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P.g1 14-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 7, 1990

Pomeroy -- Middleport. OhiO

Casino
•
ISSUe
defeated
By RICH EXNER
llded Preu IDteraatlonal
Developer Alan Spitzer's plan
to make a casino the centerpiece
ot a $300 million riverfront resort
complex In Lorain was rejected ·
Tueld!IY by voters asked to
· ch!lnge the Ohio Constitution to
allOw a fourth form of legalized
.
gambli.Jig.
Final unotflctal figures showed
there were 2,®,007 votes, or 62
percent, against the proposal,
compared with 1,259,914 votes, 38
percent, In favor. Two other
statewide Issues, Involving hous·
tng loans and homestead exemptions, both passed.
Approval of Issue 3 was needed
so there could be a separate vote
· at a later date tn Lorain to clear
tile way for ·caslno gaines to join
·11Qr9e racing, bingo and the Ohio
lottery as legalized forms of
gambling tn the state.
The proposed amendment
would have given the .Ohio ·
General· Assembly authority to
close thecaslnoatter three years
U It was not determined a
success. It a success, the state
would have been split into seven
c.-sino districts, with one casino
permitted in each district with ·
both dis.trlct·wide and local voter
approval.
"We need·to slt down and take a
very good look at the vote," sald
Terry Pederson, spokeswoman
tor Yes on Issue 3. "That wlll
, determine where we go from
here If anywhere."
Spitzer financed the pro·casino
campaign and the horse racing
Industry tlnanced tbe antl·caslno
effort.
·
· Issue 1, which would allow the
state and various local govern·
ments to provide or assist In
providing "tlouslng and housing
assistance by grants, loans,
subsidies and other means, won
In a close vote.
There were 1,689,729, or 53
percent, In favor ot the proposal, .
cqmpared with 1,507,768agalnst,
47 percent. ·
The Ohio Constitution now
aljows only one method to assist
In' providing housing .:... making
loans available at below·market
rates.
Issue 2 won easUy, allowing the
General Assembly to permit
. aurvtving spouses or people re·
celvtng a homestead tax reduc·
lion at the time ot death to
continue receiVing the reduction
It the survtving spouse is at least
60 and continues to live In a
qualified homesiead.
· There were 2,941,901, or 89
percent, In favor, and 382,010, or
11 percent, agalns t.

-

STORE HOURS -

298 SECOND ST.
_P.O_MEROY, OH.

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., NOV. 4, THRU SAT., NOV. 10, 1990 .

at

2 Section•. 1 4 P•ges 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 8, 1990
•

LB. ·

Breasts ..••..••.•••..•••
GRADE A. . . ·.

•

.. .

$ 19
. .

(

BUTTERBALL 10-22 LB. AVG.

·FLAVORITE ASSORTED
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

$2 49·

·. .

TRUCKING THE DIRT AWAY- Many truck·
lOads of dirt area are daily leaving tbe Kerr's
Run area where excavating to Illy a new culvert

is takingJ place. The culvert will extend 270 feet
from the river to the upper side or the White
House.
·

Chuck Roast ••••••••
HOMEMADE

·

Sausage ...•••••...•.'!.

Senat~ GOP /thrilled .by wins
"We felt all along we bad a Don Hill a lot of credit in the face
chance or winning," Jim Tilling, of a Republican landslide. He
chief executive officer of .the made It quite a race. "
Senate, said of the Sinagra-Butts · A third Republican- yet to be
race.
"Sinagra Is very well named - will be among the new
known and popular in Lakewood, . people in the Senate ln January .
which 1a:about. one 'third or the ·The • Repil~llcan Caucus ~.' will
district'. Wewereabletosneak up name a successor for Sen. David
on Butts ,... we · caught him Hobson who won the seat vacated
napping."
·
·
by Mlke DeWine, who ran for
attorney general.
Brans tool's seat had'eluded the
He said he hopes to have that
GOP tn the last couple of successor named In a week or so.
elections. Tilling said that seat
They may have to go through
had been created by the the same process when the result
Democratlc·controlled appor- of the deadlocked attorney genertionment board rorBranstooland al's race Is known. Sens. Paul
hewasanoutstandlngcandidate.
Pfeifer and Lee Fisher are so
' 'We felt If we got the right close In that race, and the ballots
candidate and had a neutral or cast in the boards of elections and
the late-arriving abstenee ballots
Republican at the top, we could
win," he sald. "You've got to give · will decide that race.

By SANDRA L. LATIMER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Republicans found the right
candidates to help them extend
their control In the upper
chamber by winning two seats In
\
' .I.J
•
TUeMay-'•
elections.
~ . ·: " ·".
The GOP upset ~n: Cbarll!s
Butts, D·Cieveland, and took the
seat ot Eugene Branstool, the
lieutenant governor's candidate
on the Democratic ticket.
That gives the Republicans a
21-12 advantage In January for
the new governor, George
Voiovich.
Lakewood· Mayor Anthony Si·
. nagra snuck up on Butts, while
State Rep. Steven Williams
downed .Licking County Commissioner Don Hill in that other race.

.•

LB.

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
culvert is expected to be completed ley of the Ohio Depanment of
Sentinel News Staff .
by Feb. 28.
Transponaton, who was at the site
Work on t.he Sl.8 million culven · ~e :;econ~ phase of the Pt;Uject Wednesday afternoon to col)fer
replacement and highWl!Y reloca- wht~h ts reaii.grunent of ~e lll:ter· . with Jim McG111w of the conuactor,
lion project at the intersection of . :;ecuon ~ htghways leading mto Alan Stone Co.
State Route 124 and U. s. 33 in It ~til be81!1 m ~ly March and the
The intersection has long been
enure proJ,CCt ts expected to be recogliized as a problem area with
Pomeroy is underway.
Heavy equipment of the Alan comple~ m August.
.
several trucks having struck the
Stone Co of Otesterbill who was
There ts a to1a1 of 22 properues comer of the old Roedel building in
awarded ihe project on OcL 4, has involved in .the !Cerr's Run-Nye turning from Route 124 onto Route
been moved into the area and ex- Ave. _area whtch wil:' be affected by 33.
.
cavation has staned on the river the htghway relocan~n.
The deteriorated condition of the
side of the highway in preparation
qf those. p~es. three l!1'C culven was also known by ODOT
for the tunneling and laying of steel .buStness buildings -. f!!e Wh1te but the problem did not become an
pipes under the roadway.
~ouse. the ~oe&lt;!el buil~g wh1ch emergency until Feb. 2 when a secThe pipes will extend 270 feet IS located n~ht tn the mtersecllO!J . tion of the nine-foot stone arch onfrom an area just above the White and the Jenlcins Ready-Mix plant- der Route 124 collapsed. It was
House to the river with the flow and four homes along Nye Avenue. then that ODOT built the temporary
AU wiJ! be
before !he wortc, of road to bypass the section where
line being 28 feet deep.
The tunnel and "installation of t.he rel~tmg the ~tghway mtersecuon the massive cave-in occurred.
beg~ns, according to Kenny Buck-

raze&lt;!

Round Steak ••••• ~~. ·
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF LOIN
$ 79
.r-Bone Steak .•..•L~ 4
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS

'

Work is underway on
replacement project at
Rt. 33-124 intersection

1
Whole Ch1cken .. ~~.• S9
Turkeys ••••••.•••l!·•••••• 99&lt;
Lunch Meats .••. ~B···· 99&lt;
CHICKEN

Low tonight In mid 30s. )llgh
Friday In mid i!Os. Chance of
rain 80 percent. ·

•

•

Vol .41, No.141
Copyrighted 1990

$l99

$ll 9

Fisher leading in squeaker

Tomatoes •.••..• ~~..... 49(
FLAVORITE
$ 89
2°/o Milk ••••••••• ~~L··•

·1

$ 69
Parkay ·Spread ..•• 1

JUMBO BONUS 4 LB.

BA.NQUET FROZEN ·

.
oz. 99&lt;
D
1nners
....••.•••••
TV
Crackers •.••.•..••~.~o:.. 9 9
24 PAK 12 oz. CANS
$499 MOUNTAIN TOP.PUMPKIN 0~ oz. $ 129
R. C. Products •.•••
Appl~ P1e •.••..••.••••
ZESTA

. ·

. (

.·

10·12

26

The Leadina Creek Conservancy

Smid1.

Page 3

6-21-26-45-50-52
Kicker 817791

e

. .,

Disaict will be ctosed Monday in

In a reCent aliicle regarding t.he
SVAC Quiz Bowl League, it should
lla¥e lilted that lhe top scorer for
Soudlern High School was Jennifer

Pick-3: 240
Pick-4: 9697
Cards: 6-H;. 4-C;
. K·D; 5-S
Super Lotto

8 AM-10 PM

LCCD co close

Clarification

honored
by MAC

Monday thru Sunday

The Ohio Constitution now
restricts reducing taxes on land
to residents who are at least 65
years old or are permanently and
totally disabled.
Pederson said there was support in both Lorain County and
northeast Ohio as a whole for the
casino proposal, but!! was hurtin
southeast Ohio. For example, ln
Cuyahoga County, Immediately
to the east or Lorain County' 53
percent favored Issue 3.
"It came down to an educa·
tiona! effort. The people who
were educated on the Issue were
comfortable with It," Pederson
utd. "The people ln Cleveland
would have been affected and
they accepted it. It was ex·
iremely wei! supported ln.Lorain
()Qunty ..... People ln Cincinnati
have no connection with people
up tn Cleveland or Lorain, and
they couldn't See lt as an Issue
that would benefit Lorain."
Cilslno gambling has been
legal for years in Nevada. It was
leJallzed for Atlantic City, N.J.,
tn 1976, and for Deadwood, S.D.,
IIi ,1988. Riverboat gambling Is
permitted on the Mississippi
River tn Mlss!sslppl, Dllno!s and
Iowa. ·
Supporters of the Ohio casino
proposal, Including Lorain
Mayor· Alex Olejko, looked at lt
aa a way to rebuild the economy
of ·a city crippled by the loss of
tbousands of steel jobs and a
llllpplq company, the site for
which Spitzer has acquired tor
h~ project. Oljeko said the city
hal lost 20,000 jobs In the last 15
years.
They said .enough safeguards
were built into the proposal to
repel negatives often associated
with gambllng and it has the
aupport pf the pollee union In
Lorallt.
•

olllcrYIIIU of Vetenln's Day. Water
billl due on SaiUiday would have
been considered as on lime ' lhat
dlle. 111erefore, payments received
1'uada)' will be on time payments.

Ohio Lottery

~gle

9-UVES

CAT FOOD

. 4/SJ.
:

,llood at l'owtll's Super .Valu

, Good Nev. 4 thru ·""· I 0, 1990

• DOMINO SUGAR

:a~·

$159

Good ~ Powell's Super Valu
Good 'Now. 4 thnl Now. I 0, 1990

DUNCAN HINES

CAMPIEU:S CHICKEN

CAKE MIXES

NOODLE SOUP

1·~ts3/S2 .

...

Goad at Powell's Su)Mr Valu
Good Now. 4 thru Now. 10, 1990
.

..~

10Jf4

• oz.

S/S2

Good at Pawtlf's Super 'Valu
Good Nov. 4 tlwu Nev. I0,1990

EXCAVATING BEGINS - Jim McGraw of
·Alan . Stone co;, cont.r actor for the culvert
replacement under Route 124 at Kerr's Run,
and Kenny Buckley, iru;pector for tbe Ohio
'

Department of Transportation, look over thf
area being excavated m preparation for install·
ing ftow lines 28 feet below the surface and un·
der the roadway.

MUS
band earns excellent
..
rating in OMEA contest

Meigs deputies
investigate B &amp; E
at home in Dexter

'

The Meigs Marauder Marching Band received a superior rating at
Band completed its 1990-91 com-. _ three different contests, Portsmouth
petition season Saturday at Cooper East, Portsmouth West and Fon
Stadium in Columbus at the Slate Frye. Only about 30 percent of the
Band Finals.
bands .that compete are rated supe. The Mawader Band received an · rior. This was the first time that
overall rating of a II or .exceUent Meigs High School has ~?een to a
with the auxiliary and field com· state contest.
• The Marauder Band is under t.he
manders also both receiving ratings
of 11.
direction of Toney Dingess, assisTo qualify for state contest, ted by John Van Reeth, with Kathy
bands must first be rated superior at Price, flag instructor, and Susan
an Ohio Music Education Associa- Clark, field commander coach.
lion sanctioned contest The Meigs

Screening clinic set Nov. 16
A finFtick cholesterol screening clintc will be held on Nov. 16
from 1:30 to 6:30p.m, at the Meigs
· County Health DepanrnenL
· The testing will be doneo by appointment and residents may call
992-6626 between 9 and II am
and 1 and 3 p.m., Monday through
Friday to make anangements.
A tolal of 50 tests at a cost of $5
each will be offered and only toilll
blood cholesterol will be determined, accordi!!ll to Nonna Tol)'eS,

R. N. NU1$ing Direcror.
. 1brrel pointed out that bean and
heart-related conditions are t.he
!IUijor cause of death. More than

one half of all Americans have
blood cholesterol levels l)i~h
enoogh to . be at risk for heart. disease, she said.
The nursing director said that the
American
Heart
ASsociation
recommends being screened for
cholesterol and if the level is 200
t.hen a change in foods to a low fat
diet be made, with retesting after
three months. A level or 200-239 is
considered a border·line high risk,
over 240 a high risk for heart disease. It Is recommended lhat family.
p!!ysicians be coru;ulted if the level
IS OVer :WO.

·

·

A breaking ani! entering at the
David McDonald's residence is
being investigated by Meigs
County Sheriff's deputies.
According to the report, .Me·
Donald, who resides at Dexter, has
been on vacation and returned on
Wednesday at discover that his
house bad been entered. It was
reported that t.he house had been
cbeeked on Tuesday and everything
was fine.
According to Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, a VCR, a microwave,
stereo and speaken, CD base sta·
lion, a rifle, shotgun and food from
the freezer were taken.
Ric liard Reuter of Ball Run Road
in Pomeroy reported Tuesday that a
McPherson bow and accessories
and a 2-ton ftoor jack had been
laken from his residence.
Sheriff Soulsby again urges
residents to record the serial numbers of their items such as
microwaves, TV's, guns, etc., so
that in case the items are stOlen .t.he
numbers can be entered in the
computer system.
Soulsby also SU8$ests that lhe
owner's social secunty number or
birth date can be engraved on items
with no serial numbm or IICria1
numbers on easily-removed slick-~ ers.

servicemen and service women
reporting the Geauga County
the Middle East to vote.
tn
vote moved Pfeifer even closer
All
of those ballots will be
tha'n the 2,926 margin Fisher
counted within two weeks, said
enjoyed early Wednesday
the secretary of state's office.
morning.
"We are feeling very optimisSecretary of State Sherrod
tic," said Fisher, a state sena tor
Brown ordered all ballots sefrom Shaker Heighis. He ap·
cul'l;!d in preparation tor a certain
peared with his wife, Peggy , at a
recount.
Brown's office said 15,000 to ·press conference where he removed his shirt and displayed a
20,000 "walk·in' ' votes remain to
T·shirt showing a frazzled cat
he counted. They were cast by
voters who changed address . hanging upside down. "Not
nearly as calm as I look," said
within their county since the last
the Inscription.
election, and were allowed to
"We knew lt was going lo be
vote at their board of election on
tight,"
said Fisher . "I 've always
election day.
In addition, up to 5,1100 m!litary been .the underdog."
"I never expected to be part of
ballots may be outstanding,
history in this way," said Pfeifer .
many of them from Operation
a fellow senator lrom Bucyrus.
Desert Shield -permitting Ohio

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stalehouae Reporter
COLUMBUS - The race for
Ohio's attorney general ttght·
ened Wednesday to a record
degree, with Democrat Lee
Fisher leading Republican Paul
Pfeifer by a mere 874 votes out of
more than 3.3 million cast.
Fisher claimed an "unofficial
victory" based on the returns
counted, thus far, butJ&gt;feifer5aid
he expects to win when all the
votes are counted and recounted.
Final unofficial returns, minus
some outstanding ballots, gave
Fisher 1,668,097 votes and Pfeifer
1,667,223. Fisher had 50.02 per··
cent of the vote and Plelfer 49.98
percent.
Correction of an error in

Meigs man seeks judgmeni on claim·
A Pomtl{Oy man has filed a so ouuageous in character and so
judgment action against his estran- extreme in degree, that it went

beyond all possible bounds of
decency and is regarded as atrocious and utterly intolerable in a
civilized community," tht complaint states.
No specific dollar amount is
named as damages in the suit, a!-

ged wife and BIIOther , Pomeroy
resident, alleging that t.hey attempted to poison him.
In a civil complaint filed on
Wednesday in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court, Gary
Snouffer alleges that defendants
Sarah Snouffer and Danny Zirlde,
acting . together, "injected lethal
poison into his perSon, rood and

drink".
The alleged poisoning is said to
have taken place from September
to December, 1989.
·
Gaiy. S!Kluft'er alleges' that he has
been severely inlurcd by t.he actions
of his wife and 2irlde, stalin.l in t.he
complaint fi.led ~y ilw he
has CJI.perienced ' Cll.treme pain, sufferinJ and _anguish and emotional

distress".
"As · the direct, ac11181 and

proximate result of Defendant's
the complaint says,

conduc~:i

"PiainWI suslliJicd severe mental
angiliJh coupled with phyJical injury thai no JeiSOIIIble man could
be CJI.pec:ted to endure.. .
''Tite ~endants' condul;t was

though Snouffer does demand
:'judgment against the defendants
jointly and severally for attorney
fees, costs and a monelal)' amount
that exceeds the maximum Plaintiff
is allow.ed · to state in hi.s
pleadings."
No criminal charges have been
filed against Sarah Snouffer or
Danny Z~e to date.

Fall ·open ·house tonight
.

The Fall Open House at )'deigs
High School wiU be held tonight
(Thunday), from 5 to 9 p.m.
The evening will begin with a
soup supper sponsored by t.he
Meigs High School Band with serving from 5 to 6:30 p.m. Cost is
$2.50 for adults and $2 ror
children.
Following the supper, members
or the National Honor Society; the
band and the choir will present an
informative
and
entertaining
program In t.he IICbool cafeteria.
Guests will then be invited to view
the display representing the
variety of clasles offered at Meiss

High School. Visitors are being asked to observe the talents of
students in an as well as the tiro8d
range of tesearch materials offered
to students through lhe library.
Tours of t.he building wiU foUow
at 7:15 p.m. Teachers wiU be on
band for conferences with parents
until 9 p.m.
A cookies and punch receptiOO
for guests will be t:e~ by the
Creative Cooking C
in t.he
school libraly between 7:30 anct
8:00 p.m. The public Is invited to
auend t.he program by Fenton
Tay!Qt'; ~pal.
.
'
.
.,..

�.'

Il '

'' ·'II

..

"· l..

'
Com~:rrtedtary

.'

'

"'~ ~-:;,pag8c....2- The Daily Sentinel
"'':~'~ PomefOy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday. November 8, 1990

· The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slreel

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE "EIGS-MASON AREA
~~~

Bi!m~

.

,...,...__...._.......,M"Ei!c:::l!""' .

. qj

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
Geaeralllfanarer

Pi\T WHITEHEi\D .
i\ssistant Publlsher/Conlroller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publlshers Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. AU letters are subject to edltlng·and must be signed with
hame, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·

ties.

·

Elections lay the ·

groundwork for 1992
By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Top-Democrats moved Into position for
potential runs at the 1992 Democratic presidential nomination
Tuesday with runaway wins, but the hopes of Sen. Bill Bradley,
D-N.J .. may have been undercut by his struggle against a Republican
sacrlflchll lamb.
Even a few months ago, the prospect of running against President
Bush scared off tht Democratf big-name c;mdldates, who .were
waiting for the perfect !1\0ment to get Into presidential politics.
All of the talk centered on fielding a token candidate, perhaps the
1998 vice presidential candidate, Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of Texas, and
holding back their strongest challengers for 1996.
But that attitude changed In the weeks before the election when
. Bush's sky-high popularity plummeted dramatically when he
deserted his "no tax'' pledge, the economy went Into a tailspin and he
confounded voters with his almost dally shuffling of campaign
themes .
All of a sudden, 1992 looks much better for the Democrats and It
would be surprising It some of them do not gear up, and rather
quickly, tbelr presidential campaigns.
At this stage of the election process four years ago, Rep. Richard ·
Gephardt of Missouri was commuting to early caucus and primary
states and former Arizona Gov. Bruce Ba bbltt had taken up residence
In Iowa.
,·
The one Democrat frequently mentioned as a preslde'ntial .
candidate who was badly hurt In Tuesday's election was Bradley, a
Rhodes scholar and former pro basketball player. ·
Bradley, the prohibitive favorite, barely won a third term against
Christine Todd Whitman, a Republican sacrificial offering. Bradley
raised $12 million and spent $10.5 million on his campaign. Whitman
scrounged up $000,000.
But Bradley became the unwit tlng victim of a backlash against the
$2.8 billion tax raise Imposed by new New Jersey Gov. James Florio,
a fellow Democrat.
A CBS exit poll showed that New Jersey voters by 48-41 did not think
that Bradley would make a good president.
The· other Democrats frequently mentioned as possible ,1992
presldentlal.candldates tare~ ta't better and sbawedbnce:mo're their '
·
·
vote-getting clout. .
Sen. Sam Nunn, b-Ga., the chairman of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, was so strong the Republicans '-did not even field a
candidate.
New York Gov. Marlo Cuomo, the candidate most party leaders
would like to· see run, won against two opponents, but by a
su'rprlslngly small margin, probably the result ofthe state's financial
problems.
Sen. Albert Gore of Tennessee who lost In 1988, and Sen. Joseph
Biden of Delaware, who h.a d to pull out of the race two years ago after
acknowledging plagiarizing a speech, won re-electiOn easily .
And Jesse Jackson, who won numerous primaries In 1988 before
losing the presidential nomination to Massachusetts Gov. Michael
Dukakls, was elected "shadow senator" for the District of Columbia,
the first office for which he has been elected. ·
Gephart also was an easy w1n11er but he promised not' to run In 1992
when he was elected House Democratic leader.
The elections did not produce a new shining star for the Demoerats
but not all the possible presidential contenders were up for election
Tuesday.
Senate Democratic leader George Mitchell, Sen. Bob Kerrey of
Nebraska, Sen. Chuck Robb of VIrginia and Gov. Douglas Wilder o(
Virginia also could run.
Bush's popularity would have to plunge much deeper and the nation
would have to move deeper Into a recession before the Republicans
would deny him a second nomination.
·
But the elections did produce a new. potential Republican
candidate for 1996, Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas, a formidable
vote-getter ~nd fund raiser, who swept to a landslide victory.

Does the house need .a tennis court
WASHINGTON - During the
grueling budget debate ,
members of Congress had a lot on
' their minds -like whether to cut
· medical care for the elderly or
day care for Infants, and, by the
way, where to put 'their new
. tennis court.
The Senate already has a
tennis court In the Dirksen
Senate Office Bulldlrig. But the
poor members of the House don't
have any place to practice their
ground strokes on the taxpayer's
dime.
Apparently a few members of
· Congress decided It was time to
remedy the situation. They have
ordered the architect of the
Capitol to draw up plans for a
House tennis court, either In the
courtyard of one building In the
Capltl:ll complex on the roof of
another.
Congressional sources told us
that Rep. Stephen Solarz, D·
N.Y., led the pack. A spokesman
lor Solarz confirmed that the
congressman had been Involved
In meetings about the tennis
court. "All through this there has
been a general assumption that If
they went ahead with this, no
public funds would be used," Jhe
spokesman said. But Solarz's
office offered no explanation of
.whose pockets · Congress would
dip Into for this little gift, If not
the ta)&lt;payers'.
Maybe they expected a dona-

or

tlon from a generous corporate
constituent - no strings attached, of course. Then they could
hang a plaque with the donor's
name right next to the requisite
buzzer system that would sum·
mon the players from the court to
the House floor for a vote.
Solarz may not have planned to
stick the taxpayers with the bUI,
but public money has already
been spent on ihe project design time In the office of the
Capitol architect George White.
White acknowledged that his
staff has done some "Informal
sketches" at the request of some
members of the House. The
tennis court, which would have to
be approved liy the House leader·
ship, could go In the courtyard of
the Cannon House. Office Building, or on the roof otthe Madison ·
Building of the Library of
Congress.
Sources on Capitol Hill told our
associate Tim Warner that meetIngs with White about the tennis
courts occurre!l during the tortured budget negotiations.
White, whose full-time job for
the last 20 years has been keeping
up with · renovation and new
construction In the Capitol complex, told us the tennis court Isn't
the first controversial order he
has received. He .Is obligated to
respond with designs when
members of congress make
suggestions. Then It Is up to

Congress whether to fund the
notion.
White characterized the tennis
court as "the pipe dream of a few
tennis players:"
Solarz has a history of mlxll)g
business and tennis. In .1983 we
obtained State Department cables explaining to U.S. Embassies how Solarz expected to be
treated ·on a trip to Latin
America. "Tennis courts are an
Important plus ... Solarz would

Jack Anderson

-

like to play tennis· every day If
possible .. :.assistance In arrangIng court and securing high·
qu&amp;llty tennis opponents will be
appreciated," one cable said.
And then there Is the federal
factor. That's the line Item on the
bill where the contractor doubles
the price because this Is government work.

Today in history
By United Press lnternallonal '
·
Today Is Thursday, Nov. 8, the 312th day of 1990 with 53 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
..
.
·
The evening stars are Mercury and Venus.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
British astronomer Edmond Halley in 1656; au thor Margaret
Mitchell ("Gone With the Wind" ) tn 1900; actress Katharine Hepburn
In 1909 (age 81); heart transplant pioneer Dr. Christlaan Barnard In
1922 (age 68); singer Patti Page In 1927 (age 63) and singer Minnie
Rlperton In 1947.
On this date In history:
In 1837, Mount Holyoke. Seminary In Massachusetts became the
first American college founded exclusively for Wilmen.
In 1864, as the Civil War raged, Abraham Lincoln was elected to his
second term as president.
In 1889, Montana was adm itted to the Union as the 41st state.
In 1942, more than 400,000 Allied soldiers Invaded North Africa.
In 1982, a smoky fire set by a prisoner In a Biloxi, Miss., jail killed 28
people. ·
,
.
.
..
.
In 1988, Vice President George Herbert Walker Bush was elected
the 41st president of the United States .

first year of probation, and
UPI Sports Writer
recruiting must be accomplished
OVERLAND PARK, Kan.
through telephone calls and
IUPI) :... The NCAA Wednesday letters.
banned the University of DUnols
However, the verdict does not
men's basketball program from include a ban on television ·
post-season play for one year and appearances by the llllnl, and the
.p laced the Dllnl on three years' school will not have to return the
probation for recruiting viola- $250,000 it received for Its first·
tions that Included providing round appearance In the NCAA
cars lor r.ecrults.
tournament this year.
nunols also was docked three
The· i!lvestigatlon . was trig·
'Initial basketball scholarships In gered by Iowa assistant coach'
each ol the next two a.cadeinlc Bruce Pearl, who said lie taped a
years. The NCAA also adopted · phone conversation between
se\'eral penalties that were lm· himself and Thomas during
posed by the university, Includ- which Thomas allegedly -acIng the freezing of salaries of two . knowledged an _Improper IIUnols
assistant coaches and the denial offer of $80,000 and a Chevrolet
of bonuses to the coaching staff Blazer.
for the team's participation In
DUaols will not appeal last year's NCAA tournament.
Dllnols officials expressed great
· The ban on otf-campJJs recruit· dlsapjlOintment Wednesday at
lng means a student athlete the severity of the NCAA sanc· wanting to visit the university tions Imposed on the university's
must pay his own way during the basketball program, yet said It
would not appeal.
' 'We disagree with several of
the committee's findings, and
some of the sanctions are

.I rish leary .of

Tennessee trip .
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) An already difficult trip to No. 8
Tennessee became even tougher
for Notre Dame when the Irish
returned to the top of the natlona.l
ranklngs.
Notre Dame fell from the top
spot a month ago after losing to
Stanford bUt regained the hOno.r
this week after VIrginia fell to
Georgia Tech. That was not what
• Irish head coach Lou Holtz
needed as .his team prepares to
visit noisy 91,000-seat Neyland
Stadium for a game the Volun·
teers have anxiously awaited.
"I don't know If I've ever had a
football team go Into a tougher
situation," Holtz said. "We're
going Into the .worst environment
you possibly can. Tennessee Is
looking forward to this game and
now we go Iii with the albatross

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Creepers

, The Irish last played Tennes·
see In 1979, exactly 11 years from
Saturday, and lost 40-18 In
Knoxville. Oddsmakers rate the
Volunteers a favorite and Holtz,
rellshlng the underdog role,
agrees.
''We were a three-point under·
dog," Holtz said. "Now It should
be four and going up. I would
have to say we're an underdog.
For us to win the game would be
an upset. We have a chance to be
No. 1, but there are10 or 15 tea.ms
who .have a better chance. We
will learn something a bout
ourselves."
Tennessee has the nation's top
rated pass defense, having al· .
lowed only 112 completions for
1,125 yards In 244 attempts. The
Volunteers are rated sixth nationally In scoring defense, allow·
lng 12.9 points a game, and lOth In
total defense, allowing 275 yards
a game. Tennessee's defense has
'not allowed a rushing touchdown
since the season opener and has
forced 30 turnovers, 17 of them
·interceptions.
• "This Is the best defense we've
faced," Holtz said. ''They get
:turnovers and they don't allow
•you to get any rhythm. You can't
•get In a high-scoring game with
:them. We have to have some
help. We've been to the dance
·before. We know we have to be
patient because Tennessee can
·make you look bad."
, The Volunteers also rank seventh In scoring with il7 .5 points a
game.
; ·~Tennessee Is a fine team/'·
Holtz said. "This Is the be's! .
;offensive line we've played
•against. We've played against
•sorne great offensive lines but
.this one Is very Impressive."

The Daily Sentinel

499

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Ball State defensive end Toby
Beegle, son of fanner Meigs
County residents, Ted and Linda
(Crow) Beegle, was named the
Mid-American Conference Defen- ·
sive Player of the Week last week
after a record-setting perfonnance
in the Cardinals' 13-3 upset over
Central Michigan last Saturday.
Beegle, a 6--3, 207-~und senior,
had 10 total tackles (etght solo, two
assists); including seven tackles for
losses totaling 45 yards, and caused
one fumble. He helped !he Cardinals hold the league's top
quarterback . Jeff Bender · to eight
completions in 24 attempts for 60
yards and two interceptions. Beegle
set a BSU school record for sacks
in the game with five.
The Cardinals held the Chip·
pewas tol37 yards in total offense.
The Ball State win ended Central's
eight-game winning streak and
~ave the Chippewas their first loss
m seven MAC games this year. The
Ball State defense ranks third in the
country in total defense; third in
pass efficiency defense, fourth in
scoring defense and 11th in rushing
defense.
On the season Beegle is third on
the team in tackles with 86 (37
solos, 51 assists), leads the team in

sacks with eight for 70 yards in los·
ses and has five other tackles for
losses for a total of 10 yards.
Beegle is a three-letter winner
for Ball State, ranking sixth on the
team in tackles .last year. He is a
1987 graduate of Worthington High
School, where he lettered three
years and earned ~-conference,
all-metro, all-district and honorable
mention all-state honors. Wor·
thington posted a 30-5-1 record
during his c;u-eer and a 12-1 mark
hjs senior year and advanced to the
state semifinals.
Ball State Ullvels to Eastern
Michigan this weekend, before
returning home to face Ohio
University on Saturday, November
17th. The OU game was orginally
scheduled 10 be played in Killarney,
Ireland, in the first Shamrock Crystal Bowl. But Mid-American Con·
fcrence officals learned last week
that the promoter of the event was
not planning to fulfill ils conUllct
with the two universities, so the
game will be played in Muncie,
Ind.
Beegle ·is the grandson of Loretta
Beegle and the late Thea Beegle of
Pomeroy and Fred Crow and the
late
Eleanor
crow
of
Syracuse.

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·MAC honors BSU's ·Beegle
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~101

The SVAC girls' basketball
preview has been scheduled for
Friday at 6 p.m. at Kyger Creek
High School. The boys' basketball preview Will be played on
Friday, Nov. ~6 at KCHS .
In both cagefests, ~uthern
will play Oak Hill at 6 p.m. ,
followed by . Hannan Trace vs.
Eastern . at ·6: 45 p .m.. Kyger
Creek vs. Southwestern at 7: 30
p.m. and North GaiUa at
Symmes Valley at 8:15p.m. All
scrimmages will feature two
standard elght·mlnute uarters.

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~------------~---------,

BEEGLE HONORED - Ball State defensive end Toby Beegle
earned Mld·i\r)lerican C::onference Player of the Week honors for
his defensive perfonnance In last Saturday's l!l-3 upset win over
previollllly unbeaten Cenlral Michigan. In.the game Beegle, a 6-3,
207-pound senior, racked up five sacks aad seven totaJ ,tackles for
losses In addlllon lo recovering a fUQable. He Is the son of Ted and
Unda Beegle of Wortblngton and the grandson of Loretla Beegle
and the late Theo Beegle of Pomeroy, and of Fred Crow and the late
Eleanor Crow of Syracuse. (Sentinel photo by_Dave Harris)

&gt;.

••• •
••
•

ever of all the high schools
coaches In the state."

procedure."
WhUe Dllnols will be on probation for three years and cannot
participate In the NCAA Tournament In 1991, the hardest felt
sanctions deal with the school's
future ablltty to recruit. The
NCAA ruled Illinois cannot recruit off campus for one year and
give expense-paid recruiting vis·
Its. Only the head coach ;md one
assistant may recruit offcampus In 1992.
·
''Certainly anything like this
will affect our program adver·
sely," Henson said. "Just how
much, we don't know. But this Is
a great university. It has a great
tradition. We have strong community support, so we'll do well.
We ·have the s11pport more than

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too severe given the fact the
university reported many of the
minor violations In question. The
NCAA cited, however, that some
of the violations took place
shortly after Dllnols' ,football
program was put on probation In
1988. Illinois has now been
slapped by the NCAA three times
In the last six years.
"I don't agree that we do not
have lnstitutio.n al control," head
basketball coach Lou Henson
said .. "That was one of thing~ In
the findings that !Jothered me.
We believe the management of
the basketball program can and
will be strenglhened, but I do not
Illinois also was accused of believe the fact that there were
offering cash and cars to recruits some weaknesses In the recordDeon Thomas, now a sophomore keeping and other Incidents
should suggest we don't have
.at Illinois, and LaPhonso Ellis.
The NCAA apparently did not Institutional control."
After reporting the violations
find sufficient evidence to support those allegations, which . to the NCAA, nunols Imposed Its
most assuredly would have led to 'own sanctions against Henson
and his co&amp;chlng staff, which
the death penaity, butruled there
was ·a )ack of Institutional
Henson felt was enough.
control.
·
"Our salaries were frozen. We
Dllnols felt the·sanctions were
received no bonuses: (Assistant
coach and recruiter) Jimmy
Collins was taken offthe road for
two years. (Recruit) Deon Thomas could not play," Henson
said. "The university, In my
opinion, took drastic steps to
control athletiCs."
,
The major allegations surrounded Collins, who was ac·
cused of offering $80,000 and a
Chevy Blazer to Thomas, a
highly sought after recruit from
Chicago. He·also was accused of
offering money to Ellis, who
Instead signed with Notre Dame.
"If we knew Jimmy was guilty
of major violations, he would
have been fired on the spot,"
Henson said. "That's standard

harsher then we . expected, •'
university Chancellor Morton
Weir said. "From the beginning,
we wanted to find the truth and
take the appropriate action, and
that's what we've done. The
NCAA has gone beyond that."
The NCAA, following a 17·
month Investigation, found viola·
lions at the school In areas of
recruiting, cash l9ans to student·
athletes, spe.clal credit arr!lngelhents by three student-athletes
In the purchase of' automobiles
and the distribution of game
tickets to high school prospecis,
their families and coaches.

around our neck._:•

""'"4'
"""
7
)

.

By JOHN BEND~L

p~ugatterfet&gt;at e

Berry's World

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _The
Sentinel-Page 3
_Daily
~~.;.;:_;.;;;:,:.~· . ,

·NCAA puts. Illini cage program on three .years' probation

'

; • ·''l

Thursdav. November 8, 1990 ·

_.......:.;._;;,.,;.;;;..;;.;..;;.;_.;.:.:.:~---------=..:....:....:.:..__:...;::..:.:;..:.:...;;...;;;,..;.;..

OPEN
FRI. &amp; MON. 9 to I
TUES. THIU lHUI.
910 s
SAT. t TO 5

(614) 446-3045

''

�Page

Thu~day. November

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

4-The Daily Sentinel

Thul"'day, November

a. 1990

But before a sellout crowd ofl9,006 at the Target
Center In Minneapolis, the Bulls won 96-91 for
their first victory. Chicago avoided losing Its first
four games of the season for the first time since
1967.
Jordan, who missed morning practice with a
'mUd 1llness, shared scoring honors with Horace
Grant with a modest 17 points. B.J. Armstrong
scored 10 points In a five-minute second-half
stretch to erase a brief 69-68 Minnesota lead. 'l'he
Bulls' ·bench outScored Minnesota' s 32·18.
"I.'ve bee.n a blt discouraged wit.h B.J. 'splay in
recent games," Jackson said. "But tonight I saw

By United Press International
Phil Jackson knows playing the Minnesota
:I'!mberwolves Is not pretty, but he will take what
·he can get these days.
"Playing Minnesota is like watching paint
dry," the Chicago Bulls head coach said
Wednesday night. It's boring, and they lull you to
sleep with a deliberate offense, then they come
back at you '.l&lt;ith a fury."
The night did not begin well for the Bulls.
:Michael j ordan was under the weat her, the Bulls
were .0-3 a nd their November schedule left them
:under the gun.

'~~··

,f'?

•
WID

over Tinlherwolves

he had the rhythm, so I Jet him go, and he played
very well."
Tony-.Campbell led Minnesota with 26 points,
including 16 in a third-period surge. Pooh
Richardson added 18 points and 10 assists, and
rookie center Felton Spencer had his best game
with 10 points ane! nine rebounds.
Minnesota, 1-3, has lost three straight. For
· Chlcago,1·3, the victory was especially Important
sin~ pie Bulls begin a stretch of nine of 10 games
on·the road.
"We have an Ice Capade show coming Into our
stadium thiS month, " Jackson said. "It's always
like this (In November), and we anticipate it. It's
tough playing so much on the road, but it gets us
bound together and makes us join ranks."
Elsewhere, Dallas defeated Philadelphia 104101, Clevelan4 Ileal Charlotte 100-89, San Antonio
outgunned Denver 161-153, Phoenix downed
Golden State 126-119 and Detroit toppect the
Clippers 110-83.
.
·
Maverlcb 104, 78ers 101 - At Phlladelphia,
James 'l'arpley scored 26 points to give the
Mavericks their third strallfht victory at the
Spectrum. Herb Williams had 19 points and Alex
English and . Derek :Harper added 18 each.
Phlladelphla, which drew to 96-94 with 1:41 to
play, received 25 points from Hersey Hawkins, 23
from Charles Barkley and 21 from Johnny
Dawkins.
·
Cavallera 101, Hornets 81- At Rlch!ield, Ohio,

Larry Nance and Brad Daugherty scored 21
points each and Mark Price added 17 points and
nine assists to lift Cleveland. Rex Chapman led
Charlotte with 17 points and Randolph Keys had 10
fourth-quarter points. Both clubs are 2-2.
Charlotte, which scored just 26 po·lnts in the
second and third quarters, Is 0·21 on the road
against Central Division teams.
·
SpW'11161, Nunets153- At San Antonio, Texas,
David Robinson struck for a career-high 43 points
to spark the Spurs. Denver scored 90 points In the
flut half to set a league record. San Antonio ,
scored 83 In the first two periods , setting another
league mark oll73 for the half. It was the fifth·
highest scoring game in NBA history. Orlando
Woolridge paced the Nuggets with 37 points.
~
Suu 126, Warriors 118 - At Phoenix, Eddie
Johnson scored 17 of his 35 points in· the fo~th
quarter to rally Phoenix. The WaJ'riors lost their
lOth straight In Phoenix since 1987. Chris Mull1n •
and Mitch Richmond had 30 points each for
Golden State.
Platona 110, Clippers 83- At Los Angeles, Joe.
Dumars hit tot 25 points to pace Detroit. James
Edwards finished with 14 points and 11 rebounds
for the two-time defending champions, 3-1. VInnie
Johnson contrlbu ted 14 points off the bench:
· Benoit Benjamin, sidelined for the first three
games of .the season with a separated shoulder,
scored 18 points for Los Angeles, 2-2.

,___,

;•''

. . ;;(
",,

.·!

.

first quarter of Tuesday night's NBA game
agal011t the host .L.A. Clippers, who lost 110-83.

STATE REPRESENT ATIYE

MARY

By IRA KAUFMAN
VPI Sports Writer
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) -Tampa
Bay quatterback Vinny resta·
verde, a former Helsman T.-ophy
winner and the first pick lri the
1987tNFL draft, WedneSday was
benched for Ineffectiveness dur·
lng the team's five-game
tallspln.
Buccaneers head coach Ray
Perkins named Chris Chandler
as the starter for Sunday's game
In New Orleans. The Buccaneers,
4·5, have droppect three straight
and lour of live games alter a
promising start.
"It will be good for o,ur team to
make a change at this time," said
Perkins, who obtained Chandler
from Indianapolis this. summer
for a first-round pick In the 1992
draft. ."We've gone live weeks
scoring live touchdowns and that
won't get It In this leaille. l think
VInny's line and . I think he
understands.
"I'm sure he wants to play, but
at the same time, I think we
needed to do something. He' s
only one guy, but the quarterback Is the mostlmportailtguy." ·
Testaverde, who turns 27 next ·
week, became Tampa Bay's No.
1 quarterback during the final
four games of his rookie season.
He has missed justfour starts, all
due to Injury, since then. He last
sat out Oct. 28 against San Diego
with a sore foot.
"There's really not a lotfor me
to say right now," said Testa·
verde, his eyes glassy. "It's just
a weird feeling and I don't know
how to explain it. It's not a good
feeling. I know I didn't play good
last week and Ray's been totally
upfront with me about every.
thing. This Is just partof life; you
have to keep your chin up and get

ABEL
Thanks' You For
Your Support
Tuesday, Nov. 6.
Paid far by Abel for Stall ltprtstnlalin, Da•ltl Fry,

25 Wtst Wadlington. Athtns, 011. 45701.

through lt."
Asked If his NFL future reml\inS with Tampa Bay, Testaverde was non-committal. He
down played any speculation of a
private rlft .with Perkins, whose
trade for Chandler· gave the
Buccaneers a strong option at
quarterback after two years with
Joe Ferguson at reserve.
Testaverde entered Sunday's
game against Chicago as the
NFL's second-rated passer, but

211 Wes1 Secor"'d Sh;-: ·
P.O. Dox 626
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**KANSAS CITY .. .... ......... .. .. 23

SE~TTLE

**L. A. RAii&gt;EI;IS .... .. .......... .. 2a

GREEN BAY ....... ...... .......... .. 17

... .. ......... ... ............. 20

In Octob~tr gat-together in Seattle, Seahawk defanae s~ut down Chiefs' RBs Chris
Okoye, Barry !Nord, with total of just 66 yards ... Setrttle won 19· 7 on fourFGs, last min·
ute TO .
· ;· , .
·

· Pack beat Raidera Just once. but it wu big one, QB Bart Starr leading G. B. to 2nd straight
Super Bowl title in S.B. 11, 33·14 ... Raiders have won all five meetingasince then.

**NEW ENGLAND ............ : ... 20

lNDAINAPOLIS .................... 19

Patriots edged Coltlln 18Cond game of '90 aeason, 16-1 4, N.E. QB Steve Grogan com·
plating 16 of 24 panes and TO . .. Colt QB Jeff George intercepted four times ... real tOll·
up.

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**NEW ORLEANS ................. 26 TAMPA BAY ............ :..... ....... 24

NEW YORK GIANTS ......... .... 23

399 S. Third

**L.A. RAMS ....................... 17

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•••

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Rams beat N.Y. during regular '89 se81on, 31·1(), tiking 24· 3 halftime lead, QB Jim Ev·
erett completing 1B straight paa11a ... in playoffs, wild-card L.A. beat champ Giant• 1 9 · ·
13.

882-2136

.~

·:•

MIAM1 .............. ;,,, ............. 20

. .t.
•

Jets proved atubborn in October meeting va. Dolphins in Miami ... Jets held 13·0 half·
tlmeleed before OB Dan Marino led l)olphsto 20· point 2nd halfand 20-16 win .. .close .
again.
·
·

. :·
.

**SAN DIEGO ............ .......... 28 DENVER .... ........... .......; ....... 27
Chargera gave Broncos troublaleat aeaaon... in flrat match-up, S. D. led 10· 6 in 4th be·
fora Denver rallied to win 16· 10 . , .late.r. S.D. won 1st over Broncos in 6 meetings 19·
16.
.

SAN FRANC1SC0 ........ ....... .. 27 **DALLAS .......... : ............ : .... 10
49ars liava won &amp; ltralght over Cowboya Including 1981 title (NFCI game .. .in '89,
Dallal hlld S.F. to 14·14 tie un1114thquartar, 49araecoring 17 polntatowln 31 · 14 ... repMt.

985-3308

(Monday) WASHINGTON ...... 26 **PHILADELPHIA .................. 23

Th- two tltlged dat.nalva atr~~ggle th- waeka ago, QB Stan Humphrlaalaedlng Red.aldnlto 13· 7 win... total of alx FOa mlaaed ... Eeglenvartad ahutout with TO In latrt min·
uta .

!

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PAT HILL .•
A~
CHRYSLER
. . 'ill CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH-DODGE · ~» MOTORS

· Bucs finally broke 6-gama losing streak vs. Saints in Tampa lastfall, 20-10, N.O. leading
series 8·4 . . .FG plus OB Vinny Teataverde TO pan won game after 10-10 halftime dead·
lock.
•·

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675 -1121

PHOENIX .................... ......... 13

Viking• took another 4th quarter lou in early October game with Lions, 34-27.. .holding f
20· 10 halftime lead, Minn. nose-dived, gave up 24 points in 2nd half . .. Lions favored.

CHESfEI, OHIO

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DISCOVER WHY
PEOPLE SAY, .

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**DETROIT .... ;.............. .. ...... 27 MINNESOTA ... ..... ..... : .......... 13

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Wouldn't have gue11ed it, but Falcons lead·aeriaa with Baars 9-6, but Chicago has won
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Ba,nk
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Other Gamel- For Wes 1

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Billa won last encounter with Cards in '86, 17·1 0, Phoenix leading serial3·2 . . .match up
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992-6669

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Prescription
Shop

~E I\IOEII

completed just twoo!lOattempts
In the first half of the 26·6
setback, including three inter·
ceptlons. The Bears intercepted
five Testaverde passes after the
former University of Miami
All-America suffered only four •
interceptions in seven previous
starts.
Chandler started for an Injured
Testaverde during a 41-10 loss
against the Chargers two weeks
(See TESTAVERDE onJ&gt;age 8)

It's Christmas .Club Time At
CENTRAL TRUST .

•Given wilb each

Catch All The
Excitement!!

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Sovin9{ Cornpony . .
Mem be1F D.I.C.

'

Football '90!

YourBank fot~...

In wake of five-game tailspin,

Perkins puts Testaverde on bench

The Dl!iily Sentinel Page S ·1

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Support These
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In the NBA Tuesday night,

·Jordan, Grant lead Bulls to 96-91

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786 N. 2ND AVE •

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99~-6491

'"'

:•••

�•

Thursday. November 8, 1990:

PorM-oy-Middhport. Ohio

. Ptlgi 8-The Dllv Sentinel

•

Strawberry homeward bound after
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Darryl Strawberry, the tempera·
mental slugger seeking a long
term, lucrative contract after his
best season ever, reiurned home
when he agreed to terms Wednesday night on a five-year contr;lct
· with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
No terms were disclosed,
though Strawberry's agent Eric
Goldschmidt, told WFAN-AM In
New York that Strawberry will
.be the second·h~hestpald player
In baseball behind Oakland At·
hletics ou11lelder Jose Canseco.
· Strawberry, 28, graduated
, Crenshaw High SchOOl In Los
Angeles, the city where he
resides qurlng the off-season and
the place where the right-fielder
had said he wan ted to play.
· Strawberry, who spent his
entire eight-year career with the
New York Mets, was expected to
sign the contractlater Thursday.
The Dodgers scheduled a news
conference at 5: 30 p.m. EST.
"We are very excited to have
Darryl as a member of the
Dodger ballclub," said Fred
Claire, the Dodgers executive
Vice president of player personnel. ''Darryl Is one of the premier
players In baseball and w_
e
welcome him to the organization.
We know he will make many
contributions to the Dodgers In

the years to come."
Strawberry finally reached his
projected potential with the Mets
thiS Jiast season, hitting .277,
smashing 37 homers and driving
In 108 runs. He also kept the Mets
In the pennant race, hitting
several key home runs down the
stretch.· But Strawberry's of·
tense wasn't enough as the Mets

finiShed four games behind the
Pittsburgh Pirates In the Na.
tlonal League East.
· Durl.ilg the summer, Straw.'
berry, a tree agent after the 1990
season, sought a deal better than
that of Canseco's five-year, $23.5
million pact.
The. Mets were apparently
unwilling to meet his demands.

•

In on-and-off negotiations during
the summer, the Mets offered
Strawberry
. $9 .1 million for three
,
years.
"If ($9.1 ml)llon for three
years) Is their (Mets) best shot,
someone; s going to make me the
richest player In the game,"
Strawberry said hist July.
However, a:t the end of the
.

with Dodgers

Builders meet
Rcpons on the cemetery fund
and community flower fund were
given by Grace Weber at the recent
· meeting of the Reedsville Community Builders Club held at the
home of Ronald.and Ella Osborne.
A thank you was read from the
William Congrave Family for the
remembllUice
of
comm~nity .
Dowers.
Ronald Osborne presided at the
meeting · and refreshments were
served. ,
.
Anending were guests, Melante
Thompson, Enon, and exc~~~e
student from France, OliVIer .
, Saucereau, and ·members, Grace
Weber, Donald l!'ld Pau)ine Myers,
Ernest and Maxine Whnebead and
Lyle and Ruth Anne Balderson. .
The, next meetu)g will be held
Saturday at the Weber home.

season, Strawberry said he · Strawberry batted .263, hit 252:
might remain with the Mets If homers and drove In 733 runs. He
was selected to the All-Star tearn
certain ·conditions were met,
Including "a better relationship seven times.
Strawberry was the Mets' firs t,
with the front pftlce." At the
selection and the No. 1 overall
same time, he said he would sign
pick In the June, 1980 Free Agent!
with the Dodgers If theyoftered
him a five-year contract "within draft. He first came up with the
Mets In 1983, winning NL Rookie
the range of contracts today."
;
In eight major league seasons,_ . of the Year honors . ·

.,.OUR.•

rr·s

OUR

40tll

41Jtl

•

•

Reedsville person'aJs

·
Maxine
Whiteh~,
Grace
Weber, Flllllces Reed and Ruth
Anne Balderson were overnight
guests of Doris Fick in Columbus.
They attended a play, "~bsetrap"
at the Capital Theatre.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Mundry
visited Carolyn Whaley, a patient 81
Grant Hospital in Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Vaughan Taylor,
Dayton, were recent weekeild
guests of Mr. and Mrs. David
"'
neber, .Morgan an d Erin.
Mrs. Melanie Thompson, fu!on,
and Olivier Saucereau, and . exchange student from France, were
overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead.

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· T estaverde...
(Continued from Page 4)
'

ago and threw four Interceptions.
Chandler label~ his perfor·
n\ance In that game as the worst
he has played at ally level .
"Changing quarterbacks can
spark a team, but there's no
guarantee that It will," Chandler
said Wednesday. "I'm not gonna
sit hete and say It's the answer.''
Testaverde has completed 59
• percent of hls attempts this year
for 1, 613 yards and 10 touch·
• downs. The Buccaneers have
averaged just13 points per game
over the last five weeks, lnclud·
lng two losses to Dallas.
"The change that makes the
most sense Is tb.e guy who drives
• the train .. . the engine, " said
Perkins, who 'also announced the
Buccaneers have waived defensive end Ray Seals and added
tree agent defensive lineman
Robb White.
Perkins has always been protective of Testaverde, especially
when the young passer set an
NFC record with 35lnterceptions
in 1988. But he has grown
InCreasingly fruatrated by the
.~ oftense:.s scant production since
: a 23-20 overtime triumph at
.. Minnesota boosted the Bucca·
: 11eers to 3-1.
In the summer of 1987, Perkins
· .w as bursting with praise for his
• . JIIo. 1 draft choice. . ·
' "He has a great future.
· .. Great," Perkins said after
: watching Testaverde In training
· camp that sUmmer. "No doubt
· • JlboUt it. He has a fine arm, he
· • ean scramble, he has vision and
lae gets ·the ball to the runner
:...t;lownfleld as well as anybody I
·: have ever seen."
,
•, Now, Testaverdelsleftponder·
..: ~ng If he fits Into Perkins' plans.
. ~ . "I think the receivers here
· flave just as much confidence In
Chris as we do In VInny," wide
receiver . Mark Carrier said.
-- !'We're not gonna do anything
: dUterent with Chris In this week.
· I was once In the same situation
; VInny's In now. r'know he's gonna
·fight back and work hls way back
· U&gt; the top. "

·.::Alomar named
·:;top AL rookie
. : NEW YORK (UP!) - Cleveland Indians catcher Sandy
j'\lomar Jr., Wednesday became
• the third player to unanimously
· Win the American League Rookie
: of the Year Award.
· Alomar received all 28 first·
place votes by a panel ot two
. paseball Writers' Association of
America members from each ·
'Amerjcan League city. ~e joins
• Carlton Fisk In 1972 and Mark
; ¥cGwtre In 1986 as .unanimous
· Rookie of the Year winners. ·
• The 24-year-old catcher, who
· carne to the Indians a~ part of the
aeal that sent Joe Carter to San
Diego, easily outdistanced Kevin
Maas of the New York Yankees
with the maximum 140 points.
Maas received 14 second-place
' votes and five third-place votes
for 47 points. Kevin Appler of
Kansas City was third with 31
points.
• Alomir balled .290 In 132
tames. with Cleveland and hit 9
'home runs with 66 RBI. He
·became the first rookie catcher
to start the All-Star Game and he
,collected two hlta In the mid·.
~ason classic. He . Is currently
playing In Japan with a major·
IH,ue All-Star team.
• AJomar became the third
catcher to win roolcle honors,
jolnllll Thurman Munson (1970)
aJ1C1 Fisk. He Is the fourth Indian
to wiD Rookie of the Year, alongWith Herb Score (19511) , Chris
t;Jwnbllss (1971) and Joe Char·
boneau
(1980). ·
.
.

HuRRY

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running fundamentally changed
the Issues debated. In cam·
palgns, " Smeal said. "The fact
that so rnany women were In
prominent races forced many
male candidates to take more
aggressive positions on women's
rights Issues. More candidates
than ever before had to take a
stand on abortion and other
women's rights Issues."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -A
Soviet classic sllent movie will be
shown· Thursday nlghtln Columbus, 'with a popular theater
organist providing the music for
the film by playing an Instrument
from the same era.
The tum "Aellta, " made In
1924, will be shown at the Wexner
Center for the VIsual Arts on the
Ohio State University campus.
Dennis James, a preeminent
musical Interpreter of silent
film, wlll accompany the film on
the Soviet musical Instrument,
the theremln.
"Aellta" tells the story of an
engineer who, tired of earthly
,. .\·
'
l
miseries and pursued lor them
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Three . urder of his wife, escapes to Mars
jackpot-winning· tickets were on a flying machine of his own
sold for Ohio's $13 mllllon Super Invention. He Is accompanied by
Lotto drawing Wednesday night. the detective Investigating the
The holders otthe tickets, who murder, and a good-nearted Red
correctly picked the numbers 6, Army soldier.
21, 26, 45, 50 and 52, have one year
On Mars, he falls In love with
to redeem their tickets and claim the planet's ruler, the tempestu·
equal shares of the priZe, lottery ous Aellta, and finds himself In
spokes111an Anne Bloomberg the midst of revolutionary
said Thursday.
turmon.
·
The winning tickets are worth
James, the resident theater
$4,333,342 apiece, , with each organist at th~ Ohio Theater In
holder getting $127,500:26 a year Columbus, composed the music
lor 26 years after mandatory
federal and state withholding.

In 1929, the Radio Corporation
of America had agreed to manufacture the Instrument. E~im
though RCA produced a solld)y
built Instrument with good tcme
color, the Instrument was simp,ly
too challenging to master aild
was not considered a commer·
cial success.
'

'
California musicians Ml)l!s
Anderson and Erica Sharp, two
former members of the s'an
Francisco Symphony Orchestra.
will accd'mpany James by playIng the plano, electric violin.
trombone, baritone horn, arid
electric synthesizers.

SHOP EARLY! AVOID THE HOLIDAY RUSH!

•••
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Chrilfmas Check List
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an.

Instrument invented In the 19~0s,.
and generally credited as the
first electronic synthesizer .
The thereml.n, Invented by
Leori Theremln. Is played by
passing ~he hands over tJle
Instrument's two antennae wlth·
out touching them. The:;e an ten·
nae actually respond to all botly
movements, forcing the mijsl·
clan to exercise precision '\Dd
speed so that the correct notes
can be heard distinctly .
'

.11 PAYS TO THINK AHEAD-JOIN OUR 1991
SAVINGS CLUB NOW

'

.,

he w!ll play on the theremin ,

;TVlAS
THE YEAR
BEFORE
·ciiRISTMAS
'91

.

\

whelmlngly for Richards. Exit
polls showed about 61 percent of
women voters In Texas went for
Richards and only 45 percent of
Wllllams' votes came from
women.
Leftist Paul Wellstone's upset
victory over Sen. Rudy Bosch··
wltz, .R· Minn. - the only
Incumbent senator to be turned
out of office - was also attributed to the gender gap.
But as Smeal acknowledged,
worn en make up only 5 percent of
the members or Congress and
just 20 percent ot state leglsla·
tors. "Electoral and party rule
changes are the next step for the
feminization or power," she said.

Jim Buckley visited with his sisWeekend guests of Pat and Hugh
ter, A.nne Buckley, at Ohio Univer- Martin and family were Mr. and
sity in Athens this weekend.
Mrs. Wayne Pollard, Sandston, Va.

Winter Quarter Registration:
Monday, Nov. 12
3 p.m.·
7 p.m.
'
Davis Career Center

•

'•

.Reedsville personals

To The University Of Rio Grande This Winter,
And.You'll Go Places All Year Long.
We Have Hundreds Of Courses That Can Help
You Further Your Career. Or, Investigate A
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Come To Rio Grande This Winter. Of All The ·
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*Offer Doet Not Apply To Prior Salle

Classic silent film to
be shown·· in Columbus ·

Three claim prizes
in lotto drawing

This Winter, Go
Someplace
That Will Help You
Go Places.

4If

•.

But a WOIJlan 'candidate and
support for legal a bortlon ate not
automatically linked as Democrat Joan Finney, an abortion
opponent, showed In her successful race to be governor of Kansas .
Nor could women challengers
break Into the male-dominated
ranks of the U.S. Senate.
Although Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., was re-elected,
· all, 'f.Omen challenging Incun\be!ll senators' .,.. lt\ciUdlrig 'some
·j\vho gave up safe Hou.se seats to
mount their challenge, such as
• Reps. Clau.dlne- SChneider, R·
R.I., · Lynn' Mal' tin, R· Dl., and
Pat&amp;la Saiki, R-Rawall.;;_ were
defeated, generally by handy
maglns.
Women also won the guberna·
torlal race In Oregan, with the
election of Barbara Roberts, but
two women Incumbents - _Gov.
Kay Orr, R-Neb., and Rep.
Olympia Snow, R-Malne- were
locked In such close races they
still had not been . called late
Wednesday afternoon.
Feminist groups were also
Bloomberg said two of the
savoring the defeat of a number
winning tickets were, sold In
of male candidates, often at the
Columbus and the third was
hands of other rnen,. who were
purchased In Norwalk.
perceived to be anti-women In
their rhetoric and stands, espe- ·
In addition to the top-prize
winners, 130 players picked five
clally Richards' defeat of Clayof the slx numbers to win $5,000
ton Williams In Texas and
each, 6,770 had four of the
Republican Wllllam Weld's defeat of neo- conservative Demo- -numbers for $100 payoffs and
141,922 had three numbers, good ·
crat John Silber In Massachu·
for
$3.
setts. Both men had offended
Super Lotto·tlcket sales totaled
feminists with their campaign
. rhetoric.
·
$5,419,901 .
There was one winner of the
In Texas, In particular, accord·
$100,000 grand prize In the
lng to Sharon Rodine of the
accompanying Kicker game,
National Women's Political Cauwhich produced the Winning
cus, "an enormous gender gap"
combination, 817791.
opened, with women voting over·

~o

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By DAVID E. ANDERSON
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - The
number of women who ran as
polltlcal candidates In the 1990
elections was a record . high,
feminist groups said, but
women's efforts to break the
"glass ceiling' •of high office was
frustrated more often than not.
Women could claim a number
of significant victories, especlally Democrat Ann Richards'
victory In the Texas gubernatorIa I race but feminists lost the
equally Important California
contest for the governor's manslon with thedefeatofformerSanFrancisco Mayor Dianne
Feinstein.
·
Women also won . the two top
elected posts In the District . of
Columbia, with Sharon Pratt
Dixon · becoming mayor a11d
· former Carter· ~dmln!sirii(lon
official Eleana. or Holm
. es\"-'n"''"'n
""-.....
'picking up the'&gt; nOII·votlng ·dl!le:
gate seat In the House. ,; · . .
''These elections Will go down
l.n history as a tuinlng'poinf'for
the power of women candidates,
women's votes and abortion In
electoral politics," Eleanor
Smeal, president of the Fund tor
a Feminist Majority, said
Wednesday·
According
to Fund figures,
2 000
over ,
women ran for state
legislative office, 80 sought statewide seats and close to 70 took a
shot a races for the House and
Senate.
·•
,
"The record nubmer of women

a

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lhe. Daily Sentinei-Page..:.7

Women taking biager
part in elections
0'

and ghosts. This tum give us a
What scares you the most, dear
chance to see our favorite vamreader? Is your fear the kind that
pire Barnabas Collins, played
comes subtly on black cat feet In
with charm by Jonathan Frld. A
the ebon night, a creeping so
greedy man releases him from
softly to drag you all unawares
Into the unpredictable realm of his coffin and then mysterious
attacks take place In the area of
terror. Or Is It the quick jab to the
Collinwood. Finally, In fright·
jaw that shocks your senses and
enlng scene we see whO Is
leaves you breathless on the
responsible and then It BOes from
shore of nightmare, straild!!d and
bad to worse as a young man
alone?
fights for the life of his fiancee,
Let us examine some samples
against a centuries-old rival.
of Halloween fear In the com par·
NIGHT OF DARK SHADOWS
.alive safety of our homes through
however Is the better of the two
the wizardry of MGM which
even though at no time Is any
supplied three of the best films In
element from the series used. It
the horror genre.
stars David Selby and Kate
In 1932, the director of .the
original . Dracula, released a ·Jackson as Quentin and Tracy
Collins who come to Collinwood
movie that so horrorfled , the
senslbllltles of the critics of the In hope~ of a life of peace and ·
happiness. Not so. From the start
time that It resulted In Its
ghostly Images of a past life
banning In England for thirty
begin to Intrude on the present as
years and one of the finest and
most gripping tales of love, . Qllentln sees the death of Angebetrayal and revenge of ail time llque Collins, played by the
was almost lost forever. It was .. ,gotgec)us Lara Parker, who was
hung as a witch.
called' FREAKS and was based
The housekeeper, a · grim, .
on a short story. called Spurs by
forbidding woman tells Quentin
Tod Robbins. I have read It years
that 'be Is the reincarnation of
. ago and still remember It with
Charles Collins who was the lover
fond· shudders.
Here Is a brief surrunatlon of · otthedead'iwpman. How does she
know? She Is il!e reincarnation of
the story: A beautiful but cold·
hearted trapeze artist steals the
the little girl who over a hundred
heart of a dwarf and decides to year.s ago saw the execution.
kill him when she and her strong From then on, poor Tracy finds
herself fighting , the power of
man lover find out how rich he Is.
The other sideshow freaks come Angel!qul! as her husband. be·
to his rescue and exact a terrible comes possessed and transbut very Ironic and just revenge formed Into a vicious, cruel man
who won't stop just-with ordering
on the two evil ·people.
'
her out of Collinwood.
· This movie Is a gem for Its
Of these two movies, Night Is
violation of the rule that s~ys do
the one that I find myself
as you wlll but offend no one when
preferlng for the tight, moody
you do lt..lt has actu'll freaks but
and sultry atmosphere that holds
at no time does It treat them as
on but does not let go even after
anything Qther then human· be·
the movie Is ove~.
lngs who are very human, more
All 'three have some violence
so than the normal monsters who
but they are the best in the horror
seek to harm them.
.HOUSE OF DARK SHADOWS genre If you like your ch!Us
delivered In telllgentiy with little
Is a con!lnuatlon of the ABC-TV
or no grue.
·
soap opera that had vampires

•

2 or 3 Piece Suite Or Sectional
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Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

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Thursday, November 8. 1990

•· I

Bank
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STATE ROUTE 7

TUPPERS PlAINS, ·OHIO

'
'·,.
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•

�·.
Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 8, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

r

Garden clubs hold fall meeting Sexual activity among
The Meigs County fall meeting
of garden clubs was held recently at
the Meigs County Extension
Office.
.
Pauline Atkins, county contact
c.bainnan, conducted the meeting.
Margaret Edwards, Rutland .
Friendfy Club, told the story of the
Rain Drop as a poem on autumn for
the devotions.
Roll can was answered by 29
members. Clubs represented were
Chester, Fernwood, Rutland, Rut·
land Friendly, Shade Valley, Stat
and Winding Trail.
Members were reminded to pay
county and regional dues aod that
program, publicity, beautification,
outstanding gardener and outstanding garde.n club reports are due
Dec. 15 to the state chainnan.
It waS noted that the Bend 0' the
·River Club is disbanding.
Meigs County w.ill be hosting the
spring regional meeting on April
27. '1991. Jan. 21, 1991 was set to
Hnalize plans for the meeting. The
spring county meeting wiD be held
April 23, 1991 with the Fernwood
Club to have the program and the

:Haning birthday

•• Erica Nicole Haning recently

celebrated her fourth birthday with
two parties.
~
The first party was held at her
home. Attending were her mother,
Cathy
Haning,
maternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond E. Manley ancj Joe Manl~y. Middleport.
· Sending gifts were maternal
great grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
1'1\omas McKinney, Cheshire; and
Kevin Manley and Joni Little,
Middleport.
The second party was held at the
hciine of her cousin. A Teenage
Mbtant Ninja Turtle theme was carri~out

•Attending were her mother,
paJernal grandmother, Irene Robinson. and her father, Steve Haning,
bii1h of Columbus; Greg Haning Jr.,
Gi!!'Y and Richard Haning, Lea Harrjiigton, Gayla Haning, Kim
L:indermilt, Nathan Becker, Rick
t:audermili, Angie Leedy and
Qiana Nease.

Winding Trails Club to hosL
The . Chrisunas Hower · show
schedules were distributed by Alice
Thompson and Peggy Crane.
Chainnen and classes were drawn
By JANET BASS
for the show to be staged Nov. 17
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sex·
·and 18 at Royal Oak Reson Club. ual activity of teenage girls
The theme is ''The Poems, B~ .Increased In the 1980s, especially
aod Songs of" Chrisunas." Each among whites and those in
club is to furnish one dozen higher·income families, but the
sandwiches and two ciozen cookies. pregnancy .rate remained stable
It was noted that there have beeil because of greater contraceptive
changes in the rules for · the use, a study said.'
Chrisunas Rower Show. In the arThe ·Ala"n Guttmacher Insti·
tistic classes, painted, sprayed and tute, a non-prollt research group,
dried plant materials may be used found that the proportion of
in all classes if the ananger so sexually active females ages
desires. It was also noted that every 15·17 years old rose from 32
club is to participale in the table percent In 1982 to 38 percent in
sening display. class.
1988. For those ages 15-19, sexual
Mrs..Atkins introduced Rev. Kris activity also rose 6 percent Trietong, as.sistant pastor to MeijlS from 47 percent to 53 percent.
Presbyterian Churches, who spoke
"Most of the change Is attribuon the "Flowers, Fruits and table to Increases occurring
Vegetables or Thailand." She among white and non-poor teeanswered questions on the customs nagers, thus narrowing racial
of that country.
and Income differences," said
The Raitland Friendly members authors Jacqueline Darroch For·
served cider and doughnuts at the rest and SuSheela !:\lngh.
close of the .meeting.
The study. released Wednesday, also said the overall teenage
pregnancy rate remained stable
between 1982 and 19!18 because
contraceptive use Increased. In
1988, 65 percent of teenage girls
used contraception durtng their
first experience with Inter·
course, up from 48 percent In
1982. The authors found the
overall Increase was almost
entirely due to a dramatic rtse in
condom use.
Hispanic youth more than
doubled their use of contraceptives, particularly condoms, dur·
,·;;~.
ing
first-time sex.
r \.
While the pregnancy rate for
all U.S. women changed little
durtng the 1980s, the study found
more pregnancies- nearly six in
10 - are noW unplanned. For
teenagers, the rate was more

teenagers increasing

ERICA HANING

oo

Quote of the day
:British Prime Minister Mar·
garet Thatcher, telling the openl.ig of a new session of
Parliament:
·"Time is running out lor
Saddam Russell'\. The implaca·
bi.e message from this house
must be either he gets out of
!{uwalt soon, or we and our allies
w!ll remove him by force and he
will go down to defeat with all Its
consequences.''

crowd with her glitz and costume
changes. In the lirst of five
performances in Sydney, Cher
had seven wardrobe changes.
"And as the songs got bigger, the
outfits got smaller. featuring
everything from what can only
be described as a leather thong to
minis, beads and . jeans," a
reviewer for the Sydney Tele·
graph Mirror said. "We even got
to see four of those tattoos - on
her arms and buttocks. Cher has
a great voice, looks wonderful
and is stUI the most stylish rock
'n' roll baby of them all." ·
THE ROBOCOP BLUES: Ac·
tor Peter Weller will be Indulging
his musical proclivities next
year. Weller, the star of the
"Robocop" movies, Is In Malay·
sia !timing a new action movie,
"50·50," and brings his trumpet
to the set every day. "It's a form
of self-expression," said Weller.
whose favorite musician Is Miles
Davis. "Me and a bunch of jazz
musicians, like Branford Marsalis and Herbie Hancock, plan to
make a record by next June. I'll
sing and play the trumpet. i've
also written a song for the album
called '21.' I write a lot of songs
and poetry and also play the·
guitar." Weller says he studied
music in school but turned to
-acting becaause he \vas only a
mediocre musician.
SUPERFLY FLmS BACK TO
FIGHT DRUGS: Superfly has
gone straight. Nathan Pardee,
best known for his role on "The
Young and the Restless," will
star In "The Return of Superfly"
as the slick street character lirst
played by Ron O'Neal In the
original 1972 "blaxplotatton"
classic "Superfly." The new
Superfly Is no ·longer Involved in
the drug trade but has a leglti·
mate business in Paris and starts
a crusade to clean up the streets
when he returns to the United
States and finds young children
caught up In drugs. "People give
up their past and go on to do other
things with their lives , positive
things," Purdee says of· hls
character's metamorphosis.
"That's not so far·fetched, Is it?"

By FREDERICK M. WINSHIP
UPI Senior Editor
NEW YORK - The art world
is in recession·lnduced shock
over theseason'sfirstblgauctlon
which failed to sell half the
contemporary works offered. ,
Only 34 of 77 paintings and
sculptures that went on the block
at Sotheby's gallery Tuesday
found buyers', although there
were bidders on all lots. In the
case of 43, bidding failed to reach
the reserve price be low which the
art work remains unsold and is
returned to the consignor.
These included works by Andy ·
Warhol, Jasper Johns, Clyfford
StUI, Roy Lichtenstein, Richard
Diebenkorn, Frank Stella and
Hans Hofmann, all post-World
" War II artts ts. As a result of
unsold works, the sale total was
$19.8 million instead of the $39.6
million to $52 million expected.
Dealers attending the sale
voiced the opinion that reserves
- the pr,ices agreed on by
consignors and gallery experts
as a fair market price - were too
high to be realistic In an era of
deepening economic gloom and
the threat of war In the Middle
East.
. The dealers sat on their hands
and left the bidding to private
collectors. Some said they came
only to assess the strength or
weakness qf the market.
The top lot In the sale, the first
of two weeks of Impressionist,
modern and contemporary art
sales at Sotheby's and Christie's,
was Robert Rauschenberg's 1961
"Third Time Painting," which
sold for $3, (ll(),OOO to an unldentl:
fled European coilector.
This was $1 mUllan less than
Sotheby's original estimate of
the American painting's value
when the sale was organized last
summer. The gallery reduced
the low estimate to$3 million last
week.
''The market we were dealing
with was a moving target when
we put this sale together in July
and,August," said Lucy Mitchell·
Innes, curator of contemporary
art sales at Sotheby'S'. "International events had taken their toll
on the art market by October."
Mitchell·lniles said auction prices for contemporary art began a
dramatic Increase In November

'

~

SWISHER-LOHSE

Pre-Holiday sa.,lngsl I

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Two other works that did well
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French painter of childlike car·

&amp;

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"Cows in a Pasture" sold for $2.3
mllllon, beth going to Chicago
dealer Richard Gray.

TIMEX
WATCHES

CHRISTMAS

w GIFT WRAP
I JUMBO ROLl/SO SQ. FT.

Rauschenberg used oils,
paper, fabric, metal, glass, a . II!
chain, and a real Bulova alarm ~
ctocksetat3:30o'clocktocreate "'

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GOOD
THIOUGH
MONDAY,
NOYEMIEI
12, 1990

f.(

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I

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K••••• Moe-::~

:;,': ;1 ~~•RIHI- A."'
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Mon. ttwu .... 1:00 a.m. to 8:00p.m.
Sund.. 10oOO o.m. to 4 ,00 p.m. ,
PRESCRIPTION&amp;

E. Mai!'

.

1.
1

·
I
DIMEJAPP I

EXCLAMATION
(OLGONA SPRAY
sRsE.G9s'

!

30°/o OFF II

?J

The sales continue Wednesday
with a major sale at Christie's - ll
Including one of Wlllem de ~ ·
Koonlng's most important aD. ~
stract paintings, "July," painted · I(
In 1956 as part of his urban ~
landscape series. It carrtes a
pre·sale evaluation of $5 mllllon
to $7 million.

'PH 112-29&amp;5

friencly Santlce
Pom•oy. OH .
Op . . Wulo Nighto 'tiD

*~------.--·--~

EARlY AMERICAN

CONSOLE REft10TE

2 PC. UVING ROOM
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249

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WHm WESTINGHOUSE

LliGE SOUD WOOD ",

DINING Tlll£/6 CHAIRS

HEAVY DUTY
lAUNDRY PAIR
::.

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SS99

having a turkey supper on Saturday
at 4 p.m. Cost is $4.50 far adults
and $2.50 for children under 12.
The Buckeye Travelers will entertain. The public is invited.

pen Plains VFW Post 9053 will
THURSDAY
WELLSlON - The Wellsto11 meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Ohilloc Society wiU present a post home.
baseball card show on Thursday
FRIDAY
from 4-9:30 p.m. at the St Peter
LONG BOTIOM - The Faith
aod Paul Parish Hall, Wellston.
Full Gospel Church wiD have a
hymn sing on Friday at 7 p.rn. with
MIDDLEPORT - The Heath the Raye Gospel Singers, the
United Methodist Church will have Dailey Family, aod . other local
a rummage sale on Thursday from talent. Refreshments will be served
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Ft;iday from 9 aod the public is invited to attend.
.a.m. to noon .at the church baSement
RACINE - The Racine Post 602,
American Legion, will meet Friday
POMEROY- The Sacred Hean at the hall at 9:30 a.m. to go to
Catholic Church will have its an- Portlaod grade school for Veterans
nual bazaar and dinner on Thursday Day activities.
from 5-7 p.m. There wiU be crafts
aod games for everyone. Door
POMEROY
The Senior
prizes awarded every half-hour Citizens Dance Club will have a
from 6:30-8:30 p.m.
dance Friday from 8-11 p.m. Music
is by the Happy Hollow Boys from
POMEROY - There will be a Athens. Bring snacks for the snack
Fall Open Hoose at Meigs High table. The public is invited.
School on Thursday from 5-9 p.m.
The public is invited to attend. An
LOTIRIDGE ' Country Music
open kettle ham and bean ·soup Night will be held at the Lottridge
supper will be held sponsored by Community Center on Friday from
the band boosters. Cost is $2.50 for 6 p.m. to midnight. Refreshments
adults and $2 for children.
available. All bands welcome.

REEDSVILLE - The Eastern
Band Boosters will have an arts and
crafts fair on Saturday at the high
school from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. There
will be food and entenainmenL .
MIDDLEPORT - The Gabriel
Quartet will have an anniversary
sing on Saturday at the United
Faith Church in Middleport at 7:30
p.m. Others singing will be The
True Gospel Sounds, Chari!}&gt;, and
Jan and Kathy.

MIDDLEPORT • There will be a
ruPPERS PLAINS - There wiU
bookfair at the Meigs Junior High be a round and sqaure dance at the
School Thursday through Tuesday. Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053 on
All students will be pennitted to Friday from 8-11:30 {'.m. featuring
purchase
books,
posters, the Rocky Mountam Bluegrass
boqkmarks, etc.
r......
band. Caller will be Red Carr. Cost
is $2.50 for adults and $1 for
CHESTER - .The Shade River children.
Lodge No. 453 will meet Thursday
'
at 7:30 p.m. at · the lodge hall.
HARRISONVILLE
• HarrisonRefreshments will be served and all ville Eastern Star will meet Friday
members urged to attend.
· at 7:30p.m. at the Masonic Temple.
Officers will be installed. Bring a
POMEROY -The Preceptor Beta potluck diSh.
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority wiU meet Thursday at 7:30
DORCAS - Dan Hayman aod the
p.m. at the Grace Episcopal Faith Trio will sing Friday at 7 p.m.
Church. Hostesses will be Jane at the Bethan United Church in
Walton aod Reva Vaughn.
Dorcas.
SATURDAY
ROCK SPRINGS . - The Rock
ruPPERS PLAINS - The iupSprings Grange will meet Thursday pers Plains Ladies Auxiliary wiU
at 8 p.m. Patty Dyer, delegate to have its annual wrkey dinner on
Ohio State Grange will give a Saturday at the fire house at 4 p.m.
reprot
Cost is $4 per person for turkey,
dressing, mashed potatoes imd'
POINT
PLEASANT
- gravy, homemade noodles, green
WVARNG Point Pleasant Family beans, cole slaw, roll, pie and drink.
Support Group wiU meet Thursday
at 6:30 p.m. at the Annory Day
MASON - The Ladies Auxiliary
of the Mason Fire Deparunent will
Room.
hold its annual Christmas baz.1ar on
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call
Lodge 164 wiU meet at 7:30p.m. at 773-5437 or 773-5414 to rent a
the Middleport Temple. All master table.
masons are invited.
ruPPERS PLAINS • The VFW
ruPPERS PLAII'!S • The Tup- Post 9053 in Tuppers Plains is

LAIIG( SEUCTION

CURIOS and
GUN CABINETS

MICROWAVE OVEN

DEALER FULL UNE
SEE OUR CHRISTMAS
TOY DEPT.

By United Press International
Tbe best-selling candy in the
worJd Is Life Savers, with
3M;Il,236, 300 rolls sold between
1913 and May 1987. 'A tunnel
formed by the holes In the middle
stretched end to end would reach
to the moon and back ·more than
three times,

FIOM$198

FINAl WEEKEND
NOV. 9- 10
HUGE SAVINGS

JEWELRY SALE
DIAMONDS • IU•ES
14 .11'. GOLD • WATCHIS

AU GREAT S~YINGS .

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

10. I. Jlltl A¥1.• MIDDI.IPOIT, OH.
,9J.J635 e TOll. , _ I·IOO..U·ISII

oCREDIT TERMS •FREE DELIVERY
•LAY-A-WAYS •FUU SERVICE DEPT. ·
'

'

t

Sunday program, 10:30 a.m. Junior
church presenting "Dressed_ and
Ready to Go" directed by Beverly
Rupe with Andrea PoweU assisting .
Public invited by the Rev. Gllf)'

Hines.
MIDDLEPORT - A Veterans
Day Dinner wiU be held Sunday for
American Legion Post 128 members at 1.2:30 p.m. at the American
Legion Annex. Speaker will be
Rulli Crutcher, district second vice
commander. Hymn singers, Heaven
Boun!) Four and The Chosen at
1:30p.m.

.

Pnmt•ro\

.· 992-2124

HOu.n:

11 am to Mid Sun ·Thurs
II am to I am f n &amp; SaL

CHESTER - The Ken Amsbary
Chapter of the lzaak Walton
League wiU begin slug shoots on
Sunday at I p.m. at the clu.b house.

LARGE DELUXE

Pick-Up Only!
LARGE 1 ITEM
PIZZA
PAll 01

PIZZA AND 4
PEPSIS ·

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$599

OIIGIIIAL
STYLI

•1990 Oom•no' 1 P!ru In c Our drtY ... I c.,,.,"",,.,. 120 00
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P-.A T

TIM[ AN D CAA H A OPPORTUNITIES NOW AIIA I'l.ABLE'

POMEROY - "Paddington Goes
tO the Movies" will be the movie
shown at 'the Meigs County Public
Library on Saturday ai .2 p.m. All
area children are invited. .
POMEROY - The Fifth Annual
Coal Miners Jamboree will be held
Saturday at 7 p.m. at Meigs High
School. The cost is $5 for adults
and $2 for students with children
under six admitted free. Music will
·be provided by The River Junction
Bluegrass Band, Country Blend,
The Rarely Herd and other local
talent.
POMEROY • Ponland basketball
·players and cheerleaders will span·
sor a bake sale at Kroger in
Pomeroy on Saturday beginning at
9:30 a.m. Proceeds will go toward
shoes and new cheerleader
unifonns.
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse FaD
Carnival will be held Saturday
from ~8:30 p.m. Entertainment by
Johnny Belinda and Dan Hayman
and the · Faith Trio will perform.
Public invited.
SUNDAY
CHESTER - New Life Covenant
Church of God, Chester, special

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Spechil meeting
The Rutland Fireman's Auxiliary
held special meeting on Monday
to discuss the final plans for the annual turkey dinner to be held Nov.
15 at 5 p.m. Anyone wanting to
volunteer to help or purchase a
ticket may call Kimberly Willford
at 742·2103.

a

E. Neal Orteia, M.n~··

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Charles Blakeslee presented a
slide show at the recent meeting or
the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club of his trip to British Columbia, Canada.
· He discussed the glaciers and
their movement down the pine
covered mountain sides.

The students at Letan Falls
Elementary School recently enjoyed a halloween party given by
thePTO.
Prizes were provided by the
Modem Woodmen of America,
Burlingham Camp 7230, Mrs. Ethel
A. Hart, district representative.

Rog. Sep~llli ltoml 1199.1S
LOW AI $46 Per Montt:'l•
#25·16021104311046 .

stationed in "Operation Desert Shield." Students
wrote letters, walked to the post office, pur·
chased a stamp, and mailed tbe letters as part or
their assignments.

UTILE LETTER WRITERS • Doris Well's
first grade class at Tuppers Plains Elementary
participated i'n letter writing to soldiers

,
(

Members of the Riverview Oar- Young, Gladys Thomas,. BettY
den Club recently visited the Cam- Boggs and Phyllis Larkins.
New yearbooks were given out
pus Manius Museum and the Delta
by
Mrs. Whitehead, vice president
Queen which docked in Marietta.
The Nov. 15 meeting wiU be
.. Attending were Franr.es Reed,
Maxine Whitehead, Ella Osborne, held at the Reedsville Church of
Mary Alice Bise and Ruth Ann Christ with a Chrisunas workshop·
Balderson. They were joined at the tci be conducted by Marilyn HanBetsy Mills Club by Janet Con· num and Ruth Anne Balderson.
noUy, Janice Young, Delores Frank, Members are to bring finger food ,
Kila Young, Mary Grace Cowdery, and also gifts for the patients at'
Grace Weber, Pauline Myers. Nola Americare-Pomeroy.

POMEROY - A kid's festival
wiU be held at Pomeroy Village
Hall on Saturday at noon. There
BURLINGHAM - The Burlin·
wiU be games, prizes and refreshgham
Modem Woodmen will eat at
ments. The event is sponsored by ·
Pale;s
Smorgasbord on Sunday
the Midnight Clpggers and all
from
noon
to 2 p.m: Members and
proceeds w.ill go towards the ·
their
famlies
and guests are invited.
group's 1991 California Tour. ·
POINT PLEASANT - Dan
RACINE - The Racine American Hayman and the Faith Trio will
Legion Post 602 will hold its an- perform at the Gospel Lighthouse
nual beans and com bread dinner m Point Pleasant on Sunday at 7 p.m.
for VeteranS Day on Saturday
beginning at II a.m . The public is
invited.

Vi

Rotary club tneets

$188

TAPPEN TOUCHMAnC

RADIO SHACK

$499

Cloest·Dr--Mirror· 1111A11nl
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Garden club visits campus

~

2S" DIAG. ZENITH

The Daily Sentinel Page-9

. Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

·----------------------~

Now You Know

,.

I

I

1988, reached their peak in
November 1989 and began a
correction' in last spring's sales.
''The market has now returned
to the 1988 level before the
so·called 'boom' began,"
Mitche!Hnnes said. "The paint·
lngs that failed to sell were by
artists whose work appreciated
the most In the boom."

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

r••••••••••••••••••••·-~

I'

Thursday,
. N011ember s. 1990
.

Community Calendar

MINEOLA, N.Y. (UPI) -An he allegedly attempted to steal
Inmate who was released from some food.
jail and went home for the
.. .
Chrtstmas holidays on bail pro- · Nassau Assistant District At·
vided by a Good Samaritan torney Michael Walsh said the
pleaded guilty to stealing two . unldentilled store manager resteaks during his release.
peated his demand that Ponder
l;lerrtck Ponder, 27, was the stay away from the store, and
first Nassau County Jail inmate Ponder, responded by gra bblng
In 17 years. to commit a crime two steaks and walking toward
while free on ball provided by the !ront of the store.
businessman Sal !',flgllo, au thor!·
ties said.
"A store employee confronted
Ponder admitted Wednesday
Ponder,
and in an ensuing
to s~jlling the .steaks from an
struggle,
Ponder fell through a
A&amp;P 'Supermarket In North Bel·
plate
glass
window," Walsh said.
!more Dec. 29. As a result of his
plea, County Court Judge Ira "Then, he got up, walked to the
Wexner said Ponder would be rear of the store and threw the
sentenced Dec. ~ to a year In the two steaks into a meat freezer."
Walsh said Ponder then at·
county jail.
At the time the ball was posted. tempted to walk out of the store,
Ponder was awaltingsentenceon but pollee had arrtved by then
a petty larceny charge for and arrested him.
stealing three steaks f(om a
supermarket In Hempstead on
Last Dec. 22, Ponder was one of
Oct. 4, 1989.
· Ponder was charl(ed ,With the slx county jail inmates who could
burglary because the manager of not afford $500 ball .but were
the ·supermarket had warned released for the Christmas boll·
him to stay out.of the store alter day when Miglio posted the ball.

I

Art world in shock
as price boom ends

.People in the news ...
By WU..LIAM C. TROTI'
. United Press International
· KENNEDY FINALLY
PASSES: John F. Kennedy Jr. is
glad that he's finally lived down
the' "hunk who flunked" label.
Jl.eporters awaited Kennedy, 29,
"fhen he arrived for work (a few
minutes late) Wednesday at the
l\1lanhattan district attorney's
C(fflce and he shared his feelings
about finally passing New York's
liar exam. "I got the word. I'm
~~¥ relieved," he said. ''I'm
I~Oking forward to doing sometbirig good." Kennedy, whose
sjs'ter, Caroline. passed the bar
her first try, had failed the
e~am twice since graduating
from the New York University
I.!aw School In 1989, making him
tl)e o.bject of "Hunk Flunks"
tabloid headlines. He would have
lqst $30,000-a-year his job If he
hadn't passed this time but now
h~ gets a $1,000 annual raise.
Kennedy's work concentrates on
wtilte-collar crime and low-level
po~ttcal corruption.
: ~AB FOUR RATES ONLY
FOURTH: Beatles fans are goiri~t 'to be displeased with Enter·
t&lt;jlnment magazine. In a look
baCk at the first 35 years of rock
'ri' &gt;!'Oil, the magazine listed the 35
greatest acts of all time ·and
rat~ the Fab Four in only fourth
place·, ,crit1cizing them for
Grorge Harrison's "play·by·
numbers lead guitar and Ringo's
tay drumming." The BoDing
Slones topped the list, foilowed,
tr( order, by Elvis Presley, Bob
Dylan, the Beatles, Jimi Hen·
dtlx, James Brown, Chuck
Btrry, Led Zepplin, Lou Reed's
\'~lvet Underground and Marvin
Gaye . Bruce Springsteen was
No. 12 while Madonna ranked
1!ith, · the rap group Public
Enemy ·was · 31st and the Sup~mes rounded out the list at
N9. 35.
tHER'S WARDROBE IM·
P~ESSES AUSSIES:
Cher
opened her Australian tour Tues• d~y night and Impressed the

than eight In 10 . .
Ten percent of all women of
reproductive age, or about 3.9
mlliion women, do not use any
method of birth control. One In
five of them are teenagers, the
study said.
"The fact that nearly 4 mUllan
U.S. women at risk of unlntend~d
pregnancy use no contraceptive
method - SOO:OOO of whom are
teenagers -Is cause for concern,
since the high level of unplanned
pregnancy in the United States Is
at the root of our high level of
abortion," said the authors.
Jane Johnson, vlcepresldentof
Planned Parenthood Federation
of America, said from· her New
York office that she was encour·
aged by the overall survey
results.
''The most significant point
was the jncrease in the number of
women using contraception .tn
their first Intercourse," Johnson
said, saying this appears to
reflect anxieties about un·
planned pregnancies and con·
tractlng acquired Immune dell·
clency syndrome and other
sexually transmitted diseases.
''The troubling down side Is
that we're still seeing adoles·
cents who are having intercourse
without use of birth control and
still at risk of unintended preg·
nancles," she said.
Between 1982 and 1988, the
number of· women ages 15-44
Increased from 54 million to·. Sl!
million: The number of teenage
females dropped during the
1980s, from 9.5 million to 9.2
mUllan.
For the survey, 8,450 women
were Interviewed in 1988; 7,969
women were Interviewed in 1982.

----Steak lover on the coals---

.

James version. 1163·880

Cut •so
119'1 ,:;t.
LowAaSllllw-·

11120-111

#16·826

�'

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pornaroy-Middlepoit.

Thursday. November 8, 1990

OiJio .

Buck-Wallace, son of Bruce and
Gloria Wallace of Canal WinchesNine were fined and two olhers ter, and grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
forfeited bonds in the ·cour~of Mid- Dwight Wallace, Middleport, and
dlepon Mayor Hoffman Tuesday Addie Buck, Pomeroy, and the !are
ntght.
.
•
Gail Buck, is Central Ohio's All
Fined were Tommy Quillen. Star f()r 1990 in swimming in the
Middlepon, $25 and costs, disor: age gi'oup of 17 and over.
derly manner ilnd $25 and c~sts,
Buck was · presented lhe high
Qbsauciing justice: Joyce Elltott, point lrophy award by Central
Wbiunan, W. Va., $10 and costs, Ohio's Swimming Association iltits
running a red light; ltichard A: El- annual banquet held recently at lhe
lis, Pometoy, $10 and costs, failure Columbus Mariott for earning tlie
10 mainrain aSsured clear distance; most points at lhe U. S. Swimming
Peggy S. Davis, Long BotiOm, $10 Stare Championships. He . was
· and cost, no registration: John A. finalist in all five of the events in
Clonch, Gallipolis, $425 and costs which he competed at St. Xavier
· and three days in jail, physical con- High School in Cincinnati.
1101 of a motor vehicle while under
The banquet was held for stare
lhe influence of alcobol or drugs, championship qualifiers only. Apand $10 and costs. expired . proximately 300 swimmers and
operatOr's licence:
Roy G. their families attended.
Withrow, Shade, $425 and costs
Buck also received an Outs~BUCK WALLACE
and three days in jail, physical con- ing Athlete Award for being Ohio's
1101 of a motor vehicle while under all Star for 1990. This is his fourth
the influence of alcohol or drugs: · year as an All Star.
the year of the boycoa in Russia
and Dean Whtitingwn, Middleport,
Glenn Mills, former Olympic
Swim teams represented at the
$25 and costs, open contamer: swimmer was speaker and presen- banquet were Gl"elller Columbus,
James.E. Johnson, Middlepon, $25 ted Buck wilh a trophy. Glenn Worthington, · Upper ArlingtOn,
and costs. open contrainer; and . holds a record for breast stroke. Westerville, Pickway Counties,
Chris Rayburn, Middlepon, $25 Buck's coach Axel Bimbrick was Portsmouth, Mt. Vernon and
and costs, disorderly manner.
an Olympic ream member in 1980, Athens.
Forfeiting bonds were Michael
Gibbs, Reedsville, and Randall
Bunce, Middlepon, bolh $460, for
physical control of a m010r vehicle
whle under the influeilce of alcohol Charles Mills
in New Brigh10n, 1133 Penn Ave.
or drugs. Bunce was also forfeited .
Funeral servies will be held Satura $60 bond on squealing tires.
Charles (Ted) Mills, 88, fonnerly day at 10:30 a.m at the funeral
of New Brighton, Pa. died Wednes- home. The Rev. David H. Lindberg
day in the Medical Center at will officiate, and private .internBeaver, Pa.
ment . will be at Sylvania Hills .
Born on May 15 ... 1902 in Memorial
Park
Cemetery.
· Hospital News
Syracuse, he was the son of the !are Memorial contributions may be
Veterans Memorial Hospital . Edward S,. and Ella Congrove
made to the Fiflh /!.venue United
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS - Mills. He had been a resident of Methodist
Church, 1009 Fifth Ave.,
None.
New Brighton, Pa. since 1923. .
New Brighton, Pa., 15066.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES He was a former millwright for
None.
Standard Steel Speciality, retiring
in 1966. He was a member of lhe
Fifth Avenue United Methoidst
Apply for licenses
Christmas luudraiser
Church and lhe United Methodist
The
Syracuse Fire Station wiU
Men of the Chureh.
have
a
Christmas fundraising aucMarriage licenses have been isSurvivot:S include two daughters,
tion
on
Saturday
at 7 p.m. at the fire
sued in Meigs County Probate Mrs. Eileen Jewell of Norlh
departmenL
Court to Anthony Troy Seyler, 24, Sewickley, Pa, and Mrs. James
Hartford, W.Va., and Lisa Ann · (Wanda) Dyson of Wintersville,
Library dosed Monday
Gibbs, 29, also of Hanford; }erry Ohio; seven grandchildren, 12
The Meigs County Public
Wayne White, 18, · Grantsville, great-grandchildren, · two brothers,
W.Va and Lara Lee Rose Hall, 18, Waide Mills of Elwood City, Pa., Library in Pomeroy wiU close
Gallipolis; Jeffrey Scott Mitz, 28, and Ralph Mills of Aliquippa, Pa.; Monday ,in observance of Veterans
and l.aDonna Renee Large, 24, a sister, Mrs. Audry Panerson of Day. The library wiU be open Sun. day.
both of Pomeroy.
Rulland.
l'!e was preceded in death by his
SARbanquet
· wife, Eva Winebrenner Mills, in
The Ewing Chapter of lhe Sons
April 1985 and three brothers,
of
the American Revolution wiU
Clyde, Vernon and Frank Mills.
hold
its annual banquet on Friday at
Friends may call Thursday 7 to 9
Dally stoek prices
6:30
p.m. at Baker Center in
p.m. and Friday 2 to 4 and 7 10 9
Athens.
(As of 10:30 a.m. )
p.m. at Campbell's Funeral Home
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

By LEE STOKES
Unlted.Pre!i8 International

DAY

.NOV. 9th

NOV.

mantled their launchers after
Iraqi troops entered Kuwait. "
Egypt's President Hosni Mu·
barak made a last appeal Thurs·
day to Saddam to reconsider his
occupation of Kuwait and said
the alternative would be
"dreadful."
"Hope (of an Iraq withd rawal )
exists until the last minute,"
Mubarak told reporters at Cairo
airport while seeing orr visiting
Zairean President Mobutu Sese
Seikou.
"We don't waill to see the
des tructlon of Iraq, but this
depends on the stance of Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein ... the
alternative (to withdrawal )
would be dreadful," Mubarak
said.
·
Also in Egypt, a spokeswoman
for · the U.S. Embassy denied
newspaper reports that the Unl·
ted States stationed B-52
bombers in the country.

used ..
The claim came a day after the
Iraq may b~ developing deadly
U. N. Security Council's sancnew biological weapons to strike
tions . committe~ warned that
allied troops if war breaks out In
medicine sent to Iraq could be
the Persian Gulf; Arab sources
used In chemical and biological
said Thursday , and Kuwait's
warfare.
·
exiled defensc minister says Iraq
Iraqi President Saddam Huscollected 650 U.S.-made Hawk
sein has not yet used to biological
missiles in its Aug. 2 invasion of
weapons but did use chemical
Kuwait
.
weapons against Iranian troops
An Arab government official
in the 1980-88· Persian Gulf War
quoted his country's intelligence
and • against Iraqi Kurds In
reports as say,lng Iraq I sc len tis ts
Halabja two years ago, k!lllng up
are believed to have developed a
to 5,000 Kurds.
more powerful . strain of the
Kuwait's exiled defense minisbacteria baclllus anthracls,
ter said in remarks published
which causes anthrax and highly Thursday that Iraqi troops capfatal pneumonia and skin
tured 650 U.S. -made Hawk
diseases.
ground-to-air missiles when they
"The Ir11qls have been working Invaded oil-rich Kuwait on Aug.
on anthrax for quite some 'time . 2.
but we understand 'that they have
But Sheikh Nawaf al Ahmad at
now developed a deadly. strain," Sa bah said he doubted the Iraqis
said the official, who asked that could use them because "Kuhis .name and nationality not be waiti army technicians dis-

I ...

HILL'S DEER

cuniNG

205 N. Second Str10t
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO 4576
OHke 614-992-2886
Homt 614-992-5692

HOUSESot.OTS•FARMS
•COMMERCIAL
WE NEED USTINGS!
11-5-90-Hn

Announcements

'

Meigs, Gallla or

EMS has three calls
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services responded
10 three calls for assistance on
Wednesday.
·
At 9:54 p.m., Rolland squad
went w Mctgs Mine 2 for Rex
Vance. Vance was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
At 3:38 p.m., Rutland squad
went to Stare Route 143. Precious
Moore was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 7:48 p.m.,
Middleport .squad was called to
Brownell Avenue. Shannon Staats
was transponed to Holzer Medical
Center.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Wednesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Plck-3
240.
Plck-4
9697.
Cards
six of hearts.
four of clubs.
king of diamonds.
five of spades.
· Super Lotto
6, 21, 26, 45, 5(), 52.
Kicker
817791.

A Special Thanks
To All Our Veterans .

count•• mus1 be pre-

'•AooooNe 1.10 discount tor ads paid In advance
- Giveaway and Found ads under 15 wl.\rds will be

no charge
•Pri~;~~- ;·•; .-· all c apitll letter•. ''do ubi ": price of ad cost
•7 point li type only used .
·

•sentinel is not responstble tor errors after firS1 dav /Ch-eck
for errors firJt d-v ad "runs in p.ipCH I . Call before 2 ·00 p m

d.., afl• C)ubllc-'ion to mike correction
•Ads th.i: must be paid in advance are
Card of Thenkl
HI~P'I' Adl
In Memoriam
Yard S'a tes
•A clanitied ed\trertiMm.,.t placed '" The Daily Sen t •nel te.. .
cept ~ cl•sified display. Butineu Card and legal notieesl
witt also appear in the Pt. Ple•ant R~giuer and the Gall•·
polis Oeil't Tribune. reaChing ov•r 18,000 homfls

Stocks

Am Electric Power ........... .. 27%
AT&amp;T ...... ..... .. ... ..... .... ... .... .33'Ao
Ashland Oil ......... .. .... .. ..... .. 28Y,
Bob Evans .. .... ........ ...... .. ..... 12
Charming Shoppes ... .... ....... 8%
City Holding Co . .... .......... ... 17Y,
Federal Mogul... ................. 12 %
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .. ........ ... .. 14)18
Key Centurion ................. ... . 11
Lands' End ................... ...... 9%
Limited Inc ..... .. ... ,... .......... 13%
Muillml:dia Inc . .. ... ... ........... 53
Rax Restaurants ... ...... ...... .. . 1
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... ..... .. .... . 17
Shoney's Im; .... ................. .. 9y.
Star Bank ..................... .... .. 15Y,
Wendy's Int'l. ........... .... .... .. 6Y.
rworthington Ind..... .. ... .. .. .. ... 20

Mt~on

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 1 , :00A.M . SATURDAY
- 2 :00P .M MONDAY
- 2 :00P .M . TUESDAY
...:.. 2 :00P .M . WEDNESDAY
- 2 :00PM . THUFISOAY
~ 2·00 P.M FRIDAY

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESOA¥ PAP.ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

SELECT

ENTIRE STOCK

.._

HOUSEHOLD .
PLASTICS

MEN'S
SWEATERS
EXAMPLE OF SAVINGS

foUmdn~[telephone

1.33 1.66

SHAKER or FISHERMAN SWEATER ·
OUR REG. 15.99 ea .............. 10.71 EA.
LEATHER TRIM SWEATER
OUR REG. 24.99 ................... 16. 74

TO

10.71 18.08
TO

ma~

ColOrs

FULL FIQURE, GIRLS',

•

EACH

vary D)'

srore

992 - Middleport

675 - Pt Pleasant

458 - Leon

Pomeroy

576 - Apple Grove

985 - Chester

843 247 949 742 667 -

773 - Mason

Portland
LetJrt fall$
A•c•ne
Rutland
Cootv ille

882 - New Ha11en
895 - Lelart

937 - Buftalo

BULLETIN BOARD

VIDEO-GAME/
WATCHES with ALARM

BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBUCATION

8.62

OUR REG.
19 .99

OUR AE\3 . 1,2 .88

.....REG. 17.98 ........................... 12.05
9.91!-19.99 .... 6.69 TO 13.39

·,

•\

OUR REG 2.49 .

446-Gallipolis

-

STOCK

•u ................REG,

1.66

Area Code 304

Get Resul.ft fast

STOCK

1·3·39

Area Code 614

379-Walrut

A la rge assortment ol cardigan s. crew necks.
Many colors and patt er.ns ·

MISSES
S,M,L

M•son Co . WY

OUR REG. 3 .99 ea.

OUR REG. 15.99-26.99

LADIES', GIRLS'
JOG SUITS

Me1g1 Coun1y

388 - Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Din
6•3 - Ar8bi• Dist

2 PC. SINK SET or 8 PC. BOWL SET

exchanp;es ...

Gellia County
Area Code 614

367-Ch•hire

OUR REG . 1 .99·2 .49

2.67

FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

Classified pa,res corer the ·

DUST PAN SET

•

STOCK

-·'

NIN'JA TURTLE
JUICE

HOLIDAY KITCHEN
3 PC. TOWEL SETS

P~G.

OF 3

66¢

0

-·-·

2 5.35 II oz

~er

3 , ... Not

---

OUR REG.
99' pkg .

•~le,.,

!he

s t.t~te

CHRISTMAS AUCTION
SAT., NOV. 10 - 7:00 PM
AUCTIONEER: DAN SMITH
SYRACUSE FIRE STATION
Sponsored by
S racuse Vol. F1re De .

'

•'

Man y flavor s inc lud1ng Flad Grape. Pn m o Punc.h
NIJt wiHghl

of

U~m e

GET AN AVERAGE COUCH AND
CHAIR CLEANED FOR ONLY
'39.95
CALL 446-4604 or
304·675-2295

CAPTAIN STEAMER CLEANERS
1

Get two "eiage si" rooms

22.00 each.

OFFER EXPIRES NOV. 30 1990

DOMINO'S PIZZA
POMEROY, OHIO

NEW WINTER HOURS

,.
'

We owe our freedom to ·
And now more than ever, as
you-the fine men and women so much of the world discovers
who've served our country the shining beacon of demowith bravery arid pride.
cracy, we owe you ·a special
debt of gratitude.

5th Street .
New Hoven
882·2135

2212 J(lckton Ave

Polnll'leoSCinl
675·1121 .·

VERY NICE LARGE l«lME ON APPROX. 31&gt;
ACRES- 4 BR.. 3boths, 2garoges, il!nted I
BR apartment. Property includes pond, ap·
prox. 4,800 sq. ff larm
mobile
home, A r811 blrpin al . . $84.900

139 99

FOX RIVER 26" BIKEs
l r.Jd 1es ' or men·s sty le s

ALL LOCATIONS WILL BE CLOSED
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12
IN OBSERVANCE OF VETERAN'S DAY

Sun. thru Wed. 4 pm-12 am
Thurs.: 11 am-12 am
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11 am- 1 am

FOR SALE IN RACINE ·

OUR REG.

.':fiee"d

15 speeds, lliu mb sh11!ers .
Ass emDrr re qu~red

CALL 614·992·7104 FOR APPT.

PEOPLES BANK
2nd Street

Mason

773-5514

15

3
6

15
15

10

15

Mon1hly

15

•

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
'

I

'

-.

'

. 4~ .
.60

$13 .00

$1 .30/ doy

.05 / doy

All" are for conMcutive runs. broken updaysw•ll be ch.,ged

Merchandi se
51-Household Good•
52-SporUng Goods

53-Anlfques
54 - Misc. Met'ehand•se
55 - Building Su~~~~~~~
66 - Pets for Salll
57-MulicaiiMtrument!l
58 - Fn.uu &amp; Vegetabl•

5 - Happy Adi

6 - Lost and Found
7 - ·Vard Sale l~aid in advaneel
8 - Public Sale&amp; Auction
9 - Wanad to Buy

LINDA~S

CON~TIUCTION
•New Homes

Morl I•

PAINTING

Stoekll

INTERIOR - EXTERIOR

•Garages
•Complete
R.e niodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Fr.. Estimates

985-4473
667-6179
5-31-'90 tfn

FREE ESTIMATES ·
Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do
it for yau.
Very Reasonable
hove References
614-985~4180
10·10.'90-t

IWO .

MOBILE HOME FURNACES , HEAT PUMPS
. ALL FURNACE PARTS

MOBILE
HEA'riNG &amp; COOLING
Locatld on Safford School I d. off Rt. 141
16141 446-9416 or 1-IOD·I72-59U

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Cotilplite Grooming

Bashan Building

for All Breeds

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P~M.
12

Factory Choke
Gouge Shotguns Only

Strictly lnforetd

9-25-'99·tfn

.20

. 30

tnr e1r.h tillY 11

OFFERS 2 LOCAnONS 10 SEIVE YOU....
POMEROY, OHIO: At. 7 8o S.R. 143
ALBANY. OHIO: Rt. 60 8o S.R . 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 o .m.-7 p.l'n. 7 Days
ALBAI\IY: 10 a .m. -6 p.m. 8 Days, CloMd Sunday

PAYING AS OF TODAY. SEPT. 11, 1990
. #1 Copper '1 per ib.;
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans. 46C per lb.
Clean Auto Radiaton ~lb.; Battari81 '1 .25 • ·
Yellow Brasi 40c lb.; Alum. Sheets 40C lb.

L----...1.:6:..:1~4:..,.:9:;.::9:.:2:;..·,:5~1..:1.;:4;.......;;•..;.
· ";..;·'10-::;.;;;""~ ·,

BUILDING &amp;
REMODELING

Commercial 8o
Residential
•Roofing ·
•Siding
•Windows
Isn't ft Worth Doing R~t

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION

SER~ICE

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We con
ol$o CKid boil ond rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tonks.

PAT' HILL FOlD
992-2196

992-5009

Middleport; Ohi.o
·

10·1-l mo.

59-For Sale or Trade

'

Serv1ces

Farm Stilllllifs

&amp; L1ves1ock

1 2 - Situtlion Wanted

13 - lnsurance
14 '- Busineas "Traming
15 - Schoo ls &amp; Instruction
· 16 - Radio. TV &amp; CB Repa.r
. 1~ - Mis c ellaneous

e1 - Farm Equlpmem
62 - Wanted to Buy
63- L•vestock

64-f.lay S. Grain
65 - Seed &amp; F-"er1ili.tar

RACINE
GUN CLUB

FREE ESTIMATES

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

"Free Estimates"
PH. 949-2801

GUN SHOOTS

Transportation

21 - Buslneas Opportunity
22 - Mon!'Y to Loan

71 - Auto:s for S1le
72 - Trucks fo"r Sale
73 - Vans &amp;. 4 "vyo ·s

23 - Prof•••onal Services

Real Estal e

74 - Mororcvctes .
75-Bo•ts &amp; Motort for $alB
76 - Auto Parts &amp; Aeceuoril!ll
77 -- Auto Rt1p air
78 - Cemping Equipment
79 - Campers &amp; Moror Homes

31 - Homes tor Sale
32 - Mob•le Homes tor Sal f.:
33 - F~rm• for Sale

34- Busin•s Build~ngs
35 - lotl &amp; 'Acu~tge
36 - R••I Estate Want e d

41B - Equ1prrient for Rent

49 - For Leue

Serv1r.es
81 - -Home lmprov.ment•
82 - Piumbing 6 Hu~~ng

SHOOTS START
SEPT 16, 1990

· Sept. 4,tln

NEYER CLEAN YOUR
GUTTERS AGAIN
GUARANTEED!
FREE ESTIMATES

·100 ACRES WITH

86-Mobile Home Repair
87 - Upholstery

Agency IOEPA) loot -k.
Effective doteo of flntl oetlono 111d loouonco dotoo of
propo•ed action• •nd of
draft ,ectiona •re ltated. Fi·
nal action• mey be: appealed,
in writing, wltllln 30' dovo of
the dlte of thl.a notice. to the
Environmental Board of Ritview, Rm. 300. 238 E.
ToWt1 St., Columbuo, Oh..
43216. Notlceofonyoppeol
oholl be filed with tho ditoetor within 3 daya. PropoACI
actiona will become final unleaa • written adjudication
hearing requeat it tubmittad
within 30 dovt of tho it·
tuance elite: or thi director
reviMt/withdr.ws the proposed action. Any. parton
may aubmlt comment.l and~
/or 1 mHting regarding any
droft octlon within 30 dovo
· of tho dolo Indicated . .. Ae.
tlon''. 11 u•d above doe1
not Include receipt of 1 vorlfled complllnt. If olgnlficont
public lntor..toxloto. • publie mooting mov be lwld. Ao
to onv octlon, Including rocelpt of vorlfled compllinto.

APPROXIMATELY 2 ACRE
POND, GAS WELL AND
FREE GAS.

Public Notice
•

LEOAL NOTICE

Notice il given that Matrix
Telecom. Inc. filed en eppliClition with the Pub-

lie Utllltleo Commloolon of
Ohio !Cote No. 90-1484· TP-ACE! for luthorlty to lurnieh long dittancetelephone
..rvlcll
end tredltion•l
operator 1ervicea .Cetewkle
in Ohio. Anv lntoreoted peraon, ffrm, corporation, or
entity who can ahow good
ctuM whv thio oppllcotlon
""""ld
not be granted
ohould file wMh the Comminion • wrltton llotemont
detailing the rea10n1 on or
before November 27. 1990.
Unlen the Commlulon re1.
ceivaa a written atatement

to thot effect ond on occompanying requaet for oral
hearing on tuch inua. thie
mattwwill bedecldedonthe
t.als of the Information contalned In the application and
tho lffldovlto oubmltted bv
tho oppllcont. Further lnformation may bl obtained by
contoctlng 1111 Public Utilitin Commlooliln of Ohio,
180 Elll Brood Street, Columbuo, Ohio 432118·01573.
11 1) 8. 1tc

j..:....~.;_------1

CLASSIFIED ADS
a.super m•rke1

•nv .,.,..,"
miiY
obtalrr ond
notice
of further
octlono,
·
eddltlonol lnformotlon. Unlou othorwiM provided in
notice of INirliculor octlono. 1 _ . . . ; _ . . . . . ; , - - - - - oll comm'un!Cotlono llholl be o·
Hflt to:
H..,rlng &lt;;lork.
Public Notice
OEPA. P.O. lo• 1041, Columbuo. OH. 43218-0149
NOTICE OF
Ph. 1114) 144-2111. ConAPPOINTMENT OF
oult · OAC Chop . 37411 end
FIDUCIARY
OAC Chopo. 3741-47 ond
On October 23. 1 980. In
3741-1 lor requlremento.
tho Moigo County Prolooto
Flnel luuMCI of renewal Coun. COlo No. 21827,
of NPDEI Permit
Mooy Ellen Andr-. 381
Drova
S..lc
Moterlolo !lltoon Clinton Aoed, CorooComponv. Inc. · AppO. pollt, Pennl'/lvonlo, 11110e.
· G"""' Plent
wet oppolnted becutriK of
110414 8tolll Route 338
tllo Miele of Fronolo H. AnR....... Oh.
drew, d-olld, late of SA
Effective o-: 10/30/10
2&lt;18, Ro11to N1, Long Bot· R-"tlng Wowa: Johno tom, Mligo County, Ohio
.Run end Ohio River
41743.
P8rmlt No. OIJ00018•ao
Robert E. luck,
Tlolo ltnll octlon not ProioMo Judge
~-by ptDpa•d lctlon lnct
Lono K, Noooolro.od. Clerk
It eppeoloble to EeR.
1101·211. 1111 1. a 3tc

CALIS
4-16·1S·tfn

.--~~~~ -·

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAII

COAL-

UNLIMITED

·-

ALL MAlES

TON MIN. LIMIT

Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

$50.00 por ton

KE,.'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Lump or Stoker

992-5335 or 985-3561
Across '""" POst Office
217 L Sec. Ponoiroy
POMEROY, OHIO

286-2689

10·24 I mo . pd.

10·1 I

PROPERTY FOR SALE

84-Eiectrical • R11trigeration
86 - (ienerat Hauling

PUBLIC NOTICE

NO SUNDAY

.,.

'

3/6/'90/tfn
;.: '

8 J - EIICA'IIing

Public Notice
The following Wet'tl recalvad/prepared by the Ohio
Envlronmentltl Protection

Choke only

Real Estale General

IU§UI{JI
41 - Houses tor Rent
42 - Mobile Homes for Rent
43 - Farms for R•nt
·
44 - ApArtmen1 tor Rent
45 - Fu rnished Rooms
46 - Space lor Rent
47 - W~lted ro Renr

12 Gauge Factory

•
or Res. 949-2860 •

10· 12-'90-1 mo.

4

1:00 P.M•
SUNDAYS

18 -' Wanted To Do

Neior H_ ...t

992-6648 or
698-6864

H3-Hc

Banks
Construc:tion

•VINYL SIDING
• .
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Palntl!lg
NO JOB TOO SMALL

Ernployrne nl

111)8,110

'

.·

$9.00

1- Card oi Thanks
2 '- ln Mflmory '
3 - Anno,ucements
4 - Giv'eawav

614-992-2U8

Over 16 Worda

$4.00
S6 .00

Announ cern enl s

Custom
Drapea

1 1-6-90-1 mo .

10-6 1 mo.

Rate

1 1 - Metp Wan,ed

STOCK

cm .

Words

1

Hand
Tufttnr

:Me Say What We do. We Do What We Say.
36 VRS. EXPERIENCE .

949-2206

BISSELL &amp; BOIKE

RATES
Days

BASHEN RD.;
RACINE

. EMILEE MERINAR
O.w ntr &amp; Opwator
614-992-6820
Pomeroy, Ohio

• The Area's Number ·1 Mar:ketplace
TO PLACf AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRID'A Y 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

CUTTING,
·sKINNING.
WRAPPING

DOTIII s;TU-, •om

The
GROOM
ROOM

Classifie

1

Business Services

--Area deaths

Hospital news

The Daily

Middleport, Ohio

Iraq may be ·developing new
weapons, Arab sources
say
.

Grandson of Middleport couple honored

Middleport
Cour1 news

Pomeroy

Thureday, Novemla 8. 1990

LOCATED IN SUTTON TOWNSHIP
. OFF DORCAS ROAD.

*FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

FARMER·S BANK
992-2136
---

-·-

jrJf'(!/11/ll!!!lfj,/rJIW / J !llil(fj ..

We would like

to thank
everyone who

to

sent us gifts for
the bridal
shower and on

Mr. Robert E.

our wedding

Probate Judge!

day.
Joe and Cindy
Fields
1 card of Thanks
CARD OF THA!'iKS
W. wont to tllonk thaN
who plonned the "Open
Hou••• and 10 IUCCIII·
fully cerrlod It out on mv
100th blrthdoy. Thonh
to my churah fOr • pretty
red dreaa, red ro"' and a
COrAQ8, to my gUHII for
127 cerda. meny nk=e
gllto 111d ltowero.
In
monev. end to oil who
came . It waa like a

••o

'"Ho...-aomlng''.

·

Mercle B. Kerr

Buck, Our

J,.,., 8. Scott

1514 Nye An.,
Pomeroy, Oh.

3 Announcements
BAZAAR &amp; DINNER
The Sacred Heart
Church, Pomeroy.
will hold ita annual
bezear end dinner
Nov. 8. Dinner
HIVed II·? pm.
Craft&amp; and games
for everyone.
Come One, Come All!
Door Prize• every

'12 hour
8:30·8:30 .m.

'.

Res.

949·2860
•

....4-I&amp;-16-tln
·-

USED APPUANCES
90 DAY WAIRANTY
DRYlR$-$69 up
REFRIGERATOR$-$100 up •
RANGES-Gas-Eiec.-$125 up
FREEZER$-$125 up
MICRO OVENS-$'79 up

·,
'
''

COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICE

''•·
"

Resldontlll and
Commarclot

·~

.

,,..

REWIRING AND

·,·'

TROUILE SHOOnNG
Certified Ellctricions
Fr.. Eti•ates

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or t85-3561

'
•'.

··,·
·' .
....
,.
··,:•, ··

BANKS
CONSTRUCnON

Across Fram Past Office

.POMEIDY,'OHIO .

992-5009

10/!0/'89 Hn

I~ I

'.
'.
'.
·.:•

I 010.

WANT ADS bring ·: :
Vacation Money ·

New loca1ion:
168 North So&lt;011d
Middloport, Ohio 45760

SALES

PH. 94~·2801

-

8-12 -90 tfn

3 Announcements

Congratulations

-.

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

USm RAILROAD nES

·

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGU
"At ~easonable Pricts"

,r

992-2269

WASHlR$-1100 up

CALL

1 card of Thanks

· BISSELL
BUILDERS

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
*LIGHT HAULING

:-.:

.'.,.
'

'

&amp; SERVICE

.:•
''

we Clf'Y Fllhing Suppli•
Pey Your Phoroe
and Cable Billa Hare

~..,r .....
• ' IUSINISS PHONE
(6141 992-.550
IIIESIOINCE PHONE
. IU4l 992-7754

1/ 2! / !ln

Announcements
3 Announcements
Absolut..y

no

hunting

or

ca. ...

prosecute.

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;
SUPPLIES
SportJng Nllds
Buy, Sell or Trade
Guna

OPEN MON.-SAT. 10-5

741-2421
U4t6 SMI1'II 1111 II.
ltmA. OliO

1o-a

-'110-t - ·

Want Ads

!:·:

,•

·"•

depoalt. No credit chKk. 1~
22tlo0048. $19.95 ....

; ::
,.,

No Hunting or Tlftpolli"t 0!1
tho R. H. Riebl llirm Hoot-.

"'..
-•.1

Unauachtd? Ar• Sina~M; . _ .
Communication Willi fou. Can-

..1,,.,:,,

WV.
Vlolatera
proHCutld.

Will

a.

't

·:·:

lldonUa1
lnlo.
Wolle·
HoortMOrcll•!.'o'?· loa 1041, ..:

llpah,OH4...,,

4

Giveaway

1 112 rr
good -

moo. whho 1111 ....,

••

- . .._ - , ,

304-t'IS-2071.

Nevill' 1ille I v.:allon
They Wotk AJ ...I

. . 1ftllft

,..

Crwdll Plus, Gold Crodh Cont.
VlsaJMaatercard
Guar11ntNc1.
Cuh advance.. No ~

See us Far Your

'..

trHp111lng on prop._rty of " ..
Harold Rot1, At 1 Box 270,
llpoll1 Ferry, WV. 25515, WIH .:..

.

4

monlh

old

Alollrolllon

Shepherd Pup, 114 311 Ull.

.~

5 Pull!ll•: mixed lorood. Col '
814-$1525 lfto; lp.111.

.

~- lhlp 111 !!01 ...

Gi!l Qtmk Hl!:;ull:;l Pliii:l! A S~l Pt:r Day Hulletin Boar II Arlvt!rlisl!llll!lll In I lit! Dally Sentinel Classlli!!!l St:c11un. ~:..... .::...~·

'"•tt

••.•

·'
.,
._.,.-·
-~

�l

P ga 12-Tha Deify Slntinal

Pom«oy-Middleport, Qhio

LAFF-A-DAY

4

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

" ''"'

Adorable Puppl•l Port ~.
Btu. HuJ.r,
&amp;
Glrman

~··

45

41 Houses lor Rent

Furnished

Thu111day,

KIT 'N' CARLYLEIIl by Larry Wrlgbt

LOSER

November B. 1990 .
71

Rooms

... .

Pomeroy- MiddlePort Qh~- .·.

lhui'ICIIIV, November B. 1990

Autos for

~lOR, I

tl "J!

SBie

Television

R:lUOO

QOVERNIIENT SEIZED Volllcf•

Mera•••
ChoVyo. Surpluo.

•

ConstiN.

Your ..... (11 ~Ext.
9-1010.
Pontiac Floro OT, ~ mlloago, ••
$5,200· muot Nil, O.yo: 114-441- '
1702, ~-lngo: 814 :1511337.•
'

F,_~too-horllo.

Port Calll-.lllud.
HouN doG: Spodo 7
, . . . old, ohlld..n. uu.
to run. - . , country .-lng.
B1t 111 till.
.

WIN loy CU.Y L 1'011•"

•r::ro.c-:...~ ::

THURS .. NOV. 8 ·•

low to '""" lour llmpla worck.

SORPEE

EVENING
1:00 111• tll Ill • 111
GJ-

o•

II
I I 1· 1 I

(J) Chollee Itt ~ Q

IDH-1
~N"c
(!) Square One
Q

THE ON~'i' REASON 1 60 TO
SC~OOL iS TO BECOME RICH
AND FAMOUS ..

8W041dTodtly
111J -.-n SteriO. Q
1:05 (I) le•artr Hlllll!lllea .

WELL. A GOOD EDUCATION
CAN BE YER'r' VALUABLE ·

'-~-

5

iiJ~Eipre••

Lost&amp; Found

I

GUOOT

l!lle ALF

6

.....

':~::' M:1\.lllA-4~ti~· "

Vie~ing

Jt.llH~ WILl'SWI: ..

froin $100. fOf'dli,

Sllopner~. I · 1 -lo,
wwv
playful. 814-M6-1151. .

The Deily Sentinel-Pegs 13

1:30 \il• GJ NBC NlghiiJ Newa

(Ji Abbott and Coa....
lil Ill. A8C ...... Q
(l) Wlld AIM41Ca

(!) 3-2·1 Coni8CI

~~J

BL 0 I M

j.,_;l;;.6..=.,17,.;....,1;:......,..1--I..

1L.. ....J.-.1.. ....J.L-J..--1. =•
V EN

8

I

10

lknowaguywhoisaorryhe

ever installed a car ptlone. He

says it's a nuisance having to
~~-.to the garage every ---- it

~.;,;._;,a,...:;,..,~.-:-.-~ 8
IJ--.,
1 1 1 1 1
1
L-1..-.L....J.I-.J.I-.1.--.1

111 o•cu-Q
l!lJ • AndJ Clrllftllt

c"""'~oce ~~~.

you

chuckle qUOiad
br lUling In lite milling - •
dftolop lrwn clop No. 3 bolow.

IIIJ ~of tltelllock
llallon Stereo. Q

1:35 tlJ AndJ Grilftlh
7:00 CJie 111....GJ

w- of

F-1;;1

e

0

Lost: Soble ..~ white Sholtlo
(lllniO!uro Colilo) Sycamore,

Court

ne~r

.~,_

IIIJ Scllrecrow IIIICI Mre. KCng

Q

Farm Supplies
&amp; Liveslock

VIne

Fomlly

Sl-o.

Pat.

RIWirdl

7

HOME

- •·

1562.
HOME TYPISTS,

.Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

nNd~.

$35,qoo

Part.fimt P91ftlon available for
lluns• A.R.T. or R.R.A. to do
Medical
. Record Coneultlng for
Nurtlr'!Q Honw1 In Gallrpoll•
aru. Pl.... und ,..ume to:

Fridoy, SO!urdoy, Cloy Town
HouH, Tupperw1re, holM Int.,..
for, bike ChMima TrlmmlnOe,
~-. 'r.v., Gult8r, lim,..
P.O. Boa 1088, Ourfl, Arltlnooo
72111.
oarogo SOlo. 2023 Chollulm.
.~ Thurt;. •h, Frl il:h. Bedding, HouHCieaner every Friday al~
1
It"' pui"MI, linen•, winter cloU••· temoon, Bidwell. Prote81lonal
•• '

'·

of gl1aw1n1 &amp;:
LAmpe, tumltur.. 1~.

10et

pa~~.

2 OOIVWOOd hMtlna ltO¥H. 2

I"

&amp; VIcinity

9232.

woa•

to commonouroto
with experience. Contact' Frank 32 Mobile Homes
SOlo, Sot, 1:00.?. Comdon A... Topping Adm-rator Cor•
nMr Youth center, washer, Haven of Point Plt. .ant, 304for Sale .,
couch (moftll bod). Roln or . 675-3005.
t2xl5 trollor lot' 111o, 304-675ohlno.
- - - - - - - - - - 7271.
12
Situation
Pomeroy,
Mx70 Feetlv•l mobile home, 112
Wanted
acre lat, Wllhlr, dryer, ltove,
Mlddlepon
Would lllce to do hOUMCINnlng rafr'gerator, centl'lll air Included,
&amp; affN:e clunlng. lll4-446-4~f. Plyml'- Road, O.HIDOIII Ferry,
&amp; VIcinity
114-251-11111.
I ,"::,7.;;;,oo.:,o;,.73047.a:,:7w:,:::.twt.;:-:....-.,.-.,...,Yard ule at Jean Stout
1010 Schultz 12x80, completely
·retkMnol, 7'1h
lyncuea 18 Wanted to Do
lumlohed, window olr cond,
on Saturdlly, ~·- 10.
Wllhw • dryer, . dnipet, · -.c.

St...,

Yard Sale. Friday. Novtrnber 0.

Sr 7. lllm-1 Tuppere Plalna,
TOI'ly Joi'IM Nlldenca. ,

YARD SALE. 0... doy only. S4l
WMI lloln S1N4!1 PoiM,.,y.Noxt
to II•~• nrw &lt;!iriilr. Lo1o of

S.utlfy your car. &amp; protect II $5,500. 304-175--1110, 8:00 Ull
wfntor uit I g~mo. Export 1:00, 3014711-1411 """' 1:00.
auto clunlng lntldt I out
Rlv1ralde Auto Detailing. 614- 1m llonarah · lkylln1 Tl'llller
from

441-8110.

12x80,

nllh~

good condHion, turon Clori&lt; Chlpol A*.

Interior &amp; · Exttrlar P•lnt, 10 114-381-1413.

·

yurs experience. FrH E•
llmO!n Aloo do •-1 "I
11182 14lt80 Butldr. 2 bodroom
304...?i-21oe.
- "" ng, central air, lklr11ng, 10112 milaI
building. tD.300. 114-tll2·11171 or
PUbliC Sale
Mogle v..,. Dly Cora Contor "1~14-:,:11112;:=..::88:,:4.::3·-::---:---::c-8
,.aonabll,
dtpendabll, a: · ·
&amp; Auction
lloonM, q.. Miy child coro. 11on- 2 bodroom trollor, olr condlllondor lhru Frtay, 7:30 till 5:30. Ina. corport, onochld boNding.
Riel&lt; PNroon Auc1ton Componr Foi' moro lnfofmlllon or to I:'==~
-:=;:H581,:.::;;:.::•.::"":::...:7,::P..::m.::·...,.,.~
now booking luctlono, Ill· rwglotor ~75-5847.
SPECIAL. Foil!~ to you111111, 2
oortonco

WOIMA I cloUting. fll'lt 1111; of

theyMr.

·

___::..:..===----1

-1M,.___

l..,_d Ohio, ~l"'ttlctr,

Vlrglnlo, 301-T/M7811.

w...

.:::!!:::;::=:.:,::::::::=-.,.......,....-1

_,

IIIIa Paula't . DaJ Cera Center. or 3 bedroom14x70 modtta at
SOli, affordoblo, chlldca,.. 11-F 1111 ~nbo-bll ptlco of

I o.m. - 1:30 p.m. Ago• 2 -10.
CHRISTMAS AUCTION. Sunay, IU!oro, oftor ochool, Dropolnl
Novombor 1\ 1:00 .p.m., wltcomo. 111-148-6221.
Hartford CommiOtlJ Building.
Doll•, truckl, .ca,., tn~lna, S 1 S CINnlng. lAII ua cllln
. 'put
-, home In · time tor the
....
IIUI'Ipe~ ....01
_,
.....
_,,...
cordlrl, 11-, radio oantrol
ld1ya. We aim to pluM! 114-,.,., 3 pc. piC!,.., mlrroro, x- 4164303.

112,1100 dlllvorod and Ht up.
Coil 1..ao.721-40411or
51"""' 1:zxsa, 2 bod100m
•· -·
,
hill, air cond, vinyl lklrtana,
new
pelnt,n1 porch
I I window.
wn1n~1:I x11
llol ,
w I umn •
, ,.. •
301-675-73211 • or 8:00 Pll.
.

1-

Wind- 11x70, 2br, CA, bulldI~ lklr11ng, on lot: In Qu•ll
CrHk. Gooil condMion. French
Chy Mobllti Hom•. 114-1461340.

C

!!':"of =~nl,:;,
.;:'y~=
•uctlonlllt'
Richard
,.

Will bally oil I~ my homo, • . _
to echOOI, 304-4575-2784.
Will bobyoll In my ,homo,

AoynoldO 130. :1041275-38S1. ·
FLEA MARKET st Old Arbucklo doytlma hc&gt;uro, 304-875-4841.
Storo• ~ wv, Frfcloy, Sstur·
llko lo do bobyolttlng In
doy, - Y· Pnxluoo lind loto mr homo. All lhlfto, ol agoo,
of nloo Ro1111. O.for'o Wol- hovo . ,._,..,.. Coli 114-388-

w-

COIM. CIU 30+137.Z581.

9

wanted to Buy

Ul5 (It

no

call

114-387--

lUIJ.

To Buy: Junk Auloo
with or wRhoul - · Coli 21
Business
Larry LI'Hty. IM 3U '"'
Opponunny
W.niOd To Buy: UHd mobllo
hom-, coll811111 01711.
OHIO VALJ~~~ECISHING CO.
W.nt~

FKOmmtndl thlt you do bu~.~

.._with-" you k -1 and
NOT to.- monoylhrough tho
- - - - - - - - - - - . molt until you hlvo ln,...lgltocf
tho o1flrlng.
11 Http wanted
AVON • All - - . Call llorlfyn
-·or 301-182-211111.
2 ·port~lmo omptoywo. hive tNnspclftlllon to Md tram
O.lllpollo. !lor llor nltf!l - .
10-211 1touro por _.h only.
Could bo , _ hourw lstor on.
SO ..... Industry. FnMIIIor a.nlng. Call bllwan I Lm. &amp; 12
.-.114-441-1117V.
zo motlvst~ poopCo In 'locO!
arM, n.,.,..ax Iii ..a., paid

...

lh-=~
mont
.

a,-...,......_,
AVON I AI -

p,••

33 Farms lor Sale
212 acre
Townthip,

farm

wood•.

SaJem
Own• will
In

35 Lots ~ Acreage

Financ1al

aiM.

Employmenl Serv1ces

-11•.

carry contract. IM·'M2·2152.

Horu• 1: ,.PoniH; 114-441-2107,
814388

1naw1r,

_.,.

NOI~ to:':ft'
diltrlbulor
en
the FNidom
and
lly· of vending
100io puro fnlll Juloo (Troplcona,

0

Bunklst, ste-t !orvlca locl1ionl
Ill up by c _ , (Holldoy
Inn, A_
•otc.1
Complalo
_· _
,....,._
•Pproa. 111,000 auh and mint.
mum o1 a houn por wook. No-

CARPET
FURNITURE

1br ltova &amp; rafrlgerltor fur.

Reftrwncu required. 114·245-

lind

rongoo. 304-ln&amp;-2482 or

11-21151tlll' 8:00PM.

.Socl•l Servlcee Dlr.ctor, Social
Wort&lt;or lor Clll bod facility, Iicon... or BSW required, blntllta

Pt. Pllli$Bn1

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'I

lion Fro'*lln hMtlng aiovo,
good ehlpe, S100.; 4 n~i:llal wldt
one 13 Inch, on Ford rime, good

lilstollo. (1) 805-687-6000 Ell! . .B·
10181.
ALL Yord S.loo lluot Bo Pold In INTELLIGENCE JOBS. CIA, US
Advanco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. Culloms, DEA; lie. Now Hiring.
tho ay boloro lho ~ lo ·to run. Coli (1) 105-687-6000 Ext. · Ksunay ~Rion - 2:00 p.m. 10188.
Frtdoy. Ilona, ~Rion • 2:00

Aoarox. 1 acre, wooded Iota,
cftY water1 owner financing, Jlf'·

rico R011a, Point Pr-..nl, WV

304-372o8405 or 372·2575.
Routt 2 Athton, 1
loblk ~
miiH aoulh Gllllpollt Loc a,

•c,.

public Wllllr, no reatricUon1,
10m1 w~h rtver tront1g•, 304·

571-2338.

niiih.d, a•• Mat, nesr hoepltal,
$235. 114-141-2957.
2 bodroom oportmont, Now
H1v1n,
WY.
Lliureland
Aporlmonto, IICh ond 0.0'11"
111'1111. Under new manag•
_,_ Kitchin C...nl~1 corpol~. ploygi'OUIICI lot' c .. ldrwn.
C._ Co gndo I
11om. Baarc rent· $UMI. Cali
3041882·3711. . Equol Houolng
Opportunity.
~ lA opt.: oto.. l rofrl-lor,
"'"""""'· Nol ouno~ 1or
chllchn •
pelt. $200/mo.
r.qulr~. pluo ulllllloo.

Mollohan FIM'nlture I Carpet1.
AI. 7 North. 114-141-11114.
Cciuntj Appllonco Inc. Good
UMd appllon-, T.V. osto. Open
I Lm. to I p.m. Mon.eSat. 814-

1082.

Fh..wood, 314 ton 1ruck load,

Pll.

olnco buill. Colll11-141-7048.
Honda ATV, 310, 4x4. Rack•,

anow bllc$1, bll1 PQUible con·

dhlon. $2,500. Konnioro woohor;

VG~DO. I14-985-43e9.
Lumt.r·15,2xl't..S ft.; 12. 1118'1,

-111111, 127 3rd. Avo. Gol- ~h Cut ; 20, 1x3'1; 18 IIIOr~
llpollo, OH
tid 2x2'a; SIMI trapa; clalmll.
114·812-1180.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES ;;;.:::;~:;.:.-,...,..,....-::-::-Wlllhlrl, dryera, rarrtgerltora, llbr~ hord wood olobo. tl~ por
rono-. Sica- Allplloricoo, bundle. Contain• approx. 1 112
Uppor Rlvor Ra. S.ldl Slono lon. Ohio PollOI Co., Pomotoy,
c..ot -1. Coli 814-141-73118.
114 2
Ohio. '" - 1·
PICKENS FURNITURE
Moving mUll Nil 3 pc living
NowAJo~

room IUitl, Qoocl cond. $250. or

lumlohlng. 1&lt;1 mi. t..1 offer. "~••reiN lrwmpolln
Jerricho Rd. Pl. Pl.... nt, WV, $20. Old fathloned puah mower
·
~ lumlllhlcl roomo I
both, con 30W711-1450.
$10. 30U75-1514.
clean, no pilL R1ter.nce 1:
~.mar,
2dr,
$95;
dopoellroqulrod. IM-411-1811.
Pontoon boll 1~ 112 ft .'
Aetri~alor, ·
Fr01t
FfM,
BTU Wlrm mom.
Allllrtman.., 2 tll*oomt;1 nice, Avociodo, t125.i Rolrlgorotor, 2dr, $450.00;35,000
lng
goo
lllo¥0.
$85.00, UNd
301-075-1104.
White. 115; Hetrlg~atar, ~ pr)me doort;Puvey
_guitar T-60
portono, F - Froo, Lib Now, wfth h•rd lhoU cooo $125.00
IttIEAlmFUL APARTJIENTS AT S250; A•frtgendor, Ha....t 1112·2145.
BUDGE7 PRICES AT JACKSON QOkl, Frolt FrH, 1178; Kenmore
ESTATES 536 Jocklon Plkl W.- Hlrloot Gold QS; RecondhiOMd W•hlrl, Dryers.
ham t1i2tmo. w.. to ohop &amp; Kenmon~ W.~er....AvOCido, Slli
Guo..ntNd prompt Hrvloo lo•
- · C.lll-.z588. EOH. .Q.E. Ory.,, ltl; 11\enmore Port~ all mokn, modalo. Tho Wnhor
Fumllhld Altartlllll!'ll, 1br, mi. oble Waohor, $150; lloytag Dryll' Shoppo. 6--21144..
umn~oo Paid, 831
oa~ Wrino- Wuhor, $150· GU
llpollto, 114-141-4411aftor 7p.m. Ronga, 31 Inch, $75; Ellc1rlc Romlnaton 22 rtflo t150. llortln
Aongo, WhRo 181; Chell dNr rtn. 30/30 whh ocopo $200.
Fumllhocf Apoolrillnt, 1b&lt; $181, F...- . t125; Uprtahl " - • Shot gun Brownlno SwMI SixUtllR!oo Polcl, Shorw both, 701 S150i_!l!&lt;"llll" Appllilnc•, 114~1 ,!.30~ ~~..g;!n
Fourth Avo, Galllpollo, 114-141- -73011.
875-7MZ.
44111ftll' 7p.m.
RENTZ OWN
111-411-3158
Fumlahlcl Apt, 1 br, 1200.
Slh fl,_ood, O.ilvor~ locolly.
Utllhloo Pilei, 701 Fourth, G.ll- Sololcand Choir, $1.15 por -k. $30 truck pick-up laod. 114-112llpollo, 114-141-4411oftor 7p.m.
If no 11'11Wir INVI m•
e P1 1 W~roup, fl4.01 per 6505
Nge.
.
WHk.
L..Shaped
Bunk
8Hto
Fum- Efllcloncy, All ulllltl•
Bidding
and
Chill
of
Drawere
pold. Sholo both, Sill/mo. 111
lnclud.aj $13.14 per- week. Wont~ to Buy: Scondlng nmSecond Avenue, 114-446-3145.
Swivel Rocker, $4.44 par Wllk. bo~ .Small or 11'11" OCN!Igl, 811Groc:louo living. 1 lnd 2 bod· Recliner $7.75 per WHk. Dinette 361·1'511, onor 7 p.m.
room apartmentl It VIIIIIJI whh 4 Cholro, $7.50 por WHk. 4 Two Burial Plott on Mound Hill
Manar
and
RIY'Irlkll Pootor a...., a~. 112.20 por In WHI aldo oddlllon. (Dickoy
Aporlmonto In llkltllopi&gt;rt. From wHk. 4 Drawer Chnt of Addlllon) 614·379-2732.
Dra•rs, $3.50 per wHk. AI. 141,
till. Coli 114-tm-7787. EOH.
lllln Off AI. 7 In Conlonory. W.nn lklmlng gao stovo wRh
i.arge Socond F'- _...,,, 4HOURS:
Monday lhru Salurday,
Khellin Fumlohld, :138 Flrot 91.m.-lp.m.; Sunday, 12 Noon· blowor t125. 304-i$2-28711.
IM-141-3414.

-

s.c-.

'ls!."llr

Avenue, $2101ma. pi• utllllu,
dlooelt I reference, no pl!le,

11ol-44l-41128.

2 •nil 3 bod.... rtmonllln -oy. C.rpot,
1 112 bltho, kllc...,o.
1111111-1141oftoi 1:00 p.m.

Sp.m.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNitURE. 12
Olivo 51., GalllpoCII. I UHd

Wood burner tor ..... Phone

611-H2-788hftor 5pm.

55

fumitwe, hNtera, WHtem a

w""' booto. 114-146-3159.

Building
Supplies

Block, brlcl!;, ..._. l)lpll, win·
dowl, Untelt, etc. Claude" Wintl,.., Rio Grandi, OH Clll 8M-

241-812t

picker, S'IOO; 3 lllack uw mill,

$2500. 301-8~2.
Jlm'o Fonn Equlpmonl, SR. 35,
WMI GoiiiJiollo, 814-1411-V77'7;
Wide Hlectlon new &amp; UNCI firm
tractora a lmplemlflll. Buy,
..n, trsde, a:oo-5:00 wNkdayt,
SOl. 1111 Noon.

Livestock
63
;.;::-...;:::.:..:;::;;::;,.,..,,_
5 ho111n toruli, 304-875--3149.

· Breed cowe and fl,.t cutting
hay for ule. Hertford cowa.

· brood to Anguo Bull. Hoy S1 por

bole. Cow...,.lrkst prlco. Hartoy

Alee, RIICIIVIIIe, Ohio. 114-el?:::338=1·~.....,..-.,---,,....-,---,

Show
Ouolllr
Roalolorod
OtJortor HorN• Fob 7, 1fH SorNil Fifty,

~

Feb 22

1V88

n,ooo, wetl

broke

Ct..tnut Fllly1 Sunny
Blood linea.

6.

Bar

Fob 15, 1988 Big Golding, 4 1i2
H.IHir Poll'\tl, 12,710 April 2,
118e Big Chnlnut lloro, h11
won many piNIIUI'I claiMI.
$3,~. &amp;M:a&amp;-1122.

Will do CUstom LIYMioc~ Houllng; (11ft. Goooonock T,.llor)
C~uck Wllllomo. 1114-24Woe&amp;.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

J.:.;;_..;.;:!~...:;,;,:::.:..:.._

__

Ground, ohol~ com, $8. por
100 lb. 12% -.111o fo~ $8.50 por
100 lb. Alfllfll hoy. llorgon'o
Fonn, AI. 35; 1:011'12:00 _ .,
t:lloo=n:.:l:::h"'::-;:S.::t:::
. 301-=:::"::'~':::201:::,::a::..,_
Hoy 1or s.~o. ceo- • n-hy.
Round Bolio In tho Flold. 114245.'1518

Transportation
171;_;__.:_Aui::,:O::;S:..:,:fO:.,:r_;Sa:::;l::e_ _

c.n.u.

__~­

1981 Dodgo Coronot 31a ongi~L- oc, 14..'!00 mlln. w..
S2,..., 01,200. lluot Mil.
r'::*=-,111::2::.-21=11::...- - - - 1Dllt Fah1ane, 302 motor, exc
concf, now Clroo &amp; boltory, NO
bnikn, $100. Pick up or Ia. 304-

175-5851evenlngs.

1978 Thundlrblrd. pb, po, 1/W,

ac, cruiM, amttm radio, lape

runt rood,
In cotor,
,..1
s..
Hocklngi&gt;O\'I, Ohio on St 124.
red
750 finn.

a1

114-187':1745.
1978 TronoAm. Juot rope ..ild (V·
8)
engine, naw exhaust·
lrantmlttlon.L chrome whHII,
run• good. ..... offar. 114-247·

3811.

1111.

1 It
-~-~

AeNmble . _

Money to Loan

......

~)(2:00)

1:05 tlJ MOVIE: Johnny llelktdtl
(2:00)
1:30 CJie 1121 Dlflmnt World
Dwayne's mother comes 10
vlaK and finds herseiC In a
squabble. Stereo. Q_

C!J Thll Old Hou.._Q
Ill 0 ID The Flllah A killer

=p

Auto Parts &amp;
AcCessories

escapes prison and -ks
vengeance against lite Allen
family. Stereo. !;I
tiD • Bibee Ma~ene Is fired
as lite Hetty Hoae modal.

.

.,

1 yHr old Conlury llborgl••
toppor. Groy, longbod,
• 301-875-3504.

Stereo. Q

B - T.. nomlollonti, UNd l
rtbu'Tit, .. artlng at $1Mi1; 614--2455177,a~:a.

rlll On St8ge
.
9:00 CJie GJ CIIHII An
in-depth look at the past
aight seasons is presented.

·-

VInton Aulo Solngo. Fcnlgn l

Dom Porto buying Ju'* ..,.,
114-388-11082.
.

Stereo. D

a

tlJ (JJ ~·1 Flra Biril
and Heller try to defend a
homeless man aeeullld of
murder. Stereo. D
(l) (!) Mylllryll(id Is left In
a coma and hll a ·v&amp;sllm
ella nee ol recovery .
. II]) 1D Baverlr Hille,
10
Brandon dtelde1 to help a
gl~ In trouble. (R) Sllrao.
0 MOVII;: CCiddylhoclc (AI
(2:00)
Naltllllltl Now .
QJ yop Alink Boxing
8 Larry King U..l
1:30 Ill 0 . Doctot, Doctot
Mike and Laona discover
they have leell~s lor each

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

10 ft. elkll-ln truck camper, Ilk•
.,.., $1,000 firm. Call 814-448-

~:;.:.::;:~=:=::::~AN:...;;D::;_,WINTRH 0 P
I CAN'T THINK
OF A EiJN6ri-E
REASON.,.

Services

WHY I WPCN'T INVITED

&lt;.JODY THCUEiHT OF

TO JOD¥5 e&gt;IRTHD.i&gt;.Y
PAI&lt;T'r'.

FIFTEEN.

a

81

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconclftlonll llflllme · guorontea. Local refe,.nc• fuml1hld.
Froo MllmatN. Coli colloct 1·
114-237-G488, day or nlilh1.

other. Stereo. 1;;1
10:00 (JI• IIJl L.A. Law Rollins
defends a whRI cop accuSed
of murdering a black youth.

Stereo. 1;1

Rogerw; S...ment Wlterproo.
ling.

Colvin'•

Cu.tam

~·,.,

Cablnltl

opoclallzlng In country stylo

Rtflrances..

•

(!) Nawa

BARN.EY
WHAT ARE
SNUFFY'S

98%HE'LL

CHANCES,

COMPLETE

DOC?

,

~,

- ,..,)

cy . Gel a jump on lite by understanding ' TAURUS (April 20-May 2G) .A lack of ·

'S.ptlc Tonk Pumping HOc0111111
CO. RON EVANS ~NTEAPHISES,
JocbOn, OH 1.-.e37-8628.

the Influences which ~re goverriing you patience with members of your house~
in the year ahead . Send for your AstrO· hold is a slrong possi bility to(jay . If ~au
Graph predictions today by mailing see anyone in your family walking

Drlvll

$1 .25 to Astro-Graph. c lo !h iS newspa- around wilh a long lace, you mighl be
per, P.O. Box 91428 . Cleveland . OH the cause.
44101-3428. Be sure to stale youf zodi· GEMINI (Mer 21-June 2G) 15suing com-

10:05 tlJ MDVIE: The BorIn the
PtaatiO llubble (2:00)

S«Yice,

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

ac sign.

'
&lt;'

BERNICE .
BEDEOSOL

now-

Gene1111 HluDng

-.1,11110

AlA Wolor lorvloo.-. . .

Events and conditions mlghl unfold in a
manner in the year ahead lhat will Ioree
. you co be more ambitious !han usual .
Even though you may lnllially resent
lhele InfluenCes. you'll later be gild
!hey- occurred.
ICOIIPIO (Oct. 24-Mo¥. 22) In order co
gratify your own lnlareeta and objectives lod&amp;J, .there's a chance yo~ may
do 60 In WCIJS \h8t other&amp; will lind offensive. Don't let deelrea override diploma-

. • ~~

w.a.,_,'o

..

~-,_C.A:IOI- , .' ,:
W.tor

~~ flill~.

, _ - - IJaolao,
runnlna aondlllin.
Call
~
or 1 1100.
-..

1111

~~':d

-·

lib - · 21,000

, mull

~4 ::

1111111!!11.

.

I-· -='ii.~-=:11:
Itt - ......

. . PII.

'

"'

.....
..-

~,wotlo,oto.CIII ,_ ;~ .

;:87;_,..U::P:;:ho:.:;;let:;::ery:.!....·- eon 304-m-41114 filr
tlntlloo.

...;'"i::

mands Will come rather easy tor you to~

8AGinARJUS (NO¥. 23-0ac. 21) II'S day. However, il you expect others IO
besc lo lee sleeping dogs lie loday. If you 1ollow your edicls . you'd better be cer·
unwillingly dredge up an old . unpleas- t~ln you have first set ·the proper
ant issue, it might provoke hostility in a

I)Cample.

•

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Before
commilling yo~rself Co picking up the
·. check tOr business associates or friends

today. carefully scan the prices ·tO be
tOday. If this person's Involvement sure you have enough bread in your
doesn't pan out right. you might be wallet to cover the event,

Allldonlllf or eotnntlt'Ciol I
wirlng,
or .........
Ua1n11d llutrldan. RldWMiur
Elollrtcol, 304-6711-1788.
.

renan1bll ,...., ¥01urne f i
_..., 2,000 to 4.000 •ll*!!tr.

.

friend .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Provid i"g business advice to a friend could
tum out to be a no-win situation lor you

,.,... •U.. lmmldllt..1,0do or

.

.

R...-

r '

oomo oppllonoo ropoll'l. WY · • , .-:
304-671!-23118 Ohio 614-411-2154, ' I
Aolary or coble tOol &lt;lfUing. -1 J
Wlllo·Complal~ Nml dly.
l'ump .... lind . . ,..... . 304BDI-3802. .
.

Sew-VIC

·

thes-talfeeaf(!)UnderFire
Ill 0 . Knoll Lending
Anne's plan to co11act
blackmlll money may
backl~e. Stereo. D
II]). Star Tille: 'l11e Next
Ga410fltlon
8 CNN Evening Newa
IIIJ 700 Club With Pot

·;

Eltlmatee. ..

·

lil
UPrirnatlma U..
Stereo.
ID E
AnnUli lltf)Ot1 of

RECOVER

Refrigeration

=·- ,.,. . . . . •

IIOW75-3372.

N--·

Electrical &amp;

-kit.. . . ,.,. ,.,

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

Amartcan Mullc SI10p
l!!fmaNewa
111J MOVIE: The Gl'Mt
Minna- Raid

Plumbing
ondHMIIng
Fourlft and Prno
O.lllpollo, Ohio
1114413111

Homes for Sale

OhiO.
114-• 1111 anor tpm;
I · ' com; 2 a.1111, 2 oer
-.~

a

8

C.~or'•

Esla 1e

bedroom houH, one acre

big leeg~. Stereo. 1;1
iiJ Murder, She W!Oit Q

2124, 1.aaGo7:!MDI.

85

I

him to be promoted to the

1107.
Wo oro ,_WINTERIZINGporto,
..-vice acc.eorile. WI rnetall
SHRINKWRAP.
RIVERSilE
MARINE Glllllpollo, OH. 114-146-

82

.

1114 &amp;ohun 14x70, WII•Pinclo,
2br, 2 boll, 11'1" pon:hH, CA,
on 112 ocno. AI. 2 North of Pt.
PtMunt, lbOII!on1 Condlllon.
Frono/1 CRJo.U.:blll Homoo,IMt• ft40,
7J.8818, or 304I'IW31:1. .
..
.

.
Ill 1121iD Top Cope Stereo.

8Homer's
·• Thepopulllrlty
Blmpeonocauaos

?rare- Crwlc Rd. Parta, aup.
ptloo, pickup, lind dollwwy. 114141-02M.

or.. ::r:rz~
,_
.::::-

31

~e~~mal;l

Ron'• TV SII'VIce, tpeciallzlng . . 1•'

hoUro/7-

~.;I

(J)e
Dowling
Mratarlee Fallter Dowling
and Siller Steve are lnv~Cid
to lite home of an author.
Stereo. C
ID Allee \o S.wa the "'--

Votvo engine with 2 extra •nglnoo lor porto, comoiOtoly Mil·
conlalnod. S!Mpo D. 111-11112·

76

F-

Onel (2:00)

"\riAVF.S' 11 · 8

. condHion,

In Zlnhh atto lti'VICing moet
alhu tH'IIndL Hou• c.lll, alto

LOANS IY MAIL -24 hoUri.
· ---7
1111. 11214. Up to 15,000 In 12 houra. We
, . _ Col-or con hoip you Jill • - u r •
--·•
Wilt,
Loon Br IIIII. 1-90NQ-650o.
r.:::noo
U.nlrlgllt :":;:·9li:::,:IM:::.,·- - - - - 23 Profeslllonal ·
counnlar W 1M ' ' \ . . I
Services
Ill. . C0U1t1Y:
OH - · Coflltir
conlanllal
.................

-·

mint

,,

blamed for tM !allure.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 11) As a team
player. you might leave a lotio be desired · today . Avoid slipping_ inlo arrangemenls where you musl rely on a
partner who must depend on you.
PIICE8 (Fell. 20-March ZO) Usually
you 'rewllllng co pitch in and lend a helping hand where needed , bunoday, you
mlghl deeply resent it If anyone asks
you to do someching you dldn'l first
think ol you~sell.
.
ARIES(MIIrch 21·Aprll11) Try lo avoid
invlllvemenca In risky endeavors loday
where som.e one olher than yourself Ia
calling the shots. If ~ou cari'f be captain
ol your own .ship. It''- best to pass Che
· action.

EAST

•s

.98$2

.Q 103

t8632
+J 8 i 2

tAQJ97t
+K lOt

WEST

+2

LEO (~ulr 23-Aug. 22) Demands placed ·
on you by oChers could sevorel)i' lassen
your ·lndependence and mobility loday .
·II you don'C control this siluallon. you
might nol be able IO toke cere of your
personal interescs.
VIIGO (Aug. 23-Bepl. 22) There Is a
possibility you could be unduly sensitive
to lhe r"(l'arl&lt;s ol compenlons loday.
carefully analyze what !hoy say, so
you'll no! mistake a casuat commenlfor
a put down.
LIIIIA (Sapl. 23-0cl. 23) Be on guard
today, .because an acquaintance with
whom you've held a testy relaUonlhiP
lately might try to create an laaue over
somechlng of a rnatorill nature.

1():30 (!) lo&amp;aotto: Fighllng WOfdl
Crook and Clleee
t1:00CJ1e tlJ
ail
IIJlNawa
·
()) Night Court Q
IIlNa••••tclt
II]) • Anenlo Hal

a

llle

....

A better line
is available

oo

awry. Stereo. 1;;1
()) MOVIE: The De8ptliata

75 Boats $ Motors
for Sale
1872 f7 ft. Slan:roft Trt-Hull
Boat. 125 HP, Evlnru·~
- lne,
complllt top, new u
•
Colll11-281-1311oftor :DO p.m.
1173 Bumac..n 32ft. hou11boll1
ond lrlllor. 170 "'tip ChryO!or

INOf

CREDII' PLUB. GOLD CREOIT
II ~ Poyl ,..
- - guoran11-.CIII CARD. CoM Adva-, no
tor ..........loli. ......... 1Hd.
_ , . . , dopooll, no c:rodH

..-.

miiH,

wlndohllld. Pricod to 1111. 614288-3373.

.......1811.

Renlals

monthly profR of $3,171. lbpon-

....

1981 Hond1 Magna, 4,400 acutal

Complalo llolil!o Hon. .., Uflll
&amp; ropol,., olio plumbing I
lllctrtcof, roofing, romoclollng,
polloe I docko lie. AEIIODE[.

~how a~

chick. 1-IOC).221 0041.

Motorcycles

t K 10 ~
+AQ$

SOUTH

Tlteo'i plan&amp; to prapare a
dinner tor his girlfriend

1iJ

U·I-H

.J6

l:oo CJie GJ c_, lhow

"'- oH, ~of A l-AY' I&gt;ATe
ANP A CCJ-1-A/Z
SHOfZT!

miiH, 304-182475&lt;r after 8:00

llrnlll....

Raute '7. 12 112 acr•, 10 le¥et,
tobacco ban, 2 lerge .,_rna:,
troller hook-up, $37,000. 304-1113-

60.' r AN APPt&gt;INT/tltENT' T'o
$ffAt' TO A ~oo/VI Fu/.L oF LA'(·
.
MeN, Af'IP :r, CAN'T ftNI&gt;
MY ~~-E~t~A/. C0 1-'-AfZ/

loadMI, AC, V-6 engine, 24,000

khh•ne ariit c1bl1"ltl. 814-3Ma • .
2570 or 114-1112-2578 lor !roo ..,

.

=t:'"""
I
Pua,
Eltt. 313.

1187 w..nglor, ••, good .
-.d. 304-675-6884.
11ft Chov Altro lllnloVon,

I=::.:::~::,:.:.:..::::::

Oion II no -lllonll- ~uolo

22

/

1185 I~ 810, 4•4, aula, AC,
Ill, AII-AI, 3CJ1-875.1373.

1m Corulr 25 ft. $iooo with ~ ·
R...e hitch, 304~773-5867 attar
I p.m.

1918 Iuick, IDW mll..ge, good
co.nd, 304-875-2107.

.~/Vi .

I..

4211• .

·Compony polllcllltt11on. Coli 21
~ 1-.&amp;oi).:Jll48.1400-100-3888 or

I Shiite;

NOATII

.At85t

JAMES
JACOBY

•l!trM'•

-

~ .t'l\,~.tt=::.,..· po,

74

tlJ 1121e 1!....-ment
Tonlglll Stereo. ' .
Ill. - · · F-lly
II])
Company
. QJ Ulcha Pro Bowlell Tour
a ·c,....llre
.
7:35 (I) 'rite JaH-1.

....

,.

plllyw,
lharp.

BRIDGE

()) Night Court !;I

...'

1178 Plymotdh Voyogor. BIUI,

79

tumo~~or

tlon~l

11H CJ5 IHD: aood for finn or
hunting, Tom··Rooch, 304-6711-

5lil lnl'l TriCior wRh Lolli«,
$5,150; 404 lnt'l wRh plow Cutllvltor Mowing Mtchrna, Rake,
u - $125. 814-367-G624.
BO!or Hoy Coildlllonor, $3,150;
Concrete &amp; pintle Mptlc tankl,· 145 Molin• t1,895. O.OCIII' Will
Ron Evans EnterpriHt, J~c~. Flnlnco. 814-288-6522.
~. OH 1-800-137-8528.
Choln Aopol,., do worronty
Flbltgl111 lop~r tor 1m1t1 work tor Homellte and McCuf..
truck. (louzu or 9-10 llhorl bod) Iough. llopolr all. Sldoro Equ~
$250. 304/173.5305.
ment, Hende~Mn, WV. 304-87511121.
Flrwwood lor Mil. H11p ICCip1~. 111-!IIJ.3517.
G..vlcy boo!, $310; ~ row com
$45. por lood, 304-675-5t60.
Oiooaeneck Trailer, 25h. bed, Trio
AXIl, lea thin 151000 mlln

STUDS?"

7:30 (JI. Ill GJ Jaopllnlrl Q

61 Farm Equipment

PC u11r1
potential.

.

7:05 tlJ Happr D•r•

TYPISTS,

PC .,....
$35,000 polonflol.
Dotollo. (1) 1105-&lt;187-8000 Ext. B·

· · Yard Sale

p.m. Saturdoly.

Curmct AHalr

QJ SporttCenter

S.blo holr, • - In - . No
IIJIO. Vory timid. Homo Jock.
coil .111111 310a, 114yul47 with lnfof...Uon. l.nt

TIERS

ICIAM Lin ANSWIItl
,.,
. Snugly- Tipsy-Stood-,Neaf/y-AN'(STUDS
On a routine doctor's visit I found out how involved my
son was with helping his dad build an addition. When the
doctor taped his knee, my son repliad, "Did you lind ANY

iiJ MacOyver Q

Fourth Avenue Aru~ 10oa20-00.

...n 3rd Avenue

e

I I ·1 I lnl I I I ·I· I

·~·"""

.

()) I Drum of J...,..la
· lil (J) lnaldll !dillon
(l) (!) MacNeil Lelnr
NeWeHour
l!lJ • Night CoUll Q

oe

iiJ.Miaml VIce

a Amerlcln Mullc Sllop
a lt8r lhal Clay Target

.KQJ1073
.AK7t

+963

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

By James Jacoby

Was it dangerous for North to go beyond four spades by cue-bidding the
ace of clubs? True, the king of dia·
monds looked like a useless card. but
North did not think it possible that
South would hold two little diamonds
and be making a slam try. Hence the
live-club cue-bid. When South heard
live clubs, he. simply jumped to six
spades.
With a diamond lead, declarer took
what seemed to be a good percentage
play. He ruffed the opening diamond,
drew the defenders' trumps, and then
played a low heart up to dummy's
jack. U West held the queen of hearts.
dummy's jack would become a winner. Then the A-K of hearts .could be
used to pitch clubs from the dummy. ll
East held the heart queen, there would
still be a chance that tile club king
would be with West. So the slam would
make if either of two cards was (avorably located lor declarer. Since both .

Nor1~

Soolll

W..t

1•
••

Pass 3+
Pass ~•
All pass

6•

.

Eul

1+
Pass

·Opening lead: • 2

cards were poorly placed. the slam
failed.
·
There was a better play. Declarer
should ruff the opening diamond lead.
play one high trump. cash the A·K of
hearts and ruff a hearl. ruff another
diamond (but not the king). and ruff
the last heart. Declarer now leads
dummy's diamond king. When East
covers .with the ace, South sheds a
club. East has the lead and must either
lead Into dummy's A·Q of clubs or give
declarer a sluff and a ruff to eliminate
the remaining club loser.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

easy

1 Flex
5 Billiards

46 Defeal

DOWN

shot

1 Fundamental

10 Bird-

/

2 Wfthout
exception

ralalad
· 12 Character
comadian,
John-

3 Frisco
Cootballer
4"-·

13 Oetacl .
14 Baarcal

Kapft•l"

5 Prepare

makai
15 Fury

potatoes

6 Movie

16 American
blues

looker

18 Role lor

a Take a

Jose

Farrer

1oAddftion. ally
22 Painter's

pooch
7 Raal

composer

•
Peepers"

load off

8 Pepsin,
20-da
e.g.
plume
11 Fresh
21 Wailing
qual~y
room call
23lamb's
17Hewas
mom
"Mr.
24 Throws in

(sC.).
30 "The TellTala

need

Heart"
aulhor

240pening

33"-lucy'

for

34Ninnies
ventilation 35 Ac:Cor's
25Goes
rep
37Compoashore
nent ·
27 Small bill

28 Embar-

38 S1UCiias

rassing
mist a!«!

42 Chemisrs
place ·

• 26 Unicorn's
lradamaill

28 Haslan

29 Whirl

31 Planet
32 Iroquois

Indian
31"Ageof

Anxiety"
poal
38 Captain's

record
40 Ac:Cor

Greene
41 Wid
· furtively

43 Wriltir
Stanley
440minous

bird
45 Takes~

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for the Utree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and forinalion of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

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of rain is ~ percent.
Extended Forecast
Saturda)' tllroush Monday
A chance or rain or snow
Saturday and Sunday, with fair
weather on Monday. Highs will

Soudl Central Ohio
Increasing cloudiness Thursday night, with a low In the mid
30s. OccasiOnal rain Friday, with
highs between 50 and 55. Chance

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flood warnings for the Rio
Grande plains, Austin, the hill
country and much of south .
central Texas.
Rainfall of 2 to 3 Inches was
possible throughout the region,
parts of which had received an
Inch of rain In the past day. The
storms In New Mexico and Texas
were on a ·collision course, and
could bring In ore bea vy rain to
Texas.
Strong winds'gusting to 45 mph·
caused blowing and drifting snow
near Casper,Wyo.
In the Northwest, a small craft
advisory remained In effect
along parts of the Washington ·
coastline, while high winds eased
along the northern front range of
the Rockies and_In upper Yellowstone Valley In Montana.
Clear skies and cold tempera- ·
lures covered much of the east,
with lows In the 30s In parts of
Virginia and Maryland.

t
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PLUSH
CARPET
•100%
"13 Colon

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Foot Wldal•

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Uulted Press International
Crude on shot up by more than
$2 a barrel and heatingoU by over
6 cents a gallon as statements by
world leaders reignited financial
and commodities markets' fears
of a war In the Middle East.
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher Issued her sternest warning yet to Saddam
Hussein, demanding the '-Iraqi
president withdraw his troops
"soon" from Kuwait or else the
multinational force assembled
against Iraq would "remove him
bY force."
"I thiDk that started the ball
rolling," said Ed Kevelson of
Dean Witter Reynolds's lnternaUonal Energy Futures Group In
New York.
On the New York Mercantile
Exchange, the American benchmark West Texas Intermediate
crude for December delivery
roCketed $2.68 Wednesday over
Tuesday to $35.31 a barreL
Volume was a healthy 94,954
contracts.
:'Once we broke through the
$33.90 resistance level, we hit buy
(orders). I don't think we ever
looked .back after that," Kevelson said.
The trader said Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was also
reported as warning Saddam
that a countdown to war had
begun.
Kuwait's exiled premier.
Sheikh Saad al Abdullah al
Sabah, told a Bahrain newspaper
the United States should strike
militarily against Iraq and rej~ted any territorial comprom·
Jse with Baghdad.
"The only option available now
IB the military one, because the
Iraqi regime has Insisted not only
on challenging the will of the
international community but
also continues to hold the foreign
hostages~ "Saad said.
i 1 ~l
Soviet envoy Yevgeni Prl·
makov described Secretary of
State James Baker's eightnation tour of the Mideast and
Europe as crucial to develop-

ments In the Persian Gulf, In
crisis since Iraq'sAug. 21nvaslon
of Kuwait.
"Generally, there's a feeling
permeat lng the market . tba t
something's going to happen,"
said Peter Beutel of the Pegasus
Econometrics Group in Hoboken, N.J .
December futures contracts
for home heating oj) zoomed 6.33
cents to 92.71 cents on the Mere,
while unleaded gasoline jumped
3.44 cents to 91.19 cents a gallon.
Technical buying and selll!lll
based on the "spread" between
the price of crude and the
products also played a role In the
market, Kevelson said.
There was buying of heating oil
vs. both crude and gasoline and
selling of gasoline vs. crude, the
trader said.
·
The market virtually ignored a
late Tuesday report of the
American Petroleum Institute
· that U.S. crude supplies .grew 5
million barrels last week. It
marked .the weekly Industry
survey's first Increase In two
· months.
Normally. such a report would
depress prices. But Kevelson
said the market largely discounted the Increase anyway
since It was mainly confined to
the West Coast, which receives
much of Its supplies from Alaska.
On the European spot market,
where crude Is bought and sold
for cash, Britain's widely traded
North Sea Brent rocketed $2.75 to
$35.95 a barreL
·
The United . Arab Emirates'
Dubai Light, thekeyOPECcrude
from the Middle East shipped
mainly to the Far East, ·jumped
$2.70 to $30.50 a barrel.
Three refiners - Houston's
Conoco Inc. subsidiary of Du
Pont; Marathon 011 Co., the
Findlay, Ohio, unit ol USX Corp.;
and Sun Co. of Radnor, Pa. ~alsed the posted price they will
pay for crude at the wellhead.
Conoco and Marathon raised It
$2.50 barrel to $34 a barrel for
WTI. Sun's $2.45 Increase
brought Its WTI price to $33.70 a
barrel.

Yd.

MSJAJIII •"''' ...

SAl£$2Q99 SQ, Y~.

A totally •• ••nsitn in rtlidtlltial carpet

1
. ~ Am1ct1 te efflr ~fiCant ad"ntagu owr

prlllluct tf filllr IKhl;t~otr s ucially ...laptd

INCIIIIIS PAD &amp; W01

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,SALE

20 /t

OFF .OUR EVERYDAY
LOW PRICES

-TELEVISION SALE
SVI.IIANIA

Elitr lilt,.. ,.m 11141 •• ,..,. .....-. 1991 sri•=• c~

•••it' .,.,. ..............
Y•
a

witli ............ ...,
II" .. 17" C* TV
1'11t111 FlEE S ,_ bt1a~d Picl..-t
T... Wllrllly _. • FlEE 2 Y- ~~~~ StniiiiWAIWm.
(

IIII.Y

$299

Now's the time to buy! Our,_,ale prices are
and the extended warranties are FREE.

"Prices for both gasoline and
home heating· oil continue~ to
rise at a · rapid pace, but the
change was Jess than In either of
the two previous months," the
depariment said. ''The Index (or
nat ural · gas turned down
slightly."

Butcher, Tara Gerlaeb, Heather Davenport,
Barbara Anderson, Tammy Miller, Joe McElroy.
Back row, Jert to right, Robby Wyatt, Tricia
Baer, Chrissy W~ver, Bobby V!Ulce. Mel~
Rollins, Dari!J~Lclpn. Advisors. tor tbe ~up are
Dana Kessinger anaCilrls Wfl!e.field.

By Charlene Hoeftich
More than 200 parents and
friends turned out Thursday night
for the second annual Meigs High
School open house.
Extensive displays from various
academic and vocational programs,
presentations IJY members of the
National Honor Society, im excellent ~lide presentation of classroom
scenes and entertainment by the
Meigs Band and Chorus were
featured.
Amy Wanh, president of tile Na•
tiona! Honor Society, extended the
welcome and then presented members who told of the -academic, athletic and vocational programs, as
well as the extta-curricular activities offered to sruden!S.
Aaron Sheets talked about the
math and computer programs,
· noting that already this year over
.400 students have completed a
compUler litenley course. The

language· program at Meigs was athletic programs, to conclude ibe
explained by Jennifer Taylor, Darci overview of Meigs High School.
Under the direction of Toney
Wolfe told about the social study
Dingess,
the Meigs band played
courses offered, and Kristen Slaw·
several
selections.
The choir djrecter talked on the vocational classes.
ted
by.
Thresa
Davis
presented a
The electronic program was dispatriotic
medley
and
then
moved
cussed by Eric Heck, Missy Nelson
lively
modem
number
with a
into
a
explained the learning disabilities
offerings, and Heather Davenport dance routine.
Students from the school's riurs·
talked on the choir and band
program. The role and activities ·ing progrlun. now in its second
sponsored by the Student 'Council year, took blood pressures during
and the FeUowship of Christian the evening. There was an extm·
Students were outlined by Thra sive di$play of artwork, particularly
Gerlach, tluisty Weaver ialked sculptures, from the classes of Jack
about the newspaper, Tricia Baer, Slavin, along with trophies won by
the yearbook, Misty Butcher, the the school, . home economic ·
Spanish Club, Barbara Anderson, projects, and several academic and
·
- the quiz team and National Honor vocational areas.
As
a
pan
of
the
open
house,
the
Society, and Thmmy Miller, the
Band had a soup supper, ' and
DECA and VICA programs.
Business club activities and FHA visitors were taken on a tour of the
progr:ams were discussed by .classrOOms where teachers wen; on
Melissa Rollins, Robby Wyau and hand to talk abput their respective
Frank Blake talked about the strong programs.

...,.,.,....,..-----.

-Riffe will ·remafu Ohio House
speaker 'as long as possible'

6-GUN OAK ••••••• SALE 5269
6-GUN PINE ...... SALE S309
8-GUN OAK .......SALE S349
12-GUN PINE .... SALE S399
OAK ••••••• SALE S449

"I was thinking very seriously
By LEE LEONARD
of
retiring (after 1992) ," Riffe
UPI Statehouse Reporter
told
a luncheon sponsored by the
COLUMBUS - Ohio House
Ohio
Council of Retail MerSpeaker Vernal Riffe Jr. , Dchants.
"I am not going to retire.
Wheelersburg, squelched all
I'm
going
to be here as long as I
rumors Thursday that he will
walk."
can
retire after 1992, saying he plans
to remain speaker "as long as I
Riffe said Bennett was reponslcan walk."
ble lor a v!clouscampillgn waged
Rifle, 65, who has served as against his re-election in the 89th
· speaker longer than anyone In Dis trlct by Republican Phil
Ohio history amj was . just re-. Short, and for acts against his
e lee ted to his 17th term In the son, Vernal Ill, who won a race
House, said·he wants to stay on to . for Scioto County commissioner,
ensure that Democrats retain and his family.
control of the House.
The speaker said dead an lmals
Red-laced and shouting during were thrown In his son's yard .
a luncheon speech to a gatl!erlng and his son, his son's wife and his
of Statehouse Insiders, Riffe said son's mother-In-law were folhe Is angered by events of the lowed. Rifle said he had to hire a
recent· campaign.
·
bodyguard for his son.
He said he wants to lower the
Rifle said he believed Bennett
cost of campaigns, eliminate was behind It because "the
negative campaigning and get people that were doing It said he
even with Republican State was responsible, that's where
Chairman Robert Bennett for they got their orders."
· personal attacks on Riffe and his
''l am goiDg to find out why he
family during the campaign.
attacked me personally and my

BERKLINE
'RECLINER
SALE
WAUAWAY
IECI.It£1,
. ROCII-0-LOUNGERS
and SWIYR lOCKERS

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

19" IIMOl't
COLOI POITAilf

.

..d;~..;..

REG. S329
REG. 5389
REG. S429
REG. S4t9
L..I"""-'P.-"!------------t._,r.:-~---· REG. SSS9

TAKE

,

MEIGS INDUCTEES • Fall induction
ceremonies into tbe Meigs Higb School National
Honor Society were held on Friday morning.
Tbose new NilS members are pictur.ed bere.
,~,. ~~..:~~~~g~!:. Frank Bla!te, Misty

Hunting season is here end we've reduced
the price. on our gun cabinets. Oak, pine
end cherry flnl•h••·

Our •tection hila never been better. we hive tile top t1ble1, trestle table•. f•rm tlbl••·
round lnd Netangullr tllblea. buutiful chiM C8binet1, hutches end corner cupbo1rdd1.
For""'l ond overydoy 11'/lel.
·

0/0

GUN

u~~: -CABINETS

DINING ROOM

A Muhl!Mdlo Inc. New-or

More than 200 on hand for
MHS ,o pen house ··T hursday

"Anti·Stat "24 Colon

1

$2 49 .~............. SALE $199
$2 89 ............... SALE $2 31
$339 ............... SALE$271
S399 ............... SALE$319

family, " vowed Rifle.
Benneti denied the allegations.
"I had enough worries on the
statewide level," be said. "I
know nothing about what happened In those county races.
''The election was over Tues·
day," .said · Bennett. "The
speaker Is a great American:·
Rifle was not amused. "You
know, down home we say ·'Don't
get mad, get even-:' Well, J'irr
mad and I'm still going to get
even." Riffe declined to say bow
he plans to get even.
''There's ways I'll deal with
Bob Bennett when the time
~omes ," he said. 11 YOu know,
there are times when the party
chairman comes to you and
wants to work things out on some
matter. I don't Intend to work out
anything with Bob Bennett."
Rifle has said he wants to leave
Democrats In firm control of the
House for the 1990s. Republicans
won the siate Apportionment
·
Board Tuesday.

-------r-----------.

HEALTH CHECK· Tara Humphrey, a mem· .•
ber or tbe oun;ing assistant class at Meigs High
School, now in its second year, checks Linda
Haley's bloocl pressure. The students were on

band aU evening to do blood pressure checks for
tbe visitors at the Meigs Hillb School open house·
Thursday night.

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

LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS!

Beautiful Furniture Doesn't
Have to Be Expensive...
·

a

Nosalr, under heavy pollee
guard for fear of reprisals, was
arraigned by Criminal Court
Judge Harvey Glasser In Bel·
levue's Intensive care unit,
where he was recoverlnl from a
gunshot wound suffered when he
tried to nee the scene of the
shooting. No ball was set, and
Nosalr's next court appearance
was scheduled for Nov. 13.
Dozens of ponce officers, some
armed with automadc riQes,
patrolled the baliB and the room
where Nozalr lay amid a maze of
tubes and a blue mask covering
his face.
Nosatr waa charged with
second-degree murder, attempted murder, .assault, criminal
possession or a weapon.

"12' Width

"10 Yr. W..r W.,..ty

...r. c ..... Carpet ctrtlfW by Amlct is tht

2 Sections. 1 8 Pog• 26 Cents

Invasion of Kuwait and - the . factors, since the beginning of turned up broadly after Sep. tember decreases." ·
the year.
massing of u.s. and other forces
By category, wholesale energy
"Large advances In Indexes
in the embatUed region.
A spokesman for the depart· lor energy goods accounted for prices were up 8 percent In
ment's Bureau of Labor Slatis- most of the October rises at all October after rising 13.8 percent
three major stages of process- In September and 9.5 percent in
. tics said wholesale prices for
Ing,"
the Labor Departmeni August.
finished goixls have increased 7
said.
"Also,
prices for food Items
percent, adjusted lor seasonal

other llellng stlin-relistant mn..h..

Accused assassin arraigned
at hospital bedside
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Egyptian-born baUer repairman
acculed or assassinating right• wing Rabbi Melr Kahane was
arraigned Wednesday at his
hospital bedside after denying .
cbarp~ he murdered the antiArab firebrand.
·
El-Sayyld Nosalr, 34, did not
eater a plea to charges that he
fired the bullets that killed the
controversial founder of the
Jewish Defeale League Monday
nlaht. But pollee said he voluntarily 1ave "8 wrl!ten statement
tate Tuesday from his bed In
Bellevue Hospital In which he
denied the shooting.
· "He asked for a piece of paper
Blld just wrote on It," Chief of
Detectives Joseph Borrelli said.

an Increase .of 0.7 perc(!nt In the
government's closely watched
Producer Price Index for the
month.
The 1.1 percent jump follows
leaps of1.6 percent In September
and 1.3 percent In August In the
aftermath of Iraq's Aug. 2

THICK PLUSH
CARPET
·
•Saotchguard

S Yn. =~~
Az I I S. .IMIED
. S Yn.WAIIANTY
~ ....
10 Yn. ..... . _ • 10 Yn. Azo1a1 AIIII·SIIodo

•12 Colon

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday. November 9, 1990

. INCIIIIIS PAD &amp; W01

SCULPTURED
CARPET
•Dupont 81ilnmaeter

•

at

SAl£ $1799 so."·

Sq. Yd.

Oil prices shoot up
.BY WALTER ANDREWS

"20 Colon

MSJAJIII Wlt/16 liM

•n· Wldttl

WASHiNGTON -Wholesale
prices soared 1.1 percent In
October on another huge jump In
energy prices as war fears
gripped Middle Eas t. oil fields,
the , Labor Department said
Friday.
·
Private economists expected

.

TRACKLESS
SAXONY
CARPET
"Dupont Stalnma•er

' .&gt; '

Low ionlghi In mid 3011.
Chance of rain 90 percent.
Partly cloudy Saturday. High
near 50.
·

WhOlesale ·prices up 1.1 percent in October

.&gt; SAME AS"

DAYS!

East; snow reported
By United Pre_
s s Int.eruilooal
Storms dumped snow on New
Mexico Thursday, brought heavy
rain that CI\Used lloodlng In
Texas and brought high winds to
Wyoming, while cold weather
covered the East.
A winter storm warning was In
effect for the south central
mountains of New Mexico and
snow and freezing rain hit ttie
southeast . and east central
plains, while Albuquerque received more than 4 Inches of
snow and nearly a foot fell on
Quemado Lake.
The storm was moving through
the south central mountains,
brlngiDg accumulatlons of up to 8
Inches, but weather was clearing
over much of the state.
Very moist warm air from the
Gulf of Mexico confronted colder
air moYIDg In from the wes t In
central Texas, bringing steady
.rain .to the region and prompting

Vol.41, No. 142
Copyrighted I 990

).~"''
90 DAYS-,

Cold weather covers

•

e

WEATHER MAP - Suany skies and warmer temperatures will
p-eet tile Soulhwl!tll iO!Iay. There Is a chance of showers in lbe Ohio ·
ud M!eeJnlppl Valleys u a storm syatem movea eastward. The

will

Pick-3: 482
Pick-4: 8827
Canis: 9-H; J.C;
IO.D; 4-S

~

,,
f
. £~,,..,~
.·rA..N

1101111era Rockies wiD·atao see scattered rain showera wlih snow Ia
llle ~~~Per elevallou. Tbe East Coul will have Jocreulog
cloudlaeu and aeuouble temperatures whUe li
be sunny and
cool Ia ihe Midwest. (UPI)

Ohio Lottery

grid team
announced

~

R(APY"C'Mlt

'

Ali'SVAC

A

range from the upper 30s to the
middle 40s Saturday and Sunday.
and in the 30s on Monday .
Overnight will range !rom the
middle 20s to · the lower 30s
through the period.

..

.

.

Many Other Accent
Pieces In Stock
.
And On Sale!
REG. 389
SALE

$319

REG. S299

REG. S359

~ALE $289

SAl£ $239

STOlE HOURS
Monday 9:30-1:00

Tuesday-Saturday
9:30-5:00

REG. S369 ·. ·

SALE $289 .

Andelll_fl_'1

Don't Forget

FUINITUII; APPLilfKISr TV'S, FLOOI COVIIING

Christmas

992·3•n

Layawqy

To Ust Our

• • ••

MHS COURSi: OFFERINGS • In-clepth
or the lademk, apora aad voca·
donal conne olferlnp, -u well u extra-cur·

-cle&amp;c:rlptlou

DOWIITO. . POIIIIOY, OliO

"To Qualified ApPIIConft

I

'

I

.•

- ~--- ; ular

actlvltlts at Mel&amp;s Hlgb Scb(IOI were . ,I

I'~ b7 memllen ol die Na$1ooal Honor

Soe1et7 u a part ol ·llle opea bCIIR program

Tbunda7 algbt. Here Krlltla Slawter talks
about tbe vocadooal oll'erlap.

RECOGNIZED FOR CONTRDUTION8- Bob
Evaa (left), preUie.&amp; of ihe Soutlleut Ohio
BeliHal C~ll, pNHDlB LarrJ Powell a plaque
deemlnJ him Help Couty mao of ihe year
Tlluriday nip&amp;. Powell, owner of Powell's

SaperValue 1tore IInce 187t, wu recopbed for • .
bla l•volvemeat In lhe ecoMmkr ud MCiaJ.'
developmeat of llle Melp Collll&amp;y area. More ihaa · • •
1110 people UtBnded ihe .--pttlon btiiiCiaet at tile ·
Oblo Uatvenlty ... Ia Atbeaa. (OVP pheto br ,
Krll Coehrau)
..
.
,

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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