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Tu11dey, October 17, 1989

Pomeioy-Midc:leport. Ohio

Page 10-The Daily Seiilluel

'l'lleatorewlll da~ewlr•' 7

terestect,re••f!e...

MASON FURNITURE
COMPANY

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prt~~are for die-- IJI&amp;..,.
te•orrow! DON'T IOJS 0111'!

D 'D~··~E'D

,.rn

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...m~. 8JlU..~.. ,ma ~V Jr~9•••
A F•hl•~ ~ Trljl for Tn!

773-5592

2ND STR.E~T

Ohio·Lottery

Scenes from
Bay ·area
earthquake

YI!S!Youcouldbethehldlywlnnerofllllnmdlble
week at Marco I....., the premier ,.,..Ua at
Florlda'1 IDOit llleaiN bachl Trip lndudet he
coadomlnlum for 7 dayl, &amp;ee LIIII:Oin Town Clr
rfttll, &amp;ee round-trip llr fare for two, plu d the
lilnln the IUft llld llllfyuu cat f*l hU leWII days~

Piek-3
960
Piek-4
8145

ol rain 80 percent. Th11nday,
hl&amp;h aear 45. Chance ol rain N
percenl.

Page 3

•

•

~

at
Vol.40, No.1 14 M
, Copyrlghtlld 1989

Candlestick Park
suffers damage
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The extent of the damage caused
to Candlestick Park hy Tuesday's earthquake was to be
determined Wednesday, along
with the prospect as to whether
the World Series could be re·
sumed In the Glan ts' ballpark,
Candlestick was damaged In at
least two areas, and people were
seen taking home pieces of the
stadium as they exited the park.
The most serious damage
appeared to occur In section 51,
located In the upper deck In the
center field area. A 6·1nch wide
crack ran through the entire
section, which contains about
2,000 seats.
A stairwell also collapsed In
section 53 nearby .
In Section 51, the cement
lacing came off, not the steel and
concrete structure.
There were no reported lnjur·

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''·

1

m•les

les In the park, where 62,000
people were to gather for the
start of Game 3 between the San
Francisco Giants and Oakland
Athletics. Oakland leads the
Series 2·0.
Baseball officials were to as·
sess the situation when the sun
came up, and to see If Candles·
tick was usable for the Series. If
Candlestick was determined to
be unsafe, It was possible that the
Oakland Coliseum across the bay
would be used lor the remainder
of the Series.
Other possibilities were to
move the World Series south to
Los Angeles or San Diego.
The San Francisco 49ers of the
National Football League have a
game scheduled Sunday at can·
dlestlck against the New Eng· .
land Patriots. Team officials
said they may move this game to
Stanford.

By PETE RAPALUS
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - Sear~h crews brought In heavy
equipment and dog teams Wednesday to help locate more victims In
the destruction ol the devastating Bay Area earthquake that officials
said kUled more than 270 people.
The quake was the second worst In IJ .S. history and Lloyds of
London said the cost of the damage was at least$1 billion. President
Bush quickly granted California's request for federal disaster ald.
Shaken residents laced a day of chaos with transportation,
CAUFORNIA
communication and power facilities all crippled by the quake, which
(
hit Tuesday at 5:04p.m. at the height ol rush hour.
Area
One of t!le greatest concerns was Interstate 880, a major
enlarged
double-decked Oakland thoroughfare where the upper tier of the
freeway collapsed on the lower level.
•
Oakland Pollee Lt. Sydney Rice said louf.lfog teams and heavy
equipment were brought In -to .search for bodies In the pancaked
....:~~~~:....,.
' ".
sections of the freeway.
•
"---......,'-----~-L-----1--' The 15 seconds of' rumbling which were collapsed or partially
EARTHQUAKE EPICENTER- A power!ul earthquake jolted
from the quake, which was collapsed; jordan said.
The quake·was felt from Reno,
norlbern California Tuesday, knocking oul power andcommunlca·
. measured variously at 6.9 or 7.0
Nev.,
250 miles to the east, to Los
lions, coUapslng a section olthe Bay Bridge, joining San Francisco
on the Richter scale, also
450 miles to· the south,
Angeles,
and Oakland, and postponing Game 3 ol lhe World s.e rles. The
crumbled buildings throughout
and
there
was massive damage
eplcenler of the quake was 10 mUes north ol Santa Cruz. (UPI)
Northern California, started
from the posh Mar Ina Dis trlct of
,..,.......,...,...,...,...,.,.-:-r-'"1""1r"I"T"TTT"'Trr:T"!":1"'T'T"T"I'!""iTrTT"rT-r::""""
!Ires
forced
postpone·
ment and
ot the
third the
game
of the San Francisco to the tiny moun·
World Series. A major blaze ted tal n of Boulder Creek.
More than 30 aftershocks
by a broken gas line In the
rattled frightened residents, the
Marina district destroyed six
biggest measuring 4. 7.
buildings .
There were conflicting casu·
Olllclals were faced with the
alty
figures. but Lt. Gov. Leo
Wodcers at Philip Sporn Plant,
job ot Inspecting hOuses and
McCarthy,
who was In charge ol
above New Haven, wm preparing
buildings and transportatiOn fa·
the
stale
when
the quake hit.
· ·IOdl'!' -10 , . . ...,._. ll&lt;lll...-.yor
clllt~ to s~ lf:_\hey were safe. .
because
Gov.
George
Deukme- ·
The M'arlria district, a neigh·
that overpasses U.S. Route 33,
whicb was heavily . damaged. borhood of mostly low:rlse jlan was abroad. ~aid 253 people ·
Thes!ay evening.
Medlterranean·style buildings died on Oakland's Interstate 880,
on either landfill or sandy soil nine were killed In San Fran·
Route 33, in the area of lhe plant
entrance, was closed today while
between the Golden Gate Bridge cisco, three in San Jose and at
preparations for removal of the coal
and Fisherman's Wharf, was hit least six In Santa Cruz. More than
400 people were Injured.
conveyor were being made.
hard.
Deukmejlan cut short a trip to
San Francisco Fire Chief
The conveyor was heavily
damaged Tuesday evening when 11
Frank Jordan toured the area Frankfurt. West Germany, and
was reportedly hit by a cheny
and said a slx·block area of was expected to arrive in Los
picker that had been picked up by a
multi· family buildings appeared Angeles Wednesday to meet a
lowboy at nearby American Alloys
to be severely damaged with military flight to the Bay Area.
''One thing that really disturbs
sidewalks and streets buckled.
Plant.
me
has been the failures of some
Phjlip
Sporn
Plant
Manager
"There
may
be
as
many
as
30
family of the !ale Mn. Hallleld lo lhe lwrd wae
RECOGNRION - ScoH Lucas, admtnlslra&amp;or
ol
the
highways, bridges and
Randy
Humphreys
today
declined
buildings
that
have
to
be
torn
made earlier. Plclured wllh Lucas receiving the
of Veterans Memorial Hospllal, presented two
roads."
Deukmejlan said.
to
speculate
lhe
dollar
amount
of
down,"
he
said.
"You
look
at
a
•
check and the plaques aar Mildred Fry, center,
plaques and a $1100 check to the hospital's
The
quake
str~ck along the
damages.
building
that
was
three
floors
and
and Sharon VIckers, co-chairmen of lhe auxll·
Women's Auxiliary Tuesday a~ternoon. The
notorious
San
Andreas fault at
Humphreys
said
workers
this
now
there's
only
1
~
floors."
lary's scholarship lund. The plaques In memory of
plaques were In memory "' lhe tate Ada Roush
the
worst
possible
time for the
morning
were
relocating
the
cable
There
was
no
way
of
knowing
, the late Mrs. Warner and the late Mrs. Hal!leld
Warner and the lale Ethel Hallleld Ia recognlllon
area's
5
million
residents,
thou·
feeding
power
that
operared
lhe
immediately
If
there
were
people
whO were active auxiliary members will hang In
of stzeable conlribullons made to lbe auxiliary's
Contin!led
on
page
5
unit and some cable that was used
trapped In the.buildlngs, some of
the hospital lobby . .
scholarship lund. Tile check Is from lhe famUy of
in operation of the conveyor.
tile tale Mrs. Warner while I he contrlbullon by the
Humphreys said he expecrs the
power will be relocaled by lhis
evening and then a crane will be
•
brought in to dismantle the ·con·
veyor. He expeciS lhe dismantling
to be completed sometime tomor·
· row.
By LEE LEONARD
the uniform rate as unfair to
There will be an evaluation done
UPI Slalehouse Reporler
highly populated areas close to
to
determine
if
there
will
be
the
Columbia pipeline.
COLUMBUS
Columbia
Cas
By LEE LEONARD
"We cannot alford to have a for lobbyists, Including compre·
replacement
conveyor
erected,
of
Ohio
was
given
a
rate
Increase
"We
think that rates should be
UPI Statehouse Reporter
state gover·nment that Is for sale henslve statements about whom
Humphreys
said.
.
Utilities
cost·based,"
he said, adding that
Tuesday
by
the
Public
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
to the highest bidder. We need a they s~nd thelr~orie:Y on and to
14
ft,
The
conveyor,
which
was
of
Ohio,
but
It
was
high
density
population brings
Commission
Saying the people of Ohio are governor who will make public whlcjl "- cam, lgns they
I
inch
above
the
highway,
was
also ordered to abandon Its down the cost of service.
tired of corruptlon In state service - not personar enrich· 'CO!ltr!Uute.
reportedly
moved
about
10
ft
by
geographic
districts and charge
For example, said Gerard,
TI\1\
Republican
gubernatorial
government; Republican guber· ment- the standing order of the
customers
in the Columbus area
uniform
statewide
rates.
candidate
also
proposed
shifting
the·impacr.
natorlal candidate Robert Taft I I day."
PUCO
order
means
that
will
have
to
pay more under the
The
lobbyist
regulation
from
the
~b Powers, Mason County su·
proposed a code of conduct lor
Taft's' !lve·polnt plan Includes
customers
In
some
areas
will
see
unlfonn
rates
. The PUCO estl·
Joint
Committee
on
Agency
Rule
penntendent of the West Viiginia
state oftlclals and employees a special prosecutor In the
In
their
monthly
bills,
a
decline
mated
that
the
monthly bills of
to
the
Ohio
Ethics
Review
Department of Highways, had his
Tuesday .
Attorney General's Olllce to
others
will
lace
rate
while
customers
In
central
Ohio, In·
Commission
to
provide
greater
worken assisting the Mason
"The people of Ohio want an ferret out public corruption and
Increases
In
November
or
eluding
Delaware,
Marton
and
County Sheriff's Department in
end to ·the crlppllng patterns of prosecute violations. He also said Independence.
Springfield.
will
go
up
by
about
2
December.
The JCARR Is a creature of the rerouting traffic.
corruption that they have suf· employees In his administration
"For
the
first
time,
geography
percent,
or
$1
.65.
fered at the hands of the present will be fired II they fall.to report General Assembly, where lobby·
will not Influence the rates
Gerard said the utility wanted
administration these past seven. violations of state laws and lsts ply their trade, while the
Columbia
charges
for
basic
gas
separate regions where
five
Ethics
Commission
Is
an
lode·
years,'' Taft said at a news ethical requirements.
ser"&lt;lce," said PUCO Chalrwo· prices would be uniform.
'
conference In the Statehouse
Taft also said he would support pendentagency.
man Jolynn Butler. "Custol:t\ers
The PUCO also made these
- ·rotunda.
_,
tougher reportln~ requirements
will be paying the same rate no preliminary estimates of rates In
~~---:=
A Mason inan, who crashed his
matter where they live."
other areas of the state:
•
ul~ight plane Sunday, is going to
The five-member commission·
-Southeastern Ohio, Including
sell tl
allowed Columbia a $14.9 million Athens, Chillicothe, Porstmouth
Paul Pierce, 46, said he was pracrate hike out of $23.2 million and Wellston , about a 9 percent
ticing takeoffs and landings, flying
requested. The Increase Is 1.7 decrease, or $7.63 a month.
about six- to eight-feet off the
percent over current operating
-Northwest Ohio, Including
gromd, when the 30-horsepower
costs. It was termed "moderate" Toledo, Bowling Green and Port
plane nose-dived near the Up10n
by Butler.
Clinton, about a 4 percent reduc·
Airpon. above Leon.
Steve Ostrander ol the Ohio tlon, or $3.04 a month.
•
Pierce, a Philip Sporn plant Ofllce of Consumers' Counsel
-Eastern Ohio, Including Za·
employee, said lhal while his plane
said his agency was pleased with · nesvllle, East Liverpool and
incurred only about $50 damage, he
the uniform rate ruling but Caldwell, a 5 percen I reduction,..
sustained a painful cut on his foot
"somewhat disappointed" with or $4.03 a month.
r '· .,·. ,
:J ..
that will result In him being off
the size of the rate hike perm!tied
.:.:Northern Ohio, Including
'\. 1'.1, ,) •
wade for some time. Pierce said the
by thePUCO.
Medina,
Mansfield, Parma. Bu·
0••
cut required abotll six-inside !Wid
The utility consumer watchd9g cyrus, Elyria, Findlay, Fostoria
20-outside still:hcs.
agency had called lor a $17 and Fremont, about a 2 percent
"I'm going. to sell the ~· in
milliOn rate decrease, saying, hike, or $1.33 a month.
fact
it's
fll'
sale
now,'
S&amp;ld
Columbia's
profits are
'[he commission announced It
on
week &amp;dlvl&amp;la b)' drets'nl
80tJTIIBitN QVEitN HOPEFULS - One of
today.
He
has
owned
the
ultralight
excessive.
wlfi
Investigate revenues earll@d
"cunotdla~re"
on
Tuesdllo)',
"sporlll
Mo-.i&amp;J,
lbeee Soullrera Rip klrool lelllon will be
plane, valued at about $1.500, fll' a
Steve Gerard, spokesman for by Columbia through special
ltJle"
on
Wedrrl!ld&amp;J
and
"purple
and
pld"
on
crowrred homecomln1 queen durtrr1 hlllftlme
Columbia, agreed with Butler contractual arrangements with
Thund&amp;J. Despite Soutbera Dl1lricl heine out ol short pecicid of time.
adlvlllea al Friday nl&amp;bl'l homecomtn1 rame
The
Point
Pleasant
detachment
that lbe rate hike was "moder· Industries to see how they affect
sc•ool
on
Frltllr
for
parenl-teacber
conferen·
between lbe Tonadee1
·Oak BID. Queerr
of the West Virginia Slate Po6cc
ate."
He said Columbia hu held the utility's finances.·
•
ca,
lhe
annUli
homcomlq
plll'llde
wiD
be
held
It
. ,. hopeflrlllnclude, lram lim to riJid, Bre.da Zirkle,
investigated the CJBSh. There were
costs
to
early·1980
levels
and
has
Another
rate
hike
req-t
of
1
p.m.
Friday.
ll'loa&amp;1
lrom
lbe
parade
will
be
s, April N-ewJW, Aimee Bill, Aimee Wolfe and
no
buildings
II' people ncar lhe area
not
boosted
Its
rat,es
In
four
year.
$311
million
already
Is
pelldlng
displayed
al
Frlda3'
nl&amp;bt's
111111e
wllh
wlnnln1
Allu Wllllorrl. To dram upeallr11ll.rn for Friday
where Pierce crash, state police said.
Gerard said the utility opposed before the PUCO.
float• 1o be annoaaeed durln11he even1n1.
niJhl'• rame, 1&amp;rrdenll are partlelpallnl' In 1plrlt
CALIFORNIA

•

.

,I

Pierce

* '

2ND STREET

MASON,WV
FI~JAL

Gas rates decrease
in southeastern Ohio

Taft seeks code of conduct
for state officials, workers

~

773-.5592

NO ITEM WILL BE HELD BACK rOR THE
I

President Bush ·signs
_,..Ea_rt_h_qu-a-ke-jo-=-lts___, disaster biD; search
San Francisco area
resumes for victims

Sacramento

::?5

Plane crash
is reported .

$499 =u

$299

...... c:hlny Oritnlllllitt Iiiii btocl&lt; tim ond

11

'

.

REG.'1a
ORIENTAL BEDROOM!
Orilnrrl print flon1l. Door .... wifl
,.._.. mm.r,lllge door chilL

. ..

REG.'791:JS

REG.'Se9.95

0

..

Route 33
•s ·c losed
l

REG. 1BIB:JS

Rictl Ook F'r~lh llinir4l Roam by s-tt. · ~
hulch
buflol Owol miclllllop
tlble; hide lor-. rnn d'erwith 11llhOIIIIItclrell11.
...pillS 11111t6. 11111t6 1.0"!

•ts

ea

y area

D"S 'DIE GRAIID 1'11'fALEI
Pine ftlmlture stores all across the coun·
try are Ill tile final hours of the greatest

2 Bectlono. 12 P•goo 211 Cento
A MuHimedl• Inc. N-IP•per

Pomeroy.;_Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, October 18, 1989
'

Ia Mason. you can shop It at 111111011
Purnlture. where you11 discover sensa·
tlonal price reductions on every Item In
stock. not just Bassett ftlmlture. but
everythlngl Come join tbe crowds and
don't miss tile ftnal llours of their big.
savings event of tile decadel

'

Low near 4e lonlghl. Chance

•r

12 HOURS!

. I'i
'

'I

'

,,

�f

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel../

Page-2-lhe Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, October 18, 1989

·Trouble brewing between Qtiayle, Kemp

-

WASHINGTON - A major
feud Is brewing between Vice
President Dan Quayle and the
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
man who could replace him as
George Bush's running mate In
~lh
1992- Jack KelllP·
~~ 1"1"'-'l........,..,......_e;~,;=t
Quayle has not grown Into his
•
job after nine months In office
ROBERT L . WU.GETT
· and Is stU! the butt ot late night
Publlllbef
talk show jokes. Kemp, the
Housing and Urban DevelopCHARLENE HOEFLICH , ment secretary, has parlayed the
PAT WHITEHEAD
HUD mismanagement scandal
General Maaager
J\ssWaot Publlaber/ CootroUer
of his predecessor Into a "White
Knight'' Image for himself. .The
LETTEIIS OF OPINION are welcome. 'lbey llllould be lesotlwl !00
former football player Is handwordo ...... AD letlero are subjecllo edlllar aDd mull be olroed wllh
some In a seasoned way that
name, address llld lelephHeaamber. No uulped lellero wW be pub111 Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Oblo

I

lished. Lellers should be Ia rood laole, addr,..IDIC los-, DOt peroo~·
ties.
,

Appreciates support

For this part, Kemp is minding
own business. which Is
considerable. But knowledgeable White House sources tell us
that there is an "edge to the
relationship" between the two
men that comes out I the
twice-weekly Cabinet meetings.
' Relations between the Kemp
and Quayle staffs are sometimes
curt. Both sides Mve a ve$ted
Interest In the rising star of their
bosses.
Some Insiders have heard
Quayle make lame jokes about
his

-,

THe eDUC~Tiot-1 PReSiDBNf,
.
1He. etNIRoi'JM~T PResiPe~T QR
THe. DRIJ6 W41R PRB~iDetfT?

Drug and alcohol addiction are
two problems that affect many
Ohioans. Currently there are
more than 2 million Ohioans who
are suffering from one or both of
these problems. In order to
better care for and treat these
addictions the Ohio Senate recently passed legislation creatIng the Department of Alcohol
and Drlig Servf!:es (DADAS).
Governor Celeste signed tl'le bill
Into law this past week.
House Bill 317 would cfnsolidate alcohol and drug abuse
prwams Into a single agency.
This bill would transfer responsibilities regarding alcohOl and
drug addiction treatment programs, (methadone treatment
and driver Intervention programs, certification of other
drug and alcohol addiction programs) from the Departments of
Health and Mental Health to the
new Department This new De·
partment would be required to
promote, assist In developing
and coordinate education and

research, for 1he prevention of
alcohol and drug addiction and
treatment for these addictions.
The primary goal of DADAS Is a
comprehensive statewide plan
emphasizing abstinence.
The bill would change the
name of community mental
health service districts, to alcohol, drug addiction, and mental
health districts aDd add tQ their
responsibilities alcohol and drug
addiction services. Also community mental health boards
would be renamed, boards of
alcohol, drug add1ctlon and men·
tal health serv(ces. These boards
would have 18 members; four
appointed by the Director of
DADAS and the other len would
be appointed by the board of
county commissioners. These
newly created boards would be
responsible for local alcohol and
drug addiction programs and be
subject to the oversight of
DAD AS.
By July 1, 1992 the Council on

Alcohol and Drug Addiction
Services would be required to
evaluate the determine whether
the goals of the bill hav'! been met
and the effect of the bill on the
funding and provisions of the new
Department.
Within 30 days of the bill's
effective date, the Department' s
of Mental HealthandAlcoholand
Dr1111 Add1ctlon Sel'vleeti would
be required to develop a financial
plan tor the orderly transfer of
appropriations and cash from the
Department's of Mental Health,
Health and ControUing Board to
the new Department.
For those Individuals who lose
their employment because of the
bill would have an opportunity to
receive severance pay. The Department of Health will d.lstrlb·
ute up to $900,000 to the regional
councils alfected by this bill. The
&lt;Director of Health' would be
required to establish criteria to
be used · by the councils to
determine which employees or
former employees are eligible to

..

receive severance pay and cover·
age of health care benefits.
During fiscal year 1990, boards
of alcohol, drug addiction and
mental health services and
boards of alcohol and drug
addiction would be required to
give preference to former em- ·
ployees of Regional Councils on
Alcoholism who become unemployed as a result of, this
legislation. These Individuals
must apply and be qualified fro
the positions that become
available.
,
Only two other state have
created such a department to
deal with drug and alcohol
addiction. I am hopeful that this
Department will be affective In
helping lndlv !duals suffering
from drug and atcohol addlcltions. If you have any questions
concerning this legislation,
please do not hesitate to contact
me at (614) 466-8156 or write:
Senator Jan Michael Long, Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio 43215.

Bill for Reaganism comes due
loan Industry, theReaganadmln·
lstratlon stashed supervision of
the thrifts while Ignoring warnlogs of everything from avarice
to Incompetence among their
owners and operators.
A federal bailout of the Industry will cost taxpayers at least
$164 billion during the next
decade.
'
Item: Re!lgan never displayed
any particular Interest In encouraging ethical conduct among his
appointees. He also never cared
much about federal housing
programs, except as a source of
budget reductions.
The confluence of those two
factors at the Department of
Housing and Urban Development has produced a major
Washington scandal whose cost

Is estimated at $5 billion to $10
billion.
Item: The federal debt was
less than $800 billion when
Reagan entered the White House
but $2.2 trUlion when he left. The
cost of servicing that debt was
soared from $69 billion In Interest
In 1981 to $169 billion In 1989.
Uncounted billions of add!tiona! dollars must now be spent
on problems Reagan did little to
resolve - lncl~dlng controlling
dependence upon drugs, dealing
with a growing AIDS population
and providing housing for the
homeless.
In Wyoming, the FWS had an
opportunity to buy a second,
30-acre parcel of.elk habitat from
the Twin Creek Ranch In 1985 but again the Reagan admlnls·

Berry s World
0

•

'

~1.

\

Today in history

.

Kemp In private. Kemp has jokes
of his own. At a recent birthday
party HUD employees three tot
him, Kemp mentioned he was
going to Camp David to see the
president. "It should have ~n
the other way around," he said
with a face that showed mock
lament.
Why would Bu&lt;h pick Kemp,
the man who rubbed him the
wrong way when both were
campaigning for the 1988 Repub·
lican presidential nomination?
Because Kemp has emerged as a
team player, anxious to promote
a better Image for lhe Bush
administration. He Is listening to
Bush and .acting on ··tbe presldent"s orders without balking:
Kemp has garnered more atten· ,
!ion than . any other Cabinet
· member, and had managed to do
It without outshining Bush. ·
Kemp's Image ai HUD has
gone from Initial suspicion to
some overrlght adulation. The
rank and file seek hlm as a dream
boss, compared to his predeces·
sor Samuel Pierce. Pierce was
aloof, almost bored. Kemp floats
from office to office chatting with
HUD workers, telling theiri' to
call him Jack lnste11d of Mr.
Secretary. ·
Over at the White ·House,
Quayle Is stU! trying 't o stifle the
jokes about himself. He Is prone
to gaffes and the polls show he
still gets no respect. Americans
won't forget that he's no Jack
Kennedy, as Sen. Lloyd Bentsen
stingingly pointed out during the
vice presidential debate last
year.
By 1992, It may be clear that he
Is no Jack Kemp either.

Scenes from killer earthquake in Bay area
-----.....

•

' ·--

•

0

0

0

Robert Walters
!ration refused to make any
money available.
Negotiations have been reopened for that tract, but Its price
has Increased "substantially"
from the $16,000 per acre initially
sought by the owners, according
to FWS officials. As a result, It
also may now be too ~xpenslve to
buy---,~,...,,.,..~----

" Public N atlc11
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY. OHIO
OONITA APRIL POOLER,
PLAINTIFF,
- VS DAVID ELLIOTI
HENDRICKS,
DEFENDANT.
CASE NO, 89-DR-209
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

To David

Elliott Hen-

dricks, whoae place Of r•i·
dance is unknown. you ere
hereby notified tt..t you ere
named Defendant in • divorce action entitled Donite
AprH Pooler, Plointllfva.'Dovid Elliott Hendriob, Defendant. Thit ection h11

been aaigned c•• number
89-DR-209 In the Coun of
Common PltM of Moigo
County, Ohio .atl789 filed
on Auguat 11, 1888.
You 1re r-,ulred to· en~
awer Nld Comploim w~hin
28 daya from the 161t publlcotlon of the notice which
thell be publiahed once eech
week for tix contecutNe
weeki, Yht IMt publication
will he made on tho 16th dey
of November. 1989,
In ute of your failure to
entwer or othlrwite r•pond • required by the Ohio
Rul• of ClvM Procedure. the
Plointlff,
Donlto
Aprl
Pool•. wHI he grtntod o divorce • dem.,ded "' h•
Complaint: wHI he given on
oqu~oblt dlviolon oj.proptrty; ond potentloily til·
mony.

"Thfly don't migrate anymore, bBcau1a people fel!ld them and, of COUI'IIB, the air traffic 11
HORRENDOUS/"

,,

Larry Spenctf, Clwk of
Couna of Mtigo County
Common PIN!l Court
By Mortone H4'nilon,
Doputy
i10)11.1B. 26;(11)1,8, 11
ltc

..

j

~-

RESCUE WORKER GIVES UP - J\ rescue worker lives up
Tuesday after trying to revive an accident victim on the,coDapsed

Bay Bridge between San Francisco and Oakland. A powerful
earlltquake, measuring 7 on the Bichler scale, caused a 50-foot
section of the span to cave ln.
· ,
-

The Daily Sentinel

Canseoo pumps gas
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)
People making their way home
from Candlestick Park after
Tuesday's earthquake witnessed
an unusual sight at a gas station
- Oakland outfielder Jose Canseco filling It up.

l

COLLAPSED BUILDING - J\ buDding lsaupporled by pieces of
lumber Ia the heavlly-clamaled Madia Dlalricl of 8aa Franclaco

Series fans
calm during

- s

t

•*

::: r;1~Fj!/:c~o:~~~~

dilir·sr

r

lps~lll 01 Ths W11l&lt;l

the area, killing dozens of people,
u tillty officials said.
Charles lmbrecht, chairman
for the California Energy Commission, said Tuesday that
power was expected to be restored to about one quarter of
those affected by 10: 30 a. m,
'Wl'dnesday. He said power could
be restored to halfthecustomers
by nlgh!fall Wednesday.

No subscriptions by mall permitted In
areas where home carrier service Is
.a vailable.

.

ADOLPII~S- DAIRY VALLEY l
W Of •

PaMarorl111•

SINGLE COP\'
PRICE

Dally ................... ........... ..... 25 Cents
Subscribers not d~trlngtqpay the carrier may remlt In advance direct to
The Daily Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit wUI be given carrier each
week.

•Plastic by the Roll
SEE US TODAY!

PICKENS
HARDWARE

13

Mall Sut.crtptlou
Inside Melp County

weeks., ,,,.,,,,,,,, ...... , .. , S19.24

26 Weeks ,,,,, , .... ,,,.,,, ............ S37.96
52 weeks ...... .... ,',,, .... , ..... .. .... S74.36
Oulslde Melp Count)'
13 Weeks .................................. $20.81
26 WeekS, ......... ,,,,, .. ,, .... ,.. , $4(l.:IJ

MASON, WY.

!f2 Weeks ...... .............. .. .... ... ...... $75.40

FRIDAY
OCT. 20, -1 989

THURSDAY
OCT. 19, 1989

·

SAtURDAY
OCT. 21, 198CJ

ALL. 89 MODELS
.

AT FACTORY INVOICE
*ALL IlliTES TO DElUI
'

•

'

1m Cobb
•

992-6614
EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

'

THAT COULD SAVE YOURLIFE

TAKE THE

filii

•••s '"'""""";.

"It •

lishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc., ·
Pomer-oy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·21.56. Se·
cond class postage paid at PomerOy,
Ohio.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week .. .. ... ........................... .$1.40
One Month ... ...... ..... .. ......... .. ...... $6.10
One Year ...................... ........... $72.80

ALL
I

SIRLOIN STEAK .
.
$1.39
'

earlbq111ke.
Y, GIRO
AI the IUD eel, the city '
·•
. darkened by the massive power • • -.. ( • • )
ont.a r"" t!lOk on a y.hostly huf.".

•

¥••·

through Friday, 111 Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio. by tbe Ohto VaUey Pub-

•Pipe Insulation
Estimated 1 million •Heat Tape
•Storm Window
are without power
Kits
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Between 500.000 and one million
•Storm Window
utility customers were without
power Immediately after a dev·
Kits
astating earthquake hammered

eart~quake
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)
Ll ke thousands of other San
Franciscans, I sat In Candlestick
Park and nervously awaited
Game 3 of the 1989 World Series
when suddenly the Earth moved.
Amazingly, most of the 60,000plus gathered for the game
remained calm and In fact
cheered the powerful quake
jokingly before realizing that this
was no light-hearted matter.
Phones Immediately went out
and the sky went dark from
power outages. Despite harrow·
tng circumstances, no panic
swept the stands. Fans stood
looking at each other wondering
what to do.
,
Each aftershock caused co.n- ·
cern to grow, and then word
began to fUter through the crowd
on the radios: A section of the
Bay Bridge had collapsed. A
massive fire was sweeping
through the Marina district. 'l'he
Berkeley Library was on fire .
PRECARIOUS RESCUE - Reacue workers try to keep a car
There were deaths.
from
pilll over tile edge oltbe Bay Bridge between San Fruclsco
The g11iety typically associated ,
and
Oaldaad
Tuesday after a powerfu! earlltquake coDapsed a
with a World Series game had
S&amp;-foot.ectlon ol the brldtp!. (UPI)
·
,
turned to fear.
When baseball Commissioner
Fay Vincent called off the game
Indefinitely, the order was given
to clear the stadium. Thousands
of fans streamed out In an
orderly fashion, climbing onto
MUNI bu!k!s. wondering what
awaited them In the city.
They did not have to walt long.
.
f.~ '
As the bpses approached the
city, the sickly sight of a huge
column of smoke riling above the
Marina district signified the
battle that was being fought
·Willi
•1.94~ ..
'
'
.
.
elsewhere for lives.
As the buses got Into the city,
they were met by streams of
' '
workers pourloi Into neighborhoods, Their faces told a story or
worry, aaxltlty and the awful
truth that the unthinlcable bap- ,

Published every afternoon, MondaY

POSTMASTER: send address changes
to The DaUy Sentinel, l1l ~rt St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

after Tuesday's earthquake. (UPI)

San Francisco and Oakland foUowln1 Tuesday' s
earthquake. ( UPI)
·

CARS TRAPPED - Two cars are trapped on
the collapsed section olthe Bay Bridge between

(USPS l411-t£1)
A Dhrlllton er M..-nmall~ Inc.

Member: United Press Int~rnattonal,
Tnland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper AssociatiOn. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper 5ales, 733 Ttltrd Avenue,
· New York, New York 10017.

IT'S TIME TO
8ET READY
FOR WINTER ...

Ohio's new DADAs ______S_en_._Ja_nM_._L_on_g

JACKSON, Wyo. (NEA) - In
1981, the year Ronald Reagan
assumed the presidency, the
Interior Department's Fish and
Wildlife Service had to forego an
opportunity to acquire a key
parcel of land adjacent to the
National Elk Refuge here.
The FWS had a chance to buy
40 acres of tbe Twin Creek Ranch
for $400,000. It had to reject that
now open.
Dear Editor:
offer, however, because ImmeThanks to the concern, the
- All of our campgrounds are diately after he entered the White
prayers and the many offerings open.
House, Reagan ordered a halt to
pf material and moral support
- 62 of our 63 golf courses are all Interior Department land
rrom your community, the Myr- open ,
purchases and Impounded tbe$12
tle Beach area Is making a quick
-More than 1,000 restaurants million remaining In the 1981
recovery from _ the Impact of and nearly all attractions are FWS land acquisition budget.
Hurricane Hugo.
open,
Tne agency stUl believes the
Over the years, we have
- Specialty shops, malls, and tract would be an Important
enjoyed extending. our hospttal- outlets are open.
addition to the refuge, where
lfy to vacationers across the
Your calls and letters of thousands of elk spend the
nation. It .has been heartwarm- concern are greatly appreciated. winter. But the land has been
jng to see this good wUl returned Our smiles are back. Brlng transformed Into the Mountain
tenfold during tl!e aftermath of yours.
Meadows housing development
the storm. Although clean-up Is •
Sincerely, and Is sub·dlvlded Into five-acre
stU! In progress In some areas,
J . Michael Pate, Chairman hOme sites.
the reports of the Myrtle Beach
Myrtle Beach Area ,
As a result, the cost of buying
area's demise are greatly Hugo Economic Renewal Task the land used by the migrating
exaggerated.
Force elk when traveling to and from
- More than 10,000 rooms are
the refuge has soared to a
prohibitive $1.7 mUIIon - more
than four time the earlier price.
The Q!lssed opportunity In the
Jackson Hole area of northwestern Wyoming constitutes only a
By Unl&amp;ed Press lnlernatlollal
Today Is Wednesday, Oct.18, the 291stday of1989with 74 tofoUow. small example of the legacy of
the Reagan administration.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
It II Important, however, beThe morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
cause
It Illustrates the price the
The evening stars are Venus and Saturn.
country
must now paytor toleratThose born on this day are under the sign of Libra. They Include
novelist Fannie Hurst In 1889; former Canadian Prime Minister Ing - If not enthualaatlcally
Pierre Trudeau In 1919 (age 70); Sen. cJesse Helms, R-N.C.,Jeadlng supporting - eight years of
Senate conservative, In 1921 (age 68); Greek actress Melina Mercourl governance by a president who
In 1925 (age 64); actor George C. Scott In 1927 (age 62); Lee Harvey recklessly mortgaged the nafuture.
Oswald. assassin of President John F. Kennedy ,In 1939; and actress tion's
Reagan constantly aubatltutecl
Pam nawber In 1951 (age 38).
phony economy for prudent
spend1ng. He embraced laiiiM!Z
On this date In history:
falre captlallsm at a time when
In 1776, the bonier between Maryland and Pennsylvania was finally federal oversight wu needed to
settled. Dubbed the "Mason-Dixon" line, It became the unottlclal · control greed In newly deregubolllldary betwyeen North and South.
lated marketplaces.
, ~ 19!!1, the Soviet Union announced an unmanned space vehicle
Item: Committed to druttc
!tad taken the first Pictures of the tar side ot the moon, '
deret~~latlon ·of tbe savings and

Lettel'S to the editor

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

. WMQ aM I ToPaY- •

A rush to judgment
need not be swift
By E. MICHAEL MYERS
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Congress cannot help itself from
criticizing and trying to manage the affairs of the executive branch,
and there Is no exception to the question of who may have bungled
Panama.
It Is the duty of Congress under the Constitution to deeply involve
itself in foreign affairs. But just as the president ru11s the risk· of
criticism of his actions, so too does Congress when It pl~ys Its
~nstltutional role -or overplays it.
There are sharp political operatives working In behalf of President
Bush who relish a good fight. The squires and barons of Capitol Hill
should know that when they go hunting for blame, their flanks are
exposed.
~
Brent Scowcroft, the president's national security affairs adviser,
rebukes Congress for "mlcromanagement'' of the executive branch,
meaning meddling In Panama and other national security mafters.
Sen. David Boren, D-Okla., chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee. reacts with Innocent outrage.
Critics see the failed efforts of dissident Panamanian military
officers to seize strongman Manuel Antonio Noriega and turn him
over to U.S. authorities to face trial on drug trafficking charges as a
largely made-In-Washington failure, that Bush should have done
more to ensure Noriega ended up In a U.S. jail.
Scowcroft said the administration was acting prudently because
events on the ground In Panama were confuSed and U.S. and
Panamanian military were In a fog.
That did not stop Congress. Secretary of State James Baker
criticized "armchair generals" who sermonized on what was and
should have been done days In advance of the coup, and In the hectic
hours In which It ultimately collapsed. Secretary of Defense Dick
Cheney said he had never seen such a bloodthirsty group of critics.
Baker and Cheney know the arena. Baker Is the ultimate political
Insider who has a matchless ego that serves him well in contending
with the powers of Capitol Hill. Cheney served there 10 years as a
Republican congressman, doing his fair share of criticizing
Democratic and RepubliCan administration poUcles.
Events often overtake people and they gush forth with
you-sho)lld-have's and why-dtdn't-you's before they have comprehen·
slve knowledge of the facts, The quiet, sober renectton that comes
. with a passionless examination of the facts- Information gathered
during a course of days or longer, not minutes -Is glamourless. And
hard work.
Immediacy gets you on the evening news, your name In newsprint,
and your soundbite on the air. The siren calls of the ml~rophone and
bright television lights, the entrapping reporters looking for a snappy
guote, are seductive.
• Baker and Cheney and Scowcrott play public relations with the best
of them, They are defending and promoting their boss In the Oval
Office.
Boren jumped Into the fray by charging the microphone and
rushing to the Senate Door and going on network television with how
the matter In Pan11ma was mtsm'ln'lged.
Boren and anyone else on Capitol Hill with knowledge of the facts
lias the right' and re$ponslbillty to offer criticism or advice on the
management of foreign affairs.
,
: But It can be done with 'less volume and rashness. Reporters are
hungry for Information and will pour fuel on the fire of a politician's
ambition or anger. That doesn't mean It Is always good policy.
There are others on Capitol Hill who run down the facts, and hold
\hem close for examination and thought. They come down with a
judgment, and It is usually delivered In private letters and
conversations and thoughtful speeches, not In hurried hallway
snippets before cameras or in rush-to-the-floor speeches,
_The thoughtful ones are heard and seen less, but respected more.

Quayle Ia not and, to put It
tactfully, more Intellectually endowed than the vice president.
Which man would you pick lor a
running mate?
Kemp was considered In 1988,
but Bush picked Quayle Instead.
Bush told confidants at the time
that he djdn't want to be
upstaged. The Republican Party
won'tletBushbesocavallerwlth
the No. 2 spot In 1992.
No doubt ~ayle has figured
that out, and even If he sees
l!lmself as presidential material,
he can't help but hear Kemp's
footsteps behind him.

The Daily Sentinai-PIIge-3

Pomeroy Midclapon, Ohio

Wed.-ctay, Octobeo 18. 1989

'

Adults &amp; Children
Should be Tested.

$6.00
!
Tesr odminillterai by

PRO-MED
Sctelaiq Services

(614) 446 4407

Each Test

Friday October 27'" 9AM·6PM
Saturday October 28... 9AM-3PM
Needed.

•no "

991·1556
....._...._

llllf"llllf':

'

'

Triglycaride &amp;
Glu- tnts
oHtrecl aho. 12
hour fast rlquirtd
far thtst 2 lnll.

�... "' . .

~

'

•

Pomaov-Midcleport. Ohio

Page 4 The o.ily Santinel

........

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V..c.1ner at 'hl'elllo. 1;Si p.m.
Ml•-* .. DMI'IIII, 1:S5 p .m.
ftlladlfplllalli New Ieney, '7 : 41p.m .

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Pike Eastern 19th in Class A
NEW KNOXVILLE, Ohio
(UP!) -This week's Ohio high
school volleyball ratings, compU@d by Chuck Brad&lt;?n, past
president of the Ohio High School
VoDeyball Coaches Association,
and distributed by UP!. (Firs{:
place votes and team records In
parenti1eses):
Cl•sAAA
TeMri

i;tolnts

1.
2.
3.
4.

Reynoldsburg 071 n7-ll .............. 2%7
Can too McKinley t6l t18-01 -----------219
Elyria 12) t21-ll ............. .... .......... 175
Cln. Mercy 09-2) ... ..... .................. 147
5. Ctn. Oak Hills !18-31 -- --·- .. ·-----·-----1«
6. Cuyah~a Falls (1) (18-1) ~ ........... 123
1. Stow 117-2! ·----... --·----·--·-----------·--- · 98
8. Ctn. Setoo ill tl~&gt;&gt;-·---·---- ----·-----· 73
9. Westerville South 119-1) ................ 64
10. Oregon Clay m-1) ........ ..... ........... 49
s--1 lea: 11. Louisville 37; 12.
Sandusky 28; 13. Bellevue 24; 14. Nortll
OlnUied 20: 15. Wo08te'f 19; 16. Mentor18;

17. Ce-nterville 15; 18. celina (1) 14; 19.
(1\e)

Dayton Carrcil and Austlnt&lt;M'n

Fitch, 12 each.

CluaAA
TeMD
Po•t.
1. Bucke:;e Trail 071 tl!Hi). ---- ........ 297

2. Dayton Chamlnade till tlll-31 ...... 251
3. Fairview Park til !1~2). .............. 206
4. Oak Harbor 09-1) ............... ........ . 171

5. Salem til t19-3) ---- .. ---·----------· -----· 160

6. Jack5&lt;11-MIIton tll 121-ll .. ---- .. --·--- 14C
7. Clyde !1~31 .-----·----------·--·-- - -·-·---·-- 89
8. Ashland Creotvtew t21 (1~11 --·-- .. -· 85
9. MariOn River Valley 117-21 .......... 78
10. Akrm HobonJI6-31 ...................... 72
leCOIIII&amp;ea: 11 . {tie)NewLondon(l)and

Medina Highland t2), 71 each; 13.
Pemberville Eastwood 67; 14- Sprtni!1feld
Sh.wnee 49; 15. Tea,ys Valley 39; 16.
Bexley 35; 17. Springfield Northwestern
34; 18. Rossford 31; 19. canal Fultoo
Northwest 21; 20. Finney town 18.

ClusA
Team
Po11R1
1. NewarkGath. t201 tl8-2l .... ...... .... 3112
2. New Knoxvute 151 !19-2) ............... 282
3. Miller City 121 120{}) .......... .......... 183
4. BerUn Hiland 12) !21-01 ·----- ·- ·-----·-177
5. SJ _ Henry tltH) --·---·-·--- .. ----·----· --.. 149
6. 0&gt;1. Wehrle t21 )19-1) --- --- --·---- .... -144
1. Frankfort Adena (17·31 ............. .. .. 95
8. Archbold (14-41 ......................... .... 65
9. Centerburg (15-1)
64
10. Hopewell-Loudon t1) tl!Hl) ..... .. .... 60
SHJIIIIII tea: 11. Falrbanks 58; 12.
Rockford Parkway 57; 13. Avoo ~; 14.
Heath 40; 15. Fon Recowry 31; 16.
BuCkeye Central 18; 17. (tie) St. Bernard
and Newbury, 14 each; 19. BEAVER
EASTERN 13; 20. West Liberty Sal an 11.
H

By MIKE TUU.Y
UPI Natloaal Buebllll Wrl&amp;er
- SAN FRANCISCO - A major
earthquake that killed at least
250 people rocked Northern California Tuesday about a half-hour
before Game 3 of • the World
Series, cracking1the concrete of
Candleslick Park and sending
players, their families and fans
onto the safety Of the field.
The crowd of in ore than 60,000
on hand for the game between the
San Francisco Giants and Oakland Athletics shuddered as the
rolling quake struck at 5:04p.m.
PDT and las ted aboull5 seconds.
At least two aftershocks were
felt, and Caltech seismologists
estimated the quake at between
6.5 and 7.0 on the open-ended
Richter scale.
Baseball Commissioner Fay
Vincent said he would meet with
safety experts Wednesday mornIng to discuss the possibility of
'
continuing the Series In Candlestick Park.
- "There's noway we're going to
let people back In this b\llldlng
until we're absolutely sure It's
safe," said Vincent. ''We have to
get advice from government
officials before we decide on
when to play. Any decision we
make (on · the safety of the
building) will have to be based on
fact, and what I don' !know Is how .
long It will take to get that
Information."
Vincent was talking with
former Giant and Hall of Farner
Willie Mays when the quake hit.
Vincent' said. he called.the game
at 5:15p.m. ,
_
"There Is no power In the city,"
Vincent said. ''It was clear to me
that It was important for people
Game 3 ol tbe World Serlell. The stadium 1ulfered
BUTLER TOES FAMO.Y FROM STADRJM
to leave the park while there was
some structural dama1e, but no one was burt.
- The Giants' Brett Buller takM hlalamlly from
still daylight. We could not run
(UPI)
CandlMIICk . Park Ia Su Fraacllco lollowiDc
the risk of having all these people
Tuesday night'• earlbquke, wltlclt poetpoaed
here In the darkness."
Said General Manager Sandy
Alderson of the Oakland Athlet - clutching handfuls of concrete. just sat down and waited to see gltng with the crowd outside the
Ics: "In any case the World Electricity In the stadium went what would happen. No one ballpark. "We have no Idea right
Series Is secondary to what else on and off.
panicked ln ·the stands. We were. now," an unidentified player
said. •'The ollly thing we heard Is
Is going on."
.
At 5:54 PDT, fans and players fortunate."
Vincent was tO announce Wed- lingered on the field while some
One report said there were there's a chance we'd play them
nesday lr)Orning when and where of the crowd left the park.
eight- to 10-lneh cJ;ac ks throught- In Oakland. There's no damage
Game 3 will be played.
"Baseball Is obsolete, espe- out the upper deck section, and to the stadium In Oakland. ••
"Everybody was running out
It was' the first World Series cially when you think about what extensive damage to Section 51.
of
the clubhouse like It was a
game ever postponed by an happened to the people on the Outside the stadium, fans from
stampedeofcows,"
said Oakland
earthquake. The last time the Bay Bridge," said Oakland Section 53 held pieceS of stairway
pitcher
Dave
Stewart.
"I thought
Series w'as held In San Francisco slugger Dave Parker. "It's a that had broken apart.
was In 1962, when heavy rains tragic day."
"I'm shook up by the whole It was runny at first but tben I
forced three consecutive post"I was under the table," thing," A's reliever Gene Nelson realiZed It was a 'serious
ponements of Game 6.
umpire Rich Garcia said. "I have said. •'Inside the clubhouse ever- earthquake."
·~we were In one last year In
Structural damage to Candles- never been In one before. I was ything was shaking. The lights
tick Park, the 29-year-old bal- thinking aboutmyfamllyand my went out, the dust started falling Los Angeles and that was pretty
lPark that Is the second-oldest In friends. I had a lot of people and It looked like the pillars were bad," Giants first baseman Will
shaking. We decided to get out. Clark said. '"We had a packed
the National League, Included a here.''
house here. It could have. been a
I'm worried about my family."
section of upper deck In right
"I dldn' t know that It was an
catutrophe.
_
"We shook up the lineup bUt we
field which was separated by six earthquake," said National
"You
can't
(play
the game)
didn't ltnow -tllat ~~ dotn&amp;
Inches. The ma111 prees box 'League Ptoesldent Bll1 Wbtte,
with
all
the
damage
that's
been
this,"
said
Giants
General
Manshifted when the first tremor hit. who was sitting In an officials box
going
on
around
this
city.
It
gets
ager AI Rosen.
_....
The stadium was evacuated, adjacent to the field. "There was
your
a,ttenlion,
that's
for
sure."
Players In uniform were minand some fans left the park no panic. What can you do? We

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

Cincinnati brought down to
earth by Dolphins' upset win
CINCINNATI (UPI) -It took out the Bengals the second half
a IQSS on their home turf to bring and scoredl7polnts to pick up the
th~ Cincinnati Bengals down to
victory. Minute by minute In the
eaith.
second half, the l)oJphlns got
· After having obviously grown better and the Bengalsgotworse.
overconfident In the wake of a - At the end, there was no doubt
dozen straight home wins, the that Mlam I deserved Its upset
Bengals were stunned 20-13 by win.
the Miami Dolphins at Riverfront Stadium on Sunday.
"Mabye we needed this," said
GOOD USD
quarterback Boomer Eslason.
WASIIEIS, HYRS,
•This shows you can't just put
your helmet _on the field and play
IIFIIGIIAIOIS, IYs.
well.
GAS I IUC. IAIIU
"I don't thInk the team had
emotion and I dido' t feel It In the
stadium. It was like everybody
felt we'd win this one going
away."
Ins tlead, It was the Dolphins
627 Jnl
I .,ala
wlnninl JOing away.
PI.446-16M
Aftel' spotting Cincinnati a 13-3
MIIIIOIH.KS: I 1.11.-6 P.M..
haiftlme lead, the Dolphins shut

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
a....,

'

"We have a . list of several
candidates and I underscore It
could be as many as 10 or 12,"
said Quinn, who wants to name a
new manager by theflrstweekln
November.
Quinn said the new Reds
manager must be "highly selfdisciplined" and be able to put
spirit Into the club. Former Reds
manager Pete Rose, banished
from baseball for life for gam-

I
I

•••
'•
•'
•

MORGANTOWN , W.Va .
draft and bypass his final season
(UPI) - West Virginia quarterof eligibility.
back Major Harris says he did
"Like I said, I've never heard
not make s!!llements to a St.
of that paper, either," he said.
Louis sports publication that he
Harris said he has been "too
wlii turn professional after this
caught up In the program to think
season and that he does not think
of anything like that," and
his mother stated she wants him
usually gives It no thought at all
to do so.
untu "somebody brings It up."
"I never said nothing about
Yet, he readily admitted · It
that," said Harris. "I don't think would be "hard" to turn down an
my mother said something like offer of $1 m Ullon or more to
that, either. I don't know where
become a professional athlete.
the allegations came from, but I He noted that at 21 years of age he
never said anything. As a matter
has spent those years "with
of fact, I haven't even heard of really not having nothing," but
the St. Louis Sporting News."
said money is not the only Issue.
The Sporting News had this
"You're used to not having no
Item In Its college football notes: · morley, so that's not the Issue.
"Reports from West VIrginia
You want to be satisfied," he
Indicate that Mountaineers quarsaid.
terback Major Harris will bypass
Satisfaction for HarriS would
·his final year of collegiate
be playing quarterback In the
athletic eligibility and opt for the
pros, something he believes
National Football League draft
himself capable or, but someafter this season,"
thing over which he has no
The 6-foot-1, 207-pound junior
control.
playmaker also dented speaking
"II can't think that far ahead
about the subject to a St. Louis
because, like I said, my thinking
newspaper that ran a slmUar
may not be like other people's
report. He was red- shlrted as a
thinking," he said.
freslunan and this Is hlsfouryear
Still considered one ()! the top
In school so he could enter the
four or five candidates for the

INSURANCE

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Patrol probes Tuesday collision
The Gallla-Melgs Post ot the State Highway Patrol
Investigated a two vehicle rearend collision at 2: 15 p.m.
Tuesday on SR. 7, about four miles north of the Gallla-Melgs
County line. Three people complained of Injuries. One driver
was cited.
The patrol said Timothy L. Hill, 31, Racine, driving a 1985
Ford Tempo, stopped to make a left turn onto CR. 398. Sally J.
McKnight, 19, Middleport, 'driving a 1985 Ford pickup truck,
was unable to stop. Her truck struck the back of the car.
Damage was heavy to both vehicles.
Both drivers along with Heather Singer, 16, Pomeroy,
complained of Injuries. All three were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where they were treated for minor Injuries.
The patrol' cited McKnight for failure to stop within the
assured clear distance.

--Meigs area announcements - - -

'

•

I '.UNDf1; F,\_f(llP

l~ !

~

f . '·; T
'(·, '

;

IU · \ h

Dally stock prlcM
(As of 10:40 a.m.)
Bryce ud Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

Hospital news

16 INCH DELUXE PIZZA
4-PIPSI 'S, 16 01.

$999

-I!IUYIIY AliA

Domino's
Pit~a
992-2124
POMEROY I

Licenses issued

o•o

TOP DOLLARS
FOR
.
WILD DRIED
Direct Shipment
'lb 'Il1e OrWnt

Stocks

I
I' "••"''
I

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li &gt;'

Hfi LLOWEEN

BASIC LEVI'S
c

,.

Continued from page 1

Lou Ella Fraley, 91, Route 3,
Albany, died Tuesday morning at
the United Hospital Center In
Clarksburg, W. Va.
Born In Kentucky, she was the
daughter of the late James and
Grace Defoe Cain. She was a
housewife and a member of the
Church of God of Prophecy,
Albany.
Mrs. Fraley Is survived by four
sons, Clifton Fraley, Pomeroy;
James Fraley, Prairieville, La.;
Clarence (Jack) Fraley,Aibany;
and Dennis Fr~ey. Jr., Morgan,
City, La.; two daughters, Lorraine Hart, West Union, W.Va.,
and [l()ris Jean Baker, London,
Ohio..
Also surviving are two sisters,
Ruby Roger, Graceland, Ky.;
and Maga Wayne, Charleston, W.
Va.; one brother, Leonard Cain,
Graceland, Ky.; 30 grandchildren, 46 great-grandchildren, and
four great-great-grandchtklren.
Besides her parents she was
preceded In death by her husband, Dennis Fraley, two brothers, Elbert and Charles Cain, and
three sisters, Florence Cain,
Carmine Fraley, and Ann
Sexton.
Funeral services will be held at
2 · p.m at the Blgony-Jordan
Funeral Home In Albany. The
Rev. James Stewart will officiate
and burtal will be In Temple

,,

~

-·

;"
'

SWEATERS

She quickly found friends, joining the Singles' Group and
the Women 's Club, attending Vespers, and volunteering
at the hospital and the
local Welfare House charity. The Singles' Group is
one of her favorites . "We
have a luncheon once a
month. We go to movies_
In fact, Friday we 're
having dinner in German
Village in Columbus and
going to a movie at the
Lolnlu r. Lyu
Ohio
Theatre_"
Brlltol Yllllie Rcolllcat

'!4t
Bristol Village,
there's never
a need to do
anything alone:.'

Lorraine finds Bristol Village "unique in the friendliness.
There's always someone to go get a sandwich with, and
say, 'Llt's go here. Let's go there.' " The friendliness adds
to the feeling of 'being safe and secure. "The contentment
means so much," Lorraine said.

112

OPEN UNTIL 8:00P.M. ON FRIDAYS

..
..•

n,

Lrraine Lynn
glows with.contentment. But. it wasn't
always that way.
After her husband
died, she had
· tried living alone
in the university
town where he had
taught. "But one gets tired of being a third wheel or a
wheel, regardless of how good your friends are," she said.Then she visited Bristol Village, "and everything worked
out perfectly."

5

20°/o OFF

Cemtery. Friends may call at the
funeral home trom.2 to4 and 7 to9 -sands of whom were In Candlestick Park for the game between
p.m. on Thursday.
two Bay Area teams - the San
Francisco Giants and the Oakland Athletics.
Q~ E. McFarllllld
"it felt like one of those huge
Quentin E. McFarland,
Nel- monsters from a Japanese horsonville, • died
Monday, ror movie grabbed a hold of the
OcLl6,1989, at Doctor's Hospital building and was shaking the hell
in Nelsonville, Ohio.
,
out of It," said Margie Cornehi, a
Born March 13, 1917, in Letart, city employee In San Jose, 50
W.Va., he was the son of the late miles south of San Francisco,
Ernest D. and Ora Jooes Me· who was working on tbe fourth
Farland.
floor of the -Six-story City Hall.
He was a retired guard for the
Scores of people suffered heart
Mental Health Center in Athens, attacks when the quake struck.
Ohio, sel'\'ed in the U.S. Army
The quake was the deadliest
during World War II and was a since the legendary San Franmember of Smith-Cll)iehart Post cisco temblor and fire that
No. 140 American Legion, New claimed 700 lives April 18-19,'
Haven.
1906. A quake in Long Beach on
Swvivors are his wife, Dorothy March 10, 1933, killed 120 people,
D. McFarland; a dapghter, MIS. and a March 27, 1964, quake
Linda S. Jolley, Nelsonvine; three killed 114 people In Alaska.
· sisters, Mrs. Catherine Stickler,
Thousands of people spent the
Columbus, MIS. Rosena Bushell, - night In shelters or In the open In
Wichita, Kan., and Mrs. Nora Wag- fear of another quake thai
nee, New Haven; five brothers, Wil- seismologists said could follow.
liam, Elmer and Marvin, all of New More than 30 aftershocks were
Haven, Edward, Barberton, Ohio, recorded that measured more
and Harry, Jacksonville, Ohio; and
than 3.5 on the Richter scale.
two grandsons.
McCarthy declared an emergency in seven counties and
Services were hell! this afterPresident Bush mobilized fednoon at the Foglesong Funeral
eral emergency forces to help the
Home in Mason, W.Va. with Rev.
David Fields. Jr., officiating.
stricken area.
- Burial was In Graham Cemetery. Military rites were held at
the cemetery.

Roads In the Santa Cruz
Mountains were blocked by
boulders and downed redwood
trees. Schools were closed and
officials told people not to go to
work Wednesday untll buildings
could be Inspected. Emergency
crews worked all night to repair
downed power lines, gas mains .
and ruptured fuel tanks, over a
wide area, Including Richmond
where 18,000 barrels of gasoline
leaked from a refinery tank.
.. , .
-·

Due to a printing error,
the 30D ct. Tootsie Rolls
Candy in our Oct. 11th
1919 Flyer appears ta
be 2.3 lbs. This is
incorrect.
We are selling a 1 lb. 15
oz. bag of Tossie Rolls.
We apologize for any
inconvenience this may
cause our customers.

BIG LOTS
137 Pille St.
Gallpols, 01.

OISP &amp; SIIVE VACU. PACK

SCARvES................. 1: O.FF
1 GROUP UDIES'

RETIRING - Evelyn Strauss l!as redred from the Sugar Rna
MID af&amp;er 511 and one half yean of service to the compaay. She was
honored on Oct. 11 with a smllll reception In which cake was served
and she was presented an ~nlversary clock.

--Area deaths .....-- - Bay···----,---------------------------------Lou EUa Fraley

~

••...•

UPI

WEATHER MAP - Snow Is forecast for parts of the
mld-MIIIislllppl Valley with rain In most or-the Ohio Valley ilad
most of lhe AtlanUc Coast statM. (UPI)

S15 99

'
••

.,

Rstol Village offers affordable, individual homes
available with a choice of membership plans. For more
informatio~ and an appointment to see our model
homes, call or write today.

Brisrol

II

VIllage

lndividuallwmts for today's .u~vt rttiremtnl.
lll ~ndy LanefWaverly, Ohio -45690

(614) 1147-1118 Ext.IOl
C.U 1bll Fru: 1-800-113-3811 Ext. 101
An affilille al Naional Church Residences.
N&lt;~~:· fot·profit, non-df:nomlrubw.l.

SLICED BACON ••••••••••••••~~!•.-.... 99c

KAHN'S PACUGE

WIENERS••••••.•••••••••••••••••~!•. Sl.99
SWIFT ECKIICH
ROAST BEEF ................. ~!.... S3.59
SMITIF.LD
SHREDDED 52.19 LU.
COOKED HAM ...........~~~!!·.. S1. 95
HOMEMADE
MEAT SALAD•••••·•••••••••• ~.~!!e•••••89C
KRAFT II SUCED PROCESS

AMERICAN
CHEESE .............u.n•.. Sl.99
SHEDD'S

COUNTRY CROCK
MARGARINE .UP!.!f.P!·••99&lt;
BlMIER VALLEY GlADE A

LARGE EGGS ......... !!91..99&lt;

SUNKJST
LEMONS .........!~.m... 2/39&lt;
CAUFORNIA
ORANGES ................ 2/59c
NEW YEllOW
ONIONS ••••••••JJP.-.........19'

..,011

GARLIC BREAD •••••••••~~.~!•.... S1.79
FIESIUIE
.• $1.79
GREEN

CHIC UN

STOVE TOP STUFFING .~t~!-. S2.29
SWANSON
CHICKEN BROTH •••~!~~~z•.. 2/S1.19
J-IIOWL
GRAPEFRUIT •••••••••••••••~~.~!•.....99cIUSI's
WHOLE POTATOES ••••U.~!••• 2/9 7c
IASTIIS CIOICE
INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••t~~.... S5.89
iOWNTY TOWELS ••u~~'M~~!. S2.99
IOYAU CIISI
FIG. lARS ••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••!.~. S1.49
u•HY DI111GINI

~

...'I''

TIDE •••••••••••••• ~.~!.~!~. S2.69

•
'•
.,

.~ ' ·' i : : '

to receive precipitalion indicated

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Leona
Wallace, Pomeroy; Helen Harris, Pomeroy; Georgia Watson,
Pomeroy; Shirley Willis,
Syracuse.
Tuesday -disCharges - Rose
Lee.

\

" ,.

-RAIN
~SHOWERS
FRONTS: "
Warm "Cold
. . Static . . Occiud~d
Map shows minimum temperatures. At least 50'l'. or any shaded a•ea is forecast

35'-'

YOUI INDEPENDENt
AGENTS SEIVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1161

WEn IIAIN

vatlon District Office at
992-6647.
Meigs to host Vinton
Meigs will host Vinton County
this evening (Wednesday) In
volleyball with action to start at
5: 55. The game was originally
scheduled for Tuesday but was
changed because Vinton was
Involved In tournament play.
Parents' Night will be observed
during the evening.

~SNOW

Am Electric Power ....... __ ....30¥.
AT&amp;T ................................. 42%
A$hland 011 ........................38%
Bob Evans ...... ,...................13%
Charming Sboppes ..............13%
City Holding Co........ .......... 15%
Federal Mogul.. .................. 21%
Divorces sought
GoodyearT&amp;R .................... 49
·
Divorce actions have been filed Heck's ................................. NA
In Meigs Common Pleas Court by Key Centurion ..................... 15
Howard L. EngUsh Jr., Pome- Lands' End .......................... 27
roy, against Barbara K. English, Limited Inc ................. :......
Middleport; and by Tonya Lynn Multimedia Inc...................98%
Watson, Racine, against Ricky Rax Restaurants .................. 2~
David Watson Sr.• In care of Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 15
Shoney's Inc . ...................... 10',4
Helen Pat ton, Keithville, La.
Sarah Carman, Pomeroy, and Wendy's Inti ........................ 5V.
Dennis Carman, Rutland, have Worthington Ind ................... 23
filed for a dissolution of their
marriage.
Granted a dissolution of their
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
marriage were John R. Jeffers
446 4524
' ' '' ~: .
and Robin Annette Jeffers. Robin
Jeffers was restored by the court
to her malden name, Dugan.

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA

I'' ••

Seminar Thunday
Inlenslve Grazing Seminar No.
1 will be held at the John Rice
farm on Thursday beginning at
10 a.m. and continuing until 2
p.m.
Bean soup and corn bread will
be served lor lunch and there will
·b e a $1 charge per person.
Darryl Clark, extension agent
from Musklngham County, will
be the main speaker for the day.
For more Information, contact
the Meigs Soil and Water Conser-

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Mark Alan GIIUlan, 28,
Long Bottom, and Carolyn Kay
Gilmore, 28, Long Bottom; and
Timothy Edward S)lowalter, 22,
Shade, and Michelle Dawn
· Folmer, 19, Shade.

111 S.Contl St., Po•nay

GINSENG BOOTS

·~

E,, .. , .
) . "\( . ·'
;·. ·'&lt;it•n PRIOR 1\RRf\NCf tt.;.

,,.I ~ot,' --f

Helsman Trophy, which symbolIzes the best college football
player In the nation, Harris
agreed the conies t Is a crapsboot
and said he tries not to think
about It because It will' 'drive you
crazy" having no control over lt.

.

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
responded to nine calls for assistance on Tuesday.
At 7:34a.m., the Tuppers Plains unit was called to State Route
7 for Randy Ferguson who was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Middleport was called at 7:52a.m. to Lasley St. in Pomeroy
for -Georgia Watson who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 8: 33 a.m., Syrac~se went to Third St. for Robert Louks to
Holzer Medical Center.
Tuppers Plains at 2:23p.m. transported Bertha Tuttle to St.
Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg.
The Middleport Fire Department and EMS at 2:28 p.m.
transported Tim Hill and Sally McKnight from an au to accident
on State Route 7 to Veterans Memorial HospitaL
.
Pomer0y at 5: 12 p.m. was called to State Route 143 for Iva
Johnson to Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport was called . at 5: 51 p.m. to the Stonewood
Apartments for Ellie Carmen to Holzer Medical Center. All(): 20
p.m., Middleport was called to the VIllage Manor Apartments
for Ricky Plumley who was also taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
The Scipio Fire Departmeni responded to an au to fire on State
Route 684 at 10:27 p.m.

DOWNING CHILDS

MULLEN MUSSEl

.

EMS luJs nine Tuesday rolls

.

Major Harris denies saying he'll tum pro

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST 10.8 AM EDT tQ-19-89

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports hiS
department Is ·investigating a fire of undetermined origin that
destroyed a 1979 Chevrolet four-door owned by Tom Stover of
Holley Road, Pomeroy. According to the report, the Scipio
Township Fire Department was called to the car fire on State
Route 684 out of Harrisonville. The vehicle was totally
destroyed.
.
Sheriff Soulsby also reports that Deputy Mark Boyd and Chief
Deputy Jlmmer Soulsby have received the Buckeye State
Sheriffs' Association Special Appreciation Award for continuous efforts to enhance the advancement of the law enforcement
profession.
.
·

pressing- Interest In trading for
Reds' star Eric Davis, Quinn
said, "It Is hlgblyunllkelywewlll
trade Eric Davis. I'm qulte an
Eric Davis fan. I think he's one
fine talent."
However, Quinn said he hopes
to trade for "some outfield help.
We'll be looking for a leadofftype hitter."

bllng, was often criticized for
faiHng on both counts.
"He's got to be a person who
himself Is highly selfdlsclpHned," said Quinn. 'That
type of lndtvtdual will lead by
example. We need to get back to
lnsti!Hng an esprit de corps. We
need to put the proper person In
place who can lead this club."
Asked about othet teams ex-

...'"
~

••
-r

Cause of fire unknawn

Reds consider dozen managerial prospects
CINCINNATI (UP!) - New
Cincinnati Reds general manager;BobQulnnsayshehasabout
a doZen candldates ·underconslderatlon to become the club's
manager.
Under questioning from reporters, Quinn acknownvtged the
candidates lncludeDallltsGreen,
Doc Edwards, Tommy Helms
and ' Hal Lanier. He declined to
Identify other candidates.

Ohio

...--Local news briefs--.

W•rld

....... at • .,..,..... ~ II p.m.
ca~..,. at •*"a. 1:Jip.m.

,_...

Wednn:'ey, October 18, 1989

World Series postponed by earthquake

Score board ...
Computfl'
ralingll

Wednn:'ey, October 18, 1989

.

.

.. .......

~.

,.,.. .

. _.

___ ... . ..

__..

�Wednesday, October 18. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

Pege-6 The o.ily Saati11al

are
announced
winners
·
Recent car
shotv
.

Tfle first car show of the Oldies
But Goodies Car Club. held on
Saturday on the Pomeroy park·
lng lot, turned out a total of 87
entries for the twenty class show .
Steven King, a disc jockey who
provides entertainment for
many car shows, provided music
for the large crowd that came out
In the near perfect weather to see
all of the cars.
Special award winners In·
eluded Tim Lowery, Newport,
best of show for an original;
Randy Offenberger, Beverly,
best of show for a street rna·
chine; and Sue Perdue, Fleming,
received the club trophy.
Other special awards went to
John McConnel, Dover, furthest
distance traveled, 203 miles; Lee
Archer, Vincent, best motor
trophy; Harry Pamer, Stock·
port. best interior; and Tom
LOwe, Belpre, best paint.
Individual class winners, In
first, second, and third place, fQr
the twenty classes are as follows.
Production through '49
winners were Opal" Grueser,
Pomeroy; Roy Grueser, Pome·
roy; and Tom Lowe, Belpre ..
In the production '50-'59, the
winners were Pam Lowe. Bel·
pre; Bill Chapman; Tuppers
Plains; and John Foster .
Gallipolis.
Dave Notter. Mineral Wells,
W.Va. ; Reed Buttrey , Eurebra,
W.Va.; and Ray Redman, · Ma·
son, W.Va ., were the winners in
production "60·'69.
In the production class '70·'79,
the winners were Don Boggs , ·
Oak Hlll; Millie Sapp, Athens;
and John Byer, Middleport.
· Production '80'89 winners were
Doris Deal, Point Pleasant,
W.Va.; Terry Ross, Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va.; and Larry Nichol·
son, Marietta.
Max Hill Jr .. Racine, was the
winner in the corvette class
'53·'69. In the corvett class
'70-'79, the winner was Tim
Lowery; and In thecorvetteclass
'80· '89, the winner was Leonard
Deal, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
All convertible class winners
were Robert Larkins, Long Bot·
tom; Rod Riffle, Lancaster; and
Lee Archer.

Special Interest winners were
Johnny Reynolds, Gallipolis
Ferry; Calvin Purdue, Fleming;
and James Simonton ,
Nelsonville.
Winners In the street rods
through '48 class were Sue
Purdue; Leonard Deal; and John
Tucker, Dunbar, W.Va.
Street machine '49-'62 winners
were Tom Cramer, Duncan

BIG BEND

Falls; AI New bands. Little Hock· W.Va.; Joe Dressler, Point Plea·
tng; and Butch Orr, Walker, sant. W.Va.; and Scott Wilson,
W.Va.
Stewart; were the winners In
Winning In street machines street machine, '75 and up.
'63· '74 were Patricia Chapman.
All trucks, two wheel drive
TUppers Plains; Greg Hill, Galli· class winners were Randy Orten·
polis Ferry; and a tie for third berger, Beverly; Duane Weber,
between Kevin Van Matre, Middleport; and Brent Zirkle.
Pomeroy; and Phil Correll, Pomeroy. All trucks, four wheel
Newport.
drive class winner was Doug
David Greg, Mineral Wells, Crabtree, Oak Hill.

\' uur lncl«'itcmlt~ntly Owtwd
l...ow-t•riced su,tt&gt;rmarkt~l

The winners in the muscle cars
class were Steve Curtiss,
Athens; Dan Hill, Galloway; and
Bill and Linda Malon·e, Jackson.
Bob Boling, Athens; Gene
Cherry, Logan; and Herbert
McBride, Zanesville; were the
winners In the van class.
Winning In the thunderbird
class was Jim Cox, Parkersburg,
W.Va.
Pro street class winners were
Aaron Myers, Oak Hill; Chris
Pllos, Athens; and VIrgil Holsln·
ger, Reedsville.

: I PIIMPIINS
\

, \ HUGE VARim

CANDY

ON DISPLAY·
POTS

BULK CANDY NOW IN STOCK

•GREEN BEANS
•PEAS •BEETS
•POTATOES
•PEAS &amp; CARROTS

U. S• .NO. ONE

WHITE POTATOES

Vegetables

$

10 LB.

lAG

MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE
DIET OR REGULAR

MEAT WIENERS
SLICED BACON
12

PEPSI COLA

\.

$

4-17

oz.

CANS

oz.

SOFT 'N' GENTLE
HILLSHIRE

Smoked Sausage

Bath Tissue

•PlAIN •SELF

Hudson Cream

Beat of the Bend

The banana money...
By BOB BOELFICH

The mind's the first to go.
That's what I've always heard
- and I thought It was a joke.
However, more and more I'm
beginning to see the light. ·
A ·trtp to Powell's Super·Valu
·saturday evening pressed ,the
message home.
I breezed through the store yes, I'm allowed to do that nowas long as I justplckupthebaslcs
·- you know, things like bread,
milk, soda and bananas - the
latter, however, only If the price
Is right.
Well, I did my thing- got to the
cashier - and oops! - an empty
blllfold.
Flustered, I explained to the
cashier that I would have to go
back home and get the money.
She, graciously, permitted me to
take the groceries along. How·
ever, she wanted to take my
name.
Seemed like a good
opportunity' to me for some free
groceries, so I told her Bob
Webster. However, I repented
quickly - a couple of people In
the line knew me so that was an
encouraging iactor In keeping
me honest- and I gave her ..the
correct name.
I rushed home, got the money,
and returned to the store. The
cashier expressed surprise that I
was able to find the store againand I took that as a vote of
confidence. I was templed to
offer her a couple of bucks to
keep the whole incident quiet but
with the price of bananas I
decided that I would just go with
faith that she wouldn't tell
anyone.
Now, I know that these things
aren't happening to anyone else
but me -11nyone else but meanyone else but me- are they?
It's really kind or a good feeling
tofacetheproblem-maybeyou
can do that when you get there·
too.
.
Of course, the mind's going
Isn't just limited to one Incident
at Powell's. Heck no- there's a
whole bunch of them- they just
keep multiplying.
For example, all of the people
at thebankhavelearnedtowatch
me like a hawk. My bank
deposits consistently areofffrom
nine cents to IItty dollars always In my favor, of course. I
guess subconsciously I hope I'll
get lucky and a teller will pass
the mistake through and I'll have
more J;&gt;anana money. It doesn't
happen.
Too, I'm a stickler for paying
charge accounts -In full- tilat
finance charge eats me alive not
only literally but mentally.
Recently, I sent In my payment
on my plastic and the next
month, 1 noted an approximate
$11 finance charge on the next
statement. No good. A phone
Inquiry revealed !hat In making
the payment with two checks, I
had underpaid the account by 60
cents. I thought that was a pretty
hefty finance charge for my
math deficiencies of no longer
being able to add two figures
correctly so I complained. They
decided to forgive me - but the
next month, the finance charge

Flour

Community calendar .
WEDNESDAY
PoMEROY -The Mt. Herman
United Brethren Church, Texas
community, Pomeroy, will have
revival through Sunday at 7:30
p.m. nightly. The evangelist will
be the Rev. Carsey Knittle,
Lancaster. Pastor Robert Sand·
ers Invites the public.

was $19. You got II. All beciluse
of the same 60 cents. I tlrmly
complained and threatened to
get off the world. Thls time my
sin was really forgiven- and the
finance charges were reversed.·
Getting older does have a few
compensations - I mean, just
about anybody will forgive you
SYRACUSE -The Syracuse
just about anything on that basis. Third Week Homemakers Club
I think we're gaining ground with will meet at 10 a.m. at the
that verbal campaign reminding municipal building on Wednes·
young people constantly that day . Members are to bring
some day they're going to be in supplies to make country
the same boat. Yep, It's effective. charmer dolls. Call 992-2282.
Another Inkling that things are 992-3408, or 949-2616 for list of
not as great as they should be Is supplies.
thatl keep losing clothes. Let me
clarify that. I keep losing SOME
MIDDLEPORT ':....The Middle·
of my clothes - things like hats port Literary Club will meet
and neckties - nothing any more Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. with
personal than that, however.
Mrs. Roy Holter as hostess.
I've tried to tell myself that thls Is "Master Spy" by Phtlllp
really a subconscious rebellion Knightly will be reviewed by
against both. One, I wear tor Mrs. Chester Erwtrt. Roll call
health reasons - the other , response will be a famous spy
because I!eell'mexpected to. At and their undoing.
any rate, at these prices, I've got
to get corrective help- and soon.
POMEROY - Revival servl·
And. oh, did I mention that I ces will be a 7 p.m. nightly and 6
sometimes can't rind the car p.m. on Sunday, Wedesday
now that's right In downtown through Sunday at the Pomeroy
Pomeroy.
Church of the Nazarene with
Now there's a cassette for Rev. Chris Meenach and Lester
everything these days. · Does the puppet. Special services each
anyone know where I get the one evening for children. The public
about keeping the mind alert is .Invited to attend.
through exercise? Now even If
you . can't remember . why, do
COOLVILLE -The Vander·
keep smiling.
hoof Baptist Church, Coolville,
.,. will have Its fall revival Wednes·
day through Saturday at 7 p.m.
eac)l evening. Rev. Mark
McClung of the Mu lien Memorial
Baptist Church will be the
evangelist. Paster Cecil A. Mor·
rison invites the publiC.

Moore
descendants
gather

The annual reunion of the
descendants of James C. and
Ethelinda Stone Moore, was held
Precent ly at theRhom e of Larry and
atty 0 rc 1e, ac1ne.
After the table grace by Rev.
Ray Bookman, a dinner was
enjoyed by 39 relatives and
. friends.
Pictures of the original Moore
family and one or James and
Ethelinda Moore were displayed
by Paul Moore.
The group sang Happy Birth·
day to Rev. Carl Hicks, Florence
Circle, and Marilyn Newman.
A card was sent to Bertha
Smith who was unable to attend
due to health problems.
The reunion-will be hosted by
Kathryn Windon In 1990 on the
third Sunday In September.
Attending were Sue Hagar,
Kim Follrod, Rich and Cindy
· Koblentz, George Genhefmer,
Bob and Martha Lee, Betty Lou
Dean, Ed and Marilyn Newman,
Roger and Janet Grueser, Ethel
Orr, Paul Moore, Rev. and Mrs.
Carl Hicks, Roger, Rosemary,
Rodney, and Russell Keller,
VIrgO and Kathryn Windon,
Rodney, Debbie, Adam, and
Abbie Chevalier, Larry, Patty,
Shane, and Grant Circle; Becky
Bentz, Amy and John, Terry and
Mindy Patterson, Harlan Eisel·
stein, Florence Circle, Doug ·
Circle, and Linda Patterson.

Health Deparlment Will be con·
dueling a flngerstick cholesterol
screening at the Racine Home
National Bank on Thursday from
9-11 a.m. There will be a $5
charge for this service with no
appointment necessary.
·
STIVERSVILLE - The Sti·
versvtlle Community Church will
have Its Holy Ghost revival
Thursday, Friday, and S~turday
at 7:30p.m. nightly. Larry N)x,
Asheville, N.C . wliJ be the
evangelist. Gary Holter, pastor,
Invites the public.
RACINE -The Xi "Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will have Its rush party
at the home or Sonya Wolfe on
Thursday at 7 p.m. Members are
to meet at 6: 15 p.m. at the
Syracuse Pool parking lot.
TUPPERS PLAINS - There
will be a special meet.lng for the
VFW Auxiliary on ThUrsday at
7: 30 p.m. to make plans for the
turkey dinner to be held Nov. 11.
All members are urged to attend.
REEDSVILLE -The Ohio
Division of Wildlife will sponsor a
hunter safety course on Thurs·
day, and Oct. 23 at Eastern High .
School from 6-9 p.m. each
evening. Preregistration is required and class size will be
limited to 40 students. Call
1-800-282-3557 to register.

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The United
Pentecostal Church In Middle·
port will be serving and deliver.
Ing chicken noodle dinners to
local residents and businesses on
Friday at a cost of $3.50.
Deliveries will be made between
11 a.m . and 2 p.m. Call9923824 tor
orders.
MIDDLEPORT -There will
be·square dance at the American
Legion Annex on ·Mill St. In
Middleport on Friday from 8
p.m. to midnight. The Country
Combinations will perform and
the cost Is S5 per couple or $3
single. The publiC Is Invited to
attend.

SATURDAY
BASHAN -There will be a
weekend meeting at the Red
Brush Church of Christ on
Bashan Road on Saturday at 7
p.m. and Sunday at 10 a.m. and 6
p.m. DeilVer Hill, F-oster, W.Va.
will be. the speaker. The public Is
Invited to attend .

ASHLEY N. KNAPP

Knapp
birth
.

Mr. and Mrs . Kevin Wayne
Knapp, Pomeroy, are announcIng the birth of their daughter,
Ashley Nlchole, on June 21 at
Holzer Medical Center.
The Infant weighed six pounds
and eight ounces and was 19
Inches long.
The couple has two others
daughters, Michelle. age 11, and
Amy, age eight.
·
Maternal grandparents are
Donna Roush, Syracuse, and
Wellam (Tom) Lavender ,
Middleport.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Doyle W. Knapp,
· Langsville.

· )tyonapairof ·
Soft SPQts 10r ascent.

ROCK SPRIN~ -The Child
Conservation League will meet
at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday at the
Rock Springs grange hall for the
Halloween party.

MIDDLEPORT -The annual ·
joint Gallla Meigs Scottish Rite
Dinner will be held Wednesday at
6:30 p.m. at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. The speaker
will be Harry Reissig. thrice
potent master, Enoch Lodge of
Perfection.

t1'1

•••
•• •

LIFE

· For all your

RUTLANO -The American
Legion Ell Dennison Post 467,
Rutland, will have a covered dish .
dinner on Wednesday for
members, their wives', and
friends . Dinner will be at 7:30
p.m. and meeting at 8 p.m.

life insurance
call:·

You'll get a free, delicately ocented
llorai oachet jdlt for lryi"'J on a pair.
Come meet our sales repre-

s:frs:wlS'
.fee
OO:l.JOfij

sentative• as he di1play1 Soft
Spots "New Fall Sh~s" ou

October 19, 189

10-6 p.m.

. RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conservancy Dis trlct will hold Its
monthly meeting Wednesday at 9
a.m. at the office.

Get $5.00 oH imy Soft Spot
purchase, or Soft Sot special
order, the day of the trunk
shows, plus a $5.00 rebate coupon ..
OHer good October 19·21, 1989. •

THURSDAY
POM·EROY The Meigs
c'Ounty Democratic Executive
Committee will hold Its regular
monthly meeting on Thursday,
7:30p.m ., at the Carpenters Hall,
Pomeroy. A member for the
Board of Elections will be selected at that time.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
group of A.A. and AI-Anop will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart CatholiC Church.
F o r In I or m at Ion c a II
1-800-333-5051.

·.

....• • •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• • • • ••
4 411 I 511 I Ill 7 711 I Ill I Ill •

·•

2111 Str•l
P_o,, Oh. 4$769
. Pit. 614·992-5479
614·992-2477
Claions: 1·100·421-3535

••s.:

I

• • ••

w •

ww • •

w111NATIONW1DE

11!J !!'..S'!~~!C!

• • • • • • • • • • • •• •• •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • •••••

CHAPMAN
SHOES
POMEROY'S QUAUTJ SHOE STORE

• RACINE -The Meigs County

INGELS CARPET
.·

OCTOBER
SPECIALS
CASTLEBERRY

Beef Stew

Five were fined and five others
!ortelted bonds in the court of
Middleport Fred Hoffman Tues·
day night.
Tammy K. Watkins, Middle·
port, was fined $425 and costs and
sentenced to three.days in jail on
a DWI charge.
Others fined were James Lee
Garnes. Middleport, $35 and
costs, disorderly manner; Cha·
rles Walker, Jr .. "theshtre, $25
and costs, disorderly manner.
Vincent Stone, Middleport, and
Chnarles Walker, Jr., Cheshire
were both cited on contempt
charges and were ordered to pay
old fines and costs. The mayor
also ordered that charges of
failure to appear be filed against
Robert V. Knapp, West Colum·
bla, W. va., who did not come to
court to answer DWI charges.
Forfeiting bonds In the court
were Allen Lee Underwood,
Point Pleasant, $460 on a DWI
charge, and $60 on a charge of
weaving course; Gregory C.
Summers, Southside, W. Va., $60
bond on Illegal tum; David L.
Buchanon, Pomeroy, $60, travel·
lng the wrong way on a one-way
street; Ruby D. King, Pomeroy, ·
$55, speeding; and William C.
~~our, Black Oaks, Ark., $460

.

MUMS
6 INCH

Middleport
Court news

\

FALL

NOW

ODLAN

Seven persons forfeited bonds
on speeding chargeS In the court
of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler Tuesday night:
Forfeiting b!&gt;nds on the charge
. were Jason Arnold, Pomeroy,
$47; Laura Brandol, Columbus,
$44; Steven Haggerty, Athens,
$54; Ailsa Findley. Syracuse,
$46; Michael Mulford, Pomeroy,
$48; Deloris Gaus, Rutland, $49;
and Ron Capehart, Pomeroy,
$48.
Others !orteltlng bonds In the
court were Golda Radcliff, Syra·
cuse, $43, failure to yield; Robin
Spurlock. Coolville, $43, stop sign
violation; Gretchen Sook, Ravesnwood, W. Va., $63, traf!lc
light violation; Roy E. Boggs;
New Brighton, Pa .. , $43, !allure
to maintain assured . clear
distance.
Fined In the court were Ken·
neth Carpenter, Gallipolis, $375
and costs. DWI. $63 and costs,
open container, and $63 and
costs. failure to control; Roger
Dillard, Jr., Pomeroy, $375 and
costs, OWl, and $63 and costs, no
driver's license. ,
Others fined, in the court were
Michael Allen, Sulllven, Ind ., $45
and costs, speeding; Calvin Ray
Ill. Elkview, W. Va., was fined
$43 and costs, stop sign violation,
and $63 and costs, driving under
suspension.

'\

. Bancohlo National Bank, Columbus, has filed In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court for
an $11,202 judgmentfrom Deloris
F. Tryall, Pomeroy.
In other matters, a Meigs
Grand Jury session which began.
Friday, Sept. 22, ls to reconvene
In recessed session on Oct . 20 at
9:30a.m.
And an arrest warrant has
been Issued by the court for Gary
Lee Withrow Jr. for falling to
appear for an Oct. 16 trial.

URGE HARDY

Pomeroy
Court
. news

\\\WI. •

Seeks judgment

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7

Wednelday;Octobar 18, 1989

FOODLAND

ASST... u~u

auAm~s

SPARKLE

Margarine

Paper Towels

$399

VINYL

FlOORING

SQ. YD.

IIG. Pinel f5.99 Ml· yll." ·
· •5

SCULPTURED
CARPET

$6

99

CARPET

SQ. YD.

OBSESSION, 3.4 oz. Spray .................................................. '45.00

KNOWING 1 oz .................................... ························· ...... '36.00

ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW. 1.8 oz ............................. .... .. '1 4.50
ELIZABETH TAYLOR'S PASSION. 1 .6 oz .............................. '27.00
... OMBRE ROSE,_1 oz.······························ ~ ·····-···················· · · · · :16.00

$7 .99

SHALl MAR 1

SQ.
(No POIWI.. N11tlttll REG. PRICE S1Q.99 fll.yll.

Flolr.,.._•

200~0

.

.

...

I

'

• • •

• • •

23.00

LIZ CLAiBORNE 1 oz ........................................................... '22.50
CALIFORNIA by'Jacklyn Smith, 1 oz .............................. : ...... '1 7.50
CHER'S UNINHIBITED. 1.6 oz .............................................. '30.00
LIZ TAYLOR'S PASSION GIFT SET ....................................... '40.00
ANNE KLEIN II, 1 .7 oz ......................................................... '32.00
CALVIN KLEIN ETERNITY, 3.4 oz............ , ....................... , .... '48.00
OSCAR DE LA RENTA GIFT SET .......................................... :40.00
PRIVATE COLLECnON GIFT SET ......................................... 615.00
GLORIOUS GIFT SET by Gloria Vanderbilt .................... ········· '20.00

OFF

I.OWI$1' PIKES TIIS YUI
IUIIT MTA&amp;LAnOft AVAIIIIU

INGELS CARPET 9tl·''"

175 fl. lfiD AYL

0 . . . . . . . . . 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 •• •

' OPIUM, 2 oz................................................................ ~ .... ... '47.60
OSCAR 2 oz................................................-....................... *29.60

OVEI 300 PliilliS

.

OZ·•••••••••••••••••

GLORIOUS.by Gloria Vanderbilt, 1 .7oz.............................. .... '24.00

MANNINGTON

·VINYL
lil ,_ ,,..

-

New Colognes Arriving Daily!

(Scotchgard) REG. PIKE •9.95

KANGA·BACK

...

·

.

CALL TODAY

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669
.271 NOm

.DDUPOO, dHIO
'

�Wednesday, October 1

'-II•

I

Neese, Texas, a ll traveled the
farthest.

The Wood reunion was held
recently at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. VIrgil King. Pomeroy.
Recognized were Weber Wood,
age 95, and Merrl Wood, age 91,
l he oldest; Eric Wood. one
month, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earle
Wood, and. Elizabeth King. five
months, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. David King , youngest;
Carone Hunting, Oma ha, Neb.,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Southwood,
Davenport, Iowa, a nd Doug

Wood
family
reunion held

Wedr'Jntlay, October 18, 1989

Pomaoy-Midtlaport. Ohio

8 The o.ily Sentinel

Officers elected were Rosemary Neece, president; Margaret
Fulton, vice president; and Jean
Wood, secretarytreasurer.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Weber Wood, Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Wood, Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil King, Mr. and Mrs. David
King and Elizabeth, Mr. and
Mrs. Earle Wood and Eric,

reoditv

IUMATISEII IT£11 POI.IC'f- Each ol lhese odvertloed ~ema is requncl t~ ._
a vaiabMt for saM! in each Kroger Store, excttpt 11 specificaly noted in lhilad. If we do
run 01.11 of an adveniled item, we wiU offer you your choice of a comparab1e hem
when av.a ilable, reflecting the same savings or • ra incheck which wll entitle vou tO
purchase the advertiHd item at the advertised price wilh ln 30 days. Only one vendor
coupon

Gall Horton. Ruth H askins,
Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Will,
Mrs. Dean Will, Mr. a nd Mrs. Les
Davidson , Wilma and Donna
Davidson, Rutland; Mr. a nd
Mrs. John Wood, Radcliffe; Mr.
and Mrs. John AJan Wood and
Brittany , Ewlngton; Anna and
Ivan Hallday , Dexter ; Thome
Co tter ill, Joan CotterUI, Car roll;
Mr. and Mrs. Don Southwood,
DavenpOrt, Iowa; Carone Hunt·

Robyn ' Hu nt, Ronnie Wood ,
Pomeroy.
Clarice Conner, Margaret
Quinn, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Halilay,Charleston, W.Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Coleman, Colum·
bus; Doug Ne(!le, Texas; Mr.
and Mrs. Woody Neece, Rogersville; Tenn. ; Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Hammond, Greenup,
Ky.; John Cotterill, Marrtanna
Caldwell, Marguerite Frank,
Lloyd Bolin, Martha Felstern,

wmbe accep1ed per item purc hased.

More· Legals
on Page 2

lng. Oma ha, Neb.; Margaret
Fulton, Chillicothe; a nd Ste·
phanle Wood, Middleport.

Public Notice

Wtl).().().()
can~

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
FREDDIE' HOUDAIHELT
ADMINISTRATOR OF niE
ESTATE OF LEONA KOHL,
PLAINTIFF.
VI.
RUTH McELROY.
ond
JACK McDONALD.
ond" .
JOSEPH McDCNAI.D
and
•
GEORGE COLLINS
TREASURER ,'
MEIGS COUNTY
lnd
THE UNKNOWN HEIRS
OF LEONA KOHL,
DEFENDANTS
CASE NO. 25,413
NOTICE
PUBLICATION ,
:ro the u"known heirs.
d ..
ond - t of kin of
Leona Kohl. whoH Oam•
•nd
are unkrKJW'n
Md cannot whh r1110nllble
dlligonco bo •aortoinod,
you oro t-oby notified thot
you h... bMn nllnod de·
fendanta in elegalection .,.
tttlod Frecldio - Houd10helt,
Admlnlotrotor of the Eltlto
of'l.eono Kohl. Plllntiff. vo.
Ruth McElroy, Et At.. Do·
fendonta. Thlo octlon . hoo
been ••lgnod C•o Number
215,413 ond lo J)411tding in the
Court of Common Plea ot
Molgo County, Probllo Dlvi·
olon, Pomeroy, Ohio 46789.
Tho object of thlo com·
pllllnt lo to ghlo the •bo••
·nomad Plllntlfl the outhor·
ity to olll tl•erell•otoofthe
decodont, Laona Kohl, deacribrld in Volume 241. Page
743, Molgo County DHd
Recordo, ond the proyor lo
that tha rightt. inter•t and
lieno o1111 port-. bo fully doterminod, •dlullod lnd protected ond thm the Plointlfl
be outhorilod to ooll the rOll
· 10to1t In ordef to p.y the
debts of'tho docedont.
You are required to enower the complolnt within
28 ·dlyolftor the l10t publl·
c.tlon of thlo notice which
wll ._ publlohool on. . ooch
woolc for otx ..,...,...
woolco. the 1101 public.tlon
wil bo 111od1 on the 22nd
doy of Nov..,bor, 1888.
In
of your f ..u,. to

you?

clASSFIBl
ADS

COPYRIGHT 1989 · THE ROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES l)OOD SUNDAY; OCT.
15, THROUGH SA UR Y, OCT. 21, 1989, IN POMEROY STORE .
WE RESERVE THE " IGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIE S .. NONE SO LO TO DEALERS .

,

.y

Go Krogering For
'

lo-.

•
rtces

ow

U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED

ld*•..

•

n

Genuine
Ground Chuck
Pound

SAVE~

PEA LB .

" SILVER PLATTER" WHOLE

Boston Butt
Pork Roast

c••
anaw. or

u.s.

Pound

pond • roquirod bv the Ohio
Rul• of Chill Proooduro.
judgmlnt bv dolouk will bo
renderod 111111not you lor tl!o
rollol clomonded In tho com·
pi lint.
Datod : October 13, 1989.
lane K. N•Miroed.
Ctot'k of Courto
Meip County Common
Plo.. Court
Probllo Olvlolon
(10)18, 215;
(11) 1. 8, 16, 22, 8tc

Holly Farm~

Who.l e
·Fryer~.......... Ib.

SLICED
FREE

SAVE ~0~
PER LB.

•

Public Notice

( --·-······-··················
Star-Kist Ch1 11k
!

~

Pound

Light Tuna
&amp;.5-0L

8
COUPON
VALUE
20¢

cle trlfllc.

SAVE
$1.00 LB.
"1

w-.
or

propolled by grovlty. mu•
cle power or mechanical

Surf Laurtdry
Detergent

Apple Lunch
Box Pies

meant. end which ia not
oqulppod with o pooHivo
mochonlcel m-• of • -·
lng such v.tlide or dwice.
SEC. II . Prohlbltlono. Lim ·

42-oz.

3-0L

Be H now ordlinod by the
CouncM of tho VlllltiO of
Middloport, 10 lolowo:
SEC. I. Skll-d Do·
fined.
AI uMd in thil ordinance.
the tonn""okotoboord" oholl
moon ony •lhldo or d . .ICe
capable of beinst op•med.
ridden or utld by 1 poroon
Md IXIMilling of I boord,
piMk or ptotform
on
or roll••·mountod
wheth-

POWDER

CHERRY, LEMON, PEACH,
BLUEBERRY OR

it.tiuns.

No poroon ohill o.,.,oto.
ride or uM. or
to be
oporltod, rlddon or uood. 1
skateboard over or upon any
public llrwt or roadwoy
within the Vlllogo of Mlddl•
port. ur over or upon any
oi-llk in
of tho VH·
1 -of Mlclclloport which oro
opeclfloolly zonod for com·

c•••

78

or-

merd81 u• or purpo•.
Skoteboordo m11 be oth·
erwile ridden. operated ur
uood. orcouoodtoborlddln,

operlted or ulld, over or

KROGER

uPOn ol-olko within the
VIIIIIJIII of Middleport, unl ..o
it crOll.. a haord to public
•lotv or lnt_,.,.,. . wMh

Cres

Grade A
Large Eggs

Toothpaste

Notice
P-trlon tl'lffic.
IEC. Ill . ,._,oltloo.
Who..er •Iaiii.. Or·
dlnMco oholl bo ..,.., , ·
W8rning un theltlt Dffanae.
UPOn I -ncl •lallllon by
the ume p•~on. If the perton it 1 minor, the
boord oholl bo Impounded
11nd 1 parent or guard~
ohllll ._ notlllod; tho oltatebo8rd moy bo rllo..odtothe

•Ut•

parent

'or guarcl., H r•

qu-od wMhln thirty (30)
dl'fa.
UPOn I ucond •lal.. ion,
bv tho umo poroon, II the
poroon Ia on odult, It ohlll
conatitute a minor mitde·
mNnor, the J)411tllty for
which ohlll bo ollno of up to
e1oo.oo ondthe ft)lndllory
lort.lturo of t h o " " " -·
A third or ouccoedlng •lo·
lotion, bv the ..........- . if
the p•aun ia an adult. lhall
conatitutt a mil•m..,.or of
tho fourth dogreo.
SEC . IV . Thlo Ordin.,oo
ohlll toko effect ond be In
force from I rid oft or tho - H•t diiO pormlttod bv low.
Peoood tho 9th dl'f of October, 1888.
ATTEST:
M . Horton,
Pr101dont of Council
Jon P. lucie, Clerk
(10) 18, 26

o_..,

Public NO!ice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
JAMES WILBURN
WOLFORD
PlolntiH
VS
CHARLOTTE ANNE
WOlFORD
Dolondont
CASE NO. 87-0R-293
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Charlotte Anne Wolford, whoae pl1ce of residence is unknown. you ere
hateby notifed thllt you ere
nomod Dolondont In o 11111•1
1ction entitled Jem• WHburn Wolford, Pllintlfl va.
Chorlotto Anno Wolford . .
Delendent. 'Thlo octlon hM

been uakll)ed cae number

87-DR-211"3 In the Court of
Common Plell of MeiQI
County, Pomeroy, Oh!o
4117119. Th•• lo .,..ding in
llld octlon, 1 Motion flod bv
Mike Mullon, origlnolly . Sol~
Motion il 1et for heerlng on
the 3rd dol' of Novembor.
19811 01 10 :30 o.m. in the '
Melgo County Common
" - • Court. Said Motton ill
for on ordef corw..,lng the
Defendlnt• s interat in the
following delcrlbod rool eo·
Ute to the Plaintiff purauant
to the pant.• divorce
decree.
Tho following delcrlbod
real estate eitu1t1 in " the
Townohlp
of
Chooter.
County of Molgo ond Stott
of Ohio. bounded ond de~~etibed u follows :
Sltuote 1n Cl!oot•
ohlp, Sttto of Ohio, ond being . in Fraction 19, Section
20. T-n 4 North. Rongo12
W..t of the Ohio Company' 1
Purch•• ond boing de·
.:ribed • follows: leelft·
nlng 011 point North 87 deg,
13' WOII . 11518 ond
Nonh 2 deg. 47' Eut lboUt
800 loot to • point 01 the
Mlrl- Rood (old ltoto
Route 181) ond North 1li
deg . 13' Woot oiiOut 202
loot, Aid·POint of boglnnlng
belngmot'kedbyoconCNto
morker 101, lllid point of bogonnlng oloo boing South 111
d1111. 13' Eoot 313.4 from o Southe.. torlv Ohio
Stoto Route 711./W mirkor It
437 + 23.38 (R / W morkor
found); thence North 52.
dog. 44' Eut 110 loot to 1

NOAA MILLS
wiohol to publicly
expr•• our deep thanks
and grdh:ude to thuae
who ahllred wlth us our
•-othordellh.
Your kind ICtl of
comp8Uion
JITINitly opproalatod.
Thonkt to O•orbrook
Coro Center. Middleport
Emorgoncy lquod. Dr.
Dayo, Yet. .ns Memorlol Hoopltol, the
neighborhood of Fourth
end Palmer In Mldolopon, 1f!o Boum
Addition nllghborltood
In Chooter, Rov. Frod
HMI. R... Don Seddon.
Rov. Lomor O'Bryont,
Rov. Clffo&lt;d Colornon
ond Ro¥. O ' Qulnn Kilty.

w••

12-Pu 12-ez.

SUPPLIES

w..

PASTA JIOODLIS - 15'- OIP
OPEN: 9 am-11 pm Monday-S.turday

We Accept Food Stamps

OHIO VAWY
KROGEI'I ~R!NCH ONION OIPS 11-0Z.. . !*

•

2·UTIII IOTTL£ ,

'

f

f1 .11

J

8

Dotod: Soptombor 7 , 1988
L.rry Spencer.
Clerk of Courto of
Meida County Common

pte• Court

(9) 13, 20.' 27;
(10) 4, 11 , 18, 8tc

CHRISTMAS
AUCTION

1

Od~

Pt I INJ,

0111•

RACCOON VALL£Y
SPORTSMEN'S CI.UI

I2

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

AI7CTION CONDUCIZD

•r

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
MASON, WV 773-5785
DltCUTOill MDt1t IRAW
WNCH

TEIIIII: CASH OR CI£Q( WITH I.D.
NOT~ FOR ACitDENt1 OR LOSS OF PAOP£JITY
LaNSEO IIIOIIDEO II OliO, KY. I WV NH1
•
AUC110NEER'S HOlE;
GOOD CLEAN AUCl70N- DON'T MISs

nus

COUNTRY
MOBIU
HOMI PARI
•Mobile Home

Services
SUN'S UP
TANNING

2 'It Milts Out llew
Liotta ld. in
• lutland, Oh.
SUSAN COLEMAN

· 7U-2771
e.n '" Fill Spe~l•l•
ht wlsit FlEE

-Ponlblv mort.

9-21-119- 1 mO d.

L W.
STEWART
TRUCKING
•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742·2421
8 - 20-tfn

Parte

•Mobile Home

Rantala
•Lo.t Rentelo

992-74-79

lt. 33 lll'tlt ••

SIIKI19,.
ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • Al'oiTS
SPIDERS
BEES• WASPS

,.......

Cllllrol Aqo.

:z:

'614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
'417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
·

z

or at
Veterans MeiiHlrial Hospital
Mulberry Hats. Pomeroy,

RUUD

DOZER

SIUWORK - ROADS
•

CLEARING

NEWLAND
INTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

(614) 667-3271
Grant A.

Oll'lltell·l~

· BiNGO
POMEROY -EAGlES
ClUI

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

VAUGHN'S •
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

224 E. MAIN ST.
992·9978

I THUIS. Ll. 6:45 P.M. ,
.SUII. u . 1:45 P.M. . I
I'
DOOIPIDJ
I

Basham Building

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

,1 2 H.o. FlEE with cou]IOit •dr I
I puoth. . of min. H.C. Pact· .
. 11~ Limit I coupon por eus·,
1tomer Pit' blllfl •11o~
Wo Pov •so.oo ,., Gomo

J

factory Chol&lt;o

;I Om l 10 Pooplt '65.00
I ti&lt; 11005-31'" Gamo• ~• ~- 3-lln
1

,.. ------

SYRACUSE, OHIO

Molt FOt'ei9n •nd
Domestic Vehid•
A I C Service
·All M.;or &amp; Minor

'.
I

Repairs

NIASE Certrti .r Mach.,ic

CALL 992-6756

,1

"DOC"
Cltf1ifi_.

VAUGHN

Licenaed

USED TIRE
SALE

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING·

13" through 205-15"

$30.00

CHES1EI, OHIO

Announcements

a Pair

Mounted and Balanced
"FREE"

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

·-'

SALE nAITS
SEPT. 29, 1919

L&amp;L

9-23-89· 1 mo.

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

SWEEPER REPAIR

Will Video Tapa

MODRS

Waddings,

MARTIN~$

Birthdays,
Reunions, Interiors
of Homes for

Call 742-2486
After 5 ~.m.

t0-2- 89-1 mo.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
lhwN-oltolt
"Free Eotlnurt•''

PH. 949·2101
or les. 949·2160
NO SUIIIAY CAUS
:1-ll·tfll

FOR SALE
HIGLEY FAIM
RUTlAND TOWNSHIP

145 acres, bam,

bottom, hill land,
timber. 2 produc-

ing gas wells.

$45,000
742·2143

All MAKES

AND

LINDA'S
PAINTING

IMTEIIOR·EJITERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take tht pain o1t of

FURNITURE
and MORE

painti"'• let 1111 do

POMEIOY, OH.

it for you.
YEIY IIASONAilE
NAVE IIFEIEIICES

992-6872 .

614·915-4110

222_East •in

1/ 4/19-tfn

1&gt;-5-'89-tfn

DAVE'S
SMALL IJIGINE
IEPAII
Locat.d at Valoy Lutttlllrf
1n llltltllo,..t, o•.
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moll 2 ond 4-cydo
engines
Stock Pans tor
Homelita, Weedeater,
Tacumolh. Briggo •

PH. 992-3922

' PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

2 btselll: klnens, 1 male 1nd 1

temal•, 304-675-7474.

Csllcu kttten to good horne. 114--

112·7382 after 5p.m.

Ftully whHo I block 1o. .1o
puppy, part Brllt•nr s..n1e1.
6t4-388-8708.

011 kitchen rang• to give away.
114-182-5006.
Kenmore dlshw11tMr

.-rt••

to..

deck, 3 acres plus l'h

6

acre lake. Mint cond.
$120.000 firm. All new

Conll)'

car carage. 10J60 ft.

· '1600 GALLON
WAnl SEIYICE
u•noNE
SPIEAD
DIIT HAULED
992-527

"At Rtatonablo PricH"

Giveaway

Two 1 wks ~d mal• a..ate mix
pupplea, wormt;d, 304.-451-1104 .

ALLEN'S
HAULING

CUSTOM IUILT
. HOMES &amp; GARAGES

4

3 BR ranch home. 2'lt
baths. full basement, 2

9·22·89

BISSELLBUILDERS

algnH P. A. Plckll"a.

Puppln to good homo, 127
Howard St, New Hllven HeJgtMa

drapes, fully carpeted .
Built-in ig. TV. stove &amp;
refri&amp;. See-lhrough fire place.
'992-2571

Stratton.

No Hunting or
' Pickens Propeny

-HOUSE FOR SALE

9·215-'89·1 mo.

304-1175-t!SOol,

304-882·3713.

'

LOS! &amp; Found

Found amall gray killen,

C.=

aru, pltaH Clll

811-1181 .
LOST, bl•ck brown and whtte
Bugle wearing red cOllar un
Jerrfcho Road, 304-175-3851.
Lott mane: black walllit Heck'e
ptrklng lot arnau rewsrd no

quuUona uk, ~75-2205.

Loll : Colllo dog, Mloolng t wk,
J11per1 lolt · ii'l 141
VIcinity, l1&lt;~-4•&amp;-21t 5.
n1me,

Yard Si lts Must Be P1ld In

Adyanc•. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day befo,. tM ad Is Ia run.
Sunda~ odl!lon • 2:00 p.m.
F.rld1y. Monday edlllon • 2:00

p.m. Saturdav.

·sm1cEend
Wt
can r~lr

THE
BASKET WEAVE

EAGLE IIDGE

SMAll ENGINE
re-

cert ratl10ton and
heater cores. Wt can
also acid boll and rill
tut riltliaton. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
992-2118

---All
Gutten

At Jet, U. 7 I 141

9·31 ·'89-1 mo.

985-4422

Stainltn StHI. ·

992-5114

l.oclllly Owned &amp; Operotod by 8HI, Steve • Kevin Pullino

10·9-lfn

. . . . LWtltm'

9 a.m.- 7 p.m.

614-992-2471
P. 0. lox 207
•-roy, Ohio

12 Gaugo Shotguos Only
~·ric~, [nfOI'&lt;Id

ferrous
•tats,

7DeyeAWeek

FAMILY HOMES INC.

6:30P.M.

Middleport,

HOURS

lwten, Cape Cod &amp; 2 Story
MODEL OPEN DAILY MONDAY THIU SATURDAY
1:00 P.M.-6:00P.M. or CaU for Appointmant

742-2455
Salam St.,.~~'!.

POMEIOY r OliO

Plastic~

MODULAI HOliES
SINCE 1970

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

PAT HILL FOlD

Non

EED A. HOME?

Loclted s,hind4!
Tractor D . .lorohijJ

RECYCLING
Weluy AI ,

TI. .TI
I PEST COJITIOL

Licensed' Clinical Audiologist

IEDROOM SOOES
DINEnE $En
"NEW" HCf.lt!EIS

ONE/

POOLS, WELLS

Call Anytime

a

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

USED FURNITURE
liVING ROOM sum

Insurance.

CISTERNS

Chtcktd.
We Service AI

UN'S APPJ,IANCE
SEIYICE
992-5335 or
915-3561.

1·22·t mo.

'*'·

1rOOO GALLONS

·Television Lislenin&amp; Orlices
Olpendable Hurin&amp; Aid Sales &amp; S.r~rltlll
CJ 'Hurin&amp; Evaluations F01 All A&amp;es

Have That Furnace

Starts at 1:00 P.M.
factory Choked 12
Gauge

SYIACUSE
992-2621 or
992-6944

-her.

WATER
SERVICE .

992-9922 or 992-:l22S

It's Timt Now!

EVERY SUNDAY
Beginning Sept. 17

BOB'S
HEATING &amp;
,COOLING

l:tOUSEHOlD &amp; MISCELLANEOUS: Frigidaif11 Fr111t Frae
rwfrigeralor, Magic Chef gao rM(It, table &amp; 4 chlliro, 8 pc,
M.hogany clring room sui Ia table &amp; 6 chairs wilh Barley lwiol
fronloerver, 6 beautiful apoQI back needlepoint chain, dro·
pilaf lllble, Zenith color TV, kidney shape deok. recliner,
Kroohlor sola, 3 pc. coffae l8ble &amp; ..,d tables, 4 pc. bedroom
aulll Burt Ironia celluloid pub, aupor 5 pc. Waterfal bedroom
aulll. l&lt;anmara
Maylag wringer washer, like MW
..... fumllln, 6 pi- MainO at china, beautiful antiqUe 8
place 18111ng pope &amp; gosoer rosa paint china, Wellerdioh,
FoaiDria bowlo, cake pla18, hull vase, cream &amp; suoor &amp; olhor
.,~~que glaaaware, mirror, nice cotltJme jewelry, bedroom
iantpl, 3 nice antiquo quill&amp;, axoaUent condition, ftower
pdan, buttorfly, bl~nketo, Eu"""' -per, flllll, plcluroo,
otudentlamp, poll &amp;
alulm. •tapladder,lllbs, alum. axt.

143

Pi%za-Subs-Salads-Dailv Saecials

22, 1:00 P.M.

THE ESTATE OF THE LATE
REBA GRUESER WILL BE SOLD.

.. c.,.,
•. 01. Ofl
691-6121

Shotgon Only
Choke

Makes - ~as or
Electric. Alto Parts
for All Makes.
CAll NOW

LOCATED AT 1901) MT. VERNON AVENUE,
POINT PLEASANT, WV.
WATCH FOR SIGNS.

WOOD STOVES

LOC&amp;LL Y OW. .D PillA SHOP.
9 / 18/ 1 mo. pd .

OCT. 21, 1989
10:00·A.M.

APPAUCIIAN

POMEROY AND .DDLEPOU'S OJIL Y

11:00 A.M.

SATURDAY, .

110 D FER ENT WOOD
• COAL STOVES,
INSERTS. FURNACES

FlEE lOCAL D£UYEIY

EVElY SUJIDA Y

ESTATE
AUCTION

ladder pluo mono.

LOWEST PIKES
IIGHEST QUAUTY

124 lttw.,.
Wilkt~~ilia attd
Sat... C111t•

lt.

Will have lots of Christmas gift items,
tools, toys, clocks, watches, jewelry, electronics, fun and games, d,corations, jewelry boxes, dolls, large sale, hundreds of
items. door prizes and ·give aways. Terms
cash or check with proper I.D.
.
RICHARD REYNOLDS
AUCTIONEER 301-89

~

MAIN STREET
---PIZZA

GUN SHOOT

at the Hartford Community Bldg.
· HARTFORD, W. VA.

. .bor w.tlortll ....,

FOODS

IOUSH

1ion.

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

**'*'**
IOXE5
................... 35&lt; each '

HALLOWEEN SUGAR LAY·ONS
HAUOWIIN CANDIES
····••I Title ki-Oct. 1t-I0-11

Jt4hlt
ttl..t10

Tho boorlngo In tho obo•o
dMcrlption Ire baed on 1
Department of High·
wayo RINoy morkod S .H.
1111 Soc . M . (pt.)N .+ O(pt.)
R.W Plono. dotod 3 / 131 411.
REFERENCE DEED: Vol.
293. Pogo 893. Melgo
County DHd Rocordo.
You mutt either sign 1

.4·215· '89·1 mo:

·MOLDS - .....................................$1 :60 Hch

C1111

ecr-. more or ••· -

992~2371 ·

*****

Diet Coke or
Coca Cola Classic

m•ker; thence

Iouth 1• d110. t 3' Eut
313.4-tothePOint olbo·
,~inning.
containing 1.0

The Family of

FRESH ~OSIA CHOCOLATE ILOCII
Mak Chocolate................................ s1.90 111.
Pearl White Chocolate ................... s2.15 lb.
1/4

o--

Card flfhnb

FRESH .I(KENS CHOCOUTE •••••••• S2.35 lb.
Mi• Chocolate • White Chocolate
HaHow11n Oronge

HALLOWEEN

mAfller aet; thW.ce
Nonh 15 dog. 13' Woot
313.4 fMt to • concrete
m_.er oot on the loul-·
torty R/ W llno of Ohio Stoll
Route .7 ; t'-co South 52
44' Woot 1150 foot
the louthe•t•ly
llno of Ohio Stote
7 to I hlghwoy R/ W
concrete

Business
Servi.
c
es
------

deed oonveri"l your Inter·
.., In the oubjoct rOll oottlt
prior to oold haorlng or tho
Court will mike uid con~
_ . ,. . I t tho h-lng. Tho
notlco oholt bo publlohod
woolo lor olx con-utlw wooko. The loot pu·
llllootlon wll bo modo on tho
18th doy of Octobor.
In c•e of your ·failure to
lnSwtr or otherwiae r•pond
10 roqulrod by tho Ohio
Rullo of ChiN Procoduro.
judgment or dalouit wNI bo
rendorod •uoln•t you for the
rellol dtmlnded In tho Mo"

con~

-========1
r
Business
1

CAIIDV

CAFFEINE FREE PIET COKE,

Public N

Sunday,

54 MlscellaiMIOUI
Merchandl•

Uaz. Tube

18-CL

Pomaoy- Middlaport, Ohio

T_,.

ORDINANCE N0. 1214-89
AN ORDINANCE TO
REGULATE THE USE OF
SKATEBOARDS
WHEREAS, tho unrogullted operation or uoe of
ak•tebawdll over .,.d upon
tho public otrwto ond oidowolkt of tho VHiogo of Mid·
dloport pr..onto a haord to
public oofllty, to the opera·
tort of oold okiiiiiiOordo, to
ped,atrian and motor vehi-

IN OIL OR SPRING WA ' ER

Shelled
Pecan Halves

otherwlea r•·

1989

IOOF..G
Down~PG,Ut~

Guu.r Clo ning
Plilllllng
FREE EITIIIATEI

,_.,,.

36415 ...............

YAIIIIMAN IIOWIIS
lCHO SAWS &amp; ~IS

- 99J-6155

OIIGON IAIS, CHAINS
IY AN Silfltl Cllllll
Parts &amp; s.... Oto

.......

HANDWOVEN IA!Irn
BASIEI WEAVING

SUPPliES

VISA · MAIT!IICHAIIGE
HOURS: Mon. -~rl. 9 -7
S.t.ll·l
Clooocl Sundly

WSSES OfRIED

. Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity
The Big Ont, all kinds, sizn
nk:t clothing, CO'-ts, Ieana,
dn~perles , Lewis Lint, $andr
Heights, Thurs, Fri. 8:30 . .

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
Frlclay,0Ct.20th.

t :IJO.f:OOp.m.

loyt; 1nd girls ctothel, alae 1·
18. Sm111 "Ounc1n Phyftt drvp
ltaf
11ble,
tour
chllra,

949-2969
~====10:/:10/ lltfn

magnln ... mllc.

S3120 ·•

ChRdr~~na

Roger Hysell
Garoge

•SHRUB Ill TREE
TRIM end RE·
MOVAL

lt. 124, ......., Ohio

HAULING

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

•FIREWOOD'

:.~~~~~;

IIU SLACK

991·116t

or 991·7121

EVa•s
·
411/./ttn

4-25-tfn
\

Home Rd. between
Mulberry Hgta. and lau,.l CliH.
Rlln cancels Ill Monday.

Rain or shiM. Oct. 11,11,20.
t:GO·?. Some ,_ clolhlnt ond
IOmt like new. tchlld,.... end
lduneJ, cotta 1nd ..........
u.oa ......1 lote ol ...... Jo'o
Gilt Shop, arroo:uoo.

ond thuo. z mlloo, Hyooll
OuiHo, clolholl 1 . Allin or ah "'·

Wanted 10 Buy
Fumll'" and _ ..,..., eu ~ the
or ontl,. -.atloid. Fair
bolng pole!.

eon , , _
'

�Pags 1Q-The
9

Sentinsl

LAFF-A-DAY

Wanted to Buy

42 .fdoblle Homes

wnu

48

forRsnt
~

I llldfllllft.

JuNe ............ -

-

. llledrr!ldey, October

Ohio

Col Lany IJoolv .....

4 ..._

- .......,_,•• or I' r
oounlry. • , ..... '"1,

1. 1n

..... _...
_.II.
11...-.
...,_.,_..,__,_
.............

-~~~on

.....,Ill.

..

bN'r
~"' ~.1'0
1tMtt'-l DID IT.

-~-·-4131.
·
1001 ... .,.

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

·-·=
~·

-

-.Cull .. - -.......

Mlli&amp;CII~Nd. . . . . OM

oul~171-101'1.

=

44N777.

u...l lumlhn wf ._ 'NIIII
PhoM .1 ...70.

W- hove a -

?111 .

•

-n

1111
z.a.
dklltol oloc. IGO
pa~

~.
43Ji:
pold.Dop.. RoL 114-441-

-·
_..,_
.... .,...
...... -- ......... =

IIIINewe

; • • JD .._..,

.

_----.

--lf4411f.1N1.

-iiiiiiil

I HAVE TO WRITE A REPORT

IF A PERSON DOESN'T

ON ONE OF THE GREAT
M'I'STERIE5 OF LIFE ...

OWN A CAR, I-lOW CAN A
LOVER LEAVE A NOTE
ON Tf.IE WINDSf.ll ELD ?

MAV8E 11LL WRITE SOMETHING
ABOUT THE MOON ..

:.C~· I 1ft ......h. 114-441-

I """""" 11nfurnllhad opl
- a d Hol2w Clinic of WY. 11C.
oMI-81. tor ..... lniDnnltl•.

I -

oncl

4021.

.

bolh 11p1, ~71.

II W. lpl. Z bf., 1 bllh, prlvolo
• ~IUid pallo. CloM to

11&lt;12 Clrpoi,ISO; roll corpoll4 o
,...d l up; MoiiOhond Filmllwt
614-44f.7444.

CouniJ Appllo.,..1.1nc. Good
.-d opt&gt;llan-, T.v. NIL 011on
I Lm. to I p.m. Mon.4al. i14-

,. ......, .. .....

ld.

~

«&lt;l-1111!o. 127 Srd. Ave. CIIJo
llpolio,""
For SOlo: GN)' couch • chllr,ln
aood cond. 114-441-0101 or

COIIIETOLOGIST.

,.,......

s-·· .... - ptul......
Qulrol•
load -···
pold

-

~~~-noodori.
~

r.::=-------

- - . ........ litho
Wll Mb¥ .. In my home _ , - · M,OOO. l14-44t11or
1 -lma, - - P-nl .... 117S.
•.:'io11 ,::~=71::::1=13::.7·:....__ _ __
I

:

"

·

~.ooctlyr. .............
Dilello. 11) 105-i17- Eld. Y·
10111.
EARN - . ; y iJP1n11 at homo.

F1llJilCidl

21

...

l'riOndiJ R~ Rd. UI,G110,114--1MO. I

Business

Aolllon, llooutllul .... -

...

304..75-3ml.

_7_

Lrnx,
P.l., . l a u - po,_. 11C..
Moroii'J

.,..

72 Truckt for Stle

_ _ ...,,_.114-

1877

1121on.

24ft.

.

. . VldeoCounlry

7:05 (]) ,.,._,.

FRANK AND ERNEST

fll'( $TOMAC.tl
PIPN'T G~WL. ...
MY LIVER IS A
VINT~I LOQUIST·

-

lp.m.

lolo

~~114-111-4212..,

lrolft:~,

-

llcltl,

mon'a, ohl-ornRr, lorgo
-.
pollfo,

-ond, tS2 .......31,000,
AI. 7, boloW Eurolla, Coli f14-

-=

••=

4-4f-.1416oftor 7 p.m.

.-·ory,
: -: .:-o:.
--. --.
. -,--.

=-~~.;.,ea.~::

1.-.

!lor-

-ion
-lc =

~·=2110..,....

I

--·----.
=-·
"=:'11~1!;"'3.:1:

() =-

I P i r l - II Ylllogo
Mo' Rblrtrnente: In llldcllapolt. From

-.. t-

-·

":':a·

Unh.m. ~4 , _ . • bolh.

Langley clash ovtr how to
treat an aging etophonl. Q
• !Ill MOVIE Allan
au.tennlln And The Lolt
City 01 Gold (2:00)

AT. 1~4 MILES

w.-

torRent
Strvlc:u

e.a

a.

PeNni PI
rt, '" 21110.
Road - l o r Plrll100 I INto.
Wrtla: P.- - 31T, 111 S. UncolftWIJ, N. ....... lltlnoto,
10542.
Aogtolorad NullO lor 10nt1 linn
Cll'• facility, luR ar pat'f 11me.

2 11r., opodo.., - 111111y
2 pluo

-

Real Estate

:::1 ..... "" .....

aci.!l:l"-

lurnloholl

u1-.
Do-l onct ....,.
....-.114-ttl 11821
-

1250/mo.

:=...
0111

~~METAL IIITIC'IOH
AH~.1211- Ava,

Ron

Oallpollo, UPI 114 Ul 4111.

46 S....,...
..--- for Rent

Dol.: .....

1/3 01111 hlo~ ohiPI dlom..d

"'~. $210.ti4-112-IJI2l.
'""'

SerVICeS

21 .. - -

-loft"'--

Roeer..,.•r.a1JIIt 2311
Oood
SPECIAL fEEDER CALf SALE:

__ _
-

.Home

AI the UviiiOCII: ..... Alhenl,
U.S. 10 Will, 1 mlto of Alllonr· lq Ool. 21 I:GO
p.m.
·a
0111l l- l oln. .AI
. .-C
-

lollalliiJ-. ,._ ••• tp.10.
Wad lhl 21th. For ~~~-114
..12
.. .,4..- 1 .

_....;l;;.m.::p~nw=•m::•:;nt:.:•=-- ...
W.t.TE RPIIOOFINGI
111-MIIIkMIII Ulollmo tN. L.OOIII i . . . .HII furnllhed.

*"'lng.

.....

-Yeo

loll..,_.-

'

(!liNtoN

9 Mllml Ylce One-Eyed
Jack

10:05 Ill MOVIE: Tex11 A Thl River (2:00).

-

.lACK TIIIVIIIIICill:

'DIU 211 , .............. ..,

U.l.

-

~~~~­

of

_Caiii .....

-·
1-lnoaplnolhloll,
p aaawlndoiiiiiOIII:IIIIIa

••t*lenel.

LPN on call. Low
incoMI ...... Cllll14 - 1171

~D-

111 ' .,

1-.

~

.....

Tit...

I'.

.1.-...
1171--.--

R I ant·d . . I llffo Jlhfe llf
U.l. ...,_ .,
2 II•J

Electrlclll
RefrigeratiOn

1plwamM .... I - . . • I

SChooll.

11.

Instruction
Ill·TRAIN NOWI
80UTHEAITIAN
11111-

• 17111 . . . . .

I ......

No. . .

11·1f!llll.

57

18 Wllnlld to Do

'In

~

I

.

Ill.-·
.
.
.
.
,_,
.
.
-

..-.~

..... waiL lllw• n..._'I.OOO or
Mowry. C . l -

Tluoll lor Nlro, Clri¥01,
LIR I p' . . c..J. .... lt4sta.

I

.
'.

II.

t 1 - .................

'

'

'"

~-···I •
;;:-..._..lilr
-tt::=:... ., '
.
In

~ 1111::&amp; Col 114o111-4114
...

11•

··-----·------ - ------,..--------.....,---

•

0~
Oc1.11,1-

ctJ. t

&amp;ms.
~-'-- ,

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

__,- •tO

z-

a

•

ahead by mailing $1 'o Astro-Graph, affect you.
c/o lhls newlj)aper, P.O. Box 91428, o\11111 (llareii21·Aprll11)11 llln't lair
Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be sure to 1oupec1 your par1ner 10 llva up 10 your
alate your zodiac sign.
expec1111on1 K you don'11ry to do the
SCORPIO (Oct. 2• NDY. 22) Today you same. Partly Ia -1111 lor 8' su~­
cornedllns Williams &amp; Roe.
mlghl kid youraell lnlo thinking you . lulalllanoe tod1y.
(1 :00)
hava II lhl u - . - e . In realll)', TAUIIUI (Aptll20 ..., 20) Cwe musl
you are .-ng lnues only from a limit·
be 1aken lodiiY In your conversations· 11:00 (J) lltllmln
ad perspective. Koep on open mind 10 wllh people In generlll. Although you·
• (I) Ill 1111 • Ia! IIJ)
you Clln learn from olherl.
may nollntend 1ftY dl.-_,, !hare's a
BAGITTAIIIUI(IIft. :13-Dec. 21) Take pooalbllll)' lhot· o11·1fle.cufl cornrnenll
(l) The lnwnort811eethoven
care no money Change~ hends today II could be rnlacoroalrued. ·
P1IW 111t1nov Look at
you hava .I n - I s with people_ GEMINI (Mer 21""""' 20) Whoi
the mo!lll lnd lmmorlll
abOUt whom you know lillie. To be on; 1oo1&lt; lllce olonlutlc t*geln today r.no.oltl ' t
.. upecll of Butllooen's lite
from 1111 Mrly years 10 hll
lha sate-· ll's beallo waH until you 'lurn oul 10 be a1 IIUIIInd no etMk.
year~ in Vlennl. Slllctlortl
get 1o know 111em betllr.
Don't rnakl 1ftY Impulsive 11nanc1a1
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lan. 11) Do not commllrnenll or expendHw•.
from 1111 IY1ftllhonill 119
teaturtd. (1!:00)
•
lei otherl make deciSions lor you 1oday :CANCIII (.lllnl 21......., Bl Lady Luck
. lhet affect your reputation. If you're go-1 ·eoukl be 1 lrl.. morelll*le dian &lt;*Ill
"'-""Hell (1:00)
D IIDnepllla
lng to make any millllcaa. II' a belt you .,today, 10 111'1' llllnge claM 1o 11141 - ·
t1l .........
do II youraelleo lhel you """ 18om whtll : ·Don't count on her 10 flU In on lnllda
nollo do ntXI time.
·
: 'etrllgll1 H you're
I p0or 1141nd.
11:30(1) S.bAOUAIIIUI (...,._ IN'III.11) Fectalnd'l ·LEO (.laiJ a-Ails- B) ll8lare p I Ill
.(J) Ss.tOicltgura should be double oheckad IOU. · 'on lnfannatlan 10 ot1t11s loclay, be - .
(J). ~ . . . .
10 thel you do nol make errore precll-! .to lt4IW 111111018 . . lllld.IIPICialy Kif
rrJ Ci i ... (0:30) Q
.(1) ......
Cllted upon uniound reuonlng. Aile a:
10 1 matiW of~·
relllble tii0Cflle1o biCk up your ploly. .
(Ails- a 11'1 B) H'l . . .
!IIIH CIMI Q
PISCSI (I'W. :10 " oil II) Judge a: :good to be 001-11111 lbout I c...t ~
,_~lor your8llf lodly,ln~. bu1 H'l bell nollo go
1te1t1 ol baing -tv 1""'*-d by lhel .; lw ·loclay, IUCfl • loMing 11101111'
• . . - - . . . . I NeiMr
Plomlud You A Roll,
opinion ol
Tilly ,... lA-I .can't aflord.
~
eonalor d!!!lklftV one another thai dno't:.

......

Call 11.c;

.111 ........

Mullcll
lnltl\lllllnts

.,,.,.,. . . . .

'

a J Wolor torv1oo. lwtmmlno

:m&amp;Q-........ -•. - ..........
...
"'-::-..
:":.:£
....,,.,.Y,w.--tor
..,.,
_,_7 . .
.........
I

'

85 General Hauling

lliiWilli: .... J

...

'

-rlooi,MC...,I-1711. •

'1...----'i5!i.
=-ttsma. .....
........ ,,. . . 114 141~:

TriCI ort'a graduol ahllt h'om
privalll cotlec:llone to public
acce~a, culminating wilh 1111
opening In 1793 ofThl
Louvre In Perla. (0:3011;1
• liD New Twllghl
Roger MHIIr 11pec111
Roger Miller holll 11111
mUIIc:ll Ylrllty apecfal
aboal(l the MlaaluiPf)l .
Queen wi1h Ttnya 1Uckar,
Lyle LOvitt, Libby Hurley, &amp;

I

carlo, ......... Rllldlnlill
or .,.... alii ''
•.,..lolr,
lit 1MII or !l!rfnl, ropolro.
Llunrrd lh- 1r111111oorNdnlDUI'
,_

...,.

..,................... . .....
~-~-=
...,.,..I

'

,,. ,,. OoHipollo,
ar• Ohio

...._5&amp;.....,
,
1171 -

I:""'"" ())
(I) -~
l'elllllng And Thl l'llllllc

.
••

c.nw•a Pl'"-"""'t
ondHolllna
-aniiPTno

Tt a11SpOrtdtiOI1

71 AUIOI for Ssle

--ln--2f,..,.

,,

11)1-.gNewe

• •

Hutlng

- · -lo
· Call14'112·- ·
Wo tw _ . , and hln-

I

~J~OOlQ
Gl
·• PrO lotolng Tour
• liD c-we~e~~ Tonight

.=

I7NI7I.
Co: IICII EVA,. INT!RPIIIIU,
tw
4.Jae-.,0111-.a7.._
11
~ 111 ......,.., . , _ 82
Plumbing &amp;

tor - ..

flal.

NOBOOY'S
HENHOUSE
TONIGHT!!

...__alhor•I.OO.S04- ~-"-110 Oolllo

W...ad, -

Cell 114 Ul 4117.

(J) 1111 Oua- Lalp
Sam leaps Into the life of an
elderly black man In 1 amllt

•

SHERIFF TAIT'S
GOT
SET

I AIN'T
SLIPPIN' IN

lorvtco
a ..... CI'MII: M '•"•· •
=~114-

Shuatlon
Wanted

COIUOE. 121 I

t-.30.(1) Ill) NUll HouM Ma.
Frick 11 charge wilh Cllri"i_
for an abandoned Infant 1;11
10:00(1) 700 Club- Pill
flcblrtaan

'

I SORTA CRAVE
SQME FRIED
CHICKEN,
PAW

......, or oobto loot
......... n•pltld..,..dli.
Pum.r. a 111'102
. . 104Davia

explored. (1 :30)

__... _

BARNEY

31 Homet for Sale

Brunswick World Open 9-Ball
Championships, Women's
Seml·flnal, Beardon vs Bell
from La_! V.s. NV·
(I) ()) Elglltlt Van Cllllum
~--I• Viewers
Plano are
.Compc:U11a
taken Inside the most
praatlgious muSic
competition in the Weatem
hlmllphlra; 1111 quallllellhat
allow ~ cornpelltor to win are
1111 • @ MOVIE:
'Trenct cOllin Pa.-•
CIS MoYie Special (2:00) Q
II) Lany King Uvel
.
9 MOVIE: Ptlnce Of lei Air
(2:00)

114-2S7-. dar or nfthl. A o
I_ e r I I a I I ft'l a n t
W..epuucdlng.

n7-2530.

15

I THINK I 6T"AAI ED 10
LoeE tr ~~ND
' INDIEiEHQ..IS ~

,,.. •tin ... Cell ooiiM1 ,.:

AKC
'mftll-f11
fFI~ l
:-t!RI1W-~

ToiiiCCO-W.-.-·
man Young. lutt.lo, WV, 31)1...

aft• 7:10 , .... lor 01111011.

'tNDI!!!ENQJS, PH~TIC,
MIJL.T1MAAIC1l5, Ha.\IL.EliC,
PYRETlCjl() Cll.ll!iAJIQ·UC.N

IASEIIENT

............. :IHal.'nMittr
AI ohll. Coli 114-7Q.

!..•.-·-lftl
.... - .....
- 1 4ond
1
- -.-

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRH&lt;iP~ .

•

-

c-pollllvo oollry and .........
-nl
Vall.,
Hoapltal, 3II4-I7H340. EOEIAA
. . ...... to • ..., Odf In home
of oldoo1J toctr no-'&lt; or 01~
kooot all, ,..._ 01010 -ftl
. . . IIIMI i8IIMICII In flrl1 . .
of
I'Oinl
Roolllor, 200
Main II, Pl. Pit., WY 21610.

12

Dan
out in the halls when
on ex-con shows up wanting
revenge. Q
~

·-

-

2710 to.., or 1oiDD lt114:11.

11,000 ITU 114-

GlrnllgltiW (G) (2:00)

(J)W-'tBIIIerda

·
- ca ap.......
1n C.K~l'lPl. - n l
"-41DI

Goo hMtw

......

";:..1.\:!:~;::: 54 Mlscellaneout
oft• 2:00 p.M., JD4.J'II.
Merchlndlll

lfl1, Ma_, WY.

~

1:30a~•euu
1:00 • (J) Ill) Night Court

76 Auto Plrtl a
,.,.,..,- .,_
AcceiiOrlll

=~·-.c.·•••
car..ea,.L

56 Pelt for Slit

"to.

Takn A Diva
a Churolll-1 Sidon
1.-05 (]) MOVIE: Sooppolt Your

clod. 114-21N111.

- · Pond llocldngl Callloh,

..!1111........ Cloildo' , .... - - . 011 Coli 11424H121.

Aoomolor-"
month.
llullna 81 1120/lftO. Gallla

-Ar!!lnl

-

5) (2:00)

Pr1clrl:n llobl.. MMne. ~on;.

-

·suppllll
..............

Room•

IIOATEII$:

Tile Tllom llinltl (PI 3 Of

Ill Murder, Sill Wrote Delli\

-I' IIII•S..7dryli
10-111
lbo.
.... l1...aq..

Building

Furnished

Hatll. ,, .....

-

wit-.
11"1-G112.

·-or

28R_.Io,_,.lll•••-·
114471-21171.

-

.-..sa..-.... 114IUUII.
Colll14-1412101
I:IO p.a
DAIRYFAIIMIRS

Wlnn

42 Mobile Homes

ProtnsiOnsl

2 gaalo. 1 IIIII' ond 1 ,....,. fuM

'. .9

EEK AND
WW ~TE: LAST kl161fr
A A-00- lfJ HIS CAR ...

tm17t.-· 121 top.
HP, E
oompltlt
,... l@-·
Coiii1C.-1111 .... 7:00 .......

olde-

Upololro
Pllad.

=

tors.te

n rar•=r.lllia,

Antiques

DlttiiiMNew•

75 Bollia Motors

Mon.- .

Upper Alwer Ad.- 11~7UI,
Opon Sal. fl.m.-2p.m.

~:on~
..llr'ad. 114-4-.
•· ..._ Dap. 1 53
Rol. roq

cau St-Roll e.toto. 114-44f- 45

23

young people to expand their
horizons and encourage
them 10 Slay In school. (1 :00)

YI'RA FURNITURE

•it4. '""" Saplombo&lt; 11th to
Nonmbo&lt; 11th, llrll ..,.

_
........ $110- ......
.100 clopcloll. 114-112-1117.

- ............. . . . . .... tlrM
jonlorlol holp, ..,_tmolofJ
11-12 ""' .... _... -lne
houre, . . . WMidy. 8enil
reiiUfM 10 loa
an PGnt
Pl....,.. Arglrl.!!l.iiO lla6n

one on one relationships wllh

.II)PIIICIIIIIe

unlum- apt. ea~
lanco of downtown, 2 bathl.
No polo, lnquiN al 300
Nlco boch JO&lt;d. -rttr FourlhAwa.
Dopooh, r o - • · no polo.

-·

Ill Top C.rd
7:35W S.nford And Son
1:00 (J) MOVIE: The La....M

iKlllfldom Jed and Dr.

alz-.

3br, homo wlhln Rlldng dls-

&lt;Ill Night Coult

chief Is sough! lor murder. Q

or lrada. 11.W..

-"lion........

I bf, 1wm 1 112 mil•
from Rt. 7, Eurolla, OH 304-17111.04
'

Iolii, II.OOj_ wllh lhlft · dllllrll~
tlol, ............ -~..
!N:hedullftl mal reeume 10: P. 0,
box 10311, , _. . .,., OH

II)Cnlaftre

~Volunlee,.
~=
Q
get involved In

CENo•NAAY
RENT TO OWN. 4 . _ ,
who ...lily. c.u droo-. choot • as wk., bu..
arwuatla, ....a, linf14-tll2-7717. EOH.
bod complolo • $10 wk. • .....,
-1·7771 bl. lt14 24
houra.IIICS. IIIII...,·
pte or 1
~- ...._Add 36
Real Estate
rock• • If wk. 1 dl- 011, 4
1 br. 1urn. or unfurn. cholro • $7.10 n. Aaoa- • II
Bllftcl
Ex,.rtenc.t ...,.. • IMCII:II -Llzc analplo.
Wanted
n 1111, Hllhtllu.Lionnoporlmonl In Mldcl._... 114wk. LOW CASH PIIICEI
OOIIollnf - l o r pllplolon'o 1 IIH 11 lllchM, ........,.,
N2 ..304or44NIII.
10% ott lor cuh. Crwdll toLand Wanted: 1aa acne 1 up.
oHico. X - aport- llonollI .....
cllil but nat naa
,. Send
NlooiJ fum'ad apl. lllf, hilt, avail- ()pan
w~ " " - . - .
to I p.m.l8un. 12 noon lo I p.01.
n....,. to P.O. 771, NM Hlwert. -cilhori.Ori1S.IIonoprlco
porl&lt;lila, lor
noat
..f1
f14-44f-&gt;111.
oullabll
ono- aduft.
WY21261.
--·-I
dlsWhl~pool. . . . Drror
or _Ul¢
, ••
- ..,.~·• FuK limo
1 - tor -n
...._. priMe
tor
Rentals
Arg1ney,
Inc.
28R.
ipt., new Kl'nmon, •71· Drror Whirlpool
po&lt;Oon wllh
Md
A...oda,_I1ZS; 0rrar a.1. uu
~·-d.,.
~to
ptuoll
011'1111, pokl.
now11 'Bimo.
- · - . lfiiV; Wuhor Hoi """!'~
utl•llo.
oorhdr
111.100
.....
In 1· -. ,loll.
Notrain.
... 5io-almond, IIIIa ..-, 1171; - · &gt;0
J)erienDII
, wll
Coli 104-t~104.
41 HOUIII for Rant
Inch Ranp Avcodll, a110i IJio.
IO
121,100:
trolnlng.
C.U tor IN.vB, HIU'• Olntal
oulllbto lor 1 Alina- 30lnoh, white a110i lito.
1 bad ......... 1n Po~Mror.
Labnl~, llkldl1p art 7:00-4:00
Aango 311 Inch, hor¥011 JIOid,
110. Corl _11 • . II;. f170. IMiftl:h. DIDaell, .........c.. -2. 114 441 0331
p.m. .
jL 114 Ill 1511.
Uko now, 117~5
· rotrlgoral« opl.
No ..-.. ., ....., . . or 11 ....
HMith T..._lnc. n n , ._..
1171;
1112.2tlf.
almond, $17 i R
rator
Cl,. •rvlcM MW • :I pint
Froel Free, Harv..t
, $11;
I bodroorn, unlurnlohall, llrlcll,
, . _ l o r RN'o LPN. . . Rolrlgorotor oklo by
In Mldcl-. Aolelonco ,.
lona 1150; BUgge Alll&gt;llonooo,
qulred. Cld 114411 3411.

t...
. . . . .. &amp;My Wllft .......
No upwloiiCO · C.H t·

• !Ill M*A'II'H

Cll 8plrlt Of -

llnlcl..,. living. 1 onil 2 bod-

o_.t o r -

1111 • lal IIJI JJeotCDIIIIJI•trddr!yl Q

Twilr· Of The Gorilla

7311.

o.n,..., own

.lrJUIATOU.

Mylttitlel A Nabnuot&lt;o pollee

Aano31Cho¥r,2clr.-. ..

.............
lix-_. . - ·-

Ill EnWttlllnmenl Tantghl

(2:00)

CIJdo - · Ji. :IOW7WSII.

Eallwn Local School Dlot~ct 1o
1oo111ng lor quollllod poopto lo

.......

7:3Q.. (J) FM!Hy Feud
(J)Icholalllc lportt
Amerlcll

• ()) 1111 Untolwed

- . .·

I

.'

ln 1he year ahead you are likely 1o ...
labllah more trnbllloul goals for yourMil 111M you hl¥8 lor lhe P•1 few
yeary. Your motlvallonl will be otronger
end 10 wtU your chlnCII for MICC:III .
LIMA (llpt, II-Oct. Bill you .,. too
lnllttent lboul pulling your Mlf·lnilr·
Ill llrlt, lhlre't I good chanGe you'll
come out 1111. The -.1 IO your IUih
CIA iodiiY It IO - · lor olfllfl whal
you wu1 for youraell. Lll&gt;fa. treal your. ·
"" 10. bllthdly gill. Send lor your ,.. '
'lro-Graph predlctlont lor 11141 yearl

..

•o

=

-'*·

BRIDGE

MeoNell/ ~

lia=~Q
&lt;Ill a - t

lnlwnotlonol 1'100, 2
Cell aftor lp.m. 114-.,.

EARN MONEY IJPint a1 homo.

bo .............. AfltiiJ
now .nd but 1M ftiiW WOMINI

CAUGHT in Ill"

Ntto-11 (1 :00)
~= IIJ) WliHI Of

--

Wp "s,

-.,_ 11100

SCRAM LITS ANSWIIS
._ •.,
Truant - Belch - Ru.ty- Agsncy- CAUGHT
The nightclub entertainer sang very poorly. One pa·
tron heckled, "You soilnd like a disposal with a spoon

1rJ c-nt All...

(I) ())

** ... -

polontlat.
Dlloilo, (I) IOHI7...00 EJII. 11010.

wun, ·--

3-2-1 Conllct Q

(J) •
/

--no. .......
'""'-lOr, ..........
bllao 140. Waad •11r .,... Cl

uo.-,.., -

doil

I• I I I' I e

(J)·SpcHtiCenler

Corvell.. CMVJL ..........

........,..11c.QI.1-

:100 - ·

7

Complato "'• chuckle quOied
. .....J.L..-..1.-..L.-.1. .....J
by filling in the missing words
L-L.
you develop from step No. 3 ~low.

9He-Mu
11:31 (]) Andy&gt; ontftth
7:00 (J) Our HouM
• (J) PM Mepzlne

' ' ... I•

11-, A.C. l'.l.

• ..,.,. Qui. (1) - bf.l-10111• .

-·----.I
n
-=-··

~~~
&lt;Ill Clllorlft In

another-;

,..

One elder 10
. ,' ....~.1_
· ..._1....~1-l..I.....J Z body who can IIlii do at In
- · · · · · - whsl they ._.
,...,-C-0-N_L_U_K_..,, twentlet,

.

1:01 (]) hvetly Hllblllu
1:• • (J) 1111 NIC NWoUr NeoN

T-121.10111-Mutlohan Furnlhn
10 ydo. corpol a pad lnollllod, I'DL a. TroiHng - • 120. lkl
. . . . . Larjo•
Mit. Whllo oupplloo l..t. lf4- .~

.......

~

t-

For Bolo:
-. -

.,._, ...~'

-or -

~One TV (0:30) Q

laf,L~=~~
&lt;Ill WKRP In ~old

=--wtll-.114-

c...

lor to limulete Cllrlng for a

(IJ

44t4714.
'
GOVERNMENT IEIZID Yahlal11
lroln I1DG. Font. MMcadll

_ , ou1t11, - ·
....................
, nioe

I

V 0 GE R

I

~=a:: (0:30)
~ Je~~o~~~c....,. Q

-~----·

Opportunity

~.-,...,-o.telll,
(1) 106-117-1000 Ext. 1~.

...,_fO!d_Oit..:

..
-·
lllln. -Mlnarol
-·
khool
DlolrlcL
- CIIJ

EARN MONEY Anll,. lOibi

Gn cook otovolftd

1.25 ecre lot on AI. 1101 4 mU•

"""·loll
.
10 IIF

...... WlploW,

For

~~.....
-. ..
.,, llhopping
uwtrL . trllll 114-44f-2231.
provklod. l2fl/mo. ""'' 11C. 0000 USED APPLIANCES
441..727.
Wooftorl, d~oro. ~~~
rongn. 9koaao AOI&gt;IIo-.
Uppor Rlvor Ail. Booldo Sf- Oold
Voluocl- II 1421.
· 1121WIN-·
-- ·
Croll Mottl. Cell 114-4141-73118.
otter; 114 113 1121.

fw,

,,. . . -

.... ollv-. Mh

BULMYD

2 .;.,.:1
1.l ...;;-.1
' :..;.:1....:..,.l..:...,l,........j .

9Jem
a.__....,...,.

snao,

-·-114-tl22.

.,

ONI!tot Glmft

1011 .Ill
treolor2010
-.Ill
·lrootor,
...,.,
SSIIO,

........ CorD. Ill. 1 ... , .

..

(I) Dear8ul Junior High
Spike Ta given on egg 1o e~~ra

61 Fsnn Equipment

...-.OH-.Wo . . _

lour ocrombl.d -do below to form four ~mple wordo.

.Qfrj •
Cll11181or Leegue , . _ . ,

.(J) (J)

54 Mllcellai'IIOUI

.........
_co..
:::;~~...·"""_ ..-~'

........

.....,. "' tho

Roorrango

•

·=

. I:OO!=•And

1

W1e4 ., QAT F. Mti•N -~----

EVENINO

..ottor.
n...t14-441-0710.
- ao111 173110 .rliili

MII'Chlndltt

WED .. OCT. 18

PI,

1.1
-·
C.rlo ... - oondltlon.
S04-411f.1111.

11R unlum. apl. llonp • rolrig.

Help Wlnttd

~~·

lllllafoo' hHI• ....., ' ••
-.1044ft.Me4.
1.11.10- 01'1. a.n tlrM, 11oot oflor. Coli 114-iiij:

Cntlt

.. -... -

tO !I

Err,ployment Serv1ces

r-~•

1. . Ylolllto, ...
11.000. U004 KIM ..,_

Apanment
tor Rent

44

K

1Me

11,2110. 114-441-7117.

f14-241-1114 -

I:~

114-742-1415.

11

51

---·""'""
-loft.
p.m.

U004
......
..
entlN - hol'lltMicf
... "'"""
Mllng.

DAleS A.U. "'ltE WA'f

~

,., ~.
1111-llo, v... AIIA'II -

OOIOollon ol

•• · - -

,..,...,

'::~::.' S(Q~lllX-4r.f/is·

Television
•
Viewing

A-.,

Cf e.tii!I'LL CJI.:OS.J

-·14-441-

,.. ca.... La.

crMIIISautalOW

~ 16 A. AQ!IItel

1114· u : - - - · ·

The Daly

Pomaoy-Midclapon, Ohio

It~~

~~~ If I Dl

IT, • •

11...-1117 or

TELLER

1989

S~forRent

.,,1111-. ~ ........

Uood , _ 'llllol... ' ~............ 011f'5 ' 1 11M ., ..

1989

pi'"

·==""-- '
I

,.

·····-· - 1 -

•

NOiml

11·11·11

4!J632
.KQJ73

.Unorthodox lead
is called for

tK

+QU

•· ..
EAST

WEST

+Q98
.BY Jamet Jacolly
• o\9$2
+Ql098
' Tbeoretically, slam contract$ are .K6
lquite easy to defend. Since your side
needs only two tricks to beat a small

slam, you simply plan 10 get your second trick. Today's deal c:omes cour~
syof Freddie North, an English writer
who deocrlbes the happenings at a presumably fictional bridge club. Against
South's six spades, West was confronted with a difficult lead problem and
selected the 10 of diamonds.
Declarer won dummy's diamond
king, played A·K of spades and gave
up a spade to the queen. For Welt,
what now? Eventually Weat played a
second diamond. South dl!carded two
clubs from dummy as he took tbe A·J
of diamonds, and then played ace of
clubs and ruffed a club. When the king
came up, declarer had his small slam
contract. West could do no better by
playing ace of hearts, since declarer
would rolf. A small club from the king
might work, but not if declarer bad
read the situation correclly.
The deal is an exercise in picturing
declarer's hand. West knows that
South started with si:rspades only. It is

.•

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Dealer: South
Welt
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also prooable that South is void in
hearts, since it is normal for someone
suddenly jumping 10 slam to bave a • ,
void. But even if South has a singleton
heart; West can still be sure of aetting
the contract if be plays a small heart ·
away from lhe ace. Sure, declarer cari .•
make a trick with the king of hearts; •
but that will not be enough to tate
care of all his club loeers. Eventually : .
he must fall back on the club finesse, '
and down goes the slam.

.CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Never
1 Back-talk

s Pointed
remark

.•

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41 Chatterley's title .

DOWN

9Greek

rtver
10 Venerate
12 Paper
quantity

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1 Poet
Teasdale

2 Sports
setting
13 Indigenous 3 Make sense
15 Sally
4 "Cheers"
- Howes
character
18 Excavate
5 Oslrlclze
17 Cover
8 Maxim
vegetables
18 Counsel
7 Malarkey 19 Coat
20 Fall behind · 8 Good
alii
21 Georgiathlnklngl 22 A Slnitra
22 ltsy·bltsy 11 French 24 Breakwater
23 Tie - on
resort
25 Alhtellc
24 Military
14 NervQUs
group

..
27 Vocsllon
29 Equanimity
30 Alricart
antelope
34 Pseudo
38 Shade
37 WhQity

acronym

25 Acrimonious
27 Nutmeggers
stale

1.-+-+-+-

(abbr.)

28 Summer
(Fr.)
29 Gustatory

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31-

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standstlf
32Mnlng Hnd
33 Rhodesian
dlslect
35 Golf
club
37 Jewish
month
38 Excite
39Church
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•

Ohio U.ttery

Series may
·r esume on
· Tuesday
Limit Quantities

UORE HOURS

298 SECOND ·Sl.
POMEROY, OH ; ·
PRICES EFFEcnVE SUN., OCT. 15 THRU SAT., OCT. 21, 1989

Vol.40, No.115
Copyrlghtod 1889

$

. FRESH PORK BUTT

!
I...

Steaks/ Roasts •• ~.
ECKRICH
.
$1e
49
Bologna.............. ·
CAR?LINA PRIZE .
2/ $1
Shced Bacon •••••
I-LB. PKG.

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monies to fund resurfacing on
to tne formal and final approval
refurbished to the county. The
By NANCY YOACHAM
County
Roads 55 and 10 have still
of
the
annexation.
second
lowest
bidder,
whose
bid
Dally Sendnel stall
not
been
released from
Bids
received·
recently
for
the
was
recommended
tor
approval
The Meigs County CommisColumbus.
sioners have received needed refurbishing of an ambulance for by the EMS Board, was returning
Roberts said that project
Information from Middleport VII· the ·Meigs County Emergency the chassis.
agreements
from this district
Return of the chassis was not
lage regarding the proposed ·Medical Services were rejected
listed In original specifications. "are being redone" which acannexation of property to the by_ the commissioners with the
U awarding of the bid Is hinging counts for the hold liP In the
refurbishing proposal to be
village.
··· upon return of the chassis, then funding process. Project agreeThe Information, which was readve;tlsed.
The commissioners moved to
the commissioners feel that ments throughout the state have
prepared by Triplett Engineerreturn of chassis should be made had be be revamped , Roberts
Ing, has been subm(tted to reject after learning that the low
apart of new bld ·speclflcatlons . . said. If the state 'funds are nof .
County Auditor William Wickline bid was not recommended for
EMS
Board
of
Engineer Philip Roberts and released In the near future.
approval
by
the
for required verification. Once ·
Trustees,
since
the
lowbidding
Superintendent
Ted Warner of Inclement weather could hamper
the auditor has approved the
not
offer
to
return
the
county
highway
department ,resu1aclng procedures on the two
company
did
Information as presented, the
the
old
chasslsofthevehlcletobe
.,.
reported
that
State
Issue II roads .
commissioners cim then move on

.I

Cube Steak.......'!.S2
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.
$ 89
T-Bone Steak •• :•• 3
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS .
$ .69
Chuck Roasts .•:•• 1
FALTERS OLD FASHION
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By LEE ANN WELCH
OVPNewaSWf
Elected representatives from
this area met today. with
members of the Chamber of
Commerce highway committee
and other Interested people to
discuss the US 35 bypass In Gallla
County. ·
State Sen. Jan Michael Long
(D·Circlevllle) and State Rep.
, Mary Abel (D-Athens) met at the
Chamber o!!lces to get final facts
and figures on the project, In
preparation to meet with Gov:
Richard Celeste later today.
According to Highway Com·
mlttee member Tom Wiseman,
the two left Galllpolis for a
meeting with the governor. who
Is taking a final look at the

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Paper Towels ••••••
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SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) ''Thank God for the volun:'
Crews pulled vehicles from ari leers," Bush said during an Oval
Oakland freeway flattened by a
Office photo session with Skinner
devastating earthquake . but and VIce President Dan Quayle,
found no signs of life ThurSday who briefed him on their tour of
while Transportation Secretary the area.
Samuel .Skinner said the governAt the Oakland freeway, res·
ment would examine the wreck- cuers using listening devices and
age to learn what happened.
specially trained dogs saw their
Several moderate aftershocks hopes rise Wednesday whe!! they
rumbled early Thursday In the · heard a voice coming from
Santa Cruz Mountain area, the among the scores of cars enepicenter of Tuesday's devastat- tombed In a :•sandwich" of
1ng quake, but ,no, )njuries or
500-ton slabs of concrete.
. ~~erious damage were reported.
The voice t11rned out ,to be a
" _,;;!Jll!l*l ' Ill a UIIU111Mill!dll&lt;of·M1-radlo e"" ~ ., ·
· · ·· .
•
bodies will be found when crews
''There are no survivors." said
dismantle the wreckage of the 1
%-mile section of Interstate 880
In Oakland that crashed down on
rush-hour traffic In Tuesday
evening's powerful quak,e.
Workers recovered 11 cars and
one tractor-trailer rig through
Garbarge collection rates for
the night, but there was no
official count of the victims residents of Racine and resldentlal customers served outside the
lnslde them, pollee Lt. Chris
the quak&amp;strlekea San Franclaco Bay area. • wraa
said.
·
coi'Jll)ratlon limits are going up.
Emergency units are being dtspatclhed to areaaln
Assistant Fire Chief AI Sigwart
Meeting Monday night, Racine
need of assistance. (UPI)
said crews were shoring up the
VIllage Council adopted an ordl·
highway's underpinnings to
nance which raises village restmake li safe for salvage crews. dential collection rates from $15
. By morning, they had covered
to $18 a quarter, and outside
just one block.
vlllage resldentlai collections
"We haven 't found any sign of
from $16.50 to $19.50, effective
Ufe In any of the cars that we
with the current quarte,r of
found," Slgwart said.
service.
proposed projects statewi.d e. '
Oakland Pollee Officer GreDiscussion on Increasing rates·
A decision on which of the
gory Hibbard, one of the workers
has been ongoing with Council for
nearly 30 projects will be funded
who crawled through narrow
several weeks, brought on by the
Is being made this week, and
openings between the smashed
tripling of landfill fees which
announcemen Is are expected
freeway lanes. said every car he
must be paid to dump garbage.
shortly thereafter, he said.
found had been crushed to a
Other area Increases In collecGallla County Is seeking aphelght of about 181nches.
lion rates were noted Including
·proxlmately $82 nillllon to con"I saw slab afteralab (offallen
Pomeroy, Middleport and Syra·
struct a four-lane highway
concrete)," he said. "I knew
cuse where the rate has been
through the county, from State
those were tombs, that there
Increased to $10 a month, the
Route 160 to Thurman.
were people Inside. 1 wondered
Dorcas community where resiBoth Long and Abel have
who they were, what they had
dents pay $9 a month, and In
looked like, where they were Nelsonville where res.ldents pay
placed the highway at the top of
their priority lists. "I wlll be
golng. lt was numbing."
$25.50 a quarter.
doing everything · I can do tq ·
State disaster officials put the · Council passed the ordinance
make sure that money Is fundeath toll at 273, then said they
under emergency measures
neled Into Southeast Ohio," Long
could not be sure how many Monday night after having resaid ln.July,
vlctlms are In the 150 to 250 viewed It several times In prior
Abel said at that same time she
vehicles, Including buses, burled ~meetings. The rate Increase Is
wanted to see the project mateIn the freeway rubble, from
effective with the current quarrialize because "It Is paramount
whlch about a dozen bodies have
ter, according to Mayor Frank
been recovered.
Cleland.
According to the ordinance, the
President Bush announced he
would visit the stricken area
regular rate covers pickup of
Friday for three hours.
four bags each week. There Is a

Oakland Fire Department Capt.
Jim Hah,n.
Marty Boyer, a spokeswoman
for the Alameda County Oftlce of
Emergency . Services, said:
"They so desperately wanted to
find some hope down there, to
find something."
A 6- year-old boy rescued from
the tangled mass of concrete and
steel remained In critical condl·
tlon Wednesday at Children's
HospitaL A surgeon reached him
by cutting througl! his dead
mother's body, !nd had to
amputate1!1! ieg I tree him.

R acme
. • counc h•k
I es
• k up rates
garb-e
s.Die p•c

2

RED OR WHITE SEEDLESS

A request from the Scipio
After meeting. with Teresa
Township Trustees to close Drummer, representing the
Township Road 458 has been colmty's community corrections
received by the comriilsslon~rs . program, the commissioners
Pending; the submission of addl·
agreed to apwove new budget
tlonallnfonnatlon from the trus- figures. llt'Pding receipt of a
tees regarding . the road, or .. subsidy agreement from the
section of road where closure Is state.
wanted, the commissioners will
Finally, the commissioner
consider the request.
have been notified of the upcomThe commissioners approved
lng seml-t.nnual conference of
a transfer of, funds . within the .the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Val- ••
budget of the Soil ~1\d Water
ley Regional Development ProConservation 'Dtstrlct, pending gram's policy committee. The
approval of funding certification meeting wm be held Oct. 31, 6
by . the Meigs · Budge t . p.m. , at the Lafayette Hotel In
Commission.
Marietta.

Rescue crews find no
•
survr,vors on freeway

1-LB. PICG.

BUCKET

•

g

"

2 S.ctiono. 1 2 Pogeo 25 C.nto
A MutlinMdil Inc. New~llp8r

Meigs Officials receive more annexation data

"'

Ul

Pomaroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 19, 1989
•

Limit
10. Coupons

9(
Whole Fryers •••:-•• 6 .

Clowly lonlght, IAw near 30.
Cballce of snow 31 pet'(lent.
Friday. Hip In mid 30o.
Chaace of snow 80 percent.

•

at

OCT. ·21
.

5-7-11-28-38-41
Kicker ~8686

•

THRU

GRADE A

Super IAilto

Page-4

ALL ·
WEEK
OCT. 15

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

.

277 .
Pick
124.1

\

Wt Reserve The Ri&amp;ht. To

SPRITE OR ·

Pick-3

M

2

•Tiie total value of the
double coupon may not
exceed $1.00,
:•Any manufacturer's coupon greater than 51 C will
be redeemed at face value

I.ooal news briefs,---.

only.

Vilhrge to begin picking up

•Only one manufactur' er: s coupot:~ per item.

leaVes

.

· The annllill leaves pickup wlll begin Monday In Middleport.
Residents are requested to rake their leaves Into the street
aJong the curbs In front of their homes. They will be picked up by
the street department as soon as they are In that neighborhood .
Brush, tree limbs or other materials are not to be mixed In
with leaves according to Mayor Fred Hoffman. This material
cannot be picked up with the leaf scavenger and plies of this type
of material will not be picked up.
Leaves wl.ll be picked up on a dally basis for the next several
• weeks until this year' s fall foliage Is completed.

•The total value of the dou·
ble manufacturer's coupon cannot exoeed the
purchase price of the item.
Money will not be re-

funded.
•This offer does not apply
to Powell's Super Valu
Coupons, free coupons
or any competitor's coupons.

Patrol cites driver after mishap ·
No one was Injured but one driver was cited In an accident at
7:15a.m. Wednesday on SR. 338,0.1of a milewestofmlle'post20,
according to the State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Okey D. T_rlmble, Jr ., 64, Scott Deport, W.Va .,
driving a 1986 Sprint, came up behind another car, swung left of
center causing Chris Wolfe, 17, Racine, who was. driving a 1984
Plymouth Duster to go off the road, striking a tree.
There Was no contact between the vehicles. Damage was
minor to tbe.Wol!e car and no damage to Tribble's vehicle.
The patrol'clted Tribble for left of center.

.•This offer excludes cigarettes, or any other items
prohibited by law.
•Offer· is good only for
product on hand . . No
Rainchecks.

Chnrges pending. sheriff says
'
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Souls by reports that charges
are pending In the Monday night breaklngs and enterlngs of the ·
Howard Lambert trailer on Starhall Road and of a storage ·
Continued on page 12

•Thera is a limit of .1 0
re·

'

,I

'

i. J

50 cent charge per bag If the
number exceeds the four-a-week
limit during the quarter .
For the rate purposes, bags are
· designed as the 30-33 gallon size
or equivalent containers .
Other rates In the village
Including light commercial and
heavy commercial, were also
Increased proportionately and
also carry an extra -charge per
bag over the quarlerly limit.
It was also specified that all
refuse must be placed at the curb
or roadside In containers . of
tensile streng1h to withstand
adverse weather conditions.
Council explained that Its definition of garbage for pickup
excludes leaves, limbs, furniture
Items, tires, lead-acid batteries ,
used motor oil, or anything else
that cannot be compacted In the .
compactor truck.
· Also discussed at the meeting
was the possibility of working out
a special pickup for leaves In the
village.
Mayor Cleland reported that
with the use of the compactor
truck, purchased with Insurance
money following the dump truck
wreck, the village wlll be able to
cut costs In that there wlJI be only
one trip per week to the landflll
Instead of the four or five trips
made before with the dump
Continued on page 12 .

Southern school board settles NHS issue
:

By CHARLENE ROEFUCH
Dally Sentinel staff
The status of Elizabeth Smith
and her membership In the
National Honor Society has been
settled by the Southern Local
School District's Board of
Education.
Tuesday a statement was
Issued. by the Board based on Its.
position · as clarified at the
regular meeting of the.Board on
Monday night at the school. ·
The statement says that "According to the National Honor
Society handbook, there Is no
basis for the dismissal of a
IP"aduate member from the Na·
tlonal Honor Society. At the time
of the meeting of the Faculty
Advllory Council that dlsmilsed
Elizabeth Smith from the National Honor Society, she was a
!P"aduate member and could not
have been removed. Thus, she Is
still a member of the National
Honor Soclety."
The confiict resulted from

contents of the valedictory
speech given by Miss Smith at
the commencement exercise.
Since th·a t time the American
Civil Liberties Union has been
Involved regarding the possible
violation of the student's right to
free speech.
The ruling that the Faculty
Advisory Council has no authorIty to diSmiss a graduate student
came from Ivan Gluckman,
associate counsel for the National Association of Seco"rldary
Scbools, sponsor of the National
Honor Society. I
In other action taken by the
board Monday night Effie R.
Murphy, VIctoria Peavley,
Barry Hayner, Lee Lee, and
Robert Ashley were approved as
substitute teachen.
Several assistant coaches were
hired and lncludeRonnleQulllen,
boys asslltant basketball coe.ch;
Jim Caldwell, freshman basket·
ball; Mlck Winebrenner, seventh
grade basketball; James Law-

'

.

renee, eighth grade basketball Fund. It was reported that
coach; Bill Hensler, girls varsity Southern had 13 students particiasslstani basketball coach; Alan pate In the _1989 Governors
Crisp, junior high basketball Scholars Program. They were
coach.
Jason Arnoltt, Kellle Ervin,
The salaries for all the coach- Michelle Friend, David lhle,
1ng positions wlll be paid for by Mica Jones, Jenny Lisle, Northe Boosters and the Athletic man Matson, Joyce Pickens ,
Department, It was reported. At Carolee Scarberry, Mark Thelss,
the tneetlng the Boosters made Jan Williams Chad WISe, and
another donation of $3,000 bring- Mayla Yoacham.1
Ing their total to $&amp;,000 this year.
Approval was given for main·
· Joan Hudak was approved as tenance work on the high school
yearbook advisor, · and Jane hea~ng system In the amount of
Manual's resignation as a substi- $3,000.
tute teacher was accepted. The
It wss noted that four electric
board approved a contract be- · stoves are for sale by tbe board.
tween the Southern Local Board One, a self-cleaning kitchen
of Education and Educational stove for $125, and three others
Services Institute, Inc. for the for $100 each. Anyone Interes ted
1989-90 school year In the Is Invited t.o conta~t the school.
amount of $21,190to be paid out of
Attending the meeting were
the Disadvantaged PupU Pro- Scott Wolfe, president; Charles
gram Fund.
Norris, vice president; Denny
Kim PhiiHps was named to Evans, Gary Willford, John
handle the $U47.39 from the Murphy, board members, Bobby
Dwight D. Eisenhower Mathe- Ord, superintendent, and Dennie
matics and Sclenoe Educational HIH, ll'ellsurer.

•

..

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