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Pego

Pomeroy Mh'Aeport-Gallipolil,

D-B-Sunday TimBI Sentinel

Ohio-PoW P1e11unt.

Adulr ·services...
. Continued from D-1
nesses to help rnem Increase
productivity. In the past month
alone, more than 40 people have
taken advanlage of the training
offered through this program.
Persons Interested In setting
up (raining at the new computer
lab or arranging for other types
of training may contact Ponney
Cisco. Adult Services director, or
Linda Bird, Business and Education Partnership ·Program at
Adult Services, P.O. Box 151, Rio
GrandeOH 4!if74, o.rcali245-5336.

Ohio Lottery

Bengals,
Browns
both lose

October. 15, -1989

W. Ve.

..

Pick-3

305
Pick-4

5601
Super Lotto
7-8-12-26-29-32
Kicker 262932

Page4

•

NEW OWNER, NEW NAME - The VIllage Cut Rate In Racine
llaa a - nlime ud new owners too. Rlc;hard and Beverly Moore
of Raclae ere the new owaen, having recently purchased the
buatness from JennUer Snider, and have renamed the stare 'Reclae' Cut Rate. Beverly Moore, at left, will be assisted In the
operation .of the business b)' her mother, J04ti · McLain, also
pictured. The slore, open 8 to 5Monday through Friday and 9 to 5 on
Saturday, wfll continue to carry over-the-counter medicines and
other sundry Items. The_store also has a new telephone number!149-2942.
.

Called...

,.
market aad ceiiVeatiGa, .Jim Chambers, at left,
Servlstar Tul'llkey Projeat m1111aser, discusses
tlul plaaa lor lmpi'OvemeniA at Klll(ll8ervlatar
llardware with Edle aad Tim Kill( of the
Mltldlepon atare.

DISCUSS FINAL PLANS
King Se'rvlslar
Hardware In Middleport Is one of over 3,818
Senlllllr stores in 3i states and various forelp
COM81rles. At a recent Servlstar merchandise

Conference to help

No:11'2 M

Stocks rebound.early
tOday on Wall Street

POMEROY -October Is State
'Trappers Month, reports . Keith
Wood, Meigs County Game Protector. And to bene,!lt area
trappers, the Ohio Department of_
Natural Resouces, Division of·
Wildllfe, is sponsoring a trap pin!!
seminar on Oct. 15, from 12 noon
until 5:30 p.m.. at the IzaakWal.ton F~rm at Che~ter, _ _
This seminar ls ·required for
first time trappers wishing to
obtain a trapping permit, Wood
potnts out.
Pre-registration Is required for

'

.,.

Farm Flashes

Weekly Ohio crop weather summary released
approximately 'IS acres of pizza. many fungi. Management of the
That's an area elpl tlms blger barn's ventOatlon system Is
GALLIPOLIS - The weekly than the Houston Astrodome. It critical. The key to preventing
Ohio Crop Weather summary takes the annual production of :mold growth on curing tobacco
released on Monday showed 180,000 cows just to supply leaf is to control moiSture on the
mozzarella cheese for one of the leaf.
average September precipitaA recent report says that while
tion for Ohio at 132 percent of nations largest pizza chains.
Dairy
products
for
another
'
m
athe
1988 drought dramatically
normal. Our area was put at 155
jor
fast
food
chain
requires
·the
reduced
yields, Its Impact on
per cent of normaL And excep- ·
··average
financial
performance
annual
mlllc
production
of
m9re
lion Wal !be Central area of Ohio,
than
115,000
cows.
of Ohio farms was less dramatic.
whlcll as of that time had only
&lt;::ontroll!ng moldy leaves in The data was taken from a study
· received 94 per ·cent of normal
rainfall for the month. Some 5 per tobacco curing barns during wet involving 900 Ohio farms. Only
cent of Ohio corn and 12 per cent per-Iods can be ·a problem. The 'farms whose gross sales were
of Ohio soybeans have been live plant can prevent most greater than $40,000 and had over
fungi, but once dead, the leaf Is a 500 per cent of gross receipts
harveted.
Each day, Americans consume source of organic matter_ for coming from dairy. grain, or
swine. Net farm Income was
higher for grain farms but lower
for dairy and swine farms. Few
production practIces are contemplated because of the drought
The major changes are a hesltl\Pcy to forward contract JValn,
an Increase in crop Insurance
use, and an Increase in borrowed
funds.
A _special thanks to· everyone
who made the . visit by Ohio
Department of Agriculture Dl- .
rector, Steve Maurer a success.
He was very Impressed by the
community and stayed much
longer In the evenln&amp; than we had
expected,
B:r Ed'!l'anll M. VoUborn

.I

WHAT ATURN OUT -There was a large crowcl
on hand for the first car show of the Oldies Jl,ut
Goodies Car .club on Saturday at the Pomeroy

•••••-uraiUM

•-•pen

Home gardners are asked to
consider self-seeding plants
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI ) -

all over the garden," Williams
says. "The unplanned effect can
look great. But it can lead to
overcrowding. Consider removing the mature · seeds of some
plants and ~preadlngthem where
you want plants next year. You
may have to pull many young
plants so others will thrive." .
Annual flowering pl~nts that
self-seed include hardy aeeratum, calendula, valerlan, balsam. alyssum. cosmos, linerla
and nicotlnla. Annual herbs that
self-seed include coriander, dill
and borage.

Home gardeners left with space

to till for their 1990 plantings
should consider putting in annual
flowers and plan is that seJf-seed.
· "Self-sown 'ilnnuals put out
many seeds, which- allows them
to grow the following year," says
Barbara Williams, ~orticu!turist
at Ohio State University.
Because many varieties of
self-seeding plants exist, you can
plan for a variety of colors and
shapes. But expect the plants to
redesign the garden.
"Plants that self-sow send seed

TOP AWARDS-The blgwinnenlnSaturday's
car show on the Pomeroy parking lot were, 1-r,
Randy Offenberger, best of show for a new model
car; Tim and Charles Lou,;hry, best ofshow for an

Life insurance and ~Jnnuities from
Modern Wooemen can give 'your
lamily futUtiiMICurit)l plus immediate
living benefits. Fin~ncial security.
Living benefits.

ho~D:es Saturd~y ~ght

INVEST IN A
CE.NTUL TRUST
6 MONTH CD.
NOW I

this is it. But you've
got to act fait.
This ofllr. from
Central Trust office
Central Trust
.. •IG - I . 446-0902
' I

•. •.• '

$13,900'

•••••lllrf ttl-6661

II») ·.,;a, ,-(;t~

. ,lltllllt 1JrJJ M* 7'hilws lf4ilw.

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
A fR.AlEIINAL Llf£ INSURANCE SO(I[TY

•

-d- --'P'·'C. .---'

·-

The Chester Volunteer Fire Department has announced that
trick or treat will be observed Oct. 30 from 6 to 7 p.m.
The sli·en will sound to begin the hour trick or treat and It will
sound again to signal the end of the hour.
.
Firemen Will be throughout the town for the protection of the
·
children.
, The Olive Township Fire Department Is announcing trick or .
Contl!lued on page 5 ·

1911 EASTEIIN AVENUE
. GAWPOUS, OH.
16141 446·2212

ROCk tSlANO. IWNOIS

'

+,..

,. 'I

I

•

-.

Swingle said the leak xcurred
where pressure In a line forced a
cap In a new freezer line to blow
oft The leak was repaired
shortly before midnight and most
residents began rerturnlng home
Sunday morning, Swingle·said.
The ammonia line In the plant
iS used to help freeze pizza
products.
Swingle said squad cars were
sen! into the neighborhoods to
warn people to leave and radio
stations assiSted by broadcasting
warnings.

Trick..or treat dates announced

IT
BUICK-PONTIAC.

THE CENTRAL TRIBI'&lt;XNB\NY .

Pollee, flre and emergency
units lrom Jackson, ~·lnton and
Athens counties as well as
sur-rounding communities were
summoned to help evacuate the
people. The leak, first noticed
around 9 p.m., was In an
ammonia line In the plant used to
help freeze pizza products.

-Local news briefs----.

I

kiOD~RU WOODMEN SOLUTIONS

HOM£ omc£

WELLSTOI'&lt; , Ohio (UPJ) The cause of an ammonia leak at
a food proce5sing plant in southern Ohio was repaired and the
town's 6,500 resident$ were allowed to return home Sunday.
An ammonia leak at a pizza
plant in Wellston Saturday night
prompted officials to initially
evacuate about •2.000 residents
from their harries, 1 but later
expanded on It · to Include the
entire community.
No serious lnjutles were re- .
ported from the ammonia escaping the Jeno's pizza manufacturing plant, but officials said some
people experienced Inhalation
problems and were treated at
several area medical &lt;:,enters.
Gene Swingle, a Jackson
County Sheritl' s office spokesman. said residell!s In areas
outside Wellston accepted evacuated people In th~lr., llQ)lle5 .

Power windows,
tilt wheel,
cruiu control, balance of 36
months/60,000 mile warranty.

is available for a
limited time only.
For more Information contact
your nearest

(

Commission) and the secretary
of the treasury are monitoring
the situation and that's where it
stands right now," Bu~h said at
the close of a ceremony honoring
Winners of the 1989 Presidential
End Hunger Awards.
Stock prices had crumbled
Friday as fears about the future
of takeover activity over whwelmed the market alter the
proposed buyout of UAL Corp.
unraveled when the pilotmanagement group seeking to
take the company private could
not come up with sufficient
financing for the deal.
Before Wall Streetcameto life,
financiers had closely monitored
· foreign markets for reaction and
harbingers. Prices indeed
dropped In Far East markets in .
early trading and the pattern of
slumping prices moved westward as stock exchanges opened
down In Paris and London.
Brokers said shock waves from
the selling spree In New York
sent prices plummeting on the
Tokyo, Hong Kong, Australian.
New Zealand. Philippine and
Thai stock exchanges, although
bargain hunters prompted a

. \

By LEE ANN WELCH
PVP News Staff
GALLIPOLIS - · "Like sands
through the hourglass .. ."
It seems that for grain of sand
In the hourglass that opens the
soap opera "Days of Our Lives,"
a person showed up Saturday to
meet and greet one of its stars,
Wally Kurth.
A line wound Its way around .
the one-week-old Hills Department Store. with red and white
tape carefully marking its path
for the thousands of men and
women- mostly women -who
showed up to see the actor.
Fifteen-year-old Stacy VIckers
of Point Pleasant, her mother
Susan and a friend, Charlena
Chase, waited outside Hills fr.Om
7 a.m. Saturday until the doors
opened at 9: 30, and then walled
first In line until Kurth arrived at
11:30 a.m .
Why would anyone walt in line
that long to see the man who
portrays Justin Kiriakls?
''He's awesome,'' o.ne woman
said. Others piped In With
phrases Including, "he's gorgeous,". "what a voice," and
"just take a look at him!"
Chase, 32, said the characters
on the soap are "real people to
us." She, and many others
waiting, admitted to videotaping
the show dally to watch II after

older model car; and sUe Purdue, Oldies But
Goodies Car Club Award. The show, put on by the
Oldies But Goodies Car Club, was the first show
the club has sponsored.

Ammonia leak forces
WeUstonians- from
..

WHY YO.U SHOULD

Hyou've been
holding back wait·
ing for a great rate,

· parking lot. Eighty-seven cars registered for the
show In the 20 different classes.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Prices
on theNewYorkStockExchange
rebounded Monday In a volatile
session as trading resumed after
the Friday the 13th rout. but Wall
Street hoped new safeguards
would prevent a replay of the 1987
market crash.
The Dow Jones industrial average, which plunged 190.58 Friday. was ahead 16.19 to 2585.45
around 10:30 a.m. The widely
followed Dow had sunk almost 50
points in the firs I half hour after
the opening bell. .
Volume swelled to 145,360,000
million shares- far above the 20
million to 30 million shares
normally traded on the NYSE
during the first half hour.
The NYSE tape was running 20
minutes late because of the crush
of orders. Many stocks stili had
not opened for trading.
The average price of an NYSE
common share was up 14 cents.
At the While House. President
Bush made his first comment on
the market after being asked if
he was concerned.
"No, I'm not worried," he said.
"The FED (Federal Reserve).
SEC (Security and Exchange

slight recove.ry. Analys ts played
down the significance of the
slide, saying it was expected and
reflected Investor nervousness.
"Japanese Investors refrained
from reacting excessively to the
Wall Street plunge and today's
price fall was mainly due to a
· psychological effect," said Mlchlo Katsumat.a, spokesman for
Nomura Securities Co .. Japan's
largest brokerage l)ouse.
Japan's Nikkel average of 225
selected shares, Japan's version
of the Dow Jones Industrial
average, dropped nearly 2
percent
In London, the Financial
Times 100 index plummeted an
unofflclallSO points- more than
8 percent - before climbing
slightly In a fragl!e rally that had
cautious traders waiting for Wall
Street to open trading.
BZW analyst Michael Hughes
said the day would unfold slowly.
. "A lot of people want to hang
off untl! lunch time when Wall
Street opens .. . Wall Street is
very much ·at the heart of this
particular storm."
Continurd on pagr :,

Soapers tum out in thousands
:to-t.see:~~~family ,.m ember' Justin··

I

REMODELINli COMPLETE -"- Harry's Gulf In Albany
fonnerly known as Harry's Duke, has been rll&lt;lenUy remodeled
ud
with new approved EPA equlpmeal.ltasuppUerls
lhlrllle Oil of Galllpoll&amp;.
·

I

:~~~~~:::o~~~ :~mt~~~t~~

finalized plans for · a grand
reopening celeliratlon t~ be' held
In the near future . .
The King's pledge that King
Servistar Hardware will continue to provide customers with
ln&lt;llvldual service, as well as
competitive everyday prices,
name brand merchandise and
quality Servis tar products.
King Servistar Hardware is
one of over 3,800 Servis tar stores
in 36 states and various foreign
countries.
·

1 Section. 10 Pogo 25 Conti
A Mulilmodi• Inc. NeWIPOPir

October 1~. 1989 -

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio,

t989

Continued from D-1
the annual Interest savings can
be so significant, often measured
In millions of dollars, that issuers
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) usually redeem the bonds at a About 60 percent of Ohio's farms
premlu!ll above face value. 'I'ypl- , are considered part-time operacaUy, the premium amounts to tions, and while It's sometimes at 614-378-6228, or Wood, at
one year's annual Interest. Thus, part-time by choice; It often Is · 614-985-4400.
a $1,000, 10% bond might be called because the farm won't support
at $1,100.
the family .
.
· Most tionds a.re not subject to . Kelso Wessel has some Ideas
call un!U a specified number of on how-to help those people who
COLONY THEATRE
years have elap~ed. say ·5 or 10. wan no make a full-time living on
After that period, the bonds can the farm. Wessel, a dlr.ect
FRIDAY-THURSDAY
be called at any time at one marketing specialist at Ohio
specified price or the Issuer can State University, says there are
JOHN CANDY
stipulate a declinll\g scale of plenty of opportunities for
prices, one for each year remain- farmers to make some extra
ing after the first call date.
money.
..
In addition to the optional call
"You can talk about entertainmethod, any bonds and preferred ment, unique prodUcts or tradistocks are also retired through tional roadside market sales," he ·
the useo(a "sinking fund." Once says. •'They are all opportunities
established, the Issuer must set if you're willing to work at them ..
AOIIISSION •uo
aside a certain number of dollars "The key Is to put the idea ln
I E'IENING SIIOI 7:30
each year for periodic retire- action."
ments. This enhances the security of the remaining bonds.
Whim new bonds are being
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
au. ........
Issued, investment bankers often
.......
_..,.....!'
446 4524
' . : .. ,.
say they are "floating" a new
MI. . . . 11.10
Issue; so it Is understandable
that a bond retirement fund be
called a "sinking" fund. The
bonds or preferre'd stock t'o be
retired each year can either be
called at a specific price or they
can be purchased in the open
market. Occasionally, the sinkIng fund payments are allowedJo
accumulate while earning interest, so the entire issue can
eventually· be retired at one time.
1! bOnds are called unexpectr edly, a bond-holder might get the
prlnclpal amount back sooner,
but lose wha'f'may have been an
attractive yield. In some cases,
the bond-holder may even lose
part of the principal. This would
occur if a bond had been
purchased at a substantial premium but called at a price close
to par. For these reasons, the
potential bond buyer should
carefuliy examine call and sinkIng fu·nd provisions with a broker
or bond dealer to better understand the riSks involved.
So far, It has been shown that
bond selection must Include a
consideration of the type of·
ISsuer, maturity, coupon yield,
c;~-11 features, and safety rating.
(Mr. EvaDS Is an Investment
Broker for The Olllo Company In
their G.Uipolil omce.)

marketing efforts

Middleport rmn representated at convention
MIDDLEPORT - The Ser- Industry designed to help today's
vistar Corporation held its an- do-!t-yourselfer.
.
The Kings are currently comnual biannual merchandise
market and convention on Sept. . pleting a year long project to
22 at the Baltimore Convention retrofit and remerchandlse their
Center in Baltimore, Md. Attend· Middleport store to the award
log from MiddlePort were Tim winning Servlstar Turnkey
and Edle King of King Servis tar theme. Various elements of the
project include flxturlng, lightHardware.
Servlstar owners purchase ing, product assortment, slg' their baSic product lines, as well nage. and InteriOr and extzrlor
as seasonal merchandise. at the decor.
·
markets. The markets also proWhile attending the recent
vide owners with information on market, Mr. and Mrs. King
the latest trends in the hardware

•

•.

Tueaday, perloda of rain.
Unseuonably cool. High In
mid 1108. Chance of rain 80
percent.

•

a1

"

October is state
trappers month-

Low In mid 581 tontchtChaace of rain lOti percent.

Con artists
reported in
Meigs area
· Meigs County Sheriff James
M. Soulsby is cautioning Meigs
County residents against vendors that have been working the
past few weeks selling sweepers.
These vendors offer a glft to the
household member In order to
gain entry for a demonstration.
Upon entry the vendor tells the
resident that he will earn $10 If
permitted to clean the carpet.
Fqllowing the demonstration,
the homeowner Is ,Biven a sales
pitch designed to sell the
machine.
Several residents have fallen
victim to this presentation at a
cost to them of more than $1,000
and a percentage rate of over 25.
Sheriff Soulsby asks that
anyone contacted by this group,
operating out of Kentucky, contact the sheriffs department.
This caution applies to any
vendors unknown to area
residents.
In other matters, Sheriff
Souls by reports that a 16 year old
Letart F~IIS juvenile has befln .
cited to Meigs County Juvenile
Court tor throwing com at a
motor vehicle.
According to the report, the
department hed received comP.Ialnts three different times on
Friday evening that subjects
were throwing com and other
objects at cars as they passed the
school at Letart. Deputies were
finally able to ma~e an apprehension at 11: 15 p.m.
·

·
they come hOme from work.
She also believes the shows
take on timely topl~s and situations. A quick flip around the
daytime dial wll! find storylines
on every type of deception,
.manipulation, situation and disease known to mankind.
When the actor arrived, cameras flashed, women squealed and
jumped up and down in delight.
They quickly bought up the
teeshirts, albums and tapes the ·
actor's entourage brought along.
The .e arly birds got au tographs, but the "later lineruppers" got more - they got
hugged. No autographs, but they
had a chance to get up close and
personal with the actor .
As the crowd scu rr!ed up to
him, seated in the Christmas
department, next to the a display
of mistletoe, Kurth took a few
minutes to talk about his show.
Nationwide, "Days" has taken
a beating in the ratings, but In
this market, II carries a 50 share.
In other ·words, of all the people
watching televisiOn ,at I p.m.
Monday through Fr !day in this
market. half are tu:J i~ to
''Days."

·

"I don't know wh
's (ratIngs) are up here," the actor said
in between smUes and slgnings.
Some viewers have com-

SMILE, PLEASE - 1'1111 IIIINeDUffed 1!f0Dl&amp;n
wu o~~e of lllo-da or ,..,.., lbowlnc up
Saturday JI!OrDinl at Bllll Department &amp;$ore In
Gelllpolla to lee WIIIJ Kartb, oae ollbe actDl'!l

.

,

..

mented on the disappearance' of
the older actors. the tried and
true founding fathers of "Days of
Our Lives." The women waiting
In line Saturday expressed displeasure at the "pushing out" of
actors like MacDonald Carey .
whO plays one of the longestrunning characters on the show .
According to Kurth, there Is a
new daytime coordinator. and
the move is "probably one to cut
costs."
He added "Days" would be
focusing more on the inaln
characters - his and wi·fe
"Adrienne," in addition to
"Kayla and Patch Johnson, Kim
and Shane Donovan, " and a
whole host of others.
The older actors' contrat ts are
apparently not being renewed,
and they are being kept on a
day-to-day basis.
What's in the future for the
young, dimpled actor with· jet
black halr and dreamy eyes?
·'I'll be around on Days for a
couple of more years, yet."
Hills manager Wayne Benson
said the crowd was "more. much .
more," than anticipated . They
expected maybe 500 people to
attend this event, a part of the
grand opening celebration, but
more than 1,000 showed up, and
crowd estimates were difficult to
make.

frem·llle_,.,..a ''Dais of OurUvea."Kurth,
wllo plaJI olaiiiiiiUrlakll, also visited Rllll 1tores
lnBantlnp.n. W.Va., and Oronton, Oblo, thatde.y.
(OVP pho&amp;o II)' Lee Alia Welch)

�•

Commentary
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

LENINGRAD, U.S.S.R. - An
American tourist In his early 70' s
learned the hard way that
Increased openness has brought
Increased crime in the Soviet
Union.
Holland Salley owns an Interior
design company in Napples, Fla.
He was browsing through fabrics
In tbe largest department store In
Leningrad recently when two.
youths tried to mug him. "I
yelled and screamed," Salley
told us when we met him soon
alter the attack. The muggers
panicked and fied, but they
weren't !lnished yet. ·
Salley lett the store and walked
to an underground street crossing. It was about 5 p.m. and
shOppers packed the passage.
The same two boys, plus a third,
jumped Salley and shoved him
against a wall. Again he shouted,
but no one came to his ald. The
thugs got away with $1,500 ·and his credit cards.
·
When Sa'ley told his story to
the Soviet pollee, they didn't
seem surprised . Salley ~as. He
hadn't expected to be mugged In
one of the most controlled societies in the world, where the gulag
awaits those who step out of 'line.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS. OF THE MEIGS-MASON
AREA
.

~~
.
ts=m~ 'l-M..... ....
-.-.~c::~..-

-q,v

ROBERTi.. WING En
Publisher
CHARLENE BOEFUCH
. General Mana1er

LETTERS OF OPINION are welt:ome. They sllould be lees than 300
· · ,..,. IM1- AU letters or ~ ..blecllo edlllsl&amp;ad mull be slped wllh
name, a.M'f!ll8 aad telephone aumber. No unslcaed letters will be pub~
llsbed. Leclers sbould be Ia I(OOd Iaaie, addre1111lglasues, ool peroolllll~
ties.

.GOP ticket lookipg strong,
hut dark clouds loom
By LEE LEONARD
UPJ Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- Just when It seemed Ohio Republicans were getting
their act together In terms of assembling a winning ticket for 1990,
some dark clo11ds appeared on the political horizon.
The GOP solved a big problem last week when Rep. Michael
DeWine, a four-term congressman from Cedarville, agreed to run tor
llelltenant governor on a ticket. headed by Cleveland Ma yor George
Volnovich.
That reJlloved DeWine from the list of potential gubernatorial
candidates, reducing the chance of a costly and divisive Republican
. primary.
.
It also made a strong pairing that could eventually force the only
other real contender- Hamilton County Commissioner Robert Taft
II - to drop back and run for a secondary statewide o!tlce.
But before the week ended, Cuyahoga County GOP Chairman
Robert Hughes was blasting away at state Republican headquarters,
accusing the hOnchos of misspending party money and mistreating
county organizations.
·
"The rich uncle is squandering the poor nephew's money,"
complained Hughes, who always seems to enjoy a good fight within
the party and even tries to do what he calls " selUng whiskey to the
Indians" to provoke a spat.
As De Wine told the public he would take a $38,000 pay cut and leave
the Washington track for a flyer at a do-nothing job, Republican State
Chairman Robert Bennett. put out a statement commending him for
his " bold decision. "
"He clearly has a strong desire to serve Ohioans and help clean up
state government," said Bennett.
Other party officials strongly denied this was an endorsement of
Volnovich·DeWine over Ta!t and Franklin County Commissioner
1 Dorothy Teater.
Taft and Teater lmfQediately held a. news conference for damage
controL "We're the winning candidates In the primary and in
November," said Taft.' 'We're making II very clear that we're in't)lls
race to stay."
A Columbus Dispatch poll of 1,206 registered voters statewide the
tlrst week In October gave Ta!t an 8 percentage-point lead over
Attorney General Anthon,Y Celebrezze, the front-running Democratic
candidate, and Voinovich a 10·point lead, Indicating the )wo
Republicans are nearly even.
1 ,
But Taft betrayl'd his underdog status when be' called on
Volnovich to limit primary campaign spendlpg to $1.5 mlllion, and
challenged him to a series of three televised debates. You don't do
those things If you believe you are ahead.
Meanwhile, Hughes accused Bennett and the state GOP o! spending
$2 mllllon to maintain state headquarters. ''The payroll is bloated,"
he said. "They don't need all those people."
He also complained that the state party ts dumping $1 million Into
the campaign coffers o! the GOP candidates for auditor and secretary
ot state because If they win, they'll serve on the board that draws the
next state legislative districts.
"You can't put two I candidates) outtront and therestlll th~backof
the bus," he said, adding that the state party Is drying up
contributions to the county organizations, such as his own.
Hughes said he was trying to create "some Interest" In politics, and
denied the friction would hurt the GOP. "That's bull," he said. "The
· Democrats do this all the time, and they wlri.electlons. "

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

He compared notes later with
.
others on his tour. Two of the
group had their pockets picked.
_.....
Fou r o! them who tried to
before their car was forced ott
exchange money on the black United States.
The overall crime rate in the the road by two more taxis !Uled
market were r ipped off. The
money changers either gave Soviet Unlonwentup16 .4percent with
The tourists were
mugg~ lletore the
them worthless Yugoslavian cur- last year. In the United States, ...~beatl!ll
tenant arrived and
rency or took their dollars and the Increase was 5.5 percent. The · llOUCe
Soviets have more murders per gave c
.
ran .
He recounted that the crlml·
Salley' s tour group was made capita than the United States, but
up o! conservatives who ca me to fewer rapes repored. The crimes nals opened flre on his car with
the Soviet Union with a bias posting the largest Increase in sawed'-qft shotguns . " They
against the KBG and Its tyranny. · the Soviet Union last year In· were shOoting from both rear
Some o! them lett complaining volved consumer goods, which windows. lt was half past ml?·
that the J&lt;GB had gone sott, that are often easter to steal than to night, there was a lot of tra!tlc,
at least In a true pollee state buy In empty stores. Burglary and I knew I couldn't return !Ire,
people were protected from was up 44 4 percent and robbery fearing I 'd hit someone In tile
up 42.8 pe~cent.
· oncoming traffic." The robbers
street punks.
According to our sources, got away.
.
Lt. Gen Pyotr Bogdnov, Soviet
Soviet pollee have something In
Crime ls oneo!the most visible
downsides of Mikhail Gorba· common with their American deputy minister of Internal atchev's perestroika. VIolent counterparts - . they feel out· fairs, vented his frustration In an
gunned and outmanned by the Interview with the Moscow
crime would not have flourished
enemy
. Soviet criminals are News. ''I attribute a sharp rise In
under a more repressive regime.
showing
a new boldness. They crime and lts..more danger.ous. .
In the past, Soviet propaganda
carry
more
weapons and aren't formstothegenerallaxltyo!law
had It that crime was a product of
afra
id
to
use
them.
and order, the fall of regard tor
capitalism. It just didn't exist In
A
senior
lleutenant
in
the
law and the law enforcement
communist and socialist states.
But In the past year, pollee and Moscow police force recently bodies. I'm no advocate of
tightening the screw or an·
the Soviet State· Committee on reported a case concerning forStatistics have started Issuing elgn tourists who picked up two Indiscriminately tough llne, but
candid data on crime. Now some prostitutes. They drove a short today's . situation is cleaarly
·
comparisons ca.n be made to the distance with them in a taxi abnormal."

tl.

1

ar

...

·r

•

,

Sarah Overstreet ::

'

-•od

e:pen••··

Today in history
B7 Vnlled PreM IDterna&amp;lollal

Today Is Monday, Oct. 16, the 289th day otllllll with 76 to tollow.
Thl! moon is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The moti'ililg stars ate'Mercilry, Mars and JupiJH. The evening stars are Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this day are under thl! sign ot Libra. They Include
lexlrographe~ Noah Webster In 1758, Eqlish author and dramatist
Oscar Wikle In 1854, Israeli Prime Minister David Ben Gurlon In 1886,
playwright Eugene O'Neill In 1888, lrflh revoludonlst Michael Collins
In 1890, Supreme Court Justice William Orvlll&amp; Douglas In 1898,
German novelist Gunter Grass in 1m 1age62), and act11!1sea Allgl!la
Lansbw'y In 1925 (age 64),and Suzanne Somers In 1946 (age 43) .
On fills date In history:
In :lm, ~bolitlonlst John Brown led an abortive raid on the federal
arsen... l t ,Harper's Ferry. Va.

.

. '

•

. ..

1

Pol.._.,

.,.•..

'

•

'"

•

'

(

"I started using It six or seven
starts Into the season," said .
Moore, who was 19·11 tn the
regular season and 2-0 In postsea·
son play. "lthrewitonthesldeat
flrstandtheningamesa!terigot
more confidence with 11. Dave
Duncan and I worked on it. "
The split !Inger proved to be a .
savior for Moore on Sunday
night. He struggled In the early
going, but managed to keep the
Olants at bay by using a large
number o! split ttngers
"TQnight, . I used it a tot, "
Moore said. "It's a good pitch. 1
had some mechanical problems
early, problems with my fast·
ball. In the middle Innings, 1
started to throw better and
readjusted my plan."
Moore was so confident with
the pitch that he used It to silence
the thundering bats o! Will Clark
and Kevin Mitchell in the game.

" I mixed my pitches up all
night ," he said. " I used the split
fi nger to Cla rk and Mitc hell early
and thim mixed up my pitches to
them later in the game."
Whlle Duncan had to be
pleased with Moore, he had to be
overjoyed with the performance
ot middle relie ve r Rick
Honeycutt.
Since early In the final month
or -the season, Honeycutt has
struggled. He was lnetfectlve
against Toronto In the American
League Championship Series
and was one of the lew question
tnarksfortheA 's comlnglntothe
Series.
Honeycu II came on in relief In
the eighth and tossed hitless ball
for 1 1·3 Innings, yielding to
Dennis Eckersely In the ninth.
''\Ve (He and Duncan) looked .
at the films and It looked like I
was rushing," Honeycu It said. "I
had to slow down a little to be
effective.
"But the thing you don'f want
to do Is get Into a game and start
thinking about where your arm Is
ending up. It has to be a natural
motion. At Toronto, I was worrled about where everything was
ending up. Hopefully, now that's
all behind me. "

•

A's learning to wtn as a team
seventh, eighth and ninth hitters.
Weiss homered In ·came 1 of
the Series . Tony Phillips; mean·
while, contributed two singles,
an RBI and scored a run. Terry
Steinbach, the club's seventh
hitter, ripped a three-run homer
in Game 2.
But that's the way It's been all
season.

Phillips, scored 16 more runs
than he did in 1988, had 75 more
hits and 30 more RBI. He also
made Glenn Hubbard
expendable.
Mike Gallego, who started In
place of Weiss much of the
season, ha(l. career highs in
virtually every offensive cate·
gory . He hit .252, drove in 30 runs
. and stroked three homers.
"Fundamentally, we are doing
thing better this year, " said
Dave Stewart, who tossed his
first shutout of the season Saturday to win Game 1. " We have
learned to win games in other
ways than just hitting home

runs.••
There is also a selflessness that
has developed on the team.
"I just go out and tcy to do my
job," A's third baseman Carney
Lansford said. "I'm just one
ninth of what It takes to win a

.game."

· RG's cross· country teams
compete in AII~Ohi() races

It they haul Jim Bakker off to call him to glory if we dldn' t pay
resolute in crisis and sure of his
jail and keep him there for the up . .
decisions. Years of watching Jim
.'
full120 years he could earn, I'm
Another part of the Bakker
Bakker goo and gl_ggle and hug such as Oral Roberts and Jimmy,·,
afraid there's a part of me that phenomenon has to do with the
Uncle Henry have stamped an
Swaggart are caught in the midst;
still won't quite believe he.dld it. . credlbillty that Is lent by the Image In many viewers' brains of of their tricks, the next gener11' "
I know that sounds foolish. It television Image. On television, If
a rather harmless, well·meaning
lion will have a better chance of
sounds ridiculous to me as I say a person can.buy enough air time
(If simple) man.
seeing them for what they are. '
it. I've read all the trial testim- and use that air time to act like a
So when Bakker came along In
UntO that happens, the govern:·
ony about the outrageously opu· good ole boy, what eventually
the '70s, watching him was a little ment owes it to the lnnocl'nt to
lent lifestyle the Bakkers led stands out In most people's minds
like watching TV sitcoms with hold these ministries to the ·s ame '
whUe over·selling " lifetime part· is th~t he Is a good ole boy. No
canned laughter. We knew there accountablllty rules as any other ;
nerships" to Heritage USA, matter what is said about Ronald
was something unreal and va- business.
'
PTL's time-share religious re- Reagan in years to come, people · guely annoying a·bout what we
treat In North Carolina. I 've also who formed their opinions of him · were seeing, but we were so used
read about the trusting TV based solely on his television
to it that It didn't seem so bad.
In 1900, women were allowed to~
partners who bought time-shares appearances wUl remember only
As more preachers are brought compete in the Olympic Games. Six •
and then showed up to lind that a kindly man who seemed
to justice for fraud, and as others women participated In lawn tennis. :
there was no room for them.
.,,
I know all about Jessica Hahn;
and about the hundreds of PTL
employees who were laid off at
Public N atica
Public N otlce
Public Notice
Public Notice
Christmas the same year Bakker
received $250,000 In bonuses.
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON NOTICE OF ELECTION ON NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
And I can't say I didn't know
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF "
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
THE TEN MILL
'
that he was blabbering little
•THE TEN MtU
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
Llr,IITATION
',:
LIMITATION
LIMITATION
crybaby a long time ago. I've
NOTICE io h•oby given
NOTICE it h•oby given
NOTICE io hereby given
NOTICE io henby given
watched the PTL Club off and on that
in puriUence of 1 Rethat in pursuance of a Ae· that in pursuance of 1 At· thlt in punu.tnce of 1 Refor years, both for entertainment aok.ltion of the Eutern lo· mlution of the Board of tolution of the Board of eolutian of the BOard of ;
and out o! fascination. I watched Cll School Diot., Reoclovillo, Trust. . of tM Township of Education of the Meigs Lo- Trui1MI of the Township of ;
cal School District, Pome- Selisburyr Pomeroy, Ohio. _..
him cry and whine about mean Ohio. s-eed on the 11th Sutton. Racine, Ohio,
roy, Ohio, paoed on the 9th polled on tho 6th day of
dey ol Auguot. 1989. there
on
tho
7th
day
of
Auold Satan trying to destroy his will beeubmittedtoevoteof gull, 1989, there wll be day of Auguot. 1989. thoro July, 1989, there w~l be'&gt;
bm. ed
ministry when the FCC lnvesti· the PIOP.It of slid Eutern aubmitted to a vote of the will besubmittedtoavottof
the people of said Meigs La- su
111
to I vote of ~~ ;..
gated him a few years ago. And· Local School District et 1 people of said ~on Town- cal
School Oittro'ct ot 1 GE· peqple · j~f said Sal-bury.,
ohlp
II
I
GENERAL
ELECl'bwnah p It ·. o GENERAL'
I've seen him plead tor more GENERAL ELECTION to be
TION to be held In the NERAL ELECTION to be ELECTION to be hold in the ':
held In the County of Moiga,
dollars so that tw could throw Ohio.
County of Molgo. Ohio, It hold In the County of Moigo, County of Moigo, Ohio, 01
It the r09Uiar P ' - of
Beelzebub out of the electronic voting th .. eln, on Tuooday. the regular piece of voting Ohio, It the rogut. pllco of the r119u '" P.l~~e• of voting , ·
the seventh dey of Novemtherein. on Tu•ct.y. thea• .voting tt.er.in, on ·T u•drf. therein. tOf1 TM•dav. the •• .
kingdom.
ber, 1989. the quootion of
venth doy of November. the seventh d1y of Novem- venth · day of No~ttmber \"'
But, darn It, this stu!! Is my levying II IX, In lkCOOI oft he 1988, the qu01tion of levy- ber, 1989, the qu•tion of 1919. ~NO (11/..tion ot levy ~ ·
ethnic heritage, and It's hard to . ten mHI limilltlon, for the lnlatax. in ac•• of the ten levying I t~x.ln •c•• of the ing I JJU , in nceu.of the ten •
turn ott just like that. I was benllit of Eut•n Local m I tlmhetlon. lor the .,.,. ten mill hm11etion, for the mHI limitation .._.the ben ,
of
Mol go Local
'-; ·' T ovmahip
" ·
· .,.,
' fi 1'lit•'
., r• !"!'.r;"''rvr,,
tor .
.
raised with a blood-deep belief In School Dlotrlct lor the pur· flt of Sutton TowMhlp for Sbenllit
c h o ol Dl I t rlet fo ' t h • PIA 1• the purpoM of m-'ntalninG
POM of providing lor the 'the purpooo of fire protocthe word o! these silly men on TV em•-cy requlromento of tion. .
POH_of Curre-:at
I 'M\d tipil'.ting aemeterl•.
~who claim to be speaking for the echool
Sood IIX being: on ocldl~
Sold tu being:' on oddl· ; •
Said tax being:l a renewM
diatrict and
God. I grew up In Midwestern evoidin_g an op•etlng defl · of an uilting tu of 1 . 0 mill tlonel IIJC o_f 2.0 mills to run tif\1,-.al lfl• of 0.2 mHI to run ·
to run for five (6) yo. . ot o lor • contmuln.g f*'lod of for fivpJSl vo•uu rote "Ill·
fundamentalist churches where cit.
2 en llddl·
r8te not exceeclng 1.0 mHI1 time at 1 rate not uceedlng ~ ' ekctlll:l'f1a o:2 mtl .. for eacH 1 '
tu
t.ing:
Said
we were always being dragged tionol IIX of 8 .9 mille to run- for
eoch one doll•
of 2 .0 mHio for olch one doll• ,. \IIH61 OIIIIW ,., "Ot &lt;voluotion ,:
ott to listen to some odd· looking, lor tm• (3) - • at 1 rlto Vllultion, whlcll MIOUnlltO ofvelu.tkm, wNoh amounts which amounta to two cent'1
'
ono h
odd·IOIIndlng man who said not u . .clng 8.9 mAlo for - ..,II (.0. 10) for Hch to -tv -~~ tf0.20) lor IW)JI21 fir ono hundrocl , dol!.• • -'IIW,oilf•o of'lraluotion. ;::; -,
thlnp that dldn: t seem to make a each one doH• ofvaluetion, one hundred , doll•• of Nch
II•• (5) ~ro.
whicll emoumo to eighty· vllultiorl, lor five 16) vo•o. of •olu!llion, lor • oont.,u·
lick of ·~~e~~~e: We were assured l'llno
The
Mid Election
_,.,, rso:aiiJ tor Hch
'I'M Pilllo tor llild Election lng period oftlmo.
that the guy was In direct ono hundred doH•• of - b e opan 11 1:30 o'clock
Tho Polio lor illld E'!"'ion .nn ,b e opanlt 8 :30 o'clock
communication with God and vllultion, for lhr• (3) A.M. and rlmlin o...,. untl wMibe op., It 1 :30 o cloclt A.ll4 oll"d remoln DPMI untMc•
A.M . •.nd rornlln o...,. untl
7 :30 o'cloclt P.M.
7 :30 o'cloclt P.M.
that we weren't If we didn't
""Bv ordor of the BOIIrd of 1 '
7 :30 o cloclt P.M .
The
Polio
for
Mid
Election
By
ardor
of
the
d
of
agree.
By
order
of
the
Boord
of
Eloctiono, of Moigo"''
wll be op.., It I :30 o' cloclt
Eloctiono. of Molgo
Eloctlono. of Molgo
County, Ohio ;;County, Ohio
When we weren't hearlne It In A .M. and remlin o...,. untM
County, Ohio
· · Evelyn Clorll, .;
o'cto&lt;* P.M;
EvelvnCia..._
church, we were seeing and 7 :30
Evelyn C11111.
Choirmon ·
8y order of the B&lt;*ll of
Chlllnnon
bearing It on TV. I watched Oral
.18no M. Fr:ymyor, Director
Elections. of Molgo
Jono M. ~rymyor. Director -:':
Cbolrrnan
Roberts back when It was easy to
County. Ohio Doto: Boot ember 12. 18BB Jane M. Frymy•. DINctor 0118: lloptomber 11, 190 '•
Dote: Bootomber 12, 1111 (101 11. 23 30 (11) 1 4tc ,.
EwivnCiarl&amp;. (10) 11. 23, 30, (11) I 4tc
convince viewers to send money
(10) 18, 23. 30. (11) 84tc
·
'
'
'
~~
ChlirrNn
- lon1 be!ore he had to resort to
Jono M. Frymy•. DirKior
J
I• • ', "
I '
•• ' , 1,
,,/,
tales of seeing 90().toot Jesuses Dote:..,....,.... 12. 18B8
CLASSIFIED I=IDS
··.t:'
and threats that GOd was going to 1101111, 23, 30, (1 1) 1 4tc

-

was have him develop a third
quality pitch to go along with his
fastball and slider. He messed
around with a changeup, but then
started throwing the split
!Inger."
However, Moore didn' t quite
feel conntortable with the pitch
when the season opened.

Gretzky all-time .NHL leading scorer

..•'

TV ministries must be accountable

OAI\:LAND, Calif. (UPI)
Dave Duncan had a wide grin on
his face Sunday , walking up the
tunnel io the Oakland Athletics
lockerroom . Onc.e again, one ot
his discip les shutdown the potent
offense of the San Francisco
Giants.
Mike Moore held San Fran·
cisco to jus t four hits and one run
to lead the A's to a 5-l victory
Sunday and a 2-0 lead in the 86th
Wo rld Series.
" I saw Moore pitch over at
Seattle," said San Fr ancisco
Giants manager Roger Craig,
the father of the split Unger. ''He
didn' t have the ·qall team (llke
this) behind him or the split
finger . He' s an outstanding
pitcher now."
Moore was one of the most
sought after tree agents last
winter after sutterlng through
five long years with the Seattle
Mariners.. The A's won the
blddlng war for the _ right·
bander's services, but weren' t
satisfied with hls arsenal of
pitches.
"I think the credit (for Moore's
development) goes to Dave Dun·
can," A's Manager Tony La
Russa said. "In spring training,
one ot the things I wanted to do

The Redwomen earller competed in a triangular match at
Fairmont /W.Va.) with the host
school and Waynesburg (Pa. 1
began in spring training when
· OAKLAND, Calif. (UP I)
last Thursday. The Rio ladies
Canseco went down with a
There
was
a
time
when
the
!ates
beat Fairmont 15·6, 11-15, 15-7,
fractl,lfed hamate bone In his
but fell to Waynesburg 15-9, 8-15, -of Jose Canseco and the Oakland
hand. The Oakland slugger, who
Athletics were Inseparable. It
8·15.
surprised
the baseball world by
Zempter had 10 kills agalnsi Canseco played poorly, so did the
40
ho.
m ers and stealing 40
hitting
Fairmont, while Hoop added 10, A's.
bases
ln
1988,
was out of the
But times have changed. On
Huston and Spears had seven
lineup
for
88
games
.
Saturday night, Canseco wrote
each and Sharp posted five.
Canseco
wasn't
the
only star
Zempter also had two block solos another woeful chapter In his
sidelined.
Mark
McGwire,
Weiss
and 12 digs. Spears had 14 digs, World Series trials, going 0 for 3 and Bob Welch all missed a
Hoop and Sharp recorded 13 and with two strikeouts, a foul out to significant number of games
Williams 11. Spears also had a first base and a walk-stranding
three runners. His dismal show- with Injuries. The absences put
serving ace.
pressure on the remaining A's.
Against Waynesburg, Hoop ing continued Sunday when he
went
0
for
2
with
a
pair
of
walks
had 11 kills, Zerhpter eight and
"This Is a better team," said
Huston four. Hoop netted five and a strikeout.
slugger
Dave Parker, who at age
Stemming back to the 1988
block solos and Zempter had
38
led
Oakland
with 97 RBI. ·'We
three. The defense was led by World Series, Canseco is 0-for-hls
had
to
go
out
and prove our·
Williams with 27 digs , while last 23 at -bats.
selves. I think It .b rought us
Despite Canseco's lackluster
Huston had 26 and Speaf's 25.
together as a team."
play. Oakland downed the San
The A's compensated tor the
Francisco Giants by scores of !&gt;-0
ln Game 1 and 5-llriGame2 oft he losses with an Improved defense
World Sf&gt;rles. A stark contrast to and the strongest pitching stat! In
last season when both theA's and baseball. Four Oakland starters
Canseco
struggled as the Los had over -17 wins, with a tea~
Play was suspended after the
seasons. "But records are meant
By Vnlled Press Jnlernallonal
leading 3.09 ERA, and the Infield
Dodgers
won In five
Angeles
record·setling.poi'lt as presenta·
Larry Robinson · said t~am­ ·to be broken and If It was to be
games.
..
·
turned 159 dtluble plays.
broken I'm glad It was by the- lions were made by the NHL,
mate Wayne Gretzky · Is great
The bottom half of the lineup,
year
we've
a
balanced
"This
both teams and Howe, who had
type of Individual Wayne is - a
because he thinks of the team
Ignored
ln the shadow of the
team,"
said
shortst_op
Walt
caring, sharing Individual, who been travelling with the Kings
first. Gretzky demonstrated that
Bashers,
also became more
Weiss, who hit a solo homer In
·
Sunday night when he not only loves the game of hockey and since Oct. 8.
productive
offensively . No
gives 100 percent In every game
'1'he hardest part of ~he Game 1. "We can hurt you in a
became the NHL' s all-time lead·
pitchers
longer
could
opposing
ceremony was Mark (Messier! .. number of ways."
on every shift."
ing Sforer but won the game for
relax
when
they
got
to the
The metamorphosis of the A's
Howe told Gretzky during last and me," Gretzky said. "I knew
the Los Angeles Kings.
week to practice the backhand he was happy for me but he really
Gretzky, in his 780th career
shot. It was that shot that gave wanted to win . All the points I've
·· game, surpassed Gordie Howe,
had, I needed so much help from
Gretzky.the record.
who played ln1 ,767 games, as the
"I was behind the nel and a lot of players, It was only fitting
league's scoring champion with a
something told me to go In front," both teams were there to share in
game-tying goal with 53 seconds
Gretzky said. "When the puck this record.
remaining in the game. A lew
Elsewhere In the NHL : Vancame to me I just shOt it. I've
minutes later, Gretzky gave the
The cross country teams at the . with a time of 18:54. Other
scored a lot of goals In my career couver edged Boston 7-6, the NY
Los Angeles Kings a 5-4 victory
University of Rio Grande com· Individual performancl's In·
on the backhand and actually it Rangers defeated Pittsburgh 4..2,
over his fanner- team , the Ed·
eluded Bonnie Evans, 19: 09:
was Gordie Howe this week who Calgary clipped Philadelphia 3·2 , peted with teams from all col- Becky Webb. 20: 33; Del:lb!e
manton Oilers, with a goal in
leges
and
universities
In
the
state
and Chicago blanked Detroit 3·0.
said to practice the backhand :"
ov~rtlnie.
Friday in the All-Ohio Champion· Gray, 21:06; Atsuko Yamazaki,
•'On the goal, my tlrst reactiOn
ships
at Ohio Wesleyan 23: 33; and Gina Kllchenman,
wasn't that he broke the record
25:58.
University.
but that we had tied the game and
In. the men's race, Mark Cline
The annual race is broken
that's w.hat he thought first as.
finished
flrsl for ~lo Grande at
down Into overall, university and
well," Robinson said. "He is like
23r.d
overall
(10th In the coll.ege
college categories. Over~ll. the
Gordie Howe and Jean Beliveau.
divisiOn)
.at
26:47.
;Aiso fi111Shlng
Rio Grande women's team was
He thinks ofthe team !lrst. That's
'
were
Doug
Horne,'
27: 38; Rusty
eighth of 31 teams and In the
what makes him great . He's
Edens,
27:
46;
Scott
Lafferty.
college division, second ot18. The
remarkable. He not only ties the
28:'l4;
and
Brad
Shannon,
28: 55.
men finished ninth overall of 35
game to break the record but
the men's team will next race
teams and third of 23' teams on
then scores In overtime to win the
Oct. 21 at the Kenyon Invlta·
the coUege level.
game.''
tiona!, while the women's team
Gretzky had tied Howe's mark
Coach Bob Willey called It the will remain Idle until the District
of 1,850 with a flrst·perlod assist.
teams' serond best performance 22/Mid·Ohlo Conference ChamHis record-setting goal came on a
'In the All-Ohio.
pionships on Nov. 4.
backhanded shot over goaltender .
Mary Dowler tinlShed tlrst ln
Bill Ranford's glove at 19:07 o!
the women's race, her second
the third period . The game·
consecutive Win at the event,
winner came at 3:24 of sudden·
l
death overtime when he flicked
in a shot from In front of the net.
The Daily Sentinel
Grelzky, who played the first
(U8PSI41-K1)
696 games o! his NHL career with
A Dl" ilkm er Mllllbnedl&amp;. IDe.
Edmonton, was given a resound·
Published every afternoon, Monday
ing ovation on hls hlstqric point
through Friday; U1 COurt St., Poby. the sellout crowd. Grt!tzky Is
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pubstill a fan favorite In Edmonton
lishing Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Oblo 4578, Ph . 992-2156. Se·
where he helped tjl,e Oilers win
cond class postage patd at Pomeroy,
four Stanley Cups. ·
Ohio.
:"He showed why he's the best
Member: United Press IntBDatlonal,
hockey plaYer_ In the world,"
lftlllnd D&amp;Uy Press AIIOClatiOii and the
Oilers Cap!J\111 :Mark Messler
Ohio Newspa_per AuoctaUoa. Natloaal
AdvertisiDJ Hepretentattv•. Brauham
said. "He broke the record and
Newspaper Salea, 733 Third A~nue,
won the game -Ill true Gretzky
New York, New York 10017.
fashion wltlt'twd'~llt. ,gollls
. I'm
'
PC61'MASTER: Send addrss Ch.,ll!l
very happy 19~ J11J)1: !Je .s been a
to The Dally Sentinel, m Court St.,
great friend .for 10 years and he's
l'l&gt;meroy, Oblo t5lll9.
••
done so much tor the game.''
SUIIICIIIPTION
L\TEil
''It was a record I had tor a long
HEiniG I COOUIG
BJC-••-•-te
SETS SCORING MARK - Tbe L.A. Klap' WS¥ae Gretzky
time and was ·e xtrllmely proud
One Week .......... .. ........ .. .... .. ....... $UO
celebrates ICOrilol his l,BSlst polnl wllh a goaiiD tbe fll'llt period of
O.e Month ..... ............................ $6.10
of," said Howe, woo played 26
One Year ................... .............. $'72.80
Su•ay•s
1une acalnae the host Edmonton Ollera. The JOal sets a
11' rbul\
SINGLE COPY
new NHL eareer ICOrlDI mark, toppBns the prevtoua mark"aet J;ly
Hlgh..
PRICII
~sports b~efs- NJO. lesend Gordie Rowe. ( UPI)
Daily .. .. ....•....... .....• /.. ... .... ... 25 Cents
Make This One
Q.olt
Sublcribers not desiring tq pay the carU.S. Masters champion Nick
rier m~y remit In 1d'Vauce direct to
Our Best
Tile DoUy Seatlnel on 13, 6or ~ moath
Faldo added the World Match·
basil. CredltwW be Fvll corrf• ..cb
Ba,YII.
play championship to this year's
honors at Wentworth, England,
No subtcrlptlons by moU permttted In
by beating hiS British Ryder Cup
areu wh8'e home carrier HrVIce ts
available.. ,
teammate Jan Woosnam by olll!
hOle In a ll!nae 36-hole final. .. .
Britain's David Feherty de-llloipc_,
13 Weeb ............... ..... ......... ..... $1t.2t
feated American Fred Couples·tn
26 Weeb ..... ........... .................. AUI
the $440,000 BMW Golf tourna·
52 Weeb ....... .. .......... ........ ....... rrt.a
ment at Munich, .West Germany.
- l l o t p CoaiJ
13 Weeb .................................. 1:11.•
Feberty coasted to a five-stroke
26 Weeki ........... .... .. ................. .._.
victory, completlnl the tour
52 Weeks ..... .... .................... , .. . , S'IUO
rounds with a 269 score.
Within the friendly confines of Sharp had three each while Chris
Lyn.e Center Saturday, the Unl·
Williams · posted two serving
verslty of Rio Grande volleyball aces. Sharp took charge of the
team swept a quadrangolar defense with 10 digs. Wllllams
match With some competitive and Shannon Huston were ereDistrict 22 teams.
dlted with nine digs each.
.The Redwomen defeated Find·
''Roblndld a super job and her
lay , 15-3, 15-7; Lake Erie, 15-9, setting Is getting better, " Fields
15-8; and Shawriee State, 15-12,
said. "She does a great job In
15-5. Rio Grande's record Is now
putting the ball where the team
30-6 as It enters the fray tor the
needs lt."
Mld·Ohlo Conference champion·
Hoop . posted 12 kills against
ship Tuesday at Urbana .
Lake Erie, with Zempter record·
"It was a good week tor us,"
lng 10. In addition, Hoop had
Coach Patsy Fields observed . "I
three block solos and two serving
know that by the time w: played · aces. Zempter had live block
these matches the team was · · solos and '12 digs, while Spears
getting tired, but they hung in . paced the defense with 16 kills.
there."
Zempter recorded eight kills.
In the Findlay match, Shelly lour block solos and two serving
Hoop led ;'le offense' with eight aces against Shawnee State.
kills. Mlch.?lle Spearshadslxand Hoop had six kills. while Huston
Teresa Zempter added five. In had 12 kills and Williams netted
block solos, Zempter and Robin 10.

$.2~ Mi~~ioN aP;~e.

-

the fourib Inning of Game 2 of the World Series
Suad&amp;¥ night. The A's won H to take a 2-0 lead In
ihe Fall Cluslc. (UP I).

·Rio ladies. w.in quadr~ngular match

~~NNei.·C~RVJl'J~
MiSSil.@. T'~~K iS ess.eNTia'-

Berry's World

.

STEINBA,CH HOMERS - The 1\'s Terry
; S&amp;elabacb (311) Is CODII'atalated on hltUas his
.c three-run homer oft the Glaals' Rick Reuschelln

p:
THe. :·•"~-· srea~Tif ~oReP
··
CRUiS.e
To O(JR DeF'eNse

The Daily Sentinii- Page- 3

VttiU

Athletics take .two game lead
.in series after 5-l triumph

Soviets experience crime
wave
'

The. Daily Sentinel

P AT WHITEHEAD
Asswlanl PublwheriControUer

r:UJntKuy - •••ouu•"fN'••

Page- 2- The Deily Santin.. .
Pomlroy- Midclepcort. Ohio
Monday, October 18, 1989

·

.

It'-s the new confidence that has
separated this club from the 1988
Athletics. They know if Canseco
hits .053 again, they can avoid
another winter of discontent.

SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

·.- : ...

·IT'S THE ONE·
SYSTEM THAT DOES
nMPSTj[.1. IT ALL..

.

Efficiency and
Quallty
·Of

CLOSED FOR
REMODELING
- WATCH FOR REOPENING
..

SKATE-A-WAY·
CHESTER, OHIO ·"

.......

--...-

.

...s

' '

�·--

•

.

..

•

Steelers win 17-7; avenge 51.()
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Pitts·
"There's no question that It's
burgh's opportuniStic defense
very disappointing." said Kosar:
helped Chuck Noll avenge this who was booed loudly by the
most lopsided defeat of hts sellout crowd. "I'm pointing the
coaching career. ·
(Inger at myself. Without any
Noll's Steelers forced seven
question. I feel I let a lot of people
Cleveland turnovers Sunday as
down today ."
Pittsburgh beat the Browns 17-7
Kosar. who had the lowest
to move into a three-way tie tor Interception ratio In NFL history
coming Into the game, completed
second in the AFC Central with
· • Houston and Cleveland. Those 15 of 41 passes for 162 yards. his
three teams are 3-3 and a game lowest passing total In a full
game since Oct. 26, 1986, at
back of Cincinnati.
The win came six weeks after Minnesota, where he had just 101
the Browns had pummelled the yards passing.
Steeiers 51-0 In the season opener
"I don't know that they did so
to hand Pittsburgh the worst loss much to us, or that Kosar did so
in its history. In that game, the much to us In the first game."
Cleveland defenSe forced -eight . Noll said. ··•our defense did a
turnovers and - scored ' three pretty good job. Their defense
touchdowns. Sunday, the Steel- scored on our offense (in the first
ers turned the ball o\.er just game). We shut that out tonight.
twice.
That's a big part of it."
Pittsburgh took a 3-0 lead in the
. "No question about ii. ThiS was
a great team effort and I'm sure first quarter on Gary Anderson's
the results of the first game had a 49-yard field goal following Koslot to do with the way played J!r'.s first jn~_rc~tlon. and a
14-yard Todd Blackledge pass to
tpday," Noll said.
Cleveland quarterback Bernie Rodney Carter made It 10-0 with
Kosar threw a career-high four 6:09 gone In the third quarter.
The Browns had five turnovers
Interceptions and the Steelers
in the first half. On t~eir last
recovered three Browns fumbles
as the Cleveland offense possession of the first quarter
stumbled for the third straight and their first possession. of the
game. In the last three games, second quarter , Cleveland
the Browns have scored 33 points turned the ball over on the first
and have been penallzed 28 play from scrimmage.
The most costly fumble came
times. including 10 Sunday.

when Mike Oliphant lost the ball
In the third quarter on ~ first·
down play at the Plttsbul'lllt 10. In
the fourth quarter, the Browns
_had a fintt down f!t the Pitts·
burgh 38 when Carnell .Lake
picked off a Kosar pass for Tim
Manoa.
Dwayne Woodruff, Thomas
Everett, and Delton Hall had the
other Pittsburgh Interceptions.
Cleveland's longest play of the
. day was a 40-yard pass Interference penalty on Hall, but 011·
phant's fumble came later In that
drive.
"When you have seven turnov·
ers and have the penalties we
had, you make it almost lmpossl·
ble to win," said Cleveland coach
Bud Carson.
StUI, the Browns were in a
position to pull the game out.
Eric Mete all scored on a 2-yard
· run wlth ·6:00 .~ft In the game to
make the scoi'!! 10-7.
But Dwight Stone returned the
ensuing kickol! 73' yards -to tHe
Cleveland 25 to set up Warren
Williams' l ·yard touchdown run
off right· tackle. Blackledge had
the key play on tl\edrlve when he
dove over center for 2 yards on
fouth-and-one at the Cleveland 3.
"The Browns right side caved
in and from then It was wide
open," Stone said of hls return.
· Blackledge, playing In place of

the Injured Bubby BriSter, completed 9 of 28 passes for 143 yards.
On the other side, Cleveland's
WebSter Slaughter -caught 7
passes for 106 yards.
"The stats were close," Blac·
kledge said. "The blg difference
was the turnovers. I was determined not tO give (Cleveland) a
blg play."
Pittsburgh suffered several
injuries In the game, including
tight end Mike Mularkey (knee),
receiver Louis Lipps (hamst: .
ring), defensive end Tim Johnson (ankle) , defensive back Rod
Woodson (shoulder) and running
back Tim Worley (elbow) . ,
Tbe game was the first in
Cleveland Stadium since fans
pelted the Denver Broncos with
debris Oct. 1 and forced the
referee to switch ends of the field .
There were no disburbances
Sunday.
For the third straight game the
Cleveland defense played well,
ffiiT the.BroWns liave managed to
win only one game when their
defense does not score a
touchdown.
''We'll keep it up as long as It
takes," said defensive tackle
Michael Dean Perry. "FrustratIng or not, we've got to go out
there, keep our heads up, get the
ball and try to put oor offense In
the best position possible."

•

...•..

..•.•·

.·,•'.

Scoreboard ...

·'..

. ·.
'

.·,...
,•
....•

(k:t . 7- s .. FructiiCO S. Olk:... 4
Oct . I' - SUI Frud~~~Ce t. Ollup I
Ot... 8- Sua FUIIclliCO S. Clllup t

Scores
Ohio CoUc11;• FMiball S~,:u,.,.

Amerk:• ...... Ch_,p6o_.I,SeriK

By Unlk'd PMolO ..&amp;H atMnal
Sail 111'1111,)' . lkl . l.t
Otlla S&amp;ai~ S5. ...... 31

Toi'Hton. O•~

tOakluld WIM

n.

Mllllld•pm u.

.

Su-.IMY'II '"lib
NV Gl ..b., W.... l1tllon11
san Fraarhlce ~1, DaUu 14

Cara~Pe-Mell•fPa.l

U, Hlnun i
Otk'rMI•It, Matlfte. II
Unto• 1!1, OIIMNarUw•l:l
Wo.Wr 11. CMf' R.Nf&gt;rw H
OW. M'niPya• 11, o.. ~~~o ..

Mo••

:r..

.'..

w..-~

... ~r.. J.et.a.,,. ...

.f

C..lr&amp;l !JaM• 41, . . . . . Q !W. •

011111• !7, GHrw:Hon till)'. I 1
O.fl~aee 11, M~ltatrr find. I H

~
nm.
a..11.ur~~Tn.ew••
.. Ul

"'"""'lin I

W Yl~llta W8ttJ•• !1, Wllml•~onl.t

.
'

Ohkl KIP kllool Feotball h . "

'

.'
·'

.•''
'

s ....... Od.u

Allr llllt'blel -11. .tkr Kl'-•lnD~ D

...ayla 41, Lock..... II
BoP KIM'_. n ....,... .e4&gt;
Bfl._.,...

.ao••·

u

Z.aea R&amp;..,.t..,aaA 17

Cu McKJnaey "n. \"••

S.••

I
ria )I('Nic....._ II, Gree•llllllll5

Oe Hili It, Parm. A
n • .w ... .tt OeRh~ t
Cit' IAadteru W ta. Rlc.ilnw .. Hl'l Ida"

..

0., CoiW'bMto lt.

~

llelmo• e
G 'Yilt. Gufleld M, GUm.ur Al· lloll !3
G .. 1'111 Kawll" •. tlf' V•twrltly II
............ u. C.l ~--It

He• II. N"'·ariiC'attl"i
M. PUh!!lb...,.il•o
Lillie ( :.llllll JS, Parnw. P11. . I
LIUir..aer Zll, ZM8vlllfot

•••••••IWII

Ubrrt,. n. !ioadlihrD•••

'

J

•

•
•
.•

Nllf.'ll U. S&amp;letn 14
Nor.IUCPVIIIf't.l, ~rain I
Nor-lkSI. P•l24. Sou .. Ct"ntntlll
P~&amp;rlhll S•mt&gt; :JI. GU"f'd Trlnll,r I:J
Sddut'lry St. Mllly. 3:1i, Uy.f' II
Sleuttr•1AIIe Ct"alr&amp;l :n. llf'llll.irf' 0

Slow Walf!lh """111111 &lt;'1rJ~ph Ill
To! ScoU 2'!, Tol-.rt I
Tol Sl .ln . . t'l', Tel W'IUU&gt; II
Tal Drvdhlt~ll •• T•l c~nual 15
l lnkn• L•ul :n, •l"kO'f' Nol'6 I
Urb ... 3S, Kf'ntOII Rhllf' Jl
" ' Car roiiiM U, Sprtn~S., 7
,'Wajor Lf~~Pt" B•f'hldl
PoMlw- s.:..... k'

'

World !Jtorie~
Sd FrMt•htco n. Oald.n4
81!:•1 of k\'e_n
10akiiUid II'. . lll't'lf'M '!-8J

Ot1 . H- OllkiMd 5. !oiM FnaciM"o I
o~ J. Su Fruc:bleel
Oct . .. - N- ....................
Oft. 11 - &amp;IS•Frucla"O.I:JI p.m.
Oct. II- •Ill• FJ'lUidllco, II: J5 ,.m.

Od. 15-

x.Qct . lt-alS.. P...-I~t-o.II:U p. m.

te- No pllll' llr~lll!d.
1.0et . 'll -.a OaU...., II:JS p.m.

OCI .

-•

~~:-Od . 'l!- ..
X•ll rlll!cetMr)'

Oaldui •• II: 3S p.m.

Nllkn•l IA'IIIW C11.-np6olllllllp!o!erill!11
S• Fru.:IIICO n. Ollc..o
(Sa• FrMritlt!O wtaalft'ln. .._II
Od . .t - 8•,.,_dM!o 11. Qkaco)
Od . S- Cllic... t, 8• Prudlc:o I

j..J)

NATIOS.U. FOOTB.U.L LEAGUE ·

......w*'t.c• •

Ml!ftJ... nM (Pv.. I H. t'.aplai t
..., .. CMI"rell II&amp;, llrlllr•ra:•

Kil!aJoe
Obtrl• II
~- ~. " 'IQ'H liMe (1111.1 II

~is

Od. 3: - Oaklud '7, Torwto J
Od . 4- Oakl!Uidi, Toroftlo 3:
Od. i - ToN•O 7, Oakland :1
Cki . 7- 0...,... 1. Tona&amp;o 5
Ot1 . R- O..luuiJ, To"*o S

...1 State ZS. kut !&lt;liM• !I
Bowllq Gl1!d !7, ToWd&amp; '!3
Otlloli
Mhml :n I tiP~
Me• .... lkal• U , DM.'I••U 17
Eulf'r• Dl. . . !1, Allr•l7

v........... ~o~~........ No. . . ..,. ••

'

for us not only because of the
wins , but because both of them
were really emotional."
Sunday's win also was Important for Miami because it showed
the Dolphins they can win even
when Marino doesn't throw a
touchdown pass.
Although Marino completed 16
of 33 passes for 266 yards. he did
not throw for a ro: He . did,
however, run for one.
·
Marino and fullback RonDa·
ven port scored their first rushing
toqchdowns in nearly two years.
in the second half to start and
complete Miami's comeback.
Marino ran one yard for a TDin
the third quarter to pull the ,
Dolphins to within 13-10 and,
following a tying 33-yard field

Oftrvk 1'1, T~~npa ...,. II
Mt.._.ota M. Greet~ Jla,J t.e
HoMoll 13, C'tllt~ tM
MJ...,I., {]adll..tlll
AUanb&amp; II, Nf'W 1:111 ..... 15
Nf'W OrltUIII el, NY dlft!ll ..
~»•wr 14, bdi....,.HAI
LA R&amp;l*rwM.Kaii. . CIIylt
nUaMipNa 1'1, Phoe~~b S
·
Mltn~tll7 ,

newel_.,

~at lifo 17, Sl&amp;ll Dlll!p

II

Mo11hy, Oct . 11

L" Ramut luff.a..' ,.m.

Su .. Q. Oct. U
Jllo"l:' .Jets at luH&amp;Io, I p.m.
lA R ...na&amp; Phllallil!lpldl&amp;. I p.m.
Tunllll 11-.r ~ WIMihl.oa, I p.m .
tndl.-pollll AI Clarln_.l. 1 p.m .

Gne11 Ba,)· at Ml~rol, I p.m .
Mln_.,.Gia aiO.Iroll, I p.m.
PlllMba ~hIll Hou•-. 1 p.m.

D•l• .all... _. Cll,-, I p.m.
Nl' GIUIIIal Su Dlep, 4 • •m .
F.II..,IISIUIFr....l18,tp.m.

·J'Ii'-

N"'· Orlriii»AI LA RIUII'I •.t IP·m·

goal by Pete Stoyanovich early In
the fourth period, Davenport
scored the winning TD on a
5-yard run with 5:31 to play.
It was Marino's first rushing
touchdown since Dec. 7, 1987;and
only the fourth of his seven-year
NFL career. Davenport got his
first rushing TD since Dec. 13,
1987.
Marino's TO came on a third
and goal, with the Bengals
expecting either a running back
to try a line smash or Marino to
pass. Instead, a pair of running
backs darted left without the ball
while Marino rolled right on a
bootleg and flipped over a tackler
to land in the end zone.
"I was just hoping I would
make It to the end zone," Marino
said of hls plodding bootleg run.
•'I got a good block and I made up
my mind I had to get in there."
Marino also rxtended his NFLrecord sackless streak to 18
games.
"It's frustrating because you
can never quite get to him," said
Cincinnati defensl;.r~ end Jim
Skow, who dld manage to bat
down two straight Marino
passes. "His release Is llghtnlng
last and yo_u just can't do
anything about lt."
Miami's victory snapped a
12-game home winning streak tor
Cincinnati, broke a four-game
victory string for the Bengals
this season and lett Cincinnati
coach Sam W)'che sounding llke
the classic b8d loser as he harped
about the officiating.
"Do we have anyone here who
thil!ks the oftlclatlng was equitable?" Wyche asked sllent reporters after the . game, adding
sarcastically, "I have no opinion
about II. I'll be fined by the
commissioner Is the main
reason."
But, as Cincinnati wide receiver Mike Martin noted, "You

can blame it on the officiating or
blame It on yourself, but the
bottom line IS, we lostthe game."
Cincinnati, which brought the
NFL's No. I rushing offense into
the game. was shutoutthesecond
half afte~ enjoying a 13-3 halftime lead. The only score Miami
managed the first half was a
29-yard field goal by
Stoyanovlch.
Cincinnati, 4-2, scored on Boomer Esiason's 38-yard pass to
Rodney Holman and on field
goals of 20 and 22 yards by Jim
Breech. Eslason completed 16 of
24 passes for 194 yards, but his
long passing attack was
thwarted by Dolphin defensive
backs the second hall.
·'They dropped back on their
coverage and just left me guys
underneath to hlt," said Esiason.
''Some of our fans may have been
taking this game for granted, but
imytlme you ptay a'pro like Dan
Marino, you're going to have
your hands full."
Although Cincinnati bolted to a
10-0 first quarter lead. Mlam i
linebacker Barry Krauss
sparked a Dolphins' defense that
began to take charge In the
seco_nd period. The turning point
came when the Bengals mounted
a first and goal just before
halftime but had to settle for a
field goal, which turned out to be
their last score of the day.
"We were well prepared for the
8engals offense," said Krauss,
who led Miaml .. with nine solo
tackles and two assists. "I'm
sure they felt they could run the
ball on us 'ruld we knew James
Brooks (95 yards in 20 carries)
would challenge us, but we shut
down their outside running
game."'

Said Shu Ia, "Our defense kept
us In the game until our offense
got started the second half. It· s a
very big win for us because we
showed we can beat a team that
has an explosive offense."

i\IIIUita at ranbl: ... p.m.
O.Ot~~\oll!r &amp;I Sudlfo • .f p.M.

Mo .. .Q' , Oct.. U
Cl"el.ud. t p.m.

Chlc~~P a1

I".'ATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE

S.ll.lri.,'s Rnalh
PhUIIdelpiii.S, PII' Y hl&amp;nder•3 (II\')
J'li'Ml' .J•rllff S. Har. . nl t
Del ral &amp;, luff Me I

c.. ...., ............. t(lll"l

Pllt. . JJb!. . . . . . . . I (0T)
Winni!M'r 5, Taro•o 1
St. Louh 2, Cltk:ap I
Mlnlftala 3, q.u.bec 2'
S.lll ......... .
\ ' ant·o•wr &lt;. IIHlH I
TIPWed'll

V•••

OtlloCol-.lf'Fooe.U&amp;eiRdlllrBJ
Pr'l'.. laiK_.IHal
!tatd.-.Odtl

ru rduf' • o•M S&amp;at•
lowllq G,.Pft Ill Eulonn Mlch t n)
fo...,.awa !lalt&gt; • Cealral Mlch
K•nt !!lUI• &amp;I Otllo U• h'ft'llk)'
MIMnlU Te~M .... )-

CI..:Ia•&amp;lllt " 'ml fiJ'I'hlla
Akr• at Murtaf !Matf' (Ky)

BalchrlftoW ....~• .. Ollto NordiHn
.lot. Cat Nil Ill Caplal
Hl'l*lbl!'rJat OUerbt"la
M•lella.a .. raat
Mo•• Union. M•-'diiPm
Kenyon .. AlleiflleBJ (Pal
CIUII!' lftlerw • Du~a

Meigs volleyballers· win two matches
The Meigs Maraucjer volleyball team went 2·11n action last
week. '!'he Marauders now own a
12-8 record overall and a 9-5
mark In the 'I'VC.
Meigs started out the week
with a 3 match loss to WellSton by
scores of 15-8, 11-15 and 12-15.
Kelly Douglas continued solid
play as she had 22 points,
Jennifer Taylor added 10 assiSts,
while Kelly Smith had 13 kills.
· Douglas and Smith totals were
team highs for the year.
Meigs defeated Southern by
scores of 15·1 anll 15·5. Heather
Hovatter ~d the winners with 10
points, 6 aces and 2 assiSts. Tricia
Baer added 8 poliits and 4 aces,

while Kelly Smith had 7 points, 2
aces and 4 kUls.
In the weeks third match the
Lady Marauders defeated Bel·
pre 15-13, and 15-7. Tricla Baer
had 10 points, and 4 aces, Amy
Wagner added 6 points, 1 klll and
2 assiSts, while Jennifer Taylor
chipped In with 6 points, 3 aces, 1
kill and 4 assists.
'
Meigs will close out the home
season on Tuesday night as they
take on VInton County with' the
reserve game starting at 5:55.
The·Lady Marauders will play in
the sectional tournaments on
Thursday at 6:00pm against the
Belpre Golden Eagles at Athens
High School.

.

Continued from page 1
:reat for the Long Bottom and Reedsvllle areas on Oct. 30 from 6
o 7 p .m.

Patrol cites Albany m.a.n
An Albany area man was cited In a three-vehicle crash
Saturday at 10:30 a.m. In Columbia Township at the junction of ·
State Routes 32 and 689, according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of
the State Highway Patrol.
Ke.nneth J . Coen, 32, Rt . 3, Albany, was cited for failure to
yield alter bJI .lJI84 Dodge Ram pickup truck hit a 1978 Fprd
Econoline valt driven by James L. Seymour, 55, of Canal
Winchester.
·
·
Seymour was driving west on S.R. 32 when Coen, who pulled
north from S.R. 689 and Into the Intersection, where he hit the
van In the left front side. The impact caused the van togo off the
rightslde of the road and Into a 1989 Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck
driven by l"· Sbane Sayre, 19, Rt. 3, Albany. Sayre's S-10 was
~ted so11th and sitting at the stop sign.
•

Civitan Club makes levy donations

~

DoOlltlons ot J600 each were madt&gt; to the Meigs County
Mentally Retarded and Developmental Dlsablllties levy 'fund
and Meigs Industries, Inc. by the Meigs County Clvitan Service
Club at a recent meeting.
.
The Meigs MR·DD will have a three year 1.5 mUilevy on the
Nov. 7 ballot.
·
Larry Hoffman, Meigs Industries production manager and
l'lll!mbers of the MR· RR levy volunteer committee were on hand
to accept the contributions.
The funds were raised in a joint effort by Clv!tan and Meigs
Industries. Inc., through sales at the Civitan food booth during
the 1989 Meigs County Fair.
'Donations to the levy fund·and volunteer services are needed
and Information on either may be obtained by contacting Lee
Wedemeyer, superintendent, 992-6681.

+

'

College dlly slnted 'Oct: 25

BROOKS DRIVES - The Bengals' James Broob 1'111111 o~er
Miami Dolphin defenders In the first qliAI'ter of Sunday's game Ia
Riverfront &amp;tadlum. Brooks rushed for 81 yards in the flnt half,
but the Bengals lost :W-13. (UP I)

By United Press International
Bowling Green quarterback
Rich Dackln, who leads tile
Mid-American Conference in total offense, turned in another
outstanding performance
Saturday.
Dackln threw three touchdown
passes, including the game-'
winner with 20 seconds left, to
lead the Falcons to a 27-23 win
over TUledo that kept Bowling
Green one game back of Eastern
Mich1gan In the MAC title chase.
Dackln completed 24 of 40 passes
for 303 yards and was Intercepted
once as Bowling Green improved
to 3-lln the MAC and 3-3 overall.
while Toledo is 2-2 and 3-3.
Ron Heard was on the receiving end of Dackin's ll-yard
scoring pass that capped a 7-play
drive that began on the BG 15
with 1:27 left In the game.
In other MAC games Saturday,
Ball State kept Kent State
winless on the season with a 23-21
victory; and Oh~o University and
Miami University both earned
their first non-loss of the year
with a 22-22 tie at Oxford.
"Toledo is an excel len !football
team," said BG coach Mo Ankney. "For us to beat them In a
comeback like·that with our team
believing that we could. (win)
right down to the end, I'd say that
It was the best wln I've had at
Bow ling Green."
Toledo trailed 14-0 and ralUed
to take the lead with 6:46 left on
Rusty Hanna's22-yard field goal.
"It was a hell of a play. "Toledo
coach Dan Simrell said of the
·winning touchdown. "I've always felt that no one 1play) wins
or loses a football game. There
are things that get up to that
point, and things .that happen
after that point, sol have trouble
focusing on that play."
In other games involving Ohio
schoolS, Ohio State held off
Indiana 35-31; Memphis State
topped Cincinnati 34-17; Eastern

IllinoiS defeated Akron 21-17;
Ashland beat Wayne State 27-10;
Dayton downed Georgetown, Ky,
27-7, anll Youngstown State
blanked Northeastern 44-0.
In North Coast Athletic Conference play, it was Kenyon 27,
Oberlin 19; Wooster 35, Case
Western Reserve 14; and Ohio
Wesleyan 17. Denison 0.
In Ohio Athletic Conference
play , John Carroll improved to
7-0 on the year and 5.0 lilt he OAC
with a 26-3 wln over Heidelberg!
in other games it was Mount
Union 21, Ohio Northern 13;
Musklngum 2:1, Baldwin-Wallace
20; Otterbein 19. Marietta 16; and
Allegheny 15, Earlham 10. Mercyburst beat Capital U.{), and
&lt;::arnegie-Mellon pounded Hiram
48-6.
At Dix .S tadlum, it was another
loss for Kent State, but the
Golden Flashes played well
against Ball State and had a
chance to tie the game by going
for a two-point conversion with
1:12 remaining. Ball State safety
Andre Barnett tackled Kenny
Parker short of the end zone on
the conversion try as the Cardl·
nals raised their record to 3-2·1
!3-1 In conference play), while
Kent State dropped to0-7 and 0-4.
Kent State also was hampered
by two blocked field goals In the
first half that led to 10 Ball State
points.
·'The two missed field goals
killed us," s'a id Kent State coach
Dick Crum. "II we had gotten one
of them, it may have been a
different game. but they were
just too low."
"They might win some games
yet." Ball State coach Paul
Schudel said of the Golden
Flashes. "I am relieved to get
them out of the way. I've known
Dick a long time. He Is too good a
coach to let ithe losing) go on. It
wlll take some time to get his kids
In there. They really hlt you."

·Stocks

Hospital news

RUTLAND' E.M.S. ANNUAL

CHRIS1MAS BAZAAR
ssoo

ANDERSON'-S

OCTOBER
SALE!!

Armin Schaller, 87, Little
Hocking, died Sunday at St.
Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg,
Lewis Sauer
W.Va., following an extended
lllness.
Lewis H. Sauer, Middleport,
Iiorn In Switzerland, Mr.
died late Monday morning at his
Schaller was the son of the late
residence on Rutland St.
Fritz and Sophia Schaller. He
· The Middleport unit of the
came to the United States In 1922
Me'lgs County Emergency Medl·
and was a construction
cal Ser.Vice was called to the
millwright.
scene at 10: 15ll.m. and reported
Survivors Include , three nethat Mr. Sauer was dead on
phews Ill Switzerland, and two arrival. No other details were
nephews and one niece - in Africa. • · available.
·
In addition to hls parents, Mr.
The Meigs County coronor was ·
Schaller was preceded in death
reported on the scene. but was
by his wife; Martha Wildman
not available tor comment.
Schaller inJanuary1989,asister,
Arrangements are being
and a brother.
handled by Rawlings-CoatsThere will be no services.
Fisher Funeral Home.
Arrangements are being handled
Middleport.

D,INING ROOM
. SALE
Huge selection of 3, 5 and 7 piece table and chair
. sets: ·
.
Oak and maple. Excellent quality for
years of enjoyment.
.

No one claims Super Lotto jackpot

EAI. lOSE &amp; THIOAT
GENEUL AUIIGIST
"IE IIAft HEARIII AIDS"

· SAME AS CASH

MAmESS er IOISN.GS

$10800

SHOP TONICHT
AND SA~E!

CJ04). 67S-1JU
•160° vitwi"' 11111t
0+ 400 Ill. peok britJhllllll
•Surrollllil SoUIIII ll•oo
oVMS/Oy...,. focUl
eDualvWooinpull
•Varilltlt • • oulpulo
ot-11 CllltiMII C-I•Wra.lftiiCI&lt;O

oe•flltw

.

·

•lOSS ..... O.Su•ll SyiiMI

SPECIAL

$1999

OUIIII'IIl STOOl

· liVING ROOM SALE

Oraet new c0vera in traditional contemporary and
Early American stylaa. Quality l'urniture. bv
· Bertdine, Craftmnter and others.

ouR PRICE~ nAil AT ONLY

"'-W_. a&amp; Y&amp;l.-ral•o (lad)

&amp;ERILINE RECLINER SALE

Cf'Mrall&amp;ate 1.1. Pt V... let' (Ga)
St • .loRpiiH ... ) al; DQIOfl

Def.._... um-

llfrklin .. tland!l

fttlaa~rt... .

WUml•• .. IYunflle (I. .)

•l1f

$3•2 5

-•-.IGS
-CJM.·-·--·-·"""'
·
·-·--COUNTY Unll CONTROL

IF YOO'RE NOT RECYCLING, YOU'RE THRfN(II6 ff ALL AWAY

• Dairy QUHI'I• stor• me proud IPOf'IICt'S of the Chlkifen·s Mlroc1e Network

TMfhOn ~ beMftfllocol ~II for Chl\01'81'1.
Till~ MAO.Q. Colp.
efiiiO.u.s.Non.. wo.o.ca.

PHONE 992-6360 .;... POMIIOY

"

1

ror qualh~!

ChooSe WIIIIWI't' tedinau , radl.er / NC:fiMnl Of
..-lv.. rotker•. l•utrful Ytt dutlble fabrb ..
Pfl~• yOu can efford.
~lG. •Ut ~fCUNEAS .. . NOW ONLY 1191
A£0 . '131 AICUNIAI .... NOW ONLY ''271
1110. 'IH AICUNE~I ... :NOW ONLY '287
AID . •HtlllCUNIAI .... NOW ONLY '319

SHOP
MONDAY NIGHTS

TIL 8:00P.M•

. ''FREE DELI~ERY'~-

$499 ~:~!.'

Of

SftVIIIA lY'$, YCI'S Ull
STBIO SISIE IS ON SAIL

• ...... 011 . . . . . . . . . . . ( •• dl

• ,...,.lift'"

FULL

*90 DAYS

•11a d ... .,,...."
.ufeliM "O.r VI'' lttll - t y .
You w•'l bollno tho · ~uolity ollll
.....,...., 011 tho (licturo. You ..,.,
hno to ..n a hull •-· W..l
...... .,._ il 'lt... 14 fl •

HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS

saaoo

~

01110 WaleyU .. IWaMIIr (IHJ
Wllll!:llllterl• Wa~r

~s-4 ·~ ~...... '-*-""~*.:.f.:ti.':!!

MlntESS er IOISPIIMGS

Low, Low Prices

"'

!

PREMIEI COMFOIT
TWIN

'

Reg. 5219... 3 pc. Sit ........................ S175
Solid oak or maple finish.
Reg. S329.•• 5 pc• .Sat·...............,~ ......... S263
Reg. S699 •••Tre•tle Table, 6 chairs •. S559
Reg. S899 •••Solid Oak, 4 (hclirs ....... S659

12, 26. 29. and 32.
There were 162 tickets that had
five of those six numbers for
$1,000 each and 5,919 with four out
of six for a $75 pay off.
The Kl cker game's sequence of
001573 also failed to draw a
winner for the $100,000 jackpot.

JOH"PUASAII'f
A. WADE,
M.D.
Inc:
.
YA"IY IOSPITAL .

9 A.M.-6 P.M.

RUTLAND CIVIC CENTER

OHIO RECYCLE MONTH
OCTOBER 1989

Oberl•• Ear..._ (1. .1

pnl!;r 1

On Sunday at 9:46 a.m. the
Trading on the Paris stock 6.91 percent.
Racine unit we11t to Apple Grove- exchange was suspended shortly
The timing of Friday the 13th
Dorcas Road for Jeffrey Fisher
after the opening bell due to rout just six days before the
who was taken to Veterans, and
heavy losses led by Eurotunnel, second anniversary of the 1987
at 4:40p.m. the unit was called to which dropped 13.2 percent.
market collapse raised disturbThird St. for Dave ·Rose who was
Friday's Wall Street action ing parallels.
treAted but not transported.
saw the Dow Jones industrial
At 6:13 p.m . the Middleport average drop 190.58 points In the
unit went to the Meigs Junior final hour in a selling spree set off
High football !ield for David by news that the investor group
Hardwick who was transported trying to acquire UAL Corp. had
to Veterans.
talled to raise the financing for Dally stock prices
At 7:40 p.m , the Middleport Its $6.75 biiUon buyout of United (As of 10:40 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
units and fire departme~t were · AlrUnes' parent.
called to Route 554 in Cheshire
Airline issues, takeover- of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
for an auto accident where
related stocks and blue chips Am Electric Power .... ... ...... 29\-2
Eugene Hunter refused treattook heavy hits In the frenzied AT&amp;T .... .. ........... ... .... ....... ..41¥.,
ment and Brian Holley was taken selling that pushed down the Ashland Oil ........................37')(.
to Holzer Medical Center. Bill widely followed Dow average by Bob Evans .................... ...... 13Y.
Sutphin was also taken to Holzer.
Charming Shoppes ...... .... .. .. 12\i,
Finally, at 9:06 p.m. the
City Holding Co .... , ............. 15¥.,
Pomeroy unit was called to
Federal Mogul .......... .. . :...... 21')(.
Arnerlcare for Lovie Watson who
Veterans Memorial
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .48~
was transported to Veterans.
Heck's ................................... 'f.
Saturday admissions ...: Rose Key Centurion .......... .......... 14~
------Meigs &amp;nnouncements----- Lee, Pomeroy; and Joseph Lands' End ........ .... ... ...... .... 26~
Leach, Middleport.
Limited Inc .......... :.... .'....... .34'f.
Meeting time changed
vancy Dis trlct will hold it
Saturday
dischargeSnone.
Multimedia Inc .. :................. 93
The date of the regular meet- monthly meeting Wednesday at 9
Sunday
admissions
Michael
Rax
Restaurants ... ............... 2%
ing of the Meigs Local School a.m at the office.
Allen,
Middleport;
and
Lovie
Robbins
&amp; Myers ................. 15
Dis trlct Board of Education has
Watson,
Pomeroy
.
Shoney's
Inc ....................... 10¥.
Mooey sought in suil
been changed, according to Jane
Sunday
discharges
Thelma
Wendy's lntl.. ........................ 5
Fry, district treasurer. It will be
Worthington lnd ............. .22%
The State Teachers Retire- · Campbell and ~lchael Allen.
held on O,ct. 26 in the Board of
ment
Board
of
Ohio,
in
care
of
the
Education meeting room.
Chemical Mortgage Company,
To meet Thunday
The Meigs County Democratic Columbus, Is seeking $36,593.12
in a foreclosure action against
Execu tlve Commit tee will hold
Charles
R. Spaun, Betty L.
Its regular meeting Thursday at
Spaun,
et
al In the Meigs County
7:30p.m. at the Carpenters Hall,
Court
of
Common
Pleas.
Pomeroy. A member for the
Board of Elections will be seiected at that time.
Divorce granted
Meeting tonight
Racine VIllage Council will
In the Meigs County Court of
meet Monday (tonight) at 7 p.m.
CALL 742·3078, 742-2233 or 742-2103
Common
Pleas, a divorce has
at Star MUI Park.
been awarded to Billy Joe Trout
FOR INFORMATION
·To meet Wednesday
from
Becky
S.
Trout.
The Leading Creek Conser-

by the. White Funeral Home In
Coolville.
Burial will be in the Coolville
Cemetery.

CLEVELAND tUPI) - Saturday's $3 million Super Lotto
drawing was without a major
winner, · allowing Wednesday's
jackpot to climb to at least $6
m!II!on.
Sa:les were $3,558,250 and the
payout totaled $605,925.
The correct numbers were 7, 8,

C'ontlnuPrt

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service responded to nine calls over the
weekend.
On Saturday at 11:30 a.m. the
. Racine unit was 'called to Rowe
Road for Rusty Tucker who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
· Hospital and later transfered to
Ohio State· University Hosipltal
in Columbus.
At 5:10 p.m. the Middleport
unit responded to a call at the
Meigs Junior High stadium for
Brad Stanhope who was transported to Veterans. ·
The Tuppers Plains unit went
to Coolville Road at 9:09p.m . tor
Michael Blake who was taken to
Camden Clark Hospital.
The Middleport unit at 9: 20
p.m. was called to Page St. for
Joseph Leach who was taken to
Veterans.

--Area deaths-......-'
Armin Schaller

from
S t ock s.~·----------

EMS has nine weekend rolls

OCT. 28 -

Southeast Ohio high school students and their parents are
invited to meet with representatives of 70 colleges, universities,
nursing schools and military academies at the 14th College Day
Oct. 25 at Ohio University. .
The program will be held from 8:30a.m . to ll:JOa.m . at the
Convocation Center, located at the comer of Richland Avenue
and S. Shafer St. on the Ohio University campus.
The program Is sponsored by Ohio University's Office of
Admissions. More Information on the program may be obtained
by calling 593-4100.

Falcons score ·late
to edge ·R ockets, 27-23

The Daily Sentinel Page 5

Pomeroy-Middlaport, Ohio

r--Local news briefs...

set~ack

. Dolphins rally to defeat Bengals, 20-13
CINCINNATI !UP!) - The
resurgent Miami Dolphins have
completed their conquest of
Ohio.
After beating the peveland
Browns 13-10 in overtime last
week. the Dolphins rallied from a
13-3 halftime deficit Sunday to
upset the AFC Central Divisionleading ClnclMati Bengals 20-13.
"We feel our fortunes have
started to change," said Miami
coach DonShula, whose club was
1-3 two weeks ago but is now 3-3
after bouncing.the Buckeye State
clubs.
"! thin)&lt; it's starting to turn
around for us." said Dan Marino,
who rallied the Dolphins not only
with his arm, but surpriSingly.
also with his feet Sunday. · 'These
last two weeks have been' good

Mondlif, October 16. 1989

Mond!rf. Octoblr 18, 1989

. ~· 4 The Deily Sentinel

LAMP SALE

lleaut!ful n.W tibia lam,. In on orray
of 'c olora end
Bran. Cryollll.
Crock• end Gina
R~. '18.9&amp; LAMPS .... s.Je '15.19

""'*·

Reg. '24.91 LAMPS ..... Sele '19.99
R~.

•34.81 LAMPS ..... Sele

•27 .99

'i

Reg. '44.81 LAMPS ..... s.te •36.99

~tl~tol(~
. 992-1671

hwwt•n Pa•ara;,

o...

OPEN: MONDAY
9:30 A.M.-1:00 P.M.
MSDAY THRU SATURDAY
9:30 AM.-5:00 P.M.
•To Qualiled Applice111s

�Community calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY -TheMt.Herman
UnW Bretbrell Chure~. Texas
community, Pomeroy. will haVl'
revival Sunday lllrolcll Oet. 22 at
7:30p.m. Dillltly. The I'Vurellst
will be tbe Re-v. Carwy Klllttle,
Lucas 1er. Putar Jtollert Sud·
ers Invites tbe publiC.

clasaes wtlllut tor •Ill wee ill.
•

MIDDL£POJlT .o.Grfl\1p ,2 ol
the Mlddlepert Pi U~terlal
Ch11reh 111tt11 Tu 11 hy at 1M
residence ol Mn. Carl lhrlly.
• • . . . . W1JI .. ty Mn;
Fr~il Aa•u II DIVed41Uan
by ~~-

DwiJIIt .....ee.

J'OMEftOY - ftevival servl·
ces will be a 7 p.m. ntchtly alld 6
p.m. on Sl!.,.ay. Wedesclay
throuch SundaY at 'tlie·Pomeroy
Cllurch of the Nazu-l!'lle with
ftev. Chris Meenach and Lester
the puj)pet. Special services each
evenill&amp;
tor children. The public
1
Is Invited to 'ttend.

.:Chester D of A ,tneering ·heltl: ~ent!Y . ·.

••Ml'.

.

hospital.

~

Esther Smith tllallked everyone wllo helptd
way tor
her reception. Slle alee reported
on the re«ptlon that Chet Taylor
bad.
The aext meet~~~~ will ba
lnapectioa aM Ml ' 11 are
askft to wear ...... ht luck
retrft~lll Will .. •• l'ftl;
. The meetlat el_. In .reautar
form.
Attendlq wen .Mary -¥otter,

_..any

Sandy White, ()pitt Hollon, Ada
Bissell, · Mae · McPeek, JoAnn
Baum, Charlotte Grant, Erma
Cleland, Betty Young, Virginia
Lee, Dorothy Rltcftle, Esther
Smltb, Ellzabetb Hayes, Sadie
Trussell, Marcia Keller Doris
K..alg, Doris Grueser, 'auleah
M,axe&lt;y, Jlelty Roush, Laura
Nlee, Lora Damewood, Rulb
Smltb, Alta Ballard, Everett
Grant, Kathryn Baum, 'Thelma.
White.

•

Willing Workers ,hoJd meettng8

'"l'he Miracles ot Jesus" wu
t)le theme of the JII'OIII'IIil ""'
-ted at the recent meet tar ohlll!
lmtiD&amp; Workers of tht St. Pal
Unlll!d Melbodtst Cllurrh of
J'l,lppers Plains. ·
.Evelyn 8penceJ presided at the
.meeting and the 23rd PaaJm from
tile paraphrued version of the
.i)tbM: wu rtl8d.
4

Prqp'am readlftill were )!iven
jy Joanna Weaver, Mildred
Broolls, Edltb Harper, and Edna
·Harmon. Mf,. Harper also rave
file prayer.

•

The group plans to purch.se a
natiVIty ICftt! ._. . -.nurdl.
A wiener rout•lliluuu efi)
tor Oct. 21 at -. · ~·••

ltollted by llalt-lllltt...-:
It was also IIIIMWII!ed'-.11te
chureh Thanl~qtv~Jw-Mn., will
be Nov. 15. Hazel Plarnhlll and

Joanna Weaver Will cleeorate th~.
table$ and turkeys will be fllr·
Dished and cOCIQd by Evelyn
Spencer, · Jelly {)llevaller.
Joanna Weaver, and Qoris
Koenig.

sick

TwelVl'

calls

repot'ted.

were

.

The November meeting will be
beld 011 Nov. 3 and 4 from 9 a .m. to
4 p.m. ChriStt;nas Jlfta, qulJts,'
~rter~. crafts,,ba'f!ed goods,
antlodesserts will be sold. Coffee
and cookies Will be seJ:ved during
~he ·~ar:

·,·

,

'

Also attencilnc ·the ~'meeting
were Glenna Sanders 'and .
Mildred Caldwell.
The group wUI plan a Christmas celebration: for Oec. 12, at
tbe..next meeting.

1&gt;ast
Councilor's
Ouo meets recently
'

.; It wu voted to bve the
. dll111et'a convention rommlttee
~o lefW the chlb's Christmas
~ at tbe recent meeting of
ille Put Cowlcltor's·Ciub of ~e·
;)CI • • CoUDCII323 O.uahlen of
''l\merlea wllen tbe ~P met at
- tile llall with Erma ClelAnd and
· _Dorodly Myers ai hosleSaes.

·
Marris, Lora , Damewood,
Games were COlllueted -by Thelma While, Mary K. Holter.
Cora Beegle and Opal Hollon. · · Faye Kirkhart, Pny Newell, ·•
The door . prize was v.:on by Marcia Keller, Goldie Frederick,
CharlOtte Grant.
· ·
Marrarel Amberger, Elizabeth ·
Others J~reHnt . were Fern Hayes, and auest, Sandra White.
meetla~t.

NOW .AT

••' Mary Sbowalter presided at
lbe meeting and read tbe 30th

.Psalm. Tile Lord's Piayer alld
'pledae to the American fllg were
. 11ven In unison.
.
' ·' Members are to brlq Thanks·
.~vlag poems to the November

-.
~

;_..

•

--------NOTICI Of EUCI'IOII' ON
TAll LEVY IIIIIXCIU

TMETIN MIU
UMIJATION
NOTICIIo . . . _

..
••
u

Of

g~w.,

- l n - o f l l l e·
I tluoo of tloe - d of ·
COinlllle-• of
County of - . . . ,...

•J

'

I

..

16 IIICI I~IE Pill~

.•
'

.,

oz.

..._;, ...'S, ,.

'

''

.

.

~.

•

'$9'99

' '
L.

'
\

1

'

'f

..--·

'

'

.;

.

'

'
"t

'

To amend Anicle

.....,.o..... ' .,-... ,... .

............M!AIIIIflte•
- o f doe ••••• ., ....
- . . ounty 8t 1 GIIIIIIIAL
ELECTION to Ill ....... t1oe

..
...
Ia
...............
--....
____..,
-ot-...olole.~r~

::.:
_., .., ,e-;
., ~~ ~.:;;
, . . . tloe .....

:'!r: Canil; fir . . .
puu:, • •nu .. ..._..

mof the Constitution or the State of Ohio and adding thereto Section 17a.

WHENEVER THERE IS A VACANCY IN 11IE OmCE OF 11IE U~ANT
GOVERNOR, THEGOVEJINOR SHALL NOMINATE A UEVTENANT GOVERNOR,
WHO SHALL TAKE omCE UPON CONmtMADON BY VOTE OF A MAJORITY
0 F 111E MEMBERS ELECTED TO EACH HOUSE OF 111E GENERAL ASSEMBLY.

YES

POMIIOY1 OliO

clo"'*I1HDf-:a' ,

'..

•·

:c
a ..,
......,._
.....
'";E'=·~
,..
- .... . . :v:

- . to ... ·-·
Mof
ti&amp;R ef
•
111,
•• ;; un•u

__

8114 s ••
i111Fifl.,.._

C11rd of Thankl
' " M~~tmo~i~~m

There is no provision under cu'rrem law to fill a vacancy in ihe office of Ueutenam Govemor. This
amendment would allow the Governor to choose a Ueutenant Governor. The nominee could 1101 take
otrace until a majority of all of the members of the Ohio House of Representatives and of the Ohio
Senate hid approved that nomination. Under current Constitutional provisions, when there is a vacancy
in both the offices of the Governor and Lieutenant Governor, the President of the Ohio Senate becomes
Governor.

-r:iJ.::A=:
. ..,...

.......
"',... ,,
...............
.,_., ........2 .,

........... e:a~. .
A.M..... ,
I .,__
7='1 . . . . , ...
IIUila- ef

·

?

..

.

~

.·.,r,i.i'Eat-

NO'f:ICE OF ELECTION ON
TAlf LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTIC.E io hlll'eby given
that in pursuance of a Resolution of the Village at Racin~t- 1 Racin'

on

t~

Ohio. P••ed
ht day of August.

198• . there wKI be oubmitted tp 1 vote of the p110ple of
l aid Racine Village. et 1 GENERiAL ELECTION to be
held in the COUnty of Meigs,

Ohio, at the regular place of

'
ARGUMENTS FOR STATE ISSUE 1
I

Presently; the' Ohio Constitution is silent con·
ceming the filling of a vacancy in the otrtce of
Lieute1111111 Governor. In just the last ten years,
there have ~n IV(p instances where the office of
l-ieutenant Governor became llld remained vacant
for an extended period of lime due 10 resignation
or deatb.
This propQicd amendment would allow the
Governor to nominele a candidate to fill the vacancy in the off'ICC of Lieutenant Governor. Upon approval by a COIISiitutional majority of both Houses
of the Ohio General Assembly. the nominee would
assume the otrtce of Lieutenam Governor.
Because Ohioilns have previously approved the
tandem election of the Governor and Lieutenanl
Ooverno,r. and the Governor elready chooses his
runninc mate and the eventual Lieutenant Oovernot. Ibis amendment would aHow out state· s chief
execuliv~. lo ,elec\ a l'q)lacement who will provide for continuity in both philosophy and policy,
The required advice and C!!llsent of both Houses
of the the General Assembly,for conrumation will
insure the citizens of Ohio a statewide scrutiny of
alld consensus on the proposed nominee through
their elected representatives in the Ohio General
Assembly. Just as exists in .the administrative
structUre of a bliSitldss ~iOn. the Lieulenant
Oovemor should shale the policy and management
philosophies of the Governor.

ARGUMENTS AGAINST STATE ISSUE l
Ohio no lcqet' needs elltutenant eovemor; For
five of the past ten years, the office was vacant,
and no one nOticed. Over the last fifty years, the
Ueutenant Governor bas held tlie temporary of•
fice of Governor for just eleven days .

Prior to the 1978 election, the fint in which the.
Governor and Lic11tenant Governor were elected
as a team, the Lieutenant Governor presided over
the Ohio Senate and had some inHuence and independent suppon since he was elected in his own
name. Tile Lieutenant Governor now lias no
role except that or SIICUedlng tile Governor,
should that be necessary. The succession, wii,bout
a lieutenant governor, would be the President of
the Senate and the Speaker of the House.
The State of Ohio will spend three quarters of
a mliPJon dollan In tile next two years on this
ofTice. A vote against the propeoal will give the
legialllure two messagel: I) the )IOOP.Ie,ogree that
ihe office is unnecessary alld 2) the.people ~ant
the state to confine its spending to real needs.
Submined by State Representatives
William G, Batchelder alld Joan W. Lawrence

This . proposed constitutional amelldment is
modeled upon the 2Stb Amendment to the U.S.
Cons1it11tion which has been successfully
employed twice to fill vacanc.ies in the office of
Vice Pres idem. Presently, the Ohio Constitution
provides for a method to fill vacancies in all other
elected state offices; ii should 1101-remain' sileni
concerning a vacancy in the office of Lieutenani
Governor. This is a' good housekeeping measure
for our IIIII! Constitution, and we urge iiS appt:Oval
to insure · the orderly funclion of our stale
government.

voting therein, on Tu•dav.
1he seventh day of November, 1989. the qulltlon of
levying a tax, in excenofthe
ten mill limitation. for the
benefit of Racine Village fdr
the purpose ot fire protec·

tion.

·

REYNOLDS
WHO f&gt;ASSED
AWAY

t13 .00

Monthly

1!

Alao Trt~•leelaa
PH. 992:5682.
or 992•7.1121
'
.

'

.30

u .oo

.42

.60

S1 . 30 t d•v

.OIS t dey

ti•" ......... •d•

Cla.•.•i.fied pn{{&lt;'·• cnr·t• r I lu•

THE '
BASin WEAVE

foil nrd Ill( 1••lt•plrtme &lt;'Xclrtmp-t•.&lt; ...

36425 ledc"'hlp ••.

Galli• County

Meigs County

Meson Co. WV

Ar1eCode 114

Are11 C:nrlf!' 114

AU'!II COdf 304

441 -· 0IIIIpOiil

992 - Middleport
Pom•ov

451 - Lwon

218-- G'-'•" Din .
843 --Arebie Dltl.

3?9 · Walnut

247 -· bU•' Felts

112

. BASKET

God saw that he
was suffering;
Tile hills were hard
to climb .
So He closed his
, weary eyes
An!! whispered,
•peace be thine.'
Time will never
. dim
lhe memones
Of the one l dearlv I
loved;

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL

tubmttted to • vote
people of Mid Meigo County
11 o o GENERAL ELECTION
to be held In the County of
Meig1, Ohio, It the regular
pi- of .v oting therein. on
Tu11doy. the IIVOfllh day of
November, 1989. the quOI·
tion of levying 1 tex. in
e•c•• of the tll"' mill limitation, for the benefit ot Meigs
County for the purpose of
current operating ex
Said tax being: 2 en additional tax of five tent~ mill
10 run for live 15) yeoro ot o
rate not eJt:ceeding .li milia
tor Hch one doll• ot valultion. which 1mou m1 to five
cents l$0.06) for eech one
hundred doll•• ofveluatton,
lor flvo 15) yuro.
Tho Polio lor Mid Election
will be open at 8 :30 o'clock
A.M . 11nd remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M.
By order of the Boord of

lntr•tat• long di1tance alternative operator aaailted
telephone oorvicll in 73

SERVIC~

11

voice, •

love is missing
Since God called
him home.
Sadly miesed but
not forgotten,

~~::n !'~::':n ~:te~:;

detailing the reasons on or
beloro Novombei 1. 1989.
\Jnl•s the Co.mmiasion receiv• 1 . wrttten etatement
to that effect 1nd an accompanying requeit for oral

2111 M111 Out New

In Memortam

Happy Ads

~=;;~~;::::::::

tim• · my mind

go11blck

To Bight yeert ago
And what It meant to 1oM
you
No one wll never know.
I think of you 10 often
You're in my thouglttltodoy;
.
And memory Ia one gift
of God
That death c~n't take

Your memory il my keep -

·sne

With lhlt I'll n-r port
God hll youln Hlo liMping
I heve you in my heart.
Sodly miued lty wif1i -

Nora

Hove Thot Furnace
Checked.
We Service AI
Makes - Gas or
Electric. Also Parts
·for All Makes .

llowanl L WrlteMI

Olrll•l'' I. MJ P• Pt
I. M• N• M•ICI111r.

NEW - .RIP All

N•l' I. ICiu•
Wullg Cll• M1KIII••

ISSUE 1
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
(Amended House Joint Resolution No. 2)
JOINT RESOLUTION

CAll flOW

KEN'S APPLIANCE

Propoaina to tmend Anicle III of the Constitution of the State of Ohio by adding thereto Section
17a to provide for the filling of a vacancy in ihe office of Lieutenant .Govem.or.
·
- /k it niOI~ by IM ~Mral ' Asstmbly of tht Start of Ohio:
. Three-fifths of the members elected to each house concurring herein, that there shall·be submiued
to the electors of the state in the manner prescribed by law at the general election ro be held on the
· fi~ TIICidly after die rtnt Milnday in November, 1989, a proposal to amend Anicle Ill, of die Constitution of Ohio 11y adding immediately followins Section 17 a new Section 17a as follows:

•·

~-

....

Section 17a. WHENEVER THERE IS A VACANCY IN THE OFFICI\ OF LIEUTENANT
GOVERNOR, THE GOVERNOR SHALL NOMINATE A LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, WHO
SHALL TAKE OFFICE UPON CONFIRMATION BY VOTE OF A MAJORITY OF THE
MEMBERS ELECTED TO EACH HOUSE OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
,_ .

""'

SEIVICE
992-5335 or
915-3561

All MAKES AND
MODELS

13" through 205· I 5"
$30.00 a Pair

MAUIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

Mountlfl and lalanml
"FREE"

SALE nAITS

SEPT. 29, 1919

222 Ead.in

L&amp;L TIRES

POMEIOY, OH.

FIVE

992·6872 .

OliO

USED

Basham luildina

-r-"
E'Y 11"1 ' ' " .,.
4

...,~

SAT. NIGRJ.
6:30P.M. '
Factory Choke

12 Gauge Shotguos Only
Strictly Eiiforctd
IO· !Hfn

LIVING lOOM SIITtS
IEDIOOM SIITES
DINEm SETS
"N(W" IICUNEIS
Locatad Behind'!
Trilctor Dealersl!ijl

lii·CO. . . .'fE·
I PISI CONIROL
SIIICI 1976

ROACHES o FLEAS

NEWLAND
IINTERPRISES

TERMITES o ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES •WASPS
..... . llatlonll Pill
COiilrol Assn.

,......

DUMP TRUCK

Sand-Stone-Dirt

(614) . . 7·3171
. Gr•t A. •wtaad

1·100·535-tl"
i mo.

7-11.'19-tln

'

.

.

'

.

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

Will Video Tape
Waddings,
Birthdays.
Reunions, Interiors
of Homes for
ln1urarice.

Call 742-2486
After 5_.-:··:·

GUN SHOOT
IACCOON VALLEY
SPORmmt'S aua
It, 124 . . . . .

Wllb•llil!e •1111

•Gravel
•Lim11tone
•FlU Dirt ·
742-2 ..21

Seisin C.t•

EYRY SUNDAY
11:00 lJI.

12

11· 20-lfn

. 'l

o..p . . _ o.Jr
Fatlliy dieb

SliiCnY

IWOIICEDI

8-21-•9·1 mo.

I

.

••"+"-

~~--~-

.... ....

FOUND: Sol of klylll lic...,.O
;:~.Call •• -•bo. '1 ~
Fllllllo Cocker apo- Ciolllj.
PIQM cokN'. Ne.ds p~Ml• to'"·

PH. 949·1101
or hs. 949·2160

3 BR ranch home . 2\\
baths. ~full .basement. 2

II4YI IIFIDIKIS

61··..5-4110

992-2571

FREE ESTIMATES

Tab tha pala aut of

pttiotl,. let - do
. It er you.

voY wso•AIU

'-22-19

· Ntwlllal~:
161 North Sonii!l '
"'l'rptr1, Oloio.4S760

RUTlAND TOWNSHIP

145 acres, bam.
bottom, hill

SALE5 &amp; SERVICE ..

timber, 2 producing 'gas wells.
$45,000
l 7
-214

Wo Carry Flohlog ...ppll•

Your Phone

~II,"'• Bills Hen
IIUSIIIISS 16141 Ht-6SSD
1011111(1 -

16141 H2':W!.4

1

MOBiu
HOME PARI

WATER

~ ,000

GAUOIIS
'POOLS, WEUS
:.; ; ClmiNS
'

Call Anytime

9U-7U9

p_.,.,,

992-2371

It. 33 llcwth o"
Ohil tin

{•

!

1·13-'U·

1/1!1.19 ...

POIIEIOY .UGUS

' BUILDERS

C~UI
224 E. MAIN ST .
992·9176

;. CUSTOM BUll
HOMES &amp; GAIIAGES

11IUIS. 1.1. 6:45 , ...
' SIIt.I.L h4S P.M. I

"A I IHSOII.It Prices"

.

2 H.D. FlEE llilh COU]IOI1111d; I
pu:chae of min. H.C. Pack· I
~~~ Lim• I coupon per cuS: 1
t - per biiifl IISIIOII.
I

·, ~t~~.

949-2101

, r las. 949·1160
Day or Night

j ~ SUNDAY CAllS

I·
I

~.

L ~ HOLLON

TRUCKING

ATAU

.985-4422

POIIIIOY,.O

7 p.m,

9-U·II- 1

mo.

pd.

•aE ·

' SIIAU. IIIGliiE

n•m•.owas

··-·Cit"
' AI..,_
ICIIO $AWS illll

115

·lYAII WHCI Uild

I

..,., .....

Oa

VISA IIAITEIICMMQI
HOUIII: Moft.• l'rl. f. 7
I

992-5114
At
t
o..tl111t,-ll.,_

.,_.

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity

I

'o

I

•

ALL Ylod Soloo- llo. ~
DEADLINE: 2:00
11oo dol' bo1ore tho ed lo 10
......., ed111on • 2:00 .....

AdVIIICO.

F-.. llondly IOflllon • 11:00
p.m.~rdly.

Wanted to Buy . ,1
Flil'iillft onclopplloncoo br'*'

9

p&amp;ac:e ot entire heM uhct~- ~

~ lilloog .PIId .•CII ~1~
Jwllc . , . wHh

withOUt

or

motors. Call Larry UM!j 114--

311-9303.
.,

Calh Paid. Call .,~ ..tHei7er
li~.SD2:2~1.

Toloocco bo•n, pocket MI...,
pockll
WI1Chiilo, ~
moclolnory &amp; anvil old
,
aDYW coine, 81447'-2110.
•
Ulld Form Tract.,. · I EqUip.
ment, Clah or trade. Jim'• F1nn

:=''·

Qolllpolll, coif

~4-

Uud lumlture and houlthold

-- -

eDI)I'-rte••·
2041.

....,..

PheNW

Uoocl fumuu ..

114-742-

by 11oo ,.... .,

.

,

.......
·•

Help Wanted • ~

11

ANYONE CAN APPI.YI Oootruo-

tooct

.,_c, us choor91· - .

wllh bod c:ocfH. No OliO N1u .....
Coli 21 1-921-tiOIIIlll. U2IGI. ' •

AVON I All AieM I

Sjooooro, S04-1711-1~ZII.

AVON • all INII, Coli
WMw.-ICM-II2·2MS.

SlolfiiJ'
·

iiMiiJ1;
f&amp;

BE ON T.V. many .-..r
commerc:LIIII. Now hirfna WI
- · Fot calling lntor. colT 115-

llbyattl.-, lox 1402 Rl. 1
Clooololro, oH ~sua.
8o 011 TV .,.., noodod lot
commoocloll. Foi CMIInt Info&gt;.
I1S.n.7m 1111. T-5113.

8o 011 TV many lot
oommercllll. NOw htrlna all
Fot Cllllnt lnlo .. ~l'lfl.
7111 olll. T-113.

.. on TV·

m~nr

nNdld tor

COSMETOLOGIST.

Fonlllllic

DOIIImerC:lllla. N0w hirina all
Far ........ lnlo. 11~n..
7111 1111. T·513.

lim's will open eoon. o ...,.n-paid -waclltor..
..............
looloro,
lllflaalrl
&amp;
olylllll - - "~·1011

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
• · •FILL DIRT
•ANYTI41NG

111-COUNIY
RECYCLING

9 a.m.-

Yard Sale

Myl-.

CHESTII, OHIO

7 Days A Week

-mix

771-7111 Eort. T-483 •
Boioylmor, llon.frl, 7-4:30. 2
glrll, _._ &amp; S 112 y11. Old.
bo 1'11111111 • ._.........
Send name. ot :1 reflrenc• to

~; BISSELL

BINGO

HOURS

7

mole

Employment Serv1ces

~SERVICE

eMoblte Home ·
·. .- . Partt.
· •Mobile Horne
Rantal1
•Lat Rentals

Plastks,
Stainlen

Two I wkl old

ti~·7U·24SS.

ourttit-

We Bur AI
Non Ferro"
Metals,

'·'1

Pro liMO quiHo. Any condi!JOio •

HIGLEY FAD

PLUMIING &amp; IlEAliNG

l•lrlfoo

11~-9112-50011 .

Qui..

,FOR SALE

• ...... 150.00 "' Go...
d,., liD ....... 165.00
,., G.nt

i;±

Full •lze bed with boK Nrinal.
no mattr... , 304-571-211"1. - ' -

HOUSe FOR SALE
car p11ge, 10x60 ft.
deck , 3 acres plus 1'h
acr~ lake. Mint cond .
$120.000 lirm. All new
drates. fully carpeted.
BuiO·jr! lg. TV. stove &amp;
refrfg. See-through fireplate.

DOOIPIIU

wh~o

Fluffy
&amp; bloelo .
puppy, ..... ao~~~any s;;;r.i.
614-3118-8708.

puppM .. worm.d, lOt-tll-111(!.

IIIJEIIIOR-ImRIOII

L

t14-llilf·
•

,PAY IUU FOU

992·2196
Middleport, '?~~c~

LINDA'S
PAINTING.

' I

Call

'"'"tors.••

"Fr• ES'tlmld:aa"

'-"''=

r,._

·

Gn kKohoon r"''l' lo give . . .

EVERY SUNDAY

L W.
STEWART
TIUCIONG

n-

,;

hHtw corn. We can
. . acid bail .... rod
out
also
rlpllir GasTaldls.

GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Ftxtoty Ch..ed 12
Gaii!JI

~

Giveaway

Block puppl11. llolhoor: ooroc~, Golden Rolt-r.

Wa ''" ~r and rec«t ratliatan and

RACINE

Beginning Sept. 17

4

·~

y lilnd on Rtymond Smllh:O

:~b.. k"'"'' 10 I'Jil\i
~~;.,.':~~ 1 r.:,&amp;~

tE~ICE

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CC).

u. nas.u

4/1/81/0fn

mo.

CLEARI.G

I

Homellte. Weede1ter.
Tecum11h, Briggs &amp;
Stratton.

IVININGS ·

Salem ·St..:;::;.
hllaM
1

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Most 2 end 4 -cycle
engin81
Stock Parts tor

BILL SLACK
992-226t

742·2455
e.·

LMatwd at Yalay l .....r
In lllcWiaport, Oh.

•FIREwooo·

MORRIS
- · EQUIPMENT

___

DAVE'S .
SMAU INGINE
REPAIR

•LIGHT HAULING

SITEWORK - ROADS

Sherrod Brown
Scmtary or State

Gutter Cleaning

949-2161
• t-1.... ., _ "

•SHRUB 8t TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

FURNITURE

DOZER

MAKE IT ARilE... ,
USE WANJ ADS. :
AHAllY
. TOOL

Gutters
Downspouts

FREE EmMATES

6·5·'19-tln

9-27-'89·tfn

OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STATE OF OAIO
I, Shc1tod _Brown, Secti\Uiry of Stale, do hereby cenify thai the rorce,ng.is a true copy or Amendell Houle Joint ReliOiudon No. 2, rded in the offtce of the SecRiary of Sl*te~ proposing to amend
the CotUtitution of the Slate of Ohio, toaether with the ballot languqe and eltpllnllion cenir!cd to
me by die Ohio Balloc Board and araumenll for and apinstthe amendment s11bmiaed ro me by the
apprupriate committees, 11 prescribed by law.
IN TI!!STIMONY WHEREOF, I heve hereunto subscribed my"name and affixed my orftcial seal
at Columbus, Ohio on the lth day of Sepletllber, 1989.

SWEEPER ~EPAIR

614-992-5344

GUN SHOOT
lAClNE
FIRE DEPT•

IOO,ING

Farm.

61141.

•VINYL
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
.
INSULATIOI~

S-17-tfn

741, '' ,, •r
,,.,,,,,...,

~-- «

Noiollbrokln.

1600 GAUqlt

·)

.
.
11

'(614) 446·7619 01 (614) 992-2104
417 S.COIId Avenue, llal1213
- Gallipolis. Ohio 456311
Or it
Veterans Memorial Hospital
··.,ulberry Hcts. Pomeroy, ·

ALLEN'S
HAULING
WATER SERVICE
UMESYONE
SPIUD
. Dll1' HAULED
992-5275

·

. .

114/ 19-1111

Painting

USED TIRE
SALE

No huntlnt .,

992-9922 or 992-i22fi

z

992~6U4

Entertainment
"Jan and Kathy"
Call Any Board
Member or Our
New Office· at 382
E. Second St..
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992·2403
Public Invited

·

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
!:r:- Ucensed
Clinical ·~dialogist

SYIACUSE
992-2621 er

Door Prizes,

IWiy.

3 Announcamems ••

z

BOB'S
HEAnNG &amp;.
COOLING

Steak Dinner

Yo• Arel1tltd

Pina-Subs-Salads-Dclilv Soecials

NO SUIIDAY

1919, 7:17P.M.

They're Gniat

Announcements

Htarinl Aid Sales &amp;Son:ietl 3yr. old roglllored .....
Hurin&amp;
Evaluations
for All Aees
eocur SponiOt, '"" Wllildl.
0
good hOiiil.

742·2'771
1st visit FlEE

Meigs Co. Farm
Bureau Amual
Meeting Tuesday
Night, Oct. 24,

who paoaad ow•y
Oct. 18, 1981 .

i

SUSAN COLEMAN

C1ll '" Fell $peelllt

I

3 Announcements

, In memory of
ASA E. JORDAN

POMEIOY AND .DDLEPOil'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PI1ZA SHOP.

:::~~~::.~:~~~~~1~8~
/1~mo~.~pd~.
listenina l)evices

u-ttl.'ln
llltlallfll, 011.
5

ANt

IW~.

FRll lOCAl DEUVEIY

Certiti.d lictnMd

SUN'S UP
TANNING

.

IN THE.• : ·

PRICES
IIGHEST QUAUTY

"DOC" VAUGHN

WWTADS

~

Jl

LOWEST

CAll 992-6756

Business Services
It's Time Now!

STREET
P,IZZA

Most Foreign and
Oom•tlc Vehlcl•
A / C Senrie~~
All Mllior 6 Minor
Aeptirt
NIASE Certified M.ch111ic

Thlng. .re buUin'ln lho

~

~.,.MAIN.

SYIACUSf, 0110 .

pen••·

count• In Ohio. Any interested person, firm , oorpora·
tion, or entity who Cln show
a good cou11 why tlolto oppllcetion should not be granted

HERE"• AI All!

i=~:::::::;;;;;·,,::;,~ ~FORE·. ~~ou.· ;.

ClASSIS Off(lfD

N....,. Maven

-•

'

PuiiHno

1

WUWING

Public I\I.!Jiice

No .
89-429-TP- ACE) ro,
quooting outhc&gt;rlty tofurnloh

Oft.ft

FAMILY HOMES INC.
614-992-2471
P. 0.... 207
P·-····
locllil Ownod • Oporllled lty 811. 51,.1.

SUPPliES .

895 - lttltt
937 - lutflio

941 - R•eine
742 - Rutltnd

Cape Cod &amp; 2 Story

992-6155
HANDWOVEN IASKETS

&amp;71 - A.,ole Grove
773 - M11nn

SUlCI 1970

•-•Y• OIL

67tii - Pt. Pleat.,•t

181 - Ch•ttr
,14J - ·Por1tlnd

1 &amp;.:.~~1-h,

MOD£l OPEN DAII. Y MONDAY TNIU' SATIIROAY
1:00 P.M.-6:00 P.M. ot Cal Fot Afpointmant

187 - Coohlille

with tho
Public Utlltill
Commission of Ohio (Cue

2

OCT. 16. 1983

'

:.

16

311 -- Ch•hi••
JII - VInton
14&amp; - Rio Gr•nde

LEGAL NOTICE
Nollf"' lo glv .. thet UTII Tolecommunicltion• Corporation hat filed i.n appliCittol'f

8t Children

Submined by:
State Represenlalive Daniel P. Troy
State SeJ!81ors Charles Henry and Roy R. Ray

10

.20

.

A amil8,

'.

11.00

Said lax belng: 2 1 renewal
of an exilting taJC. ofO . 7 mill1 heM"Ing on such IIIUI, this
to run for five (6) years at 1 m.U•wlll bedecidedonthe
rate not u:ceeding 0. 7 mills basil of the inform.rton conElectiono,
of Moigo
for each one doll1r
of tained In tho oppiiCition ond
.
County.
Ohio
valuatlon, which emounts to the offidov~o oubmi1ted toy
Ewlyn Clork.
lftYen centa($0.07) for each lho eppllcont. Further lnfor,
Chairmen
Jarui-M. Frymyer, Director
one hundred
dollara, ot million ml'/ be obtoined toy
valuation, for five (15) yeers. contacting the Public Utili·
Dole: Soptornbei 11, 1989
The Palla for uid Election tiel Commiltion of Ohio.
110) 18, 23, 30, (11)641c
will be open ot 6 :30 o'clock 180 E1s1 Brood StrHt, Col·
A .M . end remain open until umbuo. Ohio 43266~0573 .
(10) 16 1tc
7 :30 o 'clock P.M .
By order of the Board of ·
· Public N atice
Elections. of Moi!ll
County. Ohio
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
EveiynCioorll,
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Chairmen
THE TEN MILL ·
Jane M. Frvmyer, Director
LIMITATION
Date! September 12, 19.8 9
NOTICE io hereby given
(10) 16. 23. 39. (I 1) 6 4tc
that in pursuance of 1 RtIOiutMJ.n of
the Oelli•
2 In Memoriam
Jacklon - Meigs Mentel
Heolth Boord of 1he the
coumill o.l Gllllo. Jackson. ·
IN MEMORY OF
ond Meigo, Galllp-. Ohio.
p•Md on ttw 17th d.y of
HARRY C.
July. 1981, thero wit toe-

.

•

.

n

_

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

A•es•r• for con•cutiv• runs broken urtd~•will bl! ch.,-Qed

Public Notice

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No. 1

$4.00

3

fnr eRh

· A ctessil•ed lilh'tttiltm ..t pl.:.ct in The Oeltv Sent inet le• ·
CliP. I - cl•tifiefl dii~!IW' · l~nin•• C.erd and, .... notic"!
wMI •Ito l~peM in- """ Pt. Plt••"t Rt9i1te'r end the G11HI
po~1 Deily Tribune. ,.actling Off"' 11 .000 flomtK

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

Rt. 124, P-oy Ohio

o~,~,, 11 Wor.

. A•le

15
16

e

HtPPW Ads
V llf'd S•h•

NO

lt1JR:

........ .,,.. 7 . . .

•ttff

Words

1

.,

~Vf-'{9'1 tomah conection
* A s u,., must be pthf in •dv•nce erf"

d

(Proposed by Resolution or the &lt;Jenera! Assembly of Ohio)
A --.Jority ya 'fOte II nee ery for .. n1z .

tit of

,_... llll~lllty . . . . .AI
· ·- ' • • ...,... ...,... II to

..

Days

I
"Adt Outs ide Mei~s . Galfi11 or Masnn enunti" muu bf' ptr
;..
"Aec.tva S SO dilcount for tdt .-id in ldvtnce
•free -.:Is -- Givetwly and f nund • rl$ llhd..- 15 Wf'od~twill be
run 3 d~t ~~ na oh•t-.
•
•p,;,.. o...d ·fo, •" e._itilt IMtM11 is ttnuh1e pri(:ll! nf 111tt ens !
: '1 ~o ~nt_ '"'"""" ditJ(+i-d r , ~ •
S.flhn~l, PPJ.fflpop&amp;lblfl fur errou 1her firs~ d..- /Check
Oot.lrnH ilfhif' d~ athul'lt WI P811et'l Call bt~fore 2 ·00 p m

.,

·.. Domino's
Pllza
ftt-2114.
WDIIAIII

~~ P

PROPOSED CONmTU110NAL AMENDMENT

1

TO PLACE aN AD dLL 992-21 56
MONDAY . thru FIIDAY f A.M: 1o 5 P.M.
I A.M. ·untn NOON SATURDAY

a·
HOME?
MODUI HOMIS

EED

Roger Hysell
. Ga~age

• 'h• Area's Number 1 Marketplac:e

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

c.-.,

:liN., Df ...... , _ ,

.•

II'

PIZZA.
.

Classified

Wednesday at 1:30 p,m. wllh
Mrs. Roy Holter as hostess.
" MISter Spy" by Phillip
Katghtly will be reviewed by .
Mrs, Chesler Erwlll. Roll call
respon~~e will lie a famous spy
and their undotnc. '

.

'

Business Services

{.

POMJ:It01' -t» a - 1
REEDSVILLE -The Ohio
meeting
II r. Melp Cauty
ptvlltoa of Wildlife wllllfOIIIOI' a
C0118ell
1111
Alial. Will M lleld
llunter safety coune 011 MoMay ,
Tllesday, Tllun4ay, and Oct. l3 TuHday at 1 ' '''"- at ~ Seator
at Easlen High Scllool from 6-9 Clltzens Cenler. 1M meert'' Is
p.m. each evenlll&amp;. Prereglstra· open to all Ill&amp; 2 : ult!M&gt;eenter
tlonla required andclussl&amp;e will 1114 to all -.... llave rude
be limited to 40 students. Call contrlllu dollS. Dletiia ef tnm·
tees will bt lieN .., three yaar
1-800-282-3557 to register.
COOLVILU: -The Vanderterms. Tlw -'111 IIIII lata! hoof Baptist Chureb, Coolville,
~ ~ POMEROY -ThefallmMtln&amp; endty for all ....-r w tletl Win have Its fall revival Wednes• 01 the Meigs Co11nty GarWII Chili ntell ..,...•• • .r•c-.. day through Satllfday at 7 p.m,
.will be lleld Monday at 7: • p.111. TH IIHnl 11 r 1 r " •
.ach evenlnr. !lev. Mark
:a1 tbe exte11slon offlft on Mill· ptannlnc, tundlq, ... .,._tlon McClune of the Mullen Memorial
'betTy Heights. Chester club will of these servl~ .
Baptist Church will ·. be the
'hiist. Friends and Flowers will
oevangellst. P.uter Cecil A. MorMIDDLEPORT- The Mlclcfte. rison'·!nvltes tbe public.
.!lave tbe program. Repft!SI!Dta·
port
Chamber of Cjmlmerce will
:nw. must be present to draw for
meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the ' MIDDLEPORT -The annual
classes for !be Christman sbow to
VIllage
Hall.
be held Nov. 18 and 11 at tbe
join!. pallia Melp Scottish Rite
.RoYal Oak Resort.
Dinner wUIIle held Wednesday at
WEDNESDAY
6: 31) .p.m , at the Middleport
'
SYRACUSE -The Syrac11• . MaSOIIic ' Temple. The speaker
TUESDAY
POMEROY- The lallles auxll· Third Week Homemakers Cltlb will be Harry Reissig, thrice
Jtary of !be Fraternal Order of will meet at 10 a.m, at tbe potent master, Enoch Lodge of
.Eagles 2171 wllllla~ a meeting mU11itlpal bi!Udlll&amp; 011 W ednes· Perfection. '
day. MetiiMn are to brln1
'l'llesday night at 8 p.m.
Sllppllea · ta· Jaake country
RUTLAND '-TThe American
·' POMEROY-The Sllatfy River cllanller ells. Call t92-2212, Legion EU DennisOn Poat 467,
~utflers will be havlq berln· 9!1:1-34011, or Ht-2616 for list of
Rutland, will hallea COVl'red dish
:nla&amp;cloalngclassesoa'l'll~ supflles.
·
dinner · on Wednesday tor
.'
members, . their Wives, and
from 6: :J)-7: 30 p,m. at tiM
Pomeroy Municipal Bulldlnt, A
MIDDU:PQftT -Tile Middle- friends . Dinner will be, at 7:30
f2 donation will be take~. The port Literary Cllib wiU meet' p.m. and llleetlnr at ·s p.m.

.
.• ·Practice tor Inspection was
. beld wbe11 the Chesler Council
323 Daurhters of Anl.-lca met
receatly at the hall with Vlrrlnta
Lee as councilor,
, _The pledge to the Christian and
Alnerlcat1 flap were riven,
110111 wpth the Lord's Prayer,
alld lbealnglqafatlftratstanza
ol the Star ._... •
Chapter 1 of NIIIIIWs, VftWI
1-5 were also read.
It wu repor1ed that Ethel
Arbaugh wu taken to tbe

1118 Dilly

t'OflliJJOY-MIIJOtepOR, UlliO

J%11 I 1'he Deltt fl iltNt

IARN MONEY lloodlrit looQI
1111.~. 1 - I'Oionliol.
DIIOI!o. (11 - 7 - 1 1 1. y.

,.....

IARN MONEY IYPIIIII Ill loome•
IJO,OOOJw•r lnCOmli PCJCentlal.
· 1-IOHI7- bl. .. .
10tft.

�pq.

Pon•oy-Middllport. Ohio

I
~ LAFF-A-D~Y

_ __]J tw

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

....

1

-,·---.-LA===Goods

Ill. 7 Ret • .,.., -.q'd.
114-4-.

.,........,......... ...
'-- lftlft•••· .....
llobi.. HolM

7741.

•

44

Rent

hD.-- ...,_
hD.- - .......

::::;;:;~~ ;~:::~~j

··wha t

~:"01.,.,
lorgo
-

kllcMn,
only. waal;.«y
No .,..,.

T - - Colll14 Ul 1127
~-1:30p.

. tha t' S ~~-~;io;;;~""~-;;;;-;;;t:c;:
me lS
2 , , , _ op4o. tor rant. earpotod. -ltll. loundry
hiS analyst Caffyl" ng the tacll•lot
· - · Cil1114-tlt·
~, EOH
1Mr work
at home.
train."
1 ._.,_.,
unlumAIINd ape
b
•eMr
a._
lof -limo
~;";;..;,";..:.;::.:;,
· --:,-,..,..-"7'"'No 111por1orooo naodld. Call 1· "==========-i'"---------'1- 11o1ur Clinic o1 wv. 114-

104-141·7771 Eott. !1214- 24!

-.lnaluclfno Suriday.

18

.
WOITieS

Wantld to

4411-tt•lofrnonlntormoUorT.

Do

31

d ...... .. ........
_ _ naodld ""ptryok:lan'o ctrr1ot1an Mcotloor o12 - l l k o
oftlco. X-ray lllfll'l- -fl. Ia bo-i~homo ::::::,.
cial but not nec....ry. lend SIL AI
1911:- t o P.O. 77t, Ha-, nallabla, -too. Hovo
WV115311.
ploy -.largo yard,- tovo
to . - W/yOUr clol\d, or
fllx Inc. Flaxlblo hllnh chlldran. 814-44\1.1332 onytlma
..,. -•lc• , _ .... piing axcopiSundlyo,plooao.
ow lor RH'I LPII'o a taxi. p ltkotll avalleble, Experitncecf care In IN' hCHM
-~ w Ylr l~Kont
far oldorty ,. light handlcoppod.
- - . ... ·gt
uc ' 114-371-Blt...,..n2,.p.m.
bpoo\ol

=
._..It

..... RN'8 1'12
't $8. ,
tuf, : · : • wnh shift cUffwen.

!:' dullna .,::~!:::;. :'::~d~

=

~u':""r"tary prlrnarllj

•c:~~=~~~· ·Val~po..:;Hol,
I

• ololft

...,

1111

, iOiJ

.
Do
I ool Iooby oltttr far a
Mndloop child, SYlVIa JohnoDfo,
304-77S-11140., '1?3-6541 .

~ r- -

bu!ilnaool Work
..... - l n g ca. at h - .
Paop1o 011~ otort up ,..._
41
- 146 1
.....
Point Buotnaoa. tolillof1- port t l • · " " - 1io1p, appioxlrroataJr
\""o-i2 1ono por - . _,Ina
houri, $31. waakly. Bani
...... to Box 84!1.....,. Point
Aag\ol;y"'"'- St.,
25110·
Point ·

· Col\114 Ul 2181. EbH.
Fum. Elflcloncy $145 utllnloa
11i,
Sacond
19
:"' 4 .:.~ 1 on1 '
'
._ .....-. 1 1
32 Mobile Homes
.,..m.
.
Fu-~~
br *Ill
.._ - · 1 • •
tor Sale
uo1111oo
... 111oora both 101.
Fcourth ~lllpotto, 114 ui 4411
12&gt;&lt;10 trallor, po~laMJ lutnlohod, ••• 7p.m.
nlco flat tot, $14,000. OIB/0 ;
nlca loCOUon. 114 44f.I005 oftor Fum- apartmont, 1br1 $221.
lp.m.
Utllllloo pd. 131
Gatnpotlo. 114 411 441hnor 7p.m.
tm Ftomlnoo. t2d5in 2br. 1
124
=--~
P~t ~~:1::0:.\d~iao 1F!';,h
441-TIII.
·
Mpol\a, 114-444-44tlanor 7p.m.

:!a.~~ oitt!i:".:r,t110::

~ .. ..,., .. _ . . , . _

tHOTICEI
AM.
OliO Yo\LLEY PUILIIHI,.... CO.
rwuoomanda lhat ~ c1o
IM•I
poopto
kMW,
and NOT to oanol
lhnlugh . . ....

p1:c'2!.-..~~".
EJ:':J
-

-·Point-·
_,.:!'
"".;;...
Slooi;.,'l
W¥, -

~._::
-·r·--.

applk:ot-

Jl:'~bor~

B

Opponun11y

*rf!'=

~~"':' :'1'!.. ...:. ':',.~
-

-... aoo

Main It, Pl. Pl., WI/ 111150.

==

No ,_ _ _ W.r

DH

M.
Gat-

csat.
:
11ara .,.. VldOo ]""'"
ooooolllrood far 1111, In ' " ' ..._ 114-tt2-3130 or 11...a.
UTI.

T - -rnr:~
milA ~ u
I
'
IS7.z1311.
Will -bllohorl boouty ~lon,
Y1SMIASTERCARD
nry ,_..bly prlcod., 114311U.S. CMAAOE OUAIWITEED
olor ap.m.
'
0# CRi.DIT
RDI.Ess
REGA
23 Professional
J~
Services
12t3)112111atEXT. tJ2524,
McDonlol Cuatarn lutelrorlno. I

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

12xll a-ncn
lnoiUdarl, nloo, 1 112 blitho, vlnrl
undlrpenning, 11120 edd-1·
room, U,IOD. JOWJI.-.a;
1N1 Llborty 14xl4, $7000. t1437\1.2443.

Furnlohod apt. tbr, 1300, utllftaa
pold. 701 Fourth Oalllpollo, 614"'""'411 ••• 7p....
O..cl..,. llvl,.. 1 and 2 bed,_, opartmonto at VIIManor
and
Rlvaralila
Aport mont I In Mldd'-1. From
1t81 Filii Wood 14x70, 3br, 1114. From Soptombor 1111h Ia
111,500. 114-245-t1:12.
N....,bor 11th, flrot mqnth ..,,
frao to t - who quall"'. Call
Cla&amp;~xll, 3br, muat 114.el2•7717. EOH.
'~'"
I'IIOV'I,
• 11W7f..2720,
avenlnp.
New 1 bt. tum. or unfum.
rtrnont In Mid•~ lt42 bod,_,tiiOUiil~y. 14x52. apom
...,.....
All -~•. lumlohod. 111100. 102-4304 .,,-..au. . .
114.ft2-747t.
- l y -·111 apl. air, - ·
In Oallllpcotl La d
nbt c1oor to Hlonfv.
2 br· I20.D • · n .ulleblii tar one HuM. 11.._...
11
!.,.~ ,DOD. + OW.
R
Inc 28R ~
ho
fl ..... lnoludoa
·~ now
tor. eon ltc.lt2-.
.
33 Fanns for Sale
Cal
75-1t04.
·
-~ turn. · oiAtable "" 1
2T ocrw firm. 4 milo from town, ar 2. 114 411 0331.
nrro1 wtor. tonk. wMr
hoals~. 11~2101.
'IWtn Rl'llf'tl r ...., Houtrlng for
tho Eldany, Hondlco_., and ·
35 loll 8r AC181ge
Dloablod.
Looatod .
naar

wfth~---lcwotor.

Ctydo-. Ji i114-17W:ne.
- . . . . torso 111111c1na 1ot1.
parmHtocf,' public
- · · pr1ooo raducod, c1yda
- · .lr. 304-171-2131.
Lob Far lalo • OaiUpollo Forry,
...
- p- - ·· 104-1752722
·
ll\,.. 4-eCN tracta, Gurwtlle
Roed.
owner
Flnenclng
Avollablo. •100 dawri. ItO ocro
t-. h.OOO down. 304-1757117.
Woocland, 132 ecrt~, 131,000,

-12

Sltultlon
Wllntld

=
.._-Call

- . .ond
"" .......,.
114
11DI.WO ..,. lof ow.ty and lion: - - 2ell.
1 ,..,.
- l o t:-: .I.Jitlao
a114-1112...73
.... 7:10 p.ra. tor fftOrw lntoJ..

-·

Re&lt;JI Estotc
31

Homes for

Sllel

3 bad1wm home ~tbom,
-~ both. Comjojototy
r.m all•ad IMkle ~~ ~
OWner Rnanoed,
o - 304-511-2412 or
4.
1
3 """'
lr::r-·Mtk\dcot!il
war.
loport,
no

4

nz,soo.

oo-. . po'l:'lt~:
. .
="=i=Y

-=.·--·Opport....,.

~~7t.Pto~ualt,

~·-

_,

Unturn. ,A;t.,
IDI 4 _ , . • both.
Contranr acatod. Soc. Dop. •
Alhton. booutllul ona ..,. loto Aaf. roq od. 114-4410444.

~o-.--3124!

Nid.s.MA "NRIC,12U
·~-·­

"""'Ina.

1.25 .... tot on Rt. 110. 4 mllH
- - .. 010. v\ow o1 tho
r y· - · $5,000. 114-4411373.

Y1cloo ..... jabbor, - . . . . ""

• llout• Cis \ollll Ad.
. . . . 201, OH 44321. At-

-om

1174

to= 1 =--=
·-11,

.._,
It I.A.S.I.
ibrct.aanc1
At. 3 ... 1254,
l1polio,

o!

1-

I
US nell ;

lnVMfigllrftM........

Ia .,.. ID .... D'tWin 11otM
ol oldorty lody no- ar care
ln............. tolata -

C!1r":n.."\.m.

,

21

&amp;'!1.!.!:..

-na.

HAl REFERENCES. PLEASE
CALL AFTER SP.M. lt4-2111o
1111.
I

R il t:v "" laog · _ . - , , . . or port 11-.
~- ~ eo-pel
- r a.-...

IEAUT1FUL APARTMENTS AT

Unlurnlohod houao, 3br, Aodnay
Vll-ll. $250~oflroncoe, lt4441-4411 aftor •p.m.

=:J"&amp;AJHTINO·
~:
ELECTRICAL. PLUMIIHO EXP.

Fmanc1al

Price Nducacl, 3brt1 _.112 bath,
utlllt
nNI'I
CA

~_;_m:..c..·...,;·---===!Or - ' 304-175I.
.

4

Mloo Paulo'a Dor CaN Cantw.
· .•
o-ioblo, ololldcioro. M-1'
e o.m
5:30p.m. 21&lt;-10.
....... oftor oolooal: lhp-1na
••I :•. 114 44111:24.
REMODELING IIITEAIOA • Ex•

:':Jt' houaa claanlng. ~t4-441-

"'=.-

a

.

1'111-7741

Llko ovorythlng - l o d
with
- briCk. Prlcod ~~~~ 114-

loaal~ro:n::~at•IY ' 2 m11t IUDQET· PRICES AT JACKSON
::~ ::r.. or, on tt. At. 35. :!,AV,:V:, Wa~on!k:

-

Tocli

1~::::..--::--:--:----

-.a7n .

~"!r."o.::; ~aJo~:: ~

tool 111311, Proclorvlllo, OH 1 ~.

and l'"'h .... 304-ITS.

tor. - · - . " 38A homo. 110.., now, onlwt•t - - """ 114-

ha~otl off acrep metall,

Llk1 to

:ca~

Homes for Sale

In Ooll\palla, Tip Tap Condlllcn, 18 W. apt, 2 lrr., 1 both, prtnto
ntrar
echoOfl,
prage, .. ICICIIId pet1o. ao.a 1o
..._....
~hlooi'a. g . - , a t - 1 ........... MSGNo.lt&amp;lw.
~

:Z,

-r:il.fl"

$28,000. 11 .......510 dire or

,.r.- :.=.· :,::~~

~::"

-.q'd. 1
d II atolra, 2Dr, wotor. Jllrliaga
plclr-up.tt4-4.__.
Upol 1no
fwnlalood Ofll ca
.! :t ""...,
,_ 1
· •·
Jill-. NO ..-0. • ..,u'"
at 300
F....UOAvo.
up.

45

-

Furnished
,

Rooms

36

.

Real Estate
Wanted

3b&lt; 1 112 ~h lanollrr ranCh. Clty-.dtaala. 111~~::·
.._

do ......,
- Coil
tlnUah
- , .oltttng
onytlmo.
114+tHI14.
MU.
Land Wanted: 100 ac- 6 up.
• , _ . and both. On 3 t, 4 . Woo::.~~-.·-· 1 oc- Wootpol!!l Ad., -~ 326
W.V. 122.000. 1~14-212 1
'

Fumlalood oftlcloncy, all utJIIIIH
pold, •IMN tooth, UOinoo., tit
-.,Avo. 114-441-3141.

Blooplng wHh ....trlrog.
Aloo tnllor•-· All --upo.
Cal ft 2 00
l104-773llll ~
p.m.,
•
·
48 Space
Rlnt · .

Wv

~.:r=•, 1400 oq.ft.
Corrw
ana Plno. Ampio
parking. 11114-441-4:141, 4413 "'· fonn . . _ 1 112 mil• 3331,ar4._a.
'"'"' Rt . 7, Euraka. Olt ~75- Ccountry Maiolo H - Park,
5104
U. ol P-"'f·
31rr, homo VInton $200 mo. _.h Leota, ..,talo, porta, 11111. Call
•·· Do I A I '
• .I_1;.;4_:
4:::12::..·7:_:4c_
71::_:._ _ , . - - , - - · P·
• · 114-31~·21·
~
Hou• ~rant. 1110 month plu. Tr11ll.,lot on. farm, Rt. 17, St5.00
1100 ......... • . 114-112..117.
month. Couni!W•tor,
::,-:~....-~~·-'-:-'=.:..::..:==o 1ctUdarl. 3001 ., 175Nico 3 br. l!oull,- - · 314 =41:.:31=·: ,....,,.----::-:-:,3rd St., Kllnauga. 11~7473. Two trail• •Plicae, Aouta Ona
Locuot Aoad an rlg\0, 304-t7t42 Mobile Homes
1071.
for Rent

41

-Witarsolcotl25,000.21coto
- h hao 011 wator, oloc.
~.....,.-.,.,...,...,...,,..-,.-:-~·l ... llabto. At. tiio. Korr Ad. 5
c.. lof - . , In - homo. min. ""'" Holzor Hoopltal. 114304:;1;;71;;29~1;;?·;;;;;;====~4:4:6:M:I3:7:"':":1:4:u;•;;;"':'61;;;
.
.

18 Wllntlcl 10 Do

;:jl=-j

~

Avlng. 304185-3417.
. A - far ront • - o r noonth.
Bt-~
1 11~- ~-Ilia
..-una
.-rmu.
Hotel.
114 ••41 11110.

tor

-Far -

or ,...., 2-3 1oocfro0n;
brick holM, .._.roy, Can for
dotollo. 114-III-311T oRor
I :OOp.no.
•

vJJ ~~ "'"'

u

~:::4 ::::.-lan,
eo.ro LS,

-

lila 1271 6 up, J9rit - · 4
d - - 111. OUri Ca-o
t, I. &amp; 1~.

tlh Plymouth Duattr, AC,
A~m otoroo, 44,000 mlln

::1,.Ntt,..._
~ s1zo at"a kl;".:.!i

IOUWI , autamlllc

ill~nl.! ')_:~ ,V-I 'tit;g.,

Houses

PS

p..,....

llt2arpot,~ ; roll,carpot 14 o
yonl I up; - - Fumlt,..
114-441-7444.

\,-•'

1•

-~~=~;~~;;~;~;~~~~~~~~

USED

rlryora,

APPUANCES

.~

&amp; , . . ._.NIA. Ine.

Par1a*'
~ ~
· ll'rM llollnryJLattwo)

-

rongaa. SkiiHIO Ar,vl _., Ptootlo t:.anoro (Hall Pilorr) flO.
Uppor Rlvor Ra. lao do Btono tto1. Expi!N-. 1-IIZI
CraotMolai. CollltC-441-7311.
MIS. Anytlmo.
o .. coo« lt0¥1 andrlfrll4ntor, Rare 31 Chevy, 2 *· ~"U:
304-175-3751.
aloarp. $7100 • trodo. 11
7311 .
Klnt llza weveiMI watarbed,
tor •1•, wldre...,. d.....,., eac. lubmn ...lad o,.,.

tor 7.11 KW

runnl=

F

for ..
_nt
,..

-In·

Houllhold

Goods

E

5:

1,..,

llourti, wllft
mower I •n.
bueh hoa. 14-387.0631 .,.._r

m-

CD Wlcl -

.,:;:;.,~,: :,,o :k. 'sw1vo1

I

,~~Q)WhMIOI

e® N'li't Court Q

11)M_,U..
IHIChHrl
11J Miami Vice Calderone's
Return (PI 1 01 2)

•.

..

7:30 e

~ Flintily Feud
(I)NFLTIMaO.nre
()) Entar111nmllll Tonlgltt
Cll USA Todly

e

t!ll e1111 OJ JIOJMlrdyl Q

.11]1 M'A'S'H
11)1 Croolll..

· IHl NIQitl Court
8 Top Carel
7:35 I]) Slnlarcl Ancl Son
1:00 ()) MOYIE: Plllarw Of The

Sky (2:00)

e

~ IIJ) ALF ALF drtves lha
Tanners crazy by constantly
practicing poychoanllysls.

~~~E'-y Night
Match-Up

eiJl MecGyver Mac
disCOYers a friend's son is
selling black market medical
suppliel. (1 :00) D
CD Traval Mlgazl111
(D Travail Comedienne
Ruby Wax bernusas Soviet .
audience• and mnts the
people . (1 :00) Q
t!ll eo MajOr Dad Mac
sets up a dllte lor Elizabeth
with Lt. Holowachuk. 10:30)

(II

II! Murder, Site Wro1e

Murder In A Minor Key

121 Funny Bu..,... With
Charlie Clot . . II Charlie

Chase playa tricks on
couQtry music 5tars and lans
alike. 11 :00)
1:05 (I) MOVIE: -tball• lPG)
12:00)
8:30 • C2l 1151 ~n Family
Mark and Willie dac\are war
on each other . (0:301 Q
()) NFL - y Nlgh1

•

1

•rn..

~'\':t.· Caltpo!"~ ~~~"~:. ::.\.~4 ~ 5~::. ~I =~

Showdown
1

11) ()) Art Of The weatem
. Worklln Florence, Haly ,
investigate the begtnnings of
the Renaissance. (1 :00)
&lt;!II
.eO Murphy ' :, ·
Murphy is lured Into doing a
cameo role on a FYI-based
comedy. (0:30) Q
• (!]) Allen Nel\on Susan is
in the crossfire wtaan the
police evidence files are
raided.«;!
0 Lanr 11\nt Live!
II! Prinre Tme W-ng
121 N1ohvllle Now
9:30 llll e11:11 Femouo T - , Z
Everything goal wrong when
Teddy Z offers to housesit
lor a star. Q
10:00 (]) 700 Club With Pa1

1'-

•

••

"

'...,":!·
rr.

..
'

::,.
,.

HARK!!
1 HEAR
FOOTSTEPS

•

COM IN'

,,

t

THIS WAY!!

•
•

RablriiOn

~~~-·

11)
(I) On Slaga AI Wolf Trap
11 :00)
llll ea&gt;llftllnlno
A quiet canoe trip goes bad
11oe Jl!rla moot a trio of
hillblll\ot. ...
• (!]) CrlttieWotch Tonl(lltt
11J Everting NIWI
10:051]) MOVIE: FooUn' Arouncl
(PG) 12:00)
10:30 11) Cen't AtlOid To Grow Old
Examine lite growing
·demand for long term ltealth
care In America and the

a.

w-

ASTR().QRAPH

Autos for Sale

bomll.
•~~!!,~C. -~-~op,- cor,

u.-.sow

eto¥1, _
rwfrla,,_
A.C.,
..2 ,.... ..oo,_
_
bldr~

J ~fn'1 St1ppl1r·' ,

"'= . . . .

~,L,~r.,j~,~

Hnen.'JO•IIH-

:lllr, 1 112 ... h.
_.,_DelL
....... 11-f117 - ., ......
6527 oltor I, oo1r r.lhlrfoy.

61

Fann Equipment

..._..
=-· ·-·•••

131M; ... .., -

Refrigeration

. . . . . =.:...

Rwfiwr ,;
•

' lNitr ..... ...., ..........

I

or

commercial
ropaira.

llclilllll""'''h~n. Ridenour ·

Elar:trlcal, 304..75-1711•

85

~•:r-- ~ -,........-l.;,ooi&lt;..;•

l

•

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

C

GeiJtraJ',flaU!Ing

J I J Mt• ....,leo, 8wlmmlno

IK*•, ctwtama, wtllt.
245-8211.

Call 114-

II I A Water Service. Poolt, eta...,.. welll. hnrnedlll•1 ,000 or
dollvory. Call 304-

87

~=~p==l':"ry.;---

fll4

!!oint lrt- _..., InTho

t=rrrlnl - -·
, -

ot: , _
.,_

--.

Upholatorlng

4

'.'&lt;·1~"

'~"'•~ ·

r•l'• " "•'"' ,.., · • "''' "'- "":" ,,....., •-

-

2. yaw.

lumnura
uploolrrtorfng. Cal 304-1711-4114
loffraoootlrnafoa.

•

r

•

,.

·~ •• ·

'-·""'

~""

.......... ..... . . ..... _, ...
~

vr.:_'~'
S 0_

, .

.,
Both your outlook and attitUde will undergo constnrcHve chtngas In the year
-.1. You're now In a cycle where you
will be more poiMIWI, optimistiC and ort·
t11U81Utlc. evwtln.--yGUMrt
prewtouoly nogtt\WI.
U8f1A (lepl. a.o.t.ll) You might be
be11ertoday 11 m~nag\ng things lor oth·
ers lh., you Will be a1 nandllll(l your
own lffalra, H - . 1hllctn work 0114
to your lld¥lnll()l. MilOt' chlfiOII ere
atoead lor Libra In the coming year.
Seftclfor your Aatro-Gr.., precl\cllons

I
•'I• ... .. .. .

'

.1 ·

OcL 11,1•

,__.
,,

u hOlst

1113 221310 out-lo. - ·
r:=\tlor trotfo. 304-

"The one with the holee In It le lor
taking llhower1."

\

..,

"

.

OM
......... -

Rnldentltl

•lrlllwiK ...lc&gt;...

.• .-.-- =&amp;'.lano

.....
-.. or-.

*• VI,
Allll'll · - ._

1111 luloli - · 2

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

._~---·

no polo,
yonl

'-.louie

con-

tlftlon••, ...........

,..... -::r·.-."a •
...... _.,..

~-~-

Mellll
. . _ Cr~rununltw.
llr
IACrook
Iau •IIFL 11~1-1SJ'4 lAir
I:Jip.ll!.

eellsa
114
.... l.ootrll 171-1071.

body'""· 11,- ...

14710; - - - - 1 1 , 1 0 1 .
lf4-44Hl111.

=:,:r.:...••o;M:U::

W.MWIIIYelftlollcl 1?M1of

~
' ...... tf

ruft!l ......

~_ort-tortruokor

1010.1)-111'
t ·..... ~ 11110.1)-.

libr,

c.rto, 301 onglna,'

. 1171 .._

-.11W7N401.
, . , Chtl'llte. ........

...w••--

Rio Orondo,

.

D ()) ABC Monchry Night

Football

' .111811~11 1 '

tiTt Flrw llnl, 301 -

bird
1t Gear
· 20 Percentage
211natance
22 Disdain
25 Governor

Movtea(2:®)D

c;':;

71

17 Passerine

()) N - Amerfcan A~
(I)

today. Mail Slto Aatro-Graph. c/o this
·newspaper. P.O. Box 91428 . Cleveland.
OH
101-3428. Be sure to state your
zodiac olgn .
' SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) No one Is
likely to accuse you of being wishywashy today. You'll know preclllely
where you stand on critical issues and
so will your contomporer\os.
, SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 Feel·
lr\gs of guilt are likely to accumulate to·
day If you Iaiita use your lime and tal·
&lt;!1118 productively. Put your gills, aa well
as your previous hours, lo commend·
able U-.
CAPIIICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11) You
nave a 1\t\r lor organization today. In·
slinctlvely, you'ft know what Ullgnmentato .delogote to whom and you'll
do \lin weyo that wll Ule lite 411enll ol
thoee Involved moat elfactlvely.
AQUAIIIUII (Jan. IO-FIII.11) Onoa you
commf1 yourHII to • courH of action
: today. you wiN not IM1 Milly di••tldld
by oulllde 1nnu-. Your obleCIM ·
will be to - II through regar- of

ARIEl (lllrcii21·Apftl1t) You should
have it all together todaywtten it comH
to dollan and cents. In fact, your faculty
tor accumulation may allend to oilier
areas as well as help you get 4hlngs you
wanl.
TAURUI(Aprii.....,2G)Occasional\y ills .....,1\al we allocate lime to rlttend to our personal.-•. Today try to
give the same hourt to your interast as
phyl~.ln&gt;Otianlllnd
you do to your companion's alfa\ra. .
financial
preeaurws laced .by
GEMINI (MIIJ 21..- 2G) You'llluncthe
elderly.
II :00)
tlon more ellecll.-ou todew " you ere
eii:IINiwlilrt
George's
able to do what's ~lred ~ihout
spo11U1 repu!al\on Is ruined
ing Olherl !)Ilk O¥W your llhOU\der .
whln lie lttlkll 1
Seek MCiullan free from busy-bodlet.
contnalan. !;I
CANCER (J- 21..1u1r 12) II Hie !las
TWtllght
been a bit du\1\olely. try to Involve your1210nll8ge
Mlf In a ,_In!_. beginning todey.
11:00(])81ConllrucliWI C111ftQ11 will 1 vtty
lllmulallng 111ec1 upon your outlook.
LIO (oltfiJ 13-AUg. Ill Auoelat. .
mlgh4 duck oltalongae today, but n6t
Hill (1:00)
you. Yau may n l c - "'•lolt
"
"*"'11tat ... IIIII ,our rnett11, bliN1lllltalt
cauw c1eap doMt you know you ctn
MIRII
VIae Blck To The
oblltllCiel.
over- them.
,
WortdStno.
PleCII (Pelt. 1111 M11Gt1 211) A tto,1nge VIRGO IAul· 23-lept. 12) Bacaute Ill
• YIJIUCOiitbJ
In - • r COUld brlgflten your outi&amp;Ok your abilitY tokeep-vtftlng In prop1r
today. A lOng~ or Uhort drive could f*tpaCIIw today, 1111n'lllklly 111a1 . .
eiiiiOIC•-Q
help, II d - I matter whiCh. U lOng U Iller \lrOI or 1111111 will dlltUib
II!DtliiCr 111 ..
you're not startng at lite same four · you .
·
(J)I&amp;II~IIPJouiMI
, wale.
•

«

a

•1111-

z-

IL.~.:,..
......
......
&amp;::::

1

11:301(!?.......

'
,

h·-

... .
)

'

Works on
the piano
In the past
Aniline. •
e .g.
Wagnerian

role

9:00.

..

•-lor

18

eo

HAVEN'TLI5FD/.P
MY OI..CfONE5 Yer.

•II•

13
14

llll
PIOPII Nell Door
Walter's 40th birthd~ .brings
on a mid-life crisis. Ej;l
(2) IIJ) MOVE: 'ROlt8MII:
The Prize Pulitzer' NIC
MonclayNiall1 A1 The

r

rot-

11

~T.:.':'un· Oourmet

1

•-lon

Plumbing

Prin~~Mews

IHl The Thorn 11n11 (P1 1 Of
6) 12:00)

tr:r AU. lHE.SE PA'C .. .

+9

EAST
+Q32

WEST
+9765
.9 7
+Kl0863
+Q7

•a

tAQ752
tAJ8 5
'

.,

+H

....

+10 6 2

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
Sotot-

Nor~

Wf!t

Eaol

1+

Pass
3•

H

2+

Pass

.'•

1 . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - ''':·
ond ki
H reasoned that there '.:
m
ng. e
.
•·
~ight be an ad~antal" to holding the., ;;
hrst trtck. Su_re enough, EaSt ~lar.:; •
the deuce of d1amonds! and a SWI~ to .'.'·
the queen of clubs qwckly aetted lit'. ..,
defense the first four tncu. Wttb a ~
low dtamond lead, declarer_ waufll ,.
have bad no trouble making bil ,,
contract.
".

.'
-

...
.'

. -'
...

. '
-

'

.. ' '\.

..•

5 Indonesian
18 Israeli

port

6 Rock

deposit
21 Heal
7 Heroic laiE 22 Doze
t Invent
23 Ranch
10 FloOf
enclosure
covering
24 Infest .
12 Wiser
25 Optimistic
15 Stln
27 Marble

29 Attack
30Troy

beauty
31 Inflexible

32 Filth of
37 Anger

3t Jamie
- Curtis

hill

.l.r-+--t--t--

tlme
36 'City of
Light"
38 Metallic

41
42

mixture
Enllce
Numerical
suffix
Ensnare

DAILYCRYPTOQU&lt;rJ'ES-Here'l how to work It:

to,te

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

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

.•..,

LJ V

CIIYPIOQIJ01I!

PXR

ELJ

LMMQTCJK
OZEZEGZO
ICJKZOT

BRCJST

ICJKZO

xz

·-

•&gt;

..•

device
islands

..

. r-'

2t Single,
e.g.

40

~. ,,

Opening lead: + K

28 Before

~

...
'"'·

'

.

All pass

term

33 Misjudge
34Maa·sma
35 Memorable

..

'

HTennis

27 Craggy

•"
. ..

SOUTH
• 84
.QJ 10642

by THOMAS JOSfPH
ACROSS
43 Bard's
1 Cry of
adverb
derision
4Aswan
DOWN
Is one
1 Canadian,
7 Capital
e.g.
of Nortll
2 Upward
Yemen
lprel.)
8 Dry
3 Weapon
10 French city 4· Post-office

i

.....

tK943 .

CROSSWORD

(!]) 21 Jurnp s-4 A high
. school principal carries nis
j&lt;lto too lor. (1 :00) Q

.JUSr DE(IPIOO 10
GO ltv!O ttl.ITICS

....;.

.....

.AK53

Opening leads have been .standard
lor a lone time. Who doesn't know that
you lead top of an honor sequence (K·
Q-J, Q-J-10, J-10·9) and king from A·
K, or that it is proper to le_ad the fourth
best from a broken suit (Q-9-1-4-Z. J·&amp;4-2. 10-8-1-3-2. etc.)? Tbat is the way
bridge bas been taught lor decades.
However, several expert partnerships have adopted different methods.
Some players now lead ace from A·K
by agreement; others lead queen from
K-Q and jack from Q-J. Instead of
fourth-best leads, many top .players
will lead tbirtl or fifth best. Wbat does
it all mean? Only that bridge. part science and part art, is evolving. Never·
theless, In this rolumn we will remain
faithful to traditional metltOdl. But
even when you are playing·standard
leads. there are times for nceptions.
And that's the point of today's deal.
South got to four hearts after West
bad supported diamonds - his part·
ner's opeoing·bid suit. Although the
normal opening lead would be the
fourth-best diamond, West departed
from the norm by laying down the dia-

7:051]) Jetl...ana

g

........

By Jameo Jacoby

_ 111 YlcleoCoun1ry

GE.)UNPt1fiT. ,
\

..

•l l

it's easier to watch your diet than
...---_:------, ".~
NORTH
.. ,
+AKJIO

When fourth best
isn't best

NewUiour(t :OO)

7

82

BRIDGE

ID~

a.

•:r,

rve diacovered that
it is to FOLLOW it.

1D eiJl Curren1 Affair
CD ()) MocNell/ Lehrer

FRANK AND

10

Flavor- Awoke - Qualm - Colony- FOLLOW
After years ot counting-calories and trying 10 exercise

e

Cr-.

•t•

•.

·•

SCIAM-ln5 ANSWEilS

1IJ 1M-Man
8:361]) Andy Grltll1h
7:00 ()) Our (J) PM Mlgazl..

-lao.

C::t:'·

Comp\e!o !he chuckle quo!ed

~y filling in the mi sstng wo rds

.

L......L-.L......L-.&amp;........L......r you develop from step No. 3 below.

.I)) AIC New• Q
CD llody EllclriC
(D 3-2· 1 c-ct Q
.IIIICII-•&lt;;1
IDl ..,....•• Companr
IHi WKRP In Clnclnnlti

163

:J."·

.

-:

/1J SportsLaolt (0:30)

GOVERNMENT SEI%ED VololclH
from 1100. Ford. Uai'C8dla.
CGNtttll. Chavya. Surplus.
Buyora Guido 11) 101-NHOOO
Ext. 11-tOt&amp;i.

u---

S' I

.

.'

• .

do it - ---."

(II

;:;:-=-,:;::=.:= ===== =

~:""1\.~

.

18 Ameflcon Magazine

r,:.:,•:a:.J.':: ~:::..Die:=
re':.'=

........,401
.

o

One ham actor to another,
'The part in this picture looked
good on paper. Too bad we had

1:051]) a.v.riy HMibll...

:::M=
Ic::=ha~!I_'.C-="=...;
' ·~==:::-;;;;

==,;;;;=-----

B IE

IIJ ......

==·

-Hoi-

..

'

0 Woold Today
ill Charlll In Clllorge

a.

=a:.

I[[tI
.----- ---,110
I I~ Ol' Ml 0
L I G UT

1:30. (J) OJ NIC Nightly Newa

=~T· o':!~..~~~

1

Marty

i

2 11h Eaco~o . otandanl. All
.. ono ·-ro .,Hii5 each
ra~o,
-·- ; •
'
Jo/OH~Idno1 I AutKo Solao, BoloW
~ Y nn, anauga.

.......

I I I· I

Stouffer •xplorH 1111 eong
lnd color 111\od world ol
birda. Q
·
~:::,~ (0:301 Q

W~ERE ARE T14E COOKIES? '

•·ht

You Don't Hove To Look For
To Spy the Best Buys In
the Clossifieds.

ISA
WANT AD

THAT'S WH't' I RUSH I-lOME
AS FAST AS I CAN 6ECAUSE
I KNOW l-IE MISSES ME TOO ..

. ·,==-===:::::

11 dnsporl&lt;JIIOil

THE BEST

AC,

cond. 114-.a:lll.
~....-:.K:lo:C:O:~"": ap.m. arf'tC-445·1012.
,
.~ Trucks for Sale
Mullolian FumHura ·
gina -haiA, In
lnlornatlonol TD-1 Dozor with 1174 C..... Yon ~ Automatic:!
10 Y11o. carpot • pod l,.tollod, llayloo \nlpoclod ot
winch. Good oloopo. 145410. 114· POG, or "bHt offer:. 1tll
14111. Wlollo oupplloa loll 114- Aa!11al, All o11ara rrouot bo 1 ,._ T'-'420:-2=127=
.
quar1er ton chevy lruck. 4 .pel.
441' 7444·
to IM ,......,... of IM -;;;
lranemlallon I · cyl. .nglna,
PICKENS FURNITURE
-nl L\liflry by N"" 1 ttll .11'1\0EN"S FARM EQUIPMENT 10,000
mlloo, $800. 814.'WNaw/Uo~
Tho uo...- ,.__ tho
to "flU Solo" lt,.__te75. Long 1711.
'
--•''W
TrlctOrl Loeders ltckhOH I
Houaoloold
lurnlohl-. 112 mi. . . - ony
.
ru'·
•
"
1
•
1
•
Rd Pt Pt·~
~
-·~ ••uw ..... a .... 1171 Ford 250, M,DOO mlltl,
~f:l:fo':..rs.14sO. -nt. -·· Surol•, Army, Donlm, Aontal 12 oa.-), Aakoa, Toddoro, topper,~. new tiNa, nHda body
cla\lrlng. Dur 21th yaar, rwautar ......,. I A Complato Llno Of work. •750. 304-175-178&amp;.
YI'RA FURNITURE
laaua camalla~. Sinalr o- OEII
Equlprnont.
Orlndor
AT. 1:'.!,_4 MILES
qulpman1. 'Unclo lonr Somo- lll1ora, WalfON, R.o toryCutt•o, 1ffl lntarnallonal 1700, 2
CEN '"NARY
rvlllo'l, Ba4. U.S.A.F. Aotlrad. Rotary · TIHoro, Dloo, Potalo 1f2ton. C.ll aH.ar 5p.m. 614·742·
RENT TO OWN. 4 d,_r Old AI. 2f, Now Era. JackiOn PI-•· Suboalloro, Soodoro/ 24M.
d
h
h
k. bunk ca. Frl, Sat, • Bun. 1111 EllrthW-pllttoral 11M Ctw.vrOiat C.10, V~. alllo.,
1'00 PM. 304-273-1111.
$4811. Jahn'a Auto 5alll,
rockor • $5 wk., dlnotto Ill, 4 Bwlno aot far u1o: 1113 Ford _ . , - d Oatu, Corral Balow Hallday Inn, Kanauga.
chalro • 17.10 WL Rocllnor • h
Eacoit 114-1111-4351
Pana~ Truck Aackl, loam
wk. LOW CASH PRICi.S
.
.
. Pal ""'01 H t
Woodb
1·10 Chovy, Air, AT, PS,
10% oft far cooh. Cradll torrno Upr1glit Aah1aoral« lnooztr, an· nl..;o. Sl":vaa~ or~llr
~~ 1111
PI,
114-216-1824.
•v•la.bla. Open Mon ...sat. t •.m. Uqua Oftlhlti IP'•wer, ptettic c ... rance on Whaal HorN
ta I p.m., Sun. 12 noon lo 5 p.m. blrrel8. 114-441-41111.
Uwn • OarWn Trac:lort. USED 1111 ctroy 11-10 • T - . auto..
114-441-3111 '
Uood lumMuro, -~~ .... EOUIPIIENT: Troctoro, Round 4.3 onalno, 13,000 mlloa, Sharp,
Wooloor Wlolrtpool, $!.t Dryor pl--., gao ronoa. La1o dot! 1 lltoro,
Aako-T - Corn- eon :IGW75-788t
Klnmoro, 175· Dryor 1Ynlrtpoal ,. old, could bo '"lllat- liao blnatlon, Rokao,lloworo, - ·
73 Vans 4 WD's
Avocoda, Stils; Oryor O.E. 1\u ~"!'.'!!'. t•••. porUally - · DM\1~...... o ..
cu.t~!!",·w~-UMing
now, $150; Waohtr Hat Point, - • • • •
" ' - '"
-75 11
30
Gaar « wlo RuMing Ooaro, tilT lull olD Ford Bronco. Ed·
1\monel' llkl new, ••
; IC.
Y... a gM coollltDW and lmetl Manurw "'eaclar, Hammar Mill, dlo la•r pocklga. Excollont
Inch Aeng~Afcode, 1150; El.a. ,_ olliculltl:'l hlll~::••n'1 Chain liwe, lawy. llawera. -ion. 114-ltZ·IIH pr 814Rllnga30lnch,whltii110;Etec:. . . --...~ nt~) t•__.
CompiM• Hne af Pert• I Sar· 14\1.2110.
Aonga 30 Inch, ........ gold, · - n -· ~
'
vlcol
lib MW, $175' rofrloor- opt.
WHITE~MET"LOETECTOAS
1lzo, •171; iOiflgorotar apl. olza, Aoro Alhon. 12, 0 Socond Avo. Jlm"o Farm Equ\pmant Gal- 74 Motorcycles
almond. 1174;
AafrlJIInolor Oallpol\o, OH 114-441-4318.
llpolio1 114-441-tm. Complolo ~111
::::-1 -H:-:101
:-:_-:oda--:C::8~650
=---::c:-u-..t..,om
Froot F,.., Harvoot Oalcl, lfll;
Una •lno kuttw tractor lnoRerriatrator elde by .a. copper ·Warm Morning On HNtw, plamanta. 4', s·, 1', r• r«Mary wtndetdeld, lull~~~·~=~pnopor"$·1:.J.~~ ~P:.•;;::: wlbloWir,IS,OOO BTU. Like new.
~ltplca.kl':' I Uaad
:,•:~ ~:.:~~.· v.., ar
0pon
114 311 IC.
- · 114-371·2401.
Bat.ll.m.-2p.rn.
1111 Honda CA, 250 lor 1111.
53
Antiques
55
Building
oxc. cond. 114-31M351.
;.:~...:..::.:;;,::.:::;;:.::..,...,....~
Supplies
....r;:.,.:.·~-:: ttll Kaua11kl Klr125, Ellc.
Buy or Ill. Rlvorlna Anllq. .o,
~133.
cond. 12.250 nnn. 114-317-TS:n.
U:M E. Main Bt-. P-roy. Blaclr, 1or1o1r, win- 1
Houno: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 · llntolo, otr:. C1oirr1o Win312 O~ndor Mlxor,
p.m.l. lundty 1:00 ta 1:00 p .m . flrl, Rto ClrlncN, OH C.N 114- .... HoHincl I fl. Har ~~~. AC
et4..t2·2121.
.2·4::5::-1~121::;.
· - - - - - - 2 - no dll plantor, .lcotor! Oooro
Oak thrao atack bookCIII 1215; -56
34 Farago Horvaotor with 2
...,nd oak tabla U75; atae or
Pill for Sale
ModL All sold
304•·- • 1 •·••t-322?
m-4211.
g-, • ~
·
1 AIIC · I old . .to I :::C":-:':-:::=:-7=~=::-;;
Top
oyotom,
2,ooo
ft
ubolCao1o pold. Old lumHuro ChlhuaM
p.m
' 304-175-13117 aftor 4· -pipe, lrriJIII\on
half pr!ce,
$5,000.
Mor~
•pol-~·
qu\111, nllrorlantal,
.
aon'o Farm. AI. 35, Pliny, wv.
75 Boats Motors
·-·...-. toro. or 0 • Illata 3 Albino For!olo, SSG.cooa ·• oll. 304-t3T·2011.
coli oOIIoc:t 304-425-3275, ar 114-251-1143.
,;
for Sale
4
304 23
-4 •
·
Uve8tock
3 ,... old Ruckor c-o ctoo •
54 Ml_.laiiiOUI
,.. trao. 171-7111.
2 - o . tliiiiJ ~no~ 1 ":~uu 11 a Banmeater with 1G hp
Evlnrude motor guide trolling
• - all
h lt45
motor, drive on tn~i lar, all In ••·
Merc. .ndlll
AKC Aoo'od PuDPioa. _ . .
·
·
and AIIC rog'od -.iolana, ATTENTION H - O...ora. cellant condlllon $3,000. 3Q4..
11 point dlarroarocf .,~~~~- 10 wtta. olrl.$100. 114-4-74. ~lnt Ptuo 1o now carry!~ tack. 5711-2884.
~
14K.....,. olio 7 1541 814••
·~
'
'
AIIC Rogloto...r-s-lol ·~ ~::••:z:~.~~.': ".:• 1172 17 ft. Starcran Tri·Hull
31'la212.,.....,
puppl11 1110.114-3.11:12.
...--n
""'_,,. ;rBoat. 126 HP, Evlnruct. Engine,
31.1 aulolc ft. - n
:74':-.--=-::-::-----:::-::-c compiMa tap, new upholallry.
treez•, 5 compartment ••m AKC ......,..,. Ddmallon ~ lull 3 , .. old, fine Call '114-281·1311 after 7:00p.m.
table
with . .oc111 ;rt., ~.. IKIP. loo• cold. 11~. 304- IMod
11 wll-l402.
,.,.lgo!olod plo dlaplay with - - ·
76 }l.uto Pans &amp;
noHk dlllplft- "" uoo . on laby ro••~ ~ 14 --• Floh, Pond Stoclclngl Cotflalo,
Accessories
cauntor top or -ndlng. ttC-441-= '
•~ Hylorld 1\Uifllll, · - ·
Call 114-1112·2228 alor 4:00p.m.
'·- I Triploid Graoa Ciorp.
l\acll Lab
I AK
Dal s.t 0c 21
Southern POOR BOY TIRES, 304-1753331
fronl and allanrnanl
::.:
g=:,=.;
.
ltl.ila, 4,000 good uaoCl tiNa,
caallroglotor. 304-273-5448.
2710to ordarart-3-1431. illmt.ll,.l, new u.....
11,000 BTU Warm u--J~ Dn.gouwynd Caaory Konnol.
.
~· ... •·raio•
BlomoH
a·" Good
of Duroo loare.
H
...
ar.
u.d
1
wlntw
only.
For
....,
...
""
more Information, call 11 .._112• Hlm•lly•n lllttena. Chow etucl Roger Banuar. 51J..II4·23M.
Services
aorvloo. 114-441-3144 anor 7 Roo'~ ~-~Marao,
-·~
fiJII
l7l- - - ~Com-·"·- t:lf - • . , . , C
.
11 5 CMoln.. Maro, Ono
-·
~ -·...-•
Floh Tonk, 2413 Jacfr- Ava. Ouartor Haroo Congrau/ 1115 81
Home
K., loard, d'-1 drlva, printer, Point Ptulant, 304~711-2011, 10 c•nut Mere, ShOwn n 4-14
oollwara.
ArMrlcon Dnw Jill oot up 114.11 ond 10 Jill rooorvo
1t85 S4ato
Improvements
::..:. 'it:, otoirl.....:':latr!'~~ _,pta4o\143.H.
Fair. 11W
.
IASEMENT
11•
na.
Groom enf . . _ ,
Pot
WATERPROOFING
0 - A H - All r1oL
UnaonditiCIIIUII llfMima guaranDo- Fonn buta on 1a- floil ,.... · Julio Cooi¥1\lo Mill, Inc. EMbllohod tao. Local
lumlalood.
your lat, 113,111 l up. floo our ~-eon 114 441 11231.
1115.
Purtno
~~ ~uotom Frw ntlmat•. Call collect 1·
inodol.ltWII-7311.
day or night . R a
HAPPT JACK TAIVERMICIDE: g~nd\nt ond m\King, "'"' - · 114-237-ocae,
atrtleaamenl
Ooolgn your _ , ototlonary 6 A~ oafo 1 ofloct\vo by M i l - (114) 117.JUO
col=:;""~'"
· -~ . to,~
U.S. luraau ol VotorlnarY o-nd 1hol eam h.OO pot Wo-tlng.
Marlclno og1lnot-. round. &amp; 100, a:-.12:po lion ttlru S.t. Folly Traa Trimming, stump
rlcot,
41111. Wo wHI - - t-arma in cfoao 6 cola\ a)d: Uoraan Finn, Rt. U Pllnr, WV .-.moval, call304-675-f331 .
o 1\ot ' o1 ""-'~~"" 6 .-o to wall Caoh FoarJ J D North 304-137-:1011.
choorH from lf44M-1U1.
llraduce.
Ron 't TV Strvlct, apeciallzlng
Lorao round bolla ol My, $11 In Zenith alto Mrvlelng molt
Eloc 1\thtod olon with , _ Happy
Jock
T-nnlcldo:
other branda. HowM ca!Tt, 111o
4n.xl1t. 1221. L\lol now. A - R-nlud oalo • olloctl" by -11. f14-441-105Z.
aoma appll1nce rept~lrs. WV
ground. o ....o trap 1425. h541 u.s. ...... of YoiMnory Mutch tor Mit; Otd MlnrwaPOIII 304-47a-2391
Ohio 61..._
now 1111 prtco. 114-441-12011.
- I n a ogalnot-. round, a Molino Troctor, lt.--.. 217.
2484.
tapowormo In doge a calli A a
Flrowoocl lor oalo, $30. - · o Food a Supply 3tl W. Main .._, aer oom U.IO ptr bushel, . Aattry or cabla tool drilling.
304-46t-1t81.
gr11ea hiJ, I1.1G PI' ..... 114· Moat
St.
complalad umt day.
245-13tlalorlp.m.
Pump uln and urvlca, '304Far lolo. c-ote and Plastic
- l c tanka. AR liDo. RON · -.pol Nlo, 1 ,... old. Aaklng
1111-3102.
EVANS ENTERPR,:!} Jock- $300.114-1111-101 .
It,_ far - · 11.10 bolo. 114441-4111 . . . . ., 11...._ 0..11
. Sew-Vtc
Sarvica,
-.011.1-..37
.
~~~-~~- llfeo C!n1· 1 ns7
0Krg" Craak Ad . Parte, IUpplln, pickup,, and delivery. 614..., lalo: Quoon o11a oolo bod, ~-::""· _T
old. want to winter 10G-JDD oawe
441.0:114 .
hllnryooodoonri.Own«MI
uo loollHioo, oatl
no
R. ~DII- p\111.
'hay
t and
Fann, AI. 31, _ , , Septic T1nk Pumping $90, Gallie
Muslcll
-orol _ ..... In ..... · - 57
WV._,.-1011.
ca. AON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
. - . Prlco nogoctonablo. 114lnatruments
Jackaon, OH 1..ao(J..S37-9528.
245-1511.

C AF H Y

•a

OrMWotHMa

t4100.
All taav.' AMIFM
1111 PlymouthRollont111rao,
""'
oruloa oon1ro1; .P.S.. P.8 ., al&lt;
- con,..oni,-4 doon. Call
1:00-4:110 t4-HZ4t43. Aftor
1:00 '-t t 11112-t373. Aok lor

I
nt
ann qu pmjj
., FOnl Hloto 1 a-,....
I chc, oullvolar, 6 louOio
•
0110. . . Pont DIMIIIH5 •
Owner will nnanco. 114-2h1133.
·
D4 Cat Doz9r with winch. Good
unclor co~,- ovorltaul
with com a porto machlno.
. 304-1.,._ 1.
.
Fonl 1100 Dlnal 414, low

61

'II.

• CJl w • IJl !Ill
Q)Newl
1D M-tor Lllltte laNb!IM'a

. ...
- - .....

~~

uudappllanc.e,
T.V. Int.
uta.OtMn
County
Appllo,_,
I o.m. to I p.m. llan.4at. •14441-t'll!,.l27 3rd. Avo. CJo1.
llpollo,""
Far Sala: Qroy couch' chair, In 54 Miscellaneous
10111 cond. 114-441- ar
Merchandlll
114-441-2231.

1 :00 ()) Halt: ••1 McCc alAck~

MJF.MI\iiaaa., ntw 111111.
..... :v.Me-:1415.
'·
tlh \roo, Camoro, rod ld b1.!,&lt;..k•
PS, PI, win-., mr I 1•-·
" - r hutch, t~opo . PL, Cru\11
,4 ..41·1 008 .
tilT Pontiac ll~nblrll , $5200,
1t87' Buick SkyHawli 15550,
ttll Cho- CalobrHy ~~~

to dayroorodlt.l
11ma aanoLca•
wHh opaut lulawtlto
Rd. Ofoon I A.M. to I P.M. lion,
lhN lat. Cal 114-441-0312.

•

!V!NINQ

IUIO , .. c.

CIOII!I.~glloftl--7.

hd. Good oolocllon ol tiiod_,
autt11-,.

MON., OCT. 16
, .... . ·tit

·

~'C' M':t

affw. 114-441-0710.

w..-,

•

.JTc:= ~ :

1115 - n 300 %-X, -

or .::;

111, ttrm ... aM .... Queen

GOOD

a.us~'(

PI,
rNr
- w :!~loii
out-tlo, Y_. , AM-"11
11,300. lt&lt;!-444-7117.
, . . Monle Carlo SS, exceUanl
304-CM-1111 .

m .

Television
Viewing

1.0, UIS, I. Dl'T !!IS
1&amp;6 't&gt; All61X&gt; ~~

PSI

1111

-u.-::

:=e..;l:J

wuu

:~::.::; ;.~~~ ~otor ~~.,~.. ~u;o:.- Col l14- ti\':~':P/I~ngro::!; ~c"!,~

a - 114-

w

BORN LOSER

,... 1\ry Hotn. 4 ~=

,.~"~':'"""~~:::.t~~!;no.,.:.po~ta~,~AI~vor~VIow
=,
mat.. ...,,..._
1~U~.
-~-nla 130 ond .. Ia ....

• ·-,,,.; _,.,._

•
• - MONEY"'"'- at •---.
-~
~
1nComli potontlol.
Dotalfo. (1) - T - Eott. 1·
11111.

=

I'M ~~ \ ~~~~ JWN IZI~

&amp;N-fAftl&gt;
Qef ~E ANCJIDVtf'J IF
'f*J"' J'tL.4'
/. « rlJM •ff MEl

IHitoiM. T_PO_.up
to 1125. \\Ito o '"II $311 to
lltL RecHnara to 13n.
l.aMN 121 to $1H. - $tot ond up to 14._ 1Hie w-1 chltlra at1 te 1?11.
Doob 1141 up to $171. Huttoh•
:=--or":!:

11rr, $110/MG. p1ua • · - ·
ral.
WI~ - · I

URN MONEY typing o1 homo.
potantlal.
Dolalo, (1) - 7 Eorl. 11-.

,-

The Deily 81 1tinel- Pagl 8

Pomlloy- Middlaport, Ohio

Mondly. October 16. 1989

71 AUIOI for Slle

~r..:n~

Aplirtmlnt .

for

Help Wllntld

Uf N' CAILYI.Ee ~ Llrry Wrjpt

Houllhold

51

y.,.._
C..:omun~J. CaM

11

Monday, October 16. 1989

XLT

B 'R C J S C J K

L J

TXRQVA

sxozz
LS

XC E·

TZYI.- XLOOV XZOTXICZVA
.
.
Ynla • .,•• CIIIJIP.eta•c411••11111111 WHEN A MAN IS NO
. I,.ONOfll ANXIOUS 10 DO lETTER THAN WB.L.ItE
IS DONE FOR. - HAYDON

. ..... -. --·

-

~· ·-- ·

.'
..'
'

. ,

..

0

~

..

�..

'~

.....

-~

--· - - ... .. .

-~

.

sti'lll

Ohio Lottery

Series.

resumes
tonight

4' xa'

s

Piek-3
.495

81

ftiiAfttD

3898

Page 7
'

I

,,

15

·GREEN ·BROWN •WHITE
·BLACK ·GRE~N &amp; WHITE
Vol.40, No.113 M
Copyrighted 1989

CONCRETE WORK PRODUCTS

BI·FOLD DOORS
B£G..
SAlE

WIRE

~W'I

84811

6"x6"x10/10
5'x150'
WELD WIRE MESH

2~x6-8 730 Full Louvered ..........61.22. .... 38.48
2-&amp;x&amp;-8 730 Full Louvered...........69.78...... 43.84
3-0x&amp;-8 730 Full Louvered..........77.24.......48.151
4-0x&amp;-8 730 Full Louvered........117.4s....... 72.158
~x&amp;-8 730 Full Louvered•. __ 135.20.••••.• 83. 70

.'

CELOTEX CEILINGS

HO,. WA,.ER ,.INKS

30 GAL.

12' Main Tee ................

ELECTRIC.: ....................$13695 t:::::=5~i:::::-==4.

~

By Nancy Yoacham
Dally Senlinel Staff
The owners of urun down.
burned out or junked up" build·
lngs In Pomeroy may be on the
liSt for an unwelcome surprise
from Pomeroy Pollee. Pomeroy
VIllage Council at last night's
regular meetlng Instructed Po·
lice Chief Jerry Rought to begin
Issuing 10-day notices to Ioree
land owners to clean up their
· properties.
Chief Rought, who has been
asked · to attend one council
meeting a month to report on the
status of the clean-up effort, said
that at least one 10-day notice has
already been served ln the
vjllage.
Rought and Mayor Richard
Seyler defended the department
against accusations from council
that not enough is being done to
enforce ordinances which already exist to prevent· property
owners from allowing clutter and

SQUARE
•BLACK •GREEN •BARK BROWN
•GREEN &amp; WHITE •CHESTNUT BLEND •COPPERWOOD

1----------------NO.lB
ROOFING
FELT

s

(WHITE ONLY) ·

4• Cross Tee ....................
(WHITE ONLY)

10' Wall Angle ............ s1.90
(WHITE ONLY)

.
.
for some time over a hillside.
litter to pile up and unsafe been identified and listed. Coun·
cllman Bruce Reed feels lt Is a
''What do I have to do to get that
structures to remain standing. ·
corner cleaned up. We . come
The mayor, who by Jaw over· matter ol starting with the first
down here to meetings, discuss
sees the pollee department, three property owners on the list,
pointed out that all the pollee making them. abide by village situations like this, then expect
something 'to be done the next
department can do · Is Issue ordinances to clean-up thel,r
properties
and
rid
the
communday and nothing ever Is done."
notices. "'It's not easy to get thiS
done," the mayor said. Rought \IY of unsafe . and unsightly
Rought explained that cleasaid he normally warns a prop· 'Structures, and then move on to n-up Is the responsibility of the
erty owner to clean-up before the next three. "And it Is the owner and that he has "already
poUce department's responsibil- . started on the top of the list." He
coming back to ISsue a cltatlon.
Council charged however that Ity to serve the warrant," Reed said he started Issuing 10-day
there Is no ,follow-through to added.
notices this past Friday night.
"Some of the list Is a I ready
make sure that property owners
"That's what we want to
abide by .the wishes of authori· being worked on," reported Chief hear," Reed sa ld.
Neither Rought nor·the mayor
tles. "we have to back up our Rought.
Councllmembers say they wlll Ieel II is necessary for the police
citations," said Councilman
no longer tolerate the lag be- chief to attend one council .
Larry Wehrung.
The niayor suggested that tween the time they say they meeting a month. However,
Council appoint. a committe of want a property owner, to clea- Council feels that only if they are
councllinembers to begin work· n-up his or her premises and the apprised on a regular basis of the
lng on the clean-up effort. "'It's time It gets done. "What does It status of clean-up efforts in the
not the pollee department's job to take?" asked Councllmember village, those efforts wlll slow
prepare the liSt," said the mayor. Betty Baronlck ln regard to a down.
In regard to a related situation,
However, Council does not feel specific situation on Butternut
a committee ls necessary since Avenue where trash and an old Pomerqy resident Kenny Klein
the problem places have already couch have been allowed to lay and members of his family spoke

Move underway to
acquire information
for Eastern district

nLDING

S-rAIRWAY

8'9". s
3112" X 23"-~-~:;;:~.$1835 roll

x15"•..~.~i.~...s11 65 ro11
1/2'' X 10' CPVC .......... ~........................................•1
1-1/2" x 10' SCHEDlJLE 40 ................................•-• ..
3" x 10' SCHEO.'LE
......................11
4" x 10' SCHEDULE

6" X23" ....~.'!';.~.....S1765roll
9214" X 15''.. !!;!!,;~...'2?7°
roll
•

~.......~ ...............~~~~ ..

RENOVATION COMPLETED- The renovation and rederora·
lion of lhe Sacred He.a rl Catholic Chun:h Is now completed.
Partlcularty striking Is the main'altar which holds lhe refurblllhed
statues, the two on the sides being carvlnp ol wood. The blue, gold
and red colors ol the accessories are enhanced by the Spanish
Ivory altar and the blue carpeting.

.·1 '0 X 8'8"

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Open house serves
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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Dally Senlinel Stall
The recent open house at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
served a dual purpose- to let the
public view the beautifully reno··
vated and redecorated Interior of
the spacious sanctuary and .to
meet the new parish leaders.
New administrator of the
church ls the Rev, Robert Borer.
The pastor assOciate Is David
Mellott, who recently graduated
from the Catholic University ln
Louvian, Belgium.
The Rev. Mr. Borer was the
spiritual director at Vlanney
Center, Bloomingdale seven ye·
ars, served several pariShes In
the Steubenville area and was
chaplain at St. John High School

28" -xl'

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UNDIRPIINIIG

3.11

8

BLACIBOIID
INSILMIDI
4' xl'llar

sa.

By JULIE E. DILLON
will fill out the survey, as weilas
Dally Sentinel Staff
staff and faculty. A committee of
There ls a move on ln the
teachers will be contacting the
Eastern Local School District to
businesses in the district to
acquire Information from stu·
request that each one fill out one
' dents' parents, district residents·,
of the questionnaires. ,
and I;NIIill
. ~lieS Wh\Ch wlllaldl,_,.
The,!"!Y.!Y~asks a variety of
"d~'!C~ · II\;' II'P,'RI)1U: fin • lf!l'IM~'""' qui!Stfonir~idlng -the !ll$li!~:t
funds 'i;lul' grants.
as well as the students and their
The Information will be col·
knowledge. The committee also
requests that the surveys be
lected under what Is known as a
filled .out anonymously. A signa·
total needs assessment project.
Nancy Larkins, Eastern High ture on the survey Is not neces·
School math Instructor, Is the sary. Simply take a few minutes
chairman o! the data · gathering ~nd answer the questions
honestly .
committee, which has been work·
lng with Dr. Ann Grooms, of
The Information gathered
Educational Services Inc.. out of from these surveys will aid the
Cincinnati. Dr. Grooms has also . district In applying tor suppleworked with the Southern Local mental funding and grants. When
School District on a slmUar type applying for these monies, It Is
project.
necessary to provide the type of
In order to obtain the needed lnfonnatlon gathered from these
Information, survey questlqn· survey questlonnalres to justify
naires have been sent to 1he . applying lor the grants.
parents of every student In the
Not only will the data provide
district. It IS the request of the background Information when
committee that everyone who applying for needed funds and
receives one of the question· grants, it will also establiSh what
nalres takes the time to !Ill II out, the residents of the district feel
and fUll! out honestly. Students are the systems major needs.
at the hlglt sthool, grades 912,
Continued on page 3

26 Cents

A Muttimedit Inc. Nawtpaper

to Council about a problem on
Butternut Avenue Where litter
and junk cars are a problem at an
adjoining property. There are
also pit bulls at the home which
the Klelns feel may be a danger
to the public .
Klein also reported that a few
weeks ago, he contacted Pome·
roy Police when he heard a gun
shot coming from the backyard
of the house in ques lion. He said
that a policeman came by car to
the neighborhood, but made no
personal Inquiries at the home.
Later that night. another neigh·
bar's cat was round shot, Klein
said.
Klein, who was In law enforce'
ment for several years, feels the
policeman should' have made
Inquiries at the home after the
gunshot was reported. However,
the mayor told Klein that he
~Klein ) should have filed a
charge which would have given
the policeman probable cause to
check further into the situation..
In regard lo the litter, aban- ·
doned cars and the dogs, the
mayorsald that something would
be done this week about the
situation . "You shouldn't have to·
put up with this," the mayor
agreed.
Klein also added that the

county dog warden does not want
to begin checking Into whether
the dog owners have Insurance
for the plt bulls, for lear of not
being supported by village authorities should he cite the dog
owners into court. J&gt;leln says the
dog warden wants " back-up"
from the village or else It's a
waste of his (the dog warden's )
time.
In another matter regarding
the police department, Council
okayed the purchase of a light
bar and related equipment for a
new police cruiser with costs to
be around $700.
· Village Administrator John
Anderson updated Council on the
status of efforts to obtain funding
to expand Pomeroy's waste
water treatment. system.
The village has received notlfi·
·cation from the state of a $284,000
grimt from the State Issue II
Small Government Fund, which
when combined with a lOhper·
cent match from the village,
gives approximately 5312,000
with which to begin expansion
efforts. Anderson said consulting
engineers are already reviewing
expansion plans to -determine
how the $312,000 can be put to best
use. Anderson is in' hopes that
· Continued on page 3

-

PRESENTED PLAQUE -Stacy Shaak, ol Pomeroy Boy Scout
Troop 248, was presented with a plaque at Monday night's
Pomeroy Vllla11e Counell meeting commending hbn lor reslorlng
village flood guages as part ol an Eagle Scout project. Shank was
presented his plaque by Pomeroy Mayor'Richard Seyler.

Sesquicentennial plans are taking shape

at Bellaire before coming to
Pomeroy in late August.
Pomeroy's sesquicentennial
His pastor associate is DavJd . celebration lor 1990 Is beginning
· Mellott, a native of Shadyside. lo take shape after last night's
He completed his undergraduaie meeting of Pomeroy VIllage
work at Pontifical College Jose· CounciL Council approved a
· phlnum, Columbus. While lri. proclamation declaring 1990 as
Belgium, he interned two years · Pomeroy's sesquicentennial
at the American Protestant year, and Mayor Richard Seyler
Church of Brussells, and last signed the proclamation, making
summer completed an Internship It officiaL Mary Powell, who
at St. Joseph's Church ln Tiltons- heads the sesquicentennial plan·
ville. He expects to be In ning committee, was at Monday
Pomeroy for at least a year.
night's meeting to request the
Work on the sanctuary of the proclamation be approved.
·
church build In 1898 started In
Pomeroy was Incorporated as
January under the direction of a community on Feb. 16, 1990.
the Msgr. Michael Hellmer who Plans are being developed for
has since left the parish. Services several events to be held during
were held in thzchurchbasement the year to celebrate the l50th
while the nearly $50,000 Project anniversary of the Incorporation.
Continued on page 3
Powell also ques tloned Council
•
about the feasibility of further

developing the parJt on Mechanic along with other antlclpated
Street as something tangible to displays .
Council felt the weekend dates
be left lor the village alter the
sesquicentennial Is over. The would be fine and pledged to
sesquicentennial committee •
would fund any improvements.
Council felt lt would be a "good
project to work toward" and
Councilman Bill Young offered to
assist the sesquicentennial com·
mlttee on the playground project, if needed.
Powell also asked Council for
permission to use the upper
Pomeroy parking lot during next
year's weekends of June 8-9and
Oct. 6-7 for sesquicentennial
events. She also requested the
use of Court Street on thOSe
weekends·for entertainment, just
In case there Isn't room on the
parking lot for entertainment

assist the sesquicentennial com·
mission In helping to make
special events throughout the
coming year successful.

Local news briefs---.
Swt;eper salesmen not con artists

ILUMIIUM CtUIII

. IOD'IRO

"DELIVERY AVAILABLE"

1 Section, 10 Page

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, October 17. 1989

Pomeroy police to' issue clean-up c~tations

GLEI

3-0x6-8 Lauan........................39.01 .............28.88
4-0x&amp;-8 Lauan.....................63.05................42.04
~x&amp;-8 Lauan.....................69.68................48.41

2-Dx&amp;-8 Birch.........................36.40..................24.84
. 3-0xW Blrch.........................44.78. .................90.26
· 4-0x6-8 Blrch........~ ...............71.80.................. 47.79
~ x 6-8 Birch ..................79.60.................152.84

ROU.

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HOGG &amp; ZUS~'AN

16"

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•

ROLL ., ·

LAftiCE

~A~~~:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .s13695

Low lonlght near U. Chance
ol rain 60 percent. Wedne~~­
day, partly cloudy, with a
chance of rain. tUgh In mid
40.. Chance ol rain 4lJ percent.

Piek-4

The sweeper salesmen working In Meigs County 11re not "'con
artists'" as was stated In a headline on a story In Monday's
edition of The Daily SentineL The paper apologizes lor that
reference. The story was released to the newspaper by Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Souls by. The salesmen In Meigs
County are legitimate representatives for a product which has
always been sold house-t~house, according to the company's
attorney, Joseph Lyman of Washklgton, D. C.

•a7•!T •41.u:cmu

Daniage minor in Monday wreck
,,

,.

PARISH LJ!;ADERS- The Rev. Robert Borer, left, Ia lhe aew
adnilnlalraior ol the Sacred Heart Pariah. ma experience has
lnclnded belnJ the aplrltual director IIi Vlanney Center In
Bloomlqdale aad IIChool chaplain work as well iu eenlnJ In
HVeral parlabf!ll. He Ia beln&amp; ••ted IIi the church by David
Mello&amp;, a pa11tor asiOCllale, who recently graduated from Catholle
Unlvenlty In Lou¥1an, BeiJium.

Minor damage was Incurred to both vehicles In an accident on
East Main St. Monday afternoon.
Pomel'Of poUce Investigated the accident all: 28 p.m. There
were no ln)urlel. Golda Radcliff, Syracuse, was cited lor failure
to yield the rlrht of wajr.
According to the oollce, Donald Hall, Middleport, was
Continued on page 3

~~~-~ - The year
has been
ofllclally praclalmed by Mayor Richard Seyler as the Sesqulcen··
tennlal Year fer Pomeroy. Here, Mary Powell, who heads the
viiJace'a aeeqnleenlennlal celebration committee, reads lhe
proclamation for the ma,or, Pernertlf Counclbnember lletty
Baroalck aad eUler memben of VIIJaP Coundl. Followlnrthe •
·rel4llnc of the prwclamaUoa u Monda, nl&amp;'ht's regular meeUus of
Council, lhe document wu approved by Council and signed by the
mayor.

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