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                  <text>fl-ae-D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

September 24, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

October is best
Small business research funds available
time .· to plant ·tulips

helps the state's small techno!- ·
POMEROY - Gov. Richard F . lty 'tor Ohio's small technology· Included In the defense depart·
ogy
companies apply for federal
Celeste announces that Ohio's -oriented businesses to become ment's annual SBIR solicitation,
SBIR
awards. Ohio's SBJRProSmall Business Innovation Re- Involved In federal research, ·• which was released earlier this
gram
counsels
companies on the
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUP! ) -Whether you plant new or
search (SBIRI Program Is offer· Gov. Celeste said. "With the month. The solicitation book
SJi!IR
proeess,
project
IdentificaAlthough September Is an excel· divided bulbs. ml.x a bulb tertii· . lng small Ohio companies to assistance available through describes each of the SBIR
tion
and
design,
and
proposal
lent time to plant most spring· lzer or bone meal Into the soli
compete for a shareof$60mlltlon Ohio's SBIR Program, more research topics, provides com·
Assistwrtting.
Five
Technical
flowering bulbs, Ohio State Uni- below the bulbs. Those products
available from the u. s. Depart- companies have a chance to win panies with procedures for sub·
ance
c
..
nters
have
been
estabversity horticulturist Barbara contain the right amount of
mlttlng proposals and Identifies
funding."
ment of Defense (DOD I.
Williams says October Is the best phosphorous that the bulbs need
The federal SBIR awards wlll resources to contact for more 'ushed around th" state to provide
Approximately 1,200 awards of
area companies with direct,
time to plant tulips.
at planting time. Follow the
up to$50,000wlllbemade by DOD support feasibility research lor lrtformatlon. Requests for the
personal assistance In sul.lmlt"All sprlng·flowerlng bulbs package ·dtrectlons carefully.
to U.S. firms with 500 employees specific topics Identified by the Deparment of Defense SBIR tlng federal SBIR proposals.
sl!ould be In the ground by the end
-Plant bulbs in areas with! or less. The agency will accept Department of Defense. Success· Solicitation may be directed to
The federal .SBIR Program
of October." Williams said. good drainage that recel·ve at
SBIR proposals through Jan. 5, lui research projects may later Ohio's SBIR Program.
was
created In · 1982 to provlqe
"That's because they need time least six hours of sun daily .
The range of topics available
qualify for up to $500,00(1 from
1990.
small
firms with funding for
to get their roots established. Waterlogged bulbs wlll rot.
"This round of SBIR awards DOD for prototype development. from the .Department of Defense research and developmeni proGood fall growth ensures bulbs
-Bulbs should be in an upOght
from the Department of Defense
·More than 800 topics are covers most technology fields, lee .
Department of DeIncluding materials, artificial
take. up nutrients In the spring. It position when planted. Don't
provides an excellent opportun·
fen
e
Is
on
of
11 federal agencies
also helps them flower well and press them into hard soli. This
Intelligence, specialized devices
In the SBlR
p
tlclpatlng
reproduce.··
can damage their rooting ability.
and equipment, films. sensors.
'
rogram.
To keep flowering, tulips have Plant them in groups or clumps
textiles, communications, elec·
Ohio small businesses with
Ironies, automotive. lasers, ceto form new bulbs in the ground at the proper depth and at the
questions
concernln15 the SBIR
every year, Wllllams says. recommended distances. Usu·
ramics, software development;
Program
andor
the Department
Ohio's climate does not favor this ally, smaller bulbs are planted
chemistry, medical, nuclear
of
Defense
SBIR
sollcltiatlon.
are
type of growth, so tulips don't two to four Inches deep while
energy and nondestructive
encouraged
to
contact
Mark
·
spn1ad In the garden. she says. larger bulbs are planted 6 to 8
testing.
use
It
as
a
modi!!
for
free
trade
In
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(UPI)
manager,
Ohio's
SBIR
Skinner,
And each year, their flowers gei inches deep:
Created · In 1988 by Gov . CeRapidly expanding Asian econo· ·other res trlcted economies."
-Select solid, large bulbs. Soft
leste, Ohio'~ SBIR Program Program, (614) 466-5867.
smaller.
That means setting the right
mles are an opportunity for U.S.
But narcissus, which includes bulbs or lightweight ones are
trade
agreements, producl~
farmers
and
food
processors
to
daffodils. will spread in the usually diseased. Avoid bults
products
Asians want and prom·
sell
more
of
their
products,
and
garden.
with blue or green mold spots.
.oting
those.
commodlti(!S. Some
an
conference
sponsored
by
Ohio
"Narcissus spread from their · Mold can damage or destroy
firms
have
already succeeded
·
State
University's
Department
original bulbs and can colonize bulbs-.
·
others
can
learn from that
and
of
Agricultural
Economics
and
an area In a few years," Williams
-If you have to store bulbs
success,
Tweeten
says.
Sociology
Is
designed
to
E.ural
says. "Plan to avoid garden before planting, keep them In a
The
cortference,
"Realizing
help spur such exports.
overcrowding when . you plant cool, dry place until planting
Economist Luther Tweeten Opportunities for Farm and Food
narcissus. Count on separating time.
says
Americans can crack these Product Exports to the Pacific
your narcissus every four years
-Consider choosing bulbs
markets
by marketing spe- Rim" will be held Oct. 24-25at the
new
and planting some of them in other than tulips, daffodils and
cifically
to
the
Asian countries. Ramada University Hotel on .
other areas."
hyacinths. Spring·flowering
But
before
such
a
marketing plan Olen tangy River Road In ColumIt's easiest to separate over- bulbs that also produce colorful
c·a n have any effect, there has to bus. For more lrtformatton, con'
.crowded daffodil bulbs in spring flowers in unique shapes Include
be free trade between the Far tact Tweeten at 614·292·6335.
after their foliage turns yellow . allium, anemone, chionodoxa,
East
and the United .States.
The Asian trade conference
Dig them up, dry them out and crocus, eranthis, fritlllarla, ga·
Includes
s!Jeakers from Industry.
"There's opportunity ahead,"
replant them In fall, Williams ian thu s , iris , leucojum, ornlthog·
government
and academia. Top- .
Tweeten says. "Asian countries
says.
alum, oxalis, ranunculus and
are growing rapidly and want to lcs include export promotion.
She offers these tips on plant· squill.
continue using the United States product dltferentlatlon and the
lng anil selecting bulbs:
outlook for trade.
as a market for their goods.
Representatives from several
"At the same time they're
trying to Increase their Individ- Asian countries will present
ual standards of living and that information on reaching their
means they want more of our markets. Daniel Amstutz, chief
agricultural products. If we play agricultural trade negotiator
our cards right, we can open the under President Reagan will
Asian market even further and address the group.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A feeders and waterers- all make
swine specialist says farmers a difference in the stress a pig
concerned about feeding . and . gets each day.
Healthier, happier pigs should
genetics In raising pigs often
overlook another key factor, the reach market weight faster and
more efficiently. And that means
pig's environment.
¥" 10 S.E.E.R. EFFICIENCY
The 510HP is Heil's mo&lt;i nuv&lt;erful, mo&lt;t
agrlculture·related displays and
less
production cost.
"'fhe environment your pigs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) II"
GREATER
ENERGY
SAVINGS
~fficient heat pump. Buy one now andwe'll
Some of Ohio Stale's work on Americans' love affair with demonstrations held at Ohio
live in. is just as important a
- ··· · -·-mcludc the Homeowners Extended Lahor
stress on hogs
environmental
management Issue as nutrition
quick-stop meals shows no sign of State's Mqlly Caren Agricultural
¥" COMFORT ASSURED
andPartsprogram(H.E.L.I~)',anu-"''rTY.5
or genetics, yet it's often ig- . will be reviewed at Swine Tech- dying. A recent national survey Center near London.
DEALER
year protection plan that covers labm ;md
"Specific nutritional informa·
p;.1rt" ~.:ha~cs on &lt;~II rcp;til":\.
nored," Jerry Shurson of Ohio nology Day, Sept. 8, at the showed that the average tee·
Western Branch of Ohio State's
State 'University says. "When
nager eats at least one dinner a lion Is available for most of the
Ohio Agrlculturai Research and week away from home- usually nation's fast foods," Coplin says.
"OnJyatl)lltk~tinQdulm.
~~-pyou think about environmental
"""""""''
m"" """""''
,:._,
•'But even If you can't have it In
Development Center near South at a fast·lood restaurant. .
problems for pigs you have to
II.E.L.P. contrxt.
front
of
you
when
you
order,
pay
Charleston.
consider the stress !hey can put
But burgers and fries aren't as
-As-k-us=a"'bc-o--u,-t""it!"',- - ••,.•.., •c""''"" """""""
"As university researchers, bad as they sound, says Sharron attention to controlling the
on the animal.
we're trying to do more to Coplin, nutritionist at Ohio State amount of fat, salt, sugar and
"We know stress can add up
understand how environmental University. Nutrition Is a matter total. calories in your meal."
and cause the pig to be Jess
factors influence pig comfort and of what you eat, not where.
Curious about how your favor·
healthy or not grow as well. So
performance
as
we
work
toward
lte
fast foods do nutritionally?
let's reduce that stress, let the
"We all want the advantages of
improving
management
practl·
·
Coplin
wql have copies oi infor·
pig grow more efficiently and
convenience, speed and bullt·ln
ces,"
Shurson
says.
"That
means
mation
from an Independent
Improve profits."
dishwasher service that we find
985-4222
CHESTER, OHIO
paying
attention
to a lot of things when we grab a quick bite to analysis of fast food at Farm
Shurson says pork producers
besides the bottom line. The-key eat," Coplin says. "The trick Is Science Review.
who pay attention to the little
Is to be able to recommend a learning to choose wisely on each
things that stress their pigs
production practice lhat makes and every trip to the local
benefit in the long run. Pen size
money and is good for the pig fast·food franchise."
and shape, temperature, the
too. "
number of pigs in a pen, types of
,.
Coplin has the recipe for
healthy fast-food eating .and
she'll tell all in the Horne
Economics Building at the 1989
Farm Science Review, Sept.
19-21. The Review is 1,000 acres of
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) -An likely to be caught in the squeeze, .
Ohio State University economist Tweelen says, and the governsays phasing out agriculture ment should carefully examine
price supports worldwide would the impact on these producers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP))
be good for the majority of the before taking away any support Forage shortages are likely to be
U.S. farm economy .
programs that help them.
a problem this fall and some beef
Luther Tweeten says such a
On the whole though, the
and dairy farmers will consider
move would open new markets to
benefits of an open economy
buying standing corn to cut as
American farmers.
outweigh the costs.
silage. Gary Schnltkey, agriculThe . 5 percent of American
As for the problem of getting tural economist at Ohio State
•'
farmers that produce 50 percent other countries to go along with Unillersity, says buyers and
of the country's output are such a move, Twceten says the sellers should set the price before
Geoigle~
...
efficient enough to compete in an United States could simply cut all harvest. In setting that price,
open world market . For the 50 its own supports and sell Its consider any value the grain
FORE~T
percent of the country's farmers products at till' "natural world farmer will lose by selling his
who produce only 5 percent of price. "
corn as silage rather than harv·
D Subtle woodgrain texture
U.S. farm output, lost income
Without supports, the United es tlng it later and selling the
from unsupported crop prices States would ·undersell most grain as well as the feed value of
D Fifty-year limited warranty •
wlil 'be made up through th e other nations and make it dlffi· that corn as silage. These two
off·farm jobs they typically hold cult for other countries to justify numbers give the range in which
D Virtually maintenance-free
anyway.
lhe cost of export subsidies to the two parties can negotiate the
Mid-sized producers are mos t their taxpayers.
actual price of the standing corn.

Conference looks
at Asian markets

Pig's environment
often overlOOked

Hell's Energy Efticient
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Amerkans should eat
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WARNER

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Economist says U.S. should
phase out fann price supports

Shortages likely

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

CHARLESTON, S.C. (UP!) Authorities said they would begin ·
searching Isolated localities
.Monday for more victims of
Hurricane Hugo. which devas·
tated a third of the state and
caused more than $2 billion In
damage.
Gov. Carroll Campbell said
Sunday there were areas that
officials still had not checked,
and addeQ that damage was
eJtpected to "far exceed" the $2
billion officials estimate Hugo
caused to buildings and homes In
Charleston County.
''We are stlll looking for
fam!Ues and people, Individuals
located In isolated areas." Camp.bell said. "They may be In
shelters. We just don't know."
The storm kllled 16 people In
the United States, 24 In the
Caribbean and left thousands
at EllS. Also pictured are Mise Rile hie's escort,
Mike Martin and Miss Murphy's escort, Tom
Morrisey.

EASTERN HOMECOMING QUEEN
CROWNED - Last year's Eastern Homecoming
Qu~en, J&amp;fne Ann Ritchie, crowaa the 1989 queen,
Amy Murphy, during Saturday night ceremonies

NEW YORK (UPI) ,- George stage for a superpower summit
Bush's apjieluarice Moilday at
In the spring or summer of 1990,
the United Nations, his first as and the two signed a "memoran·
president, provided a touch of dum of understanding" on chern·
~ nostal"'o for the man who
weapons ·as ~ a bilateral
..........
""--·=-"'' ....
----- ,. - . "' leal•··
•cy•.,sen=
the ,.,,~
aumlnlstratlon
agreement;
,
·
of . Richard Nixon at the world
Bush has expresse concern In
body. .
the past about the.value ot any
Bush, who · served as U.S.
ban that does not- Include all
ambassador from 19TI·73, ad·
nations.
dressedtheU.N.GeneraiAssemA senior U.S. official who
bly· Monday to "offer a new requested anonymity said the
Initiative . that wlll bring the summit probably Wlll require
world closer to a ban on chemical two more preparatory meetings.
weapons," said Secretary of between Baker and Shevard·
State James Baker.
nadze, the first In November or
Baker conducted successful January, probably In the Soviet
negotiations with Soviet Foreign Un Jon:
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
Bush promised a summit cov·
over the past tl)ree days in erlng."a wide array of subjects,"
Jackson Hole, Wyo., setting the but placed particular focus on

'f

Phone 675-1160
vaney Drlw. Point Plt-nt. w.va. 25550
...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-.~ r ._3_1_2_6_th_S_t_re_e_t_ _ _-,-_______P_o_ln_t_P_Ie_a_sa_n.;.::t,:...:WV:.::..:.-.r ~
}:-

1 Section. 10 Pagos
A

26 C.nti

Muhimodio Inc. Newopopor

rebuilding efforts and offers of
aid pouring in to City Hall.
He said all 500,000 residents ot
the Charleston metropolitan
area were otlll without power and
300,000 served by the water
system could not be certain their
drinking water was safe.
'"!'he pressure Is acceptable,
but when you shut down a water
system you run the risk of the
water being contaminated," he
said. "We don't think It was
contaminated, but If It was It
would be a terrtble thing."
Riley said the city was testing
the water and should know by
noon Monday If people can
resume drinking tap water. He
said sanitation pickups, halted
since Hugo struck. would resume
Monday.
''There are no health probelms
associated with (the accumulat,
lng garbage) .yet," he·said, "but
we are not going to let It around
any longer."
The mayor had no estimate on
how long electrtclty would be out
In the 300-year·okl city and
surrounding area.
"This Is a Herculean task, and
getting power back Is our top
priority," he said. "Hospitals are
our first priority and then main·
talning the water and sewer .
system. High on that priority list
are obviously grocery stores and
gas stations."
. R)Jey S&amp;.!d.the CltyCO\Inell also
adopted an ordinance In the
emergency session Saturday
night that outlaws ·prlce-go~jglng
after a few gas stations there
began charging up to $5 a gallon,
and some people were peddling
lee, water, tools, propane, batter· ·
Conilnued on page 10

"Foul play Is suspected" In ihe death of three people found
dead Ibis morning at a Kanauga home, according to GaiDa
County Prosecutor Brent A. Saunders.
·
The victims were Identified as Marvin Wears, 94, Beulah
prospects for rpovement In anns
· Wears, 81, both of 41Ji Foul:th Ave., Kanauga and Audrey Foster,
conlrill.
. ·
·
·
50, of Millon, W.Va. Foster Is the daughter of Mrs. Wears.
Bush told repo_rters ·~unday
The Gallla CounQ- Sherlfr s Department received the Initial
that) he had ''added a couple
c811
to t.l l .f9Jirill j\ve., .this momiDg, tel~g- them of .three
tiling$" to his U.N. apeecl\ to · •
people
s•pectecl dead at that address.
reflj!f.t the advances made dur·
At
the
sceae were Saunders, assistant prosecutor Mark
lng • the talks In Wyoming beSheets,
prosecutor's
Investigator Mike Fenderbosch, Shj!rlff
tween Baker and Shevardnadze.
Denis
R.
Salisbury,
Chief Deputy Carlos Wood and several
II) his · speech, Bush also
other sheriff's deputies.
·
tOU\!hed on regional corifllcts,
The
Bureau
of
Crbnlnal
lnvesdgallon
was
aodfled,
aild at
particularly the continuing tur·
press
time
local
officials
awaited
lbe
BCI's
arrival.
mqllln the Middle East slrtce the
U-~· has . stepped back from
promoting any peace Initiative In
that area while encouraging
E~ptian President Hos_
ni- Mu·
barak. to pursue his 10·polnt plan
for bringing about elections in
Kroger lost more than . $17
nok~ said Kroger had offered a
ROANOKE, Va. (UPI) th~ occupied West Bank and
million In the first half of this
raise
of
5
cents
per
hour
per
year
About
2,600
Kroger
grocery
store
Gaza strtp.
year as it tried to recover from a
for the next lour years.
employees who voted to strike at
'
j
dividend
paid to stockholders to
The union said employees gave
midnight Sunday night will be
hold
off
a
takeover attempt last
up $1 per hour three years ago
considering a proposed contract
·
When the company said It needed year.
settlement Monday afternoon.
The strike affects 39 stores, but
Kroger spokeswoman Joann concessions, and they have gotBoone said company officials ten back only 62 cents per hour Boone sa'ld all siores are opera!·
lng_normally.
since then.
and the United Food and Corn·
mercia!
Workers
met
In
emer·
'
gency sessions throughout the
ensure his election as president.
night and came up with a
1The book details how Presser's
proposed contract early Monday
f~ther, Wllllam, working through
morning .
tljen Teamsters president Frank
Workers In Western VIrginia,
F;itzslmmons, got then President
Tennessee
and West VIrginia are
~!chard Nixon's White House
scheduled
to
vote on the proposed
a;de Charles Colson to place
contract Monday· evening.
~~:~~so! .~~!:::f!~t~f.~nents on
BoOne said the Cincinnati com·
I Fitzsimmons also was able, the
book says, to get the Nixon . pany understands union leaders
~dminlstratlon's cooperation In will recommend. acceptance of
c,rlppllng former Teamster Pres- the contract. The union was not
Ident Jimmy Hoffa's attempt to Immediately available for
return to power after his release comment.
Union officials said Sunday the
r'rom prison.
strike
was approved because
J Hoffa. who had been sentenced
salary
offers by the company
tl:l prison for a jury·tamperlng
were
unacceptable.
UniOn local
~nvlctlon, had expected Fltz·
president Gene Moser In Roa·
simmons to be merely a care·
taker until the prison term
l!xplred, to be content with being
acting president until Hoffa
could return. But, the book said,_
Fitzsimmons had different Ideas
and enlisted the Nixon admlnls·
!ration - through Colson - to
CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
help.
problem developed Saturday
, When Hoffa was paroled, a night during the spinning lor the
'condition set by the Justice Kicker game during the Ohio
'Department said he could not Lottery drawings, prompting lot·
hold union office for seven years. tery officials to can for a decision
Hoffa later disappeared and, from the game's director Ron
according to several reports, was Nabakowskl.
murdered .by mobsters.
The lottery drawing host had
The book, "Mobbed Up: Jackie hit the Ieverson top of the Kicker
machine to reveal the six
1 Pres!M!r's Hlgh·Wlre Life In the
Teamsters, the Mafia and the numbers, l.lut the first number
. FBI," -was written by James stopped In between the numbers .
5 and 6. The oilier five numbers
1 Neff, a former reporter for The
Plain Dealer and now a seniOr came up an right - 34515.
editor at Cleveland magazine.
· The machine resembles an
Neff's book said the Teams· automObile's odometer and Is
ters'lnfluencelntheNixonWhlte deslped to stop on a number,
r House was so pervastve that In ,aid ·1ot~ry spokeswoman Anne
1973 Attorney General Richard Bloomberg.
CONCENmATION OFJI' - 'l'hllllUie felltw could have gotten .
Kleindienst refuaed an FBI re"In the event of a malfunction·
bywl&amp;ballltleleubelpfr-welkn-lqfrlendauhetriedtoaet
quest for a 20-day extension on a lng of the Kicker machine during
up bll patt at Ward~~¥'• Harwn IIW&amp;Ival Ia Raelae. Hlllluddl•
wiretap that was threatening to practices, we are to utilize one of
Jut wOIIIda't Ita)' out of Ule WI!¥, wlllcll IDterrupted hll
expose Fitzsimmons' complk:lty the · Plck·3 or Plck-4 ping· pong
coiiCeatratlon. The puttllllll'eell pme wu fiiiOIIIOrell by Sou them
in a .Mafla klckba_ck scheme.
biQ1Wer rnllchlnes," Bloorilberg
Local School Dlltrld's c-r Committee.
Continued on page 10
said.
·

Kroger strike _may be short

Book says Presser used lfBI
to eliminate rivals within!Teamsters
'

CLEVELAND (UPI) - A new
book about Jackie Presser says
the late Teamsters union presl·

dent used his position as .an FBI
Informer to eliminate rivals
within the union's hierarchy and

,....-Local News Briefs,-t
No one· injured in accident
No one was Injured and there were no citations as the result of
.
an accident on the Pizza Hut parking lot.
~omeroy pollee reported that Charlotte Stewart, Pomeroy R.
D .. was parked along the slde walk In front of the entrance when
a car driven by Mary Lavender, Middleport, backed from a
parking space into the left rear of the Stewart car. Tbere was
minor damage to both vehicles.

.

Randall Denney and Crace were treated and released for
cuti and Adam Denney and Rhodes were treated and. released
for bruises.
, Contlflued on page 10

.

,,.
'

•

homeless,
Charleston's mayor appealed
for help Sunday In cleaning up
anq rebuilding the historic city,
which was without electrtclty,
drinking water or h9mes for
more than 75,000 people.
·''This Is a grand opportunity
for members of this community
and the rest of the country to help
those less fortunate," said Mayor
Joseph Riley, standing at the
roofless Oty Hall.
"Our goal was when the
hurricane hit to do the best job
any city ever did ln,preparlng Its
people," he said, "And now our
goal is to do thebestjob any city
ever did In recovering from lt."
Riley said City Council
members in an emergen.cy session formed a new governmental .
agency called the Department of'
Volunteer Labor to coordinate

Foul play is suspected
in death of 3 people

Bush visits United Nations

.

Hours: Monday-Frtday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m. to 12 noon

•

Pomeroy1 Middleport, Ohio. Monday, September 26. 1989

Search continues for
.fatalities after Hugo

Center.

J1r. family of professionals

,..

.

Vol.40, No.98

Copyrighted 1988

Four Gallla County residents were -Injured In a two-car crash
Saturday at 10:05 p.m. on S.R. 7 at Eastern High School,
according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
. Injured were the driver, Randall A. Denney, 18, Rt. 1, .
Bidwell; Allam L. Denney, 13, Rt.1, Bidwell; Matihew Rhodes,
13, Rt. 1; Gallipolis; and Christopher J. ·Crace, 13, Rt. 1,
Cheshire, Randall alld Adam Denney were tak"' to Pleasant
Valley .HospltaLby the Meigs County EMS. and Rhodes-and ~
Crace were transported by the Meigs EMS to Holzer Medical

...

Low tonight In mid 50s.
Chance of rain 70 percl!nt.
Tuesday, high In mid 60s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.

•

Four hurt in Saturday acciflent

Colors Available At Higher Price

(304) 675-5220

Page 3

Two accidents were Investigated over the weekend by
Middleport Pollee.
·
·
At 11:19 Friday evening . Mary Lang, Middleport, traveling
north on a Moped on North Second Ave.., Middleport, lost control
of the vehicle and It overturned, Middleport pollee reported.
She was taken by the Middleport unit of the EMS to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment. Lang was cited for failure to
control.
.
Sunday at 4:20 p.m. a car driven by Jeffrey P. Hood,
Middleport, was struck by the vehicle of Larry R. Rutter,
Pomeroy, as he pulled from a parking place on North Secoild
·
·
Ave. ·
Middleport Pollee reported that there was damage to the
right door and front of the Hood car. Rutter was cited for failure
to yield and DWI. There were no Injuries. ·
.

Double 4
or
Double 5

Adolescent Medicine

Pick·3
None
Pick-4
None
Super Lotto
None
Kicker None

Middleport police probe mishaps

$39.95 sq.

Infant, Children

Ohio Lottery

49ers, Bills
rally to win
NFL .contests

Lottery has
Kicker malfunction

..

...

'

'

�m•nentary
111 Court Street
PomenJ, Olllo

'1

DEVOTED TO THE IN'l'EitESTB OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA

Page-2-The Deily S1211inel
Pomeroy-Micklaport. Ohio
Monday, Septanber 26, 1989

Nuclear power · opponents could be
silenced.
Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

WASHINGTON - Opponents
of nuclear power may feel cocky
after stalling plants In Califor. ROBERT L. WINGETT
nia, New Hampshire and Long
Pabl.. ber
Island. But a potential meltdown
' looms fe&gt;r them In Congress.
· A bill goes to the House floor
CHARLENE HOEFLICJI
PAT WIID'EBEAD
soon
that would curtail chances
General Manaser
AMIIWit Publt.ber/ ~atroUer
for the public to speak out against
nuclear plants before they are
LETl'EBS OJ' OPINION lire welcome. 'l'loq ollould be 1-. IUD Ill
opera
tiOna I.
......, ..... AU lelten are aubjed 1e ediiiDJ aDd maM be olped wllb
Now,
more than ever, the
ume, .....,.,.. .... leleplooae . .mber. No 11Mlpetllellen will be pabIs
using the formal hearpublic
IIIW. LeUen iloHid be ID pod tu&amp;e, addr,..IDJio-, aolp&lt;noull1....
Ing process · to pressure the
1----------------~-------' . weak-kneed Nuclear Regulatory
Commission to enforce safety
measures at the plants. But the
House bill would eliminate the
public bearings that are now held
before a new plant gets a license
to go .to·full power.
Why would Congress even
consider cutting off that public
Input? If you guessed campaign
donations, you're warm.
The operators and builders of
By LEE LEONARD
nuclear power plants have been
UPI Stateboue Reponer
buying access to Congress for
COLUMBUS- When .the Ohio Senate voted last week to establish a
new Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services, ihe
exercise raised more questions than It answered. ,
Lawmakers nervous about the drug problem seemed to want to get
on the scorebQard with something rather than concentrating on a
long-term solution.
Gov. Richard Celeste proposed the new agency; yet he's one ol
those who believes the entire problem of society's addictions must be
treated.
Senate Minority Leader Harry MeshE'l, R·Youngstown, grudgingly
voted for the bill, although he said It would do little to solve the drug
problem. Meshel has his own bill to set up a state drug czar.
Sen. Richard Finan, R·Cinclnnatl, who voted against the bill, also
acknowledged that the entire problem must be addressed, not just
part of it.
" I don't sE'e anyone suggesting that we create a Department of
Drug Enforcement," he said. "We don't have a'Department of Heart
Health or a Department of Cancer Health. "
. Finan said long-term education Is going to be the ultimate an~wer.
· ' "fhe No. 1 solution In drugs and alcohollsE'ducatlon," he said, "not to
use It In the first place or If they use alcohol to use It In temperance."
Finan pointed out that It took 10 or 15 years for the anti-smoking
campaign to have an effect, but It has taken root.
·

"-..-ron-w.a.-

New alco~ol and ~g
recovery department
•
•
raises questions

decades. In just the last eight from the Industry as those who ($93,480); and Thomas BUley, .
years, the Industry has pumped voted against the limitation on R·Va ., ($78,107). One exception
more than $25 million Into the public hearings; according to · to the pattern was Rep. John
campaigns of senators and repre- campaign records.
Dlngell, 0 -Mich., who has resentatives, according to a camThe measure passed by a 13-10 . cetved $121,950 In lndustrycontrl·
paign finance study by the U.S. vote In subcommittee and then bu tions since 1981 but voted .
Public Interest Research Group. was narrowly defeated 22-20 In against Oannemeyer' s bill.
' 'Many of the nuclear corpora- the House Energy and ComUnder the current procedure,
tions that use (campaign dona· merce Committee. But Its ttrelss public hearings are held before a
·!lolls) to buy access to members sponsor, Rep. William Oanne- plant gets a construction permit
of Congress are asking those meyer, R-Callf., vows to bring it and again before It gets a permit
same members to deny lbe to the !loot for a vote of the full to go to run power. Oannemeyer
public ·acc;ess to Important deci- House this fall. o,nnemeyer has wants to eliminate the second
sions," PIRG attorney Blll'MaG- beell a nuclear power advocate ·hearing. He says his bill Is
avern told our associate Stew~rt · for years and the lnduatry has Intended to send a clear slgJial to
Harris.
rewarded him handsomely. He the Industry that the country Is
''It appears the real reason for fi!Celved $45,945 to campaign Interested In "nUClear power as
·these contributions Is ·to buy contributions betWeen 1981 and an American energy option/'
votes,"· said PIRG's Executive 1988 from companies with a
The people whom Dannemeyer
·Director Gene Karplnsky.
direct Interest In nuclear power. • represents may not share his ·
Other beneficiaries to vote for optimism, and at. the very least
It should co~e as 'no surprise the btU In cOmmittee, and lbeir
they deserve the right to be heard
that on the average, representa- . contributions between 1981-88, on safety Issues. Under Dannetives who voted In committee to were Jack Fields, R-Texas,
meyer's amendment, they would
endorse the House bill received a ($99,550); Joe ~arton, R·Texas,
have to appeal their concerns to
good chunk of nuclear money. In ($94,550); Joe Barton,' R-Texas,
the NRC, which has not exactly
fact, since 1981, they have ($94,550); Don Ritter, R-Pa., • distinguished Itself as the cham·
collected· almost twice as niuch ($94,466); Norman Lent, R·N.Y., pion of the people.
"

.

.

Monday, Septanber 25, 1989

•
•
Cardinals ·top Phillies 2-l; Cubs·sweep·Bucs m
senes
By TIM McMANUS
UPI Sports Writer
The St. Louis Cardinals keep
winning, but are experiencing
the frustration of being in second ·
place.
~ Pinch hitter Tony Pena drew a
' two·out, bases·loaded walk In the
·eighth Inning Sunday, lifting St.
Louis to a 2-1 victory over the
Philadelphia Phtllles. It was the
Cardinals' seventh trtumph In
their last eight games, but they
haven't been able to make up any
ground.
St. Louis remains four games
behind Chicago In the NL East
with six games left. More lmpor·
tantly, the Cubs swept ' Pitts·
·
· burgh this weekend.

"(The Cubs) did something we
couldn't do this year- they beat
Pittsburgh," Cardinals man·
ager Whitey Herzog said . "II
Chicago wins two more games,
then nothing matters."
St. Louis Is 5-10 against the
Pirates this season, with three
games remaining 1n Pittsburgh
before their season-ending series
at home next weekend against
the Cubs.
·
"We have to win the rest of our
games," St. Louts' Tom Brunansky said. "Six In a row sounds
pretty tough. We'll look at'lt like
one game at a tbne and go from
there. It something out of the
ordinary • happens, . then that
would be very gratl(ytng."

Third baseman Terry Pendleton said: "I hope Montreal
can win a couple of games
(against the Cubs) . :rhat's the
only chance we have. It surprised
me that Pittsburgh didn't win a

game."
The Cardinals took a l·O.Iead In
the first Inning against Phlladel·
plila . Ozzle Smith singled with
one out and moved to second on
starter Bruce Ruffin's wild pitch.
Todd Zelle then singled up the
middle to score Smith.
Philadelphia tied It In the
seventh when Ricky Jordan
homered on Bob Tewksbury's
first pitch of the Inning. It was his
12th home run of the year.

CLEVELAND:, (UP!)
runnfug back Kevin
Mack, due to ~eturn 'from a
lour-game drug suspension Wed·
nesday, Is to undergo minor
surgery on his left knee Monday.
Mack was suspended before
the final game of tile exhibition
season, one day after he pleaded
guUty to CQcalneuse In Cuyahoga
County Common Pleas Court In a
plea-bargain agreement that
saw several more serious
charges dropped.
Bro~ns

Ernie Accorsl, the Browns'
executive vice presld·ent, says
evidence of Mack's latest knee
Injury surfaced ThUrsday, while
working · out with trainer Bill
Tessendorf.
,
While NFL rules say .suspended players may not work out
with their teams, Mack was
granted a special exemption to
work with Tessendorf for minor
lnjurtes to his knee, calf and
ankle.
Thursday, Accorst said, Mack

began complaining ol a "catchIng 0.1: clicking'' feeling In his left
knee.
"In the mind of a doctor,"
Accorsl said, "It 's kind of an
ominous symptom. He's had
some swetHng In the knee from
time to lime throughout his
career. When he works hard on It,
It swells up."
X-rays at the Cleveland Clinic
Friday proved negative, so Mack
underwent a magnetic resonance
Imaging scan Saturday. MRI

Berry's World
60ot&gt; o"'

side of the argument: that
society can't withstand the negative effects of this particular civil
liberty. For every quiet , casual
drug-user, there seems to be one
who commits crimes, ensnares
children and makes life generally miserable for everyone else
In his path. If drug use can wreak
this much. havoc, we should do
anything to stop it.
Tlien, when J',m just about
ready to see every drug-user In
tile co.u,ntry punished and
pushers given the electric chair
twice, the otjler side .counters
with another rational argument:
You won't stop hardened crbnl·
nals by upping the penalties,
because those people think
they 're smarter than the cops
and they always will. I don't
know how many reformed drugusers I've heard speak lately
(usually from )all where they
ha~e little else to do but reflect on

Sarah Overstreet
past follies) who have echoed
those sentiments exactly~
Another argument against the
new drug policies Is that uruess
we~re willing to up the price tag a
lot, we're doomed to fall. Some
cities are slapping pushers'
wrists now because they need all
of their available prison space
for killers and rapists. And from
the statistics I hear, you could
convert every church camp In
America Into "boot camps" for
casual users and still not have
enough cots.
II President Bush goes this
extra step, I believe he has a
fighting chance. If we les10en the
avallabllty of drugs, then give
users a hope of something ~letter
for their lives, I think we might
finally hit on something attractive enough to replace drugs.

Who can govern New York City?wut~nm Rusher

In

iteO,

tbe first

American ww"'*per, called "PubUck i' i c::~~ h!~~ ~ay:

OCcuiTI!llCea, Both Forelp and Domeatlc," appeared fu Boltc!.•-'·-· . P

aa

••u·

e

scans outline the body's soft
tissues, and Dr. John Bergfeld, .
the team's physician, said It
showed a loose object, perhaps a
piece of floating cartilage.
Bergfeld will perform arthros·
coplc surgery,.Jn which a probe Is
Inserted Into the knee to remove
tile obJect . Such patients often
leave the same day of the
operation, so Mack's recovery
time should not be too long.
Accorsl says Mack should be
able to return In about two
weeks, meaning he should be
ready for the Oct. 15 game
against the P.lttsburgli Steelers.
Meanwhile, tackle Cody Rl·
slen, who underwent arthroscopic surgery on his elbow In late
July and has been having problems with his left knee for several
weeks, had It flare up again
Saturday and his status for
Monday's game against the
Cincinnati Bengals was not expected to be known until the
kickoff.

STEAL§ SECOND - Cincinnati's ·Herm Wlnnlnsbam steals
secoad In Sunday's same at Atlanta. Braves's shortstop Jeff
Blauser Is late In applying the tag. The Braves won, 6-Z. (UP I)

·.clinch AL West title to two

To beat drugs, we must replace them

Today .in history

anci Robby Thompson hit a
three-run homer to power the
Giants and eliminate the Astros
from I'lL West contention. Mike
LaCoss Improved to 9-10 and Jim
Clancy fell to 7-13. The Giants
reduced their magic number for
clinching the division to two:
Padres 1, Dodsers 0
At Los Angeles, rookie Andy
Benes earned his sb&lt;th straight
victory and Mark Davis collected
his 42nd save to guide San Diego.
Benes, 6·2, defeated Ore! Hershlser, 14·15, who lost for the
seventh stralgth time. Tony
Gwynn's sacrifice fly scored
Roberto Alomar with the only
run In the seventh Inning.

A's .reduce magic number t'o

Cheri Walter, the substance abuse administrator for the Ohio
Department of Youth Services, told thE' Judiciary Committee that 60
percent of young drug pushers don't use drugs themselves . They're In ·
I wish I was as sure of a
The possibility· that legalizing
it lor the profit.
solution to the nation' s drug
drugs might encourage their use
Wonder If It would be useful to take advantage of this lust for money problem as some of the people
Is frightening, but I 'm not con-.
... and pay the young entrepreneurs NOT to sell drugs, the way the
who I've heard talking about It
vlnced we'd have any more
government pays farmers for not growing crops.
lately
seem
to
be~ Trouble Is, I · addicts than we have now.
·'
. Better yet, pay them to figure oUt ways to STOP the salE' of drugs .
can see some sense on bOth sides
As a young adult, I knew people
of the argument, which sort of
who took drugs; some of them
leaves me with a final score of 0.
ruined their lives. But I knew
In the '60s, when I was a kid and
most of these people before they
drugs were becoming socially
began to take drugs, and In my
acceptable, the civil libertarian
experience, those who wrecked
viewpoint seemed to be the niost
their lives with drugs were also
philosophically sound: What peo- the ones who had emotional and
ple do In private- as long as they
social problems to begin with.
don' t drive or otherwise enThe more well-adjusted kids
ANIfII'\ I~Gr
danger someone elsE' - Is their might have dabbled l.n drugs, but
own business. That's. their right
the drug use always fell away at
It\!::
as
citizens.
some
point - usually when the
tvuc.RoW,;_VE 0~ .
And the argument th.a t legallz· novelty wore off or the unplealng drugs would drive dealers sant aftereffeCts of drug use
•i'o~IGK'f, l'EA'R~
Into other occupations makes began to outweigh the shorter
some sense, too. Prohibition periods of drug-Induced
made a lot of money for the mob. pleasure.
.
Yet the enormoUs scope of the
As soon as liquor was made legal
again, the mob got Into other present drug crisis has me
pursuits - drugs, to name one. leaning just as 'm uch to the other

It may be that New York
Mayor Ed Koch just never heard
one of Harry Truman's plihy
aphoriSms: If you hang around
this game long enough, you'll get
beat.
More likely, though, Hizzoner
was sbnply doing what comes
naturally to politicians : Wind
them up, and they run for office.
~fter all, he had run and won
three times before; who was to
say It couldn't happen again?
But this time was different.
Three times Koch hlid gone
By United rr- lDierlllitloaal
.
,
Today Is Monday, Sept. 25, the 268th day of 198!1 with 97 to follow . before the voters with a thoroughly favorable Image: as a
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
"reform" Democrat, pledged to
The morning stars are Mercury, .Mars and Juplt,er.
rescue a bankrupt city; as the
The evening stars are Venus aad Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Ubra. They Include man who had In fact pulled New
novelist William Faulkner In 1897, aporll column..! :OVIlter "Red" York back from the brink of
Smith In 1905, Rulalan compoaer Dimitri Sboatakovlch bl1106, actor ramlllar extrovert·around-town,
Aldo Ray In 1926 (age63), reporter Barbara Walterala1931 (811!58), fond of ' asking subway straphanaers "How'm I doln'?"
actor-dlrecior Michael Douglas In 1~ (age 45), and acton Mark
Hamill and Chrlltopber Reeve In 1952 (age37) and Hea~ Locklear , Ia h1l third term, however,
Koch's world seemed to fall
ln 1961 (age 28) .
_
apart. Corruption wu expoaed,
On thll date In history:
and lndictmenta rained down In
In 1513 Spaallll explorer Vuco Balboa ci'OIIed the lathmua of alliiOIIt every department or the
Panallll ~d became tile flnt - - Europeaa to aee the Pacific . city aoveroment. Oty commlsOcean
.11oaen and Democratic c:ounty

Elsewhere In the National victory and Scott Scudder, 4·8,
League:
took the loss . Jeff mauser
Exp011 8, Me&amp;a $
.
smacked his 11th home run for
At New York, Dave Martinez Atlanta. Jeff Richardson had a
blooped a two-run single tocapa two-run double !or Ci ncinnati.
five· run ninth that sparked Mont·
Cabs 4, Pirates Z
real to a come-from-behind vicAt Chicago, Steve Wilson and
tory. Joe Hesketh, 6·4, picked up four relievers combined on a •
the victory and Tim Burke six-hitter to guide the Cubs to
notched his 28th save. JuHo their fourth straight victory .
Machado, 0·1. was the loser. New Wilson, 6·4, got the win to snap his
York's Darryl Strawberry hit a personal four·game .losing
· three-run homer, his 29th ol the streak. Jeff Plea recorded the
season.
final two outs for his first save.
Braves I, Reds 2
Jeff Robinson, 7·12, lost to the
At Atianta, Gary Eave com· . Cubs for the first time In his
blned with two relievers on a career.
four·hltter and Drew Denson
Giants 10, Astros 2
drove In two runs to lift the
At San Francisco, Ke\rln MitBraves. Eave, 2-0, picked up the chell belted his 47th home run

Browns' Kevin Mack· to have knee surgery

Meshells annoyed that after he got the ball rolling with a drug bill
last spring and held town meetings, the Senate Republicans have
their own road show.
The Senaie Judiciary Committee has scheduled a S('rles of public
hearings In major cities. ThE' centerpiece of the GOP effort Is a bill
providing for $50,000 grants !or quall(ylng local drug abuse
preventio·n programs.
Chairman ol the Judiciary Committee Is Sen. Paul Pfeifer,
R-Bucyrus, who says he wants to run for governor but may yet be
induced· to be In a lower spot on the Republican ticket next year.
Pfeifer and another potential aspirant for the GOP gubernatorial
nomination- Columbus Mayor Dana Rinehart- crossed paths last
.
.
week.
'
Rinehart appeared before the Judiciary Committee to ask for a
" new set of sharp tE'eth" In state law for drug peddlers. Pfeifer
appeared to be receptive.

The Daily Sentinel Paga 3

Porna"OY-Middaport. Ohio

rough president of Queens com'
mltted suicide.
Koch himself was never accused of stealing so much as a
penny; but that merely sharp~ned the contrast between his
personal conduct and the rapa·
clous behavior ol the other high
officials of his administration. It
also raised the question of how on
earth all this could· have gone on
without his knowledge. U he
really didn't know about the
thievery, just how detached was
he !rom the harsh municipal
realities? Ed Koch stopped askIng people "How'm I doln'?"
It Is a fair question, of course,

whether New York City Is "governable" at all nowadays. My
own guess Is that- a11n the case
of the nationwide drug crisis the job c:ould only be done with
the use of draconian meuure1
that the votera, deep down, would
rather not see employed. If so,
Koch wu probably as aood a
mayor u New York wanted or
deiervea.
He certainly lmpi'IJVed on lbe
job, PI'OII esafug from knee-jerk
Uber"lsm as a Manhattan con- 1

gressman to something very like Attorney Rudolph Giuliani, who
conservatism In City Hall. Is running as a Republican
"When I was a congressman," he although he admits to having
once reminisced, ''I voted for voted for McGovern In 1972 and ;
everything nice:" Then, slapping has also accepted the nomina tlon ·
his forehead In dismay at his own of New York's tiny Llbernl
disregard of the cost: "How Party. Given the Democrats'
could I have been so stupid?!"
5-to-1 enrollment margin In New
Once he seriously overex- York City, Dinkins should have .
tended himself, running for the little trouble beatlngG!uUanl and
Democratic nomln;ttlon for gov- adding New York to the list of .
ernor ol New York against Marlo . major American cities - · Los ,
Cuomo. Unfortunately Koch was Angeles, Chicago, Waahlngton, ·
unable to conceal his personal· Philadelphia, Detroit, Baltimore
conviction that, north of the - that have elected . black 1
Bronx county line, there Is only a mayors.
howUna wilderness caUed "the
Whether Dinkins has what It ,
sticks," populated by hillbillies takes to stand up to the municipal ,
and cows. Oddiy, though, It was thlevea who walked oft with the •
Koch'a own New York City fans sUverware In the Koch admlnls- '
that pi'IJVed his nemesis. They tratlon Is quite another question. ,
wanted him aa their mayor, not He had better be a lot tougher ;
their governor. Ia the statehouse, than he looks, soundl and acta, or
they seemed to feel, the aort of the citizens of Gotham will walk
buffoonery that amused thlim In all over him In their bare feet. . :
Ed Koch would bave been out of
place:
Vlllmla c (-lllc Dl) -~
talaiCQJiapa,a...-..•
l'Jfoi
Koch' a vanquisher In the just·
tM
f91'
1
11111GD
o(
ttkla,
llpnt
lltl
....
concluded primary, David Din·
.....
It
lleipllleaJ
A
hllld
llllld
kina, Ill as laid-back and 110ft·
fraeMw, lild aida bl r h'''W IOllli
apolr.en as Kocb II bolateroua and
IJpel
of Ytn. and llacttrtal .....
uaerttve. In the November elec,
lieD,
liCCIII'dlllc
lo Tbe WllrY Alma-'
tion he will now face former U.s. , DIC.
,
.'

'

';

FLYING ' HIGH, - Sammy Marlin of the
Patriots (82) top, leaps over Seattle's Neaby
Glugow during second quarter action at SuiUvan

'

Stadium
FoxborouJb, Mass., Sunday . . The
Seabawka won, 24-3. (UPI)

Fi~e

TD passes stake 49ers
to 38•28 win over Eagles
By JEFF SHAIN
·uPI Sports Writer
The team of the 19&amp;ls reminded
the projectE'd te11m of the 1990s
that this decade hasn't run out
yet.
Joe Montana threw four of his
five touchdown passes In the
fourth quarter Sunday, leading
"the San Francisco 49ers to a 38·28
victory over · the Philadelphia
Eagles.
.
"As far asJoelsconcerned, lt's
already been written that he's
the greatest comeback quarterback In all offootball," flrst·year
San Francisco coach George ,
Seifert said. "He's cool under
pressure."
Montana, who completed 25 of
34 passes for 428 yards, hit Brent
·Jones with a 24-yard scoring pass
with 3:17 to play to give San
Francisco a 31·28 lead, then
found Jerry Rice for a 33-yard
touchdown with 2:02 to play to
clinch the victory .
The 428 passing yards were the
third-best In Montana's caneer
and the five touchdown passes
tied his career high.
"You're always sallsf)ed as a
quarterback when all you do Is
thrill" 111e ' !!all," Montana said
•'There's a lot of presaure but·as i
quarterback, you relish that
situation." .
Philadelphia, which recovered
l'rom a 20-0 deficit to defeat
WasblftiiOD G-37 one.week ~ar·
Iter behind the five tnuchdowll
paues of Randall Cunnll~C~Wn,
blew leads of 21·10 and 28-17
agalna( the 48el'a.
"I
this allows wby
tbey're world champions," Philadelphia coach Buddy Ryan

aues•

said. ·'Early on, we had a lot of
opportunities with the turnovers ,
but we didn't take advantage.
"Twenty-elgh~ points ought to
be enough to win In this league. In
the fourth quarter, we couldn't
tackle and , we gave up rushing
the passer. It was unbelievable. "
Cunningham had lofted the ball
to Jimmie Gues In the end zone
for a three-yard 1ouchdown pass
that gave the Eagles a 28-17 lead
with 8:24 to play. :But Montana's
eight-yard TO toss . to · Tom
Rathman capped an eight-play, .
75-yard drive and brought the
49ers within 28-24 with 6:03 to
.
play.
"I ilon'i care how many points
we're down, we don't have
quitters o" this team," Rathman
said. "We give 100 J)ercent until
the final whistle. At the half, we
just figured we had to protect Joe
a IIttle better. "
Cunningham finished the game
completlngl9 of 38 passes for 192
yards and a touchdown, and Luis
Zendejas kicked four field goals.
· San Francisco, 3-0, Improved
Its road record In the 1980s to
50-20-1, the best In the NFL. ·
Elsewhere In the NFL on
Sund!Q', Washington thumped
Dallas 30-7, Chicago routed Detroll 47-27,1ndiaaapoUs outlasted
Atlanta 13.9,SeattleclubbedNew
En&amp;i8nd 24-3. the New York
(llaall blli2Jed Phoenix 35-7,
Plttlburlh aurprlsed Mllllll!lota
· · 27-lt, Tllll\pe Bay •topped New
Orleand0-10, Denver held off the
LA Raiders 31·21, tile LA Rams
~Upped Green Bay 41-38, ,.., New
York Jeta raa put Mlamlt0-33,
Diego defeated Kaaau City
21-i and Buffalo topped Houallm ·

sen

I

474lln overtime.
On Monday night, Cleveland Is
at Cincinnati.
Colts 13, Falcons 9
At Indianapolis, Ezra Johnson
forced two fumbles and Keith
Taylor Intercepted a pass to kill a
late Atlanta drive, helping the
Colts to their first victory.
Johnson knocked the ball from
Atlanta quarterback Chris Miller
and the Colts' Sam Clancy
recovered at the Falcons 23-yard
· une. Reserve quarterback Jack
Trudeau scored the only' touchdown four plays later.
Rears 47, Uo118 Z'7
At Pontiac, Mich., Mike Tomczak guided Chicago to more than
600 net yards and Kevin Butler
kicked four field goals for the
Bears, 3-0. The Lions remain
winless. Rookie running back
Barry Sanders IE'ft the game
early In the second half with a hlp
. pointer. The Hetsman Trophy
winner gained 127 yards, 108 In
the first half, on 18 carrtes.
steelen %'7, Vlkllp It
At Pittsburgh, Bubby Brister
passed for 157.' yards and a
touchdown, and Tim Worley and
Merrtl Hoge scored on secondquarter runs to lead the Steelers.
Gary Anderson kicked fourthquarter field goals of 38 and 44
yards to help the steelers earn
their first vlctoey of the season.
Buccaaeera to, Slllllta 11
At Tampa, Fla., Mark Robinson, whose late hit sidelined New
Orleani q~U~rterback Bo.bbY Hebert In the lint quarter; aet up
Lars Tate's go-ahead touchdown
run with an Interception help the
Buccaneera to their aecond victory.

has the adval)tage.
.
By .JOE ILLUZZI
In
first
place.
They
are
''We're
UPI Sports Writer
Oakland Is Inching closer to Its . the ones that have to catch us,"
second conSecutive American Gaston said after the Blue Jays
League West IItle, while BalU· lost 8·3 to Milwaukee. "They're
more and Toronto are headed the ones that sweat every day
toward a three-game showdown wondering about the Blue Jays. Are they going to win, are they
that will decide the AL East.
going
to lose?'"
'File Athletics, seeking to beThe
Orioles lost an opportur!lty
come the first division champion
to
move
Into a !lrst·place de by
to repeat since the Royals won
losing
two
of three games to the
the AL West In 1984 and '85,
Yankees,
Including
a 2·0declslon
reduced their magic number for
Sunday
In
the
final
home
game of
clinching to two Sunday by
beating the Minnesota Twins 9·3. the regular season.
Oakland clbnaxes the season
" We came here to hurt the
with seven home games, begin· · Orioles," New York first base·
nlng Monday against Texas. man Don Mattingly said.
California and Kansas City are
In other AL games:
tied for second. 5% games behind
Athletics 9, Twins 3
Oakland. They begin a threeAt Minneapolis. Jll!ark
game. 10erles against each other McGwlre belted two home runs
Tuesday In Anaheim. The earH· and had four RBI to carry
est Oakland can clinch Is Oakland . McGwJre homered In
Tuesday.
the serond and added a three-run
"We'll just let It come In kind of blast In the ninth, giving him 31
quietly," Oakland designated ·home runs this season. Storm
hitter Dave Parker said. "We'd Davis Improved to 19·7 and
like to get ltoutoftheway and get .Dennis Eckersley notched his
It done."
32nd save.
Unlike the AL West, the East·
Brewers 8, B)ue Jays 3
ern Division looks like It's going
At Milwaukee, Joey Meyer
to go down to the wire. The Blue doubled home three runs to pace
Jays hold a one-game lead over the Brewers. Tom Filer, 7-3,
the Orioles with six games allowed two runs and six hits In
remaining, Including the final
three against e11ch other.
Unless Toronto sweeps Detroit
and Milwaukee sweeps Baltimore In the next three days, the
division will be decided this
weekend In Toronto.
Both the Orioles and the Blue
Jays lost Sunday. but Toronto
manager Clio Gas ton said team

six Innings for the win, Chuck
Cr!m posted his seventh save.
John Cerutti, 11-!1, allowed five
runs and six hils In five and
two-third Innings. Cerutti Is 0-:i
with 4.24 ERA In his last three
starts.
Yankees 2, Orioles o
At Baltimore, Chuck Cary
allowed two hits and struck outlO
over seven Innings to spoil the
Orioles. Baltimore threatened
each of the last three Innings, but
the Yankees turned them away.
Jeff Ballard !ell to 18·8 despitE'
pitching a complete game. .

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

----I -·-

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SUIIi&lt;rlbln DOidtoilrlltltql*l' tloecar·
rtw ~,.. rtat11 ID adnli.. dlred to
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bull. Crtdllwll be JIIVaocarrter-

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No ....~ by moll ptmOittediD '
or. . wiHrebconeearrter-11
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Available In Chester, -Coolville and
Tuppers Plain
on Charter Cable
1-80()..458-7098

�•
Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

•

Monday, September 26. 1989

MondaY. September 25, 1989

Hugo ·remnant forces festival indoors

Kyger Creek downs Eastern 23-6 to boost mark to 5..0
By DAVE HARRIS
OVP Correspoadent
Kyger Creek's Chad Johnson
ran for a score, passed for one
arid had a sack for a safety t~ help
lead the Kyger Creek .Bobcat.s to
a 23·6 victory over the Eastern
Eagles Saturday night at
Tuppers Plains. The loss spoiled
homecoming activities for East·
ern after Friday's downpour
moved the game from Friday
night to Saturday night.
The Bobcats hit the scoreboard
first with 8:18. left in the first
· quarter when Johnson hit Rob

Gilmore with a nine yard pass .to
complete a 70 yard drive that the
Bobcats covered in seven plays.
Joe Edwards added the first of
his three extra point kicks to
make It 7·0. Freshman Brian Hall
set up the next Bobcat score
about two minutes later, as he
picked off the first of his two
lnterceppttons. That turnover set
up a 32-yard touchdown run by
Edwards at the 6:14 mark of the
opening quarter. Once again
Edl\'ards added the kick to give
the .B obcats a 14-(J'Jead.
That's the way -the score stood

The Eagles hit the scoreboard
with just : 19 seconds remaining
In the contest when Savoy hit
Mike Smith with a two yard
sc.oring toss to cap off a l2·play,
72 yard drive, the extra points .
was no good.
Edwards was the game's lead·
ing rusher with 9,3 yards on justll ·
c.a rrles and one touchdown. Mike
Hoffman led the Eagles with
seven carries for 33 yards, while
Jen Durst added 10 carries for 30
yards. Johnson completed 3 of 9
'p asses for the winners for ill
yards and two Interceptions,

unttl the 9:26 mark In the last
q'uarter, when J9hnson dove in
from a yard out, Edwards was
once again perfect on the kick
and the Bobcats held a 2Ul lead.
That touchdown completed a 27
yard drive that was set up when a
Kyger Creek punt took a strange
bounce and hit one of the Eagles
nnemen and the Bobcats reco·
vered on the Eastern 27. Kyger
Creek made It 23-0 when Johnson
sacked Eagle quarterback
Shawn Savoy In the end zone for a
safety with 5:42 remaining In the
contest.

whtle Savoy completed 6 of 14
passes for 50 yards and three
Interceptions, with all six com·
pletlons coming in the Eagles
scoring . drlv~. Jeff Horn.er
snagged two passes for 21 yards
for the Eagles, while Brian
Vinson caught one for 28 yards
for Kyger. Freshman Brian Hall
piCked off two enemy passes for
Kyger, and Phillip Bradbury had
one, whtle Mike Hoffman and
Wes Holter had one each for
Eastern. · ,
Kyger Creek, _now 2·0 . In the
SVAC and 5.0 overall, wtll hOst

Symmes Valley fqr 112 yards and
a touchdow_n, Wi'S cOnsiderably
less generous to the Pirates ,
holding them to 56 rushing yards
on 30 attempts.
That helped the Oaks to put
some more distance between
themselves and their hosts,
whl~h they did when Ruff broke
loose on a fourth·and-20 draw for
a. 29-yard touchdown run In the
third quarter. Fullback Rob
Adkins plunged across the one
for a fourth-quarter touchdown
to conclude the scoring.
Chris Skidmore led North In
rushing with 17 yards on seven
C;lrrles, and Clay Smith had
seven yards on five attempts.
Billy Williamson was 3 of10for27
yards, but one of his stray passes
went to Oak Hill deep back Shane
Maynard.

Scoreboard ...
NFL
NfiTIONAL Jo' OOTRALL I.EAGUE
1\merk:~~n

Confewnt' P

"""'

W

L T

P1.'l. · PF

&amp;..ffalu .............. '! I 0 .617
NY ,Jf'ts ..... ... ..... l 2 II .33:1
Mlllllll .............. . l ! 0 .113
lnll~ .. l" .... .. I
! 0 .333
NN F.n~nd ..... l '! II .333
Cr-niNI
flt•\'rl:utd .......... '! 0 0 1.000
ClnclatMU. ........ 1 1 Q .:ill&amp;
Ho•!ilon ............. l
t 0 .3:13
PIIC!'Ihullth ......... l :! 0 .33:1
Wol'!ot
Dt·nwr ..............3 o o ueo
lA Rald!'no,....... l 2 0 .33:1
Saa 01 .. ~ ,. ........ I 2 I
.ll:l
St'.lllllr ............... l
2 I .3..1!1
Katn- flly ~ ..... 1 :! 0 .3U

PA

Kl
5-I
.J0

!I
'K
7'1'
70
72

I'll
55

:U
21

1\,11

Kl

II'! II~

37 106
93 . 55
6ft
1!8

.,.,,

Htl
52
a5

SK

30

7-1

NutioaLI { 'olllert"ncf'

M'

L T

Sl' GIIU1h ....... .. 3
Phila drlphla ...... 'l
Ph(l('aix ............. ~

PL1 .

PF

0 0 1.000
I o .li4i7
I 0 .667
:! 0 .3!3
:1 tl, .100

Mo'•hlftJ{lon ~ ... .. 1

Dalll.s ......... n

PA

II&amp; . U
91 11~
~n
72
91

'16

'!II.

~~ ~

II fl 1.000 10%

-U!

Sun FrantiMCO 4RohlnMO•I2-18 ) at Lo,;
IWdtr-landHI, !1:3$ p.m .

ff'nlro~l

Clltcagn ............. :l
TamJM Ray ......• :l

I II

.ti6":

5!t

Gr!!J•n Bas ., .. ..... 1
Mln~sllla ........ 1

"! 0
'! ll

.333

!13

II!

.l:J3

l!l

12

3

.ooo

u

K1

Dt·troil .............. e

o

AII~NI

n.N~'KGam('!l.

!H ·

\\('&gt;01

L.\ R&gt;~.mo; .......... :1
SIUI Fran . ... ....... 3
NMOo Orlt• wu• ...... l

ll 0 l.!JOO IO:J
IJ II 1.000 1\14
'l ll .:133 . 7'!

~ 0
.3:1:1
SuNI~~,V 's Rt• s lil .~

i\tlanta .............. I

71
GK
35

57

Houll:on ........................ lll 7:1 .SS'!
K
1M AnleleM ................ .. 7J Ill .-IP Ill
Cllll'ln.UI ...... ........... .... 72 !1-1 ,-.JU 19
AUanblr ..... ...... .............. ll IS .HI 30
SaluniiiO' '!l Rf'K.lll
Sl . l.oul&gt;1 II, Pha..lh•lphla5
NN" Vork IS, Mo.-n'llll
Orlcqo s, Plltllhurwh :e
Sd Franl'i~~t:o 3, Houlllon I
· San Dlean 1, Lo" Anlf!lf'lll
Cll•ctn... lll, AI lola 5
!!illrdlllf' '~ Rf'K ......
Montreal&amp;, Nftw Vork ~
" ......... Clncl ...lfl '!
st. Lou6,., !, Phlllulelphla I
Chlra«o -1, Pltlllhu,.;h t
Siul Frand8CO II, HouMI.on '!
San Dlep I, L011 An~"' 0
Mord-.y'• Gaimf'll
Sll. LouiH f[koJ.e-o n 18-11 ) Ill PIUIIh8'1h
4lt..ll•.5-1 ) , 7:15p.m.
Phllldrl!illll (Comtm 0.~) Ill Nf'W Vork
I Olt&gt;da IJ.Ifll, 7: J5 p.m .
Chlcqo (S.kllftp 11-11) a.t Monlrnl
{~lth 11· 11), j ; JSp.ni .
Atlanta (Rithanloi 0.0) 11.1 Hou!lton
(Canoll-1 ), II: S$ p.m.
Clndn.UI 4~ary 11·13) a&amp;t San
Dl e p (WhllKDn 1&amp;-IIJ, II:~ p.m.

St . l.o• Ill Pltbhu 11h. nllhl .
PhU.dflphb_ at~N Vorll, nlll!"fll
Chlcaco 1&amp;1 Mon&amp;noal, nllhl
,\tiiUita .. Hou11lon. nllftl
fl~inrllll at ~an DIIPp, niPf
San Frud.-.co at Loll ,\n lcleM. nlll!"hl

Calendar .

3:"o

indlanapoll~ 1:1. Allan~

!I
Hutllllo -17, Hou!&lt;l:nn -II tOT)
fhh:aao -li. ~roli :n

Do, ... ,

Mo!it'OW -

t7, Mlndl'sota 1-1
Tampw. BMy :!:11 , l'li- Or II' lUis 10
SV GlwM.s 33, Pllot'nb 7
Sw.n FrMndM:o 314, Phlllldt&gt;lphha. 'UI
PIU!il~uwh

t-' o!MhWI
C'IMirland at Clw·lnrMtt, 9 p.m .

T1•nnl&gt;1
SilO FrlUH·I!W:·o - mtn'" tournamt'nl

D~tlll." ~

1\'\' .lf'C,. -16, Mlam133
I.A H~&amp;m r-~ 11 . ( irf't'n B:ty ;"'
SunDh•p21, Karillllr-~fll)'ti
lh&gt;nwt' :!1 , LA Rahlt•rstl

su rliJQ'M Sport PI Trun.-lilam;
BaHt&gt; ha.ll
.-\tlll.nta - Annoon(•rdthP l'f'tll'f'mf'ntof
t'lllkh« Rruct• Bt'nt'dlct. IPifl'lilv• 111 1h1•
.-nd of thr !&gt;M'I¥60n; namrd l'lU ('orr.ah'!l

Monda.,v'" G•m1•
( "l••wland al flnt:lnlllli. IJ p.m .
SurdiO'. 01"1 . 1

.

St'OUt.

lndl:ll\llpolis at NV .l••h , I p.m .
1\IJanla '"o;, Grt' J'n Ru.v ill Mli¥-·uu
p.m .

Tr!li¥- i\nnounciPdl-orir.ut II mlnorpllchln« ('Oall' h t-'t•rlU "&lt;&lt;n ,Jt'ollln&gt;l
"111 not hf' rrnf''A'IPd.
Football
D•·nwr - Plat·rf wtdto rPc.-h·Pr Rh·lly
~l&amp;ldt"1 on lnjur't'd r't'!lt'rw•.
!'tro'\' Glut" - Al1h•atrd IIM•ha-.'krr
Pt•pptr Jo tlm'tln; plaud deJrn!&lt;lvl' t'nd
Erll· D&amp;r*',v on I•Ju"'d ""'rr\·t•.

lo!···· 1

lj • ~r

ClndnBUI at K a n~&gt;Uo;fll y. I p.m .
Dl•nwr :tt flt'\"t•hand. I p.m .
.'VII.-.11111 Houtun, I p.m .
· SMio' En ~nd 1P.t Buffalo, I p .m .
PH tHhu 1'1(11 at l)et rntl, 1 p.m .
\\' ll"~nl(loni11Nl'w0rll•.ans, I p.m .
Tampl B~tY al Mlnni'Sota. I p.m .
N\" Gla~~~ls ld Dlllk!;, I p.m .
LA Ram!l ld !&gt;!~&amp;~~ Frand~·u, -1 p .m .
~~~n Dl•· ~ at Ph!M'nb:, -1 p.m .
SJ• alllt- al LA R.aal:dl&gt;r"- I p.m .
Mond-.v. 0L1 . '!
l"hlladt•lphia at ( ' hi('MII!"II, !I p.m .

Ohio Hlll!"h Sl· hool Football R""dt"
SahwdQY. s .. pt. '!:&amp;
Akron N 6, Akr f1•n How D {ol)
Ama'ntla (' h •an·rt•t•k 3t Lant• Fhht•r I
Jko~hwood :.!7 , C1•·l.uttlnan " ' n

Brooklyn ; , In dt'I)Pndrnl'f' D
("a&amp;)d,lotoll S-1, ZIUI~ Jle~iel'1110H ~

Majors

{"••''•· 12. flyl'luCatb3
( 'In Mot'llt'l' 3-1. 0-.y Dutil at 0
C'lt' -lo£&gt; 'H. Akr Hoh1111 0
f'lmlllro..,. '!:1, a.nwe (\\'\Ill) 11
fol \\':atwrson 'lO, Marion Ha&amp;rdlnl G

Ry Un lll'd Pr"""lnh•r ntl klml
AMER If" ,\1\' l.EAJIUE
.

Ea.o;t

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Turunlo .... ..... .............. K!'I 71 .5-15 8u1Unwn•.. . ...............M 7~ .S:J!I
I
Mllwuukcl· ........ ......... "'9 "16 - ~••
3 !'t
Roo;lun ....... ....... ......... "'ll I. M3
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:-;,"". \ 'o rk .................. jl 11-1 .UM 13 1··1
('lj•YJ'hllld .. ...... ...... . ...... "11 115 .-155 I-I
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. ......... :Jj M .31~ ·til
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ou.klllnd ....................... !1-1 Ill .llli

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C'allfurnla ......... ......... llt 1"1 .511
S'tt
K~~on-t" 'lly ............... lll 6j ,511
S1't
Tt'!l:llH ...... ....... ...... .... .... 111 75 JUt "
Mln""'"llM ........ ......... 77 7!t .-lt-1 1;111
!o\~attlf- ....................... 11 117 .-1-12
f'hll-~o ........................ ti K-1 .-I'll

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OM·rhllldi~Ca1Worniu3, IMtaanw
t1t"Yrlund 6, Calllornillo 't 2nd •111M

t•airllllld II, Rot•k Hill 7
Fnl.nk Fur Gr e en -1!1, ITe.ton S·l6
H~annhw Rlvrr 20. llut'kryt• N G
H~~orri11un 27, On McNi t· hola.~ II
Howllftd 17, Nllf'lli
lnd Lllkl' 15. Kcntoa Rl~ 1:.!
K,u ·rr C'rl't'k 'l3, Rt'f'do;rillt' £a,oi ll•r n ti
Uma CT 13, AIIIPD F. 1-1
Un!dy CWVal 3, Hud11011 \\'~n R8v I
Malwrn '!I. ('onofton Val G
McDf'rmou NW 211, Mlnterd II
Mineral II d(t It, Pf'U'r8 Sprtn~ '!I
Nn'('ORW&gt;r~"• :ttl,
('('It Uol l
0•k Hill t-4, N Gallia!:
Port.n. . . 3t, lu!IMI"IJ tKy } !I
Pymalunh•l VIII 1..211, Lf'Q.mom 7

T••v

Rad•

MIIMU~ter

t, Toronlo I
&amp;ltlmol"'' II, Nt•w Vork 2
~-~~ K, K1u11•" Cllyf

Han~an

Tral·r I

HoW lhr UPI TopH,IIIorl'd S"..-.1"-':
I. Nelrr- ~ 13-IJ 4f'featrdMicllipn
St.ef' H ·IJ. Nt!X t umr: Sept. 31 at
PUIIIur.
·
%. Mhml (J.I) drfulr•M .. •arl:sll-7.
Nn lll"..mr: Sept • • at MlrhllfU Slalt'.
31 . 'Nrhra11ka (:1-fl) delra&amp;tl'd Mlnftl!sulil
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Sllltl'.
31.. Auhum (2-01 did not play . N..-:1
ll:lnll': Sept. Jl a.t TenfW'!IMPt'.
S. Celorado CHI did 1101 pia)' . Nnt

Su•hlo-- '" JWruallll
'l
N~· York t BaMimoA" 0
Clf!\'l'IIUid 5, calllornla I
Oldi!Udt. Mlnft's ola :J
MIIWYU lei' !I, Toronlo 3
Kan- 1"11)' -1, St&gt; ..tlr I
T..-s;llH 5, ('h\t•uu -1, 10 Inn.
Bo!llOft I, Df'1 roll

Mond11Y '" G a m~
V~~nk.P t'!l

~Mmalllll D-11
••
tcan t(' lemt'n!lli-10), 7;:15 p .m .

BoK·

Dt&gt;tmlttlhlho~

Mhur&gt;~ota (Guthrlto ! ·21 at

ChiUIO

cDot..,n _..11 1, 11: !It p.m.
ftlllllmo" 1H~a.r ri~M:: • -1-9) at Mllwa.u !let'
t Hip.-ra 1·5),11: 30 p .m.
· Tn~:llll (Ho!IK'Ilii· U ) UO•IIIIIr. . (~' elc h
11-IH , ID : CI~ p.m.
'h~I\Y '• G~o~m,;t

Nrw York at Be Kion, niJM
Toronto at l&gt;ft roll, niKflt
Mlniii!Rota at Cblcaao, ni&amp;M
Ba&amp;lllmoft a1 Mllwuil!l!, • • •
Cle-vt-1_. • 8e.de, nllht
Ten~~ M O•Uand, ollhJ
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W L Pel.
L"'lic-.
............. .... ~ ...... llt 1'7 .171
Jill , Lo.a ...., .................. KI 71 .1-11

MU')Iand.
II. -'rku•ll ('!-1) •l'lratrd MIK.IIIppl
U.l7. NMIIIf..,.-: Sept. :\0 V8. T~u - f]
r-~

I . W,_l Vlr&amp;tnla (-1-1) defnlf'd Loul..."111e lt-U. Nn: I .......: Stpl. II VII .
PI Uhv l'lh.
II . M"-.tnato• ('t--1 ) lo!C 1o Arbo•
21·17. Ne~ IJII.-nl!: Sf-pl. 31 v•. Co........
II. Tennn•r 4J.IJ did 1111t play . Nst
pnW: !Wpt. I I liL .\alhan1.
lt.
11-11 dele•• Kut.cll)'
1$-3. NP!III,_.: Sept. Mal \'Mdrrhlll.
1&amp;. .!IJ•CII• ($1) leli t. ftW.fl)l

Oct. 7u.Piortdn81nte.
H. PIUiba rp IH) drfellted 8Jde11~

•n.
GB
-1

Yorll ..................... 81 72 .Jtt
f
Mollllte .. ... ................ It '71 .Ill
IJ%:
"UIIII..-11 ................. 71 1M .UII 17%

s ......... .nc. ................ " .Ill
IJ• Dfe ....................... AI 1t .JII

1. Mlchlpa tl · l l dl:'leated UCLA

t+t3. Nn 1111 arnr: &amp;oft. 31 w .

•tl.Net~IJ...,.:

New

N ..7

w..........

Jl&amp;mt': Srpj . . . .
ti . t11'mHn (t-tl dett'Wd Mu)taad
31·1. Nn: ll....-: Sept, Hat Dullr.

n
-

S

Ne!l:l

VII'Jin.._

ume: lll'JN.

31 at WNI

Score by quarters
Oak Hill ............ 12 0 6 6-24
N. Ga!Ua .... ...... . 0 2 0 0- 2
N~
sa

Department
OH
First dO\VIIS ... ..... ................ ......... 14

Total yards ..... .,:... ,... ... .... ........... 361
RushJng yards ............................ 361
Passtng yards ......... .... .. .. .... ... ... ..... o

56

3 .i~

Att .-comp . ....... .. ...... .... .. .. .. .. ...... ..0.8
lnlerceptlons ................... .. .. .. ....... .1

1

Fumbles·I OSI............................... .1-1

Penalties ... .... .... ,..,..... .... .... .. .. 12·105
Punling ......... .. .... .. ...... .. ..... ... .. .. 2·68

2-0

6 j~~
5

Rio women place
first, men second· ..
leyan, 287; and Llndsey·Wllson,
The two-year course record in
298.
women's cross country at Centre
The men's race was won by
College (Ky.) was quickly shatGeorgetown's
David Keyes at
tered by three members of the
26:
51,
breaking
the 27 :08 record
University of Rio Grande runset
'
b
y
Dennis
Vessle
of 'Bellar·
ning team In the Centre Invitamine In 1988,. Placing secorid was
tional Saturday.
Rio Grande's Mark Cline at
The· Rio Grande men's team
27 : 01.
finished second in their
For Rio Grande, Doug Horne
competition.
was ninth, 27: 52; James Peck,
The old women' s record or
20:04 set in 1987 by Barbara Zebb 11th, 28:14; Scott Lafferty, 12th,
28: 15; Rusty Edens, 13th, 28: 26;
of Rhodes College !Tenn.) fell by
Brad Shannon, 24th, . 28: 54; and
the wayside when Rio's Renee
Bob Fritz, 31st, 29:34. Also
Peck finished first at 19:14-. She
competing
for the.Redmen were
was followed in second place by
Bob
Ferguson,
Vince Fatica and
Mary Dowler at 19:33 and Bonnie
Brian Kimble.
..
Evans in ti1ird with 19:51. In
- The wom~n·s win reprE!sented
other Individual finishes for the
the third consecutive first place
Redworrien, Becky Webb was
finish by the women since the
fourth at 21: 02 and Debbie Gray
beginning of the season, while the
was sixth at 21:18. Atsuko Yama·
·
men's
team has peen steadlly
zakl finished at 24:24 and Gina
improytng
with ,eac.h compe'll·
Kllchenman recorded a time of
tton,
noted
Coach
Bob Willey.
26:03.
"Everyone
really
ran well·and.
On a team level, the Redwowe
JNere
very
pleased,"
he
men's total of 16 points -a single
commented. "We feel some
point away from the perfect
people are really getting charged
score of 15.- place(! them first In
up now. People are beginning to
the race, followed by Bellarmine
take notice when our women
I Ky. I at 41; Centre, 75; and the
come through.
University of the South, 99. Six
"I think that ·first win by the
other women's teams did not
women
at Marshall has helped
finish with complete squads.
the guys. They're starting to
believe In tliemselves and their
In the men's competition,
Berea won first with 45 points,
confidence Is showing," Willey
followed by Rio Grande, 47;
•
added.
Be Harmine, 73; Anderson (1nd.)
The teams will next compete
Saturday, Sept. 30 at Heidelberg
B team, 97; Georgetown tKy. ),
118; Northern Kentucky , 139;
University, Tiffin, Ohio, ln.dual
Centre, 169; Asbury, 281; Kenmeet with the host school to begin
tucky State, 283; Kentucky Wes·
ai 2 p.m.

• h second
-• gol''Jf ers j'tnlS
M etgs
in Tr~Valley. Conferenc_e play
By DAVE HARRIS
TheMeigsMaraudergolfteam
finished in second . place In two
out of three matches last week to
raise its record to 43·20 overall.
In a match last Monday at
Falrgreens Country Club and
hosted by Vinton County, Alex·
ander continued to dominate the
matches with another first place
finish with a team score of 174.
It was a close race for second
place as only five strokes separ·
ated second and fifth place.
Belpre finished in second with 185
strokes, followed by Federal
Hocking (186). Trimble (187),
Meigs (190), Mtller (193), Vinton
County 1203), Wellston 12051 and
Nelsonville York (227).
For the first time in six TVC
matches, Brian McPherson of
. Federal Hocking did not finish as
the medallst. John Chadwell of
Belpre finished with the low
score with a 39 . ForMeigsJamey
LlttleandTlmPetersoneachahd
a 45, Mike VanMeter had a 49,
Phil Hovatter had a 51 and Jay
Harris had a 52.
In a quad match played on the
front nine at the Cliffside Golf
Club in Gallipolis the host Blue
Devils won with a low score of
160.Melgs was In second with a
score of ISO followed by South
Point with a 210 and Southern
with a 211.
Ron Tuccleri took home the
mea list honors with a score of 38.
Tim Peterson was led by Tim

TVC GoH Standings
(After 7 matches)
Team
Pobtts
Alexander .... .............. .47 points
Meigs .. ........ ................ 40 points
Trimble .................... ... 40 pOints
Belpre ...... .. .. ... ........ .... 40 points
Federal Hocklng ... ; ...... 39 points
Vinton County .. ........ .... 20 points
Miller .... .......... ...... ...... 13 p()ints
Nelsonville York ........... 8 points
Wellston ....................... 5 points

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4-PEPSI'S, 16 01.
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Slate 4N. Nn 1 lame: Sepi. 31 at

......... scu•.

If. N• ... Cu'lll• 8&amp;ah~ (4-f) dtfl!llf'd
Norll
.fH. Nea:l rM~e: Sepl.ll
liL lltntllatr.

cu-••

l't w.......... NMe (t-1) drfrlile'd
W)'omlttla.JJ. Nnl r.ne: Sept. J1 u .
So. .triiiCal.

Domino's
Pizza
..
992-2124
WESTIIAIN

Deparlm..l

KC
First do~ s ..... .... ............... ..... ...l2
Plays ... ........... .. .. .......... ........ .. .. .56

E
7

RuShing yards ....... ........... ........ 200

41
70

Passing yards ........................ ....41

T~nal yards ............................. . 241

50

120

Att ..comp. ............ .. , .... .... ..... , ...3-10 6-14
Interceptlons ......... .. .... .. .... .......... 2
3
Fumbles-lost .... .... .... .. ............... 2·1 6-2
Penalties ....... ................. .......14-144 5-44
Pui1tlng ..... .. .. .. .... ........... ........ 4-110 4·88

Russell Singleton had five each.
''We shot ourselves In the foot,
linebacker Kevin
Cummins,
and ·we would have had more
Singleton
also reco·
Layne
and
yards If we hadn't coughed up the
.
bid!," said Hannan ·Trace . head vered fumbles.
For Trace: linebacker Todd
. coach Don Saunders of his
Wildcats, who commit ted eight Saunders ted with 12 solo tackles
tuniovers in Saturday night's and four unassisted tackles.
12·0.loss to the vlsltlng Southern Tackle/ linebacker Ron Lambert
had five Solos,lO assisted tackles
Tornadoes.
The Tornadoes, in picking up and a fumble recovery . De fen·
the!rflrst win of the season, put a slve end Cole Bartrum recovere·d
scoreless first quarter behind two fumbles, and Lloyd, out of
them when tallback Travis the secondary, had one recovery.
On Friday night the Wildcats
Nease visited the end zone from
two yard~ aut in !he second will travel north to play ~yger
quarter. The kick failed, and ereek, while Southern wilt' host
Southwestern. ,
'
Racine led 6·0.
' ·
In the ·third quarter, fullback · Score by quarters ·
Richard . Deaver used 25 of his Sout)!ern. :.'.... ·:,: ""0 6 6 0.,...12
game· and season-high 145 yards Hannan Trace .....0 0 0 0- 0
to score the Tornadoes' final fltopartment
.
.· Sou. ~. iiT
Total yards ........... .. .. .. ....·.. ..-.. ..... .. 23!§
93
touchdown.
Ru shinll yards ...... .......... .... ......... 203
Southern tatlback/ wlde re· Passintil: yards .................. ... .. ..... ,... 32 930
ceiver Todd Grindstaff, who Att .&lt;"ornp.... .. ............ :... ...... ..... ... . 3-fl 0·12
3
caught a . pass fot \10 yards, lntPrceptlons ..... , ......................... .. . 0
Fumbles·lost .............. ..... .. .. ...... .... S-4 4·4
finished behind Deaver In rusH·
lng with 65 yards qn nine
attempts, white Nease, who
caught two passes for 22 yards,
(illll'am'es) , ·
rushed for 32 yards on 12 carries. Team
· :' \\I L .' PF • PA
Quarterback Jar rod Circle was 3 • Symmes Valley ... 5 0 145 74
of 8 for 32 yards. Kyger Creek ........ 5 0 103 34
Out of Guyan's 93 yards rush· Oak Hill ..... ........ .4 1 134 44
lng, wingback J.J. Bevan was Eastern ............ :..2 3 87 78
7·28, while tallback Todd Saund·
Southwestern .. ..... 2 3 74 79
ers had 22 yards In seven tries. · North Gallla ..... ,.. 2 3 63 84
Quarterback Erl.c Llo'yd Southern .............. 1 4 18 70
scrambled six times for 15 yards, Hannan 'frace .. ...0 5. 16 153
.
~;
' l
and -fullback/ tight _end Shad
Johnson went 4-13, white Joi1il'
(SVAC only)
Woods had one rurt for _eight Team
_ ,
W. 'L PF PA
yards. Eric Saunders picked up Symmes ,Valley .,.'... 2, 0 59 · 28
seven yards on two runs. ·
Kyger Creek ........ :.;2. 0 .46 · 6
Lloyd was 0·4 in the air and was Eastern ......... ,....... .,! 1 41 23
responsible for Trace's four Oak Hill .....'.. ... : ..... .1 1 :. 38 22 .~
Interceptions, which went t&lt;i Southern ...... ........ .. .l 1 ·12 23
Jason and Shane Circle, deep Nor'th Gallla .......... .1 1 8 24
back Jamie Cummins and llne· Southwestern .... .. .... 0 .2 14 45
backer Marshall Jarrell. John· Hannan Trace ....... ,0 2 0 · 47
son, who took over at ·q uarter'
.,
back In the fourth quarter, was
·sat'unlay's finals.
0-7, while Bevan's only ' pass Kyger Creek 23, Eastern 6
attempt was incomplete.
Sout.hern 12. 'H annan Trace 0
Defensively for Southern, llne· Oak · H111 24, North Gallla 2 •
man Shane Circle had seven
tackles and scooped up a fumbl~.
.This weei(B action
Deep back~ Nease, Grindstaff Eastern at Oak H111
and Tim Ryan had six tackles Hannan Trace· at Kyger Creek
each, and Lavender (first name North Gallla at Symmes Valley
u~krlown·) and freshman lineman Southwestern at Southern

Peterson with a 43, Jay Harris
and Jamey Little each had a 45, '
f'hll Hovatter added a 47 and .
Mike Van Meter had a 59. John
Hoback had a 47 for Southern and
Jason Cndnar had a 48, Jamie
Anderson chipped In with a score
of 51.
Alexander hosted a TVC match
at the Elm Golf Club last
Thursday, but the host team
could · not compete because they
only had two players for the
match. Trimble took home top
team honors with a 172, followed
by Meigs (175!. Belpre (176),
Federal Hocking (181) , Vinton
County (196); Mlller 1197), and
Wellston 1226).
John Chadwell of Belpre, Paul
Richardson of Federal Hoking
and DaveGatchelofTrlmbletled
for medalists honors with a 39.
Jamey Little and Jay Harris
each had a 42 for Meigs, Tim
Peterson a 44, PhtlHovatter a 47
and Mike VanMeter a 49.

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St-:&amp;&amp;lle :tt, Sr"· F..n ~and 3

Wa.Jilndo•:IO,

Monda)' 's Sports C'.ii.ll'tld 11.1'

Adkins rushed for 55 yards In
nine tries, arid OH quarterback
Allen Potter had no completions
in elgltt throws. One of those
throws found the hands of Pirate
defensive back Jeff Ratliff.
The Oaks 1H. '1-1) will host
Eastern Friday night, while the
Pirates (2-3, HI wlll go south to
face SVAC co-leader Symmes
Valley.

An unwelcome vis itor showed
up at Saturday's Harvest Fes t!·
valln Racine- Hurricane Hugo
- or at least, what was left. A
steady downpour of ra in through·
out Friday night, and Intermit·
tent rain on Saturday morning,
dampened the streets In Racine
to the point that It was Impossible
to set up craft and concession
booths for the outdoor festival.
Cold temperatures on Saturday
morning didn't •help either.
B\lt despite the rain, peoples'
spirits couldn't be dampened.
· At the last mtnute, the festival
was moved to the gymnasium at

Hannan Trace th'ls Friday night,
white the Eagles drop to 1·1 in the
teague and 2·3 overall. The
Eagles wlll travel ro Oak Hill.
Score by quarters
Eastern·......... ; ... 0 0 0 6- 6
Kyger Creek ...... 14 0 0 9-23

Southern Jun io r High School. pointed, but the majority of
Musical groups took the stage, as events went as sc heduled."
One disappointment was the
scheduled, and cr afts and con·
car
show which had to be
cession s tands were set up.
cancelled.
,
Things got a little crowded at
Plans at this time, says Lawtimes throughout the day, and of
course, the · festival wasn't as rence, are to reschedule the-car
large as It would have been had show on some Saturday while the
the weather cooperated, but at weather Is still warm. The
rescheduled show will probably
jeast the show went on.
"Allin all, for the kind of day It be held at Southern High School,
was , things went -well," says rather than the junior high, and
Jeanette Lawrence, of the Ra· some of the craft and refresh·
cine Department Store, who ment stands which were to have
helped organize the festival for been on hand Saturday, may also
the Racine t,JQTchanls Assocla· . be at the car show.
tlon. "Some nP&lt;1;ntP

Southem blanks
HaJlllan Trace 12-0

_North ·Gallia drops 24-2 decision to Oaks
Senior tailbac·k Josh Ruff
rushed for a personal· and a
· team·high 279 yards and two
touchdowns to propel Oak Hill to
a 24·2 triumph over 1\ost North
Gallia Saturday night.
The Oaks drew (lrst blood In
the first quarter when sopho·
more split eitd Jeramy Green ran
· a reverse 19 yards for their first
touchdown. Then later In the
quarter, Ruff, a . 5-10, 154·
pounder, got away on a 10-yard
touchdown · run to give the Hill a
12·0 lead going into the second
quarter.
Ruff·had a hand In the Pirates'
only poinls of the contest when on
fourth·and·lO at the Oaks' five·
yard line, the center had an
. errant snap that got through
· · Ruff's hands and Into the end
zone for a saiety. But the Oaks'
defense, stung In th!'lr Joss to

The Dail~ Sentinel-Page-&amp;

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

were on display at Salurday's Racine Harvest
Festival. Ohhh! Pretly!

SUCH A TEMPTATION - These little misses
peek Into tile windows of the doll houses which

!!~;.

A HARD CHOICE -II' s dlfflcu It to select which
hand woven rug you want to buy. when you like
them all. The hand woven rugs were just one of

·'

several Items on sale
Festival in Racine.

Harvest

SVAC sta~ding8·

CLOWNING AROUND - The Racine First
Baptist ·chun:h !ientln the clowns for Saturday's
annual Harvest Fesltval In Racine. At the last

gh. Fesdval r;oers spent the
Southern Junior
day browsing the craft stands, enjoying refresh·
menls, listening lo music, and visiting with

fr~n~.

----------------------------------------------~--~~--~~-----. Ready for visitors,
Card shower
Legion dinner

.

is·announced
Feeney ·Bennelt Post 128,
American Legion, and Us Auxtl·
lary, wtll meet Wednesday at the
hall at 6:30p.m. for a dinner with
each group to have a meeting at
7:30p.m.

Vanderbilt posts ~4-10
ou 8 0,be'ats
· ·
WID over
,· •
·

minute, the festival was moved from the cold
street to the warm gymnasium atSouthernJunlor
High.
.

..

Mrs. Grace Smith of 51145 S. R.
681; Reedsville, Ohio 45772 wtll
observe her 92nd birthday Tues·
day. Friends have planned a card
shower for Mrs. Smith.
The world's highest city is Lhasa,
Tibet, at 12,087 feet above sea level,
or about 2\'0 miles.

cards at HMC

Aaron Turner of Racine Is able
to have visitors in his hospital
room at Holzer Medical Center In
Ga!Upolis . Turner is In room 438,
according to his daughter, a~d
visitors are welcome. Turner is a .
retired farmer and retired from
the Meigs County Highway
Garage.

·.

By JEFF WOODS
NASHVILLE, Tenn. !UP[)
Vanderbilt quarterback John
Gromos passed for three touchdowns and ran for another
Saturday night. sparking the
Commodores to a 54-10 romp
against Ohio University. ·
Vanderbilt, 1·1, also scored on
runs of four and three, yards by
Carlos Thomas. 11 yards by
Anthony Carter and one yard by
reserve quarterback Mike

JOHN A. WADE,

Healey.
Ohio University, 0-4, got its
only points on a 36-yard field goal
by Jim DelVerne In the first
quarter and a 29-yard touchdown
pass from Jeff Baker to Jim
Swanson In the fourth.
..
A fumble by Andrew Greer
allowed Vanderbilt to start its
first possession on the Bobcats 29
and the Commodores scored five
plays later on Gromos' 14-yard
pass to Corey Harris.

. PUASAIIt VA" IT HOSPitAL

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~

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M.D~

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GENEIAL ALLERGIST
"WE HA.E HEARIIII AIDS"
(304) 675-1244

INTNE
ClAlliFim ADt

ANNUAL EMPLOYEE
PICNIC Employees of
Veterans Memorial llospllal
and their famUies gsthered at
the Kyger Creek Power Plant
Employees Club Saturday for
their annual picnic. Sue Stone
and Kim Shamblin were In of
children's games. Each child
10 and under received a glfl.
Adult games were held, with
Laura Farley winning the
door prize. Hospital dietician
Jackie Starcher was In charge
of the food. Here Rhonda
Dalley conducts a game with
some of the younger children.

Inc:

the tile insur•nce
pmiecltton you need lor
your business or lll'llUy.
Celt today for Ill lhe
AI particlp;Jt!ng
Brw~ SIOI'"es.

Dairy Queen•

'.

. SUCCESS CELEBRATED
- In obllervance of acompllllllmenta over the put year,
Overbrook Cebler bOiled a
resident and r;ueat plcalc Pil
roast SaturdiiJ aftetaooa.
Throughout the, afternoon
there wu entertalamenl by
tbe SuJIII' Run Traveler_, and
games for tile children and
grandclllldren ol resident&amp;
and · others wllo joined In the
celebration. Here Mark Murphey, Overbrook admlallltra·
tor, serves pork to one ol the
nearly 2M who attended the
· ollllervance.

IIIII SlrNt
PIIIIIII'IIJ, OIL 45 769
Phone• 614-991-5479
Clai11111 1-100.421-3535

.
0

NA'IIONWIJE

!!!!~~!!~!

.....,..

-~

Dairy QuMn'Jtof&amp;s ate proud spon100 ol the Children's. Miracle Network
Telethon which benefltiiOCOI hOSPHOIS tor C:hlldren.

• .... U.l . ..._ OI., MIIO,Q,-

POIIEIOY, OHIO

I

'•

�. ..
Septanba- 26, 1989

The D·aily Sentinel

By The Bend
,..._ ...

..
·-

Quirks in the news ______
By United Presslnlernatlonal

Monday. Septanber 26. 1989
Paga 6

Snnl•or ef slnklns Pride marriel on Pride II
CAMDEN, Maine (UP!) - A
survivor of the 198'6Si nking of the
Pride of Baltimore has been
married on board the Pride of
Baltimore Two, known as ~ary­
land' s goodwill ambassador.
James Chesney, the former
ship's cook, tied the knot Satur·
day with Susan Winter, the
former public relations chief for
the first Pride:
The two met while Chesney
was re~overlng In the hospital
after the sinking of the clipper
ship In a freak squall May 14,
1986, about 300 miles north of
Puerto Rico.
The skipper and lhree crew
members died In the sinking.
Chesney and seven others floated
in a lite raft for five days before
being rescued.
Wtriter at the time was in
charge of a homecoming news
conference .and the subseq11ent
memorial service. She met Ches·
ney as he was recuperating, and

:•, ·

Reconciliation Day
, gives Ann a·.perk

Ann
Landers
&lt;

...................
n ... ,..... .
ANN UND!II!I

en... s,........

Ours .family gathers for ·reunioJ;I

'

&gt;

The 39th annual Ours family reunion which wlll again be held
reunion was held Sept. 3 at the at the Senior Citizens Center, the
Senior Citizens building in Sunday before Labor Day.
, .
Pomeroy.
Family and friends at the
Sixty-two people attended the
get-together. Gins were pres· reunion Included, ROger, . Rhea
en ted to Flossie Circle, the most and Teresa Deem; Sandy, An·
mature woman; James Cornell, . drew and Brittany Phlison;
VIcky and Mathew Peckham;
most mature man; Roland
and Lucretia Stobart, all of'
Wolfe, for traveling t)le farthest
to get to the reunion; Gladys Middleport; Mrs. and Mrs. Ha·
Deem, tor having the most rold Braun and Pluma Haines, of
family members present; Brit· Lancaster; Jeff and Nancy
Schoolcraft, of East Liverpool;
tany Philson, the youngest girl;
SylVIa
Bush; and Roy and Gloria
an!l Andrew Philson, youngest
Bush,
of
Chester, W.Va.; Charles
boy. Several ·door prizes were
and Marie Bush; Martha Wolfe;
also · glveri away and a white
elephant auction was held to Ernest and Flossie Bush; Mark,
Nancy, Mayla, Camilla and Lena
raise money for next year's
Yoacham; Sue Hager; David

Dear Aaa Laaden: Your· co- · the family busbtess siarted by
lumn on "Reconciliation Day"
our ll'andfather. We knew some. changed my life. ijut let me start thing about It, having worked
busbtess. We cut all family ties.
._. at the beginning.
there most summers sbtce we
Ten years passed. Mom died.
; My brother and I were born
were teen-agers. Tommy (being
We did not go to her funeral. I was
.: only 20 months 11part. Mom older) went In tlrst. I decided to
angry and bitter, havbtg felt that
dressed us alike and many people
take a year off after college and
I had been cheated.
thought we were twins.
travel. While I was In South
Two weeks ago I received a
"Tommy'' was better at bas·
America Dad died suddenly of a
of your column on reconclll·
copy
ketball bull was betterat soccer.
heart attack. When I was,ln South
atlon
from Tommy. Across the
• He played a great trombone and I
Amerlcll. Dad Died sUddenly of a
he
had written "I miss you.
top
• was pretty good on the drums. I
heart attack. When I came home
Please call me." That very
: was lousy In English and he did
lor the funeral I got the shock of
evening I called and we both
: my homework. He wasn't so hot my life. He did not have a will.
In math so I helped him out. We
Mom Inherited everything. She cried. The following weekend he
were competitive, like most was very fond o! Tom's wife aild and his wife and .their two kids
brothers, but there were never · didn't care much lor mine, so the came to see us. It was my
any seriOus fights or arguments.
long and short of II was that I was birthday. That was the greatest
· gift I )lave ever received In my
The only big falling out was over out of luck.
life. Thank you, Ann Landers. ~ a girl. Tommy was nutty about
Holmby
Hilla, Calif.
Lynn Shuler was elected the
: her but she liked me better.
My wife and I decided to move
Dear
Cal.:
What
a
day1989-90 Valentine Queen of the XI
:· It was always understood that out of town, borrow some money
Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
· my brother and I would go Into from her father and start our own brightener! Here's another one.
Keep reading.
Sigma Phi Sorority when the
Deu: Ann l..allders: Thank you group met recently at the home
for prbttbtg the letter !rom one of of A.R. Knight.
your readers suggesting a "ReKay Adkins presided at the
conciliation
Day."
It
was
one
of
and noted that Kathy
meeting
, Larry Lee and Kim Peck are
the
most
heartwarming
and
Johnson
was listed In this
: announcing the birth ofthelrflrst
constrUctive
letters
that
.you've
Issue
of "The Torch'' for
month's
• child, David Russell Lee, born
,
ever
printed.
Here
Is
my
story
to
having perfect attendance over
: Aug. 22 atHo12erMedlcalCenter.
provelt.
the past six years.
The Infant weighed six pounds
I sent a copy to my daughter
The Friendly Venture program
and 13 ounces and was 20 inches
and
son-In-law, with whom I had
and scholarship forms were
long,
a misunderstanding. We hadn't outlined In a letter from Interna. Maternal grandparents are
spoken to one .a nother tor two ' tional. A thank you card was read
: Greg and Della Peck, Cheshire;
·
years. She telephoned me the
: and Linda and Gene Bing,
moment
she received the CO·
· Syracuse. Maternal great grand·
lumn.
We
talked for a long time
: parents are Margie and Randy
and
I
felt
wonderful.
The follow·
: Peck, Cheshire; Thelma Sollday;
lng
day
I
was
btvtted
to their
~ Arizona;
and the late Cecil
home.
I
went
and
we
had a
; Smith, Cheshire.
MONDAY
beautiful
reunion.
I
held
my
· Paternal grandparents are
.
RACINE-The
Southern Local
brand-new
grandson
for
the
first
· Lawrence and Cora Lee, PomeSchool District's Introductory
·
time.
What
a
thrill!
: roy. Paternal great grandmother
Chapter One meetbtg will be held
My daugther Is bl!ginnlng to
: ts Mrs. · Rachel Wilson,
on
Monday at 7 p.m. at the high
show an Interest In other
•Middleport.
·.
school
cafeteria.
members of the family and I am
; There Is another child at home.
optimistic about the future. We
RUSSELL L,J£E
;Amber N. Lee.
POMEROY -The Meigs
still have a way to go, but every
County
Churches of Christ Men's
ylslt seems to bring us closer
Fellowship
w111 meet at the Zion
together. I couldn't ask tor more.
Church
of
Christ
on Monday at
As far as I am concerned, Ann,
••
7:30p.m. All men are welcome .
, Dreama Pickens, coach for the which Nancy Manley was the "Reconciliation Day" was a
great Idea. It made a big
:football gar:ne. reported on the winner. She also reported that
RACINE -The Southern Boos:completion of the game with the best loser was Ms. Kibble and difference In my life and I thank
ters
will have a special meeting
· KOPS (Keep(Jig Off Pounds the runner-up was Bernice you from the bottom of my fleart.
at 7 p.m . a( the high
on
Monday
:Sensibly) winner being VIrginia Durst whO also won the fruit and - A De•oted Reader In Oblo
school.
Everyone
is urged to
Dear Devoled: What an upper!
• Smith, and TOPS (Taking Off vegetable basket.
attend.
I couldn't be more pleased.
: Pounds $ensibiy) winner Su·
' 'Secret pals" were revealed
1
Thanks
for letting me know. Heel
TUESDAY
: zamie Kibble at the recent antl It was rioted that those
like
a
million
- after taxes.
HARRISONVILLE -The Har·
•meeting of Ohio TOPS 570. Ms. members not present should
Lom••omp? TokP ('har/{f'- of your
risonvllle Senior Citizens will
: Kl bble lost 15 pounds.
·
bring their gifts to the next
life and turn ir around. Write for
have a meeting and first three
: Lennie Aleshire, leader, meeting. At that time there wlll
Ann Lander. . new boakiN. "'How 1n
months
birthday supper on Tues· opened. the meeting In ritualistic be a redraw for new "pals."
MakP
Friend!t
a:nd ' Srop llPinJ{
day
at
6
p.m. at the townhouse.
form and Ola Sinclair, secretary.
Plaos were made for the
Lont&gt;ly."
Send
o ~elf*OddTPned.
gave that report. Mrs. Sinclair annual Halloween party to be
RACINE -The American As·
reported that she had reached held Oct. 24. All members are lonl(. bu .. inP!f.•· •i:P Pnvelnpf' and a
('hP€'1.· or monPy ordPr for $4.15 to:
sociatlon
of University Women
, her KIW (KOPS In Waiting) urged to dress in costume and
Friend!t. c/o Ann Lan.lrrl'f, P.O. Box
(AAUW)
will
have a meeting for
attend the party. Prizes will be
~ s!atus.
11562. Chiool{n. Ill. 60611-0562.
all
members
on Tuesday at 7
awarded for prettiest, most origl·
· Mrs. Aleshire noted that nal, funniest, and ugliest.
Norma Torres was Ill.
The next meetbtg wlll be held
Group sbtgtng was enjoyed by Tuesday, Sept. 26, at the coon· all.
hunters lodge at the fairgrounds
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bailey were
Dayton, were weekend visitors of
· Peggt Vining, assistant leader, with weigh in at 6 p.m. and
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
; conducted a diet trivia game In meetbtg at 7 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Warner and
Robert C. Bailey, Sr.
other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Lesne Frank,
Mrs. VIrginia Blake, and Mr.
Sarah Beth and Matthew, Texas
and Mrs. Okey Burdette, all of
Road, were Sunday visitors of
North Carolina, were recent
By United Press International
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning,
visitors of Mrs. J.R. Murphy and
WALLACE AND HIS WORK: Mike Wallace Is getting the star
Ronald, and Mrs. Gladys
Iva Johnson. Mrs. Blake spent
treatment In Chicago, where the grand Inquisitor of "60
Tuckerman.
the weekend with Mrs. Murphy.
Minutes" started his career. Wal4tce Is the subject of a
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Elam Were
Mrs. Joseph Evans, Tyson and
retrospective at the Museum of Broadcast Communications
Sunday visitors of Mrs. Gladys
Jonathan, were recent visitors of
and was honored with a dinner Saturday night that attracted
Tuckerman.
Mrs ..J.R. Murp))y.
CBS co-workers Dan Rather and Don Hewitl, the producer of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom SummerMrs. J .R. Murphy and Mrs.
"60 Minutes." He even got to throw outthe first ball at the Cubs'
fle1d and Crystal, Medina; Ml·
Joseph Evans and family were
game against Pittsburgh. Wallace has been with "60 Minutes"
chael and Mandy Russell , Mr.
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
since Its beginning 22 years ago and he's not tired qf lt. "I'm
and Mrs. Ronald Russell, RaJohn Downs and family,
looking forward to doing more of this," Wallace said. "I've got
cine, were visitors o! Mr. and
Glouster.
another 3 'h years on my contract with CBS that '11 take me up
Mrs. Robert Russell and Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. John E . Murphy
until I'm 75 and this Is what I'm going to keep doing.'' Wallace
Mrs. Steve Haggy, Stephanleand
and Robert Murphy and Robbie,
says his career has been "an Incredible learning opportunity"
Brad.
were recent visitors of Mrs. J.R.
and he's still stalking Interview subjects. "Once again, Deng
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Warner,
Murphy .
Xlaoplng," he said when asked who he'd like to grUI next. "I'd
Ida Murphy recently visited
love to talk to him once more before he dies. I'd like to ask him,
her _great granddaughter, Cas'What went wrong?' He hadltall.Hewasa hero.Perhapshejust
sie, at the home or Jane and
. couldn't manage the transition to political freedom. I don't
Roger Hysell.
know.''
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole. Stock·
SPIKE ON THE MAKE: .Joan Rivers Is startbtg a stud
port, were weekend visitors of
RUTLAND- The Friends and
service. She says her dog, Splke, ,"wants to be a daddy because I
Mrs. Ida Murphy. Mrs. Bole
Flowers Garden Club of Rutland
found him licking plctuers of Steve Garvey" so on she's gobtg to
stayed for a few days to visit.
will be holding Its annual open
announce the "Find Spike a Honey Contest" on Monday's
Mrs. Ida Murphy and Peggy
meeting on Thursday at 7: 30p.ni.
lnstalbnent of her talk show. Rivers says she's heading the
Bole were recent visitors of Mr.
at the Rutland United Methodist and Mrs. Harley Johnson and Iva
search for a mate for her Yorkshire terrier because he "doesn't
Church. Judy Snowden will be Johnson.
know that many dogs in New York." Entrants should send a
having the program. Everyone
. picture and a 25-words·or-less statement on why their dogs
Mrs. Jeff Bole was the Monday
·
welcome.
wt)uld be good mates for Spike. "He's more concerned with a
visitor of Mrs. Clair Giles.
gre.at personality, sense of humor, sensitivity and a willingness ·
to travel because he's blcoastal," Rivers says. Three finalists
and their owners will be fiown to New York to appear on the
show and meet Spike.
HOLLYWOOD IN JAPAN: "Black ~aln" director Ridley
' !leoti S&lt;!YS It's not easy making a movie In Japan. First of all, the
cost of llvbtg made the flbnlng budget about twice what It would
have been anywhere else. Secondly, Scott and his stars, Michael
Douglaa and Kale Capllhaw, didn't get much special treatment.
''The Japanese treated us wiih apprehension, except for
govermnent officials," Scott said. ''The government and police
depariment were helpful. But the general attitude toward a !lim
crew of our sl2e was surprising. We seemed to spell social
disorder. We were not allowed to block the streets .. We had
minimal crowd control. So the crowd scenes In the ftlm are the
real thing, not rehearsed or ·dtrected."
GLIMPSF.S: Pepe .Joba Paalll made a Sunday visit to La
Sapienza University In Plsa where astronomer Gallleo taught
mathematics In the early 17th cen~. Heapoke to an audience·
of sclentlst.a and educators and told tbem they have moral and
· ethical responslbllltlell as they carry out their quest for
knowledge ... A $180,000 boule given to the family of South
African apartheid fighter NeiMB M•·dela Is being destroyed by
vandals. Mandela' 1 wife, Wlllllle, bas retull!d to move Into the
boule In the black township of Soweto, out.alde Johannesburg,
untO he Ia freed from prison.
·

Deem; Mike Deem; Norman
Deem; Gladys Deem; Ray
Deem; Teresa Bush; Wiley and
Audrey Ours, all of Racbte; John
Burcb, ,Minerals Point, Pa.;
Ralph and Murl Ours; and Betty
Gaul; of Chester; Bettie Pigott,
ot Long Bottom; Vinton and
Ruby Jones, Harvey and Elsie
Ours of Dunbar, W.Va.; John
and 'Faye Blake. Pi'octoi-ville;
John and Vera Ours, Belpre; 'Lily
Calhoun, Northeast Canton; Ro·
land. Wolfe, Bardley, Ill.; Joy
Swain, Gallipolis; Gladys Layne,
Crown City; Steven Blake, Rock
River; James and Bernice Cornell, Pomeroy; Ralph .Murray,
Salem, Va.; a!14 Nancy and
Gladys Young, Grove·City.

Xi Gamma Mu chapter names qu¥n
as well as an Invitation · to
Barbara Grueser's wedding.
Mrs. Adkbts reported that the
executive board met June 6 at
her home. Tl:\e Yardstick was
completed and showed the chap·
ter as being a three star chapter.
The by-laws were read to the
group and a possible change of
wording · wlll .b e sent to
International.
Mts. Hanning reported on the
social events for the upcoming
year.
,
Pat Arnold reported that the

:Lee birth being announced

'

Other Items discussed lnclu!!ed
the Envoy membership · pres·
ented to Knight, and the presen-·
. tatlon of the 'Girl of the Year.
Award" to Mrs. Adkins.
,,
The meetbtg closed with a •
cultural report by Kathy Johnson
on "What's Your Sign?" an
Insight into the signs of the .
Zodiac.

:TOPS 570 meets

I

Wolf Pen personals

-People in the news--

Annual meeting
set by club

WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE -The Joppa
United Methodist Church will

· Quotei of the day

l

By United Press International
Rector Richard Belser, minis·
ter o{ St. Michael's Episcopal
Church in Charleston, S.C., l;lescrlblng the mood of city residents
Sunday after Hurricane Hugo
battered the city:
·
"I sensed a profound gratitude
that most of us were spared loss
of life and thim I sensed a real
caring spirit. People were out
helping each other In a rather
wonderful way. It reflected that
people care more about people
than property."

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 ,00 A.M . SATURDAY
- z,oo P.M MOI'fOAY
- z ,OO P.M TUESDAY
- z,oo P.M .. W!ONESDAY
- z ,OO P,M THUII&amp;DAY
- 2 :00P.M. FRIDAY

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FA IDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

r.c.eo.e•

, Cla.~sif~eq RUfl~s. cot-er the '

followinl{ telephone exchan,.es ...

Into dlff..t .... mate UJII¥ flll'lll·

-~ lncladel ~ c!laln;
lampa and a enndfatller cloc:k. .
.

tare,

441- Gallipohs

Meip County

Mason Co .• W'Y

Aru Cod• 114

Area Code 301

992- Middleport

675458 ti78 773 -

916-Ch•ster
&amp;•3-Portland
247 - Letart Fall•

11

Ofkr ~ood September'..I -December ~I, 1989.
GLUCOMETER Is a lqlltlcr&lt;d lradmulrk ofMIIcsln&lt;'.

Prescription Sh.op
992-6669
.271 North Second

D•v•

R•t•

Ward•

1

Middleport, OH.

Letart

Ohio

16

6
10

16
16

Monthly

16

fabric Shop

Take
poln out of
palnti"tt• lit - do
11 for you.

•..... ......

FREE ESTIMATES

tile

.

POMEROY, OHIO
~
s~ lelld•"

..

•
•'

.

(61

·~ . 00

.30

$9.00

.42

s1MO

.60

!9- For Sale or Trad•

~
Gauge ~~Y.a.tfn
, .L _ _.;;.:;.;:.;.:::;;.a

Roger Hysell
Gar~e

$35.00

II. 124, ,_..,.,. ONe

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
. REPAIR
AIM,Trt•.aelhe

..: ..2:5612
.,. 992·7121

41C per lb.
#I COPPE..... -.911' ..
#2 COPPE••..,...;.75• ._
Ul IIASS--50&lt;· ..

Yl.lOW IIWS -~ ..

IADIATOIS .......JS&lt; •·

&amp;

LIV'~S tuck

63 - livettock

14- Hay 6 Grain
65- Setd &amp; Ferrili.l:er

, 16- RadiG , TV &amp; Cl Repair
17 - Mi1c.ll1n eou•
18 - Wanted To Oo

.
'

-z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ Licensed·Clhiical Audiologist. &gt;

::1: t614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
z 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

EED A. HOME?

9-12·89

MODUUI HOMES
S.NCE 1970
:ancn, Cape Cod &amp; 2 Story
MODEL OPEN DAILY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
1:00 P.M.-6:00P.M. or Coli For Appointment

FAMILY HOMES INC.

614-992-2478
P. D. Box 207
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
Locally Ownod &amp; Operated by Bill. Stove&amp; Kevin Pullina
9· 31 -'89·1

USED FURNITURE

STAFF
PERM SALE

TANNING

LIVING ROOM SUIItS •
BEDROOM SUIItS .,
DINEnE SETS ·
"NEW" RECUNERS

, SYIAUSf, OHIO

Moat foreign and
Dom•k: Vehld•
A/C Service
All Mllor. Minor
Repair a
NIA8E c.rttfied Machenic

Trdnsportalion

21 - Busin•• Opporfl.mity
22 - MOnl'i 10 Loan
23-- Prof•sional Services
1

71 - Autos for Sale
?2- Trucks for S1le
73-Vans II 4 WO ' s

21/J Milts Out New
lima ld.
in Rutland, Oh.

Located Behind"
Tractor Dealership

SUSAN COLEMAN
742·2778
C1ll fer fill S.taials

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT :·

1st visit FREE

742-2455
Sale111

Reill hi otP.

74- MOIOI'cycl•

"DOC" VAUGIIN.

75- laatt &amp; Motors tor Sale

Con;tlod u..,lod Shop

71 - Auto Pll'tl. ACC'!(IUOti•

31 - Hom• for Sale
32-MobilaHomes tor Sate

35 - lots • Acreage
w~ted

MOBILE

•1 - Houte!l for Rent
42- MObile Ham• lor Flent
43- Farms for Rent
•4 - Apl!rtm@nt for Rent
•&amp;- Furnished Rooms

HQME_P~IK

81 - · Home lmprovement"s

•Mobile Home. . Partt.. - · .
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

B2 - Piumbinj &amp; Heatin;
1!13 - E~ciYating

84- flectric:., &amp; Refrigeration

•t6- Spac:e for Rent

85 - Gen••• Heuling

· "'7 - Wanl•d to· Ren1

86 - Mobile Home Repair

48 - EQutpment for Rent

87 - Upholslery

49 -- For L•••

•New a.. U•ttd r ...
.Custom Pipe Bending

•Oil Changes

•G..-•Jobo
&lt;General ChMoio
M•lntenance
•Computerized B.eance.r

992-3897
St. Rt. 124
Middleport, Oh.
tNext to Hill Top OroDiry•

I. L HOLLON
T-UCKING

SWEEPER REPAIR
ALL MAKES AND

MODElS

CHESTEI, OHIO

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE

•GRAVEL
'
•LIMESTONE
.•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

" and MORE .
222 East 411ain

985-4422

POMEIOY, OH.
992-6872

•SHRUB 8o TREE'
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

Announcements

6-5-'89-tln

&amp;·21·'81·tln

77-- Autp Repair
78 - Camping EQuipmern
79 - Caml)eu • Motor Homes

33 - Farmslor Sele
34 - lusin•sluildh,gs

JONES TilE
CEN1ER

CAll 992-67S6

992·7479
... 3J
ef

Tll·CO. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTIOL
SIIICI 1976
ROACHES o FLE~S
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES •WASPS
Member Nationol Pest

.

, ,....

Control Assn.

1·800·535-2199

you·ve got it...

. H.IGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD '

BILL 'SLACK
992-226t
EVENINGS ·
4/1/ 89/ tfn

1· 7·•· 1rno. d. ·

R~uce

[NJHI
WATER
SERVICE

---nPAII

c•-. Wt _.
._ acitl lloil 011111 red
eut ratllatOI'L We also
,..., Gcn Tanlls.

I

,PAT 1111

192·21

· Middleport,

MNT ADS bring

YdonMDIII'I

'

4

Giveaway

•'

2 ldHtns, 1 black, 1 yettaw, pqo
for shots. Approx. 7 w.lka. 114446--ot856.
~
2 puppltt to giveaway, 614....._
8410.
.
Adorable kHtena, fr• to • G001:1
home. 014-441-2782.
,
Frwe 4mo. Did tamale, Pin

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY

wotC,

part Gtrman Shepherd. 614·37'"
2670.
·'

Gutters

Kitten. to givuway. 614.....,
3479.
•.

Downapouts

Kltlans, mala &amp; t.mala 4 wka.
old. Black/While, gray, striped!.
614-446-3551 anytime.
i

DOZER
SITEWOitiC • ROADS
CLEARING

· Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

lleat•

SALE5 &amp; SERVICE

or Its. 949·2160

Guntr Clt1ning

Call Anytime

MI••IJpart, Olio 45760

· PH. 949-2101

ROOFING

a nElliS

Now t.dtioll:
161 Nerlh Soconll

"At leasonable !'rices"

llownLWrilaMII

1,000 GAUONS '
POOLS, WEUS

E-Vap "Watar
Pills" available at Fruth Ph.,..
rrtKp.
I

PlUMIING &amp;

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Business Services

All and. fast with Qo.

a... Tablets and

BISSELL
BUILDERS

•Gravel
•Limntone
•Fill Dirt

ALLEN'S
HAULING

· '1600 GAUON

9-20-tfn

WATEI SERVICE
UMISTo•
·SPUAD
DIRT HAUUD
992

FOI SAU
IIOUY FAIM

IVRAtll TOWNSIIP

145 ICFIS, blm,

bottom. hill land;

7... _...

GUN SHOOT
RACCOON VALLEY

BOB'S
HEATING &amp;
COOLING _

SPORTSMEN'S CWB

SYRACUSE
992-2621 or

EVElY SUNDAY

992-6944

12 Gougo ShotgUliJ Only
· Foctory Choko
STIKRY £NFOIC£DI

RUUO

lt. 124 letw ..n
Witkn•ille ond
Saltm (lilt•

11:00 A.M.
9-21·89·1 mo.

6

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL

ENGINE REPAIR
PAITS &amp; SEIVICE
•Lawn Mowers

•Riders
•Chain Saws
•Weedeatars

FOUMD 1910 girls. PPHS ctu•
ring, parking lot Foodland, ca~
ond idonl lly, 304-675-3025 oftoc
5,00,
.
•

Loat Tan wfbtack pug flee.
Raccoon Ortek .,.. on 141,
Antwert to Butch, hard
hearing. Rewtrd oHtred. 814i
378-2957.
!

or

3 mil• off of Rt. 7
et Meig1 Memol'f

Gerdene

1·17·1 mo.

4-cvclt

en gin•

Stodl Porto for
Homelite. Weedeater.
Tecumseh,

B1lggo •

Strotton.

PH. 992·3922

6·21-'19-11n

'I

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

t.dr.d It Yaley l ......r
PARTS AND SERVICE

Yard Sale

•

IEPAII
For Moot 2 end

,•

Ca!lh R.wardt Losl Goldtn
Ratrtlver, Gallla C.ntarpolnt Ret,
Mlaalng tfnce Aug.l, Answer. .
to Luk~. 614·379·2447.
~:

DAVE'S
SMAU INGINE

.........,_t,oh.

Lost &amp; Found

ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid ln.
Ad,.rn:o. DEADLINE: 2,00 p.m·
thli day before tht ad Ia to run*
Sunday ~ ltlon • 2 :00 p.mr
Frtdcy. Mond1y tdh ion • 2:00
p.m. S1turday.
:

9

Wanted 10 Buy

Fomltwo ond opplloncoo by 1
pltc:t or entire houtehold, F1
p~cn bolna pold. cau 114-+lf.o
1151.
!

..,......"'=i

timber, 2 produc·

At Jet. 5.1. 7 &amp; 143
On ·Tht h·l'e•

TEMPSTAR

7

742·2421

In&amp; aas wells.

·~··-., .....

Built-in Ia. TV, stove &amp;

relrig. See-through fire·
place.
992·2571

Evaluations For All Ages

SUN'S UP

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

61 - Farrt1 Equipment
62 - Wanled to Buy

HOURI
7 D1y1AWeek
8 •. m.-7 p.m.

'

C!ll'l

MEET THE

~ Business Services~~--"'',..•".....,.1'--...;.;;;..;;.~.... NEWLAND
fNTEIPIISES
[;:::::::::::;r------------1,~~~
DUMP
TRUCK
..
L
W.
•
Sand-Stone-Dirt
RACINE
••'
TRI COUNTY
(6141 667-3271
,....,,.,andre· . STEWART
GUN CUJB
•
GI'OIIt A.
c•e
anti I TRUCKING
RECYCLING
••' GUN SHOOT
(;AYIIIG TODAY
AUG. 30, 1919)
CLEAN, DIY
AI.IMJIIaCANS

Listening Devices
f•~::::~:~:;~ Hearing Aid Sales &amp; ~.n,;,.l

Form Stipplies

992-2371

• Fodory Chaklll 12

992-9922 or 992-:l228

1·1·1. ..

13- lnluranc•
14- BYJin•• T11ining
15-Schools • lnstructiM

992-2104

Beginning Sept. 17
• ~tarh ot 1:00 P.M.

baths, full basement, 2
car carage, 10x60 ft.
deck, 3 acres plus 1~
acre lake. Mint cond.
$120,000 firm. All new
drapes, fully carpeted.

1.. N. 2nd- - Mildltpart
992-2725

you want it ...

PO.IOY, OHIO
Wa Ivy AI Non fer·
rous Metals. Plastics.
Stoinlen St11l

Pizza-Subs-Saklds-Dailv Speciclls

3 BR ranch home, 2~

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP

Mttc~andise

16-Pets tor Slta
57- Musicallnstrumentt '
58 - fruiu &amp; Veg.-abl•

11 - Ketp Wanted
12- SitUirion Wanted

Help wanted

POMEIOY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY
LOCAUY OWNED Pll,Zl SHOP.

HOUSE FOR SALE

WALK-IN WELCOME

5&amp; - Buildtnt Suppli•

Employment
Serv1ces

36 - Aul Estate

FREE LO(AL DEUYERY

-

10'/o OFF AU. PEIMS

61-HouHhald Goods ·
52-Sporting Oood1
!53'- Antiques

54-Miac

1/41111-Hn

Now thru Sept. 9, 1919

Merchandise

Veterans Memorial Hospital, a JCAHO-ac·
credited. !lOt-for-profit hospital, is looking
for a Patla!lt Revlaw Coordinator. The Pati·
ent Review. Coordinator will be rasponslble
for the a111nment, planning, lmplementa·
tion, anl;l evaluation of the hospital's Qual·
ity Aasurance end Utilization Management
P!ans.
Qualifications include a Regiltered Nureo
with a current Ohio nursing license. Prior
Quality Asaurance and Utilization Manage·
ment experience preferred.
Please call or send a resume to:
Margaret Holm, Aasiltant Adminiltrator
Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH. 45=769

•

S.4-8!1-1

.06/doy
broken up day 1 will be chii'Oed

Caus of Thanks
ln Memor"'
Annoucem..-.ts
Giveaway_
Happy Ads
Lo11 and Found
7- Yifd Sale fplid in advance!
8 - Public Sale 6 Auction
9 - W.,.ted to Buy

VDY IEASONAII.E
HAVE •FEUNCES
614·915-·tliO

1-1· 11110.

lOWEST PRIUS
HIGHEST QUAUTY

9 / 18/ 1 mo. pd ..

IIITEIUOR·blEIIOR

992·2284

STREET
_...__ MAIN
·. PIZZA

.20

S1 .30 / day

123456-

NO SUNDAY

OFFEIED AT

SEIVICE

.

PH. 949·2101
Of .... 949·21'6 0

LINDA'S
PAINTING

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE

OVfllr 16 Words

$4.00

15

3

PATIENT REVIEW COOIDINATOI

•
•
'

FINAL COST

937-Buftato

let Retalfl' Fast ·

EVERY SUNDAY

.

St. lt•. 331

895 - Letan

949- Aacine
742 - RuiiiOd
6&amp;7.:-Coohl(ille

Correction

I

Pt . Pleaant
l.eon
Af)91e Grove
Maaon
882 - N~ Haven

Pomero~

317 - ChMhire

318 - Vinton
2•5- RiO Grande
256- Guyan Dist.
643 - Arabia Oi1t.
379 -:; WalnYI

A weiner roast was 'held Har,tford, w.va:
VIsiting on Sunday was Bob
recently at the home of Steve anc~
Brenda Haggy, Wolfe Pen Road. RU$sell's brother, Carl Russell,
Attending were Steve, Brenda, Columbus. ·
Stephanie, and Brad Haggy; Bob
Spenlng a few days with
and Allee Russel~ Guy and Jonny Ronnie and Derina Eb!!n of Wolfe
Sargent, Ronnie and Denna Eb- ' Pen Road were Mrs. Eblbt's
lin, all of WoHe Pen Road;
parents, Clay and Leona AnderRonnie, Nancy, Mandy, and son, Union City, Pa.
Michael Russell, Racine; Danny
.
.,
and Angle Morris, Pomeroy;
Tom, Carolyn, and Crystal Sum. merfleld, Medina; Charlotte
The Meigs County Retired
Roush, New Haven, W.Va.; and
.Senior • Volunteer Progr~
Ray Redman, Mason, W.Va.
(RSVP) regrets that the name or1
Eva Robson was omitted from
Also visiting during the day of
the list of volunteers who ass is ted
the Russell's and Baggy's were
with the cholesterol· screening
Don and Carol Russell, Harrisonprogra!D held In August.
ville;_ and Tony and Lisa Venoy,

$182.76
$135.00
$100.00

247-3522

KEN'S APPUAtfcE

•A Clllllifitd ld\llrtileme'lt placed in Tha lhity SetUinall.. cept - classifi«&lt; displav. Busineu Card and l4tial notices)
will also appa., in the Pt. P!eaun1 Register 1nd the G1Ui·
polts"Daily Tribune. NIChing o..er 11.000 homn

The Paper Blillle Ia
Mua., wu built by Ells J'.
....n Ia
IJ42. ApproldmatelJ 101,808 ....,..
pan were Ulld tDCGilltluct tbll ~ ·
and the furnltare wltbln it. The walll
were made ol ._,_. of )lilted IIIII
folded ~ IICCOI'd1llc to Tbe,
Kids' World Almlue. P....-. nllled

GWCOMETEir DBlood Glucose Meter
with Memory

"Free Eltlmet•"

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

4••

By United Press International
The oldest existing city In the
world Is Damascus, Syria, lnha·
blted since prehistoric Urnes .

'

.... .....

CUTTING &amp;
WELDING

Classified
for·~ paid in adwani:e.
•free Ms . - Giveaway and Found ad-' under 15 w10rdt will b•
r•.m 3
et no ch•ge,
·
•Price ot ad fen all c~ftat letttfa i1 double price t1f ad eon.
•7 point line l¥pl ant¥ uMd.
•&amp;afltinal i1 not respon•ibt• for •rrouaher tint d~ . ~ Check
tor erron first dav ad runs in paper! . C.WI bil!fore 2 :00p.m .
d-.. Mter publitl .. ion to mike correct ton.
. •
•Acft th.at must be ,..ed in advance are
Card of Thankl
Happy Ads
In M•moriam
V..-d 5•1• .

Now you know

•

BISSELL
SIDING
.._ CO".

We Service All Mak•

have revival and homecoming '
Wednesday through $unday at
the church on Route 681 near
Reedsville. There wll) be special
singing and ·preaching.-

.. '

AUTO &amp; TIUCJC
REPAIR

•Washers •DIY••
•Range •F•zers
•Refrigerators
"Must le RIPalrable"

MeiVt. Glllt. or Mtson counli• must be pre·

get slOOfor
takirig better ·care
of yourself.

•VINYL
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

DEAD 01 AUVE

p.;d.
•Rtceivfl I .SO ctiaeount

If you
have diabetes,

B&amp;W
GARAGE

Swimmer butterflies way from
Catalina to San Pedro
LOS ANGELES (UPI) . Nearly 15 hours after plungbtg
Into the chilly depths off Santa
Catalina Islilnd, a Canadian
marathon swimmer became the
first person to swim to the
mainland using orlly the gruelbtg
butterfly stroke.
VIcki Keith, 28, a former
swimming coach from Toronto,
completed the 21-mile swim In 14
hours, 53 minutes, arriving at
Cabrlllo Beach at San Pedro
about 4: 26 p.m. Saturday. She
was trailed through the water by
a support boat named The Cold
Spaghetti.
. Keith's Catallna,to·LoS An· · In 1854, Florence Nilhtillple, an
geles swim, which began 11-tl: 33 Encllab nune, started tlie profeulon
a.m .. was considered the finale of . of trained nursing.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M~
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Weiner roast held recently

Regular Price
Special Price
Mfr. Rebate

' 'That's where we began, and
we're beginning again," he said.

a three-continent marathon ef·
fort In which she butterfly·
stroked her· way tu seven world
records.
Keith covered' 9.6 miles in the
first eight hours of her swim,
putting her well ahead of her
schedule. She originally had
hoped to complete the course In
20 hours.
Almost halfway through the
trek, Keith was swimming In
Hoot .swells.
In July, Keith became the fltst
person to use the energy-sapping
stroke to cross the English
Channel. On Aug.lO, she became
the first swimmer In 33 years· to
complete the Juan de Fuca Strait ·
off. Victoria, British Columbia.
Eleven days later. she was
bobbing and dipping her way
across L11ke Winnipeg In
'
Manitoba.
She also has twi~e crossed
Sydney Harbor In Australia.

.192-5335 ....915-356

Community calendar
p.m . at the Racine United Methodist Church .

the pair started dating soonafter.
Chesney said getting married
Qn a ship was symbolic, and the
Ptlde II seemed an Ideal choice. ·

Business Services

WANTED

service committee 'needs Items
for Christmas and ~uested fhat
each member bring a canned
,good or small gift sulta ble for a
child to each meeting until Dec.

5.

Ponwoy-Midclleport. Ohio

$45,000

~·

.

�~The Deily Sentinel

LAFF -A-DAY
.. . ------ -------·---··- ----- ,

Wlnted to Buy
TOP CA1H jiOicl lw1N3 1110C1o1

.........,._lie,

- - - -- - h

=a..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Eaotom
Goltlpolle. Coli 114-4461111

f. -~
.'

....... lurnlhn and llouHhold

Ita.'""""..

Phono

114-742·

44

Apartment
for Rent

18R unfum. apt. Range &amp; r•frlg.
proo~ldtd. Wator, towage, gar·
bago, polcl. Dop. ' Ra f. ,14-4464345.

51

25,1989

Monday. September 25, 1989
KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wriabt

Household
Goods

71 Autos for Sale

~!-1100e AQJOA't$! rr~
CU'( 11:00 O'Ci..CXK. .AW -me
V.W:.IS ~~JIJ!I-lb 10 c:;w.o ...

Brown Naug•hydt couch and
chair $175., 304-675-1715.

Pomeroy-Midcll8port. Ohio
I.JGT WE'E'K WA? ~T!
LA?r Wf:C:K. Dlo..l'T rxAb...

Television
MA1l"liOF ~. M~ TIIJE: "i:1
LA'&gt;T W661:: IT WA'&gt; AL190(
Viewing
lli!Je?C/&gt;.'(.
EVENING

114·7~-2411.

Help Wanted

tau

,,..

15

Schools &amp;
Instruction

RE·TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 529 Jacksan Pike.
Call 614-4411-4367. Rag. No. 1611·1055B.

18 Wanted to Do

Mill Paula's ·Day Care Center.
Sala, aHordabl.. childcare. M-F
2 nu,..a aldH, ahop clo!t&lt;": ln- I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. AgH 2'A~10.
CIUI,. .c Odell and Enda ~op, Before. atter schoor. Drop-ine
lllddtoport.
·welcome. 614.-4:46-8224.
AVON I All Ar. .l I Slllriar Painting, Interior &amp; exterior, 15
. _... 304-f7S.1429.
yrt. experience. Guner CINning
rtc•lling &amp; root coating. FrH
AVON • All are.., Call Marilyn &amp;
estimate. 614-371-2320.
w~., 304-882-2645.
Ad. ;Jt.rt-tlme, moatlw day 1hlft,

1r11w .we.Unda~ muat be ...lltbll
I nu1UI'I, RelerencH nHded,
114-&lt;441-3431.

a. on TV many naed.ct tor
qon;'merelale now hlrlna _all agaa
01111ing lnlo11s-m-m1 m. T·

513.•

hautlclan OHdod at Plnocrnt
C.re Center, Saltry ptue Com·
mlQion Insurance &amp; Olher
beneth.. mu.t hava or t. .,..
l!glble far manager llcansa.
COntact Gall Hamilton, 114-44fT.n:i. E.O.E. .
COSMETOLOGIST.
Fantastic
Samle Mil open aoon. GuarantMd"'WigH plue commission,
paid.. vacations. Managers &amp;

otyllolt n11dtd. 614-e82·7018

anrt'-

Crulto lhlpt now hiring til
poattlone. Both 1kllled and un·
•Iliad. For lnformali!Jn caii61S.
778-61107 oxt,l115.
O.IIVIIrY per11on apply In ,....

.an, Village PIZZI! Inn, 3004
Jackion Ave., Point P!Munt.
EARN IIONEY irplng homt.
$30,000/year Income potential.
Dltallt, 805-617..000 Ext.S·
4512. .
EARN MONEY trplng at horna.
S30,0001yNr lnc:omt potential.
Dotallt, 1-605-687-6000 Ext. B101H.
EARN MONEY typing at homa.
$30,0001yNf Income potential.

Dltallt, (11105-6117-6000 Est. 8·
4562.
Eam money typing II tlomt.
$30,000/rear Income polentlal.
Details, 1, 80!-687-6000 Ext. B1805.

;,:oc•ry
4

-622·

.. Hair Styllat wanted: tor Hair
Happonlng Styling Salon. Full or
part""'lmt. M1na~1rs license
req'd. For lnttrv•ew call 614446-3353.

train q~,~;~rter horses In western
pl111ure. 61 4·286·6522.
Need mature individual for
chlldc1re for 2·3 nights • w. .k
In my home. 614-446-8887.
Opening
for
reglstored
Anporatory Therepill at 128
bid acute care hospital. Com·
pethive ealary and benelhs. ap..
partunhy tor managtmant advancement while applying technicll akllll. Ptrtonnel Dept.
Pleaant Valley Hospital, Potnt
PLenant.2555G, :ID-4·875-4340,
EOE/AA.
TYPIST. Mutt bl able to lypa 60
wpm. Knowledge of word
proc:~tslng equipment helpful.
Kn~edga
of
mldlcallpl)'chlatrte terminology
preferred. Send ra1um1 or call
Sandrl McFuland Ptrsonntl
Officer, Woodland Cenlare, nc.,
412 Vinton Pike, Gallipolis, OH
45631, 114-446-5500. Woodland
Centers is a EEO/AA action
emptoyar and don not dl...
criminate on the basi a of
religion, race, coler, HX, agt,
national origin. handicap or anc~ttry.
· VISAIIIASTERCARD
US
CHARGE . Guaranteed.
RaaardtHI of Credit Roling.
can N-1 1213) 1126-81106 Exl.
U2524.

Situation
Wanted

Child otrw provldtd. AgH 2,3,4.
M I -. . .,.,.. lrom ptrk.
114-9112-61211. Roloroncot .....
pilad.
Wanted: Pure ft'lltiiiNd elngel1

- IHklng 1 pure metal grOUp to
up wMh. I nlod group thll
• wUIIng to go to thli topl 11 ..
211-1Hiatklori.M.
lor oldar1y and """"
21 ,....
O&gt;pcirlan.. LPN on coiL Low
Catll14·11112-667:1
••• 7:00 p.m. tor '""'" lnforo

....~on.

,

REMODELING INTERIOR, EX·
TERIOR PAINTING, ROOFING,
CONCRETE .
WORK,
ELECTRICAL &amp; PLUMBING EXP.
HAS REFERENCES. PLEASE
CALL AFTER 5P.M. 114-2561611.
Wanttd to do housecleanlna,
htve reterwncM. 11~2.51-8783,
814·256-9323.

·
21

Financial
Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PLBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do
business with peoplt you know,
and NOT to 11nd money
1hrough lht mall until you hlva
lnvesltgated .l ht offering.
$850.00
GROSS PERIWK PART TIME
Vending: Coke, Ptptl, Fritolay,
t-larshey and similar productl.
SERVICE COMMERCIAL YEN·
DING .ACCOUNTS. No Hlllng
lnt~olved. Ctnsus ftgur .. show
1veraga · Qro11 NrNngl of
.$3,400 p.r month with 10 maClt'llnn. AequlrH 8 hra. weekly.
You will nttd $8000.$24,000
cash now tor equipment, factory
direct. Call Don Edwards at 1BOO-i88·8817, 9a.m.-9p.m.
Shot S1ore' and VIdeo Store
combined far Alt. In Pomeroy
area. 614-H.2-3830 or 114-9922571.

Real Estate
31 Homes for Sale
2 br, cottage. Nlca retirement
home located 295 Lower River
Ad. River VIew. 614-446-.2300.

1986 Cllyton. IXC. cond. 14x65
2br, home type windowe, largt
kitchen, lot• of ator1ge, built ln
oven I lsl1nd •lave, washer,
dryer, air ~onditloner, awning,
located on rented tot, 1 blocK
from the UniverSity of Rio
Gr~~nde.
114-.245-1836
afttr
7p.m.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 acre Iotti GalliDOUa Ferry, dty
water, 304--875-2722.
9.04 acru ott Eagle Ridge
Road,
very
ptivate,
approximattly tour acru II
harflald tuhablo f« building
and tht rest ill woodland. Excerlent hunting area. ESectr5clly
and TP&amp;C Water avallabtl
nNrby. $10,000; or will eall total
28 acrea plus cabin for $27,500.
Call614-~369.

Ashton,. beautiful one acre lots
with rl~« frontage. public water.
Clydt /Bowtn, Jr. 304-571-2336.
Alhlon, largo building Iota,
moblll home• ~rmllttcl, public
w.ter, priDMI reduced, Clyda
Bowtn, .Jr. 304-176-2338.
For Sale: One •ere level lots, 7
mllu north of Holz• Hospital.
114-388-8649.
Threa 4 aere tracts;
3
acres/pond. Ovmar financing,
S100. down. 80 1cr.. Mf1.
Meadow/Woods, spring, gu
royaiiiH, · $45,000. qunvllla
Road. 304-675-7887.
Woodland, 132 acrta, $35,000,
At. 7, balow Eurtl&lt;.o, Call 614·
446-4411 after ? p.m.

Rentals
41 Houses for Rent
$300 month plul dtposh. Jacksan St, Vlnton. 614-388-9360.
2 bedroom all tltctrtc, In Long
Bottom, oH. $245Jmonth, un·
turnishtd.
$125.
depostt.
Avallablt Oct. 1: 614·866-3511 .
2 bedroomt,
bath, newly
decorated. cl.,n, nice. 614-992·
5858.
2 br, house, located 52 Mill
Cr-.tk, StoVI &amp; retrtg, fum'td.
$165/mo. $100/dop. 614-4463870.
3 bldroomt, 1 1!.2 baths, 2912
SP.'ruca An, Maadowbrook add•tlon, 304-675-4B15.
3 br, farm house 1 1/2 miles
from Rt. 7, Eureka, OH 304-67J..
5104

EJ:c. cond., 2 etary brick
w/basement. 3br, 2 baths, heat
pump, CA, naw gar~~ga, 23
aerts. Near Lectl . Aher 6, 61.4·
256~412 .

For Sale: 5 room house with
bath, baaamtnt new bottled gas
furnace,
2 room 1toraga
b lldl g with 5 1
0 t 1an d Jn
E~rek~. 614_256

_Q:;.

Like naw :IBR home. At . 1e0

nnr NQHS. Will bl put In
~ealtor hands soon. 614--381o
8711 .

Neighborhood Ad. Approx. 1 1/2
acr... 24x36 ~~r:g•. 3br. 614·
446-0365 61
6-4246 atter
Sp.m.
Prlca Raducldll 3 bedroom
~rick ranch, garage, breeze way1
full basement, air cond ana
heathllreplace, corntr lot In nict
nelg bortfoad, 2905 Maple Ave.,
Pt . Pn. 304-525-892a after 6:30
PM.
1c
d -• 1 3b 2 b h
Pr • re uc~. n ca r,
at ·1
AC, basement, garage, tencea
back yard, large deck, fruit
trHt, 1.54 acrH. Backyard
fishing &amp; boating, Raccoon Ad.
814-446-3431.
Second Ave. 3 br btument,
vinyl tiding. 814-448-0365 814448-4248 aftor 5p.m

for Rent

121:60 on nlca level 1oi, nlct
concrete walks, nice locallon.
Must
It Interested, 614-44S..
800!, after !p.m.

••lit

14x70 2br, unfurnished, very
nlc•, gardtn spot, 1 mila from
Holnr Hosphal $250, 614--446-

2300.

1br, furnlsh.ct eHeeleney, carpeted, AC, private, very nice, 1
adult, 721 Second An. 614-44&amp;.
2602.
2 bedroom tumlshed or unfur·
nlshed, washer/dryer lie, $200
mo. plus uUiiliH. Rei. Call after
6·30 304.&amp;75-4874
. '
.
2 br mobil• homes, Dtpoait, &amp;
"d C 11 fttr 2P m 81 ..
f
rt • req · 1 1
· ·
.,..
446-0527.
2 br, mobile home, dep I ref.
rwq'd. Call aftor Zp.m. 114-4410527.

Furnished apt 1 br, $225,
UIIIIIH paid, 920 Fourttl Gallipolis, 614-446-4416 atttr 7p.m.
Fumlshtd apl. 1br, $210, utl!iles
paid. 701 Fourth Galllpolll, 614•
446-44181fter 7p.m.
Gracloua Uvlng. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at VIllage
Manor
and
Rlverslae
Apartment• In Middleport. From
$184. From S.plambtr 15th to
November 15th, llrst month rent
,,... to thost who qu1Ufy. can
114-9i2-77B7. EOH.
Naw ana br, furnished apt. In
Mlddlaport. 614-11112·5304 or
114-44f-6886.

Now accepUng applicatlona lor
2 bedroom apt, fully carpeted,
appllenctl, water and trash
lckupe PfOVIded. Maintenance
rea living cloH to shopping,
banks •nd .choola. For more In·
formation call 304-882·37Ui. E·
qual opportunity housing. Sac·
liOn 8 accepted.
.

r.

Quiet one bed room untur·
nished apt, nice neighborhood,
reference and deposlt required,
$1.85. per month, 304:..675-1550.
Regency,. Inc. 2BR, apt., new
plush carpet,
new
paint,
u11111~._.1 paritallr paid. $175/mo.
Call ....-&amp;75-5104.
Small rum. house. sul1able tor 1
or 2. 614-448-0338.

Regular alz• t-lollywood btd
(complete). 782 High St., Mid·
dl,port.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Olive St., GalllpOIIt. Ntw &amp; Used
fumlture, heaters, Weatam &amp;
Work boolt. 614-446-3159.
Uprlghl Sweeper with an at·
1achment &amp; 24 batp . Full mat·
tress &amp; springs. Ch1ld'• Bk:~te,
304-6 75·1211.
Valley Furnltura
New and uaed furniture and appliances. Call 614-44&amp;.7572.
Houre 9-5.

Vl'ra Furniture &amp; Appllancn
Rt. 141, 114 mi. on Lincoln Pike.
Mon-Sal 8 1.m.-6 p.m. Sun 12·5.
Call till 9 p.m. tor 1ppolntmanta,
614-446-3158.
Financing
available with no money down.
Sola &amp; Chair, Reg. $891 now
·$229 (1 9 In stoek). Wood
Groupe, Reg. $529, now $299
(11 In ttock). S._p1r Sofa,
Vaughan Baasatt_. lnterapring
Reg, $B99, now o389 ( 6 In
stock). Outen Anne Colt•• &amp;
End Tabla• $149 a 11L 5
varletlea of Bunk Bade, $148 &amp;
up. Twin a Full Manressn wat
$99 &amp; up. Now $49.95 (50 In
stock). Queen. Mlttre•• S1t1
$249, Reg. $6!0; King Mattraa
$129. 8 v•rtaliet Ballet Btd·
room Suitt, Reg. '1600, now
$999. 30 dey• warranty on appllancll, Mavtag Washer $98 •
up. Dryar $75 A up.

Whirlpool automatic waaher
Small fvmlthod apt. Utllltlll $125. 6t4-367.Q234.
paid, nlct tor ont person, CIU
614 4 • 3351 ·
53
Antiques
T1r1 Townhou.e Aptt, 2 br., 1· -:-:.--...,--::-;-.:-,,.--:"-::-~
112 baths~ CA, dlahwashlr, dl• Buy or 1111. Riverine Antiques,
poat, pnvate enclosed patio, 1124 E. Main Strett, Pomeroy.
pool, playground. W•ter, . .wer, Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
&amp; trash fncludld. Starting 11 p.m ..L Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
$289/mo. Call 614·367-7850.
614·•92·2526.
Twin Rivera Tower--Houaing for Top Cash paid. Old fumlt.ure
the Elderly, Handicapped and cuboards,
quilts,
orlanlal,
Dlsabltd.
Located
n1ar paintings, toys, or entire estate
downtown
Point
Pleasant, call collect 304-525·3275, or
phona 304-675-667i. Equal ~23-6854.
Housing Opportunity.
Upptr Rlvtr Rd. 2 apt. upttalr,
2br; 11ovo, rol., watar, garbago
plcoup.
Dopotlt
roq'd. 1
downslalra, 2br, water, garbage
pick-up, 614-446-3940.
Upstal~ unfurnished 1pt. Car·
1
ed. NO pete. lnqu.lr• 1 t 300
\Jrt h Ave.

~

45

Furnished
Rooms

Furnished ehlclency, all utilities
paid, share bath, $90/mo., i1i
S.cond Ave. 614-446·3945.
Rooms tor rent· week or month,
Star11ng at $1 20/mo. Galli a
Hotel. 614-446-9580.
Slupln9 rooms with cooking.
Also tra11er ll)lct. All hook·ups.
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304-7135651, Mason WV.

46 Space for Rent
Commercial 1aca, 1400 aq.ft,
Corner Secon and Pine. Ample
parking. Call 614-446-4241, 446-2325, or 446-4425.
Country Moblte Home Park,
Route 33, Nor1h of Pomeroy.
lo1s, rentals, parts, utet. Call
614·992-7479.

54 Miscellaneous .
Merchandise
1973 Caprice, $200. lnlll'•
national Bus, con'llf"ltd to
motor homa, 1700. 38 plstol1nd
100 round of ammo., $95. Ban.
ded PVT60 Guhar and amp,
$250. My•,. Shallow wall pump,
$35. 2 coal and wood burning
cook ltOVIS, $50, 614--742•3073
anytime.
1977 Ford F-250 4 whatl drive
truck $2,500. Wood burning
stove w/blower $250. 1974 Winnebago motor home $4,000. all
·~c conct. 304-895-3813.
19B1 Chevy truck cab with air
eond. 1981 Chevy cloth truck
seat. Dually pickup bed with
goose neck hitch. Dually 1 ton
pickup r.. r end. 1 ton: bad.
Wheela. 4 speed tranamlsslon.
Mise 1 ton ather parts, go cart
frame, t!Uer, Chevy Rttst Hitch.
614-3lJ8..9684 after 6:00PM.
1982 Oodae K Arlea Ctr, 73,000
miles. AC PS, tilt altering
wheel, AMIFM radio, very gooa
cond. $1,850 or $850 down &amp;
1akt over paymtn11 of $75 per
mo. E1ec. r~~nge, 30 inchea wide,
spHd queen, heavy duty
washtr, 111 fabric. $200 each.
614-682·6804.

Large mobile home lot, Rl. 87,
20 milts from Point Pleasant,
county water and sewer included. References required.
304~75-4138 evenings.

40% off all ceramic and palntt,
Ray and Ma~ Ctl'lmict, New
Havon, WV. 304-i82-206i. llory
Slsk.

One acre lot, trailers allowed,
city water, Gallipolis Farry. 304·
675·2722.

Combuslionetr Stoker Coal
Stove tor sata. Stt of small
show pony hames111. 814-742-·
2234.

Two trailer spaces, Route One
Locust Road on right, 304-6751076.

Merchandise

.

51

Household
Goods

Computer tor aala; TRSo.&amp;O
MARK IV, compultr, monitor,
printer, cover &amp; pape~ dlak •Y•
ltm a. auper script. t.xc. cond.
814·245-5627.
Dakoll Farm Home buih on
your 101, 113,995 a up. Set our
model. 614-efl6.7311 ..

Metal work m1chinary: South ·
Bend, Emco Maier, "at Muford,
Ciauslng, RutnoK, Sherllne.
Blue Alage Machinery, :10+562·
3538.
Naw '5 1121.8fl. pink ara rug.
Office size refrigerator, typing
table, stnl office desk, chair,
utility
table,
answering
machlng. 814-992-7111.

Porttbta Llghttd Arrow Slgnt
$299. (Froo Dollvory/Lotttrol
Piattlc l.attera (Half Price) $50.
boll.. Explret 9129/81. 1-800-5333453. Anytime.

55

Closing Business Sale: All Troy
Built &amp; Toro Equipment at cost.
All ulld equipment pric:ad to
Hill Everything must go!
Agrican Inc. Upper Rlv1r Rd.
614-446-0475.

a

HtiV)' Metal catlle racks for
Chevy truck. 814--742·2781.

I

JD 2010 wfcorn plantar, aprayer
outfit, driver, 537110. 614288-65:!2.

=:::..;==-------Jim's Farm Equipment, Gal·
llpolls )?uy, Hll, tr1d1, used
Farm lrlctors. Over 500 farm
Implements In stock. Par1s tr11c&gt;
tors. King Kutter Parts. 614-4469777.
·

Transportation

Block, brick, uww DJpes, win·
dows, lintels, ttc. Claude Win·
11re, Rio Grande, OH Call 61C.
245-5121 .

56

Pets for Sale

AKC Roglsttrtd Bugle pupt.
614-38B·8B90.
Bundy Flute tor Nle, $175. 614-441-4428.
CFA regittered Hl~a~an Kit·
890.
1ans, $75/uch. &amp;14Dr11gonwynd Cattery Kennel.
Persian,
SiameH
and
Himalayan klnens. Chow ttud
urvlce. 114-446-3844 1fttr 7
p.m.
Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant, 304-675-2063, 10
gal HI up $14.1111 and 10 gal
comp~eta $43.25.
Full blooded boxer puppies. attar I, 11.4·258-6867.
Groom and Supply Shop;.Pet
Grooming. All brllda. An stylla.
lams Pel Food Dealer. Julie
Wabb. Call 814-446-0231.
HAPPY JACK SKIN BALli:
Checks ecratchlng &amp; rellavea lrrltated skin wllhout altroidt.
Promdn healing It hair growth
on dogs &amp; catsl BldweU C.sh
Fiod J 0 North Product.
Happr Jack Skin Balm: Chockt
.t erltchlng &amp; reUevn Irritated
skin whhout steroids. Promoi.H
haallng &amp; hair growth on dogt A
cattl R" &amp; a FMd 1 Supply 3H
W. Main St., Pomeroy.
·

18 inch color T.V. Remote con·
trot $135. 614·992-7259.

For Salt; Amana air condtliontr,
9300 BTU. $250. 61 4-44&amp;.0642

1n dl v ld ua1

2 new electric ranges, almond
colOr, 304.JJ75· 3000.

Qood hard •pill firewood. $35

rdl
"&amp; 0687, Jatt Wamsley Instructor,
614-446-8077, Nmhtd oponlngt.
V1maha Trumpee with cue. 114-

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

1044.

Building
Supplies

1 r.CIIntr, gold. Call 614·SI922113,9 :00-5:30.

1::::::;:;:;;:::::==::::~l:=========~
t'"

cond. Ready to work. 614-446-

Two 1utom•Uc transmlsslont,
0idt, Buick;· 3 tpood Chovy
transmission; 3 goats, 2 nan·
nlaa and a Registered billy; top- New ldu Corn · Elevatcn, llko
per; G.E. coror t.v.; V&amp; c1,. naw. $1200. 814-949-2102.
borator and fuel pump. almoal
now. 814-667-6600.
. 63
Livestock
:.W.;.A.:...NT,c.E'-D":"-u'-'n"-d---D._R-A""FT""t""Na""
3 Reg. Bred ·shor1horn Heifers.
TABLE with or without drafting Sire by Rolyn Ayatollah. 61410011. 614-3117-0274.
448-0559.
WHITE'S IIETAL DETECTORS
AnENTION Horu Ownere,
Roll Allison, 1 Z1 D S.cond Ave, Palm Plut It now carrying tack.
Goltlpotlt, OH 614-446-4336.
Pa1n1 PLue, 2415 Jackton Ave.,
Point Pleaaant, phone 304-675Want To Buy, old tube ,.dloe, 4084.
wanted mad• Hfore 1942, pll·
tic or wood, large or email. BNutltul AQHA raglsttd mare, 6
Don't have to work at all. Pay yrs. old. Can 614..379-2740 or
11 o. to $100. tar moat brands, 614-379-2671.
304-'112·2220 nk for Chuck.
Good aelectlon at Duroc Boara.
Wheelchairs • new or uald. 3 Roger Btntlar."513-584-2398.
whHied electric ecooter. Call
Rog•ra M1dical, 1..aoo-&amp;aa-2104. Young laying chickens lor 11111.
Pure -bred ~ brown eggt. 614·
WhHo wadding gown, with 256-i413.
matching veil. Bite 10. Good
cOndition. 114-251-1343 or 340-64 Hay &amp; Grain
675-3547. Alklng, $1110.
2 Wood or coal burning atovet, Large round btlts of hay, $15
one Harmon 2 yre old wlblower Nch. 614-446-1052.
$400. Warm Morning 2 Yfl old Straw torula. $1.50 bale. 614utad one yr $250. 304-615--19r7 446-4111 Eveninp: 614-446or 675-2385.
7157

For Sale • Cancrate and Plastic
septic tanks. All tlzee. RON
EVANS ENTERP~lSES, Jack~ ·
son, OH. 1-800-~37·9528.

load. 6U-892..S707.

350 JD Dozer, 1 way blade, good

Evans Motors, 1530 Eastern
Ava. Naw trailers In sloe~ (3)
8x18 BIH llvntock, IX11 G.N.,
7x16 G.N. 7X18 G.N. 7x18 G.N.
aluminum, 24ft G.N. FlatMd, 16'
I 18' car hliul~r~, Sx8 utllh~
W/rlmp gate, lx10 utility wlli
beds, hltchn, pane
acc.aaorltl. 614-446--6592 Mon-Sat.

New cast . Iron frM . ttandlng
wood/coal bwn•, w/fan &amp; vent
blower, $250; Ping-pong lable
top, S45; 614-446-4141afler 6 or
WHktnds.
Nice '2 door rwlri~erator, troll
frH, S75. Largt anglng gas
turnact, $40. Sears Carpel
Sham'pooer, $50. Atal nice VW
Camper, 11t1p1 5, runs good,
$800. 8x11 camper, 111f con-tained, $800. 614-MI-2526.

57

Musical
Instruments
•
guntr

1altOna,

~Brun'"ic"a'rra.dI IIM~utou,'c gu114t~~~~~

.:...74.;;.2-2;;.;648~------

-

2br, hou.. wi2 car
2 mlln out 141 $34,500.
114-446--0335 1ft1r &amp;p.m.

. .....

...·•.
·. ;

• , ' &gt;;.

.

1974 Carvel white with black Int.
PW, T-Tope, AC, 4 new ur. .,
everything original, exc. con·
dillon. $6500. 614-441'7441, 614446-9421 . .
1974 Corvette. Rabuln engln•,
PS, PB, air, auto, T-top. $6500
firm. 614-912·5541 or 114·1114822171VIninge.
1176 Mercury, no rulf, good
con.dlllon 11195, 1978 Thunderbird $B95; 1971 Chov. pickup,
good condition, prlctd on lntpl(:llon, 21 lool Franklin Tr1v11
Trailer, S1500. 514-448-7846.
1976 Mustang II, aood work car,
$350. S11 h on lot acro11 lrom
Vlllaga Plzu.
1979 Ch•t Malibu Classic
W•gon. 519 11 4-9t2-30iD.
1980 Corv•n•, black, automatic,
1 owner, low mllaag!t. excellent
condition. 110,000• ..none 304·

.273~-3::0::_71::;·------­

1981 Buick Skylark V-6 onglno,
AC, ~on1 whaal d~vo. $ 1'000"
1878 Olds 1300· 304..SJ'6.2738. .
1181 Cam~.ro Z-2~ 1 _v.a, 4 spd.1
S1885. 1982 A-..: Concora
wagon, one owner, $1285. 114--

:286"::;·~:.:5::22::·------,..­

1114 Ford T-blrd, VB, fvtl lnltc·
tid, premium sound 11ereo,
Ere. cond., rune gr11tl New
Eaata ST 11- $41110. 814-2455Saa.
1984 Plymouth Reliant SW,
auto, 4 cylinder, PS, Pi, TW,
cruiH, AMrFM cauaua, new
tim;, ahockt, etrute, brake ..
110,000 m1111 $2800. 814-4488143 after lp.m.
1181 ~ler Fifth Avenue. Ex·
tro thorp. 52,000 mliH. 814-3792728.
1188 Dodgo Amnl, au1omatlc •
alr, 43,000 mil... S2500 114-3J'I.
2728.

2br, At. 110 II Evorg.-.
$225/mo. ptuo Soc. Dop. No
=~- 814-441-8181 or 81..._....

&amp; I IVf'S!OCk

Troflor nlct claan unfvmlohtd,
rwloroncn raqulrod, Routo One
out LocUli Rood on rfghl, 304118-1071.

61 Fam1 Equipment

13,N
1nt

"I prefer the way II looked belore.we had
the aluminum siding put on."

ea..

111ooo1

Trulof,

ln1'f tiiCior with 511.
buth
, U,3110; 1200 David
Brown aal with C.b, eA,IIOi
114-211118122.

'.

LEAVE

Matdt.Up .
CIJ MacOyver

(I)MacGyver
• must match wits

Ron's TV Service, specializing
In Zenith alto urvlclng mosl
other brands. HouH celTs, alsa
aome appliance rep1lrs. WV
304-576-239B Ohio 614-4482454 . .
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Mo8t wells com plated aame day.
Pump 1alss and aarvict, 3041195·3802.
Davis
Saw·Vac
Service,
George&amp; Creak Rd. Parts, sup.
ptin, pickup, and delivery. 814446-0294."

..

Mac's wadding
1;1
8Q&gt;21 Jump
Investigation of student

... .
I'

. beatings unc:ovao an Hiegel
· gambling ring. (1:00) 1;1
(JJ Pri-Nria
..
9 Munier, Sloe Wrote Keep
The Home Fries Burning

•

'"•.••
•

'

1:30. (2)

..

i

•

'

.

•

'

,,

'IT WPOAND'T'W~ WHO

...

WOOt.D BE FAMCUe&gt; FOR

(I)

~ID TH.ATEVERY'BODY

.,I

Ill • liZ Murphy llnritm The
FYI group d - to

15 MINL,ITES.

sabotage a plan to replace

Jim. I;!
G]) Allen . . _
Delectlveo lnveotigala a

•

....••

suicide and the

disappearance of the body.
(2:001
i1J Lany King LMI
9 PMte nM W'NIN..tllil-og
til Nallt... Now

.,'
•.

BARNEY

..
..

1:30(111 81D Fanooua T~ Z
Taddy faces his flrol

challlnge as a talent agent.

·•

••
••

··AN' YOU SHOULD
A-SEEN TH' WILD,
OUTLANDISH HAT
SAIRY HAD ON--

1;1

MAW!! IT'S
TIME TO

PLOW II

eo

i(JJ IDlvenlng
CriiMwatch Tonight
......

..,.

10:30 (ZI

w.Follow the etory of
the ltMnllon that changed

"'
• •
'

tile face of American

bullntll, photocopying. and
tile man who lllvenlacf n.
che~~ar

(Ill

Wlttr Hauling,
volume dl...
counte, 2,000 to 4,000 capacity,
olallrns, poaii, ,Welll etc. 'C111
:104-576-2111
•

87

Upholstery ·

Mowrey's Uphofaterlng ••r·
vlclng trt coun1y .,.. 24 yeara.
Tht
belt
In
furnltur"upllolotorlng. Call 304-6711-4154
for fl"ll HtlmatH,

car11on. (G-.30)

eo Newlt..t Dldc's

unforgettable
whan he torctoeo llle
rellaunonl. Cl

anniYeraafy It

.ASTRO-Ol,W'H
BERNICE
QEDEOSOL

I

J &amp; J W11ar S.Vict. Swimming
pools, clstama, Willi. Call 614"·
245·82B5.

t~aaonable r1tn~

Ill .....

(E The lnvenllon No One

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Wltterton'a

.

10:00 (J) 700 Cttrl! WHh Pat
RoberbOn
. (j) 8plrlt 01 Adventure
Ratting Into Siberia
911
Oealgrtlng Women

..'

Carter's Plumbing
and H•at1n9
Fourth and Pme
Gallipolla, Ohio
614-446·38118

A 4 R Water Service. Pools, cittern•, wells. lmmedlltt·1 ,000 or
2,000 gallont dtllvory. Call 304·
17H370.
·

People Neat Door

til Crook a CllltM
1:00. (J) lUI MOVIE: 'My
ao,trieM'I lacll' NIC
Mondlty NWtt At The
Movtea (2:011) 1;1
(j) 8updoUII
8 C1J AIC Mondlty Night
FooiiNtll
&lt;D (!I AIMIIcan Ma118r1
Smith's 1118 work Is a
capeulsted history Of the
modem world. (1 :30) 1;1

i

.'

·=............

Waltlr lUrches lor
Inspiration In tile gosolpy
townsfOlk ol Covlntown.

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

85 General Hauling

01 Hopn Family

~
(Ill

bill, nol them. Major changaa arelll1eacl
lor Ubra In the coming yeer. Bind lor
your Atitro-Oraph prejllcllona today.
Mall $1 to Aatro-Oreph, c/o thll _ .
paper, P.O. Box 91428, CIIMII.nd, OH
,...101-3428. Be euno lo lltite yourzoell-

. .U.I (llantlo 21·Aprll 111 H might be
wiN to avoid epeoultitiYe enterprltM
today, beclt118 Llldy Luck may be tak·
lng the day olllllcl lhe _,., be &amp;VIIIII t1llnga gat lo ptllh .nd lhowl. .

'*

·TAUIIUS (April • Yo; •1 Dlugraeaclign.
mentl 11e11 11 ' you lnd your mate
ICOIIPIO (Oct. M Nft, 221 Don't do · 1lhould be riiiOMd wtthln tile confliiN
..,ylhlng out Of aptte today In order to
Of your home today lrttitNd Of airing
gat _ _ _ ...._llyoudo,
!Item In public. Open dllcunlane could
lnvfle problema.
there II 1 chanc:e It wtll hurt you mag'
. .• • (Mitr 21......., The ......
than It wtlf your -.ary.
IAGITTAIIIUI (Now. 2I-Oec. 211 Conll· lance you NqUire today lor • 'tedlou8
dentlal lnlormatlon lhtit.'comee to you
a.ignment mlgltt.410I be IYIIIable. II
today ·may tiit olllttle or no Yllue. Beyou Clll't ~~~~~ 111e ta11t1 unlkl·
lore you 8C1 upon It, checlc the 111cta wtth
ad, """" for _.,.,..diY when you can •
aliter.
CAJIIIICOIIII (Dec. 2NM. 11) PeoPle
you know little about muat be CIMIIIillth liglttl0n YOU',.. been· avoiding mlghl
v«y _CIUIIOully today or liN you might
lorelltl way Into !10Uf IICitedule today.

r~(,_21.....,IIIA~ob­

.....1.

come up wtth the lhOrt n Oltllelllck. 1!'1 blet YOU attenct to n graa~ou~~y a
get " out of llle way -and lor Ill.
Be cenolul where you~ your lru&amp;t.
11111 you get LIO
Ill Outllde lnlluYour mtitlrlll protpeCII took nottter en- AQUAMII (olin. •
courll(llng In tile yeer toloeed, but It II lnvoi1Md In • joint ellort todlty, ..... a - - * ' ...... you"- doing
ctNr cut undenotandtng In . . _ .. -you plaltocloiCidoy. ltlollocetn,
bell not to become InvOlved lrfende In ltnilnCIII Y&amp;llurW. beaiuN to whOm lltiiPOflllble lor what. One or 1ry t o _ . . tGiaaiGI n 110w wtth
.
you'll be eble to do bella wtth people both pertlee oould lellaboiiOid II ground . _ . . ~...... ol buCIIdl1ll !loan.
NIN
anon1
Nlllllilllad.
VIICIO
••IlL .BI v- aowtoom you•no nollnwloed IIOCIIIIy. ·
IJIIIIA ,..... II-OcL •I Don't leal PliCa (M. • M wlo •1 Don't do deavcn mull be aleaty tiiOUIIhl out
·. compelled to go along wtth othn today lltYIIOing today tlotit oould unnec 11 rtly ·- ' t lllp olllle way ICidoy or iiN you
Hlhe!&lt; try ID gat you Involved In an actlv· Irritate your co worltn. II you make .. might n up painting yotnalllnto a
1ty you r.lll)' can't allord. You'll be the · t111m lligly, IMjr might mlltellle rattler - · . ., .. d oii'Uihlng to gat .110119
Clone, make hale llcowll'- w110 wtlf hlvl to -.tullly pay tile , ~lor you 1n notum. . .

I- • ...

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•

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a an.-.

aclub.Westbadsbowna~;&gt;wltbtwodl·

amoadaaucloolyonespacle.SinceEast
bad played up tbe line in clubs, East
could DOt bave a doubletoa club. Tbat

1 Hurt
2 Fellow
3 Tease

• VkliliCol ill I

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f,

••.....

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.......

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: Soutb
Eut

Paa

Allpoa

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Opening lead: • K

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mean
,.... t HtbaJe.:,Wealat o~gi.'!':!'z..~ld ~.; 1;.
c1u....
rer ............... a10111...,,,
tb-lines. be does not need to COIIIIII( :•·
Albert Elpstein to know !bat West baa·· ~

four bearta. Tbe rl&amp;bt play IJeeomeil:;..,;
simple: Casb tbe king of bearta; U.,~ ,:
play a low bearl aad lnllert tbe el&amp;llt.. ,.;
from tlwnmy. Return to tbe jaek of &lt;,;·
spadel aad lead back to tbe A.J of ''•:
· bearts. Tbe uniiiWII play ID tbe beart . ·-~:
suit is easy to find when declarer cfcMs ··-·
a little basic COUDtlng. .
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-~

CIIYPTOQUOTE

11:15 (I) Ourl&amp;loake The Wltnese
. t1:M~Iattw
~•~aa~Oic­
llta tiC IIIIa

9-15
G

i=;:.r

·=---.

EWHARC

YFRZ

. " I I • • P.L 1n11n1ty Md

- ~~

lJI MOVII: :no. .... """ 1
ell :l:l.w•tit lla-t11

.GMt....._

..

One letler stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the tkee L'1, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the lelllfh and fonnaUon of the words are all
hints: Each day the code letters are different.

9
VIlle Rille 01
Pauagcl_.

0 Aftlr Hauro

~·

... r ~' '

Hal (1 :DO)

(I):.:TJ:'i-

.A.KJ64

•K9u
t85

AXYDLB.AAXR
IILONGFELLOW

(DCiolne

12100

....

1.,....+--+--+--+-

DOWN

z- .

.
(2).
(J)C.-Citall
...

::

~- ·~.

. ·-i

4 Spanish
1'1sraell
queen
port
5 Wind
5 Mullltude
instrument
10 Porcelain 6 Spanish
12 Shaping
article
machine 7 Roman
13 Was
emperor
lnlatualed 8 Cut of meal
with
9 "Superman ··s Yeaterday'a Anawer
15 Dutch
alter ego
commune 11 Emphasis 25 lam34 One and only
16 Hack
14 Wee one
prey,
35 Where the
17 Make a 18 Undergo
e.g.
buck starts
choice
19 Direction 26 Arid
37 Follow
18 Basic
20 Espied
28 Muslc~l 38 Mussolinl's
precept 21 Polynesian compostdaughter
20 Scholar
drink
lion
39 "No"
23 College 22 large
30 Damsel
in Minsk
in Oregon
truck
32 Beer
41 Never
27 Nautical 24 Merino's
variety
(Ger.)
caH
ma
33 Zounds! 42 Subside
28 Conduit
29 Poverty
30 Desolate
.31 African
antelope
33 "Nightmare
onStreet"
38 Stubborn
-mule
37 K.O. count
40 Courting
43 "-Gel
Your Gun"
44 Stand
45 Dissuade
46 Sheep's cry

11:00 (J) lab1..1

~

....

SOUTH

ru.

West led K·Aof clabs, tben swltcbed
to tbe m of dlamoacls. Dummy's
queen loet ·to East's klDg, and back
came tbe jack. Declarer 111011 dummy's
ace, played A·K-Q of spades 8Dd !ben
ruffed a dlamoad low. West dllcarded

....

tKJ10174
.1063

You brldce players doo't need com·
puten to do your counting. as long as
you caJOpt to 13. "Tbe Bridle Book Vol. 3 - For Advanced Players• by
Stewart 8Dd Biron (Devya Press, Lou·
tmlle, Ky.) baa aa ex.:ellent chapter
oa cot111tiD&amp;. Tbla week we'll loot at
110me ueful exampla.
Norlb flnt bid tbree clubs, even
tboa&amp;b be did DOt bave a club control,
beca- be wuoled partner to lu!Qw
!bat be bad full-~ed blp-card val·
for
four
bid. Had be bid
Immediate y over tbe two-club
II't~:f.~be~would
be sbow!Da more
valua 8Dd leu in point;

'

UH

RGVZ

RHQZ

DB

UH

F Z

-...

. '' i :"'

THAIUKB

_VJ.C . . E U G R R ~ R.H Q Z-. 0 A E U G·T Z.

.~

~

···· ·· ~
'"••l:i1

.

~,-

·~-~

., ..,c-J:

V R F Z K U
T V D A E
Y••••.,·• C.jpii4Bale: REMEMBER THERE'S
ALWAYS A VOICE SAVING THE RIGtff 'lltiNG TO

VOO SOMEWHERE If YOU'll ONlVLISTEN FOR IT.
-THOMAS HUGHES

.•

,,

.7

DAILY CRYI'TOQUOI ES- Here's how to work II:

·= ·-

....!::7='

EAST

.10 7 2

~CROSS

lollow Davfd.Q

.

'' .:..,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

(j) NI'L Monclliy Night

:;'•. .
.·

.' :.;

.,,
··
. .,_.. ·

CROSSWORD

Representetiveo !rom the
PrlnCNI' country oecnotiy

••.,

'·

;; •

til Church a-t llttitiDn
1:05 (II Hogln'l , .....

·,

Stp(ic: Tank Pumping $90 , Gallia
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
,Jackson, OH 1 ~37·9528.

82

r:!'!i

buddy

..,..
·. .,r

count.

(1 :001 t:;l!

iarmy8 iiZ Major
Did "" okt .
tries to torpedo

•

Fatty Trt~ Trimming, ttump
removal, call 304-675-1231.

8 (J) (Ill ALF (0:30) Cl

,.

Mutt H'!z 1966 Torry Taurut 2B1
Travel nailer in atoragt In
Florida. Clean, axtr11 nlca.
$8,500. Sarlcua lnqulrlu only.
614-9i2·2910.

Exp.rtenc.d drywall hanging
1nd finishing 1110 repair work,
304-i7S.6457.

1:00 ()) MOVIE: The lllbla, Pat 1
012 (2:00)

,..

Cobra Camper, 30 ft ., with full
sizt btd and bath, 11 Racine.
$!1500. 814-1141-21140.

C. W. Davison, Plumbing I
lrenchlng, for all water I drain
Mnn, 614-446-0159.

aCin

C!l Natltlnil OG•aoDigOJro•lplllc
Special Examine what
.
happened durtng the II'Upllon
ol Mount VesuviUs tn 79 A.O.

1973 Prowler 25ft. carpet, AC,
txc. cond. 614-367·7530.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Hfetime guaran·
IH. Local references lumlsh~.
Frtt astlmatu. Call colltct 1114·237.Q48B, dar or night. A o
garaB1aement
Waterproofing.

7:36 (II Ianford •

NO .

(!)

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1181 Fleno, auto, AC, AMIFM
Cllltlto. Good oond. 814-441-2544.

f'or Sato: 1171 Plymoutll Lola"'" Promlor.._ 4 ~•• body In
good lhapo n,OOO mllal, no
:~~ 11177 'vW /labbl11 I dr,
1 work, aftar 5:30 o14-4461DID.

WE

'

75 poats &amp; Motors
. for Sale

or
commercial
Aesldlnlill
wiring, new Hrvlc. or repairs. .
Llcens1d elte1rlclan. Ridtnour
Elaclrlcal, 304-117S.1786.

1122.

(t

lhu~.

1981 Vamaha Y249~ motor real
nice plua extru ,..1,500. 304-882-3397
\

1188 Ood~ Day1ono Turbo Z.
au1-tlc A AC". 51,000 mltoa.
8t4-3N-2721.

1117 Oodao Charger 35.00D
m1101 114-211-12:13.
,

. .~ AeRoBICS

with a band ollntemaltonll

1988 XR~5R Honda X250R,
good cond, $800. 304-67$-3492.

Home
Improvements

iiJ Cnolatn
ilJ Major League laMINol
til Top Canl

''•

1985 Yamaha 700 maximum X,
10,000 mllaa, water cooled tn·
alna, Qltlgl kept. $1200 after 6,
114-3711'21101.

81

By Jamett Jat!coby

VldloCounlry

ell NI'L Monday Nlghf

Motorcycles

Services

a

.,,A,~Niyll;l

STtRN UNTONil&gt;'J

1980 Harley Sportatar. Drag
pipes, QOOd rubbtr, windahllld . •
$1600. C.ll614-865-4278.

79

Einstein
Isn't needed

(I)8 (I)E-illment
Tonight
USA Today

1·
5ALLY'5
1

For Sala: 1974 Dodge Van $300
or best otter 614-256-6270.

84

110 Satvago C.ro1 3 acru of iand
whh buoldlng. 114-•

•

..

1987 Ford Aeroslar Mini-Van.
Excellent condition. Loaded. V6, 3.0 liter fuel lnjecltd engine.
$11,600. 814-9115-4338.

1972 17 fl . Starcrafl Tri-HuH
Boat 125 MP, Evlnrudt Engine,
Complete top, new upholtlery.
13500. Call 614-266-1316 aftor
7:00p.m.

Ill Cheers
9 llolllml Vice "men...Send

1;1

7:05 (II , . _ , _
7:30 8 (2) family Feud
(j) NI'L Trivia Game

'
-: ~
......
'·

1984 Honda motorcycle or trade
tor 250 Honda 4-whuler. 614742·2545.

v.:l.eoun

Money Stereo.

1866 314 GMC, 4 whool drlvo
truck, ex eond. 304-675-2531.

1188 Oodgo Arioa, 4dr, leo Slue,
au1o, 4'te cloth lnto~or. f2950.
814-4
781 oret4-441-7104.

1187 Cull- Stria, :13,DOD
miiN. 1 HI Mercury Tracer,
10,000 miiN, priced lo Hll, 304.
175-4128 ovolllngt.

FJrtn Suppli&lt;' 0

I

.. . . . .

BRIDGE

01

. ,~

·~·i;"'

Doctor- Venue- Whack- Effect- CONCERT
Aller looking al his bill, the motorist complained to the
mechanic, "I wanted a tuneup not an entire CONCERT."

Newalbw(t :~

~liZ 01

1975 JHp, CJ5, new tires, new
mufflar, $1500. 614-446-4141 af..
ter 6 or on weekends.
·
d
1980 CJ5 Je•p, exc con ,
$3,500. 304·175·2316 aHtt 5:00.
V-8
1
1983 Ford Rangll'
ang ne,
standard transmlsslon, 4 speed,
304-.576·2569 after 6;00 PM.
1984 Ranger XTL, V-6 low
mileage,
custom
loppsr,
automatic, 304-875·3000 1111
5:00, evenings 675-6277.

74

~-')

(I)(ZIell SpcnCentW
e (I) eu...nt Affair
(!I MecNei/IAIINr

.

'

71 Autos for Sale

5

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

I:.~Jo;-J;Ja;:'"·::':jiU;~,r...,)"''..;&lt;olt!t~~~"t'"-.........

· ~·

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

7:00i~~

1200 Sarin front
loader
Collectol'l Oolll 20 lnc:hea wipump. · wtu fit. small or · 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Frtnch, all porcataln. Will medium tractor, $2,000 firm . Call .:.;:_.:.:.:.;:..::.,_ _,....,,..,-.,.between 6 &amp; 8 614·992-6092.
1956 CJS Jeep. 4 whlll drive.
.. crlflce. 614-992-7711.
Engine nllds rebuilt, nteda
160 AC dlanl tractor, cream some body work. 614-992-7492.
King Wood and Coal Burner r.uft, $4750. 600 earln Ford
wltt1 lrlplt wallplpa used one ractor wf5fl. buah ttoa plow, 1971 Ford Van, Econo Line 200;
winter tor $350. Clll 614,.,.41 • disk, "' cuttlpacktr, .S33tf5. 614· Body good &amp; runs good. $450.
0901 .
2111-6522.
614-446·B330.

1181 Plymouth Reliant. 4dr,
PSIPB, aut~~~ AC, roal '!leo
$3400. 1141.

Vary nlct 2 br, II VlntonL no
Pill. UIIO/mo. Dluo Sac. uop.
• 14-448-ltH er .14-44HN5.

.. ···,·

9111-Man
1:31 (I) Andy Orllfllh

gtr~ge.

1111 Skrllno. 14&gt;84 now ctrpot,
bar window, oppillncoa, docko,
lloro~ldl., Undar.r,nnlng,
price
rod. 4-245- 25.
3 badroom. Holly Park with E&gt;·
pondo. Total aloctrio. $7000.
at 44 .
3

•

iiJ lhow8lz ToUr
ilJ WKRP In Cltocilotatl

Small

1174 21 I. COichman, Park
Modal
with
tlpoout,
air,
1p11r1ment...tra
apptllnc••·
$11000. Calll14-141-23tll.

......

:;,
Headline: "Psychic Conven·
.. tion To Be Held Next Week ...
But Of Course You Already - ·

~~k-~~.1;1
•• Ccontperir

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 br, small cottage, AC, c1rpet,
$1000. Down: $"221.96 mo. 5
Job Hunting? Need 1 tkiU? Wa miles below Gallipolis, 614-446- 3 rooms &amp; bath, $175 mo. $50
deposit. Good rtf1renc1. In
train people for jobt u Auto 8591.
Crown Chy n1xt to the Lodge.
Mechanics, Clrpantars, Cosmetologlltt, Divertltltd Medical 2 ~Siory brick homl, over 100 614-441·1511.
Workers,
Paralegalt, yaars old. Appror. 7 acres.
Et.etrlclans,
Food
S.rvlc• $40,000. Owners will considar 4 bedroom brick, basement,
Workers, Electronics Tech- land contract. Located Euraka garega, large yard. Cunvll1e
nlcl1n1, Industrial Maintenance behind Clay School. 614-25S.. Road. LNH, deposit, references. $450. month (Includes g11]
Workers Nursing Assistants 1678.
304-67S.7B87.
and
Orc:terlles,
Machinists,
Oftlcl Worktrt and Welders. 3 bedroom brick house with
A~ltlar now for classes begin· large lot, Mid Way Drive. New 4 br, houst In down town Galnlng October 2nd. Call Trl· Haven. Good Cond. 304-n). llpolia, $300 mo. 614-44&amp;..0644,
or 614--446-7602.
County Vocational Adult Center :58::8::1::..- - - -- - - 11 614-753-3511 Ext 14. A 3 bedroom home livingroom, For rent or sale, two bedroom
variety of funding sources to kitchen,
bath.
Complttely house, Lincoln Hit. $200/month.
pay tor tr11ining are available for remodeled lnsld• 1nd out. Call 614-992-2720 or 614-99.2::'h:::"'=':.::'l:!lg:::lb:::lo.:__ _ _ _ _ 1$32,500. Owner financed, Lton 3589.
LPN'I Ntldtd, Ex.celltnt Oppor· lrtl. 304·58:6-2462 or 586--4374. · Nice 2 bedroom Ranch houu,
IUnity, National Company, G_o;od 5 rooms and bath. BuiH-In in country. Located In Raclnt.
r .. m Atmosphere, ComptiiiiVI porch. $13,500. Needs tome Credit rettrtnce-deposit. $200
Salary, Call Dorthy Harper, Mid- repair. 614·992-2363 or 614-992- month. 814-992-5239.
dle.t on EstltH, 614-446-7148.
5801 .
Nice tum'd 1br, house on Rae·
Art you underpaid tor your BeauUtully maintained. Prsler- coon Rd. $195/mo. 614-446quallflc•tlons? Schedule your red n1ighborttood. Walk to 1759.
own hours, vacation &amp; pay, with everything In Gallipolis. DafiMar1y K. 304-675-5276.
nitely a must to HI. 614-256· 42 Mobile Homes
Need horn trainer to show &amp; 6855 ·

-homo.

·=

'
'.

• G])

~ commun~tlon

We -

...••

(I)(!) lody
e (I) ABC ...... 1;1
Ellclrlc

~uirod ·

BabYsitter, my home Raccoon

·'

.t

(jj 8portaLak (0:~

"I ar&gt;nredat.
e t.he new office,
t t'
Stilt jj.,.;;j approvtd Phar·
h11f. cl0 YOU
. really . have f.O
IMCOioaY C:O..to
:'!rnaa= !':n:·mnff~ charg(' me rent. on it?"
-.-..ln hUIVJ volume traffic
and
.
_...utlon tkltla, punctual r==========-r.=========~

pari of a
exp.rlence
. working whh peraons whh men.
Ill l'lhlidatlon and dt'ielopmenlol cloabllltiM prwferrtd, but not
NqUnd. SalifY: S8.001hour, to
- · Ubonol bonoiH packaga.
Send I'Mume to Clcllla Baker,
luokor. Community S.rvlces,
P.O. ox 804, J•ckson, OH
_
_. DoadUno lor appllcantt:
1G-3-81. Equat
Opportunltr
lmployor.

!·

worda.

AIMIIcan Magulne
1:05 (I) lle...ty HlllbiiiM
1:30.(J) 01 NBC Nlghlly ......

:'
'"..=~- c!:'~~
ltcon. NAPNES/OOPNES/or

- - In oir -

~mple

a

If you IN 1 UcenMd P.rtLcal
Nurse and enjoy a challsnge,
ploaao
tho limo to raad ohio
ad. Thlo II a ful~tlmo L.P.N.
ROMI~ In two communhy
graup homn tor persons with
Clovolopmontll dloabltilln In
1
40

12

low to lorm lour

9Jam

11

.

0 four
Roorrono- lottoro ol 1M
acromblocl -do be-

&lt;D"-OICholceD
(E 8quara One TV (0:30) 1;1
• G]) lttwW Grltlltlo
.
ilJ CllltriM In Cloarge ·

Employment Services

Food umpllna, MIH &amp;
':.7~· -kondt only.

(I) •

(I) til
g .....
CJl Home Run 11e111r

• (J)

·-11-7.QZ74.

IUiil abto to wort&lt;
te.m NJqulred;

IAMI

I:OOIJI Hardca- A McColl lck

WANTED: llaad DRAFTING
TABLE whh or whhoul dlaftlng

11

••••

TIIAT NI.Y
PIIILII .

C.dar bedroom eulte, S..ly
Poalurepedlc bedding, library
table, 304·675-78S7.

(

.......
-.mlt':ol:T'-"" ploce
"'
antiN houo
Ultlng.

~

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�Plla•

Pomeroy-Middlaport, Qhio

Monday, Septa'llbar 26. 1989

--Local news briefs-- ·Frost reported over eastern half of ·nation .
continued from page 1
Randall Denney , driving a 1980 Dodge Mirada, was pulling
out of the school's parking lot when he turned left to go south \in
S.R. 7. He made the tum at the same tltne a 1987 Pontiac Fiero
driven by David F . Taylo r, 39, of VIenna, W.Va., was about to
pass the entrance. Taylor's car hit the Mirada Ill, the left side.
No one In the Mirada was wearing seat belts.
Randall Denney was cited for !allure to yield and not wearing
a seat belt.

EMS has 13 weekend calls
.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services' units answered
13 calls for assistance. over the 'weeken; eight on Saturday and
live on Sunday.
Saturday at 1:05 a.m., Tuppers Plains transported Cindy
Mayle from an a~ to accident on Scout Camp Road to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The Chester Fire Department was also at
the scene of the acclden t.
Rutland at 1:15 a.m. was called to Dexter for William Eskew
who was dead on arrival.
Pomeroy at 4:56 a.m. to the Pomeroy-Amerieare Nursing
Center for Lovie Watson to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Tuppers Plains at 5:40a.m. went to St. Joseph's Hospital for
Robert Marcinko to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 8:49a.m., Pomeroy was called tothesherlffsdepartment
lor Ronnie Collins who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Pomeroy was called at 8: 40 p.m. to .Mechanic St. for
Homer Baxter to Holzer Medical Center.
At 10:17 p.m. ,.Tuppers Plains transported Chris Crace from
an auto accident on State Route 7 to Veterans Memorial
HoSpital; later to Holzer Medical Center. David Taylor and
Jennifer Wright were treated but not transported. Chester Fire
Department was also on the scene. PomerOY EMS was called to
the same accident and treated Matthew Rhodes and Adam
Denny at the scene. Allen Denny was taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Middleport atll :I6 p.m. transported Mary Lang from a
moped accident at the Dairy Queen to Veterans Memorial
·.
Hospital.
On Sunday at 8:32 a.m., Tuppers Plains was called to the
Arbaugh Addition for Etbel Arbaugh who was taken to St.
Joseph's Hospital.
M lddleport at 10: 34 a.m. went to Cole St,for Daisy Sisson who
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
· At I : 01 p.m., Racine went to Eagle Ridge for . Carl Lee to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 2:45 p.m. went to the Americare-Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Alma Cartwright who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Racine went at 5:58 p.m. to East Letart Road for Margaret
Gloeckner to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

B 00 k

Continued_ from
page 1
: _ __ _ _ _ __

0 0 &amp; - . - -_

Much of the new Information in which his eriemles were in·
the book came from Presser's volved. He was able· to corrobo·
2,000-page · FBI lnforll)er's file . . rate the FBI Information gained
Presser became an informer in during an 'investigation that
the late. l960s, after an acqualn· ulllmately sent Teamsters Prest·
tance, Plero "Pete" D!Gravlo, dent Roy Williams to jaiL
was gunned down on a go!!
Among others convictions as·
course, allegedly by rival crlbed by the FBI to Information
mobsters.
gained from Presser were those
of
Chicago mob figures Allen
Presser's reports to the FBI
Dorfman
and Joey "The Clown"
became so valuable to the
Lombardo,
local Teamster offl·
bureau's investigations of var·
clals
Vito
Mango
and Skip FeliCe:
lous mobsters across the country
and
the
top
five
Mafia
officers In
that the .FBI worked hard to
protect Presser when he became Cleveland.
the target of a Labor Department
investigation of a "ghost em·
"ALPRO (Presser's FBI code
ployee" scheme at .hlslocal union name) has provided lnfortnatlon
concerning (Mafia) figures ... In
in tlie late 1970s.
The book details how the FBI Chicago, Kansas City, Las Ve·
·cooperated with several shad· gas, Los Angeles, Detroit, Cleve·
owy characters and Presser's land and the · New York City
lawyer. John Cllmaco, In an metropolitan area," Oliver Reattempt to catch one of Presser's vell, the FBI's No. 2 man, wrote
accusers ln. the ghost employee in 1983 in trying to head off
investigation, Jack Nardi, sollc· Presser's Indictment.
lUng a bribe In exchange for
The book said Presser sue. ceeded Williams after the ruling
changing his testimony.
As a result of the Labor dons of most the country's major
Department investigation, Mafia families gave hltn their
though, Presser ultimately was stamp of approval. The chief
Indicted, along with two other holdouts were the leaders of the
officials of Teamsters Local 507; Chicago Mafia, who suspected
in the ghOst employee scheme, Presser' was an informer, but
but he died last year before he they were persuaded to support
ever came to trial. The other him after meeting with two top
officials, Local 507 President Cleveland mob leaders, Angelo
Harold Friedman and Recording "Big Ange" Lonardo and Milton
Secretary Anthony Hughes, were "Malshe" Rockman. Ironically,
the FBI credited Presser with
convicted earlier this year.
The book saysPresser used his helping to convict Lonardo and
FBI connections to pass along Rockman.
Information on various rackets In

--Area deaths--William E. Eskew

'

William Everett Eskew, 58, of
4833 Andes Dr., Dayton, and
36231 Cleland Hlll Rd., Dexter,
died Saturday at his Dexter
residence alter a sudden illness.
Mr. Eskew was born Nov1 1,
1930, at Pomeroy to the late John
William and Roxie Meyers Es·
kew. He was a plumber and
welder for the Sauer Mechanical
Company In Dayton, and a
member of Union Local No. 162,
pluml/ers and pipefltters, Day·
ton. He was also a U.S. Army
veteran of the Korean Conflict.
Survivors include his wife,
Mildred Eskew, of Dayton; three
sons, John Eskew, serving with
the U.S. Navy at Pearl Harbor,
Hawaii, Thomas Eskew. of Dayton, and James Eskew, of Lon·
don, Ohio; one brother and
sister-In·law, Chuck and Frances
Eskew, of Pomeroy; a sister,
Margaret Andrews, of Pomeroy;
four other sisters and brothers·
lri·law, Mildred and Chuck
Withee, of Pomeroy; Maxine and
Bob Marcinko.- of Tuppers
Plains; Ellene and Raymond
Hatfield, of Pomeroy; and Leona
and Edward Webster, of Dayton;
a brother·ln·law, Ralph Frye, of
Middleport; two grandchildren;
Jason Paul and Sienna Eskew;
and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to -his-parents, he
was preceded In death by two
brothers, Dewayne and Gene
Eskew, and a sister, Gladys
Frye.
Services will be Tuesday, 1
p.m., at the Ewing Funeral
Home with AI Hartson official·

lng. Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may .call at
the funeral home from 6 to 9 this
evenln£ (Monday).

Mary V. Reibel

By United Pretia Jnternalloaal
first time this season, the N~S the 50s and 60s , the NWS said .
Frost blanketed· much of the said.
·clouds covered much of Flor·
eastern half of the nation ·early
A high pressure system was ldaearlyMondayandachanceof
Monday as unseasonably cool replaced by a cold front stretch· rain was predicted for later in the
temperatures stretched from the · lng from northwest Minnesota to day , forecasters said.
East and Midwest to the South,
the central Plains, bringing
A weak upper-level weather
replacing warm and muggy cooler temperatures to the re- system off the northern Call!orweather.
glon for the next day or two, the nla Coast Sunday began ltnpact·
The National Weather Service weather service said.
· 'lng Oregon, resulting tn cooler
posted freeze warnings for most
Rain pelted · much of ' South temperatures throughout thereor New England as temperatures
g lon, mostly In the 60s, the NWS
CaroUna
during
the
night
·
with
said.
dipped to the 20s and 30s in the temperatures in 60s In Charles·
early morning hours, while a ton, where most of
· city was
In Concord. N.H.,· the first
record low of 49 degrees was set without power Ill the aftermath of w.ldespread frost of the fall
In Dallas-Fort Worth.
·
Hurricane Hugo. Driving
rains ·season produced mornln. g tows
In much of the Northeast and
in the upper 20s. to lower 30s,
Southeast, frost settled In for the were also reported In Alabama while a high pressure system
accornp;~nled by temperatures in brought clear. skies and cool

Search....

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT t-2&amp;-S9

·continued from page 1

ies and scarce provisions at
astronomical prices.
"Ice is going for five times Its
value. This Is a time for giving, ..
not taking, and It Is Inconceivable
to me that anyone would be
taking advantage of the misery
of others," he said.
Sam Walton, owner of Wal·
Mart stores, has agreed
to send
.
several truckloads of supplies to
the storm· ravaged city.
When New York Mayor Ed
Koch phoned offering "whatever
help we needed," Riley said, he
asked for Consolidated Edison
utility workers · to help local
utility crews get power restored,
and Koch quickly agreed.
Meanwhile, twodaysoflntense
cleanup and· repair work had
done little to Improve the mess.
Buildings lay In shambles, giant
trees were splintered, streets
were strewn with debris, cars
and mobile homes were crushed
and mud caked the streets where
a 17-foot wall of water surged
through the city when Hugo hit
land Thursday night.
The estltnated 5,000 residents
of the Isle of Palms and Sulll·
van's Island, who have been kept
from their homes by damage to
the Ben Sawyer Bridge that links
them to the mainland, will be
ferried to the Islands Monday by
the Coast Guard, Charleston

County Council Chairman Linda
Lombard said.
Lombard also announced that
Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C.,
arranged to have the Army Corps
of Engineers construct a tempor·
ary, quarter-tnUe-lol\g pontoon
bridge between the,mainland and
Sullivan's Island : But authorities
said It could take up to a week to
build.
Armed and helmeted National
Guardsmen stood sentry at
street corners In the historic
district to watch for looters.
The city remained under a
dusk-to-dawn curfew, but few
overnight arrests were reported.
At St. Michael's Episcopal
Church, the city's oldest church,
built In 1751, Rector R\_chard
Belser cl)atted with parlshoners
inspecting the missing shingles,
the gaping hole ln. the roof and the
shattered window i-n the build·
lng's towering spire.
'
·'I sensed a profound gratitude
that most ol us were spared loss
of life and then I sensed a real
caring spirit," Belsher said.
"People w.ere out helping each
other In a ra I her wonderful way.
It reflected that people care
more about people than
property."

CAL:U

Dally slock prices
(As of 10:40 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunl, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power .... .... 30 29¥.
AT&amp;T ..... .......................... .. 42lio
Ashland Oil ...................... .. 40lio
Bob Evans ,:........., .......... .. ... 14',4
Charming Shoppes ...... ........ 143,4
City Holding Co .............. ....... 15
Federal Mogul... ...... .-.......... 23l{.
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ........ .. ... ..54'1.
. 31'
Hec k .s ........ ...... .. .... ...... .........
14
Key Centurion ....................13%
Lands' End ........ .. ....... :.... ... 26~
Limited Inc ............ ....... .. ..... .38
Mu ltlmedla Inc ..... ............ 100~
Rax Restaurants ................ :. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... ...... , ... 15'4
Shoney 's Inc ........... .. .. ........ 11%
Wendy's Inti.. ............. .. .. ..... 5%
Worthington lnd .......... .. ... .. 23%

ADS]

ffi3sNOW
-RAIN
f1{;,J SliOWERS
~
FRONTS: . . Warm
Cold
. . Static . . Occlud~d
Map shows minimum temperatures . AI least 50% or a
. ny shaded area i5 ror•cast

W

1~

.

ret;eivJ! preripitatiry" i,dica1~

CorTeCtion
In the Sunday Times-Sentinel's
Melgs-Gallla Post, State High:,
way Patrol story on an acclcept,
it was reported. Keith D. Ashley,
36, Pomeroy, . was cited lor
failure to stop within the assured
clear distance. Ashley was not
cited. It should have read Mal·
thew D. Lltlle.16, Rt.l, Ga!Upolis
was cited for failure to stop
within the assured clear diS·
lance. The Sunday Times·
Senllnel regrets the error.

plants. Members are to take
plants or bulbs for sale.
Group to meet
.The Women's Fellowship of
Meigs County Churches of Christ
will meet at · Zion Church of
Christ, Thursday, 7:30p.m.

Heat

Hospital news
BOa

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Gary
Dill, Long Bottom; Lovie Wat·
son, Pomeroy; Clarence Proffitt,
Pomeroy; Thomas Parker,
Pomeroy.
Saturday discharges - Sue
Lemley, Frederick Goebel.
Sunday admissions - Carl
Lee, Long Bottom; Alma Cartw·
right, Pomeroy.
Sunday discharges - Donald
Ervin.

1062

•
Vol.40. No. 99 M
Copyrighted 1989

an

"

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Dally Sentinel Stff
The Middleport annexation petition as amended by the Meigs
County Comrnlssoners to Include
only those parcels of land on the
east or Ohio River side of Route 7
from the corpi)ratlon lltnlts to
below the village sewage lagoon
received unanltnous approval at
Monday night's . meeting of
Middleport VIllage Council.
The action was taken following
the reading of a letter from the
Meigs County Commlssoners to
Counciltnan Bob Gilmore, pro. ject chairman, stating .that the

Commissioners had proposed the
June Thomas and B\anche plans are for eventual developdeletion of all 14 parcels on the · Edwards who have property 111 ment there.
west side of State Route 7 from the proposed anne)\ation area
Councilman Dewey Horton ex'
the area to be annexed.
were present at the meeting tb plalned to the ,visitors that the
The property which the com- · ask quesdons and express east'slde properties were put Into
missioners suggested he In· opposition.
the proposed annexation area
eluded In the annexation and
When asked about sewage and more as a "favor" anyway since
which the vlllage approved lor water service, Councilman Gil· the property on that side Is not
annexation last night consists of more again stated ~hat the conducive to Industrial develop30 parcels. The next step toward vlllage anllclpates that service . ment. He emphasized that the
the incorporation of that area is there In about two years. perhaps left side is the valuable side, and
for the village to advise the a little longer. Further quesll· the area which will eventually be
commissioners of the decision at oned by Mrs. Thomas regarding of real benefit to Meigs County.
which time the commissioners the time frame, Gilmore said
As lor additional taxes, he
will take appropriate action to that' the .village has nothing to contended that these will be
officially incorporate that area' ga_ln by dragging out the service offset by a reduction in insurance
'Into the village of Middleport. ·
to that area particularly since as well as Increased property

By DICK mOMAS
OVP Staff Writer
Hours of dfl!gent and unllrlng
efforts Monday among local and
area lawmen paid off . In the '
Kanauga triple murdel's,'accord·
lng to Gallla County Sheriff
Dennis Salisbury and Gallla
County · Prosecuting Attorney
Brent A. Saunders.
A suspect was taken into
custody around 10 p.m. Monday
by the Mason County Sheriff's
department on SR. 2 south and
questioned.

.

the obligation of Haptonstall and
the lack of ·commitment from ·
Pomeroy .for the monthly payment were raised by council,
along with · possible problems
·concerning further development
or sale of the property.
Prelltnlnary plans from the
Corps of Engineers for correc·
live work on erosion at the
· sewage lagoon were presented to
Council by Mayor Fred Hoffman.
He explained that the correc·
live work needs to be done for the
protection of the lagoon and that
the cheilpest alternative Is work
Continued on page 10

Charges of aggravated murder'
were filed against Dennis J .
Baisden, 18, no permanent ad·
dress, after the a · thorough
Interrogation by Gallla and Ma·
sori County officials.
The bodies of Marvin W.
Wears, 94, his wife, Beulah
Wears, 81, of 415 Fourth Ave.,
Kanauga and Mrs. Wears'
daughter, Audrey Taylor, 50,
Milton, W.Va., were discovered
In their Kanauga residence yes·
terday morning by a housekeeper, who worked for the

Wears through the week. Mrs.
Foster was there for the weekend, caring for her parents.
Prosecu dng Attorney Saund·
ers officially stated 't his
morning:
·
••J would like to commend the
residents of Kanauga, all officers
involved, the BCI and local
officers, along with the Mason
County Sheriff's Department and
Sheriff P.E. Watterson, for their
cooperation In this matter. Everyone acted quickly and It was
·
Continued on page 10

_board _approves
.m ore loans for Ohio schools
Gallla County law
officials Deanlll Salisbury, sherrUf, BrentSaund·
ers, pra~~ecutor and Mark Sheets, · assllllalll
prosecutor confer with neighbors of the Marvin
Wears famUy Monday at 415 Fourth Avenue,
Kanauga, as they a wall for ofOclals from the Ohio
Bureau of Criminal Jn.vesttgatlon. Prosecutor
Saunders today praised residents for asslsitng
lawmen , In , the apprehension of . a susped.

Saunders said, "J would like lo eommend the
resldi!IIM of Kanauga, all officers Involved, lbe
BCJ and local officers, alons with the Mason
County SherUrs Department and Sheriff P.E.
Watterson, for their cooperation Ia this matter.
Everyone acted quickly and II was through .l he
cooperallon of everyone that we were able lo
make a quick apprehension."

.

Compaie the facts starting with efficiency. The heat pump is as much as
three times more efficient• than any conve:ntional heating system. .
In winter, the heat pump delivers clean, even heat- not the hot blasts and
cold drafts you get with a gas furnace. And in summer, the heat pump offers
the bonus of high efficiency central air conditioning. Also because it's
flluneless, it's cleaner and safer, too.
Let us prove it to yQu. For the full story call us
today at 992-3786.

value, pollee protection and
other services.
"The benefits of the annexa·
tlon for everyone far outweigh
the disadvantages," Horton said.
Also meeting with council last
night was Bill Haptonstall to
discUss a proposed agreement on
the payment to Middleport for
vlllage sewage service to Dornl·
nos and Subway which are
located in Pomeroy but provided
service by Middleport.
The agreement was reviewed
by Council but action was tabled
pending review by the VIllage
solicitor. Questions concerning

C~ntr,~lling
.

A Racine-area native Gregory warehouse which the company Is
Donohew, 34, of Ashville, Ohio, building for Worthington Indus·
was one of three men electro- tries. The construction site Is
cuted Monday on a construction located on beaborn Drive.
site in Columbus. Two other men
According to reports, just after
were critically Injured In the 10 a.m. yesterday, the men were
incident.
attempting to roll a 25-foot,
Killed with Donohew were · three-tiered 'scaffold to the front
Terry Titus, 38, of Richwood, and of the building when the scatfold
J.H. Clayton, 30, of Waverly.
touched one o!tourparallel wires
Willard Tackett, 39, of Pi· about 30 teet tram the building.
keton, and Thomas Moore, 39; of . The power line carried 69,0f10
Springfield, both In critical con· volts of electricity.
dillon, were taken to ' St. Ann's
The accident Is being lnvesti·
Hospital In Columbus. Moore gated by the Colum~s ortlce of
was later transferred to the burn the Occupational Safety and
unit of Ohio State University Health Administration and Co·
Hospitals.
· lumbus pollee.
. · Another injured worker, Jeff ·
Wlllard Tackett, 39, of Pi·
Graybill, 26, of Grove City, was keton, and Thomas Moore, 39, of
taken to Riverside Hospital Springfield, bath In critical con·
where he . was listed In fair dillon, were taken to St. Ann's
condition Monday night.
Hospital in Columbus. Moore
The slx·member crew em· was Jater transferred to the blirn
ployed by Target Construction · unit of Ohio State University
Company had finished putting Hospitals.
siding on the the side of a
Another Injured worker, Jeff

jjjiiiOWIR

25 Cents

A Muttimedie,lnc. NewepapM

Suspect charged in
Gallia County murders

Ul'l

Racine native one of. three
electrocuted in Columbus

VILA~~P.,.....--._

OHIO

1 Section. 10 Pagoo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday, September 26, 1989

By United Press Jnlernallonal
South Central Ohio
Tonight, rain likely and
breezy. Low .50 to 55. Winds
beComing north 10 to 20 mph with
higher gusts. Chance of rain 70
percent.
.
Tuesday, mostly cloudy With a
chance of rain In the morning,
becoming mostly sunny in the
afternoon. High in the mid 60s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Ohio Extended Forecasl
Wednesday through Friday .
Fair. Highs mid 50s to mid 60s
Wednesday and Thursday, and in·
the 60s Friday. Lows In the 30s or
the lower 40s· Wednesday and
Thursday, in the lower or mid 40s
Friday.

HOME IMPROVEMENT EXPERT

IW!'

Clear tonight, low near 40.
Wednesday, sunny , high In~
mid 60s.

Page 3

Weather

A

Mary VIrginia Reibel, 81,
Pomeroy, died Saturday at Riv·
erslde Hospital, Columbus.
Born on April 6, 1908, she was
the daughter of the late Jacob
and Margaret Matthewson
YS: 100% Of Medl·
Reibel.
. care's Part A InShe was a graduate of Pome·
roy High School and Ohio Unlver·
hospital deductslty College of Education. After
Ible plus
30 years of combined teaching In ·
the Marysville Oty Schools and
Pomeroy and Meigs Local
1OO"k of the Part
Schools Systems, she retired
from teaching.
B deductible and
She was a lifelong member of
Trinity Congregational Church,
1OO"k of the usual
Pomeroy, and a charter member
and past president of the
and customary
Friendly Circle of that church.
Doctor and Medl·
She was also a member of Alpha
Kappa Omicron Society In lerna·
cal expenses
Uonal of Delta Kappa Gamma, ·
and the National, State and
Include: office
County Organizations of Retired
surgery, ambu·
Teachers.
~~~::· out-patients, lab
In addition to her parents, she
It
x-rays, and much,
was preceded ln. death by a
IM1l1Cn more.
·
brother, Robert J . Reibel, In 1986.
. There will be no viewing or
. funeral services. Graveside riles
• "'··" 1-800-782-4872 for
will be held at Beech Grove
more lnfonnetlon. Cemetery Tuesday at 3:·30 p.m.,
Ewing Funeral Home in charge.
Ask for extension 803
The Rev. Richard Freeman will
officiate.
RICHARD McKENZIE
In lieu of flowers donations
may be made to the Potneroy
Mc~ENZIE INSURANCE
Trinity Church or the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center.

Pick-4

OfftctA1LS ON SCENE -

"Four reasons to
·"'-

981

WEATHER MAP - Rain Is forecast for parts of the upper Ohio
valley and the north Atlantic Coast slates with showers and
thunderstorms forecast for the lower Ohio Valley and the mid to ·
soulh Atlantic Costal Stales. ( UPJ)

----Meigs announcements--Club lo meet
The Rutland Garden Club will
meet at 7:30Tuesday at the home
of Mrs. Stella Atkins, Miss Ruby
Diehl will be co-hostess-for the
meeting with Mrs. Vernon Weber
to present a program on edible

Pick-3

Council. OKs ·amended annexation petition

.

.

II THE

Stocks

temperatures to most of the
Midwest early Monday , the NWS
said.
Temperatures ranged In the
across the northern sections O~·
Missouri, Kentucky and Plal!rts 0
southern Ullnols and Ind na.
The high pressure system
centered over the eastern Great
Lakes was moVing eastward,,
pulllng in moist Gulf air thlit was .
expected to bring rain to Ken -·
M d
•
lucky later on ay ..f th hi h
The departure 1 o 111 eall ga .
pressure system a sow
h . rthow n
cold
front
to
slip
into
I e 110 er
Pl 1· b In 1
1 ds to the
a ns, r g ng c ou
area Monday, forecasters said.

Ohio Lottery

Bengals.
slip past
Browns

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The state Controlllng Board
Monday approved loans totaling
·$3.6 million tor nine financially
troubled school districts.
The loans will be obtained from
local banks, although the state
will maintain supervision over
the finances of the school dis·
trlcts. A state loan fund for school
districts was dropped this year
because banks are willing to loan
at stmllar Interest rates.
Most of the school districts
requesting loans have tax levies
on the November ballot to pay
them off. Half those levies are
income taxes, newly permitted
by the state..

Graybill, 26, of Grove City, was
taken to Riverside Hospital
where he was listed in fair
condition Monday night.
The six-member crew em·
ployed by Target . Construction
A $100,000 law suit has been
Compa"y had finished putting
siding on the the side of a filed In Meigs County Common
warehouse which the company Is Pleas Court by Southern Ohio
building for Worthington Indus- Coal Company, Athens, agalllSt
tries. The construction site Is Jerry Ballensky, Zanesville;
Rodney A. DuVall, Stockport;
located on Deaborn Drive.
According to reports, just after James Barnhart, Caldwell; and
10 a.m. yesterday, the men were Ttm McCoy, McConnellsvllle.
attempting to roll a 25-foot, · The company Is charging the
three-tiered scaffold to the front men with unlawful activities In
of the building when the scaffold regard to a strike this summer by
touched one of four parallel wires SOCCO employees.
According to the complaint,
about 30 feet from the building.
The power line carried 69,000 the four defendants ·are not
employees of SOCCO and not
volts of electrictiy .
The accident is being Invest!· represented by local miner's
gated by the Columbus office of unions. However, they . dld 1• ac·
the Occupational Safety and cording to the complaint, have
Health Administration and Co· knowledge of the business and
contractural relationships belumbus pollee.
tween SOCCO and Its union
employees.
socco alleges that on.Aug. 23
of this year, all four defendants
picketed the main gate to the
company's Meigs Mine No. 1. On
Sept. 21, SOCCO alleges that
Barnhart and McCoy picketed
the same gate. Thecoalcompany
the second degree, to aggravated
Dale Rlffie, Pomeroy, the also alleges that as a result otthe
assault, a felony of the fourth victim of the assault, was present- picketing, SOCCO employees did
degree. This charge carries a In Court and briefly stated the not work, thereby causing dam·
possible penalty of six, 12, or 18 facts and circumstances sur· ages to SOCCO In the amount of
months in prlaon and a fine of up rounding the Incident. Riffle $100,000.
to $2,500 or both.
Indicated he was In the hospital
The company charges the
Hicks was charged In connec· ·for one day as a result of his defendants with Improperly in·
tion with an Incident which Injuries. He further Indicated his terterrlng with SOCCO's exls ting
occurred on Julv 2 at Pomerov.
approval of the proposed plea business, and requests relief
Hicks was on FederaJ proba· -, bargain agreement.
jointly and severally.
tion at the time C!f the new
Prosecuting Attorney Story
On Sept. 19, the court ordered
offense, having pleaded guilty indicated that Federal probation the arrest of Martin L. Searles
and been sentenced, in March of authorities had represented to beca~se Searles 'had failed to
this year, on a charge of receipt hltn that If a probation violation report to the Meigs County Jail to
of stolen mall matter,ln connec·
were made because of the new serve sentence. However, on
. tion with a break·ln ln.1988 at the charlie. anv time ordered could Sept. 21, the court was advised by
Pomeroy Post Offlce.
(Continued oa Pace 10)
the Melas Sheriff's Department

___

.

'

The largest loan approved was loans from two or thre~ banks.
for $1.1 million for the Howland
Other districts borrowing mo·
Local School Dis trlct In Trum· ney are East Guernsey Local
bull County .
School District, Guernsey
A request for a $4.99 million County, $520,000; Fairless Local
loan for Warren City School School District, Stark County,
District was put off until Oct. 10 $330,000; Mathews Local School ·
while the state tries to help the District, Trumbull County,
district get a bank loan $364,000; Northwestern Local
approved.
School District. Wayne County,
James Van Keuren,.director of $250,000; Paulding Exempted
the Division of School Finance in VIllage, Paulding County, ·
the Ohio Department of Educa· $142,000; Poland Local School
tlon, said the bank negotiating Dis trlct, Mahonlng County,
with Warren was . "rather $382,000; Pymatuning Valley Lo·
sketchy" on whether the loan will cal School District, Ashtabula
work out.
County, $367,000; Weathersfield
Van Keuren said the district Local School District, Trumbull
may have to apply for smaller County, $52,000.
·
Van Keuren said 36 more
dlstlcts are expected to apply for
loans in October, bringing to 64
the number of school districts In
debt. That Is 10 percent of all Ohio
districts.'
that Searles had been advised by
The board also approved:
·the department that the jail was
-A $250,000 contract with a
full and he need not report on the Worthington firm for a radio and
es ta bllshed date. Therefore. Sea· billboard "condom awareness" •
rles' !allure to appear was not campaign to help stop the spread
willfull and the arres I order has of AIDS.
been vacated. Searles Is to report
-A $2 million contract for silt
to the jail to begin his sentence removal at Winton Woods Lake,
later this month.
HamUton County.
In other court matters, an
-Increased spending of $1.3
action by Lightning Rod Mutual million for Ut.ter control and
Insurance Company versus Rick recycling by the state Ofllce of
Hall, versus Orenda A. Cook, has Litter Control.
been resolved and dismissed.

Unlawful activities are
charged in $100,000 suit

Pomeroy man pleads guilty
to aggravated assault c~rge
Gregory Hicks, 24, Nye Ave.,
Pomeroy, appeared Monday
morning in Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas . Court before Judge
Fred . .w. Crow III to enter a plea
of guilty to a charge of aggravated assau11. The case had been
set for jury trial tobegtnat9a.m.
The guilty plea came before a
jury_was seated, after extended
negotiations between Hicks and
his attorney, Charles H. Knight,
and the Prosecu tlng Attorney,
Steven L. Story. This resulted In
an agreement to amend the
indictment from felonious as·
sault, an agiiJ'avated assault of

'·

.. _ . / _ _

-~

-!...-·--·-··

Local news briefs-Minor accident probed by patrol
The Gallla·Melgs Post of the State Highway patrol
Investigated a one-car accident at 3:50 a.m. Tuesday (this
morning) on SR. 7,ln Meigs County, about three miles north of
the Ga!Ua·Melgs County line. .
Troopers said Edward Slek, Jr., 26, Pomeroy, was.backlng his
1977 Buick Regal from a private drive and backed across SR. 7,
strlldng.a guard rail. Damage was minor. No one was injured.
The patrol cited Slek for improper backing.
Another accident occurred 10:40 a.m. Monday on SR. 7, 0.2 of
a mile south of milepost 9. Officers said a 1978 Ford Mustang
driven by Kenneth Shuman, 25, New Philadelphia, Ohio, went .
off the road, striking a guard raiL No one was Injured. Damage
was minor to the vehicle.
The patrol cited Shuman for failure to maintain control.
No on was Injured Ina car-deer accident at 6: 40a.m. Monday
on SR. 7, about two miles north .of the Gallla County line.
Troopers said a 1989 Ply~outh Horizon driven by Russell G,
Esheltnan, 64, Pomeroy ; struck a deer. The anltnal was not
kUied. Damage was minor.
--

EMS has four Monday cnlls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical SerVIce
.Conllnued on page 10

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