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November 18. 1

D-B-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Name speaker for· Monday's
Jackson Farmer's Club meet
By Edward M. VoUborn
Collaty Extellsloa Areal,

Ap:lculture_lo CRND
GALLIPOLIS- Farmers with
larae acreage of grass pasture
may be able to pick up some good
Ideas from Turfgrass managers.
Research at Ohio State University has shown a significant
Increase In both root growth
· rates and root numbers from
late-season nitrogen fertilization. Shoot and root growth of
cool-season turfgrass occur most
readily In the temperature
ranges of 60 to 75 and 50 to 65
degrees Fahrenheit,
respectively.
~
Recent O.S.U. research has
shown that root growth of coolseason grasses will continue at
soil temperatures close to freezIng. Late-season fertilization
capitalizes on this differential In
optimism temperatures and minImum temperatures for growth
of shoots versus roots. Ideally;
the late-season nitrogen appllca·
lion should be made when vertical shoot growth has stopped, but
the turf Is stUI green.
Since many of the same
grasses that are used as turf. also
are used In pastures it seems
likely that the late-season nitrogen fertilization Is something we
might want to try. Building
strong healthy roots is very
Important to the yield potential of
t~e plant, think about this new
concept. You may want to try
your own little demonstration
plot.
Farmer reports of corn yields
really sound good this year.
Several farms have their onfarm storage fulL If you are one
of those who plans to feed this
corn to beef cattle, consider
using the Extension Computer

Ration Formulation Proeram.
This program Is a tree service.
Call tor details.
Dr. Peter Thomison, Extension Corn Specialist, will provide
the program at the Jackson
County FS:rmers Club this Monday, November 20. Dave Sam·
pies, Jackson County Extension
Agent welcomes anyone Interested to attend tbe 7 p.m. Dinner
meeting at the Lewis Restaurant
In Oak Hill. Reservations should
be made by calling the Jackson
County Extension OfOce at 2865044 by noon Monday.
Dr. Mark Loux, Extension
Agronomist, will be the resource
person for a s peel al Agronomy
meeting In Gallla County on
November 30 at 7 p.m. The
meeting will be held at the Senior
Citizen Center just west or
Gallipolis. Dr. Loux will provide
progress Information and research Information to date on
products being . developed to
control Johnsongrass In corn. Dr.
Loux Is the leading authority on
row crop weed control In Ohio.
Let's try for a good turn-out.
The sixth Buckeye Shepherd's
symposium will be December 1
and December 2 at Hollday Inn,
Columbus West. ReservatiOns
are available from the County
ExtE&gt;nslon Office.
Farm Income Tax workshop
lor farm families will be held at
the District Extension Center In
Jackson on December 13 from
9: 30oa.m. to 3:30 p.m. Tentative
outline Involves such topics as
depreciation, farm rentals, and
material participation, Interest
deductions and allocations, and
review recent tax legislation.
Satellite Program! Iowa State
has a· program on the new 1990
Farm BilL Br')!ldcast Is November 20, 8 to 11 p.m. Eastern
time, Telstar 301, Channel 1.

Good looks doesn't
always mean profit
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A
recent Ohio . State University
study shows expert opinion
doesn't always equal profits.
"It seems the cow-call opera·
lions people think are good aren't
always making money •" says
Tom Stout, agricultural economist at Ohio State Univ~rsity.
"The perception of a 'good' farm
can be based on the looks of the
farm and how active the owner is
in the community, as well as on
the bottom line, where profit Is
measured." ·
Stout and graduate student
Kevin Fowler surveyed 25 beef
cow-calf herds with more than 30
head · In 17 southeastern Ohio
countles to determine profltabiltty. The farms were chosen by
knowledgeable observers, ineluding Ohio State specialists,
who thought the herds were
among the state's best.
"We wanted the best operalions because we thought they
would be profitable examples
that others could follow," Stout
says. "We didn 't want a statistlcal sample."
The surveys, taken in the
summer and fall of 1988, showed
that 15 of the herds made money
in 1987. But the other 10 farms
lost more money than the 15
made.
Apparently , looks are deceivlng. Stout says. The farm with
paint on the barn and flowers
around the garden isn't always

turning a profit.
"We didn't explain the standards of a good operation to the
people choosing the farms,"
Stout says. "We assumed those
standards meant bottom line, but
that was not always so In the
cases we found."
Judgment of "good" operations was left to the experts
making the recommendations,
he says.
"We found that operations
could have been recommended
based on .superior management
in husbandry rather than on
record keeping. They may .be
. doing everything best In terms of
having highly respected anlmals, but their bottom line doesn' t
always minimize costs ...
Timing of the survey could
have affected the profitability of
all the farms studied. But the
study did standardize all adjustments for Inventory of feed and
herd size so that comparisons
would be possible.
Many of the herds that lost
money were paying the bills - .
covering feed, veterinary supplies and other cash costs, Stout
says.
_
But, overall, they lost money
when the cost of labor and
management were added ln. And
some of the farmers could have
made more by putting their
money in other Interest-earning
lnvesnnents, he says.

Ohio Lottery

Browns tie
KC; Bengals
rout Lions

Farm Flashes

Pick·3
946
Pick
2590
Super Lotto
3-11-12-14.-21-38
Kicker 854788

Page 3 ·

•

•

at

Cloudy tonl&amp;ht. Law a ear 10.
Chance ol 1now Zl percent.
Cloudy Tuesday. mrh near 40.
Chuce ol snow 20 f!l'rt;ent.

•

! ~::eJ;~ rn~g'.:ow~1;:."

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday. November 20. 1989

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

hio second in nation
.10 tOXIC
•
air pollution

WILLIAMS JANTZEN HELMET WINNER- GalUpollll' lo~:~~
Wllltama ,.7 155-pouad junior ruantar back and defeasive back,, .
wi8
;..Inner ol the 1919 Jantzen Golden Helmet Award:;.•
during Thursday ntrht's GAHS Fall Spo1111 Banquet. WllUanls::~
accepts award from sponsor Keith Thomas of Thomas Clothiers:~ :

CRJSENBERY RECEIVES MVP AWARD - GalllpoUs' Dave
Cr!Mabery, 1-1, 1'71-pound senior tackle-end, was named Most
Valuable Player of 1919durlagThul'!lljay nlght'uanuaiGAHS Fall
Sports Banquet a1 Buckeye Hills Career Center. Crlsenbery
accepts award from sponsor Joe Drummond of Clly Ice &amp; Fuel.

na..:OO

'

French named ·chainnan of ~·
Ohio AWWA at recent mee(::

Kefeli named to Ravenswood post

.,

RAVENSWOOD - Ravens- chased the Ravenswood Works
wood Aluminum Corpora lion from Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Cheml· ·
(RAC• announced today the cal corporation. The corpora·
appointment or George Kefell as
tlon's headq1,1arters are at Rar- '
GALLIPOLIS - James A. manufacturers, suppliers, al[d
reduction plant manager. He will venswood, W.Va. which also Is
be responsible tor overseeing the loxcatlon of RAC's reduction French, .son of Marjorie French consultants with an Interest •tri
operations and maintenance of and fabrication plants. RAC and the late Albert French of Rt.
the drinking water Industry. ;:. :
the RAC aluminum reduction
The AWWA Is widely recriA:·
facilities Include a metal recla· 1, Gallipolis, became Chairman
of the Ohio Section American
plant at Ravenswood, W.Va.
nized as an authority on drlnklftg
matlon .center at Bedford, lnd.
Water Works Association
water Issues throughout tlie
Kefell comes io. Havenswood
(AWWM during their. recent country and frequently provides
trom ARCO/ ALCAN In Sebree,
Annual Conference In Toledo. . research Information and teatlm·
Ky. He had worked there since
.
The Ohio Section American ony to Congress and the Environ1983, most recently as potroom
Water Works Association Inmental Prptectton Agency.
superintendent. Kefell joined
tri
S
IS
eludes
2000
tndtvlduals,
utilities,
French Is Assistant Vice PreSiARCO/ ALCAN after 15 years
dent
of Ranney Division, Hydto
with Kaiser Aluminum &amp; ChemiBy United Press International
a water supply design Group,
cal Corporation, where he
Negotiations over local Issues
/construction firm based tn Wesworked In engineering, potroom between NYNEX and the two
tervUle, Ohio.
and maintenance departments of unions representing 60,000 strikthe company's Chalmette, La. Ing workers took diverging paths
Ranney . specializes £ 4 n
•.
or :
structlon o!large dlamel
facility. Prior to that he was a Saturday morning, with a settleontal radial collector wells. · .
field engineer for Chicago Pneu- ment reached In Boston and talks
matic Tool Company for six year. breaking off In New York.
A native of Czechoslovakia,
NYNEX reached a tentative
NOW OPEN FOR THEKefell received a Bachelor of three-year agreement with the
CHRISTMAS SEASON :
Science degree In engineering at Communications Workers of
Stevens lnstltulte of Technology. America and the International
P..._ttlas 17 celen) :
hinM!tio llologi,. .....,.,._.,,_,_
He Is In his second year as Brotherhood of Electrical
Cholstn•• Caclul, F..... . , . ,
chairman of the Evansville Sec- Workers on Nov. 13 to end the
......
~~t~r ,,.. .., ...., Slier
tion of the American Society of 15-week ·strike.
"'"""
lin
111111 Cut Owls! a 1......:: ·
Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
The two sides agreed at that
For
tho
lowlli
OM's Gnn .....,~. ·
and a former chairman of the time to spend the week Ironing
........
,
..,.,
c•••., v...: :
ASME New Orleans Section.
out local Issues as a prelude to
(Watch fw - Cllrist- 0,.. ......,.
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp, sending the new contract to a
Open Daily 9 AM·II P.M. :
a new company,
Sunday 1 P.M.-II P.M.
. recently
. pur- vote ofthe unions' memberships.

..

New England phone
'ke • settle d

IAME8 A. FRENCH.

. . . 10

It

I

HERE COMES SANTA CLAUS - Santa
(Arnold Priddy I and Mrs. Claus (Cathy Mitchell I
began the Christmas season on Saturday when the
Melp County Bikers participated In a toy
coDectlon for uaderprlvUed~red children. The

.~.t;i~l!g...asset~ _tf!. e4~cf:!t.iP,n :fu~d ,

·' -:;. COLUMBUS; Ohio (UPH -A ' 1ederal governm:Ot an~t~ij''per'sP.,clal House committee Is con- cent to local jurisdictions.
slderlng a bill that would funnel
County prosecutors and law
all money and property seized In enforcement officials are generdrug raids under state law Into a al)y opposed to channeling drug
drug education fund.
forfeiture money to education.
Under existing state law, 20
"Through the DARE (Drug
percent of the money goes to the Abuse Resistance Education procounty prosecutor and the re- gram•, which most of us are
malnder goes .to the jurisdictions paying for 100 percent out of our
Involved In the arrest. '
budget, we're already support·
The bill, sponsored . by state ing education," said Westerville
Rep. John Shivers, D-Salem, and Pollee Chief Ron Shaw, head of
backed by House Speaker Vern the FrankUn County Narcotics
Riffe, would not affect dlstrlbu- Task Force. Shaw testified betion of assets seized under fore the House committee last
·
federal law - 10 percent to the week.

"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
.ATHLETIC. FOOTWEAR
STORE"

7Custom Transfers

and lettering-

group congregated at the Whitehouse In Pomeroy.
From there they traveled through Middleport lo
the coonhunlers lodge at the falrrrounds and then
on lo the Salvation Army.

·Ohio .bill would send seized

HU.AIDS GIEEIIIOUSE :
,.,_,77,
s,..-. 0111e: ·

¢i

COACHES SHORTS
GYM SHORTS • SOCKS
BALL CAPS • BAGS
T-SHIRTS • &amp; MORE

1989 GRAND AM 4 DR.

Automatic, air conditioning, tilt wheel,
quad 4 engine, cruise control, rear de·
fogger.

$9900

-Local news briefs~

1989 BUICK REGAL

Tilt wt.el, cruise control, po-r windows, Rallye wheels, Sport Option
Plcg., reclining seatl.

Patrol charges drivers with DWI

$9900

A Bldwelfarea man was charged and cited In a one-car crash
Sunday at 9 p.m. In Salem Township on S.R. 124, just west of
C.R. 1, according to theGallla-Metgs Post or the State Highway
Patrol. '
·
William S. Levacy, 26, Rt. 3, Bidwell, was charged with DW.I
and cited for not wearing a seat belt after his 1978 Chevrolet
Monte Carlo, which was heading west, went off the rtght side of
the.road and Into a ditch. The car caught on tire and scorched Its
right side, but Levacy was not Injured by the fire.
·
A West Virginia man was charged and cited Ina one-car crash
Saturday at 8:30p.m . In Salisbury Township on T.R. 174, just
west of C.R. 5.
Clarence A. McDaniel, 30, of Dunbar, was charged with DWI
and cited for driving without a license after his 1978 Mercury
Cougar, which was heading west. went off the right side of the
road and Into a qltch.
'

992·5627

Tree trimmer injured Sunday
On Sunday afternoon, Ernest Greene, 19, of Letart Falls, was
cutting limbs from the top of a tree In Letart Falls when a limb
broke off and (ell, striking him In the head and pinning his left
leg to the tree, reports Meigs Stiert!1 James M. Soulsby. The
sheri!l's deparlment was notified by the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services.
The Racine Fire Department and EMS unit were called to the
scene at 1:21 p.mm. to dislodge Greene from the tree.
Greene was then transported to Sou then High School where he
was met by Llfefllght and flown to Grant Hospital in Columbus.
He was listed Monday morning In serious condition In the
Intensive care unit at Grant, according to a hosp,ltal spokesman.
The sheriffs department also reports that Ronnie M.
Pickens, Syracuse, was arrested by deputies Sunday night for
driving while Intoxicated, left of center and no operator's
license. Pickens Is being held In the county jail pending a court
appearance.

Sq~s have 11 weekend rolls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered 11 calls
over the weekend. Six of the calls were on on Saturday and tive
were on Sunday.
At12: 33 a.m. Saturday, Pomeroy waa called to Mulberry Ave.
tor WllUam Randolph to Veterans Memorial II pial.
Tuppers Plains was called at 4:26a.m. to Route 7 for WllUam
Grueser to Holzer Medical Center.
At 11:06 a.m., Rutland went to Hysell Run tor Mildred Hysell
to Holzer Medical Center.
Continued on page 5

•

11

•

1'

Franklth eonn!)l :sheriff Earl
Smith also opposes th·e change. · .
"It's hard enough for law
enforcement to get enough money to operate," Smith sal d. "We
ought to find another way to fund
education."
Pollee officials In Cincinnati
and Cleveland, who also have
be!leftted from drug bust money,
agreed with the Franklin County
officials.
"From our perspective, the
money Is better spent on law
enforcement," said Dale Menkhaus, ·Cincinnati's assistant police chief.
Sgt. Raymond Iachlnt; a
member of a new Cleveland
pollee unit set up to handle drug
forfeitures, said Cleveland Is just
starting to see cash benefits from
drugs busts.
But Cleveland, which will
conduct about 6,000 drug busts
this year, already has received
$600.000 from · drug forfeitures
and hopes to get $1.4 million more
in coming months, he said.

Recycling
drives down .
•
waste pnces
CINCINNATI (UPn - Recy·
cling companies say mandatory
trash recycling· programs have
glutted the market with raw
materials, driving down prtces
and making some waste that
once was recycled now
worthless.
Cincinnati's residential recy'
.cling program, begun three
months ago, has made mixed
paper waste of no value, when It
used to sell for around $30 a ton,
said Chuck Francis, owner of
Metro Recycling Co. Francis
said Metro ts forced to dump
some paper in a landfill because
the company can't sell it.

DAYTON, Ohio (UPU - A
survey of Industrial pollution
shows that Industries In Ohio
released more ' toxic chemicals
into the air last year than any
other state except Texas.
That Is one !lnding of a
computer anaylysls by the Dayton Dally News using Information submitted to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency by
Ohio Industries, following a 1987
ruling that companies disclose
the wastes they release.
"Do we have an air taxies
problem In Ohio? We've just
reached the tip of an Iceberg,"
said Ohio EPA toxicologist Paul
Koval.
.
In 1987, 715 million pounds of
toxic chemicals were released In
Ohio, seventh highest In total
emissions and second In air
emtssitons.
Koval said the EPA began two
years ago reviewing the sources
and health effects of the 29 most .
dangerous chemtcais and metals

used widely In Ohio. Studies have
been completed on what the EPA
considers the four most dangerous emissions - chromium,
formaldehyde, lead and benzene.
Health officials caution
against drawing quick conclusions about the dangers of
emissions. They say many factors must' be considered when
assessing human exposure to the
chemicals, Including toxicity of
the substance, the duration and
time of emissions, weathercondi·
lions and the distance from the
emission source.
Using ZIP codes to pinpoint the
names ' and amounts of EPAlisted pollutants released ln. a
seven-county area or the Miami
Valley, the Dally News found the
dirtiest neighborhoods tend to be
inhabttated by the ''working
poor," workers and . their families "who have accepted pollu·
lion as necessary to their
paycheck."
In the . Miami Valley, the

largest sources of chromium
emissions are Hobart Brothers In
Troy and Durlron Co. In Dayton,
the newspaper said. Chromium
Is thought to pose th&lt;' greatest
threat to Ohioans because of Its
widespread use and a strong link
·
to lung .cancer.
Armco's steel mill in Middletown Is the state's largest single
source of benzene, emitting 1.8
million pounds. Benzene, a byproduct of steel-making, causes
birth defects and cancer, IncludIng leukemia.
In 1987, Armco produced more
than 9.1 mllllon pounds of toxic
chemical wastes, more than any
single facility In Its neighboring
counties. The total dropped to 7.8
million pounds In 1988 as the
company added several recycling programs and refined its
emissions calculations.
Forced by new federal regulations, Armco has pledged to
reduce Its benzene emissions by
97 percent In the next two years.

Sen. ·Glenn says he did
not
•
do anything wrong in case
"Five senators in one room do
- COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPl) Sen. John Glenn ts defending · not make a proper act Improper,
against his accusers In an ethics and that was a proper act,"
Investigation, saying he did no- Glenn said. ''Everything I did at
.thlng Illegal, Improper or ·unethi - that time was legal, moral and
cal by helping savings and loan ethical. I would not change
owner Charles Keating Jr.
Glenn met for about 90 minutes
with reporters In response to a
unanimous vote by the Senate
Ethics Committee Friday to hire
an outside counsel to investigate
allegations made against him
and four other senators. The
senators are accused of IntervenBy United Press International
ing with federal regu Ia tors on
At ·least nine people, Including
behalf of Keating, who contrib· a player and student manager of
· uted money to their campaigns.
the Musklngum College women's
"I can vouch for what !.did and basketball team, were killed In
justify what I did," Glenn said. weekend traffic accidents, the
''I'm not going to be the fall guy Ohio Highway Patrol said early
forsomethlng I did not do."
Monday.
Glenn, D-Ohio, strongly crlt,lcThe count showed two deaths
ized allegations by Edwin Gray, Friday night, six Saturday and
the former top savings and loan one Sunday.
regulator, that Glenn was part of
A van carrying the Musklngum
a plot to cut a deal on behalf of College women's baskelbl!ll
Keating's Lincoln Savings &amp; team to a tournament In MaryLoan Association.
land slid on Icy Interstate 70 In
"I don't re.c all that there was Belmont County and It collided
any deal whatsoever that was with a semi-truck, killing two
discussed," Glenn said.
young women - player Michelle
In addition to Glenn, the Simpsoq, 18. Bristolville, and
senators In the savings and loan student 1manager Mary Smith,
case are Sens. Alan Cranston, 20, Coshocton.
D-Caltf.; Donald Riegle Jr.,
Another person was killed in a
D-Mich.; John McCain, R-Arlz.;
car-train accdident.
and Dennis DeConclni, D-Ariz.
Victims Included:
Keating made or directed $1.3
Friday night
·mUIIon In campaign contribuWauseon: Walter Ricker, 72 ,
tions to the five senators, Includ- Wauseon, killed In a two-vehicle
Ing $236,000 to Glenn.
accident on Ohio Route 20 In
Gray and others have testified Fulton County.
that ' It was unprecedented for
five senators to meet w,lth
Batavia: Sherry frather, 15,
regulators on behalf of one s&amp;L. Amelia, killed In a two-vehicle

anything."
1
Glenn said that he may not
have been in the room when
DeConclnl discussed the deal
with Gray, or thai perhaps he
was not paying attention at the
time.

Traffic accidents
·kill at least nine
accident on Ohio Route 125 In
Clermont County. '
Saturday
Powell: Danny Misko, 22,
Powell, killed In one-vehicle
accident on a Delaware County
road.
St. Cla·lrsvllle: Michelle Simpson, 18, Bristolville, and Mary
Smith, 20, Coshocton, members
of the Musktngum College
women's basketball team, killed
when the van they were riding In
collided with truck on icy Inter·
state 70 In Belmont County.
Springfield : Rictiard Muck, 21,
Pittsburgh, killed when his car
crashed Into a tree along a
Springfield city street.
Sidney: Barry Kendall. 17,
Sidney, killed in a two-car crash /
on Ohio Route 29 in Shelby
County.
Cygnet: ·Brian Mayo, 17,
Wayne, killed when hts car was
hit by a train at a railroad
crossing In Wood County.
Sunday
Youngstown: Raymond
Hogue, 85, Burghill, killed In one
vehicle accident on U.S. 62 in
Mahoning County.

Another for-profit recycler,
Bill Potts, president of Cincinnati
Materials Inc. In Sharonville,
said, "Recycling Is a good idea,
but since Cincinnati's started,
It's flooded themarketand prices
are going do\m."
Private recyclers are reeling
the Impact of not only city
proerams, but.a nationwide push
to recycle more solid waste.
Currently about n · percent or
U.S. solid waste II recycled, but
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has mandated that
percentage rise to 25 percent by
1994 and !50 percent by 1998.

..

TOY COILBCI'ION - This P:CMIJI of Melp
Coua&amp;J motorcycle rlden 1ave a luuld to
uaderprlvlledled chlldrea ot tile area oa81&amp;tnay
when they tooll parlin a loy coDectloa. The toys

aoleated .u d doaaletll will be rtvea to tile
8111'nltloa Army lo be distributed 1o tile aeec1y
children.

�'

Comnien

Pon .. oy-Mkklllport, Ohio

•

Page- 2- The Deily Sa 11inel
Pomeloy Mlctdleport. Ohio

Browns escape with 10-10
tie in overtime against Chiefs

Monday, Nov.nber 20, 1989

~============~~--------~----------~--~--~-- ·

·The Daily Sentinel •
in Court Street
DE

.

Pomeroy, Ohio
•
TO mE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

11jb

'~~

......~..... .......... rTw.o:::i.-

ROBERT L . WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ CoatroUer

· CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GeaeraJMaaaaer

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, IDiand Dally Press Associatloa and tile American New!ijiaper Publishers A880Ciatlon.
·

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tiley should be leoolhao 300

words lonr. AU leiters are aublecllo edlllal ud m011 be alped with
name. addre01 and lelep._e number. No u•lpecl !etten wW be pohllshecl . Letters lihould be In IOOd taste, addre011n1 Ia-, oot personal~
lies.

Wamer conviction reversal
may affect 1990.elections
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - The reversal of the conviction of former Cincinnati
financier Marvin Warner In the 1985 savings and loan scandal may
have strengthened the hand of Ohio Republicansln the 1990 election
campaigns.
For more than a year, the GOP has · been referring to the
Democratic auditor, attorney general and secretary of state as "The
Three Amlgos ' ' for their Inability or unwillingness to enforce the law
during scandals befalling the Celeste administration.
Now, It appear~ , Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze, who plans
to run for the Democratic nomination for governor, could be fair
game for some hardball advertising about how Warner slipped his
convictiOn.
Warner, it will be recalled, was the owner of Home StateSavlngs
Bank, which col~apsed I~ March 1985 after Warner and other top
officers used their thrift s money to engage in a questionable debt
financing scheme with a Florida securities firm that.folded.
A domino effect forced the closing of 70 other state-chartered.
privately Insured savings and loans . The state spent$129milllon, plus
Interest. to keep depositors whole. It has recovered much of the
money.
~arner was a majo~ player In Ohio Democratic politics. He helped
raise the money that allowed Celeste to win the 1982 Democratic
gubernatorial primary. and he was chairman of the Ohio Building
Authority under Celeste.
Warner drew a three-year jail term and was ordered to make
restitution to Ohio In the amount of $22 million. His conviction was
overturned by a s tate appeals court In Cincinnati on what Celebrezze
termed "technicalities. "
Celellrezze. who already has spent $5.5 million or the state's money
in prosecu ling the case. vowed to appeal and reinstate the conviction,
even If it costs more. which It will.
Connie Smallwood, state superlntl!'ndent of savings and loans who
Is in charge of another part of the case In U.S. Bankruptcy Court,
thr.e ~ tened to have Warner's assets seized If he tries to back out of an
agreement to repay the state.
.
Nevertheless, imagination runs wild when one thinks about the
sport Republican commercial-makers could have with Celebrezze
over the iss ue - bundles of taxpayer cash being tossed down the drain
while a huge fish bearing Warner's race wriggles off fisherman
Celebrezze's hook and splashes to freedom.
Less than sanguine about that scenario Is state Sen. Richard Finan
R-Cincinnati, who was not only a pi Inc! pal player In the legislallv~
remedy for the S&amp;L debacle. but thought seriously about running for
governor himself.
Finan thinks the Home State scandal not only has been forgotten In
most or Ohio except Cincinnati and Dayton. but that It Is perceived as
different fr om other Celeste scandals sidestepped by Celebrezze
Auditor Thomas Ferguson and Secretary of State Sherrod Brown. '
"I don't think this has any political fallout whatsoever "said Finan.
"I don't think you can fault Tony for what he's don~ with Home
State."
When Celebrezze appeals to the Ohio Supreme Court, he likely will
find a receptive audience dominated 4·3 by Republicans who have
been prone to overlook technical errors In lower courts If !he weight of
evidence favor s convict ion.
How quickly th e high court handles the appeal could determine
whether the Issue will work for or against Celebrezze and the
·
·
Democrats next year .

Berry's World

Cause of Gander crash still in question
WASHINGTON- NearlY four · but were turned down: Our
years ago a jet · crashed In sources Indicate thai the original
Gander. Newfoundland, and 248 report will likely be shredded
U.S. soldiers died. Now the before It ever sees the light of
Canadian and U.S. governments day.
wish the questions about the
The Interest In the crash has
crash would die too. But they been reignited In part by the
won't.
e!forts or a former Pentagon
We reported last summer on Investigator who has relentlessly
the possibility that the plane was gone after what he thinks Is a
brought down by a terrorist' s "cover up." His private crusade
bomb. That report and subse- has become so public that In
quent media accounts · have August theoutgo!ngChalrmait of
needled the U.S. government, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral
which has pub! k:ly embraced the William Crowe, ~sked a top
dubious conclusion of. the Cana, At my attorney to find out exactly
dian Aviation Safety Board, that what the ii!Vestigator knew.
Iced wings caused the DC-8 to
Among other things, the lnvesstall on takeoff from the Gander tlgator loJ4 the Army that a
Airport, Dec. 12. 1985.
general had 'tried to order the
The findings of the Canadian .crash site bulldozed even before
board grow more !llmsy with the wreekage was cooL Ten days
each passing month. Four, dis· after lntervlewl~g the lndependsentlng members of that board ent· ·investigator, the Army
suspect that a fire broke out In quietly retired that general.
the plane, possibly from an
Well-placed sourceS now tell
our associate Jim Lynch that the
explosion In the cargo hold .
More than 100 members of Army may have been used by
Congress recently signed a letter · covert operatives who were
to President Bush asking him to neck-deep In ·!he secret arms
reopen the probe.
sales to Iran. Those operatives
Rep. Robin Tallon, D-S.C.. has allegedly told the Army almost
led the congressional Inquiry. Immediately after the crash thiit
Tallon tried to get a clean copy of a GI had accidentally detonated
the 200 blacked-out pages from a a hand grenade on the plane.
247-pageFBireporton the crash, That rl!port could have been
but he was told he could not see enough to scare the Army brass
them . The families of crash Into steering any Investigation
victims also as.ked for the report away from the embarrassing

November 1985 of several key
players In · the. Iran arms-forhostages deal. Among the Issues
allegedly discUssed was a secret
plot to rescue five American
postages ·by force· a ·plot that
failed and angered the volatile
(ranlan leadership. ·
When almost :!tree years after
the crash, the Canadians came
out with a report that Ice · nat'ure
Itself . had killed tbe soldiers, the
U.S. government nodded In silent
agreement. That silence grows
·
.
louder every day.
TAPPING INTO SATEL·
LITES - The PentagOn Is
worried that unfriendly nations
may tap Into the U.S. Global
PosltJonJng System to Increase
the range and accuracy of their
own missiles. The GPS satelUte
navigation system will be fully
operational In 1992 with 21
satellltes that can track U.S.
land, sea and air forces In three
dlmens!OI!S. The GPS has an
open commercial channel that
Interlopers could tap Into~ It Is
not as accurate as the coded
military channels, but It could
Improve the cruise missile capabilities of anyone who Is smart
enough to use it. Using GPSdata,
a cruise missile can be made to
change course In flight . ·

,

By Ualle41'NN llderllll&amp;lolllll
Today is Monday, Nov. 20, tbe 32ftb day of 1989 with U to follow .
The moon Is waning, moving toward lt. new pbale.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupltn.
·
The evening stars l!re Mercury, Veuua lllld Saturn.
'l'hose born on this date are under tbealpoiScorplo. They Include
botanist John Merle Coulter In 1851; Norman Tllornu, sill times the
Socialist Party candidate for U.S. presldellt.IJI l81N; "Dick Tracy"
cartoonist Chester Gould In 1900; journalist IJid broadcaster Alistair
Cooke, In 1908 (age 81.; singer-actress Judy c._ 1111916; actrt!ls
Gene Tierney In 1920 (age 69); Senator Robert F. kennedy In 192!1;
entertainers Kaye Ballard In 1926 (age 63) and Diet Smothers ltt1939
(age 50•; and actress Bo Derek in 1956 (age 33) .
(

~

·"

•
OLIPHANT FUMBLES - Brciwnll runnln1
back Mike Ollphaal (33) tumbles a lumdoffu he Is
bit by Kaa1188 City's Chris Marim In the third
quarter of Suncl.ay's same In Cleveland. The

CINCINNATI (UP]) - The
Cincinnati Bengals played so
poorly In the opening quarter
against the Detroit Lions Sunday
that coach Sam Wyche knew he
couldn't walt until halftime to
chew out his players.
Halftime might be too late,
Wyche figured, so he began
rlpplllg .tbe Bengals from the
· bench late In the first period.
"I threw a fit on the sidelines,"
said Wyche. "I challenged their
manhOod a little bit. I got r!ghtln
their faces and called them a few
names nobody likes to be called..
and they responded."
And how the Bengals responded. Down to the lowly Lions
7-0 after the first quarter, Clncln· ·
nail exploded for 28 points the
. second period and cruised to a
4.2· 7 victory.
"The players are probably still
mad at me, :• said Wyche, recal·
ling his temper tantrums. "But I
don't care. We won the game."
Pacing the Bengals was Boomer Eslason. who completed a
career-high 30 of 39 passes, for
three touchdowns and 399 yards,
the third mo8r productive day of
his six-year career.
·'I feel! could have been 35 of 39
because so many guys were open
all day," said Eslason. "It could
have been worse for the Lions
than It was. When things get
rolling, Ihilt's the way II goes."
Detroit coach Wayne Fontes
had one word for the game -

,.

·•

,,

British journalist reports USA is OK
It can be extremely useful to England, and It Is one of his best.
Intellectual · dishOnesty I have
glimpse the United States, now
"After three years In the ever seen in the government of
and then, through the eyes of a . Un !ted States "he declares "my free country. It could not have
As for the eeomony, "The
perceptive outsider. Such people •faith In the dynamism and' good happened without the connibroad
outlook ... . Is excellent. The
· journalists In particular . are sense of the American people Is vance of the grand press."
In general, "liberalism has Keynesian tax brigade h'as been
well posltlo~ed to note. angular!- matched only by my horror of the
ties and Idiosyncrasies that opinion elite.... My Impression Is been .contained. Unfortunately routed and driven from the field.
might escape a native observer · that the universities, the teach· the residual effects of experi- President Bush has held to his
.of the American scene .
lng profession the media the ments In the 1960's and 1970's are pledge of no new taxes, to the
Unfortunately, most of the bureaucracy o'ncludlng the,CIA still devastating .... In one area &lt;J.ellght of doubling conservaBr!tish"joumallsts based In Wa- one of the most uselessly guilt~ alter another it was the poor who tives, and to the amazement and
shmgton are useless for this ridden of the loll' the clergy and suffered the -consequences of disgust of the New York Times.
. purpose. being rabid leftists who the Democratic Party are still liberal reform .... The result of It Without taxes the state cannot
can t stand Margaret Thatcher, ·. full of people who think there Is all Is that a large tranche of expand: and each year the
let alone Ronald Reagan or Jesse something wrong with the Amerl· American society Is uneducated achievement becomes more
permanent .. ..
Helms ..They run with our home can way of life. They doubt the and depraved."
"Above all, the world can trust
Nevertheless, "In the end I am
grown pack of liberal media, legitimacy of Pax Americana
·
America
.... Even those who have
egging them on when they show abroad and of democratic capt- optimistic .... We are seeing the
signs of discouragement.
tal ism at home, and go to some last delayed convulsions of liber- made It their pu'rpose to deniOne notable exception to the lengths to undermine both. They alism., .. Above all, Immigration grate the country must somestops America from 'llecaylng times feel, like Bertrand Russell
rule Is Ambrose Evans- can be charming and cultivated
Pritchard, who for three years . but they are psychologically Into a mere nation. The flOod of &gt;n a moment of exuberance, 'that
has been the Washington corres- . unfit for leadership of a world Chinese, Koreans, Vietnamese, If any power is to be supreme in
pondent of London's Spectator power."
Filipinos, Indians, Mexicans and the world. It is fortunate for the
magazine. Repeatedly, I have
He nails the blocking tactics of Salvadorans, with tight families, world that America should be
found his reports on the Amerl- Congress and the media: "Judge dlsclpUne and a stomach for that one."
What a breath of fresh air,
can scene full of Insights that are Robert Bork was caricatured by work, Is constantly renewing the
amid
the fetid vapors along the
hard to come .by In the output of the Senate Judiciary Committee 'culture, and It ensures that
Potomac!
Farewell. Mr. Evanshis domestic competitors, let which combed his writings fo; America becomes the fulcrum of
Pritchard.
Come back to see us
alone his fellow Brits Inside the shocking statements that could the world, a blend of all the races,
from
time
to
time. And give·our
Beltway. Recently , he filed hi• be quoted out of context. It was the 'natural arbiter of other
best to Maggie.
last column before returning to the most egregious case of nations."

William Rusher

Let's consider, as the most
extra money earned. Between unconscionable case In question,
ages 65-69, the limit on outside the post-presidential activities ol
Income Is $9,360.
Ronald Reagan. Wife Nancy got
And so I ask: What makes $2 million to pen her gossipy
former presidents any different memoirs. Ronnie got $5 mllllon
from us ordinary James and for his meanderlngs and a
Joes? It they exploit their nolo- · collection of his speeches. Right
rlety to make mllUons, why after be left office, he gave one
thould the suffering taxpayers be lecture for free · so as not to
stuck with their pension and appear too grabby ·but be Is now
retirement expenses? Actually, pulling In $50,000 to $75,000 per
the amount Is relatively minis- talk.
cule · perhaps $30 mliUon a year
In October, a Japanese corpototaL One-seventeenth of a single ration spent upwards of $8
Stealth bomber. But to a people m Wlon do Uars to fly the Reagans
bred to a sense of fairness, the aboard a chartered Boeing 747 •
principle Is of paramount (especially outfitted with bed·
Importance.
room and shower) to Tokyo for

I\

.,

Bengals humble · Lions, 42-7

fQL.~tiTiDt.J CgU,fRoL~? Caf\J

In pension benefits for every $2 ol

''

•
Chiefs' Nell Smith (90) picked up the loose ball ·
aad took II In for·the touchdown. The Chiefs and
the Browns battled to a 10-10 tie. (UPI)
'

CaN \'eSToP THe GReetJH~se
eFFecT WtfiLe Re.J&amp;Tii'IG

Let us begin with a premise
that most of us can probably
endorse: In. our egalitarian system, there· Is little room for
nabobs.
Agreed? Fine. It Is only re'uonallle, therefore, that at least two
ot our living ex-presidents be
dropped from the public payroll.
A stranae leap olloglc, you say?
Read on, please.
Every U.S. citizen below aee 70
wbo receives Social Security
retirement beneti!J must meet
what Js known as an Annual
Earnings Test. The fliUres
chan,eevery year, but currently
each recjplent under 65 who
makes In excess ol $6,840 loses $1

Allee Lloyd (Ky.) 's David
Martin had not been a major
player In the Eagles' first three
games of this season. Bulin the
words of Coach Jim Stepp, he
"came to life" Saturday with a
38-polnt performance that led
Allee Lloyd to a 116-105 defeat of
the Rio Grande Redmen and the
championship of the men's divIsion of the Bevo Francis Classic.
Martin, a 6·7 center, along with
teammates Robbie Russell and
Daryl Slone. led an aggressive
offense the Redmen were unable
to overcome. despite hard work
by starting point guard Gary
Harrison, who led his teammates
with 28 points and 11 assists.
"We didn't guard them," Rio
Grande mentor John Lawhorn
commented. "Every time we
made a plan, they adjusted to It
and scored. Allee Lloyd Is playIng with a lot or confidence right
now. That's Important. because
basketball is a game of rhythm,
and they got Into a rhythm
against us."
Shooting 65 percent on field
goals. the Eagles jumped off to
an early lead the Redmen were
successful In narrowing to one
point on several occasions, only
to have Allee Lloyd's skill with
the layup create an even larger
scoring gap.
The Rio men. paced by Harrl·
son and double-figure contributions from John Lambcke, Tony
.Ewjng, Je(f Brown, Mark Erslan
and Brad Schubert. tra)led by
two at the half, but couldn't
contain the quarter-court penetration by Martin. Russell and
Slone that marked the remainder
of the game.
·
"We knew the only way to beat
~io Grande was to slow down the
fast break, and I feel that' show
we got the lead," Stepp reflected.
"We kind of let down on that In
the final part of the game, and
that 's why Rio Grande scored 28
points consecutively . We were
very fortunate to win here."
The Redmen were held to 41
percent on field goals and con·
nected on 14 of 20 attempts at the
free throw line for 70 percent.
Alice Lloyd sank 27 ol32 tries ori
foul shots for 84' percent. The
visitors outrebounded the Redmen 40-24.
Named to the All-Tournament
Team were Rio Grande's Harrison. Ewing and Brown, along

we

~t4
Be KiNPe.R a~P
GeNTLe~ ~r PetiY HetlLTM
CZ\~8 TQ ~R WgMeN?

We CliT THe PeFiC.iT WiTHDUT
New Ta~s? s-rav TtJNeP. ·
THiS i~ Tf'fB aL.L • T~L.f(
PRe~iPeNCY. ·

"ugly."

"It was ugly: · he declared.
"Sometimes you can't help getting beat, but don't look ugly In
doing it. We got beat ugly today.
"It was the worst game we've

(USPS llil-110)
A DlviiJkl• •f Mul&amp;lmedla. lac.

.'

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by th e Ohio Valley Pub·
Ushlng Company t Multlmedia, lnc.,
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se·

~

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ember: U lted Press InternattoMI.
I ndDallt ·r~Assoclallonandthe
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recovered In the end zone .
In the final quarter. with the
game long decided, Bengais'
rookie backup quarterback Erik
Wilhelm threw a 41-yard TD pass
to Kendal Smith.
Cincinnati's defense kept De·
lrolt without a first down In the
second and third quarters. The
Lions, 2-9, scored on Barry
Sanders' 2-yard run- In the first
minute of the game. Sanders
wen ion to rush for 114 yards In 18
carries.
Peete completed 5 or 8 passes
for 83 yards before suffering a
sprained knee late in the second
quarter and leaving the· game.
An Ineffective Bob Gagliano (8
for 19 for 88 yards and 2
Interceptions) quarte rbacked
the Lions the rest of the way.
Cincinnati lost two starters to
Injuries - defensive end Jim
Skow suffered a separated
shoulder and center Bruce Ko·
zerskl suffered a broken vertebrae. Initial indicatiOns were
that both could be out several
weeks, wblch could hurt the
Bengals as they make a drive for
the playoffs.
"We paid for this game
dearly, " noted Eslason.
The Bengals trail AFC Central
division leader Cleveland by a
game and a half and three of
Cincinnati's last five games are
on the road, beginning next
Sunday at Buffalo.
. ''This win over Detroit must
represent the start of a string for
us, " said Wyche. "Now we have
to go out and win at Buffal0."

•

'·

IT'S THEONE
SYSTEM THAT DOES
IT ALL.
HEAnfiG &amp; COOUfiG

Efficiency and
Wgh Quality
Make This One
of .Our Best ·
Buys.

No •ubscrlpttOns by mall permitted In

'I

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13 Weeki ......... .... .. .. ...... .. .... ..... $19.24
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'

Box scores:

RIO GRANDE (105) - Gar y
Harrison. 8-2-6-28; Mark Erslan,
0-4-0-12; Brad Schubert. 1-3-0-11;
John Lambcke, 5-4-14; Tony
Ewing, 5-1-0-13; Jell Brown,
4-3-3-20; Troy Donaldson, 3-1-7.
TOTALS 28-13-14-105.
ALICE LLOYD ( 1lii) - Robbie
Russell, 7·10-24; Tom Setser.
5-1-11; Daryl Slone, 2-2~ 12'22:
David Martin. 17-4-38; Bobby
Pollard. 2-0-4: Nehl West. 1-2-0-8;
Henry Webb. 1-1-0-5: Jonathan
Miller. 2-0-4. TOTALS37-5·27-l16.
Halltbne score: Allee Lloyd 51,
Rio Graade 49.

BRYAN (67) -Brian Gamble, be.''
The Browns also had poor play
1·0-2; Ryan Beine. 2-1-11-18;
on
special teams. Bryan Wagner
Leroy Johnson: 13-1-8-37: Greg
tied
a team record with 12 punts.
Barkman. i -0-2; Michael Pratt ,
but
had
kicks ol29, 24, 26 , and 31
2-0-4; Dan· Bryant, 0-1-1-4. TOyards
.
TALS 19-3-20-117.
In addition. punt returner
TRI-STATE (86. - Wayne
Gerald
McNeil twice fielded
Poole, 6-5-17; Troy Baughman.
punts
inside
the 5-yard line. The
4-1-2-13; Tom Schermerhorn, 4-0.
second
time
he did that the
8; Joe Gajdostlk, 11 -1-0-25; Matt
Browns
started
their final drive ·
Pohl, 1-3-5; Joe Deal, 1-2-4;
Darryl Hayes, 2-0-4; Brian of overtime from their own 4.
White, 1-0-2; Ken Kemerer, 4-0-8.
.TOTALS 34·2·12·86.
SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
Halftime •core: Tri-Siate 46,
446 4524
. . .
Bryaa 31.

THANK YOU
for your vote of
confidence in
re·eleeting me to
RACINE YIUAGE
COUNCIL

ROBERT E. BEEGLE
Pd. lor by can d. Bo1 72. llcin&amp; Ott

In Honor Of .
LESLIE F. FULTZ, DIRECTOR
The
Farn;ters Bank and Savings
Company, Pomeroy{iffice,
~will close at 9:45 A.M. and
reopen at 11:00 A.M.,
Wednesday, November 22, 1989
so the staff can attend his
•
servtces.

areas where home carrier service II

~

with Mar tin and Russell from
Allee Lloyd. The Eagles' Slone
was chosen most valuable
player.
EarUer Saturday, Tri-State
(Ind.) topped Bryan (Tenn. )
86-67 to net the men's consolation
. game, despite a 37-polnt game
scoring high by Bryen center
Leroy Johnson.
Allee Lloyd (4-01 faces Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic
Conference rival Union on the
road Tuesday. Rio Grande (2-1)
travels to Wilmington Tuesday
for Its ltrst District 22gameofthe
season, set for 7: 30 p.m.

when It counted, " s aid Lowery.
who had made 14 of 17 kicks this
year Inside the 40. "What can I
say? It's a horrible feeling."
Also feeling horrible after the
game was Cleveland running
back Mike 'OIIphan t. who
fumbled twice. His firs t tumble
was picked up at the Cleveland 3
by Neil Smith, who lunged Into
the end zone for Kansas City's
only touchdown ollhe day.
The Browns won. the toss In
overtime, and drove to the
Kansas City 3G, where they fa ced
a thlrd-and -10. Oliphant took a
shOvel pass from Kosar and got
to the 30, In field goal range, but
fumbled when he . was hit by
Smith and Louis . Coope r
recovered.
"It's the worst day of my life, "
Oliphant said.
The game was a defensive
struggle between the top two
defenses In the AFC, and featured 23 punts. The Browns held
Christian Okoye, the NFL's leadIng rusher, to 40 yards on 21
carries, and picked oft three
Kansas City passes.
The Chiefs held Cleveland to 78
yards rushing and recovered
lour Brown fumbles . Kansas City
starting quarterback Steve Pelluer sprained his right knee In the
first quarter and did not return.
Veteran Steve DeBerg filled In
and completed 17 ol40 passes ior
209 yards and two Interceptions.
"In a ball game like this,
you're lucky to get put with a
tie," said Cleveland coach Bud
Carson. ''Maybe we should feel
lucky. l don't feel that way at this
moment. Most of the people feel
as If we lost."
Cleveland took a 3-0 lead on a
40-yard Matt Bahr field goal on
the final play of the first half, and
went back In front 10-7 on a
one-yard dive by Eric Metcalf.
Lowery tied the game with 3:48
remaining with a 41-yard field
goal.
"I told Nick and ihe entire
squad that we're In this thing
together and certainly he's won a
lot of games kicking,'' Scholtenheimer ·said. "It wasn't meant to

IN MEMORIAM

HEAT
PUMP
SPECIALIST

The Daily Sentinel

'

'

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

r

played since I've been associated
with the Lions. I'm embarrassed
for our COI\Ches, players and
fans . It was a horse manure
effort. We played terrible. We
played ugly."
Surveying a long injury list
that Included starting quarter·
back Rodney P~te, Fontes
added, "WI! may not have-enough
players to line up , Thursday
(Thanksgiving Day against the
Cleveland Browns •. I may have
to ge~ dressed and play . But I
might play better (than some
Lions did Sunday) ."
Added De!rolt linebacker
Chris Spielman, "We took a step
backwards today . We played
terrible and It's everybody's
fault. It was all down Ill alter the
first quarter. We got our rears
beat and that's ali there Is to it."
Eslason fired touchdown
passes of17 yards to Tim McGee,
15 yards to Mike Martin and 1
yard to Craig Taylor to help the
Bengals Improve to 6-5. McGee
caught a Cincinnati record n
passes for a career-high 194
yards.
Tied 7-7 late In the second
period, Cincinnati scored three
touchdowns within 2:27 to seize a
commanding 28-7 halftime lead.
Taylor scored on a 3-yard run, 73
seconds later T.aylor caught a
1-yard pass from Eslason follow Ing Joe Kelly's recovery of
Walter Stanley's fumble and 74
seconds after that Eric Thomas
blocked a Jim Arnold punt at the
Detroit· 7 and Barney Bussey

.,

Joseph Spear

an eight-day v!s!l. Ron gave a
few Interviews and a couple of
20-mlnute speeches and pocketed
a cool $2 million.
At the samf time Reagan Is
salting away his millions, the
American taxpayers are paying
him an annual.penslon of$99,500.
The citizens of California are
paying him another $29,711 for
the privilege of having had him
as their governor. We are also
provtdlne him with Secret Service protection at a cost of $3
mUI!on a year.
We coughed up $697,034 to help
him set up an office and pay
salaries and benefits tor a staff of
more than a dozl!'n.
·

offsldes penalty gave him
another chance.
This time. he was wide to the
left from 39 yards out. In
overtime. Lowery, Wbo had been
succe$sful on 77 .9 percent of his
kicks before this year, was
woefully short from 47 yards out
with three seconds left.
Kansas City Is 4-6-1, while the
Browns saw their lour-game
winning streak snapped. but
remain atop the AFC Central
with a 7-3-1 mark. The Browns
last tie came ln. 1973 against
Kansas City, while the Chiefs tied
the Jets ·l ast year.
" I should have put It through

Alice Lloyd wins Bevo
Francis toomey title

-1,

Why should the rich get richer?
Today in history

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Placekicker Nick Lowery, who had
three chances to win the game for
the Kansas City Chiefs, came up
with three different ways to mls s.
Lowery's normally reliable
right leg misfiring lett the Chiefs
and the Clevealdn Browns with a
10-10 tie Sunday In Marty Scbol:
tenhelmer's first return to Cleveland since he left the Browns.
Lowery missed two field goals
In the last · four seconds of
regulation and another with
three seconds left In overtime.
He was wide to the right on a
45-yard field goal with four
seconds left In the game, but an

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
prospect of an explosion c~used
by negligence.
,
Our sources claim the grenade
story was ·a hoax to persuade the
Army to cooperate In a cover-up
or anything that would point
toward an explosion.
With the Army as an Innocent
dupe, the covert operatives may
have thought they had a better
chance of keeping the lid on their
own secret arms sales to Iran.
The ·deal was not progressing
smoothly, and there was a strong
suspicion that Iranian terrorists
wanted to send a message by
blowing up the plane load of U.S.
troops ret umlng home from
Egypt.
The mastermind of the arms ·
deal. Lt . CoL Oliver North, wrote
a note to his superiors shortly
before the crash saying that the
Iranians were livid about receivIng the wrong missiles. Two days
after the crash, the Islamic
Jihad, an Iranian-backed terror·
1st group based In Lebanon, took
credit for the Gander crash. The
report was dismissed by. the
White House as a lie.
·
We have recently learned
another twist that lends more
credence to the terrorist theory.
North's private notebooks make
teference to a meeting In early '

The Deily Sa lli••-Paga 3

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I

. II
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Peg• 4 The Daly S1 ltinal

·-···-·--

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Pomeloy Midtlapcrt. Ohio

Monday,_November 20. 1989

Monday, November 20. 1989

S VA C boys' preview

Eagles, Bobcats pull .off surprise fmishes m hoopfest

conunued from page 1
At 7:28p.m.• Pomeroy was called to Eastern High School tor
Ryan Stuphin who refused treatment.
Middleport at 8:57 p.m. was called to Page St. tor Oris
Frederick to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
Racine at 10: 24 p.m. was called to Third St. tor Keith Musser
who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 12:35 a.m., Middleport was called to South Second
Ave. for Mary Butcher to Holzer Medical Center.
Racine at 4:22 a.m. was called to Trouble Creek Road for
Raymond Kerns to Holzer Medical Center:
Racine Fire Department and EMS at 1: 21 p.m. were called to
Route 338 for Ernie Greene who was taken to Southern High
School where he was mel by Llfefllght and taken to Grant
Hospital In Columbus.
Middleport at 2:05 p.m. was called to Brownell Ave. for
Teresa Carr who was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital.
At 9:04 p.m., Rutland Fire Department and EMS were called
to an auto fire. Wllllam Levacy was treated at the scene.

I

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Okay, so they didn't count In
the standings. But after the two
middle scrimmages In Saturday
night's SVAC boys' basketball
preview, there had to be some
encouragement on the Eastern
and Kyger Creek benches after
puUing off surprise finishes to
join Southern and North Gallla as
winners of their respective mini·
contests.
Each scrimmage consisted of
two eight-minute quarters.
Tornadoes 48, Vlldnp Zl ·
Two early baskets by Symmes
Valley guard Shawn Mootz gave
tfie Vikings a ~ -2 lead In the
scrimmage's first two minutes,
but when Southern's Chad Taylor
hit the first of two three-pointers
from the right wing at the 5:38
mark in the first quarter, fol·
lowed by the second bomb 24
ticks later, the Tornadoes took
the lead and never gave It back.
Both teams hustled to the ball,
but Southern's relentlessness on
both sides of the ball showed
itself in numerous trips to the foul
line, which was the launching
pad for 17 of the Tornadoes' 48
points. Racine, which led 2J.17 to
begin the second quarter, only
missed tour from the charity
stripe throughout the cakewalk.
The Tornadoes were led by
Taylor's 13 points, while the
Norsemen were led by Mootz's

~

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six.

Ea1les .SII. Oaks 31
In the beginning, the Oaks used
their bulk to crowd the paint and
give themselves time and space
to shoot anywhere on the key, bu I
the. Hill expanded its four-point
lead wllh bonus baskets from
point guard Brad Davis and
Shane Maynard to go ahead 14·6
with 3: 51 to go In the first frame.
At that point Eastern started to
make its comeback.
Senior Scott Fitch, the Eagles'
6-1 forward , conneeted on a pair
or layups 41 seconds apart,
followed by a layup by 6-5 senior .
center Mike Frost. which
whacked the Hill's lead to14·13 at
the 2:31 mark ln round one. But
the Oaks ' Chad Jones, a 6-0
sophomore forward, connected
to give the south Jackson five a
16-13 advantage.
Patient shooting and a defense
effective enough lokeeptheOaks
In check bought the time the
Eagles needed to take charge of
the affair. which was what
happened when Jeff Durst, a 6-0
sophomore guard/ forward, hll a
long jumper from the left side to
cut the lead to 16·15. Then two
foul shots by junior Mike Wheeler
with 1:08 left and a beyond· thearc basket by sophomore Tim
Bissell in the quarter's last ~6
seconds pu.t Eastern on top 20·16.
Oak Hill center Chad Smith, a
6-4 senior, started the second
quarter with a layup off a

Scoreboard ...

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...·

Ratings

'

MIS!IION, K•. ( l~ll -TIM! top ft
lt•lllftK M ttlf wrtkly liM Nflt.A Dim lila
I·A.i\ loolhMII pallt'O llllurtrd hf IIIPNC.U

M•IR&amp;a .. All•lthM)' CP».l
Dtf~Mce

Dlvhoion I·AA Fae&amp;h ..l f.ommiUrr
wltll re.... nll!l Uu-. . 111 No•.ll, flnl...... r
\'Illes, lo&amp;al poials - · pl't'\'iiiMI nulllli•J·
Tram
'
Polllb
I. Ga.Sowltl'a(11-1)4fl ............... lll 1
t. f'lrrma~~ (S.C.) I 11-11 ................ 11 I
:S. r\U!'ilt.St {1·1· 1) ~ ....................1! !I
4, (tiel Moly 00511 ( 11-11 .............. U •

..

-

1
1

1!1. Nnall•lr• (''1-tl ................... JI

1

'tl. N&lt;lrlhll'f'a Iowa

1

(II(•)

Wm6Marr tH·%-1) ........... U

11.

u. Gram.. IJI !bl~ (1-tJ ............. st 14
14. \ 'ouaptowa Stur (l-3) ........... tH 17
1a. E»torrn DlllioM llt-SJ ............... U 111
II. \'II Dow (11-1) ........................ !1 1

•.• .,..~d

(a-ll ....................

OIIU'''"' ,.t·rivl~t. ~Melo : AI(.'Q"' Mlale,
H•"·ard Nl'w Ham .... lre .

.·,

Grid P :Urln,;M
I"OLUMBt.IS,Ohlo(Ufl!- Palrlnl(lor

10 . .llll.t•to.GaStatr (W) ................. 11
Ill. Canlll!t:llt!llt(ll·3) _, .... ,.. ,.... ,.... It

I
1.
II

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Wal,. Tay

INvW.n Ill
Ironton ( IJ.t) ""· Camjltf'll Ml!'morial
(lt.l ), II ~~o. m . FrldiQ', OhloStadl.n.
DIYII .. n IV
Wheelerllh•r'l' Clll-1) n. \\' IU'I'f'll ,
Ken_.4)' (IH l.:!: :ttp.m. Hlllunl.,, Ohio

j

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1. Af!Jillaehlan &amp; . !H·tJ .. $ ........... H
II. M . . . CJ.ti ...... .... .. .................. H

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at Lab &amp;k•
JU-Kelllome at ftlafll on
BaWIIIIt Grll'l'tl .. P,._,.._ .., Tny
OltMo

Ill• m.lo IIIah .School fnthldl pl•yoff
fi.Uli:
Dl\'lsiDIII
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.
Dlvalon 11
Fo8&amp;orla (' i:J-8) VA CIIMIPIIftd St• .Jo~ph
Uf.U, 11 a.m Halunllq, Ohio Stadium.

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Phtlllon v
Mlnwr Ot-11 ""~h· DaMid(lt.-1).'!:11
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Grt'fll a.,y !1. Jolu Fraftlilot• 17
K - - rlly It, On"eland 11(11•1

011~ JUrh Scltoal FH&amp;hall
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Hollt' L"'lt•h.) 71, ( '. . MUll
MI . \'t'r•a Nu;. 11, ~In• HIM t:a
,\Hf'P Uny~t (Ky. ) Ill, KloGI'UIIe 1tJ

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Ohio Slalt• 4t Wl~~eolllla!!

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M'hniprr N\' Rllflll:t'l'll. 1 ::15 p.m .

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This week's games

•

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Dli.V 10• :U. ,Jo ... ( 'arroll·18

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\ 'ouaptown ~ SA, T•w•• Sbalr

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8Ud1Q',l'liO\' , N
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fllld..tlat Bait•••• p.m.
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Tu ... U. &amp;wll•~t Grtel'll It
NnriH:rn DllltOilo $1, UN•IIIMI.13

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v.:o•m II

rebound of Davis' missed shot ln
the quarter's !lrst 18 seconds 'to
cut Eastern's lead to 20·18, but
Durst nailed a lrlfecta 12 seconds
later to boost Reedsville'sadvan·
tage to 23-18. Maynard trimmed
the Eagles' lead to two again by
dialing long distance from the
len baseline allhe7:17mark, but
a foul shot by junior Jason Hager
and a turnaround jumper from
t~ right side by junior Randy
Moore gave Eastern a 26-21lead.
Eastern took a 28-22 lead on a
baseline jurnper by junior Matt
Fin law with 5:08 left, but even
' though Frost and others were
blocking several Oak Hlll passes
and shots, the Eagles watched
their lead sUp away as the Oaks
started playing more ·a ggres·
sively and using their scoring
combination of layups and their
missile launcher (Maynard! to
take a 33-31 lead on a Maynard
three spot with 3: 22 left.
Fitch chipped away at the
Oaks' lead with a free throw
before erasing it with a layup on
an offensive rebound at the 2: 36
mark. giving the Eagles a 3~·33
lead. Though the Oaks played
their physical game on the
boards until the end, the Eagles
stole enough passes and put on
enough defensive pressure to
keep the Oaks on the short end of
the affair the rest of the way.
Filch led all scorers with 15
points, and Maynard led the Hlll
with 12.
Bobcats 26, Wildcats 22
Hannan Trace showed Its char·
acterlsllc in·your·face defense
and an up· tempo offense !hat has
yet to work out the bugs In
scoring once the Wlldeats get to
the basket, but Kyger Creek ran
the ball hard and used lis bulky
bu I short front line ln addition to
taking advantage of the Wild·
cats' miscues in posting its
four-point victory.
The Wildcats, who hustled
·constantly all over the court in
their man-to-man defense, were
ahead iJ.g at the end of the first
quarter, but , back·to· back
jumpers by junior guard Sean
Denney cut what was a seven·

point deficit early In the second
quarter and made it into a
three-J)olnt deficit . But junior
forward Chris Strow hit a jumper
from the left side ot the key with
5: 49 left to give Trace a 17-12
lead, its last comfortable lead of
the scrimmage. Then Denney
and company wen I to work.
For t·he remainder of the
rhlnl-game, the Bobcats out·
scored the Wlldeats 14·5, an
accomplishment directly traced
t'o stealing · the ball more .and
creating breaks in the paint.
Hannan Trace had problems
scoring and rebounding In the
paint, in spite of having a 6·2
center ln Craig Rankin going
against a muscular 5-11 postman
in John Sipple.
After trading baskets as they
went Into the home stretch, the
Bobcats finally took the bull by
the horns when freshman Bryan
Hall followed Denney's gametying layup with a layup of his
own, which he got on a mldcourl
steal with 1:11 lett. That gave
KCHS a 2~ -22 lead. which was
expanded to 26-22 when Sipple hit
both ends or a one-and-one with 58
seconds left.
Denney led all scorers with 11
points. while Eric Lloyd led
Trace with eight.
Pirates 40, Highlanders 25
Quickness vs. quickness they usually cancel each other
out, unless other factors are
figured Into the winning equa·
Uon. In thiS nightcap, that factor
was height, which North Gallia
clearly possessed.
·
The ~!rates, who opened the .
scoring with a three-point bomb
from the left wing by 6·1 junior ·
guard Brian Stout, led from tipoff
to final buzzer by hustling at_ all
times and playing tight, physical
defense against a shorte~. but
determined Southwestern squad
that refused to throw In the towel
and on occasion, forced Pirate
fouls.
The closest the Cadmus live
came to keeping upwllh the Bucs
was when 6.() senior forward
John Ehman canned a bonus
bucket from tHe right wlngtocut
North's lead to 6·31n the contest's

first two ·minutes . After that, it
was all green and blaek.
The Pirates crowded the paint
primarily with 6-5 postman D.J.
Hammel and 6·2 juniors Shane
Smith ·and Richard Haney, but
Stout and 6.0 sophomore guard

Darin Smith used their combined
muscle on the boards on occasion
against a simllarly-sized High·
lander front line.
Stout led -the Bucs with 10
points, while John Ehman led the
Highlanders with five.

Grant received for project
State Rep. 1'4ary Abel (D·Athens) and · State Senator Jan
Michael Long (D-Clrclevllle) announced today the award of a
$50,000 Community Cooperative Grant to the Worker OWned
Network Incubator project. ·
.
The grant monies wlll be used to help construct a 10,000 square
foot cooperative Incubator to assist the Worker Owned Network
In stardng new manufacturing entitles.
'7hedevelopment of this project will be a great asset to newly
·fonhed businesses and economic structure." commented Abel.
This project Is scheduled to begin this month and will creaje 25
new jobs In Southeast Ohio, while retaining 15 others. By
receiving the $50,000 grant, the Worker Owned Network wlll be
able- to obtain loans for the remaining $450,000 needed to
complete the project. The total net worth of his project is
$500,000.
'7he need for business support systems such as the Worker
Owned Network Incubator ln Southeastern Ohio, ls necessary
for the improvement of the economy ln this area," said Long.

~OW ·AT

tries from the foul line for 68
percent.
Following the championship
game, selections for the All·
Tournament Team were an·
nounced. Coaches chose Rio's
Jennl Couch, who scored 15
points against Shawnee. and Ann
Barnitz, who recorded 14
markers and three rebounds.
Also selected were McGraw and
Edler from Shawnee and Cum·
berland's Hope Peace. Susan
Conley of Shawnee, who led her
team against Rio Grande on the
boards with six, was named most
valuable player.
Shawnee, now 2·0, travels to
Edinburgh (Pa.) Monday. The
Redwomen (2-1) are Idle until
Nov . 30, when they go to West
Virginia State for a 7 p.m .
contest.
Box. scores:
-RIO GRANDE (52) - Cindy
Ridgeway. 2·0·4; Ann Barnltz.
4·6·1~: KathySnyder.0·2·2; Jennl
Couch, 4·7-15: Kerr! Kidwell.
2·2-6; Mindy Montgomery, 2·2·0·
10; Renee Ward, 1·0-2. TOTALS '
11-2·17-52.
SHAWNEE STATE (70) Jamie McGraw, 5·2-12; Kim
Danner, 4·9·17; Susie Huff, 1·2·4;
Lisa Brandenburg, 2·0-4: Susan
Conley, 2 -0-~: Amy Edler, 2-7-ll:
Aretha Porter, 6-2-14. Susie Bowling, 1·2·4. TOTALS 23-24·70.
Halftime score: Shawnee Slate
39, Rio Grande 26.
CUMBERLAND (64)- MlssiP
Irvin, 1·0·2; Hope Peace. 8-4-20:
Amy Clem, 1·0·2; Annette
Wormsley, ~-3·1i; Jenny Deneke,
2-().4; Mary Jo Ridenour, 1·0·2;
Mloshi Moore, 6·0·12; Leslee
Shoupe, 2+5; Jana Newman,
3·0·6. TOTALS %11-8-64.
LIMESTONE (~1) - Latonya
Bird, 2·1·0·7: Jennifer Hardin,
1·5-7; Reatha Connelly, 5·0·10;
Eugenia Crocker, ~-0·8; Trena
Wllson, 2·0·4; Sharon Dillon,
2·1·().7; Anlssa Hlll, 1·4·6; Leslie
Humphries, 1-().2. TOTALS 18-2·
9-$1.
~
Halftime score: Cumberland
32, Umeslone 2~.

DOMINO'S PIZZA

16 INCH DELUXE PIZZA
4-PIPSI'S, 16 OZ.

~··

liMITED
DIUVBY AIU

Domino's Pizza

992·2124
WIST IWIII
POMhOY, OHIO

Two winners share $3 million jackpol

Chester Council No. · 323,
Daughters of A mercia, wlll meet
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the lodge
hall. A silent aucllon will be held

Stocks
Dally slock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smllb
of Blunl, Ellis &amp; Loewi

by the . ways
committee.

and

means

Thanksgiving services
Sacred Hearl Roman Catholic
Church wlll host the annual
Community Thanksgiving Ser·
vice sponsored by the Meigs
County Ministerial Associa lion
at 7 p.m. Wednesday .
The .Rev. Don Meadows, pastor
of the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, wlll bring the message.
Special music wlll be provided by
the Methodist and Sacred Heart
choirs.
The offering will be designated
tor the Ministerial Assoclallon's
work to assist the needy in the

Am Electric Power ............. 30~
AT&amp;T ........................... ... .. .42)1
Ashland Oil ........................ 3~*
Bob Evans .......................... 13%
Charming Shoppes ............ ... 11
City Holding Co .............. ..... 15 .area.
Federal Mogul. ................... 19%
Goodyear T&amp;R ..... .............. 45%
Heck's .............................. .....5
MeeUng correction
Key Centurion ................ .... 14%
The Pomeroy SesquicentenLands' End ................... .... .. 26% nial Coromlttee will meet on
Limited Inc..... ................. .33% Tuesday evening at 7:30p.m . at
Multimedia Inc .................... 92
the J .T.P .A. office, not Monday
Rax Restaurants ......... ... .. .... 2% evening as was reported earlier.
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... ... : ...... .14~ Chamber to meel
Shoney's Inc ....................... U')I,
The Middleport Chamber of
Star Bank ............................ 22
Commerce will meet Tuesday at
Wendy's Inti. ......................... 5
7 p .m . at the Vlllage Hall.
Worthington Ind .................. 24*

CLEVELAND (UP!)- The$3
mllllon jackpot in Saturday
night's Ohio Super Lotto drawing
wlll be shared by two people who
each had the winning numbers of
3, 11, 12, 14, 21 and 38.
The winners each wlllcollect 20
annual payments of $60,000, after
mandatory federal taxes are
withheld.
The names of the lottery
winners wlll be announced after
the tickets are redeemed at a
lottery office.
In addition to the top prize

RESEIYAnON APPUUTION FOR

Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society
2nd Annual Christmas Dinner
DECEMBER 1, 1989 - 6:30 p.m.
sa.oo Single
s1 s.oo Double
Name ____________________________________
Phone Number - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .

..

J

{

p~rsons.

Enclosed for

lleigs County Museum, Box 145. Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Eichinger Sr., Pomeroy; six
grandchildren,
three
great·
grandchildren;
and
several
nieces,
Gladys Blake Riggleman, 80 or
3709 Sixth Ave., Parkersburg, W. nephews and cousins.
Va., died Friday at Camden· . Services wiU be conducted
Clark Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Tuesday, 11 am., in the SL Paul
Lutheran Chun:h, New Haven, with
Va.
Born in 'Olive Township, Meigs the Rev. Patricia Krug, Rev.
County, she was the daughter or Richard Krug, and Rev. George
the late WIIUam and Nora Weirick officialing. Burial will fol·
Blanche Buchanan Blake. She low in the Graham Cemetery.
Friends may caU at the
attended the Brisco Run Baptlst
Foglesong Flmeral Home today, 6
Church, Vienna, W.Va.
Mrs. Riggleman ls survived by 10 9 p.m., and one hour prior 10
her husband, Floyd Riggleman services a1 !he chwch.
In lieu of Oowers, !he family
to whom she was married 58
years, one son, Dale Riggleman, asks that donations be· made to the
and one sister, Saddle Cubbison, New Haven Emergency Squad or
Coolvllie. Besides her parents the SL Paul Luihernn Church.
she was preceded ln death by
Nellie Schools
four brothers and a sister.
Nellie M. Schools, 76, of Point
Funeral services wlll be held at
1 p.m Tuesday at the White Pleasant, W.Va., died Saturday
Funeral Home. The Rev Robert evening at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born April 10, 1913, in the
,w. Markley wlll officiate and
· burial will be ln Rando !ph Fairview Community, Mason
Cemetery, Reedsville. Friends Co101ty, she was the daugh~ of the
IIIIIY call at the funeral home late Ramie and Rebecca (Roach)
Edwards.
Monday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
She was a former employee of
Yonker Manufacturing Company of
Glen Pen-y
Point Pleasant and was a member
of the BeUemead United Methodist
Glen Lesley Perry, 83, of Chwch.
Tuppers Pia Ins, died Sunday
Also preceding her in death was
evening at Veterans Memorial
one son, Randall E. Schools; one
Hospital after a short lllness.
brother; and three sisters.
Born In East Liverpool, he was
She is survived by her husband,
the son ol the late Charles and Clifford Schools; one daughter,
Dorothy Jane Chaney Perry.
Mrs. Donna Grimstead of Mason,
He is survived by one sister and
Va.; three sisters, Mary Zellcie of
brother-in-law, Augusta and
Hartford, W.Va, Mona Gibbs of
Harold Barnhart, Tuppers
Letart, W.Va., and Nettie Hemsley
Plains, with whom he made his
of Syracuse; two brol\lers, Earl
home, and three cousins, Nancy
Edwards of Letart, and Willie Ed·
Rockhold, Cuyahoga Falls, Del·
war$
of
Hartford;
five
mar Osborne, Reedsville. and
grandchildren;
three
greatJoan Ann Lockhart, Coolville.
grandchildren; three step-greatFuneral services will be held at grandchildren; two sll:p-great·
1 p.m Wednesday at the White
Funeral Home. The Rev. Robert great-grandchildren.
Services will be Tuesday at the
Sanders wlll officiate and burial
Crow-Hassell
Fueneral Home wiih
will be In the Church of Christ
Cemetery, Success Road. the Rev. Eldon G. Shingleton
Friends may call at the funeral officiating. Burial will be at the
Suncrest Cemetery.
home after 3 p.m. Tuesday.
Friends may call Monday, 2· 4
p.m.,
and 1 to 9 p.m.
John Fry

·Gladys Qigsleman

Fri'CH SCORES- Eastern's Scott Fllcb (341 goes alrborae as
he flnger·rolls In two of his game- and preview-high 15 poln18 o.ver
Oak Hill's Shane Maynard (10) In Saturday night's SVAC
basketball preview at Kyger Creek High School. The Eagles, who
won their scrim mare 39-36, will open the season Tuesday ngltll at
Miller. (OVP pholo by G. Spencer Osborne)

.,

GRABS BALL - Southern's Todd Grindstaff (20, with 0 visible)
grabs tile loose ball as Symmes Valley's Danny Justice (40) and

Soutllern's Brent Shuler (42) ·give chase durtnr the OJH!nlng
scrbnmare of Saturday nlrht's SVAC basketball preview at KY1Jer
Creek High School. The Tornadoes walked away wllh a 48-U
victory. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne) ·

PRJCE&amp;OOCID
liON. l'IOV :10

THJtU 8Ul'fDA1'
NOVIIS.lfllle

3 ROLL PACKAGE
420UNCE
BOLD OR OXYDOL
LAUNDRY DETERGENT

BRAWNY
PAPER TOWELS

24COUNT

24COUNT

DJMETAPP

BENADRYL

PLUS

PLUS

CAPLETS

TABLETS

369

w.

John C. Fry, 73, New Haven,
died Sllllllday.
Born SepL 11, 1916, in Letan. he
was the son of the laJe Charles
Edgar and Ethel Y. Yeager Fly.
He was a fanner, heavy equip-

The Folks at H&amp;R Block and Kebler Business
Services would like to express our sincere
thanks to our friends and neighbors,.the Cit·
izens of Pomeroy and Middleport, Local Business People, the Utility Companies, Meigs
County Sheriff'!! Department and the Pomeroy Police Department. for their assistance
during our recent building accide!lt.
The Cooperation and Effort of everyone demonstrates the highest level of Community Service and Individual Concern.
We are proud to be a member of this community.
•

THE INCOME TAX I'!OPLE

992·6674
611 last llaln

KElLER .
Business Service
992-7270
· P1111erey, Ol;lo

THE BLOCK
MEiUCY
CHRISTMAS

GOSDIN
ALONE

'699'

Hospital news

Saturday admissions - J·e sse
White, Pomeroy; Edgar Brewer.
Portland.
·
Saturday discharges - Cllf·
ford Lambert.
ment operatOr for Grim Excavating,
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Athens, Ohio, a member of {)pclat· . None.
ing Engineers Local No. 18 of
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Columbus, Ohio, and a meml!er of Edgar Brewer.
the SL Paul Luthe11111 Church, New .
Haven.
·
Surviving are his wife. Mildred
In Friday's story about Boy.
L. Roush Fry, New Haven; son and Scouting ln the area, Ron Caudill
daughter-in-law, James L. and Bar· was incorrectly Identified as a
bara S. Fly, Pomeroy; daughll:r and unit commander. He is unit
son·in-law.
A. and Max A. commissioner.

Correction

THANK.YOU!

K1D8 ON l~~~~::~L~ VERN

SKID ROW
RANDY TRAVIS
YOUTH GONE NO BOLDIN' BACJt
WILD

ALICE
COOPER
TR..~

FLUORIDE
TOOTHPASTE

~

'

~

'

I. , I

149

r.-,y

}29
Wfta1'DAY .couJift'

NICil ...

.
.'
t

BONUS SIZE

'

.
•

•'

..
•

SCOTCH

STORE HOURS
298 Sf· c' OND ST. Monday
thru Sunday
POMEROY, OH.
8 AM tO PM

'

BRAND

711 CT.

The sale dates in yesterday's
ad were incorrect. They
should have bHn "Prices
Effective
Nov. 19 thru Nov. 25."
We are sorry for any
Inconvenience.

GLAD FOOD

MAGIC

STORAGE
BAGS

TAPE

59¢

179

I

• •

•

winners. 124 ti&lt;'kets were sold
with live of the numbers, for
prizes of $1,000. And 6,006 tickets
had four numbers, for $75
payoffs.
Ticket sales for the weekend
game totaled $3,558,791 and the
total prize payout was $3,57~.450.
The jackpot for Wednesday's
drawing will be at least $3
million.
.• In the Kicker game, one person
had the winning combination of
854788 and wlll collect the
$100,000 grand prize.

--Area deaths---

SSU Bears win Bevo
Francis women's title
Strong defensive play by Shaw·
nee Stale took center stage in the
champlon•hlp round or th!!
women's division of the Bevo
Francis Classic Saturday as the
Lady Bears pulled away from the
Rio Grande Redwomen for a
70·52 viet ory .
In other action at Lyne Center
Saturday, Cumberland IKy.l defeated Limestone iS.C. l '64·51 ln
the women's consola!lon game of
the annual tournament .
Robin Hagen-Smith's Shawnee
club established a quick lead ln
the game's opening minutes, but
the Redwomen rallied to seize
control at 12:56 on a 3-poinl
basket by Mindy Montgomery.
Rio Grande maintained the lead
for roughly four minutes, but a
pair of free throws by Shawnee
center Jamie McGraw put the
visitors up by one 119·181 at 7:22.
Successive field goals by Amy
Edler and Aretha Porter helped
the Lady Bears establish a
halftime margin of 13 points that
Rio Grande was unable to over·
come. The Redwomen succeeded
in narrowing the lead to nine
early in the second period, but
guard Kim Danner's game high
of 17 points helped Shawnee stay
ahead.
"The basic thing about this
game was, wedldn'tputpolnlson
the board and Shawnee played
great defense," Redwomen
coach Doug Foote remarked.
"We thought we had to come out
and dominate the post, but we
didn't. Shawnee got a lot of
breaks because of hustle and
effort."
Hagen -Smith said the Redwomen "gave us all we ('OU!d
handle. They made us run a
half-court offense, and we didn't
handle that too well. But some of
our kids came off the bench and
played their hearts out, which
sparked the team on for the win."
Although shooting 37 percent
from thl' field, the Lady Eears
posted 80 percent on free throws,
sinking 2~ . of their 30 attempts.
Rio Grande was 40.4 percent on
, field goals and netted 17 of Its 25

The Daily Sentinei-Paga 6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

....--Local news briefs... - - Meigs announcements

•

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer

----

••

"

•

�The Daily Sentinel_

By The Bend

Diabetes seminar ·is scheduled
for ·Meigs Senior Citizen Center

Monday. November 20. 1989
Page

. .'

6

-

Gx&gt;king ·class slated
for arthritis victims.
Openings are still available for
the easy cooking class for per,sons wjth arthritis which will be
· held Dec: 7 at the Meigs County
Senior Center from 12: 45 to 2
p.m . The free class Involves a
demonstration In preparing
healthy food while preserving
joint function and saving energy.
Cindy Oliveri, a home economist, Pam Meez, a dietician In
the Meigs County Health Depart·

ment, · and • Diane Howell, a
physical therapy provider at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
will present the program. The
program wlll offer self help
sUggestions and opportunities for
questions.
Class size is limited to 50 and
registration and more Information are available by calling the
Meigs Senior Center at 992-7022
by Nov. 30.

wnch menu set at Eastern Local
The lunch menu for the Eastern Local School District has
been announced for the week of
Nov. 20.
Monday : hamburger, vegetables and dip, fruit , and milk.

Tuesday: turkey slice, roll
with butter, mashed potatoes and
gravy, pumpkin pie square with
whipped topping, and milk.
There will be no sc boo! the
remainder of the week. •

Alfred UMW meets
with 'Thanksgiving'
"Thanksgiving" was the
Van Meter and Nina Robinson
theme of the · Alfred United
are In c harge of decorations .
Methodist Women program
Eight members were present
~hen the group met at the church
and 55 shut In calls reported.
recently.
Nina Robinson read a letter from
:The m~ting opened with
the Meigs Cooperative Parish.
prayer by Gertrude Robinson.
The group voted to make a
group singing of "Count Your donation to the parish.
Blessings" and sharing of
Martha Poole had the prayer
Thanksgiving responsive calendar and chose Maudlne
reading.
Holloway, lal1y worker In AnnisMembers gave individual ton, Ala. The group signed a
readings, "The First Thanksgiv• birthday card for her.
ing'' by Thelma Henderson;
Mrs. ·Henderson and Mrs.
" Life's Harvest," by Osle Fol· Parker gave a report on the
!rod; "On.e Nation Under God," UMW District Annual meeting
Nina Robinson; ·'I Thank Thee which emphasized the needs In
Lord," Nellie Parker; "Little South Africa and the continuing
Things," Charlotte Van Meter;
rise of pOverty world wide.
"We Thank Thee Lord," GerMrs. Parker presented a bill
trude Robinson; and "Turkey for the vanUla which the society
Trivia ," Florence Spencer:
now has for sale at $2 per bottle.
During the business meeting,
During the social hour. Sara
the group made plans for the Caldwell, served cheese sandChristmas dinner on Dec. 12. and wiches. strawberry jello delight,
for gifts to the shut Ins. Charlotte and soft drinks.

Slinderella class meeting held
Cindy Lambert lost the most
weight in the Monday night Five
Points class of Slnderella and
Mary Browning was the runner
up.
In ·the Tuesday night Mason
class. tHree new members were

•

welcomed and Kate Stone Isot the
most weight with Nellie Cas to as
the runner up.
The class held their ThanksgivIng dinner with pizza, cheese·
cake, meatballs, broccoli casserole, and other vegetables.

Community calendar
MONDAY
STIVERSVILLE -T"e Sti·
versville Word ot Faith Chu,rc:h,
located on County Road 31,
Stlversvllle-Baldknob. will be
having a revival Monday through
Friday at 7:30 p.m. with Alton
and Kathy Dozier. Dozier Is
called as a prophet and evangelist. They are from Bonifay, Fla.
P~s tor Gary Holter welcomes
the public.

Council will meet in recesses
session on Monday at 7 p.m. at
Star Mill Park.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Group II of
the Middleport . Presbyterian
Church will meet Tuesday at 6
p.m at the church for the annual
Thanksgiving dinner. Faye Wallace will have the book study and
Betsy Horky, the devotions.

Holiday proclaimed
by President ;Bush;
turkey gets a pardon

"Diabetes" will be the subject
ot the November program for the
health maintenance series, sponsored jointly · by the Holzer
Medical Center and the Holzer
Clinic.
'I'hese illformatlonal presents·
tlons, speclftcally for community
.,residents who are age 55 and
over, are designed to encourage
wellness among Meigs County's
senior clt~ns. .
This month's presentation will
be made for Meigs County
Seniors on Tuesday at the center,
located on Mulberry Heights In
Pomeroy, at 1 p.m.
Featured speaker will be Dot·
tie Esque, R.N., dh•betes educator In staff development at
Holzer Medical Center.
, Ms. Esque graduated from the
Holzer Medic81 Center School of
Nursing In 1970, and received a
B.S.P .A. Degree from St. Jo·
seph' s College In North Windom,
Maine, In 1978. She joined too
Holzer Medical Center nursing
staff In November, 1972, coming
from the University of Kentucky
Medical Center In Lexington,
woore she was a staff nurse on
the Urology Unit.
She accepted the position In
Holzer Medical Center Statt
Development lri May, 1989, specializing In diabetes education
and serving as an advisor and
program chair for the Diabetes
Support Group, which meets the
second Thursday ot each month
111 the French Five lfundred
Room at Holzer.
Shl' will present the program
on Diabetes for the five Health
Maintenance meetings In Gallla,
Meigs, Mason and Jackson Counties during November, focusing
on the Importance, of diabetes
educa!lon, both for the diabetes
patient as well as tor famUles of
those whQ have diabetes.

By HELEN THOMAS

The turkey w111 be taken to a
nearby VIrginia petting farm.
· WASHINGTON tUPI} -Pres· Bush gave a preview by stroking
!dent Bush opened the holiday the turkey , which re.malned calm
season Friday by signing a after spraying white feathers In
proclamation designating Nov.
POMEROY -The Ladles Aux- 23 as the National Day of the face of Agriculture Secretary
,
Iliary' Fraternal Order of Eagles Thanksgiving Day and giving a · Clayton Yuetter.
"Let
this
holiday
remind
us as
2171 will have a meeting on presidential pardon to a 50-pound
we
gathl'r
with
familY
and
Tuesday at 7 p.m .
turkey.
friends of the less fortunate'' and
At a Rose Garden ceremony,
the need "for giving to othl'ts,"
ROCK SPRINGS -The Porn· the white 28-year-old turkey
ona Grange will have Its o!flcers interrupted Bush's remarks with Bush said.
Wickliffe told Bush that "this
conference at the Rock Springs gobbling sounds. The president
live
bird represents the spirit and
Grange hall on Tuesday at 7: 30 laughed and admonished:
tradition
of the Thanksgiving
p.m. All subordinate officers are "Come on now; this Is serious
celebration
handed down by our
requested to attend.
stuff."
forefathers. This bird weighs 50
Bush said the turkey, a gift of pounds, one for every state In the
WEDNESDAY
the National Turkey Federation, union."
RUTLAND -The Zion Church was "unders.tandably nervous"
"It's Important for all Amerl·
of Christ, Route l43,ls presenting but he• asst~red the. flapping
cans
to take time to reflect on all
a Thal}ksgivlng eve play, "The white-feathered bird that his
the
blessings
that have been
Long Table" which Includes spaniel "Millie" was upstairs In
bestowed
on
this
country," he
several of the congregation being the family quarters.
said.
Involved in the play, directed by
The turkey was formally pres•
The federation said 45 million
Kathryn Johnson. Historical ented by federation President
turkeys
will be consumed on
facts will be presen ted and John Wickliffe of Detroit Lakes,
Thanksgiving
Day.
woven Into the presentation with Minn., and his wife. Bush said:
Bush
and
his
family will have
humor and music. There will be a "He wlll not wind up on any
their
Thanksgiving
feast at
pie fellowship following the play ·· dinner table. He' s been granted a
Camp
David,
the
presidential
which begins at 7 p.m.
presidential pardon."
retreat In the western Maryland
mountains.

POM'ER,OY -There will be a
finger stick cholesterol screen·
ing on Monday evening at the
Meigs County Health Department . There will be a $5 charge
and apPQlntment may be made
by cal ling 992-6626.
SYRACUSE -There will be a
MARC meeting on Monday at 7
p.m. at Carleton School. A turkey
will be given away to someone
attending the party followjng the
meeting.
POMEROY '- The Pomeroy
Sesquicentennial Committee will
meet on Monday at 7: 30 p.m. at
the J .T.P.A. oftlce in Pomeroy.
Anyone Interested In helping
with 150th anniversary celebration of the Incorporation of
Pomeroy Is urged to attend .
RACINE -The Raclrie Village

Bedding plant.workshop
scheduled at local church

UPJ Wblte House Reporter

Katie's Korner

Planning a reunion...

KATIE CROW
Bedding Plants" will be Things By
are
moving right along,
presented.
'
for
the
50th
reunion of the 1940
The afternoon sessions will graduation
include presentations on bedding
plant disease control, and post class of PomeHigh School.
greef\ house management of roy
I
had several
bedding plants.
The workshop will conclude calls from folks
who were inler·
with a panel discussion and es
supplyques tlons and answers, as well as IngtedusInwith
adnew Ideas from seed company
dresses.
According
to Nellie
represen tatlves .
Brown
addresses
are
almost
For more Information contact complete. Good, huh.
Jim Barrett at the Washlngton
The group will meet again
County Extension Office, 373- Tuesday,
November 28, at 7 p.m.
6623. extension 275.
at the Parrish HouseoftheGrace
Episcopal Church. Now this
meeting Is for anyone of the class
of 1940. We hope that some or all
of you grads out there attend this
meeting.
Our reunion party will be held
In the gym of the former
Pomeroy Senior High, now
Pomeroy VIllage Hall, from 1 to4
they cannot pay him. He feels the p.m on May 26, 1990. Letter-s will
town Is turning against hlm. He be mailed to all grads around
decided to go to Australia but he January with a second letter to
never gets on the train. By the come the last of March or the
end of the second act he Is first of April. Yes sir, things are
starting to act deranged.
moving right along.
The third act will be acted ·Out
Received a nice note and
at the next meeting.
contrlbu lion from the son of one
Mrs. George Hackett presided of our fellow classmates, Donald
at the meeting in which she L. Stivers and wife Beth. Do·
welcomed the members and nald's father was also ' named
thanked the hostess .
Donald.
A get well card was signed for ·
Young Don stated in his note
Mrs . Chester Erwin who has
that
his father was a graduate of
been Ill.
1940
but no longer with us. He
Two prospective names were said use
the money for whatever
presented for membership. Mrs.
' '!' m sure my father
and
added
Bernard Fultz proposed Mrs. would be pleased
.. "
Harvey Rlndflelsh, and Mrs.
You
are
to
be
commended
Wilson Carpenter proposed Miss remembering your father - for
so
Florence Smith. The names will many don'\ or wouldn't. Thank
be voted on at the next meeting. you for being so thoughtful.
Roll call was conducted with
members naming a character
Every Wednesday · afternoon
they love to hate.
Refreshments were served.

There will be a bedding plant
workshop on Nov. 30 at the Grace
Episcopal Church in Pomeroy.
Speakers for the workshop will
be Harry K Tayama, extension
specialist, floriculture ; Bob Precheur, extension specialist, vegetable crops; and Chuch Powell, extension specialist. plant
pathology.
Registration begins at 9:30
a.m. followed by "The Growing
Media, How to Use It In Your
Bedding Plant Production" at 10
a.111. At 11 a.m. "Cultural Practices Used In the Production of

Local literary club .
acts out tThe Visit'
~

The play, "The Visit" by
Friedrl!:h Duerrenmatt, was
acted out by members of the
Middleport Literary Club when
the group recently at the home of
Lt. Col. and Mrs. James M. families on Fdday with dinner at Mrs. James Diehl.
Roller, Waldorf, Md., son James the Betsy Mills Club in Marietta,
Two acts of the three act play
Jr. and w'tte and sons, Mark and and spent the evening at ihe were acted out. According to the
Matthew. Clinton, Md. , have Richard Roller home in Belpre.
play, the first act begins In a little
returned home ·alter visiting
Also enjoying the af!air were town In central Europe. An
Mrs . Dorothy Roller.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cale and Important , wealthy, several
They came for the 86th birth·
Jessica. and Mr. and Mrs . times married. woman Is coming
day of Mrs. Roller on Nov. 9.
Richard Grese.
back for a visit to her old home
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crow, town. The town hopes she will
Mr. · and Mrs . Richard Roller
and Lora, Belpre, hosted the Syracuse, were unable to at tend. hel11lt get back on their feet. She
1
ls coming back to get revenge on
the man who left her after he
wronged her years ago when she
had · to leave town after she
became pregnant. She wan Is him
dead.
The second act finds Anton
By United Press International
Schill getting worried. He owns a
HOLDING BACK THE YEARS: Zsa Zsa Gabor's age has
little shop In which the customers
been a topic. of debate ever since she was arrested In June for
are coming in and charging
slapping a policeman In Beverly Hills. Her driver's llcense said
expensive supplies and he knows
she was 61, but not everyone was buying that figure. -During her
trial last month, the media listed Mr as 62 or 66. Now People
magazine has found a former Gabor schoolmate, Elizabeth
· Nussbaum of Seattle, who has some documentation from their .
days at Mada,me Sub ilia 'sSchool for Young Ladles In Lausanne,
Cindy and Rick Koblentz, Ches- ·was 20 Inches long..
Switzerland. The blrthdate under ZsaZsa's picture is Feb. 6,
Maternal grandparents are
ter. are announcing the birth of a
1917, which means she's 72.
on
daughter,
Georgiana
Nicole.
Janice
and · Bobby Reynolds,
'AIRPLANE' STARTED FLIGHT OF FANCY: Leslie
Sept.
28
at
Holzer
Medical
Mason,
W.Va., and paternal
Nielsen Is the king of parody. Nielsen's career was reborn when
Center.
are Mae and Dave
grandparents
he won a part in the farcical "Airplane" and he soared right on
Koblentz,
The
Infant
weighed
seven
Chester.
through last year 's hit "The Naked Gun" and its sequel. which Is
pounds and
punces, and
There are two more children,
com holding up a picture of my mother in bed with Yasser
VIcki
and Krist! Warner.
Arafat. I have a stroke on the spot and I'm out of the picture. I
mean, who can handle that? This movie is further off the wall
than 'Naked Gun.'" Between movies. Nielsen found time to
NOW OPEN FOR THE
serve as ringmaster with Stacy Keach and Barbara Mandrell on
CHRISTMAS SEASON
Wednesday's " Circus of the Stars" on CBS.
PoinseHias 17 colon)
AWOL IACOCCA: Chrysler Corp. Chairman Lee lacocca is
PoinJOIIIa llaolli.. llcnbts llld T,_s,
· going to skip the company's annual meeting of more than 400
Ct.ishoous Cactvl, f.alago lasbts,
Chrysler offlcals and union leaders Nov. 29ln Louisville, Ky. A
......, Haly , ... cnllwgo Show
company source says Iacocca's decision has nothing to do with
Plaoots, Uvt and Cut Christmas ,..._
far tht lowlll Ono't Gravt ..,..~~,
the controversy over closing Chrysler's Jefferson Avenue plant
in Detroit and said the absence would be attributed to "a couple
~· Sprays. c...,., v-.
!Watch lor our Christ"'"' op., HiloMI
of outstanding commltml'nts."
Open Dolly 9 AM·&amp; P.M.
BASHING THE BOSS: Jolua Scher, a concert promoter who
Sunday 1 P.M.·&amp; P.M.
handled llnoee Sprtapteen for the Dl'cember Issue of M
HUBBAIDS GREENHOUSE
magazine, Scher said there Is a common percl'ption that
Sprfng;sreen sings about the common man although "he's
992·5776
Ohio
scr-ed the common · man" and he also lashed out as
Sprtapreea as an Inveterate ladles' man. "Springsteen has a
par1kularly ugly past." Scher said. "They did a brilliant job
Juoeping It from the public ." Barbara Cerr. Springsteen's
manager. uld there will be no comment on Scher's remarks,
tJeeawe '1t's just 1oo "gly and sounds llke sour grapes."
GLDflliii!S: llarle Ounolld's Cbrlstmas special will have a
5 peclal at tracdOn -her son8C ep• n, 6. Osmond, who made her
enM&gt;rtahunerlt debut at 3, says she won't push "thl' boy, wbose,
rather is O.rnond's e-x-husband, StepheD CralJ, Into show
Your Vote and Support Were Greatly
buslnefs, bowE'\'er·... .Jinuny Certer Is making a little progress
in hlsefloruo brklg peace to the Sudan. The former presldentls
Appreciated! !
mediating t.alks between the Sudanese government and rebels.
who Will open prellminary peace talks In Nairobi, Kenya, on
Oec.l.

Family returns after visit

People in the news

Koblentz birth is announced

mothers and grandmothers take
their children to Barbara's
School ot Dance. It really I~ fun
time.! bellevealloflhemembers
ot the class are all of five years of
age.
Now that Is a good age to trip
the light fantastic. While the little
ones are doing their thing the
adults are chatting about this and
that.
Well the conversation most
recently pertained to cooking of
Thanksgiving dinner. Now some
of the Ideas In regard to what
each and everyone prepares was
not all together mouth watering
- that Is just my ophnlon ,
however ..
. One lady noted that thl'y love
the giblets (glzzardss) heart and
liver and even search for their
share to make sure thl'y don't get
left out. Now I know that the
parts of the turkey bird mentioned are used by-many but they
certainly don't do anything to
add to my appetue.
Now theconversatlongotgolng
real good as they mentioned such
things as cooked brains - yuck
- and othl'r Items just ·as
distasteful.
Must be me It couldn't have
been Mary Hysell, Diana Karr,
Nancy Broderick, Mrs. AI Hartson. Mrs. Pennington, Mrs. EIchinger or Naomi Ohlinger.
Now you just cook that old
turkey bird anyway you wish and
everything that goes with It and enjoy.
Guess some folks have finished
their Christmas shopping or are
well on their way. Hey. I haven't
even figured out the next holiday
coming- Thanksgiving. Must be
nice.
And so it goes.

.
,

•
·
;

Your Phone
e Billa Here
IUSINISS PHONE
1614) 9U-•Ho
ttntDINa PHONE

(614) "2·

We con r~ir ond rt·

con ratl10tors
heater cor11. We con
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
r1p11ir Gas Tllllts.

PAT HILL FOlD
992·2196

Middleport,

~~~

I

tor errors first

d-v

'89·1 mo.

11

ad runs in paper) . Call before 2 :00p .m

CHIPWOOD
WANTED
W. Va. Chipping,
Inc.
locksprings ld.
P-roy, Ohio

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY
- 2 .00, P.M MONOAY
,- 2 :00 f' .M. TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPfR
- 2 .00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY PAPER
- 2 00 P.M . THURSDAY
FRIDAY PAPER
- 2 :00P .M FRIDAY
SUNDAY PAPER

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

Cla.~.~ified paf&lt;P ·' cot·er

;

'

Jollotdng telephone
Gallia County
A,.aCode 614

Meigs County

448 - Gallapolis
387 - Cf'l•hWe

992- Middleport

Ar. . Co~e 614

388 - VInton
245-Rio Grande
i&amp;I - Guyan Dist .
843 - Arabia Ditl .
379 - Watnut

Pom•ov

985-Ch•ter
843- Portlllnd
2.t7- letart Fall•

949 ..... Ricine
742- Ru1tlnd

the

exchanp:e.~ ...
Mason Co., WV
Area Code 30o4

675 - Pt . Ple111nt
.t!l - leon
576 - Apple Grove
773 ~ Mason

882 - Nevw Haven
896 - lttlrt
.9 37 - luffllo

667 - Coolvitle

.
. ~···

.Wordt

1 1516

'

3

$4.00

/tlf

V

•

•

Buying Hours;
. 7:30-8:00
Mon. thru Fri.
7:30·4:00

Monthly

. $9.00
513.00

15

1&amp; Wordt

.

86.00

15
15

6
10

ov,r

Rat•

S1 .30 / day

.20

•FIREWOOD

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAU ENGINE

rt1111 as

ads

YARDMAN MOWERS

ECHO SAWS &amp; 'IIIMMEIIS
OIIGON IAH, CIIAIIIS

Mr.rchondrsr.
1 - Card ol Thanks
2 - ln M1mor't'

.......

51- Household Goad!!

lYAII SIRYICI CEIRD

12- Sportilnt Good•

3 - Annour:ements

4- GiveMNI't'
5 -· HIPPV Ad1,
6 - Lostand Found

Peril &amp; Swwice On

S3 54 55 5657-

Antiques
Misc. Merch1ndise
Buildmg Suppll•
Pets for 511ft
Music•ltnstrumenu
58 - Fr~o~iU I Veg .. lbl-.
59- for S1le or Tr1de

Employment
1

~ Help

Wanted
12 - Situation W,1nted
13 - lnsurlroce
14 - Busineu Tlflinlng
.15-Schools &amp; Instruction
16 - Ridto, TV I CB Aep ..,
11

17 - Miscell1'1ectus
18 - Wanted To Do

61 - Farm

22-Monev l(l lDan
23 ~· Prof•llon•l Servreet

Aeol fs tale
31 - Hom~tlor

Sale

32 - Mobile Homes tor Sale
33 - Firmt for Sale
34 - Bauin•• Buildings
35 - lots &amp; Acre-..e
36 - Rut htlle Wanted

62 - Winted to Buy
64 - H•v I Guun
65- Seed &amp; FerUi.ltr

71 - Autos for Sale
72 -- Trucks tor Sale

73- Vans a. 4 wo ·s
74- MotorcyciM
75 - Bolll &amp; Motor~ for Sale
76 - Auto P•''' &amp; Acc•soro•

77 · -Auto 'Repair
?8 - Camp 1ng Equipment
7!;1 - Camptft • Motor Homes

44- Apanment·tor Rent
45-Furnllt'ltd Rooms
46- Spac::e for Rent

·- For Le••

FREE ESTIMATES
Tth tM ptin •• of ..-tirlg.
Let us • It for
YaY I£A!OIIARI

,ou.

HAVE IIIIIBIW

ann

6 P.M.

(6141 915-4110

L &amp; J VIDEO
RE(ORDING
Will Video Tape
Weddings,

81 - Home Improvement•
82 _ Piumbtng • He..:ing
83 _ EACIVIting
84 _ Eiectric.. &amp; Refrigltl'ation
85- Gen•ai'Hauling

Birthdt~ya.

Reunions, Interiors
of Homes for
Insurance.

e&amp;- MobHe Hom• Rep••
- - 8 7.-. Upholstery

Call 742-2416
After 5 '-.111.

10·2- 89-1 mo.

Futnlthlngt f~t rour Home
'

You Don'r Ht~ve To looll: For
To Spy rht 6m 8uy1/n
tht Ctou;(ieds

1

J1m11 Roed. Cotumbut.
43213 WM oppointod

e......

DINfnE

sm

"NEW" Rf(liN£15
loclted Behind
Tractor Deelership

No Hunting or Tr-po..tng on
Roymonc1 SmHh Farm.
No Hunllna or Troopo..tng on
R. H. Hlcltoil pn1porty II Harllord
•H- wriU.., pormH. For ln..._koncoH-·:1441.

--wlt4 . . .- . ..
sa

No hunting or trnpa..ng ct.y
or niaht on Chi"- YOIII F"arma.

MOIIIS
:EQUIPMENT
741·2U5
Solen!
-·~~.'!'!.

No hunllna • ·-poooing, No
L
C. ,..,...,.,,
. Sliding Hll Road,
Ha
,WY.
·

.r.rn.

4

USED APPUANCES

KOUNTRY KlUB

WASHEI5-SIOO up
DIYII5-$69 op
REFRIGERATOR5-SIOO up
RAIIGES-Gu·Eitc.-$115 up
FREEZER5-SI25 up
MICRO OVENS-$79 up

GOLF &amp;
TROPH'{
SHOP
•N- Grips

to DAY WABAIIfi'T

Auoos fNM Post Offk1

POIIIIOT OHIO

10/30/'19 tin

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

992-7479

lt. 33 Nortll of

ALLEN'S
HAULING

'MOO GAUON

WATER SEIVICE
UMESTDNE
SPIEAD
DIU HAUUD

992-527

•Clubs Customized

JOHN TEAFORD

Sc:otrt (a... Road
Cheltllt', Ohio

46ll7

11·17·'89-1••·

Giveaway

s ......

7Wl. old pupploo,
m111t11 breed, •
M IIMidlum

liHd ..... ...n wom•N I.
popor lrolo\M.IIC~-25.

i blbr rdtmHe ldltiM, 30&amp;- '
TIW340.
- k ond whllo molo- COl,

NoutorM, 111•lnlnod. To good
-·14.fi2.3211.

=·
'
"
""'
'
"
.
Wit"
-

Wlroholrod

oolntor
mo. old good
only. 114-381-8720.

mlxod - ·

304-I'IJ.

Lost &amp; Found

6

FOUND cotlco ell on IM. Vernon

Roger Hysell
Garage

An. Dlei;M call 304o171-3322 or
1714237.
.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
AI" Trt•••lt~le•
•
'"· 9~2-5682
or 992-7121

7

Itt. 124,

Po-ay Ohio

DOZEI

SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

·NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand·Stona·Dirt

(614) 667-3271
G.....t A. "t~~~-

Loti:SIIsorlon Huolly, llorgon
Lono, a.nta eo.-ao uno · -ord.l14-3111-a740.

uo

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

ALL Yord Solooll... 8o Paid In
- - · DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
1111 cloy bolo&lt;o 1111 M lo 1a run.
llundor Milton • 2:00 p.m.
Frldoy. llondoy • 2:00
p.........., •

9

Wanted to Buy

""'*
coro flllh
......... Colt

or wllhoul
Lorry Ll¥oly 114-

3111~1

Qulfto
tMO qulht. Any conclhlon.
Colli Plld. Coli 114-912-H$7 ..
114-112--2411.

Pro

=-....

u.d tumhurt and hou.W.d

u.ct
ontlro

Phon.

114-7ol2·

lumltur11 by the piec8 or
oolllng.

.....,.ollakl -

114-742·2455.

~-llo_l1....._

Card of Thanke

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
IEPAII
Locahll •tV. ., L......
In llltldllplrt, Olo.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

PARTS AND SERVICE
for Mot~l 2 and 4-cycle

EVIRY SUNOl Y

enaintl

of the ..... of

Edno llencho Cooper. do·
-od.lote ofiZO Mulborfy

Helglllt. Pom•oy, Mllgo
Cciunty. Ohio. 4117&amp;11.
.
Aobel't E. luo!&lt;.

1

C•rcl Cif Thllnlll

~Judge

IAno K. N•Mirood. Cllfl&lt;
11 1I. 20, 27; C1ZI 4. 3tc

The FamHyOf
HUBERT CHARLES
PUlUNS
wlehea to thank
nelghbon end
frtenda who eent
and food
to 111 during the
time of our lou.
Thankl aleo 't o
Rav. Grlrnln end all
who thought 'of ua
with prayera.

Public N otlce

To the Voters of Letart Township who
supported me in the recent election.

IEDIOOM SUITES

0175.

In tho Meto- Cou~ty Probltt
Cou!l. C..o No. 21431,
Borbero J. Whitt, IIi North
Ohio,

UYING lOOM SIITES

Public N otlce

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On November 13. 1989,

·

•Gravel
elimestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

No Hunllng or Tr-lng lo II'
towld on Clrde aow.i, Jr.•
ot Aahlon, ~
lly. . and Arringlon tam..

USED FURNITURE .......,.y

11·15·'81- 1mo.

(304) 675-1244
Public Notice

STEWART
TRUCKING

•fert 6 "'""' ltott . . . . .

Ser v1 c1!s

41 - House• lor Rent

Re•alf•
Fltf
.2•~::r;;~~;:, 7~."'Rent
•
• . . . . .IJII•IIIII••B

llmiiOI 1011101
Rllltal Cllonups &amp;
Painting

63 - livestoclc

ljiQIIIDI

L. W.

992-5335 or 985·3561

UNDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

Eq~o~ipment

Tra nsport ation
21 - Ous1n81t Opportunity

Due to· cleetructlon of PI DPII'IY,

So1.9·6

10/10/18 tfn

Farm Suppl1e:;
&amp; LIVt!SIIII:k

Ser V Ces

•/1/81/tfn

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERViCE

Ctoood Sund.y
949-2969

Announcemenl s

RDIINGS

VISA· MASTEACHARGE

HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9·7

10-9-ttn

992-2269

9-20-tfn

.05/ day

Strictly Enforctd

3 Announcements

BILL SLACK

.30

.42
. .60

~ 11 es lte tor consecutive runS. broken updiVIWill be charged

42 - Mobile Homes for Rent
43 - Farms for Rent

A•

PH. 992-3561

RATES

] ....,. 'Yard Sale (piid in advance)
8 - Public S1le &amp; Auction
!:t--WM'Ita:l to·luy

•A d111ified •dvenilemeht placed in The D1ily Sentinel. te111 ·
r:ept - r:l•sified dis pity , Businen C1rd. and lev .. notrcoll
witt 1110 •ppe..- in the Pt . Pl•••nt A1g11Mtr and the G1lh·
poli1 D1ily Tribune. ,. .ching over 1&amp; ,oqo homes

,
•

factory Chab

•LIGHT HAULING

985-4422

d.., ahlir publicltion to m-.e correction
"Adt thlt mu.- be peid in ldviRce are
Cai'd of Th.,lt•
Happy Ads
In MemoriMT'l
Y•d Sal•

"

Basha111 Building
EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

REVIEW - Dollie Esque, RN, right, diabetes educator at
Holzer Medical Center, reviews diabetes Instructions wllh Mary
Plantz, NA, from the pediatric unit at lbe hospital.

double price of ad colt.
.
•&amp;.ntin.! is not responsible tor errOfs after l11st d~ . (Chedt

.•

fl-•

..
FUINIIIII, APPUANCIS, IV'S, fLOOI COVI-G
I 06 lAST MAIN
.

•o ..
.{

992-2228

CHESTEI, OHIO

at no c:h•ge.

"WE lAVE IEARIII AIDS"

t

POMEROY AND "'DDI.EPOIT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.
Piua-Subs-Salads~Daily Speci~ls

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

ditcount for ads paid in advance.
I"1·~~:;~·~-· 160Geve.w1y
and Found ads und• 15 w&lt;'td&amp; will be
"Price
til c•rt.l htuen
"1 point line type only u1ed.

GUN SHOOT
lA ClNE
FIRE DEPT.

LOWEST PtiiCES
HIGHEST QUALITY
ran LOCAL DRIYERY

12 Gaugo Shotg,... Ooly

~~r.:-:M:,;:.gs~.G:.allia or Mas~ counti• must be pre.

GENEUL AUDGIST

Salal ·

STREET
PIZZA

SER~ICE

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

THANK YOU

I

SALES &amp; SEIVICE

Wt Carry Filhin9 luppll•

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Syr•••·

f

Middleport, Olio 45760

Classified

..'

EAI, NOSE I THIOAT

Now JM.tien:

161 Nertlt Soan4

the hospital and clinic series Is
Mary Harrison, R.N., stat! development ~oordlnator . For additional Information phone 446·
5247.

Making the arrangements for
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Is Allee WamJley, Director, and
handling the details on behalf ?f

1 1-8·89-tfn

•

JOHN. PUASAiff
A. WADE,
M.D.
Inc:YAIIIJ IOSPIIAL

PL.-NG IHEAnNG

~t

--~---·------·----- ~---·---~

THANK YOU
Speolel thlnlla lro IX•
tonded to the Mlddl•
port·PO"*'CJY Rotary
Club for purchulng
ticket• to the Athena
Children'• Theatre for
tlrat greder1 of H1rrl··
1onvi11 Elementary
School. H•ve • lovely

Chrlltm•.
From 8tudent1 of Her·

ri-IVIIe Flnt

Tloe Fam lly Of
SARA E. DAWSON
wl1h11 to expre.. our
he.nfoh appoeciltion
Md thankl to thoM
who were 10 kind
during our lou:
PI-nt Valley
Ho1]IIUII end mff.
Dr. Brot Morgan.
Folil.ang Funeral
Home, Orllnd

Reltnotcla end hla
sino-•. Rev. Molvln
Ortmee, and RIIY.
William CBud)
· HatflolcL and frllndl
whoiOntlloWirt,

carda or Ollllecl.
Bunlll

Block Por.ls lor

Hotj&gt;oll1e. WHdulor.
Tetumuh. Briggo •
Str.tton.

PH. 992·3922

ltglnning

Sept.

I7

Stwts at 1:00 P.M.
factory Choked 12
Gauge OnlY.
•·•· 18-lfn

MY-I-SHOP
CISTOII SCIRI
PlllftiiG
HATS
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS

c•m•.
985-4300
01110

FURNACE .
FUINACE

r.acE
PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

UN'S APPUANCE

SDVIa

"2·5US • 915-1561

Offtlt

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

ARE VOU LOOKING FOR... ? AN

IMMEDIATE JOB? GOOD PAV?
FULL MEDICAL BENEFITS? BUI
,.. lock ..,..n,nco. or loot

1......, In 1

--Job? Wo

111,. -lngt In mony lochnlcal tloldo •lh on lhl Job
trolnlng lor high oohool antdo
up 1o eo- 24. Coli 1.ao&lt;f.212.
1314, flloi&gt;.Thuro to.m.-lp.tll.lar

an lPfl aI"""'"'.
A - I AU Aluo I Shlr1oy
.,_N,IIOM'IJ.1UII.

................
- ...... --.=
"' _... _... _
.......
....... ..,.. ......
· In- I 11~11,:.
poolllon
IWIIIabte.
••
dlllll'llhip . . .
• ....

,__

to ............. ,,0. . . .
.lto-.OH-.

Lady to In-In _..ldt ty ~
.............. ........ 01

Dlllr Trillun!d,
Aft, Ootlljlalll,
OH _.,,

,

tlollilllollla-A..
R

... 2

)'

$

,....

......

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

t'*'UW
oonlct 10m

•

•

-~--------------:··~----------------------------------------------------------------------------""

�P.u•

Ponwoy-Middlaport. Ohio

8 1M o.ily Sa •lii•el

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wllnll d

11

Apartment
for Rent

........ -.-

"-"
..... vrt her,

'

au-. ............ ....

we ·v ..._
, . . .,..... 1 ,., ,....... 1111
a.., 114 tan • • r 11~

..lum.
...
- · ....
.,
... . 1110.11.._
()he • •• - ·· -

_...,.. .. ___ ..,

-

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

- - Coii11·•UnT.
. . . . lY _ _ ...

10111.

~..,_,_

•

-~~--to-·

114-702312.
" " ' - - 11

Fumlollod /lJII, tbf 120 Fou~h.
O'tt otto, 12:15. llttlltloo Pold.
11 -tloltot 7p.m.

So~·
- .....
op~-........... oond. tso.
114-1~1121.

.,.........
.....,. --.-olllo;J:.

1

PIM

Oft

I

,_ _ lonoyopowloltwload ........ 114-146-

tno-ap.m.
,

hill 1 duplo

llolt-"

with~..,....,_
....... - ·
Clydo/-,Jf. tow7t-2J1t.

;;or.,.;-OH.oe.

.., 21

Busln...

-on, torgo~
·

&amp;IIW, ....... rOd.-,

tota,
.,._
lola

with

C1yo1o

- -

~ oncl CIYIOpportunity
.-t
•IN011CEI
110,27'1 ta tM.tlll. L••• • ••
- • Col 1-:ltllom..a OHIO YALLIY IIUIL- CO.
. . , . . . _ loro-1111....
thlll fOU do
..,porplrfOUk-,
.. 1'
lAIII - y IJIIInl Ill iii.i' HC7I' to ..;;;;;,
1 1 0 . 0 0 0 - - -· uw...... tlle-unllfOUIII"
~· 111 IOUI7.-Jollll. 1- - . g lad lllo ollllltng.
_

-• ''
Lola f« lall • Oolllpollo
11aao p-~'lc -·-- - · ·
i7!ii . -·~

- Y lllolrlbutlnt ,.,_
MIIIDIATE JOI . OPIHI«a. -tlcdngfn:NnlrM,...,_IM'OPirt)"

.36

.....,..,.ndo

~.~;"'::,."'bo"'::r\:':.:'=

Good fiOY, bol

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

IOporlio on toclf -

k
-

1# I

:'.:;l:

Real Estste
Wantad

Of with·-

tor

•-

Md

= ·":.: :.::.:

r~·f~
-

-lroo
who .....,. eo~ 11,__7717.
1011.

ono lor. tum. or unturn. opt. In
llld:lfa~. 111 1111 5304 or
111-111

-·fum.

houoo. oultol!lo far 1
•:1.1144410111
LlnflaonWoaJ opt. I rmo a both,

-Nq"M,a14t410ttt.
.........-. - · dop,

to

..f.

Upotoi'!,unlwnlohod opt. corpotad. no polo, lnq... II 300

...t · - - - -pollf. To goi lllro !1-10 II IIIIIHioo IYIIladMnil tl.loroiM-up-to on
Rt. , .. F-hAvo.
,. Col ,. """'· o. !.Nil, 0 _,11"11"'
pool I phi, 11-7711 46
0

......... No

... noc
IIJii.UZ.t:IM, Mon-Thura. 1o.ro.- Pt~o Molnt

:~p.m.

~;,Q
, _ J&lt; - .
,._

op1nlo4 lor • _ . . , l... "fl'wollll,

• DonbUoy,

:.••; ..._
-•nto:

--Ill.

.......

41 HouaeaforRant
t74Coll•.,lllll«t rt.2belf.

=

CEn••NilRV
RENT TO OWN. 4 - - -

dlnaltoool,4ohaii0·17.10&amp;1L
Aacl'- . f.'RK:I L!JW ClliH

:;,:'J:=,L=·:t.:
OMIL aotld truok $1100.

...
1~
....
c..dl I...... ~=========r-=========~
1V1IIoblo.
0pon
lion.-.

114 4. SJ&amp;efterlp.M.

::==.:·::'::?·..-:::.~

IJIL

w.1121; ..,.... :110;
ro~orott50',!!,~ 110;
-

~

-hO&lt;o .-,

:::- _::~;";"...:.'""::
K.,.uga; 614-441-- 47S. ,

53

Buy« ooll. AIY«&lt;no llnllq-.
1121 E. """
Houro: II.T.W.tO:GO LIIL to 1:00
p1.m., 8undl_""'l. 1:10 to 1:00 p.m.
614-8112521.
SmoN, Old, oak cuplloord. ftOO.
Oolclonclollwrcoln-lcn.
114......2801 . NO llundoy oolo.

!:!:=

pold.
Old lumllft
qulllo,
-·

potnttngo.
...,.,:JN.121-J271
• ·--·
c.ll
oi11ect
or
1

30W2UIIII.

54 Mlacellaneoua
Marchand.lse

II

n

Col

M~-~121.

~AKC'

r-:r

,:to!'~ ~~

~ "~ ,__
I -~~
-.--.114-111-

1101.

AKC -

-

la'fala.iX•,a..aond.

.........

" ' - · t100. 11111a

:;:;;

Clrea -

· 111 4• •u

-

Ta.., ,.,, .to 1 , /lYO. 71 Auloa tor Sale
~~.?1•0•,2! 1ta.ml00.-ool .."1'!:'-~

!::!"'
_Pto:'l'e•'1"'-f:, .... -

....

' 1
oomJJI

oncl....., ~
0.-lli-AI
Ierne ·P il Food Dieter.
w-.Coll1tttlllllt.
11111...,.. KRttn. 011 oJ

;_;,_"~·,II~~~-_.= !..Q :.,..'"'.::·
w;;l=...::'~ ~': ;~='·:..;~;;:·;;;...;;;z~~:..;·:..p.-ro..__ 771_ S~i. :~'1&amp;":. :::::·.:·,..... "'"•d. tn ,..,..,, 111-1112- Pll. bot 1n 1:10 ill to 1:00 -... Space for Rent
1111-1110.
JalltoroiWooll,ogollw- 1101.
2old-dlllo,SO:IIIrltlohT.II

Ill-. 1121. -h. :ltOWTI·~-.
' '
YEIIDINO
:122 t/2 Nottll lnl. 2 IMoJ - • • o .. ...., con nco "'"'"• 11770.
. - , 221
Tum K B·-•--WID • I
__._
100111, lrom
~ ol Lollot .-- 1-- . HonciMn;,
,:--~ 1111":.:;;;:""~2=
llliaO COWl-· ltot-tn- lpo.~oomoulta,colonlol,
Flfto U, onc1 ,._,
111ta.
1177.
ld, · Plct-,
to~ ~ No oofttn; tnwo!Yod. :11!1, - I n EurNo, ltot-211- Commwclol - · · 1100 oq.lt. milo. II
3TIIartp.m.
In
- 1 1 -.Ill
oom....tol oDIIIo. ool · Socond oncl Pine /lmplo Wlnchtttor- M,
~--I~ ~ne11411
A.
.
•
15.
__ ,..._
,
..._ Plfll,.,.
42411.446-.ttto.304-4st.tltt.
S-.1' I
llolp a -·• .,.,.. ol 13,100 ,.. -11. i:J~ :f.,~'R: 2325,., 441 1421.
Cool &amp; woodbumw llriok u.oaJ
lor -ICI tlckll ooloo, Colt tor Roqubw • - · I lt&lt;Wa-7110.
Counlrp _ . . Howno Porll, 1121 UIII:J l10ilw lx1011. jjjjjj
YouwlllrwattD,OOOtol30,000
Roulo 33, ol 111: 111 IIIII.
• , I '· 11,114-111Ollh
for
,.....
ul

tull-~tn~PI P11

-ow...._

5

•

loll.-, -

up"'

JW!-...........
-..-Ill.

EARN MONEY A 7 • ._..,
130,000
-II)
4111.

Nko

_,. -

lollllllrtln

~ td

Y-

=

;,~

=..:::~..:~·

k\ Rio

C'3i

1Wo lroi* opo- Routo Qno
~ 11o011 on rlghl, 30WTIIo

Redl rst;otr

1071.

ForLeaaa

31 Homea for Slle

7--.'W. . -.·
I--·
I • • to IIMotTII-1770.

~Wtz.'-::.J:: parta. MilL

corpot,

-br.,Mp&amp;Oioloor-

. _ . 1,000 oq. . . . . . ...

, . •••n

_ , OOCOipiM lip 'llllogo
Pizza lrin In Sprlno Yoitoy PiaU.

3 lor. - · Ia. ~ ell)'
-Klnltgl
cfi!C,__
•• ::~~=,·~··
11
......7411.

aoll-; --p-.-._an

lmal I bulroa111 howl on

/lpproL 1100 Sq. ft. of oftlco

"'· Rt.
II
11.
143141
2111
4:11p.rrL

2:00 Pll.

· 11041011
.. 710ofFlrot
-·
Gltlllllll,
PlentY
Plrtdna
.......... 114--1171 ,,....,..:

lllldl,. .... ,

--.-~~-~m-

-.

MUIIcal
lnatrumantl
.,....-,;;..;;~;;;;;~.;;;..--

57

I PD• Ta- -

·-

.....

r,::;:-. 114-IIN'12t olio'

-·--'"'_Cool_ .......
~

--40"-311".
aoor•a.

-

--I- -

heft Mill IIIII I I 11101.
lotooy. ........ - coli 1711-tlallt:GO All to 1:00 Pll.
IIIUII

-

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

&amp; Lrveqoch

___

118,000. IIOW714081.

32 Mobile Homea
tor Slla

,.,_,

12
Llcrnnll

holM;

lnd

roon1

iir r':',:==••~..':
w. ...... _., .... _

'=

uc~
L:.."'="'.:.
--Coii1411111TI

---_.,In"'-

to

,....,f'lfl:rt·• don1.2acralot
II odgo ol loan, o\loo I .. thio lot, In . - .. _ . . .
Llvo In ... oncl tho . . . .
115,100 finn. 114-41-0233 • ...,
4p.•.

fum'ad.
31ro, tolol _.,_741:1.

· -

~~~..:~

;.~-

15

Schoolal
InstruCtion

111-TIIAIII_.
IICIU11IIMTIIDI
II IIIIEit
COLLEGE. Ill - - lllle.
catltt •• m . 11ot- No. ...
11-1-. '

18 W8ntaclto Do
- _.. Dar Cora Conlar.

...... . ,,,'::,!r'!
... .. ..,
'

I 0111. - t;Jt
..... ....
111 ••

Hko

tm-1-.goo-.2
lor. 1
MW oondil.,. ·
1Tol0.114-141-017 .

=,; :·.

a~+otO.

.. Diqlnl

au

Avo. Oof.

Apai'III'Mint
for Rent

1111draa••tarl"tnn,Hudeoooptod.I0 4-441 22II
1 II , uom, ......_ Plld. No
.. ~ 1112 mlloo
1111 Cllyton 14XIO, llbr, 110. ooncl. on IOIIad IGI,IIIo-. - h -opori,Routo 7. 114-

=""

00110

•. _

-119. - · ........~.
"Uftoll"

SoM

-WIIo'O,.

.:.~..::::: ,u,._
~~~~~~~"='·=
...._ 'ft.-: Wed. TtMn

W 1100. »t~!MM.

44

re•rw cl:r.~"";:'::'":.'~

llppl~ Inc. 0111 114-441-1411.
.
- II'P'
. . -.....
· 0oon
-I IIJII,
to I p.m., TMon
•11- alot
• llnllf,
_ Carhl~
.. ,
Countp

~.127 3rd.

-len.

to-......._,.. . ._
--·---·ko

looyhlll - - """ ....... ...

..,.......urt

ol• 7:10 , _ lor mwo -

Wll aM
. ....
fOOd
..... -111. - Ill&amp;.

boloo .. -.old

llnlr,110010f. l143111117.

...... 304...24117.

USED

APPLIAHCEI

112:lo0.

.....

•=· -

.. _ .

lkalfllll

--

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

ta,IOO.

*'1221 got _ ,

=
-==-.:=:.:::::
-=
..... d

* ......

ti,IDD.

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

Ill

okld

-

Fonl

-

tti,IIO. -

- - . .......

=·~~
_!loc.;,:.:""id"',Ci

a:,_

""'!'.
horn, liobr toro. ahalra.l10,..11~1111.
-

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

=-~'t'~
buill

~ploao,

lpl. &amp;1111.

111 ...

~

-·

~llfroo"'.,...

1114 Hando XR 100, 1100. a
___.
--.IOIIIIZiat.
Tw 1 - I a' I a,
•171 .........
ta,ooo.-1042 1

=:..;~;;;:;;:;______

;r....r::

1nf"'r

:=,

""""'I
..... .-......
1.

···-

-_...._In Opotl
-

tor Nnl Clr-

=•-=-n~•=

17111011.

Waahlngton Redlklna
(I) D(J) MlcG,_ Mac
finds that Neo-Nazis ors
planning 10 launclt a second

"
•,

}
,
•::

holocaust.Q

CD Treval lfagl&amp;lno
(J) Trevoll FHmmaker Sue
Francis ventures underneath
several _great world cltiel. Q
QDJ
Majar Dad Sgt .
James is lured into a career
as a popular radiO
personalitY. Q
DIIJI 21 Jump - A
taenaga Mlftln kih a
suburbenlte. then pedals
awor on his bike. Q
01 PrlliNN8WI .
1H1 MOYIE: The -faat
Club 1Ril2:00)
iiJ M..-, lila W1018
Hoc;:li.or Homicide

.1121

.........,

__ or-

l'HE BIG 'i'IJOJ OIL SPILl.
'SilU\1'100 IS REALLY
H£ATitJG.UP...

AI..Jt..SKA

rs 5Ll/OO

£~00... E.'il&lt;OO

IS

SUikX:&gt; ALASKA .. .

..
y~
8:05 (Jl MOYIE: How Tha Wall
Wao Won (Pt 1 01 31 (2:00)
8:30. ()) ltll Hollin Ftmlly

IU1 -4,ioo ......
Ofld ...a lkw,
..
ii"Us.
•

David stars Mrs. Poole in a
Q
ca
. ble c=~llow.
(J) NFL
Nlgllt
M~g~zlno '89 Redsklns Of .
Vince Lombardi
CD Tmolln' Qoumrat
llll • C Famoua Teddy z

..

.,•

Taddy

1111- Cen'ry, I dr., llr., ¥o

1111 ClrowM 11110, ...... aall&amp;d

,,.....,,
-.-d·-Of--.

.i

SerVIces

41U'12fo.Wip.M.

81

Horne

c lr'iW . .11cn
woton.
.
~ ;ocrddiiOn. ...... 0.1.0 . .,.,_

'.,

lila art of the 20th Century.

iMurphy
•1121make
M..;.,..y
-..
plans lor Jim's

'·

..

25th ennlv•ury at the·
network. Q
D (!]) Allail Mallon George

THEY SAY IF YOU
TAl« TO YORE
FlOWERS, THEY'LL
GROW GOODER

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

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

and Slkas follow a trail ol

I THINK I'LL
GIT STARTED ON
MY MARIGOLDS
lfltiHT NOW II

bodies.

•

9:30111

ltolraniOrr

-.

Ultimate
Yacltt Race lrom Annapolis,
MD(T)
CD tHINaws
(J) P.o.v. Taka a look os we
portriy lhtr lives of three

''

4 -·

Plumbing I
Hasting

_

.... ... .

111

FourtlroiMIPh
'lolllrr•ll Olrlo

..

ASTRO-ORAPH

ueiJ '

BERNICE .
BEDEOSOL

Efactrlcal &amp;
Refrigeration

....
lion
... 114-

plo In the comlrig year. send lor yo&lt;rr Start lllll&lt;ing big llrldel. Ludc will be
Allro-Graph predlctiOIII todoy.. Mall the boolt• roc:klt.
S 1.25 to Astro-Gr..,h, c/o thla _ . TAIIRUI (April II ...,. 101 Dlvelopper, P.O. Box 91428, C-IIIICI. OH menta where tll-ll .ol ch.nce play
11101-3428. Be 1111re to 11a1e your zodl- an lnlriclltl Plrllhould work DUt rather
ac sign.
- lor you todoy. C.C.rl.ted rllkt.,..
.AIIfTTAIIIU8 (Nor. 21-Deo 11) Thla okoy,
a no-no.
lhould be • -v productive diy lor you • • • • ,..., 11....... . , Don't put oil
todiy, primlrtly lh~ the e11ort1r of untl tat•thlnot you can - d o altlcll
peopll wtth whom yo~~ II be UIOCIIted could .,..,_ tlrl ""*181 - belno
rallrlr th111 your own. Don't gel In the ol your loved ona T'- 1r1 priority
way.
matt... thlt lhould be glwn ....,.lon,
CAPIIICW. (Dao. B , _ ' 111 Your CANCIII (Mia 11..,.., a) Condltlont
lkllll as a negotiator or mlddla .,....,. good lor you todoy In mat11nr thll
ore likely to be MPpwlor 10 thelia of your raqulre mental PJouu=.
H'1
peora today. You'N know to put -lmportlllt to ,_ber to be 1 do« ,
lor Iter yo11a'1 ban- rather thin alto dlfaOalal.

loolllh......,... ..

~

_ ..
AQUAIIIUI olaL ...._ 111 Don't gel

,.,
"

...
.;.1

.

ell::.

1------~~----~~L-----~------~----~·~'----~------------------------·LI--------------------------------~f----------------~----------~~
i.

10:05(Jl MOVIE: How Tha Weal
W•• won (PI 2 01 31 (2:00)
10:30 (l)llacrellrrllllt oca A look
at the IXCIItll of tha ·
lniiiiiQanea c:omrnllftlty. Q
Gil
Doctor, Doctor
Grin! trill 10 jOin ·~ .
.

•o

hl!t·
11:00 ()) ......

•IJ) CJl
• •o a Nan
A4wntule T-1 Foret!

.II))

Fatltvll
Anlllll ....

o•• ~••
ICount="VIOl Down FO&lt; Tha

)OW....,

.

II

''•
·,

cNb::

• IDl
·
·
· CrlmeWIIIilll
- COU!IIrY 1'
.. NanoiGIIIIIIc One llr
a - 1..-.. Folkabllly
Outen, NlnCI Bilfllth
Dlrlonnl from Anderson !
Fllr. tinging I11IIIY otlrlr

Ia. a

a

..

Lord. D

•o
11aw Twtllgltt zo l!wnlng Nan

s-a.

LIO (.ltiiJ
a)IM paopla alto
Ire working on fOUl' baMII tta.- I - - · 311,• ,, upiiQht todoy H you re tuiiJacted to 1 110nably lrw hand todoy, elpaCially In
.
eome unexpiCied lltllll In CirCum- · !lltuallone altarw tltlp . . trying to lrllp ·
Conditions In glnetll ahould be more ltonca. CMngae tenciiO work lor your . you - ' • JJIIIOotal kiGiftll.
hopeful lor yo&lt;rln tlrl y.- lhlld than . ultlrnlla blnlilt,
!Ida 11t1na1 out. ¥IICIO
IIJL II) You're preathey 1taW11 be1n lor lila put lew yaara. PIIO.I ~ a l-1 II) lnllde lrt- ' · tntly In aOfllle ............... luoll- 1. -. . lor ~lltlPI Ill wilt open In fomwiiOII ...... II
fir....,.._ '" lit titan . . . . . . . - wattw• . .
rather unexpected &amp;11)'8.
preneurtal frlandl COUld be benaflolal, ~. I IIIIN . . ••1111111111
ICORPIO (o.L 1• MOll. a) Tlrlre II a llpeotllly lht Upt IIIII ooma to you . )'IIU'reltoplng to gel oft lila ground, try
pouibllty you might put IIOIIPIIItlng lftn ltom I P1!8C111 yo&lt;rllllnk lral lila Midas ' to aM tlrlm alrbama tadltr·
tereoting togalher with a P1!8C111 who touch.
' LIIIIIA (..,.,
OIL II) 8ama 1r11PPr
pomMiy 11111111 a canlldlftbll c11a- : AIIIU(IIInlll11nAprl1t)tiiiiiNitan ; NPIII II 00U1J lie In tlllrl far JQU It
toncalrom your lboda. It COUld tum out ' lmport8nt rnaltlr ..ung to your work ' t1t1a 111111. You IIIOuld lie ..... 10 '
to bl IXtrentaly tort...lle IO&lt; both par- I Of )'IIU'W beln anxloul to ad- . . _•• hllgltll you altarw Unlble to
till. Mtr)or cltiiiQIIare - d lor Scor- vence. thl~ could be "*cloy when IOU. .reldt pmiOUIIy. l"llll* ., 1 _
ell!,

;u;=u,:ct,..C£
lnlrlrlts the t1t11 of 1 British

H-.

aorn:=ogalhlr

"Were you lracklng somebody who' I
barefoot? He hll athlete's note."

..

(J) Ylclttlng Zlploc

011 ~ Crtlel All. ,..,... ....

....

•o Dellgnlng wonron

Julia gota her head stuck In
the GOYernor's staircase. Q
10:00()) 700 Club With Pat

llrYtc., ....

C...,W.IIIu. ..

Q

0 LMy J&lt;lng Llvel
iiJ Prl- Tlnro Wreolllng
IIINalh-How

.... ..... 00111111Jfed- .,,

~ .... dollvorj• .,...

w- ·

rn

IASIMINT

WATIIIPROOFIND
u.-.t111ono1 Mlollmo ~
.... Loaiii .... M Dll fumlehell.
... Call 0011101 ,_
11WI7-, clop « nltlht· R o

1113

1114
"'""'........... t1M4Ml'47.

Campbell's Skate America
from Indianapolis,
IN-Woman's Competition (T)
(I) • (I) ABC Monday Night
Focrllral D
CD
All 01 Tha
World This program captures

lmprovemanta

2311.

...

~ Wonron'a Ice Slllling

'

1113 C i - - . 101 v.. ...
~ . . . . . . . . 151 ..... llr,
iru1oo, 1M, PW, T·"-IOWTIIo

ttn

t:lRIYER.

FRONT.

•

Wotorpooolln;.

dillon.
Fino 114
&amp;113110.

. CRYING AWAY UP

THAT WA'51'HE

•j

••relaatmen. t

Tilt.
1111 ' _ , . 4 .......
1rauemi111In 1100. tol sa
2211.
1113 Olllo Dotto, II ldr, - .
- . ........... .,.., . . lro
...... ..... 12.710. 11~
171111 ......:11114.

I HEAR0.5Q\\a!OD"(

z disco-• that ha

has accidentally sold his
home . Q
1:00 D ()) !Ill MOYIE: 'Tum lack
Tha Clock' NIIC Monday
Night At The Mo- (2:00)

,..,
· -.
a-·
Mil. 111 1112101.
No .....,.

lllolt..,.
..:0.

3M4TOI.al•4:11p.lll.

J

&lt;:~~~
Mlll:lt-Up Denver Broncos &amp;

a

ttl1 • • 1 dr -.MIIrd. 4cYL
.......
_,.,.....
...... -.,.,4-24$-

lol:--- __..
YW---

• - ,,....... ..._ 1w
·...-~
,_., IIO:Oanor

7,IIR
111;;;:.o...
e::1:;:1·
= -==::-:-.,-;- J.:coJ:I~:rtiM~4~7&amp;-~1~410=.:;:=::;=J~Oalll=~po=lllo.:ll,~
Cll~l:11~1:41:::11:·~·'~ .,.-,
:::'load -11400;
I .............
tum.opt.lloon;o a m.tg. I'
1r-a
,.,_111111o12Ywot-.
11
~~ ~·.
s~~~ ~»y Bruce Beattie
"':1~':.',.
.:-.m
M -----' ..... lu Jl Jk
:.::; ":m"''ot'::..~ ]'J_';;: . :
a llliliiloiii Li
11
rooo, - · II_,M, I14- =._lf'l.ln Rio OrOf!lla. at,__
F - Cllt .,_go,l14-4411-.

l'rbo, - , AC l

11.000.
llllllilot..

; toO Ill. ......... I t Upper Rlvw Ail. ·1112.
crntlloCei.CIIIa14-44f.r..
1, . . ....... , . . .....,.
PICKENSRIRNITUAE
Utllltybodlorl/ltont.-,104- Avo. ......... 1'1 'ra, 1111
.......,...
171-Sm.
IM4+=
llv 1I*
Hoo ullold tumlolrln;. 112 mi.
, _ - Pll,ll'l- ti.8IO;
Jonlollo Rd. Pt. PI
In', Wtl, ~.:.'!.~~Oo;::'va, 711~ ~
~

........ dryoro, ..............

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

__
......
..............
___ -..... .,,_
,-.-.-..,No-.
.................. -.
E .. ,,.... ,,.....

tn.-

Pl-ol-200gollon-

Dloblct. I1WIMS22 114-21111417.

tll4 ...,.. XR 100 .....
opood,3114111:122J.

7:35 (Jlllnlonl w son
1:00 ()) MOVIE: Qun.,-o (2:00)
• ()) ltll ALF Whlzzer
comes face-to-lace with ALF
in the middle of a

E.-=
·- :

- - &amp;tlhd. ..... ., ...

171-ot014.

a -·

i
•
I

St_......... ,.,_ .. . ..

-12 .....- . - Hoy Ofld ..,..
moot"' ,_, ltot-tn- loto. 211 loloi ...
.,
!!.100.
211
1·
outt/211-NIC 110 computoo a kopboard 171 T. ~ t7,400. 400 12 I
1111,
710 ...,.
114-t
15. 11M - · $350. """'""
Hliullllr1,000RNI....,IIIrt
a -hood .,~- 11~111 1ou

111.11 24ta Jock.., Avo., Pl. Pl. -

a

I

.. Top can!

'&lt;
..

, _ , _ ...... No_.

.........._ ••••• • 'an.

e-..
ROI. 1• 1ru - + r
$3t.t15. Point PluO, atot-171 lou with

t 1 oottlnt
br, llchoot
tTxziUI,
HaniWI 'TrMe

aJ COOIIflre
tHI Ntgltt Court

110;;.:.;;11;.;,...~.~
13
;,1,;..-:""';:;:*;,:.;;;;,:;
.•.

...
- -ow,
·L
f t - -OIIIIonol
*'7"rrootU
"'

61 Fann Equ-....-..

av11t1blo
Orophlco
Woll M...to,

. ca.

~

• (J) UIA Todoy

IIIW1111117.

:;m.r,:u"'"

Pllco

f-.
,-,,·,_Df!0

lhnllllnl tla&amp;alli lilian. 111.000.

Auanok.

m"'...",•

__ ... __ ,...,. -"'"'a--_Ill, . . ..

liE. PI,

PI, 1!110, K:, AIIIFM, 11100.
1114113•.
tm Low

tMt -

!,;,111 Supplr, ,

.._

-ratoloalind.3oW21.trtr21
olari:GOPII.

~

1111- Cen'ry, I dr. I lr. ¥o

II.,. MaChinery JIM.IIZ..uJI.

.....

-m

tm lullll ltootro 4dt, Ill
-.-,noNII,INO,uo.
-.11.-1101.
tm

(I)~Tonlght

IIIAt·~""' Q

Molorcyclea

74

THESE SQUAIES

(PI1 012) ~·

11:30()) •• 1 rr

•~ ..... OIC.m

lllllill c kr
(l)lw' lftoiMnai
• - ".-·filllltt eo.t
Q
... .

•

I' I' I' I'

11

IN

·

•

rI

11111 · 1
.,.,,

NORTH

By JameS Jaeoby

of diamonds, complications set ln.
Now tire defenders bad a sure trump
trick. the ace of diamonds 8lld appar·
eatly two heart tricb. At least South
!fad beld Iris trump losers to only one
by playing the spade ace first. So de-

. clarer played 1 lCIW trump towan!
dummy. West played the to, dummy
toot the kilrg, 8lld aaotber trump was
played. West won 8lld played another
. bear.t, 8lld East quickly took two heart
tricks and the ace of diamonds. One
down.
"Bad luck, partner." sclalmed declarer South. "II the queen of spades
comes down, we bave an easy 10
tricks."
"Yes, I see. But slrouldn't yoo try to

11-11·11

Uf~)

WEST
+Q 10 52
.10 5

.KQH2
tAUU2

UIOS

DeClarer needed either the queen of
spades to fall or the club suit to take
care of a heart l011er. Since it did not
seem likely that East, wbo bad overcallecl with two bearls, would bave as
many as three trpades, declarer won
the ace of hearts 8lld tabled the ace of
spades. Wlren East clilearded the nine

7:05 (Jlolen.rearro
7:30. ()) Family Fltlll
IJ) NFL Trivia Game

104-

:~:; :!: :"':-"',4-4 1 -"',.'"•:-:b l-=,o" ·,~'":'rti-.T-..-.,,,....,.. =-:::';,;~.,.,. ....... .....

-...
lAillll. ... -'"'"· 1110- '12 hp
- . Mlddl P ~.
IUif ~ wit~ aolahlo.l.".::
200 omp. DC, 4 lnl-lcn, '2 •
ort. 111 ..,._on lrlllw. t11110 nl~ ftt,IOO. 4110
fht. 11·4 441 Ull.
F'ord 12 hJI. .....W lraw.._
lion, I WD, t11.l00. 4110M1111 -drob1 10 ft. . . . . . U hp, 2 WD, .......,..
- · Cllll1......117.
1....-llon, f~l. MIO
Fonl 12 hp, 4
I lhtllwaftlhg M8chinii'Y: Iouth ..........., $116 • . , .
lond, Emoollo._, JITI...!Iflord• l'onl, 42 hp, 2 W I opood

a.u.l•

lwoozaoy,

~~

...::.-..:r.;=.: ,.

..-. w-

t

'

1113- llongor, 4114,· - •tcoaJ,- · _.
oolt
_.11:01 . . 4:00PII.
....._
- ......
1 m - aeo, 0.1.0.114- -14111oad. -.11oo. .1:1110.
. . . . . 114-211-1741.
11....-111,114-4411-71114.

·-

- - ~ m Nna, II l'onl , _ . , _. -

goro;o, ... _

l:'~o~:·

-

tm Oldo 0111- "'""wo11
17110 11
....,_
· -

HINT NUMI(IED LElTfiS

•

Complete ono cnuct.le q. uoled

by f illing in the miuing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

Playing
for what you need

IIJ Miami VIce Prodigal Son

-"'

0

BRIDGE

IIJC-

-no. -

llu\-to

An. M 1 be 1 all Addn, ell
brick ......, ....

~·-·....

~.~'or';1, .:=.....

,

'- •o till Wlrlal 01

0

_

"I don1 mind playing goH with women, • complained
lhe old bachelor, 'but I canl hold my stomach In lor
TWO HOURSI•'

-.
=~Q

"" ·

.

Lounge- GrlBI - Swank- Smooth - TWO HOURS

.())PMIIageIJl Sport8Cenllr
(I) D (I) CuiNIII AHolr
CD (J) MlcNall L.etnr

~
' .......
. ·:
1'n..tcoad 75 BoalS &amp; Motora
~·
Mdr.'t1
....., a
for Slle
LMiollll&amp;d
gultor
- . tm =IIIII - . 10.000
-Jell ....... -"'"!lot, ......
11•~
tm 11 t.
--_ , , II.
ErnerMn YCR. Good oond.
Chewc tlsiO », -· aiAo, - · 12a HP,
I100.114-44M'121-Ip.m.
..__Ill.
.
......,.._..,. .
Col 114-DI-IItlolw 7:00p.M.
, _ _,
Flro aod lol 1~ tu lpllt a Plono For - 1 Wa-: , . . CltaOon '*• dlmlgoC!
....... dlliwtw. truck ...... nv
2' ,..., to ........... - . clllun~ll, ~
·,'•
114-317.ot3111.,...,-7111.
... - . ' - . - 114......... traJo lor tcoad guno: _ , . C o l t - - - .
-I.
2 rra. old PJolt, fwnile. 2G mo. IJDrtaht ........ ....._ ..... , . ..,._, Auto. tlwaso..
0111-llaolkO&lt;c!- Old molo on.fiunolNd.ColtU Ill BIT. lion, VI
Mdr·
Wlfloer. 114-441-ootS.
R... t10011. [ooo """ 100,000
Y - M .,....._ - · a -.JtOOO.It~.
0111'1 Lillo, 24", tao. bluo. 114- 1p I 1 - o r llfiiii!O!c~
.. ,
76 Aulo Parta &amp;
11141M.
ooll
-· · : ·• .,,._ dillon,
1111 ClooWp
Cafl!!oo. - .,.....,.
-.
... lUll. •,
Accaaaorlaa
I1A.1000.
'
POOII lOY 11RII, IOWTIIo
1111 DodaO - 114-117-2M1.
4 ..,_ to bt denlall fwd or
..............
·
•'
........

lor7=1t.-111-Avo.
11......
,.
Ulnry llf -., Doo. I, 1111.

Merchandrse

7:00 ()) Our llouM

tm ...... Truck, 4X4, aoaJ.114-146-1112.
t l l 3 - ~4--.

7

•

SCRAM LETS ANSWIIS

1:311 (I) Andy (Jrilfltll

Of :•=•------==...:::..~·

_

I

1111111, V.., 1.,., 1 - .
0.W Dllva, lfl Ill IIIII
Polnl--haollddlnoncl , ... ClooWp c-11 , _ M.
Tlllll.10441'1o4014.
lied •"Douar, N, euiO. . . PI,
11
Ptgo 1or as. - · ·114- ~ M,aao - l · ""
1111-1411.
tw ~-- ltiJI!. &amp;I • ' to.
MjiiMIOIII 1 111111.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
1 • -I - L X --u.ooo-.
Com lor 12.10 - . . .. t31100.11.,_7177,
" - llooglo l'ann. 11WQ. ~ - : 1117 .__
aA.
~
-rl ' ... ou. - · lliM
Hof, Rosa ad, --2AT
...t lrdOfJ. tmfO. .,.,_..,.
*'77NMO·
...... --oi&amp;-J,~ 73 V.ns&amp;4WD'I
111 1 m~ ·- drha,__,
ooo or ,.... ....,
. _ . .........,.1.00.3D4- ....-.
11
..,._..,.,

_

6 UNSCI""''I.E
ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWfl

1-2-1 c:..-eQ
.IDCUNaliiiQ
d]) Tlftt'• Comprnr
tBl WKRP In Clrrolrtnlll
iiJIIe-Mn

(J)

'I

Clw181a:w ...._ nJia•nct
114
11
•• - · ·
-&gt;&amp;iiMI !)lllofy - ·
........
.. Ill
....

-

w~C:~O:-Q

(l)llody ltaotrlc

-

= .,.,_,oa.

.

&amp;:30·~ ()) ltll NBC H1Q1r11r Nan

11111 -Otto ~
Dodile. I -Gfl, • .-,
...
.....
noiUII.I14-7G "

I

DROPEN
l--.;~!;...:.;lr-=:,lr6..;1..:.:.,.1......j

• a-riCin .,........
$:05(1)......, 111717 I

-

_,.. -

:.!:.',";3~;·:-•'"A".:::t

ttoe.1. te411•11.

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

St-, _...,.

IDOO.•tWIIIm-ngo.
2 .1o1 - · ono tii!!.,MMX.

lt-.

::"11:="'::.:011= :t
upp -

AnII que&amp;

Oolllo

.artl., ..

Building
S
I...._

I
I

~~~:;:::.

.

CLEDUT

One pompous old crone to
anolher: "Sure I make mis·
takes. and I'll be the -----·
. . - - - - - -- ---. person lo admit il."

18 atarte. In
iiJJern

No.

, . . -~F-IOO ........
Do 10110
-·
Mftd,, Dol
' " - oltiiOio" L4=

bewords.

,_ I_LAI. S I.D YI.

~~OneTVQ

,-,

· - l -..::t,-~
boll. '

RT.t~1,_1 MILES

..... MO.Ki•oold 11111nllr,
.... _ . . 1111111:1M.
ttr7Qro9DIIIlllllllrulll.f'llll.
4x4, .,. 'tb, - · . . . , _ , _ Ko

-----•-h.

Low, -

the

.~ I I' I I .

AliA.

IJ)1PI Cllll
C l l - - Tille olr1p
to Olacltr NatiOnll Pork 10
tH tho Roctcy Mountain

-

YI'RA FURNITURE

~n•.::."::t.:m..:.'00.;,1 =:

Fum'OIIf001!!,,11t udlltloo plld,
haobol~ ........- . ,...._
•
Ill"'w.l14w4S.

~Woror ~:"..:='h';::':Jo':C:..P::,':,
,_17...,j~l:;ra.~111~"'~"'~·tnc~wv~··~a:z.u~·~0~:_:=:=._,:24::3, . . , .
·

z:c_,. ...

~

Funilshad1
Roome

eountr

A public ollwl14 01
oloobllbolng_..,_
. _ 11g111
Countp w.t...
T...., Inc. to
.- . . . .wonl
,.. """"
~ . . .,.._an
acur.lon.,.....
a
L4 p11ono llilrl ou1111'11 ll'om
on till
Oldo- ~ Rlwn.....
alilf- _,,.... qUMt torlnfDI'm8llonbymail

.-.pas
--.~~."";::J/1:1::'""..,::

-•

,.. etoowr'

to I p.m., ..... 12 - t o I p.111. ••
....
-....- .......... 111-4*3111.

.--· '

...... EoOy II - .
wanltciiO Do
35 Lots &amp; Acraaga
· no - ....... - ·
no - • - "lldld Col 1lllcttumllhodlc• ~.:.. - ... dof.'::
-1-77711111. 1114- 24 Wll do -'*'II fw llx110 1.
Wtl,
r • '"•••- I
-.,L 1 • • .....,..
lolld11a. ~ MW " - "Tho 0 drMr ':-~~~·•:::·:..:104
:C'::'..rl"':.:•=1";·"7':-:~~~a a• ,..... oulllr• ..,.... ,..... all,
.
"-IM-CJI..tlk
,
Qnz' ,. Jtvtng. 1 ..,.. 2 llecl111
"" o1 - · _..., lloautlful- ..,. """ , _ ""~'11-

-·
r:::?t:,::-:z.
~
'f

oppllo-. -- ..

Uood
oootod • - I TV'o iiOWTIIo
51101 ..1110:00 All to 1:10 Pll.

~ mpr.

.......

....;.:..A....:;N;..:F--.;..I..:Lr--11;

•w
w .fw 111 •o
Gl Nan

tm ~4
111p

=:.:::W."lli,=:e11 .. !'..."\:.::.k::..:o:• .. -~

~:::=::::=::=::::=::::==-J~:=;==;:::;:====:j 1~
'r1:.,
...::O,ad,
.....;:
,_
......... ~
··-~·~

tot- o-.

__,,.,

dutylllllclmitlo-111.

1114 .............. Colt • ~
1710. Alldna ttOOO. 11~

l'umllhod 11111. :143 Jac.._
Plko, tlll,llllllloo pd. tlor, 114-tlllor 7pJI.

"Sure, I know the value of a
d0 IIRf, DRdl, Th at'8 W hY I
as ked fOr twenty'"
.
•

e:oac:~!"'-

T2 Tnlcka for Sale

IRO'IIM. C.UIU41IIMI.EOH.

EAIIN _ , 1J111n1 Ill 130,000 ,_, _....
Dolollo, lt)IOUI7"* Ext.' 11-

.... J hool

...
.....
t~Whlto_olo..,..
IIH.
rotor ttoa. Hooi

ESTATES. 131

_
.... _
.... ooll'l111o
l'Jt.7111 oot. T..a
.

EVENING

..fl&gt;llo!ol.. 1171. -

IEAUTifUI. ANIITIIIHTS AT
IIUDGIT PIIICII AT JACKSON

I

"'

• ._

II.

gold

Rearrange '-Hers of
0 four
ocrombled word•

low ro form lour

fUrniture, -r:ll ~ ,_ •

Wooll-11

. . :.'=; .;~.; .;:t" ••; .;'__;;S;_~..;:~~c!l~.~.!~ ~s·

-.

1'12hllw I "'"'
IWAIN
Auc:TK* • I'UIIIII'IIIa •

..., lor Clolola&amp;, ........
p&amp;""'a, 1 - Ill 1111.
~

Television
Viewing

71 AU101 for Sale

Houaahold
Goode

51

The Daly

Ohio

Mondlly, Novmlbar 20. 1989

+83

+J912

..

SOUTH
+AJ764
.AH
tKQ

+K75

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

·.

/'-

SooQ

Well

I NT

Pooo

2+

Pus
Opening lead: • 10

L __ _ _ _ ___,__,j "

make tbe band? Although it risks ioing down one more tridr., you rrbotrld _
play for West to bold four clulw. II you
play club ace, club to the king. 8lld ,
badr. to dummy, putliD&amp; in the to wben
West follows with tire nine, yau wW be /
able to discard a losing heart on the ·
fourth cJub.'
'

CROSSWORD

.

..

by THOMAS JOSlPH
ACROSS

6 One Gabor

1 Zenith

7 Twenlies

.

5 - chair

art slyle
10 Wave's top 8 Seaport
12 Dodge
in Yemen
13 Sharp
9 Dweeb
bargainer 11 Occupation
15 Lamb
14 Biblical
16 Annoy
. weed
17 Moreover 18 Jargon
A
18 Enticed 19 Humming
Yealerclay'a na20 Leave
sound
28 Cornice 35 Kane's
active
20 Stoolie
block
"Rosebud."
setvice
21 Greek
30 "Casa·
for one
23 Take In
letter
blanca" 37"roomers 22 Cargo
characler
Christie"
27 Expiale
weighl
32 While38 Religious
28 Bequest 24 Omega
laced ·.
body
reclpienl 25 By maiden 33 Swedish 39 Region
29 Zesl
name
wine
41 Shrewmouse
30 Execute 26 Tllrice
measure 42 Cole
31 Giile an
(La I.)
34 Maxim
ol song
opinion

33 "-

...

..
'
•

. .,

. Poelica"
38 Slatule
37 Slubbofn
-mull

40 Teamstt:o ·
of lhe
Old Wesl
43 Vlgllanl
44 Uhlan's
weapon
45 Helen
ol song
46 So long!
DOWN
1 Hurt
2 Boast
3 Molher
(Fr.)
4 Belore lee
5 Suit Iabrie

.•

..

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Hen's m,.towork II:

11120

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

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

.
....
·~

CRYPI'OQUOTE

. 11-lt

.. .

BOCKJAU
XVFLPU
ZLM

ZAJ

XVZX

aCAPCX

XVJ
PCM
XC

UKJJXJUX
JWJA

SDX

Z

YZMJ
UCDO

F l'X C . - V . K . QJJiiVJA
Ywlw I , •• Ca;plaqa1..1 PUT AU. YOUR GOOD
EGGS IN ONE BASKET ·AND lltEN WATOf 11IE

BASKET. - ANDREW CARNEGIE
(•

·.

--..
.~··

.·'
I

�P; 1

10-n. o.lly S1 1111111

Pomii'Oy-Micklaport. Ohio

Mondly, Nov.-nber 20. 1989

-,,HoME·IANI

THIS
. ,-1. EEK'S
,.y·~
lAMES

FOI

HOME PEOPLE"

Ohio wttery

Yount
captures

Pick-3
938
Pick

ALMVP

4780

Page4

_.s sa IS

MEIGS

""'-·

~~~~~fO(l
• •=..,..,..
.urn•"CCS
'IY'S·R.OGICM

..........

.

Nov.

24~Athens-H

R4qr.E'OFFK.E
~

INSTAWIENT
· LOANs
992-3077

V.ALLEY

I

ot.· -

·
·Restaurant
'

'

221 Wilt
Main St.
'
.~ ·~ P.oll,l"oy .
' 992-5432

BOYS
Nov • .28-Kyger
Creek-A
GIRLS
Nov. 20-Meigs-H
Nov. 22-Kyger
Creek-H

I

; '·"-· -

Fa~ily

·soUTHERN

992-6661

.

Featurl•t Ke•tuekr
Frld .Chlekt•

------~---------BOYSSCHEDULE:--~--------~--­

LUMBER

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

..
"

555 PMIST• . "
. .EPOIT.
ttJ-6611
.,

Nov. 24-Athens ......................... Home
Dec. 1-lliller ............................. Away
Dec. 2-Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonvllle-York ..... ::.... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co..... :............... Home
Dec. 22-Belpre ........................... Away
Dec. 29-Lopn ........................... Home
Jan. 5-Aieunder ....................... Home
Jan. 9-federal Hockin1 .............. Home
Jan. 12-lilltr ........ :.................. Home
Jan. 16-W~rren .......................... Away
Jan. 19-Tnmble ......................... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York ............. Away
)an. 26-Wellston ....................... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ..................... : Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. 3-Athens ............................ Away
Feb. 6-Aiexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ............... Away

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Miller ............................ Home
Nov. 24-Federal Hocking ............ Home
Nov. 28-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 1-Han·nan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 5-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Dec. 8-Southwestern .................. Away
Dec. IS-Southern ....................... Away
Dec. 16-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Dec. 2280ak Hill .... ,..................... Away
Dec.29-31)-:Holiday Toum. at Pt. Pleasant
Jan. 2-Federal Hocking ............... Away
Jan. S-Hannan Trace .................. Home
Jan. 12-North Gallia ................... Away
Jan. 19-Southwestern .. ;..: .......... Home
Jan.26-K~er Creek.. ................... Away
Jan. 27-lllller .... ,.......................Away
Feb. 3-Southern ........................ HolDe
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ............ ·..... Away
Feb. 1600ak Hill ......................... Home

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL

1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 2S-:-Aiexander ...................... A,way
Nov. 28-KYier Creek.. ................. Away
Dee. 1-0ak Hill ......................... Home
Dec. S-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 8_;Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 15-Eutern ........................ Home
Dec. 16-Southwestern ................ Home
Dec. 22-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ................. Away
Dec. 29-Athens ......................... Home .
Jan. S-Oak. Hill............................ Away
Jan. 6-Galhpohs ........ :............... Home
Jan. 12-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Jan. 19-;Hannan Trace ................ Home
Jan. 26-North Gallia .................. Home
Jan. 27-Ravenswood .................. Home
Feb. 2-Eastern ........................... Away
Feb. 3-Federal Hocking ............... Away
Feb. 9-Southwestern .... :.............. Away·
Feb. 16-Symmes Valley ............... Away

A

.FOR IREAKFAST .
JJJN(H &amp; DINNER
, . , . Flltufin&amp;•

* G,_ HI ...IJII1

•Roast a.r on CRiisuld

*·stuffK
taaad Potatoes
, · * Taco S.lads
* Reel Ice CNim *

D~llng • Cilrry Out •

trlvfi.T.hN

----~~--------~GIRLSSC~EDULEi----~--~~---r:

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20-Southern ............................. Away
Nov. 30-llilltr .................:.............. Home

Dec. 2-Easttrn ................................. Away

nons.

....... Fri.
7:11 . . . . 5100p.&amp;

·w...,

7:30 ....... 4100 ...... '

Dec. 7-Trimble ................................ Home
Dec. 11-Ntlsonville·Yorl .................. Away
Dec. 14-Wtllston ............................ Home
. Dec. 18-Vinton Co............................ Away
.Dec. 21-Belpree .............................. Home
Jan. 4-Aieunder .............................. Any ·
Jan. 8-Federal Hockin&amp; ..................... Away
Jan. 11-lliller .................................. Away
Jan. 15-Eastem ............................... Home
Jan. 18-Trimblt................................ Away
Ja. 22-lltlsonville-York ................... Home '
.lin. 5-Wtllston ............................... Horne
Jan. 29-Villlon Co........................... Home
Feb. 1-Belpre .......... :........................ Away
Feb. 5-Aieunder ............................. Home
Feb. 8-Ftderal Hockina .................... Horne
Feb. 10-Southem ............................ Home

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 27-North Gallia ........................ Away
Nov. 30-Hannan Trece ..................... Home
Dec. 2-Meics .................................. Home
Dec. 4-Kyeer Creek.. ......................... Away
Dec. 6-Trimble :................................ Away
· Dec. 7-Southwestern ....................... Home
Dec. 11-Southern ............................ Home
Dec. 14-Symmes Valley .................... Away
Dec. l&amp;:...federal Hockina ................... Away
Dec. 21-0ak Hill ............................. Home
Jan. 4-Hannan Trace ......................... Away
Jan. 10-Trimble,.............................. Home
Jan. 11-North Gallia ........................ Home
Jan. 15-Meias .................................. Away
Jan. 18-Southwestern ....................... Away
Jan. 20-Federal Hockin................... Home
Jan. 25-Kyeer Creek.. ...................... Home
Feb. 1-Southern ............................... Away
Feb. S-Oak Hill .............. :................. Away
'eb. 8-Sym"'es Valley ..................... Home

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 20-lleics ................................ Home
Nov. 27-Kyrr Creek.. ...................... Home
Nov. 30-0a Hill ...................:.......... Away
Dec. 4~North Gallia ........... ,............. Home
Dec. 7-Hannan Trace .........:............. Home
Dec. 11 ~Eastern ............................... Away
Dec. 14-Southwestem ...................... Away
Dec. 18-Waterford ....... :................... Home·
Dec. 21-Symmes Valley .................... Away
Jan. 2-Nelsonvllle-York .................... Away
Jan. 4-0ak Hill ................................ Home
Jan. 11-Kyeer Creek .. ,...................... Away
Jan. 18-Hannan TI1Ct ....................... Away
Jan. 20-Nelsonville York.. ................ Home
Ja. 25-NOrth Gallia ........................... Away
Jan. 29-Waterford ............................ Away
Feb. 1-Eastem ................................ Home
Feb. 5-Symmes Valley ..................... Home
Feb. &amp;-Southwestern ....................... Home
· Feb. 10-Mei&amp;s .................................. Away

Prescription
Shop ·. ,
••

.. f9J-6669 ·..
171 NOIII.$leo•

•ULIPOII, ·81110
· "For AH v..,

'"""'"" t~llllltg
Nuit,. lu Ut" ·

"'"eAT ' HILL
FORD
I

461 JD AVE;
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7161.W
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991-2196
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1 Seotlon. 10 P"ffH

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 21, 1989

26 Cenu

A Mutttmedia Inc. NtwiP•P•

Council may 'e liminate
some parking meters

"~ ;c.row's

'

JIDDlEPOIT; OHIO

Vol.40. No. 137

.....2210 . .

l ..- ..· . ·

BOYS
· Nov. 21-Miller-H
. Nov. 24-Fed. Hock.-H
GIRLS
Nov. 22-North
Gallia-A

97 NOI1H SECOND

I

992-6333

EASTERN

"Your Finaneial
Center"

a1

&lt;

SYUCUSE OFFICE
I'

If, . .

.

"'t~'

BOYS

II

THE
CENTRAl
TRUST
COMPANY

,;

•

•

fOIAUYM

1111111

Clear toal1ht. Low Ia mid
20a. Wednesday, hllh Ia mid
4Gs Chance of rain '10 percent.

river bank on-both the upper and reported that a group of mer·
By NANCY YOACBAM
chants have checked the wiring
lower lots.
Dally SenUnel Staff
Councllls also considering the and replaced !au lty plugs, as well
Pomeroy VIllage Council discussed at the pros and cons of posslbllily of selling another lype as replacing bulbs. The mer·
eliminating a number of meters of permit which would be more chants have spent about $200 In
on a portion of the lower parking expensive, but would allow the repairing light strands and re·
lot, and llml1ing parking on that holder .to park anywhere wllhln placing bulbs so that lights will
be ready to go up this week before
lot lo assigned parking only. The the village.
Sunday's
Chrlslmas parade. The
Council
will
be
considering
the
parking situation was discussed
lights
"should
look better than
parking
suggestions
for
a
possl·
at Monday nlghl's regular
they
have
l
n
a
lot
of years," Clark
ble
decision
at
the
next
regular
meeting.
.
said.
.
Since approximately 20 meters meeting.
In addition, Annie Chapman,
Pollee Chief Jerry Rought was
. on the lower lot are constanlly
merchants
associatiOn presibeing vandalized, some actually included ln the discussion of the
dent,
said
she
will be wrapping
having been puUed out of the parking sltuatloq.
the
tlnseled
decorations
In plas·
Also ln regard .·to parking,
metal posts by vandals and then
tic
as
lhey
are
put
In
storage
for
.thrown over th~ riverbank, Coun· members of the Pomeroy Meruse
.
n
ext
year.
·
cllman Bill Young suggested that chants Association . attended
Chapman also expressed ap...
the problem of vandalism might Monday night's meeting to repreciation
for village workers
be eliminated by assigning park· quest that Council free the
who
assisted
the merchants In
norlhbolllld a&amp; 11: 011 a.m. when tbe load shUied on
TRUCK OVERTURNS ON 33 - A Waterford
lng along the wwll porUon of the meters for Christmas shOppers
bringing
lhe
lights
oul of storage
a curve, caulllag the vehicle to overturn. There · lower lot toward the river during starting Monday, Nov. 27,
maa was cited by the State Blpay Patrol In a
was no Injury and damage to the truck was
through Christmas. Council. for this year.
one-vehicle accident on U.S. 33 In Bedford
business hours.
Clark reported that grass In the
se.
v
ere.
Fulton
was
cited
for
no
seat
belt.
agreed
to the request. stlpulallng
Township on Monday. The GaiBa·Melp Posl~&amp;ld
Parking meters toward the
mini-parks
has been cut and the
street would be left In place for that parking along the streets
parks
cleaned
up In anticipation
cusromers of stores on the lower will ·be limited to two hours.
of
a
visit
from
Santa Claus on.
block. 'In addition, meters along There will be no time res lrlct Ions
Sunday
afternoon
after the pa·
the river In the upper lot would .on lot parking. The merchants
rade.
Santa
Is
expected
to visit
stlll be available for permit agreed to cover the meters with
one
of
the
parks
where
l,le will
bags, . Indicating on I he bags
parking.
pass
out
treats--to
cllll(lren,
.·
. Approximately 25 people who which rnelers are limited to two
Chief
Rought
reported
lhat
a
work In Pomeroy purc)lase ye· hours only , ·
garage
on
Nye
Av~nue
and
a
The merchants also updated
arly parking permits for $75
house
at
Kerr's
Run
have
been
which allow them to park at Council on this year's Christmas
Continued on page 10
meters along the wall beside lhe lighting situation. Joe Clark
By United Press International
of the storm was stlll over Lake famUy was bloWn over by a gust
A blustery Lake Erie snow- Erie.
of wind on Interstate 90 In
storm pounded an already
High winds. gusting up to 30 Madison Township. Family
winter-weary northeast Ohio mph, were blowing water over a members. who were not ldenti·
..,1\IM!lQJDOl'JIIn(l~se.ll4!ni windbreakw•ll at Clev~land Elec\rlc fled; were not lpjured.
ch1ttio:~· · IIOWlJ oeiU' .~Q I lll~natlngCo.'splantonqeve- '
~l!'i£'11 fhll'tleti , ~ to,
and slowing rush-hOur lrafflc.
land's East Shoreway, forcing prev~ll Tuesday over northwest
High winds In advance of the road crews to apply repeated and central Ohio while It was to
storm Monday afternoon coatings of salt. But at least Ice be dry and partly cloudy in the
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPII cars' exhaust systems each year EPA's lnspectllon and maintain·
knocked down trees and power was the only problem Tuesday south. Temperatures were to
The state Controlling Board when ·they renew their vehicle ance program, said the public
Jines, cutting electricity to about the wlnd·blown waler often car· hold steady In the 30s, while
Monday approved an $8 million registrallons. Late next year, a needs to know the reasons for the
25,000people. Thewlndblewover rles hundreds of shad on to the northwest winds of 10 to 25 mph
loan to a Mahonlng County more extensive lallplpe lnSpec- program, and the fact thalli was
a recreational vehicle on Inter· roadway. creating slick condl· created wind·chlll readings In
company
for ·renovation of an tion will start In the Cleveland prescribed by the U.S. EPA.
state 90 east of Cleveland.
lions even salt can't take care of. the single digits.
The board also authorized the
idle
steel
recycling
facility.
area.
"I know It's not even Thanks·
The snow squalls were to
Skies will clear across Ohio
Officials·
of
the
Ohio
Deparl·
Officials
of
the
Ohio
Environ·
Ohio
industrial Commission to
giving yet, but I'm already sick become widespread by midday Tuesday night, but some flurries
contract
with Ohio State Unlver·
ment
of
Development
said
the
mental
Protection
Agency
said
of winter," said Mara. a clerk at - with wind causing extensive will persist ln lhe extreme
slty
for
$893·,000 • to provide
youngstown
Sinter
Co.
will
start
the
Gordon-Darby
conlract
may
a downtown Cleveland coffee drifting - before beginning to northeast early. It will be quite
diminish ln lhe afternoon.
cold as the .mercury drops into
recycling. operations next Sep· be reduced at that time with the management services at the
h
sop.
.
20
tember, creating 70 new jobs phaseout of some of lhe 1,000 · Leonard Camera Industrial ReThe National weather Service
Wlnd·chlll readings across the teens and lower s.
over a three-year period .
compuler terminals used In the habilitation Center near the OSU
said Tuesday a winter storm northern Ohio were between 2
.The latest weather map
Th.e recycling facility will be current program.
campus.
warning was still In effect tor . and 5 degrees and mid-morning. showed a deep low pressure
Warren Smith , chairman of the
The Controlling Board c)enled
used to refine steel waste proMonday afternoon and even· system just north of New Eng·
northeast Ohio, but it was backcommission,
said University
duels
for
use
in
steel
production.
$300,000
worlh
of
spending
for
a
tng off from a Monday prediction lng, wind blew down trees and land with a cold front trailing
was
the only entity
Hospital
James
Marinucci
of
the
Devel·
public
awareness
program.
di·
of widespread snow accumula- power lines, and about 25,000 south along the Atlantic Coast.
offering
to
furnish
the manpower
opment
Department
said
the
rectlng
the
EPA
to
return
with
tlon. About61ncheswasexpecled cuslomers of northeast Ohio ColdCanadianhlghpressurewas
and
the
computer
programs
state
will
market
an
$8
million
Information
justifying
the
to falllri the Snow Belt, but II was utilities were wllhout power for over the Plains and western
necessary
for
the
job.
.
not expected to accumulate as varying periods of tlme. Nearly Great Lakes. The high will settle bond, which will be repaid by the · expenditure.
Sen. William Sowen, D·
Smith said in addition to
much In other areas.
all had power restored by early over the Great Lakes and Ohio Sinter Co.
The board also approved a $2.5 Cincinnati, said I he agency paying salaries and fringe benef·
About 2 Inches was on the Tuesday morning.
Valley lonlght. but low pressure
In Lake County, the Ohio inovlng Into the Ohio Valley .mUIIon contract with Gordon- merely needs to notify affected its for four managers, 9,750
ground at mid-morning ln parts
of Summll and Portage countles Highway Patrol said a motor ·wednesday will bring the threat D!trby Inc., Louisville, for conti· motorists wllh their advance square feet or space In ,the center
south of Cleveland, but the worst home belonging to an Indiana · of rain to the south and 'snow to nuatlon of au to emissions tes ling notice for registration renewal, will be set aside for 'Ohio State
sports rehabllltallon and cardiac
In the Cincinnati and Cleveland rather than mounting an exten·
.
the north.
areas.
slve radio or television rehabllltallon.
The board also approved:
Motorists In five counties must campaign .
Continued on page 10
Scott Compton, director of the
undergo a visual check of their

..

'

Sl~~g -;b.ds topple
trees,' disruptS power

Control Board · authorizes

lo8n ti. :·voungSioWii ·cofupany

Main .characters anno-,.tnced for
Varieties of '89 perforTnance
Heidi Caruthers and Bruce the forties, will be the selection of
Wolle wlll play the principle Ron Ash with Linda Mayer,
characters )n a musical trip back another veteran of the Big Bend
to the World War II era In a shows, doing the sentimental
segment of Varletles of '89 to be numbers, "There, I've Said II
presented at 8:10 p.m. Saturday Again" and "Love Letters".
at the Rutland ctvlc Center.
Another show regular, Jean
Wolfe will take the audience Trussell, will do "Wonder When
back to the early draft days ~Y Baby's Co min' Home".
preceding World War II wllh his
The Melody Men Quartet com··
vocal,. "Goodbye, Dear. I'll be posed· of Ash, Des Jeffers. Mike
Back ln a Year" and he leaves for Wilfong and Denver Rice will
the mllllary. Steve Martin, a bring the serviceman hom~ on
newcomer to the Blg Bend leave with their' 'Seems Like Old
Minstrel Association which Times'' and Jim Sheets returns
stages the annual production, to this. year's show· with his
will move lhe segment along versl.on of "We Did It Before, and
with his rendition of "ye, Bye, We Can Do II Again" backed by a
Baby" and later with "Some- marching group of 16 cast
lhlng to Remember You By" .
members. Laura Hawthorne will
Other performers will present . mark the departure of the
songs lhal were popular during serviceman overseas with "Now
the World War I:J era. Veteran Is the Hour" and will sing "A
soloist, Jim Soulsby will do Little on the Lonely Side" to note
"Serenade ln Blue" and Laura the feelings passing between the
HaWthorne, a music. major at servlcema n and the girl he lefl
Ohio University, will be doing behind. And that girl, played by
"Thai Old Black Magic" with Heidi Caruthers, ma~lng her
Shirley Quickel as the featured first appearance In the Big Bend
dancer. ''Skylark", popular In shows, will sing "I'm Makin'

-Local news briefs·-No paper Thursdity

· Tlte Dally Sentinel will not be published Thursday In order to
permit employees to observe the Thanksgiving holiday. An
early publication deadline will be' observed Wednesday.
Normal hours of operation will be resumed Friday.
Continued on page 10
...

_____

-----,.--

Believe".
Julianne Buck on toe will be
background dancer as Soulsby
presents "The Las I Time I Saw
Paris", Denver Rice on the
concertina will reflect the enter·
talnment In overseas.camps with
"Give My Regards to Broad·
way" and Yankee Doddle
Dandy". A children's chorus
composed of Jackie Buck, Mel·
ody HoHday. Julia Spaun, Charla
Burge, Lauren Anderson. David
Anderson, Grant Abbotl, P. J .
Erwin. Wesley Thoene, and John
Hill will tie Into the theme with
lhelr vocal, ''When the Lights Go
On Again, All Over the World".
Susan Wolf, Sherrl BisSell and
Robin While will bring the
serviceman home with lhelr
vocal, "Sentimental Journey".
Caruthers will sing "Wallin'
for lhe Train to Come In" as she
and WoUe are reunlled for their
duet, "I'll Buy Thai Dream" to
conclude the segment .
Don Pullins, a resident of
Meigs Couniy as a child and now
llvlnK In Columbus, will conclude
the show with his version of
"Before the Parade Paases By"
and will brln(l the entire cast on
stage for the finale which will be ·
a trlbu te to God and Country.
Tree .lighting as well as a fog
mac)11ne will be used this year to
provide special effect• for the
annual musical. Sound Is being
handled by Aardvark Sound,
Pomeroy.

-

.::..s:r-

---

'

¥

•

.

••

..

'

'

DOWN TIIB LEVEB -Brie MetderoflheOIIIo .
Deparimeat of Na&amp;anl •••m,,., Dlvlaloa of
Walei'WQI Jolllell: MIMleport Vlllap olllelals
Moadq allier- lo IHII owr tile Mlildllflr&amp;
levee Ia utlel_... oi!QIII'dla&amp; boa&amp; lllllaelllaa
111111 oCber laeHIIhl 111..... The vtllaae wu
neeDib' awarded a ••·• pul lor lbe proJed

---~---- -·---:-----r..r-·--·-~-

'-

n.,. llaeldofNatlll'alltelaveM.In tile

.r-UM
11'01111 dewll

.a 111e levy fl'am tile left were
Councllmaa 8ob Gilmore, Mqor Fred BoHmaa,
Baine Triplett er Triplett Bllal!leerlq lenleea,
Metlller, aad Coaaclllmea IIIID!III O.aw.tlly ud
laek Satterfield.
·

---- -----~ .;._._~

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