<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11551" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11551?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-25T21:14:37+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42521">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/0cdb2a01d86619fd21e2b6a863f59b24.pdf</src>
      <authentication>54e9dd10bfc811d60e1e6422bfb98b25</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="36374">
                  <text>Ohio Lottery

JISational
..'INewspaper
I

Pick-3: 400
Pick-4: 9282

Cants:
10-H, 8-C, Q-D, 8-S

"Week

S,.aper Lotto ·
20-23-34 44-51-53
Kicker
'
092188

·Oct. 7-13

'·

·a t
Vol.41, No. 109
.Copyrighted 1990

~

•

SATURDAY, QCTOBER 13th
.•

THE LEADER OF THE PACK - was none
other than "Saini Nick" on Saturday as bikers
from as far away as Toledo mel for the sixth
annual Meigs County Toy Run. Toys gathered by
the group between now and Christmas lime will be

-*REFRESHMENTS
GRAND PRIZE
*S·2.00 CASH -DRAWING

·sEE ALL THE
NEW·1991 ,
MODELS.AT THE
NEW CAR SHOW

,
•

donated to benefit needy children In the area;
cash donations In the past ~ave been given to
villages aad spent to Improve playgrounds
counly·wlde.

Arab diplomats.· continue to s~ch
-for peaceful..solution _to gulf crisis
By GAYLE YOUNG
United Press International
Arab diplomats searched for a ·
peaceful solution to the gulf
crisis, despite shifting alliances
and Iraq's changing stance dur!ng the last week on prospects for
re~olvln" the conflict through
~·
. ""'~ .·,., ·• ~. ., M-'
,._
•· •o:xvua' i"ton.
· '
A high-level Egyptian delega· .
tlonarrlvedlnDamascusSunday
for talks with Syria oncoordlnat·
lng efforts to oust Iraqi occupatlon forces from Kuwait. Cairo
and Damascus restored diplomatlc ties after 12 years, and
relations between-the two have
strengthened after the Aug. 2
InvasiOn of Kuwait.
Although Wes.tern diplomats
•say Syria and Egypt differ on
many Issues and are not close,
both countries have sent troops to
serve In the U.S. - led multlriationa! force against Iraq.
InmllltarydevelopmentsMon- .-·
. ·.. .&lt;J,ay,theNavysaldltwaslooklng
tor two Marine helicopters with
eight c·rewmen aboard reported
missing In the North Arabian
Sea. The helicopters were from

...... .

(J

the amphibious assault sh'lp USS
Okinawa.
Also British, U.S. and Australian ships fired warning shots
against an Iraqi cargo ship wheij
It failed to stop for Inspection
Monday, a Defense Ministry
spokesman in London said.
.
The Iraqi vj!ssel heeded the '
warning and allowed. British
Royal Marines and U.S. Coast
Guard officers to board. The
ship, which was e10pty, was
allowed to proceed.
Saudi Arabia, which has recalled Its ambassador to Jordan
In another example of shifting
Mideast alliances, said It wc;~uld
build a "military city" In the
southwest of the kingdom, where
the multinational military force
Is set up to block Iraqi
aggression.
Palestine Liberation Organlzatlon chief Yas~ Arafat left
Amman for Tunis, Tunisia, on
Monday after meeting Sunday
with Jordan's King Hussein.
Hussein expelled the PLO 'from
his kingdom more than a decade
ago, but both leaders have taken

SHOW HOURS 9.A.M.·3 P.M.

GALLIPOLIS AUTO AUCTION LOT

Astronauts conduct
•
•
varwus ·experlments

UPPER
RIVER ROAD, NEXT. TO THE SllVER BRIDGE PLAZA
.
.

CAPE

CA~AVERAL,

Fla.

Earth's atmosphere to gauge the
state of. the ozone layer, which .
shuttle Discovery collected data scientists believe Is being damMonday to help scientists monl- . aged by poilu lion.
tor Earth's fragile ozone layer In
With · the Ulysses solar probe
one of several experiments sche- speeding smoothly Into deep
duled for their third day in SPl!Ce. space, the astronauts also ·
On their 29th orbit around planned to check the health of 16
Earth, the five-member ·crew rats on board as part of a medical
was awakened at 1:47 a.m. EDT experiment aimed at evaluating·
by the Coast Guard Hymn, whether biological changes
·played In honor of astronaut caused by near-weightlessness
Bruce Melnick, the first Coast- could be used to help test new
Guard member to fly in space.
drugs.
"Another good morning to you,
In add! tlon, crewmembers
Dtiscovery. Another great day in planned to w~rk - wlth a personal
space, " controllers at Mission computer· to asses the perforControl lp Houston told the. mance of machines that might be
astronauts In a·. package of used on NASA's planned spal:e
Ins !ructions and messages faxed
station, and conduct experito the spaceship.
ments with a new voice activated
More than three hours later, command system.
the. crew opened the lid on the
The crew Includes commander
Shuttle Solar Backlcatter Ultra- Rlclihard Richards, 44~ co-pilot ·
violet experiment In the orbiter's Robert Cabana, 41, William
open payload bay to measure Shepherd, 41, Thomas Akers, 39,
ultraviolet radliltlon.
and Melnick, 40.
• The data will be used to
Richards and Cabana
calibrate · Instruments aboard gulae Ulscovery to a tanamg
sateiUtes that measure ultravi- Wednesday at 6: 57 a.m. PDT at
Olet light "backscattered" by Edwards Air Force Ba$e, Calif.
(UP!) - Astronauts aboard the

••

10

.,

I

FQur locations
Member: FDIC

to serve you better.

..

•

..

., .

.
~

....

•
•

'

.

will

•

..

a sympathetic stand toward
Iraq.
Before his departure, Arafat
told reporters that despite initial
reservations, an International
consensus has emerged stressing
a link between the crisiS and·
Middle East problems • as a
whore•.
"What was said to be lmposslble Is emerging as a reality
today," Arafa1 said.
Egypt's ·opposition . ai-Wafd
newspaper said Sunday that
Egyptian authorities had denied•
Arafat permission to visit Cairo
because he has condemned the
U.S.-Ied force In the gtllf.
The newspaper said Arata!
was told he would have to
publicly change his views and
apologize to the Arab world
before he could come to Cairo.
Palestinian sources in the
region. confirmed the report and
saldArafathadsentamessageof
protest to Egyptian President
Hosnl Mubarak.
Sources from the Arab govern- ·
ments Involved say the leaders
Continued on page 10

Moto·rcycle driver injured in mtshap
A Pennsylvania man, who lost control of his 1982 Harley David. control . of his motorcycle and son motorcycle.
struck -a wall at West Main and
Scott was transported by
Locust S,treets in Pomeroy Saturday . ·Pomeroy Squa~ 1 to Veterans
night escaped with a fractured Memonal HosJlltal and then later
.. transferred to Holzer Medical Ceo.
right 8rude.
Pomeroy Police said Timothy ter where h~ was treated and
Shawn. Scott, 23, Valencia, Pa., was rel~d. ,
.
traveling at a high rate of speed . Police 5a!d Scott was cued f~r
past SuperAmerica, when he lost DUI and failure to control. Scotts

i'

·.

· motorcycle incurred heavy damage
in the 8:20 p.m. mishap, according
to a police deparunenl spokesman.
A Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service unit was damaged
Thursday at1:26 p.m. during an incident at the Pomeroy,.Mason
Bridge. According to the Pomeroy
Poli.c e Deparunent, Howard Mullins, Pomeroy, was driving the unit
· onto the bridge when a large truck
attempted to turn off the bridge.
Mullins pulled out of the way of
. the truck and struck the bridge. The
vehicle SIIStained light damage to
the right rear quarter panel, according 10 police.
·
. ··
· Two accidents were investigated
by the Middleport Police Depart·
mcnt over the weekend.
The first mishap occutred Friday
at 6 p.m. and involved Gary M.
Smith, Middleport, and Linda L.
Nowlin, Point Pleasant, W. Va. According to the n:port, Smith was
traveling south on Beech Street
when Nowlin slOpped at the stop
sign on Laurel Street. Nowlin
reponedly pulled into the intersec. tion failing to yield the right of way
to · Smith. Nowlin was cited for
failure to yield. Smith's vehicle sustained damage to the right rear
quarter pane[ There were no in-

juries reported.

.

.

• Inn in Middleport for a potluck
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
dinner.
At least 100 bikers from as far
Led by Santa Claus, each biker
away as Toledo converged upon traveled with a toy strapped to
Pomeroy and Middleport on the !font or rear of his or her
Saturday for the sixth annual bike; the toys were delivered to
Meigs County Toy Run.
the Salvation .Army in Pomeroy
Needy children from the Meigs following the dinner.
County area will benefit from .
In addition to the toys dona ted
this annual event, which will by these most generous motorcy·
provide toys at Christmas time cle enthusiasts, the Meigs Co11nty
for youngsters who might other- Toy Run Inspires other lo~al
wise go without.
•
residents to donate both toys and
The bikers, who came from cash In hopes of making Christ·
Meigs County, Jackson, Mason mas merrier for needy kids.
County, W.Va ., St•.Albans,
Locations for donation cans for
W.Va., Athens al\d Toledo, met the deposit of money, as well as
Saturday morning at Pleaser's In "drop points" for toys, will be
Pomeroy before 'traveling to announced In the near fu1Ure,
Kelly's Corner In Pomeroy and according to a spokesperson for
then to the Mltway Tavern on the group.
Route 7. Following these stops,
In the past, at least $1,000 hasthe group met at the Riverboat

been collected each year In cash
alone. That money has been
donated to different villages on
the condition that it be spent for
the benefit of children In the
area.
. Playground equipment In
Pomeroy, Middleport, Rutland
and at Carleton School in Syracuse can all be credited to these
...
donations.
.
· New and very good used toys
which are donated at th e "drop .
points" are delivered In "truck
loads" to the Salvation Army in ·
Pomeroy. .
Before leaving for the run on
Saturday , the group expressed
Its appreciation to local businesses for their donations of toys
and money for the cause, as well
. as food for the party.

Budget battle ·moves to Senate
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The ·
budget battle moved to the
Senate following House passage
early Monday of a Democraticcrafted budget plan that gives a
House comml.ttee power to ease
Medicare cuts by $18 billion and
alter a previously defeated
plan's tax package.
The 250-164 mostly party-line
vote came at about 2:30 a.m.
after two hours of sometimes
bitter partisan debl!-te. The senate was expected to consider the
new budget plan later Monday,

•
along with a temporary spending
bill that would end the two-day
shutdown of most federal agencies and services.
The House passed the stop-gap
funding bill at about 3:45 a.m.
EDT Monday after approving the
budget plan. But the money
measure was ldentic. l to tile one
Bush vetoed on Saturday, and
Republicans warned Bush would
vet~ the bill again · hecause It
lackeil a provision he demanded.
· · Rep, Dean Gallo, R-N.J :, who
supported a bipartisan plan

defeated hy the House early
Friday, said on the floor early
Monday that President Bush
may oppose the new Democratic·
crafted budget plan.
"We just got word that the
president Is not In favor of the
way this has been handled,"
Gallo sajd. The White House
could not be reached for
'c omment.
Debate on the budget plan
opened with House Budget Com·
mlttee Chairman Leon Panetta,·
Continued on page 10

Military cargo plane forced to make
emergency landing. at Barnesville
BARNESVILLE, ..Ohio (UPI) " paint, s ome solvents, some
- Authorities said a military· pesticides , lithium batteries and,
chartered cargn plane carrying we believe, some sodium
flammable chemicals was forced hydroxide. "
The Ohio Highway Patrol said
to make an emergency iandlng
Sunday at Barnesville-Bradfleld . the pilot smelled smoke and, put
the plane down. There were no ·
Airport.
The plane, a civilian version of injuries.
.
Air Force personnel briefly
'ili'll C-130 Hercules. the Air
Frlrce's workhorse cargo craft, Is detained three members of the
owned by Southern Air Transport . news media because of possible
of Miami and was en route from exposure to · ha za rdous
Wright-Patterson Air Force chemicals.
Schneeman said the three-man
Base to Dover Air Force Base In
crew
chose to make the emerDelaware.
gency
landing after smel)lng
The plane left Wright·
vapors
and
smoke In the aircraft.
Patterson about 10:30 a.m. SunDick Quinlan of the Belmont
day and landed at Barnesville·
County Disaster Services
Bradfield at 11:15 a.m ..
Judi Schneeman, a spokeswo: Agency said lor:al authorities
ma:n for Southern Air ' said .the were told initially the cargo was
plane was carrying about 25,000 not dangerous an~ did not find
pounds of cargo, Including out the plane's contents until a
crew arrived from Wright· Pat-

terson late Sunday afternoon .
Airport Manager Clyde Wittenbrook said he was sitting In a
house acorss the street from the
airport when a call came In that a
C-130 transport plane was m·a klng an emergency la nd lng because of fire or smoke .
"The plane just touched
down," he said. "There was no .
flames or fire, just an odor. It
. was wicked. Everyone got out
OK."

He said the plane landed on the .
run\l'aY In the wrong direction,
because the pilot was afraid to
take the time to fly around to get
In the proper direction .
He also said the runway was
damaged because the plane and
Its cargo were so heavy the
wheels sank about ·3 Inches Into
the pavement.
·

·

The second accident happened
on Saturday a6:55 p.m. in front of
Fruth Phlrmacy; Mlddlepcxt police
said ~yn Neutzling, Middleport, was turning onto Fruth's
parking lot when a vehicle driven
by Risa L. Sayre, Masotl, W.Va.,
failed to stop ' and SII'UCk
Neutzlin(s vehicle. No injooes or
citations were reponed. A police
deparlmeat spokesman said Sayre
had left the scene before arrival of

officers. ~ ' .

25 Cents

A Multimttdia Inc. New.PII!per

.

" Gallipolis and Smith's GMC Trucks will be present
to demonstrate the features of their models: It's
.9ur third new car show and Ohio Valley Bank wants
everyone to have a ·great time browsing and
inspecting the beautiful new car styles for 1991.

*PRIZE DRAWINGS
*FREE ·PARKING

1 Section. 10 P1gos

More .-than 100 ·bikers
take part

.........--.
•
'\

See the exciting new car models for 1991 on
display •in a special one-day showing at the.
Gallipolis Auction Lot, ·upper River Road, next to
the Silyer Bridge Shopping Plaza - Saturday.
Smith Buick Pontiac, Gene Johnson Chev./Oids.
/GEO, Norris Northup Dodge, Turnpike of

en tne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday. October B. 1990

-

Chance of rain 70 peuent
tonight and Tuesday.

•

••

.

Low tonl1ht In lower 008.

llllh Tuesday In mld-'lOs.

SENATOR MESBEL SPEAKS - Senator
Karl')' MeDel (0 - Yollllptowll) was the keynole .
apeaker al tbe Melp Coaaty Democratic Party
Fall Dlnaer on Saluday ntallt J'1dured, left to

..

rll:hl, are ' Seuator ._,..,. Mnllel; ·Party Chairman Sue Malloll;
Slate Senalor Jaa Michael
l.GDJ ( D • ClreleviUe), runn1n1 for rt!111ecUcia Ia
November.

and

•

.f

\

-

~~

�'

..

MoncleV. Octobw 8, 1990

r

Commentary·

·

IUCounS&amp;reet
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AB,EA

~~

..

........_.._
.......,I"'T"ElE=lt-=&gt; .

..

.

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOJ!:FLICH

Geoeral Mana1er ·

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aailtllllt Poblllher/ Voatroller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland DaUy Press
ASSO!'latlon and.the American Newspaper. Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters Will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.

Hypocrisy abounds_in
statewide campaigns

By MIKE TUlLY
VPI National Baaeball Writer
BOSTON (UP!) _The longest
playoff game In American
League history only served to
prolong Boston's frustration
against the Oakland Athletics.
Bob Welch delivered the postseason start of his career and
late- slimmer acquisition Harold
Baines drove In three runs
Sunday night, sending the A's
halfway to anAL playoff sweep
with II . 4-1 victory over the Red
·
Sox.
In a game that took three hours
and42mlnutes, Welch-whohad
never survived the sixth Inning In
slx post-season starts _ went 7
1-31nnlng's Boston tried stepping
outoftheboxagalnstWelch, but
that didn't work and neither did
much else
Asked .if 'the pace bothered
him Welch replied ':Not when
the ;...ults tum out the way they
do."
·

·

Cabinet ~stomps at taxpaye:fs' . ex~nse
Jack A~erson and Dale' Van Altta

WASHINGTON - George minions have been pressed into
BliSh's Cabinet members wore a service. Cabinet mem&amp;&gt;ers have
suddenly become lifelong . soul trip. A Labor oepartment spopath In the jet stream thts
mates with guys llko;&gt; Rep. Denny ' keswoman studied bole's casummer flying back and forth
)letween Washington, D.C., and
Smith , R-Ore., who is faci-n g a lendar ·and then said Dole had
stiff re-election challenge, and visited regional of{tces of the
the Pacific North~est. But the
_
.
frequent-filer marathon does not conservative Bob Williams who department.
' While she was in the neighbormean there was a national crisis Is trying to oust llb.eral . Rep.
hood Dole was the guest of honor
on the West Coast. No, this was , Jolene Unsoeld, D-Wash.
Some of these missions have at the meal that raised, $50,000
simple, old-fashioned political
stumping at the taxpayers' . traces of ~\!at on them, but most for . Denny Smith's campaign,
expense.
of it has been served up ·on and she spoke at a fund raiser for
Bush is stU! stinging from the expensive plates - like the ·candidate Bob Williams across
humiliation of betng.beaten by, of private $500-a-plate GOP fund
the state ~ une In Vancouver,
raiser hosted by Labor Secretary Wash.
all· .people, the now-forgotten
Michael Dukakls In Oregon and Elizabeth Dole In mid-July In the
Dole's visit, ltke the others,
penthouse ·dlnlng room of Por- made · a pretense of officijll
Washington In 1988. With the
tland's U.S. Bancorp Tower.
upcoming congressional elecbusiness, just enough to charge
Our associate·Jtm Lynch asked the taxpayers' for the trip.
tions on Bush's front burner next
Dole: s office the purpose C!f _l be
. to the Iraq crisis, the president's
President Bush himself flew to

!Ll HUfF
rAND
LL PUFF...

By LEE LEONARD
UPI &amp;alehouse Reponer
COLUMBUS- U hypocr~y were a marketable commodity, some
of the candidates for statewide office could retire and live off !he
Interest on their earning's.
Statehouse observers were doubled over with laughter at the .
bizarre display last week.
•
It began, wh~n state Auditor Thomas Ferguson, who rarely has a
news conference but prefers to deal from behind press releases,
·issued a statement calling for campaign finance reform . ..
You could tell how sincere Ferguson was from the language used by
his professional wordsmiths: "State Auditor Thomas E . Ferguso'l,
noting the agitation for campaign finance reform ... "
·
Agitators can be described as people who ought to be satisfied with
the status quo but aren't.
Nevertheless, FergUson proposed to do the public a large favor and
tax big campaign contributions-; more than $1,000- by Individuals
and political action committees. The campaign would pay the tax,
which would escalate from 10 percent on a donation of $1,000 to$2,500,
up to 90 percent on a donation of $100,000.
ThiS, said Ferguson, would eliminate the Influence of big money
and.encourage can.d ldates to tap large numbers of-small donors.
It also would play right Into the hands of the auditor, who' secures
much of his campaign money by suggesting that his own office
employees give 2 percent of their pay to the cause of seeing that he's
re-elected, so they'll be sure ·to have a job.
Many hands (with checks In them) make for a large warchest, and
a happy work environment.

I

I started my professional career as a teacher. So I'll admit I
always suspected that what
principals did when they got
together was think. up new ways
to get more work out of us
teachers and more ttme for
themselves to roam the halls.
But I take it ali back, at least as
far . as Missouri Is concerned.
When the Missouri Association of
Secondary School Principals got
together this year, · they con- ·
eluded that students are missing
too much class time while
participating In extracurricular
Paul Pfeifer, the Republican candidate for attorney general, won a
activities - and they want It to
prize when he called a .press conference to announce he would, If · stop. The principals tallied the
class hours missed by kids
elected, form a Seniors Protection Unit to meet the special legal
Involved in several activities,
needs of Ohio's elderly.
and the totals are well over 100
Pfeifer said the new unit could be created at ''minimal'' co~t using
hours missed per school year In
existing personnel from tbe Medicaid fraud and consumer protection
units'. No mention of who would do the jobs of those people.
· some cases. ·Under questioning, Pfeifer said the personnel would report to the
I doubt there's a parent oi a
highschOol student alive who
same boss they do now . So whete's the "new unit?" Apparently
nowhere.
hasn't already concluded the
But It was OK, because later in the press conference Pfeifer said
nme thing, perhaps while lying
slumped over his~ or her steering ,
there already are too many different sections in the attorney
general's office and some 'of them ought to be cut out. Huh?
wheel after running another

•.

·-

~~
C. 1tl0 NEA. '"'·
·
by

"YOU'RE RIGHT! This IS going to hurt you
more th;m It will hurt me. l'rri going to take you
to court."

{

Duane Miller of Marshall trnlverslty netted first place In the
college ·men's race of the University of Rio Grande Cross Country
!nvltatlonal Saturday, while his
team ran off with the team
trophy.
' Miller posted a lime of 26:20,
five seconds slower than the
26: 15 flnlsll set by Cedarville's
Eric Fillinger In the 1989 race.
Marshall's A team won first
place among the college teams
witb 28 points, followed by
Morehead State (Ky.), 64; Ohio
University, 77; the University of
Qnctnnatl, 89; Rio Grande, 107;
Marshall B team, 163; and
Shawnee State, 213. '
Placing first in the f Ollege
women's race was Marshall's
Michelle Strager in 19: 43, followed ·In second place by · Rio
· Grande's Renee Peck In 19: 58.
Peck, a sophomore from Baltimore, Ohio, · won the 1989
women's competition In 19:27.
Overall team winner was
Morehead State with 35 points,
followed by Marshall, 49; Cincinnati, 60; and Rio Grande, 78.
"I can't blame them," Rio
Grande Coach Bob Willey commented on his teams' performamces; ''Everyone ran as hard
as they could against such strong
competltlop. Occ;~S\onally you

A couple of months ago I
suggested that one ~Ide benefit of
· the ~orldwlde cojlapse of commfuntsm might be the disclosure
o a good many closely held
communjstsecrets,lncludlngthe
Identity of various secret communlst agents In the free world.
No brand-new Soviet spies .
have been fingered yet by their
former bosses (at least, not
publicly), but various recent
developments Indicate that my
prediction was right on target.
One treasured communist myth
has already been exploded; the
known activities of one important communist spy ring have
been fleshed out; and the guilt of
two of the ·Soviet Union's most
valuable American agents has
been confirmed In the teeth of a
40-year ltber.al and leftist campaign to maintain. their ·
Innocence.
The myth was the communist
version of how Salvador Allende,
~he Chilean president who was ,
elected with communist support,
died In 1973. The ·armed forces
had rebelled, following huge
public demonstrations protest11\r Allende's destruction of the
Chilean economy. When the
prestdenttal palace came under
altack, Allende's own physician
saw him put a rifle between his
knees, point the muzzle at his
head, and pull the trigger.
But the communists floated an
account which ~ad Allende being
shot by rebel soldiers as he
heroically led the resistance of
loyal forces. ThiS became the
reigning myth, believed b.Y many ·
mWiona the world over, until the
recently eleeted Aylwin goverqment decided to rebury Allende ·

''

than ls available In the fall and become less Involved with
spring; (2) to schedule evening school, family· and peers. They
sports events so that ali travelln'g develop more cynical attitudes
can be done after school; (3) tp about work than . their noncut the length of some seasons;
working counterparts, and .most
(4')and to appeal to groups such or them work solely to be able to
as Future' Farmers of America
buy material goods, not to save
and the Distributive Education
for college or the future. In
Clubs of Ameri~a to schedule ' addition, child labOr law violamajor conferences and contests
tions and ·Injuries to adolescents
in the summer.
.
on th~ job~ have risen
Some Missouri· teachers don't dramatically.
think much of the recommenda· Ironically, the same week the
tions. For one thing, scheduling
principals' report came out, a
activities in the summer would
study by the College Board
cut Into their three-month vacaconcluded that high-school math
tion, and teachers aren't getting
Is the most important link to
rich off the work they're already
doing well In college. And minordoing in ni.n e months, Some
Ity and low-Income students who ·
parents argue that transferring
take high-school algebra and
extracurricular .activities to evgeometry succeed in college as
enings and the summer leaves
well as middle- and upper-class
·
whites.
the students less time to work at
paying jobs. Ah, there's another
I haven't hM much call for my
extracurricular activity I think
baton-twirling expertise as an
we could do with Jess of.
adult. However, I sure have had
A stUdy by the National Consuplenty of opportunities where I
mers Lliague has found that . could have used that math 1
didn't take. ·
teen-agers who work tend to

,.

.,
·i

l

Scoreboard
Olllo CoDece Football Score1

By Ualled PrH s International

s.turda)', Oct . a
Illinois 31, Ohio State 20
Miami (Ohio) 24, Ball State 10
Bowling Green 10, Ohio 10 (tie)
Central Michigan 42, Kent State 0
Toledo 37, Eastern Mldllgan 23
Western Michigan 24, Akrm 20

. l

YoungstQ\Yn St 17, Western Ken~

lucky U

'-.

·

··

Heidelberg 21, Ot rerbeln 10
Mount Union 13, John Carroll 7

Dayton 49, Jona 16
CoUet:e Football Fared

How the UPI Top 25 fared
Saturday:
1. Not~ Dame (3-H lost to .
Stanford 36-31. Next game; OC1 . 13
vs. Air Force.
.

..

•

,

Bain~· grounder from going
doWT! the line, but the tiebreakipg · run came across. ~
Baines' was acquired from Texas
on Aug. 29th for two players to be
named later.
.Oakland added two runs in the
'
ninth on an RBI double by Baines
and and RBI single by Mark
McGwlre.
.
For the second straight game,
Boston took a 1-0 lead. Luis
Rivera opened the third with a
doubleofftlleGreenMonsterand
advanced on . Jody . Reed's ·
grounder to second. Quintana
lined the . first pitch to · left,
allowing Rivera to score standlng up.
Oakland answered in its next
tum. McGee led off with a
double. One out later, Baines
singled him home.
By raisin~ Its p~off record to
19-15, th&amp;A s set
ALmark for . '
most wins and tied the Dodgers
for most In the majors.

'
'

.

""'

-

Also finishing for ·Rio Grande
have to sacrifice a meet for
in the women's race were Bonnie
another day."
Evans, ninth, 20: 57; Debbie
'Best ever'
Gray, 19th, 22: 34; Kim Edens.
The meet, Rio Grande's lOth
Involving college and high school · 22nd, 23:~; and Nancy Keller,
teams, was "the best ever,"
26th' 26: 47.
· Local team results
Willey said.
Among the 50 high school
"Everything .went without a
hitch," he added . . "I . heard
teams participating In the invitational, three area teams
nothing bt~t positive comments.
competed.
The Atheltlc Con·gress officials
In the boys's Division II race,
always do a tremendous job, and
there was a lot of help from the
Meigs placed eighth with 213
students in our Organization and
points and Gallla Academy was
14th with 344. Placing (or Meigs
Administration class ."
were Nathan Baloy, 19th, 19: 27;
Willey estimated the meet
Bobby Johnson, 20th, 19: 33; P .J .
drew between 2,500 and 3,000
Chadwell, 42nd, 20: 37;· Chris
people, Including 1,100 runners,
Sloan, 63rd, 21: 43; Phil Smith,
"so again, we feel this t's the
69th, 21: 57; and Jeremy Heck,
largest single event on campus.''
.
.
"The people from Bob Evans . 76th, ~3: 02.
For GAHS, Van Mason was
Farms, who had the food con.ces53rd , 21: 17; Eric Hoffman was
s!Qn, did a tremendoi!S job anc!
60th, 21: 41; Mike Holder was
add a lol of class to the
88ih, 21: 56; Terry Ray placed
operation," he added. "Every
81st
in 23: 49; Keith Hanning was
person did their job, which made
82nd In 23: 52; Scott Blhl finished
everything easier and a lot
86th in 24: 10; and Brandon
smoother."
PhUIIpa, Amy Well, Toby mu, and Jenny Deem.
EASTERN VARSITY- The Eastern Varsity
McQuaid was 89th in 25: 14.
Individually for Rio Grande,
Back
- Slephaale Otto, Carrie Morrissey, Lee '
Volleyball team Ill stardn1 to soUdlly gelng down
Overall winner of the race was
Mark Cline finished first In
Gillilan,
Lorrie Bakar. Absent was ~na Hensley.
the stretch toward tournament time as . It has
Turpin with 39 points, while
seventh place at 26: 54; Tim
The
team
·Is coached by veteran coach Pam
claimed wins In Its last three of tour malches.
Fairfield Union's Chad Myers
Warnock was 13th, 27:33; Rusty
Douthitt.
Pictured are front. l·r, Shelly Metzger, Tabby
finished first in 17:41.
, ,
Edens was 26th, 28: 50; Doug
Gallla Academy girls finishing
Horne, 28th, 28: 52; Troy Coch' ' ,,
ran, 33rd, 29: 23; and VInce
In the Division I race were
Fatica, 35th, 30: 18.
Heather Huestis, 20th, 24: 47;
' ..! ~
Laura Saunders, 24th, 25 : 13; Jo
obviously
there
are
many
of
you
. . ,:_
curtain.·
other
stde
of
the
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP!) Harmon, 30th, 25: 39; Whitney
who
will
predict
our
doom,"
.
Wyche
began
his
postgame
Relief, happiness and female
Adkins, 43rd, 28: 22; and Christie
Robinson
said.
"But
It
doesn't
:.
.Interview
with
a
towel
around
his
reporters co- existed In the
Clemens, 49th, 29: 32. Team
., .•
have to be that way ."
crowded·
Cincinnati locker room waist - but he was wearing
winner was Harrison . with 30
The
flengals,
who
last
week
,
. .. :
pants
underneath.
He
joked
with
Sunday following the Bengals'
points, while GAHS placed sevfailed
to·
score
an
offensive
a
male
radio
reporter
who
was
34-31 overtime victory over the
enth with 166 points. Placing first
eonstn 41-3. Next game: Oct. 1~ vs.
touchdown for the first time In 12 : '·..;.
wearing a wig and dress.
Los Angeles Rams.
Michigan State.
was ·carrie First of Mount
games,
scored touchdOWT!S on -:'·
After Los Angeles had two
5. VIrginia (!\.j}) did not pla y.
Boomer Estason threw for a
Healthy, 21:00.
Next game: Oct. 13 vs. North
each
of
their
first three posses- ,,
club-record 471 yards and engl- drives to score in overtime and
In the bOys' Division III race,
Cardlna State.
sions
and
improved
to 4-1.
6. Auburn (3-6-11 defeetedLoulsl·
five Hannan Trace runners com- . neered the drive that set up Jim the Bengals one, Cincinnati took
ana Te-ch 16-14. Next game: Oct.13
Breech's 44-yard field goal at over on its 11. Esiason then
peted. Todd Boothe placed third
vs. Vanderbilt.
11: 56 of the extra session as the completed 5 of 5 passes for 64
in 17: 30; Brian Unroe was 24th in
7. Tennessee ( J.0-2 ) did not play.
''•
Bengals capped a difficult week yards in the 8-play, 63-yard
Next game: Oct . 13 vs. Flort4a.
19: 03; Matt Davis finished in
.... ..
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
march that gave Breech the
8. Miami (3-1) defeoted Florida
with a thrilling triumph.
20:
09;
Chad
Barnes
w&amp;s
llOth
in
State 31·22. Next game: Oct. 13.vs.
chance
at
his
second.field
goal
of
4464524
.:.-..
:"This Is .a bout as big a win as
22: 58; and John Bevan was 127th
Kansas.
.
12. 75 11A"'-'IN MU!NEES s-.ruAOAY I SUII).\V
I've
ever had," said Bengals the game.
9. Colorado ( 4·1·1) deffated Mls·
in 29 :31. Caldwell's Brian Hesson
$l . 7! B.UCAIN NIGHT TUESD!\r
The
Rams.
a
choice
of
many
to
souri 33-31 Next game: Oct. 13 vs.
Coach
Sam
Wyche,
who
was
(EXCEPT "GHOST")
placed
firs't
in
16:33,
and
Ca.
l
dIowa State.
advance
to
the
Super
Bowl,
fell
to
fined
close
to
$30,000
by
the
NFL
well was the team winner wtth 33
·l o. ,Brt,gham Young (4·1) did not
·, ~:
for barring a female reporter 1-3 for the first tirne· since 1987.
. play . Next game: Ocr. 13 vs,
pblnts .
That
was
the
only
time
in
coach
Cola-ado State.
•'!!' •
from
the
locker
room
Monday
Placing for Meigs in the junior
11. Southern Cal (3-1) defeated
John
Robinson's
tenure
the
team
after
·a
loss
In
Seattle.
night
high boys race were Philip
Washlngtm State 3()..17. Next
. '.
''We had a good game plan and failed to make the playoffs .
game: Oct. 13 at Stanford.
Edmonds, 20th, 13: 47; Chris
Despite the huge edge In time
12. Dlln&lt;is (3-ll defeated Ohio
Chapman, 45th, 15: 28; Willie . Boomer . mad~ some of the
State 31-20. Next game: Oct . 13 vs.
oft
- Los Angeles had a. bye last
greatest plays he's ever made."
Johnson, 56th, 17: 00; and Travis
Purdue.
week
while Cincinnati played
Coming oft qne of hts worst.
13. Clemsoo (5- ll defeated Geor·
,..S(lrowl, 70th,19: 26. Meigs ranked
Monday
night - the Rams
gla 34-3. ' Next game: Oct . 13 at
ninth among participating days as a pro, Esiason completed
Georgia Tech .
·slipped
three
games he hind first30 of 44 passes with three
teams, while Warren Local was
14. Washtngtm (4·1 ) defeated
place
San
Franctsc.o
in the NFC
touchdowns and no Interceptions
Arizona State 42-14. Next game:
the team winner with 45 points
West.
Oct . 13 vs. Oregoo.
to win an epic passing duel with
and Riverside's Aaron Cox
15. Texas A&amp;M (4·1) defeated
"One and three Is difficult, and
Los
Angeles counterpart Jim
placed first in 11: 26 .
Texas Tedt 28-24. Next game: Oct .
Everett.
·
13 at Houston.
In the jUnior hlgll girls race,
.. : '~
16. Arkansas (2·2) lost to Texas
.;...
,;_,;_
,,,'•
Everett, who went 25 of 46 for .,...;...
~.
Meigs' Allison Gerlach was 37th
t hrl:stian 54- 26. Next game: Oct. l3
372
yards
with
two
touchdowns
in 19:43. Team trophy winner
•.
vs. Rice.
17. Oregon (4·1) defeated Utah
was Jackson with 33 points, while and no Interceptions , had
:State 52·7. Nexl game: Oct . 13 at
Teresa· Peck of Liberty Union brought the Rams back from a
,..:
Washtngtcn.
..
21-0
deficit
In
the
second
quarter.
••,•
fiJiished the race first in 13:30.
18. Georgia Tech (._Ot defeated
But
it
was
a
relieved
Eslason
and
Maryland 31· 3. Nexrgame: Oct.13
•
Open race results
vs. aemsoo.
the Bengals who prevailed.
In
the
college
men's
open
race,
'
••
19. Mi chigan Stale tl-2·1) l~t to
"It was hard to concentrate
Phil Howard of Piketon repeated
Iowa 12·7. Next game: Oct . 13 at
•
MJchtgan-;
as champion with a time of 17: 27. thts week, with this whole circus
•
ANNOUNCES
...
20 . Fresno State ( ~1) lost to
Competing in that race for Rio atmosphere going on around us,"
••
Northt:rn Dllnols 73-18. Next game:
•
Grande was student and assist- said Estason, who threw for the
Oct. 13 vs. Utah State.
,.~
ant cross country coach Bob most passing yards ever against
•••
Fritz, who finished seventh in the Rams . "The coaches tried to
e:o
to
a
baste,
simple
offense,
"
••
18:07. FUchard Haft, director of
About
10
women
.
reporters
food .services at Rio Grande, was .
••
entered the ancinnatl loeker
24th In 21: 45.
room after the game. To protect
•
i
The women's college open race
••,
the players' privacy, the Sengals
DENVER (UP!) - For three was won by Katrina Riggleman
provided by
of the past tour years, this Is the of Glenville State (W.Va .) In put up a curtain to prevent
game that would have been . 22:07. Competing from Rio anyone from seeing Into their
•,~
·,
called the AFC Championship Grande was Atsilko Fatica, who showers and bathroom. The
preview. Cleveland's trip to· was seventh In 24:54.
players put on their pants on the
'
··~
Denver Monday night leaves two
•
entirely different possibilities:
M.D.
both teams from the 1989 confer••
ence title game will be 2-3 or the .
•
Browns will lose their fourth
\
\
straight while the Broncos hang
\
. on In a tough 'dlvision.
\
Either scenario shows the
Dr. Kirkhart is the latestadditiontothe Clinic's
$
mighty have fallen -lis just how
seven phYsician Ob/Gyn Department. She will
:
many and how far .
•
Since the AFC title game last
be practicing at the Middleport Clinic each
:
year, Denver finished the season
~
Wecftlesday, and et the Main Clinic in Gallipolis
with the most crusbtng defeat In
~
the remainder of each week.
·
~
Super Bowl history and has spent
this seaa_on squandering leads
Appoint-fl er lnforn~ation Cal:
,
weekly. Last week, tbe Broncos
992-2111
:
led 21-9 In the fourth quarter
•
or 446·5SI1
••
before giving up three TDs within
77 seconds to lose 29-28 at Buffalo.
Helzer Chic
'
••
At 2-2, the Broncos enter their
150.1Str..t ·
~
gam~ behbld the 4-1 Los Angeles
lliddleport, Ohio
)
Raiders and ;J-2 Kansas Qty
Chiefs in the AFC West .

-

Bengals edge Rams

.··-

OT

.

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday. lll .. Court St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub. Ushlng Company/ Multlm~la , Tne.•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21!16. Second class postagr paid at, Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·

•,

-.
'·l ,
•,

Member: United Press InternaUonal,
Inland Dally PrPSs Asaoclatton and the
Ohto Newspapet ASBlrlatkm, National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper sates, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

•'..
,.

,.

Pomeroy, ~hiO 4~76'1

t1U118CRIPTION RATES
B7 Carrier or Mot• Jl.oute

'•

One Week...................... ...... ...... .$UO
One Month ....... !... ...... ,............... t6.10
One Year ......................... .... .... S72.80
SINQLECOPY
PRICE
·
Dally : .................................. 2!j.Cenll

·;•
'

••..
.•
-.
'\'··

Subscribers not deslrln&amp; to pay the car·
tier may remit 1n advance direct to
Tile Dally Si!ntlnel on a 3, 6 or 12 """'th
bastJ. Credit wUI bf' given carrier each

•

~.

'r
•'

'

NG subscriptions by mall1permltted tn

arMa where borne carrier

•'
•

.

'''•

'

~ervlcr

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

avaUable.

II

·

- K e l p C.oiJ

13 w..u .................................. llt.2c

'•
••

• w..u .................................. P7.96

)

52 W..U ............... ................... t7UII
. Oodaltle Metp Coul7
.
13 w..u .................................. S20.80

,.

•

aweea .................................. uo.30

•'
'

52 w..u ..................................

m.tO

OBSTETRICS/GYNECOLOGY

Browns to play

EACH WEDNESDAY

Denver tonight

.

ON DRAVO BASIC MATERIAL
COMPA.Y PROPERTY DUE
TO RECENT VANDALISM.

All violators will be·
prosecuted. ·No exceptions.
A WATCHMAN WILL BE ON DUTY!

Thank You,
DIAVO BASIC MATERIAL CO.
.-

.

•

NO TRESPASSING

·~

•'

•

Laurel A. Kirkhart

POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to The Dally SetoUnel, Ill C&lt;&gt;urt St.,

..
''·
'·

~.

.,

(IJSPSIIII-. . )

A DIYilloa Gf Multimedia, Inc.

'•·..

..,

Of MIDDLEPORT

The Daily Sentinel

.',.

.

HOLZER CLINIC

d.teated Wls·

•

I

tries has a club rebounded to take
an ALCS after opening with two
· losses.
Just as in Game. 1, Oakland
spotted Boston a run, then tied
the score and went ahead before
adding .I nsurance runs In the ·
ninth. Only a diving stop by
Boston first baseman Carlos·
Quintana limited the damage in
the Oakland seventh, but the A's
emerged with their 19th playoff
victory, tying the major-league
record. ·
Boston suffered it~ ..sixth
straight playoff loss, equalling a
big-league record.
With the score tied 1-1 in the
seventh, Mike Gallego and
Rickey Henderson singled,
knocking out Harris . Andersen
got WIIUe McGee to force Henderson, and Jose Canseco walked.
At that point, four of six Oakland
batters had reached agai nst the
bullpen.
Quintana then dove to prevent

__ ________ _________

2 Florida 'State (4-1) lost to

Mt~mi31-22. Next game: Oct. 20at
Aubum.
3. Nebraska t5-0J defeated Kansas State 45-8. Next ga me: Oct.13
vs. M1ssour1.

4. Michigan (3-11

.

shortstop Walt Weiss from the ·
game with a sprained left knee.
Dennis Eckersley relieved and
ended the threat by fanning
Dwight Evans. He finished for
his t&gt;ighth save, extending his
playoff record.
,
Morgan said the Oakland s
bullpen is just as tough as .It's
looked.
"Mid·so Is their team," llesatd.
Boston starter Dana Klecker,
whose regular-season ERA , at
Fenway Park was 6.50, allowed
just one run In 5 2-3 innings but
reltevers duplicated their failure
of Game 1. At one point, four of
six batters reached against loser
Greg Harris and Larry Andersen, and the result was a
deficit never overcome in AL
playoff history.
Three previous o.clubs have
taken·the first two AL Championship Series games on the road,
and all have advanced to the
World Series. Only twice in 14

..

Musklngum 21, Marietta 7
Allegheny 38, Wooorei 14
Wittenberg 34, Case Western 7
Ohio Wesleyan~. Denison 2
~enyon 14, Oberlin 7

••

·•

Today in history

'

Ashland 40, Saginaw Valley Sl 2i
Baldwln ·WaJiac e~5. Ohio Nortllern
0
Capital 23, Hiram 18

•.

he

pJ! a lot of balls In play."
·
La Russa said he spllke with
home plate umpire John Hirschbeck about Boston's batters
stepping out.
"I don'.t think there's anything
wrong with a batter stepping out
but when It becomes a tactic, It's
, bull, " La Russa·said. "He said he
wouldn't let It be abused."
"It w&amp;sn't at the last minute, it
was way ahead of time," Hirschbeck said, explaining why he
allowed batters . to step out.
"Whllt he (LaRussa) really said
was, he told Welch just to go
ahead. and go through with tile
pitch s.? . he wouldn't hurt
himself.
Added crew chief Jim Evans:
"Itwasacaseofloudcrowdnolse
and Welch not seeing It (Hirschbeck's sign).:·
. Rick il0 neycu tt relieved Welch
with one out and two on In the
eighth. He got Mike Greenwell to
· ground into a force that knocked

)

Scoreboard ...

I

... •.
·,

with honors - ·and take a look at
Premier Niklta Khrushchev
his bOdy in the process. Sure
which were withheld when the
·
W f, Ulm
US
r
.enough, hts 'face was partially
memoirs were first published in
destroyed; the rest of the body
the West 20 years ago. These
us produce our first atom bomb.
was intact. A leftist Chilean , passages were thought to be
.. . I was part of Stalin's tlrcle
newsmagazine has now conmor.e than Brezhnev (then the
when he mentioned the Rosenceded that Allende committed Soviet bOss) would want to see In
bergs wltll warmth. I cannot
suicide.
.
print. .
specifically say .what kind of help
The spy ring was that run by
One can see why. Here Is
they gave us, but I heard from
U.S. Navy office John Wa,lker,
Khrushchev on the subject ofthe . both Stalin 'and Molotov, then
who is now serving a me sentence
Rosenbergs : "I'll share a secret
minister of foreign affairs, that
for his ~rimes .. Former ,KGB with you: Wegotasslstancefrom
the Rosenbergs. provided very
General _Qleg Kalugln now adsome good people who helped us
significant help In accelerating
mils that he supervised the
master the production of nuciea~ :!':ntf~oduction of our atom
Walker family's theft of U.S. . energy faster. than we would
Thus do theltes of communism
nuclear secrets ·over a period of
have otherwise and who helped
18 years, and was awarded 'the
'
follow Its theories Into t)le dust.
prestigious Medal of the RedStar
for doing so. Kahlgtn ts now .
disaffected from the KGB and
· serving as 'an elected member of
the Congress .of People's Deputies. One hopes the CIA is having 1
long talks with him abOut other
B,y United Preulnteraatloaal
Incidents In his career.
Today Is Monday, Oct. 8, the 281st day of 1990 with 84 to follow.
But the piece de resistance, so
Columb~rs Day Is observed today.
far, has been the total demolition
The moon is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
of the great inyth of itui·-lnnoThe morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
cence of Ethel and Julius RosenThe evening star Is Saturn.
·
berg, who wereexecutedln June
Those born on this date are under the sign of Ubra. They Include
1953 for stealing atomic secrets· World War I flying ace Eddie Rickenbacker in l890; Argentine
and passing them 11long to tile
dictator Jualf'Peron in 1895; travel gUide au thor Temple Hornaday
Soviet Union. ·
Fielding In 1913; pioneering So'u th African heart-transplant surgeon
Fornearly40yearstheinternaDr. ChrtsUaan Barnard In 1922 (age 68); actor David Carradtne In
tiona! communist propaganda . 1936 (age 54); civil rights leader and former presidential candidate
apparatus and its stooges In the
Jesse Jackson In 1941 (age 49); and comic actor Cbevy Chasetn1943
Free World have Insisted on the
(age 47).
Rosenberg&amp;', Innocence. I remember seeing, during the EtOn this date In history:
senhower Inaugural celebrations
In 18n, the Great Chicago Fire started. It destroyed more than 17
In January 19!13, a long telegram
000 buildings, killed more than 300 people and left 90,000 homeless:
from a French student organlza·
That same day, a forest fire began In Peshtigo, Wis., eventually
lion, beggiJ_Jg the president-elect
burning some 850 square miles and killing about 1,100 p'eople.
,
not to execute these innocent
In 1918, Sgt. Alvin York of Tennessee became a World War I hero by
people.
· · slngle·handedly capturing a hiD In the Argonne Forest of France
Yet now we have been vouch·
kUling ro enemy soldiers and capturing l:i2 others.
·
' .
safed certain portions of the
In 1919, Congress passed the Volstead Act, prohibiting the sale or
memoirs of the late Soviet consumption of alcobollc beverages.

Daily Sentinei-Page-3
'

-The

Local teams _compete in 20th·
•
annual Rio Grande session

Sarah Overstreet .

Co1mnuniste' fall· springs old secreis
TY/'ll'' R

Berry's World.

.(

week's taxi service. But what
else can you do? Extracurricular
activities ar~ impQrtant for a
well-rounded education, too, and
so far the only choices have been
to either go along with the
outlandish activities schedules
schools have set up, or not let
your kid participate at all .
I've been Involved in extracurricular activities from bOth the
perspective· of a student and a
teacher. In high school! majored
In batO\} twirlng and didn't take
any more math an.d.sclence than
I 'had ·to, which wasn't much. I
simply had no time to study after
l got home from the music and
sports activities I was involved
will! every day. As a teacher, I
participated In extracurricular
yelling · matches with other
teachers whose extracurrlcul!!r
practices conflicted with mine.
Some of the recommendations
the Missouri principals. came up
with are: (1) to create a summer
season for sports that require
more daylight and good weather

He gavetheA'sa 1-0iead in the
best-of-seven series, and they
can c•tncb their third straight
pennant by winning two of the
next three games. All are scheduled for Oakland Coliseum.
"It's better than being down
two games to-none," Baines said.
Welch, a 27-game winner and a
candidate for the AL Cy Young .
Award, set a playoff record
simply by throwing a pitch. He
bas appeared In seven playoffs,
the first in 1978 while a member·
of the Los Angeles DQdgers.
"We didn't do It," Boston
Manager Joe Morgan said.
Before a crowd of 35,070, Welch
allowed just six hits and posit!oned Oakland for its second
sweep of the Red !)ox in three
seasons.
"I'm proud of the club;'
Oakland Manager Tony La
Russa . said. "They were two
hard-earned wins. They (Boston)
had a strong defensive game. We
.

.'

Secretary of State Sherrod Brown, alarmed by charges he is not
,doing his job, responded by asking for an additional duty. He said he
could shoulder the burden.
,
Brown suggested that state legislators file their campalgu finance
reports with his office instead of at local county boards of election.
"Our office bu an Intensive auditing system and l believe we
should be able to extend It to cover the campaign finance reports of
state legislators," said Brown.
.
Reporters howled with laughter.
This is the same Sherrod Brown who, during nearly eight years In
office, has always said, "not my job," when asked about auditing the
·
campaign finance reports for mistakes. ·
Brown's office already gets copies of the reports filed by legislators
with boards of election, but he has never done anything with them.
Now, ail of a sudden during a campaign, he wants a law passed. Get
serious.

-

Portland In mid-May to glv,·,. a
forgettable speech on the ec•:•nomy, sitting on thefencebetwE!en ·
spotted ·owls and log;gers. Til at
duty.aside, Bush was free to st:.ar
at the $1,000-a-plate shindig lhr
GOP candidates for state rac·o ~s
in Oregon. The accommodatllflg
president also managed to it&gt;e
photographed chatting with' h:ls
pal Denny Smith. Bob Willlam•s
crossed t~ state line froJrn
Washington toget ·hls phototakl!n /with the president too.
Since then, first lady Barbar· a
BU&amp;h, Interior Secretary ManuE!I
Lujan, Trade Representatlv e
Carla Hills, Veterans Affah 7S
--~ Secretary .Edward Derwlnsk t:,
· ~CA~'fliii!J!:t!l Transl&gt;ortation Secretary S1i.- . •
10- A
. muel Skinner and .Bureau o.f
Land Management Director· Sl'
Jamison have all carried thll
Republican pompons to Washln&amp; r·
ton and Oregon,
Jamison gave a rousing · pro•·
Wllilams speech In Washington, .
a state where the BLM owns no1t
an acre of land.
The taxpayers pick~ up the
bill for these campaign trips. Air
fares run around $1,600 round
trip (first class, of course), and
there are dally .expenses of about
$100 per VIP, not to mention the
fact that these Cabinet members,
. whose salaries break down to
about $400 a day, don't do this
stuff on their own time.
The most recent team player In
the cross-country relay is Vice
President Dan Quayle who was
scheduled to be the celebrity at a
$250·a-plate breakfast In Seattle · '
this week. The White House
. proudly adinits that Quayle has
raised more inoney for the party
than any vice president before
him. It appears to be his most
indisputable achievement.

Ectract••riculars get low grades

Pomeroy-Middleport,:

Athletics down Red Sox, ~1; take 2~0 lead in play~ffs

::::.:. ':.'"~~:'
__

~====:=:=:==::=:=:=:=========~~~--~~~~------------~~~------------~--~~M~oo~~~·~Od~·-obw s_._1__
9~:~

The Daily Sentinel

OHio

"

~

\. .

r

'

.

.

For

.

L-----~--------------------------~ --'

·-

�Ohio

By The -Bend

The · ·Daily Sentinel

.

.

--

____

...---~ ... · ....----.

MQI'Iday, Octobet 8, 1990
Page

4

opening. A larse crowd :rathered. tO watch the
populnr cloulng group.

SHADY RIVER SHUFFLERs - The Shady
River Shutft~rs performed Saturday. at McDo·
nald's In Pomeroy lor the restaur1111t's gr1111d

Bl!ST
- Anglea W118on, left front,
' wu the flnt place winner In the best bicycle
caleJory of Saturday's Klnderparade In Pome-

......... ·, ..... ..;.. ·--·-· __:,

Sentinai- Paga-5

The

l'ARADE PARTICIPANTS - Ronald McDonald and Ills 1111111 from McDonald's participated

Seltlen Fest acllvlllea over the weekend. The
band wu quite a crowd pleaser as some ol the
audlenoo joined Ia dllllclnl.

ON TAP - Tile Germllll blllld, On Tap trom
Columb111, performed Saturday nlpt on tbe
pArtdnl!i 1M lltqe In Pomeroy u part of the Ethnic

In Saturday's Klnderparade In Pomeroy. The
group was quite a hit wllh the young people.

Community ·calendar
•

. Krautter aad Scott DUion, In front, 1111d LloJd
Blackwood aad Mary Powell, back. The band
perturmed as a part of Ethnic Settlers Felt In
colljuncllon with Pomeroy's Se&amp;qulcentennlal.

LET'S POLIL\ - Tile mUsic wu sreat 1111d the
weatlller wlill laawtlc · lill members of tbe
audleaoo lor the German band Oa Tap performed
Satur4ay llllhlln Pomeroy. Plctved are Clarice

Services 7:30 p.m. nightly . Ji'ubCommunity · Calendar Items Monday In observance on Colum·
llc Invited.
appear two days belere an event bus Day. Offices will reopen
·
and the day of that event. Rems Tuesday at 8: 30 a.m.
WEDNESDAl'
must be reoolved ln.advance to .
POMEROY ...:. Zanle Smith,
POMEROY - Representative .
Insure .publlcatlqn In the
Point Pleasant, W.Va., will be from Congressman Clarence
calendar.
the speaker at Tuesday's meet- Miller's office at Meigs County
Ing
of the Pomeroy Flame Courthouse 11 a.m. untlri p .m.
MONDAY
Fellowship to be held at the Questlons regarding the Federal
BURLINGHAM - The Bed·
senior citizens center at 1 p.m.
Government should be directed
ford Township Trustees will
to the representative. .
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
MIDDLEPORT
The
Inter.
town hall.
national Order of Job's DaughCHESTER - Trapper educaters
will
meet
Monday
at
7:
30
tion
classes Wednesday and
REEDSVIt..IJE .-Red Cross
p.m.
at
the
Masonic
Temple.
Saturday 6-8 p.m . nightly at
THE POMEROY'S- Jon aQd Pam Pomeroy, · ieamed thai Mr. and Mn. romeroy are distant · Bloodmobile at Eastern Local
Isaac Walton Farm . near ChesSchOol
on
Monday
from
10
High
cousins of Samuel Wyllys Pomeroy,lounder olthe .
Dlainond Bar, Calli., were featured In Saturday's
TUESDAY
ter. Required for all flrst-tlme
a.m.
untU
2
p.m.
Klnderparade Ia Pomeroy during the Ethnic
vlllage . .
POMEROY - The Ohjo Eta trappers. Contact Keith Wood at
Settlers Fest Weekend. After researching II was
Phi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi 985-4400.
CHESTER - Revival at Vt.
Sorority
will meet Tuesday at 7
Herman U.B. Church (Texas
at
the
Meigs County Public
p.m.
RACINE- ''How to Help Your
Community) Monday through
In
Pomeroy.
Library
Child Say ' No' to Sexual PresOct.14 with Rev. Donald Bender,
sure'' eight session video seChambersburg, Pa. Services
PORTLAND
The
Portland
minar continues on Wednesday
7:30 p.m. nightly. Special singPTO
will
meet
Tues·
Elementary
at
Racine First Baptist Church at
ing, Rev. Robert Sanders Invites
day
at
1
.m.
at
tiJe
school.
7:
30
p.m·. Features Josh McDothe public.
·
well. a well-known Christian
CHESTER - The Chester speaker ' to young people. For
POMEROY
The Disabled
Township
Trustees will meet Information, call 949-2867.
American Vaterans and Ladies
Tuesday
at
7: 30p.m. at the town
Auxiliary wili meet Vonday at 1
hall.
POMEROY -Red Cross
p.m. at the hall, 124 .Butternut
Bloodmoblle at llie Meigs County
Ave., Pomeroy.
HARRISONVILLE -The Har· Senior Cltlzenll_ Center on WedPOMEROY -Meigs County
rlsonvllle .Senior Citizens will nesday 1·5: 30 p.m.
Common Pleas Judge Fred W.
have a blood pressure clinic on
Crow III has acnounced that his
Tuesday at the townhouse from
MIDDLEPORT - Revival at
office and all other county
10 a.m. to noon. The publlc is VIctory Baptlst Church. 525
offices, with th~ exception of the
invited.
North Second in Middleport
sheriff's ottice, w111 be closed
through · Oct. 14 at 1 ·p.m.
POMEROY - The Calvary Evangelist Jim O'Bryari of OklaPilgrim Chapel, · Route 143, homa City. Okla. Special music
Pomeroy, will have revival Tues· and nursery Will be provided.
day through Sunday with Rev. Pastor James E. Kessee and
Charlotte and Warren Van
Doug Mann as evangellst. His Assistant Pastor Dwight Ashley
Meter returned from a trip to
wife, Kathy. will be singing. invite the public.
Nebraska and Wyoming. They
visited her mother, Mlldted
· Janesofsky, and other relatives .
. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence HenderSAT(fflDAY ENTERTAINson attended the 50th anniverMENT - Denver Rice lllld his
sary of Dorothy and Wilbur ·
Descendants of the late Fr.ed James and Erlcka Cooper. all of
toilet seat pilar entertained
Warner at i.ottrldge and the 50th
and Barbara {Laubne r ) Leifheit Columbus; Bernard and Nancy
on Saturday as pari of the
anniversary of Charles and . gathered recently at the home of Bramlage, Reynoldsburg, MarEthnic Set&amp;len Feat In PomeEvelyn Barr at Belpre. They also
Virg11 a11d Kathryn Windon on tha Bramlage Miller, Debby
1
roy for Ita Sesquicentennial.
visited Linda and Dave Williams,
Texas Road. There 42 In Bramlage, Wendell, Linda and
All eatertalnment wu held at
Belpre, and Mr. and Mrs. Jan. . attendance.
'Ryan Baylor, Virginia Windon
the parklng lot stage.
· Parker, Tuppers Plains. and ·
Bernard Bramlage gave the Tyler and Cathy Tyler Gilmore,
Garner Griffin, local.
blessing before the meal
DANCIN~ - Ruth Francis, left, and Anna Carole Sayre join In
North Carolina; Wilbur Jr. and
and
Wlll
Poole
and
Martha
A,card was signed for
the lua at the Eth'ntc Settlers Feslln Pomeroy on Saturday night.
Charlotte Mu r ray Rowley ,
Nellie Parker lit tended a dfnner
Charlotte (Murray) Young,
"Oa Tap", a b1111d playing German music, was the lealured
Ironton.
held
tn
honor
of
Helen
and
Edson
..
Columbus,
who was in lll health
. .. . . . .
entertainment on the Pomeroy municipal parking lot, where folks
Parker. Aurora, Colo.; at the
and
unable.to
attend.
like Ruth and A"nna Carole could en! a rug.
•
Those present were Charles
home of Wilma and Howard
Parker. Others present were Harry and Margaret Murray;
Willis Parker, Parkersburg,
Virgil and Kathryn Windon. Fred
W.Va.; April and Kacle Lewis, and Bertha Smith, Debbie. Rod·
Peru. Ind.; Violet and Dennis ney, Adam and Abbie Chevalier,
Rutland.
Binda
Diehl,
Eva
RobClubs
Fall
FollageTour.Pauline
Parker
Chester; Suzy Carpen- Brian. Wendy and Amanda Win"Summer's Glory In Pressed
son,
Pauline
Aikins.
Stella
Atkins
Atkins,
·
Neva
Nicholson
and
t~r.
Ru'tland;
Sarah and Homer don, Blair Windon. Diana and·
Flowers" was the program pres·
111 Second St., Pomeroy
and
Neva
Nicholson
furnished
Binda
Diehl
went
on
the
tour.
Parker,
Cora
and Samuel MI- Beth Farley , Becky Windonented by Neva Nicholson at the
Binda Diehl had the arrangeYOUR INDEPENDENT .
Cotterill, Wlllmetta Leifheit,
chael, Stiversvllle.
recent meeting of the Rutland arrangements for the show.
Kathy Dalton furnished five
ment of wildflowers and desRoger,
Lenora.
Dorothy
and
AGENTS SERVING
Garden Club held at the home of
potted plants to be used for door cribed it.
Mike •Leifheit, .Jill of Meigs
, Stella Atkins acd Ruby Diehl.
MEIGS COUNTY
prizes from the Rulland Club.
Bernice Nelson had the hint on
County; Erv and Lucille Leifheit
Mrs. Nicholson stated that
Eva Robson reported on the
"Why Leaves Are Colored In
Potratz, Athens; Una Bravlage
SINCE 1868
pressed fiower projects should be
River Valley Herbalists planting
Autumn." Jim Apgar. Wayne
Cooper:.
Liz
Cooper
Brown
and
. started with the freshest blooms at the mini park In Pomeroy. National Forest, offers this theBrian, Sarah Cooper D!Chlrio,
• and buds. $he stated pansies are
Octa
Ward
,
Eva
Robson
and
ory.
Most
people
think
frosts
are
Mrs.
Ann.
Mash
gave
a
birth: the bestnower the press 1111d that ·
day party and dlnnerforSparllne
responsible for color change, but
: any centered fiower can be used. Dorothy Woodard attended the
it actually a chemical process.
Johnson and Wayne Pullins.
For devotions Stella Atkins program at the park.· ·
Pearl
Cacajay,
Janet
Bolin.
The
spring
and
summer
leaves
Guests were susie Pullins. Pat
: read "Thoughts or Autumn" and
Binda
Diehl
and
Eva
Robson
contain
a
green
pigment
called
and
Kelly Johnson, Columbus;
• Ruby Diehl read "October." Roll
green
pigBob,
Tammie, Bobby and Chris.
helped
make
topiary
trees
for
the
chlorophyll.
In
fall.
call was answered with a flower
Ohio Valley Chrlstl!!n Camp.
ment breaks down causing It to
Other vlsllors were Burdell Brof, . members had pressed.
.
Paullne Atkins reported on the fade which allows the yellowish . ford and Mrs. Ida Mash, ColumTbe regional meeting · was
4H
Club activities for the year.
colors to -become visible. At the . bus; and Harold Brofford.,
' announced lor Oct . 28 at Grace
made
vegetable
and
·same
time other chemical
Westerville.
They
have
Methodist Church -In Gallipolis.
flower
gardens
and
also
exhlchanges
occurcauslnglormatlon
Mrs. "Sijndy Gilmore, ColumThe county meeting will be Oct.
'
.
.
bus,andLisaDorstandchlldren,
22 Jn Pomeroy with the Rutland bited .at the Meigs County Fair of pigments that vary from
Flower Shows. Cheryl Lynn yellow to red. .
Darble and Artmas, Marysville,
Club to have the program.
Pearl canaday had a demonwere weekend guests of Mr. and
Atkins had exhibits at the three
Neva Nicholson reported on garden clubs' show In Rutland.
stratton on making a pressed
Mrs. Jas. Gilmore.
the three club flower show at
Neva Nicholson reported on flower picture.
Mr, and Mrs. J~arry Cooley,
. A plant sale was held at the
YQungstown, and Mr. and Mrs.
the Ohio Association of Garden
close of the meeting. Others Ray Machlman, Lima, were
OKLAHOMA CITY, OK.
attending ..were Margaret Par·
weekend guests of the Rev. and
sons and Marcia Denison.
Mrs. William Williams.
Tbe Tuppers Plains Elemen·
Mrs. Ruth Douglas, Columbus,
lary PTO Carnival will be held
The Victory Baptist Church,
spent the weekend wltb her
Oct. 20from 5-9 p.m. at the school
525 North Second. Middleport,
with soup supper at 5 p.m. and
mother, Mrs: Emma Fox.
•
will have revival Wednesday
Mr. aad Mrs. Ph11 Wise,
games at 6 p.m.
JAMES E. KEESEE-Pastor ·
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly
There will be door prizes,
McConaelsvllle, called on Mr. •
with Jim O'Bryan, Oklahoma
sweet shops, country store,
The International Order of and Mrs.Qiffonl Jacobs Sunday.
'
DWIGHT
ASHLEY-Asst. Pastor
City, Okllr., as evangelist. There Job's Daughters will meet Tuescrafll, games, a cakewalk a11d
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Marr and
willl!e special music and nursery · day at 7: 30 p.m. at the Middleother activities.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Vanlnwa'•. The Public Is inv11ed to attend. services provided each evening., port Masonic Temple.
•
gen spent Sunday In Columbus.

Alfred news

1

BJ!JIT COSTUMES - In Saturday's I(Jaderparacle Ia Pomeroy lor Ethalc Settlen Fest,'Heather
Bable tront left, received lint place lor her
costu~e. Here brother, Matthew Bable captured

"'

second place. They are pictured with paracle
manhalls, Jon and Pam Pomeroy, distant cousin
of S~amuel Wyllya Pomeroy.

.. ".'
,

.. ;

'

STAMP CANCELLATION - Tom Reuter,
Pomerey Poatmaster, Ill pictured cancelllnl a
lllamped mvelope lor Tereaa Tywo•Drummer on

·Blood pressure
clinic scheduled
The Harrisonville Senior au-"
zens wlll hold a.. free blood
pres~ure clinic on Tuesday from
10 a.m . to noon at the townhouse.
The public Is Invited to attend.

Trapper Clinic. ·

Saturday at the Pomeroy Fire De(iartmeat. Tbe
special cancellation stamp commemorated
Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial.

Fall Into The Habit - Give Blood
Thru The
RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY OCT. 10
POMEROY SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER
l!OO to 5:30 P·.M. ..
I

A trapper education class,
required for all first time
trappers, will be held Wednesday
aad Thursday from 6-8 p.m. each
night at the Isaac Walton Farm
near Chester. For more Information contact Keith Wood at
985-4400.

Revival set

IIE8T WAGON - WIDiam Scott Muuer
reeelved the troplly lor beat wqoa durln1 the
Kblllerparacle of the Ethnic . Settlen Feat

The Calvary Pilgrim Chapel,
Route 143, Pomeroy, will have
revlv4) Tuesday· through Oct. 14
with Rev. Doug Maan preaching
aad his wife, Kathy, singing.
Services are at 7:30p.m. nightly.
Rev. VIctor Roush Invites the
public.
·
'., . . '

'

j

'

.

'

PnmPrta\·
H011n:
1'1 am 10

992-2124

Leifheit reunion held

Garden Club topic is pressed flowers

INSURANCE

Laurel Oiff
.happenings

.

REVIVAL
AT

VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH
·525 North ·2nd, Middleport, OH.
'

Mid. Sun -Thu".

ll•mtol•mfn. O..S...

2 MEDIUM

PEPPERONI DOUBLE CHEESE
ONE . FO~ $799
SECOND PIZZA $(00 MORE
... ttwl 120 DO o.IN~•-IinWtMio"'•te11 .......... _
v... .- ., __, _etw•W•
_ ,,_...c•t:V
_ OlflliJ
. . . . . . . . . . . .,.. • ...,, ... ~oc:-., '"Ill'
,T.IME AND CARt:!.!" O""'IItT~rTIII
AiVAILAilfl

•11100om!AO'I lliiU. II'Ic

r.ow

OCT. 10-14

·1:00 " P.M~

Evangelist: Jim O'Bryan

' PTO Carnival set

Revival scheduled

Special Music ,
Nursery Provided

Job's Daughters
meetmg set

EVERYONE WELCOME

,.

•..

.

f

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

'·

..
'

•·

-

• .'

~~·:._.....,.. •~-- :,,,.., __.:. ___;:.:......'.... .'~-'•- ••~ • -·•w · ;_,• ,;,_ , ...,

••

·'

'

�Ohio

•

Monday, October 8, 1990 ·

Daily

Ohio

Business Services
COUNTRY
MOBILE ·.
HOME PAD

•Moblle Home·- .

.f!t!l• .

•

,.
.

-· v." ....
••

!""•

.

•MoblleHc'iinor' "
Ren•ll _
•Lot•Rentala-·

~

.,

. ROOM
G
ROOM

•

Conlplite Grooming
for All Br~s
EMIL££ MERINAR

- ~ ···

CANOE RACES ~ Plctlired here Is the team of
Dodger Vaughan and Sam Cowan capturing tint
place In Sunday's canoe races on the Ohio River .In
.

OwMr &amp; OperatOr
614·992·6120--

Pomeroy. Second place Ia the race wentlo David
Anderson and Matthew Ault. Both teams received
trophies.
·

.

'

Poiiiii'IIJ, Ohio
1 mei.

MOBILE HOME FURNACES . HEAT PUMPS
ALL FURNACE PARTS
.•

In Memory
MEMORIES OF
WIFE AND
MOTHER,
OPAL E. BARR
Eternal Relit
OCT. 8,1988
In Loving Memory
of Opel E. Barr
who pa11d away
two years ago

Located on SaHord Scllool ld. off lt. 1·• 1

Residential
R fl
• 00 ng
•Siding
•Windows
Isn't II Wd Doing llitlot

STEWARTS
GUNS &amp;
SUPPLIES

o~ .MON..FIIl.

•o-5
742-2421
36496 511111 IUN ID.

two-member group also walked aboui Pomeroy
playing for the people on the streets.
·

Sometimfll the r041d of
life oeemo long
At we travel through
theyoo ...
And. with 1 hllrt that'•

falter in our weorl·

naaend

Sink beol~ the way.
But God leon• clown
and whlop••·
"Child, tha,. ·n be another dey."
And the rood will grow
much II'(IOother
And much easier to

''SupPort Our Area 4-H ~Ciuhs''
.

992·6009

a'! Gutter

~Helmet"

NEVER CLEAN YOUR
GunERS AGAIN

'

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
992-2955
POMEROY, OHIO .
'

•
•

•

•

l

K&amp;C
·
J
EWELERS
: 992·3785
POMEROY, OHIO

L
••

VALLEY ·LUMBER
AND SU'PPL y COMPANY
992-6611
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY
VALLEY
992-2506
POMEROY, OHIO
~GRAVELY TRACTOR

'
..

PAT
HILL
FORD
: 992-2196
POMEROY OHIO
I

CROWS
i FAMILY RESTAURANT
,..992·2U2
POMEIOY, OHIO
'

SAlES and SERVICE
"Your Best Buy For The Long Run''
.
992-2975 .

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES
992-6121
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

·.BANKEON£

'

•

•

BROGAN-WARNER
INSURANCE
POMEROY, OHIO

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.
SANK ONE, A THEN$. HA l A I'AIU OF THE CAlliNG TEAM
Ath1na, Ohio
Metnl&gt;tr FDIC

..

..

•

•

_.;..._

•

I

...,.

~----

I

.

Sodly mio!llld by her
hu1band, Arthur;
Children. goandchlldren .
groot-grondchlld,.n,

_._ ...~

We guarantee you $20.00 to *100.00 more per
pound then anyone. We are the only cornp1ny in Ohio
with ~ •

Federal Oinaeng Export Licen11. Don't be
to.olecl ony more, ohlpyour glnoang to H011i,tKong with
u1. We don't ..Grade" your glnpeng but tf you have

p&lt;omlum rootl WE PAY elrtra Iorge PREMIUM

PRICES . We are your friends end we will make you
Iota of extra money. Come aee us. You may only have
.. Roots.. but we react •• though It waa gold.

BlUM
TRUE
VALUE
,.
CHEStER, OHIO
985-3301

FRIDAYS: 9 e.m. to t1 a.m., Gelllpollo, Ohio ot tho
Blue Fountain Motel, Room 34. Rt. 7 South just
poottht Rt. 36 Exit. '
2 p.m.-5:30 p.m .. Cool Grove. Ohio 01 G- Eloctric
Co. Lot, Rt. 52 • 243 101011 from Bl·lo GM Pluo
OHIO RIVER GINSENG. HERB CO.
P.O. Box 2347 (St. Rt. 287)
Eoot Liverpool. Ohio 43920 •
Phono (211) 3Bii· 1832
. lawrence &amp; Mitchell McCullough - Owners
Call ua any time for prk:e lncrNHI or changes
·
(21 I) 386· 1832.
Rta1srdlo•11 of whtll you live (even In W. Vo .;. if you
the glngseng in Ohio we cen legally buy itl

BULLETIN BOARD
HULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE .
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PtJBLICATIO.N

b

SUGAR RUN
FLOUR
MILLS
992-2115
PO-OY, OHIO
POMEROY, OliO

THE ZVCBJNNI PiCKERS - The Zuchlaal

blend of old time folk mule. !llembera of the
I'IJUp, l·r, are Woody Knotll, Bud Boeloa and Bob
MIDer.
·

from,..,...

•.,...
c-tJ. w.va.,
pel lui n.ed Suda:r afternoon In Pomeroy for the
Edudc settlen Felt. The group playe an eclectic
PI~

I

110 SUNDAY

RACCOON
SPORTSMAN CLUB

SHOOTING
MATCH
Every Sunday
Starting ot 11.:00 A.M.

Between
Wilkesville and .
Center.

205 N. Soclllll Str•t
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO 45760
Oflico 614·"2·2186
HOM£ 614·992·5692
DDmf S.

Iathan Building

EVERY

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Fact&lt;orv Cholio

12 Gaup ~~Only

w.

Slrictl, .1

RACINE
GUN CLUB

ol lttl~~ltpott

GUN SHOOTS

UPHOLSTERY
Hand Tufting
Custom Drap11

12 Ga11111 Factory
Choke only

36 Yeara Experience

SHOOTS STAU
SEn 1 1

We Say Whet We Do.
We Do What We Soy.
9-6·1 mo.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

SHRUB &amp; TREE

•New Homes
eGarages
•Complete
R.emodlling
Stop I CONpare
FrH Ettimates

985-4473
667-6179

SEINICE

Wt can r~ir tind rt·

awe radtaton and

heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod

out radiators. Wt olso
repair Gas Tanks •

PAT'HIL'L FORD

992·2198
Middleport; Ol!io

1·13-llc

WANTED
LOW GUll OAI

SAW LOGS

$1 50 Th!:llnd
DEUVUDYO

OHIO PALLET

614-992·2321

TRIM and

REMOVAL

*LIGHT HAULING

*FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269 .
usm RAILROAD nES
8-12· 90

BISSELL- . .
BUILDERs·
tUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES ..•
"At lllasonallle Prices" •

~

PH. 949-2101
'
or les. 949·2160 .'.
Dgy llr Night
'.

NO SUNDAY
COMPL£1E
£L£CTRICAL SERVICE
Realdentlal end
Commercial

REWIRING AND
TIOUilE SH0011MG
C.rtlfletlllectridaM '·
frHitl...._

BANKS
CONSTRUCnON
111-1 I

992-6t55

\)

'

I

I

PH. 949-2101
or Its. 949-2160

992-6009

.

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

992-6.U.

I'

E1tim11n"

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

·

-QUALITY
PRINT
SHOP
992-33U
.
MIDDLEPon; OHIO

" Free

GUN..SHOOY.

4 great locltlons In your area :
TUESDAYS: 9 o.m. to 11 om. Jockoon. OH . ot tho
.
Certified Gas Station. Rt. 35
t2 Noon to 1:30 p.m.. McArthur. Ohio ot thai ron
Kettle A8ataur:.nt on Rt . 50 Eaat•.

.They are pictured here performing a very colorful
maypole dance. The group performed as part of
the festivities of the Ethnic Settlers Fest for
·
Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial.

INGELS FURNITURE
AND
JEWELRY
99°2-26'35
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.
v

WANTED
GINSENG ROOT
YELLOW ROOT

INTERNATIONAL DANCE TROUPE - The
Folklanden International Dance Troupe from
Ashland, Ky., was quite a crowd pleaser on
Sunday as they danced a variety of ethnic dances.

Pomeroy ·

1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

·vETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2104

. .._

BISSELL
SI.DING ......
CQ.

'

III-II mo.

ened-

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
' MIDDLEPOn, OHIO
992-6669

~

.

992-5335 or 915·3561
lcrou
POst Office

GUARANTEED!
FREE ESTIMATES

father and brother

POMEROY, OHIO

Bring It In Or Wil
Pick Up.
KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Construction ·

Place."

·

ALL MAlES

Banks

Thio i1 jult Her Rnting

992-2174

OVEN REPAut

HEAnNG

face:

THIS PAGE SPONSORED BY THESE MANY FINE AREA BUSINESS

.

•VINYL S.IDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION '

111-11 mo.

So do not be diohaort·

•

SMITH-NELSON
· · MOTORS, INC • .

985-442

IUTLAND, 01110

217

. We

EWING
.FUNERAL HOME
POMEROY, OHIO

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE .
•FILL DIRT.•.. ..
•ANYTHING
AT AL~

Sportinp, NIICis

Your Phone
Billo Here

ture,

.,

BANKS

CHEnER, OHIO: ·.

Buy, Set or T111de
Guna.

SALES &amp; SER.I(E

broken

992-6491

R., L HOLLON'
TRUCKING -

S11 Us For Your

And eyea brimful of

FRUTH
DOWNING~CHILDS
PHARMACY
MULLEN-MUSSER INSURANCE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2342

992.-3033

:::t

PQMEROY, OHIQ: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R. 143
ALBANY. OHIO: Rt. 60 &amp; S.R. 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY : 9 a.m.-7 p.m. 7 Dayo
ALBANY: 10 a.m.·&amp; p.m. 8 Deya, Cloallll Sunday
· PAYING AS OF TODAY, SEPT: 11. 1990
#1 Copper •1 per lb.;
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans, 46C per lb.
Cleln Alltll Rlldlltort44C lb.; B&amp;llilllel '1 .2&amp;111.
Yellow
40c
Shaet1 40C lb.

4-H on a

.

CALL

-•

BUILQIMG I
REMODELING
Commercial &amp;.

Wo C...V Flohlng luppll•

fi

AIPOIIITMm

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING .
· 10 SEIYE You....
OPFIIS 2 LOCA1JONS

Now Location:
161 North SocOIId
Middlopert, Olio 45760

•

.

OPENlY .

~

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

PlUMBING

•

10 YISm.$2900

.
2

PATCHWORK - The English comedy group,
Patchwork, performed Saturday for the Ethnic
Settlers Fest of Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial. The

·sPECIAl .

~·~~==~~~~ ~==~=(=61:·:':":':·"::1':•:r:1:··:":·:·7:2:·'='~''==·~~ ~==========~·
The

-

Stoeklf

992·7479

. lt. 33 tlertll of
,_rey;

FIT and TIIM
OCTOBER

Now Iii

-,

�Page 8-The Deily Sentinel

Pomaloy-Middlaport. OhiO

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcements

3

51 ·

Ren!Jis

tion or peNOn or persons van·

rim.,

wire

ll

connector•

whha In color. One ShakesPflr
t~llng

motor Mod~ 601 PS ·or
108 LPS. One Craftsman w,ed
wacker Model 251 Z97-600. Ona
Homallta chain HwWith 20'' blr

)

and chain cov« Supttr XL1Z. I
will kttntllv~ p1Na! 1 report Info

10 Maaon &amp;unty :mar£H'a

or Chnter MMin, 541 Capitol

Blvd., Elkho11, Ind. ~516.

progrwn.

YlaafMtster card guar;

'No lecurlly dapoelt. 1-IOD-446-

0040,$25.

.

An axdtlng_

WI~

4 bKroom, unfur nlaMd home.
No pets. Deposit r~ulrad. 114--

949·2253.

Middleport. 4 bedroom hou...
$325 mo11thly plus d~lt. 614a

99_2-mM attar 7:30pm.

~prlng

batht,

fo ·meet aom•

,

ont apeclal. Wrtte Heat1SNrch,

.

Vlllty • 3br b.rick 1 112

b•••m•nt, Cllrport,

$500

per mo.1 reference• and dtpolit
roqujreo. BLACKBURN REALTY
814·446.0008.

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

Hnrt... rch lingld network.

8

..· o-. !Jl• G1 Ill.
· ~~c:-cxc:~

1:00 III. Cll

' l:zf

up, king $350. 4 drawlll' chat

$611. Gun C.Obl11111 1, 1, 1 1G
gun. Baby m•nr..... $35 &amp;

fl'llm.. $25, Quean
Size S3S &amp; kl~g frame SilO. Good

a111ctlon of l:ledroorn · M1he~11
mtlal cabln.t•, "hudboanll
an~ up to ·115.10 dayt ume 11
•••h whh 1p~rovod credit. 3 inl.
oul Bulavlllt Rd. OD.ri I A.M . ID
5 P.M. Mon, lhru $o1. Coli 11444&amp;.0322.
'

Grsa-n
L111 W 8eV811y HlM~ •111
1:20 \JJ. tiJ NIC NlgliHi Nawt
IJ) Alibolt anti eo.t.lo

.

45631.

.:.:
::··

(J)

complete l15.20 por - k ,
dinette with 4 chal1'8 $7.50 per

•em•. phont 304..&amp;75-5247
.n.s p.m.

· Nit

Fmancial

'

14 wool! old Boogie puppy,
...,_ 304-773-a302.
2 Cltl lo g'VNWI:)', Ill lr8

declaw.d

In front

mal.., neutered,

8'14-446-117155.

.

1 ftmalt.

4 frM I'W.Nk otd gray klttansto
1 good home. ·Far moralnforma•
liOn 0111 814-11112·)'292.
5 woek old klllono . to good
heme, 3 Y&lt;OI-, 1 groy, 614-448-

4313.
Bilek Mother cat, &amp; 2 kitten•,

calico.., eoujhpaw, box trainld.

814-441-7185 oft« lp.m.
Froo milk lug•. 5141192.e915.
KnteM to give IWIIY In Bradbury. 614-1192·5071. .
Pupp'-t, mothtr-AKC O.rman
Shepherd Father· AKC Golden
Rllri~Vtr

304-675-7991.

5876.

6

Lost

Found •
female

&amp; Found

half grown black
puppy,

lor

Ext 313.

lng 0Kpori1nco ioqulrod. Applr
In po,..on, Mon nun, 11-4.
EMS DISPATCHER TRAINING
SEOEMS, Inc. II offering an
EMS Dlspatchw C1aa Btgln-.
nlng, Saturday, Oct. 271h, 1990.
Trl)fnlng Ia fr.M tor qualltllt(S
EMT• fo .._,,. to work p1rtllmt tor SEOEMS upon aucceasfuf . completion of tht

i:towntawn

Porntry ar-.a. Mtdlum length
hair, I0¥11 peoplt. 6141992--3420.

LOST-little tabby kitten, corner
of 41h &amp; Main Street New Haven
If tound,304..S82·3704 REWARD.

pay rate 18.09/per hour) Ohio

EMT-A certification r.caulrtd for
particlp~tion. · For Information

cell: Eric Kuhn ol&amp;14-446-i840.
Energ.tlc, .nlhusiastlc, outgo.
lng employtn for part·tlmt
posltlone In telemarketing. Ex~
periance ::,'lulr.d, Phon.: 114-

446 7546 to nt 1
1
'
r trv IW app ·
Experienced
mtdla
Hlu
repr...ntativt. Ball plus comm1sslon. 304-727-7885 call for-Intarvl aw.

Lost: Ftmalt Weimaraner dog. "FE::O::E::Rc:A-:-L- :G
:::C=Jli E:::RN"'M"'E:::N-::T:-ci"S
Sllvtt grey, bob-tall, maroon HIRING $18,000-$82 000 year.
call1r. tfas allah1 limp and bald . Call 1-805·564-6500 Ext.GB 968
apol oli back.lolt Thursday at- t 1 -~1 11

temocn In Kingsbury, roult. 33 . :':':
or:;::
m:::"::;:::~~'~
rH~po
!::.:::n~
..~·~area near raodsldt rts'l. 6141992·
TYPISTS, PC . ustrt
1201.
~..d.ed
US,OOO . polontlal.
111 805·687·6000 ·Ex1. B·
Yard Sale
7

rooma

remodeled.~,

I

blilh,

n. frllltr, $10.90 per
wHk. VI'Ra Furniture. Rl. 141, 4
mllll oft Rl. 7.C.Onleruny.Opon 7

cu.
newly

$200/mo. All ulllllll

.441-7733, 814-448-4222.
2br Apt, Rio Grande, all utllltlas
paid, Large front porch, 814a381-

i948, Jac'k

· ,.commendS that you ·do busl·
ness with people you know, and
Econo Lodga DHk Clerk Poll· NOT to send money through the

tlon: part~tlmt, · tvenlng 1, mid·
night• &amp; weebnda. BooKkHp.

Apartment
for Rent

Included, uepaalt required, 11...

. INOTICEI
·;o~:e:;j'j:,iiOil ~~~0 VALLEY·PUBLISHING CO.

coarH. (Part-time Dllp1tcher

To Glv.awar: Several Boxn of
Yard Sale MerchandiM. 614·245-

2

Business
Oppor:tunHy

paws, 1

a

44

wnk. Magic Chef 14 ou. fl.
Re!Tigeratot $12.15 per wolk, 15

N~al.

Apartnient1 fo"r ' rent 1125 to
$15q. 614-992·7511.
Apartments, 2 bedrooma. nlct,
304.e75-5104.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jocklon Pike
from $192/mo. Walk to ehop •
moviu. Call61~48-2518. EOH.

mall until you hav• lnvut1gat.d
th• offering.

;.;.:;:.::,:::.;:::!:,._ _ _ _ __
22 Money to Loan
LOANS BY MAIL
Up to $5,000 In 72 hours. We
.__
can n.lp you get a signature
Loan By Mall. 1·90G-2e&amp;500.
' 9·95 tM.

Fum111hod Eftlclencr, $175.
Utlllli.. Paid, a.utpalla, 114448-4418, 1n• 7p.m • .
Real Estate
Garage Apartment In tawnl 2br,
stave &amp; relrlg. · Depo1 t 6
reference requfrod. No po11,
31 Homes for Sale
$200/mo. 614-446-1171.
2" bedrooms, •bath, corner· lot CJroclouo living. 1 ond 2 bed·
porch · an~ .deck, Hendtraon: room apartment• .al Village
wv. 304·675-7619.
Manor
• and
Rlveralae
3 bedrooms· houn. land con~ Apartments In Middleport. From
$196. Coll614·992·7787. EOH.
tract, 304·675-5104.
Nicely fumishtd moblltl'lome, 1

3 Miles from Rt. 35 Pliny, new
raneh houH, 1800 1q. tt. fenced

mile below town, overlooking
river, CA, heat, Dej)otlt, Ref.

yard on !5:2 acr11. 3 Bedrooms,
central AJC, 2 car garage, salll·
lite
, chy w ater, asking

514-446-0338.
Nicaly Fumish8d Mobile Home
In city. CA. Sultab .. tor 1 per~
son. Ref. &amp;Dap Raqulrld 614446.0338
One bedroam apta. tar rent.
S225 month. Deposit required.

ahw 5 p.m. call 304·937·
7 room, 1-112 bath, 1.3 acres, i.ddltlonal 33 ICrts hunting and
timber. 614·992·7118 or 1·384-

2097.
7 rooms 1 1/2 baths, country
II VI ng but close to Meigs School

2097.
GOVERNMENT HOMES 1rom $1
(U repair). Oallnquanl tax
property. Repos11sslons. Your

paid. 614-448&gt;1837.
Upstal,.. , Fumlahed, 3 rooms,
bath, cltan, air, wa•hldry, new
carpet. no pets, reteranee,

1.

For Sal• or Rent, 2 btdrooni
country home, 1 112 acres
daposlt'614-446·1519.
M. .on County, 304 -576 -2646.
.

45

For tale or rent. 3 bedroom

house,
405
Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy. 6~41446-7389 days
614/446-6325 t&gt;Jonings. Will fin~

ance. ·

·

Furnished
. Rooms

Rooms for rent· week or month.
Starting al $120/mo . Gallla Hot•l.

-- ·

614-446-9580.

In Gallipolis; 6 rooms, 1 1/2
baths,
flraplaca, basement ,
condltion1
garage, eiCCtllent
Shown Anvtlme. 614-256-6855.

.

Point Pleasant area, 4 rooms,
bath, full basamenl, 614·367-

7818 ,

.

Priced to still Bidwell Ohio
House &amp; 4 lots, 3bf, living,
dining, &amp; family room, garage

unattached, owner

financing

available, wlgood down payment , $25,000. 1-614-867-3649, 1·

47 wanted.to Rent

304-429-5330.
32

8

Space for WOfkohop In or near
Rio Granda. Adaquata wiring
· noc:assary. Call GeOf'go 111111•
:-:::-==~;_:=:_--:--:~ WI, 614·245•9068.
$40 DOWN on any new single· w od
wldt, plus tax and " tltlt to
arrt : 314 BR house to rent or

Public Sale
&amp; AUction

Mobile Ho.mes
for Sale ·

buy on land contract. 614-446-

qualilltd buyers. A• advertlltd

Alc:k Pearwon" Auction Company

uiHman, aa11ry plut
now booking , auction•, ••· llre
commlulon,
unlimited taring
Deflence makn the dlfttrtnc::t. polenllal, ex.,..-Jenct
preftrrecf,
Ucenetd Ohio, .Kentucky, Wilt 1ppty
Ohio Velley n,. OUII11, AI.
YJrglnlo, 304-773-5765.
2 nnl to 14 Lu-. Golllpo1111
Forry, No phonl COlli pl-.
9 Wenttd tQ Buy
SHuatl9n
goo hell«, ventod wll~ 12
Wanted
- ·· 114-1'12·21M bolwoon 10

4 1

on TV • Call EIMa Home Cenler
1-800.589-51'10.
'197U NIW Moon, Eitel ric. 2 btd·
room mobile home. 12x65 304·
773-8185.

$300. 614·245-0148.

53
Antiques
~::0::::0::~;::;,;:.:;.;~=.,..Buy or Hll. Rlvwint AntlqUia,
1124 E. Main Street, Pamaroy.
Hou,..: M.T.W. 10:00 1.m. to 6:00
p.m., Sundly 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
614-992-2525.
Top Cash paid. Old tUmhurt
cuboard•,

qulllli

Merchandise

Tondy tOOO COmfHIIer 1nd Color
MonHot. IBM COmJIIIoble wfth 3
1121nch drlvo, 5 114 drive, 30 mg
fiord drive. 1700. 114-11112-121111.
W11l1or1 rolrlgerotor ond oloctric
IIOYI. All working concl~
lion. 814-84l-2101.

_

... a-7S. . .

Employment Services

304..75-10118. .

Help Wanted

::.·. . .

P.IOO CREDIT CARDI

-=~~

· .

2424, 1.aoo.72t-02111.

76

Cil

•,

rtng. S-.D

Auto Pans &amp;

Accessories

,'
.'

paln11ngs, toys, or entire estate
304-525--3275, or 3o.t523.ell54.

Ill 1121 • Unclti'auck Uncle
Buck deeldea \0 go bilck to
11Ch001 to keep Tfa from

.8J"'f~,
~ Utlilll'
FOX Night It the Mo•iaa

I

'

Merchandise

•

Pall1

1114 Tempo, $1615. 1185 Tem~J
U4ts. 11111 T..,po, 531115. 1911!1
S.xaphana, IIC oond $450. C.Oweller, $2411. 11419112·7114.
uood couple monl:~..3o4-895- 1085·1roc $1,000. 1181 Uulllang,
3815 di.ys or95-3068 tsctUMII
condition.
evanlnge.
IS.OOOIOBO. 814olll2·3011 . .
$125 Motorole g.. black &amp; whh•
TV $20 · 304·8112-21'15 oftor 5
118J Oldl Cutlon Supreme,
wttkdaye.
Brougham, low mllear.,
kept, •lltxlr'ltl 814-44 -4
&amp;'I ruck lopper Sz5. Warm mom·
lng wood burner $200. 61-t.992·

Vegetables
food stomps. Y1rfoty of oppl11,
frMh ckftr, Indian oorn,
pumpklno, and gordo. 11-7 dolly,
-ly.I14..11H2t8.
Potll-: Wo hen • good
1upply of aood Kennebec ·
polll-. $11.00 "" 100.
Humphrey,
11
Roadnllle.
8141378.091. No Sundly uiH.

~

S1

birthday parilfor Cameron

uP A MAS"J.~

'faiHly
•:.accused
'i.loror

D8d Robin ls

tJ0:£.1.( sPILL

IT M16HT CREA'TL ·

:;•.fAIC Motldly Nlglit

FaolbaiQ
·
Cil Race to S....lfie "'-'

.. .
.(:

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
Uncondltlonll lifotlme gu&amp;Jlln·

.,

-~­

OON'T HA'vti: TO L.O::)K
· AT A CA.L.E.NDAR "TO
KNOW ITS MONDAY.

:
,,'

.

i
'I
'•
'~
'•

other bl'lnds. Houu calls, alto

For Sole: 1185 Chewy Aotro

304.e16-l!3118 OhiO 614-441-2454.
Roofing, painting, corponlory,

114-448-2722.

l)lumblng and accMaoriee.
Oual'llntitcYforlr with reftrtn·
CM, Cln1 ~ th ... priCII,
uarant•. IM-4~7292 or 304-

tome 1ppllance

Conversion
Van.
Loaded,
SI,OOO. Local one owner,. Call

Yugo . CJ.Y., Slondord,

Farm Suppl1rs
&amp;

miiMQe, new tlr• good cond,
woulcf make ••ceilent c1r tor
ltuclenl .. work cor. 114-:MS.

l '~~-"'64.

582~

Moat WWIII completed Nmt day.

11H Cul111elnt1 S.n11 ODIIono:
Lumber SNit, PUPW,
P.Mirraro, 11ectranlc diGhll

' '

...,,
•'

1rrln

tlml to change oil I

whon to gil g11 onry 23,700
mlloo Poi.U20,ll00 - . Alklng
l13,100. eon ert ~41 .4303.

Boo.k k••rl ngt•ccOuntlng, .management
alrlinlllrav•l, nurse• aidt, trac:
tor . tr11ller tr~ining,
riiJ..
dentlllome lludy. Rnonclol lid
l'f'llltlbM If qualified. Plaawnent

82

..... llle 1111 Oldo Dolt• -

COiod'

col offlu, 2301 C.Orndln Ave
Porbnburg, WV. t.aoo.eu:
11411. AI P"''lrtmo complllod 1lmontho.

.......,

• .,.... ww-

117-0111.

000.

• I'M-

QOVIflloiMENT SEIZED V~11
hm SttiO. ,, _ M-.IH.
~... ChoY)ro. surp~uo.
Your-. (t) -.sooolllt.
..10tH.

.

Gel rour cheln oaw I«YYcod for

Ptumblng
Heating

signs are rominllcal(y perteci for you. quick stuay. as well as extremely"curlMail $2 to Matchmaker, c/o thlll.....,.. ous tod1111, and this equips you to off.,..
paper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, 011 lively glln or Impart knowle(lge. There
4410t-3428.
Isn't much that wtP escape your gaze.
ICOIIPIO(Oci.J4.11oy,ZI)Oneofyour TAURUS (Aptll 2D-M8y 20) Financial
greatest atlrlbutea fod1111 Is your ablllly maHors might be a trifle trk:l&lt;y wlth
BERNICE
Ia&lt; oolvlng problems. In fact, you might whiCh to cope toclay,but you should be
BEDE OSOL ltnd two solutions for a dilemma you able to handle them well, beeaUH you'll
thought has none. ,
be
good
at
advanl~
IAGm~RIUI (110¥. 23-Dec:. 21) Today
lmpnMMIIona.
you might hove to make a decision .. • . . (MaJ 21..1une 20) ll b!oi!OCMII
where the altemaltvea fll)pear to be of you 10 atay 11 busy as potllbla lodBll.
equal value. However, If you study the becauoe you'll be more productive ,If
matter In clatall, you'll diii!)O~ one Ia · you hava to handle-~~ Ullgnments
slightly better than the other.
.
almultaneoull)l. When lhlnga lloW
CAPRICORN (Die, ZI.Jan. 11) Your . down, you'll lloW down u - ·
poaslbllillea for outdistancing You'' CAI!CU (Mtetl.,.., IIi Try to keop
competition todBll lOokI rathlr good, , ' 1l0w proflla tod1111lf you flnd yourHII lni
Oct. 1, 1110
bectiUIII you ore likely to be much more vo1vac1 In a commercial lltuatlonl wflh
,. ,
.
strongly mollvated to win tllln they'll · competitors. Youdon'twanttotlpyour
A lucrative channel mtghl develop for be.
hand regarding your taclk:a or
you In the year aMad lhat could open AGUAIIUI (.IM. 20 Feb. 1Jl Evan melhodl.
up a second SOtJrca of Income. This • .,.. though II la early ln the - · 1 ,...... LIO (.ltllr .. ..... Ill Y~ou '~ll cl,_,pafil'muchlg
111
nue has the potential to equll your pr• atlonll brellc could ..,.. u I halltlly · more comlot11111a today ~
sent earnings.
' •-today to po ..anl tensions lrQn)
aciMIIM wllh lrlancla
dO
LIIRA(.,..D-Oci.ZI)Uiuallyltilrl'l building up. Try to Intact I fun activity llWnMhll or lnvolv-'1 too llrtadvtaable ·t o on. unaollellad tldvlclllo Into yoUr IIChadule.
.,
OUIIy than you wll wllh (1111 whO don't
otl1ora,...., c101a lrlendo, but today If ....CIS (Feb. II u·mll II) You can't , know now to Nlax.
WICIO CAlla- •11p1. 1) :~~~·= J
you have sOme conatructlva suggee- . get~ you want dona today, blrt
Ilona thot can help a pal, opr- your· !you 1111ou1~ be abltl to flltiiiH two lm!*--' eatllflallonl will bo1
• self. Know - • to look for romance portant maHors to your MtlllfiCtlon If . d8llfrom -..rapmanll where
arid you'l lind it. The Mtro-Graph • you apply youi'MII properly.
,
your menlllablllt!Mto meat or ctn:um•·l
Matchmakar Instantly rtvHII. which ; AlliE• . (~ 21:Aptll 11) You're a , cllalle1lgao,

,.

ge
on
Reoldontlol or · oom.,..lol
wiring, nlw llrYice or - ' "·
Lla -... d IIHirlalan. Rlcllnour
Eloctrlcol, 3044711-1781.

"1

.

-·-·-

,...., _ , Mnll-

i*.1•

llld

_..,--I

~~.

1IJI aauolll. 111 ton. · -

v2 wa.nt.... toBuy

W.M 10

~

~i!lll.

o -

- - ....

.. ftuto.

'

.,

!.'11'1110Ch.~b~=-·41pd,

.

-

- 'good.~good,
ol-.
114-11124~

-In-1,.,..

II
U,hollillllt1.lngllt_., _ _ _ TI1o

,.

~ - . . . t l 4 .""
. -......
ng.
1111

'· .

*~ •••

I

-

•

(

r

'.

'

I+

t+

~··

Pua

tNT

Pus · s+

Ill=···
=•• .
;-;.1!......

Talk 8Mw
CIS Late

• MOVII: .............,..,
..
The-- He..._ a-

=~··
(tl'llllll
Mattilnll
Goldin Erl
ol Pro FOOIIllll

Opening lead: + J

.

temporizing false cue-bid of four dla· • ·::
monds over the four-club splin~r bid. ;
North would presumably bid four ··.,
hearts, and South would thea bid four ·.: .,
spades. T~t would give the me1111e ;: ,
of slam tnlerest without certalllty. · •
North mlcht well then decide to pass, ·
since be could have held more for bla
biddinll.
·-.,

,,....

.

.-

..-•• ''
.. ...
Yesterday's

8Hardy
novels
setting
I "Gel .
outta
herel" ·
11 lnopera·
live, as a
phone
15 Casual

lops

20 Wralh
22 High·
23

schooler
Spelling

tourney

·il'e&amp; .

agenda
25lackol

..
.

'·

.•

..

y

.

~

Paler

music

33 Make

. ·'
..
....

sOund

35 Top piiOI
36Kitten ay

/

....

..,

.....

·~

.
"

·~
~ ,1

.. '

. =:~

, ••, r

....... .
'

.... ,'
"
.". ....
...

.--·

.....

AX•YDLBAAXR
Jsi,ONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. ln this sample A. is used
for the three I.'s, X for .the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnalion of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diffe'rent.
·

.:.

••....

.

-

..

. ..~
•
.;
........,.;.:

' ".

. CRYPTOQOOIES
AliSNilii&gt;VI~BQA

TJ

S

VPUPNK
OABPNK

X, I.

.z

A

'fJ ·

• ·•·1

S Z A

SZA

""

Q X X N;

VPIIPNK

XL

Q'

.

1:001=........
AI I llllhl (2;00)

. 0 1.-::'~
.. 11
Nl'l.'l GIMIIIIIIITinll
'

'
-'
•

VCR
· 29 Bloke
30 Actor

24 On the

··r

·~

•· '•.

Ihe

26 Michener

records

Answer
novel
Burdens
Uses

27
28

apprecia · lion •

19 Ship

Cll MOVII: ... Ill Gotl'l

'

- &gt;-

.

au. .........
.,.... Le-11111111

12:11 (J) •

.

...•

.

11:00 (I) CIJ. - -

·

-

I+
ADpall!l
•splinler bid

DAILYCRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's how lowork It: 1018

P..t1

.

.
·•4;

Eoot
PPP-

Nortli

1 Go
hung'Y -

Ill c:twlltotJMr CotJIIllllll,

..

Wool

DOWN

0 lpOitiCanlllr
8 8Dorta Tonlglll

12:11 CIJ llfll •

..'

souvenirs

Ql

81 1

"'

.1

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
Pus

,

'·

411sland

1:""..:
ponlglil
CniGII l CllaM

eNewllllglll

.AQJB
. • 642
+QZ
+Q632

40 Sketclled

(J) To·le Ar.nouncM .
(Ili!UIOpaan Joumll

liD.

~ '" I

sign

Ill Mallllc' Manalon
11:30 III. IDl Tonight Show
Stereo.

ratl

t...,
-· ~--1.01111 or
==~-dou-y. Cd-

:104..71-'11121.
Mogle y_,. Illy Corio Conlor
,..--,
dopendab111,
llconoo, q•IIIY ohlld oare. .,..,.
doy llw F~diy, 7:10 tiH 5:30.
drh• lor lnctor troller. For _ . lnlonnltlon or lo
.~ 11oul8. 114.ff2·3752.
~104.a7--7.

...~·

___:__ :· "'~

Refrl

0 lllantl VIce

QJQoaPII.Itlbllea

'

~

SOUTH .

Sotltli

.

. ..

+A Kit

• J 10 I 5

Dove's

desire
31 Spring

8 11111111 TOtilglll
.IIMoneJIII•

··~ , ,·

+1Dt4

clean
38

ASTRO-GRAPH

85 General Hauling
R a R Wtt• hrvice. Poola. oil-

81dlrt E·
Co., Hondereon, WV.

'•

" •'

+Jan

37Wipe

0 ......

liD. AIMtiiO Hal

'

&amp;

88~14~1!!1!;1~'·!!!·-~
84
Electrical &amp;

~

.

Cf)NeaswWa

'•
~.

,

=·

., .'.:.

.KJSS

•• 7

outfit

Cll Nlgllt c- 1:;1

·· 'f

11

.

C.Ori«'o Plumbing
and Hooting
Fowlh and Plno
GoKipolls, Olllo

ll'I-GI4.
Fc1r Soil: 1912 PfrmoutK Sop.
AMIFII ndlOti;l o!ld, llr
_

11:00III. Ill

~- !j

•'
,. ~·· ·

32 Arrive
34 Mr.Ts

10:30()) ,._
10:50 Cll MOVIE: lnalda ~~alar
ClqwW (2:45)

..

Pump IIIII and Ht'Yice, 304·

441.0214.

IN TH' SCHOOl.'
HOUSE?

. ,,

815-3802.
Sepllc T1nk Pu....ng_SIIOc0.1111
dati, AMtAI N1811te, wlfi • · Co. RON EVANS ENTERP"ISES
..-11ur a ecan I . .rch, aiAo ,Joakoon, OH 1-800-837-i526. '
t.np. control, anti-lock braktt,
!Jow.Voc
81rvlct, .
oompu!Or dllvtr Info o,.cem, Dovfo
liNd eh- full rango gu Gtorv- CI'Mil Ad. Parta, IUpmlloor trip HI, nt'ocf time of pliH, pickup, ond dellwory. 614-

L1vestoc~

BEEN AROUND
HERE,~. AUNT
LOWt:El.Y--

,, ,·

B=:'::Pat
Rollari:Mtl

AI 8fJDI(I WIM'Bf

EAST

WEST

•Hz

customer
30- Turner
31 "Star
Wars" role

• Swlmault '10 Berllldol
l!dllltln

ASKI!ol' ABOUT

•u

~ !S·

29 Lawyer's

a$. Sr. Trek: Tlta Next
HA~

..

critters
26 Stolen

Ganeralltln

Rac1ry or cable tool drilling.

16"&amp;serose ... "

. color
24 Ranch

(t:OO)
10:00 IJJ ~ 111 lava lite Pllnll

SHllliW TAfT

•. •,..I

. ,,

club
6 Sailor
7 Beet·
hoven
·symphony

East

~2 Insect
body part
23 Earthy

w-

Gam~lllll

,,''•
'·
I

;-.;

5 Health

13 Stood
14 The Far

21-Aviv

1:30()) MOVIE: Klngtlf lha

•'
.,•'

NP11Ir1. WV

3 -Fiat
4 Genesis
setting

18 Divided
the pie

181 Lany King Uval

(

6114.

5Agonize
Stallion
10 Rid of
rinds
12 Sculpture

office
shape

WiMIII1.
·QJ MOVIE: Hull Wflllml:
Tlta Show He o..a
(2:00)
.
AWSA
Skiing
NatiOnal Show Sld
Champlonahlps from
Jlntlvllla, Wl (R)
·

o

·'
".,.:

lofty

I

House

0 Ptlma -

''

plumbing •
remodlllng
REIIOOE[!
E.tlm1t...

2 High;

17 White

2
aJl ~
· Country Mullc.
r..an~.

r

.,,•;,

Home HI ups

ACROSS
1 Auction

,!l Racl to S.... lite Pllnet

Ron'• TV Strvlce, a~llllzJng
In :Z.nlth aiiO Hrvk:lna moit

59

an

lnept biNbell player: ~:;~

Home

1117 S~blru lour whlll drivo
GL 10 Turbo Wagon. l.oldocl, ••·
cellent CG1111tlon. Pomeroy. 8141192-31143.
1111 Ctmaro, ~ack t-top, 1 ·
owner, 28,000; mllat, extra
ohorp, 18,000 or $171.02 PI'
month, 114-44U7St.

bel~

..

• _&gt; l

by,THDMA.S JOSEPH

1:05 (I) MOVIE: Imitation of uta
(2:45) •
1:30 III. IDl Farrlllkiellar
Farrta' plana lor a small

QJOnltage
0 NFL Montlar Nlaht
Mll8'iM
I:DOIII• IDl 'Jicllla Colllnl'
LouckyfCIIIJI CM (Part 2 Of 3)'
N8C MDtltlay Night at ll1o

114-237-!MIIl, doy ot night.
IIOgl... e-ment WotorprOollng.

Duntovln Frutl Farm lUll off Sr
881 ull ol Albeny. Wo - p i

.. L1~~10

11-'£ &amp;.P RJ6U&lt;. a'VJCfJ

'

' "· Local reftrancH tumlalfid.
Free Htlmat•. C.ll . oollict 1·

Fruits &amp;

56

ar AU.

Services

Instruments

,;•Iii•

5720.
Chrlotmao r..... will wholl .. ll,
304.e75-1464.
Concrete I pintle Nptlc· tankl,
Ron Evant Entarprl•••, Jack~
son, OH 1-80().537-1528.
Firewood for tall. Cut •laba.
114-256-81111 or 814-256 1~541.
Firewood: lorg1 p(ckuf, lood. All
hardwood. Cill even ng1. 114-446-i266.
For Mola .... , 304-675-1515.
For Sa.t•. Bratt. .twlna machine in 8 dl'lwer Walnut
Clblnot. $125.00 V.G.C. 614-992·

•,.'·

1171 ~go . Sprinter, 211ft.,
34,000
IICIUII lftiiH f5,000. 814Poodln: toya, tucupe, AKC.
4411.e15J.
•
Tiny m11n. beautiful ftmalta.
1164
llonle
c.on~
V-8,
Sole
or
Aloo lduH dogo. Lorge cogeo. trade tor good. rruck or t.rm 1m 16 H. "Go Tag Along" Mil
Coolville t14M'7-3404.
cont ..n.d •xtra ct..n, $1,200
tractor. VInton. 1854 Ktpton 114
881 8820.
S1
. Musical
Rd.

lohod nallor, om111 tr1lllr, 5hp,
ardmln rototlller, 114-448-0721,
~· F l nor 6p·1ft· or WMk"l
" p.
a ft. llbtrgl••• truck topper,
$125, Honda MB 5 motor bikt

"M.Y'RE.

......

r------_., ·---..

CROSSWORD

-Ill Chrlatophar COIIMiibul,

7500 W lndustrtal Gen•ratar, 11n-

"Hey, no probr.ml My c:oUIIn Mum~y ·
· great at jlgeaw puzzleel"

(A)

- QJ Gotpel JubiM
1D I!IJIN•a ZenHII NFL
Monday Nlgllt Matcfi-Up
Q!IPIImiNIWS

1 Cub Cadit riding mower.

'

lnnov• 8pnlll

OMurder,Siia-Q

54 Miscellaneous

304f773-5651.

(J)

.

Car dellgns for the future,
aarer trains 1nd airplanes
nown wllhOUI liuman piiOII
are discussed. D

call colltct

51

1

1a1 Air Will' a frttlnd lee TrBll

cornea to villi. 1:;1
()) MOVIE: Juveillle Jungle
(1 :30)

.. .~

AMIFM lttreo ca...ne, air, low

(

I:CIOIII. IDl Freah ""'- 01

(2:00)8-.

Hot.Umote

~ulp-

. acrounre
. 7:31 CIJ '"" JlffanOnl

(I) (I) • Mat:0yv. A friend
ol MIICGyvar baCOmaS ll1o
dupe olin upaoaJe burgllry

Prlcod on obiiHy. $50-$100, 6141149-2543.

Schools &amp;
Instruction

II- -·

ID MolafwMk lllunalad

•'·

prox. ont year and running.

my home. Good cart and home
eookod ,... ,• . 614-MII-2212.

Janu1ry, c.ll304-1,.7121.

Tonlgllt Slelllo.
CIJ. Mama'l ,......,
liD• TMe'a Compallf

~a~ery

·-·,?.

.•

You mill'bt not feel ready to play in
the finals ol a North American Knock·
out Team Championship, but take
heart. After looking this week at some
deals from the Spingold finals held .
last July, you might believe you could
occasionally do as well as the best
American players.
In loday's deal, North-South got to a
shaky slam. North's jump to fow· clubs
was a special bid showing lour-card
spade support, a slllgleton club and
.substantial · t!lltra hlgli.Card values.
South simply assumed there would be
enough for a good play for 12 tricks If
the side was not off two key cards.
(Key cards are aces and the kin&amp; of
trumps.) So he bid lour ftO.trump.
North'5 five-club response showed
zero or three key cards. South knew
that bad to be three to justify North's
stroag bidding, so be bid'the slam.
On a good day that would have been
fine. Tbe 9pponents would not lead
trumps; the heart kinj would be on·
side, and the defenders would have .tQ
foUow to three rounds of diam~nds.
That way declarer could take bla sidesuit blgh-c:ard winners and then cross·
ruff the rest. But not today. With tbe
heart king badly placed, there was no
play for six.
1
With a worthless queen of dubs and
a big hole in bla own heart holding,
South, I think. should bave made a

I
l
!lB=a-

,.
· •'
•'
•.

... r

II

BRIDGE .

7:05 Cll Happr 0.,.1 ·
7:30 III.
IDl Jaap1 dpl Q

tioflywoOJ

Alumn 12ft Y- · 304-882·3315.
BOATERS
llorcury Morcul- Spocllllot
Flclory Trolnod Bondod. Precllion lrobll1 Morine. We comelo
youii14-25N1111.
We .,.. nowWINTERIZINGflllnl,
..-viol ICC
riM. WI fnllall
tHRINKWRAP.
RIVERSIDE
MAliNE Golllpo1111, OH. 11~

..."'•' ..

ICI•M LITS ANIWIIS
,• •s
Swanky ~ Boxer- Quest- Unmask- WEAR OUT
. "Recall happy memories," advised the old Q&amp;Ot. "be·
cause they are things that never WEARS OUT.

·

:r:::::-

,, .

$150, 304-171-1111.
.
AKC flog. """gin. All 1ro op.

•
-.m-ms Ext
Blbplaer-kllper,
run
AVOII • AH or~'- Clil llorllyil 1jrne ln my hom'!!.. to llort In

AmNTIONt
..., world Exc11111nt lnc;omel
-mblo elmplo pro&lt;!uclo II
l'or -lll .con 1 - 1 ·
77111111.11214. :M hou,.., 7 dlyo.
.AVOII I AI AIMI I Shirley
........ IOMIS-1431.

=·~Affair

..

AIC.C OFA

~-02524
odv1ncoo. 1· _18==~W:::a::::n~ted~t~o~D;.;o~~

W..er i04 882-D45.

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Cell 114-288-1316 oftor 7:00 p.m.

Building
. tllfMI F«d Muotong, COupe, 1
cyl. 3 - d , (Frome O.mogod)
Supplies
POO finn. 114-141-4462.
Block, brlok, ...., plpoe, wln-.__llnlelo, life. Claude Winlen, "lo Grinde, OH Cell 814245-lln
1m Ctlllii'OIIC Impala, 4 door,
56 Pets for Sale
- u-. AJC he• - . tokon
. . . ~~ mechonlcolly,
..
Groom and Supply ~Pal S7IO.
Grooming. All broode. AP los.
lome Pel Food Dealer.
111 1m •ulck loSII&gt;re, condhlon. 350 engine. Pllone 814Webb. Clill14-441.o231.
44131112.
~c Gold1n RstNiver, mole, 2
yHr old houa• broken, excel- 1175 CheVy llollbu, 304-175.
lent wnh kids, l1110. Golden HU.
Attrwlvtr, ftmalt,

75

) I

.. .

111 ScaNCIOw ancl Mta. tang
Q

1012 17 n. Starcl'alft Tri·Hull
Boot. 121 HP, Ewlrll'- Enalne,
complete let&gt;. upholilery.

55

ea'-tance. Co~~nty School~ lo-

11

,

71 . ~os for Sale

Will c.re tar elderly per80R In

15

Rye IPPfOX. 30 bushel • hoy Clll

Transportation

am and 2 pm or anytlrM afttr 5

fi11L
W.nl to buy a large dog hoUse,
oall304-675-2336.
W.ntod To Buy: Junk AUtos
wllh or wllhoUI ma1oro. C.ON
Lony Lively. 614488-8303. ·
W.ntod To Buy: U11d mobile

Ill MecOt nr

Hay for -~. Round and square
beloo. Cell 114-MII-2344 oner 5
pm.

1911
.

•.

,.

oriental,

75,000 BTU . Fuol 011 HHtor,
wlfan. Also, 275 gal. tank w/200
gil. fuel oil. 614-256-6413.

6579.

4562 or currtnt repo list.
Blg Dakota Farm Horn•: Built on
~r lol. $31,9115 &amp; ·Up. 514-88&amp;·

Ruger 357, Magnum nevw uNCI,

Upstairs unfurnished Aplr1·
mant, carpalad, no ptll, utlHtln

Apartmtntl now avallable-rlnt·

lrig for 3Q•k of adjuatad Income.

area j1) 805·687·6000 Ert. GH-

52 Sporting Goods

20b Second St or call 304-675·

One bedroom turnlshtd apt,
$200. per month, 304-675-2406,
9:00 1111 5:00 PM. ·
Twin Rlvarw Towers, Housing tor
the El~erly and Handlcapped.-

Rt.' . 33-&lt;4 lane,
Township Road 27o First road to
right . Call 614·992·7118 or 1·38~

upright r-ar, like - · $1115; 4.
cu. lt. dump c1rt, Q0C!C1 cand,
$75; St175, llolftllhe 1r ,llrlng
trimmer, $751 Mull Sell! 114-4~
2234.
Sunroy botlle ilu. 36" cook
elove, whht, gOod condition.
$100. Gibaon rltrlgar.tor, Whitt,
14 cu.ft., froat fre-. Ilk• new.
$300. 814/185-3591.
.
SWAI ..
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
Olivo S1., Gallipolis. Now &amp; Ullod
furniture, hNtt,., Wntem I
Work boolo. 114-446-3151.

PRINT NUMBI:RED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

~

Slal"l .. lilt" Kenmore 21 cu. ft.

7HPJ32 Inch cUI. 814/992-2113.
12 hp W1stern auto riding
mower, 4 monthl old. 1980
Chevy Monza nHds work. 3()4.
895-3013.
2: printer•. Radio Shaeli ill11
prlnte,. V; TRS.ao's. Both far
$50.00. 6141992·7270.
4 9ood candy machl...,s.

614·992·2218after 6 p .m.

and . tOWf'.

dayea wllk.

~

.

lllle Night Court ~

·~

1.-....1.-~....J'--'-....1.-..J ,.,. develop 11'0111 .... No. :J below.

. ()) I D.,.m Ill JMiwlla
.Cll (I) • lnaltla !dillon ' .
!Il (J) MacNall Laltnlr ..

(

.~

"

7

0 lpoltiL.ook
.
0 MIRIIC Mel lion
1:31 (I) AJICif ~
7:00 III. Ill 0 WI!-' Ill
.

.'

be broccloli instead o1

8

F-Q

PICK.ENS FURNITURE
Now/Uood
Household tumi•hlng, 112 mi.
Jarrlcho Rd. Pt. Pleaunt~ . ,'W'/1
coli 304.e75·14110.
RENT TO OWN
614-441-3158
6 pc. wood group $14.01 .,.,

..... ."·'
' ..

food has id have calories
and cholesterol, why cOuldn't it

~~I!.,~Q

_,'

Wltk. 4 poater bedroom •ultt,

:ls2-1 Can1a0t

l

MARCEY

·'

.

If

m~·~--1;1

P.O. Box 1043, Gallipolis, OH.

••

•· e

· .~.-.~-ur..,N...;E:..,;
· E;..v~j!l.,· .
I .I r .- '
·...,.T;_;I.,..;C;;...,;E...:N;-.;.I.,...~~
~.
r. I 1 I' I I .e ~= ~~lhoch:.:."...!~

Ill Moeowlllltl
Ql Wlllltl TM&amp;y

';su

.•
''
,...
.
."

~- 1-nl~-..jr--M"T"'t"""'ll=---~11

~:r::an. Q
0 ca.- EitpiQe

au

~·

Glv.e away
'4
11 Gorboge bigs lull of yard

I

EVENING .

bll&gt;r bedll110 llodro- ..
boxoprl"'lllull or lwln
,.,.
5a
$88, and $98. Outen Htl
$45.

I

MON.. OCT. 8
Cl1t90 TV L•S11f'r9 Inc. Ft Wonn. n,

rnallrHI S2t5 end up lo f318.

4 bedroom home, 1 bedroom
fumlahad a pt. 304~75-2130.

\/.----

Qokl Cfedtt Card, cash adYance

Television
Viewing

sale

a

·'

,

72 Trucks for

w-1 chal,. 1281 to 1111. DteU
$145 up to $3'/S. HUichoo $400
up, bunk btd8 compllte wllh

j'l-,.. ._
·-·
'\

Otpt

Household

1990

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sol.. ond alliin prlcod liom
HIS to - · T11&gt;111 SilO lnd lip
to l125. Hlde+bodo f3110 to
$511. lleoll,.. $225 lo f375.
Lllftpo Pf to $125. DlneHII
$1011nd up IO $415. Wood tobte

1700. REWARD lot Information
lllclna to the arrMt and convic-

whh

..

Goods

Announcements •

daHzl... mUlng and Mllry.
St.. tlng on '"!. propony Indian
Loko Rood llloolcin Rldgo",
ll..on CountY. Propt~rty taktn
two 750x11 truck tlrea comp.. ti

1990 •

'

M

·. ... .

'

•

�P'ligl 10-The o.ily Sa tlitll

-1~1

.

.

'

A VInton man and two VInton teenagers suffered minor
Injuries Saturday when the car they were rldlll&amp;' In flipped over.
·WilHam Patton, 38, was northbound on Slate Route 325 In
Meigs County, when he sUd off the right side of tbe roadway In a
left curve. tns 1900 Chevrolet Camara then struck a gu&amp;fdrall,
went oVei' the cuardrall and went down an embankment. The
car then flipped over and came to rest on Its top, accord.lng to a
report from~ Gallla·Meigs post of the State tnghway Patrol.
Patton was !rapped -Inside the·car for some· time until the
Meigs County EMS $Qu&amp;d arrived. Tbe squad then transported
Patton and his passengers, Jason Burdette, 16, of Vinton, and
Jamie Marcum, 13, ofYin,lon to veterans Memorial Hospital In
Pomeroy. Burdette was qeated and released from Veterans,
aild Patton and Marcum were transferred to Holzer Medical
Center. Both were admitted and we_re In good condition .
Monday, according to a hospital spokeswoman.

UAL seek for new
buyout altemativ~s
CHICAGO (UPI) - Efforts to deal fell through, the stock
secure financing for a $4.38 .market dropped 190 points In one
b!Uion employee-led buyout of day." .
The predicted $170-a-share
United Airlines app,arently have
offer
would mark the fourth time
failed and sent employees s&lt;;ur'
In·
less
tlr~tn four years · the
rytng Monday to work out a deal
airline's
pilots
have attempted to
to lower the pricf!tag. ··
Gerald Greenwald, leader of buy the company .
''I know we · will hav\! a
the union effort to buy UAL
proposal
the board can say yes
Corp., parent of the Chlcagoto,"
Greenwald
said. "After that ,
b!ISed carrier, admitted Sunday
It's
up
to
them.
the group Is unable to secure
Greenwald said the new bid
sufficient bank financing for the
wwould
Include only $60 to $80 In
$201-a-share otter, which expires
cash,
with
the r~st In securities.
Tuesday.
Lease-backs
from suppliers also
Observers said ihey expect the
are
expected
to be part of the
group to present a $170-a-share
·
·
plan.
pla'n to UAL's board of directors
"lt's starting to lOOk like a K
and bla~J~e weakened conditions
mart
blue-llgllt special," finanIn the airline Industry for devalu·
cial
analyst
Stephen Dexter of
lng the stock.
Kemper
financial
Services said.
UAL stock was not traded
•'You're marking down the price
when the New York Stock Ex·
and marking down the price until
change opel)ed Monday.
finally you get financing."
Rothchild Securities analyst
A rejection of the new bid by
Jack Hunter predicted UAL
the beard will probably send the
stock will fall.
unions and management back to
•'The market wants this deal
the bargaining table to rework
out of the way because It doesn't
contracts
that contained conceslike violent fluctuations," Rothsions
predicated
on an employee
. child said. ''When the last buyout
buyout.
,from page 1 ·
Bud.l'u,et ••• - ' - - -Contlnued
-----.:----'----

BJ United Preu IDternadonal
For a chan11e. tbe rain held off
until the weekend wa$ nearly
over and Ohioans enjoyed what
was only the lOth drY w.eekend
since April1.
But the rain moved In Mond-ay
· and at midmorning, most areas
of Ohio ~ere reporting either
rain .. mist or fog.
A cold front dropped slowly
south aer.oss Ohio Sunday nliht
and at dawn · exended from
southwest to northeast Ohio. This
front was to remain nearty .
stationary through -the day before pushing back to the north
after nightfall.
Drizzle and some Ugbt rain was
to be the rule Monday, wltb a low
pressure systam and more rain
heading up through the Ohio
Valley Monday night and Tues. day. Once the low moves to the
east and north of Oblo Tuesday
night, the cold front will continue
to move,east and south.

More wet weather · will
threateri Tuesday night, 'but the
threat will diminish from northw·
estto southeast oil Wednesday as
·the front moves to the
Appalachians.
tnghs Tuesday will range from
60 In the northwest to the mid· 70s
In the south. After another rainy
day Wednesday, It will be fair
ThursdiiY and Friday. tngh
temperatures will be .In the 60s
Wednesday and Thursday and In
the upper 60s and low 7()s Friday,
Wet fields will cause delays In
fieldwork the next several days
across the state and harvesting
of most crops will be stall¢
through the end of the week.
Moist soli condldons will favor
germination· of newly seeded
grasses and winter wheat.
Haying operations may not
progress this week due to wet
grouild. Drydown of mature corn
should resume by Thursday and

WEATHER 1\JAP - A stationary ,front running through the
eastern tblrd of the country will bring showers to most of the
Norllleaat aad thunderstonns to the Texas and Loulsana coaals.
Cool temperatures are expected under high a pressure In the
Midwest. (UPI)
.
.

Ara b· · · - - - - - - - - Continued from page 1

D-Callf., telllng·colleagues, "We
other $12 billion through higher
''The longer this goes on, the
are tonight a government In
premiums and other costs that and envoys are trying to find a ' ·
peaceful solution to the problem, · deeper the divisions are going to
crisis, and It Is extremely imporare not yet determined.
get and the harder It's going to
tant that we move forward with
The $60 billion Medicare cut In . but Iraq has been sending mixed
get to return to normali.' one
this budget resolution. -... We can
the defeated bipartisan budget messag~ about Its Intentions.
In another development, the
Western (llploinat based In Cairo
no longer engage In just partisan- plan, which angered seniors and
Agency
Islamic
Republic
News
said.
ship or games." .
lawmakers of both parties, had
The crisis has strengthened
The new budget plan would still
providers paying $32 billion and reported Monday that Iran's
minister
of
defense,
Akbar
Torties
between Iraq and Iran, bitter
cut the huge deficit by about $40
beneficiaries paying $28 billion.
kan,
was
leading
a
delegation
on
In the 1980-1988 Gull War
enemies
billion In fiscal year 1991, which
The new plan, If adopted, would
Beijing:
an
offlclal
visit
to
that left an estimated 1 million
began Oct. 1, and by $500 billion
save beneficiaries $16 billion
Iraqi President Saddam Husdead.
over five years. But It would
over five years compared to the
sein said a week ago he was
The two countries . announced
Initial plan.
slgnlllcantly reduce the Medl·
Sunday they will hold talks
care cut and give the tax-writing
The new plan also would cut willing to e1t1brace a French
peace proposal that calls for the
Tuesday to discuss exchanging ,
House Ways and Means C.ommit- · defense spending by a little mcire
Immediate Withdrawal of Iraqi
diplomatic missions. Iraq, seektee, which Is controlled by
than the earlier . proposal and
ing allies where It can find them,
Democrats, broad latitude to
slllft $300 m lllion In agriculture troops from Kuwait, and resaid shortly after Its Invasion of
devise the tax component.
cuts from fiscal 1991 to a later leased several Western hostages
as tokens of good will.
Kuwait that It wouli:l return
The new plan, according to
year.
at
the
same
time
he
visited
But
Iranian prl~mers of war and ·
several Democratic congressWhile a smaller Medicare cut
honor Iranian borders.
men, would cut Medicare spend-· might have broad bipartisan occupied Kuwait, and highranking
Iraqi
officials
have
said
British diplomats r~turnlng
1ng by $42 billion over five years
support, the rest of tbe new
oil-rich
emirate
wll.l
remain
the
from
Kuwait said Sunday that
Instead of by the $60 billion
proposal being discussed Sunday
under
Iraqi
control,
even
going
Kuwaiti
spirits are high despite
Medicare would have been cutin . had Republicans nervous.
far
as
to
unveil
plans
to
Include
so
sporadic
gunfire in the deserted
a bipartisan budget plan negoThe plan would let w.ay,. and
Kuwaitis
In
the
Iraqi
streets, the British Broadcasting
tiated by President Bush and Means, led by Rep. Dan RostenCorp. reported.
.
·
congressional leaders but rekowskl, D- Ill., decide how to cut Parliament.
The crisis has also strajned
jected by the House early Friday.
Britain withdrew two of Its four
$20 b!Uion fromthe deficit; In
relations between Sa11dl Arabia
diplomats from Its Kuwait emThat rejection sent budget other words, the panel could
and
' neighboring Yemen, which
bassy to conserve food. Several
negotiators seurrY!ng to craft a
decide wlllch taxes to raise and
Initially sided with Iraq but has
Western embassies, defying
new plan which, unUke the · which to cut and by how much.
recently attempted to take a
previous proposal, apparently
Iraqi orders to relocate to Bagh·
more neutral stance In Ute
dad, have been under a virtual
will not need to win a majority of
dispute.
both. parties In both Houses In "\f
. selge In K11walt.
The renewal levy to be decided
Border officials said thousands
order to ensure passage. A
Italy and Holland said they
by
Syracuse
residents
·
for
curof
Yemenis are s treamlng across .,rould withdraw their embassy
majority of both parties rejected
rent expenses In November the Saudi border back to their personnel from Kuwait because
the first budltet plan Friday.
(Street lighting) Is 1.8 mills own country at three to four of the detloratlng situation.
Sources Indicated that of the
rather
than 1 mill as announced times the normal rate, appar$42 billion Medicare cut proposed
Also Sunday, Israel began
In
Friday's
Syracuse VIllage ently because the Saudis have dlstrlbu dng gas masks to resiin the new plan, $30 billion would
Council meeting · In Friday's ordered them to register and find
be paid by doctors and hospitals
dents of four areas In a program
Dally Sentinel.
sponsors If they wish to remain IIi officials. deny Is related to
while beneficiaries would pick up
the kingdom.
developments In the gull.
So far, offlclals estimate about
100,000 of the 2 mllllon Yemenls
Uvlng In Saudi Arabi~ have left
the
kingdom, at a rate of up to
Friends
may
call
at
Willis
. Clarence N. Hineman
•
Funeral Home Tuesday from 6to 4,000 a day.
The
Saudis
had
ordered the
9
p.m.,
with
Masonic
services
Clarence Norvin tnneman, 59,
beginning
at
7:30
p.m.
Y
emenl
workers
to produce Dal]Jo stock prices
of Crown City, died Sunday, Oct.
personal or corporate sponsors, (As ol18:38 a.m.)
7, 1990 In Albany, Ohio.
or to find Saudi business partners Bl')'ce and Mark ·smith
He was born Sept. 28, 1931, In
Leona Fnincis Krautter If they owned their own _of Blunt, Ellis A Loewl
Guyan Twp., Gallla County, son
businesses.
of the late Clarence L. and
Leona Francis Krautter, 64, of
Florence Marie (Unroe)
Am Electric Power ....... .. .... 27')1.
Pomeroy Pike, Racine, died
Hineman.
AT&amp;T ......... .................. :.....31¥.
Saturday, Oct. 6,1990atVeterans
He was a retired employee of
Ashland 011 ...... ... ... ...... ..... .31 'l4
Memorial Hospital following an
· the Gallipolis 'Development CenBob
Evans .. : ....... .. .. ... .. .. .....12'Ao
exteilded Ulnels.
ter, a U.S. Navy veteran of the
Charming
Shoppes .... .. ....... .. 8)'.
Veterans Memorial
,13orn Sept. 13 1926 In Hartford
Korean conflict,. a member and
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS..., .City Holding Co ........... ;.. ,.. .15~
W.Va., she was a daughterofthe
secretary for_ the past several
Federal Mogul .... .... ........... .l4%
None.
late Henry Lewts Cunningham,
years of the Olllo Valley l.odge
Goodyear
T&amp;R ...... .... ........ .17~~
SATURDAY DISCHARGESand Cora Edith Davidson Cun·
536 of Crown City, VIctory nlngham. She was a housewife None.
Key Centurion ....... .. .......... .lOY,
Baptls! Church of Crown City,
Lands' End ....... ......... .. .. .. ... 10~1
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS and member of the Flatwoods
and a 32nd Degree Mason.
Umlted Inc ... ......... .... ......... 13
Shirley Roush, Middleport; BerUnited Methodist Church.
He IS survived by his wife, Da
Multimedia
Inc. :...... .. .. .. ,.. :. 59~
She Is survived by her husband tha Conde, Pomeroy; Louis
Davis Hineman, whom he marRax
Restaurants
.................. !
of 43 years, Harry Krautter, of Smith, Pomeroy; Allen Elchln·
ried Dec. 11. 1954 In Crown City.
Robbins
It
Myers
....... , .. ...... , 17
Racine, three sons, Frank ger, Pomeroy; Mildred BlankenAlso surviving are one d!lugll·
Shoney's
Inc
.......
...
....... ....... 11~
ship, Middleport; Pamela Jones,
(Judy) Krautter, of Pomeroy;
ter, Julia PlybOn of Crown City;
Star
Bank
.............
.............
.16l&lt;}
Keith (Ruth) Krautter, of Pome- Pomeroy.
four sons, Joseph N. tnneman of
Wendy's
Inl'l.
:
...
,
...................
6
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
roy;
and Darrell Krautter of
Crown City, David T. Hineman of
Worthington Ind .... .... .......... 19%
Racine; a daughter, Sheila N'one.
.
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., Walter
(LUry) Patterion of Racine, two
Dean Hlnenuin of Crown City,
brothers, James ·a nd Daniel
imd Charles Henry tnneman of
Cunningham, both o.i Pomeroy, a
Northup; one sister, Mrs. Orval
sister, Ellen Youna, Pomeroy;.
(Shirley) McMaster of Wester·
six aranchlldren, and several
ville; and aevj!n grandchildren.
.
nieces and nephews. In addition
HOSPITA~
Funeral services will be conto her parell~S. sbe was preceded
ducted 1 p.m. Wednesday at the In death tJ,- one brother and one
VIctory BapUst Church, Crown
grandson.
&lt;;lty, with Revs. Charles Lusher
. •
Services will be Wednesday at
and Gary Warner officiating.
one p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home
Burial will be In Rldgelawn
with Rev. Robert Stewart offl·
· cistlll&amp;'. Burial will be at Gilmore
Cemetery.
The body will be at the church Cemetary. Friends may call 2-4
from noon to 1 p.m. on
p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday at the
i
Wednesday.
funeral home.
- .

Correction · ,

-Area deaths----

Stocks

Hospital news ·

.

.•.

. PLEASANT VAUIY

EAI, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENEUL ALLERGIST

"WE HAVE HEARINS A/01"
(304) 675-1244
r .

',

Ohio Lottery

Reds take
2-llead in

Friday, when high pressure will
north and ·central Plains Into the
bring drier weather.
western Great Lakes.
On the early morning weather
weather conditions over Ohio
map low pressure over southern
will be pretty much dictated by
New England trailed a cold front · the stalled cold front. Another
wave of low pressure will sUde. ·
across New York State to weak
loW pressure over no~east
northeast along the front and
Ohio, to southwest Ohio en on } hrough OhiO on Tuesday. after
Into southeast Missouri.
gh- which the front will begin to
pressure over the western Allan- move again to the east. By late
tic was nosing Into the Southeast,
Tuesday the front will move to
with more high pressure from the
the . east of Ohio and high
Pacific North)'l'est through the
pressure will build over the area
northern Rockies·, acrQss the
slowly on Wednesday.

Pick-3: 437
Pick-4: 0214
Cards:

. NL playoffs

4-11,9-C, 9-D, 5-S

Page3

lb

Units of Meigs County Emerdepartment were called to a car
gency . Medical . Services ans·
accident on State Route 325.
wered 19 calls for assistance on
William Patton was taken to
Veterans. At 9: 10 p.m., MiddleSaturday and Sunday.
On Saturday at 12:04 a.m ..
port squad transported Jamie
Middleport squad went to RiverMaskln and Jason Burdette from
the accident scene to Veterans.
side Apartments and transported
At
9: 18 p .m ., Pomeroy squad
Shirley Roush to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At · 9:35 a.m.,
went to West Main Street for a
motorcycle accident. Tim Scotf
Pomeroy fire department went
and Mary Lang .w ere taken to
to State Ro.u te 33 for ·a matress
Veterans
. ·.
fire.
.
'
On Sunday at 1: 07 p.m., Pome-e
At 3: 28 p.m., Middleport fire
departriient was called to Brad·
roy fire department went to a
bury Road for a motor vehiCle
truck fire on State Route 33. John
accident. Don Freeman went to
Nel~ll was the truck owner.
Veterans Memorial Hospltal.At
Rutland squ11d was called to
4: 29 p.m., Pomeroy squad was Happy Hollow Road at 4:44p.m.
on Sunday. Mark Richmond was
called to Pomeroy Pike. Leona
Krautter was taken to Veterans.
taken to Pleasant Valley HosplAt 5:41p.m., Pomeroy squad
.
tal.
Pomeroy squad was called to
West Main Street at 5:47p.m. for
was called to State Route 7. Allen
Janet Williamson. She was
Eichinger was taken to Veterans.
treated but not transported.
At 7 p.m., Mildred Blankenship.
Middleport squad at 6:25 p.m.
was taken to Veterans Memorial
was called 'to Page StreetforLee Hospital from Page Street In
Williams. Williams was sent to
Middleport by Mlddleportsquad.
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 7:15 Middleport fire department was '
p.m. ,Syracuse · $Quad went to . dispatched to an au to fire . on :
Southern tngh School field. Joe State Route 71n Cheshire at 10: 09 ·
p.m. Eric Lambert was the
Hill was taken to Veterans. At
owner of the vehicle. At 11; 24 · ·
7:35 p.m., Rutland squad was
called to McCumber Road. Beup.m., Middleport squad went to
lah Collier was taken to Veterans South Fifth Avenue for Claire
Memorial Hospital. At 8: 18 p.m .. Kuhle, who was taken to Vete·
Pomeroy squad was sent to State rans Memorial. At 11: 32 p.m.,
Route 684. Kresha Crawley was. Tuppers Plains squad was dis- ·
patched to State Route 681.
taken to .veterans Memorial.
Ru !land squad, Middleport Jamie Brannon was taken to
squad and Salem Township fire Veterans Memorial.

Low tollllllt aear t8 Tueiday. mc~t aear 70 Wedaelday .
Cbaace of rain 80 pereeat
Tuesday, 70 percent Wednes·
day .

/

Vol.41, No.110

.. Pomeroy-Middl

Copyrighted 1990

1 Section, 10 Pageo 26 Conti
A Multimedia Inc . Newipeper

ort. Ohio, Tuesday, October 9, 1990

Groundbreaki. . slated for research center · By Mindy Keams
Groundbreaking for the Mason
Technology
Center,
General
·Dynamics' $4 million military
research and development' center,
will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 30, 11
a.m., it was announced by company
officials.
Located just 9utside of Ashton,
along Rt. 80 and between Ashton·
Upland Road and Jerry's Run, the
center will be built on over 260
a~ of wooded valley land.
The center will develop slate-ofthe-1111 technology for the Anny's
next generation of .tanks. 'General ·

complete various tests. He saiq the ·tion, which is ncar the Department
company will hire locally to· sup- of Defense in Washington, and due
port lhat. ·
to the fact that i_t is not close to
Gilleland said lhe lab will heavy traffic flow, according to
employ 25 to 30 people, including company officials.
several scientists and engineers.
Frank Lee, director of the Mason
England said the testing done at County Economical Development
the Mason Technology Center will Authority, this morning emphaSized
be fundamental 1echnology that that credit for the center should go ·
will grow into various activities. to Sen. Roben C. Byrd and the
Calling the local cen~ a "stan-up Marshall University Cenwr or
project" England
d the .center Regional Progress. ,
has .opportumty for growth on th1s
"Since announcement, we have
area.
.
been . working with · General
The center Site was purchased on Dynamics on a daily basis, assistsept. 28 fQr a .sum of $250,000: ing them in their move to Mason
,.------~---'---------~--------------~-., . The land was chosen for its locaCounty," Lee slated. "I've found
Dynamics will spend ·mere . than
$400,000 yearly in operating costs
at the center, developing a new
electrothermal technology used to
fire·shells from a tank's main gun.
The new technology will replace
the
conventional.. chemically
propelled shells. The new gun will
use an energy source to heat liquid
in the barrel, forcing the round
through the barrel with high-pressure. Don Gilleland, director of
communications
for
General
Dynamics Lanl\ Syste{llS, :which is
based- in , Sterling Heights, Mich.,
the new technology will' be safer

for soldiers firing the guns and wiU
have more power and accumcy.
TWo other imponant advantages
include electrothennal technology
is adaptable to current guns, and 11
also accommodates current ammunitiOn.
·
According to Gordon England,
:vice-president
of
General
Dynamics Research and Engineering, the center will be operationill.
·in early spring, with the first testing
to begin in. Matc~,or April. England
said · initially, workers \\(ill .come
from the company's Washington,
D.C. and Detroit offices, who wiU

s
_
a t

•'

•

HOUSTON (UPI) Both
Another rig also went to work ·
domestic and offshore drilling In European waters, pushing the :
Increased last week, two energy
utilization rate there to 94.2
surveys showe&lt;! Monday.
percent with . 130 rigs under
The U.S. rotary rig count rose
contract out of 138 available. ·
from 1;047 rigs to 1,064last week
Those Increases were partially :
compared with 960 rigs working
offset by a slight decline In •
during the same period one year
offshore activity In other parts of '
ago.
the world.
Offshore Data Services said
Other relevant rig counts Inmarine drilllng Increased
cluded Texas, 360 last week, 356
slightly with one more rig work· · the week befOre ~nd 279the same
lng last week in the Gulf of
week a year ago; Loutsl~na, 142,
Mexico. A total of 141 r~s worked
138 and 142; New Mexico, 61, 58
out of a fleet of 212 for a
and 34; Oklalion!a, 130, 124 and
utilization rate of 66.5 percent.
133; Canada, 113, 102 and 122.

Glnltll Dynlmca
...... C:lriMINIB,.ullrig Lt.calliM
'

...

-

'

0

&lt;r
:&gt;
~

u 5 Route

,

J~

-

New jackpot sum hits to $45 million
Huntington

Saturdays.
However, 275 of the tickets
from Saturday's drawing had
five ot the numbers, for $5,000
each;,15,479 had four of them for
$100 each, and 307,621 had three
of them for $3 each.

N

..

"'
"51-----0

0:

.tl

Lottery.numbers

•

tUMington- Trl~ Alrpori

North

Plck-3

400.
Plck-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,505,971.50, witll a payoff due of
$384, 332.
Plck-4
9282.
Plck-4 ticket sales totaled :
$276,994, · with a payoff due of
$75,000..
.
·cards
10 of hearts.
8 of clubs.
queer\ of diamonds.
8 of spades.
.
Cards' ticket sales totaled
$138,486, with a payoff due of
$85,790.
Super Lotto
20,. 23, 34, 44, 51, 53.
Super LottO ticket sales totaled
$11,353,627.
Kicker
092188.
Kicker ticket · sales totaled
$1,532,526.

.

By BRIAN J. REED
went after being deposited at a offered by .the company, had
Sentinel News Stall
transfer station.
· been Increased to $7.95 per
month.
Tbe · proposed plan · of the
This Is of particular concern to
Local · trasll hauler Robert
AGHJMV Solid Waste Olstrlct Middleport, Gerard said last
· was present at the
.Lawson
will likely be submitted to the ' night, because of the district's
meeting
requesting permission
Envl;ronmental Protection decision to place a transfer
to
pick
up
trash In the village.
.
Agency without the blessing of station In Meigs County.
stated that he was
Lawson
Council assured Gerard, who .
the VIllage of Middleport.
Interested In picking up that
The plan was the subject-of the stated that he would not sign the
trash not being handled by Roger
regular meeting of 'Middleport plan as it now stands, that they
Manley, who currently provides
VIllage Council when It met in would support his decision reservice In Middleport, such as
regular session on Monday at gal'dlng the plan.
discarded stoves and
village hall.
Council member Jim Clatrefrigerators.
Paul Gerard. who represents worthy reported ~roblems with
Council tabled action on Lawthe-village on the district's policy television reception in the
son's
request, pending discussion
committee, expressed his dlssa· village.
.
.
o1
the
matter with Manley _
Jl.Sf•~ctlo!' with. sever.al-,jtems In
. He ,~tafe_c! tl)at _ ~e .had attempIn
other
action, council:
the Plan, ~ifleb hall been released tei! to c01\tact Cablevlslon catlle
-Approved
the·Mayor's report
to the committee before submls· comp,any by using theirloll-lree
In
the
·amount
of $5,634.00 for
slon to the EPA.
number with no success.
'
fines
collected
during
the month
Gerard said that he was not In
Mayor Fred Hoffman stated
of
September.
;
favor of the policy committee's that he would attempt to contact
-ExpresSed Its appreciation
decision to pay SCS Engln~rlng the cable company In an attempt
to the Meigs County Commissionapproximately $18,000, an addl, to obtain a new phone number for
ers for their approval of a $30,000
tiOna! amount paid for "over- CUSIOmers.
.
Community Development Block
budget" expenses, and to make . Council also reviewed a letter
Grant for Fiscal Year 1991;
an amendment to .the district's from the cable company which
-Agreed to look Into an
flow contro.l language which Indicated that the monthly subIncrease
In dogs running loose in
would authorize the district's scription rate for the Disney
the
village.
·
manager .to control where trash Channel, a premium channel

Bush signs emergency spending bill

•

::;)

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Saturday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:

them 10 be a blue chip company,
and one we 're excited about."
·
''Thus far, we have, in cooperation with the State of West '!irginia,
been upgrading the road and bridge
on Rou~ 80, lind are working wilh
Appalachian Power Company 10
have the electrical service needs
put in place," the director . continued.
Lee concluded by saying, ''We're
working feverishly to get things
ready and express appreciation to
Sen. Byrd on the 30th."
Among those planning to attend,
according io Lee, ary both Sen.
Byrd and Gov. Gaston Caperton.

Middleport expected to reject
soli{;~ JOOSte district prop·osal

.'

Point Pleasant .

U.S. rotary, ~ffshore rig counts _rise

CLEVELAND (UPI) - None
of the tickets from ·saturday
night's new Super Lotto game
had the six numbers picked In the
drawing, so Olllo Lottery officials raised the jackpot to an
. aN·tlme high $45 m.lllion for
Wednesday night.
Numbers were 20, 23, 34, 44. 51,
and 53 In a game where players
were golngg for a jackpot of at
least $36 million.
A week of sales saw $11,353,627
worth of tickets purchased for
the game In which the six
numbers came from a field of 53
numbers.
'file search for winners after
the drawing made losers out of
lottery officials who were expectIng a big winner.
"I expect we're going to have a
winner," Lottery Director Ronald Nabakowskl said Friday . .
"Our players have been awfully
l11ckly lately, and If that luck
holds out, we'll probably have
multiple winners."
By ' late In the week; tickets
were selling·at 4,000 a m lnu le. In
this new game. players· get two
sets of six numbers for each $1
bet.
Only one dtawlng was held last
week because lottery officials :
had wanted to see how players
. would respond to this new game
which started with a $20 million
jackpo,. Beginning this week, the'
twice-weekly drawings will re~ume
Wedl)esdays and

.

•

Squads have 19 weekend caDs

Pfeifer, Withrow .hold
on to -leads
.
-

·WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres!dent 'Bush signed ·an omnibus
emergency spending bill Tues·
day just hours after final congresslonal approval, allowing
the federal governmentto reopen
for business.
The White House announced
that Bush signed the measure at

president would ' sign the spendIn his statement, Bush said the ·
lng btu now that an agreement to . next step Jn Implementing ..the . .. .. .
reduce the deficit by $500 billion
budget .resolution Is the passage
over the next five years had
of a 'budget reconciliation b!U.
cleared both houses of Congress, . "It's component parts are to be
a scenario required by Bush
submitted to the budget commit·
before he would approve the stoptees of the Congress by Oct. 12.' '
gap measure.
.

Trump loses spot on
• hest Jis(
orbes nc

7:07 a.m. EDT. a signal for all
federal ' employees to report to
_
· ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio. (UPI) - A points.
23 points to 14 points.
work T~~esday morning. · ·
Seventeen percent of the parColumbus Dispatch poll pubFisher led In Cuyahoga County
In a written statement on his ~
llsbed ':fuesday showed Republi- ticipants were undecided In the and In nine metropoUtan coundecision to sign the temporary .['
can Paul Pfeffer and Incumbent attorney general's race and 22 ties, willie Pfeifer was ahead by
stopgap spe1Jdlng ·bill', Bush anDemocrat Mary Ellen Withrow percent said they hadn't made a large marglqs In Franklin
nounced that:
NEW YORK (UPI) - DevelRalpll' lnger!lllll. whose news- :
cmitlnue to lead their respective decision In the treasurer's race.
County, Hamilton County and the
•'While I am not fully satiSfied oper Donald Trump Is conspicupaper empire 'l(oas heavily funded .
Pfeifer, a state senator from state's mostl&gt;\ rural counties.
races, but their margins were
with the budget resolution, It ously absent from the Forbes
by Junk boilds, and Malcolm
Bucyrus. has led Fisher,In three ,
sUmmer than last month.
In the treasurer's race, With·
does provide framework within magazine's latest annual list of
Forbes, the magazine's owner
The fourth Dispatch poll of 1990 of the four Dispatch polls this row .Is seeking a third term, and . which the committees of the 'A merica's 400 richest people.
who died earlier this year at age showed Pfeifer leading Demo- year. The candidates were tied In Bracbman Is running for her first
Congress can now work . to
70.
.
•
Communications mogul Jolin
crat Lee Fisher by 7 percentage the second poll, wltll 42 percent elective office. Bracbman is a
provide substantive law that Werner Kluge topped the roster
Also excluded from this year's
points (45 percent to 38 percent) each, which was conducted just former . assistant secretary for
comes close to fulfllllnll the letter of biUIOnalres and millionaires,
list was Merv Griffin, the enter·
Jn the ~tttorney general's race, after the May primary.
fair housing and equal opportun- ~nd that does fulfill tl!e spirit who as a group have been hit
tainer whose Resorts InternaFisher spent nearly $1 mllllon, Ity In the Department of Housing
down from ll points a month ago.
- ot the Bipartisan Budget hard by the economy's downturn, tional casino holdings were
Withrow led Republican Judith much of It for television commer- and Urban Development.
Summit Agreement announced the magazine reported Monday .
mired in federal bankruptcy
Brachman by 12 points (45 c!ais, just before the primary to
on
Sept.
30,
1990."
Trump,
facing
falling
real
. .His net worth, estiproceedings
"
percent to 33"' percent) In the defeat three opponents for the
There had· been , a strong estate values and massive debt,
mated last year at $300m inion, Is
· treasurer's race, down from 16 Democratic nomination . .
'IndiCatiOn on
HIU that the was joined on tbe sidelines by
· Continued on page
In the latest poU, Fisher, a
points last month. .
'
the latest mall poll of 1,597 state senator from Shaker
reglatered Ohio voters was con- Heights, was able to narrow
ducted Sept. 28 to Oct. 4. The poll Pfeifer's lead since the last poll
WASHINGTON (UPI)
by expanding his support a mong
Is considered accurate to within
Judge
David Souter, a quiet New
Bemocrats
anti
redu~lng
his
, plus or minus 3 percentage
Englander with a murky judicial
deficit am on!! Independents from
'
.
.
record, was ceremonially sworn
In at the White House as the 10~th
justice of the 'Supreme Court.
Chief Justice · William Rehn·
•
qulst administered the oath to
Souter, ·51, In the East Room
.
.
,
I
before a large audience Mpnday
A Pomeroy man apparently lost control of his v,e bleleMonday
that Included President Bush,
aild ran ott State Route 71n Meigs County.
·
other Supreme Court Justices,
· Tony Chapell, 27, was southbound In Salisbury Toj\'llshlp
members ~of Congress and the
when he went off the left side of the toadway and ·struc~ a tree
Cabinet,
·
· with bis 1978 Pontiac Grand Prix. Chapell was traveling at
In remarks before the ceremapproximately 45-50 mUes per hour at the time of Impact an~
ony; Bush said Souter had
damage to tbe car was heavy, according to a report from the
"demonstrated his lifelong devoGalUa-Melgs post of tl'e State Highway Patrol.
.
·
tion to principle, a atratahtforChapell was cited for failure to control and no oiJerator's
ward, endurlna principle, that
license. He was not Injured In the crash.
tbe rQie he is assigned to Is to
lnterprel the . laws and not to
make them."
Bush .quoted Souter's remarks
'
Wyche Powl•, D-GL; Ilea. .Jim Saner, D~renn.;
dllrina his confirmation hearlnp
PINAL .t.PPROVAL - .Co41 cais 1ave flaal
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services responded
to five
Seaa•e MIIJcdy Le_., Georae Mltcliell, D·
that
Jlidges
must
all'iays
be
appro\'81
ear!J
ted.,
to
a
'Dem~c-crafted
calls tor aaslstance on Monday.
·
Malae
iliid Ilea. Robert ll)'rd, D-W.VL,IIoldiiiiB
aware when they act that "some
budpt
tbat coi!Waed &amp;lie larp~&amp; delloll
At 10:37 a.m .. Tuppers Plains squad '#as called \9'C:ou1nty
cop)'
of
&amp;be budpl reaolallon toQowll)l the vote on
.hliman ll(e 11 go Ina to be affec!ed
reductloa pacliap 11141 . ..coad llli'jwl . &amp;ax
Continued on page 10
·
the.coaltaula1 reuluiloa.
.. Contln~d on page 10
\ blcre- In .u. 8. hlatoi'J. Left to rllhl are Sei!J..i

a

Souter sworn
in Monday

TUESDAY
NIGHT

Local ·news

SPECIAL

briefs' ~
. -

Driver.cited following accideJJ.t

.

JOHN A. WADE, ···~•, Inc.

r

Monday, October 8, 1990

'Porn•oy Middleport, Ohio

news briefs-- Cold front ·moves to Ohio; rain follows

Car
flips over; three hurt.
...
'
..

.,

..
iiNNEIONLY
IDWne • - Qnlyl

.e

.

FOI JUST

larved with whljipad .,__, chlallen ·
grevy, oole 1lew, hot rail end ~~utter.

Sorry, no ....,_._

••CIIIt
bwerege
P''-·

with eddltlonll

NOW FEATURING HOMEMAOE DINNER ROLL

-- · CRGW!S F
PH. 992·5.32

Y US1AUIAN1 '
.

...tur.... lllillldly

I.

'rW

POMIOY I 01.
CllidcH

Squads respond to five calls

P....

I.

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="302">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9575">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="36376">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36375">
              <text>October 8, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="751">
      <name>cunningham</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6738">
      <name>hinceman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1900">
      <name>krautter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
