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                  <text>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

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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

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

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Commentary
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The. Paily Sentinel
·· 111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio ·_
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEiGS·MASON AREA

~rb

Bm~ """'-''-~..........c~.;=o
~v

ROBERT L. Wil'l'GETr
Publisher
PAT WlllTEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/C~ntroUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mana&amp;er

LET'i'ERS OF OPlNlON are welcome. They sllould be Ieos thaD 300
worolo loa1. AD letter• ore subjecllo Nil lag and mull be slped "1111
name, addrlll8 and telephone number. No •nalped let'-• wUI be puiJ.
II8bed. Leiters sboulol be Ia pod taste, addressing ........ aol perooaal~

lies.

Letters.to the editor
Participants praised
Dear Editor:
On behalf of the Muscular
Dystrophy Association, I want to
thank all who participated In the
Motorcycle Poker Run on September 17th.
'
The event was headquartered
at "The Watering ·Hole" , and
riders came from as far away as
Indiana, Michigan, and North
Carolina to help with the fundraiser for "Jerry's Kids". The
sixty-three mlle run consisted of
five stops - (The Watering Hole
to The Rainbow Inn at Athens to
Lakeview Inn at Route 50 to The
Mlzway Taverri and back to The
Watering Hole.)
At each of the five stops, the
participants drew a playing
card, and at the end of the run,
the best poker hand was the
winner of the event. The beSt
hand was held by Carl Vanover.
•

A bike show was also held as a
part of the event, with trophies
donated by Middleport Trophies
awarded for three top places In
the show, as well as one for the
oldest', youngest and farthest
traveled. Frank Musser won the
top honors.
Thanks to all the local merchants and organizations who
helped with donations and to our
Joker's Motorcycle Club
members, the event was a
success, everyone had a good
time and we raised several
hundred dollars for MDA. This
was our First Annual - so watch
for It again next year. Thanks
again.
Sincerely,
Gall Ferry
32878 Rose Hill Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

A tribute to Geneva Nolan
Dear Editor:
. peak, thirteen local clubs were
This past week Meigs County organized at one time. One is still
lost another of its Outstanding In existence. Each local club held
Senior Citizens, Geneva Humph- monthly meetings with assistreys Nolan. It has been twenty- ance from Mrs. Nolan. The
six years since Mrs. Nolan was highlight of thE' year was the
forced to take disability retire- Annual Achievement Program
ment because of severe heart • with usual attendance in the two
attacks. Many of the present · to three hundred range. Besides
generation do not know that Mrs. the club program, there were
Nolan was County ExU!nslon frequent events scheduled with
Agent, Home Economics from special interest groups, assisted
1938 to 1963 and of the work she by state specialists working with
did during that period.
Mrs. Nolan.
The 4-H club program received
I was Pt'rmltted to say a few
words of appreciation for Mrs. much enthusiastic support from
Nolan at her funeral and would Mrs. Nolan. During her twentylike to take this opportunity to five yt'ars of service, it Is
share thosE' words with the estimated that nearly 10,000
residents of the county, both different individuals partie!young and old as follows.
paled under Mrs. Nolan's supervision. In a county population of
TRIBUTE TO GENEVA ' ovt'r 20,000 people, 10,000 club
HUMPHREYS NOLAN
memt?ers over a twenty-five year
It was my privilege to work period has a great Influence.
with Geneva Nolan during 23 During the period of her service,
years of her 25 years' service as Mrs. Nolan had many state
Mt'igs County Home Extension winners. In addition, national
Agent. During her twt'nty-fivt' winners such as Melva Faye
years as Extension Agent she Jordan Crabtree, Betty Lou
probably workt'd harder and Genhelmer Dean, Mary Kathecontrlbutt'd to more families rlne Tuttle Rose, Patricia Bla·
than any other agent In the state. keslee Circle, and others were
not uncommon.
,
I felt that it would be only fitting
In addition to her work with
to voice some appreciation on the
tremendous impact she made in homemakers, Mrs. Nolan was an
the county over that twenty-five . active supporter and worker with
the garden clubs of the county,
year period.
Preceding my acquaintance Farmers and Community Instlwitli Mrs. Nolan, she had already lutes, the Meigs County Junior
bet'n recognized' for her work as Fair•. and many Individuals on
local government officials re- special problems and interests.
During Mrs. Nolan's twentyquested ht'r io stay In the county,
and my predecessor had to leave. five years'of active St'rv!ce in the
One project that stands out in county . she probably knew more ·
my mind was thE' cotton mattress peoplE' and had more Impact on
project. Under this program, the county than any other lady
Mrs. Nolan had complete super- during this century . Her influvision of· the twelvE' centers ence on the county Is felt to the
where the mattresses were con- prl'sent time and will be handed
structed by hand. Over 1,000 down to generations yet unborn.
Meigs County families benefited
Her work on earth is done. May
from that project.
she rest In peace.
C.harles E . Blakelsee
In home economics work, Mrs.
Nolan had one of the best
Mt'lgs County Extension Agent,
programs In the statE'. At Its
1940-1974

Good Samaritans
Dear Editor:
I am writing this article for two
reasons, one, In hopes of reaching the heart of even one person
against cruelty to animals, two,
as perhaps a comfort to the very
few , "Good ~amarltans" , who
have rescued a cat or dog and
saved it from a dt'ath of agony by
freezing, starving, wandering
t])rough a strange and lonely
place, going from door to door
begging for a crumb, only to be
turned away.
I now have 10 cats of all ages
which I have rescued !tom
cruelty! The most recent, being a
beauutul mother cat and her 2
newborn babies.
Somrone carried her away and
deserted her when they disco·
vered she was lmprt'gnated.
A few dollars for sU!rllizatlon
would have prevented thla! She
was sitting on a brush heap,
watching .for anything that
moved to eat In order to nurse her

ba bles. They were born under the
brush pile.
I drove a couple of miles each
A.M. and carried food to the
mother.
I thought I could not afford any
more of somrone else' s responsibility. Howt'ver, I brought them
home. fed and medicated them.
I madE' a decls Ion. .. . I would
lake them to the "Cat Shelter", to
hopefully be put to sleep, humnanely and not be given to a cruel
organization for experimental
purpose's and die In agony. I
chlckened out!
I thought perhaps, I can find a
loving home for them. There
were a few who said lht'y wanted .
a cat but, II would have to.be a
certain~ color, a ct'rtaln sex·' a
certain age, and, I would have to
pay for It' s shot's, and surgery.
(They were told it would have to
be spayed or neutered if tbey got
It from me! ) This Is only a part of
loving an animal and the most

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Bengals' defense presenres
21-14. victory over Browns

Page ~-The Deily Sentinel
Pomeloy-Middleport. Ohio
Tue1day, Septanbar 26, 1_9~~

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WASHINGTON- The Democratic Party is going through an
identity crisis, trying to come up
with an .Issue that will remake It
as the party of the prople. The
chosen Issue Is the capital gains
tax- a subject that only the likes
of Michael Dukakls and the staff
• of the .Harvard Business School
would warm to.
When the Republicans are
currying populist favor with talk
of flag burning and cocaine
!)abies, how can the Democrats
expect to become the party of the
people by talking assets, depreciation and long-term holdings?
The only hope is for the
Democrats to turn capital gains
Into a class issue, stoking the
populist fire by drawing the line
between rich arid poor . and ·.
making sure the voters know
which party stands behind the

the difference between depletable and deprrelable assets) .
Unfortunately, all thE' best
Image--makers are tied up with
the Republican Party. That
leaves the Democrats with the
·raw charisma of capital gains.
Here Is what you can expect the
party to do wit!) that turkey:
Gt'orge Bush's plan to cut the
capital gains tax will be por·
trayed as a bouquet to the rich.
But Bush will coun!J!r that claim
with convincing arguments that
the tax cut would be more of a
jump start to the econ 0my for the
benertt of all. ·
Bush's tentative tax plan includes a 15 percent . maximum
tax on capital gains for individuals, and no tax on capital gains
for moderate Income people,
defined as those With gross
incomes of $20,000 a year or less.
poor.
The president wants to combine
the tax cut with incentives to hold
It is image-making that calls
for the mind of a Lee Atwater · capital Investments longer. To be
(pictures of Willy Horton making &lt;'llglble for lower tax rates, a
a tax-fret' bundle on the sale of a person who bought a stock, for
beach condo), or the media example, would have to hold it
savvy of a Roger Alles (sound for more than a year on asst'ts
bites of Dan Quayle explaining sold from 1989 to 1992. A two-year

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
holding period would maximize
the tax-benefit for assets sold In
1993 and 1994, and a three-year
period for thpse sold In 1995 and
thereafter.
Bush's aim Is to encourage
stable investments Instead of
speculation.
The president's unlikely ally In
this battle, much to the dismay of
the Democrats, Is the chairman
of thE' Hpuse Ways and Means
Committee, Dan Rostenkowskl,
.D-Ill. He will float a bill similar to
Bush's plan which is based on
Inflation indexing.
But first Rostenkowske will
have to convlnj:e his fellow
Democrats that they can't be
Inflexible about thE' changes til
the capital gains tax, even If they
do want to look like the party of
the prople.
The people will want to know
why, with the 1986 tax reform act,'
Congress should be ready now for ·
an adjustment that appears to
benefit only those wealthy
enough to be in the capital
investment game.

In reality, the 1986 tax reform
Increased the maximum tax on
eapltal gains from 20 to 33
percent by taxing capltaf gains
the same as other Income. That
had not been the case for more
than 50 years, a period In which
the tax advantages had been a
big incentive to Investors to .
pump money into the economy.
The Treasu~y Department
thinks the effect of tax reform on
capital gains was to discourage
lnveslments and force companIes io go to more expensive
sources for money for expansion
and Improvements.
Treasury has a rt'ason to get
excited about a tax break, butlt's
a reason with a short-U!rm
payoff. If the capital gains tax
burden was eased, there would
be a quick move by many people
holding investments to sell them
in the nt'w, more favorable
climate. More sales means more
taxes for the short term. When
the selling frenzy played out, so
would the revenues to the
Trt'asury.

Does .less equal more prejudice?
You will be pleased to knowblacks. Thus, 66 percent of blacks "often Ignore you because they
probably - that 98 percent of earnlt:~g over $50,000 feel they feel you don't have the money. So
white Americans expressing an
have been viewed as a criminal one day I put on my mink coat,
opinion would have no problem if ju~t because they are black; 79 my Guccl bag and my diamond
a black family movt'd in next percent report they rect'lve prej- ring and walked Into the store,"
door, that 88 percent would have
udiced treatment while - and then service improved.
no problem if their 6-year-old
shopping.
Exaggerated? Sure, but that's
child brought home a black
It's a mystery. All those nice not your standard exaggerated
friend, that 95 percent would
unprejudiced whites, and all anecdote from yesteryear. ·
have no problem having a black
those blacks belngdlscrlrnlnated
And there Is even evidence of a
boss, that 96 percent would have
against. Who's doing It? There is form of almost pt'rvt'rse pro,
no problem hiring a black lawyer
an answer. The other p('rson, gress revealed by the fact thar
and that89percentwould have no
that's who. Of the white rt'spond- upper-income blacks feel dlsproblem about going to a doctor
t'nts, 60 percent' say they are less . crlmlnated against. That Is likely
who is black.
prejudiced than "thE' average coming about because as blacks
Golly, it's nice to live in such an
person," and only 3 percent say move up the income ladder, there
Op€'n·mlnded country! And It
they are more prejudiced.
Is more integration and contact
must be so, because It's in a poll,
To add to the confusion, the with whites, quite in keeping will!
this onE' from U.S.A. Today, and
same poll shows that solid the clvU rights dream. But
polls never lie.
majorltlt'S of whites and solid because there Is stU! some race
On the other hand, you will pluralities of blacks belleve ·that prejudice, It will be felt by more
probably - be discomfited to
opportunities· , tor blacks have blacks as more contact is' made,
know that the same survey shows
improved In the past 10 years and even If the prejudice Itself is·
that 60 percent of blacks bellt've
will continue to Improve In the diminishing over lime.
that they encounter racial preju·
next 10 years . .
There Is also a form of
diet' either "dally" (9 percent),
What's happ€'nlng? There Is attitudinal progress shown when
"frequently" (13 percent), "freprogress. If the poll were taken a white respondents are fearful to
quently" (13 percent) or "somecouple of decades ago It would suggt'st, ; even to a pollster
times" (38 percent),
probably not have bothered to pledging confidentiality, that he
A furtht'r brt'ak-out of the poll
dwell on upper-Income--blacks. or she may act In a prejudiced
show that well-to-do blacks are
There weren't many. But the way.
much more·llkely to feel discrim- · U.S.A. Today story accompany·
Further, there may well be
inated against than are poorer
ing the poll quotes a black femalE' acts that appear racist to blacks,
englnrer saying that store clerks . but not to whites. On a recent

Ben Wattenberg
"Nightllne" program following
ABC's special "Black In White
Amt'rlca," a black ABC reporter
noted bitterly that even when a
black had achieved status, it was
hard to successfully hall a cab.
The cab drivers whizzed on by.
Butts It racist wht'n a black cab
driver passes by a potential
black fare? (And they do.) It Is
surely a prejudiced act. But we
can also assume that a black cab
driver is 'not actlng out of race
hatred. Something else is at
work.
·
Cab drivers, blacks and
whites, know that the .violent
crime rate among blacks Is ·
proportionally five times greater
than among whites. The cab
drivers, of both races, are often
nervous about picking up blacks
because tht'y are fearful of
becoming a crime statistic. Is
that racism?
And so, complexity and : paradox. Blacks are making head· '
way - and finding discrimination . . Whites are becoming less
prejudlC!i!d as time goes on -but
reacting understandably to real
fears.
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Masstve
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at' c earmg t e air .
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MISSION HILLS, Gallf. (NEA)
stoned by the board of the South
- On especially bad days, the Coast Air Quality Managemen!
smog that plagues the Los District, a previously obscure
Angeles metropolitan area looks government agency that has
like a huge ollve·dra b Army become very well known by
blanket suspended · above the virtuE' of its imminent Imposition
entire region and smothering Its of a wlderanglng, decades· long
people.
plan to cleansE' the region's air.
The noxious mixture of carbon
"Resldt'nts of the (Los Anmonoxide, nitrogen dioxide, par- geles) basin pay for breathing
tlculate matter and other con- polluted ambient air with detamlnants stretches ftom the San crt'ased life spans, Increased
Fernando Valley here If . the episodes of respiratory lnfecnorthwt'st, into the centra bus!- !Ions and other illnesses," says
ness district, south to thE' Pacific the AQMD study.
Ocean and east into the San
Indeed, the risk of dying in the
Gabriel Valley.
basin because of Its dreadful air
It is responsible, according to
quality now Is about the same as ·
onestudy,foratotalofmorethan the chance of being kllled in an
700 million person-days annually auto accident In the city of Los
of coughs, sore throats, Irritated Angeles,
eyes, hea·dacht's, nausea, chest
AQMD estimates that the an·
discomfort and assorted other nual pollution-control costs assomaladies.
elated with the plan would total
"VIrtually no one is una!- almost $2.8 billion - but the
fected," says the study commls- agency says the region would
------------------------Important!
These perpetrator's of cruelty
will pay their debt in "Hell", and
hope1ully before they die, just as
these helpless and innocent creatlons of God'. They did not ask to
due to
be born' they are h ~ro
~ ,
Ignorance of the world!
"They llstt'n but they do not
hear, they look but they do not
see" : Not my word's, but the
word's of "Jesus" .
If I am ·fortunate enough to
make It to the "Animal Kingdom", I will be happy.! It's a
sham&lt;' God did not give a share of
loyalty he gave these animals, to
thE' Human Race!
They ask for nothing but
existencE' but give so much love!
Please, Please, have your cats
spayed, or, if you don't, keep
them, care for them, and love
them!
St. Matt. 25, 41-42. Verily I say .
unto you, In as much as ye have
done It unto the least of these my
brethern, you have done It unto
me.
Then he shall say unto them on
the left hand. "Depart from me,
·Y&lt;' cursed, Into everlasting fire,
prepared for the devil and his
angels!
This also applies to every one
of his living creations!
Sincerely,
Margaret Stalter

A
[ · de
ppea rna
for ·theft victims

save $9.4 billion In health care
costs annually If It compiled with'.
federal air ouallt.v standards.
Los Angeles' air pollution
problems may be the worst In the
natlu.!, but residents of scores of
other urban areas across the
contint'nt face only slightly less
severe problems. Unless thOSE'
communities take remedial actlon now, they could be forced to
Impose drastic measures similar
to those crafted by AQMD.
There are 123 rules ln.the initial
five-year phase of the agt'ncy's
cleanup plan that will directly
affect the 12 million people living
in the non-desert portions of Los
Angeles, San &amp;&gt;rnadlno and
Riverside counties as well as all
of Orange Couhty. Among them:
- Solvent·based paints, varnlshes, st'alants and other coat!ngs sold or used In the region will
have to be reformulated as
water·based products to reduce
the amount of gases released as
they are applied.
- AU products dispensed from
aerosol cans, ranging from hair
spray to furniture polish, will
have to be either reforrriUlated or
banned. Even underarm drodorants that roll on must be
reformulaledtoreducethesmall
emissions of organic gases re-leased as they evapprate.
- Backyacd barbecue grills In
which starterfluldcan be used to

R0 bert

al ters

TV/

W

light the charcoal wlll be prohibited. Restaurants using char·
coal brollt'rs will be required to
Install special vents to reduce
emissions.
- Bias-ply tires will be banned
from the market because"they
wear down relatively quickly,
spewing small rubber particles
Into the atmosphere. Only more
expensive radial tires will be
sold.
:.... Large commercial bakers
will be required to install aftt'rburners on their oven exhausts.
Breweries will be required to
Install carbon filters atop tht'lr
kettles to capture escaping
gases.
By far the most restrictive
actions, however, are targeted
against · the automobiles and
other vehicles. Within the next
five years, the number of cars
each family can own
be
·llmlted. Within a decade, 40
percent of all cars must run on
cleaner, reformulated fuels.
Within two decades, all
gasoline-powered vehicles could
be banned from the region. Such
actions are radical, but they may
be the only salvation for a region
!bat has allowed its skies to
become clogged with llfe-

wlll

Letter to the Editor
I am writing this appeal for my
son an d d aug ht er- 1n·1aw who 1ost
a11the1r possess1ons a wee k ago
Sunday night when a storage
building which they hadrentedat
Centerburg was brokt'n Into and
everything taken.
thr~atenlng cont~mlnants.
Three buildings were cleaned
out at the same time and the theft
Is under Investigation by officials
at Centerburg. _
My son had sold his trailer and
bought a ]louse but couldn't gel
By United Preq Interuatlonal
Into the house for thrt'e weeks so
Today Is Tuesday, Sept. 26, the 269th day of 1989 with 96 to follow.
they stored their ful'lliture. They ' The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
lost everything. They have two
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
children, a boy, 2, and a girl 3.
The evening stars are Venus and Saturn.
Some of the things takt'n were
Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They include
dishes, pans, sUverware, towels, frontier nurseryman Johnny Appleseed Chapman In 1174, poet T.S.
blankets, spreads, all the furnl· ·Eliot In 1888, Cerman philosopher Martin Heldegger In 1889 actor
ture Including a stero, VCR, and George Raft In 1895, Pope Paul VI In 1891, composer GrorgeGe~shwln
tapes.
in 1898, country singer Marty Robbins In 1925, singer-actress Julie
If anyone would like to donate London, In 1926 (age 63), and slngersJulloigleslas In 1943 (age 46) and
anything to them, please bring It Olivia Newton·John In 1948 (age 41).
to Robert Waldnlg resident on 124
across from Raolne Planing Mill.
. On this dale In history: •
If you want to give money make
In 1777, Brltl$h troops occupied Philadelphia.
checks out to Tlebble or Robert
In 1950, U.N. troops took Seoul from North Korean forces.
Waldnlg, Jr., and sent to Box 276,
In 1983, the yacht Australia 2 won the America's Cup from the
Racine, Ohlo45771. Anything you United States, ending the longest Winning streak In sports - 132
people of Meigs County can do years.
will really be appreciated. There
In 1984, China and Britain Initialed an accord to return Hong Kong
was no Insurance, Thank you.
to Chlnt'Se control when Britain's lease expires In 1997, and to
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Waldlllg. preserve Its capitalist sys!J!m for 1iQ years.

'*

time.''

ATTEMPTS GETAWAY -The Browns' Eric
Metcalf (21) tums the corner as he tries to make
his g~taway from the Ben gals' Eric Thomas In the

first qua;ter of Monday's "Battle of Ohio" In
Cincinnati. The Bengals heal the Browns 21·14 to
lie for ·first place In the AFC Central DiviSion.
(UPI)

Orioles,
Blue
Jays
win
to
.
ens~re . year-end showqown
to play tomorrow. What it did
By ERIK K. LIEF
tonight was it kept us on thE' same
UPI Sports Writer
The Baltimore Orioles made . pace with Toronto. It kept the
certain Monday night. that thE' pressure on them and that's what
champion of tl)e American .wt' have to do."
Pete Harnisch, 5-9, allowed a
League East will bt' dt'cided on
leadoff single to Bill Spiers·over
the final wet'kend of the season.
The Orioles beat the Brewers the first six Innings. He yielded a
5-3 to stay one game behind the a .double to Paul Molitor and a
first -place Toronto Blue Jays, two-run homer to Greg Brock In
who defeated thE' Detroit Tigers the seventh. The rookie right2-0 lylonday. BaltimorE' officially hander allowed three runs and ·
ellminafe.d Milwaukee from the thrt'e hits In 6 1-3 Innings.
Gregg Olson pitched the ninth
pennant r!lCE' and ensured that it
will be no more !'han three games for his 27th save, his 20th straight
behind thE' BluE' Jays when the scoreless appearance.
"It was an excellent perfortwo teams meet ·In a three-game
season-ending series in Toronto mance," Robinson said of Har·
nisch. ·'It was much more than I
starting Friday.
I'Xpectedwhenhewenloutthere,
The Orioles have two games
it'll with Mllwaukt'e and the Blue but it dldn' t surprise me because
Jays h.ave iwo left with Detroit hE' is capable of doing that."
Milwaukee starter Teddy Hibefore their clash In Canada.
guera.
9-6, was rocked for five
"They're all big (gamE's) now
and
seven hits in thrt'e and
,
runs
and they have been for some
two-third
innings In his first start
time," · OriolE's manager Frank
· Robinson said. "This game Is no since Aug. 26. Higuera, who has
bigger than any otht'r and no averaged 17 victories over the
bigger than thE' on&lt;' we're going past four seasons, missed the

Harris signs new coqtract
to coach Milwaukee Bucks
MILWAUKEE (UPl l - Milto Kohl and the organization .
In two seasons since rl'placlng
waukt'e Bucks head coach 1'&gt;1'1
Harris has signed a renewed
Coach Don Nelson. Harris has
contract that will takE' him
compiled a 91-73 record for a .555
through the 1992-93 season, thE'
winning pt'rcentage In the reguBucks announced Monday.
lar season and a 5·9 ( .357 winning
The original three-year pact
percentage) in the playoffs.
Harris signed with the team June
Last season Harris guided thE'
4,1~87, was tot'xplre at the end of
Bucks' to a 49-33 mark , the
the upcoming 1989-1990 season.
t'lghth-bes t in the NBA. He
At the same time, the team
recorded his 200th career win
announced Harris, 52, will asJan. 6 versus Washington. .
Harris jollied the Bucks In tlte
sume the newly created position
bf ·vice .prt'slderit of basketball ' fall 'of 1983·as a scout'. On Jqne 2·,
1986, three months after lie it'll
operations in addition to bt'lng
the head coach.
.
the team !Q P\lrsU&lt;' a 'head
· "Del has done ari outstanding coaching job, lie rt'jolned the
team as first assistant toNel~on.
job and we wish to recognize that
Prior to his association with
achievement by securing his
the Bucks, Harris was head
services for the future," said
coach of thE' Houston Rockets
Sen. Herb Kohl, D-.Wis., team
from 1979 to 1983. He coached the
president. "His teams the past
Rockets to more career victories
tw&lt;l seasons have been aggres(141), more playoff games (31 )
.slve, well-prepared and exciting.
We look forward to the 1989-90 and more. playoff victories (15)
than any other coach In the
season' and beyond with optlm·
Ism." Harris said he was !'rateful ' history of thE' !ranc)llse:

fir st month of thE' season after
undergoing back surgery in
January . He has been hampered
by a variety of ailments during
the season.
Milwaukee managt'r Tom Trebelhorn said the loss typified his
club's inconsistent season.
" It ' s disheartening. But all of
us jlere, who have been here all
season long, have had a front row
St'at to our ups and dowps,"
Trebelhorn said. "You just can''!
win divisions playing in an up and
down fashion ."
Elsewhere in the American
.L eague:
Red Sox 7, Yankees 4
At Boston, Wade Boggs became th e first player to collect
200 hits and 100 walks for four
consecutive seasons.and Dwight
Evans smacked his 20th homer.
Roger Clemens, 17-10, pitched
six -plus Innings for the win and
Let' Smith earned his 25th save.
Yankees rookie Kt'vin Mmahal,
0-1, took the loss.
Blue Jays 2, Tigers 0
At Detroit., Tony Ft'rnandez hit
a two-run home run In the St'cond
inning and Jimmy Key and Tom
Hennke combined for a sevenhitter to help Toronto stay
one-gam&lt;' aht'ad in the AL East:
Key , 13-14, struck out nine in
seven innings , be fort' Henke
came on to earn his 18th save.
· Rookie Brian DuBois. 04, suffered the loss.
White Sox 10, Twins 2
At Chicago. Ivan Caldt'ron had
four RBI and starter Richard
Dotson.posted his second victory
since July 16. Dotson. 5-11,
allowt'd two runs and nine hits in
seven-plu s innings. Chicago
touched rookie starter Mark
Guthrie, 2-3, for three flrst·lnnlng
runs .
Rangers 3, Athletics 2
At Oakland, Calif., Fred Manrique ripped a two-run homt'r In
the eighth inning to lift Texas.
Jack Daugherty led offlheelghth
with a walk off Todd Burns, 6-4,
and Manrique hit his fourth home
run of the year . Drew Hall, 2-1,
pitched one and one-third hitless
innings and Jeff Russell picked
up 'hls American Lt'ague-leadlng
38th save.

,

·Cornertiack Eric Thomas batted down a pass at the Cincinnati
one·yard line with 1: 461t'ft tos'eal
the victory.
"Everybody always wants to
talk about Clt'veland' s defense,
but ours is justas good,"Thomas
said. "We were talking before the
game alxlut how our defense
never gets mentioned. We want
people to know that Cincinnati
does have a good defense."
Cleveland mounted drives of 65
and 46 yards In trying for a tying
touchdown In the closing eight
mlilutes, but was unable to crack
thE' Cincinnati defense on fourth
down.

•

.

Irish remain No. ,I in UPI poll
Michigan. Arkansas and West
VIrginia. Pittsburgh, a 30-23
winner over Syracuse, rounds
out the Top 10. The Panthers and
No. 11 Southern Cal each improved four spots.
As a result, Southeast Confer-• •
ence rivals Tennessee and Alabama t'ach slipped a spot, Into
12th and 13th. North Carolina
State advanced two spots to 14th
and Arizona joined the ratings at
15'th with its 20-17 dt'feat of
Washington.
· Washington State lmprov&lt;'d
one spot to 16th, one ahead of the
state rival Huskies, who It'll
St'ven places.
No. 18 Georgia moved up two
spots, Air Force stayed No. 19
and Florida State rejoined the
ratings at No. 20 with a 59-9 rout
of Tulane.
The Seminoles' rt'turn gives
independents five spots in the
ratings, with the SEC and
Paclflc-10 lt'ad!ng confert'nces
with four apiece.
By agreement with the Ameri· ·
can Football Coaches Association, teams on NCAA or conferencE' probation are Ineligible for
the Top 20 and national championship consideration by the
UPI Board of Coaches. Those
schools are Cincinnati, Houston,
Oklahoma and Oklahoma State.
The UP! Board of Coaches:
Atlantic
Dick Anderson, Rutgers;
Frank Beamer, Virginia .Tech;
Jerry Berndt, Temple; Jack
Bicknell, Boston College; Mike
Gottfried, Plitsburgh; Joe
Krlvak, Maryland; Dick Mac-

By LISA HARRIS
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - NotrE'
Dam&lt;' remained the overwhelm·
lng choice as No. 1 In Unitt'd
Press International's collegE'
foot bali ran kings Monday, the
day No. 5 Colorado mourned the
death of Its quarterback.
Miami stayed No.' 2 and Nebraska broke Its tie for third with
Auburn, which was Idle and
slipped to No. 4.
Colorado, also Idle, stayed No.
5 'on the day It mourned the
weekend death of quarterback
Sal Aunese, whose battle with
cancer ahd attempt to tutor
rt'placement Darlan Hagen Inspired his surging team. The
Buffaloes, 3-0 and at their highest
position since 1977, have dedicated their st'ason to him and
next play Washington, the only
. school to drop from the Top 10
this week.
... A spokesperson at Colorado
said condolences ·have been re·
celved from several colleges and
the NFL's Kansas City Chiefs.
Because of the memorial service Mo.nday, Coach Bill McCartney was the only member of the
Board of Coaches not to vote.
The Fighting Irish, who de-feated Mlclilgan State 2H3,
earned 43 of the remaining 49
· first-placE' votes to rt'taln the top
spot they have held since last
October. They captured 714 of735
possible points, 84 more than the
Hurricanes, who toul&lt;'d Missouri
38-7.
Nos. 6 through 9 all won to
remain unchanged: Clemson,

Vikings hire kicker, hold meet
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) -Min· lngs and flew to Minneapolis
nesota Vi kings management Monday night.
Karlls said Tuesday he has
looked ou tslde the team for help
·been
practicing on his own and Is
In the kicking department . and
ready
to get back Into action.
asked the team's players to look
"I
took
four strokes off my golf
inside themselves to try to turn
gam&lt;'.
1
told (VIkings general
their fortunes around . .
manager)
Mike Lynn that 'Is as
The VIkings·, 1-2 after back-tohack losses to Chicago and many as I can afford to take off
Pittsburgh, came to terms Mon- · this year so I'm ready to sign,"
day with former Denver kicker Karlls said.
He said doesn't think he will be
Rich Karlls. He agreed to a
rusty.
o!le-year contr11_c~ wl!h. the Vlk"It's like riding a bicycle. I
don't
think it ever leaves you," he
The Daily Sentinel
said. "It's great to be here."
(U8P8145-HIIl
A Dlv•loD of Mullitmedta.lne

ST. IT. 7

Pht'rson, Syracuse; Don Nehlen,
West VIrginia; Elliot Uzelac,
Navy; Jim Young, Army.
South
Bobby Bowden, Florida State; .._
Mack Brown, North Carolina,
Bill Curry. Alabama; Bill Doolt'y, Wake Forest; Pat Dyt',
Aul!urn; Danny Ford. Clemson; ...
Galen Hall, Florida; Johnny
Majors, Tennessee; Bobby Ross ,
Georgia Tech; Howard Schnellenbt'rger, Louisville.
Midwest
Fred Akers, purduE'; John
Cooper, Ohio State; Herb Deromedl, Central Michigan;
Hayden Fry, Iowa; Lou Holtz, .
Notre Dame; Bill Mallory, Indt- ·
'.
ana; Tom Osborne, Nebraska;
George ·Perles, Michigan State;
Tim Rose, Mjaml (Ohio); Bob ' ...
Stull, Missouri.
. .,
Southwest
MikE' Archer, Louisiana State;
Greg Davis, Tulane; Spike
DykE's, Texas Tt'ch; Kt'n Hat- ·.'
field, Arkansas; Glen Mason,
Kansas; David McWilliams, ..
Tt'xas; Dave Rader, Tulsa; ' '
Grant Teall, Baylor; Dick To·
mey, Arliona; Jim Wacker, ···
Texas Christian.
West
Fisher DeBerry, Air Force;
Terry Donahue, UCLA; Lavell ·. '
Edwards, Brigham Young;
Claude Gilbert, San Jose State;
Dt'nnis Green, Stanford; Don . .,&gt;··
James, Washington; AI I.uglnblll, San Diego State; Bill
McCartney, Colorado; Larry
Smith, Southern Cal; Jim Swee-D&lt;'Y, Fresno State.

..

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lnnln11 of Monday n,lght's game In New York. The
PIIWjea woa H lo elbnlnate the Mels from the
Nllloaal Le11111e East title chase. (UPI)

...
.

8UB8CRIPI'ION B.\TES
ByC.,......orlllll«-1•

~

.

DRIVE THRU CONVENIENCE STORE

Memtier: . United Pres JnternatlonaiJ

Inland Dally Pras ASIOdi!Uon and the

Today in history

., .

FIVE POINTS EXPRESS
POMEROY, OHIO

Published every arternooa. Monday
through Friday, m Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio VaUey Pub·
llshlng Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;9, Ph. 992-2156. se.
cond claiS postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

YOU'RE OUT! - PhllUet catcher- Darren
D...Jioiii'IIIICbel to hilt left and mall~ tfle OUI play
· 01 lite' Meta' Kevin McfteYDoW. ID &amp;he four&amp;h

•

"We had a chance to tie· it or games against Clt'veland, .fired
win It, but we couldn't run thE' three scoring passes Monday
ball on the goal line," C!eveland night. He hit Rodney Holman
coach Bud Carson said. " Cincln- with eight- and 16'yard scoring &lt;
nat! · has a· much-Improved passes in the second quartt'r for a
defense."
14-14 halftime tie, then fired a
·With 7:52 remaining and after 19-yard TD pass in the third
Clevt'land had marched 65yards, quarter to James Brooks .
Tim Manoa was stopped by
Es lason completed 14 of 20
virtually the entire Cincinnati passes for 184 yards, bu I Wyche
line for no gain on fourth -and-one said his quarterback dld a lot
at the Cincinnati nine.
more than throw the ball with
' 'I gave some thought to a field
precision.
goal there but !thought we were
"Boomer had one of those
too close,'! Carson said. "We just special games calUng plays,"
needed a few lncht's."
Wyche said. "He had a lot of
Then after moving 44 yards , thinking to do out there."
Cleveland was faced with fourth Eslason said the touchdown
and-goal at the four with 1: 46left . pass to Brooks "came after an
But Thomas knocked down Ber- audible. We called a lot of
nle Kosar's pass Intended for audibles tonight."
Reggie LanghornE'.
Kosar. who hit 15 of 23 passes
"I saw Thomas out there, but I for 203 yards, accounted.for both
thought I could get thE' ball to Cleveland touchdowns with ~
Langhorne,'' Kosar said. "Any - passes of five yards to Eric ~
way, I couldn't afford to take a Metcalf and six yards to Manoa. · ' sack."
"I thought we played well
Langhorne. said Thomas "just t'nough to win," Cleveland's
steped in front of me. He jumped Frank Minnifield said . "We
out In front of me and 'made a should have won. But I'll say
good play. H&lt;' could have easily these two teams are pretty close ··
Intercepted It."
to even."
.
Cincinnati and Cleveland both
Cincinnati rookiE' Eric Ball
have 2-1 records and share the replaced the injured Ickey
lead In the AFC Central. The Woods in the starting lineup and '·:
Bt'ngals won their 12th straight gained 78 yards on I8 carries. • '
home contest.
"I was really psyched up ," the ·
Cincinnati's Boomer Eslason, former UCLA star said. "I felt ··
who had thrown only one touch· good out there. I just wan!J!d to
down pass in his previous six kt'ep going and going."

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cleve-land entered Monday night's
game against Cincinnati with the'
· AFC's top-rated defense, but the
Bengals showed a couple of
clutch defensive efforts of their
own.
Nursing a seven-point lead
• throughout the fourth quarter,
Clrlclnnatl's swarming defense .
•shut Clt'Velimd down Inside the
lO·yard line twice In the final
• eight minutes to preserve a 21-14
trlu'mph.
'
•'The defense won that one for
us," Cincinnati ) coach Sam
Wyche Said. "It came up with big
plays when we had to have them.
We held them when ll was clutch
time, when 11 was game-deciding

Democrats need a shot in the image

•

Cool..,

13 Weeki ........... ....................... D).IO

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(

..
. .'
'

�'

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 26. 1989

Buckeyes
unhappy
with each
other

Scoreboard ...
NFL results

ChM~I•-.1.1 ..•..•.....•.••••..,13

!IOATION4L FOO'I'IIALL ~AGUE
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Bulll!lball

IB•Ilnapoll!iilll. ~V Jf"t !lo 1 p.m .
Atla•tll , .S- GrPeq k)' at Mllwn Wt•. I
p.m.
.
( 'inclnr.U Ill kan!lllfl City, I p.m .
Df&gt;n\'Cr at ( 'll'Vf'land. I p.m .
1\oliuml at Houlllon. I p,m .

N'ew Orh!MIIS. I p.m.

Tum .. Bay at

Mlnrr~ota.

Freedom Bowl- Nauned Rob Halvab
Wi!lot'IMe athletic dlh!ctor.
Lollbil.na St~ttl' ·- An•oulll'i'd lhwb~ker Eric Mlddeton teh foolball k!am.
Loyolll Mar)'ll10unt - For...-d Brian
MLoCio!lkey bs tran!llert'd lrom

LA Rams Ill San FrantiNI.'O, I p.m .
Ulro ~~:oat l'hoenbi , -1 p.m .

San

at L,\ Rafclrrs, I J.m,

Cal-Irvine.

p.m.

r.h~head

.

·'

Scott.

ND\' \ 'OKH( liPI)-TIIro U nlledP~"
lnle rn&amp;UkJIIILI Board of &lt;.:o~ache Top 21
('OIIo•tc" foofhall rnllni{S. with l'f'I.'Onl and
flr~ · pllict• volf':&gt;l In pan!11lhl'flt'!4. total
points l hlltOf' d on 15 points for fir:« plac~·.
I-I fur Wl"Und, o•tc. ' · lind lll!ilt week' !I
nakinA".

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2. .Miuml ( .&amp;) (:J.O) ... ..................... 630 'l

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1. .o\uhur•fl)l'!-01 ....................... 5110
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11. so .. et ern r;ILI (2-IJ ....... ........... . 2113 15

12. TPn~~t&gt; (l-0) ..................... 19M II
13. i\lllhllmll t'!-0 ) ........................ 1f31Z
U . N.('. State ! H) ....... .. .......... 120 16
15. Arlzoraa IHI ............................71 z
16. w ~t~~hlnlfan Sf•lro ( 1-0) ..............n 17
I i. \\' Mhlnll:lon {2· 1) ........ ..............tJ11
Ill. GI&gt;O~ll (:!-0) ...... .... ............ ..... .30 211
19. i\lr Fon:l' (.f-8)
.2-1 18
20. Florida Slult' i 2·2l .................... UI z
z· unr-J n lrd
O•ht•r.o. l'f'{'l'lvlnr ' \ 'ote!O: BrlA"bam
N

''

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

, . .,_.n~~; , f1or1du Stldf', frf'!ilno Sl..lltf',
1111noi!i, Mit·hi ~~:an Slalt•, Syi"At"st", Tnas
T••t•h, UrL,, . Vlrll:lnla.

•

Majors

....

Hy li ntlt•d Pres s lnlt!rml lo.-.1
1\MERif ,\:'\i LE.\GUE

.

.•

" ' L P et.

Toronlo ................. .MG 01 .5-I K
Rultlmorv ................... JI~ 'r:l .HI
Boston .........................7!1 77 . ~
\'lll•·.tUkt•l' ................... 09 O'l' .Mlti
('ll•v•·land ....................il ~ ~~ .u~
:'lif'Vt' \' n rk ........... , ........OI 115 .-155
Ot•trolt .............. : ......... 57 IOU .363
\\'rst
Oakland ......................!&amp; 52 .6(13
faiUornia ........... .........l\9 67 .SOl
K ~tn !'i!L"' (' lty .................119 60 .571
Tt·ll~" ........................ .1'1 1 75 .51!1
Mlnii'Sot.JI ..................o; liD .1t0
S.·atllt' .........................69 Rt .U:!

GB
-

I

&amp;I.,
6 1"1

tt \lr
\tl.'!

":!!
-

5
3
1:1
17 1•·t
\!5
C hl ca ~~;u ............ , ..... ..... &amp;; 119 .t'Z! :!7

...•
•

.·.

.
'

MordOll''s

lk!tlit~

Rostnn 'l', N..w \ ·nrk I
Toronto :!, Dt&gt;t roll II

..

Hoo"l!r !lporl~ Informal kl• assiHianl•
,

Hockey

Df'lrolt- Sl pd cenier MlkeSIIIInxer .
Lo~ An,;eif'!l - Wldved lor-rd Ron
O.pay; ~nl fon... rd Syl\'alnCoutwit'r
WMI~~:oalltRobhStlluber ID NewH11.Ven of

i\mHk'an Hockey

Leaaue.

Nt•w .Jersey - Asslpd to UIICil at
,\merk'IUI Hoc key Lto~: A"DAitfondtorJI

Bill Horn 11nd Ml ke- Scllwalh, dt'ftn!lt'mu
Slt'phllllf' C11.rrier, .Jamie Hu~rofi , ChrM

Klenf:, Mart' Lanlf'l, Dave Man:ln)'shyn.
M.)'k!tl O' Connor ~· 8111 Wood&amp; !Uid

furwardli Prorry i\ndft'110n, Chrhtiaa
Bertrand, Tim lludy , Chrh1 Cldtockl,
PaMI Guay. Bill Huard, Jeu.M.am·
Lanthlw, .J~fl Madill, Sltve Roonry,

Brtlll ~llllf:r"'a. ,J.,;on Slmoa, Kl!:\'ln
Claud.- VIJ ...aln a ... Paul

Todd,

fsehlll'r1.
NN Vork- Sl peddt&gt;fen~~~em~~a Dllv ld

Shaw·.
Phlllldelphla- i\"!llpdloHenht'f or
i\merk·IU1 HIN:key Learw: coaUender

Mart 0'1\mour. defP.Memen Mike St~h­
f'r!4. Darren Rurnhlt', Gord PaddcK.•k,
Shaull! ~ahOI, Scott Sudelln and PIUII
!War!Olhll.ll, left wtnp ReldSim~n, Tony

Hunna•k. St'Oil Flekher.

RosM

Fltzpa-

lrk:k and Glrn Srllbrookr, riKht whi!PI
BrucE' Rt:ncLU land Chrl~ Jt'n!W'n, ct•nk'I'K
Don lilt~~:'· Mark BaliNen, Henl Hawley,
Kod1y Tr~tl{'l' '""'Dun Nachh1111r.
Soccf'r
Mf' m!*ili (AISA) - Re•mt'd Memphl!i IWpli; owner!lllp transferred to
Mf' mltll!! ~~:roup le d hy MarHn k~lmt&amp;n ,
Kor1lld i.;wtro\' ltnd Charle!l Welch •

Mollt!Q''s Sporb Clllt'fldu
BMehall
1\m rrk lUI lA' ~
Nt&gt;•· York Itt Bo!ilon, 7:3$ p. m .
Toronto at DetrOII, ; : 35 p.m .
Minmosofa Ill CltlcaR:O. II: 30 p.m.
Balllmeno at Mllwaukl'e, /1:30 p.m .
Tell:!l.!l at Oakland , Ill: 05 p.m .
NaUorw.1 lA&gt; apt'
Kt. Loul!i Ill PIII.JIMII'kh, 7: 0~ p.m .
Phlllldelphla at Nrow \'urk, 1:3$ p.m .
Chll'llltO at Montrnl, 7 :3.~ p. m.
i\Uanta at HouMon, ll : !1$ p. m .
Clnclnratl161 San Dlr~. 10: 05 p.m .
SIUI tranti~+t:o a1 Lo!O M~es. 11; 35

Bolling

nl~hl

S ,\TIONo\L LE.\G UE
"'
.................... .•. 1i!l
~1. Louls ......................l-11
."'t•ll' \ 'o rk .... ........ ........ll%
Munltf'ai ............... ......KJ
Pitl!olhtl !'l"h .• , ..••• •.••••• •••• ~ t
Philud ci~Jhill ................ 6:1
W..sl

L F1•1. GB
611 .H7 71 .S,.I ·I
.:i2S li1 1
76 .5Hi II
lit .-162 li1n
!II .JOt 2ti

~ ,~~t~tFran .................. 91

.3M ·.l.tK S
.529 li
.171 17

"'t

66
71
lfoulllon ....................... K3 il
Lu,; ,\n~tt•h:,; ................. 7-t fi:J

~a n DIP~n .................... Kf

pntbl6tlon.
Penrll)'h'an.._- Namt'd,JobnSimmoM
womf"'l'!l blllletbllll u!!ibllllnl aRd BreU

!Wo!Olt· o•·

Tu~da,)· 's Gamt's
Nt•w York ( lliawkllbi 11·1-1 ) at Bo~;to n
!Hf'tael 1-31. 7: 35 p.m .
'foronta (F'Ianar.;an K-1111 at O.•trolt
tTa.nana 9-U ), 7; 35 p.m .
i\linl'l'sotu f •\.--uilrra 2·5) Ill ( ' hlt·a ~~:o
(Pt'n ''l ll -13) ,ll :30 p.m .
Haltlmoft' (.lohn.~n t -51 ) at Mllwuukt'r
(.~a\' arro &amp;"' ), M: 30 p. m .
Ot•W IIUid i!&gt;l"·tndt&gt;ll 13-61 at !;uUI~
(lln n!IOn i-5), IU: tl5 p.m .
Tr11as (.tf'fft"'al 9-1) at Oaklllnd If .
\ ' nun,; li-9), 10:05 p.m .
,
Kan!U." nty ( Sabt&gt;rha.--l"n 2 1-11
1t1 O.lllfornlu (,\h hoU 1 ~- 111 . Ill: :u p.m .
" ' r dnt&gt;.'lll a,l' 's G~tma.
N~· York ut Bo~&gt;~ton. nl~~:hl
Tarnnttt al Dfotrolt , ni~
MlnQ•!Uiht at Chlc a.:o, nixtJt
Ra1tlmo~· u Mlh,'ltukt•j•, ni.-M
(lh·wlandat So• altlf' , nl~~;hl

Tt•llll."i al Oakllllld, •litlll
Hlm- ('lly at {'a lifornla..

NCAA - Plllce d Soutlt"alern LoW6IIfta bal~~olu!lhall prolftm on · 5- ~ar

p.m .

Chll·a.--n 10, 1\otlnl'l'Sota 2
Raltlmon• :;, MIIM-uuk+"l' :l
Tt'1lll" !J, Oakland 2

('hl~· lll:4,

St11tP - SuspPnded rW1nln•

blll!lol .reromP Wllllam11 llnd Georxe
F,lef:dler IUid defea!llvt' h~~ek vu..hn

UPI ratings

..··

·Collexe

Mar,k Hfll!l')' lt!Df!l8 ~81!d.iu.t~~o

1 p.m,
S\' GIMIIb a1 Dalla", -1 p. m:

Maiiii!Q' , Od . \!
Phlladf'lphla Ill fhh·aro. 9

Denwr- SlpHI Jo"'.. rd Bill H~&amp;nzllk
to mWtl,year cemrart.
Houllon :- Slprd pard ·Mitchell
Wlgl•s lo1-)'e!W' contralt.
Mllwa11a.r- SiprdCoaehDel Harrb
throUKIIr19ft-t3 IH"w;on 11nd named him
vier pl'l'!l~deDI of hauokethall operalloll'l.
Cal-l nine- Named Sieve Clark and

rA"h at' Dt't roll, I p.m.

Wwobln~on 111

S~·aUit&gt;

.

tulpen cliac• Bleil Don~lyfor llf'1t!lt
~teuo~t; ••~ • d bench t.'Oaeh Bnc~
Klmm w.·UJ beceme IIUl,jor-leapw l'Oonllnalor oll ... mct ktD-

Nt&gt;w En•ndiU Buffalo. 1 p.m .

&lt;
'

Rice.

ct&gt;achTommy Such, ptk·hlaacoach Ra.Y
Mllter. biUin~ llllli"'Kior Mill Ma;y aDd

ll•l nn&amp;ll 21 Clt&gt;Vf'land U
SU .. a,y. Ocl . l

' ''

· of the se•oa; u.uneed wot~lll not 'p6cll
up opllon on C'!.o ntrad: fi outfielder Jim

Pltt.hullh - OUPn."d vanlnc.ti to
third-hue coachGeneLamonl., 111'11-h.,..

lA Rnm!&lt;i -II, Gr«-tn Bay 33
SIUI 01 ~1{(1 ~ I . Kan•!!i flly 6
lk-nwr 31, LA RaUden U
MOI!Ii.!Q'' !ii nosult

Pill~

&amp;.Hblll
AniiiMIInrl'd ret ftment of
pkcher Bob St•nh!y, effldlve lit ihe end
llos&amp;on -

(A).

WNIJI&amp;'on30, Dal~li 7
!'lo'l' Jt'h 40, Mlllltli S3

.•

Mo .. a;y'!t Sport!&amp; Tran•cUonl

Houlton - AnllOUnt'ed .-.t.IN"ment •f
l'GilCh Voll Berra; unouaeedl..e!i MIMlti
w.Wd 1101 ret.r. as pitchiftl: 1.-Guh;
namedJohnGraham.--eeel'lll rrana1"'11.l
Aubum of-tftto New York-Penn Leoape

Bufflllo -10, Hou!iion ;e1 (OT)

.•

Transactions

M7

I 0 l.llt 113

;u..,.u..

" 'e cllle•ho'• Games
Chlnro 1111 Mon1rul, •IPI
St . ~W. at Pltbbu ra;h,. 11IKW
PhlkdelplllutNtw Yon. nip!;
Allaa&amp;a a1 He•lloa, niPI
Clnd nnatl .t San Dl eao. niP&amp;
San f'ranel.eo at Lo11 An .. M. niPf

1t

w~•

Ram~ ........... 3

San IF'u.ndiK.'O !Dow• H) aa Lo•

An~es fMarlMa H) , Jt:SI p.m .

Pltoenb:: ............. !
M' !Uihln~~:ton ~- .... 1

lA

Ctllcqo (I.. Mn 18-U) at Mollllrnl
I Marti-. Ii-I), 7 :31p.m .
Alla11lll (Greue HJ ac Hoa11011

Clndn•ll CAI-mlllrolll U J aal Su
Dhtp ( Rum~~~~~~e• S-18) , 11:15 p.m .

Pd. PF . PA
Ml U
I U .1111 11 U
I t .Ill 57 1!

8 11.11 F'rllJ\ . .. ,....... 3 0 II 1.1110
!loiew UriiN ll'l!li ...... l ·2 0 .3:13
2 0 .3:13
A;llllnta .............. . l
&amp;lnda,y'ii! Ke!!iult!!i

York{FH.-*ai!-S), t :U,.m.

( Deshlle~ll-lt),A : Hp . m ,

0 0 1.111

o

be.,d..,-.. Games
SC . Loubl ( HIU HI) at Pllt.be111h

llJ

I. T

Pblladelphla ...... !

aes•s

M....,. ••
Ptun,.~a 4. St. Lolli• I'
PIIU.dfl ... a!, N,.,_- York I
Mnlrul-t. Ollcap S, ltiiUI.
Adafl&amp; S. JloY•o. 3
Ch~~;: I••U S. SM Dlep 3
Los Mplsl, Saa Frucllk'O t

110

"""'

W

N\ ' Glanh ......... :l

It ,Jt3 18
Aa ...ta ..... ...................l% t11 ... a
ll:·dl..ltN ~ lor dhi..u title.

(Pa&amp;W•• Jot) , 'r:IS p.m.
Phll.adelpti• lGrlmM~)' H) ai N•w

-

M' orld

..\maiPur

( 'h amplonshlpi\
Footh&lt;611
fi P\'toland al flrK•hu•ll. 11 p.m .
Tennl;;

San Franl'IM'O - m en's tournam ..nt

This week's games
This Wet•k 'ti

Ohln f'oll.-r.;•• Fooltlall Sl·hft!uW
Saturd"'-"· Srptlfl
Roston follr.:t• Ill Ohio Slatt'
Akron at n-un.-- Grl"t'n
ft•nlr.ll Mh•hl.:an at MIIUlll
Kt•nt Slu.tf' at fl; l 'llrBIIna State t nl
Ohio U nl""r~ly a1 LSU t nl
Toledo al lndl:.ana
('lnclnlllll at LouiMrilk&gt; .
MorgM Stal e at \ 'ounptown Sial('
&amp;lclwi•-11\' I'"U'f' at OtLl'rhPin ( n)

Mounl l lnlon at ('apia1
·Mu!'lldn ... m at He ldeltll'rk t nl
Hiram aiiWlt.ny ( W V~t l
.John Carroll al Marlett! tn )
Ku.Wrnazoo CMh·ht at Ohio Nnrtht•rn
\\'ltll'nhl'f1; at i\llt&gt;A"heny ( Pa )
( 'aM• llt&gt;i'it'f\'' at Ohio Yii'!!Wyan
~· nlson at E:~trlhwn (lnd j
Albio n CMi r h) at Knyon
M'oostt•r at Oberlin
t"lndlay ali A"hlund
MILIK•hesk!r tlndl 11.1 Rlufllnn

ArkimMOL&gt;O·Pint• Bluff al Ct•nlro~.l lo;tatt•
M.-n·yhund (Pal at Da)'lon
Ot•IIMfll'f' at WllmiriA"lon
Clf'ne"a (Pll ) at Tlllln
Urhana a1 Olh·t&gt;t OYIIrh )

Sports briefs
Honors

Tom Herr of the Phillles, who
hit .520 during the week, was
na med Natlonal League Player
of the Week. ... Dwight Evans of
• the Red Sox, who hit .500 and
drove In 11 runs this past week, Is
the American League Player of
the Week. .. . Morris Lewis of
.· Georgia, a junior linebacker who
-: led his team to a 23·6 victory over
;. Mississippi State, Is UPI's Sou·
theast Defense Player of the
Week. .. . Nebraska wingback
Richard Bell was voted Big Eight
Offensive Player of the Week ....
San Dl ego State running back
:, Darrln Wagner and University of
·: Haw all linebacker Joaquin Bar·
: nett were named Western At·
·· hletic Conference Offensive and
Defensive Players of the Week.
... Wes t Virginia took the top spot
. In the!lrstballotfortheLambert·
. Meadowlands Trophy given to
:· the best football independent In
.·' the East.
·•
Horse Racing
Bertram Fires tone, owner of
Calder RaceCourse, bought rival

Gulfstream Park. The amount of
the sa le, which also includes the
lucrative Exotic Gardens Inc.
chain of flower shops, was not
disclosed.
Golf
Greg Norman of Australia,
Seve Ballesteros of Spain and
Nick Faldo of Britain rate 1-2-3!n
the Sony ranklngs. They are
followed by four Americans Curtis Strange, Mark Calcavec·
chla, Payne Stewart and Tom
Kite.
Baseball
Cubs fans · placed about 27
million callS over the weekend
trying to buy some of the 84,000
tickets available for postseason
play at Wrigley Field. Callers
overlOaded Illinois Bell switch·
lng centers In northern Illinois.
leaving thousands temporarily
without phone service . ... Hall of
Fame pitcher Christy Mathewson, who dropped out of Bucknell
after , his junior year to pursue
baseball, will have the school's
football field· named after him
next Saturday.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

992-3671

,

· Pomeroy, Ohio

Au~•r•

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

Pt. Pleua•t vs. Parkerhurt So1th

Wheel Horse Power Works For You.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY ·vALLEY

it:

Appointments and Walk-ins Welcome

Office Staff:
Mary Dillard,C.M.A.
Gail Hoveatter
Linda Trent
138 Maih St., New Haven, WV + (304) 882-3134
Formerly Bend Area Medical Center

· Ml.dl1port 992-6661

.THE CENTRAL TRl.SI' ONPANY

.

T1rt &amp;Wr 11ttU Me Things }l:ippm.

.

(~ MACHINE and WELDING

...,

MIKE HALEY • OWNEI

WELDING - FABRICATION· SUPPLIES
COM.PLETE MACHINE SHOP SERVICE
RADIATOR REPAIR and REPLACEMENT

17 COLE ST.
POMEIOY, OHIO
. 992-3768

Eader• ••· .Oak Hill

RIDENO
SUPPLY

985·3308

Ohio Sat1 we. Bolton College

405 PEARL ST.

992-3322

MIDDL~PORT

NORTH

992-3471

Weekly Spael•l•

SECOND AVE.

CHESTER
At Tht End of the Pomtroy·Mason Bridgt
985-3301 or
992-2556
Pomeroy, Ohio
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
985-3303
Denver ••· Cleveland ~---oi--,.__.;W;;,;•;;;h;•m;•;.;•;•·i.V;I;;;ns;;;,o";..~-----....j'---.;S~ou;;.;th,;;•;..'•;...••.·.so•at•h•w.•n.·'.'.•---+----·L-og~a~n~··~·.0.•1.11~~o·ll~•-~~-1

19 89 .

PE
BANK
,~ .
"Yo~r ~::k~eighbor

,.,

a 1

s2oo IN CASH PRIZES

MEMBER
SICOND STREET JACKSON
AY.E. FDIC
5th STREET
Mason, W.Va.

Pt. Pltotont, W. Va.New Ho••· W. Va.

773-5514

675-1121

NOTHING TO BUY-ANYONE MAY ENTERI
$2 0.00 EVERY WEEK TO THE WINNER

882-2136,

.,__ _.,.P~IHt~urgh n. Detroit

•

CONTEST RULES
The contest il opf!n to anyone except employees of Tha Daily Sentinel and their Immediate
·
··
. ·families.
.
· .
An award of •20.00 will be given to the person picking the moot w_inners. In case of il tie
one winner will be drawn from all correct entrieo.
ALL ENTRANTS MUST USE THE ENTRY BLANK BELOW.
Games for this waek will be found in the advertisements on this page. Ust the nime of the
team you think will win oppooila the nama of the advertiser.
Oecision of the judges will be final and entries beconie the property of The Daily Sentinel.
This contest will .continue for tan weeks from the date of first inoertion.
IF MAILED. ENTRIES MUST BE POSTMARKED NOT LATER THAN FRIDAY.
Clip the coupon below ... .
it out and send to ...
THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

FISHER FUNERAL HOME
MIDDLEPORT
614-992-5141

,il

Cleelnatl vs. Kantas.City

DAVIS-QUICKEL

NSURANCE
-ACROSS FROM THE COURTHOUSE-

Pltts~urgh

Grown O..r..,se w.

Hav~

Member FDIC

Helped Othera to Grow
MemberFedwaiRos...

Ohlo Uelvmlt¥ VI. L.S.U.

PAT
FORD
461 S. Third

Middleport

992-2196

PAT HILL
CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH-DODGE

~~CHRYSLER
'f~ MOTORS

399 S. Third,

Middleport, Oh.

Bowllat Oren vs. Akro•

JIM COBB
Pomery, Oh.
MiaMI {Ohio) vs. Centul Mle~lgan

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE. &amp; MORE

VAUGHAN'S
DAVIS·QUI~·EL INSURANCE

'

222 East Moin

.992-6872
Pomeroy, Ohio
Beside Buttons &amp; Bows

EWING FUNERAL HOME

PH. 992-5432

228 W. Main St.

::gm ·

308 East Main

BAUM LUMBER

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
.

an TUPPERS PLAINS

.

2 2137
•
w~·v•

.

992-6614

DOWNING-CHILDS-MULLEN-MUSSER

~

PO~~~~

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

BILL QUICKEL

n.

~Fa~e~s

CHEVROLET ·CADILLAC
OLDSMOBILE-GEO, INC.

AGENCY INC.

W.~.U.

.

The Communiry Owned Bank

ST
FOOTBALL CONT·E .

Pomeroy, Ohio

Mike &amp; Chris Manin • Owners
Home Ph. 985-4396
HOURS: 10 A . M.-5 P.M .

FARMERS. BANK

Buying Good Clean Furniture-Complete Auction Service

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS

Pen a St. vs. T, ...

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS :
992·2.174
500 East Main
Pomeroy~ Ohio
"We've

Got The Keys

To A Better Deal"
'
' · "PERFECT PICK"
You'll Rtcehrt $1 00.00 OFF on a
Ntw or Used Car or Truck!

.•,

•

992-6669
271 ' North Seco.ncl
Middleport, Ohio .
_
For AD Your Prescription and
Sundry Needs See Us"

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

RIDENOUR SUPPLy·

212 W. Main

K&amp;C JEWELERS

· .Bro.wa u. Rho•• l1lalld

••

JIM COBB .

PEOPLES BANK

'

.'

Washl11gton Sl. vs. U.S.C.

RAWLINGS-COATs-FISHER

BANKSON£

DAIRY QUEEN
~ALLEY LUMBER

Eighteen Thousand People Who Ca.re.l

PLEASERS

BANK ONE. ATHENS, NA t A PART OF THE CARING TEAM
Ath ans. Ohio
Member FDIC

MARTIN'S FURNITURE &amp; MORE
DAVE'S EXXON

San Dlago St. vs. Utah

CROW'S RESTAURANT

.-...

RACINE MOTORS

'

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING

:~

·~
'

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Navy vs. Morth Carolina

ANDERSON'S

•

· is available for·a
holding back wait·.
lim,ited time only.
ing for a great rate,
For more infor.this is But you've . . mation contact .
got to act fast,.
your nearest
This offer. from
Central Trust office
Central Trust
. G9
• all
- ' . ~-vYU~
UL ·

TWIN CITY

Racine, Ohio

SOFT DRINKS. FRIES. SANDWICHES

PRESCRIPTION
•
SHOP
.

been .

•Jj

CHERYL CARPENTR
HOME PH. 949-271 0
Milgi ••· Nelu•vlle-York

~....--b:ZY1iit:1]

iitrv•r• vt. Arr~y

" you've

Middleport

New England ••· Buffalo

"UN

•••
RACINE
MOTORS
949-2551

BAUM
LUMBER

•

Accepting New Patients
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
9 a .m. - 5 p.m,
Wednesday
9 a .m. - Noon

OWNEI: DAVE liED

.VALLEY LUMBER ·

11 East Second
Pomeroy, OH.
992-2342

INVEST IN A
CENTRAL TRUST

Family Practice

991-9907

we. l•••uue

555 Park St. 992-6611

Pomtroy, Oh.

Self Se"'e Gas - Ohio Lottery Tickets
VCR Rantala · Milk - Bread
Carry•Out B- • Hunting Ucenseo

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Reds defeat San Diego 5-3;
Giants close to NL West title

6 MONTH CD.
NOW!

DAVE'S EXXON
FOO~ STORE

Mulberry Ave:, Pomeroy, Ohio

~NDERSON'S

By GENE CADDES

UPI Sports Writer
COI,.UMBUS, Ohio ll!PI)
Ohio
State coach J~hn Cooper
..
vowed Monday to g¢t the finger·
pointing arnong his players,
which occurred after Saturday's
42·3 loss to Southern California,
''straightened .o ut."
A number of players, both on
offense and defense, publicly
expressed dissatisfaction with
some teammates following the
USC game.
"My answer to that Is you
ought to have a little of that when
you get your fanny kicked as bad
as we did," Cooper said at his
weekly press luncheon.
"! don't wan I our players
(complaining) among them·
selves; don't misunderstand
me,' ' added Cooper. "Bull think
a competitive person should be
upset after they get beat as bad
as we did.
"I loo~ed at films of the game
yesterday a,nd I didn't see
anybody who played well enough
to sli back and judge the other 21
players.
But we'll get It straight·
•
ened out if that is a problem,"
TAGGED OUT- Oakland's baserunner, Mike pitcher Charlie Hough (,49) before he can reach
Cooper said the Buckeyes
home
pl!lY
during
Monday's
game
at
Oakland.
came out of the USC game with
Gallego, below, Is tagged on lhe neck by Te~
only one major injury, but that
(UPI)
was a costly one.
Tight e)'ld Jeff Ellis, possibly
the best at the position In the Big
.Ten. suffered damage to both the
anterior cruciate .and lateral
collateral ligaments of his left
knee and is scheduled to undergo
surgery Tuesday morning. He is
out for the year.
Cooper said he was concerned
SAN DIEGO (UPI) - A double.
won as a starter since Aug. 4, with two costly penalties against
bases-loaded error with two out
San Diego moved ahead 3·1 In las ted seven-plus Innings. The . the Buckeyes early in the game
In the eighth Inning paved the
the third when Mike Pagliarulo right-hander struck· out six and on which, he said, films .failed to
·way to a San Olego loss that left led off with his third horne run of surrenderetl seven hits, lnclud· show an infraction.
them on the verge of elimination the year, an RBI double by Bip ·lng homers to Matt Williams and
"But," he satd, "when you get
In the National League West.
Roberts and Alomar's sacrifice Pat Sheridan.
beat as !ladly as we did, off.icl~t·
Cincinnati took advantage of fly.
Wetteland left the ganie when
lngdldn'tbeatyou. I'm not going ·
Padre mistakes Monday night to
The Reds pulled within 3·2 hi Sheridan led off the eighth with to stand up here and alibi about
post a 5-'3 victory .'The loss meant
the fourth Inning on Benziger' s his third homer of the year to the officiating."
.
that despite a 5·2 loss by
leadoff home run, his 17th of the make the score 4·2. Alejandro
The Buckeye coach said an
division-leading San Francisco year.
Pena relieved and struck out Will 87-yard touchdown pass, which
In Los Angeles, the Giants are
Cincinnati tied the score with a Clark, the league's leading hit ' made the score 14-3, followed
assured at least a share of the NL
run in the fifth on O'Neill's ter. to end the Inning. Pena moments later by an Ohio State
sacrifice fly.
West title. San Diego is five
finished for his fifth save.
fumble at the Buckeye 11, which
games back with five to play .
In other National League
Don Robinson, making his first
led to a 21·3 Trojan lead, were his
With the score tied 3·3, Scotti games:
start for San Francisco since team 's undoing.
Madison stroked a two-out dou·
Dodgers 5, Giants 2
Sept. 13, departed with an Injury
''All of a sudden, from 11 bell\g
ble and went to third on succes·
The San Francisco Giants to his right knee- the severity of a 7·3 game and us having a little
sive walks to Jeff Reed and became the first team toclinchat which is uncertain. - after confidence, it becomes a 21·3
Barry Larkin. Pinch hitter Luis least a share of a divisional throwing a 1·2 pitch to Wetteland game and from th'at point on
Quinones then hit a grounder that
crown Monday night, but will with two out In the sixth.
everything we did sort of backcaromed off the glove of second · have to . wait another day to
"I couldn't reach back and get fired and dlslngrated·. We got out
baseman Roberto Alomar, allow - capture the NL West title.
anything on my fastball," said of our game plan a little bit,
ing Madison to score .
Mike Scloscia drove home four Robinson, 12·11. "I went as long didn't play with poise and confl ·
"I missed the ball, that's it. No runs and rookie John Wetteland as I could."
dence and got embarrassed.''
excuses. I should have had It, I posted his first victory as a
Clark, who missed the previous
The fumble at the 11 came on
know that," said Alomar. "It starter In almost two months to three ganies with a bruised right an exchange between quarter·
shouldn't have come to this. We lead th!' Los Angeles Dodgers to a knee, fanned three times in going back Greg Frey and tailback
didn't get the hits when we 5-2 victory over the ~!ants.
0 for4. His average dipped to .335. Ca,r los Snow and Cooper blamed
needed them. The opporttunltles
" We really don't want them to
"I've felt better," said Clark, it on a lack of practice lime by
were there and we dido' t take clinch It here at our park, so I who leads San Diego's Tony Snow, who Is nursing a continu·
them. We played real good ball guess we have to sweep them," Gwynn by .002 in the batting I ng knee problem.
·
the second half of th e. year, but said Scioscla, who hit his career· race. "(Monday night's perfor·
"We 've got to get players
we can't win every game."
high lOth homer and a ·two-run mance) is an .Indication of how I practicing In order to be effec·
Rob Dibble, 9-5, earned the single before squeezing home an felt. It was like starting spring live," said Cooper. · "We've had
victory in relief of Tim Leary Insurance run In the eighth. training all over again."
players miss too much .practlce
, with two hitless Innings, walking ''Realistically , though, the
time then they get In the game
Expos 4, Cubs 3
one and striking out three. John Giants are a tremendous ballclub
and
things go unnoticed. You
(10 Innings)
Franco hurled a hitless ninth and they're knocking at the
have some timing problems, you
Inning to post his 31st save.
door."
have some fumble problems, a
Pirates 4, Cardinals 2
Greg W. Harris, 7-9, took the
Combined with San Diego's 5·3
blown assignment here p,nd there
Phlllles 2, Mets I .
Joss In relief of Ed Whitson. loss to Cincinnati. the Giants hold
and It makes the whole football
Harris allowed two runs and a five-game lead over the Padres
team look bad."
Braves 5, Astros 3
three hits in two innings, walking with five games to play . A San
four and striking out none.
Francisco victory or a San Diego
"Today was a real struggle," · loss Tuesday night would give the
said ·san Diego manager Jack Giants their second divisional
McKeon. "It's been a long crown In three years.
season. We've had our backs to
"Five gall)es to go with a
the wall since July. We'll just five-game lead," manager
'
have to come back tomorrow and Roger Craig said. "Yeah, I like
play it again.'.'
our chances.' •
The Reds added a run In the
On 'Tuesday night, San Fran·
ninth on Todd Benziger' s two-out cisco sends Kelly Downs, 4·6, to
RBI single. ·driving home Paul the mound against Los Angeles
O'Neill.
rookie Ramon Martinez, 5·4.
Cincinnati took a 1-0 lead in the
Wetteland. 5·8, who had lost his
second Inning on Leary's RBI last five decisions and had not

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By The-Bend
i Garden
.

Club meeting held

Helen Eblin presented the
~ progr~m. "Berried Shrubs That ·
: Attract Birds," at the recent
meeting of the Fernwood Garde n
Club held at the hom e of Mrs.
Eblin.
Some mentioned were ·wild
: cherry, choke cherry, mulbery,
• black gum and hackberry, birch
- trees for birds, tulip trees , and
, box elder !or seeds. Fenc brows
, provide various· foods depending
· upon the weeds and grosses
'
growing there.
Devotions were given by Ida
• Murphy who read, " The Seek-

:srudent of
!quarter named
Southeastern Business Col-lege's Student of the Quarter for
: summer 1989 has been awarded
· to Mrs. Sharon Dars t of
:Pomeroy.
~ This award Is presented to the
•student chosen as outstanding
: a mong students at SBC. Mrs.
;Darst maintai ned a 4.0 grade
• poin t average and had a perfect
; attendance record .
: She ' is the daughter of E ldon
-and Wanda Vining of Rutland
·a,nd is married to Da nny Darst of
·Pomeroy. They are the parents
:of two children, Corey and
:Chris topher. She is also a
·member of the Nazar ene Church
:Or Rutland.
: Mrs. Darst graduated Sept. 12
;wi th a n assoicate degree in

Tqe Daily Sentinel
Timday, September 26, 1989
Page- 6

Community calendar
•

commtttee '
chairman

ers" by Edith Dean, and "The
TUE.'!DAY
THUltSDAY
Appliance Blues," and "Dawn. "
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
. HARRISONVILLE -The HarRoll call was answered by risonville SeniOr Qtizens will group of A.A. and AI Anon will
have a meeting and first three meet on Thursd.ay at the Sacred
nam ing a favorite winter bird.
Following the progra m, the months birthday slipper on Tues- Heart Catholic c;:hurch at 7 p .m.
meeting closed with all members day at 6 p.m. at the townhouse.
For Inform at ion call
Mrs. Myron Miller was named
rei&gt;eattng the Lord's Prayer and
1-800-333-5051.
the nom inating chalrmaJJ to
a silent prayer · by Kathryn
RACINE -The American As·
Johnson.
soclation .of University Wome n
POMEROY -The Women's secure new officers for the
Others atte nding with those
tAAUW) will have a meeting for Fellowship of Meigs County upcoming year at the recent
already mentioned were Suzanne , all members on Tuesday at 7 Churches of Christ will meet at meeting of Group 2 .of the First
Warner, and granddaughter, p.m. at the Racine United Metho- tile Zion Church o! Christ, Wolf Presbyterian Church In Middle. port, when the group met at the
·
Pen, on Thursday at 7:30p.m.
Chelsea Yo ung, Evelyn Thoma, dist Church.
home of Mrs. Eddie Burkett.
Marge Purtell, Thelma Giles,
Mrs: Paul Haptonstall preRUTLAND -The Friends and
and Wllovene Bailey
Flowers
Garden
Club
of
Ru
!land
sided
over the meeting in which
The hostess served refreshWEDNESDAY
ments to al l.
will be holding Its annual open - Mrs. Harley Brown and Mrs.
REEDSVILLE -The Joppa meeting on Thursday at 7:30p.m. Dwight Wallace thanked the
United Methodist Church will at the Rutland United Methodist group tor the !lowers. each ot
have revival and homecoming . Church. Judy Snowden will be them had received. ·
Wednesday through Sunday at having the program. Everyone
the Least Coin was conducted
the church on Route 681 near welcome.
by Mrs. Don Lowery who read an
Reedsville. There will be special
article e ntitled " Toward Peace
singing and preaching.REEDSVILLE -The River- and Justice" by Maya Michael.
view ·Garden Club will meet on Mrs. Myron Miller was the
MIDDLEPORT -There will ThurSday at 7: 30 p.m. at the devotional leader and she used
be a regular meeting of the Ohio home of Ruth Ann Balderson the Dally Guide Post.
Valley Comandery No. 24 K.T. at with Mary Alice Blse as co-hos·
A money donation was made to
the Middle port Temple on tess. A guest speaker will be permit the visiting mt'nlster from
. Wednesday.
present. ·
Java to secure Bibles for the
people In Java ,
RACINE - Th e Wildw,ood
POMEROY -There will be a
Mrs. Carl Horky conducted the
Garden Club will meet a t the free clothing day at the Salvation Bible study on Chapter 5, " Love
home Kathryn Miller on Wednes- Army on ThurSday from 10 a.m. Isn't Either Blind," from the
day at I p.m . Members are to to noon. All area residents In · book "The Lord of .Love" by
bring· s upplies to make cone need of clothing are welcome to LeR~y Lawson.
·
trees.
attend.
The hostess served a dessert
course with coffee.

SHARON DARST
Micro -C omputer
Processing.
·

Data

Students
commended

Fenton Taylor, principal of
Meigs Hi gh School has announced that Kristin King ,
daughter of Gene and Judy King,
Bar in Middleport for a party Pomeroy, has been named a
with a band , refreshm e nts, and ·.. Commended Student in the 1990
door prizes dona ted by tri-co unty National Mer it Scholarship
,
businesses .
Program.
·
Participatio n in the 3 p.m. run
A letter of commendation from
is not necessary to participate in the school a nd National Merit
· the party. Those givin g a nytime Corporation, which conducts the
during the day to give blood may competition, will be presented to
a ttend. Even those who are not Miss King,
medically eligible to give blood
About 35,000 commended stumay attend the party,
dents nationwide are being honored fo r th eir outstanding performance on the 1988
PSAT-NMSQT, which rank s
ing on Wednesday, a m orning them in the top five .percent of
class at the Bradbury school for more t han one .million students
all kindergarten students 'in who entered the .1990 Merit
Bedford Township to include P rogra m by taking the qualifythose c hildren in the area north of ing test. Commended students
the high sc hool on Route 33; and scored slightly below the level
one at the Harrisonville School in required to co ntinue in the 1990
the afternoon for stude nts in competition for Me rit Scholars hips , but they have shown
Scipio Township.
Parents are being noti fied bu t exceptional academic pron\ise.
An official of the Merit Pro·
those with questions co ncer nin g
g
ra
m stated tha t " to be desigbus sc hedules may contact
na
ted
a Co mmended Student in
Roger Holman, a t 742-2990.
this ex tremely competitive program is an attainment deserving
of public r ecognition a nd is a

•

Kindergarten c/asses added
T he Meigs Local School Di strict has a dded two additional
kindergarten classes due to the
increase in the number of
students.
Enrollme nt this fall has in;creased to 189. Las t spring a t the
-e nd of the school yea r there were
164 stud ents in kindergarten in
the district..
: In addit ion to the classes at
'Pomeroy, Midd leport, and Rutland , there will be a dded start-

·Alfred UMW meets
Gertrude Robinson led the
pledge program when th e Al fred
United Methodist Women met at
the church on Sep t. 19.
The society joined in· readi ng
Mis sions a nd Unity from Bible
Res ponsive Readings. The progra m closed with the s inging of
" I 'll Go Where You Want Me to
Go" and the Lord's Pra yer.
rai n forest of Puerto Rico where

people a re very poor.
.Ten members were present
a nd 26 sick ca lls were reported.
During the social hour , Ni na
Rob inson se rved sa ndwi c hes.
cookies, and nuts to thosP menti -

Qn·e d and Martha Poo le, Charlotte Va n Meter, a nd Osie Mae

Alfred news
The Alfred United Methodis t
Ch urch held its homecom ing on
Sept. li with a total of 70 in
atte nd ance. A bas ket dinner was
enjoyed at 12:30 p.m. wi th
Eleanor Boyles as king the
blessing.
Afternoo n services were d irected by Lloyd Dill inger. Specia l singers were the Gospel
Notes of Lancaster. Their songs
Included " I Am Blessed."
"Great Big Wonderful God,"
"Love Melody ," "Meeting in the
Air," "Sweetest Song," " God
Likes People," "Glory Land."
and "He Touched Me. " Th e
Alfred Choir sang "Church In the
Wildwood, " a nd " I'll Meet You In
the Morn ing."
Chu rc hes represented were
Tuppers Plains. Orange, Richland Ave. of Athens, Little
Hocking, Williamstown, W.Va.,
Marlena . . Belpre, North Bethel,
Zion Metho!llst, Reynoldburg,
Zanesville, and Columbus.
Gar ner Griffin Is visiting his
nephew, Mr. and Mrs. C.E.
Power. 10407 Paragon Road.
Dayton, 45458. Griffin' would
enjoy letters from friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Stearns
visited their daughter, April
Neely and'her son, Jeff Noble, at
Fairborn.

I'

Fo llrod .
During the busines s meeting
the nominati ng comltlee, Nina
Robinson, Martha Elliott, and
Sarah Caldwell, reported the
slate of officers which the society
th e n e lected. Plans were made
!or at tenda nce a t the At hens
Dis trict Annua l a nd donations
were made for high · protei n
foods .
Nellie Parker gave a report on
Muslims.
Florence Spe ncer had the
prayer calendar and c hose Mr.
and Mrs. Lyman Hale , r etired
missiOnaries.
Thoma Henderson gave a
report on aid ing churches in the

Mrs. Nellie Lowe has returned
from a three-week trip by car to
Seattle, Wash., after visiting
with relatives In California and
Nebraska . They viewed the Badlands of South Dakota, Mt.
Rushmore, Yellowstone National Park, Old Faithful, and
one .nlght In Salt Lake City, She
accompanied her son and
daughter-In-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Pat Lowe, of Akron.
, ·
·
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Morrell,
arid daughters, of Davenport,
Iowa, and Mrs. Lorene · Scott,

PTO carvinal
set Nov. 4
It was announced that the fall
car niva l of the Syracuse PTO
will be held Nov. 4 at the recent
meeting of the group.
The teachers were introduced
during this m eeting whic h
opened the school year.
Studen ts will see a BMX bike
show on Nov . 1 at th e school.
The school is undertaking a
selling project to enable a 11
students to attend the perfor·
mance of "Ba bes In Toyland " on
Nov. 18.
The next meeting will be held
on Oct. 2 at 7 p.m. at the grade
school.

.

WIC pickup
October WIC pickup d at~s
have been a nnounced by the
Meig s Co unt y H ealt h
Department.
The dates a re Thursday and
Friday, Oct. 2 and 3 from 9 to 11
a. m. and 1 to3 p.m. Make-update
are Oct. 10, 16 and 23, same
hours.
Shot dates for October have
been set for Oct . 10 and 24 from 9
to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. The
office will be closed Oct. 9 for the
holiday.

•

Revival slated
Revival services will be he ld
Oct. 1-8 at 7 p.m. each evening at
The Mission, Cherry St., Syracuse. The pastor, Mark Morrow,
Invites the public to attend .

FAMILY DENTAL CARE
.

KRISTIN KING

credit to these young people and
tneir ·schools. Commended Students were included in a Merit
Program service through which
they could be referred to two
colleges or universities of their
choice. We hope that the referral
service and the recogniti!) they
are now receiving will enhance
the higher education opportunities of Commended ' Sturdents
and Increase their motivation to
use their abilities to the fullest.
The · continued education and
personal development of aca-·
demically talented students will
be nefit the entire nation."

Southern ·Boosters plan
auction at high school
The Sou thern Boosters will
stage an a uc tion at the Southern
High School football field on
Sat urd ay, Oct. 14, with proceeds
to go into funding fo r spor ts
programs a nd other extra·
curricu lar activities at the
sc hool.
The auctio n will begin at 4 p.m.
bu t those attending are invited to
come ear ly to browse around.
Donations are needed for the
sale with items to be brought to

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ZACHARY K. WEBER
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Weber birthday:.
Zachary Keith Weber recently
celebrated his second birthday
with a family cookout at the
home of his parents, Dallas and
Tammy Weber, In Langsville.
A birthday cake decorated
with a tractor theme was served
to Charles Simms, maternal
grandfather;
Emmogene
Slmm.s , maternal grandmother;·
Margaret Weber, paternal·.'
grandmother; and Donna, Steve; .
Gabriel, and Sarah Dawn Jen·
klns, Duane Weber, Denn'ts, ·
Sally, Katie, Bev, and Nathan.
Weber.

~~~~~~~~~~ro~------------·r-~----~P~oy-M~~~~~~-~O~h=~~--~--------------------_2~~~D~ai~ly~~~~~~7~

out o

cage
and get on with life
Dear Ann Landers: You asked
to hear from someone who stayed
In a marriage for the sake of t he
children. If 17 years Is enough, I
qualify.
·
My husband did not drink to
excess nor did he beat me. But
every day he managed to let me
know. there were at least eight
women who would have given
their right arm to have married
him.
I wonder what those eight
women would say if they knew I
buy my clothes at garage sales
a nd thr ift shops. Every stitch
that my children wear Is a
ha!ld-me-down from relatives or
Is hand-sewn by me. I mu st
account for every penny I spend
In the grocery store. Meanwhile,
he carries as much as$2,000 In his
wallet to show off.
- I a m repeatedlY, told that my
job Is to take .c are of the children ·
aod the Muse. Every night he
asks, " What did you do all day?" '
When I tell him I did the cooking
and cleaned the house he says,
"The house doesn' t get dirty ."
He says I'm no good In bed, but
he Is after me all the tlmeforsex .
When I say I am exhausted he
accuses me of putting out for the
mailman, the trash collector and
the meter reader.

the football field on Friday, Oct.
13, after 5 p.m. or anytime
Saturday Oct.14, 7 a.m. throughout the day.
The Booster will also accept
consigned Items with 10 percent .
of the selling price to go to the
Boosters.
Plans are being made for a
food sale throughout the day of
fish tails, homemade chili, and
home vegetable soup.
Nex Uund raising activity for
the boosters ll'ill be a chicken
barbeque at the Racine Fire
House on Oct. B.
·

Slinderella meets
Mary Browning lost the most
weight and received a 35 pound
weight loss ribbon and certificate
at the recent Monday night
Slinderella class at Five Points.
The runner up was Shirley
Johnson,
In the Tuesday night Mason
class, Diann Hoffman was ac·
cepted Into the Sllm·n·Trlm
program for reaching her de-·
sired weight . Kathy Honaker was
the best loser and Winifrede
Clark and Joan Vaughan tied for
runner up.
. The organization Is now ac-.
cepiing new members.

OGAN

~

RNER\~

nraftHI ~vleet

2U EASY MAIN Sf.POMEIOY
992·6617

ANN LANDERS

I stayed J n this marriage for
the sake of the children. Was It
worth It? No. I believe their lives
would have been better If I ·h ad
left this nut. For sure mine would
have been. - Lexington, Ky .
Dear Lex: I'll bel you are In
your 40s, which Is still pretty
young. Have you ever considered
escaping !rom that squirrel cage
and making a decent life for
yourself? Get some counseling
and review your options. Good
luck.
Dear Ann Landers: Everyone
says I have a good figure . (I'm 32
years old, 5-foot-4 and weigh 120
pounds·.) The front of me Is fine,
but I need some help, In back. I ·
have absolutely no fanny . My
skirts do not fit right ~cause of
this problem and I have one devil
of a time getting my clothes
altered.
Someone said a while b!lck tl)at
" Fannies" were advertised In a
magazine. They are regular ·
panty girdles built up with
rubber "cheeks'' In the back. I'm
told they are quite natural
looking.
Where can they be found? ,
Erie, Pa.
Dear ·Erie: I saw "Fannies"
advertised a few years ago, too.
Call the lingerie
In your
and

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Are• Code

$4.00

Certified Llc'enied Shop

Gauge OnlY.

MOBILE ,
HOME PARK :
·•Mobile

Horila

Parts
..oM()bile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

1-13-' BI-11n

Annou nCP. rn P.n ts

6,~

6 - Lost and Found

? - Yard Sale tpaid in advan.cel
B- Public S&amp;le &amp; Auc;tion

:

882 - Ne'IV Haven
895 - Letart
937 - Buftllo

Ser v tees
1 1 - Help Wanted
1 2- Si'luation War1t8d

43 - farml tor Rent
44 - Apartment tor ~en1
45 - Fumistted Ro o ms
46 - Space tor Rent
47 - W•nted to Rent
48 , - Equipment for Rent
49 - For l8•e

Board of Commilaionet's in

Courthouse, Second Street.

their office located in the

Pomeroy,. Ohio 45789 until

1 Of

REV. GEORGE ·
LUSTER JR.
Who passed Away
3 Ynr11
Sept.

..
'

Located right along Rt. 7 South of Galllpolla,
Ohio at 71 Garfield Avenue. Watch ForSigntJ

....m

ANTjQ!!ES · toe
table &amp; 4 heart back c:llaira, VICI.
walnut hall tree with m.-ble lop, walnut marble lop table,
Princess dresll8r, Queen Anne bullet, 2 matc!"ng Jenny

Lind twin bedo, beautiful walnut drelaer mlljble insert, stDne
jar with bee hives, Vtct. walnut table, VIet c:lllir, round table
&amp; 4 c:llaira, postllr bed, 3 nice antique boat pictllral, Cherry
Happlewhilt style t
night stand. ~ plantar,
Bentwood hi chair, spit botiOm rocklr, child's cupboaltl, hal
table, bench, Vicloroll, 12 jar with fancy blue, but1or mold,
a!Dne jars &amp; juga, matc:lllng Viet frames, WOik table, Compode, rag ~~~go, blue crock, 6 beautiful apeleacent wine
gablell, 6 green otam gablell, Pink Depression, Goofut
glaoa, 2 handle spooner, waahboalds, nice .old plctu18,
plcU&amp; album with plcturea.

en-

KICit PEAaiON AUCTION CO.
and

George Lutter;
Sitter Temmy end
llrother· ln·Lew
·Kenny Se.-laa;
Niece. Anale. end
neph-. llr~~dlily

•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

71 ~ Auto11 for Sal~
72 - Truck s for Sale

BISSELL .
SIDING CO".

73 - Vans &amp; 4 wo ·s
74 - Motorcycle:s
75 - Bo.Jtl lo Motors far Sale

···-lullt

76 - Auto Part s &amp; Acc•sori•
77 -- Auto Repair

LURCB
IIAIOif, WV
771-8711
OWN......_
• ....., •• I

NOW IJOOKlNO JlllUL AIJC'JlOJ'IS
TERIIS: Cull or Cheal! wldii.D.
.
Nol Rnpnnelllll For Aooldanta or Lon ol Pnlplrly

u . . oed • londed In Ohio, WY, a KY.-...

.,,

FAMILY HOMES INC.

614-992-2478
P. 0. lox 207
Pameroy, Ohio

PH. 992!5682
or 992·7121

Locally Owne~ &amp;. Operated bv Bill, Stev'e &amp; Kevin
.

BOB'S
HEATING&amp;.
COOLIN(;

Rt. 124 lotw•n
Wilbswille and
Salem Cont.-

POMEROY, OHIO

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

We Buy AI
Non Ferrous
Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless Steel.

SYRACUSE
992-2621 or
992·6944

12 Gaugo Shotguns Only
Factory Choke

9-22· 1 mo.

STRIC-nT ENFORCED!

RUUD

9-21 -89·1 mo.

HOURS

7

Days

. DAVE'S
SMALL INGI'NE
REPAIR

PI.UMIING &amp;

A Week

· Now Location: ,

9 a.m.- 7 p.m.

161 North Stcond
Middleport, Ohio 45760 .

992-5114

SALE$ &amp; SERVICE

At Jet. 5.1. 7 &amp; 143

'"· 949-2101
or Res. "''·216-0
NO SUNDAY CAUS.

Servtr.cs

J.fl.Jfn

81 --Home Improvements
82- Piumbmg &amp; Heating
83- EilCtNating
84- Eiecui cal &amp; AefrigfJt'.Jt io n
85- Gener-81 Hauling
86- Mobile Home Repair
87- Uphoistery

LINDA'S
PAINTING

INTERIOR·EUERIOR

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of

painting. Let N do
it for you.

12 noon on October 4,

located at Valey Lumber
In 'Midd.. port, Oh.
PARTS AND SERVICE

On The By~Pass

For Most 2 and 4-cycle

engines

Stock Parts for
Homelite. Weedeaier,

WATER
SERVICE

Tecumseh, Briggs &amp;

Stratton. ,

PH. 992·3922
6·2F89-IIn

1 ,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

. Call Anytime
992-2371

' o-UGHT HAULING

1/ ll/ 19 tin

BILL SLACK
992-226!
EVENINGS ·.

ALLEN'S.
HAULING

4 / 8/ 89/ tfn

MOO GALLON

SWEEPER REPAIR

WATEI SEIVICE
UMESTONE
SPIEAD
Dill HAULED
992-5275

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

All MAKES AND
MODELS

HAVE REFERENCES

-

614·985·4110

8/4/89-lfn

HOUSE FOR SALE

Specificattona
forobtlined
Slid automobile
- may -be

3 BR ranch home, 2\\
baths, full basement, 2
car garage, 10K60 ft.
deck. 3 acres plus lY&gt;
acre take. Mint cond.
$120,000 firm. All ,new
drapes. fully carpeted.
Built-in tg. TV, stove &amp;
refrig . See-through fire·
place.

from the Clerk of the Board
of Molga County Commioaion•s between the hours
of 8 :30a .m.' and 4:30p.m . .
Mondoy through Friday.
The Comn;liaaionera reserve the right" to reject any
ond oil bido and/ or accept
tho boot bid lor the in1ended
purpose.
Mary Hobotettor. Clark
Maiga County

WANTED

Business
Services

DEAD OR AUYE
•Washers •Doyera
•Range. •Freezers
•Refrigerators

. "Must. llpai...le"

• COAL STOVES.
INSERTS. FURNACES

lEN'S APPUAffCE
SEIVICE

APPAI.ACIIIAI
WOOD STOYIS

192·5335~915·3

IIi C•p••• Dll. Off Ul

. 691·61

9-26-'89-1 mo.

•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

742-2421
9-20-lfn

·W-IIPAI_I
Gutters
DowniPOutl
Gutmr Cluning

Palndng
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4422

. . 1-.

949-2161

1 ·23-81- ,

~-~-

;

.

•

•

Lost &amp; Found

Reward! Lost Golden
Ratralvor, Gallla Centerpoint Rd.
Missing al~ce Aug .6, Answer11
to Luke. 614-379·2447.

lost:
Nalgl1borhoad
Rd.
Siberian Husky, black &amp; white.
Answers to Freud . Reward . 614·
446-3625.

~---~~-~~·-~

Lost: Tan .wlblack pug lace.
Raccoon Creak area . on 141 .
Answars to _ Butch, hard of
hearing. Reward offered. 614·

II
1

.:._.,.;~..::=:___

'1

I

BINGO · i I' m -z9s7.
POMEROY -EAGLES ' 1· 7
Yard Sale
CWI

224 E. MAIN ST.

I'
I'
,1

'I'I ' TIIUIS.912-1976
E.l. ,,45 P.M. . •

~ ~ ~~~;:~ -::~:. ~T.;.~~!
JIB. Lim~ I coupon por.a~s- [
·I ,t _ (!If bi"F sesSion.
· ' Wo Par •so.oo P• Gamo '
r

Om 110 PHplo 165.00

.,,r Game

#001-JJ

111·(0. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTIOL
SIJICI 197'
ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
llmllor llltional Post
Control Ann.

foiFrae

.

&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard S.let Must 81 Paid In'
Adv1nee. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.,
the day before the ad Is to run.
Sund1y ldlllon ~ 2:00 p.m.•
Frldly. Mond•y •dltlon • 2:00;
p.m. Satur~y.
.
Northup. Stleond houtt •croll
bridge In Northup. Flowtra,
amall clothing, India n eom.
Friday, 29th.
S.pl. 27, 28, 21, 30. Winter,

ahoet, clOihtt tor everyone, ~
whst-note, fumltwe, .._lghborol
hood Rd. l-4.

' · W!!nted to Suy
Fumllurti 1nd eppll1ncta by the
place or entire household. F11r .

....•• bolng !llld. Coli ........

3t51.

Junk un · whh

.

or whhout ·

motoro. call Lorry UYOiy 114-

381-8303.

autno
Pro tHO qutno. Any condition. ;
Cooh Paid. Coli 814-8D:I·5657 or

1·100-5
•

·

,

Gallipolis

1.: Sllli~~ ~'!:1 P.M. ~

'

c•ml, OHIO

Labrador Retrlver, 8 months old,
nttdl good country hOrntl,
loves chfldren, 304-m-5241 at·
lor6:0o . _ _ _ _ _ __

Casl1

742-2455
Salem

L. W.
•Gravel

Klll•ns, mate &amp; lama.. 4 wka.

6

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

742-2143

ROOFING

AT ALL

Kltt•n• to giveaway. 614-4463479.

Tractor Dealership

$45,000

~~ew•LWritaall

•ANYTHING

2670.

LIVING lOOM SUtrES
BEDROOM SUITES
DINEnE SETS
"NEW" RECLINERS
Located Behind•'

boHom, hill .land,
timber, 2 producing gas wells.

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL .DIRT

part German Shephard. 614·378-

U$ED FURNITURE

145 acres, barn,

We Service All Mek81
S.Ht-l

To a loving homa! 614·256-1793.
Fret 4mo. old tamale, part wolf,

614-446-3551 anytlmt.

RUTLAND TOWNStiP

STEWART
TRUCKING

1 112 year old dog to giveaway.
Halt Spitz, half tarrier. 614-4467423.

Qld. Blacktwhlte, gray, striped.

HIGLEY 'FARM

9-22-89

Giveaway

Beaullful kittens, long haired,

6-S-'89-tfn

992-2571

(9) 19. 26 2tc

4

short, calico,. striped &amp; mlxod.

992-6872

FOR SALE

Important Notice! The deadline
for changu to be made In the
Ohio Valley Phone Book le
Frktay, Sept. 29, 1989; Anr,ono
needing 1ddltlons, delet ona,
chang" or wlahlng to advtr11•
shoufd call weekdays between
9-5; 1·800-556-l!930 or malt Information to Champion Dlrec• ·
.tori•, P. 0. Box 22 Norwalk, OH
44857.

2 pupplll to glvoaway. 614-4468410.

222 Eastllain
POMEROY, OH.

~17-tfn

Announcements

3 Announcements

•FIREWOOD .

YEIY IEASOIABLE

1989. and opened at 2:30 p.
October 4 for the foito•~ lnJ~_·vehicle:
or 1990 4-door Sofull-lire automobile,
tuiteble for police use.

.

TEMPSTAR

RA((OON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S ClUB

TRI-COUm
RECYCLING

·

9 ··31· '89-1

GUN SHOOT

"FrH Ettlmet81"

78 - &lt;;:amping Equipment
79 - Campers &amp; Motor Homes

Commissioners

-...eo...... .,
p.orentl,

•VINYL SIDING
·•ALUMINUM BIDING

Transportation

1--------~--------.,

HOLJSEHQLQAM!SCE' I ANEOOS· MapleooudiMdchU,

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

· 7-18-'89-tfn

64- Hay &amp; Grsin
65-Seed &amp; Fertilil8r

l

....... oollae-.IOialchlir,oollaetableMdendtablel,
roc:l&lt;al', 4 pc. king llizl bedroom aulta,- lllda, ,_
Coleman lantam, Nne,., MWing machine, ptusmont.

---

Grant A. Newland

63- livestock

Public Sale
&amp;Aucllon

10:00 ....

In Loving Memory

16141 667-3271 .

Public Notice

n .......,
Sept. za, 1989

In Memoriam

Sand-Stone-Dirt

61 ~ Farm Equipment
62- Wanted 10 Buy ·

33 - F•rms lor S.Ji e
34 - Busln•s Buildings
3S .;_lots &amp; Acreage
36 - Raal Esta11!1 Wanted

42 - MobileHomes tor Rent

8

MODEL OPEN DAILY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
1:00 P.M.-6:00 P.M. cir Call For Appointment

DUMP TRUCK

&amp; livestock

to Loan

PUBLIC
AUCTION
2

NEWLAND
ENI'ERPRISES

F&lt;Jrm Suppltes

41 - Mouses for Rent

_..

SITEWORK • IIUAUl
CLEARING

Employment

l;tQUBII

I

DOZER

58 -'fruits &amp; Vege'la~ea:
59 - Fen Sale ~r Trade

9 - Want_. .t o Buy

31 - Homes tar Sale

576- Apple Grove
773 - Mason

Ch81ter
Port ..nd
Let•rt Felts
Raclne
Rutland
Coolville

MODULAR HOMES
SINCE 1970
~--llan~:h, Cape Cod &amp; 2 Story

REPAIR
Alto TrUtlllttloll

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY

67 - Muticallnstrument~

32 - Mobile Homes tor Sate

986 843 2.47 949 742 667-

.42
.60

54 - Misc . Merchandise
55 - Building Suppli• ·
56 - Pets for ·S.Jifl

Real Es tate

458- Leon

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2160

,20

53 - Antiques

23 - Proi•sional Services

992 - Middleport

.30

Me rchond tse

21 - Busln•s Oppouunhy

675- Pt . Pleasant

Roger Hysell
· Garage ,
AUTO &amp; TRUCK

BISSELL
BUILDERS

51-Household Good~
62- SpoMing Goods

S - HIPPY Ads

22 - Mon~

D A HOME?

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

'

"AI Reasonable Prices"

.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Aven~e. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

9-6· 89-tfn

Ovflr 16 Word1

$6 ,00
$9 .00
$13.00

1- Cird of Th1nk1
2 - ln Memory
3 - Artnoucements
4 - Giveawav

Mason Co .. WV
Area Code 304

Pomeroy

266 - G~o~yan Dist
643 - Arabi• Dist
379 - Walnu1

lhe

exchan!{e-~ ...

Meigs County

Gro~nde

t5

R•te

ljhijldrifill

following telephone
446 - Gallipolls
387 - Ch•hire
388-Vinlon

16
16

16- Radio. TV S. CB Repair
17- Miscellaneous
18 - Wanted To Do

2 :00P .M . FRIDAY

Clas.~ified pa!(e -~ cot·er

Galli a County
ANI Code 614

15

14- Busin•s TraininiJ
1 5- Schools &amp; Instruction

- 2 :00P .M. WEDNESDAY
- z ,OO P.M . THURSDAY

-

· 4-25·1fn

13- lnsu'ranc;:e

2 :00P .M . MONDAY
2 :00P .M . TUESDAY

:z::
z

.Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Factory Choked ~2

"DOC" VAUGHN .

lnr ear.t'l rl.., 81 teP•'•'• ads ,

ads paid in advance .
- Giveaway and Found ads under 15 wcrda ..,ill be
run diiVIJ at no ch ..ge.
•PriC:e of 1d tor all capital letters is double price of ad cost
•7 point line type only used ,
_
•sentinel is not respon11ble for errors aher tust dlf¥' - !Ch eck
tor errors first diY ad runs in paper) Call b~fore ,2 :00p .m,
dtv after pu~licati O n 10 make co rre ction.
·
•Ads thll'l must be paid in advance are
Card of Thanks
Happy Ads
In Memor ia m
Yard Sal•

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Ucensecf Clinical Audiologist-. :,

Beginning Sept. 17

CALL 992 -ti7S6

992-i22B

listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; ~•n•ieol
0 'Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

EVERY SUNDAY

All Mljor • Minor
Aepa in
NIASE Certified Machenic

or

9 / 18/ 1 mo. pd.

RACINE
.GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

DIESEL

Mo1t Foreign and
Domestic Vehidea
A / C Service •

Monthly
15
&amp;1 . 30 / dav
.05/ dey 1
Rates are tor consecutive runs. brctken updiVIi will be charged

:~•'''""~5 . 50 discount for

· 992-9922

· Middleport, Ohio
HJ.tfc

SYRACUSE, OHIO •

'

10·

I

Pi:n:a-Subs-Salads-Daily Saecials

992 · 2~96

(Next to Hill Top 'Grocery)

SERVICE

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PillA SHOP.

,PAT HILL FORD

·st. Rt. 124

AUTO -

FlEE LOCAL DEUVERY

repair Gas Tanlis.

Middleport, Oh.

..

LOWEST PRI(ES
HIGHEST QUAliTY

aut radiators. We also

992-3897

.

Words

D

ou"slde Meigs. Gall i a or Mason co unt i• must be pre-

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

I

•Graue Jobl

HOMES &amp; GARAGES'

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-215.6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
SUNDAY

NOTICE TO MOTOR
VEHICLE DEALERS
Sealed bido wHI be roce~ed by the Meiga County

992-6669
271 North
Middleport
Second
Ohio

•Oil Changea

Rt. 33 North of
Pomeroy, Ohio,

Public Notice

65

We can r~r and re·
can ratltaton and
!Mater 'cores. We can
also acid boil and rod

•Cuatom Pipe Bending

ment stores. Good luck, Iavey,
all's well that ends well.
Dear Ann Landers: This after.
noon I got so mad at a telephone
operator that I broke the phone.
Befleve me, that's not easy to do.
I was driving in a part of L.A.
that I don 't often get to. On
Impulse, I decided to drop in on
an old friend. Unfortunately, I
did not have his address.
I pulled off the freeway and
found a service station with a
phone, ')'here was no phone book
In sight, so I C!\lled Information
(50 cents) and asked for the
street rrumber. The operator
refused to give It to me. I was so
furious that I broke the phone.
I'm not proud of my behavior,
but will you please find out why
the telephone company Is so
obstinate? - Seeing Red In L.A.
Dear Red: . We chec)&lt;ed with
Illinois Bell, General Telephone
and Pacific Bell. They all give
out addresses if the phone Is
listed. You must have reached a
lazy operator.
And now about that temper of
yours. Belter learn how to
a blood
control it before you
vessel- and~I~a~m~:.::~

MAIN STREET
,..., .,.
PIZZA

SER~ICE

•Now lo Uud Tir..

CUSTOM BUILT

let Results fast

OJ
OFF
SUGGESTED
· . /0
· RETAIL PRICE
"GREAT CHRISTMAS 81FTS" ·
SUPER SA~INOSI
Don't Ml1l Thl1 Salelll

JONES TilE
CENTER

... 1919, t.o. A•pl•
Tl•e. Syndl mte and
Crealan SyndlrllP

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Last Chance To Buy Before
Christmas . ·

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1989
9:00 ·A.M.-5:00 P.M.
It's the SERmS ONE
Business Polley...
P,ackaged protection for
retail stores, offices,
churches, apartments,
drug stores. Simplified
In content, convenient
· In format and very
affordable.

Landers

Classifie

Nelsonville, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Stanley. Mrs. Morrell Is
the former, Janet Scott.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lewis,
Florida, recently visited relatives here and attended a family '
reunion: Lewis has recovered
from recent surgery.
D.G. Graham In the Air Force
In South Dakota, spent a week
with his uncle, Harold Graham ·
and family, and grandmother,Bessle Graham.
Mr . and Mrs. Raymond Do·
nohue, Brenda Neutzllng, and .
two daughters, Linda and Gary ·
Haynes and Mildred Lee at·
tended the Donohue reunion at
Letart, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Do·
nohue, and granddaughter, An- ,
gle, attended the Mt. Moria~
Homecoming last Sunday.
Residents of the area have
learned that the Dearold Graham property in Sumter, S.C.,
received heavy damage as a
result of Hurricane Hugo.
Mrs. Gerald Donohue at tended
the Ladles Retreat at Lake Hope
last weekend.
Brenda Neu tzllng was sur·
prised with a birthday party at
the home of her sister, Linda
Haynes, Columbus. Relatives
from Meigs Co,, and· her sister
and her friend from Mt. Vernon,
attended.

14 KARAT
GOLD and
STERLING
SILVER
SALE

Ann

992·7479

Harrisonville happenings

:Motorcyclists plan blood run
The annual Meigs Count y
:Blood Run of the Meigs Mot orcy·clists will he held on Oct.ll.
· Motorcyclists are to meet on
the Pomeroy parking lot at 3p. m.
to go to the Senior Citizens Center
where the American Red Cross
Bloodmobile unit will be from I to
§:30 p.m ,
• Following the "blood run",
motorcyclists will go the Ceda r

.'

•

lt4-61l1·2411.

~-

.

.

'

�Page-&amp;-The Daily Sentinel
II

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wriaht

LAFF·A-DAY

Wanted to Buy

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

TOP CASH pold lor IllS modol
..... ........... Smhh
Bulcii-Pantlac, 1111 Eallom
A...
2:112. GaUipolle. Coli ··-~-

:104a.

Pllono

11of.742•

2 BR, NtoroncH &amp; dopooft roqulrod.l14125f.1822.

"'.::',:.U.':.l:l'oloo
"" plec:o
or
Hlllng.

2 br mobllo hornoo, Oopoolt, &amp;
,.,. roq'cl. Coli onor 2p.m. 81of.
441.0527.

Ullll
oniiN
alof.742-2411.

W.ntod To Buy: Uood Mobllo
- - . 114-441-0171.

2 br, mobiiO homo, dop 6 rot.

l:J{ Coli oftor 2p.m. 614-44f.
2 br.1 lullt fumlollorl, n.W corp«, AC, AU utllltloo pold oxcopt
otoc. orlfl goo. Coblo TV

Employment Semces
11

IVIillbll.

Jielp wanted

If you .,, a Ucenald Practical
NUru and enloY a challenge,
,.....1oko tllo·1rmo to rood t~lo
od. Thio Is a full·tlmo L.P.N.
po.ltlon In two communhy
group homte tor pe...ant with
""""'opmonlol dloobllltloo In
40

1 "'aA{r:M

.tl•• • . ;. ... ...;~

:''':.~~Zd. c!':!'~~

"I waited three weeks for
this appointment. You're
char
. ging me $40 and all you
t e II
• •d0 n •t.
Can h'?l''
e IS

1Jr:onoo

O.Wnar

..wage and

\
-

NAPNES/OOPNESior
ltoto iioont opprovod Phormocotoar Couroo roqulrocl;
volld d"-'• llconoo, good
*lvlng
rtcOrd and wiUing ta
*lve ln lloovy valumo tnoHic ·
.,_,good com~ni.,.uon and
ffi
-anliatlon akllll, punc1ua1
Oi:t obiO to worll II port ot 1
t.Mn
working rwqulr.d;
wllh ~·axperience
wtth men111 retai'dadon and developmtntol dloobllltloo protorrod, but not
~qulr~. S.luy; $8.00/hour, to
1111'1. Ubonl bonotH pockogo. 11
Help Wanted
Sand Nlume to Cecilia Baker,
Buckove Comrnunny Sorvlco~, Occuolonol Illby olttor lor •
P.O. Box 804, Jockoon, OH handlcop child, Sylvia Johnoon,
41140. Dudllne tor applicant a: 304·773-1140 or m..a541•
1 ~3-89
Equal Opportunlt•
e';;;ployOr.
'
Oponlng
lor
no~torocl
Rnpontory Therapllt at 121 ·
2 nurut aiM, lhop clerk, . In- bid acute care haepltal. Com-quldd1,. ~
Oddl and End1 Shop, patltl.,_ 11lary and bllneiii:L 0pII
.,......
ponunity tor management adANYONE CAN APPLY! Guararr vancement whllt applyinG techtlld VIIIIMCt us CharS~'. Even nlcal akllla. Pereonnel DIJ:·
wtth Md crtah. No one retu,.ct. Plulllllt ValleX HQJSpltel, P nt
Coli 213-825-9906 oxt. U2508.
~~1";.'·2555 ' 304-175-4340,
AVON 1 All Ar.aa 1 Shiriey
Spoono, 304-875-1429, .
Tobacco Workors Wantod, Norman Young, B~ffalo, WV, 3Q4.
AVON • All orooo, Coli Marilyn 937-2530.
Woovor 304-882·2145.

SCfatc . ,

payll

waler,

tralh Pickup.
S.cunt:y depoelt and rtf. Fourtenth• otlmlla tram city llmha.
114-441-7713.
~;.:-"-';C'-"7-;--;---::;;:;:::-::2BR,
fumlohod.
5250/mo.
1250/dlpO-IIt. 2 peraon max. occupancy. 1No ~a. water, aewer
paid. I~ city. Rot. Roq'od. llof.
44846
5 00
mftor ' p.m.
Trollor nlco cloon unlumlshod,
raqulrod, Routo Ono
ou1 Loculi Rood on right, 30478
078
.:.·1:..:.
:..:;·----.,1

,.,.,.,...
::•
44
A~rtment
' for Rent

18R unt..,. opt. Ron;o. rotrlg.
gar•
,age, paid Water,
Dop &amp;tewaga,
Rtf 814-4454345. · '
·
·'

~-----------,.----------; ~vldMI.

10

Bobyol1tor my homo Raccoon
Rd. Part-lime, moltly day ahltt,
tew w.tkendl, mull be r.llable
&amp; meture, Atftr.ncM nllded,
614-441-3431.

12

•

Situation
Wanted

C!:llld c•re pravldtd. Ag" 2,3,4.
lllddlo~rt, ocron !rOm park.
614 99 •a- RefertnctO I"""
pU.d. .ov av.
_.-

1br. 1 apartment, all utllltl11 lncludocl 1300 por mo. Dop. roq'd.
814-44HZ22 IMtwMn 8 1: 12
-•·::;m:..-:-1-.::--.-:--;::::-::-::;--;:;:::-

31 Homes for Sale

~

Like new 38R hame. Rt. 180
noor NGHS. Will bo -• In
Rooltor hondo ooon. af4.3aa.
8711
·
Neighborhood Rd. Approx. 1112
acr•. 24x30 gaflil•· 3br. 614440.0355 114 441=4248 after

2 bedroOm 1pl1. . for. renl Car·
potocl. Nlco oottlng, llundry
tocl 11tEio• ' .YIIItblo. CIU 614·992·
371 1 OH
bedfoom unfumishtd apl
3
located Holttr Clfnlo ot WV. 61 .,.
446 .a1ae tor me,. Information.

!p.m.

3 bedrooms, In Middleport. Near

Rlducedtt 3 bedroom
b~cJ&lt; ronch, gono;o, lnozo woy,
full bulment, air cond 1na
~'"'h""'~':,:· corner lot I~ nlco
nelgr bor
, 2905 Maple Ave.,
Pt. l'n. 304-525-111211 1ftor 1:30
PM.

echool .and atores. $175Jmonth
1100. dopooh. 614-.992·
12 1.
3 room and both opt, 304·6754023.

G'"'

AC, baHment, gsrage, fincH
back yard, '-rve deck. fNh
ti'MI, 1.54 acret. Backyard
tlohlng I booting. Raccoon Rd.
614.-446-3431.

rer,

Price

31 W. itpt. 2 b&lt;,. 1 both, prlvato
onctoo,td patio. etooo to
Prlco roducod, nlco· 3br, 2 both, grocory • • - &amp; ohoppln; conwater,
uwelj_ trash
provl~. 1265/mo. ~an 614448-8727.

Country Mobile Homo Pork,
Routt 33, North of Pomeroy.
Lots1 renl•l•, parte, ulee. Call
114·•92-7471.

For SOlo: 1871 Plymouth La.
Baron Premier, 4 dr, body In
goad 1hape, 75,000 mlln, no
rullli 1977 VW RabbH, 2 dr,
nude work, aHtr 5:30 614-4461010.

L.or;o mobllo homo lot~. Rl 17,
20 mila from Point ,..1a11nt,
cDUnty water and ....., Included. AelertncH required.
304-67$-ot138 evenlnga. .

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vohlcln
from/$100.
Fonli.Uercedee,
Ccirvettaa..Chtvye.
SUFJ:!Iue._
Buyoro-Guldo
805-587-1000
ExLS-10181.

one acre toe,

GOVERNMENT SEIZED V•hlcloo
from $100. Farcl. Mercedes.
Corvett•. Chavye. Surplus.
Buyoro Guido It) I()H87-6000
Ext 5-10189.

anowld,

city water, Galllpolla Ferry. 304675·2722.

Two trollor opoCOI, Routo 0no
Locult Road on rlghl, .304-6751076.
.

51

15 1 1

ru·· ..

12 hp oloct~c oton Cub Codot
Brown Naugahyda couch and 128 rtdli'lg' mowt~r w/enow bllda.
chair $175., 304-1175-1765.
304-17f.IB13 oHor 1:00PM.
Broyhill · complete bedroom 2 por11blt tree etandl. $25.
suite. Full tlza. Llkt ntw. 614- •ch. &amp;14-892-3721.
992·2733 1ftor 5:00 p.m.
40% off all cer.mlc and palntl,
Cedar btldroom .euhe, Sealy Ray end Mary• C.111mlce, Naw
P&lt;&gt;sturopedlc boddlng. library Hovon, wv. 304.a.!2-201t. Mary
table, 304-675-7687.
Slok.
Couch and chair. Gold twHd Collecto,.. Doll! 20 lnchn.
colonial. Reasonable price. 814- Franch, all porcalaln. Wid
992-6168 afttr 3:30.
ooc~llco.llof.882·m1.
County Appliance Inc. Gaod
used appllancea, T.'v. sets. Open
8 a.m. to 8 ~;m, Mon.-sat. 614446·169_!11, 6 7 3rd. Avo. Galllpolla, UPI

CombuttlonHr $toklr Co.r
Stove tor Ale. Sell of email
ehow pony ha........._ 114-742·
2234.

Dakotl Form Homo IMllh on
yoUr lot, $13,9D5 &amp; up. See our
modoi.I1Wif.7311.

Electric bultt In oven &amp; rl!nge.
Carnival glatiiWI.,.. Ant~
Gat floor furnacl, storm door~~ treadle uwlng machine,
&amp; wlndowo, 304·675-3278.
458·1808 oftor 6:30.

•cr•

FlrrMODd fDr 11111, $30. load.
304.-458-1181.
For .8111 .. Concrete and Plaltlc
.. puc tanb. All •Jz11. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·
100, OH.1-800.S37·9528.
For Sale; Amana air conditioner,
8300 8TU.I250.114-446o0642
Good hard opllt lirowood. $35
laad. 114-802.J707.
Hay tor ule. Round balee,
clover &amp; timothy. Stokermatlc
lllova. 1988 Stake body truck,
aood condition. 2 new fron_t
flrH, good rolr tim. Hydro•llc
toll IIH. 614-245-5117.
King Wood and Cool B•rnor
wit" trlpiO wallplpo ullll ono
wlntor tor $350. Coil 114-441·
0901.
Now 5 112l18 tt. pink .,.. Ng.
Orne. 1111 refrigtrator typing
table, lit11l oHM::e
chair,
utility
.. bl.e ,
answering
machlng. 514-992·7711.

••l

Portable Lighted Arrow Slgne
$299. {Free Dellvery/Littel'l)
Plaetlc Lettere ·(Hatt Price) $50.
box. ExpiNO 9129/88. 1-100-5333453c Anytlmo.
Rare 38 Chevy, 2 dr. Sedan, 11
ohorp. • 7 ~ « trodo. 614-68f.
,
• 7311.
State of the art Puvey XA1200
mhcln~ con•ol• with manual
ukl •••• 304-812or;ra or g e . -.
2 92.
Two automatic trantmiHlont,
Oldt, Buick; 3 lipeed Chevy
transml11ion; 3 goatt, 2 nan·
nln and a RegltttM billy; topper; G.E. color t.v.; V8 c.,..
boratar 1nd fuel pump, tlmoat
new. 514-687-6680.
,WHITE'S METAL DETECTO~S
Ron Allison, 1210 Seoond Ave,
GolllpoiiO, OH 614-441-4331.
w.ro To Buy, old tubo rodloo,
wanted made befon1 1SI42, pa•
tic or wood, l1rg1 or amall.
Don't have to work 11 all. Pay
110. to 1100. for moat branda,
304-882·2220 ask for Chuc:lc.
wt.alchalra .. IIIW or uald. 3
-loci Oloctrtc ocoo&lt;or. Coli
. RogoNIIocllcal, 1.aoo.e&amp;&amp;-:!104.
Whlto wedding . ;own, whh
matching voli. Silo 10. Good
condtllon. 114--255-1343 or 340675-3547. Aoklng, $150.

I Woodon

(111'1190 door. 16x7
mocllclno coblnot with llghto.
6
11 4 4
• •
Coli oH• pm.

:;r.·
55

Building
Supplle!l

Block, brick, 11Wer plpea, wlrtdowe, llntetl, etc. Claude Wlntere, Rio Grande, OH Cell 814245-5121.

56

oc-

1

11 1

to Frank Sinatra sing 'I Old It My Way ... "'

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Melroae, red &amp; yellow dltlcloua,
rimn, Jon~thon, &amp; . Maclnlosh
pplotr, lloney I Sorgum. Dun·
rovln Fruit Farm, 681 SoU1h East
ot Albany. Houro: 8-1. CLoaod
Mondoyo. 614-6118-1298.

l

Red Raablrrlll for Salt! Frozen
Berrinl Pick your own or ready
plcMd. Taylora Berry Patch.
614·245-5014.

eo Andy Qrlflllh

.,._..,...,.._

1111 Cllellea In CNtrga
IIJ Jem

1:01 (IJ lleo!etly Hlllllllle•

®~(0:30)
~ llocly Electric..... Q

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

1030

ca..

011111 T,.etor,
S:J,gso~·
30o tnt't tnoctor with 5tt.
buoh
, $2,350; 1200 Doukl
Brown D oool with Cob, $4,550;
114-281-1522.

Pets for Sale

1111 WKRP In Clnclnlld

350 JD Dozer,·&amp;way bltdll, good
cond. Ready to work. 614 ~
8044
·
Cl011lng Bualrwn Sill: AU Troy
Buln 1 Toro Equlpmont at coot.
All uood oqulpmont p~cod to
ullf Everything mu.t gol
Agrtco·n Inc. Upper Alvtr Rd.
lf4-446.Q475..
' '

Heavy Metal cattle rac!W tor
Chovy tr ..k. 61of.742· 27U.

Jim'• Farm Equipment. Gil·
llpollo buy, ool!z troclo, uood
Farm tr'actar11. UYtr 600 farm
Implement• In ll~k. Parte trac4
toro. King Kuttof Porto. 614-44f.
8m.
New ldn Cam Elevator, IIH
now. $1200. 11of.t49·2102.

63

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

.·'.

Livestock

ATTENTION Horoo OWntro,
Pelnt ,Piut Ia now carrying tack.
Paint Plus, 2415 Jackeon Ave.,
Point Plt11ant, phone ·304-6754084.
'

51Wl:fV! WIIAT

(I) SpartaCenler
II)
CWrent Affair
(I) (I) MacHaH/ L.ehnlr

e ())

,.

1975 Dodge Van. Good con·
dillon. 614·949·2671.

~

.,

".,'

1984 Honda motorcycle or trade
for 250 Honda 4-wheeler. 614742·2545.
-1-98_5_Y:-:-a_m_a-:-h-a-:7::o-=-o-mo-x71m-u""m
- '-::'
X,
10,000 miles, water cooled en·
glne, garage kept. $1200 after 6,
614-3711-2906.
.

..

I

'

1972 17 ft. Starcraft Tri·Hull
Boat. 125 HP, Evinrudl Engine,
complete top, new up,olatary.
$3500. Call 814·288-1311 oHor
7:00p.m.

--,,...-..,.,......,.,.,.,._,..,1974 Corvet while whh black Int.
PW, T·Tape, AC, 4 ntw tlree,
everything orlglnel, exc. condition. $6500. 614-446·7441, 11of.
446-9421.
1174 Corvette.· Rebuln engine,
PS, PB, 1ir, auto, T·top. $6500
llrm. 114-992·5545 or 614·14112217 evenlnge.
1171 Mercury. no rust, good
cond"lon $1195, 1878 Thundorblrd $8D5i 1111· Chlv. pickup,
good condHion, prtcod on lnapectlon, 21 toQt Franklin Tr,vel
Trollor, $1500. 114-446-7846.

1178 Buick Rogal Y-lrJ! door,
gooclcond, 5800. 304·5,..2389.
1171 Chovy MoiiiMJ Ct-lc
Wagon. $11115. 114·1182·3090.
1980 CorvtHe, black 1 automatic,
1 owner, tow mllaegt, excellent
condition. $10,000. Phon• 30421'3-3078.

... old ~borhood vtalts

Slmantl)lt. Q.

. '·

1977 Norrlscrafl boat 17 112 ft.
85 hp Evan, new baHerl11 1nd
many extrae, $3,950. call 304·
675·2669 betw11n 9;00 am and
5:00pm.

(I) (I) Nova Explore how

major ctlleo ara dealing with
harbor pollution. Q
.\Ill e i121 R - : 111 Two
rafters are trapped tiy a

••

'',.

whirlpool.

eO MOVIE: D.A.R.Y.L lPG)

(2:001

Lowe ·15 1/2 ft. aluminum ban
boat. Mercury 25XD motor. Ex·
tl'll, with trailer. Call evtnlnga
114-992·5181.
. •

1!J PtlmeNeWI
11J Mllftlai, lhe Wrata
Pawdar Keg

8

,.

And C8ltlouae l1luncley lPG)

I'

(2:15)

1:30 II) e ()) Living Dalla Four
. teens lace busy lives aa they
strtve for success as modele.

.,'

i~ache..

•'•

t:OO e C2l 1111 Midnight Caller
Jack astabllllhea a J)OO!ntlally
deadly connection with a
sertll killer. (2:001 Q
.

: ''

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BASEMENT

WATERP~OOFING

.,

C. W. Davison Ptumblng &amp;
trenching, tor all water &amp;_drain
llnu, 614-448.01~9.

·'

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
ramoval, call304-675-f331 .

e ())

lust one problem wllh .
Roseihne'e new ]Qb, the
compuler. Q

IIJ MDVII!:
lllg lrnl (Rl
(2:00)
8NaohvllleNaw
t:30 (J) e ()) Cllk*... Soup
Jackil eniOya an opportunity
to tend tar at Michael's
tavern. Q
10:00 (I) 700 Club Willi Pat

11181 Ood;o Amnl, outomotlc I

l.
·
1181 ~ Art.e, 4dr, let Blue,

J &amp; J Watar Service. Swimming

.
Rollonl. &gt;lclr,
PIIPI, 11110 tntnoil AC. Nil nlco
13400.11448112-1.

IU~. Q

e ·o

I!J

,.

:

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.f

· .~

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

"'1111 114-211-IZU.
lnrnlcar&lt;llo M•lo 11-... 1•9 Nl••n c.ntrw, 1 epeed,
1700 lin 31 1 par 11
• 7 JoH w.~ lnotnrclor, .....
~l:
m
m'
go on,
11~-77, llmlo&lt;l oponlngo. . ...., Tok1 .,.., pormonto; MUll
11111114-441-78&gt;41.
.

....

M-..y·o Upholoto~ng oar·
vlclng trl aaunty aru 24 years.
Tha
beat
In
furniture
tipholotorlng. Coli 304-175-4154
tor ''" 0011 "'"'...

'.
;•

'"

.

,.

,.

'··

.........

Sam.
UltUIUII cOnc.uona coukl d8V8IIIP
u..........., In the,.., lh8ed thll will

..,_ 10 be--·- 0111 for you flnanclllly.ln liCit- w h t l l - wtl( be
lnltlllll , by I fl1lnd

..... (...... M

II) lAdy Lucie
felltl ·you- wry d II vlng,thougltallemlghtnolltiVIIgivllnyou

tall rituah IIIII IIlOn ........ Thll equid all
begirt 10 Clhanlll 11 of today. Know
~ to laok lor romanoe IIIII you'll
,.

lind II. The Aolro-Groph Matchmaker
inolanlly meala whiCh ligna are romantlcally perlec:t lor you. Mall $2 to Matchmaker, c/o thla newspaper, P.O. Box
91428, Clev.iand, OH 44101·3&lt;128.
ICOIIPIO (Oct. :M Now. 22) You could ·
be gelling oome extremely lntereellng
pieces ol news llltQrlly. They win deal
with a proi&amp;CIIn which you have ,_,,_
ly become Involved.
IAGITTAIIIUI (Now. 22 DM. 21) You
could be relller tortunlle today In lhat
otherl will - to H you're not cwwlooked Han)'lhlng Ia to be,:::: or given away. 118 lllre to ICk
ge your
benelltCtora.
CAPIIICOIIN (0.0.22-.len. 11)1n order
to teet your bell today, you'll need
oorna 1ype of lnvol'&lt;lltNI11t that kiiPI
you ltCtivll mantllty I I - .. phyllc8lly. Self-lntereela can be ICMnced If you
. are free to move around.
AQUAIIIUS (,_ _.. ,.. 11) An lmpullive, but DII*OUI friend of roura might
givll you - l n g today you ,..,ly
haw liMn -•llitO.ltut would not haw
dlled 10 .... for you!'lllf.
I'IICU (M. •
all :10) Pari-ohlp arrengernenta lltoukl wortc out exfor you today be they for
tremel)' bua1rt11a anaclll purpcnt. Thlllajull ·
one Of"- t - whirl you'reluclcy
M

able to hllldle vOul'lllf vety w.ll In unexpected deYelopmet ol1. lnlllncllvely
you will know how to turn things to your
advantige.
TAIIIIUS (April 10 Mer ID) A qulcklhinklng uiOCiate might be available
loday to holp get you out of a rough
spot, but n·a bell you don't mike a
habit of tnlling until lhe lUI minute to

10:30 (I) P.o.v. Warl&lt;lng cowboys
who wr11e and rec11a poetry
are _proflled. ~~c

eo-T
IHINeww

Host Jay Johnltone

lntarvlewa two calabrlly
sportS g-ta Hch ••
11 uniqUe and hutnoraul
sporting_. from around

M~21 ....... 1D)Oon'tbediacour
today H thlnga don't ~r
to be going In your f.- according to
early Indlcatora. You're a goOd atrelch'
runner 11111 your breekl come In the
taeond hill.

lhl - "· (0:30)

eo Arwnto 11a11 (1 :OOJ

I!J=,...
oV...

w1to hll liMn -

not _. 110U 1 fraollul1 11 mualt 11 you
tltougltt. Tllll iill be due to '" - peeled chlllgtlln ~
VIIOO ,,.... 22 •• , • . , Tltlnga you
are likely 10 MJOI' doing the moat today
wt11 be
11111 1u1t 10 pop ~

oratftlr,thln ttte-wltloh-pllnned.

•

SitliDC South, you have reached an
optlmlatlc slam. Cover the Eaat-West WEST
EAST
bands with your thumbs aocl plan your · • 7 3
'. ,
.52
lay. It would -m with a neutral • J 9 8 7 3 z
.K 10
Cead of a trump or a club .that you t ...
tAQ153Z
could draw trumps, pitch two hearts • J 9 7 6 z
•10 IS
-..
on the hll!h clubs and hope for the
SOUTH
queen of cllamonds to be with West to
.AKQ9f
make the slam. However, you get a fa.AQf
vorable lead of the heart eevea. East
tJHf
puts up the klag. You win the ace, play
two rounds of spades to pull trumps,
VulDerable: Neither
lbeD eae1t the heart queen and ruff
'•
Dealer: South
your lilt heart East llhows out on the
third heart, dilcartlinl a low dlamoad.
Eut
There ill DOtlting better to do tbaD to
Paa
play out the clubB, tbro-,rlng two diaPaa
monds away. Later, when you lead up
Allpasa
to the king of diamonds, yoa can hope
. ··..._·
Opening lead: • 7
the diamonds will be situated so
. '·
lbat you willloee only one trick.
,
HIIWI!Wr, wbea you play A·K-Q of
clubB, throwing diamonds, and then
lead tbe fourth club, sometbi!lg unusu- diamonds. So the right piay ill easy - ··
"- the last club East simply tbrow another dlamoad on the
ba
tbriiiWI~ diamoad awaY, Does last club. West must 'win tbe trick.
lbat tell you sometbln&amp;? West ill Willi na diiiiiOIICI to lead, be lw to .,,
known to have started with six hearts play either a heart or a club. Either
two spades. When East tlilcards way you can ruff in dummy and throw ' '·
on Ute last club, that marks West with · yoat last dlamilad away. Now WAIII't . :
baviag started witb five clubB. Theile . lbat a Dice reward for counUDc the ;
are bill 13 cards, so be must be void in cards?

.

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• •. l

CROSSWORD

·,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Headquarters
5WIId
10 Actor John
11 Lyric poem
12 Concerning
13 Poor and
ragged
14- diem
15 Veloclty
17 Naophyte
18 Bleacher·
lie
21 Go away,
Garfield I
24 Mental

oullook

28 Redden
28 Bellini
opera
29 Public
.speaker
31 Lillie
brolher,
at times
32 Method
33 Commls·
slon
earner
35 Lavish
party
38 Coterie
39 Craze
42 Answer
the alarm
44 Maley's call
45 SIMih41Wash
47 Brink

4 Vestibule
5 Floral
decoration
8 Fencing
sword
7Deer
8Say
further
II Grassy
ground
10 Generation
·
221sra~li
37 To be (Lat.)
18 Provide
dance
38 Goll term
with
23 Palm leal 39 Fairy
we!IJIOnS 25 Hitchcock queen
17 Binge
film
40 An ex
18 Cab
27 Cheerful
Sinatra
rider
30 Trallor . 41 One of
19 Charily
34 Hire
baseball's
20 Like
35 "Berney
leagues
Felix
Miller"
(abbr.)
Unger
character 43 Rbuletle
21 Barge
38 Troll
color

' ~~,Q
Uc.~

:E: . .L~Fan
• CraOII

....

a Cllltae

.

12:00 (I) MOYII: , . ...... llart 2
011(2:110)

()) NAICM CINntl Mlt. .tltl

Oon't IINCIUII your day tall . ,.. e~y :
with 1111111.
.
•becltiM rwtl'llnta caukl becoml I
AIIU (lllnlll 11-Aprll 111 You're • · dllltPn1111 lftlnk•. today and
. yoti lhould be '

li~...:L.~~ Tanlgllt

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,,

.

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CIIYPTOQUOTE
NT

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NC

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y 11._r.,••Ca;;illqaalltl SHOUL_!J'LIKE 'I'OLOBVEE
ABLE TO LOVE MY COUNTRY AND .S11Ll ·
JUSTICE. - ALBERT CAMUS

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One letter stands for another. In this sample A is Ulled
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

-

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......

AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

PYJ

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DAILYCRYFn)QUO'hil

PYNT

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1 Curse
2 Assert
3 Do wrong

CM

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11:30(1) ......

Tanlgllt BMw

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DOWN

The Maze
Vldl DC.. 111lf

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lind - t i l l support . .

CANCIII (.lltM 21-.luiJ II) ~ ..,
to ~g.- with
you~ an 1a1ue 01 ~mport.u
rnlghl aurprlee you today by ~i·tg
an lily you - rety on.
.
LIO (...., . .,.... II) s-hlng
you•,.. liMn WIIIUng to do that you 1811
_.. be ac ''"" 1111*111¥8 might

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80n·.....
11:00(1).._
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'

CIIH•w•ld• Tonight

l!vanlng -

111'.20 (I) MDVII!: O!tnfl8ltt At Tile
O.K. c-1 (2:30)

••

2,!100 aotlono dollvory. Coli 304·
eTI-13'70.

,..r 11oc1oo c~~orgor •.aoo :::-87=:-:::U:-'p-:h-::o::-:lst~e:-ry:--­

'&amp;

00
llland Bon A
lamoua surgeon pushes her
son Into becoming 1

85 General Hauling .

Watterton'1 Water Haulklg,
I'IUOnabte r1111, volume dl•
1117 CUI:IMe hrta,, 33,000 · counts, 2,000 to 4,000 capacity,
mil•. 1 • Mero~ry Tracer, clatel'l\8, ~a, welle, ete. Ctll
10LOC!O mlloo, prlcodlo aoll, 304- 304478-21118
e7...12hv"""""·

(I) ......
(I) P.O.V. Taka an Intimate
look It the struggleS OS I

(j •

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

or commercial
wiring, new nrvlce or r.l)lirt.
Llc.nnd •l•clrlclan. Ridenour
Eloct~cal, 304.e7&amp;-1781.

Wattara llpeclll Barbara
talka wllh guests Billy
Crystal, J!): Leno and Robin
Williams. 1iJ

MAW ALWAYS FERGITS
TO CHOP ME SOME,
KINDLIN' WOOD AFORE
SHE :rROTSOFF !!

•,

Plumbln'g &amp;
Heating

R~tldlnllll

•

e ()) The llllrbere

P.~~ 1of homeless people.

Septic Tank Pumping $90, Gallla
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jockoon, OH 1-800&gt;537·1528.

1181 Ctrryotor Fifth Avonuo. Ea·
tra •harp. 12,000 mlln. 814-3712721.

e

former h~scttoot
coecn. Q
IIJl Latry
Uvel

SHUX··NOW I GOT TO MAKE
. ANOTHIR TRIP OUT TO
TH' DADBURN WOODSHED !!

Servlct,
Davia
S•w·Vac
O.Org11 Creek Rd. Parte, IU~
plin, pk:kup, and dallvery. 614446.0214.

84

Verge Of Other WCIIIcla (1 :00)
i121 Wall Tony eats out
to prove the Innocence Of hil

ill&gt;

II)

Rotary or c1bl1 tool drilling.
Mot1 walla completed eame day.
Pump · ealea and Mrvlce, 304191-3802.

Carter'• Plumbing
and Heating
Four1h and Plne
· Galllpolle, Ohio
114-446-3688

(I) (I) Mit,... KH: On Tile

RobertaOII

Ron'a TV Service, apeclallzlng
In Zenith also servicing mosl
other brands. Hou1a calls, aleo
tome appliance Npalrt. WV
304-576-23118 Ohio 614-4462454.

82

LJH-I-IUH ••• I l-EFT MY
WHOOPIE CI.JSHION
AT HOME.

.

'

R--

(I) Ptor.aa-1 iOxlnll ·
II)
There's

''
..·'

un·conditlonal lifetime guaran·
tM. Local reftrencu lurnlehlcl.
Frtl H11matll. Call collect 1·
JS14·237..0488, day or night. R o
geraBaaement
Waterproofing.

TrM &amp; stump removal. Shrubs,
llatoned firewood. Clly $45.
Country $55. load. Don't
landscapes . 614-446-9646.

eon-aon willl Dinah

1:05 (I) MOVIE: The Greet s-.1

'

Home
l"t'provements

1115 Mercury lynx elation
w1gon, PShPB1 AC,_$1,1118. 304178'·1280 o or o:OO •II.

114471-2728.
1tH Plymouth

10-

delends a weallhy widow
accused of murdering her
hulband. C
(I) Ptofaulonal
Bodybuilding Junior National
Championship from
Memphis, Tl&gt;l, Women &amp;
Mixed Pairs Competition
II) el1l Wllo'l tile llou?
A trouble-making friend 1r0111

•'

,... ~ Dntone Turbo11 Z, R I R w.ter Servlo•. Pool• ell·
•utomatla I Ar!. 11.000 "' ••· teme. went. lmmtdlata~1 ,oOO or

aultarlll.

e

m.

:1'1':.14~~n\"': ~~.:::= • m'.:~~lomo, wlllo. Cotll14'·

guitar

1:00 (I) MOVIE: The lillie, Part 2
Of 2 (2:00)
C2l 1111 Matlock Matloct&lt;

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

71 Autos for Sale

0

-

1111 Majol l.Hgue BaMIMtH
8TopCanl
7:35(1) Sanford a SGn

I

;';J 43,000 mlloo,U500 514-3711-

lndlvtduol

TH"'vi!S 1· 2.G.

..:..._........ ,

11-'A'~""'
Q
IIJl CIC II floe

1981 Yamaha Y2490, motor r,al
nics plue txtl'll $1.500. 304882-3397

Services

11184 Plymouth Rollont SW,
1010, 4 cyllndor, PS, PB, TW,
arulea, AMIFM cas11tte, new
II~,_ ohocko, olruto, brokoo,
to,UOQ mUH $2800. 114-44f.
1143 a nor ep.m.

lloglnnoro

•

F0 /liT.

BaHbltU

II)~- Tonlgltt

GIMI~NlA . K

Muat sell 1986 Terry Tauru• 281
Travel Tr~~ller In storage In
Largo round baiH ol hoy, $15 Florida. C_lean, illdra nice.
$8,500. Serloue lnqulrle.t only.
uch.l14-441·1052.
614.S92-2910.
Straw tor 1111. $1 .50 bale. 614448-4111 Evonlngo: 614-4417117

1182
Oldsmobile
Cutlass
Supreme, V..O, good cand, 304575-2223.
.

CIOrlnot. Uood ono yoor. 8300.
...... _
.... 3044714261.

TO MA!Cf up

(I) Mejar ~

el1l USA Todly

(,Of$ FMTE/Z

/

e ()) Family Feud
MMU!ne(0:30)

·· &amp;LIT iiMf

AS you GET
o ,.,ep..

.,

~:-:-:-:-:-:-~~~':':""~=

7:30

..'10~ META~LI,SM
·$LOW$ pDfNN '

' '·

Motorcycles

Hay &amp; Grain

11182 Cam1t0 T-Topo, V-8, 4
opoocl, 304-178-1301 . .

Musical
Instruments·-

7:05(1) Jeflenana

FRANK AND ERNEST

NORTH

•Jto as

By Jamet Jaceby

8 VlcleaCountry

1986 314 GMC, 4 wllool d~..
truck, IX cond. 304-675-2531.

81

1111 Wheel Of

ii:.ri;-n

1980 CJ5 Jnp, axe cond,
$3,500.'304-875-2316oftor 5:00. ·

Young laying chlcUnt tor ula. Cab,. Campar1 30 ft ., with full
Pure bred • brown egga. 114- elze b,d and bath, at Ra;lne.
256-6413.
$3500. 614-HII-2840.

Transportation

ee

Q
IIIII:-.
11J Miami Vlca Dealh And
The Lady

1975 Jeep, CJ5, new tires, new
muHior, $1500. 614-446-4141 ot·
ttr 6 or Qn w••kandt 1

1973 Prowlor 25ft. corpe~ AC,
exc. cond. 614·387·7530.

64

BRIDGE .

NewwHour (1 :00)

'•

· .-tS'

Thesis - Kitty- Awate - Quaint- KNEW.THAT
Headiine: "Psychic Convention To Be Held Next Week .
.. . But 01 Course You Alteady KNEW THAT."

7:00(1) Our ~
e ()) PM .....&amp;lne

.

1971 Ford Van, Econo Line 200i
Body gc&gt;od &amp; Nne good. $450.
614-446-8330.

SCitAM-LETS ANSWERS

~:35 (IJ Andy Qrlflllh

•,

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

'11181 Buick Skylortc V·6 onglno,
AC::, front _ , d~v.!. $1,000.
1171 Oldo $300. 304-610·2736.

57

o-n

'
.,

19!56 CJ5 J11p. 4 whHI drive.
Engine - nMds rebuilt, neecle
aomo body wortc. 61of.992-7492.

74

UNSCR,r,MBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

1!J Sllowllz Today

1984 Rongor XTL, ·V-6 low
mileage,
custom
topper,
automatic, 304-675-3000 till
5:00, evenings &amp;75-6277.

61 Farm Equipment

\Ill eiDCISI!IeWaQ

eo Th-'a CCimpatiy

·,

.....

oft PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~
THESE SQUARES

(1)3-2·1~Q

1983 Ford Ranger V-8 tnglne,
sltrtdard transmlsslon, 4 speed,
304-178·2569 atlor 6:00 PM.

1171 M"""n; II, good work cor,
$350. Sae II on lOt acrou from
Vlllogo PIZZII.

'"I

I

58

.'

1:30. ()) 1111 "IIC ltlghiiJ New8

F-350, 1 ton, 1211. tlatbod. Now
111'11,
IIHodl, king pent,
muflllr. $1500. 814-441-1052.

Yamaha Trumpet with • • · 614-742-2648.

&lt;

..

' I I I I

rain epolla
a family outing, Ramona gall
bored and frullrated. (NRI8
(I) lqllltN One TV (0:30)

WI-lEN WE LEFT, IT WAS NICE
AND CLEAR .. NOW;LOOK Wl-lAT
WE'RE RUNNING INTO ...

'

Computer for IIIIi TRso.&amp;o
Estate Sale:: W• are selling an- MARK IV, computer, monitor,
Uro household. Anyti1fng Y"" r.~ntor, co- &amp; popo~ dlok aye.
naad. Soma antlquaa. 614-258- em &amp; auper ~~erlpt. uc. cond.
6855.
114·245-5827.
GOOD
USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryara, rafrigaratorw,
nongu. Skaggo ApOfloncoo,
Upper RIVer . Ra. B11lde Stone
Crest Mote,. Call614-446-7398.

Musical
Instru menI s

I NVE X

(I) . . _ When

11183 4x4 1 112 ton Cllov. 6.2, 1
ton dla ..l. Good cond. 614-256-

57

-d1.

'

Orwlall Hila (0:30)

1979 1/2 ton Chevy pickup.
38,000 actu11 mll11. $3500 or
trldl. 614-446-1052.

54 Miscellaneous
Mere h. an dlse

~mplo

.-

i Hardcll• a McConnlcll
IIIIINeww
w ro • ()) illll e a~

(I) Majol Leotgue . _ _ . .

z

2

;,.:,:;::..:::;:·:,:·=·==--:--:--:;:- \

1:00

191nch color T.V. Romoto con-...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _'""1~--------..-.....j ~65::12=='-.-:;;:;--;-;:--;;;:::--;;;=:=
trol. $135. 614·1182·7258.
r
11185 314 10n Bluo C!IOvrolot
new ilectric rangM, llmond
pick-up truck, exc. etw1d. 814calor, 304~75-3000.
250-6608 afl•r 5p.m:

~. whh full olzo
241nch
...
d $
oven, w 10. 2 yooro ol . 175.
614-985-4145.

low to form four

EVENING

1977 Silverado long bad truck,
wHh 4 wheel drive. 614-4467647.

Household
Goods

."

0 lour
Roarra~go lottoro of II!.
ocrambled -d• be-

M, TUES., SEPT. 26 8

72 Trucks for Sale

Merchandise

3br,
kltchtn
w/ltova,
refriglrator, $250/mo., plue
vSoln~lldiA~vt.· • 3 . ~r,. ~oo m o ~. Olllhilo, dop, 1 rot, no polo. 5
Wanted: Pure metal Jtad alngerf
,.
v 14-44a_,
,... Coun,St:. 814-oMe-..928.
S.tklng a pure metal group to 44t-t2oll a II' 5p.m
Kenmo,. dryer &amp; Whirlpool
hook up with. I naad grour that
Apartment tor rent, 304-675Washer. Can bt ...n lnt
It willing to ,o to thl top 114- Sm,.,.·~n· ~ 11 Hho~~ 41Wt~.i:'~ 2218.
worklnriJ cor1d. $175. 614--446256·151flolc orLH.
.
'
R
&amp;330.
;:::.:,.;.:;.:..:..;:,:;:."-;-~'--:--:--1 14 41-0335 onor lp.m.
BEAIITifUL APA TMENTS AT
COSMETOLOGIST.
Fontaotlc Wo cino tor oldo~y ond lion·
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Moytag Woohor-Dryor, 1400.
SOm'o will open ooon. Guonon- dlcopoocl In our homo. 26 yooro 32 Mobile Homes
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Plko
Froat frH refrigerator, $275.
tlld wag11 plut eommlalon, ex))lr)tince. LPN on call. Low
from 1$192/mo. Walk to shop &amp;
Dauble aven range, $275. Dlth·
paid vocotlono. Mon._,. I
ln.c omo homo. Call 61of.!l92-6873
for Sale
ff!OY(H . Clll614-446-2588. EOH.
washtr, $75. 614-992·2363 or
'
8tyllate ntldld. 814
7018 atter 7:00 p.m. tor mor• lntor·
BR
Fun)~ EHicisncy S150 utllltlas 614-V92'5801.
anytime.
matlon.
:~~~ic!:3 ~~~ 2tron't 2 ::~:~ Dd. tihare bath. 607 Second,
PICKENS FURNITURE
CRUISE SHIPS Now hiring all 15 · Schools &amp;
Prlcocl to ooll. $12,!5bo.l14·25f. Gallipolis, 614-44&amp;-4416 anor
New/Used
'
pooh-. Both oklllod 1ncf un11102.
8p.m.
Hou11hold furnishing. 112 ml;
olclllocl. For lntormotlon Coli
lnstn.ictlon
Fum'ts•-• opt, odultl, 304·67•
Jerricho Rd. Pt. Pluaant, WV,
616-7711-5507 oxt. H655.
1174 35 ft. Coachman, Pork
•call 30~-675-1450.
RE·TRAIN NOWI
~.;:';~~/!'. ~~~~Iiane:~: 2257.
.
Delivery ptraon appl" In ~,..
Regular elze Hollywood bed
BUSINESS $5000. Call 814_..11-2368.
Fumlohocl opt. 1 .. i&gt;r, $225, lcompllto~ 782 High St., Mid·
10ft VJIIIQI PIZZI lim, 3004 SOUTHEASTERN
COLLEGE,
529
Jackaon
Plko.
Ollthoo
paid,
820
Fo•~h
Go~
Jack-On Ava., Point PluunL
dloport.
Cell .614-441-4387. Rog. No. 86- 1977 Comoron 12x80, partial~ Dpqllo, 114-445-4418 oftor 7p.m.
EARN MONEY typing ho"'o. 11·10558.
tu 1-•~
1 I
SWAIN
m M1'ftl, centra • r, IXC con • Furftlehld ept. 1br, $210, utllltn
$30,00Giyur Income patentlal.
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
$7,500.
NHd
1o
SoUl
304-895paid.
701
Fourlh
Golllpollo,
114·
Dotolls, 105-687-6000 Ext.B· 18 Wanted to Do
Olivo St., Golllpollo. Now I Uood
3687.
44~-4411 oHor '7p.m.
4562.
furniture, hlatera, Wntem I
Do ca~ntry work. Building 1185 Skyllno, 14o64 now corpot,
EARN MONEY typing at homo. homn lo . rem~ellng. · Have beY' window, appllancet, decks, Ortcloue living. 1 1nd 2 bed- Work booto, l14-44f.3158. .
$30,000/yllar Income po:tenua· t ~ reflirencet. Alk lor Ctirle. 114- otoroge building, Un~•er:nnln".• room •partmen.. at Village
Valley Fumfturt
Dotollo, 1-105-687-6000 Ext. 8· 44U468.
and
Alveralde
• ••• 25 • Manor
•
Aportmontoln Mlddloport. From New and uatd furniture and IP"
aoklng poyoH. I 1~10189.
pliances. Call 014-44f5..7512.
Mise Paula'a Day Care Center. 1986 Clayton, tiC. cand. 14•85 $184. Fram September 15th to
EARN fiiONEY typing at home. soto, offordobto, c1111dcano. M·F 2br, home type wlndowa. large November 15th, llrst month rant Hours 9..S.
$30,000/year Income potential. 6 a.m . .. 5:30 p.m. Agn 2'-"'·10. kltchan, Iota of lto,.ge, built In fre;t to thoH who quality. ~all
Vl'ra FumHurt a Appllancn
Dotallo, 11) 805-687-6000 Eo. B· Before, after echo~ Drop-Ina oven 6 leland etove, waeher, 614-e92~n87. EOH.
Rt. 141, 1!4 mi. on Lincoln ptk._
4582.
'
wolcomo, 614-446-8224. ,
dryer, 1lr condltlonlf', awning, Nl'w one br, fum.lsha~a . In Mon-Sat 9 a.m.-6 p.m. SUn 12·5.
toc1tecl on rented lot, 1 blocll
,
Call till 9 p.m. lor appolntmonto,
Earn money typing 11 home. Painting, Interior &amp; extertor, 15 from
the Unlvereltv ol Rio Mlddltport. 114-62·
or 614-446·31 58.
Financing
$30,000/year Income potential. yra. experience. Gutter cleaning Grandi. 114-24Wbl
tfler 51~._.41-8898.
available wl1h no money down.
Dotallo, 11) 1105-687-1000 Ext. I · &amp; rocolllng 1 root cooling. FrH
7p.m.
Nli:e 2 SA, 4 112 mi. tram Gal· Solo &amp; Chair, Rog. $6118 now
1805.
ntlmat•. 614-379·2320.
llpollt. No poto. $235/mo. 61of. $229 (18 In otockj, Wood
:c
Ho" t'"r"'s'"tr"'t'"lo:-t---n1:-ocl-:-:-;to-r-:H:-a:-lr I REMODELING INTERIOR, EX· 35 Lois &amp; Acreage
Groups, Reg. $1121, now $2H
441-1038..
Hopponfng Styling SOlon. Full or TE~IOR PAINTING, ROOFING,
(11 In llloclc). Sleeper Soli,
part•tlm•. Manager1 lleenat CONCRETE
WORK, 1 1cre loll Galllpolle Ferry, city Now accepting applications tor Vaughan Bas11U lnlenprlng
2 1blclroom ape, tully carpeted, ~.g. $899, nO\N $369 I e In
roq'd. For lroorvlow coli II of. ELECTRICAL I PLUMBING EXP. water, 304.075-2722.
aDollancn, wster and trath alock). Ou11n Anna Cotf11 &amp;
446-3353.
HAS REFERENCES. PLEASE
off Eagle Rldga plCkupe provided. Maintenance End Tabloo $148 i oo1. 5
CALL AFTER 5P.M. 814-251- 9.04
Job Hunting? NMd a aklll? Wt 1511 .
Road,
very _ private,
ap- •.- living cloH to shopping, varieties of Bunk Bede, $149 &amp;
trak'l ~pie tar lobs u Auto
proxlmatlly four acrn II ~nka 111d achoole. For mor•ll'1· up, Twin &amp; Full Mattresses Wll
Me chanica, Carptnte,.1• C~ Wanted to do , housecleaning. hayfield eUitabla tor building formation call 304-882-3716. E.. $99 &amp; up. Now $49.95 (50 In
metologfetl, Oiveralfled Mldlcal have' reterencH. 614·256-6783; and the r... Ia woodllnd. Exc.l· qUal opportunity hr;auaing. Sec· stock). Queen Mattrns Sltt
Woril.e,.,
Paralegal•, .. 4-256-9323.
ient huntlng lrta, Electricity Uon 8 accepled,
$249, Reg. $650;· King Manreu
EleCtricians.
Food Service
and TP&amp;C Water available
$, 29. 8 varittlll BasSil Bid·
Worbrs,
Electronic• TIICh·
nearby. $10,000; or whlllll total Qulot on• bed room untur- room Stilts, Reg. $1600, now
nlcl•ns, Industrial Malnten1nce
28 ac,... plue cabin for $27,500. rilshed apt, nice ntiQhborhood,
30 dayo warranty o~ opFinancial
Worktrl, Nursing Assistant•
Call 514-121·2389.
,.terence and de~os11 required, $999.
pilances, Maytag Wathlr SID I
and
Orderllae,
Machinists,
185
04
7
1550
up.Orytr$7S&amp;up.
'
A•hton, beautiful one acr. lata $ · ~er'month,
" 5'
OHica Workers and We1dera.
with rtver frontage, public water. flegency, Inc:. 2BA, apt, new Whirlpool automatic wUhlr
Reg later now for cia. . . begin- 21
Business
plueh
carpet, new paint, $125. 814-367-0234.
Clyde /Bowen, Jr. 304-578-2336.
nlng OCtober 2nd. Call Trf.
~tlllt1o1, pornally paid. $175/mo.
Opportunity
County Voca1lon11 AduU Center
Aehlon, large building lote, Ca11304-6_75·5104.
at 61of.753-3511 Ext. 14. A
53
Antiques
moblla homH permitted; public
. INOTICEI
variety of funding eourcn to
water, P.rlcn rtduc.ct, Clyde Small tum. hou•e. eultablt for 1
pay fcir training are available tor OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINQ CO. Bowon, Jr. 304-178-2338.
Euy
or
1111.
Rlverlnt Antlqull,
or 2. 814-441-0338.
1hooo ollglblo.
. recommend• that you do
11:1:4
E.
Main
Strllt, Pomeroy.
bueln111 with people you know, For' Salt: One acre llwll lote, 7
M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
lPN's NHdld, Excallant Oppor· snd NOT to Hnd money mlln north of Holzer Hotpltll. Tara Townhousa. Apte, 2 br., 1~ Hours:
112 bathe, CA, dl•hwaahlr, dis- p.m., Sunday 1:00 lo 8:00 p.m.
tunlty, Nallonal Company, Good thro\fgh tht maU until you hav• 614 388 8649.
posal, privata encloud patio, 614-992·2526.
Team Atmosphere, Competltiw lnvest~ated the otterlng.
·
pool, pl1yground. Water, sewer,
Salary, C.ll Oorthy Harper, Mid·
ThrH 4 acl'l traclli 3 &amp; trash rncludld. Startlno at Top Cash paid. Old furniture
100% CASH INCOME
acrellpond. Owner financing,
cuboards,
quilts,
oriental,
dillon Eslatea, 614-446·7148.
S301J..S700 uch Amuaemant $1 oo. down. 90 aem MIL ,$289/mo. Coll614-367·7850.
paintings, toys, or entlra ntatt
Game
per
.
wee~.
Prim•
Me1dow1Woods eprfng, gas Twin River• Tower-Housing for call collect 304.S25-3275, or
Are you underpaid tor your
e. 100% ratum of In· royattlet,
tt5,ooo: Gunvllle the Elderly, HandlcapJ)Id and 304-523-6854.
qualltlcatlons? Schedule your location
vestment GUAR·ANTEED. Call 1· ~oad. 304-175-7687.
own hourw, vacation &amp; pay, with 800-446·
Dlnblltd.
Located
near -:-------------5443 NOW.
Morty K. 304·675-5276.
downtown
Point
Pleasant, 54 Miscellaneous
Woodland, 132 tern, $35,000, phono
304·675-6679. Equol
Need horse trainer to show &amp; Shoe Store ind Video St~• Rt. 7, below Eureka, Call 114-- Houelng Opporiuntly.
Merchandise
combined
for
sale.
In
Pomeroy
446-4418
after
7
p.m.
train quarter horsn In western
area.
614·992·3830
or
61
4·M2·
piiiiUfl. 614·286·6522.
Upper Rlvtr Ad. 2 apt. upstair,
2571.
2brt atove, rtf., water, garbage
Need mature IndiVIdual for
picKup.
D•poalt
req'd.
1
Rentals
chlldcare tor 2·3 nights a week
downelalra, 2br, water, garbage
In m~ home. 814-445-8887.
pick-up. 614-446·3940.
Real Estate
Point Pleasant B1.1alness, es•
Upttalf!1 .unfurnished apt Car·
41 Houses for Rent
lablishment needs part time
petld. 110 pete, Inquire 11 300
janitorial help, approximately 31 Homes for Sale
$300
month
pluo
dojloolt.
Jock·'
:..F""";.;;.;;,h;;,A;.;v.;.•·;...._:----10-12 hrw par WHk, evening
oon st, VInton. 61of.388-1310.
-:
hours, 135. weekly. Sena 2 br, cottage. Nice rttl,.ment
45
Furnished
res'-!me'to Box 5-26, care Point hom•r located 295 Lower Rlvar 2 bedroama, bath, newly
Pleasant Register, 200 Main St., Rd. Rver VIew. 814-446-2300.
diCOI'IIIId, clAn, nlca. 114-112"Rooms
Point Ple..ant, WV 25550.
2 br, amall cottag!l. AC, cai-pet, 5858.
Someone to sl11p over In home $1000. Down: 1"221 .91 mo. 5
of etderly lady no work or care miln below Gallipolis, 114-441Involved, plaaH a .. tt asking 8598.
wage and retrencu In first Itt•
2 11ory brick home, over 100
wlrtt to Box P·25, care of
Po nl Pl..sant Register, 200 y••rt: old. Approx. 7 acr11.
$40,000. 0Wner1 will conaldlr
Main St, Pt. PH., WV 25550.
land contract. locatld Eureka
TYPIST. MUll bo obto 1o typo 60 behind· Cloy School. 114-256wpm. Knowledge of word 1878.
procnslng equipmant helpful.
3 bedraom brick hauae with
Knowled~
of
medlcal/psychlltrlc terminology larga lot, Mid Way Drive. New
preferred. Send ruume or cell H1ven. Good Cond. 304-J73.
Sandra McFarland, Pat~onnal 5681.
Officer, Woodland Centers, nc: 1 3 bedroom· honie livlngroom,
412 VInton Pike, Gallipolis, OH kitchen,
bit~ .
Compltttly
45631, 614-446-5500. Woodland ramodaled Inside and aut.
Centare Is a EEOJAA action $32,500. Owner financed, Leon
employer and doea not dl• area. 304-586-2462 or 588-4374.
criminate on tha bult of
religion, raet, eoloilr •e•, age, 5 foam. and bath. luiH-In
natrona! origin, hali icap or allo porch. 113,500. Neldt ~me
rtpoJ!. e14·1182-2363 or 11of.ll82·
Cittry.
5801.
Tho Molgo Local School Dlotrlc1
It
currenlly
Haklng
ap- Beautifully maintained. Prefer·
pllcetlons from certlflld apo red neighborhood. W1lk to
plicante for a Soya: 9th Grade ovorythln; In Golllpolla. Doft..
Baekelblll Coach Boyt~' 8t~ nhaly a mutt to 11e. 114·251Gnodo Bookotboll Coach, loyo 1855.
7th Gnodo lookotboll c-h,
loyl' Head Track Coach, Junkw Exc. aond., 2 etory brtcll
High Traell Coach, Aulatant wlba~~~~~Mnt. 31br, 2 bathl, Mill
Junior High T-k Coach, Hllll pump. CA, n- · gonooo, 23
Bo-ll
Coodl. Aoolotont ICI'H. N•• LActa. A"fllf' "I, 114leHball CO.ch,- Olrttl' R...rve :IH-1412.
SoftboU Coach ond Gh111' Junior For SOlo: 1 room houoo whh 42 Mobile Homes
Hlalt 1-boll Cooch lor 1ho
both, buomont new botllod goo
for Rent
1111M0
yoor. Appllconlo fumac•,
2 room etorage
mUll hold 1 ¥1llil Ohio INChing IMllldlng wHh I oc- ol lind ln
ctrttflcllt 1nd for 001tehlna Euroko. 11of.258-1883.
121&lt;80 on nlco lovol lot, n1..
~hla. muet meet ctrtlff..
concrot, Wilko, locOIICJII.
cotlon roqulr.montl ot Ohio tor For tale, HVIn pa~ old ranch -'ull Hill H lnt.,....td, 114-4•
opclllo m_.no ond 'CPR. Parotylo houoo. 3 l&gt;odroom whh aoo;;:::-=-'·:.;"::"~"';::'~P.::;"";=:~;:-:-:-­
,,._.., -·ld contoet Iwo
old L.onrto• Hoot Pump
Jim Corponto&lt; 8-lnlondont 011 1.1 ..,., Flltwooclo Rd. ot lbr, unlollod oltlcloncr, ~r·
ot Molao Locolsc-••.ot P.O. Flvo Polnlo. CorUcl o... 'o• Pllod ,":~;fl~on. vo'l' nliloon''
Bo• 212, J20 Ellt Mlln .,_, In ot .11-·7701 Or llof.1182· 721 Soc: •
"What got me started In crime? Llst81llng
8641.
Avo. II
-2002.
1-.
P-oy.Ohlo.
B11utlclan nHdtd II Pinecrest
Coro Contor, SOiory pluo Com·
mlulon lnaurance &amp; other
blnelht, mutt have or be al·
llglble lor menaaer license.
contact GtU Hamllron, 614-4467112. E 0 E

eo SalvaS~• Car. 3 acrn of 11nd
with 28x30 bufldlng . 614·2866522.

Commercltl apece, 1400 aq.tt.
Comlf S_,... and Plno. Amplo
portdng. Coli 114-44f.424i, 4412325, or 441-4421.
•.

tr~Uert

.••

--------------~---.
71 Autos for Sale

46 Spaee for Rent

2 BR, 1 mlltlr'om town bn 588.
Dopooft r~ulrod. You pay
utllllloo. 114-311-1804.
,

Uood 1uma... ond houuhold
IPPIIoncn.

Tuesday, September 26. 1989

"

·.;
'

�%8£

10-lhe Daily Sentinel

~-Local

.

Tuesday, September 26. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

news briefs ... -----. Suspect...

Continued from page- 1
responded to four calls on Monday.
·
·
· At 4:15a.m. the Rutland unit was called to Meigs Mine No. 1
for Don Coon who was treated but not transported.
·Tile Middleport unit. at8: 02 a.m. went to Beech St. for Helen
Kennedy, also treated but not transported .
The Rutland unit responded to a call at 9: 39 a.m. on Romine
Road In which Chartes Romine was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and later to liolzer Medical Center, and'at 5: 24p.m, the
Middleport unit went to South Third Ave. for George Ostermyer
who was take11 to Veterans.
In. Monday's report of · EMS activities, a call which was
, answered on'Saturday by Tllppers Pia.Ins EMS was Incorrectly
reported. The report should have read that on Saturday at 5:40
a .m. , Tuppers Plains EMS transported Robert MarchlltO from
Tuppers Plains to St Joseph's Hospital, In Parkersburg, W.Va.
Continued from page 1
. ounct'·l... ________
_
C

.

Ill\ llmiAl .WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 9-27·89 ·

continued from p age 1

through the cooperation of everyone that we were able to
make a quick apprehension."
The· Gallla County Sheriff's
Department .received a call on
the murders at 8: 57 a .m. Monday. In turn, Sheriff Salisbury
contacted the Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investigation,
at London, Ohio, for assistance.
Baisden was $Cheduled for an
extr~dltlon . hearing this afternoon before . Judge James L.
Holliday In Mason County Circuit
·Court. If he waives extradition to
GalUa CoUitty to · face the
charges, he will be returned to
Gal Upolis for the beginning of
prosecution on the. felony
charges. If Baisden refuses to
waive extradition to Ohio, Prosecu ting Attorney Saunders said
the appropriate paper work
would be started to extradite him.
to Galua County.

Officials would not confirm a
motive, however, they did say
that between $500 and $600 was
apparently taken from the Wears
residence, from Mrs. Foster's
purse and a small change purse
from a dresser drawer In the
Wears' bedroom.
Conducting the Investigation
were Sheriff Dennis Sails bury,
Prosecuting · Attorney Brent A.
Saunders, Mark Sheets, assistant prosecuting atiorney ; Chief
Deputy Carlos Wood; Mike Fenderbosch, Investigator from the
prosecuting attorney's office,
arid several other sheriff's
deputies .
While there have been double
killings In Callla County, It l.s
believed that Sunday's killing
was the first triple murder tn the
history of Galli a County .

on the riverbank. The proposeq position will be re-evaluated in
, cosl to shore up the riverbank, December, It was decided. CounMayor Hoffman said, Is $480,000 cilman Gerard voted against the
with $3fiO ,000 coming from the proposal.
.
:federal govenp'nent and $120,000
The mayor and Councilman
through the village.
Gilmore reported on a meeting
While tile village clearly does with the recreation committee
not·have the $120,000 for Its share and discussed .several projects
· of the cost, Mayor Hoffman which are under consideration. It
Gallla County · Coroner Dr.
By United Press International
Indicated that some other fund- was noted that Williams has lined
Edward J . Berklch was on the
South Central Ohio
.lng might be available because of up a soccer exhibition match to
scene and ordered ihe 'bodies to
Tonight: Clear, with a lo;.v near
tile emergeiJCY nature of the be held here and that plans are . the Franklin County morgue, at . 40. Frost possible In low-lying
s1tuatlon,.
Columbus, Ohio, for autopsies.
moving forward for a haunted
.areas. Light northeast winds
He said that the next step will hayride at Halloween this year. a
The victims were found In developing.
be drawing up specifications for joint ~enture with the Jaycees.
various parts ·of the house with
Wednesday: Sunny. with highs
the job. It the village can come up
their throats cut, according to between 65 and 70.
Gilmore explained that the two
with Its share, he said, the Cor~ acres near the marina . will be
officials. Wears was found·in the
Extended Forecast
~ thinks work could begin somelivingroom; his wife, Beulah, In
used with a trail to be made
Thursday through Saturday
, time .In the spring.
the bedroom and the daughter. In
through the woods for the bayFair during the period, with
A second reading was given to · ride featuring scary scenes along
the bath room. All three bodies highs In the upper 60s or lower 70s
the skate board ordinance follow- the way. He said that tentative · , had .knife wounds In the throat Thursday and Friday and .ln the
Ing :amendments proposed by plans call for the haunted hay- and neck.
upper 50s or lower 60s Saturday.
Councilman Paul Gerard. The ride to continue over a two week
Early morning lows will be in the
ordinance, as amended by coun- period.
Two knives, one believed to be upper 30s or lower 40s Thursday
. ell before the second reading,
the murder weapon, were found and · In the 40s Friday and
·will keep skateboarders off the
on the premises arter a thorough Saturday.
Councilman Horton asked
sidewalks In the business areas, council to take a look at the grant sel\fch, officers said. The knives,
and 1&gt;ff all streets In the village. for the bicycle path and see if according to Sheriff Salisbury,
The ordinance was also amended some changes can be made to get
were sent to the BCI crime lab at
to include penalties !Or juveniles the project underway. The pur- London.' 'and adults In three stages rang- chase of property for the developOfflclals say there was no sign
Ing from a warning to a charge of ment as originally proposed was
of forced entry to the Wears'
misdemeanor. The second read- discounted by council as " too
residence. No one In the neighing passed by a five to one vote expensive." Mayor Hoffman
borhood saw or heard anything
with Wllllam Walters voting agreed to check Into possible out or the ordinary, Officials
against the amended version.
location changes for the bicycle placed the time of death between
Mayor Hoffman was autho· path.
5 and 7 p.m. Sunday. An uneaten
rized to proceed with an applicaThe success of the bloek party dinner was on the table.when the
tion to apply for Community was discussed by council with the
bodies were discovered.
Development Block Grant mo- Middleport Chl!mber of Com.
Officials were very methodical
nies for Improvements at Hartin- merce being commended for Its In their processing of the crime
ger Park. The proposal Is for work. Gerard also reported on scene, going over every Inch of
money' to construct restrooms ~ecent meetings of the District
the house and yard. BCI Investiand p~rchase playground equip- Solid Waste Polley Committee.
gators were delayed In getting to
ment, a total of about $15,000.
Kanauga, and the on-scene !nvesAttending were Mayor Ho.f' Council passed an ordinance to fman, Clerk-Treasurer ·Jon
tigailon finally concluded late
retain Roger Williams as village Buck; and Council members last night. The bodies were
recreation director at a salary of Horton, James Clatworthy, Gilremoved from the scene nearly
$100 a week for 20 hours work, for more, Gerard, Walters, and Jack 12 hours arter they were
the .remainder of the year. The Sa tterfleld ..
discovered.

- .-. -Area deaths-Gregory Donohew
Racfne area-native, Gregory
(Beaver) Donohew, 34, of Ashville, was killed Monday in an
accident on a construction site In
Coiumbus.
Born June 21, 1955 in Gallia
County , he wa&amp; a son of the late
Leroy (Roy) and Mildred Ours
· Donohew. He was raised In the
East i.;etart area of Meigs County
and graduated from Southern
High School in 1973. He was a
carpenter for the Target Construction Company In Columbus,
and was previously employed by
the Timken Company.
Survivors include three brothers ani;! sisters-in-law, George
and . Ruby Donohew, of Circlevjlle. Jolin and Jan Donohew, of
Clovis, N.M., and Jeff and Becky
Donohew. of Pickerington; uncles and aunts, Gene and Evelyn
Webster, of Cleveland. Lewis and
Ruth Ours. of Wellsville, Kenneth- (Bill) and Edna Ours. of
Wellsville, Wiley and Audrey
Ours. of Racine, Ralph and Ida
Mae Ours, of New Brighton, Pa. ;
several nieces and nephews, and
many cousins.
Calling hours in Ashville will
be from 7to9 p.m. on Wednesday

Stocks
Daily stock prices .
(As of 10:40 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .......... .. .29 34
AT&amp;T ................... .............. 42\-1
Ashland 011 ..... .................... 40\-1
Bob Evans ...................... ... .14%
Charming Shoppes ........ ...... 14\-1
City Holding Co .............. ..... 15
Federal Mogui .................... 23 J!s
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ ....... .... 52Y.
Heck's .. :.... ............................ %
Key Centurion ................ .. .. 13'!!.
Lands' End ......................... 26'lf,
Limited Inc .. .................. ..... 38
Multimedia Inc .................... 100
Rax Restaurants ......... .. .. .. ... 2\-l
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... .... ...... 15Y.
Sl!oney's Inc ..... ...... , ......... .. 11%
Wendy's Inti .. ..... ...... ........... 5Jis
Worthington Ind . ...... ..... ..... 23y.
(Channing Shoppes Is ex dividend today.)

Hospi~l

news

Veterans Memorial
· Monday admissions -Homer
Ray, Point Pleasant; John
Lowen; Pomeroy; Rose Genhelmer, Pomeroy; and Ora Chapman; Pomeroy.
Monday discharges '-Adelia
Swisher, Lois Province, and
Stella Bush.

Weather

Pomeroy .••.

(Continued from Page 1)
be served concurrently, that is,
at the same lime.
Upon the proposed plea agreement and the recommendation of
the Porsecuting Attorney, Judge
Crow accepted Hick's plea and ,
sentenced him to the maxlm.um
term of 18 months In prison. In
addition, Hicks was ordered to
Pi'Y a fine of$500 to reimburse the
Robert B. Molden
Meigs County Department of
Human Services for monies paid
Robert Bennett Molden, 77. Rt . for medical treament for the
1, Dexter, died In Holzer Medical victim, Dale Riffle, and to pay
Center Monday afternoon.
the court costs.
He was born on Sept. 7, 1912 in
Hicks was Immediately reRutland. son of the late Sheridan mande.d to the custody of the
and Esta {Folden) Molden.
sheriff, to be transported to
A World War II Army veteran, prison as soon as possible.
he was a retired farmer and
Judge Crow expressed his
heavy construction worker.
appreciation and thanks to those
He was preceded In death by persons who appeared Monday
one son, three brothers and two morning for jury service.
sisters.
Survivors incude his wife, Seeks divorce
Gladys (Welch) Molden; three
stepsons, Cecil Stacy of Dexter,
A divorce has been granted In
Allen Stacy of Langsville, and Meigs County Common Pleas
James Stacy of Canton; two Court to botll parties In the action
stepdaughters, Geraldine Spur- of Gloria Sue Musser versus
lock of Reynoldsburg , and Michael Todd Musser .
Wanda Sharp of Dexter.
Services will be held Thursday Apply for license
at 1 p.m. at McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home in Vinton. Burial
A marriage license has been
will be in the Miles Cemetery In Issued In Meigs County Probate
Rutland. Friends may call the Court to James Anthony Carnafuneral home Wedn~sday from 2 han. 30, and Sandra Renee
to 4 p.m. and from 7 to 9 p.m.
Unruh, 22. both of Racine.

JOWL CHUNK
BACON

49&lt;

CHICKEN
LEG
QUARTERS

f/,;J

BsNow
FRONTS: . . W~rm

-RAIN
SHOWERS
:
"Cold
. . Sialic
Occlwic f
'

EGGS
DOlEN

99&lt;

59CLB.

IHRIFIEE

IROUGHION'S

SLICED
BACON

. WEATHER MAP- Showers and·thunderstorms are forecaSt lor
parts oftbe south Atlantic Coast st11tes Wednesday. Showers are
possible In parta of the Pacific Coast and the central and northern
Intermountain region. (UPI)

BANANAS

3 LIS.

$100
GLAZED

DONUTS
11 COIIIT

89C

59CL~
I PACI, 16 OZ..
OCT. 3.

1988

C&amp;K
SUPERMARKET
·
992-3480
"ON'M 'r''
MIDDUPOU, OHIO
( J

.

2 St!cHons. 14 .Pages 25 Cents

Val.40, No. 100 M
Capyrlg~ted

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, September21,1989

1989

•
·•
;
·

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3RD SIREET
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OUR SREcnON IS STILl BEAUTIFUl

ARRAIGNMENT TODAY - Arraignment was
scheduled at one o'clock this afternoon In
GaiUpolls Municipal Court for Dennis J. Baisden,
(center) 18, Pojnt Pleasant area, on three counts
of ag(t'avated murder. Baisden Is charged In the
triple slaying Sunday at Kanauga. He waived
· ·extradition· yesterday before Mason County
Circuit Judge James 0 . Holliday to return to O)lio

to lace the charges. Baisden, arrested Monday
night . near Henderson by the Mason County
Sherlfrs ·Department, Is shown here being
brought Into municipal court yesterday In custody
of Mason County Deputy Sheriff Donnie Kapp (far
left), Gallla County Deputy Sheriff Howard
· MuUins (left), and Gallla County Sheriff Dennis
Salisbury.

Ka~~i!!l _V:gl{ey: .rgy,t~

fUvOred ·by officials
The state officials selected the
north-southeast route linking Point
PleaSant with the state Capitol
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- A using existing population pockets
new four-lane highway could be as the major criteria. That logic
built along lhe Kal)awha River, didn't wash with Jackson County
West Virginia state highway officials whose east-west "scenic
officials told a public meeting route" from Goldtown-Ripley was
was penalized by using those
Tuesday night.
criteria.
State Senator Ned Jones,
"I'm just' pleased that we can go
D·CabeU
, even said the study's
forward and get a four-lane road
logic
was
"seriously flawed" in that
into Mason County," said state Sen.
it
equally
compared the disruption
Oshel Craigo, D-Putnam. "This is
building
a
four-lane
highway would
the area for economic developcause
with
potential
economic
ment"
By CHUCK MASON
.
OVPStal'r

development
Charles Lanham, a member of
the Mason C~unty Area Ctuu:nber
of Commerce s roads committee,
was pleased wnh what he saw ~t
the . hour-and-a-half-long · pubhc
meet.mg at the Nauonal Guard Armary at Camp Conley.
.
"I ~ink. you hav~. to take 11 (~e
Elanmng). m phases, Lanham sru~. ·
'They .did an _excellen~ JOb m
presenung. the1r onfonnauon based
on thetr cntena. I th1nk_y~u ~ave to
start someplace. Now II IS ume to
refine the data an~ get ~ the next
phase of the study, he srud.
Those attending the public meet·
ing a crowd that was considerably
sm~llcr than that originally an·
ticipated, were greeted with massive wall charts arid maps outlining
the corridors and the criteria used
in the selection process. The
through ACTION, the Ohio. De·
partment on Aging, the Gallla- audience members =ived several
handouts with the .actual scoring
-Jackson-Meigs Mental done by the state DOH officials.
Health Board. and locaL d.ollars
Tlleir recommendations, and those
generated through donations,
fund raising, and county comments made during the public
hearing will be forwarded Fred
government.
VanKirk, acting commissioner of
RSVP provides a variety of
the DOH. Another public hearing is
opportunities for retired persons
aged 60 or older to participate expected next m&lt;l!lth and the, fin!il
route decision 1s expected m
more fully . In tile life of the
January
of next year, officials said.
community .through significant
·
In
rating
the Jackson County,
volunteer services. · Volunteer
County
and Pumam County
Mason
projects In Meigs County Include
routesI-77,
Kanawha
River val·
Inter generational programming.
ley
and
1·64,
the
officials
used the
literacy , and long term for the
facto(s
of
cos~ environmental im·
frail elderly with assistance
being provided ' to over forty · pact and socio-economic . impact.
volunteer stations Including ser- The scores were tallied, with the
vice agencies, schools and com- lowest scores termed the winners.
Under lhat furmat, the state
munity organizations.
officials
!lave the edge on cost of
RSVP staff Include Susan
construcuon
to the Kanawha Valley
Oliver, director; Jeannie Braun,
and Allee Wolfe, coordinators, route, the edge on environmental
impact to the east-west Jaclcson
and Doyle Hudson, van driver.
County route an!l the edge to the
more southern Hurricane-Milton
connection at I-64 in terms of
socio-economic · impact. The final
scores were I· 77, 86; Kanawha Val·
ley 77; and I-64, 85.
The violations occurred at the
Once !hose figures
were
MassUion Automobile Club, al- produced, the c!ebate then. began
though the deparlment held that over the methodology of the study.
agency blameless and said It Both Mason County Commission
helped Implicate He Inzer.
President Thomas D. "Tucker"
The tampering consisted of Mayes and Commissioner R. Kenaltering the date of birth to show ton Sheline were concerned
the license holder to be over 21 whether state officials llad taken
years of age.
safety into account in their
The 12 others who received the evaluations. John Lancaster of the
documents will face charges of DOH said they had. Fonner state
falsification. The · state Is at- .sricultural eotilmissioner Gus
tempting to retrieve the fake Douglass wanted to lcnow if they
licenses and ID as soon as had swdied running the route
possible.
through Comstallc park, which
"The Department of Highway might eventually lead to developing
Safety will not tolerate this kll)ll a state park there. A lady in the
of activity and will prosecute
Continued on page 5
Continued on page 5

Volunteers recognized
for senrice past year

A .. .

l'
'

New Colognes Arriving Daily!
OBSESSION. 3.4 oz. Spray .......................... : ......... $45.00
KNOWING, 1 ·oz ......... :..................................... .'... *35.00
ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW. 1.8 oz .................... $14.50
ELIZABETH TAYLOR'S PASSION, 1.5 Oz ............... *27.00
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at the Oliver Funeral Home.
Additional calling hours will be
at the Ewing 'Funeral Home in
Pomeroy on Thursday, from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m., where services
will be held Friday at 1 p.m.
Burial will be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery.

SMOKED

•

Nearly 300 volunteers contribu ling over 63,000 hours of
volunteer · service over the past
year were recognized at the 16th
annual recognition of the Meigs
County Retired Senior Volunteer
held at Dale's Smorgasboard In
Galllplis.
More than 200 of the volunteers
and their guests.: were II)
attendance.
Special honorees . were presented 15 and 10 year service
awards. Those receiving 15 year
awards were Reva Beach, John
Brewer. Eva Dessa\ler, Vida
Green, Margaret Johnson, Cora
Michael, Frances Roush, Sara
Voss and Gene McElroy. Ten
year service awards went to
Dorothy Davis, Goldie Dill,
Gladys Dillon, Beulah McComas,
and Louise Eshelman.
The Meigs RSVP Is sponsored
by the Megls County Council on
Aging, Inc., and receives funding

Charges filed against clerk
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The Ohio Deparlment Qf High·
way safety filed charges Tuesday against a Massillon license
agency clerk for allegedly handIng out .ll fake duplicate driver
licenses and one false Identification card.
Jollene A. ,Heinzer of MassUion
was charged In Massillon Municipal Court with tampering with
records, a fourth -degree felon,
and falsification of records, a
first-degree misdemeanor.
Sl)e was dismissed from her
clerk's job and could face a
maximum penalty of six months
to five years In jail and a $2,500
fine.

By DICK THOMAS
OVP Stall Writer
Dennis J . J;lalsden, 18, of the
Point Pl~asant, W.Va. area,
waived extradition Tuesday afternoon before Judge James 0.
Holliday In Mason County Circuit
Court to return to Gallla County
to face three charges of aggra"ated murder.
Baisden was arrested late
Monday night by the Mason
County Sheriff's Department In
connection with the murder
Sunday of three people at
Kanauga.
The bodies of Marvin W.
Wears. 94, and his wife, Beulah
Wears, 81, both of 415 Fourth
Ave., Kanauga, and Audrey
Foster, 58, Milton, W.Va., were
discovered ·Monday morning,
with their throats cut, at the
Wears' residence.
Baisden was transported to
Gallipolis by Mason County Deputy Sheriff Donnie Kapp. There
was a brief delay ,In order to find
a qualified counsel, In arraigning
Baisden before Gallipolis Munlc- ·

Ipal Judge Joseph L. Cain.
A hearing was finally held with
appointment of counsel and fix Ing bond for Baisden. Judge Cain
determined Baisden was Indigent and appointed Attorney
Herman Carson of Athens and
Attorney Ronald R. Calhoun of
Gallipolis, as co-counsel for
Baisden. Attorney Carson was
unable to come to yesterday's
hearing. Attorney Calhoun represented the accused man at
Tllesday's hearing, ·
The reason for the brief delay
In appointing counsel, according
to Judge Cain, was that under a
new law, attorneys must have
certain qualifications. Attorney
Calhoun told Judge Cain that he
(Calhoun) was not qualified by
the Ohio Supreme Court to be
lead counsel.
Baisden, still clad in a MasonCounty orange jail suit, appeared
before Judge Cain .In handcuffs
and leg shackles. He was· barefooted. He showed very little
emotion as he was questioned by
Judge Cain. Judge Cain then

read the three warrants charging
him with three counts of aggra vated murder.
Judge Cain set bond at $250,000,
cash , no 10 percent , a nd continued the case until one o'clock
this afternoon at which time the
amount of bond will be reconsidered and a date will be set for
the preliminary hearing. Purpose of the .preliminary hearing
will be to determine if there is
sufficient evidence . to hold
Baisden to the next term of grand
jury which is set for Tuesday.
Oct. 10.
The arrest of Baisden Monday
night stemmed from a day-long ·
exhaustive investigation by th e
Gallia County Sheriff's Department, the Gallla County Prosecuting Attorney's Office and
agents of the Bureau of Criminal
Identification. London, Ohio .
The bodies of the three viet! ms
were discovered around 9 a.m.
Monday by a housekeeper who
worked for the Wears through the
week. Mrs. Foster was there ove r
Continued on page 5·

Celeste
calls for clear action
.
agenda on education .·program
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPll ' Gov . ~1!1!):\l .l:;elt!llte said .'t\'es·
day he bopes President Bush's
education summit meeting for
the nation's governor's focuses
on Improved early childhood
education, more student financial aid and national performance standards for schools.
"We do not need another study
process, not another review, not
another report," Celeste said In a
leiter to the president before
leaving for the two-day meeting
in Charlottesville, Va. "We need
a clear and compelling action
agenda."
Celeste commended Bush for
calling the governors together
but said he hopes It "Is more than
simply a media event."
The Ohio governor said na tional performance standards

Head Start will do more than .a ny
should be Invoked as President
other single Investment· to
. Keil~;.s commitment in 1962
strengthen
education and fight
to land a man on the moon.
abuse,
"
said the governor.
drug
He said that by 2000, every
Celeste
said
the governors
young American should be able
should
en·courage
po s t •
to read, write and compute well
enough! to perform the jobs of the secondary education by making
21st century without having to II affordable. He said federal
take remedial classes, and most student aid has shifted from
young adults should be able to grants to "burdensome and often
use at least one foreign language ·prohibitive loans."
''We must reverse this trend in
in a business setting.
student
financial aid if we have
"We must raise expectations If
any
hope
of preparing the next
we are to improve educational
to match their global
generation
performance," said Celeste.
competition,"
said the governor.
The governor said the summIt
Celeste prepared for the sumshould agree to full funding of the
Head Start program for every 3- mit by visiting schools In Toledo,
and 4-year old in America by Youngstown, Cincinnati, and col1991. Currently, aid covers only leges in Cleveland and Akron. He
about 20 percent of those also visited a program In Dayton
for high-risk c hildren.
children.
"An all-out commitment to

Voinovich will move to .Columbus
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Mayor
George Volnovlch, a Reublican
candidate for governor, plans to
move to Columbus after he
finishes his third and final term
as mayor In January .
"Right now, he and Janet
(Voinovich' s wife) are in the
process of apartment shopping,"
said Curt Stefner, a spokesman
for Voinovlch's gubernatorial
canpalgn.
Steiner said Voinovich will not
sell Ills home In Cleveland, but
will probably live. In Columbus
during the week.

Dry wealher is
forecast for weekend
· By United Press lnlernalional
Dry and cool weather continues to provide good working
conditions across Ohio. And the
dry weather Is expected to
continue through the weekend.
Winds will be shifting Into the
south or southwest by Thursday
as another front moves across
the Great Lakes. Its passage
across Ohio about Friday Is
currently not expected to pro·
duce any rainfall, but II may help
to keep temperatures lnthe moderate range.
Sunny skies Thursday Will be
favorable, for harvest harvest
operations, with drylgn rates
remaining moderate to good
under the sun.ny skies. With brisk
southerly winds developing
Thursday , moisture losses
should be close to one percent
even as relative humidities bottom In the 40 percent range. The
winds, as high as 20 mUes per
hour over parts of northern Ohio
Thursday, will Increase the fall
of apples.

"Basically, during the week
particularly, my expectation Is
that he will be In Columbus quite
a bit ," said Steiner. "He' ll have
an office In Columbus."
Steiner said the campaign will
be headquartered In Columbus,
since the state capital is a more
central location. Steiner admitted Volnovlch was criticized by
some downs tale Republicans
during Ills 1988 Senate campaign
for basing his campaign organ!·
zatlon In Cleveland .
"I think there's no question the
campaign was criticized justifiably for being based In Cleveland,
although It's understandable that
he was based here and doing the
mayor's job," he said .

Voinovich lost overwhelmingly
to Democratic Sen . Howard
Metzenbaum .
Political observers sa id a Columbus base would put Volnovlch
closer to large blocks of Republican · voters in Cincinnati and
Columbus. Voinovich. a former
state leg islator and lieutenant
governor. lived in Columbus
when he attended Ohio State
Un lversity .
Voinovich has been mayor of
Cleveland longer than anyone in
the city's history, having fi rst .
been elected in 1979. Voinovlch Is
currently traveling In Italy and
·the Netherland s and is to return
to Cleveland Oct . 4, the day a fl er
the mayoral primary election.

·Local news

briefs~--..

Bi.ock grant hearing Oct. 4
The Gallla-Melgs Community Action Agency will hold a
public hearing at the Meigs County Outreach Office on
Wednesday , Oct. 4, at 1:30 p.m. for low income individuals.
Purpose of the hearing is to solicit Input on community needs in
Meigs County.
The low Income will also be electing Individual s to fi ll indigent
vacancies on the GaiUa-Melgs CAA Executive Board for 1990.
The agency urges all interested Individuals to participate .

Plummer denied new trial
A United States District Court judge ai Columbus. Ohio, has
denied a new trial for Maxine Plummer, former executive
director of the Gallla-Jackson-Melgs Mental Health. Board.
A Wellston area resident, Plummer was fired In 1983 by the
three county board after being charged with various allegations
of malfeasance, nonfeasance, Inefficiency, dishonesty and
· failure of good behaVIor.
Plummer legally challenged the action and thecasewound up
In Federal Court where a trial was held this past June. The jury,
however, ruled' In favor of the board, finding that Plummer was
Continued on page 5
·

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