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P.ge 10-1M Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

-Local news briefs...-----.
Continued from page 1
registration !rom 9-9;30 a.m. All activities should end around 3
p.m. when prizes wtll be given away. Youmustbepresent tow!n
a prize.
This annual event Is put on every year to show kids of all ages
demonstrations and exhibitions In hunter salety,turkeycalllng,
taxidermy, coon hounds, fish f111el!ng, trapping. canoeing,
black powder. archery, and tro11p shOQtlng and reloading.
All }oung people of the area are encouraged to participate In
this yearly event. For further Information contact Kay Batley at
985-4449.

Fore_stry Field Day Oct. 28
The Ohio Tree Farm Committee is planning a Forestry Field
Day at the Mead Experimental Forest on Saturday, Oct. 28.
Landowners, concerned citizens and anyone interested in
forestry In Southern Ohio should mark their calendars. The tour
wtll be held oil Bear Creek Road, one-half mile west on State
Route 124 in Scioto County, ·and one m!le south ol the Pike and
Scioto County line.
A great variety of forestry practices have been completed on
tills experimental forest over the past 27 years.
Tour visitors wl!l have the chance to discuss soil erosion
control, timber harvest methods, wildlife management •. forest
management, economic impact and tree farming from the
landowners viewpoint.
Registration for the tour begins at 9:30 and the tour wtll start
at 10 a.m.
The tour wtll conclude with a free beans and cornbread lunch
at 1 p.m .

The- Meigs County Health Department has receive-d a $28,000
grant from the OhiO Department of Health to Institute an Early
Intervention program, according to a release from State Rep.
Mary Abel, (D-Athens) and ~n. Jan Michael Long,
(D-C!rclev111e.
Early Intervention programs are designe-d for children from
birth to three years of age and their families. Developmental
and educational services, family support and programs for
teenage parents are some of the programs available through
early Intervention. ·
Funds were provided by the Ohio Department of Health
through the Early Intervention Unit using federal dollars from
the Handicapped Educational Amendments oJ 1986. Director of
the local project Is Margie Lawson, D.D.S.

EMS receives.four calls Monday
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
answered lour calls for assistance on Monday.
Pomeroy at 12:51 a.m. was called to Route 7 for Patrick
McHaffie; and at 8: 39a.m. to Mulberry Ave. for Ada Hoce, both
·
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland was called at 4: 14 p.m. to Hysell Run Road for Guy
Priddy who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 4:59 p.m. , Pomeroy went to the Americare-Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Mary Pickens to Holzer Medical Center.

Newspaper project completed
The Ohio Newspaper Project Inventory In Meigs County has
been completed, It was announced today by the Ohio.H!stortcal
Socjety.
The project staff member John Haas reported that he
inventoried 35 newspapers at the The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy,
the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society Library, and
the Middleport Branch of the Meigs County Public Library. The
Inventory records Will be added to project flies at the Ohio
His ll&gt;rical SOciety and to the OCLC Online Computer Library
Center's national database.
Haas reported that he found a copy of the Mlddlpeort Review.
This was brought to the office of The Dally Sentinel by Mrs.
Mary '\'VIse and Is the only Issue known to exist. He also reported
finding several copies of the Rutland Journal, and one Issue of
The Dally Tribune, Pomeroy.
The whereabouts of several other Meigs County papers,
however, are not known. Titles and Issues needed from Meigs
County lnclul\e the Middleport Gazette, 1865 through March 13.
1867; Middleport Leader and the Dally Tribune, Pomeroy, all
Issues; and the Middleport Review up through June 1948.
Information or comments regarding the Ohio Newspaper ·
Project and its work in Meigs County may be directed to Fred
Gaieck and John Haas. Ohio Historical Society, Ohio
Newspaper Project, 1982 Velma Ave., Columbus, 43211-2497,
telephone 614·297-2559.

Area deaths

Licen~

issued

Marriage Ucenses have been
Issued in Meigs County Probate
Cou~t to Theodore Willford, 50,
and Nancy Kay G!lllsple, 31, both
of Long Bottom.
I

Lt . Gov. Paul R. Leonard, who Sept. 21 when the Southeastern
has served as Ohio's second In • Ohio Regional Council and 12
command since January 1987,
area Chambers of Commerce
will be the principal speaker at
thank the utility companies, their
the University of Rio Grande on stalls, and the state · for their

Burn .•.

efforts In the economic development of southeastern Ohio.
Bob Evans, SEORC president
said Leonard was well qualifie-d
to speak about econom h; development because of' his experience
In economic development. He
tr(lvels extensively throl!ghout
Ohio promoting the development
program, ar.d In 1987 he opened
Ohio's trade office In Lagos , ·
Nigeria, located In western
Africa.
Evans said the companies to be
honored·are: ColumbusSouthern
Power, Columbia Gas of Ohio,
Inc .. Ohio Power, Bl!ckey Power
and the Governor's Oft!ce . of

Continued from page 1

lng to the Gal !Ia County Sheriff's
Bane said two male junveniles
Department.
are In custody, both charged with
According to hospital officials, an aggravated felony. Both were
the girl suffered second and third In Juvenile Court yesterday a.nd
degree burns. Her condition was dented the allegations. Attorneys
reporte-d as· "stable'' prior to her were appointed for both youths.
transfer yesterday to Cincinnati. The two juveniles are In custody
She was accompan led · by her In an out-of-the county facility,
mother.
Bane said.
Names of the juveniles are not
available because they are minors. The two boys allegedly ·
Continued from page i
poured· gasol!ne on the couch to
burn it. Gasoline sp!lled onto the windows in condominiums, tear·
girl and the ground. When they !ng out atr-cond!tiontng units and
set fire to the couch, the girl's stripping roofs from wooden
houses.
dress ca'l\ght fire,
San Juan suffered extensive
The Incident was investigated
damage.
Downe-d power l!nes
by the Ga!lia County Sheriff's
blbcked
traffic
and scraps of
Department and Gary Bane,
sheet
metal
!lew
through streets
Gallla County Juvenile Probabstrewn
with
paper
and broken
t!on Officer.
glass. :Eleetrlc power was cut
Island-wide to avert
electrocutions.

Hurricane ...

Plan famUy night
The Ladles of the Harr!sonv!lle
Presbyterian Church are spon·
soring family night on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the church.
The Rev. Harso Moelyadi,
Java, w!ll present slide show
and talk on Indonesia, as well as
Java, In particular.
The publ!c Is Invited to attend
this event.

a

Group to meet
The Pomeroy Group of AA and
Alanon will meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday at Sacred Heart Ca·
thol!c Church. Information on the
program may be obtained by
calling 1·800.~33·5051.

Couples to
end marriages
Divorce actions have been flied
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by John C. H!te, Middleport, against Celia A. H!te,
Middleport; and by Cindy L.
Richardson, Middleport, against
Thomas J. Richardson,
Middleport.

FALL

Dally stock prices
{As of 10: SO a.m. )
Bryce and !\lark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .. ...... ... .. 30y.
AT&amp;T ...... .. ..... ........... .......... 42
Ashland on ...................... .. 41 y,
Bob Evans ...... .. .. ... ....... .. .... 15%
Charming Shoppes .............. 15%
City Holding Co ............ ...... 15~
Federal MoguL ........... .. ...... 23¥.
Goodyear T&amp;R .... ......... ......54%
Heck.' s ............ ... ....... .... .... ..... 'J4
Key Centurion .. ... ...... .........13%
Lands' End ...... ..... ... ... .. ...... 26)'8
Limited Inc ........................37';1.
Multime-dia Inc . ............ .. .. 100~
Rax Restaurants ....... , .......... 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers .......... .... .. . 15
Shoney's Inc .. .............. ... .. ... 12
Wendy's Int1 .......................... 6
Worth!ngt 0n Ind . .... ............. 24

old door.

you can install a Bilco Basement Door yourself*
lnjoy t .. cMwottl-o, ..taty anti low malntonan&lt;O of a• all-st•l
llro laM-•t J!oor, You'lllko Its -•· trlmaJIPIIran&lt;a,oaMohporatiM, anti tho way it thods rain. Irs a •'"'t do·lt·yourtalf
..-•loct anti actvaly coots lou tht!n llawlnt a now . . . . . ..., lltolt.

Hospjtal news

LOW

~~~~LUIIBER

Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - Stella
Bush, Pomeroy; Lloyd Johnson,
Middleport; Carrie ·Kennedy,
Middleport ; Bernice Fry,
Pomeroy.
Monday discharges -None.

Mrs. Nolan wee the form• Gen••

Humphreva. daught• of the l•e WiiNem PrMton end luvenia OOI'c. Hend•aon Humphr.,, of Wilton, Roane
County, WV. She wea born Sept.,b_.
2. 1905. Attended the Mt. Leb8non
Grtde School and gr.:lu~ed from Wal·
ton High School in 1919. She hM been
• mem~ of the Adventilt church since
the age of s.vem ... wh•e she also
as a Sund..- School Teach•. Beaid• h• parent • lhe was preceded in
dealh by thr• ._oth••· Velm•. 1916:
Gilbert 1930; and BNce. one silt• Nettie 1983.
She married Howard 0 , Dolan March
20. 1943 who survNes. She ta alto survived by five broth•• : John W. and Ba ·
Iii Humphreys of Watton. WV., Luster
Humptweys of South Chel•ton, Hubert Humptwev• of luling. LA., and
Jam• C. Humphut{l
of Bowling
GrMn, Fla. and one
Mabel Dot.
phina Kelton of Clfll .... d. OH .
Mrs. Nol1n, 1 rCirMI HorneEcono~
le~ Exttn~ion Agent, HrVIng Meigs
Coumy 21S v••• working with 4-H Club
Memtt.s Md Homem• •• from Sliptam b. 1938 umil June 1913, when
she eufterad • heet ltttldt on the way
home from Hunlinglon, WV. wh•tthe
hMI
1 tlll•illon broMic. . on
s..vtng. After. tp.nding tour WMkt in
Holler Hotpllal tha rcurned home Md
hid IIICOnd8ttldc lrldb.dltothaho•
ptt .. tor two~. aft• which It wes
nec•Nrvfor h•totlkeeclsebillty Ml-

,...,ed

•id•.

m.,.

''••

ANNUAL

By Margaret Caldwell

YIELD* ·

ONE YEAR TERM

,,..,dt m.-, cell t.-•
I

MEMBER F.D.I.C.

Point Pleasant

882·2135

675·1121

*INTEREST COMPOUNDED QUAFUERLY

~~

8
No one hurt in 2-car collision

·

·
No one was Injured tn a two-car coll!s!on at 7:35a.m. Tuesday
on SR 7 at CR 21, near Hobson, according to the Gall!a-Metgs
Post, State Highway Patrol.
.
Troopers said the accident occurred when a 1985 Volkswagen
GoU driven by Heather A. Wood, 17, Middleport, pulled onto SR
7 Into the path of a 1982 Chevrolet Chevette driven by Ph!lllp S.
Harding, 38, New Boston. There waa moderate damage to both
vehicles. ·
.
The patrol cited Wood lor failure to yield the right of way .

A bel introduces legislation

Mason
773·5514

Representative Mary Abel (D:Athens) has Introduce-d
legislation to amend oectlons or the Ohio Revised Code
· regarding solid waste management plans.
Continued on page 7

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL

-

bne
•

·

ANK
- -

positions with notice of the
openings posted to the community.
All this has left the town in two
comers of the ring, with the next
.round .rooking like more trouble for
the town ,and the people.
Meanwhile Nichols Conner mayor
waits in the bact8round . for hi~
chance at a position with the rown
government.
Students and other citizens stood
acrossthestreetfromthemunicipal
building holding signs supponmg
Roush
!hside,' the meeting was opened
up to the public for comments, of
which complaints expressed in·
eluded boycotting srores, firing
municipal employees and harassing
citizens at night.
Nichols who was e~rted out of
the rOQm by police officers after initially refusing to leave the table,
was the object of many verbal
complaints expressed by the more
than 80 citizens attending the meet·
in!(.

1 news

. Loca

I

New Haven

An alleged conspiracy in Mason
has left the town with no recorder .
and one council position vacant af.
ter Mayor Agnes Roush asked rown
policemen 10 re!llove fonner mayor
George Nichols from the COWICil
table.
, · Roush, who had submitled her
:verbal resignation at the last meet·
ing on Sept. 5, rescinded the offer
Since council members did not
make a motion on the resignation.
Council member Brian Keams,
after declining appointment to a
nominating committee to select a
recorder, stood before the council
and a , standing-rOQm-only crowd
and professed his disgust with the
way the situation has been handled
by the town, and submitled his verbal resignation.
A nominating committee composed of councilmen I ames Proffitt
and Frank Zuspan, will begin
taking applications for the two

·

EARN "BIG GREEN" AND SUPPORT YOUR FAVORITE TEAM!
INTERCEPT THE •FALL CLASSIC" C. D.
BEFORE TIME RUNS OUT!
ONLY AT

OPLES

Carolyn Robinson. Patty Duffy
Taylor, Robyn Pitzer, and Judy
Crooks. The res lgna lion of Nancy
Circle as a substitute teacher
was accepted. Mattie Teaford
and Ne!lle J. Cook were employed as substitute cooks.
The board ·approved the $100
charge per student · for driver
education with the student to pay
$50 of the total amount.
·
Also approved was special
tutoring for one-half hour a day
for a handicapped student at
Syracuse Elementary by Bar·
bara Brown, and transportation
to~ another handicapped student
to Rio Grande by Ralph
Steinmetz.
The board also approved an
agreement with the Meigs Local

School Board for Meigs Local to
transport a multi-handicapped
student for Southern Local to the
multi-handicapped class at
Southern Junior High School, and
for Southern Local to transport a
student from Meigs Local to the
Buckeye Career Center.
Dan Riffle was approved as the
district's on-bus instructor. Stu•
dent pickup and discharge points
for the bus drivers were approved, Betty Wilson and Carl
Wilson were hired as substitute
bus drivers and the rate for
drivers was set for $30 a day .
The Ohio School Boards Associ·
a lion meeting was announced for
Sept. 28 at Athens with the board
members and superintendent to
attend.

.,

DOING IT RIGHT - Proper handling of the
hose and nozzles at a flre scene plays an Important
part In flre fighting. Pictured from left to right at

the Pomeroy Fire-Department's training station
this weekend are Dave Ballard and Stacey Shank
(seated), and Mlke Van Meter and Keith tlagen
(standing) .

Gun barrel
explodes; man

Mason City left with no
recorder, one council position
s~!!~~~ea~~~uJ;:y
'!tal

_..._

through Ngh tchOOI Md ooHege. Aft•
i'odua1lng t.om Ohio Ufti¥0fii!Y In
1131 with a lechllora of Sd•oe
Deer• ·~•taught Homt Economice in
twin dep.tm..e:a in CheeterNI end
Ptftnevlla OH. for thr• ve-a.
hrviole wll be WtNin •*f. hotem20. 1tlht Rowllngo-C-Fiohw
wMh tho llov. Chort•
lurf.. w.belnMel..

dation can be taken, Ord said.
In regular business at the
meeting, . the board author~ed
Dennie H!ll, treasurer to make
application to the State Department of Education for funds with
which to purchase claSsroom
equipment and furnishings for
the proposed new Southern Local
School District elementary
school.
It was pointed out that this Is a
necessary -procedure prior to
placing a bond Issue on the ballot
to finance the cons tructton of a
consolidated kindergarten
through eighth grade elementary
school for a proposed new kinder·
garten through eighth grade
elementary school in the district .
Substitute teachers hired were

During the p~t several years,
there has not only been a decrease
In federal and state funding. but
also stricter guidelines tor operation which curtail where a taxi can
operate and how they may charge
for their serviCes.
Federal guidellmis, which are
now being more strictly _en·

Nichols removed from table

'

BeforecomingtoMeig~County, Mn.
Nolen worN!;~ to PIV h• •pen••

Society's High School Faculty
Advisory Counc!l dismissed
Smith, she was already a graduate member.
Present at the meeting . was
VIctor Goedlcke, American Clv!l
Liberties Union representative,
who has been active In the
process to get Miss Smith reinstated Into the honor society. He
was brought Into the situation
after Imogene Smith, Eliza·
beth's mother, made the charge
to the ACLU that her daughter's
right to free speech had been
violated.
A meeting of the High School
Faculty Advisory Council Is
expected to be called soon by
James Adams, principal, so that
action on the board's recommen-

!

Huddle Under This Warm And
Washable Throw From Biederlack
Of America's College Collection.
Choose From Marshall, WVU, or ·
Ohio State University Logos,
$1 0 With Deposit of $1 ,000 or More
$5 With Deposit of $5,000 or More
FREE With Deposit of $1 o,ooo or More

••tv
Sund., morning lit Hob:• Mediclll
Cent• following .n atended illn. ..

A Multimedia ln'c. Newapaper

~~~~~~~~~~~' !or~.-s~te

•,

G"''"'" Humphr.,a
84.
College Str•. Syracuse. .died

2 SectiOnt, 14 Pages 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September20,1989

port, but Is the policy of the federal UMTA and the State of
Ohio Dept. of Transportation
which must be adhere-d to In
order that the publ!c trans porta·
t!on system can receive funds for
Its continue-d operation.
The VIllage of Middleport feels
the Blue Streak Cab Co. has done
an e,~uent jl)b in providing J?Ub.
· . • ml~MJe-llsettbyeach1'~:-wh1dt
"Uc
·transpbrtatton·to Ml~~port­
that on\)' one token
tiWI .
means tl)at the . balaf\i!l! ol the
Pomeroy area resident and
funded !are must he paid by the cus·
hope that this ·good serv e will
by
Mass Transit tomer In cash. Customers Inside
be able to continue. The village
funds, the State of Ohio Depart· the Middleport-Pomeroy service also would like to thank the
ment or Transportation, and lo- area may still use the service Meigs County Commissioners
cal funds provided by the VIllage by purchasing tokens lor their
for their financial support of this
service during the past several
of Middleport and the . Meigs rides as long as it Is In the one-toCounty Cotnmlss!oners. Middle- ken zone.' Any trips outside the , years.
port has a contract with the Blue one-token zone area musthepa!d
The village requests the coopStre11k Cab Co. t9 provide this . lor by cash.
eration and continued support
service and In return. the village
A fare schedule Is ava!lable at
lor this system which has propays Blue Streak for each token the Blue Streak Cab Co. stating vide-d a much needed service In
which they collect for tax! ser- what the cash charges are out·
the area since 1985. The changes
vl£_e. Slllce Rnlr rldt!$ are paid side the one-token area.
In fare ·structure are certainly
ior.~Ofrfclals feerihls Is a much
This policy Is notonewhlchhas
not wante-d but are necessary if
more e-conomical operation than been made by the Blue Streak the program is to continue to reflxe-d·route bus services.
Cab Co. or the V1llage of Middle- ceive federal and state funding.

Deposit

$1,000 MINIMUM

•

Middleport Ma¥,or Fred Hoff·
man stated today' that changes
will be necessary In the Blue
Streak Cab ·co. ·r are structure
due to a cutback In federal, state,
and local funds and due to more
stringent enforcement of both fe . deral and state guideline$ for the
. service.

·o r

I

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
lnmld60s. Thu~ay , variable
cloudiness, with high In mid
80s.

:Blue Streak ·cab Company,
Middleport adopt new pol· .
because of funding cutbacks

Ntat trim ~pp•cno.

CALL NOW FOR OUR

Page 3

of the reinstatement, while
By CHARLENE tiOEFUCH
Denny Evans voted against It,
Dally Senllnel Stall
and Scott Wolfe, board president,
Elizabeth Smith. who was
abstaine-d.
dismissed from the National
According to Supt. Bobby Ord,
Honor Society after a controverthe board's action was based on a
~lal valedictory address at South·
letter from Ivan Gluckman,
ern High School's commence. ment last spring, w!ll be associate counsel for the Nareinstated Into membership If tional Association of Secondary
Schools, sponsor of the National
the Society's High School Fa·
Honor. Society.
· culty Advisory Council follows
Ord said that Gluckman stated
' the recommendation of the
in his .letter that there are no
· Southern Local School Board.
: The board by a vote of 3-1 with provisions .In the National Honor
Society handbook for the High
' one member abstaining voted at
:a meeting Monday night to make . School Faculty Advisory Council
to dismiss a graduate member.
the recommendation lor Smith's
There
are .provisions, however,
reinstatement into the National
for
the
Council to dismiss a
Honor Society.
student member.
Charles Norris, Gary W!llford,
According to Ord, when the
' and John Murphy voted In favor

A
longtime
to enJoy it .••

short time
to install it ...

Piek-3
418
Piek-4
5366

Student reinstated into honor group by board

SALE

A

Ohio Lottery

Vot.40, .No.9&amp; M
Copyrighted 1989

FIX-UP

Stocks

Major
H()ople's
predictions

I

Appalachta and the Ohio Depart-,
ment of Developme nt.
Participating chambers are'
Lancaster, Perry County, Logan;
Nelsonv111e, Athens , Meigs•
County , GaiUpoUs , Lawrence.
County, Portsmouth, Pike·
County, Chillicothe, Jackson,
Wellston. and VInton County. In,
addition the ·Ross County lm·
provement Corporation and the '
Scioto Economic Developmen t.
Corporation.
·
Tickets may be purcnasea.,
from local chambers.
·
Dinner Is sche-duled for 6: 30 :
p.m. following a 5:30p.m. social
hour.

KICK OFF
FOOTBALL
WI,.R A RECORD
The "Fall Classic"
Certificate
•

Ralph Michael
Ralph Michael, 60, of Lebanon,
Ga.. a former Meigs County
resident, die-d Sunday at the
Archie Jones Hospital of Canton,
·G a . foUow!ng a brief !Uness.
He had been employed In the
Research and Development Department of M~Donald-Doug!as
Aircraft.
Born on Oct . 7,1928 at Gallipolis, he was the son of Dylvan
Michael and Hazel Thomson
Michael. He was a U. S. Army
Veteran, having served In the
Korean Conflict and was a
member of the Worldwide
Church of God.
Mr. Michael is survived by his
wife. Cora Michael, Lebanon,
Ga.; a son. Ralph A. Michael II,
Ackworth. Ga.; a daughter. Rene
Michael. Atlanta, Ga.; three
stepsons. W!ll!am A. Smith, and
Rickie Smith, Le banon, Ga .; and
James C. Smith, San Marcos,
Calif: a stepdaughter, Mrs . CaTolyn Smith Turnage, Austell.
Ga.; a sister, Mrs. Nora Mae
Shook, Akron; and three grandchildren, Ralph A. Michael II,
Ricky A. Michael, and Rachael
Michael, Ackworth, Ga .
Besides his parents. he was
prece-ded In death by a brother.
Gerald Michael.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at ) p.m at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. Mark
Morrow will officiate and burial
will be in Bunker H!ll Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 9 a .m. to the time of
services Thu.rsday.

Lt. Gov. Leonard to address area leaders

·Meigs
announcements

Meigs receives $28,000 grant

Tuesday, September 19, 1989

. ·--·

-Nich~ls told the R~gister
the
accusauons were un)ustlY directed
to him and he explained· sevetal of
the complaints.
"I have no grudges or any ~d
feelings. Many of those people: JUS!
have a personal ax to gnnd,
Nichols said. ·~. COIDJ!!~ts
don't express the maJOnty opuuon,
but I'll ~cept ~is far romght." .
He wd he mtends on contacung
the attom~y get;tetal's '!flice to~quest an mvesugauon mto ce_nam
pos1Uons Roush has been appomted
to, .conten~ng that there is "conflict
of mt.ereSt;
.
Roush mtends to conunue .condueling town government busmess
and conce~!l'te on filling the two
~.~t ~nons. .
., .
I d like to think Its over. It
should be," Roush said. "It's a sad
siblalion w~. mauers like th\s
come about m c1ty govemmenL It s
the.pcople and the city govemll!ent
that suffers ~~ of the nme
wasted on feudin2.

Warner Jr., Chase Road, Athens,
was Injured Monday night when
a shotgun he was flrll!gexploded.
According to a report from
Meigs Sheriff James M. Souls by,
Warner had gone out to the
c h!cken coop with the gun to see
what was causing a disturbance.
He found an opossum In the coop,
fire-d the gun, and the barrel
explode-d.
Warnerwascutonthearmbya
piece of flying metal.
He was treated and released at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital In
Athens.
PROPER TRAINING - Whether firemen are working on the
On Saturday afternoon, depu·
ground or up on the ladder truck, It's Important to know the proper
ties took a theft report from
handling of equipment. Here Tommy Werry, a junior flrema!l for
Jimmy l{lng, DeWitt's Run
the Pomeroy Fire Department, gets the feel of the nozzle while on a
Road, Long Bottom, that gasoladder during Saturday's tralnbtg session.
l!ne had been stolen !rom his
vehicles. His fruit cellar had also
been entere-d and several jars of
food were taken. •
Also on Saturday atternnoon,
Reba Morrison, Route 2, Racine,
reported that someone had shot
WASHINGTON CUPI) -The changes In hopes of speeding up
outherfrontdoorglasswlthaBB administration backed a move In congressional. action and making
gun
Congress Tuesday to toughen the bill "stronger and more
Sheriff Soulsby reports that parts of President Bush's clean· workable."
"President Bush, along with ·
17-year-old David R. Kerth. air legislation, but environmenCHICAGO (UPI) - Mafia Nocatee, Fla., was cited by talists said the Improvements members of his administration
leaders ordere-d Teamsters boss deputies for !allure to control and were minor and do not address and at the suggestion of House
Jimmy Horta !tilled, dlsmem- !allure to report an accident, the bill's fundamental leaders, have Identified a
number of ways In which to
hered and entombed In a New following an accident on County weaknesses .
As a House Energy and Com· strengthen the proposed legislaJersey sports stadium because Road 4 at 4: 15 p.m on Sunday·
he threatene-d to expose union·
According to the report, Kerth merce subcommittee began con- tion and demonstrate our commob ties for federal tnvestlga· · was traveling west on ~ounty sidering changes to Bush's bill, mitment to a cleaner environ·
tors, Playboy Magazine reported Road 4 when the Ue rod came administration allies proposed a ment," Lent said.
Subcommittee Chairman
Wednesday.
loose on his vehicle. He lost wide-ranging amendment that:
·
Henry
Waxman, D·Callf, a key
strengthen
sections
relatwould
Hoffa's body waa dlsmem- control, and the vehicle, a pickup
ally of environmentalists .
bere-d .. w!th a chain saw and truck, went ott the roadway on' . lng to autOmobile emissions, air
praised some of the changes as
store-d In a freezer tor five the right side, struck the em· poilution In national parks and
clear. Improvements, but said
months before It was transported bankment and rolled over.
tall smokestacks at power
some parts of Lent's amend·
from Michigan to New Jersey
The pickup was heavily plants, among other Issues.
where the bcidy parts were burle-d damage-d.
.
Rep. Norman Lent of New ments appeared to he worded so
loosely that they still gave the
In the cement of Glanta Stadium
Three passengers in the vehl· York, prime GOP sponsor of
EPA great discretion over
at the Meadowlanda construction cle were transported by private Bush's legislation, said the adstrengthening emission controls.
site In East RuthertQrd, N.J.
Continued on page 7
·mtnlstratlon had agree-d to the

Magazine reports
· ff
rd red
Ho a mu e

Administration backs·strong

clean-air legislation

�--

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

·--

·'
•

·commentary,
.
.

-

.

Har-rumph!

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepon. Ohio
Wednaaday. Septamber 20, 1989

-

-- - -

.

•
Big Ten vs. Pac-10 m
Saturday double feature

-·

By MaJ. Amos B. Hoople

W~-..,81' '1 8porta CalftiiiiU'

&amp;oll••

'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohlq
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE. WEIG$·MASON AREA

~'h

ts~m~ "--''--.-..~=;­
~v

ROBERT L .. WINGE'M'

Publisher
PAT WliJTEHEAD
Assistant Publ~her/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager

LETl'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. 'lbey ohould be le&amp;s 111M SOG
wordl lone. Allle«era are ••IIJect lo edlt•r ud mua be lllped with
nune, addr•o 1111d lelepboae number. No u•IPed letters wW be published. Letters lhould be Ill rood lute, addr•olnr ••-· not personalities.

Palau corruption under investigation
WASHINGTON .- A federal
Investigation has reached the
same conclusion that we did a
year ago - that the Reagan
ad!fllnlstratlon helped bring
"paradise lost" to the South
Pacific.
A 20-month probe by the
General Accounting Office says
the administration "let serious
proble!flS develop" and "did not
act on the knowledge it had of
violence" In tho;! island Repu~Uc
of Palau, a U.S. trust territory
near the Philippines.
Last summer we reported on
!fi'I~~9U

the corruption and violence un·
folding beneath the administra·
tton's nose. The GAO lnvestlga·
tors followed the same path, and
it led directly to Lazarus Salil,
the late president of Palau.
Before Salll shot himself last
fall, he was a valued ally of the
White House. In that sense,
Palau was closer to the Philippines than In geography alone.
SaUl had been called a "mini·
Marcos," after the Philippines
des pot who also won Reagan's
heart.

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
The GAO discovered that Salll
and his cohorts were up to their
eyeballs In shady deals:
- Salll and his cronies never
adequately explained more than
$1 million in payments theY
received from a British company
that built an overpriced power
plant In Palau. That plant has
weighed down Palau with a $50
million debt that U.S. taxpayers
probably will have to pay.
..
- A top SaUl aide solicited up

_. WIIIIIM ~'11\lEQIH '•
--::i~

!fypocrisy in
'its purest fonn
By STEVE GERSTEL

WASHINGTON ( UPI) - In the space of a day, albeit a very l01ig
one, the Senate was accused of hypocrisy twice and was abashed
enough to do something - once:·
First, the good news.
The Senate had all but locked up legislation outlawing
discrimination against the country's 43 million disabled in jobs,
transportation, restaurants, hotels and almost every business. State
. and local governments were very specifically Included.
• Absent, hoWever, was Congress, until Sen. C)'larles Grassley,
• R-Iowa, offered an amendment to make sure the Senate ·and the
: House join in what,was called the most important civil rights bill since
• 1964.
.
• The thought that the Senate would not include the Capitol and Its
: complex of office buildings would come as a shock, were It not for the
· 'unhappy fact that the litany of exclusions Is already very long.
:. Such major laws as minimum wage, the historic 1964 civil rights
• ·legislation, occupational health and safety measures and many
• others do not apply, and all efforts to bring Congress under Its
: strictures have failed.
: ··Grassley noted that Congress "has been, historically quite good at
• exempting itself from the laws Its passes forothers"andadded, "Ata
&gt;minimum, It goes to a lack of public accountability. At its worst, it's
:'raw hypocrisy."
• Des pile some grumbling that the Grassley amendment would place
: compliance by Congress In the ·hands of the executive branch : deemed by some a violation of the separation of tlie branches of
• government - the proposal was accepted.
• It still remains to be seen whether the Grass~ey amendment
· survives as the disability bill makes its way through the rest of the
: legislative process.
·
·
· In all fairness, Congress's record on opening the Capitol to the
~ disabled is quite good. There are ramps In many places and special
• sections are set aside lor wheelchair-bound disabled In the Senate and
: House galleries.
Now for the·bad news.
On the same day, the Senate passed a bill limiting to one year the
: time a parent can be jailed for refusing to comply with a court order in
·.a child
case.
-~·~~~:~~~~;:~~ confined
this amounted
private ofrelief
bill for
Dr.
to jail intothea District
Columbia
for two
· years,
to tell a judge the wherabouts of her daughter,
· Hilary, 7, thereby voiding visitation rights for the father.
Morgan alleged that her husband had and would again sexually
assau it their child .
While several senators rhapsodized about what a wonderful thing
:they were doing for Dr. Morgan, Senate Democratic leader Ge&lt;irge
·· Mitchell reminded them that federal courts and 48 state court
. systems also do not set a limit on how long a person can be held for
civil contempt.
Most telling. moreover. was Mitchell's argument that the Senate
can order a witness jailed for contempt -without time limit- and
indeed kept one William Cammtssano In prison for 18 months for
·refusing to testify.
· Mitchell told senators, who paid absolutely no attention, that "In
passing this bill. the Senate will be opening Itself to a charge of
hypocrisy."
·
· In this instance, the Senate chose hypocrisy.

~

Letters to the editor
Sheriffs department praised

"Have you heard? After finding a dust bunny in her cell this morning, ,
Leona Helmsley fired the warden."

WIC program reviewed
A popular phrase has been
voiced throughout the country
lately. "You are what you eat."
Certainly, proper nutrition and
diet contribute enourmously to
appropriate human development
and future ability to function as a
productive member of society.
Consequently, we should all be
aware of a program called WIC .
WIC stands for Women, ,Infants
and Children.
I recently · visited the WlC
program In Lawrence County
where I saw mothers and child·
ren participating in this food and
nutrition program. This was
done In conjuctlon with what was
labeled WIC Awareness Month
for August 1989. What I saw and
what I am sure other Legislators
observed In this awarenes program was a successful delivery
of a diet and nutrition program
aimed at what traditionally have
been at risk individuals In this
country.
WIC is a special supplemental
food program for women, In· .
!ants, and children established
by the federal goverment and
carried out by the United States
Department of Agriculture. WIC
helps low income pregnant and

.

Today in history

v
\

v

nursing women, women who
recently bad a b&lt;~by , infants and
children who are at health risk
due to Inadequate nutrition.
To be eligible for WIC, one
must meet all of the following
requirements: a pregnant and
nursing woman; a woman who
recently had a baby; an Infant
from birth 12 months; or a child
onetofiveyearsofage. You must
be a resident of the State of Ohio
and of the county from which you
seek the WIC asslsla!!ce. You
must be determined by health
professionals to be at medical·
/ nutritional risk. Finally, you
must meet Income guidelines
established at 185 percent of the
Federal poverty guidelines.
Those gJJidellnes have been re- .
vised upward over the most
recent months whereby a family
of two who makes less than
$14,837.00 per year or a family of
four · that makes "less than
$22,385.00 per year would fall
within the Income guidelines.
WIC has proven to be an
effective health care program.
Research conducted with a report released In early 1986 has
demonstrated that WIC has had a
significant Impact on .maternal

and child bealih. These studies
Indicate that 'Substantial health
benefits for WIC participants
Include the fact that WIC helps
pregnant women see physicians
early and increases the number
of women receiving timely prenatal care. WIC participation
also bas Improved the length of
pregnancy and birth weight. WIC
partlclpaiton has redyced late
fetal deaths. WIC hils Improved
the diets of women and children.
WIC children are better lmmun·
izedandaremorelikelytohavea
regular source · of health care.
Consequently, thesestudlesdem·
onstrate that WIC has had a
positive impact on improving the
quality of nutrition and health
care for at or near poverty level
families.
WIC operates in such a fashion
that the participants receive a
voucher for the purchase of
designated fond products. The
participant then obtains the food
products at participating retail
grocery stores and submit those
vouchers to the retailer for
'payment for the merchandise.
Since It Is not a food stamp
program and Is operated by
voucher means, only those par·

to $1 mllllon from a bUsinessman
seeking approval for a venture,
and he told another businessman
that be would have to.pay bribes.
- Sal II struck IIHtdvlsed deals
with New York bond sellers, w)'lo
were later Indicted for fraud, and
an Australian gun runner who
was arrested for drug
trafficking.
- The GAO found evidence
that the bidding·for multimillion·
dollar contracts was rigged.
The GAO's findings vllldlcate
three members of the . House
Interior Committee, who com·
plalned that the administration
was Ignoring what was happen·
lng In Palau In a rush to sign a
"compact of free associatiOn"
giving Palau and . Its 15,000
natives independence.
Reps. Ron de Lugo, D-V.I.,
Morris Udall, D-Arlz., and
George Brown, D·Callf., have
long suspected that the admlnls·
tration was blinded by Its desire
to sign an agreement with Palau
that would allow the Pentagon to
dock battleships In Its harbors . .
The trio wanted the White
House to Insist that Palau clean
up Its corrupt government before
it cut the umbilical cord to the
United States.
'
In the meantime, Salil was
pressuring his own employees to
support the proposed White
House compact. The GAO re'
ported ·that some opponents of
the compact had their homes
firebombed .
The compact Is still making Its
way through Congress. A U.s:
mUitary presence ~ the pivotal
Issue that divided Palau - Is not
spelled out In the draft . .It will
have to be negotiated later.

To deal with those problems,
the Industry bas turned to a
dizzying array of advanced tech·
nologles. Among the scores of
potential options to retrofit existing plants, for instance, are
microbubble flotation, molten
caustic leaching, limeStone In·
·jectlon, coal-water-gas co-firing,
vanadium pentoxlde afterburn·
ing, regenerable scrubbing and
fluld·bed absorption.
.
New plants might utilize at·
mospherlc or pressurized fiui·
dlzed bed combustion, coal gasl·
!Ication or liquefaction, or a
flue -gas desul!urlzatlon process
in which electron beams slice
through post'Combustlon gases
that have been treated with
ammonia.
Reluctant to experiment with
those technologies on Its own, the
Industry has successfully
pressed for sizable amounts of
federal money. Indeed. ·much of
the mpney former President
Reagan promised the Canadians
he would spend on eliminating
acid rain bas gone to the electric
power Industry.
The Department of Energy
estimates that it will spend
almost $2.75 billion on Its Clean
Coal Technology Demonstration
Progi-am between 1986 and 1992
-and It Is not the only source of
government funding. The Cool
Water plant, fo~ example, was
flnanw64n part by the Synthetic
Fuels Corp., a federal enterprise
that coUapsed amid a scandal
over Its profligate spending.
Additional funding came from
a consortium of supposedly respectable firms -Texaco, Gen·
eral Electric, Bechtel and South·
ern Calltornla Edison - as well
as the Electric Power Research

W L Pel , GB
Turonto _.................. .. Jit 111 JU Bai.lllrnott· ................. ....IIS 71
S
MU-*IWl" ...... ,. .. .........ll 74 .H7 7
Blu~lon ......................•..7t 77 .1to

Robert Walters

Institute, the Industry's leading gas, which has been used to
research organization.
provide electric power for about
The magazine published by the 100,000 households .... Sponsors ... ·
Edison Electric Institute, the call Cool Water 'the world's
industry's dominant trade asso- cleanest coal plant."'
elation, o(fered this upbeat ac·
Another magazine account
count of the project In 1985;
described the facility as "one of
"Successful demonstration of the cleanest In the world." An
new technologies Is causing Energy Department spokeswO.
excitement throughout the indus· man characterized It as "a·
try. Fueling this excitement is wonderful success story."
tbesuccessoftheCooiWatercoal
When the five-year federal ·
gasification demonstration · funding commitment expired :
plant.. .
last June, however, the Industry .
''Since the summer of 1984, thf! unceremoniously deserted the ·
120 megawatt power plant has Cool Water plant, claiming that It
been converting 1,000 tons of coal was no longer efficient or .
per day Into a clean synthetic economical.
·

Berry's World

Muley

_N._.- Vork •. .. ,. ..............U AI .t$3 I$
C11!'W'Ian• ....................17 lit .ut li %
Del roll . .......................11 tl
t7

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,.,.,.

DaiM - Vlrllnla Sllnw of Daiii M

1%

lftdl a- New Dtl .. lllllerMikl_.

Teuli ..........................n .71 .511 1~
( 'hk!IKO .......................... 87
TueHd~'H Re!i.aH
ODland 5, n""eiiYKI I
llaltkml"l' t, DrftroU ~

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Ratin@S

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•

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lllat Otllo BIJ118chHI Albletlc •'-lOci•
Uo• cempulerattl toeth• rMI•.- (lite ·
'opfo.r lelmlllll uctl rriiOIIIqalltyfor
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t . Nordl OlrnNII'III • • •; 5. Aultln-

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Raerw. U.U: 7. Me II• II.H: 11. Ute)

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IWKtoa:
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Houlflon ............. :........ .JII 71 ,531 i
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Montrul tGrO!iK 11-111 Ill PitiMbui'J:h
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1Ltllt)' JI-I3J. 7:35p.m.

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GoMIIl'n ll.lt; 7. F'nlnMI• lt.JO; II,
G~&amp;lllpol~ 1-&amp;.$11.
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IRidtiU"dsH).l:llp.m.
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7· 131. ":as p.m .
,

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("'rUI'Iand -l·il) 111 ~llft
(KIIPpp•r ';.12) , 10::i5p.m .

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Wtekllffr20.$0: 5.111t.l f.ampheiiMf'morlal and' Gaarfltld H€'llltlH trinity , IM.S(I
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KtOGIIIIO
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l..o!&lt;i i\n~t'lli ~tl San Fr•nd*·o,

nl~~:hl

College poll

I. NOift' Dumf' {Ul 12·1) .............. 't31 I
'! . Ml11ml 131 (2-ft) .... .................... 1-&amp;1 :!
1l , ~Pt.n..kllll) (2•t) _................. tiH6 j
, :c. Auburn 1 I) ~~-0 1 ......... .. , ........... 111 -&amp;.

Reeling from an early setback
by Mount Vernon Nazarene, the
University of Rio Grande volley·
bal\ team ra!Ued to defeat the.
Cougars In three out of four
. games Tuesday to boost Rio
Grande's overall record to 12·3.
The Redwomen fell15·171n the
opener, but handed the visitors
losses of 15·10,15·5,15·9 before an
enthusiastic audience of team
supporters In Lyne Center.
·'The team played a lot better
1. fantoa C.f'nll'lll Calltofk&gt; !1.•; !.
Han .. tull Rlwr •.It; 3. RtHhf'nviiJeo
than It did over the weekend,"
C'.lllhplk' lt.tt: -1. Frf'ftrkk~ow•, IUt; 5.
Rio Grande Coach Patsy Fields
Utf'J J\mantlll Orllr'l'rrek IUtdl Eul
('~1110111. U,tt tllCh: 7. Bloom-Carroll
remarked.
'·our defense was
JUt; II. Hulh lUI,
good,
and
we hit the ball
very
RKt-tti01111
I. Whrelerftl'll: nut: 2. £:0111 Grow
better.
In
addition,
our serving
Da&amp;WIIIIIn-lryllnl lll.lit: a. Paint V.. ley
and receiving was excellent.
17M: t. llltl Wl'llt 1t-fler110n llllld
BrooNIIt, lUI uric 11. EM I Olntoa
Mount Vernon is a very good
15.58: 7. ColwniiiM ReJMtv lUG: II.
team, one of the . best in our
FPilnld'ort t\dt'ra 1-I.M.
DIVIM!tktn V
district,
so this Is a very good win
Rtlioal7
for
us."
I. Lorain Or•\4rW litH: !. Mo.-ot'\'llf' 11.01:3. Ptnlftllla " 'oodrlc:la•B.H:
The victory also boosted the
-1. !lll'l Mc:Oo•ld ute1 &amp;rln C.nifor
Wflllf'rn Rttwr'W'. t.tt f'aca.: 1. Adlattd
Rio ladles' standing In the
Crtt&gt;t~rw K.lt: ";, Ml11p M.H; II, CUt')
Mld·Ohio Conference to 2·0.
o.,. .. OIIl Hetph uti IUrtlllftd, 7.51
f'lltl'tl.
Paul Swanson's club trailed
Re«ie~t II
the hosts early In the first game,
I. S_..llky St. MUJM !I.H; 1!.
ftcmoat Sl . ,Jollf'ph 11.11: a. Uma
but tied and surpassed Rio
('alltolk lUI; -1. A.rlaAfen I Ut: 5.
Grande.
The Redwomen battled
lllufft011 1!.•: I. (Ur) Hl c kntllt ad
Ayer!i\'lllf', II.AI!~h; H. V~anBurmUI .
back
In
the second contes I to
Re_..nlt
wrench
control
away from the
I. ('111111 Wlnc:hMie-r 17.18: t. Nt'wark
ClltiiDIIl' 11.•: 3. Glouatn Trlmflll:"ll.lt;
Cougars,
and
dominated
the
~. SymmN Vallt'y lUI: S. St.dyllldeaction
for
the
remainder
of
the
IO.H: II. Ulr) ftoanldl• Funacr Gr~•
1111d Eutllno1.,UI eacll; II. knrrCrHk
match.
':.Sf.
...,
Leading the offense for the
I. \\' -.vall'!lfl~tiGO•hll'n ltl .• ; 2. (lie) St.
hosts
were Chris Williams and
Htnl')' lllld MIU'kHII..cH:al, tt.tl l'IM:h; ~ ­
MIII!Vr lUI; S. SprlnKfleld ('Mitollt'
Shannon Huston, each with 11
II.IMI; I. C.O .....\'IIIt'U•: 7. Carey 1.51; II.
kills. Michelle Spears added
llill') nndn..al Hlllt'rf!lltand Onci••U
('iiunlr, Dlq .•. 51uct.
nine, Shelly Hoop had eight and
Teresa Zempter pumped In
seven to shore up consistent
hitting on the Redwomen's part.
In digs, Spears had 27, Hoop
netted 19, Huston had 18, Robin
The Wahama alumni (Class or Sharp contributed 17 and Willi·
ams had 16.
1970) is sponsorin' a sanctioned
Zempter led the way In block
double
eliminahoo
softbaU. solos with four, and also added
tournwoent OD Saturday and two serving aces to her credit.
Sunday at Masoo. Sponsors'
d
trophies will be awarded to the Hoop and Williams each ha
top three teams, aod the winners three serving aces, while Huston
also had two.
will receive T·sblorts. Entry fee Is The Rio ladles are back In
$75 and two Red Dot softballs.
F ~ rth infarmation call Jdf action Thursday when they host
A~oM a'::'d 881-3735 'or Gary Malone, Cedarville and Concord
Clark at 882-2328.
(W.Va. ) In a quadrangular

i. Mll'hlpa IC'I·IJ .. : ...................... .&amp;U !I
t\rbh~Wl

(1-1) ......................... U :J K
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~- "' ~t \'II'J(Inla (:~ Jl) ................... 3.&amp;7
11. M' ~ln~~ton 1'!-111 .................... 'll~

12
II . Tt••lll'l;,..t" (:J.O) ...................... 'l:H 17
1\!, 1\Jabama c 1·11 ........................ IM' 1M
Jl.S}'Nt'll_. (:l--0) ,.,,,,,.,,,,,,..,,,,, .. ,15111
lt. rltL'thll11h rt·tl ...................... 121' 1-1
l:i. StUIII'rn ( 'Ill I 1· 11 ........ ............. ~.&amp; li
16. ~.(" , ,.,.,.h• t:l-0 ) ......................... 7515
li. M'W'Ihi . . Oit~h&amp;lt• t:l-t) ............. .3:t :1.
Ill. Or••••n ('l-0) .............................:!7 "
I!I. 1\Jr t ·an •f' i:l-01 ............. ........... ;.!.&amp; IK
'!II , (Ot•o r~la 1 1·01 ............................ 21 lfl

'¥1. OhloSiatt•II ·DJ ........................21 2
l!·unrank·•
Othrr..; rt•t•t•l\'lnt \IOU'S: ,\riloM.
Fri'!IM Slatt•, MkiUJwt SIIUr, Mll'lli!i·
10lppl N.alt•, Pt·nn stutt•, Suuth t 'urollnw.,
Tt"'ta.~ MM. Vl 'L,\, Vlrrlnlu.

Transactions
Tut'MIIIQ''H Sporll'l Tranllllt•tlo_.

BM.Mirtolhi!JI
St•aatllf'- F.:.k'n*'d t.oolll,.~·t ~ l'f'DWr
Olck&gt;n Polynlt'l', l wo yrar111 dlr~ h IH3-84
~'AIIOfli Hllftf'd lrt't'"llll; .. l ~· .4.Vt'I'J
.IOha!IGD IO 2-)1'1Y' l'Onll'al',l .
C 'o llf'~!;:t'

Pf'nn SI:Ul' - llldPflllli t•l,- I!Ullp.•ndf'd
qwrk.,ha&amp;ck T•m Bill lor twealdna: If' lUll
rult'S.
Foothall
1\llwtiM - Pll&amp;l'f'd dt'f81111W' t' ... Rkk
Br~..n o•lnjurf'd ft'Kf'rw.
NY .lt"'!l - Plll'f'd,.ff4yRil•hMianoon

ln.ltlrtd mcf'rw; walnd runahll!;: back
Nu u FlliiDia: Nfli'W'd Hafetr Cll.riHow~trd .
PIUHhu llh - Slllllf'd Pllnl llr .. 1t
Ria• ll'nlllllpand ~~Affi)'Thorn~U~ Evf'l't'tt.
Ho.•kf')'
Oft roll· .- ~pd ddNNPmelt •Jf'U
~luarpll'!l • • De-lift Morton lo mulll -)'l"¥
t-onlnl'I!G llt"nt Wft win I( nair Krtllll&amp; to
Adlrondllck of thf' A.mPI'k• HCK'k.l')'

LI'II.P(• .
l i.S, Ot:rmpk•?.

'l::~~~ .. ~

. ..

Dt't!OI\Ih Wait'r• ·
,Jolin Rut•k

tar,

,Jo...-.

The Daily Sentinel
. (USPS Itli-KOI
· A Dlvloloa el Molllm ...a. Inc.

Plan tourney

Published every afternoon. Monday
throogh Friday. 111 Court St., Po·
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Pomeroy, Ohio 457fi9, Ph. 992·21156. Se·
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Ohio.
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·•take off that uniform. You tfiiiiBd positive for
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junior high school.
·

Domino's. Pizza

13 Weeki ..................... ............. Slt.:H
26 Weeki ......... .............. ........... Ul.!ltl
52 Weekl .................................. $71.36
Dulllde Molp CoalliJ
taWeekl ..................................
26 WeelcJ .................................. M0.30

991·2124

m.!'

WEST IIAIII

52 Weekl ....... ~ .......................... l?l.40
I,

.

--

•
•

*

T

-( • • .

"Vanderbilt 21 Ohio Unlvers1ty 18

•vmanov.i.t 17 Columbi a 6

·
•virginia 28 Duke 21
•vtrgt nla Tech 25 Templ e 15
Washington 24 •Arlzooa 21
Washington State 42 •wyanlng 35
Western Mi c higan 25 •Kent State 15
William &amp; Mary 14 •Princeton 10
"Yale 21 Lehigh II
1•) Home team

7

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Ill II

Of TL
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J.itt.lttr

·~::r....~~;;:::=. .~~~
.

ltiJB. ltJ· ~.t/

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$109
WITH FRIES ............;••• s1.64

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY •
..

"At 11M End Of The Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"

..POMEROY, OHIO

"Air Force 38 Texas·El Paso 10
•Atabama 28 Ke.ntucky 22
•Appalachian St. 31 Jame Madison 24
Arkansas 28 •Mtsslsslppl 21
• Arizooa State 21 Houston 14
•Army 17 Wake Forest 15
Ball Statf" 31 •Toledo 21
•aaylor 38 Kan5:as 10
•california 33 Wiscons in 20
Central Michigan 14 •Bowling Green 8
•clemson 35 Maryland 17
·colgate 17 Brown 14
·coloraOO St. 31 Eastern Michigan 21
Cornell 26 •BI.K!kncll 24
•oartmouth 22 Bas ron University 14
•oetaware 28 West Chester 21
•East Carolina 26 llllnols State 18
· 'E. Kentucky 34 W . Kentucky 31
Florida 30 •Memphis State 20
•Ftorkla State 42 Tulane 21
•Fresno State 351...on~ Beach State 18
'Georgia 27 Mississippi State 22
•Ga. Southern 38 Middl e Tenn. Sr. 14
•Hawaii 22 Utah 12
Holy Cross 19 •Harvard 14
•n11nots 40 Utah State 14
Iowa 17 •Iowa State 15
•Kansas State 11 Northern Illlnols 7
•Louisville 32 West Virginia 28
Mlaml iFiorldal 42 •Mtssour114
•Mtaml (Ohio) I4 Cincinnati 13 .
•Navy 17 Citadel 14
Nebraska 49 'Minnesota 18
•Nevada-Reno X) Idaho Slate 12
N. Carolina 22 'N . Carolina St. 18
•Notre Dame 35 Michigan State 22
•oklahoma State 33 Texas Te c h 16
Oregon State 31 •Bolse State 28
· •Pennsylvania 24 Lafayette 10
•penn State. 28 Boston Coll~e 24
'Richmond 24 VIrginia Military 19
Rutgers 38 •Northwestern 14

....

P-lOY, OliO

.. ~~

.FOOl:LONG

992-2556 .

~-di'ih~6f • • ;

e ···;

=

••

•

DESIGNER SERIES

HIGHSCHOOL
CLASS RINGS

SILADIUM®

Full Noma
t~g·••·"O

Regular Price '99"

FREE CUSTOM

~RTQ1~~Q

Rio ladies win three
games to net match

,aut.

' !5. ( 'olotdo (3·11) .......................... 51!! 7
i . flf.m!lo• (:~1) ............................. ,1 I

SATURDAY. Sept . 23

'Son Diego State 32 Fullertoo State 21
•sal~ Jose State 29 Pacific 18
·souther n cat24 Ohio state 21
•South Carolina 28 Georgia Tech 21
So. Mlsslsslppl42 •Texas ChriS! ia n 15
SOuthweSiern LDutslana 27 "Ri ce 14
'Stanford 24 Oregon 8
Syracuse 17 •Pittsburgh 14
Texas 38 'Southern Me t(lodlst 14
"Tulsa 32 New Mexico 28
"UCLA 28 Mtchtgan 24

Avalue of over $50.001

1. lronlon 31.110; !. Dowr ti.SII; l. St.
l'lalrniii.-21-M; t. Or nil~ l&amp;.H; l. tlltJ
IWiar•a,. Fl!'rry and lndhua Vallf'y, IUO
Pa-h: 7. Btolmonl llnlo111 H .M; It ttll'l
By""~llr MP-.wtlroell ~tnd MeA"'*'
VInton. li.Jt uch.
~ .... i!
I. H•millon Badin ~Ut: !. Uif'J
Ct.ci . . . l &lt;.ift'et~lil..
CAPE, lUI
rach: -&amp; . Waw•rly !I.M; 5. ~prlndlf'ld
Norflr•iPrn ZUt; •. WllllamMpot't
" '4!1ld.JI 17.•: 7. E'aaon lUI; M. Onclnnilll McNicholll" 11 .•:
DIYIMton IV
RePon 13 ·
I. \hrrenk•n•dyte.CIO; !. Pl'terllhu I'll:
Rprlnlfleld 1-&amp;.•51: 3. (Ur) Roowown and
Broekl)'ll, JUt f'ach; 5. G•reuavtlle
G•rlfld, U.OI; f. 8toll'hweCHI 1!.83: 7,
Rol:k, RI¥Pr U.M; ~ (1M!&lt;) "' tlllnK'on~~.nd
Akron M~&amp;nchf'Mer, lt.M e~b.
,
Re~nu
I. VH,UIItM IIUt: !, Jkoll\'tlk' fll'..Fork 17.51: 3. Hur01111l.M; t. 1\Jif'n Eat~ I
JUt; l. 0.&amp;1rlo lUI; I , Ult"l MI.
lllaancbard Rl\lt'rdlllt aad Colollf'l ( ' raw ford, lt.SI f'IW.'h; 11. ilk' I Cardllllton and
Co111M Wf'llllll'r• Rl'lln'~. I .H uc ...
BrKtoall

..... w••.

lllating 48·3 pasting last year.
Coach Mack Brown's boys cer·
talnly didn't like that o0 e·
·
High-rated N.C. State is a
pronounced favorite this time b uI R a Ie1gb " C haw'' Tabacca,
our North Carolina correspond·
ent, says don't be misled. We
predict North Carolina will win,
22·18, In yet · anotl)er Hoople
Upset.
Elsewhere, we see powerful
Notre Dame running ltsrfcord to
36-18-1 over Michigan State with
a 35-22 'victory (CBS·TV ). In an
key lndependimt clash, Syracuse
will defl!at Pittsburgh, 17·14
(ESPN). Meanwhile, In the SEC,
Kentucky w.lll give favored Ala·
bama a battle before falling,
28-22 (TBS).
Also, Miami's blgh·flying Hur·
rlcanes wUI blow away Missouri,
42·14; Washington will take Its
Pac-10 opener form · Arizona,
24-21; and Clemson will get off on
the right foot In the ACC with a
35-17 win over Maryland. Har·
rum ph!

FEATURES

.........

~EW l'ORK I UPI!-ThrUniWdPrt"'"'
lnt.t•r•loml Board of fo•t•hl'!l Top to
t·alll••" fonlhall nalln.,-. wkh rrl'Unl and
fl r~- plik• c• \fGk'S In ,...enlh~. I.W.I
pol Ills ( haltit'd on 15 polniM for lint plan·.
It far !oiei'CUIII, ftl.'.), ind IMIII ..-t•t•lt'"'

M.

War~n"~lle

·

Chtdnnlil.l .................... 70 Ml .Ut 17

'

4. M•IIDion W•hlnP,on %5.111:: 5.

Akron Dlft !UI: I. Grew City 23.58;
7.!tlf') M'.W. .IHult and Wftllentllt
Soullll, U.H each.

NATIONAL LEA.GV£
Ell"t
I•· .............................. W L Ptlt . Gil
Chil'llJIO .......................115 .. .513 St. Loubo ..................... JU 70 .S31 -&amp;
N...- Vork.. ..................711 71 .5t7 51-'t
Mo ..... .....................'Jil 73 .511 7
PilbihurKh ......... ;..........,. "' ...
u ~.&gt;r
Phl.. dl'lphll• ................11 M . ~D-4 1-1

Los

.....

I. Canton MciUn.ley S.U3; : . Up~r
Arllnatan Zll.-. 3. Muflllllon .lllcbon

l '•llferNilM fll'Veland,nla:hl
Ollklall• .t Mlnlft.ola, nllfi
.SuUk- at TI:"I.P, nl~

st.

Fol"'t~.

IUI,f'aetl.

Oakland (DaviN 11·1') Ill (]f'Wiud
(SwlndPIIIS.5), 7: 15p.m .
Dt-lre4t ITIARilnll t-13) Ill Blllllmol"l'
(Bil.lllll..rd 1'7-'H, 7: 35p.m .
('alllornla IAhhoU 11·111 Ill Mlant11ot111
tGuthr.'e- Z.l ), 8: 05p. m .
l'hh:""o (Pf!noz 18-IS) at KanMM Cit)'
(GlJhiCIII 15-10), Jh35 p.m .
.
Sullie (HanAOn'J-5) al Teu•lhfft.'OJII
K-,\), M : :l~p . m . ·

......

A.maleur

Hou!lloft- U.S. Stnklr AmlkUir
Ch.nplollKitlp

Oaldaad ........................ 11 ,ilt Caltlornla ...... ,.... .........M II .W %'1.
~lllrli'Qtll ... , . ....... ....... 7. 1S
,.,...u............................M Mt

World

Golf

.an

.571

Egad, friends! California, here
they come - two Big Ten teams.
UCLA entertains mighty Michl·
gan on Saturday in the Rose
Bowl. Then Southern Cal hosts
Ohio State In the Los Angeles
Coliseum.
It't&gt; an ABC-TV doubleheader
that the Pac-10 just might enjoy.
For Michigan, it will be the
second Rose Bowl appearance
this year. On Jan. 2, the Wolve·
rlnes upset Southern Cal, 22-H,In
the 1989 Rose Bowl game. that
same day, by the way, UCLA
knocked off Arkansas In the
Cotton Bow I.
Squaring off In Pasadena, both
Michigan and the UCLA Bruins
are loaded with veterans on
offense aitd defense. Look for
UCLA to win a nallblter, 28-24.
Southern Cal's Trojans and the
OSU Buckeyes have met 19 Urnes
with a 9·9·1 tie to show ·ror their
efforts. In their Rose Bowl
meetings, the Bucks prevailed In
1955, '69 and '74; the Trojans
triumphed in 1973; '75, '80 and '85.
Now the home-field advantage
at the L.A. Coliseum should work
in favor of USC. The pick here Is
Southern Cal , 24-21.
From the Hoople Upset Dept.,
here's another:
The up-and-coming Louisville
Cardinals, riding an elght·game1 •
win streak, whlll shock the
visiting West Virginia
Mountaineers .
Coach Howard Schn!!llen·
berger's Louisville lads, victors
over Wyoming and Kansas tlils
fall, have a well-rounded attack
and a fierce defens. West Virgl·
nta, 11·11n 1988, Is stUI putting Its
game In order after heavy
graduation losses.
In a real crowd-pleaser, give It
to Louisvute. 32·28.
North Carolina's Tar Heels
hold a co,mmanding 52·20·6 mar·
gin over North Carolina State's
Wolfpack. However, the Tar
Heels have lost two of the last
three meetings, lncludlng.a bum·

Dan~ · Poolf'n. Jo.

oo ...

Mol'lcow 011.-npioMitlp»

fl'l

Kiu•~~AMoCIIy ................ Jl7 11

.Jee Y Gultl
Ju.Ur Middltwf'IIJII*•

Rol'hetk!r, N.Y.-

J•

Sen. /an M. Long
ticular food items which provide
mitrltlonal value can be obtain
through the WIC program. Thus
the emphasis Is on the proper
nutrition and diet.
Unfortunately, many lndlvldu·
als and families who may be
eliglbie for WIC are not aware of
the program. Thus, I present this
weekly report In hopes of making,
others IIi the 17th Senate District
well aware of WIC. U you believe·
y0u may be eligible, then contact
should be made with the local
WIC office. For your Inform&amp;·
. lion, the following are the telephone numbers for WIC offices In
the 17th Senate District. For
Athens County 594-8143. For
Gallla County 446-4612. For Jack·
son County .384-5417. For Lawrence County 532·3534. For Meigs
County 992-6626. For Plckaway
County 474-8861. For Ross County
773·6709. For VInton County 5964171. In addition, If you have.
questions about the WIC program or desire additional tnfor·
· matlon, as always please feel
free to contact my office at
614-466-8156 or · write to State
Senator Jan Michael Long, Statehouse, Columbus, OH 43215.

~b)'

Eul

.....

Pipkin Prophet

IBF Welltrwi&amp;N. Tille
.Roehet&amp;fr, N.Y. - Slm011 ••wn n .

B) U•lk-d Prt'til . . &amp;erllllk»MI
AMERICAN U:AGV!:

Franl'l~~to

Power·industry runs ·out of gas

vehicles Including ours and even
DAGGETT, Calif. (NEA) attempted to jump In front of
Throughout
the mid·1980s, the
vehicles to try to stop us for who
Cool
Water
generating station
knows what purpose! Because
here
was
constantly
cited by the
votes might be lost, no serious
electric
power
Industry
as a
cooperation had come from the
model
of
,&lt;;lean
coal
technology
sheriff's department until this
yel\r. Our new sheriff, Mr. for the future. Today, the llban·
Sou)sby, upheld the law to doned facility w:atts to be desprotect us without worrying troyed or dismantled.
The forsaken power plant in
about voting consequences. It Is
certainly refreshing to find this the middle of the Mojave Desert
caliber of public servant In our stands as a monument to an
Industry fumbling toward the
county.
future,
uncertain about how
I should also point out that the
I.
much
gene~allng
capacity the
fair Itself benefits very ffnan·
nation
will
require
In the future
clally from our sheriff's policy
and
what
form
it
should
take.
concerning Crew Road. There
While
conservation
Is
the
cen·
were commonly 100 cars parked
terpiece
of
a
strategy
that
allows
along that road costing the fair
hundreds of dollars a night In lost utility companies to stretch exist·
lnggeneratlngcapaclty, the need
gate receipts.
for
additional power plants to
I also want to thank Chester
Township trustees who helped meet expanded demand in the
cooperate In this successful solu· 1990s has become Inescapable.
The Industry Is almost para·
lion and the Meigs County Fair
lyzed,
however, by the concur·
Board.
rent
controversies
over "acid
Sincerely
rain"
and
the
"greenhouse
ef·
Keith D. Ashley
feet," both forms of envlronomental degradation whose major
causes Include the byproducts of
burning coal to generate
electricity.
Co~il·flred boilers, which ac. By United Press lnteraatlonal
.
count for almost 60 percent of all
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 20, the 263rd day of 1989 with 102 to
electricity produced nationally,
1ollow.
are the country's principal
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
source
of sulfur dioxide and a
· The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
major
source
of nitrogen oxide,
• The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
both
leading
contributors
to the
Those born on this date are under the sign .of Virgo. They Include
formatiOn
and
depositiOn
of
acid
Australian nurse Sister Elizabeth Kenny, who · pioneered the
rain.
treatment of polio victims, In 1886; novelist Upton Sinclair in 1878;
The domestic combustion of
jazz plano player Ferdinand "Jelly Roll" Morton In 1885; fashion
coal,
almost all of which occurs
i!eslgner James Galanos In 1924 (age 65); and actress Sophia Loren In
in power plants, accounts for 8
~934 (age 55).
percent of the world's emissions
of carbon dioxide, a leading
· On this date In history:
contributor
to the deleterious
In 1519, Portuguese navfgator Ferdinand Magellan began a voyage
global
warming
trend.
to find a western passage to the East Indies.

Dear Editor:
I wish to express m1 !amlly's
thanks to the Meigs County
sheriff's department for the
. fantastic job they did during the
. Meigs County Fair. Since we
have lived on Crew Road, which
is the road to the back entrance of
the Meigs County Fairgrounds,
we have had severe difficulties
with "moochers" parking along
our road in order to slip onto the
fairgrounds without paying.
These people parked so many
cars that there were times we
could not pass through to go
home let alone get any kind of
emergency vehicle up Crew
.Road, which Is a dead-end road
currently.
: We tried unsuccessfully to
:work with the two immediate
·past sheriffs to keep our road
'clear lor our safety. Not only did
the road get closed off In the past
nine years, but there was alcohol
and marijuana consumption go·
) ng on around these parked
-vehicles. Loiterers at these cars
~ad thrown rocks at passing
..
.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

QN4f;l] h Jkdifjm-.

95
Sa le ends
Novembef 30 .

1989.

match set to begin at 5 p.m.
Fields said that of the three
teams, she expects Cedarville
will offer the most competition.

DISCOVER

· AN
HO

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Fall Quarter Begins
October 2nd

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

.

Mets top Cubs 5-2; looking
'toward series with Cardinals

night's game In Cln~lnnatl . Oester missed the
throw 1 and Clark advanced to third. The.Padres
won 5-1. (UPI)

In· l3 innings,

Blue lays edge Boston 6-5
By ERIK K. LIEF .
UPI Sports Writer
Extra-inning victories have
co me in bunches for Toronto
recently, to such an extent it even
shocks the Bl ue Jays th emselves.
The Blue Jay s won-their fifth
extra-inning game in their last 10
outi ngs Tuesday night when
Nelson Liria no drilled a two-run,
oases- loaded double with two out
in the bottom of the 13th, rallying
Toronto to a 6-5 victory over the
Boston Red Sox.
Lir iano's game-winning hit
ca me on a 0-2 pitch from Greg
Harris. 2-2, who took over from
De nnis Boyd to start the lOth . It
was a high curve on the outside
par t of th e plat e that the
lef t-han ded hitt i ng Li ria no
turned on and pulled over · the
head of right-fi elder Danny
Heep.
Liria no's a bility to pull fhe ball
shocked teammate George Bell.
" If that had been me at the
plate l might have been a ble to
get a hit." sa id Bell. whose
two-out sin gle in th e lOth sparked
a one-run rally tha t evened the
sco re at 4-4.
" But th ere's no way I could
have pulled the ball the way he
did. He ju •t smoked the ball ."
For the Blue Jays, who trailed
by a run after the top of the lOth
and again alter the top of the
13t h. the wi n prese rved a twoga me lead ove r the Bal tim ore
Orioles in the Amer ica n League
East.
" 1 sa id to myself th a t I just had
to try and touc h the ball," said
Lir ia no. who had a sin gle to show
for his first fiv e at -bats in the

game. ··r knew I only had one
chance left, I had to stay alert
and be ready to go on anything."
It was a dra matic ending to a
game which the Blue Jays nearly
handed to the Red Sox in the lOth
inn!Og when reliever Duane
Ward uncorked a bases-loaded
wlld pitch to force in a go-ahead
run. Toronto also falled to
advance runners in a number of
clutch situations.
'"This is the time of year when
you have to win those kind of
ba!Jgames If you expect to win
the division." said Toronto manager Clto Gaston.
Boston manager Joe Morgan
was Incensed after the defeat.
" How ·could they possibly win
that game as inept as they
·were?," asked Morgan, who
kicked over a .garbage can when
Liriano's drive hit the fence .
''These guys are supposed to
win (the division)? Can you see
any way they should have won
that ball game? There's no way
they should have."
Morgan suggested that the win
should be credited to the umpiring crew, which gave close calls
to the Blue Jays in a two-run
fourth and two-run 13th.
"We wer e screwed left and
right tonight, " he said. "They
blew two calls, they were afraid
to call anybody out."
Tom Henke. who allowed a run
in the top of the 13th, Improved to
7·3.
In the top of the 13 th , Jeff Stone
reached on an infield single off
Hen ke and advanced to third on a
bloop single by John Marzano.
Boggs followed with a one-out

ByJOEILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
Teams prefer playing another
contender down the stretch. It's
the teams with nothing to lo!&gt;C
they fear the most.
The Mets and the Cardinals
know their jobs. They lace each
other twice In the next ·two days
in St. Louis and neliher Is looking
for anything less than a split.
"We're not going In there with
the Idea of knocking each other
off,'' Mets manager Davey John·
son sald Tuesday after New York
knocked olf Chicago 5-2 at
Wrigley Field. "You can make.
book on that. We still need to win
a bout all of them and we need
some help, It'~ true. But we're
still In this thing."
The Cubs spene! the next five
days against the PhLilles and the
Pirates, two teams long gone
from the pennant picture . With a
four-game lead over St. Louis
and a· · 5~-game lead over New
York, Chicago must guard
against complacency over the
remainder of the week if It Is to
win the National League East.
' 'The pressure's off them,"

flyout to deep left rield and Stone
scored without a play.
Elsewhere in the American
League:
Athletics 5, Indians 1
At Cleveland, Mike Moore
NEW KNOXVILLE, Ohio
allowed two hits over eight (UPI) -The first 1989 Ohio high
Innings to earn his career-high school ·volleyball ratings, com·
18th victory, handing Cleveland
plied by Chuck Braden, past
Its fifth straight loss. Moore, president of the Ohio High School
18-10, who walked one and struck Volleyball Coaches Association,
out five, did not allow an earned and distributed by UPI. (First·
run. Gene Nelson pitched the
place votes and team records In
ninth. Rod Nichols fell to 4-5.
par en theses) :
Orioles 6, Tigers 2
ct ..sAAA
At Detroit, Tim Hulett and
Point s
Jamie Quirk drove In two _runs Team
1. Re~· n oldsbu rg 1151 14-01 ......... ........ 201.
apiece to Lead Baltimore. Bob 2. Ci n Set en 111 13·1)., ...................... .. 196
Mllackl, 12-12, pitched five and 3. Cantr:n M cKinley 121 cS-21 ........... ... 115
Sa ndu sky i 10-21 ......... ................... . 107
two-third innings and Mark Willi· 4.
~ - S tow t5-lt ........... ....... .. .-....•........ .... 92
amson pitched three and one- 6. ETyMa 17·01 ................. .. .............. ... 91
third perfect Innings for his ninth 7. BeloitWPStBranch Ill 0·0) ..... ...... 69
Cln Mercy t5-0t .............. .. .......... .... 63
save. Jack Morris, 7-11, lasted 8.
9. It le i I..oulsvllle 15-1 ) ..................... .. 35
only five and two-third Innings.
9. llie l Brecksville c5-:H .. ..... _..... :....... 35
Second ten: 11 . Westerville South 34: 12.
Angels 7, Twins 3
on Clay 33: 13. Warsaw R iver VIew
At Minneapolis, Chuck Finley. Ore~
31; 14. Shelby 27; 15. C1.1ya hoga Falls22: 16.
16-8, allowed two earned runs and Nort h Olmsted 16: li. Bellevue 15; 18 . Wei
three hits in six innings aljd Solon a nd Celina, 14 each: 20. CPntervlllt&gt;
13.
Claudell Washington belted a
home run to lead California to its
Clus AA
Team
Points
third straight win. Bryan Harvey
) . Fairvi E'W Park 001 (5 ·11 ............... 167
notched his 24th save. Kevin
2. Sprlng N ' western 1!h 15-11 .... .. ...... 145
Tapani, 2-1 , allowed five runs and
3. Akroo Hoba n l2l 16·1) .................. 124
4. Day ton Chamlnade 13l n -11 ..... .... 117
10 hits In three and two-third
5. Flnneytown I 21 f~ - 1 I ..................... 59
Innings.
6. n ie) jacksoo-Mlllon 121 t6--0) .. ...... 51
Roya ls 5, While Sox 3
6. f!iel Pemb. Eas twood 17-21 ..... ..... 51
8. Buckeye Trail ll ! (6-01 ............. .... 45
At Kansas City, Mo., Danny
q_ Clvd e 18-11 .. ......... ... ............ -...... .. . 40
Tartabull and Willie Wilson each
1o.Bex1ey 111 t5-li .. ......... .... ... ........ ... :19
knocked In two runs Ln the second
Sero nd te n: 11. Canal Fultoo Northwes t
inning for the Royals. Larry :!7 ; 12. Lima Bath 36; u . Salem 35; 14.
Teays Valley 34; 15. Oak Harbor(] 127; 16.
McWilliams , 2-0, scat tered six
WeSt Ho lmes 26: n . Otse~o Il l 25; 18.
hits over seven innin gs and Steve . Rocky Ri ver 23; 19. file\ River Vall~:&gt;y a nd
Orrvill !:', 2'1 ea ch.
Farr picked up his 18th save.
Rich Dotson, 4-11, a llowed four
Oass A
unearned runs in the seco nd Team
Points
1. Newa r k Ca t ho Uc 1191 14·0) ......... .. . 237
Inning.

Miller spikers
11th in Class A

2. Sl. Hen ry 121 16-21 ........................ 149

:t Arch bo ld

1~- O J ............................. 134

4. Fran krort Adena 13 1 17-01 .. ........... 128
5. New Kn oxville 121 17-11
..... 119
6. Miller City ttl t5-0) ................. ..... 76
7. n1e1 Berlin Hiland 18-0l .... ........... . 67
7. !I le i Fairbanks 17--01 ................ .... 67
9. ST. Bernard 15-11 ................... .. ..... 52
JU.Fort R ecover~· 16-1) .............. ... ... .. 50
Second ten: It. HEMLOCK MILLER 3 4;
12. ,Hard! n No rthern 30; 13. Conotton
Va llev 29: 14. ote l West Liberty-Salem
a nd Ho(X'well-Loudon 26 each; 16. Canal
Winchester 24: 17. Fairlawn 23; 18.
Buc keye Central 20; 19. Rockford Parkwa y HI; 20. Columbus Wehrle 16.

Sports briefs
Hor!&gt;C Racing
The West Vlrglna Board of
Stewards dismissed allegations
that winning trainer James Ca·
sey tried to rig tile top race In the
West VIrginia Breeder's Classic
by bribing horse owners. The
three-member panel threw out
charges lodged by James and
·Brenda Wright, owners of Fortu·
nate Field, and allowed the
$125,000 prize money to be
released to the winners.

TO-UC HES HOME - II seems that Oakland's
Dave Parker is the victim of a brushback pitch
during Tuesday night 's game against the Indians

in Cleveland, but Parker Ls sliding into home and .
reaching behind his head to touch the plate for the
run. The A's wdn 5·1, (UPI)

Little Marauders defeat Nelsonville·York, 48-14
~

Hcn th Hudson raced for 283 also threw for three two point
va rd s rushing nnd fi ve touc h- conversions. as Brad Anderson,
dow ns. and added a noth er sco re . Rya n Co nde and Jared Douglas
when he pic ke d off a Nelsonvi lle each grabbed one.
pass and returned it 65 ya rds in
The defense scored anoth er
lea ding the Me igs Marauders
touc hdown when Jason Hart hit
eight h graders to a 48 to 14 romp th e Ne lsonvi lle quarterback
over the Li tt le Bucks.
when he was trying to pass, the
The Little Marauders domi- ball popped lose and Matt Clark
nated the gam e from the start as
scooped up the lose ball and
they racked up 443 yards In total
ram bled 30 yards to paydlrt .
offense.
Nelsonville scored late In the
. Kevin Whobrey .tur ned in ·an
outs tanding performance adding
GOOD USED
107 yards on the grou nd . Quarterback Eric Wagner complet ed 5
WASHERS, DRYERS,
passes good f9r 39 yards. Wagner

Sports briefs
•
Hockey
The betroi t Red Wings signed
defensemen Je ff Sharples andDean Morton to multiyear contracts &amp;nd sent left wing Dale
Krentz to their America n Hockey
League affiliate in Glens Falls,
N.Y.

REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
62 7 3rd An., Gallpells
PH. 446·1699

HOUIS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.

game to make the score closer
then It really was.
The Little Marauders will
travel to Belpre Thu rsday night
to play the Little Eagles.

Meigs Cou~ty
·property transfers
Jacqueline McLaughlin,
Wayne McLaughlin, Mlnd'y
Mc·Laughlln and M ega n
McLaughlin, right of way to
Tupper .Plains-Chester Water
District, Letart.
Harold L. Henders on ahd
Wllma A. Henderson, right of

.

'i.

REACHES FOR BALL - Reds second .
baseman Ron Oesler (16) reaches lor the ball,
which was _thrown behind a sUding Jack Clark ol
the Padres _in the· !&gt;Cventh inning of Tuesday

Wednesday, September 20, 1989

Wednesday. ~ember 20, 1989 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Track and Field
u.s. track olflclals properly
reported two positive drug tests
from this year's national Indoor
meet to the sport's world governIng body, The Athletics Congress
Executive Director Ollan Cassell
said. Arne Ljungqvlst, medical
commission chairman or the
International Amateur Athletics
Federation, said ' Monday in
Toronto TAC failed to report the
positive tests as required by
IAAF rules.

I

'

Cubs pitcher Steve Wilson said of
Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.
"They're playing pretty good
ball and they're really pretty
1
good teams."
While Chicago certainly has
the edge as the season winds·
down, the Cardinals are positionIng themselves well. By beating
Moritreal 5-0, St. Louis picked up
a valuable game In the standings.
All the Cardinals must do Is
gain at least one more game over
the next 10 days. If they do ,
they'll be In position to tackle
Chicago on the final weekend of
the season and win the pennant.
"We Ilke our chances better
day by day," sald St. Louis
outfielder Tom Brunansky, who ·
drove in two runs with a single
and his 20th homer. "We could be
two games behind at the end of
the season and the Cubs have to
come and play us in St Louis."
In other NL games:
MeiS 5, Cobs 2
At Chicago, Gary Carter belted
a three-run homer and Dwight
Gooden earned his first majorleague save. The victory ended
the Mets' three-game . losing
streak. Bob Ojeda, 13-10, picked
up his eighth win In his last nine
decisions. Gooden pitched four
Innings. Steve Wilson, 5·4, took
the loss .
.
Cardinals 5, Expos 0
At Montreal, Tom Brunansky
drove In two runs with a single
and his 20th homer and Bob ·
Tewksbury pitched a four-hitter
to win his first decision In four
appearances since St. Louis
recalled him -Sept. 2 from the·

minors. Mark Gardner, 0-2, wa'
the loser. Pedro Guerrero also
homered for -the Cardinals.
·
Padre~~ 5, Reds 1
At Cincinnati, rookie Andy
Bene:; allowed five hits over six
and two-third Innings and Mark
Davis earned his 40th save to
send the Reds to their eighth
straight Ioss.Benes, 5·2, struck
out nine and did not walk a
batter. He also collected two hits
before giving way to Davis, Who
leads the majors In saves.
Braves S, Astros 0
At Atlanta, Gary Eave combined with two relievers on a
four-hitter to outduel Mike Scott.
Eave, 1·0, posted his first major
league victory In his first major
league start. Ron Gant and D!!ve
Justice homered off Scott, 20-9, In
the seventh.
Pirates 4, PhiiUes 2
At Pittsburgh, Gary Redus
Went 3 for 4 with two doubles and
a tie-breaking single to lead the
Pirates to their lOth victory In the
last 12 games. Jeff Robinson,
7-11, posted his first victory since
Aug. 25. Bill Landrum hurled the
ninth for his 24th save. Bruce
Ruffin , 5-10, was the loser.
Giants 3, Dodgers 2
At San Francisco, Mike Laga
lashed a three-run, pinch-hit
double with two out In the fifth to
rally the Giants, who remained
five games ahead of the .Padres
In the NL West. Mike LaCoss,
8-10, won despite allowing 11 hits
over five Innings. Steve Bedrosian notched his 22nd save. Ore!
Hershlser, 14-14, allowed eight
hits In five Innings.

way to Tupper Plaln$·Chester
Water District , Orange.
Donald Fitch and Linda Fitch,
right of way to Tupper P lains·
Chester Water District, Orange.
Roger C. Gaul and Chloris L.
Gaul. right of wa y to Tupper
Plains-Chester Water District,
Orange.
Lloyd Blackwood and Anna
Margaret Blackwood, right of
way to Tupper Plains-Chester
Water District, Orange.

.

Direct Shipment
· To The Orient

Former auto dealer wins $5.3 million from GM
PAINESVILLE. Ohio iUP l l A jury has awarded .$5.3 million
to a former Ch·evrol et dealer who
said he was forced into bankr uptcy In 1981 by t)le General
Motors Corp. .
The suit by Earl Evans Chevrolet Co. of Painesville ar gued
GM had favored a competing
Chevrolet dealership, which at
Ihe time was partially owned by
tl)e a utomaker.

.A mo tio n was flied following
the verdict In ·Lake Count y
Common Pleas Court Tuesday to
doub le the award, as allowe d
under Ohio laws regarding
fra nc hiser-franchlsee re lationships; The motion also asked for
Interest on the settlement and
reasonable legal fees.
GM officials said they were
disappointed with the verdict and
planned to appeal.

The jury fou nd that GM di s·
criminated against Eva ns by
giving the Classic Chevrolet Co.
of nearby Mentor a much better
s upply of cars and a greater
number of better -selling mod els.
Nicholas DeV!to, who represented Daniel Nester, Eva ns's
majority owner, said GM owned
88 percent of Classic until 1981,
when the automaker sold lis
Interest·. Classic was originally

·part of the suit, but was later
dropped as a defend ant.
Nes ter began purchasing
shares of Eva ns in 1975 a.nd
acqui red a controlling lntrest In
1980. DeVito said It was a thriving
dealers hip un til GM started
showi ng preferential treatment
to Classic.
DeVito prese nted records
showing Ge neral Motors provided Classic with more cars
fr om 1979 to 1981 than were given
to Evans.

ADV_
fRTISlD ITfll POLtCY-Eech of theN.IdYertioed ~11!11 ia 11quired to be ,...dity
ava•labte for sale in each Kroger Store, except II apecifk:;llty noted in this ad. If
we do run out of an adve.rtised item, we will ott. ~-ou your choice of 1
co'!"pere~~ it~m. when aval8ble, reftecting the umt Nvings or a rainc~k
w~1c_h will ent•tle you to purchiH the adveniled item at the ld\lertiled. price
·~ •th•n 30 days. Ontv one vendor coupon witl be accep1ed per item purct..Hd.
COPYRIGHT 1989. THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,
SEPT. 17, THROUGH SATURDAY, SEPT. ~. 1989, IN
'
·
GALUPOUS AND POMEROY STORES .
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
DEALERS.

•

·Overtime proves fatal
to RG's soccer team
Greg Ross's goal for Mount
Vernon Nazarene at seven min·
utes Into the first period of
overtime Tuesday broke a dead·
lock with tlte University of Rio
Grande soccer team and allowed
the Cougars to escape from
Stanley L. Evans Athletic Field
with a 3·2 victory over the
Redmen.
A frustrated MVNC offense
came alive In .the second half of
regulation after the Redmen,
riding the crest of a weekend win
on the road over Georgetown
(Ky.), finished the first period
with a 2·0 advantage.
"Overall, It was not a good
game, even when we Were
winning," Redmen Coach Scott
Morrissey commented. "We had
our opportunities, dangerous opportunities, in the first half and
we scored on them. "
The Redmen forged ahead
when Barry Saunders, with. an
as slst•from Tony Daniels, broke
through the visitors' defense to
. score. Daniels followed up, as·
sis ted by Frank Payerchin, to net
the team's second_goal and carry
the winning edge Into the !&gt;CCO!ld
period.
The hosts' defense held for
about 20 minutes when Ross
scored the Cougars' first goal at
24:28. Rlo Grande stayed In the
game to stem any further advan·
ces, but Pete Ryder. shot the ball
In the Redmen's net with two
minutes of regulation remaining

RG baseball team
changes game date
The date for one of the
University of Rio Grande baseball team's practice doubleheaders has been changed.
Coach Dave Oglesby said the
contest, to be played against
Wilmington at Rio Grande on
Sunday, Oct. 8, has been
switched to Wednesday, Oct. 4 at
2 p.m . , due to a conflict. ·
The twin b1!1, consisting of two
seven-Inning games, wlll be
played at Rlo Grande. Oglesby
said an alumni game has been
slotted for Oct. 8 at Stanley L.
Evans Athletic Field.

~~ .

to Leave the score 2·2. Officials
then called for the stand;~rd pair
of 15-mlnute overtlmes to be
played, with Ross posting his
game-winning goal, on assist
from Paul Carr, shortly afterward. The win put MVNC at 2-2
on tlie season.
A key to the Redmen's defensive play was the work per·
formed by Chad Rickey at the
goal. Rickey recorded 24 saves ,
while MVNC's Steve Entenmann
had six. Rio Grande took 14 shots
on goal, but the Co11gars re·
corded 35.
The Redmen fell to 1·3·1 overall
and 0-2 Ln Mld-Ohlo Conference
play. They will be Idle until Sept.
30, when they travel to Bluffton.
Following the game, Saunders,
a junior from Jamestown, Ohio,
emerged · as one of the team's
statistical leaders, having scored
five of tlie Redmen to-date total
of 10 goals. Daniels has three and
Rich Bltonte Is credited with two.
Payerchln has had two assists
and John Kullna one. The game
also boosted Rickey's number of
saves to 72.

~

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The Daily·Sentinel- Page- S

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�.,.. 6-The Daily Sentinal

EMS hasl5 weekend calls
Fifteen calls for assistance
were answered over the weekend
by units of the Meigs Emergency
Medical Services.
On Saturday at 1:32 a.m. ,
Pomeroy went to West Main St.
for Geneva Swartz to Veterans
Memorial Hospital . At 1:38 a.m.,
Pomeroy went .to Ball Run Road
lor Martha Boynton to Veterans.
' ·Memorial Hospital, and at 2: 11
p.m., Pomeroy transported
Sharon Hubbard from the station
to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Tuppers Plains at 5:27 p.m.
was called to New Hope Road for
Inez Stalllilgs who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. •
• :Rutland was called at 8:41p.m.
tQ Route 143 lor Gerald Arnold to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
10:47 p.m.. Rutland was called to
the Columbia Township Fire
Dpeartment for James Gaston
wiio was taken to O'Bieness
·'Memorial Hospital.
' syracuse at 1:05 p.m. went to
Cherry St. lor Lisa Bailey to
Holzer Medical Center ,
Sunday at 5: 50 p.m. . two
Pomeroy units transported
Christopher Dee, · Karl Borski

and Tom Page from an auto ·
accident on Route 33 to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Rutland at 7:51a.m. was called
to Route 124 for Lacy Barton to
Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport at 9:05a.m. went to
J:leech St. for Helen Kennedy to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at ll :56 a.m. went to
HoUy Lane for Leah Jane EichJn,
ger to Holzer Medical Center. ·
At 1: 44 p.m ., Tuppers Plains
went to New Hope Road for Inez
StalUngs who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
later to St. Mary's Ho.spital,
Huntington. W,Va.
Two Rutland units at 4:27p.m.
transported Clair Swan Jr. and
Susie Swan from an auto accident on Main St . to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Racine at 8:56 p.m. transported Richard Rattimer frQm
the station to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Pomeroy at 10: 06 p.m. transported Stella Bush from the
Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing
Center to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

.

would be Insured for up to $15,000
for each personal prf;lperty loss
claim, while the coverage In the
poUcy was actually ltmlted ·to
$1,000 for any one theft claim.
The company denieS any
misrepresentation.
White's lawyer, Edward Kramer, said White flied only one
claim and was paid $976 for
personal property stolen from his
car last year. ·White made two
other Inquiries to the company
about possible claims; but never
filed any claims.
The suit alleges Allstate canceled the policy because it feared
White would become a victim of
racial harassment in the white
neighborhood.
. White's ·home was reportedly
burglarized March 5, shortly
before his coverage was to expire
on March 17. The suit . said
vandals spray-painted racial
slurs on walls, destroyed lurniture and stole a number of
household Items.

Senate Bill 205 was recently
introduced lp the Ohio Senate by
Democratic leadership. The bill
outlines the basic feature of a
new drug enforcement plan for
Ohio.
According to State Senator Jan
Michael Long, drugs have become the most Important Issue
facing Ohioans today. "Cocaine
and crack use are on the Increase
and both are slowly eroding away
our society," Long says. "Illicit
drug use In Ohio Is costing us
many productive lives and bll·
lions of dollars every year. In
order to successfully combat
drug pushers and drug users, we
must get tough."
S.B. 205 takes a comprehensive. statewide approach to the
problem, Long says. The bill
specifically calls for the creation
of 27 special drug judges and
prosecutors, constructlon ·of two
new prisons In Ohio to hOuse
minimum. medium and maxi-

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI ) - Tuesday 's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK-3
418.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,162,986.50, with a payoff due of
$1,581.004.50.
PICK-4
5366.
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
$214,312, with a payoff due of
$57,000.

I

1989 CROWN
VICTORIA LX

Dark Cinnabar. Loaded.

WAS 1 18,850.00

NOW

1989 TEMPO
GLS 2 DR.
Lt. sandalwood clear coat, A.C .. power

#

• ~·I

"''989
Eat At ...
~

$15,950

NOW

OFFfCIAL GIVEAWAY RULES I. No pm::ha.., llft:ft,N.r}L 2. To lrfiMr. fill o.t •ndmt~ll\11 IMoffk.. llorm ~
"or prinl ~~ Mtne and eddrnt llfltl Mpilltllt J"aS' card •nd I'IUIIIItlo: C-1\on 1: Conil..tlna, P.Q &amp;-.; 14588,
S.ltlmote. MD 212611. Enter at olta~ 11 \IOU wilt!, but •.ch nltf)' mull bol! mt~ll.d Mpilltild)r. No rMC.._,k•l
cb:UoM perlllitlfd. No rapc~M~blltty 11 1HIMTI«d for to.t, stolen, mlldlmted or LIN:cnlrln. 3.1'•5" urd mUll
be pott,...rbd by 10/31/19 aiM! lftetwd ~ IIJ7/19. 4. 100 WIIIMrt·MIIcech recetvt Us. s.vtngs Bondi with a

,_,ro-

IKeY-.,. of S2MIO(WIIue tn1t...n StoOOif ~IHd priOfto mM\Irtty). Noprtns or~:.~lhMlbttltutlon per·
mitt-d. •nd prbn ... ._.nfu~ •nd - ·uarm.r.W.. Thtoddtof Wlnnift!ll dtpeftd IIIICN!Ihl M&amp;mbet o4

""rln~ TaanHll!tt.tok~lhyoftt.wtnMn.LiMIIOMprlMperfamllyor..W....,~Winnert

will bor -~«&lt;in a random dt-.1"1 from •mont all dglble mutn on or MMiut 12/31/11 and will be ROIIfled
~ Mnl by l{U/90. Eftl:t.nt:IKctpt and ..... to 1..... rulna..t llw dlrdalon of IM)udanwhkh lhal be fi.W .
Winnertlll~ lw,.red to Hen 1fftdevll1of dlllbiHiy 1nd rae.... 6.Gi"-ay opRn to US. rnidnt1. 1wap1
-employtft •nd theft ..milia of C.m.tlon Comp.ny. 111 afflllllfl.lllhidlarin, .dw!r11111111 ..-ncv and )uclgl111
Of'PIIIUIIoft. Sllb)tet tO ltl federal, IIIII and loc:all-. \loidwhercproflibited, rnlricted or IIIIH.J. For aiW.I of
Gtvuwaw wtniWI'I, Hftd 1 Hlf.addreued,ltarnped enYdope 10: SchcMarthip Gtwaw.y Wtnnert Lilt, P.O. Bo•
14590. a.ltimort, MD 21268. All wiiiMrllill M41Uftiiii'Udl be m:etwd by2/28/90.

I
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I

1

I
I
I
I

.
... Mail to:

Proceedings of sale have peen
approved In Meigs County Common Pleas Court in a foreclosure
action by Central Trust Company
of Ohio against the Scipio Energy
Association Inc., et al.
A judgment action has been
filed by Norman Milliron, Racine, against Gary Cooper, Rutland, and Marilyn . Cooper,

1989
AEROSTAR
VAN
Extended Length. G,.y a. Silver a. 2

NOW

WAS •11,971 .00

WAS 1 21.164.00

NOW

$17,950

.1989 RANGER
s 4X2
Rear step bumper. tapa

WAS '11.568.00

WAS 18463.00

$14,740

1989 RANGER
SUPER CAB 4X2
Crystal blue. XLT Package, 6 speed • .

XLT Packag•. 302 eng., power win·
· dows, locks. A/C, speed S. tilt, tu·
tone blue. ·

3-1989 UNGER
s 4X4
Red, black, white.

2 IN STOCK

NOW

trans., •ir ,cond .. plus mora.

S9965

WAS 1 15,649.00

NOW

1989 F-150 4X4

itriP. ~

S9995

1989 F-150
PICKUP
Tutone red a. silver, 6 cyl .. auto.

S12, 150

NOW

,.

'

· ··

..

Four defendants were fined 011
DWI ; charges In "the•·cilurt of·
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
· Tuesday night.
, Fided on the charge were
Calvin R. Dowell, Long Bottom,
$375 and costs; Monoka Olngu~s.
Point Pleasant; $375 and costs,
along with $88 and costs for open
container In the vehicle; Roger
Dillard. Jr .• Pomeroy,. $375 and
costs, along with $63 and costs, no
operator's license; Sharon K.
Farley, Akron, $37? and costs.
along with $63 and costs, no
operator's license.
Otriers fined In the court were
Jimmy Harris. Middleport, $88
and costs, open container of
alcohol; Mike ·c. Stump, Pomeroy, $63 and costs; fictltiO!IS
license plates; and Jeffrey L.
Davis, Syracuse, $43 and costs,
assured clear distance, and $50
and costs, no financial
responsibility.
Forfeiting bonds In the court
were Arthur Ray Martin, Charleston, W. va., $45, speeding;
Susan Jones, Pomeroy, $43,

'

7285

1989 F150 4X4
PICKUP
Red a. white tutona, V-B. auto. trans .•
speed S. tilt.

.

WAS 1 16,969

NOW

$13,470

{2) F-150 4X4 PICKUPS

Dark Ch•stnut, 6 cyl., 5 spaed.
WAS 115,071.00

jail on a OWl charge. and $25 and
costs on expired license.
Others fined were .Brian K.
Hawley, Middleport, $10 fine only
for no motorcycle endorsement;
Bill Ritchie, Reedsville, $25 and
costs, disorderly manner; and
Max Geary. Middleport, $25 and
costs, operating a motor vehicle
without due regard for safety.
Forfeiting a bond in the court
was Donald Nicholas. Middleport, $40, speeding.

Pomeroy court news

6 cyl. eng. &amp;4 spaed. tram., clark blue &amp;dark brown.
WAS 114,752.00

•.

1989 CONVERSION VAN DEMO

.

CARNATION AND CONTAOINA
$200.000 Scholarship Giveaway
P.Q Box 14588
Baltimore, MD 21268

Guy Wayne Shuler, Rutland,
was fined on four charges when
he appeared In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
He was fined $25 and costs on
each of two disorderly manner
charges, $100 and costs on
driving under suspension, and
$50 and costs on resisting arrest.
Also fined In the court was
Darrell Craycraft, Cheshire, $25
and costs, disorderly conduct ,
$425 and costs and three days in

1989 BRONCO

S7265

Portland.
Home National Bank ha~ been
awarded ~,995 .83 , plus Interest ,
in an action against Robert D.
Gibson and Pansy Gibson.
In the state's case against Greg
HICks, Hicks has been released
on a $5,000 recognizance bond.
Finally, a grand jury session
has been set for Friday at 10a.m·.

Middleport court news
.

$6875

NOW

WAS 1 8451

$5875

----------------------Send in this completed form by 10/31/89
to be eligible to win in our Carnation/
·Contadina Scholarship Giveaway.

Meigs County Emergency Medical services reports that five
calls for assistance on were answered on Tuesday by Racine
.
and Rutl11nd units.
At 4:24 p,m. on Monday, Rutland transported Charles
Richard Grueser from ah auto accident on Larkin St. to Holzer
Medicafeenter. Treated at the scene was Jessie Grueser.
At 4: 58 p.m., Racine was called to Third St. for Elizabeth
Hysell who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Racine at 8: 12 p.m. went to Mile Hill Road for Twlla Clark to
Holzer Medical Center, and at 8: •9 p.m. to Trouble Creek Road
for James Hinkley to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland at 9: 44 p.m. went to Woodyard Road for Buddy Kuhn
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Columbia Township also
responded to this call.
·

fog roll across Northeast

By United Press lnternat.ional
in Los Angeles caused scattered
Late summer showers and fog power outages throughout the
rolled- across New England and region and about 70,000 residents
much of the eastern United were without power, official s
States early Wednesday as thun- said.
· derstorms dumped rain In the
A high pressure system that
West and snow fell In the high hovered over the Southern plains
during the past few days brought
moun lain regions of Nevada.
The National Weather Service · more fair weather to Oklahoma,
said an upper-level low pressure where sunny skies and pleasant
system moving over the southern temperatures prevailed stateCalifornia-Nevada border late wide early Wednesday .
Tuesday produced thunderBut rain, drizzle and fog
storms and rain in eastern and persisted In New England, where
southern Nevada and ln southern . weather was damp and tempera-'
California.
tures were In the 50s and 60s
Pea-sized hall and brief but Wednesday across Massachuheavy rain fell late Tuesday In setts. Maine and New
Las Vegas, while more than a Hampshire.
tenth of an Inch .of rain was
Showers and fog also prevailed
reported in E·ly, Nev . NWS across eastern Pennsylvania,
forecasters said snow was · re- where more than an inch of rain
ported in the high mquntainS fell overnight in some areas.
above 10,000 feet.
Scattered showers fell along
An unusual late-summer storm the Florida Keys and stretched
NATIONAL WEAtHER SERvice FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT f-21-t9

from the western part of St .
Petersburg to Bayport while
mostly fair skies prevailed over
the rest of Florida early Wednesday. Showers and thunderstorms
soaked much of the state Tues-

Weather
By United Press International
Soulh Central Ohio
Tonight: Partly cloudy . with a
low betwee n 60 and 65. Nearly
calm winds.
Thursday: Variable cloudiness, with highs between 60 and
85.
Extended Forecast
Friday throl!gh Sunday
Mostly fair Friday, with a
chance of showers Friday night
and Sat ui'day . Fair Sunday.
Highs will be near 80 Friday,
near 70 Saturday,a nd In the 60s
Sunday. Early morning lows will
be near 60 Friday , between 5.5
and 60 Saturday, and in the 60s
Sunday .

•

Qssured clear distance; Melvin
Thornton, Racine, $4i3, no operator's license; Donna Frank,
Pomeroy, $63, failure to register
her motor vehicle; Charles
Yonkers, . Letart, W. Va .. $63.
expired registration; ·William
Beard, Zanesvlile, $63, expired
vehicle registration; and KellyS.
Ogdin. Rutland, expired
registration.

Gun
...
Continued fr,om page 1
vehiCle to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for treatment.
On Tuesday morning, Audrey
Hart, Racine, was traveling west
on Route 124 in Syracuse when a
deer jumped Into the side of her
vehicle. There was light damage
to the vehicle.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - Sue
Ellen Lemley. Syracuse; Lois
Jean Province, Middleport.
Monday discharges - Francis
Hysell.

day, with temperatures In the~ ­
and 90s.
· •
Clouds were scattered over ·
Georgia and the Gulf Coast late
Tuesday and showers hit the
coastal areas by nightfall. .
The weather front located off· ·
the Atlantic Coast was expected .·
to move wes t lntoo the state,
bringing mostly cloudy skies and·
a chance of showers to thesoutheast on Wednesday and
Thursday.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER ·

INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pomtroy:

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

10

0

•

, .

''YES'' ~
THERE IS STILL
TIME TO ENROLL!
~ DON'T LET FALL QUARTER· ..
&amp;r.~i~v
BEGIN WITHOUT YOU.·
CLASSES BEGIN SEPT. 25th
*SECURITY OFFICER
·•BUSIN.ESS ADMINISTRATION
*SECRETARY
*EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
*MEDICAL OFFICE SECRETARY
*MICRO COMPUTER-DATA PROCESSING
*DATA ENTRY SPECIALIST
"JUNIOR ACCOUNTING
*REAL ESTATE

~SNOW

-RAIN
~SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static . . . Occluded
Map Shows rnlrimum temperatures . At least 50% of any shaded area is forecast
. to receive precipitation indicated
·
UPt
WEATHER MAP- Showers and thunderstorns IIJ'e forecast for
parts ofthe central Plains, upper Mississippi Valley and the upper
Great Lakes Thursday morning. Sbowers are possible In parts of
the mki·Paclfic Coast with showers and thunderstorms possible In
parts of the soutnern Plnns, and south Atlantic Coast states. (UPI)

11

CALL 446-4367

SOUTHEASTERN .BUSINESS

COLLEGr~

SPR.ING VALLEY PLAZA - GALLIPOLIS

"A.I.C.S. ACCREDITATION
*JOB PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE
*INDIVIDUALIZED INSTRUCTION

•FINANCIAL AID FOIU
THOSE WHO uu•~Ln·y
REG. 1188-1

Growth recession predicted for 1990
CLEVELAND (UP I) - The
chief economist for the Society
Corp. projected Tuesday what he
calls a "growth recession" by the
end of next year as the number of
jobs Increases slower than the
expansion of the available work
force.
Kenneth Mayland, economist
·· for Ohio's th ird-largest bank
. holding company. predicted the
loss of 22 000 manufacturing jobs
•

StOC kS

In Ohio but an Increase in 3'7,000
non-manufacturing jobs.·He said
that would mean a 0.5 percent
Increase in the unemployment
rate.

r------------,

GilLS AND LADIES

FLATS, DRESS HEELS
&amp; SCHOOL SHOES
PLUS A FEW BOOTS

$3 &amp; ss

Checkout
Nationwide's

Mutual fund IRA

CANVAS &amp;
SCHOOL SHOES

$3 &amp; ss

Investment opt+ons.
0 flEXIBILITY ...

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi

Self-direct transf~rsemong -4

LADIES

funds as often at you like, free of

'J

Am Electric Power ............. 30%
AT&amp;T .. :.................... .... .. ..... 42
Ashland Oil ....................... .41 ~
Bob Evans .. ..... ................... 15% ·
Charming Shoppes .. .... .. .. .... 15%
City Holding Co .................. 15¥.,
Federal Mog~~l... .............. ... 23~
Goodyear T&amp;R ........... ; .......53¥.,
Heck's ......................... .......... ~
Key Centurion .. ...... ............13%
Lands' End .................... .. ... 26%
Limited Inc ............ ........ ..... 37
Multimedia Inc ....... : .. ....... :.101
Rax Restauants ......... .. ........ 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ ........ 143;.1
Shoney's Inc ...... ........ ....... .. 11%
Wendy's Inti ....... ................. 5%
Worthington lnd .............. .. .23%

chlrge and without tax penalties.
SERVICE ...
Full-time profeuional manege·

JUST IN TIME FOR

ARTICS
DRESS &amp;
CASUALS

TUBE SOCKS

MEN'S ALL LEA THEI

DRESS SHOES

.._.. .........

MEN'S

$9 &amp; $12

MEN'S LEAIHEI

NATIONwllE

S14&amp;S19

MEN'S 6 Pl.

$499 .

__
...
0
-

WAS 526,326.00

GOLF SHOES

LAIGE TABLE OF

302 Wtst 2nd Str•t

ltndmonty.

LADIES'

.N'S 4 &amp; 5 1\ucKLE

$3 &amp; ss

lf2 PRICE $2000

.

$900

$600

FOR THE FAMILY

Call me today tOf a frH no.oblltltlon
IRA kiland KCtSI to our 2.. hour totl ·
free number .
Vou 'II .. IO receiYe aprotpeet~o~acontaln·
lng mof'l! complete Information, includ·
ing m~~n.gemtnt fen and e11pen.ea.
RNd it carelull)' before you lnvnt or

JOGGERS

S1QOO

CLOSEOUT
SHOES

'. .

... . . .S lliE &amp; GIEY

POCKETBOOKS

ment, toll -free assistance and

P-roy, Oh. 45769
Ph. 614-992-5479
Rts.: 614-992-2477
Claims: 1-100-421'3535

BOYS &amp; MEN'S LOW &amp;
, HIGHTOP LEATIIEI
CONVEISE, .GIEGOI,
FOOT JOY, U BALANCED
SPECIAL PUICHASE

$2900

INfAIITS &amp; IDYS'bill TOP -

0 OPPORTUNITY . ..
Choost from 4 •••·deferred

•

LORAIN

rain~

Late summer

•

BUILT BY

The Daily Sentinal- Page-7;-

·Sale proceedings approved

WAS 1 7826.00

S9870

1989 FESTIVA
LX
2 DR.
Red, air cond.

Sky blue. C.C. met.

NOW

... 'vahte aam.turity

EMS Meigs has 5 Tuesday calls

1989 FESTIVA
2AirDR.
L
cond.

windows &amp; locks, tilt wheel &amp; speed control, plus more.
WAS •11,639.00

1989 FESTIVA
2 DR. L PLUS

NOW
-.

We offer a new building with adequate parking,
120 plusn~~mben, low du11 structurel$12.00 per
year), actlwe audiary with' excellent cancer
iM•rance plan for ...-xllary.
FOI INFOIM.nON CALL
667-6418, 985·4161 or 985-3376

1989 MODELS MUST GO!

tone sand.
WAS 1 16,901 .pO

n

V.F.W. Post 9053, Tuppers Plains, Oh., invites
you to become Cl member of our .Post.

ON AMERICA'S BEST-SELLING CARS AND TRUCKS

NOW

We're going to present 100 lucky kids with $2.000' in U.S. Savings Bonds
to help with their education. So give us a chance to invest in your child's

AN OPEN INVITAnON TO ALL VETERANS
WHO SERVED OVERSEAS IN ANY WAR.

;;,;,~'". CLEARANCE

WAS 6890.00

FroIll

continued from page 1
Abel's bill will amend the criteria for ratification of the solid
waste management plans and the preliminary solid waste
disposal fees of joint solid waste management districts.
The language deletes the requirements that the largest
municipal corporation within a county In a joint district can veto
the solid waste management proposal.
The approval of a solid waste management plan would only
necessitate a 60 percent passage by the district.
·
Abel said that under law, the largest municipality In each
county of the joint district has the power to totally override a
joint district has the power to totally override a joint district
plan. Her legtsation, House Bill 656, would prevent a
municipality from vetoing a plan for ail entire district.
Abel said the current regional plan and its mernbers are
pioneers of House Bill 592 of the 117th General Assembly. The
Southeastern area is one of the few districts In Ohio that Is a
forerunner of enacting a plan.

·PAT HILL FORD· INC.
OFFICIAL

Pomerov-:-Middleport, Ohio

...---Local news briefs.... - -

mum security drugs offenders, three prosecutors to specifically enforcement officials to Investicreation of a new Ohio Drug handle drl!l! related cases. Local · gate, interdict and apprehend
Enforcement Agency &lt;ODEA) , courts would be relieved of the drug criminals In Ohio. The act
and finally, the creation of the . excess burdens or drug cases. would al~o . educate our children
Drug Advisory Board to assist Two new prisons would be built to · about the harm and criminal
the director of the ODEA.
house between 400 arid 600 drug aspects of Illegal drugs, Long
The
Emergency
Drug
Enforcefelons . The Ohio Strike Force explains.
14
ment Act would create nine would be created to work closeiy
The total cost of this program
· courts In Ohio, each with an with local and federal law would ~ $50 million.
. average of three judges and

1

:future. Just complete the form below
-to enter your child's name in our big
:$200PQ(}ScholarshipGiveawall
To save na.., redeem the valuable
coupons below. (See official rules
for complete details.)

Wedn&amp;lc:lay, September 20. 1989

Senate Bill 205 outlines new Ohio drug enforcement plan

Allstate sued for redlining
CLEVELAND (UP)) - A
Cleveland man has flied suit
against the Allstate Insurance
Co .. accusing the company of
engaging In "Insurance redllnlng" by cancellilg his Insurance
because of his race and the
location of his home.
Willle White, a black resident
oi a mostly white area of the
~lty's east side, filed the sultiast
week In Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court. The suit, which
asks $510,000 In damages ,
charges Allstate's agent fraudu·
lently represented the terms of
White's homewner's policy and
that different terms and condi·
lions for cancellation were applied to White because of his race.
· Redllning Is a company ban on
the saleoflnsuranceservices ina
specific area because of race,
religion or national origin. The
practice is prohibited by state
law.
The suit alleges the agent led
White to believe his property

'

Wedn•dey. September 20. 1989

Ponwoy Midcleport. Ohio

...
I

DRESS SHOES

BY Dress Wellington, lineman;
IMulated, ~nginee,.., Jogger
&amp; Miners SIMI Toed.

SALE PRICED

•
•

•

..

.•
•
•

SIMONS PICK-A-PAIR

'

IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

0

Morna Dill« Coh•n'lllul . 01'110

NOW

MOTOR

.
0

519,900

COACH

Dr. Victor Hochman
SUIDE .

ALL PRICES AFTER DEBATE -Tax and Title Not Included

Available In
Black
Purple
Wine
Fuchia
Brown

Pediatrics

SMOOTH

Available In
Black
Brown
Rlld
Navy
Taupe

•
'

I

•

&amp;

"
'
'

Now Seeing New Patients

PRICES START AT

S2799

See Rick Tolliver, Jay Hill, Pat Hill or Dwight Honake-r

.

461 SO. THIRD

992-2196

MIDDLEPOI\T

•

J'

(304) 675-5220
For An Appointment

.'

· Monday tbrouch Friday
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Suite 118

CHAPMAN SHOES
QUAUTY SHOE STORE
h

'I

...'
.:
0

Call
\

.•
0

"

Infant, Children
Adolescent Medicine

PAT HILL FORD IN€.

'••

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•

PLEASANT VAUEY HOSPITAL
The fomlly ol prolestiono/s

Veley OrMI, Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550 •

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Wednesday, September 20, 1989

Page 8-The Daily Sentktel

.' ~ Hensch birth

Community calendar
WEDNFSDAV
HARRISONVILU: -The La·
dies or the Harrisonville Presbyterian Church are sponsoring
family night on Wednesc!ay at 7
p.m. at the church. The Rev.
Harso Moelyadi, Java, will present a sHde show and talk on
Indonesia and partlculary Java .
The public Is invited to attend.
THURSDAY
pOMEROY -The Meigs
County Branch of the American
Cancer Society will have Its
board meeting on Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Cancer Society's
office. All board members are
asked to attend.

ford at t304) . 882-3205 for
information.
POMEROY -A ~"ar wash will
be sponsored by the Midnight
Cl011gers on Saturday from nQOn
to 4 p.m. at Pleaser's Restaurant
in Pomeroy . The $3 donation for
all cars, and $5 for all trucks and
vans will go towards the group's
1990 summer season east coast
JORDAN M. HENSCH

BIG BEND

RUTLAND - American Le·
gion Post 602 will meet on
J'hursday. Hank Cleland Jr. will
be speaking. Refreshments will
be served . .

POMEROY -There will be an
OCCL meeting at 7 p.m. on
Thursday at the home of Nancy
Broderick. The program will be
on attention deficient disorders.
FRIDAY
POMEROY -The Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, NSDAR.
will meet Friday at 1:30 p.m. at
the Grace Episcopal Church. The
guest speaker wlll be Mrs .
Gordon W. Knight, Southeast
District Director. Hostesses will
be Miss Eleanor Smith, chairman; Mrs. Wendell Cleland.
Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mrs . Paul
Eich, Mrs. Clinton Fisher. and
Miss Lucille Smith.

Mary Browning lost the most
weight In . the Mo11day night
Slinderella class at' Five Poillts,
with Shirley Johnson ~s the
runner-up.
In the Tuesday night class at
Mason the best loser was 'Winefrede Clark and Carol McClure
was the runner·up.
Members are .· now being ac·
cepted for fall classes.

SLICED BACON

HARDY. FALL MUMS

LB.
FlESH LEAN

Ground Chuc:k

59

IOSTON STYlE

Pork Roast

$119
ll

PACKER lllll "..,.., '.

MOlTON

SWANSON'S

Fried Chicken

COUNTRY STYU

.Cubed Beef ·
Bucket Steak

m~ts

The Racine Block Party was leave of absence for personal
the topic of discussion at the reasons.
recent meeting of the Ladies
· Those present were May CleAuxiliary of the Racine Fire land, Em my Lyons. Bea Au ther·
Department.
son, Sandy Patterson, Kay Hoi·
The group will be serving hot' man, Gean Lyons, and junior
&lt;;logs, sloppy joes, chips, a n~ pop member, Sissy Lyons.
throughout the day, and there
New members joining Include
will be a cake walk, money hat , Rhonda Lyons, Ann Lane, Missy
and games . .
Jones, Angie Patterson, and
Alana Butler, president.
junior member, Valeri
opened the meeting by leading Patterson.
. · the group in prayer and the · The next meeting will be held
pledge of allegiance.
on Oct. 10 at 7:30 p.m. In the
Misty Grueser has taken a annex.

fOODIAND ·

Homogenized

CAMPBELL'S

Post
Oat Flakes
15 OZ. lOX

40&lt; OFF LABEL

Bold 3

WILKESVILLE -There wil

.Laundry Detergent

be a smorgasbOrd at the Wilkes

ville Pythia Hall in Wilkesville 01 .
Saturday beginning at 4 p.m. Tho
public is invited.

ROLLS

40&lt; OFF LABEL

Sunlight
Dish Liquid

OUTSTANDING - Melp County•s, ouslandlng Future Homemaker of America Is Southern Hl&amp;h School student Sarah Wiles.
Wiles's selection us the ouslandlng·"-A member was annouaced
during Youth Nlcht u the Melp Conaty Fair, however, because
11he was pardclpulng In Ohio ,stue Fair actlvltlea, she was
unavailable lor pictures on Youth Night, Wiles Is the dauchter of
Larry and Ann Wiles, of Racine. Her home ecoaomlcs teacher Is
Diane Rice. In addition to F11A, for which she has served as
president, vice-president, district vice president and Melp
J unlor Fair hoardmember, she Ia also a member.of the Hill Top 4-H
Club and Jobs Daupters.

SLINOERELLA DIET CLINIC

MIDDLEPORT -TheCountr}
Hymn Timers are planning a
reunion hymn sing on Saturday
from 7:30p.m. to midnight at the
Church of Christ in Christian
Union in Middleport. The service
will be under the direction of Dan
Hayman. Sam Anderson, pastor
of the church, invites the public.
' .
CARPENTER -The Carpen·
ter Baptist Church Busy Bees
will have a bake and rummage
sale on Saturday from 9 a.m.
until 4 p.m. at the Townhouse on
Route 143 across from Laura's
Grocery.

~

AT

Dr. Westmoreland's Of,fic:e
224 UST MAIN ST.
POMEIOY
APPTS. 992-5052

The first annual meeting of the
Christian Men's Fellowship,
sponsored by the Churches of
Christ and Christian Churches of
Southern Ohio, West Virginia,
· and Northeast Kentucky, wlll be
held Thursday evening at the
Ohio Valley Christian Assembly
just South of Darwin on County
Road 20 (Old Route 33) .
A soup and sandwich supper
will be served from 6·7: 15 p.m.
The "Kingdom Builders" will
sing from 7·7:30 p.m . and congregational singing and announcements will be held from 7: 30·8
p.m.
Kerry Align, from the Bluefield
. School of Evangelism. Bluefield.
Va., will speak at 8 p.m .

MONDAY, TUES., liiUIS., Fll. 10:30-2:30
WED. IVINIJIG 1·9
IEGIJINING MOJIDAY, SEn.IEI 25, 1919

.

'

There will be a child reglstralion day sponsored by the Harri·
sonvllle Masonic Lodge on Sept.
30 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m . A child's
description and fingerprints Mil
be taken for parents records. All
children are encouraged to take
advantage of the program.
Homecoming
The annual homecoming of the
Eagle Ridge Church will be held
on Sunday. Morning services
begin at 10 a.m. with a carry-In
dinner at noon. AfternQOn services wlll begin at 1 p.m. with
speCial singing by the Dailey
family. Everyone is welcome.

'·I

who ti.a ve ordered the books can
bring their receipts and pick the
bOoks up at the high school
between the hours of 8:15-11: 30
a .m.
Boosters to meet
The southern Boosters will
have a special meeting on Sept.
25 at 7 p.m. at the high school.
Everyone is urged to attend.

Car show to be held
Tbe Oldies But Goodies Car
Club of Meigs County will have
its first annual car show Oct. H
on the Pomeroy parking lot.
There will be 17 classes offered to
exhibitors with two trophies
given per class. Dash plaques
will be given to the first 50 cars
Llevlng ~union
The ElwOOd Lleving family that enter. Registration begins at
reunion wlll be Sunday at noon at 9 a .m. and the fee is $5. Call Gene
the community building in Le· Whaley at 992-7013 or Bill and
Sharon Neutzling at 985-4317.
tar,
t W.Va.
George Hall to perfonn
Lodge picnic
George Hall, well known orgaThe Shade River L0 dge 453 of nist , wlil perform at the Reeds·
Chester will have its annual ville United Methodist Chu rch on
pi&lt;mic on Sunday at Royal Oak Oct. Bat 7:30p.m. Hail will play a
Resort beginning at 6 p.m. All variety of gospel and inspita·
members and friends areencour- tiona! music, including audience
. aged to attend. Those attending requests . The public is invited to
are to bring a covered dish.
attend .
Portland PTO Carnival
Seniors to be honored
The annual "Fall Carniva l"
The Ru !land Church or God will
honor senior adults, ages 55 and will be held at Portland Elemenover, on Sunday. The theme will tary on Oct. 7. A supper will be
beginning at 4:30 p.m.
be "Celebration of Life." The served
and
will
include chili, vegetable
congregation will be honoring soup, sandwiches
, desserts , and
those who have contributed to the chicken and noodles. "Silver
community and church. The Wings, " a country and wesiern
guest speaker will be the Rev . band will provide entertai nment.
Avery McCiease, from Lebanon . . There will also be games, door
Reservatiop ShOuld be made by prizes, a country store, caJ&lt;eThursday. Call the church office walks , and a dance. Admission Is
to make a reservation at
free.
742-2060.
Quilt show
The Mason County Extension
Revival
The Middleport First Baptist Homemakers Cu It ural Arts Com·
Church will be conducting revi· mittee is Sl!onsoring its annual
val on Oct. 1-3. The theme is Harvest of Quilts II Show on Oct.
"Commitment, Getting Behind 7 a.nd Bat the West Virginia Farm
Jesus. " The revival wlll begfn Museum. The show is open to all
with Sunday morning worship exhibitors. Call (304) 675-3435 or
servjce at 10:15 a.m. Evening 675-2198 for information.
services will begin at 7 p.m. Rev.
James Seddon Invites the public. Meeting due changed
The regular Meigs Local
The Oc.t.1 evening service will be
"youth night." Bi )I Louler will be School Distict Board of Education meeting will be held on
the evangelist.
Thursday, Sept. 28 at 9 p.m.
Open house
The Sacred Heart Catholic
Church will have an open house
on Oct. 8 from 4-6 p.m. Vespers
service will follow at 6 p.m. The
public Is invited to attend. .

There wlll be a square dance at
the American Legion Annex on
Mill Street In Mlddlepcrt on Oct.
6 from 8 p.m. to midnight. Music
will be provided by Bernard
Connolly and the Travelers. The
cost is $5 per couple and $:!single.
The public is invited to attend.
Picnic
The Feeney Bennett Post 128
will have a its family picnic on
Sunday at the Legion Park on
Mill Street in Middleport. Dinner
will. begin at 1 p.m. Chicken and
noodles and coffee wlll be furnished. Those attending are to
bring a covered dish , In case of
rain, the event will be held in the
_annex .

Revival scheduled
The Middleport First Baptist
Church will be condudtng revival on Oct. 1·3.
The theme is "Commitment,
Getting Behind Jesus ...
The revival will begin with
Sunday morning worship service
at 10:15 a.m. Evening services
will be held at 7 p.m. _ ,
Rev. James Seddon invites the
public to llttend.
The Oct. I evening service will
be "youth night. "
Bill Louler will be the
evangelist.

Year books in
The 1989 Meigs Maura&lt;Jer year
bOoks are in· and may be picked
up at the high school between the :
hours of8:15·11:30 a.m.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524 .11'' ""
II ·'~ ""
.....,.._,.,._-!
•250 - ·-·J

~

J

,.,.[:,!

I

II!PTDIUII15 awu II

~::::~"'~1~11&gt;\~Y;thru TIIJRSDA~I

~-~~(N)

I"-U)

7:10' 9:10 MI L1

7:00 I 9:00 DAILY

:

.

SAT &amp;SUN MATINEES SAT I SUN MATINEES
'

Meigs yearbooks In
The 1989 Meigs High School

Pomeroy PPSEO
expanding services
.,

pressure. Clients will also recelve education about methods of
birth control and reproductive
health. Contraceptive supplies .
for clients and pregnapcy tests
are available during regular
office hours.
All services at Planned ParenthOOd are confidential. Fees are
based on a sliding scaie accord·
lng to income and ability to pay.
The Pomeroy office is o~n
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday,
Wednesday and Friday; 9a.m. to
6 p.m. on TUesday, with an
afternoon clinic every Tuesday;
and closed on Thursday. For an
appointment, call Clinic Coordi·
nator Donna Peterson at 992-5912
during office hours.

If you
have diabetes,
get 5100 for
·taking better care
of yourself.
&amp;f~ . ?l r-~ "- ~

I

SUPERIOR BULK

WIENERS •••••••••••••••••••• !~!~ .... S1.49
SWIFT ECKRICH

TURKEY BREAST••••••••• ~.~!~ .... S3.29
SMITHFIELD

"MDDED
$
·
•
SliCED
18.
·
COOKED HA •.•.••••.••.••••••.. 1.97
12.11 11.

HOMEMADE

MEAT SALAD •••••••••••••• l.L!e ••••••~.8 7(
KAAn t6 SLICE PROCESS

AMERICAN
CHEESE ......................... 97&lt;

BEAVER SAllEY DOZEN

GRADE A
LARGE EGGS.............." 99&lt;

KRAn t lB. CTN.

VELVEETA
CHEES~ ..................... S2 .89

IDAHO 10 lB.

BAKING POTATOES ..... S2 .89
HEAD
LEnUCE ...........!~.L-...... 69•
WINESAP
APPLES .........U.B•• !~~.. S1.39
GOLDEN DELICIOUS
APPLES ...........l.UJ•.• 2/69&lt;

MRS. SMITH'S

FRUIT PElS .................~~.~~·••• S2 .69
APPLE JUICE •••••••••••••• !!.~~·... S1.19

MINUTE MAIO

LIPTON TEA BAGS .....~!N•••• S1.89
JOAN .Of AIC

CHILl BEANS •••••••••••••• H.~~·•• 2I 99&lt;
FRENCH'S

CHILI-0 MIX •••••••••••••• !·!!1.0.~:•••• 59&lt;
AIMOUI
POTTED MEAT ••••••••• ~ •• !.~~·... 2I 6 S&lt;

CAMPBELL'S J03/• OZ

GWCOMETER111 ll Blood Glucose Meter
with Memory
Regular Price
Special Price
Mfr. Rebate

$182.76
$135.00
$100.00

FINAL COST

$35.00

Prescription Shop
992-6669

271 North Second
. ....

~C~h7.1l~dr~e=n=~==~~k=u~~~n=.==========y=ea=r7bo=o~k=s==a=re==in==a=n=d==st=u=de=n=t=s==S=q=u=a=re==da=n=c=e==============

Offt!r ROod SC!'ptem.,rr.I-Decr:mht"r 31. 19H9

MIDDLEPORT -There will
be a class D softball tournament
in Middleport on Saturday and
Sunday for $60. Call Rick Staf\'

Christian
fellowship
scheduled

Announcements

GLl:COMETER Is ;a rep,istt:n:d trJ.dt:mark of Miles Inc.:.

•W• R..erve the Right to

I

Tbe Harrisonville Masonic
Lodge will be providing, free of
charge to the public, a children's
registration service on Sept. 30
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The purpose of the event is to
record a discrlptton and fingerprint of a child for his or her
protection and the parent's records. All children are welcome
and encouraged to take advantage.of this offer.
The reglstr!ltion will take place
at the Masonic hall In
Harrisonville.

L

Tomato Soup

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Rejoic·
ing Life Christia n school wil l
have a chili supper on Saturda)
from 5-7 p.m.

Child registration
service scheduled

· Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio is expanding services
In Pomeroy by offering daytime
clinic hours on Friday, Oct. 20,
from 10 a.m. to noon Dr. Ann R.
'lt'--'- Fingar, formerly of Ohio Unlverslty's Hudson Health Center, has
l
recently joiJ!ed Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio. Dr.
Flngar will provide examlnalions by appointment on the third
Friday of each month.
Physician services Include
Pap smear, breastexam,dlagnosis of vaginal infection and
sexually transmitted diseases
and pregnancy confirmation
exams.
Other tests provided are bematocrit, urinalysis and high blOOd ·

Milk
GAL

1/'l

POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Senior Citizen Dance Club will
sponsor a benefit square dance
for the sesquecen tennial commit·
tee on Friday from 8-11 p.m.
Music will be provided by True
Co untry Ramblers. Admission is
$2 and those attending are to
bring snacks for the snack table.

LONG BOTTOM -The Lon1
Bottom Communit y Associatio
will stage a smorgasbOrd dinne
on Saturday at the Long Botton
Community Building. Servin1
will begin at 5 p.m. The dinne:
will include ham, turkey am
dressing. chicken and nOOdles
etc. Desserts and drinks an
included in the $3.50 charge. F01
children under 12 the costis$2.50

Springs Grange; and Division 2, Patty Smith, Hemlock Grange;
Class A, Muriel Bradford, Hem· tote. bag, Binda Diehl, Star
lock Grange.
Grange; crocheted cushion top,
Catherine Colwell, Star Grange;
Crocheted ltem.e
Tablecloth, Rose Barrows, Co- handkerchief, Sara Cullums,
lumbia. Grange; collar, Binda Hemlock Grange; wall hanging,
Diehl, Star Grange; afghan, Norma Lee, HarrlsonvHie
Elma Louks, Rock Springs Grange; and youth photography,
Grange; dress, Rose Barrows, .Eric Montgomery, Star Junior
Columbia Grange; and three , Grange.
piece baby set, Emma Adams,
It was noled that 14 members
Racine Grange.
from Meigs attended the Sixth
Miscellaneous
Degree at Jackson. Legislative ·
Embroidered pillow . case, · chairman. Eldon Barrows urged
Norma Lee, Harrisonville members to contact their legis Ia·
Grange; Patty Dyer, Star tors and Se.na tors.
Grange, was the whiner In adult
Arthur Crabtree, Meigs
state banner, wreath youth pro- County State Deputy, held the
' ject, decorated woodcraft, yound annual inspections.
adult door stop, bathrobe, all
The death of Dean Will was
photography for the adult cate- noted . His father, Norman Will,
gory, Including scenery, anlm· Is the assistant steward.
als, people, and flowers, and
The benediction was given by
sUdes; adult oils and acrylic Crabtree.
painting, Geraldine Gauber, Columbia Grange; ·stutred toys,

Racine auxiliary

3LBS.
OR MOlE

5 LJ. UG

Contest winners · were announced at tbe recent meeting of
the · Meigs County .Pomona
Grange when the group met at
the Rock Springs Grange Hall
with PauHne Atkins, master,
P.residing.
Westlna Crabtree thanked
Joyce Ann Ritchie and Debbie
A:rnold for serving as judges of
the contests. The following were
winners in each category.
Baking
. Honeynut bread, Pa.tty Mal)·
zey, flo lumbla Grange; brownies, Patty Dyer, Star Grange,
youth baking; blueberry cupcakes, Pearl Smith, Hemlock
Grange, young married men.
Sewing
One piece dress, Rose Barrow,
·
Columbia Grange.
Quilts
Division I, class A, Muriel
Bradford, Hemlock Grange;
Class C, Kathryn MIHer, Rock

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

contest winQers named

· Golda Reed, associate matron,
.Landmarks of the order were
announced that Installation will read by Donna Nelson.
be held on Dec. 14 when the ,
Other announcements JnHarrisonville Order of the East· clu~ed a .meetlng at the hall on
ern Star met recently with Betty Sept. 30 for the purpose of
Bishop, worthy matron, and
fingerprinting children. A HowDoug Bishop, worthy patron, In
ard Starr meetillg will be held at
charge.
·the hall on Thursday at 7; 30 p.m.
Sandy Quick, deputy grand
Bernice Hoffman thanked evematron, who was visiting, was ·ryone for the_cards and letters
presented and Invited to sit In the · received during the time of her
East. She gave a short talk and
recent lllness.
special tribute to Mrs. Bishop,
Mrs. Bishop gave a short
who liad helped her In the past . . humorous reading for the
The past matrons, past pa· closing.
.trons, all honored masons, those
Bob Reed gave the blessing
)laving had grand appointments, before the group entered the
'find 60-year member Ruby Diehl, dining area where refreshments
'were presented and welcomed .
were served by the refreshment
Those having birthdays this committee, Mrs. Stella Atkins,
-month were Brenda Kennedy ., Miss Diehl, and Mrs. Paul Kloes.
and Pearle Canaday.

Chiquita Bananas

French Fries

Grang~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Harrisonville OES
_ planning . i~stallation

3/SlOOO

•

POMEROY -The Democratic
Executive Committee will meet
on Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the
·Carpenter's Hallin Pomeroy. Ali
· interested democrats are Invited .
to at tend:

JuU and Walt Hensch. Canal
The Hemlock Grove Christian
Fulton, are announcing the birth
Church will have Its annual
of a son, Jordan Michael, on Aug.
homecoming on Sunday, Oct. I.
' I6 at Akron General Hospital.
Services will be held at 9:30a.m.
The infant weighed seven
with a basket dinner at I2 : 15 p.m.
W pounds and 14 ounces, and was 20
The afternQOn service wlll begin
li
inches long.
at 1: 30 p.m .
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead,
9 Reedsville.
·.,_
Paternal grandparents are . Hensch.
· Mrs . Alice Hensch,
The couple also has a daughter,
Village, and the late
Lisa Ann, age six.

ODLAND

Pomona

Slinderella meets

Yourlndependendy Own.ed
Low-Priced Supermariet

. ROCK SPRINGS -The Rock
Springs Better Health Club wlll
meet on Thursday at 1:15 p.m. at
ihe home of Francis Goeglein.
Louise Bearhs will have the
program. Helen Blackston will
. conduct the game.
POMEROY ~The XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will. meet at 7 p.m. on
Thursday at the Senior Citizens
Cen ter in Pomeroy.

Homecoming set

OLE CAROLINA

REEDSVILLE -Voters of the
old Reedsville precinct are urged
to attend a · meeting at the
Reedsville Fire House on Thursday at 7 p.m. Residents of the
precinct are urged to attend.
Anyone wanting to register may
do so at this. meeting.
DARWIN· -The first annual
meeting of the Christian Men's
Fellowship will be held Thursday
at the Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly just South or Darwtn
on County Road 20. A soup and
sandwich dinner wtll begin at 6
p.m. Entertainment will be provided by The Kingdom Builders
and Kerry Allen will be the
speaker.
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
group of A.A. and AL-Anon will
meet on Thursday at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church at 7 p.m.
Call 1-800--3 33-5 051 for
information.

Wednesday, September 20, 1989

romerov-Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, OH.

CREAM OF CELERY SOUP •••••• 53&lt;
WITH 40&lt; OFF LABEL 22 OZ. UQUID
JOY DETERGENT •••••••••••••·••• S1.29

GLAD

SANDWICH BAGS ......!~N........ 89&lt;
CAMPBELL'S

TOMATO JUICE ..........!!.~~·.. 2179&lt;
PIING LIS

POTATO CHIPS ••••••••••~.~~·•••• S1.4 9

J. .IO

BOUNTY TOWELS .............. S2.99
SLICED PEACHES ........l~.~~·.......97&lt;

DELMONTE

.
.

�Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. Septanber 20. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Beat of the bend

Kelly and Max Eichinger of
Long Bottom dldn 't realize they
had company Saturday ·night
when they returned home from
visiting Mark and Tracy Abbott
In Hartford, W.Va.
Their dog, Zachary, created
such a noise on Sunday that they
Investigated and discovered a
white kitten which belongs to the
Abbotts. The cat apparently
crawled up under the hood of the
Eichinger true': during their visit
In Hartford and migrated unhurt. thankfully - to Meigs
County.

~Past

Councilors meet

Mary K. Holter spoke briefly
: about attending the 40th annlver' sary of the Belle Prairie Council
; 269 in Belpre when members of
, the Past Councilor's Club of
- Chester Council 323, Daughters
: of America met recently at the
; lodge ha ll with Cora Beegle as
· hostess.
Attending the anniversary
· from the Chester council were
: E rma Cleland, Thelma White,
: E thel Orr, and JoAnn Baum.
· At tend lng Irom Perry council
: 283. New Lexington, were Mary
: C. Moose, Alberta Hartshorn,
· and a guest. Edith Wakely,
· Marietta. a former member of
the D of A. Mrs. Wakely spoke
briefl y saying she and Caddie

Wickham (deceased), instituted
Belle Prairie Council on Sept.l4,
1949. Mrs. Wakely asked to be
reinstated In the council soon.
Mary Showalter presided at
the meeting ;md read the 26th
Psalm. The Lord's Prayer and
pledge to American flag were
repeated· In unison. The minutes
of the August meeting were rea\!
by Laura Mal Nice.
At the close of the meeting,
games were conducted by Margaret Amberger and Goldie
Fred!'rick. Refreshments were
served by the hostess.
Attending along with those
already mentioned were Betty
Roush, Inzy Newell, Fern Morris, a nd Opal Hollon.

Harrison reunion held
The Harrison reunion was held
. recently at the Kyger Creek Club
: House in Cheshire.
A basket dinner was held at
· noon a nd the day was enjoyed
re m inesc- i ng.

Attendi ng were Vickie iHarrl·
son) Ellis. Paul and Mary
Ha rrison, Ga llipolis; George and
. Ca thy !Harrison) Hereford ,
Linny a nd Jennifer Tyree, B.J.
Ho!!ner, all of Southside, W.Va.;
Steve and Debo ra h Pecklam.
Dan ielle and Jason Pecklam,
Mike Harrison, Greta and Brano·
ram Trfplet t, Gary and Charlotte
1Harrison 1 Harper, Jeff, Vicky.
and Mat thew Pec klam, and Tim
: Wamsley. a ll of Middleport:
Scott, Melissa. a nd Brittany
Harrison. Ralph and Sadie Carl,
Rev. Clyde and Margaret ·Hend·
erson, Olen and Louise Harrison.

all of Pomeroy.
Floyd and Lola Harrison, John
and Amy Harrison, Rutland;
John Harrison and Jodi Tillis,
Pomeroy; Jack Harrison, Ru tland ; Ada (Harrison) Scott, and
grandson, Tyson Davis and Chris
Fisher, Debra Davis, all of
Columbus: Clyde Olen Harrison,
Stanley McGuire, Middleport:
Cheryl Fitch, Cheshire: Shawn
Taylor, Middleport; . Rodney
Carl, Belpre; Stephanie and
Andy Carl, Parkersburg, W.Va.;
Don, Tina, Bobbie Jo, and Clint
Lambert, Jeannie (Harrison 1
Wolfe, and son, Travis, Middle·
port; Brenda, Derrick, Brook,
Jim and Elaine &lt;Harrison )
Quillen. Jeff. Adam, and Amber
Sowden, and Adeline Sowden, all
of Rutland.

Bike-a-thon raises $268
A total of $268.50 was ra ised In
thi s year's Meigs County St. Jude
Ch ildren's Researc h Hospital
Wheels for Life Bike-A-Thon,
accordi ng to Ka y Holman, chairman of th e the project for the
Racine Firemen's Ladies
Auxiliary.
Mrs. Holma n reported that
61-year-old Hazel Sellers was the
only rider in the bike-a-thon and

Fund drive underway
The Racine Village Park
Board is co nducting a .drive to
help raise f4nds to purchase a
sound sys tem for the. park's
summer progra ms. A 13-inch
color television and a five-inch
black and white battery operated
portable television wlil be given
away at a drawing to be held at
Racine's Har ves t Festival on
Sept. 23. The televisions are on
display at the Home National
Bank.
(

NOW BOOKING FALL AUCIJONS
TERMS: Cuh or Check with J.D.
Nal Reoponolbfa For Accldento or LC!OI of Properly
Ucenaed &amp; Bonded In Ohio, WV, &amp; KY. 16&amp;.88

been elligned c•a number

Town 4 North, Range 12

87·DR-293 in the Court of

ollheOhioCompany'a
Purcheoo end being deocribod ao fottowo: Begin7
n 1ng all point North 8 dag.
1 3' Waot 1618 feat and
N
2
47' E
bo
orth dog.
aota ut
900 loot to a .point at the
Marietta Rood (old State
Route 161) and North 16
dog. 13' Weot about 202
fHt, •id point of beginning
being marked by 1 ooncrete
marker set. utd point of beginning oloo being South 16
deg. 13' Eaot 313.4 loot
from a Southeaoterly Ohio
Route 7 R/W m•kor It
437 + 23.38 CR/W marker
found); thence North 62
deg. 44' E01t 150 feet to 1

Compiled by:
Emfflogene Holstein Congo
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Bonnie Proffitt, S.26, to Gordon
C. Proffitt, Letart.
Michele Mowrey and . Steve
Mowrey, agree to Columbia Gas
of Ohio and Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp., Bedford.
Mabel Mae Smith, by POA, .60
acre to Roger Dale Shoemaker
and Phillip M. Shoemaker,
Salisbury.
Hazel Blackwood Oliver, parcel to Willia m Alan Blackwood
and Marta H. Blackwood, Scipio.
Philip Owen BlackwO\ld and
Teresa K. Blackwood, parcel to
William Alan Blackwood and
Marta H. Blackwood, Scipio.
Juanita M. Little, Lot 1 to J erry
D. Swartz and Trudy A. Swartz,
Salisbury.
Ralph G. Smith and Gwenda
M. Smith, Parcels to Paul
Phillips and Deana S. Phillips,
Scipio.
Rodney Brooks, right or way,
to GTE North Inc. , Columbia.
Joseph E . Higgins, right of
way, to GT~ North Inc . ,
Columbia.
Betty Wells, right of. way, to
GTE North Inc., Columbia.
Brewster W. Higgins, r ight of
way, to GTE North Inc. ,
Columbia.
W.R. Lawson and -Sherr Uyn A.
Fowler Lawson, right of way, to
GTE North Inc., Columbia.
Harold R. Jordan, right of way,
to GTE North Inc., Columbia.
William C. Miller by POA,

Rose Mary Miller, right of way,
to GTE North Inc., Columbia.
Eugene R. Facemyer and
Dennis L. Facemyer, right of
way, to GTE North Inc .,
Columbia.
Cecil Gillogly and Joan Gillogly, right of way, to GTE North
Inc., Columbia.
William B. Gregory, right of
way, to GTE North Inc . ,
Columbia .
Charles Casto and Rebecca
Casto, r ight of way, to GTE North
Inc., Columbia.
Edgar C. Medling, Juanita C.
Medling, Elmer J. Medling,
Bonnie Claire Medling, to parcels State of Ohio-Dept . of
Natural Resources, Olive.
Arnold N. Spencer and Frances H. Spencer, parcel to Arnold
N. Spencer and Frances H.
Spencer, Olive.
Arnold N. Spencer and Frances H. Spencer, parcel to Arnold
N. Spencer and Frances H.
Spencer, Olive.
Arnold N. Spencer and Fra nces H. Spencer, parcel to Arnold
N. Spencer and Frances H .
Spencer, Olive.
Arnold N. Spencer and Frances H. Spencer, parcel to Arnold
N. Spencer and Frances H.
Spencer, Olive.
Arnold N. Spencer and Frances H. Spencer, parcel to Arnold
N. Spencer and Frances H.
Spencer, Olive.
Arnold N. Spencer and Frances H. Spencer, pa rcel to Arnold
N. Spencer and Frances H .
Spencer, Olive.
Margaret Burri, 7.4139A to

Hill birth

Club when members met at the
home of Linda Hubbard.
Dues were collected and officers reports were given.
AMBER BROOKE HILL
It was decided that the group
will sell dally reminder pocket
calendars.
Receiving anniversary gifts
were Mary Myers and Lyn
The Rutland Church of God will
McKinney . Janice Fetty re- be honoring senior adults, ages 55
ceived a birthday gift.
and over, on Sunday.
A guessing game was played
The theme for this activity will
on prices from a.drug store with be "Celebration of Life." The
Ruth Young the winner. The door Rutland Church congregation
prize was won by Susan Cleland.
will be honoring those senior
Refreshments were served by
adults who have contributed to
the hostess. The next meeting · the communities and church. ·
will be held on Thursday at the
Activities will begin at 10 a.m.
home of Isabelle Couch.
. with special guest speaker, Rev.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Hill,
Long Bottom, are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Amber
Brooke, on Aug. IS at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
The infant weighed six pounds,
10 and one half ounces, and was
19 inches long.
Maternal gra ndparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Ransom,
Racine. Maternal great grandfather Is Carl Hubbard,
Syracuse.
Paternal gra ndmother is
Helen Hill, Long Bottom.
The couple has another daughter, Ashlee Michelle, two and one
half years old.

Seniors to be honored
Avery McClease from Lebanon
preaching at 11 a.m. A banquet
will be held In the fellowship hall
of th!' church after the morning
worship service.
The public Is Invited to at tend.
There Is no charge for any ,
activity but in order to reserve a
place the church office, 742-2060,
must be contacted before Thursday at 4 p.m.

Ronald W. Wilson and Teresa A.
Wilson, Letart.
Billy Gene Spires, Affld, Helen
Spires, dec'd, Salem.
Don Short, dec'd, affid, to Irene
T. Short, by gu ardian , Orange
Irene T. Short, by guardian, .
Lee R. Short, Roy C. Short, BlllJ .

Short, and Wandel J. Short,
guardian's deed, to Ralph G.
Coleman and Sharon L. Coleman, Orange.
Kenneth Rhodes, right of way
to Tupper Plains-Chester Water
District, Letart.

Common Pie• :of ~eitll
County, Pomeroy, Ohio
46769. Thora lo pending· in
seld action, a Motion lltod by
Mike Mullan, originally. Said

Public Notice
.

COLUMBIA GAS OF OHIO, INC.
PUCO Case No. B9-620-GA~AtR
NOTICE .
Notice is hereby given that Columbia Gao of Ohio. Inc. (Columbi•!· 200 Civic Cant!'
Drive, P. 0. Box 117. Cotumbuo, Ohio 43216, hu filed an Appllcetoon with the Pubtu:
Utitltioll Commiuion of Ohio tco.,miuion or PUCO)It requeotothat the .c ommiulon 01·
tabtla h a uniform rate to be chorgad and oollec:tod for all - oorvice with1n the Southeao- ·
titrn Region. exa.pt for HNk:e wtlere the 8xiating ret• have been ettabliahed by .certain
municipal ordinance contracts or by 8peclal rate contracte. The Southeut•n Reg1on will
be compooed of the oountleo of Athena, Gottia, Hocking, Jackson. lawrence•• Meigs,

Morgan, Perry. Roaa. Scioto. Vi~ton end Wuh•ngton, Ohio . The exiltlng.rata •n t~e
areu are unjuat, unfair end are inauflicient to yield rea~onable compenut1on for "rv1ce

rendered by C&lt;!lumbia. The ratao praoentty baing cottllelod from the llflpro•imately
88,000cuotomerathat wHt be affected by this Application are those pr81crlbed In ~0 !'li-

ferent PUCO Rate Schedul•. pursuant to various arden ilaued by the Comm111t011,

This is the child who

lhe dollar
, lhe economy.
vibrant.

various municipal ordinance eontractsthat heve e•pirod by November 17, 1989, butthet
are currently baing billed the Sout-tern Region rate pursuant to the Joint Stipulation
and Reeommendltion litod in Case No. 87·681-GA·CSS. Cotumbialurtherr.cjueotothe Commiaaion fix 1nd det•mine uniform, jolt and rea~oneble rat• to be charged and
eoltllelod by Columbia for the aarvice rendered to the genoral service cuotomero In the
Sout-tern Region and oubotltute ouch rateo lor those rat• currently being charll."d.
The municipalitioll offoctod by this Application are Adelphi, Albany, Amaovdte,
Athena, Beverly, Buchtel, Chauncey, ChMapeake, Chaohira. Cheoterhlll, Chillicothe,
Coel Grove, Coalton, Cootvlle, Corning, GaltipoHa. Glouster, Hamden, Hanging Rock.
Hemlock, Ironton, JackoonvHta. Junction City, Kingoton, laurelville. Logan, Lowell.
Lower Salam. McArthur, McConnelavlte. Middleport, Murray City, Nelsonville, New
Sooton, New Straitsville, Oak Hilt. Pomeroy, p·o nomouth. Proctorville, Rendvitte, Roo
Grande, Rooevlle. ShawMO. Somerset. South Point, South Weboter. Stockport, Thornvilla, Trimble and Wottaton.

The AppliCition will also affect the rataa of Columbia'• cuatom~ra in the uninC?Or·
poratad areas of the countl81 of Athena, G~llia. Hocking, J1ck1on, Larence, Metga,
Morgan. Perry. Roaa. Scioto. Vinton and Waahington, Ohio. Becauu t!'1e propoaed
Southeutern Region rete will be uniform. it Haantially repreaentaan ··average" rate for
the region. Thus, aome of the existing rates within the new region mev be increased. while
other exiltlng rata within the region may be decrNied.
Columbia preaently h• 4 exiating municipal ordinance contr11cta within the pro·
posed Southautern Region that are ew.cluded from thi1 filing. These contracts are with
the municipllitiea of Crooluville. Jackaon. Matte end New Lexington. Bec:a~te the ~om·
mi11ton do• not exerci11 jureadiction over auch r1t•. the' coats of prov1d1ng nrvtee to
thne.municipllite.. wit not be inctuded in the Application to ntablilh the uniform rat81
for the Southelltem Region. However. at the expiration of env such ordinance, it the
municipality prefara to be aubaequently _incl.u'ded i_n the Southe•ter~ Region fo_r ratamak·
ing purpo... it m-v do aoby not renew1ng tts ordtnanca contract with Columbi1. lf 1nfNI
contrect io noteatabtlohod, the municipality willtherNfter be included in the Southeu-

tern Region tor retem1klng purpoaee.

PRESENT RATE- The praoont ratea vary by rate schedule. depending on location within
the arN affected by the Application.
.
PROPOSED RATES . In thlo cue Columbia io proposing orate design under whoch Col-

•e.

umbia win bill tta cuatomer1 a ''Customer Charge" of
14 per meter per month durin:g
the months of November through March, and t9.48 per meter par month during the
months of April through October. regarcl•a of gu consumed. The roteo for all -consumed in each billing month are 65.229C per 100 cubic I.,. lor the first 600,000 cubic
feet ~etiverod and 62.296C per 100 cubic feet lor all daiivarlao •••••ding 600.000 cubic

Only a child.
But like aU American kids, Randal Six, inventor of a solar
heating device called Let the Sun Shine, is a ve~y special
child.
For our kids have a creative, inventive heritage second to
none. And inventiveness, creativity, productivity; these are
the things prosperity and growth are made of.
Now the inventive instincts of American school kids are
being challenged l&gt;y a very special education program and
contest.
Invent America!
It's the only program that recognizes small genius. With
more than half a million doUars in awards every year.
And the only program that knows small genius can grow
up to become big genius-with !Jie capacity to make a big
difference in the world
Kids and parents should ask their teachers about Invent
America! and how to participate.
And if teacher doesn't know?
Just write Invent America!, 510 King Street, Suite 420,
Alexandria, VA 22314, or call703/684-1836.
Invent America!
Desil!'\ed to make Amerita a wjnner again.

feet . These retaa will generate en increase of *4.130,4152 in operating revenuea. Ho·
wever. to the extent that operating conditions or el!lpenaes change during the pending of
the ca1e, Columbia may reviae ita propoeed rltM 1ccordingty.
COST OF PURCHASED GAS ESCALATION - Both the preoent and the proposed rates

are aubiect to decreue or increase In accor.nce with the "Gas Coat Recoveryu prov•·
olc&gt;na o1 Columbia' a Rut• end Regutotiono on lito with tho Commlaaton, aS REQUtREO
BY Commluion Ordero dated October 1 1. 1978 and October 18. 1979. in Cau No. 76·
5115-GA-ORD .
,
.
.
,.
OHIO EXCISE TAX- The propooed roteo are also oubject to an Oh1o hc11etax . clou~.
purouant to which alt bilto rendered o~l be adjuoted to include the effecto o~ Ohoo Excooe
Tax on grooo recelpto impoood by Ohoo Rev. Code Sectoon 5727. 38, e•ceptmg thooeac·

counts eKempted from sUch tax.

·

.

BILLING ADjUSTMENTS - AU billo rend..-od ohalt be adjusted to in~lude tho tnton".',
Emergency and Temporary PIP Plan Tariff Schedule Rider ott forth on th~ Cotumb•a •

Ruin and Reauletlons on file with the Commi11ion.

RECONNECTION CHARGE - tlooov~c&lt;• under thio rote schedule !• diooontinued at tho
requMt of any customer, Columbil a hall not be under obligation to reaumeaerviceto that

cullom• on the same premia• until that customer haa made payment of en amount
equal to the ''Cuatomer Charge'' for each month of the intervening period. but not to ex·
ceod oeven (71 months.
ANY PERSON. FIRM. CORPORATION. OR ASSOCIATION MAY FtLE PURSUANT TO
SECTION 4909.19 OF THE REVISED CODE, AN OBJECTION TO SUCH PROPOSED
INCREASED RATES BY ALLEGING THAT SUCH PROPOSALS ARE UNJUST ANO
Ot&amp;CRtMtNATORY OR UNREASONABLE.
.
Recommendations which differ from the Appli ..tion may be mode by the Staflolthl
commi11ion. by Columbia. or by Intervening pertiolland may be odoptod by the Commoo·
. alon. tto propooat tontablioh a uniform r 0tell adoDtaclln PUCI) c... Noa. 89·616-GA·
AtR 89-817·GA-AtR aii-811-GA· AIR, 89-819-GA-AIR, a9-820-GA-AIR, 88-943-GACMR end B9·944-GA·CMR. tho rlleo to cuotomsn within any one or saver•• uo ,_uoumbia'oooovice reglona may oxcood the propooad rataoln Columblo'uppll..tlonainthe
caoeo Further Information regarding the Appllcotton may be Dbllinod from Columbia
Gao oi Ohio, Inc., 200 Civic Center Drtvo, P .~O. Box 117: Columbuo, Ohio 43211-0117,
(81 41480·4103, or from the Public Utlitial Commilaton of Ohio, 1a0 East Broad Street,
Cotumbuo, Ohio 432115.
PERCENTAGE CHANGES FROM PRESENT RATE •
uoothia Appll..tlo'J.propoto ootabllah a uniform rata for 11• oorvlco which Ia currently provided under llu different
ra\0 ochaclulao, the changootrom preo.,t ratoo wAt v~ry depending on the rata achoduto
under which II cuotomor II cun.,tly recelv lng gao IOfYica. The rata chengaa propooed by
this filtng rang~ from 2 .9% to 12.0% for consumption of 17 Mcf per month during the
winter mont he and 14:9% to 211.3% lor consumption of I Mof per month duriR1fthooum·
mer montlll. Theoo percentage chon goo are dotliled
·ollllllll (~·IIAICII)·· - - - (AftD,-OCIOID)··
IILL IILL ll!r
I
IW. II1J,I. lltf
I
AT 0U1 AT !1111 1ltC INC . AT IIUI AT ItiC lJtC,

a...

bal-.

-

tKDDUPORf

I&amp;IGt cotllrY • tiUNCIIII'

111 8, 13, 20,

I

I'I

t5 . 61 100.04
, , 1a 100.04
97 . 11 100.04

4.4S
2. 16

z.u

4.6 30.76 ,7.10
z,t :sa.a 11.10
a.t :sa.a 37.10

FREE lOCAl DEUYEIY

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

992-7479
.

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials
992-9922 or 992-1228

1-13-'18-tln

9 / 18 / 1 mo. p~ .

Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; ~no•i•.l
e, 'Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

GIEG I.IOUSH
,. GENERAL

a:z

'

•CUITOM KITCHENS. lATHS
•EXTENSIVE REMOD£UNG
•VINYL SIDING a ROOANG
eME1'A1. BUILOtNGS
•NEW HOMES

z

SINCE:. 1969

WANTED

B&amp;W

DEAD OR AUVE

GARAGE

.

of Ohio, and be·

192-5335.,:...985-3561

Fraction 19, Section

We Service Att Mak~

reotlir and rtIOft
anti
htater 1orts. We 1an
alto acid bail and rod
out. radlaton. We alsa
repair Gas Tanks.

.PA~:J~}, ~:RD
· Middleport,

-:-.-.,-~

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

REPAIR
WELDING

247-3522
St. lt. 338
Letart

concrete

mark•; thence

South 16 deg. 1 3" Eaat
313.4 feet to tho point of beginning. containing t .0

SYRACUSE. OHIO
Most Foreign and
Oomastic Vehicle~
A/ C ServiCe
All Mlijor • Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Machanic

(All 992-6756

ecrea, more or lees.
The bearings in the above
dncription era based on •

"DOC" VAUGHN
Cen~led LICOfll_. Shop
·
5-25·'88-tln

Ohio Department of High·

ways .JUNBY marked S.H.
181 Sac. M . Cpt.) N . + 0 lpt,).

liVING ROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
DINETTE SETS
"NEW" RECliNERS

ROOFING
NEW- REPIII
Guners
Downspouts

Gutter

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

• 9-11-'11-1 ~•. pet

--~--~~-~~

MEET THE
STAFF
PERM SALE

BINGO · . · 1
POMEIOY ·EAGLES · f

JONES TIRE
CENTER

CWI

Now thru Sept. 9, 1919

10% OFF All PERMS

SUN. E.l. 1:45 P.M. . .
1
DOOI PillE
2 H.D. FREE w~h couj)On and:l
pun:has« of min. H.C. Pad·' I
.ace. Lim~ I coupon JlllaiS· , 1

•Grease Jobs

WALK-IN WELCOME

•General Chassis
Ml!:intenance
•Computerized Balancer

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP

992·3897

MiWittwt

9U·2725

DOZER
SITEWORK - ROADS
CLEARING

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK

tomer per binJ) stSSion.
I
Wo P"'' ISO.OO P• Ganoo
OYir 110 PHplt '65.00 I·
Por Game
I
u. ~oos-32
. " _?· l~.. 1

Rt. 124
Middleport, Oh.
St.

INext to Hill Top Grucervl

.

6·, 6-tfn

-~-------:J.,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

•SHRUB 8o TREE
TRiM and RE·
MOVAL

CUSTOM BUll T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

HT HAULING

"At ReasDnable Prices"

•FIREWOOD .

PH. 949-2801

BILL SLACK
992·226t

Sand-StonB-Dirt
!6141 667-3271
Grant A. Newland

or les~ 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAlLS

EVENINGS

7-18-'89-tfn

Roger Hysell
. Garage

You mull either sign 1

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

dead conveying your interaot in the oubjec:t rNI eatato

prior to said hearing or the
Court will make uid conveyance at the hearing. The
notice shall be pubtio had

once each week tor six con·
secutive weeka. The l•t pu·
btl ..tlon wMI be modo on the
18th day of October.

In cue of your failure to
anawer or otherwiae reepond

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

1,000 GALLONS

REPAIR
Alto T,•••MittiOfl
•
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

· 4-25-tfn

as ·roqulrod by the Ohio
Rutea of Civil Procedure.

TRI-CO. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL

judgment or defauh: wUI be
.rendered egainll you for the
retial demanded in the Mo-

SINCE 1976

tion.
Oated : September 7, 1989
I.Jirry Spencer.
Clerk of Courto of

ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS

Meigs County Common

SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
Member Notionol Pest
Control Assn.

Pteao Court
(9) 13, 20, 27;
(10) 4, 11, 18, 8tc

3 Announcements

Tol frH
1-800-535-2199

NEW HOURS

WATER
SERVICE

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

RACINE, OliO

WILL BE OPEN
ONLY 3 DAYS A
WEEK
Mon.-Wed.-Sat.
8 A.M.-4:30P.M.

CHESTER, OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422

Buaineu Semce&amp;'

GillY'S
BODY SHOP

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL
ENGINE iEPAIR

550 Pap St.
Mitltlltllerl, Oh.

Ol&gt;t!N
7:30 A.M.-11:00 P.M.
8-23·'11 1 mo.

PAm &amp; SIIVICE
•Lawn Mowers
•Riders
•Chein Saws
•Weedeaters
3 ml• off of Rt. 7 .
at Meigs Memory
Oardena

6.34 20.6
4 . 11 14-'
4 , 11 14.t

8·17· 1 mo.

"'I

HUDNALL
Ntw locatioft:
161 North Se&lt;oncl

Miollfloport, Ohio 45760 ·

Take tlie pain out of
painting. Let mt do
· it for you.
YEIY REASONABLE
HAVE IEFEIENCES

We Carry Fithing su,oplioa
Pay Your Phone
!"'d ~a,bfe 'Bills Hera

8/4/89-tfn

•VINYL
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN tN
INSULATION

SALE5 &amp; SERVICE

·

IJ

SWEEPER REPAIR
All MAKES AND
MODELS

BISSELL
SIDING CO:

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

........ lult.

"Fr" Estimates"

PH. 949·2801
orles. 949-28'60

222 East-"ain
POMEROY, OH.

NO SUNDAY

992-6872

SUN'S UP
TANNING

TRI COUNTY
RECYCLING

21ft Miles Out New
lima ld.
in lulland, Oh.

POMEROY, OHIO
We Buy All Non Ferrous Metals, Plastics,
Stainless Steel

SUSAN COLEMAN
742-2778

for Fell Sptelllt
·1st visit FREE

(PAYING TODAY

more.

AUG. 30, 19191
CLEAN, DIY

ALUMINUM CANS
41 c per lb.

ALLEN'S
HAUUNG

#I COPPER-~...90' •·
#2 ~OPPER ......... 75 1 li..
Rm IRASS ......... 50'· •.
YRLOW BRASS ... 40' • .
RADIATORS ......... 35' lb.

'1600 GAUON

WATER SEIVICE
UMESTONE

HOURS
7 Days A Week
9 a .m. •7p .m.

SPREAD
Dlft HAULED
992

At Jd. S.R. 7 &amp; 143
On Tht h-Pan
1-36-'11·1 mo.

'I

• 4-li.

INTERIOR·EXTERIOR

614-985-4110

Si ll/It lin

..- ~~

PLUMBING &amp; HEATINGf

FREE ESTIMATES

6-5-'89-lfn

PAUL'S
BARBER SHOP

- .

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Call Anytime
992-2371

li_

1;
I'
1HUIS. 1.1. 6:45 P.M. I
224 E. MAIN ST .
992-9978

•New &amp; Used Tires
•Custom Pipe Bending
•011 Changes

4/ 6/ 89/ tln

R.W Plena, dated 3/13/46.
REFERENCE DEED: Vol.
Page 893, Moigo
293,
County DHd Recorda.

Cleaning.

Painting

742-2455
Salem

concrete marker sat; thence

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

Howard L Writ...t

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

8-1·1 mo.

North 16 deg. 13' Weat
313.4 feet to o J;oncreto
marker 1et on the Southa•·
terly R/W line of Ohio State
Route 7: thence South 52
deg. 44' Wnt 1110 feat
along the Southeaoterly _
R/ W line of Ohio State
Route 7 to a highway R/W

USED FURNITURE

located Behind·
Tractor Dealership

CUTTING &amp;

169 N. 2nd

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

&lt;l Licensed Clinical Audiologist.
~ '(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulbeny Hgts, Pomefoy,

RESIDENTIAL
COIIIIERCtAl

s.eelllhh"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

3tc
' I

LOWEST PRICES
HIGHEST QUAUTY

tt. 33 North of

DUllY 51. SYUCISI

•Washers •D rver•
•Range .tF reezers
•Refrig·e retors
"Must le Repairable"

...IAlL UIUUII:.l ...IIIL ...IIIL OII:.J.CIIC..l
- --.....4'11..11''---- .:wL
f
t
'
I
f
f
f
.S

lrllllllllflllllltlll

STREET
PIZZA

· 8-1· 1 mo.

Town·

burn Wolford, Plaintiff vo.
Charlotte Anne Wolford,
Dalendent. This action hao

.

"Wtd.lng gown

'

IIASO!f, WV
773-117811
OWNERS~ J - 61 Maey llolria-

I

992-2284

ford. whose place of rest-. I~~~:;:~hi:l
dance ie unknown. you are I C

LUNCH

Public Notice

Fabric Shop
POMEROY, OHIO

I:~!~i~~:-~~1~~~.:

~~-MAIN

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mo.bile ·1-iome
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

OFFERED AT

Public Notice

hereby
named Defendant
notifed thatinyou
a leg1l
are
1ction entitled James VVII·

I

Locally Owned &amp; Operated by Bill. StOlle &amp; Kevin Pultlno
g.

Pomeroy, Ohio

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE

Pomtroy,
Ohio

614-992-2478
P. 0. Box 207
Pomeroy, Ohio

MOBILE
HO_ME_PARK

.

Motion is set lor h-ing on
the 3rd day of November,
t989 at 10:30 a.m. in the
Melgo County Common
Ploao Court. Said Motion Ia
fl&gt;r an order conveying the
vs
Oelandant' 1 lntareot In the
CHARLOTTE ANNE
following deocrlbad real eoWOLFORD
Defendant tate to the Plaintiff purouant
CASE NO. 87-DR-293
to the partial' divorce
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Charlotte Anne Wol-

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

Meigs County property transfers _ _ __

Gauge

tN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
·
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
JAMES WILBURN '
WOLFORD
Plaintiff

.... c:...~....w b

.

Starts at 1:00 P.M.
F!J(tory Choked 12

FOODS

Public Notice

HOY!!EHOL p &amp; MISCEI LANEOUS· Maptecouchandchair,
maplecolfee table, sofa&amp; chair, colfee table and end tables,
rocker, 4 pc. king size bedroom suilll~ water skis, new
Coleman lantern, tinens, sewing machine, plus more.

..

VAL~~

514 East Main ,
992-6910

&amp; 4dlairs, poster bed, 3 nice antique boat pictures, Cherty
Hepptewhite style t drawer night stand , WICker planter,
Bentwood hi chaii, split bottom rocker, child's cupboard, liaR
table, bench, Victorola, M2 jar with fancy blue, butter mold,
stolle jars &amp; jugs, matching V'octlrames, work table, Compod&amp;, rag r~~gs, blue cro'ck, 6 beautiful apalescent wine
goblets, 6 green stern goblets; Pink Depression, Gootus
glass, 2 handle spooner, washboards, nice old picture,
picture album with pictures.

that the money came in from her
sponsors along with donations
from • other businesses and
individual s.
Assisting with the fund raiser
were Joyce Grady, Joan Grady
Mis tee Grueser, Shelly Gillen:
water, Way ne Lyons, Carter
Wolfe, Charles Wolfe, and Jake
Holman, Jr.

f'

·oHIO

ANTIQUES· k:e cream table &amp; 4 heart back chairs, Viet.
watlut hall tree with marl&gt;le top, walnut marble lop table,
Princeas dresser, Queen Anne bulle~ 2 matching Jenny
Lind twin beds, beautiful walnut dresser marble insert, stone
jar with bee hlvea, Viet. walnut table, Viet. chair, round table

..

$1 00 LB.

****

Located right along At. 1 South of Gallipolis,
Ohio at 71 Garfield Avenue. Watch For Signs

-

Beginning Sept. 17

Wa Accept Food St•nipsl
SUMMER HOURS
Mon. · Tues. 8-5; Thur.·Fri. 8·5
W!ld. &amp; Sat. 9· 5

Sept. 23, 1989
10:00-a.m.

Other scouts participating In the project were Ryan t'ratl, dosepn
McCall, Patrick Er-~n, Michael Williamson, Joshua Hoole.. ,
Michael Stacy, Wesley Thoene, and Ryan Well. They were assisted
by Kathy Stacy, Nancy Thoene, .Dale Thoene, and Anna Baxter,
leaders, and .Wanda Shank and Greg and Debbie McCall, parents.

. SALE

EVERY SUNDAY

FAMILY HOMES INC.

PH. 992-3922

9-20-tln

Spec Ia I Thlt****
Week! sept. 21·22-u
BRONWIE MIX &lt;Just add water!

SINCE 1970
Cape Cod &amp; 2 Story
MODEL OPEN DAILY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
1:00 P.M.-6:00 P.M. or Call For Appointment

For Moat 2 and 4· cycle
engines
Stock Parts for
Homelite, Weedaater,
Tecumseh, Bri991 &amp;.
Stratton.

742-2421
RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

:.

ln·lllddloport, Oh.
PARTS AND SERVIC E

•Fill Dirt

Hallow•n Sugar - Lay-Ons ·
Hallow•n Candies
Free Candy Classes-Sign Up Now!
Mondays &amp; Saturdays 11-3

ED

lecahll at Valay Lumbar

•Gravel
•Limestone

Hallow•n ..~..~.....;~....·''• •· boxoo 35&lt; ...
Molds ............................... s 1.60 ~a.
Sucker Sacks
Sucker Sticks ····~·····--········· 40&lt; p~r 1 .

lag. SUO lb.

11

a
·
HOME?
MODULAR HOMES

DAVE'S
SMALL INGINE
REPAIR

•

STEWART
TRUCKING

Milk Chocolate - White Chocolate
Hallow•n Orange

Saturday,

PACKING TO MOVE- Pomeroy Cub Scout Pack 249.and their
leaders pltcbel!ln Monday night at the Meigs Library to help pack ·
book~ for the move from the seco·nd St. location into the new Meigs
Library building. The library Is closed all this week a8 the packing
continues and will reopen In the new location on Monday. Here
Adam Shank, left, and Ricky Nalsteller, place magazines in a box.

L.

Merckens Choc......- ••••;•• ,.,$2.35 •·

PUBLIC
AUCTION

Chatter Club plans bake sale
A bake sa le was planned at the
recent . meeting of the Chat ter

ALLOWEEN
CANDY MAKING SUPPLIES

$29.500 OR WILL CONSIDER
LEASING BUSINESS .'
-2954

Sentinel

The

Business Services.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Includes Following Equipment:
2-Coats Tire Changers ·
1-Snap-on Alignment Rack
1-5 hp Air Compressor
1-Computer Wheel Balancer
1-Small Hydraulic Hoist
2-Snap-on Floor Jacks
Various Small toys

action at Pomeroy Elementary
this year. The· school's PTo
presented the school with some
$1500 In gym supplies at the end
of the past school year. Games,. ·
bas ketballs, nerf footballs, jump
ropes and volleyballs are just a
few of the Items purchased by the
organization for children at the
school.

And, I did warn you recently
• that the swing is towards the
Tina Neigler and Tammy Ball,
; Ch ristmas holiday season.
both registered nurses at VeteSupporting that warning Is the rans Memorial Hospital, are
announcement that a holiday extending big thanks for all of
bazaar will be held on Friday,
the help they received In staging
Nov. 3, at the Meigs Senior a successful medical book fair at
Citizens Center in Pomeroy the hospital last Friday. The two
_ the fo urth annual event, by the nurses co-chaired the event.
• way . Approximately 20 different
The fair was for employees
• craft people from the area have
only during the afternoon bu twas
been invi ted to participate and
opened to the public in the
there is a lways room for more.
. afternoon. Not only were their
: Fo r table reservations call the good medical books on hand but
· center, 992-2161.
there were a number of displays
of health-care equipment.
Julia Vaughan is working as
Winning door prizes were Kim
the new second grade teacher at
Roush, an electronic blood presthe Pomeroy Elementary School
sure cup; Linda Diddle, a stetho· .
this fall replacing Darlene Arnott
scope: Margaret Corsi, a Vete·
who bas moved from the area.
rans Memorial Hospital t-shlrt,
Julia formerly taught at the
and Ruth McGrath, a drug
Salem Center School for several
handbook .
years.
By the way, Darla Kennedy is
I dare you to name just one
filling in a fourth grade teaching
person who refleets a joy equlval·
spot at Pomeroy Elementary on
ent or near to that shown by your
behalf of Mrs. Mar lene Fisher dog when you return home.
who is ill.
Small wonder we call them
"man's best friend" .' Do keep
There should be plenty of smiling.

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Rutland Tire Sales &amp; Service
5 Yr. Old Building 36'x40'
· Situated on 3/4 Acre Lot

A little extra cash...
By BOB HOEFLICH
If you want to pick up a little
extra cash between now and then
you might be
interes ted In a
yard sale-flea
market event to
be held on Oct. 7
at Locomotion.
Locomotion Is
the teen dance
location on Mechanic · St., In
• Pomeroy and was· formerly the
Elberfeld . De partment Store
Warehouse. The sale and flea
market will start at 8 a.m. and ·
end at 5 p.m. on Saturday, Oct . 7,
and should provide you with a
warm, dry location in case you
didn't get around to staging that
yard sale during the days of
summer. The price Is $6 per
space a nd you must provide your
own ta ble or racks.
If you'd like to participate call
742-2187 after 5.

Wednesday. September 20. 1989

.r

IUSINESS I'IIONE
C6 141 992·6550

.IES.ENCI PHONE
C614l

Announcements
3 Announcements
Alone? Put your romantic future
In our handtl Someon• for
avaryonal For details &amp; con•
fld•nllal repty Hnd nama, ad-dr••• a age to Personal
Rt1ourc~ 1 P.O.
Box 5841
Athena, Ot145701
Important Notlcol Tho doodllno

for chang11 to be m1d1 In lhe

Ohio Vallor. Phone Book ..
Friday, Sep . 21, 1i81; Anyone

nHdlng addltlona, dalttlonl,
changea or wishing to advartiM ·
ahourd call waekcfaya betwMR
9·5: 1·BOO..S56-8SI30 or mall In--

formation to Ctlamplon Directories, P. 0. Box 22 Norwalk, OH
44857.
Reduce your wel~·take "Ntw
Shope Diet Pion

ond

~-Vop

wa11r pills. Avllllble FrUlh
Pharmacy.

4

Giveaway

3 long-hotrod kHtona. Whho
calico, tan and white. 114·H2!
5685 or514-742·3154.

s lduena 4 blk and t grar, I wha
old, 304-8'75--3734.

5 mo. old polt·lob. Nlrto- pup.

Hoo

hod

vaclnotlono.

614~45-SOM.

OHLP,

lt4~41-1213

'

RAI
or

Abandoned 3 moe. •go! 4 mo.
ortnge male cat. A llforrle look
otlko. fl4--44&amp;-4713 evenlngo:
Khtoni to glvo away In Indo
bury. Cotl114-li2-807t.
Mota &amp; lomote hom.,.... to

otv•woy. et4-241-8171.

8ho= ..

Hood good oorm.inhal

1w pu,. brwd
lito.aa
1tl,
....,_

.. Pt.-- Antalil . . .

Ptoaao tletp.

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel
4

LAFF-A-DAY

Giveaway

-·-· -r

NMd good homea, Clerman

Shepherd dooe, owner Mr. Hill

doo .. ood, Polnt Ploaunt Sholtor. Plo- help. 304-e75~58.

~

own contaln•r•. John lambert

111104.

.

Very nlco 2 .br, al VInton,_

Rooting Shlngloo. l14-3111-!11111.
Sl. Bamerd Meda a

31)4-675-1340,

6

llalo. S210/mo. Dl• Sac. Dop.
•14-.e1n 01 *14 uss•s.

oooct home

In the country, 2 lf.l yra Did

'

44

Found :tmall m111 Poodle bet•
ween Ch11t1r and long Bottom,

orQ!Jnd Sopt. 11. Call IU-9854244.
Los! . Black malo kliiOI)• mleslng
from Rt ..143 aroa noar •omoroy.
R1ward. 614-992-6763.

give him SOme Of
this ...my mother says it's
_good."

hsarlnl Reward offered, 614-

Fomlly:

Fri, ' Sot.

8

not lfrsld to lnBWir
the l)honu; antwer thlll sd and
I wil.l pay you $150took. No 11ptrtlnct I'IICHiary. Excellent
working conditions. can ML
Lawaon st.814·281-1422.
LP .. full lime ~lliorl Pluunt
Val lay Hoapltal Nursing Cere
Center.
contact
peraonntl
oNice, Pleasant Valley Hospital,

2 day auction Friday and Satur·

day, Sopt. 22 I 23, 8:00 p.m.

Lots of new merchandise, and
furnlturt, living room suite,
swivel rochr, recliners, bunk
beds end che~t of drawers. 1

'

114-446-1742.

I

grocery ltorile a ehopping cen.-

ovorythlng In OalllpoHo. Doll·

lor,

nlttly • must to HI, 114·25f..
68 55
,:::::·:_--;-.,..,--...,.------

tunlty,
Nationalh Comtany, Good
~ AI
Team
mosp ere, ompe1111
- VI
Salary, Cell Dorthy Harper Mid·
diet on E1tate1, 614·446-7148.
Locel retelter ..,king Loll
Prevention Menager, f~o~ll~tlmel
banafltl, send rtsume In care o

retrl~or, $250/mo., utilltlsa,

"nr11""wtll hoott'

dep, 1: ret, no pete. 5 Quart St.
114""41-4121.

• P

DoyJe

Apartmont klr rwol upt""" area.
Ulllltln paid except .electric.
304~75-5329.
• ·
~ponmont klr ronl, 304-175-

a••
Mora~o

new bottled

IUmaco, 2 room building with ! acrn of lind n
E ka I • •••
3
ure

2218.

• 1&lt;r£;;,v-888 •

Br owner, ·s bedroom, 2 full
batht, bfg living l flmllr roOm,
huge fireplace. 1 112 acrl.

Box 655, Golllpolls, OH 45631.
Priced to Ill. ;104-175-3123.
year guarantee. Brass, tools, Need moluro Individual lor Llko now 3BR hDmo. Rt. 110
quality plio-up will bo offered lor chlldcare tor 2-3 ntal• a wo·ok neu NGHS. Wilt be put In
Raaltor hlnct. soon. 114--388daa1ars. We slill have hot doge
l:8:::71.:.l.:.·-:-:-~----..,------­
31$1 .00, coH.. .25¢, Iotti of door ln my homo. 614-44 8887.

prizes. For more information

call Ed or Brenda 304-273·5183.

9

Wanted to Buy

Now hiring, pan-time RN't. Any
3 st'llhs. Complllllve waga1.
Contact D.O.N. Pinecrest Care
Center, 555 Jacklon Pike. Gal·

llpolla. lt4-448-7tl 2. E.O.E.

Used turnitur• by \he piece or Room and board tor atdertv in
entire household also selling. my home. Good care. 614·992·

614-742·2455.

6901 .

---,------

Wanted to buy, used Schwinn We care tor elderly and han·
Airdyne
Exercise
Bicycle. dicappld In our home. 26 ytiafl
expenenc1. LPN on call Low
Homer BaX1er, 614-992-3337.
Income h'Jml. Cell614·992·6873
ahar 7:00 p.m. for mort lnfor·

Fumlohed apt, edultl, 3CI4-675o
2257.
opt. t br, $225,
camor lot In Kanougo. 114-448- Fuml1hed
utllltH paid, 120 Fourth Qaf,
1:22:=.:51::·-::--:--7.':"-:--:--:--- llpollo,l14-441-4411 oftor 7p.m. '
Price Rlduced!t 3 bedroom
Fumlehed apt. lbr, $210, ut1111H
brick ranch, garege, br11ze way
full bailment, 1 tr cond ana1 paid. 701 F~urth Oalllpolll, 114heathflreplace, corner lot In nice 441-4411 after 7p.m.
~ borh!&gt;Od 2905 Ma 1 •
ne
'
P • "'VI., Gracloul )lvlng. 1 ·ond 2 . bod·

Employment Services
11

Schools &amp;
1nst ruction

1..:....;.:.;,;..;;;__ _ _ _ __

Admission co-ordlnator&gt;Soclal ,_1,..B.,...,.,w.,...a.,nt,..e,..d.,.....to_o.,.o_......,.,.

Worker lor long lerm cart I :8
h
faell ity, experience preferred,
abys 1II 1ng lob In my ~me. 49
axcsllant salary and ban•fits, Hay Spruce St. 614-446-0386.
Care Haven of Point Pleasant, Mits Paula'• Day Cart Center.
At. 1 Box 326, Point Pleasant, sate, affordable, childcare. M·F
WV. 304-675·3005.
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ag11 21A·10.
Baby sitter needed in my hom• Before, 1fter achoof. Drop--Ina
Mon , Wed, Frl, 11 :00·5:00; Tun, welcqme. 614-446-8224.
Thurs. 11 :00-6:00; evenings on ::;-;-:;.--~:..:.:.:..o-=:_--...,
week-ends. 614-742-2385.
Painting, Interior I exttrlor, 15

yrs. experience. Gutter clelnlng

Babysitter needed, lor 17 mo. &amp; receillng &amp; root eoallng. FrH
old at my heme. Soma days, 11tlmate. 614·379-2320.
some
nights,
wages

REMOOELING INTERIOR, EX·
TERIOR PAINTING, ROOFING,

Ba In demand . Food Service ' gp~J'lR~6~L l PLUM BIN~~~~
workers make up ona of the lar- HAS REFERENCES. . PLEASE
gest and fastest ~;~rowing cc· CALL AFTER 5P.M. 614·256cupational groups 1n the labor 1611 .
force. Enroll now for Fall I :-::-:-:-::::-:-c:-:-:--:-.,.--;quarter In tha Adult Food Would llkt to do babyelttlng In
Mil naga ment
and
Catering my home. Have experience.
Program at The Adult Education Near N.G.H.S. 614·388.0096.
·
Center-Tri·Counly Vocational
School. We have a variety of

alig i ~e

applicants.

Classes

begi n October 2nd . Call 614753·3511 Ext . 14 to reg ister.

7p.m.

614~245-5831

after

1----------

room
Manor

apartmen~s

snd

Village
RIVerside

at

Aportm1n11 In Mlddloport. From
$184. FrOft! Soptembor 15th ID

Lllllo glrlo wlntor clothoo, olz1 4, · h1y .cwulpmtnt. New and ulld.
304-675-1484.
Tlddll"', drum mowtl"', con-0000 USED APPLIANCES Molll worlt mochlnory: South ditione~ blltrl, nkH. Jim'•
WHhoro, dryon, rolrigoralan, Bond, Emco Molor Jot Mulord, Farm ~qulpmont. Clelllpolll,
rang•. Skaggl Applllncee, CIIUIIng, Ruenok, Sherllne. 114-441-sm.
Upper Rlvor Ad. Booldo 91ono Btuo Rlago Mochlnory, 304-582Creal Molal. C.Ait&lt;l-448-7311.
3531.
63 · Llvestoc;k ·
Ootd oculpturod carpet with New call Iran trH 11andlng 1 Reglatered Llmoueln' Bun. 1
pad, 20x13 ft and 3x1t n, good wood!COIII burntr, wlfan I vtnl two yHt old Ill"" 11' ••• "811
cond, 304-675-4127.
blower, USO; Ping-pong loblo
.,. ~~ ·
lap,
$4!;
114-445-4141
oftor
I
or
4 Jorooy Hallarl S I I will Did,
Konmoro dryor I WhirlpDol -konao.
$100. ooch; 12113
Clld,
Wa1hor, Con bo - n lnt
$300. Nch. 304-e75-4511.
-ritlng cond. $171. 114-4a- Portabfll air comprnaor 150
.8330.
CFM, 4 cyl onglno, 12,150. 304- AOHA Roalllored moN ond fllfY.
451·1031 ,
~ore brolio 1D ride, NOO. Coli
Kitchen Aid Undor Counter Dloh : ::,_,..:.:n::;o7-..
Wa1hor, $75. 25 Inch coiDr T.V. 0
1--w-1:1 or-:bod--:-::$::c200~;.,.tw-o loto ovonlnp,I14-141-2W.
lor parto, $25. 814-1112·3158.
lO.pood blcycloo. 304-815-3101 ATTENTION Horso OWnorl
boiOfll p.m. ,.
Paint Pluo lo now carrying tactC
. PICKENS FURNITURE
N1w/Uoed
Rodlo and rocOfd pioyor with ~~: ~=-~~~it.,kao,Q'~'!,"S:
HaueohDid furnishing. 1/2 mi. recorda (eome 1830), llrgt~o 4084.
Jerr5cho A~. Pt Pl•unl, WV, mlcrow1n ovtn. cOlored TV
coli 304-675-1450.
w~remots control, wardrobe•,
B11utlful AOHA regiiiH mere,·l
Yalley_ Fumhure
Ntw and UIIC:I turnlture and sp.
pllancel. Call 114-446o7572.

raom Sulta, Reg. $1100.

now

Small tum. hou... auitlbll for 1

Walnut br ault with bookeaM
bed, lamps, cheater dr~wers,

workshop.

Tara Townhouse Apt1, 2 br., 1·

bam

carport.

Locatod In Hemlock Grovo. U

1/2 baths\ CA, clohwoshor, dle-

pollt. pr nt1 encloaed patio,
DOOI, pl1yground. Water, aewer,
l lraah fncluded. Sllnlng at
$289/mo, Colll14-387·7150.
33 Farms tor Sale
~~tland.
Laeher Farm, 105 Twin Rivera Towr-Hou•l~ for
acree, Houu, gu will. 614-192· tho Eldo~y. Hondlcappod ond
Dlubled.
Localed
noor
6159.

aeres. Call 614-iMD-2112 after
Sp.m.

downtown

Point

Pluunt,

phone 304-675-1671.
Houolng Opporiunlly.

Equal
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 acre Iota GalllpDIII fony, city Upper River Rd. 2 apl. upstair,
wator, 304·175-2722.
2br1 IIOVI, ret., water, garbage
plcMiip. Dopoell roq'd. 1

Ashton, beautiful ont 1cre lots
with river frontage, public wsttr.
Clyde !8ow1n, Jr. 304·578~2338.
Ashton.

large

building

JD 2010 w1com plant~&lt; """''"'
Dutlh, poll drivor, n'Js'O. 1114286-6522.
Salol End of ooaoon ealo on all

H
ours l-1.
·
lrso to lhoH who qualify. Coli · Vl'ro FumltuN &amp; Appllancoo
114-192·7787. EOH.
Rt. 141, 1/4 mi. on Lincoln Plko.
Now accepUng ar,pucatloM for Man-Sal I o.m.-6 p.m. Sun 12·8,
Cal till I p.m. for •~ntrnenla.
2 bedroom ap~ ully carpoled, 114-44&amp;-3158.
Flnonclng
•r.pllanc••· water 1nd lra1h ovollable
with no monoy down. .
plckupa provldtd. Malntenancli Sola &amp; Chair,
S&amp;lt now
rr.e living cloSe to thopplng, $22t (11 In !log.
110clll, W!&gt;Od
bankl and echoolt:. For more In• Q"'uf:, 11....528, now 12_
..,.. •
lormotlon call 304-112-3711. E·
n otockl. Sloapor Sola,
qual DpportunMy housing. Sec- 111
Voughon Bllntl lntorspring
tion 8 accepted.
Rog, Slit, naw $311 ( I In
Ono bedroom olit, no poll, lllockl. Ouoon AMI CaHoo l
$100. dopoeM, $235. mDnth ln- End Tobloa $141 a 101. I
variltiH of Bunk Bedl:. $148 l
cludu water, 304-175-4023.
up. Twin • Full ManNIHI woo
One, 2 bedroom apartments, $9t 1 up. NDw 14U5 (50 In
thr11, 1 .,..room apanmenta lh 11ockl. 0-n Ma11NOI Soto
$150·, Kin" M1Hr111
Racine. Depo.tt snd reference $249, R-.
-·
•
required. 514-MII-2085.
$128. 8 voriotln 8o1H1 Bodo

or 2. 614-44~338.

lola.

down.. alrs, 2br, water, garbage

plck·up.l14-446-3840.
Up111ol~ 1 unlumlshed apt Cor•

peled. NO pela, Inquire at 300
mobllo homn parml11ed, public · FounhAve.
watar, prh:H rsduc1d, Clyde
Bow.n, Jr. 304-576-2330.
Woll-kopt unlurnlohed 1 bod·
room garage apertmtnt In quiet
For Salt: One ac ... ltvtl Iota, 7 nolghl&gt;clt'hODd. R1foroneH &amp;

mllos north of Holm Hoepltol. Dopoelt roqulrod. $185. 304-675614-3111-8849.
15$0.
Warda Tr11ller Park. 2 Largs

La11. S75/mo. 614-441-4265.

Woodland, 132 acrn, $35,000.

45

Furnished
Rooms

Rt. 7, boiow Euroko, Call 114Room• tor rant • wtek or month.
446-4416 oftor 7 p.m.
Starting at 1120/mo. Qallla
Hotol, 614-446-8560.
SIHplng rooms with cooking.
Also trailer apace. All hook·up1.
Call aher 2:00 p.m., 304-7735651, Maaon WV.

Rentals
41 Houses for Rent

ulillly ca~neta, lleelrlc trona,
upright freaer, chllt freezer, 18
ft rlfrlgerator. ,.•• old wooden
tolophonoo, old hoy reko, FD~
Goluy~ln oaw, 24 n ladder.

yrs. old.~ Cell 114-371-2740 or
114-371-2171.
a--· I lo I D

304-171
7.
SM 58 Mlo. Monltoro. 10 ft . Ball~·
IHo Dloh. Goa oump pump.
Bathroom c•blntt sink and mfr·

~ro:::r.::I:::1.:..4·.:..•112;;;-:-6::;1.:..37~.:-:-:::-::--~So
w·~
Bed M1 11
mma •••
rose.
Full olzo. Llko now. Coot $5tS.
WUIIalllor S200. 114-1112·2812.
WHIJE'S M.ETAL DETECTORS
Ron Alll10!!1 .1210 Second Avo,
Golllpolll,"" 114-441-4331.
WhHtchll,.. .. new or ..ect. 3
whoolad oloctric ecoolor. Coil
Rogon Medico!, 1-800-IIW1Q4.
I bu rnIng 11ovee,
2 w--•
- or .co•
one Harmon 2 yN old wlblower

$400. Warm Morning 2 yrs old

uaed on• yr $250. 3D4-175-1tn.
or 675-238!.

~w;:o:::o,~or.:..o=.r1c71ng-;S;;-h-op_m_o7tl-,"'25=--cu

fl chHI freezer, 20 ft two axil
traller.t_kjng alze water bed, 304- .

-or

Bl.iy or IIQ. Rlvli'lne Antlquet,

1124 E. Main StrHt, PomorDy.
HDuro: M.T.W.lO:OO o.m. to1:00
p.m., Sundoy 1:00 ID 1:00 p.m.
614-vt2•2528.
Fullllzo - s bod w/rallo, Car·
bin I Snyder Fum. 114-4461171..

5 5 Pets tor Sale
· ~=-=::...:.;.:;;;..:.;;.::...:.::::~.,..,....,.
AKC Pomoranlon pupa. 3 black
lomoln, I wooko old. 114-2451015 oftor lpm.
AKC Aoglllortd Boaglo pupa.
114-381-88ecl.

palnllngo, toyo, or ontlro ntoto
304-!23-8814.

llno, $3011. 114-311-1314.
AKC rogl11ortd Booglo pupplo1
1 llttor 12 wHko ofd, 1 llttor i
wko old, 304-67&amp;-188&amp;.
·
BoautlM AKC lomalo maH110, 8
mo. old, 114-446-7432.
Brinony Spanlolo AKC, roglo-

tlrm. 114-lw:·

call COIIICt 30U25-3275. or

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1 y1or Old Roglltored Slborion
Husky, lomolo, SIOO. 1NO Olds
CutiiM 2 door, lm·fm, tape, AC.
$1000.114-742-2081.
1N2 Dodge K A~oo Cor, 73,000
mllH. ~~.!.. PS, tift OIHring

whul, AMII'M r..tlo, Ylry good
cond. $1,850 or $850 down &amp;

toko o"r paymonto ol $75 per
mo. Ellc. range, 30 lnchlla wide,

lpaod

quoon,

huvy

duty

wash•!! all fabric. S:HkJ eactt.

614-68•-6804.
2 tlckoll lot

111)1

Clovoland

Brown Foolbatt Gamta. Prtftr·

red autlng. 114·251-1217 or
114-446-220.

1974 Super Boltlo, g!&gt;Od cond,

1·304=::c"-75-1=2224~.-::--,,..-,=-.,­

1978 Buick Rogol, v..,_.!lr,
73,000 miiH, no ruot. _..o.
1-1':1=4-=-"'=41'='404:..:.:..5·-:::-::::--=c--.,..

1 OWI'IIr, &amp;ow miiN@, a•celllnt
tered. 6 yr. old femall, I mo. old condhlon. StO,OOO. l'hono 304female. SlUing do to ownara 273-3071.

hullh, 11 4-24S.8548.
1910 llofDury Ballcot "'"lion
CFA roglalored Hlmolayon Kit· wogon, I cyl.&amp;:z'; ruot, uldng
ten•, $11/uch.l14·388-88i0.
$150.114-245.
Colllo pupo $25.. IICh, :104-571- 1911 Buick Skylarll V.. englno,
2501.
.
AC" lrDN whool drivo, ll;ooD.
Drogonwynd Conery Kannol. 1911 Oldl 1300. 304-671-2731.
Ptrelan.
SiameM
and 1181 Com•"' z-~~,_v.ac!.:".,
Himalay-an 1dtten1. Chow atud $1885. 1882 ......
"'
IOMco. 114-446-3144 after 7 ;/,:~ono owner, 11211. 114p.m.
Fl1h To'*, 2413 Jockaon Awo. 1Nt Fomi EaC011 Stallonwoae&gt;n.
Paint Plaaoant, 304-675-2013, 10 82,1!!10 miiH. Folr
gal ut up $14.1t ond tO gol $6ov. 114-115-4418.

.-Ilion.

crulae, AMIFM CIIHlle, new
tlru, shockl, .. rut•, brak...

eo,ooo

Electronics
Servicing
The
program 1t the Adult Education lop quality tha,e normell~
Center-Tri-County Vocational priced tram $19. to $60. Ovtr

October 2nd.

combined
1at1. l~;t Pomeroy
area. 114-992-3830 or 614·i92·

Schnoldor 407-36lHI&amp;OI.
Call 614·753-3511 Exl 14 lo Shoe Store and VIdeo Store
register tor claene blglmlng

'or

Job Hunting? Noed • .okl117 Wo 2571 .
lraln ptOplt for jobs 11 AUio
Mechanics, Carpenters Coamatologista, Olvereifled f.tadlcal
Workers,
·
Parala~le,
Electrlclane,
Food SarviCI
Worke,., Electronic• Tech·

nicians, lndu1trlal Maintenance 31 Homes for Sate
2 br, cottage. Nice rltlrernerti
home, locatld 295 Lower Rlvsr
Rd. Rlvor Vlow. 114-446-2300.·

Workers, Nursing As•lstant•
and
Orderl ies,
Machinists,
OHic• Workers and Weld•rs.
Register now for cla11n begin·

nlng October 2nd. Call Tri- 2 ltory brick home, over 100
County Vocational Adult C•mer y11ra cMd. Appro~~: . 7 urea.
at 614-753-3511 Ext. 14. A. $55 ,000. awn.. will conelder
varl•ty ot funding sourcH to land contr~ct. LocatH Eurek8
PlY for training are available Jot behind Clay School. 114-251-

thoeoollglble.

58

Nice 2 bedroom Rench houn,
In country. Localad In Rsclne.
retlt'lf'lce~apoelt.

month. 114·1t2·S231.

$200

8143.
tN5 Buick Elactro Exc.
cond. gar~• cap, loaded. V-1.
114-44W834.
1111 Chtyaler Fifth Av•- ea.
Irs ohorp.l2,000 mUoo. 114-3712721.
1NI Dodgo Arioo, 4dr, 1c1o Bluo,

lawn. Raloro.,.. l Dopoell ,.._
qulred. 114--13.

1171.

304-675-3133.

42 Mobile Homes
1or Rent
2
bod,_
luml1hed.

Wuher/dryer, llr condhionld.
1235. por month plue utiiKioo

1nd d-h. 114-112·7471.

2 br., mobile home, rent on

Whlta Rd. I mi. from Hcolur
Hoof.:•'· I til'""· can 514-245-

113 , anw I p.m.

.

FruHs&amp;
Vegetables

IUIO,

llr, cloth lntlrfor, 12110.

"The captain wants to make It fun to walk
the plank."
l .

I I

Pfft.SONAJ.Ly, · ::t PoN 1j
/

.'
;

$!E ANY fqAS 0 tJ
TO WD/lf(Y AIWT TtiE
fNVI/lONf'/t~NT IF
THE ~l!.IC A/l.fi ~
GOING TO INf'IE/l.IT
IT! .

~

~

•
! ~~~~~-___j

..

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATEAPROOI'INO
Uncanclhlonal lllallmo guorantoo. Local NloronCH lumlllhed.
Froo Htlmatoe. Call colloct 1·
114-237o0411, doy or night. R a

t...IFS IS&lt;.IUSTONE
8I&lt;OI&lt;:EN PROMISE

AFTER ANOTHER.

gerelae1m1nt

WlltarpnM&gt;IIng.
C. W. Dawloon, Plumbing •

trenching, kw al water &amp; drain

·~· 114-441oG1.5i.

Exporloncod drywall hanging
1nd flnllhlng a110 repair work .
~ .. ~5~
•

JAMEY TOLD ME
YORE BARN WAS

ON FlRE I

m

Ralaty Dr cabto tOol drilling.
Mootwollo Cotnpfoted umo
Pump ooloo ond IOIYico,
·
ll$-3102.

THAT YOUNG-UN
IS TEL.LIN' THEM

IALO·FACE
LIES AG'IN II

"WASTE NOT,
WANT NOT"

I ALWAYS SAY

•I

82

'

... '

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

ASTRo-GRAPH

Carter'• Plumbing
and Htatlng

Fourth oild Plno
Gallipolis, Ohio
114-445-3888

84

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

a.

Electrical
Refrigeration

AHidlnllal

or

I!))

lle!*'fl

aTopCerd
7:351]) MajOr Lugue BaHball
S:OO I]) MOVIE: The Kid From
Left Field (2:00)
G (]) iiJl UniOived
Myal8rteo Startling account
of an alleged UFO crash
landing In the U.S .. Q
()) t 911 World Water Sltllng
Men's Competition,
Championships trom West
Palm Petich, FL.ln
CJJ II Ill Growing !'alna
Maggie resolves to do what
it takes to prevent Mike's
marrying Julie. Q
(l) Cll Llva From Lincoln
c.nte&lt; Zubln Mehta
conducts, and soprano
Jessye Norman Sings. (2:00)
1111
C Peaceable
King dam
• «JJ MOVIE: The Iaiii of
T1lniie (PG13) (2:001
OPrlmeNewo
IDi MOVIE: Duet For OneJR)
(2:00)
.
liJ Muider, She Wrote Sticks
And Stones
a Oklahoma Cenlannlal
ceJHratlan Conway Twitty,
Gary Morris and Minnie Pearl
entertain Oklahomans with
music and laughter to
celebrate the state's
centennial.
1:30 (JJ Young R-. A penniless
teen orphan Is hired as a
rider lor the Pony EKpress.

commercial

!'

Ooogie to lather her baby. Q
a C'rook • ClulN
9:00. (]) 11J1 Null HOUH
Reginald J. Tarkington tries
to stop lhe take-over of .his
hotel. (1 :00) C
(J) allllardl lfrunswlck World
Open 9-Ball Championships
from Las 1/agas, NV, Men 's
auanerllnal 4: Malhews vs
Devenport ln
II Ill Anything lui La,. Q
tml • tD Jake And The
F - n A terrilled woman
seeks protection tram i
sadistiC psr,chopath. Q
C Lany K ng Uvel
liJ MOVIE: The Annihilators
(Ri (2:00)
Ql Naellvllle Now
9:30 CJJ II Ill Dllogle Ho-r,
M._D. A beautiful radiologist
asks Ooogle to lather hal
baby.Q
10:00 CD 700 Club Willi Pll

tro-Graph, c/o thts newspllptlr, P.O. pei-aonal experlllfl(;88 you mlghl learn

Chinese an whiCh Is now
shOwcased In Taiwan's
National Palace Muaeum .

Ba_x 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. ...,_al valuable lesoonsloday. File the

(1 :00)

!

Be sure to llate your zodltll: sign.
knowledge you acquire away 110 that It
LIIRA (Sept. zs-oct. 23) It won't be can be used advanlageoutlfy at 1 1 selllsh ot you today to do something date
apecill and niCe for yourlelf for a ARU (Marcil 21-Aprll11) In jOint en-·
change. See ,If 1111 Item you've wanting deavore today etrl'l8 to be more supcan be worktld Into your budget
portlve than .-tlve. Tille will lneplra
SCORPIO (Oct. :M Nov. 22) Thla 11 one your counterpart 10r mulull beMflll
of thoee dayt When you'll ha.. lhlt 1()8- TAURUS (April • ...,. •1 Your
clll magnetic eppeai which will enllble ennoblng quality today Ia your willing~to light up~ room When you enter. It .,... to CCJOPit'lla end lhlre with otllen

~I likely you II t:::rti!Oilced today.
AGmARIU8 I
• II Dtc. 21) Today you wlllnnately IMf II II bel1er IO
llpL
1
give than to rscel... Becauee of your
:Ill, •
eelflua osslllooke llka you will lake In
· far more 111111 ~ Put ou1
In 1111 year alljlad you are lllcely to be CAI'IIICOIIN (Dee....,.;, 111 p
18
more erMIIve·lhln UMIII and thla will you'll be lrwalwd with today will~
add a new dlmeullon to your tn.. The lpired by
lc
nkiMa you'H ~ w11 h... profitable 11 will c:au::'h.m~':
COUld be not Jull 18 lhay are
potential.
YIIIQO (A., •lept. 22) In eltuallona AQUARtUI 1, _ • l"eb. 111 Your lntuwhere you are required to m.111ge or lllve perceptlone could be rather ,....
control olhlrl, do 110 today with kind markllble today apeclllly In matters
words and gentle dlrectlva. Thought- that affect your ''*-' or llalua N.....
fulnell will produce rnwdlng reeuttt. g1ng hunchellhou
· -.VIrgo, treat your'lllf to a blrthclay gift. t,..taclllghtly.
ld not be (gnorecl or
Send fOr your Allro4r~Ph pr.cJICIIonl IIIICU (l'tJII. • 'larol1 •I Through .
for the year ahead by milling S1 to AI- .
. . . .. .

.::::n:::

'l

q ·• ~

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

FNday - Tryst - Croak - Walnut - FANTASTIC
I had come up with a great idea lor making extra money.
Granny shook her head and said, "Ideas are much like
children, no matter what,your own are .always FANTASTIC."

,.,....

BRIDGE
'
By James Jaeelly

When South asked far aces and
ltiJJI', it was his intentlOD to bid a WEST
EAST
grand slam if North showed up with •
•Jlot~
three kings. Since the jump to three • j "10 98
•ua
spades by North showed four-card · t Q 9 a 3 2
• J 104
support. South could usume no spade • 10 a7 2
.K63
loeers, and he was willing to gamble
SOUTH
that if his side bad all the kings, he
+Q8632
could dispose of the potential club los.AKQ
er. Luckily for South, partner sbowed
+A~
oaly twa kings, and he settled in six ·
.AH
sllldM. Tben ltlddenly the 111umptlon
Vulnerable: Both
about no apade losen proved faulty
Dealer:
South
when East turned up with J-10-9·5.
Declarer won the Ke of bearta, and
West Norlll Eut
got the bad aews wben be played a
Pill
Pus 3•
specie to dummy's ace. So be played a
Pus
Pus ~•
club back to his jack. Wben that won
Pus
Pus
the trick, be was in politiOD to make
All pass
the t:~~~~tract if be gueued the distribution of the other sulta. He played two
Opening lead: • J
more bigb spades, then the A·K and a
diamond ruff. He continued with the
K-Q of hearta. East dutifully followed
' suit to all of these. East was now left
' with the blgh trump, the king of clubs lead with a trump to Ioree twn to lead
and one otller card. U that unknown . away from the club ldng. Tbe winDing
card were a diamODd or a heart, the play Is the trump. And declarer did:
COiitract could be made by playing the · make the right play. But let's all be
ace of clubs, aince the king would . aware that it might hive been right to
drop. But II that last card were anoth- cash the club ace in the hope that the
.e r club, declarer must
. throw
. . East
. . on kiD&amp; would come down.

a•

1-----------...J

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOS.EPH
ACROSS 40 Segment
1 Polish
41 Noted
cake
Italian lamily
5 Failure
DOWN
(st.) .
1 Abjecl
9 llali11h
2 Expiate
bell town 3 Extended
10 Tennis
in a way
name
4 Trouble
12 Besmirch 5 Bewilder
13 Servile
6 Manliest

Yesterdey'e Answer

15 Terminale 7 "Three 16 French
27 Mighty
16 Editorial
and e Baby" river
29 Clementine's
pronoun
( 1989 film) 19 Car make
lather
'
17 Actress , 8 Venetian 22 Distance
. was one
Joanne site
measure
30 Character18 Sell11 Fortune- 24 Iranian's
istic
cenlered
telling
anceslor
34 Commedia
one
card
25 Lot's son
dell' 20 Repub- 14 Actress, 28 Michaelmas36 Eggs
llcan
- Velez
daisy
37 Wonder
ow
Initials
21 Different
22 Allol
23 Successor
to HST
24
Sole - "
25 Wllander
of tennis
27 Riches
28 Russian city
29$howlng

·p

prudence
31 Consumed
32 Dweller
In (suff ..)
33 Author Levin
35 Get lostl
37 Seaweed

6-4- - +--

product
38 Plunder
391ota

DAILY CRVPI'OQU(JIES-Here'show to work It:

1t20

greatest eollt~~:tlon of

m0et

u-

iA beautiful
Ill Dllogle Howeer, M.D.
radiologist asks

Sam leaps into 111e lilt of a
newlywed New York cop on
his honeymoon. Q
(J) Ladlll PTo BoWiinll Tour
CJJ e Ill Chlnt lleKh
McMurphy and K.C. are
kidnapped and held captive
by the VIet Cong. Q
(l) I!)) Newt
Cll Emperor'a lye: Art &amp;
P - In Imperial China
Re,.aled Is how an 18th
century emperor created the

n:~~~~~--~~-··
D1vlt
S.W·Vac
Servlc1 ·· • .. :

'

8 Ill USA Today
'
tml • G2l IIJI Jeopardy! "
IB«JJ M'A'S'H
.,.
C Clolaflre

Rollerlllon
G&lt;Il iiJI Quantum L81P

Georgn Crwk Rd. Parts, aup! · ~ ..
piiH, pickup, ond dollwory. 114- ·"
441.0214.
.
Soptlc Tank Pum~lnf $90~Gallla - "'
CD. RON EVAHS EN EAPHISES : -:
JICkeon, ~ 1..aoo-5374521.

(J) Scholaollc Sparta
Amerlcll
(JJ En18rtalnmenl Tonight

e

wiring, new MrVh:e or rwpalre.
114-446-1711 or 11+446-7104.
.Licanood oloclrldon. Rldonaur
tNI DDtfG!I Dov1on1 Turllil Z,
llotroea, rod I yoiiDW dollcl- out-lla &amp; ArJ. 51,000 miiH. Eloc1rical, 304-e75-1781.
Jonothiln, a MoalroOih
1~"'"•
85 General Hauling
ppiH, honor I Soraum. Dun- etw11-me.
I'DYln Frun Parm, 111 South Ent
1111
l'loov,~. auto, AC, AMIFM
~ a J Wllor Sorvlco. Swimming
al Albony, Houro: 1-6. Ct..M
oond. ,$4100. ......,l._ojalomo, wollo, Call 11411Dndoya.I14-6!18-82N.
114-448-21144.
245-1....
Red Roollorrtea lor Salol Frouit till I'!Nblrd 101 onglne, tlnlod
· lorriool Pick ~r CIWII " ' reedy wl ...... "'.!!!.~, 4CI,GOO tlllloo, R I R Wllor Sont_lco. Poo~1 _!&gt;1e­
lems, w8e. lmmldi•1•1,1NU or
olokod. !'!,_ 8any Plllali. 11,000. 3114-mMMtz.
.14-241-• .
2,000 gallonl doU..ry, Col 1111 Plymouth llollonL .... 171-1370.
PIIPI, ••• .,._ AC. real nloe watt..-.. w... Hauling,
. - . 114-2111oe21t.
,._abfo raloo, valu010 dlo- •
r,! rn )uppll•'·,
- · 2,000 .. 4,000 capoclly,
:·~ liLJf'SfUCk
-~-671-2811
.... . Woljl, aiC. Coli
OOVEANMIHT IIIZED '&gt;111tlol•
ftwt/1100.
PordllllnlldiL 87
Upl!olltery
81 Fann Equipment
luyou Go oklo
_.,
Ext.8-t01H.
1200 .....
- -11 01
Wfp&lt;lntp.
WIN lh
llaN 31 !:llovy, I ctr. Badin. 11
rnldlum l,..fo!. 82~ Qrm. CoM eharp.
17100 or trade. 11...bolwoonll lo14-,...•-6013.
7311.

·-r --.,.. ·=

Andy Ortflllh
liJ Miami Vice Three soul
deadened bikers cut a swalh
of murder and destruction.
Q!l VldeaCounlly
7:05 (I) Jeffarsano
7:30 G (]) Family Feud

81

mlloo $2800. 114-441-

oa-•·

Too many peopla, too clou? I
room hou11 on 33112 acre. near

Two bedroom hou .. Parte Drive,

Real Estate

1171 Monto CariD with air ond
h t $ 710 ' bH1
1lh '!DHor,
304 ""..:..1 · "'
=o::.:-=:'-·-.:..:::..·
:-.:. -=.,--~:-:-1111 Trono-om, T-lopo, v-e, now
llret, needt thtle work. $2200 or
boll Dllor. Bl4-441-3301.
1180 Corvetto, block, automallc,

1912 Chovrolol Mollbu CtaHic
Groom ond Supply Shop-Pal with olr c-tlonlng. n,ooo
Grooming. All broodo. Allotwloa. mlln. GOod condlllon; 814-371lama Pit Food Dealer. Jullt 2151.
Wobb, Calll14-44&amp;.0231.
1N4 PlymDUih Aollont SW,
auto, 4 cyllndor, PS, PB, TW,

Credit

Q

I!))

'

2217ovonlngo.

1·-,.,....,--=::.....---------

complete $43.25.

Fora.nta, Bugle Soy, Levi, Camp
B•'llerly Hlll1, Leslie Faye, Luclil:,
over 2000 others, or $13.91 one
price designtr, multi tier pricing
discount or family shoe store.
R•tall prlcn unbell•vable tor
250 brands 2600 styles. $18,900
lo $29,000: Inventory ll'llnlng,
tixtur••, airfare, grend opening,
etc. Can open 15 daya. Mr.

.I

GlWENT

Hlilh

--=~COWIQ
Moneyllne
,

.' -

Sf&gt;rv ices

or 114ooM..

!::C..~~~ pa~"~d '!'r!r~r. f!~,•. ~·:::~mp~~~ :';.,n~s:.111':.~~~:so~~..1c

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommenda lhat you do
businesa with peoplt you know,
end NOT lo Hnd money
throu~h the mail until you hav•
Investigated Ihe offering.
Own your own epp~~rtl or shoe
store,
d\Oole
from :
Jean/Sport1waar, Lsdin. Men'1,
chlldrsn/Mattrnlty, L1rge alz11,

School will tra in you tor jobs In
the servicing end maintenance
ot elacuonrc equipment. We
have monlee evallable to pay for
training tor eligible applicants.

I

Tough guy Rick takes an
Interest in Environmental
Acilon Committee. (NR) Q .
I]) '&lt;r e Ono TV (0:30) Q
,18 «JJ Andy Orlffllh
IDi Facta 01 Lite
'I!J Jam
a American Magazine
6:051]) &amp;,verly Hlllbllllel
6:30 G CD IIJI NBC N(ghUy New1

0

Boat. 125 HP, Evlnruds Engine,
complete top, new uphols1try.

wing chair, a rocker rocllnor, 875 •1- ·
Car~ln I Snyder FIWn. 114-446- 55
Building
1171.
Supplies
Whirlpool outomotlc waahlr
$125.114-317-0234.
Biock, brick,
olpoo, wlitdowa, llntsl-. sic. C'eude Win-- 17::::-:=7;_---::-.,-,,..---,..-tert,
Rio
Qnnc:le,
OH
C.ll 114- 1174 Corvllte. Rebuilt engine,
Antiques
53
245-!121.
PS, PB, al'i._O.\"~k T-top. $6500

Details, 805-687·6000 Ext.B· Store. Add color analysis, brand
4562 . .
names: Uz Claiborne, Healthtex,
EARN MONEY typing at home. Bonnie &amp; Bill Sl Michele,

Go the way of the hl-taeh future.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale
1872 17 I, Slororoft Tri·Hull ,

./, • I

low ra form four simple words .

iCJJ SpartsLootc
(0:30)
e Ill ABC Newa Q

74 Motorcycles
•117=4-K"'o___..,k"'l..:100:.,.,..-.:E"'x."""Con......,d. •
1700. 1188 Honda XR200 toko
ovor paymanlo. ~-675-4501 ·
bol~ 2:00 p.lll.
•
1!1114 CR.SO!)-R, porlfcl cond,
1150. 304-671-11115.. .
1111 XR25R Honda X250R,
good oond, 1100. 3Qol-tl71lo3482,
till Yom.,. ¥2410, motDr Nal
nlco .PI• ""'"I $1,500. 304152-3387
.
1!1117 Yahoma Vlrsgo. 4,0011
miiH. 11100. 114-843-5304 or
114-112-2574.
For lflo: 1!1110 Honda CR.aSO:
Runo aood. $325. Will con11dor · •
trodol0rgul18.114-317·7211.

$3500. Coli 114-2111-131.1 aftor
7:00p.m.
- H oct n a uroc 8oor1. 19n Norrlecroft belli 17 112 ft.1
IS hp Evan, now baHorln ana
Aogor Bontloy, 11MI4-23N.
Plgo lor 1alo. tO woolt old Dfgs, many •xtru, $3,110.00. 304-t711 yoor old boor. 114-448-72117 a~ .2111, 1:00 om 11115:00 pm.
to; 4pm,
76 Auto Parts &amp;
64 Hay &amp; Grain
Accessories
Lara•
"'"""
baloo of luly, su 11n Ma-'&lt;:k 302 onglno,
ooch.ll&lt;l-448-tOSZ.
autornadc, body rough, 1200.
RDund BaiH Alfalfa • Oreeo 304-4111-1 042.
lle.f25; oquare boiH 11.so;
pay now ond wo will until waroed 1D buy 41lrn • whHio.
you nood hoy. Morgan'a Farm, 8 at 10 Inch whoola wHh
'1100.11 or 1200i11 tlrH ID lh
Rt. 31, Pliny, :J04.13T-1011.
FDrd or DodgL 394-671-1131.
Straw klr 111e. $1.50 bolo. 114441-4111 Evonlngo :' 114-441- 79
campers&amp;
,7=11=7========
Motor
Homes
::;;
Transportation
1871 Aoaollo pup,Up Flborgla..
eldH. lllaopo I. li!OO. 114'2455870.
71 Autos tor Sale
MuM ..!t U81 Tony Touru1 281
1973 Plrmouth Duater I cylln- Tr- Troller In alorago In
d• IIUiornltlc 71.oo0 .atual Florida. Cloan, oxtro nlco. .
$1,500, Soriouo lnqulrioo anly:
mllae; $595. 11~41 .
114-1112·2810.
1974 Carvel whllo with black 1n1.
PW, T·Topo, AC, 4 now tlreo, VIking 1181 Fold down treUor. ·
ovorythlng Driglna~ ue. • .... 910¥0, leo bclx, oink, wotortank.
dKion. $8500. 114-448-7441, 114- Toko CIVOr poymo~~to. 114-1112·
3017.
441-1421 .

EARN MONEY typing homo.
Dancewaar/Aeroblc,
$30,000/year Income potent ia l. Petlle,
Bride!, Lingerie or Ac:c::enorte•

$30,000Jy8ar Income potential.
Deta ils , 1·805·687·6000 Ext. B·
10189.

t~e
be·

()) Home Run Derby

(l) Degre111 Junior

e

118$5.

Hou" lrllitr with built on
rooms, 3 bedrooms, living room

hall·baumenl,

.0 four
R:eorrange letters of
ocrambled words

c

6:351]) Andy Orlffllh
7:00 I]) Our Hauoe
' G (]) PM Maom:ifta
()) SpartaCenler (0;30)
CJJ a Ill Cu._. AHalr
(l) Cll MacNeil/ Lahrer
Nawaltaur
~
iiJ IIJI Wheel 01

Counly Appllonce, Inc. ODod
uood applla-. T.V. ooto. Opon
I a.m. ID I p.m. llon ..Sol. 814441-lllt, 127 :lrd. Gaf.
llpollo, OH
Ealale Solo: Wo are lOlling ·.,.
tiN houHhakl. Anything noed. ontl-. 114-251-

$999. 30 doyo worronty on If!=~~";;:; r7"f,:'~p~01 hlr 591 fo

kitchen, balh,

~y

1111 • C CIS NIWI Q
.. «JJ Th-'a CompariJ
C ShowBiz Today
IRI JelfartiOna
,
liJ He-Man

November 15th, flrat month rent

· ·Caii-304-675-S 104.

Ill 1111 •

(l) Body Electric
I]) 3·2·1 Cont8ct

Regency, Inc. 2BR, apt., new
plulh
cerptt,
new
paint,
Total electric. $7000. .u lllitl,., panlally paid. $175/mo.

Financial

3511 Ext. 14.
Don't bo loft behind by tho rapid 21
Business
chango In manufacturing lech·
Opportunity
noiOIJY· Receive specialized I--....:.:.,.==,...:_ __
trainmg In the mechanical. hyd·
INOTICEI
raullc and electrical components of factory equipment In
the Adullindustrial Maintenance
Program at The Adult Educa11on
Canter-Tri-County Vocat ional
School. We hav• a variety of
funding sources available lor

from tho Unlvorolty of Rio

15

AVON · All areas, Call Marilyn 11 ·1055B.

funding sources available for
those who quality. Call 614·753-

t986 Clayton, exc. cond. 14x&amp;S
2br, home fYPII windows, large
kitchen, lots of ator1ge, built ln
oven &amp; l1land stove. washer,
dryer. air condition.,, awning,
localed on rM~Ied lot, 1 blocK

panda~

COLLEGE. , 529 Jackson Pike.
Call 614-446·4367. Rog. No. 116-

r•

prico loworad. 614·245-11625.

614·992·3972.

1
Middleparl.
RE-TRAIN NOWI
AVON ! All Areas ! Shirley SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS

n&amp;5JoUonable, References
qu~red . 614·446-7902.

bay window, appllancn, deckl,
tto111p building, Undert:llnnlng,

ft?Bilon.

2 nurses aides, shop clerk, . In· Glving beginning piano lesaona
quire a1 Odds and Ends Shop, _
i_n_m.:..y-::ham"'_o ,.,61.,.4--·2...,56-=62,7.:.6·: __

Weaver 304-882·2645.

12xl5, 2 bedroom. 114-742·
2744.
1985 Skyllno, t4xe4 now corpol,

3 bedroom. Holly Park with Ex·

Help Wanted

Spears, 304-675-1429.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Grandi.

A.

i

"*"""

Nice 3 br, home wlgal'lge, new
ro0 t 1 1 1 ldl
"' dded
ng, ne Y •
• v ny
dining room wiWet blr. localld,

Furnilure and appliances by the
plece or enUre household. Fair · Physical
·
O.v.lopmant
prices being paid. Call 614-446- Sp•cialllt. Part time. Must hllve
3158.
Phyalcal Educa11on Certltlcala
or equivalent 'from Ohio
Good used ehurch pews. CAll Department ol Education. Adap614·992·7410.
· tlve P.E. Certificate preterrtKt.
Valid Ohio Orlvara Ucenu Pt. it. 304-525-892t after 1:30 ·
Junk cars with or wllhout preferred. s12.66 hr. 16 hourap:=M:...::--::---------motors. Call larry lively 614- per week {bau scale). lm· Small 2br, houll wf2 ear
388·9303.
""
mediate
position. garage. 2 mlln out 141 134.500.
Quilts
Houre:10:00ilm•2:00pm (Mon.• 614-441·0335 after &amp;p.m.
P're 1940 quills. Any condition. Thur.). Apply to: B•lte Hoffman,

Cash Paid. Call 614·992-5657 or Program Dlroctor. Meigs County
614·592-2461 .
Board of MRIOO, P.O. Box 307,
1310 Corlolon Sl., Syrocuoo,
TOP CASH paid for 1983 model 1_0::;h.:.lo,-4.:.;5_m:;;:.,..-:c---:---:-and newer used care. Smith 1~
Buick-Pontiac, 19 11 Eastem Wanted: Babysitter In my homt,
Ava., Gallipolis .. Call 514-446- 3·4 days a w..Jc. Call afltr Spm.
2282.
1·6.:.1.:.4·.:.36.:.·7-·77.:..:.44.:..- - - - Used furniture and household 12
Sltuallon
appliances. Phone 614·742·
Wanted
2048.

BONK!

lra1h

.wtetov1,

kltctwn

3br,

a
·
w

bath, baHment

•-L

wator,

441-8727.

By owner, 2 112 bldroome, 1112

' -r-· ·
finance. 614-74 2-2718

W~ILE I WAS WAITING, ·
SIR, I T~OU6~T I'D PRACTICE
FEW PASSES ..

provided. $265/mo. ...,II 614--

bl. h
12 •~rei lot. d2 hovt·
b ~ld, on 1 t 111

n~wlvnr..'.!'~

'(OU HOL.D TilE BALL., MARCIE,
. AND I'L.L COME RUNNIN6 VP
AND KICK IT... .

iilllllewa
(])

(JJ •

.

:c:-.:~·· 2:.~i'o.1 ba~ro:'~::

red

304-675-4340, EOEIAA.
I:.::Hu::d::aon::;:·:...
' -:---.,.--......,.,..
I:-:="':":'---':-::--------- For aa ..: 5 room houM ·with
LPN's NHdad, EJ:cellenl ODpor-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

'

'I

2 BR aptrtrnent, utllltilt peld.

BeautifUlly ' malnlilntd. Prefer•
neighborhood. Wslk lo

;588=1~
. =:7:==-,:-::-:-

oo;;;:;&gt;-

~~~~~ · ~~~~~~~~

i

. 3 bedroom brick hi&gt;Uio with
largo lot.. Mid Woy Dn••· Now
HaYin. uQOd Co&gt;nd. 304-J73.

M

20

e

tml
C Wloeguy Vinnie
takas Oon Aluppo'a placa on
the commission table. Q

• «J1 Crtmewlleh
II) Evening Nawa

10:20 (I) llllly Onlhartl CNNcle
10:30 (D ChiNI China's National
Music
ei!D New Twlllgllt zaen~~aue

the gOod lhtnga IIIII may happen 10 ·
11:118 CD lllltnlln
you. Your glllurea will wtn you llllal.
• Cl) (I) • Ill 1111 • c
QE- (...,. 11-.lune •1 Chorellhll
IIJI Newt
Channel your artlatlc end crHIIve abiU- .
(D
China An Art 01 Line
till will be the onea you'U find the moll ·
eo Arlanlo 11a11 (1:00)
gratifying today. If imllgtnatton Ia ~
Olh
qulred,lllay will ~ lallora ol tow.
S Talft 1'111111 The Dlrkllde
CANCIII (olunl 11....., II) In lltullThe Old Soft Shoe
liJ lllan VIce Golden
llOnl ~ you'l play a domlnlnt role
today you I be able to dell with Olhen
Triangle, Pl1 01 2
ill VldloCaunlry
In a WfY llllecllve fahlon, batW• your
eomplllllons wiH dlclall your actlona.
11:20 Ill MOVII: A Man Celled
LEO l.lulr •Aut- 8) Tha wanll end
. ROna (PGI (2:t5)
needs of tllole you low will like.,_.. - 11:30()) . . . . .
dlllol- your own conoernt today. In
,fact, you're !IIIII)' ·to feel no -tflol "
®_
(9,30)
too great fOr people filar to your~-·
(I)
(0:30) Q

•JII•

• !:!lonlghlllhow
c...

"

'~~:~;~' S@~(\~-'££tfSe
::::
CU.Y I . POUAN _;;.,...._ _ __

_..;,;,;;,;,:.,;,_=-= ldltool

1:00 CD Hanlcallle I McCormick

I'

vans &amp; 4 WD'a

1br.1 oportmont, all utNHIH Incluaed $300 por mo. Dop. r.q'd,
114-445-4222 botwoon I I 12

-2-BR-•.:...112::..:..=e!;___'·-pa-rt-..-,1y-,.-r.
nlshed.
hbclrhood Rd.
Avolloblo Octo
tal. S2101mD.
114-446-1157 """' 7pm, tBM4501 uk lor Loony.
21101ed.
bedroom
tor ront.
corNlcoapto.
lOlling,
loundry
lacllNioo ovolloblo. Cill114·1112·
1711 EOH.
2br, opt. 11 Ria Orondo, All naw
carllaf.l14-386-1148. ·.

31 Homes lor Sale ·

I~"7t;oEuv~'Mhr!~ri:J~~c~n If you're

p.m. Saturday.

Apartment

73

,l

Call balwHn 11om I lpm only.

t---------'"""r::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::1

Gal Extro Tlmo, now lha kldo
are back In tehool. Turn 1hat ex·
trotlmo, Into m Call Avon, coil
Corol 614-4411-43117 or Boo 614Clay 446-4882.

•
4 lanilly, Sopt. 22 9-5; Contenary
Town Hou11. Cloth11: Children
to Adult. priced lo Hill
ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day ~tore the edIsto run.
Sunda~ edition ~ 2:00 p .m.
Friday. Monday edillon • 2:00

Goods

WED., SEPT.
EVENING

1.m.

Anoworo to Butch, hard of

2

HOU18hold

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

Television
Viewing
M

,

Lost : Tan wlblack p1,1g fact.
Raccoon Creek a~1 on 141.

7==:Y:a:r:d:S:a:l=e===
:
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

51

BORN LOSER

tor Rent
lBR unlulll. a111. Range I rtlrlg.
~· Wotor, MWOgo, gor4;,r.: paid. Dop. I Rol. 114-448-

Lost&amp; Found

379"29 7·
Lalll:medlum-elzed
long-hair
black dog In Wolf Pon orsa. 11
found cail614·992-5401.

no

Ponieroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 20. 1989

72 Trucks tor Sale
1174 Ford 1121Dn plck .UP. Oood
.-111on.
I14-247·31N
OYOnlngo,
1171 DoclciO, ioatl~on pickup,
10,000 Clllglnal mllH. Exo. ooncj,
$3,000. tt• 448 4015.
1171 ChoYY Hall-ton, 31,000
mlloe. 114-44fl.1012. .
FDI' oolo. 1117 Ford 'Ranger.
34,000 mlloo, bod ccwer, 15700
nogotloblo. Pnono I1444S-1287.

Lot . klr ornaU mobllo hOfne
witor 1 IUrnllhod, T'Y
..blo ond pfllago avail-.
304..75-4114.
.
2br, Rt. 110 ill ·EvorgrMn.
S225/mo, .... .... Dop. No Ono ..,. lot, trellora· atlowod,
city wator, Qafllpolla Foriy. 304=~- 11~111 or 114-448- 175-2722.
.
·..,, 2 both, PCIIIor oroo, a_.
Nq d. Poy all Ullltloo. 114-311-

You hiVe to dig up and turnleh
on New ~lma Rd.

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

46 Space for Rent

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

Old newspepert to aiM •way.

Flrsl trailer on right(Co. Ad. 25)
past Molgo Hlilh Sehool.
·
Red Canna bulbe to giV• away.

WednBicley, September 20. 1989

Pomeloy-Midcleport. Ohio

AXYDL8AAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are ali
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTE

9·20
,Jl VA V

I tl V

TVIIXVA
80QV

XR

NTVE

X R R,

JTV

-

X E

Z VIM A

AHIOEP -·
188

ROEIEUV

XEV

UVAJ

ABODA
RX88XN .

OZAVE

C""toq•ote: PEOPLE WJfO HAVE
. NO WEAKNESSES ARE TERRIBLE; TiiERE IS NO
-·~ WAY OF TAKING ADVANTAGE OF THEM. ANATOLE FRANCE
Y•terde,·e

«' 1989 Kmg Featu•es S yndiCAl!. Inc

._ ,

�September 20, 1989 .

Meigs vs.
Wellston
Friday

SAVE
$7.50

We Reserve The Riehl To
Limit
-,. Quantities
.
. . . -.

STORE HOORS .
·Monday thru Sunday

TOWARDS
THE
PURCHASE
OF YOUR
THANKS-GIVING
TURKEY·
USDA CHOICE
_ .
$ 99 WITH OUR
TURKEY
Round Steak ••••• ~.. 1
USDA CHOICE
VALUE
Chuck Roast •••••••• $129 CARD.
US~A CHOICE BONELESS . ·
$ 79
Rump Roast •••••• ~•• 1

8 AM-10 PM .

298 SECOND Sl,
POMEROY, OH;
'

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., SEPT. 17 THRU SAT., SEPT. 23 .

Ohio Lottery
Pick-3

402
Pick-4

6542
Super Lotto
5-8-11-23-33-44
Kicker 352812

Page 3

•
VQ1.40, N&lt;&gt;.96 M
C&lt;&gt;pyrighted 1989

Cube Steak ••••••• ~•• ~229

CHICKEN

Leg Quarters •••••':o. 49(

Pork Sausage ••• ~•• Sl 09
ECKRICH

revised proposal for
•

Smoked Sausage .~· $199
ECK~ICH
. .
$ 79
Shced Bologna •• ~. 1

NO MAKEUPS
ONLY ONE
TURKEY
CERTIFICATE PER
FAMILY

All twelve spaces
must be properly
validated before a
Turkey Certificate.
will be ho,..ored.

Sweet Potatoes.~~. 39(

s1·
4
9
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••

FLAVORITE

GALLON . .

ROYAL SCOT

Margarine •••~.L:·.·~!EJ. 3/Sl

MAXWELL HOUSE

.-

DAIRY LANE

$11
9
Ice
Cream
••••••••••••
Coffee •••••••••••• ;:~:•• $579
•

By NANCY YOACHAM
Dally Sentinel Staff
The Meigs County Commls·
stoners passed a motion Wednesday to propose to the VIllage of
Middleport, a revision of an
original property . annexation
proposal from the village.
·
The property which the commissioners are suggesting for
annexation Includes 30 parcels on
the east side of Route 7 toward
the Ohio River, but nothing on the
west side of the highway.
This decision by the commissioners does not become official
until they notify by letter· the
agent for petitioners in favor of
the annexation - Middleport

•

TOO HIGH! -A routine Ohio Power Company
lnspectlcm of lines and Insulators on this tower
above the hydr«H!Iectrlc plaut at Letart Fall!,
revealed that Insulators on the line had been
struck by lighting. On Wednesday morning, Ohio
Power Company employees - working 265 feet
above tbe ground - changed the damaged
lnsulaton on the 69,000 volt line. Employees Rex

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Stall
Gal11a and Meigs Counties·
Mental · Retardation and Developmental Disabilities boards receiv'OO nearly $90,000 Wednesday
afternoon, -tile result of a settlement between the state and the
federal Health Care Finance
Administration (HCFA).
Gallla's MR/DD boerd was the
recipient of a check for $50,090
while Meigs recleved $40,187
from· state Director Robert E.
Brown. In a 10-day period, Brown
will distribute $20 million among
the state's 88 counties.
The money was part of a $30

' ·· nree accidents, were invesll·.
gated' by the Meigs · Couniy·
!I her 1f f ' s Depart m en t
·
Wednesday.
Aceordlng to a report from
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the
first occurred at 8:10a.m on the
parking lot at Southern High
SchooL Michaella Jones, Pine
Grove Road, pulled Into the
parking lot and observed a
vehicle driven by Ivan D. Lavender, Syracuse, which was
stopped.
Jones started around Lavend-

er's-vehicle. stoppeif at the time . line Wamsley·, Titus Road; col&gt;
wl!ne preparing to bac~ 'Into a lided on a o'!rve. The · deptlty
p~rklng space, anlj as Jones
noted that the road Is narrow at
started to back, Lavender moved the site and no citations were
his vehicle too and struck the Issued. There were no Injuries.
right door of the Jones' vehicle. There was light to moderate
There was light damage to the dainage to both vehicles.
Jones' car and no damage to
The third accident occurred at
Lavender's vehicle. Their were 8:20p.m at Racine. According to
no injuries nor citations In the the report. Jamie Jones, Racine.
incident.
had pulled into the Fun Sun
At 2: 10 p.m on Price Hollow parking lot and did not see a
Road In Ru !land Township. vehl· vehicle operated by Robert Ja cles driven bySu~nR . Coleman, son Codner who pulled In behind
Price Hollow Road, and Jacque· him to discharge a passenger .
Jones began to .back and struck
Codner's car In the left rear door.
There were no citations nor
Injuries. There was no damage to
the Jones' vehicle and only light
damage
to Codner'
s tationwagon.
Two persons were injured In a one' car accident at 3:40p.m.
In other activity, Judy Hunter,
Wednesday In Meigs County on Flatwoods Road, 0.4 of a mile
. Happy Hollow Road, reported to
the department that a house she
west of Texas Road, according to the Melgs-Gallla Post. State
Highway Patrol.
owns on Happy Hollow Road had
Troopers said Sean L. Wallton. 16, Pomeroy, headed west, lost
been entered sometime within
control and his 1984 Pontiac Fiero went off the left side of the
the past two weeks and several
road, came back onto the roadway, left the right side of the
· items taken, · Including a gas
highway and overturned after striking an embankment.
stove. a stereo, and a table saw. A
Damage was heavy.
door on the back side of the
Walton and a passenger, Sharla Cooper,15, Middleport, were
garage had a panel kicked out.
Injured and taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital at Pomeroy.
and a pane of glass In the kitchen
Walton was treated for a laceration of the scalp but not
door had been broken out to gain.
entrance Into the house.
admitted to the hospital. Cooper suffered a laceration of a
tendon In the left wrist. She was admitted to Veterans Memorial
Richard Dennis Butcher, RD .
Hospital and transferred to Holzer Medical Center. Her
Albany, reported that his trailer
condition was reported stable late this morning.
had been entered Wednesday and
The patrol cited Walton for failure to maintain controL
that several household Items had
been taken. The matter remains
Continued on page 16
~nder investigation .

.•

•

$40,000 TO MEIGS - A check lor $40,000 was
presented to the Meigs County Mental Retard&amp;·
tlon and Developmental Disabilities Board In a
meeting Wednesday at the Gallipolis Develop·
mental Center. Here, Robert Brown, state

., ___ _

Ohio to get
rain Friday

;

..

.li
\'•

SUGAR

12 Oz.

$399

limit I Per C•stomer
Good Only AI l'owoll's Supermarkol
he4Son., lop!. 17 tlwu Sat., Sept. 23

• 4LBS.
0

~-• 0

$119

limit I l'tr ( uslomer
Good Onlr ·AI Powoll' s S.p.--kol
Go.. Sun.. Sept. 17 tlwu Sat. Sept. 23

_____

CARNATION

CHEER DETERGENT
147 oz. $599
0

EVAP. MILK

~!Noz.

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powolt's Supermarket
Good Sun., Sept. 17 tlwu Sat., Sept. 23

··

,.__,_.,..

2/Sl

Umh 2 Per CustoAt l'owoll' s Supermarket
17 tlwu Sat.. Sept. 23

POT DESTROYED - More &amp;ban 1100 marl·
Juana plan &amp;a puled durln1 raids 011 Sept.ll,l! and
13itl Lebanon, Letart, Oranp, Bedford,Sal ..bury
and 8aUDD Towllablpa were destroyed by lbe
Melp Cool)' Sherlff'a Depajobnent Wednesday
In accordance with an order lram Melp Coun!J
Common Pleu .Judce Fred W. Crow 10. The

plan&amp;a were bauled frGIII the lherlff'a office to lbe
Melp Cormty Gara1e at Rock Sprlnp where It
wu deatro)'ed. Here Todd Spirea, ,a llherlff'a
deptat)', ulla&amp;a In loadlnl the l,lU plan&amp;B which
Deput)' Sheriff Iimmer SoDisby valued at $2,1100
each.

l

'

MR/DD director, left, presents the check to Lee
Wedemeyer, Meigs 169 board chalnnan. Also
pictured are State Rep. Mary Abel and Denver .
Rice, right, 169 hoard vice president. (Sentinel
photo)

Meigs·gets $40,000

A total of $40,187 was received
by the Melp County Board of
Mental Retardation and Devel·
By United Press International
opmental
Disabilities (Meigs
Rain was expected to develop
MR/
DD)
as
the county's share In
across much of Ohio Friday,
the
Ohio
Department
MRIDD's
aftef several days of S!lnny
Habilitation
Center
Restitution
weather.
Moisture from hurricane Hugo Settlement for the Federal
will be noticeable In the form of Health Care Finance
Increasing cloudiness and to- Administration.
The federal reimbursement.
night, aild southern growers may
even see some light ratn tonight. made Wednesday at thP Galllpo·
Most areas should eventually lis Developmental Center, was
see between one-quarter and for the cost of services provided
one-half Inch of rain Friday. A to Medicaid-eligible Ob.loans outfront sliding through the Great side a federally certified faclllty
Lakes Friday will keep a chance between 1982 and 1988.
of rain across Ohio Saturday . A total of $20 million was
before clearing Sunday and distributed to counties statewide
with · the amount of federal
·•
Monday.
Cold air poised In Canada will reimbursement belllg based on
follow t!lat front and bring chilly program enrollments and
weather to Ohio this weekend and billings.
Accordlllg to Melp Superln·
early next week. Highs will
generally be confined to the 60s tend en t Lee Wedemeyer, the
Melp MRIDD participated In
this weekend and Monday.
Saturday and Sunday nights the Title XIX Medicaid Hablta·
apoear the coldest, with lows lion Center program during
1986·87 and 1988.
Continued on page 16

•

.

INSTANT COFFEE

Ohio firs.t sought the Medicaid
reimbursement for ou !patient
developmental services In
March 1982, which was rejected,
according to Brown. The state
sought coverage for habllitatlve
services, which focus on learning
and maintaining life skills. which
Medicaid said was non-medical

In nature ratner than
rehabilitative.
While $20 million of the settlement Is going to county
MR/ DD's, the .additional $10
million Is earmarked for Sup·
ported Living programs. A new
program, It provides support
services to people with developmental disabilities to Jive In
homes In local communities.
Currently, Brown said, there
are 6,000 people on waiting lists
for the Support Living programs.
The single highest check Is $5.7
million, going to MontgQmery
County (Dayton 1. and the smal·
lest Is $8,640 in Vinton County.

Two hurt in Wednesday wreck

Lotsa Pop .••••••••••. $349 Bur ito ••••••·••••• :~:••. 4/ Sl
BIG CHIEF

mUlion Jump-sum settlement
from the federal HCFA for Ohio's
Habilitation Center program.
The Habilitation program provides certain services to ·
Medicaid-eligible. Ohlolans out·
side of feder lly-certlfled .
t
facilities .

Local news briefs--

PATIO

MAXWELL HOUSE

public hearing, as well as the
petition signed by property
· owners In favor of the
annexation.
Six of the property owners on
the west side of. the highway were
against the annexation and testi- .
lied as such in the public hearing.
Only three property owners on
the west side were In favorofthe
annexation and signed the pet!·
lion; one property owner had no
preference; three property
owners could not be located; and
one parcel on the west side Is on
state right-of-way .
No one from the east side of the
proposed annexation testified in
Continued on page 8

Area MR&amp;DD boards recetve
nearly $90,000 in settlement

Deputies probe three accidents

TURKEY
CERTIFICATES
WILL BE HONORED
NOVEMBER 20-23,
1989. NO
REDEMPTIONS
AFTER THIS DATE.

Thi WHk of Oct. 9 we
ask that you bring In
your card and
exchange it for a new
card (for our
inventory. purposts).

Councilman Robert Gilmore who will then present the suggested revision to Middleport
VIllage CounciL If the revised
proposal is accepted by Middle·
port, the commissioners will then
take appropriate actions to of!lclally Incorporate the 30 parcels
Into Middleport.
The original annexation proposal Included the 30 parcels on
the east side of the state highway
and 14 parcels on the west side of
the highway, as Indicated by a
map which was prepared by the
village.
In making their decision, the
commissioners considered tes· ,
tlmony . which was given In a ·

•

Cuml"p, Roger Hoffman and John Lightfoot
worked the tower; with help from Ivan Wood,
George Nesselroad and Jolm Seldeaabel on the
ground. Ernie Slssoa, line supervisor, was also on
tbe scene. Sisson reports that all Ohio Power lines
are Inspected on a regular basts for rnalntenaace
problems. "We don't just put them up and forget
about them," Sisson says.

112 GAL.

.

CASE OF 24-12 OZ. CANS

Certificates can
only be ·redeemed
on the purchase of
·a turkey. No cash
refunds will be
made. ·

'

property annexation

One space will be
validated each
week with the
purchase of
$15.00 or more
(excluding beer.
wine and tobacco
products).

Only one space
may be validated
each week.

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. NewiPaper ·

Commissioners seek

The first two
weeks are FREE.
No Minimum
Purchase.

HOMEMADE

2 Sections. 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday. September 21, 1989

LB.

BUCKET

Mostly cloudy tonight. Low
In mid 60s. Chance of rain 40 ·
. percent. Friday, high In mid
70s. Chance of rain 80 percent.

0

•

'

'

He advised that as a Medicaid
Habilitation Center, Meigs
MR!DD Invested to provide
additional services In the school
age and adult !frvlce programs.
These services, according to
Wedemeyer, Included oc~upa­
tlonal therapy, physical therapy,
nursing services. speech · and
language and transportation .
Under Title XIX Meigs
MR/ D.D was to be reimbursed for
up to 58 percent of the Incurred
expenses for these expanded
services, Wedemeyer said. 811lmg In the covered period totaled
$102,836 with an expected return
of $5,474, he pointed out.
However, at Wednesday's dis·
trlbutlon Meigs MR/ DD's share
of the reimbursement was
$40,000;
.
Wedemeyer explained that the
$20 million dlstrlbu ted statewide
to counties was made available
to the state after years of
litigation with the federal aoverrunent over the. appropriate(Continued on Pa~re 8)

.,

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