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'

Ohio·Lottery

Leyland
named top
NL manager

Pick-3: 697
Pick-4: 7604
Cards: 7-H;
5-C;9-D;2-S
Super Lotto
6-ll-26-27-43-49
Kicker 559629

Page 3

•

Vol.41, No.136

•

Clear toalcbt. Low In mid
4lla. Mpstly &amp;WUiy Friday.
mch In mid 70s.

•

at

•
2 Soctiono, 14 PogM 25 Coni.
A Muhimedia Inc. Newupeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 1, 1990

Copyrighted 1990

•

RAC leaders refuse··
offer; lockout begfus :
cusromers. The company's statement said, "Given the current impass
and the unrealistic contract
At 10:35 p.m. Wednesday evenproposal
of the steelworkers, there
illll, negotiators for the U.S.
Steelworkers of America Local can be no certainty of continuous
5668 presented a written offer . 10 ' production."
It also stated that under these cir·
officials of Ravenswood Aluminum
the
corporation
C01p0ration to extend the current curnstances,
contract with the right to strike af. believes the only way to guarantee
a continued and secure operation.is
tee giving 48 hours notice, accord·
ing to Stan Hostler, attorney for the to utilize the current salaried work
Steelworkers. The current conttact force and to supplement these
workeis as necessary.
was to end at midnight.
Hostler said the union wiU be
RAC leaders refused the offer at
11 :54 p.m. Ac~rding ' to a state· filing suit against RAC for unfair
labor practices and not negotiating
ment released from the company,
the contract in good faith with the
the offer was "rotally unacceptable
Labor Relations Boan1. He also
when .operating a . continuOus
production facility the size of said the company cannot per·
RAC." · The USWA had totally
rnanently replace the union workers
rejected the company's proposals
because of the lockout.
for a new contract.
''The company never intended tO
At midnight the·first ever lockout
bargain in good faith." Bill Doyle,
at RAC began. Salaried employees,
v~ president of the union and
"scabs" and replacement workers safety commi1tee chairman, said af.
began operating the corporation.
ter the lockout announcement He
The coipOration. has repeatedly
added that there lull never been a
strike at the plant, which was for·
stated the need to operate its
facilities ro ·satisfy · financial
merly Kaiser Aluminum, and thai
obligations and cillnl)libncnts
to
there had never been any violence
.
.
By Micbele Carter

BONE-IN BEEF

Round Steak

SEEKING STATE OFFICE .:...Incumbent State
Rep. Mary Abel (D·Atbens) Is being challenged
by Richard E. Jones of Meigs County In theNov. 6
election. Jones, a Meigs County Commlssloner,ls

.7 9

l

Landfills. big issue

LB.
.TENDERBEST QUALITY
ASSORTED

Jones and·Abel

10·11 LB.

AVG.

"· $149
FRESH LEAN

Ground Beef

17
SWIFT PIEMIUM .

..

5 LIS. OR

...
$1 99

MORE

.

BACON
•·•••••••••••••••••!~•·· $
ECIIICh .

LUCKY lEAF

$ 199
COOKED HAM ••••••••~~!; ••
lmEIUU
·
$
TURKEY FRANKS ....~!!••• 169
SWIFY
.
$289

Apple Sauce

BOLOGNA ••••••••••• ~.~.~~. 199
ECIIICH

.
.
air vtews on
'

.

issues during Gallia debate

Pork Chops

LB.

seeking to unseat Mrs. Abel, who was appointed to
the state office when .Jolynn Boster resJcned to
become cbalnnan of the Public UIUIHes Commls·
slon of Ohio. (OVP photo) ·

16

TURKEY ROAST ......~!!...

oz.

CANS

The candidates for state repre· tlon of classroom programs.
sentatlve for Gain a, Meigs and ·
"The formula that ~xlsts today
Athens counties appear to agree 1s a trage(ly, arid the fact Is It's
on a number of Issues, but differ tremendously outdated , tre·
on how to approach those Issues, mendously unfair and probably
tile' !1St In i '!ll!rii!S"O'f'fOtums at unconstitutional," ".Jones"sald. ,
·the Gallla Co11nty Senior Citizens
Landfills: •se•lous problem'
Center revealed Wednesday.
Asked about the problems
Rep.' Mary Abel, D·Athens, and facing county landfills, Abel said
her Republican · challenger, she helPed write legislation con·
Meigs. County Commissioner Rl· cernlng the environment and
chard"E : :Jones, aired their views recycling and urged the counties
before approximately 100 people Involved 'tn the regional solid .
at the event, sponsored by the waste management district to
GaiHpolls Area Chamber of Com· begin planning landfill needs. ·
merce and the Area Agency on
' 'The • district c an limit the
Aging.
amount of trash that can come
On education, which both can·
Into It, " she said. "It Is true that
dldates have cited as a priority eastern states are looking at our
Item, Abel and Jones both said area to dispose of trash because
the· funding formula ffor schools we're rural, but I will not support
In Ohio needs to be revamped.
any legiSlation that allows the
Willie Abel said the Issue will be importation of trash Into Ohio
addressed next spring when the that Is not already allowed under
new legislative session Is under· Interstate commerce rules."
way, Jones urged for 1he lmme·
Jones called landfill concerns
dlate setting-aside of money ~ ·a very serious problem" and
from the state budget for less said he found Gallla County's
fortunate school districts until desire to withdraw from the area·
changes are made.
solid waste district "justifiable"
Abel said the formula last because the the county's veto
underwent change In 1982, but power with the district had been
other factors have come Into play .removed.
since then and the formula has
Noting that the only other two
"not met the needs of the area."
landf!lls besides Ga'llla's are
She added that reallocation or
scheduled to be closed by the
redistribution of other funds,
EPA within a year, Jones said "It
such as. transportation, need to
could mean every b)t of garbage
be looked at to ensure conti!lua·
in the district could end up In
'

Gallla County, and people don't
want that to happen. It's a very
serious problem and It needs to
be addressed."
. . Publlll .!aput vi.tal
.Ob '~;motfu!tl '"!!rlvfi•onlmen.tal £i!\•
Issue .,- t)Je location of Industries
that create potentially hazardous
byproducts and w~ste - the
candidates each fLvored dec!·
slons being made by local people
after the .facts are presented by
the Industry, the EPA and" the
public at a bearing.
'We have to be very careful
about that kind of waste coming
Into our area, but we should not
t,ry to discourage Industry,"
Jones said. "Ithlnk we have to be
reasonable and follow a process
by holding a publiC hearing in
which the· facts come out. 11 the
community decides they do !lot
want this kind of Industry, then
they should do everything they
can to discourage it. But on the
otherhand,lffactsarepresented
by the EPA that were previously
unknown, then they should listen.
It's a local issue, but one should
listen (o all the facts first. It's
wrong to discourage Industry at
the outset."
"It's necessary to have a
public hearing and work with the
people Involved In this Issue to
make the necessary decisions,"
WHAT A TREAT. Bushel baskets or candy
Abel responded. ''Wbl!e there
treats
were given out to youngsters at tbe Mid·
are regulations, one of the things
dleport
HaUoween party and dozen or donuts
we need Is strong enforcement of
Rod
cinnamon
rolls, along with gallons of cider
the regulations. ·
.
"Tbeofflclalssbouldllsten,but
the people make the choice," she
added.
The candidates also agreed
.
·
'
provisions of the Clean Air B!ll
passed earner this year will have
a negative effect on the local
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
water or into dark areas.
economy , tied as It Is to the utility
Sentinel news stafT
In a little over an holir after the .and mining Industries.
A smashing success!
party. had started, 35 dozen donuts
Retraining, new Industry
That about describes the first an- and gallons of cider hl!d been con-,
Abel said she supports efforts
riual Halloween haunted · hayride sumed and -the Auxiliary was off in to retrain coal miners who could
and party held at the Middleport search of more: Me!Rbers finally be
put out of work by the bill's
Marina and hosted by Feeney-Ben· resorted to sem11g cmnamon roDs mandates, but added she Is
nett Post 128, American Legion, after purchasing all the donuts they trying to convince the Industries
and its Auxiliary, arid the ViUage of . could find in town. Bushe! baskets to re-educate the miners and
Middlepon.
·
of candy treats were gJYen out support employees for exiJiing,
BOO Gii!DOre, geneml chairman, during the evening, and everyone available jobs. Jones, however,
estimated that about 2,000 attended enjoyed the wiener roasL ·
said the answer to lost jobs lies In
the party.
Costumes were judged by Kathy attracting newer Industries.
Cider and donuts. were served, Chadwell, Marilyn Epple, and
A question submitted by a
candy treats were given out, and Betty t.pu Johnson with trophies member of the audience on the ol!
wieners were roasted around the being awarded in three clllegories and gas IndustrY and Its contlnu·
huge bonfire on the hiU overlook· in three age groups.
.
log potential In southern Ohio
illll the marina parking area. '
The first and second plllce wm- drew varied responses. Abel said
The traetor·pulled hay waaon ners in the birth .to B!X year !&gt;ld she bas eo-sponsored legislation
was busy all evening 1r811S)l011mJ caJego?' wm: prellleSl, Paige to Investigate new methods In
r,oungstr.rs and adults through Bradbury and Jonlann Thomas; dlsp«ising•of brine, the byproduct
Sleepy HoUow" wheie a do2en or ul!.!lest. Lucy Howcuon and Jen· of oil and gas drilling.
so scary action scenes had been niter Step, and IIIOit original, Jol!n
Jones ai!J'I!ed there Is a probmated by the I..egioll, Melp .Ktawtcz)'{l and Brialny'nloren; m ·lem with brine dlspolai and feels
County Jaycee members and other the 7 to 10 year olcla, jnttiesl. those Involved In the Industry
volunrcen.
' .
Cbarla Busp and Albley HlnDabs. will follow environmental rules,
Wilen the wait and the linCi to ugliest, Slllh CDla and Juon "but
need someone wltb
go on the haunted ·hayride became Knight, 'and m.ost orisina1. . John common aense In thedepUtment
too long the legio111181ICS ~ a Buuard and KriS Karawsczyn; and In Columbus. Ten yean ap, you
pickup buck into action alter load· in the 11 to 16 age group! pre~ wouldn't believe the dollar• oil
11111 its bed with hay.
.
DaJ:lene Doerr 8J!d Trishia Tob111, and gas brought Into our area. I
The Middleport fuimen and. . ugliest, Wanda Dickerson ~ ~­ think. It's 10metbing We have to
POPULAR nA111U • Tbe lllluated ..yrlde
police •••od in controlling the · !etta Bucldey, and most. ongJnal, look at."
WM a popalar featllre It Wlllaelday Dflllt'l
tllffk:, l'*'ing and llllloalling the ~eremy Johnson and Jennifer Flcm· ·
.MiddlePort commllllkJ ~ party. t. filet
Of rune and cllolce
wqon and truck, and seeing thai mg.
·
· On aborUon and women's
it 10 popular
tile llnel ll«ame 10 lonl
)'O!II1lllfm did not stray near the ·
that
.Bob
'Gilmore,
ttD•Il
ellairmu,
Continued on page 7
~

HaIIoween acti•VI•t•Ies
· 2 {)()() peopJe
attract

FULL CASE

R.C. Cola
24 12-0Z. CANS
LAY'S
'

Potato Chips

Alpo Dry
Dog Food
ALPO 14

oz.

10
·aAG

9
AlPO

99 LIVER SNAPS
LB.

oz. C~NS DOG FOOD ...........

W1R11ervethe

$

•

53(

PrieN

10

.9(
oz. 9

we .

li/

•

'

ucr

tlnall,

there.
RAC bad
U!ken several
precautions in anticipation o( a
strike. Windows to the office
buildings were boarded up, 7.000
feet of chain-link fence were eRe·
ted, cameras were insuined and the ·
plant's electrical transfOI'Diers ·lire
being protected by ttactor lniilell
and sheets of steel. Doyle added,the
union workers bad never given•ll1e
company any reason to make sqcb
anangements.
One union worker said be was
hilmiliated by the actions talcen ·by
the company. An estimated $2-3
million dollars was spent in !be .
preventative measures at. a ~
that has bad no violence. "Nothing
they .would do would surprise me,"
Doyle added.
. •.
Another worker added that if
someone would do damage to dne.
of lhe electrical units, that would ·be ·
the end of approximately 500 jobs.
Electricity is a ke~ element ;in
operations. ''We woiildn 't ~
our jobs." be stated.
:
As urtion members stood with
Continued on page 7

were served to the estimated 2,000 attending. ·
Among the American Legion Auxiliary members
serving at the party were f'rom the left, Marvel
Petry, Bridgett Jobnson, and EUa Roush.

�'

.

'

'·

Co_lllmentary
. ..

' "

\

I

The . D~ily Sentinel

.

.

Marys Memorial, Youngstown
CardluaJ . Mooney, Campbell
Memorial and St. Henry.
St. Milrys flnlsbed with a
170-158 margin over II!COad place
Beloit West Branch In Division
II, ·with the Roughrlders also
with a 1~ margin In first place
votes.
·
St. Marys finished a 10-0
regular season Friday night with
a 42-18 win over.Ellda, while West
Branch, alao 10-0, downed Niles
McKinley 34- 7. ·
Goahen advanced, one spat to
finish third In Division II, Steu·
benvllle tailing ODe&amp;J!.OI to fourth:
Columbus Bri(IP aga1n was fifth.
Rounding ·ollt the list were
Columbus . DeSales and Dayton
Dunbar In a tie for sixth, Rayland
Buckeye In eighth and Geneva
and Columbus Beechcroft tied
for ninth.
Mooney, 9-1, finished eight
NEW YORK ( UPI) - Jim son, was wracked by a drug POints up on Mentor Lake Ca·
Leyland, ·who guided the Pitts· !!Candal .and beset by fan apathy. thoUc (10.0) . In Dlvl.slon Ill burgh · Pirates to their first
In Leyland's first season at' 162-i54 - and held a 9-6 margin In
division title since 1919, Wednes-' Pittsburgh, ' the Pirates finished first place votes . CAPE was a
.
day was "amed l'fatlonal League last a third straight year. They distant third with 86 points.
Portsmouth
Bloom-Carroll,
~;mage~ of the Year bY the
tied fot fourth the next year, then
Baseball Writers' Association of challenged the Mets In 1988 and West and Amanda Clearcreek, '
a1110.0, finiShed fourth, fifth and
America.
ended up second.
sixth,
and were followed In order
Leyland reccelved 17 of the 24
Plnlella received three first' by Akron Hoban, Orrville, Ross·
ftrst-place votes cast by a place votes and 49 points, while
~BWAAcommltteecomprlsedof · Montreal's Buck Rodgers and' ford and Willard .
Campbell Memorial, which
two beat writers from each Tommy Lasorda of the Los
beat
Struthers 14·7 In overtime
National League city. He fin·
Angeles Dodgers tied for third . Friday night, had a final 167·155
lshed with 99 points, far outdls· with 32 pa(nts. Rod(lerS received
lancing Lou Plnlella of · the three first-place votes and La· margin over Loudonville In Dlv·
lslon IV In another two-team
champion Cincinnati Reds.
. sorda topped the final ballot. ..
The Red Devils also held a
race.
Pittsburgh, hurt by Injuries,
9·3 edge In first place votes.
·
finished fifth In the NL East In
J
LaFayette
J\llen
East
finished
.
1989. This season, with a healthy
116
paints,
followed
by
third
with
everyday lineup and key pitching
Bainbridge Paint Valley with 105
.from Doug Drabek and Zane
and
Versailles with 101. The rest
Srrilth,, Pittsburgh won the dlv·
of
the
IV list had Lorain Clearlslon , over the heavily favored
New York Mets. The Pirates lost
In slx games to the Reds In the
playoffs.
.
Leyland, 45, was a catcher and
career minor-leaguer In the
Petrol! organization. He then
managed 11 years In the minors
for the Tigers before being
named third-base coach of the
Chicago White Sox under current
Oakland ' manager Tony La
Russa.
·
·
He was named manager of the
Pirates In 1985 after four years as·
a White Sox coach. Leyland took
over a team In Pittsburgh that
finished 57·104 the previous sea-

Pomaloy-MidJiaport, Ohio

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS - Cleveland St.
Ignatius will win a third consecu·
live Division I state high school
football cha)llplonshlp, say
members of the UPI Board of
Coaches.
The Wildcats, who finished 10·0
this year and wlli .takea 39-game
winning streak Into this weekend's playoff action, were the
solid choice as the No. 1 team In
the final UPI Division I ratings.
- St. Ignatius, which whipped
Parma Holy Name 28·0 In Its last
re,gular season game, took over
as No. 1 the fourth week of the

Thunday, November 1. 1990
~ .

.Is Saddam as evil as they say?

.

.

..........

.

Jack Anderson

~

.

,'

reeent article

utters to the editor
l ,...
'

• •

Vote your conscious Nov. 6

,i' •

Pay-padding ·pols

face voters

....

Urges yes vote Nov . .6 .

. .·:·

season and was never seriously
challenged. The Wildcats' ftruli
margin over runner-up Sandusky
was al&amp;-1&amp;0 and 17·21n first place
votes. Both finished 1~.
Cincinnati Moeller, which lost
to St. Ignatius In last year's
championship game, wound up
third with 156, with Warren
Harding and Grove City round·
lng out the first fiVe with 148 and
136,fl!spectlvely.
·
The rest of the Division I top 10
list consisted of Cincinnati Prln·
ceton, Austintown Fitch, Middletown, Boardman and Chllllcothe.
The other follr No. 1 teams also
were the sanie as last week - St.

Jim Leyland is named
NL manager of year

.. .

Resporn;ls

Pomeroy-MiddlaPCllt. Ohio

~·

59~~~

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
44o 4524

:

~,

SuriOCO 10W30,
10W40or5W30
Motor Oil

STARTS TOMORROW!
FRIDAY 7:15,9:15
SATURDAY 3:15,7:15,9:15
S~DAY 3:15,7:15,9:15
HDNDAY thru THURSDAY 7:15,9:15

ttN;12

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - Thollnal
1990 Unll•d Preas Iaternatlonal Ohio Hlih
SChool Board of CoaclliS football ratlnp
(wtth first placo votes and woo·lost
records in parentheeesj:.

John's 22; 14. Doytca Wayne13; U . (tle)

River !Ide and Ptquo, 8 each;
. PalDelvOle
17. ~nllleld ~dllm 5: 18. WoMhlnatat

4; 19. (tle) Elyria and Ktnt RoCRVelt, 3

eadl.

. Dlrialoa I
T..,.

.

1. CleSt. lgnatlu! (17)

2. Sandusky

.

DMII.. D

Polola
(J.0.0) .............. 206

(2) (10-0) .......... .............. !60

T.....

Polllla

1. St. Marys Me"J ( 1~~F) ... ,(. ....... ~~

2. West BrOil&lt;~ I l (

......... .......... 116

3: .Clnctonatl Moeller (9-1) ................. 156
3. Goshen 110 &gt;... ..... ............... .... ......
9 1) .......................... . 107
4. Warren Hardlna: (1) (10.0) ....... .... .. .. 148 . 4. Steubenville I·
•"· Gr-City
(1) c1••1
136 • 5. C..lumbusBrlps (9-1) .... ................. ~
u•&lt;
~ " " " " " ""'• " " "
•
6
Col bu DeSII (8-2)
1$
6.. Ct~Prbtcetm(8-2) ...........................64 ' , ,(tle)
urn~
(a. """""" 1s·
21
0
7. Austintown Flteh (8-2) ....... .......... .. ... ! 7
Daytca
1)
............
8. Mlildletown (8-2) ............................ .. 40
8. Rayland Bu&lt;keye (9•1 l ............. .... .. .. 61 .
9 Boardman (!1·1)
36
9. (tiel Geneva (9·1) .............. ............ .. 33
10.Cilnucothe
Co1wn~s BoSoechl er ot~
t.... 33
Second ten : ll. MuslllcmJackson27; 12.
econd ten. .
on , 1 · non own
C..lumbus Brookhaven 23; 13. Toledo St.
Continued On page 4

bar?

111&gt;6i·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::34

13 '18-22ul. .l....

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lllblna' Corhpany/Multlmedta, Inc.~
Pomeroy, Oblo 4!17a, Ph. 812-21!1&amp;. s.;
coad elus PQitq'e paid at Pomeroy. ' .
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'
Member: United Pns• Intematlooal', "lnla!ld Dally Preoa Auoc:latlo!lli!CI tilt
. Ohio Nf'Wapa_pfr AAOClatiOD. NatiODIJ
Advertlltng Representative, Branhara
Newspaper Sales, 133 Third AVEnue.
New Yorl&lt;, New Yorl&lt; 100)7.
•

POSTMASTER: Sead addreU chan..O

to

1be Dally Sentinel,
Pomet'oy, OhloU789.

lU
·

Court §t;
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IIVII8CliiPTION IIA'I'Bfl •

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One Week........ .. ......................... ~10

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ElectroniC:· -·
Tune-Up KitS

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Final UPI gtid ratings

&amp;99

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L
.,_lliiellt,

.

'"~15

Values children's' education

=co ~

view In sixth, followed by Brook· Minster, wound up with a final m!)llt, Cincinnati Country Day
ville, Catdlnaton -Lincoln; 172-156 margin over Archbold and Fostoria St. Wendelln.
Mogadore fell from the top 10
Crookavllle and Wheelersburg. (10.0) and a 14-4 edge In first
place
.votes.
for
the first time all year amr;.
Brookville fell trom third last
Fremont St . Joseph finished 28- 12 loss to unbeaten Mantljll
week to seventh after Its first
third In' the small school voUng ·Crestwood.
.·
.
loss, 13-0 to Eaton.
122
points
followed
by
with
In Division V, St. Henry
completed a 10.0 regular season Ayersvllle and Minster In a tie for
The Daily Sentinel:
with a 46-14 · win over Toledo fourth with 106.
'
Franklin Furnace Green
Ottawa Hills.
(IJBPilfHel)
The Redsklns, ranked No. 1 the climbed from 11th last week to
A lllv- of Mlhlmedla, lac.
final six weeka of the season after sixth the final week and was
Publlab«l every ahemom, MondaY.
a 20.0 win over then No. 1 : foiloweit by Caldwell, MariethrOUJII Friday, .Ill Court St.. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley pul&gt;

Fuel

Says record speaks for itself

'*

· ~~.

..--

No more free rides

.

The Daily Santinei- Page- 3

Final UPI ratings released; SL Ignatius picked to repeat

Pega 2-Tha Dally se:uttu•

.,

first husband. Her second hUB·
swear they knew Saddam when
who
kept
a
vat
of
acid
to
dispose
Ill Court Street
WASHINGTON - President
'
he was young, or knew someone band, Saddam'li father, died
' .
of
the
bodies.
before Saddam was born. Sad·
Bush should be reading the latest
Pomeroy, Oh"
who knew him.
If
that
Isn't
bad
enough,
the
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
Intelligence reports al)put Sad·
The CJA also. has assigned Its. dam's paternal Influence came
reports
charge
·that
his
mother
from a stepfather straight outof
· dam Hussein with at least one
. psychlatrjgts to put Saddam on
tllb
.
.
was
ugly,
,
·
· a Dickens novel. The stepfather,
eyebrow raised In ·skepticism.
sm~ r-t""\_.1.._-,-' f""T"''ac::t ·~
The closer the United States the couch. Their resulting psy· known locally as "Hassan the
Granted,
the
president
of
Iraq
Is
~v
.
comes to war with Saddam, the cllologlcal profile says he Is
liar" played the Fagin role for
no saint. But the reports Bush Is
'.
more outrageous become the "megalomaniacal," "shrewd Saddam, sending him out to steal
getting
from
the
Central
Intelll·
CHARLENI!; HOEFLiCH
but often Irrational," has "delu·
'
' ROBI!;RT L. WINGETT
and possibly murder. '
gence Agency and the Defense tales from Saddam's !lark side. slons of grandeur," and so on,
. ' .. .
Geaeral Manarer
Publisher
The reporta say that when
Intelligence Agency amount to . Before Iraq Invaded Kuwait on with a blt of paranoid schlzophre·
Aug. 2, the reports were tamer,
•
Saddam earned a reputayoung
no
Jess
than
the
demonlzatlon
of
; .... .
and more credible. After that nla thrown In for good measure.
PAT WHITEHEAD
tion
as
a murderer, the vlllaprs
' 'I ' ,
Saddam.
What else would explain Sad·
date, U.S. Intelligence agencies
:
t ~ I
Allllllt1111l Publisher/Coni roller
could
always
tell his handiwork
Is
the
In
those
reports,
he
.
. dam's Stalln!stlc paranoid
original bad seed - unloved by put on a full-court press to get purges of the last decade, or his - he preferred shooting his
" A MEMBER otThe United Press International, Inland Dally Press
his mother, misdirected by his even the most ·extraneous tidbits rebuUdlag of the walls of Nebu· victims In the back. One report
' Association and the
American
Newspaper
Publishers
Association.
.
stepfather and uncle, a murderer of Information about Saddam.
•
chadnezzar's Biblical city of says he used a vat of acid, either '
The
CIA
h!ls
paid
thousands
of
at the age of 10 who preferred to
: ·'' ' LETTERSOFOPINIONarewelcome. Theyshouldbelesslhan300
Babylon w(th ·the name Saddam . In or near his home, to dispose of
dollars
to
Iraqi
Informants
who
shoot his victims In the back and
• · words Ion&amp;. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
!Jusseln stamped .on every lOth the remains.
At some point Saddam ·moved
name, address and telephone n~mber . No unsigned letters·will be pil bbrick?
' _llshed. Letters sllould be In good taste, addressing Issues, not persqnall·
In
.with .· his uncle, Khalfalla
There Is no question that ·
·
·
, ·; 1les.
Tulfah,
who gave the teen-ager ,
to
Saddam Is no Mother Teresa. But
' l it' ' •
a pistol and a car and
Saddam
the latest reports from the CIA
•
off to make his way In
sent
him
more, Mr. Jones was contaCted the and DIA look like a contest to see
Dear Editor:
the
world.
Saddam cbOJe to Join
next da~ about his failore to show who can trump whom with the the violent Baath Party at the
'
"
and · irutially responded that he most outrageous Saddam story.
'-" '
I feel compelled to respond to a
Saddam was born In the village age of 22. He was well-suited for
didn' t know anything about the
story that appeared in the Oct. 28
' the party's predllecllon to use
screening committee's meeting. of Takrll north of Baghdad. and force. When an official In Takrlt
Sunday
Tunes
Sentinel,
"Jones
' ·' '
(Keep in mind, he did return the most of hls closest aides today was murdered the year after
Speaks Out Against OEA Choice."
questionnaire that was being used are Takrltls.
In the article Mr. Jones questions
made by candidates running tor
~!!i' Editor:
His mother was a tyrant who Saddam joined the party, Sad·
for the evening's interview.) The
the
Ohio
Education
Association's
: I hope the voters throughout office, as the claims made by
had been married once before dam was the one accused and
OEA
screening
committee
went
so
thrown In jail for a time.
the state of Ohio are smart Sen Jan Long and Represen· endorsement of Mary Abi:J · for
far as to offer to reconvene in an at· and had three children by her
enough and honest enough, to see 'tatlve Mary Abel. They would' Slate Representative of the 94th · tempt. to hear wllBt Mr. Jones ~ to
111e. political purpose of the
have us believe that they are ' Disbict. He adds that he wishes
say. Mr. Jones chose nQt 10 do this.
(;;el'i!ste adm!nlstratlo.n, f·or
solely responsible for every they woul&lt;! "look at · both our
Yes, Mr. Jones, the OEA did ·en~pending the hundreds of mil·
grant and every bridge and records and listen to what we both
dorse Mary Abel for State
lions of · dollars of taxpayers highway Improvement In their have to say about education."
Representative of the 94th Distrjct.
Mr. Jones has apparently forgot· The endorsement was a result• of
:rtiOtiey on roads, bridges and dIs trlcts. To be bones t they are
'g rants ot every description,
only tools of the democratic ten about the opportUnity he had to her excellent rewrd of voting on
present his record to the OEA. The educational issues. She has proven,
during the last two years, espe·
political machine In Columbus.
Sincerely,
OEA House Disbict 94 Screening by her past actions, to be a friend of
clally the last year of hls
By LEON DANIEL
Committee
met' on thursday, Aug. education. We also feel that her inadministration. I also hope that
Marshall M. Burnett
UPI Chief Correspondent
Republicans Democrats alike P.S. Don't forget bow we had to 30, for the purpose of screening the
WASHINGTON - Those lovable bozos In Congress who awarded
into the problems facing
wm: be stronl! enoul!h to vote dodge the pot holes. during the two candidates of the 94th Disbict. sight
themselves
a pay raise before bopping their cons(!tuents with new
education in the 90's is commentheir conscious on Nov. 6
first six years of the Celeste The time, date, and location had
taxes
are
going
home to campalgrt for re-election.
. ·
dable.
.
; I~ my lifetime I have never administration.
been murually agreed upon by both
When
all
the
votes
are
cOunted,
the
great
majority
of
Incumbents
So, Mr. Jones, the next time that
beatd of as many false claims·
candidates. Each of the candidates
will have retained their seats, proving once again that the American
you
are approached by those who
'
had
received
and
returned
their
•.
that the OEA has been ueating . taxpayer can take a joke.
questionnaires prior to the Aug. 3Q ·. feel
'I .• ,
Ills the Republicans who appe'ar to be most threatened In the Nov. 6
you unfairly, tell tllem the b11th. ·
meeting.
·
elections,
mainly due to President Bush's plummeting popularity
~
Tell them that you.had your chance,
On
the'
evening
of
Aug.
30
Mary
.arter
he.'broke
hls promise that there would be no new !axes.
1 • .•
level of operation to provide you Abel appeared before the commit- but you chose not to appear.
Some GOP candidates publicly rejected Busll's capitulation, while
·Dear Editor:
Democrats gleefully exploited his flip-flop.
: lVe would like to take this with the necessary government tee, as scheduled, to respond to our
Gary Phillips
questions and to make her stand for
; ~~to urge the residents ofthe seni!ces.
Democrats charged that the president's refusai to accept higher
38133 Hemlock Grove Road
Please vote YES on the 3 mill education. Richard Jones, however,
I \ltllage of Racine to vote YES on
levies
on the rich makes him a champion of the fat cats.
Pomeroy, Ohio
was nowhere to be found. Further• There Is a groundswell out there In the real worl!l beyond the
' tiW: upcoming 3 Mlll Renewal Renewal on November 6.
Remember: This Is not a new
Washington Beltway for throwing all of the rascals out, built won't
: Ljlvy that wlll run for five years
tax!
• filr:eurrent expenses.
happen.
Thanking you In advance, we
Challenged lawmakers are shielded bY bulging war chests and
l.The money generated by this
remain.
llenewal goes Into the Vlllage
other perquisites of Incumbency that make them virtually
Sincerely,
our scllQols. With a 15-year tax
To all tax paying homeowners:
General Fund. Genetal fund
Invulnerable.
abatement it is possible for people
Frank Cleland, Mayorri .
moneys are used tor . current
If most of the current campaigns are less Interesting than watching
Jane Beegle, Clerk
10 have a riew home ani! never pay · paint dry, a few races are proving lively.
Ppeall!!l for operating the vii·
Is it fair for some homeowner.! .to
Robert Beegle, Councilman be able to vote more taxes on your' taxes on it to help pay fdr ·the · Down In North Carollha, some thoughful voters want to relieve
('age government - electricity,
Henr)r Bentz, Councilman properly without being required to education of their own children. If Jesse Helms of his day job as a U.S. senator so the Republican
llll!lurance, pallce, building main·
Ronald
Clark, Councilman pay more cin their own 'homes?
there is mone~vailable to provide stalwart can devote his full time to art crtltlclsni.
i4!Jiance, street .lights, and etc.
Carroll Teaford, Councilman
. ,.-1'he v!llage must have this 3
Should those of us who cannot up to $5,000 fbl preparing a lot for . Now that Helms has slain world communism, they say, his devotees
Jeff Thornton, Councilman afford to build a new home in a cer- · new construction there is enough should let the 69-year·old defender of the tobacco Interests lay down·
;mlil renewal approved In order
Larry Wolfe, Councilman tain area or choose to live elsemoney to give to the schools to his sword and light up.
;tor. us to maintain our present
replace
what they have lost on the
Although Helms du !I fully seej(s re-election, he might secretly
where be forced to pay for the
new
homes
already built or to be · welcome more time for hls primary passion -perusing pictures for
education, emergency and fire ser''f • ' •
possible prurience.
vices, street and road repairs, health built that are not being taxed.
The village is collecting an inThe man who would give Helms a rest bY replacing him In the
deparunent and all the other varied
:.. '.:bear Editor:
School District and in state services our real estate taxes come tax from these people to help Senate Is Harvey Gantt, 47, a liberal black architect who served as
:J;am a teacher in Meigs County government service. She currently provide for these few exempt pay for village services. The mayor of Charlotte.
schools and county deserve to be
In his campaign to relieve Helms of his senatorial chores, Gantt
.
wfiD ~ wholeheanedlr with serves on the House Education homeowners?
paid
for
the
services
provided
for
visited
each of the North Carolina's 100 counties to Inquire politely of
If
all
areas
of
the
county
were'
altlii: Ohio Education Association's Commiuee. She has introduced and
the
voters
what the old man had d6ne for them lately.
these
people.
.
.
.
Clkldrsement of Mary Abel for worked for legislation to improve lowed to abate taxes on new conThere
should
not
be
any
more
If the polls are credible. Gantt IS running about even
Not
enough,
Sbte Representative from the 94th schools in our area. She ·has struction to bring in more people
free
rides.
18-year
Incumbent, the champion ofthe zealots on the radical
with
the
the tax base would not suppon all
Qistrict. This endorsement was not repeatedly stressed her commitright who once was deemed Invincible.
Ailen Lipscomb
made by strangers in Columbus, ment to securing equity in school the required services.
In Texas, GOP gubernatorial candidate Clayton Williams, who
Maybe
the
village
should
be
refunding
which
is
important
for
our
Clark
Road
llut l'lllher by tea:hl;rs on a screenbought
the nomination With some Of the mllUons he made In oU and
quired
to
make
up
the
difference
to
Pomeroy,
Ohio
schools
of
Southeaslerll
Ohio.
ins committee from all of . the
ranching,
·may yet snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
I find it odd that Mr. Jones is
~I districts in the 94th Disbict:
The
sawed-off
cowboy Impersonator squandered his big lead over
candidates were invited ·ro oow upset over our endorsement of
State
Treasurer
Ann
Richards by shooting himself repeatedly In the
tbeir positions before the Mary Abel. Mary's reconl .obwhen
II already was In his mouth.
foot,
sometimes
·
g committee. However, viously speaks for itself while
Television
cameras
recorded Williams' latest gaffe ~ his public
Mr. J~ failed to sh.ow up Jones chose not to share his educa.
1b the voters of Eastern Local system be dissolved?
of
Richards'
offer
to shake hands. Texans knew a real cowboy
refusal
appomtment, 11 was unpos- tional priorities with us prior to our School Disbict:
2. Will we have to consolidate just wouldn't act like that.
•
~
to detennine his position on endotscment.
with another district and pay high
At roundup lime In Texas, Claytle WUllams Is looking as mournful
Sincerely yours,
CiWaaon issues.
The Eastern Local School system tax rates equal to their millage?
as a motherless calf, and Richards Is humming, "Git along, little
Joy Bentley
;Mary was endorsed for the fol3. Would our students receive a . dogie. "
is having financial difficulties along '
.
Box 188
reasons. She has a sound
with many other School systems. better education or would they be
Syracuse, Ohio
· of experience,. both as a
We are currently paying 20.5 mills the step-children of the district?
t$dler in the Federal-Hocking
4. Will we lose local conb111 of
in support of the school system.
''
This is the lowest in Meigs County, our schools?
In the past our grandparents were
the lowest in Southeastern Ohio,
I'
farsighted
enough to pay for our
and the lowest allowed by the slate.
I
education.
Don't our children
The ~tern system· is asking the
deserve
as
much?
Dear Editor:
taX payer to vOte yes on a five-mill,
the state and additional donations
Children are our greatest natural
, The Olive Township VOlunteer to our department seem 'unlikely.
two-year, operating · levy. This
Depia bltent has placed a 1.5
Unfortunately, during the same would keep our dislrict together un· resource. If you value education
.l!liiL· S year, levy on the Novanber time period we were able to save til' the sljlte legislators and courts and the students of this disUict,
-HiiiioL The funds will be used to money by getting the above items decide on the best way to fund our please vote yes ·on Nov. 6 and sup·
~ e new equipment, maintai,n donated, we fiiCed several unexpec• schools-a
time
consuming pon our schools.
dOnprove current equipment and ted repain to our lppllllltus, incluil- process.
Very b11Iy yours, ·
i.O dsver all day-to-day opciationai inB 56.000 worth cif overhaul work
The failure of the emergency
e~ ot the depaiunent.
Ronald and Oayann Clily
on the pump of OUT 20 year old operating levy would leave many
/IbiS is only.the fourth levy in the pwnper.
unanswered questions.
36180 Allen Street
• t . "
3(fyear hisUJIY of our departmenL
I. Will the Eastern Local School
Chester, Ohio
Our current levy brings us about
Tllis levy will replace our current $8,000 a year. These expensive,
mill leYy. The 110111 .cost per unexpected items are impossible to
y,ar to die owner of a $30,000 budget for when we must use more
hOuse is about $45. It is expected and more of our budget to cover intl\at this levy will bring us about creases in daily expenses such as
$13,000 per yell'.
that's not what it's there for. In Sepgasoline and insurance.
·
Dear Edilor,
: We are setling the slilbtly
tember alone, 36.000 items were
Our funcDisen bring in some
They say .there is no industry in
~igher milllge IJec!!l!e, not only
extrll money and the donations we Meigs County. Well, in S~use, shilliJed.
~ we r.oecl with increasins costs
Th~ items are sent to the conreceive from local businesses do Ohio there is an industry. It s called
Of dly-to-day ilems but Rgulations help us keep our COSIS down but we 'Meigs Industries, Inc.
tractor, then distributed to major
·:repnlial fudgbliaf and hope that you will understand and
There are 106 employees. chain suns and bui1den all ovu
;fire..... llfety lie mquiring us to suppon our request for additional Products
are made, assembled, the United SillieS and they AIL
.buJ ,1101e eqwpnent. . filet. we lalldollan.
packaged and shipped from this come from Meigs County, and they
I.M 111 replace all of • lirefighrer
company, with all wort being done are AMERICAN MADE.
pecjlecdve p lhal we owned live
The pofiJS fJOm the prOducts are
Dirk J. Kleiss, Secretary
by employees who ~~e dt.aling with
~..,.
Olive 1bwuship VOlunteer F'ue mental retardation and various han- paid to the employees (clients) of
1fe '-ve been f011UJ111e in one
dicaps. There's not a profit bec•m•e Me' Industries not the staff. Slaff
eqiaipmeni·Jdalcd aspect Over the
is ~ from county funds collected
1.- line yen, we have bad 110111e ·
from milllp. Our clients no longer
~ gllll' and pegen donaled
do simulaled work. They do tW
wort for real pay.
to:•~non-polit group from the
('oil- . The Jllgal belp us
I urge you 111 vote for the Meigs
~ 111ert JDCn Wlbren when lhm
lnclusbier/Cirleton School levy and
· To the voters of Sutton quale to mow ano care for
is ll).eDIIIJPIICf. 't'bey 11e • item
keep this industry open to those
who deserve iL Keep·the dollln in
cemeteries in the manner which the
dilt "' ,.oa1d have beeD unlltely Township:
(!; t990 by NE". one .
~ lllll\tilla on our own, due to
On Nov. 6 the vortzs of Sutton . IIUJ!ees and the public desires.
Meigs County and keep those
I
Townahip will have an opportunity
Your favorable ~Ole on Nov. 6 · workers in their jobs.
tllli~- Wblle dliJ
"Tell me about It, "11khail! Hey. do you want to
bal
I
almoll
of to ¥010 on a ball-mill (O.S} levy for would be apprecialed.
ecro'if! • 10 our
tbey optntinJ
compare ~pproval ratings?"
aad
malntamiDg
c:emetenes.
•
~
•ba.e:lllo llt»ived Jllllllo.llld mm
Suaon Towllsbip Trustees
'&gt;I!"P"'III from deplrlmiiiU acroes
The present fimds ~ not adeFol1e11 V• Meter, cbalrma

.. ....
.

.

Thursday, November 1, 1990

.' '

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j

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 1, 1990

Pom•oy- Middleport. Ohio

Thursday. November 1, 1990 .

Ohio State's Robert Smith to weigh options
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI• - · ern Califor nia. '
myself 'Is t this really a fair
Ohio State's Robert Smith says
" I love Ohio State and the
trade-off? '
he' s keeping his options open.
chances and opportunities I've
"lth!nk If some6ne Is unsure ot
Smith, the Buckeyes' outstand· been given so far ," said Smith,
their future and where they're
lng freshman running back, has who Is fewer than 200 yards away
headeil, then It (leaving) could be
hls sights set on poaslbly leaving . fr om breaking Archlee Griffin's
a bad thing," he said. "I'm not
Ohio State after his junior year to OSU freshman rushing record of taking ·an egotistical standpoint,
pursue a career In the NFL and 867 yards . ' Then again, I want to butlknowmy mental abilities as
also enroiiiD medical school.
get to the point where I'm In
well, and I'd never let leaving
" What ·'I 've determined control as soon as possible.
early ruin my plans lor an
through my flrstfew cluses Is , l,t Becau~. very honestly, we're education,
things progress as they have, In · ·not In control here . They're In
''I'm not going to say I'm not
my junior year 1 could be eontrol of us. .
100 percent Into · this stuff, beaccepted Into medical school, "
' 'We get an education out of it. cause I'm going to do what these
said Smith, who leads the Buck· But s()metim~s •.when It's 7:30 In ·guys brought medoWilheretqdo.
eyes In rushing witli 671 yards the morning and we're getting up They're paying for my educaand a · 6.9 yards per carry to I!O ' to study table, I'm asking tlon, as long as I'm here.
average.
" If I did gain acceptance In
medical school, and knew where
I
I was11eaded In that - my most
·important focus In life - I very
.'
possibly would leave at that
time. "
Smith, a 6-foot-2, 195-pounder.
: !rom Euclid, was one o!the most
heavily recruited high !!Chool
players In the nation a year ago,
selecting Ohio State over South·

COBB'S

Lake II; 13. Alii- It; II. l~e} Wapakmeta and Cincinnati Nortbwes t, 9 each;
16. (Ue} Footcrla and VennUion, 8 each;
IS. Bellefontaine 6; 19. M.lple Heights 3;
20. Whl4eh.,... Antbooy Wayne 2.

(VPI)

Kosar, Pagel say there's
~o quarterback con~versy

S169

S169

DOWN

PER MONTH

Pomeroy, OH 4576Q

~Young

DOWN

'"

.
'•

PER MONTH

..
..•'

~

,,
•

"..•

a mqnth.

Exp.ndltures

ELECT

$25,22t . 60

&amp;3,203.11

li,211.U

$t,410.01

.

..

. t

l

•

' San Diego State
San Jote Slate

38

23
30
24
27
22
42
34
23
23
24
31
.27
28
35
27
27
28

24

• WliillingtOn

• Waatem Michigan
• YoungsiDwn

992-3322 ..

Bootonu. · .

• Cenlrll Florida

"Ciaclll

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o.ta....

NORTH SECOND AVE•
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

"EaltT•,_...

Keno"*'
~"" W.lllngten

&amp;.1om

Florida A a Y

VALLEY LUMBER
555 PAIIC ST.
li!IDDLEPOIT, OHIO
992-6611

28
34
17
38

Ylilke Fonttl
• South Carolina
• Nevada-Laa Vega&amp;
New Mexico
T.C.U.
Iowa
• Kanw State
Cincinnati
East Carolinli

Pilllbutgh ·
Ealllllm Michigan
indl~r~a

24

7
7

Wyoming

'Purdie

10
14
14
16

'Kanl Slale
• Air Force
Bal Slale
Nol1h carotina

8
21
23
14
13
21
21
17
14

6

20
10
21

7 •

·

17
14
22
17
20

• Wiaconain
' L.S.U.
Colorado
• Allron

Navy

6

Nonhwestem
• Missouri

Kansaa

U.C.LA.

P0111and State
• West'llrginia

M&lt;ansas
Utah

• Fullerton State
• SW Loullliana
Calilomia
Wllllhington State
• BoiiDn ColaQa

,...;;;pie

•Texao Tech
'S.M.U.
New Mexico Slall
Nol1h Carolina Stale
Gaolgia Tech
ArizDi1a
Toledo
Ohio .

10
13
22
13
21
13
23
20
7
14
21
27
14

7

13
7
19
21
17 .
14
16

n

.......UHtl.

~~-

.~==s.:::r

--

•

.

'

23

' Prl1- I-I -

21
30

• HouiiOn
·
. .lam
._

'Z1
23
a20
23
27

v•

•

."
j

Baum
Lumber .

•
•
'
'

~

I

,,

CHESTER, OHIO
985-3301 or 915-3303

l
~

3 COJIYENIENT LOCATIONS
. . _ , W.Va.

773-5514

675-112•1

Ridenour
Supply

~

ClbiB, OliO
915-1101

~

. ......wlli

21

17
21

27
20

10

20

17

ao

11
23
14

24

20

~

SOuJMm Connecticut

28
23
24

."""""''""'
" Tuft1

Wilt Chttter Sta•
• W.lmiMter

33
27

13
ro

• Buffalo u.
· C. W. P01t
Hlmilon

21
23

wuJu~ume

[:

• Plymoulll

"
•
10

• JeNI Cl rg

' !;_hoJftO' Swe

.

• Alhland
-

21
27

""Gia1

· -lndlanapolll
.
Tibor
. . 0111

• Centtll Olllahoml.

44
31
21

• COl

21

Camloi.IA

• ()aylon

"
30

• Oolionco

• E"110ria St..

21

~·

' F.mo

&amp;If c.Nral Oklahoma

'Hoo=

.I

·~

37

' Hiram a.NE
Grinnell
• Bllekburn, IL

Mlclllftd
Millourl Southt1n

28
21
24

" Doane
' MIMouri·Roll a
'8oMr

31
28

33

• Karl... Wellt¥an

28

MioooyriV~Ioy .

Mount Union
. .... k~um '

35
22

• NE Mlliourl
• Nontl O.kOta awe
• Notth DUota u.
Northern Colof.to
Ncwthlm Michigan

31
40
24

P.eru
• 8E Ul&amp;lourt
• SE OldaftOml.

St. ~d
Whulon .
• Winona St•
' WIICOnll~StevtM Point
Wlaenbefg

-

,..

.._

LMelllid

7

.

Bethel, KS

• ..........
• c.-..

Mlllowl Weater11
Ntbrulr.I·Ornatla
M1nkalo

• Teau A I I
Valdolta
W•t VIrginia Stall

........
COIPotr

~

:M
23

'81. JOHPh'l

• NW Wluourl
CenlriiWIIIourl
NW Oldahoma
• 8oalttl Dallota u.
~~

Wilc:oNin-S~Ior

35
28

~

:M

!?
-

·=o_.
....
.........

31
23
22

30
34
34

Clark

• Monlli Brvwn
• $hopllord
' e..t TeiM
Willi

' Am111111 Tedt

wtna••
• W.l Texu
N~

EmcHY I He;nry

• LM'b.lltl'

• Wahlnalon I LM
' Moohodliot, HC
Wcnho11•
H.....
T'!! ......
11 •• ,_
• F.,..,..
W.l Georgia
• J . C. SMtti

. -Bltdaon••
.·-.r. VA
f:on VAIIy

• TeMMIM W•le)'an
OUchla
LMnpkln
•

Abl6eM ChrlaUMt
• Ditta he
• Glenvlle

Other Gam .. -Fer Weot
24 ' • Menlo P•k

COI-IloW

'Ciaromont

L_.l Claltl

'Z7
30 .

27
27

'N
'H. ;:rh
W1l

Podi~U .. OA

211
M
46

·a.-r
...

24

~

M

• Fotflewll
8ouiWn Oregon

• Sacramento SUile

a.
n

SantaC.•
· AlUM

. ........ Uioh
• Sl. u-.,.c~

38

·---·

'PM:IIcLI.Itwan

w.wn nunlnglan

34

27

Zl

SanFranca..St• •

cal LWWan

H-

P. . . Sound

FOR SUNDAY AND MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4 AND 5
BUFFALO ....... ........................ 24 **CLEVELAND ...... ......... ......... 20

Browna, on 6-gama win atrNk vs Bllla,leaclllflel 7-2. Cleveland won playoff game In
'89. 34-30, Intercepting pau on one '~&gt;·yard line In final 3 aecond1 to hold othkllla.

CHICAG0 ...........................•.. 23 ••TAMPA BAY ........................ 10

Chicago had won 12 atralght fl'om B1101' til T.B. collapled &amp;Nr-dan t..t -aon. Buca beet
INn twice In ftm-- -aon-- p . T.B. ·won 42-31 at homa. 32-~1 In Chicago.

112-2.1~6

17
14

14
20
22
20

14

7

7

1.

21

0
17

23

14

21.

•
••
7

12

20
20
13
17

r--------COUPON--------,
I
·I

1
I

OIL CHANGE SPECIAL

$1695

. lnclu@a.UpTo
6
Quarts of on.
1 GM
Cara Only.
I

CROWS
Family Restaurant

10

992-5432

"
20
17

•

,.•
20

24

20

1.

POMEIOY, OHIO

·TUESDAY NIOHT SPECIAL
ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT

13
21
23

ONLY$3

10
7

49

••

24

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY.

VALLEY
SOFT .DRINKS- FRIES · SANDWICHES

rlt~klf Speciale
At The End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

992-2556

·· '

Pomeroy,

.~ ........................ 30

**MINNEIOTA .....•................. 24 DENVER ......•......................... 23

Vlltea IHCI brlaf sll'laa 3-2, winning lalt meeting In '87, two dluppolntmanta. Noh
elcllad to win II dlvlalon. Bronco ct.fanH pooraat In AFC, VllcaaloHin 4th quaners.

•NEW YORK JETS ................ 21 DALLAS ................................. 20

c-bov--JIII have mat just four tlmaa, Dellaa winning all by 10 polnll or more. Wont
Jst wipe-out wasl2-10 back In 1170, lelttNm that heathe ball could win thla one.

••PHILADELPHIA ..................

:27

NEW ENGLAND ..................... 13

Eqlaa hew ·blltan , ... thl'lf' ltralght, last one 34-31 In OT In '87. N.E. offenH poo·
reat In AFC, ~~ average Of 16 polnta per game thN first six. giving up 188 polnta.

461 S. Third

992-2196

win.,.

...
.,

.

.,

.:::

' i!

.,,
...
t.._l).

"ff CHRYSLER
MOTORS

CHRYSLER
~.Itt..
Pl YMOUTH-DQDGE .,.~

..._______________.
399 S. Third

Middleport, Oho

uC:CIIM'g1ra by tobil crt - • polllta, wll•*ll tw1oa In
.,.. point. than 10-7 an lwnle mIn lilt 40 - •

1101111 far '10 1111o1uNt1 by4S-24 loel to Chi!Hs. ~ 38-21 .._to T.l ..... •13.
fMon. Nlg~) N.Y. GIANTI: ..... 23 ••INDIANAPOLIS ........ ,.......... 13
t11m1 hewn't met In 11 ywra, (laltlmore) Colta winning'-' foUr In • ,_,outscoring
Olanta 101 to 141 NV clefe~ttullowed opponentlj.,.. 14pol'tltal*'gamethrough al•.

.

PAT HILL A~

**IEA'ni.E ............................. 20 SAN DIEGO ........•.............•.... 14

WASHINGTON .•.....•..•............ 30· ••DETROIT .•........••••.••....... ..... 20
Radlldna .._domll 11 • Llana."
lilt 12mel'ah upe, lnlllnt ..... I0-8- Delnllt'a

~

Middleport, Ohio

Stlialeralooldng for 8th ltralgllt win over Atlane, laat mat In '87, Pitt winning 28-12.
· Stlieleralelld one sided ..... 7-1. nelthar t•m predictable (who Ia In FNLII
,
SAN FRANCISC0 .................. 31 **GREEN BAY ........................ 17
4a.. lelld oloHIMlasvsP'8Git24-21. SF, at !loma. ahooked by G.B. leatfall. 21 -17,
Ql Don Mlilkowlkl Nmlng for two Pack TDI, 48an unable to ._.In finalS mlnutaa.

8elhuuks won lui thrw
W. I.D. IIIII 17-11 an~

Ohio

PAT HILL
·FORD

**KANSAS CITY .............•...... 28 L.A. RAIDERS ........................ 24

· Each won at home In inltcll-upa lilt -IIIII, CN.fs baelllllfRaldera 24-18 Cln Chris Okoye'a
TO nm In 4thquMiwi. LA. lid bV BoJecban'a Ill yanlland .m , won-d gamaZ0-14.

•

POIEIOY, OHIO

..•
17

I

"2-2174

500 EAST lAIII

21

21

.
1

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

10
10
14
13

1.
I

Expl,. 11-16-90

.RamaiHCI Mri11 3-2. Ollan w!nnlng lalt m~ng In '87. Aama big dluppolntmant llka
Broncos, Vlkea, giving up a.verage of 29 polnta par geme thN flrat alx. Oller road win7

PhOMIIx Carda hew nevw pleyecl Dolphina, but St. Loula Cerdaloat all five maetlnga,
ICOrlnJ. II polnta to Mleml'a 1111. Miami end Buffalo making tight recaln AFC Eeat.

@.

915-4222

NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

•~

• Sav.mah Sla~
S.WanM

~~epo~~siiiMak•

I
20
11

28
311
34
211

• LlftOit·Ah.,_

8
7
22

• Nor1h Park

• Ferrum

· ~

8
21

Pump
XL 1200.
Super Efficiency

31

24
&lt;12

• Jadllonvtle Slate .

12
IG
11

SMITH~

21
23
23
21

48

~. KY
Ouii!Onl
-S"'"'r

21

SALES • SERVICE
INSTALLATION
fur-.1
• Air Cllllltlon••
llloh IHidoncy
Enwv '-!rlni tltat Pumps

.13
t3

23
34
Z1

E111wn New Mulaa

•
12B
a8

•• llllln
McPherson

Central Arkanlll

' Eion

1D

:10
24

. • Art:anlu· PIM BIU"

• ConCOfd

COOLING

217

• Bouttl Olkota S1ale

41

~ 9Jiulin

AND

23
21

• o.n11on
Other G•m••- South 6 Sauthweot

• AII!Owna At M
Albany, GA

Pomaroy, OhiO

28

30

.onawa-

.

tlag-V~Ioy

. ---"""'
Hllkil
• tllnoil
eo•
Iowa wetle)ian

.

HEATING

24
20
I

llulll..

• Kei'!'ll'

34

'

.•

WARNER

13
7

u-.

••

992·3671

1gB

c.n.ton

Fon " -

• ar.tvlll

ANDERSON'S

""

= =:

• Clttlloft

Strta you want
in the sizt you nattl

7

Othe.r Gam.. -llidweat

:' 8Mtlaft1,
tl:tn.~lic.
K8

w...... the

••PITT8BURGH •.....••..••......••.. 28 ATLANTA .••..•.....•.. ........•. ....... 24

~...

••
..:

-·

fueclutf'llnnll

27
24
Z1

•

at a price you111ike.

7
21
12

· ~- Va~t~~r

22

'L• lltddloboiry

'11

"WIIMI

**MIAMI ................................ 28 PHOENIX ...........•.•................. 20

Pl. l'loe-1, W. Ya .Now Hew.,, W.

'

~·

" LabMon V.lly

lo-.
HOUSTON ............................. 31 ·••L.A. RAMS

MEMBER FDIC
luroND STRUT JACKSON AVE.
S~h STREET

..."'

13

Ed

34

S.tealtendllt 3-3 ainc111st n(eadng In 1970. Sal111 won lest INICCh-up 111'87, 41-24,
NCh hU U1lcen embll"llllng
N.O. 32-3 to VIIN, Bengel8 48-17 from Ollert.

Bank

•i

..
•

~

...,. ff ~

fJ~

21
14

**CINCINNATI ....................... 30 NEW ORLEANS ...................... 27

Peoples

,,'
'
.,''

i'•

9lrDUdlbulg
lndlaM. u., PA
JuNaa
~

U}~
••
J. J·

11
DISCOVER WHY
11
PEOPLE SAY, . IIDr]pl•

2!
13 •

THE·.BOB HARMON PRO .FORECAST

..

..••

I

&lt;;loOpbuSh~

17

Wheel Horse PoWer 'Mlrks For You:

..

•

..

"'

•

24
10
7

• Central
Cc»nnec1lcul·
Loc::kHtwn
'II...,_

24
21

• SoutMfn ArlwiNI
" T..,.....Mattln

7

'Z1

• Dk;tkaon, P4

21

20

31

• Cottllnd

211
~
....

•
...1.
...

..

ClooiDn

.
•• = 1 .·Macon

10

.,

• Clillomlll State, PA

7
14

CMIIh•
·-

.211
24
17
24

20
20

7

24

21
3D

2S
33
24

13

23
24

• Nttetl '

L~.1 lltDM
• North Aa.tlama
North Cvollna Central

17

:..

Norl" Carolina AI T
·-h-

·r..,
..a..a.,.._
W.IOm K"""""i'

10

21
12
23

21 .
35

..

· r... , .... Teet.

14
0·
20

21

·~~-._..,..In

• 8outlwft .....

8
21

:M
a

311
!4
20

LoulliaM Ted!

15

..atl1

·IINII8tll1
·• JICUon
••

' !lo~JC-

...
1.
1.

:;12

·--

•• ,

Other Gem• - 'Eaat

....... NY

8
21

1M
30
'n
28

1M
a
1M
30

Llf~en.

•
''

23
21

·
--'HMootd

'Novado--

..

•

Ru. .rs
• Florida

21
30
23

oiO
30
41
31

Funnan
• ..,__,..

•

38

33

·Wtw~

·'•.

Pel. by JONES for Repr-ntetlve, George Colli no,
Traaurer, 110_, l'lce Run Rd. 1 Raedavllle, OH

• Milllinippi Stale
Olegon Slate

lhjor Collegn - Dlv. lt-.v.

~

Q772

Rice

' Vwginia

"•

$1, '". 77

23
26
27
17
28
31
21
24
22
24
28
27
30
28
24
24

26

AI:Gda=hlan Stall

l
i .

.

Penn Stale

. 'V.P.I.

''

RICHARD E. JONES
94th District

• Paalc

Ta..,.
Texas A &amp; M
' Utah Stall

Queen

•
.,•

•eeo.oo

$72,613.12

'0reaon

Soulh'n Mlsslsall'f'l

Dairq

••••

CHEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE
CADILLAC·GEO, INC •.

TOTAL

• Nebruka
Northam llinaia
Nolnl Dame
' Ohio Slall
Oldalloma
• Oklahoma Stale .

~18C1118

12,900

--.

Minnoiaota
Miuialllppl

.' Tonnaaaee

COIPE............................... 8,99 5

Pllrty

~

• MichiUan Slate

' Stanford

USED CAR SAVINGS
8,995
••cuu
s.7,895

Closing Balance

I

99.2•2342

Loullllila
• Memphis State
'Miami Fi
' Miami: OH

'Southem Clliforn1a

,

.

111 East ·Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
'r

',,

TheFACTSon
CAMPAIGN SPENDING

NOBODY OWNS RICH JONES-.
NOBODY EVER WILL.

• HousiDn
• llliiloia
Iowa Stall

DOWNING CHILDS
.MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE

•
•

S243

Cobb

Florida Slale
Fresno Slall
• Hawaii

At

S159

fi' S99 '$295

' Duke

•.J

1991• '
S-10 TRUCK

PUBLIC NOTICE

• Cenlnol Mchigan
• Ciam1011
'Colorado Slate

992-2057
698 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

•

1991*
FULL SIZE
TRUCK

.STATE REPRESENTATIVE

Sundry Needs See Us"

AUburn
Bowling Gr.n

S189 S189

Jim

For AD Your Prescription and

6141667-3'161

• Arizontf Siale
• /vmy .

St~rting

S99

tln'"

Qoule 7
P 0 . Box 339

sat., Nov. 3 - .MaJol: Collegaa • Dlv. 1-A

1990*
PRIZM

Pobats

253 NORifl SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THE BOB HARMON FORECAST .

FUll SIZE TRUCK

::
CoUep
King's Col)ege . In WllkeiBar;re, Pa., will reinstitute vartlty; · football tor tile firat time
since the proeram wu dliCOnIn 1963. ... The NCAA
teprtmanded the Loyola cMd. •
and Syracuae lacr01se teams lor
the!' flabt dllrllli the 1990 IItle
ia!llf· ... Pitt buketballforward
Brill! Sborter bu a viral muacle
lntej:tloll that collld lldelllle him

......
ltl·-,

Tugpe1s P,lo.ns, OH 45783

6141992·2136

1991*

,•

@'

Member F.O.I.C.

P.O. llox 626

992·6669

Alabame

Potats

S159

brleU .

'--J

•

••

211 West Second Stree t

1. Campbell Memorll l9) 110.0} .... .. .... 167
llERE.A, Ohio (UPI) - Coach mance since his rookie year, says
2. LoiMIOIIVUie (3) 11~1 ............... ...... 155
Bqd Carson Is playing It close to he and Pagel are llandllng the
3. Allen East m 1 1~1 ........ ............. . 116 ·
'·
thevestwhenltcomestowhowill ·,, sliuatlon welL
'
4. Paint Valley 111 (10-01 .. .. ..... ..... .. .. ., 10!
Starting At
5. Versailles (9·11 .. .... .. :....... .. .. .......... 101
~tart at · quarterba:ck Sunday ·
"I think myself and Mike have
6. LotalnCiearvlewi11 11~1 .. .. .... .. ....64
against Buffalo.
handled It well," Kosar said. ''X
7. BrookVUie (9-1) ........... ......... ............59
And while fans and the media
don't think we've had a problel)l
8. Cardlnatan·Lincoln il l 11~1 .. .. .......49
9. O'oollniUe (t-1) .... .................... .... ..Jt
wallow In the newest distraction through this." . .
·DOWN
PER. MONTH
JI.Wheelor•uw: (S-1) ............. .. ............st
to· plague the Browns, the soOne player who Is having a
Second ten: 11. Coal Grove Daw•
called "quarterback controv- problem staying with the Browns
ll'J11111 11; 12. Warren Kennedy 25; 13.
Heath 22; 14. (tie) Steubenville Catholic
ersy," Bernie Kosar and Mike Is wide receiver Eugene Rowell:
and Gates Mills Hawken, 13 each; 16.
Pagel, the two principal players A ninth-round pick from SouthSmtthvUJe 8; 17. (tie) Wes.t Jeffersm and
In the soap opera, say they're not ern Mississippi, Rowell was , Columbus Hartley, 7 ead!; 19. ltlel
Columbus AcademY and WllUamsbu rg, 6 .
le(llng the debate over who waived Sept. 3, res!~ Sept. 26,
each.
shpuld startatquarterbackgetln waived Oct. 7, signed to the '
AUIO/AII
the way of their preparation or practice squad Oct. 10, activated
lilvlolaa V
Starting
At
Team
.
•
Polllta
off the practice squad Oct. 17,
their friendship,
I. St. Henry I 141 I I~ I .......... .......... .. 112
€arson will not announce who and waived again Wednesday . . ·
2. Arcbbold (4} 110-0} ... .. .......... .. .... ....'1:16
will start at quarterback, saying
He was releas!ld Wednesday to
3. Fremont St. Joe 110-01 ................... 122
4. (tie} AyersVIIIe 110-0) ........... .... .. .. .. 106
11e:wants to give Buffalo more to make room for coverage lineMinlier 19·1) .. ......... 106
think about before Sunday's backer Ken Roile, who was
6. Franklin Fumace Gren (10.0! .. .. ... ...65
DOWN
PEl MONTH ·
gai)le at Cleveland Stadium.
waived Oct. 16 to make room for
7, Caldwell (I... ) ........................... ..... -'!
8.
Marlemmt
&lt;9-11
.....
...
..
....................
.50
The choices are KOsar, tal- long snapper !'.fike Moms.
OD&lt;Innatl ~untry D.oy 110-01 .. ...... ..38
entedbutunabletoavoldtherush
The only Brown on the Injury 9.IO.Fostorla
St. Wendelln (9·11 .. .. ...... .. ..28
and throw on the run, or Pagel, a . report Is defensive tackle Bob
Second len: 11. Mogadore 2~ 12. Berne
Unlm 18: 13. Sandusky St. Mary 's 14; II.
nine-year veteran who can move Buczkowski, who Is questionable
South Charlestan Southeasern 7; 15.
1.917 CHIYSlEI
$
out of the pocket and led the after suffering a concussion
McComb 5; 16. ltlel Newark C.thollc and
FIFIII
AVL
..............
.......
Browns to two fourth quarter · against the 49ers last Sunday.
Kirtland. 4 each; 18, McDonald 3: 19. lt.. l.
Tri·County North and Woods!leld, 2 each.
Lolded. Low Mllea. One Owner.
touchdowns Sunday.
VII's a difficult situation, but
1919
thi! most lmportan t thing Is to
TOPAZ_...........,........~ ••••_
4
W._l
Drlwe
•
Auto
p~pare yourself, get yourself
l!Vell equlpf*l. Low mi.... One owner.
ready, .stay positive, " KOsar said
STAIT•G
AY
.NOTICE is hereby given that on Saturday., Novem1911 DI.DS DELTA II
$
Wednesday. "I want todowhars
ber
3rd,
1990,
at
10:00
a.m
.•
a
public
ule
will
be
belttor tl!eteam.l.think the most
Well equipped, low mlln. $ .
held at 106 Union Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio, to sen for
lnlporta11t thing for myself and
tor. this team Is for Individuals,
c111h the following collateral:
1990 DILIA II;...........
DOWN
MONTH
ml!self lncludecj, to do what the
Well equipped.
1974 VAC Travel Trailer S#V22&amp;3002
coach wants and take It from
1988 OLDSMOBILE CUTlASS CRUISER SW 4 DR
th$'e.
'
8#203HJ36X189303666
''That's his dec1ston and as a
The Farmers Bank end Savings Company, PomeptaYer you live with It and you
mllke the most out of it."
'
roy, Ohio, reserves the right to bid at this sale. and to
P,J!gel, who has been through
withdraw the above collateral prior to sell. Further,
several quarterback controverThe Farmers ' Bank end Savings Company r...rvea
sld before with the Colts, said it
the right to reject any or · all bids submhted.
wat important for the players not
Further, the above collateral will be·soid in the j:Onto get caught up with what was
992-6614
dltion
it is in with no expreaed or Implied warranties
bethg sajd by fans and members
.of t!ie media.
given.
308 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
·•~uarterback controversies
&amp;re;developed by the fans and the
media," Pagel said. "Between
Beinte and I, there Is no controvers~. Between the two of us we
TtiE FINAL PRE-ELECTION FINANCIAL REPORT FILED BY
jusfdeal with It and go on.
,
'"e have no say In it. All we
• MARY ABEL INDICATES SHE RECEIVED TOTAL CONTRIBUTIONS OF
can.-do as players Is prepare like
$72,613.82, COMPARED TO $25, 229.60 FOR RICH JONES.
we'w going to start. "
t14gel said earlier In the week
MARY ABEL RECEIVED $8,000 FROM POLITICAL ACTION
that· whoever starts has to have
COMMITTEES .(PAC 1.s) AND $110,487.33 FROM THE OHIO DEMOCRATIC
confidence that the coaching
Cempeign Flruonce Report
sta~ Is bejllnd him and won't pull
PARTY AND HOUSI'; COMMITTEE. RICH JONES RECEIVED NO
hlni·after one bad throw.
i - 8- 90 through 10-11•10 .
PAC MONEy AND $593.00 FROM THE OHIO REPUBLICAN P·A RTY
Kosar agrees, saying that he
AND ITS HOUSE COMMITTEE.
willJlpproach this game like any
MARY ABEL
RICH JONES
other, If he starts.
WHY DO THESE FOLKS IN COLUMBUS CARE WHO WE ELECT
"ltm not really thinking a,bout
Sterting Belence
$15,01'.5$2 . 3'
AS OUR REPRESENTATIVE?
It tn ·tennsof that right now," he
Contrlbullllf!s r,_ within
said• "When I 'm out there, you
$2,,'667. 26
the nth District
glvcp t your best. You still play
WILL
MARY
ABEL
BE
MORE
INTERESTED
IN
TAKING
CA,RE
,
·
and. play aggressively."
Political Ac:tiQn c-mtu..s
OF THE PEOPLE IN COLUMBUS WHO APPOINTED HER AND FINANCED
Carson said he wan ted to speak
- 0Outside the Diatrlc:t
I,OOD.OO
privately to both Pagel al)d
HER CAMPAIGN · THAN THE PEOPLE WIIIO LIVE AND WORK IN THIS
Ko54r , although he had not done
DISTRICT?
Ohio O...OC:rat Houu
tha~· by the end of · practice
Com!!!ltt.. and Democ:rat
Wednesday.
·
Pllrty
KOsar , who had not been
Qhlo Republlcen House
· benChed because or his pertor- ·
Commlttft and Republlcen
••

:; · Spor11

FB &amp;Farmers
Bank
Savings Company .

,

!

•

Dlvulaa IV

Prescription
Shop

'

•

1. YoUDp Mo""ey (9 ) (9-H .. .............. 162
2. Lake CathoDe 16) (10-0) .. ...... ......... IM
3. CAPE (9·11......... ......... ........... .........86
4. Bloom-Ca'r rnll(l} (10-0} .......... ........ .85
$, Portlllioulll W•t ( 1l (lD-11) ..............19
6. Aman4a Cleen:reek (IO-Ol.. .... c....... .. n
7. Akrcil Hoban 19-11 .. ........ .. .... ... .. ...... 66
8. Orrville (!1·11 ................ .... ......... ......62
9. Rossford !9-11 .... .... .......... .. ..... .. .... ... 33
10.WIUard !1) (10-0) ......................... .. .. 24
Second ,.., 11. Hamll4m Badin 22;· 12.
Ucklng Valley 21; 13. Sprtrig!leld Nor·
theosiOrn 20; 14. (tle} .. _..., aad 81.
Clai...Uie, 11 eadl; 16. Wlcklll!e17; 17.
Dover 13; 18. Keuorlng Alter ll; 19. N..,
Lexi•P• 'Ji 20. {tte• Youngstown Ursu·
Une and Rld!Deld R...,,.., 6 eam.

Team

•

•

Your Bankfot~... .

•,,

Starting At

Continued from page 3 ·

; SOAP OPERA C.O NTINUES- WhUe fans aud tile media wallow
lia .the newest distraction to . plague tile Clevelaud BroWDs, the
$~-Called "quarterback controveny," Bernie Kosar (top) and
Mike P-..el (bottom), the two prlnelpal plafen Ia the soap opera,
say they're not letdnr; lbe debate over wbo should lllart al
lj'uarlerback get In lhe way of tllelr preparalfon or their lrleadablp.

;
·

-.

Football '90!
Catch All The
Excitement!!

·199l*
·CAVALIERS

Final UPI. ..

Teun

Support These
Fine Area ·
Businesses!

' H .T NOVEMBER
SAVIN S!!

JIM -

DlvloloooDJ

"But, once the opportunity
comes to move along, I'm probaby going to take a dvantage of
it. I'd be a fool not to. "
Smith said playing professlonal footl!All would be on "a
diversion' ' for htm.
"My real Ufe 'swork ls aheadof
me and I'm trying to lay the
groundwor k for that," he said.
Buslneu
A New York company, Soviet
Professional Athletes Resources
Ltd., has been formed to represent · pro boxers, WfllStlers and
cycllsls from the Soviet Union In
the United States.

The Daily Sentinel- Page- &amp;

. Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

716 N. 2ND AYE.
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO
99.2·6·91

,·;.}

�'

'

lhunday, Novemblr 1. 1990

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

P.a• 6-lhe Dally Sutinel

lhunday, November 1. 1990

JOneS and. •• COntinued troU:. page 1

·No. 7 Colorado in 'must win' · situation at No. 2 Nebraska

rights, each candidate came out have been endorsed ))y the Ohio
firmly In favor of what Abel Gun Collectors Association,"
called the woman's "choice to Abel said. She aiSQ did not offer
choose.'' Jones said abortion Is an explanation of her views.
not a legislative problem, bu tone
When offered a minute's worth
which needs to be solved by the of rebuttal, Jones responded
family with the assistance of the simply, "I still oppose gun
clergy.
control."
"Government doesn't need to
Questions for the candidates
make that choice," Abel added. . were posed by a three-member
. While the audience was ad- panel consisting of Lee Ann
vised at the· beginning of the Thompson of the Galllpolls Dally
forum by moderator Bill Gray to Tribune, Brad Harvey of V:l JEHrefrain from outbursts, laughter WGTR Radio and Kevin Kelly
• and applause broke out whim the from the University of Rio
candidates were asked another Grande. The candidates' re·
audience-submitted ·question: sponse time was monitored by
their stance on gun control.
Dr. James Magnussen, '\VhO
"I oppose gun control," Jones chaired the chamber of comresponded tersely, and dkl' not merce committee overseeing the
elaborate.
forums.
"I oppoSe gun control, and I

•

•

I

By JOHN HENDEL
UPI Sporia Writer
After nearly three decades, a
l~gltlmate heir has been found to
ehallenge the reign of Nebraska
and Oklahoma In the Big Elgbt.
· But to capture the conference
title, No. 7ColoradomustwinthiS
week at No. ~ Ne))raska In one of
Saturday's top games on a·strong
nationwide schedule.
• Unlike last week, when there .
were no games between ranked
teams, several plilrings Saturday will have a strong Influence
on the poll, as five oft he top seven
teams meet rated opponents.
In addition to NebraskaColorado, No. 1 VIrginia . faces
No. 14 Georgia Tech with the ACC
Jead at stake; No. 5 Washington
bas a chance to · Increase Its ·
··Pac-10 lead to 2 Y.! games with a
victory over No. 17 Arizona; and
'the winner of No. 6 Illinois vs. No.
.13 Iowa will own the Big Ten lead.
_, Elsewhere In the top 10, No. 3

W... eoUJ Sp- Truoadlons
-bill

Bostoo Agreed to. 2-year
con.tract with pitcher Gree Harrts;
added pitchers Tom Flscb er, Derek
Livernois,.Dan O'N elll, Jeff Plymp-

Dave Owen and Scott Taylor·to
40-man roster .
tCI\,

Clnclnl\atl -

Declined to exer-

Cise t99i contract option for second
baseman Ron Oester.

Huntsville (Southern League)-

.

t

Namecl Casey .Parsoos manager

' and Bert Bradley pitching coach.
. Kansas City- Announced It wUI
nol orrer a contract to outfielder
Willie Wilson.
Loa Angeles - Purehased. co~­
tracts of first baseman Eric Karros
and outfielder Henry Rodriguez
trcm San Ant(ll!O of the Texas
Leape; reinstated pitchers Ore!
Hetsblaer and Tim Belcher and
lnftelder Jefl HamUton rrcm disabled list
·

MadlsM (MidweSt League} Named Gary Jones manager and
Scott Budner pitching coach.
Ok1ah(ll]a City (AA) - Named
. Tommy ThompsOn manager an~
Jeff Andrews and Stan Hough

coaches.
Philadelphia - Signed catcher
Darren Daultoo tol-yearcontract;
named Johnny Podres pitching
coach.
·1 .
Pittsburgh - Oedtned to exer·
dse 1991 contract option for Pitcher
Ted Power.
San DiEeO- Re-signed Urst·base .
coach Rob Picclolo\ namat Merv
Rettenmund httdngcoachandTom
GambOa minor-league Ueld eo~i ·
natcr; reassigned hltdng coach
Jack Maloor within the
organization.
Southern Oregon (Northwest
Le~) Named Dick Scott
man~er and Gil Pat9!rson pitch- .
Jng

coach.

*QUALIFIED
*HONEST

*DEDICATED

ELECT

D. MICHAEL MULLEN
MEIGS PROBATE/ juvENILE COURT JUDGE
A Full Time Judge For A Full Time Job
P~id for by candidate, D. Michael Mullen, 105 East Second St.. Pomeroy. Ohio

..

. lloekey
Chicago - Signed right wing
Steve Larmer to a 4-year contract.
HMUo!d - Acquired def..,,..
man Marc S.reevtn frcm the NY
Islanders for futUre considerations; assigned Bergevin to Spring·
field of American Hockey League.
NY Islanders - Returned lel't
wtng Rich Krcmm and rlgflt wing
Derek Laxdal to Capital District of
Arnertc&amp;n Hockey L.eague.
Philadelphia - Sent goaltender
Pete Peeters and defenseman
Murray Baroo to . Hershey of
American Hockey League; called
up goellender Bruce Hoffol1 fr(I'Tl

Hershey.

·Mary Capehart

Surviving are her husband,
L. Capehart; two daughRussell
Mary E. Capehart; 76, of
ters,
Diane
M. Troy and Jackie L.
Mason, died Monday, Oct. 29,
Sisson,
all
of Mason; eight
1990 at Camden Clark Memorial
grandchildren
and six greatHospital In Parkersburg. ·
grandchildren.
Born Sept. 14,1914, she was the
Memortal services will be 11
daughter of the late Christopher
a.m.
Friday, Nov. 21n tlie Clifton
and Margaret E. (Gress)·
.United
Methodist Church with
Bletner.
She was a retired school· the Rev. Terry AI varez
teacher who had taught at officiating.
There will be no visiting hours.
Wahama High School for 28 ·
Arransements
are under the
years. She originated the Honor
of
the
Foglesong Fundirection
Society and· sponsored WHS
eral
Home.
student council. Capehart was a
In lleu o{nowers, contributions
member of the Mason· United
can
be made to the Wahama
Methodist Church, Women's SoSc.holarshlp Fund c/o
Alumni
~, Hol!'.emiilker- Oub- and
Rex
Howi:rd,
Boxg 129, New
Mother's Club. She was a graduHaven,
W.Va.,
25260.
~te of Marshall University.

·

Toronto-. Sent right wtne: John
Kordlc to Newmarket of American
Hockey League.

Tllund&amp;J Sporla Cll&lt;11dar
Bolla(
Re•VJftlp&amp;a
Atlantic City, N.J. - Bruce
Seldon vs. David Bey

u.-•rhl•
Atlanllc City. N.J .. -

Sharmba
Mitchell vs. Robert Byrd

GaH

1990 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL. .,

1990 COUGAR

Tokyo - $1.15 mllUon PGA Four
Toun World Champtonmtp

Team

Polll&amp;a

1. VIrginia (351 17·01 ........... ..11071
2. Nebraska 116) iS.OJ .. ......... 773 2 ·
3. Notre Dame (I) (6-11 ......... 70tl4
4. Auburn (3) tf&gt;.0.1}........... ... &amp;l13
5. WashlngtM ill 17·1) ....... .. .582 6
6. Dllnots t6-1J ...... .. ............. .553 5
7. Colorado (7-1·11 ....... ..... ..... 438 8
8. Miami (5-2) .... ............ .. ..... 430 9
!!; Brlgha!" Young (6-1) ......... 382 7
10. Tennes"'e !H2l .. .. ....... 28910
11. Florida State (5-21 .... ..... 280 11
12. Texas (5·1) .... .... .. .. .. ...... 221 U
13. 1owa (6-1) ...................... 20913
14. Georgia Tech 16-0.1) ...... 16912
15. Mississippi t7·1J ............ ... 9115
16. Wyoming !9·tll ...... .......... 7716
17. aemsoo (7·2) .... .. .. ....... ... 3217
18. Mldllgan (4-31 ...... ... ..... ...1618
19. Arlzooa (6-2) .......... ... .... ...12 21
20. Oregon (6-2 1 .... .. ........... ...10 22
21. PeM State !5-21 .... ........ .... 7 24
22. LouisVIlle ( 7-1-.1) ...... ..... .... 6 23
23. Soulhern Cal t6-2) .... .... ..... 4 20
24. (tie) Texas A&amp;M •11-2·11 .... 125
24. (tie~ N. Cardlna (5-2-1) ... 1 NR
NR - not ranked
Others receiving votes; None.

new contract
on Wilson's "lifetime contract."
After the announcement last
week on White's status, Wilson
was quoted as saying he was
"probably going to be next."
Wilson and Manager John
Wathan had a mid-season run-In
In which the player declared he
wasn't respected by his former
teammate and demanded a
trade. The Royals refused and
Wathan and Wilson patched up
their differences.
Wilson Is a five-time .300 hitter,
Including a league-best.332mark
In 1982, and led the American
League In triples five times and
stolen bases once (1979).
He. pleaded · guilty to drugrelated charges In 1983 and spent
81 days In a federal prlaon.
Commlasloner Bowie Kuhn suspended him from the first 34 days
of the 1!184 season.
On the Royals, Wilson ranks
fifth In games ( 1,787), fourth In
at-bats (6,79~), third In runs
(1,060), fourth In hill (1,968), fifth
In doubles (241), first In triples
(133), sixth In RBI (509) and
fourth In average (.290) In
addition to being first In stolen ·
bases.
Wilson was the Royals' first .
pick In the 1974 ftee-asent draft.
He made his major-league debut
In 1976 and was called up to
Kansas City for good late In the
1977 season.

vehicle while under the influence,
and $25 and COSIS, expired
6peralor's license; Tina M. Carpenter, Gallipolis; $425 and costs and
three days in .iail, physical control
of a mota vehicle while undec the
influence of alcohol, also $25 and
costs, for failure to conltOI her
vehicle, and $50 and costs for
fleeing from a police officer.
Jerry Arrnslrong, Middleport,
$25 and costs, disonlerly manner,
and $100 and costs, and three days
in jail, destruction of f:~;
Mike Pierce, Pomeroy, 2 and
costs, disorderly manner. The case
of criminal trespassing against
Dean Whittington was lr81!sferred
to Meigs County CoUrt.
Forfeiting bonds were Steve
Browning, Hwricane, W. Va., $52
bond, speeding; and Charles R.
Pelry, New Haven, W. Va., S60 expired regisualion.

Area deaths--

County commissioners ·accept bid
Fully Equipped!

Loaded Unit!

1990 FORD E-150
CONVERSION VAN

.· 1990 AEROSTAR
EXTENDED WAGON

·:jRoyals fail to offer
KAN~ CIT'(, Mo. (UPI):Willie Wilson, a. fixture In the
Kansas City oulfleld since 1979,
JWas Informed Wednesday he will
:not be offered a contract by the
;:Royals tor next season.
'• Wilson Is the third Kansas City
·\reteran In eight days to receive·
·:~uch news, following catcher Bob .
lloone and second baseman
,Frank White.
• The moves slice approxl·
:mately $3.9 million In salaries
!from the Royals' payroll; the
.·highest In baseball last season.
· Wilson, a 35-year-old switch·
· hitter, batted .290overll5games
·last season. He opened the year
::as the team's fourth outfielder
"but was a starter most of the
;season because of Injuries. The
·team's all·tlme stolen base
leader, Wilson was successful on
24 of 30 steal attempts last
·season, giving him 612 ·for his
;career.
• "Willie Wilson's style of play
ilrought a lot of excitement to the
Royals' organization," General
Manager Herk RobiDIOn Hid.
"We thank him for hill outltand·
ing contributions and years of
service with the Royals and wish
:him well. " ·
' The decision was no surprise.
:He was given a one-year deal
"worth ~.000 last seuon after.
the Royals tailed to pick up the
five years of opll?na remaining

· Eleven were fined and two others
forfeited hoods in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Wednesday night.
Fined were Kevin Jewell, Rutland, $10 and costs, expired licen·
se; James D, Thompson, Indiana
Springs, Nev., $100 and costs,
operating a motorcycle uDder
suspension; Robert Bush, Mid·
.dleport, SISO and costs, displaying
for sale hYilOdennic needles in his
place of bUsiness; Billy J. Trout,
Middleport. $50 and costs, petty·
theft; Sam McCloud, Middleport,
two charges of disorderly manner,
$25 and costs on each one.
Eugene S. Morrison, Sr., Middleport, $425 and costs and three .
· · days in jail, physical control or a
mOtor vehicle while under the in·
fluence of alcohol or drugs;
Timothy M. Herdman, Pomeroy;
$425 and costs .and three days in
jail, physical control or a motor

Sail Francisco - Placed wide
Mlke Sherrard on Injured
reserve; activated wide receiver
Ron Lewis; addednosetackleOdell
Haggins and del'enstve end M:arttn
HarrlsCII to practice squad.

NEW YORK (UP!J -Tile United
Press lnternatlmal Board of
Coa·ches Top 25 college footblll
ratings, with record and nrst-place
votes in parentheses, total points
(based on 15 pcints for first place,
14 tor second, etc. ), and last week's
ranking.

..:Wilson

Middleport court news.

FOR OUR CHILDREN'S
FUTURE

rec~ver

bott pit£h~ C(Jlcll.
Bubllllll

Anthony Masoo and pard Pete
Myers.
· Sacramento - Released center
Marty Conlan and guard Joe
FredriCk.
.
Sioux Falls iCBA I - Signed
guard LancasterGordon'toa1·year
contract.
t:oDer•
Fordham - Named nm Fin·
nerty basketball assistant .
Houstm - Annwnced basketball
forward Craig Upchurch will miss
Seas(ll becau!l" of a back Injury.
Kansas State - Dtsmtued for·
ward Kenny Williams frCII\ the
basketball team.
.
King' s College (Pa.) - An·
noonced It will reinstitute varsity
footbalL .
North Carolina - Named Bruce
Hemphill dire ctor of football recruiling.
Footblll
.
Oeveland - Signed linebacker
Ken&lt; Ro''" waived recetverEugenl.'

Slate heads for South Carolina UCLA In Pac-10 play.
No. 21 Penn State Is home for
jlnd Texas Is at Texas Tech.
Mississippi goes to Louisiana West VIrginia; No. 22 Louisville,
State w&gt;lle Wyoming plays at which wraps up Its season next
Colorado State. No. 17 Clemson · week, faces Cincinnati; No. 23
has a game with North Carolina, Southern Cal welcomes Callfo·rwhich Is ·tted for 24th In the nla; . and Texas A&amp;M, tled.l!(lth
ranklngs, Mlch(gan goes against North Carolina at No. 24, visits
Purdue and No. 20 Oregon meets Southern ~ethodlst.

squad.

College ratingS

New Jersey -Released forward

almost since he took the job at
Colorado and set hiS sites on the
COrnhuskers and Sooners.
"There Isn't any nonconference .game that begins to
compare with the lmporlance of
playing against Oklahoma or
Nebraska," McCartney said.
The Nebraska -Colorado
winner will have the Inside track
to the Big Eight's Oranse Bowl
berth. And, with only a few weeks
lett in the regular season, the
other New Year's Day bowls are
also shaking out. "
The Citrus Bowl Is looking to
VIrginia · to stay unbeaten and
hold the No. 1 spot In the ratings, .
potentially making the game In
Orlando, Fla .• worth the national
championship.
The Rose Bowl has Washington
zeroing In on the Pac-10's slot
while llllnols, If It can knock off
Nos. 13 and 18 (Iowa and
Michigan) · the next two Satur·
days, would be the likely Big Ten
represenlatlve.
No. IS Mississippi, whose only
loss has been to Auburn, will be
looking for help to grab the SEC
title and the resulting Sugar Bowl
Invitation. With Houstor., unbeaten but Ineligible because of
probation, out of the P,OStseason
picture, No. 12 Texas controls Its
own late regarding the SWC's
spot In the Cotton Bowl.
Elsewhere, No. 11 Florida

tackle Mark Hosland to practice

Tacoma CPCLl - Named Jeff
Newrilan manager aft4 Glenn AbAtlanta - · Waived forwards
Duane Ferrell and Darren Henr1e.
.Q&gt;Iwnbus iCBAJ - Waived
guard Mel Kennedy.
Golden State - Placed foiWardcenter Jim Peter!2n and guard
Bart Kofoed on inJured Ust; waived
guard Stan KlJ'TibrCllgh. ~

'

have so many of the seasoned
Notre Dame goes against Navy;
No. 4 Auburn looks to keep Its players back. Most of the key
SEC lead at the expense of players returned, so It appears to
me that they are awfully good . .
Florida; No. 8 Ylami Is home
"They've played a very diffiagainst Pittsburgh; No. 9
Brigham Young tunes up for next cult and demanding schedule. Of
week's WAC showdown with 9-0 course they've gotten nicked up a .
couple times but If you play that
Wyoming by playing Air Fori:e;
and No. 10 Tennessee le!i&lt;Ves the kind of schedule you're going to
lose one or two."
t
SEC schedule to play Temple.
Sure, the Buffaloes are not
Until last season. either Nebraska or Oklahoma won or unbeaten like Nebraska, 8-0,.but
shared every Big Eight football since a one-point loss at No. 6 ·
title since 1961. Then In 1989 Illinois, Colorado has won six
Colorado went ·undefeated straight. This season the Butta·loes bave beaten No. 5 Washingthrough the regular season.
One season, especially one as ton, No. 12 Waslllngton and, last
emotionally charged 1!5 last week, Oklahoma.
year'.s was for Colorado, can be . "A lot of these guys over the
considered a fluke. But the · last two years have played In
Buffaloes, 7:1·1desplteoneofthe tough places to play, tough
most dlftlcult schedules In the stadiums against quality opposicountry, are trying to prove they tion," Colorado Coach Bill
McCartney. "I.thlnk we can draw
are not mere quirks.
''They are very comparable on all these things now as we go
(to last season)," Nebraska and play this game."
The Cornhuskers seem to play
Coach Tom Osborne said, ''They
every game on· the same even
plane, a philosophy that has
helped Osborne rack up 17S
victories.
"We understand the magnltude
of (the game) but we won't
.
Indianapolis - SliJied quarter·
change
anything in terms of how
back Rusty Hilger; re-signed wide
receiver Regete Thomta'l and
we'll go about getting ready for
as signed b1m to practice squad.
It," he said.
LA Rams - Asstened running
McCartney, however, has
back Marcus Dupree to practice
squad; rehBsed running back Fred
·pointed to the Nebraska game as
Whittingham Jr.
his prime target every season
·
NY Jets - Signed offensive

Sill«tty Features Must See Video

Appreciate!

RAC
...
Continued !rom page 1
their iofonnational signs in front of
the three gares at the plant they
said, "We are not on 'strike, we are
locked out."
Several union workers, who had
reponed to RAC . for the midnight
shift, 'wexe told to leave when the
union's propOsal was rejected. One
angry worker said he had stopped
at the guardhouse to clock out, after
being told to leave, and the guard
would not let him clock ouL
On October 23, RAt sent letters
to the plant woden telling them ~
''regardleS$ · of the Slatus or
negollations, on November I there
will be work available for anyone
who wishes to work."
In an inter-office memorandum
dated OCtober 18, Ravenswood
salaried personnel wen: given a list
of supplies that would be necessary
in a lock-in situatioo. They were
told to report to the plant at 10 p.m.
on Octo1Jer 30 prepared to stay.
Last week the salaried workers
were given a ~urity measures list.
This infonned them that some of
their friends would not be their
friends and to be careful what they
say about what's going on. It also
told them that if they hear gun fire
to stay low ·and call the poHce
ASAP. The final sentence was,
"Remember, .stay calm, do not
panic and be alert at all times."
A notice was posted in the com·
pany locker rooms on October 29
that all personal belongings were to
be removed from the lockers no
later than .ll:S9 p.m. on OCt 31.
The waiting period has begun,
according to Hosder, it could be a
long time before the situation is setde"- He said it could be a week to
two weeks before the negotiators
get together again.
.
Early Thursday morning, the
union hall was busy with workers
signinl up to wod tlie "infonnational picket lines.
At the plant, la!ge flood lights
were placed inside the main gate
and guards could be seen patrolling
around the grounds. ·
· The plant, which is the biggest
indusuy in Jaclcson County, is now
referred to as "Fort RAC." The
feeling of union woden on the
picket line, as weU as some of those
salaried employees inside, is one of
humility and concern. Neither want
to !Je where they are .

Middleport man i8
cited on DUI eharge

Syracuse and Racine
break-ins investigated

A Middleport man was cited:
tor drunk drlv1ng Thursday.
morning after an accident on
Meigs County Road 174.
Larry A. Rider •was north·
l;lound when he apparently lost
control of his 1977 Oldsmobile
Cutlass and ran off the right side
of the road. His car continued on
and stru~k a ditch and a concrete·
bridge before coming to rest,
accordlrig to a repor.t from the
State Highway Patrol.
Rider was treated at the scene
by the Rutland EMS squad, but
was not transported. He was .
cited for driving under the·
Influence and failure to control , ~

The Meil!s County Sheriff's
Depanment 1s investigatin~ a tip
concerning a rash of breaking and
entering incideniS in the Synicuse
and Racine area.
Acco!ding to Meigs County
Sheriff James M Soulsby, the Asb-land Bulk Plant in Minersville, the
Dairy Bar in S)'lllcuse, the Kountry

Kiix:hen in Racine and Wagner
Hardware in Racine wep: entered
early Monday morning.
SmaU amounts or money were
stolen from some of the busmesses,
while other owners reported Orily
that their estabHshments had been
entered .and ransacked.
The tip was received from a resi·
dent in the m:ea. who saw a suspicious vehicle at one of the shops
the morning of the incident.
According 10 Soulsby, . the
depamnent continues its investigation into the incidents, but no ar· Meigs County Engineer Philip rests have been made.
M. Roberts, PE, PS, will clsoe
Township Road 114 (ML Olive Employment figures
Road) iii Oiester Township for the
pmpose of replacing the existing are announced
truss bridge with a new steel beam
According to figures released by
bridge. The work will lake apthe
Ohio Bureau or Employment
proximately three weelcs to cOnlpleJ:e. This is an Issue 2 funded Services, rloyment m Mei~
County .dro
from 6.0 percent m
pro,)CCL
August
to
S.
percent
in September.
Questions
concerning
the
The
report
showed
that there
project, such as those about re-rout)Ve~
SOO
unemployed
in
the overing, should .be !lirected to Roberts'
all
labor
for
of7,900
in
the
county.
office at992-2911.

Road 114

to closed

·Band booster
dinner

Am Electric Power •............ 28\4
AT&amp;T .................................34\4
Ashland on ........................ 28~
Bob Evans .......................... 12%
Charming Shoppes ............... 7%
City Holding Co. .......... ........ 15
Federal Mogu\... .................10%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................15\1
Key Centurion ................. .... H
Lands' End ........ :................. 914
Umlted Inc. .......~ ........... ....13'?!1
Multimedia Inc................... 54~.
Rax Restaurants ... .............. 1\1
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 17
Shoney's Inc ................ .• ...... 9'?!1
Star Bank ............................ 16
Wendy's Int'l . ..................... 6%
Worthington Ind ........ .... ...... 19~

A bid for bituminous materials Ridge in Salem Township.
for die month of November wls acRoberts said that his department
cepted by die Meigs County Com- .also plans to level ground at the
missioners at their regular meeting Rocksprings Cemetery and to in. on Wednesday.
stall new pipe on Lickskillet Road
1)e bid, which was the only one near Long Bottom. ·
reCeived by the office, was submit- . The commissioners also apted by Asphalt Materials Company proved a funds transfer for the
ln Marietta.
·
Meigs County Department of
Meigs County Engineer Philip Human Services. The interRoberts·indicated lhat work on area · departmental lr81!sfers totalled
roads was continuing.
$401,000 in five accounts.
According to Roberts, widening
Present at the meeting were
luis been compleU:d on Pilgrim , Commission President Manning K.
Roush. . Commissioner David
to
million
Koblentz and Clerk Mary HobstetCLEVELAND (UPI)- There .
ter.
was
no winner of the $7 million
A hay fire was amoiJg the calls
jackpot In Ohio's Super Lotto
for assistance answerect ·by the
drawing Wednesday night, InMeii!S County Emergency trfedical
creasing
the grand prize to $10
Services units on Wednesday and
Election Day Dinner
million
for
Saturday's game.
early Thursday.
.
There will be an election day
lottery
spokesman said
A
On Wednesday· at 8:51 a.m .. dinner at the Rock Springs Church
jac~pot went unThursday
the
. Racine Squad went to Third StreeL on Tuesday at 10 am. Vegetable
no player
claimed
because
Anna Abitz was 1r811sported to Hol- and bean soup, sandwic;hes, pie and
plc~ed all six of the winning
zer Medical Center. At 12:50 p.m:, cake will be sel:\'ed. Bring con6, 11,26,27,43and 49.
Rudand squad went 10 Main Street tainers f~ cany-ooL Orders may be numbersHowever,
103 players chose
for Darlene Spangler. Spangler place by calling 992-3356 or 992·
of
the
numbers
to win $5,000
five
went to Vetei)IDS Memorial 5869.
each, and 5,550 players had four
Hospital. At 1:10 p.m., Middleport
of the numhers for payoffs of$100
squad was dispatChed to Asb Street
Olive trustees to meet
for LuciUe Cundiff. Cundiff was . The Olive Thwnship Trustees
lrea!Cd ~ut not transporled. At 1:46 will meet Mooday at 6:30 p.m. ai
~.m., Middleport squad was sent to the Reedsville Fin: House.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Overbrook Center for Helen EdWEDNESDAY
ADMISSIONS
wards. Edwards was taken to
Scipio trnstees to meet
•
Mona
Farra,
Racine.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.:
The Scipio Township Trustees
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
On Thursday at 12:27 a.m., Rut· wiH meet Wednesday at 6 p.m. in •. ,Michelle
Whittington, Raymond
land sq~ was called to an auto&gt; the township building in Pigeville.
Justis,
Dana
Wyant.
. accident. Lmy Rider was tteaJed
· but not ti"IWported. At 12:49 a.m ..
Syracuse squad wis sent to State
Route ' 124 for Vermont Marlcins.
Markins
went
10
Veterans
.Memorial. Hospital. At 5:44 a.m.,
Pomeroy fire department was called
to a hliy fire on Chase Road. At
6:30 a.m., RuilaDd squad was cal·
Jed to New Lima Road Diane Harrison was transported to Vctenms
Memorial Hospital.

.
.•

.

Meigs Band Boosters are spon•
saring an open ktttl.e ham and bean·
dinner on Thursday at 5 p.m. in the
Meigs High School cafeteria prior
to open house. The cost for the dinner will be $2.50 for adults and $2.
for children. The menu. includes;
ham and beans, combRad, colo·
slaw, and drink. Homemade pie 11114.
cake will be extra. •·
••

GREAT GIFT. IDEAS
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Lamps
Starting At $1 900
•s pc. Samsonite
Card Table
.
&amp; Ch'airs
starl:"' S9900
•Pictures Starting At $1 000
•Iron Daybeds
$29900
' lEG. SJ99 Jo.

•Jumbo .Bean Starting ,
2888 .
Bean Bags
At
•Lane Cedar
Chests . Starting $18900
REG. $379.00

At

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Mini Lamps

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,
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Stooks .
Dally stock prices
(~of 10:90 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunl, Ellis &amp; Loewi

•

..

.•

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Meigs EMS ruris

Announcements

Effective November lst-rfov•ber 1Oth

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

SALE

S59900

.Belt 01 Luck In
$111e Competition To

3 7b Choose From .

.

Weather

YOUR CHOICE
ONLY

8o•lll Cealral Olllo
Clear. Thursday night, with a
low In the mid «11. Mostly sunny
Friday, with hfeblln the mid 70s.

·.

~l'lrecu&amp;

Saaurdq lllhlllcll Meada,
Fair Saturday, and a chance ot
showers Sunday and Monday.
~~~~ will ranae trom the m1c1 aos
IC! ·the low 70s Saturday and
SUnday, and from the mid !101 to
mid 60a Monday. Overnlirllt lows
will range from themld.O. to low
!101 Saturday aDd Sunday morn~
. ·~ and In the 401 early

Iay.

Tb~ Meig1 High
s~boo/Sfnd/

,,-;o.O0 SALI

Glider Recliner

.

9IWII #211

00
'$29800 ~::~r \\0\·

(14 DAY FACTORY DELIVERY)

..,..,...,
3 Position
Rocker Raellner

992-5097
POMEROY,
OHIO

""'Way
2

SALE

$398' 00

INGELS
MIDDLEPORT

.I

..,..,_
.3

00 SALI
Pollllon,,.,,,
S49800
Recliner

Rocket

SALE

S19800 ,:
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3-Position\~
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Rocker RICHner

S44400

ITURE &amp; JEWELRY
VIlA

992-2635

1-100-426-5511

MAITIII
DIICOVER

' .

OHIO

�a

~~r

The D.tv seuooel

will be opened 10 the public aDd
hopes of getting pennission or die
land owners for a ttail slretching
MiMlepon-Pomc:roy Rocary Qub.
from Shade River in Chesler to die
Mrs. Puwell gave the c:lub a brief new facilities planned a1 Forked
~llalion on die acdvides and· Run State Parle.
pttl~ !bit lhc tblee-mcmber orOther projects Bill still in the
garuzalion is c:uncnliy worting on. · works afw a survey at the Meigs
Tbe project nearest completion is a County Fl!i£ to enable the Parks
biking lr8i1 ar the Boy Scout Camp Dislrict to identify the needs and
in Cliestc:r. Wilb bopes to utili.ze wants of the people of Meigs
Shade River aa an lllnl:lion. some County.
four to five miles or hiking trails
If anyone has any constructive .
Bill planned tluougb die large IJ'8C]I: · ideas or would like to allend a
of fand now owned by
boy · meeting of the Meigs Park District,
scoutS.
·
contaCt Mrs. Powell at 992-5005 or
Mrs. Powell explained that this Charles Barren and Sieve Story.

Kevin and Kelly Milani, Racine,
are announcing the birth or their

Miry PuweB, Dim:lllr of Meigs
Couruy Pin: Dislrict, was die guest
sp rII c:ut die recent'meeting of the

me

Republicans holdfinal meeting
)be Meigs Ccunty Republican . Campaign ·materials were dis.Elleeutive COII!Illiace met recenUy tribuled to ccmrnittee members.
in"JB!Y headquarlefS in Pomer'oy
Anyone needing a sample ballot,
ret the ~ time before the NOV. 6 application for absentee ballo~ inelection.
·
formation on candidates or a ride 10
~ were 30 members pesent
the polls on election day should
and a number of guests.
contaCt their committeeman or call
Local candidates presents were · Republican Headquarters at 992Judge Robert E. Buck for Juvenile- 5756 or ·992,5463, according to
1!9J~ · Judge; Manning K. Roush
Collins.
··
~ Meigs County &lt;;:ommissioner,
The headquarters is open daily
seeking re-election; and Monday through Saturday, through
~::
- , E. Jones for Stale election day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
It
tative for die 94th District.

I,

gp

I

R

·~

. l

~~::

!et

AROUND TOWN .·1• coajuactioa.wlth Pomeroy's Saqalceatennial, the lSOth aDDivenary of the lncOI'ponUoa or.the village,
Bank One in Potoeroy, Is sp011sorlng this photo ldeatlfleatioa ~rles.
The phot011 feah!rt an:bitectural details or bnlldiap witbla the
towa. The picturts were taken arouad towD llld are featured ia
Wedaesday editioas of The Dally Sentinel. Aaswen, by man or
drop-orr, must be received at The Daily Seatlael olllc:e by the. followiag Monday aad ~naen wUJ be listed Ia Tuesday editiolls of
the paptr. Wiruiers will receive a landmark Christmas oraameat
rrom Baak Oae aad when the ~ries concludes aD people who ideatified the pictures correctly will have the chaace to wiD a savings
bond from Bank One.
·

first child, a daugbler, Kaylee Lynn.
on OcL 1 at Holzer Medical Cenler.
The infant weighed seven
pounds· 13 ounces and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandpatents . are Mr. , .'
and Mrs. Carl (Jackie) Vanover,
Racine; and Mr. and Mrs.,Raymond ,_ .
Ginther, Portland.
1111;,
Grea -grandparents are Mrs. Leslef Seaman and Mrs. Ruth Thomas.
Great-great-grandmother is Mrs.
EUaQuillen.
·
Paternal grand_parents are Mr.
and . Mrs. Bill (Louise) Soulsby,
Pomeroy; and Rudy Fraley,
KAVLEE LYNN MD..AM
Cheshire.

Quslilg ·Pl.el6tiption
Selri~e

At ·

Compeli#ire Pti6el~

HEAR YE!
(ALL MALE)
Will Appear At The

"-•~

SUNDAY I NOVEMBER 4, 1990
2:00P.M.
Public Welcome!

E•.Moln

Moe ..,,.., II.PII.

Cllort•lllflo. 11 . I'll.
RanMIIuw • • I .Ph.
MDII. tim IM. i:OO e.m. to 1:00 p.m.
•nd-r 10:00 1-Ift. to 4:00p.m.
PIIEICRII'TIONI
PH. 112·2111
f~.......

I

........

Pom•oy. OH.

-

,,

+uz Bowl

~mpetition

fts un&lt;:{erway

==

Southern, and Brian Liev.
:In SVAC Junior Varsity matChes
SIUthern, Symmes Valley, and
E4stefn defeated Oak Hill, Kyger
~and North Gallia Top scor!!.'11 junior varsity players were
!:IJvid lhle for Southern, Travis
PiPte for Symmes Valley, Danny
Uwrence for Eastern, Soumyaju
~aa for Oak Hill, Bryan Davidson
arf! 1odi Hobbs f&lt;r Kyger Creek,
al¥1 Brad Schultz for Nonh Galia.
!The next matches are scheduled
fat Nov. 7 when Southweslern will
tJq aat Kyger Creek, Symmes Valat Eastern, North Galli&amp; at
S . them, and Oak Hill at Hannan
~f&lt;rNonhGalliL

~'()to meet

T

.

.

I

luverview PrO will observe •
&lt;&gt;den Hquse at 6:30 p.m. on Mondaf u a pan of its regular meeting.
A member or ihe Board of
Ed'-...v- will be at the meeting to
~~levy.
.
Jabyliaing will be provided, and
the: movie "Land of the Lost" will
be pheW!! to children.
I

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With Color/
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Law AI 115
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Requires Cllarging
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Adapter or Mobile

Hean Catholic
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FRIDAY
POMEROY - There will he a

lolountilg K~ . 117·1050

hymn sing at the Hillside Baptist

~h;.~ ~ea= ~t;g: F~h:

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2115
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Portable CD Player

79910 ·'::maS:~·
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Tone/pulse. 143·500

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~ 2~5
Dual alarms. Bright blue display. 112·1578

Notebook-Size PC

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S699

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Reg. 711.00

Bulh-in software. 125·3530

Dot-Matrix Printer

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26915·

Law Aa .,. .... - ·

Reg. 311 ••

Push tractor feed. 126·2848

I A hCaldl piogram was given
by ~Jacobs with readings on
~. . cholesltrol and other
health problems 81 the recent rneeringl of die Rock · Springs Better
Hqlth Qub held a the home of
Nalley Morris.
Selen Bllckstoo opened the

metUns with the Lord's Prayer and

=~~~·Violet HyseU

Spell Checker

1lle group donaled $5 to lhc
Mak:h fA Dimea llld $5 to lhc
Aml:ricln Lung Auocialion.
.4, fill CIJIIIIII waa held with
pri2!N ao1n1 10 Helen Bllcblon
lad Dorodly Jefren.
'
'h benediction waa given in
uniPI.
Qdlen IDCIJdi"' wen: Louise
BCIIfll, Apel Dixon and Frances

=2~

~-

=-;r...
....
,
.
•,·~=·~·.
OPEN :,.. .-a c::M•...
- - IIWIIIIM wl$ I 1 '1111 Clll

pt. 1.1011 "!"

ADSIEJ
Ill
DIAMOU

992-2156·
'

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

·aousE --·tllltiC.·
..

lOllS

'

Pocket·slzedl 163-670

.... .... -11101

,..-. Col_, ,.tiel; • I

.

Plan Now to A"endl_ __.

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Payment may vary depending upon your purchalft.

oncl""""

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ITCHAIIlE TOUCH·TOft!IPULSE.j]IIOOOS- "'IMIOIIfOr4
lirol. Ttlt~lvrt. in orus tltvintl only'""" (IOIIty·dOQ
1 you can.stiN use ·~ reqvmg ronn. likl Mftmativt long-diiUua I)'Sitms tnd computeriad seMctl. FCC registered.
liltS.
NOI' 101 party lilieS. Wt 511\'iCe wnat we Ill BattttNIOWifld ~ UCiudiS Olttlrils except wt.&gt;rt noted. ·
*Recl~es rtew activ~tlon and minimum MrYict commllmenr wen Rldio Sfllck ctllltar p110ne cafritf except wt1tr1 Qrohibited
by State IJW /1699 wittJotA ICtNifion) , 5ee 6foiliTIIMOif' ~r defalk. .
,,
·
,
,
PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATiNG STORES AND DEALERS

•

•

Childlen of God, Angie Willen,
The Redeemed Quartet and Tbe
Carriers. The public is invited.
S~CUSE - There will be I
holiday bazaar at the Syracuse Asbury Uitited Methodist Church on
Friday and Saturday from 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. There will be crafts, baked
goods. Soup and sandwiches will
be served.
POMEROY - The fifth annual
arts lllld crafts show will be held
Friday fian 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the
Meigs County Senior CitJZens Center. A viKiety of handmade crafts
will be displayed and food will he
available during the afternoon.
Public iJ inviled.
, SALEM CENTER - The Salem
Center Fall Festival will be held
Friday from 2-7 p.m. 81 the school.
Refreshments alld events will take
place in the evening.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Gallia
County Pomona Grange will meet
with the Meigs POinona Grange on
Friday at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall. A potluck meal will begin at .
6:30 p.m. followed by meeting at
7:30p.m. All officers will be instal-

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Mrs. Ruth SwepSton, Columbus:
Steve Swepston and sons, Cod and
Andy, Washington Court Hoose;
visiled with Mr. and Mrs. Robert

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..'

,·'·~

..'1-1.

..
,) '

cake; and prettiest plain jane ~,
Call 992.()681 for !llllre inforrd1
lion.
:.
A costume contest will be belil
on Sunday 81 die liChool rot :1
children age 12 and under. Judging~ }.
will be in four age grotlps, 0-2;'i~
years; 3-5 .years; 6-8 yean; and ~.~ .
12 years. For more information ei11
nM
£.&lt;.01 •
YYVUUO

' . ::~
" ·

'
I

be a round and SQUIIIll dance on
Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m. at the
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
featuring lhe True Country
Rarnblets, Caller is Jim Carnahan.
POMEROY - "Rabbit Hill" will
be the film shown at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
~m Saturday at 2 p.m. Public invited.
COOLVUJ..E • There will be a
SQUIIIll dance at the Coolville Lions
Club on Saturday · from 8-11 p.m.
Music ·by Happy Hollow Boys. $3
single, $5 couple. ·
·
SUNDAY
· REEDSVILLE - George Hall
will perform an organ concert on
Sunday at 7:30 p,m. at the
Reedsville
United
Methodist
Church. The public is invited.

E. Neal Orteza, M.D. ·
&amp;

Emy Olivarez-Orteza, M.D•. ~ ·
•

,'·

announce the opening of their
· practice in

..
-,

General Pediatrics

..'

and

.-.,

Adolescent Medicine

••

at
.
2907 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, West Virginia

•

&gt;

'.

•

.

~

Seeing patients

Steven
Alexander
Hudson
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
celebrated his second birthday
recently with a party a1 Me.Donald's in Pomeroy.
For appointments call
' ~
Attending with his parents,
Jatnes and Barbara Hudson, were
(804) 675-4107
••
1atneS Hudson n, Clara Landers,
·~
Harold and Eaa Will, Jean Gilmore, Lisa Hooten. Melissa Martin,
Marvin ,Hickel, Jessica Hoolen,
VALLEY
Heidi Gilmore, Desiree Hickel,
..... The lomily ol prof.Nionalt .
Joshua Hooten. Levi Hickel,
Heather Davis, Harold Scarberry
Jr., Bubby Martin. Sending gifts l!;;;;i;;;;;====•V;;;;II;;;ill;;;;.Driw;;;;.;;;;'i;;;P;;;;oint=PINNn=;;;;~;i;;WY=21';;;;15f0=;i;;(3CM;;;;i;)8;;;;711;;;;;;;;43;;;;40i;;;
was Robert Titus.
• ..,

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$189 95

I
7 Ill Ide
-w·l II

•

•

• 1c111t d=+· top.IMI

(rom

bag
.._
clnNng .

Designs by the Sea

SAVE SS

212 E. Main, Pomeroy

Layaway ~neral wpi11 for a

'
•

.--=-...

...... Chrllt- Gift.

•
•
•

·~

r--------""'!"...;80-.;N-------..

Dave Diln will .. in our
store to autograph copies
of his ••• book ·
·"From A shea to Glory"

.
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..,.

STOP BY
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3
11 :00 A.M. TO 1:00 PM.

--------•

30x Microscope

day .school.
•
Elva Dean B1!111itz, Potneroj.~
was at the home of Eunie Brillkcc.·
on Sunday.
.
.'·,:
Mr. IIIII Mrs. David YOUD&amp;Columbus, spent a recent werVri' '
with Miry Roush.
,' •
,;l

Carleton Schools festivals
planned for this Sunday

Hudson birthday is celebrated

~ SVAC QUiz Bowl League
*petition got underway this
wick with the varsity teams from
S~es Valley, Hannan Trace,
western, and Eastern defeatKyger Creek, Southern,
western, and North Gallia.
QuiZ Bowl League is an oppchmity for high s&lt;;hool stlldents
to)ngage in academic con!aiS, pit·
q their lalowledge and quiclcness
ofi response, against !bit of their
«Anpetitors. :r~ scoring Jearn
mtlnbers for this first or seven
matches were Darrell Freeman for
S)'IDIDes Valley, Roben Bush for
Hlnrtan . Trace. Ci!ldy Carney for
~ Hill, Tom HIDiter for Eastern,
Dpn Polcyn for Kyger Creek. Jes-

I

Carmel area happenings

Cindy Oliveri, home economics Ohio Stale UniYenity and other in· Lee rr,..endy.
Mrs. Edlel Orr, Cheslef. was at
agent . in ~eigs and . J~ ~tutions.. The publication gives
Counties, recetved the Commwuca- bps on Qllte m8nagement, slress the Lee home on Sunday. .
There were 44 present for Suntion. Award for: ~e~etter at ~ . ~don, child Clllll, finances,
Nallonal Assoctabon of ExlenSIOII nulribon, and other family, conHome Economists llllliUal meeting surner and employee-relaled matin Chicago. Tbe award waa for her lefS.
. work on ''UfeT'J.me," a quarterly
In Meigs County, employers can
publication or the .Ohio Coq&gt;era- order bulk subscriptions for ."Liferive Ex1ension Service.
Thne" by contaCting Cindy Oliveri
Ms. Oliveri is a member of the at the Extension Office at 992edirorial board that produces 6696.
·:ureTIIIIC." Tbe annual cornpetiMs. Oliveri bas been the ellen- · Apancake brunch.and craft show
bOll f&lt;r the award was open to the
sion home ecooomics agent in will be held Sunday from 11 a.m. 10
3,200 members or the national aaMeigs CjlU!Ity since 1984. She bas
p.m. at Carleton School in
sociarion. The awards ceremony been a member of the National As- 4SyracuSe.
interested in
took pllce at the organization's Ill· sociation of Extension Home reserving a Crafters
space
should
call 992nual ~ling in September. ·
. Economists f&lt;r seven years. She
. "LifeTime" is aimed. at helping
Served as Ohio Sta~ President and 6681.
A cake contest and auction will
· employed people balance their
received the Stale Achievement be held on Sunday at the scbool.
work and family responsibilities.
Award for Home Economics in
Three ea1egories will be most resArticles are based on researoh at
1989.
live holiday cake; best occasion

· Conununity Calendar items appear led including subordinate members.. wttn semng' to begin at 5 p.m. till·
two days before ail event and the
lUPPERS PLAINS - Christmas lowed by games at 6:30 p.m. Adday of that evenL llems must be bazaar 81 SL Paul United Methodist mission is 25 cents.
received in advance to insure pub- Chun:h in Tuppers Plains on Friday
POINT PLEASANT - A bend
lication in the calendar.
and S~y from 9 a.m. 10 3 p.m.
area g011pel sing will be held SaturTHURSDAY
· POMEROY - Chun:h Women day 81.. 7 p.m. at the Gospel Ligh·
lUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- United wiD meet Friday at 1:30 thouse Church on Neal Road in
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 p.m. at SL Paul Lutheran Cbwth in Point Pleasan~ W.Va. featuring
Auxiliary will meet Thursda' at Pomeroy for Wo-ld Community Edens Family, Ptarly Gates
7:30 p.m. The district 12 president Day. Dues are $5 and $5 blanket Quartet. NIIIOW Way and Rellecwill be a guest A poUuck will be cenifi.ca~ea may be purchased.
tions. Public invited. · ·
held.
·
RU1LAND - The Leading Creek
· MJDDLEPOR:l' - The MidPOMEROY - Orders for the Consqvancy District will meet · d1eport Elementaey Scbool will
1~1 M~igs Marauder year book Friday atiO a.m. at the office.
have it fall carnival on Sa~y
will be taken 11 the high school on
SATURDAY
from 1-5 p.m. The public is invited
Thursday and Friday. Cost is $20 . RUTLAND - Rutland PfO Fall to llllend.
and engraving is an additional $2. Festival will be held Sanrday from
CARPENTER .- Tbe Carpenter
Plastic covers are $1.
6-8 .p.m. Tbe Monster Maah Blllld Baptist Cbun:h will have its annual
RACINE · The Racine American will perform from 6-6:30 p.m. ~ and bazaar with serving
Legion Post 602 will meet Food wiD be available and there beg10ning at6 p.m. on Saturday.
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Refresh- will be games and prizes,
TUPPERS PLAINS • There will.
ments wtD be served.
·
1ACKSON - The Winter
POMEROY - The Salisbury Craftfest, a craft show and sale,
Township Truslees will meet will be held at Cailter's Cave 4H
Thursday 81 the home of the clerk, Camp in 11tkson on Slllurday and
Sarah Gibbs, Ball Run Road, Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Pomeroy. The public is invited.
wn..KESVUJ..E ~· There will be
LOTI'RIDGE - The Lottridge a smorgiSbord dinner · at the
Co~unity Center will meet Wilkesville Pytbian Hall on SaturThilrsday 81 7 p.m. A poUuck din- day beginning it 4 p.m. Cost is SS
ner will be held at 6 p.m. Tbe f&lt;r adults and $2.50 for chilcben.
public is invited.
Public invited.
RU1LAND - The Rutland,
RU1LAND • Tbe Rutland EMS .
Township Truslees. will meet will have its Chrisbllas BaZaar on
Thmsday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rut- Saturday from 9 a.m. tO 5 p.m. at
land Fire Station. The public is in- the ciVIC center. Tables are availvited.
able for $5 each. Contact Marcia
POMEROY - The DAV will Elliott at 742-2233. Proceeds 10
meet Thursday at 1 p.m. at the hall benefit Rutland EMS; Refreshon 124 Butternut Ave. in Pomeroy.
ments available.
CHESTER
The annual
SALEM CENTER - Star Grlnge
friendship meeting of District 13 D and Star J1,111ior Grange will meet
or A will meet Tb1115day ar Belpre. . Saturday at 8 p.m. at th~ grange
Potluck dinner a1 6:30 p.m. fol- hall A poUuck supper will follow
lowed by meeting at 7:30 p.m. In- the meeting. All officers aie to
stallation of district officers.
repon al 7:30 p.m. ·for a conPOMEROY - Tbe Pomeroy ference.
Group of A.A. and AI Anon will
SALISaURY - ,The Salisbury
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. a1 Sacred Ff!I! Fesli;val w~l he held Salllllbiy
STEVEN ALEXANDER HUD-

HEATH UNITED MONODIST CHURCH
Middleport, Ohio

Oliveri honored by
national organization

..·. Cornm~nity calendar

THREE REGISTERED PHARMACISTS TO
SEIYE YOQ.

ST. DAVID'S CHORUS

5

evival services will
ordilined minisler and his
New Life Covenant Church of wife both attended the Bible. Col• Chester, beginning Sunday lege at the Christian Teaching Ceocontinuing through Wednesday ter in Lafayette, La. The Rev. Lee
t, 1 p.m. each evening.
also attended Tennessee Temple
Rev. and Mrs. E•.Jay Lee of . University in Chauanooga, Thnn.
ill Ministries will he con- and Denver University in Denver,
· d · · g ·the ·services. The ccuple Colo.
·
wels IIJid teaehes on the subjects
The Rev. and Mrs. Gary Hines
o ~verance and spiritual warfare invile the public to an.end the
. well as conducts training ses- revival services.
s · for Christian workers.

Tamara Hayman, daughlef of
Dan and Faith Hayman, Syracuse,
has been accepted into Who's Who
Among American High School
Students.
:·
According to a release from the
organization, only five .percent of
all students from the nation's
22,000 high schools are honored in
Who'sWho. ·
. The release went on to say that
smce 1967 the maj&lt;r objective of
Who's Who has been to rec~
the achievements of the nauon's
outstanding swdents who have contributed to their scbools and com·
munities. Nominations are received
from over 14,500 high school
faculty members, scholarship agencies,•youth club adminstrators and
other qualified educators and advisors.
·
Miss Hayman was nominated for
the award by the sponsors of the
Modem Miss Program.

The Daily Sentinti-Pag• 9:,_

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Hayman named to Whoj- Who

Milam birth ·

Powell speaks at Rotary meeting

•

Thursday, November 1, 1990

Thursday. Nolfember 1. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

FREE GIFT WRAPPING
~~~.

•

•'

••

.

·• •
...

Mitldt.pon, 011/o 46760

•

VIlA&amp;

93 Mill Srr.t

.--

(614} 992-6657

\... ':.-.,.

•

lllh&amp;ef I •

..._..cr, ,.,.:....,.,. ··••
II.T..

· -. . . . bag ......
• II =t fl ~ ll:aol . .

• 11.0- lrlll!lar
•.ccw ....... . . .

I

.

•Po unrc•Naalewllltullaf"
and

brulhecf-.,. c'a

onDaill- ·

••

Of

. ~.if( .5troF..E.t a3ooks. "

•

.....
_
....w.,.
.--....
.
-·--··· .• ·--

CAIID

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
MIDDLEPOU, OHIO

-·

�Paa•

1

o-Ti'!' Deily Sentinel

Thursdiy,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Nov.-nba' 1.

.

1990

~~~~N;~~am~bw~2,~·;19~90~~--~--------~--------~~~m~~~oy~~M~~~d~~;;~O~h~io~~--------~~~-------:~n.~~~~s:em~in~al~~~~1 ;

Harrisonville happenings

~~R~e£;, !?! ct!e s~!-me-r'-s-en_tlr_e_w-ar-.

Nellie, ·RUlli IIIII Jcrany Lowe years.
IPCIIl 1 weebnd in Three Mile,
'Mrs. Wilma Cotttzill and Mrs.
W.Va., It the home of her sisrtz, Letha Coutrill spen\ two days and
Helen Young. Wlille there the a night in the Amish Community in
poup lOured Hawk's Nest and eastern Ohio.
Babcotk Stale Patk.
.
Bessie Graham has returned 10
Mr$. Faye Cotlerill has returned the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
bailie from a two week's stay in . Graham from O'Bleness Hospiral.
Florida 10 visit her father, Noah
Lawrence Colterill, Waco, Texas,
Birdlfield, who had surguy while stopped overnight with his parents,
lbewaslhere.
. RaymOnd and .Letha Cotterill,'
At I nx:cnl meeling and dinner while on a business trip through
~ a local carpenter's union 650, this area.
Clladei Kinl ""' liWanled a 45·
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Doitohue
year pin and Duane Stanley a 40- and Mr. and Mrs. Abe Lee spent
yeu: pin fa- membenhip in tbe or- two weeks in Florida where they

'

pnizarion.

Mr.

lllld Mrs. .

visited the Dennis Donohue family

John Williams of Jacksonville. Dennis Donohue's

went 111 Wyandolte, Mich., 10 auend
1 retirement ceremony for her
blolber, I&amp;me$ Warfield, who had
been pastor of the ·chwch for 50

four-year-old son retlimed with
them for a visit with his
grandparents.
·

...., IIOY. 2ncl &amp; SAT., INOY. 3rcl

Middleport Child Conservation
League holds recent meeting
A .halloween party was held

[

' and Jobn SUauu may be short
but they 're still sharp when It
comes to clothes. The YO\Ing
actor and President Bush's chief
of staff, who both are 5-fool·9,
both made the 10 Best· dressed
Shorter Men In America list
compiled by Short Sizes Inc., a
specially clothing company. Also
on the list are 5-loot-7 rock star
811Jy ·Joel, S·!oot-7 Broadway
actor Robert Morse, 5-foot-6
, Olympic gymnast Bart Connor,
5.foot· 8 television home handy·
man Bab VIla, 5-foot, 7 Cleveland
Mayor Michael Willie and 5-foot·
8 writer Tom WoUe. Repeat
•t 5 1 Ml
winners were .,. oot· ac or ~
chael J . Fox and 5-toot·l actor·
director Danll)' DeVIto. There
were also a couple of dlshonora·
ble mentions on the list-cartoon
characters Homer and Bart

recently· by members of the Mid·
dlepon Child Consavation League
at the Rock Springs United
Methodist
Church. presided .t the
,._..., Broderic'8
_,
"'
meeling and ~ with 'ihe
Mother's Prayer and pledge to the
llq. Money was coUected for a

made for tbe District Spring Con. . ~~ to be hosted by the league
m AJril. .
.
. Allending were Bob, Thmnue,
Bobby and Christie Mash; Nancy,

TO PLACf AN AD CALL 992·2156

Houn:

INGELS
FURNITURE

LARGE 1 ITEM
PIZZA

• ,S90 Oomino' 1 ,.111 . l"c Our drirf•• Clf'l"f' ... thM 120.00 Delilte""' ' " ' limft.O 10 •"•"'•

SAVE 40% ALL COOKWARE SETS and
REVERE OPEN ·sTOCK COOKWARE-

.

• SAVE 40% SELECT APPLIANCES
PROCTOR.SILEX TOASTER #T330W SALE 8.98 REG. 14.97
PROCTOR·SILEX IRON #13300 SALE 8.98 REG. 14.97
THERMACELL CURLING IRON #CA0262CS SALE 11.39 REG. 18.99

446-Gallipolil

367-Ch•hiu
388-Vinton

245- Aio Gr~ndo
211-Guvan Dist.
143-Arebia Diit.

•lesume Formatting and Completion
•Personalized Repetitive Letters
•48 Hour Turnaround Guaranteed
.•Lifetime Computer Storage

379-Walnat

INT'EIIOR • EmRIOR

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Toke the pain out of
pain!i... Let me do
tt for you.

• SAVE 40% ALL MICROWAVE·
COOKING ACCESSORIES

SALE 11.86 REG. 19.77

Public Notice

• SAVE 40% ALL DECORATIVE LAMPS
9 ~ 99·49.99

'

• SAVE 40% ALL COOKIE JARS, GLASS GIFTWARE,
GLASS SERVEWARE and *ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS
.~..:-.-"--·· :· not ..,._. in Rehoboth &amp;Ndl. s..lord~

DE. , 8e.1in, UD., Onotd. ME., N . Hlllf)d,;,,

Ut•. TitQidM!gll, Tut:ll* tM:•. w....-., NV., KMIOn, OH., WMU•. VA .

Gto~~tloti,

TiiOtl.

w.-.N.H., Co.tfnt, Mar. ..

' THURSDAyI NOVEMBER 1

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

COUCH FOR SALE

_86" single seat
cushion couch,
·medium blue
background. Five
· large ruffled pillows
(3 are back cushions).

r·

992-6491

49- For Le••

ant to :
H-lng Clllrll,
OEPA. P.O. Box 1041, Col·
umbuo, OH. 43211·0141
Ph. 111141 1144·2111. Con·
tuh OAC Chop. 3741 trill
OAC Chopt. 37411·47 ond
37411· 11 for '*!Uinomonto.
Flnel lauance of Certlll·
co11on
Huntington Dill. Corp• of
EngiMirt
Yonouo Twpo., Ohio
Elllctlvl Oato: 10/22/10
Thl• flneiiiCtion not prec1d1d
by JI&lt;OpoHd octlon end 11
10 EBR. Pertolno
to 401 ~. grant.
,......,, lo Huntlngmn Dlo·
trlct Corpt ol Engl-.. Public Notice No. IHII0-1111.
(1111 ••1tc

....,-ble

BUI . LETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4: 30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
. PUBLICATION

PARKING LOT SALE

. _MIDDLEPORT,

.

BULLETIN ··BOARD

.

786 NOITH SECOND ST.

44 - Apartment tor Rent
46 - Furn ished Rooms
48 - Space for Rant
47 - Winted tQ Rent
41 - Equipment tor Rent

79-C•mpen S. Motor Hom11

3ROLLs1.99
OUR REG. 79' rol

SPARKLE
PAPER TOWELS
90 sheets perroiL Two ply .

0URREG.

OUR REG.

3 • 3 3 3.67·4.67
84 OZ. TIDE
LIQUID DETERGENT

1 .83

BAN DEODORANT

6 oz. aerosol. Variety ol
popular formu las.

New fresh clean scen1.
Llmll 3 P4'

c..stomet

4

0URREG.
7.99

99
ULTRA
SLIM.f=AST
14 oz. con1ainer.
•

..

Choice
or van illa, chocolate or

1..1m1t e Pfl cutklmfr

614-992-7563

Commercial a.
Relldential
•Roofing
•Siding
•Window.
lln't • Warth lloi1g RIP•

.BANKS.
CONSTRUCnON
SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM' and

REMOVAL
"LIGHT HAULING
'FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK .

992-2269 .

GALLIPOLIS·

175 N. S~d Ave., Middleport

(614t 992·7028

Silver Bridge ·Plaza
i

992-5335 ... 1115-3561
Offk•
. .POIIIIOY;'IIIIO.
.tf
•

MO.

•ALUMINUM SIDING
•iLOWN IN

·

INSULATION

BISSELL · · '
SIDING CO.

Ser v1 ces
81 ·· Homelmpr-owmentt
~2 - Piumbing

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEn.

87- Upholsll!ll'y

PUblic Notice
NOTICE OF
. APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On October 23•. 1990. In
the Melt!• County Probate
Court. Con No. 28127.
Mary · Ellen Andrew. 381
Moon Plnn.,tvenla,
Clinton Ro.od, 11108,
Corea·
polio,
wao -lnlecl Exacutrlx of
the ettete of Frenal• H. An·
drew, doceolld. lato o!SR
248, Rou11 •1. long Bot·
tom, Motgo County. Ohio
411743.
Roben E. lucie.
Prol&gt;lt.Judge
t.ne K. Ne111ol0011d, Clerll
1101211. (111 t. 8 3tc

FOR SALE IN RACINE

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE It hereby givMI
thet on Baturday. Ncrvember
Jnl, 1110. et 10:00 o.m.. o
public Nte will be held ot
101 Union A-ue. Po.,...
roy, Ohlo,lo Hlforcuhthe
following collatarel:
1174 VACE Trevol Tralltr
IIIV221:1002
1811 Oldomoblle Cutlut
Crulaer IW 4 OR
s•2B3HJ31X111303111
The Fonner• llenk and
lavtngl ComfiiiiY· Po--

SER~ICE

.

PAT' HILL

.,.

CEDAI

........

992-21

CONSTRUCDON

Middl•p~

992-66t8 or

UNLIMITED
4 TON MIN. UMIT

$50.00 ......
286-2689
10-24 I
pd.

Reel Estate General

CUSTOM IUIT
.HOMES &amp; GARAGEt
PH. 949-2101
or los. 949•2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

'

..C=

o..rontooct.

edYif\Ca, No
depoah. No crMIIt check. 1

Com....,clal
IEWIIIHG AND
. 110UilE SII()OnNG
· Cortlflotl lltctrldaM
fr• ltlntotos

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
1 f!IO.

&amp; VIcinity

3- Fomllllll, 101 -' ~~~ . •.
........ Nov N; •.
:flO.
ChrtMmu crat11, yard or~

nomontl, ponloon loOot. oiNn. "'!o
wlntlrclott.-.
Big Yont loll, loll lhlo yoor. AI. 'j:
II otont hlgllay Hondo--. . ~
Everything cheap, g1HM1r1, *
Avon batt• bookl, 1ome fur- · •
nhon, clot ..l Ill ~~-~ -~' you •
Wlnl $1.00. Fridly • _ ......., ~
10:30 1111 ?. Sundl)' 1:00 lilt . :
·mile homo, -hlng dtH.- ~
MCh.y.
- ~

»'

221.0048. $18.95 IM.
Ell ~. LoN Walghll ....

446-11571. .

No Hunllna

D&lt;

Trupo..,g on

We

Bring It In Or
_ Pldc Up.

.

liEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE '

992-$335 ... ~·5;3561
, ...... , ........ Office
217 E. s.c. ,_.,
PCHIIIOY, OliO

316/'90/tln

1 mo .

YARD SALE

RACINE
GUN CLUB

(Next to Block Plllntl

GUN SHOOTS
ltOOP.M.
SUNDAYS

12=:=-'

SHO-O-II'S STAIT
SIPI1 1990

~
1111

Pomeroy,

:•

Mlddlepon
&amp; VICinity

•;

••
•)

2!0 llutboOTy _. lo P Etomonbory. Bockproodo, IIIII;
blcl1 houiMif'lt, COli .. eweatW1
clelri wtnler clothing.

•

i&gt;

:

3lomlf
.... Sotom
·-· •
Bob Elldit,....
,..Jdtnce.
OM ,..._, ~
chalnuw,
clothing, ::

.,_.......

a••••ratmlec.

i

7ZS Cheltnut StrHt. Mlddl1part.

l:

UnatlactMcl? ArN Slngl• See11:
COmmu . .atlan With You. Con-

COlli.

~

lht A. H. Alclcot form Hor110rd,
wv.
Vlotl1...
will
Ill

fldenllot
Info.
Wrllo:
HNriMardo, P.O. Oox1043, GoJ.
tlpollo, OH 45131.

Frlday,1112, lo3pm. Blbf ftlt1N01 men. · Aftd WOIMitl

1 - A o -. 1...__.
Sm1ll Indoor doa: hou..brolc.n,

doll noc like cfiUdNn. 114-JJio.
2233.
White t.male Spttl .-yiCI,

*"

675-1831 """ 5:30.
Whho flobbtt, • Huolloy Typo

Dog, To-y,s...-.w.

6

Lost &amp; Found

=

BliCk wollll loll on P_.'o

~,:;h

1m::=

....... REWA'ADI IMIH2-7734
or twtl82-1813.

Found

~--•-

~

1

-h

"Q

ooto,

lloYing S.lo.

~

bleycto - · ·

nlclcnoC-0.

.,
l;
~

"
"

~

34t&gt;tod ..... "
Nov.
1-24.10011,
- -'IlL.

..

•·'!;

GNnt Slnootlltddloporl.

one

.

.

m

dey onty. Ylrd ot
High ltrMt 1 Mlddl1part. LMng

=
..,.

room ...-, ml.c. 11·:1-10.

Wlnlor YW Solo" Cllry rooldonco on Ftotwooao Aooct.
Frida~ Nov. 2. W prn onct
sotunlor. Nov. a. • .,. prn.
LAIIo ots
- -· olllld,.,.
chllhle onct
coollo
oman
to
odUNI. AIM IOYIInd mloc.

-•2

a

Public Sate
&amp; AuctiOn

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

Rick Poe..., -tan Co&gt;mpony
-.nown ,_ booldng oucttona, a. ~
ol:.""Ji.d1um
plfllnce 1111 cl"-o.
poopto. 11411112.$420. u
- 011!!,_1\!_~ky.
w.. ~.­
·
VIrginia, 304-:t rHTA.

holt g-n billclc

9 Wllntttd to Buy
=:-:::-:::-~:-:;..~.!..,IIIICI CloDio County Echo. Yoor-

FomU, Pot.

w.-

-1

ne~r

VIM Coll't .,...._

t:=i ~~~~~

7

e

::.,.,

Botuntoy,
I:OO..m.·? A tot of auw Jthll..- M
.t.. L.aootto In lllcld-, , _
IO Joh-'0 Ylrlotf lltono; klr
lit. Unlan loptllt ChUN:h build•
tng fund.
fhru

holr, loot: Soble ond wHto Bhetlle
llllnlot&amp;n Cotlo) . , . . - ,
Fowth holr,
A - Aroe - ·
Soblo
tiDDod In btoclc. No
IIIJL Yorv tfmld, Name Jooll.
P I - caD 114-4414131 Intormotlon. LMI - n lnl
Annue

\0

1-, mloo.

Large rumrnogo I -

Pupptoe. s Wb. old, All tot billclc
tomoiM, ' - -her, Aogii-

-i

Big Yont S.to. Tlurodoy.Sotu,.
dey. S52 Soulh Fourtll · IIJd.
d -. Gtrto ctothoo, eM

ctalhoo,

Giveaway

4

OVEN IEPAII
ALL MAlES

•

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

Th......y

'

,

Yord loll, Sotuntay, 11 Moln Sl,
..._ Haven. 1at1 ot 1&amp;eetronlc1,

3 ·Announc;ements
Calh

...·. .

Cllrogo Solo, Fri, Sit, lion. 3203
JocklonAve. 8:00111 ?.

Announcements

Vl_,_orcard

614-992-6120
Po1111roy, Ohio

992-6641 Daily
992·2627
5 P.M.

ClASSifiED ADS . ?

Crodll Ptl8, Gold Crodh Cont.

• CONI'LETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICE

Owner _&amp; Operator

3 BEDROOM COU
HOME, 5 acres
wooded, larp livinc . room with firepia, 2 baths, unattached 1aflp, near
11111 Hl1h School

HOUSE OVERFL!IYIINC?
ClEAN IF WITH (\

"AI Reasonttblt Prkas"

,..

Pt. Plellsant

36496 SMnll HN ID.

The ·
GROOM
ROOM

FOREST RUN ROAD

...

,

~-

Buy. Sell or Trade
Guns
OPEN MON .·SAT. 10·5

Aesldentlelend

In Memory Of
EARL H. DEAN
Who paattd ew1y
Nov. 1 , 1.979
11 yeera ago
I wish there were
some wonderful
: plac.
Called thti . Lend of
Beginning Again.
Whtlra ell our mlstokes and all our
htlllnaches
And all of our poor
Hlfllh grief
Could be dropped
like a thebby old
coat et the door.
And never be put on
ageln.
His wife a. femll

Ptu 11 Coroonory. Air_,.,... · ·
. . . . . . , . , . . . , . tall looll.
gift clothoo,
Ulonotta,
11wn
- r . ~~~~• loto ·""·.

5oa Ul For Your
Sporting Hoods

BISSELL-·
BUILDERS

~=J!~~~i::::=
2
In Memory

Yonl Solo: Frldly 6 SIIUrdn, :;,..
llh -.IU01 ott 141 on LJnooji -: ·

. . .t

. . 742-2421

Public Notice

...... .

SUPPLIES

110.

roy. Ohio, .Wurvei the right
to bid a1 1111o - · end to
wl111drew the • - DOlle·
tlfal priOr to - · Further,
Tho Formero Bank Mid Sav·
lno• Company , . _ , the
right to roject ony or ell bldt
IUbmlttecl.
FUrther. tho obove aolll·
torot will be oold In the aon·
dillon It m In with no ex·
pro- or Implied werTen·
tiat OivMI.
.
(10)31; i11)1, 2. 3tc

11M.

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;

OGarag-.
•complete .
· R.emodlllng
Stop &amp; Compare
Fr_oo Estimates
985·4473 .
667-6179

•••

2183 Eallom Avonuo ond olio 1
112 mlllll .... 218. _...,... '· 2, •

10· 12·'80·1 mo.

·

. . . . ·-es

810 South Second
Middleport

:

--··'-·... Clot.... -

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL
FRE~ ESTIMATES

We con rtPGir tiilcl rt·
core radiators'· and
it.attr cor"•.We can
·also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tank•·

EMILEE MERINAR

FRI. &amp;SAT. 8:30·??

..

Factory Chollt
12 Ga• Sllotg- Only
Strklly Enfornd

110 SUNDAY CAlLS

YARD SALE

kitchen •!!PNances

;,,

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 ....

PH. 949"·2801
or lo,_ 949-2160

GroOming
for All lreods

Lois of full size clothes and

':J,

lashan lulldlng

"'Free Eatlmete1"

83-Eac.,aling
85-Gen lfal Hauling
&amp;&amp;-Mobile Home Repair

d-.

' :.;Sol· .......

.... ._14!1t

&amp; He•lng

84- Eiectricel &amp; Jlllefrtg•elian

lllnd,
pie - ·,.~
ld1
-- ·· •
roclo calllnll)
...
rongo, otac. ·c~ryer, dlllrwutw, ~ .
kttcllen table • . - · bed,

Ylnhy.- pon.
lld,mucltrnoN.
~
Huao ',!~ Salepon'
~~t
o..f.'v.
_
t
......
....,.
·
·
·
_
.
_;:10;,;;13;;.01..;;'19~n-l
AdUh,
Fumhuro,
...,., "
L
. hm hid, qUIItlf.
," '
, , _ Slit:
a til
?
d ' . ,.
tUinhUriL lullvllto ROlli, Abon · ~
Uynl.. I"UrnltuN.
\l~

. AG'DII , . . . . . . .

•VINYL SIDING

COAL

VERY NICE l.AAGE tllME ON N'I'ROX. 3\1
ACRES- 4 BR. 3blths, 2&amp;.,_ rented I
BR apartment Propefty indude pond, approx. 4,1100 sq. ft. l•m blcfl and mobile
home. Are1l barpin II . _ $84,900.
CALL 614·992·7104 FOR APPl ~

'

I•

SE.YK

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCnON.

SORRY, NO RAINCHECKS. UMITED TO STORE STOCK
MAGIC CHEF
30" ELECTRIC RANGE
Only I year old - $150
INGELS APPliANCES &amp; RENTAL
and KUTRITE CARPET

UN'S APPLIANC
.E E

Vary IIOIDnGilt
Ita we Refarences

Ant:--

Orondo, OH.

9-25-'99·dn

NOV. 1 THRU. 3

llavors.

up .

'4-1&amp;-86-tln

Lump or Sto.ker

Public Notice

S1.50/D.S. Page

., .,

•1 - Houaes for Rent

whhln · 30 · dayo ol the II·
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho following w... NCIIV· IUance dale: or 111t dlrec1or
o d / -...d by 111e Ohio rev1Ma/wlthdr8WII the proEnvlfonmont.l Protacdon poNd action. Any poroon
AIJII- (OEPAI loat - · rnev oubmll commonllond·
I or • mHtlng rav•dlng eny
E~o dat.o ot llnal oc·
tktn1 and iuu1nce dllte1 of droit ectlon within 30 doyo
propolld action• ·a nd ol of 1he dall lndlca1ed. '"Acdroit ectlono ore o101ec1. Fl· don", at ulld above don
no I octlono mey bo IIPPMiod, no11ncluda racolpt of 1 veri·
In wrhlng. within 30 daYI of •ftod oompllllnt. If olgnlllcont
tho date of thlo notice. to I he public lnt-11 exlato. a pub·
Envlrunmentol loenl of Rt· lie matting may be held. Aa
vllw. Am. 300. 231 E. to any ectlon. inolucR"9 rfi·
Town 11., Columbo11, Oh, , celpt ol111rlllod "'!niplol~ll.
432111 . Notlceofenyappoal ony penon rney ob1oln no·
lhall be lllod with the dlrlc· dee of further 110don~o ond
tor whhln 3 dayo. Prup-d oddltlonal lnformollon. Un·
octlono wll become llnll un· le11 otherwl• provided in
looo • wrt1tM1 odjudlcatlon nallce ol Jllrllculer actlono,
heoring owqueot IIIIUbmlttecl all cammunlcatlona thoU be

SALE 23$ TO 11.99 REG. 39¢·19. 99

.FRIDAyI NOVEMBER 2
9:00
• • •
Weather Permitting

e;mnma

895 - Letart ,
937 - Buflllo

78 - Ctmp ing Equ ipment

• SAVE 40% ALL PORCELAIN DOLLS

SALE 46$ T0 .1.79 REG. 77c-2.99

•BrOchures
.
•Letters and Term Pa_pers
•Mailing Labels
•Press Releases
•Newsletters

74...-Motorcvcl•
· 76- Boeu &amp; Motors for Sale
76- Auto P•rts • Acc•sori•
77 ~- Auto Repair

33- Farms for Sale
34-Buain•s Buildings
36 - Lotl &amp; Acreage
36 - Real Enete Wanted

Get Recuftc Fast-

• SAVE 40% ALL KITCHEN and BATH BRUSHES

. Wordprocessing Services Include:

31 - Homes for Sale
32 - Mobite Hom" tor Sate

72-Trw~;:ks forS•I•
73- V•ns 6 4 v,'O "s

42 - Mobile Hom" for Rent

.,

Otaonllc llcrvtna .Solo: Now. .!1' ~
2. l-1 p.m.. IOI"W. COli. . . tqO '

6-12·90

'71 - A&amp;.noe for hie

43 - Farms for Rent

SALE 77' TO 14.38 REG. 1.29·23.97

SALE 5.99 TO 29.99 REG.

S15.00 every day

Rea l Esl al e

773 - MISOn

742 - Rutland
667-- Coolville

FREE ESTIMATES

USED RAILROAD nES

13...,- Livestock
64- Hav • Gr1in
66-Seed &amp; Fe·n ilinr

21 - Busin•• Opportunitv

882- New Haven

949-Recine .

12- W111ted to Buy

22 - Mon., to Loan
23 - Prof•tionel s..-vicft

&amp;76 - Apple Grolltl

247-Lelart Falls

E~Quipment

Tran sporl alwn

&amp;75-Pt. Pleasant
458-Leon

992 - Middleport
Pom•oy
9815 - Ch81ter
843-Portllnd

6, - F1rm

17- MisceU•neout

Meson Co .. WV
'Area Code 304

Mei gs County

.. DAY WOIIA111Y

1 8 - Winted To Do

2 :(10 P.M . FAIOAV

Area Code614

~ IIPPiiP.s

&amp; L1ve slock

1 6 - Schools lo Instruction
16 - Aadio. TV &amp; CB Repair

Classified pap;es .col'i'r the
foUtJwing telephonl' exchanges ...

SALE 8.99 TO 53.99 REG. 14.99·89.99

Fmn

14-Busin•• Training

2 :00P.M . TUESDAY

- 2:00P.M . WEDNESDAY
. ~ 2:00P.M . THURSDAY
-

sa - FruitS &amp; Vev.-ebl•
59-For Sele or Trede

1 1- Help Wanted
12- Situation Wanted
1 3- lnsurence

- ao P.M . MONDAY
-

53 - Antique•
s• - Mitc. M•cttandite
51-Bu~ding Suppli•
&amp;6-Pet• fot S1h1
57-Mutl~el lnnrum•t•

f mpl oy111En l
Serv1ces

OAV BEFORE PUBLICAT ION
- 11 :00A.M . SATUROAV

FRIDA'( PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

TtME AND CA"fEIII OfltPOATUNITifS NOW AVA.ILAILE 1

.

In Memoriam

9 - Went.:f to Buy

WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

&amp;1-Hounhold Oqods
52- Sporting Goodl

7- V•d Sale !paid in advence)

•A cl•sified advertisement placed in The Daily Sent inelle• ·
c:ept ~ c:l•sifi ed di1pl..,, Bulin•• Card and leg81 notices)
will ~Ito appear in ~he Pt . Pte•enl Register and I he Galli·
poii1 .D1lly Tribune. reaching olltlr 18,000 home1 .

.............. IJ- Y .. od •I ,.n&gt;etpllll'tOIJI IOC.IIDN onf¥ . . . . . 1U IGdftio!WI Wftotl ..,pkc1ble IJA"T

JOB WINNING RESUMES

,05/ doy

11 .30 / doy

5:._ Happy Ads

8- P~tblic Sale &amp; Auction

TUESDAY PAP,ER

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

.60

113.00

1.5

16

C1rd of Th . .ks

MONDAY PAPER

-$999

$599

.42..

19.00

&amp;-Lost end Found

•Ads thlt mutt be l*d in advance tre

LARGE DELUXE
PIZZA AND 4
PEPS IS

Pick-Up Only!

14.00
. 16.00

3- Annoucements
4- Giveawav

for errors tint d~ ed runs in piper) . Call before 2 :00 p m
dt¥ tfter publicltton to mike conection.

USED APPUANCES

1.. Nortft Stcond
l!lldtlhpart, Oltlo 45760

BUILDING &amp;
REMODELING

Ov,r' 1&amp; Words
.
.20
.30

Rote

1 - Catd of Th.,kl
2 - ln Memory

only u•d .

COPV DEADLINE -

.

Mercham11 sr.

•Sentinil it not responsible for errora1fter tint day . IChtdc.

II am to 1 amFri. &amp;SaL

AND

New Lamtlool: .

10·10.10·1

Words
16
15
15

6
10
Monlhly.

- Giv..wey end Found ed1 unci• 15 words ,_m be
no chage.
all upitel ••ters is double price ot 1d cost .

I I am to Mid. Sun.·Thurs.

.

PLUMIING &amp; IlEATltG

LINDA'S
PAINTING

614-915-4180

:!!e•:0..~1 . 6:0 disc~U'ni for 1d1 ptid in ldvance.

992-2124

For a Resume that interviews as well as you do!

.

Dl

PHONE

tor con•cutNe runs. brokenupd.,-swilt be ch•G«i

106 N, S.C011d Aw-e
Middleport, Ohle 45760
(614) 992·2635
.
Toll Froo 11001 426·5511

POMEROY. OHIO: R.t . 7 &amp; S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: At. tiO &amp; S.R. 143
• . NEW HOURS: ·
POMEROY: 9 e.m.-7 p.m. 7 Daya
ALBANY: 10 a.m.-11 p.m. 8 DaYII. CloHCI Sunday
PAYING AS OF TODAY. SEPT. 11. 1990
#1 Copper '1 per lb.;
Clean Dry Aluminum Cena. 411¢ per lb.
CIMnAUIIIRMiotors44¢1b.; BatiiiN11•'1 .26•.
Ve!low Braaa 40c
Alum. Sheela 40C lb.
1 1
·

NEvtR ClEAN YOUR
GUTTERS AGAIN

.,.

w. Y.OidW -Ool:_~~ov.
• . .,...
-.
2nd,Fomttr
::Hoo;ooo~on~lll~.-~·;;;-hiWdiij
,.
~
12

0Fftl5 2 'OCAYIONS TO SIIVI YOU'"'

992•15009 ·

Your Phofl.e
Billa Here

'

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

TII·COUNTY IECYCLING

W. C.,.,. Flohtn8 SupPtl•

Days
. 3

MONDAY 1hru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

over tbe last few years. Leiters
were read from former pastors who
were unable 10 attend

•coMPOSITION SEPARATE PRICE

REAGAN ON MEMORY
LANE: Ronald Reacan was
overflowing with nostalgic memorles during a Tuesday tour of
his hometown, Dixon, lll. ''Yes, I
love and remember Dixon," be
said. "'And, yes, Dixon Is the
placethatlalwaysknowlcango
home to.,. 0 1\ his first trip back to
Dixon since a 1984 homecoming,
th 1
red th
e onner president lou
e
small frame house where he
lived 85 a boy.

• The Area's Number 1' Marketplace

·- -

992-2922

MNPEAKERSGETPOLIT·
JCAL: The two top lawmen !rom
''Twin Peaks," FBI Agent Dale
Cooper and Sheriff Harry s.
Truman, set aside the Laura
Palmer murdei; caselongenough
to do some ' polltlcklng. Kyle
MacLachlan and Michael Ontkean . appear In character In a
30-second. television ad opposing
Proposition 135, a pesticide regu·
latJon that Californians will vote
on next week. In the spot, the two
dori rubber gloves and examine a
smoklngblackboxwtth "'135No" ·
stenciled on Its side. •'This
Proposition 135 Is not what .It
seems;· MacLachlan Intones

Ia 1c
n I
Construction

Classi 18

Josh, Holly and Megan Broderick;
Unda and Vincent Broderick;
Helen, Amber, Brenda and Jeremy
Blackstone; Peggy Houdashelt and
Keuy Johnston; Kath
. y, Ke.ith and
Gtnger Durst; Jon Mattea; Joshua
and Jeremy Manley; Bonnie
Michele and Rebecca Scott; Kyl~
White; Ann Colburn and Weston
Fife:. Becky Broderick and Peggy
Harris.
The travelin~ prize, donated by
Becky Brodenck, was won by
Peggy Harris. Pop and cookies
were served by the members
·
·

Racine UMC homecoming
Homecoming was celebrated at
die Racine United Methodist
Church on Sunday with special
worship service at 11 a.m.
During die s«vice, Rev. Roger
Grace baptired Bethany Mllllins,
infant daughter of John and Amy
FISher Mullins. Rev. GlllCC read the
lilmes of children baptized and
couples married in the church since
the ll)erger of the chwcbes. Also
-remembered were the 14 people
wbo have died during dlis time.
· The choir sang an anthem, "For
AD the Saints." The children's choir
sailg several numbers and Jennifer
Walker sang a solo.
A potluck dinner followed the
service and an afternoon program
was conducted
Paula Sayre . sang a solo and
LarrY Fisher sang a solo and led the
.. group in singing. Paul Beegle, suprrintendent, introd.-1 tbe Sunday achool teachers.
Rev. Grace called attention to the
accomplishments of the church

II."

-s-om_be_r_ly,e-xp-la-ln-ln-gt_o_On_tk_ea-n
that, ''The pesticide Industry
designed 135 to mislead the
yoters. lt doesn't protect us !rom
cancer-causing pesticides." The
commercial was aired at a San
Diego news conference where
doughnuts and coffee, two "Twin
Peaks'; staples, were served. ·

•

p:::s ~~ .·

· ~:w~:.berore

drobe should be nuked," said
5-!oot·2 Bob Stern, president of
Short Sizes. "And, for the sake of
civilization, Bartrlghtalongwitb

B siness Servic==8=t1 __~_~. :. : _n~. :.-- ,
11

Yard Sale

book. 114-MI-1324.

..,~ .

·

-

.,. .
.~

• Ponlll; f14.44W107,
114 3M 1104.

,

3
:5

To . ""'' Good tJood

~umor, IIW?NI40,

:'::-! ~: .:._~ :;;
Latry UveiJ. I'M I. IHJ.

..3

1

To llur. . _ ......... f'M2111 Dill.

. ._

Gellpolls
&amp; VICinity
LAROI OAAMI
SALE'
·DON'T LET THIS ONE I'AII
YOU IYI SA1UADAY ONLY,
Nawamblr lnl, 114 11'1111 en ~
1111. ott 7.

Emp loyllll'll l Scrvtcrs

-EXTRA

d_
...
-..A--.•••=• ................

filet'*'&amp;/

11

Help Wanted

.Dantlno'e Plaa of

it•• ., 11

,l ·
~

iJ
.

.............. A - · M - . C I I ........ .

toa n u - l l -lon.

,w... .. -.atl.

�•

Apa11JMnt
torRent

LAFF·A·DAY

5I

VI-

11nl,.,...

!!!!lorn

a

1'2i••-. "" ,...,

53

-:,-,-.,-1011~.-:R::"I..:,.,-:111-.-An,....,llq-,-. -..

2 &amp; I '
·r 1n11MIIte In Pomeror.. 1 112
bollia,-· aqolppool
I &amp; tWiaa- NqUirod.
-

--~Char. P.U.,

••••• ... •:oo p.m.

rtver,

'-. ·.

l .

cr'lll'l1oakina
Ref.
1

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

•

~i~.~ &lt;ll•

I!Ddill! P.U.

~·

Dodga p1a1111p D-100, PI
PI, 1111111 I, .~!'.."'.~-_ , iiiol

_

&lt;
..

.............. ,•.
, ... Fold 210 J/4-

iii Abllott -

ctl3-2·1 c . . -

a® •a•c:aa
...... r;~
, . , Grltlltlt

OM II d

=

-11. . , . . . feCIUIIod.
114111122211...,1p.rn.

Ill lpolt8Looll
AclvlnWw of .,. lllack

·en Sl8reo. 1:;1

1:35 Ill , . , Grltlltlt
. 7:00 (]) -~IIJl wntel
. of,'
Fortune
(JJ I
of JaMnll

41 Houses tor Rent

z bad_.;
DtDa1 $100
· -"
· -Aut,
lind.
UIO inonlh.
"

reqUired.
IMnU-2114 oriM/liiNQS.
lnd

INOTICEI

..

OHIO VAWY PUBLISHING CO,
NCOmmlndl thlll you do IIUI~

rou

with paople
krmw, and
NOT to oond _ , . , throuvn tila
.,.N you

-

lila obortng.

2

4S

fu,....,

lledroom.

-Good-

H.U.D.

ilavo ln-lglllad -

0&lt;

Ill

-ion.

o - . 1 Oftlr. -

· (l) (!) MICHell Lehrer

,.._.Ia•

=·--Hottl.

~

-nal-lar2orloon-

•ruotlon

--.

·- ·

I

22 Money to Loan

MIO

D ·ICIAC&amp;OW and

. .h~.
AlaO tralllr
-·All
-....,..
Call ••• 2:00 p.m., 104·7"1So

CREDIT PUJS. 001.0 CREDIT
CARD. Vltolllut.-card guonon·
lotd. CUh Adnneto, no
-urby do-b. nco crodH
chack. 1·100-226-0048. SIU5

........
.li...., ..... 1-fr~

sH••• THAT'S" N°

P/liVf~'.f /.lr:.INSI; JPJ*p~r:-c;,

75

ftiCJtt.ESS' P~IVING I
C/l0$SING A pOU8/.6
WHtTE I-1N6, P~IVIPI6

Boata &amp; Motora

tor Sale

WITH YOLJ(l tlfAP
OUT THi WINPOW • · ·

1112 fF ft. - f t BM. Gil HP, Ewl~~

_........,_ . ,..._
~·---1·­

~'Ti."::.,~· '
f•,lcrc~alldiS€

AKC reglttered Beegle pupil, 5
manlhe old. $150 eech.l. firm.
AKC reglettrtd Cochr ~panltl

27114.

pupt. S125 atch. Rad Dooh

Household

Hound melt pup. $100. 6141667•

Wao..

3010.

IHRiiiKWIW'.

Goods

AKC

Roglatorod

Mlnlotort

Schneuzer Pup1, 5 wke. old,

61 ......~ ...., 4p.m.

1413, t-5.

For Sa : 1112 Morcury Mlrqua,

Ill power, IDIIded, 1'14-211--1431.

&amp;

811utlf1.1l SlemeM Klttenli, 814·

441.0231 Tho Groom Shop.

loxtr pupe • 4 m•l•, 2 lem•le,

$75 aoch. Colll14-388,.803.
O..gonwynd canary Porolon,

sa.m... •nd Hlmalayen kltt.na,
BU 448 3844 Ifltr 7 p.m.

Tonk, 2413 Jockaon "'"·

Floli

Point PINaonl, 304-675-2013, 10
gal oot up $14.111 and 10 gal

•

::

THAvt;,S" lt-1

1980 Flll'd Dart- 12000. 1111
Ford Rongar otok..... 12800. Stll 7&amp;
or trodo. 1114451-t:r!O. .
1980 Ford Plnlo, auto. raar win·
~OW

dlfrOIIt.r, IIC cond, $1,200.

304-175-4141oftor 4:30.
1981 Monta Corio, ":'.:•· Air
condp V-6, 304-175onar
6~ M.
.
1112 FOfd EXP, nMda engine
work. $450. ~ ollor

I :OOp.on.

,'

Auto Parts &amp;
kc:1110rle1

1177 Ford lranoo. Coil plltl

.. ~

train. liM Font :"",~
2.11 VB englna ond
••••• , , •• IMI 1 t1 •n

·-.

'. •

__ -__........_

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

~

10 mill ..... OOIIf! h ·
· - 711 itullt

alna. -p.m.-n:so
1 0 ...
-.a
p.m.

-

W.lkll' m•lew trt-color. Spring

crttk rock brod. 614·092-3679· 1114 Olda Tcronado, loodad, 4 C..W.IIIT-.,. ~onnllh , _!
$~,800. 304-862-2050 .... 4:00 llltt, ..... Aloo, ' ~ 10 aftll' 1:30 pm.
p...
711aodaqo-. . . . .,.....
'
2211ollorlp.m.
·'
Poodln: toye, te•cu.., AKP.
Tlnr mel•, bllllllful ftmlll .. · 1985 Chryaltr Flnh Ava, tully
Alao tdlllt doao. Lara• cagto. powea:-cf, 304-182·3134 Ilk far ~~· II I ' Pwt. riJ.
Korani:OQ.S:OO.
CooMIIII14/If1.340ol.
CARPET
FURNITURE
Mollohan Furnlturt a C.rptla. . Plontt, Pott, Ill. 7Nor111.114-441-11144.
Slanda, A- -lng Hold.-o,
St•eo,
W?nt• dOI:hl•, llby
rntdl... bl.. btck·
Man,_, t Rolli Wollpopor,
ll011lng, naad to ttll. 4Bed
Rollo, 13 ~. Tupporwo,., 3

Dlhar
Mltcollanoouo
County Appl- Inc. Good and
. - oppllo,_, T.ll. uta. ()pan Thlngal Coli 304-6711-2954 or
I Lift. to ~on. Mon.'llll .•14- SH AI 1:18 Engllah Aotd Pl.
3rd. A... Go I·

rlilla Bond HHI lload, 304-671:IIM.

, . _ .... 204-f75-1071.
2br~100.
lrallar ... - ·
..

1110
r o -olr,mo1111o
-·
141170,a
ctntnot
lumlthad
or
unfurnllhld, 121.11 bklg, on 1
ecre, Junction Rt. 2 end 1ft Ill.

~

mod*

lila unballavoblo prlot
S12,100 dollvtrod ond Ht up. 11
·:,:11!::,
. ,-..,.--,---:-= -::::Coii1.80Q.~ tordoiiUo.
::
OIOior-7. rant, · -

-Ia - ""

Nlot Z bad,_

,.,._,

llrgt yord, 210 ilonih Stroot,
Koilouga, 114-446-'11111.

BUll IIIII

tor local private club, oxcollant
- g oandHion, - . r
nl(lhlo only cto otel, Go~
llpolll Dtlly Tribuna, 125 Third
Avon.., Dtlllpollo, OH 41131.

DFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Ava., OoiiiDOIIo. ~ lo

Want~

INOinttntnl. 114-441-'1111 day,

«&amp;-t511t...

.

35 Loti &amp; Acresge

to notocata In lila
lonrntdlata - . . , Plttiburv/1
..... Cflllcf ..... ..,.., , _ Room • lor

=_, -···ony- =
--..In

WIIt ...
ell lllllftli, lratnea In nuralng.
H1tYe IWfeltl 'U . . . . .2-31M.

18

truck box, J04.1~7315.

!!e!r!lorllor,

2dr,

Froet

115; Gulbav For S.Poltla: W - Rhllng

Free, or

em,

lf'"ec ne

- . F - F - $110; Kanonart G-ttd prampt ....lei far
WoGold $tS;. llt· mtllat, - · Tht Wttilar
tc..nmore WIIIIIII', AvOOido, Ill; Dry• Shopp&amp;l14 418 3144.

~ ~...:S: =~ Part· -lnglon, 170 barrall,
w...._ wMho• .1 10~ - . IIOi__ , 11. liJI riding

=

=, a.:_.,

• •• il..ct
·~· ~

, _ _ $1211;

- ;- · 441hii:

mower: . r cut WID• . .r

-·lfi'!,",INtl.uHI&lt;'tollll

llunoy H

...

rldmg - ·

..... 114- brand .... $100.
1ony D-1- car cltcm011
(4=01 cltll pllytrj. Ullo MW.

=Ra~=~
~~
, 14.44 perWMk.
-lntr •7.11 ~ -11. Dlnlllo
-.o with 4 ChaiN, 17.80 por -k. 4

2 bt*oom ...-men~. Nlw
Hovon,
WV.
Laurllllld
Aptllrntllla, IIIII lnd

- · Plifttw ohlkfnon.
c10 -.,.. .., rio '
oi-. lttiC

rotJ1 $111. Coli

:,:::,.a:·

-•t.
1

Appft&gt;L 1 _ . , - -

,our

Avocado, 1121,; IIOigarotor, 2dr, Gulnad. $11, : ~
Whlla, Ill; ...~. !="~" .....
...,_
froot Fret, Ub
- · An:nclltklned Wtt hl1'8, D~·
eaoi ~O!t.
Htln'Mt

w-.

44

Equol Hoo•lng
18--lnd-1 2
.,..._""""""'"""'~
~
-from Alhlnl,
,.,_..,,
ott Cld 20
II. - Nl01 _ , 1n
bullcllng ..... 111,100.00. rno• ltd _ . _ and 111.
All k 11 t 1271 Evenlngii'M 141 aas.
UOO ......_ 814 ttl 22171101·
114-441-7 om and 7 pm. ·

...,.,. ltdr

- ·· 114-1185-

Mlxad hard wood ollba. $13 por
IIUndla. COIIIIIM o~. 1 112
ton. otllo Pallt4 Co., PoiMroy,
HHooOIMo.thiOooldld turnlohlng. 112 mi. Ohio.
114~1.·
.ltrr1cho Rd. Pt. Pl-nl, WV,
call304-675-1410.
lloYirllloala, tumbUM ond onloc.
a.-. alot _,...,..., 1'14-441- 1188 nP .tully loodad, , _

. ···..-

R-c»letered mlne1ure Dllshaund,

6 wb old, $200. NCh, 304-11!&gt;-

3526.

'!il

lwhMI

112.20 ""'
~

1885

MHzubllhl

Conquest,

Musical

monthi.J

email

-lor

Ina ...

. . . Colt 814 11112'?173.

.

'.
. '.

WH""T 00 'rt:lU DO 'INHE:N
'rt?UR NOM HOI.-LCRS

·.

•·•

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables
Dunl0¥fn FNb Farm tutt oft Sr

•
I

•' 1

.....,lllnl ·.·. .

·-------- . .
'

f~ll'lbuatrn

BARNEY

(l)

·.·

~

•"t,

'r

A~bU11Dft

..
I

~

~·.

.'

11:00 (]). Cll (Jl. •

~;:1ppl1rs

20-...,

P. L :VI'',I~rk

61Fann Equpment
I
J0 Tract, $11,8110i_i!!)20 JD
Troctar · - I&amp; ...; 2010
JO T_,or, ~56o. i5Wnor will

.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

..... -

- --

Doy

Cora
Canlar
lhPsndable,

-. ....., .....
f'81iantt ,

........

~

_ . . Dty C.. cantar.
. . . """*ble, chl?.d'c m. ll:f
....... 5:t0 p.m. AaH 2-10.
..,... •
ilattoaC Dlop In•
t 1 FYI&amp; 114 441 1224,

Point PIn1In
..,..

Itt.

i

ttl~

"t,
31111.
"··~.........

83

;

1lllla, I:ON:OO - , . ,

Llvlltock
7,

tor Rent

=--·

"My pumpkin pie 1as1e1 like candle wax?
Maybe I should ~ave jusc lhrown
our jack·O'-Ianlern away." ,

~~ ..• ---------~

·---·--------- -

-··:

lor-

,.

roll PhlllrJ.I!OO ftb ~~~ 1111
Ch 2 iUl rnn~unnJ "· a.r
......
OOO,woiiFafl 11, 1111
Ootclng, ~. 112
;,..,.,.,
,'110 April a,

~·

.' ' .•"''~

...

.
. .... Utno,hoo
won
~ .lt!Mture rt11n1
U,'IIO. 114'-12.

------·~~·--------------

- · 2, 'II-

•

knplamenta. • ..,.

-OUollaQuo..l'tb RoalolaMII
tfll

2 bldRom ,_.., unfumlehld.
...... ...,...... Dtpoalt
Wll- otrt'ol tldarlr , . _ In rny .hoont. I hlvO rottr.noao.
NO . pota.

1-·7227.

Galli

,,..... a

-lxporttnMdUdr-•7
' In
"""""
doCngaround
....
1 -• hoont.
In«
Go~
nptlla. _..1130, 4:30 to 41 ttou111
1:30p.on.

-·-lA-

_,..,..

-

rwnrnnHt......, illnd dEll •
lion 10· lOx Co2t ~ -

J

..~-'·

,,

'

Tile yur ~ could be a very slgnlflcantoneforyou-eyourca,.,.and
aamlngt .,. w-ned. Thero are
promillng lndiM,IIQnl you might make
more 111M- t.tore.
ICORPIO (OoL M Na•.l2111 might be
very touQit 1o r..mmer out 1 tllsible
ag,.,.nt Ioder· None ol .the . . , lnvOIYid ltiiPt to 'be ssllslleel wllh the
terms, fMilll1o 111 prQIPICiolor survtval
very
Get afump on life by un·
derotancllne lhe Influences wl11ctl ore

dubl-.
'•

21 forum
garb

lor

22Praa

34Early

lakeoll

25 Mason's

26~:r.•r
lavorile

son

28KingiJ
30Ferbar

..

garden

35 Dis·

..

patch lid
361nquire ·

37Dece•
31 Nicklaus's

Dill·

..

...
l..r+-+-f-11-

Acros.s

&lt;at •

IIJlNewa
(JJ Night c-t 1:;1

gove(ning you in the year ahead. Send overburden your budget.
tor your Astra-Graph predictions today TAURUS (AprU
20) All lmpor·
C!)Newafik:h
by mailing $1.25 co Astro-Graph. c(o lanl associa(ion musl be handled wllh
®. ArlettiO Hall
lhls newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleve- conslderallon and tact todoy. A mlsun«&lt;I Mllntl VIol
land , OH 44101·3428. Be sure to state derslandlng or ·thoughlleaa behavior
• Antell eM IIUIIc Shop
your zodiac sign.
could put this retallonahlp In jeopardy.
0 at. ShOt Clay T..,.at
IAGmARIUI ( - . 23-Dec. 21) GEMINI (May 21-.lune 20) II'S lmpor·
Do alt ..
sometimes you're reasonably good at tanl at this lime that you do not let your
Ill~ of lhelllack
juggling several critical·assignments si· duties and responsibilities begin lo pile
81 ·c 1Sl8feo. 1:;1
multaneously, but this 11 not likely to be up on you. It rou fall behind, you could
one of those days. It's besl to do less. have a dickens ala time trying Ia catch
11:301~· IIJl TonlghiiMw
but do thai wen.
up later.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 11) A email . CA~CI!R (.lune 21-.1.., 22) Usually
misunderstanding might arise between • you re a rather gregarious person wl1o
JiiWiiii81iL.i0 ";rg'ltlti't One
you and a good friend today. Tile event taels comtortablo In a crowd. Howevor,
could be magnified beyond lis slgnlfl· l~ay If a b(l of aollluele ,appeaiiiO you .
cance If II turns lnla a clash ol oppoaln' 11 s best nol tp Ioree yourself lo mingle,
wills
·
.LEO (.IIIIJ D'Aug. Zl) Tltere leatt~ong
AQUARIUS (Jotn: ZO.Fob.
11 your ,Indication thai you mlghl ftnd yourself
liming and tocllcs are not 1n sync, 11 will ·· lite cen1er of aHentlon today. Olhars
be exlremely dllllcull tor you to 1u1m1 will be scrullnlzlng your faul11 , hoW8V8r,
ambitious objeCtives loday. Try lo do . ralher than looking forthlnga to admire.
wl1ot 's tmart and ettocllve at the rlghl ' YHIGO (Aifl. :11-lept. II) There Ia a
lime.
chance you might try to lmpoae your
'I'IICES (Fob. :10-" all 20) Slrlvelo oplnlonaonanunraponttv.lll-lobe Hlecllve today 1'8(11fdlng the 1 - day. Thlolndlvldulllo-loanger, but
you discUss with a temperamental your Intrusion COUld got 11111 friend. H 11111 pertOtt'l opinions are nol l1ially aleemed.
In eccord wllh yours, your pol could be- ~ (lepl. 2S-Oct. II) Thltl Ia no1
come very argurntnlotlve. ·
, nee 1111rlly IIMI beal lime to dlscuu ft.
Alllll ,......, 21·Aprll11) This Is nola 1n~ m.e nn wllh your rnrtla. There!' .
" good lime to utume naw ftnonctll abli- . a poetllblllly - " party might nI
gallons If lhllre are still oome otel oc- , the Other one wlto II blOwing 100 much
: counla thai na-'1 been clelreel from money.
' 11!01 (J) MOYII: T1la ....
. ' ~..
· your .boot&lt;L Be pNdenl and lry nqt to

39 Stow
c&amp;lgO

..
...

40Usa

sema·
phora
41 Voklld

•M•nw••

\

20Tdf

36Uama's
kin

...

DAILYCRYPrOQVOTES-Here'sblwiOwertll: 111111

1)

. . . . ,..,.r:~~r~4~Ri,n·

Want 10...., 10 lo 1 0 - ,.h
.,., ttw Flfdlr, 7:20 IIU I:JO. or , _ - . For men ...,..nlbn or to CouiiiJ
on
good
raad,

11 Airport

19 Letter
opener

.·

32 Ungralalul
ones,
anagram
ol29 .

• CIOOic and Clta..

-· .

a

nDVej
31 Cuzco
na1lva1
33 Prepare

Across

(!)l!dga

-~
• :'..&gt;'

close

pojisler
6 That is
7 Energy
Zsa Zlla's
1is
8 Sunbath·
lng goal

seaport,
anagram
ol16

111:05 (J) MOYIE: 'Thla llou8e
Paunnd (2:00)
10:30(J)Newa

''
'

orTrsde

5 Nollld

28~

0 700 Clull WHII.Pat

,.

·

27 Past
28 Flemish

s-.

SAUC611

. '

For S&amp;le

(I :001

C!l Under l'tta
&lt;Ill 1D • Knoll Lllncllrtg

D«ll I NEED
SOME
SMILLIN!

lima

23 Frlend lor
areas
Francois 15 Black as
24 Bass's
nighl
love
17 Sea gust
25 Farm
18 Hymn
machine

.. uve

Anne Malheaon becomes
IH!ful for her life; Karan
return• 1o work.
D
®.at. Trait: The Nell(
aanerdon
Q1 Clll l!lfllllnll . . _

=...:c:.=~·~ ..

20 Reeks

gul~-rldden

couple. stereo. a

_,

111 atol ot Allony. Wt ,_.,.
food oloonpa. Vorlatr of opplao1
amllh ah .... 1nd ~UIW, mlxea
nuto, , honav or aorghuon. "" ~::'~ lib ,_, 2\000 --.TV .......
~.Suniloy
. . dolly, mlllt,
, muot ~~ ~n
In _ ...........
lob poyononlo. I 4
-llonday.ll14-l~.
11014.
Turnlpo ll/lluohtl. Pick , _

ANI Eltste
Wantld

llala bird
13 Tatzan
was one
14 Rocks
from N.H.
16 Neon,
e.g., anagram Dl .
14 Across

s -.

rapraaanla a

-ltv your cor I proltct h
111om wlnlor oob I grlrno. lxpoll
outo olaMing lntlcfo a .out.

38

laslaner
producer
10TelDOWN
11 •Bart·
1 Flavor
back··
. 2 Finjaltad
riding
3 Singer
lady
Turner
12 Hawatrs • 4 Prima

Motion Plt:1ln (A) (2:001
. ttNeiiiMIIINow
till Top Rallk lolling
Ql Latty King Uval
1:30 (]) • IIJl.Grand Deemond's
mother announces her plllts
10 r81111t!'Y·
1:;1
1111
Ooctor, 0oc10r
Grant talis In love with Kalle .

I

ely - · -

AIMrlldt Aufo Deca?llng. ...._.

,1 The

lhe pt OC1Ice'o naw
~ - S-. 1:;1
10:00 (]). IIJl L.A. LIIW Abby

Wanted to Do

...._._

PIJT COTn:::lN

IN MYEARe,

a•

flnlnoe. ........ 8822

ft'!""",
Jot.
~"7lo:olnt
p
' wv
or 272-21lt.

I

ATVCU~

..... ~

SNAFU® by Bruce Beatti"e

by THOMAS JOSEPH
· ACROSS
bellla
1 c.-ry
42 Poal John
5 Beam
43 Penny

BrertdiiOallt Brandon's cer
while trying lo p8U her
driving leal. Stereo. .
«&lt;I MOYIE: t~et~t~~ur~~~r...The

'j

-

10:

CROSSWORD

~.ne:.~ Hlb, 10210

58

';nm

+

inv.11grtllon of the murder
goH jull II Hlltna had

SI8-8612.
W£ CARE..J&amp;M ·(Joauo &amp; Mel
PIANO SERVICE olfa,. EXPERT
~ "CARE" lor th- CARE" obout tilalr plonoo. 8111
Word. 304_.12·2325 (Prov 22:1).

of
O..wt,., t3.10 pa · 111. 141, Waad. ootor, :;.I SIJQI~ $101.
4 MHtt 011 111. 7 1n ca-,. - ballY'a c
ng tt,.... $1 ·
HOURI: - , thru Sllwdoy, Built!, 120. Choil if .......

s-.a

OlhetoJIM. Stareo.r;l

Plano! Rudolph Wur1Rztr, V.,
aood conciHion, SI,OOO. Coli BI4-

11r11.

North was uneomfortable with bid·
Well
Norlll Euo
ding
four clubs over South's three·di· Solllll
undercover pollcawoman.
I+ Poa
amond bid, bul what choice did he
Pass
2+
Pus
have? He had already rebid spades : 2 •
~ .._ lo ......... Plenat
Pus .- 1+
Pus
with only a five-card suit. U South was 3 t
All
pus
6
C!l"::£...a
looking for blm to bid no-trump with a
•
~ 1D
Top Cope Slereo.
heart stopper. 8·&amp;-2 did not qualify. So
Openin1lead: K
process of elimination forced him to
~. lito limpiOIIO The
show support for clubs with only K-8 ,. L-------~----...l
SlntpiOitl help Homer'a boll
No one can fault South for going 10
wHit 1111 cempalgn tor
slam. particularly since the bidding
Declarer paid a heavy penalty for
. Stareo. Q
dar, lite Wlille r;l .
mightjustenoourageWesttoleadinto careless play. There is no reason 10
rlcen Mutlc ShoP
the A·Q of hearts.
play only one round of clubs to lite
8PallneNIW6
Wesl had an easy lead of the dla· king. Instead declarer should play ace
Ill MOVII!: A W"'- N1VW
• mood king. Declarer now fell from of clubs and then king of clubs. What a
'
Qulla (2:00) 1:;1
grace. He won his ace of diamonds and difference! West can no longer ruff the
1:051]) MOVIE: 01111 Night of 1M
led a club to dummy's king. Next came third spade, and declarer is still in
111-(2:00)
the A-K-Q of spades. Declarer's plan dummy 10 take a ltellrt lineae tp ltis
1:30 C!l 'Thla Olclllou88 D
to throw three diamonds away queea. After he picks up lrum... he
a a• TIM .....,.llarry . was
and
then_
detenmne the best play in the plays ace of hearts, drOpping East's
· batlln evllaplrtll and a mad , ·
hearl
su1t.
Oops! West ruffed the third . kln1. He can then force oul the jack of
acillllllllo 11ve Cen1rel City.
spade and played anolher diamond. hearts and make the slam.
Slereo. D
Declarer now had to ruff. Because .~omt&lt;J,C.,y ·s -. "JI&lt;dlyaeBrlflwo"lllll
aD. llebte Chertene,
trumps splil badly. East was able 10 ·~-~"" CMd a.-· frrrlll«~ rrlfllu t•UW.
Martene and Derlene trtvel
take his remaining spades after win· 1bo ule O..-•ld 1-YI ,,. - •••no•ft ~
1o Club Mid lor a va~.
ning .the
· Botb ,,. JIONilllod by~,..,.~
.
th heart king. Tlte ugly result - - (),_...,APUIINIIIXJtetluatl.
l
~o..s';go
down ree.
1:00 (])
IIJl a-a Frasier and
Ullth worry about lhe .
devalopment ollhelr son.

(l) ·(!) .., ....

MaNger 1.00..7811 anrtlml.

p.m. to doilt Mon. lhN~~: ·
can
114s.
Soughmon FtnM. L.ocattd 7·112
rnl. 8. olf Gtlllpollo St. AI. 7.

Mr I lao Dowling and Sieve
ltunl lhe lclftlr of an

Cll•

Serv 1cc ~

. " QJ 74
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

By James Jacoby

Jamll Ouke Ia accuHCI ol
murder, Bird lrlello prove

paymonto on p!ono. Sao locally.

own. Irina own oontolnaro. 4

~: Megnum Force
.
Cll &lt;Jle ,....,. 0ow11n0
(2:301

s-.a Ga~ tel'e f'lrl Alter
(I)

.

lturnp ....,....1, Jud work,
Serraned 1eh, oU1 hlokory BlaiCI'MnTVtorceror~
• - · dttlvorod. til. Plcll- thfng ot eq•l ..,..., 304-175up Loa
. d, Don. Wough, 114-446- :all.

~=:=:=...=,.='"=·=:='"=.=='=·
. =·==N=-=·J.!r~;~~·...
;: e.:; h'~u ~~
_. ,~" ~'"!1~·~---_'_=...j·

~~

'"'* ....

.2......

••••

.AQI09
t AJ ~ 2

e

~--~-tn.,
4, ·

Prlca nogotloblo. 114-1192.a2ta.
Wonlad: Attpontlblo pally to
on

1'1•11111 1111 M, Uillid I

S()U111

s-.."

MotorHomn

Hemmond Oraan whh rhvthm.

t•ke

=

Turbo, 5 apttd, loadad, oxIL llaltlna II Ill; IIW4J.
ltnt condblon, 114-441-0183.
:117l~·;I1WlNIU.~;:i~;;,"F;;;i;;;;&amp;
11115 M-ng GT 1.0 302 V-6, VInton loll .... l'cl!tign a
pw, pt,l-t-. oc, -.un, a. ~-~·lllrytnl
apttd, whbo whn grey lntorlor. •~- -~
Aoklng $5,100. 114-'948-2534 .,. 79
ltr 5::10 pll!.
.
.
Clmpera&amp;

Instruments

;•====~=~=-~~~~~tnd ·~
Choir, 11.15 pa -11. Wonlad to a.,: Standing Tlrn1 Ptlca
814.01 per ""!. flonollar llrgo .._
114- 59
IAhapid J ... k llodo, . . .me,onor7p.m.

Co&lt;ln 1touooc 1 - . 2 -

3 roome, 4 raorn1. All l'lll=-lf
d-Iad, air condHionlng,
your Wltll' 1: MWW btl IN peii.
Make your cholol naw. No

.

-.vue~

u.- - ...........
lad,
~o::,--ovr....:.~p=-lorr:: ......
ononl. Kltolttn turnlahod. ·cor- 4 Drtwr

Situation

12

ADDIIoncal,
Memorial
Ra. Bttldt .Stono 3145.

RENT 2 OWN

Bulldlnga
Wanted: Pari-time Bar Tender

refrtgaratore, oltor 1.:110 PM.

PICKENS R.IRNITUAE

Retrtge_rator.

_...,..,.,id,

King wood and -1 bur..r
oto.., aood oond, 304-675-e830

- 1. Colll14-441-73tll.

- . fl4.441.1102.

~Fortr'o-­

APP~IANCES

"-"'·

--

.,,,

at Fumw..l 21M;
of St. At. 7 Hucl Approotd. 114-211-

33 Fanns tor Sale

rangot.

dryer~.

2br unturnllllod. olr . . . c l , tYIIftbla, btlutlfut ¥law In

Ano, 304-1115-34M.
2br, .. ...... -ad In
SPECIAL Factory to youllll, 2 E•ft-114 MWIIr.
or 3 bedroom14x70

Waahlrl;,
~

2----·nd
. . . . furNihld, •••• • ,.
aullwd. 111. \ ~· lid, ......

USED

U-GOOD

rnolllla llomt, :114

puppy, 10 wko old" hod ohola,
$1211. 304-372-1310 Hlplor.

Tebleclothll, 4 811:1 -~ ••

lpollo, Ul1

2 .........

Pure bred ..""'le 11ble Cold•

--~--- · ·95

One round
short

. (JJ

t7

+10632

IE

•a-a..,...,..._ ,,-·
ltWl

•Ks

' .J7f3
tKQl098

~~~='T-

'

EAST
+JI087f2

+vs

e

'

-NTE
. ~, ,I

lllo.Waliwtall
IIIYI- .·
IIAIIHE OoiHDOIIa. OM. 114-4412424, 1-7842111.
..

oompllltl43.25.
Four yaor old AKC Rag. Trtllng

-161!...

•so
•u

JAMES , WEST
JACOB'l 1

Ill Crollltra (0:301
7:351]) The JeHwaont
1;00 t~.IIJ.Colby Show
(R)

II·I·H

•uz

Cll•

a--7113.. .

N0R111

.

+AKQ63

Mra. King

7:30(])= IIJl~r;l
&lt;1l
c-~;~
Cll
• l!rntll..
llll-riililllllnrttrniMtetllllnt
Tonlghl Slereo.
.._,1 Family

Itt.

42 Mobile Hollin
tor Rant

BRIDGE

7:05 (J) ...,., Olp

-.u.-wv.

4 ....... oncl both. Ccintoot .....
Borcua II Mlrya Mkl. t14-44f.

=:,.eo:'ndl

~=~

-----or-h.

304/IIW(M.

/

SCI A Ill UTS ANswns
~~~
Crunch - Thief - Minus-Nether- FURNITURE
My husband is very fussy about ltls car and goes to
extremes to keep It clean. In fact it's in the garage so
much you could almost consider it garage FURNITURE!

Cll (Jl. lnrllde l!dlllon

Fumllhed

·, Roome

....... Cll

........
8

CDIIIII

~~

It

Business
Opportunity

2

1:051llllaVetlr Hi.lliaa
. 1:30 ~ • IIJl NIC NighiiJ Newt

-~~~--·-2200.
OMII epll, tor Nnt.

"Not THAT plug, you idiot...the TV!!!"
.

.1 111'.

. Ill . . _ . Slereo. 1:;1

.... ~­

:1112.

r

..,H...-E..,..o...,r_c.,..-11 ,J

1:;1

•One

'

:~~:..C. TOO.r . .

601N6 SOOTH FOR
THE WINTER. HUH?

1111 ....... F-110, ..... toppor,

30441$-2711.

:.I· II

«&lt;I
l!xprau
II BuJaetMr Thoraughincl

,

thlpt. .... -. ..... ~1221.

. oriental,

polntlngo, ';J:· or antlre oatalt
cau.-. 1211-32711.

...

I
jill

..

SOTJEL

a •• .

1.All
c-

..;,

-

•

(JJCIIIIIMift~r;l
3-2-1c..-

One and two ~. J owe; IQII:a.
..,.. IIIII MWhf redr aarlted in

...

THURS., NOV. 1
EV!NIHQ

1111.

54 MIIC81181110US
Merchandise

\ .r

AtJC&gt; RtJ~ ~t:V•uro!

WALLET

:

:!:..":14 ::·.:.r-.J!4:

1:00 to 1:00 p.m.

qulb,

' aubollrd•,

G~OIT Q/(0 ~A

sa.•·
"''" ...,. P.U. 1\111:
1111 iiiiC IW. 1711; llD AIIIO

. ,,........._,,
_., ... nlallal- - · 1 Top CUh polcf. · Olcl tumburt

mile beloW townb
CA, hNt,
114 !1410311.

=i. -

Yin,

Hou,.: U.T.W. 10:00 a.m. lo 1:00
P:'!'o~Y.

· oono ~~~w..wL

Af:!; b()ILTV OF ~1-lb A

-- P.U.· ·
P.U.
· - CIIIC
d
Char.
tz.2111L414, P.U. ~iJion l'onl 4114.
P.u. ea=-~,_

1124 E. .Main lti'Mt, Pomeroy.

u-..

Television
Viewing

l f&gt;M~~~~

ii:i'i: -

A.urri.E'
t.1FF'~€: MY

Antiques

~
~ f. ~sm;,«&lt;;o
I ... I'IW

- - .,. • :e
·.

5 ooy. ,

l)oy .., lbi. o'iiM; 1400 101. 11444t-2100 oft•llp.on.

A- uu-. .,.,. 11111-.

,._,_

,.

BORN LOSER

.

I

ft ... ,....,

AC,-.~

13

.

'

Truc:kl ror Slit

1111 .... ,.

--·-·
!Md---·
ho~.-.;o,_

tum•-.

&amp;... - ,.,.........,
Allaotononl,
a--.
211 Finlt

1

72

a lMd

01wo • ·· GoiHpollo. -

.... Coli--nit. EOH.

=
=

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

Houllhokl
Goodl

IWAIN
AUCTION a PURHI1'UAI. 12

OrMIOUI ~ 1 ft 2 bedapoll- ol
llaand
- LFram
~lnM'Mw

Thurwdey.
November 1. 1990
..

Nov8mblr 1, 1190

Ohio

.

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

'
,.

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is tilled
for the three L's, X for the two O's, elc. Single letters,
aposll ophes, the lertgtb and fonnatiqn ~the words are all
hints. Eac.h day the code letters are different.

-.

CllYP'I'OQUO'n

RQB

KQSW

PHDUTNY

Q'K

LZY

AVS

BRYS

,,

TU

NQAYD

..

i

'

.

UQ

PHWFTSF

QK'

KQZAYZ

URY

NZTAYD

FYSYZlUTQSD.

- LZALSW
DLELNZQH
v. I ...... Ca;;l ... I I PERHAPS NO MAN
1lfOUGHT A UNE S~Rfl.UQUS ~ HE

.WROTE IT. - .IOHNSON ,,.

·

"

I

I

,.

•

�Thursday, November 1. 1990

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

·AAUW meeting features
Southern -~z Bowl team
Don Salmons, Southcm High
School Quiz Bowl Ollch, and quiz
bowl team menlbers. were guests 81
the recent meeting of the Mid·
dleporl-Pomeroy Branch of the
Americll1 Association of University

Women held II the Racine United
Methodist Church:
A quiz match between two
groups of Southern students and

Fiie Safety Week was an opPQr·
tunily to see the Syracuse Volunteer
FIJ'e Department. Syracuse Mayor
Eber Pickens and several fire
department vol~nteers responded to
a routine building evacuauon drill
at the Meigs County Board of Men·
tal Retardation. Enrollees practice
drills for eme!lencies on a monthly
basis. This ume. however, they
were treated to an impressive
demonstration by the fire departmenL All 'equipmenl was displayed
and many students and adult enrollees were shown how to spray a fire
and what it is like to wear some of
die protective equipment Enrollees
also viewed slide presentations on
fire safety in the home. "In Case of
Fire" is a three-hour audio-visual

ou Bobcats

l

PLEASE VOTE FOR

~OliVE

TOWNSHIP
FIRE LEVY

Your Support Is Appreciated!

P1id for by Olive Township Volunteer firl Dept.
Route 1. Rl4dsvilll, 45m

\

~ travel to ·

Vol.41. No.137
Capwslghted 1890

Qllf Qivlnll

Syracuse residents
asked to support levy

' I-GUN OAK ............................................SAU'"9
lEG.' S429.00
s

399
REG • S499•00 12-GUN PIN ................;..............SALE
SAU S449
O~IC •••••••••••..•••••••.••••••••••••,......,•• _

'

BERKLINE
RECLINER
SALE
WALLAWAY RECLINER,
. CARE BASKETS FOR SERVICE· PEOPLE •
•
Residents 01 Overbf'O!Ik Ceater In Middleport
were busy, Of! .Thursday preparing "care pack•
aaes" for Me•~ Couaty semce men and wcmen
Ill Saudi Arab • PreparlDR, tbe packages are, 1-r
.

.

The Gabriel .QU4rtet

Quartet to participate.
•
•
•
tn anntversary stngtng

2

$15

MEN'S

LEATHER LOAFER

s2s·

1,

'12 Color1 .

pired II midmghL
-nus is the first work stoppage
resillting from contract negotiations
in the facili1y's history," tile release
Slaled. This comes less than two
years after the plant was taken·
priv81C in a le...eraged buyout from
Kaiser Aluminum.
.
The
release
said
RAC
· negotiaUIJ'S broke off the talks after
rejecting the union's proposal to extend the previous contracl and Ul
extend negotiations. Plant supervisors then ordered the worters to
leave the plant Salaried workers
and replacement w.ork.ers are

'12' Width

$1 799 .so. n.

•Anti-Stet '24 Colora
'10 Yr. Wur Werrenty

I 0 Yn. . . . . . . . . . 10 Yn. ., Ill Alllt-Siiedl
I

99 Sq. Yd.
SAlE $17
IISIAWD w/t/16 PAD

A totally Mw ......... In rnldtntlal corpet
f..r. Gnlis Corptt ctrtlfW by An!oco is tht
product of fiber technoloay specially ••eloplll
by A..-co to offer slglifliant
owr

·

stoln....,listant

.

SAL£

$2Q99
.
.
SQ. YD.

than COIIJplllllble empto,ees ai
other comPI'ties." said Joe Cbap..
man, a Slaff repc:senllllive for tfJe
USWA and spolcesman for the
110ion negqtiating committee.
·

Under its most recent offer, the
company would impose a profit:
sharing plan to replace cost-ofliving adjUSiments and a wase
bonus system based on aluminum
prices.
'"lbe profit sharing proposal is
vague and stingy," Chapman said.
"'w bonus sysrem .has WOited
weD. It is 1 proper reward for our
past sacrifices, whicb has saved tbis

Saturday, Nov. 3, at the RavciiWQOd
High School New Gymnasium.
Union members will be given a full
report by the negotiati(Jn commiuee.
at this time. Three meetings have
been se1 up to accommodai.C all
shifts: 8 a.m.- A ,and B shifL~' ) I
a.m.- C and D shift and 2 p.m.- itii
other shifts.
S'"lwodun will be able 10 sign
up for unemployment benefits at
the union hall on Wednesday, N\1'1.
7, at 9 a.m., ll a.m .• 1:30 p.m. and
3:30 p.m. On Thursday, Nov. 8, the
hours will be at9 a.m. and II a.m.

INCLIIIES PAD &amp; WOi

·

$2

s

Enjoy lhl fall
alliiN~,...,....
1991 Syhonio tolo•"''fAI
TtltlitiOII. lhty're oil on tole!
with the ,_chill of uy
U" te 27" Celor TV y01 rectin 1 FlU 5 Y- blllldltl Picture
Tube Worranty -~ o FIR 2 Y•r bNIIdlll S.Wicl WAIWITY.

"us -

SIZES 6-13

$10

, llus:Z

r~ ,, SYLVANIA1
,

~~:..;~
~

SUPFRSET

SIZES4
to 6'/J

REMOTE CONSOLE

•Z·Ifl·1 ••••••OM • 111 ... ..._.. Olf 2znw

lUMEN'S

DRESS SHOES
MARKED DOWN

19" REMOn
COUll POITAILE

~~i--S
5299
Now's the time to buy! Our sale prices are
low and the extended warranties are FREE.

$45

21

ONlY

MEN'S .

DINGO lOOTS

• o.k Lll•
. 100 .......... ClaiMII .............., • ..., . . , •

.STOll HOURS
9:30-1:00
Tutsday·Satur•y
9:30-5100

Mon.,
•

FREE DEUYERY

549

DINING· ROOM SALE

o .. ul oliool Ml ,_,liMn bitter. Wo hiV91111 top UlllH. tre111o
tabiH. flonn tabloo. round ..d r.,tangular labiH. bolutllul chino
c.blnttl. hutchH end corner cupboerda. Formol and .....,day otYloo·

TAKE

OUR EVERYDAY. LOW PRICES

. Layaway For Christmas!

..I

To make life "a lillie less rclena.less and a lillie more fOtgiving" for
the mentally relllided and develop. mentally disabled and their families
is the goal of the Meigs Coun1y
Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities in its
quest for additional l8ll revenue
which will be decided couni)'Wide
on Tuesday, according 10 MRDD
Superinlelldenl Lee Wedemeyer:

levy will generate approximately
$312,000 per year. This· will cost
the owner of lh!l average $40,000
home six cents per day or $21.00
per year.
Wedemeyer compared
the ··
average annual .figune to the cost of
a typical family night out for pizza.
"If the levy does not pass."
Wedemeyer wd, ''the board wiU
bave no choice but to reduce services."
This reduction in setVice, according to Wedemeyer, will be accomplished through all or a combination of measures, includinz a
aew year layoff of II least 16 llalf
members, a 10 pcn:ent cut in
salaries for ~ remaining and a
r.1SpOIIIion ol Ill .....,. . . in-

be tbe dlinl such levy to be 1111 tbe
billot on behalf ot the MRDD
bQI(d ill liS m•y elec•ions Simi*
tmea•M.tt
rejlii:leil by lhlf Meigs
CountY
olec:lonlle first in NOYelll-' creases.
ber.1!189 llld then in May of 1990.
Wedemeyer stallld that the board
. Acconting 10 MRDD Boant now employs approximately · 45
President Roben EMon the board's eml_lloyees, while the aflil~
1991 budget projection has · 1 Me•gs Industries Board emoloys
revenue shortfall of over

=

se~add't:: another faitoo

tevy

~~~u;gt!ts'i~scs!

vices for approximately three and a
halfrnontbsduring 1991.
delay and minimize the effectS of
"The Meigs MRDD board"
rising progrart~ cosu."
provides much more than jUSt CarPomeroy AIIOmey John Lenres. leton School." Wedemeyer said on
the board's vice president, says one Tuesday. " Serving a total of 140
example of the board's· eflQI1S to poople, tbc board provides
utilize tjJe public's money ' in a employment and vocational ser.
frugal .-ay · is 10 place ~ much · vices, case managcmcrlt programs,
money~ward prov1ding clitect ser- and suppon services like fos!er
vices ' Ul the person with IIJCJltal homes and residential services.
rewtlatiOn and deve~tal dis- These services, too, would be inabilities and their famiiiCs.
cv~ed
.• in any suspension of ser'"The salaries of the boald's ad~
minislrators are well below the
"It must ~intod out under the
same PQSitioos in neighboring law that the · ool age children are
counties and well below the county the legal responsibility or their toMRDD board swe-wide average cal school disaicl," . Wedemeyer
salaries," Le ntes said· ·'One ad• said. "The local school ·district must
mmiStrator s
. IS ap • provide all educational services ,.r
·
1 SIO
car Carleton School, for whatever
proltlmare Y
'
per Y
. reasons, would be unable to
below the stare a~erage and
$10 000
below a provide an education ror children
•
per years
with mental retardation or
neighboring
county
for
the
same
d
.· "
evelopmenta1 disabilities who
po~!!'edemoo. eyer repons that the new reside in Meigs County.·
...

,. . . .. . = ·

Ande11on'1

Don't Forget

FU.mtll, APPLIAIIaS, TV'S, ROOI COYBING

To Ure Our
Christmas

992-3671

layaway

J

tricts. We cannot continue to have
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
our state government control us
Sentinel news stair
.•
with threats and blackmail by withRon Easunan, independent canholding our funcls if we don't do
didare for the Ohio Senale seat in
what they want." he said.
the 17tb Disaict.lates exception 10
l:le contends that the closer the
what he terms the ''excessive camgovernment is to the people, the
paign spending" ot his oppo11ents,
more efficient it is and that trying
DEWINE . VISITS
Conartssman Michael
mlssloaer Ma•nllig Roush, Meip County
Sen. ian Michael Long, (Dto run thin"" from Columbus with
DeWine (R-Cedarville), candidate ror Obio
Circleville) and Dan Hieronimus,
no consid~lion of the local comAuditor But Wickline, Fran Dewlae, CoaLieutenant Governor, and bls wife Fran vlslled
(R-Lawrence COIIIIIY).
munities is a real problem.
gressman DeWine, Melp County Probate Court
GOP beadquarters In Pomeroy 011 Wedaesday.
Jqe Robert E. Buck, and Meigs County
· Easanan, who rCiides on Sumner
He says he dilters wilh how jobs
Pictured, left lo riRIJI, 1rt MeiRS County ComCommissioner Ricbanl E. Joues.
.
Road in East Meigs County, in adan: created. "The State.j:aniiOI condressing the issue of cam~gn
lihue lO spend tax money by Creal·
spending, charges that the 'l)igh
ing jobs; we have to encourage
coSt of campaigns is Just another
priva!e enterprise. We cannot conway of discoiJraging culzens from ·
tinue to put businesess out of busi1
ness with rules and regulations."
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
"It's a clear lndlcetlon we're In before. The government said partieipation in govemmenL"
natlon's.jobless rate remallll!d at recession," said Cynthia Latta, employment has dropped by
He says ~ so far he has spent
·, ,
Eastman commented.
5.7 ~rcent In October, but the an economist at DRIMcGraw 700,000 since mkl·year after $198.93 llld that he has ''refused
Citing tbe PUCO as an example,
government said ·rrtday tbe HID, In Lellialiton. Mass. "If the gaining 500,000 jobs during the every contribution."
~·
he raid that there are rules being
"I · do not beliove that anyone
talked about whiCh will be devuoverall Jol! market showed number of jobs .out there Is first half of the year.
further weakness and econo- shrlllklng, I, don't know how you
Janet Norwood, tbe bureau's •, who spends $200,000 to Ft elected
RON' ~
181ing 10 the ildependent 11\JCk.ing
misll warned the report ahows can call It anything elee."
commissioner, told the Joint can lllliOCiale wlllllt likes for tbe ~e only tb'O.·pmy, pi;uclts' and bu$inels IIJd he c:h.-ged !hat the
the economy has slipped InTO
.''WhUe that may not be the E_sonornlc Committee the report average citizen to live. I do not the 10~ ot the gove1nment."
"peoppe cannot alford to have the
recession.
correct conclusion, It Is the moat o~ more evidence of deter'Jo. believe we can ~Y base the ·
goa11 appell' 10 be 10 ~vemment t&lt;*rol the transpona.
The Labor Department's Bu- reuo111ble one to draw," said ration In the job market.
01JICOJ1IeS of our elccllons on wll!l ' better
' polilicll CIRCI' and uon of this counuy.
reau of Labor Statistics said Robert Dederick, c blef econo''Fo~ !he third month In a row.
ipends tbe llllllt money and .tbett•' limit qu(.·individual fiOIIIbns,"
'"lilies n going to have to be
mist at the Northern Trust CO. In more illd"atrles Ioat joblt than blse their acomplishmenll Ofi"IIP:w Elltmaftilanlinued.
large Job losses In the coastruc·
Cut SO the people can use thai
Uon ud manuracturln&amp; Indus·
Chicago. "We've lost our footlna, pined ·. ttiem," abe Illd. "ln mucb IU ~~ spend when
Loc:ll control is IIIOtber ll'el IIIOIIOY lO lejJCIIellle the OCOIIOIIIy,"
trlel, and a sU,ht downturo In
addition, i:ulblclts occurred both · tbey pt iniD
• the i.._e,d· ;· wbele ~ IIYI ho dllera wi*.,1•Jiulmll! lllid. "Par ow:ry $1 cut in
that's for aure."
n1111-,1rm payroll employme~t,
Tots! civilian employment In the over1111verqe workweek entceec!!Apr llid.
'tlle odl!w·' p• • .,.. "We 1tava 10 . . , • aeu1r l'7 $10 ill tbe
Hewea0110chlqetllll"eloc- trY •·IO pl conaul, Or Clll' CC1i1J1ty -•y;IIICOIII!Il0ll4
.
were oHiet parUIIIy by ga11111n sUpped to 117,7 mUIIOD IJl October and Ill tbe factory WC.Jkweek."
the eervlce sector.
from 117.8 mi!Uon the month
lOll olllcillure IIOlreJituondnl tbe govemmeRt' 'IIIChM 'llillt!lll.l'ddCoaUauecJ on pap 10

'I

'
.,•
~

.

..

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Stair

Jobless rate remains at 5.7 percent

20°/o OFF

DOWNTOWN PO.IOY, OHIO

-To Ou1llfled Applaante

1.5 mill levy needed
to keep services up

Eastman takes exception to
opponents' excessive spending

TELEVISION.
SALE
spartt
011 o

JOGGERS

An attempted brealcing and cn!ering was investigated on Thursday
by the Meigs Counly Sheriff's
Dep81'1111enL .
Owles Neutzling, Leading
Creek Road, Middleport, rePQrtcd
that he discovered that somcono
had aucmpted to enter his building.
l:le discovereil that someone had
pried 1111 the siding of the building
and jammed the door.
N'oenuy was made.
Deputies of the department also
took 1 repon 00 a deer-car ac:cidenl
on Thursday nighL
Aa:onding to the re""" William
R. John•~ of Racme· was
·~·
southbound on State Route 7 near
Ches•- in hts' 1983 Chevrolet when
...
a deer ran illto his path.
He struck the .-..
-'-, but it was not
killed. Moderate damage was listed
to the lion! of his vehicle.

chief; Katie Crow, Kenny Buclcley,
Jim Papc, and Thresa '!YsonDrummer, council members.

MRDD Board says

~~MinterFryar be~~ill:=~~v;.w:::

.-..,.IIJX'Wd.

IWLI/AifiiA
.....,....,.., .

MEN'S LEATHER HIGH TOP

LEATHER JOGGER

AND UP

'12' Width

PEIMlCOlOI ~lED WAIUNTY
5 Yn. A11iMt s• · 5 Yn. '$ I 11 , _
1

with coun and the colleclion of
lines, .
Others attending besides those

ha~~e

to

THICK PLUSH
CARPET
'Scotchgulrd

GENESIS
. By Bollytex of Callfornla

costs $975. Council a&amp;o aped m named were Janice Llwson, clerkhire a pan-lime COift clak to assisJ IJ'eaSinr; Jim Connolly, poliQ:

M .· C
r:m
:J:.is i~ :J:.an:it pa~s is a linanciatty healthy ~~a::"'J::=--._::: e.gs oun y "w~h&amp;ve sec~ this silJJIIIion
:~ ~.:~';':.;! :=:=s a:.~::,·~Yc~~&amp; ~The advanced polit-sbaring deputies probe~ ~the~~
and onleled its 1,800 'sreclwork.ers wodcers' pay- especially whea the pwposal pesentcd by RAC will be
.Ia.Illt
ministraiOrS and the boald
leave their~ TlleCOI/tractex- WOlken' wages 1R much lower voted on by the aeelwodccrs on comp
taken every courae available 10

INCU.ES PAD I WOI

SCULPTURED
.CARPET
•Dupont 8talnmuter

S12· .

JOGGERS

$2995

SALE

INSfAUID W/9116 PAD

LEATHER JOGGER

BOYS HIGH TOP &amp; LOW CUT

ALL WORK BOOTS
ON SALE

Sq. Yd• .

. other

MEN'S LEATIIfR LOW CUT

$19 SIZES 6-13

'20 Colqra

BY KATIE CROW ·
S"""'use Villlge Council
rembid'S residents that the 1.8 mill
renewal levy whicb will be-on the
ballol in Tuesday's election needs
their .support.
· At the regular meeting Thursday
nigh!, Council noted that the 1.8
renewal levy is for street lighling.
·. However, it will be listed on the
ballol as curren1 expense.
It was noted !hat without the
support the levy Council will not be
able to alford Slreel lighting as it
cunently is. It was also PQinlcd out
that the one mill levy for the lire
department is a new levy and is
needed to help !hat deJ)lWnent purchase needed equipmenL
·
In other business Mayor Eber
Pick.ens announCed that all village
. owned equpment and restrooms 81
the pool and park have been winterized. The Mayor also noted that
. the culvert going across Carleton
Stteel needs 10 be replaced.
He reponed tbal be had contacted Bob Jeffers in regald to street
patching and that Jeffers advised
that the wcrl: wit be begin next

and J1m HiU to travel to FoJt
locked in the facilities to keep planL"
.
Wayne, Ind. to check out a 1980 Incpaalions goia~
The Ra-wood ~ ~ teniltional diiJ!IP truck witb ~
acuon,~:!.tiiOJ'un ....,_.,
"--~• ....._,...,
.t,~J!,· been
.II!I!!JI04
for •• and.spuderwhiob~$7~ . '
~ · .• 110'*""' . ,by
Kaiser
. Council lllso ~ the Jl!IC·
o( USWA District 23 who ~- . AhunUJum •
ChemieaJ Cupola. chase Cif a radio for the police
licipalcd in .the negotiations. It's lion, a publicly-owned coql~Wly
cruisl:c in order to ccmply with the
unconscionable that while this lleadquaneted 1n Oak.land, CA.
new radio sysrem which goes into
company ~::!?g up profits. it This week, ~ has lgreed 10 effect on Dec. I. The new radio
wants m
its employee's new conaiCU with the USWA
t

HIGH TOP &amp; LOW CUT

to 4 1/2

DRESS PUMPS
PAIR

$14 99

ment
from
the
c:orpora~
headquaners.
According · ·to the release,
Ravenswood AluminUII Corpota-

TRACKLESS
SAXONY
CARPET
'Dupont Stllnmuter

LADIES

SIZES 3

LADIES

SALE

OVPNeww Stair

ac~·~n•
' .. ,rl:!!:..~~
loc.~~ou~t.
"'
ux; tJnited" S'1- .,.,...,..
of America released a press swe-

Layaway For Christmas!

'100% Nylon
'13 Colors
'HMt Set yam 'Anti-Sutlc
'1 2 Foot Width

Paul Anderson, Dexter, the only
original member of the group, formed the group in 1975. He is the
bass singer. Mark ~oleman,
Cheshire, is tenor and his sister,
Carol Coleman, Cheshire, is
pianist Lead alto singers are Duane
3nd Diane Bing, Gallipolis. Rief
(Monk) Hennan, Middleport, is the
bass guitar player.
The group has performed in
several chUIChes throughout the lrista!e, and in July made its lint
recording, The Gabriel Quartet
"Singing the Gospel 'Til the Truin·
pel Sounds!"
The public is invited 10 allend
the celebration.

Jy MICHELE CARTER

REG. 5399.00 ............................ SALE ~319

PLUSH CARPET

•

around tbe table, Boiinie
volunteer Yvon.ne Wilson,
slsta•t Actlvldy Director Sue
Jones and Rutb Bennett.

•
.
will
t
al
Umon
vo e on. propos

$199
REG. 5289.00 ............................ SALE S2 31
.
$2 71
REG. 5339.00 ............................ SALE

REG. 249.00............................ SALE

$199

SALE P·RICES
STARTING AT ONLY

21 Canto
A Multlmodiolnc. N-~

For street .lighting

.
$269
REG. $329.00 6-GUN
OAaII .............................. SALE $
REG S389 00 6-GUN PINE...............................SALE 309

ASSORTED UPHOLSTERED SEATS AND BACKS

2 hctiono, 11Pageo

.

QUr gun cabinets. Oak, pine and.cherry ftnlshes.

REG. SS$9-.00 .I-GUN

Clear &amp;oolght. Low near 18.
· PariiJ cloudy Saturday. Hlgb
In mid 101.

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio. Friday~ November 2, 1990
.

~~~~ ~~~..N~~w!1~!!,~ ......

GLIDER
ROCKERS
.
SOUD OAK OR ALDER FRAMES

$1 0

3-C;S.D;9-S

•

Beautiful fabrics plus
Berklina's Limited
Lifetime Warranty.

LEATHER JOGGERS

985
Plek-41 6321
. c.rda: 4.-H; .

Page3

'

ROCK-0-LOUNGERS and
SWIVEL ROCKERS

GilLS
HIGH TOP &amp; LOW CUT

Pl~-3:

Youngstown

Es,lg Sts,f On Chrittmst

fire_ safely program approved by the
Oh~o Depanment of Mental Re~dauon and .Dev\llopmental Disabilities.
Bus Safety Week was observed
with a full morning of practice and
presentations. . Quarterly
bus
evacuauon drills were conducted.
Each class and the adult semces
enroll~ viewed the film, "~
Zones, proVIded by th_e Ohio
. Depai1IIIent of :rranSPQrtallon. :t'he
film ~ pracucai demonSI;1li~S
emphasized two ma)Ol' pomts 10
bus rider safety. ·First. all. ~
around a bus, .or any .vehicle 10
. operauon, are polell~ially ~gerous. Second, noone IS more 1m·
PQrtant to your personal safety that
yourself. · . . .
Other acUv1Ues planned for !lJe
· month include an annual10specuon
from the Industrial Safely Commission for Meigs lndustties, Inc.. and
review of all safety procedures.

An anniversary sing, in obser·
vance of 15 years of singing Gospel
music will take place Nov. 10 at
7:30 p.m. at the United Faith
ChUICh on Rou!e 7 near the Mid·
dleport-Pomeroy bypass. There will
be several groups of singers
celebrating the group's 15 years including Jan and Kathy . from
Racine; Charity from Mason,
W.Va.; True Gospel Sounds from
Wheelersburg.
According to a release from the
group, some of the members have
come and gone but the reason for
sigging has remaine4 the same, "to
lift up the name of Jesus Christ and
to spread the Gospel in song."

Ohio Lottery

let U1 Help You Qef ·Tbst

Carleton School notes
Safety Month recently · ·
lllbtt

----------~--------~_,, ,

another maiCh between students
and a team from the AAUW were
condl,....,
The next meeting will be held
Nov. 27 at 7 p.m. at the Racine
United Methcidisl Chun:h. The
~!JIIIIIII will be by Nancy
08cham who will speak on girl
scouting. Hostesses will be Virginia
CIKSOII and Helen Smith.

SAFETY EMPHASIZED - Students at CCarleton Scllool
receatly Iearaed about various safety techDiques durlllg llafety
moalh, held at the school during October. &gt;Here Syraclll!e
Firefighter JeH Bable assists Deadra Carleton with the bo8e and
aozzle durillg Fire Safety .Week.

Carleton School and Meigs In·
dusaies are observing ."safely
month" in various activities th.at
were scheduled throughout Oc-

. ·. f'

2

''·

"The:=m

' o-r..,· '·(,

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