd ·in our hOme. 26 &gt;taars
•xper~tnct. LPN

on call. Low

Income homt. Cali 614·992;6873
after 7:00 JJ.m. tor mb'r t infor·
rn•Uon.

15

Schools &amp;
Instruction

RE·TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS

COLLEGE, 529 JackHn Plk•.

,,,._.,....t367. Atg. No. 1611-10558.

CaR

18

wanted to Do

Ctrilfled W•lder. Wtldlng ; Arc,
TIG. '
Goo. Aloo, · small
14
1404
tatirlca11n; )obo. ' '"•
·

MIH Peula'a Day Care Clflttr.
..,. attord1btt, childc:lf't. M-F
, a.M.• 1:30 p.m. Agll 2*'10.

lotor., ollor school'. Drop-ins

24
walca,.l14-44f-12 ·
Pointing, ln1orlor • ox11rlor, 15

W

Furnished efficiency, all utililin
p1ld, share Mth, S1351mo., IHI
S.cond Avt. 814-446·3845.

Roome for rtnt • we•k Of mon1h.

SliMing at $1 20/mO;
Hotel. 614'!448-11580.

Oaltla

Slteplng roorrwil with cooking.
Also trailer sptct. All hook-ups.
Call after 2:00 p. m., 304·7735651, Maaon WV.

46

Mobile Homes

12x10 Buddy, 2br, all gae, ntw
carpet, AC, 1810 IIKt ntw

through out, 16450. 114-441-

0175.
12xeo on nice ~•I k)t, nice
concr.tt Wllka, nlee location,
Must etll tt lnttrtlltd, .,........,.
1005, aft• 5p.m;
1115 Conerod, 12x55, 2br, lots

1~x70

mobl.,

•

MISC&amp;IIanaous
Merchandise

tOft. Sattlllte dish. remote con-

1rol, $500., Eorty Amorlcon L.R.

suit, 2 chairs, 4 tabl ... 1500.

==~~~~

of lldlrty • do
I .... 11VWiU2
.,...

H

Lary;• raund, bal• of hay, IU

350 A.T.,tJ.CIIIInt . con-

$500. You haul. 814·742·281 4.

u:a-.3HS.

47 Want~ to Rant

For Sal• • Concreti and Pintle
septic tanks. All slzt8. RON

57

114-912·74711.

cill watllf, Gallipolis Ftrry. 3Q4..
67 ·2722.
Two trailer lpi!CH, Routt Ont

2 or 3 bedroom home ftnt $1(10.

to 1179. I- momh, :104-f756553 or 304-81111-3418.
Merchandise

51

Household

2br, lumiahod, air cond.l cobio
T.v.. Boou1ilul Rr- Vow in

.,C Ch•rry dining room ouho,
Dlincon PhYla IOIIJ. Good cond
- · 304-e,W2111,
h12 corpot $50; rol cirpot 14 o
yard &amp; up; 'Mollohend Fumtl\.we

country style

IOVI

I

2 Ctari...,. lot toll, 1 lor mar·
chlng,
1 lor · Baldwin
arrows. $110. Call 114-141-3050 Cirlllll Wlbuln
In lun mochtno.
eftw 5:00 p.m.
11~-4-79,
614-2411-5017,
Foatlre Compound Cr01sbow, 5

Roro 36 Chovy, 2 dr. Sad~"!S:."
tharp. 17100 or trade. 11

'7311.

A11t1ur1rd Equipment, locllld

Stoto of tho ort Ptovty XR1200

Oo~

: r o r guldo 1350. IICJ4.8I2..

S1501mo.

lp.m.

44

114·746-1828

1b!r

mixing contolt with manual

•fl'lrl_,.,

t::i..:.....~

1'711 EOH.

an~~

can no -.... hunl eo I am

aotu.,. on Coon Houndo. i l.... 114·742-2412.
Suppi1P~

~ liVf'S[OC~

after

91

"

Motorcycles

Autos lor Sate

75

P.fFE/'lENi:-f$ I ANP \

lo Motors
Sal

loot. 125 HP, EvtMHI:.,.E1,""·
;;;':-'~.l~&amp;S~a-~ 316 aW;
7 00
' p.m.
1m - r o f t boll 17 112 ft.,
81 hit Evtn, new bllttrlel ana
m1ny eJd:rl .. $3,IICI. call 304-

:·

Of YOU.

61

-\

·=

118118ft. u.r a ... 8011, 115
H.P. Mercury outboard motor.
Mercury fool controlled trolling

motor. 15500. 114-441. .10.
11188 Boho 1111 Sunooort 350
Chevy S.l. Prop, AM.fM atllrea.
0pon bow, lhorp boot. 112,500.
114-8112·21211,114·582-4241.
Lowe 15 112 ft. aluminum b11s

v

Cl 111tb,NEA ~

boat. Mercury 25XD motor. Ex·
tr11, with tralltr. Call tvtnlngs

114·912·5181.
76 , Auto Parts

&amp;

(I) elll Wllo'l The loll?
·Angela learnt that IIMI

wouldn't have made a good
Brooklyn housewife , C
(I) (!) Actor JUi!cl ·
Hlrlc:h narratas a 1001&lt; at
what mak4ts Naw York City
tick . (I ;00) Q

;;

..
••

in Naw Jerny. C

e till MOVII!: Info The Night

,,..,..A;..,:,c~,:,e.:..s:,s'='o:::r:-la...,s===POOR BOY TIRES, 304·8753331, trant end aUnment $18.15,
4,000 good ultd tiN:a. Mml·

tii'H, niW tim.

79

81

(R)

.\
..

a.

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditlonsl llletlmt guaran~
IH. Local 11t.renees lurnlahtd.
Free eatimat•. C.ll coll•ct 1·

114·237-oa&amp;, doy or night. R o
I_ • r • I a • • m • n t
Wo10-ling . .
C. W. Dalt'lson, Plumbing &amp;
trenching, tor all water &amp; drain
Unn,, 114-446-0151. ·
Fttly Trat Trimming, etump
Nmoval, oaii....,S..f33t.

Con__..,.

Lint£ CI&gt;J.J.f:J.:JS APb&lt;JUD
~~IS AU.

·,

1;05 (I) MOVII!: S.O.S. Titanic
13:00)
1:15 e ·lll IISI NSC laMbelll;l
1:30 (I) e (J) Thew- v...
On vacation, Keoln meets a
captlvallna older girt. 1;1

1:00 -~·ChaM
(J) Top Rank lloxlng
lll e ( J ) R -

•'

.

Ro-nne unwisely lnvltas
Dan's tonaly bola over tor
dlnnar.Q
(I) (J) AlnaTICitll l!lqllllance
'{he first around Cite world air
race ia recounted t1y
survivors. (1 ;00) Q

.

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

1!11

EVERYeoDYS

WKA.T A PRE:TTY
FL~ ....!'1...1.. BET
IT 5/oi.ELLSNICE.

eo ED6Y "THese

..

80 The

DII.YS.
.

!.My ICing Llvel
lanny Hit Show

1:30 w elll Cttlcken Soup

•.'

.,.,'

Jactcle's blrlltCey dinner lor
Middle fiCII unexpected
problema. t:;l
10:G0()) 700 c.- With Pat

·-··

Ral:llrtMMI

~·

BARNEY

w e111 th111J-"'Ing

Hope and Michael examine
. their.marrllgt, now six years
Old; Q

'
TATER AIN'T SO NEW
ANYMOR~ JUNEY ·SUE-COME t&lt;IGHT ON tN

aorne applllnce rtptlra. WV

61 .........

(l)(J) ....,...., Photographl and
h i - IIIWit'MII, along-

recent lntarvlewe, tall the ·
and CantroVIInllal
story ollltllf111111 atylum In
Amttrk:a. (I :00) C
1111
1..-'lan Oonlel
rneeta an anracttve and
~tarloul riding Instructor.
complex

ea

Rotory or coblo 1ool drilling.
Moat w.Us CDI'I'Iplllttd tame
Pump tlln and Nntlct,
Ull-3802.

::z.·

1NI l!odfiO D•VI- lhllflv z.
Strvlc•,
AI opU-. Low mlloogo. Elcol- Davia . S.W.Vac
1oM iono!Mion. 114-74Mt71, or Goorgoo CrNII Rd. PartJ, ouppll~ ~lckup, ond d•llvory. 114114... _. D.W-.
&lt;141:&lt;~214.
80 ....,_ Coro.l- o l wtth , _ building. 114-2M- Sopllc Tonk Pumping SilO, Gollio
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
...
.
Joc:koon, OH 1·100·537-9528.

-

82

iiSivftiiNewa
10:311 (!) P.O.V, Tak41 an Intimate .
1oo11 11 the atrugglea oa 1
p,~ ot ltomalen people.

eoLaiCII TonlgM

a
• U10 Clllbrtty T-.

AND (llfth 11-Apli 11) Today you
Altro-Graph Matc:hmlk• lnelonlly re- might " - to ·.r~ta 1011111 of yqur
vealo whk:h ligna ere romanltc.cly per- lime and IMIVY to~,. - · • pro.
lect lor you. Mall S2to Matchmaker, c/o jecta or problema lnlleed ol tocuttlng
lhla IIIWIP-· P.O.IIox 91428, Cltrve- primarily on your own alt.rre. TIMI eMland, OH 44101-3421.
mando won't be exOIIIIve.
SCOIIPIO (Oot.IM lloo. Z11 A friend ol TAUIIUS (April . . . . . 101 Try to
yours w1to Ia UIUIIIy rather lllent and fll*1d your. tree time today wlllt comlaid back may be In a yery talkatMI panlonl w1to know how to anjOy Hie. Tlte
BERNICE
mOod today. H .b ehooves you to be a
company you keep will exert a big lnftuBEDEOSOL
gOod Hat-; becaU• what It will be once over tiMI way you'l 1oo11 at
valuable.
wOOd.
IAGfTTAIIIUI ( - · II Deo. HI In GIIIIR (lrl-r H..,_. 10) You might
compelltMI car-ln•ot•-•• today,
not be able to wrap up al ot the llttla
~-•••••- - 11 lln't w1to you know, IIIII w11tt you _ ~and anda you'd like to today, but
•
know 11tat COI!f!ta. If you're baltar pre- you cen rtduoe 111em Mlilllentlally Hyou
pwecllhan your competition, you'll be mike the lllort. What you do now Will
the victor.
111w you .._later.
C.VIICOIDI (Ilea. INaft. 111 Frlenda CAIICIR (..... H._.) 11'1 beat not
wiH 1tnc1 you a d1llglttlul par-. wtlh to waft until !MIMI - e to 111111&lt;1
WhOm t o - - today, beciOtM your 80dll IO'I'IItgllltanta today, belt will be~ to1hem lltatyourlntwwhom you'N want
111 .,._. ..., 11awt to aay 11 _., 011 taa 1t1ter m1g1tt mille ot111r Pl8ftl.
OoLI.look lor I'OITIII108 and you'M find Ct. TIMI

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
andHuUna

Founh and Prne

Gallipolis, Ohio
114-446-3866

-Itt.
• 12,:150; 1100 David
wnh Coli, 84,850;
.

you'l be coming Of age llter.rly or

=~ 11o0o1. _,Yourlnltlncll
CJPPortunlt'
:,;•
- 'tfl!l!!
UIUII
I lillina. but you

. lor apotttng ttMnOial
f1k11Y \O be
You m1g1tt not maka

could develop..._.-.~
'w1110ft you cen bulkl. Know , _ •
. I

I•

..

~~avew.-Aildlloly

Dwtn Hltmlklll Stave

we~ner and Holly

0unn
trlveltrtrouglt and
Japan antartalnlng u .s.
military JIIIIOMII. (1 :00)

Hoat Jay .Joi1Mtona

1nwtins two c1l1brlty

·•1

·

AOUAIIIUS (olall. • 1'111.
Some1'*'1 lltat
111111110-

""""'appear
but Ta 01 eilormota Import- to you
can bl f'I'IM8IIIMI tuccnafully today,
b1s1 • your -dOn -Will be atrongartltertthelr8.

PieCIII (1'111. 10 " lit 10) Let your
companlona Ita.- ~ -lreadom ol
c:holca toda)' IIIII you expect !rom
tllam. VOAJI IUIOIIIIonl Will be u-;
lfWIIII' c:onmtal ~ you follow tltll lim-.
pte rula.
'·

.

.
.

'

g-ta IICh -

..
and hurnorOua
at&gt;OIIIna from amund
tlit world, (0:30)
II) AIMttiO Hall (I :00)
lportl

WI(( I I unique

e

..........

OIIOJIItfnl

0 Mlall1l VIDe Evon , _,
11:GII(J) MOVII: It 'Tiline K·l
(II) (2:001 .

h~bon!M~

LIO ,. . . . . . . II) Be acampatlaon

11:10

an endp.lay

=
'

.

. ltMcl, -~~ Wl)llc
tire your mind. .

-·t-

beyortd

~

otltlr

begin to

'

,. .

,_

,.

-

JNT

4~Q

••

'

N'*a
2NT

.......
Paa
Paa

3•
4+

.

Allpuo

· Opening lead: • K

were fol- ·~
lowed by another beart ruff. Next ·
came A-K of cluba and a club ruff. Tile-· ·
Jut beart from cltrminy wu ruffed, :
and Sou1lt tbeD led 1 spade. WileD Welt ·.
foUO'IIIed low, the nine iMertec1
from dummy. East wu 011 lead, and
wlu!tever be returned would make the ·
slam for declarer.
·

monds ending in dummy

by JHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Belt

45 Corundum

8 Lummox

1 Betrayed

I

DOWN

10 Pepal cape 2 Musical
11 Wild party
group

13 Ship
14 Betel
15 Poor

'·

3 Grazing
land

palm

product
(sf.)

18 Legion·

4 Beverage
51mbue
8 Jalopy
7 Celtic

deity

nalre

11 Incarnadine I

Supervisor
11 Circumvent
Take In
21 Surrounded 12 Carpenter's

t

by

need

22 Commotion 17 Taro root
23 Undulate 20 Moving
24 American
trucks ·
23 Wound

jurist

27Hard

24 EngHsh 32 Creme de
aaaaytst
Ia creme
25 Outburst 38 OHactOty

2t Manage

sensation

27 Stage

37 Gainsay

· selling
29 Uncle
(Sp.)

3t lnclan

&gt;

I

weight

41 Semlnery
· (abbr.)

31 Harsh

•

.

.... j

'·

pan

IInder

..

21 Best
·29Bon-

..

30 Before
31 Bum

•

slightly

33Be
mistaken

34 Tyke
351sraell

38

airport
Rental
contract

400ut of
the way

42 Join up
43 Make
strides

''

44Marlne
bird
DAlLY CRYP"'UQUOTES- He~'alln to work It:

10 1~

AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is IL~Ptl
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters ,
apostraphes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. ~day the code !etten are different . · .
.CIIYPTOQUOTE
IN

EG

TMV

NIY~'D

VXDQVPENPO

CEXFV

vaunlll

••

CROSSWORD

VIIGO(. . . . . .,L .,PPit'Jitrlliell••ln- - OOUicl be a lilt IMI1JIIlng cto-

your normal - " " - On

..

+A lUlU
+K7S
Vulnerable: Norlb-South
Dealer: North

.

North-South were fortunate to be
using natural metbodl after two noSouth could !hUB bid three dla·
forcing and - wbat reaction
eoaaed. North bid three bearts, wblcb
could be abowin&amp; a five-card suit or
could be a cue-bid in support of diaJll(lltds. South DOW bid three no-trump,
not mterestecl in slam unteu North
could abow diamODd support. Tbep
came the real test of partDenblp.
North did bid four dlamoDda, but wbat
about the four-beart bid by South? In a
strong partnersbip, tbat sltould be COIIstruecl u a control-showia&amp; cue-bid,,
since diardOndo bave been eoafirmed
u the partnenblp's trump suit North
DOW showed the ace of spades, and
South took a sbot at lbe slam.
Looklnl at aU 52 cards, West would
bave led 1 spade, but otllenr!- lbe
king of bearts wu lbe automattc lead,
Declarer won dummy's ace of bearts
and ruffed a bearl. Two rounds of dla-

G E I VB

day, 10 don't pt.-

SOUTH

+au

'

llqiptrloday,- IIIOuglllt lln't lie.
II' ,_.~ 1111* bergalnl.
1M ftlll amounte )tOU'H 11¥1, "OSbllu
•· . . lllldup •;:r~~~~r.

+64

+10642

+QJ98

(J) Ill • •

(J) IJghler ltde 01 8pofta

-people-

~.

•

•to au
+K lOS

. • KQH
t7

up

··.

EAST

WEST
.JI7 .4

JACOBY

11:00()) . . _

• Ill (i)
1111 Newa

+KQJs
+AS

JAMES

wife ol Dylan's star witness.

.''
••

ea Wottlony agreas

to help ftncl Cite kidnapped

IIINalhvllteNow

Ron'o TV Sorvloo, opoclollzlng
In Z.nfth oioo urvlclng moot
other brtndl. HouN can., alao
~t.7a-MH
. Ohio
·

0 M u - , - Wrote The
Pertecl Foil
Ill
With Dinah

OH.oor MlXft.JUSr A

•

(2:30)

l1J P; lmeN•••
I!J MOVII!: l.8ce IPI I 01 ~
(2:30)
.
-

1'

campers
Motor Homes

1970 Banner Camper. Sltepe 8,
ood condition. 1550. C.ll 61.f..

•a

Reecue~ 111 A
belly, taua Into a deep shaft

dl

t:.

zoo."

e
~=i-·

IO·)

'•

- - ollnfluanCI will be uppermost In
.·""'Ttfttnciii11M,..,
ahead. Thill II the

PI- .r.ptng. 1llrMm

7:31 (I) . . , _ And Son
1:00 (]l MOYI!: Night 01 T1te
Ortuly (2:00}
Ill 1111 NIC lallbelt:

'•

Tite reaiiZIIIori ·IIIII you don't IMive to
tue a back - • to enyon~ In your

I'm a porcupine ala petting

•

Night Court
lltTopC.nl

(9)

I

-~
"I ..._, feel out of

0

oc:-RN

loclrbuU:tUSA
Champion
, Men's
Competition from Raleigh,
NCffi

1030 Co• -·
83,HO~nt'llroctor

Vinton.

e(J) USA Today
ali e D IISI JeoperdJI t:;l
e® M'A"li'H

1 00: ~...

Fann Equipment·

Brown
114-2

iH ....IiE,S'

.

IJ) 1!-llontant Tonlgltt

WITH ·
IMAGINATION?

171-aMI between 1 :00 ara and

1~:::::..:::::::.:..;:::::::_,..--=

11183 Comwo Z21 305 ou1o, PS,
PI, air, crul'"itl~"k T-Top, nOIONO, 16,100.
76-2363.
11183 TOfOII Collco OT, luoi lnj.,
5 opood, olr, ounroof, ol powor.
$2100. 11-1-3204.
11111 T-llrd, U, V-8 1ng., AC,
~' PWiiAIIIFM/Con., now tiros.
:::00:::...:.:1~4..:•..::41:..:341=1::...----,1...
1NI -.mouth
RoMant Cdr,
r•F
PSIPB, 1ut~::s AC, raal Net
13400. 514- . 1.
11117 Dodao 91Wvor, root good
oond, AlllFM c - ployor 4 ·
oDd. ,,.nunloolon, P8, h,
1~00 or bttl atttrt Mutt StU1
Cllt after !p.m. 814·Hfo6251.
ft.~
1... -.., Z24, ~
·uo. ollopo, block, 11
7.
lor
•-•-a
1" ' Cllryw -~. P8, p '
· PW,
1uto. ...,.r mUIC Hill e14a
&lt;1414838, Eu. oond.

PIPN'T '(OU A/&gt;Vff(T~$f
I · fOft SOMEONE

~u~

MALCoLM Fo~Jfs
NEVE!(
t-lfA((P

for
8
1172 17 ft. S!orcraft Tri-Hull

42-2858.
.
11110 Bobco1, 6 cyl., iooko good,
runo good• nking ltiSO.. 1983 11171 Tauru1 Hlf-cont•lned
Chryofor, ~ Class. S8SO. 614- 'camper; 24 n. Good condlllon.
245'11232.
Lo&lt;o10d on lot in Hockingpoit.
I14.UZ.252R, 114-512·
11111 Ford Cougor XR7. 2 door 13000.
- · Uko - · All oquipmo... 4241 .
aCJ2VI. 11111. 114-1112-1111; ·~ 1111
FordiSh..ta
cam,_.,
1:'="..:4:.:••:.:.•4-8112-::::::..:•1;:63.::._,...,...,.,...-,- . 15,14t milia, 304-175-2531 .
11181 Mozdo QLC holchl&gt;oek,
high maoogo, d_.tabto, 1!!11 VIking SP 161 fold down
lrtlllt. Stove. water tank. sink,
•canon~lc:al, good oond, 11,200. awning, taU over paymt~nl. &amp;140.1.0. ,..._.75-3117 oftor a,oo Mll-30'17.
j:PM:..::·'-----=-,--,--,...,.
11111 Monto Corio. SunrOof,
AII/FMICuo., AC, ••c. oond.
Services
107c000 mi1H. · I2300. 61.._

11~12:::..'=or:,:44:::.::5-R7..:.:..4::,7:.,.:--=-::
11112 Camoro T·TOjiS, V-8, 4
opood, 304-875-5301.

e

CHiG#r:IP

-'

.A7U

&lt;!I Malor League ........

~i

Boats

NORTH

ea IISI-01

.._liM (0:30)

..

...---------,_'
,...
+AQI

MANNERS?

111 VldaaCountry

miiM. Meta lie maroon, lola of

Sp.m.I14·992·528Z.•

Have you aver noticed that fN8f'J generation Ia totally
convinced there has bean a deplorable bleak down Of

7:05 Cll Jener-e
7:30 Ill FamltJ Fauci

chrome. Wlndthltld. lncludtt
2•
..~•t
t~,~n t.ce hllntlta, one - • one
-f"•h
ft
AFO. Phone lob
'"" I •r

to-t

Frenzy- Obese- Mecca - Ca.rbon - MANNERS

October Stereo.

.·

..

111111111

SCI'M ~ ANSWIU

I]JCI!Mre
0 Miami Vlca The Cows Of

1184 Honda motorcyclt or trad~

t

.'

~-~
l'llo.~, ..;- t:;l

· Carttr't Plumbing

F.It rn

Apartment
for Rant

fumlshadl. _ In

For Sale
Or ...._..e
'""'

In G•IUPGfle, tor more lntor· For ale or tradt. Aealaterld
~= end
Rod lonoo, Wolkors,
maUon. Z4·M3-1111.
.
tad. Mountain CU,.
Sawmill, J - k Co~oy. good Wolkor - · wru ooto or trodo
thlpt, 24 ln. Planer, l14·3fl7a far 1UMt knlvet. 011'11, INCkl,
..., khootaro. Ho.. bod bock
7533. .
1

Broyhll complete baclloom
ouht. Full alll. Like now. 6141112-2733 oltar 5:00 p.m.
County A~pilonce Inc. Good
Uood appiiU.C.., T.V. 0111. Opon
MonAJaL 814-

59

.

Fum'ed. all tltctrlc, 2br., 1 mile,
from city on large private lot.
1200/mo. Rtf. &amp; .Stc. Mp. 114-441·2231 or 44&amp;..2581 .
·

e p.m.

11444MHt.

Iundy Aho Su, 1500. 304-173Portoblo Lightod Arrow Slgno 5812·
.
1218. IF'"• Daliv~!Lonors) For Solo: Cto~.":t.IIU1.!z 1878
Pintle Letttrl (Half P~ 150. Audl 5000. 81
14n after
box. Expl- li2RIB. 1
533- &amp;p.m.
34&amp;3. Anytime.
gu har
l•non..
Rainbow Switptr wlpower noz~ lndlvldUII
beginnwll sorious gultorlot.
zit &amp; sttachmltl1tt. 7 mot. old. lrunlcard •
Muslo 114a441Mu .. ull $521. Please call 814· -•7
_... , -'·II ~
"ama'..,. I""11'·--~.....
111 .. 378.
614-441-8077, llmitod oponlngo.

114-t4a-7444.

441-161!,,127 3rd. A...
iipollo,""

Instruments

Rn, OH. 1-80Q.I37-1!28.

614·37i-2678, no Sunday Cilia!"

8 a.m. to

·

Muslcat

EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·

King wood &amp; coal etov•, 2 yrt;.
okl. 114-t41-41H after 4 p.m.

Goods
2

dillon, $3100. 11'13 F100 Forol
P.U., $100. 11111 Hortor Davidoon Su~rvildo, 14000. 1178
Hortoy David... Lowridw,
13000. 11116 8X30 rnoblto homo,
11000. 114-74Nitl.
5 - . , y ,... loclng $1. Rl.
teo, next to fOld. VInton
Momorlot Co""'ary, Lot No. 131.
1600.814 311 .....
Couch, Chair, hi-oy bod,
wooden 10blo, chot!!L1...Cn bod,
GE ro~tg, box "~'""~~"• mot·
•..... 614-441·3224.
•

""3.'!':-rhood

"'.:r:··:;

7i

"fc

Locust Road of. right, 304-67$.

Commtrclll sp•ce, 1400 sq.ft.
Cornar Steond and Pint. Ampl•
perking. c_.u 814-446-424&amp;, 44S.

2230.

304
..

''*
--_,Coli

....

54

1 btclroom turnlehld upet•lrs
o~wo-/dryw hoop up, 304110
11:;=:,;:...;,::..·--:--=---:--:-:cond lr'NII 1701140 lot, IH'Oid 11FI untum. .... Rlnfll refrlg.
Run Ad by new bridge, will providtd. Wa\er, stWige, gar·
ltance. 30.f-182·2407 or 182· bage, paid. Dep. • Ref. I14-44S.
1231.
4345.
Skytlnt,

:74::2:.:-2::14
::5::·...,.,=:--:-:-=-:-:.:c:Roclucod. 11187 Suzuld GUSO _L,
1 mint condl11on. 1,1w

64

Auolrollon C011.1o Dogo, Pupo: good Nnnin\ cond, 15 mi. por
Non IIOI)totorod: Esc. WOrtcori • I ,g~-="'::.:lti=IID.c...::..:1..,.4-:c31"-B-"173:,c..,7.-.,....,.
r~rt~ l:.':~~ ~~:; 11711 lutok La Sobro Llmhod. 4
Ronch. &amp;14-441-18211 colt oftlr d - sidon. AI oqutpmont. Uke .
5P·m·
~;;'i. 301 VI. I17IIS. 114' 1112'
~J:nwyncl Cantry K..,nel
n,
91
.,... 1871 Cadillac hdln DeVIl~.
Himalayan kltl:tna. Chow ttud power •vtrvthlnSf, tx:c cond,
..-vice. 114-4........,. after 7 well malntarntd. 88,000 mllet,
p.m.
pricod on lnopocllon, 304-1752580.
Fish Tonic, 2411 Jockoon Avo. I=='----=,..,---,-...,...,
Polnll Pl.. unt, 304-111--2013, 10 1t7t Hond• Civic, nHds paint
got 011
114.111 ond 10 1"1 mochonicolly good, $800. 814&lt;141-3413. _ _ _ _ __,.
comp roto 3. -~.
~~::..::.:.:.:::._

1078.

Park. 814-448-4285.

homolt-2 bedrooms, 111,000. ,1:;';:7,:11i,m
;;.:.o;;
, ':.:.'4;..·;::38:.;...
:..::.:1:.21'.:-::--.1
~~~~~::erOo'ro!:t::;~~
~·
2 Sfl, 112 dUI)In. partlaHy fur·.
3 - - , 12170. StowJ, niohocl.
Rd.
111;114-371·2320.
~or, A.O., lotol -trlc. AvoMobio Ocl
101. $210/mo.
-"'""', ~-~lonRMill
:1;::1:.4-4;.;46-=1=11;.;7=o:::l10r!:...-,7,-pm-,_1--:RIIIODIUNG
. tNTEf!O_R.&gt;...~!TEIIIOII
PAIIO'INO,
""""""'• ,..._
•-•
4501 ""'lor Llny.
CONCII£TE
WORK,
ln.
At
•
lLICTIUCAL I PWMIING Ufl, 11M IIIII 2411.
2
- h 4 noomo I
both, 1 lumi-1 1 unlur. .HAl . . .RINCI&amp; PLUII WcK*
lib 1 , _ R10bD1 nWied, 1111• CMh.
CALL A1'TP IP.il. 11.,_
uo •
"";:1::,1·~-~~~~~-=- I 1 - , . . _. w. 1111a - . . 2 •~· ,..,_.,... "' . - car.

w. .......,.

304-423-6654.

304-125-3275, or

1811 Plymouth Voyogor Custom
Yan, 8·2.50. QoOd condition.
May biHII1 at 158 Portsmouth
Rd. $3500.
•

..u-. lor 250 Honda ...,.._,, 11&lt;1' ,.

1171 Volkawlgon Albbft Dltttl,

578-2421.

Oroom -"" Supply Shop-Pot
Oroomtna. All broods. All otyloo.
lomo Pi1 Food Doot•. Julio
Wobb. Coii614-44U231 .
HAPPY JACK SJ(IN aALM:
Chocfla ocrotehlng 1 r-..1~
rltatod ollin whlioU1 010ro1c1o.
Pl'omotH hoollna I hair growth
on dogo &amp; cotsl Bldwotf Cooll
Food J-D NOfth Procluoo.
Happy Jtck Skin Balm: ChRIIa
ocrotching 6 roll- lrrltotod
okln wlth0&lt;11 01orolds. Promo!oo
hoofing &amp; holr gl'owth on dogl &amp;
cotol R I G FOod I Supptr 3n
Dakota Farm Home buill on W. Moln 11., Pomoroy.
your lol, 113,1195 I up. S.., our
Llibrodor AMrio,. pupploo.
modeL &amp;14,.88-7311 .
AKC R-wod. Btooko ond
FII'IWood to, 11~, 130. load, yoitaws. Own llro ond dom. Coli
ovonlngo 614-1112-1181 .
304-458-1i8t.
Firewood, 11 cords of at•sonld P.rslanMimalapn
k1Htn8.
hardwood. $60 1 cord, all tor Slalpol"" CFA raglttered. 114-

nec:11 required. 114-441-1125.

of 'cabinets I ciOHt sptct,
awnlnp, call antr Sp.m. 114: Trailer nlc• clun untumlshed,
245-8222.
.
reterencts required, Route On•
out Locust Road on right, 304·
1171, 12&gt;&lt;15 -·control hill • 875&lt;1076.
air, piUI ntW . gH fumac•, exc
cond, 16,500. 304-875-2514.
43 Farms for Rent
1173 Ftomlngo, 12ldl5l 21&gt;&lt;, 1
bath, on Nnttd Jot n Point 3br, farm house, unan1ohtd
PINHnt. Call lfttr 7p.m. 114- g1rage on Jackson Rd. near
Mudsock.
l100fdtposlt,
"'!8·75!1f.
1173 Ltbarty molllto homo.
12X55, txpondo, good cond,
muot otlt, 304-871·1338.
1977 Noouo 10KIO, good cond,
$5,750. calh. Buyer m-..t move
at own Pptnlt. Located n11r
L01ort, 304-885-3585.
1177 Yorloor 1roltor._ ' "

c11l ·coiiiCI

1W1

1 small tot At. 7, 3 larr. lot, Ad·
dlson Ad. $75. War • 'Trailer

plus utllltltl. Depollt 1nd ,.,.,..

Pori&lt;. 11&gt;1-445-1102.
.
2br, mobllt home 11 Evergretn.

Top Cooh poid. Old lumHIH
cubalrdli,
quina, 'arltnlal,
ptlnllnga, top, or entire Htltt

614-446-2300.

Space for Rent

room AC, applancee furt)llhed
2 mlltt from Holztr $250/mo.

Kan1ugal Fotttrs Mobile Horne

Hour8: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00

:11::5-4::;41~8::..-~:---::--:--:­

&amp;G I
ay
ra n

motion 614-112-2322 or m
3531.

OHe-Man

good
111 ,500. ItoWUI consider
rt
d 114
1u1omob
II pa 1ra t "
•

=.,..,,......,.---.:._."::"::-::::::::;:

... UNSCRAMBLE FORI
V ANSWER
.

1:31 ~ Andy Gttfltllt
7;00 Ill Our l!ouM
elll PM Mra •Ina
(J) 8par11Cinter
W e(J) Cunent Atlalr
(I) (J) MocNall/ Lehrer
Nawollour (1 :00)

:1 II:.:...:I~A:_o:.:roo1=o-r~Vo""n-.~L::oo::d:;:od::;.

'

Complete tho chuckle quotod
by tiUiP'Q in the missing word1
dovolop from 11op No. 3 below.

... PRINT . NUMBRED
V LETTERS
•

!BWI&lt;RPin~

Soo to Approclo11111 41,000 octuol mii1o.
114-245-6112.

74

::..:rl:...;1-;l,.; A
I'

(J)AIIC-1;1

eDCU-t:;l
l101 liDlllw&gt;wltz
Tine'• Conlplny
Today

MUll

.

..

other
people
11 what we don1
like about
- --7

_ V
L.....l-..I...-L......L-.1........1 you

(I) llodr lleOtriO

lnntmlstlon~.St8 englni, Cllp-

toln SN1o.

p.m. AI brMdt, _, salt. In·
otudlna -~~ ... C011ta · · 1011 offdoV Tuoodoy, ond up tlit
4p.m. Wlidnelday. For lnfor·

--o---

114-G92·252S.

lhll.
Wood fra'"e. excellanl · condition. Blut •nd t1n plaid
cuahlons. ; $70 both. 114-Mg..

2 br., opociousl 011ochod lomliy

for sate

1184

Wod-y Oc1. 4 8:00

BttttU lnttreprlng
1117 Ford LTD. 310 auto, Inter•
ROI), 11111, now $368 I &amp; r,n 56 Pets for Sale
ror, por1oc11 Exlro ports, ,...
o1ock). OuMn Anno ColiN I::---.-:-:-":"":--~-=-~-:::: toroblo. Aaklng 11000. 304-4175End Tabt.t 1148 1 HI. I 3yr. old. Rat Terrier, 2 rr. old 1912.
varlttiH of Sunk ltd8, $141 l temalt Fl•t T.,Jen: I wk. old bt
up. Twin a Full Mattt'lstet was Terrier Female, StllalllogeiMr. 1873 Plymouth Dulltr, I cyllnStll A up. 14U5 (50 In 114-441-3413.
dor ou1omollc, •79,000 acluol
otock). Ouoon Monroos Sill
mlloo; 1515. 11 ... 45-01141.
$2411, Reg. 1150; Kll)g Mafti'HI AKC ....... _puppln. At~d,to
$121. 8 varlttltl 811111 ltd- got Franclt Btntdum 61
7- 1977 Pontiac Sunblrd, 4 cyl,
room Suitt, fleg. 11100, now 3851.
·auto, Nna ~· body good,
$991. 30 d•v• warranty on ·~ AKC Rtalet. .d a...ett pup- I .1:.:7.:.50;::·..:3.;;.
"":..,.:....,,-11...,...
pllonc••· M?J•g Woohor Ill 1 ploo. Olcflaolllonod. Shot.. .U. 1978 Iuick SkyioriL 305 m.otor
up. Orytr $7 A up.
king $15.0. 114-448-&amp;034 or 114- and tranarnlnlon. Hat tllahl
448'11083. ·
dlltnlfll to Iron! ond. 1500. 114Antiques
53
742-285t.
AKC reglttered flmale Cocker 1.:..:=..:=:....,----,--Buy or ·••"· Alvtrlnt Anllqutt, Spanlll, buff oolor, I months 11171 Ford LTD lill :::~ Exc.
1124 E. Main StrMt, Pomtroy. old, 1tou11 trained, 1100. SOC.. cond. Runa good. 1 .
1825.

p.m., Sundoy HIO to 1'00 p.m.

Furnished
Rooms

, Large moltll1 home tot (lingle)
on farm 20 milu from POinl
PL.taunt AI. 87i county wattr,
1981 Naaha 14x80, with 7x24 stwtr. R~terancee rtqulrld.
expando. 2bf', all tltc. garden 304-8911·3001 or 304~71-4138 .
tub. exc. cond. Asking 19000.
614~88-9746 before 2:30 or 614Ont •ere lol, 11'1111.,. allowK,

Child Clrtl provldtd. Ages 2,3,4.

L.ovlng Mothtr, wJ24 yurs of
exp. &amp; chlldeart, will babysll In
my home, Mon·Sit, all agts, day
&amp; afternoon limtl Call after
8p.m. 614·388-9626 In Vinton
artt.

45

Chlldl'ln eccepttd. 814
3897 or514-24W223.

ter4:00.

Pomeroy. 614·992-6901 .

No,

pt1td.
pets, lnqulro al 300
FourthAvt.

flout• 33, North of Pomsroy.
Lots, rtntlll, partl, Nils. Call

for Rant

pi•••

Have room, board and cart tor
tldtrly.
Rtnona bit, , In

downstairs, 2br, water, garbage
plck·up. 814446-3940.
Upst1jr11 'r'nfurnhahtd apl. Car·

2325, or 4~~25.
Country MC)bile Home Park,

42 Mobile Homes

some brick. Priced right! 114-

368-8711.

Upper Alvei' Ad . 2 •pt. upstair,
2br1 stove, rtf., wattr, garbage
ple11up. ,Deposit
rtq'd. 1

5104

NiCII 3 bedroom homt 1 bath,
Tr~~lning program. To apply
ond Ia~ lot 1 Gollipolls
write to: SIGn-.tanager, Numbtr 9•"1!1"
Ftrr/.. Prictd m1d 40 s 304-67~
43, 41300 Laurtl CUff Rd., 172
.
Pomtroy, ONo 457ei.
·
No dawn payment or closing
$0m.ont lo •'"P OYtt' In homt co ..s, asaume lOin very neaf,
of elderly lady no work or cart convtntitntly localld 2 bed· 388-8588 after 2;30.
Involved,
tlltt asking room home, Maaofi, WV. Must
1984 Double wide, moved, Itt·
wage and retrencH In flrlt ltf. havt
county bond program ap- up, dallvtrtdl EJCc, cond. May
ttr1 wlrtt tO Box P· 25, cart of proved,
emount
finan-c~ apPoant PINsant Atglsttr, 200 proximately 119,000. For mort finance wtctown payment. 614-446·1610. 614-448·4835 1nytlmel
Main St, Pt. Pit., WV 25550.
lnlotmatton 304~ 727·79i0 or
2 SR, 1175; 3 br, 1200 On 588.
Tobacco Worktrs Wanttd, Nor· 304·722-5212.
man Young, Buffalo, WV, 304- Older homt, I roorM and ath, OeP.Qslt. You pay utllitiH. 614.388·91104.
.
1'37-2530.
nndt .om1 repai111, large lot,
2 bedroom turnlthed mobUe
50x1811, 115,000. 304-87&amp;-3884.
Situation
12
home, 304-675-3900.
Portland fld. 1 room hoUit, frM
Wanted
IMdroom
tumlahed.
gaa, compltttly rtnOVIItd. Ntw 2
aiding, root, windows, doors, Wether/dryer. $235. per month
Babysitting in my home, 2·3 carpeting, plumbing, wiring, plut utiiiiiH and dtpotlt. 114·
miiH from Holzer Hospital. Will lights, cfeck on 2 srd.., patio, i92·74711.
give rtltrtncts. 614·446-2387.
landscaping, lg. walll In closets,
2
btclowm.
Nice,
g~
Babyslning In my homt, 2·3 tg . .toragt, completely private neighborhood. Middtoport. 614miiH from Holzer Hospital. Wid on 2 ac,_, 152,000-. Up Ia 100 192'5858.
ICrH av.ll•b&amp;t. 614·843-5281 af..
give rtltrtncts. 614-446-2387.

Mlddlepon, across from park.
814·9112·6926. Rtftrenets sup-

u.s. 11 w-. 1 milt Eul of AJ.

-.y.

Vaugh111

per River Ad, GllllpoUt 1 Apply
In · person It the etON on
Tuladly Oct. 3rd blllwHn
11i.:.m.-5p.m.

lnaidt

Galllpollt, un 114-441-4331.

Good tatactlon of Outoc Boo,._
R - Bontloy. 51 " 584 ' 2311 ·
Pilr roalolwod Bolgium llu...
11441T-7933.
R......_
ft-~"ta
Rom. 1
.,....
-,..,.. ttkl. 1121. Cllll tvtnlnp,
11c.ellQ.7102. ·
SPECIAL ~EIDER CAJ.F SALE:
At the LtvNiook late~ Athllne,

WhMI •dcllng "OWn with -eac . 114-441·1052.
•
hi
-• ,_!'
mlltC~II'Ig_v..,, llftl 10' t 50'' Sllor 0110.
"1."" bato. -446114·
Vl'r1 Fumllur~~ &amp; Al)l»&gt;lancH
304.e7J..3547 ore14-25f...1343.
.. ··:.Evtnin::
814
At. 141, 1f4 mi. on Llncoln Plkt.
~ 41 ~ 111
Mon·Sot 1 o.m..a p.m. Sun 12-1. 55
Building
7157
eorr trill p.m. tor oppolntmonto,
114-445-3158.
Fl~onclng
Supplies
ovallohlo wi1h no monoy down.
Solo
Chair,
R•g. 16111 Block, brick, HWOJ win·
$221 &amp;(11
In etOck). WOOd dowt, Untell:, eiO. ClaUcte Wln-

1 .tory with half bMemenl. 2

MANAGERS
:ASSISTANT MANAGERS
. SALES ASSOCIATES
TEN BELOW

...

VtRA FURNITURE
Rt. 141 4 MILE$
SUrpl ... Army, Donlm, llenlll
CENTENARY
ololhlng. Our iltMh JNr, Nl!ulor
RENT TOOWNqtuuluol:!:'~,r:...,.,~
4 o.,Wir Cheat $5.00 Wk; Bunk
U 1 _. e -·-~
Bodo 110.00 wk. comptolo. rvllo'J,
. A,r. - u o Swivel
Rocker $5.00 wll: Old ftt. , Ntw Era, Jackson
Dtnot1•, 4 Choirs $7.50 wk. Co. Frt, Sot, I Sun. Noon till
Rociinor S8.00 wk. LOW CASH 1:00PM. 304-273-llllle.
PRICES
UHCI fumtlurw. lmell IP"
Lovt Stat $249, A~lar 17411; pliMcta.
Lab c1oa· 1
Rocker Rocl0nor 12••• ~::\~r
,..
old
o.!:
fiu
$1111; cn..t ,..., .-.-; 1 • had all ehoce, panrally trained,
troosoo 144UI .. 1n.oo OOL 304 ...,..,4111•
COuntry_ lluo Dt..-, 1 !"
....!!ftJ10Comw. .pli!',
. 6 ~:.:'a~
Vlvlar
Phot~111phy
and
·Ch';i;;i ~Ook Currio Cablnots, :;:.7,&amp;~~~~341~11.
1278; wllh CuNtd Olan Front.
Roll Top !look I Cllolr 1421' WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Croci! Tormo Avollobl•. Oponid Ron Aliloo!!.,1210 Socond Avo,

I

'

Dldja ever nolioa that what
WI complain about mD8I In

I

LOBSUE

· I-~~~~~

®.,....Loolt (0:30)

C4ndlllon. ps, AC, aU1omotlc

Merchandise

r I:::_.:..,;
~ =·==-::::·

1:05.Cll aa.el1) Hllll.ll
1:30.()) 1111 NSC Nlghllr-

1178 Joop CJ-1, V_., PS, now
point. obloing 11400. 61-7·

eu 44&amp; om

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btr IISI topptr prletd an In-

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'••
Pqi 10-The o.ily Sentinel

.
Tuudly. Oc:tola' 3, 1989:

,....._-Local news briefs... ~--:,·

Stocb

•

.
Continued from page 1
. Miller, 42, Bertin, Ohio. Damage was minor to Miller's rig and
modente to· Shriner's semi.
·
.
· The patrol cited Mlller for failure. to stop within the assured
clear distance.
Another accident occurred In Metgs County at 5: 15 p.m.
· Monday on CR. 34, 1.7 mUes north of SR. 124.No one was Injured.
There was no citation.
·
Troopers said brakes failed on a 1979 Olds Cutlass driven by
Patrick V. Johnson, 25, Racine. His vehicle went of! the road,
and UtrQ\Igh a fence owned by Harrison Smith of Racine.
Damage was moderate. ,

Driver cited after mishap
Anthony Martin, 18, Le.tart, W. Va. was cited for assured cl~ar
distance as the result of an accident on EastMalnSt ., Pomeroy,
Monday afternoon.
According to the report of Pomeroy Pollee, Martin struck the
rear of a car operated .by Robert D. Spencer. 54, Zanesville,
which was stopped In traffic. There was ·moderate left rear
damage to the Spencer vehicle, and moderate front end damage
to the Martin vehicle
' Also under Investigation by Pomeroy PoUce Is a hlt·sklp
accident on Butlernut Av&lt;¢. Kevin Lemley reported to poUce at
11:57 a.m. Monday that his car parked at his residence on
Butternut had been hit In the left back panel, There was minor
damage to the vehicle.

EMS has 10 Monday callS
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
responded to 10 calls for assistance on Monday.
·
At 8:57a.m ., Pomeroy was called to the AmeriCare-Pomeroy Nursing Home for Susie Windon who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Pomeroy was called at 11 a.m. to Main St.
for Robert White to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 11:08 a.m.,
Porneroy transported Mary Urllee to Holzer Medical Center.
Racine was called at 4:59 p.m . .to Mile Hill Road for Icle
Tucker who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at
5:05p.m. to an auto accident on Route 338. Eric Smith was
transported by •Racine fr!Jill the accident scene to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Syracuse transported Christina Gallagher
from the accident, also to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 5:41p.m., Rutland was called to Woodyard Road for Buddy
Kuhn who was taken to Veterans Me.mortal Hospital.
Pomeroy at 7:48 p.m. transported Scott Whobrey from the
Meigs football field to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
• Middleport at 10:16 p.m. went to Page St.forWalter Bunce to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 11:02 p.m. , Syracuse transported Larry Klein to Veterans •
Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy l!t 11:32 p.m. was cal)ed to Mulberry Ave. for Terry
Payne to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Bonds se.t for pair
' Bonds were set Monday In MeigS County Court for Terry M.
cMenford) Jewell and Betty Boyd, when they appeared before
.
Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Bond for Jewell, who Is charged wl~ drug abuse, corrupting
another with drugs, trafllcklng In drugs and ~lv!ng stolen
property, was set at $50,000bond with 10 percent cash, or $5,000,
necessary to secure his release from the Meigs County Jail.
Jewell posted bond and was' teleased from custody.
. .
Boyd was released from custody on· a no.ooo personal
recognizance bond.
Pomeroy Attorney Charles H. Knight was appointed by the
court to represent Boyd. Jewell will retain his own counsel.

r

·.

·

ments, council feels that every
possible avenue of funding
should be sou&amp;ht, and therefore
authorized Anderson to appty for
emergency funding.
Should Pomeroy be fortunate
enough to -qual tty for the emergency funding, Anderson, according to Councilman Bruce
Reed , anticipates that a $5 per
month Increase· In customer
water bills would cover the
village's share of the costs to
Improve the system, In addition
to the added maintenance
expenses.
The village could know as early
as next month If It Is eligible for
the emergency fundlhg.
Although Councilman Franklin. Rizer was absent from last
night's meeting, the concensus of
rem'atnlng councl!members
seemed to be "we have to try
every way we can" to secure a
funding SOI!rce for the needed
Improvements.
The problem of a land slippage '
on Wyllls Hill was agatn·a topic of
discussion for Council. Itappears
that after Council authorized
necessary excavation to reopen
the Wyllls Hill Road from a
previous sUppage, the property
of Wyllls Hlll resident Barbara
Arnold Is again shifting toward
the road .
Councilman Bill Young reported that a private engineer
has reviewed the problem, and
says the slip Is the result of a
drainage problem of combined
origins. The engineer has recoinmended a prbeedure to correct
the dralnlage problem. however,
there remains · a matter of
determining with whom responsibility lies for paying for the
repairs - the village· or the
property owner. \
·
Council believes the responslbtuty lies with Arnold, but wants
the matter clarified legally, once
and for all.
In another matter related to
road lm.p rovements, council
authorized VIllage Administrator Anderson to spend an additional $2,000 to pave the Intersection of Mulberry Ave. and Hiland
Road, ·tn the hospital-county
infirmary area. The paving
would be done at the same lime
the Shelly Company Is In the
village on other jobs .
VIllage Clerk Jane Walton
reported that Shelly Is willing to
pave private driveways at the
same time parts of specified
village streets are paved.

Thirty-five cases processed in Meigs Court

.

Thirty-five cases were processed by Judge Patrick O'Brien
in recent Meigs County Court
hearings.
F1lled were Danny E. Phelps,
Albany, $75and costs, three days
tn jail suspenclf!l upon proof of
valid operator's license wtthlri 60
days, no operator's license;
Candace L. Tibbs,- Middleport,
$100 and costs, six months In jail
suspended five years probation,
restitution, two charges of passIng bad checks; Kelly R. Counts.
Syracuse, 10 days In .Jail sus- ·
pended, · one year probation,
co.sts, carrying a concealed weapon; Janette M. Roach, Middleport, $75 and costs, three days In
jail suspended uponproofofvalld
operator'sllcense.wlthln 90days,
six months probation, no operator's license; Rick Watson Sr.,
Racine, six months In jail suspended to time already served,
one year probation, restraining
order . issued, costs, domestic
violence; Scott Dailey, Long
Bottom, 90 days In jail suspended
to 30 days, three years probation,
restitution ordered, costs, criminal damagln&amp;; Charles E.
James; Racine, 90 days In jail

suspended to 30 days, restitution
ordered, three years probation,
costs; criminal damaging.

W.Va., S20 and costs; Monte M.
Kinamon, Franklin, N.C., $22
and costs; Ernest E . Allen,
Vienna, W.Va., $21 and costs;
Roger Pillow, Groveport, $25 Ronald E. Johnson, Rio Grande,
and costs, hunting without per- $25 and costs; Keith D. Rhodes,
mtssl'on; Thomas J .. Wiencek, Cheshire, $20 and costs; Danny
Broadview Heights, . $10 and Bowser, Orlando, Fla., $26 and
costs, passed on double yellow costs; VIncent Laudermllt Jr.,
line; Kenneth R. Collins, Pome- Middleport, $21 and costs; MIroy, $5 and casts, no taillights; chael Rinehart, Racine, $27 and
Loti Ritchie, Long Bottom, $10 costs; Judith L. Hill, RuUand, $21
and costs, child restraint viola- and costs; Ralph Ho!Ungshead,
tion; Clara Ohlinger, Pomeroy, Wellston, costs only.
$10 and costs, failure. to control;
Bonds were forfeited in county
James D. Halley, GaiUpoplls, $20 court by Jeffrey McCall, Murray
and costs, safety belt violation.
City, $50; Richard A. George,
Fined for speeding were Eliza- ' Hurricane, W.Va., $60; Kathleen .
beth A. Fisher, Clinton, $19 and Nyland, Columbus, $80; Roy C.
costs; John D. Yoho, Parker- Johnson, Sumner, Ind., $60;
burg, W.Va., $25 and costs;
Deborah Alnesky, Lancaster,
Henry C. Bowen, Charleston, · $80; Charles Shultz, Nortlt CanW.Va., $22 and costs:..\ Harlan ton, $60, all for speeding; and
Johnson, Athens, $28 and costs;
Corey Carnahan, Long Bottom,
Curtis L. Ellison, Parkersburg, $40, for a seat belt violation.

· Meelln1 date eluulpd

The committee meeting for
Pomeroy Cub Scout Pack 249 has
been moved up from Oct. 9 to Oct .
5, at 7 p.m. , at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. All
parents and leaders who wish to
attend the committee meeting
should do so.

Hospital news
Veteru• JlenMrtal

AL playqffs

.,•••

Vol.40, No.106 .M

....

PANAMA CI'rY, Panama
CUP!) -A smiling Gen. Manuel
Antonio Noriega said on national
television his forces ltad crushed
a coup attempt by mid-level
Panamanian military officers
and accused Washington of directing ihe uprising.
Opposition leader Guillermo
Ford, meanwhile·, said Wednesday the coup attempt revealed
dissent In the military under
defense forces chief Noriega and
·he predicted further attempts.

Now there ie.

It' • Stale Auto Compont•: Modollot Auto policy.
The rtt• are lower. _T)Ie cOver•o•

.,

H you h - hed no vlol81iona .,.. ol·'·

t•uh tcddents for th...e year• and ..
••• •••- 211 yHrs old. you could
be quollfled to become 1 Medollal :
. .,olley holder, onjoylngapoclol. , .
ducodriiM.
ArK! ~ you ere mldcl•oged (411·
1141, you'l got the bit11111t ·~
bt'oolt of Ill.

ing for a great rate,
this Is it. But you've
got to act fast.
This offer from
Central Trust

.a~~o-,

.

4

....... _

~

·••••part 992·6661

THE CENTRAL TRI..SI'&lt;XNJMY.
T1rt IW T1ttzt MtM17Iilws "HJpfw.

&gt;

P~ODUCTS
P~OPL!

SPICIAL INSURANCE

di£1!1

They are, fr«m . l·r, Tract 'ilartielti, Hueber
Hovatter, Amy Johnson, Slacy Tyree, ·and Kell)
Douglas.

"Special Care For People Who
Are Special To You"

·Meigs homecoming activities listed
It's homecoming week at
60's day on Thursday, and
Meigs High School and the · "Maroon and Gold Day" on
students are gearing up for
Friday .
'
Friday nil(ht In a varletv.ofwavs.
In addition to these spirit filled
Throughout the week they are activities there· win be a bonfire
participating In spirit raising on Thursday evening at 7:45p.m.
activities such as "Camaflouge at the football field. There · will
Day" on Monday, "Inside-out also be a pep rally at theschoolon
Day" on Tuesday, "Hillbilly Friday afternoon.
Day" on Wednesday, 50's and
Five girls are In the race for

f .

'

L

Come Visit, And Experience First
Hand The Overbr.,ook Difference.
lpprtwld 01111 C1t tilled

••

MDKAID, •uua,
Pli,ate

II II lilft,
.....GIICI

,,..

I

. Asw•a.
I

..

homecoming queen and they are
Tract Bartels, Heather Hovatter,
Amy Johnson, Stacy Tyree, and
Kelly Douglas. One of these five
girls will be crowned the 1989
Meigs High School Homec01n!ng
Queen during_pregame activities
on Friday n~ht when the Marauders take on'the Vikings fi·om
Vinton County High SchooL

Wf.Pay

••limit

· ~~/ .~~·

'

'

The Masi&gt;n County Board of
· Education has been ordered by a
hearing examiner for·the Education
and Stare Employees Grievance
Board to reimbiJI"SC&lt;, ~ reacher
Bill Webb $4,647.83 · in tuition
~ paymentS for his daughter.
It was ruled by the examiner that
the Mason County Board of Education. chalged tuition· in retaliation
against Webb, who was fired las1
year for refusing to comply witlt a
new school dress code.
Webb, a Gallia County, Ohio,
resident, taught math at Point
Pleasant High School for about 15
years. He taughl several exll'a clas·
ses for free, and in return, the
Mason County school board per-

mitted his children to attend Mason
County school free of charge.
After being suspended and then
fired in i988 for refusing to obey a
new dress code banning blue jeans,
and fmcing male teaChers to wear
ties, Webb began receiving 'tuition
bills fm his daughter, Jerrod, then a
~
Point Pleasant High senior.
Larry Harless, Webb's attorney,
ultimately challenged the tuition
· bills before the grievance board,
claiming they were, retaliatory and
a breach of conll'act. The board
claimed ·that chargirig tuition for all
out-of·state students was · required
under school policy.
Examiner Sunya Anderson, in a
ruling dated Sept. 29, determined

Local news briefs

.

Fire destroys Gallia mobile home
A fire which destroyed a mobile home on Route 554 west of
Kyger In Gallla County Tuesday afternoon remains under
lnvesti_gation.
_
Middleport Fire Chief Jeffrey Darst reported that the State
Fire Marshall was called to the scene.
According to Darst, botlt the mobile home a~d a nearby ·
storage shed were engulfed when the firemen arrived at the
scene. The alarm came In at 12: 53 p.m. and some firemen
remained at the scene until 4: 30 p.m. assisting in the
Investigation.
·
·
Darst said that no occut\ant or owner I'( as there at the time of
the fire. He said that he understood that Rodney Geiger lived In
the mobile home but whether he was. the owner has not been
determined. Cause of the lire remains undetermined, Darst
said.
·
The Gal¥a County Sherl(f's Deparirnent dispatched a deputy
to the scene.
·
·
·

.

(61.) 992-6472
,

..

333

PAGI~

identified.
In Washington, a State Department s pokesman said the U.S.
government Is "now looking at
consequ~nces , trying to sort ·
through the evidence."
The White House emphatically
denied U.S. involvement In the
attempt to oust Noriega, who Is
wanted In the United States on
federal drug charges and whose
removal Washington has tried to
forc e through tough economic
sanctions .

•

House returns to finalize. bill ·
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter .
COLUMBUS The Ohio
House of Representatives will
meet Wednesday for a brief
session to finalize a bill creating
a new state agency to coordinate
state and local programs for
alcoholics and drug addicts.
The session is to begin at 1: 30
p.m.
The only other scheduled items
of business are:
- A res'!ilutlon establishing a
statewide task Ioree to look Into
the avallabilily and affordabllity

Board rules Bill Webb is to be
reimbursed for daughter's tuition .

~#(

New·~.,

By LEE LEONARD
$1.84 million In Income taxes and
tendent of public. Instruction,
UP! Statehouse Reporter
accompanying accountability in, said hearings would be held by
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A spending.
the state Board of Education In
special state Commission on
Celeste, who embraced the November and December In
Education Improvement held Its Senate legislation as t'ncotporat- hopes of adopting the guidelines ..
organizational meeting Tuesday ing some of his administration's In December and January.
and made plans to monitor the own Ideas, said he Is "enorCommiSsioner Steven Minter
spending of $93. million · by the mously optimistic' ' about the .e xpressed concern that the comOhio Department of Educat!9n. . commission's work, and said mission might not have time to
· "This Is the first time ""'ve Ohio must develop an educa- properly evaluate the proposals.
been asked to evaluate the entire Ilona! system graded on "what Is
"We've worked very hard on
,system of education from pre- learned rather than what Is these for 90 days, " said Walter .
school to graduate school,:' said
tau~ht."
"You have our best shot."
Gov. Richard Celeste, · who has
Celeste told the commission he
"We're going to look at everyrepresentatives on the commls- hopes It will set goals on the thing that comes by us and not
performance expected of pre- just rubber stamp," said Bara,
slon and participated In the first
meeting.
school children, elementary and who scheduled future commts~ state .-. 'Rep . ',;~ohn . -Bara;. D· . ,. secoodary "* p'upils and · cone~ :.. •Jew.nillffnlw e etlaJ rwo eu cck!i.
Elyrla•.l"as chosen ~halrman for
students.
Among the guidelines to be
the · remainder of the 1989-90
Mild tensiOn developed be- presented to the commission are
legislative session and Sen. tween "some commission howtodlstrlbuteandspend$19.2
Cooper Snyder, R-Hillsboro, was members and the Ohio Depart- million for preschool programs
selected as vice chairman.
men! of Education, which al- and a like amount for Head Start,
The commission was eslabready has written guidelines for a program for disadvantaged
llshed In Senate Bill 140, which spending money on preschool youngsters; $20 million in gi-ants
mandated a variety of education programs, dropout prevention, for dropout prevention; $9:7
improvements costing relatively literacy and summer education million for research and developprograms.
men! of new educating methods;
little money.
The new commission will re- $9.2 million for career enhanceThe . package, si&gt;onsored by
Senate ·President St~inley Aro- view those gulilellnes and has ment for teachers; and $3 million
noff, R-Cinclnnatl, was an alter- veto power over them.
for summer school remediation.
native to the governdr's plan for
Franklin Walter, statesuperln-

Iff ......... •'
tlf\.l tiEl atci
FOR SPECIAl

Inc.

Education comm£Ss"ton
to monitor spending

214 UST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6617

M~Himedie

•

-w:!~.~~..~-

rued

Werklri C1 i

........................................................ .,.1/it

Asked If other coup attempts
might follow, Ford said, "! have
no doubt. " Ford was an opposl-

~ ,

1 love living at Overbrook Center because everyone is so
nice and so good to me, we have a nice Administrator
nice Nurses, and Nursing Assistants. We have delicious'
meals, served by g~od ·Cooks and two nic'e Activity ~irec­
tors. There is Bible Study and G~spel Si~gin~) and
.Cl!urch, and lots of social events. I .love Overbrook Cen, '
ter, and I am proud to ~all it my home. We are a'l justllke.
one happy family here."
,

limited time only.
For more Information contact
your nearest
Central Trust office

forces .''

Noriega told Panama City televl-. can operation," President Bush
sllon, shoWing an air of confi- said In Washington. ''I can tell
dence as a score of military men you that Is not true ."
An official at the U.S. Soutbern
and government offlcais stood
Command
In Panama Cit y, less
·
' by.
than
a
mile
from the still' 'For weeks we had received
smoking
barracks,
said Amer ithis Information that now (Amer Icans) were going to penetrate, can troops were mobilized only to
trying to ·confuse medium-level protect U.S . facilities.
" Of course we provided ·securofficers," Noriega said .
U.S. officials denied Instigat- Ity for our own Installations, but
we were In no way Involved In the
ing the rebellion.
" There were some rumors coup attempt," said the official.
. around that this was an Amerl- who asked that he not be

tion vice presidential candidate ·
in May elections annuli~ by .
Noriega amid widespread allegations of electio~ fraud . Ford was
beaten up by Norie ga forces
during a post-election protest In a
much-publicized Incident.
An overnight curfew was Imposed on the capital Tuesday
after pro-Norlega troops retook
the central barracks of the
Panamanian Defense Forces
amid heavy fighting.
"We will maintain this order,"

'""-not_.,.
t!w.,_ ......

RUTH BEN'NETT. RESIDENT

holdfng back wait·

" Noriega h.a s been trying to
play the role that he came out
successful, smelllng like roses
[rom this attempt," Ford said on
CBS's '.'This Morning" program.
"I don't think so. He has no
support from the civilian population .. . from world democracies,
and now he has shaken up
support within the defense

· · ,_.. • • - ·
palcytooldor
faryiU~
tnt .cdda 1t. 1hat'aafl ctt'elmrned- ~
'-!ely,- -n...-....
1ng plllod to quollfy. onct you _ , o·
Mod. . palev.
CoM uo oboul thlo .., lnourenco
b-klhrough for ufo drlv.,._

1i,R2_GAN

2 Sectlono, 14 P1g11 26 Canto
A

Noriega blames U. ·S. for aborted uprising ·

Thera 1hould be 1peciel car ln.ur·
.,~ for .nore m1ture, alfer driv- ..

•r• brollder.

Clear IOaiJIU. Scutered
fro.l )IOMible. Low Ia upper
388. Thul'llday, m01Uy BUDny.
HI Jb In lower 70s.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. October 4, 1989

Copyrighted 1989

44

is available for a

Pick-4
7023

•

Preftrt.. •river• .
••••rv• preferre• r1t11

Sesldes his parents he was
preceded In death by his wife,
Mildred Turner In 1973, seven
brothers and six sisters.
Graveside services will be held
at· 2 p.m on Wednesday at the
Bald Knobs Cemetery. The Rev.
Lawrence Bush will officiate.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to
9 p.m. today (Tuesday l .

-.
Jfyou'~

455

PageS

2*i
n%f

Aaron H. Turner, 85, of 49631
Portland Road, Racine, died
Monday at the Pine Crest NursIng Home, Gallipolis, after an
extended Illness.
He was a retired Meigs County
Highway Department worker
and a farmer. Born on Nov. 16,
1903, ln Mason County, he was the
son of Sam B. Turner and Mary
VIrginia Belle Bonner Turner. .
Money suils
He Is survived. by a daughter,
VIrginia Lee Turner, and a son,
'
In the Meigs County Court o(
James Ralph Turner, both of
Racine; a brother, Joe Tui'Jler, Common Pleas, Hogg and ZusBrunswick, Ohio; a siSter, Hattie pan Materials Company, Inc.,
Woodard, Jackson; a stepson, Mason City, W.Va., Is seeking
.Charles Baker, Racine; a step- $3,683.60 from Fred Miller, Jr.,
daughter, Betty Cooln, Colum- Racine.
bus; and several nieces and
The Farmers Bank and Sav.nephews. Also surviving are five Ings Company, Tuppers Plains,
step-grandchildren, and two Is seeking $1,541.39 from Michael
. W. Lance, Jr., Reedsville.
step-great-grandchildren.

&gt;{;l¢14

Pick-3

27m

--Area deaths---.
Aaron Tumer

•

Am Electric Power .......: ...... 30 ~
AT ItT .................... ........ ..... 44~
Ashland 011 ........................ 40%\
Bob Evans ..... .. ................... 14~·
Charming Shoppes ...... .... ....14%:'
City Holding Co .... ............. l~ j
Federal Mogul. ..... .............. 23"'
Goodyear T~R .. ... .. ......... .. .52~
Heck's ...... ........... .... ........ ... ... *'.
Key Centurion ..... .............. :15 ~
Lands' End .. .. .......... ........ ...
U'Mited Inc .. .. ,..... .. .............38%'
Multimedia .Inc .... .. ... ........... 1()(f
Rax Restaurants ....... .... :......
Robbins II Myers ............. .... 15 "
Shoney's Inc ... ................... .
Wendy's Inti . ............... ..... :.. 5~
Worthl~on Ind ............. .. .. 23S,:

..

.INVEST IN A
CENTRAL TRUST
6 MONTH ·CD.
NOWI

Monday admissions - Opal
Barr, Bidwell; Robert L. White,
Racine.
Monday dllcharges - None.

•

Warner are Involved In other
matters with Mullen, they· have
stepped down from the case.' For
this reason, It Is necessary for
Pomeroy to hire a prosecutor to
repfi!Senl the village If the
matter goes tO court. As suggested by Story , Council paslled
the resolution to hire legal help.
It was reported that the vii!age's new pollee cruiser, a Ford
Taurus from Pat Hill Ford,
Middleport, has been delivered.
The village paid $9,900 for the
new car, and passed a motion to
sell one of the village's ,old
cruisers. The older car will be
advertised fo .. sale li.s soon as
possible.
•
·
Councilman Wehrung reported.
that "some progress Is being
made ' ' on Pomeroy's proposed
zoning ordinance. A 'meeting of
the village's zoning committee Is
scheduled for next week. •
In final matters, council au thorlzed the purchase of two office
chairs for the pollee department,
and tentatively approved the
freeing of parking meters for this
year's Christmas. shopping season for two weeks, from Dec. 11
through Dec. 26.
The mayor's report of $955 In
fines and fees collected for the
month of October was also
approved.

WHY YOU SHOULD

Homecom1D1 Sunday
The Flatwoods Church will be
having Its homecoming on Sunday. There will be· a picniC at
12: 45 p.m. with worship to follow
at 2 p.m. Rev. Kenny Baker will
be preaching and the Warren
Chapel Gospel Singers will provide special music.
Trick or treat
Pomeroy Village Council has
approved Trick or Treat night for
the same night as Middleport,
from 6 to 7 p.m. on Monday; Oct.
30. A community Halloween
party, sponsored by the Chamber
of Commerce, will be held from 7
to 8 p.m. on the same night, on the
upper Pomeroy parking lot.

Anyone wlshlng 'to have a driveway paved, at the expense oUhe
property owner, should contact
village hall. as soon as J19Sslble.
Shelly's exact date for beln&amp;ln
Pomeroy has not yet been
scheduled.
The n~ for road repairs at
two locations on West Main St . one location where a ·broken
water line has created a problem, and another location where
mine drainage and a clogged
drain have.caused a problemwere discussed. Both locations
are to be fixed as soon as the
underlying causes of the prob!ems can be repaired.
As recommended 'by Meigs
Prosecuting Attorney Steven
Story, Council passed a resolulion Monday night enabling them
to hire a ·prosecutor to represent
them'in a pending Metgs County
Court action InvolVIng Pomeroy
Attorney Mike Munen.
.
Apparently, Mullen, after belng stopped by Pomeroy Officer
James Stacy for a minor traffic
offense, was charged ' Instead
with DUI. Mullen requested the
case be transferred from Pomeroy Mayor's Court to Meigs
County Court where he has asked
lor a trial by jury.
.
. Because Prosecutor Story and
Assistant Prosecutor Linda

,
•

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(Aa of 11:48 Lm. )
Bryee and Mark 81,111&amp;11
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Ohio Lottery

Oakland wins'
•
game one In

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!

Announcements

I

•

.

Pomeroy
... _co_n_ti_n_ue_d_fr_om_p_a_ge_1
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
.
.

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Three charge4 after accidents

IT

Three accidents each resulting In charges of failure to
maintain assured clear distance were Investigated by Pomeroy
Continued on page 7
I

the tuition was retaliatory and ordered the reimbursement. Anderson
cited several incidents in wh,ich
school officials denied Wellb access
to his school records, withheld a
Continued on page 7
.'

('' '

Seek cause
for Tuesday
camper fire

of health care services and
·Insurance.
.:_A blll putting Ohio in line
with federal requirements on
-how much aspousecanearntobe
eligible for Medicaid. The bill
must clear the Ohio General
. Assembly by the end of the year .
· The major item of business Is
House concurrence In Senate
changes to House Bill 317, the
drug and alcohol recovery bill.
The Senate made those changes
Sept. 19 and Is out of session.
House action will send the
mea~ure, authored by Rep. Ray
•

Miller, D-Columbus, directly to
Gov. Richard Celeste, who favors It as major step,,forward In
addiction treatment.
The bill sets up a Cabinet-level
Department of Alcoholism and
Other Drug Addiction Services to
take over serveral different
programs now located In the
Department of Health and Department of Menial Health.
The alcohol and drug recovery
. bill resulted In vigorous debate
among various alcohollsm and
mental health groups, some of
which are still not satisfied .

a

No-smoking contest winners anriounced

Meigs County Sheriff James
M. Soulsby reports that his
department and the State Fire
Marshall's office are InvestigatIng the · cause of a lire that
destroyed a 1972 camper (5th
wheel type) at Royal Oak Resort
on Tuesday afternoon·.
The camper was owned by'Mr.
and Mrs. Car.! Rt·c hards,
Lancaster.
The Chester Fire Departnient
was called to the scene but the
camper could not be saved.
It was reported that the
camper had been moved. e~rller
In the day from the camping area
to the stora~re area.
Scott T. Cu·rl, 21, of Middleport,
has been cited to Meigs County
Court for giving false Information to an officer. It was reported
that Wednesday, Sept. 27, Curl
reported to deputies that his 1988
Chevrolet pickup truck' had been
hit-skipped In the parking lot of
the Big Wheel store at Laurel '
Cliff. Deputies later learned
from the Milson,' W.Va . . Po Uce
Department that Curl was In- •
valved In an accident earlier that
afternoon In Mason, In which his
vehicle had sustained heavy
damwge to the front end.
When confronted by au thoriContinued on page 7

Winners In the no-smoking
contest sponsored by the Amerl·
can Lung Association of Ohio and
handled through the Meigs 4-H
Junior Leaders have been announced by Donia Crane, 4-H
assistant who handled the skit
. and poster contest.

t.

In the poster contest the
winners were; Melissa Clifford,
Pomeroy, first place, $15anda no
smoking T-shlrt; · Jamie Ord,
Pomeroy, second place, $10, and
Jenny Clifford~ Pomeroy, $5,
third place.
In !l!e skit contest the winners

..

were Angela Donahue, Barbara
Donahue, and Melissa Neutzllng,
all of Pomeroy, first places, each
receiving $15, and certificates for
pizzas; Charlotte Hart,&lt; Ursula
Hart, and Joe Hall, all of
Pomeroy, second places. each
receiving $10 .

•

..
CONTEST WINNERS- Prelented cub pl'lzea
In • amokllll preveat1011 coldMiapll'IIOretl by !be
American LDDI AlaoclatloD of Oble b)' Mn.
'Dwlrht Walllee, il Soalbeul Bruch member Of
the board ol directors, were froal, Me~
~

Clifford wltb Jln. Wallace. I lo r, HelDlid raw,
ADpla l)onalw-., Barbara DoaaiNe ... llellua
Neullllll, ud !bird rew, Vl'Hia Ban, .lee Bali, ·
Cbarlotte
. Bart,. 111111 ole•IIIJ Olflord.

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