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Ohio Lottery

seahawks
hand BengaJ.s
fll'8t defeat

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Plek..J: Ill
Plct4: 6118
Cardl: .
J·ll• Of·C, Of·D, A-8

· -· W. . . .

Mostly ctear

. near II. Partly

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Vo1.4l, No. 101M
Copyright11d 1990

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illniDk't laU moved up aacl llowD aa11 ..,...,.d
periodically. · Operating . It lrGG~ . lalt• tile
, structure were fteiMII ~e and 8ar&amp;b 'DDbJ.

TQ CATS' TAKES FIBST - Tbls'

a,.&amp; .

lly the Junior claaa of Soutl!ern Hlg!t

· ICMol tor the kadlllonal· homecoming parade
· a.lk ...._ plaee In the competWon. Tllelarre blf'ck

:Homecoming
· panlde brings

PlACE
Tbe .Mnlor elus ·of
Sebool uae!l a remOile eoatroled
Ita ''Mow Over tb.e Cat•" &amp;hem~

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nesdq. Hlp near Ill.
of rain • pereent.

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Pomeroy·to. pennit
frre parking· for '90
C • tmas shoppers

f!oat In Friday's homl'eomlng parade before tile·
·rame be&amp;ween tbe Soutllern Tomadoet aad 1111
.llallnan Traee WUdeate.

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:Out creativity
. . Tile Junior class wltli lis
creative "Stunk' the Cats" float
took first place In the judging at
•!be annual Southern.High School
iiQIIIee:Oinlng parade , Friday

.
By BBIAN I:REEI\
.· Seuttlnal New• !Matt
Pomeroy Vllllge Council voted
, to provide free parkltie during
tbe Cbrlltmas shopping Mason
at Ita regular meetllll at VI~
Hall on Mollll~ even~n&amp;.

· afteriiOon.
.·
..
.. Tile parade marked the· begin·
lllq ol. festivities as students ·
&lt;prepared for the gave between
tbe Tomadoes and the Hannan
Traee Wildcats Friday night.
'l'aklng second place In the
JUIIIIDc wu the senior class float
wlllcll can1ed out a "Mow Over
tile Cats" !)Ierne, while third
place went to the freshman class
'With Its "Pound the Cats"
tlllmed float.
Led by tbe · SHS band the ·
jl? ,.de m!)Ved from . the high .
ICbool 1hr~h downtown Ra· :
CIDe. Besldel
floats 'from the
llllh IIChool clasleS, homecoming
c•ndJdates rode on convertibles,
tile football players and cheer·
leaders rode on a flatbed truck, a
IJ'OUP'or baton twirlers marched
aiollg, and emergency vehicles
and fire tnieks, · along with
THIRD PLACE' - ''P9und the'Ca&amp;a" .Utile
RVel'al decorated four wheeler s
theme of tbls lrelllmao c1aaa D.U eate~ 1n tile
ftl'e In tlle.Uneup.
llomecomlng parade a&amp; S,utll. . mlli ......

Annie Cllapman, Vllikl Ferrell,

tllld .Joe and Suaan Qark, all

the

..

WIGGINS RECOGNIZED - Kenny Wiggins,
left, was presented an outstanding service award
lrom Buckeye Hills Resource Conservation and

BOMBCOMING QuEEN - Junle Beegle was cruw•d
,. bomeoomln1 queen In balt~e ceremonies at Fl'klay nlgllt'l
pme betweea the Southern Tomacloea and tbe B••a" Trace
·wUdeate. Tile 1989 bomeeomlnl queen, April Nuar8WJCI,
crowned ber •l!C~aor .who was escorted by Jere1117 Role,

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The merchants aleo reported to
co.uncll that new Cbrlsbnas
banner5 would be In place In the
dOWDtowD irea for the sllopjltng
season.
'
Counell also voted to approve a
. three-bour beer oermlt, Jiendlng

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~~~E~~rrr·;c
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Flu shots slated to be given this

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Two
nUnols lawmakers from aepar·
ate aides of the ,aisle aareect
Tuesday the Midwest would be
particularly hard hit under the ·
new federal budget.
.
As explained by State Health oecupatlon, behavior, travel to
· Adult Immunization AwareCongresswoman
Republican
ness Week Is Oct . 21-27 and In Director Dr. Ronald L. Fletcher, other counttles, or IDCreaslng
Lynn Martin dete:rlbed the lf!lla·
conjuncllon with the State De· many deaths and serious II· · . age.
latlon
as. "Juat a~l" tor lbe
The 1990-91 vaccine protects
partment of Health's program to lnesses occur eacll year from
·
reliOD
wblle DelliOCrat R)cbard
stop preventable Illnesses and diseases that can be prevented agalnsttbeTypeA-Talwan, Type
Durtlln
said cu !backs In Medl·
death, the Meigs CoUnty Health with proper Immunization. He A-Shanghai and 'l'ypa · B·
Department will be offering flu · encourages all Ohioans to be Yamagata strains of lnDuenza. · care WQIIId result In llospltel
cloelngs.
certain they have been properly Infiueriia Is a respiratory dla·
vaccines on Oct. 18, 19 and 22
'lbey were lnlerviewed oa the
ease,
caused
by
viruses
that
·
immWtized.
Health. Deparbnent personnel
"Fox
Moi'IIIJII News" p~am
WilDe the emphasis at tills time often spreads In epidemic prowill be at the Senior Citizens
from
Wublqton.
portions. Each year, thousandsCanter on Oct. 18 from 9 a.m. to of year ·Is on flu shots, Dr.
Durbin Aid be hadn't decided
noon and 1 to 4 p.m . to give shots Fletcher reminded adults that of Ohioans experience flu symp~ow
be would vote on ~be budget
toms that Include sudden fever,
to senior citizens and to those there are vaccines available for
willie
Martin Indicated she didn't
who are disabled, and on Oct. 19 ·pneumococcal, measles, hepail· sore throat, cougb, and muacle
like
any
part ol tbe Jllopoeal.
and Oct. 22 from 9 a .m to noon tis B, tetanus, d!ptherla, and · aches .
Is a partial trans·
Followlna
. The vaccines are very effecand 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at the Health rubella.
crlpt
of
the
lnlerview, u proAdults may need these vac·
tlve, according to Dr. Fleteller,
Department.
vided
by
Federal
News Service:
cines because they ware not and often lessen the severity of
The cost for the disabled and
Q.
Congteuwomall,
let me
an Inness, even when thelmlllun·
properly ·Immunized as children,
senior citizens Is $1. Costs to the
or ·require vacc!n{ltlons because izatlon Is not one h11ndred. per- . begin with you. You've had some ·
general public for the vaccl~e Is
pretty strona lanauaae. You say
of special llealth conditions, cent effective.
$2.
this Ia "muaer• In plnattlpe .
sui~." Wbal'a your reaction to
·
thll deal?
.
A. I thlDk eapeclllly again It's a
bill that does dlaparalely affect
varloua reglou o1 the collntry
and for the Midwest It Is a bill
A planning meeting to organize a support group for. people
that Ia Jult·awful. Tile only way
with arthritis and their famUy members will be held Oct. 24
my sta~ even geta money baek
trorn JO: 30 a.m. to noon in the conference room at the Senior
WASHINGTON (UPII -In an from th'e recter.l aovernnient
Citizens Center, Mulberry Helgbts, Pomeroy. The public Is.
baale~ly Is !be road PI'OIII'Bm. It
unusua' move Tuesday, tbe Pen·
invited. For _additional information residents may call992-2161.
.tegon sent tbe aircraft carrier

month at county healih department

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about you ·
medication?
can your
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Pbannaci8t today:!

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· He cares
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ta.bodt vour h~th!

. iiONOR GUARD._: RalllM Po1t tot of l!le Amfrlcan Lellon led
lk JNIPde a&amp; tbe Rllellll! Fall I'~Wtlval ed IWardq mo...q.

.... aM local political candlllatea, were In tile parade.

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TUESIAY
. NIGHT
' . SPECIAL

Pr Vlllted Preas International
Tile

~rd

!JIJaraine, !I kind or

l)lllttlnl billldache, •Is derived '
tram tile Grftk word "bemlkra·
Pia," meaalnl pain on the side Of
· tile bead or face.
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Support group- to be organized

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Introducing High Country

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"' NoW You Know

LeMay family resided in Meigs

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Pr tided PreM International
Prwtdellt Bush announcing
, . . _ , on ..o~~CUng the na· ·
. .tlil'l ll•tatt clellclt. by $500
llllllae over flw years:
- if
"It II bll&amp;nced: It Is fair; and
fa 1111 view, h II what the United
-.. . . _ til Amerlca needa at this ·
.... .. tlllllltDry:"

1Dinint . _ Chllyl ONLY

pollt-.

Served with whlpp,.t
oht.....,
Uml'(. cole ot.w, hot nil end butter.
Sorrv. no aubotM- ucapt ....,~
, · · willlldditiOIIII pr~.
·

FOI JIST

$3 •s

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. NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL

· CIOW'S F
Pl. t92•5412
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Y MS1A.AN1 .

PO"NY, 01.

. .Ia' ··"· . , ....... Qhbc .

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1-_c_o_Ne&gt;_•_•_•_s_..._._••__•.;,"_u.a.____c_,..;.,_....;.,....:.;________•~"'_'~.._.•

• goes
C81Tler

into. gulf area

Get natural tobacco satisfaction
· in a larger, moister. pouc~ ·
Only from High Country. .
You can't beat the taste..

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Qtiote of the Day'

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Looal news .briefs _______, U.S. aircraft

leu:w!llanagroup~,laclll!lliagthe!loutlternmgltSchooiMarclllng

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•• l!Jieesldve
aVI@!

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Richard
Seyler.
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' ··- · Approved the Mayor's Reo.
'portfor September in the amount
of $2, 70o.50 tor fines collected.
·- Agreed to seek further
clarification from legal counsel
onanordinanceregardlngspend·
log limitations in the village.
Present were Seyler, Shank,
Werry, Baronlck, Young, Coun·
ell member .Bruce Reed, Pres!·
dent Larry Wehrung, and Clerk
Brenda Morris.

budget hits Midwest hard

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reservoir and bo06ter plant.
When asked a bout the progress
on the proposed sewa,g e treat·
ment plant, Anderson ' lnd!~ated
that the Environmental Protec· .
tlon Agency is In the process of
approving a permit to constrUct.
The estimated stert time for
the plant, according to Anderson,
1s spring or 1991.
Council member Tom Werry
asked Anderson to look into the·
possibility of grading wnus Hill
Street and Young mentioned the
need to curb a portion of Lincoln •
HlU.
1n other action, Council:
• - Passed a re.solutlon apwov·
1ng a routine transfer of $40,000
ofrom the general lund to the
street fund for current operating
!!xpenses.
- Set Trick or Treat for
October 30from 6: 30 to 7:30p.m.
in the village.
-Moved to approve a malntenance agreement of village com·
puterequlpmentln the amount of
$648.88 through NCR.
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- Heard suuested changes to
the .propol8d fire department

T~J Dliri~is taWmaked say

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Wiggins was honored for hls
service and dedication In the
area of natural resource conser-

CANDIDATD ON PARADE- '.fhe candkla&amp;ea .
lw P · h• Fall Feshal Queen rode on
oo..ed~ In the lesllvnl
prior to the

repreaenliJII the Pomeroy Mer·
cbante AaiOCiatlon, .appeared·
before co.unc!l to appeal for the
free parking for their customers.
.'' According to Cllapman, last
year's free parking helped
"maintain a sleady flow of
customers and provided good
public relations."
FoUgwlng the merchanta' pres·
· entetlon, council voted unan!m·
ously to suspend metercoUec:tlon
from Nov. 24 untO Dec. 27.

bratwurst, aaurkraut and Ger·
man potato salad will be 'SI!l'vid
In connection with the fes11val.
. Counc!lman ·Bryan Sbank op- .
poeed the permit, citing the
vlllaae's recent efforts to "clean· .
up" the parklnl lot area and
eliminate drinking In the parking
lot.
Powell . reminded council that
'lbe permit would not be effective
unlelaapprovedbythestete,and
said lbat II the permit were not
approved, soft drinks would be
sOld in the taakarda.
Council had the first reading on
an ordinance giving Christmas'
bonuses to full· and part-tlii\e ·
employees or the vllllge.
Two more readings wiU be
required before . the ordinance
goes Into effect.
The current weed-cutting project now ullllerway In the village
·was discussed by council, with
counc!l member Bill Young stat·
lng that he bas heard "nothing
but good comments." Council
member · Betty Baronlck re.minded council tbat tile village
still has a
way to 10" on

weellelld'l
debrll and blgh grass.
Mary Powell.
·
Administrator John
Pomeroy Sesquicentennial Coni·
Anderson told council tbat an
Wayne Schafer, RCt.D Ban·
vat!on with a wooden plaque
mlttee, told ·eouncll that the application for Community Decarved In the shape of Meigs quet Committee Cllalrman,. con· . permit would allow aaleolbeer ln Vl!lopment Bloek Grant Fund
, dueled the awards ceremony
County.
arestrlctedareuuri'oundblgthe ~ monies was submitted to the
· Also recognized by the RC&amp;D with an executive council
stage In !be mnn!ltlpil parking Meigs County CommlssloDCrs
Executive CouncU were Barbara member from each county preslot duriq tllll weekellll's Etbplc lut week.
Gaddis, Athens County; Ed Far· enting their respective awards.
Selden FelL
The monies, In the amount of
ley, Belmont County; David · Also higbllgbted'durlng the even·
In addition to beer, which will $14,000, would be spent for an
tng's activities was the recognl·
Brandt, Fairfield County; John
be sold lniOUvenlrtenkardalfthe autolllatlc control device to' be
ttpn of the 23rd anniversary of the
E. Hockman, Hocking County;
permit II approved by the state, used on the Lincoln lnll water
William Thomas, Monroe
Buckeye HUis RC&amp;D. E r
activities Included a ca
County; Jeff Shaner, lttorgail
County; Fred Powell, Noble . dinner and door prizes. En r·
tainment was provided by ..the
County; Jim Young, Perry
Barber Shop Quartet who sang
County, and .Doug .Mercer, Wa·
favorite songs during the meal. . •
shlnJrton County:

Kenny Wiggins, Pomeroy, was
one or 10 recipients of outstand·
lng service awards at the recent
Buckeye Hills Resource Conser·
vatlon and Development's nlrith
annual banquet held on the
paddlewheeler Valley Gem In
Marietta.
·
Approximately 110 RC&amp;D Ex·
ecutlve Council members and
. guests attended the affair.

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Develqpmenl by Tbereo• Jobnaoa, Melp County
executive member (center), and Wayne Sebafer,
RC&amp;D banquet cllalrman.

:Wiggins presented service
-~~riWo;rd ~at -·9 th ·RC~D-Iiaifquet·~ ·~

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· 1 Section, 10 Pages 25 Cenle
A Mullirn.dlalnc. Novil-or

Pomeroy-MiddlePort. Ohio, Tuelday, October 2, 1990

MARCH Aln FORCE BASE, Calif. -Gen. Curtis LeMay, the
, blunt· spoken warhawk who helped sm~sh Germany and Japa~,
then comll)lnded America's airborne nuclear delerrent at the
. height or the Cold War, Is dead at 83.
LeMay, a legendary soldier who ran for vice president with
GeQrge Wallace In 1968, died Monday of lleart failure at the 221M~ ·
Strategic Hospital near the · retirement bome ror Air Force
otflcen where he had spent bls decllnlnl years.
·
Regarded .u the father ot the Strategic Air Command, the
airborne arm of America's three-pronged nuclear deterrent, .
LeMay bad lived ror. a number of ~an at Air Force Vllla1e
Wetl, a retirement community about 6mlles from the SOuthern
CalifOrnia air bale.
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· · He was the son of Zona and ErVJng .LeMay of Columb\ls and
·
Continued
on page 10
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tekea part of that out and puts It people in the Midwest, as Lynn
Into the glint maw of the deficit. has said, are paying $1.40 a
Even things such as home - gallonlfthey'relucky,!ftheycan
beating oU, that's what lbe poor find gas that cbeap, this Is not the
In my stele have. They put a tax kind of proposal that I think Is
on that, and more money goes lor right lor the economy or right tor
the people that I represent.
oU exploration - whlcb sounds
But I think the ·thing that
good rtght now, but auess what
regions that benefits? Between bothers me the most are the
the savinp and loan and tbls bill, Medicare cuts. This is the "rural
We ml&amp;bl as well 'teke tbe hospital foreclosure act of 1990."
Midwest and j.ust strip all the This bill will result !II the closure .
money from Ita pocket, and say to of at least one bosp!tel in my
DUnoll, why don't you pay tor the congresa!onal district, and perhaps t~. And as I talk to
country.
For the old, for farmers, for · members from across the Mldw.
anyone trying to make their WilY est and other rural areas, I find
'
that they are facl'd with the same
In this nation, all this does Is
protect the stetus quo. And a thing. You just can't make this
quick nUillber should help you. deep a cut In MediCare without
Revenues are up this year four closing down hospltels and really
percent. Spending Is up 12.8 denying elderly tbe basic medi·
percent. That's the real problem. cal services they deserve.
Rep. Martin: There's one other'
This bill Is almoet all taXes. To
call a !few tax on the elderly thing l think we shotild say here.
•'"'ving" Is the cruelest hoax or This Congress for years bas been
playlq With more and . more ·
all.
·
money, and people- anyone who
Q. Con1reasman Durbin,
what's your reaction to this? votes against these big spending
Wllat are your . ~DCenis about biUs tekes poUUcal beat. People
then ar~ told "you're against
this compromlae propoeal?
A. Well, I don't tblnk this women, or children , or
budget sUillmlt alfl!8meat Is farmers." Now , though, one
thing we have . Is people are
IOini to win aay beauty conteat.
Wlten 1 take a loot at the finally saying you're going to d
propoAis to IDCreaae the aas tex have to pay for tl)!s. I say you pay
Continued on page 10 .
6n the verge or a recession wben

~:o:=:=~~J~::::t~:
.vo~et
r_p'ui_ctration
deadline Oct . .9
warships have been damaged by
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Iraqi mi11Ues IJid Iranian mines
Aa fall telilpefltUI'II cool
addition, the office will be . which can also be compkited at
ln ~nt years.
do-.
poUtlcal campaignl heat open on Monday - ColUillbuS
the board office, explains to the
Tile nuclear-~ lnde-'-,lip IJid !be. dHdllllel far vo1er Day -from 9 a.m. untll4 p.m. · appllcaat that there ·are eleven
In

pellllebce, the first carrier 1ent rqlltratlon qldelllY IPproacb.
In~ the waterway llnc:e 197'Jue ~,.dlrectof ol tile
Melp Cciwlty Bolrd cl EleetiOna
carries a erew of about 5,000 and
some '15 combat pllllel, IDCiud·
balll. .h rwtfMer lllat voters
log F ·U Tomcat and FA-18
wbo '111111 to reP!IIr to vole or
.
cl!l!np lllelr .or address
Hornet ftabten.
· Navy leadera refilled to aend
muatdoaoonorbelbre0ctober9.
carriers Into the 1J111f dllrlna lite - at 9 p.m.
eecort operation lnvolvlq Ku·
To uallt diCIIe wllo muat meet
waltl tanlrerlln 118'1, arptqthe
t1111 dlldl!;',:,.,tljl Bolrd · of
• "' MedWIIc .
huge lblpa wo!l)d 111 a 11rae · ElletkiDI
~get In a 1111111 area and were at
StrMl will be opea tin Oetober 9
Contin~ on pap 10
· WIUI I p.m.
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FryJnyeraleonotedthatablen·
tee ballotl wW be available from
October 3 ~h November 3 at
DOOD.
Applications for abaelltee bal."
Iota maybe req-ted bypbontng
the ol1lce at 11!12-:118t7.
·
Frymyer llald that the appUca·
. tlou are pneraliY mailed out to
tbol8 mq-tlnllbem wltilln a
.day or two.
·
. The allllle·page application,'

quallf)llq 1'eUOIII for voting by
abaenllll baUot.
·
AmOIIJ the qnallflcatlons tor
votlq ll)t ablenlee ballot are
heiDI 82 years o1 age or older, ·
~ awet from the county on
e!ec&amp;n ~. llolfltal, Jail or
lm11hiiiO!!al conftttement, pbyllcal 1nn.1 or dlaablllty, active
duty IUrpnllld inllltla, be!JIIa
110u worar, Of rellaloua reuona.
Elec:tlon day Ia November 6.

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Comt;nentary
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Pomeror, OJ••~

DEVOTED TO Till: INTEBII:ST8 OF TilE IIEIG8-MASON .U~EA

:._....~cd;;;·

M"L-' ......

CRARLENJ: HOEFLICH

. Geaerllllllanacer

P"T WlOTEREAD
ANI"*ul Pablllher/Conlroller

A MEMBER of The United Press Internailonal. lnland Daljy Press
Aaoclatlon and the Amertean Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 .
wordl lonr. Allletten 'are subject to edlllnr and must be.slped with ·
naine, addrels and telephone numbeF. No unsigned letters wut he publlsbed. Letters libould be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall-

·ues.

·White House Panes ·
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By ARNOLD SAWISLAK ·
UPl Senior Edt&amp;or
WASHINGTON - Washtncton's attenUon Is fixed on the budget
these days, bu 1for the most part officials are worrying about sums of
money In inultlple!t of bl11lons ot dOllars.
That may be why nobody seems. Interes te . In an item reported
earlli!r this year by The Washington Post t · I only Involves an
appropriation or $!KXI,OOO •
The money, according to the Post, Is tor win w panes at the White
House. Fifteen bunndred window panes, to be exact, and that divides
out to $533 for each one.
It should be noted that Americans always have regarded the White
·House as their own - a .place they lend to their current choice for
president on one or tWo !our-year. le!15e5, .and that they want
maintained In good shape. AI the same time, they usually object to
really extravarant spending or changes In the old house to satisfy the
whim ot the temporary occupants.
Thus; Americans old enough to remember the Truman presidency
will recall there was DO great outcry when Harry moved the family
acroas the street to Blair House and spent mllllons of dollars to
compli!tely rebuild the Interior or the White House after the leg of .
daughter Margaret's plano broke through the floorboards In the
upstairs living quarters.
·
But there. was a major flap when HST undertook to build a second
story balcony on the White House overlooking the Rose Garden.
People felt the While House already had enough balconies and If the
Trwnan.s needed more space to relax,let them take a foldlong chair •
out to that big beautiful back yard.
Now, as to the Bush windows.
•
The report said the money Is needed to buy 800 windows that nf:!ed
replacement now and 700 to be held In reserve. There was ilo ready
explanation of wily that many windows need replacement - ·s urely ·
the prealdeJ!IIsn't that wild a horseshoe pitcher -liut the reason !or
buying spares was.
White House curator Rex Scouten was quoted as saying these
windows would have to be hand-made In order to match existing
panes In the mansion and might have to be bought from a French

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manufacturer.

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WASHINGTON- Two weeks
on · chronic fatigue syndrome,
ago, Independent researchers
even wh~ Congress ordered that
announced that the disease
research. Up untll two yean ago,
known as "chronic fatigue synscientists !rom the National
drome" Is linked to the same
Institutes of Health and the ·
family of retroviruses that has
Centers for Disease Control were
been aS$oclated wlthAIDS. Ironl·
apt to say that'the disease was a
cally, It wu good news tor those
figment o! the patient's
who suffer from the mysteriOus
Imagination.
lllness. At least now the scten tillc
Only constant grass-roots presworld may believe they are sure from people with chronic
really slcl!.
fatigue syndrome bas produced
Their disease has. been dert·
any actloll from the government.
stvely labeled "yuppie flu " be·
In 1988', Congress, under heavy
cauie II often strikes young,
lobbying !rom the victims, apmlddle-clall! people with symp· . propria ted $1 mllllon to !he NIH
toms that might as easily be
for research Into the disease and.
caused by, tnindl' workabollsm. · ordered NIH to tnveattga'f-AIIY
'lbe victims are tired, depressed .links with AIDS or cancer.
and anxious In addition to sutler·
An outbreak o! _chronic fatigue
lng fror:p flu·Uke symptoms. Iii
syndroQle In Incline VIllage,
severe cases, the patients cannot · Nev., In 1984 Is typical of how the
even get ou I o! bed. The Illness Is government · · has handled the
not fatal. ·
disease. Two CDC researchers
These victims have had a tough were dispatched to the town.
time getting anyone, especially
They ·took blOod samples !rom
. the federal ~vernment, to take
the victims and reached no
them seriously.
·
conclusions.
For years, the government
Dr. Paul Cheney, a leading
refused to do adequate research
lncjependent
Investigator tuto
.
'

chronic fatigue syndrome, had
asked the CDC to lnvetttgate the
Incline VIllage outbreak. He told
our reporter Paul Zimmerman
that "It waa lllce puUina teeth to
get them out In the ftrst place."
When the CDC researchers
showed up. "tbey didn 't apend a
lot of time with the patients,"
Cheney salci. He wu convinced
that the CDC didn't have an open
mind . about chronic · fatigue
syndrome.
·
Cheney IS one of the lndependent researchers wbo released the
study earner this week llnkmg
chronic !attgue syndrome to the
family of viruses reaponslble tor
AIDS.
Another researcher working
with Cbeney, Dr. :bantel Peter·
son, belli!ves chronic fatigue
syndrome has had to stand In line
behln!l AIDS research In Amerlea. The powers that· be In the
government research "CCmmunlty have "underestimated the
severity otthe Illness," Peterson
told ua.
the CDC has not

conducted any lab test1D1 of ·
blood llllllplel ot chronic fatigue
· · sufferers. The aovernrnent re- · •
search lab hasn't evealllpporfed·
a co•lstentlabel tor the dlleue,'
which baa 1011e tbrouah tour·
name change~ In five years.
It took the CDC untO 1988 to
come lip with a wor~ detiDI·
tlon ot cbronlc !aitgue ll)'lldrome,
and there-.. ltll1 no test for the.
dlleue. Doctors can only dlagDOle patients by ruling out other
allmenfls.
·
There are some recent slgn1 of
movement at tile . CDC. · Dr.
· Walter Gunn, the head or CDC
lnvetttcatlve team lookin1 Into ·
chronic fattaue, told us that the :
.. CDC no __tonaer considers . the
.dlseue a mental ll(Deu. Instead, .
the depresalon that victims ;
au!fer, he said, Is a resuH of the
Illness, not tbecauseoflt. Gunnls .'
beginning case studiet ot chronic ·
fattaue patli!nll, which he hopes
. to ftnlsh within a year. He says '
the atudy may aJve the CDC :
answers about what causet .
1
chronic fatigue syndrome.

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By Da!NIS AN8TINE
UPI Sparja Writer.
' SEATTLE (UPI, - Seattle
quarterback P&amp;ve Krli!g and
receiver Tommy Kane wtab all of
tfteir miscommunications could
1\U"D . out like one cild MondaY
night.
, .K ane turned one way and
. Krli!g threw another, but the
" receiver adjus~ and caugbt a
63-yard tcwcbdown pass that
broke open a cl~~~e game and
gave the Seahawks theirJlrst win
of the season - a 31·16 victory
oyer the'Cinclnnatl Bengals.
.The Seahawks, 1·3, used three
touchdowns by Derrick ~enner
!IDd two scoring throws by Krieg' .
tQ hand the Bengals, 3-1, their
first loas of the aeuon.
The· Bengals bad .t rouble with
~attle's defense .;.. led by
linebacker Rufus Porter - · but
were sUllln the game after three,
qi!Brlers.
.
But with Seattle leading 17-9 on
the first play or the fourth
quarter, Krieg threw a third-andseven pass downfield just as
Kane ·put an outside move on
·safety Rickey Dixon. But ·Kane
saw the ball, quickly turned
downfleld away from Dixon and
gathered In the pass for the score
and a 24·9 lead.
Krli!g, who completed 17 or ~4 ·
passes !or 217 yards, said the ball
was supposed to be thrown
outside, but .he threw the ball
!lownfleld when he saw Dixon
bite hard on the oulslde move.
"As soon as I saw 1t I adjusted
really well,'' said Kane. "Dave
put It out there and I Just adapted
to it. Dave mual have thought I
· could getlo It so be put It out there
.away from the defender
(Dixon) ."

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Kane's elation tumi!d somber
The Seahawks didn' t sit on the
after the game when be learned .ball. After Krieg threw two
that his rather, PhU Kane had
lncompletlons, he found Jeff
died In Montreal late Sunday
Chadwick with a 10-yard pass In
rilght. He was 82 yeats old. .
the flat and the wide reeelver
John L. '.Williams aild Fenner ,
turned the flare Into a 52-yard
who also scored three touchgain down the sideline ~ stopped
downs last week and now leads · at the 28 by a touchdown-saving
the NFL In scoring with 36 poiJUs,
tackle by David Fulcher.
led a Seattle rushing attack !hat
Krieg then turned to Fennergained 151 net yards,, Williams
and Williams, who combined to
had 73 yards on 12 carrli!s; while
gain the !Ina! 28 yards. Fenner
Fenner had 60 yards on 16 got the !Ina! two yards on a pass
carries.
!rom Krieg.
"We tried to throw deep on
An emotional defensive per!or·
them some, mix It up, because mance by the Seahawks early In
they were comllig with an eliht·
the third quarter led to a score
man front," said Seattle bead that gave them some breathing
coach Chuck Knox. "Then wben room after leading 10-6 at
we got the ball downfleld we halftime.
turned to Wlllla!D$ and Fenner.
After Rufus Porter sacked
We had some gOod blocking and Boomer Eslason on a second·
tliey both ran well. F11nner does and-20 from the CI~Ctnnatl 26, he
especially well down there (near was filagged for punching the
the,goalllne) ."
quarterback, who had swung
'
.
Cincinnati' s Sam Wyche said first at Porter.
Brown In tile second quarter of Monday night's
.
~REAKS
UP
PASS
Seattle
stron1 safety
he hopes his club wlli learn !rom
.But Porter deflected two conRobert
Blackmon
(left)
breaks
up
a
Boomer
game
In Seattle, wblcb the Seabaw~ won 31-16.
the lou.
.
'·
secutive passes and Mel Jenkins
EAiason
pass
to
Benpls
.wide
receiver
Eddie
(UP
I)
"We Just had one ·or those batted down an Estason pass to
nights," said Wyche. But maybe force a 38-yard punt that gave
the Joss will be a little bit ofa kick Seattle the ball on the Bengal46. Williams reversed his field on an
David Fulcher's Interception
Breech tied the score 90 setor us. I don' tree! real gOod about
conds Into the second quarter on
"Boomer and 1 traded a bunch off-tackle play and gained 23 gave the Bengals the ball on the
losing, but we'll handle it."
a 34-yard field goal that was set
"of nasty words," said Porter. " I yards for. a first down on the 16. Seattle 47 on their first possesThe Bengals didn't .g tve up don't think my tackle w.as out of · · Fenner . ripped off 13 yards on ston of the game, but Dwayne · up by Eslason's 19-yard pass to
afl'er Kane's long catch, how· line and he didn't have to get up first down and then scored ftom · Harper's theft and22-yard return
Brown for a first down on the
ever, thanks to a broken play that swinging (Ike that. After that I
SeatUe 22.
the three for a 17·6lead with 5: 48 • a lew plays later set the Sea·
cornerback Mltcbtlll Price really got fired up."
left In the third quarter.
hawks up on their own 37.
Krieg engineered an . 80-yard
tui"Jied Into a 66-yard pill)I return
A persanal foul call against the drive that ended with Fenner's
Eslason said he's not into
Eslason came back throwing,.
for a touchdown.
fighting.
hitting Eddie Brown !or 18 yards Bengals and a seven-yard pass ·!our-yard run up the middle with
With Seattle leading 24-9 with
"I'll push and shove and then and Ttrn McGee for 17 for a first from Krieg to Brian Blades on 4:48 lett In the second quarter.
10· minutes remaining In the get the hell out or the way to Jet down on the Seattle 26. But the third-and-seven moved the Sea· . Krieg completed five passes for
game. 'a low snap from center the · other guys clean up the . 8eahawks stiffened and forced hawks within tleld goal range.· ' 45 yards- four !or first downscaused Seattle punter Rick Don· garbage, " said Estason, who the Bengals to settle for a 43-yard
Norm Johnson, who missed and scrall))lled for 15 yar ds to the
nelty to fumble the ball, but he compli!ted W ot 23 passes tor 128 field goat' by Jim Breer,jllate In two lteld goal at tempts that Clnclnnatll5. Fenner scored tour
scrambled to his rlghtandgotoff yards. "I'm not going to take on a
would have given the Sea hawks a
plays later.
the third.
a flat, 40-yard kick. Price seemed guy In a tight . But Porter Is a
The Bengals made lt 10-6 at
The Seahawks led at halftime vtctor:Y In a 34-31 overUme loss to
hemmed tn, but he broke Into the defensive force: He'sverygOod."
because their defense held the Denver a week ago, redeemed · halftime with a 26-yard lteld goal
open at midfield arid scored
The Seahawks quickly moved
Bengals to two Breech field goals himself with the 51-yard boot !or five seconds before the
untouched.
to the Cincinnati 35. · where
despite Cincinnati · beginning a 3-0 lead with 5:06 left In the tnlel"!lllsslon.
•
three drives In Seattle territory. quarter, ·

'.· Boston clinches -at ·least share

·,

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!lver Bengals M~nday night

and Dale Jlan Atta

•

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of American League East title

1

I

By PAUL .DEFEDE

.

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Looking at the . Sllber lining .
1

Berry's World

--~.
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Ben Wattenberg
-

&gt; ... _

The best response, It's been ~
thought, could come from the :.
moderate South. Alas, the Sun· ·:
belters are often Intimidated by ~
t!le media·blessed sanctimony of·•
the super-llba. Too often they buy{
the hokum that there Is a :j
Democratic Party "Liberal·;
Veto." Too often they drtft:j
leftward Instead of yanking tbe;f
•1.
lefties to reality.
But Silber Is from the Nor- ~
theast, hotbed of the cuckoo~
cacophony. Not only that, he If~
!rom Massacbilaetts.
.
:
But Silber, coming from the • ·
belly of the beut, bu 1hown tha~~
the people oiMauacbusetta have~
been mallped. Truth be told,;,
· Maasachusetta volen often vote''
Ukethe rest at America ~They too
would like cominon sense, tor a
change.
·.
I! Umt ctin be demoiistrated In
Massachusetts, It may then bf! ,,
easily aeen bow few nouvea~-.:
liberal Clothes remain on the
emperor.
.
II could happen. ~ 'lbe 1976&gt;
Massachusetts presidential "
primary wu also won by a ~P
·Jackson Democrat: Scoop_ .
Jackson.

Sibler ·win ·shows.liberalism's decline
.

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Tile jiiU1IOie -.e t1eem1 to be entlr9lY t9 retain h.-_tprtc_.,
authenticity. There was no Indication that these windows would be
,. bulletproof, a security expense most Americans probably wollld
endorse.
According to the Post report, .the budget also sought $500,000 to
modernize and expand the White House kitchen, which hasn't had a
updatlni since the Truman renovation 40 years ago.
. We all know big ticket kitchen appliance prices are high and the
While House kitchen does have tp prepare fOod !orlSO,OOO guests each
It has been thought that tr spoken" seem like a sissy word. .higher taxes ind more welfare,
year. But this Job was being sold In part as needed to give the pastry
change ever came to the spa· As Ills developing, he may end up
Implore voters to consider the
chef a place ot his own to work. Chef Roland Mesnter, It seems, has to
vtned Democratic Party II would running for more than governor
nuanceJ of reverse dlscrlmlna·
. do his cookle-cuttlnll 011 a table In the main kltchenn.
come !rom the moderate Sun- of Massachusetts. He could re·
tton, and proclaim that the
Perhaps It would be a good Idea tor the president to call back the
belt. Perhaps not.
Ignite the battle tor the soul oflhe
Democratic Party Isn't liberal
White House budget for another look. At a lbne when the coUJitry .
"I am a Scoop Jackson Demo· Depwcratlc Party, and perhaps · enough? (There Is such an
faces even more cuts in social programs and .tax lncrea~ to boot,:... crat," says JOhn Silber, . the · bl'\lg It to a flash point. ..
outsider, Jesse Jackson, a perenmaybe the White House can make do with plain hardware store glass
Democratlc nominee for gover(At last! Coming to Your
nlal loser.)
In some of Its less conspicuous windows and the pastry chef can make
.nor of Massachusetts, a state rar Neighborhood! The Paleos VS·.
Silber can ·iii! an important
his cupcakes In the same room as the meal and potatoes are being
from the Sunbelt.
·
the Nouveaus! )
Democrat !or several reasons:
cooked.
It Is being said, slmpllsllcally
· Because be bas a precision of
Silber agrees that If you call
him a "paleo-liberal neo- and theoretically, that Silber won
mind that one used to associate
conservative,'' you 'd be about because there Is an "anti·
with professors of philosophy.
Incumbency,
pro-outsider"
Because he Is articulate, even
right.
I
1! that doesn't sum · II ·up, he mood, ge)lerated by S&amp;:L scan·
when commltllng gaffes-so terri·
tells you that the Democratic dais and things like th;tt.
ble that they gain him votes
A tbought!or the day: Comedian Groucho Marx said, "There Is one
Party has become "a collection
Readers: Beware ·Of TSO
faster than pi)llsten can survey
way to find out I! a man Is honest: askhlm. IIhesays, 'Yes,' you know
of sects pursuing pet schemes
( TheoretIc a I SImp Its tIc
them. ("Silber Shocken" often
he Is crooked."
that have undermined personal Outslderlsm, .
soundllke...;.what'slhatword?reaponstblltty."
Silber qualifies as an ot~~stder.
ab yes, "truth/') Becauae he Is
Silber says the old-fashioned But he Is l!lso tough on W!!trarr,
preach!ng a message that many
Franklin Roosevelt-style-liberal· sharply against reversedlscrlm·
Americans yearn to hear -that
Ism (paleo version) was pointed · Inalion, very·tough on crime, and
government can be leaner and
In the right direction, but that !or cutting taxes. He Is a foreign
better when you take off the
nouveau liberalism "has sought
policy hawk, unafraid to put a · Ideological blinders. And be-Ideological purity Instead of finger In the eye or the liberal
cause he Is from the liberal
common sense."
_media, and voted for Ronald
Northeast.
(When the late Sen. Henry
Reagan for president twice, and
Silber's residency can chal·
lenge the Idea that the way to
"Scoop" Jackson ran for pres!· .· George Bush once, so far.
dent , his ,slogan was " Common
Silber Is not . Just any old
reform runaway· Democratic
Sense for a Change.")
outsider. He's an anti-nouveau·
Party liberal lim·II from Ita outer
Silber, Is a former professor of
liberal outsider.
·
geograpblcal edges, tar away
philosophy, clvll rights activist, , Ask th~ about TSO: Do "out·
!rom the Nortbeutern purlflca·
and a man who makes "out· · slders" win It they come out for
tton wells.
•

r

Seahawks
post 31-.16 .victQry
.

Jock Anderson

.G ovenunent may finally help

Ill Cotu1 street

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

:~~~· - 2-1111 Oily •• ...... ;.
;PaliWCf M' L'lp-At. OhiO
-T'!Udlf, ~ 2, 1880

•

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The Daily Sentinel

e

Tuudil\'. OctwJa. 2. 1890

.

-

state's bonds as the riskiest In tb~
nation .. Dukakls, Who Isn't even
.bothering to run for reelect \On, Is
so unpopular that rumor bas It he
travels mostly by night.
So the stage was set tor the ·
emergence or a relatively con~r·
vative outsider to be the Demo·
cratlc nominee for governor, If
only one could be !otind. Thereu·
pon John Silber, a Texas-born
· professor of. philosophy who bas
attract!!~! national attentiOn as
the outspoken president of Boll·
ton JJntvenlty, took a leave of
absence from that office and bit
the campaign trail.
The Democratic establlah·
meqt, Including Its maulve
liberal bloc, finally ll'OUped
belilnd former state Altor'Uy
General Francia Bellotti, a aenlal moderate, In • desperate
effort to atop Silber. But when the
smoke cleared on prtmary day,
Silber had defeated Bellotti by 10
percentage polnta: ·
What were the Democratic
voters tryiJII to aayT They
clearly wanted · no 1110te of
liberalism. They evidently approved Silber's call for a social

•'
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William Rwher .;

policy that stresses the need for
"Individual responsibility,"
llam Weld, a patrlclu aclon ot •
rather than promising some the old M111acbusetta IU1Jto; :
groups that they will receive cracy wbo wu onee U.S. attor·. :
preferential treatment.
ney In Bolton. Ed Meese ma!le •
What's more, they not onty him autataat at 101 llo!)' paeralln :
didn't condemn Silber, but ()0111· cb.,.e of the criminal dlvlllon - :
'tlvely applauded him for telllna·•
I
ldndneu Weld repaid bY •
reporter that the reuon he resJaniDI. IIi a well-publicized I
wun't maklnl campalp tala In dllplay of "dlapj,.. jUit wbeil j .
a run-down black area wu that Mee~e wu under' heavy attack
he saw · DO p,int In 1'maklnl from tbe Democriltl ud the
speeches to drug addict&amp;."
·media tor alleaed mlldeedl that
The whole thrust or SUber's two succeutve special pi'Oiecu•
campalp, In fact, wu agalut ton COuld find DO around&amp; to
the 1ort ot aenttmentall.l berallsm prosecute.
that . cbaracterlzel most DemoNo dollbt hordn of liberal
cratic pollttellull. In Mauachu· Democrata wt11 crou 'party llnel
settl thll montll, that wu exac~ · tbll November to vote for Weld
what tbe voters wanted to hear.
over SUber. EquaiJy certaiDJy, a
It wu allo what American tot of RepabllcaDI will pl8fer ; ·
voten u a whole wanted to bear Sllher" ID the allk·atocklnpd ·1 •
back In 1980 wileD they elected u . Bolton Brulul wllo tri..S to 1
president a maia whole favorite' deltroy bls patroL It Ia tar tab .
alleedote Involved a "welfare
to predict that SUber wul
queen." The pundltl have u· ,early
wiD, ·•pectally •IDee Mulacbu· ~
lured ua that thll pitch 10111 a&amp;O · setta' deereplt RepubUcu Party
lo1t Ill attraction, but the victory
II atlmulalld by thl,baltet that It ,
of John Silber auaae1ts at laat hu aome bope of
l
otberWise.
But
If
lUber
wins,
the
1912
'
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Now be must face In November
Dfntocrallc convention will be 1 :
- "" Republican nominee, WU·
iulu.
.. :

victorY.:.

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games, ·we' re going to make
the ye'ar, came orr David Wells, :
them go out and play. It's not
h -6. Jose Mesa, 3-2, got the win . .
'UP.I Sports Writer
Gregg Olson recorded three outs . ,·
Boston clinched a s~are of the· going to be easy for them, "
for his 37th save.
AL East title and left pitcher Hibbard said. "You go out there
Twins 7, Marlnen 5 - At :
Tom Salton In charge of guiding and try to give them a rull lor
the Red Sox. to Its playolfdestiny. their money- &amp;lve them a good
Ml~~~~ea~"' · Jiii:Qtt'-'\ll&amp;drav'!lfl
garti1f liillt malte them eai'lf 1t.'" .:"'two rw\s'ai!(fscored"iWice to lead
Tbe'-R~4ex ;-'li!eklng Its third
Boston would rather do just
the Twtns. Kevin Tapant, 12-8, .
division title In five years, came
got the win. JUchard Garces got
· closer to making It a reality that than ba-;k Into the dlvlson
the last three outs for his second
Monday'ntght with a 4-3 victory title. In 1988, Boston learned It
had won the title while waiUng at ·- save. Russ Swan, 2·3, took the
over the Chicago White Sox .
loss.
The win put seconq-place To· a Cleveland hoteL
."We don't want to back 't n,llke
Ranger&amp; 4, Brewers 2 - At
ronto, which lost 6-3 to BaltiMilwaukee, Bobby Witt, Mike
more, a t- a dlsadyantage. If · we did In '88, we want to win this
Jeffcoat and Jeff Russell comToronto !a Us to wins lts·ftnal two one ourselves,'' Dwight Evans
said.
·
blned on a four·hltter and Julio
games or I! Boston \\(Ins either of
Mike
Greenwell
agreed.
"We-"'
Franco drove In two runs to pace
Its remalng pair, the Red Sox
want
to
win
by
winning,"
he
said.
Texas.
Jeffcoat, 5·6, allowed one
would capture the AL East.
"1!
we
win,
we
have
the
luxury
unearned
run on a hit In two
II Toronto and Boston are tied
going
out
and
saying,
'We
Innings
o!
relief.
Russell-pitched .
of
at the end of the regular season, ·
they will meet Thursday at corraled our own destiny,"' 'the ninth for his lOth save. .
Robinson, 12-5, was tagged with .
Toronto for a one-game playoff. Wade Boggs said.
Dwight Evans singled tn· the
the loss. .
.
.
The winner would host the
Angela 2, Athletics 0 - At .
Oakland A's In Saturday's op- go-ahead run In the eighth Inning
Oakland, Calif. , rookie Joel
ener ot the league championship an!l Jeff Reardon, 5-3, hurled one
and one-third Innings of relief for
Grabe pitched a three-bitter to
series.
the win. ·
pace California. Grabe Improved
Boston's win also left Bolton,
wasn't.
oblivious
to
.
to 3-4. Brian Harvey got the !Ina!
Reardon
the next scheduled starter, In a
two outs lor his 25th save. Dave
situation most pitcher's would ~ the noise the Fenway Park fans
made
when
they
saw
the
final
Stewart,
22·11, pitched his
envy.
score
tn
Baltimore.
··
le!lgue-Jeading
11th complete
"It's my last st;lrt of the season
"I
knew
what
It
was
but
I
game
and
took
the
loss.
and I want to get the big one,"
said Bolton, 10-5. " I would like to looked up on the scoreboard to
finish It off. Ileel I'm -the luckiest make sure It was over, " Reardon
said.
·
guy In the clubhouse to get tlie
chance to do this."
Tlgen 2, Yankeell 0 -At New
Chicago starter Greg Hibbard York, Frank Tanana allowed
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
said
that ,Boston will have to work three hits through seven and
CBLBBRATE TIE-CLINCHER- Bos!Gn relief
Bogp (18) after the Red Sox beat lbe visiting
446 4524
•'
hard against his team to earn the one-third Innings and Travis·
pttcller' left Beardlla (rllll') lllid cllicher Toay
Chlcalo White Sol f.3 lo clinch a tie for the AL
$Z . 75 M5Aifil MTIIIE£5 SATlJR~Y &amp; SUIIDNf'
division title. "In the next two Fryman hit a two-run home· run
$2 .7§ IMYJIII NIGHT TU£5D.IIY
Pe• (ceater)
lbake ....... wttlltearnmate
wacte
Eutlltle. ( UPI)
.
'
{UCEPT NGHO!iT" )
to pace Detroit. 'Janana, raised
his record to 9-8. Jerry Don
I
I
;~IPAV t~N THURSDAY I
'
Gleaton notched four outs to earn
his 13th save. Chuck Cary, fell to
··
·
BJ RICK VANSANT
Davis expects IQ be In the theo~tftetd throwandapplled the . 6-12 .
•
'
Oilole!t 6, Blue Jays 3 - At ·
UPI Sports Writer
starting lineup for the playoffs, tag.
·
Baltimore; Mike Devereaux
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Eric
but concedes he won't be at full
"He had that piate sealed off,"
The Daily Sentinel
socked
a two-run home run and
Davis's bruised shoulder and Bill
strength.
Justice said.
Bob
Melvin
added an RBI single
(tJIP811....)
Doran's bad back are giving.
''I won:.t be completely healed
The next day, Oliver pulled the
'
In
'the
sixth,
rallying the OriOles.
J\' " " ' - of .... .... • ...
Reds · manager Lou Plnflla •a
until after the season,'' he said.
same tactic on San otego' s Blp
' .
The
loss
dimmed
the Blue Jays .
headache.
'The shoulder Is stiff and sore.
Roberts with similar results .
Publll~ed ...,Y llteniOOII, Mmdoy
of
defend.lng
their. Amerihopes
_ tllrouP Friday. l1l Court St .. PoThis was not the condition he
But I should be able to do
One o! Cincinnati's most plea· ·
\norQY, Oblo, by th• Ohio Valley Pubcan
League
East
Division
crown.
wanted to find his team entering . · something In the playoffs. I'll be
sant surprises has been first
lllhtnr Company/Multtm..Ua, Inc..
homer,
his
12th
of
Devereaux's
Thursday's opener of the Naswinging as best I can and If It
baseman Hal Morris, who took ·
Po!MI'&lt;Jlf, Oldo lmt, Pb. 112·21!1. ~
o:aad claa ...,,... paid at .POmoroy,
tiona! League playoffs a'gallist
hurts, II hurts."
over at mid-season lor slumping
'
Old0
Pittsburgh.
Plnlella:
faced
\Yith
the
likely
Todd Benzinger. Morris has ·
' • '"";'
' r 1.•
Davis, .paid $3 mllllori a yea!" to
proposition of replacing Doran · become the team's top hitter at
..
)lombft: United Pnaa 1-..tkllll,
Aalclclattoaudtllf bit homers and · drive In runs,
on the playoff roster, has seen no ·.344.
w p&amp;AIIGOiatiOI!. Nattoa
bruised his ldlsbouldercrashlng . · sirong candidates surface from
11 Dora·n can't play, Mariano
·
IDS--•ootaiiYtl,llrUIWD
·tnto a wall last Thyrsday and
his expanded roster.
Duncan (.304) will be at second
Ill10017.
Tlllrd " -·
~..,Yon,
New..
Yorlr
'
hasn't played since. Plnlella said
The Reds played poorly friday
·base, backed 'up by veteran ·Ron
Monday Davis won't teSt his
through Sunday In dropping a
Oester. The Reds are solid at·
I'08'I'MABI'ER:
- !L, \ shoulder until Wednesday's .t hree-game series to San Diego.
shortstop and third base wil.h
1i&gt; 1bo JJI1Iy Sen
. s.i.d
- -· ill Court
regular-season finale.
Sunday, Plnlella star,ted a .h alt
Barry Larkin (.301) and Chris
!'lllrllnl)'. Oldo ·
. .
'
' Doran's case looks worse. Tile dozen bench-warmers and the
Salxf. the club's top home run
' llJIIImiP'I'ION MTIIII
veteran Infielder we.s acquired
~suit was only five hils and no
hitter with 25.
.
. dno w..t................................... n.a !rom
•
theHoustonAstrosa!llonth
runs.
·
_
In
the
outfield,
Davis
ls.Jolned ·
O•• llonlh ... ,.............................11.10
'
On• Yoar ...................... ,.......... m.tiD . ago to give the Reds another,
"Seems like sbrneoftl)ese guys
by Billy Hatcher ( ,277) In center
'
'
'
dependable hitler- !or the would want to·cometothefront to
and the rtght·fleld duo o! Paul
!• .
·-· Ofnce Hours
postaeason.
.
make the playoff roster,'' PIO'Neill (.270) and muscle-man
lii.Uy ........ ,.......................... 25 Cents
But Doran, troubled by 'a bad nlella said. "But· I wasn't ,lmGlenn Braggs ( .299) . .
'
. .Ubocrlbfrl not dOolriDIIO pay ihec..:.
Monday through friday
back was admitted to Christ • pressed with anything 1 saw." ·
The starting · pitchers wtll be
!1.- 8:/'., nmlt 1D advaBCt! dm!ct to
Hosplal Sunday for,._obsel"Vatlon · .sun, there are regulars who
strikeout artist Jose Rljo, Tom
11M
y Sent!Dtloo a 3, hr U !IHllltll
9 a·.m. - 5 p, m.
'
' Chilli !fill boll.., corrtoreacll
and the Reds llf:IIDOW~ be Is . ,Impress Plnlella as the playoffs
Browning and Oanny Jackson.
suite
13.
PVH
Medical
ornce
Bu~ldlnc
"questiOnable" tor the' playofta . near. Cat~her Joe Oliver, who
The key r~ltevers are m~dle·
IUboef!pt- by nlal1 pormllled ID
That hurta because Dora,li has platoons with Jeff Reed, stands
man Norm Charlton and closers
(304) 675·7700
_....,..hom•c.......,.III!I'VI&lt;eta
beed
bitting
.373
since
joining
the
out.
His
extraordinary
(tlate·.
Rob
Dibble and Randy Myers •vauablt. ·
'
Redl.
blocking recalls the defensive
the N~ty Buys. . ·
·
'
.
,. Jblllol
''The Information I have about . gems of Johnny Bench.
''Our buUpen ts strollier thjn
.,~awee~s~
Doran
tanotverygOod,"Pintella
Last
Thursday,
Oliver
made
P!ttsburgh's,''
Browning
said.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL __.,
..................................au•
II Weeb ..................,...............U'I.M laid. ' 'We'll see over the next48 hbnself a human wall between
"And we're going to need every·
rrue houn. It's a problem. l . was Atlanta's Dave Justice and the
.
. . Tltt lam/~ ol ptol.ulonols
'
\
thing we've. got against Pitts..
-llotpC..,
burgh. The Pirates are a scrappy
II Weeb .................................. ~~.tiD looking forward to havtng~ls bat plate. Whlle·JusUce slid and tried
Vahy Drive. Polnl.,....anl, W.Va. ·~5550
' .
II Weeb.................................. .30 In the starting Uneup or else toftgureouthowtomaneuverhls . team,ahungryteam.'lbey.come
'
a Weeb.................................. ttl ~mlng off the benr;h to help us." feet toward th~ plate, Oliver took
~ you bard for nine lnnlngl."

·.

0

,

"

---OC-IR4

Ailing Reds provide worries for Piniella

.. §Dy.....

.

Randall ·r. ·Hawkins,
M.D.
.
Internal Medicine

., Canter•--IIN=PY

C
flo

......= .
,w. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

tl

•

.

.

�.
'

••

•

The Deily. Sentinel .

Ohio

By The Bend

In Dodgers' 2-1 win over Padres,

Martinez becomes. young~t 20-game· winner in
"I know this game was on TV
accomplished' the feat In 1947. He
By Ualted Preu laterDII&amp;Ional
dOwn
there (In the DominiCan) ,"
' Monday night, the sturdy right also became the first In franchise
arm of Ramon Martinez made annals to reach the plateau In his Samuel said . '.'A lot of people
room In a post-game Ice bucket second season since Jeff Pfeffer were watching." I'm Jlad (Marfor a bottle of champagne.
In 1916.
Martinez became the youngest · "A guy like that comes around
Dodger In 43 years to win 20 only once In 10 or 15 yellrs,"
games when Eddie Mur.·ay Carter said. "He's going ·to be
sll!gled home Jose Offerman around a Iolli time.
from second base with noneout!n
"He had our number. He had
the
Natonal League West's ,
the ninth to give Los Angeles a 2·1
triumph over the San Dle!(O number all year lonlf..He's lost a
Padres.
·
little pop,. bUt for him losing a
"i have It, I feel so excited," i!ttle pop Is as hard as somebody
the Domln.tcan right-hander said else's best stuff In July."
Martinez, who entered second
after allo'!"ing only five hits In his
big-league best 12th complete In the National League with 220
game ofthe season. "I never felt strikeouts, fanned just three but
linproved his record against NL
· anythlnti like I feel today." .
After Juan Samuel tied It 1-1 West teams to 13-0 this seaspn.
A solid contender for the Cy
With an elgbth·lnnlng homer,
'(oung
Award, Martinez finished
Chris Gwynn led off the ninth
the
year
with a 2.92 ERA. He said
with a single off Alldy Bepes,
he
·
doesn't
usually sip cham10-11, and continued to second on
pagne,
but
would make an
center fielder Joe Carter's error.
·Offerman ran for Gwynn, and exception.
' 'Today , I'm gonna drink," he
Murray grounded a 1·1 pitch Into
said.
right field for the game-wlriner.
. "(Martinez) was giving It his . The Dodgers, limited to three
best and that's what we were singles, tied It 1-1 In the eighth
doing, too," Murrl)y said after when Samuel, another Domini·
driving In his 94th run of the ·can, rlppel) a 2-0 pitch over the
· season. "It's nice It worked out.'' left center-field wall for his 13th
Martinez, 22, became the homer of the season. Benes had
youngest Dodger to win 20 games retired 10 straight batters before
slpce 21-year-old Ralph Btanca the blast.

'

t

.

jiJnlor national
Eut

1\'
t-ll&gt;Ston ............. 87
ToJUlto.............. 85
Det rott ....... ........ 78
Bl!1Umore ........... 75
INDIANS ...... ... .. 75
Milwaukee ......... 72
New York ........ .. 66

L Pci. GB

.!144

73
75
82
84
85
88
94

.53!
.188
.472
.469
.4511
.413

Weot
Oakland ............ liZ 58 .ISS
Chicago .............. 93 67 .58
Texas ........ ....... 83 77 .519
California .... ..... 79 81 .494
Seattle ... ........ ... 76 84 .475
Kansas City ...... 75 84 .472

2
9
Ill\
12
15
21

con1ract.

Cleveland- Watv.ed safety Keith
Bostic.

Denver - SJgned quar-erback
Pat Haggerty and running back
Blake Ezor to practice players'

contmcts.
NY Giants - Placed wide re-

cel.ver Odessa

9

Stacy

Phltadelpllia - Signed quarter·

bade Ben Brown, tlghtendMaurtce
Johnsm an(! defensive tackle carl
Dawson to practice squad.
Pittsburgh - Signed linebacker
Eddie Miles, wtde receivers Lorenzo Davis and Ron Fair and

.,... - dlvblolll champl0118

kllaclud tie lar dlvtalan
Mollll.llf'• JONultl

llet rolt 2, New York 0
Boston .f, Chicago 3
Baltimore 6, Torooto 3
Minnesota 7, Seattle 5

) 1

Texas 4, Milwaukee 2 ·

... ,.,..2-~) .

Detroit (Searcy
at New Yort
!Leiter 1-1), 7::.Jp.m .
Otta~ao (Perez 13-14) at Boston
(lloltmll).5),1: li p.m .
Toronto (Biadt 12-llJ at BalU·
(Johnsm1~J. 7:35p.m.
l!anias .City (Wagner i).!J at
Cl....,land (CandiOitt 14-11), 1: 35

m""
p.m.

Seattle (Hana 17·9) at Mlnne·

sw (Abbott 04). 8: 05p.m.

Teus (Rog«s 10.5) at Milwaukee (Brown 0-1) , 8: 3S p.m.
·
&lt;;amomla (Abbott 10·141 at Oakland (Welch 26-6), 10:05 p.m.

w........,.........

Seattle at Minnesota
Detroit at New York, nlght
Clllcago at Bostm, night

rororuo·at Baltlmore, 'nlgbf
Kansas City atDCieYOiand, night

Texas at Milwaukee, nlgnt
Calttomla at Oakland, night
NATIONAL LEAGUE

Eut
W L Pci. GB

Pltlll&gt;urrh ......... H
New York ....... ... 90
Montreal. .. ......... 83
Philadelphia ...... 17
Chicago ... ... ...... , 75
St. Lollis ............ 10

116 .188
70 .563 4
77 .Sl9 11
83 .481 17
85 .469 19
~ .438 24

Wool
REDS ..... ........... II . 70
Los Angeleo,....... 85 15
San Franclsco ... . 84 76
_San Dteeo .......... 74 8~
iloustm ........ ..... 14 86
Atlanta .. .. ..: ....... 64 96

.50
.531
.525

5

6
.fil 16
.463 16
.400 26

bolll- dh·lol• ........ ....

MoadQ.' I p.me&amp;·
New Yon. 4. Plttllbllrgb 1
Cincinnati 4, ~uston 3
Montrea115, St. Lolllo 9
Philadelphia 7. ChiCOJO 6
Atlanta 5, Sin Fraaclaco 3
'Loo Aareleo 2. San Dieeo 1

'~Wod&amp;J'•Pmoo

· New .Yoli&lt; (Goalo:a 1~1 at
Plhobllrgb (Tonilla 4-4), 7:35p.m.
St. Lollll (OIIvareo HI) at Mont·
real (Gr- 11-121, 7: 3ij p.m.
ChiCOIO (8teleckl7-ll) at Phlla·
delpllla (Gre""" 3-2), 7:,35 p.m .
lloUIICII (Htl'llllnd"' 2-0) at Ctn·
cinnatt (Armstronr 12·9), 7: 3S p.m .

,6.tlanta (Avery 3-10) at San

Frandoco (BIII'kett 14-71, 10:35

p.m.
San Diego (Rasmusaen 11-15) at

Los Angeles (Morgan 11·151,10: 35
p.m.
, "
-:e~~aelldq'a 1am•
New Yolk at PtUsbu.rvh
St. Louis al Montreal

Atlana. at San Frud~o
Chlca&amp;o at PhDadelphia, ntpt
lfoust&lt;ll at Ciacinnatl. nt&amp;ht
'San Dteeo at Los Aa&amp;eles, nllht

TraD8aetion8
MoodAJ lp.to Traooacttono
Jy Ua . .d PnoolllferootiOMI
AIIGRodBJ
.
·

WIIUantt Renault (Fomula0ne)
-Signed dl1..,r Nl&amp;el Man.,!).
-INIII
"
Los Aagelft- Acquired pltch..Mike Wllldns !rem Pltrdt lor
1
pitcher Mite Munm:.

..........

Booton - Releooed ~U&amp;rd Denoio
Johnlcn.
· NowYorlt.- SIIDfd loWardBrtan
Qutn""tt to a·muta·,.ear contract; •,
signed forward Earl Curetm and
IUirdJ Gre1 Grant, Tharm Mayes

and Joba Statu.

Orlando - .Siped lreNI81t
center Wallace Bryant and 1orward
Eueene Mclloell.

'

USA Bukftball .,- Named VIvian
Sh1nrer Pan Am ...lcltn Gomeo

women'a COiclt. Tara Vaao.rwer

World Untwrslty O.met women' 1

c01dland Joan .Bonvtdnl wcmen'.t
'

~

- defeilsJW back Anthony Florence
to practice contracts.
•
San Diego -

Released k!cker

. Fuad Revelz.
Tampa Bay - Signed defensive
lineman wuue Wyatt, running back

TOO CLOsE

COMFORT - Second base

uinp1re Dulch Rennert (top right) ,almost collides
with Reds shorllllop Mariano Duncan as Duncan

Derrtck Douglu, Wide receiver
Chris Fool, tight end Ed Thcmas

Cal Komia 2, Oakland 0

Team

Turner on injured

reserw; signed Wide receiver
Robinson.

19
23
26
26\\

Minnesota .. ....... 73 87 .456 29

.

coach.

Foolball
LA Rams - Activated comerback Jerry Gray ott Injured reserve; waived runnlng back Jim
Price; signed running back Fred
Whittingham to a players' practice

.umi!ICAN LEAGUE

T_,

t~am

hits and no walks. Hels winless In of the season to open the scoring.
. eight starts since f&lt;ug. 24.
The Dodgers snapped a four· Mike Pagliarulo had · opened .game losing str11ak and moved
the fifth with only his sixth homer Into sole possession of second
place In the West, one game
ahead of San Francisco.
In other National League a~­
tlon, l'i[ew York dorroed Pitts·
.burgh 4,1, Philadelphia edged
Chicago 7-6, Cincinnati shaded
Houston 4.3, Montreal pounded
St. Louis 1~9. and Atlanta
. dro
. pped San Frandsc? 5-3•: .
At
Meta t, Plra&amp;ea •1 Pittsburgh, David Cone scat. tered three hits In pitChing his
sixth complete game and also
drove In two runs to help New ·
York. Cone, 14·10, struckout12to
push his league-leading total to
233 and walked four .In lifting his
record to 3-0 against the Pirates
this season. Zane Smlt)l, 12-9, lost
for only · the second time In 10
starts for the Pirates.
PhUIIes 1, Cubs 6 - At
Philadelphia, John . l&lt;;ruk
knocked In three runs and the
Philadelphia Phlllles clinched at
least a tie for fourth place In the
NL E11st. Chicago's Ryne Sandberg .h it his 40th home run of the
season, jolni.Qg Hank Aaron -a nd 1
Jose Canseco as the only players
to have at least40homeruns and
25 stolen bases in the same ·
season.
· Re.ds 4, Asll:os 3 - At. Clncln-.
nat!, Ron Oester scored the·,
winning run on a wild tliroW by
shortstop Rafael Ramirez with .
one out In the ninth Inning to lift
Cincinnati. Randy Myers, 4-6,
pitched the ninth for the win.
Brian Meyer, 0-4, took the loss.
The victory ended a three-game
Reds losing streak.
Expos 15, Cardinals .9 - At
Montreal, Tim Raines knocked In,
four of his career,hlgh five runs
with a grand slam to guide
Montreal. Tim Burke, 3-3, picked
up the victory In relle(. Mike
·Perez, 1-1, was ,the loser.
Braves 5, Giants 3 - At San
Francisco, Fra!lclsco Cabrera
belted a three-run homer and
John Smoltz limited San Filanclsco to three hits .leading
Atlanta , Smoltz, 14-11, recorded
· his first victory In five declslo!IS
against the Giants · this sepson.
Trevor
Wilson, 8-7, lost his first
unsuccessfully tries to lag
Veldlng
start
after
making six relief
. ( 15) on a steal play In the first Inning of Monday
appearances.
nllfht's game lti Cincinnati, which the Reds won
4-3\ (UPI)
, .

Cooper·feels heat for shortened

wing Mlkko. Makela.

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Ohio State head coach John
Cooper felt the heat Monday for
agreeing to let Saturday's 35-26
toss to Southern California end
with still 2: 36 remaining on the
cloCk.
The game was called in the
mkjst of a heavy thunderstorm
after USC recovered an Ohio

Detroit -Assigned John Chabot,
Robert Plmrd, Doug Houda, Chris
. McRae, Yves Racine and Stewart
MalguDBS Ill Adlrmdack IAHL) ;
acquired rights to forward ~ngt
Gustafssm fran Washli'lgtCI'Iln the
NHL waiver draft.
,
Global Hockey I&gt;eague- Named
, Will lam Putman cmnmlsaloner.
~~Angeles,;,_ Acquired tights to
defmseman Rod Buskas fran
Plt...,rgh In the NHL watvtr

· draft.
NY Rangers - AssJgned center
Brian McReynolds to Binghamton
cJ. American Hock,y: Leape; re·
turned left wt.ng Louie DeBru to
London otOntarloHockey League .

*

Quebec - Acqlllred rights to left
wtnger Wayne .. Van Dorp frcrn
Chicago. defen~eman Shawn And·
ersan frcm WashlngtCII and center

Aarcn Broten trc:rn Minnesota in
the NHL waiVer draft.
St. U:Juls - Acquired rights to
defeaseman Marlo Marots frcrn
Quebec and center Bob Bassen
trcm Chicago· In the NHL waiver
draft.
Vancouver - Acquired rights to
defenseman Randy Gregg fran
Edmtt1ton in theNHLwalverdraft.
Washlng1co - Traded defense ·
man Bill Houlder to Butralo for
detenseman Shawn Andersoo; aC.
.qulred forward Dave Tippett ftan
Hartford tor future considerations;
agreed to terms with goalle Don

Beaupre.

UPI college ratings .
NEW YORK (UPi j - TheUntted

Press International Board of
Coaches 'Top 25 college fOOibaJI
· ratings, with record and first·pla.ce
votes In parentheses, IOI:al potnls
(based on 15 points tor first place.
14 for second, etc. ), and last we.ek's
ranking.
1. Nwe Dame 1&amp;51 13-0) .... 814 1
2. F1onda State 1101 14-111 .. 179 2
3. Nebraska (4-11) .. . ...... _. .... 625 6
4. Michigan 12·11 .... . _. ........ till 7
5. Virginia (:HI ) .. .. ....... , ..... 593 H.
6. Auburn 12.0.11 ..... ...... ..... SIKJ 3
1. Tennesoee (3.().2) .. ..... .... 553 5
8. Mtamt Ill 12·1) .... ... ....... 515 9
9. Colorado (3-1-IJ .. .. _.._, .... 28116
10. Brllham Yoong 1§.11 .. ... 279 4
11. Soot!)'"' Cal (3-1) ...... .... 216 14
12. llilnds 12·11 .. .. .. .. .... _. .. ... 200 15 ·
1~ Clen~~on (4-11 .. .. .. .. .. .. ....150 18
11. Waahlllglon (3-1) ............ 128 11
15. TeJW AIIM 13-1) ......... ... 96 10
16. Arltanoas (2·11 ...... ......... 48 21
17. OregmJJ.1) ...... ... ....... 45 NR
18. ~orgla T~ch I 3-0J .... ... 42 NR
19. Michigan State 11·1·11 .... 37 20
20. Fresno State '(r;.(i) .......... 36 19
21. Arizona (J.II _, ................ 16 13
22. Indiana 13.01 ... .......... ... 15 Nil
23. Mississippi 13-1 l ............ . 12 21
· 24. Wyoming i:Hl l :......... _, .. . 11 23
25. Ohio State 12-11 .............. 10 12
NR- Dotralllod
Others recelvtna votes: ArtwiUI
State, Georgia, Iowa, LouJ.slana
State, San Jo.iie.State, South Card·

Ina, Texas.

Tbe national cbamploa wtll re.

cave al32.000 ae~~-athlettcscholar·

•hlp frCIIl the Gerrtt• Foundation

'.and Untied Preu IDterltltlanal.
.#'l' By aareemeat with theAmer~n ~

Football Coacbes Auoctatlon,
. ~am&amp; barred from television ap..
pee.rances or p~t1eum play or
havlne lost more than 20 pen:entot
th'elr !oOiball ICb ... rlltlps .,..

tnelJglble for. the Top 25 and
nauonal ch·amytonal)lp conaii:lera·

t1011 by the UP Board of Coochea.
· Thoat achtda are Florida, Rout. t!ll, MemphloState, Oklahcma and
Oklabcrna State.

:f'

Notre
,

State onside kick near 'lnidfield.
Ohio State had just scored to
make It ·35-26.
Cooper admitted alter the
game and repeated again at his
weekly media luncheon Monday
that he gave his apprwal for
referee Ron Winter to call the
game If Oh io State didn't recover
the onside kick
But Monday , the ques tlon
arose as to who actually decided
~.

game .

~..,

By JEFF SHAIN
. up with 779 points.
UPI Sports Writer
The Fighting Irish needed to
· NEW YORK (UPI) - Notre
rally for fourth-quar,t.er touch·
Dam.e. having posted Its first
downs ·the .prevlous two weeks,
easy victory In tbiee games this
edging Michigan and Michigan
season, bolstered Its lead Sunday
State with the help of deflected
In the United Press International
passe's that fell into the hands of
college football ratings.
Notre Dame receivers.
The Fighting Irish, who were
But no heroics were needed In
only two points ahead of No. 2 Saturday's 37·11 triumph over
Purdue as 15 Notre Dame
Florida State In last week's
balloting by , the UPI Board of runners carried a total of 65
Coaches, moved In ·front of the tl!ftes for 362 . yards and four
Seminoles · by 35 points In the touchdowns.
latest poll.
"A lot of people say we
Notre Dame recel'(ed 45 of 56 shouldn't be No. 1," Notre Dame
first-place votes cast· by the quarterback Rick Mlrer said.
59-member Board of Coaches, an " We played · our kind of ball
Improvement of 11 first-place
(agains t Purdue) and .showed
ballots from last week. The them. It was fun.to get ahead and
Flghtlng Irish finished wlth814of do some thlng• 'we wanted to do.
•
a possible 840 points, the highest We,looked more like a machine.
.Polnt total by any team this We're coming together."
season.
Notre Dame head coach Lou
Meanwhile, , the Seminoles Holtz, as Is his habit, was not
were at the top oflOballots, down ready to make any bold
three from last week, and wound ·

'

· The University of Rio Grande
soccer team bounced back from
a narrow ·District 22 loss · to
Malone over the weekend to
defeat Shawnee State Monday,
5-1, In home contest.
Ricardo Campbell ~ored Rio
Grande's first goal of the game
without assist Barry Saunders
followed, ·also without assist,
l!rhen he booted the balllilto the
Bears' net from 23 yards out.
Ia the lasHive mln11tes of the
first half, the'hosts took the sco~
to 3-0 when Saunders fired the
ball In ftom 35 yards out with
assist from Frank Payerchln.
Somewhat sluggish play by the
Redmen In the second half
allowed Shawnee State, which
,hajl pressed throughout the
gam!!, to rec!trd Ita only goal .
when one of Itsplayers scored off
one of two saves made by Rio
Grande goalkeeper \}orey
Feerer.
.
.
. .
. Rio Grande came back at the
35-mlnute mark whtm Campbell,
whom COach Scott Morrlasey
said demonstrated
,. a "lot of I

a

Individual effort, " scored with·
out assist. With two mlilut.es
remaining, Joe Kiley brought the
bill! down to Campbell, who
carried It through to complete
the hosts' scoring.
· ''Coming Into the game, I was,
concerned because the level of
play over the weekend was
tremendous ·and I felt we would
be down from the Malone game,"
Morrissey said. ''We caine out
strong against Shawnee State
and that set me at ease."
The Bears, In their first year of
play, had four shots on go111 ;~nd
15&gt; saves. "I have the utmost
respect for Sha\\'Ilee State, ".
. Morrissey said. "They Jiave a
good thing going and there's no
substitute for hard work. For a ·
first year program, they have
nothing to be ashamed of.''
The Redrrien lost to Malone 3-2
In overtime Saturday In Canton.
Dominating from the start, Kiley
scored 20 minutes Into the game
with assist from Saunders with
an 18-yard shot Into the Pioneers' .
net.

Block party
•
winners ·.
announced
The winners of door priZes
contributed by local merchants
for the ~lddleport Block Party
have been announced by Mike
Gerlach, co-chairman of the
annual event.
Sue Sigman was the winner of a
1 color television contributed by
lngles and Chuck Kitchen the
winner of a $50 bond provided by
Central Trust.
·o ther winners of gifts and
certiflcatj!S were Betty Moore,
Mary Hughes, Carol Smith, Jean
Null, Ida Martin, John Ash,..Carl
Brannan, SplrleY Simmons, Glo- ,
ria Van Reeth, D. Reed;· Krist!
Richmond, Bryan Johnson,
Elaine Corsi, Eleanor Logan,
Sarah Hull, Mary O'Brien, Frank
Case, Tracy O'Dell, Tom Reed, ·
Annie Y.ates, Bob Moore, Curtis
f Jenkmson, Backy Baer, and
" Mazie. Brannan.
' . .
I

· Sunday school
1 being start~d
school is being started
I atSunday
tile Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church on Oct. 7.
There will be classes for both
adults and youth from 9 to 9:'45
a.m.

Revival slated

.

states : "Any time during the
pronouncements.
·
game, the playing time of any
" We play~d a little bit better,' '
remaining period or periods may
Holtz salt). "Everybody plays so · be shortened by mutual agreehard against tis We real! h
ment of th~ ppposlng 'head
ave
coaches and the . referee:"
·
some serious concerns
weY have
to address."
.
,
''That Is what transpired,''
The rest ·bf the ratings under.· ·said RUdner, who added , that
went a majOr shakeup, thanjls to
Winter could. have suspended
a 26·26 tie between Auburn and
pl;ly untll the S\Oi'm passed
T.ennessee and losses by s(xother
without the coaches approval.
ranked teams.
"The operative concept here Is ·
No.3Nebraska,No.4Mlchlgan
player-spectator safety," said
and' No. 5 Virginia all moved up
Rudner. "Dave (Perry) talked
th
th
h
1
of
solid
with
the head linesman, tile TV
ree P1aces on . e ee s ·
·
liaison and others. PracticallY '
victories. They were followed by
everybody there was just glad to'
No. 6 Auburn and No. 7 Tennes·
see, who remain neck-and -neck
get off the field. II was scary."
after their tie. ,
When · pressed about whose · .
Miami, a 48-21 wlnne~ over
decision It was, Cooper said: I'I'
Iowa, received· the. final lltst·
dldn'tsee any option, to be honest
1
t t0
t 0 1 hth
with you. I have never been·:1
P ace vo e
~ove up
e g · Involved In a ball game (llke
No. 9 &lt;Colorado jumped· seven
places following Its 20-14 victory that). What do you do when you
over Washington, and Brigham suspend a game? When do you
Young fell six spots to lOth after play It~ In that situation, I
Its 32-l6 Joss to Ore~~:on.
' thought It was the right move to
.make."
1

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"It was the type of goal tlJat ·

goes on a highllgbt tape,'' Morris·
sey said. '
·
The half · ended 1·0 In Rio
Grande's favor , QUI Malone
· finally got on the board at the
25-mlnute mark of the second
period. The teams continued to
press against each other 11nd
jlnlshed regulation at a deadlock.
'!'he Pioneers led 2-1 on a goal
. e·arly IIi the extra period which
was answered by the Redmen
shortly afterward.· But the Pioneers prevailed With another
goal before the Conclusion of the
half.
.
· "That was kind of a heart·
. breaking loss bi!cause we feel we
outplayed Malone," Morrissey
remarked. "But. that typifies
athletics because the best team
doesn't always win."
Both Rio Grande and Malone
had 13 shOts ·on goal, with Feerer
posting six saves and Malone
recording tl;ree.
Now 6-4; the Redmen travel to
Thomas More. (~y.) Wednesday.

bu-'neu lntunncie peckage. that it. h'1 SERIES
ONE. a 'broad-covent.::;

The Joppa Church will be
having a revival Wednesday
through Saturday with a homecoming and dinner on Sunday at
12: 30 p.m. featuring the Gospel
Rl!)'s from Parkarsburg, W.Va.
Rev . Seldon .J&lt;&gt;ilnson will speak
Wednesday; Rev. Robert Saund·
ers and the Dalley Family
Singers, Thursday; Rev. Harold
Alloway and singers from Torch,
Friday; andRev.Car!Hickswlth
the Belle Snyder Singers,
Saturday.

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Star Gra~ge Co. 778 and Star
Junlclr Grange No. 878 will meet
In regular seshslo n onCSaturdRaY aadt
8 p.m. at the a 11 on oun1y 0
1 near Salem Center. Potluck
refreshments will follow and all
members are urged to attend.

Anniversary·
, set by church

History group
pJanmng meetmg

992-6687

~·-::·~....
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' Tbe Bedtwd Towuhlp History
~roup will meet Frtday at 7 p.m.
ICt the Modern Woodmen of
o\llll!rlca Hallin Burllqham.
• ADyone Interested may attend.
a ~torY related Item.

r.

Smith, New York; Diana and
Beih Farley, Mason, W.Va:;
Rodney and · Stacy Tripp,
Columbus.
Attending from Meigs County
were Martha Lee, .Larry and
Patty Circle, BettY Dean , Ethel
Orr, Paul Moore, Barbara and
Alvin Tripp, Virgil and Kathr:(D
Windon, Debbie, Rodney , Adam
and Abbie· Chev alter, Brian and
Amanda Windon, .George Gen·
helmer, Blair Windon, Be~ky
Bentz' and Ami' and John, Fred
and Bertha Smith, James and
Becky Cotterill; Jeff and Lisa
Stethem, Kejly·and Todd Tripp.
Roger and Rosemary Keller and
Harlan Elselsteln.

"We are proud of our school",
says the staff at Chester Elementary School, and, as Is evidenced
by student activities there, that
pride has rubbed o(f on the
_.:By::.....:.
.
student body as well.
Recently, 1 had the pleasure of bakery forced to contend with the
. The Student Advisory COuncil
sitting througlt wha.t has lobe one fact that he Is Illiterate. Jane
(SAC) from iast year at the
of the finest films tl) come along Fonda plays the widowed Iris school provided. half of the funds
In some time. It has wonderful King, orie of the workers In the
needed to resurface the · play·
acting by two of the best actors to bakery, struggling with the·grief ground's basketball court.
come along In some time. The of losing her husband to a serious
Landscaping and Initial sm()()o
story Is lntellegent and moving Illness, unable to Jet go and start thing of the court are now '
.
loving again.
w It ho u I t he need oI fa Illng bac k
Circumstances throw them to- finished.
VAG Is a program open to
on trite and hackneyed cliches gether and they find that" they
several delegates from grades
that should be drawing social
security. The JllUSic Is by the need each other to solve their two through six.
legendary John Williams who problems. This-becomes one. of
According to Head Teacher
gave us the memorable Superthe most positive and upbeat Ron Hill, "the students work
films of the current production very hard to help make the school
man and Star Wars themes. And
1
h 1
year for the fact that It Is a better place to be."
the theme Is a toplca one t at s
beautiful, alive and honest In It's
more common than you might
"Some of last year's projects,"
. think.
stressing of the fact that not all Hill explaln.ed, "lncl~ded a varprisons have bar~ and 1 that Iety show, after school movies,
stanley and. Iris, due out In
sometimes the key Is simply the dances and problem~ solvlng
October Is one of those movies
that for no better reason than
act" of asking for ilelp.
discussions."
,
that It Is charming without being
Stanley &amp; Iris Is r&lt;\ted PG-13
Hill also said that a new
CHESTER SAC DELEGATES - These students were fourth
tor language but Is still a great program Is underway at Chester
cute should be required viewing.
movie that leaves you regretting
. and fifth· grade delegates on Student Advisory Council at Chester
Starring Jane Fonda and Robert
·
Elementary · this year called
Elementary Schoollasl year. The SAC helped finance the r_ecenl
DeNlro It concerns the subject of
the end run of the credits. If you · 'Chester's·Pride''.
Improvements to scbooJ's · basketball court. Pictured, front to
Illiteracy In America which has · like to be entertained by a movie
The '.'Chester's Pride" proback,
are Brandon Buckley, Billee Pooler, Angle Riling, Javla
to be one oft he mostserlous of all
that leaves you filled with hope, gram offers students there the
Drake,
Laura Eutman, Anna Wolk, Chris Bailey, Head Teacher
of our domestic problems facing
then this film Is just wba~ you . opportunity to earn points for
Ron HID, and IJnda Schultz, last year's advisor.
us now as It has long range
need. It Is a reaffirmation In helping around the school In a
effects In not only the educational
celluold that fills you with Joy arid variety of ways, from housekeepbut the economic circles.
happiness.
Ing to peer tutoring, bookkeeping
27 million Americans cannot
If you need help In reading or and assisting teachers.
.•
know someone who does, go to · Teachers and other-start Per·
read or write. Consider that: 1
·aut of every·5 adults over the age
your local ll)lrary or call : the sonnel post "help wanted" signs
of 17 cannot read a newspaper,
National Literacy Hotline toll· on the bulletin board. Students
11
u
free
1·800· 228-8813.
b
fill ou t a jo app ca on or even
Next month, the Halloween must then apply for the job and
~:r their own name. Scary' Is~· t
column and believe me have I got Interview with their employer.
Students, according to Hill, are
Based on · the novel by Pat
some fabulous fright films In· . responsible for maintaining their
Barker called "Union Street"
eluding a .rereleased classic by own· time sheets which will be
the director of the original ta!Hed for awards and recognl·
Dracula, Tod Browning.
this film tells the story of Stanley
Cox played with a quiet dignity
Untll"then, be kind and rewind lion to be presented at the end of
the school year.
by De Nlro who· is a cook In_a
thOse tapes.

VideoView_

J~e/t:--:-.H-;:-;illa~ry

Community calendar·
(Community Calel)dar Items
appear two days before an event
acd &amp;he day of that event. Items
. must be received In advanee to
Insure publlcallon In the ca·
lebdar.)
~DAY

and 50 year members, .Refreshments will be served and all
master masons are urged to
attend. James J ..Harbage, Past
Grand Master of the Grand
Lodge of Columbus, will a(tend.

port Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at i: 30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Richard Owen.
Mrs. Bernard Fultz will review
Extraterrestrial Civilizations by ·
Isaac 1\slmdv. Roll c;~ll will be to
tell 'a UFO story.

BRADBURY - Revival at the
Bradford Church of ChriSt wll··
I!be held through Friday at 7:30
p.m. ilightly. Evangelist will be
Phil Strunk. Nursery Is provldeil.

Homecoming sec

Any teenagers from Meigs and
Gallla counties Interested In
JolniDif the Teenage Republican
Club are urged to call Jay
Dewhurst at 1·51947.-

secretary and treasurer.
Gills were presented to Bertha
Smith, birthday; Et!iel Orr,
oldest woman; George G~nhel·
mer, oldest man; Jenna Meyers,
youngest girl; John Bentz.
youngest boy; and Clayton .R.
Smith, farthest traveled.
Attending were Dale, Jenny,
Sara, Shawn and Shane Machlr,
Marietta; Roy Bookman, Bu·
chetel; Ken and Betty Fell
Mechanlcsburgj Harold, Phyllis
and Carl Fell1 Spencerville;
Norman and VIrginia Fell, De. Graff; Roger , Janet Grueser and
Jenna Myers. Logan; Johnny
il!ld Denise Craig, Scott and Beth
Payne, Vinton; Clayton · R.

Chester Pride is school wide

STUDENT OF THE WEEK - Meigs Junior . Wgh School's
Student of the Week bas been awarded to Jeremy C«!leman.
Jeremy Is pictured, left, with George Nagleskl, who presented the
award. The award was given to Jeremy for art class and classroom
behavior.

COOLVILLE -The Coolville
VFW Post 3478 Is having a hunter
1
safety rourse at the Lions Club
Building on Main Street In
Coolville on Wednesday, Friday ,
RACINE - The Racine FlrsL Oct. 10 and 12 from 6-9 p.m. Call
The Forest Run United Metho· Baptist Church will have revival Robert V. Pullins, 667-3831 . or
dist Church Is celebrating Its 75th through Thursday .at 7: 30 p.m. Edward Wigal, -~67-6657 for
nightly with Dr. Jim Pennington. Information.
anniversary on Sunday.
Regular worship services at 9 There will be special music and .
CHESTER , - The Chester
nursery available.
a.~. with carry In dinner at 12:30
.. Nazarene Church will have rev!·
p.m.
REEDSVILLE - 1'he River· val Wednesday through Sunday
A . special anniversary program will be held at 1:30 p.m. view PTO will meet Tuesday at 7 at 7p.m. (Sunday6p.m. )nightly.
p.m. at t~e school. There will be Nelson Perdue '!'Ill be the
The public Is_Invited to attend.
·
babysitting and a movie, ''The speaker.
'
Little Mermaid.''
POMEROX - A rummage
'sale
will be held at the senior
MIDDLEPORT' - The MlddleThe annual homecoming of the
citiZens
center In Pomeroy on
po~t Arts · Council will !,lleet
United Faith Church, Route 7 Tuesday
Wednesday
and Thuruday from
at 7 p.m, In council
by·pass~ Pomeroy, will be
7:30a.m.
to
3:30
p.rn. dally. Good
chambers.
· ·81\nday.
·
clean clothing, linens, household
, Sunday school is at 9: 30 a.m.,
- The XI Gamma appliances and miscellaneous ..
morning worship at 11 a.m., MuPOMEROY
·
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Items for sale. ,
basket dinner at noon, gospel Sorority will meet Tuesday at
slng.at 2 p.m. featuring the New 7:30 p.m. at the home. of A.R.
REEDSVILLE - The Joppa
Gabriel Quartet, Harvest Trio, · Knight In Pomeroy.
Church will have revival Wed·'
JohnsQn Family and other local
nesday through Saturday ·with
talent.
homecoming and dinner on Sun·
POMEROY -The American
Pastor Robert E. Smith Jr. Leglo,n Drew Webster Post No. 39
day at 12: 30 p.m. There will be·
Invites the publiC.
special speakers and ,singers
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
nightly·. · .
Dinner will lie served.

I

214 EAST .MAIN
POMEROY

The annual reuclon of the
descendants of James and Ethelinda Stone Moore . was held
recently at the home of VIrgil and
Kathryn Windon In Chester.
.Rev . ROy Bookman gave the
blessing before the picnic·dinner
.enjoyed by the 58 relatives and
friends .
·
PauJMoorebrpughtpiciuresof
James C. and Hannah Moore,
and James C. and Ethelinda
Stone Moore.
Clayton R. Smith, New York,
was a visiting relative. His
grandmother was Sarah Moore .
Officers elected were Larry
Circle, Preslden.t; Betty. De~,
vice president; and Martha Lee,

Grange to meet

Republican Club
me~rs . sought

compethlvely-priced
fOr ·retail ' storet. . officet,
churches, apartments and
drug stores. Call us for a proposal ·and quotation.

'

Moore family gathers at reunton

A six-week series of clogging
ciasses, · "Clogging for Grand·
mas" will begin Wednesday at
the MlrJdleport Arts Council.
Paulette Harrison will be the
Instructor and classes will be
held from 10-11:30 a.m. each
Wednesdaq. The cost Is $2.50 per
week and pre-registration Is not
necessary.
For further Information call
Harrison at 992-6248.

underfootballrule3-~-2-A,wblch

Rio men ·defeat Shawnee State,·. 5~1

Tuesday, ·october"2. 1990
Page-5

•

Cloging classes
set in Mieddleport

to end. the game - Cooper or
"When the coaches met with ,
Winter, whQ...: conferred · with . Winter (the . third time), Coach
Cooper and USC head coach Cooper Indicated his attempt at 1
Larry Smith three times In the an onslde kick,'' Rudner said by '
second half about the storm.
telephone from the Big Ten
Mark Rudner, commun,lca· office. "He said 'If we recover It,
tlons director oft he Big Ten, said let's do our best to finish the ~
he talked Monday to Dave Perry; game. If USC gets It, then that'.s
the conference's supervisor of · enough.' When USC recovered
football officials, at&gt;&lt;Jut what the onslde kick, It was mutually
transpired just before the game agrelid by both .. coaches ·:to .
was finally called.
suspend the game.
.
Rudner said the game ended

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ffi
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The Daily Sentinel
..

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to practice
contracts.
"
""-.... JobD Maoaum

llaekey
Blll!alo- Traded left wing Mike
Donnelly to LoS Angeles tor left

years

tinez) got It done ."
BeneS. who had an upset
stomach 'and got sick throughbut
.
the game, permitted just
seven

Scoreboard ...
Majon

4~

,,

POMEl'tOY :... The Elghtand
Forty Meigs County Salon No. 710
will meet Tuesday at 7: 30 p,m. at
the home of Margarie Fetty .
Bring dues.
· RACilllE -The Racine Baptist
Church Is holding revival
through Thurudi.y at 7; 30 p.m . .
nightly. Dr. James Pennington Is
the evangelist. PubliC Is Invited.
•
Mfi.LWOOD, W.VA. - The
River Valll!y Herbalists· will
meet. Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
home of Unda McCoy, Mtnwood,
W.Va.

,

.

WEDMBsDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle-

· .... ~ ••. ••• ~ .,- ~."'·, .. ""7"-

· CHESTER'S PRIDE - These students are lnvesliga&amp;lng the
employment" opportunities available at Chesler Elementary
Sebool through the new Cbester's Pride program there. Pictured
are, left to right, Jon Stu!ler, Stefani Bearhs, and Kelll Bailey.

PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 6 p.m. In regular
session.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of A.A. and AI· Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
Call 1-800-333-5051 for more
Information.

Please Note
The
.La&amp;t Day

POMEROY ~ The XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. 1in the. conference room of
the Senior Citizens Center. Bring
neckJaces. Rush party has~b~n
postponed.
·

J

To Make
Payments On

COOLVILLE
The Bethel
Church will be holding a yard
sale•on Baker Street In Coolville
on Thursday and Friday begin·
nlng at 9 a.m.
,

Your
1990 Christmas Club Is

' TUPPERS PLAINS · - The
Tuppers Plains VFW .Post 9053
t;adles Aulllary will meet Thurs·
day at 7:30 p.m.

October 6, 1990

COOLVILLE - Tl)e Lottrldge
Community Center will have a .
potluck dinner on Thursday at 6 ·
p.m. followed by the ·regular
meetlnlf. The center Is located on
Athens Countty Ro''d 53 S. five
mlles west of Coolville..
·

. POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Lodge 164 F&amp;AM will meet
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Mlddlepott Temple. There will
be presentations of pins for 65

REVIVAL
Chester (hurch

1991 Clubs Will Start On

October 22; 1990
.Thanks For Banking With Us!

of the Nazarene

PEOPLES BANK

OCT. 3·7 - 7:00 P.M. ..
SUNDAY EVENING SERVICE '6:00P.M.

'•

SPIIDIWUa•
. Will DOWII IIOUfiiSS PIUCHEI.,

.

,.

NEW HAVEN

fiii.SOI PRill

,,

POINT PLEASANT
675-1121 .

882-2135

\
·7~:o;

..

-:.~ ...

::: •. -: . .. _ •.•:.

.

. .... .... ... ·-·····- ··~

MFMB!lR P.O.J.C.

--.

·;

•..

MASON
773-5514
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.---.People in the news------:---...;------1

· By .WILLIAM C. TROTl' .

Ualted Preu Jateraatlolllll
BERGI\IAN ON BERGMAN: Japmar Berpnaa has finally
gotten around to watching the complete films ot one of the
· world's greatest directors - Ingemar Bergman. Bergman's
!ales t autobiographical work, which.will be published later this
month In Sweden, says, '1 have always avoided seeing my
!l!ms. The Urnes I have been forced to see any of them, I ~ve
always lelt angry, sad; upset, shocked and have had to go to the
toilet." The director said It took him a year. to look through all
the films with his editor but he was "still unable to see some of
the emotional scenes, " which be felt would be too much forhlm.
Bergman and his editor talked ·about the turns and used the 60
hours ot taped discussions with Bergman's · dl~les to form the
basis of the book. "I have avoided my. films because of the
emotions tlley'have stirred In me," he said. "But I felt I had to
see them now. I wanted to return to the films And walk through
their landscapes. It was a hell of a walk."
YOUNG AQUINO IS BOX-OFFICI!: STAB: Krill Ailulno
wants to be the Philippine version of Michelle Pfelller. The
19-year-old daughter of PhiUpplne PresideD~ Coraao• Aqalao Is
starring In the movie "Pido Dlda, Let's Do It Together,' ' which
·has broken all box office records In her country, playing a poor
girl who marries a .man she had mistakenly thought was her
brother. Critics have said Aquino, who went Into acting against
hlir mother's wishes, has no la!ent but she's not dlsuades. "I
think that everyone, regardless of who or what you are, should
.or her. own dream," Krls
be given the .chance to fulfill hls
.

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recently told aa Interviewer. "I want to be like Michelle
Pfeiffer, who can do both comedy and drama." Aqulao also bas
been bias~ as being frivolOus and owrly .concerned With glitz
and glamorbutnow she II Involved lnaciUzen'sdrugwatchand
gives a portion of ber earntnp to charity.
· "WOLVES" TO BENEm KQlll: A benefit premiere of the
Kevi• CGIIDierfllm ''Dances With Wolvea"willbeheld In Rapid
City, S.D., next month to ralae tunda for two youth .PI'OIIl'llms In
the state. The Costner film, whiCh wu shot at several locations
thrOUghout the state last year, II the story of the relationship
-"between Indians and settlers. GOv. Geoqe Mickelson aald the
pr;,emlere fits In with the state's declaration of 1990as the Year
of Reconciliation between Indians and non, IDdlans. •'In keeping
with the movie's coacept and the Year of ReconciUatton effort,
we requested that the premiere abowlng be a benefltforyouth 111
risk (of dropplnj' out of school) and specifically, Native
American youth," Micke~ said.
·
FAMOUSS'J.'BIUBIIINNEWYOBK: 'Ibere'uhlgh-protlle
rent strike In progress on Fifth Avenue In New York. Allatalr
Cooke, . the culture4 host of PBS's "Masterpiece Theater,"
fol'mer New Yorker Editor WUJJam llllawil and Phil...,.. de
MoatebeUo, the head of the Metropolitan Mu8elllll, are among
those withboldlng their rent In an Upper East Side apartment
building. The tenanta charge the landlord Is not makllig repairs
the building's owners, who are seeking to convert It from a
"'rental Into a co-Op, argued that the tenants are using the-strike
as a bargaining plOy.
• .

ltEUlEV M. SAUTERS

vent the story from being spread
off campus.
''Please, those of you who want
to again drag Dartmouth Into
national media think before you
cast your log upon the fire, ... it
said. ·
Dartmouth students were clr·
culatlng a petition pledging to
''formally sever all association''
'flth the Dartmouth Review, and
condemning It for contrlbu ling to
an almOSIJhere ol. intplerance ..
Freedmlln, who Is Jewish, alao
bias ted the paper.
"For 10 years the Dartmouth
Review has COnsistently at·
tacked blacks becauae they are
·· black, wo~en becl!uae they are
women, homosexuals becauae
they are homosexuals, aad Jews
. because they a~ Jews," ·Freed·

Mr, and Mrs. Charles Mark
Sauters, Pomeroy, are announc·
lng the blrttr of a son, Kelsey
Mark; on Aug. 21 at Holzer
Medical Center.
The lnfanfwelghed five paunds
10 ounces and wiiS 19 inchE!!Ilong.
· Grandparents ·are Mr. and
Mrs. Leroy. Sauters, Pomeroy,
and Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Vandevander, Whitmer, W.Va.
Great grandparents are
Manda Eastman, Pomeroy; Ed
Vandevander, Thomas, W.Va.;
Lester Dice, Riverton, W.Va.
Step-great grandmoth.e r Is WildS
Sauters, The Plains.
The couple also has a daughter,
Bri\ll~ Diann, 17 m~nths .

8 A.M •.untii .NOON SATURDAY ,

p~tograpber.

Quirks in the news

•Pric:•
art li:H all c epi1aii~U!rl is doubl e priee Clll ad
"7 point Nne I¥ PI! onty used
· ·•

seven photographS alorie. The
defense contends that the dis- puled pictures should be judged
only as asmallpartoftheoverall
exhibit.
Mapplethorpe died tn Boston
Match 9, 19f!9, from compllcalions of AIDS.
· ·
His subject matter included
homosexual "taboos, traditional
stll)ltfes, commercial advertls·
tng, fashion photography and
album.covers.
·
. , His work y.telded 20 published
hooks and · exhibition catalogs
and brought some of the highest
prices of any ltvtng art photographer. In 1987, his platinum·
on-linen prints, produced In sin·
gle editions, sold for $15,000each.
In a related development, the
American Foundation for AIDS
Research said Monday 11 recelved a three-year pledge of
supportf1'9m pte Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation to provide 20
percent of Its annual gross
revenues, Which COuld amOUDI to
S3 mi!Hon. The proceeds will
come prtmarUy from the sale of
Mapplethorpe' s work.
The Robert Mapplethrope
Foundation Is dedicated toes tabllshlng Improving, or expanding
museums that exhibit photographtcs art, as well as funding
efforts against AIDS.

........... Ofllw
117 L S.C. P1
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H 'lOT, OliO
11V98/tfa

·.60
·~·

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•

Caret ot Thanks ~

H11ppy Adl

In Memoriam

Yard Sales

4'46 - !J•IIipoli•

elluifi@d •ct¥ertiSP.ment pllu::ert In The Deity Sentinel I•• ·

SUNDAYS

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Both

GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOIS

CO UNitY
MOBIU · •

t !0 cfli COI,Irtl !tU Rd.S r'•id if'!

Elected treasurer

Benjamin J.

tnr e•r:"' diW ••

Au.••m

IEN'S·APPUUICE

Rat ...,e fo• conwcutive tuns, b•o•en upd~~rsWittbed.•old

Me i Qs. Gi!Jtlia nr Muon coumi.,&amp; mulf be pte·

I
1 thought he was one of the
most Important photographers
MARCH AIR FJ&gt;RCE . BASE, a retirement community about 6 him as a sergeant while LeMay
Uncomfortable In the role . 01
working at the lime. I realized
Calif. (UP I) - Gen. Curtis miles from the Southern Ca!lfor- commanded tbe 20th Air Force In
•
politician,
he
would
not
or
could
that
he was Ill With a disease that
LeMay, the blunt· spoken war- . nla air base. .
World War II.
not abandon his candid style of
would be fatal and felt II was my
hawk who helped smash GerThe ctgar-thomplng LeMay, a
The gruff, stocky Lemay was a . speaking his mind. · He comresponstblltty as curator to work
miJDY. and Japan, then com- four,star general who ran SAC · colOnel In the 395th Bomber
plaiDed
of
a
national
"phobia"
wtth him while he was altvf• "the
m~ded i\mertca's airborne when Its nuclear-armed bombers Division In ~nglaDct In the early
about nuclear bombs and said
cu~ator said.
.
nuclear deterrent at the height of were aloft around the clock In the days of the .aerial war against
they were ''just another weapon
the Cold War, Is dead at s:i.
· I felt he was among the
1950s and eo&amp;, was regarded as a · Germany, when he acquired
LeMay, a lepadary 110Jdler Iuper llawll aD4 W¥ ~ of l~, blanpu,_tkm for cold 1:9uraee, In the araenal." He wascrltlcl2led
lmportant of the portrait photofor ..,~Iilli that If peace talks
who ran lor vtce president with
graphers, of the sun photoAller years of dis tlngwshed and absolute dedication to mtlfailed, North VIetnam be bombed
George Wallace tn 1968, died rniUtary service that Included ttilry resulta.
graphers, Of the ftgul'e photo- ,
''back Into the Stone Age."
Monday of heart failure at the bombing raids against Germany
graphers
and the mostlmportant
LeMay decided that his B-17
He said he could understand
22nd Strategic Hospital near the and Japan and Air Force com- Flying Fortresses . could wreak
one working In the 1980s,"
conditions under . which the
rettrement home for Air Force maud of the Berlin Airlift, more havoc on German cities It
Kardon said. ,
atcimlc
bomb could be ~ In
.officers where he had spent his LeMay signed on as the vice , they flew straight through antiThe museum and tts director.
Vietoam.
declining years.
Dennis
Barrie • are being tried In
presidential running mate of aircraft fire rather than flying
'1f you're tn a poker game with Hamilton County Common Pleas
Regarded as the father of the George Wallace In their unsuc- the zigzag pattern previously
a bunch of card sharps and you Court on charges of obscenity
sirategic Air Command, the cessful third party bid. Iron!- considered necessary to niln!mtell them Y.Ou never bluff and you· and child por~ography for show·
airborne arm of America's three- cally, LeMay was In the position 1ze losses.
never
draw to an Inside straight, lng seven pictures among 175
pronged nuclear deterrent, Le- · of taking orders from a man CharacteriStically, LeMay ~
r guarantee yo)!. you're not going exhibited by the Contemporary
May had ltved for a number of Wallace- who had serwd under known to his troops as "Old Iron
Ill do very well In that poker Arts Center last spring, drawing
years at Air Force VIllage West,
Pants" . - ·pOoled the lead · game," he said.
record crowds. · Five . of the
bomber In the first test of his
LeMay bridled at aCCUSlltiOns pictures tn question show homo'
theory, whjcb was generally
sexual acts and two. show c hlld·
he was what one polttlca~ oppoadopted by Army Air Corps units
nent called "the big ·bomber ren's genitals.
In Europe.
Before Kardon's lestlmony,
general, with a thUnderbolt In
Robin Willie, son of Robert and
LeMay was transferred to the : one hand and a nuclear warhead the prose,cutlon rested Its case
Saddam Hussein ·billboard overhead hi a helicopter, he'll Pac1!1c Theater after theflght!Jig
Dove White, Coolville, has been
after calling a pollee vice squad
In the other." .
gre)lts MlcbiJan mototlsll
· drop ballocins filled with re&lt;!.
elected treasurer of the fresh·
ended In Europe and played a
He called the accusation a ofttcer who vls!ted1he exhibition mal) class at Ohio Valley College.
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (UP·I) white and blue paint on the
major role In the devastating · scare tactic and said, ' 'The real
to determine whether the
-Motorists along I-196 just west picture. He then plans tore-post
· White Is a business and man· ·
B-29 raids against Japaa, Includcharges
should be brought.
war mongers are those who
of Grand Rapids have been the besmirched billboard for all
agement
major and plans to
Ing the atllmlc bombing missions
The state had demanded that graduate In 1992. ae is a member
would needlessly prolong the
·
confronted with a starttlng sight to see.
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki that
Vlelnam War." ·
the seven questionable photolately: a hugebtllboarddeplct!ng
Heckman, · a former matheof the stage band.
ended the war.
graphs
be withdrawn from the
LeMay
was
born
Nov.15,1906,
Iraqi President Saddam matics major and amateur
· Ohio Valley College Is a twoMter the war, he became·u.s.
In Colwnbus, Ohio. He received exhibit. Kardon maintained that year Institution offering assoHussein.
wrestler, said his favorite meAir Force commander In Europe
they must be Included so that ciate degrees In ltberal ·arts,
an eliglneerlng degree.trom Ohio
On either side of Saddam's dium t.s the billboard. "With
and In that capacity was an
.viewers
could get a feeling for the
and
won
his
State
University
familiar face are the words biUboards you can speak to the
secretarial sctenc~. a!ld science
architect of the 1948-49 Berlin ,, wings In 1932 when he signed up
enUre
exhibit.
"Crude Dude." And just to make masses," he said. "Mt!Uons of
as well as the bachelor of arts and
Alr!Ht.
Muntctpal Judge David Alba· bachelor of science In Bible.
as a cadet tn the Army Air Corps.
sure the·pun Is clear, thtck, black people get to see what I do. And
Shortly thereafter, be became
nese has ruled that the jury of
In later years, LeMay lived
ltquid that looks like oil seems to that appeals to me."
The college Is iully accredited
commander of SAC, which went
four
men and four women must by North Central Association of . 'I
quietly In a retirement commundrip from the word "Crude."
Without IM aid of a single from 600 bombers at 18 bases to
decide the case on the basis ol. the Colleges and SChools.
Ity In Newport Beacb, Calif.,
· The billboard Is the latest work government grant, he has
3,000 B.S2s and smaller planes
where be said be was "as retired
of Mark Heckman, a 27-year·old create!f 17 billboard posters In carrying hydrogen bombs from
II$ I can be" although he was still
Grand Rapids artist.
the past eight years; One of his
called upon for consultlni jobs
Later this week, with television favorites featured 2,001 painted l!O bases worldwide. He became
and traveled occasionally.
crews tn tow, Heckman will have condoms glued to a b1Uboad also Air Force chief of staff In 1961,
remaining
In
.that
JOb
until
be
In h1s book, "Mission With
the Saddam poster removed and bel\rtng the word "AIDS."
retired Feb. 1; 1965.
LeMay,"
be said he bad "blood
latq on the ground. Then, flying
LeMay went to work for
on my hands ... not because I
Networks Electronics Corp: of
preferred to bathe In blood. · It
Chatsworth, CaiH., as a highly
was becauae I....was part of a
·paid consultant. He was fired as
primitive world where men still
chairman of the hoard In 1968,
had to kiU In order to avoid being
a~ decided to run with Wallace
killed, or In order to avoid having
Sandy King was TOPS best
Nancy ,Whlttektnd led ' tbe on the American Independent
their lewd nation stricken and
loser of the week when TOPS OH TOPS prayer with the Pledge of Party ticket.
emasculated."
'
1383 members met on Sept. 24 at Allegiance being led by Cathe·
Cheshire Baptist Church. Mamte rlne Little. Edith Gardner led the
StephensonwasKOPSbestloser. TOPS pledge. KOPS pledge was
II
. Edith Gardner, welgh·t re- led by Janet Thomas.
·
$ Order, announced that Nancy
God Will Not Be Outdone was
Whltteklnd was , TOPS Sepread by Helen Trout. A nutrition
tember best loser, with Helen
quiz prepared by Barbara
,,
.
Enjoy rhe flexibility and liqNidity of. a CD
Trout as KOPS September best
Colmer . was won by Janet
loser.
·
·
Thomas.
which is automatically renewable and redeemable
Barbara Colmer led the ToPS
Catherine Ut.tle w!UI '· a winner
at each 7 day anniversary,
Trained in Childbirth and Women'• Di~e&amp;~ee
in the uang Jn •ue•e \.~JLc.,~.
prayer when members met on
Members receive a charm · and
Sfpt. iO. Mamie Stephenson led
Medical aDd
The 7"Day-Premium CD
certificate lor losing welgl!t ' or 'f6e Pledge of Allegiance. TOPS
is
another exal,l1ple of our .
staying the same six weeks tn a
pledge was led by Christy RamsCommiunem To Cusromers.
row.
burg. Belinda Dean led the KOPS
'}'or
Annabelle S!uon led the TOPS
pledge,
.
prayer With Christy Ramsburg
Helen·Trout read a verse titled
Call or visit your nearest
the Pledge of Allegiance. Nancy
Quality. Vi1'gtnta Voight waa
Central .Trust office for· details roday.
Whtttekind 1~ the TOJi'S pledge .TOPS best l01er of ·the week.
w!lh the KOPS pledge being led
Gueata were Rebecca Cornelius
and Leab Wbltteklnd.
by Belinda Dean. Judie Reese,
.
Cheshire, was welcomf!d aa a ·
A funny money auction was
~uimum drpnsir 199.999.99. Subsranrial penally fur ~111rl)· wirhdraw:.l
. t I'Oid to prladpal utlco,....I..Od - Y· Rotei etr&lt;dhrtp Sopt, zi 111!10
· new member.
held following the meeting wtth
lind Rlbt«f to chan~ without nOficeo. Y~d auumes lh• smrd race rtmains ·
. Following the meeting,
Helen Trout as auctiDJieer.
constant (or 11 fu If year wirh no withdrawals of inrtrest or prinripol.
.
members toured tbe Fenton Art
A chapter exe4lttve meeting
Class Company, Williamstown,
'was also beld.
•
IA~
.
.
1175 ·'
W.Va.
Anyone wishing lntorm.atton on
I
· The !lank TIUu .'lfake• Thlnll• Happen.
september 17 TOPS best lOser
TOPS may call Janet Thomas at
.,\
992·8661
448-0102
.was Odella Mack. Janet Thomas
367-o274· or Helen Trout at 367· .
was KOPS best loser. ·
7233.
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _11111!1_ _ _ _ _ _. .
Middleport
GalllpOul
Mlmb,; FDIC

as

Words
15
" 15
15
15
15

6
10
Mon1hlv

y

·Curator knew exhibit
might offend some

Air Force general, ca~didate LeMay dies ·

Days
,
3

RACINE

lriaglt .. ~ ••.
- Pldr lp.

RATES

· TO PlACf AN AD CAll 992·21 56
MON,IiAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

•ciOWiYI .

ova IEPAII

• The Area's Numbtr . 1 Marketplac~

qualified tn . tbe month of Sepcat~tared first place honors tn .tember. This ts especially noteclass C compettllon at the 1990 · worthy as one third of tile band Is
Canal Winchester Band Contest. seventh graders.
The Eastern percussion section · Remaining contest performan.,
also won first place. 'l'be band ces for Eastern are .the Athens
•
was rated superior by four of the lpvitatlonal Marching Festival · ·:
six judges for Its perlormance.
on Saturday at the Ohio Unlver·
f
Entering Its second con~ t of .stty Stadium. · The band will
~
the season, Eastern also qualt- compete all! a.m. Thtsls the last
;
fted for the state marching finals lOCal competition of 1990. The
to be held tn Cooper Stadium In band will also travel to ChUB·
Columbus on Nov. 3. This js tlie cothe that day, and to Newark on
first lime . that Eastern has Oct. 20.

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Robert
Mapplethorpe was an Important
portrait and still life photograpber, a curator testified, and
whtle his work might offend some
people it ,was appropriate for
Clnclnnalt s Contemporary Arts
Center.
. The museum's curator, Janet
Kardon, who worked with Map·
plet!torpe before hedtedlastyear
of AIDS, testified Monday at the
obscenity trial of the art gallery
and Its director saying she felt a
responstb1Uty to work with the

. .

..

-·~

The Daily Sentinei-

,Bu-8lness Services

Classifle

The Eastern Marching Band

man said In a statement. "Now,
In an act of moral cowardice that
extends that reprehensll;lle pat·
ter; It relies upon Hitler's MelD
Hampt on the day of Yom
Kippur. Appalling bigotry of this
lclnd has no place at the college or
In thiS country."
·The Review, which has the
backln( of WIIIJam F. Buckley
and otber well-known co~~~erva­
tlves, •• published by Da~tmouth
students but baa no direct affllla·
tton with the coli~
,
The newspaper and Its S'tatters
have been lnvolvec:J In a number
ol. controverst8! Incidents, In·
chiding attacks In print on a
black professor of music and an
assault with sledge hammers on
shanties built on tbe college
green to proteat apartheid.

-

Pomaov-Middlaport. Ohio

Eastern·· Band·wins .·title ·.

·Dartmouth .blames prankster for·Hitler quote
HANOVER, N.H. (UP!) -The
fighting for the Lord's work,"
editors of the Dartmouth Reappeared In the middle of a quote
view, a controversial off-campus
from Theodore Roosevelt, which
weekly •. sax an unknown pranks·
the paper calls Its "credo."
ter was responsible for sltpp!ng a
Dartmouth Review editors disquote from Adolf Hitler Into· an
avowed
the Hiller quote and
Issue released dutlng an lmpor·
offered
"heartfelt
apologies to
tant Jewish holiday.
Jews
·
at
DartmoQth
and to .the
The antl·sem!llc quote, from
Hitler's book "Metn Kampf," Dartmouth community at
was ·carried on the paper's . large." They also pledged to find
out who Is respoJistble for putting
masthead.
It In the paper.
It prompted an outcry from
''This cancer amongst our
students, who have scheduled an
anti· Review rally for Thursday, rlinks will be sougbt out Bnd
thoroughly punished," they said
tmd college officials. Dartmouth
In an open letter to the campus.
President James 0. Freedman
, Monday attacked-the paper for • 'When the person who did this Is
. found, let us au berate him
.. showing "appautng bigotry."
together -let us notflghtagalnst
The quote, "Therefore I beeach
other."
lieve today thati am acting In the
·The letter also pleaded with the
sense ofthea!mlghtyCreator: by
Dartmouth community to prewarding · off the Jews I am

l

Saucers birtb

thence in • Southeaaterty

dlroctlon to 1 point. 181.00
Df Sbitlon 102 pluo

CALL 614-992·7)04 FOR APPT.

thence in a SDifth, wtwly
dioctlou ID the,._ of B•
ginning. contoining 222.133
-.uare feet. more or I•L
. Thlo dotcrlption Ia biHil
THIS l"xl"
on 1 aurvey 11111de under the
dlroctlon ond .,porvloton of
BULLETIN BOARD
fronktin D. Bloir, Regitmred
Surveyor No. 8178.
SPACE AVAILABLE
Sold ltotlono botng tho
St.tion num.,_, 11 lltipuAT 15.00 PER DAY
leted In the heroinblfo,.
mentioned 8urvey and 11
shown by plan,a on file in the
Doport&lt;Mnl of Tronop-Publlc Notice
Pu
· bll" Nollce
cotumbus, Ohio.
---:----:-"":"7-:-"
I
~~:;; ctolm title by In; Ohio liovioed Code Section . "ou"'b"'oc"'n:::be=d...,i;,.n-=m=v~pr=eoon=c=• I~
tn Vol
2703.14: 183.07;
thls14thdlyofSop1emblr. :~~~~"o::".:"'"lo 138. of
Civil Rule 4.4 1990.
of Molgs
1• 2703, 24 end(A)
·
Richord A. Szilogyl,
(Unknown Htirs·of

Attorney-At-Law

Dovl-•l
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Bemord B. Hurot
Dlrectqr of Trantportetlon
Stole of Ohio
Plaintiff

Devf••••·

I

un:;,wn Helro, Dovl-•.
Executoro, Adminlsvotoro
of AIII!Dnt of the Eatote of
Irene Jome1• Decouod, et
Iel.
.1
Dofondonto
.
Coot No. 90 CV-219
AFFIDAVIT,
•
1
STATE OF OHIO
1COUNTY OF MEIQS oa
. PETER JOHN
PAPA·
OlMOS. being firOI duly
owom, dopoooo end sayo
!hot he 11 1 duly oppolnled.
quolfied ond octlng Aulll·
ant Attorney Qonorot of lhot
Stoltt of Ohio; thot tho
Plaintiff. · Bornord B. HurOI.
Director , of. Tronoportotion,
. State of Ohio. - s by his
Peililon, to app10priote tho
proporty described lhe~ln
and to fix the valuotheroaf;
&lt;thot k
the Un·
I ~~~: AdminlltrltOrl,Ext·
or
of: lront'Jamu. do·
eril AIC81Ary perprocooclng end II

f.

_ , . !hOI -

1nd P - of Nilunknown to
C8nnot with , .
be OICir·

.Peter
.
.
Jdhn Papodlf!IO.O,

\"::=~ Anornor Qlnoral

I

to before me and

Notary Public State of
Ohio
My commlolion hoa no
IJq&gt;irotlon dote
Secilion 147.03 R.C.
Unknown t1Ht.
EIIICUIOrt. Admlnlnalnltoro
or Aaolgn1 of the E-o of
treno Jomeo. Dec.uc!. w11
take nOtice .,., they hove
Mled
tho DINclor of
Tronaportotion of tho Stotoof
Ohio, who hla' in1111tuted a
proceeding in the Common
PI- C&lt;iun of Molgo County,
Ohio: ID opproprllte - n
· P"'I*'IV d crlbod hoowfl&amp;t
for highwty pu- namoly the iNking, canolrUc·
tion ofimpi'OVOimont of: Stale
'Route 33/124.
Slction
12.88122.79,
Molgo
County, Ohio and 10 fix ll!o
votue of wid PIDPirlt· The
PIGPII'IY aought 10 be approp - II man -lftcolly d•
ICribed os followt:
DESCRIPTION OF THE,
PARCEL OF lAND AND
ESTATE. INTEREST OR
' RtQHT THEREIN
APPRORPIATED
Sltuoled In the Townlhlp
of Sotlobury,
County of

by

Meiga end State of Ohio.

and known u btolng 1 port of
Section 8, town 2 North,
Ronge 13 Welt, ond more
fully bounded end described
•• follow1:

PARCEL NO. 22-T
(TEMPORARY)
TEMPORARY EASEMENT
FOR CONSTRUCTION
· PURPOSES
Beginning at o point In the
Eutooty uilltlng right of
WIY lne of Now Stroot, tho
o-1: South-It pro·
perty
corner
end the

Southwell corner

lc•l-

cuioted camor) of Lot 22 In
V. B,' Honon Addition to the
Vlllogo of Poineray as ...
co.- In Plot Book 13, Poge
448 In the Reccirds of Meigs

=}~~~L==
1Station
~~OIIntv. 144.22
'"'1e11
of
102 pluo
18.28
In

t

In

loving

memory
of
·

LEONA B. WISE
Feb. 20. 1903· ·
Oct. 2. 19811 ,
Two yNra ago you left
1111

.

Ute h•• nevor been the
teme;
II Nil¥81 • •dey

fnlm the Dll-llnt of 1 our·
vay made In, 1810 by tho
Ohio D-nment of Tron·
aponallon of ·ltlte Route
124 In the Vllor. of Po· ·
1 ;;;:~ lotiobury ownohlp,
I''
8 "'Molgo County, ,
thenCII Jn • Northwllt•ly

direction olong tho Eaotorly
exiOI""' 'r!Qht' of woy lin.o of
New · ltreet. the Ownera'

.,

1

periOna noted above

meet 'y ou

·

.

--Ln., .......

291411; Robtort A. Jolley, Jr:

111
S.C. 28815: Daradl¥ P.
Ra.,...r

a

T N - Undor Wll of~~­
C. ' - - 1 Aa:il ........ Rd.•

...,:a...

Glwc .... s.c.
_ . _ ..... 201Cit

··----...
Rd.. Otwzulll. I.e.

ii'iOi

ofi.H.,_,Jr.,-MO..,_
_
....... afllllgar
, _ , 3111 Rd.;
8. c. 211011: 'lila
F• 1. .11 Lilt •n •• looloty of the u. •- ,.,. ......
Aw.. H.- Y..._ N. y , 100111;

Go=•....

STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMENT
AND
CIRCUlATION
1. Tltlo of Publlootlon', T1!o
Dolly Santini!. Public:Oiion
No. 1411-HO.
2. Dolo of Fltlng: Oc:a&gt;bo&lt; 2.
1990.
3. Fnq-cy of 1•-:
Doll'( MOndor thnluah Frldly.
A. No. of Publlohod
Annually: 2&amp;5
B. · Annuol SubiiCI'iption
Price' 172.10 Home Dlliv·
ered.
.4. Locoilon ofKno- Olftc:o

of Pubtiatliolt: 111 Coun St.
Po\1-f, Ohio, Moigo County
411789.
5. LocOIIon of the - .
~

... a..- .......

Olflceo of tho Pubtiohen: 111
Ccut St.. ?oo•ov. Ohio.
Mllgo Caunty 45711.
I.·P u - R - L. - ·
gift. Sytacu-. Ohio 411779.
ElltDr: C1w11ne llo..,...
Poo..ov. Ohio 48719.
·Ohk&gt; Vlllor PuiS '•011 Co.,
111 CIMt St. """-·
Ohk&gt;. Muftlmtdil Inc. 301 S.
Moln St., P. 0. lOx 118!1,

O•••*· s.

c. 29102. ·

owning
_7.o81oddlakter1
r_of_
_ _1

eo.. c/a
r· TIUI Co., P.

oubrll: w:Mng: Cede a

The Da;a

o.

It
Boa 20....

:3a..,

..... N.Y.. N.Y.,4:PIIIIIp J. Donolluo, TN- U/A
ql o Ph RIP llootbwg &amp; Co ..
Sulto 800 210 8. Waor
DIM, Chftlogo, tU. ~
Merion L HwN. . P. 0. 8110
1405 a...~ s. c.

- ·~

8edly mlaed by

hullbtlnd, Caall W._;
dluahler. ll011....
eon, 'Phil; dllughter.
In-lew, Shirley;
' grandeon. Datt, 1nd
.U the granclohllthn

•••idu•

C.IIIW

riANKs·

CONSTRUCnON
992·6009 .

lt-11110.

CAIN'S

Howard l, Wrltesll

ROOFING

·of Mllil•'"'

NEW.....; REPAIR

.UPHOLSTERY
Hand Tuftln,g
Custom Drapes
36 Y eon Ex perle nee ·

614-992-2321
We Sey What We Do.
We Do What We Say.
f.&amp;. I ...

.__ _,.._.,

hlllin---

-of1_.rof-lft.
d t ·~·- Tho
Mtn-

a-

CoJ. C..o •UtaIt Gononl Uta trio., Tho Eq h I h Ufe
- . , , . Soctlol¥ofthoU.
s.. toll uta . . - Co..
John H - - u t a •

- e o .. ..........,_
uta i'tc .,. Co..
Mu;as a. ••wl'Nil CD. of

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

OFRIS J LOCAtiONS 10 SIIYE YOU-•. .
POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. liO &amp; S.A. 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 a .m .-7 p.m. 7 O.ys
ALBANY: 10 a.m.,.li p.m. a Dayo, CIOIId S~nday
PAYING AS OF TODAY, SEPT. 11, 1990
.
#1 Copper '1 par lb.;
Cl.., Dry Ah1minum Cena, 45C per lb.
· a.n AulD A..._ 44e lb.; 111111111111'1.2&amp; • ·
Yen40C lb.

N.Y.,-YOIIIUfe.......
Co..l'heNu:••
1 ...........

uta ...._ 00., Tho ......
-na..T..,._,
- C••
o . ofua
Am-

-'*··

419.

.•

•

0.-.,__by_
C. Totltl Pold

a..-:

.

. . . ea.=-·· Conlor or ONr ......._ S....
~F-

E. Totli
11.090.

' 41 . ·
Dloltlbuliotl:

F. Coplol Nat Dinrllul.t:

1. Ofllce u. a..lt ·o -.
u.._.nted. Spoiled AfMr
Printing: 208.
.
tt....rno from 1i1ewa
A-'":202.

-z.

a. Total: !1,100.

Actull No. Coploa of Single 1 - Publ- Ne-lt
1D Fltng Date:
.
10. t " - lild Noture of
Cln:u-.
A .• Total
No. CopiH
Printed: 11.100.
a. Peld Circulation.
1. ..... 1'hrouglll Dnh I
ondC.rrlora.s-Yonclont .
-Cau--4.118.
2. Mel Subocriptlontt:
413.
C.TotliPoldCin:u-:
4.H9.
D. F - D - n Sy
Clfrior or~ M-o.
.........
CatrQILc••IWr
Md ~ F- Coplol: 31.
·e. Totli Dlllrlbinlon:
11.001.
F. Coploe Not Dlltrlluted:
u. a..lt o-.
u._unted. Spoiled AfMr
Printing: Zll.
2. .A'eturna fnlm lilewa
Agonto: ZZ4.

--by-I Corttly tllot the -

areCOiuectMdaot .
.

Robert • .

lt.

Banks

.conitriction
992·5009

a~Helmet·
Gutter
NEVEl CION YOUR
GutTEIS AGAIN
· GUARANTEED!
FREE ESTIMATES

Commercial
RIHidential
•Roofing
. •Siding
•Windows
hli't It Wcwtli Daiog fiPt

BANkS
CO.NSTRUCnON

...

t0-11110.

FIT and TIIM
OCTOBER

SPECIAl
10 VISm $2900

......,

APPOIIIIMENT
-.
ClU

992-3033

•ssELL &amp; lUilE
cumucnoN
. . . . . . .til

•Gatain
ecempllte
. . .. ... d.....

s..,ac..,..n
Fret Estltllat11

915·4473
667-6179

GUN SHOOT
UCINE
FilE DEPT.

.............
EVRY

Pubtlllow

SlY. NIGHT
.6:30P.M.
hclolrf

' 11

&amp;-.

Oiob

. o.ty

Strittly

WANTID
I.OW UA. OAI

s.. . . . , ...

I••••

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

Sp11:r:orTI'IIde
BUy,

a-

REE ESTIMATES

Phone Book~ Is Friday, October
5th. Anyone needing additions,

deletions, cttanges, or wishing
to advertise should call betweara
9-5 we&amp;kdays at 1-BC0-556-893~

or mall Information to : Cham-

pion Dlr•ctariea Inc: P.O. Box ·
22, NoiWalk, OH 44857.

4

Giveaway

2 beautiful white long halrld 8
wks old kittens, fema le and '

male, liner trained, 304·882·2n7
·
2 part Chow puppies, mala and
female, 304··m -SS3B.
•.

or882-m4.

949-2168
1·7·'90-1 mo..

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMO~AL

AussleJBiue Healer mix , 7 mos.

old. Female. To good home. 614-

25e-6554.
Oarlln,g lltlle black &amp; white pup.
pl11. To good homes. Parents:

both vary small dogs. 814-446-

·uGHT HAULING

•fiREWOOD

7538.
Or))haned 4 WMk old long

tOng

haired baby kittens , 304-882· ~

BILL SLACK

2066.

992-226~
USED RAILROAD TIS
ll-12· 90tfn

6

Lost &amp; Found

7

Yard Sale

SHOOTING
MATCH ,
Every Sunday
Starting at 11 :00 A.M.

Between

Gallipolis

Wilkesville and
Salem Center

&amp; VIcinity

USED APPUANCES
90 liT WIDIIIIT

~~~~~~~~~;1: up
KEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVI(E
or 1115-3$61
• ..... ,,.. hit OHica

992-533~

91:!11'!111 ••.

(1012

Business
Services

_ Painting

RACCOON
SPORTSMAN

SER~ICE .

We can r~r cind rl·
1111'1 rntltaton · anti
healer cons. We can
aka. acid bail and rod
oul'rntliators. Wa also
repair

Gas r.-.,

PIT' HIU FOlD
992-2198
Middleport;

1. -

Q. Total: 8,100.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gu.t ter Cleaning

The deadline lor chanqes to be
m1de In ttll · 1991 Otuo Valle)!

7 very affectionate • kittens, •
about 6 wks. old. 614-44&amp;.3383.

-nol

N-Yorll, N.Y. t003S. Tho
South Caroline
- · o a T - or CoTN-. 1421 Main 81..
Calumblo. S.l;. ZBZZI.

1\De.- friend .·

110..al SMOOYIIG

I

.

IMPORTANT NOTICE

M""IP'*"·

There In HNven ,by
Ood'a throne;
un1ll then we'll
arlah your mar~oiir I

_..__

. . .IGAre

SandiHAa 'tw.S..II•
C.pltal
1114.
Avenue of 1hll Amer' •·

11.048.

•

R•lda •till ..,d
Cornmen:illl

Alfred F. Bl I I ..........

-end8 .eautta
s - 4.1130.
c.n...
Moll Bolo lpllona:
Public Notice ·

COMPlrn
EIIC111Cll SEIVKE

A.F. lusa s

aholt lu- toko notlcethol
unle11 they, or their IIIOf·
ney, file on ·An•- no la10&lt; Amulty ....,_ ofAtt•lcto Tho
thon 28 doya otter the com- y,... ............. Ca.. The
pletlon af lhot SeNice of Puuta tno: Co. of N. Y.,
bllcation, they
wtll 1 h
-~uta·dlemod IO hot,. wllvecllholr - - Co. .
.
A - No. Coplol EICII
right lo " " - · tnd the f'e. ·
titian wHI bl token •• INt ..... During PI u•ne 12
Montho:
and judgment
wll btl
11;1. e - - - o f ( ; W .
rendered occordingly; Civl
011' I.
Rute 121A)(1).
·
A. Totltl No. Copiw.P,!tntcl:
BERNARD B. HURST
~
Director of Tr1naport1tion 1.100.
a. Pilei~
110)2; I, 18. 23, 30; (1.1! ,
8, lite
'
1 . - ......... -

ooee by

we don't mention
your name.
l.l ltlml dey we plan to

45631.

PUblic Nollce

SAW ·LOGS
S150 nu"'

1
. . . . . 10,.

OHIO PA'IQ
COIIPUY

..

RACCOON VALLEY

SPORTSMAN CLUB

GAME ROOM
NOW OPEN ~
. Wed. thru Sat,

Garaga Sale: 636 Linwood Or.,

HRS.: Wed.-Thurs..Fri.

Garaga Sale": Chlldrens clottlas,

;oo

S p.m.- 11:00 (l&gt;m.
Sat. 12 Noon-11 p.m. ·

lttwun Wilkenille
· and Salem urner

SPRING
SPA
Your

3q!i Day· A-Year
'

Rerrea r.

"'l\

I.,L RDUON.
YIICIING &gt;'
•GRAVEL
• •LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT .

•ANYTHIN~
ATALJt

915-4422

Garag~~

Sale:

Rt.160,

Old

Evargrean Rd. Crafts, avon, wi,n-

ltems:, Tacke!

Reslchnca.

29Ht thru Frl Oct 5tt't
Last Sale thla year. Green Tar·

race In Centenary. Oct 3. Baby

clothes, coats, new lte~s .

Qct. 1, 2 3. 10-4. ! miles South

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY

· CIISIII, 0110, .

new lupperware, dishes, soma
tuml~r•. Mon-Fri. 10-4. 4 112
mll.s east ol Porter on 554,

Household Sale: 3 32 Solar
Drive, Plantz Subdivision, Sat

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GAIAGU

.... 949-2101
or Its. 949·2160

Rio Grande, Oct-.· 3, 10-4. AduH,
children clottllng, coats, toys,
misc.

Oct. 4th, 5th.

, BISSEU-·
BUILDERS

"At •••-•1• Prius"

Bumelta Rd. Kanauga, OH
Monday, Tuesday, Wed. Yout!-1
biKI, chalrt, table~ , car seat,
gun1 , mlsc. ~10-5 .

America's Favmite
Porrable Spa

BAUML
LUMBER
CHESTER
985-3301

•

on 218, Ceramics ready lo paint,•. ,
car seat, slrollar.
.
. October 2nd thru 6tla, Route "" Cheshire, nice ciothfng, ct;eap ·',.
prices, .05 cents to $1.00.

�'

.

I
.

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

1990
B~The

Page

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy
a.: eotor.l .....

Yllrd

LAI-1 -A- UA I ,
I

Television
Viewing

p
.
I
onaov-Micklaport. Ohio

Daily Seudllel

51

44

···,

m

HOUHhokl

'N' CARLYLE~ 1tJ

71

Autos tor Sale

Goods

e

-- . •. .- ~ fomliy
COJio. COJ,
tmgood
1ow
~'i:i."'"'ythlng
!'"• 114-

•• .

erda.
......,.
tto.•ahold ..,._ ttl 811te It

lou11eat,

:10.

~SM . . tOo.ol.•lJI.m. 114--46

'

RHri'Gnlie "!ettoro
0 four
ociGmblad -

M

TUES.. OCT. 2

...

~~::.' SCCi-4llA-4~~s·
lolltocl 1tr ClAY I. POU.AII
of the
d• · be-

low "' form laur ol"'plo -'do~

I L BES .TOU

EVENING

} WOREI411

I
I' I .I' I

"Your sisle""r•h_as,..made the
Deans's list at college," he
. _ _ _ . _~ • mom told her son. •Wow," he
;:::~~=~~~.:, grinned, "how did she get into.
C H E 0 Ky
so much ------?"

. hs~l;,_,;;.l,;,;,.l;.;-.;l--1~
1:05 (I) lew'•lf "'±liM' a.
1:30
0 N8C ,....., ,....

111•

(Ji .AIIbott l1lld COlli II

. 'ft11111 "'·~..:Q
a • Clll ..'l. Q

IN THESE SQUARES

. , UN SCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSW ER .

1:31 (J) Ani!J Gltflllll
•

&amp; VIcinity
: t t.mi~Hie: Octoa.r 24. 417
I s,
41
llldcleport. TOfO,
1 chflchn
clotllill!l,
!MilO,

, ..._.,.

rrrr.

i 3 family yon! Olio I :G0-4:00, Oc1 toblr 2, 3. Wom.•, men.. a

' chlldreM cloth., ockll; I. Mda,
' tumltura.:ttm Diad Man•
, ': Curve_ PonMof.
: us o.n.r.t Hllllnger Parkway,
' llldldlopOriJ u. ~
, ~.
b .. . pn1dl, curtalrw,
l HOme Interior, d.,_, mJK. .
l 8 tomliy Yllrd llll. Clllldron'o
I clothing ond haono lnlwlcwo ot
1

-

.1 -..37-41501. A
vot!Otr II lundlll!l - · ' ~
PIJ ""lnllnlng wo ntlloblo ""
lholl ollglblo.
Looking-~~ - o . 114448~1103. a
35&amp;.

Connlll TuciiiM''a. Racine. Qc..

: tober 4-ICh.
.': 810
-·
Oct. s-h
1-1. SICOt)d
Clothing,-bedding,
, 11....,.,
dryoro,
curtolno,
, 1~ clletill, fumh~n, ·~

: ;~='"'"=~~==~NOm~~~~~~-­

' Cor-' lllt. Oct.

2-3, Tuoo.,
· Wtcl. 335211 SR33, Pamoray.

' lap. - . women'• clothea.
• boOM, new vtnitr mirror,

: ceblnlil, mllc. ll....: 1-?
' Flrot inobl...,_ on loft bthlnd
' Molgo lolrgrouncl. October 5, a.
,.Top.
clol:tt., many
lema.
·
·

c-..

~

Firlt tlm11 Nil, Octabw 1,2,3.
,_n•o cloj~lng
~·~10112. · p~arna, fumhura.. 10.'1.
I a-i&gt;n tlgnto ol ~"'i C...k,
~ntiQuoo,

~ ~.

Aullarid.

IM.,..2~

CIOihta. 380 Grant Str.,..,
, MJddlopoit, Ott. 814/112.st111.
'Oct- ~. r.,., 11n1o ~~oys
clot'-,
- 1 In oubdiVI" Qt)od

nlco

sJon beNnd St. Ptul'a Church
bulklln9 In
Pltlno.

Tu- '

01-lcinol olgno will bt up.

11

Contor

=.

s,_-.

MONEY
IYJIIII!I,
lng, ·- r • putln~At-. Fun cw pt. tlmo.
m,
. - Et. 8-10181.
poc•ntlol. (t)
EARN

-pr•

-· -

~

oil ..m~ mile. HouM n1xt to
Molgo • Golllollno.

Ylrd Solo. befon
Srro•·- pool. In rlnl.
.... , nlct !lingo. lD-? Ocl1-2·3-4-5. Roln Conctll. lt4-fll2·

15155.

Yard 1alo. Oct. 1~. 31043 RociiIIJIIIngo Rood, PoooiWOJ. Juot
-Cloehl~- Mloc.

·

Fumlon,
.

Yard olio, October 1~. 210

SoUth

Fouiltl

8

PubliC Sale
&amp; Auction

dlopolt.

AVtn!le

Mid-

.,c.Jot -::

t.•.n

Employment Services

Schools&amp;
Instruction

Boo kkoo fl ngloccou nt hi'g,

man~g~m~nt,

, HOiellmcM:t

18 wanted to Do
Elcparfoncocl

ohHI

-11

worlisr, bul can .do moat llf'IY•
lhlng, - · Box C-t, % Pt. Pit.
Roglatw, 200 lllln Sl, Point

Pi-m.

11

. Help Wanted

''";Mr'· ._. ..,.,
W.• v• 304-8Go
.
AVON • All

AVON I All Allll I
Spol... 30WIS-142f.

titer

B1bptttw In mr for 2 childron. 111111 ho"

-----Rock

, ,.._...ion..~

GfOUP- F'or , , _

COl Jomlt
:104.ea:I-2MI "' Chilo -Tr.l-

-. -~oniy.

Cant-po F - Porty Pion
Co. , _ tiring lull and poll
~~-~2.

Fumlturo roflnlthlll!l and ropolr,
=~~.·nd lrH t o l l - .

o.t JOU':' chain NW ... , . c for
llrelliood • - . - . Equl-nt Co., Hondwoon, WV.
304o4171-'1112t.

Mogle y_. Day Cort Ctnttt
rooionobio,
citpondoblo,
llooiiH, q!!!illr child owo. Mon&lt;llr thnl Fnclilr, 7:30 t11 s:so.
For ...,.. lniOnnotlon , "' to
........ 304o411W847.
,
IIIII Poulo'o Oor Co,. Ctnttr.
loll,
c h i -. 11-1'
8 o.m. - 8:30 ~· 2-10.
Before,
• DI'Dp-lna
I
c I'IJioaftw
114-441-BZM..

•-bit.

I

Cc&amp;t;tllfotoglll nMdtcll Ouaran-

·Furnished

told,~.

::'
1881,- WY.

:~~::~~,009.

tNCI
- · pold -lonl. 114~-72111.

Ftnanc1al

' Docior'• ... Muot lifo
-idJIII pooplo, bt till- 21
Business
clo,.. lind lnounlnco • ·
porloinco. E - wa&lt;ldng
Qpportunlty
NloJY ancl
frtngo bonollto. ~ndlng
INOI'ICEI
OPPOIIunHJ.
8oncJ OHIO YA~LEY PUILIBHING CO.
~ to: -Doc'lor't Autatant FICDRUMNiethll)tou.dobuelp,O, 8oo 184 _ . _ ,, Cillo with ....... you
~---·-·- -:--::---:--:-:-·I NOI"'e- _,., t
tho
lht
tho.........
~ -.
Elm -- b ytotho_.......
Join -""'•CIIJW~Tho'WOfld ".
II'OII'TINQ OOOOS
Jui¥-Dec•n•. Lave . name, Tum Amlllol'l Jo¥1 o1 ~·
ICkf,_S. lnd pftone number on Into I • DDIIIfulllll 1ln.1. You
•n:Jstli•..mc..l141121tll. -ownMII~aeuac. . .
. E l - ~-~-"1 fiJ lpellif!l-11-::

.......,.._, aoocr

*-

for Sale
- ,,-,,..-.,....-'""",..--,"'"'
,...
-~- 14 mobllo
1• 80 Fr~,
""'"
::;end cr..-, Household
4248 51
'•or U2-3701.
Goods
1181 Tondllt 14X'I!Il 3
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
J001111, both &amp; hiH, "li500. ond chtlro pJtcod IJoJn
8115-3842 or
or7:00. $318 10 MM. TlbloJi 150 ond up
1t82Townhoule Mx7D,doUble to tl21. lid 1111111 1310 to

---------

-'13'

-. A1••101! e

:r:~~::CA,on""""-td

t:,sm.

u-•-~~ - ·
or--.~·~--.

F

-..bit.

t"""

......lon of

" ...,.,.
droom IIIHoo,
-~~ - ·
Uti
IIIII up 10 NUO ...,. umo to
C18h With lp~roved CNdlt. 3 mi.
0111 lulovlilit Rd. Oaon t A.M. to
I P.M. lion, 1IJJu S.L Coli 8144.. onp

-board&amp;

35 Lota &amp; ACreage

Co11JJ0r

1111acroo, llolpleo l~
clono
1111,000. 1141115-4110 .n...
P.JL

8 1.m. to I p.m. llon•.Sot. et4~eatoH 827 3rd. AYI. Go~

ApptloJa,

Inc. Good

uood oppllo,_, T.V. uto. Os&gt;on

r·

•

....--.

Dlprlhoppo.~.

Sowlo[H~IL Ntvw - · Drlnlhll
or Y JIJ!von. Compllto wHh
Rotclr "" .... $230CI.
111 1411031 1ftw 8pm.
WHI)'E'B METAL DElECTORS
Ron A. .on 1210 - d Avo,
Golllpotla,
11, 441 4331

-.

CH

55

Blocll;llrlc!c, lol- Win._tlmoto, ttc. Cloudo Wintwo, "lo (lrllndo, OH Coli 114.24
..5-812;;.._;..t_ _ _ _~.,.--

1•
1

llkl
llonty? 56
Pets for Sale ·
011 •:.,•::IKy fllmlO.J. Mile Rd., 2 AeN1 11441Ed
buldlng lot, -elY to bulld·on, ,..,. ond calpoto. llotlohon Fur- ~ pllr P o - . S04-773-a871.
~"'" &amp; ~o, Rt. 7 Nonh. 8 ._ltl oga 1 thru 5. All oro
- i d....- . - - ~
.114-4 11144, Golllpolla, olontcf. 814ft12-7ll3.
-2Aollten,tocro-,s
-I
-h
-ipoclt
_
_
h _
_rootliotloJ1o,
_l.ociJo,
_
For Solo: -~~~~~ 11.,.11 I G - ond tlupplr Bh:r. Pot
paloilo
Wltor,
no
hoo~ 1 - !.ion ill ,...., G-ng. A l l - All
,_.. ~ 11:1S. 814 411 2482.
~II
ullt

ae

1~-:-~-~===:--

a.J:"..

- . 1-8011tl·

Ext. 5214. -

L _-'"...... !!'!."

Elpolloontot'

TIIIIRUNE

-1101111: ' - -· -

._

•c~ -

-~
~gorolol,

whHo,

· ft:
:=" ~ ~~!"'·
lido, whlio.si!O:~~
·gf•
't. -ICOnszao;
.,;.,or fll ·-.:..... ~

=:J

Rentals

l::.. =.=•··3:"
1-:7.:=::.::==;,..:..;:,.:.;::.:.:.-.,.:-.AKC liog. molt llhtiHJU, block

=

I whlto. F.Mit ShiiMzu, gold.
a........ , : :. ~
aortouo lnqulrfot Onliy. - . .
41 HOUSH tor Renl
1000.
• ; Kon...,.
..- ..,.,..,
I~~-,.,:--====::2 or 3br home In Gollpollo, -•
A-ode,
OrYor, AKC roglltorod loltck ortd wiiHt
$ 2 - Dtpotft roquiftd; 114- HI· ·wtolb moll Sliiii'IDJ, 1 r-r old, oxctl~
-~ PI; Goo 1ont nwldii!IO. $125. 304-8a2·
COPIIJ1JJJIO 18:i!loctrlo 3877.
~
HouM 2 b 1 0011a, nloli !!lflgo
Ronie. 30 illch .......
, 11110;
~bortl Da 11.
untumiiiMd~
w..llrigli ao•o - . &amp; llrp1 All pot !lfOOIIIintlo 21
= . • n d ..... _
- · SotJ...Ai-.J, 1180 Eoc!l; 20 ou. ,..,. oKptJionoo. ~r.:::ntmont•
ft~
. ..,_ ~~r, 11F!',: F~.'. ~ly.nl-1418f2-1120o.· I no lniWII,
Spring Yollty . . . . bllok 1 112
~
·~ ·- a A-nooo, U - A•-- 1I 7':':::...::'::--.:.C:---=-;:::::-:;:::bathe:; ••• .,...,., Clrplllt, tiOO
~
· - O.to..- tiWIIIoo, 11om Aua.
pw=mo. ,.,.,., 1:11 1nd clellad
•
7111.
3t, 1110. AIC.C'Ikter ng' ana,
. ILACKBURN REALTY 11000 . US1D AJIPUANCES :104..a.31:13.
10001
'
.
1
'jpp;.,;;;..d,,;;;;n,
upjl'i;'~Ail.
Stono llo-anciHIIIIIIIJonldttono.
42 Mobile Homes
c..ot-.c.~ 811 1187318.
111 Ill U141ftw7p.JL
for Rent
RENT TO OWN
Filii ToNI, 2411 - - Avo.
~
PotntPIIIMint,J04-t71.2013,10
~BAR=·- MIL
-·-. o
cr. WJilor, lniOh 1 po, . wood 1 ....,. 114.01 por gil Nl u&amp; 114.• Wid 10 gal
pold. 12001.:0 pluo "'-!i, ·4 - ~~J- tuHI, ~~-~pltl~o~!!;UB~
.
hi"
roorn lddillclno, - ·
115.20 por ..t, Roglol- II"'* Glnnon
4 -,.
por llht!&gt;hlfd Pupo, 1100
114ll'&lt;~~.,~-;;1114;nr.1;•~•~-~
~ bldrooru trallw 1M' ,.... In WMIL 11-ok! Chef 14 cu. ft. 245 8132, 01 814 441 1103 Alter
R - o r lt:I.M
18 4;.m.

-·

DrJw.'

.:.::::l:

17.:'-7-:--.--.-==-=

w.,.~ .tl~; ~::!: liDrll~..
;m;.~,.;;idf(Co:;ttii.ory;;·
e.

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

-.-..,..-=;_..

.....

IT.SO

ar
llolollo " " - -rttr,
dtpollt, 1 - - roquintcl.
114-$tt22. .

:'·~-=h~ ·

- · 811 148 tut, 3Q4.415.

fliO.

-h.

por... 11. •c.,:a.
10.rr
SNAFU.._
.

·
.., b)' IInce Beattie

·-----1
-

lmm 1 dlltt CIPiftl!tl tar AN . .
......... .......... Moun
u..-llondlythru f~ 1:00
to 4:3ll bul . . , VIIJ, COnloal
d~ .............. -

Core

a-·t·

lllfw,
·-7112

Plo- _
_ Ollie
,_"

22

Farm Supplies
&amp; Liv estock
61 Farm Equipment
1$0 MF Dlolll $3,t50· 135 MF

For- bcort, 4 :liNd, tun
aoocr

tta Pontioo -,.,.eon a1438H712, 1nytimo.

tD114 'llonto Corio, Y-8, Solo or

=·

===:-·=~=~

FlliiWI In llhf..·

~- ond

4

·=·

a

s:'t:

t ot

. (2:25)

ltudant.

1:1ar - · t14-4(f.Mt

•

ae:.-.

(_.)
ouR1blo tor ri!flll!l, 2 r.o. TB
Phi~
..... .,.., Nih ·~

.,.tar homo.

takes over when Coach
Hayden davaloptl an

Serv1ces

=h.tt!'r.;!,'::'·-,58110

=·

'lllgo

tta

'

-

Home
lmprovemenls

r N5VeR !&lt;NOW WH!:N
SHES PUTTlN&amp;MeON. ·

1ta1JaJ,
·
Allofll llltiO
olr, low
20 .-lllnt quolliy ., ~ 1 rod
now . _. - &lt;iond,
W11 _ , go.od
-·
acr ""
holfwl •. .
., - · 114-245-

ooooli"''•

=·
.,., -

.

22.000 m~~oo.,
•• .M..

Col I_...,

A roo1 -

~

tm a-. 4x4, 314

-

""' ... eti47NI7I.

tlroo,
1 1'

' .....,.IE.IZID "ehlcl•

JET

PNplirlng !loW lor the
Futln

:;:,Jio . . . dlpollt.f14.

. . . "' ·-11'1

lftt lnd 7

for 'r.':i.~m 111!!1!-._Co.,!l,

!!or""
..... - . l 1 - -I:IOp.m.~•.
............ lnlhol'lold.l14-

-.-liNT .IZID Vlh-

11111M

"KIIDCit H
You 11naten 10 quit
_ , time wou CIO fiiOUIII-to.mou on •
ClleWIIlG-tobloco Iller."

....

.lin "" -

fronl ..... FOrde. M•a I d I
~ l!f!II!!Je,

•••u ... ..--~~·-.
....

""""" o n d -

......._ Clll " '

1

w Major LaJ:."'MIIIII'
i21CJOOit.
DMIIorLIIII•IItlt·•

BARNEY
SET UP, PAW

THAR AIN'T NOTHIN' .WRONG .
WITH THAT LAZY VARMINT
THAT A LITTLE
WHD CHDPPIN 1
WOULDN'T CURE!!

AN' TAKE YORE
MEDICINE

., · 11:aowe w Clle
iiJNewa

. (I) Night

11:30 We iiJ TootlghiiMw
CZl Adem 8mltll'l r.on,y
World

•

. BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

ElectJ'!Cal &amp;·
Refrlgll'lltlon

Uctriiotl - . .. ~

Con lito

,

Oft a, , .
·

.......

Upllolltlry

,

I

IInder niOit oondlllonl you tunctlon eicbllllllf 1111111 ln ~lp .,....
mMte. 11111111 1111 ,.., ltltead 101111 ol
lflllll' i' II IIIUIIOIO II -likely to be :
8111tievad lndopandiOtlly ot otllerl. .
~ (lltiL •011. II) In order-to IP-

vado wltlch could aw.ct your lmege.

:ao

cut h.

AOUAIIIUI (,_
1'811. 11) Conlldcr 'LIO (.IIIIJ :111-AIIg. II) Bo extreinely
carefully today the ltfmlln which you carelultoday that you do nottr•t your
expraao yourltllf 1n verbal or written paeraln a~ding manner. They
IIIIIIMftta a.-tlonable com,_ta Mil II H they you feel you
could be gr'a.aiv mltllntatpratldtb your .,. juatiiHIIe bit better than they ar1.
del~rMnl.
. VIIUIC) (Alii- 21 IIPL II) Commercial
.,_ lnthar today, you might laal PIICII(F.., Mom,. :10) n Ia not a ) condhlont could be a trifle more com. com)nlndtomaku prilmlleyou know good policy ai thlo tlinllto 1penc1 In tid- )!lex tor you than they Initially appear.
you Wll not be IIIII to lteaP. Unlortu- , vance lUnda you ~ to, be - n g Don't IJY to hlltdle Hrlous .,.,..,_
....., IIIII taatlc wll ortl)r ihlka matteno lllorlly 11 your ochldute Ia dllruplad, n f mi!IWI withOut flrat doing •
'!'!":-~INit ~to I birthday . could P.,t you 1n a tight .Pinch down the ' "-"!OJ k. ,
your ....ro-Graplt DndlcO llfl8,

:ao

""" -N

...

.

·ceaLate

z=:r--

'

SOUTH
.J.107654 ..
"AKQ

e

,,

u

.AK4

Vulnerable: Nortb-5outh
Dealer: South
Woo1

1•

Pill

Narllt
It

P111 s+
AU pus

Ell1

tt

P111

..

Qpening lead: + 2

·(the rt·•t ......;.;0\age~play).and will ......
.- r - · -.~down·.
·
.
11 helps for Sooth to know ,the style .
of bls East oppoaent. B East Is kno,-n
to be a conservative player wbo would
t
f
1 t with
never come In a the our- eve
only a.fiv~rd suit, then South sltoo!id
figure out what the defender's game is
and drop tbJ! lone spade kiDg.
•..

THOMAS JOSEPH

.....
''•

to work it :

DAILY CR YPTOQUCYI'FS-

L"'it!:' ....

101~

::
I

w.

Is IeONG FELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used . ,

NwiNIQitt

12:ol w lllglt..l81;1
12:30
iiJ Late Night Wltlt

for the three I.'s, X for the two ~·s, etc. Single letters,
apo~trophes, the length and fonnallon of the words are all
hinls.J?!ch day the code letters are different.

IIMid wnar-1

I]) MOVII:

. _ llllllld (PG)

~&lt;; Twl'aM z- .
..........
1.

ME AT I.

12:311]) lnltlnlll.oll

.

· 1:aola=,cau,a
·
·AII~IorMI

CRYPI'OOUOTE
II F
M
S V S 'I' F. V M I. N

•J812:QOI

SM PETF F,

II.*.:: ..;.. ........

UMFFttYF.

FV

oellnnr,. ·

8 lllllw. . 1'odly
• 1:011]) .._Colli IIIII
1:11 (I) MOYII: ,.. HI!" Wid
..... Nit (2:00)

'

I Y F. VI. Y W

v· t

II V

N Y

IJ I.

....-

_ It II W W " '

·I Y E V L Y W
N Y Q . - - K Y I. M I l
, . · Y.......,·eCrnt.t.._..zOUR PROGRESS. AS A ' "
NAnoN CAN BE NO SWinER rttAN OUR PROG. RESS IN EDUCATION. -- JOHN FITZGERAI.I&gt;

1;30~ill'--"" . . ""
oe....,~

-·

AXYDLBAAXR

11:~

' 8

.

... '

iii~P.l.

... I[J)

'

DOWN
1 Bashlul's

. , . _ (2:30) '
•
11:31wc-Q
12:00 (I) Into the Night Sino.

someone

Rt11
_, •1'11111 or m :•rc'-1
1
wnng,MWWW.•~

~:.":!::n!!l

It,~

tiona for the year ahead by mailing ARIES (llorch 21·Aprl11l People 'you
$1.25to Aatro-Graph, c/o this._.. are especjally fond of might be the very
per, P.O. Box .91428, Cl-nd, OH ones wbo 1ft you down today. Thelrraa44101-3428. Bo sure to state your zodl- sons will be dllflcult to comprehend,
ac Jllgn.
•
e.en when exptanltlons are offered.
SCOIII'Io (Oct.-.,, 22) Thlala one TAURUI (April 20-MoJ :10) There Ia a
ot thOH daya whln the spirit might be pi&gt;allbiUty you might beCome Involved
willing while tiNi llll8h Ia weak. :Your In some type of clandestine mloadven.,.,_ to)atiOMIIze your way out ot not ture today. What appears.IntrigUing roCiolng nmay be much more lormldable mantlcaliy could end up ai a heartache
lhan your gOOd Intentione.
.
Isler.
aAGmARIUI (Nov. 21 Dec. :111 Within 'GEMINI (MIIJ 21-.lune :101 Try not to
a group with whom you'll JIOCiallze today ·. overwhelm yqur social calendar at thla
there may be
In particular lime. Instead' Of attempting to meet all
you're anldOustoim.,_. The b4lll way of your obligations In one IIIII swoop,
to don Is to be yourself; the worst way Ia take Into conalderatlo~ thaie might be
to be pretentious.
, too many accounts to settle.
.
CAPIIICOM (Dec. ta..,_, 111 Deep, CAHCIR (JulfiO :11.Ju1J 22) You'H be
down you m1Q'11 not be u su;:: cf,"~ ':aware of your ambltloua ob)ectlvaa toalii today u you' WOUld like
' ' day, but your motivation might .not be
to tl)lnk. 1'-laol 1Q811111y Induce you ~ atrong onough to 1uccooafully fuel ~r
to do -..thinG by way ot 1oo11111 bra- 1 • Intentione. Hail-helrled efforts., won I

•tn

,

•• 53
+AQH861

"JI742

40 Out ol the
'storm
41 Vendor
42 Tavern
quaff
43 Sailor's
· ·patron

(!)Tole~

(J)EB
1.

t2
.J9 7 32

..

EAST

bookiO

StereO.

Coii-Piumlolng
· ond H_,lna
Fowth ond PTno
GoiUpollo, Ohio
:at74_4•..
•-:::•::s~•-:----

rol

IIIIIII'IM

il])llg•ui.,Jika

Plumbll)g &amp;,
Heating · '

.

Court Q

0 Miami VIce
• Ctturclt ltNet . .11011

'I

84

1111 ID8

CD Na•awalell
I[J) e An10t1o IIIII

8

.K

WEST

.

ill) 700 Cltillpoclal:

10:30(!),....

I

Money to Loin

headlines. C
W (I) 8 til1Jtw•1•11t11111
Nancy's chilnglng IIXUII
fetllnga CIUH har marriage
to sufler. I;IJ
(!) (I) luMvllll.!:l* Q
~I[J). 11ar r ....: ,.."'
o.n.allon
8Ewnlni!Newa

-ion ... . _ ropolrtd. .
&amp; rHiultt In llocil. Ron.
Evans lnler'JNtH•, ' Jacksort,
OH. t.-m-91131.
'

oil ond .....
1--....rtaz.OO. Cib R &amp; R W.W ...loo. fJaelo, ,._
ltld tH. $UOO cr - ... t-, will.~....,.... or
- a t1ll GnVII 'Hill
Jll. TIn ctwlska bltwe ~ ....... Coli_
l'lortL IEIIIr momlngo, _ _.. Wotor ......

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

w.

Story RIChard kllay and Jane
Wallace fOCU88I on the
unraportacl llpacl1l of Irani
page stories that flava
gripped 1111 nltiOn'a

nlghi.

•

G.V.

IQolh. Q .
IIJ Story leltlncllhl'

·~Hid

10:00

- UIOI
i7ii ,..,.
~=ionJ&amp;NA~~
.: 82
• •
~
N. o f mlioo

.

a unr 10n1 Uvel
1:30 w (I) 8 eo.ctt Luther

~~ ~~lwnonoo. Run8

•n

friend
ACROSS
2 Historic
1 Slun with
noise • .
time
7 Hac1enda 3 Feet out
ol sorts
home
11 Maryland . 4 File
cabinel
player
kam
12llne of
Slmmisymmetry
grant's
13 Radio
Yeslerday's Answer
Isla
slation 10
one
,31 Kohoulnk .
15 Murdered 8 Prerequi·
19 Acts the ·
lor onA
siteo
16 Drops in
gondolil!r 33 Use foul
7 Tabby 's
,.
on
20
Bouldet
,
·
l&lt;~nguag
e
delighl
18 Wa~er ' s
income, in 8 Give the 21 Tax-time 34 Airport
asst .
autr.i
boot
part
35 Kin of 42
II Knighlly 22 Swir)dle
21 Scorch
23
Ram's
·
Across
a
ddrBSS
.'·.
.
22 "In Cold
mate
36 - RemiCk · ::
10 NiflcomBlood"
25
Coni
is·
37 Building
poop
aulhor
cated
wing
141CBM
24 Butler
'28
"Siella"
38
Dream
type
serving
star
state
16 Form
25 Great
29
Mispro39
Hit show '"
17
Jack
weight
Sprat, for
nounce
sign
26 Despon.
dent ·
27 Evolutionary link
21 0ancer
-'
Kelly
' 30 Actor
-"
Estrada
31 Atlache
32 Home
designer's
.:
concern
,c
34llbrary .

c

• N811tvllle Now

•t

CUt_.
Hwy. 180..
.,. . . . . wt1t ••••

~y

DMIIt' C88 TuladaJ Movie
(2:00)C
0 BUdWeller Prell lite:
Tu 11 ~., Night Flghtl . ·

Motor Homes

•...

CROSSWORD

iJi FI'OitlllM C
Gil a 8 MO\IIB: 'Anatll or

eRfAI( ·
IT OFF...

104-H

'

Becky'lbotll birth control. g
~ l"o~~ Special Rapaot

MAIXK

.loc-._

" ' - - To Bur: on. Slloogo
~.J.. 814 t4UIU, or 814-

.

w
(1)8'11Roeooanne and Den .... to

·"

w~

=:am:r.:-

uu ..., .._,,.,uun,220

-

1:30(1) (1)8 Hlld of 1111 Cl!faa ~
Anrld Infects the class with
the flu. Q

1- coro.

T:.r:.r·tlll;
~~.f.HI; '•='~

tm1 io

i,nloe,

8:05 (I) MOVIE: Rollercollat.r (PG)

Night A t. .cher II accused ·
·of moles~llg a filth-grade

Raon_,., ,.tnt,~, •• ,..... ,,,I
2t,oo0
plumtatilg and eocnlartee: .
=•:
GUINnttod wllh-

hlal onc1 llli.

bel'l IIR 7

- ( 2:00) ,

- · Con1 t -. pJtcoo,
111U Ford
ttae •- - 1114-441-72111 OJ IIS-11184.
RolilfY or coblo tool *llllng. ,
A~to,P.If.!j1fiiOidiCV!Iott -Willi CC!f"plot"" Nf!!l = ·I
::r.m.~~=;~-=
ond ..,.~
I
113.118~::" Qdl Cololll3,8t8;
;w
• t2,1H; 1 • '""'lc Tonk Punooina 110. Ollllo
Ford ' - ar, $1,f88; tN4 Co. EVANS ENTiiRPIIISE8,
0H 1~37-41821.
I
Terato S.W. 41&lt;4, $2,4ts; 1N4
~lolln 200 SX l1.f!!L1N4 Pcrd
Elp. ~ 1HD-Qo:r
1114
Dayton~
~ •
11,2ts.i..1.-· ~ T·:::-11~1

Jolin 0.... 12 ft. &lt;lee.
Goodcondllion. l14-241-3144.
Jolin Doon 4G20 D1o111 ,.ah
turbo chl-ls 11c concl,liZ_, lflilr. :SO Pll.

no
did

1

e

• On . .
I:OOWe o ln lite Hut ot lite

;r-

In llddii,;IA. """"
1

e "'-:

~a.ou.i .... Station

campers~

1171 20 II. Chovr

.

mixed up with the CIA lltd
theKGB. C
1111 112)
Ut A
mother Is tra2!Jed lnslde 'a
bumlng car. !;I~
® MOVIE: AIIIIICIIIUO (PI 2
of 2) (PG) (2:00)
~ Munlllr, She Wrota

"j"

ere ...--. -:J?

ron JJI J, -

79

nus

QJ PllmaNewa
1D MOVIE: Mr F~voott.

VInton Auto 8~. Fonlgn 1

IAIEMENT
WATERPROOFING
u.-.tltlonol Ufollmt a ,... Local ......... furidlhed.
Frol _.lmot-. CoM celtocl 1·
814-237-04U, doy fit
Rogoro e - n t WottrJIIOO'
ling.
'
.

"!'lcf
•.... . ·

/il·~ Nova. A hippy ge111

·:Z

402 Ch~ _ b1a motof.
814.W2-412"f { - phonl
number)• .
BudCIII Tronomltllono,. UNci &amp;
robulH, tlolllna 11 1118; 814-245&amp;177, 114-3711-2213.
UNCI outc&gt;""'tlo trol\lllllallonl,
OM &amp; eto, os11 114 118 0437.
. garontood, aloe npolr onUibto.

1f87 Chow. LUXIIIY Spoil, V/8
onglnt, T-topo, _ . , locko,

· octuol ml 24,800, ..._ cond, 11444So8881.
Fron"""'ldlng:::,ad
dw !.'.!.'.!' '1f87 Dadg1 Coft DL PB, PI, AC,
000
01
~ 4 tlroo, outomotJC. Goto
good ~ mllogo. Dniy ono
2 llthltn 3,200 bu com crtbo ownor. Excol..,. coricltlon.
$80. - · Will tNr down b
II ... Nil. Mlko Dhr. 114-m·
$200. ""''"· 304473-21148.
"::23::n:'
"'tD87. Plymouth Turlomo, S2,100,
2
O:C~:'..:"'tu:,ca;i· 11111-llc, w/alr; 1f84 Doytona 5
l:'lt.ito of 11-, 814,2
ii OIMf. $2,200. 114-211-12711.
lllk"" .loJ1887 Thuncllllllrd~ loodod, 3.1
Fll• Woaon Yorv LY-41, u 8
ooo 111. Exc. oond,
-~ion
. , 11,o&amp;l. i14-1ll:f· 58,500. 0 0. 114-38JI.02t4.
·
11111 Trono-Am, 58,1100; tte7
ford 1532 to lor. Coil oft II e:oo !)oclgt 100._!1,000i 1f88 Ford
114-251-1411
EocciJtJ.f'!J!!"'!i..~ O . . .r tJOIIor,
p.m.
·
1450. ,,....l'lv&gt;l, 114-38?-7284.
..,... F1nn ~--::~ SR. 35,
Wool Galli
,
I-IP77; :::.....
Cht-~· 1:;. }
W1cto 1llocl
now I UNCI farm
m.:~ ....,:,
troctoro
lmpitmonto. Bur.
~• ....._ I - • 00 -••-r• 01 lot, 8ooft
: $11,wu; WIH
tiiiH:On:- : · -. ' 1111 tor 110,100. 81t 448 am~

Angela's dating IChedule
slows down while Tqny'a

Auto Parts &amp;
=-=~A~cc~e~sso~rle~s~-.--

·0orn P•n• bCJr1ni1
814-311-11082.

Q

w (J)8Wiio'lthjlloel?

76

81

:~: 111511
441

Ol murdering I call (11!1,

t&gt;IVIPENI&gt;
ANYWAy f

.187:1 17 ft. S11n111ft Til-Hull J
Bolt. 128 HP, E&gt;llnrudt~,
oompftlte top new u
• ·
Colll14-21111-13ti •"• :00 p.m. l
BOATERS
I,
IIOIOUJY Morcuiaw llpooclltfot
FIOI~ Trol~ 1 londtd. Proc~
alon MQbllt -.nn.. Wt comt to
JOCII 814-an.am.
\Yo oro -wiNTERIZINOpolll,
- - -. W•ISHRIN~WRAP.
RIVERSIDE
MARINI Glllool~OH. 814-4U- '
2424, 1-totHZII-41 •
.

tf87 Cod!Hoc Sidon DoYIIIo,

8!22.

...... .,••• 1111

AI

1112

"""· Sl,200., 304o4175-7M8.
1112
Aoyol
Oldwnobllo
•utomotlc, 4dr,
cond; no
rust, 12,000. tl4 l41-1341.

w.
defends a med11111 IOCCUIIIId

. fZ~I-L.y ,tLifVfP
IH TH~ PiAC*

ton pl..,. Aulonllllc Tronoiil · - 1 . 504-4171-1711. '
LiJJ aln-GIJICJoolbrod - ina1ni.,... ~I All,f
lUI~ e. II Cell"- -.itlaoltl I I o.Good
85 Generall:hWUng

or

ment

1!181 Chov.tt1. Motor, body &amp;
lrantml•afon an In u:oelltnt
concl~lon. · Nttdl
muttltr.
814flll2-3141 IVInlngt.
'

Oltlol~ti!IO; UIOII Sft. Buoh
Hoa.
i. UNCI- a~oc~o, -~ lloorillll,!~l!c.~...-.....
=:nJ.lnl~,:.~~.:: tom whoolo, _... - · ·

2233.

I

=-'14-4:=.:46-.:,:,.:1021=. :-::-''--.,......:--:-

Elc. 'cond, low mil~IVonlngo, . ~

,._,otol-.
_.lo ond . .
hiVI Juno OCII, NJ, 504 -

.................................,
l':'."fr· .,, • • .,.
111r,

1178 , Pontloc
Bonnovlll•
Broughom, loodod, , . . tn•, •
Nno 8oocl. Now 22 coDbor ..,._
outo, inoclti70NC. 304-4175,7211.
11181 Chtvotto. EJc. Cond. $H5.

7:31 (J) Till JetlenGflll
1:00
0 Matkiall t.11ttock

A.!'IP_j_HI TOOTH
Ff-,•ttY, :t NIVf~

!Or Sale

18• N.w Yorker, 318 engine,
low , mllolgo, loodocl, 15;800.
814-37W209.

JIG, 11m1. 11W111-13st.

Apartmenl
for Renl

1 0 ' OOfil
dtopiJt, , ...,

t;£-AtJf

75 Boats &amp; Motors

111711 Chtvtttl, good·cond, MOO.
814-258-1528.
•

:;:!_=,..=::7-:;:;;:::c~:;;.
·--.,.._,::---goo--:-t, ·=Co~lfoti,S,..,., *\!

: 114411 nm

No- -lp.ltl.

44

Coooll

twlp....

n.ooo.

=••moJtl

For-: . , -· 114-44$-

'-

·~

8~··--·

uvettock
1:;;:=.:;,.,.,c::c;:;:--=-=-:=-:::- 63
=~":..
7-Co_;.~;.....~;
~..!"'!:.Z.n:!i 12 y.o. Tl, lll&lt;lo-ro,
dar~ - .
.,v,.... RNogMiot~-,1-·-

rI-:;:::":::::;=====·Jjlllg~hl
1

1178 Novo. Coill14.e411-2858

lrodo lar good. Truck or fonn
troctor. Ylilton. 1854 · KOYIIton
Rd.
tta Iuick Rogal LlmHtd. Y8,
PS, PI, AIC, Tilt whtol, - r
23ft. Stor Craft Compw, $2,800 wfndowa. new brill-. bkJng
cr t ..do far good 314 ton 4- 114,700 114-1112-2218 1ftorl pm.
dn.. • ~lwp. 114-251· 111811 Chow- outomotloJ....~r.
13113.
uc. oond,
eM-446-.....
For 11a1o. lArgo won unit ole, lifo 111811 Doclgo Charger, 2dr, ·
new, uud one aumm......-.
IIIII oondHion fi550; Comoutor holchbtcll. wlllto, wHh rod lntor..._ $50, n- Radle:, lhllck. lor, AMIFM S •pd, PS, new ••·
- . S2,100. 8~2847.
computor 1150.· nlco b
Chll•bnll; ,,. t.V., good 1HI Chev. Cavt~l'-r, ...lion
_.on 1100. Coli 814'tll2- . .gon, 4 Dr., AC, auto., 1988
52f3.
•
F~ Tempo, 4 Dr., 4 cyl., AC,
outo. 114-446-2300.

!!!!
l,;;;;;;-;;;;;rs;;;;p;;;sj;j;;:p; 8ii'.2233: ·

r.,..,· *-m7UI,GIIIItarln- ~·=:=...-:•,.,..

~HOIIE~hrrYitPIIiiiiiTiiis,PPCir".;;;u..,;;;.l - l n g l 0 _ 4 _ - . l '
nudiCf
=::..r..mlal.
Oololll. (ll
Eat. 1- ~"RII&lt;IY ~- lnl
4582.
'

Dunrovln Frull Farm luet oft Sr
J1CC0P1
tood otompo. V1rloty of opoltl,
1 ·-.'i~~':'d
-ond ~·
cldtr, t-7
po-_,,
c

· Building
Supplies

.
,
....
_
24~-==·~~~~;::; IIPOIITI1-1411··· .
~'"r=..... --·-- ..... ·- =
2tJ_.-......_..
'* ul-

. . . Iii. . . ...,..

-

ms.

S'fi••:::!
ts50~=~.:
-~._
. Gun Colol- 8, 8, I 10
~ t:' Into::.-::,.,~
-· &amp; :'\:-. Good

JOn!td

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

58

F01 Solo:= Connon~~. MIDndiy. 114118 1211.
POll, 111
••
Palo!-: WI hovo I good
For S~ia: G.E. RafriQorot~, auppty of aood Kennebec
814-441-3714 oftw
s :...,..m. - -· $11.00 par . 100.
Hu-..
ot . R-lllo.
-doy•.
;:-For,_SIIoo~:-,~Hoo=rt:::h-:-;-=o:-:w::oocl= 81413'1H2N. No Sundar oa1o1.
bumcr lnoort. 585. OJoot-o. Sorgum Moll- 11 tho JunoLltor w~h blower Jor flroploco. tton IIIIo Routo 325 ond 124,
8oY0111l Mc:tlono of 8" profob
•U·Iu•l chlmno•. C1ll 8t"•• w.. of IAngovlllo, Ohio.
•
~0150 oftor 1 P.M.
1=--=-.,...;.-::r--,--:--:-For Sale
For Solo: Kingwood - 1 olo111, 59
good oonc1, 814-24U413 or ooo
or
Trade
ot Howonl Hotchor'o.
Fun liH truck top. Porch 113 ..... finn With mobllo
owning h20 ft. 30W'/Io41f80 o~ homo, "" goo, Sollllxa'y
Tow':!II:J ~450. DO"' ac,.. Can
tw 8:00 P11
1 ·i 130 AcN farm
...
· c::..:..c·;,:..;..;::,
· c-=---:--:---::-:- Solom
Townolllp; , _ -..om
HoopH•I bod. Good •hapo. 814homo, blm ond othor out446-3423.
::-:---:---- ,,..-.,- :-,-,,- bulldlngo, 585,000.00.;
King 11ze wolwbtd, 114-441· Twa or t31 Butt11nut
17111.
.
A-uo, l'oJntrol', wHh Iorge
lola f3t),OOO.OO; Nice roconflr
IAvl Iodin IIJclca, now, 40-42, NT ddld ~ bedraom ttou.
4x4 ChoYJ on ~ Holghto, P-JOY.
tlr.lltm8. · 11.1x12, I tug. 0.. """ lorgo 101. ..•••. oo
O'Brfo" lild Claw RooiiY Co.
h-l!lr.--.om.

Hilt once.
lorlouo lnqulrloo oniy. IM-4441000
H=':::t~~ 1,,::.:.:..·-=-=-:--~t2fl ond 1111 to
R-Hionod _,..D.,...
$110 - - or GuorontNCI prompt lar
fiJI or twin 171, ftnn al molrN, mocltlt. Till - r

:S b:.:: C
btbr boa:::&amp;.

.·

1181 toll of Albtny. W1

"'" • .. .,.._,..., -=..-=,:~,..:.
~ llrlllll 12111 ~ t111-·Dooftl - . : 8lu 14".

-'8p=
.m=-.===-:::=-::-= ,... ltae
14li?O mobile
homo, s b o -, 2 bolho, 1111
on 100x150 lot, lolo of lllno, - b w

a-: ~-

It~ ...

46 ........., for Rlnl

Cou r H - Porft.
~ 110111 • - Ohio R - n, Nonh of P-JOY.
I 4 loCa, 3br, living, ~~::.- poliO, Milo. Coil
dining. I flmlly noomiln:,_....,... _... _. _,..
no'";;--:......... ..:,
... · 1ft Wlnled to Rent
-·,..,...
~
mont,
m~
·
'
·
,. -ICI: 314 IR hoUtt to ronl or
304-421 hiU
bu¥2.on lond controcl. et4-CU32 Moblle.Homes
421:

:=,.-::.':::!w': ':t':i

Cut,

- - ond o~lt $40. ~k up

• '':1.._,.

•-m

14or IMm alrllnee travel, nuran aide, trlcw-~~~~~~~~-::-::::- tor tralllf tf'llni,.,
rltSf..
:-:
•
tludv. Anonclll 11d
1
bcltlo ovolloble If S"lflltd. Ptocomont
Homo lriw bottlot
CIPIM'· .111 411 ....
_ ....nc..
Schoola k&gt;
NNCI II!" ht":!J..nttd wHh col onlce, 2307
mdln A..,,
- · 114-1112_ . , 10 Po-rg, WV. 1-80N41... and 2 p111 or t,.,Urne afl• 5 1411. All progrtnit compllted 1.
1-..tho.
pm.
Wontld To Buy: JIOik Alltoo
wHh or wHhoul ..-a. Coli
Lorry UVIIy, 114 318 13113.

FII'WWOOd .. IM.ton.d, . '

Rooms

homo with S bocfo -••, tomliy
JOOJJI, In Ruotlc Hille,

~~Oil~:..,c:;::r..
a en.aa11n1

txre~lfi'ICE . WITH~~~

45

,_lot.

in-

-

Room &amp; bollnl. Froo "" pcroon
to 11v.m &amp; do llgftt .r.tt ot
Privott Homo Coni "" ~.
rollrod ago.I1441Ht!IS.

9~:-:W8::-::nl:::ed-:::to:::-B-uy::-:~
=":"

lvlll!l but- lo 8chocil
ond town. Rt. 3S4 lane,
T - I D - 2l Filii IMd to
lfallt.. Coli 814-8112-7111 cr 1&gt;384•

~1111
old!J~
conduct • ""~~~~~ tho
Polnl Ploallnt Job
Oct. 3t1W11243114.
·,
•
18-ftl, "" JfPA ollalblt 211r, lrolll!, 111111 &amp; 112 totol-.,
~t..nlal n
-ldonto. '!bin- on
lot,- bt - ·
lng Inc
t - - l n g • $4,-&amp;144M-103l
.
ond ' cuttomiHd rooumo.
,
Llndttd onrallmont. Far
SPECIAL
le routHt, 2
lien
call a.
II ~
II
e'75-27JQ
or Jobc..r Worke
Aa- or.
the S btd.-11141111
unbellenbll -Driot of
toclllao, 227.1 EOEIII- $12,100 -•ICI IIICl _, up.
F.tt.
eon
40!15 ""doloII•.
WI14K'IO;
:lllr, CA, bultJI.
12
Situation
lng, lkiJtlnct, Oft lol In Quill
Crolll. Homo.
Clooil · .fronch Cb
Wanled
Mobile
1111111340.

15

~..
hro11@!..~.
814

'M.n.,J.

l'l:lille'tttn. .

October 4-8. D•renlo:n gtau, No phonlcolli plollo.

AI"'" MY.

timber. 814-·7111 or 1-384-

...

•ou

r=;s

(J) ......... l"tomiiJ

o..-

_ , tliJU 8otun!Oy. Two
chlldron, ochcol ogo.
8141112-oOIO. .
PoJ1/Iull tlmo Nloo, -ion.
opplr Oat. \ 2, 3. t01 ....·12.
Tojoci Fumluro, 111 s-nd Avo,
Golllpollo, No pllont 01111.
Porwan •••. .~ to our~~ ~-ombulltorr
srncwomon.
s - lifting. Job 1r1llaht houOokloplng.
AIMMII 21 llouro 111001 - . .
Sond ,_,... with r o - o ,
to P. o . Box 78,
OH
45771.
..
.

The four-dlamODd bid by East was a
tWCHdpd sword. It would either get
Weal off to the ri&amp;bt lead or result In a
sacrifice for non-vulnerable
t. It certainly did not deter South
from tlrlvln&amp; to slam. ObviOJtBlY del clltter would bave preferred that his
partaer's strength. be In the spade suit
(dummy's kiD&amp; of diamonds was a
wilted card). But all of ttl have been
In wone contractsjhan a s~:.:gpar­
ently depelident upon. a su . . ul II·
neaeln the trump swt.
However, here the layout of the
cards. offered a lesson in psycholol)'.
Suppoee East willa the openln&amp; diamond lead and returns a low diamond.
South wiD ruff and West will diJcard.
What will that tell declarer abotlt the
locatiGn of the kin&amp; of spades? It wiD
becolne cbild'e play for South to play a
10p8de to dtm;llny's ace, dropping
East's kiD&amp; and lccirlng up the :!lam. So
what can poor East do about tbla? •
Eut must crute aa IDulon. B be
wins ihe openin&amp;lead with the jack of
diamonds, for lnstaace, BD&lt;I then returns a heart, declarer may well 'believe that East made a lead-directing
fotll'-dlamood bid oa only a fiv~rd
suit and that West wu leading from 98-2 of diamonds. In tbla event, South
will du)y take bls flneose In trumps
.
·- --- -..• . ·- .

- T~

20VT.
7 roonw 1 112 btthl, countJY

NORTH
tAQ98
"106
tKID73

BRJDOI

T:30~u~ ~~=a
w ael!-.-.t

ICM, odand

" ·•

.-~·~--------------,

OTHERWAY?'

7:05 (J) Happy

2W!
Aoomo b,.,. · - o r monlh.
Moclcol - " · expo~~ typlot,
•oru111 ot 1=-. OIIHo HoloL
lnsu,.nea, dlt• lfllry, dOai:OI'II GOVERNMENT HOMES from tl 114 u-.1110
.
olllc1'1 In Ollllpolla I P-ray, (U Nook!.
tox
8114111381SUndoJ4-71&gt;.m.
:::"~tr· ~.v=
wllh - n g .
NIOCI bobrllllor 1n .., homo, 4582 feW~~~- 2:00 ,:,h~~

Oct- 2 ond 3. t:OO to 5:00 -IJYIRocoptlonloi,
pm. A &amp; R llartltt.ttanford, -ty~ng. tw~chboonfMust
ond
W. Yo:
FumHuro; Antlquoo, com..,niCalliin oldilo, olio hon
NlciN- Clolhto, Rodloo, of oomputoro ond
A.P.
S"ubmll
I'HUIM
to
~-.- ' - ' Orgon.

;.=:~Lva--

1•1/2 boat, 1.3hlfr!llll!l
dHionol 33 7 n&gt;0111,

...

•Just breathe itl' anti out, • the anesthetist informed the
paiiBnt. Groggily the patient asked, "Is there any·

ID l e i - aficl ·rm. ICing

·

I I I I I I I

Wholly - Robot - Latch - Cygnet - OTHER WAY

====-·
.
o.,.

~'/: :WYfii.~IIIOW~lS-;;:-7a~1;8.iH:I.iiiidTo0:
con-

w:Oto, "'•E..:.=co
I
nlclono, lnduotrfol 11-nonco 13 btdroom• houN. lond
Worbro,
llochln'::.d troct, ~.

:':~~!:1 =- -.ginning Oct- \ 111i0
Cofl 'M!'coumr llocotlonol A.,n

w

OMicGr*

laf."T.

I

•

I

2

t

SCR• M LIT$ ANSWIIS

(J) I .,..... Dl JoaMtle
(I). lntlldll!dlllon
(!) (I) Macltel Ll1ltoer

a::m~~

INTELLIGENCE JOBS. FED, 1N4 Schul 14x70, w/UpooMio,
CIA, US Cuotomo, DEA,, otc. 211r 2 both I
........... CA,
Hlrltlg. Uotlngo. (t) on iJz ocro
2, North of Pt.
18J4000 En K·1D111.
.
Pl...-, &amp;c. .JI. ., F.-ch
JOB HUNTINO? NEED A BKIU? City Moblr. H!lmM, et4-44eWE TRAIN PEOPLE FOR JOBS 113(0, • ~ • Auto llachll._~f, Account· 3311
, l~putlng
1101, COr- 2 btdroomo, bttll, lol,
rr.:;::~:~.
eoo-O!&lt;&gt;gtoto, ond -.._ Hondo,_,

·

w.
IlLill W'-1 of
F-Q

.NewiHDW

31 Homes tor Sale

Middleport

17

49 PRIN T NUMBERED LETTERS

B:r:::.:: ••

7:00

I
I. G

~ • • • •
Compl~to
tho cho41e quotod
•
by tilling In 1110 missing words
t..,;..I..---'L.;._..I.....J"-.L.....J you dovelop !rom ot.p No. 3 beloo.o.

®. ,..., Gotllltll

Pomeroy,

1"1

P A R M.T

THE OCTOSE~
5EA5T KICKS
LEAVES ALL
OVE~ I-llS
VICTIMS..

.

' '

.

KENNEDY

.
C) t9110 by King

.

..

.

FoaiUfOS Syn&lt;lieoto. ••"·
~

I

•

'

�•

Pac:•

•
•

Pon•oy-MKidi(!PO!t. Ohio

10-lhe Deily Ss ltlt•sl

Bm Chllds · 'roast~'

CoJlil'atulatlou to Brian JohnThis year's sale '!as been set
aon, son of Shirley and Oon
for Friday, Nov. 2, and all area
Jobnlon of the POrtland area.
craftspeople are being Invited to
. Brian has
take part. For Information or to
been notified
rent a table call 992-2161.
tbat he hu sue. cessfully come
The MeigS Band Boosters anr
through the test·
In the process of forming a 200
lng program to
Club for the · boys' basketb.a ll
. become a cerll-'
season - a clulf comparable to
fled public acthe one formed by the athletic .
countant.
boOsters during football season.'
College,
has been with To join, contact Bob and Debt
Columbia Gas of Ohio for the past Buck at 992-3833; Don and Bernie
· six years.
Anderson at 992-22G1, or Danny
and Carol Crow at 992-6130.
It was called a roast, but It was .· . The club will awarcUhree gifts
really a tribute Thursday even- of $50, $25 and $25 at each home
lng when a group of 30 friends got . game.
together for a surprise dinner
Prciceeds 'from the .club actlvl·
honoring BIIJ.ChUds a t Oscar's In
ties
will be used to pay ·ror new
GallipoliS.
Bill has wrapped up 11 years of uniforms needed tot add.ltlonal
operating the Jayrnar Golf band members ...., over 30 new
Course near Pomeroy. Everyone members· with a cost amounting
enjoyed the roast and even Ginny to around $7,000. The boosters ·
Ginther, Columbus, a long-time feel that the band Is really on the
friend of Bill's came down for the move under the direction of Tony
stag event. 'During th.e evening Dingus and are anxious to be
Bill was presented an engraved · supportive.
plaque In· appreciation for his
No doubt you are thrUled that
work at Jaymar- he finished up
your Congress and President
there over the weekend.
Bill ~lll be going to Bonita Bush are arranging a whole
. Springs, Fla., where he ~ll serve passel of new taxes for you to
as a golfing pro at the Bonita Bay pay, penallzlng the elderly with a
. Golf Club. Blll and his wife; Joan, good deal of concentration on us
· annually winter at Bonita sinners. And, of course, we all
.Springs where he Is affiliated need a hefly hike at the gas
pumps, especially alter we' ve
· with the golf club.
alread~
been gouged to the hilt.
Taking over operation· of the
Unfortunately,
that's the way the
Jaymar Club wll.l be Paul Simon .
system works - just raise the
. and Pat O'Brien.
Income, never reduce the waste.
If you're Into arts 11nd crafts, I swear, If It weren't for the great . Miracle meeUng
Turkey diMer set
·the annual arts and crafts sale at October bright blue weather, It
The Ladles Auxiliary of the
The Rev. Leon ·Stutzman will
the Senior Citizens Center In would be pretty hard for us to
be conducting a miracle service Tuppers Plains Fire Department
keep smUing.
Pomeroy Is an Ideal showplace.
at the Rejoicing Ufe Church at has tentatlvaly ,set its annual
333 North Second Ave., Middle· turkey dinner lot Nov. 10 ·at 5
port, Wednesday at 7 p.m. The p.m.
Rev. Stutzman pastors Uberty
Temple
In Dayton and travels Weekly movies
Clara Phillips, . Rutland, a
The Meigs County Public LIOpal Wrjght
extensively throughout the Unl·
brother, Averett Peyton, Springbrary
. wl)l begin a series of
ted States as a convention
· field; and children, Francine
1
weekly
movies every Saturday
69
f
S
P
speaker and evangelist.
Opal~- Wright, • 0 · t. ar s, Elaine (Everett) _Adams of
·
beginning
this Saturday at 2' p.m.
The Rev. Michael . Panglo,
died Saturday night while visit- Springfield, Sharon (Mike) Ro·
week's
movie wiU be ''Star
This
pastor of ,Rejoicing Ute, Invites
lng _her · granddaugpter· In berts of Akron, Mary Jane
Trek:
CJ
ty
on thi! Edge of
Kentuc~.
·
thee public to attend the miracle
She was born on March 1, 1921, Palmer· of Tennessee, and John
Forever." .
service.
·In Harrisonville, to John and , William Wright of F1orida, 10.
Esta Maude Fazenbaker Wilson. grandchildren, and nine greatShe was prece&lt;led In death by her grandchildren.
first husband, Bernard Howe 11,
Funeral arrangements are besister, IIJellle, ' and a brother, ll}g completed by Uttleton's
Frank.
Funer~ ., ijome of Springfield.
She Is survived by a sister, SerV~ceswlllbebeldWednesday. ·

Stocks

Hospital

·..

_ _ _ Meigs announcements _ __

'

a

new8

lnlO the Persian Gulf ls)lllusual,"
the Pentagon said, "It Is not
unprecedented and Is n.o t meant
In any way to increase regional
tensions."
The· last American aircraft
carrier to enter the Perslan'':iulf
was the USS Cons~ellatlon In
1974, while Iran was still a U.S.
ally and the reilon was generj!lly
~aceful.
'
In M;ay 1987, when Iraq was
still at war with · Iral), an Iraqi
warplane hit the guided-missile
frigate USS Stark In the f:'erslan
Gulf with two French-made ·
~~~et missiles, killing 37 Amer1 .,._,rssa. llors and Injuring 21
01
""'
Iraq apologized, saying the
attack was a case of mistaken
Identity.
Nearly a year later. In April
1988, the frigate USS Samuel B.
Roberts hit an underwater mine
In the gulf, causing major dam·
age to the ship and Injuring four
sailors. The mine was believed
planted by Iran.

Vol.41, No. 106M

~I

If your Boots Weren't Made for Walkin', co~e
see us about car financing. You Can't Help
.Falling In .Love with this rate:· 9.9SO/o A.P.R.!
And this gr~at rate is av.ailable for both ·
new and used cars.

Continued frotri page I ·
from this horrible thiJi'Z by • · House and Senate. This Is lime to
limiting some spending But say- we should have said at the
what we have here Is the. same beginning Of the y41ar that we're
old jleople that want to save the not going to Increase our spendnine old p~otected classes, and
lng anymore than pur revenues
put It on the backs of people were.
,
.
. .
who've. already paid their fair
Q. There so""' oth~ thl,ng, and
share. Thii·IJ a bad biD. Thllls a
I ~Ink. Dick, you re a good
· camel You can call It a hone
Democrat, but you would agree.
you c~ aay It'• )eautlful. n·~ There'• nobody at borne, nobody
atlllacamel andtft!lone 1pltlln otliat belleWI that they11 take
the mornmt: t
·
· th- bflh• taxe1 and put It to
Q; What'alhealteraatlvehere?
the deficit. Everybody beUevn
Would you favor the Gramm·
thll place will continue apendllli,
tludman au~tlc cull to th!l?
and we've ilven no evlde11ce at
A. · Well, I have a rather
all- no!Je, none- that we are at
Interesting position. I have actu·
all disciplined. It Is lime to thr~
ally voted against moat of these
the raacala out.
·
outraeeouupendlng blul that we ·
Go ahead, jump In there, .
oontlnue to pu.a. So I would aay
Congreuman.
sqme 01 thele people _ there'• a
A. Well., I would bave .to add
Deillocratlc majority In the
that tJiere • ooe .elemellt where
·.
Lynn and I mflht dlaagree
v

•

Quickness of reunification

surprises ~ OU . profes~or ·

Churches' oppoSe
ending x-ratings

So if Your Daddy·Took Your T-Bird Away, .cruise on
down to Peoples Bank for the best car loan rate around.
· But huny! This offer is available only during our '·
•

TtvO ...

· · CARNIVAL

1. '

Our Loan Officers Are Cru~in' For car Loans!

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to eight calls for assistance on.Monday.
At 2:51 a.m. the Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
Mark Richmond who was transported to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
·
The Pomeroy unit, at 8:13a.m. was called to Pomeroy Pike·
for Ada Starcher who was taken to Holzer Medical CenteF.
At 10:14 a.m. 'the Middleport unit went to South Seventh
Avenlle for Robert Davis who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
The Tuppers Plains unit transported Brandon McCartney to
O'Bieness at 10: 43 a.m. ·
At 1: 19 p.m. the Rutland unit responded to a call on Route 143
for Amanda Hammond who was taken to O'Bleness.
·· At 2: 16p.m . the Middleport Fire Department and emergency
squad tesponded to a tractor accident. In Rutland In which
Norman Will was transported to Veterans.
·
The Middleport units at 3: 26.p.m. went to North Front Street
for Genleve Demoskey who was transported io Veterans.
The. final call for as.sistance came at 6: '1:1 p.m. when the
Middleport unit and fire department res~nded to an au to
accident at Third and Main. :)oy Stobart was treated but not
transported.
·

vERUI Ew . . . . '19
STEAK - CHICKEN

" ' .

Squads have 8 Tuesday calls

Silver Anniversary
CelebratiDn

RockTober
1st thro~gh 6th.

•

(Fuzzy dice not included).
..,.

. ,..

~

•

PEOPLES BANK
•

HAPPY BIRTHDAY 1D U~ ... THAN~ TO Y.QUI
MASON
773-5514

. POINI' PLEASANT '
675-1121

•Lo!uta Subject To gua!U!td Or Bon ower. ·
•Member F.D.I.C.

NEW HAVEN

7.73-5514

•Equal Hotulng Leltder til
•Loana Muat Be ~Related

'l1tla olrer Doea Not Apply To Model Yeara

Prior To 1883.

.

.

'

SAT DCT .13
0 INNER · s·oo

LEA11ER OF . THE PACK

Meigs County .Sheriff James M. Souls by reports that three .
lndlvjduals have been arrested In Mlddletow'l . .
Aecordlng to Sheriff Soulsby, 40 pounds of marijuana was
di$COvered In a vehiCle owned by Herbert Yonas, 41,
Middletown. He Is ~lng held on a $7,500 bond In Montgomery
County.
Others arrested In the Incident were Harold Pettit, Union
Avenue, Pomeroy, and Jerome Howard, Route 4, Pomeroy.
Both are Incarcerated In the 1'!flddletown Jail, according to
Sheriff Soulsby.
.
.

•

A Multimedia Inc. Newtpaper

Mr. Hartson.
By CHARLENE H()EFLICH
.
Story's Statement
said
that
the
Ministerial
He
News
Staff
Se!ltlnel
.
Tuesday,
In response to that
I
A meeting of church Pilst9rs Associations will share will'
request, Story Issued a threeand lay people Interested In thoSe at 'the meeting the response
page position statement to the
working with the campaign to of Meigs County Prosecuting
Meigs County Ministerial Associhave removed from Meigs · Attorney Steven L. Story to their
ation regarding, lhe rental of
County alleg~ly obscene video request that h)s office Investigate
x-rated videos In Meigs County.
tapes will be held Thuruday at and prosecute those persons who
It reads In part:
7:30p.m, at the Pomeroy United are, In hts opinion, In violation of
· "I - There are no allegations
Methodist Church, 311 E. Second Ohio's anti-pandering of obscen·
that there ·have been any rental
St,, Pomeroy. · ·
lty statutes.
or sales of x-rated adult videos to
Representatives of · the two
Sponsoring the meeting are the
&lt;~ny ·minors. As I told you In our
Meigs County and Middleport ·ministerial associations met
conversation, any rentals to
t
Ministerial Associations. These ,with Story, Assistant Prosecutpersons under the age of 18 on
••
\•
two groups launched a campaign tor Linda Warner and Sheriff
x-rated videos, would be prosetn· August to challenge the . James Souls by on Sept. 27.
cuted vigorously. In addition
charge of publicity postel'll lor the Rlvet'VIew
CARNIVAL TIME - Fall brings with It school
The Rev. Don Meadows, treasacceptabll!ty of what they terin
there have been no allegations to -,
event. Jull Ia the daughter of Greg and Patricia
carnlvala, . and these students at Rive/view
"sexually-explicit and violent urer of the Meigs County Ministedate that any of the x-rated
Hayman of ·Long Bottom, and Christa the
Elementary School 'n Reedsville are working
video tapes" rented at various rial Association and pastor of the
videos complained of contain
daughter of left and Sonia Clrcl01 !If Long Bottom.
hard at publicizing their carnival, set for October
Pomeroy United Methodist . children. Obviously, any such
establishments In the county.
13. Jull Hayman, left, and Christa Circle are In
The Associations are planning Church, said the meeting las ted
complaint would take this out of
a Pornography Awareness Cam- approxlmat.ely two hours.
the realm of the discussion we
• 'Mr. Story was very cordial : had and would be dealt with very
paign ' Iilier. this month entitled
•'White Ribbons Against Porno· and took a lot of time explaining
severely by my office. .The
graphy" plus ~ continuing cam- the law to us," Meadows said.
complaint that I have is that
paign to Identify those establish- "He indicated there were several • x-rated videos are·being rented
ments which do and which do not .probllem areas with hls office's
or sold to adults.
rent or sell these videos which involvement in prosecuting al"In order to properly underlege,d violations of anti·
carry an X, XX or XXX r.atlrig.
stand this, I believe It is Impor''We have Invited allpastorsln pandering laws. He also extant that we define what we are
emigrated to the United States never thought he would see _the
the county, and several dozen Jay pllilned the Jlrnltatlons he has
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - An
talking a)&gt;out:
parsons, to the meeting," said with stafflng.and that his job Is .
from West Germany In 1951 reunlflcatlon ·of Germany.
Ohio University professor who
"II - What 1&amp; an x-rated
Richard Bald, an OU political Mr. Al Hartson, pastor of the technically considered partmovie'?
science professor, said Tuesday Middleport Church of Christ and time," Meadows continued.
"An x-rated movie Is a movie
The Ministerial Associations'
he Is still amazed at how quickly coordinator of-the WRAP camthat has been deemed by the
East and West Germany came
palgn for the two ministerial representatives at the meeting
Motion Picture Industry to be
requested that Story submit to
.suitable for viewing by adults
-together. The . two ·nations were
associations.
them
a written statement for
r~Unlted at midnight Tuesday
"It .Is at this meeting we will
only, that is, a person 18 years or
,.
following a 45-year division.
find out just how much Interest accuracy 'In reporting to their
older: It Is noi a rating by any
::.~~.:,..,.,...~·""·'·'-"'·~ ~~ ~· ""'~":!ti&gt;hlli'llnl)i'IO!ll!' ' ..,ho ..:• there Is ili'thli.cBJllpalgn,,apd the· constlttien~ and to the news
. govequnental agency .
dldri't thhlk reunification was. people who are serious enough media his response to their .
"What an X·rating attempts to
· Continued on page 5 .
. possible In the forseeable !u- a bout It to work In It," continued requ~sts of him.
ture," Bald said. " I don't think
,........- - - - - - - - - . . . . , . . . - - - - - - - . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ,
there was one single German •
expert who made that
prediction."
But Bald and Hubert Wilhelm,
an OU professor of geography,
warned that wfille there ·ts a
senSe of euphoria over a united
Germany, problems lie ahead lri
rebuilding East Germany. ·
Wilhelm, who ·e scaped froni
East Germ~ny. twice following
World War II, said for instance, a
smail porcelaln·ware factory operated by his cousins .that had
been In the famUy for 100 years
closed recently.
"As soon as the border opened
and the money changed they
were exposed ·to competition
from the West, which forced
them to close," he said.
Wllhl"m said scores of other
small businesses In East Germany may suffer a slmUar fate.
Bald said while West ae·r man
Chancellor Helmut Kohl deSOUTER CONFIRMED- A smUing Judge David Souter holds a
serves credit for bringing the
brief press oo.nferenee at the New Hampshire State House'Tuellday
countries · together, It was an
~fler being conflnned by the Senate to become · the next U.S.
effort brought to fruition by the .
dlsptaylnK this year's trophies are Sherr! WoH,
Supreme Court Jusdce. Souter could be sworn In 88 soon 88
people df East Germany.
A GOOD YEAR- The Eaatern Marching Band
field
commander, Aaron Wilson and Susie J(Jmes,
Thursday. ('IUPI photo)
·
has had a good year 10 far. The band receutly look
senior
members, and W!IUam Hall, director.
flnit ptaee honors at Canal Winchester which
qualifies them for state competition. Pictured '

.,

IACINE, OHIO

Three arrested by sheriff

2 Sections. 12 Pages 26 Cents

campaign underway ·to
remove x-rated videO~

i!OrNt

MASTERCARD - VISA -GOLDE !II BUCKEYE

Continued from page 1
'
Stlversvilie, and the grandson of the late Mr. and Mrs. William.
Carpenter of Stlversville. The LeMay family lived In Meigs
County several years during the depression at the Carpenter
honie. LeMay ·graduated from Ohio Stae University. He
returned to the Stlversville community several times before
World War II but has riot been back since.
Local relatives Include three first cousins, Freda Carpenter.
and Gene Carpenter, Stlversville, and · Anna Haines, Racine.
. Neva Curtis of Indianapolis, Ind., formerly of Meigs County, Is
also a first cousin. (See page 6 story).

••

•

·MER-CHANDISE &amp; ..
FIXTURES
RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

briefs•.. ~
. --..:----.

Low lit mid 80s. Cbanct of
rain 80 . percent. Thursday,
high near 70. Chanee of rain 80
percent.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, October 3. 1990

Copyrightod 1990

South Centr~ Ohio
Mostly clear T.?esday night,
with a low near 50. Partly cloudy
Wednesday, with highs near 80.
Chance of rain Is 20 percent.
Extended Forecut
Thul'lday through Saturday
A chance of showers Thursday
and Saturday, with R19Stly (air
weather on Friday, Highs will be
In the 70s each day, with
overnight lows between 55 and 65
early Thursday, and In the 50s
Friday and Saturday mornings.

· 94... 2100

..

at

ON

31D ntEET

Cards:
10-H, 10;C, K-D, 2.S

•

--

Weather

Plek·3: 229.
Plek-4: 4700

Page 3

STOREWIDE CLEARANCE

--Area deaths---

:,·,:-.-~Local

Continued from page 1

Dr.. Nancy I(tme, Middleport ented the educational program
risk o' being bottled up.
chiropractor, recently attendeq on sports Injuries from the
In seeking to defend the appar·
the d!ltr~ meetiJii of the South tral~r's perspective. . He Is a
ent change In strateliY, a Navy
Central Chiropractic Society In past trainer with .the Clnc!Matl
spokesman said Tuesday that the
ChUllcothe:
· Reds Iarin .team •. the Cincinnati
carrter "was blghly defendable"
Denis Behm, an athletic Kids Indoor soccer teJUll, U.S.
and Indicated there was Utile risk ·
trainer from Cincinnati pres- National swim team In the Japan
to the ship.
.
· .
and Australia Pan-Pacific meets
The Pentagon officially salll
and the Goodwll.l Games In
the Independence was ~nt Into
Seattle, Washlnilon, plus , pro-· the gulf to "conduct normal
.
gram coordinator for the Clncln·
operations" and "to provide an
Dally stock price&amp;
nat! Sports Medicine and Rehaopportunity for the carrier bat.t le
(As of 10: SO a.m.)
b!Utatlori Center.
group to become famUiar with
Bryce and ~k Smith
1'he sccs-ol! reprl!sents chlrO: some of the unique operating
of Blunt, Ellis a. Loewi
pr!lctlc pltyslclans ·throughout 12 ' conditions In the Persian Gulf."
counties In Southern Ghlo,
. It said !he· IndepelKience alao
Am Electric Power .... :·;; ...... '1:7%
would "provide a visible demonATilt'!' ................................. 321!!
ne~
:: ~ stratlon of. the operational capaAshland 011 ......................... 3'2
bllltles ot a carrier battle group
Bob Evans .... :..................... l2%
·
.
to
our friends and allies In the
Veterans Memorial
Charming Shoppes .. :............ 9%
region."
Monday admissions- Ellen A.
City Holding Co................... 15
The Pen~gon denJed·thlit the
Young,
Racine; Norman C. Will,
Federal Mogul ............... ...... 13%
movement
the caJ;tler Into the .
Rutland. ·
Goodyear TlltR ...................171!!
gulf
was
1
tend€
to Increase
Monday discharges -Martha
Key Centurion ....................10%
tension
In
the.
region,
where more
Burns.
Lands' End ...... ........ ........... 10~
than 170,000 u.s. soldiers and
Umlted Inc ............. ....... :.... 14
sailors are racing off with Iraqi
Dissolution dec.-ee
Multimedia Inc .......... , ........ .60%
forces occupying Kuwait,
Rax Restaurants ...... ............ :.!
"Although the movement of
A dissolution has been granted
· Robbin;" lit Myers ..... , ............ .18
In the Meigs cOUnty Court of one or our carrier battle groups
ShOney s Inc . ...................... . 12
Common Pleas to Debra L.
Star Bank ........... ... ; .. .. ........ 16 3.4
Wamsley and James R. Warns·
Smith in Persian Gulf
Wendy's Int'l. ................... .....6
tey
II.
Worthington Ind .................. 20\4
Sgt. Carter. Smith has been
assigned to the United Arab
Emirates. Sgt. Smith, a tank
commander with Echo Troop
Revival services
To meet,Thlll'lday .
5-12 CAV Is stationed at Fort
Revival
services
are
underway
The Meigs County Chapter' of
Knox, Ky. He will be engaged In
at
the
Pomeroy
Church
of
the
Public Employee Retirees, Inc.
demonstrations
of the fire power
Nazarene,
196
Mulberry
Ave.,
will meet Thursday at 1 p.m. at
and
maneuverability
of . the
Pomeroy.
David
Canfield
Is
the
the Senior Citizens Center, MulMl,Al
Abrams
tank.
Sgt.
Smith,
·
evangelist
and
Jim
·
anci
Cathy
berry Heights, Pomeroy. Feahis
·wire
Cheryl
and
their
two
tured speaker will be Brad Sisson are the song evangelists.
daughters
reside
In
VIne
Grove,
Sturm, PERS; Columbus. All Services ·will be held through
Ky. He Is the son of James and
goverDinent retirees are Invited Sunday at 7 p,m. each evening,
Wilma Smith of Sharon Road,
to attend and ask · questions The Rev ; Glen McClung, pastor,
Portland.
Invites the public to attend .
concerning the PERS program.

..Ohio Lottery

Blue Jays
still alive
in·AL East

U• S. atrcraJ' ··~-----­

Dr. Kime Attends district meetiDg

Beat of the Bend

,It

'
WINNING BAND - The Eastern ~bing
. Band recent!J captu'ed tlnl place honors at the
11110 canal
Wlncheater .Band Contest. 'lbe band
.

.

'

'

aleo qualified for the !!We Marehlnl Finals lobe
held ln Cooper stadium In Columbu on No-v. 8. Of
the SO-member band, 10 are aevent!' gra,d ers. ·
·'

\

•

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Offl·
clals of mainstream American
churches said Wedhe!l(lay the
movie - Industry's decision to
scrap the :X rating for sexually
explicit fllrns was "arrogant and
111-advlsed" l and should be
reconsidered. .
In a joint statement, leaders of
the National Council of Churches '
and the U.S. Catholic Conference
also warned the c'hange lnay
encourage further 'a ttacks on the
Industry and 'fuel a campaign for
direct government regulation of
movies.
In as·salllng the decision to
adopt a 11ew NC-17 rating to
re.p lace .t he :X, the statement said
the Motion Picture Association of
America "has caved In to the
commerelal Interests of those
who are are attemptllli to get
sexually expoltatlve material
Into general theatrical release. "
"It Is an arrogant arid Illadvised decision. which deeply
affects the public good," said the
statement . released by Bishqp
Edward J. O'Donnell, chairman
of the Committee on Communication fo .t he usee, and Beverly
Chain, head of the Communications Unit or the NCC. .
.
•

Local news briefs----,
Fish fry scheduled Saturday
The Middleport Fire Department will kick off Fire
Prevention Week actlvltles'by holding a !Ish fry Saturday, Oct.
6.
.
Fish sandwiches will be on sale at the-fire station for $1.50
each.
·
Serving will begin ·a t 10.:30 a .m.
,

Deputies probe theft

'

The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is Investigating t he
theft of some antique Items from an outbuilding on Long Hollow .
According to the report, Mrs. Betty Weyersmlller reported
Saturday that several antique Items had been taken on
Wednesday. Included In the list or Items was a set of single trees
¥'1th separator.
·
·
·
Sheriff James M. Souls by reports thai Thomas Matt McCourt,
19 formerly of Middleport, was arrested Tuesday evening .In
H~klngpor.t on a Meigs County Court warra~t charging
breaking and entering at the Walter Roush residence In
Middleport on Aug: 9. McCourt Is being held In the Meigs County
Jail pending a heart~ In the Meigs County Court.
On Tuesday afternoon deputies were n!&gt;tlfled by Susie Reiter,
Kingsbury Road, that her trailer had been entered someUme
between 1 and 3 p.m. She reported that a necklace ad ear rings
and five packs of cigarettes were taken.

. Boord seeks applications
otTheEas.tern Local Board of Education Is seeking applications
.
Coaches are needed for men's varsity basketball, men's ·
Continued on page_
5
L,......;..._...;...__.;;;;;,;;;;,;;;;.;;.,;;;,:;,.;;;.
_...;____

tor Its whtter sports program..

~.

'~

'

.,

"

.
I

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36360">
              <text>October 2, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="246">
      <name>wilson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="367">
      <name>wright</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
