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                  <text>Novembers. 1989.

Meigs County
agent •s corner
ByJoM &amp;let
Melp co..ty
AJeai, Ap'leulture
POMEROY -A few years ago,
Or. John Street conducted an
extensive research program
with a focus on fall fertilization
practices of cool season
turfgrasses. ·
The · results or these studies
Indicated the quaUty or many of
Ohio's cool season turfgrass
areas could be slgn!Dcantly
Improved by fertlllllng In the fall
after the grass stopped growing.
This fertilization practice was
termed "Late Season
FertDization" .
To capture the full potential of
this practice, an application of
1·2 Ills. nltrogen/1000 sq. ft.
should be applied after the grass
stops growing In the fall. For the
pastrew years, the proper timing
for this fertilization has been as
follows:
Southern Ohio: late November
to early December.
We anticipate this schedule to
be appropriate for t.his fall's
applications, Unlike fertlliza ·
tklns made during other times of
the year, this fertilllation does
not require the addition of
phosphorus or postasslum. Also,
the addition of the slow release
nitrogen Is not necessary as
excellent results have been obtained from applications of
highly soluble nitrogen (i.e.
urea) applications.
The resulting benefits can be
~pectacular. Even though the
grass Is not growing, nutrient
uptake and photosynthesis con· •
tlnue. Treated areas normally
display dark green coloration
longer Into the fall and green· up
earlier the following spring. This
fertilization effectively leng·
thens the annual j,erlod of
Improved quality by 4·6 weeks.
Turfgrass density Is Improved as
Is the root mass and depth of
rootlnl. The spring fertilization
needs are greatly reduced. By
eliminating the need for heavy
spring feedings, the severity of
many springtime diseases Is also
lessened.
PrepariDK Lawn lor Winter
All things considered, 1989 was
a pretty good year tor growing
turtgrass In Ohio. Granted, In
most locatloils the spring was
wetter than we liked In some
locations the de!iclencles of
summer rains reduced the qual·
tty of the lawns during that
period, but most lawns came
taftllllll uasc.atW ' C!Oiilp&amp;red
with I~ past ff!'W years. The final
chapter In lawn care for 1989 will
be making sure the lawn Is
properly prepared going Into the
winter months ahead.
Olllo Is located tar enough
south so that the adapted cool
season turtgrasses are seldom
kUled by the low temperatures of
tbe winter period. Most of the
Injury encountered on our turf
areas over the next few months
wm be attributed to at least one
of !btl following:
1. 1'RAFFIC: As conveyed In a
previous message, efforts should
be made to minimize human and
veblculllr traffic on frozen and or
dormant turfgrasses.
2. ICE COVERAGE: Low lying
areas that flood then become
frozen In Ice·for extended periods
of time can be expected to lose
turfgrass quality.
3. WINTER DESICCATION:
Most often seen during dry, open
winters that allow the above·
ground pllint parts to dry out
while the frozen ground around
the crown and roots prevent the
soli moisture from being taken
up Into t~e plants.
4. LOW TEMPERATURE IN·
JURY: This condition only oc·
curs during abnormally cold
winters to turfgrasses margl·
nally adapted. Fall seedlngs of
tall fescue in Central and North·
ern Ohio are often damaged by
low temperatures. This injury
results from freezing damage to
the crown and root system. .
S. REA VING: Freezing and
· thawing cycles during the late
winter results In a lifting of the
turfgrass plants. This event is
more damaging on new seedlngs
With the actual Injury occurring
due to the disruption of the crown
and root system.
6. SNOW MOLD: Snow mold
Infections can occur without
snow but are most destructive
where snow cover persists for
long periods of time. This disease
Is much more of a concern to the
arPas north or Ohio.

The good...
Continued from D·1
cally exert influences. Nonethe·
less, thl! factors that ultimately
drive stock prices are earnings
and dividend growtll in the
coming years. These well·
manaJed firms bave positioned,
and are posltlonlfiJ, as~e~ta ta
generate profitable ar-th. We
continue to believe that the
"good" over, time can make less
slplflcant the short term lnflu.
ences of the "blld" and the

Pick '
6145
Super Lotto
4-14-37 -38-4~43
Kicker 735173

Low toalKht In ·mid 40..
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Tuesday, hlr;h In mtcl 60s.
Chance of rain 10 percent,

•

•

8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST~
.POMEROY, OH;.

.

PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., NOV. S THRU SAT., NOV. 11, 1989

2 Sectiona, ·1 2 Pagn 26 Cente

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday. November 6. 19~9

A Multimedia Inc. New11Japer

Meigs County

Public .Library
is dedicated

CHICKEN ·

Leg Quarters ••• !~... 39 &lt;
FRESH PORK BUTT
.
$ 29
Steaks/Roast....... 1 ,
LB.

FLAVORITE

Wieners •••••••••••• ~~ ••• 99&lt;
FRESH
$219
Chicken Livers
'

$ 59

3
CH~ICE
$ 229
S1rlo1n Steak........
.
99
Round Steak •• :.!~.. S1
ll1l 29

USDA CHOICE .

LB

US? A

LB.

T- Bone S-teak .•••••.

RIBBON CUTl'ING - HIJhliJhllng the Sunday afternoon
dedlcatloa of the new Melp County Public Library was the ribbon
cutting. From left to right, the pardclpanlll were Rep. Mary Abel,
Sen. Jan Michael Long, Meigs County Commissioner Manning

. Sll.

TUB

By JONATHAN FERZIGER
United PreM laterll&amp;llonal
Voters this weekcould elect the
nation's first black governor In
Virginia ~ad a black mayor for
N4j.w-; ¥1!Pir•..Clt)l·•lll -~e~· alSll
~tgnlflcant for tile !18StY'lo'ae _of
campaigning.
,T he off· year elections Tuesday
win not affect the makeup of
Congress and relatively ' few
statehouse jobs are up for grabs,
but polls reflect a return to the
fold by Democratic voters who
flirted with the GOP during the
Reagan era.

USDA CHOICE

BA~LARD'S 1-LB. ROLL or 10 OZ.

Sausage ........... ~!..

Eight Meigs
indictments ·
are filed

5 LB. BAG

Yellow Onions ••• 2f$1
FLAVORITE

2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• •$1 59
PLASTIC GALLON

.29
Cheese Shces ••• ~!~!·. 1
Sl
4
9
............
Ice
Cream
Pie Filling ••••••••••••• 79&lt;
COUNTY LINE AMERI~AN

12

1f2 GALLON

oz.

'

DUNCAN HINES (Excluding Angel Food)

Cake Mixes ••••••••••• 79&lt;
SUNSHM CHUNK

CAINATION

DOG FOOD

HOT.COCOA MIX

$2992oll.

IND~ WRAP SLICES$

BORDEN'S

LUCKY LEAF CHERRY

99&lt;

10 1-0Z.

ENV.

FRESH

Bakery Donuts •••• $169
DOZ.

36 OL FliNCH IOAST or
39 OZ. ADC or EP

MAXWEll HOUSE

SUGAR

COFFEE

$499

\

$119 4LB.

...••

•••

•·

&lt;

•

Eight Indictments were flied
late 1\!St week In Meigs Common
Pleas Court.
The Indictments were the result of an Oct. 20 session of the
Meigs Grand Jury, however, the
office of Meigs , Prosecuting At·
torney Steven L. Story did not !lie
the Indictments with the court
until Nov. 2.
Among the eight Oct. 20 Indict·
ments, four individuals were
Indicted op drug related charges,
Including Michael P. O'Neil, Carl
Edward Moore, Buford Smal·
lwood and Timothy Davidson.
O'Neil, 35, of Pomeroy, was
charged with trafficking In drugs
(cultivation of marijuana).
O'Neil was also charged with
three counts of Illegal use of food
stamps and three counts of grand
theft, lor a total of seven counts.
Moore, 42: of Racine, was
charged with trafficking · In
drugs-cultivation of marijuana,
and possession of marijuana, tor
two counts total .
Smallwood, 42, and Davidson,
33, both of Pomeroy, were both
lndicteq on one charge each of
trafficking In drugs-cultivation.
Also indicted by the Oct. 20
grand jury were Michael Pierce,
charged with escape; Chris·
topher C. Cole, charged with
unlawful possession or a danger·
ous prdnance; Ronald E. Coates,
charged with aggravated bur·
glary and Guy Wayne Schuler,
charged with vandalism.
Coates, O'Neil, Schuler and
Pierce were all expected to be
arraigned on their Indictments
sometime today •(Monday), ac·
cording to Paul Gerard of the
office of Meigs Common Pleas
Judge Fred Crow III.
. Christopher A. Digiulio, of
~o. Arizona, who was arrested by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment on an Arizona charge of
receiving stolen property, was
alao expected to ~ppear in Judge
Crow's court today. Digiulio was
not expected to waive
extradition.
'(

•.• -...... _w

,

Roush, Pal Holler, library board president; County 'T reasurer
George Collins, County Auditor WIWam Wickline, and County
Recorder Emmogene Congo.

Voters
go to polls
Tuesday

•••••

I

~--

704

STORE HOORS
Monday thru Sunday

. . . Qell..... .me..)

--·--...

Pick-3

Page4

We Reserve The Ri&amp;ht To
Limit Quantities

"urty•'.
(llr. BY- 18 u )IIYei&amp;IMIIi
lriiiP llr 'file Ollie Celnpaily Ia

·--

Ohio Lottery

Browns
take over
top spot

••

PRESENTED COMMENDATION - A resolu·
don from the Ohio HoWle of Representallves
commending the Meigs County Public Library
Board of Trustees for their work In the
development of better library laclHtles lor Meigs
County was presented by Rep. Mary Abel to 'Pat
Holter, hoard president, and R11th Powers,

librarian, at Sunday's dedication ceremony. Sen.
Jan Michael Long and Manning Roush, county
commissioner, both s~akers at the dedication,
joined Mrs. Holter and Mrs. Powers as Rep. Abel
made tile presentation before the nearly 200
persons attending.

Investigators report safety
·flaws at.Piketon fuel .plant
PIKETON, Ohio (UP!) -Top
Energy Department invetlgators
have found safety problems at a
nuclear fuel processing plant
near Piketon, but say the prob·
!ems don't present a hazard to
the workers.
The Columbus Dispatch re·
ported Sunday the problems
were writ ten In a memo It had
obtained after Investigators began looking Into problems at the
plant.
Martin-Marietta operates the
Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion

.

Plant at Piketon for the Depart·
ment of Energy. That agency
sent Its special top-levellnvesti·
gators - or tiger team - to the
plant Oct. 23.
The team checked malnte·
nance, cleaning, and decontami·
nation buildings In Its first few
days there and sent the memo to
the DOE Oct. 27, the paper said,
Joseph Fitzgerald, inspection
team leader and director of the
DOE's Olllce of Safety Polley,
said · his Inspectors had found

slgnl11cant-problems in the three
buildings . .In his memo he wrote
of specific hazards as well as
breakdowns In safety procedures
and housekeeping.
"While, in our judgment, no
Imminent hazard exists to
workers. In those ·facilities, the
lack of adherence to fundamen·
tal safety standards, 'IS well as a
work environment largely lack·
lng In formality, discipline, and
account'lblllty to safety, pres·
ents an unacceptable situation,"
Fitzgerald wrote.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Dally Sentinel Stall
"When we stop learning, we
stop living, and learning Is what
libraries are all about," said Sen.
Jan Michael Long, a speaker at
Sunday's dedication of the new
Meigs County Public Library.
Nearly 200 gathered In front of
the new building for the dedlca·
lion program which was high·
lighted by the ribbOn cutting and
followed by· tours of the spacious
. library facllltles .
Introduced by ·Pat Holter,
president of the Meigs County
Library Board, Sen. Long said
that while the construction equip- ·
ment Is gone, the "building"
continues -''this time a building
of knowledge."
He descr !bed the library as a
new avenue for all segments of
the population, to learning for
children, to opportunities for the
disadvantaged, to pursuits of
leisure time activities for
seniors.
He referred to the new library
as the result of a partnership
between local and state leaders
who want to see things happen for
Southeastern Ohio.
· The leflalator conpnented- &lt;jll
the CUJite ~n fulld tng for llbral'·
les and pointed to the new Meigs
County library as a "success
story" brought about because
state leaders recognized the
Importance of rural library fund·
·ing and acted to change the way
money Is dlstribu ted for library
development.
. Also speaking was Rep. Mary
Abel who congratulated the II·
brary board and staff and then
presented Mrs. Holter and Ruth
Powers, library director, with a
framed commendation from the
House of Representatives.
On behalf of the Meigs County
Commissioners, Manning Roush
extended congratulations to
those. who have worked to pro·
vide better and more accessible
library facilities for Meigs
Countlans.

"We have ._ethlng here we
can all be proud of and we need to
salute everyone who had a part in
bringing this about," com·
mented the commissioner.
Long-time board member and
staunch supporter for better
libraries, C. E . Blakeslee, gave a
brief history of library develop·
ment In Meigs County. He talked
about the formation of the
Middleport and Pomeroy Llbrar·
les, the buildings constructed
with Carnegie Foundation funds,
and the role of local supporters.
As master of ceremonies for
the dedication, Mrs. Holter rec·
ognlled numerous Individuals,
Including library officials from
New Madison, Gallla, Pike and
Jackson Counties, and Zanes·
vllle; Rodney Rogers, contrac·
tor, and Richard Dittmar, arch!·
teet, for the new building; and
two representatives from the
State Library .
Mrs. Holter noted thatcongrat·
ulatory messages had been re·
celved from several state offl·
clals. She Introduced Mrs. VIlma
Plkkoja and thanked her for
bringing bookmobile service to
Meigs County In the mld·slxtles.
Also lAtlod.eed b)' Mrs . .,.II '
alld~ tor their e11thu·
slastlc support were library
trustees, Patricia Mills, Mary K.
Yost, Wanda Eblin, Don Mullen,
Blakeslee, and Ted Reed.
Ruth Powers, library director,
extended the welcome and intro·
duced her staff, Norma Hawthorne, Jean Roush, Olita
Heighton, Patricia Cason, Agnes
Dixon, Sharon Mattox, Connie
Bailey, and Harry Roush.
The Rev. Donald Meadows had
the Invocation and benediction
and the flag ceremony was
conducted by Gerrl Miller, pres!·
dent of the American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39,
and Richard Vaughan, commander, Drew Webster Post.
The flag donated by the auxiliary
was raised In the opening
Continued on page 8.

·Bank One's drive thru
..
is open for business ·
After several months of con·
structlon the new Bank One drive
thru In Pomeroy Is officially open
lor business.
The ribbon cutting ceremony.
of 75 new one dollar bills, was
held this morning (Monday) .
Approximately 50 people were
on hand for the ceremony ,
Including all of the employees at
Bank One, Pomeroy, and several'
from the Athens office. In addl·
tlon to bank employees, several
residents of the community at·
tended also.
The new drive offers many
· services to Its customers other

than just the drive thru service.
There are 14 parking spaces,
an Indoor lobby , and two drive
thru windows. The different
types of transactions available to
customers Include the opening of ·
accounts, loan applications money orders and cashier ch~ks,
purchasing and redemption of
certificates of deposit, mer·
chants transactions, and the
payment of utilities.
Business hours lor the new
drive thru are Monday thru
Thursday, 8 a.m .·5 p.m.. Friday ,
8 a.m.-6 p.m. , and Saturday. 8
a.m. to noon.

,.....--Local briefs--.....
Suspect arson in Wellston fires
The Wellston Fire Department ruled that three fires,
Including one that gutted an old newspaper building, that hit
Wellston Saturday night were caused by arson .
Assistant Fire Chief Bob Long said no Injuries were reported
In the fires. He added that the blaze that destroyed the building
that formerly housed the Sundry News was suspicious.

Patrol cites Rutland youth

RIBBON CU'n'ING CEREMONY - The aew
IJallk ODe drive lllru on Second St.ID Pomeroy II
officially opea lor lnalln-. Tbe rtblloa CIIIUIIJ
ceremony,of'711111woaedolarblllll, w.. held-*8
o'clock tliiB momin1. Cattln1 the rlbboa 18, B.T.
Grover, Jr., president of Bank ODe, AIU. •

•

,

Olhen, left to riJht - Marlya Rolli-, Joaa
Wolfe, MIJBe Mlatll, Barb DaJU, Betty

llllroalek, Pomero, VIBace CoullcU. Marllya

Wilcox, Dlua La._, Gerl Waltoa, Marllya
WoUe, ud DoriA 8aowden.

, I

A Rutland area youth was cited In a car-truck crash Saturday
at 10:36 a.m. In Letart Township on S.R. 338, 1.3 miles east of
Racine, accordiDJ to the Gallla·Melgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol.
Angela D. Russell,17, Rt.I, Rutland, was cited fordrlvlnglett
of center after her 1984 Ford Escort hit a trailer pulled by a 1988
)'ord F ·250 pickup truck driven by James R. O'Brien, 28, or
Adams Rd., Racine.
O'Brien was driving east when Russell, heading west, crossed
the center line and hit the trailer.
Continued on page 8

.

.

�Pomei'oy-Middleport. Ohio

/

Commentary
•

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Olllo
DEVOTED TO THE JNTEJlESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
PAT WHrrEBEAD
Publisher/ Controller

Assistant

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geaerlll Man!Oier

A MEMBER ol 'l1le A.dated Pre8s, Inland Daib' Preis Auc&gt;datloa and lbe Amtrlcaa New r P"" Pulllillhers Aal

••Jon.

LETI'EKS OF OPINION are welcome. Tiley ohouNIIo 1081- Mt
words loti&amp;- AU letters ll'e -jed t. edllloc . .d mul llo alp.. whh

•II"" ,...,_

qame, addre.. ud lel.,.,_e •mber. No uoalped ...-.
llshed. Letters should 11o In ..,...Iaiiie, ad-siDe Is._ 1181 perooaolllles.

.Senate drunken driving
·bill may be weakened
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stalehoaae ll.epoNr
COLUMBUS - Anolher round in the continuing battle to take
drunken drivers off Ohio highways is being played out in the Ohio
General Assembly, and the House is looking for alternatives to the
tough Senate bill passed last May.
Rep. Marc Guthrie, D-Newark, chairman of the House Public
Safety and Highways Committee, Is intent on removing the so-called
" administrative suspension" - a pollee officer's on-the-spot
suspension of the license of any driver testing over the legal alcohol
ltinlt.
Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, chief sponsor of the measure, said
the Senate strongly favored administrative suspension because "it is
a swift and certain punishment likely to mod!iy behavior."
William Denlhan, director of the Ohio Department of Highway
Safety, favors the procedure, and so does Nationwide Insurance Co.,
which has to pay claims to the victims of drunken driving.
But Guthrie and Rep. Katherine Walsh, D-Ober lin, have been using
subcommittee hearings on the matter as an opportunity to question
the effectiveness and fairness of administrative suspension.
Guthrie and Walsh wonder If Immediate license suspension, with no
occupational driving privileges, will especially hurt low-income
families. while wealthy violators will merely assign or hire a driver to
go to and from work.
Rep. Russell Guerra Jr., R-Englewood, a former police officer,
figures most offenders, regardless of income, can find a way to get to
work if push comes to shove.
.
"We want to get 'em off the road as quickly as possible and keep 'em
off the road ," he said of the drunken drivers.
Guthrie has been irritated by Denihan's Inability to back up with
hard statistics hls claim that administrative suspension has reduced
drunken driving in other states.
So he seized on statistics provided last week showing that of the 28
states with administrative suspension, 17 have worse fatality rates
per 100,000 vehicle m!les than Ohio, and four others are tied with the
Buckeye State.
"We don't buy that logic," said Wendy Schweiger of the
Department of Highway Safety, adding that it does noi deal w1th the
issue of driving while lntoxlcated.
Pfeifer, a former prosecutor, believes Guthrie has been led down
_ the garden path by defense attorneys who oppose adminstrative
· ; suspension.
_:But Guthrie produced a pair of defense attorneys last week who
· ;: :Said administrative suspension actually works In their financial
•• interest and not In the public Interest.
,
Don Nichols, a Minneapolis attorney, said the Minnesota law is
; jokingly referred to as the "Lawyers' Full Employment Act."
And Jim Looker of Cincinnati said an administrative suspension
hearing by the Bureau of Motor Vehicles actually serves as a dress
rehearsal lor the DWI court case, when many defendants ai'e
-A ·acquitted.
. Guthrie. in his rewrite of the Pfeifer bill, is resorting to electronic
•. • house arrest after jail time for repeat ·offenders, plus Ignition
, . interlock to make sure a convicted driver stays sober.
•
"I think we'll stand out i!l this country (in halting drunken driving!
without creating a riew bureaucracy which, frankly, is not fair," he
• said.
.
Pfeifer's proposal had called for ignition interlock and special
· ,
-~ :colored license plates to denote a convicted drunken driver.
•
Complicating the issue is the fact that Ohio could lose $2 mlllion a
year in federal highway safety funds unless It enacts stilt penalties.
Guthrie told the subcommittee last week the driver license
suspensions will have to be raised from 1~ to 30 days on the first
offense and from 30 to 90 days on the second offense, with no
occupational driving privileges, in order to qualify for the federal
money.
·
The license suspensions are•longer now, but a judge may grant
occupational driving privileges at will.

Berry's World

LENINGRAD, U.S.S.R. -The
Soviet Union could launch a
"weather war" against the United States and, because of the
whimsy of weather patterns,
Americans wouldn't even know
it.
The notion sounds like fantasy,
but scientists say it Is true. The
Soviets are not the only ones
meddling with Mother Nature.
They are so afraid of America's
capablllty "to wage war with the
weather that they quietly signed
a treaty with the United States
some years ago that banned
hostile manipulation of the
weather. The. trouble with the
treaty Is that It Is totally
unverifiable.
For the record, no U.S. lntelll·
gence agency has any evidence
that the Soviets are engaged In
even minor skirmishes using the
weather. Tlie only country that
has ever used weather as a

·-~NIA.Ioo.

"... snd do you, H.-old, promise to 61181'8 In
equsl meaure the TV remote control with .. : "

,,

Bengals are
·knocked out .of first place

weapon Is the United State..
• From 1967 to 1972, the Pentagon conducted a $21.6 million
rainmaking operation designed
to make the Ho Chi Minh Trail
slippery. Mistakes were made.
Once, seven Inches of rain was
dumped on an American Special
Forces camp In two hour$. It Is
possible that the American cloud
seeding compounded a deluge In
August 19'(1 In North Vietnam
that resulted in flooding that
killed thousands of people.
We have reviewed a dozen
secret Central Intelligence
Agency reports about Soviet
weather moditlcatlon research
done In the last three decades.
The research Is conducted at 'the
"Hydrometerorologlcal Institute" in Lenlngrade and in a
network of more than 100 similar
Institutes. Almost all or the
Soviet research has a quasilegitimate agricultural use, but

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
the CIA Is well aware that the
same techniques could be used to
deliberately disrupt the climate
of other ·countrles.
The Soviets have always believed that bigger ts better, and
:that is reflected In their grandiose weather plans, including a
scheme to melt the Arctic ice and
moderate temperatures In the
northern Soviet republics. One
civilian Soviet scientist told the
CIA that he knew of as many as
300 secret weather modification
experiments done-In the Arctic.
One plan, by engineer P.M.
Borisov, that was mercifully
never carried out, was to pump
water from the Atlantic Ocean to
the Arc! lc Ocean. Borisov be·
lieved that all the ice In the Arctic
Ocean could be melted within

three years, never to return
again. Part of his' blueprint was
to throw a dam across the Bering
Strait.
· The complaints. of more levelheaded scientists dampened SQ.
viet enthusiasm for the Borisov
scheme.
Temporarlly, the Soviets have
settled for melting lcepacks
across huge areas ot their
country by, covering them with
one black substance or another to
draw the sun.
·
Another long-held Soviet
dream is to be able to divert their
rivers that now flow north Into
the Arctic Ocean south so the
water can Irrigate Soviet agricultural regions. Tbe loss of water In
the Arctic could change weather
patterns the world over.

BO RAMBLES - Los Angeles' Bo Jackson showed his talent on
the football field Sunday ,leading the Raiders 10 a 28-7 victory over
Cincinnati. Jackson scored on runs of 7 and 92 yards, and rushed
for 159 yards to help knl1(lk the Injury-riddled Bengals.out of first
place In the AFC Central Division. (UP I)

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The
big play has returrted to the
Raiders, and with It has come a
return to prominence for Los
Angeles.
So Jackson sprinted a clubrecord 92 yards for one of his two
touchdowns and Jay Schroeder
threw 84 yards to Willie Gault for
one of his two scoring passes
Sunday, l!ftlng the resurgent
Raiders to a 28-7 victory over the
· Cincinnati Bengals.
"Our team Is playing at a llne
level of efficiency," said Raiders
Coach Art Shell, whose team
Improved to 5-4 with Its fourth
victory In five games since he
took over.
Schroeder, benched last week
but back as the starter after a
kn~ Injury to Steve Beuer lei n,
snapped out of a slump by
completing 8 of 17 passes for 231 .
yards and one Interception. On
the Raiders' first play, he connected with Gault for 63 yards.
Jackson, who had a 73-yard
scoring run last week, rushed 13
times for 159 yards, Including a
7-yard TD burst In the first
quarter. And Vance Mueller

Walsh knocks Rio out of title race;
Fields is District, MOC top coach

~dO:.tGiiR!!W

•

Military can't halt Soviet decline
A number of respected conser- constant rubles. Abroad, ·Mosvattve voices are being raised cow has supplied Syria with
these days to warn us against MIG-29 fighters and supersonic
overly optimistic assumptions Sukhol 24 bombers, receiving in
about the intentions of the Soviet return a · major naval facility at
Union.
Tartus on the Mediterranean
We would &lt;lo well to listen coast of Syria, superior to any
carefully to these people. They U.S. base in that vital sea.
have been right about the Soviet
Moscow Is also, Pipes asserts,
Union in the past, when the stepping up military aid to North
world's liberals were falling like Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Camboa ton or bricks !or every hollow dla and even Afghanistan. And
assurance offered by Brezhev, or Soviet aid Is continuing to flow to
Khrushchev, or even Stalin.
·Angola and Nicaragua.
One of the ablest of these
Not exactly the picture of an
doubters Is Richard Pipes, a empire in collapse! Pipes conprofessor of history at Harvard eludes that "world stability and
and a longtime student of the peace are nowhere as close as
Soviet Union. Whl!n Richard much of world opinion would like
Pipes talks, I listen.
to believe ... In fact, that soft-line
And whatls Pipes saying these policy has enabled Moscow to
days? On the Op-Ed page of The spread Its influence and power
New York Times recently, In an abroad more effectively than
article entitled "The RU$s!ans when It had pursued an overtly
Are Stlll Coming," he pointed out hard line."
that, according to the best
Pipes concludes that either
estimates, Soviet military out- "Moscow regards the present
lays are continuing to grow atthe period as a breathing spell...
rate of 3 percent a year In before resuming a worldwide

offensive," or "the leadership is
so beholden to its generals ... that
It cannot afford to alienate them
with cutbacks In appropriations
and foreign commitments."
Nor Is Pipes alone In his
concern, Gen. John Galvin,
NATO commander In Europe,
recently declared that "we see
little decrease yet In the level of
combat power available to the
East."
We would do well to heed these
warninp. It would be foolhardy
In the highest degree for the
administration, or Congress, or
our NATO allies to reduce the
West's military strength out of
some glib assumption that "the
Cold War Is over."
Atthesametlme, hOwever, It Is
clear "that in the broadest terms
Soviet power Is in Irreversible
strategic retreat. All we need do
to prevail is remain calm and
firm.
Does anyone suppose that
Gorbachev would sit Idly by
while Poland elected a non-

William Rusher
communist president, and Hungary prepared to do likewise, if
he thought he had any alternative? Why are Estonia and
Lithuania preparing to secede
from the Soviet Union altogether,
and even the Ukraine growing
restless? They smell decay and
death In every breeze that blows
from Moscow, that's why.
And what upwardly mobile,
opportunistic young politician in
the Third World today would
choose to cast his lot with the
communist world enterprise,
confident that it will support him
and lead him to victory?
Against this worldwide perception of Soviet decline, of what use
are a few Sukhoi bombers? Tbey
stlll have a certain raw military
potential, but they cannot put
Humpty Dumpty back on his
wall. Not all the massed might of
the Red Army, Navy and Air
Force can do that.

UFOs? I'd just rather not.even know
It this were 25 years ago, my

qa.·: .e,,..,. ...

Inj~ry-riddled

Page-2-The Daily Sa: sli~el
Pomeroy-Middlaport. Ohio
Monday. Noliembar 6. 1989

Are Soviets fooling with Mother Nature?

·The Daily Sentinel

cousins and I would be right in
the middle of a ghost hunt.
BUlle Jo and Ginger Jived In a
tiny Kansas town, and about all
there was for kids to do was go
down to the tavern for some
chewing gum, climb boxcars;
and play In the many_decaying
houses whose families had
moved away years earlier In
search of jobs in the bigger clUes.
No one paid much attention to
the houses, because rto one
wanted to live In the town. The
hapless owners just gave up and
let us have at 'em.
They were exquisite places for
calling forth gbosls, a practice
we never tired ot We.never tired
of It because we never actually
found wbat we were looldng for.
Sometlmel we felt "cold apotl"
and oceaulonally we even heard
atranae volcel cut the atUI air just enoup to keep ua comtng
back without truly frtptenlng
u. .
As I arew older, I gradually
lost my belief in ghosts; a
combination of changing pblloaopby and, I'm sure,- having
never actually seen one. My
cousins and I gradually stopped
looking for flying saucers, too;
our faith a victim of our failure to

- ' -·-

·

Sarah Overstreet

who had been returning !rom a
experience.
But recently In Kansas folks match, told of seeing a round,
hard and he hallucinated it.
were seeing UFOs - a bout 100 blinking, "saucerllke" object
The way he tells lt, a saucerpeople In southeastern Kansas come close to their bus, hover,
shaped object (like a "teacup
and northeastern Oklahoma re-. then zip back and forth across the upside down on a saucer") with
ported slgbtings. Reading their horizon. Although the whole red and blue blinking lights
accounts, I realized I haven' I busioad saw it, pnly two or three hovered and theh landed on his
'stopped believing in fiying sauc- · were willing to ' tell the story on
back-40 one evening at milking
ers as much as I just stopped camera - the rest were afraid of time. When It took off again It lefi
thinking about them; and 1think being branded as wackos.
a circle of scorched earth behind.
It's the same with my high·
that's because I'd just rarher not
StUI, I won't think too much
school friend's father: When he about flying saucers until one
know.
The Kansas UFOs did aU the called the local airport to report lands too close for comfort. I
usual things - hovered, zipped what he'd seen, they guffawed have enough trouble with my
swiftly while making no noise; and set the tone for all future fellow humans to fret about
rose straight up In the air. They re-telllngs. It .you aren't a family aliens that I haven't ever seen.
had coinred blinking lights. One friend and don't earn his trust, With my luck, anything that
earful of folks reported a "round foraet it. But it is the only UFO lands In my back-40 will be
thing wlt)l two red llgbta" from stoey I put any real stock In, · carrying a couple of single
which popped two 9-foot, areen, because this man Ia about the women, younger and prettier
glowing, thin beings that may or straightest arrow I've found In than I am, who'll work for less
may not have bad heads. Acr0111 this crooked old . world. I know moaey and whom the men In my
the world In the Soviet Union, either he saw what he says he life will regard as . exotic
Tan, the ofttctal government saw, or a cow kicked hln'l real foreigners.
lleWI agency, reported stptlngs
or a "ablntnc ball or dlac" from
wblch euwpd buman-llke creaturet, 9 to 12 teet tall, with ''very
•
small heads." ·
.
By Vnlled Preu lnteruilonal
Today Is Monday, Nov. 6, the 310th day of 1989 with 55 to follow.
A couple years ago, one of the
The moon ls In Its first quarter.
reporters at the TV alation where
Tbe
morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
I work did a aeries on local UFO
The
even1ng
stars are Venus and Saturn.
sightings, and one report really
Thole born on thls date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
lmprened me. In It, members of
Belgian Instrument-maker Adolphe Sax, Inventor of the saxophone,
North Arkansas Community Col·
In 181\ ,hand leader and composer John Philip Sousa in 18~lege's women's vollyball team,

Today in history

The Daily

everything they could, and 1 successful volleyball career at
Walsh again dashed the chamcouldn't ask for more than that." Warsaw River View High School.
pionship hopes of the University
With a primarily young team to In past seasons with the Redwoof Rio Grande volleyball team
start, Rio Grande battled its way men, she has won honorable
when It defeated the Rio ladies in
to the conference championship mention from the district and
three games Saturday. but the
on
a 7-1 record and ·first place In was named to the conference
Redwomen emerged with sevthe district at the end of regular first team.
eral individual honors from Its
season competition. Fields' sixdistrict and conference.
The coaches also chose Zempyear record with the Redwomen ter, a 6-0 middle hitter, to the
In its opening round in the
is now 147-81.
District 22 volleyball tournament
All-District team and first team,
at Lyne Center, the top-seeded
"We've had some super things
MOC. The daughter of Clifford
Redwomen 135-6) fell to Sue happen, " Fields said. "If anyone and Gaylene Zempter of PortsTurner's Cavaliers 11-15, 15-5, had told me at the beginning of mouth, Zempter has not yet
9-15, 6-15.
the season we'd be in district chosen a major at Rio Grande. A
The victory propelled Walsh competition, I'd have told them
sophomore, Zempter played volinto the title match against · they were crazy."
leyball at Minford High School
Mount Vernon Nazarene, which
Saturday's match saw Teresa and was named to the MOC
had earlier defeated Mount St. Zempter post 21 kills, Shelly honorable mention list in 1988.
Joseph and Cedarville for a shot Hoop 14 and Michelle Spears
Named to the district's honoraat the championship. Walsh seven against the Cavaliers, with ble mention list and the MOC
netted the top spot by defeating Hoop and Shannon Huston ad- second team was sophomore
Paul Swanson's Cougars 15-6, ding five block solos to the Robin Sharp, the team's 5-6
15-2. 15-12. As the District 22 offense.
setter. Sharp is majoring in
champs, Walsh (29-11) will host
Huston also posted two serving elementary education and Is the
the hi -district competition Nov. aces. On defense, Hoop netted 29 daughter of Marvin and Jackie
11 and faces Northwood Institute. digs and Spears had 16.
Sharp of Tarlton, Ohio. At
Midland. Mich.
In voting by the district and Amanda Clearcreek High
"I felt that for the talent we conference coaches, Hoop, a 5-8 School, Sharp was named her
had. we had a' super year, .. mtddle hitter, was 'chosen the league's top volleyball player. .
commented Redwomen Coach District and MOC Player of the
Awarded honorable mention
Patsy Fields, who was chosen by Year. A physical education ma- from the conference was threeher peers as the District and jor, Hoop Is the daughter of year volleyball veteran Chris
Mid-Ohio Conference Coach of Charles and Leona Hoop of Williams, a 5-8 offensive hitter.
the Year."l felt the team gave Coshocton. A junior, Hoop had a Williams is the daughter of
Howard and Barbara Blakeman
of Kitts Hill and Is majoring in
crown~
physical education. At Coal
BIG RAPIDS, Mich. (UPI) meet.
Grove High School, Williams was
Defending regional champion All-Conference for twp years and
Northeast Missouri State and
Ashland College won the men's Southeast Missouri was third was her team's most valuable
and women's categories Satur- with 103.
player in 1985.
day at the NCAA Division II
Great Lakes Cross Country Regional Championships.
Northeast Missouri, which
scored 76, slipped by five-time
defending regional champion
Southeast Missouri which finished 5econd with 87.
CANDIDATE FOR
Both teams qualified for the
NCAA Division II championships
Nov. 18 at Stroudsburg IPa.)
University.
Experience:
Dedication:·
Alan Peyton of Plt15burg State
Vol.
Fireman
9
yrs.
Lifelong Resident
finished the 10,000 meters In
hard President 1989
32:28. Teammate Malt Logue
Attends Racine U.M. Church
was second In 32:57. Both
Radne Council '81-'19
Meigs Co. Teacher 9 years
· runners also qualified for the
P•id for by Candidate Scott D, Wolfe.
nationals.
·
P.O. Box 872. Roctno. Ohio 45771.
. In the women's competition,
Ashland compiled 67 points to
outdistance Grand Valley State
which had 87. Both earned
automatic berths to the NCAA

caught a 25-yard scoring pass
from Schroeder In the second
,
period.
"We couldn't stop the big
plays," Cincinnati Coach Sam
Wyche said. "Our defense was
not up to stopping them."
The Bengals, 5-4 and one game
behind first-place Cleveland In
the AFC Central, lost quarterback Boomer Eslason and running back James Brooks to
Injuries In the first half.
Es!ason, who tossed five TD
passes last week, suffered a
bruised lung when sandwiched
by Greg Townsend and another
defender on the third Cincinnati
play. He was In the game for only
two offensive series.
Esa!son was spitting blond
after the game. There was no
Immediate word If he would miss
any playing time.
''I was having trouble catching
my breath and calllng signals at
the line of scrimmage," the
left-bander said. "It's really
frustrating."
Brooks, the fourth-leading
rusher In the NFL, departed with
bruised ribs In the second quarter and finished with just 28 yards
on 7 carries. Backup running
back Eric Ball also was hurt In
the first quarter, suffering a
bruised hlp.
"With all the injuries, we had
only five plays we could run at
the ·'end of the game," Wyche
said. "It reminded me of the
replacement games during the
strike."
With Cincinnati trailing 28-0,
rookie Erik Wilhelm threw a
34-yard TD pass to Tim McGee
with 12: 09left. Lewis Billups then
interecpted Schroeder, setting
up the Bengals on the Los
Angeles 32.
But on 4th-and-goal from the 1,
linebacker Tom Benson dropped
a leaping Stanford Jennings for
no gain · with eight minutes to
play, and the Raiders had withstood the AFC champions' final
challenge.
"I saw him jump and I tried to
stop him In mid-air," . Benson
sa(d.
Schroeder hit Gault for the only
score of the third period. The

•••

Scott D. Wolfe

"It gave the entire team a lot of
confidence," said Schroeder,
who completed only 28 percent of
his passes the }as t three games.
"We str~ggled, I struggled the
last couple of weeks. Everybody
got a great lilt from that play."
Jackson- with 467 yards in his
four games this season- scored
from the 7 four plays later,
carrying Dixon on his back into
the endzone for a 7-0 advantage.
Nine minutes later, the 1985
Heisman Trophy winner displayed his breakaway speed in
his 92-yard run. Taking a pitch on
a sweep left, Jackson turned the
corner, pulled away from Dixon
at the 30 and used Interference
from Gault to go the distance.
"It wasn't me: It was the
linemen and fullback (Steve
Smith)," he said. "When you get
good blocking, it's like my
grandmother could have run that
play ."
Jackson had the previous-longest run In Raider ·history- a
91-yard scamper during a 1987
game at Seattle.
W!!helm was intercepted by
Terry McDaniel at the Cincinnati
43 midway through the second
quarter. Four plays later,
Mueller took Schroeder's pass
and stretched the ball .over the,
goal line to complete the scoring
play that made it 21 -0.
The Bengals took possession at
the Los Angeles 49 - their first
visit to Raider territory -with 58
seconds left in the half and
moved to the 16, but Jim Breech
bounced a 34-yard attempt off the
left upright as time expired. It
was his first miss in nine tries
this season.

Bishops capture soccer tourney title
WOOSTER, Ohio IUPI) -Phil
Pelck scored the first goal of the
game Saturday to help Ohio
Wesleyan to a 3-0 win over
Wheaton College in the championship of the NCAA Division II
Great Lakes Regional soccer
tournament.

NE Missouri, Ashland win CC

*** RE-ELECT

wide receiver blew past Rickey
Dixon, caught the pass just
beyond midfield and raced In for
the touchdown.
Wilhelm finished 15 of 36 for 200
yards and one interception. Jennings had 92 yards rushing on 19
carries.
Schroeder, who completed just
1 of 8 passes for 1 yard last week
after replacing Beuerlein. surprised the Bengals by throwing
the bomb to Gault on the game's
first play.

The Bishops take a 21-2-0mark
Into the third round of the
national tournament against the
winner of the New England
regional.
OSU got into the finals with a
2-1 overtime win over DePauw,
while Wheaton advanced with a
2-0 win over Wooster.

Sentinei-Page~3

Streaks
capture
OAC title
By United Press International
Given a second chance. the old
guard of the Ohio Athletic Conference might not be so anxlous to
roll out the welcome mat for
Tony DeCarloc,_and his gang of
John Carroll Blue Streaks.
John Carroll. after 34 years in
the Presidents' Athletic Conference, returned to the OAC this
season and simply ran away with
a football championship.
The Blue Streaks, In a championship "showdown" Saturday
against Mount Union, left no
doUbt they are the class of the
league by belting the Purple
Raiders 31-7.
That made JCU 9-0 {)verall
going Into Its regular season
finale next week at BaldwinWallace and 7-0 in conference
play ,
Larry Wanke, a I ransfer from
Pitt, threw two touchdown
passes to Pete Engoglia and
Willie Beers ran for a pair.
Beers' first TD broke a 7-7 tie in
the third quarter and the Streaks
added 18 points In the final
period.
"Winning the Ohio Conference
title was our goal from the
beginning of the season," said
DeCarlo, who also serves as JCU
athletic director. "We had the
chance to do that today and
weren't going to let it get away.
It's a real thrlll to win this In our
first year back in the
conference. "
Wanke completed 20 of 32
passes for 257 yards, including
17- and 34-yard touchdown passes
to Engoglia.
"It took Larry a while to really
pick up our system," said De- .
Carlo, "but he's reading defenses
better and better and certainly
has put things together the last
three weeks."
Whlle John Carroll was wrapping up the OAC title, Ohio
Wesleyan assured itself of · at
least a share of the North Coast
Athletic Conference championship with an ·118-7 win over
two-time defending champion
Allegheny.

The Bishops, who trailed 7-6 at
halftime, took the lead for good
on a 4-yard touchdown run by
Kevin Sims early in the third
quarter. Sims rushed lor 177
yards in 29 carries.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

" '.':

~ .•.

. RE-ELECT
-

LARRY WEHRUNG
POMEROY VILLAGE COUNCIL

I CARE - PLEASE ~OTE! .
Pd. Pol. Ad by Candidate, larry Wehruf!g,
1681 Uncoln Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

SOUTHERN LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCAnON

·s

L1 ""iJ-OO[i{]
TI 5e"'' o ..... ~
0

(,tqn~cx

wasn'f

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Areawide Retired Senior
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HEADNG &amp; COOUNG

Efficiency ancJ
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Make This One
of Our Best
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Gallla County Council on Aging

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Meigs County ·Council on Aging

No subscrlptio~s by maU permUted In

areas where home carrier service ls
avallabl e.
Moll Saboertollo110
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Meigs County Retiree! Senior
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VOTE YES ON NOVEMBER 7

••

Paid lor by Menial H..lh Levy Commin.. Edw•d J. S.rkic::h. M.D .. Tr..sur.r

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ReaMd

Cl•la•ll

n.IJ. Nt!'l ,;IU1\f': Nn . It a1 OldaiKIMIII
~"'"·
~- Nf-br•• (I-I) lo!il teC•tora•!'J-11.
LOIIhiLana &amp;llU.

Repeal

Dlvl!llloon \,'
&amp;e(llon 11

Mcn.-1411 llt-1) u Berh CenWr
Wesllern Rl!!lltrW {ll-eJ, 7:Sip.m .. F1tch
S&amp;a411lwn, VO!UIIr."'-ft.
ReA~Gn Ill
s.-ai!Q St. MI!I'P 111-01 v11. De-fil.lt(f'
.-\~""''..,. {11-t}, 1:311 p.m. Frld*l, Cay
Malllcl~l Sladl.un, Ort-_.1\.
aeP,nlt
stiiMb~• (II· I) \'5. Fr•Win f'\lr•c•
Gre8 (11 ·1), '.1 :31 p.m. f'rolday, Fuloa
Field, Lllftta~~~!B.
Reatonte
MlrMer (le-I) va. Sprtnllfleld Calltoftl'

(I•U. 1::te p.m. F!'lda,)',Wert:dkadlvm,

Ptq•.

Saturday's scores
Ohio foltel(t' Football ScottS
No\' . -1
OtllostMit' 5:!, Sonhwr144'r• !1
Howlln~~: Grt'l"'l 51, Kt•nl St.le I!'K
&amp;.&lt;~k'rn Mlddlaa 211, IMIIUT\1 i
Ktonl111:ky 31, tlneln!Mtl D
Akr!NI S:t. Nonht•rn Arlw• 7
\'OIIIIiJPlOWII Slldt&gt; .1,1, Uhrr1)"1-l

&amp;lctwln-'hlla.·r r.. MIU'k&gt;tta1
Hl'ldrlhPr« 35, Cap !WI i
...,.m W. " 'uQK&amp;rr IS
· -lua. ('uroll ~I. MH• Unkla1
MuNchapm %-1, Ohio Nonhern 8
Ollerltl'l• n. Cell.ll"f' (Ky) !I
O.ht Wfl'lk!)•n IIi, Allrallf'ny (PL l 1
C!lM' Jl, Oht'tlla ZM

.... ~ 17. ere. .... ,..
"''illl'..tlol'ran. EariiMim (lad... I 1-1
st . .lewpll (la411. J tl. .W.I.nd !I
Bluffton -U, Wllmh1.allon ll
r("'ltral state 711, Nor'llu.'f'n Mlctdpr~ 0
DQtolt U. v .......ralso (Jnd.JI
"-...,_(lad. I II, DtiiiUk·f' 1'.1
F1IMIIIJ M, ¥h,ylll" ~t• (Midt-1 30

Frowhtra:IM411, J3-I, Tlma n
UrlliiM IIi, URtoa tlt,y.) 8

How they fared
felk-lllt" Foolti.JI
How tht• !:PI To pte I1U'1'411Saturloa,v:
1. Not"' Dam" (~-1' dj•futt•dN "" y41.0.
Nnl iiiiiiii'H~: Nn. II "'· ~uUwrn
Mt'tMdiMI.

'!. ( 'o lonuto (~·Bt dl'lt'llllf'd Nehnl'ika

liiTIIP: Nov . II vs. Mklalpa.
!1. S.udl~n Cal (i-t) played Ort'KOR
Stlltf! . Nexll{ame: Nov. II a1 Artz....
10. TnaeMee (I-I) did DOl pia)' . No:t
llia~T~oe : Nov . II YA. All:r ....
11. Arkulllll n -1 1 d•l""'" ll Ric.- Sll-n .
Ne~tt IUUnf': No\', II VI\. Blu'lor,
IZ. W~t Vl ...lt'lla (8-t· ll loat to Prnn
Sia.lf' 1&amp;-1. Nekl lM'II' : NO\', II \'11,
Ruill;f'rs.
n . A•IMim ~).~) played tlort . . at
lli&amp;:hl- l'.iex trwnr: No\'. It v.._ LowllilMall
Tt't·h.
II. Pit tabu ra:h 1~.1-1) dldn•l play . Nl'x t
awnt: scav . ll v11. MIMI'Ill.

U . North Cwolh• statr li-t) la~t to
Vll'l(inla *1·1. Nf')lt a-anw: Nov. 11 llt

.......

IIi. ArizOM ~ 1-3\lostMCallfornllltl-tll.
I'll ext l(affil'!: Nn. II Yf\. Squlher• C&lt;ll.
11. Penn Slat l' (i-!) defuled \\'Ht
Vl~aill 1&amp;-1. Ntolll ramr: Nov. 11 111

Mar)'llllld.
Ill. OMbon .11'-!1 411d1PIItl'!• North
CaroUnu. 35-3. Snt lllm4': Nov. 111 lit
SOulh ClU'OUftll.
l!t (Ue) Tex1111 UM (1·2) dt'feaY~td
Soultlt&gt;rn Metllodbol l3-H. S••• a:amt:
Nov. U ''"' AriWit&amp;S.
lt. (tiel T~tKa/'1 (-1-3) IOJ&lt;il to Texl&amp;l' Tf't•h
2.. 11. Nextaamr: :-.io\ . II at Hou!llon.

Pro results
NATIONAL IIASKETIIAU.. AS SOC ,
Slllwd..,.'li H~t!o~ulh
Nf'W York 119, Mlllll\l M

MIIWIUIIIr:f' lot, PbUadel phi aN.
DttnkiS.WallliAiloaU
New .lt"I'IIIPY 111, Or..-o JH
llldl....aiH. Cleveludt8
Boldon 111. Chlcqu 110
SIUI AIIIOIAio IN, LA Llllien!R
Df'nwr IS5, Plloenb: 1St
Hou•on 13'l. Goldt'nSlate IU
Sa(.'flt.menlo 10,, Suilk 1ee
SUIIIIO''!I Rl'Aull
Portland!IJ, MlnneKo&amp;M83
Mondll)''ll Gall'll'
N- York at Or•ndD, 7:38 p.m.
Tuf'lld.,-'!1 Games
Miami Ml New ,Jersey, 7:311 p.m.
Detrok ILl. Chlcq:o. 8 p.m.
Bo11ton .a MIIW•ket', K:lO p.m.
Portland at Ho•Pn.I:Up.m .

Ch Mtlotte

!U.

Sunlit, It • .m.• ,

NATIOSAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Su llh,y',. Htlulb
Alli!.Dia 3ll, ftllffalo !fi
Green Bay 1-1, Chlup 13
Clt'Yt:hnd -12, T.mpa &amp;.y 31
Houlllon :l5, DI!INII 31
Mi.mlll ..... anapoll5 13
Mln ..,.o&amp;a U,IARUM21l0'1'1
N\' Jeh!'7, Ne• !:n,;Jallll Z&amp;
KanMIII rlt)' H, Suttk&gt; 10
LA Rale&gt;n til, (1.,1.-il 1
I'II'Y Glut!i H. Phoeelx U
Dil' .. tl, Phlldelptlla 17

"aan

Den\'lf'l'

:w, PlulllMup;h 1

PalJil.l.l 13, WIN!.hllton 3
MoiiiQ , No\'. 8
N"' Orin•~ 11.1 Su Frudseo. !t p.m.
Sullllay No,·. It
Clllcqo 11 Plt&amp;Bbtlra-lt. I p.m .
rlt&gt;Yeland ~~ot .Sf',.tlt!, 1 p.m.
Deruerlll. KanRIIll Clly,l p.m .
Gt'f'f'll Bay at Detroit, I. p.m.
hMIIIIIft&amp;Poll• a1 Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Miami at Plo'Y .Ids. 1 p.m.
Mlntll'!!llllia at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
NrwOrle... M.e N••EIIIIJud,l p.m.
WMIIIftJEIOIIatPhlladelptda,l p.m.

DaUu..,

Ph~lx • .a

p.m.

At._.. .as .. FrandaK-0, .f p.m.
Nl' Glurt~tat LA RA~M, .f p.m.
LA Rrdcltu .. Su Dtep, K p.m.
Monllay, Nov. 13
Cladn... lld ..._.oa.. t p.m.

Ohlo HIp Seheol Fou•tt.ll Pl~~oyoftli
Nov . .f
IH~IIktal

Cle8f )«.alv• If, Warren WMn Re~~1
a.dldU, E L1eSI!.awl
u ... !I, Tro:r '.1
Lilncu&amp;er -It, Frl'!mori RoliN,
M•lllll ... n, stowWalt.h .lew!.« u
Akr Garfield '!R, Gre~ City Z'.l
Cia Moellf'r Sl. On El..- '7
Midllftci'IUM, ~··WIQ'Df '.1
DMtiloniU

lrollllo• 2A, Orn411f' I

St

C~aln~llf'J. ~wr

I

uw.loniV
WIU'ftn Ke•~df U, Beaeh"·ood tK
Akr Muc:lleMrr !8, WeUia!Pon :n
rlur Fork,, ,\Ilea E&amp;!ltt
Vf'l'lllllll'a SS. Archbold I!
Slet~ben\tUe C!Uh. 2t, AmiUida 0

Fre ..rlct.lown 'll, E Cllntoa 0
Wlweler.tlu 111: •· •ookvllk&gt; l.f
CMI Grow :U, Pal• Valley til .

OU fires grid coach

.
, ATHENS. Ohio !UP!) -Cleve
Bryant, who was unable to create
competitiveness on the football
field In his live years at Ohio
University, was !Ired Sunday
night.
Bryant, who has won just nine
games In live years, will remain
as coach for the team's final two
games of the season. school
of!lcials sald.
He has a contract that expires
In December 1990, and school
of!lclals said they would honor it.
·Bryant has a 1-7-1 record this
year and a 9-42-2 record in his live
years. The Bobcats are tied for
seventh place in the Mid·
American Conference.
"Although the program was
not fully competitive, Cleve
Bryant has made many strong
contrlbu !Ions to the university's
football program," said Athletic
Director Harold McElhaney.
"Cleve's loyalty and dedlc&lt;!tion
to Ohio Unlverlty are clear to all
whO worked with him. He has
strengthened the program In
terms of the caliber of academic
students he has recruited and in
graduation rates."
Bryant met with his team and
coaches Sunday evening after he
learned of the decision.
"I promise the university a
strong effort and performance In
the final two games of , the
season," Bryant said. " J have no
other comment on the unlversltY:s decision."
,
Bryant met Friday with' OU

Monday, November 6, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

4 The Deily Sentinel

.

President Charles Ping to dis cuss his status. McElhaney had
recommended to Ping that Bryant be replaced.
"In areas that are Important to
the university - the development of the student athlete;·"the
Integrity o! the program, support
from the university community
:- Cleve has provided outstand·
lng leadership,'.' Ping said. "But
the program has to be competitive, and It was time for a
change."
Ping said the university will
honor all commitments o! the
contract that expires In 13
months.
McElhaney said he would
appoint a screeningcommltteeto
look for a new coach.
Bryant was a quarterback for
the Bobcats who holds many of
the school's records for passing.
He also set a Tangerine Bowl
record In 1968 by throwing for
four touchdowns and running for
a !Ill h. He Is also a member oft he
OU Hall of Fame.
He guided the Bobcats to
Mid-American Conference titles
In 1967 and 1968, and was an
11th-round draft choice of the
Denver Broncos In 1970.

Defense paces Browns win
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!)- lnst~ad
of relying on gimmicks, the
Cleveland Browns turned to
simplicity.
This week's basic . winning
formula? Get the ball In Eric
Metcalf's hands and watch a
wondrous rookie turn heads and
scoreboard numbers.
Cleveland's dazzling tailback
received some defensive support
Sunday, one week after the
Browns used llea-!IIC)cers and
halfback option passes to beat
Houston. Safeties Felix Wright
and Thane Gash returned
·second-quarter interceptions for
touchdowns on consecutive plays
and Bernie Kosar threw three
first-half scoring passes, powerIng the Browns to a 42-31 victory
against the slumping Tampa Bay
Buccaneers.
Metcalf, son of former Card!·
nals All-Pro running back Terry
Metcalf, continued · his emer·
gence as one of the league's most
exciting players. The fanner
Unlversit)' of Texas standout and
collegiate track star caught a
. 24-yard swing pas.s to open
Cleveland's scoring, then added
a 43-yard TD run early In the final
quarter, reversing his field three
times to give the Browns a 42-24
lead.
·
Metcalf ran for 87 yards In 17
carries, added 52 yards on seven
receptions and returned three
kickoffs for 94 yards, accounting
for 233 yards In total offense.
Kosar completed 18 of 22 passes
for 164 yards, dissecting the
Buccaneers with pasS&amp;~ In the
fiat to Metcalf and fullback Tim
Manoa .
"Bernie was throwing the ball
very well in the first half and that
opened up the run for us,"
Metcalf said. "I'm starting to
feel more comfortable ea'ch
game."

Monday, November 6, 1989

Vikings
take over
top spot
By DAVE RAFFO
UPI Sports Writer
The Minnesota Vikings moved
ahead of Chicago In the NFC
Central Sunday, but It took a
victory without a touchdown on
their part and an overturned
replay .c all against the Bears to
make It happen.
Rich Karlls tied an NFL·
record with seven field goals and
Mike Merriweather blocked a
punt out of the end zone for an
overtime safety to lift the Vikings
to a 23-21 victory over the Los
Angeles Rams at home. The
Packers defeated the Bears 14-13
after Don Majkowski's 14-yard
TD pass to Sterling Sharpe,was
ruled Illegal, then the "call was
overturned by the replay official
at Green Bay .

GA.SH
. SCORES - Cleveland's stron1 sAfety Thane G11$h
Intercepted VInny Teslaverde In the aecord quarter Sund~ at
Tampa Bay and ran It back for a tiluchdown. ~er In the period,
Gash suffered a neck Injury, ud ~as carried from the field on a
stretcher. (UPI)
'

And that's an uncomfortable
feeling; for Cleveland's future
opponents. The Browns, 6-3, won
their third straight by snapping a
7-7 tie with 21 consecutive points
in. the second period. Kosar, who
completed 12 of 13 pass attempts
in Cleveland's 35-point opening
half, also threw TD passes of 7
yards to rookie Lawyer Tillman
and 4 yards to Derek Tennell.

Rio harriers advance
to national competition
The University of Rio Grande finished 11th at 20:11, Becky
Webb was 13th at 20: 23, Debbie
men's cross country team and
Gray
ended the course 19th at
two of Its women's squad runners
21:
27.
Atsuko
Yamazaki was 31st
will compete In the NAJA Nationat
,
23:55,
and
Gina Kllchenman
als on Nov.18 at the University of
was
32nd
at
25:03.
.
Wlsconsin-Parkside in Kenosha.
Overall winner for the
District 22 coaches made the
women:s race was Malone with
decision based on the results of
30 points. Rio Grande was second
races run Saturday at Rio
with 47, followed by Cedarville,
Grande, which hosted this year's
69;
Findlay, 81; and Walsh, 140.
qualifying event.
The
men's team qualified as a
In addition, the coaches chose
whole
for the Nationals when It
Rio Grande mentor Bob Willey as
finished
third In Its competition
Cg-Men's Coach of the Year.
with
86
points. Joining the
Willey will share the honor with
Redmen
at
Kenosha will be
Malone's Jack Hazen. Scott
Malone,
which
finished first with
Armstrong of Malone was named
22
points.
and
Walsh,
second with
the District Women's Coach Of
78
points.
the Year.'
Other team ranklngs included
Redwomen sen lor Mary
Cedarville,
fourth, 87; Defiance,
DowiE'r of Jackson qualified for
·
fifth,
163;
Findlay, sixth, 164;
the nationals for her second
Wilmington,
seventh. 182; and
consecutive year as champion of
Bluffton, eighth. 189.
the women's varsity race.
Cedarville's Eric Fillinger won
Dowler bested 34 other runners to
the men's raceln25: 47. Finishing
finish first In 19 minutes even.
for Rio Grande were Mark Cline, ,
Teammate Bonnie Evans. a
lOth, 26:58; Rusty Edens, 17th,
freshman from Kingston, Ohio,
27: 44; Scott Lafferty ,18th, 27: 58;
will join Dowler at the Nationals
,
Doug Horne, 19th, 28: 02; James
for finishing third at 19:26.
Peck, 22nd, 28: 09; Bob Fritz,
"I'm very happy about going
28th,
28:54; and Vince Fatica,
because the national race is a
29:44. There were 55
33rd,
great place to be. The competirunners
entered In the race.
tion offered by the other runners
Willey,
noting this would be the
is excellent," Dowler comfirs(
time
in 12 years an entire
mentE'd. "I'm happy for Bonnie,
team of Rio Grande runners
too, but I'm disappointed that we
would attend the Nationals, said
couldn't go as a team."
both of his teains were mentally
In other Individual results for
tired a Iter a week of !Ina Is. but
the Redwomen, Renee Peck . raced hard.
''They gave everything they
had," he said.
Willey said he was gratified at
sharing the top coaching honor,
but added it was a "shock."
"! don't !eel I deserve It, but
It's always great when your
peers recognize you,'' he said.
"But. it's really not the coach, It's
the team that makes It."
Prior to the varsity races, a
men's open race Including 12
runners was conducted. It was
won by Malone's Kevin King In
27:58. Finishing for the Redmen
were Matt Bagent, seventh·,
31:04; jon Benfer, eighth, 31:12:
and Bryan Kimble. 12th:, 32:29.

"We were lucky to come out
with a win.'' said Cleveland
Coach Bud Carson a Iter his teani
was oulgalned 398-271. "The
'fampa Bay offense had a good
game plan and they attacked our
defense where they should."
Tampa Bay; which stood 3·2
~fter stunning Chicago a month.
ago, couldn't establish the run In
dropping Its fourth consecu tlve
decision. VInny Testaverde,
picked off four times while
passing for 370 yards, threw a
pair of 9-yarcl TD passes to·
J11mes Wilder, Lars Tate scored
twice from one yard out and
Donald Jgwebuike kicked a 53yard field goal as the Buccaneers
dropped to 0-4 against the
Browns.
ITestaverde com·pleted 27 of 50
pass attempts, but couldn't overcome early mistakes against the
AIFC's top-ranked defense.
Wilder, a nine-year veteran who ·
lost his starting fullback job to
"!llllam Howard this season,
caught eight passes for 107yards,
b4 t the Buccaneers rushed for
just 49 yards.
:·'The two best things I saw
wl!re the crowd (69,162) and Eric
M~tcalf.'' said Tampa Bay
C&lt;~ach Ray Perkins.

,'

The Vikings, 6-3, snapped a tie
with the Bears, who fell into a tie
with Green Bay at 5-4.
Karlls' seventh field goal tied
the score 21-21 with 8 seconds left
and equalled Jim Bakken's 22·
· year-old record for field goals in
a game.
At TamP,., Fla:, safeties Felix
Wright and Thane Gash returned
back-to-back second-quarter Interceptions tor TDs and Bernie
Kosar threw three first-half
scoring passes for the Browns.
Cleveland, 6-3, won Its third
straight while handing the Buccaneers, 3-6, their fourth straight
loss.
At Los Angeles, Bo Jacl&lt;son
raced a club-record 92 yards for
one of his two TDs and finished
with 159 yards on 13 carries and
·Jay Schroeder threw two TD
passes to lift the Raiders.
Schroeder hit Willie Gault for 63
yards on the Raiders' first play
and completed an 84-yard scorIng pass to Gault. Los Angeles,
5-4, won Its fourth In five games
under Coach Art Shell and
dropped the Bengals to 5·4.

•a 1.111 TO 1IMl,

VOTE FOR

-·

DENNIE ·E.
HILL
FOR

sunoN
TOWN SliP
TRUSTEE

Thank You!

Pd. Pol. Ad by Cand.,
47854 S.~. 124, Racine, Ohio

•

Whatever Your Choice
Exercise Your Voice .....

Taka Time To Vote On
TUESDAY I NOVEMBER 7 I 1989

UT US COlin Till
IT PAYS.
As soo~. as you join Senior
Champs, we 11 gtve you a checking
account that pays interest. No serv·
ice fees. No charge for checks,
You'll also receive a free Jubilee•
card that lets you get to your BANK
ONE accounts day and night, around
theworld.
·
Plus fee-free travelers checks.
Money orders. Cashier$ checks.
Notary services. And direct-deposit
of paychecks, pension checks, or
Social Security checks.

BETTY BARONICK
POMEROY VILLAGE COUNCIL MEMBER

RE-ELECT

FOI
I
SOUTHERN LOCAL
SCIOOL BOARD

ROBERT E.
BEEGLE

Write-In Can.date

IA.CIIH YILUGE:
COUIICR

THANK YOU.

Pd. Pol. Ad by Cand., P.O.
lox 141. R•cln•. Ohio

I'll. for br Cenclldele.
Boll 72. !Ieoine, O'lio ·

--· ,,

c..o,,·
~

· ·

.

·

INITIATIVE TO REPEAL ORDINANCE NO. 573

VILLAGE Of ~MEROY
Amijortty 1lllnnlllve volt 11 RICIUIIIY lor paaage.

JUST KDP ss,ooo • .-s
-All .,.IBBI'IS AlE 1IURS.
· How do you qualify for Senior
Champs? Easy. just mamtain $5,000
or more in any combination of sav·
ings or certificates of deposit (except
IRAs) at BANK ONE; You'll earn
~t rates ... and get these ~rrific
· ·Senior Champs bonuses besides. ·

''

Shall .ordinanc.e number 573 ~nacled by the Village qouncH of Pomeroy and all other
assoCiatr:&lt;~ ordman~s not s~ifically quoted or de.Stgnllted by number but having reference
to the sa1d commisSIOn and h1slonc preservation and Its rules and reoutations be repealed?
-

I

,J... .

VOTE YES TO DO AWAY WITH THE
POMEIOY HISTORIC
PIESEIYATION
COMMISSIONI
I
PAID POL AD BY DOTTIE TURNER

. . . ..-............~~------~15~3·M~U~LB:ER:U~A:V;E..~~~·:E:RO~Y~,O:H:I0~45~n:9~ :
.,1

•

Our members go far. And often.
Because when you belong to Senior ·
Champs, you can see new places.
Meet new friends. And save along
the _way. All our travel outings and
soctal get -t:oge_thets are arranged by
your own BANK ONE Senior ChamJ&gt;!l
Coordinator, who plans activities wtth
our members' interests in mind. And
you get them all at terrific prices!

"This is our kind of
thing-financial
savings, plus a
chance to meet
new jrieluJs.
What agreat
rombinatitm!"

11UE111011 AIID IIIUEI BAlLOT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

%

Annual
Rate

%

MMIYN15.

Pol. Ad. Paid For By C~nd., Betty Baronick,
503 Mulberry Hei1hts. Pomeroy. Ohio

!.

Annual
Yield

GENERAL ELECTIOII - NOVEMBER .7, 1189

~e .

now, how abotit this extra·bigh inter·
est rate on our Senior Champs CD?
It's agreat way to become a
Senior Champs member and it's
available only to peo9.le 55 or better.
But this rate is good. for a limited
time only, so don't delay!

I

OF~

.d

SPEaiL
TOSMRS.
Hyou've needed just one more
good reason to join Senior Champs

Effective

VOTE FOR

CARL
ROBINSON

...,,.....,.

. Been.a_long time, hasn't it,
smce you JOined a club that paid )\?U
~o belong?
When yo_!I join Senior Champs
at BANK ONE, your membership
entitles you to an exclusive (and
valuable) combination of free and
discounted banking services for people 55 or over. Services chosen not ·
JUSt to s.ave you time_ and money, but
to pay nch rewards mmemories. .

ATTENTION POMEROY VOTERS!
BOB WILLEY
District Co-Men's
Coach of the Year

The Daily Sentinei:....Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BANK. ~E. ATHENS. NA

Nn.rta, OhiO

U.mNr FDIC

-oubjoctto="""'"'yloldootiOf W'&gt;v~tllil!o--IDroolty-WII
l'mlf..,._
byiWCONETRAVELCORPORAT1DN,anafiHIIIofiWICONE.MN4SAB.D ~ ONooranlt 'IJ 1 idlid

_ _ ... IIN_wllh IIANCONECOAPORATION.

'

'

TERM: 18 Months
Minimum depooit: $S,ooa Limited Time Offer.

To join Senior Champs, call or stop
in today at any BANK ONE office.

�r.'

By The ·Bend

The Daily Sentine~

Vladimir Horowitz remembered 'Green Beret' songwriter.Sadler dead
as tGarbo of concert stage'
.

Monday, November 6, 1989

)

Page- 8

Community .calendar

Announcements

hall on Oak Grove Road. Ham
MONDAY
room.
and turkey wlll be furnished by
LETART FALLS -The Letart
the grange. Those attending are Falls PTO will meet Monday at 7
TUESDAY
to bring their own table service p.m. Bill Downie's class . will
SALEM CENTER -The Sa. and a covered dish. A pig In a ' have the program. Plans tor the lem Township Volunteer . Fire
poke auction will be held. fall festival will be finalized . All ~partment Firebelles will hold
.Members are to bring a gift for parents are urged to attend.
an election day dinner on Tues·
patients at the Mental Health
day at the fire house in Salem
Hospital in Athens.
LETART -The Letart Town- Center. The menu will consist of
VFWiomeet
ship trustees will meet Monday vegetable, bean, and chill soup,
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Arts and crafls show
at 7 p.m. at the township sloppy joes, hot dogs, and pies.
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
EAST MEIGS- The Eastern building.
will meet on Thursday at 7 p.m.
Bring containers for carry out
orders.
All tickets are to be turned in at Band Boosters will sponsor an
arts and crp!ts show on Nov. 18
CHESHIRE -"Women Alive"
this meeting.
from 9 a.mj to 4 p.m. There will meeting at the Kyger Creek
PORTLAND - The Porlland
be
live
entertainment,
food,
and
Clubhouse. Janlne Fiala will PTO will serve election . day
Fall feslival
POMOROY - The Salisbury soft drlnl\5. Call 985-3951 or speak on "The Gracious Home- refreshments on Tuesday from
maker" and Karen Jordan will 6: 30 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the school
fall Festival wlll be held Satur· 992-2996 for Information.
give a demonstration on ceramic gym.
day from 5-8: 30 p.m. There wUI
Slug and muzzelloader shools Christman ornaments. Hot dog
be games, homemade chil1, vePOMEROY - The Ken Ams- supper at 7 p.m. on Monday ,
MIDDLEPORT -The Middlegetable soup and pizza.
bary Chapter of the Izaak Walton
port Lodge F and AM will meet
League will have slug shoots on
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. to elect
OutlnK planned
Sunday,
and.Nov.12, Nov.19, and -The board of trustees of Colum· officers. All members are urged
BURLINGHAM - The Burlingham Modern Woodmen will Nov. 26. Muzzle loader shoots will bia Township will meet Monday to attend.
have an outing at Dale's Smor· be held on Dec. 17, Dec. 24, and at 7: 30.p.m. at the fire station.
gasboard on Nov.12 beginning at Dec. 31. The shoots will consls t of
POMEROY -The Drew Websnoon. All are welcome. The price free hand and bench rest events
SYRACUSE -The Syracuse ter ·Past 39 In Pomeroy will -hold
wlll be $2 per person with age 10 at various distances. Rifle and Elementary PTO will meet Mon- Its annual oyster stew on Tuesscopes wpll not be shot In· the day at 7 p.m. at the school.
day at 7p.m. at theposthome.AII
under free.
same category. Various prizes of
members and guests are invited
,,».
meat
and
money
will
be
Blood pressure clinic
MINERSVILLE -Members of to attend. Members may bring
HARRISONVILLE -The Har· awarded.
the Middleport. Garden Club prospective new members.
risonvllll! Senior Citizens wUI
going to Stahls will meet at the
Veteran day dinner
home of Mrs. Ron Reynolds In
sponsor a blood pressure clinic
POMEROY -There will be an
· RACINE -The Racine Ameri- Minersville at 6 p.m. on Monday. election day luncheon at the
on Nov. 14 from 10 a.m. to noon.
Following the clinic there wUI be can Legion Post 602 will sponsor Members will return to Syracuse Episcopal church in Pomeroy.
a club meet·ing and all members a dinner of bean soup, corn bread Dairy Bar for the meeting and
and ham sandwiches at the post refreshments.
ROCK SPRINGS - There will
are urged to attend.
home on Saturday at 11 a.m. A
be an election day dinner at the
salute will be given to commemoRACINE -The Racine VIllage Rock Springs United Methodist
Veleran's day service
rate Veteran Day . Any person Council will meet Monday at 7 Church on Tuesday beginning at
MIDDLEPORT - The Ameri- who has worn a service uniform p.m. at Star Mill Park.
10 a.m. There wlll be vegetable
can Legion and Auxiliary of the is invited to attend.
soup, bean soup, corn bread, hot
Feeney Bennett Post 128 will hold
REEDSVILLE -There will be dogs, sloppy joes, pop, coffee and
a veteran's day service on
Turkey dl011er
a meeting for all seniors and desserts.
Saturday at the annex on Mill St.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The parents interested in the senior
Lunch will be served at 12: 30 Ladles Auxiliary of the VFW trip at Eastern High School on
MIDDLEPORT -There will
p.m. Members are invited. The Post 9053 in Tuppers Plains will Monday at 7:30 . p.m . in the
be a special Alzhetmer's Support
district membership train wili be have a turkey dinner on Saturcafeteria.
Group
meeting on Tuesday at
there.
·
day. The menu will include
Overbrook Center at 7 p.m.
turkey, dressing, mashed pota·
SYRACUSE -Sutton Town- "Daniel 0. Trent will speak.
Council to meet
toes and gravy, noodles, hot roll, ship trustee will meet on Monday
ATHENS- A meeting of the dessert and tea or coffee. The
CHESTER - There will be an
Buckeye Joint County Self lnsu· price will be $4 for adults and $2 at 7: 30 p.m. in the Syracuse
munlcpal
building.
election
day dinner and bake sale
ranee council will beheld on Nov. for children under 12. Serving
at
the
Chester
United Methodist
17 at 10:30 a.m. at the Athens will begin at 4 p.m.
REEDSVILLE
-The
Olive
Church
beginning
at 11 a.m.
County Extension Office.
Township trustees will meet on There will be ham loaf, soups,
Bake and card sale
Monday at the Reedsville Fire sandwiches, pie and cake.
Coaservancy District closed
POMEROY - There will be a Station.
POMEROY - The Leading bake sale and baseball and
MIDDLEPORT -The MiddleCreek Conservancy District will football card sale on Saturday at
POMEROY
-The
Meigs
local
port
Order of the Eastern Star
be closed on Friday In obser- Meigs High School from 9 a.m. to
band
boosters
will
meet
Monday
will
have
an election day dinner
vance of Veterans Day . Water 3 p.m. spobsored by the Meigs
with.
vegetable
soup, sloppy joe,
at
7
p.m.
at
the
hl~th school band
bills due on Friday wlll be Band Boosters. Admission wlll
considered an on time payment be $1 tor adults and $.50 for
on Nov. 13.
children under 12. Contact Peggy
Lewis · at 992-2673 for
.
Hymn sing
information.
·
By WILLIAM C. TKO'IT
old daughter of Polish President
POMEROY - The Mt. Olive
United Press International
Wojclech Jaruzelskl is getting
Community Church wlii have
Turkey dinner
lots
SEE
ZSA
ZSA'S
UNDERof media exposure but she
special singing on Friday and
REEDSVILLE - The Ladies WEAR!: ZsaZsa Gabor's crimi- doesn't like all of it. Monlka
Saturday with the Rev. James Auxiliary of the Orange Town- nal status hasn't hurt her histori- Jaruzelska says an interview
Satterfield ministering. Pastor ship Fire Department are plan· cal value in the lingerie Industry.
The Sunday T.lmes of
Lawrence Bush invites the pub· ning a turkey dinner on Nov. 18 The black lace bra and panties with
London was off base In saying
lie.
beginning at 4 p.m. at the fire Gabor wore in the 1953 movie that she and her fathered argued
station.
"Llli" will be ori display Nov. 8 over tmpositlon of martial law in
Lelarl Falls PTO turkey
when Frederick's of Hollywood Poland In 1981. She tries to set the
dinner
Craft show and sale
opens its Lingerie Museum, record straight in a Polish
LETART FALLS- The Letart
TUPPPERS PLAINS - The which is. replacing its Bra Mu· communist newspaper, Zycie
Falls PTO will be holding its Ladles Auxiliary of the VFW post
The displays also will Warszawy, by saying, "I want to
turkey dinner and fall festival on 90531n TuppersPlalnswlllhavea seum.
Include a black bustier worn by say openly that harm was done to
Nov. 12 at the school with serving craft show and sale on· Dec. 2 Madonna, a petticoat Ava us, me and my family." Photos of
to begin at 11:30 a .m. The menu from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Soup beans,
wore in "Show Boat" Jaruzelska also appeared rewill consist of one choice of meat. com bread, cole sl:"~w, pie, cake, Gardner
and
a
white
peignoir that Mae cently In the French weekly
which includes turkey, ham, or and hot dogs will be served. The
West
donned
for
a Life magazine Paris Match, showing her ·at
baked chicken, mashed potatoes, public is invited to attend.
layout
In
1952.
home with her father, In bed In a
noodles, slaw, green beans, roll,
sleeveless undershirt, in front of
ABERNATHY
OUT
AT
drink, and dessert. Prices are
Christmas party
a
DORM:
The
board
of
trustees
at
fireplace, ln a limo and wearing
$3.50 for adults, $2 for children
TUPPERS PLAINS - The the Rev. Ralph Abernathy's a gray fur coat. Jaruzelska, an
under 12, and free for children VFW Post 9053 and Ladies
mater, Alabama State aspiring actress, says she posed
under three. A country store, Auxiliary in Tuppers Plains will alma
University,
has reversed a deci- tor the · pictures not to help
games and door prizes are also have a Christmas party for
sion
to
name
a new dormitory herself, but to Improve her
being planned. The public is members and family on Dec. 16 after the civil
rights leader father's Image. ''This is also why
invited.
at 6: 30 p.m. The auxiliary will because of the things he wrote I have always consi!lered Westfurnish the meat and everyone is about Marlin Luther King Jr. in ern press attacks on this alThanksgiving dinner
to bring a covered dish. Santa his autobiography. Trustees of legedly gloomy man in dark
RACINE - There will be .a Claus will be present to give out
glasses as unfair and prejudl·
Thanksgiving dinner on Friday . treats and a gift exchange for the the Montgomery, Ala., school cia!,"
she said.
voted
to
name
one
new
dorm
had
at 6:30p.m. at the Racine Grange · kids with a $3 limit.
for King and the other for
MISS KITI'Y HAD AIDS:
Abernathy but that was before Actress Amanda Blake, for
the furor started over "And the many years ''Miss Kitty" In TV's
Walls Came Tumbling Down" In Gunsmoke, died of AIDS, her
which Abernathy wrote that King doctor confirmed Saturday. Her
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI) The exhibit was to have been In had extra-marital affairs with Aug. 16 death of throat cancer at
The display ol Chinese artifacts Seattle and Columbus, but In the two women the night before he 60 was complicated by a viral ·
that has drawn more than 660,000 past couple or weeks, Interest was assassinated In Memphis, hepatitis brought on by acquired
visitors to a remodeled down· began to peak in Orlando.
Tenn., in 1968.
immune deficiency syndrome,
town high school may be on its
A spokeswoman tor the
FAMILY TALK: The 25-year- Dr. Lou Nishimura said. He said
way to Orlando, Fla.
Greater Orlando Chamber of
The Son of Heaven exhibit of Commerce told the Columbus
artifacts of the Imperial Arts of Dispatch Saturday night that
China closed its stay In Columbus China· has approved a plan to
Sunday night. Tile exhibit, which show the dlsolav there.
opened In March after six months
Holly Bennett appeared cauin Seattle, was to have closed in tiously optimistic, the newspaper
September, but was granted an said Sunday, but Bennett added
encore so more schoo~ children "we won't know one way or
could visit.
another until the Ink Is dry" on
More than 660,000 people the contract.
toured the exhibit, and at times
She said the backers have
the lines were so long they nearly secured an exhibit site In a
stretched out to Broad St., the new skyrtse In the downtown
Paid for by the Candidate, W. Harria,
main east-west artery through area that won't require a lot of
the capital city.
Pine Grove Rd., Racine, OH.
renovations.
Rabbit club
POMEROY - The A.R.B.A.
Rabbit Club wlll meet on Nov. 13
at 7:30p.m. at the Meigs County
Extension Offlce. All youths and
adults Interested in the rabb\1
industry are invited to attend.

cole slaw, coffee and tea for $2.75
In the basement of the Masonic
temple from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
CARPENTER - The Colum·
bla Township Volunteer Fire
Department Auxiliary, "Bucket
Bridge'' will serve food all day on
election day at the firehouse on
Route 143 near Carpenter. There
will be donuts, hot dogs, bean
soup, and corn bread, pie and
beverages.
FOREST RUN -The Forest
Run United Methodist Chruch
will have an election day dinner
from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. There will
be Homemade vegetable and
bean soup, sandwiches, pie,
cake, and beverages.
PORTLAND -The Portland
PTO will have an election day
money maker from 6:30a.m. to 7
p.m. at the schoel gym. Food will
be served.
SALEM CENTER -The Sa·
lem Township volunteer fire
department will hold an election
day ·dinner at the fire house in
Salem Center. The menu will
consist of vegetable, bean and
chilie soup, sloppy joes, hot dogs,
and pies. Bring containers for
carry out.

School menu
announced

Eastern
The lunch menu for the East.
ern Local School .District 'h as:
been 'announced for the week of·
Nov. 6-10.
Monday: . hamburger, com, ,·
fruit, rice pudding, and milk.
Tuesday: grilled cheese sand· ·
wlch, tomato soup, carrot and
celery sticks, apple crisp, and
mllk.
Wednesday: spaghetti with;
cheese, homemade rolls and
butter, green beans, applesauce,·
and milk.
.,
Thursdy: chicken patty, vegetables and dip, glorified ric~r
cookie, and milk.
Friday: cook's choice.
,
Carleton School
,
The menu for the Carleton
School and Meigs Industries has~
been announced for the week of
Nov. 6-10.
•
Monday: toasted cheese sand·
wich, tomato soup, crackers,
fruit, and milk.
Tuesday: beef stew, biscuits,
cheese wedge, fruit, and milk. •
Wednesday: tuna tetrazlnnl,
buttered peas, roll, fruit, and
milk.
Thursday': taco dog, french
fries, pork and beans, fruit, and '
milk.
Friday: Holiday.

TUPPERS PLAINS -The
Tuppers Plains VFW Auxiliary
9053 will sponsor the Voice of
Democracy for students from
Eastern, Southern, and Meigs
High Schools on Wednesday at
the post home in Tuppers Plains.
at 7 p.m.

Son of Heaven going to Florida?

. Your Support 8raatly Appraelltad

William F. "Bill" Harris
TRUSTEE
SUnON TOWNSHIP

THANK YOU

...

Vo~

PAUL

GERARD
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE
FOR

COUNCIL
Alpalbllcan
Nowembel'7

.

Dedicated.
Experienced.
Capable.

DAVID KING
CANDmATE FOR

Meigs County School Board
IIOVEMR 7, 1989 ·
Your Vote and Influence
'

Appr~iated

Paid for by Candidate, D. Kina,
38858 Smith Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio

NEW YORK (UPI) - Friends
and colleagues of the late pianist
Vladimir Horowitz recalled a
musical genius with a penchant
for mischief, and his blograpber'
deemed him "the Greta Garbo of
the concert stage."
Horowitz, the nation's most
honored pianist, died of a he'art
attack at his Upper East Side
townhouse in Manhattan about
12:45 a.m. Sunday, pollee said.
He was 85.
"Horowitz was undoubtedly
the greatest pianist of the 20th
Century," said Glenn Plaskin,
author of "Horowitz," a critical
biography published in 1983. "He
had more physical energy, more
electricity than any musician
that came onto that platform.
"He was the Greta Garbo oft he
concert stage."
Horowitz, hailed 11 years ago
by then-President Jimmy Carter
as a national treasure, combined
flawless technique, emotional
depth and sheer stamina to
become the world's preeminent
pianist in the last half of the 20th
century.
. In 1986, after he scored · a
triumph with his first concerts in
his native Russia In more than 60
years, he was presented the
highest U.S. civilian award, the
Medal of Freedom, by President
Ronald Reagan.
The Ktev-born master - he
was 16 when the Russian Revolution swept out Czar Nicholas was especially noted for his
dynamic interpretations of .such
composers as Liszt, Rachmaninoff, and Chopin.
The Soviet Union's official
Tass news all(ency, in a brief

.

MURFREESBORO, Tenn.
(UPI) - Barry Sadler, a former
Green Beret ll(ho glamorized the
elite fighting force with a flag·
waving hit song in the 1960s, died
dispatch, said Horowitz's " musi- dian," Janis said. "He knew how in his sleep Sunday, officials
· said. He was 49.
cal prowess won him many to be terribly funny." •
But Janis said Horowitz was
Sadler had been in the Alvin C.
admirers throughout the world.''
York Veterans Administration
"Being a remarkable Improv- the last -of a vanishing breed.
''He was the last of an era of Hospital since March 6. The
iser, he emphasized emotion in
pianists w,ho, in my opinion, colorful songwriter and adven·
his playing," Tass said.
.Throughout his life, Horowitz really understood the Instrument turer died about a year after he
was shot in the head during an
was renowned tor his erratic and its possibilities," he said.
Lincoln Maazel, the.,S6·year- ·apparent robbery In Guatemala.
behavior, Plaskln said, calling
Phil Duer, a Nashville attorney
him "temperamental, demand· old father of Pittsburgh Sym-phony conductor Lorin Maazel, who served as Sadler's legal
lng and a perfectionist."
"He was extremely charm- said he was shocked by the news guardian, said Sadler had been
receiving physical therapy and
ing," Plaskln said. "He would of Horowitz' death.
treatment
for complications re·
have loved the attention he's
"It's
a
terrible
loss,"
the
elder
suiting
from
the gunshot wound,
get Ung now."
Maazel
said
at
his
Pittsburgh
which
left
Sadler partially
Others remembered a gentle
home.
"We
knew
Mr.
Horowitz
paralyzed.
man who adored watching old
Sadler won national populaQty
movies and found he could never and heard htm play many Urnes.
Mr.
Horowitz
also
heard
Lorin
in
1966 when he recorded "The
quite retire from the stage.
Ballad .of the Green Berets •." a
In past months. said pianist conduct as a young boy·"
Maazel said hemet Horowitz35 sentimental tribute to the elite
Byron Janis, Horowitz read
"everything he could" about the years · ago, when 13-year-old u.s. Army special forces in·
composer Wolfgang Amadeus Lorin and 16-year-old Byron spired by Robin Moore' s book,
Mozart. That is, when he wasn't Janis were performing with the ".The Green Berets," which also
spawned a John Wayne movie in
watching old movies or planning Pittsburgh Symphony·
"He was a very energetic a 1968.
his next recording contract.
Janis, who first met the pianist man," Maazel said of Horowitz . . · The song, with lyrics by Moore.
as a 16-year-old schoolboy, grew "He was such an all-around · was in the top five on the record
up to become Horowitz's long· brllliantp!anlst, a.fantasllc pian- charts for weeks and sold more
ttme student- the first Horowitz 1st. He was completely dedicated ·than 12 milllon copies.
ever taught in thls country- and to playing the plano.
"He liked people especially
Sadler sang of "fighting soldilater. his close friend.
"He was a man with a great when 'they paid to go to his ers from the sky , fearless men
who jump and die" and conservasense of humor, almost a come· concerts," Maazel said.
tives latched on to it in a time of
growing dissent over the Viet ·
Fonner House Speaker Lancione dies
nam War. He became so popular
four years the Bellaire Democrat that the Army had to assign a
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI) was chairman of the House Rules colonel to serve as his publicity
Former House Speaker A.G.
Committee. During his career in agent and feared returning him
Lantlone, the longest serving
the House, Lancione also served to combat.
legislator in Ohio history when he
as chairman of the tax and
Honorably discharged in 1967,
retired In 1978, died Sunday after
education committees, and as Sadler later published a book,
a lengthy illness. He was 82.
"Everything You Want to Know
minority leader .
Lancione, the son of Italian
Lancione died at 6 a.m. at a bout the Music Industry."
trnmigrants who settled in Bel·
Riverside Methodist Hospital in
Sadler was first in the Air
mont County, served 32 years in
Columbus from complications of Force and was discharged in
the House, Including one term,
hepatic encephalopathy, a hospi- 1962, according to Billboard. He
1973· 75, as speaker. For the next
tal spokeswoman said.

Now is the time for g·r·r·r~
buys in the dassi(ieds

---------.
SACRED HEART

when he dlagosed her Ulness as
AIDS, sl&amp; was not surprised.
Nishimura said Blake never told
htm how she got AIDs but he said
she did not use dru;; N~edles and
did not get it through a blood
transfusion.

.
•

FOR

FOR

OLIVE TOWNSHIP CLERK
(614) 378-6233

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

Appreelft.."

Paid for by Candidate. Reedsville, Ohio 46772

Annual Bazaar
NOV. 9th
Ham or Turkey Dinner
ADULTS $4.50
CHILDREN •2 .25

Door Prizes, Crafts and
Ga-s for AI

'.,

Ell, lOSE &amp; THIOAT
GEIEUL ALLEIGIST
"WE IIAft HEARIH AIDS"

•
.,'

(30CJ 675·12CC

ELECT

BILL
QUICKEL
FOR

ALL COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD
Paid for by Cand., 180 Garfield,

'

.

.'

•:

•''

Your Vote and Influence. Appreciated

THANK YOU

Paid for by the Candidate,
Larry R. Hubbard, Rt. 3 Box 73, Racine, Ohio

VOTE FOR

ROBERT POOLER
FOR

MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE COUNCIL

Thaak
You!
PD. POL. AD. BY CAND., 224 WALNUT STREET, •
.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760 '

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA
ANNIVERSRY SPECIAL

UMIYED ONE ITEM ON EACH

$1395

DEUVEIY AIEl

Domino's
Pizza
992-2124
WEn MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

' .

LET PARENTS SPEAK ABOUT
QUALITY SERVICES FOR
QU~LITY PEOPLE

QUALITY· SERVICES
FOR QUALITY PEOPLE

Mary 1Jrowning:
The Meigs County Mental Retardation staff have
helped my adult !!!On learn to eat by himself without
fear of choking. Meigs Mental .Retardation
professionals have also taught my son to speak to
me with
an electronic
communication device~ ·
.
.

IT IS A FACT:
DID :you KNOW THE AVERAGE HOME IN MEIGS
COUNTY IS $40,000.00!
THE MEIGS (AR~DD LEVY· IS 1.5 MILL
THE 3 YEAR TAX IS $21.00 ANNUALLY, WHICH IS
S1.75 PER MONTH OR · 6 CENTS PER DAY.
THE COST TO MEIGS COUNTY IS NOT MUCH - BUT
THE LEVY HELPS MAINTAIN A NATIONALLY RE·
COGNIZED PROGRAM!

POMEIOY, OHIO

J.OH"
A
•.
WAD.E,
M.D.
Inc:
. PUASAIII YAIIIY IOSPRAL

SUTTON TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

Paid For By The Candidate, ·Ed Durst
31340 Noble Summit Rd., Middleport, Ohio 45760

J

Every011 Wele••

Larry~ ~~.Hubbard

Your Support Is Appreciated

-

''~•"'-

Serving At 5:00P.M •.

VOTE FOR ...

2-LARGE 16 INCH PIZZAS

ED DURST

81

conviction, Sadler said he mls·
took the gleam of the man's car
keys for a pistol and shot him
between the eyes, saying
proudly, ·'Forty feet at night by a
single light in a parking lot."
Sadler was Involved in another
shooting Incident with a former
business partner In 1981. Sadler
later denied he tried to shoot the
man. saying, "I'm a Green
Beret. It I'd shot him, he'd be
dead."
Sadler, who was married and
had three children, was shot In
the head as he returned to his
home just outside of Guatemala
City in 1988.

'

PATRICIA A. MARTIN
"1e•r ~ota •• NIVtllbtr 7t~ Will

CHURCH

failed to establish a music career
and !ben joined the Army,
eventually qualifying as a Green
Beret medic. He served in
Vietna111 and won a Purple Heart
after stepping into a booby trap.
He was convicted of voluntary
mansla\lghter In the 1978 shootIng death of Nashville songwriter
Lee Emerson Emery. He received a four- to five-year prison
sentence but that later was
reduced to 30 days in jall and two
years probation. The shooting
occurred In a conflict Involving a
woman.
Asked about the man'slaughter

VOTE FOR

ELECT

----People in the news----

1

•

LETART FALLS -The Letart
Falls PTO will meet on Monday
at the shOal at 7 p.m. Bill
Downie's class will have the
program. Plans tor the fall
carnival to be held Nov. 12 will be
finalized. All parents are urged
to attend.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE - The fltm "The
Pretender" will be shoWII on
Wednesday. at the Racine Nazarene Church at 7 p.m. The public
Is Invited. The film is geared to a
younger generation.

The Daily Sentinel- P.age-7

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Monday, November 6, 1989

Phyllis Skin~er:
.
My son learned the skills for his job at Fishers Big
Wheel at the Meigs MR/DD Job Training Pro·
gram.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THE LEVY, PLEASE CALL:
(614) 992-6681
MEIGS MR/DD
131 0 CARLETON STREET

Naomie Bissill:
My son attend~ the Meigs Mental Retardation
School Age Program. Please help us keep that
Quality Service.
' Grace Weber:
My adult son, Mark, has benefited greatly and is
more self reliant and independent as a result of
the intensiv~ programing he has received at the
Meigs Board of Mental Retardation
Tom Weaver:
Meigs MR/DD has provided a full range of programing to my daughter through Supported
Home Services Program.
Connie Rankin:
With the assistance of the professional services of·
fered by the Meigs County Board of Mental Retar·
dation I have been able to provide my five year old
daughter the trainipg she needed to learn to walk.

SY.RACUSE, OHIO 45779
Committee for the Levy
Bob Hoeflich - Levy Chairman
Jlobert Eason - Meigs MR/DD Chairman
Lee Wedemeyer- Superintendent · · ·
•

r---------------------------------------------

1

PROPOSED TAX LEVY
MEIGS COUNTY
A majority affirmative vole is necessary for passage.

I
I

I
I
I
I

I An additional tax for the benefit of Meigs County for the purpose of COMMUNITY MENTAL
I RETARDATION AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITY PROGRAMS AND SERVICES PURSUANT
I

•I TO CHAPTER 5126 OF THE REVISED CODE. TO-WIT THE MAINTENANCE AND OPERATION
OF SCHOOLS, TRAINING CENTERS AND WORKSHOPS FOR MENTALLY RETARDED PERSONS at a rate not exceeding one and five-tenths (1.5) mills for each one dollar of valuation which amounts to fifteen ($0.15) cents .for each one hundred dollars
of valuation,
.
for three (3):- years .

.

IFOR THE TAX LM

149-)·

L------------~----------------•----------~----~
Paid for by Mt~tiga MR/DD Levy Committee
1310 Carleton
SynJCuae. Ohio 4&amp;779

�- - . Peg a 8-The Dllily S 1 1tintll

---Local news briefs... --.. ----Area
Continued from page 1

Driver charged after accident
Clarence E. Boyer, Middleport. was charged with fll.llure to
yield following an accident Saturday at the intersection of Ash
and Pearl Streets.
According to Middleport police, Boyer pulled from Pearl
Street into the path of David M. Demosky. ~iddieport , who was
traveling east on Ash Street. There was moderate damage to
both vehicles, the front of the Boyer car and the left hand side of
the Demosky vehicle.

-Farm Bureau offers reward
A $500 reward has been offered by the Fal'tn Bureau for
information leading to tbe arrest and conviction of the
individual or individuals responsible for setting a hay fire
Saturday morning, Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby
reported tOday.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Souisby, the hay
belonged to Roy Holter, a long-time member of the Meigs
County Farm Bureau. was on the Charles Radford farm,
Pomeroy Pike, when the fire was set.
Anyone with information concerning thE' fire is asked to
contact the Sheriff&amp; department or Holler.
In other weekend action, the sheriffs department notes that a
report was taken of an accident which occurred at 2:10 a.m.
Sunday In Rutland.
According to the rpeort, Brian J. McClintock, 16, Rutland , lost
control of his vehicle on Larkin Street and it went off the road on
tltE' right, struck a utility pole. and then traveled over an
embankment.
McClintock was cited for no operator's license and failure to
control. The vehicle was heavily damaged, but there were no
injuries .
·
•

Courthouse to be closed
Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge F,red W. Crow III
has announced tltat his office, and other courthouse offices, wili
be closed on Tuesday afternoon. Nov. 7, for Election Day. The
closing Is specified by statute as a legal state holiday.
Judge Crow urges voters to go to the polls and exercise their
rights to vote.
.
The courthouse will also be closed all day on Friday, Nov. 10,
in observance of Veterans Day. Because the holiday fails on
Saturday (Nov. ll, the traditional Veterans Day) it is observed
on Friday.
All county offices will be open tor business as usual on
Monday.

No meeting tonight
The Pomeroy Village Council will not meet tonight because of
Election Day Tuesday.

. Squads make _II calls
Eleven calls for medical assist·
ance were answered over the
weekend by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser·
vices. Six of the calls were
answered on Saturday and five
on Sunday.
Saturday at 2: 57a.m ., Chester
Fire Department was called to a
hay fire at the Radford Farm on
County Road 25.
At 3:08a.m. : Middleport Fire
Department was called to a
structure fire on property owned
by Hank Cleland on North SecondAve.
Middleport was called at 10: 46
a.m. to 701 Beech St. for Albert
Roseberry who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Rutland at 11:18 a.m. was
called to Townsltlp Road 175 for
Thomas Fe!lure Jr. who was
~ 1aken to Veterans Memorial
·· Hospital.
Syracuse was called at 4:17
p.m. to Hayman Road for Gene
Congo to Holzer Medical Center.
. Pomeroy at 9: 28 p.m . was

Stocks
Dally stock prices

(As of It: 38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunl, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 29)1
AT&amp;T ..... ... ......................... 43\4
Ashland Oll ...... ..................34'lk
Bob Evans ........ ...... ............ l3lA
Charming Shoppes ....... .......11"h
City Holding Co ... .... ....... ,.. .15)1
Federal Mogul. .. .......... ., ..... 20)1
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ................. 46%
Heck 's ... ...... ........ ... .......... ... 7'&gt;{,
Key Centurion ................... .15\4
Lands' End ......................... 26'h
Limited Inc ........................ 36'&gt;{,
Multimedia Inc ........ ....... .... 9234
Rax Restaurants, .. .... ........... 214
.' Robbins &amp; Myers .·........., ...... l4
Shoney's Inc ....... ... ............. ll'lk
Star Bank ............................ 22
Wendy's Intl .......................... 5
Worthington lnd .................. 24\4
(AEP, Bob Evans Farms and
Wendy's are ex dlllidend today)

called to Route 143 for Chuck
PullinS to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
On Sunday at 1: 24 a.m. ,
Tuppers Plains went to Route 7
for Ernest Perkins Sr. who was
taken to O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital.
At7:07 a.m., Racine was called
for Beulah Ransom to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The Chester and Bashan Fire
Departments were called to an
electriciiJ fin' on ' Eagle Ridge
Road at 8:55 a.m. The name of
the property owner was not
given.
At 1: 59 p.m., Rutland Fire
Department was called to a
brush fire on Township Road 175.
No name was given. At 9: 13p.m.,
Rutland went to Hampton Hollow
for Myrtle Wilson who was taken
to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Meigs ...
Continued from page 1
ceremony.
Mullen extended the invitation
to those attending to tour the new
facility. RefreshmE-nts, inciud·
.lng a cake replica of the building
made by Bunny Kuhl were
served in one of the conference
rooms by the Trinity Church
Women.

H08pital news
V eleran• Memorial
Saturday admissions - Marie
Thomas, Pomeroy.
Saturday discharges - Michael Imboden, Henry Werry,
Ann Williams, Joseph Morgan.
Sunday admissions - None.
Sunday discharges - None.

Licences issued
A marriage license has been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Wayne Pauley Jr., 35,
Rutland, andCathyLouiseWard,
36, Pomeroy.

Meigs area announcements
·· Election Day dinner
: An eleetion day dinner will be
. )leid tomorrow at the Racine
United Methodist Church. Serv·
· ing wiii begin at 11 a .m . and
continue through the dinner
: hour. The menu will Include
soup, sandWiches, desserts and

beverages.
To meet Tuesday
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star, will meet at
7:30 Tuesday night at the Chester
hall. Officers are not req ulred to
wear chapter dresses.

Lotto jackpot
deaths----- Super
up 19 $17 million

Perry of Albany.
He was preceded In death by
five grandchildren, one greatgrandchild, two sisters and three
brothers.
He attended the Church of
Christ l'n Christian Union.
Services wili be conducted
Wednesday, 2 p.m., at Waugh·
Halley-Wood Funeral Home, the
Rev . Leland Allman officiating.
Burial follows in Centenary
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home2 to4 p.m. and·7 to9p.m. on
Tuesday.
Pallbearers will be · Mike
Burns, Gary Burns, Cliff Wolfe,
Rick Burns. Eddie Harrington,
Todd Chaney. Honorary pallbearers wili be Ray Wolfe and
Jerry Buri!S.

Rosa Genheimer
Rosa Lucille Genheimer, 83, of
Peach Fork Road. Pomeroy,
died Sunday at the Overbrook
Center in Middleport following
an extended illness.
A homemaker, Mrs. Genheimer was born April 28, 1906 at
Pomeroy . She was a daughter of
the late Henry and Sarah Finley
Jhle and was a member of the
German Presbyterian Church.
Survivors include her husband,
Victor C. Genheimer, of Pome·
roy; a daughter and son-in-law.
Lucille and Charles J. White; a
foster son. Victor Sponagel; a
grandson, Clement White; a
granddaughter, Yvonne White; a
foster granddaughter, Vickie
Sponagei; one brothE-r, Henry
IhiE'; ail or Columbus; four
·sisters, Martha Barton, of Co·
lumbus, Leasly Hysell, of Ra·
venna. Christine Beegle and
Henrietta Bootlte, both of Pomeroy; one grE-at grandchild and
several niecE's and nepltews.
In addition to her parE-nts, she
was preceded in death by two
brothers, Elmer and Homer lhlE',
and three sisters, Bertha Custer,
Emma Wayland and · Ertle
Shannon.
Services Will be Wednesday, 1
p.m., at the Ewing Funeral
Home witlt Rev. Alan Blackwood
officiating. Burial Will be in the
Meigs Memory Gardens .
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday from 3 to 5 and
7 to 9 p.m.

Conrad Ohlinger
Conrad M. Ohlinger, 79, West
Locust St, Pomeroy, died early
Monday morning at the Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis, fol·
lowing an extended illness.
A retired crane operator at
Midwest Steel, Pomeroy, Mr.
Ohlinger was born on Aug. 19,
1910 in Pomeroy, son of the late
Wiliiam H. Ohlinger and Clara
Rapp Ohlinger.
Mr. Ohlinger was a member of
thE' Pomeroy Church of Christ.
He was a veteran of the U. S.
Army, W. W. II and belonged to
the DAV Post 53.
He . is survived by his wife,
Elizabeth Ohlinger, Pomeroy;
two .sons and daughters-in·la).V,
MLchael and Sandy Ohlinger,
Albany; Merle and Un Su,n
Ohlinger. Newark; two daugthers and sons-in-law, Wilma and
Edwin Acrod , Hebron; Sheila
and Edward Cozart, Pomeroy,
and two other daughters, Naomi
Ohlinger and Kathryn Smith.
both of Pomeroy.
Besides his parents he was
preceded in death by his parents,
three borthers, three sisters: and
a son, Larry Keith Ohlinger.
Funeral services wlii be held at
3: 30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home. Leo Lash
'a nd Don Seevers wUI officiate
and burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Pomeroy.
Friends may call at tlie funeral
home from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9
Tuesday.
In lieu of flowers donations
may be made . to the Meigs
Chapter, American Cancer Society, 236 W. . Second St.,
Pomeroy.

Hubert Pullins
Hubert Charles Pullins, 51, of
Liberty Ave., Pomeroy, died
suddenlY. on Saturday at Veterans. Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Pullins was born Oct. 14,
1938 at Pomeroy to the late
Hubert Paul and Neille Mae
Bowen Pullins. He was a laborer
for Pomeroy Vlliag~ and a
member of the Fraternal Order
of Eagles, Aerie 2171, Pomeroy.
Survivors Include two stepchildren, Diane Robertson, of
Ravenswood, W.Va., and Cha·
rles Walker Jr .• of Middleport;
one brother, Frederick Pullins,
of Middleport; a half-brother,
Paul Pu!Uns, Florida; two step
brothers, Charles Stobart, Memphis, Tenn., and William Stobart,
Lithopolis; . two step. sisters,
Helen Mossman, New York, and
Janet Jordan, Florida; two step
grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In · death by his wife,
Georgia Hawley Pullins, and a
step brother, Rossland Stobart.
Services for Mr, Pullins wiii be
Tuesday. 1 p.m., at Ewing
Funeral Home With Rev. Lloyd
Grimm officiating. Burial will be
in the Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to4 and 7 to9
on Monday.

Walter R. Barber
Waiter R. Barber, 62, of
Reedsville, died Saturday evening at St. Joseph's Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va. following a

Clarence C. (Bmz) Burns, 88,
of 1737\!, Chatham Ave., Gailipolis. died SuDday at Holzer Medical Center folloWing a lengthy
illness. He was a painter.
Born Oct. 5, 1901 In Mason
County, W.Va., .he was a son of
the late Christopher and Nettle
Roush Burns.
He married Gladys Sigler on 1
June 30, 1925 in GailiROlis, and
she survives, along With four •
sons, William Burns of Rio
Grande, Robert Burns and
James Burns of dailipolis and
Clarence Burns Jt ..of Columbus;
eight daughters, Mildred Daft,
Claranelle Wolfe, Christina Kirk,
Wilma ·Sayre, Linda Kinder,
Carol Burns, ail of Gallipolis,
Thelma Harrington of Columbus,
Loretta Sue Chaney of Marietta.
Also surviving are 37 grandchildren, 39 great - grandchildren, and one great; great- grandchild; three brothers, Matthew
Burns of Evergreen, Marc.u s
Burns of Ashtabula, and Walter
Burns of Columbus; three sisters, l..eQna Taylor and Madeline
Long of Gailipoiis and Lucliie

Ye1rs • Dedicated, Loy1l
• Av1il1ble Anytime.
Your Vole of Confldenee Will Be Appreciated.
.
hill f• ., • Calldidllt,
21110 Apple Qrove-Dorcas ROll, lllclne, Dhlo

a.,,

•f1•

Miller rep
to visit area

Card of Ttl~nks
In Memoriam

Happy Ads
Vard Sal•

COPV DEADLINE MONOAV PAPER
TUESDAY PAPEA
V!iEONESOAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

Classified

8 - PubHe S•le &amp; Auction

9 - Wanted ttl Buy

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A .M. SATURDAY

-

2 :00P .M . MONDA~
2 :00P .M. TUESDAY
2 .00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
2 :00P .M . THURSDAY
2&lt;00 P.M FRIDAY -

paJ!e .~

cot·er the

367 -C ht~~~hire

388 - Vinton
245 - Rio Graride
256 - Guyan Dist

882- New

949 - R•cine
742 - Rutland

895- L.etart
937- Buffalo

458 - Leon

576- Apple Grove
773 - Mnon
Haven

Cet Results Fast
Public Natica

54- Misc. Merch111d1 ..
55 - Building s~,~ppli ..

56 - Pet&amp; for Salfl
57 - Music.t Instruments
58 - Fruiu • V•getabl•
59 - For Sale or Tr•de

Fmn Su iJIIiles
i&lt;t

1 2- Siluation Wanted
1 3-lnturance
14-Busin•• Tr••ning
Hi-Schools &amp; Instruction
16- RJdio, TV &amp; CB Rep_.r
1 7- Misc:•ll•neou 1

lt. JJ ....... of

·~-·'· Oltle

61 - Farm Elfuipment
62 - War~ted

10 Buy

63 - Li~o~tstock

64- Hay &amp; Grain
65- Seed &amp; Fertili.t:er

23- Prot•slonal

Ser~tices

ReJI Esl ate
31 - Home~lor

RACINE
GUN
SHOP
C9919 NIISIIIOUOW ID.
IICIIIE, OliO

Transporlation

Sale

'3 2-Mobilt Hom" for Stle
. 33 - F.,ms for Sale
34-BtJiin•s 8uildingl
35- Lou &amp; Acreage

71 - Autos for Slle
72- Trucks for Sale
73-Y•ns . 4 WO 't

GUNS· AMMO

74.-MOtOf'CVCie
75 .... 8oats 6 Motors fo' S1le
76 .:.- Auto Peru &amp; AecMtori•
77 -- Auttl Rep1ir
78 - C•mping Equipment
79 - Campers It Motor Homn

l;tgdlfill
41 42 43 444546-

Houses tor A ant
Mobile Homes fo·r Rent
Farms for Rent
Apertment tor Rent
Furnisl'led Rooms:
Sp•ce tor Rent

DEER SLUGS ... $2.20 Box
GUITARS·&amp; GlJITAR STRINGS

OPEN 9 AM-7 PM Monday-Friday
Saturday 9 am·5 pm

47- Wanted to Rent
4.8 - Equipment tor Rent

49 - For Luu

Public NatiCI!

168

Services
81 -- Home Improvement•
82 - Piumbing It He-ing
83 - Excall'ahng
84-Eieecrictl &amp; Refrigeration
85 - Genlll"al•-t.uling
86- Mobtle Home Repair
8 7 - Upholltltly

Cand .• 180 Garfield, Middleport

RE-ELECT

NATHAN
BIGGS
SAUSBURY
TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE

CUSTOM IUIT
' HOMES &amp; GARAGES

NOTICE OF ELECTION 01\
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON the prooont module body.
voting therein. on Tu•dly.
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
The Moigo County Com· tho 08Vonth dey of NovemTAl( L~~ ~~J!.~~~S OF .
THE TEN MILl
. "lillionoro n~~ervo the ri9h1 ber, 19B9. thl qulltion of
LIMITATION
LIMITATION
to reject onv ond/or on bido levying otax. In oxcoooofthe
NOTICE io hereby given
NOTICE' i• hweby glv,in 1 or any part thereof an~ to ten mill limitation, for the
~hat in purauance of a Re·
that in piJr.u~~nce of •
waive any informality in any benefit of
Meigt Local
ooiution of the E•torn Lo·
solution of the Boaid
propoaal.
School Diatrict for the purcal School Oqt. , Reedlville•.
Truat881 of the Townlhip
Mary Hobatetter. Clerk P9M of Current Expen••·
Ohio, palled on tho 1 11h
Sunon. Racine. Ohio,
Meiga County CommWaion
Seid tax being:z an , addlpaooodon the 7th doyof Au- (10 30: (11) 6, 2tc
I tionot tox of 2.0 miMIIo run doy of Auguot, 19B9, there
gu.l t, 1989, there wHI be
for a continuing .,.iod of will bll•ubmitted to a vote of
oubmlttod to I voto of the
Public Notice
limo II. rote notoxcooding the people of ooid Eootorn
people of aaid Sutton Town. 2.0 mill• for each one dollar Loco! School Oiltrict 11 a
ELECTION to be
ohip It 1 GENERAL ELEC- NOTICE OF ELECTION dN otvetuotion. whicfl omounto GENERAL
TION to ~- held 1·n the
to twonty cento ($0.201 for hold in the County of Moigs.
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
ch
h elrod doll
Ohio. at the regua. piece of
County of Meip, Ohio, ot
THE TEN MILL
eo
one un
••
lhl rogulor pt- of voting
lt~ITATION
of vetuotion. for • contlnu- voting therein. on TuMdly,
the •8Venth dey of Novemthli'ain. on,. Tu•*v. the..
lng period of time.
,.,.WMft•
.....__,et
NOTICE lo heroby given
The Polio tor uid Eloction ber, 1989. the quootion of
.
.....,..-:
.........., 1hlt in pur1uance, of a At·
11 ~- 1 30 'clo~ l.vyktg ltU,InMC.8ofthe
1111, the queot
f tovy·
w - open •• : o
lngltu.iniii&amp;CIIIoftheten .,&amp;ution of the Ba•d of A.M . .ndremainopenuntH ton mHI llmltotlon. for the
Truotof
1he
Township
of
7
30
'cl ~ p M
benefit of ~twn Local
mill Imitation. for tho bon•
:
o o- · ·
fit of Sutton Townlhip for s.liobury, Pom•ov. Ohio,
By order of the Boord of School Dlltrict for the pur1hl purpo~e of fire J)fotec· pM•ed on the 6th d.., of
Electiqna, of Meip poae of providing for the
lion.
July, 1981, - . , wll be
County, Ohio lfY'Ietglncy requWerl1ent. of
E·-'-·
~
the achool
district and
Said tax being:a a ren8W'al submitted to • vote of thlt
-.vo-,n Cllr•,
-pto of ooid Sotilbury
Chol men evoiding en operating dllfi·
of an existing tax of 1.0 mill Town•hip at a GENERAL
r
cit.
1o run for five (6) year• at • ELECTION to be hetd in 1hlt
Jane M. FrymyM. Director
Said tex being: 1 an addi·
rote notoxcHding 1.0 millo County of Mot-. Ohio. oi Dote: September 12, 19B9 tional tu of 8. 9 mills to run·
for nell one dollor
of
•·
(10) 18, 23. 30, (1 1) 114tc
for three (3) year1 11 a r81e
valuation, which l!l'l'lount• to the regular piece of Voting
not excndlng 8. 9 miHt for
ten cenu ($0.10) for each therein. on JuesdiiV. the ••
Public
Notice
venth dey of November,
eeCh one dollar of valuation.
one hundred
dollars of 1989, the qullltion of levywhicfl omounto to eighty·
valuation, for five 16t years. ing a 11x, in excess of the ten NOTICE OF ELECTION ON nino conto (IO. B9) for uch
Tho Potto for uid Election mitt tlmhotion, for the bene- TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF ono hundred
ctotl•o of
will be open at 6:30 o'clock fit of SalisburyTownahip for
THE TEN MILL
valuotion, for
throe (31
A.M . and remain open until the purpou of maintaining
LIMITATION
vooro.
7 :30 o'clodt P.M.
and op•atin~ cemeteri•.
NOTICE lo hereby given
The Polls for uid Eloction
Bv order of the Board of
Said tax biting:2 an eddi- that in purau•nce of • Re- will be open at 6 :30 o'~to.ck
Eiectiona, of Meiga 'tionat tax of 0. 2 mill to run aolut6on of thl Board of A.M . end remein open until ·
County. Ohio tor five (!t veer• at a rate not County Commloolonoro of 7:30 o' clock P.M.
Evelyn Clark, exceeding 0.2 mills for each tho County of Me\p, Po·
By order of the Boord of
Chairman one dollar
of valultion. meroy. Ohio, palled on the
Election•. of Meigs
Jane M. frymyer, Direclor whichamounutotwocenta 23rd dey of Auguot, 19B9.
County, Ohio
Dolo: September 12, 19B9 [$0.02) for eoch one hun- there wHI bot oubmlttod to o
Evelyn Cl•lc.
(10) 16. 23, 30, (11) 6 4tc
drod dotlero ofvetuotion. f~r vote of the people of laid
Chairman
Mo;go
ounty
ot
o
GENERAL
Jone
M.
Frymyer.
Dlrectcw
fivo(5)yHro.
Public Notice
The Polio for 11id Election ELECTION to be held in lhl Date: September 12. 19B9
will be open at 6:30 o'clock county of Meigs, Ohio, ot (10) 16, 23, 30, 11116 41c
A.M.
and remain open until the regular piece of voting
LEGAL NOTICE
therein. on Tu11day, the ••Sealed proposals will be 7:30 o'clock P.M.
venth dey of NoYimber.
· Public N otic.e
By
order
of
ihe
Board
of
received in the office of the
1989, the question of lavyElectiona.
of
Mei~
Meiga County CommissionCounty, Ohio ing 11ax. in IXCNI of the ten NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
ers. Third Floor of the CourtEvelyn C terk. mill limit1tion, for that ben•
hou.e. Pomeroy, Ohio un·
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Chairmen fit of Meigo County for thl
til 12 noon on NoVember
THE TEN MILL
purpoae
of
community
menJane M. Fry~yer, Director
15." 1989. Bido will be
LIMITATION
Date: September 1 1. 1989 tal re1ard111tion 1nd developopened a1 2 p .m. at !he same
NOTICE io horot&gt;y given
mental
dis•bility
prour•m•
location on the above date. (10) 18. 23. 30. (1116 4tc and tervicM pursuant to that in pursuance of 1 R•·
Propoult shall be for refur·
the Gelli•
chapter &amp;1 26 of the rev;.ed ooiulion of
Public Natice
biohmonl of one (1) 19B4
code, to wit the mainte- Jockoon • Meiat Mon,.i
Meigs County EMS Ambu·
nance and
operation of Helllh Bo1rd of the the
lance wi1:hou1 trade-in .
schooll,
training cent•• counti• ofG.Ui&amp; J.c:keon.
Do..llod informotion, in- NOTICE OF ELECTION ON end worklhop• for mentally ond Meip, Gotllpolil, Ohio,
struction 1 , proposal forms,
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF retarded persona.
pooood on thl 17th doy of
ond complete opocificotiono
THE TEN MILL
Said tax being:z an eddi- July. 1989, there wMt be
mov be obtoinod from the
UMITATION
ttonal tax of 1 . 5 mills to run- ll.lbmitted to a vote of the
offices of the Meigt County
NOTICE il hereby given for fiva (5} vuraat a rate not P80Rie of laid Meip County
Emergency Medical Ser· that in purauance of a Re·
oolution of the Boord of exceeding 1. 6 milia for ach ot 11 GENERAL ELECTION
vicft, P . 0 . Box 74B, M u I·
Ed
.
f hiM ·
L
of voluotion. to be held in the County of
•H · hi
p
ucat1011 o t
..gs o- one doll•
~ Ulllrry
etg ..
omeroy, cal School District, Pome- which amounta to fifteen Meigs. Ohio, ot the regutor
Ohio 46789. (6141 992·
· cenu ($0.16) for each one pl.c::e of voting th•ein, on
11617. Biddero ohol uoe tho roy, Ohio, pooood on the 9th
Tuesday, the •eventh day of
prlntedform•provkiedMno day of Augu.t, · 1989. there hundred dolt . . ofvotuotlon. Novomber. 1919. lhl quoo·
for
three
f
3t
Y•••·
shop ordera or O!her form• will beaubmittedtoavoteof
Tho Polio for uid Election tion of levying a tu, in
will be accepted. Eoch pro· tho people of uid Meigt Lo· will be open ot 1:30'o'ctoclo • • - • of tho ton milt limit•·
; pool muat contain the
c•l School Diatrict at a QE.
A.M. and remain open until tion, for the bentflt of Meigs
·, name of the pony or partioor' 1 NERAL ELECTION to be 7:30 o'cloclo P.M. ·
County for the purpo•• of
making the propoaal and held in the County of Meigs,
By order of the 8o1rd of current operating UPifiMI.
mult be accompilnied by an Ohio, at the reg~lar place of
Etoctiono, of Mligo
Said tax being:a' an addioriginal bid bond or certified
counw.
Ohio tional lox of ttvo tontho m~t
check made out to the Meigs
Evely~ Clark,
to run for five lit year• et •
County Comml111ktner• in
r1te no1 nc. .ding .5 mill•
.
Ch~rman
the amount of five percent
Jane M. Frymyer, Director for nch one dott• of votuo·
(5%) of lhl 10111 bid. Only
Date: September 12, 1989 tion, which .mount• to five
wanted to Buy
bidders wtth QVM approval 9
(10) 18. 23. 30. (11114tc
in the ambulance manufac·
turing buainest wHI be con·
aldered. Successful bidder
must guar•n1ee all work.
11 Help Wantld
performed end mu1t111ume
the remaining gorantee on

----------1

Pd. For by Cand .. Nlthan Bigs.
38960 St. Rt. 124,
Oh. 45769

valuation. which amounta to

_.., cento ($0.07) for each
one hundred
doll•• of

v•••·

•

a

~

line.

Teresa M. Tyson-Drummer
S~RACUSE

VILLAGE
COUNCIL
Your Support Will Be Appreeltte4
Pd. by Candidate, 3rd St.,
Syracuaa, OH. 46779-0742

.

-· ~

•"

,::

' '

,•...:..

You Can Look AI Them Bolli,.Bul Don'l Touch. Play _

it safe around electricity at home and at work. Call
us for a free booklet of electrical safety tips.

1 Card of Thanks
Tht family ol John Vromlll wish to uprns our
apprecillion Hd thanks:
The staff 111d rnidtnts of

Owwbrook CH1r. Tilt IIIII
1t1d ICU 11111111 of Veltt1111
lhMr~ Or. BIVWnllld Dr.

YliiiiiiiiVI; lilt fls .. F•
nnl Hotttt; Rw. ll1d ·Irs.
Hlrwy llncllullllor 1t1s ser-

Your Vole and

vice and thllt tflou~M
ftiSI; frl... wilD IIIII flaw-

lnftuenee Appreelaled
On Nov. 7th.

III,

ens or a11•

C~ .. ~- &amp; Johlt

I

EVERY SUNDAY

· PH. 949-2101
or las. 949·2160

leginning Sept. 17

.

1

YroMI
and lnHia.

-

1

Day or N9tt
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Factory Chake4 12
Gauge OnlY.

GINSENG DIAUIS
&amp; DIGGEIS
You wanted and •e

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

Will Video Tape
. Waddings,
Birthdaya,
Rauniona. Interior•
of Homes for
lnourance.

can

742-2486

After 5 .......

DIVE'S
SMALL INGINE
REPAIR

wiU give $200.00
lb. for good clean,
AYEI~GE wild gin·
s•nt· Ship or bring
your roots to the
Ohio liver fur and
Ge11111111 (o., P. 0.
lox 2347(Rt. 2671,
Ealt liverpool, Ohio
43920.

cents i•o.O&amp;I for each one
hundred doll•• ofvoluotion,
for five 151 Y-•·
Tho Polio for oold Election
wMI be opon ot 1:30 o'clock
A.M . and remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M.
By order of the Boord of
EIICiiono, of· Melgt
County. Ohio
Ev.lyn Ctork.
Chair1n11n
Jono M. Frymyor, DiriCior
Dote: September 1 1, 1IB9
11PI 18, 23. 30, (11) 114tc

11

216-315-1132
Cll end Save

4 / 8/ 88 / tfft

.........

Pam a s• .nc. o"

,.. R..,_ir,

HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9-7
Sot.B· 5
Cloood Sundov

CALL 992·117511
"DOC" VAUGHN
Ctrttfi.t Licensed Shop
8-25-'88-tfft

9C9-2U9

SWEEPER REPAIR

USED APPUANCES

10/ 10/ 19 tin

tO DAY WIIIMITf

All MAlES AND

WASHER5-SIOO up
DRYER$-$69 up
IEFRIGEUTOR$-$100 up
RAIICIS-Gis·Eilc.-$125 up
FIEEZEI$-$125 op
•
MICRO OVENS-$79 up
:

MODELS

.MAmN'S
FURNitURE
and MORE

KEN'S APPUANCI
SEIYICE

222 ·East jllait1
POMEIOY, OH.

992·5335 .. 915-3561
laos• FNM Post OHico
POIIEIOY, 01110
10/ 30/'19 tift

992-6872
6·5·'19-tln

r.

---~---~-:ft

Plwu.ING &amp; HEAnNG
..... Locatiln:

engln•

BINGO
1' 1'
'1 POIIEIOY.UGLIS · I
I
CWI
I•
'1 224 E. MAIN ST.
li
I '
992-9976
I'
I tliUIS, l.L 6:45 PJI. . I

!.._ s•.DOOIPIIIll
u. 1:45 P.M.

. ,

i'1
:1 '2 N.D. flff - - M6 I
I ·Ptdat of Mlo. H.c.
I
~I II&amp; liM" I coopon per ws- ' 1'

"Picl-;

I

r-1 -

1I·
Jill' billfl •soon.
Wt l'ar '50.00 P• Gamo

, o... I 10 Poaplt •u.oo , I·
Go....
I
li&lt;: #O~S-32_
__j:~ I·
---------~\·

PH. 992·3922

I

,.,

I

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARitiG
Announcemenls

NEWLAND
~NTERPRISES
DUMP TR,UCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt
S. A Cool Cat AndChul Out rn.
Sc""i' in !he Ckusi(...t Secoon.

Help Wanted

••net •

IEGISTIIED NUISES

Immediate lull thttt and part tl11tt ~penlnas ~re
available lor r..istertd tttnts to -k 1n tile S,.e11l
Cart Unit and the M..lcai/Sttrcical Unit. S.lary
co-nsurate with tlptfience. hctllent lrinp be·

(614) 667-3271
Grant A. Nawlatld

7-11-'19-Hn

•VINYL S !DING
•ALUMINUM StDttlrG
•8LOWN IN
INSULATION

SEND RESUME TO:
(I o The Daily S...tinel

Qofrpg Out of 1•1,... St. ..!

Gracerln-, clg~~nttln, toblcco,
pop. Aioo Ganorol Slon oqule"
ment. CIOIH Nov. 11th. Aoee 1,
Butoon Rd. 614-MII-2125.

Positivity no hunting or trapDing on tho old ~­
HoudaaheM prop4r1y, For.~
Run Rd., Pomor"'', OH. Elfoctlva
Nov.3, 1tn.

Giveaway

4

Adorllb~

kktono vory ployhll,

304-675-11128.

J.C.Fiochor okf upright plono.
Good tone. Vou loa~ rou t.v.
Ill kayo ploy, Folr candklon.
614-i82·7'6t0. Any que.tloM,
call YvonM II 114-112-2710.

"Free E1timatM"

6

•.. ...

PH. 949~2101
or leL 949~2860
NO SUNDAY

Lost &amp; Found

Found:

ovo 111- (~)

Soptomber "28th

llolgo
ot
Holrint Clinic. t1of..CtU&amp;21.
II

County Hoonh. -

LOST ctoa blk -Mo chMI,
answ.,. Jake, .,.._. call Z.ke

GUN SHOOT
lA ClNE
FilE DEn.
Basham luldlng

or U.. 304-175-5304.
Lo.t: 6 mo. okl brown &amp; .wh~e
mo~
boaalo, Cloy Chopol,
Frt.ndly Rldg• Vicinity. 814-2511192.

lost: Hitch and ball from plckup
truck. 614·843...!34e.

7

EYEIY
SIT...GHT

Yard Sale

6:30 , ...
, Fochlry Cholco
12 Gaup Shltg1111 Dilly
Striclly EnforcH
10-9-Hn

-

lllclttdt llailey, 1.. 11., Director o! Nurslnc
Vtllr1111 lhtlorial Hospital
115 E. It-'ll Driw
PtltltrOJ. OH. 4576!
.

3 Announcements

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.,

Mflts.
Contact:

,,

VISA - MASTEACHARGE

NIASE CerttHtd Mechanic

Stock Jtert• for
Hvmellto.Woedoater,
Tecumaeh. Brigp a.
Stranon.

...

··----~--

YAIDIIAH MOWIIS
ECIIO SAWS &amp; TIIMMEIS
OIIGOII IllS, CltliiiS
ftlll AIWlCI CEil&amp;

Moet Foreign Md
Domeetic VeNd•
A I C Servic. ,
All flli.;or • Minor

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Vater1n1 Memorial HCiallltal, a·JCAHO-at:·
credited. nat-fen-profit holllital, Ia looking
for a Patient "avltw CoafdiMtor. The Patient Review Coafdlnator will be ra~ponaible
filr the •-•-nt, pllnnlng,linplirnentatlon, and evaluation of the ho-cJitll'• QualIty A•urance 1nd Utlll11tlon Mlnegernenl
Pfana.
·
Quallflcatlona Include • Rtgllttred Nurat
with i ct.Wram Ohio nurelng llcen... Prior
Quality A•urance end Utllutlon Manage ment ••partenc• .....ned.
.
Pfetla cell or
reaume to:
Margaret Holm. A1811t1n1 Adminiltrator
Vatar1111 Memorial Hoepltal
111 E. M-riel Dtlvt
P~y. OH. 41711
1114)111·2104

111 (ourt St., P. 0. lox 1·3
· Ohio

EAGU IIDGE
SIIALL ENGINE

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

Mi.ltF*I, Ohio 457110

Experience Preferred
GM Dealership

TO:
(/o The Daily Sentinel

·IVEMIIIGS ·

In "' ' lkpert, Oh.

WARRANTY CLERK &amp; CASHIER

~ESUME

n. numu

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Mo•1 2 1nd 4-cyde

PAT.NT IIVIEW COOIDINATOI

PARTS CLERIC
SEND

SINCE 1969

111111'

161 llerth Second

HELP WANTED

Experienca Preferred

BILL SLACK
992-22"

~.ti:L--..:;

PARTS MANAGER. GM DEALERSHIP •.
Experience Neceaery in Parts
Pepartment.

•FIREWOOD'

lem!MatValoyL......

(614) ft2-2104. htt11slon 213

HELP WANTED

•LIGHT HAULING

9·8· B9· tfn

l--:-::.--:;-;;:::-;;:;:;;;;:;;--

WANTED
TO BUY

-

"At Reasonable Prices"

----------1

•DAY Life Member
•Middleport American
Legion Member

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

BUILDERS

Public N atice

•SHRUB 11o TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

SYIACUSf, OliO

12 Ga.

36 - Real E&amp;t1te Wanted

9-20-tfn

4-25-tfn ·

1-12-'18-Hn

18- Wanted To Do

2,-Busin•s Opportunity

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al1o Tree1llltdu
PH. 992!5682
. or 992-7121

992-7479

Livestock

742-2421

II. 124, P-ily Ohio

•Mobile Home
Pwta
•Mobile Home
Rantala
•Lot Rentala

·=......_·

ALL COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD

VOTE FOR

675- Pt Ph1aunt

667 - Cool~tillfl

Greatly Appreciate•

FOR

an

Area Code 304

992 - Mtddleport
Pomttov
985 - Ctlester
843- Port .. nd
247 - Letart Fall s

Paid for by the Candidate,
884 Maple St .. Middleport. Oh .

The PoMo for uid Eloction
will be open It 11:30 o'clock
A.M . .nd remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M.
By or., of t'he Board of
Etectiono. of Meigo
County, Ohio
EvolynCiorlc.
Chairman
Jone M. Frymyw. Dir'ectcw
Dote: Septornber 1 2, 1 BBI
(10118. 23. 30. (1 1) 6 4tc

ErnployrnP.nl
Ser ViGes

M11onCo ., WV

Meuga County
At . . Code 6,4

446 - G•Il•pohs

NOVEMBER 7

rate not exceeding 0. 7 miHt
for each one dollar
of

5 - Happy Ad•
&amp;- Lon and Found
7- Y•d Sale !pa id in •&lt;Nancet

22 - Monev to loan

For Middleport Village Council

Paid for

53-AntiQun

lihfihiriijil

379 - Walnut

BILL
QUICKEL

3- AnnoucemMt S

4- Gil,.•••v.v

•Gravel
•Umotone
•Fill Dirt

Roger Hysell
,Garage

COUNTRY
MOilLE
HOME PAD

51 - Household Good11
6:Z - Iporting Goo•

M. KOCH, M.S.

STEWAIT
TIUCKING

446-7619 II' (614) 992-ZilM
z
AvtnUe, Box 1213
45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
-Mulberry Hats. Pomeroy, Ohio

5-17-tfl

Merch and ise
1 - Card of Th.-iks
2- ln Memory

~ LISA

L W.

:1:

DIDHIUD
992-5275

runs. broken updl'(swill be ch•ged

, 1 -- Help wanted

643 - Arabia Oist

•

10
Mon1hlv

•••o

G•lli a County
Area Code 614

ELECT

15·
15
15
15
15

3
s·

.

Cl

Ntarinc Aid S.les &amp; Sert•ial
Evaluations For All Aps

:i Licensed' Clinical Audiolocist

•'11600 GILLOII
WITII SIIVKE
UMinOIE
SPUID

ov,r 1 !i Words
R•1e
.
.20
.... 00
.30
.6.00
.42
$9.00
.60
$13.00
.05 / dav
$1.30/dav

Word1

1

'A classified acNenlsemeiu placed in The Oailv Santmella•·
cept .1... cl•tifled dtlpl3)' , Bu1in•• Card and l.y,. notices )
will
appear tn the Pt . Ple•ant Regi1t11r and the O•lli·
polis Oajly Tribune, re.chin~ ~;JVer 18, 000 homn

On Wednesday, Nov. 8. a
representative from Congressman Clarence Miller's office Will
conduct an Open Door session
from 11 a .m . to. 1 p.m. in the
courthouse in Pomeroy.
Anyone with questions concerning the federal govenment is
invited to stop by and discuss
them with the representative.

~our ~ole &amp; Influence

D•v•

Mason eounriM must be pre -

"Receive 5.50 discount for ads p.~id in advanee.
•Free ads - G11teaway and Found ads undet 15 word I will be
wn 3
at no ctr•;e.
'Price of ad for all upitellatt11n i1 double price ol ad eost.
"7 point line type onlw uled ,
"Sentinel •s not rnponsible for 8nonatter tinr a.,. . (Check
for errors fir It dtv ad runt1 in paper) Cell before 2 :.0 0 p.m.
d.,
publiCitton 1D mllke correction.
"Ads that maut b• p1id in advance are

Write-In Candidate

to ruri for five IIJ y..,, at a

MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL
BOARD

Of

paid

,JACK SAnERFIELD

ohn oxiltlng tox of 0. 7 miHo

Forrest "Buck" Van Meter

"Ad~ outside Meigs. Qallia

VOTE FOR

tion.
Said tax being:z a renewal

BONNIE TURNER-BENNETT

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

s.

Listeninc Dtvices

ALLEN'S
HAUUIG

•

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

following telephone exchanJ!es ...

the pu.rpota of fire protec-

valuation. for five (6)

.,

Exlended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
A chance of rain each day.
Highs in the 50s Wednesday and
Thursday, with lows ranging
from 35 to 45. Cooler Friday, with
highs in the 40s and lows in the
30s.

In the recent article of the
halloween party In Middleport
the names of the folloWing were
unintentionally misspelled. The
names should have appeared as
Michelle French, Jordan Shank,
and Joelyn Eklich.

Business Services

Classified

Weather

.1

benefit of RIICine Village for

RE-ELECT

•Retired-Sute of Ohio Dep1rtment of
Highwaya; •Sutton Townahip Trustee 8

CLEVELAND (UPI) - No
grand prize winner in Saturday's
Super Lotto game pushed the
jackpot tor Wednesday to at least
$17 million, the highest it has
been since ·early summer . .
Ohio Lottery officials said none
of the $7,565,450 worth of tickets
had the numbers 4, 14; 37, 38, 42,
and 43. However, 180of them had
five of· the numbers for $1,000

Corredion

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE io hereby give~
that in pursuance of 1 Re·
solution ofthovtlt-of Ro·
cine. Racine, Ohio, pMHd
on the 1ot doy of Augult,
19B9; there wMI be oubmlt·
ted to a vena of the people of
oold Rodnt VIM-. 111 GE·
NERAL ELECTION to be
hold in the county of Meigs,
Ohio, at the r-aul• pl110e of
vottng therfNn. on Tu•day.
tho oeventh dly of NoYim·
ber, 1 9B9, the quell ion of
levying a tax, in ex ca.. of the
ton rnltt llmkotion. for the

' VOTE FOR

SunON TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

brief illness.
Born AprU 20, 1927 at Reedsville, Mr. Barber was a son of the
tate Roy and Ellen Baker
Barber.
He is survived by one son and
daughter -i n-law, Joey and
Jackie Barber; three sisters,
Ruth Barringer and Ly.dla Chevalier, both of Reedsville, and
Alice Rood, of Empire, Ohio; one
brother, Raymond Barber, of
North Carolina; four grandchildren and several nieces and
nephews.
·Besides his parents, Mr.
Barber was preceded in death by
his wife. Martha, in 1973; five
sisters and one brother.
Services will be Tuesday, 11
a .m ., at the White Funeral
Home, Cooiv!Ue. with Rev. Jeff
Burdsall officiating. Burial Will
be in the Heiney Cemetery near
Reedsville. Friends may can
after 2 p.m. today (Monday) at
the funeral home.

Public Natice

Clarence Bums

The Daily Serttinei-Page-9

Monday, November 6. 1989

Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

.....II

SER~IeE

Wt con repair 1ntl ra·
ctlt't . ratlla-. attd
-... cores. I can
IIIIo acitl bail lllfll f1MI
aut rlldiaton. Wt •lso

.._.....
.....&amp;

w

..._

for-of VD

T-'.
_,,

PIT HILL FOlD

992·2198
Micldleport, Ohio

_IIIIIRI_
ClYI...

1-13-tfc

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Vanl Sal.. 111111 B• Ptid In
Adv1nce. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
thlt day before the ad .. to rwn.
Sunday ldlllon .. 2:00 p.m.

Friday. llondoy odMian • 2:00

p.m. Saturday.

9

Wanted. to Buy

Junk aara wfth .,. whhout
motoro. Coli Lorry Llvoly 114- ,

. . .3113.

Qulftl

Pro 1140 qulnL Any condHirMI.
Cosh Paid. Cioll 114.e82-IIU7 ar
114-611:1·2411.

ltondlng

u- I

popor -

t14-3H--·t1N...M17.

.

Uood rumn ..o ond houoahold
=~•ncoo. Pllonl 114-742Uood 1\irnlblro br llo

p-.

or

ttot••holcf .._ ..wna.
"'·742-2411.
'M;iir.iAii~t~IMire

aAIIIII.

Wontolf 10

l!!rY: ..._

.• -

nod ,...., TrOotonl .. lqulpo
114 441 Mit
N

:.,..

111 Court St., P. 0. lox 8-4

Wontolf to lur: llood . _ . . . , . • • 0171.

Pnmowau. Ohio 45769

WllnteiltDMYIJM•wll
tNMmltl,~.

•

�..

...

)\

\

Paa•

42 Moblll Homes
torRent

LAFF-A-OAY

51

Goods

Television
Viewing

• • r-UII w/1.100 ~.do:;

--. ........- .

'". . 11·-·· . """

·AMIFM -..,

eulo, wl

-·••zotwlp.lll.

•

QOVIANMINT IIIZED Vlf*ltl

----·
...
.........
175-tn..

6:00 (ll Haldcaltle And .

~.ptll

Apartment

for Rent

I

J b1 ria oom apia. tor rent
-

(l) Wild America The
adopted cub must now learn
her final lesson: 10 rear all
humans. 1;1
(!J Square One TV (0:30) 1;1 .
IDIID Andy Grlfflth
QJI World t - y
1H1 Charlie In Chlfle
«Jl Jam
Amarlcan Magazine
6:05 (IJ lllverty Hlllblllleo

11D SAY I'M ABOUT .
ONE COOKIE AWA'( FROM
8EIN6 HAPPY ..

WE HAD A GOOD TIME
TODAY, DIDN'T WE? HAVE
1 MADE '{OU HAPP'{?

Total e1ectr1o. Call 114 411o412'7

potod.

car.

a

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

flcllhlll ....- . Ciiii14-IIQ-

S711 EOH.
2 llr, 81ove, rwfrlg. fumllhecl,

....,

a,,....~.

1:30 •

114-

(2)

@~(0:30)

oMNMG.

e ())

(!J

1978 hyvlew 14dl, Zbr,will conoldor llnanclng.l14-3712921.
11x7V

home, 2 bedroom,
fi11JPIIC.. IIC cond, 304 ~1•ft•S:OOPM .

19111 Rl..vlow, 141711, 3 ~-pu~l112lflfl

Cl-

polio.

441-021:1.

bedroom, tumlehld. AN
1111111111 polcl. 1350Jmonlll, 150.
Jl~ -.11-t-

4

=-

ff~VICE

1211

oq.ft. of ..,:\.".:: In • olngll

1-

W•-•
top of tho llno • • Hollr Pori!
141M with M b24 IEJ:p11ndo
HOCMIL Th .. hOlM II a ~

Farms for Sale
W1l bob,ol In "" homo, Qol.
,_,
Roloronce1
..... t d, 114-441-7140.

10 • - · 12 mllll lrom OoJ.
ilpoilo, pond, ilncod; good 11om
• houll, .... hunllng. 114-251111111.
Rt.7, 1D mi. Iauth Golllpolll, II+
.....,

houiHIIIdl

repair,

tralllr lot, 111,500 Ollh, 114117-tZZO.

21

r,:k"'PL
.._,,114-1112-2171.
lor - r . Rnn. No

Aohlon, boautlrut ono ..,. loll
with~-"""'- pullllc .....

Clrdo - · ~f.IIIIW7WS3I.

__

.,.,,.., ...

aalll-.

Poy

3yn. at 15'11. Int. .,...
Jl7·7111.
Troller Court Ia&lt; 11\o. 4 - ·
2 Joll. 114-Mt-21tllvonlngo.

Real Estate

bath, · · -· •••
Avo,I14-4IWMII.
Qraclon• hlng. 1 end 2 .Ndroom •parlmehla 11 Vlllqe
llonor
ond
Rlvonlilo
ADIII-. In llldclilpoll. Ftom
11M. Fr- Slptomblr 111h to
-bor111h,- - h .....
lrN
to ... llfY. Coli
11..-.,7717.EOH.

Oround floar 3 room • Mth,
~~ fU~ UIC.
oond•• nliiiii\OriiOOd, ,.,, .......
304-t7HIIit flf 175-IIIU.

h ·-

~·-

45

·

Fumlshlld
R.oome

---·-or-h.

••rana

HoteL 114 4 tl I liD

llooplna ..,.... whh -ng.
Alto 1ralllr 1pece. All hook-up&amp;.
Coli otter Z:OO p.m., 304-'173111111,11...., WV.

46 Space far Rent
C...-.&gt;111 1400 oq.ll.
earn....r Plno. Ampto

'IM7.

2325. or 441

W-and, 132 . . _ $31,100,
At. 7, balow Eur.... cau 114441~411 afttr 7 p.m.

eo..rory lloblll Homo Park,
Aoute :13, North of Pomo..,.
Loto1 _~•to, porto, ...... can

Real Estate
Wantlld

Anaund 20 HCiudecl 8CNe IDr
aallr c•bln. Ulllh... &amp;ln-i 1:
llry. HouHr, 12011 Pll..mlth,
Alhlno, OH 41701.

IC

8:00 (2) MOYIE: Saokatchowan
(2:00)
D (2) 1111 ALF All becomes
disgruntled and gives Willie
an ultimatum. (0:30) g
(J) NFL Moncler Night
Match-Up San Francisco
49ers &amp; New O~aans Saints
(I) II (I) MacGyvar A
survivor of Tiananmen
Square asks for Mac's
2fOtection . (1 :00) g
CZJ Trevol llllapzlne
(!) Trav111 Richard Goodwin
offers a tour of his native '
.
Paris. (1 :00) g
1111 111\IZ MajOr Old Robin
has her first crush when she
meets Mac's chess
opponant. (0:30) 1;1
1D liD 21 Jump S - A
prlvote IICUI'ity firm and local
rich kids are blamed for
break-Ins. (1 :00) g

,,_ (,

INIDJ'~, Irll:

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

75 Bolita &amp; Motors
tarsale

,::1:.~
pokl.
Old ...
qulltl,
- ...
polntina'!. 10f1!, or • . - 001111
ooll -

104--.

104 1211-3271, or

54 MIIICIIIIaiiiiOUS

MerchllndIIll

l120/mo. 111111111

ot

Raod.
Ownor
Flnonclng
AvaUoblo.
l100 - · to ..,.
tract, 15,000 down. ..._..,.

36

Tt-lto.VE$

tum.- · -blo Ia&lt; I

-·Jr.

Lolo For Salt • Clollpollo F"""
SI,OOO. Pullllc Wiler. 30W7S..
2722.

II)) Croaoftre
® Night Court
12!1 Top Card .
7:35 (IJ Sanford And Son

IJulkllng
Supplllll

110¥18 •

" - In oountry homo, ,..
Nnt, ,...,.,..., ltW'it-2121.

wotor, llflcot roducod, Ctydo
304-t'IS-233I.
Camp Conley, Polnl Pie_,.,
112 ..... luN hoot!....... :IDU'/57!11.

~~ IJ'A'~aopardyl 1;1

f 0 R?

-ohorl

Aohlon, 1orvo bulkllnll toto,
IIICIOIII homoO pormiHocf. publlo

oophol to ,...-. "
oul-nt lor - - otortup.
AMOunt nlldld $11,- Pur- , _ ....,. ._._ O....vlllo
IIIII ...... far

F - lpl. oR utllhlll pold,

e

....._

pftJALTJf$f,. ·ffAtff
WHAT Po you
6UYS TAI'f ME

orZ. 114 4410131
35 Lata &amp; Acreage
·--~
~- ....-No.........
.,.., car2troow . . . . $4000. poll, _lriq. ......
3GO

BusiMa
Opponunlty

CIIMGE$, ·

JOUfVCfP GtfEC/C

Fumlohod oli utllliH paid, rool
w-...nlng llropllco, oobll
T.V., -tar lloc. . iof, llllutllul
rtvn... Folt• lloblll Home
Parte, .,......,11113.

-A

Ftnancial

a

ATM FtES,.

quiNCI. $230/mo. 114-Srt-2171.

llpolla

1 Jr. old HoM, 100,100 11111 11M
lu,_, - . . n-, ~~~
1874.

10 1. llllllhl dilh whh 21
Inch •-t-lalon, IIIC. oond.
114.at2 1111.

1rJ nspor1Jt 1011

"',m=""t'-=7-li-•._.;lllll,..;_w.;.o"R-:TII'"'"'-,...,:

71 Autoe for Bale

Coll ... ~.,.-7:
IOA1111S: Nolr ~ ,
I llobllli IIIIIM. ~ '
...... ., • • 1171.

--·!!!&gt;.-~

...

I

I!JPnmeNewo
tH1 MOVIE: Weird Science

I

75

(PG13) (2:00)
«Jl Munier; She Wrote Old
Habits Ole Hard
IIIII Of Claulc Rock If
Roek'n roll legends Including
Paul Revere and the Raiders,
Little Anthony, The Filth
Dimensions and Frankie Valli
and the Four Seaoons
perform In this concert
special hosted by Wollman
Jack.
8:05 (IJ MOVIE: Rio Lobo (G)
(2:00)
.
8:30 D (2) llllltoglln Familr
Oavid blames Burt lor their
lreak accident. (0:30) 1;1
(J) NFL Monday Night
Magazine
CZJ Trevolln' Gounnat
!Ill •liZ Murphr Brown The
FYI team bets they can give
up their lllestyle for two
weeks. 1;1
9:00 D (2) 1111 'Crou Of Fire (PI
.2 Of 2)' NBC Moncley Night
AI The -~ (2:00) D

Auto Pans &amp;

a

AcceiiiOI'IIt

__
eam.,.,.

POOR lOY 1111EII, 304-e'llo ,
end~~- ·

.........,
iiilt. 4:.00 ~ -

.-. .'.

la1-

79

&amp;

Mo1orHom111

parlclng. Coil 114 ... 1241, U21.

114..a-7471.

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Primo IIICIOIII llano lot on form
Rt. 17, watorlnciudod,
.... · 301 Ill
County
3001 .. :IDU'IS-I131.

I I. -

,,_

oom=

..r..-.CIIII14 . . 1

far

11-IE ONE: WHO~ THINKING
OF 6011'610 HARVARD.

Serv1ces
Home
lmprovementa

Lond Wlntod: 100 ocroo • up.

~llllrtamo,vlowl,1-

3214.....

®

••

BARNEY

"""" .. ...... loot *llil!le· .
-

-

a

PAW tl 'l THOUGHT
YOU WAS
PLAYIN'
CARDS
TODAY!!

NOBODY
WOULD PLAY
WITH ME!!
THEY CLAIM
I CHEAT!!

STAYED HOME
AN' PLAYED

pt

World Explore lila strict ·
morality and classical forms
of architecture. (1 :00) 1;1

!Ill e\IZ MOVIE: 'WIMin

SOLITAIRE ALL

Ha't Not A Strlnge~ CBS
Spacial Movie (2:00) Q
IDliD Allan Natlon George
and Sikes Investigate tha
murder of a lamous human
doctor. (1:00) D
QJ1 Larry King Uwl
«Jl Pnme nrna WreaUing

DAY LONG

I

-v.o
......... .;
CIW
Rd. PM-.:-;;

~up,- dollvary. 111- :

1211 Nellllvllle Now
10:00 (ll 700 Club With Pit

I

IIPI!o lonk P-110 0111111 '
Co. RON EVANIINliAPRISU, :
.....lulon, OH 1~7-H21.
,

82

Roberllcin
Cll

Plumbing &amp;
Hlldlng
ca~..-.Ptu-.t

·""-""'

-...rPTno
Qotllootll. Ollla
114-llt-3811'
-

.

ASTRO-G~

have with trtendstoday.
TAURUS (Aprll21 Mer 21) In ldvanclng your per1011el lnteresta today you
might usetiiCilca your companlolll flnd
BERNICE
ollenllve.. Be doubly C&lt;Wialn the prize Is
BEDE OSOi.
worth the proc.clures.
G!.... (118J 21..,_ 21) Today you ,
may lacl&lt; the courage of your convtcIlona and your Intentions could go un- '
111 oicld. If you h - no Ieith In your I
own Idea, wily lllloukl otherl?
·
CANCIII , , _ 21-Jtllr 21)11 you fell to
keep your prlorltfelln order today your
-auuA
nonproducliWI lnvot•emanll could be
glwn more .nentlon than the
bllnfel you're expected to par1otn1.
LEO (""" 21-AIII- II) The option to
New. 1,1"'
.. forceayou~todaylnordlrtoad- malta your own IIKII-could be tell,
-your plll::-.alllllllltlonl.,.llke- ., frOnl you toclltl' If you put youraalf '"
An opPQf1Unlty.m81' p,_,tltlllf In the 1y to be lnaellqth a. The tupp0r1ars you a po11t1on where you let your .,..,. do
year ahHd through atrualld friend wllo • ....., need mlgltt Ignore JOU·
your lltlnklng for you.
dlblillllnuntque-..,-.Studyln 11111Cn(FIIII.21&amp;¢111)A-re1o' VIICIO lAIII- DSIPI Ill Put1110f11

tV...'IIrthday
·- ·

Graph predictions today. Mall S1.25 to
Astro-Graph, c/o this nilwapaper, ·P.O.
91428, Cleveland, OH 41101-3128. Be
,, sure to state your zodiac sign.
' IAGITTAIIIUII (Now.
21) You
may have to contend with oome prob. femstoday t~at.,. not entirely of rour .
own making. Your ability to resolve
lhem eflectlvely will be lessened If you
begirt to rear-ry lor yoiKsell.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.IMI. 11) It's best
not to take larva risks today In order to
ach._ nomlnil gains. Keep this upper-,
moat In your mind H an auoclale present• you with a queallonable
propoelllon.
·
AOUAIIIUI (.len. »Fall. 11) The

dlpthwllalllp!Opllld_,HMialnan
-with wliiCit ,au. n ~II'
K«&lt; 10 (Oat. ....... II) Wilen do-

"" tnUIII be Cloee 10 Thanklglvlng. We're

I

,...,...,111-

11:®(llllabllan

• (I) \Ill .liZ IIJ) NIWII
. (I) llaal Of Mulcta , . . . . _
(0:30)
ettD . , _ H a l (1 :00&gt;
1!)1 Mo..,Una

.........

.

•

.

A
9

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

I

-

. . . . l.''

' - .

.•

contlmplllll a walk down
the IIIIa wHI1 I r8cordfng'
1tar. Stwao.

c-

..........
IFna~

\

n-3

BRJDOE

NORTH
U-4-11
••'dtJ9
.KB4
tAKQ54

Nailing down
the contract

+6

By James Jacoby

WEST

EAST

+S
.Q7S3

+IOU
.A1012
t!OP871
+Q

tJ

+AKI0985t

Great Britain won the Women's
World Team Championship in Brazil
in 1885. Sally HOrton's strong playinc
contributed a lot to that victory, and
for the next three days we will see why
as we look at some of Sally's successes. In today's deal Sally's partner
made a slam try of four clubs, thinking
it possible that Sally migbt hold as
much as tbe heart ace and spade
queen. Glad that sbe bad five spades to
tbe queen, Soutb siped off at four

SOUTH

•u
+n

+Q8762'

+J7 S2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Welt

s+
4+

spades.

Sally won Welt's jack of diamonds

Openinclead:

In dummy, cubed two blgb spades and
tben led a low club from dummy. East

Eat

Weal Nor..
S+
IlbL
Paaa 4+
AUpua

Sao..

PUB
PUB

+J
.

won the queen and returned a trump.
This was won in dummy, followed by
two more blgb difmoods (a club discarded) and a diamond ruff. A club
was ruffed in dummy and the last diamond played. When East followed, declarer simply pitched her last club.
East now bad nolbini: left to play but
hearts, and the contract was eitsured
recardless of which opJ)onent beld tbe
heart '!ce.

Lesson:

Tbe

North may seem strange wilboat lintround CODtrol of clubs, bttt tat was
the only way to invite slam witboat
getting beyond game-level If South
held tbe ace of hearts illslead of tbe
lack, a four-heart cue-bid would tben
have gotten Nortb-soutlt to a good
four-dub cue-bid by slam contract.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
40 NoveNst
1 Vehicles
George 5 Girder
41 Emperor
DOWN
9 Irving
and Carter
1 Editor's .
10 Actress
mark
Nelson
2 Cowpoke's
and olhers
"pal"
12 Alienallon
3 AI the
131solate
poinl ol
15 Conceil
a gun .
16 Possesses 4 Fast plane
17 Aclor
5 Dim
Hullon
6 Time
18 Apathy
periods
20 Dolly of
7 Greek
"Hell!),
nickname
Dolly"
8 Henry
21 'The Greal
Fonda
Compromiser' liim
22 Russian
11 Splinler
cily
23 Trident
25 Word ol
regrel
28Codger
27Medlocre
28 Yellow
lish
29 Hi-li
adjust men I
32 Actress

composer
20 Untied
33 " -0id
23 Tonto's
Dutch
horse
Garden"
24 Anlorio's 38 "Today,
beloved
1- man'
25 Hurfful
37

r:--r.--..---,..-

Hagen
33 Wrath
34 Building

wing
35 Albanian
capilal,
37 Boasl
38 Jordanian
capilal
39 Hindu soul

. '

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

11111

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 fonnation of the words are all
hinlll. Each day the code letters are different.

'

.

CR\'PTOQUOTE

11-6

.

IIJ ....... Vlcl Crockett

= o n l'llaiWia compllclttlorta
• VI IIIII Cot ""'
t1t1n trying to llnil fllljUYI- Rem- . 11:301])SIII••
yau lllrt. Don't giW ..... llll'lngthl ' i1C1r piObllmi lhl, thin potnt lhl ec• (I) • lelt Of
(J)Ip tiC....,
to Gpp ael'lg ~.:tort than IIIey - - -' •CMina flrtglt lllw.
p mur.
•
. : Lllltl (llpL 21-0ot. D) UIUally yau
(!) 1111 ap•• oloumlll
AIIU (llltnll
11) A Old II** twice beiON risking your ,._

It""""

-· .

on the origin of the Pledge
Of Allegiance. and a
controversial flag display In
Chicago whore people walk
on the ttag. (1 :00)
.ltD CrlmeWIIch Tonight
0 EYIIIIng N 10:05 (IJ MOVIE: Red River (2:45)
1&amp;.30 CZJ lacrettntallganca The
creation of the F&amp;t and OSS.
the CIA's predecessor, Is
traced :
.liD Twlllgltt Zona
180n8tage

-your own ltllllglt\IIIR 11111141en1a ..
· todlly Ia tantanDMt to quilting IIIICN'

tlllllle ecot~ -11 . . 011-nld lod81'
you II1CI ycM ~ nllkely to .haft a
IIINIIIIII of the t'lllndl. IIUI IIIII may ncM
be ·~rue In IIIMr ·orlllcll · Mljar adllll""** ua to be nllthlr IIKir· l ; ~on "IffY''-- Today, howollanged ar. .l-.cl tor Scorpio Ill lhl . .,_nonllndlr. TIIIIOCIUidbntpe., 1 - ·· you m1g11t lllp Into 1 ' coming year. 8end lor your Allro- Clllly pertlnenlln any 1~11 you, lmpulllvely.
~.

J

1H1 Nawo

(!J Follow The Flog Stories

a-o.c.

flnllly ,. olllllng lhe lllltowJnr from last Yff-."

w-·• Qy-IM:t

1989 World Championship
lrom Stuttgart,
·
Germany-Women 's Optlonals
&amp; Compulsories (T)
~ II()) AIIC Monday Night

CZJ~~OfTheWIIIIm

TWENTYFOUR TIMES
STRAIGHT

SO I JEST

iollll-plllod-dai. :
lllid llrYioo, .... .

....,

I

.

EQOism- Known - Unify - Notion - WINNING
WhTie vislling a horae track one afternoon, I everheard one old crony slah 10 another, "No one ever bet
enough money on a WINNIN,;..G..:.ho..:.rse..:.:...·_·- - - - - - - - .

Nawellour (1 :00)
1111 ei!Z liZ Wh11l 01
FortunoD
ID liD Night Court 1;1
QJI Monoyllno
IHIChHrl
«Jl Miami Vice Crockett and
Tubbs pose as cocaine
imponers In Columbia.
VlcleoCountry
7:05 (IJ Jetfer10111
7:30 D (2) Family Feud
(!) NFL Trivia Game
(I) En-ll'llllllnl Tonight
IJ(I) UIA Today

tat - · 304-t'IS-

Fumlolled Ape. 107 112 Soc:ond
AYL Ullllllll pold. 0op. Ro-

_.....,,CoM for-·
7211-4041.

.

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

Ill SponaCanter
(I) D ()) Current Affair
CZJ (!J MacNeil/Lehrer

=:""·

Fflf Ronl: Furnlohod Z I 3 , _
oportiiWWL Cllln o u - Ia&lt;
-.........
No "i~teRoll
1511. depooM -

wldemoiiAo

•

I I

.

A UNSCRAM8lE A80VE lETIERS
'U
ro GET ANSWER

3-2·1 Contact 1;1

«Jl ·f!o-Man
8:35 (IJ Andy Qrlfllth
7:00 (ll Our HouM
D (2) PM Megazino

FRANK AND ERNEST

vau· bot- . n

see you.when I'm--·-·."

Compl~te .' t,e chu~lcl.e q uoted
by f1ll• ng m the m1ss•no words
L-..1-....J-...r...·- ' - . 1 - - ' you develop from step No. 3 below.

1;1

tH1 WKRP In Clnclnnetl

to

&amp;::: -~....';:ao:t"'"

Would

II I

I
I' G

!Ill .112l CBS NeWa 1;1

...-

mobUI

}

WU C F E R
s

ei!D ntree'l Company

Sl W. opl. 2 br., 1 blih, private

1171 , z bodroom F - g.-y 11- I ohopplng-12150 tumftllld. 11100. cau fll',
.....; .....J. .. truh
114-·747t.
prOI'dad $2151ma. w. 114-

19110 Sherwood Parte

,

..,.:..T-:,A;,;C:....r-P
-:,Hr--11
:::'. Four year old to mother
'
I
I
who .was in hospital, "I'm nol
~~~~~=~~_,
I I
old enough to vis~ you, so I'll

1111 NBC Nightly N1w1

(I)
ABC Newo
(l)-yE-

Mobile Ho11181
for sale

I' I I I I
DAVIL

01 ei!Z

~~~~l!l1111 AMA luperc......,

~~.. llrgo kllc.. n, ........,
up, ilduMo only. No -

"See to it that our best
customers receive our most
sincere form letter."

PUIIIII

EVENING

~-

...... 2:JOp....

I'IIAI MIIY

8

MON., NOV. 6

.....,.. err rtellllrM. RoUII One

44

The Daily Sentinel-Page 11

Pomeloy-Micklaport. Ohio

Monday. November 6, 1989

71 Autot for Slit

Houtthold

.......

.

November e. 1989

Pomeloy-Middaport. Ohio

10-The o.ity Sentinel

·

V

LPWVX

MNPJ

KNP

PKJ

'

VHW

'

QTNXL.- N .
KJBWI
Yul , ,•• CIUJIICI I 1 A GOLDEN RU.E:

•.

XKHOK

XV I

NBTI · LKNXL

.nmGE liEN NOI' IY 11EII Ofl.at8 BUT BY
. ,WHAT niEIR OfiiONS HAVE MADE OF 1'HI!N.G.C. I.ICH1ENIIERO
'
~

\

•

�..

A,.RIDM

~~· m

l

REPLACE
YOUR OLD
SLIDING DOOR
WITH THE
ATRIUM DOOR!

II :• II

oA1.L WOOD
.EJIEIIGYEfRQEIIT
oiiEAIIY·TOINIITAU.

1/2 VARIABLE SPEED
REVERSIBLE DRILL..............

oiCIJ)IIIASI-

~~~t. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$7950

32" X 6'8" .
6 PANEL DOOR.......s1299s
36" X 6'8"
6 PANEL DOOR.........S13295
32" X 6'8"
1/2 GLASS DQOR_S15Q95
36" x 6'8" 1/2 GLASS DOOR.................- S16485

ORBITAL ACTION
S
FINISHING SANDER.............. 3899
318" CORDLESS
DRIVE·R·DRILL:.......................s3gss

ALUMINUM
ROOF
COATING

I

!

.rowa roou MAD

..

I

I

D

I

I
I

l

I

I

·'i!

L J-...

'

-I.OCIC IIICI.UD£11

The Alriwn Door
il•cho~•lly a whole
oyatern of ldeu for
tlihandll&amp; the beauty
of ony homt.
Come In today •
lei u• help you
choooe
the id.. that's
1
I rightfor your home.

TllB PDnCT CJIIUS1'.NAI G'D.,.,.JIO&amp;!Sf
VARIABLE SPEED

JIG SAW........................................,...............
CIRCULAR SAW......................s5399

•

·150
CORDLESS SCREWDRIVER................... 2

BLACK &amp;DECKER

6'0"x 6'8"
INCLUDES SCREEN
AND HARDWARE

. $

X

6"~~;10 .8 4811

rl-ttt+
i:lnU: WELD WIRE MESH

ROU.

SAVE

'1871
t---------.. .

.

•GREEN &amp; WHITE •CHESTNUT BLEND •COPPERWOOD

$

1 Soctlon, 10 PogH

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 7, 1989

11111 11011

BARB
COMPU'I'BLY AIDJOIIBD
'

8' X 8' .................$425
8' X 10' .,............$525

· EARLY
- Voting precincts around
. MeJP County I were open bright and early this
momlag to accomodale the many voters who
needed to cast ballot&amp; before golag to work or
school. In Syracuse VIllage precinct, Mary Ann

-----12' Main Tee ................ 3.45

Wall Angle ............ s1.90

CElLINI PANELS

3111" X 15"-~~!;~.S1235 roll
3tl1" X 23".!';.'!;..'!'-~-.... .11835 roll
65 roll

IIIDLAftll
4' •••

•8.811
···-------------1
29¢ a·g· •. .~·-·~~...........sss. 95
29¢

"'LI'A..............................................................;$1,99
~u: .................................................................'1.99
Y•••••••.•.• .-•••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••11.99
:.........................................................•2.75
-=--

6" x23"...~~';.~.....s1765ron

llfiw;;;.,
_..._

BLICKBDARD

2' x4' LAY...

9314" X 15".. !'!-.!'!',;,~...527'0roll
. tw4"
"' S41&amp;o roll
;,- X 23".!!:!:t!!!.!!'!!:..

CILOi'D 12" X 12"
CIILII8 TILE
MONTEGO ....... _SQ. FT........
ST. JOHN ........... SQ. FT. ........

35¢
CAYMAN ............. SQ.
35¢
BARBADOS .... SQ. FT.......... 35¢

.......,;.

· TRINIDAD ......... SQ. FT..... _..

POLY GUARD PIPE INSULATION......................$305
HEAJ TAPE............................................................•12so

'$

10'....................... 64.95

FT.........

.,.INKS
30 GALLON GAS................:..s1412o
---.

WASHINGTON tUPil - The
While House, preparing to help
host a global drug summit early
next year. is considering having
the meetipg held In Colombia,
Peru or Bolivia, administration
sources said.

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tlon, criminal justice and em· of the ~ard: and Sens. William
p!oyment problems affecting Bowen, D·Cinchinall, Theodore
black males 16 to 26 years old.
Gray, R-Upper Arlington, and
The Department of Admin is· Robert Ney, R·Barnesvi!!e.
trative Services recommended
The controlling board also
that bids be waived and the voted Monday to transfer $80.9
contract awarded to Sykes and mUllon In state and federal
Lynch Brown because depart· money to the new Department of
ment officials said the project Alcohol and Drug Addiction
needed more consultant's hours Services.
than offered by the !ow bidder.
The departnient will have $28.4
Recommended were 2,311 mll!!on to spend In the next eight
hOurs, compared with 632 hours months and another $52.5 million
proposed by the Dayton firm .
for the fiscal year beginning July
"It looks . fishy to me," said 1, 1990.
stale Rep. Robert Netzley. R·
The board also approved a$2 ..7
Laura, a member of the control· million contract for Evaluation
ling who voted against the · Research Corp. of Fairfax, Va ..
contract award. "Of the five . to review all 800,000 pending
people on the (Administrative child-support cases In the De·
Services) . Committee that re· partment of Human Services .
commended this, at least three of The federal government will pa.y
them were problalily hired by the two thirds of the cost of the
guy that's getting the contract." contract.
State Rep. Robert Hickey,
The goa! is to gel rid of cases
D,Dayton. also voted against the that should have been closed,
contract.
giving workers time to focus on
Voting to approve the contract active cases.
were Robert Prosser. president

"We'd like to go right to the
heart of the problem," one
source said Monday, adding that
Colombia appears to be a top
choice. "Of course. we're not
going to put the president's life in
danger."

White holds slim lead
ii1 poll over Forbes

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COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPil Tile State Controlling Board has.
approved a $91!.500 consulting
contract for two Columbus com·
panles despite lower bids from
two other firms .
Tlie \JOard voted 4·2 Monday to
approve a contract for Sykes
As~lates and Lynch Brown and
Associates to coordinate and
manage the newly created Com·
mission on Socially Dlslldvan·
taged Black Males.
Sykes Assoc!a tes is ·owned by
William Sykes, who served as
administrative services director
In the Celeste administration
from 1983 until 1988.
Sykes currently is chairman of
the Ohio Civil Rights
Commission.
The two other companies
which submitted proposals lor
the contract are CarltonGroupof
Columbus, which bid $98,100, and
Multi-Western Cos. of Dayton,
which bid $55,300.
The new commission Is to do a
year-long study of health, educa·

WASHINGTON (UPll - AI·
though an off-year election that
In other Urnes might hardly be
noticed. the contests being declded by voters Tuesday had the
potential for making history and
moving blacks to a new level of
American politics .
Three campaigns - guberna·
t,or!al battles in VIrginia and New
Jersey and a mayoral fray in
New York City - have grabbed
most of the attention, pr!mar!!y
because of the efforts of a pair of
black Democrats: Virginia's
Douglas Wilder and the Big
Apple's David Dinkins.
Gclng into Tuesday 's voting,
the two men, both ahead In the
polls, appeared confident they
were on an unprecedented jour·
ney - W!!der with his drive to
become the nation's first black
elected governor and Dinkins
with his effort to become the first
black mayor of the country's
largest city.
Slill, their RepubliCan oppo·
· nents - Marshall Coleman in
VIrginia and Rudolph Giuliani In
New York City - pushed to the
end, appealing Monday to undec!ped voters and trying to rajse
ques Uons about the Democratic
candidates' integrity.
·
At the same time, polis showed
Democratic Rep. James Florio
running far ahead of Republican
Rep. -.James Courter In his' third
attempt to be governor of NeW
Jersey . .
Also at stake Tuesday. were a
host of other mayoral contesij;Including big-city showdowns in
Cleveland, Detroit, Houston and
Seattle - and one congressional
race, to fill the Texas seat left
open by the death this summer of
Democratic Rep. Mickey Lela1Jd. who was k!l!ed in an
airplane crash in Ethiopia.
Eleven candidates were in that
contest.
In addition, voters in 13 states
'.
c~'l)s!dered a wide range of ba!lot
qllestions. Although there was no
overriding theme among the
referendums, the Issues lncludPd
busing and money matters.

Reuter says
it's not too
late to mail
holiday cards

White House eyes South America
for glo~al drug .summit next year

BOt

1 PIECE.......:.....WHITE............'189.95
2 PIECE.............WHITE ...........$259.95

Winebrenner registers with workers (left to right)
Naomi Loatlon and ESther Harden. Harden has
been a precinct worker "for 40 years." London Is
also a long-lime precinct worker, "but not that
long," sbe points out.

State Controlling Board OKs
e9ntra'*:
•te,, lower bids

(WHITE ONLY}

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Off-year election has
historic potential today

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LANDSCAPE TIMBERS

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11
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FT. AlUMINUM
$
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FT. FIBERGLASS LADDER•..'12548

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Niners
capture
eighth win

SKILL

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·'ODD

Monday, November 6, 198S:. ·

Pomeloy-Midclaport. Ohio

Plla• 12-The Dilly Sentinel

CLEVELAND t UP!) - State
Sen. Mike White takes a shrink·
lng lead over Council President
George Forbes into Tuesday's
election, which will decide Cleveland's first new mayor since
George Volnovlch was elected In
1979.
VOinovlch, who defeated in·
cumbent Dennis Kuclnlch 1111979
and won re·eleciion ln. 1981 and
)985, decided not to run for
re-electiOn this 'y ear because of
his 1990 candidacy for governor.
Forbes, who has worked
closely w!lh Votnov!chduringtbe
las I 10 years, said he would not
run against Volnovlch . but decided Ill get into tbe race once
Voinovich was out.
The 16-year president of city
counc!! was an easy winner in
last month's non-parli118n prim·
ary - 38 percent to 2~ percent. bu 1 While Immediately took a
large lead 'in early . general
efcl!on polls.

Both candidates are black. but
While has picked up much of the
support given the three defeated
white candidates .
A poll ljy The Cleveland Plain
Dealer published Oct. 22 showed
White with a 19-po!nt lead over
Forbes. A WKYC·TVpoUrelased
Wednesday showed the lead had
narrowed to 16 points and the
most recent pol! released In
Sunday's Plain Dealer showed
the lead had shrunk to eight
points, 41 percent to 33 percent.
"We're . not sitting on any
lead," White said. "We know that
if there's a low voter turnout on
Tuestlily, I could very well be
s!ltina' at home on Wednesday
thinking about the state Senate."
II 11 generally believed among
poUI!cal analysts that Forbes'
supporters are more loyal. He
has a strona backing In the city's
blaci community and has received endorsements from most
of the major u~ns in Cleveland.

"It's not 'too !ate to mall
hOliday greetings and gifts to
faraway countries If you. use air
mail service," says Pomeroy
Posimaster Tom Reuter. "And
parcels sent to m!l!ta~y person·
The sources said Puerto Rico nel in the Far East and Southeast
also is under consideration, al· Asia can still be shipped via
though the administratiOn would Parcel Airlift Mall !PAL) and
rather have the summit in Space Available Mall (SAM) cocaine-ravaged South Amer!c" depending on the destination."
Reuter recommends that you
for symbolic reasons.
"We'd like to hold it In check with the Pomeroy Post
Colombia, Peru or Bolivia," one Office 111 992·2235, or find the
source said. "If we didn't hold It desUnatlon and deadline on the
!n.a ny of those countries, it would chart !!sled below.
"PAL packages are a!r!!fled
be bad for sym\JOIIc reasons."
domestically to a U. S. gateway
facility, . then airlifted on a
The presidents of Colombia, space-available basis to an APO
Peru and Bolivia last month
(Army or Air Force Post Office)
announced they would hold a or to FPO (Fleet Post Office) .
summit and Invited the United Packages weighing up to 30
States. :rhe administration,
pounds and measuring 60 !nc~es
which has long promised to host. in combined length and girth
such a meeting, promptly may be sent to military ad·
accepted.
dresses by PAL," Reuter says.
On Nov. 20, representatives of
Postal customers pay theregu·
the four nations are to meet to Jar parcel post rate to the U. S.
develop an agenda, select and gateway. plus a small fee for air
announce a summit location and service. The air service fee Is 30
to extend Invitations to other cents for parcels weighing two
countries.
pounds or Jess, 60 cents for two to
About a dOzen nations are
three pounds, 90 centy for three
expected to attend, most from
to four pounds, and $1.20 for four
the ~eric as, along with at least
to 30 pounds.
one representative from Europe.
Parcels up to 15 pounds and 60
The summit is expected to be inches in combined length and
held in January or February.
girth can be sent by SAM to
Colombia has been rocked with
mU!tary addresses overseas at
bombings and shootings since regular parcel post rates.
escalating Its war on cocaine
In the 48 states, SAM man is
car leis last summer. ·Admin is· carried by surface vehicles to a
lratlon sources said the summit gateway exit and flown on a
would be hl!ld there only if space available basis to its
officials conclude adt!Quate se'· destination.
cur!ty can be provided.
Continued on page 10

!\

In San Francisco. where citi·
zens are still recovering from
October's devastating earth·
quake. voters were faced with
whether . t,:, vote for a new
. baseball stadium to replace
Candlestick Park. Even before
the quake, the NatiOnal Leauge
champion Giants threatened to
move if they dO' not get a new
place to play.
.
Also, San Francisco voters
decided whether to keep a,law
allowing unmarried couples,
both homosexual and heterosex·
ual, to register. with the city. In
some cases, the law would give
partners rights ·normally ac·
corded to a spouse - a prospect
that bas upset many religious
groups.
As tney ctosea aown their
campaigns . Monday, the candi··
dates in the three major races•
put In frenetic days.

Accompanied by Incumbent
Democratic Gcv. Gerald Baines,
who is limited to one term, and,
Sen. Charles Robb, D·Va., Wilder
was undaunted as he confronted
a handful of hecklers who com·
pia! ned a \lOut a tape recording in
which Wilder purportedly prom·
lsed to help scuttle the state's
rJght-to-work law.
"I'm going to tell you a \lOut a ·
tape you can bring to the
lnaugura!orbrlngtotheceremonles tomorrow evening because
remember I told you here. I will .
be elected the next governor of .
Virginia," Wilder argued in ·
Arlington, Va.
Coleman. accompan led by Republican Sen. John Warndr.
R-Va. , turned In a similar stalewide blitz and contended that'
despite polling numbers . that
showed him traU!ng, the momen· .
tum was shifting to him.

Russians observe
72nd anniversary
of .'17 revolution
MOSCOW (UPll - Mikhail
Gorbac_hev, ca!IIDjt his nation's
economic crlslt a "sword of
Damocles," led a subdued Revolution Day celebration Tuesday
marked by a smaller-than-usual
mU!tary parade and the first
lar,ge-scale counter·
demonstration In Soviet history.
The annual Red Square display
on the 72nd anniversary of the
.1917 Bolshevik Revolution was a
shadow of previous trumpetings
of Soviet military might.
AI Moscow's Dynamo Stadium
several miles from Red Square,
10,000 protesters' staged a
counter-ral!y , walking 10·
abreast and hoisting signs that
read "A fish begins to stink at the
head" and "72 years leading to
nowhere. ''

Protesters entering the sta·
d!um at one point nearly co!l!ded
with workers on their way to Red
Square to march in the official
parade but pollee prevented the
two columns from meeting. Pollee did not Intervene in the
counter-ra!!y.
AI the Kremlin, only 183
military vehicles, a fraction of
earlier armadas with hundreds
of arti!!ery pieces. roiled .across
the vast cobblestone square.
Previous mainstay portraits of
the. ruling Politburo mem'b ers
· were absent and the \JOmbastlc
banners of the past were re·
·placed by signs urging "action.
not talk."
In another first, Gorbachev
gave an Interview to Soviet
Television from high atop the
Lenin Mausoleum where the
other Po!!tburo members joined
him in viewing the annual
parade.

•

"The expression I am a bout fu .
use Is~ \OIIib one but .I want to ·
say ft," OortiiCIH!Y Hid. ''L.IIre
the sword of Damoci!!S, the
problems of food and our market
sit ua lion are h anglng over everyone. It makes them anxious
and troubles them."
According to legend, Damocles, a courtier in ancient Syracuse, was seated under a sword
suspended by a single hair to
teach him a lesson a \lOut perU.
Will) his arch-conservative Politburo member Yegor Llgachev
casting wary glances over Gor·
bachev's shoulder, the Soviet
leader said the parade this year
was less pompous than in the
past.
First lady Ra!sa Gorbacbev,
bundled in a black wool coal and
blue fur on a damp autumn
morning, watched the celebra·
lion from a stand for special
guests .
In a sign of the country's
nationalist unrest, the Latvian
Popular Front in the restive
Baltic region and activists in the
southwestern republic of Molda·
via had urged their followers to
snub the natlonal.oUday.
·
At Red SquaJt., the state
fes tivltles began when the giant
clock atop the Kremlin's Spasky
Tower chimed 10 a.m. and
Defense Minister Dmitri Yazov
reviewed Soviet troops bedecked
In formal ho!!day uniforms of •
green, grey, blue and brown.
Only 25 tanks led off the display
of military hardware In a dellber·
l!te symbolic expression ·of the
"new poUtlcal thinking" heralded by Gorbachev and For·
e!gn Minister Eduard
Continued on page 10
.

Local news briefs-...:...
Meigs ha_s brief board meeting
In a brief special meeting of the Meigs Local Board of
Education Monday night, Darla Kennedy was hired as an
' elementary teacher. She has been assigned to the Salem Center
School, Supt. James Carpenter reports.
Attending the special meeting were I;tobert Snowden, Larry
Rupe, and Bob Barton.
·

State stores to close Saturday
Director John R. Hall of the Ohio Department of Liquor
Control announced today -that wholesale only liquor stores and
departmental offices wl!l be closed on Friday in observance ol
Vl!terans' Day .
·
·
All ret-aU liquor stores and agencies will be closed on Saturday
in observance of the holid&amp;)l.
It was also noted that the Ohio Department of Liquor Control's
officers, state liquor stores and agencies will also be closed on
Nov. 23 in observance of Thanksgiving Day .

Flu vaccine still available
A small supply of flu vaccine IS still ava!la ble from the Ml!lp
County Health Department and will be available to the public:
from 1 to 3 p.m. on Nov. 15 and Dec. 6.
Continued on page 10

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