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Tuesday, October 24. 1989

,...
· --I.ocal news briefs---. Father....
Middleport Council session brief
AD hlvltatloa to tiM! Mef&amp;l Collaty PubliC Ubrary dediCation
at 1:30 p.m. 011 Svaday, Nov. 5, was rud at Moaday's niJht
meetlag of Middleport Vtllqe Council.
· It was &amp;epca1ed clurtiq' tbe brief meetlill by Middleport Mayor
lfotOnaa that tile aaaeutioa proeeclurel are "mov!Dialoal."
He Mid tlaat once the Nelp Couaty Board of County
Commlllloilen atYe their ftaal q~proval on tiM! clellaed area,
tbell tbe vlllaae will proceed with the annexationordlaance. The
area IIMIM!d II from the vlllllp' s south corporation lbnl~o
belc. tile -•ae laaoon, all PfOpertles oq the Ohio River lldfllt
State Route 7.
TriCk or treat nllht was 1111D aniiOilllced for Moaday night
from 6 to 7 p.m. It was suge~ted that residents who want to
participate Ia that activity tum on their porch lllhts. The siren
will sound to belin and end triCk or treat.
Attendllll were Mayor Hoffman, Couacll members Paul
Gerard, Robert Gilmore. Dewey Horton, Jack Satterfield, and
William Walters, and Clerk·Treasurer Jon Buck.
·

No one hurt in two mishaps
The Gallla-Melp Post of the State Highway Patrol
lavestlgated two accidents Moaday In MeiiS County. No one
was lajured. There was one citation.
No one was cited In a two car collision at 4:54p.m. Monday on
CR 31, 2.5 miles north of CR. 28.
Troopers said a 1974 Ford Torino driven by Denise A. Miller,
32. Portland, and a 1983 Ford Escort, driven by Jerry L.
Hayman, 16, Portland, sideswiped on a curve. Minor damage
was done to the Miller car and moderate to the Hayman vehicle.
There was lleavy damage to a 1989 Ford Escort In an accident
at 11:15 a.m. Monday on qt. 12, 0.2 of a mile east of TR. 353.,
Troopers said Catherine C. White, 30, Pomeroy,lost control·
on a curve. The vehicle went off one side the road, then the other
and overturned Into a ditch. Damage was heavy. ·
The patrol cl~ White for failure to maintain control.

Squat,ls have 3 Monday calls
Meils County Emergency Medical Services reports three
calls answered on Monday.
Syracuse at 11:55 ·a.m. was called to Five Points for Don
Dalley to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 4:24p.m., Middleport went to State Route 7for Chris Darst
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy was called at 9: 28 p.m. to Willow Creek Road for
Flora Jeffers who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Soil suroey field work to end
The Meigs County SoD Survey will mark the end of field work
wltb a last acre ceremony on Thursday at 10 a.m. The last acre
will be mapped at Portland Indian Mound State Park,located on
State Route ·124 at Portland. The public Is cordially Invited to
at lend, says Gordon Gilmore, Melp COunty SoD Survey team
member.

.'

State Issue II meeting Thursday

Melp Enatneer Philip Roberts has announced that all
: · t0W115blp trustees and village officials In the county are Invited
! to li meetlnj Thursday evening at the courthouse In Pomeroy
' where the State ISsue II program will be updated. The meeting
will start at 7 p.m. and Roberts will be explalnlag the many
chaqes Ia the State Issue II program for tbe 1990 grantiDI
process. Bootlets of Instructions and necessary forma for 1990
will be distributed.
.

------Area deaths.-Jolm Vroman
. Several relatives traveled to
London Thursday tor the
funeral aervices of Jerome Lee
Dials, 37, who died Oct. 16 at the
Toledo Medical College of Ohio.
Mr. Dials, married to -- the
former Breada Sayre of-Pomeroy, died as the result of an .
apparent Infection following
l)eart transplant surgery In
August.
: Besides bls wife, he Is survived
lly three daughters. Melinda,
Janet, and Jllllan, all at home, a
son. Jerry Lee. at home, his
father and stepmother, Arthur
8nd Adria Dlala of New London, a
ltater, Lora Jean McGhee, WakelfWI, and a brother. Chuck,
Penefleld. He was preceded In
taeath by llts mother, Sherry, and
a brother, Ru-IL
• Going from here for the aervl·
~ were the aunts and uncles of
Mrs. Dials, Marilyn and Jerry
Powell, Rac:lne; June and GetCJie Kallifia, Syracuse, and
Ruby Burnside, Pomeroy.
A truck driver, Mr. Dials had
the heart transplant In August
when Ills old heart, only 10
percent functlo ..l, was attacked
by a virus and an emergency
iltuatlon existed. He reportedly
was xec:uperatlilg sattsfactorlly
until ahollt a· month ago when he
was striCken by the Infection.
~ew

John C. Vroman, 81, Middleport, died Modnay at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Born on Jan. .19, 1909 at
Parkersburg, he was the son of
the late Frank and Grace Mason
Vroman. Hewasaretlredtooldle
maker at 1m perlal Electric, and
a member of the Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department.
He Is survived by two sons and
daugbers-ID-law, . Charlee and
Dee Vroman, Belpre; and John
and Judy Vroman, Columbus; a
grandson and his wife; Jotui H.
and Melanie Vroman, COlumbus,
a granddaughter and her husband, Mary and Mike Hapney,
Little Hocklill, two grandsons,
Mark Vroman, Costa Mesa,
Calif. and Jimmy Vroman, Columbus, and a granddaurhter,
Julie Vroman, Columbus; two
great·grandchlklren, Meltssa
and Mark Hapney, Utile Hock·
lng, and a niece, Sandy LuckeydoG, Richmond, Va.
He was preceded In by his wife
Gladys Vroman In 1973.
•
Graveside services will be held
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the
Riverview Cemetery with tbe
Rev. Harvey Rllldfllesc:h official·
lng. Friends may call at the
Rawllngs-Coats-Ftsber Funeral
Home Ia Middleport from 6 to 9
p.m. Tuesday.

--------Annoonce~n~-------llaiiNeell party
: The Basban Firemen's Ladles
Auxiliary will have a halloween
party Moaday from 6 to 8 p.m. at
the Buhan firehouse. Tile party
II for children from the Rainbow
Ridge, Keno, Bashan and Eagle
Rldae areas.

...........

The Rev. Steve Sklllett will
ipeak at the Calvary Plllrlm
Cbapel on State Route 143 WedDelday at 7:30 p.m. The Rev.
Vlctar Rolllh, pastor, lnvltea the
public to atll!nd.

rro
... .,.. r.r '"'
: The. Mkldleport Elemetnsry

fTO wlll have a

fall carnival at

tile ~c:bool on Nov. 4 trom2 to5: 30

p.m. In conJunction wltb that
tbel'e will be a craft bazaar and
epac.'es are for sale at ~ each.
~ lateteatect Ia rnervina
..,.ee li alllcl to call!ll2-711li or
- - IIebe Moaday.

.........

Past Matera' nl&amp;ht wUl be
• tn'Ed at tbe Middleport
J..odpJia,F.aadA.M.Frldayat
7:30 p.m. There wt1l be a
COI'IIIJread and bean dinner at
1:30p.m. follolll'l!d by worktn tbe

J '

master maste11degree. Members
of craft teams are asked to
atlend. Any member want111 to
take part are asked to call Jtm
Hill at 912-'1038 or 992-21157. All
Masons are urged to attend.

.. ,......

A haunted ho~~~e Is betna held
In the I8Jile building as the
LangsiiUie Post Office and will
continue to operate throurh Oct.
31 from 6 to 9 p.m. Numerous
tickets have been gt\leli to
cburchea and ~~:boola of the
county. and can be purchased at
the door, acoordtq to Barbara
Varney wbo prepared the
haunted boule.

..........

A cburch revival Will be held at
the South Betbel Cbureh 011 Silwr
Rldp Road lOcated about oae
mile west of Eastern Hlahllebool
Friday, S.tarday and IIUIIday at
7 p.m. The evaaplllt Will be Bud
Hatfield. IluaDe Sydenstrlcller.
pastor, lnvlta the publk:.
T.iDitla+ ,.,.
Tbe Melp Local Sellool DIJ·
trlrt IINrd Ill Education will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. In tile
board's meetlna roam.
I

n-:un"':'uec~_fr_om..,;pa;.,.,ge:..._1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

-eo-:·
he went IDald&amp; to Inquire tram
emptoyeee If anyone had been
there loo!rlaa for him. In the
courae ot tiM! converaatton, he
told them what wtil bappenlill;
that he was betq reunited with a
dauglltrr hebadn'taeenslncealle
was a baby.
Wheil Kimes finally arrived,
Flnkellblader knew It was ber
before she even aot out of tbe car
..,•• becaute lhe Memed so ner·
vous." And that was. how · they
met. In a parking lot with "the
people from the service· station
all stan~IDI In front of the
window watching," they lauah.
From Belpre they drove home
to Racine where Kimes' family
members were anxiously awaltlng their arrival. ''They were all
there walttna." she says. "We
had four generations Ia the
hOuse.''
Flnkenblader, now a widower,
met grandaons and great grand·
sons and a great &amp;randdauahter
he never knew he bad. • 'I have to
look up at every one of my
grandsons," he says proudly.
And one grandson who Is In the
Air Force, was leavlll for Korea
on Monday. "Dad niade It 1ust In
time to see him." aays Kimes
wltb a smile.
. "Between laughing and crying
and just looklilg at each other,"
says Kimes, "It was dltflcuh to
talk.,

Bur after the Initial shock
finally wore off, father and
daughter began to really get
acquainted. Now he's dad to her
and grandpa to her children. She
knows now that she has half
brothers and slllters and that all
of them have famWei. "We
fiiUred out that altogether, there
are 19 grandchildren and five
great grandchildren," Kimes
says. "And he has a granddaughter up north who looka just like
his great granddaughter down
here. It was after 3 a.m. on
Monday before we flaally went to
bed," she laughs.
Both father and dauahter also
took a day off from work so they
could spend more time together
before dad's return to Orrvi)Je.
Finkenbinder says he always
wondered about his Utile daughter. The last time he actually saw
her was when she was three and .

Meigs ...
Continued from page 1
support the mental health levy
whlc:h It passed, will enable her
agency to provide additional
support for the frail elderly. With
tile,.. . . . ot U..lew1. a4dttlonal servlc:t!ll could be provided
by the Mella County Senior
Cltliens Center, Thomas said. ·
Frank Cleland, a Melp County
membel-of the Hlpway Users
Committee of the Southeastern
Ohio Regional 'Developmeni
Council, reportecl that efforts are
currently underway by the Route
33-Route 124 Corridor Committee to 11pdate the Impact report of
the proposed corridor road on
business trom Lane: aster, Logan,
Athens, Melp County and the
Ravenswood, W.Va. areas. The
111$1 study was Completed In 19114.
Cleland also reported that
pressure for a public bearing
which Is to be be held Nov. 1 at 7
p.m. at the MeiiS Senior Citizens
Center, may have come from this
area group.
The Reatonal Plannlag Commlsalon voted to support the
update of thta business study.
Yesterday's meetiDa was conducted by Regional Planning
COmmission President Fred Hoffman, with Orion Roush, fanner
president, as secretary. ·

one-half, althourh Kimes has no
memory ol ever seeing her
father. But after a few years
pasaed "I had no way of fladlng
her/' Finkenbinder says. "The
lull knew of her, her name was
Wlllte." He aever bn&amp;glned that

she'would find 111m, or even want
to find him, "especially after
almost 50 years."
But find him shedld. ''Andnow
there'll be a tot more weekends
and holidays together," Kimes
states emphatically, as father

and daughter try to c&amp;tch up on
all the years missed.
"''m not resentlul of the
missed years," Kimes Is quick to
explain, "but I am regget!ul. I
guess It was just meantto be this
way."

Vol.40, No.119 M
Copyrlghttd 1989

4962.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$218,374.50, with a payoff due of
$86,000.

DENTIS'ntY EXPLAINED - Dends&amp;ry used

young woman -

Stocks

Am Electric Power ............. 30%
AT&amp;T ................................. 42%
Ashland 011 ........................37',(,
Bob Evans ..................... ..... 13*
Charm lag Shoppes ........... ... 12*
City Holding Co.......... ........15*
Federal Mogul ....................20*
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 45*
Heck:s ............. .... ................ 6¥s
Key Centurion .................... 14~
Lands' End .................... ..... 26~
Umlted Inc ................ .. ...... 35~
Multimedia Inc: .............. ...... 95
Rax Restaurants ............. ..... 2*
Robbins&amp;: Myers ................ 13*
Shoney's Inc....................... 10~
Wendy's Inti........................ 5~
Worthlagton Ind .......... ........ 23*
(Aiblalld Oil IDc.'s fourlhquarler lola S.'71/lllare after
cbarce vs. aet Sl.l8. Federal
Mopl's net S.Zifllhare va. S.U.
GoodJoear TAR's thlnl-q~~&amp;rler
neiSI.IS/IIIare vs. Sl.ll.)

A IJ,APPY DAY FO~ SEO- Governor Richard
Cele11te viSited Gallipolis yesterday to announce
the commitment of S8U million to relocate US
Route 31. With lhe governor are Stale Rep. Mary

· OPEN YOUQ
1990 CHQI~TMA~ CLUB
AND RECEIVE A
.fQEE GifT!
Have

l;lfl

..

'

•fashioned

31, ~.and

$3
CHRI&lt;£&gt;TMA&lt;£&gt; CLUB&lt;£&gt;
Light the way for your holiday
visitors with our
Cordi~ Bra~ Candle Light.
(Batl.erie8 Not Included)

CHQI&lt;£&gt;TMA6 CLUB
Give yopr home a festive glow with our
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(Candle Not Included)

310 AND

Hospital news

'20 CHRI~TMA&lt;£&gt; CLUB&lt;£&gt;

'

I

PEOPLES ,BANK

Marrlap lice- have been
llaued Ia tiM! Melp County
Probate Court to Michael Allell
n1111, 30, Rullud, and Teresa
Renee WlldealliUth, 30, PiJme..
roy; aadRodileyDeleWrla'llt,41,
Rutland, and Andrea Margaret
Enrllbt. 35, RuUand.
-~

....

YOU MAKE 49 PAYMENT&amp;.,
AND THE 5orn I&amp; ON U&amp;l

Vt!MnuMemerlal
Monday aclmtallona - Ann
Wllllama, Clifton, W.Va.; Benny
Spesn, Syracuse; . Mary Olivia
Page, Lanpvtlle.
Monday dllcharpl -Mildred
Fultz, Detn Smith, Lovle Watson, John Metqer.

Your Good Neighbor Bank
MASON
•

na-ss14
I
- --·-··-,.,

POINT PLEASANT
675-1121

By LEE ANN WELCH
single pro)!!Ct on the drawing
OVP News Start
board, at an estimated cost of
Relocation ol ..US Route 35 $61.2 million. .
"This lsaglantstep,butnotthe
through GaiUa County should be
the economic development boost end of our 'l!!!l~- f.9_r Southeast
'I;!Jt'( l'jllil bas.IIHIIId fOr. ~s~• --.OIIkl' hlldl~-;:wnl!'• !Gill"' a
ac:cordiJII to a number "of state crowdofmorethan lOOgathered
on the parking lot of Woodland
and locat offiCials.
''Thls will open to way to Centers.
' ·
economic development Into the
'"I'he road to economic recovnext century," State Sen. Jan ery (In Southeast Ohio) must be
MlchaeV Long said yesterday. paved and four lanes," Long said
Long and other state officials to the cheers of those attE-nding.
were In Gallipolis with ~v.
CommunltyimprovementCor·
Richard Celeste lo announce the poratlon Director Jack Fowler
project to local reskiE!nts.
said an Improved highway sysOn Monday, Celeste an· tem wlll help attract light Indus- ,
n~~nced nearly 30 highway protry to this area. Many companies
)eels statewide to be funded from have expressed Interest in locatthe additional 5.2 cent per gallon lng here In the past, Fowler said,
gasoline tax, approved by the but the problem was the transportatlon system.
legislatW'e In Ju iy.
The Southeast Ohio Regional
The US Route 35 relocation In
GaiUa County Is ·the largest Development Council has more

Following the presentation of
the resolutions, Jeff Warner, a
NatiOnwide Insurance agent, reviewed the benefits and special
servlc~ or being a Farm Bureau
member.
Among the benefits are lower
insurance discounts for Nation·
wide policy holders, savings on
eyeglasses and prescriptions
drugs, as well as the represent&amp;·
tlon the Farm Bureau receives In
the legislature.
One of the speakers for the
evening was State Represents·
tlve Mary Ables, who spoke on
the development of Route35 from
the Jackson County line Ia
Gallipolis, as well as the needed
completion of the four lane
highway from Athens to Pomeroy and on to the Ravenswood
bridge. She also spoke of the
growing drug problem In the
nation, as well as recycling
legislation and the problems with
area landfills.
Following the entertainment
for the evening, which was
provided by "Jan and Kathy," a

gospel singing duo from the area,
the results of the district trustee
elections were presented.
Serving as trustee lor District
No.1, Orange, Olive, and Chester
Townships, will be Wendy Win·
don. In District No. 2, Lebanon;
Letart, and Sutton Townships,
the trustee will be Nita Yost:
Pauline Atkins will serve In
District No. 3, Bedford, Scipio,
and Sutton Townships, an!!
Donna Davidson will serve as
trustee for District No. 4, Ru·
!land, Salem, and Columbia
Townships. David King w•s
elected as the 1990 delegate to the
state convention with Alvin Tripp
as alternate.
Twenty·elght new members
lor 1988-89 were welcomed Into
the organization and pins wer~
presented to those with 25, 30, 35,
45, 50, and more years of
membership In the Farm
Bureau.
:
Following dinner, served by
the Eastern band boosters, Jack.
Carsey gave the treasurer's:
report.

work ahead of It, now $61.2
mDI,lon has been . committed to
US Route 35 relocation, accord·
lng to hllhway users commltttee
Chairman ~·nn~ B~' ~

,

"t!R!m.
.
··-- .
"Thill project allowslhe Importance of region-Wide cooperation," Bush said priOr to the
governor's arrival. The next step
'is gettlag funding for those SEO
projects furthers along In the
planning process. which Includes
highways In Athens, Meigs and
Pike Counties, In addition to a
Portsmouth bypass.
"We (SEORC) will be urging
the governor to fund at least two
ol these projects next," Bush
said. After that, SEORC will
work to bring attention to projects the state doesn't recognize
yet, like maklngUSRoute35four
continued on page 10
FORTV·FIVE AND $0 YEAR MEMBERSPresented pins for membership In the Meigs
County Farm Bureau for 50 years were, from left,

(Choo!c rrom Two Dcsigll!l.)

IW.....,

Long, Abel say US 35 project
should boost development

By JULm E. DILLON
Dally Sendnel Staff
Approximately 250 people at tended the Meigs County Farm
Bureau banquet and annual
meeting held Tuesday evening at
Eastern High School.
Farm Bureau member Nor·
man Will read a list of 26
resolutions dealing w!tlllssues at
the county, state, and national
level, which were voted on and
passed, Including completion of
Route 33 from Athens to Pome·
roy and on to the Ravenswood
bridge; corrective action on the
river bank erosion within the
VIllage of Pomeroy, and a more
economical way of trash
disposal.
·
Another resolution passed
stated the farm bureau's opposl·
tton to the American Heritage
Trust Fund. This program allows
government agencies. local,
state, and federal, the authority
to take land without the landowners consent by condemning
the property.

Kanawha County Circuit judge
orders Webb to be reinstated ·u. S. Atty. Crites addresses pupils

with our Antique-finish
&amp;mta Claus Tree Ornament.

~

Abel, and Slate Sen . .ran Mlcllael Loas, right, who
lobbied Celeste almost dally for the highway
lund tog. (OVP photo)

Gov. Celeste makes its official
CARNIVAL ATMOSPHERE - You can't llave any kind of
carnival - even a "Carnival of Careers" - wltlaout a carousel.
Soutllern Wgh art students fashioned Ibis carowoel to aet.the theme
for MondRJ'II "Carnival of Careers" at tbe school.

2 Section•. 1 4 P•gn 25 Cent•
A Multimedi• Inc. Newtpaper

Fa1"1n Bureau urges
completion of US 33

or young man - to pursue.

So••

--~--

Low tonl~tht In mid 41111.
Thursday, mostly sunny and
warm. Hlsh In mid-70s.

Pomeroy· Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday, October 2&amp;. 1989

Dally 1&amp;oct prices
(AI of li:H a.m.)
Bryce aad Mark Smltb
ot Blunt, 1:11111 6 Loewl

By U•Med P,.. Jateraa&amp;loaal
Cellini t&gt;lllo
Tonlll:ht, mostly clear. Low In
the upper 40s. Wlads near calm.
Wednesday, m01Uy sunny.
High Ia the mid 'lOs.
Exte•ded Foreeu&amp;
n.a 'IQ' 1111' , ...
Fair. Hlgha mainly In the 'lOs.
Lows from the mid 40stomld50s.

..

•

lirlllllal de•lls&amp;ry Ilia rewarding career for any

Weather

-

Pick
7491

to be prlmuily a maa's field. But Pam Diddle, ' Diddle Is amoag over-38 career experts who were
rep-liar Dr. Marate Lawson, of the Raelne
on hand for Monday's "Carnival of Careers" at
Soutbem High.
Deallll Clllllc, explal• to tbese Soulbern Wgh

PICK-3

$523.~.

Pi('.ks3
656

•

Lottery numbers
1114.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,142.212.50, with a payoff due of ·

Ohio Lottery

Major
Hopple's
Major Hoople's
predictions IOOIU11
IOIICAir
Page 3

NEW HAVEN
882-2135
I

CHARLESTON, W.Va . (UP!)
- A Kanawha County Circuit
Court judge Tuesday orderPd
Mason County school officials to
reinstate tleless teacher Bill
Webb, saying the county's dress
code violates his academic and
expressive freedoms.
Mason County school Superintendent Rick Powell· said the
hoard of education would appeal
the decision to the state Sup~eme
Court.
Webb, a mathematics teacher
at Point Pleasanl High School.
was fired in December 1988 after
refusing to adhere to a dress code
requiring teachers to wear dress
slacks and recommending they
wear lies.
Webb, a farmer who lives near
Gallipolis. Ohio. lost a bid lo get
his job back lhrough the employees' grievance board. But
Kanawha Circuli Judge Tod
Kaufman ruled county school
boards do not have the authority
to Issue dress codes.
"It Is held that the respondent
county board lacked the authorIty to lllsue this dress code and
thus could not discharge William
Webb tor not complying with It,"
Kaufman wrote In a 25-page
opinion.
Kaufman wrote that Mason
County's dress code violated
Webb's rights to academic freedom and freedom o! expression.
"Apart from the parents and
children of this one school losing
a valued higher mathematics
teacher and department chairman, the pervasive chilling mes·
sage to other schoolteachers ... Is
that they are considerably less
than free to devise and apply
varying educational methods
which promise higher academic
achievement."

.

Kaufrpan also ruled the school
board failed to adhere to its own
policies by not warning Webb in
writing that he could be !Ired for
not obeying the dress code. The
dress code also was Imposed
after Webb had signed . a new
contracl for the school year, and
the contracl made no menllon of
the new requirements, Kaufman
wrote.
Powell said Kaufman was off

the mark in ruling the dress code
violated academic and constltu·
Ilona I freedoms.
"Mr. Webb was Insubordinate
and that was why he was
dismissed," said Powell, who
Inherited the widely publicized
case when he took tlie post In
July.
,
Webb was not available for
comment Tuesday .

Whenever U. S. Attorney Ml·
chael Crites, Columbus, has time
from a busy schedule In U. S.
District Court, Southern District
of Ohio, he can usually be caught
fighting - against drugs. Crites
says his number one priority Is
the fight against drugs and he Is
enlisting soldiers to help him in
Ills fight from Ohio's public
school systems. Crites spent
Tuesday discussing the light
against drugs with junior high
and elementary students In
Suuthern Local School District.
"l'm the last person you want
to see" If you are Involved in any
way with drugs, Crites explains
to students In his presentations.
He then d eta!Is aspects of his
work as a U. S. Attorney
"worklag for the President," as
Ills work relates tohprosecutlng
drug offenders. He reinforces the
belief of President Bush that the
Illegal use of drugs Is the most
serious problem In the United
States today. Then In very simple
and stralghforward terms, he
tells students the reasons that
some youngsters get Involved In
drugs and encourages them to
"Just say no."
He explains to students that he
Is against drugs not only because
he Ill sworn to uphold the law,
"but because I'm a parent with
three you11· daughters. I'm here
because I care about my
cbllbren, and I care about each of
you. I want my glrJIIIIld I want
each of you, to hav't!'IWiftllves,"
Crites says to youngsters. "And
It everyone wollld just say no to
druas. then the drug problem
would soon ao away." he adds.
Crites cites the example ol
University ot Maryland athlete
Len Bias who had just staned a

Raymoad hmee, Grace Furbee, and Howard
Nolan. For 45 years of membership were Pat and
Roy Holter.

mDllon dollar contract to play
professional basketball with the
Boston Celtlcs, then went out to
celebrate the slgnlag of his
contract "and'snorted cocaine up
his nose and dropped over dead.
He snorted his life up his nose.
Now he has no future anymore.
He's dead. Drugs can kill you. I
want you to be achievers like Len
Bias was an achiever as an
athlete, but not to go the way of

Len Bias," Crites says.
He then goes on to ex phi in In his
presentations to youngsters the
health effects of the most prevalent Illegal drugs being used
today, as well as the health
effects of alcohol.
He talks to students about P.eer
pressure and encourages them to
be couragous and resist peer
pressure when It comes to the use
Continued on page 10

REPLICA - ~.Mart 1'11111 PrliiC!lplll .....

aeeet* a repllo• of tile Dnr E.rereeil

•*

Areacy.'•IIJIIIMI " V. S. Atlonley Mlellael CriM. Cr11e11 t!pOke to fludeat. • .........,.

a&amp; ~.Mart Fallll. Pertlutl, RMine ud Syraeaa E l - krill, uti
sa- Oel. a-1811• b-. PI'IC'hl Iii
Nattnal Bed Rill... Week to premole a dnc floee .tmerloa, Crltea
pr 11•teil eaeb at• leld a&amp; tile sclloela with a red rlllllea wid! tile
. . . . "'l'be Cllelce F• Me, Drq Free!"
.
)

at Sou•era Jultr BIP.

.

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON- Tim Austin,
17,
felt like he had stumbled onto
. Pomeroy, Ohio
the
set of " SIIturday Night Live."
DEVC1l'ED TO·THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ABEA ·
Two Secret Service agents
flashed their badges at the door
of his Oakton, Va., hOme and
asked his mother If they could
come ln.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Tim was as baffled at his
Publisher
mother. Had he fired on the
president with hls slingshot? Had
a sniper matching his description
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
been seen on a rooftop near tbe
General Maaacer
Asslslanl Publisher/ Controller
White House? No. Tim Austin
. had written the wrong answer on
LETJ'ERS OF OPINION an welcome. They ......... be leoolhan liN
his English paper jlt James
lon1. AD tellers are subjeel le edlllllll ud mllll be slped wllb
Madison High Schoot
nome, addreoo ud leleplloae lumber. No aulpMI-• wW be pubThe question was, If you had 24
lished. Lellen lllould bela I(OOCIIaHe, addr-clsa-. aolperoonall·
.
tleo.
. .
hours to live, what would you do?
. ' Tim's pal began drafting a weird
response. Not to be outdone, Tim
wrote that he would kill some

w.,..

Report recommends more
vitamin c for smokers

' ByREBECCAKOLBERG
United l'1'eiiiJ lnterna&amp;lenal
WASHINGTOM - The National Research Council earUer this
week updated Its nutritional guidelines for the first time In nearly a
decade, urging smokers to eat more vitamin C and advising young
adults to keep calcium consumption high .
. The Recommended Dietary Allowances report - the lOth versl.o n
since 1943 - was supposed to come out several years ago. But the
committee charged with drawing up the guidelines was disbanded In
1985 "as a result of differing scientific opinions."
The new report kept the recommended adult Intake of vitamin Cat
60 milligrams per day. But It said cigarette smokers should consume
at least 100 mill1grams of vitamin C dally because they process and
eliminate the vitamin more rapidly than non-smokers.
Vitamin C prevents scurvy- a potentially fatal disease- and also
plays a role In immune response and wound healing.
:Another major change was the recommendation that young people
kl!ep eating relatively large amounts of milk and other calcium-rich
foods Into their mld-20s.
The previous report, Issued In 1980, had set 18 as the cutoff age for
high calcium consumption . .The new edition keeps recommended.
!!ally calcium Intake at 1,200 milligrams from age 11 through 24. The
~hlft stems lrom res.e arch suggesting peak bOne density Is not
reached untU 25. even though bones usually stop growing In length at
!lbout 18 years.
"The most promising nutritional approach to reducing the risk of
osteoporosis (brittle-bOne disease) later In life is toensureacalclum
Intake that allows the development of .. peak bone mass," the report
added.
; Dairy products are the best source of calcium, but the mineral is
also found i11 some leafy green vegetables and soft fish bOnes. An
1!-ounce glass of milk contains abOut 300 milligrams of calcium.
~ The 284-page report, drafted by a five-member committee, also
established dally Intake levels for vitamin K and selenium for the first
time.
• Dally Intake of vitamin K. which helps blood clot, was set at 1
microgram - or one-millionth of a gram- per 2.2 pounds of liody
weight for bOth children and adults. Green leafy vegetables are the
l)est source of vitamin K.
• As for selenium. the report recommended men eat abOut 70
micrograms per 2.2 pounds of body weight each day and women abOut
~5 micrograms per 2.2 pounds.
Recent studies in China have linked selenium-deficient' diets to
6eart ailments In young children and women of child-bearing age.
C:Oood sources of selenium are seafood, kidney and liver.
- Michael Jacobson, executive director for Center for Science In the
Public Interest, called the new report "a good step."
• Jacobson· said his consumer group was pleased with the council's
Position that the average adult does not need more than 50Q
l)lllligrams of sodium per day. "Americans now eat five to 10 times
that much. Making that recommendation Is a courageous move In
nutritional circles," he said.
: Overall food allowances ranged from 2,300 to 2,900 calories per day
for men and 1, 900 to 2,200 calories per day for women. The report's fat
limit of 30 percent of total calories and cholesterol limit of 300
mUllgrams per day echoed many recent studies.
The report also lowered recommended Intakes of folate, vitamin
B-12. Iron In pre·menopausal women and protein for pregnant

women.

Bettye Nowlin, a spokeswoman for American Dietetic Association,
&amp;aid the report contained " no real surprises" and should make little
difference In recommended eating patterns.
. "If people eat a variety of foods and make sure they stick to the
(ecommended caloric intake, they can. be assured of a balanced.
nutritious diet for maintaining health," Nowlin said . ·
''

rooay in history
•
By Unlled Press lnlernallonal
;Today Is Wednesday. Oct. 25. the 298th day of 1989with 67 to follow .
•The moon is waning. moving toward Its new phase.
: The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
· The evening stars are Venus and Saturn.
: Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
llritlsh historian Thomas Macaulay In 1800. Austrian composer
JOhann Strauss In 1825. French composer Georges Bizetln1838, artist
Pablo Picasso In 1881, explorer Richard Byrd in 1888, comedian
Minnie Pearl In 1912 rage 77), actor AnthOny Franclosa In 1928iage
t!;ll and pop singer Helen Reddy In 1941 rage 48).
•
' On this date in history:

· In 1825. the Erie Canal, America's first man-made waterway, was
opened. linking the Great Lakes and the Atlantic Ocean .
: In 1854. In what's known to history as the Charge of the Light
Brigade, 670 British cavalrymen fighting In the Crimean War
attacked a heavily fortified Russian position and were wiped out.
: In 1971. the United Nations admitted China as a member, ousting
the Nationalist Chinese government of Taiwan.
In 1983, some 1,900 American troops, supported by six Caribbean
rjatlons. lnyaded the tiny, leftist-ruled Island of G~enada . Nineteen
Americans died In the fighting . .
: In 1986, the International Red Cross ousted South African delegates
f)'om a Geneva meeting because of Pretoria's policy of aparlheld. It
was the first such ejection In the organization's 123 years.
•
• A' thought for the d;t.y: Artist Pablo Picasso said, "God Is really
another artist. He Invented the giraffe, the elephant and the cat."

••

J)eadline for publication
election letters Nov. 1

of

•
:The
Dally Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 8 general

electiOn. However, In the Interet! of fatrneaa, no election let ten will
tie accepted after 12noon on Wednelday, Nov. 1.
; Individuals should addreaa laauea and not per~onalltles. ·
· Letters P.IJli!IY endoning c:andldates will not be used.
: LetterJii.ukl be300worcla or Jell. All letterlaresubjecttoedttlng
IOid mutlt lie ll6ped wttll name, addrt!S1 and lelepllone numblr. No
tiDIIped Wtters will be publllhed. Letters should be In aOGII taate.
~
~

.

.

Holtz still upset over fight

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Wednnday. October 26, 1989 ·
- . .. ....

Secret senice takes jokes seriously

Ill Court Slreet

lack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

Important people, among them,
Vice President Dan Quayle. He
says It was just a joke. It was the ble answers- get your girlfriend
kind of joke that only a teen-ager pregnant, steal a car for a joy
gets.
ride, robbery. Those are the
Officials at the high school ways a normal kid would spend
dldn' t laugh, and the Secret hlil last 24 hours. Threatening to
Service was alerted. The agents kill Dan Quayle fell into the
were pretty humorless, too, when category of psychopath. "You
tliey showed up at the Austin could be raising another John
·home on Sept. 8.
Hinckley," tqe agent told Tim's
Tim and his mother sat at the mother.
dining room table with one agent
A former Secret Service agent
who asked most of the questions. . ·told.our associate Jim Lynch that
The ot~er agent stood a few teet the Interrogation was an "overaway, twirling his mirrored kill." He said agents who check
sunglasses and glowering.
up on the Tim Austlns of the
Tim's answer to the English world are often fres)l out of tile
class question was unacceptable, training academy. They have a
said the' man at the table. His list of routine questions that
partner suggested some accepta- sometimes bOrder on the comic.

•

0.

zA'tWJ1t"l"'
~A&lt;N.r

'/

,.'1-0lOQII'QII"',..~:...,.jlll:llS:

"What would happen If -Dan
Q11ayle came to your door?" one
·
agent asked Tim.
" I 'd be shOcked," Tim said.
After 90 minutes of Interrogation, the agents left. They said
Tim's case would be referred to
the Justice Department and
would likely be dropped.
But the agents dldn' t stop
there. With the Austlns' permission, they called on the family
psychologist and asked more
questions about Tim. The psychologist assured the agents that
Tim Is harmless, that "he has a
sardonic sense of humor that
sometimes backfires.
A spokeman for the Secret
Service refused to talk to us
abOut the Austin case, or any
other case, saying only that
agents "do Investigate allegations or circumstances that may
relate to threats against the
president or vice president."
This Is the same Secret Service
that recently told us we were tull
of baloney when we reported that
the agency was "taking se·rtouly" an alleged plot by the
. Medelltn cocaine cartel to assassinate President Bush. 11m's
experience proves that the Secret Service takes everything
seriously. Including sarcastic
adolescents.
nm said he learned something
abOut America, and he wrote It In
his jourmll: "Freedom of SPeech
Is a good thin' to have. Too ba~
we don't have lt .... How manr
people say something as a jo~
and end up In jail?"
Tim won't be prosecuted, but .
he won't be forgotten either. He
now has his name on a Secret
Service ftle, just In case he poses
a threat to the White House.
again.

Political.money
is
riding
on
House
·
·
·
. · Robert Walters .
HOBACK JUNCTION, Wyo.
(NEA) -Why would Republican
and Democratic political organizations In states more than 1,000
miles away contrlbu te $5,000
apiece to candidates In a routine
contest lo fill a vacant U.S. House
seat from ·wyoming?
Why would scores of House
members - bOtb Republicans
~nd Democrats - representing
districts throughout the country,
pour thousands of dollars of their
own campalgo funds Into the
contest?
Why would those state organizations, politicians and the national committees of the two
major parties pump vast
amounts of money Into equally
ordinary elections held this year
to fill vacant House seats In seven
other states?
The answer to all of those
questions: Contests for House
seats; which liOt long BJIU re·
celved only modest attention and
nominal donations from power·
ful Wa'Sblngton politicians, are
being federalized.
The candidates. once chosen
by local party leaders, now are
often recruited, if not selected.
by officials of national party

organizations. Moreover. much
of the money Indispensable to
successful campaigns now
comes from Individuals and
organizations linked to
Washington.
Nowl:lere is. that phenomenon
more apparent than In the
special elections for House seats
left unoccupied because ol the
resignation (usually to accept
another public office) or death of
a representative.
In an era when better than 95
percent of all House members
seeking another term are reelected, special elect Ions offer a
rare opportunity for a post to
switch party control because
they are always contests for open
seats ones without an
Incumbent.
Unlike regular ~lecttOns for
House seats, ali 435 of which are
conducted In November of every even-numbered year, special
elections are held throughout the
year and thus_po not have ·to
compete for attent16n (or money) with other races .
For those and other reasons.
out-of-state money whose flow
was orchestrated from Washing-

ton became an Important factor
In all of th~ special elections for
House held thus far this year -In
Indiana, Alabama, Florida, California, Mississippi, Texas (In two
districts) and Wyoming.
When Jtepubllcan Rep. RIchard B. Che~y gave up the
Wyoming seat to become President Bush's secretary of defense,
Republican Craig Thomas and
Democrat John Vlnlch engaged
In a spirited contest to fill the
vacancy. The campaign cost
almost $1.3 million. divided
a bou I equally between the two
candidates.
The Wyoming Republican and
Democratic parties contributed
$5,000 apiece to their respective
candidates- b"ut that traditional
support was matcl)ed by extraordinary $5,000 donations from
bOth parties' state organizations
In California. Colorado, Ohio and
Michigan.
In addition. 11 other state
Democratic parties and five
other state Democratic parties
and five other state Republican
organizations - most of them
based hundreds of miles away contributed $5,000 apiece to the
Wyoming candidates.

Edward Zuckerman, a Washington expert on canipalgn .
finance and publiSher of a ·
newsletter on the subject, con- .
eluded that the funds probably
originated In Washington, then
were transmitted to tbe state
committees earmarked for
transfer to Wyoming In " a
complicated money recycling .
operation." All ofthls Is perfectly
legal.
Many of the contributions to
Vlnlch and Thomas (who won the
race) from the campaign accounts of 115 House members of ·
bOth parties, almost all of whom
gave S500 or $1,000, also appear to
have been coordinated by the
national party organizations.
Finally, bOth candidates received generous support directly
from their parties' national organliatlons - Including the .
Republican and Democratic ·
committees that were estab·
llshed to raise funds for contend·
ers for U.S. Senate seats.
More than one-third of all the
money spent In the Wyoming
race came directly or Indirectly
lrom Washington - and that
pattern Is likely to be repeated
elsewhere In future campaigns.

Tax bill reveals a party of Dumocrats
Is the Democratic Party just
sick, or Is II ·dying? Its feeble
performance In the current bat·
tie over a cut In the capital gains
tax suggests the virus that has
laid siege to Its wheezing frame Is
a fiendish bug Indeed.
In brief, what happened Is this:
During the 1988 c ampalgn,
George Bush promised to cut the
capital gains tax rate - taxes
paid on profits real~ from the
sale of assets like stocks, bonds
and real estate. As an election
Issue, It clearly rode In the back
seat while flags and pledges did
the driving.
The capital gains debate gathered steam before House leaders could get organized, and they
were thrown Into utter disarray.
Majority Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., took considerable
heat for trying to frame the Issue
as a popuUst, rlch-vs.-mlddle
class debate.
Rep. Les AuCoin, D-Ore., told
the New York Times that "the
American people do not buy ln ...
to a class warfare political
argument." Rep. Ed Jenkins,
0-Ga., a leading proponent of the
tax break, said, "The party 1
know and love and have worked
for Ia not lntereated In class
wartarecltchea.1don'ttblnkthat
plays anymore."
For anyone who bellevea In a
robust two-party system, this Is
na~~~eattnc babble. Old I say the
.Democratic Party seems sick?
How about chronically mudd!•
be6ded? People who talk like this
are not Democrats, they are
Dumocrats.

Fundamentally, there Is nothing new about this debate. The
Democrats have been representIng the middle class against the
monied Interests since Thomas
Jefferson argued George Washington's Cabinet table. Since
there are millions more average
folk than rich folk, there Is no
reason why the arguments are
any less viable today than two
centuries ago.
. Think about it, Democrats:
-The man elected president Is
the product of the privileged
classes and a millionaire. He
went to Andover and Yale. He
has country club habits and
mannerisms, flits around like a
hummingbird, affects an effete
alt and tends to speak In an
esoteric gibberish. None ofthese,
of course. are Indictable offenses
-until you consider that his first
big economic decision as presl·
dent was to thumb hla nose at
"the help" by vetoing a modest
lncrea!ll! In the minimum wage.
His second was to gtve hjs
wealthy frtends • big break on
the capital gains tax.
Is the Democratic Party so
devoid of talent that no one forge
a weapon with this raw material?
-All tbe mumbo jumbo aside.
the capital gains giveaway Ia an
outrlcbl handout to the lUper
rtcb. The btU will be modlfted by
the Seaate, but under the HoUle
version, the 375,000 wealthiest
families In America would receive more than 125,000 apteee In
!.$X benefits. The federal treuury would be reduced accordln&amp;IY. Greenbackl don't grow In
~

·-

petri dishes. They have to tome
from sqmewhere. Either government services will be reduced or
the national debt will become
even more obscene.
If you can't make an Issue out
of all this, Democrats, \hen you

Joseph Spear
trulY are a bunch of feckless
has-beens. You are Dumocrats.
And perhaps the bell Is t.ollln for
the party of Jefferson, Gen.
Jacksoh and FOR.

CHALLENGE TROPHY- Wllh Friday night 's
22-7 win over lhe Belpre Golden Eagles, the Melp
Marauders reclaimed lhe Meigs County Jaycees·
Belpre .Jaycees Challenge Trophy. The trophy,
which goes lo the winner of lhe Melp-Belpre
football game every year, was slarled ln-1 98twllh
Belpre winning lhe fll'llllllt, 25-14. Melp won the
trophy tbe next two years, 34-7 and 13-0, before the

Golden Eagles won lithe last two years by scores·
of 12-7 and 33-27. Pictured "ilh lhe trophy are lhls
year's Marauder seniors; Kneeling left lo rlghl
are Co-caplalns Jay Humphreys and Jim Dursl.
Standing left lo right are Dennis Boolh, Tony
Miller, Danyel VanG~deran , Doug Slewarl, Ed
Crooks and Randy Hawley.

Kaff·kaff ·

Seminoles ready for Hurricanes
Egad, friends! It's no wonder
that coach Bobby Bowden of
Florida State Is hailed as "The
King of the Road." In 14 seasons
at FSU, his record out of town is
an Impressive 54·25·2 - Include
lng electrifying wins away from
home over such powers as Notre
Dame. Nebras~a and Ohio State.
This season, In Blacksburg,
Va .. Bowden's Seminoles went on
the· war path arid recorded a
dominating 41-6 triumph. over
tough VIrginia Tech, the team
that handed West Virginia Its
first defeat of 1989.
What Bowden and his boys
have to learn Is bow to win the big
,,ne at home against arch-rival
Miami- the Seminoles have lost
their last four home games
against the Hurricanes.
Two of those games went to
Miami by one-point margins.
17•16 &lt;tn i983, and 26-25 In 1987.
Both times the HurriCanes went
on to claim the national crown. In
the 1987 and 1988, the Seminoles
lost only two games all season
long - bOth to Miami.
This Saturday the spotlight is
back on Tallahassee, Fla. , and
FSU Is the underdog against
Miami.
·Both clubs have explosive
offenses. The Hurricanes, with
either freshman phenom Gino
Torretta or seasoned Craig ErIckson doing the pitching. average 40-plus points per game. The
Seminoles' passer, Peter Tom
Willis, Is a match for either of
those QBs.
Miami has theedgeondefense,
but Florida State has the llome
crowd on Its side. So, In a
spectacular aerial show, the
Hoople System Is calling II , 34 -31.
for Florida State - In a
heart stopper.
·Equally Important In the race
tot national honors are the Notre
Dame-Pittsburgh (on ESPN-TV)
and Colorado-Oklahoma clashes.
The Irish hold a commanding
33-16-1 lead In the Pill series .
·However, the rugged Panthers
have won three of the last four
meetings.
·
• As Tony Rice goes. so goes the
Irish -and N.D.'s quarterback
Is doing very well on the ground ,

The Daily Senlinel
(USPS IU-910)
A Division ol Mgltlmedla. Inc.

Berry's World

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Ca11fornla 19 Oregon Stat e 18
and through the air. His slats
Cltadel17 Eas t Tennessee Stall' 15
aren' t astronomical because he
Clemsoo 49 Wake ForE'St 14
Colgate- 28 Lafayette 24
has a strong supporting cast of
Colorado 38 Oklahoma 24
runners and receivers.
Colorado State 29 Ut ah 28
Connectlrut 41 Richmond 31
Pitt's attack Is well-rounded.
2,4 Dartmouth 21
The rapid development of fresh- Cornell
E . Michigan 35 Cen t ral Michigan 18
man QBAlex Van Pelt makes Ita
Florida Slat e 34 Miami (Florida ) 31
F resnoS1a te 35 Nevada -Las Vegas 28
threat to score from anywhere on
Georgia 24 Kentucky 18
the field. In a free-scoring affair,
Georgia SOuthern 34j Samford U
· Georgia Tt!ch 28 .Duke 24
give It to Notre Dame, 34-27.
Harvard 10 Princeton 7 ·
The relentless Colorado attack
Holy Cross 42 Brown 27
Houstm42 Ar kansas 24
poses a big problem for host
Illinois 28 Wisconsin 10
Oklahoma in their Big Eight
Iowa 33 Northwestern 15
battle. The Buffalo offense aver- Kansas 28 Kansas Stat e 21
Ma r shall 25 VIrginia Milit ary 12
ages 520 yards and 42 points per
Michigan 28lndiana 21
game. But .tl)at may drop off
Michigan State 22 Purdue 15
Ml s slsslpol 27 Vanderbilt 13
because RB Eric Blenlemy is
Na vy 26 James Mad ison 22
sidelined with a broken leg. Even
Nebraska 49 le w a Stat e 11
North Ca rolina 17 Maryland 15
so, lei's make it Colorado over
N. Carolina St. 38 South Carolina 28
Oklahoma , 38-24.
Notre Dam e 34 Pl1 tsburl!:h 27
Nebraska, looking ahead to its Ohio State 21 Minnesota 20
Oklahoma St a t e 21 Missouri 14
Nov. 4 Big Eight showdown with
Or egon 28 Long Beach State 12
Colorado, should have little trou- Penn State 28 Al abama 21
ble disposing of Iowa State, 49-11. San Diego Sta t e 32 Lexas- EI Paso 28
San Jos e St. 42 New Mcxloo St. 21 •
F,lnally. In a,n ABC:;TV 'doubleSouth~n Cal 28 Stanford 17
header, UCLA, will edge Wa- Southern Methodist 17 North Te1tas 15 ·
So. Mississippi 31 Memphis St. 21
shington 28-24, In a Pac-10 · Syrarnse
27 East Ca rollna 22
encounter, and Michigan wDI win Temple 22 Northern 11llnols 2Q
TennC'isec 22 Louisia na Stote 11
Its Big Ten clash with Indiana, Texas
A&amp;M 38 Ri ce 20
28-21. Har-rumph! '
Tolt'do 35 K ent Stat£&gt; 14 •
SATURDAY . Ocl. 28
Akron 31 Cincinnati 24
Appalachian St 34 UT-Ch a ttano~a 21
· Arlzoos 31 P acific tO

Army 1'7 Rutgers 14
Auburn 28 Mi ssissippi State 17
Baylor 25 Texas Christian 10
Bowltng Green 38 Mlarrii IOhiOI 18
Brigham Young 28 Hawaii 22
Bucknell 24 Columb6a 6

Tulsa 30 Louis ian a Tech 10
UCLA 28 Was hington 24
Villanova JO Rh ode Island 20
It a ly )
Vt rgtnla 31 Lou isv Ui e 24

Schlichter
hearing .reset
•
CIRCl.EVIl.LE . Ohio I UP!)A bond hearing scheduled Tuesday "for former Ohio State quarterback Art Schlichter was postponed by Municipal Court Judge
0 . Charles Hosterman.
Hosterman said he postponed
the hearing at the reques I of
Schlichter's attorney after two
doctors at the Charter Hospita l in
Las Vegas, Nev .. wrote confirm-ing former Ohio State quarterback is being treated by them for
gambling addiction.
Dr. Robert Custer told Hos ter-

Sports briefs
Basketball
Missouri Coach Norm Stewart ,
holding his first news conference
since becoming Ill Feb. 9 a nd
mls~lng the final third of last
season, says he is free of colon
cancer and ulcers. The M-yearold coach is In his 23rd season a t
Missouri.
Boxing
Soviet middleweight Viktor
Egorov will fight Mastapha Cole
of Cincinnati at Wembley Stadium in London Wednesday In his
first professional fight outside
the Soviet Union. Promoter
Micky Duff had to Import Cole
after some 30 Brit Ish fighters
refused the match. ... IBF
crulserwelght champ . Glenn
McCrory of Britain will not fight
again this year following Saturday's 11th-round knockout over
South Africa's Slza Makhatlnl.

man that Schlichter had ente red
the hospital Oc t. 17 for 21 day s of
treatment. He said he had been
trying to find a space for
Schlichter in the ho spital since
Oct. 1.
Schlichter was charged with
passing a bad check for $150 at a
South Bloomfield , Ohio, service
station Sept. 7. He failed to
appear in court on Oct. 13 for a
pretrial hearing, claiming he
was being treated at the Las
Vegas facilit y.
Circleville Law Director Gary
Ke nworthy asked for the bond
hearing In the wake of questions
over Schlichter 's whereabouts.
Such hearings are held when it Is
thought a defendant might flee
prosecution.
Hosterman said he probably .
will move the bond hearing to
coincide with th e rescheduled
·. pretrial hearing on Nov.' 20. A
jury trial is scheduled before
Hosterman on Nov. 29.
The charge carries a maximum fine of $1,000 and six
months In jail.
'

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Tholl Latt
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Choreel

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rter may remit In advsnl."t' dlrect to
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at fault because olthe logistic• of
how we conduct our pre-game.
workout.
" I don't otter this as an
explanation. There ts no explanation. Rathe r than do the pregame warmup like we've been
doing It for 20 years, I should
have changed it. Winning the
football game Is not worth the
embarassment to the unlver·
s lty," Holtz said.
Holtz said he did not believe his
players started the fight .
•'The contendon that our players tried to Instigate It or start It
- I can't buy that, " Holtz said.
a real mess. "
Holtz blamed himself for not " If I thought our football team
altering his team's · warmup was taunting, I wouldn't worry
pattern In the wake of a pre-game abOut our image. I would worry
fight las I year when Miami abOut the problem."
The defending national cham(Fla.) visited Notre Dame
plan Irish, 7·0, carry the nation's
Stadium.
"! should have been wiser and longest winning streak. 19
srnarter," Holtz said. "I should games, Into a Saturdily home
have moved our players out and game against No. 7 Pittsburgh,
not practiced In the stadium. I'm 5-0-1.

practice. USC players filed past
the Irish In the nor th end zone
toward the only exit from the
field when the fight began.
Security gua rds joined assis tant
coaches In separating players
apart . allowing the Trojans to
reach their locker room.
' 'This has happened two or
three times In big games and It
always seems to be here, " USC
coach Larry Smith said after the
game. " It's unfortunate, The
people here should look at their
seCurity . and how they bring
teams In or out of the field. It was

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Rio soccer team
falls to Quakers
Wllming.fon closed out the
University of Rio Grande soccer
team 8-0 Tuesday at Stanley L.
Evans Athletic Field.
The nationally-ranked Quakers held the Redmen to a single
shot on goal by 'junior Tony
Daniels. Goalkeeper Chad
Rickey recorded 14 saves for the
Redmen. Wilmington netted 37
shots on goal and PQSted no saves
at the net.
The win boosted the Quakers ·,
12-3-2 overall. while the Redn KII
go to 2-9-1. Rio Grande com(' •"trs
its season Saturday at Bald~; in- ·
Wallace.

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'

Candlestick
ready for
World Series
SAN FRANCISCO (UPl) Mayor Art Agnos gave a final
go-ahead to resumption of the
World Series at Candlestick Park
on Friday foUowlng an unprecedented 10-day delay In t~ ' ·
. baseball classic due to \:
earthquake that rocked the Ba_
Area.
"There's no question In my
mind that the World Series elm
proceed this Friday, ·• Agnos said
Tuesday . "I'm satisfied that
Candlestick Is as safe as any
facility can be before or after an
earthquake. "
Agnos had demanded "Ironclad assurances" of the safety of
the stadium and apparently got
th.em in a report by Interactive
Resources, Inc .. which said that
the "Integrity" of Candlestic_k
"has not been impaired by the
earthquake."
Agnos added that the pollee
department had returned to
normal duty .and officers would
be available for traffic duty and
other assignments related to
Games 3. 4 and 5 scheduled for
Candlestick.
The report said that Candlestick "performed quite well"
when the blg earthquake. which
registered 6.9 on the Richter
scale, hit at 5:04 p.m. PDT Oct .
17. a few minutes before the start
of scheduled Game 3 between the
San Francisco Giants and the
Oakland Athletics . The Athletics
won the first two games at the
Oakland Coliseum .
·

7

$pe61sl 01 The W11k/

•Leaf Rakes
•Leaf Bags .
•Yard Carts

Subscrl~rs

Mall l!obooriDI-

By JIM SLATER
. UPI Spo1111 Wrller
SOIRH BEND, Ind. CUPI) Lou Holtz re peated Tuesday his
vow to resign as Notre Dame's
football coach If the top-ranked
Flg~ting Irish are Involved In
another pre-game brawl.
Holtz vowed to quit In the wake
of a fight between the Irish and .
Southern Call!ornla players Saturday before Notre Dame's 28·24
triumph over the Trojans. Notre
Dame officials have sent Southern Cal a letter of apology for the
Incident.
"I'm embarassed by it." Holtz
said Tuesday. "We should have
avoided It at all costs, even If It
meant retreating. We will avoid
It or I'll not coach again."
Notre Dame's seventh straight
victory over the arch-rival Trojans was diminished by a pregame brawl between players,
Holtz said.
" I don't hl\ve much enthusiasm .right now," Holtz said.
"There Is probably something
wrong with the atmosphere of
our football team. There's nothing I can do to repair the
damage this has done. no malter
what happens."
AbOut 30 players were Involved
In the pre-game fight, which
began as Southern Cal players
tried to leave the field after

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.October 26, 1989

Pomaloy-MiddhllOI't. Ohio

R.
am, rock concert complicate Series·

GAUJ:!ft WORKS OUT - Glanls pl&amp;eher Scolt Garrelts
· · tlor-. durinK the team's worko•t at Cudlesdck Park In San
Ji'l'aaclleo Tuesday, u pltcblllc coach Norm Sherry looks on.
Garrelta wlllstu1 Game 3 of lbe World Serlea Friday a(Kbt. ( UPI)
··--·----

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Cavs drop 94-90 exhibition contest
LA CROSSE, Wis. (UP!i-Jay throw for a three-point play and
Humphries scored 22 points and Fred Roberts then had a slam
P&lt;iul Pressey added 14 Tuesday dunk to put the Bucks up 80-77.
niJht as the Milwaukee Bucks
The Bucks hit 20 or 22 free
downed the Cleveland Cavaliers throws in the game to 14 of 22 for
94-90 In an NBA preseason game. . the Cavs and outre bounded the
The Bucks are now 3·1 while Cavaliers 40-37.
the Cavaliers, who were led by
Former Buck Pllul Mokeskl
R~n Harper w!th 18 points. fell to
made his first appearance
2-3.
against the. Bucks since signing
Mark Price added 16 points for in the off-season with Cleveland.
tht Cavaliers. Alvin Robertson He got a big hand from the crowd
added 11 and Ben Coleman and and had 1 points and 1 rebounds
Ricky Pierce had 10 each for the ln ·six minutes of action.
Bucks.
The Cavaliers led 47·44 at the
' half after Price hit a pair of free
Sports briefs
throws w!th three seconds left
Honors
and were on top 67-to going into
Denver quarterback John Ei·
the final period .
The Bucks went ahead for good way and Indianapolis safety
with 5: 39 lelt In the ·game when Keith Taylor were named AFC
they scored five straight points. Offensive and Defensive Players
Robertson was fouled while mak· of the Week. NFC honors went to
Ing a basl,let and he made the free New Orleans running back Dal·
ton Hilliard and Minnesota IJne.
backer Mila! Merriweather.
Hone RaeiJII
The president of Maryland's
tim~
two tracks Is willing to accept an
off· track betting facility In BaltiTbe Ohio High School Athletic more If granted a way of tapping
AsiOCIItlon announced ID Its last Into Washington bettors. Joseph
meetlq that all boys' and girls' DeFrancls, president of the Lau. reponal crou country tourna· rel Racing Association and the'
meat starting times have been Maryland Jockey Club, which
moved to Saturday afternoon, so operates Plmllco Race Course,
as to accommodate runnen told a legislative panel that a
scheduled fa take their ACT facility In downtown Baldmore
exama that day.
would hurt PlmUco's atteadaac:e.

OHSAA announces
CC
change

\

,

,

--

•

hope we can work something
out," he said.
Graham called the cllolce to
deter to Monday Night. Football
selfish.
'
He said he would have abided
by a decision to stopallentertaln·
ment events In San Francisco,
"but when one sector of our
community Is being moved
around at the will of another
sector, that Is not kosher," he
said.
The · promoter termed the
Stones' five-story-high oversize
stage "the most ell bOrate In the
hiStory of traveling rock 'n' roll
shows." He said It could conclev·
ably beset upln~ ~days, but not
In 2 ~·"You can't justsend men
up those ropes 15 hours a day,'' he
said.
Bennett Kleinberg. a publicist
for the Stones, said earlier that
the band's preparation time has
varied, but he said It has rarely If
ever gone below threi! days.
"Right now the contract Is
standing and the tickets are still
valid," said Kleinberg.

I

High school notes
By GENE CADDFS
, and won Its first football cham·
UPI Sports Writer
•
plonshlp since 1972 when the
COLUMBUS
- Ohio high Greyhounds beat the Golden
schoolfootball notes from around Bears 28·20 Friday night. Junior
the state:
Mike Dickerson rushed for 104
Sen.lor running back Ron Ritz yards and sophomore Louis
rushed for 345 yards and scored Willard had 145 yards, bOth
six touchdowns Friday night to scoring two touchdowns, to lead
55·21 the way for Grove City, now 8·1.
lead Niles McKinley to
victory over Hubbard. Ritz had The Greyhounds lost their opscorlng runs of 71, 51, 45, 41,2 and ener. 15·13. to unbeaten Colum·
1 yard. Hubbard quarterback , . bus Franklin Heights but have
Brad Smith completed 15 of 26 won eight In a row.
,
passe~ for 264 yards. His TD ·
Delphos St. John's handed ·
passes of 52, 84 and 26 yards all Minster Its first loss of the season
went to Bob Easton. .
Friday night, 26.0, In a battle of
Junior quarterback Bob Hoy· Division V top ten teams. Scott
lng passed for six touchdowns · Schulte once again led the way
Friday night In St. Henry's 60·20 for the Blue Jays. Schulte carrlecj
victory over . Coldwater. The 33 times for 244 yards and scored
6·fool4. 200-pound Hoying com· all 26 St. John's points on
pleted 18 of 22 passes for 286 touchdown runs of 5, 30, 33 and 6
yards and also ran 10 times for 65 . yards and a 2·polnt conversion.
yards. Three St. Henry receivers . Fremont Ross' Cary Lance
shared the siX TD passes equally, threw an 11-yard touchdown pass
Including Scott arunswlck, who to Scott Mezlnger with 50 seconds
hauled In 8 for 111 yards. On the remaining Friday night to give
season. Hoying has completed the Little Giants an 18·13 win over
10? of 184 attempts for 1, 749 yards previously unbeaten and 3rd·
and 21 touclldowns.
ranked &lt;Division I) Lancaster.
Wooster's Andrew DeLoach Ross drove 70 yards in nine plays
ran 31 times for 209 yards and for the winning touchdown after
five touchdowns In the Generals' recovering a Golden Gale fumble
32·12 win over New Philadelphia with 2:31 to play.
Friday night.- The 6-foot-1. 195West Jetferson's high-scoring
pound DeLoach now has 1,651 Ron Mast rushed 38 times for 305
yards and 21 touchdowns on the yards and six touchdowns In a
season and 4,288 yards and 4.5 48·7 win over North Union Friday
TDs in his three years at night. Mast, theCOII!mbusarea's
Wooster.
leading rusher and scorer, now
'has 1,943 yards and 30 touch·
Grove City po~ted Its first win. downs this season.
over Upper Arlington since 1979
Senior Trent Boykln scored

a

'IWMd~!f Sptii'IA TNII•ctiO-.;

U.H: II. ~~t~lon ft.SI.

Bt-l

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Playoffs

stage for five days prior,"
Graham said. "I was not aware
until the weekend that there was
a conflict." ·
Graham complained that
Baseball ComlhiAIIIoner Fay Vlncent's office did not check with
him or with Collaeum officials
before moving Game 3 of the
World Series from Tuesday to
Friday. He also criticized lhe
decision not to hold a game on
Monday. thereby extending the
Series one more day Into the
Stones' preparation time. ·
''This schedule fits In very well
with our traditional World Series
games and also !Its In very well
with the network," said Jim
Small, a spokesman for Major
League Basebalt
The ABC·TV network has ex·
elusive television rights to the
World Series. "The network bas
previous obligations to Monday
Night Football," Small added.
Small said the baseball commissioner's office and the Oak·
land A's "have been In contact
with the ColiseUm people" to
discuss the Stones contract. ·:we

Ritz blitz thumps Hubbard,

Scoreboard ...
• OHSAA Ratings

SAN . FRANCISCO !UPI) First an earthquake delayed lhe
World Series.
·
NowralntsforecastforGaine3
Friday night. and a different
problem - a Rolling Stones
concert - threatens Game 7.
The National Weather Service
predicts showers and tempera·
tureS In the 40s to mld·60s for
Friday. However, skies were
expected to clear Saturday when
Game 4 was scheduled.
The Oakland Athletics lead the
San Francisco Giants 2·0. If
necessary, Game 5 Is scheduled
for Sunday at Candlestick Park
and Games 6 and 71n Oakland on
Tuesday and Wednesday.'
If Game 71s played Wednesday
In Oakland, a conflict arises with
the Rolling Stones. The Stones ·
are scheduled to perform Nov. 4
and 5 In the CoUseum.
Rock promoter Bill Graham,
whose company Is bringing the
Stones to Oakland, said Tuesday ·
the band needs live days to build
a massive set for the concert.
"Our contract clearly states ,
that we have the right to use the

Harris 'not worried'
about Reisman voting
MORGANTOWN. W.Va.
(UPl) - West Virginia quarter·
back Major Harris says the
pressure of the Hetsman Trophy
voting's coming closer doesn't
bother him.
"I just go out there and play,"
the quarterback said In a weekly
telephone conference call Tuesday. "I don'\ worry about pres·
sure or something like that." .
The No. 3 passer In the NCAA
efficiency rating has completed
84of 144 passes for1,285yards for
13 touchdowns with six lntercep·
tlons, The 6-1, 207-(iounder also Is
the Mountaineers' No. 2 rusher
on 428 yards on 80 carries
compared to . leader Garrett
Ford's 462 yards on 88 carries.
The juniOr leader of the 14thranked Mountaineers, 5·1-1, Is
eonsldered one of the top five
candidates for the Helsman,
symbolizing the best player in
college football. They play Satur·
day at Boston College, 1·5.
"It's funny," he said. "You try
not to get caught· up In that
because I think !hat will hamper
your performance."
To .\hat end, hyping Harris for

the Hetsman. the WVU sports
Information staff sends out post·
cards and a letter nationwide
each week reporting Harris'
latest accomplishments.
"I don't mind It," Harris said.
"I wouldn't mind having more.
Like I said, everybody's got jobs
to do."
The Pittsburgh native said
publicity Is simply part of the
process. But throughout that
process, people continue to treat
Harris just as they always have,
he said.
"1 don't think it's any big
change."
The run·and·shoot offense In·
trlgues the quarterback who runs
West VIrginia's option offense
that usually does not allow him to
throw a lot of passes. Harris said
he thinks he could have a lot of
positive statistics If he were
operating a run-and-shoot
offense.
"But I'm not in that offense, so
I can't dwell on t.hat," he said .
A lot of little thingS become
part of the Helsman balloting,
but the team record plays a
major role, Harris noted.

55~21

two touchdowns and passed for
another Friday night to lead Kent
Roosevelt to a 21·18 win over
Barberton. The 5-foot-6, 145·
pound Boykln touched the balll4
times In the game and was
responsible for 219 all-purpose
yards. Boy kin scored on a
60-yard punt return and a 13-yard
run and threw a 34-yard TD pass
to Tyrone Thomas off a fumbled
pltchout.
Elmwood snapped a 20-game
losing streak Friday night with a
28.() win over Lakota. Steve
McGrain led the way for the
Royals with touchdown runs of 20
and 38 yards. The Royals forced
six Lakota fumbles and reCO'
vered five of them. Shawn
Morgart returned one 26 yards
for a score.

'
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MEIGS COUNTY

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MON .• WED .• FRI. 8o SAT. 10-6

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If you have foot pain
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Most medical insurance plans accepted

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4542 DUSON AYt ·
110 IOANE STIEET
· PAIIIUSMG, WY•.J6101 CHAIL£STON, WV. 25302
(304) 421~1000
(304) 342-0000

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CIOO. nOM CUSSICS TO
THIIIWIST RELEASES.

H2·5711
'
·•IDIINII, OliO

tender Glenn Healy Tuesday to Chyzowski's first NHL goal had
to come In and play good defense night: Philadelphia routed St.
because they usually come out · Louis 6-1 and Edmonton and the give the Oilers a tte with the sparked the New York Islanders
N.Y. Islanders skated to a 3-3 Ue. Islanders. With the Islanders' .to a 1·0 lead . Jarl Kurrl helped
flying."
Brad Lauer In the penalty box, the Oilers creep back with two
Flyers 6, Blues I
Chicago coach Mike Keenan
downplayed the Importance of
At Philadelphia, llkka Slntsalo Gelinas goal at 15:;14 capped an goals. Pat Lafontaine and Brad ••
the two early season wins against scored two goals and added an Oller comeback from a 3·1 deficit Lauer had the other New York .·
assist to help the Flyers end a
In the third period. Rookie Dave goals.
Detroit.
.
11
three-game losing streak. Sin·
1t's only two games," Keenan
-------Sports
b
r
iefs-----Isalo gave Ph11adelphta, which
said. "It's a long season."
Detroit center Shaun . Burr had just one win and one .. tie In
Football
Auto Racing
'
The
Indianapplls
Colts are
their
first
eight
games
going
Into
agreed.
Indianapolis 500 winner Emer· •
''Two games are two games,' ' the. contest, leads of Ul and 3-0 trying to sign vet~ran quarter·
son Flttipaldl will team with
said Burr. "We're not going to and assls ted on a goal by Murray back Don Strock. He would play
Danny Sullivan and Rick Mears
put our heads In a hole just Craven to make ,the "_$COre 4·1 behind starter Jack Trudeau and
on the CART circuit In 1990 under
because of them."
midway through the third I,M!rlod. backup Tom Ramsey. .. . Jets
the sponsorship of MarlbOro
Chicago goaltender Alain The Flyers also got a §harp backup quarterback Kyle
Racing. Marlboro will field a
Chevrier, who turned away 26 of performance by goaltender Ken Mackey underwent surgery on
two-car unit with Team P.enske.
29 Detroit s(lots ~ Including two Wregget. who stopped 31 of 32 , his Infected elbow In New York.
Hoeke;y
excellent opportunltl~ for Yzer· Blues shots and surrendered ju,st He will remain In the hospital a
DE&gt;fenseman Rod Buskas, the
nian - Improved his career one goal, to ex-F1yer Peter Zezel few days .... Pittsburgh Steelers
senior member of the Pittsburgh
quarterback Bubby Brister, out
record against the Red Wings to In the third period.
Penguins, was traded to Van·
since Injuring his knee Oct. 8.
8-1·1. Chevrier Is 4·0 against
· Islanders 3, Oilers 3
couver for a sixth-round choice In
Detroit since joining the Black- . At UniOndale, N.Y.,- Martin returned to practice. 1t remains
the 1990 entry.draft . He had not
hawks last season.
Gelinas
from Mark unclear If Brister _will start
pla~yed thiS season and. asked to

•

WILD DRIED
GINSENG BOOTS

OPB 7 DAYS A WEll
365 DAYS A YUII

FAMILY DAYS TUESDAYS &amp; SUNDAYS

By TOM WITHERS
llnemates Dirk Graham and
UPI Sporta Writer
Steve Thomas. Graham assisted
It's only been four years but to on all three Murray goals and
Troy Murray It seems longer.
Thomas assisted two and added a
Murray scored three goals and
goal.
added assist Tuesday nlghl,
" I was just at the end where I
leading the Chicago Blackhawks
had to put the puck In tl~e net,"
to their third straight win a 5·3 said Murray.
victory over the Detroit Red
Murray's third goal, at 4:57 of
Wings.
the third period, came after
In 1985·85, Murray set career
Detroit had trimmed a 3-0
highs with 45 goals and 99 point~,
Chicago it\ ad to 3·2 on goals by
but his totals have dropped off Steve Yzerman and Borje Salm·
significantly th'e last two lng. Murray directed a pass from
seasons.
Thomas, past Detroit goaltender
"That was so long ago I can't Tim Cheveldae to thwart the
remember , " Murray said of the Detroit comeback.
1985·86 season. Murray lead the
It was Chicago's second ·triteam In scoring so far this season umph . over the Red Wings this
buthlslsts that there's a long way · season and their sixth In the last
to go. "Things are going well," he nin~· regillar season meetings
added. "I don't even want to
between the teams.
compare it ."
"We still fear coming into this
Murray notched his
ou''"''ng," Murray said oftheJoe
•reer hat trick with the
A11]:na. "We know we have

'

FOR

PEOPLES CHOICE VIDEO

2 TAPIS lOR S3H

MULLEN MUSSER

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OPEN
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WATCH IllS SUNDAY'S
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Blackhawks top Red Wings 5-3 for ·third straight. victory

The Giants offered to refund
tickets for !hose who did not want
to attend the games after the
earthquake last Tuesday. But the ·
reported that, ''Due to the very
limited respo1151' to the World
Series refund offer, there Is no
public sale ·of World Series
tickets at thiS time. An announcemen t will be made concerning
any future sales of World Series
tickets."
·
"Everyone's coming back,"
explained Robin Carr, assiStant.
media relations director with the
Giants. She said only abOut 100
people accepted lhe club's offer.
A ttc.ket office employee said
most people seiUng back thetr
Uckets were out~of-towners who
had to return borne. "They
couldn't keep coming back and
forth," she said, adding that few ·
II any fans said they were
nervous abOut Candlestick's'
safety.
"There's talk of donating any
extra tickets to members of
Caltrans (the state deparUJ!ent
of transportation)." and otller
emergency .workers, Carr adlled.
She said no firm decision :had
been made on the subject,
. '
however.
Two Cal trans emplbyees
reached Tuesday morning said
they llad heard nothing abbut
free Series tickets. "But I work
here, I'll take 'em," said Lou
Alexander. ' a landscape and
.maintenance worker answering
phOnes at the Cypress structure
command post.

DOWNING CHILDS

The Daily sentinei-P.age-6

Potne1 oy Middleport, Ohio

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POMEROY, 011/0

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OVER 600 OTHER PRIZES

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MICROWAVE OVENS
HOUSEHOLD AND PERSONAL CARE
APPLIANCES •
OVER 8 26,000 WORTH OF PRIZES
qiANUP DAILY IN ANV FAUTH STORe~ NO PURCHASE NECESSARY!
PRIZE DRAWING DECEMBER 151H

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AND REOPEN AT 8:00
MOONLIGHT SALE
8:00 P.M. TO 10:00 P.M.

7·86 NORTH SECOND

MIDDLEPOIT
•

992-6491

,.

..

�Pzc

I

The o.lly Sea'ltinel

Meigs County
~roperty

transfers
'

'1/edurday, October 26, 1989

, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Kathy A. Powell to William Roy
Powell, Parcels, Olive.
Ronald McDade, Loretta Me·
Dade, Donald McDade, Linda
McDade, Wilma McGraw, Dale
McGraw, Thelma Reese, ·Herman Reese to John W. Barcus,
Christie A. Barcus, Pt. Lot, Mid·
dleport VIllage.
Oma Arnott, Norman Amott to
John W. Barcus, Christie A. Bar·
cus, Pt. Lot, Middleport VIllage.
Norma Shamblin Wtlson, Rober Wilson to John w. Barcus,

!age.
Robin Annette Jetfers to John
R. Jeffers, Parcels, Salisbury.
Deborah Ann Whitlatch and
Laoma Cremeans, dec' d .. A!fld.,
Middleport VIllage.
Michael E . Cremeans, Drea·
rna Cremeans to Deborah Ann
Whitlatch, Parcel, Middleport
VIllage.
.
Samuel S. Clay, Mable F. Clay
to James Everett Pauley, Mary
E. Pauley, Lot, Mlddlepor( VII·
lage.
·

Christie A. Barcus, Pt. Lot, Mid·
dleport VUiage.
Mark Markham to Robert G.
Pickett, ~1. of Covenants, Meigs.
Kenneth E. Riggs, Judith A.
Riggs to Charles Lambert, Betty
Lambert, Parcel, Olive.
Lionel Boggs, Mary Lu Boggs,
Wllltam Childs, Joan Childs, Da·
vtd DUes to William Thomas
Lavender, Patty Sue Lavender,
Lot, Middleport Vtllage.
Edwina Bell to Charles F
Scott, Pt. Lot, Middleport VII-

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Everything's fine ...
group with the problem. How By BOB HOEFLICH
ever, Mr. Seyfried writes II the
All's )l'ell at Locomotion.
sketch doesn't do it, he'll come up
. Locomotion Is the former El·
and help get the cemeteries
: berfeld
located.
·. house on
Now you can't be that. .
:- chanlc Street
: • ?omeroy, w~Jicb
This Is the week Meigs senior
·· has been
are to call Linda Jones at
citizens
· ver led to a teen
Veterans
Memorial Hospital to
: : gathering spot
make
an
appointment to take
· : and Is the scene
part
In
the
Meigs County Mini·
: • of weekly Saturday night dances
Health
Fair
being staged at the
:: for young people of the area.
hospital
on
Thursday
and FriA number of Improvements
. have been added to the Interior of day , Nov. 2 and 3.
Tlie fair will offer free blood
:. ,the butldlng and presently the
·' exterior Is being painted. This sugar and blood pressure tes t;lng
: · Saturday evening, a Halloween a,; well as cholesterol tests.
·'theme will be carried out for the · These ,are free. Kits to help
residents with testtngforcolorec·
dance. While costumes are ental cancer - a test done com·
couraged for those attending.
pletely In the privacy of · your
they are not req utred.
home - will be available also
By the way, LocomoUon Is
the fair and hospital
during
being used by school and compersonnel
will explain proper use
munity organizations for some of
of
the
kits.
Those picking up a kit
their evening events.
are asked to make a contribution
Seems Impossible that Mrs. of $1, which Is considerably
Nan Moore who taught so many below the hospital's cost.
The free tests will he done In
of us hi the good old days of
M.H.S. will b.e marking her 89th the newly remodeled and redecorated cafeteria after which time
birthday on Oct. 31
those attending will be Invited to
at her Middleport home, 160 N.
the conference room for light
Fourth St.
· And, In case you had forgotten,
Mrs. Moore Is a twin. Her twin
sister Is Mrs. Elizabeth MournIng, 409 Second St., Middleport, ·
who, of course, w111 be marking
her 89th birthday also on the 31st.
·., Another sister Is Lorena Davis
· . - she's doing well also. Mrs.
· 'Davis will mark her 94th birth·
. day on Dec. 26.

Tim and Lisa Compson are
announcing the birth of a daugh·
ter, Allsha LeAnn. on July 27 at
Holzer Medical Ce nter.
The Infant weighed six pounds

and eight ounces. and was 19
Inches long.
Paternal grandparents are
Janet Compson, Point Pleasant,

W.Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Ernie
Compson, Clifton, W.Va. Great
grandmother Is Blanche Jones,
Mason, W.Va.
Maternal grandparents are

Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Smith. and :
great grandmother Is Maude
Smith, Rutland.
The couple has another child, a·
son, Kenny, age four.
•

MONEY SAVING COUPONS

refreshments -also free.
·The fair will be held from 2 to 1
p.m . both days. There Is one
problem, however, and that is
that the time slois of 2 to 3 p.m.
both days have already been
taken so your appointment will
have to go Into the3 to4 p.m. time
area on either day .
You can register with Mrs.
Jones by calling the hospital
992-2104.
Shucks - can't even complain
about t.he weather. Do keep
smiling ..

ALISHA L. COMPSON

LAYAWAY NOW
FOR .CHRISTMAS'
OPEN UNTIL 8:00P.M. ON FRIDAYS

ldl
290 North Second, Middleport, Ohio

Thanks to W.G. (Bill) Seyfried
ot'1099 Teodora Ave., Gallipolis.
A former resident of Meigs
County, Mr. Seyfried read of the
diHtculties being encountered by
the Meigs County Genealogical
Society In locating several
cemeteries.
Mr. Seyfried sat right down
.and drew a sketch showing
locations of two of the cemeteries
that he had known about In his
boyhood here. The sketch Is
being forwarded to the society
. and undoubtedly will help the

IN THE DEll-PASTRY SHOPPE

FREE!

_ _ _ Compson birth---

Beat of the Bend

' them h0111e."

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:1 .

; Chris and Carol Leigh are
· back.
~ Chris and Carol have been In
. the swim of many activities In
: Chapel Hill, N. C., for the past
~ .y.ra. 'rhey"We'nl -to North •
Carolina from Meigs County
·having been so active In working
with retarded children and the
establishment of a school for
them while here.
Presently, Chris and Carol are
getting rid of seven years of dust
at their farm home which they
maintained during their absence
and will get a little more settled
•In as time goes by. They're
; bright spots and we welcome

48-CT . PKG .

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Frozen Yogurt
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·page 7

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ZO-OZ. LOAF
Fresh Made
Garlic Bread
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Vladnuday, Octobel 25, 1989

, , Another good friend to many of
, ;us. Lee W. Mt&lt;:omas, recently
· suffered a stroke and Is a patient
·'at the Holzer Medical Center.
· Mr. McComas will also be
.. marking a birthday - In No. ,vember, as I recall. I know you
· all want to wish htm welL

8-0Z. CTNR .

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FREE!

$13,000 In fines and restitution to
the city. He warned she will go to
jail for "quite a period of time" If
she fatls to comply with the
restrictions he set forth In
placing her on two ·years'
probation. ·
• Gabor must serve her sentence
by Dec. 29 In a county jail of her
c.holce at her own expense and
complete her community service
by March ·JO, 1990. -

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

•

BEVERLY HILLS, Callf.(UPI) - Glamour queen Zsa
Zsa Gabor, who turned a routine
traffic stop Into a worldwide
media circus, must spend three
days behind bars and 120 hours
helping out at a homeless
women's shelter for slapping a
·
Beverly Htlis cop.
A controlled but angered Municipal Judge Charles Rubin also
slapped Gabor with nearly

BUY ONE

BUY ONE

FRE

Zsa Zsa gets 3 ays

FAOZEN 13·0Z. PKG.

. -~ J

-FREE!

DANA K. GADDY

Gaddy birth

40, 60, 75 OR 100 WATT
SOFT WHITE

EASTERN GROWN

Red Delicious
Apples

General Electric
Light Bulbs

.......

56.

ec

$178 .

THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE--GET ONE FREE ITEM

THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE .. GET ONE FREE ITE~ ,

I

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE, CAFFEINE FREE
PEPSI, CAFfEINE FAEE DIET PEPSI,

. Diet Pepsi

or

2-Ltr.

Coli

ec

THIS IS NOT A IUY ONE.. GET

.,

FAEE ITEM

Michael and Teresa Gooch
Gaddy are announcing the birth
of a daughter, Dana Klersten, on
Aug. 31 at Alachua General
Hospital in Gatnsvilte, Fla.
The Infant weighed seven
pounds and one ounce, and was
19~ Inches long.
Paternal grandparents are
David and Flora Gaddy, Archer,
Fla. Great grand mother Is Stella
Gaddy, Ashville, N.C.
Maternal grandparents are
Roger and Janet Theiss, Racine,
and Robert and Evelyn Gooch,
Kentucky. Great grandparent Is
Kev Gooch, Gallipolis.
The couple has two other
children, Billy Joel, age nine·
and Drue, age three.
'
I&gt;

•

MAlLIN FOR

FREE·2·LITER

--

~
===
·"-"
=:-:

• . ~1111 at tl1t req~~~IH lhllll~ to ,._. a-tu~. P.t

.,...-.....--I·IUI

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~--------------------~•m -----------------------' " - - - - - - - -- - 5t, , _

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I

I
I
I

II

�WednnllllV.
Wednesday, October

1989

POMEROY -The Me igs
County Health Department will
be administering flu vaccines on
Thursdayfrom9a.m. tonoonand
1-3 p.m. forthegeneral public at
the health department. There
will be a charge of $1 for the
general public. A make up date
will be held on Nov. 3 from noon
to 4 p.m.
RACINE - The American
Legion Auxiliary of Racine Post
6(Y.I will meet Thursday at 7:30 at
the hall.
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
group of A.A. and At-Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m . at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
For more information call
1-800-333-5051.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport troop 245 will host its fall
roundup on Thursday at 7 p.m. at
the Middleport Presbyterian
Church. · All boys between the
ages of 11 and 17 are invited to
attend.

. NEW MEMBERS- These are jus&amp; a few of the
new manben of tile Melp County Farm Bureau
wllo at tended tile baaquet on Tuesday even inc at
Jj:utern HlpScllool. Froml-r,lr•t row, Mr. aad

Mrs. C.C. Helbnan, Bea Wood aad Lee Wood.
Middle row, Marjorte Rice aad Harold Rice. Back
row, Ed Bolter, JeH Warner, and IJnda Warner.

.
- --------~----------------~--------~Coal miners jamboree
have a Christmas party for

: Trick or treat
: The Orange Townshpp Volun. tee• Fire Department has announced that trick or treat will be
held Oct. 30 from 6-7 p.m .
The Chester Volunteer Fire
Department has announced that
trick or treat will be observed
Oct. 30 from 6-7 p.m. The siren
will sound to begin lhe trick or
treat hour and II will sound again
lo signal the end of the hour.
Ftremen will be throughout the
~"oWn for the protection of the
elllldren.
• 'The Olive Township Fire De·
partment is announcing trick or
treat for the Long Bottom and
Reedsville areas on Oct. 30 from
6-7p.m.
The Rutland VIllage Council Is
announcing trick or treat for Oct.
:)()from 6-7 p.m.
Veteran day di-r
The Racine American Legion
:_Post 602 will sponsor a dinner of
.:_bean soup, corn bread and ham
··sandwiches at the post home on
: Nov.ll at 11 a.m. A salute will be
: given to commemorate Veteran
· Day. Any person who has worn a
: service uniform Is Invited 10
• attlc'nd.
:

The UMWA Christmas Committee will present the fourth
annual Coal Miners Jamboree to
benefit area c hildrens services
on Nov. 4 at 7 p.m. in the Meigs
High school Gymnasium.
Tickets can be purchased at the
door for S5 for adults and $2 for
chUdren. The River Junction
Bluegrass Band will perform.

members and family on Dec. 16
at 6:30' p.m. The auxiliary will
furnish the meat and everyone Is
to bring a covered dish. Santa
Claus will.be present to give out
treats and a gift exchange for the
kids with a S3 limit.

-.!

LONG BO'ITOM -The Long
Bottom Community Association
will stage its fall smorgasbord
dinner on Saturday at 5 p.m. in
the community building. The all
you can eat meal will feature
turkey and ham, homemade
dressing and noodles, desserts,
and drinks for $4 . Chlidrens price
is $2.25.

SATURDAY
RUTLAND - }lomecoming
weekend will be observed at the
Rutland Nazarene Church. On
Saturday evening thE&gt; drama, "Is
My Name Written There'' will be
presented. Activities in celebra·
lion of the 40th anniversary of the
church will be held on Sunday.
POMEROY - Free Clothing
Day will be held at the Salvation
Army on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, on Thursday from 10 a.m.
until noon. All area residents In
need of clothing are welcome !o
come, Salvation Army officials
advise.
REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
Local Academic Boosters will be
sponsoring a consignment and
donation auction on Saturday at
the high school. Contact Anna

Wolfe Pen
happenings

Sunday visitors of Dorothy
Reeves were Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Darnell, Melissa, Jeff, Michelle
Johnson, Amy Johnson, and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Reeves and
Robbie, Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. LesUe Frank,
Sarah and Matthew were Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
HanJng and Ronald.
Mrs. Tom Summerfield, and
Crystal, Medina, were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell. Sunday visitors were
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell and
Michael, ftactrre.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith ·
were recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Smith, Rock Springs.

'\

STRAIGHT TALK - U.S. Attorney Michael Crites, Columbus,
Letart Falls Elementary students to baa~~: tough and
"say no to drugs." Crites says his number .one priority as aU. S.
Attorney Is to llpt drugs. In past years, he has often taken his
message of flghUng drugs to adult groups, such as chambers of
commerce, but this year he started takiiiC his mesu~~:e to
youngsters, beginning with hill own children at llome .and then
~~:olng Into schools...l'here' s no cuarantee any of our kids will say
no to tile problem of drup," Crites aays. And although he believes
that schools can help In tile Iicht acalast drup, he believes that the
soluUon to the drug problem also rests heavily wllb parents.
encoura~~:es

'

16 INCH DELUXE PIZZA

...

,1511,

$999
Domino's Pitta

992-2124
WEST MAIN
POMEIOY, OliO
•

PH. 446-1699
"OUI$: I A.M..-6 P.M.

Square dance
,
: A square dance will be held at
llle American Legion Annex on
Mill St. In Mlddl(&gt;port on Nov. 3
from 8 p.m. to midnight. Bernard
Connolly and the Traverlers will
· perform. The cos tis S5 per couple
:and $3 single. The public Is
·Invited to attend. The caller will
: be Ronnie Woods.

.

• . Turkey dinner
.
: • The Ladles Auxiliary of the
:Orange Township Fire Depart·
·ment are planning a turkey
·dinner on Nov;. 18 beginning at 4
p.m. at the fire. station.

Craft IIIIo,. IUid sale
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
. VFW JIO'It 9053 in Tuppers Plains
: will have a craft show and sale on
·Dec. 2 from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m. Soup
:beans. com bread, cole slaw, pie.
·cake, and hot dogswlllbe served.
;The public is Invited to attend.

.

•Rm I&amp; SUC£ PROC£SS

AMERICAN
CHEESE ..................... S1.98

BUYER VALLEY GRADE A

~,·

'

CELLO PACK

MEDIUM EGGS ••••l!P1;••••• 97c . CARROTS ...........'MH,.. 39C
RED DELICIOUS
WHIPPED
MAIGAIINE ••••••••• 2f$1.19 APPLES ................... /S9c

SHEDD'S TUIILE11 I OZ.

...

·~H,.•l)J.

f'l

1'.
"

II

•E . •

·-

New Colognes Arriving Daily!
OBSESSION. 3.4 oz. Spray ............................ ; .....................
KNOWING, 1 oz...._................... .. ....... ...................................
ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW. 1.8 oz ...................................
ELIZABETH TAYLOR'S PASSION. 1.5 oz ..............................

'45.00
*36.00

'14.50
'27.00

OMBRE ROSE, 1 oz............................................................. '18.00

SHALIMAR. 1 oz.................................................. : ............... '23.00
GLORIOUS b'FGioria Vanderbilt. 1. 7oz .................................. '24.00

OPIUM, 2 oz . ....................................................................... '47 .60
OSCAR, 2 oz ............................................. ;..................... ..... •29.60

LIZ CLAIBORNE, 1 oz.................. .. ................. ......................
CALIFORNIA by Jacklyn Smith, 1 oz ...................... ~ ..............
CHER'S UNINHIBITED, 1.5 oz ..............................................
UZ TAYLOR'S PASSION GIFT SET .......................................
ANNE KLEIN II, 1. 7 oz .........................................................
CALVIN KLEIN ETERNITY, 3.4 oz .........................................
OSCAR DE LA RENTA GIFT SET ..........................................
PRIVATE COLLECTION GIFT SET .........................................
GLORIOUS GIFT SET by Gloria Vanderbilt ..............................

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669

. .

ClwlsbiiU partJ
The VFW Pa. t 9053 and Ladles
Auxiliary in 'l'llpper,.Pialnl will

WHITE SWEET .
POTATOES •••••••••'••L.., ••• 49c

........_

..

_.,.

- - ·----

•17.50
'30.00
'40.00
•32.00

'48.00
•40.00
•56.00
•20.00

MIXED VEGETABLES •••••• S1.39
REEMS NOODLES .........~!.~!. S1.39
BANQUET
SLICED TURKEY •••••••••••• ]!.~!. S2.49·
IUFT

MIRACLE WHIP .............3•2.~!. S2.49
STOYI TOP
PORK STUFFING •••••••••••6.~!•. s1.2 9
DELMONTE
PITTED PRUNES ••••••••••••1•6.~!. S1.39
DLLOGG'S
.
APPLE JACK CEREAL.••••'.'.~!. S2.59
PUFFS FACIAL TISSUE ...~2!.~ S1.29
LIICD UAF Z1 oz.
BLACKBERRY PIE FILLING
•• S1.89
DIL IIOIITI
.
.
CUT GREEN BEANS •••••••1•6.~!•.... 69c
DBUI12 01.
CHIP DELUXE COOKIES •••••• S1.99
.
JUICE FRUIT COCKTAIL •••••• S1.89
~YSZOZ.

. . .UPOI1, OliO

271 1101111 SECOND

•22.60

2•0.~!.

··--

j

12 oz.
JAR

Purch••·

WHOLE SnCK
IENTU&lt;ICY BORDER

NA

·7 9-.

ll.

HERITAGE HOUSE

PORK LOIN .

BREAST HALVES

ae-

gets
45 ·years

BIG RED BOLOGNA ••••••••~~~ ••• 99c
AMISH FAIM OLE FASHION
DUTCH LOAF •••••••••••••••••'.!!·•• s1.97
SMIIHFIILD
SHREDDED 12.09 ll.
.
COOKED HAM •••••••••••• ~~!!~.~. S1.89
HOMEMADE
MEAT SALAD •••••••••••••••••2.~·•• S1.69

99

Pepsi-Cola

FRESH CHICKEN

~B~er

SIPIIIOI

MT. DEW, PEPSI
DIET or REGULAR

WHOLE

1

&gt; 'l'urkey dl nner

Bake and card sale
There will be a bake sale and
b~ball and football card sallc'on
Nov. 11 at Meigs High School
fi:Om 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. sponsored
~ the Meigs Band Boosters.
Admission will be $1 for adults
and $.50 lor children under 12.
~ntact P~ggy Lewis at 992-2673
• for infonnatlon. _

SELF-BASTING
TURKEYS

GOOD USED
WASHEIS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TYs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 3rtl An., Gallpolis

'1.00 DONATION FOR
FREE FOODLAND GROCERIES
DRAWING

INSTANT

$

BREAD DOUGH

4-PEPSI'S, 16 01.

UMITID
DELIYRY AIEA

ContKt Frat.-nity Members &amp; Give

MT. BLEND COFFEE

of Stockton, Calif, were sale
following the San Francisco
earthquake.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Keaton
visited his sister, Glenda Bucha·
nan at Barlow . Mrs. Buchanan Is
Ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Stearns
returned on Oct. 20 from a
business trip to Fairborn. While
there. they visited their daughter, April Neely, and grandson,
Jeff Noble.

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA

SUPPORT .
TAU KAPPA EPSILON
OF RIO GRANDE
UNIVERSITY IN HELPING
BIG BROTHERS/BIG
SISTERS

DLAND
, ........ n

from one or more of the funds.
It mlt1ht be aurpriJinll tllat w~
often have to make a choice ·of
which o11e item to purchaae when
we have a chOICe of two or tlu'ee.
This Is becallle there oftea IJ not
enough •'unspoken for'' moaey to
purchase what IJ requested.
Hopefu Uy, thll information
gives some understanding to
school flnancea and to the complexity or daaire more Information feel free to contact either the
Sullilflntendent or the Treuurer
at Meigs.l..ocal.

~~~~~--~~~·

Low·Priced Supermarket

POMEROY - There will be a
gospel hymn sing on Saturday at
the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church at 7 p.m. The group,
Sunrise, will be featured. Pastor
Bill Williams invites the public.

Ohio or from the appropriate
agency. All funds are au,. ted
annually by the Slate Audttilr.
As stated before, these are not
all of the funds which the district
has, but are the main ones as'tar
as the operation of our district Is
concerned. In addition to the
number of funds. we have the
limitations of the indivlduai
funds to consider when making a
pure hase. Some items may be
eligible expenditures from more
than one fund, but the use of the
Items may prohibit spending

vantaged ttudents in math and
readln11 ulllk!r State and Federal
flllldellnes (Salaries of personnel
II included)
Chapter 2, Federal Government through State Dept., Books,
materials and supplies for Ubrar·
ies and other equipment under
State and Federal guidelines
Food Services Fund, Sale of
meals, State reimbursement, All
costs of cafeterias, Including
salaries
All funds are subject to audit
from the Auditor or the State of

EASTMAN'S .. · Your Independently Owned

RUTLAND -The Rutland
Emergency Medical Service will
sponsor Its annual Christmas
Bazaar on Saturday from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. at the Rutland Civic
Center. There will be crafts,
baked goods, and refreshments
for sale. Table rental Is available
by contacting MarCia Eliott at
. 742-2233 or JoAnn Eads at
742-3078.

BRADFORD - The Women's
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Churches of Christ will meet at
the Bradford Church of Christ on
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Church
The Alfred United Methodist
Women United of Meigs County
Church will host the Northeast
will have a planning session at
1:30 Friday at the Mount Moriah Cluster Service on Sunday at 7:30
Baptist Church In Middleport. Ail . p.m. The clown ministry will be
key women from area churches presented and refreshments will
be served.
are urged to attend.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs .
Delberl Stearns were their
POMEROY ·- The UMWA
daughter and children, Laura
Support Group will meet ThursCohen,
Daniel, and Leah of
day at 6 p.m. at Pleasers.
Akron.
Mrs. Wilber Parker received
word that her son Eric, and wife,

: Smorgaslloard dinner · ·
• The Bashan Ladles Auxiliary
: wlll be sponsoring a Smorgas·
: board Dinner on Nov. 4.
· · 'I'he Ladies Auxiliary of the
: yFW Post 9053 In Tuppers Plains
. will have a turkey dinner on Nov.
11: The menu will include turkey,
-diessing, mashed potatoes and
~ gravy, noodles, hot roll. dessert ·
and tea or coffee. The price will
~ be S4 for adults. and $2 for
·· ~hUdren under 12. Serving will
begin at 4 p.m.

a budget approved by the Board. appropriated General Fund
Disadvantaged Pupil Program expenditures
Fund, Federal Government
Title VI-B, Federal GovernThere are often questions
through State Dept., Criteria ment through "State Dept., Exwhich meet the guidelines of the pl!ndltures for special education
which often arise about money
and just where and how the
program and Is approved by purposes un(ler guidelines of
district gets its money and bow It
State.
State (Some goes to· salaries of
spends It. PerhaP.S the best way
Lottery Profits Fund, State personnel)
lpttery through State Dept..
Chapter 1, Federal Governto try to begin to explain about
- school finances Is to give generu-cannot be used for salaries or ment through State Dept., ExInformation about some .of the
anything which takes the place of penditures for learning dlsaovarious funds which the districT
operates and a few of The
. particulars about each lund.
Each one of these funds must
be kept separate and accounted
for individually, and each one ·
has its own particular guidelines
for use as far as expenditures are
concerned. The money is received from different sources,
with conditions placed _on some
funds before the money Is
received.
Lis ted below are some of the
funds which many districts have,
and some general information as
to from where we receive the
funds and general expenditures
allowed from the funds. This
informa\ion Is not all Inclusive,
because it does not get Into the
specific limitations of each fund,
but it might enable one 'to
undersland the basic operations
of each fund.
Fund, Income from, can be
expended for :
General Fund, State Founda·
' '
NATURE'S BEST
lion Program, Local Taxes, Most
salaries, materials, supplies,
utllltles-general operation or
district.
Bond Ret lrement , Loc.a l
T\lxes, Paymentfor construction
· of school buUdlngs
Permanent Improvement
Limit 1 Per F•mity With
Expk•
Fund, Passage of Stay-at-Home
S I.LB.
Bond Issue, Items which have a
lOAVES
life-span of 5 years or more
Uniform School Supply Fund,
Sale of Workbooks, Student pur·
chased supplies, Workbooks and
With Pap·Up
student purchased materials,
TENDEIIIST
GRADE
'A'
supplies
El(Cess Lottery ·Consortium
Fund, State Lottery through
State Dept. Grant proposal with
10 liS. &amp; UP
C61!nty Office, Testing mate, rildS i Computer equipment
• Employee Benefits Fund, Gen·
eral Fund, Lunchroom fund ,
Federal funds, Hospitalization,
Major Medlcal .a ndDental Benefits for Employees through self·
funding Insurance Program.
Principal's Funds, School
sales, pop machines, pictures.
, etc., That which will benefit the
student body of the school and Is
listed on the budget approved by
the Board.
,
I AittVitY Funds, Fund Raisers,
· Dues, Admissions, etc., For the
. club or organizatlon and liJtedon

Alfred community notes

Announcements

.
: ~ :stuc and muzoel loader shoots
.:. : ·The Ken Amsbary Chapter of
: tlie lzaak Walton League will
• ilave slug shoots on Sunday. Nov.
· ~ .. Nov. 12. Nov. 19, and Nov. 26.
Muzzle loader shoots wlll be held
on Dec. 17, Dec. 24, and Dec. 31.
'l;be shoots will consist of free
hand and bench rest events at
various distances. Rifle and
scopes will not be shot In the
same category. Various prizes of
meat and money will be
awarded.

By .lames Carpaner,
Superlateodeat

McCoy at 985-3907 or Kathy
Manicke at 667-3730 for Information. 1.0. McCoy wlll serve as
the auctioneer.

POMEROY - The Senior
Citizens Dance Club will sp&lt;)nsor
a round and square dance on
Friday from 8-11 p.m. at the
center on Mulberry Heights.
True County Ramblers will perform and admission Is $2. Those
attending are tohbring snacks for
the snack table. Those attending
may also dress for Halloween.

The Daily SentNI- Pltgr 9

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

A look at Meigs Local Schools...

Community calendar
THURSDAY

Octo._ 25. 1989

$ 29

HOUSE

2°/o
Milk

1.11.

'

2°/o MILK

89
PLAmc

Die Week'i
Speclll

GAUON

CHARLOTTE, N.C. IUPI) Jim Ba~ker's lawyer argued that
thee evengelist be sentenced to
return to the PTL ministry and
"complete the dr.e am". for the
congreg~tlon be defrauded, but a
federal prosecutor said that
would bfl putting "the fox right
back In the hen house."
U.S. District Judge Robert
Potter evidently agreed, and true
to his nickname "Maximum
Bob" sentenced Bakker to 45
years In prison, fined him
$500,000 arid ordered htm to begin
serving time Immediately. The
television preacher will not ·be
eligible fOr parole for 10 years.
Potter also rejected defense
motions that Bakker be freed on
bond pending an appeal, to be
· filed Wednesday with the 4th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in
Richmond, Va.
Bakker. · 49. was found guilty
Oct. 5 on 24 counts of fraud and
conspiracy in the sale of "lifelime part~ershlps", at PTL,
which promised three nights'
free lodging for life al the
mlnistry's Heritage USA retreat
.In fort Mill, S.C.. to anyone
sentllng the ministry $1,000.
He could have been sentenced
to 120 years In prison and fined $5
million for .the scheme.

/

~~~

i•us~s •iu~"~ ,aus:Ns
•....eoue-

' 'Tifrt!II'J;

~I

FOODLAND

SPREAD
•
MARGARINE

KRAFT DINNERS

•REGULAR •liGHT

Macaroni
&amp; Cheese

KRAFT

FOODLAND

MAYONNAISE

LARGE EGGS

Iuiie, wt.ols or sprai

s.-

·$

32

oz.,

_Shields birth

89

CRISP
CELERY

oz.

JAR

lOX

~.,.49!~k

Sargeant land Mrs. Russell
(Christie Y·erks) Shields Jr.,
statio!led at fope Air Force Base
In FayettevJlie, N.C . are announcing the' birth of a daughter,
Kathryn Nicole, on Oct . 17.
,The ln(Jn t weighed eight
pounds and 1~~ ounces; and was
21 ~ inches long.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Fl. Shields, ·Sr.,
Belpre. and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Yf'!rks, Beip~.
The coil pie ha.s another daugh·
ter, Casandra Leann. age three.
'I

Home on leave
Pvt. William R. Gilkey, son of
"Earl and Nancy Gilkey, Rock
Springs Road, Pomeroy, Is hQme
on leave from !he U.s. Army,
On Saturday, Pvt. Gilkey will
depart on a o~year tourotdut;y
In Korea.
.

.

•Wo R . _ Tho Rlgtn To Umrt Quont~lot

'

..

.

•1*.1101 Elfeotlvo '"""Sot., Oct.• 28. 1tll

•USDA Food lt-po Gl..., Accoptod

1¥

J'

•Not Rnpon1ible for Typapaphfcll Ert'tlrl

'I

'

�Ohio

Octobll 25. 1

wng, :,

OVER It YEARS - PI• were presealed &amp;o
the&amp;f! people ofllleMelpCoua&amp;y Fann Bure• for
their membership Ill llle orc..la&amp;loa of over 1141
)'ean. · Fnm l·r, first row, MB)' Holler, Ada
Boller. Paullae AW., and Alvin Tripp, farm
'bure• member pre&amp;e~~tlnlhllle awarda. Secoad
row, Dalaey Blakeslee, Sylvia. Mldldfl, Mar)'

Eaa~, M-re Mora, aad Geol'JeBelter. Third
row, C. E. Blakeslee, Zlba Midkiff, Nellie Parker
Mildred Gaul, Maida Mora, and Doa Mora. Back
row, Maxine Grllftth, Millie Mldklfl Joan M-r
all represeatlnJ Buk One, J.M. Gaul, Grac;
RoUer, and Harry Holler.

Pomeroy
Court
· Ronnie Powell of Middleport
was fined on five charges, a total
of $500 and costs, when he
appeared before Mayor Richard
Seyler in Pomeroy Court Tuesd~y night.
The charges against Powell
were destruction of property, two
counts of menacing threats, and
two counts of assault. Powe II was
put on probation for six months.
Failure to pay the fine will result
in a 10 day jail sentence, it was
reported.
Others fined in the court were
Terry Hysell, Pomeroy, $63 and
costs, fictitious license plates;
Mark Compson, Racine, $88 and
costs. open container In a motor
vebicle; Darrell Sands, Hartlord. W. Va., $63 and costs.
expired vehicle registration; and
Debra Halley, Syracuse, $25 and
costs. speeding.
Robert. Rillle. Racine, was
lined on three charges, $375 and
costs, DUI; $113 and costs,
possession of a controlled substance, and $63and costs, operating a vehicle under suspension ..
'Also fined were Larry Bonlee,
Middleport. $20 and costs, expired registration; Brian Young,
Oregon, Ohio, $47 and costs.
speeding; Walde Moran, Edgartown, Md., $44 and cotgs, speeding; Debra Rowley, Pomeroy,
$43 and costs. stop sign violation;
Vanessa Stamper, Point Pleasant, $63 and costs, expired
registration; and Brenda Cogar,
Syracuse, seat hell violation, 520
line only.
Forfeiting bonds in the court on
speeding charges were John
Holcomb, Bidwell, $46; James
HalleY. Crown City, $43; Patricia
Dent. Pomeroy, $45; Kimberly
Donough, Upper Arlington, $456;
and Danny Tillis, Rutland, $50.
Others forfeiting bonds were
Rachel Sterrett. Copley, $63,
tra!!ic light violation; Gregory
. Cook, New Haven, $375, DUI. and
$63. squealing tlr.s; Shirley
Schartiger, Shade, $63, operating
without a valil license; $47,
speeding, and $63, fictitious license plate; and James Carl, St .
Louis, Mo.. $63 traffic light
violation.

Area
deaths
Marie Francis

l

Marie Francis, 84, Pomero)
Ohio, died :rucsday in Pleasant ValIcy Hospital.
Born July 23, 1905, in West
Columbia, W.Va., she was the
daughter of the late George P. and
May H. Hagerman Francis.
She was preceded in death by six
brothers, Wilbur R., William H.,
Carl E., Ralph E., Lawrence· W.,
and Marion G. Francis.
She aucndcd the Middleport
Church of Christ.
Surviving arc two sons and
daughters-in-law, Carl T. and
Dorothy M. Roach, Pomeroy,
Raymond A. and Donna Stewart,
Middleport; sister, Mrs. Lula
Mason, Charleston; sister-in-law,
Ruth Francis, Pomeroy; six
gr:mdchildren,
six
grcatgr:mdchildrcn, several nieces,
nephews and cousins.
·
Services will be conducted
Friday, 10:30 a.m., at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with the
Rev. AI Hamson officiating. Burial
will follow in the Suncrcst
Cemetery, Point Pleasant
Friends may call al the funeral
home on Thursday, 2-4, and 7-9
p.m.

pa~te I

Racine plans free
leaf pickup Friday Weather

South Central Ohio

Tonight, mostly clear and COO].
Low 45 to 50. Wind's near c;~lm.
Thursday, mostly sunny and
warm. High In the mid-70s.

Hospital
Velerans Memorial

Tuesday admissions
neth Hysell, Rutland.
Tuesday discharges
Wyant, Dennis BOyd,

- Ken•..
- Dana
Georgia

Watson.

, ,

Lorraine Lynn
glows with contentment. 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 gets tired of being a third wheel or a
wheel . regardless of how good your friends 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 Club. attending Vespers, and volunteering
UA.
at the hospital and the
local Welfare House charity. The Singles' Group is
I
one of her favorites . "We

"'t '
Bristol V'llage,
thel"e's never
.
a need to do
•
aJo
"
anyth1ng ne.
Lornl"" f. Lyaa

Bristol VltJ.a&lt; lcsld..t

have a luncheon once a
month. We go to movies.
In fact , Friday we're
having dinner in German
Village in Columbus and
going to a movie at the
Ohio Theatre."

0- 15 WOAD$

~~}IUtlidt

run.)

-ioa, Get111

Df

•

no ch•t•·

.
: :.
·:
.·

COPY DEADLINE MONOAV PAPEA
TUEIOAY PAPEA
WEDNEIDAV PAPER
THURSOAV PAPEA
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAV PAPEA

tnr ••"'"

·

double pn~ of ad

11

&amp;-Lott •nd Founci
7-V•d StltiDtid in Nwancel
8-Pubhc Stle • Auct10n
8-Wanted to' Ivy

992-MiddtfiPOn
Pomeroy

676-Pt . Pl . .ent
458 - l..eDn
571-Apple Grove

843-Portalind

773-Mnon

247-Letart hll•
949-R•ame
742-Ruta.nd

882 - NMN Hfien
896-letan
93? - Buffato

986-Ch•ter

216-Guwn 011t
143-Aflbia D11t
379-W81nut

hM failed ,to monitor tor re·

Trainmg
16-Schoola &amp; lnt~rucuan
16-Red•o. TV 81 CB Repa1r
17-M•t&lt;:elll!lniOul
· 18-Wanttd To De

21 -Bu••n•• Oppcrtunitv
22- Mon-v to lo111
23-Prof•IIONt Slfvi~

Heal l;.;tatl!
31 -HomH for Sale
~2-Mobile Homn tor Sele
33-F.,ms tor Sele
34-Busineu Buildmgs
36-l..otl &amp;. Acrt8ge
36-Realr:t..u w..,_.

4'7-'h.,rett 'o Ren1

48-Equtpment tor Rent
48-Fof Lt•t

dlologlcol activity in the
drinking waWr aupply as r•
qulred under the atete( 1 ufe
drinking water laws. Rule

Council of the Village of

.
·-··-=·~·

.

Bo 11 now ordolnlll

.

by the

Middleport. oo foli-o:
SEC. I. Skll-ord Do-

fined. ·

onlnlllon of compll.,cewl1h copoble of being oporllod,
the radiological mu.imum
~ontamlnant l.vela. Upon

ridden or u•d by • pwaon
and cona-.lng of 1 ·boerd.

plank or plllform moumed
r.otlfllll of 1h1s viol• on
wheel• or rolart, whethlion by 1he Ohio Envlron- or propelled
gravity, musmorrtol Pr010C11ort Agency, cle power by
or
mach~~nicel
!he VIIIIll• of Middleport hoo means. and which
is not
made arr1ngamenta for the
equipped
wl1h
•
poohive
drinking wM:er to be en•
mechanical mHnt of lteertvaod ol lhe above m..,. ingsuch
vehide or device.
tlpned frequency fOt' rodioSEC.II . Prohlbl1iono. Lim·
loglcol IICiivily. The VIII- killona
..
of Middleport will toke o1epo
No perllort •hall operat..
tQ •sure thlt the required ride
or use. or CIUII to be

--

~ng

'I

_r,

monitoring wll continue to
be p-rmlll.
q,cr. 23. 24, 26

.. SHOP VAUGHAN'S DEU FOR
ALL Y
HALLOWEEN

.. Public NCIIIct
Ji!DINANCE No.' 1214.&amp;9
• AN ORDINANCE TO
REGULATE THE USE OF
' SKATEBOARDS
WHEIIEAB, 1M unregu·

llled oper1tion or

UN

of

.._..• • over and upon
the public ltreata and tide·

•BUNS
•PIES ··
•CAKES

welkl of the Vllll[la of Mid-

dleport pr•ents 1 haard to

operated, ridden or uaed, a
skateboard over or upon any
public ltreet or ·roadway
within 1ho VIII 111• of Mldtl•
pqrt, or ov• or upon any

op•ated·

or

$179

upon aklewalks within the

Village of Middlepon, unlen
it crutee 1 herard to public

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

TillE TO MAlE A STOP AT OHIO"VAWY
111.1 FOODS FOI AU CANDY SUPPUES•.

PUMPKINS

Merckens Chocolate .......s2.35 lb.

liN.

White, Milk (hac. and Colors

DOZ.

. AMBROSIA

White.......................... S2 .1 ~ lb~
Milk Chpc................... Sl. 90 lb.

29E~

Molds. Boxes. Layons, Oils,
Thermometers and Dipping Forks.
Remember Fruits and Nuts
.Snacks for College Students.

LOCAL HOMEMADE

$J69

$149

DOZ.

WE WILL SHIP
OPEN MONDAY-SATURDAY 9-5
Wo Accept Food Stamps

CHIPPED
CHOPPED

: OHIO VALLEY

HAM

FOODS

514 .Eost Main
992·691D

Pamuay,
Ohio

:.----..11

--------......,.-=-----------

SJ49

Real E .....0 "oneral
.....

Ll. -

SEC. Ill. Ponollloo.

Whoever vioiHes thia Or·

dlnonce shall be giv•n •

warning on tha firlt offenae.
Upon 1 second violation by
the tame ptraon. if the per·
son Ia 1 ml..,or, the akete-

boord shall be impounded

1 parent or guerdien
sh.all be notified; the akete·

and

board moy berelooollltolhe
parent or guardian If r•

quoo1ed whhln thirty (301
days.

' Upon a second violation,
by the ume p•aon, if the
p~son is an adutt. it shall
conttituta 1 minor misdemunor, the penalty for

which sh!lll be o fino of up to
1100.00 ond1he mondolory
forfeiture of the tkltebo•d.
A third or eucceedlng vio·
lation, by the same per ton. if

1ho person is on adull. lhall

conttitute 1 misdemeanor of
the fourth dagr•.

SEC . IV, This Orclln.,ce
ohall 1oko llffot:1 end be In
force from end aft• the eer-

ul&amp;d. over or

MAKINO TIME

GLAZED
DONUTS

utetv or Interference with
ped•triln traffic.

sldew,.U. ltureoo of tho VII· 11111 d••P•IIIItletl ·- low.
hoood 1M 9th day of Ocloge of Mlddlepllf1 wlllcll ••
opeclficolly zoned for com- tober, 1989.
mercial u• or purpoM.
ATTEST: Dewey M. Horton.
Skllebo•do may be Olhl'rllldenl ol Council
erwile ridden, operated or Jon P. Buck, Clor~
ul8d. or r.auted to be ridden. (101 18, 26

IT'S HOLIDAY CANDY

COOKIES

Bristol Village offers affordable , individual homes .
available with a choice of membership pla~s . For more
information and an appointment to see our model
homes, call or write today.

Brisrol

•

Village ·

Individual homesfor Mday's active retirement
lll Wendy Lane/Waverly, Ohio 45690

(61•&gt; H7-nl8 Ext.lOl
Call Toll fru: 1-800-123-3811 Ext. 101
An .11ffihart of N.11i0nll Church Rtstdmcts.
No!-for- profit.· non -dtnom inational.

.At Jet. U. 7 &amp; 143
On Tho
Pa..

153-I..IYittodl
14-Hev • Gram
15-Selld • fert ihur

71 - Autot tor Sele
72-Truckl far S11e
73-Vens &amp; 4 WO ' s
74- Motorc::vct•
?6- Boetl &amp; Motors for Sale ·
76-Auto Pertt &amp; Acc•sor1•
7'7-Auto Repatr
78-Cemptng Equipment
79-Cemp•• &amp; Motor Home&amp;

ALLEN'S
HAULit4G

1600 GALlON
WATER SIIVICE .
UMESTONE
SPIEAD
DIRT HAULED
992-5275

\01

To David
Elliott Hendricks. whose pl.ce of r•i·
denca is unknown. you are
hereby notified that you are
named Defendant in e divorce action entitled Donita
April Pooler. Plllintiffva. Da-

vid Elliott Hondridlo. Do·

end addr•- are unknown

end cannot with r. .onlble

You are fequWed to answer uid Complaint within

28 doyo from the 1011 publl·

Clition of the notice which
shall bapubliahedonceuch
weak for six consecutive
weeks. The l•t publication

I

CALL US FOR

YOU~

answer or otherwise r•-

pond 01 requirlll by !he Ohio

Rul• of Civil Procedure, the
Plaintiff,
Donita
April
Pooler. will be granted a divorce 81 demanded in her

ali-

mony.

Lorry Spencer. Clerk of

Couns of Meigs County

Common Pfe• Court

By Merlene Harriaon.

Do polly

(10111.18. 25; 11111. 8; t6

61C

THUISDAY IS SENOR CRIZEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'S
5% DISCOUNT ON AU PUICHASES (Excluding Clgtrettnl

WANT ADS bring
Vacatkln Money

MUST PIOVIIE GCIUIIN IUOIEYE CAD OR DIVO'S IKENSI

Happy Ads

_;__ _.:....:.~---

TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY LUCKY I DAYS

Now, ot Yll--11'1 ....... in .. te I -forturtrl CtM ,ans ona

RCIIYI DOIIll THI CD..ON VALUII

... to 51' Itt,. . . s.

.......,. ''~' .......
Middleport, OH. • Cor- of o.... Hartinger Pkwy. &amp;
f'oalll St. • 1112-3471
A CARDINAL•AFALIATED SUPERMARKET

STOlE MOUIS

DAILY: 6 A.M.-12 A.M.! SUNDAY: 8 A.M.-12 A.M.

CONTACT: Manning lllots
C~t~tral Trust - 992-6661
Good 111vestment Property! Financin&amp;

available throuah Central Tru~t or make
prefemd arranaennts. Central Trust of·
fers ~:ompetltln rates and friendly service!

• required -the ONo
ol Clvl Proclllure. '
by deloult wll be

..-·-lor

the
lnthe•m-

Oct-13. 18ft.

LenoK.N•-·
Clerlt of Cour)o
Moi111 County Common
PI- Court

Pr-• Division

(10118, 21:
11111.8, 11, 22. ate

THE
BASKET WEAVE

GUN SHOOT

a-fill ot Ylley • u I r
.. . ,......,•• OIL.

.......

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moet 2 and 4-cycle
Stock hrta for

h, ·ortiiL WHdH1er,

TOCb. •all, lrlfllll

&amp;

Stratton.

PH. 992-3922

11-'lt-1111

SEPT. 29, .1919

L&amp;L TIRES

614-992-5344
FIYE

01110

.

Dependlble Hearin&amp; Aid' Sales &amp; Sanrit:l[
CJ Hearin&amp; Evaluations for All Aces

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ .Licensed' Clinical Audiologist
::1: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second ~- Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

z

or
Veterans Memorial Ho1spital
Mulberry Hcts. Pomeroy,

992-6872
6-S-'I'·tfn

BiNGO

R. L HOLLON

PO.IOY .UGI.ES
CLUI
224 E. MAIN ST.
992-9976

TRUCKING
CHESTER, OHIO

YIIIIIS. E.l. 6:45 P.M.

sn.u. 1:45 ,.._

992-7479

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

lt. 33 North of
'-•roy, Ohio

985-4422

Roger Hysell
Garage

It's Timt Now!
Have Thot Furnace

DOOI PillE

2 H.O. FREE with COIIJIQIIMd•l
puo:h.. ol •in. H.C. l'ldt-'
lit. Umk 1 COIIIOII por ali-

t - Pllli"'D IBI!on.

.

••'"'
•so.oo
-· · ·
O.or I to
P•plor.•u.oo
lie. IDU-J'r Gamt

•,

•SHRUB • TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

Checked.
We Service All
Makes - Gas or
Electric. Also Parts
for All Makes.
Ul&amp; MOW

•UGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD '

BILL SLACK
992-22"

IEN;S APPLIANCE

SERVICE
992·533S or

EVENINGS

985-3561

4/6/18/ tfn

SUN'S UP
TANNING

STEWART
TRUCKING
•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421
9-20-lfn.

DOZER
SITEWORII • ROADS
CLEARitJG

NEWLAND ·
fNTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK

Sand-Stone-Dirt

992·2196

Middleport, Ohio

1-13-tfc

LOWEST PRICES

IIGHEST QUAUTY

fiiEE lOC:Al D£UVEIY

POMEROY AND .DDLEPDIT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PIIIA SHOP.

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Dailv .Specials
992-9922 or 992-:1228

3 BR ranch home. 2Yz
baths. full basement. 2
car garage, 10x60 ft.
deck, 3 acres plus 11/t
acre lake. Mint cond.
$120.000 firm. All new
'drapes. fully carpeted .
Built-in lg. TV. stove &amp;
iel1ig. See-throu1h fireplace.

Ctll for Ftll Speelelt

L &amp; I VIDEO
RECORDING
Will VIdeo Tape
Weddinga.
Bi1hdoya,
Reunleint, lntoriora
of Homo• far
lnauranco.

10110/ H tfn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM BIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

...._shit
"F-Eetlmat•"

··9-2101
or ln. t•t·2160
Pll,.

NO SillilY

SALES &amp; SERVICE
we C.rrv Fishing Su,.,U•

Poy Your Phono
..__ .•.,- Cable 11111 Hero

. ' IUStNISS I'IIONI
16141 Hl-6550
-[(PIIONI '
161•1 "l!,r1:14

EED A HOME?
MODUUI HOMES
SINa 1970

~

Capo Cod &amp; 2 Story
MODEL OPEN DAII. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
1:00 P.M.-6:00 P.M. or Cal For Appointment

FAMILY HOMES INC.
614·992-2478

P. 0. Box 207
·
Pomeroy, Ohio
Locally Owned &amp; 0,.111ed by 8~1. Stove &amp; Kovin Pullins
9·31·'81 · 1 mo.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCnON

FOR SALE
HIGUY FAIM
IUTlAND TOWNSHIP

949-2969

d.

New lomtierll
161 lt.th Soconol
Middloport, Ohio 457 60

9-22-89

. $45,000
742-2143

HOURI: Mon.-Fri. I· 7
So1.9-15
Closed Sundoy

PI.UMIING &amp; IlEAliiG

992-2571

VISA · MASTERCHARGE

........

1YAJI AIWlCI CIIIIU
ParH &amp;Strole• Do

9/18/ t mo. pd.

-HOUSE FOR SALE

145 acres, bam,
bottom, hill land,
timber, 2 producing gas wells.

OIIGDIIIAIS, CIIUIS

742-2771

Cal 742·UI6
After Sr. pollllo

PAT HILL FORD

YAIDMAN MOWas
E(HO SAWS &amp; YRIIIIIMEIS

Rutland, Oh.
SUSAN COLEMAN

f-ZI-111·1 mo

core radiators and
heater cor11. We con
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAU ENGINE

2t/2 Mles Ollt New
Utna ld. In

1st Ylslt FlEE
-Pouilllv more,

MAIN STREET
---- PIZZA ·

. L. W.

We can r~p~~ir and r•·

10-9-tfn

DAVE'S
SMALliiiGlNE
HPAII

"FIEEv

. SALE STAm

"DO(" VAUGHN

and MORE

:=: ~:;:~:~;

$3D.OO I''*

A4GWIIH anol lalanud

CAll 992-6756

222 East~n
POMEROY, OH.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

13" lltroutlh 205-15"

Repair•

FURNITURE

lt. 124, P-ray Ohio

(hob

USED TIRE
SALE

NIASE Cenjfled Machani4;

SER~ICE

Factory (hob
12 Gaugo ShotgiOIS Only
S1ri&lt;tly Enfor&lt;td

•
·u sJness
servi·ces

SYIA(USf. DittO
Molt foflign and
Domel1ic Vahid•
-'IC Service
All M8jor &amp; MinOt"

MARTIN'S

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lat Rental•

r.,.,,

smc:nY EWOIUDI

9-21 ·811-1 mo.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

AU MAKES AND
MODELS

HOME PARK

12 Ga.,. Shot,_ Oolly

Gaug~

RADIATOR

SAT. NIGHT .
6:30P.M.

Stllllhe ••••

Starts at 1 :00 P.M.
Foctory &lt;hoked 12

SWEEPER REPAIR

OH.

Basham BuUding
EVElY

rB

conventence priced at77% of appraised va·
lue- U5,000.
·
·

VERY IEASONULE
HA YE IEFEIENCES

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

thetlh• righlo,
Blrlh•av
=:;:t,"''portioeb'!tutlydeLo•o,
od, llljullod ond pro•
IKIIII ond lho11ho Pllllnliff
DN,II.., Jeff, Je•l ..
be'IIU1horillll10
tho reo!
0111118
In ordor sell
10 pay
lho 1~;:======~
deblo of th• d-ent.
You oro required 10 on·
-or 1ho comploin1 wMhln
21 d"Y• oflor tho 1•1 publl·

.... uuer or otherwlee r•·

BOB'S
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

7-18-'89-lfn

5

th• obovo

- - tho loot publlc.11on
wll be modo on the 22nd
day of Nov-ber, 1888.
In .,.. ol your folture 10

949-2161
• t-11-'11-t-

(614) 667·327.1
Grant A. Newland

Happy 16th

· NEWLY REMODELED -In-town two-story, 3
bedroom, vinyl siding. Low Maintenance! 158
S. 3rd St., Middleport Old charm, modern

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the ·pain out of
painting. Let -do
it far yau..

HANDWOVEN IASIIETS
BASKET WEAVING
SUPPliES
ClASSES OFFERED

lAona Kohl. Ploimiff. vs.
Ruth McElroy. E1 AI.. D•
fendonlo. This IICIIon hoo
been oooignod Cole Number
25.413ondispandlnglntho
Court of Common Pl. . of
Melgo County. Probele DlvioiOn. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

-•lve

IIITEIIIOR-EICTERIOR

992-6855

of

far olx

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Pomer~y.

Administrator of tl1e Ellate

week

Peinting
FREE ESTIMATES

EVElY SUNDAY
11:00 A.a.

'

36425 locksprlngs ld.

1111od Freddie Houdoo hall.

wll be published once ooch

..ginning Sept. 17

4-25'tfn

'

Wilbolille ...
SaltM (.,,.

Gutter Cleening

or 992-7121

1/4/89-tfn

you have bean ne,nad defendlnta in elagllection an-

'*ion of this notice which

FrH

614-985· .. 180

~aleut?

HALLOWEEN PARTY NEEDS

Member National Pest
Control Assn.

of Ndvemliei. 1989.
In cue of your failure to

•

MADE FRESH DALY
•VEGETABLE •CHICKEN •CHILl
•POTATO
•BEANS
'•BROCCOLI

ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS

will'- mllle.pa !be 15th day

11. 124lelw-

1-12-'11-tfn

SIIICE 19n

County, Ohio 46769 filed
on August 11. 1989.

The object of thia com-

HOME·MADE SOUPS

4-25- '89· 1 mo,

Common Pie• of Meigs

89-DR-209 In tho Court of

diligence be oocenolnod,
you ore hereby notified tho!

plaint Is 10

Call Anytime
992-2371.

01-CO. TERMITE
&amp; PIST CONTIOL

equitable division of prop-

To the unknown heirs,
devil .... and nu:t of kin of
Laoria Kohl. whoaa nam•

POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

RACCOON VAUIY
SPOITSMEN'S CWI

GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY-SUNDAY

MOBILE

1,000 GALLONS

GUN SHOOT

RACINE

DowniJ)Outl

COUNTRY .

·WATER
SERVICE

tendent. Thill action hes
been aastgnad can number

----:P:-u-;b-:-li:-C-=:;--,-.:.....--1 Complaint; will be given on
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
FREDDIE HOUDASHELT,
ADMINISTRATOR OF THE
ESTATE OF LEONA KOHL,
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
RUTH McELROY. .
end
JACK McDONALD.
ond
JOSEPH McDONALD.
ond
GEORGE COLLINS
TREASURER.
MEIGS COUNTY
ond ·
THE UNKNOWN HEIRS
OF LEONA KOHL.
DEFENDANTS
CASE NO. 26.413
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

Gutters

RUUD

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY. OHIO
DO NITA APRIL POOLER,
PLAINTIFF.
-VSOAVID ELLIOTT
HENDRICKS.
DEFENDANT.
CASE NO. 89-DR -209
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

potentially

• • - IIPAII

t-22·1 mo.

11 --Hom•lmprowmem.s
12- Piumt.o • HeMing
13-E.ac:••tmg
14-Etectncll Ia Reft~g•atton
1&amp;-Gin••• Hauhn~;~
I&amp;~ Mobile Home Reuau
17-Uphola1trv

and

ROOFING

SYRACUSE
992·2621 or
992·694C

Transporl al10n

erty;

llawanl L Wrltolll

TEMPSTAR

992-5114

IS 1-Farm hutPmtnt
12-W.mtd to Buy

author-

Lorraine finds Bristol Village ''unique in the friendliness .
There's always someone to go get a sandwich with , and
say. 'Let's go here. Let's go there .: " The friendliness adds
to the feeling of being safe and secure ..:The contentment
means so much," Lorraine said.

HOURS
7 Days A Week
9 a.m.- 7 p.m.

Sr.rv1ce;.;

42-Mobile Hom• tor Rent
43-farms tor Rent
44-A~nment tor Rent
45-Fur.Whed Room•
46- Sp•c• tor Ran1

mlniltrattve Code requirM e
As ueed in thil ordinance,
communhy w.ter tuppty to
collect four conaeruttva 1ho lorm "okat-•d" lhotl
que'*"! somploo for deler- mnn any vahide Or device

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

VAUGHAN'S
CARDINAL

tf2 GAL.

Weluy AI
Non Ferrous
Metals, ·
Plastics,
Stainless Steel.

53-AntiQUet
14-Mtte. Mlfch.ndtae
'6-Build•nv Supph•
16-.,Pett tOt Stlfl
17-Mu•cal lnttrum•t•
58-Frun• • Vev'Mebl•
59-For Sale or Trllda

41-Houeet tor Aant

c:le traffic.

3741-81-26 ohho Ohio Ad-

·('!&lt;.

CIDER

POMEIOY, OHIO

&amp; l !Ve o\Ui: k

14-B~o~lin••

public ufe~y, to 1he operaPUBLIC NOTICE
of uld oke1-ordo, 10
ton
Tho Village of Middleport
pldMtrian and motor vehi·

'

DECOUTED

060 .00

5-:7-tfn

AT

,

Ill-COUNTY
RECYCLING

$25 00

F.11 11. Supp lie s

1 1-Help Vunted
1 2-Srtuation Wanted
1 3-ln•ur•nct:=

Get Retultt .Fast

CORN
DOGS

~=::::::;

Mt•rclld lllll s t~
51-Hou.,....old Goo•

~t;r VII,!~~

117- CooN'ille

KAHN'S IULII

13.00
113 .00
s21 .00
151 .00

f llllillr yIll': III

following telephone exchanges ...
446-Galllpolis

07 .00
010 00
015 .00

12-SPM!inoGootlo

4-GIYeewtv
5- Happy Ad I

- 2:00P .M. FRIDAY

Mnon Co.. ·WV
Aru Code 304

Business Services

21·36WORDS

...,..._,ads

3-Annouc..ntntt

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
-11:00 A.M . SATU-DA¥
- 2 •00 P.M . MONDAY
- 2 •00 P.M . TUESDAY
- 2•00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2•00 P.M . THURSOAY

Me1p County
ANI Code 814

tla.t Ill

l - C.rdcfTn•••
2-tn Memory

COlt

.Qalha Counw
ANa Code 814

08.00

A11111111 I II; I: lilt~ II\ ;,

Classified pages (:over the

245-Ato Grinde

•CHEESE BALLS
•PARTY TRAYS
•ROLLS

$13.00
033.00

•A cl•sifi.a ecNe"iMment plec«t tn Tna Deilv Sentinel I• ·
cept - ai•IHttld drtJ118¥. &amp;u1in•• Cerci end lecjll notiCII)
wHI e110 epp.., in the Pt. Pt . .e!'lt R~itter end tht Galli·
polil Daily Tribune. reach•ng over 18;000 ttom11

367- Ch•h.re
388-Vtnton

•

100AYS
1 MONTH

1 .1() dllcount tor ads p!lid m advance
- Grweewey Mid Found HI und"" 15 words wiH be

•A.dt tMI must be preid '" actvence ••
C.d of Th~Q
Happy Ad s
In MtmOfMfll
'hrd s ...

..

-BEWITC.HIN8
BAROAI S

ss.oo

11-ZIWORDS
u .oo

A1t• are tor con•cutr.o4t runs. DroUn upd~lwill be r;h•Vtd

•sentinel,. not r•po.•lbta tor..,,~, •her flnt d., . !ChaO
tor •rora ltrs• d-v ad runs irl pieptrl. Call Detar• 2:00p.m
dw lftll" DUblt~ion to m•• corrtetiOn

·

3 DAYS

I DAYS

Ma1on COI.nW•• must be pre·

•Ptlet of
all capital 1.-._.,
•? point line type o..tv u.d.

04.00

1 DAY

y

'

Continued !rom !rom page 1
of drugs, alcohol and even
Emecy Gordon, Cheshire, $25 smoking cigarettes. " If someone
and costs, no financial responsi- won't he your friend because you
b!Uty; William R. Gilkey, Pome- won't take drugs or take a drink,
roy, $10 fine only, running a stop then,he or she Is no friend. And If
sign; Ronnie Powell, Middleport, you don't smoke, thimdon'tstart.
$25 and costs, disorderly Not for anyone."
manner; Steven Scott Powell,
He also shares some statistics
Middleport, $40 and cosis, reck- with students regarding teen
less operation; Duane A. John- deaths which can he attributed to
son, Pomeroy, $10 and cost. drug usage. "Fourteen teenagfailure to yield; James Singleton, ers are kUled every day in auto
Point Pleasant, $10 fine only, accidents in the United States"
running a stop sign; and Mark and often because they were
Hall, Middleport, $25 and costs, either on drugs or drinking .
domestic violence.
themselves, or had gotien into a
Forfeiting bonds were James vehicle with someone who was on
D; Ogelsby, GallipoUs, $60, driv- drugs or drinking.
Ing lett of center; Helen M.
In addition to all the facts and
Bonecutter, Henderson, W. Va., figures and health ln!onnation,
$60, improper turn.
Crites explains to students that
Terry Powell, Pomeroy, en- "it's a cririle to use, sell or give
tered a plea of not guilty to a away illegal drugs." When peocharge of domestic violence and ple commit such a crime, it Is
the case was transferred to Crites' resposlbillty to prosecute
Meigs County Court.
·
them for their actions.
Getting Involved with drugs "Is
your choice and your consequence." Crites says.

Racine Village officials have
made arrangements for free leal
pickup in the village on Friday.
In announcing the tree pickup,
Councilman Bob Beegle stresl!ed
that leaves must be put in bags
and placed at the curb ifthey are
to he picked up. He said that
there are to he no branches, no ·
twJgs nor any refuse In the bags
with the leaves. Pickup will take
place on Friday only, Beegle
said.

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

EMS has four
Tuesday calls

lanes from Jackson to leave him alone lora little while.
Chillicothe.
Abel. not to he outdone , gav&lt;:'
SEORC has long recognized the govprnor 24 Snickers candy
the importance of a good trans- bars-one !oreachweekshehas
Meigs County Emergency
portation system to economic been in o!fice. ~aiUng him or Ohio
development, and made the US Department of Transportation Medical Services units answered
Route 35 relocation project the Dlrctor Bernard Hurst almost four calls for help on Tuesday.
Middleport at 7:02a.m. went to
top of its priority list.
dally on behalf of this highway
VIllage Manor Apartments for
"This is a significant commit- project. ·
Ralph Frye to Veterans Memortment by I Governor) Celeste to
Celeste said that on the first
this area,'' State Rep. Mary Abel day Abel was in office, she called Ial Hospital. At 8:10a.m., Middlesaid. She noted this Is his to· talk about the US Route 35 port ·was called to the Gavin
follow-through on a promise of relocation. And he said shl' never Plant at Cheshire lor Randy
highways and jobs for the state, · stopped - she and Long sent Phillips to Veterans Memorial
which equals economic copies of every letter, telephone Hospital. Middleport was called
development.
message, newspaper article and out again at 12: Sl p.m. fo{ Linda
•'By opening- up the highway editorial to both the governor and Hart who was transported !rom
system, there will .he the possibil- ODOT director- aU In support of Cheshire to Holzer Medicaf
Center.
ity lor new and additional eco- . the project.
· At 12:53 p.m., the Rutland unit
nomic development, " Abel said.
The governor said he plans to
was
called to Depot St. lor Kenny
During his remarks, the gover- return next year to drive the
.
Hysell
to Veterans Memorial
nor praised, and even joked a bit, J!ulldozer to break ground on this
Hospital.
about the persistent efforts of project.
Long and Abel. noting they could

u.s....

Middleport Court news
Eight were fined, two forfeited
bonds, and one case was transferred to Meigs County Court at
Tuesday night 's court of Middleport Mayor Fred ~otfman.
John C. Sheets, Reedsville.
was fined $425 and costs and
sentenced to three days in jail on
a DWI charge. Others fined were

Continued from

1

The Daily

Ohio

.£#;.

R!!!1: GIEG;D~··~:fo..J

•

RESIDEIITIAL
• .. CO\IIIERCIAL

,

•CUllOM Mc.-ENII • aATHI

•EXTINIIVE f11 EMODE\.ING
•VIN't'l IIDINQ • IJIIOORNO
eMRA&amp;. IULotNCII

•NEWHOMU
~uvu; 190;

•slY n. S1MCIIII

9-215- '88-1 mo.

USED 1FURNITURE
liVING 100M 5111ES
IIDI10CIM 511115

DINUTI sm

"NEW" IKUIIEIS

i-' · Located lohlnd4
Yrector De.. tr~hip

MOIIIS
EQUIPMENT

741·1455
s..,. Stl~~':!.

BISSELL
BUILDEIS
CUSTOM IUIT

HOMES &amp; GWGES
"AI l t -..11 Prices"

• PH. 949-2101
or ln. 949·2160
hr • ....t

NO SUNDAY CALlS
4-

'•

-

�WednSJday, October 26. 1989.

Pomeloy- MicUapon, Ohio

12-The Dlity Sa llil•ll

Page

LAFF-A-OAY

lilT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlpt

Apartment
tor Rent

--·:·1111,- . . . . . . _
......

a

Wralll

Television

71 Autos for Salt

ori.I14-44H

=:'4 'JJ:......

---···10-.....
1110...,....114-..m.
.

~.=

. . . 1-

oullllllofor1
AM., 4 - a both.
--1. loci-. 1oc. Dop. a

....

...._In

wv.

EYE NINO

--

, ... .,....,.r

w

,..,......_~,m.

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

N o - a t l \ I l*.lOR
A. H. ItlcUI-141-.1

""- ...3Dwa..Mtl,.. ....

141lll -

-

1

•CIJ

wnh dining
- - $11110

a:oo

p.m.,

"''·-""'·

-ns.

C1na TV (0:30) Q
• !Ill Andy Orlfillh
11J WOifd 'tadaJ
1B1 Choliel tn Qtarge
ill"""
Gil AntatiCan MagnJne

ME I-IOLD I-IlM ...

;53:,__;A;.nt_;;;l;:::qu:;e:;;S~~- 56

Counlr)l llollllo H- Paril,
iloula
33, 0: - " " ·
.
LOll -·lo
oaloo· iluy or - · R , _ lonllquoo,
'11..-•~ • - · 11:M
E.
lloln 11-. -~
114.....7471.
·
~.- 11.•w :OO
~:
•.. 10. ..... lo 1 :
81aoplna"""" lot ron1, may.. p.10.1 ~ 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
ldtohM ~ living • _ , 114....,.
.
living. 304 .-J417.
Top Caoh paid. Old tumii1Jra
Tr•l• • • 3 mi... fnMII town. cuboarda,
quill,
ortant•l,
Old -v•, At. 2 a 12, aN• 1:00 polnllngo, loJI, or ,,,,. 114011

-a -··

FiT

coli-coli . . - 30+12W271, or
1Wo iloulo Ono I04-6:zs.NM.
LocUli Roecl on rlghl, _.7111071.

Musical.
Instruments

QOVERNIIENT SEIZE$) Vohlcloo'

from 1100. Fonl. M•c•d•" ·
c-1100. Chovyo. ........... .
Buyoro Guido (1) - - :
Ext. S.1011t.
. .
•
GOVERNIIEHT IEIZED Yoillclco :

I DOt.l'T KJJfJW 'tMf
! FUL 111AT ~Y!!

6

.
.
.
=

1.,........ ,.

Lost&amp; Found

- - a-1
I Col 1-1111-~

41Aioto- 1141111.

- - - -laldng
AllllllcltloM. AIDtY In ......
"" 11a1n II., Pt.'PR:
~ _ , NCil bond
loOidng lor . . . . ftl' I'CIIM, I

LOll- -1011110 Tlck.JIUIIO,
3 lnhee 0U1 At dl'ftancl RICigl..
30M7W241.
LOll- Tlcil - l o Wo~

Com ...................... pu

,....,.., phone: 11~1-11Di.
LDIII: male Sib I riM ~

a_.
oyoo. - .a
.. .,.L
,,.........2111.

I•""~·~~~··~11.;1;14~4;1t~t~m~;;;;i;d,

lil.clc.l r1c

a.tc ......_.,
c ,.... dd bul

•

lototOObolif161CFioclllly,

........

I

..

,..,.. . ..._,nd'm'~

-------- --=
7

Yard Sale

Coi'
!.!!. ... 2 loll 2U - I I ;
-~~--­

' OH-14.

Gallipolis

1n ... -

&amp; VIcinity

-

10.....,..

M1 - · , .
SOIII11o.114 1--lt.

ALL Yard Salao IIUOI lo Paid In
Advonco. D£AOUNE: 2:00 P.'". lha day .,._tho od 1o 10 run.
Sunday • 2:00 p.10.
Frldoy. - . , . ....... • 2:00
p.m. Satu,.y.

~ ,.,• ..,• ..,
Jllli-dmo, al ohll

AN..
...11a

lollllo doya, - · lniiiCI, Pllm014 C...
Coni• Ill olwl I .....
.._7112, lho D.O.N.

(E.::O.=E·~-----------

Ill':: arlll ,.,.
• .,. -..Milliloll-.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

-

- . 1ot """ 1100 •

11~. 1111. LJn.
Big 4 iamlly. Thur. f~. .... Mway, N. - . IL 111142.
hind Muanlc
RHine. q F mlble. ._...... .....,
Clal-. C.l'a, 11111 _... In oppooronco.
~ 1 - . -no, 11'11 - a 1411~olo, n14 ainlld 10
van, aood cuuclltl.,, 1100. C.. WOIII. 114 •• •11.

uo. -

.-.In

-or
...
:"t:r.
"*

ot.WU..-n.

- · - lunaneto..,owriRIIOIM
Th... w Fri. Ocl. - ·· o1 _ . , ...., ,.
101i.m. 14 , _ . Dr.• llaeon. lniiOfVId. ..........
T,.. rlgh! • oaiWOOh. Oooll
-~ 111
1 In-

~
.auh•.
__ Loleor...,aflllrlf.
-, ........

PL. wv . . .

Wsnted to Buy
Tallo · Col COlo!
Jur* an wMtl 01 wtlhoul 114 411 r..T ar ... 11......,.
molorL Call Lany Uvoly .,,.. - .
311-1303.
T - wor1loro -IlL .....

9

OUIIIo

YouftO, 8u-. WV,' Pro IMO qulfto. Any -ion. :1117::.4;:5311.=~----­
c-h Paid. CaN 114 Ita 1117 or

12

114..511Z-2401.

UOOd "''"'"" anc1 '""1111hold

UOOd

.

-

Sltultlon

Wanted

i H14;;ji ;n*i.,ri-.:ill~o~w~.;.i~;;;-;;hD;,
.
;;;..;;:
••

4-JU..

=r:::

...... "::::.l7 .......
.....74244111 •

· •.. :104-372
lho plooo or Wo ..... lor _ . , onci - -

-·

~"'::'".:.~

UOOd mobllo homoo, ........ - - Clll14 Ita ll'lll

UU1711.

-

Wenl:eclto Bur:

ttau. an ¥-A •

- r -....blo-..Gawp M1
· 3114-t~ "' .....
.....ao
Wo ..od lo lluy: l a l - A llur-

7:00 ,. ... lor ...... -

SchOols &amp;
·lllltructiOn
I--_:;111-'_;;T;_;R;.;IAIN~IIOW;.;:.;_~- 15

Fonn Trocloro "' Equip- IIOIITHI.UTIIII
-,_
114-441-2404
... CO:.L.IIIE, 121 - - Pllto.
_,..
Col 114 4. l:aJ. """ No. . .

,...-.

Employment Servrces 18 Wanted to Do

t11

lllooP;. .... DorC..-.
. . . . . . . ?'1,111"' .. .....

Help Wanted

I ...... 1:11

::.:..:r:

2 ...10.

..,._ ..._
• Dtoplne
11 uw. 114 1tl 1224.
.

ANYONE CAN APPI.TI Guaron- c . us chargo. E...
wHh bod crwdft. No-..-. Traoh Hauling - . - f y
CaN 211-125 IIOiellU2501.
~k~~. ~~~~· II ; d Ha

AVON I AI , . _ I

lpoorw, 304-1'11-1421.

Md

both,

IC~Q

fuN

I lurdelto Addn,

-PI-,WV.

I houoao
lalo
lly.·
Good
OMidlllon,
oload)'
._

110,000. SorloiM
ZII-111-:JN2.

-

•-•oro only.

lllr, . , _ p1ue clop. 111 , _
101.
lllcl!on wlolovo,
a
,
River Vlow,

:lilr.Z - · ZIOO::·-

~t-.r.':"ltl~:~n71. aoro,

For ....,. . .

-r

2 lullllolho, .....
living room, dlnl~ room.
llltchen, IIRIItadMid 2 oar
...... 1012 . . - . ...... 4 -

-nFor-..,_
-

Sl*ior

:r::.:·

Wll ..._
In "" homo, 41 112
St.• ,... lop. 114-441o
Wll do- jollo, ......,.._

laonTY _ _ ..,
...._...... Foi - ... lnlo.
115-771-7111 ald. T·llll3.

=L

Tot.. electric. CeN 114 41127
lloloro2::10p.m.

Z IR opor1-, ......., - . r

~~··=

---7ml.frol01-.
AMIIor owned• • , 4 4 .. 1348.
-

... _

... 101 ChorJy

-1 •

It, Vlnlon. Olllo,
112.a310.

h.ooo.. ~

AC Riding lawn - · 42 Inch
.... 1 opel. lrano. hydraulic lift.

,.-,.;,noIll--~~~-.
'"'- '""' k-.., utHoy
........ only. No

turniUed. 11~....,... .
2 lA apo~-. lolal - ·
wot• a llaoh paid. 11'-441HIP lchool. SMO.
OWnor
-·-111
til.......
1471; •1Wiii1at
2 bedroom ••· tor rene. CarSo4 ........... Plied. Nloo -il)g, .......
... 1M 'ill II """""" ionood In, iochlllea ovallablo. Cill 014-112·
pc
itlr nc p' t 11100. 1M mtEOH.
oii7-.Gollpol$o,bel_ . , ......1!10p.m.

Good 1hape. &amp;14e3'7t-Ht5 1ftw

4:30p.m.

1 llaJiaa W.oh•, a llrY•o..."::~
tor
1 . . . $1'1: '
Sill Wolorllod wfth f'll.« Flllad

Allco Chalmora Wd 45 IIOCt!!,
an. IKIIh hog. now Sn
corn firm
- ·1Mch1MrY
- • dloo
exc.
1 . . , . .. .
Fonn llachlnory At. 124 llohow
Acl. Jackaon ott 114 211 ltU

1 Lounge Roell- Chait, 1100;
11H4H741oftor lp.m.
1 Uvlng , _ CO\ICIII $100, 4
lYing room chalro, 120 oach,
114-441-2011 .
biZ oarpot 110: ""' ...,.. 14 0
Pl"'l 1 up; Man hMd Fumll'"
114-441-7444.

1111 lolllo Chalm.o wldo 3p4. hHoh, PS,- .............
,.,.ary- grodor bladO, $3,350.
($IDI .. 7140.
... " " " · -.or will llnMco. .,...,...
.......
JET 131131 104hoo In Olocll. IIZZ.
oalo pr1co JS 011. BIUO TD I llllornatlonal wlh
Ridgo llachlnory,304-W-3531. winch. 15000014-11711-:140'.
King o HNt CGIII 'wood ...... Evano llolorf 1130 IEJOiorn
IEJtill " ' -· $110...... """'"'
Go- Trallor

u.n.... aoo; 1 dHic llhalr Pli

~

couch, Olllnl - · tool
lfool, exc conct. :~~M-87~4~~~.
County """"- Inc. 0oo11
UMd lppM
0 T.V......

&lt;t:
Mon"- ,,..

1 ,., tol~m
· ·
•Int. ·
- · Qal.
.....

oloolng
loan on
vett S , _' and llolh opl, _..,...
"'"'· corwanlionliy . looallol a 4QH.
bd*OGIII holM Vuon. WY.
• w...... 2 br, , llolil, ........
oaoh prlco 111,100.
tn a· a11 d
Pllfo. QoM lo
'1110or-72NZIZ.

~~~~·--------~--~
Dlvon
a cilalr :or oalo. SIO lor

No - 1o
ooet:a

~1-frar~MN

lr611adon.

8IIIUIM

-=·

.-

· - .-J.~
ohopjllftg - far,
~-...
DIOVIdod.
IZOSirilo. .... .. ...
~727- ~

tt7t 14170 Eicono .Zbr,

~

Nvlng "'""'· (_., 110¥1) pkiO
elecfik:
hMid
HH bMn
ramart111d lnelcle. v.r, nice.
Doolo 011 - . 1 -·
r nn• lor - n...CA.
.........
.... ol oncl
lo In ....,......-llon...coJI
aft• 3 :0Gp.M.I14:-24M211 ....
up o1 Ouoll Craoilllollll1 Homo

~Pa~IL~iiiliWO;;;IP.;k!.;;?i
1910 s... wDad Par1c 1••10
homo, 2 ..............
ftNptace. eiC COIMI, 301 Ill3&amp;41 •fi•I:OO PM.
ttl7 Clavton t41r72, a ............,
010 cllllll-~.!!"' - r pay-o,

ll•drooa•.

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Waohoro, ..,.,., ..:r~-.
n - . Skaggo AoOIIa-.
Uppor Alvor Aa. lolldo Stono
Croll 11o101. can 11._....73111.

••har

Goo-· •
•rurow
,

•

Don't

ho,.lo IIICIVa. 14,100.114-111'·
7744.
liN Claylon 24111, 11!!, !!!!!!'
11oW&lt;Nr..,,

- . m.ooo.
_,ngo.

-100

llullohan Furniture

10 yda: oarpM &amp; pad l,..taiiMI,

$411. Whllo

tm a.,- mobllo ..3 ,... ,.,. .oftloo ., - ....
tw. 1 1: 112 bathi..Woodbu"*' In loaMioM, 21 ~ t , DDm apt. a

tlal ~ 141&lt;70.

both. 114 441 3341.

25e3.

cond. 014-251-1521 ... 114'2*
1177.

104-1711-lMll.

.._111!,..
•--"- urt

Hl4po$nl
and .,.,.,
uood I!OI'f lilt lo malchlng ol4
loolca good,l300. bolh. 30U71o

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale.

laol. .,,..
441·7444.
PICKENS fUIIHITURE
Now'Uoacl
HoHooouuoo-hollldd iumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jerricho Rd. Pt. Pl-.t, WV,

1-. II I di'OGfl: .... Ul)tawn
locatfon. IIU i!!!"L . ._.,....,..,
call304-171-1410.
lumloiled. :IIOWTO&lt;ZTM;

fum. Eillclo.:K 1141 Ulllllloo
~ lho. II
-o
·
• 107 ·
-N
lpolla. 114 4111411 1t1er

~"'::::·"".:::..----------~-

Fu..-pd.
optlllmllll,
tbr, $195.
UIIINieo
Sharo bath.
701
Fourth ft;....._.le, 111 ue 4411
ft
-

SWAIN
AUCTION a FURNITURE. ea
Olivo
111 .. GaHipollo.
•tumhure,
held.,., Wllttm
I
WOII&lt; boo4o. 114&lt;Mio31D.

:a;•~J~p.m.;;;:;,;t"iiM:;:ii~;;iiiii;;
FumlaMd apt, 1br, ,I2DII, uiUit•

paid. '1111 FOuotll Galllpolla, 114441-4411alor 7p.m.
0roo1ouo Pvlng. 1 and 2 bod......, lpoJI'"""' II VIHogo
lianor
ond
At.orolda
......,... 1n Mldd1tp011. From

FUll

-.o

t-

_.. ... -

2414214.

ll............

Monarch WoOd a~. for .-. . -

or

for

MUOn, $300.

.'f:."·• ....
uood 1
Inti-

quopol. bollyOiove,uc.cond.
Call114 44&amp; Retevenl·~
Nlco 1 - plac1 Uvlng room 014.
Priced ......bl • • C81111o\-:M7..
ZitS .. 114-247-31113. IEJcollanl

m

oondlllon.

kmoe: ""hlloh
- .M
..,.-bumpor

hftch hatOO -

11500;. 7111

aa

14270, -

ull ltve.
loci! . .., """ IM5G.

,., -

--

*-171-1"/St:

W

...... lliitl, .

"""'""·

PIOOikL~n(~P~~MO. ~--~e==OC==~-IIoL Explrao 1121/11. 1-eoo-ID1o

:MIZ. """""'·
Portablo, dual E·Tanil Carrlaga,
S75.00. CaM 304171-1 nz. dartlow.

no- ......

Army,

papers. 10:30) Q

Uve From Uncoln
C.rt1ar Mozan's opera Is
presented In a new Harold
Prinoe production. (3:30)

vz eo, SUI.

1111 y..,.ha
. . . . . . . ., .

~,.

S&lt;ereo.
at • t!JIIIugl Iunny'&amp;

:

Howi._n &amp;p.clai Bugs

.10 .. •

and Wllch Hazellty their
competing reclpe lor a scary
HallowMn on Bugs· gang ol
lrlandi-Daliy Duck, Porky
' 8peacly Gonzalal and

75 Boats &amp; Motors ~: •

rorsate

1B1 MOVIE: WaalllngiOn
Alfllr (2:00)

,IIJ Munter, She WIOta When

Thieves Fall 0111
121 Cilurch Street StMfon
1:0&amp; (Jl MOVIE: Utile Big Man

Auto Parts &amp;
Ac:c8uorles

(PGJ (3:00) '
1:30W Ill]) Head Of The Cia11

101 llalor 8oanl ou11 JG, .·
.....,.,., Mftlpietely overh.lulld, ·
only IIIII ""100 on -.r, Chucll,
:104..71-1311.
•'
FuloiiOINCk 1-r. uc....:,

*•1n-M17.

Alan gets mixed signals from
Vlki, who seems 10 be In love

;"'l@\~~o-

·

POOR lOY TIRES, . ~
a11anmn ·
...... """'
4,001 -onc1 .....
1..... •.
........ 11Mllleo.
.

mt

I '11-IINK IVE
..JU5T' WRITTe:N A
qa.DSN OI..DtE.

2444-4344.
- · 2 . ...... ...........

holds 1

() w-··

-- ..

dloh - . .......
haatlng
.......
, - ·O.llllll't

o.-

._
"-•

14-441o747ll.

~~711-~1:110~.oo::.~:c~:

-OJ.
1• ....,_
z-

-·

Puro- G - . 2 112 yooro
old. Juol .rr..... nod. .....,.,._

Building
Supplies

lloolt, brlcl,' -

.._
...'lntolo, .... Cl.- ..... Nlo Orondo, OH Col .....
,.._.121.

-

BARNEY

....,........ .......... ... .
--.TY . . Iioo,opoclol-

In -

~'II:~ Ouanor Horoo, "!"&lt;!'!'~·
llay tiM. , IH,
12001bi.,. lhown
W..tm
- · Aog'od. woonUng,
blood liiloo; Jon. 1171,
Ulz.od- ...... ., ..._

E

and I wk. old piglllio. lliO.
Calll1oi.J4114115.

•

- , - n g ,. -. •

-· ... _.... -

_.......,..,.,..,..WY \~

*-1711-2:1N

Olllo ....... • ;

-~
1813102.

"""

I GIVE OL' SNUFFY
CREDIT, LOWEE~Y-· .
HE JEST TAKES LIFE

NOT

ALWAYS,

CALEB

ONE DAY AT

· stall sends a videotape ol
llle hotello the President ol
lhe U.S .. (0:30) t;1
(I) .I]) Anyihlng lui .._
Hannah challenges Mally to
a battlo ol the bylines 10
make 1 polnl. (0:30) Q
10:00 CIJ 700 Club with Pat

I

·
Co. RON IVANIINTIRPAISII, .~,·1
Jackaon,OH 1-.J7.J121.
· ;
loplk 7Mk Pullllllna 110, Gallla :

82

Rob

PlUmbing &amp;
Heating

ASTR().QRAPH

--Piilo
"'·Ohio

1144 . .GrllfJ
...

a,ctrlcal &amp;

BERNICE~

~·

..

· CIIIIC'
IIAil _ _ _ o...

:mr.-..........

..
Cal-

~- -. lm-~oot,ooo

I=

1

..,. - •

5

j1~f"

.....,
-- :::
I : :: - " " In
,...,,,_toP.
0 .$1!11
._ ' 11. ,.._. :

PI

A,WY.._

::S

=·

Jiidsalllllatt:

-"u I . ...... t:, k•d..........
: ~
1

:.n; .:="nr'J.e:'#. ::--=: w
EARN IIONIY

"

r

:n

311

Rill !ll8fe

IPOklln .... whMI.
ICOA:riO (Oct. 14 Nou.

....._._.

...."...=...~~

Oct.a,1•-ling cMvillo-•11 .,. likely to
IIIII ~ &lt;eGMdlng your IOdai _ , .
ltlonlln the,_, ehted. You may become lhe 1oct1 point o1 a graup ..,..
you llaWi prwtoualy moraly •

Wroiii.W, 1 G - hl,iiOI,
ill.
. 0111 114_ ,7,.o. .
7jl.&amp;

. ,., . . ---·--?"

''Terrtllcl New, wllat klllel of Ml lhOtH we

I

.

poet
25 Porcelain
Item
28 Falk.

21) Acctpt

irtandt lor whll !My nloday and not

~what you lhlnk they might be able to

do lor you. The $Mil you 0011111 an to
hoi;&gt; you till moll could be till onea
who. Ill your the hardllt. Know

.

.

where 10 lOOk 1or romance and you'll
"nd II. The Aatro-Graph Matchmaker
inolantly ....-Which lllgna are romanllcalfy periect lor you . Mall S21o Matchmaker. c/o this newopaper. P.O. Box ,
91428, C-ane!. OH 441014128.
IAGITTAIIIUI (Now. 23 Dec. 21) Two
oppo&amp;lng IICIIona will be al odds today
where your 18 concerned. Fortunatliy for you the pr0110f*111 of your
c.uae wiN beltronger !han the iorceo ol
your detroclore.
CAI'IIICOIIII (Dec. 2NML11)11you're
In need ol a lavor today. don't go lo
people who have rejected you In the
Pill. On lhtl olher hind, It looktllite you
can c:aunl on lhoee WilohaWI _ , ill lo
hoip you prevloualy. .
AQUARIUS (olen......... 1t) In your
eotnmercill dllalingl (oday h loolcl llite
you will be able to dell wtth olhen In a
very llflectlve -.on, but 1n PtiNIY toclal - - · you might llaWi two left

molar started, bul you won't resent tile
ntlllded nudge.
TAURUS (April »&gt;loJ 211) Baiore you
make demands on 10111- loday. be
sure you'N be ab!e lo rec:lproctle down
lite line. Lei this penon know you're a
giver, nol jusl a Iaker.
GEMINI (MQ 21-.lune 211) Thlnaa aren't
likely to run 100 amoolhly tOday II your
male feels token lor granled. II you
wtnl to be reapected, you mull ftret
show r - ' yourself.
CANCER("'-11...Itllr22) Try to avoid
negallve people today. becluae you
mlghl have con-able eeli.- doubla to
wllh yourself. On the other hand.
poaiiMI lhlnkora'
will
be
inieclloua.
LEO loltllr 11-Atlll. Zl) You lllllllktliy lo
CO!IICI guilt at lhllllme II you tquander
lunda for llilllil p u - . II you ..,.
to make polnll. buy tomlllhlna ntce tor
your f1lmlly ~·llld.
fwl.
VIMO (Alii- S.ltpL 21) A conlj)IIIIIOI
PIICU (Fill.
Manlll 211) Don't lei whO 1111 H In lor you might 1ty 10 make
your ego dominate your logical thlnitlng · you look tmalln tho
of olhen tolodey If you're requhd lo mike an 1m- day. 11 you kiiP 1 coo: you can
por1anl - n. Do lhtl amort thing. - l y lake thtlllatm out IIIII ~··
-IIH d_,'t make you look~- manauvare.
or In iron! o f - .
~ (llpL
D8t. D) AnltiMMI
,._.,.._., 11·Atllll 11) Today you mlgiliCI'IIj)lniOyourmlnd lodey, but at
might not tiUIIifY. the 111111111-11...... .INti ""'_..., be
nillgrnalellll
among your IIIOciatll. ~~~tile litlngl. The probltm ihat - - you
IIIIIJ llaWi 10 prod ~ ~!"' to get your could be - • to do with your turpiul.

vi-

a

er-e

a

Sam ieape into the lile ol a
~· secr11ary in 1961.

lii~a
Pro ao.::l Tour
W •I]) China

CrhMWalch Tonight
Newt

lU)Nawa
10:30. Q]J -Twilight z-

.12)

(I)

Ill) liMn

.1]) dl

........

·=

•o , _ - (1 :001
IIJ Moneyllna

ill....,. Vice The Fix

s-.

121 V:ddeecaiCCcM:OUIII••ryr
11:05 Cll MOVII!: Outt8 Of~
(1 :45)
11:30 CIJIIIalilllliNIIIIIIn

•

:rttel~=::fl~-

-~IITGflllllllltolr
(J)

001-

I

Comic lloalt Art
• (J)
Q

lllfll•••

SOUTH

u

.AK4
tA 10~

+A QJ 10 7 . ~
Vulnerable: North-lloutb
Dealer: East

So1111

ltletl

N-

Eul

14

Pua

I+

Pua
Paa

zt

Pus

S NT

z+

Pa.

/ttl pasa

Opening lead: • 6

L------------1
bad gpened wltb a weak two-bid iD ella·
lllOIIIIa. That's off the wall for esperi·
enced players. since East mi&amp;bt be
maltiD&amp; it impoaslble for his side to
plly In a beart coatract, but IIDOftbo.
dos bids sometimes work. nu. time
West would be leading a diamond, IIIII
tbe tlefetlll! would get two trictl for
sure.

3 Pulpit
topic

4 Child's
paradise
5 Partlcl·

8

ro::ry

7 Terminate
8 Mature
9 K.O. count
11 Burn
15 10th
20 Region
33 Top off
annlver· 21 Egyptian 34Metric
sary
Ctuistlan
measure
18 Young 23 Ultimately 35 Traitor
lover
27 Leglsla- 37 Never
ttve move
(Ger.)
17 Spread
joy
2tl Cozy room 38 Thessallan
111n the 31 Outlet
mountain
least
32 Slgnorina's3t Beachboy's
19 Irritable
"eventng"
hue

scuttle
2 Grand
- Opry
D~II.VCRVPTOQUOTF.S-IIere'~hnw

to work it :

10125

AXVDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sa:npl~&gt; A is used

for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ·
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints....Each day the code letters are different.

,

~

CRYPTOQUOTE

11-25

QJIXXUC
XG

F PI. G C

CVVIf
-

FVRU

XG

VW

X F VW

QCHVV

I
I

•·

DOWN
1 Coal

i • ID

iIIJ !Illl!vertintl

+4

+KI8

mountain
4t Operatic
great
42 Rose
fragment
43 British
film
director

Vietnam's unrelenting rains
Ioree everyone ln-. (1 :00)
Wlteauy VInnie
and Amber confr0011 their
trua latilnga lor each other.

+QJ

.QIOU
tKJ7142

.JI76

40 Biblical

Q u a - Leap

11:DOCIJialnlll

....

I
I

EAST

WEST
+715%

for ohe
21 Greek ·o·
21 Tub tester
30 In balance
32 Exhausted .
33 Swerve
3e- pricing

.12)a lton
Ill

~-~-. -

-

121 MOVIE: Neohvllil Beat

.r

J a J .,.... - . """""""

.....

Dlleelh'e (2:00)

ilovlo
-Voc
Somo1, I
0 ~ Creak Rd. ...... ... ~
~and-,. 114- ":

85 Get\11'111 Hauling

---

THill DAYS
AT A TIME

(2:00)
1:30 1112l '1111 NUll HOUM The

BEDEOSOL

-

RIGHT NOW,
HE'S TAKiN' IT

A TIME

ilollry .. ...... .... ...... '
wollo CCIIIIfllllod do¥. . •'

84

....

tlliillln:a

M.D. Doogle unwiMiy agrees
to lei Vinnie videotape him
on rounds. (0:30) Q
1111 • ID Jaka Ani! Tile
Fa-n Jake and McCtbe
find lillmltiVes differing on •
robbery case. (1 :DO) Q
IIJl Larry King Uval
ill MOVIE: Hollywood

at

lod caiii1WH·1210 aftor .......
For lolo: lluro-i&gt;Nd Holllpoltlro
JOUna ' _.... ..
1250: P..- llamplllh Gl•
$221, 114-245-11224 alar .......

55

c

(1) .(I) Doog........,,

For-: I 100. old Col

•

ACROSS
1 Role lor
Johnny
Carson
5 Wortc hard
10 Potpourri
11 Substitute
12 Refuse
131ndurate
14 Gawk
18 Stop
working
18 One- time
21 Panamanian
seaport
22 Sidetrack
24 Persian

seance in the

courtroom to conjure up a
g_hoat. (0:30)
Brunswick World Open 9-Ball
Championships, Semi·finll,
Ledman vs Kennlslon lrom
Las Vegas. NV

Tr;msport at 10 n

todoylll...-•71•.

121~1ChaM

1:00 •12l Ill) Night Court Harry

lalw l'igo tor oalo. eon "'""'"
2011aft• 5:00p.m.

and Hoollna ·

Danlll
I ..... _ . . ,.. lot
o j11 1

Pumpllln, Chtllile lnlwn The
spirH ol Hal~oMen bewllchell
lite Peanuts gang, eaptelally
Linus, who walls in the
pumpkin patch lor lite Great
Pumpkin. (Animated) (0:30)

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

IIJ-Na••

76

• • S2

CROSSWORD

vaster. (ll:30)
~
Q]J MOVIE: Daaih Hunt (AI
(2:00)

tmt71.-.ft. _ 121 HP, lvlnludo=, .
lop,
Ujlt
Calll1
......
, ,-.....
7:00p;lll;••'

DOnlm, Ranlal

olothlng. Our lllh yoar, raalu;ua cemofll~ Smatr ..
qul-nl. "Unclo tlaln 1YIIto'o, lal. U.II.A.F. llalllod.
Old Rl. 2f, Now En, Jackaon
eo. F!', 1a1, a s.... Noon 111
1:00 PM. 304-m-5155.

•I]) Olllwlng Palna Ben

sneaks into the high tcllool
to sell Carol's old term

700 mlloo, 1111. .
·

Ca...... PIUIII~lnl

J.:!i
z!V"";J!;~"::"s 1 II ...

M y - Police hunt lor a
woman wanted for
robQory. (1 :00) t;1
(J) Greilt AmeriCan Evenla
Georgi~

(lJ (!)

Frnancral

- - " ' Ja-ol . . . Qol """ . . . . . . . . . . .

(1 :23)
1112l 1111 Unltli¥acl

7400 MI., -:·

•u
tQ3

from

Alillnt, 1118, (Ptit 1 Of 31

,.,lily

a
1ro11ora.
COmpolhi¥o pltcoo on lroiiOr
hllchel In ga
teCil or trame
IIVHiock.~nato

(J) UIA Taday

7:31 (Jl Banford And Son
1:00 (I) The Flral OIJmpice:

S4100: 1181 Valloy o-onacil
haawy d~r PSOO:
0100: lruck Ill. PM oove
SIOO; laiQO -'"&lt;lion of olhor

Now
nallablll
EYif'OfMNtl
GIOplllco llurolo, Rog. ' -· lnotallollon -ablo.
Pl.ll $31.15. Palnl Plut, ·urge IIIICtlon of JN!il18 lnd AC2411 Jock- Avo., Pl. Pft. - -· 114 441 1512.
171-40M. '
.llm'o Form Equlpmont lA II
O..ay olll'lana llckol 1o WOOl Goalf!!:lo. 114-441o177'7,
Ooldand, Calli. Lonlnl 7:00a.m. ...., on1 a-., rroo~
2 1 - Yoaugor loro:or-~-.Alrporl. Chillooton,W.Vo. $100. 2!111p. Shonnln 1focWo. DwiW olllckollo driving hoOII. Kl!ll Kun• Ec;ul...-, UOOd
Call
!CoNn,
......... 2111 J.D., FOld, Flf1IUOCII1 P - a
Dlec._ LACI morel We bur, MM.
1 -U ~ 1111 ,_.SaL
Slgni
Portablo l.ighlo!l sat. (Froo Dotlvory/LoltiiO) 63
Llv Sl k

llurJ&gt;Ita,

w-:-

••• lulukl G8 1250,114-441 ae&amp;.

Family F ()) lchoiaallc S;lortl

tiJI Croeallre
tlJI lllgilt Court
121 Top C.rd

1$ APVI.t'iP. • ..

.:_74::_;.Moi:::;O:;IC!~YC;;Itl:;,~~

,_
.12)

ltr2?..$:"""nlyl Q .

olza lonnal (110111,

-l!oa.

...........

Forpt that tben!'a a plly for sis
clubs. Ia IOilrDIJDIIIt plly, wltb only
Z7 Clllllbilletl btp-cartl points and double
Ia all IIIIIs, three noSince owrtrit:ka are
sbould you plly wltb a
·mlgbt p1aD to Wll A·
K af spades, tbrowiDc a tllamoDd, and
iDtendlllfl to try tbe clab flaaR am.
U that works, run tbe clabl and 1ee If
you Willi to try for a favorable end·
position by1ai:5;ttb a bart In tbe
bope that a tlef
will bave to lead
away
the kiDI of cllamoada. Tile
other approadl II to simply play ace
and q - of clulil, IIYIDI •P DD tbe
club flaaR. Now J011 plly oat all your
clubl, and the tlefeaden are burtleaed
wltb baYIDI to bold 11'11 tel u well as
the ldac of diamonda. Under 1'- clr·
Cl•l"'taaleee, PnetbiDg good freqaenl·
ly hapJII!II' at tbe llnilb.
When tbe deal occurred, declarer
decided be did not want to give up on
the club fillelle working. He woa tbe
lint bart and played dummy'1 A·K of
spades. What a pleuant aurprile wbeu
the Q-J dropped doubleton, sett1n1 up
the entire spade IUit! He &amp;ot rid of all
biB red-llllit loaen before trying clubl,
and made sis for an eJreellent resoll
Note that on thla deal East woald
bave greatly Improved biiiiCOre If be

W EIIMrlllnmant Tanlgill

Quarter HorM M1re, n rm.,...

liM. F,_ ........ 111h to
llov- IIIII;- IOOnlh iloo IO 1 - . .lily. Call
.,.._.7717. EOH.
· - •••: ....,.,. $1110;
··~~~-.!!"'" $1110;
_ , lum'od opl. olr, - •

_ _ , .... , . . I n - - - .. - . . .
-olacaillftlnlho
'I' !oiulloWC~Iiifor--.114-441'
Wo have oovonl 10 ond 1 2 - ~""='--------------,­
mobllohomoo. _ _..., 11 Ono bedroom p - apl, :10411- lomo llhlo
·~
l
c
ocljUOI11u1
.
going to Ml lhentln the woodl One IUdrDORI total t&amp;tctlic in
inyWoy'ICaRI-~
•tor and 1r00i1
. . . or rwnt.
p6clwp 1rM. Rerwa• Dll , .
mobllo homo. 1411711,
quiNcl. 114-11241114.
room. oentral air, ft: fll'a. Rio OrancM, 2br, etove.
,..... Umtl 3 occupMCa. No ~alar fumlahed. No pata;
,..... o.p.ll ... ....... . . Dapjd . ..., lor lludent• ...... 114-lltt.
oouplo.llj 4111031

ct..,

oocr;

s 'ld-11 . . - apl
locltecl HoturCUnlcofWV. 11.,.

of•

.. -

........ Pl.

Phonl

""""'

=:.:""PI ...., .........
P-211, ....
200

ouiiOO - - ' ohiiJroo• -

ii'f ••·

-..n1.
4

NOR1'Il
..z....
+AKlOIU

IIJJ_J_.,

IBICill Miami Vice Mil~ Run
Gil VidtaCaunlty
7:0&amp; IJl ....,_.

for Rent

•

BRIDGE

'~l~-01

Apartment

•

'· ·~'
Unwind - F61T!ur- Ditto - Cliche -.DIRECTION
OIMng instructor, "Pretend you're playing the planO."
Student, "But when I play the ~· I don1 have. a
bul'ldlofthem coming from the oppoeil8 DIRECTION.

.12)

•

I I I

5CIIAM-LET5. ANSWEIIS

-IH-(1 :00)

IEJpotl• "d lnol- wllh hond
WalnuiO lo , ... -·You "'"- 1117 0111o - ·
014-311 •'
Onoan Hiflnc.
Wolnulo to ~ .,.,, 2310 =~:=:=lf'\
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LAND WHE1HER HE WAS BORN TlfERE OR NOT."
- lliOMAS f1110f
(f) 1!189 Kong F o -• Syndicalo Inc

�Tum your
clocks hack
Sunday

I
•

We Reserve The Ri&amp;hl To

HOURS
Monday thru Sunday

624
Pick
9281
· Super l.otto
21-22-33-35-37-38
Kicker 537485

Oct. 29

1

STOR~

Pick-3

LIMIT ONE COUPON
PER FAMILY.

.
r------------MUELLERS

pmit Quantities

Ohio LOttery

1

•

ELBOW
MACARONI

8 AM-10 PM

3 Ll. lOX

298 SECOND ST.
_POMEROY, OH;.
PIICES EFFECTIVE SUN., OCT. 22 THRU SAT., OCT. 28, 1989

Vol.40. No.120 M
Copyrighted 1988

Powell'• Super Valu
Expires Oct. 2S, 1989

,.. ___________ _

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

CAMPBELL'S

TOMATO
SOUP
I 01/• OZ. CAN

I3/S1
79C
Bacon •••••••••••••• ~•••••

CRISPY SERVE

1

ASSORTED SUPERIOR

. •

lunch Meats ••• ~••••

$1 39

Powell'• Supor Volu

Expires Oct. 28. 1989

-·
I
I

L---·
---------!
--------------·
PRE GO
SPAGHETTI
SAUCE

$

9
11
Chuck Roast ••• ~••••
19
Sausage ••••••••••~•••• S2
U.S.D.A. CHOICE

1

By NANCY YOi\cHAM
used pollee cruisers. The comDally Sentinel Starr
missioners had already okayed
The resignation of Herbert the purchase of one used vehicle
(Pete) Shields, Racine , as a to be paid for with a combination
member of the Meigs County of · funds Including a $2,500
Regional Planning Commission. Insurance settlement for a demwas accepted with regret by the · olished cruiser. Because the
commissioners. According to lhe sheriff is trying to provide a
letler submitted by Shields to the . vehicle for each deputy., In order
commissioners. he Is resigning to save wear and tear on vehicles
due to lll·health. The resignation In the long run. the commissionIs effective from Oct. 20. The ers said they would check wllh
commissioners commend.ed the county auditor to see If the
Shields for his many years of additional purchase can be arservice on the planning commls- ranged, with the sheriff's departslon. and his othe~ Involvement men! lo reimburse the purchase
In county ·p rojects.
from his 1990 budget. As pointed
Thecommlsslonersareconsld· out by Sheriff Soulsby, many of
ering a request from Sheriff the department's cruisers are on
James Souls by to purchase two the road round-the-clock when

they are being shared by ·depu- Co .• Marietta, the only company
ties. By providing each officer submitting bids.
County Auditor William Wick·
with a car. a vehiCle would only
une
submitted a letter to the
have to be used !or one shift.
commissioners
notifying lhem
Bids from Gibson Inc., Athens,
that
informallon
supplied by
were accepted by the ·commls·Mtddleporl
VIllage
regarding a
stoners upon recommendation of
annex·atlon
of ptoperty
proposed
Engineer Phutp Roberts, lor two
Into
Middleport,
was
adequate
to
diesel dump trucks. dne truck ,
Identify
the
parcels
Included
in
which Includes a spreader bar.
the
annexation.
Next
week,
the
will cosl $37,691.48 . The other,
without a spreader bar. will cost commissioners v;ill formally
$35.791.48. Gibson Inc. was the adopt a resolu lion accepting the
only company which submitted · proposed annexallon proposal
bids for the counly highway from Middleport.
The commissioners approved
department trucks.
··
state
figUres for I he 1990 operaBids for bituminous products
tions
of
the Community Correcfor the highway department lor
tions
Program
. State funds for
the month of November were
the
program
for
next .v ear will
accepted from Asphalt Materials

~~~~~~~~-~

..

31112 OZ. JAR

ECKRICH SMOKED

Leg Quarters ••~••••• 39 c

BUCKET

Cube Steak •••••~••••

$249

200

a.

l 59C

·

I

I

Powell'1 SUI* Vllu
Expirea Oct. 21. 1989

L--------------------------.
~

-

FAlTER'S LB. ROLl

Powell' 1 Super Volu

Expires Oct. 28. 1989

1
I

$ 69
Chuck Roast •••~... 1

lm&amp;U~

_____________ ...
,---------------1
CHATEAU
'I
! COFFIE l
! FILTERS

89&lt;
Sausage ~·········~·····

TONY'S

PIZZA

.,

$159
Powell' 1 Super Volu

Expires Oct. 28. 1988

l-------------~

r-------------4
I

Celery •••••••••••••••• 2/S1.
.

I

STALKS

SWISS MISS

HOT
COCOA MIX
10 Envllape Pkg.-lllg.(Wy

FLAVORITE

'99&lt;

2°/o Milk •••••• ::~~~ ••• $15 9

Powell' 1 Super Vllu

Expires Oct. 28. 1989

~-------------J

3-LB. CROCK

s

49
Shedd's Spread •••• 1

--~---,--------,

' GALA

PAPER
TOWELS

BANQUET

oz. 99&lt;
TV
Dinner
. oz. 2/ $."1
•••••••••••••
P·•neaGoplDple •••••••••••

59~

10-12

20

•

•

•

2 liTER Bonus

.

Lotsa Pop .......... 2/
36
IOAST ar
39 OZ. AD(, EP, REGULAR

IUIWEu HOUSE

COFFEE

$

1

TIDE DETERGENT
13601.

s5''

UmM 1 ..., Cullomer
Only At POWtll'1 Su.,.,morlurt
-Sun., Oct. 22 thru Sot.. Oct. 28

APPLE, CHERRY, PEACH

oz. 89·&lt;
Banquet Pies ••••••••
20

SUNSHINE CHUNK

IIG CHIEF

DOG FOOD

GRAN. SUGAR

20LI.

$299

Limit 1 Pot Cullomor
Good Only At Powell'o Su.,.,morkll
Good lun., Oct. 2~ thru Sot., Oct. 28

. HI.

Sll9
Umit 1 Per Customer

•

Good Only At Powell' 1 Supormorket

~---------------

1

! Sl 00

OFF

3 LIS. OR MORE
PUR(HASE OF

GROUND BEEF
OR

GROUND
CHUCK
Powoll'l au.,., vu.

Expires October 28, 1911

Good Sun., Oct-22 thru Sot., Oct. 28

L---

2 Sections. 12 Pogn 26 Conto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 26, 1989 ·

A Multimedia Inc. New.,aper

Shields resigns Meigs County planning post

-------------I

CHICKEN

Low In mid 40s tonJcht.
Friday, sunny and warm.
High In mid 708.

total $13,843.
A request to transfer a CI-C2
license from Gregory L. and
Rebecca J. Meeks, doing business as Dry Rock Carry-Out,
Bedford Township, to Lyle R. and
'Joyce A. Sinclair, has been
received !rom the Ohio Deparlment of Liquor Control. The
transfer request must be returned lo the state by Nov. 27.
Public comments regarding the
request must be submltled to the
commissioners no later than
Nov. 17.
In final matters. the commls·
sioners adopted a needed resolullon to file the county's Commun·
ity Development Block Grant

appllcallon wllb the Oh lo Departmen! of Development.
The commissioners approved
a request from the Meigs County
Court office to use some additional monies . In the office's
equipment accounl to paint and
carpet the county courtroom,
and purchase new drapes.
Also, the commissioners accepted TMC , a long-distance
carrier. to provide long distance
telephone service for offices In
the courthouse, apd also the
sheriff's department, prosecu·
tor's office. board of elt&lt;?tlons,
dog pound, litter control agency.
county development o!!lce and
the county Infirmary.

Nation's ecomony improves;
inflation climbs 2.9.percent

WASHINGTON (UPII - The they were down $30.7 billion. The below 2 percent. A few econonation's economy grew at a reason was while exports stayed mists, In fact, are predicting a
stronger than expected season· even, Imports ·rose at a 15.1
recession If not In the fourth
ally adjusled 2.&gt; percent annual percent annual rate. the depart - quarter than early nexl year.
rate in the July-September quar- men! said.
Economic growth was not hurt
ter. matching the growth rat e for
So far this year. the economy much by Hurricane Hugo, but the
the second quarter of the year, hasgrownatanannualrateol2 .9 · storm did reduce personal Inthe Commerce Department re- percent. To reach the Bush come forthequarter by $4 billion.
ported Thursday .
·
administration's projection of a Personal income. not adjusted
Meanwhile. the deparlment 2.7 percent growth rate for 1989. for inflation, rose $56.2 billion In
reporled that lnflatl oncllmbedat the economy would have 10 the third quarter compared with
amoderate2.9percentratelnthe expandata2.1Jl('rcentratelnthe $82., billion in the second ·
'
quart.er.
lhlrd quarter as measured by its fourth quarler.
price deflator, compared with a · But economists not~d that the
Thursday's report was Ihe first
4.6
rate In the second economy grew weaRer as. the . of three monthly reports on
: .&lt;:..,;J~~~~-'li!rif,r
.
nnortor.~ .p~ssM' '·and .
I"
rn:)fii -;:ri:.ss'"na:·:· :o
· ~.~ti:n.tfd .thaobfftop fourth quarter tlonal product - t1e total of
with growths
goods and ·services· produced In ; ',0 "" .
the econmy - - followed an
Identical 2.5 Percent annual rate
of Increase In the April-June
quarler and Indicated the economy was chugging along at a
stronger clip than lnlllally
be known as Karr Street In her honor. ''That was
RECEIVES RECOGNll'ION - Friday has
expected.
the nicest thing you could have done," Marcia
been proclaimed "Marcia Karr Day" In the
Economists had lhoughl that
stated.
Marcia moved to Syracuae In 1912. She
village of Syracuse by Mayor Eber Pickens .
the economy wOuld become in·
jolnM th~ Syracuse Methodl•l Church In 1913. She
Marcia will be 99 yeiU's of age Oct. 27. She Is lhe
creaslngly sluggish during the
has been and still Is an active member of the
oldest resident of the vlllllge. Wednesday night,
summer months under the pres,
church. Marcia Is also a member of the Carleton
Marcia was presented a plaque containing a Key
sure
of the Federal Reserve·s
Board of Trustees and attends all of their
to the City by members of lhe council .. "I lt11ve
tight monetary policy and subsemeetings. She Is a retired schoolteacher, haVIng
never had a plaque before," 'she quipped. Also,
quent high Interest rates.
taught 20 years.
more exciting to her than anything, was when she
But stong consumer..,onsumpwas told that the street on which she lives will now
tion , especially for au tomoblles,
kept the economy going. Personal consumption expenditures
were up at an annual rate of 5.8
percent during the quarter, the
fastest rate of growth since the
firs I quarter of 1988, when it was
6.2
percent.
the Oct . 20 session of the Meigs
Six Individuals have been ar- passing bad checks.
this category, expend!·
Within
Ersel Blevens Jr .• of Dexter. County Grand Jury. Three of the
raigned in Meigs County Comtures
for
durable goods -those
'
mon Pleas Court as the result of was arraigned yesterday on a Oct. 20 Indictments are lor products such as cars designed to
Indictments handed down In cultivation of marijuana charge. cultivation of marijuana. In
Prosecutor Story reports that addition to five more Indictments last at least three years- rose at
September by the Mei.gs County
a 15 percent annual rate, also the
Grand Jury. According to Meigs culllvatlon of marijuana Is a on other charges. Information on
fourth degree felony and carries the Oct. 20 Indictments will be biggest rate of gain since the first
County Prosecuting Attorney
TUPPERS PLAINS HAS NEW POSTMASTER - MarUyn S.
with It a max·lmum penalty oilS forthcoming from the prosecu- three months of lasl year when
Sleven L. Slory, three of the
the rale was 21 percent.
Burke, at right, Tuppers Plains postmuter, welcomes · new
months months In prison and a tor's office.
Individuals were arraigned on
Officer-In-Charge Laoa Proffitt to tbe Tuppers Plains Post Office.
In other Meigs County Com- · Meanwhile. the nation's nel
maximum fine of $2,500.
charges of tra fficking in drugs,
exports fell $22.9 billion, IndicatProffitt will be In charge at Tuppers PlaiDs during the coming
mon
Pleas
Court
wws,
Michael
The cultivation charges arose
the olher three were arraigned
Ing a widening of the trade gnp as
montlts while Burke completes a detailed aselgnmeatat the Belpre
has
been
ar1'algned
on
an
Pierce
from the summer eradication
on charges of. passing bad
the stronger dollar made U.S.
Post
Office 1111 a supervisor of postal operatlou. Burke has been a
charging
him
with
indictment
efforts .carried on by the Meigs
checks.
.
products
more
expensive
to
U.
S.
Postal Service employee since .June 37, 1980, starting as a
County Sheriff's Department, domestic violence and vandalArraigned lasl week were
foreigners.
It
was
the
biggest
aubllltute
rural carrier from Reedsville, lbea as a rural carrier at
Delbert Patlerson, of Portland, the Meigs County .Prosecuting ism. Charles Knight appointed as decline In U.S. net exports since
Middleport. Sbe aerved lor a time as Offlcer-ln-Charre at Coolville
Attorney's office. the State Attor- counsel lor Pierce for any future
and David B. Dillard, of Racine.
before being aamed postmaster at Tuppers Plains In September
ney General's olllce and lhe proceedings. Pierce enlered the second quarter of 1983. when
Indicted fo r lra!flcklng in drugs
1988. Proffitt began her employmeat with the U. S. Postal Service
Nallonal Guard : Those efforts pleas of Innocent to the char~jtes.
(cultivation of marijuana 1.
I• OctOber 1980 as a subsHtule rural carrier at Portland. S~e ha.;
A jury trial for Pierce has been
Also arraigned last week were netted nearly 8,000 marijuana
since
been a rural carrier at Portland and Little Hocking, and was
Dec.
18,
slarting
at
scheduled
for
plants,
says
Story.
LaDonna A. Nestor on one
a
rural
C'arrler at Racine before her aew assignment at Tuppers
9
a.m.,
with
discovery
to
be
the
prosecutor
Additionally,
charge of passing ·bad checks;
Plains.
·
completed
by
Dec.
8.
reports
there
were
further
such
James S. Slump, on two charges
•
Bond
for
Pierce
was
set
for
lndlclments.
res1,11ting
from
the
of passing bad checks; and
Donna J. Miller, on four counts of summer eradication efforts • .at $25,000.

Six individuals are arraigned in
Meigs County Comm~n .Pleas Court

I

••

Celeste calls for drug
free week in Ohio

Vehicles damaged by shots, sheriff reports
On Wednesday evening, deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's
Deparlment were called to Bowman's Run Road to take a report
of damage to vehicles. According
to Ihe reporl, the vehicles, owned
by Perry Smith, apparently had
their windshields shot out. Two
juveniles were apparently s~en
In the vlclnlly wllh guns. Charges
are pending.
On Tuesday evening. deputies
took a fire report In which a 1980
Chevrolel . Citation. owned by
. Raymond Hayes, Point Pleasant, W.Va .. was sitting In the
driveway at lhe Tom Wolle
residence on County Road 28.
Hayes noticed smoke coming
frOfll under the hood. and the
Bashan Fire Department respllnded. The car's engine received moderate damage.

Betty Wilson, Peach Fork reports that deputies are lnvestl·
Road, Pomeroy. also reported on ··gating the breaking and entering
Tuesday that during the night. a of the Alfred United Methodist
tractor blade was stolen from Church and the Bear Wallow
that property. It was valued Church. of Christ Both church
were entered late Saturday
around $450.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby also . night

'·

Glenn punched in face
WASHINGTON (UPil -Sen.
John Glenn, D-Ohlo, was slugged
In the jaw Wednesday after a
tree-planting ceremony In the
nation's capital. but t~e former
Marine grabbed and held the
as~llant until he was turned
over to pollee.
Glenn. 68, was slugged "fairly
hard" but was not knocked down
and left after the Incident to keep

•

I

by assailant

an appointment, according to
assistant press secretary Lowell
Solomon.
· District of Columbia pollee
arrested Michael J . Breen, 31. of
southwest Washington, and
charged him with assault on a
member of the U.S. Congress, a
federal olfense. He Is scbeduled
to be arra1110ed Thursday In U.S.
Dis tttct Court.

..... ,

' NBW 1'08'1'11MTBR -

Na.y Mo- Is the nelliy
appointed ptMitn\uler for the
Pertlalld Poat Office. She
brlnp ·with her from the
Z..vllle ..-ea three yean of
Pfl!ltli aervfce. 811e II lakin&amp;
for Iva Lawrence who
. nllr~ Ia .Ju!J. Fllllllg bt for
Lawrelllle up .unltl now •1111
'been Charlotte Harper.

over

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!} Amid a sea of red-clad school
children chanllng, "Hey! Ho!
Just Say No!" Gov . Richard
· Celeste proclaimed ·oct. 22-29
"Red RibbOn Week" to celebrate
community Involvement and
commllment for a drug -free
society.
The governor was joined by his
wile, Dagmar, and Hope Taft of
Cincinnati, president-elect of the
Ohio Association of Parents for
Drug Free Youth. In meeting
with abOut 150 pupils at Douglas
Alternative School.
"AirohQI and drug abuae have
reached epidemic proporUOIIllln
this nation," Celeste said. "It Is
lm!l@ratlve that visible, unified
efforts be continued In this war
on drugs."

Songs , cho&gt;ers and skits punctuated the half-hour program . The
pupils, who were wearing red
shirts and outfits to symbolize
the" Red Ribbon Week," cheerPd
loudly when Mrs. CPieste said,
"You and I know that we don't
have .to get drunk lo have fun.
You don't have to get high on
drugs to ger lovP or a hug."
Celeste s aid a recent survey
showed children, through teiPVIslon, can name more brands of
beer and win&lt;' than presidents.
"How many of you know
someonewho·s having a problem
with drugs or a leo hoi?' •he asked.
AbOut 40 pupils raised their
hands.
"I suspect you think you can't
do much tohelp older people smp
Continued on page 12

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