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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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Dall7 1&amp;oek pricea
(Aa of 11:48 Lm. )
Bryee and Mark 81,111&amp;11
ol Blunt, Elll• A Loewl

Ohio Lottery

Oakland wins'
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Pomeroy
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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
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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
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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 .

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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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lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERJ!:STs OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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Is B~sh playing · the spoils game?

WASHINGTON- Do a small
fav'or fdr George Bush arid you
get a thank-you note. Do a large
'
favor and you get an
~'b
ambassadorship.
·,
rs:m~ r'T'-.1'--r'•""-=·The Senate has caught on to
~v
, Bush's political spoils games and
Is making much ado of some
ROBERT L. WINGErT
pending ambassadorial appointPublillber
ments . . But the Indignation
comes too little, too late. Some
CHARLENE HOEFLICH ' questionable nominees have alPAT WHITEHEAD
General Manar;er
Asslstanl Publlsber/ConlroUer
ready been approved by the
Senate.
Calvin Howard Wilkins Jr., for
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. '111ey ollould lie l,.olbMDIIOO .
example, Is the kind of Interloper
words looc. All letters are subject II&gt; edlliDI ud mal&amp; be olped wll~
name, address BDOIIelepbolle number. No u""Jped I&lt;Uera wUl be pubwho makes career foreign ser·
lis bed. Lellersollould be 111ood lllle, addr-1111 ••-· not .,.rooaall·
vice
i&gt;eople grind their teet h. He
tl~.
.
.
Is lhe new all)bassador to · the
'
Netherla"ds. 'I'he Wichita, Kan.,
pizza mogul began his business
career selllng vacuum cleaners
door to door.
He doesn't speak Dutch, but he
speaks German and that's good
enough for Bush.
Th'e president may be more
By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON (UPI) - There is ample evidence that many interested In another of Wilkins'
members of Congress abuse their privilege of sending out cost-free qualifications - a· 15-year hismail and for that reason It can be argued the ptivilegeshould betaken
away or reduced.
· Indeed, as Congress considered the legislative branch approprai·
lion bill severa l members fought hard to drastically cut back the
·
·
franking privilege.
It ·is unfortunate things got to such a state because, as other
members pointed Ol!l, congressional mailings can be a vital part of
our system of government.
.
.
True, many members view the franking privilege as a campaign
tool and send newsletters and other mail to their constituents soley for
the purpose of bolstering their re-election prospects. B~t other
members use the mail to keep people back home informed about what
is going on in Washington and explaining what the lawmakers are
doing.
During debate in the House last week, Rep. David Obey, O-Wls.,.
made a strong case for the proper use of the franking privilege.
Among his other points. Obey noted the overwhelming advantage the
White House has in communicating Its views and positions to the
public. The president has "almost automatic access" to the public
through television news, he said.
"He gets to have his picture of things presented to the American
people virtually every night," Obey said.
Obey says he does not begrudge the president this advantage, but
notes that members of Congress also have a role In making decisions
of government and should also be able communicate their views,
"If we are to be anything other than lililputlan partners In
establishing that dialogue, we need to be able to enter the fray once In
a while," Obey said.
"Since we do not have Instant access to network television, and we
speak in 435 different voices, the only tool that we have Is to
communicate our views through the use of the frank."
Critics of the franking privilege have particularly objected to
mailings that go to every home in a congressional district, addressed
to ·'postal patron," but Obey argued that approach II' as most logical.
"If you send to a postal patron you are getting to_everybody. you are
telling everybody the same thing, and you are getting to those folks
who are not registered to vote ... to the people whomovetoooften to be
on anybody's list. ... I submit It ts a much more democratic way to
communicate with people, and It Is a much more equitable way ."
On another point, Obey noted the frequent demands that Congress
"stand up and have more guts ... to oppose special interests." But
speciallnterestgroups with plenty of money can and often do "flood
your district with mail" arguing their positions, Obey reminded his
co Ueagues .
The Chamber of Commerce. the AFL-CIO, the-tl\rift industry "can
tell you and your district how you should vote on an Issue," Obey said.
"If you are going to cast a tough vote, the only.device you have to
A friend and I just took two
explain to everybody, not just the organized few ... Is the use of a
teenagers
- my friend's daughnewsletter. And we are ·supposed to eliminate the one tool that gives
and
her
friend - to see the
ter
us the ability to do that.'' Obey asked.
.·
Rolling Stones on the St. Louis leg
of their "Steel Wheels" tour.
Some of you parents of teenagers are probably wondering
.
By United Press International
why I'd pay $128 for four· tickets
Today is Wednesday, Oct. 4. the 277th day of 1989 with 88 to follow.
and confine myself In a car for
The moon Is waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
eight hours with two kids whose
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
first question was, "Do we have
The evening stars are Venus and Saturn.
to sit with you when we get
Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They include
there?" But I had a great time.
Ruiherford B, Hayes, 19th president of -the United States, in 1822;
For one thing, I think being
Frederic Remington, painter of the American West, in 1861;
with teen-agers Is sort of like
journalist-author Damon Runyan in 1884; pioneer movie comedian
DWning a lake cabin. lf you don't
Buster Keaton in 1895, and actors Charlton Heston In 1924 (age 65),
have one and don't have to go
susan Sarandon In 1946 iage 43) and ArmandAssanteinl949 (age40).
down there and fix busted pipes
In the middle of winter, you
On this dat~ In history:
really envy ali the people who
In 1777, AmeriCan forces under Gen. George Washington were
have lake cabins.
defeated by the British in a battle at Germantown, Pa.
But I guess the· most compel!. lng reason I wanted to take them
In 1890, Mormons In Utah renounced polygamy.
In 1957, the Soviet Union launched the first man-made space
to see the Stones Is that I was
amazed, maybe even vindicated,
satellite, Sputnik·!.
In 1976 Earl Butz resigned as agriculture secretary with an
that kids who usually think I'm so
apology·f~r having made. what he called the "gross indiscretlon"M
uncool like the same group of
middle-aged
singer~ that I do.uttering a racist remark.

Congressman makes case
. for proper use of free mail

Page-2-The Deily Sentinel
PQmeeov Mldd'eport. Ohio
.Wednmfey,
- Octo_ber. 4, _1~~~

lack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

tory of political contributions to
the Republican Party. Since 1974,
nominated · twice as many politiWilkins has given $178,roll to · cal loyailsts as he did career
various GOP causes, Including diplomats to head embassies,
generous contributions to two
accotdllig to figures comptled by
members of the Senate Foreign
the Senate Foreign Relations
~lations Committee that con·
Committee.
firmed him - $1,000 to Sen.
Ronald Reagan was·not nearly
Frank Murkowski, R-Aiaska, In
as adept at gratitude as Bush Is.
1986 and $1,000 to Sen. Rudy
During the first seven months of
Boschwltz, R-Minn., In 1984.
Reagan's second term, his noml·
Wilkins capped hts charitable
nations o! career diplomats out·
campaign with a $92,000 gift to
numbered politicos 3 to 1.
the Kansas Republlciln National
The primary critic of Bush's
State Election Committee. on
political spoils Is Sen. Paul
Sept. 6, 1988, our reporters Sarbanes, D-Md., who says, " If
Bonnie Potter and Stewart Harwe're going to have any standard
ris have learned.
of seriousneSs for ambassadorial
Wilkins' nomination for the
nominees, we should get off this
Netherlands past was rushed
money merry-go-round."
.
through a Senate committee, and . Sarbanes lost the fight over
approved on June 20 before ~IIkins. But he continues to
Bush's trip to that country oppose the nominations. o! others
because the president wanted his whose resumes don't quality
ambassador in place.
them to represent the United
Nominations like Wilkins' have States abroad.
·
become the rule rather than the
Korth Is a political partyexception under Bush. During his thrower and a former Ms. Maid
first seven months In office, Bush of Cotton for the National Cotton

Council. She chaired the closingnight party tor the 1984 RepubJI·
can Convention and co-chaired
the 1989 Bicentennial Presidential Inauguration. The Republicans consider her to be a crack
fundralser.
Korth told us she has demon·
strated her executive and admi·
nlstrative skills with her current
efllployer, Sotheby's auction
house.
Newman Is a real-estate ty· .
coon from Washington state and
another party thrower. · She
chaired the Bush campaign In
Washington. But her knowledge
of New Zealand is a bit shaky.
She could not name the county's
prime minister when asked by a
New Zealand newspaper. A .report by the American Academy
of Diplomacy says Newman
"does not appear to be qualified
for this position."
But by the Bush standard of
party loyalty, Newman Is as
qualified as the next nominee.

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Late touclfdown wins for Ursuline
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Wrller
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Ohio high school football notes
from around the state:
Robert Echols ran three yards
for a touchdown with 57 seconds ·
to play ·and Blair Detellch,
kicking in place of Jim Leslie,
who was hospitalized, booted the
extra point, to lift YoungstOwn
Ursuline to. a 19-18 win over
Brooke, W. Va., Friday night.
Ursuline, now 6-0, trailed at one
lime in the game, 19-6.
Sophomore quarterback Terry
Boyd ran for one fourth-quarter
touchdown and passed for
anoth~r to rally Buckeye Southw:-est to a 12·7 win over Hannibal
River Friday night, handing the

Pilots their first loss of the and 21 yards In the third quarter
as the Bobcats overcame a 10-7
season. The win was thethlrdlna
. halftime deficit. Ford had 109
row.for the Buckeyes, now 3·3.
yards of his total In the third
Ayersvllle remained unbeaten
period.
· ..
Friday night with' a 20-7 victory
Kenay
Daniels
rushed for 16Z
over HJcksville behind the run·
yards
and
a
pair
of
touchdowns
nlng of Dean Schlachter .
Friday
nJchl
lo
lead
ianbealen
Schlachter rushed for 231 yards
Symmes
Valley
(1-0)
loa32-0wln
oa 27 carries and scored on runs
over North Gallla. Daniels bad
of two and 84 yards.
TD runs of 88 and eight yards,
Shawn Patton rushed 34 times
for 203 yards and a pair of while .Jason Sheppard addetl124
touchdowns to lead Campbell ·yards and a four-yard scoring
run.
Memorial to Its sixth win In a
Sean Gabowskl's 47-yard interrow, 26-7 over previously unception return In the final period
beatep Girard.
,
,
provided Holland Springfield
Darin Ford ran for 188 yards
with a 12-6 victory over Millbury
and three touchdowns to lead
Lake. It as one of four pass
unbeaten Cambridge to a 21-10
win over Barnesville Friday . Interceptions on the night for the
Blue Devils.
night. Ford had TD runs of seven

And I realized I Rtight not ever
have a chance quite like this
again to bridge this particular
part of the generation gap. I
thought I might get more of a clue
as to what makes them tick,
maybe what makes me tick, and
maybe even what made me tick
20 years ago when I was their
age.
.
During my 10 hours With these
two kids (we were together 18
. hours, but eight of them they
spent sleeping) did teach me one
thing: They are more like me at
that age than , I would have
wanted to admit a week ago. My
friend's daughter Is even crazy
about the same anthem of
disaffected youth that we were in
the 'OOs, the Stones' "Paint It
Black." And what was my :
immediate thought when she
said this? The same · as my
parents' 20 years ago: "What's
she got to be so pesslmislic
about? Why, kids today havt'! It so
much better than when I was

their age; I'd have beeri doing
handsprings if I'd had all the
oppOrtunities she has."
But the spookiest moment
came during a conversation she
had with her grandfather when
we stopped off to have lunch with
him on our way to the concert. He
was . talking about disruptive
students, and how they should be
shown the schoolroom door If
they don't want to · learn. She
sucked In her breath and puffed
up her ·chest and glared at him.
"They just act that way because
they've got problems," she said.
"They're either bored ·o r have
bad home lives or emotional
problems. If someone would just
help them, they wouldn't be
diSruptiVe!"
As she talked, !thought, "What
.im Idealistic child. Wonder how
long It wlll take reality to dampen
some of that fire?"
It was a while later that my
memory finally engaged, and I
realized her- words could have
been mine years ago. Then I
wondered what had happened to
my own idealism; It had disap-

chapters of, the Sierra Club and' development. .. means the desTUXEDO, N.Y. (NEA ) zensofspeclesoftrees.Thereare
VI\rlous local conservation tructlon of Sterling Forest as we
Clas_hes between environmental- stands of decades- and centuries·
groups, adds that "forestry prac- know It," responds the coalition
•. lsts dedicated to preserving the old oak, maple, elder, elm,. ash,
!Ice has been cautious and of conservationists. "The his·
landscape and developers com- hickory, ' hemlock, pine, locust,
toric natural -ecosystem, the stDI
appropriate."
mitred to building upon it have · spruce and aspen.
Now,
however,
that
attitude
Is
nearly pristine water resource,
For the past 35 .years, those
. beCome· common throughout the
changing.
"AmBase
ha~
made
the
recreational potential and the
· • country-bulan epic confronta- resources have been tended with
clear its intention to maximize its grandeur of Sterling Forestconslderable.care and concern
• uon now looms here.
profits," says John A. Humbach, would be lost."
At Issue Is the future of the by a New York-based Insurance
•;
a prqfessor and associate dean at
They teared development
:• 30-square., rpj_le Sterling Forest, arid financial services company
the Pace University School of would pollute the brooks and
· the largest tract in the privately known as City Investing Corp..
Law In nearby White Plains, streams that feed Into the Monks·
owned wDderness In the nation's -·then~ Home Group, Inc. and now
•• most densely populated urban · AmBase Corp.
N.Y., wbo Is chairman of the vtlle and Wanaque reservoirs
coalition.
directly south of·the forest. State
, a'tea, the New York metropolitan
"We manage this forest ~!&lt;"Iter
Indeed,
AmBase
has
commlscourts
now must determine what
: • region.
than anybody - the feels, the
stoned a boat Of land use studies compensation should be paid.
·:
The 21,000-acre . tract of shim- state, anybody," says David A.
Small portions of Sterling
• mering lakes, sparkling ponds,
McDermott, an executive with .. - of water quality, traffic Dows,
denaeforests, tranqutl meadows, the Sterljng Forest Corp., the fiscal Impact, solid waste dtspo- Forest are already developed
prtatlne streams and gently AmBue subsidiary now · plan·
(1,000 people live in five reslden·
sal and other Issues - thai
sloped bills straddles tbe New
nlng more Intensive develop- Inevitably wUI lead to more ttal areas and 2,000 people· work
York-New Jersey border less ment of Its holdings.
Intensive development of the at six commercial sites), and the
• than 35 miles northwest of
Even the Sterling Forest Coall· forest. The results of their conservations endorse "limited '
tlon, a group of conservation atudlelsbouldbeavallablebythe development" of "carefully semidtown Manhattan.
:- The Appalachian Trail tra- organizations, says AmBase and mlddle of next ;ear.
lected" additional tracts.
• verses Sterling Foresl'snorthern Its predecessors · "have main·
"There II at.olutely no quesIf AmBase reJects that alterna·
: bOundary. Insldetheforest;deer,
talned a generally eniJPtened tlon that lOme ~ of developttve, lhe coalition wants New
• bears coyotes. wild ·turkeys,
and responsible policy toward . ment hu to take place. We want York to purchaSe the remaining
'to do It In a sensitive, balanced 19,000 acres _ "by eminent
their asset."
: · foxes.' beavers, otters and other
manner .... We feel very stroDJiy domatn 11 necessary and starting
: indigenous animals roam In a
The coalition, whose partlcl· about tbe environment," saya
with tbo11e choice buildable areas
. aa tural setting less than an
· pants Include lhe National Au· McDermott.
m o 1 t v u 1 n e r a b 1 e t o,
hOur's drive from Wall Street.
dubon
Society, several
regloQ)•
''Even
.
wltb
tile
beat
bltentlons,
(
developll'lent.''·"
.
J
T!le forest lt~el~ ·tncludes dti&gt;''

Sarah· Overstreet

peared In such tiny Increments
through the years that I didn't
even notice It was going.
Do I sttll have any of the
Idealism that she has, or did
experience - perhaps too many
years of being a journalist where
a healthy dose of cyniCism Is tbe ·
only way to survive - change
that completely? And If so, when
did It happen?
Oh, I could recite some of the '
reasons I might have changed
my thinking, Including the thing
she's looking so eagetlY forward
lo for answers: a college educalion. What I've learned seems as
valuable to me now as · tbe
Idealism I started with. But I still
have to wonder If the conflict
between Idealism and · expe·
rlence has made me better able
to see what really Is andwhatcan
be hoped for, or If the battle
between them has just left me
tired. W.hat price have r paid for
my own dlsDluslonment, Jnd
what loss ;nay the world have
suffered for it?
.

~

Berry's World

Robert Walters

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* How to improve advertising copy and layout!

Slits staffs .

Thursday, Friday &amp; Saturday
on. 5th
ocr. 6tr.
oa. 7TH

BUY ONE STIHL CHAIN AT
REGULAR PRICE AND GO
THE SECOND CHAIN

* Special characteristics of the area market! ,·

Befort joining the B:urHu. Mr . 1J an Osten strved as. ~I Its

1nd Promotion Mln~gt"r ot tht American Gas Assoc1ahon. At
A.G.A he worked cloltty witn U:S. and Cel\ldian retailers
hOmebuilders and utlli.ty companies in the dtvttopment and
execution ot salts. edmtistng lncl rnarket1ng programs
Following

Thursday,· October 19, 1989
Holiday Inn

gra·ouation with a bachtlor ot science degret in

tdvertising. his first promotton was as ldvrrtisingand utes
promotion copywrittr for OuMont ··lelevision. Mid lhtn a~

Co-op Advtrtislng Coordu\ator tor Emtrson A:ad1o . ~nd

leltvision Corporation . Pnor to this. ne was 1n aavert~s1ng
dHtgner tor ttrt Grand Un1on Company . a mew c1111n ol
supermarkets

•

Upper Routt 7 -.

Gallipolis, Oh.

8 A.M. til 10 A.M.

AHtr join1ng tne Bui-Mu In lN7as Rttait "s.tt!!!Minltf:· Mr
VIII 011111 - 11 I quontty
VIet Pmidlltlt~
C - Adwtrtilitt9 Sllel,- lot -ial ciOMIY W "

Free Coffee and Danish

••ltd

FOR $500

,.,. ,..

CALL

NEY

New York. New York 10017.

eTrash Bags .
•Shovels
•Brooms

sn,ooo NOW S12,5Q_0
•

. OVER
40 CARS

Published every afternoon, Monday

One Month ....... .......................... H.lO

SEE US TODA11

Track and Field
The Athletics Congress has
begun a · year-round, ·out-or,
competition drug testing program aimed at curbing doping
abuse In the sport ln, the United
States. The top 15 U.S. athletes in ,
each event are subject to random
testing within 48 hours of
notification .

•

one Year ................. ................ S1'2Jit

•Lawn lakes

.Was

A Dlvllloa of llllltbnodla, lne.

Advertlllll&amp; Representative, Branham
Newspaps- Sales, 733 Tlllrd Avenue,

IN STOCK

One owner, 39,641 miles. Shllrp.

The Daily Senlinel

Ohio New~paper Auodatlon. National

IT'S FALL
.. SPRUCE UP
TIME!!

1985 CADILLAC EL DOIADO

Sports briefs

and the women's championship p.m . , high school boys
Individual.
went to Cedarville.
Awards will be presented 30
High school teams scheduled to
minutes following each race at
run Include Adena, Alexander,
the top of the hill behind Lyne
Amanda Clearcreek; Atbens, Ba.
Center.
tavia, Belpre, Caldwell. Chesapeake, Circleville, Coal Grove,
Edgewood, Fairfield Union,
Fairland, . Federal Hocking,
Fisher Catholic, Gallla
Academy, Georgetown, Hannan
Trace, Harrison, Heath, Ironton,
Jackson, -Liberty Union. Licking
Heights, Logan, Meadowbrook,
Meigs, Mount Gilead, Mount
Healthy, Northeastern, Northwest, Paint Valley, Peebles, . PIketon, St. Bernard, Skyvue,
South Point, Teays Valley,
Warren Local, Waterford, Waverly, Wellston, Wheelersburg
· and Zane Trace.
The' schedule of races Is as
follows:
9:30 a.m., women's college
division; 10:10 a.m., men's college division; 11 a.m. , open race;
11:35 a.m., juni!)r varsity boys;
12:10 p.m., high school boys
Division III; 12:45 p.in., high
school girls DivisiOn II; 1:20
p.m., high school boys Division
I!; 1: 55 p.m., high school girls
Division l; 2:30p.m., high school
boys Division I; 3: 05 p.m. , high
school girls Individual; 3:40

claiming total ownership of a
winning $47,000 horse race ticket
that several wltneslel testified
was actually part-owned .by
·
Rose.
Witnesses said Rote had Glolosa report the wlnninaS liS
Gloiosa 's lor tax purposes. although Rose actually kept much·
of the winnings.

people."
. Perkins referred to John
Dowd, who Investigated Rose for
major league baseball.
Rose's name often came up a
month ago In a tax fraud and
drug trial of one of his fonner
close friends, Tommy Glolosa.
Gloiosa was convicted. among
other things, of tax fraud for

ClNCINNldl. fuPI) - Two
baseball m7,;o/abllia dealers
say federal agents have inter·
· viewed them about business they
did with Pete Rose,
The former Cincinnati Reds
star player and manager, who
six weeks ago was banned from
baseball for life ~ause of
gambling, reportedly Is under
Investigation for P&lt;&gt;ssible Income
tax evasion.
Infernal Revenue Service officials anq FBI agents questioned
the sports show dealers , report·
edly as part of a federal grand
jury Investigation.
•'They wanted to kpow how
much business I had done with
Pete," said Charles Sotto. ''They
wanted anything Involving Pete
Rose.''
Said Chuck Perkins, "I talked
to the FBI and Italked to Dowd' s

College, high school ·runners flock
to RG for Saturdays annual meet
H~ndreds of runners from area
colleges and Ohio high schools
will converge on the campus of
the University of Rio Grande on
Saturday for the 19th Rio Grande
Cross Country Invitational .
The Invitational has been gainIng notice fqr many years and
Rio Grande running coach Bob
Willey !eels It Is the third largest
meet In Ohio.
"We offer a challenging
course," Willey said of the hllly
terrain surrounding Stanley L.
Evans Athletic. Field. "Numerous teams that have run here
before want to come back to it.
We feel the event is very well
organized and we take pride In
the course being marked well.·'
This year, the invitational Is
receiving sponsorship from Bob
Evans Farms, to whom Willey
and his staff expressed their deep
appreciation for the ·support. In
its early days, the Invitational
was a part of the annual Bob
Evans Farm Festival.
A new feature this year is the
open rae!' for any runner except
high school athletes. Entry fee Is
$2, payable on the day of the
Invitation• t.
Scheduled to participate In the
college division race are Cedarville Catlege, the University of
Cincinnati, Marshall University,
Morehead State University, Ohio
University, the University of Rio
Grande and'Wilmington College.
In 1988, first place In the men's
division .-ace was won by Cedarville's Eric Fillinger with a finish
of 25: iO. In the women's division,
Mary Dowler of Rio Grande was
first at 18:41, but was displaced
because the school did not finish
with a complete team. Ohio
University won the men's title

The Daily Seutinei-Page 3

FBI agents talk to ·dealers about Rose

.

Member: United Pre11 lnternattoaal..

[; Firm threatens 'its own -wilderness
''
•'

notes

Inland Dally Preu A•oclatlon and the •.

Looking across the generation gap

'

~ehool

'

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, October 4, 1989

••

.

1uto tltl\t1'S and rNI est ole ogenh and brokers

Mr. Van ~ten rs a contrlbuti"9 author to THE
NEWSPAP.ER. 1 ~ tltiMng wit; 111 Dllllsts ol the

VISIT THE STIHL BOOTH AT
THE PAUL BUNYON SHOW

newap~r buslnns. lftd tlls campMted the ~rketdt"'l 1nd

Advertising program aponsortd by tht American A ver11s
ing Fldtf'ation at the Hl!rvard GriCIUite SchoDI ot Bvs1ntSS
Me i!.alsoa metnbtrof tfteNtw YDfk Sa+t5. EIKUitvtt.Ckil

Pomeroy Nome &amp; Auto
POMROY

600 lAST MAIN

992·2094

.

ST/H£

.

. IIUIMI.II 011• WOIILDWID.
"I'm sorry, sir. Thflrfl's no SUCh thing ss an
ordinary 'ws/k/ng shDtl' any more. :·

~~

RSVP •••
This seminar Is available at no cod to you.
IPOft.-ed by The Ohio Valley Pubhhing. Co.
Hciwever, we do ask that you do make reaervatlons by calling Larry' Boyer at 4411·2342
or by filling out and mailing the coupon.

ADVERTISING SEMINAR RSVP CARD

Seating Lhnltltl te First '1 00 Ptr1011t 1-timri"'
Name

Company

Phone
t 6 to Ohio Valley Publishing Co..
Ohio 481131

�Pagt 4 'The o.ily Sentinel

eMm,..a,l:ll.,m.

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*•"

Mm -A.MERICAN CONFERENCE
Conftrence

Tum

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Otlei'Wn ........................ ! 10

3 10
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2 '! 1
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.......... ,.......... ,.. ,0 0 0
!'IIORTH COA.~T

A.THLETIC

CO~TERt:Nf'E

CoalrrenCf' Overall
TeiiiJt ...................... .... W LT W LT
Allf'JiwiiY ....................... ! I II 3 It
Df'•Mon .......................... l f 0
3 It
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2 II
Ktttroa ........................... l II
I 3I
Olwrla ........................... l 't I
t '!I
Ear ....... ........................ l t e t 1e

(Final Standings)
Team
Points
Alexander ............... ......... ... ..63
Federal Hocking ........ ....... .. , ..52
Belpre ...... .. .... ... ..... .. ............. 51
Melgsltlel .... ........ .................50
Trlmble ..... .... ....... ... ... ........ ...50
VInton . ..... .. .. .... ... ...... :.... .. ..... 24
Miller ..... ........ .... ... ... ............ .19
Nelsonville .......... ................... 9
Wellston .............................. , .. 6

$1399
lfoll.m.talllc with pop-up (063-82)

*'"

Leu

IIIAftDUft
fOILIT PLUNtiiR
(1'52453)

PJ::r~~~au~~s ~~~=.c~':fl~~~

opening kickoff sophomore Steve
Caruthers broke his clavicle
!collarbone) and Is confined to
St. Joseph'.s Hospital in ParkersThe llttle Bucks drove quickly , burg and Is expected to be
down the field with Jay Hook and released Wednesd~y. Late In the
Glenn Flores doing most of the game junior Scott Whobrey was
damage before Flores ran it In Injured, Scott was taker&gt;- to
from 35 yards out. The Buckeyes Veterans Memorial Hospital by
added the extra points to tie the the Pomeroy" Emergency Squad
where he was treated and
score.
That sel the stage for Wyatt's released. ·

Shelly Hoop, a three-year veteran of the University of Rio
Grande volleyball team, was
named District 22 and Mid-Ohio
Conference Player of the Week
tor her efforts In games played
.
between Sept. 18 and 23.
Hoop, a ~-8 middle hitter from
Coshocton, appeared In all 15
games played by the Redwomen
that week. The team posted
victories over Mount Vernon
Nazarene, Maione, Cedarville,
Concord (W.Va.) and Walsh.
She was credited with 36 kills In
66 attempts, with 12 errors, for an
attack percentage of .363. Hoop
had 18 solo blocks, three block
assists and four blocking errors,
In addition to 78 digs, three
service aces and nine reception
errors In 104 atteiT)pts.
"Thai's a great honor for
Shelly and for the /whol4l team,"
Redwomen Coach Patsy Fields
said. "It depends upon the

players to help her out, proving
that we're an unselfish team.
"Shelly did a super job that
week and played some great
games," the coach continued.
"She's a very consistent player.
You can depend on her wherever
you place her durtng a game."
Hoop is a junior majoring lil
physical education. I.n addition to
numerous honors In volleyball at
Warsaw River View High School,
Hoop was a member of the' 1987
Rio Grande team that won the
MOC championship. In 1988,
Hoop was honorable mention,
All-District, and first team, AllMOC .

Sports briefs
Honors
The Women's Sports Foundation honored swimmer Janet
Evans as Amateur Sportswoman
of the Year and tennis star Steff!
Graf as Professional Sportswoman of the Year. The WSF also
announced four Inductees to the
International Women'S Sports
Hall of Fame: Theresa Weld
Blanchard (figure skating),
Evonne (ioolagong Cawley (tennis), Joan Joyce (softball) and
· Ilona Schacherer-Elek .
(fencing) .

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second sacker Nelson Llrlano, forcing Llrlanti to
throw wild to first. The errant throw allowed lwo
runs to score, pushing lhe A's lo a 5-3 lead allhe
t!Jne. Tile A's won 7-3.

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win two meets

The Meigs Marauder Cross
Co$try teams won meets recenflY over Federal Hocking and
Tr!IJ!ble at Federal Hocking. The
M$ . boys won the meet
111-lneet with 25 points, Federal
H~lng was seconil with 53 and
Trllpble had '55.
.
Olrls Stewart took top honors
In tie boys race for the Marauders,; P .J. Chadwell finis~ In
sec,.nd, Nathan Baloy fourth,
Jeritmy Heck eighth, and Ryan
Left}ley ninth. For the girls the
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fouPth, Milly SIUOII fifth, Amy

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TVC Golf

herlocs. The Marauders had put
good pressure on the Nelsonville
punter ail night but to no avail.
This time however Wyatt led a ,
charge of Marauders and Wyatt
blocked the punt at about the
Buckeye 25 yard line. The ball
rolled out of bounds on the
Buckeye three. Two plays later
quarterback Bentley dove In
from a yard out to give the
Marauders a 14-8 victory.

.

.

•

Henderson, but he caught the lett third when Fernandez lined a
By MIKE BARNES
leg o! Llrlano, whose throw hit-and-run single over . shortUPI Sparta Writer
bounced up the first-base line as stop. After Fernandez stole seOAKLAND, Callt. (UP I)
. cond. Whitt hit a sacrifice fly to
Rickey l!enderson often has been Phillips and Gallego seared.
"I
was
just
trying
to
break
up
criticized for taking It easy on the
center.
field, but no one could blame the the double play," said HenderGruber walked on four pitches,
Oakland outfielder for a lack of son, who also had two of Oak- and one out later Llrlano ripped a
hustle In the open lng game of the land's four steal§ In the game. "It ·3-2 pltcil for a srngle and a 2-0 .
just so happened the guy hit me In advahtage.
American League playoffs.
The league's top base stealer In the wrist and I got the
The A's got one run back In the
nine of the last JO seasons, opportunity.
bottom of the Inning when Dave
''Carney dldn 1t .hit it treme- , Hellderson cracked • his fifth
. Henderson ·used a hard slide to
upend Toronto second baseman dously hard. I read the ball off the homer In 22 postseason games, a
Nelson Llrtano Tuesday night, bat well and really got a good ·leadoff shot deep Into the leftfield. seats.
causing a wild throw on an jump."
·
'
Said Llrlano: "When· I go to
appar~nt Inning-ending double"I think It's beenovertheyear&amp; ·
play grounder In the sixth Inning. throw he hit me, so It messes up I've been a ~nd-half player," '
The play enabled the Athletics the throw. I know who's said Henderson, a .306 hitter
to score the go-a head
In a running. "
against Toronto In the regular
Stewart,
the
first
to
register
a
season.
"I hit the ball well in the
three-run outburst, and the dethird
straight
20-wln
seasons
.
fending AL champions went on to
second half, and the playoffsand
a 7-3 victory over the Blue Jays. since Jim Palmer In 1978, World Series happen to be In the
"He's been aggressive since struggled early. But after sur- second half."
he's been here," Oakland man- rendering Ernie Whitt's leadoff
Whitt pushed the lead to 3·11n
ager Tony La Russa said of homer In the fourth, he did not tile fourth, pounding ,a HI pitch.
Henderson, who returned to the allow another hit.
well Into the seats In right. The
·"Early In the ballgame I had · A's stranded runners at second
A's .ln a .June 20 trade with· the
problems with everything," he and third ln. the fourth, but
New York Yankees. "The fact Is,
I've managed against him many said. "I was having trouble climbed within a run In the fifth. .
With one out, Lansford singled,
times, and ·I've never seen him finding the strike zone. And there
are no easy outs In that lineup." stole second as Jose Canseco
not be aggressive against us."
Stewart left after eight lnn!Dgs, struck out - the first of three
Dave Henderson and Mark
and Dennis Eckersley pitched a times- and scored on -Parker's
McGwlre belted solo homers,
hitless ninth. His Job was made bloop to right. The A's had
and ace Dave Stewart allowed
·just flve hits over eight Innings
easier when the A's SCO!J!d twice stranded ftve baserunners, all in
In the eighth. Gallego came home scoring position, before Parker's
for the winners·.
on Duane Ward's wlld pitch, and RBI single.
The Athletics, who swept the
Lansford singled home the final
Red Sox In last year's AL series,
•
trailed 3-1 and were 0 for 7 with
run.
The Blue Jays wlll attempt to
runners In scoring position be-.
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
square things Wednesday after;
fore Dave Parker's two-out Jmi
446 4524
noon . at the Oakland Coliseum
single In the fifth started Oak·
when they send Todd Stottleland's comeback.
myre, 7-7. against 19-game
McGwlre, who had eight howinner Mike Moore.
mers In September and three
"We'll just forget about this
against Toronto this season, led
one
and come out tomorrow, ...
off the sixth with a d~tve Into the
Toronto
manager Clto Gaston
left-field seats that tied the SCI)re
said.
3-3. One out later, Tony PhiUips
With Stewart having difficulty
bunted for a hit and stole second.
with his forkball- he did not get
Blue Jays starter Dave Stleb,
a groundout until there were two
who had not lost since Aug. 20,
out In the fourth- the Blue Jays
was replaced by Jim Acker. Mike
opened a 3-llead.
Gallego followed by beating out a
In the second, George Bell
· single off ·the glove of tthlrd
opened With a single and took
baseman Kelly Gruber, and
Rickey Henderson was hit in the
lett wrist by a pitch to load the
=-r~
- if~
· .
bases.
·
That- set the stage· for Carney ,
Lansford, who grounded to Tony
Fernandez. The shortstop threw
to second to gel the force on

.
;

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''

runa

Rio's Hoop wins District,
MOC Pl~yer of Week title

........

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.

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Building SUpply store for all your fall tlx·UP needs. ·

Meigs resen'es win, 14-8
By DAVE HARRIS
Robby Wyatt blocked a
Nelson11llle-York punt with about
five minutes left In the fourth
quarter to set up a John Benfley
touchdown to give the Meigs
Marauder Reserve a 14-8 win
over the little Buckeyes Monday
night.
Shawn Hawley put the Marauders on the !Core board !lrst when
he picked up a Buckeye fumble
and ran 23 yards for the score
midway In the second quarter.
Joe McElroy ran In the extra
poln.ts to give the Marauders an
8-0 lead.

.

Seventh-inning outburst gives
A's 7-3 win over Blue Jays

IIARVIST
OFVALUIS

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Rletif'r and fOI'WIII'd De-.: E"mu to
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Nelsonville ( 227).
·Phil Hovatter had an outstanding round of 40, seeond lowest
behind medalist Mike Dayley of
Alexander (38) . JameyLlttle had
a 44, Jay Harris 4~ . Tim Peterson
46 and Mike Van Meter 47.
In non league action at Riverside In Mason, Meigs won the
match with a low score of 181,
followed by Ritchie County(182) ,
Southern (187) , Wahama (195),
and Point Pleasant 1204) .
Jay Harris was medaliS't with a
low score of 42; Phil Hovatter
finished with a 44, Tim Peterson
47, Jamey Llttle48andMikeVan
Meter 54. For Southern Jamie
Anderson had a 53, John Hoback
and JasonCodnar47, AndyHIU5C
and Colin Maidens 54.
,
In a dual match on Thursday
Meigs outlasted Trimble 178 to
192 at Riverside. Mike Van Meter
and Tim Peterson continued .
solid play, Van Meter was
medalist with a 43, Peterson and
Jay Harris had a44, JameyLittle
had a 47 and Phil Hovatter had a
48.

American L~ playoffs

Miami -

P'•••
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1. LonU•
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U .M; J. Pnt•• Weodrld111e !Ut; .-.
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Mo~lllr lUI; I. MeDoaald 111.11; '1'.
SqarHe.kGarawai 11.111: 3.lllopdo"'
ILII.
lf••lfinn IH
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Frr.mo• Sl. olowpll :li.M: J . Uma
Caillelir- SUI; t . Apr~~YIIlr H.ll; S.

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Od. II - Na laMe K!MtWd.
Od. 11 - at N...... Leape ftlamo
ploa, II : U p.m.
Ocf,. II - al N... .U I.e . . .. ellalnplea,l:atp....
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ellunptn, I :SI p.m.
u

The Alexander Spartans won
the TVC golf championship ,last
week. After nine matches the
Spartans h'ad a total of 63 points,
In a wild. battle for second place
Federal Hocking took !1\e honors
with 52 points. Belpre !lnlshed In
third with 52 points, while Meigs
and Trimble .finished tn fourth
place just two points out of
second with 50 poln ts.
In action last Monday at the
Oxbow Course; Alexander won ,
the match with a low score ofl70.
· Belpre finished three strokes off
the pace with a 173. They were
followed by Federal Hocking
(181), Trimble (189) , Meigs
(192 ) , Miller · (192), VInton
County (201 ). Nelsonville (204),
and Wellston. (235).
Mike VanMeter had an outstanding round for the Marauders with a 42, he was followed by
l&gt;hU Hovatter with a 46, Jamey
Little, Jay Harris and Tim
Peterson with a 52. Brian
McPherson of Federal Hocking
· was the medalist with a 1 over
par 36.
'In an eight player reserve
match 9n the b;~ck nine, Nathan
Brown shot a 54 to place first, and
Chris Knight shot a 60 to finish
second, both are Marauder
freshman . '
In a TVC match at tile Ohio
University Course Alexander
won with a team score of 167,
Federal Hocking fin ished In
second with a score of 169,
followed by Meigs and Trimble
(175), Belpre 1185), Miller 1(!00),
Vinton· (210). Wellston 1220), and

The

Ohio

Alexander wins TVC golf title

Scoreboard ...
Computer
ratings

.

Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio

L . .,

lo 12 - ·

·

OAKLAND, Calif. ( UP1) Three seasons of 20-wln baseball
has taug~t Oakland's Dave Stewart the mathematics of
baseball..
" You play hlne Innings, anything can happen, you never
quit," said Stewart, who yielded
a fourth·lnnlng homer to Ernie
Whitt and tllen shut down Toronto In the A:thletlcs' 7-3 victory
over the Blue Jays. "Before I
won 20 games, I had not started
enough to know how to hang
tough when my stuff wasn't
there."
Stewart, who was 21-9 In the
regular season, took advahtage
of game's late afternoon starting
time to easily retire the first
three hitters·. But In the second,
hls recall of what works came up
zeros .
" What I try to do In every ball
game Is to accomplish three
things," the right-hander said. "I
lry to control the Inside part of
the plate. 1 try to throw forkballs
and I throw an occasional br'eak'"g ball. None of those things
worked early.
"Then 1 started getting the
fastball over and getting ahead of
the hitters. That made them
more vulnerable to the breaking
ball."
It wasn't the first time this ·
season Stewart has struggled,
but he usual11 has pulled
through.
"I pitched In 37 ballgames this
year and got Into the seventh
Innings In all but four of them. ~
he said. "It usually comes."
Stewart, 9-5 lifetime against
the Blue Jays, dazzled the
Toronto llneup after Whitt's
homer. He went eight Innings,
yielding five hits, three earned
runs, three walks and six strikeouts. It was his second ALCS
career victory.
"Stew Is tough mentally,"
Toronto's Fred McGriff said.
•'He turned It around after
struggling early. He doesn't pull
any punches. He c;omes right at
you."
The mental toughness also
encoura·ged Stewart's
teammates.
_
. ·'When you got a guy on .the
mound like Dave Stewart, you
know it's going to be close,"
Rickey Henderson said. "That's .
a good reeling."
Oakland Manager Tony La
Russa said he never doubted thai
Stewart was In control.
"I thought early he was throwlhg the ball well," LaRussa said,
"A lot of the game Is location
when you.are going against great
hitters. I thought he started
hitting his spots better (In the
late Innings)."
Stewart had complained of a
sore pitching shoulder late In the
season, but said Tuesday night It
• 'felt fine. I had no problem."
In fact. Stewart had II working
so well !ate In the game thai he
felt he could have gone the
distance. However, La Russa
opted to go with relief ace Dennis
Eckersley In the ninth.
"I felt the•last three Innings
were my best," Stewart said. I
had velocity and control, (but)
Tony wanted to get Eck In the

,.e."

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CHUCK WAGON
$114

Spol18 briefs
Basketball
The Dallas Mavericks said
they expect to sign Steve Alford,
their ·second-round draft choice
In 1987 who was cut last sea!on.
Al!ord, 25, an All-America at
Indiana, averaged 2.1 points ln28
games for the Mavericks In
1987,88. He was cut by the
Mavericks last December and
finished the season with Golden
State. , .. Nlagiira promoted
men's basketball .Sslstant Jack
Armstrong to the head coaching
position. Armstrong replaced
Andy Walker, who resigned last
week.

-tlil- r

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'•

~

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WITH FRIESH......S1.69

'

.ADOLPH'S

'*.
¥0MEIOY, OHIO

"At the End Of The

~)~:~~r......ll!!!!til

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VALLEY•

·-•r·•-

.· a

ltlrla1" . "''

992·2556

a ••

••;

' -

GOOD POKE, DAVE - The A's Mark McGwlre (left)
congratulates leammate Dave Headerson following Henderson's
second-Inning homer against Blue Jays hurler Dave stelh In ihe
first game of the American Leape playolfs In Oakland. Four
·Innings later McGwire would also homer, which helped the A's post
a 7-3 victory. (UPI)

*·'•
•'

•

•

·'

,,

Failed double play hurts Jays
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) The double play that wasn't gave
the Oakland Athletics a onegame jump on the Toronto Blue
Jays In the American League
playoffs.
"As hard as I hit that ball,"
Oakland's Carney Lansford said
.of the one-out bases loaded
grounder he hit to short In the
slxih, "and as well as Tony
(Fernandez) turns the ball, I
thought for sure It was a double
play."
Bui It wasn't. Rickey Henderson's . speed getting down to
second - he hit Nelson Llrlano
going Into the bag-·foreed a wild
relay throw to first that let two

runs score and started the
Athletics onAhelr way from a 3-3
tie to a 7-3 victory.
'·
"Fernandez mlide the sure
play Instead of coming In for the
quick one," Oakland Manager
Tony LaRussa said. "As soon as
I saw that,! knew he was going to
)lave trouble at second .
"He made the right play. He
waited for the hop. It he comes In
for the do-or-die play, he might
get him."
La Russa cited the bunt single
by Tony Phillips that stiirted the
Inning, long with Dave Parker's
two-out, two-strike RBI single In
the fifth, as key hits for Oakland.

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KNOWING, 1 oz ................................................................... '3&amp;.00
ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW, 1.8 oz ................................... '14.60
ELIZABETH TAYLOR'S PASSION, 1.5 oz . ............................. '27.00
OMBRE ROSE, 1 oz . .-. ............... ~ ........ ~ ............... :................. '16.00
, SHALIMAR, 1 oz.; ................................................................. '23.00
GLORIOUS by Gloria Vanderbilt, 1.7oz .................................. '24.00
OPIUM, 2 oz ........................................._................................ '47 .60
OSCAR, 2 oz ........ ...................... .... ;.................................... '29:150
LIZ CLAIBORNE, 1 Oz ....................................................... :.... '22.60
CALIFORNIA by .Jacklyn Smith, 1 oz........................ : ............ '17.60
CHER'S UNINHIBITED.1.6 oz ....................................... ; ......· '30.00
LIZ TAYLOR'S PASSION GIFT SET ....................................... '40.00
ANNE KLEIN II. 1.7 oz.................................................. : ...... '32.00
CALVIN KLEIN ETERNITY, 3.4 oz ......................................... '48.00
OSCAR DE LA RENTA GIFT SET ...... ..................................... '40.00
PRIVATE COLLECTION GIFT SET ......................................... '5&amp;.00
GLORIOUS GIFT SET by Gloria Vanderbilt ............................. '20.00

PIESCRIPTION-lHOP
.
.
992-6669
271 NOIIH SICOND

_.,LIPOIT, OliO

I

•

,·

..

�•

•
•

PIF'BIIGQte-1-6-The Oaiiy Sentinel ·

IIG BEND

•

October 4, 1989

Pomerov-MiddlallQI't, Ohio

Your -Independently Owa.ed
Low·Priced Supermarket

· .

\""'Vk

~Yie'tt

:Z

77Co•~••''·~.,•••• , ~

A

r-

~~

61NCH •

HAIDY

POTS

FALL .

-

Po.llce Tuetlday.
.
Al3: 55 p.m. on West Main St. in front of lbl! Sundry Store, the
1986 Chevrolet driven by Harold Slsaon, 33, Tulia, Okla. Wall
struck In the rear bY a 1979 Oldsmobile driven by David Young,
Guysville, 20.
Pollee reported that Sisson was stopped In traffic when his car
Wall struck In the rear by Young. There was light damage to the
rear of the Sisson vehicle and. moderate damage to the front of
the Young car. Young was cited for not maintaining all&amp;ured
clear distance.
.
·
At 3:25p.m on Main St. In front of Racine Motors Sales, a
station wagon driven by Michelle Hall, 35, Middleport, was hit In
the rear by a 1984 Mercury driven by Dana Flck. 31, Long ·
Bottom, who was cited lor assured clear distance.
There Wall light damage to the rear of the Hall vehicle which
was stopped In traffic, and moderate to the front end oil he Flck
car which failed to stop.
In the third accident invesllaated by Pomeroy pollee,
Va. was charged with
Kenneth G. Smith, 25, Par~rsburg,
OWl and not maintaining assuied clear distance.
According to the report, Shelly Fortune. 27. Syracuse, driving
a 19t4 Oldsmobile, was stopped lor the stop sign at .thePomeroy
bridge underpass. and was struck In the rear· by tbe Smith
vehicle. Fortune was taken by the pollee to Veterans.Memorlal
Hospital where she
treated and released.
Damage to the Fortune vehicl' was .light to -the rear, while ·
there wlia moderate damage to.tbe front of the Smith car which
was towectfrom tbe scene.

MUMS

DIET OR REG.

PEPSI

DIE!

CANS

w.

SAGE

was

24 PACKS

$

VIENNA

12 oz.
CAN

iii:r~l COLA
24
a.oz.

ARMOUR

ARMOUR
TREET

49

POTTED MEAT

4

3 oz.
CANS

Patrol cites driver ,a ftet rriisluJp

WHITNEY

. ARMOUR

$1

. PINK SALMON
1SV1

oz.

'

One driver was cited In an accident al4:t0 p.m. Tuesday on
· the SR. 7.Mtddleport·Pomeroy bypass, at the junction of CR. 24,
according to the State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Kathy A. Roush, 32, Pomeroy. driving a 1979
Ford Fairmont south on Sit 7, stopped to make a left turn onto
CR. 24. Her car was hit from behind by a 1983 Chevrolet pickup
truck driven by Kelly D. Meeks. 27, Athens. Damage was
moder!lle to the Roush car, minor to the truck. No one was
.
injured.
The patrol cited Meeks for failure to stop within the assured
clear distance. ·
•
The patrol Investigated a car·deer accident at 6:30 a.m.
Tuesday on SR. 7, near Tuppers Plains. The animal scampered
off after Us run-In with a 1985 Chevrolet Cavalier driven by
Robert W. Smith, 41, Pommeroy. No one was Injured. Damage
was minor.

$299

HlllSHIRE FARMS

.Smoked Sausage

99
USDA CHOICE ·

HOLLY
GRADE

Mixed

Fryer Parts

BONELESS

night as the National Weather
Service predicted temperatures
would drop to near rerord lows In

Cash award offered for
best photo of valley life
Now Is an excellent lime to
explore the backroads, town
squares, caves and hollows, farm
markets, festivals and fall color
of Ohio's "Little Smokles." And
If you takeyourcamera with you,
you just may come back a winner
In more ways than one.
Southern Ohio Tour Assocta- ·
tlon, a visitor-hosting committee
or the Ohio Valley Resource
Con!ll!rvatlon and Develop1J1ent
Project, ts offering ,SlOO for tile
best photograph or life . In the
viii ley. Although fall has a
special Intrigue for color photo,graphers, photos taken this calendar year in black and white or
color are ·eligible.
· Entries are to represent events.
or locations In these Ohio c;oun·
lies - Clarmont. Brown, High·
land, Adams, Scioto, Pike, Ross,

Jackson, Vinton, GaiUa and
Lawre.nce. Photographers of any
age or experll!ll! may parllcl·
pate. There are secQnd prizes. of
$75, third prizes of $50 and fourth
prizes of $25. ·
· .
Photos are to l;le 8X10 mounted
on 9X12 matboard and acCOQ'I·
panted by the negative. Each
entrant may submit up to four
prints. The deadline for entering
is Nov. 30, 1989.
Entry forms alid roptes of th~
rules and regulations may be
obtained from "SOTA.OVRC&amp;D.
411 Court Street, Portsmouth,
Ohio, 45662, or call R.L. Mohl at
614·353-4557 for more
Information.
Wtnilers may be asked to
permit their pho~os to be part of a
traveling photo display.

...;.._.Pomeroy Court news--

parts or the state. ·
A freeze warning was In effect
for portions · of northwest and
west central Ohio. Temperatures
tn an from Toledo west to the
state line and from ahout30mtles
north ·of Dayton to Toledo were
expected to fall to 'near record
lows of 30 early Wednesday .
A frost warning was Issued lor
the remainder of the state,
excluding extreme ·northeast
Ohio and the southern part of the
state south of a line froni Athens
to just south of Dayton. Over·
night .lows In the warning area
were expected to be In the low to
mldJOs.
A frost warning that had been
Issued earlier Tuesday' for the
Cincinnati area was canceled.
HOwever, forecasters said' lows
In the southern Ohio were ex. peeled to be between 35 and 40

49

By United Preu laterutlo&amp;.l
Soalll Cen&amp;nl Ohio
• Tonight: Clear, wi~h scattered
frost possible. and a low In the
upper · 30s. Winds light and
variable.
Thursday: Mos lly sunny, with
a high In the lower '(Us.
Exlellded Foreeut
Friday thrtllllh Sunday

LB.
lOLLED

CHUCIIOAS1 ••• .111.s1

TUNA
6.5 oz.

FACIAL
TISSUE
FOR

Free clinic ,
The Harrlsonvll·le Senior Citizens are sponsoring a free blood
pressure clinic on Tuesday. Oct ,

'

MORTON

Pot Pies

•PLAIN •SELF

d

U. S. NO. 1

Martha White

White Potatoes

Flour

~­

Ashl•nd.

~

Gary ~Gregory, fouuerly with MGM F•m City,
tANS

Inc., wants you to know that he is a Saleaihll1·,
/Driv~ for Bob Mprs Ashlcnl. Gary wiU be .
lerving Meigs, Galia and Mason counties.

GREEN
CABBAGE

Heating Oil, Kerosene and
#2 Fuel Oii-

Ifyou ·
have diabetes,
get s100 fo~
taking bett~r care
of yourself.
-7.~? .,z

P0111eroy, OH.
992-5111

Gallipolis, OH.
446-1"085

Also Awailablaz

Gasoline
AntifrHze
Complete Une of
Yalvolint Olls &amp;
GraaHI

."

Lewll Ollt leur fuel Oil CHI wit•
· ASIILW'S ~llatt hy•a.t PiaL
oWe R...,.,o The Right to Umit au.m•~ee

(

t

.

~USDA Food
. ltMnpa Glecly AaUpt..t o Not
. R•ponel/bl • For TypCigrophlcal Error•.

,.. __.._ 8 • 11f 1
..,., ..... Ett.c:tlve Thru lundey• ..,.....,_
.

(

•

'

Corky's Classics
.
,
POMEROY
992-2851
TUES. ~IS. OPEN TIL 7 P.M.

112 WEST IWIII

Lrraine. Lynn
glows with content·
ment. But it wasn't
always that way.
After her husband
died, she had
'
tried living alone
in the university
town where he had
taught. ,:But one gers tired of being a third wheel or a ·
wheel, regardless of how good your fnends are," she said .
Then she visited Bristol Village, "and everything worked
out perfectly."
She quickly found friends. joining the Singles' Group and
the Women's.Clu,b , attending Vespers, and volunteering
·
at the hospital and the
l'ocal Welfare House charity. The Singles' Group is
one of her favorites. "We
have a lun cheon once a
month. We go to movies.
In fact. Fnday we're
having dinn er in German
Village in Columbus and
going to a movie at the
Lorrola&lt; F. lytiD
Bristol Vlllop Roslll~nt
Ohio Theat re .''

.•

'~t'

Bristol VI'llage,
there's ne:~er
aneed to do
anything a,lone."

--:::-'- ~

•.

AVAIWLE AT

.St.BOB
MYERS
ASHLAND
lt. 124
St. lt. 160

'

THURSDAY, FIIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

•

-

10, from 10 a.m . to 12 noon, at the
town.house . Everyone' is
welcome.
•

l/2 PRICE

Hospital news

B

A chance of rain Friday,
ending early s ·a turday and with
fair ronditlons Sunday. Highs
wlll be In the 60s or low 70s Friday
and ·ranging from !he middle 50s
to the middle 60s Saturday and
Sunday. Early morning lows wiJI
be mostly In the 40s Friday and.
Saturday and ranging fr'om the
mid 30 sto the mid 40s Sunday .

·BUY .1 ·ITEM AT REGULAR
PRICE AND RECEIVE
SECOND ITEM AT

Raymond Huck denied bond

Sl

Slightly higher temperatures
were forecast for Wednedsay
nlght 1 with ..lows .expected to
range from 35 to 40 across the
state. Highs of 65 to 70 are In the
forecastlorThursday, with over·
night lows near 40.
'Friday's ·forecast calls for a
chance of rain and highs ranging
from the 60s to the low •70s and
overnight lows between 45 and 55.
Saturday and Sunday are to~:
cast to be fair with highs tn·the'
50s and lows ranging from the
mid 30s to the mid 40s ..

_ _ _ Meigs announcements ....___

Stoeks

a

and could produce some patches
or frost.
Sunny skies Wednesday were
expected to allow the frost' to
bum off rapidly In the morning
and afternoon temperatures to
rl!~i! to betll\\!!en the ltlid 50s and
low 60s.

-~----Weather-----,-

Seek cali.se...

Chuck Roast

LB.

STARICIST ·

By llalted Preaa lateraa&amp;leul
Freeze or frost warnings were
poe ted for much of Ohio Tuesday

EMS has 9 rolls for assistance

• BOlDER
Whale Stick

frost warnings posted in Ohio

Twelve were fined and five . Bass, Syracu!ll!, $63 and costs,
others forfeited bonds In the driving under suspension. and
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
$63 and rosts, expired plates.
Seyler Tuesday night.
Phillip Tucker, Sarahsville,
$43 and costs, ..iilegal left turn;
Fined were Keith Hicks, Bid·
George Collins, Portland, S6:l and
well, $313 and costs. destructfop
or property; james Acree, State costs, running a traffic light and
Route 143, Pomeroy. $213 and
$63 and costs, operating Iinder
costs on each of two charges of suspension; Gerald Hendricks,
Racine, $63 and costs, open flask;
assault; Harley Barton, Pomeroy, $88 and costs, consuming
Dean Hill, Racine, $88 and costs,
container; Charlie Bowen,
open
• alcohol under the age of 21. and
$113 and costs, public Jr., Pomeroy, $375 and costs,
DUI; and George Stobart, Jr.,
Intoxication.
Nine calls lor medical assiStance were answered on Tuesday
Kathryn Haley, Crown City, Racine, $163 and costs. loaded
by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
$43 and costs, failure to maintain firearm in a motor vehicle.
AI 12:39 a.m.·, Rutland was called to Loop Road for Ani!~~!
assured clear distance; Clarence · Forfeiting bonds were Martha
Searles who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
J. Maynard, Racine, $63, expired
Smith, Columbus, $375 and rosts,
Racine at 9:08 a.m. went to Dewltfs Run Road for Bonnie
registration; Tonya L. Watson,
OWl and $63 and costs. operating
Hiles to Holzer Medical Center.
Racine. $43, defective muffler;
under suspension; Bryan E.
At 9:35 a.m., Middleport was called to the Riverside
Mary Huffman. Pomeroy. $49,
Apartments for Barbara Bolin who refused treatment.
speeding; Howard Searles,
At 12:33 p.m., Racine went to Bowman's Run Road for Paul
Pomeroy, $53, speeding; and
Grady who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Continued from page 1
Kenny Morrison. Midleport.
The·Middleport Fire Department was called at 12:53 p.m. to a
lies on ·Tuesday .evening, Curl $375, DUI charge.
trailer fire at the Rodney Geiger .residence on Route 554 at
admitted giving the false
Cheshire.
Information.
Syracuse at 1:39 p.m. transported Shirley Powell from
Also on Tues(iay. Randy
County Road 35to Pleasant Valley Ho'spltal.
Hamon, of Route 3, Albany,
At 2:27p.m., Middleport was called to Shady Cove Road for
reported that pane of glass In
Dally !Mock prices
Randy Stewart to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
· his trailer's rear window door
(As of 10: tO a.m.)
The Chester Fire Deparunent was called at 3: 25 p.m. to a
had been broken out. The trailer
Bryce
and Merk Smith
trailer fire at Royal Oak Park.
·was entered but nothing was
of
Blual,
Ellis 6 Loewl
And at 9:51 p.m .• Middleport went to the corner of Cole and
taken. Several wee~t&amp; .ago, Ham·
Second Streets for Phyllis Blake, taken to 'l&gt;leasant Valley
on's trailer was entered and
Am Electric Power .............. 30
Hospital.
59me guns were stolen.
AT&amp;T ............................ : .... 44'!4
Kathy Dugan, of Route I,
Ashland on ........................40*
Shade. reported Monday evening
Bob Evans .... :..................... 14*
thai sometime between Thurs·
Charming Shoppes .......... .-... 14')1
WlNFIELD, W.Va.:.... Bond was dented Monday by Putnam
day and Monday, a 1970 Honda
City Holding Co .................. ~5%
Clrcut Judge Clarence Wettto Raymond Huck, one of three men
lour-wheeler was stolen from a
Federal
Mogul.. ................... 24
charged with murder In the August shooting death of Putnam •
shed behind her residence.
Goodyear
T&amp;R ...................52'j\
County Deputy Sheriff John Janey. On Monday morning, deputies Heck's ................................... %
Huck and two Gallipolis men - Robert Bates and Robert
took a report that Ricky A.
Key Centurion .................... 15¥.,
Gray - are scheduled to have their cases ao before a Putnam
Walker. Racine, struck a deer
Lands'
End ......... : ............... 27*
County Grand Jury In mid· November.
while traveling on Route 124.
Limited
Inc......................... 391\4
Janey was' killed while on a stakeout of Huck's Cows Creek
Ughl damages were listed to
Multimedia Inc .................... 101
home. Huck bad allegedly hired Bates and Gray to1Jum down
Walker's 1989 Ford t.ruck.
Rax Restaurants ................... 2'j\
his home 10 collect Insurance money.
Sheriff Soulsby reports that
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15%
Watt ·recessed Huck's bond hearing last week when
18-year-old Ronald Stanley,
Shoney's
Inc ....................... 11%
prosecutors produced a .tbreatentng letter received by Gray at
·Racine, has been cited to Meigs Wendy's Inti ........................ 5Ji
the Mason County. W.Va .• Jail, where he is lodged.
,
County Court on a charge of petty Worthington lnd ................. 23')1 ·
James St. Clair, Huck's lawyer, objected to the letters
. theft. He was·reportedly Involved
Introduction as evidence, arguing prosecutors had no way of
In a thell of money from Vonda
proving who sent lt.
·
•
Wolfe; also of the Racine area.
Walt resumed tile hearing Monday. ruling the letter could not
The theft occbrred on Sunday.
be introduced, but also dented bond.
·,
Veterans Memorial
Finally. the sheriff reports that
Tuesday
admissions - James•
on Saturday, Deputy Tom Smith.
M.
Denney.
Bidwell; Eric V.
in ronjunction with the Harrison·
Smith.
Ravenswood,
W.Va.; Ber·
Lodge, fingerprinted 34
00r ...• ;C~on~tl=n~u=e~d~~~o=m~pa~g~e~1~------------- ville
nice
Fry,
Pomeroy.
youngsters. The fingerprinting
Tuesday discharges- Charles
grievance ronn and kept his won a previous cowt action chal- was part of the Grand Lodge of Heck, Irene Willford, John
Ohio's
Child
Protection
daughter off a school academic lenging suspension order. An apLowen.
Program.
team.
peal challenging Webb's final dis1be board may a~l the ruling missal is still pending in Kanawha
10 Kanawha Circu1t Cowt. Webb Circuit Court.

Oktoberfelf Special

BOLOGNA

The Deily' Santirui-Pega 7

Pon•ov-Midclaport. Ohio

,__· LocalContinued
news
briefs
....
---.
·
Freeze,
from paae 1

"

MT. DEW,
PEPSI FREE

W1dna11hrv. October 4, 1989

GWCOMETEir ll Blood Glucose Meter
with Memory
Regular Price
S!ieclal Price
Mfr. Rebate

$182.76

FINAL COST

$35.00

$135.00
$100.00

Lorraine finds Bristol Village."unique in the fnendlin ess.
There's always s.o meone to go get a sandwich with. and
say, 'Let's go here. Let's go there.'" The friend Imess adds
to the feeling of being safe ~nd secu.re. "The contentment
(~ns so much," Lorraine said'.

•'

..

&amp;tal Village offers affordable. inciivrdual homes
· available with a choice of membership plans. For more
information and an appointment to see our model
homes, call or write today.

•

Bristol

.

Individual homes for today's active retirement.

Offrr M4l0d Sqnernber 1-Dc;ct"mbl::r ; t.· 19KQ.

GLL'COMETER is ;a tefiistered lradt:mark of Miles In&lt;.·.

·Prescription Shop
992-6669
271 North SacotMI
. Middleport, OH.
\•

l'

•

VIllage

111 Wendy Ltne/Waverly, Ohro 45690 ·

(61+) 9+7-1118 Ext.102 .
Call ToO frft: 1-800-223-3811 Ext. 101
An affilill~ or Naionll Church Rtskltn&lt;:n
Not·for·profn. nc.t-dtnommational

•

�October 4. 1989

Pomeroy- Middlepon, Ohio

Conservation
Day held

•
On Friday more than 400 fifth
grade students · from Easter n.
Meigs and Southern Local School
Dlslrlcts will travel to the Wal·
lace Bradford Farm to ·partie!·
pate In Meigs County's Third
Annual Soli and Water Conservation Day.
The outdoor education program was developed by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, the
Ohio Department of Natural
1\eSOIU'CeS, the Meigs County _
COnunlssloDers, the Meigs SoU
aild Water Conservation District
and the Meigs County schools , to
delponstrate the Importance· of
cOnserving natural resources.
Each year a_conservation topic
Is· chosen and experts from the
sponsoring agtncles serve as
teachers for the day. This year's ·
activities focus on the management of woodlands.
According to John D. Riebel,
Meigs County Superintendent of
Scbools, the program Is an
excellent example of how cooperation between various federal,
state, and local ageJ!cles can
result In high quality educational
programs for children.
Activities related to science,
mathematics, social studies, and
art give students first hand
experience with· Important conservation practices that they
learn about In the classroom.
Students will attend either the
mOrning program from 9: 15 a .m.
to · l1:15 a.m. or the afternoon
program from 12: 15 p.m. to 2:15
p.m.
_Participating In the day's
events will be Larry Johnson and
Keith Wood, Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Dlvts ion of
Wildlife; Mike Duhi, SoU Conservation Service; Dean Bottrell,
SoU Conservation Service, Meigs
So'U Survey; Wallace Bradford,
&amp;:adford 's Tree Farm; Merle
Bradford, Woodland · Crafts;
Jolin Rice, Cooperative Extension Service, and Kenny Wiggins,
Meigs County Litter Control.

We RtSII'YI The Ri1ht To
L~111it

298 SECOND ST., POMEROY, OHIO

•·

Quan!ities _

1 • •

298 SECOND ST~
POMEROY, OH:

_

MONDAY, OCTOHR.2 THRU
FRIDAY I OCTOBER 5
1
A.M. ~ 6:00 P.M.

SUN., OCT. 1 THRU SAT., OCT. 7, 1989

PRICES

GRADE A

FALTER'S

Liver Pudding

$ 29
Baby Swiss Cheese ... !~. 2
__

LB. .

5 LB. AVG. ALPINE ALPA

a to

DELl ROLL...:.. 15 LB. AVG.

$139

Bologna •••••••••••• ~•• 79c

Spa.re Ribs •••••••••••

Drawing and quilting classes
are being offered at the French
Art Colony . .
. Bunny Kuhl of Pomeroy will be
tile Instructor for the quilting
~ which will begfn on Oct.
24 and will be held from 7 to 9:30
p;m. The fee Is $35 for non·
members. For the classes, Mrs.
Kuhl will provide everything
n'!l!ded except a black ball point
pen. Those interested are asked
to register by Oct. 19 at 446-3834.
On Nov.2 fromt;: ;!OtoM: :!Up.m.
Thursday nights, a figure drawIng course will be olfered. Both
th!lse beginning and experienced ·
In drawing are Invited to attend.
Tbe Instructor will be Mike Vigue
wbo will talk a bout proportions of
the human figure and work w,lth
dllferent techniques with pencils
In creating drawings.
Dance classes will begin as
soon as an Instructor Is located.
Any studenllllnterested In dance
classes are.asked to contact the
Art Colony.

Chuck Roast ••••• !~. $1 59
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
$ _
89
1
Rump Roast •••••••••

a LB. AVG.-JACKSON

U.S;D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

ENDS &amp; PIECES

·_

LB.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

Tnistees to meet
The Bedford TOWIIIhlp Trus·
tees will meet In regular ~e~slon
Mopclay ac7 p.m. at tile t-.uhlp
llall
·

-

-

,·
,
on
$399
Ba •••••••••••••••••••
.60 BOX

r

•

Lettuce ••••••••••••H!!~ •••·59 C
•

'

12 LB. AVG. LOAF

.

FLAVORITE
0/0 .
PLASTIC GALlON
I~
•••••••••••••• .
S~EDD'S CROCK

2

REG. $2;_39

.

Dorltos •••••••• ~~ ••1~.o;••

$

LITTlE DEBBIE

15.5-17.5

_o.z.

'' ' .

·-

$lS 9 .

Tony's ·Pizza........ ..
•

BANQUET

•

$1
09
·rv Dinner ••••••••••••
10-11

~

oz. ..

$

139
.

$ 6.9 .
.Sausage/Bacon ••••. _6 ·
3 LB. AVG.-FAlTER'S
.u. $
9
COMBO. ~AK-3 LB. EACH

$

Spread·••••••••~ •••'.'!-... 149

.

Cooked Ham •••••~..

$1 59

Ml.lk .

.••

. _

Polish Sausage •••• 13
MILD or' GARLIC
.
_ $
Smoked Jowi .... ~L:.•• 79( Franks ••••••••••••• ._.~.. 199·
HONEY LOAF, PEPPER LOAF
$ 99
12 LB. ~VG.-LONGHORN.
$
179
Colby Cheese •••• ~..
_ BBQ Loa f ••••••••••i!·• 1

••

•

..
.•••
••

'·

•
•

•
••
•'..

6 to 8 LB.lYG.

.•
.••
•

36 OZ. FIENCH IOAST
39 OZ. AOC. EP • lEG.

MAXWRL HOUSE

COFFEE

$549

••

· SUNSHINE liTE SIZE

DOG FOOD

20~ $299
Linsit I p., Cw,_r
Owly At Pew•'• Stp 11uarktt
hid S.IL, Oct. I tin Set~ Oct. 7, 1919

CHEER DETERGENT
147 oz. $599 .
Umit I P« Cust-r
Good Only At Powoll's Super110rllot
Good Slott. Oct. I thtu Sat. Oct. J, 1919

CHARIIN

TOILET"TISSUE

4=~ $109
c..,_,

Umi_t t Por
Good Only At Powoll's s-fmarlart
Goods-.. Oct. l .tlvu Sort. Oct. J, 1919

•

•
•

•

INSTANT COFFEE

...••
••

-••

,.

•

12

oz. .

$4 99

Limit I Pw C•t-r
GIOII OnlcJJt Powoll's ~rkot
. Good Suft, • I thru S.t., t. 7, 1919

•
"•

.•

•

•

CAMPBELL'S

CliNATlON ·

MAXWELL HOUSE

~

TOMATO SOUP

EYAP. MILK

3Cast-·
f$1

f:z. 2f$1

10(~~ oz.

Limit I P• Cust-r
Good ~At ,...... ~rkot
S.. t. I tlwu Sat. . J, 191,

limit 3 ••
61011 O~t Powoll's S'trlllllllcot
11011 S... . I thr• Sat, t. 7, 1919

1

• ••

'

.

:~~

Betsy Jones was elected Valen· ..
tine Queen when members of the'··
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Bet( ··
Sigma Phi Sorority met for a·.
rush party at Main Street Pizza · .
In Pomeroy.
··
The party followed a "NeW. :
York" theme with prizes being" •
awarded to Joyce Douglas and
Megan Andrews for their ·
dresses.
•·•
Lasagne, garlic bread, salad; ·_;
and New York style cheesecake ·
were served to those attending. :
New pledges honored at the' rush party were Kathy Wilfong,_' ··
Gwen Hall, Jane Ann Karr, and _;
Megan Andrews.
'
The next meeting will be held·-'
Oct. 10 &lt;tt 7 p.m. In the soclaf•:
room of the Grace Episcopal .
Church.

Meigs band
• •
parttctpates
.in festival

..

The Meigs High School Marcil· ·
lng Band successfu Uy partlcl·
peted 111 th,. class A ban4 ·
competition at the Athens Invlta· ·
tiona I Marching Contest this past
.
Saturday.
The band captured second .
place honors In the second
largest class of the festival with a· ·
score of 234.5.
'
Meigs High School twirler,
April Hudson, was awarded _
outstanding feature twirler of the .·
festival.
..•-The Marauder band will per.. :
form at this week's homecoming;' ·
game and will travel to Ports·· ·
mouth on Saturday to compete In ·
the Portsmouth East Marching · ·
Festival.
The band Is under the direction · ·
of Toney Dingess. .

•

Snack-Cakes •••••••••
'

·-

Cremeans
reunion held

.
Hospitalized

Shirley Lyons, Tuppers Plains,
a student In Hocking Technical
Copliege's practical nursing program, was Inadvertently omitted
from the.IIJt.of studenta achlev·
lng the summer quarter dean's
list,

6

Budget Pack ••••••••

$ 49

LB. AVG.

$ 99
R1b Steaks •••••••• ~.. 4 .

More food and clothing have
come In lor the hurricane victims
of South Carolina. The new
collection point Is . the Meigs
County Extension Service.
While one semi-truck load left
for South Carolina Tuesday ,local
supporters of the project are
hoping for another truckload.
Faye -Clifford, advisor of the 4-H
club which Is heading up the
project, Is now trying to locate a
truck to transport the donations
south.

On dean's list

.
H
Chopped am ••••• $119
2 LB. BACON, 2 LB. WIENERS,
2 LB. ROLL -SAUSAGE
Box $ .
99

1
a
Brpunsweiger •••!'e•• 19(
Bologna ••••••••••••!'..

LB.

More help for
Hugo viaims

Velsla Roush of Bailey Run
Road, Pomeroy, Is confined to·
Grant Hospital, State and Grant,
Columbus, Ohio 43215. Mrs.
Roush Is being treated for aJI
ln!ecUod which developed follow .
lng her recent surgery. She Is
exjlected to be hospital !zed from
fl&gt;ur to eight weeks. While she Is
not permitted visitors or flowers.
she Is able to receive cards.

10 LB. LOAF

LB

Gasses set
at FAC

~ggs

Ohio Eta Phi
chapter meets

.

Whole Fryers.:!••••• 69C
LONGHORN
_ . _
$ . 99
Colby Cheese ••••••• · 1 .
BUCKET
_~i
$ ·.49
Cube Steak ........... 2
SUPERIOR .ASSORTEd ,
Lunch. Meats '•• ~L:-•••• $1 _39

FRESH PORK

·...•

·-

There will be a bluegrui"
benefit on Oct. 14 for Amy Boas:. :
age 15, a student at Point . ,
Pleasant High School, who IJ on a,'
list for a heart and June ::.
transplant.
The benefit! will begtnat 2 p.m. ~
at the Mason County Fait··:
Grounds In Point Pleasant. Act:·.
mission will be S5 per person wltlj_ "
children under age 12 a.dmltted .
free.
.
·~ ..
Entertainment will he pro, "
vlded by River Junction, Scioto.- ..
County Bluegra,s, Hlghgrus .'"
Station, Kelly and the Country
Grass, a·nd Idle Tymes. The' .
Shady River Shufflers wUI also ,.
perform. Any other ·clogging :·
group Is also welcome tc) .
perform.
.'
Refreshmenlll wlll be available .
from a concession stand locate&lt;! ...
on the grounds.
·•
Those attending are to bring a .
lawn chair.
·

FALTER'S MEATS
TRUCKLOAD
SALE

·sTORE HOORS
·Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM .. ·'

Benefit
set for

11m CROCKER

CAKE MIXES ,
UMIT 2
11.5 oz.

79C.'"

llmlt 2 P• Cwt-r
GIOII OnlJ,!t Powoll's ~rkot
GIOII Suo. . I tin Set. , 7, 1919

..

There were69 relatives attend:·,
lng the Cremeans famUy reunion~
held recently at Forest Acres ·
Park near Rutland. ·
:
Attending were Maude Smith,
Charles Cremeans, BasU ere..
means, Kathleen Cremeans, ·
Linda, VIcki, and Bethany· .
Boyles, Shirley, ThornasT.,Dee;· ·
Tyler, Thomas B., and Trista · ·
Simmons, Judy, Danny Jr.,
Mindy and Angle McDonald,- ·
Melanie Dudding, Lee Morris;
John Haggy, Danny, Barb, and ·'
Derek Cremeans, Doris Rich- · •
mond, Ted Cremeans, Wesley "Young, Paul and Kevin Musser, .. :
Arthur and Glennls Musser; ·
Carroll Smith. Tim, Lisa, and ·
Allsha, Compson, KennyZuspan,
Iva Cremeans, Leoma and Mar- •
tin Woolet. Karen Gilkey, Paula ·
Hall, Zelma and Adam Kaylor,
Glenna Fetty, Chris, Sheila, .
Kristen and Corey N ap,pet,"·
Luther, Mary, Cheryl and Brian
Smith, Randall Arnold, Everett, ·
Sherry, Philip and Elizabeth:
Smith, Deloris Rodgers, Bud.'
Schoppert, Kathy Herron. LesUe ·
and Howle Holloway, _Mickey,' ·
Joyce, and Nicole Cremeans. ·
Kathy and Amanda Jeffers, and
Jtilla,l_?ebbie, and Sara Engle. ·

Granges will
_have meeting
Star Grange and Star Junior ·
Grange will meet In regular . .
session at 8 p.m. on Saturday at ·
the Grange hall located on' ·
County Road 1 near Salem ·
Center.
-.
Officers conference will pre- ·
cede the meeting at 7: :.I p.m. aftet .
all officers and commlttl!e jle(..
sons are aaked to at lelld.laalalla· ·
tionofofflcerswlllbelleklcllailta

=~m::!·~::s:::.t•'&amp; .

members and candidates _... ·
urged to attend.
•

'

�•

Paga 10-The o.ily Sa otinel

POMEROY -The Calvary PI!·
grim Chapel will have revival
through · Sunday at 7: 30 p.m.
nightly. Rev. Joe Sl(ford, Knox·
ville, Tenn., will be the evangelist. Special singing will be by the
Mann Family. Rev. VIctor Roush
Invites lhe public. The church Is
located on Roule 147 jusl off
Rouie 7 bYPaSS.

tl~s

to date and a discuSSion on
"where do we go from here" will
take place. All members are to
urged to attend this last meeling
befoll! election of officers on Dec.

7.
POMEROY -'The XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority wlll meel Thursday at
the home or Darla. )Staats at 7
p.m.
REEDSVILLE -The Olive
Township Trustees will have a
regular meeting on Thursday at
7: 30 p.in. at the Reedsville Fire
Station.
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
group or A.A. and AI Anon will
meet at the Sacred Heart ca.
thollc Church on Thursday at 7
p.m . For lnfo~atlon, call1·800·
333-5051.

HARRisONVILLE -TheHar.
rlsonvllle Holiness Chapel will
hold a missionary service on
POMEROY - The Big Bend
Wednesday at 7:30 p .m. with
Clvltan
Club wJII meet at 7 p.m
Jerry and Jackie Kwaslgi'oh,
Thursday
at Meigs Industries.
home on leave from Bolinla. R~.
,..
Anyone
Interested
In joining the
Earl Fields invites the publiC.
group Is Invited to attend.
HARRISONVILLE -TheHar·
FRIDAY
rlsonvllle Holiness Chapel will
POMEROY
-The Trinity
have a missionary service on
Church
or
Pomeroy
will sponsor
Wednesday at 7: 30 p .m. with
a
soup
and.
s
andwich
lunchron on
Jerry and Jackie Kwaslgroh who
Friday
from
11
a.m.
to 7 p.m.
are home on leave from Bolinla.
Vegetable
soup,
bean
soup,
Pastor Earl Fields Invites the
sloppy
joes,
hot
dogs,
beverages
·
publiC.
and desserQ; will be available.
POMEROY -The Pomeroy Advanced orders for quarts or
Lodge 164 regular monlhlymeet- soup are being taken and the
price Is $2 per quart. Orders can
lng will be held Wednesday at
be
placed by calling 992-5480,
7:30 p.m. at . the Middleport
992-3222,
or 992-3777.
Temple. Refreshments will be
served. All master masons are
MIDDLEPORT -There will
asked to altend.
be a square dance al the
American
Legion Annex on Mill
POMEROY -The Meigs AI·
Streel
In
Middleport
on Friday
hletic Boosters will meet Wed·
from
8
p.m.
to
midnight.
Music
nesday at 7: 30 p.m. at the high
will
be
provided
by
Bernard
school.
Connolly and the Travelers. The
cost Is $5 percoupleand$3 single.
THURSDAY
The
public Is Invited to attend.
TUPPERS PLAINS -The Ladles Auxiliary orthe V.F.W.Post
ANTIQUITY - A hymn sing
9053 In Tuppers Plains, will have
will
be held al lheSpirltual Faith
a regular meeting on Thursday
Church,
fonnerly Faith Fellow·
al7:30 p.m.
ship, at Antiquity at 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE -The Big Bend Friday. The sing will feature
Service Unit or Girl Scouts of "Sweet Surrender." The public Is
America will meet Thursday, 7 Invited to attend.
p.m .. al the Syracuse United
SATURDAY
Methodist Church. Any scout
POMEROY
-The Pomeroy
leaders who have articles !or The
Teen
Center,
at
the old ElberDally Sentlnel's Girl Scout Diary
feld's
Warehouse,
will hold a flea
· should bring the articles to the
market
on
Saturday
from 8 a.m.
meeting.
to 5 p.m. Six by six spaces are
SALISBURY -The SalJsbqry being sold for $6 each. Call
Township Trustees wlll meet on 742·2187 after 5 p.m. or contact
Thursday at 7 p.m . . aL the
township hall.
RUTLAND -The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet In
regular session on Thursday at
6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire
Station.
POME~OY

-The Public Em· ·
ployee Retirees Inc. Chapter will
meet on Thursday at 1 p.m. at
Maples In Pomeroy. The guest
speaker will be Calvin G. Lyons,
a native of Jackson Count'y. He is .
the director or PERI In Colum·
bus. Appointment or a nominal·
lng committee. review of actlvl·

.

RUTLANjl -The Rutland
Freewill llaptlst · Church will
have a bake and yard sale ·on
Saturday beginning at 9 a .m. An
old fashioned bean dinner will be
hzld at noon. All proceeds will go
to 1he church building
....- fund.
'

. SALEM CENTER -The Star
. Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet In regular
session on Saturday at 8 p.m. at
the grange hall. Installation of
otrlcer.s will be held. All
members and candidates are
urged to attend. A potluck supper
will follow the meeting.
PORTLAND -The annual
" Fall Carnival" will be held at
Portland Elementary on Satur·
day. A supper will be served
beginning at 4: 30 p.m. and will
Include chill, vegetable soup,
sandwiches, desserts , and
chiCken and noodles. "Silver
Wings," a country and western
band Will provide enterlalnment.' '
There will also be games, door
prizes, a country store, cakewalks, and a dance. Admission Is
free.
·
MASON, W.VA. -The Mason
Counly Extension Homemakers
Cultural Arts Committee Is s)lOn·
sorlng !Is annual Harvest of
Quilts II Show on Saturday and
Sunday at the West VIrginia
Farm Museum. The show Is open
to all exhibitors. Call (304)
675·3435 or 67.5·2198 for
information.
REEDSVILLE -The annual
Fall Carnival will be held at
Riverview Elementary In Reeds·
ville on Saturday. A supper Will
be served beginning at 5 p.m. and
will Include Kentucky Fried
Chicken, steak. noodles, mashed
potatoes and gravy, cole slaw.
green beans, and roll, as well as
olheF desserts. Hot dogs and
po~orn will be sold alter 7 p.m.
Games will start at 6 p.m. There
will also be a country store. door
prizes, cake walk and a split lhe'
pot. Admission Is free.
LONG BO'ITOM -The annual
Bissell chill-soup supper has
been set for Saturday. Special
music will be by the Bissell
Brothers gospel group.

•••

w_,

••t

r-

&gt;:'

Public Nadoe
'B rodt to land n - -nad
by Rooa Morrio; thenco
I oouthwMtarly - i a n
along oald RoM Morrla' land
S rodt to the .,_of bogln·
nlng. containing 1/B - •·

morear .. a.

......... ___ ,

Public Notice

__

No. 222114-tenth
end I'NI Account of Konn..,
C. w•l\ G......., ofiHe E•
tate cf Adrlenno F..,clo.
~· No. ZIZII&amp;fl'intl
and Diato!l!ullle ..._..,. of
r... LaComb. Eooc:uirl. of
the E-o of Jam• D. Lt&gt;.'

Comb. DacMad.
e.. No. ZS708 _.;. Flrot
- ... of Nanqo L. -ft.
~.....,., of tho E1f8ta of

-

Chicken barbecue
There will be a chicken bar·
becue on Sunday beginning at 11
a .m. at the RaCine Fire ,Depart·
ment. There will be chiCken,
beans, cole slaw, and Ice ·tea
available for $3. 75. Pie and cake
are extra.
Health club meeting
.
The Rock Springs Better
Health Club will furnish and
serve and canteen at lhe Red
Cros~ Bloodmobile on Wednes·
day,Oct.ll.

by various Individuals from the
area.
A nursery for ages ,0·5 years
will be provided each night.
•
For · more lnfonnatlon a bout
ihe revival or lhe church contact
Derek Stump, minister, at 992·
5844.
Open house
The Sacred Hearl Catholic
Church will have an open house
on Sunday from 4-6 p.m.
Vespers service will lollow at 6
p.m. The publiC Is Invited to
attend.

E-

~~i1_; F,;;tl
.,_,... Ac'!'!'nt of

Gaorgo J. Kam. Jr.,
ofAho- of Honry ~· Kam.
O.O..ad.
1
EotAIIe .No. 2384C!-Finli
-D--ntof
Mory Jane Ttl-. Admlnittrllrk of tho E-o of Torry D.

Ttlbot't. o.-011. •
Ella1l No. 248011-" Fouoth
(Continued Of' Pag~ 11)

'

Its first annual car show pel. 14 '
on the Pomeroy parklllg lot.
There will be 17 classes offered to
exhibitors with two trophies
given per class. Dash plaques
will be given to the first ~ cars
that enter. Registration b~nsal
9 a.m. and the fee Is $5. Call Gene
Whaley at 992-7013 or Bill and
Sharon Neutzllng at 9854317.
I

Geof'le Hall to perlonn i
George Hall, well known orga.
nist, will perform at th~ Reeds·
ville United Methodist Church on
Sunday at 7:30p.m. Hallwlllplay
a variety of gospel and· lnspira·
tlonal music, Including 'udlence
requesta. The public is l)lvlted to
attend.

MIDDLEPORT -The Middle- Chicken barbecue
port Fire Department will be
The Southern Boosters will Car show to be held
having open house on Saturday . have a chicken barbecue on
The Oldies But Goodies Car
starting at 11 a.m. to kick off Fire Sunday at the Racine Fire
Club of Meigs Counly will have
Prevention Week. Activities will Slation. Serving will beg.ln at ·
Include a fish fry, bake sale, and 11:30 a.m.
a blood pressure and blood sugar
clinic. A dining area will be
Bradford Church of Christ
available al the fire stat-Ion. The
The Bradford Church or Christ
public Is lnviled to attend .
will have a communlly revival
P li 0 N L i L'
meeting on Oct. 8·11 beginning at
TUPPERS PLAINS -The La·
7:30 p.m. nightly.
'
f'I11CIS liiiCliVl IHHII
dies Auxiliary of the V.F.W. Post
Jimmy Tingler, minister of the
9053 will have a bake sale on
Raceland Christian Church In
SIPEIIOI BIG lED
Saturday beginning at 8: 30 a .m.
Raceland, Ky, will be the evange·
on the lot across from the
list for the four day revival.
Farmers Bank In Tuppers
Special music will be provided
AMISH FAIM BlAND
Plains.

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STOFIE
c' i ' u
Sfil .. lJCI /. J11H 1l
!

BOLOGNA ••••••••••••~.~ •••••••• 99&lt;
.
DUTCH
LOAF
•••e•••e•e~•.u· 1
SWIFT E(IIKH YA. IIMD
:
11"111 •••~ •••••••••••••~ •••••~•••••
HOMEMADE
IIIEAT SALAD •••e•••e••••••••e··~

S1 e 9 9

SJ.19

Smith birth

Spires birth
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Spires.
Rutland, are announcing the
birCh ol their son, Timothy Mark
Jr., on Sept. 8 at Holzer Medical
Center.
The Infant weighed seven
pounds and 14 ounces and was 20
Inches long.
Maternal great grandmother
Is Verna Sturgeon, Rutland .
Paternal grandparents are
Charles Spires, Rutland; Elaine
Quillen, Rutland. Paternal greal
grandparents are Floyd and Lola
Harrison. Rutland; and Clara
Phillips. Rutland. ·
Mrs. Spires also has two
daughlers, Missy. age 10, and
Jamie, age eight. ·

Wedding slated
suzeuc Jane Paugh and William

Scot! Hicks will ~ married Salur·
day, ·4 p.m., at lhe home of lhe
bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. lack
PaupfiLcwl
In lhe event rl rain, lhe wedding
. wiD be ·in lhe Unioed Medlodisl
Cllllcb in Uaion.
(

John and Glena Smlth, Clarks·
ville, Tennn., are annou~clng the
birth of a daughter, Jennifer
Mlch:elle.
The Infant was born June 7 at
Clarksville Memorial Hospital
and weighed seven pounds and
eight ounces and was 19~ Inches
long.
.
Maternal grandparents are
Charles and Nancy Boykln,
Clarksville, Tn.
Paternal grandparenls are Os·
car T. and Madgle Smith,
Pomeroy.

SCARF SALE

BUY ONE AT IEGUU.I PIICE
AND GET 1f2 OFF ON SECOND ONE

(PRICE PREVAILS)
liiUISDAY 10/5, FIIDIY 1016 &amp; SITUIDAY 10/7 OIILY

IIAVD VAUlT,GIAH A

SMALl EGGS .....•K'A-.•• 79c
IIAVD VAUlT

HOT PEPPER
CHEESE .............'!-. $2.79
DAft PAIUY QUAnEIS

MAIGAIINE .......W. ... 99c

HEAD LnUCE....~.9•. 79c
(AUF. CEUIY .H.St-..69c
IUISII --40 Cl. I'

GIAPEFUR ..... ~. 2/99'
WINESAP
APPLES ......~.

OlE· IDA

290 North S1cond, Middleport, Ohio

End Of Season

Parking Lot Sale
THURSD"Y, OCTOBER 5th and
FRIDAY I OCTOBER 6th
9:00 A.M. • 4:00 P.M. - Weather Permitting

GOLDEN FRIES e•••••e!~f1•·
FIESH·LIIIE
'
GREEN
PEAS
•••e•e•••·~~f1•· ~1·e49
'
.NITEMAID
120Z.
(
LIMEADE ·

1
S 1e79

786 N. 2nd
Middlttport
9?2-6491

•

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGI COUNTY, OHIO
THE FARMERS BANK.
SAVINGS COMPANY,
Plaintiff
EDWARD H. RAMSIIURG ,
et al., ·
Defondonto
CASE NO. 88 CV B
LEGAL NO'TICE
SHERIFF'S BALE OF
REAL ESTATE
Ao Shariff of Malp
County, Ohio, I hereby offer
for oale at 10:30 A.M. on
w.d-d8y. Nov. 1, 1889,
on the front otapo of tho
Molgo County Courthou•.
Pomeroy, Ohio, the follow·
lng dMcrlhod roll aotete:
Silulte In Rutland Town·
ohlp, County of Moip ond
Stota of Ohio, to-wh: Sit·
. uateln the County of Melgo,
in tho Steta of Ohio. and In
tho
of No.
Rutland.
Bt·
ing 'T-nohp
In Fraction
2. Town
B. Ronge .14 of the Ohio
Company' • Purch-.e. Bt·
ginning In the cantor of tho
public road where the town·
.t\ip road int•~eet• the
county road 11 Harvey
Gardner' • lend;
thtnct
Northerly olong laid county
road 882 foot or to the land
of Myrtle Lanning: thonco
North Woetorly along told
line I bout 25 ro* to a stake;
thence Nonh Eoatet'ly olong
Hid line 48 roda to a atakr,
thence North WMterly olong
11id line 14 r~ to a stake;
thence Nonhwerdty one rod
and 19 linko to tha North
E11t comer of 1 28Yt acre lot
of land -nglng to H. C.
Smith; thence W•t along
the South llnaofH.C.Smith
lond about 82 · - ond 22
linka to the township roed;
thence in a South e......
dlraction following tlid
lownohlp road to the placo
of beginnktg •• imated to

contain

C'1.rt

•o.

w•

;===!===::;
5

HAPPY 38th
BIRTHDAY.
CRYSTAL
RICHMOND
.3B Is REALLY
GREATII
But there'• IIC) time
to hesitate;
For now. the yee11
will fly right by.
leaving you with
your hair to dye.

Don't be 10 sad,
Although your age
DOES 1how;
But. what the
'
HECKI
Your friend• all
know.

Forty-five ecr•.

more or••·

So peril. right up.
And, enjoy YOUR

SAVE and EXCEPT a lot or
parcel of land In the North
Eott - - horaof dMdod
by Margoret M. Smith to
Gertrude Ch•oouppo•ad to
contain obout 1/10 aero;
ALSO EXCEPT 111'h daodod to Gomude Ch•a
rooordad in Volume 119.
Pogo •111. ALSO SAVE and
EXCEPT thr• - • · mort
or le11. which w• convoyed
by Dwight Mutchler and
Marvel Mutchl• to Oerlrude Rupa by deed doted

11

Happy Adl

day;

·

Birthdays are special,
EVEN AT YOUR
AOEIII
• Happy Birthday
from
"The PIBBI8rl
Gang••

..........................
I

~

ASSOITED YliiETIES

15

OL

614·992-6466

REGISTERED NURSES · ·
Immediate full time and part time openin&amp;s are
available for recistered nurses lo work in the Special
Care Unit. SalaiY commensurale with experience.
hc:ellent frin&amp;e benefits.
ContiCI:
Rhonda Dailey. R.N .. Director of N11sing
• Veterans Memo1ial Hospital
.
115 E. Mem01ial Drive
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
(614) 992·2104. Extension 213
EOE

/$1e19
I

99c

I'

•••

wc;~rs

, 1e49

•e•••••••••e••u:1•• • 1 e 3 9
I

ae ••••••

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
Beginning Sept. 17
Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Factory Choked 12
Gauge OnlY.

DOZER

BISSELL ·
BUILDERS

NJWLAND
rNTERPIISES

R-onable Prices"

PH. 949·2101
or 'Res. 949-2160

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

Day or Night

(614) 667·3271

NO SUNDAY CALLS

Grant A. Newlanll

99c

.Alto Tr••••lulo•
PH. 992:5682

Wi.,nillo aod

CHESTEI, OHIO

SYIACUSE
992·2621 or
992-6944
9·22-1 mo.

RUUD

9·21·89·1 mo.

LW.
STEWART
TRUCKING

.QITERIOR·EXTERIOR

•Gravel

Ta . .

tiM

pain

YEIY IIASONABLE
HI YE IIFEIENCES

•. _ . PartL - · ..
Rantala

' 1:

FOODS

t
li

224 E. MAIN ST.
882·8978

F

THUIS. I.L 6:4.5 P.M. ~
SUN. LL 1145 P.M. : 11
IOOIPIIZI

'

··--··
Outten

1·.2fi·'ll· tfn

DAVE'S
SMALl INGINE
IEf'lll

,.

1

•lnllln•

Btoci&lt; Jlarto for
Homellto. Woedaller,
Tacumuh. Brlggo&amp;
StraHon.

I-ll·'ft.lfn

I

-·

moy

4

ht wisit FlEE

-Possibly mar•.

I· 28·'Ill- 1 mo d.

l

THE
BASKET WEAVE

Y.....,otllo tolo. tl:lll Eoolorn
AN., R•r. etotn., _ . &amp;
ondo,lumHuro,
F~.• oot. •s. .
.

ont'-· .._

36425 lodttpri......

'-•Y·
011.
992-6&amp;55

d.

Pl. Pleasant .
&amp; Vl,:lnlllv

HANDWOVEN IASIETS
BASKET WEAVING
SUPPliES
OFFERED

It's Time Nawl
Have That f•nace
Checked.
All
Guor

992-5335 or
985-3561

"LLEN'S
HAULING

SIIICE 1976 .

Control Assn.

1·810·535·2199
l -7· • · t
MO.

· - &amp; Uoad Tlr•

eCuotom Pipe Bonding
•1!11 Chen•OrMieJot.
oQenerol Ch••la

Mlintlftence
•Compu..,kad Bolan-

992-3897
Rt. 1~4.
Oh ,

· on
Solo,
1 milo out Sond
HIU ll'd.
riGht,
watch lor algn, .

WM, Thun, Ffl.

G...,..

BISSELL .
SIDING
CO~
... . _ lloollt

1 · 27"' 89· tfn

MOD GALLON
WATEI SEIYICE
UMESTONE

Big Yord Solo, lion ond Tuoo, o~ ·
At: 35 Sollholdo on L1111o 11
Milt Ad. LM Baird ,...ld1nce. AJt •
klndl of thingo.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

SEIVICE

JONES nRE
CENTII

PARTI AND SERVICI!
For Molt 2 and 4-cycte

PH. 992·3922

-.

tf nln wfl try

lima ld. in
lllfland, Oh.

Pair

Tol ,,..

Certtflcl licenled Shop

iS 1 e 5 9

Oct. I ,

F~l.you

Call hr Fall Spteltl•

ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES• WASPS
llontllor Nt1iontl Pnt

"DOC" VAUGHN

Downapoutl
Gutter Cleanl"9
Painting
FREE EmMATES

-

·~·

21/• Ues Out New

SALE

SYIACUSf. OHIO

lemHthtVIIIayl I
. ..,.... pert, Oil.

:~.;':r·

F~.

__,_

13" through 205-IS"

TII·CO. TEIMITE
&amp; PEST CON'IIOL

CALL 992-6756

IOOFIIG

R"'"""'''' Solo:

p.m.

SUSAN COLEMAN
7.U-2771

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

,' Aep•lrs
NIASE Certified Mlch.-. lc

'

mloc.M-.
.·
Porlolno Rd. on 211, Third houoe ·
on rlg!ll. lola clothing. babv ·
ploy Pin. 2 ..... - - .....-t .
ThUrl, Frt.

10· 2-' 19· 1 mo.'

USED TIRE

H7·tfn

All Major 6 Minot

Onr I to '""" 165.00 '
P., Gonoo
Uo 1005-12
1·~1111

21 • 30, . . . . . .

Clolhol &amp; - · bicyclel, oncl ·

SUN'S UP
TANNING

9·22-19

992-5275

Moll Foreign and

i•

"'

992-2571

9·28·'88·1 mo.

..... w

Call 742-2486
After 5

NO SIIIDA Y CAU5.

3-f!·lln

~

313

22nd

St, ·

.

.

Gooogo Sal!, Friday, Oct. I, llkl
W1y Drive, NIW Haven, WV.
V•rd Solo, 1010 Ylond Sl, Tuoo,
Wod, Tllun.
Vord Sail. 5 llopla St., llooon,
WI/. Thurs •ncl Fri. 8:00 tiM 1:00.
A&amp;lf'l Clntllt.

Yard S•te, Wtd &amp; Thurt, 8:30 to
4:30, 166 N. Park Dr. Cancotlod
II rain.

Announcements

'

ClalhH, odds •nd endl, ch••P.

Communily Action C.nler yard, •

101 S.Cond St.; Fri and Sat.

Giveaway.

Pomeroy,

3 llltt.,., hlllf growing, lt........_

Middleport

4

.

and wlnttr clotn&amp;ng, Lo11 ot .
olherlhlngl.

PIL 949-2101
or les. M9-216D
. . . _ _ __

Solo

'

Thurodoy· &amp; ~rkloy; booko, toll

..FrH EatimM•"

DIIT HAULED

·Oom•lc Vehid•
AI C Serviu

2 H.D. fR[£ trlti1 COUjiOIIMdj l'
·pondt• ol min.- H.C. l'lct· I·
.• L Um~ I C0111J011 JII'QII-' •.
tCIW par bin11 •soon.
'
W• l'ar •so.oo P. Ganoo • 1·

3 BR ranc:h home, 21'&gt;
baths, full basement, 2
car prace: L0160 ft.
deck. 3 acres plus lllr
acre lake. Mint cond.
$120,000 firm. All new
drapes, tully ca~peted .
Built-in lc. TV. stove &amp;
refrig. See·throuah fire·
place.

SPIUD

742-21

CLUI

-HOUSE FOR SALE

liEN'S APPLIANCE

ng gas wells.
$4S,OOO

I'

· Mlddlepon,

FIYE POim, OHIO

Yonl lole. Oct. I IlL N . 7t3
Plno Ill. Rio - . 1oyoo

Will Video Tape
Weddings,
Birthdays.
Reunions, ltttariors
of Homes for
Insurance,

Electric . Also Parts
for All Makes.
CAU NOW

145 acres, barn,
bottom. hill land.
timber. 2 produc-

4 / l / 89/ rfn

I

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

We Service

RUTLAND TOWNSHIP

EVENINGS

Ilia clothing. liM cOMtortw, ·
~~·· and lll.a. Motor C.t

992-21

Makes-

HIGLEY FARM

BILL SLACK
992-226t

. 1111
Oct. 1, 1-3, Allin c~

,PAT HILl

985·4422

FOR SAlE

•I'IREWOOD .

•Mobile Home

We can r~ ond rt·
radiatan and
hlater cores. W1 can
alsG acill bail ond rod
out rodlatars. W• also
repair Gas Tanks.

614-992-5344

742-2455
Salam Stl~JI.~':!.

·•LIGHT HAULING

-·

SE~·ICE

L&amp;L TIRES

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

•SHRUB 8t TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

llothlnl of.Twtn Club Yard Solo: ·

Sot Oct. 7, •3:00p.m. uuvet ·
Clift Ill!· Grog I .lanot Ebiine,
Undor At. 7 bypoll, _ , big

SALE SUITS
SEPT. 29, 1989

Locat&amp;d Behind'
Trector Dealership

8/4/19-dn

CIRCetl,

"REI"

BEDROOM SUITES
DINEnt SETS
"NEW" RfCUNERS

614-985-4180

8· 20-tfn

6-5·'19-tln

bedaprM•.
llmpe.
dllhel, wicUi', nlcli neca loO
much to mention (Walch tor ·
Slgnol)

t•lna,

Mary lAyn.'l, AI. 7, Cheshire, ·
OH. OCt. 4,1,7,1. '"' p .... Rain

Mounted and Balanced

LIVING ROOM SIITES

out of

•Fill Dirt
742-2421

992-6&amp;7a

Ckllhlll, lntanla to ...... cur-

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

USED FURNITURE

FREE ESTIMATES
poht~,. Let me do
it or you.

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

Olgonlc Yord Solo: Cl F_,
oct. I, I. Th- Fri. ,..,_ 1:2
mil" out new 110 from Hokw. ~

RADIATOR ·

$30.00 a

9 · 23·89· t mo. pd.

LINDA'S
.PAINTING

•Limestonlt

•Mobile Home-

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

BOB'S
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

II. 124 lttw. .

ltow-.ILW1ilelll

OHIO Y

or 992-7121

TEMPSTAR

RACCOON VAUEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUI

•••AT _.................................... s2.25 •· .

OPEN: 9 am·ll pm Monday-Saturday

124, P-oy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

7-18·'89-ffn

GUN SHOOT

2221ast_,...n
POMEIOY, OH.

Drop 1y and Chtcli Out The lut Of
Our laking Staples For Your
Holiday Ntttls.

Rt.

4·25-tfn

CHOPPED DATES""'""..................." ••• '2 .4 7 lb.
FIUIT r.IX·GLACED ........................... suo lb.
GLACED PINEAPPLE .......................... '3.2 5 lb.
GLACED lED CHERRIES ..................... '3.50 lb.
DAB IAISINS _ ••.::..............~.·-·-· ... '1.70 •·
GOLDEN IAISINS-.. "········· .. ··:......... SJ.II •·
MACAIOON COCONUT
lb.
ANGR FLAKE COCONUT"................ SJ.6h.
S4.45 ..
WALNUTS IHalvu &amp; Pitcul """"""··· '4.2 5 •·

Roger Hysell
Garage

SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

CUSTOM BUH.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

MOBILE
HOME PARK

2, SoL tOol.

9i' 111 1 mo, pd.

g.a. 89-tfn

"At

droo- I IOidl or mlac. Fri. '"

992-9922 or 992-1221!1

.

.

Gonogo Solo: t044 5oconcl ....
lop ololh. Int.,., ST. Jr. -

5113/ 19 lfn

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Doilv Specials ·

All MAKES AND
MODELS

-IIIIOIIMIMIOIIIHIIIIIIIIIIII

Rd., 1!; Milo . . Rl. 211.

POMEIOY AND .DDLEPOIT'S ONLY
LOCAU Y OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

SWEEPER REPAIR

PECAN Pl£(15

clolhM, m~. 1 \t mi. on Kl'll»r

FifE LOUL DEUVERY

Business
Services .

•.

""""""············'1.74

-ly.

HOURS
Days A Week

LOWEST PRICES
IIGHEST QUAUTY

lt. 33 Nat lh of
Pa••royr '

.

-•RLT.T4
Wod., Thuro. .7 Lola
~
warnem,
chll._

MAIN STREET
---- PIZZA

docr11.
Tho following doecrihod
rul •tate 1ituete in the
Townthlp
of
Ch•ter,
County of Molgo and $Jato
of Ohio, bounded and do·
acrlbN u followa:
Situate in Ch•ter Town·
ahlp, Stete of Ohio, ond bo·
lng In Fraction 18. Section
20. T-n 4 North, Ron11112
Wnt of the Ohio Conlpony' t
Purch•e and being de.:;lbld • follows; Beginnlngalo point North87deg .
13' W•t 1&amp;1B foot ond
North 2 dog. 47' E•t obout
900 feet to • point at tho
Marlatta Rood (old State
Route 181) ond North 15
dog. 13' Wool about 202

992-7C79

Merchandise ·

2 Founlly Yord Solo: I nlilel

following dMcrlbed reel estate to the Plaintiff puriUint
to the partie&amp;' divorce

•Lot Rental•

54 Mlscellaneou11

.....,whalnotl.

992-5114

factory Cholte

WESAM CONSTRUCTION

tt llodl•on Avo., Thuredly,
Frldar, H, Childran'o ctolhoa.

Galllpolla
&amp; VICinity

At Jet. S.l. 7 I 143
On The lv·l'au

STiltnY fNFOIICEDI

BACKHOE/DOZER OPERATOR
Wa• Rate Varies
s10 to S22 Per Hour

Wt luy AI
Non Ferrous
•tals,
. Plastics,
Stainless Steel.

Yard Sail

9 a.m.- 7 p.m.

12 Ga119' ShofguM Only

WANTED

7·

1

c..,..
EVElY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

Help Wanled

Ill-COUNTY
RECYCLING
POMEROY, OHIO

99

LUCK'S
BEANS
•••••
~'L5 2
BUSH'S
: .
WHITE HOMINY ••••w:.:1. ~I 69C
LIBBY'S PUMPKIN .e~~f1•·····
GENEIIC EUOW
·
j
MACARONI ••
.,_CAN HI.S
.
~
CAKE IIIIXES •••• e~ ~e!~':.~;
BmY CIOCDI m
~
FROSTING
FRIED APPLES
ui1
••
~•••
CHAIMIN
BATHROOM TISSUE :J•w-.s.
••

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
JAMES WILBURN
WOLFORD
Plaintiff
VI
CHARLOTTE ANNE
WOLFORD
Defandont
CASE NO. 87-DR-283
NOTICE IV
PUBLICATION
To Cherlotte Anne Wolford, whon place of ,..~
dence Ia unknown. you •r•
hereby nottfed thet you ere
nomad Defendant in 1 logal
oction antltlad Jomoo Wll·
burn Wolford, Plaintiff vo.
Ch•lotte Anno Wolford,
Defondont. Thit IC1ion h•
been aalaned c.e number
87-DR -283 In the Court of
Common Plou of Malgo
County,
Pomoroy. Ohio
45788 . There It pending in
Uid lctlon. 1 Motion fllld by ·
Mlko Mulen. orlgln..ly. lald
Motion lo Ml for ,_lng on
the 3rd d81' of November,
11118 It 10:30 a .m. In the
Malgo County Common
Pleeo Court. Sold Motion it
for 1n order conveying the
0-dant' 1 lntor•t In the

Salem

I

e•••e•e•••eUf1•··•·· 9 9 c

'

'

A_.tt 11th. 1132. and ••
corded In tho Melgo County
R-rdt of Deodt. being •
peri of the IMM
oonvoyad by S.t
11n·
bury and 0 . E. 111nburv to
Dwight Mutchl• by deed
dated Auguot 1tth. 1832,
recorded In Deed look 128,
at P - SM. Rocordo of
Deodt of Meigo County,
Ohio.
ALSO lAVE AND EX·
CEPT 1 poroll ofl.,d begin·
nlng It the South (at
oor- of o.rtrude Rupe
land; thonoa Eottorly ..ong
the Uno of Gertrude Chota
land 211 rodo to o atone;
thonca In a Northerly dirac·
lion 17 rodo. moro or Ilea. to
a atone: thence in 1 w.t.ty
diroction 211 rodt; thence In
a Southerly clrlctlan 17
rodo, more or
10 placo
of beginning. containing 3
ecr•. more or lela.
Thla deed It to convoy
22.70ocr•.
REFERENCE DEED: Vol·
umo 214, Page 231 ond Vol·
umo 283. Pogo 411 of tho
Moigo ' County Deed Ro·
cordo . ·
Said rMI •tete
approioad 11 •17,000.00.
S•le ol •ld rHI llt111 IO
be for not ·••• tt.n tw•
thlrdo (2/3) of tho aforlllid ,
appraload valuo.
Said olio lo aubjact to •P·
provol by the Common PIOM
Court. Molga County, Ohio.
JAMES M. SOULSIY,
SHER.IFF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
APPROVED:
Patrldo H. O'Brlon
Attorn., for Plolntlff
(81 27: (101 4, 11. 3tc

CHESTD, OHIO

JENNIFER SMITH

TIMOTHY M: SPmES JR.

Public N Olice

VI.

e..

.

thi1 onfln ence it llerel:ly
ropallod.
Sac. IV. Thot thla ordi·
nance il herebv decl•ed to
be an emergency in that
superveaory peraonnel ere

,

are

conoldorad and continued
from d8y to day untM finally
diopoaad of.
· Any peroon lntarMtad
m8y fllo wrlnan axoeptlono
to aold - n t • or 10 mott·
et'l -lnlng to the uacu·
tlon of the tru111, not IMI
th•n five di!YI prior to the
d111 Ill for hoorlng.
Robort E. luct. Judge
Common ,.._ Court,
.1• .• ""bate Dlvlaion
• -go County, Ohio
1101 4, 1tc

I

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE OIVISIOI\I
MEIGS c~w'iTY. OHKl
IN THE MA
R OF I
SETTLEMENT OF
.
ACCOUNTS.
'
PROBATE COURT.
,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Accounto ond vouchrf. of
tho fol-lng nomad II cl·
arl• hiiVI Men filed i the
Pro- Court, Mel go C~lln­
ty, Ohio, for -•oval and

n:ceptiona

time llid IICODUntl wll be

'

ORDINANCE
NO . 1215-88
An Ordinanceeatablla hing
the poallion of Recreation
Director and •tabllalling
thenlery.
Be It ordained by tho
.Council of tho Vlllogo of
Middleport • foil-a:
Soc. I. thot tho poo•ion of
Ra«eotian Dirlctor ahall be
deol•ad 1 port· timo poo.ion
frornSopt. 18,1989through
Decombor 31. 19811. with
tho filing thla poollion working on ov~ of

rector ohell ho 1435. DO por
month.
'
Soc. Ill. Thot eny o&lt;cl·
neo.:. ·in conflict ·with

Unl••

filed' theroto, Uid eccountt
ho for ....lng before
oold Court .., tho lth d8y of
November, 1 •••· at whlclo

I

Public N utica

Soc. II. Thet tho aalery of
t11a part· lime R-aatian Dl·

_,._,
w•

I

• Soid lola Ia tubjiiCI to OP·
provol by the Common PICourt, Malgo County. Ohio.
JAMES M. SOULSBV,
SHERIFF
,
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
APPROVED:
Patrick H. O'Brien
Attorney for Plaintiff
(D) 27: (10) 4, 11, lite
·

_ . , houro , ..-

Annuol-ntof.leoolihoL
Sheca. G -.. of theE-•
of Ollw• E. loll\', on ln....,.

forOI from ond- the-·
IIIII dote • -idad by low.
PMoad tho 211th d8y uf
lept-bor1IU.
I
Att-: Jon P. luck. Clorlt1
DOW8y M. Horton.
Protidont of ~ountol
(10)4,11,2tc
•

~praitMfv•We.

f

IContinued from Pogo 101

c:::,e.

REFERENCE D.EED : Vo·
luma 30&amp;, Pogo &amp;87, Melgo
County D - Rocordt.
Slid rool aatllo ap·
proitod 11 U2,1 00.00.
Silo of ooid roll -1110
bli for not tw1 1hlin twothildt 12/ 3) of tho afor•ald

'

The

Public: Notice

· - lmmadotaly for tho
_.tlan of •-aation programe within tho
.... v. Thla
anco

·

•

Ohio

Public N otlce

Announcements'

FALL SH RTS AND
M·ATCHING· TOPS

·~~

,·.~

-~

.any commU~ member to enter.

Public N Ollce

IN THE.
ong 10.84 - · • • -· EX·
COMMON PLEAS COURT CEPTING ond RESERVING
OF MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO an -omont to tho Stall of
BANK ONE, ATHENI, N.A. Ohio • rwcord8d In Volume
Ploinliff 210, PalM 173 and 190,
:~ County _Doed AI·
HERBERT 8 . MILLER , ot ol ..
ALSO, tho following real
·•
Dtfondonto ntata
oiluitod In tho County
CASE NO. 89-CV• 140
of
Meig~
, In the Stat• of
LEGAL NOTICE
Ohio. •nd in the TOWn·
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
ahlpo of BEDFORD and
REAL ESTATE
Ao Sheriff of Meigo ORANGE.
PARCEL NO. 1 : The fol·
County, Ohio. 1 haraby offor
for oola at 10 :00 A.M. on lowing reel •tate eitueteln
-•d8y. Nov. t , 1888, lheTownohlp of BEDFORD ,
on tho front ttapa of tho County of Malgo and StOia
Meig~ County Courthou•. of Ohio. ond of the Ohio
Pomoroy, Ohio, the follow· Compiny· a Purch•e and
d•cribed M follow a. to·wtt ;
ing d•cribec:l rtll lltMe;
Siluote
In BEDFORD Beginning 80 ...... nonh of
and ORANGE
TOWN· the aouthe•t corner of Sec~
SHIPS, County of Moigo and tion 6. Town 3, and A1nge
13; thonco north to the con·
SUite of Ohio, to--wit ;
tar
of the nction; thence
The followino reel •t•t•
loellad
In
BEDFORD w•t 40 rodl; thence aouth
TOWNSHIP, Meiga County, to 1 potnt due west of ttlrt·
Ohio. In Soctlon No. 6 , ing point; thence e•t to the
T-n No. 3. Range No. 13 place of beginning. containand dMcrlhod 01 followo: ing 20 acres. more or less.
PARCEL NO . 2 : The 11&gt;1·
Being the remainder of the
towing
d•cribed'rul eatate
twanty-oix end flfty·lix huh·
dradtho
(28.681
ocr•. oltuato In tho nonhwoot
SAVE and EXCEPT 3 ocrot quo!for of Section 35.
dead to Addie Shumway. Townahip 4 North. Renge
The Mid rul 8ctete con- 12 W.t. being ORANGE
veyed herein i1 further d• TOWNSHIP, Maigo County.
acrlbed • follows: Bounded Ohio; Beginning II the S.W.
on the north by land of Al- corneroftheN .W. querterof
blrt Day and Milo E. Section 35; thence eott 100
Guthrie; on tho oat by AI· rodl to Wm. Rankin lend:
blr1 D81' and Milo E . Guth· thence north 73 roda to a
rie; ' on the south by Harry Sblke on the south aide of
Swartz end B. F. Permtltt the road; thence Iouth · 77
and on the w•t by Aide cleg. wut 36 rod&amp; to a atake
on the Iouth tide oft he road;
Whoi81' Vodor.
Alao, beginning at the thence ooulh 81 dog. Wtlt
line of
center of- the road two rodl 74 roda to the
w•t of the iouthaaat corner the oactlan; thence oouth 28
of the northeMI quarter of rodl and 20 Iinke to tho
Section li. Town 3 ond p i - of beginning. contoln·
Range 13; thence west 38 lng 33-146/160 acrM. Also
rodl to 1 stake; thence north beginning at a ateke on the
B5 dog. WMt 6
ond 4 Townohlp line 28 rodo and ·
Iinke to a stake; thence south 20 links north of the Iouth- :
71 deg.
6 rods end 18 wett comer 'Of the north·
lin lea; thence tMt 38 rods to - • quener of Socdon 35;
the center of the road; thence nonh 9 rod&amp; to the
thence 1outh 1VJ rod&amp; to center of the road; thence
a southe•terly direction
plec~ of ~inning, conq.in!long the c~ter of the road

20%

'~i·

'

Public N Ollce

Octoba' 4, 1989

Wednuday, Oc:toblr 4, 1989

Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE -The Mission
Church in Syracuse will be
having revival through Sutiday
at the church beginning at 7 p.m .
nightly. The church Is located on
Cherry St. just off Route 124
North. Tum right on the ~xt
street past the tire station.
Pastor Mark Morrow invites the
public.

'·

''

&amp; VIcinity

37117.

s....

4 mo., lomolo dog. 112 Bluo
Australlan.HMierl Mlnillure ColIll. Exc. hunting/finn dog.
Hou-c.lncl.fl4-441-21llll.

4 family Vard
R.ln or
lhlnt. 1:00..1 :00. Fo,... Run Ad,
behind Block Plont. Follow

11-.:ll and Whtt1 JNirl Tem.r, •
montho Old, :lOUT~ ul.
14.

Road, flrtl houN.

Spring A~•.,

Clonnlum
.....
. _.. IDr palling,
bring .....

bide. karoaene huler, blcydea,
clolh-.etc.

algna.
David Brtw.r'a Sllversvlua. ""· IMdlum
old pupploo,
•
•whht,
aln dogs, 114- Oct. 3rd,4oh,51h. tum right C.R.
317.0111 or 114-317·7711. ·
31, Por111nd. Righi Brawer

·-lng

_ . _ ond oolf. ,.l-171561111.
Cuddly ldltono, lolo ot c lrom, ·~pad. calico, • mlxad.
Very tionclly. I14-256-171S.
Smal black ond whMo hooglo
mil ~og. Vory lrlondlr alHI

.... .,... ~-371-2543.

6

Lo1t &amp; Found

Fridtr, Oct. I, 1:00-S:OD. 103 /

Glil•nllcl

Pomeroy. Bunk

Oc:t.5th,6th,7lh. ·

MOdem Woodmen end Meek '

Sto10, ln1ldl 8ur111'1ghom. NOIIh .
At.33. 1:00-4:00. Food on Sot.
U5 ond lt.OO/bag.

�1989

Page 12-The Oeily _Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

...................
••••
wanted to Buy

9

--

-

44

HOUMhold

KlTN'

72 Tnlekl ror Sl'll

·-- .:::..Dt..-...

Goocla

Coli LMy Uwoly 114-

111•1~
t14....
' " ' 414
- t1tl.
-·

•

......

~:~

'u.od 1uml11ft. lnd houMIIold

21MI.

Phone

~

•

. !VINING

-··to. . ..
__ .,._._

1114 Dotoon llulmo,
...._,

Employment Services

1:00. ~ Mild

.

otn

14,181.

W.v• 304 112 2145.

I' I I F 1·i
1:

SPITY

Quill (0:30)

be-" Urtone

., ... olor 1:00, -

ANYONE CAN APPLY! o..,...
lood -Me~.. us chorgo. Ewllh bod ...... No .... rofuud.
C.U 211 125 IM ext. U2501.
AIION I All Anao I llhlrloy
Speon. 304-87$.1421.
AVON • .U . . _ Col Mo&lt;llyft

tile I "cCa-

~~ eoo 111 ea
Cll OINt Amel1can lanbll

CZl 0 •• aUI olunlor High

1117 •100
ollondod
Olb, - ·
1 - prlood
...... .

H._, Wanted

M

WID.. OCT. 4

~

1111
. . . 4:10: .....
1114 Chowolot I loll., 1171
KlwiiOld
- · tWO Cltlllon, -

114-74~

Uood lumlluro br 1ho plooe .,
on11re ho111ollold oolllng.
114-742•2455.

11

"
-"

...... ~wdM.a.e . . .
---114-fG-

""' 1140 ..... ~ oondlllon.
CMh Pllld. cal 114 12 1157 or
114-4112-2411 .
~

Television
Viewing

HERE'S TI4E WORLD WAIN
F~YIN6 ACE 51TTIN6 NE&gt;~T
TO A BEAUTIFUL FRENCH LASS

HE MUST THINK OF
SOME WAV TO 6ET HE:R
ATTENTION .:.

H 0 C K E I,.
1---!i
•
I..._....l.--"·rr-1.;.,l~r-;
__,___.__ -

·· birth lither
unexpactedly
appears .
Thames: adoptiOn, family.

WOULD MADEMOISELLE

My 8011 1eained a 'Wluable
lealon from playinq epolla. He
--~..
aays (l8!lple admtre a good
r----::--:-~:--:---, . loser as king as it -- ·- .

INIItl;l

CARE FOR ONE-EIGHTH
OF A DOUGHNUT?

1!1....,_ 0111 TV (0:30) 1;1
eiD ANtt Clltllllh
1B ChiMe In

I' I I I' .I I I

Chafae

11) ......
• ~can Mlgulntl
1:011 Cll leVIII) Hlltll•ll

"There . are TWO sides to
every dispute ...and I've given
you both, dear!"

TARPYN

1::10. !II 01 NIC Nlgh!IJ Newa
. Cli
(0:30)
(I)
(I) AIC N-.1;1
~..., lteclllc
a.2-1c-l;l

b o - 12x10. Slovo,
ro~taeralor, A.C., IC1ol oloc1rlc.
Qool CINn condhion, und.,_.
pinned, wlnttrfud. Roody lc Quill 0n1 ' bad room unfu,..
move ln. At New Hnen. $$000. nl- opt, "'C:i'hbcrllood,
Ntw.ftce end
required,
304-412·2411.
.......... mcnlh,
..711-1660.
In lroobdall, Ftorido. lnctudoo
Rog- Inc. 2BA, 1111·· now
lei. Cllll14-f1112.10111.
ptull!ba, polnl,
Would you like 1 new mobl.. 1111111
oily pold. t17111mo.
homo boloro Wlnlo&lt;l Coli UO II Coil
1'1..104.
•
1-IQ0.7zt.4045. W. to~o riding
mowreN, lrteton. motorcyc'-a. Smlll fum. houoo. oUIIIblo lor 1
IUtomobi,.l end trucb on or 2. 114-4411-0331.
lrodo.
1W1n Rhrora T-r--llouolng lor
lho Eldorly, Nondlcoppod ond
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
DlubtH.
Loclltd
nHr
downlown
Polnl
PINIInl,
1 ocro - 0111100111 Fo"" clly ph... 304-e75-1171. Eqllll
....... 30H75--2122. Houolng Oppot1unlly.
II CRy Schoclt, 5 Upper River Rd. :Z apt. upei•lr,
IOWn,t- 2br ltove, ref., w•t•r, ~r1HIIIJII
1
,..,_, ~111110, aood- picKup.
Dooooh roq d. 1
olloo. ..... llWil-11110.
downttelrl, 2br, Wllsr, g~~rbl,g•
hhton. biiUiilul onl ICN loti plck·up. 614-1411-3140.
whh rlvo&lt;lronl190, public wolor. Upotll'!t unlurnlohod opt. Co~
'Ciydo
Jr. 304-a71.:1331,
S

HELJI WANTED: TYPIST. Mull
oblo to typo 10 wpm.
Kno ...dgs of word proc..alng
!lolplul. Knowtodgl
ol
modlcolfl&gt;lychll1ric:
..,.
mlnoiOVY
p,.lorred.
Sond
re•urM or call Sendrl Me·
Farlend, Personnel otftctr,
Woodland Ctnters, Inc., 412
Vlnlon ' Pike, Clllllpollo, ON
45631, 114-4411-1500. Wcodllncl
Cenlef11 ll 1 EEOI.AA action
omptcyor ond d - no1 cflo.
crimlnate on the bule ol
religion, fiCI, color, 111, age.
nolfonot origin, hlncllclp e&lt; .,.
bo

oq...,_,.

\obt.,y ·- Geese - Scout- BIOUBfl- OURSELVES
Oldja _, notice that what we complain about moat
in other people is what we don1 like about OORSE·
LVES?

IWwallour (1 :00)

IP.

CMifY.

Hair Stylist w1nted: for Hllr
Happening
Slkan.llconoo
Full or.
_ _._ Styling
llltllgor11

=.,:or""-.......

1-.

,

Real Estate

31 Homes for Sale

pet.cl. JIIIO Pita. lnqull'll 1t 300

building

lalo,

mobl'- home~. permitlecf. public
wit•, prtc. reduced, Clyde
Iowen, Jr. ~71-2331.
TllrM 4 acre tract• OWMt financing $100. down. 10 acrn MIL,

ounvu.. Raad, 304-175-7887.

Woodland. 132 acr11, $31,000,
fit. 7. below Eur.U. Cell 11..
....._.411tlllf 7 p.1n.
t

JV ond V.rolly a.-loodo&lt; otf.
vtoor. II lnl.,.,od coli Chlrloo
Moon, Prlnclool Eaotom Sc...........hzo, 8:Q0.3:fl).

ei:i

ai-

45

Ho..,.: M.T.W. 10:00
t,r;:.:.~:l1 :00 to

--Ind.

Furnished
Rooms

lmlll, ••,.....
$80;
Woodin trunk r.torN, m;
Fruttwood te~~e~rt Nproductlon,
Fumlahed tftlcltncy, 111 utllltiH 115; I red. Flrnta dlnftlt Jllat.1,
paid, ahare bath, $135/mo.• tta 110 tech; 1 IIChool bench, 111.
814.......1031.
Socond Avo.I14-4411-3Mll.

Room• tor rtnt • WHk or month.
StartinG It $120/mo. Gat/11
Hotol.f14-4411-i580.

MasonWV.

J-.

Ooclooionll ltoby olllor lor I

honcllcop child, SYIVI1

3CM·T1'3-1140 Of 'T'J'W541.

ou lold wo4l pumpor. Bodlonl
T - I p or Addloon T - I p
Roull. Fumllh own !ruck. Ex·
,.,..noe
nteMUf'Y.
MaU

-q u i - ·""h_....., ...
10: Crt-. Inc.,
13113 Ionon Dr., Cto..r.nd, Oh
44131.

3 br, llrM 1 112 011!10
frofll At. 7, EuNka, 0H 304-e'f&amp;.

5104
4 bulroom houM, 1·112 bath.

on Grovot Hill, Mldd!Opcn, Ohio.

Olnogo.
tmmodllle
CIR ~~~
.. 7'14. - -·
Point - - Buol- ~
tll&gt;lllhmonl ..... limo 5 roomo ond both. lull-In
jonhorlol holp, OI&gt;P"'•i-oly
11).12. hro por

::"A ovonlng

131.
. aona
to 1oo a.ae .... Pcinl
Pl-nllloglol_~.- Moln 81,
hourW.

Ito-.

4 bod.- br1r:ll,
-~~~. llr!IO yord. Clunvlllo Rd.
I.Noo, dipoolt, .roloronc:oo,

~-7117.
monlh (lncludu gu) 304-

porch. S13,500. N•ldl IOmll
Npo~.

Commen:lll apace, 1400 aq.tl.
Comer Socond ond Plno. Ampll I!!'!!""'-.
port&lt;log. Coll814-441-42•11. ·232:5, or 411 4421.

Coumry -

Homo Pork,
AoUIO 31, North ol P-roy.

LOIO,.!!nltlo, porto, ootoo. Coli
••4-·7471.
s _ , tato llclng 81. Ri.
onllrgollnn-20 mhoonolloo lrornlclloiPngloclol
110, - c-ory,lcl
to rood. No.
Vlnlon
nl Momorlll
138.
$100. 814 388 1811.

814-192·2383 or 814-11112·

Dofocllve.

-=. 1-

Exportonco

.... but not To
Trolnlng
-rom.
write to: SW.llanagl!, Nu
r
43, •1300 lourel CIIW Rd.,
Ponwor, ONo 45711.
Someonllo ellep over in home
o4 • . - , tidy no work or core
hawOiwa~ ptiiH ...,, MWna
wage 1nd rerr.nc•• In ftl'llt . .
~~ w1r1o to Boo P·ZS, coN ol
""'"' _ , ROQiotor, zoo
Main St, Pt. Pn •• wv 25550.

T--

HARTFORD ·I , _ , ltolh, opP'OL 4 ocroo. WOOl Pclnl Rood.
m,ooo. cau Collod, 1..14-212-

304--g37-2018.

11211
Uko now '39R homo. 10"" now,

56 Pets for Sale

Want to wlntlf 100.200 cow.,

:!yr. citl. Aol Ttrrlor, 2 yr. old
IOmoll Rot T-r11 8 wlc. Old All
T.,_ flnlllo, SoU llllogll1ho&lt;.
114 4113413.

AKC Roclot- -

hiVI hay lnd IIC flcllitiNJ. Clfl
Mor~•

wv.

_.

~~· 114-141-81134 .. 114-

AKC rogtot- -~~ Ccclcor
lplnlll, butt color, I monthe
old, houoo lrllnod, 1100. 171.:1421.
Aull1roliln C.Uio Dogo, PuPI!:
Non Rogl- EliO.- &amp; ·
po-ago. Fomltoo 121; Motoo,
11311; lob li.vono Hlckiin Volley
Ranch. 114......1821 0111 lft•r
lp:m.
Dnlgonwyncl Conery Konno!.
Pertlan,

llameH

end

Hlmoloyon klnono. Chow llud

•rvlet.
p.m.

114-441-3144 after 7

Farm, Rt. 35, t'llny,

137-2018.

romodolod1 . wllh

388.,711 .

Situation
Wanted

Bobyolftlng In my homo, 2·3
mltoo Irani Moopllll. Will
give reflnlnc•. 11......,.2317.
H•v• room, baird and Mre tor
oldorly.
Aoloonoblo,
In
Pomoroy. l14-112-4;801.

oulornollc, 71,000 1011111

mll"i $511. 114o+ti-Ot41.
1177 Pontile: Sunblrd, 4 cyl,
oulo, ntno aood. body good,
1710. 30W7f..53N.
1171 cadttloc Sodon DIVI!to,
everythlrv~ txc aond
woll molnlornoct:'"8a,ooo mttoo:

ji1~18~1~~~~}i
ltdan.
302V8.

1983 Camero Z21 305 1uto, PS,
PB, olr, cnrloodl~, T·Top, now
ot.,_, SI,IOO. ;ou4·o711-2311.
mar-

ching, 1 lor ooncort. Boldwln
ora•n wtbuln ln tun mechlne.
11~-1411-1471,
614-245-50e7,
114.:1411-5311.
Iundy Alto Sox,
304.,7111112.

Lovl"l Mother, w/24 )'Nf'l of
••P· chlldctre, will babyslt In
my homl, Mon-Sit, d •O"· d1y
&amp; •fl•moon time! Ctll thlr
ep.m. &amp;14·381-1121 In VInton
ar...
·

ssao.

W• care tor elderly and hlndlct~pDICf In ow hom~~. 21 r•rs

experlence. LPN on CIA. Low

1NI Chryolor Filth Avo. tlrM, Drlced to ..U. Call bet·
...,.11.m.-lp.m. 114-3714114.

__ .,. - ..

18 Wanted to Do

(I)
lieu

Wlntllrlzlng

TraveiiO North Carollnl to

- ·-ury

booo
HXD MOtor. Ex·
.... - · - · C o l .......
114-ttMISl.

llll

Kingdom Dean and Ridge
light lor 11'11 rights ol 11'11
zoo's bllon ..Q
MOvtl: lltl!=k -

76 ' Auto Pana &amp;

0-

Acc:eiiOI'Iel

eo
IRI (2:00)

4,_....,_,_,_
.....-...

POOR lOY Tllll8, .w7ll- .

1B MOVIE:

---,.,....__

1m eo...
ChlmDion. -P
"'-oil,
4 ...,_.oock otcvo,

ac.-ac:t...
1:00(1)- Brunewlck World
· Opan 9-Ball Chll'(lpiOnahipa,
Men's Sornl·ftnol2, Varner vs

or 114-2111-1111.

11111
,_...
....po&lt;.
15,141-. *.f71-2135.
.,:

Strickland lrorn Las Vegaa,

([) e (J) An,.,... lui Low
NV

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP:
1 1
I LL DeF6ND101HE
WELL, t CXJN'r A6i&lt;£e

'•

I

:
FOlly Troo Trimming; ....... :
Nmovll. CIU 304-176-f331.

othor brondt.- colla,- •
oomo oppllonco _,,., WV .
304-17W311 Ohio 11._ .

1414.

ROIIrJ' or ooldo loot drilling. ·
• .,plolod ..... dly. .
PuniP lnd oorvlcl, ·
low·VIC

alllioh ..... .....
:tlll10 10 ....,... -

l

---~~~

'!

1 " " . . . .. : :

Ho-.

SHE LIKES
TH' l'lltSONAL
TOIICH

([) e (J) CNna IMcll An

unfailingly chaerlut Red
Cron workor gall everyone

.AO.ETS

• pen j)ll.
~Maws

B...tco, . .

Examine 11'11 growing
demand lor tong·lenn health
care In Amertcs lnd the
phyalcll, emotional and
llnanc:lat presauraa laced by
the fralllidllly., (1 :00)

~~· lnd clollvory. .... : :

:
Astro-Gr8ph p~k:IIOns lor the year
lhoad b' rMIIIng $1 to Aatro-Greph,

c/o lhil ,_.,..,.,., P.O. Box 81428,

Co~ot'o

Plumbing
lndHoltlng
Fountuncl PTno
CIIIIIDOIIo, Ohio .
114-44HMI'

C-.nd, OH 44101· 3428. Be oure IO
stale your zodiac lllgn.
(OoU4 Now. 22) Yooj'relikely 10 ~ In a gregertoua mood today and
lhla Ia and good, pro'llded you re-'
111*1. Ra Umltallons. EnJoy you....rt, but
try to lilave the party before yoUr coach
turns Into 1 pumpkin.
.

acOIII'IO

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

8AGITTARIU8 (Now. ZI-Doa 21) Rewards will al1end your ""'blllone IOdoy,
provided you havothe wlllpowwto atk:k
to what you lnHiate. OlllriiCIIona by
pleuurable dNoralon1 could dllh your
" - upon the rockl.
CAI'IIICOIIN (o.o. ...,.,_ 11) The
high oatoam In which you hold your
~ - . lnd oplnlona 11 tolerable,
but ju8l ~ careful lllal you don'! be- '
.come too VOCII todaJt regarding your:
Pu.- your ""'btllon1 In the
dillpprovallor what olhert think.
yoar lhoad, eapecillly the onee you AOUAIIIU8(.1111. 20 Felt. 11) Colllcllve
lhetved In the · r-aJ be; • you WI .
11M* Nita an
they - . (Uel wtlhfulll*lldng. You'.re
you lllould do qu111-lodaJt. A fly In
now 1n a-.....,. m-t can W: . 11'11 Olntntlfll could be gelling hooked•
come roallltll.
on ~hlng 11181 II purely pte In the
UIIIA(Iapl.. Oat.•)Somaootewho lllty.
.
.
II Pill tlly t1 , _ dllllllllght malte an PIICII. (Felt. 20 Mr Cll20) You'll dill
Don't be-" w.l6c11Wil) wllh yow-. routiM ~ns
m
..,_Ill obllglliOn 11 lodaJt, buill an fllua gets too weighty,
10 1111111 11111 you 11111&lt;1 this lnCIIYtdual
you might not ~able to cope with llui
llllr* you don't want R. Ubrl, 1-1 readly, H 81111.
•
youraertto a birthday (11ft. Send tor wow _ AIIU (Mirell 21·Aprll 11) Evani

and•VDII

''a Uph \1 -- .
=" =""Cll:-. , - ,.
:!:.!.':It
2

lh

&amp;Ill

=
I

1;1

1!1 Can, Allord To Grow Old

on,._. CrMk Rei. Pute. aupo . .

IIIW

WraMII (PG131

(2:00)
IIINI&amp;hvlleNaw
1::10 ([) • (J) Ooo(Jle
M.D. When Doogle'a lolkl go
out ollown, he ls_eenuaded ,
to throw a porty. 1;;1
10:00 Cll TOO Club With Pet
lhlur1aon
.
([) L.MMe P1o llowllnll T-

:

-·

oullvolor,

8 MOvtl!: The

I SHORE
WOULDN'T HOOK
OL' BOSSIE UP
TO ONE
OF THEM

Ron'o TV Sorvlco, -lollzlng ·
_,,. :

Dovlo

Jake Ia anlgntld 10 cte11 up
the murder ol a policeman.

BARNEY

In Zonllh -

..,...

ea Jalle And The F -

. ..

!

celabraUng Columbus

GJ Tllllll To Cora
0 Lally King Litre!

•

·
:
·

. . . 11,11111 .... booll • d,
ong!M,_, I1MI7·11•

100-·. . . . --·-· f:tJ1
"" =n:&amp;'t:t:'·

special

D = llhnic mulllt:
re
the arrival of all
Immigrants to theae shores.
(1 :00)

l

·.

Pefloln•tce AI

The White HouM Prelldant
and Mra. Buoh holt IIIII

DIDN'T6AY IT1HAI
WAY AT ALL.

SAY sc::IYSTHIN&amp; STUPID."

..._ Loal,...• cralumlahed. .

""-.
··~···---~~­
'CIIIvlt.

Mo- parting hie aoup to lind a piece ol
•
chicken on the bottom ...

~ (!lin

I 'U.. BE::T 'VOL-TAIRE

DSAn-1 '1CIUR Ri&amp;HI TO

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
U - 1 1 - Nllllono guo,.._ :

-110 Cl, Pull·
,..,.,.
1N1
t old,
..,., ...........

truck• for ....

Merty mull deal with hl1
IHitngl toWII'd hll gotgeOUI
Iotter daughter. 1;1

Improvement•

11~11~-0IR

(PI 2 01 2)

clallmalss. C

bulli ~· turnooo, 111otntou
11111
• - tank and watlr
up.
.. IIOIIY, aood II,..
with opo,., NOll. f14=2H-1501

, _ · - ·· Coil collocl 1·
114.:117-0411,
cloy or rilghl. A o
gerelalllftlnt
W.llrpnlollng. .
C. W. - . Plumlilng I
ti'Mehlnl. for lill - - • dNin

· by THOMAS JOSEPH

~

8:05 (I) MOvt!: au,- TregeciJ:
The IIOry 01 Jim .
(3:12)
8:15el)l 01 NIC laaaltalll;l
1::10 (I) • (J) Head 01 The Clua
Eric end Simone secretly
wish to dele lholr new

li71 ~mon Trovol Troltor,
lono Exc. oondlllon.
U,IOO. lll-317.0.47, 11~7·

Home

_,n-

o':;,:,C:U t.-,.
1

+10832
+7

CROSSWORD

12:30)

WITH 'rQJ I!!IJI;;At5
VOLTAI~~ID. ..

.KIO ..

Here is an Interesting exercise in
SOUTH
parlneritbip bidding. North's takeout
+2 .
double proml8ed 111pport for all unbid
•suz
suits, and If North held four bearts,
t A6
that suit ·would be a good one 10 play
+KQ10162
ln. Bui South was not about to bid
Vulnerable: Both
bearts with four small w~n be bad
Dealer:
West
such a sti'OIIg club suit. However, after
be bid three clubs, North cue-bid lbree
Soo..
Nor..
spades - a stronB game-try. Now
I+
Dbl.
Soulh bid bis hearts. (After all, North
J+
Pus J+
eould have four bearts.) North knew
••
Pus 5+
betler than 10 allow South to languish
there. He bid five clubs.
Opening lead: +K
WbeD !be lead was made, declarer
WOIIdered to bimllelf wily North ba4
not -:~Y bid three 110-trump. But hand), lhe clelertders coukl do no better
splh
was DOt 10 be cried ov.er. So than cash two beart tricta and tHo
be dummy's ace of spades and give declarer a sluff and a ruff with
ruffed a spade. He played two rounds the lead of either a spade or a
of clubs ancl.tbe A·K-Q of diamonds, . diamond.
throwing a heart away. He tbea ruffed
Lesson: Even wben the. contract
the last spade from dummy and got off loota bopelesl, don't Clve up. Somelead with a beart. With the lucky Ue of . times tbe cards lie In just tbe right
the hearts (A·Q doubleton In tbe W~t way to allow you 10 succ:eed.

Ill Cllun:ll . _ llallori

Sit.

81

·

t1J PtllneNewa

111.15,

0411.

e a .,._.,a

I

coaatllne. 11:00}C

- - Cllnyo.·
-101H.
Quldo (I) -.-.otl
......

72

Advantunl
e (J)jGIOIIIIIIJ
P1llna In

lui~Ume

.I I .I w.l• hrvloL lulmmlng
IIOVIRNMINT IEIZIDIMWIII
froln 1100. Fonl. M.. a1dl1• ........
- - - · Colll14'

•• Lf I~ 1..

IS NIC ' I I rbel:

follow 11'11 baltiH OYIIt'

-

85 G1111ra1 Hauling

for Rent

=
(2:00(

e (J)

Loa 11112 It -

RE·TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 53 Jock- Plko.
Colt 514-IC6-1317. flog. No. 11111-10551.

Apartmant

.TopCenl
7::11 (I) lllniOid And Son
8:00 (J) MOYIE: ,_Female

•.

Ellc:lrlcal &amp;
Refrigeration

44

•
I

Heating ·

Schools &amp;
Instruction

Chrlollon Lody would llko lo do
IMtl&gt;yoliUng In my homo. Holzor
..... 114-446-0151..
'
Mloo Poull'o Doy Core Conior.
Solo, llktrdlblo, ·· ...,
1 o.m. • 5:30 p.111. 114-10.
. . - . , ollor oohool: DrotHno
wal::amL 111 4• 1224.

i

ol colega. Carol owka
omployrnent. C
~ 1!1 CoilleMng Anlirlclt

IOATEA8:

INI Ford LTD, 12,100.l104-171o t_P'I"..oi.~:Nn'N'?e'.t=R=.
4410.
Jooluoon, ON 1.-&amp;37-tiZI.
1111 T·llrd, ~ ong., AC,
82 Plumbing &amp;
~:,w~~~ 3481. ' , _ IIIH.
. . . Plymotfth ......
PSIP8, ot.Colrono, AC, tNI nloo

Income homl. Cell 014-992.e873
•her 7;00 p.m. ~ more Information.

IIJ
lllw
1B Night Court

Motor Homes

••ooo.

dor

•!:·'~11;1 .

I

•

Floh Toni&lt;, 2413 Joclllon Avo. ~~cod on lnopoctlon, . . .. !lilt 1fl!dnt BP Ill lold - · 11oM, Wllor tonk, olnk,
Polm - · 304-41711-2013, 10 ::58::0:::·.,.,....,--:::-,..---:-....,..., owntna.t... cvor poymen~. 114got Ill up .t14.te ond 10 got 1171 Hondo Civic, ntOdo polm MH0'17.
,
mtchonlcllly ifood, NOO. 114compltto t43.25.
Full blc:oded Boxer puppiH, 441441 !.
.
11HSHII7.
1180 Iobeii, lcyl., loeb 1•::,
Serv1ces

Musical
lnatruments
2 Clarine.. for u•, 1 tor

~

&gt;
&lt;
~
.....

Plecl1lon Moblll M.tne. loft.
dod. 114-:llt sm.

71 Autos for Sale
1117 Pon:ll,.TD. 310 auto, kit•·
lor, portocll Eldro po~o, reotoroblo. Alldng
~
1112.
=,.-::,..--::h-~::-._,---,1-c-cyllo:-..,_
1171 Ply,_, -•••

7:011 (I) Jellenonl
7:30 W l'llmiiJ Fauci
(II lcftolaallc 8pona
Amaltca
Cll ~lnmlnl Tonight
e&lt;IJ USA Todar

e

!1.

campers&amp;

hoollng &amp; hi~ growth on dogo &amp; lor 4,
calli A &amp; Q Ftod &amp; Supply Site 1181 Mudo GLC
w. Moln St., Pcmoroy.
high
mttoogo,
llbrodo&lt; All1rto- pupploo. oconomlcll, good
AKC Roclol«tod. Btocko ond 0 .8 .0. 304..711-SI
yo~-. Own olr11 ond - · Col PM.
11
1
Ovonlngo 4-1112-4!1 ,
1181 Monto Corio. ''"'""''•
Porolttnlll..,ollpn
kiHono. AMIFM/CIH., AC, oxc. cond.
Sooloolnt.. CFA rog-. 814- I~!,OGO miiH. U300. 114-44115134111
lv-.r or 4411-t1747.
Tloolnt Wllkor CoOn - . 1N2 Cimino T·Topo, Y... 4
114.:1. .11101.
........ 304-11'1-43111.

_,. briCic. Prlcod rlgnll 614-

t

t--=-1
-

11 t . IIIICrlll Trf.Hull
- · 121 HP, lvlnruclo Enalno,
COIIIPII!I IOD. .... Upholtwy.
t35I/O. &gt;Coli 'ltWM-1311 lltOr .
7:00p.IIL

~.!.- ond

Transportat tun

-.OW"Iooh-. 8-AO-

akin without eWolda. Promot•

Workore Wontld. Nor·· Nlcl 3 i&gt;oclroom h - 1 both,
Young, lulfiiO, WV, 304- aorogo ond larvo 1ct1 Oolllpotll
Forry. Prlcld mid &lt;10 I *'17111137-2530.
5725.

15

Larg• round baln of hay, 115
11ch. 114-441·1052. ,

10r11, Rio Grenclo, OH Coli 114- Straw for ule. S1.5G bill• .,,..
241-1121.
448-4111 Evenings: 614-441-7157

Hoppf Jock Sldn Bolm: Chocko
ec:retchlng a ,..,..,.. hrh.ted

-n

12

100, 1:00..12:00 Man lhru Sal.
Marg•n F1nn, At. 31 PJiny, WV

~~~~~~~~=•

1Y ._... houM md 101110 kill,
1f4 w.lnul •., Pl. Pl. 304-171-

ovo,Y,hlng

Hay &amp; Grain
=o..,-u-ncl-:--.oho~ll-co-m-,:::,~.OO~po~r

Groom ond SUpply Shop-Pot runo f,ood• uklng 1850., 1 .
Grooming. All br-. All otytoo. Chryo or, • CtoU. pao, 114llmo Ptt Fcod Doolot. Julio :145-4232.
Wobb. eon 114-44e.0231.
1180 a..., Cillllon x .., 4 .,, 4
·
opood onatno oxo oond, lfont
HAPPY JAC~, SKIN BALM: ond oncl tJ~vor11 olclo ~·
Checks ICf'lltcn~na &amp; rlllaves lr·
tor
0
rftotod
okln
wlllioul
otorolds.
1
Prorne1u h - a :;:.prowth 1;
on dogo a cotol II
C.oh
Food .ro Nonh Prod-.

5801.

- P I - , WY 25110.
A - Socorlly In Locll 111pro,

91.,.

64

Block, llrlcll, llipoo, wt,.
doWI llntlla, etc. c•aude Mn-

Buy • lei.
1124 E. Main

• vtdeaCountlr

.tJ

tm

EAST

•au

Confidence Ster10.

FRANK AND ERNEST

hoi- . .

+AJt5

By JuaH Jaeoliy

II) Miami VIce Vote 01

75 Boats &amp; Motora
tor Sail

Supplies

trall., apace. All hook-ups.
after 2:00 p.m., 304-173-

41 HOUSH for Rent·

trade. ,,..

11

'

111

though yoU mey do the greatw ppr1iOn
ol the work today, a&amp;1IOCialu could~
lhl .,_ who get the preile. You can
llvo wtlh the orrangerto6tiW but don't

surrender -.rda wllhoula fight.
TAIIRU8 (April...., 20) To oburv·
era it may appear u d your prtortllet ere
confused lodaJt, '*-uee you might
taka yt&gt;Ur responlibllllet too lightly
while going all out lor what you conllder
fun.
0177 • ,.., :n......., Whln dealIng with olhera tOday, whalher In a ituelrllu or IOCIIIIIIItng, try to &lt;Nintaln a

a .

expoae Vinnie.
eo~·••• ToniQllt

011118ga

·-

11:00(1)......
..
w Ill • (II 11!8

e

~

eo

AnllltOin Alt Fontm
AIHnlo Hall 11 :OOJ

· eo

t1J IIana''"
diNewl.-t

II) ....... VIlla Lombard

.o..-....
unllnllhed 11u11n11u
• VldecCocnllr
11:30(1).._

e!Jl • 1Wtlllltlllow

'l([)fiiQ

E::~v=-

Prlll~·~~~~~ , _

thrutentld.

v

1 Trifle

Indian
45 llsy-bltay

8 Harem

chamber
DOWN
9 Revolt .
1 Wllldorf,
e.g.
10 Actress,
Shelley 2 Instant
12 Black
3 Tom apart
and blue
4 · - live and
13 Zeal
brealhe r
15 Golf score
5 June event
18 "Pillow
8 Palm leaf 23 Greek ·s· 32 Holatlng
talk" star
7 June
24 Slumber · deVIce
18 Japanese
beetle
21 Debilitate ·33 Boston
city
Pyrenees H Whole
airport
19 Menace of
republic
number
34 CorundUm
the comics 11 Reataned 27 Certain · 38 Jekyll's
21 Malarkey
14 Rundown
political
alter ego
22 Squid
17 Inquire
adherent 38 Golly!
nuld
20 "Strange 21 "The
41 "Three
23 Champagne's Interlude"
Bells"
Stooges•
descriptive
heroine
poet
member
24 Benny
· Goodman's
music
1::-++-t-127 Subslantial
21 Russian
rtver
29 Conlrlved
30Munch
31 Wise
opinion
....,
giver
,. 35 -out
38 Bewitch
37Gypsy
31 Nickname
for
Margaret
40 Picture
42 Lack
43 Nautical
device

a

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work II:

. •ea..•a-.

11:01 (J) 110¥11: ,.,,... I'M Ill
(2:00)
([) lMIIIe The JIGA T-

"j

i;,::ti.untTonltiM

"'

tD/4

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

a:D llew Tdtattt z IB"-

c,.,

,o guwd ,_han holM.

44 Caddoan

10::10 e

purpoee.
LIO (.lull' 11-Aug.ll) You could ~u,.
IIIUIIIy prollctl.. of wour per 10nt11 tntoday anc1 ~ c rrlbty not llltM
doing • lll1la --.a 10 ....
your po.rt1ona H you leolthey . .
ng

VIRGO (Atra. II llpl. Zl) Today you
ere likely 10 De quite practtcllln _,of
·~ .-.dl8'itqrl excllp1 when It tomll ,
· p 11'11 IMI..,_I ol your own ,..
jOIII'Cee. You could, in ~ Uk a lox

ACROSS

eo
IIJI**'I!Newa

mldd'-"ol•tt.road attftudtl. 11 you teen
too much in • ~direction, 1hlnga
might not work out too - ·

' CAIICD (.... 11-.lllr II) H·yoil plan
to 181 up a bull.- .-lng today In a
non-conwnorolal anvlror1mant, avoid
·choolit!IJ I llllllng 10 lavilh IIIII 11'11
tropptnga will detract !rom wow

eo WlaeguJ A po1111ca1

candidate threatens to

•

•t-It

tKQ~

Timing

and luck

IIJ
1MCourt !;I
IBChHra

ltoll, -lloh llllr
lp.lft. 114112 · -

. Building

Slllplng roomo with cooking.

Rentals

Non11110kw Ia care IDr four
yoor olol In
Pclnl
PLM•nt M
• Friday,
Ret.renca JOC~. 3141

Fourth Ave.

lull AI'G. -

e111 e WhMI 01

NORTH
.AH
• J"15

BRIDGE

1!1 MlaNIII/Leh,.,

~

' - - ' U.tl•
- mint rneroon,
- - ·Iota
1,100
111llie.
ol
ctvamo. Wlnclohlold. lnctudH 2

Ylvllor
Phologrophy
oncl I
-oping .. u l - lor uto.
tl'I0.114-ill2·llllloftlr 4:30.
WHITE'S METAL DETECTOIIS
Ron All'-'!!~o1210 Sooond Avo,
Golllpollo,"" 114 441 4331.
White wddlng ~n wllh
molchlng voll, olzo 10, SilO.,
304..711-3547 or 114-211-1343.

e

.
(I) CUrrent Altair

1 1 1 7 - - Flalorr ......
tod
-OIIMHL
ofiollo,
luHI...........
. . riCk. AMIFII
11~51-1501, 814-211-1111.

Aoclucod. 1117Suzukl Gl 4!10 L,

••·3

SCII.AM LITS ANSWIIS

(I)

74 · Motorcycles

mi-.-

.bhton, llrgo

.

(l)f~IIECI lllf

1111-4411.
1111 PIYmot.Ch Voyogor C u - ·
Von. l-250. Good _,.,Hion . .
Ml' 'l t o - ot 151 Portomoulh
Rd. t3500.

1114 Skyllnt, 14x70 moblto
- . 2 bodroomo, •·tn,oao.
304-475-ID.

4$112.

.

1B WICIIP In Clnclnold
II) He MM
1::11 (I) Andy Clltllllh
7:00(11 Our H!luoa ·
*'171r100.

IUlomaba• u part

EARN MONEY lyplng 111 ho-

.

Ill._... Todly

1111
-Wll
· oonoldor
Von. I.Mdod.
S11,100.
_.r

$30,0001r••r Income potential.
De1ollo, 11805-6117-fiOOO Eld. 11-

.

i 8-C~

!NO Dodao A.,. Von, 11,111.

101811.

.

,..,.l.oolc

e!II,. Megu~ne

EARN MONEY lyplng 111 homo.
S30,0001yur Income pottntill.
Do1ollo, 1-105-6117-6000 £1&lt;1. 11-

f ,

A Complet• oho cloucklo quolod
. 'V by tilling In the milling -dt
,__,__.__....___,........__. y011 develop lrom ttep No. 3_bolow.

.

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and lormaUon of the words
all

are

hints. Each day the! code letters are different.

.....
OQT

CIIYPI'OQU01'E

HTJKVA

MSCTK ·, LV
TJRQ

-

AVO

VOQTH

, zTPVAU

QXKZJAL .K . JAL

OV

SK

XALTHKOJAL
ZTRJXKT

LSEETHTAO

L ·V H V 0 Q N

OQTN

KTDTK.

LSD

Y••,• 'c'•Ctat•ll tuiFYOUAREN'Tf¥111
WI1H EN"'HJSIASM YOU WIJ. IE FIRED wrrt1
~IASM..,

VINCE LOI.ARIII

'.

�-~~ --

Pag
.

•

n. Deily Sentinel

·Proudfoot birth
Nell and Laura Proudfoot.
GarriSon, Ky., formerly of Pomerov, are announcing the birth of a
d&lt;~ughter, Jessica Gail.
The Infant, born Aug. 30 at
St·wto Memorial Hosp!lal, Ports·
muuth, weighed six pounds and
six ounces and ws 20 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Oscar T. and Madgle Smith,
Pomeroy.
F"aternal grandparents are Harold and Catherine Proudfoot, St.
Albans, W.Va.

Wa til u lfll'/. Oc:toblr. 4, 1989

Pomelov-Midlleport, Ohio

14-

Alfred
news
The Alfred United Methodist

JESSICA G. PROUDFOOT

the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Howard Parker in honor of Helen
Church is announcing the com ~ and Edson Parker, Aurora. Colo.
pletlon of Its handicapped ramp. Wlll!s Parker, Parkersburg,
The next Alfred United Metho- W.Va., asked the blessing before
dist Women meeting will be Oct. the meal.
Others present were Irene
17 at the church. The program
will be "A World of Sisterhood." Parker, Syracuse; Homer
· The Northeast Cluster services Parker, Rutland; Suzy Carpen-.
will be at Allred on Oct. 22 at7: 30 ter, Rutland; Tom Hysell, Midp.m. and will feature the Clown dleport; Violet and Dennis
Parker, tong Bottom; Aaron
Ministry. The public is Invited.
Mrs. Wilber Parker, Mr. and Parker, Columbus. Cora and
Mrs. Joe Poole and Will, at- Sam Michael were evening
tended ·a family supper held at callers. The Colorado Parkers

Wiener roast held recffltly
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Michael
hosted a wiener roast recently
for the Senior Citizens Dance
Glub at thelrhom~onStlversville
Balll(nob Road.
Attending were Malinda and
Manley Cristy, Jim Travis,
Grace Welch, Pauline McLean,
have . been visiting ·friends and ·
relatives in the area for two
weeks. They started on their
homeward
Journey on Sept. .24.
.

Charles Rogers, Thelma While.
Mary Holter, Marie Norris,
Doug less Circle, Garold and Fay
WUdermuth, LUua Randolph.
Lawrence and Nancy Blosser,
josephine Richie, Helen Fisher,
Nellie Hat!ield, Alta Dill, Jule
and Jill Chapman, Loretta Bee- .
gle, Kermit McElroy, Larry ,
Hubbard, Eddie Hubbard, Lil·
llan Proffitt, Jenny Ward, Eva
Roberson. Clarence Story. Cora
Michael, and Sam Michael.

Ohio Lottery

Giants, A's
capture playoff
wins Wednesday

Pick·3
286
Pick4
I
7586
Super Lollo
7-8-15-30.3541
Kicker 503043

Page 3

•

•

at
~~~~~li~:;ms:

CloDdy. Low loal&amp;ht Ia mid
SO.. CltanU of rala Is It
perceat. Frida)', cloud)'. Hlp
In mid 8h. Chaace of rata •
percent.' ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October

5,

2 Sactlona. 12 Pagaa 21 Centa

1989

A Muhlmedlalnc. N_ _.,

Board takes no action on reinstatelnent
By CRARJJ!:NE HOEFUCH
Dally Sentinel Staff
Despite the Southern Local
· Board of Education's recommendation that Elizabeth Smith be
reinstated Into the National Honor Society, the Faculty Advisory Council to the Society,
meeting Tuesday night at the
Southern High School, took no
action to do so. ·
Smith was diSmissed !rom
membership In the society last
spring after a contr&lt;Wersial
valedictory address at Southern
High School's commencement.

,.

lDVfRTISED ITEM POLICY-Each of these advertiud items is required to be rudily
available for sale in eacn Kroger Store, eJCcept as sPecifically noted in th• ad. If
we do run out of an advel1ised item, we will ·offer you vour choice of a
comparable i1em, when available, reflecting the same savings or a raincheck
wh ich will entitle vou to purchase the advertised item ai the advenised price
within 30 days . Only one "'endor coupon will be accepted per item gurchased .
COP~AIGHT 1989 - THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,
OCT. 1, THROUGH SATURDAY, OCT. 7, 1989. WE RESEAV~ THE RIGHT TO
LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .

.,.,

y.

In her speech Smith among
other things charged misuse of
authority by ·a school offlcer·and
harassment from other students
and teachers, an&lt;1 challenged the
selection process .for member·
ship · In the National Honor
Society.
She was subsequently dismiSsed from the National Honor
Society by the Faculty Advisory
CounciL
·
Since that lime the American
Civil. Liberties Union has been
involved on behalf of Smith who
contends that · her right to free

speech has been violated.
The matter of Smith's membership In the National Ho!lor
Society was referred back to •e
Advisory Board following the
Board of Education's Sept. 18
meeting. The recommendation
from the Board called for the
Advisory Council to rescind the
earlier action dismisSing Smith
from membership.
That recommendation was
based on a letter from Ivan
Gluckman, associate counsel for
the National Association of Secondary Schools, sponsor of the

YJ
~

PEPSI
U.S. GRADE A 10-16-LB. AVG.

"SILVER PLATTER" FRESH

Frozen
Young Turkeys

Assorted
Pork Chops

Pound

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,

Diet P~psi .
or Pepsi Cola

Pound

. 2-Litar

18
SOLD IN PKGS. OF 10-11-LBS.

With Low Prices.
And More.
U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

Stew Beef or
Cubed Steak

MOUNTAIN GROWN

Folger's
Coffee

Pound

-

·Kroger Chilled
Orange Juice

00
V~UE

LIMIT OlE WITH COUPON

LIMIT.ONE COUPON PEA FAMILY

-

CCU'OI- ..,_ICT, 1.U.t. ail.
J, ••
liW lAXU

IIJI.IICl TD AlfllaaE ITAft •

·Cap'n Crunch
Cereal
11-ez.

SHERBET OR

Kroger Lite

Ice Milk
%-Gallon

WESTOVER

Cottage
Cheese

Hoffman Is Ken II)' Byer, Fire prevention
committee chalrmaa. The Middleport Fire
. Departmeat will have an open house and fish fry
· Sa&amp;urtl&amp;)' at the lire houae as a part of' the
observaace.
·

-Fish fry and ~pen house to
.kick off .fire prevention week

Village for a water line .
extension.
Meigs County's total allocation
of CDBG funds for this year Is
$103,140. The block grant proposal must be submitted ·to the
Ohio Department of Development for linal approval by the
end of this month.
Following the block grant
hearing, blds were the main
order of Wednesday's commis~loners' meeting.
Su bmlttlng blds to provide a
vehicle for . Meigs Emf;!rgency
Medical Services . were the
McClain Company, Anderson,
Ind., $44,268; '-lh.e. !Jarton Company, Col.u mbus, U5,162. 71; the
Burgess Company, Loudenville.
$55,800; and Heisler's, of Norwalk, $45,291. ·The bids were
tabled until next week to allow
for review by EMS authorities .
A $14,960 bid was received
from Pat Hill Ford, Middleport,
to provide a new cruiser for the
sheriff's department. Upon re:
commendation by' Sheriff James

Souls by, the bid was accepted pending an acceptable delivery
date.
A $400 bld from Alva B. Clark,
Langsville. for a 1978 Pontiac
belonging to the county~s lllter
control agency, was also accepted by lhe board.
Besides the bid for the cruiser,
Sheriff Souls by discussed other
matters with the commissioners,
Including, whether or not It would
be advisable to have an underground tank Installed to provide
gasoline for sheri!!'s vehicles,
. and wnether or not ,an unused
portton of the jail should be'
repai~ f9r ll&amp;e .only for people
st!lltencM.lG tl!ftl! days on DVI

charges. Tlie commissioners Instructed Sottlsby to check Into
costs related to both Ideas, and
report back to them as soon as
possible.
·The commissioners met with
Tom Young, Athens, a representallve or the TMC Company,
Columbus, .a long-distance teleContlnued on page 5

•

A kickoff for Fire 'Prevention
Week, Oct. 8-14, wiil take place In
Middleport Saturday when the
Middleport Volunteer Fire Department hosts an open house
and fish fry at the fire stat! on.
According to Kenny Byer, lire
preventi9n committee c~air. man, activities at the fire station
wiil get underway at 11 a.m. and
will Include a a slide show on fire _
prevention, distribution of fire
·prevention literature, and a demonstration and display of equpment. ·He said that firemen wlll '
be on hand to answer questions.
In conjunction with the open
house, a blood pressure clinic
will be held.
Wednesday aflernoon Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman signed
a proclamation declaring the

week of Oct. 8-14 as Fire
Prevention Week.
In his proclamation the mayor
called for the people of Middle·
port to participate in activities at
home, work and school and to
remember, as lhe 1989 National
Fire Prevention Week theme
suggests that "Big Fires Start
Small: Keep matches and Ughters In lhe right hands."
He noted that chlldren playing
with !Ire ls the leading cause of
fire deaths among the very
young, killing three of every ten
pre-school children who die In
residential fires , that matches
and lighters are what chlldren
playing with fire most often use,
and that about 75 percent of
residential fires begin with a
match or lighter.
In his proclamation lje further

noted that teaching appropriate
fire safety behavior to children
has proven to save lives. The
Middleport Fire Deaprttneht, the ·
mayor said, Is dedicated to the
safety of llfe and property of Its
protected citizens from the devastatlng effects of !Ire and
recognize the value of !Ire safety
education, particularly lor the
very young and he cal)ed upon :
the citizens of the community 1
and businessess, schools, service •
clubs and organizations to join In
lire preventiOn efforts.
.
j
In conjunction with the obser1
vance, the Middleport Fire De&lt;
partment is again.conductlng ~~ ­
the Middleport school, klndelfgarten through fourth grade, ~
poster contest. Firemen will.also
be going to elementary school to
talk about fire safety.
I

As818tantPr-IIDI,'211 ) £4 llell'miiDC;&amp;rliOa,
Atheas, defenae co~ Belllclen; IUid defeaae
Coa1111el Roaald R. Cal"on. Balsdea was held to
tbe grand Jui'J • for Tn.-.48.)', Oct. 1%. Bolld
remains afsue....

PRELIMINARY HEARING - Tbe principals
at Wedaesd&amp;)''s prelbnlnary h~arln1 for 18-yearoltl DenaIs J. Baisden, accused of triple murder,
were (left to right) Brent A. Saunders, Galla
County Prosecudng Attorney; Mark Sheets,

Suspect confeSses to killings

Absentee voter's 'ballots are Dennis Baisden bound over
.
available at board of election~
grand jury after hearing
I

COUPON

"AS ADVERTISED 01 TV"

810HI PROCLAMATION - The week of Oet.
. 8-14 wu
u Fire Prevenlloa Week In
Middleport wileD Mayor Fred Hoffmaa alped a
proelama&amp;loa Wedneaday alter-n. With M&amp;)'or

By NANCY YOACHAM
Dally Sentinel Staff
Eight projects were approved
by the Meigs County Commissioners for Inclusion In the
co\mty's Community Developme~! Block Grant proposal. The
projects and amount of funding
to •each were ann!)unced at
Wednesday's CDBG hearing In
the commissioners' ol!lce at the
courthouse.
Projects approved by the com·
m siOners include $23,000 to
s· ton Township for resurfacing
1e Hill Road; $18,000 to Sallsry Township for resurfacing
Z ~pan 1Joi!Qw Road; »~ t9
SyraC'u~ VIlla~ for ,pilvfDB the
parking · lot at London Pool;
'10,900 to Ru !land VIllage for
resurfacing Brick and MulberryLocust Streets; $10,000 to Salem
· Township lor a fire' hydrant and
water line; $10,000 to Middleport
VIllage for play ground equipment and park restroom; $10,000
to Scipio Township for fire
equipment; and $9,200 to Racine

j

100% FLORIDA

&amp;4-oz.

with the exceptiO!\ of one are new
this year.
Now that the Council has
declined action on the matter, It
presumably will go to the Southern Local Board of Education
which meets again on Oct. 16.
The board vote at 'the Sept. 18
meeting to make the recommen. dation for reinstatement was 3-1
with one members abstalillng.
Charles Norris Gary Willford
and John Murphy voted In favor
or the relnstatment while Denny
Evans voted against It and Scott
Wolfe, board president
abstained.

Corrtmission ~pproves
eight CDBG projeCts

.....,._

._,PatH

National Honor Society. Gluckrecommended by the Board of
man stated In his letter that there Education.
are no provisions In the National
The consensus of opinion,
Honor Society ·handbook for the
Adams said, was that the issue
High School Faculty Advisory
should nol be addressed by them.
Council to dismiSs a graduate
He further explained thalln the
member· and ' that when Smith · constitution of the National Howas dismissed, she was already a
nor Society, the only Issues the
graduate member.
Council can address are memHowever, at Tuesday night's
bership, dismissal and warnings.
meeting. the Faculty Advisory
R'i!instatements are not listed,
Council abstained from voting
Adams said.
when the matter was proposed.
Names of the members of the
The motion, according to
Faculty Advisory Council were
Adams, was to consider the issue
not released by the principal but
of reinstating Elizabeth Smith to
he did say there there Is a new
the National Honor Society as
advisor and that all members

•
ISSUe

,4.6-0Z. PUMP OR _

Crest
Toothpaste
U-oz. Tube

'

.

.

By CHAR.LENE HOEFLICH
ballots are to be voted.
Dally Sentinel Staff
Absentee ballots must be deliFor those voters who cannot go
vered to the Board of Elections In
to the polls on Tuesday, Nov. 8,
person; by mali, or through a
absent voter's ballots are avalla·
near relative not later than the
ble through the Meigs County
close of polls on election day,
Board of Elections office.
according to the Frymyer.
Jane Frymyer, director of lhe
There are rules which specifies
Board of Elections office. reports
who qualifies to vote absentee.
that applications for absent voAnyone 62 years of age or over,
ter's ballots may be picked up at
anyone who will be absent from
the office on Mulberry Ave. or
the county on the day of the
will be mailed to anyone calling
election, anyone confined - to a ·
the olllce with the request.
'hospital on the day of election,
Once an application has been
anyone unable to vote on election
received ftOI!'I a registered voter,
day for religious reasons, all
then the absentee ballot will be poillng place officials, members.
mailed to the voter. A request!or · or employees ol the Board of
.a ballot thell disqualifies the Elections, anyone on active duty
voter from voting at his regular
with the organized militia in the
polling place In person on elec·
State of Ohio, anyone confined to
lion day.
a Jail or workhouse under sent·
The application requesting an
ence for a mlldemeanor or
absent voter's ballot must be awaiting trail on a felony or
delivered to the Director of the
misdemeanor on the day of
Board.of Elections not later than
election, may apply to vote
noon on the third day before the
absentee.
day of the election at which such . - Once an ilppllcatlo~ for absent .

.

I

to

voter's ballots Is received lzy the
Board ot Elections, then the
By DICK THOMAS
signature Is veri!led through
.OVP Stall Writer
comparing It with the signature
A preliminary hearing was
on the registration card.
held Wednesday In Gall!polls
1
Municipal Court lor Dennis J.
A power of attorney does not
Include voting power for another
Baisden, 18, Point Pleasant area,
person. Incorrect Information on
on three counts of aggravated
murder.
·
' the application constitutes ~lee·
tlon falsification, according to
Baisden Is accused of the
·the Secretary of State' !I office.
Sunday Sept. 24 lhroat slaShlngs
For those who are disabled, . of three persons at Kanauga,
Marvin W. Wears, 94, Beulah
such as someone who uses a
Wears; 81, of 415 Fourth Ave.,
wheelchair, but prefers nbt to
vote absentee, poll workers will Kanauga; and Audrey Foster,58,
go to a vehicle parla!d outside the Milton, · W.Va., Mrs. Wears'
polling place and vote ,those daughter, who was visiting over
the weekend.
people on election day . .
After hearing the evidence,
Since Tuesday Is the last day
for residents to re111ster to, vote. Judge Joseph L. Cain ruled there
the Board of Elections offl~e will waa probable cause to hold
be open !rom 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Baisden to the grand Jui'y w~lch
ReJIIIlar office hours are 8:30a.m convenes at 9 a.m. next Thursto 4:30p.m. Theolllcewillalsobe day. Bond remains at $250,000.
Defense co-counsel Herman
open for the convenle11ce of
patroas on Monday, the d&amp;)' set Carson told the court his client
for the observance of. Columbus . was Indigent and that he would
delay themattero!bond untjl the
Day, Frymyer said.
'I

,\,)

•

'

case gets Into common pleas wounds to the neck. The most
serious wound was on the neck of
court.
.
Baisden showed no emotion as Mrs. Foster . who was found
he fidgeted in hls.chalr, slumping . collapsed across the bath tub in
or holding his head In his hands, the bathroom. All of the viet ims
during the two-hour preliminary were fully clothed, the coroner
hearing. He was wearing the said.
Another witness, Ida Jones, Rt.
same orange Mason County suit
he wore on his return to Gallipolis 1, Gallipolis, who cared lor the
after ' the ex tradition hearing. Wears during the week, testified
However, he appeared In court that she came to work on
Wednesday without handcuffs or Monday, Sept. 25. but the back
door was locked. That was her
leg shackles.
usu&amp;.'l way to get in. She carried
The first state's witness was
the garbage out front and tried
Dr. Edward J. Berklch, Gallla
County C,o roner, who testified be
the front door but It was locked.
was called to the 'l'{ears. resiShe looked In the front window
dence where he pronounced the
andsawMrs. Wears on the living
victims dead by observing and
room floor.
touching them. Dr. Berklch or·
The Gallia County Sheriff's
dered the bodies to the Franklln . Department was notified at 8: 57
County morgue, Columbus, lor
a.m. Monday, Sept. 25. That was
forensic autopsies.
the beginning of a long day that
Results of thoie autopsies
did not end until early Tuesday
received last week determined
morning. Baisden waa arrested
that the three vlcllmfl died of · at 10 p.m. Monday Sept. 25, after
Continued on page 5
hemorrhaging as result of knife

'

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