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                  <text>Pie• 10-lhe Deily Sentinel

Beat of the Bend

Have you had the
'Gloopus' yet?

·' -, Tunday, November 13, 1990

Pomaov-Midclaport. Ohio

Hoople's
Saturday
matchups

Northeast Ohio records snow flt1rries

•
United Prea lnteraa&amp;tonal
of Ohio Tuesday night as high·
.Skies were mostly clear across ~ pressure .settles over the area.
the Buckeye State overnight, but The winds will become. nearly
northwest winds off Lake Erie calm, which will allow the
kept some clouds over the mercury to drop Into the 20s.
show videos through the dance northeast corner of Ohio. .
By BOB HOEFLICH
The Tuesday mornbig weather
which will . be 8:30 to 11:30 p.m.
Had thfi' "Gioopus" yet?
Some flurries fell over Lake,
map showed a ridge of high
By the way, Saturday night will be · Geauga an4 Ashtabula counties pressure stretching from Lake
Now, no doctor is
io
the 142nd dance staged by Iva Sis- In extreme northeast Ohio and it Superior to the Tennessee Val·
you that you
son and her group for lhe area was dry elsewhere.
have the " Ciaoley. A low pressure system was
.young people. ·
pus." l's sure
·Low -temperatures were · over the northern Rockies with a
there is some
mostly In the 20s but the clouds warm front extending southeast
scientific name
The.annual fllll Spi&gt;{IS banquet at kept feadlngs In the 30s In the Into the Plal.ns.
..
Involved for the
Eastern High School has been set northeast. Lows ranged from 25 • The ridge will move east and
ailment which
for this Thursday beginning at 6:30 degi-ees at Mansfield to 33 settle over the Great Lakes and
has invaded our
p.m.
. · degi-eeS at Cleveland.
Ohio Valley Wednesday and the
household -but n9t matter, it's
Bevera¥e, rolls and table servi_ce
The National Weather Service warm front will move Into t~
still the "Gloopus."
are provllled with each fam1ly said skies will be clear across all Midwest.
. This litlle plague slal1S with an ·being asked to take a meat dish, a
· aaack of extreme dizziness. If you vegecable or salad and a dessert.
Continued from page 1
malce it through that out of control
All cheuleaders, football players
.
'
situation, next ·comes the very and volleyball playerS will be plans are tar a director to be in nography and ill support of groups
WEATHER MAP- A large storm s:YStem wtli continue to move
. stuffy head, the sneezing, a sore recognized during the festivities.
place in early 1991.
.
In the Northwest; brlnrtar rain to Nevada and central CaiUornla
and individuals opposing tile sale
throa~ loss of appetite and upset
and snow to the blcher elevatlo118 of Idabo and western Mel!tana.
He
also
re~ that the Cham·
.
of
pornographic
materials
was
stomach and numerous aches and •. Pomeroy 's Harlan Eiselstein IS ber for the tupe being will remain
The rest of the country shoald see mostly sunny aides under high
adopted
unanimously
by
Council.
pains in variable locations.
pleased with !he foothall work of in the Pomeroy location and that
prell8ure. The Plalas will araln see record or near record hl«hs
During a discussion Councilman
I know. You're thinking "he his grandson, John Adams, a stu· necessacy repairs will be !"3de to.
today wblle the easter11 third of the couatry wllhtlll be fairly cool.
Dewey
Horton
talked
about
por·
·
should have gotten a flu shot". I dent at Sandusky High School.
the . building to make 11 more nography-infiltrated .. c;ommunities
(UPI)
DID that but it didn 'I stop li1e
Sandusky High • John is a stan· suitable. As for permanent quarters, as "dying commun.1bes" and sug· •
"Gioopus", which, by the way, I'm ing member of the team · is in the Eliason said that both Middleport
gested that if residents don't go to
sure is contagious.
. semi-finals of the state. The team and Pomeroy have offered ~e.
Continued from page I
places who sell it, they go out of
I just hope you don't get it. defeated Massillon last Saturday,
The questions of the develop- business.
You're just gonna hate the 27-7, and this Saturday at 7 P:m. ment director's salary and other ex·
"An alert notification Is not a
The possibility of putting some decide whether to bring them
--oloopus".
call
to active duty," Boling said.
will meet the Warren Harding High penses involved in the operation of money into remembering ser· back," Chupka said. "I was
I
"It
puts
the units at a higher
team in the Akron Bowl.
the coupty office were discussed at viceme'lr before or after the surprised to hear they were
stage of rea:diness in preparation
John is six foot, three B.lld lips length with Councilmll!', Paul !lolidays was discussed but no ac· thinking about delaying II."
Back to the happy side of life.
The decision will be made by for a possible call to active duty.
the scales at 245. He is·the son of Gerard expressing Council s ~­ tion was taken.
Dorothy Roller, long-time Mid· Kathy Eiselsteili Adams. lnciden- cern for development but pres~mg
Under the alert status, the unit
Again discussed at the meeting Forces O:nnmand In Atlanta.
dleport resident, marked her 871h Ially, John is also a good student for "more specifics as to how thm$s
commander
may call up to 10
Other
units
Involved
In
prebirthday anniversary last Friday, and was 8th out of 250 male will be handled and done." He swd was mandatory trash pickup in the vious activations we~e a quarter· percent of his unit to make
village. Mayor Hoffman said that
Nov. 9. She loved all of the cards, students taking the SAT.
that Council will be more "com· he is in the process of checking master unit from Marlon, three necessary personnel notlflca·
gifts and flowers that you sent 10
fortable about contributing" wilh other communities . for information maintenance units from 'Colum· tlons and prepare unit equip· ·
.remember her. You made it a
You probably' haven't heard of additional information,
on how ·mandatory pickup is bus and volunteers from three ment," Boling said.
lovely, memorable day.
The units- both medium truck
the Meigs Appalachian Crafts
Eliason respended that everylh· handled. The criteria for· licensing ,.Ohio Air National Guard units.
comp~ntes
- perform over-the·
Capt.
Jim
House • and small wonder· it isn't ing is Set ilnd that how much trash himierS .was also discussed.
Boling, Guard spo·
A Ilea marke~ yard sale and craft open yet
road
transportation
of heavy
.
money the' Chamber will have 10
Handling of !he Ohio Depart· kesman, said the 1486th Trans·
sale will be held from 9 a.m. to 5
equipment
and
supplies
using
Sponsored by the Pomeroy Mer· operate on is the concern now and ment of Develpment revolving loan portatlon Co. of Mansfield and
p.m. both Thursday and Friday at chants Association, the new craft that will partiallY deiM!Iine how fund
tractor-trailer
rigs.
About
360
payments from Dairy Queen Ashland, and the 1487th TransLocomollon.
Guard
members
are
affected
by
house will have a grand opening on much a director can be paid. He
portation Co. In Eaton and Piqua
Locomotion is lhe teen · dance Sunday afternoon, Nov. 25 • that's said mat the goal is $30,000 and was discussed and ao ordinance were placed on alert Sunday.
the
alert.
center on Mechnic St., in Pomeroy, the day of the Pomeroy Christmas that die Chamber is nearing that was passed establishing ~ special
and all of the activities both days parade. It will be operated in !he figure when ·verbal commiunents fund for that money in the village ·
will be held inside the building so former Bichman home at 119 But· are taken into consideration. Gerard budget
Council also passed a resolution
you don't have to be concerned 100 temut Ave. in Pomeroy. While again asked for more inf!l""ation authorizing the mayor to set policy
much about the weather. .
many ChriStmas theme items will emphasizing
that
Middleport and made decisions regarding use
The charge for participants 1s $5 be featured there will be many
of the revolving loan monies m acand they must provide their own other anicles offered to the public Council is "not against it but do . cordance with Ohio Department of
CLEVELAND (UPI)- Cleve· distribution plant that wUI em·
tables. If you want to take part, and the house is expect¢ 10 remain want it to work" stressing again !he Development policy and authorize land City Council Is backing a ployee 300 to 500 people.
.
make your reservation by calling in operation well after the need for more specific information. · the transfec 'of monies from the plan from the mayor's office to
Council .Monday night voted
The question of whether the per992·3456 and ask for Sherry. Christmas hol1.daYseason.
The Plain Dealer $15.9 18-2 In favor or a resolution to
.
son
employed would be working gerieral fund and other funds into offer
Refreshments will be available for
million
In tax Incentives to keep urge the city to offer Mayor
It's really not good 10 forget . specifically for Meigs County or the newly created revolving loan the newspaper's printing opera· Michael White's proposed tax
consumption on the site.
By the way, Power Express will about Thanksgiving. Why do I feel could accept work from other areas fund.
package, which Includes a 10·
Council coniplimented Bob Gil- · tlon In the city.
be on hand this Saturday night for that if we didn't have so much to be was again raised. Reed said the job more and the·American Legion for
Plain Dealer publisher Alex year, 50 percent tax abatement
the weelcly teen dance at Locomo- thankful for, Christmas wouldn.' t be would be full time . for Meigs the Halloween party at .the Marina, Machaskee, liowever, said the on the plant's tangible and real
Cowlly and .that there are residency
newspaper Is not seeking tax
tion.. These are the d-jays who nearly as nice? Do keep smiling.
property taxes.
requirements. He went on to state heard a report from the Middleport Incentives as It decides between
.. "The Plain Dealer has made
that the Chamber is asking for sup- Arts Council, and authorized in· a sites In Cleveland and suburban Its home and ·maintained Its
pan because "what's good for·any creasing payment for prisoner Brooklyn for a printing a·ild operations In Cleveland for 150
pan of lhis county is good for all of meals from $2.50 to $3 each.
years," White said. "We have
It was DOled that the John Fultz
·
the county."
offered the newspaper a proosal
Mitchem in 1968; three sisters, El·
As for the salary requirements of family has opened a bed and
Richard B. Mitchem
which demonstrates our commit·
sie, Misti, and Stella; and two the job asked about by Gerard, llreakfast house on North Second.
.
ment
to keeping the newspaper's
Richard B. Mitchem, Sr., 60, of brolhers, Herbert and Eu~ene.
Reed said thai increases over that the second meeting in December . · YOUNGSTOwN, Ohlo(t]'PI)-.
operations
In Cleveland where 11
Kerr Street in Pomeroy, formerly of
Graveside services will be held paid by the Chamber would coille which would .fall on Christmas Eve Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
belongs
."
MI. Rainier, Md., died on Saturday on Thursday at 10:30 a.m. with from administrative fees from was cancelled.
numbers:
at the V.A. Medical Center in Hun· Rev. Lesley Hayman officiating.
The mayor's report showed
grants generated by the director.
Plck-3
tington, W.Va., following an exten·
Burial ·will he at the Bradford
The county-wide organization receipiS of $4,743.32. Judy Crooks
4446.
ded illness.
Cemetery.
"
now has lOS members with finan- was sworn in ·by Mayor Hoffman
Ticket sales: $1,246,145 .
He was born on October 8, 1930
There will be no calling hours.
cial commitments form the Meigs preceding the meeting. She was ~ Payoff: $536,081,
in Wheeling, W.Va., the son of the
County Commissioners, Pomeroy ·pointed to fill the term of Bob G1l·
Plck-4
tiue Wilber (Sye) Mitchem and
Soudi Central Ohio
Village, the banks of lhe county, more who resigned. Others attend0082.
Mamie Mitchem. He was a veteran Nellie M. Vincent
Mostly
clear Tuesday night,
ing
were
Councilillan
Horton
and
and. utility compailies, as well as
Tfcket sales: $239,135.50.
of the U.S. Army during the Korean
with
a
low
between 25 and 30.
Gerard,
William
Walters,
Jack
Sat·
some other businesses.
Payoff: $44,200.
Nellie Marie Vincen~ 63, of
Conflict
Mostly
sunny
Wednesday, with
terfield,
and
James
Oatworlhy.
·
OTHER BUSINESS
Cards
He was a journeyman, affiliated· Township Road 175 in Middlepon.
highs
near
60.
A resolution condemning par·
four of hearts.
with Peoria l'ost No. 2 of the died Monday at home following .an
Extended Forecast
jack of clubs.
American Legion, the United Slate extended illness.
Thursday thro!lgh Salurday
ace of diamonds.
She was born on August 15,
and Tile Roofers, and Damp and
Fair Thurdsay and Saturday,
·
queen o(spades.
1927, the daughter of the laie Felix
Waterproof Workers Local No. 69.
With
a chance of showers on
Ticket sales: $80,036. Payoff:
Surviving are four sons, R1chard Lee and Nellie Thompson Boring.
Friday. Highs will be In the 60s
$27,200.
B. (Janos) Mitchem, Jr., of Wesley, She was a homemaker.
Thursday and Friday, and beSUrviving are three daughters,
Mich., Billy (Connie) Mitchem,
tween 45 and 55 Saturday. Over·
Point Pleasant, ,W.Va., Thomas Betty Staley, Shawnee, Christine
night lows will range from 35 to 45
(StaCy) Mitchem, Bidwell, and Napper and Kathy Yancey, both of
early Thursday, In the40s Friday
Herben (Lisa) Mitchem, Sanca Middleport; one son, George .Vin·
CHICAGO (UPI) - The mod· remainder . say values will
morning, and between 35 and 45
Maria, Calif.; three daughters, Be· cent, Middlepon; three . sisters; esll!ptrend In farmland values In decline.
early
Saturday,.
Dally stock prices
cky (Jefl) Haning, Albany, Mary several nieceS and nephews.
five Midwestern states continued
The availability of farm mort·
(Dale) Taylor, · Middlepon, and
Besides her parents; she was during the summer, the Federal gage financing appears to be (As or 10:30 a.m.)
Regina Mitchem, Balllmore, Md.; preceded in death by her husband, Reserve Bank of Chicago said rising among bankS and ltfe Bryce aad Mark Smith
or Blunt, Ellis 4 Loewt
three brothers, Wilbur (Frizz) Jacob Vincent in 1972.
Tuesday.
insurance companies .
•
Mitchem, Jr. and Ed' Mitchem, both
Funeral services will be held on
A survey of 450 agricultural
"Mid-year reports for com· Am Electric Power .............28~
. Veterans Memorial Hospi~
of Wheeling, W.Va.. and Ken Wednesday at I p.m. at Ewil)g banks in Illlnois, Iowa, Indiana,
merclal banks show that their AT&amp;T ................... .. .. .... ......33%
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
Mitchem, Ft Hood, Texas; his Funeral Home with Glenna Rum- Michigan and Wisconsin showed combined portfolio of farm real
Ashland
011
...................
:
.....
29
Rodney Smi~, Pomeroy; Jed Will,
friend and former wife, Vivian mel officiating.
the average Increase was 0.8 estate loans was up 4 percent In
Mitchem Games, Pomeroy and a
Burial will be in the Bradford percent during the third quarter the five-state area compared Bob Evans ....... ............... .... ll)S Sr., Pomeroy; George Harvey, Gal·
Charming Shoppes ............... 9
lipolis.
long-time friend, Ellen Fuller Cemetery.
and 4 percent during the year with one year ago, and life City
Holding
Co
.....
.....
....
....
17',2
MONDAY DISCHARGES •
Tucke~ Mt . Ranie~Md.
Friends may call at lhe funeral ending September 30.
insurance companies reported a Federal Mogul ............... ..... 11 'J4
Ill
one.
Besides his parents, he was home from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. on
Most of those who answered · 6 percent Increase," ~njamln
preceded in dealh by Regina Marie Tuesday.
the survey expected the farm· said. "The Increase for these two Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .. ...........14%
land market to be stable to lenders more than offset the Key Centurion .......... .... ......11%
somewhat stronger during the continuing declines In farm mort· Lands' End .. .............. ......... 10%
Limited Inc...... : .. .. ... .. ........15',2 ·
fourth quarter.
gages held by the Farm Credit Multimedia Inc..... ....... ... .... 53%
System."
Rax Restaurants.. .. .... .. .. .. .. . Yo
. "While farmland values have
Because of restructuring and Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 17',2
,.,. lloOuld be ........ - ' - "
,.,-..,
continued to drift higher, the rate constraints on new lending, Ben·
Now INN Ia:
of gain has slowed from that jamin said the portfolio of farm Shoney 's Inc.................. ..... 10%
Seven calls for assistance were anwered by units of Meigs County
experienced during the late r:nortgages held by the FmHA Is Star Bank ...... .. ..... ............... 16
Emergency Medical Services on Monday and Tue8day.
·
c-~e~·.--.
1980s," economic adviser and expected to continue downward Wendy's Int'l. ....... ...... ........ 6%
ill Auto pollay.
At 9:39a.m., Rutland squad .went to Township Road 175 for Nel·
·
Worthington
Ind
..................
20%
vice president Gary Benjamin through Dec. 31.
"you....,. hacl no vloiiiiOna or1t·
lie Vinson. Vinson was dead on arrival. At 10:22 a.m., Racine squad
..
said
In the bank's Agricultural
fiUit Ill ldintl for ...........d
was sent to Sixth Street for Thelma Evans. Evans·was taken to Hol... at ....t21-.old,you-ld
"Moreover,
the recent
Leiter.
zer Medical Center. At I 0:30 a.m., Middleport fire department was
MctU..I•ed to IIIGDme 1 "n f1'1 t
quarterly gains have typically .
dispatched to South Fourth Street to the Ivy Sleeth residence for a
policy
........ ctnjouintl IPII'It N•
fallen short of lhe rise recorded
smokeodor.
,
In most measures · of overall
At 12:36 p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 Nye Avenue. Jed Will was
w If you - noidch-1!1141 i4
tnnauon. In terms of inflation·
uansporled to Veterans Memorial }{ospital. Pomeroy fire depanment
141, '1011'11 till IN llltlllt r1to
adjusted
dollars;
II
appears
the
llrook of oil.
was sent to Union Avenue for · a brush fire at the Earl Pickens
!'rend In farmland values is nat to
'residence.
·
··Internal Medicine
perhaps somewhat lower."
·· · -•• Iriot
Mldlllll
On Tuesday morning at 2:36 a.m., Middleport squad went to
cyhalolor
you
.....,,,,pollfar
Bankers
In
Illinois
reported
no
fOUl firtt IDIIJ at. lllll'l .. lwllw&amp;
North Second Avenue filr Louise Terrell. Terrell was treated but not
change In land values during the
lmmodhttlv•.- . n...·anodlno
transported. At 4:40a.m., Middleport squad went 10 the Sronewood
third
quarter
and
Wii!CQnsln
_ ............. 1&lt;1 .......... Office
Hours
Apartments for John Metzger. Metzger was taken to Veterans
Y'!U 1 II ' '4t polloy.
repOfted a 1 perc en I drop.
Memorial Hospital.
Monday
through
Friday
'
Indiana and -Michigan land
Cll
••
lltOul
.... . , ......u............
..
.
••• u ........., .........
values were up 1 percent and
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
· Iowa up 2 percent during the
Hospital news
summer.
'
Suite t 3,
Holzer Medical Center
MUter representative
Nearly one-half of the bankers
Discharges lor Nov . .12
PVH Medlcai.Offlce Building
believe the demand for farmland
to visit Wednesday
Wyaft Akers, Jerilyn Belcher, by farmer and non-farmer InvesINIUIIANa!'lfiiVICE
' . (304) 675-7700
A representative from Con· Irvin Brumfield, Mllzlann tors during the fall and winter
992-6617
gressman Clarence Miller's office Friend, Emma Hall, Goldie will be unchanged from year-ago ·
·
:il4
EAST MAIN
Hundley,
Edith
Juhasz,
Regina
levels, and . the · rest generally
will be in Pomeroy Wednesday 10
POMEIOY,
OHIO
Justice,
Mary
Kline,
Kayla
look for a stronger demand.
conduct an open door session from
PLEASANT
HOSPITAL
McGuire,
Denver
Nelson,
Unda
Nearly three-fourths of the
ll a.m. 10 I p.m. at the Court
.... Tlte faml~.,/ ,.,-u~ona&amp;
House. Anyone with questions con· Rhodes, Sandra Rlppeth and bankers expect values to remain
C 5 I I
ccrning the Federal Government is Mrs. Jamie Wolfe and daughter. steady through the end of the
Births
for
Nov.
12
Mr.
and
spician~sal'lftca Products
Valey Drive, Point.Plealanl, W.Va. 25550
year, 24 percent think they will
invited to stop by and discuss them
Mrs. Kelly Hocker, ·a ·son, Pt. · continue to trend upward and the.
. . · Fa~ Sptelll Ptoplt
with the representaliv~;
Pleasant.
·
.

Ohio Lottery
Major Hoople's

Pick-3: 970
Pick-4: 4777
Cants: K·H;
9-C; K~D; K-S

Page 5

•

Vol.41 , No.146
Copyrighted 1190

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Senti!lel news starr
Due to lhe failure of lhe 1.5 mill
levy the Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities has voted un·
animously to close the agency in·
Sept 1991.
While taking the action 10 close
the agency at a meeting Monday
night, the Board also instructed

Supt. Lee Wedemeyer to meet with
the. Meigs Cotlnty Commissioners
this afternoon (Wednesday) to request that a 1.5 mill levy be placed
before voters again in early 1991 in
a special election.
However, Supt Wedemeyer said,
even if the issue is passed in a specia! election, it will not change the
decision to close the facility since
1991 revenues are already set, and

the money from a new levy would
not come in until 1992.
.The projected 1991 balance defi·
cit was set at $270,000. The levy
would have generated $315,000. It
failed for a third time lhis month.
According to the action taken by
the board, as Wedemeyec ex·
pJained, progr3ms for pre-school
and school aged children as wen as
the · adult workshop would cease

~~~--------------------~~--~
...

•

·. How passage of the five mill
emergency operating levy will af.
feet operation of the Eastern Local
School District was discussed at
length by Supt. Richard D. Smith at
a meeting of the' Board of Education Tuesday night
Smilh stilted that passage of the
levy which will generate. $1,54;6~9
a year ·means that the distnct w1ll
not ·have to borrow "as much" at
the end of the fiscal year. He we':lt
on to explain that in effect this
means that the district will be ap·
plying the proceeds from ..the l~vy
to "reduce the amount wh1ch
would have had to be borrowed in

-Area deaths----

Midwest fannland
values edge higher

Stocks

Hospital news

,,.,.,
...
,
.
.
"
...."••,.h,.. ,....

--Local briefs---""""'

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

Squads receive seven cy:rlls

"··•-•..

·-------------------Randall F. Hawkins, M. D.

_......

· ------~
. ------------.

·-~

RJI.I

VALLEY

.

.1!1.-_

'
when the agency is cfosed
in Sept. decision to make. We fully realize
1991.
lhe impact of our action on the enOnly · the legally mandated rollees and lheir families as well.as
positions of superintendent and lhe staff."
Supt. Wedemeyer told the 40
case management services would
be mainlltined with minimum sup- staff and family members in atten·
port in clerical and business dance that he is committed 10 do
operations.
what is necessllry to organize lhe
John Lentis, viGe president of the "leadership of the community 10
board, in commenting on the action . provide the . funds required 10
said, "This is an exttemely difficult operate the agency based on client ·

By Charlene Hoeflich

Lottery nUmbers

•

'

•
ID

1991

service needs."
11
. !0 the meantime," he said, "we
cannot compromise lhose services
at lhe jeopardy of client safety. On
current projected revenue that can
only be done through September of
the comipg year."
In talking with the superintendent Wednesday morning, he said
that it was the board's feeling that
Continued on page 6

Eastern board discusses haw
money will be spent in future

Cleveland offers paper $15.9 million

Weather

2 Section~:. 16 Paget
.
A Multimedia Inc . New.pap•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. November 14, 1990

MRDD Board votes to ·close agency

Chillicothe ...

;

•

at

Consul tants
· ...

Clear tonight. Low In mid
40s. Thursday, high near 70.

lhe future. He emphasized that the
levy does not solve all of the financial difficulties of the district. He
expressed his appreciation to the
board and others who worked and
supported the levy.
,
Arepon was given· on the recent
state competition of the Eastern
band and the superior rating
received with Supt. Smith extending his congratulations.
The Thursday night fall athletic
sports banquet at Eastern was announced for 6:30 p.m. as were
parent-teacher conferences to be
held in the district on Nov. 20-21.
Board members, diseussed the
upcoming eligibility for buildil)g
assistance from the State Depart·
. ment of Edcuation and approved a

second reading to amend the Staff
Conflict of Inlerest policy.
Mark Ullman was accepted as a
volunteer boys basketball junior
high assistant coach for the 199091 school year, and the resignation
of Jeanette Radford as substitute
cook was accepted effective
retroactive 10 Oct. 10.
The transfer of $6,900 from the
general fund 10 the unifoim supply
fund was approved and will be used
to pay for .workbooks' until fees can
be collected from the students.
Next meeting was set for Dei:. 12
at 6:30 at the high school cafeteria.
Attending were Ray Karr, president: Charles Knight, vice presi·
dent; and mem~. Bill Hannum, I.
0. McCoy, and Jim Smith.

Dr. Robinson nominated to
head Meigs Chamber in 1991
Of

ACCUSED MUI!.DEREk • John..Causey, far
left, was Ilound over to tbe Meigs County Grand
Jury at his preliminary hearing before Meigs
County Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien on
Tuesday morning. He is accused or shooting and

killing his next-door neighbor Edmund Shamp
on October 27 near Reedsville. · Meigs County
Public Defender Charles H. Knight is pictured at
right. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)

At Causey hearing Tuesday

Judge ·O'Brien denies motion
to dismiss · charge ·oj murder
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
A motion to dismiss the murder
charge against ·a Reedsville man
was denied ori · TUesday morning,
and John Causey's case was !Jound
over to the Meigs County Grand
Jury.
Causey appeared before Meigs
County Court Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien for
a preliminary
"probable cause" hearing.
.
Causey, who resides at Coolville .
Road, ·is accused of the shooting
dcalh of his neighbor, Edmund
Shamp, fo~owing an apparent
domestic diSpute on October 27.
Shamp was pronounced dead at
the scene by Meigs County
Coroner .Douglas Hunter.
At Tuesday's hearing, Assistant
· Prosecuting Attorney Linda R.
Warner testified that she was at !he
Meigs County Sheriff's Department

on the night of !he 27th wheri the
shooting was reported. Warner said
that when she arrived at 'the scene,
she found Shamp's body on the
front porch of the Causey residence
in a pool of blood.
.
Wartier also stated thilt she was
also present at the sheriff's office
when the defendant was adminis.
tered his rights and gave his first
statement 10 authorities.
Causey, according to Warner,
"readily admitted that he shot Mr.
Shamp" i'n the face, lllld stated that
he killed him with a .20 gauge
shotgun.
Warner said that, according to
Causey, Shamp came to the front
door of the Causey residence, car·
rying a can of beer, in an auempt to
speak to Causey about a squabble
between Causey's granchi\d and
another child in the community.
According 10 Warner, Causey stal.t''

Local ·briefs _ ___,. _. .""""'
Bates trial re$Umes today

·that Shamp said, "Come on out,
. John, and we'll see who's the better
man."
Causey fOld authorities that he
told Shamp to leave and then
closed the door of the residence.
Shamp allegedly put his foot in
the doot and Causey told' him that
if he didn't leave he would "blow
his (Shamp's) (expletive) brains
out"
According to Warner, ~ausey
told officials that that is when he
shot Shamp.
· Shamp's widow, Christina, told a
different story at the hearing
yesterday, staling that she viewed
the incident from a distance and
heard her husband call Causey's
name and say, '.'John, you had bet·
ter come· and see what (your
grandson) did to this girl." '
Christina Shamp then said that
she heard a gunshot and saw her
husband fall to lhe floor of the
porch.
When · aSked
about
the
relationship between tile children,
· Christina Shamp said yesterday that
there had been a "running baide"
. for the two weeks prior 10 the
shooting.

An Ohio· man accused in the shooting of a Putnam sheriff's
deputy will h;lve his trial in Wheeling instead of Winfield, a. circuit
judge ruled, according to the Herald Dispatch IOday.
The defense asked that the trial of Robert Bates of Gallipolis, be
According to her, Causey had
moved from Putnam County Circttit Court, saying publicity over the
threatened
several people in the
dealh of Deputy John Janey made ll fair trail impossible.
•
days
prior
to
the incident.
Putnam County Circuit Judge ClarenCe Watt agreed Oct 25 10
·
"Get
out
of
my yard," Causey
· move the trial. He said last week it would be held in Oh.io County •
reportedly
·
IOid
several of his
Circuit Court in Wheeling. ·
neighbors,
"I
told
you
I'm going to
Jury selection already had begun when Wan decided tO move" !he
kill
every
(expletive)
one
of you."
trial. It will begin again Wednesday in Wheeling, court officials said.
Knight's
oral
Public
Defender
. Bates is charged with first-degree murder in Janey's August 1989
.motion for dismissal of the case
death.
was based upon what he termed
ProsecutOrs allege that Raymond Huck of Hurrican hired Bates
"failure
·on the part of the state to
and Robert Gray .of Gallipolis to bum his house so he could collect
prove
death."
the insurance.
..
'"\..
Story stated that the probable
cause was proven in the case, stat·
ing that Shamp's body was "more
Four deer accidents .have been investigated by the Meigs County
than probable cause."
Sheriff's Department
.
Judge O'Brien denied Knight's
Tbe first report was received on Monday at 5:10 p.m. on County
motion; and due to the court's in·
Road I near State Route · 124. Jack Peterson of Rutland was · ability to preside over felony mat·
southbound in .a 1986 Escort when he struck and killed a deer that
ters except to set bond, bound the .
ran into the path of his car.
·
case to the grand jury.
Moderate damage is reported to !he front end of the vehicle.
to Story, secret grand
On Monday evening at 6:30 p.m., Carol A. Russell was
jury pniCecWtgs in Causey's case
southbound on Slate Roure 143 when she struck and killed a deer
are expecle!' to take place on ·
Continued on page 6
Thursday. .
.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Individuals nominated as officers
were. announced at November's
regular meeting of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce,
held Tuesday at Overbrook Center
in Middlepon.
Tom R~. who presided over
the chamber's nominating commit·
tee, announced that Dr. Nick
Robinson of Middleport has been
nominated to take over the
presidency of the chamber in
January.
,
Charles Kitchen · has been
nominated to fill the position of
vice president, and Dick Owen
received a nomination to continue
as chamber treasurer.
Election of officers will take
place when the chamber meets in
December.
'
Reed also reponed that the
nominating committee was in the
process of recruiting members in
the outlying areas in the .county,

and urged members 10 consider
possiblities for getting representa·
lion on the chamber from lhose
. areas:
The field of applicants for the
chamber's
executive
·direc·
· tor/development director position
has _been narrowc:d down to. eight
applicants, according ~o the director
search comm1nee chamnan, Lenny
Eliason.
.
Eliason told the chamber that ~
interView process should be genmg
underway in the ~ys ahead, and
!)fat the comm1.ttee IS now attempt·
mg to deiM!Ime !loth ~119: requiremcnts and salary availa~1hty.
That search has been ongo~ng (or
several months, and according 10
Eliason, the process of obtaining
financial suppon from villages in
the county is still ongoing.
"A huge, huge success from all
angles" is how Chamber President
Bruce Reed described last month's
Big Bend Stemwheelcrs Festival,
crediting J•m and Donna Dav1s

wilh much of lhe success.
The American Stemwheelers As·
sociation, whose members were
owners of the stemwheelers docked
during the festival , are looking
forwaxl to next year, according to
Reed . .
The chamber agreed yesterday to
_continue supporting lhe festival,
and set a rcntative date of October
12for the festival in 1991.
Mary Powell, of the Pomeroy
Sesquicentennial
Commlttoe,
which co-sponsored the event with
the chamber lhis year, reported that
25-30 boats are expected to be at
next year's event.
·
President Reed also reported that
the Ohio Department ofTransporta·
tion would hold a meeting with
officials regarding the PomeroyMason Bridge feasability study in
the weeks ahead.
Reed said that he had been in
contact with ODOT officials, and
urged those present at the meetirig
to participate in the meeting.

Blame deer on four accidents

Al:cordint

NEW MOTEL UNDER CONSTRUCTION Groundbnaldnl waa held Tuead_, for tbe new
·Muon Motel. The 24-lld faeiHty, aclleduled to be
opea by.lan.l,
llloeated beside FasU·U and will
.
'

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employ appnxlmately alx people. Sllown are
(L-R) Fraak Herald, bolel owaer: Masoa M.,or
Aguea Rouah and Charles (Fritz) Sayre, contractor. (OVP photo by Michele Carter)

.,

�Wednesday, November. 14, 1990

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel u. s. mum aboUt Vanished man

Tucker's late ·trey gives Knicks 116-110 win over Sonics

Page-·2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepoft, Ohio
Wednesda.y. ~oveniller 1~. 1990

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

· ~m~
"'~

r"T"'\......."-...,.... ,...,.-Ee d·~

~v
.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The Un ited Press International, Inland Dally Press
Ass'o ctatton and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sho.uld be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and tei&lt;P.hone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personali·
ties.

WASHINGTON - When his
father vanished In Uganda In ·
1971, Ted Siedle. who was 17
years old at the time, had no idea
that nearly two decades would
pass and he still would not know
for sure h()w, or even if, his father
had died. Today the U.S. govern- ·
ment refuses to tell Siedle the
truth.
Robert L. Siedle was a 46-yearold ~ociologlst who, In 1971, was
lecturing In Uganda at Makerere
University. He had three sons
and an es !ranged wife back in the
United States. In Africa he had
befriended an American frE!e-'
lance journali,st, Nicholas Stroh,
who worked for several U.S.
newspapers.

.:a~rs
ON!!

Tunnoil in House
GOP leadership

.

.

Whatever happens in ·those and other leadership races wiU
undoubtedly affect the decisions that a~e made in two years from
now, when Michel's reiJlacement is chosen .
Members of both parties . will gather at the Capitol in early
December to organize for the 102nd Congress that convenes in
January and hold their leadership elections. The Democrats • meeting
likely will uneventful, but the Republicans- now and for some time
to come -offer the promis~ of exciting political tl;leater.

Letters to

th~

a

I

By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The leadership of' the House Democrats
a nd Republicans is becoming a study in contrasts as the GOP
thrashes about looking for the right combination and the Democrats
enjoy a period of calm and stAbility.
.
It was just. last year when the ranks of the Democratic leadership
were decimated by the scandal-driven resignations of House Speaker
Jim Wright, of Texas, a·nd Rep. Tony Coelho, D-Calif., the No. 3
Democratic leadl:f· Now, Speaker Thomas Foley , D-Wash., a nd his
leadership team, appear set tied in for a long run.
On the GOP side, however, changes are in the· works, and even if
they do nol materialize .. the par ty will suffer through a period of
Intense self-scrutiny and reevaluation.
Part of the turmoil involves the House Republicans ' campaign
committee and its co-chairmen, Rep. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Mich., and
Ed Rollins. Vander Jagt has been the unchallenged leader of the
committee.for 15 yea,rs and it came as a bitter surprise to hlm last
week when Rep. Don Sundquist, R-Tenn., stood up to challenge him
for the post.
Vander Jagt, in meetings with reporters, angrily assailed
Sundquist for having the nerve to run against him, even going so far
as to compare ~he move to Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's betrayal.
Go-chair RollJ~s was already in hot water because of his suggestion
that GOP congressional candidates seek safety by running against
President Bush and. his endorsement of a budget package that
included higher taxes. Bush was not pleased by that idea and
appeared to want Rollins fired .
·
Neither Vander Jagt nor Rolllns have a lot to brag about as a result
of the election, in which the GOP lost ground to the Democrats and
wlll be even a smaller minority in the new Congress.
By contrast, the chairmanship of the Democrats' campaign
commlltee, IS gomg to Rep. Vic Fazio, D-Calif., who had to be
persuaded by other leaders to take over the post from Rep. Beryl
Anthony, D-Ark., who wants to step down .
The campaign posts will be particularly important. lo both parties
because .the next election in 1992 wlll involve new congressional
districts that will · be redrawn based on the· new census figures.
Opportunltes for big gains or big losses confront both parties in that
situation.
·• -·
· .
·
Elsewhere in the·leadership, tl)e future of Rep. Newt Gingx:ich, of
Georgia, the conservative No. 2 leader. was cast into doubt because of
his .surprise near-defeat in last week's election. His colleagues are
sure to ask if Gingrich should stand as a party leader when the voters
back in his home district are so split on whether he should even
remain in Congress.
·
It is widely believed that House Republican leader Bob Michel of
Dlinois, plans to retire after 1992, and Gingrich has his eyes on the iop
post. But so do others, Including moderate Rep. Jerry Lewis, RCalj!. , currently chairman of the Republican Conference.
Gi ngx:lch, in an apparent move to undermine Lewis, has reportedly
been urging another colleague to run against Lewis for the conference
post. So far, no one has annou1;1ced plans to ~ hallenge Gingrich for his
j~.

On Jul)( 7, 1971, Stroh and priest," th'e Inscription read, for
Sledle set out for Mbarara, emergencies. It Is 11nllkely that
Uganda. Stroh was looking into his killers obliged.
reports that there had been a
Sledle had stayed behind at the
massacre at the Simba Barracks hotel that day, until a car called
of the Ugandan army. Stedle was tor him at the hotel. T\lree
writing book about m!sstop.ar· Africans dressed In the shir!S of
ies and thought he might tag.'· Uganda's special forC!!S ushel1!d
along with Stroh and do some him Into the back seat and drove
research:
away. Neither man was heard
They spent two days in Mbar- ,from again.
·
ara, andonthEf morningofJuly9,
Idl Amin, the brutal Ugandan
Stroh set au f for the Simba dictator, ordered an investigaBartacks on his own In a beat-up lion, more out of obligation .that
blue Volkswagen. There was a · curiosity. Nearly a year later,
sign In thewlndowthatidentifled investigators found Stroh's
him as " Press" and a cross burned-out car outside oflown at
around his neck that identified the bottom of a ravine. A former
him as Catl&gt;nltc. "Please call a lieutenant in the Ugandan army

•

editor

History and today
Dear Editor: .
available and they were used. A
l;'robably one of the biggest ·ship' was available that was
land battles in all of history is rigged so it would blow up and klll
shaping up in the near east.
every thing within a mile. New
In · 151!8 the greatest naval long range brass cannons were
ba!tle known, up to that time, ·used. Men were pressed · Into
took place between England and service and the suffering and
Spain. The battle was between death in the after math · was
thEt Spanish Armada and the great. The principal English
English fleet . Most of the fighting leader was Elizabeth I and King
wa, in and near the English , Philip of Spain.
.
Channel. Sir Francis Drake is
The Armada was considered
remem.bered as one Of the Invincible in that day. The battle
principal English admirals. ·
settled very little in that day and·
~long and expensive preparaage . . The world took peculiar
tion took place on both sides turns as time went on.
betore the battlE'. Each side had
These th lngs can be read in a
da~gling alliances on both sides
1959 best seller - ·"The Defeat of
that blew both hot and cold. Each the Spanish Armada'' . This bit of
sld!! believed that God was on history is very Interesting in the
their side. England was protest- light ofthe world's events in our
ant. Spain was catholic.
own time.
!'jew w~11pons ~~ terror were
Gayle Price'

Today in history
By United Preas International
Today is Wednesday, Nov. 14, the 318th day of 1990 with 47 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward lts,~ew phase.
':!;he morning stars are Mars and Juplte,r ..
'l:he evening stars are Mercury and Venus.
1
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They include
Robert Fulton, AmeriCan 'inventor of t.he steamboat. In 1765; French
Impressionist painter Claude Monet ln 1840; Indian statesman
Jawaharl~l Nehru In 1889; Mamie Doud Eisenhower, wife of
President Dwight E;tsenhower, in 1896; Amertcan composer Aaron
Copland In 1900 (age 90) ; actor Dick Powell In 1904; Sen. Joseph
McCarthy of Wisconsin In 1908; actor Brian Keith In 1921 (age 69);
astrOnaUt Edward White, killed In a 1967launchpad fire, in 1930; King
Hussein of 'Jordan in 1935 (age 55); and Prince C!tarl(';s, heir to the
British throne, In 1948 (age 42).
On this date In history:
In 1832, the first horse-drawn streetcar made Its appearance in New
· York City. ..
.
.

,,

..

..

'~

~

Jack Anderson_

came forward with a story. He
said he saw Stroh arrive ·at the
Slmba Barracks and saw him
being ted "away at gunpoint Jjy '
soldiers. The lieutenant was then
ordered to "destroy everything."
He. bunied the Volkswagen and
th"n went with another soldier to
a spot 10 miles out of Mbarara
where they found the c·h arred
remains of two bodies, poured
gasoline on them, burned them
again and scattered the ashes In
ta river.
Idi Am in decided the Investigation had gone far enough. He said
the two men had died ''at the
hands of unidentified persons, "
and closed the case. But that
wasn't good enough for their
families. They pressed their own
government for answers and got
none.
Today, Ted Siedle, now 36 and
the president of a securities
company in Providence, R.I.,
knows a little bit. more. But he
didn't get it through official
channels.
Since then, ,Siedle has pieced
together more details, including
the fact that his father met with a
known CIA officer the night
before he and Stroh set out for
Mbarara.
In 1982, Stedle filed a formal
request with the State Depart·
ment under the Freedom of
Information Act. He wanted the
file on his father. The department gave him a few documents
with much of the· information ·
blacked out because it was
classified.
.
Siedle isn't angry anymore.
"At this point, I'd just like to
know the truth," he told our
associate Tim Warner. "If people like my father are encour·
aged by the CIA to engage ill
amateur investigations, the CIA
and the government should be
accountable for what happens to

'

·

Robert Walters

Berry's World

I

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~

·~

~90byN£A II'IC

LIVING DANGEROUSLY
. '
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categorizes the events of the last
week as "10 times more hectic
than anything else I've gone
through."
Usually, one of the primary
functions of bowl games is to
generate positive publicity for Its
community. Instead, the Fiesta
Bowl tinds itself In tile rare
position of · trying to foster
goodwill despite the actions of its
community.
. And that 's unfortunate, because the Fiesta Bowl Is being
judged strictly on its location and
not Its actions. The organization
has ~hown no track record of
insensitivity to minority issues.
The Fiesta Bowl was the first
bowl game to have a black
member on Its board of directors
and remains the only one to have
appointed a black president. In
addition, the Fiesta Bowl was the·
first bowl to have a: woman board
member.
Fiesta Bowl employees get a
day off on the federal Martin
Luther King holiday,. as do city
employees In both Phoenix and
suburban Tempe, where the
game is played. Arizona State
University, which owns Sun
Devil Stadium, also celebrates
King Day.
No matter. Public reaction to
voter rejection of a state King
Day has been so heated that it
nearly chased the Fiesta Bowl
out of its ciwn state to save itself.
If not for a series of rulings
over the weekend by the NCAA,
the FiestA Bowl could have been
in the process today of temporarIly set tlng up shop In San Diego.
It was an option bowl officials
considered as a last resort, but

OSU
beats Latvians 111-89
.

more about the first synthetic
_;___~-:--.:..::..;_.:__:_
fiber to threaten Its monopoly In
. ani! excels in NIJ tests where
the market.
Spectra, a Kevlar competitor Kevlar performs poorly. "With·
initially produced In 1988 by New out a doubt, Spectra has better
Jersey-based Allied-Signal. is ballistic characteristics than
stiffer less comfortable and Kevlar," says Capt. John Cerar
substa'nttally · more expensive of the New York Pollee Depart·
ment, the nation's largest local
than Kevlar.
law enforcement agency.
But It also is tougher, lighter
·
'

..

"We lost that 10-point lead
quickly and really put ourselves
in a hole," Seattle head coach
K.C..Jones said. "That's a tough
position to come ·back from. We
got caught standing and that's
something we have to work on.''
In .other NBA games, Milwaukee routed Boston 119-91, Golden
State outscored San Antonio
128-124, Houston nipped Mlnne·
sola 90-88, Orlando topped Dallas
109-103, Philadelphia defeated
Indiana 108-100, Detroit blasted
Miami 118-93, Cleveland beat
Atlanta · 121-104, Portland out-

.

By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
The Fiesta Bowl spent 20 years
working to take its place among
the elite college football bowls. It
will spend a good many more
months trying to keep those.gains
from unraveling.
·
The bowl that went from
neophyte to .national:
championship caliber in just 17
years now finds itself trying to
maintain its credlbll1ty against a
flrestorm of reaction over a
political fumble of which . it had
no control.
For whatever reason,
members of the sports community have taken it upon themselves
to punish Arizona for Its rejection
last week or two proposals to
create a state holiday honoring
MartinLutherKing Jr. Butin the
process, it is dragging undeserving victims through the mud.
"When we started out with the
game, we knew it would not be
easy. The bowl grew because of
our hard work and dedication,"
said Don Meyers, head of the
Fiesta Bowl's team selection
committee. "When we put to·
gether our first national championship game between Penn
State and Miami in 1986, I
negotiated that and it was one of
the toughest I've ever gone
through. Now we have (a sltua·
!ion) . with political ramifications, and it has been as difficult
as any .~~
Meyers has been with the
Fiesta Bowl since 'i ts inception.
He was one of the founders and
has negotiated every television
and radio contract involving the
game during that time. But he

New rules target bulletproof vests ·
·

quart~rs .

gunned Denver 155-129, Charlotte
downed Washington 120-105, Chi· ·
cago clipped Utah 84-82 and
Phoenix ' outlasted the Los An·
geles Lakers 112-111.
·
Bucks 119, Celtlcs in - At
Milwaukee, Alvin RobertSon
scored· his lOth career triple·
double and Jack Slkma added 21
points, leading the Bucks. Ro-·
bertson scored 15 points, pulled
down 10 rebounds and had 11
assists. Boston's Larry Bird was
held to five points.
Warriors 1:18, Spurs lU ...,. At
Oaklan(\, Call!. , Mitch Richmond
scored 31 points and ChriS Mullin
keyed a surge late lit the fourth
quarter. Mullin hit two jumpers.·
and stole the ball to spark a 7-0
run that gave Golden State a
123-113 lead. The Spurs had used
a 12-.J run to puu within 116·113
with 3:29 left.
,
Rockets 90, Tlmberwolves 88A.t Houston, David Wood scored
15 points, including"a layup with
23 seconds left that gave the
Rockets the lead: Houstonphiyed
without leading SCOI1!r and rebounder Akeem Ola"juwon, who ·
has a sprained left ankle. Tyrone
Corbin led Minnesota with 19
points and Tony Campbell had 15,
10 below his average.
Magic 109, Mavericks 103 7 At
Orlando, Fla., Terry Catledge
scored 30 points and Nick Ander·

Fiesta ~wl trying to keep
hard-fought national prestige

for polishing a fellow student's names of Maynard, Sullivan,
plane.
Fletcher and Martin. He learns
"Don't believe what your eyes
He quit college to join the Air to transport himself by thought are telling you. All they show you
Force and won his wingS as a . alone and to '"fly as fast as is limitation. Look with your
fighter .pUot. He wrote three . thought to anywhere that Is."
understanding of what you really
books on flying but the royalties
He returns to the flock that are. You are an image of the
were not enough to live on. He ostracized him and instructs a
Great Gull."
was wondering how to pay the band of disciples to teach .the
The .whole object of l)fe, we
rent when he took a walk one secret to the otl)er gulls.
learn in "Jonathan Livingston
night in 1959. ·
After Bach transcribed the Seagull," is to prove this divinity
A vision came to him as If on a entire story - in a mere three - to make it visible, to have it
motion picture screen telling the and a half hours- it amounted to
produce results.
story of a maverick seagull who only 10,000 words. In ·book form.it
"You. know nothing till you
loved flying for its own sake, not fills only 40' pages of text.
prove it ," Jonathan tells Martin
just to scrounge for food. His
But you will understand the Gull. In the words of the Elder
fellow gulls found him strange book only if you read it In the llght
Gull, we prove we are creatures
and ostracized him.
of two passages in particular in
of excellence by first realizing
There the story ended. Bach which Bach's Christian Science
that the perfection we are looking
wrote It down and forgot it until background comes out:
for Is right now within us.
eight years later when, early one
'"Your whole body from wingDoes it sound like something
morning, the tnotion-&lt;i::p!cture tip to wingtip,' Jonathan would
Jesus once said? "The Kingdom
began unreeling again. This time say, 'Is nothing more than your of God is within you." "Believe
Jonathan is ina realm transcend· thought itself in a form you can
that you (already) have and you
lng time and space where he see. Break the chains of your . shall have" (that Is, what you
meets gulls with the unlikely thought and your break the believe shall come into outward
chains· of your body too." '
expression in your life).

WASHINGTON (NEA) -The
Promoting those alternative
nation's police officers are In the requiremen,ts is the Personal
unusual position of being inno- Protective Armor Association, a·
cent bystanders ca ught in the ~rade association whose
cross-fire resulting from sniping members are du Pont and Its
at the Justice Department by one Kevlar customers - with one
of the country's largest notable exception.
corporations.
Point Blank Body Armor, a
At issue is the selection of the charter member of PPAA and
best specialty .fabric to produce the world's largest producer of
"bullet-proof vests," "flak police and military protective
jackets" and other forms of body clothing, has resigned from the
armor that law enforcement and trade association In protest over .
military personnel rely upon as PPAA's refusal to accept the new
standards.
protection.
Delaware-based duPont, E.I.,
Du Pont says It "cannot
which in the early 1970s deve- support" the federal governloped Kevlar as the only texlle tnent's new standards "because
·capable of performing the task, the test method is flawed" and
has enjoyed a virtual monopoly prqduces "Inconsistent, unrelia·
of the $50 million per year market ble results'' .- allegations NIJ
throughout the past two decades. rejects.
'
.
Moreover, Point Blank Is not
In 1987, however, tough new
uniform standards for body ar· alone in Its criticism of self·
mor were promulgated for the serving, Industry-concocted
first time by the National Insti- standards. When members of
tute of JustiCe, a Justice Depart- both the House and Senate
ment agency that is the federal earlier this year introduced
government's principal sponsor legislation to make the NIJ'
of law enforcement research.
standards mandatory Instead of
· DuPont producesKevlar, then voluntary, their position was
sells It to smaller companies that endorsed by the country's major
fabricate body armor products law enforcement organizations.
from the aramtd fl!Jer. When NIJ
In a move that will almost
ie~tl?d tb0$1! vests, jackets and
certainly delay Implementation
other items under the new or that Initiative, Sen." Joseph R.
standards, more than twa;thlrds Blden recently requested that the
failed to pass.
Office of T~hnology Assess·
To protect police officers ment, a congressional agency,
against the automatic and semi- review the conflicting claims.
automatic weapons increasingly
Democrat Blden altered that
favored by criminals, the new proposal In his role as chairman
NIJ standards require that each of the Senate Judiciary Cnmmlt·
body armor panel withstand hits tee. But he also Is a senator !rom
by six Instead of' five rounds of Delaware a state whose
ammunition fired at a higher · economy Is dominated by du
velocity. In addition, the new Pont.
standards do. not allow degrada·
Indeed, there is reason to
tlon of protection If the body believe that duPont Is concerne(\
armor becomes wet.
less abqut the theoretical and

put the Sanies ahead 110-109 with
1:18 left. Wilkins then found
Tucker, who put the Kntcks
ahead 112-110.
Two free throws by Patrick
Ewing, who lead all scorers with
28 points, and a layln by Wilkins
closed the scoring.
Sed ale Threatt led Seattle wlt'h
24 points, while Payton had 19,
Xavier McDaniel17 and Derrick ·
McKey 16. ·
The SuperSonics rallied to send
the game into overtime, outscoring the Knicks 7-lln the flnal2: 17
to tie the score, 104-104.
Seattle led by 10 points during
much of the third quarter,
including an 85-75lead with 1:49
remaining. ButtheKnlcksclosed ·
the gap to 87-85 after three

..
..

In Wake of King vote,

them."

""'

w

By United Press lt~ternational
Gerald Wilkins drives the
middle, draws a double team and
then fires back toTrentTuckerlurking behind .the three-point
line. The two veteran New York
guards used the play to help the
Knicks remain undefeated on
their West Cnast trip.
Wilkins passed to Tucker,
whose three-pointer with 57 se. conds le.ft In overtime Tuesday
night put the Knlcks ahead for
· good ln.a 116-llOtriumphover the
Seattle SuperSonics .
"Gerald's a great penetrator
and 'when he goes to the hoop aild
draws people, he knows where I
am and he kicks It back out for
- the easy shot," said Tucker, who
had 17 points, including three
three-pointers. ''I do the same for
him, but I had the shot tonight
and he found me. "
The Kn leks improved to 3-0 on
the West Cnast trip. It was their
first victory in Seattle since Feb.
.S, 1985 - losing five straight.
Wilkins added 22 points.
"This was one more piece to a
good road trip," Knicks head
coach Stu Jackson said. "We
should have won in regulation,
but we made a couple of
turnovers and they cashed ln.
But In the overtime, our guys
rei!lly went after it."
Gary Payton hit a 10-footer to

Christian thought
lights
classic
book
·.
George Plagenz
How would you like to have to
own up to the fact that you were
the redismissed "Jonathan Livingston Seagull" as a " a mite too
icky poo" when the book came
out In 1970?
Or admit that you' were the
editor at Harper · &amp; Row who
rejected the manuscript before
Macmillan accepted it?
Twenty years later , Richard
Bach's delightful allegory of a
seagull who employs the tech·
nlques of mind over matter to tap
a gull's unrealized potential is in
its 40th printing. After an initial
r un of only 7,500, more than ·30
mUlion copies have been sold.
Macmillan is marking the
event with a special 20th anniversa ry edition.
Bach, who is now 54, has
always had a passion for flying.
While attending Long Beach
State College in California, he
received flying lessons in return

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI1 Perry Carter scored 26 points
and five other Ohio State players
reached double figures as the
Buckeyes rolled to a 111-89 win
over the Latvian National Team
Tuesday night in an exhibition·
game.
Jim Jackson added 17 points,
Jamaal Brown 13. Chris Jent 12
and Mark Baker and Jamie ·
Skelton 11 each for Ohio Stale,
ranked No. 11 in the UPI Board of
Coaches pre-season ratings.
The loss snapped a three-game
winning streak for the tourlng
Latvians, dropping them to 3-4
with another _game Wednesday
night against Michigan· ·a t Ann
Arbor. ·
cOhlo State never trailed after
Carter put the Buckeyes up 9-7
with 17:51 left in the first half.
A 9-0 run made It 23-13and Ohio
State's biggest lead of the first
half, 44-27, came with six minutes
remaining.
The Latvians, led by Karlls
Muiznleks with 28 points . and
Andrejs Bondarenko . with 23,
kept the game within reach for
'much of the sel'ond half with ·
their sharp passing .and outside
shooting. Ohio State led just 7~-69
with 12: 30 left In the game.
But from that point on, the
Buckeyes began stretching the
lead and took their biggest
margin at 107· 79 on a basket by
Bill Robinson with 4: 30 to play.
"For the most part, I'm
pleased with our effort, but I'm a
little concerned with our half·
eourt ~efe~tse." said Ohio State
head coach Randy Ayers. "We
got involved ln.soome situations
· where we didn't adjust too welL

We'll also have to improve on our
hillfcourt offensive execution.
We'll face a lot tougher defenses
than this. "
·
· Ayers used all i4 players on his
squad and 11 of them broke Into
the scoring column.
"We wanted to see a lot of
combinations," said Ayers.
' 'You notice we played 10 players
in the first half alone."
Ayers said he thought the
Buckeyes wore the Latvians
down In the second half.
'•i thought they were a very
good offensive ball club," he said
of the Latvians. "They move by
passing the bail very well."
Latvian head coach Malgonis
ValdmaniS, through an lnterpre·
ter ; called Ohio State "a very
pt)werful team.
" Even the select group from
the Soviet national team would
have difficulty playing Ohio
State," he added.
~hio State takes on' Athletes in
Action next Monday before open·
ing their regular season Sunday,.
Nov .· 25• against Bethune
Cookman.
·
.R. .. ,
.
o

~

-. .

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

'

v

'

''

even the possibility shows how
desperate the situation might
have become.
"Politics have no place in
sports, at the Collegiate or any
other level," Meyers said. "It's
unfortunate that the NFL got Its'
nose into the matter."
·
The NFL deserves a gaol
· chunk of the blame for this. The
King Day · measures appeared
hea'ded for approval until Com·
missioner Paul T.agliabue went
on ·n ational television two days
before the election and threatened to strip the Phoenix area of
the 1993 Super Bowl If the hollday
was not established.
To their credit, Fiesta Bowl
offlcials ·have decided to stay put
and fight the negative
perceptions.
"The Fiesta Bowl has become
one of this nation's top football
bowl games because of the
support of Arizona and its people," bowl president Larry Gunning said Sunday. "(It) has been
an Arizona tradition for 20 years.
Despite the challenges we've
faced, we plan to Invite the best
teams available to us and at·
tempt our game In·Tempe." .
The committee faces a long
road In (rylng to turn around its
.public ID:~age. However, It seems
willing to accept the responslbil·
ity for setting an example for the
rest of the state.
"We shouldn't be a victim of
what's happening and In the long
run, I don't think we will be,"
Meyers said. "We're going to
turn it Into a positive
experience. •'
That .includes a halftime show
devoted to King and civil rights
and the creation of a scholarship
fund for minority students at
each of the participating schools.
In addition, tl)e bowl wlll.create a
third scholarsh!il fund for minorIty students in Arizona.
"We think we can become a
catalyst .tor this In Arizona and
come· out with a positive civil·
rights statement," Meyers said.
In addition, bowl of!lcials have
been working behind the scenes
Sports briefs
at the state capitol in an attempt
to rally legislators to approve a
Basketball
King Day bill during Its upcom·
Dallas Ma\'erlcks forward Roy
ing special session.
Tarpley, who originally was
. That would bethequlckestway expected to miss no more than a
to settle ' the Issue. Until then, . month' with a knee injury, will be
Meyers expects the Fiesta Bowl lost for the entire season with a
to be the target of more blinds! de torn llgainent, doctors said Tueshits.
day. T~am physician Pat Evans
"We can't legislate. All we can discovered th'e extent of Tardo is try to help out," Meyers pley's Injury during artorost;:optc
said. "I'm ·a great believer In the surgery Tuesday .... Sacramento
democratic process of this coun- Kings Coach Dick MottA was
try. The voters voted, and they suspended for one game and
decided they did not want a paid fined $500 by the NBA for
Martin Luther King holiday.
bumping an official during Satur· "Until the appropriate action day night's game against the
is taken, this Issue Is not going to Knlcks.
leave us. Whether It Involves the
Fiesta Bowl, businesses locating
here or the Super Bowl, (the issue
SPHIN~ VALLEY CINEMA
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'·

blocked by Los Angeles' · center Vlade Divac • .
during first.period action Tuesday. (UPI)

son added 8 of his 18 In the final . City, Michael Jordan san!&lt; a
period for the Magic. Orlando, 20-foot jumper at the buzzer to lift
1·6, had set an NBA mark with its the Chicago to Its first victory In
16th straight regular-season Utah in two years. With 16
home loss Nov. 6. Dallas earlier seconds left. John Paxson passed
learned Roy Tarpley is out!or the to Jordan, who · fought off a
season with a torn knee ligament. double team and hit the jumper ·
Slxer!i 108, Pacers 100 - At to give Chicago its fourth straight
Indianapolis,. Charles Barkley victory.
" Suns 112, Lakers 111 - At
scored 23 points, 19 of them In the
second half, and Philadelphia . Inglewood, Call!., Kevin Johnson
b.eat Indiana for the ninth collected 24 points and 14 assists
straight time. Reggie Miller's and PhOenix escaped whim
three-point play put Indiana James Worthy missed a foul shOt
ahead 86-85 with 7:03 remaining,
but the Pacers did not score from
the field over the next five
DEE I
minutes.
SEASON
Pistons 118, Heal 93 - At
SPECIAL
Auburn Hi liS, Mich., Isiah Thomas scored 23 poin Is and Mark
Aguirre added 20, powering
Detroit. Miami committed 24
turnovers, which led to 29 Pis·
tons' poihts. Detroltled12-9when
HI-SHOK SLUGS
It went on a 19-lrun that provided
a 31-10 bulge.
Cavaliers 121, Hawkal04- At
AtlantA, Gerald Paddio scored 22 ·
points, while Larry Nance and
Brad Daugherty added 21 each to
help Cleveland win on the Hawks'
homecourt for the first time after
11 losses. Mark Price added 19
SPit
points and 13 assists for the
Cavaliers.
12 GAUGE, 23/4 IJICH
Blazers 155, Nug,ets 129 - At
HOLLOW POINT
Portland, Ore., Clyde Drexler
DEER SLUG
picked up the 13th triple-double
of his career, helping the Trail
Blazers leave Deniler winless
this season. Drexler scored 39
61 Vine St. 634 E. Main SJ•
points 10 go with 11 rebounds and
Galipolis
Pamtroy ·
12 assists. Portland, which raised
446-1276
992-5500
Its record to· 6-0, remained the
league's only undefeated team.
Hornets 1:10, Bullets 105 - At
Charlotte, N.C., Armon Gilllam
scored a franchise· record 39
points to lead the Hornets.
Gilliam shot 16 of 24 from the
floor and 7 of 8 from · the
free-throw line, coming within
two points of. tying his career
high. He also garnered 12 re·
bounds. Bernard King led Washington with 34 points.
Bulls~. Jazz 82- At Salt Lake

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with l.J seconds left. The Suns,' '
who dealt the Lakers their
earliest playoff exit since 1981 :· :
with a five-game upset In lase :
season's West semifinals, lm·
proved to 4-1 with their first' ·
regular-season triumph at the ··
Forum In 18 tries since AprU 1985.

The Daily $entinel
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through Friday, 111 Court St .. Po· '
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub- ·"

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Wednesday, November 14. 1990

Ohio

Bob Weleh claims AL Cy Young Award
By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Wrller
NEW YORK (UPI) - Bob
Welch of the Oakland Athletics, ' ·
whose 27 victories were the most
by an American Leaguer since
1968, Tuesday won the 1990.Al-CY..
Young Award by a wide margin.
Welch, now a free agent,
received 15 of 28 first-place votes
In voting by the Baseball Writers'
Association of America . He was
second on 10 other ballots and
third on two for a total of 107
points.
Roger Clemens of Boston, a Cy
Young Winner In 1986 and 1987,
finished second with 77 points
and eight flrst·place votes. Dave
Stewart, Welch's teammate, was
third (43 points, three first-place
votes) followed by Chicago rellever Bobby Thigpen (20 points,
two first-place votes). .
Oakland's Dennis Eckersley,
Toronto's Dave Stleband Cal !fornla ' s Chuck Finley also received
votes.
No pitcher was named on all
ballots by the panel of jwo
writers from each AL city.
Voting-was based on five points
for first place, three for second
and one for third.

The National LeagueCyYoung
finally broke through with a
winner will be . ann~unced today. career season. The Cy Young
Doug Drabek of Pittsburgh and
Award will only add to his value
Ramon Martinez of Los Angeles
on the market, where he should
be able to command $3 mUllan a
are the leading candidates.
season.
Welch was27-6fortheA 's, who
Welch refused to discuss his
were swept In four games by
plans, but Oakland manager
Cincinnati and failed In their bid
TOny La Russa·, speaking in
to win a second straight World
Worcester, Mass ., indicated the
Series. The right-hander, who did
pitcher might test his market
not lose consecutive decisions
value.
this year, became the first AL
"I think they (Welch's family)
pitcher to win more than 25
games since ·Denny McLain - are going test the waters to see
who wants him more, but I don't
notched 31 for Detroit In 1968.
think anyone's going to want him
Welch's great season came as
more than we do," La Russa
a bit of a surprise to those who
saw him struggle In spring said.
Welch, 34, posted successive
training. With that as back·
17-win
seasons after the A's
ground, We!clt had no trouble
pinpointing his key game of the obtained him from the Dodgers
in 1988. The Detroit native began
season.
"It had to be the first game of his big-league career In 1978 and,
the season," Welch said. "I had , at age 21, he provided the World
struggled In the s_prlng and the Series with one of its finer
first batter I faced (In the regular moments. He came on In relief in
season) hit a home run. I said to the ninth inning and struck out
myself 'I know It's got to get New York's Reggie Jackson to
better, but how quickly will it•• end Game 2 after Mr. October
The next thtee batters hit f!rs.t· repeatedly fouled off pitches in a
pitch outs and frol)'l there I seemingly endless at-bat.
But in 1980, Welch shocked
started gaining confidence."
baseball
by admitting he was an
A consistent winner throughalcoholic.
He spent five weeks in
out his 12-year career, Welch

an Arizona rehab!Utatlon center
and Iater·wrote a book about his
experiences.
In his time as a recovering
alcoholic, Weich has been a
model of consistency. Only hilice
since 1980 has he won less than 13
games. Despite his great success
this season,· Welch was still
considered Oakland's No. 2
pitcher behind Stewart. Welch,
however; has a Cy Young to his
credit, while Stewart does not
despite four straight . 20-w!n
seasons.
Stewart was one of nine
pitchers to throw a record nine
no-hitters In the mators last
season. Stieb also hurled a
no-hitter.
Clemens pitched the Red Sox to
the AL East title, but a shoulder
Injury limited him to one start
over tlte final weeks. He pitched
Games 1 and 4 of the playoffs
against Oakland. Clemens made
a spectacle of htroselfin the final
game of the playoffs when he was
ejected by umpire Terry Cooney.
Thigpen's 57 saves shattered
the previous mark of 46 set by
Dave Righetti of the Yankees in
1986.

Pro results
NATIONAL BASKETBALL AS-

SOC.

Eullern Conference
Atlantic DI-vision

Team

W L Pet. GB

New York ...... .. ...... ~ 2 .714' -

Bostoo .............. ...... · 4 2 .667 ~
Philadelphia .............. 3 3 .500 I ~
Miami .............. ....... 2 3 .40Q 2
Washington ............... 2 4 .333 2¥.!
New Jersey ... .. .......... .I 5 167 3Y.z
Central Division
Milwaukee ................. 5 1 .833 Atlanta ................ ... ... 4 2 6671
Det rolt.. .. ..................... 4 2 667 1
Chicago ....... ..... .. ......4 3 . 5711~
Cleveland ............... .4 3 5711 1h
Indiana ................ ....3 3 .500 2
Charlotte ................. 3 4 .429 2tn

Western Conference
,.

Team

Midwest Division
W L Pet. GB

Dallas ........... ..... .. ,A 2 .667San Antmio ............. 3 2 .600 ~
Houston . .. ......... .. ,. . 4 3 .571 ~
Minnesota ...... .......... 3 4 .4291 ~

Utah ..... ... ................ 23 .4001 ~
Orlando .. ............ ...... 1'6 .1433\1
Denver ..................... 0 7 .000 4 ~
Paelflc Division
Portland .................. 6 0 1.000-

Phoenix ....... ... ......... .41 .800 1%
Golden State
........ 52 .714 1 ~

Seattle ................... 3 2
LA Clippers ... .......... 2 4
t.A Lakers ....... ........ 1 4
Sacramento ......... . 0 5

.6002\1
.333 4
.200 41h

.000 5~

Tuesday Resldts

Charlotte 120, Was hlngt(l1105

Orlando 109, Dallas 103
Cleveland 121, Allanta 104
Detroit 118, Miam i 93
Philadelphia 108. Indi a na 100
Goftlen Stare 128, San Ant orlio 124
Milwaukee 119. Boston 91
Houston 90, Minnesota 88
· Chicago 84, Utah 82
New York 116, Srat tJ e 110. OT
Phren lx 112, LA Lakers 111

Portland 155, Denver 129
Wednesday Ga.m es
Charlotte a t Boston, 7. 30 p.m .
Milwaukee at N ~ J er9"y. 7:30
pm.
Atlanta

at Phlladelphl a , 7:30

p.m.

Dal las at Miami, 7: 30p .m
Indiana at Cleveland , 7:30 p.m
Ph(l!nix at LA Cllppers 1 10·30
pm.
Thursday Games
Utah at Orlando. 7: 30p .m .
LA Lakers a t Hou ston. 8: 30 p.rh
Minnesota' a1 Denver. 9. 30 p.m.
Chlcago at Golden State, 10. 30

p.m.

San An tooloat Sacrament o, 10. 30

p.m .

New York at PonJand, 10: 30 p.m.

Tuesday's scores
Women's CoUe&amp;e Basketball Score
By United Press International
Tiffin Unive r sJty 65, Malon e 48
Men's COUege Baskelball Score
Rlo G~ and e 91. Kentucky Chrostian
69
Urbana 135. Cinci nna ti Bible 90
Michigan AAU 98. Toledo 92

~

Wild ·turkey population
rising in Medina County
HINCKLEY, Ohio (UP!) Wild turkeys, nota common sight
In Ohio, can still be found in
Medina County.
The native wild turkey until
recently had been eliminated
from Ohio due to extensive
hunting and habitat destruction.
But work by the Ohio Division of
Wildlife has changed that.
In 1988 and 1989,24 wild turkeys
were released In the Cleveland
Metroparks Hinckley
Reservation.
Of that number, 11 birds were
initially monitored with radio
transmitters. One bird's trans·
mitter is stili !unctiqning, and it
continues to be tracked. Only one
known fatality has been reported; a bird was struck by a
car and· killed.
,
''In the two years since wild
turkeys have inhabited the park,
there have been approximately
30 sightings by visitors," said
John Kason, wildlife manager
for Cleveland Metroparks. "The
birds are somewhat secretive, I
suspect. and are active in areas
where human contact is
minimal."

upland game btrd in Ohio.
Body feath ers appear drab
brown !roll'\ a distan ce, but up
close they are an array of
Iridescent colors. Their large
brown tails with a black band at
the Up differentiates them from
domestic turkeys which have
white-tipped tall feathers .
Adult ma les, called gobblers .
have a reddish head, with a long
beard dangling from the breast.
black-tipped breast feathers and
spurs on the legs . Hens have a
bluish -IJead and buff-tipped
breast feather s.
The birds were forced out of
Ohio when their ra nge was
destroyed by increased lumber·
ing. farming and hunting. the
last wild turkey sigh ting oc·
curred in 1904, said the Ohio
Department of Natural Resour·
ces Division of Wildlife.
In 1952, the Ohio Division of
Wildlife began an unsuccessful
attempt to reintroduce the wild
turkey to Ohio.
The program failed because
the birds were raised in captivity
and unable to survive in the wild.
In 1960, the first wild· birds were
live-trapped and released in
Wild turkeys stand three to Ohio. This successful method
four !eel tall and weigh up to 24 first reintroduced the birds back
pounds, making them the largest · to Ohio.

ball we made three bad passes
lfnd it broke our concentration.
" Both teams played a little ·
ragged," he added, "but I feel
Rio Grande has some excellent
ballplayers. We were beaten by a
good club."
Rio Grande shot 40.6 percent
(35-86) from the floor to KC's 42.4
percent (28-66), and trailed KC
from the free throw line, posting
62.5 percent (10-16) to the
Knights' 83.3 percent (10-12). The
Redmen ted narrowly on rebounds, 37·33.
Individually, Harrison had 10
assists to his credit while center
Troy Donaldson led his teammates on rebounds with nine.
KC's Sudlow rivaled Donaldson
with nine boards .·
The Redmen , return to action
Friday at 9 p.m. against Summit
.Christian (Ind.) In the second
men 's game of the Bevo Francis
.Classic. The Knights (2·1 ) are at
Tiffin Thursday.
In other District 22 and MidOhio ~onterence games played
Tuesday, ·urbana defeated Cin·
cinnat! Bible, 135-90.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (91) - Gary
Harrison, 8·2-3·25; Mark Erslan,
4-5·1·24: Brad Schubert, 0-1·3·6:
Troy Donaldson, 2-2-6; Jeff
Brown, 4-1-0-11; Tim Chri~tian,
HARRISON SCORES- ~lo Grande guard Gary Harrlson (10)
2·1-5; Darius Williams, 3-1·0-9;
gets past Kentucky Christian guard Chad Leach (31) and goes
Terry Farley, 0·1·0-3; Jawanza
airbOrne lor two ol his game-high 25 points during Tuesday night's
· Childs,1·0·2. TOTALS24·1H0·91.
season opener at Lyne Center, which the Redmen won 91·69.
KENTUCKY CHRISTIAN (69)
- Eric Sudlow, 8-1·0·19; Aric
Russell, 4-0-8; Rodney Persin·
ger, 1-2-4; David Braun, 2-2-6:
'
Paul Melton, 1·2-4; Jeff Wise,
1-1-3; Chad Leach, 3·1·0-9; Mark
Stiles, 3·0·6; Keith Roark, 1-3-5;
By JEFF SHAIN
Lonnie ·Grills, 1·1·0-5. TOTALS
community. It will help · unify
UP!
Sports Writer
25·3·10·69.
people for the cause of civil
No. 17 Louisville, absent from
Halftime score: RioGrande.46,
rights."
the bowl picture since 1978,
Kentucky Christian 32.
placed itself on the .New Year's
Day schedule Tuesday by agreeing to accepl an invitation to the
Fiesta Bowl.
The Cardinals, whose 9-1-1
record Is . their best since 1972,
will face a representative from
the Southeastern Conference ln
the game, bowl officials anCORAL GABLES, Fla. (UPI)
weeks.
nounced at a news conference in
-Miami Coach Dennis Erickson
Then Notre Dame will have to Tempe, Ariz.
said Tuesday the Hurricanes' lose at least one more - two
The Fiesta Bowl, embroiled In
chances of being ranked No. 1 at would be better for Miami- as
controversy
for the past week
the end of the season have the Irish fhiish up their regular
since
Arizona
voters rejected two
improved from "slim and none" season schedule qgainst Penn
ballot
measures
to create a state
to "slim and slimmer."
State and Southern Cal. Then holiday in honor of Martin Luther
Since the · Hurricanes dropped comes ·the Orange Bowl game
King, also formally announced
from second to eighth In the with Colorado.
rankings after losing to Notre
No. 2 Colorado finishes its plans to create scholarship funds
Dame on Oct. 20, five · teams season with a breather against for minority students at each of
ranked above them have been Kansas State. A combination of the participating institutions.
"We're going to have what we
·defeated.
_
an Irish loss or two plus a vict~ry
The Hurricanes currently are over Colorado would give Miami think is a very good game, a
ranked third and a lot o( things a shot. But the Hurricanes must quality game," said John
have to happen for Miami to risE~J,&lt; defeat the Southwest Conference Junker, the bowl's executive
director. "We had a little bit of
to the top by s~;ason's end.
champion In the Cotton Bowl.
adversity
because of the timing,
First, Miami will have to win
I
think
people are going to
but
its last three games beginning
That is a little farfetched, but
react
positively.
We'll wind up
with · Boston College at home
It's not unlike the scenario that
MASON, WV.
with
not
only
a
good
game, but
Saturday. They will be heavily gave the Hurricanes the national
favored against the Eagles,
title a year ago. And it's a lot less something that w!il help the
Syracuse, also at home, and at complicated than It was three
San Diego State In the next three weeks ago.

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"At•the IIIII of the Pomeroy·•- llridgl"

POMEROY, OHIO

'NEW YORK (UP!) -Chicago
White Sox pitcher Alex Fernan·dez can become only the se6nd
pJayer to win amateur baseball's
. highest award and experience a
·-pennant race in the same year
Wednesday when the Golden
Spikes Award Is presented.
Fernandez, who pitched last
spring for Miami· Dade Community Collegeltouth, heads a list of
nine finalists who will be In
. attendance when the award is
presented at. New York ' s
Waldorf· Astoria.
Only Bob Horner, the Inaugural Golden Spikes winner in 1978, ·
has won the award in the same
year he made his major-league
debut. Horner went directly from
the Arizona State campus to the
Atlanta Braves that year.
Fernandez, a right ·hander
with a four-pitch repertoire,
spent only two months in the
minor leagues before making his
White Sox debut Aug. 2 against
Milwaukee. He had a no-decision
In a 4-3 win, then earned his first
major-league victory In his next
outing against Kansas City.
"You've got to shoot for the
best. That's what I've always

been taught," said Fernandez,
who pitched for three teams at
three different level In 1990.
After transferring from the
University of Miami to Dade South last winter to become
elig!b)e for the draft, Fernandez
went 12-2 with a 1.19 ERA for the
Jaguars. He pitched 10 complete
games in 15 outings, striking out
154 and walking 23.
He also hit .316 as a designated .
hitter with nine home runs and 54
RBI and was named National
Junior College Player of the Year
by the U.S. Baseball Federation.
"As far as 'belng ready .to play
quickly in the major leagues, he
was the best one in the CO)Jntry,"
Dade South Coach Charlie
Greene said.
In two months with the White
Sox, Fernandez went 5-5 with a
3.80 ERA in 88 innings.
"He has not been overblown' In
the projections," White Sox Manager Jeff Torborg said. "He has
· the ab!Uty to iocate, and he has
tremendous poise. Those are two
areas you worry . about. If you
didn't ·know better, you'd think
he'd been pitching in the big
leagues for five, six, 10 years."

Rio ladies sweep
opener with KC
Despite a low shooting jlercen·
tage (41·98 for 41.8), the Un!ver·
s!ty of Rio Grande women's
basketball team got off to an
encouraging start Tuesday with
an 80·41 sweep of Kentucky
Christian at Lyne Center.
, Ann Barn!tz, Debbie Fredrick
and Stephanie Gudorf paced the
Redwomen offense with doublefigure scoring In a contest in
which nearly the entire bench
saw action.
·
' "We started off pretty good,
l!layed well In the middle, butlost
our concentration at the end,"
Coach Doug Foote said of Rio
Grande's performance. "We re·IJounded well, but just didn't
shoot it well. But It was good for a

start.··
The season opener saw the
hos is dominate from the begin·
ning, successively closing down
KC's offense to post a 30-point
lead at the half. Aiding Rio
Grande's game was the work on
the boards. In which the Redwo·

Kaff·kaff!

·Saturday showdowns put bowl bids ·a t stake
By MaJ. Amoo B Hoople
Sage of the Sidelines
Egad, friends! If there was ever a .
Showdown Saturday, this is it! Confer·
ence titles and bowl'bids will be on the
line all across tbe country.
In the Midwest, Notre Dame and
Penn State will m~x it up In South
Bend, Ind., Meanwhile, Iowa, looking
to go the Rose Bowl as the Big TeO rep
for tbe first titne since 1986, will en·
tertain old foe Purdue.
Penn State and the Irish have met
14 times: Notre Dame has a 7.5-1
edge. Actually, Joe Paterno, the Nit·
tany Lions' coaching "genius, • has a 64record vs. the IriSh _ but he's lost'
the last two.
After opening this season with loses
to Texas and Southern Cal, Penn State
came back to win several in a row;
playing at the top of their game.
The talent-rich Irish bave been
somewhat inconsistent. Their offense
is super, their defense suspect - until
the chips are down. They shut out
Michigan and , Michigan State in
fourth-quarter efforts, and limited
high-powered Miami to only three
points in the second hall.
The Holtzmen are determined to
have their say, one way or another, io
who wins the national championship.
The Irish seem to play their best in
big games. And this is a big game.
Make .jt N.D. over Penn State, 31·24.
Hayden Fry's Iowa Hawkeyes are
the real surprise of the Big Ten, with
victories over Michigan, Michigan
State and Illinois. Iowa will have little
trouble outpointing Purdue, 42·14.
That should get the Hawkeyes a ticket
to Califorma for Ne,w Year's Day.

In tbe South, Georgia Tech's formi·
dable YellOw Jackets will wrap up the
ACC crown and the Citrus Bowl assignment with a resounding 38·6 conquest of Wake Forest. ·
Meanwhile, in Memphis, host Tennessee will scramble the SEC race
even further with a bard-earned 37·31
victory over Billy Brewer's tough
Mississippi. ·
F Te
·
or xas, the_SWC title and Cotton
Bowl host role Will he on the hne when
.the~ vasit Forth Worth to meet Texas
Ch~asllan. The UT Longhorns lead the
~~~~:-lll·l. The Horned Frogs wall
g
s a scare before !alli~g. The
Hoople System has Texas wmnmg, 2822 ·
Elsewhere,
LaVell
Edwards'
Brigham Young Cougars sboqld nail
down their 11th WAC title in his 19
years as head honcho. The Cougars,
with Helsman-hopeful QB Tv Detmer
operating in high gear, will roil over
Utah, 49-2&amp;.
Washington's Huskies, the cream of
the Pac-10, will visit Washington State
for the 83rd renewal of their series.
On paper, the Rose Bowl-bound Hus·
kies are the clear choice - but that
means nothing to the Cougars. Just
two years back, the Cougars dealt fa·
vored Washington a 32·31 defeat,
knocking them out of the Rose Bowl
trip. So, look for Washington to .sur·
vive a tough one, 3$-28.
Finally, in the 107th renewal of
"The Game;" my beloved Yale Bull·
dogs - boola-boola - will visit storied foe Harvard. The Bulldogs will
give their usual good account of them- ·
selves. But the lads of John Harvard
will claim the victory, 24-21. Harrumpb!

men outdistanced the visitors
39-21. In that category, Kathy
Snyder posted nine and Barn!tz
had eight to lead the team.
"Eyeryone played 20 minutes
apiece, which was good because
everyone needed to get into the
first game," Foote said.
·
On the whole, Foote praised the
work of his freshmen In helping
establish. the lead, one point shy
of the score of Its winning 1989
opener (81-40) over Tom Bender's Lady Knights.
For KC, Aim!e Arnett was the
leading scorer with 11... while
center Jenny Ross capta~d the
boards with six. The team was
not credited with any assists and
ended the game at 29.1 percent on
field goal shooting (14-48). From
the free throw line, the visitors
connected on 12 of 22 attempts for
54.5 percent .
The Rio ladles went to the
charity line seven times and
were successful on four for 57.1

'

'Michigan 36 Minnesola t8 .
Michigan Slate 44 • Nort"""tern 24
North Carolina 3t • Duke 20
Northern Illinois 36
Loulllana 35
• Notre Dame 3t Penn State 24
Ohio State 35 'Wisconlln 2t
Oregon 34 • Oregon State t5
Southern Cal 38 ·ucLA 21
San Diego State 36 • New Mexico '24
• San Jose State 28 Fresno State 25
Syracuse 27 • Weol Virginia 2 t
'Tennessee 37 Mlsslsslppl31
'Temple 21 Rutg&amp;fS 20.

·sw

Air Force 30 'UTEP 20
• Alabama 35 Cincinnati 14
Army 17 • vanderbllt 15
'Auburn 21 Georgia 12
'Ball State 22 Ohio University 14
Baylor 17 • Rice t4
'Buc~nell33 Fordham tO
Brigham Young 49 • Utah 25
'California 17 Stanford 15
'Clemson 24 South Carolina 22
'Colorado 38 Kansas State t7
ColoradO State 31 'Loulllana Teeh 28
• Cornall 23 Pennsylvania 14
Dartmouth 27 • Princeton t 7
• Eastern Kentucky 38 Morehead St. 17
Florida 38 'Kentucky 28
• Aorlda State 42 Memphis State 24
'Georgia Southern 33 Samford tS
Georgia Tech 38 'Wake Foreot 6
'Harvard 24 Yale 21
Holy Cross 35 'Colgate 21
'Houston 55 Eastern Washington tO
Illinois 28 'Indiana 21
'Iowa 42 ·Purdue t4
'Kansas 32 Missouri 28
Lehigh 28 • Lafayette 21
Louisiana State 35 'Mlaslsslppi State 13
• Miami (Florida) 42 Boston College 24
Marshall 35 'Weotern Carolina 17

(' )Home Team

'

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SATURDAY , Nov. 17

percent. Fredrick, the team's
assists leader last season, topped
the defense with five.
·The Redwomen re-enter action
in the second women's game of
the Bevo Francis Classic Friday
at 4 p .m. against Kenyon. The
Lady Knights (1·2) travel to
Bl4ef!eld (W.Va .) Saturday.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (SO) - Debbie
Fredrick, 4-2·0·14; Gena Norris,
1·1·0-5; Ann Barntiz,. 8-1·17;
Kathy Snyder, '4-0-8; Jenn!
Couch, 0·2·0-6; Kerri Kidwell,
2-0·4; Stepha'\ie Gu~orf, 4·1-3-14;
Amy Snyder, 1·0-2; Marlo
Kistler, 1·0·2; Mindy Montgo·
mery, 4·0-8. TOTALS 35-6-4-91.
KENTUCKY CHRISTIAN (41)
- Kellie Pelfrey, 3-2-8; Ste·
phan!e Fraley, 2-2-6; Kathy Bo·
gan, 2·0·4; Almle Arnett, 2·1-4-11;
Melissa R!es, 2-0-4: Angela Bat·
tista, 2-4-8. TOTALS 13+12-41.
Halftime score: Rio Grande 47,
Kentucky Christian 17.

Texas 28 •TeJCas Christian 22
Teus A&amp;M 32 •Arkansas 21
'Texas Tech 42 Southern Methodist t6
'Toledo 30 Ar~ansas State 14
'Tulsa 35 Montana State 13
UNLV 24 'Long Beach State 21
"'Virginia 42 Maryland 24
Washington 35 'Washington State 28
William &amp; Mary 33 'Richmond 10
Wyom1ng 35 • Hawaii 24
'Youngstown State 42 Maine 10

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America hasn't forgotten

· PH. 992·2556

In uniform. America's men and women fought to protect this
country as the a land of opportupity."

HUNTING
SEASON
SUPPLIES!

Hurricanes still hope
to rept;!at ,as champs"

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI

FIRST TIMERS • Jolla Beatley, Melp sopbomore, left, and
Cbris EbersbiiCb, Soutllenl jua~, took their first de~ this bow
seasoa f'rom tile Great Bead area. Tbe deer wm takea 10 minutes
· apart by the two trleada lea tllao aa bour after they entered tbe
buotlog field. Deatley'• b•ek was a fOur point, wbile Chris dowued
a six point bud&lt;.
'

.Chicaco's Fernandez heads
·Golden Spikes candidates

The Daily Sentinei- Page-5

No. 17 Louisville and SEC
commit to Fiesta Bowl Jan. 1

TO THE PEOPLE OF
MEIGS COUNTY

1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

·Knights fall 91-69 in first Rio
The University of Rio Grande's
trademark fast-paced offense
was well in evidence Tuesday
when the Redmen opened their
season with a 91-69 defeat of
visiting Kentucky Christian.
Spurred by a 25-point performance by senior guard Gary
Harrison and another 24 markers
from junior Mark Erslan, the
Redmen pulled away early from
the Knights to hold a 10-pointlead
in the first few minutes and build
the margin to more than 20 as the
·game progressed.
KC threatened to catch up
during the first half, coming as
close as six, but the Redmen held
a cushion of 14 entering the final
20 minutes.
" We 've worked out the kinks
and played everyone," John
Lawhorn remarked as he began
his 11th season coaching the
Redmen. "Maybe we played too
many people, but in a game like
that, that's how It Is .
"I think we did a good job of
taking them out of their half·
court and quarier-court defense," he added.
Substituting often, Lawhorn
employed his preference for
three-pplnt field goal shooting
with Harrison, Brad Schubert,
Jeff Brown, Darius W!lllaJllS and
Terry Farley, but received effective results from Erslan, the
starting guard from West Alex·
andria, Ohio, who sank five of his
11 trifecta attempts. ·
Dick Damron's Knights also
knew how to use the three, which
helped Eric Sudlow, Lonnie
Grills and former Kyger Creek
High School standout Chad
Leach make contributions to the
offense.
"We made a good run in 'the
first half when we were down
38-32, " Damron commented.
"But Instead of protecting the

Wednesday, November 14. 1990

MY SIN(ERE THANKS FOR
YOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT
IN THE PAST .ELECTION •.
I APPRECIATE THE
OPPORTUNITY TO SE.RYE
YOU FOR. ANOTHER ,TERM.
ROBERT E. BUCK

Out of unifOI'll), too many of-America's veterans have found
opportunity is still something they have to fight for.

The Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA) assists
'

veterans in their fight for opportunity.

If you ar.e a veteran; a resident of Gallia or Meigs
counties; and you are laid off, unemployed or underemployed,
the Gallia·Meigs JTPA program can help with job placement and
re· training.

The fight for this land of opportunity hasn't ended
it has simply ~hanged battlegrounds.

•

•

Contact the Galli;:1.-Meigs Community Action Agency for
information on how you can win in your battle for opportunity. '
'

I· ·

Paid PoHtlcel Ad by Candidate, Robert E. Buck. 1 :ll
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio

"

••

"

r

�J

Paga 8-The Daily Santinel

POI'l'WOy-Middeport, Ohio

,..--- Local briefs... :-.,--___, Wanning trend is expected
Continued from page 1
to to last through Friday
lhat ran imo the path of her 1981' Cadillac. Light damage was listed
to the left front fender of llle car.
The third accident involved John Tucker of Pomeroy, who was
. northbound on U.S. Roure 33 on Monday. A 10-poim buck caused
heavy damage 10 Thck:er's 1984 Ford truck.
David Kucsma of Racine was southbound on Route 33 at 6:30
p.m. when a seven-point buck jumped into the path of his vehicle.
Moderate damage was susraincd by the vehicle.
!n light of lllese accidems, Sheriff James M. Soulsby Clutioned
motorists 10 be aware that deer are moving about and thai drivers
should adjust their speeds accordingly.
.
Sheriff Soulsb~ also reports lhat The· Pick and .Shovel at Salem
Center reported tlu!t somecne stole .the hose and nozzle fro!~) the gas
pumps.

EMS has nine Tuesday runs
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered
nine calls for assistance on Tuesday and Wednesday.
At 7:57 a.m. on Tuesday, Middleport Squad went 10 North Second
Avenue for Robie Clonch. Clonch refused treatment
·
At 2:15p.m., Columbia Fire Department was called to an aulo fire .
on Woodyard Road. The vehicle was owned by Charles Lee. At 2:41
p.m., Middleport squad went to South Third for Dale Walburn. He
was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital. Pomeroy squad went to Mill
Street at6:13 p.m. and transported Marie Ferguson to Pleasant Valley HosjJitaL At 7:36p.m., Tuppers Plains squaq was calleq t6 Suue
Route 681 for Joshua Barber. Bather was treated bU! not transported.
At 7:53p.m., Racine squad was dispatched.to State Routes 338 and ·
124 for Da\vn Marie Collins. Collins was taken 1o Holzer Medical
Center. At 9:29 p.m., Rutland squad went 10 Meigs Mine 31 . for
James Reed. Reed was transported to Holzer Medical Center. At
10:06 p.m., Racine squad went to Barringer Road. Goldie Lawson•
was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
On Wednesday at 12:06 a.m., Pomeroy squad was dispatched to
~ Main. Street. Gecrgia Swagger was transported to Veterans
: Memorial.

Thanksgiving service announced
The annual community Thanksgiving service of the Middleport
Ministerial Associatioq will be held Sunday evening at 7 p.m. at the
First Baptist Church of Middlepon, Sixth and Palmer Streets.
The Rev. Frank Smith of the Heath United Methodist Church wiU
be the speaker. A community choir will sing accompanied by a
trumpet trio. Those aucnding are b¢ing asked to take a canned food
• item for the Cooperative Parish Food Pantry.

Monthly police' report released
Eighty arrests were made during October with eight accitlents
being investigated, according to the report of the Middlepon Police
Department.
Parking meter collections totaled $720 with 349 parking tickets
being issued. The merchant police collection was $106.

Fir.!}men rel~ase monthly report
';:The Middleport Fire Department responded to 11 fire and rescue
calls and 70 emergency medical calls during October, according to
the repon of Jeff Darst, fire chief. Vehicles were driven a 1ota1 of
1547.7 miles.

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Ohio Lottery Commission plans
to change the rules of Its recently

Weather

The National Weather Service

said skies Will be clear Wednes·
day night and it Wlllnotbeascold
with lows In the 40s.
Sunshine and a warm southw·

Carlton ... continued from page 1
the age~y cmdd not "ta)ce away
one service without talting away
other services and still be fair 10 all
clients."
"How do you place a value
judgement on one group of people
o:ver another group of pecple,"
Wedemeyer said in explainin~ that
"everybody has to ta)ce pan m the
lack of funds"
He described the decision to .
serve everyone through September
and then shut down. as a "fairness
issue since all services provided are
equally imJ)ortatlt"
·
The program which serves approximately .130 children and '
adults with a staff of 43 has an annual operating budget of $1.4 million, according· to Wedemeyer. He
indicated · lllat there would be a
reduction of state support once the
program is not in operation.

He said lhat Meigs County
operates with more than two-thirds
of its funding coming 'from the
state, while other boards across the
state provide local funds of about
that much.
·
Wedemeyer acknowledged lllat
the school age program is declining
because of the public school special
programs and said that school age
children if not in a program at Carleton wiU be served by the local
school district.
As for those clients who are already Oil jobs, Wedemeyer said,
support services from the MRDD
Board would be discontinued as of
September. 1991. ·

Sexual misconduct complaint
lodged against magistrate

Profits drop with new Super Lotto game

est tlow will help tile mercury
climb to near record levels
around 70 Thursday.
A cold front will slip Into Ohio
Soudt Central Ohio
Friday and cause some· clouds
Clear Wednesday night, with a
and even a slight chance of low between 40 and 45. Mostly
showers. Highs Will be In the 60s. sunny and windy Thursday, With
The .... ~kend should be dry highs near 70.
with S&lt; ••oable highs In the 50s
Extended Forecast
as high pressure Will be ir\ control
Friday throu1h Sunday .
of the weather.
A chance .of showers Friday ,
On the Wednesday morning with fair weather Saturday and
weather map, high pressure was Sunday. Highs will range from
over Ohio with a cold front over
the upper 50s to the nnlddle 60s
the Northwest and a warm front
Friday, and . from 50 to 60
into the central Plains. The high · Saturday and Sunday. Overnight
will move to · the Southeast lows will be In the 40s early
Wednesday . night as the warm
Friday and between 35 and 45
front moves rapidly east.
Saturday and Sunday mornings.
By late Wednesday night the
cold front Will extend from upper
Michigan to the central Rockies.

By United Press International
A warming trend in Ohio Is
expected to last tlirough Friday.
High pressure over the state
caused mostly clear skies and
llght winds during Tuesday night
and Wednesday morning,. but
some lake effect cloudiness per·
slsted In extreme northeast ohio.
Overnight temperatures were
mainly in the 20s.
As the high moves east Wed·
nesday, southwest winds and
plenty of sunshine were expected
to help the mercury climb Into
the· 50s and 60s.

.·. •

revised Super Lotto game within
six weeks becau.se players are
winning too much money and not
wagering enough.
''Our obligation - the only
reason we are In business -:- Is to
make money for Ohio, .money
that Is earmarked for. primary
and secondary education," lot·
tery spokeswoman Anne Bloom·
berg said Thesday. "We are
looking at changes within the
next three to s(x weeks that w!ll
st!ll provide anexcitlngga:ne but
allow us to regain our profit
margin." ·
In Columbus Thesday, lottery
director Ronald Nabakowskl got
approval from the State Controoll!ng Board to draw $17.4
. inUI!on from the last fiscal year's
"excess" lottery profits

e¥
.

,
:··
i I .

misconclucL

·

The FTD00 Autumn
Harvest" Bouquet.
just call or visit
us today.
Thanksgiving
is Thursday,
November 22.

.

Meigs announcements

. Square dance

There will be a round and square

WICKER &amp; BRASS
IASIET BOUQUET

dance Friday from 8-11 :30 p.m. at
the Tuppers ·Plains VFW building
featuring Specks of Blue Grass.
Caller will be Arthur Conant. Cost
is $2.50 for adults and $1 for
children under 12. Public is invited;

QUTCH POT

31ele0om·

BOUQUET

HOLZER CLINIC
WELCOMES THE 1990
ADDITIONS
TO ITS MEDICAL STAFF

Actions for divorce have been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Floyd Andrew
Reynolds, Middleport ·against Shirley Diane Reynolds, Middleport,
and Gloria · Diane Robertson of
Pomeroy against Richatd ·E.
Robertson, also of Pomeroy.
DissOlutions of marriage have
been granted in the court to
Theodore C. Fisher and Nancy Jo
Fisher; and Ronald R. Cremeans
and Catlly F. Cremeans.
A divorce has been granted to
Janet S. Bamen from Forrest Roger
Barnett.

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FREE

5 X 7 WOOD PLAQUE
1,'111 H YO\IIl 1'1\CI&lt; Mol

$18.95

•

Malcolm W. Lentz, M.D.
SurreryI Orthopedics

Michael E. ·Moore, M.D.
Orthopedics ·

J

Marriage licenses have been ·
granted by Meigs County Probate
Court to Shaun Eric Lambert, 18,
Rutland, and Cr.thia Ann Smith, 19,
Langsvill,e; Ph1Uip Wayne Biederman, 42, Albany and Ann Susan
Vaughan, 36, Brunswick, Ohio;
Gregory Wayne Cooper, ~2.
Parkersburg and Sharon Demse
Griffin, 24, Reedsville; and Donald
Lee Dailey, 36, Middlepon IJ!ld
Gail\ Ellen Gilmore, 37, Mid·
dieport.

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Value

Meshel as minority leader:

Senate In January to end Me·
shel's 10-year hold on the leader·
ship position.
.
"Sometimes fresh Ideas are
needed," said Boggs, an 18-year
veteran of -the General Assembly
who trled to engineer a coup two
years ago but failed.
Assistant minority leader will •
be Sen. Alan Zaleski of Elyria.
Minority whip Will be Sen. Robert

Village funds balance reported ·
The halance of all village funds
at the end of October was
$163,672.29, according 10 llle
report of Jon Buck, Middlepon Village clerk-treasurer.
. Accdrding to the repon, Iota!
rece~ for llle montlt was
$72, .82 with disbursements of
$112,592.
In the general fund the receip.ts
were $24,257.31 with $7,909.30 in
disburserpents leaving a balan9C of
$4 39.27. The safety fund showed
disbursements of $15,492.76 from
the police funds and $11,625.90
from the income tax fund. Neither
fund showed receipts for balances.
The report showed deficit balances in several funds. ln the street
maintenance funds there was a
deficit balance of $8,719.04 with
receipts .for the month being
$7,552.88 and disbursements of.
$8,915.49; in llle mini-golf there
was a deficit balance of $389.74
with ICCeipts of $338 and disbur·
sements ·of $1,265.40; in ' the
· swimming pool a deficit balance of
$16,741.07 with nb receipts; in llle
cemetery fund there was a deficit of

$5,632.10 with no receipts and
$2,809.45 iii disbursements, in the
ArtS Council .lllere was a deficit of
$1 015.92 with $207.21 in receipts
.
and $257.82 in disbursements; m
the Issue 2 fund there was a deficit
of $2,203.83 with no receipts and ·
$4,918.03 in disbirrsemenrs.
1n the economlc development
fund. receipts totaled $1,709.40
with disbursements. of $892.18
leaving a balance of $9,015.34; in
llle
public . transportabon,
$10,372.50 in ICCeipts, · an.d
$12.249.08 in disbursmeents lead- .
ing a balance of $6,077.42, in the
water system improvement no
receipts, no disbursem~ts with a
balance of'$60,736.43; m the water
fund, receipts of $13,664,38 with
distiursements of $15,201.64 and a
balance of $5,188.25; in the
sanitary sewer system receipt;ts of
$11,760.87 with disbursements of
$12,472.35 with a balance of
$9,040.01 and the ARC Housing
Fund, disbursements of $1,672.57
with a balance of $762.54.
Receipts for the month totaled
$72,344.82 with disbursements of
$112,529.00.

.

SAUS AND RENTALS
LOCALLY OWNED BY GIEG &amp; CONNIE KAYLOR

CONTINUITY OF CARE, inc.

Veterans Memorial Hospital

TUESDAY ADMISSIONS
None.

507 MULIIIIY HTS.
614·992-2310
OFFICE .

TUESDAY DISCHARGES

POMEROY, OH.
304-112·3529
RESIDENCE

- - - - - - - - - ••11119190
- • •:..:·=-=•:....:=-;ill

·It's Christmas Club Time At
CENlRAL TRUST

"*.

Come into any Central Trust Office and open your
1991 Christmas Club Today!!
of

"
PONDERO

j::DIIponROOdforanyp•rtwliii. CaniiOibe
u~ e &lt;l

oat ll( o~aMg rocalto n~ P"ctis mav Yarv

SAVE $5.00
REG. $19.95

NOW

$1.4.95~
.95 dlpoojt

.

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Bruce L• .,...pan, M.D.
· RadloloiY

•

$3.99

All·YOU·CAN·EAT

Grand Buffef''
Lunch &amp;Beverage .

lnclude5 Pondero50 's All·You ·Can· Eat Gran? BuHet'" Mondo~a~i~~turdoy
andAII·You·Can·Drinlc coHee, tea or sohdnnk.
11om - ·4pm

PONDEROSA.

C011pon ~for ant p1rtr air• Cannbt tw!
use&lt;l on comc.naho n w•m ~n~ Ol lie ' eoupot'l or
no1 •ncluoeo Vai.O ~~
O•Koontolle&lt;

r..,

--·-·····-··· ··--·
r&gt;t&lt;loC&lt;paMg

locat oon~ P~tces may

Yl&lt;y

150 MILL ST. ·
~IDDLEPORT, OH.
992-2188 '

HOLZER CLINIC
.•.

•j
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,_.,,Ollie

.,...

SAT., NOV. 17

11100 Ail '11. .. , •

' '

Poftl'lhl Delivered
. Thull~· Deo. I

"'•

4:00pm 11:00 pm

.......

••

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UPPER RIVER ROAD

t.

(Across .From The Airport)

992-6661
~&gt;---;,......:.::::::~ Mll)OLEPORT, OHIO
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Member FDIC

446-5411

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A'PNCBANK
IIIL . . Str•t

GALUPOUS, OHIO

gc'

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Charbroiled
.Ribeye Steak Dinner

''"' I

IUITONS alliiiiOWS

385 JACKSON PIKE

JH

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,.

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PlU 1

11125190

CENTRAL TRUST ', .·t

Michael J. ZlriUe, D.O.
. Fant!ly Practice

These skilled physician• join the Holzer Clinic five decade
philosophy of providing high quality health c,are iri a
··
courteous and sympathetic manner.
·
Our Medical Staff is now 63 physicians strong - 22 separate
medical specialties in one organizaton. Six locations
providing medical care for you and y0 ur family - and we're
STILL gro~ing!

PlU I

---·····---------

• You make 50 weekly payments and
Central Trust . will make an extra
'
payment!
• Select from several weekly payments ·
$1, $2, $5, $10, or $20.
• You will receive your check in plenty
of time to beat the 1991 Christmas
shopping rush .
• As a bonus, receive this acrylic
Christmas Tree Ornament to brighten
your home during the holiday season!*

''
Michael J. Owens, M.D.
Intemal Medicine

..

,n·e('lm!)of1auon ""'" an·1 o1 ne• c011pon or
fll)l • nC iud ~ Vai.O a1
'

d•!cct.ml c:lle• Ta•

lnclucl.s Ribe~ Shlak witll potato and f}Cirlic toast plus
Ponclerosa's AII·You·Can·Eat Grand BUffet':' ,

• blmlt t piCk per subject - 2 per family.
• Group Plctur" $1 .00 per subject. Pll)l when taken.
• Look! Chrltii!IM Mel Black Bllckgrouncf In Your Pack· No Ellra charge.

(

Bring this coupon and Order our new Honey Roasted
Chicken with potato, garlic toast and All· Yov·Can ·Ear
Grand Buffet .. and get SOC oHSi\ur
re ular price.

HURRY/ Coupon Expires I I 124190

'

· Trudy J. Nei!IOD, M,D.
,
Pediatrics

,,

Honey ltasted
Chicken Din•

.

FAMILIES

I

OUR NEW

.

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last.

AND

2' · 8 X 10 3 · 5 X 7
12 - JUMBO WALLETS
24 : HALF SIZE WALLETS.

Come in to Ponderosa and try our NEW Honey Roosted
Quarter Chicken served wiih potato, garlic toast and
Ponderosa sGrand Buffet; at ahtmey of aprice/

Located Across From Veterans Memorial Hospital

Flossie Stanley and Katherine
Weaver.

'AGES

41

---a-~ ·

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPUES

Hospital news

ALL

Professional
Color Portraits

DEROS/t

A complete line of standard, lightweight and recljner wheelchairs
· · tomeet all you[ needs. Built to be tough and durable,
lnvacare wheelchaifS Offer outstanding value at ali affordable pnce .

•Given wilh each SS. SlO. or $20 club while supplies

FREE

Nettle· of Barberton, and the
staffing. Campaign-wise, we
asslstllnt whip will be Sen. need. substantial help," he said.
Jeffrey Johnson of Cleveland.
"We r eed people with real good
campaign
skills." ,
Boggs, who has been In the
Boggs
said
he will put Sen.
Senate since 1983, is viewed as
Richard
Pfeiffer
of Columbus. a
one of. Its experts ln the area of
·
persistent
critic
of Meshel, In
educatlon. He also Is a favorite of
charge
of
winning
Senate elec·
environmentalists and organized
tions
in
1992.
Sen.
Linda
Furney
labor.
of
Toledo
was
made
chairman
or
The minority leader's salary
Will be $57,467 annually. Meshel's a caucus pal!cy committee.
pay Will drop from $54,730 back to
· • We are going to do what is
the $40,407 of a rank-and-file
senator. Also deposed was Sen. necessary 'to be more success·
Neal Zimmers Jr., D-Dayton , the ful, " said Boggs, who was chosen
during a 'k&gt;sed meeting of the
assistant minority leader. ·
Democratic power h'as de· caucus. Boggs said Meshel
clined steadily since 1983-84, moved to make his nomination
when the, party had a majority unanimous after he demon· ·
and Meshel was president of the strated support from a majority
.
Senate. They lost control In the of the caucus.
Meshel took his ouster matter· ;
1984 elections, and lost two.more
seats iast week to dwindle to an of.factly; he had done the same
to the.n-Sen. Oliver Ocasek of
even dozen .
Boggs and his backers blamed Akron after Democrats lost con·
Meshel for the losses, and·Boggs trol of the Senate In the 1980
'
'
vowed "tremen~ous changes in elections.

_ Invacare
Rolls® wheelchairs

Rotary Club
Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary
Club will have its Pancake Day on
Saturday, December 1 from 7 a.m. ·
until 1 p.m. at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center on Mulberry
Heighrs. Prices will be $3 for those
age 13 and up, $2 for children 6-12
and free for children under 6.
Proceeds · will support Meigs
County service projects.

Apply for licenses

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dump~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Teaming with fellow senators
unhappy with Democratic losses
In recent years, state Sen. Robert
Boggs, D-Jeflerson, Tuesday dis·
placed Sen. Harry Mesbel, DYoungs town, as minority lea!ler
for the 1991-92 session.
Boggs, .3, managed to capture
support from seven of the 12
Democrats who will be• In the

, · Revival Set
Reedsville-Long Bottom Charge
of llle United Melllodist Church
will have revival services Wednesday through Sunday at 7:30p.m at
the RcedsviUe church, with Pastor,
Rev. Charles Eaton and other special speakers. THere wiU also be
· special singing nightly.

Divorces sought

992-6454
106 BUTTERNUT AVE.
POMEROY, .OHIO

Boggs

United Methodist distribution
There wiD be a clothing distribution on · Thesday· November 20
from 9:30 a.m. until noon at llle
Meigs County .Coopemtive Parish;
3 Hc Condor Street in Pomeroy.

Open dance
The. Belles and Beaus Western

Pomeroy Flower Shop

Laurel A. Kirkhart, M.D.
Obstetrics/Gynecology ·

Square Darice Club will sponsor an
open dance on Friday at llle senior
citizens center in Pomeroy from 811 p.m. Jim Underwood, Hurricane, W:Va., wiU be the caller.

Thanksgiving dinner
.
The Lottridge Community Center will host Thank:sgi ving dinner
on Saturday at 6 p.m. Bring a
covered dish. Public is invited. The
center is located on Athens County
Road, five miles west of Coolville.

Dally stock prices
(As oliO: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and MJI.I'k Smith
of Blunt, Ellls &amp; Loewl

C. Steven Batiste, M.D.
Family Practice

The commission said 'Wilson
viol.alt.d canons calling for a judicial officer 10 observe high stan·
dards of ipregrity. In additiQQ, it
said he viol.alt.d a rule that says a
judicial officer should conduct him·
sell in a ·manner that promotu
public confidmce in tlte integrity of
thejudicial plllCCss.
Tbe report also swed that he
viol.alt.d a canon calling for a illdicial officer 10 perform his office
impartiallr and diligentlr,.
According 10 Ancil Ramey
Clerk of the West Vugiriia So~
Court, the Judicial Hearing Board
will hold a public hearing on the
matlel A recommendalion will then
be made to the Supreme Court. The
court will then mooe jUdgement as
10 what, if any punishment will be
rendered.
'
Ramey said the cOurt doe !lot
have name of the woman who filed
the report or the case. they have the
allegations 81)d complaint
.
· Tbe commission aclll as a grand
jury and the hearing 1Jom:d ICIS as a
judiciallribuilal in disputes involving judicial officers.
Wtlson has 30 days to file a
response to the allegations, according 10 CommisSion Chairman w.
Jack Stevens.

.

Sing
·The Praise Team from Jackson
will ~ singing praise on Saturday
· at 6:30 p.m. at the Faith Gospel
C.hurch in Long Bottolll. A covered
· - qish dinner wiU be held at 5 p.m.
Pastor Steve Reed invites the
public.

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According 10 a report : I? the
Charlesloll .Gazette, the Judicial Investigalion Commi~ said in .its
report 10 . the Judicial H~g
B~ that probable ca:use extsts to
believe '!lat. ~ilson VIOblted three
codes-9f Judicial conduct
An ':"~Darned '!iOman filed the
complaint, .stemr~ung from a July 5
meeting wtth Wil~t;l- ,The woman
had WC!'t ~ Wilson s office to
speak ~th h"!' about htt son who
was bemg amugned lhat day.
Tbe Commission said Wdson
W!JS alone in h~ offic~. an~ invited
lhe woman to Sit and mdicated he
)YOuld help her son anyway he
could."
.
··~ !he woman got up 10 leave,
MagJSirale .Wilson came from behinrlhiS desk and grabbed her and
tried to kiss her several times," the
commission said. "She puDed·away
from ~ill! and left his office."
"W1thm the next few mmutes an
offi~ biOUF;ht her son before
Magtstrate Wilson ~ he told the
offi~ to. ~e: him to another
magtStrate, 11 S31d.
' "I didn't d&lt;;J it.:, Wilson s~
Tuesday monung. I flat deny u.
Wilson said he knew that the suit
was going 1o be filed. His only

'

October retail sales
show 0.1 percent hike

lr----·-PRESENT COUPON TO PHOTOGRAPHER -

rr8pOiiSe 10 it was that die allegations were !lot true.

On Fnday lhe West Virginia
Su~e Court JtC.ci.v~ !!. ~-.;__·fhc Ga:reiiC7S~saidJI~ complaint from the Judicial lnvesuga- mission bas other informaiJOII that
tioD Commission 8B8inst 72-yew- Wilson allegedly made improper
old Mason·County Magtstrate John sexual advances Joward other
A•. Wilson on allegations of sexual women who had C89C.S before him.

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y~ur .

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·B1 Mk:bele Carter

Stocks

Am' Electric Power ............. 28~
AT&amp;T ........ ......................... 33%
Ashland 011 ............... .... .....28~
Bob Evans .......................... ll y.
Charming Shoppes .............. 9%
City Holding Co ................. .17~
Federal Mogu] ..... :..............12%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................14%
Key Centurion .......... ........ ... 11
WASHINGTON - .U.S. retail forecasts by private economists
Lands' End ......................... llV.
sales inched 0.1 percent higher in and analyst Robert Dlell, ai Limited Inc ........................ 14~
October to $152.32 billion, the Northern Trust In Chicago, was . Multimedia Inc ................... 56%
Commerce Department said cautiously optimistic. ·
Rax Restaurants .... ............. 1\.1,
Wednesday, an indication consu·'
"The conswners are hanging Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 17
mers are cutting back as uriem· in by their fingernails," Dlell · Shoney's Inc .... ................... 10%
ployment rises · and economic said. ''Things dldn't.go oH a cliff. Star Bank ........................... 15~
· fear intensifies.
It was pretty soggy all around.
Wendy's Int'l. ..................... 6%
"Consumers are gloomy ," said But we could still have a Worthington lnd .................. 20V.
Allen Sinai, chief economist at reasonable Christmas."
(Ashland Oil Is ex dividend
the Boston Co. "It's deadly for
today)
retail sales and suggests a bleak
In September, retail sales
The word "bus" is short for the Lat·
Christmas for retailers. We're
climbed 1.3 percent nationwide
in
word "omnibus," which means "for
now moving into the heart of the
following an advance of 1.6
all.'
downturn."
percent In August, according to
Not counting cars, trucks and
the data. complied by the depart·
vans, retail sales were un- ment's Census Bureau.
change!l in October. NotcounUng
Although the domestic econ·
gasoline, which costs more be· omy appears to be In or near a
cause of the Middle East crisis, recession, with both the consusales dipped 0.1 percent last mer and manufacturing se~tors
month, a government spokes· showing weakness, retail sales
man said.
were up 4. 9 percent over October
"Retail sales are sliding along 1989.
with the consumer," Sinai said.
But a market letter by Fuji
"The essentially unchanged re· Securities of Chicago said consu·
suits reflect a decidedly weaken· · mer confidence Is .at "recesslonlng at the retail level on very bad ary levels."
consumer fundmentals .
The U.S. Chamber of Com·
"Without higher gasollne pri· merce, meanwhile, Wednesday
ces, and seasonal aQjustment forecast an economic downturn
factors that pushed up au to through the first half of next year
prices, retail sales would have and predicted unemployment
fallen," he said .'
would exceed 7 percent by the
October's overall 0.1 percent end of 1991. The October rate was
gain was generally in line with 5. 7 percent.

.

Wednasday, Novanber 14, 1990 ··

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, November 14. 1990

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446-0902 '

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .

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Paga

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sg1~1ng
.

Ohio

8-The

BIG. BEND......... •Your Locally Owned
~

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Low-Priced Supermarket

Wednesday. November 14, 1990

Untying tubes doesn.' t
~~ways restore fertility

'.

QUESTION • SiX years ago .I
had my tubes tied. I have since
mariied and I now want to bear a
child. I've heard that a tubal ligation can be reversed. Is this true?
ANSWER • Tubal ligation along
with v~my are the most effective methods of birth control if you
don't consider abstinence an acceptable alternative. A · significant
drawback to these · methods,
however, is that they are essentially,
peimanent. It is very difficult to
resiDre fertility once the surgery is
done. Therefore, we doctors try to
caref~y counsel ·our patients
before perfonning a pennanem
sterilizanon. We remind our
patie~ts that it is often difficult to
'predict what ·. changes will occur
over the duration of their leploductive lives. Your marriage and current desire to have a child is a
·common example. Now you· want
children • six years ago, you did

'

-----Sav1ngs
Butter
Ball
Turkeys
Available!

"BUYERS BEST"

1

CRISP CELERY

38C

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BUNCH •

DOL

SUPERIOR'S TAVERN

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KAHN'S BONELESS
UT'L HICKORY ·

ti~IWI.•••••••••••••• !~;

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

QUESTION -I've saved $2,000
to have my tubes repaired. Is this
· enougb?
ANSWER • I am a little reluctant to answer your questions about
the cost of this operation because
imporqmt variables • like the surgeon, !he hospit;ll where he or she

$229
$299

The Oaily Sentinei- Page-9 .
'

practices, and whether a physician
or a nurse administers anesthesia •
are unknown to me. I can tell you
th3t patients I have refeired to one .
surgeon in my area who is very
skilled at this openllion have paid a
total of about $4,500. I've known
cases where the price has been as
high as $6,()()(). With these M roUgh
estimates, I would recommend that
you keep saVing your money a little
longer since most insurance plans
dO'not cover this IYJl\l of surgery. .
Also, remember tliat the decision
to try and have your lubes put back
together is more complex than
simply being able to alford the surgery. To help you understand why,
I'll explain a little about how the
female reproductive system works.
The fafiopian tubes carry the egg
from the ovary · io the uterus. ·T!Je
tube is more complex than a simple
pipe conoecting these OtgliiiS. CeUs
which line the inside of the tube
propel the fertilized egg along its ·
Journey to the ulei'Us. The process
of repairing a previously "cut" tube ·
requires microscopicillly exact
realignment of the layers of the
tube. This delicate microsurgical
operation attempts to restore the
ability of the tube to function normally. Surgery done witli less atten-

Sentinel Calendar

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

•'

Community Calendar items ·up·
pear two days before an event and

Familr
Medicine

the day of that event Items must be
received in advance to insure publication in the calendar.

MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Child Conservation Leagud:
will meet Thursday at 1 p.m. at theRock Springs United Me_lhodi.tt~
Churc~. Plans will be made for the:
Christmas dinner. All members uf. ged to attend.

. WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE · .The Third Wed,
nesday Homemakers Club will
MIDDLEPORT • Bobbi ~­
meet Wednesday ·to make will instruct a Chrisunas wrealh:
Christmas trees. Items needed are ·making class on Thursday at 1 p.m.:
tinsil, hangars and a round piece of at the Middleport Arts Council..
Cost is $20 and includes supplies:
your general health must be good cardboard.
Call Susan Baker, 992-7733 to&lt; ·
and you should be young enough to
RACINE • The Mt Moriah register or for infonnation.
expect to have a Qormal pregnancy. Church of God .will have revival
Another factor to consider is the Wednesday through Saturday at 7
POMEROY • The Meigs County:·
method used 'to "tie" your tubes. If P,m. Victor Holland. will be the Democratic Executive Committee:
they wete burned in two, they 'II be evangelist and there will be ~ial will meet Thursday at 7:30 ·p.m. at;
hander to repair than those that singing nightly.
the Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy. •
.were simply cut and then the ends
Public
invited.
tied off with suture. Check with the
MIDDLEPORT
The Middoctorwho did your.sterilization to dleport Amatuer Garden Club will
POMEROY • · Revival will be ·
find out which Procedure was used. meet Wednesday at the home of held at the Hysell Rim Holiness:
Also, if the operation was ore than Jean Moore. This will be a work · Chapel Thursday through Sunday·
five years ago, regardless of the meeting to prepare for the at 7:30 p.m. nightly. Matlc Morrow
method used, the chances of your Christmas Flower Show. Bring use- will be the speaker and there will :
becQming pregnant after surgical ful items.
~special sin:r
· g. The public is in, •
repair are not as good as if you had
v1ted to atlen
. :'
been sterilized within the past five
MIDDLEPORT • The Mid· .
years.
dleport Literary Qub wiU ineei'
.
·.
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the , RACINE ·FRIDAY
The
RaCine
Grange
::
''Family Medicine" is a weekly home of .Eileen Buell. Florence
column. To subrriit questions, write Smith will review the book, "The wiU have its Thanksgiving DiMer:
on Friday at 6:30 p.m. at the hall on
.to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
Name of the Rose."
Oak Grove Road. Ham and turkey -.
University CoUege of Osteopathic
will be furnished. Bring table ser- ·
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
THURSDAY
vice
and a covered diSh. Public is
Ohio4570l. ·
POMEROY • A Ilea market invited.
A pig-in-a-poke auction
benefitting teen dances wiU be held will foUow
dinner. ·
in Pomeroy at "Locomotion" (former Elberfeld Warehouse) on
MINERSVILLE .· The Return
Thursday and Friday. Spaces will Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DAR, wiU
be available at a cost of $5 for both have an 1890 buffet luncheon on
days ..Refreshments ~Viii be for sale. Friday
at 12:30 p.m. at the horne of
To rent space,. call Sherry at 992- Mrs. Rae
Reynolds.
3456.
POMEROY -The Women's ·
POMEROY • The Pomeroy Auxiliary
of Veterans Memorial '
group of A.A. and AIAnon will Hospital will
a craft and hake ·
meet Thurs.day· at 7 p.m. at the sale on Fridayhave
in the hospital lobby
Sacred Heart Catholic Ch~h. Call beginning at 9 a.m.
1-800-333-5051 for infonnation.

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of
Medicjne
tion to precise alignment can result
in a tube which looks fine, but
which doesn' t propel the egg
properly.
The likelihood of conceiving af.
tee this surgery - the reason to have
the ~ery in the first place • can
be as h1gh as- 80 pen;ent or liS low as 20 percent The technique used
to reconnect the tubes and the skill
or the surgeon ·are important in
predicting success. This surgery is
so exacting that it is not done by
every ~ologisL I'd recommend
that you ask your doctor to refer
yo11 to a l!)'llecologist who does
reanastomOSJs of fallopian tubes as
a specialty. ASk the doctor about
his or her success rates. Don't be
embamlssed to ask. You need this
information to decide .if you want
this doctor to operate on YOU.
. Once you have found a surgeon
you are satisfied with, you must
still consider several factors. First,

.PLAIN • SELF RISING

Gold Medal
.Flour

REEDS Vlll.E • The Riverview
Garden Club wiU meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. for · a Christmas
workshop at the Reedsville Church
of Christ Members are to bring a
finger food and gifts for Amcricare
patients.

SATURDAY
POINT PLEASANT • The Spencer's will perform at the Bellemead
United Methodist Church in Point
Pleasant on Saturday at 7 p.m. Narf9W Way will ajso be featured The
public is invited to attend.

LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON ANI) S10.00
ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

FOODLAND .
WHOLE • JELLIED

·1OX or LIGHT BROWN

Brown &amp; Serve
Rolls

.Domino Sugar

MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE

KRAFT

DIET or REGULAR

•
PKG.

Mike-Sell's
Potato Chips
/

/

I~

/

'
!,

'

"~. ' '
'

-

BAG ....UJ,.• $119
TOP STUFFING

'::==

Fresh Baked

Pumpkin 8 INCH
Pie
Fluffy -8 cT.
Dinner Rolls

U. S. NO. ONE

.

- . . .,.
Justis prom-oted
~

19

99

1S LB.
BAG

8 INCH MT. TOP

Libby's Pumpkin

Pumpkin Pie

LB.

.HOT OR MILD

1-LB.
PKG.

KRAFT

MARSHMALLOW

V-0
·~'·

Shampoo &amp;

.-,_..;..:!
~

,

lSOZ.

BOlD HOlD
Styling Spritz

~1Th~~s

EXPIRES 11-17-90 I

GOOD ONLY AT
FOODLAND

$1. 99·

whenyoubuyONE2lb.can

Chocolate or Strawberry
Flavor Powder

$1!~

NF-1.00
32-519461

_

TO THI DIAL.IA: You WIH be rttmburwd ' ' 00 pluaiC, II su~m111ea 1n
comp!tanc:e wllh Nellie Foods Corpor•~an ~PilOn PoliCY ana In·
Ad CouPORAQf""*" mcorvorlltrd

ALBERTO V-05

Aerosol
sHair
pray 13.2
oz.

NEStlE IN-All COUPON

·'

will

..!129
99

.

Alfred personals

SUPER SAVIN'GS
ON ALL CHILDREN'S
DRESS .AND CASUAL SHOES

The Alfred United Methodist
Church will hold its annual soup
supper on Dec. 1 at 5 p.m. Soup,
hot dogs, sloppy joes, and pies will
be served. Contributions are welcome for the Unquenchable Fire
Missions.
The community was saddened by
the death of . Margaret Spencer,
lifelong resident in the community.
Out of county family members at·
tending the funeral were Sarah
J~sephine . S!Io1_1e, Lisa and _F,rica, .
J1m Lamb, Christopher and J1mmy,
all of Toledo; Connie Ballard, Chad
and Jason, ChesterviUe; Eddie Gillilan, Mildred Holter and Roberta,
Mansfield; Mary Jane and l.aJTy
Osborne, Washington, W.Va.; Kirk
and Betty Spencer, Grove City;
Virgil and Barbara Spencer, Some.rse~ Mary Harper, Spencer, W.Va.
Karen and Stephen Follrod,
Athens, are announcing the birth of
twin sons, Brandon and Brian, on
Nov. ~- Osie Mae and Clair Follrod
are paternal ' grandparents. Clara
Follrod
is
paternal
great
grandmother.
Kate and Ray Rodehaver,
WeUbom, Fla., have been visiting
relatives and friends in the area.
They attended Sunday school and
worship services on Sunday.. They
wiU return home this week.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Brooks were Marvey
Columbus; and Randall and Doris
Smith, Barberton. The Brooks held
a family birthday !linner in honor of
Mildred Brooks.

Carser.

Ulellme Lubricated

Suction Power Motor

$6995

&amp;;;:ent

; &amp;Position Carpet

chr~-

JUST IN TIME FOR THE HOLIDAYS

CHAPMAN
SHOES
·
POMEROY'S QUALITY.SHOE STORE

Introducing Dr. E. Neal Orteza

Dr. Emy Olivarez~Orteza

AT DAN'S

P

leasant Valley .Hospltalls pl~ised to ~lCXIIIIe E. N~ Ortera, M.D. and Emy L. OllvarezOrteza, M.D. to Its medical stall'. The husband and wtre pediatricians open their olllce at 2907
)ackson Avenue, Point- Pleasant on Nov. t. Prior to ciimtng to Point Pleasant. the doaors
ampleted tlvee-year residencies with the Depanment of Pediatrics at Uncoln Medical and Mentil
Health Center· In New York. Dr. Neal Ortaa. who w~ assistant chief taklent during the ftnal year
ol his residency program; has a special Interest ln neonatology and endoalnology, Dr. Emy
Ot~ hasaspedallnten!st In allergy anc! dermatology. Both doctors are board qualllled
lo l'edlatrla, and belong to the Amedcln Academy of l'tdlatrla and the American Medical
Asl9datlon. The parents of a t 6-month-old daughter, MellsM Rose, they enjoy teMls. the movies
and the thettre. Appointments br children and adolescents may be made beginning Thursday, Oct.
25, by calllns (304) 675-4107. Olllce hours are, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays.
I
.
.

1 RACi OF MEN'S LEATHER
FLIGHT JACKETS 200fo OFF

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

290 NOITH
SICOND

1'b&amp;- family ol professionals

MIDDLEPORT

..

6.5 Amp ESP' Motor
• Cull Cleaning Time In Hall!
• 65 Amp ESP' Elll'l

Malar

.

•CASUAL WEAR TO SIZE 14. STUDENT SIZES
INCLUDES HUSKY

r~

The Lowest Priced ESP"
Ever From Eureka

Eureka Rally"'
Team

•JEANS •JACKRS

&lt;,

Bruah Roll
• Top-Fill Big

The BOss·· Upright.

Model2034

.20°/o
OFF
BOYS I GilLS WEAl

~S IN ....D. 81t0 Bt.UE CIRClE ORNE. MINHE'f'ONt(A. MN S5343.
LIMIT: ONE COUPON P!R IIIURCHAII.

• Edge Kleenll" On Both Sides
• PoWer Driven Beater hr

THURSDAY. FRIDAY &amp; ·SATURDAY

and

3 DAY SALE

• Clf'llet Helglll Adjustment

-• Powtrful - .

THURSDAY, FRIDAY I SATURDAY, NOV. 15-17

'*"" D,- rN!'ef'Ce Gooa only 1ft

uS A Cor11umer m~o~st "" $aln Ta• Void wne,. FlroMJtiiiOfTaiiCII
RntriCteel CUh ,....,. 11100c ~ AEOEMPTtON . IMIL. TO: NESTLE:

99

STUOENT OF THE WEEK • Kim Janey was chosen as student
of the week at Meigs Junior High School by Mrs.• Je~~nne Bowen for
her work in reading and speUing.
·

......

E Dale Jus tis of Kokomo, lod.,
former native of Mason, W. Va.,
has been promoted by PSI Energy
to
vice
president, · district
operations.
In his new position, he
be
responsible for ovCfSCcing the
company's nine regional field
officers. ,
Justis, husband of the fonner
Sharon Yoimg of Pomeroy, joined
the company in 1965 as an engineer
at the company's corporate offices
in Plainfield He held various en.gineering positions unlill979 when
he was named division engineer at
the company's North Division
office in Kokomo.
In 1982, he was promoted to
, Northern Division operations
manager and in 1985 North Region
and Kokomo district manager. He
was promoted to his most recent
• position as vice presiden~ Northern
Division in 1986.
Justis earned his. bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from
the Indiana lostitute of Technology
in 1965. He is also a licensed
professiol)al engineer in lodiana.
Justis is a member of the Purdue
Kokomo Advisory Council, the In·
diana University Kokomo Foundation Board, the Kokomo Elks Oub,
the Kokomo Country Club and the
Fairfield · Christian Church in
Oakford. .
He and his wife have two
children, Greg, 23, and Wendy, 20.
They plan to relocate to the
Hendricks County area in January.
Justis is the son-in-law of Mrs.
Audrey Young,.Pomeroy.

set·Potatoes Mountaineer Sausage

DELICIOUS

$ ' 99

1-181

·s
4-10 LB. AYG.

Cream Cheese

·-Cola

Turkey Brea

e

PHILADE~PHIA

STUDENT OF THE WEEK • Amanda WeD was selected as student of the week at Meigs Junior High School recently by Mick
Child for her work in American History.

GOLDEN DELIGHT

Cranberry Sauce

•

21 oz.
PKG.

EUREKA
VALUES

Drive, Point Plinllnt, wv 25550

•
i,,

•.'-1

.

'

•

. '~

•

•

�•

Page 1 o-The Dl!ily Sentinel

Pomauy-Midclaport. Ohio

.
c;hapter discusses upcoming parade
~

:A'discussion was held on having
a: float for lhe Pomeroy Christmas
P;lrade and a commi• was named
at lhe recenl!neeting of the Precep!Or Beta Beta Chap!er Bel8 Sigma
Phi Sorority. held ai the Gmce
-~opal Chwch.
.
. '{he committee consists of Jane
Witter, Ann Rupe, J0111 Corder,
d!irlotte Elberfeld, Velma Rue,
1\Wda Mora and EleanOr 'I1tollw.
· i\n invitation was n:ad from the
dh)o Eta Phi Chapter to aliCIId !heir
Quisunas party.
.
• Members were reminded to take
gif!S for Serenity House to !he
Quisunas Party which will be held

Dec. 13 at the home of Charlone
. Elberfeld.
. It . was announ~ . !hal Lee
Lefebre was. lhe wmner of the
· coverlet
Refreshmen!S were ~rved at the
dose of the meeting by Jane _Walton and Reva Vaughn. There will be
no meeting on Nov. 22.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1990

DOLL HOUSE CONTEST
MEIGS COUNTY MUSEUM
NAME: .... '......... : ..... .. . • .... .. .. ·............... .
ADDRESS: . .. .. . .. • . .•... . ... .. . . ... . . . .••. . . . . .• .. ...

PHOME: .. . ..... .. ........ . ... .. ..... . .. . . . . . . . ·...... .
.en more co.ncerts than any other orchestra in the world.In 1982, it played

its lO,OOOth concert. It has performed
more than a thousand more since
then.

'

........ Child's Doll House ....... .Single Room Shadowbox
. ........ Other Mlnlatu~ Room Shadowbox·

MAIL ENTRY FORM TO:

Meigs County Museum
144 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

.

Ohio

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

Christmas dollhouse judging Dec. 2

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE

The New York Philharmonic,
which began playing in 1842, has giv·

Wednesday, November 14. 1990

Wednesday, November 14. 1990

Christ,mas Open House will be radios and watches will interest
held at ihe Meigs County Mliseum many visilon who lillY even
on Dec. 2 from I to 5 p.m. at which remember using some just like
time dollhouses and minianm: them. Another featured display will
rooms entered in the contest will be ·be an "angelic" tree, completely '
judged by Dave Sheaffer, president decorated wilh angel ornameniS
of the· T'my Treasures Miniature handcrafted by Melissa Coleman.
Club of Athens.
Museum committee members
Members of lhe T'my Treasures hope that these and other interest·
will display some of lheir miniature ing displays will malce lhis year's
rooms as well as model railroad open house a treat for youn~ and
layout and some antique farm equi- old. Most displays will remam for
pment toys. The Ohio River Bear the rest of lhe monlh of December
Company, MiddlepM. is planning and ·may be seen d!Jring regular
· to show its complete line of teddy museum hours from 1-4:30 p.m.
bears. Local coUections of old Tuesday lhrough Saturday.

1 2 pRICE

8THANN · .
VAL

.../ n

·

CE SALE

c

...

(E ntries are to be In by week of Nov. 26·30)

'

. -......:.

. .~ ·.

·,

COPYIIIGHT 1990 • THE K~ OGER CO. ITEMS AND
· PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, NOV, II. THROUGH SATUR·
DAY,' NOV. 17, 1!i9o,IN POMEROY
WE RESERVE THE RIGAT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS .
ADVE~~ISED lliM POLICY-Each of these ;:~dvenised items is required to be readily available for

sale 'fn each Kroger Store, except a!- specifically noted in this ad. If we do run out of an
advertised item, we will offer you your choice of ~ comparable i tem, when availf!ble,
re flecting the same savings or a raincheck which w ill entitle you to purchase the advenised
item at the aa 1ertised price within 30 days. Only one •1endor coupon will be accepted per
item purchased .

NORTH CAROLINA

Fresh
.Yams

California
Head Lettuce
Each

California
Celery ·
Stalk

Pound
CLOSED AT MIDNIGHT ON
WED ., NOV. 21st

· ·

Open
Thanksgiving Day
8:00am Til 4:00pm
Reopen At 7:00am On f!'riday
Nov. 23rd And Resume ·'
Normal Hours

K
rkay
Margarine

THE
DAIRY CASE"

Pillsbury'
Crescent Rolls
8-CI. 8-oz .

hlb.

For
BETTY CROCKER

~ !4(t6.. lbs. And

:. Youn ·
Turkeys............ .tb.
.

SuperMoist
Cake Mix
18.25-1 B.S.oz.

(Limit 1 With 1\.dditional Purchase)
HERRUD ROYAL CROWN WHOLE
(14-17-LB. AVG .l

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Ham
Pound

PER ROLL 1·PLY.
ARTS AND FLOWERS ·

FREE

Ribeye
Roast

B· oz.

$173

c

SLICED

·.

. Dial
Liquid Soap

ScotTowels
Paper Towels

••
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF, BONE· IN

BOTI'LE

300 SHEETS PER ROLL l·PLY.

Cottone lie
Bathroom Tissu

Airwick
Air Freshener
4-o.z.

4-RoU Pkg.

c
Crest
Toothpaste

.

$249

..

0\an\OOdS

Crest
Toothpaste

6.4-oz. Pump or Tube ,

4.S.oz. Pump

\&gt;\'lites

..

f'ub'es

o,aro::;~.~ S

ot sa\&gt; ..

\t9

s?Eclf'l.. . .1 $Z39
?.eta'

..''
•

•

Kroger
Skim Milk ·
• Glllao

..

THESE ARE JUST A FEW EXAMPLES, OUR ENT~RE
ONE MILLION DOLLAR INVENTORY ALL 50% OFF

'I·NGELS
'

.

' I

.

'

· THURS., NOV. ·15th 9 AM TILL 5 PM
FIIDAY, OV. 14th 9 AM TILL 7 PM
SATUIDAY, NOV. 17th. 9 AM TILL 3. PM ..
. ..

FURNITURE 'A ND
JEW,ELRY, INC.

10~

NORTH SECOND AVE .
· MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

614-992-2635
Toll Free 800-426-5581

(AI lhe•e lnw prices, slzln~t will be an extra
char1e .)

'

'I

l\

\\

•

INSIANI t : III: PII
Apply And

t'!celve

'""i~u1

buying powe•
TODAY!
Credit tor m s

Lay-a-way
Master Card
VIsa

�"Putting Your Garden to Bed"
was the theme . of the progmn
ptesenled
Doi-olhy Katr at the ·
fl!Cellt meeong of the Riva Valley
Hetb&amp;lists held at the home of
Unda McCoy, Millwood, W. Va.
• Mrs. Karr said that herbs should
be clipped back about one third,
and that anything to be moval inside should be · put in polS and
pfaced in tile garage for about a
lll,l:ek. She noted that sage and hyssop, and thyme benefit from a win·
tei- mulch.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Badgett
were guestS at the meeting and he
spoke briefly of his inrerest in organic gardening and heros and
noled that he is a bee keeper which
is a natural extension of herb gardening.
Mrs. Connie Hill conducled the
business meeting and thanked
everyone who helped in any way 10
make the annual herbfest such a
success. The herb of the month was
· given by Jill Knopp on _scenled
· geraniums \IIIlO noced tllat their culture is tile same as the most .
familiar geranium. The leaves, she
said, are excellent for baking, reas
and jellies,. and Victorian women
put the leaves in their batll wa1er.
• Final plans were made for the
harvest dinner which was held at
Royal Oak Park with the Athens
Herb Guild as ~ests.
·
Lucille Albnght and Nava Couch
were guests \lll the meeting. Members were reminded that now is the
time to be thinking of Christmas
crafts and gifts from tile garden.
P¢~ grnss is used locally as an
edible wild plant substiwting for
regular black pepp[er in soups and
salads.
Refreshments of leinon tea and
herb tea breads, mint yarrow and
raspberry teas were served by Sue ·
Hllyman, AM Kely, and Pat
Hllyman.

Classif.i e

br

.

STORE HOURS
Monday tlu:u Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

-

.

.

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., .

FRESH PORK BUTT

.

$ 29

LB.

SPLIT

D~Y _
B EFORE PUBLI CATION

.

10-22 LB. AVG.

Tu~keys ••••••••••••• ~·~ ••

Classified
Galli a County

Ar.. Code 6f 4
446 - Gallipolis
387- ChMhirfl
388-VInton

245- Rio Grande
256 - Gu'fln Oist
643 - Arabia Dist
379 -Walnt.~t

.

. COLBY LONGHORN

.

.

Cheese ••••••••••••••• ~·~.

pa~[es .col'er

Meigs Co unty
Afet Code 614

$

Ham Patties

Cranberries ... ~!~~:~G~. 99 &lt;

$1
8
9
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
. PLASTIC GALLON

Jumbo Spread .~t $169
KEMPS
$
2· 99
Ice Cream ......,......

We•know that we owe

. _ 5 QUART PAll

To hardwork and leadership that shows.

. .

Pineapple •..•~.~z~~~·. 2
REGULA~ S2.49

.~

Dorltos •••••••••••••••••
11 OZ. PKG.

To that man or respect

.BANQUET

TV Dinners
oz.

s·159

10·12

Ryan Cowan
Jun lor,
Trombone player ,

Carboaaleil water
Carbonated water, the basis for
modern soft drinks, was lint made by
an Encllshman. Joseph Priestley, in
1772, notes The Kidl' World Almanac.
By addln1 carbonic gas to water;
Prioslley was able to duplicate na11111!'1 bubblln1 water.

TIDE

TOILET TISSUE
Family
12 Roll Pak

$2·99

Good at Powel's Super Yalu
Gaotl Nor. 11 thru Nor. 17, 1990

DETERGENT
136

oz.

$6 79

Good at Pawel's Super Yalu
Gaotl ljqr, II thru Nor. 17, 1990

A heartfelt thanks
to ewryone
who
donated food. pi..
and cakes to our
16th Annuli Turkey
Dlmer held lut Saturdliy evening.
Tb.lnks to 1111 the
women and men who
WOibd 10 fllthful.
lnd to our lOyal supportera who l1llda It •

trema~·-·
A l!l«llal thanks to
who helped wllh the
.clean-up.
Welooking forward to
I I lng you llglin next
year on
Nov. 9,

•

He's not only our reacher
But he's alto our friend

CHARMIN

1 . C8rd of Tllanka

al ttw non-memberS

Hit name Is Ml) TQney Dingess
And we know he's the belli

Wt! Jove y ou Mr. Dingess ·
And will a lways -take pride In our ban(!.

Serv1cr.s

15 - Schools &amp; InstruCtion

16 - Rtd io. TV&amp;. CB Rilpai1
17 - Miscelltneous
1 8 - Wanted To-Do

21- Busin•s Opportunit y
22-MofliV to Loan

23- Prot•sional Services

Real Eslale
31 - Homes for Sale
32-Moblle Homes tor Sale
33 ..... farms for S1i e
3.4-Business Buildings

Mcrc hond1se

1991.

MUEUER'S
•

I OZ.

NOODLES

3/~1

. · Go..t et ,.,.••, ""' Yelu
· Galli Nov. 11 lflru Nn. 17, -1990

We promise to
haw MORE food
next yNrl
' LADIES
AUXILIARY OF
TUPPERS PLAINS
FIRE DEPT.

.

J;MJ@ltl

41 42 43 44 45 -

Houses ror Rent
Moblle HomM for Rent
Farms for Rent

46 -

47 •&amp; -

49 -

Apartment 1or Rent
Furn il had Aaom s
SP•t:D for R111n1
Wanted to Rent
Equipment for Rent
For le•e

.

•Vinyl Siding

54 -l\1isc . Mtfchandise
S!i- Building Suppli•
56 - Pets for Salfl
5'?-Mutic.llnstrumttltl
58 - Fruh.s &amp; Vag1111bl•
59- For S•le or Tr1de

•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•I n1u Iat ion

THURSDAY, NOV. 15
6:30
ALBANY, OHIO

There will not be a sale on
Thanksgiving, Thursday;
Nov. 22, 1990
Sale will resume on Thursday,
·
Nov.29, 1990

Helpers for
Tha_nksgiving Dinner!
AMISH NOODLES............... SJ. 90 tb.
PUMPKIN PIE SPICE
Cinnamon, Ginger, Cloves
AMBROSIA BUKK CHOC...... s1.95 ._
AMBROSIA WIITE CHOC...... S2.15 ._
HARD TAC CANDY...~ ........ S1.50 ._
ORANGE SliCES ................ Sl.l 0 ._
MELLO CREME SANTAS ..... SJ.50.._
. HRS.: 9 TO 15 MON.-SAT.

Ohio Valley Bulk Foods
11Alf1

POIIIIOY

Located on Safford School Rd. off Rt. 141

H2·6910

We Accept

feetl

Stwtll.s

Your

Buy, Sell or Trade
Guns

992-2772 7.t2-2251
639 Bryan PlaceMiddleport,' Ohio

61 - Farm Equipment
62-Win1ed to Buy

Ul · For

Sporting NHtls

JAMES KEESEE

Farm ~lllilllir.s
&amp; L1ves1o1:k

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;
SUPPLIES
Sea

·11 / 14/ tfn

63 - livestock

(614) 446-9416 or 1·i00-172-Sn7

OPEN MON.·SAT. 10-5

GUN SHOOT "

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INnRIOR • EXTERIOR

RACINE ·
. FIRE DEPT.

FR_EE ESTIMATES

Bashan Building

Take the poin aut of
pain~ing . Let me do
11 for you.

· EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Very Reasonable
have Referen1H

742·2C21
36496 SIIRII liN ID.
lmA.,OIIO

factory Chokt

614-9115·4180

10·10-'90-t mo.

10-01-'90-1 mo.

12 Gauge Shatg1011 Only
Strkdy Enforcod
9-25-'99-ttn

•

64 - Hay &amp; Gr1 in
65 - S.ad 1&amp; Fertili.tar

YOUNG'S

Tr ansporlalion

!ARPENTER SERVICE

71 - Aurfa for Sal e
72 - Trut:lc!l for Sale

73 - Vans S. 4

vvo·,

74 - Moto rc yc ~·es

76 - Boan &amp; Motars far' Sate
76- Aut o Par1s &amp; Acc•aori•
77--Auto Repair
'78 - Camp ing Equipment
79-Campers 6 Motor Homes

- Room Addltlono
-Gutter Work
- Elect•lcol &amp; Plumbing
- Concrete Work ·
-Roofing
-:-lntorior • Exterior
P•lntlng
(FREE ESTIMATES)

Y. C. YOUNG ••

992·6215
Po-roy, Ohia
11 / 14/ ffn

Serv1ces
81 -- 11om a improwment ~

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
"LIGHT HAULING
"FIREWOOD

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•Naw Homes
•Garages
•Complete
R_em0deling
$top &amp; Co111para

BILL SLACK
992-2269 .

Free Estimates

PAl' Hll.L FORD

98$-4473 .
667-6179

USED RAILROAD nES

SER~ICE

We 1an repoir tind re(ore radiators and
heater 1ores. We 1an ...
also CKid boil and rod
out radiators. We alsa
repair Gas Tanks.
992-2196
Middleport;
.•

e-12-90

.

82-Piumbing &amp; Heating

83-EIICIN'Iting
84- Eiecuieltl &amp; ~efrig•ttion
85-Generel Hauling
86- Mobile Home Rep•i'
87 - UphotstiH'y

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
T.,.
Boord of
of
Eeatem Local School OieEd~cation

trict deairea to receive
-led bldo for fleet lnlu r·
once I&lt;&gt;&lt; 1he 1991 calender
year.
·
In order to be co.nlldered,
oil -ted bldo
bo •• ·
ceived by the Truaurer•a citfica by 2:00P .M. on December 17. 1990, Oftd ·wlll bo
opened ot thattlmo.
The Bo•d of Educ•tion
reserve• the right to .accept

,.,.n

Of Ml••l•port

COAL
UN LIMITE It

UPHOLSTERY

4 TON MIN. LIMIT

.CAIN'S

, Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes
38 Years Experience
614·992-2321

213 North Second

We Say What We Do.
We Do What We Say

E. Mai1nlo.l

POMEROY, 0.

, 992·22S9 .
MIDDLEPORT - Beautiful
Colonial Home! level lot, 2
car garage, has ornate trim;
attic studio w/skylight. Well
insulated. Owner wants to
sell! $49,900.
.POMEROY - 2 bedroom,
I ~ stpry home with carpet,
built-in bookshelves, patio
and rear balcony, with a
view of the river. I II car garage. $23,000.
POMEROY - 5 acres, vacant ground on top of a hill
near town. Gr€at location for
house or trai ler. $3.900.00.
RUTLAND - Must See To
-Appreciate. 3 bedroom, 1~
bath, ranch. Beamed Ceilings. Heat pump, C/A, patio,
garage, carport plus other
buildings situated on approx. 6 acres $44,000.
POMEROY - 4 Unit Apart·
ment building in Pomeroy.
PotentiaL Monthly gross income $400.00. WANT
$17,500.
.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Morlon Addition - 3-4 bed·
room ranch In excellent condition in a large 1acre lot A
large family room makes liv·
ing here a joy. Elec. B.B.
heat plus woodburner.
large storage shed. Call for
appointment $41.000.
POMEROY - Two unit rental property w~h potential
for two more efficiency
apartments plus live gar·
ages for additional income.
Both units are rented at
$150.00 each. Price includes two refrigerators and
two ranges. Rental stream
has been good . large lot
wnh potential for future construction. Owner will sell on
land Contract $14,500.

Ill •10 LIIT.ISI
MAE NUPP ...,.;, 949-2157
UN 11USS111.,. 949-2660

.10 IIU ....·-··· 915-4466
OFFICE··--··.. "1-2159
OUIWD-IIAS

IEIII IOCll aiiD WI S1l1
11.1¥1 •Ym 11101111 rot
IIIGS COUIIIY IIWSit. II
YOU WaitT 10 1111. WI
CIIUIIO IUIR IODAY USt lllnl till .. SIJM(I

· OUIUII. . .

$50.00 por ton
Lump or Stoker

286-2689

. COMPlETE
ElECTRICAL SERVICE
Rooidantial and

, ·

Commercial
RfWIIING AND
TROUIL£ SHOOnNG
Certlfi~

Electrldans

FrH E.ltHtet .

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
992-5009

10-24 I mo. pd.

11-16-r.r...

lG-1 I mo.

205 N. Second SlrHI
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760 1.
OHico 614-992-2886
Home 614-992-5692

OOml S. TIIIIR, UOIR
HOUSES•LDTS•FARMS
•COMMERCIAL
WE NEED LISTINGS!

ll-5-90-tfn

.

f
1'

i·

·I

Public Nollce
and/&lt;&gt;&lt; reject ony ond all
par1a of any and •II bida.
Board ot' EduCition
Eastem Loco! School
Dlatrict
38900 SR 7
Roedovllte, Ohio 46772
EloiM Boston, Treoo .
(11114, 21 . 28;
(12)6, 4tc ·
'

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

12 Gauge factory

Public Nollce

THIS l"xl'
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE I
I
. AT i5.00 PER DAY ·

114 IASf

593-8761 .

J&amp;L
INSULATION

35 - Lot • lL Acreage
36- Reel Est•te Wanled

Corner of Mill St. and
Factory .Rd.
Consignments Taken
Monday thru Thursday
From 1:00 to 6:00 P.M.
For More Info. Call 698-3614
Auctioneer: Richar~ Workman

~

FRESH .

BENNM'S MOBILE
HEAliNG &amp; COOLING

1 1· 14·1 mo. pd .

fnlplnymrnl

AUCTIO.N

992-21_56

MOBILE HOME FURNA(ES • HEAT PUMPS
All FURNA(E PARTS .

. Fully Ucensed, Insured &amp; l•nded·

.eo.

, HOURS

USE THE c:.,.&amp;.ISI!'!'IEDS TOOA'

The successful Maroon and Gold Band

owe this auccess

895 - letar t
937 - Bufialo

Pick ·
It Up

From the fi rst note to the last

Tht" work has paid otf
And a name,
N~w. we have one!

882- New Haven

446-9495
Pickup &amp; Delivery

We know he wtll aay.

Has a lot ro be proud of

773 - M •son

CARDINAL
DRY CLEANERS

He. shows us how to do It
How to march and to play
"Be the best you can be'

For thr Melg~ Hlgh School Band

675 - Pt Pleasant
:458-lBO!'I
576 - Appl e Grave

Vinyl Replacement Windows
Roofing, Siding, Decks
Residential Electrical Service

.06/ day

Sun, thru Wed. 4 pm-12 am
Thurs.: 11 am-12 am
Fri. Sat. 11 am- I am

Leaves the crowd on their feet

the feellng you re&lt;."elve
When t he crowds on thetr feet
A nd showing they are pleased .

7 - VII'd .Sale ~paid'" advance!
8 - Public Sale &amp; Auction
9 - Want~ to Buy
·

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

PARKAY

And no emotiOn Is better

. A.ut e Code 304 •

.4,.

19.00

813 .QO
$1 .30/ day

53-Anttques

4 - GhiUway
5- Happy Ads
6-Lott and Fou nd

BULLETIN BOARD

HORMEL

LIBERTY GOLD

th e

. 20
. 30

51-Household GaodA
52- Sporting Goodt

2 - ln Memory
3 --' Annoucement s

Ma so n c ·o . . W'll

992 - Middlep ort
Pomeroy
98&amp; - Chester
843 - Po rt la n d
247-Le1111 Falls .
9 4 9 - Rteine
742 - Autland

. • ·NEW

·

Th~n

2 00 P.M FRIDAY

Oef RuuJtt Fad

LB

.

2 ·00 P.M . THURSDAY

667 - Cootv llle

$ 99
Boneless Chuck ••• ~ 1

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

-

foUtJtdn![ telephon-e .excha~!!es .. .

99&lt;

the Meigs High SChool Band.

work

Annou nce Ill enls
1 J... Card af Thanks

1 4- Bus•n•s Trammg

-

,·

54 .00
86.00 .

Stock!!

lnr ear.n fl-... It Mparata ads .

- 2,00 P.M . MONOAY
2 .00 P.M . TUI!!:SCAV
2 :00P.M. WEONESOAY

Over 16 Words

· Rate

. llo• In

Ra1 .. are for con.Mcu•ive runs. broktn up davs will be charged

1 2- Situltio!'I 'Waf1ted
1 3-lnsurance

-

-

FLAVORITE .

Are long we all know
But tht!R hours of work
Are t'llp~tsed In our show.

15

_ , :0 0 A .M . S ATURDA Y

·

Chicken
Breasts ••':-$119
.
ECKRICH ASSORTED
.. .
$ . 39
Lunch Meats ••-••• :.o:. 1 ,

And an. Impression they won't forget.

We

_

Steaks/Roasts ..•':-. 1
MIXED
·
49&lt;
'Fryer Pa.rts •••••••••••

A teacher and friend
Tbls man of such standing

The days a nd nights or

run 3 dl¥1 11 no chatgt.
: Price of ~d for 1!.11 capftalteuers •• doubht pn ce o lad cost
7 point line type only u•d.
•S..,tintl it ~ot respgntible for erron after first dav . (C heck
ior etrors f1nt d-.: ad runs in piper) . Csil befort! 2 :00 p m
d..- after pubtltattO n to mlllu correct ion
•Ads thl1 must b'e paid in advance tre ·
·
Card of Thank•
Happy Ads
In MemOriam
Yerd Sales

SUNDAY PAPEJ:l

t know a man of such standing

--

Monthly

. Free ads,..... Gnte.~av and Found ads un~llll' 1 sword I will be

FfUDAV PAPER

Follows him wherl'ver he Is at.

This man or respect

15
15
16 '

paid.
:A•c-'ve I . 60 ~ discount for ada paid in •dvilnce.

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEONESOA't PAPER
• THURSDAY PAPER

creative at that
The succeu he has made

he goes

3
10

Meigs._?•Ilia or M.. on counties must be pre-

COP'Y DEADLINE -

And

Wh~ever

16

t 1 - Help Want ed

kmaster of his tradP

Dl~ct's

Words

1

. 6

• llTHRU SAT~, NOV. 17, 1990 ·

namP

Once a man has res pect
He ts never the same. ·

Days

•A clatsifi«&lt; ·~•rt it;e m..,t placed'" The Dai ly Sent 1net lel ·
cepl ~ clas•f•ed d•tPII\' . Business Card 1nd legsl notices)
WP i!1_•DO•o •PP~!~. in the Pt. Ple•• nt R~tginer 1nd the Galli ·
0 011 1 11 v .Tn~o~to~':f'·· ruchi ng O\ler 18.000 ho m as

BUTTERBALL

- LEE HOME
IMPROVEMENT

.

RATES

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.

· Poet,'s corner
A man of respect,
HaS worked hard for his

.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

.

Grange meets
Mcm bers of the Gallia Coun!)'
Pomona Grange were guests at tJie
r~ent m~ting of the Meigs
County Pomona Grange held at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall.
Vickie Powell, lecturer of the
Gallia ~~ang~. presenled · .the
program, Hobday of Thanksgiving," consisting of a welcome and
readings, Thanks for the Thankless
DMs and Grandma's Kitchen, and
songs, "On the Fanm" and
"Thanksgiving Cheer."
·Two musical numbers "On the
Wings of a Dove" and "Under the
Double Eagle" by Bob and Kendra
Ward-Bentz.
A potluck meal preceded the
business meeting.
Pauline Atkins conducled the
meeting which opened with singing
"Sweet Hotlr of Prayer" with Ches,
te( King, pianist, and the "The Sw
Spangled Banner."
Bob Powell, master of GaUia
Grange. and Arthur and Westina
Crabtree, Meigs County Deputies,
w(:re presented to the master 's Sta·
tion.
:Patty Dyer, delegare to state ronfete nee, gave her report.
Installation of officers was held
with Dan'Evans, Gallia County, assisted by Bob and Vickie Powell,
Martha Ward and Marry Ellen
Reynolds as pianist.
'It was announced tllat the Rock
Springs Grange will serve refreshmeniS for the Jan. 4, 1991 meeting.
The meeting closed with the
song. "God Be Witll You Till We
Meet Again."

Busilless Services

Choke only

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Mtlgo CC!Unty Boord
of ~ental Retardation/ Devo!apmontol Dloebllltlos will
hold o public holrlng t1 tho
Meiga County Boerd of
MR / DD ofllce on Carleton
Str- In Syracuoo, Ohio on
FridiV. December 14 at
2;00 P·'l' · Tho purpose of
tha hoo~na Ia to gotllorl!Ub·
fie comment on the 4 yHr
"Strotoglc Plono" ond the
1990 "Annuol Action Pion"
tor the Molgo County Boord
of Mental Retardlltlan/ Dev·
olopmentol Oloobllltloo. A
copy of tho propoHd Plono
will be 1vallllble for review
by lnter.Jt.:l per10n1 at the
Molgo County Boord of
Mtntol Rotordatlan/Oevekipmenllt Dlnbllltloo of.
flee.
1111 14. 1tc

SHOOTS StART
SEPT 16, 1990

Sept. 4 .tln

USED APPUANCES
90 DAY WA... AJITY
.WASH £~5- $100 up
DRYER5-$69 up .
;
IEFR IGERATOR5- $100 up •
RANGIS-Gn-Ei oc.-$125 up
fREEZ£R5-$125 up
IIICRO OVEN5-$79 up

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or tiS-3561
Acro11 From Post Office
.POMEIOT; QIItO .

HILL'S DEER
·CUTTING
CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPIN.G
BASHEN RD.,
RACINE

949-2206 .

' - ' - ·· -· _ l_0/_3Q/'89 tfn

MOVING SALE
CARPENTER
GUNS &amp; AMMO

BISSELL··
·BUILDERS

(USTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGEi

11·6· 90-1 mo.

Banks
Construction

911 HyMII St•
Middleport, Oh.

' 'At Reasonable Priles"

99.2-2034 .

. PH. 949-2801 .
or Res. 949·2160
Day or Nigh!
NO SUNDAY

v0

1100 Remington
Slug Guns
870 Remington

NEYER Cl£AN YOUR
GUTTERS AGAIN

Slug Guns ·
Ithaca Slug Guns

GUARANTEEDI
FREE ESTIMATES
10-1 I

11 -13-1 mo.

Real ES1ate General

MICROWAVE .
OVEN REPAII ,

' ~- ~
EQUAL HOIAING

o.-o"TUNIT'f'

UWNCR At:AITY

1!!_·----

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992· 28B6/HOME 992-6692
DOTTIE S. TURNER, BROKER

EASY LIVING- In This 4 year old 14x60 Sunnybrook mo·
bile home. It has 1 trihedral ceiling for dirriension and a
laundry room with shelves lor storage, equipped kitchen,
l)vo bedrooms and I \1 baths. II is beautiful and in new condition.
$14,000
ECONOMICAL LIVING- If you are just startin~outor ~your
choldren have llown the coop, th~ 14x65 Hillcrest Mobile
Home wHI be just right lor you. It has 3 bedrooms, I\! baths
front and rear porches. and ii total electric. Ready to !llOve to
your lol
·
JUST $8,000
PEACH FORK ROAD - ShOwcase kitchen, built-in dis·
hwasher, Jenn-Aor range, oven and microwave. Three bed·
rooms, full basement, and lots of big nice trees for shade sittmg on 2 pretty acres.
$34.000
BlUM ~.DDITIOfl- Beautiful laying 178x117 loto in anice
subdiVISion. TPC water and Columbus Southern Electric
available. NO mobile homes permitted. Great buildinl site.
.
$ ,500

AU MAlliS
Bring It In Or We
. Pidc Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE

BISSELL .
SIDING CO.

.

..Free

SERVICE

992-5335 or 985-3561
Auo11 F""" Pitt .Offiro
217 I. Sec ~ Pomoroy
POMEIOY, OliO
316/'90/lln

BUILDING &amp;
REMODELING
Commercial a.
Residential
•Roofing
•.Siding
•Windows

Isn't

~

Warth Doing l9lt

. BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
992-5009

10.1-1 mo.

LONG BOROM - Fantntic Rlwr View - This one story 3
bedroom home is almost in the middle of two bends of the
· !leaut~ul Ohio R1ver. Has new carpetingthrou£hout lmmed·
1a11 possession Ind comes with all furniture.
.
MUST SU $21,il00
POMEROY - Peacock Aw. - Completely remodeled with
. new wmdows, new carpet new almost everything Has adinone _room, hv1ng room, 3 bedrooms, foyer, kitchen w~h new
tii!i~els, new bath, and 1 ful basement with lots of windows
and its owh new furnace.
MUST SEE, $34,000

fl.AlWOODS AREA- Aerowingarea. Approx. 3acres with a
grill llylnj building site or mobile home sHe. TPC water
aviiiibll. EIIICirfc lines across the property. Farmers Horne
Approved. Almoii rudy lo go, just need$ you.
$1,000

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

The
GROOM
ROOM
Con~piitt

Grooming
to; All lrttds
EMiliE MEIIINAI
Operator
614·992-6120

Owlltl' &amp;

,_,.,,Ohio

10.11 mo,

Now

"-•ll!ift

Eatimates '' ~r

PH. 949·2101
or Rts. 949-2860
MO SUNDAT

.------~
··
•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR

CONSTRUCTION
992-6641 or
691-6864
. 10· 12·'10·1 ma . ".,

�fl '

.~

··'''

•

Pege-14-The

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcements

3

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Sentinel
35

LDts

&amp; Acreage

Wednesday.

KIT 'N' CARL VLE® by Larry Wriaht

44

i:='::fr •

A*Wtoly no
t._alng
on
ol
Harold R -, Rt. t
X 210, CJol.
llpollo Farry, WV. 25515, will
praMCule.

BORN LOSER

•

,.. Honda, Cl, 500, 11,310.

•

114-387-l'2DD.
GCMlRNMEHT SEIZED Vohlcl•

'
'

-·ll- '

$-10181.

1;,

'·

•

,•

(I) CIID !Ill 1121e
1121Newo
(!) Choilla In
1;1
(!) 3-2, 1 Contect
(!)
One
1;1

0040, ~5. IM.
Unat:tachtd? ArM SlnaiM Seek
Communication Whh '9ou. C:C.
Info,

,if?

Wrtte:

Box 1043, Go~
·Hpolto, otu......
.

4

.

. .

ue

aqu,,.

.........

·m

4 pups. 3 female and 1 _mi .., I
old. Wormod. 6t4/843-5t3t.

........... ......,,. ........ ...... ·-"It' S my [) lVJlle
' '
R1g
' 11t. .t 0
-~ ·

p.m.

CNiam · color miniature . ~!:oil ..,
female: Hauaa braUn. 1141742·

2827.

.

=

-:-s=.:.Lo~st~&amp;':':F:::o~u:::n=d::-·

Houses for Rent

3
~r,
1,
,.moaeted, 142!/mo.,
r.qul.-.ct. l14 .. tt

TO BE

601N6
A NICE DAV
IT 'S

AFTER ALL ..

noWty

Depoe~~:

SNOOI"(..Til~·SC~OOL.
6ll5 IS COMIN6 .. W!ll(
DON'T VOU TAKE Mi( CAP
AND UMBRELLA
!lOME FOR ME

2 bedroom home In liMon, WV.
304·'1n-888t.
3 bodi&lt;oom
homl
Point

a

~ERE,

8:05 (!) Bavwt_y t111blllleo
8:30 &lt;II D 1!11 NBC Nightly News

~

Abbott and Coatella
(I) CIID ABC New. 1;1
(!) Wftd Amallcl
(!) 3·2·1 Contact
II!» 1!111D
New•Q
«J) ID Andy Griffith
ID Sportalook
· ID Rln Tin nn, K·9 Cop
Stereo. 1;1 ·
8:35 (!) Andy Griffith
7:00 CD D !Ill Wheel ot Fortune

?

1111 Fonl BroncO•• - · 14,100 ... bllil otfw, 514-

Bullona

a

"
I_le__a~t..--------~--------------~·n~~-h&lt;M,30~­
__
(_'
l-

Bowl and lht Under

eou

tho Dolly

.

INTELLIGENCE JOBS. CIA, us
Cuolomo, PEA, Ole. Hl~na.
, ' Con It I 1105-187-eoGO EOCL K·
10188.

LOST, moto Brlnlny .
· Ton Milo Rd. 11'01. At.
REWARD, 304-458-1721: .

LOST: Hoovy donlm coot, rod
olold llnlngLI-IIno c;otll'r on
l=lltwoocla "Mel near cfiurch on
Sllturdoy nlghl. 614-111:2,7302.

7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis .
&amp; VIcinity

I'·

ALL Yord Sllloo Bo Poid In
Adoonco. DEADLINE: 2:GO p.m.
the day beto,. tht ad it to run.

Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.
F~doy. llondoy odhlon • 2:00

p.m. Salunllly.

Ftnanctal

s.n- _1-::1:::-:-,H,.,e-:,lp=w.,a,n,.,led:-::~=

?"''

. tln016 14 11182~155 ·

.

-

&amp; VIcinity
Oologo - · Rt. 2 .Junc:llon 87.

New. M,11,1t. Dl-. lompo, old
..n"y d - . old hutch, ond
tabael, lala ,_.,

Business
Opportunity

::.JJ:?t

eon, OH 45640.

SOCIAL

WORK

POSillON:
Coordlnotor ~tio(l
... n.blo .. twllldontlol
progromo lor wkh montol rOtlrdollon .ond dooo~
lol -lhloo In O.lllo COunty,
Ohio. R-lbll"loo lnclutfi
lho doy~-Y oupoovlolon of
the pragrem. MuM have one
r-r experlwa and • four.year

EARN$t8,000
No ioollng, P.T., nood - 1 par·
aon to ·aarvfce Ml1 brand

--782--.

candy

I'CMita. 10,000 cath Nqulred. 1·

llRED OF VENDING RTE ADS?
WANT SOME'IliiNG NEW7
CALL 1-IOHZH!I22
~NDING IIOUTE: L.Dcol. G cooh 1 . - . High troHic
~llono. ·EIOY _... WIH Troln.
1-«&lt;~IIW363.

22

Money to LDan

CREDIT PWS. CIOLD CREDIT
OARD. ViNIIIoot- guorantMCI. Caah Advaneea, no
eecu,tly

-.....

no

credll

dearM In 'f human Mrvlcn Choc~. 1-ICI0-22f.0048. fti.N
lleli:t. Experience wHh Medlclld IM.'
Public Sale
,..,llatlonl: .nd pl'ftiaUII ax.
8
LOANS ·ay MAIL
poi!onco wtlh parooMOt lllpor- Up to $5,1100 In 72 ltoura. we
&amp; Auction
vlolon pm.rocL Volid drtvor'o
con holp you got o ;1":'~
•
Rltk Pearson Auction COft'IPMY llclnoo ond aood driving . . - Loon By Moll. 1.-.2
roqulrod.
Uliorol
bonofll
pock·
II. IS fM,
now booking auctions, u~
·ogo.
Slllory:
Jlt-18,000
yNr.
perienc• mak" thl ditfei'llncl.
Licen11d Ohl~. Kentucky, w... Mi.let live within 30 mlnut• distance ol Oalllpolll, Ohio, or be
Real Estale
Vlrglnlo, 304-773-57115.
wilting to ; rel~a. All appllcatfono muot bi pcot-morkocl
9 Wanted to Buy
by 1:1120110. S.nd ,.......,. to
Bokor, P.O. Box 804, 31 Homes tor Sale ·
Hortes I Ponlll; 514-446--2107, Coclll1
Joclcoon,
OH 45540. Equol Op-,
614·388-8504.
pcrtunlty Employar.
Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
wtth or without motol'li. 0.11

Lorry Llvoly. 514-311-1303.

TECHNICAL TRAINING, JOBS,
TRAVEL
us Novy hoo 2'1'•"' provrav•llable. Clll Mr; Ray at 1;aooo.

Employment Services
11

Help Wanled

282-1384.

n-.

HOME · TYPISTS, PC UM'!I
$35,000
PCIIonllol.
Dotoll1. 111 8D5-NUOCJO Ext. B·
4582.

AVON ~ All .-rus, CIII -Marllyn

Vlouolly
lmpolrod Cortlllod
Wuv• 3()4.882-2645.
Profloolonll with prolicllncY In
Addrt...,.
wanl.t
lm· Brolllo for t'"oring. Contoct tlno
madiatefy!
No
IJCperience Canon, Maon COunty &amp;o.rct of
nec:qnry. Excellent pay! Work ~ducotlon, f/07 Elahlfi st~"t"'
78at home. Call tall frH: 1.SOO. Ploooont, WV 25550. 3
•'
395-3283.
. 4540.
AVON ! All Al'lll ! Shirtey Woril !rom h - SilO por 100
porporlng moiL lnlormollon
Spurs, 304-l75-142i.
Mnd atap to K.S. Enterprt.n
Career Opportunltln, On Rlvllt'. P.O. Box 5157·HNW NJ 07205.
Good Pay, benefits, adventure.

M.K.G. Job Servlco lo for you.

For mortlnkmnatlon Mnd Sl50
to M.K.G. Job Services, ~ Clay
Lick Road, Northup, OH 45658,
C~o~rrtntly

accepting
applications tor full or par1-tlma
dlntal hygiene posHion. Mu:et
be licensed to practice in the
s1att of Ohio. Rnumtt may bll
,..,, : cit 041, c/o G.lllpolis
C)aitr, Tribune, 825 Third Ava,

Gall palls, OM 45631.
Oeliwtry driver nMdld, mu•
provkMd transportation, good
wages, apply In person Village

12

Situation
· wanted

Ltc.naed day eire provider. Has
3 tull·tlma openlnga. H you live
in Melga or Athans County, you
moy bO ollglblo lor lrM bobyoll·
tlng thN the Del)ar1mtnl of
Human Servlc•. ~or more lntormallon call Connla .t 114-167·

6329:

14

Business
Training

Pizza inn , 3004 Jackson Ave, P'l.
PI I.
Earn extra Christmaa money

Retrain

taking Avon. orders trom

~~~~·n~

tamlll,

wcril. C;lll Kay 61 •

LAW ENFORCEMENT

DEA, ATF, · ~,S. Marshalls, now
hlrlng. Call 219o&amp;e2·1136 EXT
OH15t B:OOI.m. to 8:00p.m. 7
doyo.

=·

MODELS: 2 WNI'8 to adult. No
ooqoorloloco
Soloctlng
,._ .,_ tar
kK'I
to local
ond mojor • ortlooro, Pr-ntlllono ot ep.m. or 7p.m. lhorp

on Wedneedar, Nov 14th at

Holldoy Inn, Huntington, off l-e4.
Mlnoll muOI bo wllh logal
guordlon. Hlghllto Modollng,
NYC &amp; Scronlon, PS 717-346-

31141.
NMd adra mon.y? Make your

own hou ... ....-nonttt'IUon toye,

home decor, and Chrlatmaa
ti..U. All fully guar11n1Md. No

delivery,

no collecting. Call

Friendly Home Part~ c7o ROM

514/Mi-20211.

Aloo

booldng
.,..,._ and!Dr taking ord.,..

2br, houae edge of town, inalda
city llmlta on .818 acre tot,
C:~~ atrnosphare,

S34,000;

e

3711, after BP·n:'·
3 bedroom houu, ona acra
woodocl lot. Roclcoprlngo, Ohio.

8M-M2-a225 after epm.

3 badroome houn, land con·

trocl, 304-8711-5104.

3 Mllea from Rt. 35 Pliny, ranch
atyle, 1800 sq. ft. fenced yard on

5.2 acrH. 3 BMiroo"'-, central

AIC, 2 car pnge, t1tllih1 aya·
tem, cHy'Water, nMd to Hll, af·

••r s p.m. cen 304-i37o324B.

I room. houH; ona bath, on 2

112

Audrey BIHalng
WHt Point Rd.,

acret.

,.sldence;

Hortford, W. VA. $15,000. Call
collocl: 6141282·1218.
II rooms and b.th, 2·112 acfft. In
Hartford. $15,000. Call collect 1·

Ono bedroom liouH, 304-1752722.

42

Mobile Homes

I .,~_,,.-...,...~-,-. ...,...~
12x&amp;O 21u, . lerae Drtftta lol:,

,.

3 BA, 2 botho, Hennon ·Tntco
Dlotrtct. $300 por month. t-114411-1103.
3br lloblio HOmo for Ront Furnlu.d or unfum .. hed. c.tlaner
Zp.m. 814 441 8527.
Extra nac. 3br, In Port•, •c.
dop. 1 , rol roq., 1271inico I
ulllhoioo, 814-44W18t, 514-441-

11855.

.

hoino

•

14x70, 304-175-

Small tnUer In llinerlivUia, Oh.

. Ext. GH·

4562 for current repo llat.

Uu.. S.lll 3ltr houaa on ap.

Plaza. C.ll Todliy, B144464387fl
Reglsteratloni9().()5..12JI'B.

For IOio or ront. 3 bodrvom
houoo, 405 Sprlna Avo.,

1 acre. $20,000.

Bldwoll, OM. Phono: t-304-429-

PDmaray.

B141US..730

~. 1

iduk. 51~2-3t81.
SUpar rilco 2br, In Contonory.

~.:.~i4
44

a nee.

'=s=.-o·

Apartment
for Rant

daya,

6141448-1325 ovonlngo. Will lin·

-

Aooma nallable for 2 or 3 conotNCIIon -.r., 304-882·

2581.

Roontolor ront · - or month.
s::'ll~ 11 $120/mo. Golll• Hotol.

8

1180.

fOOIIIO

wHh ccoklng.

Atoo' tl'llllor .,..... All hook-upo.
COl olor 2:00 p.m., 304·77.1-

54

Merchandise

1 BR tum. opt, In Vlnlon. Dop.
roq'od, t114-446-M41.

51

Household

Goods
LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
Sa!u ond chon ~ from
$385 to SIN. Toloteo $50 llld up
lo ft25. HldH-- $3i0 lo
$585. RocNnon 1225 to 11371.
Lompo ~~ lo ftZS. Dlnottoo
ftOi ond up to $495. Wood tobto
w-1 choltW $285 lo $71111. Doou
Sl4$ up lo $371. Hulc~ MOO I
up, bolnk comptoto with
- - ~ Ond up IO $3e5.
Iooby ft10 Monro- or
loox oprlngo lull or twin 178, firm
188, ond 198. Quoon ooto$27!11
up, King $350 . .4 drow• o $11. Gun C.bln.ta 8, 8, a' 10
gun. Boby monr- S35 a
$45. Bod fro- ~•• Ouoon
st .. $31&amp; king .......... Good
ooloctluii 01 loodr_, ouhoo,
- . . cobl- hoodtocordl $30
llld up to $86.110 doyo 11
- h with OpJ!I"¥0d · - · 3 mi.
out Bulovlllo Rd. Ot&gt;on 8 A.M. to
5 P.l. Mon, ihN Sol. Coli 5144464322.

TYPISTS,

PC

Farm Supplte s
&amp; Ltvestock

18x7 Wooden Qa,.~ Door, wtth
hordwoN, $tOO. 614'245-6255.

SUV.

•llhanalnp, craft
ponoto- toto &lt;If (lhrfotmoo- SUi.

aprone,

Ocoo-

74

, 61

Faim Equipment
Gohl llllnilor ml10r 4 ocnono.
llognt1 Bodgor 7ft hoy bind.

8olh good cond.

-273-4211.

Jlm'o fonm Equlpniont,_SA. 35,
Wool Golllpollo, 514-11-8777;
l-luii now I uood torm
1 1 .o
B

tnctoro
m'"......,.. uy,
Nil, tl"lde, l:oo;.a:oo weakdaye,
Sol. lin Noon.

63

Ll astock
.;,;.,,..,..,..,...-v..;.,..---,_.,
' --:::
...._ will
12 Holotoln 0011hahon 80 cfoyo, bml oorlltlclol
_.act bulta
from tterd lhat
.... _ 11:M2 tbl milk, tl8tl lb
lb prololn, $t,211q. ooch.
• 1210.

:C!IIS

a

•

hood of eo
e-U41a.

pcourid Shollo.

~b0on,2for$t.w.

Clortotmoo lrHI, toaalng ony
ftl. Them.. 1'rio Fonm1

I

wlndohlold. Prlcod to ooll. lt4218-33T.I.

'

1t87 250-R 4 - o r . ~1113 ; :
CR..eo $500, excellent
k&gt;n, , •
Uytlma 3()4.171-1041 •flar 1:00
1
• .,.....,.

•

75

•

Boats

&amp;

,!1.,

I

l

t

for Sale

- · 1211
HP, Evt...-~no,
oompl
k top.
MW u
.
Clll114-21&amp;-1111aflllr :DO p.m.

'

W. otw ~AIZING.:~•.

=~::Kw-=.----~~~~

MARINE O.llllloito, OH. 114-4482424, t-,721-02111.

76

_,
,

I I • lo.f

\:

I caJ'T MIIJD

,.

5£100 TA!&lt;ai OUT

rr WAS

.,"

10 Dt!JIJ£R .. .

A BIG

Accessories

OF COWTE.XT

1170 Nova, 2 door, nice, 11,000i

0.8.0, Cllll I'M t11 0204.

e a . m~

S I S Ctoonlna. l..ol u. clyour homa In tkne for the

1111
llonto
corto.
Y-11
·Auliomotlc 83,1100 mi. Laaloo
~I out. SIIOO 0.1.0.

• 5:30 p.m • • • 2 ·10.
Before, aflar achool. Drop-Ina
walcome. 814-441.,224.

S:na

HoUdays. We aim lo pleaMI &amp;14-

'

oriM/lQ-23111.

uoora

..''

BASEMENT

Transportation

Mono .Un, 42 rogulor, opo~

Dmltlllll,
m111ag•,

I--lOT" ACC("'D\1-G- "TT
MY UNCl-B NBO.

''

Improvements

For Solo or Tiodo 1180 COmoNO,
T.top, 301 lntllnl, , _ polnt1
- r y a Nilolo~
..... grut. P,ZOO,
11

WIUERPROOFING
Unodoodltlouol lllallmo guoronIN. L,ocll roforoncM tumlohod.
F- ootl- Coil colloct I ·
814-:m'-. doy Of night.
Rogoro -mont Wolor.,_

'

flng.

Colvtn'o

Cuolom

Coblnoto

-'•llzlng In oountry olylo
khhono on&lt;l c•-•· 114-3M-

;.;

.,
•
•

257U or 514-1112-~ lor lrM tlmoloo.
•

=·

Ccmplolo Mobllo Homo 101 ujoo
a
oloo plumbing 1o
111
, roalllng, rwmocllillnt,
potloo I docko lie. REMODE!,;-

INGI

Rlllerancu.

lt4-2111-1111.

Eld........

•
" '\
.,....
.·~..'
....

~NIWI

&lt;II (IIIII Barbare Wallers

~

-

o10.-

Otdo Dolo .... Exoollont

- - · Alo:il po, pli, I l l , - ,
ernlfln Cllll··e.,~

-.a
..._llo,
IICIOd
1111

Alllonoo

-.

...· - " " " .. 814-24111142.

55

Building
Supplies

Speclll Shirley MacLaine
talks abciut her personal
relationships; Mel Gibson
discusses his family, religion
and life in Australia.
(!) (!) Korea: The Unknown
ware
,
!Ill 1!2) Ill WIOU Kelby's
story could set • . cri'1'inal
free; Kevin recruitS a midget.
· stereo. Q
«J) ID Star Trek: Tho Nell

."'

:f•fll

Aon'l TV Sorvlco, -lollllng
In Zontlh otoo ..,lclna moot
Dlt.r bnndL . . _ alTa, alea

-~~ropolra. wv
304-5114:198
Ohio 114-441-2454.
Aolory or cabto tool ~tnng . ,-:,..;
wotlo complolod oomo
,&gt; ·
lliCf
·•:.-&lt;
lll48o2
, OMYicl,
r.-.,

=·..

S.ptlc TMik Pumping $00, Gotllo

' •

,,

•

'

Cortor'l Plum..,.
•nd HNilna-·•
F..-ondPino'
. Gollljoollo, Oltto
11t 1413111

CNN Everting Now1
1D 700 Club With Pat
Robertoon
t0:05 (!) MOVIE: J'he Horae
Soldlen (2:30)
10:30121 Crook and Ch1ae
11:00'(}). (I) Cll. !Ill 1121111
aJ) New•
(!I Night Court Q
(!) Newaw.tch
«J) Ia All:lftlo Hall
11J MleMI VIce (1 :00) Stereo.
at Fllr1 1nd F•tivall:
Nelll'llllca Stele Fair Charlie
Daniela perlorma at tile lair·
in Uncoln, Nebra8kll; in .
addition, Mike Snider
highlights fair events.
Moneyllne
Rln Tin nn, K-9 Cop
S'tereo.
11:30 We 1!11 Tonight Show
Stel80.
(J) Matt Helm
&lt;D Amerlce'a Delenae
Monllor '
IJl CWOtflne

Malchmaker can help you to under- circumstance$ we usvally fare better
stand what to do to make the relation- when we have lots of time lo ponder a
ship work . Mail $2 to Matchmaker, P.O. ·decision, but loday II could be the snap
_.....,._ _ _ _ _ __. Box 9t428, Cleveland, Ot144t0t-3428. judgments you ma~e that will prove tile
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0.C. 21) mosl effective.
Someone you treated conslderalely in GEMINI (Mor 21-.1- 20) Geminis are
the pas1 may have an opporlunity to re- in a tsvorable cyclt~,where their llnai\clal
BERNICE
ciprocate loday . This person is vet')' ea- trends are concelned. Be alert and
BEOEOSOL ger to balance accounts.
ready to move quickly today if someCAPRICORN (O.C. 22-.lln. 19) You'll lhing unusual unexpectedly develops
recognize a good Idea when you hear .. lhat could yield a profit.
. .
one today and that IS why It behooves · CANcER (June 21-Julr 22) Today you
'.
', ·.
you to communicate or socialize with might be more Inclined to think abou1
progressive thinkers. Make It a pOint to pleasure then work. Fortunately, you
.
should be able 10 eniOY yourself without
avoid negative types.
AQUARIUS ,...,, ZO..Feb. 11) In matte" detracting from or Interfering with your
that pettaln to your career you should serious affairs.
have a slight edge over yo~r compell· . • LEO (Julr 23-Aug, 22) A number of lillie
lion today. t1owever, 11 you are going to things you have failed to llnlllh up until
make your mo!141, do 11 quickly because · this pOint In time can be conckldell to
time may not be your. lily.
yQilr setlatactlon today. You'll enloy
No¥. 15,1110
PIICII (M. zo.MIIfcll20) A friend ot aweaplng the decks clean.
foreign extraction or someone born In 1 VIRGO (A... D-lopl. 22)' Something
There are indications you may become place dlatant from your place o1 b!rth fortuitous might develop lor you today
involved In a very unique endeavor or could play a construcllve role in yaur af- through a friend you "'"' In a chance
enterprise In lhe year ahead. It wiN be fairs today.
encounter. You and he/she have 11way8
something you'll have a hond In ARIE8 (IIMch 21-.Apr111t) Thla could bMn able to eoml'ltllnicate with one anr..;.lght
ortginallng.
be an exciting dlly tor you - • jOint other very well.
GlpD taCaSCORPIO (Oot. 24-No¥. 22) OOn't be endeavoro are concerned. Somattolng i I LIIRA (Sept, 11-C)ct. ZS) Today you
QIIIpacta Tonight
reluctant to discard old. unworkable axtraordlnery. might sud~Nnly - o p could be extremely lucl&lt;y - e your
0 IIIOVII: The lndl.ln
methods tor better procedureo today. • thlt'll p.._ you 11 wan 11 the othor materiel lnt-11 1r1 co..-ned, bUt
flglitlf (2:00)
Sometlm" It mike senN to switch party Involved.
'
: not nec:nnrlly In other ai'8111. Keep
· . 11:35(11C._,.Q
hOf'8811n midstream. Trying to patch up , TAURUS (April.,.._, 20) Under moat your mind on malting money.
a broken romance? The Aatr~Graph
,
.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Plumbing &amp;
Haitl!lg .

Generation

a

Dovto
-.voc
Sorvlco,
G..... Crook Rd. Po~o, llip==-kup, ond dollvory. 514-

82

.,,\

lho unbollonblo prlca ol
$12,100 - - ond ooi up.
Coii1-IOO-~ lor dolollo.

au

- · olr CCiftCI, vinyl ;k/~rng,
, _ w l - I point, pon:h
wltllumn owning hll, twntollot,

Nellrllaka Stete Fair Charlie
Daniels performs at ths lair
· in uncoln, Nebraska; In
addition, Mike Snider
highlights lair events .
PrlmeNowo
!Ill MOYIE: The Indian
Fighter 12:00)
8:05 CD MOYIE: A Flot1ul of
Dolllrs (2:00)
8:30 (I) CIIIIJ Growing Paino
Jason and Maggie see Psris
from a hospital window . 1;1
9:00 (}) D 1!11 Deor Joltn The
group enCOtlrages John to
find an old rOO)antic llama.
Stereo. e
&lt;II &lt;IIIII Doogle Howaer,
M.D. Katherine's parants
arrive tor the holidays .
Stereo . !;~
·
(!) (!) Ko,.a: The Unknown
ware
!Ill 1!2) 111 Jaka and the
Felman Jake and McCabe
come Into conflict wrth a
nivanga-seeking detective.
Stereo. e
•
11J MOVIe: Daad Reckoning
(2:00) Stereo.
121 Nashville Now
Larry King uvet
9:30 (}) D 1!11 The Fanelli Boys
Ronnie seeks help
baby-sitting his girlfriend's
children . Stereo . I;!
(I) Clllil Menied People
Weather causes everyone to
celebrate Thanksg~vin at the
brownstone. Stereo.
·
ID College Baake
10:00 (}) 11 1!11 Hunter The early
, release of criminals IT)ay be
linked to 11 murder . Stereo .

a

CO. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
.looklon, OH 1-1100-637-1525,

ar. CA.

TAK&amp;IJ OUJ

..'
'

Home

==:

Wlndnr 14171.,

I JUST mYT LIKt.

W~

MISTAI&lt;£..

cond~

a

a

.,

Auto Parts&amp;

7:30 (}) 11 II!» Jeopardy! 1;1
(!) Night Court 1;1
· (I) : 1121111 Enl-lriment
Tonight Stereo.
CIJIJ Mama'• F1mlly
(!]) Cll Three'a Company
ID College Basketball
Craaaft,.
7:35 (!) The Jelfei'aona
8:00 CD D 1!11 Unsolved
Myatetlea The FBI reopens
the t965 murder of a black
deputy sheriff. Stereo. Q
(!) MOVIE: The Bachelor'•
01ughters (2:00)
(I) CIIIIJ The Wo- Years
Kevin and his mother have
Thanksgiving without his
lather. Stereo. Q
Cll (!) Scientific American
Fronilors Student-buill
machines battle in Close
, Encounters ot the Remote
Kind: Stereo. Q
!Ill 1!11111 48 Hours Stereo.

11J Murder, Sha Wrolll;'l
I2D Falitl and Feallvals:

''

1m 11 11. StoiCIIIII Tri-llull

King- ........... Solid plno,
full
wav.,
12
drawal'li.
Haodboord -lnor Indo oh~
.... Grali lor Chrtotmoo: $400.
1141112~ afl.r 1:00 p.m.

tl78 Thu-liln1. pb, po, IIW,
oo, cnoloo, omilln radiO, topo
olnor, ..... flOOd, rod In .
i..J -..... 1710 firm. Silo ..
Ohio on . Sr 124.

304-17J."P'Ja after 1:00 PM.

a
o

.r

bUJid.

lng, .., lot In 0...11
en&amp; Gooa' _,..... ,, F -

~. --. 114-4*
33 Fanns for Sale

e

1. ~

35

LDIS

=

Alllfta. 1
diY ...... -

I Acreage
eore. 1 udall tota,

flnlnalna. ~~\,l'tiil; wv
., IJ2.25ll.

.·r. . .

"Got any atop watcta? 1 want to e8e how 10ng
~ takas my. husband to get flick

of W!nter."

1

I·

I

'

v E 12

''

•

.

..
'•

I

..

s_c....,.A_,s,.......,.r~-~~

.

3

I 1 ·I I .
H I MT R

!

1"1 '

-,,-,.-T-·,.,.-1. ~

I I I' ·•
L-....L...J.-..L-..J....-1

A.comicwa.sentert.ainingan
aud tence of armed servtce
men·. He made them
laughter when he qutpped, I

F y G F E.· I

lknow a guy who joined the

II
1--

I

~oar wit~

9.

..

~-,-..,......,,_..........;,--r--lservice to·-· ·--!"

I I lc I · I

0

5
Complole tho ch11&lt;kle qUOIM
by filling in the milling words
L.-1..-1.--..L.-..L.-..L.--I you dovolop
from srop No. 3 below.,

..
SCUM LETS ANSWIIS
Kitten - Impel - Ultra- Misfit - TALKIES

Old gent to movie casHier: "The last time I ~ttended a
movie popcorn was onty 15 cents. The cashter smtled
and said," You'll really enjoy yourself fiow ... we have
TALKIES!"

· BRIDGE

NORTH

JAMES
JACOBY

.

'

U-14-tO

+J 74
. Q9
• Q64
+J98S3

EAST

WEST
+A 10 6
· •10 a

• 53 2
. • KJ6542 I

...
t

t l0532

~ Cll MOVIE: American
'A\'nja IR) (2;00)

'

Motors

Services

SOlo, oHordoblo, chlldcoro. M.f

614 •992-21 56.l~i~:.; 1,;.d;;;,1r~~\
304 •675. 13 33 f&lt;i..;J~.'t=l.'l·
'614-446-234.2

I

.,

bod $tOO. llunnlng looordo $25.
304-I'IM30t.

1178 ,_, LTD U 4dr, low
mfl!oo~.L • - " ' conciHion,
ti.H5- tn4 ue 1158.

8ltMI 12x11, 2. ~ 1llrool'i't

•.

VInton Auto Sllivogo. Forolgn l
Dom Porto buying jun~ cora. , ,
IM--311111112
' .•

ton. Ohkt Pallll Co., Pomeroy,
Ohlo.114-ltM481.

SPECIAL. P.ctory to you1tl1, 2
Of' 3 bediOOfti14J:7'0 modela II

-.

Truotl '1-r oH Toycoto long

Ccncrolo l ptootlc Mptlc tonko,
Ron Enn1 Ent•I'DiiMI, Jeck80111 OH 1-800-13'7-0128.

MI.. Paula'a O.y Care C.nllr.

ISA
WANT AD

..

4041.

ev.ntng. or wleklnda:. eM~
5514.
Magic Y•ra Dq C.re Center
roooonoblo,
dopondlbll,
llcenae, qUIIby child CIN. Mon.
doy lhru Fridoy, 7:30 till 5:30.
For more lntormatlon or to
roglotor 30~75-5847.

THE.BEST

cppos ITE oF~

.~

~

Flatrock acroa . 1from Oooa
Church, 304-1715.

ll•od hord WCICid olollf. ft3 por71
-~~Aut~o:;s~f~o;..r·~Sa~l~e=~
bolndlo. Ccntolno •liP'!"'· 1 112 .,.,

hOUH cl•nlng or bebvalnlna

Tfff

Shll&gt;hord

wlntor coot. 514-441-..75.

446-8990.
High School otudont will clo

'

. Hond1 Magna, 4,400 ICutal
mil•,
mint .
condhkm,

350 Ponlloc motor. Good
lien. $150. 1114-14~3110.

...., piinla, ahlrteJ_ top c0111,

auto c1e1nlng Inside &amp;. out.
Rlversldo Auto Detailing. 6'14o-

a bltlary, Sporty Fo;~~ roor
ti'IW'el truNc, Nne Yl
. 114381-1111,
'

CONGf!U~

I

•

•

Motorcycles

1111 - new Mit,
CM ,,,.,
400-Enhauat
v- J..'
mll•aa

booulllul Chrlotmoo
twmnont· only ft,N par yord. 12 - ~~~-'Jci;";;iiiii:-:-Ji!~~
oL bog, of potvootlit' otumna.
...38 por yord. CoiOI'od burlop, '
onty $1.31 par prd. l•ra,
lllira, Boora, omoll, modlum,
lorgo, $.N, ft.~ suo. Rollo of

448-2303.
needed. 135,000 potentl•l. Will boby oil in my hcmo, cioN
Dotollo. 111 1105-NMOOO Ext. B· to ocl1ocil, 304-1711-27114.
45112.
Will bobpll on port~lmo bUio,
HOME TYPISTS, PC uoora Rat.. encaa provtded. 11._,388n-.
$35,000
pctontlol. 87M.
.
Dotollo. 1111011-587-eooo Ext. B·
10181.
.
Wll catwlor -~ In "" homo.
11411112-177'1.
INTELUOENCE
JOBS.
All
llrlnChoo. US Cwtonw, DEA, WI! do bobyolttlng In my homo,
araa.
Chriaty
Hlrt::&amp;.Coil (118CIM87- Cheshlra
Alchordo. 514-387-7287•
... .lOll!! Ext. K·1 , •
HOME

,.'

Mlscellane&lt;&gt;us
Merchandise

$0 W/IAT I$'

I I

•

I

ntarenc., 6

2231, 8t4-448-2581.

T/11$ t&gt;leTtONAP'( $AYS "ff?O '' 1$
THE oppo51Tf .oF 11 CON'~

Rooms

2br on luga ·prlvat• lot, fure
nlohod, $22!!/ino. ptuo 7~':

Your

rone.

Furnished

-=

homo far ront, 514-4410501 or 448-0Ttl.

propo~r- A•po,e...
~r- (1 IOS-a87..SOQO

45

/

wuhar, *Jar llook-up, wat" 5651, M•- wv. .
5 112 gallon Aquarium complata.
poid, V.nco Rood, 8W441-o885.
.
81....-24'1
.
121150, 2br, whh oipondo, ctoon, 46 Space for Rent
1 otortod boogioo. S50/ooch. eon
11rg1 lot, water pald 1 washer Ccunlry Mqbllo Hcimo · Pork, Fronclo Alto. 814 448 4288.
·
d,Yor, hoo~up, WHt ond of Bob Routo 33, Nonh of Po. .roy.
.
Allontlon:
Qui~.,.
ond
croftON.
McCormick. t14-441~tl.
l.ottJ~n1111, pal'tll, AI•. C.ll
Guhl'l Country Stotw ond Rom·
140180, 2 bodroom rnobllo " - · 514-wz-lltN.
nonl Shop ot 2118 Mi. Zion Ad.,
Racine arM. No pelS. $175.00 • Traner lot tor rent, 304-$75·1071.
Jockoon, OH 1814-2111&lt;1041) lo
month ~ua utlllU•. 814-Mthovlng I hu(ltl y01r ond Nlo. .
100% cOOlon VIP P~ntl from lho
2117m4-114~24311' 49
For Leasa
bo"·
SL88 par yoid. Said
2 mobllo loomoo, - ' oMI .,...:.-....,;...;.....:.:...:..:..;.,.,-.,- color only
broad cloth ramnanta for
water tumlahld, refaNncet , . 2 n•ly built commercial untt..
qulrod. At . .\ LlocU81 Rd, Polnl 1100 oq. ft. ooch. 1850 • mcnth. qulno ond croflo, oil colora, only
PI-nt, 304-871-1071.
Joclcoon, Ohio. 814-21111-71)44, $t.68 por yord. 00 lncli . qui"
prlnto only S4,H por yord. eo
Zllfl-21160.
2br unfumlefwd. Mobile Horne,
Inch quln llld curtoln molorlol,
For
t.oo-Solo:
2
olory
homo
In
Mar HMC, no .peta. I1Uimo.
whlo, noturol, pooch_,_ country
Choohlro · V1i11g0,
Excollont blue, rneuve, onty p .SO per
fiOO deposit, 614 448 381l
Condklon,
1104-1132-88511,
Yl'd. autn bitting, bolw· St.tt,
.
2br, mobUe home In Porter, You Olflco: 1104-1132-71711.
Ful~
a-i- $5.40, Ill ptt.
poyoll utllllloo, 614-3118-11804.
low pan-., $1.50 each, 1 yard
~~~H.

MuL 0

bo-

~mplo -ds.

1;1 ,

FRANK AND ERNEST

Sl-

for Rent

GOVERNMENT HOMES from $t
(U ropol~. Dollnquont lox

5330

::-B,-a-ul:::llfv:--y""ou_r_c_ll_,&amp;_p_ro_t,-oct...,..,..h
from wfnttr -.n I grime. Expert

=.

I

lho

7:05 (!) Happy Dayo

wv.

MIOOLEPORT-3 bod,_, LR.,
D.A. Fom. Rm7 b o - . Nlco
tot, aoocl netghboftlaoll. No
llopoolt roqullecl. 514-

low 10 form lour

a

r... IIIII-.

614-282.!1218.

praxlmal.ty

Wanted 10 00

ceiiMtll

Mobllo
7888.

Now!IISouthNatem
B;uslnns Collage, Spring Valley

18

4br, he- noor Gollllo, ntod •·
r.M• en, 132!hno.
pluo ~. oort- colto onty.
IGI-788-3125.
Fumlehecl HOUM, 3br, 21 """ 1
O.III!OIIa. 1225,
61• 44&amp;-4-118 oftor p.m.
a motot1o homl, 2 bodroom, tumtohod or unlum-.
Hovon,
3041812-aoee
In chr, · :i lioutoo for ront,
d-ft · roqulrocl, Coli llt4-448831hftor 5p.m,

0 lour
Roorrongo 1otttr1 of
ocro mblod words

(I) CIIIIJ lnoldo Edition
(!) (!) MICHell Lelt,.r
NewaHour
liD 18 Night Court !;I
1!11111 Cu,..,.t Alfllr
crJ1 For Klda' Sake The hosts
travel tile country to meet
parents, teachers and
community leaders who are
working to Improve the
heanh of our children.
11J MacOY.,er
·
ID SportaCenter
Moneyllne
ID Soei'IICraw and Mrs. King

llpollo Dorrilno'o lor om.ra. 8144411-4040.

ProgroMin
Foclllty to
.... -piing •
... ..... lor
Soclol
DltoriAdmln'OM Coordinator In
oddhlon to Soelol Sorvlco Ex·
pono- lndivlduol m..t oloo
- · otrong Hlllo In Morllol·
lng c.neua O.wlloprnent &amp;.
CGrnmh. .nt lo Quolly Pollont '
Cora. CcmpotHin Sellry I
- h Pocklgo. Sond Confldlntlll
R-mo to Admlnetr.lor, Four Wlndll Nuralf!8
Foclllty, 215 Sloth Annuo, JICII·

lAM I

~ I Dmm of Jeannie

lAIII
&amp;TVFFW!

T..lnG Appllcatlono o l -

"'-•m

Pt. Pleasant

21

8

cas

-..w ......... '

PI-nt. 2 bolhl, familY "'""'·
g•ro~~t~,olc. 30usa1117t.
·
3 Bodroom · · houoo, aood

....

Wolld Today

ID Batman.Stereo. 1;1

Ladin wrlst •tch found neer

S10 ato-.

.

ID tn-tlto PGA Tour

1 6UE55

2 puro whho fuzzy ltltonl, 304at5-30t7.
.

BOfdtr Collie to glvtiWIY to

IIJCI-Ex~~teaa

Rentals
41

good hcmo. 514-iU-T.In oftor 5

t%

IID.ALF

1".1I ::CIlriiIllI

' "''

Giveaway

8

EVENING-

1:00 (}) D

program •.VIA/Muter card ~'*'·
No eecurtty depoelt 1400

-rt-rchL~cO.

WED., NOV, 14

!

Gold Crodh Cord, cooh -

lldanlial

The Daily Sentinel- Page-15

Television
Viewing

•

$100. ClooYyO. Buqoluo.
··
Your...._
( t l - Ext.

·

Por:narov- Middi_apOrt. .OJ!io.

c

71 . Autos for Sail

Announcements

Wednesday, November 14, f!90'

November 14, 1990 ,.

+ A 10 7 4

A 98 7

·SOUTH
K Q98

+

• A 73
t KJ

See spot
win

+KQ 62
Vulnerable : North-South
Dealer: South

By James Jacoby
South

West

Nortll

Easl

Pass
2+
2•
It would have been better for South I+
All pa ss
to cue-bid three hearts after East's 3 NT
overcall , on the chance that North
Opening lead: ' 10
might have Q-x of hearts. 'Instead he
bid three no-trump himself, a some·
what brash ac tion that needed a bit of L----'----- - - - - '
luck to succeed . East was right to stick
in the two· hear t bid, if for no other
rea son tMn to gel a good lead.
The opening lead wa s covered by
the queen and k ing, and decla rer held East holding only one ace for an entry,
up. It was obvious to East that a low t he defenders were abte to take only
heart would go around to dummy 's re· one heart trick and their three aces.
Of course South was lucky . but he
m a ining nine, so he continued with the
had
to contribute to his own good forjack of hearts. Not knowing the locatune
. If he had carelessly ducked the
tion of the heart eight , declarerrfelt he
second,
heart , the seven-spot would
was headed for defeat. Then he saw a
have
done the work that declar- _
never
. faint chance. If West's heart 10, obvi·
er's
bridge
guardian angel intended ,
ously a lead from a doubleton, was acfor
it.
companied by the eight, declarer 's
James Jacoby's books "Jacoby on Brid~~ and ~
seven would become a winner. So de· ·Jacoby 011 Card Games· (wrilien with his lather,
clarer played the heart ace and was lhc /;lle Oswald .Jacoby) are rww available at
happy to See the eight from West. Next bOOkstores. &amp;th are publisbf.&gt;d by Pharos Bnoks.
@ 1910, NEWSPAHA ENTERPRISE Alltl.
came the king of clubs. Declarer could
handle t he 4-0 club break , and with

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Calaveras
County
chronicler
6 Recipe
unns
10 Stand
11 Gin mixer
12 Antilles
Indian
13 Misanthropist
14 Conway
and Reid
15 Chihuahua
sening
16 Give whirl
11 Dupe
18 Con·
dueled
19 Plant of
the ·
legume
family
22 Black·
thorn
23 Concern·
ing
26 Slrutter's
baby·
29 Pelrot
32 Aseol,
e .g.
33. R_eeent
(prefix)
34 Twist
36 Trade
37 Crystal
ball user
38 Macbeth ,
for one
39 Signs ol
tomorrow
40 Gold ·
finger's

first name
41 Missing
42 T-hone,
e.g.
DOWN
1 Bailie
ploy
2 Apparilions
3 Postal
choice
4 Osiris 's
wHe
5 Pen point
6 Cajole
7 To thai
time
8 Segment
9 New
England
food fish
11 Justice of

Answer

17 Mosqui..

toes,
slangily
20 Man in
blue
21 Woodland
tree
24 Metallic ·
dishes
25 PacHic
Islands,
collec·
15 Motorist's
tively _
aid
27 Broad·

n-.,...-...--,,--..-

cast
28 Ruble pan
29 Writer
Nikolai
30San
Antonio
landmark
31 Measure·
ments
35 Outlet
36 Close
38 Profs'
helpers
(abbr.)

DAU.YCRYPTOQU&lt;J'IE! -; Here's how to work II:

11114

AXYDLBAAXR

.Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
lor the three L 's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apo~~trophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different. ·
'

CRYPTOQUOTE

11·14
.A V
J

vv

EA S
J

U S· N N S E J

0 0 S X A VF

OSXAPOY ,

NVDFOJ

~

0 SXAP0 Y,
POY . -

JPF

.
0 D L , J V V Q J". 0 S X A · ·
EPNNPDC

SJNVF

, Ye.tar4aJ'• Crytt~•~te: THE MAN WHO

INTERFERES WITH ANOlliER'S HABITS HAS THE

WORST ONE. - HENRY S. HASKINS
C) ,1990 by Ktng F"ture• Sy!"'dieel•. Inc.

.

·'

'

.-..
•.

�I

,•

Pllge-16-The

mboden

'-"-~·,,__

•

November 14, 1-990

Sentinel

__________ Spencers to

Tim and Joy (Spaun)' Imboden,
tiacine, are announcing the birth of
their second child, Chelsey
Micheale, on Oct 19 at Ho~er

Medical Center.

The infant weighed eight pounds
10 ounceS and was 21 inches long.
The couple also has !l son, Zachery,
age tWO and ahalf.
Maternal grandparents are Charles and Betty Spaun, Racine.
Paternal grandparents are Frank
and Lora Mae Imboden, Syracuse.
Great grandparents are Junior
and Marie Spaun, Racine, and
Freda Warth , Hartford, W.Va.

24 contest winners
A Halloween !'arl¥. was held
recently at Hanisqnville Elementary.

.

A costume contest Willi 'held with
24 winners of three silver dollars
each in the categories of prettiest,
ugliest and most original.
.
Winners were: April Butcher,
Travis Hayes and Jody Donohue,
pre-school; Rachael Morris, Ryan
King and Jessica King, kindergarten; Jennifer Reeves, J.W. Howard

·

Christmas open
house. on
Dec. 2
.

The S~ncers, a family gospel
group, will perform Salllrday at 7
p.m. at the Bellemead United
Methodist Churcb on Burdette
Street in Point Pleasant during a
concert sponsored by the Bend
Area Gospel Silig Committee.
The Spencers is a family group
consisting of J.G. Spencer, his wife,
Barbara, their two sons, Wade and
Kevin, and a daughter, Geniece.
Songs they have wriuen include "In
My Robe of White." "Coming
Soon " and "It's So
. Peaceful.
"Narrow Way," a local group
will also perforin. The public is invited to attend.

.

NIT cage
play begins
Wednesday

'

· Children and adults will all find.,
some of the things they have wanted for Quislrnas when they visit
the Mcip County Museum's
Chrisunas Open House on Del:. 2.
The theme iS "All l Want for•
Christmas-. with displaY* or'
some of the things thal have been
favorite gifts fat years.
.'
Dollhouses and dolls, lt.ddy
bears and model railroads, antique
radios and wlilebes are IMIIOIIJ the
exhibits to be seen. as well as mletesting coUectiOns and halldcraftOO
items thatllhowcase the talents of a
number of local people.)
Miniature hobbyists are encouraged to cntei the dollhouse
contest and send en~ fonns to the
museum. Children s · dollhouae
should also be entered and prizes
wiD be awarded in all ca~egones.

.

!lnd Rees Wyant, first; Amanda Parsons, Jonnie Barley and .Ben Haley,
second; Julia Wilt, Jason Miller and
HoOey Welch, third; Erin Pill!'n,
Lisa Crawley and John Bliss,
fourth; Jessica Weeler, Courtney
Haley and Devon McM~y. fifth;
Jessie Blackford, Jesse Dillon and
\'Iegan Swearingin, sixth.

.

The Spencers

·Ohio Lottery
Pick-3:· 138
Pick-4: 0930 ·
Cards: 5-H;
9-(:. J-D· A..S
.
' '
Super Lotto
3-15-16-22-24-38
Kicker 538856
'

4

••
Vol.41, ·No .1 46

992·34r1

SERVICE DESK

Our New

Commission approves request

Voters ·get another
chance to·pass levy

THURSDAY IS
SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY
So/o DISCOUNT ON
AI.L PURCHASES

• UPS g if'rJ&lt;'rallxpress Delivery SrrvicP · Shor&gt; FlPfl"'' ,\ Clc•anii'CJ
. V&lt;dro Tope Rental· West('rn Uruo11 SPrJ&lt;r 0
·Traveler's Express Money Orders

UNLIMITED DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY
UP TO 50¢ • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
STORE HOURS: DAILY 6 am·12 ~idnight ·Sunday 8 am-10 pm

,

MORGAN R. WERRY

Birthday
celebration ,

·.

Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
and Pearl St.

We now feature ...

(Excluding Cigarettes)

MUST PROVIDE GOLDEN BUCKEYE
CARD OR DRIVERS LICENSE

·A

THURSDAY,
NOVEMBER 22, 1990

Morgan Raeann Werry observed
her first birthday recently with a
party at the home of her parents,
Raymond and Joyce Werry.
The cake was decorated with' a
portrait of her as a baby.
Attending were Brandon Werry,
Bill and Kathy Dyer, Jim Stewart,
Karen Werry, Lany and Janet Fife.
Bruce D. l\Dd Dorothy Myers, Mary
and Christopher Myers, jlruce A.,
Tracy, Kelly and Brittany Myers.
Sending cards and gifts were
Cliff Ashley, Eleanor Werry, Ed
werry, Flip Werry, Helen Stewart,
Ralph Stewart and Leonard Myers.

LET US HELP WITH
YOUR HOLIDAY FEAST!

' .....

•

THANKSGIV.JNG

1ft
·

'

U.S. Gov't ln1p. Grode "A"
. with Pop·Up Tender niner
All Sizes

.

CARDINAL
BASTED TURKEY

I

•

.,

LB.
Umlt one with
Addltton1l

and $10.00

Swift•AII Sizes

;~~~~~~~-~.~. . . . ~. . 88(
DU......

U.S. Gov't. lnspected•Gradt "A"

.

·93(

JOE GRANDsTAFF

·Vpcoming revival

PARK FARMS ·
FRESH TURKEY ··-•·

The Rejoicing Life Church,
Middleport, will have a revival
Eriday at 7 p.m. through Sunday
wiih services at 10 am.
Guest speaker will be Billy Joe
Grandswf. He · graduated from
Ravenswood High School and a
.earned First Team All State honors
·in football. He played football at
'Fairtnont State College. He
'graduated from Rockford School of
Theology in Illinois. He has
pioneered and pastored two chiu'ches in the United States and has
also ministered overseas. He becarne state evangelist for the
Church of God in West Virginia in
1985 and is presently a camp meeting speaker. He has authored 57
books.
,·
Pastor Mike Pangia invites the
pul!lic to attend the revival.

French Roast, ADC or
·Perk/Reg.

Assorted Varieties

MAXWELL HOUSE

.

COFFE~

$4 9 12$2 59 $1 .

36-39 oz.

can

Free With Mail-In Rebate
Regular or Butter Flavor

PEPSI
COLA

.

I

•

12 oz

cans·

48 oz

•

can · ·

I

I

•

.

PREPARING·THE PUMPKINS - First grade
students at Middleport Elementary were busy
Wednesday morning in preparation for their
Thanksgiving Dinner on Thursday afternoon.
Tbe students
prepare the meal and each takes a
.
"

.

.

lurn at all of tbe dlsbes. Here, students are
removing tbe seeds and other. ''pumpklu gunk"
from tbeir pumpkins. Some students . pictured
are Tyson Lee, Corrie Hoover, Scott Williamson,
Tyler Stewart, ~vor Buck and Joilb Lynch.

.

Meigs Local School Board adopts
'no smoking' policy in school areas
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel news staff
A policy of "no smoking" in
teachers' lounges or any area of
schools where students may he
present was adopted by the Meigs
Local Board of Education a.t WC\!nesday.night's meeting. ,.'" ' ·• ·
The smoking ban will go into efJect. on Jan. 1. ~eff Werry proposed
the action which passed by a four
io one vote. Larry Rope voted "no"
on the basis that he felt the Meigs
Local Te!jchers Association should
be contacted again for inpul on the
policy.
However, it was pointed out by
several of the members and confirmed by Supt. James CarpCnter
that the MLTA had been approached about the matter months
ago and that there had been no
response to the proposed action.
The board also on the recommendation of Werry voted to create
an athletic director's position for
Meigs Junior High School. It will
be posted to conform with the
MLTA contract
The
superintendent
was
authorized to proceed with advertising for bids for replacement of the
sewage system at the Salisbury
School to bring the system up to
EPA ~tandards. New furniture will
also be. 1purchased for the high
school cafeteria and the superintendent was authorized to go abead
with securing bids on lliat.
·

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News.Staff
Meigs County voters will again
decide on a 1.5 mill continuing
levy for the Meigs Cotmty Board of
Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, this time in a
February special election.
.. Lee Wedemeyer, Superintendent
. of Carleton School and Meigs Industries, approache4 the Meigs
County Commissioners at their
regular meeting on Wednesday for
permission to hold a special
county-wide election on the issue,
and the board in tum approved the
request.
.
Wedemeyer also informed the
commissioners of the MRDD
board's decision to close o!'Cmtions
for four to five months begtnning in
September of 1991 due · to the
failure of the 1.5 mill levy during
the recent generill election. . .
. "The board feels that the closing
is the only fair way to deal with our
clients, their families and the
program's emplorees," w~meyer
told the commissiOners yesterday.
Wedemeyer said that the 1991
budget is basically set, and that any

Employed as substitlJted teachers superintendent ~for~ the matter _of
were Penny Burge, cosmetology, semce contracts rs discussed agrun.
Todd Johnson, K-8, Pamela Morris,
Action was also tabled on the
1-8, and Sheryl Roush, 7-12 busisuperintendent's
request for the
ness education. Joyce Shug was
telemarketing
communications
sYShired as a sub$titute lms driver
tem
-in
·t.h~
cpnlnll~.~~~pl.
ear.
pen(Jlng·certificalion-:
•
The resignation of Cliff•Keennedy ·I'!!P\Cf, sl!id that pr~~liminaey1 infer,
as head boys' track coach was ac- mation is that the system would
cepted and Dennis McOu~ WI'S save t.he district money,. . ·
Af!er a len~y discussion, the
accepted as a volunteer freShman
basketball coach to assist Geite board on a mouon from Larry Rupe
Wise if his non-paid activity in the and in a split vote agreed to ·
coaching position is not in violation publicly apologize for the lack of
communications with the Meigs
of tlle MLTA contract.
Julia Hubbard was granted Athletic Boosters concerning the
maternity leave from Jan. 2 through fall sports banquet and to meet with
Manch 22. The' board voted to enter the Boosters to discuss the posinto an agreement wi~ the ~eigs sibility of mlJtual involvement in
County Board to paruc1pate m tile future banquets.
The banquet this year was sponcounty's
multi-~dicapped
sored
by the Board.. In years past
pro~arn. The cla_ss . 1s held at
the
event
has been a function of the
Racme and the distnct currently
Athletic
Boosters.
has two students enrolled there, it
In a vote to do the public
was noted.
Arrangements were made to sell apology and request a meeting with
some old school buses and a couple the boosters to discuss the posof other vehicles which are no sibility of mutual involvement in
future banquets, Bob Snowden and
longer usable.
Jeff
Werry vOied against the action
The board decided to postpone
while
Rupe, Vaughan, and Barton
entering
into service
and
gave
"yes"
votes. Barton, however,
maintenance agreements for the
stated
that
he
was voting in favor of
telepho~e systems in the superinthe
motion
"for
harmony only."
tendent s office as well as the JUmor
Snowden
charged
that the board
high and high schools because of
"docs
not
owe
an
apology to
the cost .The question of cornanyone
on
this
inatter."
·
. patibility of cheap plug-in disRupe
also
asked
that
the
board
posable phon~ to the in~m sys- .
ContinlJed 01i J;laii"e i2 terns is to be checked mto by the

Kraft Quarters

PARDY

59~
Frozen

203

BErn CROCKER CAKE MIX MT. TOP PUMPKIN PIE .•
·~

-

18'1•

oz.

pkg.

69 c
..... -

Lll!llt ltVM- COIIP!"&amp;IIO liD..,_., .............. Wide~
~ 1a. lRO.

,.... '-"1 Good 111 c~. ......

··fil········

SHED..A I. NAPPER

Car qualifier

202

•.

;

pkg.

O...eoupoo~

FLDUR

" ' !Mifr, OciiMI II C...

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

All Purpose

.~age

99c ·-

l--..m~&amp;t!O.~
..........., . . . .~
.

oo-D~H~C~

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

Sheila I. Napper, Langsville

Mary Kay independent beauty con:

sultant, recently qualiJied as ·a team
manager and earned the free use of
a red Pontiac Grand AM.
As team manager, Napper will
provide leadership to her personal
recruits, and will suppc:n her director in meeting the unit's business
goals. To qualify a5 a team
manager, Napper had to meet
. Spec:ific sales and recruiting requirements. .

V,tlu.dllt• Coupon

28~.

roo

I . . . It ......... 11, 1110.

.,._
UCHIIHD

Assorted Varietles•Bath

NORTHERN nSSUE ..·

0

L•OfltwolfiCIIIIIOII&amp;IIOGO~ . .............. -~~~~~~ Drill~

,..... ~ ...... c.............. - - ... il,..,........ 12. , . .

HAN~SGIVJ!IIG CIUCKEN? - Yep, !bat's
rJabt, cblcken. Tile lint lfllde ltudents at Middleport Elementary an prepll'llll their own
· Tlwlkqlvllla Peat lor Tbuncbly aftmloon.
PreparatiOn lor the dlaner takes two da;rs m ..
tbe studenll love IL ~ere tlley are wasblng .the .

oo-ot-oo

'•

lht.r ........ •IJps;:¥1d d.,..,lllll.._- 5 '! .......

I

'

1 ••

cblcken wblcb will later be coaied wltb breac11D1
and baked. FIIIJ·tbree llhldents, Ill the lint
grade dr"etl ot ~ma Asbley md Mary Braner,
worked 011 the preparadoa. Some ot the lltlldtnts
pictured are Delana Ek:blallfl', Keltb Taylor,
Dav"lVance, Clay R-llaad David HaiL · .

revenue. generated lium the levy, if
passed m February, would not be
realized by the board until1992.
"All ofo~ serv1ces are valuable,
a~ to elirnmate and cut
serv1c~s. would put the !'&lt;&gt;ard mto a
posmon of oneraung m a s~bstandard manner, W~demeyer S&amp;ld.
WedellJeyer srud that the personnet level of the ~hool-age program
now, meets mm1mu~ standards,
and that the adult semces program
IS now one person above those state
stan&lt;!&amp;~· .
Ehrnmaung any staff members,
according to Wedemeyer, w~ld
open . the system to po~nual
habll1ty m the event of an acc1dent
on the see~.
...
A reducuon of staff members 10
the program, or other cuts m services, ~auld al~ . threa~ the
prognun s 11CCredltabon . WI~ the
Comm1ss1on on A:c.creditatiOn of
Rehabilil!'uon FaciiiUC,S.
. .
CARF s
. accreditab&lt;!n·
Wed,emey~~ says, mc~es the distnct s ab11ity to re171ve revenue.
One exarn~le of thiS 1s money from
the Rehabtlitab_Ol_l Servrces _Commission, admm1stered by the

anr

A~E THEY CLEAN YET? - Andrew Baker
and Tara Wyatt, first graders at Middleport
Elementary, want ·to be sure that tbe potatoes

Cold front to
move through ·
Ohio Friday

Assorted Varieties

2 Sectiona.12 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, November 15, 1990

Copyrighted 1 990

Middlep.ort~ Oh.io
Stop By

Low tonlght OIn mid 40s.
Increasing cloudiness Friday.
_Wgh In upper 60s. Chan~e of
rain 20 percent.

By United Press International
A cold front is expected to
move through OhiO Friday after·
noon and evening, bringing with
It temperature readings in the
60s and a chance of showers over
the northern counties In the
afternoon.
The National Weather Service
said high pressure will be In
control of the weather over the
weekend. Highs wUJ be seasona·
ble Saturday and warm to 55 to 65
Sunday.
Skies were clear during Wed·
nesday night and Thllrsday
morning. Winds were less than10
mph except stronger near Lake
Erie. OvernJght lows ranged
from the mid :)Os to mkl 40s with
the coldest readings over the
. sou theas t counties.
Skies ilre expected to be mostly
clear Thursday night and
southwest winds will . keep the
mercury In the 40s.
On the Thursday morning
weather map, hliih pressure was
over the Southeast and will move
slowly east. A cold front extended from Quebec across Lake
Superior to the central ·ROckies.
By sunrise Friday the front will
extend from Maine across Michl·
gan to Texas.

•

Bureau of Vocational Rehabilitation.
According . the the superintendent, that money is only granted to
CARP-accredited pro~s.
The Meigs MRDD s current secvices contract with Gallipolis
. Developmental Center is al~ ~ntingent upon CARF's accreditatiOn.
The special ,election will cost ap·
proximate!)' $5,500, and although
the comm1ssioncrs authorized the
board to place the levy on the ballot
on Febl'llll9' 5, they did so with the
understanding that the MRDD
board, either with funds generated
from any levy passed, or through
private sources, must bear that cost.
"If this county is to have an
MRDD program," Wedemeyer told
· the board of commissioners, "the
community's leadership must pass
the levy. My staff and I have tried
three times, and we can't do it."
Issue 11 projects for 1991 were
announced at the meeting by Meigs
County Engineer Philip Roberts.
Those projects, and the Issue II
funds ·approved for each, are:
Racine
street
impl'overnent
Continued on page 12

they clean for Thursday's Thanksgiving dinner
wiU be good and clean. The first grade classes of
Emma Ashley and Mary Brauer prepare a. dinner every year lit tbe scbool.
·

Local briefs -----.
Woman injured in ·wreck
A West Virginia woman suffered minor Injuries alter she
apparently lost control of her car on State Rollte 338 in Meigs
County .
Kath;~: E. Wiihlbach, 30, of Ripley , W.Va., was taken to
Jackson General Hospital by the Meigs County EMS following
the accJdent in Lebanon Township. ·
AccordJng to a report from the Gallla-Melgs post of the State
' Highway P(ltrol, Wlihlbach was eastbOund when she apparently
dro.ve off the right side Of the road and struck an embankm~nt .
Her 1984 Pontiac iOOO continued on, striking a fence, and then
•· overturned onto its rlghl side. The report stated Wlihlbach was
traveling at approximately .55 miles per hour at the time of the
crash.
Wlihlba.ch was treated and released from the hospital
Wednesday, according to a hospJtal spokeswoman. No
Information was available as to the seriousness of her injuries.
Wlllhlbach was not cited In the accident

Reward offered for information
. A $500 reward is being offered for information leading to the arrest of the individual or indiViduals who broke into the Richard
Young residence at318 North Secon&lt;J Avenue, Aparnnent 2, in Middlepon.
.
· ·
.
Young advised that he went hunting on, Wednesday at about 9
a.m. and when he returned home at 10 p.m. yesterday evening, he
noticed that his guns were missing.
·
·
A total of 13 guns were taken, including shotguns and handguns:
A unit from the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation was on the scene to take photos.
According to Middleport Police Chief Sid Lillie, the sujlject appearently forced the door open with a screwdriver. · ·
The guns stolen included: Remington 870 trapgun with a r11lease
ttigger, Rernin$10n 870 express full choke blmel and a deer slayer
· barrel, 2 Renungton 870 shotgWIS, a muzzle loader, 50 Caliber
Thompson centerlire. a model 70 Wtoehester, 270 caliber, I model
Continued on page 12

-------'

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