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Pllu• 10-The Dlily SentiiM!

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Alfred UMW mefts

Rock Springs UMW meets

Charlotte Van Meter and report on the UMW District
. Prayer · by Dorothy Jeffers
Dawn Kopec led the program
Thelma Hellderson served as Annual meeting at Gallipolis. opened the October meeting of by reading scripture from ExoanchoJ:WOIMII In the program, The society discussed plans for . lhe Rock Springs .United Metho· dus 22, verses 25-27. Mary
"A World Sisterhood," when the · November and December meet· dlst Women, followed by ·the Showalter and Fern Morris as·
Alfred Unlled Methodist Women !ngs as well as gtvlng to program "Are We Mortgaging s!sted with the program after
Our Children's Future?''
met recently at the church.
shut-Ins.
which a discussion was held on
Nina Robinson read the open·
Mrs. Van Meter had the prayer
!ng scripture from Revelations, calendar and chose Mary Morris,
Ph!Upplans, and Corinthians. All In education at Jack's Creek
member• took part In reading Center, Roark, Ky. The society
A Halloween party was held In ·Souls by, Sherry Haye, and Matt
and dbcullllon with favorable signed a birthday card for her.
the
recreation room of the Laurel Snyder. ·
COIIUMDts oa the stze and work of
Sara Caldwell asked the bless·
the World Federation of Metho- lng for refreshments served Cliff Free Methodist Church with
Winning In the junior class was
Belbtda
Soulsby
and
Sandy
Megan
Clark, Travis Friend, and
during the social hour. Mrs.
dist Womell.
Wright
In
charge.
An\ly
Sanders.
The business meeting · was Henderson served sloppy Joes ,
Games were held for the
opened with prayer by Mrs. Van pumpkbt pie, Halloween candles,
Refreshments were served to
children,
and a cake walk was 58 In attendance.
Meter and we~e by Nellle and punch.
enjoyed by all.
Parker. Martha Poole gave the
The next meeting will be at the
The children In costumes were
secretary's report and roD call. church on Nov. 14. The program
judged
by Eva Robson, Ruth
Six members were present and 10 will Thanksgtvl ng readings by
Williams,
and Clarence Story.
sick calls were reported.
all.
Mrs. Henderson gave a brief
Prizes were awarded ior the
prettiest, ugliest, and most
Dr. Daniel 0 . Trent will speak
original.
on Alzhetmers Disease and slni·
An election day atnner will be · Advanced orders for quarts of
Winners were Wesley Wright,
Bar diseases at a special Alzhel·
held lit the Rock Sprbtgs United soup are being taken and the Megan Adkins, and Kameron mers support group meeting on
Methodist Church on Nov. 7 price Is $1.50 per quart. Orders Sayre In the nursery class. In the Nov. 7 at 7 p.m. at Overbrook
beginning at 10 a.m.
can be placed by calling kindergarten class the winners Center In Mlddleporf.
Vegetable soup. bean soup and 992-5869, 992-3356. or 992-3512. were Buble Hayl', Kylle Sayre,
Shirley Finley, support group
combread,hotdogs,sloppyjoes, Those ordering soup must pro· and Tyson Lee. In the primary ' leader. Invites the public to
pop, coffee and desserts will be vide their own container.
class, 'winners were Billy attend.
served.

Monday. October 30. 1989
how children may be helped.
Roll call was takea with 15
members and two visitors pres·
ent. The secretary's and treasur· ·
er's reports were given, and Rev.
Katherbte Riley had prayer after
several requests were taken.
.Sharon Folmer led devotions

entltll'd " Prayer ." · Several
members had readings and
verses from the Bible pertaining
to the topic.
The meeting closed with
prayer and a social 11me was
enjoyed In the church lellpwsh!p .

Ohio Lottery,

rally to
top Vikings.

Pick-3

394
Pick

room.

Page 3

Halloween party held recently

·m oldy s11nny,
cooler. Hlp In mid 541s.

WedaeH&amp;J',

I

•

Alzheimer group
meeting slated

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tue1day. October 31, 1989
I

Election Day dinner scheduled

1 Section, 10 Poge

26 Cent&amp;

A Multlmedio Inc. N-opopor

·c hester furnace work
completed, board says
I

I
,.

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Dally Sea&amp;lael Staff

J

., ...

Bank One Is Pleased to Announce
The Opening Of The New
POMEROY AUTO BANK
Monday, November 6, 1989
~ 8:00 A.M.
..
Second and Lynn Streets
'

LDw In mid Sis tonllht.

3856

.

POMEROY HALLOWEEN PARTY- Brian
Reed, left, bad a rougb job on Monday nlgbt when
he served as one of the jud~res for tbe halloween
party held In Pomerq followlag trick-or-treating

•

'

•

Furnace work at the Chester
Elementary School has been
·completed at a cost of $31,577,
Supt. Dan Apllng reported at the
Monday night meeting of the
Eastern Local School District
Board of Education held at
Eastern High School.
Dr. Apllng noted that the: cost
covers the complete tear down
and rebuilding of both furnaces,
as well as the cost of replacement
parts, at the school.
''The cost of this project
graphically underlines the need
for voters In the district to pass
the upcoming school levy," com·
mented Dr. Aplllig .who ex·
Ia tbe towa. A crowd lnll of witches, c l - ,
plalned that without adequate
monalen, and some beyond detterlp&amp;loa, came out
local funding lor such emergen·
for tbe event In wblch entertahneat was
cles, the district will have to
provided by WMPO radio.
Increase the amount of money
borrowed from the state loan
fund.
It was also decided at the
meeting .that furnaces In the
other schools wm be Inspected.
Several are reportedly old and
~ possibly In need ol SOml' repairs.
The board employed Lois Ihle
and Michele J. Mowrey as
substitute teachers for the re·
malnder of the 1989-90 school
year to be used on an as-need
basts only.
Cat~y Janelle Sargent was
hired as a substitute custodian

and substitute cOOk and· Sheila of dangerous weapons contained
Ann King as substitute custodian In the student handbook, autho·
for the balance of the 1989-90. Bob r!zed a home Instruction tutor for
Shaver was employed on a a junior high school student for
supplemental contract as ele· medical reasons, and approved
mentary choir director.
~ the establishment of a new
student activity fund , the Teen·
A contract was entered Into age Institute.
The policy which required that
with the Ohio School Board
head
teachers be present at the
Association lor the purpose of
Board
of Education meetings
representing the district In ari
was
amended.
According to the
arbitration hearing. Tabled until
amendment,
head
teachers are
the regular November meeting
not
required
to
attend
unless
was action on adopting a policy
reganjlng oral recitation of the requested to be present.
Appropriations were made to
Pledge of Allegance.
The board approved retmbur· the Teenage Institute Fu!lQ, the
sement to George Gaga! for two Chester Student Council Fund,
college level courses, and ap- and the 1989 Chapter P Car·
proved the appUcatlon of Mar· ·ryover Fund. Modifications to
garet Cauthorn to establish com· the appropriations for several
pulsory back service ·wtth the · other funds were made Including
School Employee's Rl'ttrement. the PY90 General Fund, the
Cheerleader Fund, the Class of
System.
Several teachers, parents and 1989, the 1989 DPPF, the 198 Drug
students were at the meeting to Free Grant, the 1989 Chapter I
discuss concerns with the newly Fund. A transfer of $6,206.76 was
·enacted grading system for approved from the 1989 Chapter I
grades 7 through 12 this year. The Fund to the 1989 Chapter I
committee will continue Its study Carryover Fund.
Next meeting was set for Nov .
and analysis of the district's
poUcles on grading and honor roll 15 at 6: 30 p.m. to be held In the
attainment this year. Target h.lgh school cafeteria . Attending
date lor a recomml'ndatlon to be were Jim Smith, president,
made to the board Is by the end of Kathy Manlcke, vice president,
the first semester of this school and members, Ray Karr, Charles Knight, and I. 0. McCoy . The
year.
The board amended the exist· board met In executive session to
!ng poUcy governing !)ossesslon discuss personnel matters.

~AI9· one..la 14rt-:iR·-accidentflf--*"'tJe'r8 ·

cited by Ohio State Patrol Monday
One driver was cited In an
accident at 8:30a.m. Monday In
Meigs County, on SR. 124, In
Lebanon Township at the Inter·
section of TR. 132. No one was
Injured. according to the Meigs
Gallla Post. State Highway
The party goers were jlldgedla several categories
Patrol.
.
and these youngsters are j11st of lew of the many
Troopers said Nancy D. DeCosse, 35, Racine, driving a 1988
tbal turned out for tbe party.
Renault, stopped at the stop sign
then pulled ontoSR. 1241n front of
a 1979 Olds Cutlass driven by
Mary K. Michael, 20, Racine.
Damage was heavy to the DeCosse car and moderate to the
By United Press International
administrators said they were hopes of keeping the unwanted Michael vehicle.
Youngsll'rs and oyer-aged
not au thortzlng ally street pa· annual ritual of arson and
The patrol cited Decosse for
trick or treaters put the finishing rades In the posh Georgetown vandalism to a minimum. A 6 · fallure to yield the right of way.
touches on their costumes for a business district and residential p.m.-to-6 a.m. curfew has been In
night of Halloween fun and frolic neighborhood, the usual party effect since Sunday for unesTuesday while 'others Intend to spot .each year. About 75,000 corted youths under 18. By early
avoid the ghoulish pitfalls of the people turned out for last year's . Monday, there were 136 arrests
season by keeping their children celebration, when pollee closed for curfew violations, compared
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
off the streets.
offGeorgetown's main roads for with 182 Sunday night In 1988.
Commerce Department reported
Hospitals across the countr~ a parade of wacky costumes al\d
Tuesday that Its gauge of future
Broadcast reports said there
and two prisons In Indiana spectators.
economic activity rose 0.2 per·
had been a rash of about a dozen
offered their X·ray facilities to
Police olf!clals said the restrlc· fires, especially on Detroit's
cent In September, the second
ensure that no Halloween was !Ions came after years of efforts lower east side. One Involved a
consecijtive monthly Increase
ruined by tainted candy.
to cope with a large and often fire In an abandoned house that
and a sign that the l'COnomy Is not
In New York City's Greenwich rowdy crowd as well as public spread to an occupied dwellbtg.
heading for a re~esslon.
.VIllage, Halloween has become , drbtklng.
The modest jump In the Index
Kids had an early start on
an annual all-night street party
VIce E'resldent Dari Quayle and Halloween In Carson City, Nev.,
of Leading Indicators, 'Intended
for adults. If last year was any hls family plan to welcome where the celebrating took place to predict economic perfor·
Indication, Tuesday night's wild neighborhood children trlck·or· Monday to avoid conflict with the
mance six to n tne months In
bash should draw· some 250,000 treating at the U.S. Naval Obser- state's 125th birthday celebra·
advance, foUows a healthy gain
marchers and spectators. The vatory In Washington, where his lion Tuesday.
of 0.5 percent In August. A surge
"save the rain forests" theme family now resides. The Secret
In consumer confidence was the
this year will Include what Service Intends to search every
A divorced couple from L!vo, primary reason for the Sep·
organizers call a "moving rain ·visitor, no matter how small, and
nla, Mich., planned to walk the tember Increase, helping to
forest pageant."
magnetometers were specially aisle a second time on Hallooffset dec!btes In seven of the 11
Wicked witches and goblins Installed for the event.
ween, with bride Pam DeAngela economic Indicators that make
searching lor an olf!clal celebra·
In Detroit, about 30,000 pollee,
carrying her flowers In a plastic up the Index.
t!on In Washington, D.C., were firefighters , city employees and
orange pumpkin. DeAngela, 44;
Consumers have been a bright
out of luck this Halloween: City civilian volunteers teamed up In and Richard Kauranen, 45, said spot for the economy this year,
they picked Tuesday as the date dl'lvlng It on durtn.g the summer
for the second wedding alter 14 months with purchases, espeyears of divorce because ''It's cially of automobiles, when
scary to re-marry your ex· manY. analysts had expected an
spouse. ''
economic slowdown.
In Philadelphia, Halloween
But economists expect consu·
partlers at one costume shop mer spending to wane In coming
Middleport Pollee are Investigating the theft of a sliver gray
passed over Batman and Joker months, leading to slower
1976 Oldsmobile owned by Brian Well, Middleport. Pollee
disguises and opted for classics , growth, and Tul'sday's report
reported that the vehicle was taken from the Well driveway on
like Marc Antony and Cleopatra.
appeared to support that expec·
South Third St. sometime between 2:30 and 6 a.m. today
There also were requests to tatloti. The sharpest decline In
(Tuesday I.
Impersonate recent any of the 11 Indicators was In
Dl'wsmakers.
nl'w manufacturing orders for
"We've bad a few couples consumer ~roods and materials.
coming In wanting a Zsa Zsa
"Growth Is likely to be a little
Gabor look, and the guy as a
slow the Dl'Xt couple of quarters,
Thl'lt of the Ohio Valley Plumbing maintenance van
poUce officer," said John Weln·
bu I after that there II reason for
overnight Monday Is under Investigation by the Pomeroy Pollee
stein, the owner of Costumes by
optimism that the economy will
Department. . .
·
Pierre In Phlllldelphta.
piCk up," said Michael Penzer, a
.The theft was reported to pollee all: 49 a.m. Monday and at 11
seniOr
economlat with Bank of
"We can't rent an authentic·
a.m. Tuesday the maroon Chevrolet had not been recovered. It
America In San Fraaclaco.
looking pollee officer outfit reportedly was locked wben It was taken from In .front of the
that's lmpersonatlq an oflk:er
The COI!IeCIIdve Increases In
East Second St., Pomeroy business. ·
thl' Index followecla bad stretch
- but we can get close enouah
Continued on page 10
l'arller Ia theyearwh~ the Index
with a security guard look that
they get the Idea," he said.
declined four out of five months

No one was Injured In an
accident at 4:30p.m. Monday In
Salem Township on SR. 124, 5.2
miles east of the Jackson County
line.
Troopers said a 1984 Ford
Ranger driven by Johnny V.
McGuire, 43, Langsville, pulled
onto the highway In front or a 1974
Kenworth tractor-trailer driven
by Russell E . Boggs, 36, Rt. 3,
Oak Hill. There was moderate
damage to the Ranger: minor
damage to the tractor·traller.
The patrol cited McGuire for
failure to yield the right of way.
Nell C. Morgan,17, Cincinnati,
Ohio, was cited for failure to
maintain control after an ace!·

dent at 7: 47 p.m. Monday on SR.
124, 5.2 miles. west of the VInton
County line.
Troopers said Morgan, headed
west lost control and his 1982
Toyota Corolla went ofl the road,
striking some railroad tracks.
Damage was moderate to the
vehiCle. No one was Injured .
The patrol also Investigated an
accident at 8:30p.m. Monday on .
SR. 7, 2.1 miles north of the
Gallla-Melgs County line. Troopers said a deer was k!lled when
lty ran In front of a 1988 GMC
pickup truck driven by Britt
Wooten, 42, Springfield. Damage
was moderate. No one was
Injured.

Leading indicators up 0.2 percent

Enter From Second Street

You can now condu.ct the following business at our new facility which features. an indoor lobby
and 14 parking spaces:

•

•open of accounts
•Merchant transactions
•Loan applications
•utility payments
•Money orders and cashier checks
•purchase.and red•mption of Certificates of Deposit

•

'

LOBBY and AUTOTELLER HOURS:

·Mon.·Thurs.-8 am-5 pm
. Friday-8 am-6 pm
Saturday-S am-12 noon

BANKEONE.

..

Eighteen ~nd People WilD Care.
BANK ONE. ATHENS, NAIA ,AliT M THIE CAlliNG TIA.
Alll0111, Ohio

Meml&gt;et FDIC

.

-local news briefs--

!'r.
"'~ '·

..

Middleport police probe theft

'.

'

•

'

,...

..

Maintenance van reported stolen

from February to June, lnclud· mer goods and materials, were a
lng a sharp 1.1 percent drop In declbte In unfilled manufacter·
May, raising the specter of a ers orders, a drop In orders for
recession. As a result, the Index plant and equipment, faster
fell 0.1 percent overall during the .deliveries by vendors, higher
first nbte months of the year, average weekly Initial claims for
compared with a 3.8 percent state U'!employment Insurance·
Increase during thl' saml!'perlod and lower sensitive materials
·
In 1988.
prices.
In addition to consumer confl·
dence, the three Indicators that
In addition, tlie department
pushed up the September Index said that the Index of cobtcldent
were a larger money supply, a indicators, Intended to track
longer average workweek and current economic conditions,
high stock prices.
was unchanged In September
On the downside. the six after climbing a sharp 1 percent
negative Indicators besides a In August.
decline In new orders for consu·

Bad mushrooms alert issued
The Meigs County Health De·
partment wants to alert area
residents of a recent Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) an·
119uncement regarding canned
and bottled mushrooms from the
Peoples Republic of China
(PRC). ,
FDA has announced that all
mushrooms shipped from China
In any size can, glass jar or other
container, Including brlned
mushrooms In bulk containers,
will be automatically detained at
U.S. ports due to reoccurring
finds of staphylococcal enterotoxin contamination.
Thl' action represents a major
expansion of the May deten tlon of
lnstltutlonal·slze No. 10 cans.
FDA now has Identified staphy·
lococcal enterotoxin In 5.5,16 and
68ounc:e ldralnedwel&amp;ht) C8111of
either whole mushrooms or pieces and stenis prodllced by 10

plants In Cblna .
The foUowlng plant identifying
code numbers appear In the can
codes from the various plants
where contamination Is known to
have occurred : TM, T3, T17. M2,
B2, L1 and Ql3!nNo. 10cans. The
16-ounce cans bear a T1 or Tl7
code. FDA also has confirmed
the findings of a private laboratory of the presence ofthe toxin In ·
No.10cans with an R12 can code.
The agl'ncy has confirmed find·
lngs from the Canadian public
health authorities of the toxlri's
presence In 5.5 ounce cans with a
I '
Q1 can code.
All mushroom products from
the plants lndenllfted have been
or are being recalled. Anyonl'havlng cans of mushrooms bear·
lng these can code destanatlons
should cease use at o!ICI! and
return the product to where It
was purchased.
"

-

-

-- --·-·--

�Tun day, Octobei- 31, 1989
Pags 2-The o.lly St 1t111el
Pol••ov-Middspwt, ONo
Tullt1t~y, Octoblr 31. 1989

-

•
Ill Coolrt S&amp;reet
Pomeny, Oldo
1)E\IOTED TO TBE JNTEU:8T8 OF TBE IIIBIGII-MASON ABEA

rY"-...1~~~ I -

='

.....

.

ROBERT L. WINGETI·
Publisher

CHARLENE BOBFUCH
Geooenl . . ."'...
A MEMBER of De A.....!eted Preu, .... dDUIJ Pnu"-&gt;d,._ ~~~~~~tile Ama kaa Newlf p II' f'w!"
~
7

•

u;nEBSOFOPINIONoreweiCOIIIe. ..,..., -..JbeleNIUIISM
· - ...,. All ktlen are Mbjed lo .,...., ud - b e •lped wit•

- . u ....... w.,.... ••'-.N• • ..,..,. .............,,..,.

....... LoUers-lllbeiDpociiMie,ulrii""'I..._,Htporoo

e!t-

llel.

Sonaetimes it takes a crisis
to get action in government
By LEE LEONARD
UPI S&amp;a&amp;e...,_ lleperter
COLUMBUS - ID geaeral, things have to reach crisis proportions
before state government takes any decisive steps.
Item: Ten days ago, Gov. Richard Celeste learned thai drugs are
!Uterlng Into Ohio's prisons In mass quantities. No cat Utter,
Sherlock.
So the governor ordered an Investigation, and directed the
Inspector general to come up with a way to stop the flow of drugs Into
prisons.
Item: Several highways and bridges were shaken by an earthquake
In the Oakland-San Francisco area, with resulting loss of 111e.
But that's far away from Ohio, where earthquakes rarely occur.
Consequently, the Celeste administration showed little alarm last
week when asked If any steps were being taken to check Ohio bridges
and highways (or their ability to withstand a quake.
'1'hey take that (a potential earthquake) Into account when they
design those things." said the governor. "It's up to the engineers."
Celeste said construction safety standards "vary from place to
place," and added that there's been no problem so far.
'1'hey (bridges and highways) are generally built to withstand
Ohio weather and Ohio seismological conditions," agreed a
spokesman for the Ohio Department of Transportation.
So, even though there have been several earthquakes In Ohio during
the past five years, Including one that rattled the Perry Nuclear
Power Plant In northeast Ohio, there'll be no official precautionary
work right now.
This despite Call1ornla G9v. George Deukmejlan' s surprise, alarm
and outrage when he found out some o!Oakland's bridges weren't up
to snuff.

WASHINGTON - ~llllam
Seidman, the chairman i of the
Federal Deposit Inslir11nce
Corp., Is the undertaker wilo will
preside over a multi-billiondollar funeral for the savings and
loan lnduslr)'. Without a wlnk 'or
a smUe, he told us his goal: "I
have set my ambition for this job
at the loftiest level, and that Is, I
don' t have to take the Fifth
Amendment before I leave."
That will be a refreshing
change from the legacy of the
Reagan administration. The
country has' already been taken
by a savings and loan Industry
that was allowed to run amok
under deregulation. The last
thilig the taxpayers need Is to be
fleeced by the program that Is
supposed to clean up the mess.
Seidman wUI have his hands
run making sure that doesn't
happen. During the next three to
five years, he wUI preside over
perhaps the biggest real estate
sale In history - the disposal of
$Dl billion In properties taken
over by the government from
thrifts that went belly-up. If the
Department of Housing and

Urban Developmeut tbouibt It
bad a beadacbe pollclnl the
fraud In $4 billion worth qf real
estate, Seidman Is destined for a
migraine.
The properties now owned by
Uncle Sam hold more polelltlal
for mischief than a convention of
toilet seat designers for the
Pentagon. Everybody and his
cousin wUI be lining up for Inside
Information, a piece ofthe action
and a steal of a deal. Seidman's
job Is to make sure they don'tget
it.
He wUI have plenty of people
watching over bls shoulder Congreas, the General AccountIng Office and a new I.Dspector
general 111 the FDIC. Seidman's
·agency has a reputation for
disposing of the assell of failed
commercial banks with efficiency and good judgement. But
be told his sta~ recently, only
half In jest, that wben It comes to
the savings and loan assets, good
judgement Is out and the rule
book Is ln. "If you have six
different people coming In to M!l'
11 this transaction was proper,

BJ Ullllecl l'lw11 ...,.. ......

have about 10,000 of Its own
employee~, mDit of the real
estate deals will be done by hired
outsiders. Seidman's concern
revolves around thole contrac·
tors and maklnesure they don't
enrich themselves or their
Crtends or famllll!ll through secret deals.
- The tempta~lon will be great
to use tbe assets before they are
sold. Seidman can't afford to
have RTC employees living In a
condo or driving around In a
CadUiac acquired from an lnsol·
vent thrift .
- The RTC will be a hotbed or
Inside Information on pending
sales. Exploiting tbat Information to line one's own pockets Is
one of the many possible offenaes
proscribed by the rule book,
- RTC employees wU1 be
tempted with gifts and favors
tram people who stand to gain by
RTC decisions. There Is no such
thing as a free lunch In the RTC
manual.

. c......
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4 I

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(..4. Ral*n .... ,... 4 4 I .Mt 111
Sultlf ....... .... ,.•. 4 4 I .Mt 141
Clt1 ....... S S I Zfl Ill
s.n Dlep ...... .... ! I I Jll Ill
N•le_. Co•latllee

"u-

:Letters to the editor
•

Residents urged to
approoe renewal levy

near Editor:
We would !Ike to take tbls
• opportunity to urge the residents
:·or Racine to approve the7110 mill
. •' levy - a renewal not a new tax
:~ cor !Ire protection!
• We also would like to urge the
• voiers of the three townships to
• approve the 1 mill renewal levy
: for fire protection that will be on
, the November ballot.
I

Help the firemen provide the
best fire protection that they can.
Remember, this Is a renelfal
.... not a new tax.
Sincerly,
Robert Seegle
Carroll L. Leaford
Richard L. Wamsley
Larry Wolfe
Henry Bentz

)Today in history
BJ Ualed ~ lnlerM&amp;Inal
Today Is Tuesday, Oct. 31, the 304th day of 1989 with 61 to tollow.
This Is Halloween, also called All Hallows Eve.
,
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Ill fin I quarter.
, The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus and Saturn.
• Thoae born oa this date are under the alp~ ScorpiO. They Include
: Dutcb painter Jan Vermeer In 1632; Enellsh poet JohD Keatlln 1795;
Girl Scouta founder Juliette Gordon Low Ia J.B«); Geaeralllltmo
· Cblang Kai-Shek, the flnt leader ol Natlonalllt China, ln 1S87; actress
and singer Ethel Watenln 19110, actl'l!lseaDaleEvanlnl912 (ap18)
• and Barbara Bel Geddeslnl922 (ap88); utronautMichaelCoD!nlln
1!130 (ale 59); TV III'WIIIIIChormaa Dan Rather In 1931 (ap 58);
• broadcasler Jane Pauley In 1950 (ap 39) and vloUn vlrtuoeo ltzbak
Perlman In 1945 (age tf).
On tbla dale In blatory:
• Ia 1517, Martin Lulherhepn lbeProlfttantRefonnatiOnbynalling
• a proclamation to the door of a church In WltleaberJ, Germany.
In 1864, Nevada was admUted to the UaJon as lbe 36th state.

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with 2:13 left. in the quarter,
Anderson fumbled two straight
kickoffs. The Giants turned them
into a Jeff Hostetler 11-yard TD
pass to Lionel Manuel and a
two-yard Ollis Anderson scoring
run.
The VIkings managed only an
eight·yardTDpassfromKramer
to Herschel Walker In th~ open·
lng quarter and Rick Fenney's
one-yard run with 4:03 left. The

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fiftlf'=in UPI ratings

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lA Ranu' II Min~. I p.m.
NY .l1!'1111al New En!lllaiMI, I p.m.
Suttle .. Kan.,. flty 1 p.m.
Cl•lnnlll .. LA.R . . .rs • .- p.m .
SY Gi .....11al Phonbt, t p.m .
rhll...elpllla• sa~~ DI•KO· -1 p.m.

by seven points.
By LISA HARRIS
Colorado beat Oklahoma 20·3
UPI Sports Wrller
NEW YORK (UPH- Florida and Nebraska routed Iowa State
State, which some coaches say 49-17 in conferenee games . In the
might be the nation's bes~ learn week's most dramatic finish, No.
despite two losses. Monday 4 Alabama edged Penn State
cracked the top five In United 17·16 on a blocked field goal Inn
Press International's coUege the closing seconds. As a result,
the Crimson Tide moved up a
footbail ratings.
spot
and the Nittany Lions down
The Seminoles, whose 24-10
victory over Miami Saturday put four to 17.\h.
Florida State leads No. 6
their record at 6·2, follow the only
four undefeated Division I·A Miami by 20 points and the
. Seminoles' rise sent Michigan
teams.
Notre Dame, .with a 45·7 rout of back down ~ spot · to seventh,
Pittsburgh, remained No. 1 with despite the Wolverines' 6-1 re·
an 8-0 record, followed by Big cord l'nd 38-10 victory. over
Eight rivals Colorado and Ne- Indiana and Reisman Trophy
braska, who meet each other candidate Anthony Thompson. ·
with 8-0 records this week, and
Michigan's co-leader In the Big
Alabama. 7-0.
Ten race, Illinois, also improved
On the strength of their upset of to 6·1 and jumped a spot In the
Miami - a payback for last ranklngs to eighth. No. 9 South·
year's season-opener that took ern Cal, 6·2. rose one place, nine
preseason favorite Florida State point~ ahead ol Tennessee, 6-1
out of the national Iitle picture- and' rejOining the Top 10.
·
the Seminoles jumped three
The Volunteers Improved. two
places and sent Miami from No. 2 spots to overtake Arkansas,
to No.6.
which stayed lith with a 6·1
Flprlda State coach · Bobby mark .. Iml?rovlng two spots were
Bowden said he thought his No. 12 West VirgiJ;~Ia, 6·1·1, and 13
team's defeats - to Southew Auburn, 5·2. Arizona. 6-2. · reMississippi and Clemson mained 16t!J. followed by Penn
would have held back his team in State, 5·2. · ·
·
the ranklngs. But Notre Dame .
coach Lou Holtz was one of ;
several coaches to make the
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
suggestion "the best team In the
446 4524
' .. , . ~' .
country just may have two
losses. "
Notre Dame, winner of a
natlon·leadlng 20 straight
games, has been No. 1 since last
Oct. 31. Its latest victory sent the
Panthers tumbling seven·spots tQ
14th.
The Fighting Irish received 47
ol 50 first-place votes and 733 of .
750 possible points to lead Colo·
rado by 55. The Buffaloes, with
their highest ranking since 1977
captured 678 points, 21 more than
Nebraska, which leads Alabama

K p.m.

M&amp;IIIIIQ'. Nov. I

New 'Orllr ..llal • • Frucllk'6, I p.m .

Transactions

UPI ratings

Mpclilay Sp_,M Tn.••d"IIIH
ly \Jaltfod Pftooll lllk'l'allo_.

N~'

VORK 4UPI) - Th('Unl&amp;fodPr~PKM
ll'l~r..tao-.1 Board of Ceal'IIN Top 21
c•olr,;t' follltllll ra&amp;lnp.wlhl'~nl aflilt
nnt·plact&gt; \'~ 1.. p!U'f! .. helell. ttUI
polatM lhlfM'd o11S polnt11 lor llrlll pial',,
H for ill'COIIII, ol'f:t•. ). •nd IMNl "'"'"k'M

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olunit" Ltwa. !lad fnrwu• A.alho~
Blakley, Den•K . . , .... .lo• l'wnia.on.

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S.Nt&gt;hrlltlluii(HCM-11) ... , ............ ... 151-&amp;
4. Alab~ (7-0) ..........................1$-;e !l
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IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (NEA)
- For almost half a century,
residents of the West routinely.
acceded to the Defense Department's demands that It be
allowed to research, build and
even test nuclear weapons In
their region.
The West's unquestioning assent to those activities dates back
to the Manhattan Project in the
middle of World War II, when two

Los Alamos, N.M. , and Ranford,
Was h. - were in the region. (The
third was Oak Ridge, Tenn.)
In succeeding decades, dozens
of nuclear facilities were built
throughout the vast region. In·
habitants of nearby communities
responded with enthusiasm to
the economic benefits the new
Installations were expected to
generate.
In recent years, however that
attitude has changed markedly
as the West has started to
seriously question the national

security justification and the
local health and safety Implications ol numerous military
projects.
Nowhere Is that trend more
apparent than at the eastern end
of Idaho's Snake River Valley,
where the Department of Ener·
gy's Idaho National Engineering
Laboratory opened In 1949. Today it employs approximately
10,000 people.
Idaho Falls bas a J!Opulallon of
abOut 40,000, but no other major
Industry. INEL, an 89().square
mile facility locatecl 25 miles
west of the city at ll¥! base of the
Lost-River Range, Is believed to
be directly or·~rectly res pons!·
ble for at le.a st two-thirds of all
employment In the area.
Because the local economy Is
so heavny dependent upc)n INEL,
no objections were expected
when DOE decided several years
ago that Idaho Falls would be the
site of the first new nuclear
weapons plant constructed In a
quarter of a century.
The Special Isotope Separation

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Brf!W!Ik'r

This week's games

Wilder erases races, Dinkins · doesn't
Two black men are running for
amendments. Blacks are a unless their candidates Is
high offices that have never been
smaller share of th~ electorate In elected.
The Wilder campaign Is fresh.
held by blackS. Both look like
New York than In most big cities
There
has never been an elected
winners. One campaign Is com·
with black mayors, an estimated
black
governor In America,
monplace, but with an unfortu23 percent. (Hispanics make up
certainly
not In a conservative
nate twist. The other Is new and
somewhat less than 10 percent.)
state
only 17 percent
Southern
can be a heartening turning point
And there Is a disturbing
In black politics.
.
subtext In the Dinkins campaign, black.
Wilder needs abOut 40 percent
If black politics changes, so do
sometimes stated, sometimes
Democratic politics and the
unstated. In the primary election of the while vote to win. The polls
future potency of some Demo(with Jesse JackSon working the say he can eet it.
If he wino, black politics wUI be
cratic ldeolO!IIes. If Democratic
streets) the Dinkins operation
politics changes, so does Ameristresse1 that a vote for Mayor Ed transformed. ·Blacks COIUitltute
can politics.
Koch was a vote against "bar· 11 percent of the U.S. population
The two politicians are David • mony" (I.e., racial harmony).ln but hold 0 percent of the blgbest
Dinkins, running for.lomayor of the current gl!ll'eral electiOn elected offices. That drcumNew York City, and L. Doualaa
contest some.Dftiklns 1upporters staace bas the appearance of de
Wllder, running for governor of
(not Dinkins) say that voting for facto racism.
Thla sad situation bu led to a
VIrginia.
Republican Rudolpl) Glullanl Ia
circle
of despair for many black
Tbe Dinkins situation Is famD·
voting against "harmony."
lar. There are many black
Surprise: Only a V4te for politicians. Bellevlnl they could
blg~dty mayors. They.have lypl·
Dlnk111.1 will yield the lfealured not gain hlaher omce, they have
cally been first elected by caplur,
H-word. Although Dinkins mtatat typically accommodated tbe
Ina alllla.t all of a large black be a capable mayor, that tbeme . squeaklelt very liberal wbeela ID
vote, a large poriiOD o( a amaller
II the politics of vole:for-me-or- the black community. So 111011
Hllpanic vote, and a small share else, the electoral equivalent of a hlac:lc polltlcan wins on merit In
of white votes. They have won In potentia! temper tantrum. It Is VIrginia, then a black polltlclp
cities with bqe Democratic aot politically healthy. Suppose could win on merit statewide
·
majorltte.. Tbe candidates have next time Illlllans or Puerto anywbere.
1be
key
to
Wilder's
good
been quite liberal.
Rlcallll or Jews ee or whiles Dinkins qualifies, but with say there wlll be no harmony ahowine II tbat he runs not aa a

Olllkl &lt;'oUt•"' Feolb• !!k..,._lt
BJ Unlled Pre!i111Rift' . . ll ...
Sllllwd.IO, No.-4
OMo stlltr lit NorUt.w~rn
Kl'nl Slalf' at Bowl~ Grf't'n
Miami at Eat,. Itt' n RfidiiiM
WM ... rn Mh:.. jtall &amp;I Telrdo (•J

Ben Wattenberg

( 'lncln..alllt ~ul.-:~ -­
Nordten A.riM• 1111 ..Uron
UhHty (\'a) at l'..~Ptown Stai.Jkhlwht-Widlac• M Marlt'4ta
t"llpli&amp;J at Ht'lddhrrl
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Mo•llll Valonllt olohn Carroll
MUIIIdnpm a1 Ohio Nol'lhf'rn

Ct-ntft' lKy) Ill OUerbt&gt;ln
A.ll~y ( P•l ill Ohio WHieyan
Ohf.l'la .. CW ltt'M'rw
O..aMon al Krnyon
Earltwn (lad) Ill Wll tronbrrl{
SC. Jo.,ph Clad) Ill ANIIId
Bhllltoeal Wllmlllllo•
Nerllrrn MldllptiM Crnlral &amp;&amp;.It
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Browt~ and ~rd ""' HllllnM ••
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So ..a .. 01111n • .upGII!i. ""-'P"'d holt
wln~t E\'I'N'tl s••~ 10 liMme t·hlli.

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NIJL - F1ftt'll N.., Yerll •-~~~·
rl'ftWr TriiJMalltUt • • • • rHuli of •
tna~c.·h ,..,..,,,._,..,.,..In an Ot-tctHor
:clldl JIITII'.

Twsd,..,.. ~p01111 Calettdar
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1'1li11WttU.:a .

Roberf Walters
.. .

project, to be buUI at a cost of $1
billion and opera ted for seven or
eight years at an additional cost
of S2 bllllon, would purify pluto- need."
'~ ·
nium, the highly toxic element
They held local rallies, testlused as a trigger In thermonu- lled at public hearings In the
clear weapons.
area, sent a delegation to WaImpure plutonium would be shington to lobby Congress, ordissolved In chemical solvents, ganized a letter-writing cam·
then heated Into a vapor. Power- palgn to Influence federal
ful laser beams would give the offlcals and flied a clvll suit
contaminants In · the vapor a against the project.
positive charge, allowing them to
They slowly bulll a consll·
be magnetically diverted. The tuency that Included Republiremaining lmpurlt~ 1wouldthen cans and Democrats, liberals
constitute less than 6 percent of and conservatives. People from
the plutonium, making It suitable Boise, Twin Falls, Idaho Falls,
for weapons production.
Ketchum, Rupert, Pocatello and ·
But the Snake River Alliance, a other Idaho communities signed
coalition of grass roots activists up with the Snake River Alliance.
.from more than a dozen comMany mem!Jers of Congresa
munities, aggressively quest!, believe that problems at existing
oned the project's safety, cost nuclear weapons should be corand usefulness.
rected before new facilities are
They noted that In early 1988, buUt. So, the alliance recently
then~Energy Secretary John S.
scored a major victory as bOtb
Herrington told a congressional the House and Senate voted to
committee: "We're awash In prohlblt .the start of construction
(weapons-grade) plutonium. We ' on the faclllty during the current
have more plutonium than we fiscal year.

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RU~trd

GIIU aHfonn.rd MI ... Ch.arn .....

z-u.nu~•d

Westemers .Protest nuclear weaPf)ns

R... e.-.d

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st. l.elll11

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NATIONAL HOf'KE\' LEA.GV£

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f'"l" R~U~K,..I. Phlla.f'1 ... " 1
~q'M Gallnf"M
Mealr..·al at N\' lld&amp;. .H11., 7: U p.m.

Motorists advised to watch for deer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) State highway and wildlife offl,
clals are advising motorists to be
alert for deer on Ohio roadways.
There were 17,540 car-deer
accidents on the state'S roads
last year, and 28 percent of them
occurred during the month of
November, a spokesman for the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, said Monday.
.
Officials of the ODNR and the
Ohio Highway Patrol planned to

SVAC standings ·

Giants limited Walker to 68 first possession, knocking him
Minnesota's D.J . Dozier re·
rushing yards on 12 carries In his
from the game. The Giants
turned the opening kickoff 6~
third game with Minnesota.
played without tight en~ Mark yards to the New York 29 but th"
After Allegre's field goal, And·
Bavaro, who has a knee Injury.
Giants held when safety Tern&lt;
erson fumbled after a hit by
The Giants were held to 65 Kinard Intercepted a Krame~
running back Lewis Tillman and
flrst·half yards, but became the pass for Hassan ! ones In the en
Dwayne Jiles recovered (or New
firs t team to score a!!ainst zone.
York at the Minnesota nine. Minnesota In a third quarter this . Walker scored the fir s t first·
Hostetler hit Manuel three plays season.
quarter touc hdown against the
later with i: llleft In the quarter.
Johnson's TD came on third·
Giants this season with 5: 45 l~ft
Anderson lost the ball again and·elght frol'!l the 34. Corner·
In the quarter. The 61-yard drive:
when hit by Greg Jackson on the · back Mark Collins blitzed Kra·
was aided by a 15·yard unne~es.ensuing kickoff This time, mer and forced him into a bad
sary roughing penaltY aga;nst
Myron Guyton r~covered .a t the throw. Johnson intercepted and
Taylor, who belted Kramec a te r
VIkings 19 with 1:03 left In the sprinted down the right sideline,
wide receiver Anthony a:te~
quarter Anderson scored four leaping just over the goal line lor jumped offsldes and the play a
plays l~ter, 12 seconds lntu the the score.
blown dead. Thepenaltygavethe
fourth quarter.
New York moved 42 yards to a
VIkings a first down on tile Giants
The VIkings dominated the 39·yard Allegre field goal with
48.
20
first half, but the Giants defense 2: 13 left In the quarter for a 10-7
A~ter K~amer hi~ ~~s~s S~~ve
turned the game around In the lead. Hostetter scrambled 12 yar s to o~~s an
d hi e
second. Lawrence Taylor's lirst yards and threw an 11-yard pass Jordan, Wa er score
s s ·
sack In three games sent Kramer to Manuel on third-down plays to
cond TD as a '(lklng, and his first
to the sidelines with a bruised keep the drive alive.
by pass. He also caught a ~7-yard
right arm and Wade Wilson
Anderson then fumbled twice,
TD pass against the Giants a
replaced him early In the third and the Giants completed a
month ago when he played for
arter
17-polnt run wlthln2:25spannlng Dallas.
qu
·.
The Vt' ktngs had four sacks In
K
1 t d 10 f 18 f
the third and fourth quarters.
ramer comp e e
o
or
l'he Vikings controlled the llrst
the first half - two by Noga.
127 yards and two. Interceptions · il · ·lf but led only 7 non Walker's
Leonard Marshall had two sacks
and · was sacked three times.
"
"'
.
Wllson, the starter until he · TD carch .
·
for the Gtants.
suffered a left hand Injury a
month ago, finished 8 for 16 for 59
yards and was sacked three
limes.
Hostetler completeQ,6 of 13 for
87 yards and was sicked four
times In relief. Simms threw just
one incomplete pass before AI
Noga sacked him on the Giants

WLT

Team

S.IIIQ, Nn. l
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Chlcap II Gr~n Bar, I p.m.

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.Ill 111 Ill

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publi•catJ•on ·
Deadline £or'
1'
• ·letters NOV;
~ ·t -""'··"- ..-at~
MtreetMlfit::etly se·
0 f e lectiOD
tected liYt!te
ernment
to develop the atomic bomb The Dally Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 8 general
election. However, In the Interest of fairness, no.election letters will
be accepted after 12 noon on Wednesday, Nov. 1.
Individuals should address Issues and not personalltles.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
Letters should be 300 words or less. All letters are subject to editing
and must be signed with name, address and telephone number. No
, unsigned letters will be published. Lell!!rs should be In good taste. ·

ttt

.ItS ttl lit
.111 Ill If!

•• •••
Drllftl' ....... ....... 1

Sen. John Glenn, D.Qhlo, !ell a tremor of his own last week when a
fanatic sneaked up on him and unloaded a right to the chops while the
senator was doing a television Interview.
·
Glenn's Marine Instincts took over, and he held the man for security
guards, showing remarkably quick reflexes for a man of 68 years.
This Is not the llrst time Glenn bas reacted coolly In an
Inflammatory situation. At the 1984 Democratic National Convention,
he calmly extinguished a smouldering fire In the backpack of a TV
reporter.
A lowball campaign Is smouldering In the wings for 1990.
Democratic State Chairman James Ruvolo figuratively met
Republican campaign adman Roger Alles at theq)llo border and told
htm to leave his "gutter tactics" at home.
Republicans retorted that Ruvolo knows something about "slime"
himself because he and the Democrats are "running a sleazy, trashy,
smear campaign" against GOP gubernatorial candidate George
Votnovlch.
Ruvolo recalls lbe negative ads Alles produced for Volnovlch
against Sen. Howard Metzenbaum In 1988. The Republicans say they
have every right to be negative because Ohioans are tired of a corrupt
. Democratic team In the Statehouse.
• By a year from now, Ohioans are going to be mighty tired olthese
juvenUe exchanges, no matter who's at fault. And they might want to
hire the guy who sucker-punched John Glenn to do some additional
work.

.n:s ••

By DAVE RAFFO
UPI Sporta Writer
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J .
(UP!) - Pepper Johnson returned an Interception 39 yards
for a touchdown and the New
York Giants turned two Alfred
Anderson fumbled kickoffs into
14 points within 83 · seconds
Monday night lor a 2H4 victory
of the Minnesota Vikings.
The Giants, 7-1, won their third
stralgbt despite losing quarter·
back Phil Simms with a sprained
right ankle on the opening drive.
New York maintained Its onegame lead over Philadelphia In
the NFC East. The VIkings, "5.3,
had a Cour·game winning streak
snapped and fell Into a tie with
Chicago atop the NFC Central.
The Giants scored 24 straight
points after trailing 7·0 at half·
time. Johnson's return of a
Tommy Kramer pass tied the

M.ID-AMEIJCAN CONnllENCB
CelllerMtot Onnll

W L T Pd. PF , PA
a.n.ao ..............1 1 t ,,.. ttt tBI
Jlll~mt. ..... ......... 4
t • ... Itt IH
......... ..... ..t41.MIII41U
WN' ............. 1 15 I .171 Ill Ill
NY Ma , ........... 1 7 I .Ill Ill Ill ·
a.:~ ••u ..........s
Clewlaacl ........ ..$
IIDulf................ f

'Giants rally in second half to win, 24-14

Ohlt CeUep r.-au&amp;e••

N.\TIDNAL J'OOftALL LIJAGVE
AIMric• C.llfeftllct

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

•
then you have to do It by the
book," Seidman told ua.
Why all the rules? It Isn't
simply because the taxpayers
are tired of belne ripped ol!. Tbe
savings and I!I&amp;JI bailout bas
become more than a vebtcle to
sell real estate. Coqresa made
sure that It was larded with the
nation's social and economic
agenda. Seidman can't simply
sell real estate. He bas to turn
some Into low·l.neome bouslng,
be has to accommodate minOrity
bualns-ln thedeils and be baS
to pard &amp;~linat IJjrowlnl the
national real state market out of
whack by the magnitude of the
sale - a11 the whUe gettlne the
best price i.Dd worldng fast, but
not too fast. He must sell all the
assets, buthecan'tdumptbemat
below-market prices. He must
make the best deal possible for
every piece of properly and do It
without sll!pplng OD any crackS.
The red flags fall Into these
catagortes:
- Even though the RTC will

P-omeroy-Middeport, Ohio

Scoreboard ...
Ohio standinWJ
NFL results
......

FDIC faces a difficult task

·J'he Daily Sentinel
~m~
'Qil1

•

:J
The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3 '

hold a news conference Tuedsay
to alert motorists olthe potential
hazards of deer along the state's
roads, especially during the
upcoming deer mating season.

VV L

s)mmes valley 10
Oak Hill ...........
Kyger Creek.....
Southwestern .. ..
North Gallla .. ...
Eastern ........... :
Southern.... .......
Hannan Trace ..

.

9
8
5
5
3
1
0

PF PA
0 325 104
1 349 68
2 179 125
5 181 159
5 160 148
7 113 195
9 49 224
10 34 343

.

(SVAC final)
Team
W L
Symmes Valley ... 7 0
Oak Hill .............. 6 1
Kyger Creek ........ 5 2
North Gallla ........ 4 3
Southwesterq ....... 3 4
Easlern ............... 2 5
Southern....... ...... .l 6
Hannan Trace ..... 0 7

.PF

Frlllay'• adlea

PA
58
46
87
105 88
121 124
67 140
43 177
18 237

239
253
122

,
Symmes Valley vs. Shady,lde
(9·1) at Sutsberger Stadium,
Zanesville. 7:»p.m,

IM!Idface - In playofla

••

POMEROY
HOME AND AUTO

bOO EAST MAIN

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20 Gauge
28" Rem. Choke Barrel
231&lt; &amp; 3" Shells

$

REG. 5399,95

(tJ8PII41-. .)
A DIY- eiMdtmedla. lloc.

SALE PIIC£

36995

Published every IDI!l'DOIIII. Monday
thr01111b Friday, lt1 COOrl St., Pom..-oy, Oblo, by the Olllo Volley PubU.blnl CoJnpaayiMotttmedla, lac.,
Pomeroy, Olllo 45'181, Pb. 992-21M. second cla11 pootqe pold at Pomeroy,

Synthetic
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Ohio Newspa!:r. =tlon. National

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SALE .
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POSThiASTER: Sead addr- Cblllllll
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top-of·th•~•

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Gallipolis

Middleporr

446-0902
992-6661
or visit your nearest Trust office for details
·
on your next 7~Da'y·Wonder.

Slug 81rnl • 12 O.uv•

bull. Credit wDI bellvenearrtoreoeb ·

No •.a.rtpt- by moU p11111lttal tn
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aVIIIlable.

CALL

Wlngmaater8
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· with Mollflod Ro"
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USA e Hardwood stock
whh ulld bUtt pad
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The Daily Sentinel

Advertlslntt

992·2094

· SERI'II\G THE AREA FOR 2.1 YEARS

Jtmington.

Member: lhittal Prel• Intematlolllt.

Team

Quality Service Before, During and After
the Sale.

Inland Da.UyPreu AuoctatiOn and the

(All games)
black politicians, but as a Virginia politician. His campaign
sti'I'SII'S that he Is In the tradition
of successful moderate Virginia
Democrats, led by Sen. Charles
Robb, who changed· American
politics by empbas121ng that
Democratic candidates need not
be liberals, and If they're not,
they can·win, even In the South.
Wilder . supportll the death
peiaalty and a tax cut. He did not
brlq Ssse JackSon In to campalp. He runs ieleviiiOn ada
featurlne Robb' s endorsement.
What happens If Wilder wins?
Many black represetltatlves
and mayors will aspire to hlllher
omce. That means mOderate
poaltlollll. MOderate black poUt·
lcs yields more moderate Demo,cratlc polltlcs, which yleldl more
moderate American politics.
(VIrginia moderates and COllier·
vatlves pt a national bonus by
votlnj( for Wilder.)
·

TIRES ARE OUR BUSINESS

SALE PIICE $299 95
.G, SUUS--, 40 G~ ~y

. EBER'S .GULF .
• 949-9200

. . . IACIIL OliO

.

M ·

'dr

s1$9999999
0,000Substantial
MINIMUM
DEPOSIT
pcna1ti for early Withdrawal. lrm·rcsr

for a

ruu y~ar wilh

·

a:i~~m rin~os~~ and' (ll~pt~nde&lt;i weekly. Rates effl·&lt;-1 in· Ot·1 27 , _l9H9 ..uhl
_. suCjcct m ~an; without noricr. Ytcld tisum~ t~llt suted ne e. re_m ams cons t,I N
(10

withdrawals of lnt tTest l lf prmCJ pal.

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
The &amp;nk Thill Makes Things HaPPen.

AffifiKe; Tht Central Bancorporaciun. Cinrinnat•. Ohi1l · \&lt;ember FDIC

�Pomeioy-Mickleport. Ohio

TuMday, October 31, 1989

Tua1day, October 31, 1989

DAR chapter has r~ent meeting

HALLOWEEN WINDOW- Syracuse residents
Mickey aad Joanne 'Wiliams have the perfect
wlllflow for hellday decorations - especially
Halloween decorations. tbrouchoul the weeks

preeedlnr Halloween, Joune caa be foiiDd
browslnr area stores for addiUoaal crealures to
add to the window's spooky splendor.

OAGC regional meeting qeld
Bonnie Allen, former Ohio Wilkesville. Also attending were ported on junior gardeners, and
Association of Garden ClubS · members of Region 3 and Region Introduced ~I chelle Miller, who
state president, presented "Ar- l , and Mrs . Lillian McDuffy of told of her experiences at the
nature study camp at Camp
_
tis Uc Sights and Sounds of the Hocking County.
Lazarus,
that she and Mrs. Bolin
Awards were given to Mrs .
Serengetl" when the OAGC l"e'
attended
on a scholarship from
glon 11 met at McArthur on Oct. Pauline Atkins for outstanding
Region
11.
Eva Robson, regional
21, with the Wilkesville and garden club member, and to Mrs .
VInton Township garden clubs as Robert Owens, outstanding ama- sales chairman and Mary Ann
Geiger, OAGC sales chairman,
hosts.
teur gardener. A communication was read reported outstanding sales for
The Serengetl Natlonal Park is
from Ellen Bell, Washington the day.
o~ of the many reserves that
Lucille _McComber was chairTanzania has established to · County library director, thankprotect It's abundant wildlife. It ing the region for the memorial man for the luncheon which was
has owr five thousand square book given to the library for Susie served at decorated tables by
mUes and Is one of theflnestlnall Poole, former state president members of the host clubs.
Pal Wells, second vice presifrom region 11.
Africa.
Reports of activities were dent of OAGC and advisor to
Mrs. Allen showed slides taken
while sbe was there and to the given by regional chairman and region l1 told of _upcoming dates
accompaniment of Masal music, tthe county contact chairman. of Interest for 1990. Convention
made eight artistic flower arran- Iva Stacy gave sales awards to will be at Avon Lake the Aqua
gements to represent different top garden club sales, Gallipolis, Marine Resort July 31. and Aug.l
Chester, Vinton Friendship, The and 2. Gardeners day out at for a
animals and sights at the park.
The welcome was given by Plains, and Vinton Township. fall fo llage tour on Sept. 24-29.
Mrs. Margie Milnor showed
Jane Bowles, and Bernadine Region 1l WI'S third highest in the
Kinsel used Psalm 19 for the state with $1.719.97. The state slides of "Amerlflora" and told
theine of devotions. Betty Dean, total was $l9,338.4f for fall bulb of_the plans and work progress of
outgoing regional director, in- sales in 1989.
the 40 employee planning staff.
stalled the new officers, KimSheila Curtis reported there The event will be held for six
berly Willford, secretary; Eliza- are 93 accredited judges and 20 months In 1992, April 3-0ct. 12.
beth - Philips, treasurer; and student flower show judges. This Is the first time It has been
Patricia Holter, publicity_ She Exhibitors and judges schools for held in the United States at
also presented gifts to her 1990 are May 21 and 22, and Sept. · Columbus. The first international show was in Hanover,
retiring officers Mauritta Miller 17 and 18.
and Janet Holsinger, and also to _ The Friends and Flowers, and Germany in 1951 and occurs In a
the regional chairman. Mrs. Rutland Friendly clubs received different country every ten yeDean was given a gift of money awards for their flower beds at ars. Permanent structures to be
from the Region 11 garden clubs the state fairgrounds from Pau- built Include an ampitheather
line Atkins.
by ]drs. GabrieiH. ·
with seating for 3,500. Tourists
Rita
Frazier
gave
certificates
from
all over the world wlll oe
Eighty-four garden club to Rutland. Fernwood, Friends
viewing
this and other areas of
members from the rtve county and Flowers, and Gallipolis for
Ohio.
region answered roll call. Clubs
their
garden
tMrapy
and
club
represented were Athens, The
pi'ogram books. Publicity book
Plains. Cheshire. Gallipolis,
certificates
were given to MaOpen Gate. Rio Grande, VInton rietta, superior
rating; and RuFriendship, Chester. Rutland.
tland
and
Gallipolis,
excellent.
Rutland Friendly, ·Friends and
Mrs.
Dean
gave
flower
show
Flowers, Shade Valley Council of certificates.
Floral Arts, Star, Belpre. Hill
The slide chairman, Elsie
and Dale, Little Hocking, Mus- Hanson,
gave Betty Mizicko 12
kingham, Marietta, and the host awards for
her entries in the
clubs, Vinton. Township and
state contest. Janet Bolin re-

a(

WoodmeO junior club formed
A Modern Woodmen of AmeriJ? Ica Junior Service Club was
lnslltuted at an organizational
pa.,y held recently at the United
Methodist Fellowship Room in
Albany.
Ethel Hart, Shade, a represe~ ­
tatlve of the fraternal life insurance society with home offices
In l!ock Island, Ill., is sponsoring
the' club. Hart said the club will
be ihe 23rd club In the state.

Barbara Boggess, Albany, Is
the group's junior director. The
new junior club is part of Camp
4798, Athens .
Junior service clubs for young
members were begun in 1942.
Club mel'r/bers learn about patriotism, good citizenship and the
joy of serving others through
participating In a variety fo
service oriented, educational
and recreational acllivltles.

Miller reunion held
The 47th annual .Miller family
reunion was held recently at the
home of Shirley and David
Bumgardner; Noble Summit
Road.

Attending were Jim and Terri
Powell, Jacob and Brldgette
Davis, Jim and Jackie Reed, Ed,
Ru_th, and Jim Durst, and Bruce,
· Cindy, Thadeous, and Brandyn
Bumgardner, all of Middleport.
Mlck and Jean Michaels,
Grand Rapids, Mich.; Danny,
PefiiiY. and Pete Brlckles, Rutland; Dennis Ziebell, Jackie.
Christine, and Meltss&lt;t Hanrahan, Hanover Park, Ill.; June,
Helen, Brenda, Patty, and Hillary Glaze, Columbus; David,
Phyllis, Ted, and Elizabeth
Reed, Lancaster;. Steve and Kris
Wheatley, Tracee Leark, Kayla
Casto, and Darrell Bowers,
Logan.
Carl Pullins Jr., Columbus;
Michael and Sandy Ohlllnger,
Albany; Janet and Ed Venoy,
Craig, Brenda. and Megan Venoy. and Kevin and Brenda

Hallowe~n

party

The Racine American Legion
Post 602, will host a halloween
party on Saturday for all children
toa,r 12.
O.mes will be played, cos·
hma will be Jlldled. and refrelbmnts will be terved
Tbt pwly will ta11e place from
4 to6 p.m.

r

J '

Venoy, of the Chester area;
Eileen Bowers, Pomeroy; and
Helen Miller, Pomeroy.
During the afternoon those
attending enjoyed looking at
pictures, swimming, and playing
games.

The Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter of the Daughters of the
AmeriCan Revolution held Its
October meeting at the Grace
Episcopal Church parish house.
Mrs. Raye Reynolds, regent,
read greetings from the presi- ·
dent general, Marte Yochim,
who told about the organization
of the first national meeting of ·
the DAR on Oct. ll, 1890. Mrs.
Benjamin Harrison, wife of the
President, was the first president
general with lScharter members
attending.
The DAR was established to
perpetuate the memory of the
men and women who achieved
American independence and to
teach patriotism by observing
historical events and preserving
historical documents and Important historical places. The group
is also interested In promoting
good education, especla11y the
history of the country, not only
for the people, bu I also for the
Immigrants coming to this country for the first time.
The · Meigs County chapter
DAR Return Jonathan r.'Jeigs.
was named and organized Feb. 8,
1906 with Mrs. George Plants
elected the first regent.
Mrs. Reynolds also reported on
two Important resolutions of the
National Defense Committee.
Schools should return to the
traditional teaching of history
and geography as separate subjects, not combined Into, social .
studies, which Is quotec! as a
'&lt;ague concept of the two subjects. The lmmlgratloll act of
1965 eliminated the national
origin quota, resulting in a flood
of third world Immigration, both
legal and Illegal. Unlike earlier
arrivals who considered U.S.
citizenship a priveledge, immigrants come to the country with
the philosophy that the constitution gives them Immediate acquisition of all rights and
prlviledges.
The DAR urges Congress to
strengthen and enforce laws to
aid the border patrols, and to stop
the infiltration of Illegal aliens at
the borders.
The chapter voted to buy two
American (lags to be placed In
class rooms and thanked Mrs.
. Grace lch for her gifts of

cemetery book~ to the Meigs
County Library. ·
The grave marking ceremony
for Dorothy 'Harley at Middleport
with Mrs. ·Nan Moore as chairman was announced. It was
noted the SAR will meet at the
Sportsman In Athens with Congres~nian Clarence Miller as the
guest speaker.
'
Mary Powell, sesquicentennial
committee chairman. and Anna
Cleland DAR centennial chair. man. will be working together for
special activities in 1990.
The guest speaker, Mrs. Grace
Yerian, state DAR conservation
chairman, talked about the· importance of recycling solid
waste.
The U.S. has over 150 million
tons of solid waste each year.
Seven percent of this is plastic
which takes 25 percent of land fill
space. Zven plastic diapers take
200 years to disintegrate.
.

.

'

~

Some areas are \low~ recycling
glass ·by color. Publishers and
manufacturers shOuld be trying
to establish . !' program fo.r
recycling paper, especially
newspapers wl)lch use so many
of the t~ees.
·
Some aluminum cans are rejected by recycling plants because beverage companies are
using them with steel bottoms.
Laws pertaining to the type of
waste dumped into landfills will
be in effect by 1993-1995, and

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

some types of solid waste will be
banned,
Mrs. Yerian displayed three
craft projects which were made
from plastic. aluminum and tin,
and encouraged everyone to buy
the conservation T-shlrts which
she modeled.

992-3671

vt. L.

11 East Second

Clevelad ••· Ta•t• Bar

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lacine, Ohio

949-2551

MilE HAllY • OW-

WELDING - FABRICATION· SUPPliES
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RADIATOR REPAIR and REPLACEMENT

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POMEIOY,
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Aa~are ••· Flori••

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Chester

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Congratulations

SECOND STREET JACKSON AVE.

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William V. Arthur, Jr.

5th STREET

Mason, W.Va.

Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.Now Hav.,, W. Va.

. 773-5514

675-1121
882-2136
R••• 111. Ml1netot1

Lot

******
William is a winner in The

L HOME
MIDDLEPORT

Daily Sentinel co-sponsored
football contest!!

614-992-5141

•

•

·-'

DAVIS-QUICKEL

•

CONTEST RULES '
The contest is open to anyone except employ- of The Daily Sentinel and their immediet1
fomilleo.
.
An award of •20.00 will be given to the p•oon picking the moet winners. In caoe of' • tieone winner will -be drawn from all correct entrieo.
ALL ENTRANTS MUST USE THE ENTRY BLANK BELOW.
Games for this week wHI be found in the odvertioemento on thil page. Uet the name of the
team you think will win oppooha the namo of tha advertiser.
Decision of the judgeo will be final and entries become the property of The Daily Sentinel.
This conteot will continue for ten wHks from the date of first inoertion.
IF MAILED, ENTRIES MUST DE' POSTMARKEO NOT LATER THAN FRIDAY.
Clip the coupon below ....flll h out and oend to...
·
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AGENCY INC.

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Middleport, Oh.

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ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
BAUM LUMifR

Chleago u. 8reee Ba~

PAT HILL

CHEVROLD-CADilLAC
. OLDSMOBILE·GEO, INC.

WINNER

ADVERTISER

NSURANCE

r

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PoMery, Oh.

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South Ctrollea n. Flori•• State

.....~~""'!""!'"'---1 - ...,,

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE &amp; MORE

VAU~HAN'S

DAVIS-QUICKEL INSURANCE

222 East Moin
992-6172
Pa!MriJ, Ohio
Beside Buttons 8o Bows
Mike .8o Chris Martin - Owners
-Home Ph. 915-4396

i

EWING FUNERAL HOME

I FARMERS BANI!

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HOURS: 10 A.M.-5 P.M.
luring Good Clean Furniture-Complote Audion Sarvico

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS

Buffalo u. Atl111t1

JIM COBB

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS
992,2174
''

~wlcea

un u• n.

POMIIOY
992-6617

500 East Main

. Pomeroy, Ohio

: ··w~·v~ Got Th~ Key8 To A Better _D eal"
"PERFECT PIU"
You'll Receive $100.00 OFF on o

____.... ...,._

,.

New or Used Cor or Trudtl

w.~.u.

fREE SMALL COFFEE WITH PURCHASE
WINDSHIELD WASHER FLUID ••• $139

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~lrglnla

tech

~•· ~an4er~llt

BANKSONE

VALLEY LUMBER

.

PLEASERS

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MARTIN'S FURNITURE &amp; MORE
DAVE'S EXXON

B~NI&lt; ONE, ATNENS. NAIA PART OF 1HE CARING TEAM
All1,en.t. OhiO
Mt.&gt;lnl.lor fDI C
1

K111111

CROW'S RESTAURANT

State vs. lowe Sttte
"Your Compl~t~ Athl .. ti~
Foolwt•ur Storf&gt;"'

LOCKER 219
IANI ONE
691 Welt Main

Po11,1eroy, Ohio

·e.v.u. -·· Grete•

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MIDDUPOn- 992-5627

PAT HILL FORD

Color..o State ~•· llyo•l•t

NAME •.•••..•• : ..•••••••••••.••••••••.•.•..•••••••.•••••.

Foot•an '891
Cateh All
Exelte•••tll

t••

I'

MEMBitR F.D.I.C.
OOfller Ia bmlted To One Free Portrait Per Family And Ela:ludes lndMdual Baby and Pet Portraits.

Pomeroy, Ohio

212 W. Main

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WRDING

I.

NEW HAVEN

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

RACINE MOTORS

-..,PEOPLES BANK
POINT PLEASANT

PEOPLES IANII

DAIRY QUEEN

•'

Thank You For Banktrtg With Us/

MASON

RAWUNGS-COATS·FISHER

ANDERSON'S

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PRESCRIPTION SHOP

II&amp;C JEWELERS

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PHOTOGRAPHY BY C.R. JWCDANIEL II
. Your Free 8z10 Color Portrelt Wui Be Ready ID Time For The.HoUdaya.
You llay Purchase Additional Portrait• If You Chooae.
Pleaae Call llarllyn Martin at 6715·1121 To Sch~ule Yop.r Appollltment•

FOOTLONGS~ •••••••••••••••• 99(

P••• State

.992-6669
2 71 North Second
Middleport, Ohio
For All Your Prescription and
Sundry Needs See Us"
•••
Stet• .

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PICTURES WILL BE TAKEN:
N9BMJIIR §A; 7
NQDDflm!S. &amp; 9
People• Bank
People• Beak
2212 Jacbon Avenue
15th Street
Point Pleuut
New Haven ·

u.

PRESCRI
SHOP
...

We are pleased to offer this gift to the general public.
Simply make an appointment and bring your family in
to be photographed in the comfort of our offices.

s5

U

TWIN CITY

MACHI. and WELDIIG

RIDENOUR

RACINE
MOTORS
CHERYL CAIPENTEI
HOME PH. 949·271 0

Wheel Horse Power 'M!rks For You.

~

R C•••••••••••••••••••• !.~!!~.•.• 99(
COKE ••••• ~.!~.~~~~~1. '$2 49
. PE-PSI •••••••••••••••••••••••••
2'HANS
99

·vrl

"UNDER NEW

•••••u• State

U:IESI

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Refreshments were served by
the hostess committee, Mrs.
Harotd Sargent, Mrs. James
O'Brien, Mrs. Gerald Powell,
Mrs. George Morris. and Mrs.
Everett ljayes.

RNER\.~,

214

991-9907

G•• -

VALLEY LUMBER
555 Park St. 992·6611

Po111eroy, Oh.

Self Servo
Ohio Lottery Tickete'
VCR Rentole - Milk ~ lreod
Carry-Out Beer - Hunting licenoeo
'
OWNII: DA¥1 IDD

Colorl4o ~·· tle~rttkl

Pomeroy, OH.

992-2342 .

East Main St.

992-2121

INSURANCE

•
,

He reporte&lt;! there are three
operating land fills in the six
county area and two local recycling plants.
Both speakers agreed there
should be educational workshops
for the public and tofi.nddifferent
ways to recycle many products.
In the future, recycling will bean
important part of each persons
daily life.

packaged. protection for
retallt~tores, offices,
churches, apartments,
drug stores. SlmpUfled
In couteat, convenient
In forma&amp; and very
affordable.

.,.....,.

Ral•m

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

It's the SERIES ONE
Business PoUcy•..

OGAN

Pomeruy, Ohio

DAVE'S EXXON
FOOD STORE

Mulbarry Ave:, Pomeroy, Ohio

ANDERSON~$-

Kenneth Wiggins, Meigs
County Litter Control _;~gent,
reported on the development of a
six county landfill which will be
accepted by EP~ standards. He
also told a bout the _sixth grade
poster contest during October,
and the field trip to, Wallace
Bradford's farm by 14 elementary school sixth grade classes,
where the SoU and Water Conser. vation Service had 10 minute
talks at scattered stallons concerning conservation of water,
forest, and soils.

We Have A Free
8xl0 Color Portrait
Just For You·!,

EWING
FUNERAL HOME

The Deily

ADDRESS { •

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PHONE •••••••..•••

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"OOOD LUCK"

·-

••••••••

Sutport
· Aret

t•••• Flaa

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Pometov-Middeport. Ohio

f!nrt of the &amp;nd

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Attendance
requested
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she's now working on a cruise in
BJ IIOB •oEn.teH
; Paret~ts of the students at the the Southern Caribbean for early
; Rutland Elementary School December and steamboat!ng on
· would appreciate the pleasure·of the Mlsstssippl aboard the M!s' yo11r compapy Friday even lng stsslpp! Queen for next April- so
·
when tile annual fall festival is there are longer outings.
Now doesn-t that sound like an
. staged at the school.
, The kitchen with all of those entertaining Job? I'm not really
• good th!ilgs to eat will open at 5 up on all the specifics of parUci-c
· p.m. and hours oftbe festival are patlon but Maxine d.oes have a
: 5 to 8 p.m. Games and other toll free number U!00-824-6954 If
you would want to inquire.
. ac;t!vltles will start at 5:30 p.m.
· Door prizes will be awarded.
Next Tuesday ts election day. ·
Sponsorship If sponsored by the
. Even if you're nol real hep on
school's PTO.
voting, chances are you can find
Iris Myzrs Kelton writes that a good election day dinner about
her uncle and aunt, Lystgn and the county. Do keep sm!Ung.
Ubby Fultz, formerly of Middleport, have had to give up living
alone and are now liVIng in a
nursing home.
Ubby suffered a stroke several ·
years ago and made a strong
comeback effOrt but other compHcatlons developed. Lyston has
inoperable . cataracts, a heart
condition, and ·a back injury
from World War II which is
:. causing pi'Qblems.
•:. Both Ubby and Lyston love
;. receiving cards and If you'd like
~ to remember them the address Is
iI 420 12 Pensacola Road, Venice ,
, Fla., 34285.

---.-----

Martha Chambers of Middle, port - now you all know Martha
• - has a fragile but well pre: served announcement of the 16th
·: annual commencement of Pome- ,
;.. roy High School.
.:; Now that was back on Friday,
·,May 20, 1892 -a while ago, eh?
'· There were 16 graduates and
. back then every class member
' did some sort .of presentation
, during commencement.
The
·: graduates Included Sadie Oav!s,
· Mary E. Stout, Carrie Schlaegel,
: Anthony Neutzllng, Iza Skinner,
. Ammie (CQ) Williamson, Bertha
· Szyfrled, Zelia Felger, Herbert
: H. Dyke, George W. Donnally,
: Otto G. Schoenlein, Dana. E.
· Robinson, Ralston Russell, Ell
: Pfarr, Permella Bailey and Phil
: M. Smith.
· The commencement . was
: staged at the old opera house,
: apparently the high school being
· too small to ·a crommodate the
: expected crowd. ·
, M. Bowers was superintendent
• of the Pomeroy schools at the
: time with T.C. Flanegln serving
: as principal, and Harriet E.
· Sears.as assistant principal.
.

-------And, of course, so many of you

:MaxiM Grlftltll Wllo was
: with tbe Pomeroy National Bank
· for years and then, or course,
: ii-ansferred over to Bank I when
; It bought Pomeroy National.
· Maxine has been working in
: tbe Athens fac!Uties of Bank 1 for
: several years and It you love to
• travel you'd really like her job.
: Maxine spends a great deal of
: time these days in planning
· outings on behalf of Bank 1 for a
; group known as Senior Champs
; - which is known as a banking
: program that" rewards people 55
· and over.
Maxine plans many short trips
for the group - to dinner
, theaters, dog races, the festival
; of lights in Wheellnll;. and numer·
, ous other events of interest. She
; accompanies the group on the
' various trips many of which are
, just one day outings. However,

,•

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WEDNESDAY
, MIDDLEPORT -The Middle'. port l.lterary Club will meet on
: Wednesday at 1: 30 p.m. with
) Mrs. Wilson Carpentl!r as hostess. Mrs. Forrest Bachtel will
; review "Han Fan tel." Roll call
:: will be for members to answer
. w'lth "The first time you
:- danced."
RACINE - There will be a
hymn sing at the Sutton United
· Methodist Chun'h on Bashan
Road on Wedn~ay at 7:30p.m.
·The public' Is invited to attend.
•
THURSDAY
MIDDlEPORT-The Evange:une Chapter No. 172. Order ofthe
'Eastern Star, Middleport, will
have Its regular meeting on
Thursday at 7:30p.m. Initiatory
work will be exemplified. Officers are to wear chapter dresses.
MIDDLEPORT -There will
be a bake and rummage sale on
Thursday and Friday from 9a.m.
to 4 p.m. at the Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church tn
Middleport.

New officers were elected
The Christmas nower show Is traditional arrangement in a
when the Shade Valley Cot~nc!l of
Nov. 18 and 19 at Royal Oak basket using pumpkins, forsyFloral Arts met for Its October
Resort. Members were given thia, dahlias, and cratons.
meeting at the home of Melanie
programs a bout the show and the
Sheila Taylor made an arranStethem with 13 members Shade Valley club is responsible gement lrom a pumpkin cut In
present.
for entry decorations. Members half using eucalyptus, feather
·Bobble Karr. outgOing presl· are to go ·on J:&lt;ov. 17 at 1 p.m . to · grass, and fall leaves.
dent, Installed the new officers decorate.
Refreshments· were served by
for next year. They are, Carol
Allee Thompson had the. pro· the hostess.
Erwin, president; Sheila Taylor gram on pumpkins. The "Lady
and ~ty Dean, vice presidents; . Godiva" pumpkin has naked
Rhonda Mllllron, secretary;
seeds. She named several reJackie Frost, treasurer; and cipes using pumpkins. The best
The Racine American Legion
pumpkins for pies are sugar Post 602, will host a halloween
Denise Mora, news reporter .
The group dlscu~ having a pumpkins . Pumpkins can be dance on Saturday 7-ll p.m. for
catered dinner with the Chester stored for several months in a all teenagers, age 13 and up.
There will be a costume
Gal'den Club on Dec. 6 at Royal cool place. They are. also rich in
fudging and a couples only
Oak Resort. The time will be VItamin A.
l!;lrs. Stethem had a workshop "freeze . contest." Greg Alden
announced later.
on
making arrangements for the from WMPO will serve as D.J.
Dues of $8.50 were paid by each
top
of pumpkins. She made a Refreshments will be served.
member.

HaJ/oween dance·

~~

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THE
BASin WEAVE

--...-

,_.,,Oil.

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36425 ....""'.......

it''
I.;. . .:

992-6155

LOWEST I'RKES
IIGHEST QUAUTY

$30.00 ~ Pair
Mounttd and lalo11&lt;td
·\
~,FifE"

q ullts and .pUlows, wooden crafts, teddy bears,

baskets, sweatshirts, sluffed toys, crochet and
knll arUcleo, ceramics,. country crafls, flower
arran,emento and more. Here, Jenny Burdette,
left, and Opal Tyree, volunteers at the center,
display just a few or what will he on sale.

18
'·

SALE SUITS
SEPT. 29, 1919

L&amp;L TIUS

fiYI

.01110

Television Lislenina Devices
Dependable Htlrina Aid Sales &amp;Senrict(
CJ Hearing Ev~luations Foi All Ages

!a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Licensed' Clinical Audiologist

~z '(614)
446-7619 (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Of

742-2771
Cell ftr Ftll Specltl•

Meig~.

Me1 chont!Jsr.

51-HouMhold Goods

u - soonJng a.53-AntiQue•

Call befort 2:00p.m.

- Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

E111plny111enl

At"' ·.,,... 6m;Ji&lt; ~

_,,...w..,.,~

SEIIOIGIU·S-Ii&amp;S
IITD._W..,CORFI

IOWii .,. . . .
Adream vacation to the Grand
Canyon? Aday trip to the country?
An evening at the theatre, or a
momiiig walk and breakfast?
1&amp;
Wliatever trips and get-togethers
your BANK ONE Senior Champs.
Coordinator has planned, yoo'll
read all about it in yoor issue.of the
.Senior Champs newsletter. And
we'll handle all the arrangell)ellts ~
so you spend your time having fun.
(What's more, each newsletter
will keep YQU up to date on the latest
BANK ONE services, Senior Champs
member benefits, finan.
cial news, and health
informatioo.) .

-

, SUNDAY PAPER

2:00P.M. MONDAY

2'00 P.M TuESDAY
2'00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
2:00PM. THURSDAY
2'00 PM . FRIDAY

17-MiKelllnllOUt
18-Wanted To Do

Cl,rtss:i(ied' puges cover the

441-0IUipotit

MeipCoumv
Ar. . Cod,e 814

M•onCo., WV
Aret Codt 304

~92-'-Mlddl oport

675-Pt. Ple. .nt

Pom•ov

3&amp;7 - Ch•hira

388-Vinton
2•6--Rlo Grtnde
258-GuVIn Oist.
843-Arabia Oist.
379- WIIInut

!185- Ch•ler
143- Portll!nd

247-L111•n Falls
949-Ricin•
74.2-Rutl~

NOTICE OF PROPERTY
FOR SALE ,

•

To join SeniorCIIamps, caD or stop
in today at any BANK ONE office.
..,

Usted biiOIIIIft five (5)
tntcts II laid. incladiiii'IS~
denceloCIIIII ,...eon. bllnc
ofltrld tar 1!111 -, F1111klin
1111 Estlle Conlplnr. fill'
·-e inlornution Of ..,.
poinl...t to vilu,
cott11ct Joe ll1111w 11 tt.
Soti!Nrn Ohio COli C...,
llinl Olf!co, 6141286-5051,

)II••

Of

o... illriY at Ohio , _

Complny, lind Min .......
Otlice in lct:onnlisville.
614/962-4525.
TJIACT YV-07
Hone 1nd 5.110 Mrtt
locatld on Vinton County
R01d No. :18, sil..ttd ia
Section 1 of Vinton 1owttship, Vinton County, Ohio:
9 ye•s old: 2-story, wood
end brick home; ell elec:·
tric; 2\o\ baths: county •·
ter: ~ _outbuildinp in fllir

I

cond1l10n · $54,0110.110.

TRACT VW-98
Otdlr !-story hou• ulth
)lllintod wood skin&amp; loenl
ll•tt (3) llliltt DISI of Wll-

kttvMie on Stilt llllutt 124;
baunlllll; 111 • d sleetrie;
l.ucltli Clllk Dlllr: hc:r•

- $36,1110.110.

•

TRACT YW-139
2 hou• - !-story bridl
house: 111 and slldrle: 111-1111: county l!llllr. Oldlr
2-st~ 'UOOII sided hoasr.
elldr1t:; . . -'•· l.oCIIId
on 1.110 acre .,prtuiiiiiiY
tao (2) mit• SOtllh of WI~
kallle • IIIII bt1160.

• $51.7!0.110.

''Tire tmvel /lrOtltrDns

TM iiC-73

..ltli4lf 4-JOOm

are'~" ijic. I get
together with all my

•*loti:

llitMII II

I•CIIod on
• --·••U.SicreelttCo~
pOll

. . . .Tt~Mltip. ..••

frinu/&amp; and offwe go!"

~-

illitrlc ud will

1rc· ·~pitt~··

'~··154• Allloclllill 50.00

• • • 4-fiiOIII locltou•

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tupper• Plains VFW Post ~ .•
will meet Tllursday at 7: 30 p.1111:
Mrl. VJrrlnla Smltb, Dl.ltrlct 12
president, will be ~ tor
lalpectlon. All member• are
Ul'led to at lend.

01

ICI'••

, . . . , 40.• ICI'. ill

31 -Hom• for Sale
32-Mobile Hom• for Sale
33- Farmt for Sale
34- Bulinat Buildings
35-Lots • Acreage
36-Rell Ettatt W.,led

. 176-Apple Grove

773-MIIon
882 - New H8Ven
81&amp; - Letart

,.w: ltcltiJI

ollllp
~ lOIII flo. I

.=.r.-

43 - Farms

•or Rent

44-APMtrnent fOf Rent
46-Fumilhed Rooms
4&amp;-Space for Rent

.... -47-Wanted to Rent
41 - Equipment for Rent

41-For

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~-

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
C11e No. 88-0R-268
RUBY RUTH
YARRINGTON,
Plaintiff

santement ;
ESTATE . NO. 23338 Ninth Account of Elmore E.
Boice end Remoro C.
Young, Trulltaoo of lhe Roy·
mond E. Boice Truat A ,
ESTATE NO., 23339 Ninth Account of Elmore
E. Boice ond Rom ore C.
Young, Trulltael ofthe Roymand E. Boice Trust B.
ESTATE NO. 26396- Fi·
naland Dlt1ributive Account
of John Chorl• Honcloy,
EKeculoroftheEIII!teafHo·
Jon L. Hondtey, Dtcellod.
ESTATE NO. 211824Second end Final Account
of Wendell R. Brown, Guar·
dion of the Person ond Estete of Mabel Brown, en ln competent Person.
ESTATE NO. 22462 Ninth Annual Account of
Robert B . Titus,"Guordien of
Stephen E. Titus.
ESTATE NO. 26882- Fi·
nolond 0/strlbut/vo Account
of Cl~~ra Humphrey, Adminiltr.trbl of the Eetate of Edword Newton • Humphrey.
oko Edword N. Humphroy,
ella Edwardl Hunphrey, aka
E. N. Humphrey. Dece111d.
Unl•s exceptions ere
fitod thereto, otld occounto
wit bo for hooring before
Aid Court on the 4th dov of
Docomber. 1989. tt which
limo oald ..:counts will be
conaidefed and continued
from dey 10 dov untl fi~lily
dlopo•d of.
Arrv person inttr•ted
may lite written ••c:eptiona
10 u/d eccounts orto mill·
ero pertelning to the ••ocu·
tion of the trust. not l•o
lhan flvo doyo prior ta the
dote -lor hoorlng.
Robert E. Buck. Judge
Common PI- Court,
Ptollete Dlvlolan.
Mligo County, Ohio

vs.

AR NOLO LEE
YARRINGTON. JR .
DefM~dlint

Amold Lie Yarrington, Jr..
whole t•t known fllklence
woo Rodno. Mlilll County,
Ohio, ...1 whole -ont
- - • • ond ,..ldonce
ertu-n.wltltakonotice
that on t._ 21th dey of Oc·
t - . 1888. Ruby Ruth Yor·
ringlan filed her Compllinl
for Divorce epiMt him In
Cooo Na. 88-0fl-288 In the
Common Plea Court of
Meitll County, !Jhio. d•
menclng thet obe be ellvon:od from him on lhe
groundlthet thtondlheD•
fendont .have llvod 1-111
Wid pwt, without tnt.ruption and wtlhouJ cohebit•
lion lor one yeor or more;
-the be -dod her per·
IOnel belonglnfl and ett.ara
now in h• poe-alan. end
tor ouch other rille! 10 1M\'
be proper,
You 1 , . notified the! you
muot on•- lhe Camptlint
for Divorce within 21 d-,1
otter the t10t publication.

wil&amp; be meda on the
6th dovof Deaember, 1888,

whidl

or judgment by det.,h be ronderocl ogoinlt you.
You .,. further notified the!
the flnot - ' " • 1n this
couoewlllbeet8;JO o.m. on
Jenu..., 26, 1880.
Lorry E. Spen,.r,
Clerk of Courts
Melg1 County. Ohio
Mo~... He~rtoon. Depuly
(10) 31; (111 7, 14, 21, 28;
112) I, Ita

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Notice: ,

..

..

!NTH!
COMMON fiLIAl COURT ·
""OIAtl DtVISlDN
MEIGt COUNTY. OtiiO
IN T"E MATTER OF

II!YTLIMINTOP

ACOUNTI,
•
poROIA1E COURT•
MEIGI COUNTY, OKID

aa.trc• Mel VOUohlrl of

"L... ......
.,.

_-,

--

canrl• Licensed

................ ~

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

-

Stocll Parts tor

PH. 992·3922

•

YARDMAN MOWIIS

Sorvica On

HOURS; Mon.- Fri. 9-7
Sat.9·6
Sunday

73- v.,.a" wo·,
75- Bo•ts &amp; Motort for Salt
7&amp;- Auto Pant &amp; Acceuori•

77- Auto Repair

?S-Camping Equipment
79- Camp•• 6 Motor Homes

Services
81 --Home lmprOvtm•t•
82-Piumbing • H.,ling
83-hCMI'Iting
84- Eiect:rie.a &amp; Aefrig•etlon
15- Gen•al HauUng
8&amp;- Mobile Hom• Atplir
17-Upholl1ooy

'*'

LINDA'S
PAINTING

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On October 28. 1989, in
the Meigs County Probate
Court. Cou No. 26418.
loit Sauer Harkins, 12 N.
Shafer Street, Athen1, Ohio
45701-2303wll oppointod
Executor of the ntete of
Lllwta H . S1ue•, dece11ed.
late of 36 Rutland Street,
Middleport. Ohio 46760.
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K. Ne11erlroad, Clerk
(101 31; (1 117. 14. Jtc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On October 24, 1989, in
tho Meigs County Probete
Court, Ceae No. 28394.
Bronwyn Williams, 1 &amp; Dew
Stroot, Middlepon, Ohio,
46760. weo oppolntod Exocutrbl: of the •tate of Robert
M. Dailey, deceaed. late of
15 Dew Stroet. Mldcloport,
Mt1111 County, Ohio.
45760.
Robert E. Buck.
Probete Judge
Molgo County. Ohio
Lena K. Net...rolld, Clerk

(10) 31; (1 117. 14, Jtc

1----------n
ustness
servi ces
0

-·
HOIISf: f&lt;lfi ~;All
3 BR

hollt, 2V..
baths, full baStlllJRI, 2
Cll prap, 101160 ft.
deck, 3 ICIIS plus IV..
ICie lake. Mint colld.
$120,000 linn. All RIW
drapes, fully carptttd.
Built-In 11. TV, stan &amp;
llfrl&amp;. SH·throup fi ,..
place.
992-2571
ranc~

.

9-22-19

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

STEWART
TRUCKING

j_.ll: GIIG I. IOUSH
:lh • , GENERAl

;&amp;&amp;

. !P~

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-242'1

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
puin!i111: Let me do

for you.
VEIY IIASONAIU
HAVE IEFEIENCES

•LIGHT HAULING

Chalet

NEWLAND
~NTERPRISES

•FIREWOOD

BIU SLACK
992·22"

DUMP Tf\UCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

1614) 667-3271
Grant A. Newlond

EVENINGS

4/l/89/ tfn

7-J8c'l9·tfO

Til-CO. TEIMITE
&amp; PEST CONTIOL

FOR SALE
HIGLEY FARM

SINCE 1976

RUTlAND TOWNSHIP

ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
llemblf Notional Ptst
Control Assn.

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

PlUMBING &amp; IIA'IING
Now lo&lt;ation:
168 Nartll Soo:OIIII
Milldloport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERYI( E

Pay Your Phone
ond Coble Billo H.,e
' 11111161 PHONE
(6 141 9t2-6550
IB!IENG PIIONE

16141

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHES1EI, OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
· •ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422

9-23-89· 1 mo. pd.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSUlATION

..

BISSELL
SIDING
.._ CO•.
"Free

......

Ettimet•"

POMIIOY -EAGUS
ClUI

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

RADIATOR

992-9978

Will Video Tape
Waddings,
Birthdays,
Reunions. Interiors
of Homes for
Insurance.

9·26-'89-1 mo.

BiNGO

224 E. MAIN ST.

THUI,. I.L 6•45 P.M.
SUII. LL 1:45 P.M.
POOl Pll%1

·

H.D. FRU with COUJIQII llld;
pu~~:h• ol111in. H.C. ·Pia-'
111. Lim" I tolpon Jllr 011-,

t-1* blnJ11fttl01.
:
Wt ' - IJO.OO P• Gomt
o..r 110 l'toplo 165.08 • '
l'lr Gaont
'
2-J.Ifft .

U&lt; IOOS.J!

hwnLWtll

I

ROOFING
.W-IIPAII
Gutters
DowniPO.U tl

Gutter Cleenint

..

Pllintlng
FREE lmMATES

EVERY SUNDAY

IJ-

PH. 949-2101
or les. 949-2160

1-100-535-2199

"

'·

Starts at 1 :00 P.M.

$4S,OOO
742-2143

Fr..

GUN .S' HOOT

Beginning Sept. 17

We Carry Fishing SuppU•

DOZER
SITEWORK - ROADS
CLEARitJG

MOVAL

RACINE
GUN CLUB

8-20-tfn

Factory

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
· TRIM and RE-

5- :7-tfll

•NEW HOMES
,oi, I,\CF JIJfl9

IIISIIJ

12 Gaugo Shotguns Only
Slri&lt;Hy Eafonod
10-9-tfll

614-985-4180

l600 GALLON
WATEI SEIVICE
u•STONE
SPIEAD
Din HAUlED
992-5275

•YINVL SIDtNQ &amp; ROOFING

-METAL IUILOINGS

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

1t

.

•CUSfOM MTCHENI. BAT HI
•EX"TINIFYE IIIEMODIELINO

GUN SHOOT
lA ClNE
FIRE DEPT.~
Basham Building

1/4/89- till

Public Notice

tin

. L. W.

........

71 - Autol for Selt
72- Truclla for S .. t

ALLEN'S
HAULING

Hometite. Weedeater,
Tecumaeh. Briggs •
Stratton .

• E.GLE IIDGE
SMAU ENGINE

Partt' I

Transporloliun

11_0_I_3_1._1_t__
c ______~

t

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

A / C Service
AU Mlljor • Minor
Repeirs
NIAS£ Certifia::l Mac:h.,le

IY._ SIIYICI CIINTD

a.

84 - Hev
Grain
&amp;5 - Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Public N otic.,

RUUO

... Middleport, Oh.

IIITEIIIOR-EJITERIOR

"•"t
42- Mobile Hom11 tor Ftent

l'lolllte CIMt. Mltea c.....
ty, Ohio. for .,, ....... lltd

-·'

61-Farm Equipment
62-Wantld to Buv
13- Livestock

41-HouMI for

tlllfalll'u

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Most 2 end 4-cydo
enginet

UHI! SAWS &amp; TIII'MIIIS
OIEGOIIIIAIS, CHAINS

lliijdlil

937-lufftlo

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

.alii; IIICirlc •• IIIII

Oom•tic: Vthi d•

74- Motorcycl•

458-Leon

Reel Estate General

....,ted at Yaley llllllber

VISA · MASTERCHARGE

2 1- Butin•• Opportunit~
22-Mon~ 10 Loan
23-Pro,_lional Service.

following tel'ephone exchanges ...

..
Oet Ruultt Fatt

· JUSTSS.OOOOII.&amp;I
' ~
Mas •• DliOIL
Imagine yourself on the road ,_/
with a &amp;roUp of friends, en~~ a
sj&gt;ecial Senior Champs event, tnp
or vacatioo. .
Joining Senior Champs is easy.
In fact, you t:na.Y already qualify. All
you haVe to do 1s maintain $5,000 or
more in any comtlnatim of savings
or certificates of deposit at BANK ONE
(except IRAs).
Then get ready to go far. And near.

Fori!' Suppiii!S
1'. LJVI!cluck

liilfiUihhil

817-CoolviMe

COl&amp; ALOT Of SRODI
You'll receive a freeJutllee" card
that lets you access your BANK ONE
accoonts day and night, around
the\Wrld.
·
You'll al~ be eligible for free money
orders, cashier's checks, and notary
services at BANK ONE. Just show
your Senior Champs membership card.
And did we mention free travel·
ers checks? Another welcome bonus
for Senior cparnps who are on the~

PUIS.

-11:00 A .M . SATURDAY

-

~:-:,~syo::,~~PER

... cma FESIIVICIS 1111' .

lMr lo 111111111

11 - H.tp Wentfd
12-SitUidon Wtnttd
13-lnluttn 01
14-Buain•• Training
15-Sd\ooll &amp; Instruction
16-Radio, TV a CB Rep-

DAY BEFORE PU8LIC:ATION

MONOAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

SPECiAL MilE I 10 SMIS.
Uyruve needed just one more
good reason to join Senior Olamps ·
now, how about this extra-high interest rate on our Senior Champs CD?
Its agreat way to be&lt;;orile a.
·Senior Champs member and its •
available only to people 55 or better.
But this rate is good for a limited
time only, sd don't delay!

~l:fVIC~S

SERVICE

. BOB'S
HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING
22

DAVE'S
SMALL I!NGINE
IE PAll

SYRACUS~ OHIO
~ost Fonign and

"DOC" VAUGHN

67- Mulic.llnstruments
58 - Fruits &amp; Veg«•~•
59-For s .. e or Trllde

Auction

•A elnliflld adven"'JDWII pieced in The.Deity SentinM tell·
cept !:.... el•lifitd displl';'. Butin•• Card tnd lege! noti~l
w11 1110 appew in th Pt. PltMant Regl11tr and the G1Ui·
polil Deity Trtbune. r. .ctling ower 11,000 Mm11.

Of

56-Building Suppli•
58-PMs for Selt

in actvancel

VAUGHN'S •
AUtO - DIESEL

TEMPSTAR

992-6944

ont

Veterans llemoriai Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

CALL 992-6756

54-Mit&lt;:l . Merchanditt

dl\' 1ft« publlc•ion to mlkecorrec:tion.
•Ada th• mutt be .-id in achoance .,,
Clrd of ThMkl
Heppy Ads
In Memori.m
Yerd Sel•

COPY aEADLINE -

s&amp;o.oo

:--:------

•Aectlve t.50 ditcoum tar ads P,.id in 1dv.nce.
•Free _. - GW•ew•r 1nd Found adl und• 1&amp; words will be
run 3 d-weat no ch•ge.
•PriCII of ad for ell CIPitllllltteu is dCM~b4e pt"ice of ed cast.
•7 point Nne type anty uled.
•&amp;•tlntl
r-.ontiblefor •rortefter fint dllf. !Check
~I·

$15 .00
126.00

RM• are for conl8cut'ive nn'IS, brokan up days will bach•ged
fnt' aar.h d- ••
ads.

Gellie or Muon coumi• mult be pr•

"not
tor errors firlt d., td runs in

$7.00

no.oo

4-25-tln

SYIACISE
992-2621 or

28·35 WORDS

$6.00
$8 .00.
$13.00
121 .00
S61.00

Alto Tr••*fl..lt~
PH. 992-5612
or 992-7121

1-31-'19-1 mo.

SUSAN COUIUN

S5.00
88.00
$13.00
$33 .00

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

loc•lly Owned • Operated by Bill, SteVe&amp; Kevin Pullins

Out-New
lima ld.ln
111,11allll. Oh.

u .oo

1 DAY
3 DAYS
8 DAYS
tO DAYS
t MONTH

II. 124, P-oy Ohio

614-Hi-2471
P. 0. lax 207
·
P-ray, Ohio

614-992-5344

9·21-81· 1 mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage

FAMILY HOMES INC.

21/t ~·

0 -15 WORDS 11·25WORDS

POLICIES

j

~AI£&amp;11

fadory (hokt

STIKa¥ ENFOiaDI

MODULAI HOMES
SINCE 1970
'a:.:.t~lanchr Cape Cod &amp; 2 Story

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru fRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M,
'
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ooid.

IIIA-....OF
. . . . . . . . . . . .111011&amp;
SIIVICIS-R'" -~
. . . . . . . 1'00.
Travel is just one of the benefits
of a Senior ~ps
inembership. Yoo'll
also receive a
wide range of
banking services,fiee
of charge.
To begin
with, ~ soon as
you join, we'll
you a BANK
checkill! account that pays }'00
interest. No service ciuu-ge. Even your
checks are free.

11:00 A.M. -~
12 Govp Shotg- CJ,olj

MODEL OPEN Dlll Y MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
1:00 P.M.-6:00 P.M. ar Call Far Appointment

SUN'S UP
TANNING

•

•Ada outside

. One of the great things ·
·about being older is having time to
travel for pleasure. Whether it's a
jaunt to see the gt'illldkids, an excursion to some exerting oomer of the
\Wrld, or maybe an outing to root for
ywr favorite team m its hoote field.
That's why a lot offolks tell us
they b-e the outings and travel
PI'Of[iUIIS that arne their 'Wf (at
terrific prices) as members of Senior
Champs ... BANK ONE's program
. of free and discounted memller ser- ~
.. vices, exclusively available to P!!OPle
·ssor&lt;mr.

EVElY SUNDAY_

EED A HOME?

13" lhrou!Jh 705-15"

.

.

w-e.,.

9/ 18/ 1 mo . pd.

ht visit FlEE

.

Wilbifttlo ....

POMIIOY AND •DDUPOU'S ONLl
LOCALL T OWNED PII:U SHOP.

.SED DRE
. SALE

;.

II. 124 lotw-

FHE LO&lt;AL DEUVEIY

HANDWOVEN IASUTS
IASICET WEAVING
SUI'ftiES
OFFUED

,.

RACCOON VAWT'
SPOITSIIH'S (I.IJ

992-9922 or 992-:l228

•

't

PIZZA

Piua-Subs-Salads-Dailv Specials

CRAFT BAZAAR -The fourth aanual arlll and
crafts show will be held FrldaJ' from 11 a.m. to 7
p.m. at the Meigs Counly Senior Center. Twenly
five area craftpl!rsons will display a varlely or
·homemade crafts, Including hickory chairs,
baadanas, picture frames, ,..reatba,leather craft,

.

Business
Services
li======
GUN SHOOr ·
MAIN STREET

..

. ,. ···.·
..
' .

Mrs. Virginia Gibson spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Gibson and sons In Columbus.
Mrs. Freda Smith visited TUesday afternoon wtth Mr~. Frances
Young.
Ray Alkire, Columbus, spent
the weekend with hl.s parents Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Alkire.
Mr. and Mrs. K.C. Welsh have
returned to their home In Florida
for the winter. Mrs. Sally Welsh
and Mrs. Bonnie Napper accom·
panted them:
Mrs. Betty Bishop and Mrs.
Stella Atkins attended the grand
chapter of the Ohio Eastern Star
in Cleve land on Tuesday and
Wednesday.
Thirty Scipio senior citizens of
Pagev!lle, took a bus tour to the
Amish Country on J'hursday.

• Th.e Area's Number 1 Marketplace

POMEROY -Tht! XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta 51J11U1 Phi
Sorority will have Its Ritual of
·Jewells Tea on Thursday at 7
p.m. at the home of Sharon
Stewart. Me!Jlbers art! to bring
. canned gooda for the needy
family.

t

Pomerov-Middlaport. Ohio

Harrisonville

Shade Valley council meets

· ===~~====

Calendar

..
The Daily Sentinei-Paga '1.

Tuesday, October 31, 1989

Call 742-2416
· After 5 ~.m.

NO SUIIDA YUUS

3-11-tfll

SER~ICE

We can r~ir and recore radiators and
heater carts. We can
tlho acid boil and rod
out rodiatars. We also
repair Gtn Tanks.

PiT HILL FOlD
992-2196

Middleport. Ohio

10·2· at.1 mo.

USED FURNITURE
UVING 10011 SimS
•DIIOOM SimS

DINEm sm

1-13-Ht

BISSELL
BUILDERS

"NEW" IE&lt;UNERS

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES

Troctor Deal•ehlp

"At •••allle Prim"

Located Behind'!

· PH. 949-2101
or les. 949·2160

·' MODIS
E-PMEin
742·1411
ser ••

Day or fltht
NO SUNDAY CALlS

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PAIK
•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentols
•Lot Rentals

992-7479

lt. 33 Nerth of
Ollio

•-•oy, 1-12·'11-H

WATER
SERVICE
1rOOD GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

Call Anytime

992-2371
4-25-'89·1 mo.

TRI·COUNTY:
RECYCLING
POMEIOY, OHIO •

We Buy AI .
Non Ferrous ·;
Metals, "
Plastics,
Stainless Ste-1.
HOURS
.
..
7 Days A Week ·. · . · I
9 a.m.- 7 p.m . .. ·· ·

992-5114 ·.':
lf Jd, 5,1, 7 &amp; 143

I,

.• •

On :riM lhr· Pass . . '·
- ~- 26 - 1 mD.

50 DIFFERENT WOOD
&amp; COAL STOVES,
INSERTS &amp; FURNACES

APPAlACHIAN
WOOD STOVES

.. Carplntw, OM. Off 143

691-6121

..
SWEEPER REPAIR;·, .: .·
All MAlES AND· .· ; . ' : ·.·.
MODELS

.· :·:: · ·: ... ,

MAlliN'S . . . ..·
FURNITURE .· · ·
and 11011'..', ;, L::,•.
\·

'

222 East . .:; ·~ ::: i~:,
N.IIOY, 01. ,, :_'&gt; ~

"1·6172 · · · o;
6-s-· ...,,.-

. ..

~.·

.,,

'

------·--1:1--~------------------------\

�•

..

Tuesday. Oc:tobar 31. 1989 ..

Pomarov- Middleport. Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

45

42 Mobile Home.

tor Rent

T• stllay,

Wrtpt

Furnished
Room•

.

~

n. Dally Slntinei-Ftge

71 Autoe tor Sail

A
GFCASH ·
ISI!IIER

........

31,1989

Television
Viewing

[ =~:!

TUES., OCT· 31

•

0 lear
rang~ iettera of the
four ocromblod - d• below

•

......

Ci) . . . Of Mulct• .....
III " - When plana IWI
to go wrong during 1
I

1VE DECIDED TO
DEVOTE TilE REST OF

OFSiliF

.~ ,.1L;:-0;-IS: :. ,I.:. T I'- -'~i

Clly.
(!) 11a11t Lu=.,Hour

W£LL,MA'I'8E I(OLI
SHOULD TALK IT OVER
Wl'fll 't'OUR CAT, AND .
SEE WHAT t-IE Tf-IIIIIK5..

M'{ LIFE TO MAKING
M'&lt; 1106 lli\PPV..

IW.::'l-1.
Ill CfllriH

In Cllllgl

OJent

1:01 w ..IIMIV

31 Homes for Sale

Help wantect

Donlol Alllliotont -

lmmodlolofr lor • poo-lo!-=

;:.;:;:::::-:=-:-:::::-=-:::-:-1

...IMJ Gflontod P!OctiCO.
- . . - to P. 0. 8o1 tl, Point
Ptoooont, WV 25!5110.
Dool_. for lforol ohop. ......
H alitt to work 110m1 . .nndl
ond oil holldop. Want pot! 111M
and tuM dme emDioYe-. El·
~ .,-ferNe~ 'buf wiM conakHr ottws. Send rMUrM to
Tho Dolly llo,.lnot, 8ol 72t II,
Pom.roy, Ohkt 45711.
EARN IIC»&gt;E Y Aoldl"9 Boob!
130,oOoiJr . . . _ jlolontlol

v.

:-JF-:'::-:-:--::--:----:-1

Dotollo. (11 - - Elll.
mlllod puppiH. ql2.
CoM 1!4-llf- EARN IIONEY ~ TV!

::,o.

150.-yr. , _

.......

· Dotllllo {11 IIOS-&amp;I7-t
4112.

Elll. K·

F n o t - - 1 - - , _ F_. ltolo-c:ivH4 on purn IIIIo - . .lobo! NOW hirinG thlo '""'
lull"
ond lncludod, 304- 510,271 to $14,II,, lmmodlolo
11711-41N.
Oponlngol Coli t-315--m-eoea
FIM to aood homo, Colllo El&lt;UF2T41A for c""'"t llotltlg.
lllbood.lt!l4315421.
otyllot wltlt Ohio Ucollond 1'11411110 to P.O. 8ol 122.
Ful bloocltcf cln acal81a polnl MiddltpOrt, OH.

........ l&amp;au: t 01111. To goad
........ 114-112-1107.

..__
---. - . .
1

~~

collco

=:.".J.,,..._.2016::;:

M-4111 . Allo I lnCNIIh old kittiM.

" " " ' - - d o l l t o ......
111- eoour lpOnlol

Pll, - lleclcal
lor 1 100 bod FNS-lCF loci!My,
••per'-tcad ,.conunencled bul
not required. EKDIII .... benlllll,
oppty II Scenic Hlllo Nurtl"9
Cllltor, At. 2 Box a2 lldwoll,

A1cardl Cllttc ,_...,

w.-.

--ion.
-lot•

6

T-.

-

.... 8poJod - . hod
d ...... I ,..,. old. 114--1122331.
sewn Swk. oid IMIJ)Illa 1• .,.,.
pori tfck.l1.._
1410.

,

154 an hourkrool

Lobon . .-

wort. eon...t 1n poroon, ....,,.
A"'!, lnlond Producto, Joc-

OH 45614.

MI . . . . lhlp _._

IDr 1

MFVice

oro
•• Join our ttam. lm-

pro11 •

_..,.

Llldl

-tnt lor .I .,.,.
penon. Commlulon.

--lor

or_,. !llttotJ to:

Bond -

Lost &amp; Found
aox
371,
-==::'"'::'=~~=-:::-:::-::: :::""'::'"'::"'"::::111::h.~OH:::.:.:4::!!ee::2:...____,_
a.., 1111.,flM- collar,
whllo opoto
molo! g1NII"9
ne~r oard co. Appro.. ,. tin. per

...n,..

9t1 =PP rDell,104471-l001.

Yerd Salt

7

01143220.
Tob ovon onlero. Col C"""
11..-..317 or a. 114-441-

-

ClliQJbiM ..
&amp; VIcinity
AUYMI--IIoPolllln

....... 'GEADLN:

2:00 ,....

tho ..., ............... to

week. Send name I ph. no. to
4711 Alvoroldo Dr. Colo,

NO.

,.=t.~-~-t:
...
Pomeroy,

-

polontill.

Dotollo. (11 IIOS-&amp;IT.eOGO Elll. y.
101 •.

Situation

olflcll .....
304-372-t358.
Hotflold'o
lllld
-·-·
~-. Aoln or ohlnl. .lo"o ......tod In boby olttlna In my
Olt Shop. Swr•a.-. top. own ttom.. Call 614:.882-1110 or
knlck-lulocko.
)llno
u.oo, 114-ta.esa.
Oct. Room ond boord lor - l y.
A-ble.I14-H2-1.
- .2nd,3rd. Roln .. ohtno.
We . . . for oldot1y ond ltlnAolpll · lrom dlcoDoodln our """"'· 21 ,..,.
Hoi,.-. -1:00-4;00.
Laglon
SoiMlhlng far &amp;iiXWOUe.
npOrlonco. LPN on low
Income homo. Col111(.m-t~73
...
.,
7:00
p.ln. tor ..... lnfot'.
Public Sale
8
'""ion.

a .oo.
..-..&amp;2.

WIU do houoo ~!"""'Y
lhoppl"l,
-~·
hly or
--~~4~1317.

. . . . . . . . . In .................

lor-··

Cl•lo•= gift~.!:,!'-.=,""'•
15
1

.....,., ..,.,.
•
1or ...,.... An -

-mr
-

"~~

· Not

Brick 3111', 2 both, 2100 oql. pool, holt .....
city aCfl ~~II, 114-24s.a?l.

or A.,.: 211r, houoo,

For -

•

114-44~-a~&amp; .

Kr•

122,000. Front lot 1.4
.old
=~ Col Coltoct, 1-614No - . , po,..... or ctosl"9
COitl to ueurne toen on very

Wauted to Buy

SChools &amp;
lnst ctl
ru on

Price Nduaed, 3llr: 1 112 bllth,
utll~y """"• goo hoot, &amp; CA,
locotod opproa-oly 2 milo
Wnt, from Holzer, on !lt. AI. 35.
I1C..t48-0071.

2 ~m
All( IIHofntl .,._,.,, 814-1192-61101.

114-441-7444.

Rentll Ploparty. HouH and 4
mol&gt;lll hOmoo. Will rotum In·

v•tment In kMI'I. Excellent
opportunHy. SOUIZ-2460.
Unlumlohod houoo, !lbr, Rodney
VI-II. 5250._Aofo-, 61(.
441~11 1fler

7p.m.

32 Mobile Homes

for Sale

w. • · 2 br., 1 both, prl••••
enclOMd patio. ao. to
35

grocooy 11- &amp; ohopplng con-

fer,

wlter,

MWM'..L . .

WlltaHn .... ot.
tor lp.m. 114-Z4HZI1.
.. Quoit Crook .......

*-

1117 Ctatf:on 14x72, 21nJ oom,
fiNpllce, exc cond, take over

,.,_.,.. 30W75-7141.

11187 llborty 14170. Goo holt, 3
bodroomo. Spoclouo. Oon1
hav. to rnova. $14,500. 114-317·
7744.

NMd a Haw or IJMd llobi..
Homo? Short limo on tho - ?

Smol Down Poymont? Poot
Crodlt HIOiory • P...-? Wo
con hotp. 1 . - - 1 2.

NMcf a New or UMd MottO.
Homo? Short tlmo on the Jab?

Smon POJmom? Put
credft hillory! !"*em? W.
con hotp. 1 - 1 2 .

For-: Fumlohod 2 1 3""""
a~lla. Clun •..-hablll for
ono. No All I .poolt ,..
quiNid. at4-441-1111. 1

Fum. EHicllncy $145 ut!IHIH

DCI. Shirt bath. 107 Second,
Calllpollt, &amp;14 Ul 4418 after
&amp;p.m •
Fumlahtd IPirtment,' 1br, 1195.
Utllhlll pd. Shiro it&gt;-'th. 701
Fourth O.lipollo, Itt 1114416

afler7p.m.
Fumlohod opt. tbr, 5200, utNHH
pold. 701 F011rth Glllpo!ll, 114446-4411 aft• 7p.m. •
G - living. 1 ond 2 bod"'""I oponmlnll rit VIII""

Manor

ancf

Alvertk1e

Aportmonto In lllddllport. From
''"· F""" lloptornbor tilth to
No....., tilth, 11ro1 month'""'
lroo to • - who .,.Illy. Coli
114-et2-7787. EOH.
Lorgo 2 bo*- t op4. In
Pomeror close to achool lnd
ot-.
UOO/montl\
5150
.
. _ ...-ulnd.ltl-w.l-31211.
..,.....
~
~- •· ·~ pt. • I
, _1'I Nm - •
• r, hut,
periling, nolll !o 11~';'.7•

~::.bfe tor one lldu~. 11

Woocland. 132 acrn, $35,000,
At. 7, Hlow EYrlka, C.ll 114- g:,"'=",~.;;.~-s:. t:.'~
~411 aft., 7 p.m.
R.t. Nq lid. 114 441 OU4.

'ttL

Dthate Mlrance, Hvtng room,
bod-.,
kltcho~,
both
- r , ldHI lor 1 poroon.
Lind Wontod: 100 ocno &amp; up. 1!1-441-2102.
lltrM~, vlewa., 1aiQO.

==·

F1nanc1al

21

·
- 10304-t"7~.
buy . ....,,. .
t.-IA,

Buslntll
Opportunity

11 . Help Wlnted

OliO VALLEY PUILIS.- CO.
,_,mondo 11101 ,... do
IMIIIMII with peopll you lutOW,
onciNOrtollnd_,.,

t-.. --,... . .

SQuon- of hoy 5t .OO. 30411&amp;-11571.
Strow 5t.IO coli oftor 4,00, 3041714211.

lklllohonFumlhn

10 ..... corpttl &amp; pod lrw!oMod,

154111. While._.... toll. 114441-7444.

Transportat1on

CENtoNAAY
RENT TO · OWN. 4 dnwor

. . ...,, chnt • • wk., bunk
bod comploto • 510 wiL Swlvool
rockw • Q wll. dlnotto Ill, 4
cllolro • 57.50 wk. Roell- • 5I
w!l. LOW CASH PRICES

10%

off for

Clah.

Credit

tenna

avall•ble. Open Mon ..s.l. I •.m.
to 6 p.m., s.... 12 noon to I p.m.
~~~

. ...... u.

w..tw 112si dry.,. s1so;

ntrlgeratots l150i rangtt$150;
diah waahera 540; hNtlng

oto- "0:1 Dolbort Swllhli,
Uood Apol oncooL Porch St.

K.onougo, •14-441-T471.

Whlo gi~'o Copeoln bod . .h
droworo undornMih, aood
·Chrietmae gift, tM-77S-11A •f.
tor 1:00 Pll.

eubolrda,

qultt..

orientll.

10 I. Melli llltellle dtlh whh 21
Inch · - 1-lolon.
Nc. cond.
114-ltut4t
.

181,000 ITU Lonnox - r
flow ol furnace and 250 piton
oil llnlt. Exc- coroiH'--.
Cool iron botlltull. 114-441-Ui'3.

=-=~--:--~
1m BonniYilte. 4 P!IIP8, outo, AC~tlft AM:Ai

......
:.;:.;:.::.;;:.....,_ _ _ _ 1- ......
· 1

56

s-,

· Toblo

ION, Drtl PI 1111. llue Ridge
304 612 3131.

lla Pick·up lold ...IIOMCI Mk
a nlckOI'J,. llrowaocl. cHy, 1541.
Coumoy,
QO.
E-o
Donolliodlc•- 114

/1111011 I All Anti I llhlrloy
........ !GW71-1421.

'

....,..

---· ...

" -

• AI • - · Colt .._Up

..........

pu-

3moloAKCio--

dr. nlco cor, 114 441 8340.
1te0 ChoYy CopriGO ' Clllolc,
lllaadut, lowml~ ....... --.... . -

Extro_llloo. Flrot - •·
.. u. 114-117-1!111.

tu•

Old

lwk.

=: ...~..-tr.
Na ....

••oo - ·
-s~•oa.c-. aao -h. . 114--

1111
C«Mr1'1lponlll,
StOO; 21

AKC Gorrnon lhlphord .114441-1221.

·

AKC Aoo'od Colllo Pu,._ Slblo,
lwko. ol'd, 5200; 114-251-1121,

..."

AK.c

mnuge.

...,..,._. a.a1o ouppl11
-

._ llod" 1
..
otock, 304-

l'UIII.
AKC twglotorod Shih-Tzu, hod
lhota.wormedJ...hMHh 1..,.,.,..
tM,304-171-21.._
lllby Cockotloll ·(I) vory tomo.
$31-. 114 •e'l20.

Block -~~ 4

old ~•-·

yr
mon,~ notUrod,
"""yod,
-812-3172.

Chaw Chow Pu.... I . .u
old, S10G. 114..-.7710.

Draaonw;tnd c.aerr

KlnMI.

Porllon,
lilml11
ond
Hlmolo,.., kltlorto. CltCMNI'Yice. 814 Ul SIU 1flllr 7
pm

· ·
Fllh To,., 2411 Jockoon Avo.
Point - n l , 304-tl~-20~~3, 10
•nd

10

gol

M - 1 - P_....... 1
w!lo. old. 171.00. 114-742-3110.

G""'"' ond lupp!y ~
Groomlna. Allbroldi. All
Pol Food 11oo11r.
tlo
w.bb. c.JIIU Ul 0231.

--r

11181 AIIC Eoglo Wogon.lloiHod,

• 'Mill.

---11-.Colt
Clltllt

-

_,Got

- " 114-112·7110.

'

. f.£ 'IJAS A

a

...a

lei of Corrillll Raltyl. .._.._
m4orloovo-oogo.

,:

79

,.'

campers&amp;
Home•

•

1112 Oldt Cut.... 1""'Broughel• laldH. 114 41WIOt.
11181- 1,000-8 ...ounroof~lly

Slldl.ln oornpor •· Good oond.
11100, aleo Itt. topper, walk·ln,

,.,.".!. !'~......

$400. 11~.

5017 OYinlng: 114.Z4M111.
201
glne, •uo wllh ~nuadrh11e, elr,
PW, T-T- 304-tl'll-

,.., eo._ z-a.

v.a ...

=-·til,

1113
ChoYI!to
4
.,.....
lr&amp;i&amp;itlallan 1100. 1114 HOnda
XA 1001100. SGo4 - 2221.
,.., Ford Eoort S711; 1115
!!&lt;odtiO , . _ - . 1112
Cltriy
I ton 1211. boll bod · lup ta11g111 UNO. 114-211 1122.

"'"' ....

-.

11181 Ford -

.... 4 - ·

_,.~-·
MW tlr!'.!..- · lip
_.

dillon, llrir VI. 111711. Co 114-

1112:;1411D;:;::.::•:.:•:.:,•4;..:tla=-6::.71:.;::1._ _ I
::
t•l - - - .......~
- ..-•.!.'!"'.

=.

-loll.

81

Home
Improvements

·'

IAIEIIENT
WATEAPAOOFINO
UncondltloMI IIIII,. IWUM-

"

:j.,
.

11W37-o4R, a, or nflltl. A o

·•

gerel•••~n•nt '·,

-rprooflng,

"I

Fony TIM Trimming, ot'""P

:104-67$-1331.

o

,
,.

.

Aon'o TV 8orYtco, -'o!lzlna
In ZlnHh oleo - I n a ltiOil
olhor
· - ..,al,._
collo,eome - aDDIInoe
WV
304-171-HII Ohio 614-4412414.

1•

BARNEY
WE'LL
GIT RID OF

THAT NEISTY
OL' COC.DJ!

304•'71 4410

1114
4 · __,
lrlitanT• •~ n. onty
14,000
mllea,

82

'

Fourth onc1 Pint
Gill....... Ohio

.........,...
lloclltol~

.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

_ _.lot
or _.,._ , ,..

ld: Rill* ••Ia plrly IO
tllll lOW -hly

304-671-1711.

J&amp;JWotw_l_

. . . . Uflllll

=:_•tema. ...... c.H 11~

Cert••
..- ~;Coli
Mr-101..-.
....

RIR _ _ _ ..._
• - wollo. lmmodilto-1,000 or

:=.-

dolfvwr. CoN 304- "

• • • ,Mil...................

...

.

-----~ ~~~:z..~~~~
~---Col
":
_.,
... ..,. u..........ry
•
- · 1,000 to 4,000 ..,....,, ..

_.....

-

_

dopooH. No
10 EHI • .,
114-423-6211.

.....
-,_ ....
--··"-·=
1111111:

"I've ltnrd ol ambulance-chulng lawyers,
but dentlsta giving out buslneea carda?l"
·I

n........, .......

...... irl'

?

17

-·1__ .,...

..·i;·~.:;t''i;A'-~i;;-o;:

I'Gf -_ _
1-_
Cllotr.
....... u,lt I lwlna - &lt;',,
_
....,·~ !!flnllrt-,_14_

~lWia~w.-~--·--

Tlto
In
lvmM~n ,.
1101 der l:tO. 114- • ; I I llrlo'l. Coli 304-t7t-4t14
loll' -

.

I

- .

1M

. . ..- .

lir""" ---

J

I

~~

~

-~

AQUAJIIUI
»fell. 11) Yol/tt
c i t - lor .. C; Ill will be gr8llly ~
ha,.:edloday " you -llotlt your fnlll.
Oot.I1.1ect and your lntultlon. Elch w!M conolrvctiwly IUPplemenlthe otltlr.
An extmnely ICitve cyGie could be ln PIICII I .... 20 M ohiO) Thlre'a 1
the oftlng lor you In the year altMd. Lola polllblllly that IOmtllhtng wtll d...lop
or triMII, , _ l n l - lftd ,_ ac- today·- to lllllllllorl- -ad
quaint- will keep you hoping In en- out very .... tar you preJIOt!lfy. Tlte
procldu,. you UIICI 111111 will
lOYeblll...,._
'
ICOLIO COoL lUlu:. II) AIIIUIIMI -your beat kllll- - ·
the prlnd.,.r role In 111J Joint wnture In ARIII Clllnllt 11oMIII1S) 8orttng out
whlclt you're lnvot..cl todey, b1cau11 compllc8tlonl "" othn " your liong
you'M be r811ter lnfllotloua U the!Mder, lUll today. "'-'tim 01 Mltlll• the
Ill' IIIII) II l)lrllolpe1on n dleorga- protlllrnlere "'*-. -.1 o r - ·
lc, you'l up . lht right
nr.d. ~-to
you•• 11nc1 n. Ttte AllrO-GrePit . . . - ..
MatcttiMII• inlllntly ,.,.111 wltlclt TAUIIUI CApri 20 .. .. 20) IWiona .

look""-

,,

f-

r:-c-;a
•o

otllll8.

011

agetn•'

atcll Tonight

Mun-.

aan&amp;tage

....... e
•

(1) (I)

(I)

2+

Poa

3+

P-

INT

AUpoa

p-

Openlq lead: • 9
1be ace and awltclled ID a cltdl. Wltea ·.
Welt took tile - .... tetw IIIII lite ·
suit, det:lanr - Eut's jlck wllllltla .
kiDI, !eel lt-Q of bearts
wltb ibe - in dummy), ud ,..
.:
tbe el&amp;ltt of spades lbroulllt But.
"·

(= .

tbat suit bebaved, declarer u ··
tri~ lor a top IICGI'e.
Four bearta would baw ttltDtt lluift.
A club would be won by Welt wltb tbe
ace, and tbe queea of d!ammds INlet •
'IIOtlld quieldy lift tbe clefellderi tbe
lint four tricb.
•·

•

2 One and
only
3 Ire.
13 VIewpoint 4 Hellos
t4 Golf
5 Ready
score
8 Exhausted
15 Pagoda
7 Mauna -

18 Criticize
of Ubya
_11 BuMdlng I Old
24 inactive
25 Minnelli
wing
saiHng
film
11 Respond
vessel
:Z1 Caddoan 12 Have pity 28 Calil. cily
Indian
17 Expert
27 Acrimo·
nlous
22 English 20 French
21
Court
river
river
31 I lold
23 Slmba
23 Fasting
24 Horrify
period
27 Signified
....,.,~,....,.,....,..,..
21 Narrative
210btalned
· 30 Arab
garment
31"German·
style cake

Ill • G2l

(!) ..,._ Side Of lpDr1l
Holt Jim Valvano lntervllwa
two celebrity lpolll guests
eaclt week .. - •• uniqul
1nd humorous sponlng

32 Exclusive
sel
31Moslem
pi'Byer call
37 Tuesday in

Hollywood

libllly you be thelllrd dog today
wlto II eblll to 111111 aut good dellllor
ot11111.
•••you to - • 1
mieldle .... who llrtnga two lltotlot•to- - "" • prolllltble .....,_,
•

l~.e=!:lQ

•1

,,

'·

·.

..
. ..

'

·...

......
....

-"
;

··.

medium
45 Teudency

DAILYCRYPI'OQUOTES-Here'sltew to work it:

1013t

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
'•

..... ..
•

•

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fD11111tion of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diflerenl.

..
--~·

caYPTOQUOTI! .
l ..SI

IJ •

.

h

...

... '

31"Srnoke"
heroine
40 Put up with
42 Fragrant
wood
43 Brazilian
saaport '
... Recording

Ar1tlrlcl
mlkn
111 - . t on
III
·-·
• c-.,
lht . . . ol world power.

~~&gt;c~··f

"'*..

..

scuttle

CVPAXJ

,,.ih_;..........

'·

31 Forty winks
41 "Cheers"

YVT

"UMC'P

CMP
KJ

t..y

N U

WMMX"·•

PM

"KJ
"KJ

XNRY " ;

KAP

TYJ

NCUJWJCUJCP _. " -

.·

CMP

(1 :00)

a) lltn'a apoa-.

•,

35 •L.A. - •

. - irorn around lite
world. j0:30)

eo AneniO 11111 '' :001
OMDMVIIII
9 Nwaltart
0 ..... - Milling Hotn
SinO.
• \'Ill Co! .. ,

"•

33Cap
34 Coal

Go

•liD New Twtllgltt z-

11:00()).._

Eat

10 Respect
11 Opposite

OE....... 10:05 Cl) MOVIE:
HettM(2:00)
10:301I1Forum

a

..-..c-. a
I

••

IIINewl

lfll 8111111end Son A
hospital specialist Insists on

rnen:lll contlllll.
L U I - »Aug. II) n you don't rock
lht 11oM iCihylllfngloould I waY
of -'&lt;inti out to ,our ulllnt8tllldvmtagl. LM rwt nlltnl
-llllltlld OltMkingiiWIIIIkll•.
¥11110
I JL lit Do not be
llnld of lmoMnllntl today that OCJntpMttMt' llillt .. tla. Chill,.,... will
, _ allllmullllng -.ct on ,our Intel· llalllld IIIII . . ghle you Illidge tN8I

C.._.

to draw up a will . (1 :00)

(!) A - ' a ClftiUiy Follow
Amorlcan· Soviel relltlons
since t1tt 1917 Rualian
Revolution. (1 :00)

signa are romantically perfect lor you . with whom you'll be eaoclallng today
Mall $2 to Malcltrnalter, c/o thlo ,_... oould provide you wtth wortltwhllepaper, P.O. Box 91428, Clewel-, OH andlnformltlon. Beagoodlla-. bl44 101·3428.
caute what y&lt;&gt;U are told Clt'l be uHI·
8AGITTARIUSCNov. D-Deo. 21) You matelyused1oyouradvantege.
are likely to be luckier In commerclller· U... CIIIJ 21""- 20) This I• a
rangernenls today than you will be In good d~=:," to experiment wtth the
tlloee wltlclt ttre of a purely ooc1.r na- , _ or
t. II you've _ , conald·
lure. Malte hay today and play erlng type of unlq,. prOiett, ll:s .
tomorrow.
lirnl to begin to teet the weters.
·
CAI'RICOM Cllec. J2..lln. 11) II your_ CANCIII (.liM 21......, II) Progresclub or organiZation pega you to be part II.. lA* lor a progr., you want to lnl·
01 a commlll• or 1 specllllalgnntertt ttate can- be found In t1tt ranka of Pit'·
today. don't try to dodge n. 11 could tum oona you k,_ IOCielly. Look tar lid In
out to be IOmtllhlng uniquely lltll rat1t1r tlt8n 1r11011g your c:omodvant~a.

n·s

Mlchul and Hope -

time

~~~~~~4-------~--~ Q ~~

Conor'o Pt11111blng
ondHootlng

LICIRJid Ill¢ I f . Alcllnour '

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

~ DAY

Plumlllng &amp;
Heating

Aool.,.lll or
wiring, -

a ,..... cu ,....,.,.
•..DIIIolll
.._.10
.... ......

YALLER PILLS
THREE TIMES

as

I

!t=U~!ftl

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Oft

JUST TAKE
TWO OF THESE

Dovto
llow·Yoc
S.VIco,
0 I ~ Creek Ad. Pitta, 1Upo

1114 Dot- I I - 14,100.

41 Hou... tor Rent

MLIM.

-a

Nllhvllll Now
1:30 tD 8 Cll Cltiekert Soup Bea
lhlt she mUtJI not
conlln,. to live with Jackie.
(0:30) Q
10:00 (J) 700 Club- Pit
Ra•artton
• C1l
Mldulgttt ca~~or
08'1011 la pursued by an
oiJHsai¥8 1111iae Intent on
killing_
(!) • her-JJJ:c•l:
(I)
_ Qiliielltlna
..lllil!ll .

" _., .........

111-31

lloplc T.,k Purnolng_5110, Golllo
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISCS
Jacban, OH 1...,_537-1521. '

•

•

llolo!y or ooblo tool . . . . .
-Pumpi02.1AIM
wotlo oomplolod ...,,
and aervU. 301o-

:::•at.::"....... -~~~- .,. .

Mullcel
lnltruments

u..r

(2:00)

Ia. L.oMI EefM• ~ I furnw.d.
FriO ... 'Coli 1·

...,..~~,coli

· former coer:lt. (R) D
~.any tung

0 MDVII!: T- Or T -

::,-:~~~.·.c.~ .:too~

14,100. 304-tll-7101.

ANTIMACA'=ISAR. • ·

I!..,..._

comj)8tltion- 10:301 Q
III (J) Anlllleln
FollOW lht ltory of the
clollw;ttle of World war 1.
(1 :00) I
lfll 8 . Wolf Tony aats out
· to prove the Innocence of his.

OF Nor HAVINS ANY
TV 10 W&lt;l\.10-1.

AND KNI I lEVAN

- ·. 't.'

Hat-n horror

THA"rt:&gt; WHAT C'.CWE6

'SHEU.SO 500 IIALNUT6

N_,.
••

ornament I Neighbor

01

Till Night Gillftple and Virgil
invutiglte the death ol a
beauty conteatant. (1:00) Q
@ Top II- lloalng
(!) 8 (I) Flouanae The
Connor 11mlly competes in a

Services

...

pow-. opotto•
cond. -75" .., ~: t-211-

AII/FII - - . . 12,110. 304-

For A- 2 lor, - . 1u1r 1111111, now lilt- on 111. T R4. ~ DH. I• aLAr

Converllllon 1.-CIIi Cll MOVIE: Till Oltoet And
Mr. Clllcl&lt;ert (2:00)
1:30 (!) 8 (J) Till WWOt"'--"""'YMn
Kevin will have to delv hia
mom 10 play contact f...-.

S/l~lo'i'lt I ChaM
1:00. (1) . 1111 in Till -

Well

8 Dross

No
Accounting For Murder

POOR 80¥ 'iiAU, 104-671Wt
hont end lllanmtnl
good
t .....

-

Munlll.--

(2:00)

0

OI~G·A·LIOO

317-7257.

·"""·
78,000
'"''"'
12.000
114-441-2171.
11181 Oldt ~- 4 oyL No111
motor work. $100. l14-112-t211.

1171-1711.

.. -4-. iiiiGOO .......

Cculllwl . .
.., ...ll.l1t - - 1.

•.•

Soolll

by lHOMAS JOSEPt.t
ACROSS ' DOWN
1 Embrace 1 Talk

01 PrtiMHewa
Ill MOVIE: Olt08t ltory

·••

~~--·Sol of ChiVy truck A - I tua.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

CROSSWORD

goea oft. D
eo MOVIe: llollrlllbln

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP .

AKC - o n Tonlor, - l o 11
..... 5200. 114-211-13154.

uune: ,.,..

,.,

lMMf

balanCI 11tw 1 loeded rifle

lti2MS.

31 HomII for Salt

••u • Ill

~r.

•m llon:wy Zlphur. PS, CA. 2

~-

for

.... TV

tody

2 loogil rollblt - · moil I tm F!-rd, PS. PB, o!r, 11C&gt;0C1
lotnolo; 2 yro old, wilt ""'• .510. runt ...... :104471MOt\ 31)4..5'7WJ11.
a1f
'
·

If, ..... and 4

WII ...,
rtf I ...., lllluty
prklriC:I. 11.
...
.~~~.

..

F l _ o n _ l l r· • bod ~10, trucli - · · 171; 114-

~""' m1111, a,Ttl . .._ ....... 4,000

Pell for Sale

r::=- ,..;:.,"'D...a:: !!:;:.•..,.m"
BANDSA~

r'\~'

(PG 131 (2:00)

&amp;
Acce110rles

m.

Merchandise

c...

· playitt&amp; a pme coatract in three notramp or Itt lour of a major wltb a H
fit. bow do you decide? l11111811y tbe S.3
major Ia 111perlor, pll'tiA!Ullrly If at
leut oae band baa lltorbtea, but ez.

'L..

,'

polntlngo, top, ., ,,..1,. '"'"'' lllllllful, -klod lho~ol pick
c•ll collect 30u 25-3271, or of lhter, cr..m 1e1na1e blueh
304-&amp;23-1854.
colt. lronlon, 114-1132_._

54 Miscellaneous

-- :

tAJtl
+U71

+.usu

2

'·

'""'

Hour1: M.T.W.10:00Ltn. toi:OO
p.m., ~:11:00 to 1:00 p.m.
114..82•
Top Cooh pold. Old lurnM,..

PJ'.YMff'IT.

.

board 120HP, .......

Wbetl lbere il a chOice between

!Ill Jeoplnlyl Q

.7,

• .. 12
tQI

ceptlODS do exist. Ia today'l deal,
Soutb made a two-diamond respo111e;
wbett opeaer Nortb railed tq three dia·
I!IOIIdl. Soutb ltad to mate 'a cboice.
Delplte tbe lti'OIIJ ,_tbillty !bat
Nortb ftli&amp;btltaw ttborlllea in a black
suit, Soutb elected to bid three no8 (1) as~ Mattock
trump. He iboulbl able tricb might
defends a Hollywood mo.le
.be easier than II wltb bla campletely
director framed lor murder.
ltalaaced ltattd.
PtoflntaMI
Wltb a 1101'11111 club lead. declarer
would
ltave a Httle wart to do. He
~t.!n~Of · could mate
bll CGDtnet lD a variety of
Beach. CA·Mixed Pairs
ways,
but
it·would
probably be beat to
CompeiiiiDn 6 Men's
just lead tbe jac:lt of 8padel out of bil
(!) • (I) Who'l Tlte lion?
haDd and bope that tbe oppoaeats
ArtQIIa ltU 1n opportunity to ·
~ pve blm 1111 ttltttlt trick in clubs.
self har advertloing agency.
Tbe ttCtttal opalD&amp; lead of tbe apacle
~~
BiologillS try to
able providwl decli~W wltb a real bodecode hulltlna' three
nama. It wu eovend wltb dummy's
billlort·leltlr ClertlliC
q
- and Eut'l klDI. and wu taken
ntMIIQ8. (1:00) Q
by
tbe
- · Declarer boldly led a
GJ 811111-111 A
dlamc.d 1D cltlmmy'e kiD1- Eut child's II'- hangS In t1tt

ALLEY OOP

dHion. 114-112.- tltloaw 7p.ot.

53
Antlquel
'"" young doge.
==--....:,;:..:;,:,::.::,::~=..., ~ IIUnUrlg dog
Buy or 1111. Alvorlno Am'-;
1124 E. lllln St-. p _ , ,

Y~

e G2l

EAST
tKIGI

WI!ST
tH3

By Jamea JICOby

VldiOCountry

011

11181 tilt. Lint Tnlllr. 1,1110l•t
NP .......,
llotor. A11dr logo lloltlngl 114-

.................

A choice
of games

eo M'A'S'H
OCrouflN
aJ) Nltltt Court
iaTopC.rd
7:35 Cl) Sanford Son
1:00 (J) MDVII!: NMIII (2:00)

1172 17 lt. lt...,.ft Trf.Hull , ~
- · 121 .... EYinNdo Engine, · 1·
cotn~~~et• IOit. .,.. uphal1tuy.
•
CollltWH-13111• ., 7:00 P.ftl.

~~~~

BRJDGE
01

. . _ _ Seaon In Retriolw
(l)lnteltllhwnwnt Tonight
• (J) UIA Toay

M"NfY TO fll,._t&lt;f

•!

75 Baets &amp; Motor•

- -. WIIIrotumll&gt;wwbuw• In~· ... r •

an1 r1unlly.

Motorcycles

1NS Honda 450 ..,... tiike. ,.
wlheiiMfi only 700 rniiM, 1815. • •
304-111o1n1.

.,

Hay&amp;Greln

l.wwilptod tho olforlnt.

,._... P; ;

'·

1111 Yomollo VZ 2~. S750 or
-ollor. l14-441-tl;oo.

Rentals

!NOTICE!

Employment Servtces

Upotoln lumlollod olllcloncy,

Real Estate
wanted

.;

for sale

; ront ""'·

Smoll fum. oultoblo for 1
or 2.114-441433i. i

36

1111 Foni"A•-• Vlnlii •- '.
nlco. taw ml,.. 1
Ford
F...lu, tow lni!Mge. eldrl. ~·
• ..... both prlcod 10 .... 304- '.

•• ·Jo

~--------,

(1) Femlly F (!) . . . . La. .te . .lllbell

_;_--~- . l .TfiOUG-/fT T/1f ~
t'~AGf pf~IOp"WAS' i
Tiff TIMf you ..fPl'NT';_
PfAYI N6 fO, "Ttlf

IIIII III

UNSCRAMBlE FOR
AN SWER

Sign M8ll in government building: The Government

7:30 e

..

L

Loves The Onea Who Grease 11'1 llen, But Hiltory
Flernet)1bels The Ones Who-~I:!IFT themt•

7:05 Cl) JefleriOftl

,

I(

SCIAM LI1'S ANSW115

Eaclt Other

FRANK AND ERNEST

PRINT NUMBERED

Defile - Trick - Laugh - Misery - SHIFT ·

l!la0 Mllntl VIce Made For
•

11181 Tofolo 4x4 P.U. 171111j
1171Joop c.............. o1r - · 514118; 1111 Chill P.U.
41,000 mlloo 2 wll. 14711; I&amp;D
............. 110, 4 Ill. ol
- - lf.-...u or 114-

74

llpollo, ""

54011. .... $100. :1114-17H049.
YI'AA FURNITURE
AT. 1~1..4111LEI

on

lluncfry roam, 011rpeted, •lr
cond, tr• trnh pklkyp, 3Q4..
773-6107.
·
One
-oorn
tumlhood
uDotolro oot, w/drylr hook"'P·
104-171-17M.

lolv"" •

Inc. Good
uood opptloncoo, T.'v. 1110. Opon
8 o.m. to I p.m. llon.-811. 614441-1111_!1, 127 3rd. Avo. 011-

Counly Apptlonco

441-11727.
Aportmont lor ront, · :104-&amp;i's2218.

end aot ono ...,.

t1~

IUJ:
bur·
nod l'ono Trocloro or Equip114-441-2414
1-5

64

eo
Court Q
0 MDftiVIIIII

2324.

A

Ie
In

MecHei/Leltrer

· · · · - - (1 :00)

11181 ChoYY S10 1 - , PS, P8,
NC, '154 Chilly 110. 304-171- ·

no

s..,. KenmOf'll portable dlafl.
...n.r lor aaJe. Like MW. 114-

.!1

•

.

(J)

•or:.lri..•Nii'

••«

.175-2571.

e

III

11181 ChoYY ConvortiOn Vln •
Good -ltlo!l 113500, Coli 304- '
1714121,
4:30 p.m.
1114 Oodgo lllnl Yon, .... ' •
- · priOo roducod, 114-441-

ond

provldld. 5218/ma. ...,, 114-

OCCIII!Ing oppllciotlono for
opto,
oquol hoiillng~
...ny,
poy fui!IICUrlty
dO
.........

......, to luy: ttaue. on Y.A or
O.lllpollo

Sod,..

lind • w11. old " " " MCh. C.. 11 4-MNhl.

roll corpol 54 o

Duollx. Eoch ooldo, tivlr19room,
PicKENS FURNITURE
dining room, .. kltchoriL. Dlth. 2
NowiUood
b o d - ......... .... lllcf.
HHotD&amp;U,._II'tolooldd. lumllhlng. 1/1 MI.
d'"""". 5175 ond 51~. Ape. 1 Jorrlcho
Rd. Pl. PI_,., 'WV,
1543-111113.
·bedroOm, llvlnoroom, khchen,
coii:IOW71-1450.
Comer
Cote
anct
Ttllrd,
beth.
1871 Bayview 14xta, 2br, owner
will consider financing. 11 4-3~ llldflloort. $150. Apt. 1 bod·
SWAIN
roam, llvlngroomt.. kllch•n, beth. AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
21121.
PD~Mroy; 312 E. zml. 5110. C.H
Olivo St., Ollllpotlo. Now I Uood
114-H2-2ol03. Hay• A•l Eatat• lumhure, hut.,. Wnlem &amp;
or11....a-mo.
·
Worll-o.lt4-4~tlt.

Porte.

...-.. . .

tr•ah

,,._ 18 Wanted to Do

114-742-2455.

I

In

b12corpol,~;

11171 Qrondbr.... 14:~ bodroom, 2 ICtlla land.
. 114-

Rtf. No. •

IW
tl1o .....,.
or
_,.., -....
__
NIIIng.

Wo- to

'
apertment, tlrtt floor.

A~. 2 - - living room,
d•nlno room, beth, doWnttal,..
38 N. 2nd lt., lllddltPort. 5110.

ond '""11~742•
h&gt;ld
Ill -Phont

~)§

2 bedroom

y•rd &amp; up; 1101lohand Fumthn

===·~l:.l:l.'l'f."·

......
......-::4":'::.

Polm Pluo """ hn
Took, 304-t71-4014.

2T11 EOH.

Oulltl
liN tt40 qul!to. Any conciMion.
Cooh Polll. Col 114-112-5157 or
114-IG-2411.

=

For Solo: I mo. old Coft out of
Quodor H!lrw 11-. II , _
tod coli 114-2M-t2tO oftor Sp.JW.

tbr. unfUrrtlohod lp4. &amp;
ro~lg. ne poto, St711rno wotor
lnclu.d od 5t001dtp. 114-4413817.

•Pta. for rent. car..
Nlco -lng,' loundrY
locllltilo onllobil. CoU 114-ilt:l'

.

I.,,.....
6

Ill WKRP In c-...
o ·tteMen
1:311 Cl) AltltJ Clrlllltlt
7:00()) Our HouM
e(J)PM .....IIM
()) lp a11CIIlllf ·
tD
(I) Current AfWr

oAT, ' '
AIIIFII, ...... olldlnf roor , . :
c:.~ 17,000 Olllto,
.
a,-._......731.

~110.

7110 or 304-72N212.

cooh prico ttl,500. :104-727·

11;.."1;,;;05S=I·: .......,....,....,....,._
Jun11 ..,. with .- wMhout ,;,

-

wnh-dry

ootid.

SOUTHEASTEAII
BUSINESS
COI.LEOE, 121 Jockoon Pilei.

c.n e14 411 1317.

~Colt Lorry un~y

~~.;!, torgo kltc:Nn,

, ... Chev ......... otll4, a.va,

·t -, oh- . . - ,

=-

lorsl::l

...-... _,tilt-

noot, . _.......... locotod, 2
bddloom , _ . llo-, WV.

Keith ---:R::E-:·T"'A"'AIN,.,NOW!,.,,....._

--·

1BA Wllufn. op4. Aongoi I roirig.
pnovldod. Wotor, Hiigo, gor•
bago, pold. Oop. I Rot. 614-4414345.
.
tbr, 5110/mo. pluo dtp. utllhloo
rei.
khchan
W'-t9ve,
a
rtlriaerator, no pete, River View,
238 Flnt Avo. 114-&lt;UI-41211.

-Int.

••100.

-·
HARTFDR;D - I rooms, beth, . . Toto! up.
oloctrlc.
eon....,.
114 No
441 •••
16:!7
proL 4 ..,.., W... Point Ra.d. bo""" UOp.rn. - • 1
,

flroploct, IXC concl,
3541 tftori:OO Pll.

&amp; VIcinity

Auction, Sol, - · .,h 7:00p.m.
11 lc~ Townlhlp FINhouee

uo.

1110 Shorwood P""' t4x70
mobllo homo. 2 bedroom,

Wanted

&amp; Auction

Broadway, Mlddle&amp;MH1. &amp;1 ..112~
11850 up or 114,.12-7754 ottor

Al'&amp;rtment•
torRent

whh bunllloo, 5 _,hi Old,

. . .~.

Middleport

44

3 bodr-, tcitol tiKirlc. On

dill-...

1112·7471.
_
....d _ _ _

EARN IIC»&gt;EY Rolling Boob!

12

3 btd oorn h&lt;&gt;fM llvlngroom,
kltcllln,
both. Complotoly
,. twacU 11 d lMkNI and ouf.
$32,500. Ownor llnoncod, L_,
oroo. 304-581-2462 or 1188-4374.

Flisacad ' For .... : Gad ~~~~·~-~~11~W~71-2~40S~.·­
....,., tww J a•· whlls Mk. Fannal CUb Tnctor CUitlvltora,
~- Doolhaof Pl. 114- P!CM, Dloo &amp; -lnf
or :141-ttU.
114-317·7411.
Au all, el ILiillil aad, llf'lll Jim's Fann lqul~: IFI 11
plckuo tood, $31
Woot Oo!IIDo!lo, 114-441-1777,
141-107 .-114-441-tZM.
Monr Ulld l'onl a llnllt T"'!·
FINwood: Snuned ~ -~· tora
plue oth... New
Lorge
$31
or
Vou
~
K
:_!~.
lloul as. 114 441- or 114- J.n.. Ford, ~
.....
_ ....._p__ '
25112'1
-.
.._
Dtooo. Uolo ...,., Wo bW, 101,
For _ , Lot Cobin, - ....
Sot.
nlghlly, - l y. I1W41J.A4}.
For ..... c-.- lnd - l c John DMre eo, wide frolftll end,
3 "'· hitch. o.c. $1300. 080.
-~
AI RON f1HG·71St
oftor I:IIOP.JW.
EVANS 11111111.
ENTIAPAISES,
Jockoon, OH. t-.637-1121.

.

AGL L 0 y

Noltoobrightteen: ·~aParla
England?• Exall*ltld
teacher: "No, M'l In FIWIC8.•
TMn:'ln8¥irWUgoodat ·-.·

=··t

'11;11' l EilER S IN SQUARES

~~e:=.r;.,

11

.

•

Complele "'• chuck le quolod
...,.1...-Jt.....l
·
.....
..1-.1.--J
·
by !;!ling in IN missing words
..
YO&lt;J d ...lop lrom stop No. 3 below .

IIIIoclr ._....

73 Vanl &amp; 4WD'I

.

•

.-:1.:...;1;-::.,lr-;I_.:.Tir'~

u• •1•1

1:30. C1l 1111 NIC llglttlr Newl
(I) 111 a1J' a' (0:30) .
&lt;D eCilAICNewiQ

TD t lnlornotlonol wlh

T.E

5

.

• AmlrlcM Flag ,.,.

~

-Kinono,

woo;ds.

..

-~~~~. Remon~ 11- lite

&amp;-

lo&lt;~r ~ mple

1:00 (J) tt.dn I And
llaCa R ':!'a
e(J) (!) .(J) • eo

1

11~·7120.

form

10

I!VINING

72 TrUckI tor Sill

IIIAIJA

I 1111. oldldtt- &amp; -

8·

RXNJT.

•,.

CNRMZVT

RYVIQMXP
Y1111r • .,•• c.,ee•••te• THE MAN FLAPS

ABOUf wmt A 8UNOI OF FEATHERS; THE
WOMAN GOES TO WORK sam.V WITH A O.OTH.
- OLIVER.W. HOlMES

,,

..

�10-llw o.ly SI tti11el
r - -.

'

'

Meigs County Eme111ency Medical Services answered eight
calls for assistance on Monday.
At$: 19 a.m., Pomeroy went to Seneca Drive lor Ida Clark who
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy was called at 8: 52 a.m. to Rose Hill lor Bernice
Evans who was dead on arrival. At 9:16a.m., Pomeroy" was
called to Mulberry Hellhts for Edna Cooper, dead on arrival.
At 3:21 p.m., Syracuse went to Bridgeman St. for .Jane
Teaford to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy was called at 3:40 p.m. to Indian Run for Walter
Barber who was taken to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital,
Parkersburg, W.Va.
.
At 6:44p.m., Pomeroy was called to the Country Mobile Home
Park for Della Mohler who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Tuppers Plains was called at 7:08p.m. to State Route 681 lor
Franklin Kidwell who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 8:21 p.m., Syracuse was called to Minersville for Debbie
Utchtleld to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Area
Deaths
Bemire Evans
Bernice Mae Arnold Evans, 84,
Pomeroy, died unexpectedly on
Monday at her residence.
Born July 30, 1~ In Pomeroy,
she was the daughter of the late
Edgar Nelson and Effie Louella
Flnlaw Arnold. She was a graduate of Pomeroy High School. She
was a school teacher and homemaker, attended the Enterprise
United Methodist Church and
was a charter member of the
United Methodist Women.
She Is survived by four daughters and sons-In-law, Jeannine
and John Cunningham, Gallipolis, with whom she resided tor a
number of years; Carol ·and
PbllipOhllnger, Pomeroy; Fran- ·
ces and Donald Hunnel, Pomeroy; Jennifer and Charles Warth.
Pomeroy; two sons and
daughters-In-law, Michael and
Sharlee Evans, Portland; and
Arnold and Margaret Evans,
Palmerston N., New Zealand; a
daughter, Andrea Ownes, Marshall, Mich.; a son, Terry Evans,
Harrisonville; · two brothers,
Rev. Walter Arnold, Holliday,
Fla.; and Samuel Arnold, Syra;
cuse; three sisters. Virginia
Blazewlcz. Pomeroy; Madge
Smith, Holliday, Fla.; and Nancy
Clark, Cleves; 19 grandchildren,
. iO great grandchildren, and
several nieces and nephews.
Preceding Mrs. Evans In death
were her husband, Arthur James
Evans In 1970, a son. James
Arthur Evans, and three broih!~
Ralph, and Epgar

•.iarl,

Services will be Wednesday at
1 p.m. at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Katherine
RIIIIY officiating. Burial will be In
l)le Rock Springs, Cemetery.
Friends may call on Tuesd;~y
. from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to the United
Methodist Cooperative Parish
Food Pantry, 311 Condor St.,
Pomeroy.

•Floor Lamps

S3466

REG. 5129 BRASS

sa

•

STARTING AT

$599'00·

STARTING
AT

$18800

All S11111111111;, &amp; S1t!.tlllS &amp; Fost1:r f1 11JI111UI11 Berhl1nq All On Sal!! Nnw

POINr PLEASANT. WV

:IC.•.

,..,.......

IS NOW SCHEDUUNG PATIENT APPOINTMENTS
EVENING &amp;. M'ltiRDAY H~ AV.All.ABI.E

3

(

,\iii

OF THIRD &amp; OLIVE
GllUPOLIS, OH.

. IOCBAEL B. CARUSLB. DDS OIEDRAJ. D&amp;lma11lT

'

WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
long deadlock on proposals to
raise the federal minimum wage
hils ended with agreement between President Bush and Democrats in Congress on a compromise plan to boost the wage to $4.25
by April, 1991.
.\
The House tentatively scheduled a vote Wednesday on the
plan that would boost the current
$3.35 wage in two Installments.
Democratic leaders hailed the
agreement
as a victory, but they ·
, I
appeared to have yielded to Bush
on several key points.
Labor Secretary Elizabeth
. '· .
Dole went to Capitol Hill to
announce the administration's
acceptance of the plan. ''I'm
"
delighted that we do have an
agreement," she said.
In a statement released at the
White House, Bush said the
package "gives relief to those
TOBOGGAN LADY -Blanche Serasg, rlgbt, a . the Communily 'Action Agllncy lo give to neecty
with the greatest need in our
children. Accepting the toboggans for the agency
realdent at Overbrook Center In Middleport,
work force while at the sa'me
is Sid Edwards, director.
keeps herself busy In her spare time making these
time protects job opportunities
wonderful, warm toboggans which she donated to
for young workers."
.
l
The plan includes a low~r
training wage ftlr new workers
age 16 to· 19, but the provision
I
woukl be eliminated In 1993.
Bush vetoed an earlier bill
because it would have raised the
minimum wage by 30 cents more
titan lhe $4..25 he In sis ted on, and
did not include his proposal for a
..UX-montll .trai~ Wa.p for new
... MANAGUA, Nicaragua ~ l/Pil Wednesday, the- day the paot . Buslt b~ DO Immediate ,..etlillt emplo)'ees.
' ' · ''
'
to Ortega's announcement and a
- President Dan.lel Ortega, expired.
Under the new comprom1se
accusing President Bush of
''It seems the United States has Contra leader In Honduras said
plan, the training w;~ge - 85
promoting "criminal terrorism" lost Its head and wan is to add a he would seek aid from
percent of the full minimum
In Nicaragua, said Wednesday he state," Ortega said. "Nicaragua Washington.
wage - could be paid to new
Ortega had stunned Bush and
would go ahead with plans to end is not another state of the United
workers for just three months. It
a 19-month unilateral cease-fire States. We are not slaves of the Latin leaders at a summit In
could be extended for another
with U.S.-backed Contra rebels.
United . States and we don't Costa Rica last week when he
three months if the employer has
"We are nat going to extend the accept the dictates of anyone nor announced his Intention ·not to
a training program in effect.
extend the cease-tire and he
cease-tire, Mr. Bush," Ortega of any po,w er."
The two sides appeared to h;~ve
said · In a broadcast' speech
A White House spokesman said
Continued on page 4
diHerent understandings about
whether the Labor Department
would have to certify such

ta,•••,
c~ow for

-~hrfthttat

(614) 446-3045

:::::;

Ortega goes ahead .with plans
to .s uspend Contra cease-fire

Instant Insulation

Pafnt

.

Instant insulation in a can I Eliminates
dralts aild air leakage to SliVB energy.
Conveni$nl, applicator included.

Contains100% mineral spirits. Thins paint, varnishes
and
.,..,.,_en&lt;~mels. Cleans paint brushes and rollers.

-NQOIQI~12

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•

7 -Jutlet Center

Ul, 125V ,.. . .,...., wlh"plwtk - · ....... , . . _ .....

Coal wlit., -n·•ning fl-11·
cont light. Stock .. and san today!

· wlith ...
,.
loot~'t4/l
perd

1341Smii/31Ut

IIIICJ(. 7£/J t13

~~- - ·

....swr.

• . .&amp;

Air Filters

Screwdriver Plus

Spun glau liltors with reiolarcttl
llltl1ll p. Clot (lioca I,_.' For
laating or 41ir condltiloling. Dilpalablt. Ecanomicol. Avoilaltll 11 6 liz-.
IUDI4t~t.7.U,~l

3-ooll ..- . wilh _
..tmot ..
•dtUto .... lodolodl••....._
...., lit, - lllook tit, - llatk 1111
, . _ lit .............. .
ltOJI/04166

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Electric Glue Gun

Papua. ¥•" • .,, size. Dwotot, ..t molal

lly..... woM,Itett.r .,d '""'in 60

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'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A ·wide drug plan Involving schools,
bill to the floor In December It It
labor union representative communities and government.
is ready. He said "drastic times"
"While I favor getting parents
raised concerns Tuesday over
In the area of drug control call for
possible random dr.ug tis ting In more Involved, I wonder whether
''drastic measures."
the !workplace l! a bill under we're going to turn our parents
Ralph Eckhardt .of Local 4 of
consideration In the Ohio House into police authorities," said
the American Federation · of
Rep. Wayne Jones, D-Akron, In
becomes law.
State, County and Municipal
At the same time, members of ·questioning the provision that ' Employees expressed concern
a select House committee study- provides jail time for parents
that any stat~wlde drug policy
lng' ways to combat . the drug who knowingly permit their
·'be applied in a fair and uniform
problem warned of potential children to use drugs .
mannet."
trouble with language making
Eckhardt said any drug testing
"There's a lot of work to be
parents legally accountable for done on this bill," said Rep. Otto in the workplace should be
their children's drug abuse.
Beatty Jr., D-Columbus, refer- initiated only upon "probable
The select committee, chaired ring to the "horror stories aiX&gt;ut . cause" to detect a violation, and
by Rep. John Shivers Jr., D- what happened after we enacted should ~ accompanied by
Salem, began hearings, using a law making parents responsi- rehabilitation.
legislation .drafted by House ble for car thefts by their
He said random testing "holds
Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D- children."
· a lot of questions- constitutionWheelersburg.
Shivers said the committee ality, the right of privacy and the
Among other things, Riffe's will soon be dealing with amend: reliability of the test."
bill provides strict penalties for inents, and he urged members to
"We recognize that this is a
drug trafficking. revocation of propose changes. He said at least serious problem and It must be
drivers' licenses in some Instan- three hearings will be held In ·remedied, but the plan cannot
infringe on anyone's constituces, mandatory drug counseling November on the legislation.
lor certain youth, and a state' ·
RlfJe has said he will bring the tional rights," he said.

B

•••wrr·

Thermogrip•

Hearings begin on drug bill

Sfa" Pawtr Wrench

ca_lo, l·httorrtchor" ' ' - 120
lOIII •dlooiiL
IJJI/51211

Quett the MlleiRi Confetti/
WE WILL GIVE AWAY A
HUFFY 10 SPEED BIKE.

Voinovich·proposes to use
rnment
gove
volunteers in state

TO WIN GUESS HOW FAI THE WHEEL WILL TURN
ON THE BilE IN THE STORE WINDOW.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN.

I
announcements

Tlte Lebanon Township Trustees will meel tonight at 7 p.m. at

the township bulldina.
Vall tome«
Big Bend .Girl Scout Service
Utili will meet Thunday, 7 p.m.,
at the Pomeroy Un lied Methodist
Church. All Girl Scout leaders In
Metp County should attend:
Eleel... dtmetl'
The Columbia Township Volunteer Fire Department Auxiliary
"Bucket Brigade" will sei'VI!
food all day Election Day at the
firehouse on State Route 1~3

ORAND

·RE-OPENING

ORAND
RE-OPENING

We can

WEDNESDAY ·

•

NOYEMIER 1

THIU SATURDAY
NOYD11f14
8:00 A.M.-7:00 P;M.

992-5020
. ----

~

MIDDLEPOn, OHIO

WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER 1
'THRU SATURDAY
NOVEMBER 4
8:00 A.M. 7:00 P.M.

'

The savings could go lor live Services Into the governor's
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) education, drug-fighting pro- office.
Saying he wants his administra-Establish an Ohio Youth
grams and economic develoption to be known as the· 'Together
Services
Corps · to mobilize
ment programs, said Votnovlch.
We Can Do It Administration,"
·
nearly
2
million school-age
Republican gubernatorial candiThe Cleveland mayor sal.d he
date George Volnovich Sllld Tuesbelieves the number of govern- youth; seriously consider requlrday he will, It elected, Implement ment employees on the payroll tng a fixed number of hours of
' a six-point plan to use volunteers
also could be reduced, as they community servlee before high
were with a similar progralll in school graduallon.
in' government.
-create a Higher Education
"Government works best when
his city.
Volunteer
Initiative so colleges
"I am absolutely convinced
it reaches out and Involves
and
universities
will help growpeople, utilizing the time, energy
that through public-private partlng
businesses,
local
school disexpertise, talent and commitnership and volunteerlsm, we
trlcts
and
state
government.
ment of our citizens," .said can change the direction of
-Establish "Ohio TomorVolnovich. ''By itself,. ·govern- Ohio," he told reporters.
row,"
a broad·based volunteer
The six-point plan:
ment cannqt effectively solve
committee
of Oblo bllslness and
problems."
-Appoint an Obio Operations
labor
leaders
worklnl to Improve
Volnovlcb conceded the state
Improvement Task Force of
budget, now al
billion, could
business and management ex· state aowr-t and plaa t.r
perts to conduct an Independent Ohio's economic future;
not be ~uced.
-Form a Governor's PubliC
"We're going to get a handle on audit of state government and
it," he said, adding that he . find ways to "cut the fat" and Relations Council consl.sUng of
state officials and private public
expects to keep up with Inflation improve efficiency.
·
relations
professionals who will
by shllvlng 10 . percent from
-ReOrganize the Ohio Office of
develop
an
effective marketing
operational costs, so taxes would Volunteerlsm and move It !rom
stratety
for
Ohio.
not have to be Increased.
the Department of Admlnlstra·

s:n

· -.
I

1989

Minimum wag~ going
up ·to $4.25 by 1991

Me~

Meed•l &amp;Hrpt

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday. November 1,

2 Sections, 12 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. NewiJ)aper

j

2924 JACKSON AVENUE .

REGISTER FOR OYER 50 DOOR
PRIZES. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
'
NEED NOT IE PRESENT TO WIN.
PRIZES INCLUDE •••
4·1LACI AND DECKER DRILLS,
ESTWING 22 OZ. HAMER,
2 GALLON HUDSON SPRAYER,
GLASS SHELF liTI
SHOWER MASSAGER.

•

Na.123 M
1989

Easy Financing
Available

--

•

r., ·'

Recliners

REG. saot.®

. J'AJIII.Y DENTAL cAliB

1201/40711

Cloudy, low tonight In m ld
30•. Thursday, cloudy. Hlp In
mid 40s. Chance ol rain 40
percent.

~

lEG 5399.00

SLEEP SOFAS

.Veleraas HospHal
The civil trial set for WednesMonday admissions
Della
day
morning In the Meigs Com.
Mohler, Shade.
mon
Pleas Court will not be held.
Monday discharges
Fred
Jurors
need not report.
Sayre.

40 Watt 48"
Fluorescent Tube

Pick-3
633
Pick
3901

REG. '1 59 WOOD

Page 3

.

REG. 539.00

Trial Wednesday

....a...

'

Ohio Lottery

Zimtner
named NL's
top manager

S79
l99.
•Tapestry
~~.~!:.oo $ 1 9 900 · Foot Stools
S29
•Solid Brass Table
.9
=~rs:.oo
800 ..ron Daybeds$ 19

'

Edna Cooper
Edna H. Cooper, 96, Pomeroy,
died unexpectedly on Sunday at
her residence.
Born Sept. 26, 1893 In Meigs
County, she was the daughter of
the late William S. and Blanche
Tewksbary Hart. She was a 1910
graduate of Pomeroy High
SchOOl, a homemaker, and a
n:tember of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
She Is survived by a daughter,
Eloise C. White, Columbus; a son
and daughter-in-law, William G.
and Phyllis Cooper, Morehead
Cliy, N.C.; a brother, Lester
Hart, Pomeroy; three grandchildren, Barbara White, Colul}l• bus; J. Michael Cooper, Broadview Hts.; and William R.
Cooper, Southbury, Conn.; a
niece, Jackie Menchlne, Millwood, W.Va.; a cousin, Murl
Wood, Pomeroy; and three great
grandchildren.
Mrs. Cooper was preceded In
death by her husband, Homer.E.
.Cooper, and two sisters, Elsie
Hart and Audrey Maag.
Graveside services will be held
Wednesd~y at 3: 30 p.m. at the
Beech Grove Cemetery with the
Rev. Don Meadows officiating.
Arrangements are being
handled by the Ewing Funeral
Home.
In lieu of flowers donations
may be made to the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.

•Jumbo
Bean Bags
•Lane Cedar

Am Electric Power .. ,.......... 30'jk
AT&amp;T ................................. 43'jk
Ashland 011 ......................... 36
Bob Evans .......................... 13%
Cha~g Shoppes .............. 12% ·
City Holding Co .................. 15%
Federal Mogul.. .................. 21%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... :............43li
Heck's .:............................... 6~
Key Centurion ....................15%
Lands' End .......................... 27
Limited Inc ........... .............35~
Multimedia Inc .................... 95
Rax Restaurants ...... ........ ......2
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... ........... 14
Shoney's Inc . ........ .............. 11%
St;~r Bank ............... :........... 22)7
Wendy's Inti......... ..... : ...........5
Worthington Ind .. .. .............. 23~

Hospital news

GREAT GIFT IDEAS

•

Dally stock prices
(As oflt:3t Lm.)
Bryce ud MU'k Smllh
of Bluat, Ellll 6 Loewl

Squads have eight Monday calls

I

--

Local news briefs... - - , Stocks
Continued from page 1

·~

'

'&gt;

JOE MCClANAHAN

Speaker
named for
banquet
Joe McClanahan, retired HockIng County extension agent, will
be the speaker at the annual
banquet of the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District's
annual meeting and banquet to
be held on Nov. 14.at 7:21p.m. at
Southern High School.
McClanahan and his wife,
Judy, live on a farm and raise
sheep and truck crops.
Tickets for the annual meeting
and banquet are $7 each and may
be purchased from SWCD supervisors Tom Theiss, Alan Holter,
Ron Eastman, Rodney Chevaller, and David Gloeckner.
Tickets may also be purchased
from the SWCD office.
During the annual meeting,
Gne supervisor will be electe4 for
a three year ll!rm on tile board.
Calldidatft are David Gloeclmer

81111 O.v .. ~.

Tlte outsta•dtng farm family
and Goodyear Farmer will be
recognized during the evening as
well as the 1989 Affiliate
Members.
De,a dllpe · for . purchasing
tickets to the banquet Is Monday.

•

training programs, but Dole said
that was something "we will
work out with the Congress."
The federal minimum wage.
currently $3.35, has not been
Increased since ·1981. Under the
new bill it would rise by 45 cents
next April and another 45 cents
the following year.
Senate Democratic leader
George Mitchell of Maine called
.the plan "a victory for working
Americans, those at the bottom
of the economic scale who need a
boost and who need It .as ,soon as
possl ble.".
·
He said the compromise eliminates "any unreasonable, extended subminimum wage structure." It applies only to
teenagers and lasts just 90 days
. "unless an employer is able tq
provide a certified, bonifide
training program for an additional 90 days."
House Speaker Thomas Foley,
D-Wash.. agreed It was " a
victory'' and was "one of the
principle Items" on the Democrats' agenda for this Congress.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, DMass., said both sides had
compromised, but the bill is less

~

•

tha:n what he wanted or "the
working poor desired."
The "stalemate on the minImum wage is finally over. May
we do everything within our
power to ensure these workers
never have to wait that long
again," said Kennedy, chairman
of the Senate Labor and Human
Resources Committee.
Rep. Augustus Hawkins, DCalif., chairman of the House
committee, said he supports the
compromise, but said It was "not
a dramatic breakthrough" because the wage should have been
Increased over the years to $5.05.
Hawkins Indicated he still opposes the training wage.
AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland said the union "welcomes
the long overdue agreement on
minimum wage. It will benefit
·America's lowest·paid wo~kers
who badly need and richly
destrve this small wage
increase."
Kirkland said the training
wage plan "contains adequatt:
safeguards so the youth are not
exploited and older workers are
not displaced."

Senate passes

judgeship ·bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio . (UP!) The Ohio Senate passed legislation Tuesday adding state· appeals court judgeships In Toledo,
Cleveland and Trumbull County,
and returned It to the flouse for
concurrence in amendments. ·
The judgeship bill was one of
seven acted upon by the senators
during a one-day Halloween
session.
Two of the bills, revising
Medicaid eligibility and juvenile
sentencing to prison, were re·
qulred by the federal government at the end of this year to
avoid a loss in federal funds .
The Senate adopted, 29-2, and
forwarded to Gov. Richard Ce·
leste a bill requiring gas stations
to offer fu\1 service at sell-serve
prices to handicapped motorists.
The judgeship bill adds thre~
judges in the 8th District Court of
Appeals, with headquarters In
Cleveland, and one apiece In the
11th District (Trumbull County)
court and 6th District (Lucas
County) court.
Before passing the bill, senators eliminated an extra domestic relations ' court judge for
Summit County and added two
common pleas court judgeships
for Montgomery County. The
House will be asked to support
those changes, probably at an
early December session .
The blll also attempts to create
an objective standard for determining which court districts
need additional judges.
Some senators privately com-

plained the current system is
little more than a "pork barrel,"
with judgeships being added
haphazardlY for communities
with political clout.

Utilities told .
to use 'least
.
cost ' optt.ons
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio adopted rules Tuesday
requiring electric utility compan.ies to show they are pursuing
~he "least cost" options when
planning for future load growth.
The new rules require a method of planning for the deployment of electricity resources in
wh lch conventional generation
options. such as new power
plants, are evaluated alongside
other options, such as cogeneration, conservation, or
ioad- re~uction programs.
Electric companies in Ohio
now wiU have to provide the
PUCO with new plahs. and at
least every five years, those
plans will be subject to hearings
and review.
"They (new rules) will provide
a forum for ail parties to discuss
the costs and benefits of various
ways of meeting Ohio's energy
needs, " said Jolynn Barry
Butler, chairman of the PUCO.

.---Local news briefs---.
No one hurt in Meigs wreck
The Meigs-Gallla' Post, State Highway Patrol investigated a
one·car accident at 12:15 p.m. Tuesday on CR. 5, 0.7 of a mile
west of SR. 7. No one was injured.
The patrol said Rex D. Vance, 35, Rutland, lost control of h.ls
1986 Z-28 on a curve. The vehicle went off the road, striking a
utility pole. Damage was minor to the car. There was no
citation.

Lawmen recover &amp;tolen van
A 19~ Dodge van stolen Tuesday morning from the
V;~Uey Plumbing Company; Second St., Pomeroy,

Ohio
·was
recovered Tueeday night on Hooker St.ln Middleport. Seraeut
Bill Browninl of lilt Mftldlaport Pulice Departme•t diiiCII•~
the vehicle, IICCOI'dlng to Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby.
__ Nick Leonard, owner of the vehicle, has reported· to
authorities that the only thing missing from the vehicle Is the
keys.
Investigation Is continuing Into a two-car accident which
Conttnu,ed on page 4

'v'

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