<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11898" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/11898?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-29T21:26:25+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42868">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/072f3c453c0ee9cd4239c4dad03a82ee.pdf</src>
      <authentication>603f0a839535c3292e66f9e458874398</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="37415">
                  <text>Paa•

- ·Local news. briefs.---.
EMS has $even calls Monday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered seven
calls for assistance on Monday .
Middleport was called at 1:'35 a.m. to South Third Ave. for
Ernest Wells and at 9:32a.m. to South Fourth Ave. for Russell . .
Mills. Both were taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy was called at 9:27a.m. to the Amerlcare:Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Lovey Watson wh() was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 10:32 a :m., Pomeroy went to Route 143
lor Dave Cumings to Veterans Memorial Hospital and at 1:38
p.m., PQmeroy went to Mulberry Heights for Mary Lang to
Holzer Medical Center. At 9:01p.m., Pomeroy transported Flo
Strickland tram the Amertcare·Pomeroy Nursing Center to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Syracuse was called to College Road at 11: 55 p.m. !orTlmothy
Haynes who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Village. ••

Continued trom page 1

computerized study to help find a
suitable sue. Gerard said that he
felt the Information being com.plied by the professOr might be
useful In establishing economic
development sites and prQvldlng
a basis !or Industrial promotion.
The status of the village's
eontract with Columbia Gas was
discussed with the mayor noting
that state-wide rates have been
set by the PUCO.
Paul Bailey of Park Street met

with council to talk a bout a
drainage problem which he has
at his residence.
the Mayor's report showed
receipts of $4,793.
Attending were Mayor Hot·
!man, Clerk-Treasurer Jon
Buck, .and Council members
Dewey Horton, James Clat·
worthy, Robert Gilmore. Paul
Gerard, William Walter, and
Jack Satterfield.

Ohio... Continuect from page 1

Weather

H08pital news

years service.
The Gallia· Meigs Patrol Post
wei()Omed a new Commander
last week. Lt. Robert J. Wood·
ford, who transferred In tl'om ·
Portsmouth. Is the tenth commandant of the local post since It
opened In 1941. Others, In the
order they served, were D.H.
Cole, tbetlrstcomma,nder; W.C.
Goodhart, acting commander;
Max Lambert, W.H. Harrison,
P.O. McCreedy, R.R. Greene,
E.W. Wigglesworth and G. Dan
Henderson.
Pe1'8011ael Named ·
The Gallla-Melgs Post bas a
compliment of 12 men, three
dispatcher and 10 cruisers. Besides · Lt. Woodford, there are
three serge.nts and nine troopers,
and four dispatchers ·.

Sou .. &lt;;enlral Oblo
Showers Tuesday night, with a
low In the mid 50s. Showers and
thunderstorms and windy Wed·
nesday, with highs betw~en 65
and 70. Chance of rain Is 80
percent.
Extended Forecul
Tbanday throqh Saturday
A chance of rain or snow
Thursday, with fair weather
Friday. and a chance of snow on
Saturday. Highs wlll be In the 40s
Thui-sday and In the 30s Friday
and Saturday. Overnight lows
will be near 40 early Thursday
and In the 20s Friday and
Saturday mornings.

. Rober Medical Center
DtscbU'Ie&amp; Nov. 13- Mildred
Collins, James Ferguson, Howard Gahm, Mark Gardner, Ar·
lene Grace, David Long, Donald
Miller, Cheryl Nibert, Freelin
Peck, Margaret Phllllps, Natha·
nlel Riddle, Pamela Robinson ,
Howard Swindell. Wllllam
Weaver and Amy Wolfe.
· BlrCIIINov.1S-Mr.andMrs.
.JosephNott, son, Point Pleasant;
W.Va.

Stocks
Dally stoc• prices
(As oi10:3G a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smllh
of Blunt, Ellla &amp; Loewl

Am Electric Power ............. 303A
AT&amp;T .......................... : ..... .43~
Ashland Oil .... , ...................35%
Bob Evans ........................... 14
Charming Shoppes ..............11%
City Holding Co ................... 15'Va
Federal Mogul. ....... :............ 20 .
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... .46
Heck's ... .......... .................. .. S\'4
Key Centurion ..................... 15
Lands'
End .............. :.. :....... 26~
Connie Sue Covert, Calltornla; a
Limited
Inc ................. . :.... ,36%
sister and brother-In-law,
Multt~:~~edla
Inc ........ ............ 94
Mayme and · Kenneth Boster,
Rax
Restaurants
....... :.......... 2%
GalUpolis; and a brother and
Hobbins
&amp;
Myers
....... , ......... 15
sister-In-law, Jack and Kathleen
Shoney's
Inc
..
:
...
...
......... ... ..10'4
Covert of Batile Creek, Mich.
Star
Bank
...........................
21')4
Graveside services were held ·
Tuesday afternoon at the Middle- · Wendy's Inti. ............ :.......... 4'Va
Worthington lnd .................. 24%
' port ~111 Cemetery. The Rev. AI
McKenzie officiated. Arrangements were handled bY the
Rawlings-Coats-Fisher Funeral
Home.

--Area·
deaths-wayland Covert
Wayland Francis Covert. 73,
formerly of Mlddlep_ort. died
Sunday In Battle Creek, Mich.
Born on Oct. 18, 1916, In
Middleport, he was the s.on of the
late Ar-thur and Nelle Ramsey
Covert. He was a 30 year
employee with Kellogg In Battle
Creek, Mich. He graduated from
Middleport High School and was
·a veteran of World War II.
He Is survived by a daughter,

Rep. A bel...

TUIJNy, November 14, 1989

Porneloy-Middl1poet. Ohio

10-The Dilly Sa ttinlll

lncludllll[;
Sgt. J .L. V~tugbn, Sat. L.L.
Arledge, and Sgt. G. C.Carper;
and Troopers B.D. P•ck, D.O.
Conrad, L. M. Evans, C.E.
Moody, R.S. Justus, S. T. Circle,
J.S. Jagers, D.L. Hopkins, and
P.J. Lajoye.
.
Dispatchers are: Bill Brown,
Kay HilleY, Melva Saunders and
Mary Sommer.
!
In 1988, troopers of the GalUa·
Meigs Post Investigated !,238
accidents, made 6,279 arrests
and Issued 6,685 to motorists
traveling through Gallia and
Meigs Counties.
Highway deaths are on the
Increase this year compared to
1988. In 12 months last year, the
patrol reported
10 highway
fatalities, four In Gallla County;
six In Meigs. Tblsyear,:tbe patrol
has reported 15 accidents In the ·
first 10· months. GalUs County's
total Is 11, up seven from · last
year. There have been !our In ,
Meigs County, compared to six
last year.
Twenty-five years ago, tbe
patrol Investigated 539. IIi wblch
eight persons were kUI~d. made
2,106 arrests and Issued 4,430
warnings. ·

·.

~

We Honor All PCS Cards.
You Pay·Only The Co-Pay
'

Meigs .principal thanks

.

~mmunity for

•

.

'5 'r= :

1989 TAURUS S.H.O.

'

10,000 mi'los. Local owner.

Factory oHicial car.
Laather int., moon roof, loaded.

S1 ~,500

$15,500

.1 985 fORD F250
. 414 '

1989 MERCURY TOPAZ

Auto. traM., AII!FM cassette,
roar defroster.

6 cyl., 4 •Pt• sun •lsor, local
owner.

Air, cruise control, tit whool
COllette.

S6995

S8995

$8995

Y-6, air, cruise &amp; tit, one local
owner. Like new condition.
Low lllileage.

'

1987

~EROSTAR

$7995

1986 T·BIRD

(2) 1986 TAURUS GL.

Y-6, powor soats,door,

Loaded.

$6595

.....-

"-- 1

URY
COUGAR XR 7

ALL-WHEEL DRIVE

1988 ESCORT 2 Dlt GL

5-passengor,. air, auto. trans.,
one owner.

$4895
windows,- cassette. Local owner.

•~

Alltfo, tr. .s.
10,000 Milos.

$5995
\1

.....te &amp; SlYer.
Local Owners.

Quad Captain .Chairs.
Loaded • .

$6295

$9195

1985 PONTIAC

1986 CHRYSLER

PARISIENNE WAGON

LeBARON 4 DR. GTS

loaded.

Crusie, tHt, air.

Air, auto. trans., cruise, tit.

$5995

S2995

4 cyL, t•bo .. auto. trans.,

I

-$4695

·

::rtVIIIia.
IH:il M"

.t D8ni

amt'
· Loeb .t Dam an: 11110111
the 16 the FERC bas fktnsed
1be Dcpanment of lhe lnrerior
clud lldl; of information, pottnliaDy sew:re loss of llsh IIIII
ilcgrtldtiJi9n of water quality as
rmwas for requesting the rdlearing It 111o claims the FERC licen·
,.j die ~ projects
wilbouuuolution of important fish
llllllriJdllfe issues.
111e aeboaling request was filed
on behalf Of the Inferior
deplnment's U.S. Fish and Wildlife
SUvi&lt;:e. Similar requests have been
filed by West Vuginia and Pennsyl-

. -"Ohio bas u-'"'ed FERC ·
Varua.
. "'"'
~·L

"Based 011 the limiJed ~available, annual losses ol millions ol

... _....
..... · support of school otsantzatlons,
FERC ~ ~ly re.~ to pi'OVIuo , and. ~so ·as a way io familiarize
the b lllol!MI lllforJl1811011 requested, . bUSit!saes Wb!Ch donated tO the
bulllilo iistlcd the licensu belen scoop! wltb programs offered at
final rec:ommencladons hid been
the school. .Refreshments will be
filed by stale 8lld federal ll8IUral se~ and the eve11lng will
~lea.
conclude with a tour _or _the

peeled," Sl!d Ronlld LllnberiiOn,

Wildlife Service, "FER deferred

Northeast Regional Direcllll' ol the
F'lsb IIIII Wlldlife Service.
·
"We an: seriously conccmed that
the FERC ignored our repeal¢ requests for baseline·inf!lfllllldon and
issued the !he licenses withoul adeq1181e dati about the acwal cumulativo impact of these projects,"
Lambertson commented.
"We are also concerned about the
precedent that might be set by
FERC's &lt;lecision,n Lambertson ad·

resolulion of wa1« qlllliry, flshely,
and recreation issues until after
liccnlinJ • al which point project
diacNro•ll is moot and effec:&amp;iile
~lion may not be ccooomically feasible."
Locations where the hyd-.
roelectric projecls were licensed, ill
addidon to Gallipolis Locts .t
Dam and Belleville, are W111ow Is-

that it IIIJIIIQU rebearina, accord·
to the nq.tmmt ol!he Inter·

1cr.

.·

. •

·

.·

fish IIIII
q~
on D!:Dinm•"oflllt
.'
..a.klut-~'ljver
~ C8fl
be~-·:

.,_.,water

ded.
.
The "pclidon for rehearing; molion for stay,lllll request for oppor·
IUnity to file a brief' mainJains

.

•

.
Many activities will be taking
betweennowandtheendol

on Sunday, Nov. 26, behind the
old

to the ..JMII,Idlq.
l'!II.Tatklr
QII!Ia.hr!••
"ll"''a
· ~~==~l~:5~;:=
Fisb~'"ii
7"P.&amp;' ed
pollilliit
out' ·4~=r~E
•.
- n11
' IIHllld the Pome-

land, Pike Island, Now Cwn~-

land, Dashields, Emsworth, At.
ICRhenyLock &amp; Dam 2, 3 and four,
M"llllllllphela 4, Maxwell, Point
Marior, Hildebrand, Opekiska and
Tygart Dam.

Lawmakers to assemble drug bills
By LEE LEONARD
ently are racing each other to see lor drug violations, but H9use
UPII!tlllellloue Reporter
which chamber can flrsl adopt a Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D·
COLUMBUS -Anortheastern comprehensive blll to respond to Wheelersburg, Sl!id a more com·
Ohio pollee chief told an Ohio the drug problem. . .
prehenslve approach to the probSenate panel Tuesday the state
A select comm lttee In the lem was needed.
sltould spend at least one-half of House Is preparing to have a bill
One major Issue that has
all available drug-fighting mo- ready to submit to the floor for a surfaced In both the House and
ney on education.
·vote Dec. 5.
Senate Is how to distribute drug
The rest, said Chief Terry
But the Senate Judiciary Com·· de~;~lers' assets seized l.n raids on
Shldel 9! Can!leld, should be mlttee Is accelerating be!lrlngs, ci'rck ltouses and In other drug
evenly divided .. between law and Senate President Stanley arrests.
enforcement, and treatment and Aronoff, R·Cinclnnatl, toldrepor·
Law enforcement agents want
corrections.
· ters Tuesday he will summon to keep the Proclleda, but others
Bowling Green pollee olflcer senators Into session Nov. 27 to have said some of the money
Grant Tansel told an Ohio House vote on a bill.
should be diver ted to educational
commlltel' the Drug. Abuse Res·
Bolh -sides are trying to Incor· programs.
!stance Education program porate stronger ·penal lies for
Tansel nld ibe forfeited moshould be In every school in Ohio drug abusers and pushers, drug ney should remain with the law
to help young people resist the education and treatment, and .enforcement agency to use as It
temptation of drugs.
·
funding for additional prison ~tit. "It's a two-wry street,"
'I'he testimony I~ place on space.
.
be said. "With the educadon, we
opposlle sides of the Statehouse
The Senate long ago passed need the law enforcement."
as the Senate llnd House appar- legislation Increasing penalties
John Murphy, reprnentlq the
Ohio A.&amp;IIOCtatlon of Coun!f Prosecu·furs, told the Senate commit·
tee more money needs to be
allocated to law enforcement,
which be said Is the most
Important element in cleaning up
the drug problem.
The Melgs-Gallla Post, State Highway Patrol investigated a
"It's Important ' thrt tilt state
car-deer acc;ldent at 7: 05 p.m. Tuesday on US 33, 0.3 of a mile
and local goverianenta ROd . a
east of milepost 10, In Salisbury Township.
stron11 message throqb the
Troopers said a 1985 Chevrolet Cavalier driven by David
communities thrt cSrua abuse Ia
King, 32. Pomeroy. struck and kiHed a deer. No one was Injured.
not condoned, and more lmpor·
Damage was moderate.
.
·
tant, that drug trafflcklnK II not
The patrol also Investigated an accident somewhere In Meigs
condoned, •' said Sbldel. ••Straq·
County, near the Ravenswood bridge, however, no report was
lhenlng the criminal justice
~tvallable late this morning.
system will do that.·~
Stark County Proaecutor Robert Horowitz said drut btdlet·
Leaves will be picked liP bY village workers In Pomeroy next
menta In blllaree haW llllftUid
week accordlnl to Mayor Rlcllard Seyler.
threefold since laat year, "We
The aclMdllle Ia Mondry In the tlrat ward, Tued&amp;ay In the
have aot to have mote 1lrJp hl tile '
II!COnd ward, Weclnelday In tbe third wrrd, and FrldllY In the
trenebes and that's all tbera-la to
it...
fourth ward.. J,.eaves are to be bagpd and placed ·at the curo. ·
Senate Minority Leader Bll'r)'
Mesbel, D-YounpiDwn, madt
another rp~ lllttn lilt

that the enUre eveninc will be
conducted by students. Althouah
JrlaJor emphasis Is to entice
members of the business com·
mllllltytoattend'l'lluraday"open
bllale, the public is also wei·
come, Taylor said. After seeing
and hearing the students Tburs·
day evening, "l'in sure you'll
agree we have some outstanding
yOung people at our school," he
said.
Ta;vlor highlighted aspects of
the school's academic and voca·
Ilona! curriculUms for chamber
members, noting that students
from Southern and Eastern Locals pardctpate In the vocational
training offered at Meigs.
.
Pointlngouttbeneed!orschool
and community to work even
more closely In the future to
address educational ISsues, Tay· '
lor enc:ouraged members of the
business community, as well as
the community at large, to !eel
tree to offer suggestions for
Improvements at the school.
Taylor cited "lack of self
esteem" as a major problem In
rural ~treas which often prevents
stu4ents from attaining succeis
In hJ,h ichocil. ''If we could ever
come cloae to whipping the self
esteem problem In Meigs
County, we could whip a lot of
other problems 100 through var·
lous activities In oqr schools,"

to merge forces with
royFireHouaeo!IButternutAve.
Chamber and other areas tbe_ where vehiCles lbould be waiting
county to become on Jan. 1, lbe to take walkbll parade partie!·
Meigs County Chamber of . pants to Middleport.
Commerce.
The parade In Middleport wl11
The upcoming activities were start near Dairy Queen at 3 p.m.
discussed at Tuesday's regular and move throuah town to
Pomeroy · Chamber meeting disband at the Holzer Clinic
which was conducted by Tom . parking lot. Anyone planning to
Reed, standing In tor President participate In the Christmas
Bruce Reed who was unable to parade should contact the
attend. The meeting was held at chamber office In Pomeroy.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Theme !or the parade Is "Christ·
The Christmas paradew11o~ maa Along the River." Law
topic of discussion. This years enforcement authorities will be
parl!lde Is being sponsored by directing tratnc during and after
both Pomeroy and Middleport the Pomeroy parade to mak41ll
Chambers and will begin at 1: 30
Continued on page 7

ld
.
Residents to not to put mai1
in bo·-ves
tOO. J'
i.ar ..in. advance
.,
""'
'.'Do not put mall in your boxes
too far In advance'' of the arrival
of your letter carrier. This
warning to postal customers on
rural routes ,Is from Pomeroy
Postmaster Tom Reuter.
Reuter reports that a couple
Instances have occured recently
In which Items have been removed trom rural boxes when
the Items were put out the day
before the letter carrier Is to
arrive.

"Never put mall in a rural box
and put the flag up when you
know the mall won't be running,"
Rueter says, such as on a holiday
or on Sunday. And be especially
cautious when putting money In
the mall. "Never put money In ·a
rural box and teave It there for a
dllY or so thinking It will be safe
until the letter cai,Tier arrives,"
he warns.
Although tampering with mall
Continued on page 7

Local news briefs--Patrol reports car-cJeer mishap .

LeGves to be picked up next week

or visit your nearest Trust office for details
on your nexr 7-Day-Wonder.

. .

dtoe»i: 199,999.99. Sublt~ntiiJ P@taln' for cu:tt wihdrawal. Interest

paid w principal and comP.Wnded wft'kiY,. R.ates effectrte Nov. 10, 1989,.•nd

sub_rea to Ch~nie wifhout notice Yield MSume rh• srareod rare rrmoins runltam
for a full ytar wilh no !fithdr•••ls of interest or principal.
'

1HE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
Makes Things HaMien.

1989 BRONCO II XLT
Air, auto. trans., loss t'-n

·LOADEDOne _Owner

1984 MONTE CARLO

Tht~t

. ......· _..

ti

The Department of the lnrerior
bas asked for a Jdlearing Of the
.decision ol the Federal EMlgy
llegularory Commission (FERC) to
Uceilse 16 hydroelectric projl!c:ls in
, the'!PfCI'ObioRiverBasino{West

8 MERCURY
TOPAZ

The &amp;mk

lul!llbeon me ,..,,.,. •v Ill Veter- Memorial
HospitaL Dlck Waner, m.....r of Kropr,
Pomero,, lllte• 1e Ta,lor'a remarks.

Request rehearing on ·FFRC·
'hyd.roelectriC project licensing ~~=:Et~d~JE Christmas parade
hed u l ed N ov
sc
!DB
J
.• 26

$12,695

Affili•r: The Untral S.tkUrporation. Cincinnati, Ohio • Ycmbet FDIC

support

By NANCY YOACHAM
Taylor said.
ment which will evetl Include
Dalb' SenllneiiKaff
He noted that through many robotics . .The bulk of the total
Meigs High Principal Fenton school activities, Including $148,000 coming Into the dllltrlct
Taylor thanked Pomeroy bust· sports, varied music programs,
tbrouab tbe grant process will go
nesses tor donations and support honor societies, a number of
lo the Business Office Education
which make It possible for school clubs and vocational organlza·
program at the school. Presently
organlzatlonstoof!eravarletyof lions, students are given oppor· the school offers two BOE
opportunites to students; oppor- tunltles to get out of the tradl· · classes, Taylor explained, one
tunltles which might not other· tiona! classroom situation to class !or admlnlslratlve assist·
wise be affordable.
obtain a more well-rounded edu· ants and the second !or computer
Taylor extended thanks during cation. The classroom and the accountants. In the past, only
remarks made at Tuesday's out-of-classroom experiences lour computers total, have been
meeting of the Pomeroy Area ''work hand-In-hand," he said.
avalla ble !or the two classes.
Taylor also explained brle(Jy With the grant. each student ln.
Chamber of Commerce. Tbe
luncheon meeting was held at an Appalachian Regional Com· each class · wlil now have a
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
mission Grant which was Db- compuler to work with. "It's
In addition to thanking bust- talned !or Meigs Local through .scary for the teachers and for
nesses .tor monetary donations, the efforts of several people. The
me," Taylor said, "bui It will be
Taylor also thanked businesses grant Is a combination of federal,
great for the students."
for hiring · students !rom the state and local money which will
Taylor pointed out the need !or
scbool and living them the allow ·the high school to implethe school to update Its programs
ppportunlty to gain valuable ment a computer laboratory to lhrQUih technoloiY In order to
work · experience as well as a which all students at the schoot .provide students with the kind of
paycheck.
will have access, and Improve educational skUJs· needed to
Taylor encouraged loc111 busl· the electronics and &amp;\ItO mechan·
either further their educations
ness· people to attend Thursday · Ics programs offered by the after high school, or to find Jobs.
nig)lt's special open houae at the school through updated equlp-

Konnoth McCollough, R.Ph.
Chorl• Rlftl• R. Ph.
Ron ..d Hlnnlng. R.Ph.
Mon. lhru 1181. 1:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Sundlf 10:00 a.m. to •:oo p.m.
PAESCAIPT1o1'4S
Ptl. 912·2951'
E. Meln
Fritndty Service
Pom•oy, OH.
0p., w ..ll Nlgllt• 'II 9 .

•

-

· s10,000 _.IMUM DEPOSIT

2 S.ctiono. 1tl Poe• 2tl Cent&gt;
A MultlmOdlo Inc. N - -

·Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, WedniSday. November 1~ 1989 .

PCS CARD ._OLDERS·

Veter111111 Memol'lal
.
Monday admissions :.... Marie
THomas, Pomeroy; Joan
McLatn; Racine; Cindy Aelker,
Pomeroy; David R. Mllls, Mid·
dleport; Lovey Watson, Pomeroy; David Cumings, Ppmeroy;
Llllian Napper, Racine; Flo
Strickland, Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - Elmer .
Hysell, Brenda Fry.

VICTORIA LX

Maxi~m

•

at

.ATTENTION ••••

as maintenance workers at
ODOT garages and state road·
side parks, Abel said, "and the
Idea bas worked wzll."
Abel noted that Meigs MRDD
has overcome many ·obstacles,
Including those related to trans·
portatlon, to · provide students
and clients with opportunliles to
beCome a vital part ot the
community, not only through
work experiences, . but also
through social experiences.

Middleport
992-6661

Low lotdcbf Ia mid a..
Cll- of rala II perceat.
Tbal'lday, colder, In lower
Jla. Chanee of rain 'II percent.

·•

SPEAilS TO CHAMBER - Melp Dish
PriJiclp&amp;l Fenten Taylor speaks to rnemben of
the Pomeroy Area Chamber Commerce at a

. Enjoy rhe flexibility of commtting for only 1
week, the liquidity of a CD which is
automatically renewable or redeemable at each
7 day anniversary, and the security of FDIC
insurance up to $100,000. Yet earn at a rate
normally found with much longer term CD's.

.

I

Hospital news

1918

Gallipolis
446-0902

••. , ·t

The blpest "-'1 In tbe world Is
the Atacama In nortbern Chile. [t Is
13,500 fl!!!l above sea level allll highest poiDI.

u

CALL

I

· ~~

Page6

Continued trom page 1

Board, toured the school and the
adult workshop, and was also
taken to a job site at the Ohio
Department of Transportation
garage at Chester where Meigs
Industries has a maintenance
contract.
,
Oblo, 'Abel noted, Is one of the
Jargesi employers of tbe hand!·
capped In the United States.
Former. Oltlo Department of
Transportation Director Warren
Smith . Initiated the Idea of
contractln_g adult MRDD clients

Ohio wttery

Mark Davis
NL Cy Young
•
wmner

_...., .......

Wonwn fined on DWI cluJrges

Oaewaaftnedllld"touroiMaforfelledboaGIIDWic~

Ill tilt court ot Mlddlellort Mayor Freel Holfmall Tn er0'1)' nllht.
n..d1111 tlltcltup- Aalll Jo Mlbr, ~Bid
- - · will ..... day ~:b:-llllee· .........
al . .
tMIIIIIItlletlllrpwen
I J. Ratllllurtl, Ru~tld, KettMCII
Continued 011 1111• T

.r

committee, ltl'llllrpe•npallllll
$SO mlllloa p!U fD ...... ....,

j~ llld JII'Oitftton .. ....

urtlaa COUIIIIII 10 Iller

c.-.
.

m

•

dni

........ -

Sen. Paul Pfelfa, 1\-aaern~~.

OOtblllld 011 .... T

•

l.r•

IMITI n

_..........,..,...

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

1M I

c

-

I

,.

I

In .,_.,, athl,

Cllft71r ........

lllllmr ..

.... •" . . '

�.

w... lldey, November 16, 1989

Redmen seize opener at Ky. Christian

Pea• 2-The [)ely Ss ilinll
Pomaov Mldcllsp;At. Ohio
V':.dnlldiiY. No\:•n.,..1&amp;, 1889

.rhe Daily Sentinel
• 0..11 street
Ill
p _ _,,OIIIo

DEVOTI:D TO THE JNTEKEST8 OF TilE MEIGS-JIIASON AJIEA

.•

, r-r&gt;...l'-...,...,1 I

I -

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaber
PAT WRft'EIIEAD

Ar'e•·• Pllhlllller/ CoatroDer

CBABLENJI: HOEFLICH
Geooenl ........

LETI'EIISOFOPINION oreweleeme. Tllej - b e l_ _ _
..... All- .......Jed ......., ... ....... wllll

....,
....._udl•p••••....,.,_· No ....... -.wll .. ....
..... Let&amp;ero-Wbe Ia pod lute, ...._ollie ....... IOiperllnll11-.

GRAYSON, Ky. - U excitement Is the word baslcetball
observers will attacb to the Rio
Grande Redmen this year, they
proVed worthy or the term In
their firat rame of the aeason.
Tile Redmen defeated · host
Kentucky Christian 114·79 here
Tuesday, but the game alao gave
Coach John Lawhorn an oppor·
tunlty to try some different playa
and ret a rood lookathlsyounger
players.
·
'1 was really pleased with our
freshmen , " Lawhorn com·
mented. "They made mistakes,
but When the game was on the
line, they came thrOUJh for us.
The starlers had spots when they
were shaky, but they did ftne."
Randy Kirk's KC team, defend·
lng Division l1 champtolflln the
National Christian Colteelate At·
hletlc Association, meant bust·
ness and maintained tbelr attl·
tude throurhout the game. WhUe
the score was not Indicative of a
stronr defense, KC put up a light
In close quarters that sometimes

·EPA lets violators·off surprisingly light
WASHINGTON -OrlandoWII· him ott too euuy:
Under the final settlement of
son Ia the Jack Nicklaus of
fishing. He has his owu TV show the case, Wilson wt11 pay tbe
ot the
on the aport and regards himself govenunent only
u a atauncb protector of the or(Jinal nne. In exchanre for the
envlroolmeDt. But Wilson wears a · waiver of the rest, WUson has
hard bat as well as a ftshlng cap. promised to air 21 public service
He Is a developer, and was ·announcements on his television
receatly punlahed by the Envlr· show to discuss tbe value of
onmental Protection Agency for wetland areas.
In other words, Wilson gets 80
trylnJIO erect an ornce buUciJnr
~cent
of bla fine lifted simply
~ federally protected wetlands
because
he will tell his viewers
outside ot Atlanta.
that
It's
not
nice to hurt Mother
The case could beSmirch Wllaon's reputation u a naturalist, Nature. The announcements are
but the EPA loolal 1!V811 wone. no big deal to Wllaon. He told our
After llappiDJ Wilson wltb a associate Scott Sleek that he
1100,000 fine, EPA officials let presents environmental mes·
sa res on bis program aayway.

m.ooo

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
The EPA has a history of ·
lftolvlng cues like WUson' s
wltb a slap on the wrist. Docu·
meats show that the agency
tm(IOies fines that are surprta·
lngly low ror the nature of the
offense, and then allows the
vlolatprs to negotiate for even
lower penalties.
Because of · this easygoing
attitude, tbe taxpayers aren't
getting their due from people
who trample on environmental
laws. It's often worth the risk for
developers and Industrialists to
lpore and short-circuit the law,
even when clean air-, clear water
·and wildlife habitats are endan·

gered. It costs money to put
scrubbers on smollestacu and to
treat wute-water that poura Into
streams.
When the EPA catches the
scoftlaws and punishes them, the
fines rarely match up ·to the
financial benellts the violator
gained by breaking the law In the
first place.
The EPA- bas a fresh start
under George Bush, wbo wants to
be ~n as the envlroDmental
president. But If the qency
expects to be taltell seriously, It
wUI have to &amp;bow a little more
enthusiasm for enforcing the
law.

took the 3-polnt shootlnr prowess
or Tony Ewlnr and Brad Schu·
bert and timely Inside aulstance
from freshmen Tim • Christian
and Troy Donaldson to put the
threat away.
.
"If you let them play quarter
court, they'll slow you down, "
Lawhorn said of the Knights.
"They play hard and technique·
wise, they 're very sound."
Paced by a 21-polnt perfor·
mance by center Bart Snyder,
the Kntehts trailed the vlslton
closely In the open lng 10 minutes .
Rio Grande netted Its first
10·polnt lead at · 10: 15 on a
Donaldson Up-In, and from there
the Redmen were In control.
Freshman JeftBrown kept Rio
Grande's offense cooking by
supplying 11 of the team's 30 first
half rebounds. The Knights hit
the boards 17 times during the
hall, with starter Erlc Sudlow
providing six. The Rio· men led
KC by 20 at 3: 47 when Gary
Harrison pumped In the ball for a

42·22 standtne.
The second periOd opened with
a stiffened KC offense, keyed by
Snyder and freshman Art Daurh·
erty, but consecutive 3-polnt
shots by EwiDJ and Schubert
helped put the Redmen ahead by
30 (82·52) In the flrat 10 mlnulel.
The vtatton shattered the cen·
tury mark with 3: 15 remaining
on a Christian basket.
A disappointed Kirk praised
his team for working hard, but
attributed the loBS · to poor
execution.
"That's not putting our kids
down, It's being realistic," he
said. "1 felt our team tried to go
beyond themselves. One thing
about being a good team Is to
know Its limitations. Instead of
letting the system take shots,
they tried to create shota. "
Leading the RA!dmen In scoring
was Schubert, who matched
Snyder's game hl&amp;h or 21. Also
placing In double figures were
Ewing, Brown and Donaldson.
- The Rio men face Tri-State

(lad.) Unlverllty a t 9 p.m.
Friday In the Bevo Francia
Classic, while KC competes
against Dyke u d Tiffin this
weekend In a tournament at
Tiffin.
BoxHOre:
KBNTVCKYC~AN(~)

- Art DaiiJ)Ierty. •·2·0.1•: Kirk
Rles, 2·1-5: Rodney Perolnrer.
4-2-10; Eric Sudlow, 4-4-12; Rob
Carpenter, 1.0.2; Aric Russell,
3-5-11; Kevin Hart, 1·2-4; Bart
Snyder, 9·3-21. TOTALS a.t-n'lt.
IUO GRANDE (llf) - Gary
Hardlon, 4-1·9: Brad Schubert,
2·5-2·21; Tony Ewlq, 4·3-J.l.B;
Jeff Brown, •·1·11; John
Lambcke, 3-0-6; Mark Erallll!,
J.l·1·6; Stewart York, 0-2~:!;
Lyndell Snyder, 3-1.0.9; Darius
Williams, '2·2·6; Troy Donaldson,
fi.0.16; Tim Chrlltlan, 4.0·8;
Terry Farley, 1.0.2. TOTALS

M-ll+llt.

Bal.._ leOn: RloGraadelt,
Kell&amp;ueky CluWIIaa • ·

'

New book tells
of Wright's fall

KC Lady Knights fall in Redwomen opener

By BOBEBT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON (UP!l - Writer John Barry got more than he
barpiDed ror when he undertook a book about the. speaker or the
House. Not only did Barry get an Insider's view or the workings of the
House, but he also happo!ned on one or the greatest pl!rsonalpolltlcal
dramas ·In recent Washington hisk&gt;ry - the ran or Speaker Jim
Wrtrht.
Barry has chronicled the events of Wright's speakershlp In an
a._orblng new book: "The Ambition 11nd the Power," published this
month by VIking.
Just before Wright was to take over the speaker's post In 1987 be
agreed, over his staffs objectiOns, to let Barry have a front-row seat
to watch Wrtghtln his lint, and as It turned out, his last full term as
speaker.
. ·
Barry was granted access that only top peraonal aides normally
have. He sat In on meetings with other House members,
administration offtclals, and foreign representatives.
Even If Wrliht's poUIIcal career bad not crumbled as Barry
watched, the book would have been a valuable addition to the history
of Congress. Readers outside Washington will learn a great deal
about bow the modern Congress works, for better or worse.
WasblllgtonlallJ, of coune, will savor the IDJide tidbits Barry
provides, such u Treasury Secretary James .B aker complaining that
President Reagan made bls job "hell," or Wr(Jbt's threats to remove
sometimes adversary Rep. Dan Rostenkowsll:l, D· Jll., u chairman of
.the Ways and Means Committee, or his strained relationship with
former Democratic whip Tony Coelho, D-Callt., wbo also reslped
under an ethics cloud.
.
But the heart of Barry's book Is the story of a Texas politician wbo
rose from humble origins to achieve the moat powerful position In
Congress, and wbo used bls power audaciously Ollly to see It yanked
from his hands by charfes or ethical transgressions.
Barry treats Wright with sympathy, but he Is unsparing In pointing
out w._bt's own flawsand mistakes that led to his fall. "One thread
co11reted all of Wri&amp;JU'a ut.e- bubrla." llewt(tes.
Wright "was a man who had dreamed of Jl'eatness and larreness
"Now that we're alone, would you mind if I put in for some bluefin, Mikhail?"
ror himself and greatness and largeness for his Institution. A House
like (former Speaker Sam )Rayburn's ... Rayburn was the
standard."
Barry recoiDits the historic and tumultuous 100th Congress, which
produced a record of achievement unmatched In decades, largely
becallll! of Wrlibt'a single-minded drive to accornpllsb.
w._bt did accompUsh, butln doiDJ so he alao alienated CQltearues
on both sides of the al$le, people who might have saved him when the
•'
ethics charges aJ:ose.
A sound education Ia the enhance the quality or educatiOn schools.
and train more agency start.
;'
cornerstone to good government.
Wright's predecessor, Rep. Thomas "Tip" O'NeiU, "had always let
In Ohio.
Other responslbll\tles of the
member
of
tbe
CommJs..
:
As
a
the House work Its will. Wright bad bent It to his," Barry notes.
Wl\h that basic premise In mind,
The main objectives of the Commission are to evaluate pilot
Democrats wes:e restive. "They welcomed their victories bllt 1 am pleased to have been Commission. are to select, re- projects or other school Initiated slon on Education Improve· t
ments, I will be closely worldnr •
wondered about the style. The minimum needed to win bad satisfied
appointed to serve on the Com·
view, and evaluate educatiOn programs to determine whether
O'Neill; Wright and Coelllo seemed Interested In the score .. . mission on Education Improveprograms at the elementary and such prorrams suggest lnnova· with not Ollly the ~ad Start l
members did not like being pllshed for votes."
.
ments. This CommissiOn W.s
secondary school level. Pro- tlve, effective ways to deal with program but many edflcatlonal :
Barry bad thought to write just about the two years of Wright's first
eatabliabed from the education grams operating In colleges or the problems of other acbool · programs thrOUJ(Iout theStateof ;
term as speaker, butlt~amelmpoaslbletoend thestorylhere. Tbe omnibus bill, Senate Bill 140. universities that receive state districts. How tbe schools are Ohio. We must continue to mate ;
111111 chapters continue to June 19119when Wrlrht, unable toexonerate · Five members of the Senate and flna11clal assistance will also be using state money and lor what sure that laws do not place a •
htmaelf of the ethics charges, reSigned as speaker and from the
the House of Representative, the evaluated. The Commission will purposes are also areas that the burden on our local .school '
dla trtcts. 1 wUI work to ensure
Houle.
G9vernor, one member ap·
regularly evaluate programs au· Commission wUI evaluate.
that Southeast Obtoan• obtalD
Tile book deals candidly with Wriebt's nemesis, Rep. Nelrt
pointed by the Governor, one pervlaed by the Department of
The Commission on EducatiOn the best education poulble.
Glnartcll. R-GL, wbose drumbeat of allegations led to the ethics appointed by the Oblo fl!lard or EducatiDJI to determine If spe- Improvements has recently been
If you have any questions ••
commltlll!e InvestigatiOn that toppled the speaker.
Rerents and one member apcific goals are being met, deter· discussing how to expand the
EarlY on Glqrlch rec&lt;11111zed Wright's abiiiUes and warned his
pointed by the Stale Board of mine If programs have adequate program· to serve more eltgtble concernlnJ the Head Start Pro- :
eoUearues that If Wright ever consolidated his power "he will be a
Education will serve on the operattnr · or administrative children. Head Start wants to gram or the Commtaston, please ~
very, very formidable man."
·
.
Commission. Tile Cornmllalon pzoced11res, and determine the serve more eligible school child· do not hesitate to contact me at ;
Barry Is critical of the ethics committee' a handling of Wright's
was allocated $91 mutton this ran eo.t of tbe delivery system' at ren, acquire more classroom (61~) t66-8156 or write: Senator &gt;
case, char&amp;tng It ceded control of the Investigation to Cblcaro lawyer
to fund special programs . to elementary and secondary space and materials and .to hire Jan Michael Long, Statehouae ~
Columbus, Ohto 43215.
' t
Rlcllant Phelan, who Barry says "misled the commlltee
repeatedly."
••
· And the booll details Wr!Jht's high· risk decision to join Reagan In
•
caliiDJ for a diplomatic solution to the conflict Ill Central America, a
•
move tbe admtnlltration thought would cage the speaker, but which
actually enabled blm to drive the peace process.
.
WASHINGTON (NEA) -AI·
ldeoioglcally oriented coalition Reagan's agenda - but he was
alt~rs
though there probably neYer waa of diverse croups In Washlnrton frustrated . In his attempt to
•
a time when tbe enactment of and throughout the country to broaden the coalition's goals.
'
federal legislation was as simple lobby the Senate on a judicial
"Some critical outsiders were - "aome advocacy organizations
as augested In hlgb scboolctvlcs
nomination.
less substantively motivated," need medica attention to attract •
classes on "How a BIU Becomes a
It vividly recounts the eventa write the authors. "Some wltb an and mobilize members "- and to 'I
••
Law," tbe proceu lw beeome that occurred between late June eleva ted sense or self · raise money and aurvtve."
•
tncreaslqly cornpiiDI.
1111, wben Justice Lewll Powell Importance harbored thinly dis·
The alllhors deserve credit for
lnllud, In an ... wileD tbe realped from the bleb coart, and gutsed resentment aralnst ·the their candor. Thole who read •
•
arcane busbteu ol eo... late October of tbat year, when coalition's (leaders) who chose their book will dlscowr that at '
ranres from budpt MQIIIItra· Presldellt Raaran's nomination to cut them In lesser roles."
least some of what transplra on •
tlon to judicial lmpeechmelit, of Borll as a replacement was
In addition to the problems Capitol Hill Is remarubly Ibn· ••
very lew people outalde this city
rejected by a !18-42 vote In the caused by lndlvldnal egos and liar to what occurs In communi· ,•
- and not I1IIUI)' Wide Senate.
organizatiOnal turf, they add, ties ellwbere In the nation.
uadentud what Ia belq~neby
DurlnJ that four-month period,
''c
their ~ rapresentattves on
liberals (anti·Bork) and conserC.pltolHUL
•••
vatives (pro-Borll:) eai8Jedlnan
For those anxious to team.
•
epic atruule ewer the nomina·
l
~. a l'I!IJ1llar atream of. tlon. Tbe Pertschuk·Schaetzel
BJ tlnlled Presa laternMII_.
boob treat apedftc COJIII'III' book ta exclusively about the
Today Is Wednesday, Nov.l5, the319thdayofl988wlth4&amp;tofollow. •I'
11onal actlona aa c - •tudltl. liberals, but much or the mateThe moon Is waniDJ, moving toward Its last quarter.
•
Amoq the bllt ~ tiiU . . . . In rial t~ds ldeoiCJtiY.
••
The momlng stan are· Mars and Jupiter.
Nelftt Y"l'l Is a falelutlq
•
There was, for example, tbe
The eventnr stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
acaNIIt ot bow tbe Tu R.eCDrm
Inevitable mutual uaeasbteu beThose born on this date are under the lim o1 Scorpio. They Include •'
Ad ot J-. came to be eeect.td, • ._tile Waslllqtoll':tnsldera"
Brltllb statesman WIWarn Pitt ("the elder" 1 In 171111; British
''SIIowduwn at Gucct Galcb," · and the rrau·roots actlvilts
aatrollOIIler Sir William Herschel, iltacoverer of the plaaet Uraaus,ln ,'
co-aulhand IIY a pair ot wan elleWIIere ta the country. Pert·
1138; Nobel Prtze.wtnntna pbysloiOJiat Aupat J&lt;rorh o1 Dennwk In •
Journal nporlarl, Jeftny scllull and Sebaetzel aplala:
1874; artlltOeorala O'Keeffelnl887; jurlltFellxFrullful'leriiiJ882: •'
and Alan S.
"Mot evwry memblr o1 tile
diplomat W. Averell Harriman and World War llCermanGen. Erwin ,•
(uU.Iork) coalltloa vlewed tile
Rommel in 11191; Gen. CUrtis LeMay ID 1901 !831: actor Edward A - •
- ~ . llltWOIU bllllply.
•'
In 1121 Iap80); and P!1P alnpr Petuta Clark Ill W2 I qe 117),
,. cloMly tbe tallden
••
On this dale In hlstary:
WGrlred with 'tbe HUJ,' tbe more
dllcomflc.d aome member•
,._1n J8N, UaioD Gen. WWtam Tecwnleh Sbu man bepa 1111 Civil •
•~
..ar 11181'eb flun Atluta to
~~'"· 0t111n doc d b)' a
lit JIJO, tile flrlt u.nllly ol the Leque ol Natloaa was eallld to
. . - _. •• ntta u. Jan; ardlr In O..Va,llwl._.lllld.
••=
ln - · 1111,101 people dlmltitltrated In Wash. . . . D.C., a111Mt •
••
tile
VlltMm .....
'
'
.
awllold Bally .... cUed after .... llod)' ....... tile •
..,.,.., gtJM Into lhock! You didn't fJive him
. . . . . . . .lito ..,...... beljg 011 lllm1 ... bad ll¥ecl wltl for 20 - · at Callfllnlia'• . _
'
cII Otlltlr.
_, Ia. of Whlll IW biH might be, did you?"
lie
'""lUI I w aa Lllllla U.htanlty
'II lltdlltlliau.w' ....... ol
1n *'~:..fl . . . -1111114willlll a eoaur1n1•1 A1r1M DC.f Jet •
IIDrll erlllel to tPJ
muell ~ ~ .. n IWDtbPJB durlq tateolt ,._ Dtewr.
'

GRAYSON, Ky. - Control of · None of Tom Be!!der's team, the ·victory Into Its next encounter,
the floor and stronr defense . 1989 champiOns In Division 1l of against the Llm~tone (S.C.)
combined here Tuesday to give
the National Christian Collegiate Saints at 4 p.m. Friday In the
the Rio Grande women's basket·
Athletic Association, scored In Bevo Francis Classic at Lyne
ball team the upper hand over
double figures .
Center.
host Kentucky Christian In the
"Probably the key for usls that Box IICOre:
season opener for both teams.
we came out and were under
KENTUCKY CHRISTIAN (41)
Rio Grande' s 81-40 romp ·over
control," Foote said . . "Debbie - Kellle Pelfrey, 2-0-4; Lori
the Lady Kn(Jhts was attrlbu ted
Fredrick had a lot to do with that, Hann, 2·0-4: Jenny Ross, 3.0.6;
by Coach Doug Foote to the
with some nice contributions Lynn Manges, 3-0-6: Kathy Ifo.
team's trademark unselfish
from the rest of the team."
gan, 1-1·0.5; Aimee Arnett. 3-2·8;
The Redwomeil will carry this Kim Freholm, 2·1·5: Mlsale•
playing, In which 10 or the 11 Rio .
players sent onto the floor
scored:
"There was a nice balance of
the post and guard play," Foote
commented. "Everyone contributed, and defense was the big
factor lor us."
A relatively low-key first half
of the opening period turned Into
a scoring rush for the Rio ladles
when they led by 14 !28-14) with
8:02 remaining.
,
Substituting freely, Foote
spelled starting point guard
Debbie Fredrick at times with
·c tndy. Ridgeway to good effect,
while si!cond·year veterans Ann
Barnltz and Renee Ward penetrated effectively to score In the
quarter court and the on the
perimeter. During those final
eight minutes of the hall, Rio
Grande forged ahead by 22 points
while Its defense held Kentucky
Christian lor four markers.
. Pacftl IIY game scoring highs
of 16 frOm Barnltz, 14 ~om Kerr!
Kidwell and 13 from ;Fredrick,
. the Redwomen swamped the
hosts, holding the Lady Knights
to 22 points for the entire half.

Long named to education post Sen. Jan. M. Long :

IUI81.
Bal..meiC!ore: ltloGruH41,
lten&amp;ueky Quollllaa 18.
-

ATLANTA (UPI) -The Geor·
Bulldop apparently have
reached an arreement to play In
tbe Peach Bowl Dec. 30 at
Atlanla·Fulton County Stadium,
publilhed reports said Tuftday.
Georata, 6-3, with
left
aralnst Auburn and Georata
Tech, likely would play either
Arizona State, 6-3-1, or Syracuse,
6-3, sources told The Atlanta
Constitution.
Vll'flnla, 9-2, ls an outside
possibility to play In the rame If
the Cavaliers lose to Maryland
and are knocked out or tbe Cltrua
Bowl.
Georrta bu played once before In the Peach Bowl, coming
away with a 17-16 win over
Maryland In 1973 In the first bowl
game current head coach Ray
Gotr ever played for the
BuUdop.
Golf retuaed to discuss Geor·
gla's bowl plana Monday n!lht.
"I'm just worried about playiDJ
Auburn (this Saturday),'' he
said.
Bowl bids cannot be otflclally
extended untU Nov. 2!1, but by
Monday night atmoat all of the 36
slots were reportedly tied up by
unofficial commitments.
Peach Bowl execu tlve director
Robert Dale Morran retuaed to
confirm whether the selection
committee had ll!lected the Bul·
ldop to play In the bowl, which
pays $800,000 to each team and Is
televised by ABC.
"You can say that the Peach
Bowl has increased Its Interest In
GeQrgla, " Morgan ssld. "We're

rta

dolnJ everythtq Ia our power to
convince them to come. "

The Dally Sentinel

eames

t..__,
2

&amp;Dio-117

..

-

·"'*"·

l'lllllltlood ...,. - - - lllrCIOIIh
mOlllo
c.rt
-.....,.
1'11mwoy. 0111o, .., t11o
voaor

.......
w• .,. Olllo-...
. a

11111111 C-'1)'1¥-M-. lie., . .
~

e&amp;.~

1

-lit--.
tn-tlM. ..

..-.at Pe L*GJ• ·.

Momw: lllllteS
l!oludlliUyPT-AIIOCiaiiOiudlllt
otloNew ;tCAIIIdatiiML-NatiDUl

Adverllllll'· ·'lldnl
-·
- NoW..
'131
Ntw York,
York
!Om.

A-.

~.:U.....TO:rt [

PcwwUJ.

alit.,.

., Corrie---~11-l!IIII'II~Alk~
, unA

OoeWHII. ..................................$UO

-au:....

OoeMililll! ............... .... ............. .tllt

One Year •.. ••••••.••••••..•....•• •••••• .• I11JIJ

CliiP\'

DollY ................................... 211 Cfttl
Sulloorlllonaotdollrtallppoytlltcor·
rler _!DI.)' remit 111 advace direct to
lleattael o~~a 3, lor12 !MMb
bull. Cl'eSit .......... - -

,..Dilly

-No-..-..,

mau,.....llleS 1a

.
.
.
,
=
•w-... .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

ar., ft«e . . _ urrllr MrVke II
ovollolllo.

_.,..

UW-.................................. SIUI

srr.ll

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
•• w-.
w-.
.
.
w-....................

!ISW-......... ......................... f!UI

u

a

eSC

. . . .

c..,

Dl.IO

:.~
11111.10
!). ......... ..

m.oo

Pro l'ftiUb

paiOJiis,.O/sc Fumace
Powertut. 1500W ptJre ceramic disc
healer produces 5200 btu's. Smaller
than a 6" cube. Heats even the largest
rooms.Thermoslat conlrol mainl8ins
selected temperature. Exceptionally
sate &amp; economical. 11 500W

. • -fill Rlm(larrJ
Plastic Sheeting

M.aater.

t Y," Plldloclc

-to

4-pin IUmbllr lad&lt; has dual steel
lad&lt; both sidlo of shlci&lt;le.
2 braeS k.lys - . 1 3 0

10' • 25' x 3 mil. thick. Strona
polyethytene film. Blad&lt; or clear.
IIMH781,0

$ffr'

:

'
''

Berry's . World

James, 1·0.2. TOTALS IH-Hil.
RIO GRANDE (11) - Mario
Kistler, 1.0.2; Jennl Couch, 2-0-4;
Cindy Ridgeway, 3·1·7; Debbie
Fredrick, 5-3-13; Kerrl Kidwell,
7.0.14; Mindy Montcomery, :H-0.
9; Ann Barnltz, 8.Q.16; 1\lllY
Snyder. 1-1·3: Renee Ward,1·2·0.
8; Kathy Snyder, 2-2-6. TOTALS

Georgia has inside lraek
on playing in Peach Bowl

Scoreboard

Bork fight provides capital insights

Robert W

The o.11y ·sa CltMI P111 3

Pometov-Midd'1P'I't. Ohio

.

'

I

.

A~c.utlc

Today in history

Forms permanent, flexible self llllidlt
and out. Won't crack, chip, PHI or
dlac:olo&lt;. Paintolbltt, sanditble. Wllfte.
10.3 oz. IJ20WHT

I

'

.

_____ .__
..........-&amp;.................
.,...
* ...... -- ...... .Ia*" ·'

-....

...... dlllln

"'IY - ......_lnCIMclull...,. ~ not

110e1t t1 _,., SOfnt SIOrtll'niY ltltfelltii'IIIIO Cllfl Vld Qrry

It stands tor
tpeeial quallly
111d ellll value.

,•

the-·

a..

•
••

IT

•

••
'

..c.... •

.................. ,., .•

...... ·---·--'·
-...........-_._,.._'t:.:.

KING SERVISTAR HARDWARE

[

... ......t.
_........ ll:.....

"':':..-

::....'Ztl!f'''
............
,! ......

405 North Second Avenue, MIDDLEPORT~

•·

.,

•"
.•

'
'

�---·
-.......
: v.-§ BIG BEND
.,.

P1111

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

Eastem fall athletes honored
Seniors recognized were Debbie
Brooks, Amy Murphy, and Kym
Mcintyre.
Next Coach Arch Role with
asslstanll Ron Hill and Don
Eichl~ made preMDtat!ons to
the varsity football team. Dan
Tripp, a top lillemanallyearlong
for the · Eagles, earned Best
Defensive honors, while seniOr
Shaun Savoy earned the Best
Offensive Player award .
Shawn Bush was named Most
Improved and won the Best
Academic Awllrd. · .
·
Seniors honored In their last
year were Jeff Horner, Shawn
Bush, Derek Yonker, Dan Tripp,
Shaun Savoy, BUUe Wells, and
Scott PhiUlps.
Dan Tripp and sophoinore
Mike Smith earned All-SVAC
honors.
See accompanying list of players and plcturea.
·

The Eastern High School Fall advisor, presented awards to the
sports banquet was held Monday juniOr high cheerleaders.
evenillg to homr juniOr and and
Junior hlgll and reserve volley·
senior high school athletes and ballcoachDonJacksonrecapped
cheerleaders participating In fall the respective volleyball seasons
sports programs at the school.
and made awards presentations
Eastern Wgh student Tom to the girls on his squads.
flunter served as Master of
Varsity assistant Don Ja~kson ,
Ceremonies and presented the subbing for head Coach Pam
welcomillg address, before Intra- Douthitt, made varsity volley·
duclng high School prillclpal ball ·p~sentatlons. Carrie Ber·
. Charles Moore, who gave the nard was recognized as the lone·
Invocation.
senior on the team, while Toby
A potluck style dinner pre· Hill and Lee Gillilan were recogpared by the parents and athletic ' io£:-for~king
Ali-SVAC.
boasters preceded a memorable
ee Gill n won the Most
awards ceremony.
oillts ,Score
~rrie
Parents of the senior athletes Baker e~rned the Best
ng
were presented corsages by their Percentage award, Stepha te
c hildren In honor of the dedlca- Otto, Best Spiking Percentage;
lion and encouragement offered and Toby Hill. Best Defensive
the athletes during their careers. Award.
. Coach C. D. Mcintyre pres•
Cheerleadlng advisor . ~uth
ented awards to members of the Brooks presented varsity and
junior high football t~am. while reserve cheerleadlng awards.
Tammy Capehart, cheerleadlng

l

junior, best senlng percentage; Steplulllle Otto,
freehman, best spBdag percentage; and Toby
IDII,junlor, best defeasive player.

VOLLEYBALL AWARDS- Volleybllli award

wlnnen at Mollllay nlllll's lalllfiOI'IS baaquet at
Eutern mp. School are, I lo r, Lee GUIIall,
soptaomore, lor most points seored; Lorrie Baker,

Hartford blanks Detroit, 3-0
By United P en Jaternadonal
Mike Liutl» '' nding out at age
33 he's still ot.~ of the most
effective goaltenders In the Na·
tiona! Hockey League.
"When you get to your mld-30s,
you feel like you've come full
circle since being a rookie," said
the Hartford netminder after
shutting out the Red Wings 3·0
Tuesday night Ia Detroit. "When
you're a rookie, you dOn't know
what youcaadO,andwhenyou're
In your 30s you dOn't know what
you can dO until you 10 out
there. "
Liut went "out there" and
turned away all 26 Detroit shots
as the Whalers scored three
power-play goats and extended
Det roil's losing steak to six
games.
It was Liut's teague.leadiJt
third shutout of the season and
the 23rd of his 11-year career.
The Red WIDgS (4-12-31 are
winless In their last 11 pmes,
with an ~ reaml and 11 last
place ill the Norris Illvlsloa. Tile
winless streak bepD ill Hartford
Oct. 21 with a 3-3 tie and tncludts

a 4-3 loss to the Whalers Nov. 3.
lt's the longest winless streak
since the team went on a 12-game
slide during the 1985·86 season.
The Whalers (10.9·11 are In
third place In the Adams
Division.
Detroit Coach Jacques Demers
said he couldn'tfault the effort of
his team Tuesday night. "I know
that for sure if this team wasn't
working bani, they'd get a kick In
the butt big time, but they came
to play," said Demers. " We
dlda't p( a thllllil because Llut
dldll't give us a thing."
Ron Francis. Pat Verbeek and
Ray ~rraro all scored power
play goals for the Whalers,
Ferraro's coming with a two·
man advantage.
The Wings, whose power play
ranks last In the NH£, ·h ad 9: 54
with a man advantage but only
managed nine shota on goal.
They haven't scored ill their last
11 power-play opportunities and
have J1181181ed only one goal In
tllllr last 32 cllances.
'1t'a ll'llltl'lttac when the
oppoalq goal~ plays that well

against you," said the Wings'
Gerard Gallant. "And Llut's
done It IWice tn the last week and
a half."
Llut, who was steady through·
out the game,' earned his shutout
In the first period when the Wings
had several good sco ~lng
opporutnltles.
"Any time you can defeat a
team In the flrsi period when
you're on the road and they 're
period, It goes a long way toward
wlnntng the hockey game," Llut
said.
Elsewhere. Winnipeg whipped ·
Quebec 5-3, ·Pittsburgh jJounded
the New York Rangers 6-0,
Philadelphia nipped · the NY
Islanders 5-4. Los Angeles topped
Calgary 8-6 and Washington and
Vancouver played to a 4-4 tie.

JeCa 5, Nordl•ues S
At Quebec. Randy Cunney·
worth broke a 3-3 tie with a goal
at 8: 51 of the third period and
Paul Fenton added an maurance
goal~ seconds later. QuebeC lost
for the nillth time In Its last 11
· games,
PeaguiM &amp;, Raagers 0
At Pittsburgh, Troy Loney
scored his first two goals of the
season and Wendell Young
stopped 25 shots for his first NHL
shutout. Pittsburgh handed the
Rangers their fourth loss In their
last seven games and just tbelr
fifth of the season. The Pengul~s
posted their third victory In their
last 12 games .
· Flyers 5, lsluders 4
At Unlo·n dale, N.)'.. Jay
Wells's first goal of the season
midway through the third period
snapped a 4-4 tie. The Flyers are
5·1·2 In their last eight games
while the Islanders continued to
struggle at home, dropping to
1·8-2 at the Nassau ColiseUm. ·
Klap 8, Flame&amp; •

. At Calgary , Wayne Gretzky
assisted on four goals as Los
Angeles handed Calgary Its third
straight defeat . The triumph
snapped a six-game Los Angeles
losing streak against the Flames.
The loss snapped an eight-game
home unbeaten streak !or
Calgary.
CaaiiCka 4, Capital&amp; 4

BOLDING lACK - V-wwr ....

mu Robert Nonlmark

(f) Jaolda baei&lt;Waah'. . . .'a NeUIIIIIQ *rillltlleflntperlod of
Taftda;y nrpt'a game at tile PacUie Collaeum ill VIIICouver, B.C.
(UPI)

'

Ohio State, DePaul
meet in Dodge NIT
CHICAGO (UPI) -ObloState
and DePaul, a eouple of prnmt.
lng but young basketball teams,
kick oft the 1989-90 aeaaon Wed·
nesday night when they meet In
the first round of the Dodge NIT
at the Rosemont Horlzoll.
Both ObiOState, wllldlllllllll!d
19·15 last year, and DePaul,
whiCh was 21-12, return tYro
starters, although the Buell:.yes'
Perry Carter, a Moot-8, 230pound junior ceneer, wUI not play
becauae of kidney ptoblem.
'I'M . . . . wlliiMI'k llle ....t
of OldaState'a .....,~•••
!lad eaaeiL Allh. 31, named Jut IS£&amp;&amp; to acpllce
Gary Wllltama, wllo 11ft ID tallt
tile llftd ' - " · •
Mary'·et

-.-7rfllllll'

... a r• ar

and II:IGI4 after M ce r111111111
father, Rq .. .,..,. ,. - ·
Olda .... a)&amp;a wtllllt Willi I
die . . . . of ..... J
I
TretlM•• ptvJetlll!d ltarter at
3

Us IIIJaltl

;t . ... "

fiii·T• C ..-·• bwud David
Biela. w11o awnpll u points
Ill tile Blue Demons'

E.;~:::·

..

JoliJ IIMilloJIJ&amp;II't • a• r alllltlill
• - • liNd CIIIICII .. Dd'lll

J

forward. Lee Is sitting out as a
rea.at at playing In an authorized
•lllllmer tournament, awaiUng
~ on his eligibility from the
NCAA.
That leaves Ayers with a
ltarUat lineup of 6-looH Jamaal
11111111 at one guard and 6-foot·l
SCifi!Mimore Mark Balcer at potnt
guard, 7-foot sophomore IIlii
Rolllnlon at center and &amp;-loot·7
Chris Jent and 6-foot-6 Jim
Jaclllaa at the rorwaru.
DePaul' a m• .., two atar·

.....ftl...,.
II

M ....

Dl

JUII!or
It the Other

Wlddllllibtaatt: 30
..... 11:8'1'1. will lie teleWed
natlonal!r by ESPN.
· ·

At Vancouver, British Columbia, Jim Sandlak scored at 8: 39of
the thlld period to help the
Canucks post a tie. Sandlak
backhanded his sixth goal of the
season over sprawling goaltender Bob Mason from In front
of . the crease to allow the
Canucks to break a tbree-game
losing streak. . Steve Leach
scored IWo goals and added an
assist as Washington earned !ts
llrst point In three games. ·

~·.......61 ••:~,.........
-...

:

p

( ••

~pul•l 01 '"' w,lt/

'*

••

ENTER 10
,
'

,-----------~~-~-------------i
FOODUNDS IIITIY IUNI 1

•

Win A Chevy 5·1 01 .~'I
•
Address: _ _ ____;_ __;:_ _ ~~:..·_
· .....:.:...
·' - - I

&lt;

Su~: ----~------~p: --~--...~--

3

Pboae:

..•

No

I

I

..'

••

..

)

PICKUP

RKE

I

~

'

Ent"r Today•••• We'll Give It Away
Jus.t In Time For Chri11tmas!!

TAVERN
HAMS

•
.,.
L

'•

$11911.
UIIY'S .

. PUMPKIN

I
I

2t OL

"'~s
•

(Do

BACKHAND ltETlJitN - W!lb ller eye oa the ball, Mart!na
Navratllova i:lieet aer-lbe coart to make a baeklwld return of a
MarJ Joe Feraade&amp; aerve In the5r VIrginia Slims match Tlleada.y
In New York. Playlag ller firs&amp; ma&amp;eh IIDCe.a groin IDjary lldellaed
her last week. NavraaUova won tile mateh &amp;-%, f.S. (UPI)
'

Sporls briefs

I

, Soecer
The Zlmba bwe Football Association banned four players for
ll!e for urinating on the field at a
Harare soccer stadium. ZIFA
chairman Nelson Chlrwa said the
organization was "appalled" by
the behavior Sunday of the four
players of the southern Tongogara team. He said the lour were
advised to urnlnatlng by witch
doctors who said It would ensure
a vlctory.lt didn't work. Tongogara lost 2-0. The ball was Intended ·
as a deterrent.
'
Telev!aloa
CBS, which . begins broadcast
of major league baseball next
year, completed Its baseball
announcing teams by namillg
Jack Buck and Jim Kaat as the
backup team and Greg Gumbel
as the studio host. Brent Musburger and Ttm McCarver will
be the network's No. 1 team.

The Hu~ting
Season Is
Here!

Now In Stock•••

POTATO
CHIPS

$ 99

2/Sl'!:·

..

ZEST A
SALTINES

•SHELLS
.
•HUNTING
VESTS .
•PLUS MANY OTHER
SUPPLY NEEDS IN
. STOCK

PICKENS
HARDWARE

1-LB.
BOX

USTIIAI'S FOODUID·

MASON, WY.

wn

t.
•'
'I

.

BAT

I'
I

•

N

SUNDlY MOVIES ONLY

TREET

I

NOW AVAILABLE!
'

ARMOUR

$1 00

Wntl AD. EXPIIES 12·3-19

Peoples Choice
·video

HOUSE
99MIU.O.

MIDDLinn, 01.
991-5711

Hospital
Bills Hurt!

BEEF
STEW

•

•

.'

"Let the Dell Do lt ••• "

&lt;

.,•
•

''.

.'•

•

.

•

FOI

'

THANKSGIVING DINNER.
(WIIEII AYAIUilE)

INCLUDE.S:

1• ,...

Lo_. School ~ P.T.O. lh
Colkcfllll ll.1hu•'• FooAallls l.ghter
leulpt 1 J Ito ...., CGZI . . ri.IIMIII
new thru llarch 31, 1990 for School
C1 llfuter Syst_. llftll etc.
C011tact your schoel fer details.
;._
Mire
••
•.....

_____....

..

ttl·211t
••

I

'

·~.

•I

••

CHEVROLET
S-10

'••'

·1:.

'

., • •• •rta"

I
I
I

GRADE 'A'
GOLDEN
DEUGHT

I

•

'

VAl'FYl

8 AM • 10 PM

••
A

·Aiil1ililii ......,..,_..,............S1;M

1101111'5

•

NEW 1990 '

•

'

Gift C~rtificates
And Party Trays
Availablt.

ALL STOlES
OPEN
THANKSGIVING .
DAY

WIN THIS

I

\ S.1 09

&lt;

~

•

We Can Ease the Pain!

FOOTLONG HOTDOG

•

.

~

Your ladepend~atly Owned
Low·Prlced Supermarket

I

Martina is
•
easy wr,nner
•
r,n
tourney
NEW YORK (UPI) - MarUna
Navratllova, playing her first
match sillce a groin Injury
sidelined her last week, crushed
Mary Joe Fernandez, 6-2, 6-3,
Tuesday night to gain the quar·
terfinals of the $1 million Vlrgl·
nla Sltms Championships.
Navratllova, who also celebrated the relaxation of travel
restrictions announced earlier In
the day In her native Czechoslovakia, defeated the 18-year-old
Floridian for the sixth time In as
many meetings.
"I've been better, I've been
worae," said Nilvratllova, who
also was bothered by a cold. "I
played well e~~ough to wtn, As
long as I wasabletorun, that was
my biggest concern with my
grolli', but It was no problem.
"I played really solid and she
fell the pressure of me coming In
all the time."
In the other opening round
matches, fifth seed Zlna Garri·
son overcame a sluggish start
and serving diHICltltles to register a 6-3, 6-1 victory over Helen
Kelesl, and No. 7 Helma Sukova
fought back from a 5·1 deficit In
tbe second set to beat Raffaella
Reggl, 6-3, 7-5.
NavratUova. the second seed,
will play 15-year-old Monica
Seles In the quarterfinals while
Garrison faces defending champion Gabriela Sabatini and Suk·
ova plays either Stetfl Graf or
Jana Novotna.
·
NavratUova said the new open
door policy In Czechoalovakla
came 15 years too late for her.
although there are no regrets
sillce she'd prefer to live In the
United States regardless.
Reflecting on her defection In
19'15 when she was 18 to pursue
her career, Navratnova said,
"When I started playing I wanted
to be the best. tennis player In the
world, I had no Idea how big the
world was."
Navratliova broke service In
the third and seventh games or
tbe opening set, tbe second one
coming on a Fernandez double
fault.
·
Fernandez managed a break
point In the second game of the
second set, but was unable to
capitalize. Navratllova broke In
the fifth game and, after wasUng
lour break points In the seventh
game, ended the contest with
another service break In the
ninth game ·at love.
After trallillg 3-2 In the opening
set. Garrison swept seven games
In a row, bringing ber to 3-0 In the
second set . Kelesl held at love In
the fourth game before Garrison
won the final three games with
the loss of merely five points.
.Although she swept the final
four games of the openlilg set,
Garrison had to struggle for 51
minutes to secure 11.
After squandering four break
poillts In the third game, the
quick-footed Texan gained tbe
lniUal service bn&gt;ak of thJ! match
In a sevellth game that went to
four deuces before she won It
with a forehand dOwn the lille.

PomiatOJ'- Midclapoet. Ohio

rnd•v. Novtmblr 1&amp;, 1989

Wtdnndey, Nowmblr 115, 1888

4 The o.ly ~tndnel

...,

FIISII

PUMPKIN
PIE

$199
24 Oz.

•Fresh

PAtti Turktyll0·12 ._ ltf•• Cooking!

15 IlL ..... IIMI Mly Ill sa.tlt.tMIJ

•2 Lb. Dressing
•2 lit. Wholt C1tked Yams
•12 DlnMr .,._
•J~ Oz.
in Pit

Pull•'

. , S2495
..

·.

S HIS liVAIICI · - ..__ _ __,

,

oW.IImrwen. llltMTo Uml OuancltlllaPtl 1 l"ntloeThru lutl., Nov. 113 1ntoUIDA flood ....... 0..., a.lnJt••,_,.llt Jlt¥1111 PorTyJI . .pllloall,_.

•
••

I'

•

�•

Wt Ia 11 1ay, Novwnblr 11, .1 881 ' .

SelliNI

NBA
•

Davis named NL
Cy Young winner
NEW YORK (UPI) - Mark was second. It you look at the
Davis of the San Diego Padres. year be bad compared to the rest
who recently flied for free of the relleYers, tllere was a big
agency, Tuesday saw his market gap. But U you look at my year
value receive asub&amp;tantial boost. compared to the other starters
Davis, who led the majors with the gap was not that big."
« saves, was naJ!ll!(l winner of Davis, who Is expected to
the 1989 National League Cy receive offers from · many of
Young Award In voting by the baseball's 26 teams, refused to
Baseball Writers' Association of comment on his future plans.
"I deftaltely take my family
America.
The 29·year-(lld reliever, who Into consideration. A lot of things
headed a record list of 90 players will go Into the decision," Davis
to rue for free agency after the said. "Today I feel this Is a happy
season, easily outdistanced Mike time for the Padres and myself,
Scott of the Houston AstroS In the and I would like to focus on that."
DaviS became the third San
balloting among 2~ BBWAA
Diego
pitcher to win the Cy
members - two from each NL
Young,
joining Gaylord Perry
city.
who
won
tbe award In 1978 and
Already considered one of the
most coveted of this year's free Randy Jones who won lt.ln 1976.
agents, Davis helped his cause, He Is also tbe fourth reliever to
receiving 19 first place votes and win the · award, joining Mike
107 total points while Scott, the Marshall of Los Angeles (1974) ,
1986 Cy Young winner. collected Bruce Sutter of the Cubs 11979)
four first place votes and 65 and Steve Bedrosian of the
Philadelphia Phllll. (1987) .
points.
Davis. who flew 'from his
Greg Maddux of the Chicago
winter home In Scottsdale, Ariz. , Cub&amp; llnlshed third with 17 points
on a private jet ow11ed by Padres' and 1988 winner OrelHershlser of
owner Joan Kroc, told a news the Los Angeles Dodgers reconference at San Diego's Jack ceived one first place vote and
Murphy Stadium that strong finished tied for fourth with Joe
defense and luck helped him win Magrane of the St. Louis Cardinals with seven points.
the award.
Others receiving ·votes were
"I felt everything did go my
way, " Davis said. "If I needed a Tim l)elcher of the Dodgers (4
line drive to a center fielder for a points) , Scott Garrelts of the San
double play, I seemed to get It, I Franclscodlants !4 polntsl,Rick
had a triple play made behind Reuschel of the Giants (3 points)
me. I had tremendous plays · and Mike Bielecki and Mitch
made behind me In the Infield Williams of the Cubs (1 point
each) .
and the ou !field.
Davis' 44 saves In &lt;18 opportunl·
" I'd look aroi.md and everybody's face would say 'hit It to ties this year were Just two shy of
the major-league record set by
me.'"
DaviS said he felt " very Dave Righetti of the New York
honored'' by the wide margin of Yankees In 1986. SuIter set the
victory over Scott, whom he NL recon1 with 45 saves In 1984.
called "an outstanding talent and Davis finished tbe year with a 4-3
record and an ERA of 1.85 In 70
a nice guy."
Scott, who won Cy Young In appearances. He recorded 92
1986, won 20 games for the first strikeouts In 92 2-3 Innings and
time In his career, posting a 21).10 was a key to the Padres secondrecord but didn't think he was half pennant drive.
In 1988, Davis was used excludeserving of the aWard this year.
"If I had to vote I would have sively as a reliever for the first
voted for Mark Davis also," said time In his career, recording 28
Scott. "Deep down I thought he saves In 34 opportunities and
had a good chance to win. I earning his first All·Star
thought the highest I would finish appearance.

Smith UPI's NL
Comeback Winner
By DAVID MOFFIT
\JPI 8porta Writer

ATLANTA CUPil - Apparently on his way out of professional _baseball just two years
earlier. Atlanta Braves outfielder Lonnie Smith reboUIIded
so strongly this past season that
Tuesday he was named UPI'a
National League Comeback
Player of the Year.
Smith, 33 and playing his 13th
major league ·season, led the
Braves In batting (.315), borne
runs 1211, runs (89). and stolen
bases (25). He became the first
player to lead the e.lub In all lour
of those categories the same
season, despite mlsstng27games
because of a hyperextended right
ankle. l:le was second In RBI,
with 79.
The home run and RBI totals
were both career hlgbJ and his
.415 on·base percentage led the
National League.
Sm lth, who Is eligible for
salary arbitration this winter,
took his comeback award In
stride.
"J don't know If It has that
much meaning to me, but It's
great to he acknowledged,"
Smith said. "Any such award Is
an honor and It'll probably mean
more to me after I have time to
think about It.
' 'The only reason I was 'gone'
was that some teams had given
up on me." Smith said. "I knew I
could still play and the Braves
gave me a chance. I felt I could
put up the numbers I did, and I
worked hard to do that. I think I
have some good years left."
In 1988, after being cut bY
Kansas City, the former Philadelphia and St. Louis star, caught
on with the Braves as a minor
league tree agent. He spent most
of the 1988 season with Richmond
of the International League before being called up to Atlanta,
where he batted only .237 with no
home runs In 43 games.
Smith, who hit .339 and .324 In
back·to-back seasons (1980-81)
with Philadelphia and .32lln 1983
with St . Louis, was overweight
and had a hlsklry of drue
addiction when he was released
by KanllaS City hi December

1987.
After falliiJI Ill numei'GUI at·

tempts to jobl anodler IIIBjor
leap team. SmlUI -taded
Atlanta pnerai!V...... Bobby
Cox and •~~Dec~ • a Baa,...l
miiiOr leaper Gil Mardi t, llt!ll.
He tQIIk owr left field early WI
paat ..alld qlllt:llly bKtame
the !Ut. pllce Braves' main
clfelllll" wapoa during a 6M7

campa!p.

"It was not a good year for the

Braves (who batted .234 as a
team)." said Cox. "But, It
certainly was a good year for
Lonnie Smith."
Smltb, a native of Chicago who
resides Ia Spartanburg, S.C .. was
18 when he broke lniO professional baseball in 1974. Philadelphia made him the thin! overall
pick In that year's June draft.
The· next season he was named
player of the year In the Western
Carolinas League after batting
.323 and stealing 56 bases.
Traded to St. Louis by way of
Cleveland In November 1981,
Smith led the National League In
runs scored with 120 and was
second In stolen bases with 68 In
1982. But although he batted .321
In 1983, he missed nearly a month
when he voluntarDy admitted
himself to a drug rehabilitation
program and didn't reach the
.300 mark In the majors again
until this season.

1-..., .. ....,..

~·---···

-·

-

NLCY YOUNG WINNERTile S.. lllep Padrel~ Muk
Da~ •· of ScoUidale, Arts.,
was
u IIIII year's .
Cy Yo_, Award wlanerTue.
day. Tile ••'hpaw iellever, a

•-n

veteru of aevea bla-leque

aeu- led

Ole majors with

4havl!ll. (UP I)

UNLV faces
strong opening

test tonight
By·Unlled Press lnlerll&amp;&amp;loaal
Nevada-Las Vegas faces a
difficult opening test of Its No. 1
ranking w~ay night when
the Runnln' Rebels , go to the
races with Loyola MllfYI!Iount In
the first round of the 5th Big
Apple National , Invitation
Tournament.
,
The shootout In LljS Veaas pits
two teams that ~veraged .a
combined 197.8 pOints last season
and Is the highlight of six
flrst·round games 111 the 16-team
NIT.
'
No. 3 Louisiana State also
plays home against Southern
Mississippi. In others, Richmond
Is at North Carolina State, Ohio
State visits DePaul, Air Foree
goes to California, 'and AlabamaBirmingham plays at Kansas.
The remaining flrst' round
games are Thursday night North Carolina A&amp;:Tat St. John's
and Houston at Wichita State.
Second· round games will be
played Friday and Saturday,
then the four survivors head to
New York's Madison Square
Garden for the semifinals Nov. 22
and championship Nov. 24.
UNLV Is looking for lt,s second
preseason NIT champiOnship.
The Rebels won In 1986 and went
on to compete In the Final Four
later that season.
Four starters return !rom last
year's 29-8 team, although top
scorer and center David Buller Is
out until mid-December because
of academics. ·Stacey Augmon.
who won the Hlinry lba Award as
last year's top defensive player,
Is joined by Jualor College
Player of the Year Larry Johnson as the stars for Coach Jerry
Tarkanlan.
"I'm not sure we're a great
shooUng team," Tarkanlan said
of his conce~ . "Last year was
probably the worst shoo!lng
team since I've been here. This
year the shooting 1$ better
because of L,a rry and another
year of experience." ·
Loyola Marymount averaged
an NCAA·recllrd 112.5 pollits a
year ago and returns five of Its
top six players. The leader Is
Hank Gathers, a 6-foot-7 senior
whose averages or 32.7 points and
13.7 rebounds were tops In the
country. Also,back are Jeff Fryer
&lt;22.9 points) and Bo Kimble
.116.8).

BOB GIUIO

•

'
:
:
:
•
'
·
:

Two fined in Pomeroy court

,

,.

Two were fined and six others forfeited bonds on speeding
charges In the court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler TUesday
night.
·
V!ned on the charge were Richard Jeffers, Pomeroy, $49 and
costs, and J11mes Cline, Albany, S44 and costs. Forfeiting bonds
were Cletus Harter, Rutland, $45; Wanda Laudermilt, Racine,
$48, Stanfurd Cox, GalUpolls, $48, James Clifford, Pomeroy,
$47; Ronald Rhea, Point Pleasant, $50; a,nd Robert Scarberry;
Pomeroy, $48.
Three flned ·$375 and costs on DWI charges In the court last
night were David Smith, Middleport, Gary Boggess, Racine.
and ChriStina Haning, Middleport. Ronald Coates, Pomeroy,
was fined $113 and costs on a charge of public IntoxicatiOn.
Others forfeiting bonds In the court were Anthony Bentz,
Racine, $43, stop algn violation; Amy Hill, Long Bottom. $43,
stop sign violation; Brian Reed, Reesville, $63, expired
registration; Rolleft l)eall, LltUe Hocking, $63·, OP,encontalner,
and Jeffrey Sellers, Rac.tne, SfiJ, expired plates and $375 OWl.

•.

B &amp; E probed by deputies

•

IJ :
,.

•

16.1NCH DEWXE PIZZA

·'

4--PIPSI'S, 16 OZ.

•

~,,,

•

•,,'
••

A bi'eaklng and entering at the trailer home of Benny Carroll,
Raci!M!. Is being ln¥estlgated by the Meigs County Sherl!rs
Department. Carroll reported to au thorilles that the trailer was
entered through a rear window early Tuesday morning. Three
jewelry boxes, several bottles of medication and a camera were
l'l!ported taken.
Sheriff James M. SoulsbY reports that a 17 year-old Pomeroy
youth was recently sentenced by the Meigs County JuvenUe
Court to the OhiO Youth CommiSsiOn for a term of stx months for
the theft of an OhiO Valley Plumbing Company van and an
• Oldsmobile from Middleport. The youth was apprehended In a
rural area of Jackson County. The Oldsmobile had rlin out of
gasoUne. The youth had left the vehicle to get gasolinE: and when
he returned, officers were on the scene and made the
apprehension.
·
SberUfSoulsby also reports that Brian Bass, 33, Syracuse, has
been arrested on a warrant charging blm with failure to appear
to answer a charge of operating without a valid operator's
license.
Also arres lied was Chester A. Ross, 21, of Salser Road, Racine,
on a heDCh warrant charging failure to comply with a court
order.
·
·
.
Both men are lodged In the Meigs County Jail.

''

•

1·GIOUP UDIES TOPS

•

~

. .2. $0fo

•·

••

Off

••
•
•

LADIES ili1HEI lOOTS

;

25-50°/o oFF

''

''

"HANG TENt!
BUY ONE PIECE A. ·GET ONE
PIECE FOI 117 PRICE
. (PIICI fBYAilS)

IOYS FU•Il SHim

•.•

20°/o"'
·
1101111 UD GOITII

.'

•'•

'

'Srrwke Out' scheduled Thursday

•,

• ;· IUtmNG 10015 · . -·

~

•'

·

•.
•'

"'

S1SOOcm '

'.

LAD Of 1111 WOODS

'

IUIIEI IISILAIED BOOTS
_.S26'9

'•

'

I

210.North leoond, Mlddllport. Ohio

ce~nt=er~J~.R~.~R:e:ld~s:ro:re:d::~~po::ln:ts~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ ·'

Baelae Legion to mHI
The Racine American Legion
Post 602 will have Its regular
meettng on Thursday at 7:30p.m.
Refi:elhmeents will he served.
Syracu1e coU.cll to meet
The Sy.r acuse VIllage Council

•'

.011.

I would like to
·thank all the iv oters
who supported me
in the recent
election.
r
I

RONALD CLARK

uc• ¥' 1 •81 CO..CIIIAI
... St ...... 011.
J

1813

..

LIC HOSES
WE CUSJCM.MAICE
HYDIWJIJC HC I
10 Rl' YOIIt,..

•

AUJO

•MIN

• INDUSrRiAL

515 MAIN SIREiT
· PI'. PLEASANT, WV
~

. 675-1520
119W.SEq)ND •
IW"'&amp;~'

·~···

OHIO

..

"' ' .

l!Sl.!J.!~~!.:.:...·,.E;.PA.;,o.-..;;.o.;,;,

.
''
' '·

Johnaon to Holzer Medical
Center.
Racine wu called at 10: 08 a.m.
to Route 338 tor GJI•ter Sha)lan
tO Veterana MemOrial Hoapltal.
Syracuse at 10: 12 a.m. trans-

Seeks divorce

Christmas...

H

Residents....

tal news

ospi

continued fi:om page 1

Is. a serious offense, ttNtre are common letter, without any
people !\round who dQ this sort of money.
Anyone who has mall taken
thing, Reuter ' says. A recent
Incident Involved the theft of a · from a rural box shout~ contact
the Meigs County Sheriffs Department or your postrnas ter
'immediately, Reuter says.
Anyone with Information regard·
lng mall thefts should also ·
Soatb Ceatril Oblo
contact
authorities.
Showers · and a chance . of
thun,derstorms and beCOming
windy Wednesday night, with a
low between 35 and 40. Chance of
precipitatiOn IS 90 percent. Rain Dally stoek prius
changing to snow flurries likely (Aa !If lt:IO LID.)
and windy Tbursday, with Beyee lllld Mull Smltb
temperatures falling Into the or Blnat. Elllll a Loewt ·
tower 30&amp;. Chance of Pf!!Cipltatlon Is '10 pel eent.
Am Electric Power ............. J0'!4
lb:teaded Foreeaa&amp;·
AT&amp;T ...................... ........... . 43
. FrldaJ tbrOuab Su..Q
Aahland 011 ........................ 34'!4
A chaliCe of · snow Qurrles Bob Evans ..........., ........ ...... 13%
malaly In ·the northeaatern part Charming Sboppes .............. 11%
ot the atate Friday, Wltb fair City Holding Co........... .......15%
weather Saturday and Sunday. Federal Mogul ............. ....... l9%
Highs· will he In tbe 20a Friday · Goodyear T&amp;:R ....... :.. .. .......45%
and In the 30s Saturday and Heck's . ........ .. ............... ........ 5% ·
Sunday. Overnl&amp;ht lows will Key Centurion ........... , ......... 15 .
range from 15 to 25 earty Friday Lands' End .... .... ...... .. .. ....... 26%
and In the 20a Saturday and Umlted Inc........................35%
Sunday mornings.
Multimedia Inc ............. .. ..... 94
Rax Restaurants .... .. ............ 2%
Robbins A Myers .... ............ l4%
Sboney's Inc...................... .11%
Star Bank ..:... .... ,.......... ...... 20'!4
Wendy's Intl ............ .... .. .. :..4%
Lottery numben ·
Worthington Ind ... , .............. 2~%
(A•bland 011 Ia ex .· di.Sdead
CLEvELAND /UPI) - Tiles·
toda)o.)
day's · winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:.

Weather

Stocks

Twin Mattress Set ...............ssoo ...
Full Mattress Set••••••••••••••••.s5so wk.
Bunk Betl .Comp•••••••••,...... S1 ooo a.
Sofa &amp; Chair .................... S12 so wk•
Recliner •••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••,.S600 .wk.
Swivel locker..................... $300 ...
6 Gun Gun CabiMt •••••••••••••SJOO

....
.
6 pc. Wood Group ................ .1199.01
Iller••••• Hutch-...................u.,...

.,
.•'
'

NOW

....
Twin led with Bedding-......

S249"

.

'!:JUG

432..

war on drug~.
.
"If you want to concentrate on
a very serious problem, that's
what you do," he said.
Gayle Channing, leglslaUvfl
director for lhe PubliC Children's
Services or Ohio, said communities need to plan .collectively to
address drug ISsues, and need
monetary and legal •upport to
Implement such pli!DS.
Sen. Charles Henry, R·Aubum,
has a bill that Is part of the Senate
package

will meet Thursday at 7 p.m . at
the village hall.
Mee&amp;lag caaceled
The regular meeting of the
Washington ·Technical College
Board of Trustees scheduled for
Monday has heen canceled. The
next meeting wlll be held Dec. 18.

saoo

[.'

'..

."
'

PICK·3 ticket sales totaled
$1,155,390, with a payoff due of
$761,325.50.

8287.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled.
$220,208, with a payoff due of
$51.100.

DOWNING CHilDS
MUWN MUSSEl

INSURANCE·

111 S.COIId St., Po. .rey

YOUI IIIDIPIIIDEIT
AGEIITS sav•G

MEIGS COUITY
. SIIC11161

ShOWn Ia juet • Ample of the great styles
you'll find for the entire family at Picway!
Reg. 1 5.99-42.99,sale priced at '5, '7, '1 0 off!
(a) Children's Moon Boola in blue with grey.
Sizes 11 -2. Reg. 15.99, Nle 10.99.
Sizes 3-6. Reg. 16.99, sale 11.99.
(b) Girls' Vylon Boots in pink or grey.
Sizes 9-4. Reg. 18.99, Nle 11.99. .
(c) Men'alnaulrtecl Boots with tan leather
upper, brown rubbjlr bottom. Thinsulatee
. insulation. Sizes 7 ·12. Reg. 29.99, arte 19.99. ·
'(d) Women'a Sweater Cuff Boots in black.
sizes 5·10. Reg. 21 .99, Nle14.99. ·

REG 1599

,••

WOMEN S

OFF

Slll14 81

'

' ''·

lEG. PIICI Of AllY fiA1UUUlll Ill S10CI
'IIIUIS., Fll. &amp; SAl.

••'

'' .I'

••

O.ly Nalunlilrr ...,ld , .... •• miiC'h otyle, ••
mUC'h .... fort and oe miiC'h •orutlllty lnto,a
pall' Of . .........all fer oo llltlr a prlre!

."'' .'.

Conw In ...n to ...,. on any mull·
ha\'P llyiPI In Blaelr., TauJI"

.,..Na..,..

CLOSED THANKSGIVING

OPEN NIGHTS AND SUNDAYS

EXI'MNCED OU1IIDE IAIIIIP.IF
•EXri I NCED CCUN1&amp; PIQIIU

.
~·

' ,. .

'

'.

.,....

NOW .

....

COHIIY PINE

• I

... l' a.

•m•

ported Beulah Ransom from at 9: 30 p.m . where an odor of
Apple Grove Road · to Holzer smolte waa reported.
Pomeroy was called to the
Medical Center. At 10:20 a.m.,
RaCine Fire Departtnent WBI Eagletl Club at 10: 25 p.m . for Roy
called to a brush fire on McKen· Howell to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
zle Ridge.
Middleport was called at 10: ~
a.m. to Cheshire for Rlcbanl
Northup
to HolZer Medical CenContinued tram page 1
ter, and at 5: 33p.m. to Beech St.
A dlvocce action has been tiled
easter for pi.rtlc.tpanta to get Area Chamber of Commerce . for Paula Mays to Veterans In Meigs Common Pleas Court by
from Pomeroy to Middleport, It memberals aclleduled for Thun- Memorial H~pltal.
Sandra Lucier, Rutland, agaiDit
was reported.
day, Dec. 7, at Royal Oak Park.
The Chester Fire Deparlment Harwood M. Lucier . Greenfield,
. In a related matter, anyone The dinner Is being catered by was called to Mount Olive Road Mass. ,
wishing to help work on Christ· Roaer and Mary Gilmore and
Steven A. Yonker, Dayton, and
mas llgbtl for display thrOUJhout costa $25 per couple. "This will be
Paula Jane Yonker, Middleport,
Pomeroy during the · hoUday our last fling as the Pomeroy
have filed for a dissolution or
seaaon Is encouraged to come to Chamber," Reed said, and enVeler... ~
marriage.
Pomeroy Village Hall tonight . couraged all members to attend.
Tuesday admissions
Keith A. Davidson, Middle(Wednesday), 7 p.m., and bring
Copletl of a new community, Tammy Zedeker, Pomeroy .
port,
and Benjamin F . Davidson
light tooll and gloves.
resource directory covering
TUesday dlacharges - Ora
Jr.
,
Mldltleport,
have flied In
TheunualBigBendVarletles' Meigs and Gal.l la Countlel were Kearns, Carole Coteman, Mary
Meigs
Common
Pleas
Court for a
show will be held Saturday, Nov. dlstrlbu ted to chamber members
Butcher, Charles Cook, Martha
diSsolution
of
their
marriage.
25, at the Rutland Civic Center, by Reed. The directory was
CloDCb, Ulllan Napper.
reported ~b Hoeflich, show dMloped by the Gallla-Melgs
director. The show Is co-· Community Action Agency Em- .
sponsored by Pomeroy Chamber ployrnent aDd Training DivisiOn
and the Rutland Civic Center through a grant from the Job
witb !;loth organizations to share Tralalng Program Act 1JTPA) .
proceeds from the show.
Additional copies of the directory
A final "Chamber Apprecla· are avalla ble at the PomerO)o
tion Day" dinner for Pomeroy JTPA office.

Eight calli for aaslltance were \
answered on Tuesday bY units of
tbe Mel&amp;* County Emergency
Medical Servlcea.
At 12:18 a .m ., Rutland went to
· Melp Mine No. 2 for. James

ATURALIZER.

I '

/;

SEE OUR

Meigs EMS units. have eight calls TueSday

.
'
. .•
•

I I

1 STOP IN

rrom page 1

---Meigs announcements---

.

240 THIRD AVENUE
GAl !!PQUS, OHIO .

conunued

chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Indicated additional
fundiJJe may he available to local
pi'OIIecllton' offices. But he said .
any mqre Judges willhavetowalt
until January, when the Ohio
Supreme Court Is expected to
Issue a report ·on the need for
extra Judges.
Meshelalao told the committee
a Cablnet·level Drug Enforcement Agency should he set up at
the st;ate level to coordinate the

•,

HOtJIEUTE-JACOBSEN•IRIGGS a STRATTON
TECUMSEH • KOHLER • . WISCONSIN

The Meigs County Chapter of the American Cancer Society
)las announced that Thursday Is the Great American Smoke
Out. 1n conjunction with the di!Y, al)y Individual who takes one
half of a pack or cigarettes or more Into the Subway Sub Shop
will receive a free cold turkey sub.

Lawmakers...

SALE PRICES GOOD THRU 11-18-89

SMALL ENGINE-REPAIR

I

• •

:
;

.---------~-----------po~ln~t~s·~r~--------~~~ ;
.'
NOW AT DOM~NO'S PIZZA

•CYUNDER tEAD

I

..

aad puUed down 3Q rebouDda for
Cllarlotte. Kelly Trlpucka added
At Minneapolis, Scott Roth
24 points and Rex Chapman 23 for
fueled a second-quarter aurge
the Hometa. Orlando's Reggie with 15 polnta anc! made a layup
Th~ tOtaled 15 points.
with undef a mlnale to PlaY to
Bell 111, iiocl*a •
lead the Timberwolvel. Tbe
At Miami, Kevin Edwards
vlct011' was the second of the
scored 33 point• to rally Miami. It seuon .for llleexpansionTimber·
was Miami'• third straight viC· wolves and marked the first
lory over the Rockets .. Houston
defeat to a flrst·year team ln.the
wuled bY Mitchell Wlglna with career of Warrior coach Don
24 points and Buck Johnson with Nelson.
23.
. Clippers ttl, NaniU 111
CeiiCI . . 1ters N
At Los Angeles, Gary Grant
At Hartford, Calm., Larry Bird scored 27 points and Char lei
nailed a 10-tooll!r fi:om the right Smith ad\led 24 polnta, grabbed
baseline with a haU-second left to 12 rebounds and made two timely
lift Botton at the 'Hartford Civic steals to lead the Cllppeni. Los
Center. Ron Anderson led all Angeles outscored Denver 37-19
scorers wilb 23 pojnts and Hersey
In the final quarter to snap a
Hawkins added · 17 for three-game losing streak. La·
Philadelphia.
· fayette Lever led Denver with 25

• ENGIJE • OCIC

for your vote, support and
confide"'' in
me to
the Middleport Village

.~

Veteran Mllwaulu!e center
Jack Sllana contlnued the NBA
educatiOn of San Antonio rookie
David . Robinson with a lone·
distance lesson.
Slkma scored a season-high 29
points, Including five threepointers In the first period, and
grabbed 10 rebounds Tuesday.
night to lead tbe Bucks to a 108-97.
victory over the Spurs.
"It was good to see a lew go
In," said Slkma, wwho also
helped limit Robinson to 18
points, six belOw his average. "l
got Into a lltUe rhythm tonight. I
had back spasms at the end of
training camp, but I've been
working with It'. My defense has
been pretty good all season
long.''
The Bucks trailed 9-7 before
surging to a 19·17 lead on four
straight three-pointers by
Slkma. Milwaukee never trailed
after that.
Willie Anderson led the Spurs
with a a season·hlgh 22 points.
Fred' Roberts had 15 points and
Ricky Pierce 13 for the Bucks.
"I think he !Robinson) got
embarrassed." said Spurs coach
Larry Brown. "Wean tried to tell
David that he was not the first
one to be burned by Slkma's
three-pointers.
"I don't think that's what heat
us," Brown said. "What heat us
Is what happened after that.
They penetratl!lf, we had to e11me
over late and they threw t!K&gt;
extra pass. That's the way we
have to play. We have a tendency
to end the offense a little too
quickly."
The Spurs, wbo trailed 8H9
entering the final period, out·
scored Milwaukee 13-2 to open
the fourth quarter, puUing within
89-82 with 7: 32 on two free throws
bY Terry Cummings. making his
first regular season appearance
In Milwaukee since being traded
by the Bucks.
Wingate's basket brought the
Spl!rs within 91-84, but Milwaukee answered with six straight
points. opening a 97-84 lead on
Pierce's Jumper from the top of
the key with 5:23 remaining.
Elsewhere, Cleveland clipped
New Jersey 103-92. Charlotte
chopped Orlando 130·116, Miami
nipped Houston 101·99, Bos~n
bumped Philadelphia 96-94, Min·
nesota defeated Golden State
101·98, the Los Angeles Clippers
downed Denver 129-121, Chicago
ousted Sacramento 96-94, Dallas
upended Seat de 113-109 and Portland nlpl)e!l New York 118-117.
Cavaliers 1N, Nets 82
At East R11therford, N.J.,
Craig EhiO came oft the bench to
score 19 of his 23 points In the
second half to spark Cleveland.
Ron Harper added 22 points for
the Cavaliers, who have beaten
the Nets eight straight Urnes.
DenniS Hopson led New Jersey
with 17 points.
Hornets 130, Malic 111
At Charlotte. N.C., rookie

MACHINE SHOP SERVICE

THANK YOUI

Plltl,., 11r 1111 c ·c•it

Condnued from pap 1
A. Morrll, Mlddlepari,Riaa I. Sayre, M111011, W. Va.,andDanlel
Kes teraon, Pomeroy.
Ratbbum 8IICI Morrlaon alao forfeited $M bolldl on cllarp of
driving without an operator'• lteenae.
Otbera fined In the court were David M. Persons, Loq
Bottom, $25 and coati, no operator's llcenae: Robert E . Manley,
Bidwell, $15 fine only, speeding; Larry R. Fox, Middleport, ud
Charlea 0 . Pullins, Jr., .Middleport, both $10 fiDel only on
cbarget of runnln&amp; atop alp; Rodney CloDCb, Middleport, and
Soaya Clonch, Middleport, $25 and cots each on charges of
disorderly conduct; David P . Smith, Middleport, $25 and costs,
failure to atop alter an accident.
Michael A. CelU, Pomeroy.- entered a plea of not guilty to
charaes of DWI, Illegal tags, possession of drugs, and going tbe
Wl'OIII way on a one-way street. The charges were transferred
to Melp County Court. .
·
,
Others forfeldng bonds were Roy Boggs, Middleport, $110,
disorderly manner; Gall E. Thoma, Long Bottom, $60 on
allowing an unUeensed person to operate her motor vehicle.

•
Tim'*'"!¥• 111, Warrlen 18 :

By UnMid PrM81a.....aleMI

~~"&gt;i

--Local news· briefs...---..___,

•
••

Sikma'slong shots push
·oucks to 108-97 win

The Dltlly 81 ttinel PaJt 7

'JJUIL1U-tey, Noirant.' 16, 1989

........
. .l. ·-·
,. . . .

�Paa•

V:adn11day, November 16, 1989

8 The o.lly Sentinel

Beat of the Bend

'Horse play' to help
raise funds for trip
lly 11011 BOEFLOCII
HopefUlly. there is a delicate
way to describe a lund raiser
being held
urday by; eighth
the So1olhPrn
• Junior tllgh
School to raise
funds fog a trip
to Washington,
· D. C. next spring. I suppose It
could be called horse play.
The class Is staging a road
apple rodeo at the Jennings
Beegle residence beginning at
about 1 p.m. Aplotofland will be
· limed and numbered and a horse
· will be turned loose In the plot.
The wailing game begins then
and the person with the num• .bered block Into which the road
apples fall will win $1,000.
: Suppa~ more than one block Is
Involved? Wei~ there Is a solu·
tlon worked out for that too.
However, It might be just as well
to let the answer to that problem
be provided when and If the
problem ariSes.
The numbered blocks are beIng sold at SIOeach and there are
to be 300 blocks.
So far. 95 blocks have been
sold. If you'd like to partiCipate In
the novel rodeo see any seventh
or eighth grader or contact Bill
' Baer, 992-5138. or VIcky Hill. at
the schooL Ilaer and Hill are
class advisors. You also can
contact Teresa Drummer at
992-6714.
And another clock that moved
time backwards.
Homer Proffitt. Racine, reports that such an electric clock
bung on a wall at the home of his
mother, Mrs. ,John Protntt in
Portland. Several times out of
the blue the clock started running
backwards. · When It was unplugged It would function properly for a period before again
turning back the hands of time.

..

I

Indian sunUner ends as cold weather returns

talns of New Mexico and shOwers. The lows were In the 50s
rain prevailed over the South.
Colorado.
tllroqbout the area.
Winter storm warnlnas were
Colorado
temperatures
were
SkieS were overcast early
po1 ted In upper Mlcbtaan and
already
In
the
20s
early
Wednes·
Wednesday
In New England.
·Wt.couln, w~ the National
day,
wltb
readtnaa
as
low
as
10
with
rain
In
par,IJ
of Maine, New
Weather Service predk:ted snow
di!JI'H&amp;
In
the
north.
Some
snow
Hampshire.
and
Vermont.
accumulations ol up to 8 inches.
1
The Protfllts nnally gave up on It
flurries were noted ll('ar the city Temperatures ranged from the
accompanied by 11111ty winds.
and the clock was taken out of degi ees above normal as the
Light snow was also forecast ot Pueblo In southeast Colorado. around 60 degrees In the Boii1Dn
use.
Most of Texas enjoyed clear to area to near freezing In northern
for Minnesota, North Dakota,
·state was experiencing Its third
.
.
Wisconsin and Colorado. Ski partly cloudy skies. Mostly Maine.
straight day of Indian summer.
Well known Middleport resiShowers and mild weather · areas feported up to4 ~ Inches ot cloudy skies and some showers . MoiSt unstable air trQm the
dent, Mrs. Dorothy Roller ob- were expected to continue
new s•ow lllank~ting the slopes. were reported In east and ·sou- Gulf of Mexico generl)led clouds
served her 86th birthday last throughout the day, but drastic
, and rain over most of the South,
The strongest · thunderstorms !beast Texas and In Louisiana.
Thursday. You made her day · changes are coming.
Clouds
were
Increasing
In
especially In lower Mississippi
were along a l~ frO!D Cape
with the cards, phone calls and
northwest
Kansas
and
decreaswhere thunderstorms and show·
A front moving across the state Glra,rdeau, Mo., across Ullnols to
nowers - she sends alOI\g a big should cause much colder air to Bloomington, Ind.,theNWSsald. lngln the northeast.
ers were accompanied by
thanks.
·
Tl!undershowers were lncreas- temperatures In the 50s and 60s.
move In beginning WedJlesday Elsewhere In the Midwest, rain
As does Mrs. Nan Moore, night. The mercury Is expected tell over Iowa, Kentucky and lng over Missouri and beginning
High pressure brought drier
former Middleport High School to be from tbe lower 30s to about parts of Wisconsin and Michigan. -to build over Arkansas as the weather and clouds to Washing·
teacher. whom you gave such a 40 by dawn, and then keep falling
ton and sunshine to Oregon, but
Cold arctic air spilling Into front moved through.
nice birthday recenlly. Mrs. during the day Thursday. By northern North Dakota and MinIt was cloudy with showers and by forecasters said a shield of
Moore received 60 cards to mark Thursday evening readings near nesota pushed temperatures · thunderstorms and lows In the high clouds moving Into the '
the occasion and was delighted. freezing should be widespread.
below freezln_g and threatened to 50sovernlghtlnwesternPennsyl· Northwest promised some rain
Thank you.
Rain, possibly heavy at times, bring the first sub-zero readings vanla and the northern West and snow in higher elevations by
will continue over most of Ohio of the se&amp;Son. Temperatures VIrginia Panhandle. Rain deve- Thursday.
John Terrell continues to be a tonight. However, the strong were' expected to be In the teens loped overnight In eastern Pen- ,
A cold front brought subnorcheerful feature of the Pomeroy cooliM trend that should get by daybreak, falling to the zero nsylvanla. The lows were In the mal temperatures and gusty
community.
winds, but not much moisture, to
underway du!'fng the dark hours · mark l11ter in the day, forecas- mid 50s.
Like everyone else John is oot could cause snow to develop over, ters said;
Clouds and taln prevailed · Utah and ArizOna.
getting any younger, but he the western counties by dawn.
In California, dense fog In the
A cold front began moving during the early morning hours
continues hiS Interest In other
In
south
New
Jersey
where
lows
Central
Valley and along the
As the weather gets co Icier; through north Texas and New
people and how they're getting snow ought to develop over most Mexico early Wed~ay, leav- were In the mid 50s. A cloudy coast was exected to dissipate
along. In a recent conversation of the Buckeye State Thursday. Ing behind strong north winds of cover developed over Maryland during the day, opening the skies
Jobn mentioned that be never The National Weather Service up to 30 mph In the Panhandle. and eastern West V(rglnla over- to abundant sunshine and pleahears a couple ot his favorite was unsure Wednesday morning Oklahoma and the Rocky Moun- . night and some spots saw rain san! fall weather.
'
songs anymore. The names?
how much would fall.
Red Wing and Walt "Til the Sun
Besides the cold and snow,
Shines, Nellie." Frald they're another Important · factor In
long gone, John.
Ohio's weather Is going to be
strong northwest winds. The
Oris ,Hubbard ot Syracuse winds expected to be starting
thinks we made a mistake In Wednesday night should be fast
letting allot the bus services that enough to ·blow loose objects
once were available get away around and affect the handling of
from us. However, at the time the motor vehicles. They will also
services were pulled no one help drop chill factors to close to
voiced any notable objections 10 degrees by Thursday
and the companies Involved afternoon.
apparently demonstrated that . The cold front that will usher In
they were not making any money Ohio's spell of wintry weather
on the runs. Unfortunately, the was from Illinois to Texas on the
·bus service Is only one of a early morning weather map.
number -of losses which have Another system that will be
taken place In the community Important to the Buckeye State's
over the years.
weather over the near future was
a low pressure center that was
Did I miss Thanksgiving? over Arkansas Wednesday mornTuesday's mall delivery brought Ing. By Thursday evening the
four Christmas catalogs - quite cold front is expected to be along
a challenge tor those of us living a the East Coast. while tile low
one day at a time ph:Uosphy. Do pressure system oug)Jt to be over
keep smiling.
Quebec.
Around lbe Nation
A.n arctic cold front dumped
snow over the Great Lakes and
brought freezing temperatures
offensive player; and Sbawu Bush, moel tmFOOTBALL .WARDS- Reclplentl of football
to • the Dakotas and Rockies
preved player and best academic. (See additional
awardl
al
Moaday
ntcbt'e
Eutern
Earles
Fall
Wednesday while thunderstorms
picture
and elory on pace 4).
Sporlll
Baaqaet
are
eentor
playere,
I
lo
r,
Dan
sqaked much of the Midwest and
Tripp, beat deteulve player; Shawn Savoy, best
· By\J.... Piwa....._..aal
Cold weather will relllfll to
Ohio with a veqeanceThut:,
likely accompaliled by sn .
As dawn approached W
·

•::ite =::::;n::C:- ~

-.

•

- ·.. _. . .

-~

..

By The Bend
....

T~e
''

Wednuday. November 16. 1989
·Page 9

Announcements

"

~

Turkey talking time

In the spotlight
By Cindy 8. Oliveri
County Extenalon Agenl,
Home Ecoaornlcl: arid 4-H
When the holiday season be-

comes Hstomach flu., season,
Improper handling of turkey and
all the trimmings may be to
blame. The problem Is salmonellae - a bacteria found in fresh
poultry and red meat that can
cause sever headache, vomiting,
diarrhea, cramps, and fever.
Careful handling tor food safety
begins with thawing of the
turkey.
If there's a frozen turkey in
your freezer, better make plans
to start thawing It in plenty of
·· time before you need to cook 11.
The main thing to remember is ·
not to defrost II on the counter or
table~op. Bacteria multiply rapidly at room temperature.
Temperatures between 60 and
140 degrees F. are called the
'~danger zone" where bacteria
multiply rapidly. In the hours It
takes for a turkey to thaw, the
surface bacteria could multiply
to dangerous levels. ·
The best way to thaw turkey Is
In the refrigerator, but it lakes a
long time, so you have to plan
. ahead. An 8 to 12 pound turkey
takes 1 to2days .. a 12to16pound

tur~ takes 2to 3days .. a 16 to 20

pound turkey takes 3 to 4 days ..
and a 20 to 24 pounder takes 4 to 5
days. Li\rge turkey pieces, such
as a hlllf or quarter, take 1 to 2
days.
If you don't have all that time,
you can thaw the wrapped turkey
In cold water. But the wrapping
must be Intact. If It's torn, wrap It
In a plastic bag. Immerse the
bird In cold water In the sink or In
a large tub. Refill with cold water
frequently .. about every 30
minutes. The water must be cold.
Here's how long thawing in cold
water takes: An 8 to 12 pound
turkey takes 4 to 6 hours; a 12 to
16 pound bird takes6 to 9 hours; a
16 to 20. pounder takes 9 to 11
hours; and a 20 to 24 pounder
takes 11 to 12 hours.
Yet another option for thawing
Is In a microwave, provided It's
big enough. Follow the manufacturer's directions.
The next step Is tile cooking
process. When turkey Is cooked
to the well done stage (at least 165
degrees F.) the salmonellae Is
killed. But the stuffing may not
reach that high temperat11re so
salmonella may· ~urvlve If the
stuffing Is not cooked properly.
One precautiOn Is to cook the
stuffing In a separate container.
If you cook stuffing Inside the
turkey, It must reach a tempera-

ture of at least165 degrees F. to
' destroy salmonellae, use 'a meat
thermometer to be certain the
stuffing Is thoroughly cooked.
Insert · the meat thermometer
Into the center ot the stuffing.
Don't pack stuffing, tlahtty into
the bird. Packing too tightly adds
to the problem because it doesn't
allow the oven heat to penetrate
through the turkey and stuffing.
Always stuH the turkey just
before roasting. Stuffing ahead
of time Increases chances tor
bacteria to grow.
The other chance for trouble Is
after the meal. Leaving turkey,
stuHing and other foods at room
temperature for mote than two
hours is risky. The time, temperatur.e and food provide a perfect
climate for the growth of bacteria. Remove thestufflngfrom tbe
leftol(er turkey as soon as the
meal Is over so it can cool
quickly. That two hour ttme limit
should Include all the ttmes that
leftover turkey, stuffing and
gravy are left at room
temperature.
For safety's sake, follow
proper handling procedures
from the ttme you put that big
bird In you·r grocery cart untO the
last bone Is clean. It just. might
prevent a stomach ache for
someone In your family.

Sluc ud miiDelloader lboou
Tbe Ken, Amsbary Chapter of
the Izaak Walton League will
have slug shoots on Sunday, and
Nov. 26. Muzzle loader shoots will
be held on Dec. 17, Dec. 24, and
Dec. 31. The shoots will consist of
free hand and bench rest events
at various distances. Rifle and
scopes 'will not be shot In the
same category. Various prizes of
meat am;l money will be
awarded.
Couucll to meet
ATHENS -A meeting of the
Buckeye Joint County Self Insurance council will be held on
Friday at 10: 30 a:m . at the
Athens County Extension Office.

.A
h~e.

'

NEW OFFICERS -New officer• for lhe GaiUa
· Cllrlltl1118cllool for lhe 1988 school year are, from
left, lroat ..-, Paul Aupacb, coucU advlaor;
KariNa Nuce and Kourllley Scherer, commlitee
ebalrmea; and Elizabeth Lanrona, secretary. .

bran~ new Big Bear .will help make Gclllipglls" an even b;ger and better place to

Second row, Robert Greve, vice pl'e81dent;

Michelle Wellman, president; and Ben Perry,
lreaaurer. Third row, Allen Youa1, Julllor· blp
representative; Weady Baird, committee chairmen; Andy Slmll, Junior bl(b represeatatlve1 and
Nick PelT)', parllmentarlan.

Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
RACINE - The Racine First
Baptist Church will have revival
through Thursday. Dr. T. Howell

Upchurch will be the evangelist.
Evening services begin at 7: 30
p.m. The public Is Invited.

Catered fUisine and live entertainment will set the stage for our Special Preview

'MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Christian Union Church will
hold revival through Saturday
with different speakers and sin:
gers n lghtly. The public Is invited
to attend.
MIDDLEPORT -"The VIsit"
bY Friedrich Duerrenmatt. a
play to be read aloud by
members, will be reviewed by
Mrs. 'George Hackett Jr. at the
Wednesday meeting or the Middleport .Uterary Club. Hostess
will be Mrs. James Diehl. Roll
call will be to answer with a
(See CALENDAR, on 10)

Event. You ll then see plans and drawings for the new Ariel Cultural and Performing
A~ts Centre, plus,-get a sn~ak peek at ?ur brand new.store! Best of all, the proceeds
will go toward the restoration of the Anel Cultural and Performing Arts Centre. Big
Bear, Better for you and your community
·
.
DATE: Thursday, November 16, 1989
TIME: 6 to 8 p.m.
. ·
PLACE: Big Bear
31 Upper River.Road
In the Ohio River Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio
.
COST: $10 per person
.
All proceeds to benefit the Ariel Cultural and Performing Arts Centre.

Christmas par&amp;y
TUPPERS PLAINS -The
VFW Post ~ and LadleS
Auxiliary In Tuppers PlainS will
have a Christmas party for
meni.IN!rs and famUy on Dec. 16

Parlab aceeptl•c appllcatlo•
POMEROY -The Meigs
County Cooperative Parish Food
Pantry will be taking applications for food baskets based on
low Income through Dec. 13 on
Tuesday, Wednesday. and Thursday from 9:30 a.m.-12: 30 p.m.

Thanksgiving meal served

Craft ahow and sale
TuPPERS PLAINS -The La-

giving" and a hls1Dry of the first
Thanksgiving during devotional
lime..
It was reported that 61 shut-In
calls were made over the last
month.
Also, a white elephant sale was
held as a money-making project
with Mary Allee Blse and Nell
Wilson as the auctioneers.
Attending the meeting were
Paat Martin, Tammy Cowdery,
with Christopher; Diane White,
with Lynn and Tomlclna; Cheryl
Eddy, VIrginia Walton, Verna
Rose, Nell Wilson, Emma Durst,
VIolet Satterfield, Audra Ruckman, Erika Boring, VIvian
Humphrey. Thelma Smith, Mar)'
Allee Blse, Pearl Baker, Sandy
West, with Denise; Mary
Folmer, Kelly Eichinger and
Bobble Reed.

MORGAN R. WERRY

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA

Werry birth

446 4524

.

The Meigs Local annual ChapRaymond · and Joyce Werry,
ter 1 parent teacher meeting will Chester. are announcing the
be held Monday from 7-8:30 p.m. birth of a daughter, Morgan
at Salisbury Elementary.
Raeann. on Oct. 23 at St. Joseph
The program will Include an Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
overview of the Chapter 1 proThe Infant weighed seven
. gram by the director, Wendy pounds and two ounces and was
Halar. A slide show of right to 20 Inches long.
read week, and plays and skits
Grandparents are Philip H.
from each of the participating and Karen Werry, Chester, and
schools In the program will also Bruce 0. and Dorothy ·Myers,
be shown.
. Long Bottom .
Teachers attending will be
The Werrys have another son.
Vlcckl Haley and Paula Chan- Btando11, aae four.
cey, Harrtsonvillei Elizabeth
Story and Marsha Radabaugh,
Middleport; Jon! Jeffers and
Janet Hoffman, Pomeroy; Kim
Oliphant and Paula Chancey,
Rutland; Cindy Allen, Salem
Center; and Ilarbara Mathews,
SaliSbury.
'
The public Is Invited to attend.

.

So ~Ill the restoration·of.the Ariel Cultural and Performing Arts Centre. And Now,
Big Bear IS proud to provide a sneak preview of both!

at 6: 30 p.m . The auxlllaty will
f\lmlsh the meat and everyone 11
to bring a covered dish. Santa
Claus will be present to give out
treats and a gift exchange for the
kids with a S3llmlt .

Turkey dinner
REEDSVILLE -The Ladles
{1-uxlllary of the Orange Township Fire Department are planning a turkey dinner on Saturday
beginning at 4 p.m. at the fire
station.

Chatter club
meeting held

· Big Bear Presents:
A Bigger And
1 Benefit

dies Auxiliary of the VFW post
9053ln Tuppers Plalnswillhavea
craft show and sale on Dec. 2
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Soup beans,
corn bread, cole slaw, pie, cake,
and hot dogs will be·served. The
public Is Invited to attend.

An early Thanksgiving meal
was served. at the November
Arts and craft• ehow
meetln,g of the Faith Gospel
REEDSVILLE -The Eastern Ladles Circle. The Thanksgiving
Iland Boosters will sponsor an meet lng was held at the home of
arts and crafts show on Saturday Sandy CowderY with Dolly Reed
from 9 ;j.m. to 4 p.m. There will assisting as co-hostess.
be'llve entertainment, food, and ·
Cowdery, program director,
soft drinks. Call 985--3951 or presented "The Voice of Thanks992-2996 for information.

Chapter 1
parent teacher
•
meettng set

•

'

D·aily Sentinel

A grab bag sale was conducted
at the recent meeting of the
Chatter Club held at the ~orne of
Doris Wilt In Syracuse.
Dues and flower fund money '
were cOllected. and the officers
reporta were given.
Anniversary gins were given
to Mary Starcher and Dorothy
Roach. A game conducted was
WOII by Janice Fetty, Linda
Hubbard, Brenda Bolin, and
Delores Whitlock, who also won
the door prize.
The group made plans to have
a bake sale at1the next meeting
which will be held at the home of
Doi'Qiby R«!a.c h In Pomeroy.

GOOD USED
WA-15, DlYDS,

IIFIIGIIATOIS,TY~

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 lr4 An., Gallpalls
... .U6-1699

IOUISr I AJI,.6 PJI,

.

.

tile

8lld

to

Ellll.

The Melp High School Junior
Clvltans wilt be conductlnll a
caaned food drive on Tbunday;
The group haa been working
tllroualtout the yHr oa proJKta
. -~~ as .... dq the Cbeller
Bllw Club Ud Arcben: with U.tr
Slcoad Antual Benefit Shoot for
MD.\.
Tbey a1111autated the Ouldlllg
a.tad Sclt:aDI Ia Clleiblre with
/~)

games coad)lcted at the school
for.lts Halloween party.
For tht food drive on Thursday, members of the club will be
ca11at ... cUlled 100111 to douta to loeal organizations for
llelid)' fanllllel.
Drop bollft are located In local
IIN!fll' eeora alld Jr. ciYitana
wiD 1111..-.doortodoorln hopes
that area Nlldeata will donate a
I-III!I'IIIIQI:Ie lood ltenl.

,

MEAT SALAD •••••••••••••••••L! •••• ~ ••• 89&lt;
SWIPUCIIIICII LllfiCH IlEAl
ROAST BEEF ••••••••••••••••••¥~••••• S3.79
SIPIIIOI

•

BULl WIENERS •••••••••••••~•••• S1.·89
SMIIIIFIILI SMOII* 6·1 II. AVG.
TALLY HAMS ...................-.••••••• s1o•

SMAU EGGS ...tML.I3C

... -.1

aanusuc• ..•·

PACIMia fiiSII

· - YAUI'f lUll A

12

GUPES _......... ~. 11.59

PIOC. CHEESE ••'lh 11.99 .

CUNIERRIES ••• u.M.99'

DAn PAIIIAY 01AilR5

CMIJOIIU

IIAIGAIINE-•H•IL•• 99c

CBEIY ·-······..a.o...atc

GAS &amp;EUC. IANGES

I Wish To Thank All The
.~oters Of Meigs County for
FOOD DRIVE -Til- members of
llelp mp School .Jr.
Their Support In Selecting
Clvl&amp;ane will cotnc door to door Ia cmler eollect c81111e1111oocla
that can be UHd lor'needy lam Dies. They are, cloekwlae from left,
Sbawa U,.comb, Stephauy Gardner, Mlchdle Malboltra, Pam
·Me for County School
Bam,
Tracie
Board.
Junior Gvirans to hold food drive
be

IO.MAIM

Your Vote Is
Appreciated!

·QUICKEL

EM'S

NOODLES ••••••••••••••••••••••!!.~~. S1.39
.IIUIEIWD
APPLE JUICE •••••••••••••••••1!.~~-. Sl. 19
MIS. SMIIH'S
F.IUIT PIES ....................!~.~~·. S2.69
WP1Ell'5-11 'II OZ.

BEAN w /BACON SOUP ••• 2/S1.19
....
,.s

PUMPKIN ~ ••.•••••••.••.••••••\~~~••• Sl. 19
SWEET POTATOES •••••••••JMl••••• 99C
RAlSTON
RICE CHEX •••••••••••••••••l!.~·.... S2.69
IMS'ION
COIN CHEX •••••••••••••••U:I'.f!o•• S2.49
IVORY LIQUID •••••••••••!!.'1\•••• S2.59
A-IAI.a.Q
SAUSAGE •••••!.t\. 2/S1.39
JOI.-.......... u~• s1.19
TOWELS............,... S!.99

TAYLOI

..............__,••u .. s3,39

H. Pill. Allllr Clld. *t llltleltl, 11•111•1101".. a.
F

\.~- ~

-•

...

�•

,..

., .

•

, .. ' ,o,.:.,;. .,.. s. ttiiltl

:. •

••

,,
.•

.

"

RUTLAND · -The Le.-dill&amp;
Creek Con5!'rvancy Qistrlct ·wjll
boll Its monthly meeune .on
wi!dne5day at"!l a.m. .
.

&lt;"-CALENDAR, oat)
cbaracter you love 1!1 hate . .

RACINE - . OAP.SE ~53.
Southern Local wtli meet at the
high school on W~sday at 7
p.m .
.

SYRACUSE -The Third Wed·
nesday Syracu"" Homemakers
Club will meei Wednesday at 10
a.m. at the municipal building.
Roll call Is to bring a fa\!orlte
cookie recipe and samples for
members. For the project

.

'

.. ...

.

:. ,..a/ Kt·.-•ort:,~ ·.. · .~:-· ·

•

members 'will make lavon for
·. the rest home residents.

'
;)itj
calendar

'

TRURSDIIY
· RliTLAND-TheRutlandFire
Departinent will have Its annual

...

'

. ·.· . ·

.

. Wadlu~.No~.;.nb.: 11. ,.... .

WASHINGTON (UPJl- TbeCentrallntelltcenceAgencyhaa
confirmed that overall military spendlllg by tbe Sovlt't Union
hu declined thta year by 1.5 percent as promtaea bY, Moscow,
Tbe Wubtngtan JOost reported Wl!!lnesday.
In addiUon, some U.S. offlclata believe tbe Soviets will make
cuts or about 1 percent In 1990, . the Post quotea sources u
uymc. .
.
Tbe new CIA esdmates of Soviet mUitary reductlollll, which
are VIrtually Identical to pledges made by sentorSovletofflclala .
earlier thta year, havt! not yet been accepted by the Defense
lntelllgeace Agency, the Post utd. A full-scale lntelllsence
community review of the esdmate11 Will not be concluded undl
next year.
However, the new Information poaes a dilemma for the Bush
admllltatratlon, which In recent weeks has made public
statementa aaytnr that the Soviets have not reducl!!l military
Sp!!ndlng:
'The admllltstratlon baa not been leveling With the public for
a long time," the Postquoti!!IHouaeArmi!!IServicesCommlttee
Chairman Les Aaptn, O-Wls., as saying. "They're afraid It will
· add to the stampede to cut the ilefense budget."
A $305 billion defense bud(let awaits final approval by
Congress.
A senior admllllstratlon official told the Post that the Soviets
"may have completl!!l" production of Typhoon-class balllstic
missile sullmarines while continuing worl&lt; on smaller
Delta-claas missile submarines.
Tbe officials said, howver, that the Soviet Union also Is
'slowing production of Its Intercontinental Blackjack bomber,
which he said has encountered "terrible problems."
Adminlstrat ton officials said the Soviet trend should be
vlewl!!l as an attempt to modernize Its nuclear arsenal In
anticipation of a new arms-control agreeemen't with the United
' · States and as an attempt to get rid of problem weapon systems:

purclloood.

ow

COPYRIGHT 1!11111- THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY. NOV. 12. THROUGH SATURDAY, NOV.
18. 1989, IN POMEROY. OHIO
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.

•
rtces.

n

ore.

•,

Navy declares 48-hour

..

'safety stand down'

THANKSGIVIIIG
HOURS ..
.
YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER
STORE WILL CLOSE AT
MIDNIGHT ON
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 22nd.

WASHINGTON &lt;UP() -, The
Navy Is hoping Its unprecedented
48-hour safety "stand down" ot
all of Its shlpa, aircraft and shore
training facilities Will Improve
readiness and help end a recent
string of deadly accidents.
"We're not an unsafe organiZation," Insisted Adm. Carlisle
Trost, chief of naval operations.
"We operate on a day-to-day
basis In a hazardous environment ... It's passlble to operate
safely."
Trost and Navy Secretary H.
Lawrence Garrett on Tu~day
order~!!! the Navy-wide 48-hour
•'safety stand down'' within three
days, with tbestartiJI&amp; ttme to be
decldl!!l by Individual neet
commanders!
'the order directs that a close
review ·of all safety-relatea
Issues be conduct~!!!, but differ:
ent ships and facilities will be
conductlllgthe reviews at different times, meaning the nation's
naval forces Will maintain most
of their punch.
Navy spokesman Lt. Cmdr~
Craig Quigley said there has
never been a Navy-Wide safety
"stand down" order IK!fore.
Trost told Pentagon reporters
he wu concerned about the
mtahaps, though he found "no
common thread" to them, and
order~!!! the stand down "to tal&lt;e
a look at what may have cauSed
thta fturry or accidents."
He aald the recent rub of
accldenta ''mal&lt;es me wonder'' If
operatlllg or safety p~l!!lures
have gotten lax and could, be
Improved. Trost aald he does not
know If the 48-hour stand down
will result In such changes and
that he will wall to hear back
from his fteet commanders after
the review Is completl!!l.
But, he said, the review Is
expected to . "Improve readl·
ness" by ensuring lhat sailors
and officers "take no shortcuts"
that could Impair safety.
Tbe order came a few hours
alter the Navy's fourth accident
In sbc days, a fire aboard the
helicopter carrier USS Inchon In
Norfoll&lt;, Va., that left more than
30 people lnjurl!!l.

·· open
Thanksgiving
Day
Bam
Til . .
Re-Open At 7am On
Friday, Nov. 24th.
I

•

'.
lARGe

Ro!;olds,.,.,
----•u•.s•.•G•R•AIIIDIIIE•A-liP}
16-LBS. AND UP

99 C

Save Kroger register receipts for
free :IBM computers in schools.

II your local Kroger Store Manager and enroll in this
exciting new educational program to obtain a FREE IBM
Personal System/2~M computer with printer for your
school. We'll give you a $2~,000 bonus in receipts just
for signing up. There's no limit to the number of
computers with printers your school can earn. Start
saving your Kroger register receipts and call for details
today. Kroger cares about your children's education!

P...t

HERRUD ROYAL CROWN WHOLE
14-17-LB. AVG, WATER ADDED

California
Celery

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Hams

Stalk

Pound

GOV'T GFiAOED
GRAIN FED BEEF BONE IN

Ribeye
Roast
Pound

"AS ADVERTISm ON TV"

Shelled
~nglish Walnuts
Pound

NATURAL

Kroger
Ice Cream

Bean

Av1NiaAfllrlov.

branch o! the Treuury DepartWASHINGTON (UPil
Health war nines start appearing ment - failed to draw up tourh
on all alcoholic beverages Satur- regulatlollll to enaure such warnday, but consumer groups and lllp grab collllumlt's' attention.
"What I've - n 10 far II not
lawmakers accused the lnduttry
satisfactory,"
said Tburmond,
of trying to hide the messar~Is next
whose
17th
birthday
Sen. Albert Gore, 0-Tenn., aald
month.
Tuesday that most of the warnIngs he has seen "are almost 1 Like others at a news confer·
ence Tuesday, be noted the tiny
Impossible to read."
·.
But James Sanders. president type and lnc:Onsptcuous placeof the Beer Institute, said, "Now ment or many warnlllp mal&lt;e
Is not the time to nit-pick the them nearly Invisible to the
labels or to extend them when average COI!llumer.
Gore clalml!!l the Bush adminthere Is no proof they'll do any
Istration bowed to lnduatry com·
good."
The mesAges, which ~ law plaints about the warnln( plan
must appear on all beer, ,[Wine and pressurl!!l ATF to mollify
· and liquor contaiMrs. irlarn manufacturers with soft
·
pregnant women that they. run regulations.
"Jnduatry
snapped
Its lingers
the rlsl&lt; of birth defects If they
and
the
administration
sat up
drink, and remind motorists that
·
and
obllll!!l
their
wishes,"
Gore
drlnklllg Impairs their ability to
said.
drive.
Tburmond said ATF officials
Regulations allow the print ot
him they would present htm
tokl
tbe warnings to be less · that
With
a better warning label plan
one-tenth o! an Inch high.
Sen. Strom Thqrmond, R-S.C .. by Saturday, when the labeling
who sponsor~!!! the first legisla- requirement takes effect.
Gore said that If the bureau
tive attempt at alcohol warntnes
20 years ago, said he was pleased Calli to do so, he Will introduce
Congress finally tool&lt; action In legislation to make sure warn·
1988, requiring warnings similar logs are In readable type and
prominentlY placed.
to those on clgaret te packs.
Catherine Belter, 'a spol&lt;eswo"Many Americans are not
man
for the National PTA, said
aware of the adverse effects
the
cu~nt
rules for warning
alcohol use may llave on their
labels,
which
allow O.OIIIncb type
health," Tburmond said.
on
the
side or a bottle or
placl!!l
Alcohol abuse and relatea
"an,
"shows
a
dlsrerard for the
problema cost the Unitl!!l State~~
public's
health."
.
· nearly $120 billion each ~ear,
Frederlcl&lt;
Goodwin,
adDr.
federal officials estimate.
Despite the legislative victory, ministrator of the Alcohol, Drug
Tburmond said he Is disap- Abuse and Mental Health Admin·
pointed the Bureau of Alcohol, Ia tratlon, SJ!Id be supporta efforts
Tobacco and Firearms - a to mal&lt;e alcohol warnings more

Under the tradtna ayatem, any
udlltyseel&lt;tngtoexpalldrenerattng capacity - and therefore
emtasions- would havt!tOoftaet
that lncreue by obtalnlll)l addl·
Ilona! pollution permlta from
planta that havt! reduced emilislons beloW their authorized
levels and tbua have excess
pollutiOn rtpts to ~ell.
Among other problems, oev·
era! senaton complained that
most of the permits would be held
by utllitle~~ In the dirtiest atates
and they mlgbt "hOIIJ'j(" those
pollution rights for thelrOWD ~~~e.
Jn contrut, they aald udlltlell
that already have reduced emillatons might have difficulty obtalnlng the additional pollution
permits ihey would need If they
decided to expand generating
capacity.
·

The spokesman said that the
White House Is confident all will
be shipshape for the superpower
tall&lt;s. "Tbere Is no concern at
all," he said.
Trost told fleet commanden
they should "leave no stone
unturned to ensure safely of
operation.s Is foremost In the
mlllds or all hands from the deck
plate to the bridge."
"The obligation we have to
brlllg every sailor home safely
and husband tbe scarce resource
o! combat readiness dictates a
hard look at all levels and at
every detail," Trost said.
Tbe order requites fleet commanders to provide a report oil
"!IDY lesson learned as a result of
the stand down and any additional action which may be
required to further safety In
jlerformlng the Navy's mission." ·
Quigley said. "The purpose Is
... to put aside whatever It Is that
normally takes up your working
day and focus attention on
working procl!!lures and the
safety procedures that accompany them."
"Given the series of recent
Navy accidents. this was the
prudent thing to do." Quieley
said.
At least 65 people have been
killed this year In Navy accidents. Including 47 sailors who
WASHINGTON (UP_~~L::­
died In a gun turret explosion
Tbree
elderly California ~n
April 19 aboard the battleship
who
lost
their life savln&amp;li by
·ussiowa.
lnvesllng
In
uninsured bo~ 101d
On Sunday, the Navy destroyer
through
Lincoln
Savings &amp;!Loan
USS Kinkaid and a merchant
blamed
Sen.
Alan
.€radsto!l,
ship collldl!!l near Singapore,
0-Callf.,
for
their
losses.
killing a navigator a board the
"I felt he was really the· one 1
destroyer and slightly Injuring
who
swlndll!!l us," said CODDle
five otlle'r sailors.
Wlcksman
of West Hllbl, a
A day earUer. two Navy attacl&lt;
jets overshot their target during 78-year-old English lmmtlrant
a training mission In Southern who bought $25,000 worth of the
California and dropped 12 live now-worthless bonds. "It bu
bombs near an occupied desert affectl!!l our lives, just devastat·
campsite. One man was slightly lng us, as It was our life's
Injured by a ftylng rock and a savlnrs."
The testimony came Tuesday
mobile home was damaged east at hearlllg of the House Banking
of Salton Sea, Calif.
Committee, which Is lool&lt;lng Into
Last Thursday, a Navy jet
the scandal surrouftdlng the
crashed Into an apartment com- Irvine, Callf.·basl!!l thrift. Tbe
plex In Smyrha, Ga. , causing a roles of · Cranston, and Sens.
huge fireball that gutted the Dennis DeConclnl, 0-Artz.; John
building and Jellied two people.
McCain, R·Arlz.; and John
Some of the other fatal accl· ·Glenn, D.Qhlo, are being looked
dents were: a pilot attempting at after Edwin J. Gray, the
his first carrier landing crashl!!l
former chairman of the Federal
Oct. 29 on the USS Lexington In
Home Loan Bank Board, testithe Gulf of Mexico, l&lt;illlng five fied last weeI&lt; they asl&lt;ed htm to
sailors: on May 9, a fire on the
withdraw a regulation opposed
Navy supply ship White Plains
by Uncoln Chairman Cllarles
-killed sbc; 11_nd an explosion and
Keating · of Arizona, who made
fire on the carrier USS America
large contributions to all tbelr
May 14 killed two .
campaigns.

Blames senator ·

~slble.

'. He also urgl!!l that some·
warnings be printea Ill Span lab,
lind al10 be targeted at "high·
rtak' • groups lll&lt;e teenarers.
"We cannot torte~ of all drup
tn thls country, alcohol is the No.

1 l&lt;lller and the No. 1 health

problem," GoodWin aald.

COllY'S CUSSIC

l

FALL CLEARANCE
SEUcnONS LIIII1'ED

Corky's Classics
112 WD1 IIAIN

"2·1151

PO"R?l

OPIII11L 1 - . 10·7

MON., wa., ,._I SAl. 10.5

Shop 'Til
You Drop
Be Our Guest
• Free Shuttle Service

$~5

to
CityA...
Center
Mall &amp;
Lane
Center

00*

• Champagne &amp; Bubble Bath

to warm you when you return.
• Complimentary c;ontinental

Breakfast
• Free Hotel Part&lt;ing
328 West Lane Ave.

Columbus. Ohio

plus tax
."'-

"t1r'

\\ofldo~

~N\:

1141211 4141

as

•
•

•

.•

-•

•

~

ALL VARIETIES

Laundry
Detergent

L'eggs
Pantyhose

GIFT GUIDE EDITION

••
,,•"

Wednesday, Novelllller 22nd

•
•• ·

CAFFEINE FREE DIET
CAFFEINE

~

Diet ,

38-oz.

Plir

t

•I•~

,r

COPY

E

Call

t

....•
I

REGULAII

•

..

SCINT IRIGHT LIOUIO ILEACH
CIAUON •.. 7110 ·

•
~

2-ltr.

•

~

I

.

Pomer~y

Flower _S~op

H2·201t :

MOIDAY, . . . . . . 20th

DAILY

992·2156

and ask for display adverti. . .

tft-6454

106htiii. . An.
Cllle

,,

'

50°/o OFF

~

OFF

•

2000.

Alcohol ·health warnings ·start ·_this week

~

30%
I

The bill goes to the full
environment committee; Which
Is expect~!!! to make more a~bstandal chanres to 1Jush's proposal when It meets Tbursday·.
Tbe quick committee action, Is
part of a drive by Senate
Democratic leader George Mit·
chellofMatne toensureclean·alr
lerlalatlon ill reported to the full
Senate before 'nlanksglving.
Before the subcommittee vote,
Mitchell said that if the committee met that .schedule, he would

-~

..• ,.09

'1ba Video"

2000.

.Senate when Coqreaa returned
from • Its holiday recrsa In
January.
However. clean-air lerlalatlon
has stalled In the House. where
members ot the Ener(Y and
Commerce Committee are
squabblln&amp; over cost-sharing
propoaala desl)llled to reduce the
burden of acid rain control on
Midwest atates, the largest emitters o! sulfur dioxide pollution.
Tbe Senate acid rain bill ill
similar to Bulb's plan In that It
would require the nation's 107
dirtiest coal-burning power
plants to cut their sulfur·dioxide
and niii'OIIen oxide emillslollll.
TbOlle two pollutanta play the key
role In the formation or acid rain
blamed for damare to lal&lt;es,
atreama and fol'l!lta In the
Northeast and Canada.
The Senate bill al10 would set
up Bush's proposed "pollution
permit" trading system, desl(lled to enaure that ac~ rain
emilllollll do not rtae after the
year 2000, thus eroding the
poilu don rl!!luctlona to be

pressed coneaaubout tbe compUCated pollution permit tradln&amp;
1 ystem.
Busb'a plan calla for tbe
rovrerJI'IItnt to allot pennlts to
utllltlea glvinreach power plant ·
the "right" to emit a apeclfled
level of pollution atter the year

achieved In tbe lttOa.
To make the permit ayal8m
worl&lt;able. Sell8te Democratic
leaders abandoned tbelr preflous plan to slagle out 20 power
planta to achieve the pollution
reductions. Tbey aald the 20plant scheme would have
cramped 'tbe permit trading
system too much.
The Senate bill retained
Democratlc-aponsored reqlllrementa that utllltlel rl!!luce nitrogen oxide emlastollll by 2 miiUon
tollll more than Bulb'• propoaal
would demand. .
Tbe Senate bill al10 contalllll
new provlslolllll'I!Wardlqatatell
that already have reduced em illslollll to low levels and llllltalled
scrubbers on more than 50
percent of their coal-fired power
planta.•"Ciean" states would be
exempt from pollution reduc·
lions until tbe year 2000. Sbc
states currently qualify for the
exemption: M!IIJieiOta, Montana. New Mexico, North Da·
l&lt;ota, Wyoming and Utah.
While the subcommittee voted
unanimously to approve the
legislation, several 1enaton ex·

••

3-lb.

..

·

J J make
clean-air leatslatlon tbe
first order o! bull-• for the

WASHINGTON (UPil ·
A
Senate panel approved •n 'ckl
raJa control bill that .cloiely
mtrroraPresldentBusb'spiaJ!by
callln&amp; for a 10 mllllpn-ton
reduction In aulfur dloxideer;Slollll and a celltnll on poilu n
af!Bthe year 2000.
'
By a vote of 13-0 Tuesday · the
Senate Environment and ~lc
Worl&lt;a Committee's subcommlttee on environmental protection
adopted leglalatlon that, with
oaly a few changes, embraces
Bush' a blueprint for halvinr
sulfur dioxide emtaalollll trqm
U.S. power plants by the year

•

OA ·BOILED CUSTAAO

BATMAN

The order also comes with the
Navy In the forefront of lnterna·
Ilona! relations - a U.S. vessel,
as yet unspecified, Is schedllll!!l
to host one-half of the Mediterranean summit at sea next month
between President Bush and
Soviet leader Mll&lt;hall
Gorbacllev.
At the White House. wllere
officials are preparing for the
Dec. 2·3 summit, a spokesman

.

~-GIUon

I

,

.

Frozen Young
Turkeys
'.

U

said the Navy notified it of lhe
action "through the chain of

command."

The Ddt 81 iONI f'IIJF 11 :

Senate panel appro~es acid rain controls:·

Soviets reportedly cut
military spending: CIA

I

••IIIICifk:llll'

Pomlloy-Midclllport. Ohio

VtulrnliiY, Nolsllnllll'16, 1888

turk dinner OR Tb!Uidayat tile.• ' Sonlf!tywlll,meetat &amp;p.m. on tbe
l'tfiDDLEPO!tT -Tbe Meigs
POMEROY . - ,:I'be · Po-fOY
. ltutlalld Grade ..SchOdl bpglnnJni · . Po!MI'O)'. par)llng,lot. oi'4J'hun· ~ J .imior JliiiJ,foot,ball bJinquet ~U · Chapter of A.A. •'!d AI-A11Qn _.'
a.t ·5 p.m. ·Tickets cd be pur· · day · for ' tbe · ·Myst.ry·· trip.
be held ThuJ:'!IdaY lt j;: 30 p.m. at
will Jlleel Thursday at 7 P-llt¥~ ~ •
chased by an.'y fire deparllnent , .IIJembersa:re tobrlng .111dlli!y tor t¥ .' jllrilor hleh. scllool. Each :. Sacred _H eart Catholic ~urch . .
· . , . shoppq and eatlng...Members . pareD,~ Is te brlllg ' two cover~!!! For more Information call
. member.
OAII; HO:i · -The Ewings_· .areal~tobrlllg~an~. goodsfor . dishes.
. ··
1~333-5051.
Chapter .Sons of the Ame(lcan · .t~e~yfamlly. ·•.· ·
· · ·
·'
·
· . ROCK SPRINGS -The Rocl&lt;
' ReVolution wm ·meet .at Uwls
. •
. .
POMEROY -Thursday lias. 'Springs Better Healtlf'Ciub will
meetTbursdav all: 15p.ni: at the
Fa"mliyRestautantinOai&lt;Hillo,n . REEDSVILLE. -The RIYI!r~ IM!endeslgnatl!!l the Great Ambo erdThursd•v at &amp;· 30 p n\ A tour o! \!lew Garden Club ~II hold r
lean Smoke Out Day. The ar
,
th w 1-;b Mu~um .:Vilifollow the .C ilrlstmas workshop at the · meetlllg of the Pomeroy Chapter home of Nancy Grueser. Meet at
d~ .e
Reedsville C)lurch of Cbrlst on of the American Cancer Society the-Rock Springs Unltl!!l Metbodlst Church at 12:30 p.m. to car
ner.
.Thursday ·at 7:30p.m. Members will be a noon luncheon at
POMEROY -The XI Gamma are to bring gifts tor patients at Veterans Memorial Hospital on pool.
Epsilon Cllapter, Beta Sigma Phi Americare.
Thursday.

AIIIIU1IIEtl tTUI PIUCY-Eoch of , _ ldvlniMd io l'lqllifld to be
roldily ovoilablo lot -In uch K,_ Store, oxcopt
noteclln
thio oKI. K we do "'" out of on -... wo w11 o11w you your choice
of 1 comp8fllble item, when evelibte, reflecting the...,.. savings or 1 r11in·
. chock which will.,titto you 10 purdliM the-- ... II the ldvertlaed
prico w~hin 30 cllya. Only ono ~ coupon will be occoptod per ~em

I

''

\'

I

�---.--

·.

PIG• 12-The Oily 11 tdloel

Ncwembar18, 1889

People

•

'l:.dl tldl'f, Novembar 16, 1989

....

·c lassified

Cholesterol
screening slated
A linger stiCk cholesterol
screening wlll be held on Monday
evening at the Meigs County
Health Department. There will
be a S5 charge lor !be screenlDg
and appointments may be made
by calling 992-6626.

Turkey shoot set
Th~ Coolville Uons Club will
have Its annual tlll'key shoot on
Sunday from noon until dark at
the VFW club located two miles
west of CooMile on Route 50.
There will be free hot dop and
coffee available.

..

'

STORE HOURS

UfiDA'S
PAIJITING &amp; CO.

'

~·

We Reserve The Ri&amp;ht To
Limit Quantities

11111101 ldUIOII
llntal CIIIIIUJII &amp;

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

l'aintillt

FREE ESTIMATES

•••

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

.

•

••
••
·••'•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

• ••
.•.

PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., NOV. 12, THRU SAT., NOV. 18, 1989

.

.... ttoo,. .., ...........
lot . . . . for, ..

'

TO Plla AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
Meip, Gellle or M11on counti•

m~tt

Day I
1

a

•

-:

,·

,

•

.;

.

.

Pork Loin ••••• ~·•• $149
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
$
Rump Roast •••••• ~. 199
1/4

CHICKEN

·~

.

Leg Quarters .... ~ •• 39( .
HOMEMADE

Sausage •••••••••••• ~ •• 99(

MONDAY PAPER
. TUESDAY PAPER

DAY 8EFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00A .M . SATURDAY
- 2:00P.M . MONDAY
- 2:00P .M . TUESDAY
- 2:00P .M . WEDNESDAY

FRIDAY PAPER ,

- Z:OO P.M. THURSDAY

COPY DEADLINE -

r:

WEDNESDAY PAPER
'f'ttUASOAY PAPER

,.,., •
,.

- 2 :00P .M. FRIDAY

• lUNDA'¥ PAPER

Ov... 1&amp; Words
.
.20

$9 .00
S13.00

.42
.60

.a.oo

15

e1 .30 / dey

Announcements
1234-

C•rd of Thll'kl
ln Memorv
Annc;u..lctments
Gh.. eaw•r
&amp; ~ Hap_,., Ad•

61-HaullholdGoock
IZ-Sportint Goods

6 - Lolt 1nd Found

56-Pttt tor Sal11

53- AntiQutl

s•-Mitc. Mtrchlndill
65-BI.Iildi"l Suppli•

7 - Yard Sllejptid in 1dv1ncel

57 - Mr.~linllnsttuments

8 - Public Sele &amp; Auction

51 - Fruit• 6 Veg••bl•
59-For Sale or Tr~de

9-Wtnted to 8uy

Emplov rnent

Farr11

Ser vILI!s

&amp;

1 1 -- Help W.,-.ted
1 2 - Shu•tia, Wantad

following _telephone

••
••

....•
••
•'.

4•1 - Gallipolts
387 - Ch•hire
381 - Villton

,•••

Area Code 614

Area Code 304

992-Middleport
PomlfO't

e75 - Pt. Plea..nt
458 - l.eon
576 - Apple Grove

985-Cheater

143-Portland
247- Letert Fall•

2•5- Rio Gr~nde
268-Guyen Ols1.
143-Arabi e Oi11.
379-Walnut

,,'·'

M.. onCo .. WV

Meigs. Counly

Galli• County
A Nil Code 114

949 - Racine
742 - Rutland

773 - Mason

1 5 - Schoolt &amp; Instruction

.·

.•.
•i'

,...

.,'..

71 -Ar.~cot for Stle
72 - Tr11ck1 for Sele
73 - Vans &amp; 4 WO ' s
74- Motorcycl•

23 - Prof•sional Servic111

Renl blale

75-Boats&amp; Motets for Sal•

P•u &amp;
77·· Auto Repair
76-Auto

3, - Hom" tor Sale
32-Mobtlt Homes for S.le
33 - Farml for Sale
34 - Busin•• 8vll d!ngs
35 - Lots&amp; Acreage
36 - Real btate Wanted

''

Acc•101i•

78 - Camping Equipmer~t
79-Campeu &amp; Motor Homes

ljlijdlfll

81 -- Home Improve'" ent t
82-Piumbing • ·Netting

83-b.Ctva1ing

86-Mob'le Home Repair
87 - Upholtlerv

.

,

Ll.

'

'
Public N'o tlce

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
OHoro wll be raceiv~
untl the 22nd day of No...,...,., 1819 et 10:00 A.
J!ll, at the Office of Ber... rd
II. Fultz. Attorney ot l ;111'h Wilt Second Street:
.po,..oy, Ohio 41719 for
the purch•• 0( the Edne
· Cooper ,..idence. Tha r•ldenc8 cona'-t1 of 3 bedroomL kitchen, utility room
H'l bethe ond a1 cer , . . .
with centre! holt (gil orced
ir ftoor fur-(oltoiMollon
Mulberry Helghto. Pomeroy
'Qhio.
•
...cott 992-21 Be tO. funher
[mormetion.
• The right II ,.wvod to re-

n1tive 1nd treditionlll opera·

vlt1 oubmitted by ihe epptl·
cant. Further informetion
mey be obtained by contoctl"'llhe Public Utlftteo Commluion of Ohio, 180 Ent
Brood StrHI. ColumbuL
Ohio 43218-0573.
(11116, 1tc
---;;:~;;-:-':7'"-:----1

l!ct •nv o.. oft, bldo.

, Borbero White, E-ter tlf
• tho Eoute of Edna Coopoir
1111 15. 1tc

,•

Cabbage ••••••••••••~". •• 19 C
FLAVORITE
$ 59
2°/o ·Milk •••·•••••••6:~.. 1

•
•

•'

• •

BLUE BONNET

.

Margarine ••••••••'!. 2/ Sl
Crackers •• ~ ••••• !;~:~~ .. 99&lt;
FOX DELUXE
7.soz. 69&lt;
Lotsa Pop •••••••••• 2/ $1 Frozen Pl.zza •••••••••

Pumpkin Pie •••::.•:. $11 9

2 LITER IR.

TIDE DE1EIGENT
1470L

$649

Uooll I r.c .._
11oM Oolr At'""'' Soopa_ ...

lloMS... .... lltlroSII.IIer. II, ltlt

'.

MOUNTAIN TOP

ZESTA SALTINE

WELCH'S

GRAPE JELLY

99C

Uoolt I ,_ Coot11oM 0o1r At,....., s.,._ur
.... ........ lltlroSot..... l ......

IIG CHIEF

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

:A':

GRAN. ·SUGAR ·

.:: s119

.99C

Uoolt I ,_ Coot-

s.,__...

11oM 0o1J At ........,
lloMSooa.Mow. lltlroSot.lle9.11, ltlt

·~------------------------------------------------~--~----~~--.~--------~--------~-------

u.it 1 Pw Cwt111111
11oM Oolr At ..... ,..,._....
............ ll •• s-...... 1.. " "

•

Public NotiCe

''

..

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice lo glvlltl tt.t Fiber·
Jl~o Notwork Communice·
•iono Umltod Pllrt-ohlp
'h.. fled "" oppllcetion with
.the Public Utllltloe Commil"on of Ohio (Colo No. 89'131B·TP·ACE)
rtq-1·
irlg tu1horlty tol...,.rnunlto furnlth In·
;-chenge,
-lon oorvtceo In Athlno.
J;orrall,
Cl•k. Clinton,
Co-on. Crewford. Del•
wore. Falrflold. Foyet111,
Frentdln, Gollle, Guern-•
Hordln. Herrloon. Hlghl.,d.
f1ocking. Jeakoon. Jeffer·
10n, Uwrence. Ucking.
· Mocloon, Merion, Meigs,
Monroe. MorgM1. Mo"ow·
Mulldnvum. Noble, Pliny,
Plckewey, Pike, IIOIL Sol·
oto, T u - - . Union.
VInton, W11hlngton. • 11nd
Wyandot Countteo, Ohio.
Any Inter- peroon. firm,
corpdretton. or entity who
con . - - d cau• wily
thto oppll~tlloutd not
be tlfMied
ld tile with

tbla Com"'

wrttten

•n• on or i;tefort December
.;z. 1981. Unt111 tile Cem-

...
I

:iotMrlent to lllot effect ond
ocoompenylng rtq"!!ll
~tpr ore! h.,.rlng on ouch 11.,.. thlt mattw wit be de~dod on the belle of the In·
~iorf'conteined

In tt.e

~

,.,.'

- -be...._.nedlfaoFurtlw fnfeomcillcln

•
''

he l'ubflo Utlftloe Com·
lion of Ohio, 110 lilt
ltrMI, Columbuo.

.•

Ill Ml#hfel t, ...

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Mo.-t 2 •nd 4·CyCII
en gin•

PH. 992-3922

Public Notice

Public Notice .

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS
OF LEONA KOHL.
DEFENDANTS
CASE NO. 211,413
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

GOLDEN RAISINS .... ,: ...... ..... ... •2.69 lb.
DARK RAISINS ........................ •1 .78 lb.
MACAROON COCONUT ........... •1.141b.
UNSWEETENED MACAROON ... •1.40 lb.
ANGEL FLAKE COCONUT ......... •1 .&amp;6 lb.
CHIPPED COCONU'JI................. •2.215 lb.
MINCE MEAT ........................... •2.215 lb .

SUPPUES

~~

•

Public N otlce

. ..

···"·•

••• St....

•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

742-USS
Set...

9-20-tfn

, ALLEN'S
HAULING

'MOO GALLON
WATII SEIYICE
UMEnONE
SPIEAD
DIIT HAUUD
992-5275
5-

POMEIOY-UGUS
CLUI
liiiiiS. LL 6:45 P.M.
SUit. LL 1:45 P.M.
. . . Plllll

DEER HUNTERS
PARADISE

CONTACT: •
PAUL ILOIS 01 IMICI IDD
1

992·213 6

•LIGHT HAULING

2 H.D. FREE with coupon 11cl
Pllth• of min. H.C. Pili- '

~~~ liM~

I coupon p1f cus-'

•FIREWOOD

·tonw I* bin., MSSIOIL

w. ,, •so.oo ,. ~·

.....-.

BILL SLACK

O.tr 10 htpla 165.00

.Uc.IGOS.:tt

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS

992-2269
WENMGS -

2·3-tfn

411/ 89/tfn

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHESTD, OHIO

NEWLAND
1614) 667·3271

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING.
AT All

Gr1111t A. Newlarilr

985-4422

ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Din
·

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

224 E. MAIN ST.
. 982-9976

7-18-' 89-tfn

RADIATOR .
SER~ICE

Wt ccin repair and rt·
core radiators a!MI
heater corn. We cu
also acid boil a!MI rod
out ratliators. Wt alse
repair Gas TIds.

1

GUN SHOOT
RACINE

PAT HILL FOlD

FURNACE

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

FURNACE

1-13-tfc

FUINACE

EVElY

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
OAS OR ELECTRIC

6:30P.M.

KEN'S APPUAIICE
SUVIQ

SAT. fiGHT
f&lt;Ktety Cilob
12 Gaugo SholgWII Only
Sfri&lt;tly EttforcH
10-!1-lfn

992-5335.,915-3561

•IN STOCK•
ZETOI TRACTORS

ROUSH
coNmucnoN

ltrno

COUNTRY

MOBILE
HOME PARI

Office

•Mobile Home
Pans
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lo1 Rentals

217 E.

INT£Rsf&amp;1T IAnEIIES
IIRNOIIZED
ECHO· YARDMAN DEALER

"2-7479

&amp;lEG I. lOIISII

•-roy,

lt. Ullertll af

WE DO SAW
REPAIR
•Saw Supplies
•Chain• •Chain Oils

Ohio
1·12-'11-lfn

EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL EIIGifiE

MOIIIS IQUIPIIINJ

YARDMAN MOWas
ECHO SAWS &amp; m.IIS
OIEGOII IAIS. CMIItS

.......

IYIII SRWICI.CMI&amp;

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

PLUMIING &amp; !EATING
..... a-lion:

ParttiS•wiceO.
VISA· MASTEACHAAGE

HOURS: Mon. -Fri. 9-7
Sat.l-5
Ctoood Suntloy

Will Video Tape
Weddings,
Bi1hdays,
Reunions, lmariQrs
of Homes for ·
Insurance.

161 Nortls Set:encl
liddhpert, Ol:io 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Wt Cerrt Fiehing SuppU•

Your Phone
_ca,bfa IIIIo Hera
IUSIIIISS PIIONI
(6141 992·6550
IISIDINQ PIIONI
(6 141. 99l!·7754

94t-Zt69

10/10/ 11 tfn

Announcements

(all 742-2486

After 5

CHIPWOOD
WANTED

Roger Hysell ·
Garage

W. Ya. Chipping,
IIIC.
lacksprinp lei.

II. 124, Potntroy Ohio

,_,.,,Ollie

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
~I••
•

PH. 992·3561

T
r••••l••l••
PH. 992-5682

Buying Hours;
7:30-8:00
Mon. 1hru Fri.
7 :30-4:00 Saturday

DUll to dntruction of prcpiFIY,
No Hunllng or Troo-lng II ol-_ ,on ..Clyde
llowori; Jr.o
Alllton,.......,

llylin """Arrington .......
- - yourWolghl, Tau.._

Shope Olat Pion" ond EVAP

water Pllto. Anlloblo ot Fruth
Pllermocy.

or 992-7121

(11) 7-'1!1-1110.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSEU
SIDING
CO.
. . . ._
...t
"FreeE111Im81•"

PH. 949·2101
or ln. 949·2160
NO SUNDAr caus

CUSTOM IUI.T
! HOMES &amp; GUAGES
"At leeoaaltle Prices"

PH. 949·2101
or les. 949-2860
I
Doy or Night
NO SIIN.OA Y CAUS

3-11-tfn

c,

Giveaway

4

1 ,.Mile cock....,.., 2 yrs. old,
1
........
port L.obroclar - · '
mo.
oici,I14-44Wt44.

S kilt- 2 ceto, I - t c
..... 10 month old~.......
Spitz. Prefw older c
. lt4t02-tl'l2orlt4-1182-3Z .

eocw 8ooniol m~a
puppl11, 304475-712i.

• - old

loltle • • oook lion. Oven
d.... l - " · CoQ t14-74Z-2$07.

Ktttono. one long hllrod Cottco,
-..71-1145.
llolhor

Pupplal

Televislon Listeninc

roatotolod

Oemwn Bhophanl,

:til4-e71-

.Dependitblt llllrina Aid S.les &amp; Setvi1~ p;";jii·~-~moiO!Oi;;-;;-Wkl:
'Hurinl Enluatlons For All Aces
i ~~. ~~..;.~:,"~

:r,er.

z·

! licensecf CHniCII NKJioiO&amp;ist

I

'""'10

•Gravel

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Factary Choktd 12
Gauge

- LISA M. KOCHJ ~.S •

114 ACRES LOCATED IN
ORANGE TOWNSHIP, OFF
CHERRY RI~GE.
51.1ASTU.

located Behind
Tractor Deal••hip

To tM unknown helr1.

'Bakf•t
Supplies

'

DINEm sm

....... I£(UNfiS

Bathcna Building

Fresh Hon•av
Fralt Cake

CANDY·

IEDIOOM SUII'fS

FIRE DEn•

Md

89-DR-209 In the Court of
Common Pie• of Meigs
County. Ohio 4S769 fltod .
onAugult11, 1988.
Vou are required to anaww Mid Coniplaint within
2B doya from the tut publi·
c.tion of the notice which
ohotl be published once eoch
Public Notice
wHil for oil consecutive
The l•t pubUcetion
_...;:._________ 1WHb.
wit be modo on tho15thdey
tN THE COMMON PLEAS
of November, 1989~
COURT OF MEIGS
tn cue of your feil"'o to
COUNTY. OHIO ·
enaw.r o·r otherwiaa r•·
DON ITA APRIL POOLER, • pond 11 requkod by the Ohio
PLAINTIFf:
Ruloo of ClvA Procedure, the
-VSPlaintiff,
Oonit1
April
DAVID ELLIOTT
Pool•. wMI be granted a di·
HENDRICKS,
vorce M dem.,ded in h•
DEFENDANT.
Complaint; wiU be given an
CAllE No: 89-DR-209 equitable dlvilion ot propNOTICE BY PUBLICATION arty; and potentially ali·
To Devld
E1Hot1 Hen- mony.
dri~. whose piece of r•i-L•rry Spencer. Clerk of
dance ia unknown. you are
Coun1 of Meigs County
hereby notified that you ere
Common Ple• Court
named Defendant in 1 dlBy Marlene Harrilon.
vorce ectlon ontMtod Donlto
Dep~ty
Apr~ Pootw, Plolntiffvo. De- (101 1 1. 18, 2&amp;; (1111. a. 15
vld Ettlot1 Hondrlcb, De- &amp;tc
fendant . Thia action h•

-4321t·OI73.

:,

SMALL ENGINE
IE PAll
"-'*'•tV..yl Lu

devil-. 81'1d next of kin of
Leon• Kohl, whoM nem•
•nd eddr•. . are unknown
end cannQt whh r-onoble
diligence be ooCMtolnod.
YOII ere hereby notified thll
you hove- nemod · deMndenta in a legal action entitled Froddlo Houd•helt.
~.Mo~.M~ow.Mu•
Adminlotmor of the Eotote
klnvum.
Noble,
Perry,
of Leona Kohl. Ptointlff. vo.
Plckewey, Pike. Root. SciRuth McElroy. Et AI.. O.
oto,
Tu~earewM. Uni:on.
fendenta. Thla IICiion hllo
Vinton, W81hil1gton, end
bHn •aigned Caae Number
WyMdot Countloe, Ohio.
25,413andll penclnglnthe
Any interested peraon, firm,
Court of Common PI•• of
corpor'etKtn, or entity who
Melgo County. Probete Divicon ohow good cou• why
sion, Pom•oy. Ohio 411789.
thia appllcetion ahould not
The object of thlt combe grentod should flte with
plaint le to give the above
thia Commillaion • written
n1med Plaintiff the author~
otot...,ont -ltlng the rulty toHittherMI lletlofthe
sone on or before Oee~mber
dooedent, Leone Kohl. de2, 1989. Unten tho Com·
scribed in Volume 241, P•g•
miaaion r~~clivn 1 wrinen
743.
Meigo County DHCI
'~tatement to that effect and
Recorcll. ond the pr.,.. Ia
•n eccomp1nying request
thll the rlghto. Int-I ond
for oral hearing on auch ia·
Uono ofellportloebefullydesue, thfto molter wRI be cia·
termlnod, odlu~llnd procidod on the b•la of the lntected end thet thl Plolntlff
formetion conteined in the
be 1111horllod to Hllthe rHI
epplicetion and the afflda- 114!en aslgnld CMI number
ntote In order to pay the
IWrtt of the d 1 c1c1Mt.
You ere required to In54 Miscellaneous
- • the compt..,. wMhin
Public Notice
28 dayolft• the loot pubtl·
Merchandise
cation
thlt notice which
11!0'~~"""'.-,;;;;,;;~;;;;~--fNI.•IIiirlj! ~------,----"" witt be ofpubflahed
enceweok for olx ou-sive
NOTICE OF
' w - . the lilt pubiiCIIIIon
wHI be mode on the 22nd
APPOINTMENT
DF FIDUCIAllY
dey of N......,ber, 1981.
On Octoblir 28, 1989, in'
In CMt of your flllurt to
the Mtip County Problite' lnlwet or otMrwke ,...
Court, Cue No. 28393. pond 11 required by the Ohkt
Dougt• W. Ut1lo. 211-21!! Ruloe of Clvl Prooeclue,
Eut s-nd Stroot, P. 0. · judgment by d.t.. tt wNt be
Box 888, llomoroy, Ohio ronwod ogelnat you for the
411769. wu appointed Exe- reli.t d...,endedln the comcutor of the ntetl of Relph plolnt.
CHOPPED DATES ..................... •2.47 lb.
Swon, Jr., dec-od. tote o( Doted: October 13. 1989.
Dexter Rood, Langavltte,
Leno 1(. N•llfrood.
FRUIT MIX ................................ •1.80 lb.
Clerk of Courto
Ohio 4574t.
FANCI FRUIT MJX ..................... •1 .8.0 lb.
Moigo County Common
Robert E. Suck,
MELO FRUIT l\'lfX ..................... •1 .80 lb.
.
Probeto Judge
PI- CCMJrt
RED CHERRIES, ..................... :. 1 ~.&amp;0 lb.
Lena K. No.,.elrood. Clerk
Probete Dlvloion
(11)1. 8,18, 22, 4tc
(10) 18.211:
GREEN CHERRIES ......... -: ......... !3.615 lb.
(1 11 1, 8, 1&amp;, 22, etc
CHERRY Plf!IEAPPLE ................-.3.40 lb.

:'!PPIIcetion end the ofllclo·
;;pte oubm- tty the opplf-

:t'l1l 111. 1ta

::

1

*"fnlllion rewtv• • written

,)

.;g

n

- - e n t cllloiltng the rN·

DAVE'S

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
FREDDIE HOUDASHELT,
ADMINISTRATOR OF THE
ESTATE OF LEONA KOHL.
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
RUTH McELROY,
Md
JACK McDONALD. '
ond
JOSEPH McDdNALD,
ond
GEORGE COLLINS
TREASURER.
MEIGS COUNTY

. .

tor MrVicea in Athena, C.rrell, Clerk. Clnton, Coshoc·
ton. Crowlord. Dol-oro,
Folr11efd, Fev.ne. Franklin.
Gellle, G..m_, 'Henlln,
Horrlaon, Hlghlend, Hoell·
Jeclson, Jefforoon,
lng.
Lew-. Uclolng. Medi·
MJn, Merion. Meigs. Mon-

13

L. W.
STEWART
TRUCKING

UVIIG lOOM Sllns

EVERY· SUNDAY
Beginning Sept. 17

992·5335 or 915·3561
Acr111 F.- Pott OHia
POMEIOY HIO

85-G•nfl'•l HIUiing

..
•

''

UN'S APPUAIICE
SERVICE

84-Eiectriul &amp; R•frfo•ation

992-2156

$ 29
Chuck Roast ••••L:.••• 1
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
$ 89
Chuck Roast ....l:·... ,1
ECKRICH
$149
Bologna ................
·

90 DAY WIDAIITY
WASHD$-$100 up
DIYEIS-$69 up
REFIIGEIATOR$-$100 up
RAIIGIS-Gis-Eitc.-Sl25 up
FREilU$-SI2S up
IICRO OVU$-$79 up

.

BunERBALL-1 0-22 LB.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE

USED APPUANCES

Stratton.

Sr.rvices

41 - Houses for Rent
42- Mobile Homes for Rent
43 - Farms tor Rent
44-Aplrtment tor Rer~t
45 - Furnt&amp;h.ci Rooms
46 - Spaee for R1nt
47- WI"ted 10 Rant
48-Equipmen~ for Rent
49 --For L•••

Turkeys ~ •••••••••••L:.•••• 99&lt;.

USED FURNITURE

1

Stock Pln1 for
HDqietite. Weeduter,
TeCUmtloh. Briggs &amp;

....

Oet Rttults fast

..,-,'

RACINE
GUN. CLUB
GUN ·SHOOT

·CLEARING

2, - Rutin•• Opportunity
22-MOnfV to loan

895 - letlft

867-Coolville

)' •

Iefort 6 1'-IIL ll•t ..._

16130/'H tfn

Tr~nsport at10n

882 - New Haven

937-8uft alo

Llvv~luck

62- Wanted to Buy
63-livestoctl
64-Hav &amp; Gr•in
65-Seed &amp; ferlililer

11 - Ridio. TV • CB Repair
17 - Miscellentout
. 1 8 - W•ued To Do

e.xchan/{&lt;'S ...

Suppltt~~

01 - Ferm Equipment

, 3 - lnsurance
14 - Busin•s Training

Classified pafles cm·er the'

".

AFTD 6P.M.

(614) 915·4110

.06 / dey

M1: rchan rli s 1:

!r"

• f

.so

VBY •450"'• I
Hl¥1-IICB

fnr 11f!h

"A CIIUifled I(Ne"ilemtftt pl.ced in The01ily Sentinelle,. .
cept - c:IMiified dis pit~¥, Bulin•• C1rd and leg II notic:esl
will •lao """' in . the P1 . PleJUnt Register and the Gelli·
polie Daily Tribune. r. .ching over , 8,000 hom~ .

• ••
,.

Rate
$4.00

A.t• .,. tor conllo.ttlwe•uns. brokfn upd~swill bach1rged
as
ads.
'

he pre-

tv.,.

•.

15
15
15
15

6
10
Monthly

.;;,;,;.. e .50 dtlcount for tds Plid in 1d¥1nce
... - Giveeway end Found ads und• 15 words will be
run 3 d~~r• II na c:h•1e.
'
""ict of ad for·ell c.lflhlllcters is double price of ad cost.
"7 pot~ line
only Ulld.
•• ....,.... it not respons'ble for .,-rou after fiul d._, , !Check
for errOfl ftrst dl';' ad runs in 'P.,....I Cell before 2:00p.m .
dw aft• publiCIIIion to mike c;orreclion.
•Actt thllt mu.c tile peid in ...Vence are
Card of Th.,kl
Happv Adl
In MemorieM
Yatd Sal•

••

Word•

,.

Sa llinai-Paga

The

Business Services

•

in the news
By WILLIAM C. TROTT
Unite• l'reM bier..&amp; lou!
SAM'fl Till!: MAN: Stars like
Mlcbael ladll•. BUJ CMJ&gt;y,
Fraak Slnat ra .. Eddie Buplly,
Clint EuiW_.. and lleb Bepe
were gushing owr Sanuny Davta
Jr. Monday night. ']Jie occasion
was tbe taping of a two-hour ABC
special to celebrate Davis's 60th
anniversary in show busiDHS
and raise money lor the United
Negro College Fund. ''We're
simply grateful that we can be
here for Sammy tonllht - he's
the best," Sinatra said. Talking
about what makes Davis special,
Dionne WU'Wiek said, '1t's
spelled with four letters L-0-V -E. And let me tell you,
Sammy'd do anything you asked
him to do and he always haa."
Davis, 63, seeming overwhelmed
by tbe tributes as hestoodquietly
oCfs tage tal king to Jackson and
Sinatra, appeared tired and had
a red blotch on h1s neck from the
treatment he has been undergoIng for throat cancer.
CAP IS THE TARGET:
Former defense secretary Cu·
par Weinbe~er was the target of
protesters' eggs and tomatoes
Tuesday during an appearance
with the duchess of York, tbe
former Sarah Fer...-, at Leeds
University in England. Neither
Weinberger nor Fergie was hit
but a bagornour landed near the
duchess. The ],500 protesters
denounced Weinberger as a
warmonger because of U.S.
support for the Contras In Nicaragua but Weinberger said the
reception didn't bother him. In
fact, he said'll made him feel like
he was back in the United States.
FAMU.Y MATTERS: W.Mpl
Goldbel'l became a erandmotber on her 40th birthday. Her
unmarr~d daughter, AI_.
dria, 15, gave birth to a 6-pound,
15-ounce baby girl Monday mornIng. Baby Amarah Skye, her
mother and grandmother are
doing fine ... Kelly McGillis's
next role Is motherhood bUt she
hopes to return to The Shakespeare Theatre at the Folger in
Washington someday. The pregnant McGillis -Is leaving the
Folger at the end of her run In
"Twelfth Night" on Nov. 19,
meaning she's dropping out of
scheduled appearances in "Mary
Stuart" and"TheMerryWlvesof
Windsor." "I respect and admire
the work of The Shakespeare
Theatre and 1 hope lo relwa Ia
the future." she said.
PULITZER CASE: Rol1811ae
Pulltser and her ex-husband,
newspaper heir Peter Pulitzer,
are stillgotng at it. Roxanne, who
wrote a steamy autobiography
after her lurid 1982 divorce, has
asked a West Palm Beach, Fla.,
court to grant her more visitation
time with her 12-year-old twins
Mack and Zack. She currently
has a bout 72 days of visitation a
year but claims Peter, who lives
with the boys on a ranch in
Okeechobee County, has
lhwarted her visits. The matter
comes up for judicial review on
Jan. 16.
BUYING GOODWIU.: David
Rockefeller told Japanese businessmen they should consider
spreading around some charity
money If they want to be
accepted in the United States.
The fonner chairman of Chase
Manhattan Bank, speaking at a
Tokyo symposium Tuesday, welcomed the buyout of New York's
Rockefeller Center but warned
the Japanese mogula they need to
be aware of the brewing antiJapanese sentiment. "If your
. presence is to be accepted, my
countrymen need ... to sense you
care, that you are w!IHng to
adjust," Rockefeller said. "Japanese corporate phllantropy ...
play a constructive role In
helping defuse the crisis of
resentment
and
misunderstanding."
JURISPRUDENCE: Sly
Stone, 45, is being held In a
Bridgeport, Conn., jail on federal
fugitive charges. The one-time
leader of Sly and the Family
Stone was arrested Saturday
night and charged with fleeing to
avoid drug charges In Los
Angeles .

Ohio

% ~614) ~7619,01' (614) 992-2104
417 SICOntl Avtta~e. b 1213
- Glllipolis, Olio 45631 .

z

or
•
Veteran.s llemori•l Hospital
I ulbeny Hlf$. Pomeroy,

or317-mo.

6

Lost &amp; Found

Found tn Mln. .V'Ifle, amlll
-dog. 114-n2-3261.
LOST block ond whKt dog
•••lng cOllar na name, Let-.\

wv ...... ,M ....z.

LOST y- old mal•llocoglo with
blue conor on Jtrlcho Rd.
_ , Soo, 304-e71-t44S.
L.oet: I Booale In Qocd
.._
...,_~- Tw"""""
No0:1.11_.,..,_

RACINE GUN SHOP

4H1t IIUSIIIOUOW D.

GUNS·
12 Ga. DEER SLUGS ••• S2.20 lox
GIITARS &amp; GIITAR STRINGS

=
1.oc11:

eu-, -.eon 11aap
(ore!

-

... .....

~~.,. ~ - - o.....
et-n•.

7

Yard Slle

OPEN 9 AM-7 PM Mond1y-Frk11y
· S1turdly 9 1m-&amp; pm

949·2168

-·-

11·6-1110. d.

-- - --·--~----------...0

�..
•'

I

I , ·,

'

.

. .·

'.. .

&lt;'t

'

'!...

....

•• •••

· .,~ ,~

:;!{, ~

;

. . ,. • 'l!

, ·. _,..

-.

.

'

..

.. •. .

.,...

eleviston .~ .

. ·.·

·.Viewing
•

. WID •• HOy. 11 c.M ,~

..,

..

. ptJUtl

·• "OIIaarranvo '"""' el · "" .
•
'"'" ocro""'lod ,...,... boo
. _ law Ia form four ~. .lo. -.11.

I
I 1 L 1 1 r_
s L E.H I :F·
1

.....

~~=::::•· And

.

e (Z (i) eQ(i) ill e Cll

I. I 1· 1~ I . ·
:=::::=~J

(0:80)

'f'ES. ~AM ..I LEARNED
A LOT TODAV..JUST 8EIN6

&lt;D D1~1 ttl .lulileolllgh
818ge ~lfi)D
(J) ....,. One TV (0:30) Q

0 WOIId todliw
ill Chlrlh In eto.rge
0 .....
• AIMftcan M1g111M

DIDN'T PAV
ANifTMIN6 ~

..ERE WAS WORTH TilE

II

, COTIS

e G)) AliiiY Oollftlh

OF COURSE, I

PRICE Of APMISSION ...

s

.

,.
First woman: "Hent's a
!:' magazine that 1e11s 11ow to
.
± take five years oil your l!~eel"

I'. 1
1
.

RA KH Ew

112l

liS HIC NltiMif Newt
/ri lpartet ca~ (0:30)
(I)
ell)llteoiiiC
AIIC - • Q
&lt;D ..,.,

-

00 00! G£1 M.Y

.,.._.

~

EARN
tJ111n1 II_
llooM.
$30,
_IIONEY
_ ,_

Ollane,lll•
QICheen

IIJ .....,. VIce WhateY8r
Workt 818re0.

-,.......

"""
... • LJIIII!cs:n
lor..._..
. you, T•--.Cd~
qullfled
111 •• · - .,. ... 11 .....
hnw •
pratlufl.-..1 •
pllr•tee. In ,...,.,.. of • • or- W._lo _ _ , . . .
MN&amp;IM:•. .WU., tar...,.
lftYIIII . _ . - •rnnw.
ilotollo 011 II 114474- Iaiii¥.
Far ...._ulsa 0111 104-

AVON I AI AMo I

-··4
........ ............ ,...
D11u81 ............... ILIIOW1 1
.... ,;, -~- llir 1
01.
:

l?ll-lllll• ......., . Pll.

F

••••a.

73 Vlna&amp;4WD.' I

!11•!iia:Cct-•;;,;,j...
~;,~-;i;!-; :
•
• - 1111
.....,
ca..
!.l!:t!IJ.-!Iw••
.......
~nrr.
•

.=:

Cllan • A U tor

-No-11111 .........

.........1..-.1111.

S11io1or 12

tt.•Pf •. ~·P VAN WINfCLl/
' ,.
. Jtl(, po you
JfAVf f4. .'-OT of

1

........ JOW75.1421.

AVON • AI ..... Col llorllyn
w.vtrl01 . . . . 11

-

--· .... ,· ,........ ....
Lao...,..

-. 111111
11. . , .. ~Good . . ....

.,• • 1151.

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

, . . 1or - .

t21. -

.,..

111-4411.

.....
-- 'llloloor,104475-1111.

33 Farm11or Sill

EARN IIONEY tJ111n1 II llooM.

::V:z~
)-W'Iiat.IC-

,.._.,,
Eom -

lor Cloilll

•• - • "!!''I" lor -

_,..
-

No ......Col'•
104441·77'11
Ell.1114M
hau8.k
I

-

111111

~

t:

SCIIool• a
IIIIWCIIOn

_.

U'71.11t

111-TIIAIII-

,COI.UIGI,
ICIUTHIAST&amp;RII

1121 -

Plilo.
-No
Cll . . . . . tilT......
. .·
.

..... .....""lor,
er2.114 ttl "1'

._,_10...,......,.

llolllniollod opt, • ........
-lllloollil,- ...... ....
....... 14 ttl OUt

.:=.:..,_..

WlciMit _, If I . . . . . . . .. .
....... of •• J .... ....

--""'*-....II eo..
:ICIII

;.:I.·.:-,.-::[,.-..=:=

45

.

•. ;Jnl.........

ldoA
waR · 7 lit a 11~~:f auto
7 ..........
...
...._.,..117 •NLOood
0

~

.............,.a. .......
.. .

. . . . . . . 7 ....
JM I
I C»&gt;41140.

-771-

Sple.
...................

41

Rlnl

=r.
-----0&amp;
.....
-=····
Coull -

F1nanc1al

~--.-

..... ,. a.•- '

' h. .

Allotrlllr--.M~IDiluPL

Col1,-.WV.
........
...

--.a

2 9 'wa
-·'111 ...........
2'1t2 ... lift . . All .. 1:ot

PM.

&amp;-

....7414114.

TV..-.- ...

4 WhiiiU ... niW• .....,...

Naiii.IUt•lfll

to
- Dl,
IMillgW.
P. 0.
Rau1ew aJ, wva1M.

,
Cn':::&amp;,
211
""'_- !lolllol In
II 21
-No,..__
ColloP llo Clnl
Ott

IIDIJ.

.,_... E....... Folklbilly

a.-.. Nanci Gillfllli

'

performs lrotn AnderSon

•

Fair, singing many o1 her
hils. .

!

01 no.
a:30 Ill e!Jl 01 no. cta11
With T lnlll"td, Alli.x Is !lilt

1:05 (I) CtMII

..
--.,
..
---

...........................
...
.
=r·, ... ..,_

Clwl I =~t8a;rm,CIUI•
• ..L ... I I . I _ , _
olgn .. '"'

.,...JAl,.Clwl

57

Mullcll
lnltnllllnll

·-

I..........
;w. t.a · ~ fll!lll
114.
...,
. . . ., . . . .

Thoft,llil.

. . . .

0

...

'

,•:~

tm c."••
-114111

Clmperal

Mc!ltirHomll

•

.J,

with IUtJ)rislng dance contest
partner. (0:30) Q
1:00 eoo 1111 ~ Couf1 ~
Iarmer actrllis Is charged
with auauh. (0:301 Q
(i) e (I) Jlootlla lloiwMI,
M.D. Doogle reluctantly

'

••
·•

mak11 hiS annual flllhlng trip
witll his da&lt;l. (0:30) D

(!)

l·
-1111oaort.
"""· ._ 1m-•a.=:w111t - . ..._ ·
IRTlllllt, .
8Z,GIIIt-mtlrr.
,

&lt;D
Movere: no.l'ublc
Mind Moyara ..amlnl$ the
power of pollaters to ·

•

lnftuonce public opiniOn,
00
Jake And The
F - McCabe tnd Jake
lowatigate the death !II on

lf'~ 104-:--.:::
- 1 - - 4:GOI'II.

':
•

_
...........-.•-..ro·.
Pl.----·
..........
--..... -·
1171 ~ Town Cor, - .
1m- Plnlo, 1100. ~~~

~ .1:i

;=;::..rv.r;a

- - -......- - - - - •

81

Home

'

=~=i~~~- _2!~:::::~~- ~

0 MOVIE: Jalle lplntter,
,.,.. Ere (2:001 Stereo.
NMiwlh Now
t:30 eoo 111 ., Two The
guys consider a tell to
determine NicOle's biological
lather. (0:301 Q
Ill Culr;e . .illlolllel

1m- ...

a

'

1m~.......,III.PS,

~~ AD, AliA, 11100.
IIU-11.

PI,

.,_

,...,

=::~=1-

TIM

....... 1¥ .............. :

~~ 0111114 ~~·"'=:':

In Zlnlh ........... - - ..

;::;::,.-,! F weONe........
WY
11......

eou.., ...... -,.,...

.,

71

-:··~

CMI I a n .,., IMiak 11MJ.
l s.i
- ........-.
1111. . . . . . . . . . . . ..... ....
,.•
. .-1Mb,
11..
1171. 114-Miillll.
1111m..... 1 ........

,II, IIIIth ol ' " ' ~,.:011111, ....... c:ol

~c .:.n::
=~.:··

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

Du:XU4Iii . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
_,...,,_.~

CllempiOM

IX

,.

!

l!locly

• Hanel Orllfltlo: One '""

(

'

I

Min Who

KMw Too Muctt

' '(

n, tt

101 (A)

c··.... ..i!'

· ...

,

-~
117-

One 1'!!.,..-x. ,. ;.............1. . ..
. . . 01!* 1117 ...
Minr...,..,. 114•1
or

2 .Ill -

llg-

Fumlahld
Aooml

-----otMOIIIh.

P. 0 . . . liM.
......

tt:~=;;§
_...,lCi._

-

54· Mlsc:tllan&amp;OUI
Metchandlll

·-......--

practrn.triMI.r..........
--~---­

lor

t•

r;:tlllfJ aMI . . .
vz
1: ............. ~- ...
•u••••~F• ,

...

lnllall•
lllir_.,.,

i1111 .MOVII:
. £ ••••
TM

..,..--..

-

n

-

if:~ MOVIE:

"~ ... usa' 1111..._ ~ ·

t.ata..,._

--~-LeU
IJ,

'i:'l,..,ber.~':J 0

;.,

r•••• •• lsua

18 W..lldto Do

~ a'

K.-

Klftgdam Rebecca Intervenes
when Courtney laMs lor a

~.,

'\

=··-.
.
_,.
.
w.- ............. ,,
PI •

IL

'

oom..............,~~
...

••=• -

':

- . • .. -..a... n +--

luw I 1r: .,•_.:
..... .. ., . . , . . . p.y.al.

r

(!)

•t

__
.
-...............
.
=
--- -..
----·
- -. ;.
tllll.l1t-

Clwl-

1' I

1

•i

~~

EiUF27-Ior-lollnf.
M._,

9 Ntglll Coull

!'_Iaiii. (0:30) D
&lt;D AIMttoan Mat..,. Harold
Lloyd ft. .-red tor his ·
rollin Safety Lnt. (1 :00) Q
Ryan'• Den
111 eo.........,..

llllllhll . . . , _
COli.,
........., .... 7:11"""" '
_... ... ..... I ~
",..,.
..............

110,2'71
.. 114,11t.
I
~ Mt
-&amp;1001

OuaftlnoJol Coli

. =.,;
.

- - 111 .................. '

. . . . . .

-'!..-:·

Molorcyclel

.
1m 1T ._

;w4onllll.
-.(I) -7
-11
1 . l-

15

t.4

a

$30,000 -

101a

0~

Cllmpt. (1:00)
IJl e!Jl GniWitl(l Plln•
JaiOII II lletitant to tell
Maggio of 1111 new CllrHr

:,.,:::~,~.~-~.::::-=~-==:-::
~.-.!d.i.!!."r- ........... :.
--75 1o1ta Motors
for Sale

Rt.7,10mi. ...... 01J U ,41+

Dolollo-(1) l-·
. y.
$30.-,.- -El
·

!lf.A:~~~~

a

•

~~'r!"'J..~

EARNIIOIIEY ... f g - 1

e (I) USA Todly

alllgedly ~frauded nudist

.........
-......... ,........... .,.
P.wullllwd - . Ia '- '

7:30~~=-~·
·
(I) ll..... o-Tontght

IIITIPC8ftl
7:351]) 8lnlord And lon
1:00 IJl MOYIE: lluci:a-t Gill
(2:00)
eoo Ill Uneotoed
Ill""* A report on the
C8j)ture of a man who

ttwtfl Lf '(OV
Wf~f CJUT"'"'
$

'

LEAVE IT ON

~ LOOKY

WHAT
TATER OONE TO MY
NEW PLASTICAL
WATER PISTOL!!

(I)

TH' FLOOR-HI'LLIUIT

e(l) Anltltlnglul Love

· SorMona Is planting
unfll1terlng lteme In
Catherine's gooslp column,

IT II

(0".30) Q

- of

I 0:00 IJl 700 Club With Pot

•:

=.·.:. JJ ==::z: r

RalllriiiR

e ill

1111 au.- LHp
Sam dllandl a Southllm
biZckol
murdlr In 1867. y~':J.,Q
IJl
(I) Clilna
l..llliM' lllgal I baltll of the
blndl to 1Ue morale, (1:00)

lllololy ., •ll!o tool '"""'" ··,

ICC',....

IIUtOI

e

~~~~--.,_,
.. - I l l

~Nowa
()) AlaldCIR Ml
lJc¥1 11

fortu-

-BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

SNAFU~ ~ IInce Butde

Uti Hlrokl
,.,,._ad
lor hiS

fole In Safety Lilt. 1.1:00) Q
Ill· IIIII WIMM VInnie
atllmPIIIO .-w
~ ... high sc:liool

by maiNng $1.25 to Allro-Graph, c/o - · you ·have p1'8Ytou81y ·- .
this nenpaper, P.O. Box 81428, ~ nate your tuck II ep110 bed lnt8cl1oland, OH 44101·3428. Bilsura1o otate d.ay. Houur•. In altuatlona where
you've not -biiiMd a 11'8C!l record,
ywrzocl~.
H"Ci:C.wata~~ Tonight
IAaTT
(Now. II Dec 11) detsl'~l could be dubiOul.
OI........ Nowa
Vw'ra !lklly 1o be bel1w 11 1111nag1ng . . . . (lllr 11.,.. •1 Vow powthe I'SIOUr- ol otherl today then you PK!a lor per1011ll glln oould be 1'111her · 10:30 &lt;D Tom - · 1liiMng On
a.
wtl ~ wtlh your own, HaWIM,..,.,.. In "IHy" 1odly, 10 PIc I dcau!IOullr In II
thia your
not be COIIOTMdalntaltWL H- ' t lalla muGII
eo
- Twflglll
up to pw.
to tip 1M ec.lal tl(!llnll you.
llllllwz
• On ....
CAIIICOIII (OM. INan. 11) Try to CANCER (olunai1-.IUIJ II) H mlgltt be
keep ,our life In 11&lt;01* b1!a1011today. II both you end your mile keep
10:311]) MOVIE: Drew! (2:00)
Don't be II _ , end no play, nor aM :;our handl oil the fMIUy GIIICk book 10n
ploy llld no wm. Pllfty II - l e i lor day. El- ol you are C41P8ble of bnlle- 11:G0(]) I
e(l) 111 eo
hllpphlil
lng " r•- IMidly.
LIO
(....,
II
AI.
II)
l!a
I
lillie
10AOINIIIUI ( , _ . l'tll.'lll Tltara II a
: a = - ( 1:00)
~today you m1g1tt ~~tald you clay n you to olagOIIIII8 a that.,.,_ to :;our_, o r -·
rmhed no11t1ng In l'1llum lor ,lllllsahwt
111n mlg!tl be a tondllocy on ,our-perl
tiling you did
•IOiheo ....... In IIJ ..... vtoe Blby Blull
to ruke *VW coo•
laona than
lilly,
you did
~
Stereo.
ecknowll ~~ ••d.
Mtl eery.
• \UtaCco IIIIW
Pll Cll (PW.. " •101 lllaltlld V11C10 CM1- II IIIIL II) AVOid the '
11:30(J)I
•
braid I I • 111 .....,10 b e - .,_oiiiM!,......todar,IIM •
you do not Jill¥ leucolllin In ,our .,._ wheiiNIY ..,_to be ......... OOUIII be
..,..,.,..,,.. uu111t lrlandl. Anwllne ,.., .
wilt CMI plklll04 .. willa 1hlt
;; 1• • JII!J ill . . be .....
...., ,
1101........ . . . . ..
'
&lt;
(llll . . . . . . . . , You . .
Qafl MIA "'e Art
by .,..,IIIJIIIfreolllllllllltltodar
ullt'l ,_. mdnl .¥1rtiM.
but
........
.....

.,....,._1041_,

z- .

If.:

..... ,.,,.

lor

In the , - llheacl you might en... Into
enirl.. iii'I""WIG''IIMiwlltonuollo II oldlr and mo•nAI* .. ooed
ttwt JOUISII. Tltll oould tum to to be 1
'f:!Ai=~ IIIIJ!il!l I In . . . . ...,._

1'101-10 (0.. M II • . , Tcolly ,_, '

.... _.. .... ,.,..._or
.not. .
dl!na

1u111t
1 ,_.1 ..
, Udllot*
iiCOII _
In comntlgltllla
lllflt
to ,
1111-lllcotll

a:l

=

=

eom• ...,•• youtendtolle~

11on1. .,._leba
11111110,
dlo- In! or 111111 :IJ "· ,our beltaw!co •
tzb 111. II plo, 1ra111 younzlf to 1 IIIYIIIitappolltl.,.....
.

='"'Y:it::c'lor-;..r:,
n

' ~~~i~II~D~Iat.~.,~~GI~~~tul~-~

·.

. ..

TIU. . . (Aid • " t .. , Ill - . 1 .
·,

NORTH

l!:!:ri
...
!1! ... ~L

1'--el

:l.i::.~Scxne
...... It 1101-wtrecl

U·il-11

•au

tA652

tH

war

JIDIH Jacoby

7:01 (i) ,..,......

•--~-~~~~­
· -lolnt
.._.tlllo
.
.-. . .
............

., . ,~

. tQI06

Put little ones
good use

-~

~~ lhi holllh_
.............
00 log,lf,...
_ _ _ ln

::::....c.~

c:oun Q

ell'll

r r I'

4

BRIDGE

J!.:..lGII-01

-.....otgOI)Int-.
..........
,.... _..... ._..._
--lt.Not-111&amp;

...

Newallh (1 :00)

Dllollo, 11) --tOdD Eld. ..
10111.
A WIHNINOT~ .
Thlo lo ,..., - - . to ....

2

7YTBnt- Mumps- Ripen -Jocund- COMPANY
A man sterad at my large and varied U80I bl161'1t of
dog food and treats. Smiling, he asked, "Is your pel
haYing COMPANY?"

(ll(!)~

G~

Help wanted

take ---

SC-...M LETS ANSWIIS

~P(i) ' !I) c - AHlk

e:;\(t.i,¥.11

Employrnrnt Semces
11

/A.f-!!

woman: "I'H

I' I
I· I loFI I I I I I
2

® Tlne'l ColllplftJ
ill WKRP In CiliCIIoid

UOod 0171.

Second
ol _,.

• ~:;wRrY~i~~~RES I' 1 1 1

(!).s:•c::.'i.Q

OHa-Mal
...311]) Anclr Oollftlh
7:00 (]) Our HauM

I

7 I I' I•
0 · Complete
oho ehucklo quolod
_
•
_
•
by filling ln the miulng words
1L.-L...L.....JL-..L--l---1
I 1
you develop lrom stop No. 3 below.

1:11(1) le4.,.W Hl*''l'ta

1:30

1:

HOTOT

(I) laaiOIMI•olllllll.._

Wllly Nllly thought his contract reasonable, 10 be woa dummy's ace of di-1
amoods and immediately played A-K
of bearls, Too bed - West was left
with the high queen of trumps. Willy
Ip:~ ~A-K and ruffed a club, ruffed a
1a
back to bis band, and ruffed
last club. Meanwhile West, with '
two clubs Qrill..-lly, bad discardone diamond and a spade, Willy
now ruffed another diamond and bad
nine tricks In, but the lOth trick was in
never-never land. Wltetlter be played a
spade or his last trump, tbe defenden
bad the rest.
He turned plaintiVtJly to the kibitz.
er, Careful Charlie, and asked, •what
could I do about It?"
.
•try rufflng a diamond at the second trick," was tbe reply. "You can
then play as before, but West will be
up against it. If be discards a diamond
on one club ruff and a spade on tbe othyou wUI be able to make all the
tritrnps 1n your hand by ruffing three
diamonds. If West throws two diamonds away, then the last little diamond in dummy becomes· a winner

.• 8

tJ9

4

tQJt42

SOUTH
•~u

. • AK74J
t7 .
tAKI3

1

t

EAST
tAJU

tK97
.Q 106
IKQt083
tto a

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
West

Eui
Paa
All- .

Pass
Pass

Openinc lead: t K .

and you simply cub it. either takiDI
the trick or forcing West to use bis
trump queen on tbat good diamond. •
Charlie's lesson was a good one. If
your approach to making your COD·
tract is to ci'OIII'Uff, try to make as
many little trumps as you can, It! both
bands. Doo'tallow a defeader with tbe
bigb trump to get in and draw your
small trumps that you need' for ruffin&amp;
purposes.

·cROSSWORD
by fHOMAS
ACROSS
1 Soho
"so long"
5 lmpudeni
answer
9 ActOI" Jack
10 Use
12 Sail tree
13 Shout
15 Dutch
river
16 Soviet
space
station
17 Llle (Fr.)
18 Mickey

Mouse,

JOSff'H
DOWN ,
1 Shade
of blue
2 Modlly
3 Blab
4 Wood core
5 Texas
river
6 Slave off
7 ammoniac
8 Like
Cicero
11 French
river
14 Darnel,
e.g.
16 Liquely .
19 Mar on a car

•

Ye1terclay's An•22 Silent
film star
24 Inlet
25 Heroic tale
26 Swimmer's

woe .
e,g.
27 Angrier
20 Prior to
21 African
river
22 Engendered
23 Explosive lr---+--t--t-24 Margay
25 Highlander
27 PhUipplne

29 llalian
city
30 Savor
34 Cosily
36 Woo

37 Fish
product

Moslem
28 Sandy's cry
29 Scholar
31 "Roscoe'
32 Fish
33 Zounds!
' 35 Entertained
37 Slratagem
38 Frull
39Greek
mountain
range
40 Next door
41 German
river

DAILY CRYPTOQUOI.ES- Here's hnw to work II :

"''" ·

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
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 formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the cOde letters are diFferent .
CR\'PTOQOOTE
ll-15

VXEXO

810

CLZRFAX

KLZtiiC.

CFA X

J X MT Z

F

AVIKMXJIDX

IVX

M L E L V D ·:

UIQ

- · ZFVHOF

CFAX

JXMTZ
RJ X

f

UIQ

I RJX0

-MLBX.

PFOXU

Y•le•••t'• Catpte,....: IT REQUIRES WfS.

DOM TO UNOfJCSIAND WISDOM; THE MUSIC IS
NOTHING If THE AUDIENCE IS DEAF.- WALTER
LIPPMANN

'

�...
F'lla•

;:

.,..

'

~ ..

..

f.'\,. ....... ~.

""'".

Wedn81day, November 15, 1989

Poma'oy-Midcleport. Ohio

18-The Dlily Sutinel

. ..

Ohio Lottery

Saberbagen
AL Cy Young
honoree
'

M-3

154

Piek

9035
Super Lotto

5-7-9-21-33-39
Kicker 482547

Page 5

Low loalp&amp; I• mid 2h.
Cllaace of OIIITiea •
pM'eelll. P111117 elouoiJ Friday. Hlp .. mill a ..

•

Middleport, OH.-comar
Hargting&amp;r Pkwy. &amp; Peart Ste992-3471
A CARDINAL-AFFILIATED $UPERMARKET

Vol.40, No.134
Copyright8d 1118

• November 16, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio.

2 'leoiiDna. 14 ...... 21 Centa
A MultlniNiolnc. New-er

Recycling fnm ·asks for 'letter o~ support'
By NANCY YOACHAM
Dally Sendn~ Stall ·
Representallvlik of a proposed
plastics recycling center In Jack··
son, Ohio were at Wednesday's
meeting of the Meigs County
Commilalonera to ask for~ letter ·
of support for the new bllslness
venture called Liberty Recy·
cling. J. R. Hall, Tammy Hall
and Jim Spurgeon attended Wed·
nesday 's meeting on behalf of the
company.
AS explal~ by J. R. Half.•
Liberty Recycpng will be ·•
. reprocessing center for plastid
and wJ)I buy plastics
other
~

2 LITER
FARMSTEAD

SMALL BONELESS

69
Ha~ns*1

LB.

PEPSI
+

CARDINAL

TURKEYS

POP-UP TIMER
BROASTED

LB.

89+

BUTTERBALL TURKEYS
tO TO

•

LB.

~ling

centers.
Hall said he has been In contact
with each county In the six·
county solid waste·district which
1ncludes Meigs and Jackson
Counties, dl~11sslng the project
and askm. for letters of support.
Only' Athell$ County officials
refused to meet with Liberty
representatives, Hall said.
Liberty Recycling will not be a
recycling collection center, Hall
reJ1911ed. "We do not have the
time, equiPIJient or money to set
, up a recycllnk c'ollectlon center
and we don't .want to ~om pete
witll
'tbllse centers already In
. '
.

operation," he said. The ·com- million dollar venture, according tage l)f garbage going to landftlls.
pany will buy from all recycling to Spurgeon, which Is expected to
The commtulonera said their
employ
as
many
aa
32
people
centers In the surrounding area,
only concern Is that Manley's
Recycling and Kennedy's Recy·
Including Manley's Recyllng and working three shifts six days a
Kennedy's Recyllng In Meigs week. Buyers of Uberty's repro- cling are In support of the
County. Hall(fported that he has cessed plasdc pellets have al· venture In Jackson. The commls·
already been fn contact with both .ready been lined up, Spurgeon slollers will be contacting both
Meigs County businesses who said, along with sellers of plasdc.
local centers for verification of
have agreed to contracts with
The Oh lo Department of Oevel· their support and If satisfied that
opment Is l•volved In the pl;lns the two localc:e~~ters will benefit
Liberty.
Although Liberty Recycling Is lor Uberty Recycling, he added.
from Liberty Recyclln&amp;. the
Spurgeon.fu rther reported that · commissioners will then write a
not yet In operation, letters of
support from surrounding coun- 33 percent of all solid WilSie that
letter of support for the
ties ·are necessary to work out goes to landlllls Is plastic. So not company.
financial details for the new only .would Liberty Recycling
In other matters, the commls·
vent11re. explained Spurgeon. bring jobs to the area, It will also stoners accepted a $43,967 bid
Recycling Is a one help elbnlnate a large percen·
frQril the Horton Company, Co-

Self-insurance proposal being ·
considered ·.by Racine Council
. By CHARLENE HOEFLlCH
Dally Sendnel Staff
The posslbiUty of going Into a
self-Insurance company Is
under consideration by Racine
VIllage Council and to explain the
program representatives of the
Buckeye Admlnstrators Insu·
r•rice Co. met recimUy :Wtth
village officials.
It was pointed out that a
. self-Insurance program Is tal·
lored for the public entity and"has
a higher lbnlt tban the current
policy. Law enforcement

YELLOW

COOKING
ONIONS

LB.
8A8

•

~

TENDER CRISP
CALIFORNIA

'

CELERY

.,

Hea~

U.S. N0'.11DAHO
. SELEc·r BAKING

POST TOASTIES
CORM FLAKES

Potatoes

LeHuce

t8 OZ.

39~18.

59~-

99t

FULL LINE OF 8AKER1
MEEDS

89~~·

BOJ

'By Untied Pre&amp;~~ International
snow began fai'Hng across
northern Ohio early Thursday,
creating some rush-hour probIems In Cleveland and Toledo,
and reSidents began bracing for
"The Witch."
"The. Witch" Is what Great
Lakes sailors call the November
wind and the National Weather
Service said that wind crosstnc ··
Lake Erie was expected to drop
up to 61nches of s'IKiw tn northeast
Ohio Thursday . A snow advisory
was In effect for no~thwest Oblo

tL8.8A8

DINNER ROLLS
2 PICIS. 0

FRESH OYSTERS

'

'

h

.

IDIDnn.U.n tor fP'OUps laking lbe walkln!Jiour.ln
thil fP'oup were Josh Wilson, Clayton 0'!11n!Jt!l',
Ryu Dill and Dulel McDonald wllh den mother,
Jeanie Witherell an4 her assistant, Sheryl Wlllon.

. .Northern Ohioans -brpced for blast ·

BROWN SUIAR

RED OR GOLDEN

APPLES

99+

.

·· · Hl!l'i'OBICAL "ALKJNG TOUR -Thele Cub :
Scouts of Pack H6, Dea 2, took tile Pom•oy
Chamber of Commerce'• waliiiDil bt.lllrlcallollr
· of the vlllale 'lbunday after-a. Tbe chamber ·
. provide~~ a m•P ud ~~~~ of bt.torlcal

DOMIIIOS PO.DERED OR

I

DELICIOUS

$1 °

arternoon..
Snow accumulations of 1 to 3
· tncb~ were expected In . the .,
advisory areas. while a snow
squalL warning - predicting
aceun!ulatlons of 3 to 61ncheswa~ In effect for the snowbelt
cpuntles of Lake, Gea11ga and
Ashtabule:
Elsewhere around the state
ar01111d 1 Inch of snow was
possible near Dayton and Colum·
b11s, while only flurries were
expected In the extreme south.
Wednesday afternoon, several

., .Local .news briefs
~

T~•vo..JVWr

LET ~AUOHAN'S COOK
THANICSOI~INO DINNER FOR YOU

~

FRESH

Turkeys
Fro111 The

-----

-

Deer-mr mishap reported

s..

,.'

sOulsby reports a deer-c:ar accident
tiiDI'IIInl· AOC!Oidllla to the ntr1011. Alvllr R. Smith,

Meigl Sberlff Jam• M.

W~

36, of romeroy, ....
a.m. Wlulll)le

1MHTlfS

·cHOCOLATE CHIPS $17 9
'

•

No one was· Injured.
Troopers said t~e accident ocCurred when a 1980 Buick Regal
drive" by DonaldS. Fitch, 17, f&gt;l!meroy turned left In front of. a
198.'1 Chevrolet Chevette driven by Tara L. Morris, 18, also of
Pomeroy. Dall)llge was moderate to both vehicles.
The patrol cited Fitch for fatlure to yield the right of way when
turning left.
·
Another one car accident occurred at 8:25a.m. Wednesday In
SclploTownahlpofMelp CblllltyonSR. 681. 0.7ofa mUewestof
mUepost lour. No one was Injured:
Troopera said a 111112 Pontiac driven by Linda G. Wyant, 18,
Albany, Ohio wea( off the rtpt akle of the ~QBd, struck a rock
and a piece of metal and went Into a field. Damage was
moderate. There Will no citation .

Oak Hill, Ohio

'•10 Lit. T~rker
• 2 Lit. et Pe1f111
• 2 Lit. Oree• Be111
• .Ortftf
• 2 L•• Ore11111
• 1Lit. Grtlltetrr.Rell..
• • II. , ••, ••• , ••

•

tw&lt;H:ar collision at 3:40p.m. Wednesday on SR. 248at Chester.

Lewle Turkey Farm

•

mishap probed bv.! patrol

The Gallla·Melgs Post, State Highway Patrol Investigated a

Cotnpleta TilrkaY Din_nar

·
f
~.l

·

··

tiOZ.

thunderstorms. Much of the
centrl\1 and southern portion of
. the ·s~te was under a tornado
watch through Wednesday n!ght,
but the NWS said there VJere no
confirmed tornadoes.
Heavy rains fell across the
' state, With most areas gettlng1 to
2 Inches.
Morrow County Sheriff Rex
Yeagleysatd' seve~alsmallbarns
were destroyed and roofs taken
off buildings soutbwes t of Mount
Gilead.

~~i~~~:~:r~r~~a;:;~!J!;
·~~d~~~~~ d:rr:~e:t'~e~::~ didn't
pe~~;r::.w:~~~~~yl~~~~~~~~~~~
"' , ,
·
require treatment," Yea-

'

$

Council to extend appreciation
for the assistance ctven his.
company and also to Invite
council members to dlacuu any
problems. He advised Council
that ht'.s company will become
Involved with tbe Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce.
Clerk Jane . Beegle reported
that the packer truck bas lnsu· ·
ranee coverage and that funds
will be coming to handle the
dump ti'I!Ck acddent. It was also
noted that she bad received
notice from the Stale

....II.UIII

be will be going to Columbus.soon
to start taking his training lor the
water operator's certificate. The
need for bulbs lor tbe Christmas
decorations was noted by Rizer.
Mayor Cleland and Beegle
reported that aq appUcatlon for a
tax abatement on the five acres
of property purchased near the
Star Mill Park has been filed with
the auditor .
Fire Chief Robert Johnson
adVIIed cou!ICJI that the depart·
ment needs some safety equip.
ment
and price AUOtatlons
Counet\ autho-

-•1

helmets.
Sl!ftt
Glenn jacket and
pants.
Rizer repollled that •during. Oc·
offiCers.'
.
Mayor Cleland reported he has
MaiCobn Parks·, National Gas lOber, •.231.11110 plloaa of water flllld the 1!198 application for
and on Corp. also met with was JIIQ!IIIe6. He also iao~ that bsue n 1DG111!Y. Council pledged
$2,000 of village money to match
with $14,000 Issue II money for
blacktopping. The Mayor was
also authorized to execute any
needed contracts.
Parking at the offices of Dr.
Margie Lawson and Dr. Doug
Coluribta Township resident 125 ·acres ·of property In Meigs Hunter was dlscussechnd It was
Joseph . D. Nelson, 33, pleaded and ,Vinton Counties, Story says. noted that some vehicles an(
guilty on Monday afternoon In "This Is the largest proper)Y parking across the sidewalk·
Meigs . County Common Pleas . for(elture to date In Meigs making It necesu,ry for pedestrl·
Court to a charge of cultivation of County," reports Story, "and Is a ans to walkoutlnto the roadway .
marijuana on a bill of lnforma· contln118tlon of policy of the.
Council again discussed noise
tton prepared by the Meigs prosecutor's office and sheriffs from the Sporn plant. The clerk
CouniSO Prosecuting Attorney's department to eliminate Illegal was au thorlzed to write a letter to
drug trafllc In Meigs County.
the manager regarding results of
office. ·
Story says the prosecutor and a survey concerning the not~
Nelson was sentenced to one sheriffs offices bave taken a poUutlon.
.
year ·tn.. prison based upon the hard stance on eliminating IIJe.
The financial report presented
recommendation of Meigs PI'Oie- gal drug traffic In the county. at thesbowedcashbalanceslnalt
cutlng Attorney Steven L. Story. Story an dclpates additional real tutids of $200,597.18 with receipts
The bill of Information and and personal property tortel· of $173,301.99 for the year and
subsequent ·guilty plea are the tures as people are caught and expenditures of $118',370.94. The
result of summer eradication convicted of dr11g-related Super Now ln!eres~ for Sep·
efforts by the Meigs County offenses.- •
·
tember was $802.05, It was
Sheriff's Department, the proBuford Smallwood, 42, Pome- reported.
secutor's office, the Ohio Bureau roy, Indicted In October on a
Council recessed until 7 p.m on
of Criminal Investigation and charge of cultivation of mart .. Monday. Attending were Mayor
Ohio National Guard, and "four Juana, was arraigned on Tuesday Frank Cleland, Clerk Beegle,
months of negotiations" with before Meigs Common Pleas Rizer, and Council members,
Nelson's attorney~ Stuart A. Judge Fred Crow III. Smallwood Robert Beegle, Henry Bentz,
entered a plea of not guilty to the Carroll Teaford, Richard WamsBents, Columbus.
In addition to the jail sentence, charge. A trial date for Smal·
ley, and Larry Wolfe.
Nelson forfeited · to au thorlties !wood wa,s set for Jan. 17.

Man pleads goUty to
cultivatiol) of marijuna

STALK

CALIFORNIA
ICEJER8 .·

lumblls, to refurbish an ambu·
lance for Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Services. The bid
was accepted by the commls·
sloenrs, subject to the approval
-of the EMS Board of Trustees
which was to nave met Wednes·
day night.
Ken Edsel, of Clemens-Nel·
son Associates, Columbus, met
with the commissioners to dis·
cuss the Drug-Free Workplace
Act and to offer tbe services of hiS
company In helping the county
develop a PQUcY relating to the
act. A policy must be In effect by
Continued on page 14

•

c.u.,

IOillb 011
Rold 1 at 1:18
••
. [l~lfttoltltpatllofbll
,_.. uptllamapto the left

1

fr~lso r-cs~ ,':;.~ ·~· year-old
1

samuel Atexanaer,
TullllliOPIIIna,. ftl•i'rtlted We1rUdiQIIMiillnl 011·· cbafle
of dbtnei!IC. vloll!ilet. Al!'hJider II betq lleld Ill tile Melg•
. County Jail
a ~ In county court.

pe*""'

1
gl~o:
~amage !rom the storm
was reported 14 miles away,

northeast of Mount Gilead,
where · a mobile borne and a
double-wide modular home were
heavily damaged, and roofs
taken off buildings.
Yeagley said trees and power
lines were reported down In
variOus parts of the county, and
· some roads were flooded. He said
one y01111g man riding a bicycle
was taken to a hospital for
examination after lightning
struck close by where he was
riding,
·.
.
The storm, preceding a strong
low-pressure system moving ou I
of Indiana, hit southwest Oblo
early In the afternoon with heavy
rain.
"Small streams were going
over their banks and one trailer
park was evacuated fol' a few
hour• 11ntll the water went
down,'' said Bitler County she-

rill's tnapatc:ber !Ute DenUqer.
~G ll&amp;td. Crtbe kblch 'W,!~r from

1

h. l h d
State ea t
irector urges
Ohio residenis to quit smok.ing

By United PreaslnlerJalloaal
·state Health Director Ronald
Fletcher encouraged Ohioans to
participate In Thursday's Great
American· Smokeout, saying
smoking Is the "single most
devastating factor In premature
death."
"During 1987 · alone, adult
Ohioans age 20 and older lost
174,366 years of potential life as a
res111t of diseases linked directly
to smoking," Fletcher said,
adding that health care costs
resulting from smoktns totaled
$1.41 biWon In Oblo durin&amp; 1987'.
. Fletcher said smoking Ia "the
single most preventable cause of
disease and death In the United ,
.States" and the leadilll cause of
premature death In Ohio.
"It's never too late to take
responsibility for our . hHIUI."
Fletcher said. "By •IIJliii)Da

1111oklnt1 ltJmmedtate)Jrt'!ldlllltl
tbe cllanc:el of belrtd...~~Jiu

l'eiOI'J ee sen ._b water slroke, cancer an yn•-.,
Into the Gregllry Creek Trailer every form of cbronlc 111111
Park, sendlq retldents from dbeale."
their llomes for a few boun.
MeanWhile, many residents ot
Temperatures Thursday · the southern Ohio community of
momlnlf were mostly In the 30s. f ' Ripley take a different view of

;~--------~~~------------~-·- - ·-·-----

Cancer Society, the 24-hour smo·
tobacco.
"We'vegotaslgrioutfrontthat keout Is aimed at sparing men,
says you're allo~ to smoke," women and children from the
said Bill Whisner, bookkeeper at nation's leading cause of preven·
the Farmer's Warehouse. ''It table death, The annual smoking
helps the economy here."
death count totals390,000- or an
Ripley, In Bi-own County, Is average 1,000 funerals a day preparing for Monday's start of from cancer, heart disease and
the annual burleY tobacco sales. lung disease.
Roy ' Grlfftth, president of tbe
In North Carolina, . which deO.K. Warehouse, said and· pends on a $900-mUilon tobacco
smoking campalps bave burt crop. the society dlstrlbu ted a
domestic sales of tobacco, but record amount of educational
overseas markets for Ohio 11&gt;- material promoting the smobacco are Increasing.
keout. ''Each year we gain more
•&lt;Jt tobbaco would be taken out • streqth," a spokeswoman said.
of the hltty counties of IOUtbern
Taking a swipe at glossy
Ohio, It would be very, very bad . advertlaements !bat promote cl·
for tbe farmers," Grlffth said.
•arettn and 1he pxlllfe, former
-Surpon Geaeral C. Everett
Ar...t 111e NII&amp;IH
Koopcbafaed tbealltzycopy and
B;r VINCENT DBL GrtlDICE
lll!XY photOtp'aphll are "on the
tli'IS r' • ......
border of sleaze!'
M...e. 0( Amerlc-.. anuffed • ''CipNCtee are t~ only pro·
aut fllavet•, c:lpn ud pipet duct Ill Amer~ wblch are
Tll!l 1 9 y tl.take part Ill tile l3tb leeally &amp;upported 011 when you
Great ~an Smokeout- a Ill&amp; .them accordlnc to InstrucmamJnall public health effort tion will kill you," said Koop, who
a~a~avlqiiiiOkerafroman
witb "Dallas"· &amp;tar Larry Hag.
·early l!'ave.
man Is aerving as co-chairman of
· Sponsored by the American tbe smokeout.
.,
II

-------- -----....------·--·----'--·----·--

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="213">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2803">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="37417">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="37416">
              <text>November 15, 1989</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
