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                  <text>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
'

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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

..

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"51-----0

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.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.

•

�..

\

'

•

I'

· Duncan's horner gives Reds.

•"

Paga--2-The Daily Sentinel
Porna-oy-Middl$part. Ohio

;:::::::~:::::=::::::::'::::::::::::~----------~
· --------~-~
· -;~ --~·~
' ----~----~--------~Tu~•~d~~·~o~~~o~bM~9~·~1~9~9~0-- ::

Senti~el

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED
TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS&gt;MASON AREA
'
'
11~

'

.

.

.

~m~ r""'r"L...I'---.-'~~'9
~v

.

.

·.

.

life.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GenertJ.:~ana1er

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/Controller

,I\ MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
AssoCiation and the American Newspaper Pu.blls hers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long, All Jetters'3re subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published, Letters s!)ould be In good taste, addressing Issues. not personall·
ties.
·

Placing the
;blame in·Washington
By ARNOLD SAWISLAX
VPI Senior Editor
.
WASHINGTON- The Washington Answer Man is hete to answer .
the burning question: "Who is to. blamP for the savings and ' loan

sc andal? "

·· "

Question: S(r, can you tell us brleOy who is responsible for the
enormous savings and loan losses the government and ultimately the
taxpayers w!ll have to pay to clean up this mess?
Answer Man: I am afraid not. In Washington, there are no brlef
answers to any question. However, I can tell you thatln the caseofthe
- ahem - problems experienced by some thr!lt institutions, it has
been determined at the highest levels that there ls enough blame togo
·
·
around.
Question: Sir, how can that be? That is what you told us about the
Challenger dlsas ter, the . HUD scandals and the Pentagon
procurement frauds.
Answer Man: That is true. But lt lsn' tjustln Washington that no on&lt;;!
is to blame when something goes wrong. When Ford bu!lt the Edsel
and Coca-Cola took lts original formula off the market, there was .
&lt;:'Dough blame to go .around In Detroit and Atlanljl.
Question: Well, let's get back to the S&amp;L situation. I'm told the
problems were the direct result of deregulation of the thrifts during
the Reagan years. So Isn't Ronald Reagan to blame? In fact, I recall
that George Bush was in charge of deregulation for the White House.
Maybe he ought to take part of the rap .
Answer Man: Much too simple an explanation. You must
remember that the derl!gulatlon thing started during the
administration of Jimmy Carter, who would be blamed for the S&amp;L
.mess lf he hadn't been overloaded with blame for the hostages in •
Middle East, IRflatlon and the energy crunch.
Question: That certainly sounds awfully familiar. So we can blame
the White House on a bipartisan basls?
Answer Man: Not entirely. None of this lleregulation could have
happened lf Congress had not passed legls!llt!on to permit it. So the
people on Capitol Hili have to bear some of the responsibility.
.
Question: Well, how about some specifics. ·can't we blame those
five senators who. got c~mpaign contrlbutlonsfrom Mr. Keating and
went to bat for him when the reegulators began leaning on him?
Seems to me that four of those guys were Democ;ats.
Answer Man: True, but you can't put all Qf the blame on the
Democrats. Don't forget the president's son and his Involvement with
that Colorado S&amp;L. So the Republicans are vulnerable too.
Question: \'{ell, wait a minute. Doesn't thlsbo!ldown to a failure by
the people at' the Federal Home Loan Bank Board and the Federal
-Savings and Loan Deposit Insurance Corp.?
·
Answer Man: Absolutely. But the House and Senate committees
with jurisdiction over those agencies were supposed to be monitoring
the work of the regulators and they also fell down on the job.
Question: So that's lt? All those people in government share the
b,lame?
.
'Answer Man: Not quite. The public also has to take some blame.
Question: The pullc? What in the world dld we do?
,;.nmswer Man: You accepted the Increase ln federal deposit
·'Insurance· without ,question and then greedily put -your savings in
those high- Interest thrifts because you knew Uncle S.am would ball
you out.
Question: OK, I glve up. Nobody's to blame for anything.
Amswer Man: Not true. ·For example. we can place the blame for
higher gasoline prices.
Question: Really? On who?
Answer Man; S.addam Hussein.

..

Berrv.'s ·World

The first and saddest lesson Is
this : that there may be no such
thing as ~·world peace." In a year
wlth so much promisE'. Saddam
Hussein Is a colossal spoiler. But
If It hadn't beE'n him. it would
have been some other ego·
maniacal bully wlth delusions of
omnipotence.
Lesson 2: There may be no
such thin!' as "World War"
anymore. Instead. rE'glonal con·
file ts w,lll keep U:.s. forces
runn ing from nation to nation .
and will demand troops and
weapons that can function from
the desert to the tr opics .

LE'sson 3:' AS unpopular as th~
notion is. thP United States must
continue tdbe pollceman for tfte
globe. On a purely selfish level.
Americans need what the world
has - oil belng the· pre-emhient
nPed. We hope too that there is
sti ll a spark of compassion that
wlll make Americans wllling to
protect the downtrodden and
bullied even If there Is no oil at
stake . The United Nations
doesn't have thE' resources to do
lt. and other countries have
shown they don't have the moral
wlll to do It . America must retain
that moral wlll. .
Lesson 4·: ThE' current svstem ·
of defense spending Is .;.rong,
wrong, wrong. AS,niuch as we
mistrust the Pentagon with tax
money, we mistrust Congress
even morP.

"Do you believe there willbe a recession?"

.'

John

Party· ·

~

Duncan hits . a three-run homer against the

Plra&amp;es Ia the fifth Inning of Game 3 of the

~-

Republican
Party

Ko.ror .
Murpl

ITTSBURGH (UPI) - By hls
own estimation, D~~onny Jackson
wasn't at hls best Monday, but
after enduring a year of Injury
and disabled llsts, he 's not
complaining.
Jackson allowed seven hlts ln 5
· 1-3 lnnlags in helping the C!ncln-

'.

· This WeS'•

Ohio C&lt;&gt;lere Foolboll Sdlodute
By Uaited Presslnteraatlonal
SAturday, Oct 13
Ohio State at Indiana

Kent State at Ball State
Bowling Green at Toledo (n l
Mlaml at Ohio University
Akrm at -Navy
._
Clncl~at.l at West VIrginia
Youngstown State at Liberty iVa.}
St. Joseph (Ind .) at Ashland
Muskingum at Baldwlh·WallacE'
Ohio Nortttern at Capital
John Ca rroll at Heidelberg
Hiram at Marietta

Measuring· educational achievement

most, even by grade 12 , are
unahle to analyze what they read
or solve more complex problems .
The state board has recom mended raising the number of
units required for high school
graduation, and lt ls also In the
process of selecting criteria to
ldentl!y· excellent and deficient
schools and school districts. The
board ls also implementing a
plan to modernize vocational
edu&lt;•atlon.
·
- Thls ls an area weallmustcare
about, slnce children are our
future, and without quallty Instruction they cannot be pr~
parmi lor the · careers of the
future. If you want more information about this subject; or any
othH subject Involving state
government, please contact me.
You can do so by writing me,
State Senator Jan Michael Long,
Sta·1.eho'use, Columbus, Ohio
43215, or by calllng me at (614)

Otterbein at Mount Union
WHtenberg a t Allegheny (Pa.)
Chicago at Case Reserve
.Denison at Kenyon
Ohio Wesleyan at Earlham find. t
Wooster at Oberlin
Drake ria) a t Dayton.
Blufftrn at W.Va . Wesleyan
Defiance at Wes t Uberty (W.Va. )
Geneva. (Pa) at Findlay
.
Mount St. Jo seph at Centre (Ky.)
Tlffin.at Urbana ·
'
• EvansvHle (Ind.) at Wilmington
n-nlghl J{ame '

UPI coiJege ratin@s
NEW YORK (UPI ) -TheUnlted
Press Internati onal Board of
Coaches Top 25 .college football
ratings, wJth record and flrst·place
votes In parentheses , total points
(based'on 15 point s tor first plaCe
14 for seco nd , etc .), and last week'~
ranking.

.....

. Team
pts,..Week
I. Michigan 122! (3·1) .. ....... 745 4
. 2. Nebraska 1161 f!l.O) .. ... .... 717 3·

The Daily Sentinel

466-~156.

'

lay an egg

Is hard·line columnist P~t
Cold War ? Can America win It?,
Buchanan a "chicken hawk" on
Should we pursue it wlt~ vlgor?
the . Persian Gulf? Is finger-In There Is. we can. we should.
yoUr-eye Robert Novak really
An o,ngoing symposium about
"Nevllle Novak." ready to ap"America's Purpose Now" conpease Sad-sack Hussein. tht&gt;
tlnued In the new issue of ThE'
butcher of Baghdad? Are they
National Intert&gt;st lin which I am
"right-wing Isolationists?"
a participant) lays out some
boundaries in a clvl~fashlon.
They stand so 'designated.
along wlth somP other conservaSen. Malcolm Wallop, R-Wyo ..
llves of gentler mien. Their
writes: "I believe the American
Indicters are also conservatives,
Idea was divinely Inspired .... In
and hence we have, once again.
standing for liberty and justice
the llberals favorite topic. "a
America stands for somPthlng
spilt .among the conservatives."·
beyond itself.... What is Unique ln
In a New York Times Interview
history ls the exi.s tence of a
Buchanan complaln$' that he has
particular country devoted to
been .unfairly accused. ·
these universal ends. " He says
Tsk. · ·Don't ' feel sorry for
we cannot shrug offthat role. and
Buchanan lJ\ any matter concern· should, Indeed, promote 11. ·
lng rhetorical pungency - he's
Jeane Kirkpatrick sees a more
· mo~e a giver fhan a getter- but
complex tableau, and whllt&gt; she
In this matter of nomenclature he . . might well agree with much of
Is correct. A chicken hawk is a
what Wallop says. she looks ln a
supposedly . tough , guy who ls
different direction. She notes
afraid to compete because he
that, "It ls enormously desirable
may lose.
for the U.S .... to encourage
de~ocrat!c institutions.' ~ but
'Buchanan's problem. and the
problem of some (not all) other
what she stresses ls that "It ls
!so-Rights, is. that they are afraid
time to give up the dubious
to try to win, and not just In the
benefits of superpower status .."
Persian Gulf.
Kirkpatrick raises the . rigl\t
•.That ls . th~ Issue. Js therE' ·question about tn~currenl'sltua­
soJl\ethingblg lefttowln after the 1 ~ tlon . She properly stresses the
.
.
'

Sen. Jan Long

The, test results showed that a
majority of the students testedin reading, languljge and mathematics :.. scored above the
average score nationally. About
30 percent of those tested were in
the upper 25 percentile
nationally.
However, we all need to be
concerne~ about the approxl·
mate one in five Ohlo students
who scm~ lower •than the
satisfactory performance level
established by the state Board of
Education. Nationally, a report
released by the National Assessment of Educational Progress,
entitled "America's Challenge;
Accelerating Academic Achievement," indicated that there has
been llttle or no gain in reading,
writing or mathematics sltllls
among students ln grades 4, 8 and
12 over the past 20 years. The
national report suggests that
whlle nearly everyone has mas·
tered basic skills by grade eight.

Idea that It .is time for' serious
national debatE' about fon&gt;!p;n
policy: but I go wlth Wallop' s
·emphasis. As readers of this
column know , I am a neo·
manifest destinarian. I believe
we are a non·normal n.atlon ln a
non -normal tlm(&gt;.
· In Helsinki, President Bush
appropriately calls for a "new
world order."
But Buchanan says. echoing a
strain of conservative pPsslmlsm
that ls centurieS old, "When you
start talking about Intervening
tot a new wor-ld order, we st;tre.at
that and say. 'what are we dojng·
ln this house?"' ·
·
In the 1970s some tragedyprone conservatives fretted th~t
"America has lost its nerve." Of
course, they said. it was all the
fault of the liberal left and 'the
bug-out in VIetnam. but,. they
sald, tbe polson had spread;
America had been rendered

(U8PSUJ.. . )
A Dlv ..lon ot Multimedia, Inc.

Ben Wattenberg
0

spl nefess and could. not compete.
Nnw it i~ apparent that most
Am&lt;'rlcaris - Including most
Am&lt;'i!cans o!the liberal persua·
sloO:-' are st!ll a pretty nervy lot.
Near wall-to-wall support tor our
stand In the gulf shows that.
In a unique moment. when we
are thP sole global omnl-powe~.
we should be assertively offering
our Ideological goods and our
geopolitical services.
That Includes trying to maintain global order · when necessary, as in the· gulf, making
Saddam b&lt;!Ck off and denuclearIze, not beinl! the world's polleemean but rather' leading the
world toward self-pol!cin$1. And it
Includes promoting the values
that led Wallop to say that
America stands for somethln11
beyond Itself.
There ls a world to be won out
there.

:
1

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)
1

I

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Out.Wie Melp Cou•iy
13 WeekS ..... ,. ,,........ ................. $20.80
26 Weei&lt;S .. , .................. .. ........ ... U0.30
;

'_,'

52 Weet&lt;s .. .'...... ........ ................. S75.40

The Melgs Marauder girls
volleyball team, under the direction of head 'coach Rick Ash,
cllnlched the Tri·Valley Confer·
. ence championship last Thurs._day, night with a 15-9, 15-12
victory over Belpre.
The La!fy Marauders are ·unbeaten in 14 irles In the TriValley Conference and 111-0 overall. The title tor the Marauders Is
the first league title In volleyball
In the schools history.
Trlcla Baer and Amy Wagner
led the way for Meip, Baer had
tour aces, three kllll and nine
Pllln.ts, while Wagner added one
ace, two kills, five assists and

1-

I

nine points.
Kim Hanning added five aces,
· one kill and elght points~ Kelly
Smith had 11 k!lls, Jennifer
Taylor had one k!ll, nine assistS
and one Plllnt and Chrissy
Weaver had one k!ll and three
points Including two blocks of
Belpre spikes for points.
In the reserve game the Little
Marauders cilasted to a 15·3
victory In the first game and held
a 13-3lead In thesecondgamebot
then disaster struck as Belpre
came roaring back to ·win the ·
second 11ame 15·17 and the third
game 6-15 and win the match.

The second game loss was the
first loss of a game for the
Marauders all year. Leading the
LltUe Marauders· were Nikki
Meier with 11 points, Cartle
Bartels and Yvette Young with
seven points each.
The reserve team saw It's .
record drop to 17·1 overall and
13-11n the conference.
Me!p will close out It's home .
season on Thursday ntgbt as they
take on Nelsonville-York and
parents night will be observed.
The reserve contest wtll get
under way at 5: 55 with the
varsity to tallow."

0

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POS'J'MAS'T':E!R: Send address changes

lu14e Melp CoaoiJ

By Ualted Preas lalerutloaal
. Today Is T\lesday, Oct. 9, the 282nd day of 1990 with 83 to follow.
The moon ls wa~lng, moving tow!lrd lts last quarter.
The mornlng .stars are Mercuiy, Venus, Mars and-Jupiter.
·The evening sw Is Saturn.
·
~

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday. 111 CourJ St .. Po·
m«oy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia , .Inc ..

New_York, New York 10017.

Today ~ · history
.

nat! Reds to a 6-3 victory over the nothing you can do about that.
Pittsburgh Pirates and a 2-1lead You have to give them credit.''
Jackson was on the disabled
ln the National League playoffs .
"I didn't pitch too bad," sald_ llst a total of 54 days, and )le also
Jackson', who was on the disabled was coming back from an operalist three times this season. tion In 1989 on his left shoulder.
"They hit some good pitches . He was 6-6 with a 3.61 ERA
down the third base line. There's during the regular season.
He was hit on the left forearm
by a line drive ln his second start
Aprll 29 , and he was on · the
disabled list two times later in
the season because of recurring
problems with his left shoulder.
3. VIrginia (10) (5-&lt;1) ..... :.... ,706 5
"I dldn 't feel as sharp today,"
4. Mlamli4) 13-1) ........... .... 684 8
sald
Jackson. "I was pt!chlng on
5. Tennessee (l) [3..0·21 .......567 7
days
rest. I felt too strong a
five
6. Auburn (3) (J.O·I) ........... 556 6
7. Notre Dame (3-1) ............ 524 1
lo t, of times. jlut some times
8. Florida State (4-1) ..........463 2
that's the e:&gt;f&lt;:itement of the
9. Brigham Young (4-1) ..... 25910
game. Fortunately I was pretty
10. Southern Cal (4-1) .. , ....... 24511
11. Colorado ('1·1-1) ... ...........244 9
luc ky . I made a couple of good
12. Illinois (3-1) .. .. ........ .. ..... 23712
pi tc hes when I needed to."
l:l Washlngtoo !H) .... .... .... 20114
" We wanted to come in here
14. Clemson 15-1) ...... .. ...... .. 19713
15. Georgia Tech (HI) .... ..... 11118
and win the first game, and then
16. Texas A&amp;M 14·1) ..... .. ..... 7915
worry about . tomorrow ," said
17. Oregon (4--1) .. ,..... ..... ... .. 6017
Jackson,
who had not faced the
18.lndlana (4-0) .. , .. .... . .... . ... 2822
19. Wyantng (6-0 ) .... .... .. .. ... 2124
Pirates since 1988. "The first one
20. Hie ) Arizona (4·1) ....... .. . 16 21 ~
was important because (Bob)
20. Itie ) Mississippi (4-1) ..... 16 23
Walk
is pitching tomorrow and
22. Texas (2-1} .. .... .. .......... U N.R
23. Arkansas (2·2} .......... ..... 1216
then
( D o u g ) D r a b e k' 24. Iowa (3-1) .:.................. 6 NR
(Wednesday). "
25. Texas Christian (4-1) .. . 4 NR
"We hadn't faced him all
NR - nul ranked
year," sald Pirate right fielder
.OtRers receiving votes : Ge11rgia,
Bobby Bonilla, who was Hor-3
Louisville, Penn State. South Caret·
against
Jackson. "That makes It
Ina, Toledo.
· a little tough."
The national champion will receive .a $32,000 noo -athlet!C scholar·
Jackson got ' help from tlil'ee
ship frc:m the Gerrtts Foundallon
Cincinnati
relievers, ,who comand United Press International.
bined to stop the Pirates after he
By agreement with the American
Football CoaChes Assortatlon,
left the game. The Pirates also
teams barred from teolevtslon aplent a hand, leaving the bases
pearances or pa&gt;tseas oo play or
loaded in the fourth ·and flfth
having lost more than 20 percent of
their. football st:holarships are
innings .
Ineligible for · the To p 25 and
"That's why It's so nice to have
national championship conslder8.·
tlon by th e UPI Board of -Coaches .
them out there," Jackson said of
Those schoolS a~e Flot1da, Housrelievers
Rob Dibble, Norm
ton, Memphis State, Oklahm~a and
Charlton and Randy Myers.
.
Oklahcrna State.
Jackson says the Reds are not
ove'r·confiden t against the PITransactions
rates despite thelr victories ln
Mo... ay Sports Transactions
the
last two games of the series .
By UnUed Presalnteraatlooal
"It's going to be tough all the
Baoebalt
Los Angeles - Annou nced re·
way through.'' he said. " They've
llever Don Aase bas elec te(l to
got
a good ballclub. They '11 come
become a free agent rather than ·
back and fight all the way .
accept a minor· league assignment.
lluketball
• -There's no way anyone's golng tb
Boston- Announc.ed retirement
sweep thls. , We're in .for a
of broadcas te r Johnny Most.
dogfight all the way."
Houston - Renoonced th.erlgh.ts
to guard.forward Lewis Lloyd .
Jackson threw 90 pitches ln hls
· New Jersey - Wai ved fre e agent
5
1-3
innings, 56 for strikes.
guard Kevin Houston .
-''I'm used to throwing 110, 120
New York - Waived guard
Tharoo Mayes .
pitches,'' Jackson said. "Nlne·
CoDece
.
ty's
nothing. I wasn't as sharp as
Big East Conference- Extended
I should have been the whole
an Invitation to the University of
Miami.
game, but I felt fine.''

Scoreboard ...
'

ethnic makeup. As is the case
wlth most of these tests, students
from wealthier suburban dis·
trlc)s scored better than poorer
utban and rural districts.
This report provides a useful
service for school districts and
parents,. For the past several
years, education reform has
been a popular rallying cry for
many groups. But without a
standardized test administered
statewide, lt is nearly Impossible
to measure how we as legislators
can transfer the rhetoric of
reform Into reallty.
·Franklin Walter, super1.J11end-·
ent of publlc instruction In Olllo,
put the report into proper perspective when he emphasized that
lts real usefulness Is not ln
comparing districts, but ln uslng
the data to analyze curriculum
and Identity Instructional methods that may need to be
strengthened over the · next
decade.

National Leap.e Championship Series Monday ln
Pittsburgh. The homer helped push the Reds wln
6-3. (UP I)

Jackson not at his best, but
isn't complaining after victory

Vote the lcizy,sleazy incumbents out

The Ohlo Department of Education has taken an Important
step . forwa rd ln measuring academic performance on a state·
wlde basis.
For the first time, the depart'
ment has put into report -format
the results of a standardized test
measuring academic perfor·
mance of fourth , slxth and eighth
graders in the state: And although no test is perfect, the
results of this first snapshot 'of
Ohio's school students seem to
Indicate that we caJJ do a better
job of educating our students.
The test. the results' of whlch
were released last week, showed
that one In five Ohlo students
scoted lower .than the national
average, and the state's own
"satisfactory performance"
level ln reading, mathematics
and language standllrdlzed tests.
The test compared each school
district wlth those of similar size,
population, Income level and

riuts. The left·hander struck out After Bonds popped up, Carmelo
By RICK VAN SANT
'.
Martinez smacked a doubte that
five
and walked none.
UPI Sports Writer
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - Mari- - Deadlocked 2-2 after lour in- hugged the left-field line to bring
ano Duncan, expected to ride the nings, Hatcher led off the fifth ln BonUla. BBut then the Pirates'
bench during the playoffs, ig- with a double to left-center and uprising suddenly ended.
The Reds intentionally walked ·
nited Cincinnati's hitting attack moved to third on Jackson' s
Slaugh!
to load the bases with oge
sacrifice.
Thlrd
basema
n
Jeff
Monday with a three- run homer
out
and
the
·wtth
King
·
s
aved
a
run
by
knocking
and four RBI, powering the Reds
to a 6-3 victory over the Pitts- . down Barry Larkin's smash Lind Striking out a~~~~!--&gt;_.:..,'T"'-"
burgh Pirates and a 2-1 lead ln . down . the line and . holding l:!ouncing back to the
the National League Champi9n- Hatcher at third, but Larkin end the llltllng.
Cincinnati grabbed·a 2-0 lead ln
l!'gged out a hit. Duncan, starting
ship Series.
Duncan, hitless In hls first only because of a September the second thanks to Hatcher's
elght playoff at·bats, went 3 for 5 Injury tnB!ll Doran. made King's two- run. homer. Wlth two outs,
and snapped a 2-2 tie with his great defensive play Irrelevant, Ollver singled to left and Hatcher
f!fth·lnnlng shot off loser Zane smashing hls three-run shot to followed with a home run to
left-center. It was Hatcher's first
Smith. Duncan was backed'ln the left-center.
hit
of the playoffs and first homer
Reds' 13-h!t performance by
The Pirates closed to 5·3 In the
slnce
Aug. 31.
Bllly Hatcher as the two ac- eighth on Duncan's error at
Smith
ducked more trouble In
counted for aU the team's runs.
second. Barry Bonds singled off
the
f&lt;i~rth.
Wlth one out, Glenn
Hatcher went 3 for 4 and took Norm CharltQn and .Don Slaugh\
,
Braggs
and
Todd Benzinger
Smith deep In the second ihnlng walked. 'Slaught . was .. out at.
singled,
but
Smith
got Oliver to
to stake Cincinnati to a 2·0 lead.
seeond on a fielder's choice, but
Into
an
lnning,ending
ground
.
I
The best-of-seven series con- Bonds scored on Duncan's high
tinues Tuesday night ln Pltts- throw to first ln a shot at a double double play.
'
Jackson wiggled out of a jam in •
burgli wlth Game 1 starters Jose play .
I
Rljo and atlb Walk on the mound.
The Reds added a run ln the the flfth. After King and Bell
Cincinnati's Danny Jackson ninth off Stan Belinda when Joe · opened with singles, Jackson got
went five and one-thlrd Innings,
Ollver and plnch-hltter Hal Mor- VanSlyke to flyoutand Bonilla to •
yl&lt;;!ldlng seven hits and two runs,
ris singled and Duncan followed pop up. Bonds walked to load the •
wlth four strikeouts and three with a single, hls fourth RBI of bases, but Jackson escaped the
Inning scoreless when Martinez
walks. Rel!ever Rob Dibble, who
the game.
has struck out eight of the 13
Pittsburgh, held to just one hit popped out.
Jackson flmilly was chased in
batters he has faced ln the
ln the first three lnnlngs, tied the
the
sixth when Jose Lind doubled
playoffs, struck out three ln one
score 2-2 with a palr of runs ln the
with
one out, but Dibble came on
and two-third innings. Randy
fourth.
to
fan
the next two batters.
Myers worked the·nlnth, striking
Jay Bell opened with a double
out the slde, for his second save of
down the left-fleld line, AndyVan
the series.
,
Slyke worked Jackson for a walk
Smith lasted flve Innings, sur·
and Bobby Bon!lla -ripped a
rendering eight hits and tlve
single up the middle to score Bell.
PORTSMOUTH - The Southern High · School Golf team
. coached by Jlm Anderson ls
doing exceptionally well thls
season and advanced Tuesday to
the next round of the Ob,lo State
Tournament by placing third out
of 19 teams In the · Dlv. III
Sectional quallfler at Shawnee
State Park .
I
I
Southern now advances to the
district.
·
Southern's team total was 363
on tbe Shawnee course near
·I'
Portsmouth, led by the 81 shot by
I
John Hoback, who earned honors
as the number two medallst in "
the tournament .
Behind Hoback's leading 81
were Andy Baer 89, Josh Codner
95, Bracken McFann 98, and ·
Jamie Anderson 99.
OPEN WOMENS DOUBLES - In tbe open womeai dlvilllon of
The Tornado golfers wUl play
the Syracuae Open Teaala Tournament the team of Diane Lawson
their District match on the
and Doaaa N - defeated the team of Becky .Jolaulc!n IUid Rhonda
Valley Vlew Golf course In
Lancaster, Ohlo on Thursday,
Wood In the llaala. Pictured from left to rl&amp;ht are: .Johnson, Wood,
Law&amp;On and Neue.
·
October 11.
Other teams and scores were
Crooksvllle 353, Adena 359
Southern 363. Belpre 376, Peeble~
376, Valley 378, Portsmouth East
379, Unloto 383. Trimble 385,
Daswon Bryant 390, Federal
Hocking 393, Huntington 396,
North Adams 399, · Lynchburg
The Syracuse Open Tennis feated Gray 6-4, 6-1.
Clay
402, Minford 407; Clay 418,
Final~: Bentley defeated HagTournament was held recently
Fairfield
428. and Whit~ Oak 507.
.
with champions befitgcrowned In gerty 2-6, 6-0, 6-1.
\\'omens Singles
eight divisions.
SemHinals:
D. Lawson deThe tournament was spon·
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
feated
J.
Shah
6·4, 6-0. T.
sored by Dr. M.C. Shah, Dr. Dan
446 4524 ~ .',~ 1 :,'s;'
Westmoreland, Bank One, Ra· Haggerty defeated B. Johnson
S2 . J5 BAAGAIN "'AT/NEES SATURD.-_1 J SUNOAJ
cine Home National 'Bank, 6-4, 3·6, 6-2,
$2 .15 BARGAIN NIGHT TUH[)AY
(EXCEPT "GHOST" )
Farmers Bank, Foodland, and · ,Finals: Lawson defeated HagOCTOalfl
I thrutt
gerty
6-3,
6-4.
·
McDonalds.
FRIDAY thl'll TMUASOA~ I
Women Doubles
Opea Men'• Slnrles
SemHinals : Wood/Johnson deSemHinals: B. Johnson defeated S. Mullens 6-1, 4-6, and 6-0. feated Haggerty/ Birchfield 6·3,
J. Bentley defeated D. Hendricks 6-4.
Finals: Lawson/ Nease de·
7-6, (7 -4). 4-6, 6-3.
Finals: B. Johnson defeated J. feated Wood/ Johnson 6-4, 6-1.
Mixed Doobles
Bently 6-0, 6-2.
Semltlnals
: Porter / Bentley
Open Men's Sln&amp;les
defeated
Mullens/
Wood 6-3, 6·4.
SemHinals: Johnson/ Osborne
Haggerty
/
Lawson
detea ted
defeated Rogers/Gray 6-1, 6-0.
Shah/Shah
6-0,
7·5.
Hendricks/Mullens defeated
Finals: Porter/ Bentley de·
Bentley/ Porter 6-2, 7-6, (7·5).
feated
Haggerty/Lawson 6-2, 6-2.
Finals: Johnson/Osborne de·
teated Hendrlcks/MIIIIens 6-1,
6-1. .
Intermediate Men'• Doubles
Semltlnals:· M.C. Shah defeated R. Conde 6-3, 6.0. A.C.
Shah defeated J . Conde 6-2, 6-0.
Finals : M.C. Shah defeated
A.C. Shah.
lntermecllaie Men'• Doubles
SemHinals: M.C. Shah/C.C.
Shah . defeated Conde/Welton.
. V!llanueva/Murphy defeated
J.Conde/ R. Cbnde 6-3, 6·7 (H),
6-3.
.
Finals: V!llenaueva/Murphy
defeated M.C. Shah/C.C. Shah
,.
6-4, 6-3.
'
\
31 Men'• Doublea
SemHinals: Bentley defeated
1'
Rogers 6-4, 7·5. Haggerty de-

Southern golfers
advance in tourney

DUNCAN CONNECTS - The Reds' Mariano .

~Chicken . hawks·'

•

'

There are strategists so ena· Saddam Husst&gt;ln, but who's kid- ·'
mnred with high-tech . .whiz-bang ding whom? Dug-an may have
special effects that they have · been impolitic, but he wasn't . :;!
making it ·up, Saddam and hls •.
deprived thP budget Of money for
manifest destiny are the pro!).: ~
ammunition, runways. fuel and
other lackluster necessities. Thti · lem. not hls million-man army. ~
public is ted up with spending !{Is sold len would just as soon go , .•
bl)l!ons of dollars on wild goose home, just as American soldiers ·~
~~
chases and "Star Wars". As Rep. · would .
Lesson 6: Jt Is not a crlme to go
Pat Schroeder, D-Colo .. recently
to war over all. The world
put it, "What we 're bullding
doesn't fit the threat we're economy is dependen t on It- the '
lifestyle, the well-being. the ·,'
talking about."
security and the future of bllllons
Lesson 5: Thou's an ds of troops
of peop.le lit erally re~t on it. Unt!l
and billions of do]lars ln equip·
ment are slUing In the Saudi · the world . finds an alternative, •.
;
desert waiting to solve a problem then on ls worth fighting for but
only
once.
The
next
time
that could be taken care of wlth
one bullE'!. Air Fo~ce Chief of · there Is .a Persian Gulf crisis. ·.
Staff Gen. Mlchae.l Dugan was let's hope we'll .be defendlnl!
something more lofty because we
fired last week for Implying that
no longer need Saddam's oil.
the United Slates wanted to kill

Democratic

.

!O ·A

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

•

•
.. -

· 6-3 victory over Pirates

Something.is to _b e learned &amp;om crisis ·::
WASHJNGTON - If thE' Per.&lt;lan Gulf crisis is sett!E'd without
a shot bE'ing !Ired. thE' Un ited
StalE'S will have learned some
valuable lessons very cheaplycheap in the E'conomy of human

The Daily

In Game 3 of NLCS,

Commelltary
'

I

Ohio
I

The Daily

"

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0

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.

, Call or visit your nearesr
Central Trust office for 'detail s today.

SlO,OOO. MINIMUM DEPOSIT
Max imum at:PI!!~it $?9.99999. SubnanriOI r~nalry fur t·~rll· wirhrlruwal.
Interest paid to prlnctpal ~nd comp~nd~ weekly. Rat es efff'Cttve Sept. 21 . J990
and

~ubJ«l tu ,·h:~nj.!t' w1rhcmr nlll!l~ Ytcld as5umes t hat -;r:a tt•d rate rcm;~in~
t'Hrl!itanr foJ a full ye:u wirh nn withdrawals nf int cre&lt;~t l lr rrint·ip:.l.

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPM'Y
The Bank That .\-fakes Things Happen .
992-8881 ' . . 448-0902
.
Mlddle.p ort
Gaiii!)Oiil
.\ofem b.. FDIC

,,

:1

•

0

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'

Pomen)y-Midclaport. Ohio

r

By The Bend

The
Daily
Sentinel
.
.

--

.

TuesdaY', October 9, 1990

•

"AIDS: A Worldwide Crisis
With a Human Face" was the
title Qf the program Presen!ed ·by
Mrs. Janet Eblin and Mrs. Jackie
Frost at the October meeting of
the Chester United Methodist
Women.
.
The purpose of the meeting
was to educate the public on Aids.
Tlte group sang "Breathe on
Me, Breath of God" as the
opening with Mrs. Betty Dean as
plilnist.
,
The scripture read was Mat·
thew 7: 12, John 9:3, Romans 8: 39
and I Corinthian 12:26. ·
The program closed With
prayer,
Mrs. Mae Young presided at

the meeting with 14 members
present. Forty-one sick and
shut In calls were reported.
Oct. 17 was set to work on lap
robes and members are to bring
a sack lunch .
Election day dinner Is Nov. 6
and the committee is Jackie
Frost, Denise' Mora, Helen Wolf
and Ethel Orr.
New officers are Mae Young,
president; Kathryn Mora, vice
president; Denise Mora , secretary; and Betty Dean, treasurer.
Fun day was discussed and the
group decided to go to the
Middleton Doll Factory on Oct.
25.
It was decided not to order
Response Magazine again.

Middleport Literary Club meets
N~tin, Rebecca Evaf!s, . and Jessica Karr.
Ml le-Michelle Schultz, Becky Drlggu, and
M sa Guess. Back-Jessica Radford, Heather

EASTERN JUNIOR HIGH VOLLEYBALL Tbe Eastern Junior High voUeyballers· of Coach

Don Jackson have been enjoying a good ~ason.
Plcturd are, l·r, front, Jessica Chevalier, .Heidi

Goff, and Brandl Reeves.

'

front, Penny Aelker, !lherrl Sinltb, Jamie Wilson;
middle, Daalela Wehnleyer, ~hY Bernard.
Back - MarUyn Kibble, Wendy Bach, Chrlltllle
Shultz, and Sharon Baker, Manager. Coach Don
Jackson.

EASTERN JUNIOR VARSlTY VOLLEYBALL
- HI tUng the nell! hard for a chance to play on the
varsity next year are members of this year's EHS
junior Varsity Volleyball team. Pictured are,

Mrs. Bernard Fultz reviewed
the book "Extraterrestrial Clvlll·
zatlons" by Isaac Aslmov at the
recent meeting of the Middleport
Literary Clqb held at the home ot
Mrs. Richard Owen.
She stated that Aslmov proceeds to analyze the universe,
life, intelligence, basing his con- ·
elusions on the most scientific
findings . He states that the size of ·
the universe, the number of stars
In a · galaxy, the number of

planets, provides the setting for
determining whether other civilizations do exist. He feels that
humans are not alone In the
universe.
Mrs. George Hackett Jr., presided at the meeting and roll call
was answered by members tell·
lng a UFO story.
Guests present were Mrs.
Clarence Stratton. and Mrs .
James Ve.imarl. The hostess
served refreshments.

D of A meeting held

' OPEN MENS SINGLES CHAMPION -Brent Johnson defeated
Jobn Bentley In t~ finals of the Syracuse Open Tennla
Teurnament. Pictured from left to right are: Bentley and Johnson.
'
.
.

OPEN MENS DOUBLES - In the Open Mens dlvlson of the
Syracuse Open Tennis Tournament Jim Oabcirne and Brent
Johnson defeated Donnie Hendrlckll and Steve Mullins tn the
finals. Pictured from lefl to right are: Hendrlcb; MuliiJia, Osborne
and Johnson.
•
.

OPEN WOMENS SINGLES . CHAMPION - Dll!fte Lawson
defeated Terri Haglferly In the wome• singles finals at the
Syracuse Open .Tennis Tournament. Pictured from left to right
are: Haggerty and Lawson.

Cleveland comes from behind to ·nip Denver Broncos, ·30-29 ·
' DEN'VER · (UPI) - Jerry w!th Brian Brennan for a 24-yard
Kaurlc kicked a 30-yard field sco ring strike to bring the
goal as time expired Monday Browns within two, 29-27, with
night and the Cleveland Browns 3: 21 to play. ·
scored 10 points in the final 3:21
The Browns, who were shut out
for a 30-29 victory over the 34-0 in Kansas City last week,
Denver Broncos.
converted 'two fourth,down plays
The victory snapped a three- on the 80-yard drive. Kosar hit
game losing streak for the Vernon Joines for a 24-yard gain
Browns, 2-3, who had dropped 11 on fourth-and -two from the
of their last 12 games with the Denver 48 to keep the drive alive.
Broncos, Including three of the . The Broncos failed to move the
past tour AFC Championships . ball on their next possession and
Denver fell .to 2-3.
were forced to punt. Cleveland
· Trailing 29-20, Cleveland quar- took over at its 39 with 2:04 left
terllack Bernie Kosar connected and Kosar directed a 10-play

drive "ttl&lt; set up Kaurlc for the
game-winning kick.
Kaurlc, who beat out ve.t eran
Matt Bahr In training camp, was
making his first attempt since ,
Week 1.
Kosar · finished 24 of 38 at·
tempts for 318 yards and three
touchdowns. He hooked up with
Kevin Mack on an 11-yard TD
toss and with Webster Slaughter
on a 43.yard TD. Eric Metcalf
scored the Browns' other TD on a
5-yard scamper.
Bobby Humphrey scored on a
19-yard run for Denver and
rushed tor 106
his fourth

-

consecutive 100-yard game, tying a team record.
John Elw~scored on a 13yard quarte
k draw, Mark
Jackson sea a on a 16-yard
reverse and David Treadwell
kick·ed field goals of 20 and 25
yards for the Broncos. Simon
Fletcher also bloCked a punt out
of the end zone for a safety.
Elway completed passes of 19
and 34 yards to V~nce Johnson
and then handed offtoJacksonon
a reverse to give the Broncos a
26-20 lead with 10:31 remaining.
Fullback Leroy Hoard fumbled
on Cleveland's next play from
scrimmage, and Dennis Smith
recovered at the Browns' 32.
Cleveland held, and Treadwell
maqe his second field goal to
widen Denver's lead to 29-20
midway through the final period.
Denver took the opening kickoil and marched 92yardsfora 7-0
lead. Elway converted on two
third-down situations in the 1\ineplay drive and completed all five
of his passes. On third-and-two,

Brennaman signs new. pact with Reds ·
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Marty
Brennaman, the Cincinnati
Reds' play-by-play announcer
for the past 17 se;~son, has signed
a new contract with the club to do
both radio and teleV.lslon for the
next three seasons.
Brennaman, whO teams with
Joe Nuxhall on the .Reds' radio
broadcasts on . WLW, will work
. portions of both radio and television broadcasts for the 55 games

It was announced that lnspec. !ion will be held at the next
meeting of the C.h ester Council
323 Daughters of America at the
group's recent meeting held with
Doris Grueser, associate councilor, presiding.
.
It was reported that Clarice
Allen is not well and the death of
John Arbaugh was noted.
The Past Councilor's Club will
meei Oct. 16 at 7: 30 p.m. at the
Pythlan Sisters Hall In Long
Bottom. Ada Bissell, Mae
McPeek and Alta Ballard will be
the hostesses.
Kathryn Baum was pianist for
the meeting.
·
The Good of Order Commit tee
had an addenda for Erma Cleland. The colOr
escorted

her to the front of the hall. Poems
were read to her by Betty Roush,
Lora Damewo'od and JoAnn
Baum. Opal Hollon presented her
a gift. The addenda was presented because Mrs . Cleland
accepted her commission as
deputy state director.
_ Attending were Thelma White,
Goldie Frederick, · Doris
Grueser, Ada Bissell, Ethel Orr,
Sadie Trussell, Alta . Ballard,
JoAnn Baum, Mary K. Holter,
Betty Young, Sandra White,'Opai
Hollon, Lora Damewood, Marcia
Keller, Erma Cleland, Margaret
Amberger, Elizabeth Hayes,
Esther Smith, Mary Jo BarrJn· .
ger, Everett Grant, Kathryn
Baum, Betty Roush and Mae
McPeek.

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Myers birth

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he burst up the middle and went
In for the game's first score.
Kosar brought the Browns
right back, engineering a 76-yard
scoring drive. At the Denver five,
Metcalf took Kosar's pitch,
picked up a bloCk from Mack and
went in to make it 7-6. The extra
point was blocked.
Early in the second 'quarter,
the Cleveland defense threw
Humphrey for a 1-yard loss on a
third-and-goal at the 2 and
Denver settled for Treadwell's
20-yard field goal for a 10-6lead.
After Denver failed to move
the ball, a short punt gave the
Browns excellentfleld position at
the Denver 43. On their first play ,
Metcalf took a handoff from
Kosar, and pitched . back to the
quarterback, · who hit Slaughter
in the end zone. Kosar's second
TD pass of the season gave the
Browns a 13-10 lead.
Steve Atwater set up the
Broncos next TD, intercepting
Kosar and returning it to the
Denver 47. On third-and-one a\
that wlll be carried -by WLWTTV.

"I want to think (president and
chief executive officer) Marge
Schott and the Reds' orgnlzatlon
for making me a · part of lhls
exciting team for the 90~." said 1
Brennaman. "The opportunity to '
broadcast to the fans on both ·
r.adlo and television is go·ing to be
· terrific."

-·

Whon you qu.llfV • 1 pre!...,.
rtok toi
Auto c...._leo(
opeciel Medellet Auto """"'· yow
rot• wan't 110 up with yow lint ·

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. occident. ,
Unlike almM• IIOiici• IMt require

Iller

· Benjamin~- Solr M.D.
Dbstetrics and Gynecology

-vn•• "'till
" ......
dr- with
ret11
IU .....

TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter, Beta. Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the Meigs County Public
Library In Pomeroy. · ·

H you h - • - clifvllll ··
•• jult haw .... , _ - ..._. '

.... p,.,.lum- llewlliiiM Medollot Auto Policv from lt8lo Auto

........... eo_..._

PORTLAND - The Portland
Elementary PTO will meet Tuesday at 7 .m. at the school.

CeH '411 - u tlor
- -'•
- ..,_._
~-­
·-hrough
,

:For ~ointment, Ca[[ 675-3400

CHESTER - The Chester
Township Trustees will meet
Tuesday at 7: :lO p.m. at the town
hall.

!Moniay-:Jriiay, 9 a.m. · 5 p.m.

'

PVH Medical Office Building
Suite 215, Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV
r

BROWNS CELEBRATE - Browns kicker
lerry &amp;auric (2) celebrates his garne-wiitnlng
field goal 1bortly 1fler Monday night's game
apl•t the host Deaver Broncos. Kaurlc's kick
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with four ieconds left gave the Browns an upset
30-29_. victory, which snapped the Broncos' ·
seven-game .winning streak at home. ( VPI)

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SAMANTHA HALL

the Uomptlon

1nd reduction• end llraader oowrage. Rite -lotuo ........ _.,
• "'I• 21 ...d . . _.....,.. •·
trootlvw lor the 41 to 14 old.

Trained in Childbirth and Women's Diseases
Both Medical and Surgica1

HARRISONVILLE -The Har·
rlsonville Senior Citizens will
have a blood pressure clinic on
Tuesday at the townhouse from
10 a.m. to noon. The public Is
:Invited.

214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
992-8887

In OB-GYN Practice •iDee 1975
,.,., .• ts
•
(

Floral Arts
council meets
"What Is God Like?" and
"Hands" were given for devotion
by Betty Dean when the Shade
Valley Council of Floral Arts met
recently .a t her home.
Roll call was answered with a
weed you can eat.
The regional meeting was
announced for Oct. 27 at the
Gallipolis Methodist Church . ...,
The Christmas flower show is
Nov.17and18atRoyaiOakPark.
The county meeting is oCI. 22
at the extension office.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess.

POMEROY - The Calvary
Pilgrim Chapel, Route 143,
. Pomeroy, will have revival Tuea·
-day through Sunday with Rev .

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•

Doug ·Mann as evangelist. His
wife, Kathy, will be singing.
Services 7: 30 p.m. nightly. Pub·
lie Invited. ·
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Representative
!rom Congressman Clarence
Miller's office al Meigs County ·
Courthouse 11 a.m. until 1 p.m.
Questions regarding the Federal
Government should be directed
to the representative.

By United Press International
BED BUGS: The spotlight that
goes with the title of mayor of
New York Is creeping Into the
master bedroom at ·Gracie Mansion, and hizzoner David Dinkins
doesn't much like the glare .
Newsweek reports that Dinkins'
staff ordered the city Human
Resources Administration to
build a cherry headboard for the
mayoral bed tha~ ended up
costing cost as much as $11,500 In
labor and sundry materials (the
wood was donated) . The revelation comes just after Dinkins'
announcement that he plans to
raise taxes to pay for more pollee
officers and may lay off 15,000
· city workers.
NO RESPECT: Roger Moore
has always taken a bashing in
some quarters for his portrayals
of sec.ret agent James Bond after
\

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Plii Sorority will travel to Fenton'
Glass In Williamstown, W.Va. on
Thursday. Members are to meet
at
the upper parking lot In
1
Pomeroy at 10 a.m. ·

~-------------------------------41

REVIVAL
AT

VI(TORY BAP-TIST CHURCH
525 North. 2nd, Middleport, OH.

OCT. 10-14 -

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7:00 P.M.·

·Evangelist: Jim O'Bryan
OI{LAHOMA CITY, OK.

Special Music
Nursery Provided
JAMES E. KEESEE-Pastor
.
.

DWIGHT ASHLEY-Asst. Pastor
:

Ohio University
College-of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
.Medicine
john C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
. of Family Medicine

to the point of being nearly antifungal powder In your shoes,
Impossible in some individuals.
such as Tlnactin, Is al$0 helpful.
QUESTION - I have athlete's These measures will also help
foot all over my feet. I work in a with lhe· moisture, but you will
situation In which I am In water also need medication to clear up .
for long periods of time. Is there the ·infection. There are a
anything that I can do?
number of medicationS that are
ANSWER - Fungal Infection available to kill athlete's foot
of the skin of the foot- athlete's fungus. Lotrimin AF; which was
foot, or "tenia pedis" in doctor recenily changed from a preslingo - is very• common. It cription to a non-prescription
produces a rash that blisters, medication, is one of the best. At
scales and itches. At times there lhe same time, you might want to
can be a significant amount of try Domebro's solution, al$0
redness and a burning sensation available without a prescription,
with tM rash, and at other times · to help dry your feet and clear up·
there may be little of this. the Infection. The feet should be'
Individuals who have constantly soaked in the $0lutlon and for 10
wet feet, from working in water minutes or covered with cloth
or from perspiration, have more soaked with solution for the same
trouble with athlete's foot. Medl- amount of time, twice daily. ·
cactlon to clear up the infection
If you still have trouble with ·
will only give temporary relief If athlete's !pot after four weeks of'
the constantly wet condition Is these non-prescription treatnot eliminated too.
ments, you should see your
Since you are required to work doctor. There are oUler stronger
in water, you need to take special medications which he or she can
measures to keep your feet dry. · prescribe for you.
Wear two pairs of heavy absor-- ·
"Family Medicine" is a:
bent socks under your boots, and
weekly
column. To submit ques-: ·
change them at break time.
!ions,
write
to John C. Wolf,
Don't wear the same pair of boots
Ohio
University
College of Osteo•
or shoes two days In a row. This
pathlc
Medicine,
Grosvenor
allows time for them to dry out
Hall,
Athens,
Ohio
45701.
between wearlngs. The use of

D.o.,

Sean Connery's departure from Birthday" to astronaut Thomas
ttie 007 role. But Moore now Akers' ·earthbound wile. "We
reveals that thOse quarters In· don't have a birthday cake on
elude the quarters within his own board ... so we had to come up
home. At a ceremony in London with something special here for
Sunday at which Connery re.. you, Kaye," shu ttl!! s~lpper ·
celved the 1990 Tribute Award Richard "Dick" Richards said
from the British Academy of from the crew cabin as Akert
Film and Television Arts, Moore .displayed for the TV camera
recalled his son, Jeffrey , asking what looke;&lt;l. like a small pastry
at age 7 whether he could beat up with a glowing green "light
James Bond. When Moore rep· stick" taking· the place of· a
·
lied that he was, in fact, James candle.
,
GJ,IMPSES:
The
Secret
SerBond, the child said, "But what
about the real James Bond: Sean vice agent credited with saving
Connery?" "It has been an honor Ronald Reagan's life in a 1981
to fill your shoes," a good- assassination attempt has been
natured Moore told Connery. "If put In charge of the agency's
you've got any others lying Chicago office. Timothy J.
McCarthy, 41, Is a Chicago
around, let me know."
ORBITAL BIRTHDAY BASH: native. McCarthy was . one of
It was the debut of a new several •others shot In the Waspace-based quintet Monday as shington attack on Reagan by
the crew of shuttle Discovery John Hinckley Jr. McCarthy
beamed a rendition of "Happy shielded Reagan by placing
himself between the president
and Hinckley .... The man once.
known professioll!llly as . "ThE\
Body" now wants. to serve the
body politic. Former pro
wrestler Jesse "The Body" Ven,
to second year srudents in lura , 39, Is running for mayor o(
designated technologies on the Brooklyn Park, Mlnn. ·He's seek:
basis of academic merit. The lng to body slam - llguratively:
an 18-year
awards may be applle.d to tuition, of course. incumbent.
fet!s or books.

L:x:al students .get scholarship

A local student at Washington
Rainell Arlene Duff, daughter Technical College has received
of Mrs. Eunice Duff, has been oneofthreeendowedscholarshlp
awarded a scholarship to pursue for the 1990-1991 academic year.
a career in hairstyling. She Is a The scholarships are made
1990 graduate of Tri-county Joint . possible through endowments
Vocational School in Nelsonv!Ue. created by professional organiAward selection was based on zatlons and local residents.
Edmond Shamp, Reedsville, is
a personal Interview with a
member of the SCholarship com- .tlie recipient of a $3QOscholarship
mlttee as well as other personel.
from the American Society of
She attends the hair experts
Metals endowment. The Soubarber school in Reynoldsburg
theast Ohio chapter of the organland resides at the Eastgreen on zatlon has provided an annual
the commons apartment
scholarship for students in the
complex.
.
engineering technologies at WaOhio State School of Cosmetolshlngtim Technichal College.
ogy and the Hair Experts Barber
Shamp is a second-ye'a r student
in mechanical engineering
School are the only schools In the
state of Ohio bffering both
technology.
cosmetology and barber styling.
All scholarships are awarded

MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
port Amateur Garden Club will
meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
home ot Bill Haptonstall. Gladys
Cummings will be the hostess.

By john C. Wolfe, D.O.

-People in. the newsi------+-

scholarship

Community calendar

thr• , ... of policy ·e wa•ll...

1'11• Medeliet

PFC Jerry Allen Derenberger,
sari of Mr. and Mrs. James R.
· Derenberger, Pageville, has
been sent to Operation Dessert
Shield. •
He has been stationed for the
past two.years with C. Co. Eighth
Eng. at Fort Hood, Texas. ·
Deren berger Is a 1988 graduate
of Meigs High School.
Cards may be sent to hl'm at
Desert Shield, SPC Jerry Allen
Derenberger, 271-70-4788, C. Co.
Eighth Eng. BN First Cav . Dv.,
APO New York, 09306.

Duff receives

'

WE'LL
OVERLOOK
.YOUR FIRST
ACCIDENT

-lot·-·

Derenb·erger deployed

RAINELL A. DUFF

Homecoming
candidate
Samantha Hall, a sophomore
at AlderSon Broadus College In
~hlllppl, W.Va .. is a candidate in
the 1990 Homecoming Queen
Pageant: She is the daughter of
George Hall. Reedsville, and
Carol Hall, Winfield, W.Va.
She is a 1989 graduate. of
Winfield High School. She is
:majoring In buslnessadministra·
· tlon at A.Jderson Broadus where
:she Is a member of the college's
show choir, The West Virginians.
Homecoml)lg weekend is this
.\"eekend which will mark the
·school's 120th year.

Toenail Infection Can SOMETIMES Be Cured by Oral Drug
QUESTION - I had a fungalInfection under my fingernails.
The doctor gave·me an medication for the prol!lem. It cleared
up under the fingernails , but now
it Is under the my toenails. I
unders.tand that it is impossil?le
to clear this up. Is this true?
ANSWER - Fungal infections
of the fingernails or toenails are
difficult conditions to treat. The
fungus invades the base of the
nail (the area ·where the .nail
grows) and produces a thickened, unusual looking nail. Typically, the n~il becomes detached
from the skin directly un.der it.
This skin, known as the nail bed,
normally holds the nail in place.
'rhe Infected nail may become a
quarter of an inch thick or
thicker, and very brittle . The ·
edge of the nail that you cut is
rough and honeycombed instead
of having the smooth surface of a
normal nail. But is this condition
impossible to clear up? Well yes and noi
It takes a special type of
medication to kill the fungus
causing the nan infection. MediCl!tions applied on top of the nail
will not get down to the growing
area where the Infection exists .
The nail can -be dissolved or
surgically removed to allow
topical medication a chance .at
work as the new nail begins to
grow, but it Is more common to
take the antifungal medlcalton,
griseofulvin, . by mouth. The
blood carries· the medication to
the nail growing area to klll the
fungus . This is probably what
your doctor gave you for the
fingernail Infection. Toenails are
larger, thicker and more slow-growing than fingernails.
Therefore It Is much harder to
eliminate an Infection In them -

PFC JERRY DERENBERGER

Bruce and Tracy Myers are
announcing the birth of their
second child, Brittany Lynn, on
Aug. 29 at Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed eight
pounds nine ounces and was 22
Inches long.
They have another daughter,
Kelly Marie, age two and one ·
half.
Grandparents .. are Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce Myers, Chester;
Patricia Ireland, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.r and Dennis Ireland,
Columbus ..

the Cleveland 44, tight end Urson
Mobley collided with Elway and
knocked the ball loose, but the
Browns were called offside,
negating their recovery. Four
plays later, Humphrey ran
around right end for 19-yard TD.
Fletcher stormed up the middle on Cleveland's next punt and
knocked it through the end zone
for a safety to extend the Denver
lead to 19-13 at halftime.
With the Broncos driving,
Felix Wright .intercepted Elway
at the Cleveland goal line ·and
returned the ball to the Browns'
37. Kosar's second TD pass, an
11-yard completion to Mack over
the ·middle, gave .Cleveland a
20-19 lead at 6: S8 of the third
quarter.
After Kosar completed a 13·
yard pass to Brenna11 on a third
down and eight, Allon MontgOmery intercepted Kosar's next
pass and. returned It to the
Denver 31 .

thll
lmmecletely.

Fa~ily ~edicine

Chester UMW meeting held

.-

EVERYONE WELCOME

Fall Into The Habit - Give Blood
Thru The
RE_, CROSS BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 10
POMEROY SENIOR-CITIZEN CENTER
•

~----~l:~OO~to~5~:3~0~P~.M~·~--~~,
*75 Value

COUPON

t7S Ytlu,.

FREE ELECTRONIC H~ARING TESTS
will be given in MEIGS COUNTY by

BELTONE HEARING AID CENTER
MIDDLEPORT FAMILY PRACTICE CENTER
B. DAYO, M.D., 306 2nd Avenue
THURSDAY; OCTOBER 11
9:00 A.M. TO 12:00 NOON ,

z.

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BELlONE HEARING AID CENTER
1312 EASTERN AVENUE, (RT. 71 - GAWPOUS
. WEDN~SDAY, OCTOBER 10
9:00 A.M. TO 4:00 P.M. ·
CALL 614-446-1744 or 1-100-634-5265

•
•

.

I•

CaR Tol Free Nu. 1-100·634-5265 far inmt.alt •lflllllnnhllillll,..lltnt. :
THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY ALICENSED HEARING AID SPECIALIST •
Anvon• who h11 tiOuble ....,ring "' unci-ending con-..tlon "InVIted
to hlvu FREE hNring t ..t to -II thll problem can be hlllpedllrlng tllla
coupon with you lor your FREE HEARING TEIT of t71 V81ut. Adulta

only,!'fNM.
UMWA • UAW • OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDER
WAII·INS WD~OME
II 1111111 Tmlll
I,

•

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Fl EPREVENTION WEE

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O.bel •• 1180

St~ait

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Geotp Strait, the lald·back
'l'lllru CfOOIII!I Wbo aot·llil tint
succeu alqlq at Army service
clllba, repeated u the CoUilty
Muatc Alaocaltlon'a EntertalDI!I'
ot the Year.
. ''I'm truly apeechless. I really
don't bave a speecb, .. laid Strait,
wbo beat out Clint Black, Ricky
·van SheltoD, Katby Mattea and
Randy Trayts Monday llilbt for
the top award In country muatc.
Strait gave special th•nlr.s to
bll baad. "tbat are out there on
the road wltb me every day. It;i
so much fun to play wltb them.
They are so solid. ..
·
Strait's victory, In wbat most

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4

· Tbe J&amp;oadl, u t11e1r f. . aow
atrectloaately eall t11em. a1lo
Willi tile Album 1111 tile Year award
for "PicIda" on Nashville. ••
'i'be HeadhiiDten. wbo bave
beell around tile millie IICelle for
more tban 30 yean. were gtlift a

NA.SHVIJ,.LE, Telln. (UPI) -

OCTOBER 7-·13 1990

•
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re_peats as top.en~ertainer

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•

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••
I

t
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FIRE . . . .

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a chance to bear thenl. Shedd,
Nuhvllli!'a Polygram Records

competition In recent years, wu
not aurprlalq Iince the Country
Music ~tton baa sbown a
tendency for repeat winners In
the "80s with Barbara Mandrell,
Alabama and Hank Williams Jr.
all multiple winners.
There were two double
wlnnen, .Gartll Brooks and tile
rollicking country ifoup Tbe
Keutuc:ky Headhunters.
Tbe HeadbiiDten, tile country.
rocken l!Vbo bave given a new
meaDIJJg to x-e-ll!terpretatlon of
some country standards sucb as
Don Glbaon'a "Oh, Lonesome
Me," wu named Vocal Group of
tile Year.
.
Lead lllqer Ricky Lee Phelps
.In hill acceptance told bls motller_
that he wore a buttoned up sblrt.
~ a11o tbanli:M tile people who
bought tlcketa and records for
the past year. Tbe group wu
virtually Ullknowli a year ago.
and COIIDtry radio bas only
recenUy given tbem · total
acceptance. ·

t::====:::::::;r.:======:;r,::~;;;;;;;;;:::;r;:::::::;~~=t

tllll II about u 10011 a way to
atarttlleCMAaw.,.forUIO,"
&amp;Gl= MOran u4 11er tate COISIWICIIW
bUibaad, Keltll Whitley, Willi tbe
• • • 11 II
Voeal Ewat of tbe Yev award
for "Wilen Eacb Tear BeCon. A.
Role.''.WhltJeydled Ill 1911of an
"overdo~e of alcohol.
~··•~ Csg I 1 •
. Ste,l
Tbl$ yeu's :Utllannuat awards
. F~ Etllss•t•
show was boated by Travis and
Reba McEntire and featured
915-4473
some of tile biggest names to
667·6179
country music. It was broacleut ·
Jive by CBS from tbe Grand Ole &amp;-...,_ _~::;.

contract by Harold Shedd. for·
merly the producer for Alabama.
Sbedd tQid .the band membei-s
that be wu taklq a. cbance 011
them but tile public 0111ht to baVI!
top executive, mid tbeJI'OIIpthey
botll may be out on Ule street
selling bamllurpra.
Brookl. who led with five
nominations, won the VIdeo of
the Year ·award for '"l'he

~sbellevewutbestlffe&amp;t

•

Business Services

Opry ~ouse. ·
Tbe top sonpirltiJI&amp; award
went to Jon· Vemer and Don

Brooks, an Oklabaoma native
who Is living out the dream Of his
mother Colleen Carrooll, . Wbo
'was a country singer In the 19!501,
also picked up the prestigious
Horizon award.
"I've 10t a million people to
thank .. I'll never thank them all.
The two k!Dgs of country to me
are George .Jones and_Georee
Strait;• Brooks aid accepting
the Horizon, aJI award given to
the perfonner whose career baa ·
shown the most development
over the past year.
VInce Gill, wbo hu been
recoplzecl aa a great talent by
his 'peers for years, finally won
some recogn!tton. Tile Oklaboman won the stogie of tile•Year
award, wblcblsgivenforthebe&amp;t
perfonnance of a single
recording.
.
"Man, r ve been aroUnd for a
long time. f waited for this for a
long time, so I'm 10tng to stand
up bere, for a Ion&amp; time. I think

Protect Your Home
From Becomtng A
Hot Property!

Protect Your Farm
.From Going Up ·
In Smoke!

CLOSED SUNDAY

~4

nm I II••-' no ch•v•.

This Page Sponsored By These Fine Community Minded Businesses.

y•d s.e.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-6491

BRO
· INSURANCE
V
LUMBER
and SUPPLY COMPANY
OHIO

11

992-2506

PAT
992-2196

SALES and SERVICE

POMEROYI OHIO

SWISHER &amp;·LOH
PHARMACY

..YOUR BEST BUY FOR THE LONG RUN"
OHIO

SMITH-NELSON
.MOTORS, INC.

TROPHIES
..DDUPORT, OHIO

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN·MUSSEIINSUIANCE
POMEIOY, OHIO

I

CHESTER, OHIO ,

915-3301

OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

381-Yinton
2•1-R6o Grande

/'OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY OHIO
I

-...r, CillO 45160

915-3301 .

CHESTER, OHIO ,·

•2 - Mobile Ham• for Rent
43-Ftnns for A11n1

44-AJ*1mtnt for Renl

.

Ofloo614-ttl·l...
. . . ,14-tft-5691
DOrlll s.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ron EaltIMI. Gery MlahMI. Thoma
Tltlloa ancl ChlriH Yatt.
Noml-1 wll be IC•
oepiiCi , _ lhl tloor tt the
11nt1 of lleotlon. Twa .,......
- . .,. to tlacted. You

'

.

.

-~

r

...

__ ..."" ........
••me.

meeting or M M
-whlcltmayllel-red
' - t the faon•-n ell•
1rlat oftloe.

11011. u, 210

I'UIUC NOTICI

In IGDDedlftoo wllh lea..
..... 107•• of .... Oltlo ...
vllld Cede ...... llldo wll
Ill rml •II ..,. the Mllao
Couoty -.nt ot Commfe.
....... In ...... otllae ....

THIS l"xl" .
BULLETIN BOARb
· SPACE AVAILABLE
~ AT '5.00 PER DAY

..... 111111aCawtl 1

..
-

·.

, . . flo.

. - , , Olllo..... 011
Clot. M. 1110. 'file llldo w11

l!e .,...... It 1:00 -p.m. oo

--

mlnliWIIm IOitll

- g ..dalrcondltlanllog,
:::!r.-lllflllntforoflloe
lllftlltl Nqulrotl for olid

buldllll
ancl rlloled
_
_Itl_
....... fMIII_

foratwai21-...._AI
bldl lhould lndloatt Ary NnUII for bldjllr to provide rnlln--forthlt ....
ttr1or 1nd • - of dte

ao-

&lt;

The l011nl of County
Coml1llltloneN moy requn
llddltlonll
PfOVI·
.tone with thl • uulful
blddlr. lnaluclntl but not
limited to ... """ofdteapthlt __ l f _

_to __

IIIIII.Y by giving I

mlnf..

......., of oblly 1101 doy8 ......
Mllnotloe.
Thl'-loftltlaMII
.. linin. . . . lliol-lt

c

"••1' lulod lid'". lo-

ctlll llhllll ~- .....
... llillll furnlolt tltllr -

or-

llloltornl.
The • a-d ot Ceullty
C.... 'J' _._.,__,.

the..,_ IIIII
the
.... bid for tltl .........
,...,.,.. ot11 r
n the right
tonjOOI_ ......... .....

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

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

OOIOblr 14. 1110 .... - J

h .............. .

......
7 ~-··
' 017111 .....
Ill . . . ...die
Mllta CeulftV D r

i

~

I

),

••1

CI

1

I

I

. _ II I IIIIi , Cllrll

11011.1t. l1o

H1nd Tufting
Custom D111pn

614·992·2121

.

•o•u

I'OME PUll
•Mobile J4ome

•Mo~~:

H11: Wad.·lh•s.·Fri.
51410 p.IIL·li:OO p.m.
Sat. 12 Noon-11 p.m.
letween Wilkenilla

Rentl ... .
•LotiRed I

992-7479

:tt. 33 Nerth Df
P-roy, 01t1e

1·12·'10-1 mo.

the
of

u J cum 110

-

-.loltn ......- .
Aulnrut AtiD....,OonenJ
lwltm to ....... - and

..b t lod In my,_..
•

II•~~~~~J
A.

USED APPLIANCES

17te

· "DAY WMRAIITY

pro:

......,
end dto
louttu
1 ....._
(ul·
ouilled - - t of lol 221n
·v. 1. ~A 117...., to the
·v.._. of llo,_ot H ,._
...,...IIIPII'tlaol13......
448 In the lloconllot Mllgo
Ceurtty. 144.22 tMII.tl of
Bllitlon 102 pluo 18.21
from ... - - · · ... ...,_
In 1810 by 1ho

..., -

Ohio DIP I tment of Tran-

•• IaMon of ...._ Route
124 In tho V... of flo.

Olllo;
- I n • Nonltuuu,.,..,
lloeotlon 11oo1t the Ea.-ty

• ....,..
of ,..._

Ohio

COUNTIY

NOW OPEN
Wed. thru Sat.

We lily What .We Dei;
We Do What We Say.
t-f-1 ...

-aoid
.._ -

NOIMy

614-992 ·6120

GAME ROOM

S6 Yean lxperleaeo

.....,.. 81R1bury fownlhlp.
- n I In Mllp Coumy.

1810.

Owner &amp; Oparotw

_. Solam Center

lfP..............

1ltle14dt dly of llp1811l

for Alllrlllls
EMILEE MEIINAI

RACCOON VALlEY
SPORTSMAN .CLUB

PubliC Notice;.,-_

not,

Conolollng ot 1. minimum
of 4 - · IDitl faalltlla
for rMn Md WDIMit. laid
oltlcl- ...... -both

building. .

Dawlnut

11w
atoglve-oflle
. . . of._,..__..,
1'111111 I • In IC aw
wldl 81 ~ k 1
DOl~ 14:
113.07: 2703.24: and Clvl
II. . 4.4(AI. llwl I Coda.
And furtltlr llflllnt lllldt

8eMceo Dlvlllan. 1088

..

•I MINit,.,
UPHOLSTEIY

tlinotl:..:::
... _ - . y
r

of Hum.. BeiVIola loolli

11-llllio

POIIIIIrDV.

- - -m-Ill...
_...

Public Nollc:e
~qu- -

OHIO-PALLET
COMPANY

Aollgnaof:l-o!o-..S.·
oeued••,. nec•u•ry per·
- t o IIIII I* cc 11111111nd N

I

742-2421

36496 Sll11t llU1I u. :·
IUTUtlt, 01110
..~

DIUVIIaTO ,

Deftttdlntl

7

Gune
·•
OPEN MON...fa 10.5 ~

.....

C... Na.IO CY·211

•

Sportfllt llllcls :

.... . $150 1111~~

cutllt'W. AdnA I t aiUra. or

81·· Horn• lmprowmtnt•
82- Piurnblng &amp; tt.•lng

Buy. Sell or T...- •

~.

·saw LOGS

Bile H••

llld to fbi .... ............
t1t1t It oppoera t1t1t t1t1 Un·
known Heln. Dau' 1 Eae:

79-Cempers • Motor·Homa

Cw llfl • Bulrld••
fnll II' I•

•

LOW GUll OAI

You1Phollll

pap If d 1 I t - -

Equ'-»m~t

87 -Upholltery

_....1),1810.

•

'

78 - C•mplnt

STEWAITS '.-.
GUNS' &amp; :1
SUPPUES 3•

WANTED

WI C.V FiiNntl ........•

lAI

......... to

71-lq•u a Moton for ....
76-Auto P1tU &amp; Ace• tori•
77 -AutoR·~

4.15-

" t.!

1"' .
SALES &amp; SEIVICE

pi.........-...
,

~~

s.. u. ,., , ....••

llow'-llt
llortll SNaloll
. I ' I Clllia45760

SUNDAYS

;.'

110 SIJIIDA Y CA11.S "' '

Plllllll&amp; &amp; HEATING

•• Riled-... _.... A81181·
lilt AftorM\1 Gan-' of tho
. _ .ot Ohio: .... doe
Plllleallfl. a.n.rd I. HIINI.
l)flwu ol Tn ..a •dan.
lt8t8 of Ohlll. ..... by ?tlo

It-Mobile Home R-..air

Public Notice

I'··

64-Hay a G,.in
66-Seed &amp; Fertilidr

81-Gen. .l HIUiing

The (lhlo So~ and Woler
ConMrvotloll Commlulon
wlllcou•1n lloctlonoflup..,.... of the Milt• Sol
..d waw c-111Dn
· Dlatllallo lleltlld In ICCOrd·
DHt wltlt ChiPter 1111 of
the Ohio llevlled Code ol
Mllaa Hlah lcMol on No-

VfRY NICE LMGE t«&lt;ME OIUI'I'fiiX, 311
ACRES- 48R, 3bllttl, 2....... 111111d I
811 . .bi.rt l'lu!a1Y lnCiudiil pond, 1(1llfil. 4.8110 111- II. r.m - and titCIIile
hame. A1t11 bQin Ill $89.900.
CAI.l614-1192·7104 FOR Al'PT.

.•DDUPOU, OHIO

ez~WntdtoBuy

.....

PH. 949·2101 3
or •••· 949-2160 •

111-11••·

AFFIDAVIT
STATE Of OH?O
COUNTY OF MESGI 11
I'ETIIII JOHN
PAI'A·
DIMOI. 7llinl INt duly
IWOIII. t r a••• lftCI e.ve
lhllt .. II • dilly .,Pal I d.

83-LN..Iock

47-Wenttd to Rent •

ELECTION
LEGAL NOTICE

.

992-5141

.

81-"'•rm EQuipm.nt

41-EQuipment ior Aen1
41-For lA••

Public Notice

FOR SALE IN RACINE

MIDDLEPOU, OHIO

...

F.&lt;rr'l Strp:J'P''
/i l!Vt:qtrll

"-

.TIOIIU
•._..ND
SIIOOTIIG
992·&amp;009

RACINE
GUN CLUB

U'*-wntten.Dwt
Exca.10ra. • d elnl tceora
of Aollgno of111a E - ot
I,..J• ..-. D .
nd.et

59-For Slle or Trede

...

..Free Ertimatel..,

R•ldentPaP and

BANKS
CONSTRUCnON

v.

83- Eac.,etha
84-EI~te~rlctl t. AefTigtrlt6on

4&amp;-Furnithed Aoomi
41-S,.ce for Rent

Nocu• I l l

COII!rnarcial

DllaiaiUt al
I - of Ohio
Plaintiff

158-Fruitl • V119••bl•

Serv1ct:s

41-HouMS for Rtnt

667 - Coolville

•

QUALITY PRINT SHOP
992-3345

815-Uiart
937-lufl•o

Oil'S UPUllla
SDYICE . •

205 ll s-.1 SSnl7

..........__
,.,..._...,n

31-Ru• EtUite Wanted

882-Now Htvon

,....,_

COMPUTE
EIICTIICAl SERYKE

IN THE COUIIT Df
COMMON PLEAI Of
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

67-Music:~alln•ttum•t•

BISSELL .:~·
SIDING co.: ;

..

· AILIIAIIS

IUnlo- l7elro of

151-Buildino Suppli•
61-Pett for Sel•

AT

•

llkll " .. Or ••

ool

74- Motorcycl•

34-Buoin•• Buildings
36 - loll &amp; Acruoe

BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE .
· 4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
fUBLICATION

.

Fslale

175-Pt. Pl1111n1

BULLETIN BOARD

.· 992-6455

•1

73-vansa • wyo·a

31 - Hom• for &amp;tit

578-ApfNa Grove
7?3-M..on

742-Aulland

.05/doy
.......

71 - AuiGI for Sete
72-Tfuc;k• tor &amp;ele

32-Mobile Hom11 for Sale
33-Fifmt for Slit

· 458-Loon

247 - IA!ort Fall•
141-R•cine

.eo

Tr ori':JIIIr t ,J 111111

Are• Code 304

Read the Best
_.
.
:
_
.
I

'

•992-3748

Pomercw

811-Ch..ter
143-Port.... d

R~al

M••on Co .• .wv

liB RAIUIOAD liES

o••

Tuiiii t: II R;: ·.t , y

=:

'

~

•VINYL SIDING
,, ,
•ALUMINUM SIDINd::
•BLOWN IN
,.
INSULATION ,:

1-12-IOtt.

lion
2703.14:113.07:
2703.24- Clwll .... 4.4

To Do

21-luPt•• Opportunity
22-Moow tOLD..
23-Prof•.tanal Sarvica

8et ReeuHe Fad

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669 '

992- MiddiiiPOrf

the

exchan~es, ..

Aret Code 614

.

..BAUM TRUE VALUE

~~~------~~~~~----------•

RIDENOUR SUPPLY .

317-Ch•IW•

211-Guy.n Di•t.
143-Arebie DJtt.
371-WIInat

.-

MilE SWIGEI

992-6685

&lt;MI-GaMipolio

KING SEmn:irAR HARDWARE
..
.

STATE FARM INSU

EQUIPMENT

992-2342

992-2

A,.tCodt614

.

992-7075

pa~es.cot·er

Melgt County

Oallia COYf1t'f'

SNOUFFER
FIRE AND SAFETJ-1

992-6454

POMEROY OHIO

992·5432

.

18-W~ntad

2 :00P.M . FRIDAY

JoUeu:ing telephonP

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

FAMILY RESTAURANT

POMEROY OHIO

992~6128

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Classified

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2115

-

·BILL SLACK
992-2269 .

lttwllft
.-...mn. and
Salem (Inter

Ohio Reviled Ccode I

53-Antiqulo
s•-Mtsc. Merch.,..titt

Fltldflt:i&lt;il

SUGAR RUN FLOUR MILLS

FORD

GRAVELY TRACTOR

· K&amp;C JEWELERS
. 992-3785

POMEROY, OHIO

- 2:00P.M . WfDNESDAY
- 2,00P.M . THURSDAY

lUNDAY PAPER

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2121

POMEROY

TIIURIDAY PAPER
FAIO.to~ PAPIA

2 :00P.M . TUI!IDAY

-

WEDNISDAY PAPER

EWING FUNERAL HOME

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

POMEROY OHIO

992-6687

992-2104

- z,oo P.M . MONDAY

•fiR£WOOD

51•11111 It 11:00 A.ll

'Public Notice

&amp;1-Ho\IMhold 090(1i.
12-lporting QooM .

11'- HOipW-td
12-ltluat..,n WMted
13-lnturtnell
14-BulinMI Tr1ining
15- "l chool• • lnltruelion
1 e- Rtdio. TV 6 Cl Aepeil'
17-MisctNaneous

- 11 ,00 A .M . SATURDA,Y

TUEIOAY PAPJ!A

:::gg

•1.30/diY

l 11111 lnylnt:rrt
Srrv1r:r.s

DAY BEfORE PUBLICATION

MONDAY PAPER

16

7-Verct..SMe {PIIid in advanc:tl
8-PuWic .... 6 At.tclion
9-Wented to BYy

•A . _.... _. ..,enMmMt pl.ced in The Daily; Sentin .. CP·
cept -r d•tlfild clllpl-v. Butin•• C.rd and 1..81 MtiCHJ
wNI Mao IIII.P_. M 1... fltt . Pl-..m R ....., and tha G•lli·
pol6l Deity Tribune. •ectring owr 18,000 hOmll.

COPY OIADI.INI -

e13.oo

5-H•ppy. Adt
8-Lott end FoLtnd

HIPP\' Adl

tn Memorlt!m

1s

1 -Card af ThMks
2-ln Memory
3-Annoueementt
4-GivtiWIV

mull be '*din advance ••

t•OYAL
•uGHl HAULING

· m•·•

. . . 4.tfn

r~~==========~~-------------------AII II ll lJ II 1:1' II I I' II I~
Mt:r ctt.Httl 1sl'

"*·

MATCH
Evtry Sunday

SHOOnNG

.SEPI'
51001$=11
161 1990

~~-

fl•t• ••• for con•cutive runs. broken upd~sw
ftlr e~h ...,.. II •Der8te 1d1 .

.,.,,. of ltd fOt' IH CIIPitll •••er• i&amp; double price Of td cost.
• 7 point In• tn»e onl¥
•S•inll il nat ........... , for errors after lirlf d~ . (Ch•i:lk
for encw• Nut d., ..:1 rune in pape&lt;rl. Cell before 2 :00p.m .
•• eft• IIUbliCMkM'I to m•• correction.
Card of Th•kl

HOSPITAL

Monthly

•flecetw. • . au cfitcourrt for • • c-lef in ..... ~. .
.,,.. ... - Giwuwe¥ lind Found .... wnder 11 wor8 will be

•Adl N

FRUTH PHARMACY ·

10

POUCilS
·
.
•Adl ouiMH Meigo. 0.111• 01 MUon countiia mutt be pre- .

P

••

~

.

.

98

· 1·13--Hc

SHnB&amp;TREE

hOOPA

R:l"oo : 0 ~'' 111 we;~
:~.

'

~ANYTHINB

.

992-2196
Middleport; .Obio

SPOilSMAN CLUI

•, ~

It

•LIMESTONE , ,
•FILL DIRT . ' ;

RACCOON

GUll SHOOTS

· w~;:t•

0,•v•

MONDAY .thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
• 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

PAT' HILL FOlD

11-11-

Sbktt,

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace .
. TO PLA(! AN AD CALL 992-2156

repair Gal T1111ai.

GUARANTEED? ·
FREE EBnMATES .

12... ..,

Classifie

•

....
.w lrtoil - ""'
Mt radioton. We oho

NfVEI ClEAN YOUR
• GUIIEb AGAIN

SAT. •111
6:30PA
a..

picked up tllelr tblnl stralgbt
Voeal Duo award.
Last year's Horizon award
wiDDer, Black won the coveted
Male Voeallstottlle Year award
"I promise all you wonderful
I_M!Ople who voted for me that tills
could never get old," sald Blaek.
For tile llecond year In a row,
West Vlrglnlan Mattea won the
Female Vocalllt of the. Year
·award. ''I'd like to tbanli: all tile
songwriters and plcke!'ll,.. she
said. "Witllout them we couldn't
do wbat we do ...

..... . - - . Wa . am .

~Gillter
~Helmet ·

*••
l1ll I
· nar

I

recorded by
Mattea. who Ia Vemei''B wife.
"It pays to be a hUiband,"
VI!ZIIer said ''I want to tbaDit
radio for playing tbe song because I lmow It was real bard to
play ;• Vezner !laid In a tearful
acceptaDce of tile award.
The mother and daughter team
of Naomi and Wyrvmna Judd

We Cllll r.,aininll re·
~· r...ton" 01111

892·1008

.UCIIIE
FilE DEPT. ·

wu

Tbe song

· SER~CE

Construction

GUN SHOOT

Henry for
"Wbere'~~e .You
Been, .. a plalntl\re -e about a
loving couple growtq old and
endlq up at the same bolpltal.

Dance."

Ia...

ap

Oil'S APPUANCE
SEIYI(E
992-5335 or IIS-3561
. ..... , _ .... Office
. .POUIIOY('OIIO .

-....rlghlofw.yllneof
rww ltnlt. tile awn.r.·
-t¥v plepo"' ... ond .
.... _.,.Diloi22.1D•
point II lhlt

--

-ot-lotandthe

Nortllue Mt corner of 1hl

o-·

10 YISm
OPIN IY
APPOINTMENT

proji81ty. 171!'43

- l . t l of -ion 102 plua

03.48;

1hlnctl lrl I North Ill U It
lloeolloot lioolt thlt - ·
trtr.,. of -lot ond t1t1
o-• Nortltlrtv I*GII'"'
1M to • c.,1•2.70l.tl of
102 plua

CALL

I0/30fl9-tln

· BISSELL.IJUILDERS.
CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGn

"At ftg nem..lt Prices"

.... 949·2101 ·
....... 949·2160
Doy or Night
NO SUND~r

BUILDING &amp;
REMODEliNG

Commerclel • •
Rslidilntl•l
•Roofing
•Siding
•Windows
Isn"t h ......, .... !Lt:l
I.I I J

BANKS

CONSTRUCnON

01.111;
.thMolln e loud 11111tt
dloeotlo.t to • point. 118.00 ·
-Wtoflllltlon102 ploq 1.................-~.:...---------1
1
' . : . "' ..........1,
I to ........ of ...
OPPIIS J LOCATIONS TO SIIVI YOU-

Til-COUNtY RECYCLING

1

...

.......

a

IIIlA• 222.133

-Mt.-orS...

1No I
lp- 1 e on • - - u - thlt
dllsGtlo.t ..d ..pervlllon of.
,_..,D.-· lloglo .. ed

lur.:;or..::o.,-:7:..... the

1111....,

.,.,.,...lo,.
ftlpu-

nurnllen •
In the

=:,::•.:.::

-

1:::

~- of T-op , IIi·
lion. Colu oluo. Ohio.
olaiM ..,. by ....
d Ia Yo....... 111. .. .._ 111, of
till o.clllloardl fll Melgl

·
POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7 a I .R.143
ALBANY. OHIO: Rt. 60 a S.R. 143
.NEW HOURS:.
POMEROY: 9 a.m.·7 p.m. 7 Days
ALBANY: 10 e.m.-6 p.m. 8 Daya. CloMd Sunct.y :

PAYING AS OF TODAY, SEPT.11,199Q.

#1 Copper '1 per lb.;
Cleen Qry Aluminum Cena, 411C per lb.
a-tAutoRacl8ton44C lb.; llllttetlea'1.2tl•. •
Yell- Bre• 40c lb.; Alum. Sheets 40C lb.•
t

a-..

lllniie••• ,..,,,

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

614 992-6114 . ..,, ..,.:,..•

I. .

Cot:lnlf. OMo.

N••l•

•....u

..... . . . . . dtl?r-

.....................
...
.
.......
__
---·
.
.
=

...,..... A _ ... ....,

llloat?ttn. ...

. . ..

lind ~......

wll ...

a .,., .. ...,. ......
7

••

1111

1Wa111A1111·

.,.m•s •o•u HOME

a'u• ·Clwl

r:

- •• 7IUHT
DL II rGI11
II
~'I:
11. u. : ,,,

•.

MOilLE HOME FUINACES ·HEAT PUWS
. All FUINACE PAllS

doe ....

1

.

~

••••••

.

•111M &amp; COOLIII

h

" ,.....,..,. . ,.... ....,

I.. • I , .... Sdteel Ill. Iff lt. 1•1
~

'

i

�:TUIIdlf, OrAl . . 8,

Ohio

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

~

Ann0uncll'lllnt8

33 Fanna ~Sale

...- ....~·-·"'!"""" ... .. - - --

--- -

..
..

0 four
harrongo latten of
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78 . Auto Parte &amp;
Tr;msrort~tion

71 Autos for sale
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NBC llitowle ot lhl Week Q .
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AKC Reg. ltaglll AI

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WATEAPROOANO
Unoondt' Hill .,..._ 1~

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Michael hlree J.leiiiH 10
work for lhe ad agency. 1;1
(!) Roce 10 S.ve till Pt.ner

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a.r...llon

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n:oo &lt;2le (JJ we 1!11 o e

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1:30 (I) (J) e Colcll Hayden
beComes jeJrou. 1
vllltlng coach Ia offered great

.,

1:11 Moollyllne

lllllllg llrOihlr ......
11:05(1) MOVIE: MIC*M X (2:15)
11:30 &lt;2le Ill Tonight Show
Stereo.

(]) Today'a 1'111 .
(l) Adlrllmllll'l Money
WOIId
.
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- • IIMiir enerk lr! llue _.ICI. Llbta,
·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . lreel younell to a blflhday glh. Send tor
yaw Aatro-Otlph. clo 11111 nu1paper,

Alllll (....,.. 21·April ~ II J01! over:·
react....,._, 10 pr-..1 loelay, It

e:ould-JOI! lobelllluelna ......_

P.O. Box !11428, CIIMIMII, OH 44101· felling manner. Mllnllln coni~OIIIy lo-

3428. Ba..,.lo-yourzcidr..:~~gn.

euo1ng

lum oullo be M - i n luiJIIty II

TAURUS (Atodl at llloer »I.Wt.t you
IIUI1Ially- up ahuMIOM loclay you . .
Nklly 10 do 10 from a negaltve penpecllwl. A poot JIUiude UOIIII- Dlhenllo
lilly nay fram you.
C11ar 21.,_ 211 Hea- &lt;IIImandlthan UIUal might ba placed upon
your purae loday, i1o II you do iiOI WMI
10 beComl ""'-"d In ,.. Ink. manoge your~ wllh gNat care.
CAHCIII(.IUIIe21...... 11)UIIIIrldD
noi8PI*f 10 be ..-rnglo.coaparale
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llle oiling lw you In llle Y'lllllllaad, ... who . . uauailr IIUIIPO'II.,_ ol your plena
wou't be c11a1roua o1 beilllklng o11 or pragrme ., ad&gt;M·
old, unprocluc1M ~ • Mil • Nrllul . To be on 1118 Ala
diu 'IIIIQie'll
lfoulllname aide. only on JOUrMII erect iiOI
1iG111 aLII- '1111 tr..rtron W11 be olluerl.
good.
I'IICII (,_ ~" 1111111) Thilla- .
illlporiMICJb. ollhoaa'doyiOUulien you might be Juctgecf
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cartlul you mlghl end up llle lltgll for
._lilly l r - bath Ulldoe.
UCIITTAIIIUI (Now. II Dec. 211 There
Io a p liiMIJ you mlghl premal!nly ·
try 10 IIIII' or adjust ~ug In wlilcle
you·,. loelay. Poor liming
COUld Ulllke the UIIIHII' ~le. nol
betler.
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. D-1• 111 Vo..cr~ IOdoy IIIOuld ba, "What Ia good
10r the majafiiJ Ia 8110 good for me,"
becat• only u-lhlngl lhellllke 1n1o
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lhoaa day. .uMn h mlglll be 1011\t'bM

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-·1 corldaonn you lOr your .

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II ltpL 1!1111 row group
mot&gt;-lla today llllelnlo cor IIIIer·
IliOn 1118 t 1 I IIIIIICIMadl ol 011111'1. II
JO(I

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row andl, you oould lie ~~~~­

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.

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PRINT NUMBEReD lETTERS IN · I
THESE SQUARES

A
V

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET . ANSWER
•

·l:t.C::rOIIIght
Ill On ......
DIP~

l:lllporla Tonight
1111 CIIIIIIOIIINr-CC~okUonl1~~~~·11,11,
Part 2 (1 :401

11::U(J) a-.Q
12:00 we 11110 111e Hlghl

I I.

Ecr•••

1:11 ........

12:05(JJ ........... 1;1
12:30 (II. Ill Lalle Nlgllt W1lo
(1:00)

declarer.

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mialng lloe ti'UIIip 10. II be bas II, 1111 tbll West m1P1 baYe llllrtAMf wltlo A· _,,
lltst play In the trump sllil '!rill bil to Q-10·6.) Wbatever e1ae II CNt tloilre lor~·:
lead to the 10 In his band. II deelarer il ttoe del- It 111 clearly 11e1t for Well ·•:
milling the spade 10. he Is almocit to
declirer a cbaDce to !ole tlore~r:;:'.
nrely going to play low from the dum- trum!l trlckJ. Fallin&amp; to do 10 wu a ·my 011 bls lleC.'OIId play In.the ti'UIDP clear-miltal:e. '·

II••

.. ..

CROSSWORD

·~
.·__,...,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Thump.• ,.. pal
6 Lawn
material
111ndian,
lor one
12 Hazardous
13 Famed
sleuth ·
15 Barbie's

16 Mine
output
17 Hot lime
In Paris
18 Occurrenee
) OHa
· played a
Butler
23 Fountain
treats
27 Midterm,

e.g.
28New
Zealander
2t Poet's

DOWN

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

1 Dark beet
2 ,Soreness
3Average
4 Ptohibit •
5 Smitten
&amp;Golf
1 course
parts
7 Singer
Ocasek,
of The
feature
Cars
8 Tennis
21lumber·
great
jack's tool
9 Three·
22 Belfry
rasidenl
player
card
. 24 Noisy
game
commo·
10"Auld
lion
Lang - " 25 Raver·
14 Fury
anee
18 Bugs's
26 Use a
· slool
foe . .
19 Subway
30 Rue
lara
31 Fishy
20 Ring
soup

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~

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33 Uller
34 "Alice"
diner
35 Oodles
36 Director
·Kazan
38 The Venetable39 Check
40 "No ifs, , or buls'
42Go
aslray
43 Garman
link

... i

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....
.....
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460naet
47 Pecfect
places

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

MISLIY
XIKY
J II U J

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L S P M I P I~

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IJ V I

LUXURY OF THE RICH. - OSCAit WILDE

'

.. .,"... .
..·-'•.

· 37 Argon or
oxygen
38 Bikini haN
41 Famed
sleuth
44 Rlv11 of
Nantes
450peneda
fastener

SJ

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. ...·....

Hollywood

CRYPTOQUOlE

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_,

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31 Poet
. Stephen
Vincent
32 Pine
product
34 West of

One letter stands for another. In lllis sample A is use&lt;!
for the Uvee L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length .and fonnation of the words are all
hlnla. Each day the code letters are dl fferenl. ·

-

.

concern

Y...•f=r'• Crnlt•taDiel EXTRAVAGANCE IS
THE LUXURY OF ntE. POOR: PENURY IS niE

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WFYEQPI

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dlamDIIel. Declarer took dummy'a kiDI
and led a spade back to bla kine. Welt i
tu . .
woo the ace .and played 11110tber .dill· ,
•ut lOtH .
mood. South 'ftD aaci played a RCOnCI
~~t;tt'ortb-Soulb
1pade. Welt waa alral~ to duck this
trick. He clld not want to have to win
the third 1pade and thea lead away' Soolll
N.lll East
from ei!Mr the jack of hearts or t1oe 1 •
Poa 1 •
P. .
jack o1 clube. ADd playing a tblrdl1 +
Poa 2 •
P..
round Dl dlamoncll miglot live del:lar· 4+
.Aller a useful llufl and ruff. So West
crabbed tbe q.- of spades and
()pelllng lead: • 7
played aaotber. That was 10 trlcka lor

llhld.._....,

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.. ...

......

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be clearly took tloe - c view oo dele- tbll time. He led his fourth-beat

(]) MOVII: . . . Of DldlotiioiM

:GOII:.t,.L

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~

DAU.YCRYPI'OQUotEs-Here's hawloworklt: 10/V

.Ntth.Now .
D !nab 11 Tonight

11:31 (]) llllllnllleolll
1

.

.••·I

Alttoouglo Welt was a finalist ID a t J 1 1 7 4
Nortto AmericaD team cllamplonlhip, · • J I

0 . 'WIIIgUy' C811AW
OTiee

.,

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lllllapn,P.I.
oe Mr Till 111ow
lllgtlt

No. :J b.iow.

••

beard Nortto support
spldes Ire was jaltllied Ia lliooliD&amp; oat
a pme. His milllmwn lllglo eardl._
all prtme val- and It ~d take WIST
, very Uttle iD the North baad for game. +AQ I

beau

Ill Nnllvlllt How

Employment Servrces
11

llaml't Fllllly

Ill
8 Croullre
7:36 (IJ The ..., . ___ .
I:00&lt;2le 11J Me- MoUock
defends a roofing contractor
ICCUHCI of murder. Q
·•
(J) MOVIE: lnllctl1161y
(2:001
(JJ (I). WhO' I lhlllou?
Tony re-examines hla •
relatlonah~ with hla
girlfriend. 1;1
!ll (J) Novil Tlue myaleriee
ot Neplune are explored. Q
1111 liZ. Mejor l.elgue
. BaMbell
oe MOVII!: Tlee Hellllllng
Peulcln (2:001
0 Murder, She W..W Q
Ill Cleurcle 81rMt Btalloie
8Pri-WI
Clll CleelllopiMel' Coklmbul,
Part 2 (1 :401
1:01 (I) MOVIE: llengkok ltlllon
(pt 11 (3:00)
1:30 (JJ (J). Held 01 lhl Clule
Blly haa dllflcully dMtng
Amertcan WDII'III'I end pllcea

. . pe,CIPfP

L....L..,.,..II......L.-1.....1 you -lop f - . tCop

to be_,_

@. TIINI'I comp.n,
D 8upel8oula All ve. Norton

you''i ~•Gf'IT! •; ..:r've

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NORTH
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~-r~~~..;0;. 1J;;.,;::t..;R;.I::..8. ,.~,~ ;·;;~~~ ,:-thoch:~~_::

I .I I

'::~::::=:::::~~~ ·money because ills cheaper

Creamy- Groom- V~ue-lnclts -ICE CREAM
If food has to have CaloriE!$ and cholesterol, . why . couldn't It ile broccoli instead of;.::IC::.:E;..;C::.:R..::E::.A.::.:M;,;.?_ _._._---...· :::

~=~c.r'.J'
aOMecQrwr
8portaCenler

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IC... M
UTI ANSWIIS
'
'

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(I)

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Granny told aU of her grand·
aughte~ not to marry lor

.

1:01 Cll Bavetty ttn tllu
8:30 &lt;2l8 11J NBC Nlgtdir N1wa

/(

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Donakln'a Ruanillntl erect

IIJclng

..

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,

.

.'

Pig a 1~lhe Daily Sentinel

Local news briefs... - -.....· Gloom
. · Y.week·is

Continued from page 1
Road ·28 for nene .Swath. Swain was taken to Camden ·Clark
totemorial Hospital. At 7:58a.m., Rutland squad was called to
. Dye Road for Luc!Ue Lambert. L.a mbert was taken. to Holrer
tdedtCal Center.
.
.
·
·.
.
At· ,;1.2:53 p.m., ·Pomeroy squad
was
called
to
Amerlcare
dth
•~d At ·
Po meroy.EdnaHenrywastreate . erebutnottranspor"' ·
1: 59 p.m., Pomeroy squad was called to Spring Avenue · for
Charlene Goodwill. She was transported to Holrer Medical ·
Center. At 5:26p.m., Tuppers Plains squad was sent to·Joppa
.Road. Her man. GrQssnickel was transparted !rom there to
Camden Clark Memorial Hospital.
·
,
Continued from page 1

. ·te r·••,•
· ·U
So

.

-~'--~~__,.....:.:....:=:.:....::.......___-,__

by what we do."

After taking the oath, Souter
saldi "I will try to pass on the
.constitutional authority that I
received this afternoon.! will try
to use It the best I can according
to the light !hat God gives me." ,
Among !hose witnessllig the
ceremony was former Justice
William Brennan~ a leading
liberal on the court tar 34 years
whose , retirement opened , the
door ·· for Souter's nombia.tloh.
The lj4.year-old former .. jurist
stood and was applauded by tbe
audience when Bush singled him
out In his remarks.
Souter, a former New Hampshire attorney general and .
member of that state's supreme
court, had moved up to the
.federal bench in April of this
year, becoming a member of ihe
lst· U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
based In Boston.
Bush selected · Souter as his
first nominee tor the Sup~;eme
·· Court . just three days after
Brennan's retirement in late
July. Soull!r Is the court's youngest member and his lifetime ·
appobitment could easily run
'beyond 2015.
White House chief of staff John
Sununu, former governor of New
Hampshire, was among those
.who recommended Souter,
whose .keen Intellect has been
highly praised, but whose scanty
judicial recbrd and reticence has ·
l!!ft the nation largely in the dark
on ·Where he stands on major
' Issues confronting tbe court.
During his confirmation hear·
logs, Souter deflected questions
about his views on abortion and
~despite strong opposition from

some. woJ:11en's rights groups the Senate confirmed him by- a
90·9 vote on Oct . 2.
Whfte House offictals said
Souter, a bache.Jor, actually was
sworn In as a justice on Oct. 3 by
an administrative officer at tbe
court and Monday's event was
ceremonial.
On Tuesday, he was scheduled
to Join his eight "brethren" on
the court In a judicial ceremony,
On Wednesday, he will partie!·
· pate In hearing in one of the
year's major cases - .a dispute
over the legality o! company
policies that exclude women
from jobs that inlghtendanger a
·
·
developing fetus.
A Rhodes Scholar, Souter holds
degrees from Harvard Un!ver.slty and Harvard Law School and
· studied legal philosophy at Ox·.
ford ~nlverslty. His home Is In
Weare, !'I.H.
While he addre.s sed very few
major issues during his state
court tenure lil)d brief time of the
federal bench, Souter was gener·
ally Viewed as .a mod~rate based ·
on his confirmation testl!llony.
But court observers see Souter as
playing a potentially decisive
role on the court, providing a
pivotal fl!th vote to create a more
solid conservative majority on
the nlne·meiTiber court .
Bush, who Is strongly against
abortion, lntsted that in selecting
Souter he did not apply a "litmus
test" on abortion, ciVIl. rights or
other controversial Issues. Opper
nents to Souter failed to generate
the flrestorm of criticism that
torpedoed President Reagan's
nO)llinatlon of controversial appellate court Judge Robert Bork.

·Trump•. ~·-·__c_o_nll~n_u_ed_fr,...om_._P_a~:_e_1______

foreca
. st for.. .Buckey··e _State··

. I 7·

,.
at

Am Electric Power ..... ,....... 27% . Hobson Chul'Clh Speaker
AT&amp;T ... , ............................. 32'1. .
Carl Noggle will speak at ,the
Ashland on ,........................31
Hobson Church of Christ on
Bob Evans ........................... 12 . Tuesday evening at .7 p.m. He is
Charming Shoppes ............... 8'Vs
with the Navajo Indians. Bring
City Holding Co . ................. 15~
cannedk goods for Noggle to take
Federal Mogul.. .................. 14'Vs
back'With him.
O&lt;&gt;odyear l'&amp;R .................... 16%
Key Centurion ..... ,.............. 10~
Lands' End ......... ... ............. 10\ii
Um!ted Inc . . .................... ..1.2%
Multimedia lllc . ...... ............. 60
· VeterDI!s Memorial
Rax Restaurants., .................. l
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
-Robbins &amp; 1\llyers ................. 17
Rena.McDantel, Pomeeroy; WalShoney's Inc ....................... 10% , ter H. Roush, Racine.
Star Bank ........................... 16\4
MONDAY DISCHARGES
Wendy's lnt'l. ...................... 5% · Shirley Roush, Leora Strom.
Worthington Ind .................. 19'Vs

v.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL ...

. Jr1 The Family of proleJ5ionals
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Valley Drive, Poillt Plaasanl, W.Va. 25550 ·
'
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Home with Rev. Bob
Stewart officiating.
Burial wlll be in Gilmore
Cemetery.
~
Friends may call at the funeral
·
home from 2 to 4 ,p.m. and 7 to 9 ~
p,m. on·Thursday. ·
· ·. ~

fi

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/iill.fj

O
Tt.OO accidents P~l?bed by deputies
The Mei!(s County ,sherifrs Department Investigated two
auto accidents on Monday.
According to Sheriff JamesM; Soulsby, 44 yearold Jerry
Cc:mtlliued ?n page 7

Fire ·prevention\ ~eek
is.observed locally

You · still have time to ·
catch the. latest. feature
.at Peoples B~ . .We're
extending our 9.99o/o A.P.R~, fiXed
car financing for another week!
'

'

Fire Preve.ntlon Week continues through Sunday ,and given
the frightening · circumstances
surround! rig fires In· !he home, it
might be wise for ia n of us to .
review our living and working
envtrontnen ts io reduce the
riSks.
· ·
.
According to· tlie National
Ftrek ·Protection Association,
roughly sO percent of all fire
fatalities in the United States
· occur at home.

~ate

'

This great rate is available for both new and used cars. ·
And
because it is a fiXed rate, the ·
.
rate of interest on your loan can
never increase.
,

'

en 1ne
'2 Sections, 16 P.oges 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc.· Ne~~eper

"We are dying in fires in the
places that we feel tbe safest."
· according to NFPA President
Bob Grant. "We need 'to look
around these famlllar surroundIngs and see the dangers that
luke there: , We can protect
oursellves if we identify and
"Temove homP hazards before
they start a fire."
Smoking materials, like cigarettes; are the leading cause of
· Continued on page 7

public
IDlput

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... • ,:,·.

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By CHARLEN)i: HOEFLICH
opment In the county. He talked
!hen do something to correct the
Senliael News staff
about a development team with
weaknesses.
The Important role of retention
The chaUenge of attracting various various areas of expernew industry and creating an lise and knowledge about the and expansion of current bUs!.atmosph~re for expani!ing .and community to work .with a
ness was stressed by the speaker
retaining business already tn · ,t;levelopment director. He des·
who noted !hat 86 percent of all
place were discussed by ' Jack · crlbed . the team as the "key
new. jobs c9me from present
B!lrl!ngame, . Jackson County, players" In tbe game of market·
business. Burlingame also
W.Va. development director, at tng the county. .
,stresSed t)ie Importance of mainTuesday's meeting of the Meigs
Emphasizll)g that tbe primary
taln!ng conlaci with the EcoCounty Chamber of· Commerce.
purpose of any business or llomlc DeveiopmentOfflcewhtch
iS a source otflnanclal assistance
Introduced by Bruce Reed, ..Industry Is to make a profit, the
Chamber president, Burljngame speaker said the team needsot be as wen as training prQgrams :
talked about deve)QP!ng a good In a position to answer the
He said that cataloging indusmarketing program to "sell" the question of how locating or . trial sites, identifying properties
county. He commended the · ~pandlng a business in the. and buildings, and getting that
group fof the consolidation into a county will help the person or Information out to prospects Is
Meigs County Ch!lmber, for company In !hat goaL
Vital If development Is to take
developing an attractive braA comprehensive community place. He also recommended the
chure, and for proceeding toward assessment was.listed by BurUn- development of an industrial
hiring an economic development . game as an Important part of park.
attracting . business. He said.
· Burlingame's talk followed a
director.
ButUngame listed a five,. point communities need to determine · . lUncheon at Overbrook Center.
program toward economtcdevel- strenghts and weaknesses and
Continued on page 7

Transportation issue solved'
by Meigs ·Local Scho(Jl Board
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tbetwoextensionswlllcostthe ·
Sentinel News StaU
board less mopey than pu ttlng an
The problem of transporting aid on the h'l;tndicapped bus now ·
five students who are in the transporting those students. ·
. Meigs ~ CQunty. c;lass for severe . . Putting an· aid tm -t)le bus had ..
behavior · handl~apped · (SBH) been proposedbecause of alieged
children was resolved at Tues· abuse of a multiple handicapped
day night's meeting o! the Meigs (physical) student by one of the
Local Board of Education.
SBH students.
·
.
The board, after a lengthy
In a first vote on creating the
discussion in open session, and morning bus . extension, the
executive session, accepted Su- . board, on a vote of 3-1, rejected
perlntendent James Carpenter's the morning route but after
recommendation for the estab- executive session approved the
· llshment of two bus. route .exten- · route by a three-yes vote, with
.sions to transport the SBH Bob Snowden passing. The afterstudents from the high school in noon extension was given a
the morning and back to the high unanimous vote by tbe board
school In the afternoon. At the fo.Uowing the executive session.
'high school, the SBH sfudents
The tioard entered Into a
will change to.busses travelbig in .purchased serVIces contract with
!heir respective home areas .
Barbara . Culbertson to proylde ·

Meigs Countlans will have an
· opportunity to provide Input on
how to Improve the educational
delivery system at a public
meeting .to be held from 7: 30 to ·
9: 45 p.m. at Meigs High SchOol,
Pomeroy .
Mary GoodriCh, state board of
education representative for !he
10th Congressional District, wiU
be here .to meet with local
citizens who are concerned about
the public school system and to
gain community Input on educa. lion Issues which she can take
back to the state board. .
The meeting Is one of 210 whl~h
will be held across the state this .
fall. The theme of the meetings Is
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) "Charting the Challenges" and The lates I Columbus Dispatch
· the emphasis, according to Paul PoD shows a majority of Ohioans
Brickner, board pre.sldet:tt, is on are against State ISsue 3, the
getting better Insight Into how Lorain casino proposal.
.
constituents really feel about
The poll, publiShed Wedneseducational issues.
day, also shows the other two
At Thursday night'~ meeting iSsues on the Nov. 6 statewide
Meigs Countians wlll be asked to ballot are favored by voters.
share their feelings about educa· State Issue 1 would allow the
, tton with Ms. Goodrich so that . state to proVIde houstllg assist·
she can report back to the state ance. and State Issue 2 would
·board. Once expectations for expand the hOmestead tax
education are considered, partie· reduction. ·
!pants wili discuss and complete ' The mall poD of 1,597 regis·
a questionnaire on· the following tered Ohio voters was conducted
Continued on page 7
Sept. 28.through Oct. 4. It showed

serVIces as an occupational therapiSt for one·half hour per week
at the rate of $35 per hour.
flosste Allensworth' was · employed as a substitute teacher for
the 1990-1991 year and Kathy
Wilf9ng was recognized. as a
volunteer assistant junior high
cheerleader advisor. ·
A resolution was adopted by
the board stating that It is
Impractical to transport Christopher Lambert to the Athens
Christian School and agreeing to
pay Shirley Lambert the rate
determined by the State Depart.
ment of Education. ·
The resignation of Vernon
Little as a substitute bus arlver
was accepted. Jeff Smith was
hired as a substitute bus driver
con tinned on page 7

Casmo proposal may be in .trouble
.

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55 percent opposed to tbe casino licensing of a casino resort hotel,
proposal and 37 percent In favor tncludlng games by electronic .
and mechanical devices, for
with 8 percent undecided.
A similar poll conducted by tbe profit, In !he city of Lorain as a
newspaper ~ !DOnth earlier bad pDot project for·a period not yet
47 percent approVIng tbe Issue, specified, but for .not Jess than
but the, difference may have five years, If approved by the
resulted from a change lri the voters of the city of Lorain?"
The earlier poll was worded to
question's wording. The latest
emphasize
the proposal was a
poll used. tbe first paragraph of
pilot
project
"to determtn~ the
the official . ballot language,
impact
·
of
such
a fac!Hty on
which had not been adopted when
economic
development
and
the previous poll ques tionnalre
travel
and
tourism
in
Ohio."
·
was drafted.
Tba t q ues lion was based on
The latest poll asked:
proposed
language then pending
"Should the Ohio Constitution
·before
the
Ohio Ballot Board. · ·
be amended to au tborlze the

'

Dlive-in to Peoples·Bank
nowthroughOctober 13th
for the .best car loan rate
around!
not included!)

(fuzzy

(Q)
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PEOPLES

\!!!/

Still The Leader OJ The Pack! .

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seeJ.dng

A Pomeroy man s)lifered minor Injuries Tuesday when .he .
apparently lost control of his ;'ehlcl~ on Bedforo Township Road
In Meigs County.
. ,
·
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· , &lt;&gt;•WiUiam Kautf,- 41, was wes,tboimd a'nd 't raveling atapproXImately 50 miles per hoQr when he went off the left side of
the road In a right curve. He then crossed back 0ver tbe roadway
and went off the right side, strlkbig an embankment a,nd rolling
over once. His 1975 Chevrolet C-15 then came to rest In an
upright position, sitting partially in the roadway.
Kauff, wlio was not wearing a seat belt at tbe time, suffered
· mbior Injuries. He was taken to yeterans Memorial Hospital by
Meigs. County EMS, where he was treated and later released.
He was later cited for failure to control and driving und~r
suspension.

Marte Ell2abeth Thomas~ 72,
Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy, died
Tuesday, Oct. 9, at .her resfdimce
following an extended lllness.
Born March 24, 1918 In Pome·
roy, she was tbe daughter of tbe
!ale Frank Kral!tter and Freda
.!
LiiC!Je Smith Krautter.
Helen AugustQ.e
.
She .was a memher of the ·
~
Women's Auxiliary of FeeneyWord has been received of tbe
Bennett Postl21i of the American
death on September. 29, 1990, of
Legion for .l8 years. She was a
Helen A. Augustine, 86, at Eli!!J
homemaker.
·
Home In Middleport, following
di~e
S)le Is survived by her husband .an extended Illness. ·
of. 53 years, l{arry R. Thomas,
She was born In Meigs CQunly
Pomeroy; a daughter, Anna
and had been an Akron resident ~
. (Hobart) Cozart, Portland and ·for most of her life, having been
.·Brenda (Harry) Cunnlligham,
employed by the B.F. Goodrich ·
Chesler; a son, trry (Donna)
Tire and Rubber Company !or
Tbomas. Pomero ; ·a brother, over 35 years, retiring In 1967.
·
.
ijarr'y Krautter, Racine; two
Sbe was a member of St.
sisters, LIJUan Walker, SpringMichael's Byzantine Catholic liiW., .
. tleld, and Evelyn White, Miners· · Church. ·
·
ville; a slsler In law, Bonnie
She Is survived by her sister,
Krautter, Pomeroy; tour grand· . BernlceWoodsldeof.Ciancy,Mt., '
cllUdren, and ·three greatand several nieces and nephews.
MASON
tp'8ndch!l4ren: ·...
.
She was preCeded In death by
773~5514
Belldes her parents, she was
her husband, John.
preceded In death by a brother,
Burial was ln the St. Michael's
tte J · d 1 •~
.
•loansS·""""tiDO.ualilicatiOIIofl!orrower •EquaiHousiMLender'
Franak "'•
""'Laawusonr. • r · •an ass ocr • Cemetery·
.
·Loans u;'i"'ee Purchase Re~ted
•MimbarF.o:tc.
Fred
Funeral' . arrangements ' were
. Funeral services wlll ·be held
handled by the Kucko-Antbony · ~ fA.. ~~ ~ ~ ~ tao.
on Friday at 1 p.m. at Ewing ·Kertesz FunearlHomelnAkron,
;
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presented a five point plan for enlicbig .new
Industry Into. thf county · 1111d relalnllig and
expanding current businesses.

Man injurecJ, in auto accident

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CHAMBER Sl'EAKEB - Jack Burlingame,
,. Jackson County, W.Va. Economic Development
·• Director was speaker at 'J'uesday's meelin1 of the
Melp County Chamber of Commel'fie. Burligame

local news briefs--- Schools

{I)

•

Business and industry
•tOpic·at chamber meet

(304) 675·7700
fZ
. . L .I

, Low tonight .
·Cli1111ce of rain 88 percont.
Cloudy Thursday. IDgh In the
mid 60s • . Chance ·or rain 30
perceni.
·
·

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, .~ednesdsy; October 1 0. 1990

Offlce Hours ..
Monday through Friday
9 a.m.- 5 p.m.
Suite 13, PVN Medical Office Building

Hospital news

1@1

Vol.41, No.110
Copyrighted 1 990 .

Internal Medicine

(f)
I

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JJRATES

Randall F. Hawkins,
M.D.
. .

fQ

- Area
death~nerat
Thomas

. _NL flag

will

.M:eigs
announcements

..

fick-3: 717
Pick-4: 6281
Cards:
·6-H, 7..c, 8-o, 3-S

Wea·the·r

©

be

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Stocks

.

Ohio ~ttery ·

. to cop
·· wm
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{j)
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Lottery
·

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Reds need .

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IJ:r United Press Intetnadonal
rain may fall over the nQrthwest- days by wet field conditions.
areas. ·
It looks as !hough much of Ohio by Wednesday morning.
.
Seeding of wheat and grasses
Afternoon humldltle,s may con·
is in for at leastanotjier couple of
During the day Wednesday the will .be delayed at least a few ·tinue around 70 percent or higher
gloomy days, with cloudy skies ·front should begin to move east, daysandstandtngwatercouldbe through Wednesday. -·
:
and some significant r.alnfall.
..;Jmd possibly east of the slate by a problem in some low·lying
·
Rain move,d in t west central Wed·n. esdayn1gb•'' Dry1ngou twill
·
NAiiONA
. LW"THERFOREC';T. F ROM 1A~10.1~!10TQ7AM1~. 11..0 .
.and northwest Ohio during the be slow, hoWever, Since a vast .
~
~
night, but rainfall amounts were reservOir of additional moisture .' \
generally Jess thim a quarll!r of '!'Ill likely be added Into the
an inch over the northwest at equation as moiSture from Tropi·
daybreak, where rainfall was tbe cal Storm Klaus reacheS the·a rea
heaviest. The mercury ranged
Wednesd.a y night and Thursday.
widely ·across the' state, generChill stress may develop tn
•
· ally . from thfl' upper 40s In tbe livestock over the northwest part
· extreJ:11e northwest-to the upper of the . state through . tonight.
60s in the southeast. . .
.Harvest. l\lld tillage operations
will be stalled the next several
A . cold front' 'was stretched
across Oh!Q from nortbeas t to
southwest and moved little dur- ·
lng the night. The front was not
expected to move much through
South Central Ohio
Tuesday night, 1\S. waves of low·
Rain
likely and a chance· of
pressure move northeast along It
thunderstorms
· Tuesday night
and through Ohio.
Wednesday
: Lows will be
and
A tremendous.amount of.moiSnear
60Tuesday
night,
wltb highs
ture has been feeding fr!)Dl tbe
. WEATHER MAf: - A stationary front in the e~tern United
near
70
Wednesday
'
Chance
of.
western Gulf of Mexico, up the
States
will bring a good chance of showers and thundentGnns 1o all
rain
ls60
percent
Tuesday
night
Mississippi Valley Into the Ohio .
areas
ea8t
of the Mississippi River. Temperature$·In the.Midwest :.
and. 70 percent Wednesday.
·Valley; With the front over OhiO,
tG
warm back up under high pressure. The cold lront1111d ·
will
begin
Extended Forecast
· rain will continue In mosta~a• .
trough
In
the
Northwest wiD bring little, If an:r, precipitation, sci the .
ThU1'8day through SatUrday
The rain was to become heavy
of the country will see a pleasant day. (1JPI) - ·.
western
two,thlrds
A chance of rain Thursday,
at times over ·the -n orthwest
with fair weather Friday and
·two· thirds ofthe state as tbe low
Saturday. Highs will be In the 60s
pressure areas move across the
Thursday and In the tow to mid
state. As much as 2 to 3tnches of
,., 70s friday and Saturday. Over. night lows
range from . the
mid 40s to mid 50s through tbe
period.
·.
Dally slock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m. )
Bryce 1111d Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

now thought to be $250 million, !lllllon, followed by ReVlon's
the magazine said.
Ronald Perelman with $2.87
~
The net worth ofl72 people still billion and industrialist Henry
~
on the list dropped from 1989, and Hillman with $2.65 billion.
· 53 people on the list lost between
Other perennials on the Forbes ®, ·
$101) mllllon and $880 mllllon, the liSt Included sisters Barbara Cox
~
magazine said•
.
Anthony and Aline Cox
Sumner Mu'r ray Redstone; Chambers, who inherited a pubowner of Vlacom, suffered tile Ush!ng empire and whose com.lar&amp;e$1 decline as his net worth blned .w orth Is about $5.2 billion;
tell from $2.88 billion to $2 billion. publishbig brothers Samuel NewAlso losing chunk of change
house Jr. and his brother Dowere pUbliShing !llagQate Rupert
l)ald; !llanufacturing brothers
Jay .and Robert Prltzker; WaJ.
Murdoch, whose net worth fell an
estimated $600 mDllon; cable
Mart Stores founder Sam Wat'ton
teievtslon's. Ted . Turner, . down
and his children; Seagram Co.'s
SfOO million; and H. Ross Perot,
Edgar Bron!rrian; publisher- ~
off $300 'million, the magazine
tul'ned·ambassador Walter An·
said.
nenberg; developer Harry , ..
· But fallen .junk·bond kbig Ml·
Helms ley; and oil and real estate
111.
chael Milken managed to stay on
magnate MarVIn Davis.
the list witb an estimated worth
of ·s700 million, even after paying
DUID 1'8
$600 million .In governmeri t fines .
~
and penalties and losing $250
CLEVELAND (UPI)million In the bankruptcy of his
Monday 's winning Ohio Lottery ·
old ftrm, Drexel Burnham Lamnumbers:
·
bert Inc. MHlien ·is .awaiting
Pick·3
.
sentencing on securities fraud
437.
and other charges.
Pick·3 ticket sales totaled
· Tbe.mintmum amount to merit
$1,200,067 .50, with a payoff due of
a place on tbe richest list dropped
$534, 649 ..
Pick-4 '"
to $260 mDllon, down from $275
million last year. the magazine
0214.
said.
· Plck·4 ticket sales totaled
.
Both Kluge and second·place
$223,929, with a payoff due of
Warren Edward Buffett held the
$101,500.
same pfaces they did last year,
,
Cards
Forbes said.
,
!our of hearts.
Kluge, whose holdings include
nine of clubs. ,
Metromedla and Orion pictures,
nine of diamonds,
@.
was estlmated to be worth at
five of spades.
'@)
least $5.6 b!Uion:
Cards ticket sales totaled
Omaha-based Investor Buf•
$96,970, with a payoff due of fill;...
1t!tt's worth was placed at $3.3
$39,440.
~

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Tuesday. October 9. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

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Q ~ @ •

· POINT PLEASANT ·

NEW HAVEN

675-1121:

882-2135 .

@
=
·

W!!J

·({2·~

THIS OFFER DOES NOT APPLYl:O MODEL. YEARS PRIOR TO 1983.

~ IR\ ~ &amp;

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.©. © . . C!t) © . (® t!j)·
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,.

CBECJUNG UP

Rick

Barringer checkS
Olive Townalilp Fl.-e
Deparlment tire truck lui · week, a roudne
precaudoa of the deparlmenl, whhUe Dale Smltb

· \Older the bood. of

.

.

t~e

ship Vohmleer nn Deparlment memben wen
aile .belilnd the wheel. Fire departmenle like .
cbecklliJ lhe eqalpmenl at lie. departme~~t lasl
.lhelra ate Clil duty IIi boun a day In cue a fire doe8
• week. nre deJNII'Imenle In lite area are cearlli&amp;
break .oat Ill the community. Fire Prevenilon
up lor nre Prevendon )\'e~ oblerved lllro~h
.Week Is being ,observed throucb Sunda;r.
..

'

'

,,

Sunday.TIIIs depanmeal, aJOD&amp; wllb SmQlle:r
Bear, cave • prMealallon on fire safety at .
Riverview Scllool on Monday. Plelared are, lefl to
rl&amp;ht, Frank Bile, Jolul Smith, Rick Barringer,
Dale Smith, and · Mark Smith.

FIRE PREVEN'DON WEEK - Olive Town·

!'

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36378">
              <text>October 9, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6739">
      <name>augustine</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1900">
      <name>krautter</name>
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    <tag tagId="5">
      <name>thomas</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
