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                  <text>PIt 10-lhe Ollily Salti1.a

Monday. October 23, 1989

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

.us 35...

Continued tram pqe 1
·
wtU lie dOled all this week be&amp;!Ming tomorrow, according to
tile !lalllbury Township Trustees. The road, bowever, will be
Gplll for momiJii and evening school buses, It was reported.

EMS has 10 weekend calls
Ten calli for assistance were answered over the weekend by
unlta or tbe Melp County EmerJency Medical ~rvlces.
On Saturcl.y at 8::)! a.m., Middleport went to South Second
Ave. tOt Kenneth Cutlip to Ho!Zier Medical Center. Middleport
wu called at 9:33 a.m . to the Stonewood Apartments for John
Uetaaa to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 6: ll'l p.m ., Pomeroy was called to State Route 681 for Jane
Ratclltf who was treated but not transported.
Pomeroy at 7:19p.m. went to Fisher St. for J. L. Poulin to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 7: 53 p.m •• Tuppers Plains transported Harry Perry from
Scout Camp Road to Veterans.Memorlal Hospital. ·
Sunday at 9: 40 a.m .• Tuppers Plains was called to Reibel
Road for Donald Hoffee to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
Racine was called to Vine St. at 9:48a.m. for Clara Davis to ,
Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at 3:36p.m. to State Route 124
tor Franldln Lemley. also to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 6: 11 p.m .• Tuppers Plains was called to State Route 7 for
Marilyn Maddox to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
Rutland was called at 6: 29p.m . to Salem St. tor Merle Davis to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
1

SECOND PlACE - CompeiUiu between .the
sopllomore ud JUDior class ftoats In Frl~'s
Soulhem Hlp homeeombig parade wu close.
The jaalor Doat won, with the sophomores 00111 of

Stricken...

!iasNOw
FRONTS: "
Warm

-RAIN
W).J SHOWERS
"Cold
. . Sialic ; . , Occluded

Maps~ mi~mu~ ~mf?'!rature! .

to 'ec!•ve pt!':!P• ~at• on 1 rd~a!~

At least 50% of any shaded area i! ro~casl

UPI

-•era

WEATHER MAP- Showen are forecaal for parla of lhe mid lo
Paclfle coaal slales aad mid lo nortllem llltermountaln
re..... Shonn are poMible Ill m•tofthe PacUic Coastalales and
moal of the llltermoutaln recton. (UPI)

-----:--Weather----By U•W Preas lnlernatlonal
Soutll Cealral Olllo
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low
near 50. Winds southwest 10 to 15
mph. Tuesday. partly cloudy.
High near 70.

Exleaded Forecut
Wedllead.y tllrOUJb Frld.y
Fair throughout the period.
with highs In the 70s and lows In
the mld·fos to mld·50s.

"Bury- the Ow" coming In seecind." The
sophomores will receive a S2S prize· from the
school's student council.

continued from page 1

"He's big, strong, tough and
which struck at the height of the mid·November at the earliest.
ornery;"
said waitress Lory
Highway 17 linking Santa Cruz
afternoon· rush hour and mea·
with the Silicon Valley was still Hartland of the Nugget Restau·
sured 6.9 on the Richter scale,
Engineers Inspecting a stlll· closed because of quake· rant In Weaverville, where Helm ·
standing portion of the Nimitz generated mudslides, and the was a regular customer. " I'm not
Freeway found ominous cracks Highway Patrol said It woulcl surprised he survived. He's just
Sunday along wltli evidence that convoy car pools along the main tough as nalls."
Doctors Sunday expressed con·
. the structure had shifted, possi- alternate route, Qillfornla 9.
fidence
and concern about
Local
Jaw
enforcement
agenbly In some of the thousands of
Helm'
s
condition.
which remains
cies
lnltlally
projected
the
re·
aftershocks.
.
critical.
gldnwlde
death
toll
at
up
to
273,
Streets running under that
''He's not out of the woods yet, ••
portlon of the freeway were but officials have since said there
said
Dr. Will Fry, a member of
cordoned off and at least 150 may have beim fewer cars Qn the
the
team treating Helm at
people In ·four apartment build· collapsed freeway than first
Highland
Hospital. "We're not
lngs In the nearby Cypress thought, and the .final death toll
coming
out
and saying that "he Is
Village complex "'ere evacuated may be lower.
But the experts were proved wonderful and thai everything Is
to a Red Cross shelter.
wrong
when they said there could right with the world and he' s
Oakland pollee said the eva·
be
no
survivors
In the collapsed going to make It, because we
cuatlon would last only 24 hours
freeway
after
the
easy·to-reach can't jus I say that."
while the still·standlng portion of
Hospital spokeswoman Phyllis
survivors
were
extricated
the freeway was being shored up,
Brown
said Helm also suffered ,
shortly
after
the
disaster.
but Oakland Mayor Lionel Wll·
several
fractured ribs and a skull
Longshoreman
Buck
Helm
son said It could be lengthened to
fracture
, but no Immediately
was
found
alive
Saturday
In
the
48 or 72 hours.
apparent
lung damage. On Sun·
·
twisted
remains
of
his
compact
Although engineers were try·
day,
Helm
"was responsive to
car,
wedged
In
a
tiny
pocket
of
lng to prop up the Nlmliz with
commands,
an"d
Is talking a little,
large wooden beams and steel safety In the tons of twisted steel
but
kind
of
goes
I'! and out." '
girders, they still · feared the and concrete.
rickety structure would collapse
and send debris flying Into
nearby apartment buildings.
In addition to the Oakland
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) heart Is functioning well, and his
residents evacuated Sunday, the Buck Helm, the burly 57·year~old kidneys are functioning , but he'll
state Office of Emergency Servl· stevedore who survived nearly need to go back on dialysis later
ces In Sacramento ·said 7,362 four days trapped In a car utlder today," Brown said.
people had been displaced by the the rubble of Interstate 880"
Helm, she said, "was responquake, 5,000 of them In hard hit foUowlng. taft, week's earth· · slve to commanc)s, and Is talking
Saatll Cr~a Couni:Y ~ of San quake, was
uah guy with a a little, but kind of goes In and

Quake sunivor tough as nails

Yl-&amp;tllt:ISCo.

_

stuMKilll 'Will

1ft'e.

In another development, Base·
"He's an ornery old fart,"
ball Commissioner Fay Vlncent Helm's son, Greg, said proudly at
He Is survived bY bls wife,
and San Francisco Mayor Art Highland Hospital, where Buck
Edward Blake
Freda M. Founds Blake, CoolAgnos announced !)unday that 'Helm remained In critical condl·
the World Series, suspended tlon late Sunday but was ex·
Edward Blake, ·88, Coolville, ville, a son and daughter·ln-law,
Carl
Buford
and
Norma
Blake,
after
tWo games, would resume peeled to survive.
died early Sund.y at St. Joseph
Coolville;
two
daughters
and
Frld;ty
at Candlestick Park beHospital, Parkersburg.
"He's big, strong, tough and
sons·ln·law,
Frances
and
C~trl
L.
tween the two local teams - the ornery," said waitress Lory
Bom In Troy Township, Athens
San Francisco Giants and Oak· Hartland of the Nugget Res tau·
County. 011 April 28, 1901 he was Glllllan, Coolville, and Opea
land Athletics.
the son of the late Edgar and Eileen and Gerald Phillips of
ran lin Weaverville, where Helm
Oakland Mayor Wilson lndl· was a regular customer. ''I'm not
Adallne Reed Blake. He was a Athens; a brother and sister-In·
member ot" the North Bethel law. Delbert and Rene Blake,
cated he Is ambivalent about . surprised be survived.
United Methodist Church, and at Hockingport; five grandchild· . resuming the Series.
"He'·s just tough as nails,"
"I don't know. What do you say Hartland said.
one time served on the board of ren, seven great·grandehlldren.
He was preceded In death bY
In favor of the World Series being
directors of the Coolville Camp
At least one fellow dockworker
bls parents, three sisters, seven
Meeting Association.
played?-1 have mixed emotions," had Ignored lnlllal reports that
said Wilson, adding the after· there were no survivors and
He was a former Carthage. brothers, an Infant daughter and
math of the earthquake dwarfs maintained hope that Helm lived
Troy school board member. Mr. an Infant son.
Funeral
services
will
he
held
at
the Importance of the Series, through the coUapse of 1·880, the
Blake . worked tor the OhlohiJe.
1
p.m.
Wednesday
at
the
White
although
"people need some double-decker freeway .
partment of Transportation beFuneral
Home,
Coolville.
The
fore his retirement. He also was a
means of releasing tbler ten"I feel like laughing In their
heavy equipment operator and . Rev. Jeff· Burdsall will officiate
sions, getting back · to their face now," Terry Concon said.
Uves."
assisted with the construction of and burial will be In White Chapel
"Oh, Buckaroo!"
the Pennsylvania Turnpike, Fort Cemetery. Friends may call
Elsewhere, work crews at the
A longshoreman at the Port of
Bay Bridge removed. the 50·foot Oakland, he worked days In the
Leonard Wood In Missouri, and anytlme Tuesday. The family
WriJbl Patterson Air Force Base will be there to receive friends
section of the upper level that shadow of the 1·880 freeway and
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
collapsed onto the lower tier In slept nights In a custom van. He
- In Dayton.
Tuesday'squake. The bridge was maintains a permanent rest·
expected tli remain closed until dence In Weaverville, a small
town ·In rural Trinity County
about 250 miles north of Oakland.
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Three $1,000, while another 9,282 bad
Tiny framed photographs of
Super Lotto player hold tickets four of them for $75 each.
his
children - Desiree, 12, Jeff,
witll the numers 5, 7, 9, 14, 24, and
. The accompanying Kicker
16,
Marc,
22, and Greg, 35- were
Dally
stock
prices
•• and will share the $9 million game: produced the number
In
the
van, nicknamed the ·
(As
of
10:
40
a.
in.)
jackpot, Ohio ~tlery officials 561614, and only one ticket had
"Weaverville
Flash."
Bryce
and
Mark
Smith
uldSunday.
the combination, making It worth
of
Blunt,
Ellll
A
Loewi
Holders of ttJ,se three tickets $100,000.
A big bear of a man at 6·foot·1
and 240 pounds, Helm Is consl·
can redeem them at a regional
Lottery officials said eight
Am Electric Power ...,.. ....... 30~ dered one of the most lntelllgent
lottery office and become eligible tickets had the first five
AT&amp;T .... ......... ...... ......... .....43'% workers on the docks.
tor $3 million each, or $150,000 a
numbers, worth $5,000 each; 76
Ashland on .......................·.37%
"He had Ideas and was always
year for 20 years, before taxes.
bad the first four for $1,000; 769
Bob
Evans ........ ......... .. ...... .13~ good In conversation," said
Lottery officials said nearly 5.5 had the first three for $100 and
Charming Shoppes ............. .12'% Jacques Lira, themanageroftbe
million tickets were sold for the 7.~ll had the first IWo for $10.
Oty
Holding Co . ....... .... ... ... 15~ terminal where Helm worked.
drawing. Out of that number,194
Federal
Mogul. .. ... ...... .... ... .21 ~
Phyllis Brown, a spokeswobad five of the numbers for Chemical fll'lll
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .................. 48
at Highland Hospital, said
ma!l
IIMJ'ee8 to lreal waaer
Heck's ............................ ..... 6~ Sunday that Helm's condition
Key Cen turton ..... .............. .. 15
had"not changed much since his
PIITSBURGH (UPI) - The
Lands' End ... ......................26% near·mlraculous rescue SaturNeville Chemical Co. has agreed
: llfealllr cuceled
Limited Inc....... ......... ........35Ji day night . His biggest problem
Multimedia lnc . .... ....... .... ...99~ was damaged kidneys from
Tuesday's meeting of Amerl· to treat water contaminated with
can Legion Post 39, Pomeroy, hazardous waste before dumping
Rax Restaurants ............. ..... 2~ going so long without water. He
It Into the Ohio River, authorities
baa been canceled due to Illness
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ...... ......14~ also broke several ribs and
said.
'
a legion spokesman reports.
Shoney's. Inc....................·.... 11
suffered a skull fracture.
Neville Chemical had been
Wendy's Intl .. ... ........... ....... 5~
"His vital signs are stable, his
Fall~apt~unMllr
violating an order to stop dumpWorthington Ind ... ........ .. .... .23~ lung function has Improved, his
Boy Scout Troop 245 will have a Ing more than 2 million gallons of
fall roundup at the Middleport water Into the river dally, aald
Presbyterian Church In Middle- Sam Harper. a water quality
port at 7 p.m. Thursday. All boys supervisor with the state Depart·
apd 11 to 17 Interested In ment of Environmental
ICOUIIDJ are Invited to attend, Resources.
Don vauahan, scoutmaster.

..

Three share Super lotto jackpot

Stocks

Contlnued from pa ge 1
r esources to aid economic
devlopment."
The second·largest· project Is
construction of a relocated por·
tlon of U.S 30 In East Liverpool
· from the Newell Bridge to north
of Broadway for nlne·tenths of a
mile, at a cost of $23.2 mUllan.
The tlllrd·largest project Is the
ex tension of Ohio 126 for ·. two
miles from Galbraith Road io '
Ohio 4 · In Hamilton County.
virtually · completing the Cross
County Highway. The cost Is
$20.1 mUllan.
Other Projects Listed
Other projects that are pari of •.
the package:
·•
Guernsey County - Widening
Oblo 209 to four lanes near .
Interstate 70: widening on·ramp
io westbound 1-70, Installation of
!rattle signal at on· ramp and _
Installation of left turn lane at
off·ramp of 1·70 east.
·
Ashland County - Relocating
2.:!5 mUes of U.S. 250 from
Faultless Drtve on the north side
to U.S. 42 on the east side of
Ashland, removing heavy truck 1
traffic from the center oft be city.
Cost, $8,7l)lUllon. Also, widening
U.S. 250 from U.S. 42 In Ashland
to tile 1·7llnterchange. Cost, $1.2
million.
Belmont County ~ Construe·
tlon of the relocated portion of
Oblo 7 In Bellaire from the south.
corporation line to 26th Street for
1.4fWnlles. Work also will Include
construction of an Interchange at
12th Street . Cost, $15 million.
Also, constuctlon of a one·mlle
relocated portlon' of Ohio 7 from
26th Street to 43rd Street. Cost,
· $15 million.
Cuyahoga County - Widening
Richmond Road from Chagrin'
Boulevard to Cedar Road In
Beachwood for 2.5 miles. Cost,
$10.1 million.
Sandusky County - Compte·
tlon of the Interchange of U.S. 6
with U.S. 20 northeast of Fre·
mont, allowing entrance and exit
ramps from all directions at the
U.S. 20 bypass by way of U.S. 6.
Cost, $5 million.
Greene County- Relocation of
3.12 miles of U.S. 35 from U.S. 68
to east .of Bickett Road,. complet·
lng the four· lane bypass of Xenia.
Cost, $14.1 rflllllon.

Weight

con~l

classes to begin

The Meigs County Health IJe.
partment
will begin a series of
Helm was found alive In the
six
week
classes for weight
lwls ted remains of a compact car
control
at
6
p.m. oli Nov . 1.
about 90 hours after a mile-long
The
classes
to be held on
section .of . 1-880 collapsed In
Tuesday's devastating "Vednesdays wll) be for !Wohours
each session and will Include
earthquake.
nutrition education, stress man·
The front and rear of the car
.
agement,
weekly welgh·lns, rebad been crushed. but a huge
laxation
techniques,
recipes, diet
steel girder that ! .1 over the
recall
sheets.
exercise
tech·
passenger compartment kept II
nlques
and
other
pha~ of
from being flaltened by the tons
·
of concrete that claimed dozens weight control.
There
will
be
a
limit
as to the
of lives. All along the freeway
number
.pf
people
who
can be
were bodies trapped In cars
admitted
to
the
class
which
will
crushed nearly flat.
be
held
In
the
conference
room
of
Luck was on Helm's side. The
the
Multl-Pur~se Building,
weather \"as fairly mild -and he
did not sustain Immediate life- Mulberry He1ghts, Pomeroy.
The classes are free to Meigs
threatening Injuries during the ·
County
residents although they
collapse.
are limited "in size. Anyone
Other doctors said Helm had a
wanting to register should call
strong will to live and that Is often the Meigs County Health Depart·
the difference In such situations . ment. 992-6626.
0\lt...

·

.

ANDERSON'S
OCTOBER SALE!!
•

Ohio ·Lottery

Browns
knock~rs

Pick-3

out of first

184
Pick

4962

Page 3 -

•

•
. Vot.40. No.11 B

M

.

advlled.
At Tlluraday night's meeting
tbae will . be a variety of

... , •tratiDns on variDuaacout·
hll aetiYitlfllncludiiiJ campiiiJ,
earn: Ct e building, and back·
III8CIIdllll are Invited to attend
P-til are also Invited to

atlllld.

Replar meetlnp of the ICOUI
traap !IU held oa Saturdays at 6
p.m. at the Presbyterian Church

wlllell aponaora the troop.

.

.

{

Hospital news

Veter=MIIMI'Ial
Saturd.y admllllona - John
Met:rpr, Middleport; Debra
Smltb, Racine; Lucien Poulin,
Pomeroy.
·
Saturcl.y 411cllarJes - None.
Sunday admlaaiDns - Clara
Davl.l, Racine; Allen Mowery,
Syracull!; Merle Davl.l, Rutlllnd. Sunday dlachareea - Paul
Steinmetz Jr.

..•

,

·-PEPSI,, 16 _0 1.

By NANCY YOACHAM
three years has been serving
Dally Send!lel Staff
Washington County entirely In
. Emerson Shimp, CO)IIIty ex ten· the economic development field.
slon agent, economic .developShimp reportej1 that ene of the
ment, from Marietta, speaking needs of th"ls arel!-ls for hunting
at Monday's .quarterly meeting· and fishing guides tor lbcatlons to
of the Meigs County Regional hunt and fish. Another need Is for
Planning .yommtsslon, said that betteL locations for. access to the
he has been saying there are only Ohio River , · as well as more
three large buildings In the service areas for oiJ, gas and food
southeastern Oblo area which that are needed by boaters.
are available for Industrial use.
A possible tool for development
After helirlngduj"lngMonday's along these lines would be ·a Port
meeting of a site In Middleport, Authority, Shimp said, which
which Includes a l)ulldlng,_Shlmp would· ,have the power to Issue
says he has to revise that number boqds As well" as exercise other
to four.
governmental powers.
One of the first requests of
Shimp also pointed out the need
Industry Is for available build· for coaperaflve effort by all Ohio
lngs, said Shtrrlp, who for the last River communities on both sides

of the river.
Shimp received his lnforma·
lion Monday on the Middleport
Industrial site from Vljay S.
Gadde, planning coordinator for
Buckeye Hllls·Hocking Valley
Regional Development District.
Gadde presented part of the
Meigs County portlon of an
Areawide Action Plan, currently
In rough draft by Buckeye Hills.
Charles atakeslee, execu tlve
director Of the regional planning
commission, reported that sev·
·eral people had assisted In
making suggestions for the
Meigs County portion of the
Areawide Action Plan.
Four possible Meigs County
Industrial development sites are

Included In the Areawide Action
Plan, reported Gadde. Those
sites are 65 acres-at Hobson; 44
acres on Portl.a nd Road; 25 acres
at the ·Scipio Industrial Park;
and 1.5 acres at the Hall building
In Middleport.
The report also lists 11 possible
development projects during the
next two years In the five villages
of Middleport, Pomeroy, Racine,
Rutland, Syracuse, as well as
within the Tuppers Plains Sew·
age District. Included In the list
are motel·restaurant develop. ment, elderly housing, dock and
marina development, waterline
replacement and expansion, and
street Improvement. Copies' of
the report are available at the

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) passing levies or making cuts In
The state Controlling Board spending.
LaSt year, 37 districts reauthorized 11 more school dis·
trlcts Monday to seek $4.8 million quested loans totaling $26.8 milIn loans from local banks to keep lion, Van Keuren said. Only 19
schqols open for the rest of the districts borrowed $13.2 million.
year.
The largest loan approved
James VanKeuren, director of Monday was for $1.89 million for
the Division of School Finance Springfield Local School District
with the Oblo Department of In Summit County. It will be lhe
Education, said 36 districts al· fifth loan for Springfield Local.
Under questioning by board
ready )lave requested loans total·
lng $17.1 mutton this fiscal year. members, Van Keuren said
He said he expects another Springfield Local last received a·
eight to 10 districts to apply for · loan,t[om the state In 1985. .
The : §tile- no "lllDJet makes
l!lo.!J~; totaiP\i ..-, miniOn: .to-:4(
loans to school districts, hut the
hi~ befori!'the year 18 over.
Based on past experience, Van ·controlling Board must give
Keuren said only about half the districts permission to seek loans
districts will actually take out from local banks.
loans. The rest will c;ope by
Rep. Robert Netzley, R·Laura,

~plosions

complained that the state IJe.
partment of Education does not
sufficiently monitor districts
with loans to see that they trim
spending.
VanKeuren said S"prlngtleld·js
In receivership to the state and
the department will be "monitor·
lng them on a monthly basis tor
the next two years."
Van Keuren said nine of the
districts receiving loans this
lime will have property tax or
Income tax levies on the ballot
next month.
~
'!'be state ··Mt~C·IIDIJ; 1lmctll1 '
sald'healilllhsllrance premiums
for employees Is the main cost
that Is driving districts to bor·
row. "It almost seems In some
cases that It's out of control," be
said.

rock chemical plant

PASADENA, Texas (UPI) -A trapped.
Cox said one Phillips employee
series of explosions tore through
a Phillips Petroleum Co. plasucs was confirmed dead and 20 of I he .
plant Monday, killing at least one company 's · employees were
worker, Injuring at least .109, missing, as were three who work
blowing metal debris six miles for various subcontractors work·
away and rocking nearby lng al the plant.
The firs I small explosion was
buildings .
AI least 23 people were unac· followed by a huge blast that
counted tor, Phillips President broke out windows and knocked
Glenn Cox said, but all the loose ceiling tiles In ·nearby
petrochemical company's sub- schools and al a shopping mall.
More explosions followed , and
contractors al the plant had nol
{'Ompleted headcounts of their fires were reported In three parts
of the taclilty. Some of the
employees.
The tire, sparked by the 1 p.m. • Injured were people living near
explosions, raged for hours at tile the plant wbo were hit by flying
41·year·old facility but had been · debris, hospital officials said.
controlled by 10 p.m., Cox said at · Hydrocarbon vapors, !be raw
a news conference. It continued materials used for making plas·
to bum •. tlie company president tics, were believed to have
said, and there was no way of caused the explosions, said Bob
telling whether any more Benz, manager of Phillips plas·
workers had been killed or tics division. Blll Stoltz. the

facility's envlronmntal director,
said while the burning chemicals
were not toxic, they were "highly
explosive."
A pipeline supplying tbecbemlcal to the plant from a Phillips
refinery In Sweeny . was shut
down, but substance already In
the plant was enough to teed the
flames for hours.
The blast also damaged the
water storage system at the
compl'i'x, hampering firefighters's efforts. The five fire com·
panles sent to fight the blaze had
to pump water from the neigh·
boring Houston Ship Channel.
There was lit tie warning of the
disaster..
"A siren went off and as we
were evacuating, that's when
you could see a low fire coming
down through the unit . ... and
then the whole thing went up. "

FOUR GENERATIONS - WilHam Flnkellblnder, of Orrville, Ohio, rathen In Racine wplh a
daughter, Nancy Raye Kimes, whom he basn't
seen alnee she wu a baby, and two succeeding

Father,
daught:e r
reunited

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•

of the yea,r. According to lnfor·
matlon presented at the meeting,
the format of the 1990 brochure
will be to use maps to highlight
the Importance of Meigs County
to the entire s tate and this par t of
the country.
Kimball Sh!elds, Meigs County
Economic Development Dlrec·
tor, reported that the county's
development office Is now oper·
atlng on a nearly full time basis.
Shields also reported that actlvl·
ties In regard to possible small
business loans are movjng .
forward.
Eleanor Thomas, of the Meigs
County Council on Aging, encour·
aged the planning commission to
Contlnued on page 10

•

$999
WIST IWN

Meigs County Commissioners'
office and will be presented at
next Tuesday evening's policy
council meeting of the Buckeye
Hllls·Hocklng Valley Regional
Development Distric t.
Mark Murphey, representlng
Leesa Murphey and Associates,
Pomeroy, presented slides of
pictures which are being cons!·
dered for Meigs County's 1990
brochure, during Monday's regu·
tar q_uarterly meeting of the
Meigs County Regional Planning
Commission. The meeting was
held at the Farmers Bank
building with President Fred
lloffman In charge of the agenda.
The new brochure Is to be
published shortly after the first

Controlling' board authorizes
more loans-for Ohio schools

watts
• Fits under cabinel

Domino's
Pizza
992·212• .

25 Con to

A Muttimedia Inc. Newtp•per

Meigs planners discuss development projects

Anriouneements

NOW
DOMINO'S PillA
16 INCH DELUXE PIZZA

1 Section. 10 Pogo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday, October 24, 1989
.

cogyrtghtod 1eas

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MONDAY
IIIGIT SPECIAL

Low In upper tos tonight.
Wednesday, mostly sunny.
Hlp In mid 70s.

KNOWLEDGE SHARED- Tracy lapman, of
Atlleu, allares her lulowled&amp;e of 11r0rldnc wllh
prnelloolln at Molldq'• "Carnival of Careen"
at S.atllerll Hlp SchooL Tllreqbe11t tile d.y,
over M peflllar, careen were explained lo
students by experts In lhe variDua career fields.

Soulhem'a "Carnival of Careers" wu lpoii&amp;Ond
by lhe school dlatrld'a (Jemmlllee for llle
Advancement of Career Bducattoa for atlldenla at
the hlp school and junior hlp levela. (See
addiUonal photos on pap 10) •.

...

generallona of the famUy. Sealed In back Is Seotl
Doucllls KJ..-, the lhlrd cene!'a&amp;lon, and
between her veat 11'8Ddfather and her ll'aDd·
mother sits Ashlelp Merhan Kimes, the fourth
senerallon.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Dally Sendnel Staff
This past Saturday and Sunday
were exceptional days for Nancy
.Raye Kimes, of State Route 124,
Racine. After nearly 47 years,
she found her real father, Willi·
amhRay Finkenbinder, wbo
Jives at Orrville, Ohio between
Wooster and Massillon.
"I had never met ""my father,
that I could recall," Kimes says.
Her parents went their separ·
ate ways when she was just a
baby. In those days, It was
practically a rule that a mother
retained custody of her children,
as did Kimes's mother. Her
mother never let her know where
her father was.
From tJme to tlme over the
REUNITED - After nearly f7 years, Nancy Raye Kimes, of
years, as Kimes grew up, mar·
Racine,
and Wllllam Ray 1!1nkenblnder, of Orrville, Ohio, are
rled and began raising a family
getdng
to
know each other.
of her own, she tried to locate tlte
father she .had never known. She
' R-A·Y·E .' the son answered. a nd
knew bls name, but that was father's.son- a half brother she
then Finkenbinder knew for sure.
she
bad.
Imagine
didn't
know
never enough. Her searches were
"My middle na me Is also R ay ,
that conversation! Anyway. the
unsuccessful.
but
we had put an 'E ' onthe e nd of
Then recently, she mentioned half·brother accepted the news
middle name." he explains.
her
to a friend at work that she never well, explained to her that their
He finally answered his son's .
knew her dad and had tried to father was at work and that she
questlon,
" I had a daughter .
call
back
on
Sunday
at
a
should
locate him from time to time. but
Nancy
Raye."
specified
time.
with no luck. The friend asked
Then his son told him that the
In the meantime, the half·
Kimes If she had ever tried to find
daughter
had called and would be
brother
broe
the
news
to
their
him through telephone lnforma·
calling
back
on Sunday.
•
father.
tlon. As stmp)e as that sounds,
And
call
back
she did. She said
"I
had
just
gotten
Home
from
she never liad. She began searchhello
to
her
dad
for
the first time
my
son
came
over
to
work
when
inl her memory for any clue she
·
at
5:30
p.m
.
"At
five
minutes
may have heard her mother the house," says Finkenbinder.
six,
I
was
on
my
way
down
after
"He began asking me questlons
meation. She knew when her
here,
"
Finkenbinder
says.
parenll broke up that they had like 'what were you doing 47
Actually, the two made arranJived at Stowe, but her mother years ago?' Then he asked, 'Dad,
gements
to ll)eet at a service
had also meatloned other towns. do you know someone named
station In Belpre. From there
She listed the tllWDII she could Nancy Raye?"
Kimes and her husband would
Finkenbinder
had
to
think
remember her mother talking
lead Finkenbinder to their home
awhile.
Yes,
he
knew
someone
about, and started dialing.
at
Racine.
named
Nancy
Raye
47
years
"About the fourth call, I hit the
Finkenbinder
was the first to
ago
but
It
couldn't
be
her
jack119t." sbe lauJha.
arrive
at
the
service
station, so
could
It?
"How
does
she
spell
her
That .was Saturday. Her flrat
middle
name,"
he
asked
bls
son.
·
':OnUnued
on
page
10
telephone contact was with her
{
I

•

�The Deily

Ohio

Commentary
Labor doesn't go for

The-Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - David
Genrge Ball is President Bush's
nominee to pollee pension funds
all over the rountry. But for
retirees like ex-miner Robert
Brown, Ball may be the next
worst thing to a cave-ln.
Ball's decimation of pension
plans when he was a rorporate
executive is making working
stiffs Uke Brown and some people
on Capitol Hill nervous. Tbey' re
not sure he has the right attitude
to run the federal Pension
Welfare and Benefits
Administration.
In his mining days, Brown
worked at a molybdenum mine of
the Continental Divide near

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS. OF THE MEIGS-MASON
AREA
.

~lb

ISlm~ ~.__-.-.~c:::~...;.;
~v

.

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
AssistaJII Publisber/CoatroUer

, CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager

sao·

LETl'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. 'nley should be Ieos th1111
words loBI. AD !ellen are 111bjecUo edltlar ud mu$1 be slped with
aame,
ud telep....,e aumber. No •aslped letters will be publlollell. LeUen obo•ld be Ill pd lute, addr ...ilr ••-· aot perooull-

""*••

tt...

Health-care system's
broke, needs riXing
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior Editor
wASHINGTON- The elderly poorwlll suffer most if congressional
negotiators fail to salvage catastrophic health insurance repealed by
the House.
Tbe House buckled under special-Interest lobbying by well-heeled
oldsters who objected to paying the surtax that helped finance the
program.
·The Senate, lor its part, sharply reduced benefits provided by the
year-old Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act.
Negctiators from both houses will try this week to reconcile their
differences.
Tbe Senate approved a plan by Sen. John McCain to kill the surtax
but retain some of the benefits .
The Arizona Republican's plan would not reinstate prescription
drug roverage which would have benefitted 6 million people ·a year
when phased ln. It would repeal new full roverage lor physicians' biUs
after a $1,370 deductible. It would retain hospital benefits that pay ail
bills after a $560 deductible.
McCain's plan would retain a flat premium of $4 a month deducted
tram the Social Security checks of 30 millk&gt;n elderly Medicare
.beneficiaries. But it would scrap the controversial surtax of$22.50 on
every $150 of their inrome taxes, up to a maximum of $1,050 per
person In 1993.
When the law was passed overwhelmingly last year. former
President Ronald Reagan balled it as a ''pay as you go' ' program, a
model of fiscal responsiblllty that required no new taxes.
Opposition to the new program surfaced when Congress.convened
last January. It centered on the inrome-based surtax, although
. three-fifths of those who benefit would not have paid it because their
Incomes are
low.
What enraged many oldsters was that this was the first time
benefits for the elderly were funded entirely from premiums on
beneficiaries. Benefits for senior citizens traditionally have been
paid lor by general taxes on the whole population.
President Bush, who praised the law in last fall's campaign, has
done nothln&amp; to save it.
Seft. Dave Due • :;a. 1l·'M1111L . op\Ded b\Uerly that "'you ~an•t
·count on this White House to take ~ risk op health policy issues. "
McCain said he " urged, begged and cajoled" the White House to
; support his plan. But Bush has no stomach for the fight against
· repealing the law he so recently hailed. So the president should bear
much of the blame if the program is gutted and millions of needy
seniors are left uncoveced.
Such timidity in the White House does not bode we]l for 37 million
, adults and children in the l.Tnited States .who have no Insurance at all.
Nearly 88 percent of the uninsured are working people, many of whom
: earn too much to quality for Medicaid but still live in poverty.
. The same president who rowers in silence as the nation's crisis In
· health care worsens insists on talking tough about theAmerlcanflag.
· Bush natters on about the need to protect the Old Glory with a
constitutional amendment that would take away a civil liberty
protected by the Bill of Rights.
Tbe Constitution ain't broke, Mr. President. What needs fixing Is
: the nation 's inefficient system of health care.

~

:

·
•

Letters to the editor
. Dear Editor:
• I am a former patient at the
• Overbrook Center and I want to
' express my opinion about the
center. There isn't a better place
to go to recuperate or to be taken
care of or to make it your home. I
was at the center from Sept. 6 to
Oct. 2 to recuperate from a
recent surgery and I was never
:: treated so good. All of .the
·. personnel, Hle R.N.'s and the

.· Dear.Editor:
· About 3';4 weeks ago, I made an
.. appeal for my son and daughter• in-law, who lost all there posses: slon from a storage place. Like I
• said there was i10 insurance after
: the sale · of his trailer. Some
: people said the storage place
: should carry Insurance, but they
: don't. They made the kids sign a
: paper stating that he would not
: be responsible lor loss or dam' age. All of the ones that had there
; thlltgs there bad to do this. We
· are very disappointed as If the
' people of Meigs , Co. l tbought
thq helped people out wben they
needed, but I gues.s I was wrong.
we received a bag of clothes for
there Utile glr~ tram Dr. Wilma
Maulleld. 15.00 from Pickens
Gulf Slat ion and Wald Cross of
Racine. A&amp;o S5 from Lucy

~

N.A.'s are the nicest people to
meet . Tbey were all very good to
me. Also the ladles and gentlemen from the cleaning and
maintenance departments are
very nice. I had three good meals
a day served by good cooks . It Is
the same as being at home.
Mary Durst
Stone Woods Apts.
Middleport, Ohio

Taylor. I want to thank these
people as they are the only ones,
that has helped us. I even sent a
letter to a couple companies that
1 thought might send a small
donation, but nothing. My husband and I don't have much but
we wUl try to help them as much
as possible. My husband hasn't
worked for two years and Is
disabled and so am I. Our
daughter Melanie has Cancer.
Her little boy has ceresal palsey.
So there's not much more that
can happen to our family. Maybe
you people of Melp Co. rould get
down on your knees, and pray for
us and thank God It Isn't your
family. We will keep the faith,
but Bob Its very hard -to keep
smiling these daya. God Bless.
Mr. and Mn. Robert Walding
Racine, Ohio
o/

...

nominee

happens to the dollar.
Labor _unions call it "pension
raiding.'' The business·communIty prefers "excess asset reversions from terminated pension
plans.''
Call it what you wlll, It Is legal.
Ball was able to stretch a
little-known loophole In the pension law Into a gaping rip that
other rompanles have since used
to shut down hundreds of pension
plans and make millions of
dollars. And now George . Bush
wants Ball to regulate all private
pension plans ro the rountry for

the benefit of the workers.
Ball refu.lld to talk to us while
his nomination is' pending.
What ht 41d at the Climax
Molybdenum Co. was classic
pension raiding. AMAX used
pension fundi to buy annuities
that guaranteed the miners a
$20-per-month pension for every
year of their service: That meant
someone with 10 years of service
would get S200 a month. Tbe rate
was only S1 more than the
company was paying before It
shut do~n the pension p\an. Very
generous.
What the employees lost was a
bargaining chip. Tbe union In the
past had won several increases in
pension benetiis, acrordlng to
Brown, who now works for the
Oil, Chemical and Atomic
Workers International union. "I .
don't think It's right, but what's
right and what's legal are two
different things," Brown told our
associate Stewart Harris.
Labor's No. 1 friend on Capitol
Hill, Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,
D-Ohlo, hopes to close the gap
between what Is right and what Is
legal. Metzenbaum and other
pro-labor senators wlll try to fix
the loophole In pension law
through legislation this falL
Metzenbaum let Ball's nomination clear his Labor subcommlt·
tee and apparently has not
decided whether to make a stink
about Ball when the nomination
comes to the Senate floor.
Ball has proved himself to be
an able administrator. His appointment Is not so much a
question of ability as It Is
philosophy. As one Senate staffer
put It, "He certainly understands
the pension area, In some ways
too well."

.- Cities sprawl in the wide open spaces

Tbe Daily Sentinel welromes letters regarding the Nov. 8 general
electtori. However, In the interest of fairness, no election letters will
be accepted afler 12 noon on Wednesday, Nov.1.
Individuals should address Issues and not personalities.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
Letters should be 300 words or less. All letters are subject to editing
and must be signed with name, address and telephone number. ·No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good taste.

CLEVELAND (UPI)- Rookie The Browns have surrendered an 56 yards on the drive, Including
Eric Metcalf scored two touch,
third down completions to
NFL·low 95 points.
downs and Sernle Ko11r hit
Dltka yanked starter Mike Slaughter and Brian Brenun; as
Webster Slaughter with a 97-yard
Tomczak after he was lnler· the Browns ron trolled the ball for
scoring pass as Cleveland beat cepted by Frank Minnifield to set '1:58.
Chicago 27-7 Monday nliht to
On the touchdown, Metcalf was
up Metcalf's seven-yard scoring
move into a tie tor first place In
run in the third quarter and covered one-on-one by llnethe AFC Central and give the
backetRon Rivera . Kosar threw
replaced hlm with Jim HarBears their third slralaht defeat.
baugh. But Harbaugh did not to Metcalf In the Jell fiat and the
Cleveland, 4-3, snapped a two- complete a pass untll the Browns rookie dove under Rivera and
game losing streak ancl Is now were leading 24-0. He linlShed9of into the end zone.
tied With Cincinnati and Houston. 16 for 93 yards. Tomczak comBut the Cleveland offense was
Chicago, which registered Its pleted 4 of 14 passes lor 76 yards
Ineffective after the scoring
first three-game losing streak and was sacked twice.
drive, getting just one first doWI\.
under coach Mike Dltka, Is 4-3
The Bears averted a shutout on Its next poSsession and ending
and a game back of Minnesota In with a five-yard Harbaugh pass the halt on a strange series of
the NFC Central.
to Wendell Davis with 3:47 leltln
plays that saw two runs up the
Kosar completed 22 of 29 the .game.
'
middle after the 2: 00 warning
passes for 281 yards and two
Kosar threw a three-yard that lost a yard each, and an
touchdowns, and Slaughter registouchdown pass to Metcalf in the Incompletion.
tered career highs with eight first quarter, and Metcalf scored
Tbe Bears. who went Into the
catches tor 186 yards . . Tbe on a seven-yard run in the third seventh weekend of play with a
97·yard pius was the longest quarter. Matt Bahr kicked field league-high 192 points, were held
scoring play from scrimmage in goals of 31 and 35 yards lor In check by the Cleveland deteam history and came with 6: 56 Cleveland.
fense for most of the first half.
lett In the game. Only 12 plays
Kosar was coming ott a poor Chicago's best scoring chance
tram scrbnmage have been periormance In a 17-7 loss to came when a 31-yard Tomczak
longer In NFL history.
Pittsburgh last week In which he pass to Neal Anderson gave the
Tbe touchdown pass to Slaughthrew a career-high four Inter- Bears the ball on the Cleveland
ter came on the first p.lay after ceptions, and missed on his first · 42; but the drive stalled on a
the Browns stopped the Bears on two attempts of the night. But he three -yard run and two
a fourth-and-goal play. Slaughter then hit on 11 of his next 13 Incompletion&amp;.
blew by single coverage by passes, although tit!! Chicago
Tbe Bears had just five first
Vestee Jackson on the play and pass rush obviously disturbed his downs In the first half and gained
slipped a tackle attempt from concentration on several at- just 96 yards. Cleveland had 101
Jackson on his way to the end tempts. He finished the first half total yards. Tomczak was 3 of 11
zone.
12 of 17 for 85 yards.
for 53 yards In the first 30
The Browns who'i urned the
The Browns had just one first minutes.
ball over seven times last week down on their first two possesCleveland's Ozzle Newsome
but did no~ commit a turnover . sloits before Kosar directed ·a caught a pass In the first quarter
against the Bears.
73-yard, 14-play drive that put to extend his pass-catching
Tbe Cleveland defense shut Cleveland up 7-0 on a three-yard streak to 150 consecutive games.
down the potent Bear offense, Kosar pass to Metcalf with 28
The Bears play the Los Angeles
which had scored a league-high !;fronds lelt In the first quarter. Rams In Chicago Sunday, while
192 points going into the game. Kosar completed 7 ol8 passes lor the Broims will be at home to
face Houston.

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

.. ~ :

: Deadline for publication
· of election letters Nov. 1
:

Leadvtlle,Colo. lnl986,Ball,wbo
was viCe president of AMAX,
which owns the mine, terminated
the company's pension plan. Tbe
benefits due to the workers were
converted Into annuities that
would pay the miners a guaran·
teed pension.
What the miners lost was any
chance to win cost-of-living
raises tor pensioners. Tbose
raises would have come from
so-called "excess pension funds "
- profits from Investments
made OVfr the year~ by the
pension fund. AMAX kept those
profits and reaped millions. The
workers got annuities that pay a
fixed sum, no matter what

~nsion

KiMPeR a~D
Ger-lTLeR? YDtJ c.att'T
GeT THe~ F'Rot-f HeRe·

too

Browns defeat Bears 27-7

raga-2-lbe Daily Sa 11iuel
Pomel01t Mldd'aport. Ohio
Tu11day, Octobll 24, 1989

SOUTHGLENN, Colo. (NEA)
That' s noteworthy because it
In densely populated cities and
- Only a decade ago, this Denver confllctswlththepopularperceptheir suburbs. A surprising 83.9
suburb's name was nowhere to tlon of the West as the most
percent of all Westerners live in
be found on many maps of the wide-open and sparsely settled of urban areas, rompared with 88.0
region. That's because it was a all the nation's regions.
of all Northeasterners.
thinly Inhabited community
Indeed, Westrends, the reTbe Westrends report points
who&amp;e few residents lived on the ilonal affiliate of the Council of out that In five Western states,
open range.
State Governments, earlier this more than half of the total
Today, Southglenn Is one of the year published a report on "A papulation lives In a single
dozens of booming suburbs that Dynamic West: A Region in sprawling metropolitan area or
ring Denver. Real estate devel- Transition" that cites this popu- . urban corridor.
opers built thousands of homes lation paradox:
In that category are Phoenix·
during the 1980s. Shopping cen·
- With . 65 percent of the Scottsdale-Mesa-Tempe in Arizters are springing up at major nation's land area but only 21 ona , Fort Collins -Greeleyintersections to serve thOse who percent of its population, the Boulder-Denver-Colorado
don't want to travel 15 miles or West remains the country's least Springs-Pueblo in Colorado, Homore to shop In downtown densely populated region.
nolulu and its suburbs in Hawall,
Denver.
'
Two of the three states with the Logan-Ogden-Salt Lake City·
,That pattern Is duplicated highest proportion of people Provo In Utah and Bellinghamelsewhere In the Denver area living outside metropolitan areas Ever e t I · Seat tIe · Tacoma·
in Lakewood and Littleton, in are in the West. Idaho Is llrstwlth Bremerton in Washington.
Arvada and . Aurora - as an 80.4 percent and Montana is third
Throughout the early and mid·
Increasing proportion of Colora- with 75.8 percent, tVermont Is 1980s, the West had the highest
do's population becomes concen- second with 76.9 percent.)
birthandln-migratlonratesolall
trated along the Front.Range of
- But the West ranks second regions. As a result , Its 15.1
the Rocky Mountains. Moreover, among all the nation's regions, percent growth rate between1980
the same trend Is apparent behind only the Northeast, In the and ' 1987 was the highest In the
throughout the West.
proportion of its residents living country (substantially above the

Robert Walters
11.3 percent recorded in the
second-place South) and more
than twice the nationwide rate of
7.4 percent.
'
Moreover, the Census Bureau
projects that the West's total
population wlll Increase during
the1990sbyanotherl8percenta rate almost double the predieted nation11l average during
the next decade.
Accelerated population growth
invariably produces substantial
eronomtcbenetlts-butlheyare
always offset by the need to
provide housing, transportation,
educational, medical and other
facllltles and services to new
residents.
Some time In the next century,
the Front Range urban corridor
could stretch more than :;50 miles
- from Cheyenne, Wyo., to
Albuquerque, N.M. That's an
event to be awaited with both
high expectation and considera·
ble trepidation.

'

BREAKS UP PASS- Browns defensive back
Frank Minnifield (11) breaks up a paAS Intended
lor Cbica1o wtderecelver Dennis McKinnon In the
fourtb quarter of Monday. nl1ht'a game In

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(

business pages under the head·
ing "Growth.'' But the economic
impact of freedom cannot be
understated.
We . are probably In for a
turbulent but potent freedom
boom that can make the recent
markets look tame.
Freedom yields democratic
capitalism and a market econ-

omy. A market eronomy yields
wealth. Tllese days, wealth
spreadseverywhere; that'swhat
"Interdependence" and "globall·
zatlon" mean. We will share In
the freedom dividend.
So, lfyoucan, lfyoll'recareful,
buy. It's the beginning, not the
end.

'

a.,.. Z1

Pllldlx M. Atlulll II

.......·.aa•

Dn.er 14, Selltlle II (OT)
Cl...-eiiM t"', ·O.Ic:ap 1

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Ml•euu at NV

u..-.ter

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I. ,._lw Dul• (ft) ('Jot) .............. 1JI I
1. Mltrnl (I) C~l) ........................ 1"/t t
I. 011. . . . (I) C1-l) ..................... 111 S
4. N....... tt) (1-ll .... :.............. 111 4
S. Ala...._ IHI .......................... 114 II

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Klrbys Kar Kar~

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111a1t- Ullda Adlllnlton 1~3:
Von&amp; JaniOa 1111-m; carol Hlllll• 163:

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Avei-McC~l......-r; DebbttBiyant
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157
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407'._pblle .,.nbt 118-f38: Pat

To..-111--

Frank·

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NATIONAL lOCK£\' LEAGUE
Mo-~'a&amp;.llla

NV Banjirrs $, V .-oo•wr J

Moatnal S. Harlord 1
New .ler_, 5, 'loroate .f
W.-hlnpon3, Cal~J (del
1\le!MI~Q'•

Orunes

Edmo•on at NV l•.... erA. l:SI p.m.
Si. Lo•.a Phlladtelplia. 1: np.m .
Ollcap a1 Detroit, "1:35 p.m.
WetiiHd•'• Gama
F..dmoiiiO..I NY Bulft'• alP&amp;

Tero•o at ntW. .. Il. ni&amp;M
W•lll•ate•atWialllpti·•IPil
Bllffale II. MlalrH&amp;a, Dllht
Calp.ry Ill Lo• All ..... nllfll
Mond111 Sport• Tru•dkl•

Bueboll

Mil.... •• - Bel•ued dalpated
hiUer·llral h~~~~emaa .loer Mi!Jf!r 10 hee• lip wllll Tal)'e ef .l.... me Central

"'-·

Tor'llllle- NamedGalenCI~ plthl•l

eoath, n-pl.klq AI WI..,.,, wM wu

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n•lelf!Na - 1M .-d c:eater •• rt

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NRL- S.llf'"Mied New York II landers
left wlftl R.., WoOII for lellriiii'AM u

rn• of Od. 17 ...ada ~-t:r.

At . . . . . - 81ped ............. ,.
lldert • a rHII-te• e.IIIIRd; Ntll
forwanl ~~• Olbone •• Peoria of

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Klrbys Kar Kare

Goldlll Gtrll
J.P. Tru&lt;tdllt

car

Mllland Group

Oct. 14 - Oaki&amp;Dd I. !f .. Frudllce I
Od. IS - Oaklaa.l, S.a Frudece I
Oct . II .... N• pme -.:~ted.
Od.. 17 - Game ,...,. •• dw to
e.-UIIq•kt.
Ott . n-at 811111 Fraadllco, II: SS p.m.
Oct. Ill - at San rrue....-; 8: SS p.m.
x.Ol't. tt- a&amp;SuFrudace,II:U p.m.
Oct. II - No sam• telledlded.
Jil.(}d, II - at OakiM., A: II p.m.
li -Nov . l - IU. Oaklaa•. 8: SS p.m.

Toom-llap

Interior • Exterior Co. . ~) ,
Geor1aAu\oSale ._ ,..,~ -•'"
Pt. Pleulnt Hardware
-.
La Moree Beauty Sllop
•·
Netw..-k VIdeo •
FOlly Lad!•
Edl EII!CII'OIIICO

1M:

plo_,IPfl

World!t'rB
S.. Fru~ n. Oaki&amp;Ad
Bnt of S.wea
~oat....:. ••• ... az.t)

Local bowling

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1\MMrp. •I ~~tum - II mlllkln Ellr•

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1n11 fl~.
14 lor teee ... .w.), ... lut weell'•

"Look! It's our little neighbor from the South
here to haunt you. "

Chlcap at Del roll, 1: Sl p.m.

hl~lleMOII8c:hedule

u.au II
NY 01 ...• a. 8• Dlep IS
s.. ,..,..~ "· NN Ell II... n

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L•4f Fair

I!'Amoltlon at NY ll)rulders. 7: 3~ p.m.
St.IAu• at Pblllt.llftplll-. 1:31 p.m.

Ml ............... 1
a ...... n, PMIIIINrtllt

At..... M Nn

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Tom Colllu

Ml..t11. Gret11._., •

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NEW YOIUl( liP I) -TIMUDIIedPI'ftl•
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ctlltp ................... l'ftle. . . ..

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W•lllaat••JI,T.mr:..,."'

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WerlllSerktJ

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UPI ratin@s

Berry's Worl~

.....• • • • Sport• cal ad....

flrlrt C.p

p.,n. '

also investing here because the
market will grow by 20
million people In the 1990s while
their domestic markets will
be, buy.
mostly remain stagnant or
As this column Is closed on shrink.
Buy because the Idea that
Monday morning, Oct. 16, the
last we know about the stock America won't be able to com·
market Is that it plummeted 190 pete due to our dumb kids Is also
a crock. The best universities In
points on Friday.
Buy. Why? For some small the world are In America.
Buy because the Idea that
reason. '
we're
mortgaging the future of
Buy because the market shaour
children
Is also malarkey.
keout wlll make It more dltflcult
The
health
research, roads,
to do leveraged buyouts, which
and ·medical
airports,
education
will add some rationality to stock
care
bought
by
the
government
prices, which will reduce market
will
accrue
to
the
benefit
of our
volatility In the long term, which
kids
even
If
those
goods
and
Is probably good for stock prices.
Buy because while everyone serviCes are bought on credit.
has been snickering about "ac- Anyway, the standard of living
counting triCks,'' the deficit has keeps going up, and by any
gone down from 6 percent of the standard of human prosperity,
GNP In 1985to3percent today. lt thOse kids will likely be rtch.
Buy. Why? Because of a very
Is still shrinking. It Is a manageabig
reason.
ble, If. unfortunate, situation.
Money
managers too often talk
Apparently, when no one was
about
the
stock Dl,Brket in terms
looking, the dumped-upon
of
Interest
rates,. dividends and
Gramm-Rudman-Hollings legisbuyouts.
lation put a sloppy brake on big
By such criteria, the world Is
deficits.
Buy because the GRH budget only at the begtnnlng of a great
"sequestration,'' which has just boom.
That boom, In this halfgone Into effect, wlll probably
century,
hal been taeled by
further cut federal spendlna.
sUJ'IIne
technology.
That surge
Talk about sloppy. But It can do
cont~.
,
with a cleaver what ought to have
The boom hal been led by
been done with a scalpel.
cai)IWIIm.
wbk:h hu eltJIIIIIded
Buy. Why? For some bigger
enonnoualy,
8lld 11 now spreadreuou.
Ina
tartber
at
the apeed of a sell
Buy because the Idea that It Is
order
on
a
Friday
afternoon.
bad news that ''foreigners are
That
boom
may
now reach
buying up America" Is a crock.
Forelpen are Investing In critiCal mau because of a new
AmeriCa because tbe economy factor! viCtory. The non-tree,
and the nation Is very healthy. non· technological and nonTbls Is the only large, stable, capitalist nations of the world
democratic, growing, capitalist have probably been vanquished.
market In the world. There are That tends lo be reported on the
profits to be made' here. West news pages under lbe beatlllll'
Europeans and Japanese are "Gorbachev" Instead of on the

Calendar

Pftll.-.n. West GermPy -

st, NY .let•

Bet,.. w. Greft 11Q' .a MIIW.kee, I

u.s.

l.oa Sla&amp;r.

.11t Ul liS
.111

.....

Share the freedom dividend__B_e_n_wa_ue_n_be_rg
Buy.

Otllrra recelria.. "otea: i\lr Fore~.
Fra• State, So..at Carolln&amp;, Syra..-.111!,
Texu. Te:u• UM, Vlrpa .. , W•hllll·

.nt ttt n1

• • .. . 11"1 ••
• I ... IJI lfll •
I I, .lit Ill Ul

Nal ..-.1

1.

.IU 121 Ill

C.Oioal

New Orlt•• tl, lA

It you can, If you're cautious
about It, buy. Because the stock
market Is more than It seems to

Spartans must
win next five
for bowl bid

Scoreboard ...
Nn. results

lnlerlor ' Exterior Co.
Georges AuloSalet
W&lt;twor1c VIdeo
Pt. Pleuant Hardware
. EdJ Electronl&lt;1
La Moree Beauty Shop
GoldeoGirll
Foxy Ladl.,.
J.P. Tru&lt;klnt

IBn

looi'IH: Prlldlla McBride 190680&lt; 'Voada Jordal&gt; 191~ SblrloY HaU
1auo8; Boanle FuDor 1IU56o Gerotdllle
Hunt W·tl6; COral iledYnoldl 1'10-6;
Ltlllon Nibert 1IH63; Brolldl Weavor
~ID:

Cooper says receivers must block

Cleveland. The Browns won 27-7 to tie the Ben gals
and the Oilers for first place In the AFC Central
Division. (UPI)

Debbt~ Dobbins - ; Dtxle

Mlrtla 202-477; Pat 'll:&gt;rshee 151·397.
lpllla: Unda Adllftlton 7-~.

(i

EAST LANSING, Mich. (UP!)
- Michigan State coach George
Perles said Monday the Spartans
can salvage their season by
winning their last five games and
going to a bowl game.
"We've used up our mistakes,"
Perles said at his weekly press
conference. "We've got five
games left. We've got to play
them one at a tbnt&gt;and we've got
to win them all."
If they can acrompllsh that,
the Spartans will finish with a 7·4
record - · good enough to g~t
them a bowl bid. Michigan State
has lost its last two games,
including Saturday 's contest 1410 to No. 9 Illinois.
"Our destination might not be
what we wanted at thestartofthe
season, but we can still go
someplace nice," Peries said.
"Hey, 'all the watches are the
same. All the chicken wings are
the same. We'll gc where we can
go and hope we can get a niCe
tan."
The road to whatever bowl bid
Michigan State might land starts
Saturday ,a t Purdue. While the
Boilermakers aren't a highly
ranked team like most of the
Spartans' recent . opponents,
MSU Is taking them seriously.
"It doesn't matter who we
play:: . said· MSU linebacker
Percy Snow, wl)o registered. 23
tackles against the Illinl. "It
could be the .No. 1 team or the
worst team In the nation. We
prepare like we prepare for any
other team.
"We can't go out there and take
Purdue lightly, . like we did
against Rutgers (a 17-14 upset
loss) last year. We have to give
100 percent because · they are .
capable of upsetting us."
Snow, whose family was in a
minor car accident on the way to
see him play against Illinois but
was uninjured, said the Spartans' comeback last season when the team won their last six
games and snagged a Gator Bowl
lnv)tation - makes It easier to
come back again this year.
"It feels basically the same
after four tough losses," Snow
said. "I think It makes It easier.
We've done it once, we ean do· It
again. Coming Into the season,
we really didn't expect this, but
hopefully against . Purdue we'll
get It going.
"I'd love to go home for
Christmas, don't get me wrong.
But hopefully I'll be ott getting
ready to play football over
Christmas."
Purdue represents· the next
opportunity for Snow to show off
his talent once again. Snow Is the
leading candidate for the Butkus
Award which honors the nation's
top linebacker. He's aware oft he
award and wants it badly.
"I think about It, but the past
few weeks I've had other things
on my mind (winning games),"
Snow said. "But I know wl)en I'm
out there I'm not just playing
against an opponent. I'm also
playing against the Other linebackers around the country."

By GENE CADDES
UPJ Sporll Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
With Ohio State's new emphasis
on the running game, It's going to
be block or sit tor Buckeye wide
receivers.
Bobby OUve and Bernard Ed·
wards shared the starting
flanker posltlon the· first five
games, but neither played In
Saturday's 21-3 win over Purdue.
Instead, head roach John Coowr
switched former split enp Jeff
Graham to flanker and played
Greg Beatty and. Brian Stableln
at split end.
"I think our wide receivers
realize they're going to have to
block and do things the way
(assistant) eoach (Gene) Huey
want&amp; them clo1111 or they're DOt
going to play," Cooper told his
. week press luncheon Monday.
Cooper said Jeff Graham was
selected the offensive player of
the game against Purdue, •
strictly because of his blocking.
He caught only two passes for 37
yards.
Cooper said the switch of
Graham to flanker was made In
an effort to get the ball to the 6-2,
195-pound junior .
"It's a lot easier, in our
opinion, to get the football to a
flanker than It Is to a split end,
simply because of the nature of
most defenses," said Cooper.
"Most people are going to play
a hard corner on thesplltendslde
and double cover · the wide
receiver, " said Cooper. "We feel
like he's the best receiver we've
got and we've got to make the

Sports briefs
Golf
President Bush new to An·
drews Air Force Base to play golf
with Lee Trevino and Doug
Sanders and a group of rongressmen. Asked how the president
could justify taking time oft to
play golf, White House press
secretary Marlin Fitzwater said:
"Because he Is president of the
United States.''

't •

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 1411-. .)
. A Dlvldoa ef Mllhbnedla, be.
Published every afternoon., Monday
thrqh Friday, 111 COurt St., Po-

effort to get him the ball more. ••
Cooper said the demotion of
Olive and Edwards, who also
served as the play messengers,
had been building.
"To be honest with you, we'
weren't getting out of those guys
what we wanted," said Cooper.
"You can keep talking to them
and talking to them, but It they
don't have anybody else challenging them for playing time at
the position... Tbey just weren't
getting it done.
''Tbe main reason we made the
move," added Cooper, nwas
because of blocking, because of
effort. Obviously, both of those
guys want to play . If they're
competitors, they'll bounce back
In practice this week. Hopefully
we

aot tbelr at•III&gt;L''

Cooper c ailed the win over
Purdue "our best overall game
so far this year. We were happy
to move the ball on the ground
again like we did (371 yards),
pretty much rontrolling the line
of scr lmmage throughout the
game.''

Tbe Buckeye coach, however,
was not pleased with the passing
of quarterback Greg Frey, who
completed · only three of nine
passes for 47 yards.
"We're going to have to lm·
prove in that area," he said.
"We're going to have to throw
more passes on down the road
ihaJI we did In that game and
certainly we're going to have to
be more effective throwing the
football than we were against
Purdue.
"We'd like togooutandconlrol
the line of scrimmage and
rontinue running the football, •·•
Cooper added, "knowing full well
we're going to play some teams
we won't be able to do that
against."
Cooper praised the play of his
offensive line, singling out tackles Joe Staysnlak and Tim
Moxley for their work against the
BoUermakers. Tbey share the
offensive lineman of the game
honor .
"I think Staysnlak had his best
ball game since I've been coach·
tng here," he said. "He really
hustled. The last two or three ball
games, ~e·s really played g"'l'i
football for ·us."
The defensive player of the

game honor also was split
between safety Jim Peel and
freshman outside linebacker
Alonzo Spellman, fast becoming
an Ohio Stadium favorite with his
intense play.
•"Alonzo rontinues to get better
every day," Cooper said of the
6-6, 260-pound Spellman. "He has
great work ethics. Alonzo really
has a bright future ahead of him
If he continues to have the
attitude and work ethiCs he has
and continues to get better."
Ohio State, now 4·2 overall and
2·1 In the Big Ten, plays its next
two games on· the road, with a
nationally-televised game Saturday (3: 30 p.m. EDT) at Minnesota, also 4-2 and 2-1. The
Buckeyes are winless In two
previoull roa4~ UU. sea&amp;QL

..

,,.,.,,.
,.•.,.
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There thould be •pecill c=- inaurance for .,-.ore m~~ture. ufer driv ...
era.

Now there is.
It' • SUite Auto ComplniM" Med.. ill Auto policy .
The rat• are lower. The coveqg•
are broader.
H you ~:teva had no violl'liont or atfauh accidents for three yaara and

-.t

are at
26 yeart old. you could
be qualified to become a Med•ist
policy holder, enjoying tpecl•. reduced rates.
And if you are middl•eged (45~
641. you'U get the bitkloat · brNk of all.

Wollt'a mare.

01

a Madllilt

pot;.

cyhotdor you • • not ctwgod lor year

- . . , - . lhal'saflec:twtlrnmDdillletf. too. Th•e'snothrea.,..-waiting period to ..,.tify, anco you own a

- - potilli'-

Call us 1bout thit car iMUrance

breakthrough for uta drivers.

~~~~~
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
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'

•

�·,

I,

Tuudey, October 24. 1989

Canadiens
post
3•2
triutnph
.
.over Whalers; Rangers win

,,

· Modell ,ays
owners must
heal split

period. Lemieux broke In alone
from the blue line after taking a
pass from Mike Keane · and
one-handed a dr ive through the
pads of Llut.
Stephane Richer had tied the
score 1·1 with his fourth goal at
12: 44. Richer tapped In a. shot
after he took a pass from Shayne
Corson.
Scott Young gave the Wh,lers
a 1·0 lead just after a faceoff at
13: 00 of the opening period.
Young' s slap shot from the edge
of the circle went Into the far
corner of the Montreal net to the
right of Roy.
Ferraro won the faceoff from
Stephan Lebeau and passed the
puck to Pat Verbeek who In turn
·gave the puck to Young.
.Liut, who entered the game
with the best goals-against aver·
age In the league, only had four
stops In the first period. Montreal
had just one.shot at the midway
point .
.
Elsewhere In the NHL, New
York Jl,angers topped Vancouver
5-3; New Jersey nipped Toronto
5-4; and Washington and Calgary
skated to a 3-3 tie.
Ran,ers S, Canueks S ·
At New York, JohnOgrodnlck,
Darren Turcotte and Brian
Leetch scored a goal and an
assist each and John Vanbles·
brouck stopped 31 shots to lift the
Rangers,7-1-1, to their best start
since a 9-1 mark In 1983·84 . Igor
Larlonov recorded a goal and an

Bedding Needs ...
See A Perfect
Sleeper

.;CLEVELAND .(UPII -Before
NFL owners can think about
electiQg a new comm Iss loner'
Cleveland Browns owner Art
Modeil said the league must first
heal a spilt that has made
agreeing on a· successor to Pete
Rozelle Impossible In three ptev!ous meetings.
-The. league's owners will meet
IR Clev'eland Tuesday, Wednes·
The Suns led 53-40 at halftime
day and possibly Thursday, and
and Increased their lead 'by 21
for thl' fourth time their goal will points In thfSecOnd half. The
be to elect Rozelle's successor.
Wolves were able to cut the lead
Two weeks ago; the owners left · to 11 points with six minutes to
DaiJ,as deadlocked at 13 votes for . play, but Phoenix pulled away
Ne~ Orleans Saints president
·
again.
F1sW. U wtes 1M NFL
Tile
Wo-.
wllo 110t
I~ 'Paul Tagfta~. a!ld two
abstentions. A candidate needs
19 votes to be elected.
The· develand meeting orlgl·
REDWOOD CITY, Calif.
nally was scheduled to finalize
(UP!)
- Cornerback Tim
next year 's exhibition schedule
McKyer,
suspended for "Insuand to resolve other league
bordination"
three weeks ago,
niatters, butnowtheorilyltem up
was
reinstated
Monday by coach
!Qr discussion wtll be .the com·
George
Seifert
of the San ·FranmIss loner search.
cisco
49ers.
"I don't think It's helping us,"
"He and coach Seifert met,
Modell said of the deadlocked
hashed
out whatever needed to
vote. "What I'm 'hopeful for Is
be
hashed
out, and he'll be back
t~at whatever happens here In
In
Practice
on Wednesday," team
Cieveland ... ends uJ)'In' a healing
sjioke!;man Dave Rahn said.
process. I've never seen such a
McKyer, who l)eld out for a
split In the 29 years I've been In
better
contract last season and
the teague and we've got to heal
tlrtl;
season before joining
again
that ·breach and go on to bigger
the
team
late
and then suffering
and better thi!IKS."
Injuries
that
llmlled
his playing
-Finks Is the chosen candidate
time,
was
suspended
for
remarks
of the so-called "old guard"
he
made
on
the
team
plane
flying
owners, while Tagllabue Is Ia·
to
New
Orleans
three
weeks
ago.
vered bs-" owners who are newer
Seifert
said
he
considered
the
to the NF!-. But after watching
remarks
by
the
vociferous
his counterparts struggle to
McKyer as "Insubordination."
break the · deadlock, Modell beSeifert tried to trade him but
lieves there Is more at work here
failed to do so.
.
than the qualities of either
McKyer had been nursing a leg
leading candidate.
~ ·I don't !~Ink It's a problem of
whether Tag or Finks get It,"
Modell ~ald. "It's beyond person·
allty. I would have to, think
By LISA HARRIS
there' s a power struggle going
UPISporta Writer
on, and I can't single out any
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ala·
faction or per~on except this
barna, having won Its Southeast·
thing going on for months now
ern Conference showdown with
has led to a voting block which Is
Tennessee, Monday climbed
very Injurious to the league."
three places Into the No. 5 spot
Hall of Fame defensive end
pre'\llously held by the VolunWillie Davis also has been
teers In United Press Internalniervlewed for the ·job, but he
has yet to receive serious tional's college football ratings.
The Crimson Tide Saturday
sl!pport.
·"To me It's mo.re Important to defeated the Volunteers 47-30 to
reunify the ownership than to crack the top five, the only teams
pick Joe, Bill, ' Sam or Tom, "
In Division 1-A with perfect
Modell said. "That to me Is the records.
Notre Dame, 7-0andwlnnersof
essence of what has to be done,
19 straight games, retained the ·
hopef\llly In Cleveland."
Modell said he would try to No. 1 spot It has held since last
meet with some members of the Oct. 31 with a 28-24 triumph over
Southern Cal. The Trojans re"~ew guard," probably San
FranciBcO owner Edward DeBar· mained at No. 10.
tolo Jr. ,, before the start of the
The Fighting Irish received 40
meetings. There Is a possibility of 45 first-place votes and 7.11 of
of a compromise candidate, but 750 possl ble points to lead Miami
by 58. The Idle Hurricanes
while Modell is willing to listen,
he said he will not support any captured 672 points, 21 more than
candidate from outside the NFL. ' No._a Colorado, which extended
Its lead over No.4 Nebraska from
JUiu!d If the owners were
embarrassed at their Inability to eight points to 20.
Miami Ia 6-0 and Colorado and
elect a commiS.sloner, Modell
said: "I don't know If some Nebraska are 7-0·after lopsided
owners in this teague are capable conference victories.
"We don't belong up there with
of e~11111ent. "
them,"
Alabama coach Bill
Meuwblle, Rozelle, who had
Curry
said.
"We have may have
hoped to retire by September,
the
capacity
to be very lllghly
may have to preside over the
league for the rest of the season. ranked on our squad but we
'1 told (Rozelle) , 'Look, give It haven't performed up to that
another five years. You're just a level In my opinion. I'm thrilled
the men who vote on UPI are
kid ,"' Modell said.
u tbe-•can' t break their lmprealed but I havea't been
deadlock, Ro21elle may have no lmpreaaed.
''We haven't put 80 minutes
other choiCe.

.n.n

assist for the Canucks, who
already had beaten New Jersey
and the New York Islanders In
their trip through the New York
area. The Canucks played the
game withoutlen wing Vladimir
Krutov, who returned to the
Soviet Union to help his family
prepare for a move to North
America.
pevils S, Maple Leafs 4
At Toronto, John MacLean had
a hand In all the New Jersey
scoring, collecting two goals and
three assists to lead the Devils.
The second period was called ·at
· 17: 14.with New Jersey leading 5-2
when a fight Interrupted play and
refereeTerryGregsondecldedto
tack on the remaining 2: 46 to the
start of the t!tlrd. Gregson
assessed four game mlsconducts. included both goaltenders,
Toronto's Mark Laforest and
New Jersey's Sean Burke.
Capitals s; Flames 3
At Calgary, Alberta, Theoren
Fleury scored a power-play goal
at 7: 14 of the third period to lift
the Flames to a 3-3 tie with the
Capitals. Fleury's third goal of
the season came when he drilled
a slap shot past Washington
goaltender Don Beaupre from
the top of the faceoff circle. The
goal came with two Capitals In
· the penalty box. Both clubs had
excellent scoring chances In the
final minutes of regulation but
both Beaupre and Calgary goal·
tender Rick Wamsley came up
with big saves.

Suns cop exhibition
win over Timberwolves
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (UP!) The Phoenix Suns outplayed the
Minnesota VIkings Monday
night, winning 108-91, In an
· exhibition game at the Sioux
Falls Arena.
With the win Phoenix moved to
a 2·3 record In the exhibition
season, while the Wolves
dropped to 0-4.

closer than 12-8 early In the first
quarter, mlssedalotofrebounds
on the offensive boards In the
first half.
Forward Tom Chambers and
guard Kevin Johnson Jed the
Suns, with 22 points apiece.
Forward Tim Perry had 13
points.
The Wolves were led by guard
Tony Campbell and forward
Scott Roth, who had 17 apiece.
Adrian Branch had 16, Doug
West 12 and Donald Royal 10
points.
··
Some 7,618 fans showed up to
watch the first professional bas·
.ketball game In Sioux Falls since
1~.

I

Cometback McKyer is reinstated

a

Injury and
hlp Injury and
'reportedly was unhappy about a
lack.of playing time.
The suspension was without
pay but no otl)er financial penal·
ties were Involved, the spokes·
man said.
It has been estimated that
McKyer, a star defender on last
year's Superbowl team, lost
about $90,000 In pay during the
suspension.
The team also announced that
Jeff Fuller was placed on Injured
reserve due to his neck Injuries
suffered In Sunday's game with
New England, and that fullback
Harry Sydney also was placed on
theIR with a broken left forearm
that will keep him out for the
season.
Linebacker Jim Fahrnhorst
suffered a possible broken foot In
the game but tests were still
being conducted, the spokesman
said.

ANDERSON'S .. -- -

I

together. In any game. We' ve had
some great Victories without
great performances. We'lll!eed
to address with the players,
particularly a team that has not
been ranked this high In a while,
that this has happened and look
at It for what It really Is - u·~ a
process. We're only between
Nebraska and Michigan In one
place. We .haven't played Nebraska Michigan or Nebraska,
we don't know how we would
stack up with thempn the field."
Alabama finished five points
ahead of No. 6 Michigan, 5-1 and
Improving one place with a
Victory over Iowa. Pittsburgh,
5-0-1, rose two spots despite not
playing, as Arkansas and Tennessee fell from the undefeated
ranks and the Top 10.
No. 8. Florida State, 5-2 with a
.22-14 victory over previously
11th-ranked Auburn, jumped five
places and No. 9 nttnot.s rose six
with a 14-10 triumph over lrardluck Michigan State. The No. 10

P-roy, Ohio

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HAND-TO-BAND COMBAT- Moalreal's Tom
Chol'llke (rJsht) grapples with Harlfoi'd's Adam

Rain threatens World Series
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Heavy rain forced cancellation of
World Series practice Monday,
and the prospect of more storms
jeopardizes Game 3 at Candlestick Park.
The Wo.rld Series , already put
off one week by the devastating
earthquake to the Bay Area. may
face another delay as a result of
the band of winter storm fronts
and unsettled weather extending
lntD the Gulf of Alaska.
If and when the World Series
between the San Francisco
Giants and Oakland Athletics
resumes, It will mark the longest
break between games since the
championship began In 1903.
"Although you can' t general·
lze, the delays will have a
significant effect on a number of
players," said Dr. Bruce Ogilvie,
one of the pioneers In the field of
sports psychology. ·'In terms of
human behavior, one can expect
a decline In the emotional lnvol·
vement needed to excel !n
championship situation over
time. How can there not be a
flattening effect?" ·
By Monday; players on both.
teams had gone through their
ritualistic emotional buildups for
games at least twice, only to have
·the contests rescheduled.
"Most ~thletes can't just keep
getting · ready for a game and
theJI turn It oil and then on
again," said Dr. Jerry May, head
of the U.S. OlympiC Committee's
Sports Psychology Department.
"It gets harder to focus."
The delay can also make
athletes overly analytical.
"One of the dangers with any
kind of delay Is It makes some
athletes ·think too much about
what they are doing," May said.
' 'They lose some of their lnstinctiveness. They let self-doubt
creep • ln . . You can also
over prepare."
Fortunately, May says, base·
ball players are U$ed to delays
because of ralnouts.
"They've been though delays
before, " he said. "Granted they
usually are not this long, but they
are delays nevertheless."
Other factors also come Into
play .
''These players have multiple
factors entering Into their
minds," Ol!gvle said. ·'They
have been a part of the Bay Area
and this tragedy that has occurred. Some have been scared.

a

BAUM
·LUMBER

We all have been. Some have had that's ever played," he said.
their lives away from the field
"Who's ever had to go through
disrupted.
this? Do you know how tough It Is
"Right now. for some of these to practice?"
players, baseball is no longer the
Ogilvie said because of the
most significant thing In their catastrophiC circumstances surlives. It certainly may become rounding the break, the managonce again the most Important er's role assumes greater ·
thing, m aybe by spring training. lm portance.
·
Right now, though, they 've seen .. "I think the skippers are facing
their own mortality."
a real challenge," he said. ' 'They
Athletics Manager Tony La are going to have to motivate
Rossa, whose club leads the their teams by really emphasizWorld Series 2·0, Is well aware of Ing the positives. They are going
the turmoU.
.
to have lo say, 'Go out and play
"I think the club that wins It your best because it. will help
may have a claim on being more people recover from the quake. '"
deserVIng than any other club

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The contut II open to anyone except employ- of The Daily Sentinel and their immadlete
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ALL ENTRANTS MUST USE THE ENTRY BLANK BELOW.
Games for this week will be fOund In the advertiaamanta on thla pega. Ult the nama of the
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No. 16 Arizona. 5·2, edged
Trojans fell to 5-2 with the Joss to
Washington State, which fell
Notre Dame.
Arkansas plunged five spots to . !rom the ratings along with Air
No. 11 after losing to Texas, Its Force. No. 17 North Carolina
first loss In six ganies. Tennes· State lost to Clemson and fell five
see, 5-1. fell seven places to No. places with Its first Joss In seven
12, followed by No. 13 Penn State, games. Clemson, 6-2, rejoins the
Idle at 5-1 last week and rising ratings at No. 19.
three. No.14 West VIrginia, 5-H,
No. 18 Brigham Young, 6-1,
jumped four places with Its 69-3 Improved two spots and SEC
rout of Cincinnati. No. 15 AUburn, runner-up Florida, 6-1, joins the
4-2, dropped four spots.
ratings at No. 20.

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--+--·w_._~_••.•.".'·.R.••.•••.I•.c••••.••.'_...,_.
___,_,.,_,._._s_••.••.".'·.•-1•..•..•_...._,,___c_._l•':r•~·~---•.·o-•~•·-~'!"··-·~~-1
1989

fr

Paul Tagllabue, one of four
candidates submitted to the
ownership at a meeting In Dallas
two weeks ago, Is the new
favorite.
Nordlques center Peter
Stastny, who scored had goals
and 10 points In three games last
week, Is the NHL's Dodge Per·
former of the Week .... IIUnols
quarterback Jeff George and
Michigan free safety Vada Murray are UPI's Big Ten Players of
the Week.... Quarterback Danny
Clark and linebacker Brad Sid·
well, both of Brown, are Ivy
League Offensive and Defensive
Players of the Week. Brown
broke a 15-game winless streak
by beating Cornell 28-7. . ..
Linebacker Shelton Thompson,
who helped preserve Florida
State' s 22-14 Victory over Au·
burn, Is UPI'sSoutheast Defense
Player of the Week. ... Pitt, Penn
State and West VIrginia retained
the top three places In the
Lambert Meadowlands Trophy
poD for the top college football
team In the East: ... Bill Rodgers,
four-time whiner of the New
York and Boston Marathons, will
be presented with the 1989 Abebe
Blklla Award In New York Nov.4
for his contributions to rimnlng.
.. . 49ers quarterback Joe Montana won the Septell)ber race lor
the first Potamkln Professional
Athlete of the Year Award.
Soccer
Baltimore and San Diego,
which played for ihe 1989 MISL
championship, were the top
selections of the eight league
coaches In a preseason poll.

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----Sports briefs----Baseball
Designated hitter-first base-'
man Joey Meyer has been
released by the Milwaukee Brewers and Is expected to sign with
the Talyo Whales ot the Japanese
Central League. Meyer. who .251
In two big league seasons, will
join former Brewer teammate
Jim Paclorek on the Whales . ...
Blue Jays pitcher Jimmy Key
will undergo diagnostic surgery
on his left shoulder Tuesday.
Toronto also said Galen Cisco has
been named pitching coach,
replacing AI Widmar.
Basketball
The Philadelphia 76ers signed
center Kurt Nlmphlus to a
one-year contract. Nlmphlus
played In the Canary Islands last
year.
Bobsled
Swiss shot putter Werner
Guenthoer, the world champion
and Olympic bronze medalist,
will join Olympic bobsled cham·
pion Ekkehard Fasser's crew as
a brakeman this winter.
Drugs
The U.S. Olympic Committee's
new drug-testing policy, which
allows three ramdom tests a year
In addition to whatever tests take
place at competitions, probably
won't go Into effect untu next
spring. The plan, approved by
the USOC execu tlve board In
Denver Sunday, still must be
signed by each of the 41 national
governing bodies tor Individual
sports.
Football
NFL owners meet again In
Cl~veland'Tuesday In an attempt
to choose a successor to Commissioner Pete Rozelle. Attorney

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HOME Pll. 949-271 0

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Alabama replaces Tennessee as No. 5 team .

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.

By dOHN SWENSON
UPI Sports Wrller
With the score tted ~nd just
seconds lett on the clock Monday
. night Ryan Walter and Petr
Svoboda .devised a.. pJIIn. An
Instant ·later the Canild lens won
• !he game.
·. " Justbe!ore that lastfaceoffln
'their·wne Petr said to me, 'Ryan
you get the draw and, I'll score',"
said , Walter, who scored the
winning goal with 21 seconds
remaining tolltt theCanadlens to
a 3·2 victory over the Hartford
Whalers.
.. "I went to ·the net," Walter
continued. " ! kitow that Mike
l:.lut hates being bothered by
someonl! In front of the net. Petr
t\)Ok that shot and It went right on
my stick."
Walter was standlng~n front of
the Hartford net when he dl·
t ected a blue line drive from
Svoboda through the legs of
Whalers goalie Llut.
" It was one of those plays,"
said Svoboda, " where you just
close your eyes and then shoot."
Ray Ferraro banged In his own
rebOund at 2: 30 of the third
period to knot the score at 2-2.
Ferraro grabbed a rebound off
the back boards, took a shot.
grabbed his own rebound of! the
pad of Montreal goalie Patrick
Roy and then put a shot through
Roy 's legs . ·
Jocelyn Lemieux made the
count 2·1 at 16:31 of the second

Ohio

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Children earning more, saving more: srudy
COLLEGE STATION, Texas
(UPI) - ChWrea are maklq
more molle)' these days and,
bucklni a trelld. also are saving
most of lt.
Dr. Jamea McNeal, professor
of marketing at Texas AltM
University and a researcher of
chlklren's consumer behavior,
said their lncreued rate of
saving Is . ~~~Cent or the
pre-World War II en when
children were taught to be savers
rather than spenders.
''1'11~ are certainlY blaspend·

ers ana they continue to be, bUt
their Interest Ill saviJii mODeY
and the wllllnpess to do It Is
relatively new."
McNeal's atudy, releaaed Mon·
day,llldlcates that children ages
4 to 12 have aD average Income of
$U2 per week and spend $3.0'7 of
It and save about $1.35.
''011 a utlonal basil, this
suggests that Amerlcu children
8f1! receiving $8.6 billion a year,
spendlllg slightly over 16 blltion
of It and savln11 the remalnlllg

A_merica entering new
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. 2002 to 2006," said Lennard Fisk,
&lt;UPI) -The Gallleo probe !Ired NASA's chle! pla1letary scientist.
to Jupiter from the space shuttle
CRAF, scheduled for launch In
Atlantis Is one of many new U.S. 1995 by ~n llllinanned Tltail-4
space pl'llbes that will conduct rocket. will !ly past the asteroid
mankllld's most extensive exp!O- Hamburga Ill 1998 before Its
ratfon of the solar system over ·· rendezvous with Comet Kopff at
ibe next two decades.
the tum of the century.
The . $1.4 biltion GaiUeo,
After Initial observations, the
launc.hed Oct. 18, joins the robotic protle will fire a space
unmanned Magellan probe harpoon Into the comet's icy
bound lor. Venus and will be nucleus for an llltenslve material
followed at regular Intervals by analysis.
·
ln1996,CasslllllsSCheduledlor
robotic spacecraft bound for the
SUII, the moon, Mars, Saturn and
launch, also by a Tltan-4. After a
a comet.
flyby of the asteroid 66 Maja In
1997 and planetary giant Jupiter
Shuttle program dlrectoc Ar·
nold Aldrich said the U.S. planein 2000, casslni is scheduled to go
tary sclencepnJifam "lsbecom·
intoorbltaroundrlnlledSaturnlll
lllgstrong ... with many launches
2002 and drop a probe Into the
yet to come In addition to the atmosphere of the moon Titan.
Magellan and now the GalUeo."
''What we've done is.we've laid
The Comet Rendezwus and
down a planetary program now
AsteroldFiyby,knDWllasCRAF,
that gives you a planetary
and the Casslnl Saturn probe
mission on Its prime exploration
"are tl)e new starts this year a11d
phase continuously from 1990 to
hopefully, If successful, CRAF
2006," Fisk said. "End to end you
will be at Its comet from 2000 to
have a pllinetary mission dolllg
2002 and Casslnl at Saturn from

$2.6 billion," laid McNeal.
''1'heae are attracUw aew
flprea to buslne nn that prO.
due@ aad lelJ to chUdren, but It's
the ballilen that abould be taklll&amp;
notice - and IIIey are."
'Jbe I tudy IJivolved 1,018 housebold&amp; Ill the Holllton area that
Include at leutonechlld and that
are.r:epresentatlve of houlebolds
across tlie country.
McNeal said banks In Denver
and New York have opened to
exclusively serve children. Other
banks have Introduced special

e~a

facilities for children,. such as
their OWD teller window and
aavings accounts. At least one
U.S. baak, like many Ill Britain,
lleJids employeea to elementary
ICbooll to make It easier for
children to conduct their banklllg
buslneaa.
·
• The children IIHCI the help to
learn such basic behaviors as
uvlllg and lavestlllg~d the
banks could takethlso
tUIII'Y
to begin developlllg a llett!!r
public Image," he said.

The probe, a jollli venture of
Its prime exploration contlnu·
the Unlted ·States and tbe Euroously for the next.17 years."
''That's of course a !ar depar· pean Space Ageacy; Is scheduled
ture from where we've been," he for launch · from Atlantis In
October 1990. Ulysses will he the
added.
Already &amp;Pee!llng to ltadestlna· · flnt spacecraft to study thepotar
tlon, Mqellan; launcbl!d May 4 regions ot Earth's star.
The Mars Orbiter, scheduled
from Atlantis, wlll use a high·
tech radar system to map up to.90 tor launch atop an unmanned
percent ot Venus's cloud· Tltan-3 rocket In September 1992,
Is designed to study the Mardan
~rouded surfaCe, heamlllg back
pictures sboWing features the atmosphere, topography and
gravitational field from the van·
size of lootbaU stadiums.
Many plaaetary scientists be- tage polllt of a polar orbit.
Previous Mars orbiters !lave
lieve Venus Is the victim of a
runaway "greenhouse effect" In circled the red planet's equator,
which solar radiation is trapped ana the United States • twin
In !lie atmosphere, raising global VIking landers touched down on
temperaturetoabout900degtees Mars In 1976.
In 1992, the National Aeronau- hot eaough to melt lead. By
studylngVenus,maaklndrnayhe tics and Space Administration
able to learn ways to avoid a · plans to launch a spacecraft Into
slmDar late.
. orbit around the poles of the
·uke Gallleo, tile Ulysses probe moon to Investigate· Earth's
also will set Its sights on Jupiter, satellite. Prevlolll IUIIBf explor·
uslllg the giant planet'a gravity ers have orbited the moon's
lor a boomerang·flight back over equatorial regions, and the upcomlag flight will p,rovlde new
the south pole of the sUJI. . ,
lnfonnatlon about the moon.

Quirks in the news_ _ _ _ _. -~
. , __..;\;.. . __
local authorities, said the report,
datelllled from the town of
Ambon In east ladonesla.
The leaflets also guarantee
good treatment to those who
surrender and promises the
soldiers passage back to their
lamllles In Japan.
Last May, a Morotal Island
resident reported meeting a man
slnglllg a Japanese song In the
Morotal forest. The Indonesian
tried to speak to the loag-halred
man In Japanese and persuade
him tocometohls village, but the
man raa away.
On another occaalon thl&amp; year,
Gllllil-- tiT £Iii 1k ' -... a, 18Ml.
described as "a guest of one of
the Isolated tribes," whom they
suspected to he a Japanese
soldier left behllld from Japan's
mWtary occupation of Indonesia

People in the news---.
By u ...ed Praia Jater.tleal
SOUNDS OF THE 8111: Tile CIMII'e 19M record "London
Calling" heads the list of the 100 best albums of the '80s,
accordlag to the editors o! RoWng Stone. But Prince and Bruce
Sprlapteea had the most entries on the list. The editors praised
the Clash, which broke up a few year sago, for creatlllg a record
that "stormed the gates of rock convention and slllglehandedly
"set the agenda - musically, potitlcally and emotionally - for
the decade to come." The Rolllllg StaDe list put Prlllce's
"Purple Rain" In the No. 2 spot, loUowed by UJ's "Joshua
Tree," TaiJdns Be. .' "Remain In Ught," Paul 81m011's
"Graceland," Springsteen's "Born Ia the USA," Mlelulel
.lacu-'s "Thriller," REM's "Munnur," ·Biebanl aad u ...
Tllam...-'s ':Shoot {Jut the Lights" and Tracy ·CbiiJI!IUIII'S
self-titled album. Prince also scored with "1999" at No. 16,
"Dirty Mind" at No. 18 and "Sign o' the Times" at No. 74, while
SprlngsteeD's''Tunnel ol Love" was 25th, "Nebraska" was 43rd
and 'The River" was No. 86.
THE SOUND OF SBIIILEY: The QllllllY of life lor American
diplomats Ill Prague, Czechoslovakia, can be expected to pick
up with Ambassador Shirley Temple Black on duty at the U.S.
Embassy_ The fanner child star aays restrictions on
fraternization with most nongovernmental CzechS make an
assignment In Prague a bit lessappeallllg thana poSting to, say,
Parts. mack tells Newsweek she'll tiveil up the embassy by
formlllg a singing group. ·'I've got a lot of Ideas on ho~ to keep
our misSion personnel happy," Black says. Christmas carols
and 'The Sound of Music" wUI be In the repertoire ot the
embassy singers, but there's no word on whether the
ambasSador plans a reprise of 'The Good Ship Lollipop."
IACOCCA'S IUDII: Be careful, Lee llleOOO&amp;; t~'re
schoolchildren now, but th~'re the car buyers of ibe future.
Iacocca. the outspoken chairman of Chrysler Corp., Is calling
for an end to tile tradltlonal .academlc summer vacation and a
switch to year-round schooling. "AmeriCa Isn't golag to fare
very well Ill marketing, or manufacturlal, or much of anythlllg
else In the 90s with tile hlgheet functional Illiteracy In the
Industrialized world, ·and high school graduates who can blftiY
read their own diplomas," lacocca said Monday at a meettna of
the Magazine Publishers Association and Amerlcaa Society of
Magazine Editors In Naples, Fla. •'One obVIous tiling we can do
is keep kids In school long enough 'to give them the skills th~
peed."

SAVE THE RHINOS: Prlllee PIIWp, hualland of Britain's
Qlleea Elllabedlll, arrived In lndoaesla Moaday for a two-day
visit to promote nature conservation. The ODke of Edlnbul'Jh
. sailed by private yacht from SIJIP.pore to the· UJq Kulon
National Park In WHtern Java, bome of the elllllve aacl
endangered Javan rhino. The prlace II traveling Ill bls capacity
as IJiternatlonal president of the World Wide Fulld for Nature,
formerly the World Wildlife Fund. All of Moaday wu aet aside
for tourlll&amp; the Indo-tan aature preserve, whlcb lies south of
Krakatoa volcaao.
oLJIIIPIIBII: a.n- a.b aacl New York's archblabop,
O'ee-, traded qulpa about proper formal
at ttre before tile annual Al Smith charity dlaner the other nlgbt.
O'Connor, .weartq clerleal robet, auaall!d that Mrs. Bliah
reterve ber faahlon ,_,. for the preldent, 1111)'1111. "I'm a
happDy 1111111arrled 111111." .Aiiawaed the SIWFos: '"Nell, I'm
not eobl8 to tell the pn~ldent that." ... Danl " alllowr,
&amp;1'1..,... of fl•Melt =
' • • ud Ikl'l bloiJ'Ipher. I
11appy albl!lt the :yearloq celelntlon Ill &lt;!lettyabuJ'I, P a., of thP
of Ike's Oet. 14, - . , blrtll. "My IJU!Idad lived
rnaDY plllcea 111 hJa life," Ellenlw e:er ..ld. ''But lie choae to
come toGetl)'lbuJ'I. It' a tbe place w1tere lknew hbn heft. It was
the place lie felt utural alld at home,"

c.._. ,...

-••1

(

I

Pig Pickin'
planned at
Farm Museum
The West VIrginia State Farm
Museum will hold Its lOth Annual
Southern Pig Plckln' dinner on
Nov. 4 with serving to begin at
12: 30 and continue throughout
,tbe day.
Ac~rdlng to James Lewis who
has eharge of roasting the meat,
the cooking will take place

of exploration .

'

.lapnnlu ·soldlen of WorN War
JIIHulletl
. JAKARTA, Indonesia (UPI)Four Japanese ~archers are
roaming Morotal island Ill the
Moluccas chain Ill iearcb of
aglllg hermits thought to be
· Japanese soldiers left behllld
after World War IL
"Finding the soldiers could
prove dangerous. Therefore, the
loeal goveriUIIent had ad\&lt;lsed
them not to go Into the forest
where there are Isolated tribes,"
the official Alltara news agency
said Monday.
• lns~ad. the 1Dclo1Blan go. . .,,. •• ,, :5 tM,...
searchers to ~tatter leaflets
written In Japanese that announce World War II ended 44
years ago and advising the
. hermit .soldiers to surrender to

drugs," wrote t.:tndy, a
lltth-grader. "If we don't stop It
'
''
now the drugs and gangs are
!M~Is uk Buab'e advice on
.
golllg
to get worse: I go to
J&amp;np,drup .
'
Pickard
School. I like It there. I
CHICAGO (UPI) - Just say·
lng no hasn't been eaough to would like to see my
drive drug dealers aad gangs neighborhood become safe."
Brenda Lee, also In 5th grade,
from the neighborhood, ·so Pick·
ard Elementary Schoo( students has two brothers who are
'
wrote to President BUsh seeklllg members of gangs.
"I Uve In the heart of Chicago,"
his advice.
Fourth,grade teac'*r Mary she wrote. "My neighborhood
Sunny said 950 IDC\Iwtdually has drug users and gaag hangers
handwritten letters were sent that kill people and scare little
Mollday to the White House frOm children on the block. That's why
chlldren Ill kindergarten through wedon'tgooutslde. We need your
8th tll"ade who llttend the school help."
. IIUIIIIY said the letter&amp; were
•Ortnr'•IIDto111..._.
written as class projects.
:'Help us clean out our
neighborhood and get rid of
durlag World War II.

---

Hallowee~

October 24, 1989

Tua1day. ~ 24,1989

'
Puo1•c11
Mlddllf art. Ohio

n. o.., ........

outside and then bp brought Into
the kitchen where II will he
prepared for serving.
Music will he provided by
Everett Wedge. John Smith,
Joan Jones. and Everett GUlls·
pie. All proceeds from the dinner
will he used to upgrade the
museum. which Is located four
miles north of Point Pleasant
next to the fairgrounds.
The meal to consist of either
barbecue pork or 'heel, baked
beans, slaw and roll wlil cost
$3.50. The museum wlil also have
applebutter, sorghum molasses,
and cornmeal for sale.

EAST LETART -The East
Letart United Methodist Church
wlllliost a Mission Interpreter on
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Virginia
Snavely. Monticello, Ind .. who
with her husband, ·co-founded
Grace Children's Hospital in
Haiti, will he the speaker. The
Rev. Roger Grace Invites the
public.
RACINE - The Southern JunIor High booster association will
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the ·
junior high school buUdlng In
Racine. All parents of junior aigh
students are urged to at tend:

..

lEG. '599.00

SB Sl

I
t4t·luc-.
MASTIIICARD-VIIA-GOLD!N lUCKEY!

-

PAJIII,Y D.UIJIL CABI
2924 JACKSON A~NUE

POINT .PLEASANT. WV .

,A
..,.•

IS NOW SCHEDULitG PATIENT APPOINTMENTS
I:VEMMl
.

---~VAIIABU:
(

A six hour workshop entitled
"Social Servcles In Long Term
Care Facilities" will he offered
Thursday from 9 a.m to4: 30p.m.
at Heritage Square, New Boston,
by the Nursing Home Area
Training Center, an affiliate of
the Oho Department of Health
and the Area Agency on Aging,
The workshop is designed to
update administrators. social
workers and other care provid·

DAVE'S
SMALL INGINE
REPAIR

ers on the changing require·
ments for social services In loag
term care facilities and to
develop programming to not only
fulfill state and federal requirements but also to Improve the
resident's quality of life.
The program has been ap·
proved for continuing education
requirements by several profes·
sionai boards.

25°/o

NOW 539900

out1ide Meigs, Gtlli• or M11on cou~tl• mult be pr•
ptid.
"Receive t .60 di1eount lor adl Plid in •&lt;h•nc•·
·
"Free ad1 - Giveaw.y tnd Found 1d1 unct. 16 word1 will be
run 3 d~¥• •• no ch•ge.
"Prlc~ of ad for all CIPit•l letter• is double price of ad co1t.
•7pomt llnetypeontv uMd .
"Sentinel it not respontible for erron tftlr fiut dl¥ . !Check
for 11rror1 flnt day ..t runt in paJ*I . C.ll before 2 :00p .m.
d..,
publicMKHI to make correctton.
"Adl thl'l must be peid in •dv•nce .,,
Ctrd of Thankl
In Memoriam

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

FAMILY HOMES INC.

9·6 Tues.
Wod.·Thun.

MAIN STREET
.,.._ PIZZA

992-6855

LOWEST PRICES
IIGHEST QUAUTY

HANDWOVEN IASICETS

FlEE lOCAl DIUVEIY

IASKET WEAVING
SUPPliES
ClASSES OFFEIED

MONDAY PAPER

H•ppy Ads
Y•d S•l•

THURSDAY PAPER

FRIDAY PAPER

SUNDAY PAPER

Employment
Ser v1ces

Ar.. Code 114

Meiu- County
Ar. . Coda 814

M•onCo., WV
Ar .. Code 304

••e-Gallipolis

992-Middleport

876 - Pt. Pl. .tnt
458-Lton
576-Apple Grove
773-M"on
882 - New Haven
896-Letart
937- 8uff,.o

367-Ch•hire

388-Vinton
2•6-Rio Grandt
256-Gu'fln Ditt.
843- Arabia Din
379-Wtlnut

Pom•ov
985-Chf!llter

843- Portllnd
247- Letart FaUs
949- Rteine
742- Rutland
667- Coolville

Farrn StlfJUIII!S
&amp; L1ves lock

11 - Help w.,ted
12-Situatlon Wanted
13- lnsurance
1•- Butin•t Training

15- Schools &amp; Instruction
18- Aidio. TV &amp; CB Repair

17- MiteeUaneous

61 - Farm Equtpment

·

Transpurtat10n

21 -Buttn•• Opponunitv
22 - Mon~

to Lotn
a•- ~ot-.••••vtCM

71 -A111os tor •••

72 - Tru~• for s .. e
73- v.,. &amp; 4 wo·s
74-Motorcyelf!ll
75 - Boats &amp; MoiDt's for Stle
76- Auto P•ts &amp; Acc•sori•
77-- Auto Aepair

31-Hom•for s...
32-Mobile Hom• tor Stle
33-flrml for

s•e

78 -Camping Equipment

34-Bulin•• Buildings
35-Lot• a Acr . .ge
36- Rtll E1t1te Wanted

41 - HouMI for Rent
42- Moblle Hom• for Rent
43- Farm• fGr Rent

44- Ap.utment for Rent
46-Furnilhed Ro.om•
41-SpaCe for Rent

let Retultt Fatt

62- Wanted to Buv
63- liveetock
14- H1y &amp; Gr•in
66- Seed &amp; Fertilizer

18 - W.ntecl To Do

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchange.~ .•.
Gillie County

55- Building Suppli•
56- Pets for S.a~~t
57- Mulieallnsuumants
58- Fruits &amp; Vegillabll!ll
59 - ~or Sale or Trade

9-Want.. to Buy

2 :00P.M . MONDAY
2 '00 P."! . TUESDAY
2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY
2 '00 P.M . THURSDAY
- 2 :00P.M . FRIDAY

WEDNESDAY PAPER

17.00
$10.00
$15.00
$25.00
S60.00

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials

47-Wented to Rent
48-Equlpment for Rent

41-Forle•e

--~--

WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
DIRT HAULED

79 - Cemp•• S. Motor Homes

992-5275

I

LINDA'S
PAINTING

·INTERIOR-EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

Taka the pain out of
pain~n1. lot me do
it for you.

VEIY IEISONABLE
llAVE IEFEIEIKES

614·915-4110

l/4/19-tfn

224 E. MAIN ST.

81 --HomelmproYement 1
82 - Piumbing &amp; Heiling
83-,bc.,atlng
84-Eiec:trietl &amp; Refrigeration
85-Gen•al Htuling
88-Mobile Home Aeptir
87-Uphollt:ery

NOTICE OF PROPERTY
FOR SALE
Usled below are five ( 5}
tracts of l111d, indudinaresidente located thareon, beint
offared for Slle by F11nklin
Rell Estate Company. For
more inforntllion or appointment to view. pl•e
conllet Joe Rlmsev II the
Southam Oltio C01l Complny
Mine Office, 6141286-5051,
·or Dean Beny at Ohio Power
Company, Lind M~n~tement
Office in McConnelsville.
614/962·4525.
·TRACT VV-07
House and 5.00 acres
located on Vinton County
Ao• No. 38. s~uated in
Soction 1 ol Vinton Township, Vinton County, Ohio;
9 years old; 2-story, wood
and brick home; all electric: 2V, blllts; county WI·
-ter; 3 _outbuildinp in fair
condK1on - $54,000.00.
TRACT VW-98
Older l·story houa with
painted wood sidln, loCIIed
thr• (3} miles west of Wil·
kesville on Slate Route 124;
besemllnt; ps 1ttd llectric;
lladint Croell Wiler: 3aeres
. $36,000.00. .
TRACT YW·I39
2 houses -1-story brick
ltouSt; ps lttd litt:tric: ..
sement; county•..ter. Old«
2·story ~ sided hou•:
el tt:tric: well Wllar. located
on 1.00 acre flllproximllaly
two (2) mHes sauth of WI~
kesvllle on Stale Route 160.
- $51,750.00.
1
TRACT MC-73
Small 4-room house In
poor condition; located on
a secluded 2.5tcres in Columbia Township. lelp
County. Electric and well
wllar. No indoor plumbin&amp;
• $7,000.00.

Enjoy the flexibility of commtti'ng for only 1 .
"'"
week, the liquidity of a CD which is
automatically renewable or rede~mable at each
"' · 7 day anniversary, and the security. of FDIC
' ii1surance up ro $100,000. Yet earn' at a rate
term
CD's.
normally found with much longer
j.
( •
CALL
Gallipoli~
Middleport
' •.
446-0902
992 -6661'
, ', or visit your nearest Trust office for details
on your next 7-Day-Wonder.

$1 0,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

.

.

diologicll activity In the
drinking water •ppty • r•
quired under thllltate's Nfe
drinking wat• lawa. Rule
37411-81-26 of tho Ohio Ad·
minia1rative Code requira e
communhy w1ter aupply to
colt- four co-tlve
quonorty Mmpl• lor detO&lt;·
min.tion of compli.ncewh:h
tho rodlologic• moximum
contaminMt levels. Upon
being notified of thio vlolotlon by ·tho Ohio Environ·
mentol Protection AgMicy,
tho VillogeoiMidclepon hM
made errangements for the
drinking weter to be enalyaed et the above mentioned "oquency lor rodlo·
logic.! octivlty. Tho Villogo
of Mlddlopon wHI tlko step•
to anaure thllt the required
monhorlno will continue to
be performed.
OCT. 23. 24. 25

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public UtMitioo Com·
mi..ton of Ohio ha set for
public hearing C11e No. 8937-GA·GCR. to rovlow tho
011 recoverv ret• of Col·
umbie Gu of Ohio, Inc .• the
op•etion of it• Purch•ed
Goo Adluotmont Clouse ond
rtlet«&lt; m1tter1. Thi1 hearing
11 ICheduled to begin ot
10:00 o.m. on Tu•doy. Novembor21.1989. otthool·
fice~ of the CommiSiion,
180 E. Broad St.. Columbuo,
· All Ohio.
intorooted ponioo wMI
be giv1111 en opportunity to
be he1rd. Further inform•·
tion m~ beobtelned by eon·
tecting the Commil•ion.
{101 24 1tc

WANT ADS

RI·CO. TEiMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL
ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
Member National Pest
Control Assn.

ToH FrH

1-800-535-2199

t•

•

•'
•

TilE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

'

The Bank That Maker Thingr Ha1&gt;11en.

Affililt~: The Cenrnl Bancorporation, Cincinn1111, Ohiu - 'M"L·mber FDIC

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Read the Best Seier

I

••

·SERVICE
1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

and Cable Billo Horo

Owtr 10 Ptoplo 16S.OO
Por Game

'992- 2156

Business
Services
SWEEPER REPAIR
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS

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FURNITURE
and MORE
6·5·'19-lfn

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·

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"=======:::!
4·26·"89-1 mo.

•ALUMINUM SIDING
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PH. 949·2801 .

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422

16141

eLIGHT HAULING

9-23 ·89- 1 mo . pd.

VAUGHN'S
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SERVICE
SYRACUSE. 01110
Mo1t Foreign and
Domestie Vehicles
A / C Serviee
All Major &amp; Minor

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-226.

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lEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE
9U-5S35 or

Re.,_i,.
NIASE Certified Mac:henic

. . NM&gt;
"DOC" VAUGHN

~

W&amp;IIIGS

985·3561

• / 8/89/ tfn

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

GUN SHOOT
RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB
R!. 124 Betw•n

and
Sale01 Conllr

W~ku•ille

EVERY SUNDAY
Beginning S~pt. 17

EVERT SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

Certified LicanMd Shop
5-26 -'88-tfn

Factory

STEWART
TRUCKING
•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

742-2421
9-20-tln

HOURS

DAN AIVU CINIEit

7 Daya A Week
9 a.m.- 7 p.m.

P-&amp;S•wlc•On

EAGU IIDGE
SMAU ENGINE.

.......

VISA· MAITI!ICHAIIGE
HOURI: Mon.-Fri. 9·7

881.1·1

.

Closed lundey

949·1969

10110188ttn

"FREE"

SALE STARTS
SEPT. 29, 1989

Choked

L&amp;L TIRES

12

614-992-.5344
FIVE POIITS, OHIO
9 -28-'89· 1 mo.

FOR SALE
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP

145 acres, barn.
bottom, hill land,
timber. 2 producing gas wells.

Located Behind'
Tractor Dealership

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

$45,000

742-2455

CUSTOM IUH.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At leosonable Prilts"

PH. 949-2801
•
or Res. 949-2860 ;
Doy or Night

742-2143

lutland

NO SUNDAY CALLS

9-25-"89·1 mo.

COUNTRY

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

MOBILE
HOME PARK

GREG I. IOUSII
' GENERAL

.

•

...EWHOME8

BOB'S
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
SYRACUSE
992,2621 or
992·6944

992-7479

." il •\ 0," 19h9

lt. 33 Nortll of

11511 ST. IYIIAOISI

P-roy, Ohle

t-22.·1 mo.

1·12-'U·tfn

DOZER
SITEWORK - ROADS
~
CLEARitjG

Roger Hysell
Garage

NEWLAND
lNTEIPRISES

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Rt. t24, P-roy Ohio

REPAIR .
AI" Tr••••l••loe
PH. 992:5612

.DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

(6141 667-3271

or 992-7121

Grant A. Newland

RUUO
50 DIFFERENT WOOD
&amp; COAL STOVES,
INSERTS • FURNACES

lHlUCNIAN
In

WOOD STOVES

c..,., •. 01. Off 143
698·6121

RADIATOR

._.LWrihul

. SER~ICE
cae r~ir .and rt·
core rodiators and
Iteam cores. We cae

ROOFING

We

--nPAIR
Gutters

also acid boil aniJ rod

Down~uu

out ratllotors. We also
repair Gas Tanks•

Gutter CIMnlng
Painting
FREE ElnMATES

..

PAT HILL fORD
982·2186

Mlddlaport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

•

..

Announcements

4-25-t!n

7·11-'19-tfn

4-IH

TEMPSTAR

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rantala
•Lot Rentals

•tUSfOM IWTCHENS lo .ATH&amp;
•EXTENSIVE AEMODB.INO
•VINYL SIDING lo ROOANO
•METAL IUILOINOS

d.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

HIGLEY FARM

liVING ROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES .
DINETTE SETS
"NEW" RECliNERS

3-ll·tfft

L. W.

MOOHttod oncl lalancod

9-6- 89-tfn

USED FURNITURE

NO SUNDAY CAW

13" through 205-IS"
$30.00 a Pair

Gauge O~tiY.

STRICR Y ENFOIKID!

Salem

USED TIRE
SALE

Starts ot 1:00 P.M.

12 Gauge Shotguns Only
Factory Choke

or laL 949-2860

YAIDIWI MOWas
ECHO SAWS I TM-IS
OIIGOII UIS, CUINS

At Jet. U. 71143
On lhl h·IJiau

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT

HSIOINa fl!IONI

It's Time Now!
Have Thot Furnace
We Service AH
Makes - Gas or
Electric . Also Pans
for All Makes.

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKINGcHEsna, OHIO

, 1':',S::~~:.~~~

,i.l.------;...--::lt

BISSELL
SIDING ·co.

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

992-5114

9-22-19

Pay Your Phone

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

992-2371

1=--------11' •VINYL SIDING

POMEROY, OH.
992-6872

the

J
J

- .}~:!~. I

.oos.u

992·2571

SALES &amp; SERVICE

1aflt. lim~ 1 co•pon per cos- 1
'I t;:r,""', ~~~~o~!':m. I

(all Anytime

222 East ...in

Rustic 4-roomloallou•
loCI!• on 50.00mes. Appro~ilnately 40.00 teres of
woods; electric and will
Wllsr; loCIIod on ltlp
CountY lo• llo. I in S.
1111
Towultip, hlp
County; IICI!illlll ht!ntln&amp;

· .area. : $32,000.00.

WATER

PPQ(

TRACT ll$-154

,....,._.m dep01it 199.999.9'). Substantial penalty for early withdr :;~w a l. lntl'fl~ l
p1id to principal and rompoundtd wceldy. Rates dfM ivc Oa . 20, 1989, and
1ubjea to chanF without nOt" itt. Yitld IIS5umes rhat stated r:1tc (&lt;'maim Ctmsram
for a fu II year with no wlrhdtawals of interest or princip 11 L

I

PUBLIC NOTICE .
Tho Vllloge of Mlddlopon
ha failed to monitor for ra·

Mildltport, Olio 457 60
We Cotry Fiahing Supph•

9-21-89·1 mo.

Public Notice

Now l.o&lt;ation:
161 North Second

I 2 H.O. FREE w~h COUJIOII and I

9 · 7·89 · 1 me . d.

Real Estate General

I•

1 purthase ol min. H.C. Pac:k· 1

UL

baths, full basement. 2
car garage. 10~60 ft.
deck, 3 acres plus 11/,
acre take. Mini cond.
$120,000 firm. All new
drapes, fully carpeted .
Buill-in lg. TV. stove .&amp;
refrig. See-through fireplace.

9-27·'89-tfr

SINCE 1976

Serv 1ces

.fI· PlUMBING
HUDNALL
&amp; HEATING .

· THUIS.992·9976
I·
E.l. 6:45 PJl. 1
SUN. 1.1. 1:45 P.M. 1'
0001 Nlll
.

·I

3 BR ranch home: 2'h

--~-..,

CUll

'I
'=======·=·t:'"~· I
5- '7

...

-HOUSE FOR SALE

9 / 18/ 1 mo . pd .

POM:.~~~GLES

ALLEN'S
HAULING
..... 00 GALLON

61 - HouMhold Gooda
52-Sporting Qoodl
63- AntM:euel
64- Miac . Merchllndi1e

I-Public Sale &amp; Auction

-

TUESDAY PAPER

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLl
LOCALL l OWNED PIIIA SHOP.

21· 35WORDS

Mer r.hand1se

Card Of ThMkl
ln Memory
Annoucements
Giv ..way
Happy Adt
&amp;- Lon and Found
7 - Y•d. Sale(paid in lcholnce)

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
-11:00 A .M . SATURDAY

COPY DEADLfNE -

Sat.
9·8 Mon.
·• Fri.

F11&lt;twry Chekt
12 Gougt Shetg..,.,Only
Stri&lt;tly Eolor.U .

801
Locally Owned &amp; Operated by Bill.

PH. 992-3922

Basham lulfdi•:
EVERT \.,
SAT. NIGHT .· ·
6:30P.M.

614-992-2478
207
.
p..,,.r•••·

P. 0.

. """

1234&amp;-

•A cla11itied •dvertilem.-.t placed in The D1ity Sentintlj .. cept - cl•lifiad di1pl.,, Bu•ln•• Ctrd 1nd legal notices)
wil~ tllo_IPP~IIt m the Pt. Ple••nt Aegiller 11nd the GlUtpol•• Dally Trtbune, Nec:l'ling O'M' 18,000 hom•.

OPEN
-FURNITUilE
----

AiduVRanch, Capt
SINCE 1970
Cod I 2 Story

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Most 2 end 4 ~cvcte
en ginn
Stock Perts for
Homelite, Waedeater,
Tecumseh. Briggs &amp;
Stratton.

adt.

Ann 1111 nce111 en ts

•ft•

50°/o

-

.lllf~'~~ . MODUUR HOMES

lecatetl at Valley l......,.
In llltltlleport, Oh.

Rat• are for con•cutive runs, brokenupdayoswill bech•ged
fnr ear.h d.w 11

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FilE DEPT.

f0·'-11• .

0·15 WORDS 11·25 WORDS
1 DAY
$4.00
55 .00
3 DAYS
$5.00
s8.oo
6 DAYS
s8 .oo
S13.00
10 DAYS
513 .00
$21.00
1 MONTH
$33.00
S51 .00

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

579900

TO

NEED A HOME?

992·9922 or 992-1228

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156

The Meigs Marauder March· overall with a score of 78.5. The
lag Band under the Cltrectlon ot band received ratings of superior
To~ Dingess took flrsi In Class and excellent from the six
A Saturday at the Fort Frye adjudicators.
marching contest held In
Field commander Heidi Ca·
Beverly.
ruthers also -received a superior
The contest was the last of the ratlag anti took first place In
1989-90 band competition season. Class A. April Hudson, MHS
'!be band scored a total of234.95 feature twirler, won first place
to take first Ill the Class A overall and a superior rating
contest. The Marauders' music with a high score of 84. Also
. score was a 76.95 glvlllg them the • taklllg firsts In ibe coalelts were
third highest overall music score the MHS percussion and flags.
The l)'IHS band will present'lts
of the day placlag behllld Parkersburg and Marietta.
1989-90 contest show thla Friday
In marching and maneilverlllg night at the Meigs-Federal Hock·
the band again placed third 1111 game.

UCIIE DEPlftMENt STOB

Social Security workshop set

• The Area'~ Number 1 Marketplace

Meigs band takes first

.

I st visit FIR

'

The •nnual community Halla- judges' choice.
,
ween party sponsored by the
Apumpklllcarvlngcontestwill
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce also he held 'with car:ved pumpwill be held Monday night on kills to be prepared In advance
Court Street heginnlllg at 7 p.m.
and then brought In lor judglag.
Trick or treat will he held In tile First, second and third place
village from 6 to 7 p.m. so the prizeS will he awarded.
party will start Immediately
WMPO Radio personalities
after that ends.
will emcee the party which will
The event Is also being held In , he done live remote from the
conjunction with the area mer· party location. Doaatlons ot
chants Moonlight Madness Sale, moaey and candy are needed and
6 to 11 p.m.
anyone wanting to donate should
Costumes will he judged ta the coatact the Chamher office,
categories of up to klndei"IWflen,
992·5005.
first to third gradel, fourth to
In the event of rain, the party
sixth grades, aad seventh to wUihemovedtotheTeenCenter,
eighth grades .. The categories on Mechulc Street In Pomeroy.
will be pretdest, Ulllest, and

-lAYAWAY NOW -

C•ll hr Ftll Steciel•

Po-•oy, OH.

party set.

IT'S TIME
•••
. TO START THINKING
'
CHRISTMAS!
·' LADIES INIT
.MENrS JOGGING SUITS, NEW
TOPS, FASHION SWEARIS and more.

742-2771

36425 lockspri,.s ld.

Sofo &amp; Chair
Sofa &amp; Low-t
Conte~ary, Traditianol
or Countrr Look~OW

VAlUES TO '1291.00

Eaay
Fin1111dng
Avalloble
Vloo '
Moot.C.r.d
Dlacov•

SUSAN COlEMAN

THE
BASKET WEAVE

SALE $439-00

•CAMELBA&lt;K (OUNTRY SOFA

SAVE

.......... Oh.

S39900 SOFAS
Fine
~ Upholstery by
.•La-Z-Boy
•Temple
•Barday
•Fairfield

•YOUR CHOICE:

SUN'S UP
TANNING
2'11MIMO.t IMiw
u.. Ill. In

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Church
Women United of Meigs County
will have a planning session at
1:30 Friday at the Mount Moriah
Baptist Church In Mlddlzport. All
key women from are churches
are urged to attend.

HARRISONVILLE -TheHar·
rlsonville Senior Citizens wlll
have a special meeting on
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the town
house. All members are urged to
attend.

fo·r Christmas!

AS SHOWN REG. '699.00

The

TUESDAY
RACINE -The Southern Boos·
ters will have a special meeting
on Tuesay at 7 p.m. to plan for the
volley ball and football banquet.
Members are urged to attend.

Layaway Now .

PRICES STARTING AT

Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

;

-··

�P

.

..,

a a n. o.1v suiuel

42 . Mobile Homel
for Rent
AU II.ICTIItC - L I H0i1!!t
2 IIDAOOII8, ON NICI L..,.,
8T.IIT.2 . . . 0'
;-..

111
110

1 _ . , . . . _ . . . _ _, 2
--Coi114110Cule lui ......... liMine MM

~- '

-·---....,...... ...
,_
0~

L111h

- lo
6

- ---

her,

f:;-~,-

~r... ,"ea:··~
-

2S10

I

'""

'l

--·--

Ca,jun sushi."

.......

=
=.:.
..............
C=., .................

Rodno!, -

·11 ...... 1344.

-

Nfltt.

I

=----:-. .~::"-::

Alo-.Zbr,nloeunll,=

Troller nlco cloon 101lumlohod,
ro1ot01- roqulrod, R - Dno
out L...ot ROMI on rtght, Ol'S-1071.

44

-·

Pomelov-Mklrleport. Ohio

Television
Viewing

'

,,,..~~

__,__

Lolli, """"' 11.-.747'1.

•

c;oll

Tlok - · -

·

11

Now ICCIIIII"'c:.,.·a•~• for
AN'o .......
.:Umo, ol lhl.
onliololo - blo doya, bonollto lnloc~ P-Nol Corw

r.1Pr ch;m&lt;J 1se

51

Al-II MAL

1

1LL 8E

CRUELlY!

TIIERE AS
SOON A5
I FEED
THE D06 ..

ANIMAL

CRUELTV!

GallipoliS

9

Kflll' lnqul,. ot 1101 Chootnut
Sl. O.Hipollt.

wanted to But

----

or without

Larry Uvlly 014-

= ,. .
UMd turniiUN end

A•porialble, rnouvated ......
_.... NMt In APPNI'Inc..
Po.idve .nldude. not afrlld .to
work. 111 4tl 3815.

lorMal .. Ill ...... ovw In horne
~owotood,

!.•,
wlrto to Boo P.Z5, aoro of
""'"' P-m Roalolor, 200
lla)n at, Pl. Pit., WY 211110.

Wanted

hotd

11~742-

1jfl7 llloorly 14o70. Goa hoof, 3
b..troom1. Spo~~cloue . Dan't

Serv1ces

Employment

11

Help Wanted

No--

ANYOHI CAN APPI.VI-..,.

-

-

hln ta move. $14,500. 114-317·
7744.
1HI Caflon 24x51, 3br, mUit
. . - , $23,000. 014-37f:Z720,
...nlngo.

•;......c, Ill-.., E-C11 111-U•nt
boll CftOIL
U2101.

........

Schools&amp;
Instruction

15

RE-TRAIN HOWl
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 121 Jock_, Plko.
Col 114 4. 4317. Hog. No. . .
11:10051.

.AliOII I . , . I .....

-;.~na,;
mr - 114-140· ...r
..C.
F
.......
-

lor

4111.

I 1.111. 5:30 p.m. 211-10.
- . ...... oclooo[ lhp-lnl
r' Til. .14 Ul 11224.
I

ea
"'"!!.•. notn. 1oam town. cnr
lclooof .-riel. CitY wotor, g&lt;!OCf

Aoloton,

Tnoh Hauling ........ - l y
tton.t, 1 r ndlll•l
1
1131.

-·-

Will do odd Jobo, ....l'S-3118,

For Solo 30 OCNI, pond, llmbor,
public ...., on block top rood,

Work - • ·oflor
- UO cloonlna,
Pll.

Ill

For ooottna Into. 111-m.
7111ai. T.al3.

llo.,TV--for

,., -Ina lnlo l1$.71f: 21

blnllll. Uc.ltlnt

35 Lots a Acreage

1111.

.... rv_........, ... :tiM_..,._
. , F1nanc1al
Fa 1 'I

qui- 114-IIWIII.

wnh rf- ftonllgo, publlo ... .,.
Clydo 18-, Jr. 304-57S-2331.

=
7111ai.T-.
CAIIUA OPPORTUNITY! h·
.......
~--1•1-­
WIIrhlglo
_ _, _

room, clntnll air, ~ fl~e.
ponolo. U'l'N I oooupon1o. No

Ashton, beautiful ON KN lat•

-·-8prlngV.U.,Arao.
eu•••a.

-

___ ,_,.__
---1-$21,000, t14-211o-1580.

........~....
'"' .... -dor ,..,

__

11500. lome cculd uoo lfttlo
- l c ld)ullmont but who'o
going 10- 11oom In t h o onywoy'l Col •.-72t-1445.

homo 111M. Frionclly Rldgti Rd.

ITIWIIII• nJTIIId In ..,. t.om.,
rnolllty
~
.
la1•1ty

.... t*tng

We have MV..I10 and 12 wide
mobiM hameL PrieM llartlng II

pete. o.po.1t and ,.,.....,. , .

- · · o.rchlldc:Mw.
c- Conttr.
S.ll,
lftordabla,
M-F

WCOJIIIFC....

Attenllon Huntwsl Are you In
need of • oa~Mn In the Woode'1

llrvo

toto,

bulkllna

pormltlod; public

· · prfcoo
raclucod,
a-on,
Jr. :t04-671-Z331.

Clfde

$24,000 and 13 K,. tr.ck on
blacll lop I'Oid, public water,
$1a,ooo S04-571.z77ll.

LA141 For Solo • Gollf!oolla Farry,

$1,000. PYblla •ler. 304-1712722.

Business
Opportunity

lMM WeN tn1C11, Ounvlllt
Road.
OWnor
Flnonclng
A'llllabta. $100 clown. to acre

INOliCEI

·
- · $5,000 - ·· 304-87157887.
W-oncf, 1 3 2 - $30,000,
Rl. 7, below Eu..U, Call 11.t.
446_..11 lftlf 7 p.m.

==y~~~~

_.... oondlllonl. .... bt N • 111 wtlh ,.op&amp;e you know,
--hrotod.Wint-ln Ifill NOT to ..net money
through the mail Until fOU hi 'Ill
loll tow.~~gota tho ollortng.
CUI 011 c/0 Galflpollo DollY
T - 121 Third Avo, CW.
SIMI lultcflng S,ot- llonlg
llptlllo41U1.
- n g dlalotolllp In Nlocl
onoo. 8 1 - odYartlolng:

,... "'--_,0

tleller Mmlnlr: dlllgn and .n-

.::::;::

o u - pno~dod.
foot"'7 dlrocl II low

36

Real Estate
Wanted ·

lord Wontld: 100 ocroo &amp; up.
W-ei, atroomo, vlowo, 1 -

'20-3520.

. . . ., IIM'Iclll CAN 303751-1200
n124~.

u• ...,

A••tlng loobl

aa.-,.
potontlol.
Dotolo. (1) - - E l l . y.
m•.

23

Profeulonal
Services

...,., ______

Rentals
41 Houses for Rent

llcDonlol Cullom lutchollng, e

- --lilt..
Good-··
=--.. . . .
. . ., _ ,

-

potonllal.

Dotolo. (1) - - E l l . Y·

U IIN IIOIIEY fYIIInt ot homo.
t:IO, DD
lelconMi pot.mltl.

f..,

fYIIInt

.,.,_, - . (1)

II homo.

potonllol.

31 Hom11 for Sele
3 bocfroorn homo AYfngraom,
ldtchon,
bolh.
Comptetoly 3 bedroom, unlurnlohocf, brick,
l'lmart · d lnekle lnCI ouf. In llldd.._.. Rotor..- ,..
$32,500. Oon)or flnoncocl, Loon qulrod. Coil 0144112-3407.

_ . , . · TV!

$10.-,.
plliontlol.
Doto1o (1) - 7 - Ell. K·
-~--rldll

10o1t1nt lor • "11011

pooplo to
............... -Apply

lor ...........711-

BEAunRJL APAATIIENTI AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

ESTATES, ISO Jocklon Plkl

.._ 11121mo. W.lk to oltoD I
-.Coiii14-4411-2H4. EOH.

locat.._,

For r.nt 2-otflce

ot ..........

Wa....,., dryoro, Nlrlgonkn,

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OCNJMWM'

For-- CoriOfoll ..... EVANS ENTEAPIIIIEI, Jack.
RON

Gold couch m~w ..,.,.,
21 Inch blcyclo 114-2111-

r=.

For ... - . . . - 1 1 1 0 · I tleport- 1250,
30\-f~.

Hotpolnl walhor ond tlryor,
UMd vaty llttlo motchlna oot
gcod, $300. bolh. 304-ll'S2001.

Cl
rotlo ptoyor, • - • · rodlo,

wtRIInlncl.l14 2M 1522.

Clool- Wd
111........ - triO!'!!,
...
41

FOr----·

borbor oholr, 4 hub - . 11444f.UTI.

Will_.,.. -

Oold ccln. 1121 v......... $42&amp;
......14 143 lta1.

lrttoln.

-uc. ......
- ·•ft'IHtliiUII,,
Whool - Howt'l
olltor
Forme houorr Rt. 124 .... _
11&lt;1. lo I n OH 114 - 1114

63

1111llu
Ford
~~~Yilt, 4 - · •
Juot
now,
overy~hlna _.,,

new tlree, lbeoiUtl tip fop oon- ' ,
dhlon. 302 VI. $07111. Coli 014- ·,
8124023 or 114-1112..711.
:.

.. ,......... ,.,_.. ".....
1111 Pl,....h

$110. ., ...

241.af4.

-~

-1

Qua--.

a• -

- · .,..._

All -· - -· "'"

"4';-!J

=bll£a·~/Ut1-=

un-ngo.

_ , . appr-.

74

-OUr--· .,.,_.... ---.
-..or

::r.· iiOO. ........
0o1

Aooma""""' •- " ' _,h. =53.;__:.;A;,;.nt;lq;:;u:.;es;.:;.,,....,._

atonlna ., • • -·
Hotot. 014-1*-1580.

011111

luy ow 1111. A - Antlquoo,
1124 E. lloln at-. _...,_

doiiYIIrod .,_, or *J,
,...~ .. ~711~

p.m., - Y 1 :00 to 1:00 p.m.

55

Houn: II.T.W. 10:00 Lm. IO 1:110
114~252t.

-

46 Space for Rent

54 . Miscellaneous
Merchandlu

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

9f

lntorlor

Motorcycles

Corio. Good ohopo,
nono (10011. $1100. IU 142 1424.
11711 Ponlllo Oronti Prlo 301
· buellol
-..; •104-818AII-I'II
_....,
gcod -.do
11711 -

I moll III(C ~~- -

1011- o

1110 Z41, - · cond"=l25tiO or
ol1or. O!WU aou.
1.1 Cod. CUpo, DoYflloL- · 111. ooncl. $11100, -701

1110 Tolono do Oldln!Obllo. 2

::~.::-w~
1111111_.
Pll.

..:.=

... ,.... ...

(2:00) .

9 Munier, She W"'* A

. EEK AND MEEK

Colll14-211-,1hllor :GO p.FI. .,

IIOA'IIAS: NOw WI-ng
- l o n l l o b l l o -......

'

did. I14-25Nil'l.

::

76

Fashionable way to Die,

Acceuorlel

6ASIS

"

I
For -

110 lor

1100 -

........ truclt ' - · -

oohd,

104-771-1417.

l

..

,..,.. - 1 1 4 - 7 -

;

'

•

.

1'0011 80V TIRO, :llloW7fo

1111,

end

lronl

afka&amp;MI&amp;.

.a IINO,

Serv1ces
Home
Improvements

89

IAIEIENT
WATERPROOFING
Uawwllllllloftlll llllllnl .,.. ... ...
..._ LOIIII e... u"'*"lwn........_
,_

• • • •,

'M

Clll OOIIMt 1• •

114-aT-, cloy or nlgloL A o ,

••rtlltlment .
W.llrprOODetg.

l'o1lr Tno

•

Trlmmlna

..

"'- •

-ol,coll:104-1711-fU1 .

Aototy or coblo loot *illl!lg.
Moet Willi campMied ..'"'
Pump, ond oorvlco,

·•.

,

WITH '
LITTLE SONNY

YONDER
OL'
SUN II

HOT ON Hl5
HE!;LS !!

:t, · ,•1

••w

Soptlc Tonk Putnolna $tO Oolllo
Co. RON EVANS IN'I'ERPRISES,
Jockoon, 011 1~7-11521.

:',.
•'

.'•

.... . . .
Plumbing &amp;
ltaatlng
-~eo~11.,=·,-:Piumbl::--:~
..- -

~ '1.":':;8 :.::: :.'::: 82

- · fully - . .... - ·

li4HUII1.

ond Hooting
'... Pfno
OoiH- Ofolo

lleeond AN_ o.llpdT

114-i41-3811

1_, Dl. 10 R 1 IOf· 014-441-

84

1- ·-..

untM ft:IO aH.

~~~-

~~

Electr16el &amp;

, " ~rlgti'atlon

BERNICE

BEDEOSOL

....... -.
'·

Oltlo - ·

In the year ahead ,au will be In an ex·
tremeiY forlunale cycle lor ·llil lulllll·
ment o1 hopei and expeclallonl. II Is
Hit ely ,au will- victorieS avenin .,_
you
expertenc:ed
deleal

.... -=lo...,..
__...

:c=·(CIGL :M.ftotr. II) Condlllona
.,. .xalfMit tavOt'llble lor you at lhle

lime

~~~--·

om.. your JIIIIO!MIIInl....l

are

111&lt;1. Et1tllprll8a or venlu,..
001 whiGh you or)glnata or manage .,.. dfto
tlned lor euc cut. Matot CMng1ll are
. • llh8ld far Sc:oniiO 1n the coming yur.

, ........ 11~11.

•

(

f

Larry King Uvel
MOVIE: Pretty a.by (2:00)
1111 Neohvllle Now
9:30 (J) Ill (J) Chicken SOup
Jackie convinces Maddie 10
draw up a will. (0:30) I;J
10:00 (]) 700 Club With Pol
AObenoon
U (Jl llJ) Midnight C.OIIer A
friend of Jack's battles wllh
lha hOspital over his
, ·
comatose son. t1 :00)
W Ill (J) lhlrtyoomellolng
Gary fic:es fatherhood as

c

:•

Aon'o TV llorvfoo, -'&lt;lllzlna
In Zonlh llltlclo 7 _ moOI
o l h l r - Houoo co-. oliO

.

Eope~....,.

burning down a crack house.

'·
'

!

81

C

IZl (J) Anietlcan

Follow lhe story of the
closin~altle ol Wo~d War I .
(1 :DO) I
1!1) •
Wolf A former
black ac:tivlso is accused ol

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

I

kiss. (0:30}

• /0-J.'f
I

111,10, 4,000 good ..

oom!-11-. , _ -

Wayne gets his driver's
llcenae and has 1o chauffeur
Kevin around. 1;J
9:00 8 (Jl llJ) In Thtl HHI 01
The Night Althea's lila is .
shanared when sha is raped •
by someone sha knows. I;J
(J) 0 (J) ROHanne One o1
Dan's poker buddies gives ·

Roseanne a very affectionate

I

C OH ......

1117
-Hill' Ina.

1111 Country Comedy
8:05 Cll MOVIE: Hlah Pllllll
Drifter lA) (2: 011)
a:30(J) eCJ&gt;TheW-rYura

I SAID I ~LD
~ \\11111 IT OIJ
ACASE. -BY- CASE

.'.·'

AutoPartslr

.

IIJPri-WI
® MOVIE: The Sleplo-

a. • - _
...
- ,· 125 HP, 1,:=~
,_
.
17

·--~·tilt,
=..me~

lloll,.,!lo Tooh: - l d for

e

.. Wllh ,. hp
Evlnrudl IIUitll t~ ,,
motor, *WI on triter. all In •· ..
oellenl 001Ni.. on 11.000. 31M- ,
571-2114.

1m

&lt;D

S.nford And Son
8:00 (]) MOVIE: Follow TM Sun
(2:00)
(Jl llJ) Mlllocl&lt; Matlock
tries to Clear the name of a
circus clown ICQI88d of
murder. (1 :00) 1;1
I]J Top Rank IIOalng
W Q (J) Who'a TM lloso?
Tony Nes In order 10 get out
of a dinner dale with a
beautilut woman. (0:30) I;J
IZl (J) Nova Learn the
liltle·known wartime history
of radar, winner ol battles.
(1 :00)
IJI) ei!Z Racue: 911 A
farm child is buried alive
beneath hundreds of pounds
ol gr11n. D
·
• «ll MO~IE: Frld8y TM
13th, Pin IY: The Flllll
Chapter lA) (2:00)

7:35

c

loldOII
~11Ert,.._...._.
• •

ropa!r -a1 - ·1oT.V.
~~
o0no1
P.O.- loll
...

11!1 Top C1rd

11 . . . ._

11711 Torll• Pfeil..., AC, 11111

•

11J Crouflre
® N)ght Court

WE~L, R)R 1HE

oppf- ropolrs. wv
fO'I!I Ohio 114-44&amp;~4 1111 --18-2454.

Claflwl 41rl. .............. 114_,

56 Pats for Sale

a llJ) J-rdrt t:;J
1D I!] M•A•I'H
9 •

=,...,-,.,...,:o:--===~-:- .•
1101 lutultl 08 250 7400 not.,
$210. 114 44t 1311.

no ruot

=

Building
Suppllel

,_

114-~~~2-~m.

you PoN'T NEEP To

. orfN .,f'o WIPE".··
\· _ ;t'M pLANNINtG 1b
STAY OUT51 pf.

:
.

.

1111 1-10 4 wholl ..... bod, ,.,000 octual mlloo. VI, 4
• ...........17200. lluol

wv

Roome

--

·:

nn., 4 oyt., •utQ., lOaded, SliGO :

Hat a

•ow•,

Opon .............

Yor- min~ '

75 Boats a Motorl
z-.2---.11otfor Salt
~IM4.

_...
-o. 2- ---4-aun,l
......

u-

7:05 (I) Jefllrl0111
7:30 D (Jl Flmlly Feud
I]J MajOr L11gue Baseball
Mapzlne (0:30)
(J) Entertainment Tonight
0 (J) USA Toclly

Uveetock

~lol--dPin
PICKENS FURNITURE
... •nlllne. OrNI:
lar
Nrl' rt
...... ef4·t•U11 ..•~·"'· HouMhold lurnilhlnt. 112 mi. . DITJ;.oorn - ..... t171. . . . .
Coclar Bar, lllclolopot1. 11,._
opt. 1 br, 12441, Jorrlcloo Rd. Pl. PI-nt, WY, 11172.
'
utllnoo pokl, ao Fowth oo~ call :J04.075-1450.
llpolll, 014-140-1410 aflor Tp.m.
b-.lo
r 1111,
ort_...,.
_
_
FurnilhMf apt. 1br, 1200, ulllll• AUCTION .S"';.AJ"RHITUAE. Ill
pold. 701 Foul1h Clalllpollo, 014- Olivo Sl., Galllpollo.- I l.*d
- - · $300. Alao - ·
Pure brtd Ouau...,. 2 112 YMtt
446-4411 aftw 7p.rn.
fumfturo, ......... - - •
~---171CIIIIU
4411111 ........
Worlt
114-1*-3151.
old.
Juot - 114418Oroclauo living. 1 ond 2 bodroom oponmonll 11 VII- Sofa tnd .cholr, $110.
1
Manor
1nd
Rlverslae ond tobloD, $31. ooch. 114-112·
........ - - · · Roa'ld
Aponmonto In lllddlopol1. From 5398.
OYIIoblo 1 - . . Clol'dl!&gt;l. 11:...,:1114y~ 15-2,
$114. From So!Mombor 151h to
Qrophloo WroU - . !loll· 1 - . ,
lllom
YI'RA 1'\JRNITURii
Nonmber 1S.h, lint monllh rent
$01.110 .,._._ Poln4 Plloo, - · lloa'otl. -ling,
RT.
141,
4111LE8
!no lo thooo who quollly. Coli
2415 "-"-". Avo., Pt. Pit. · ~ If-, Jon. 1m,
CENTENARY
01W12-m7. EOH.
ITO-IOM.
RENT TO OWN. 4 Nlcoly -.m'Oif opt. llr, liNt, drMMr, chllt .. .. wiL, bunll - . , olrplono lloklt 10
bod comptoto • $10 wk. -~~
SPECIAL FEEDER CALF BALl:
porklng """ door to Hb..,.,., roc:kor
• $5 wlc. dlnobe oot, 4 Ooklond, eotlf. ~ 1-.... AI ... Unotock Solo, AI-.
euHable far one eduH. 814-441chWa
•
$7.80
wk.
Aocllnor
•
$1
Oct21
hm
0331.
of ....
~. a.onooton,W.YL ttllO. u.s. 50 Wool, 1 milo wit. ~OW CASH PRICIEI
..... Wcdr 1 1 0.. 21 1:00
OomorollloUIIo-OM. bedroom p,.. apt, 304- 10% oft lor OMIL C... l o Kuwl,
114-tlt • •
171-1110.
anllabta. Open Mori•.W. I Lm. CIIt
~
Itt• l!llsra. c.tlle ...,..
p.rn.
to 0
Sun. 12 . - t o I p.m. onytlmo.
loci
oftir
Cp.m, " - , up 10 4p.trL
Ono bodroorn t- lloctrfc In 01~j
1U.
Wad lloo -~- l'or lnlormollon
Pomeroy,
....
,
and t1'81h
pickup !no. _ . , _ ,. w..hlr 1120; d.,_ Stoo;
114-11124322 orl14._ 31131.
Ploollc
I (11111 Prtao) $10.
qulrocf. 814-VI2-.
rofrlg-oro $150; ra..... $150;
1to1. E~ptrM - · , _ _ 64
Grain
dllh wnhoro S40; hlollna
A~
Grande,
2br,
MA~~
=-~~~~~~~
11ovoo
MOl
·
Dolborl
·
,.~r~gom.,. lumlohocf. No polo.
llhtll _ , $1. Hor $1.21. Rcllo
Uood Appll~""!'t. Porch at.
DopOIII. ldoal lor otudonto •
$11. 1101- Fonn&lt; Rt. Sl,
KIAIUQI, 11~473.
coupfo. 114 441 IOSI.
Pllnr,
- H O I •.
Walhor WN~pool, till; Doyw
Bauoro bolll of hoy $1.00. Smol tum. · oultoblo tor 1
RCA Com Canflr.$500. a..- ll'lhU7I.
or2.l14-1464331.
tor
1100.-Up!llalf!1 unturnlahld apt. C.r· now, $1 ; Ho1 Polt!.
olmontl,
lllto
now,
1171;
oloo
•
..,
.,..... No pMe, lnquiN at 300
Inch llonaa ...-. 1110; Eloo.
Tr3nsport3tlon
~ourth AYL
'-'w:.:omon=.:.:-.::...u_._---,b-io_room_ Ringo 30lnch,- $110; Eloc. SUrpl.., """"· - . Ringo 30 lnclo, ...... clothing.
to otooro _
..., of
71 Autos for Sale
Hko
.........
~:r·."Unofl"
.....11o11Nd.
or 10111.-. .
opt. obllo Homo on In lllu, $1111;
rvlllo'o.
lat.
U.UJI.
Golllpolla oroo oliO -Ina o~ almond
$1
Rofrtgorol«
-. 2 · Big block
.... -· lordablo houolng 114 UUIIII, FJOTt frM, HI,.,.. Gold, . .i Did
Co. 1'AI.
r1. Zf,
llol,- I 1101.
til 1171
engine. 114 4301. .
bot-e-o or loovo m o Rofolgototor- b y - - r I:OOPII.J04-27HIII.
, ... "1150; lklllfll Atlolloric:n,
1171 a• o.eta "U, pa. pb,
- l i e , olr, pw, cruoloOif ....
AIYor Ad.-114-446-7311,
Furnished
45

mot•J•l

II!IVIdeoCountry

-ion.-

KlngOI._CIOIIIWOIId .. OIN.

:=~\omi;'r,l:!, ~

(B)Ch..,.
9 Miami Vice Little Prince

chrome ..._.., AT,
A - duol lonko, oldlng nor
w i -1 ••C:.'!t. 17,000 inllol,
$2,-. ...-110-1731.

Holiond sez o r t - III"'!J ., . . Suzuki Ouacf Run-, high
Holllnd I ft. Hay Bind, A&lt;; &amp; ronge, • - pockoge, 011· ,
z rw no Ull pllntor, John o,ore rocka. $12....ftor • p.m. 114:114 " " - with 2 24111S3
-Allgood
1 - Vamohl VZ 10, $125. 114m.t211.
HI IDI1.
-

-plplor . .o.CoNI14-Mf:
21011-1:00 p.m.

Em!"'"' . . . ..

11110 Chov holt ton 4114, -VI,

t~

••

Send lor your ~oslro-brapn pre&lt;llcllons
today. Mall.$1to Astro-Grapll, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland ,
OH 44101·3428. Be sure to stale your
zodiac sign .
8AGmAIIIUI(Ntw. D-Dec.21}Aperson you thought wu out ol your league
might propooe an lnlerasllng )olnl venlure wtlh you today. II c:ould be a step
up to lhe big time.
CAPIIICOIIH (Dec • . 22-.lan. 11) You
have the ability today to make advantlgeoua agroemenls, provided you're
prepared co -IIIII lhe other guy lares
u well u you do.
AQUAIIIUI (.lin. 20-Fft. 11) Flow with

-. =

aware of lis parameoers, you should do
extremely well. Let your common sense
guide you tn chancy mailers. ·
GEMINI (MIJ 21-.lune 20) Things have
a way ol lfOfklng out lo your expecla·
tlonsloday, so don't be alrald t o vate your slghls a bll higher than usual.
Even 11 you lallllhorl, whlch len'l lllcely,
you' lllllll come out ahead.
CANCIII (olune 21-.luly 22) All work
and no ploy 11 a boring lormulo designed to 111&lt;1 lhe zing oui ol lila. Sal
aside your 1ooll early lodly end partlclpall In actlilltlea you find lun.
LEO (.luiJ 11-Auf. 22) Luck continues
to favor you agaln today where your

lneleod ol r-Ing mat- - · are concerned.
change.
_ In condltiOnl work to Somelhlng good could develop lor you
your lfttlmlte Denlllt, _.the ones tllrOUQh a Cfilln ol-fsalllln motton
by autlkllllactan.
which WOII'I be IIIII~ you.
~I 1M. B IIINh 20) U18 the VIIIGO (Aig, • ltpt. •1 FOCUI your
11oft llllloday 1111 illlllatlon whore you e11ort1 and ltlentlon ali-priority IUul8
have 101111thlng IUbatlllltllll to gain. n today, . , _ ... u-.nu.-!NI
could ·~ to be counterproduetiW If , look 1111 ~1. Tl*lk poiiUve
~ getloo pu8hy.
and play to win.
- S (MINh 21·Aprll11) Actlvltlea ~CIIapt.• -.ll)lnOtHtijNIIUve
w11tc11 dO not Improve your 1111torta1 po- § E o d o y you • " ' " the
s111on lhOtlld not be permitted to tllte lfllllll'
yet you may not r1111a n 111
lime INlay from thole 11181 do. Altocale the time.
, your opponenla will
yourlllfortltolllernonoymll&lt;oratoday. and this
give you a I:Onlldlrable
TAUIIUIIA!Ifll:lll i11a1 II) Luck hn Ill .plyctoologlcal edge.
llmllllllonlloday and I I long • you .,.

-

~

.

'

\'

Susannah 90;85 into labOr.

!hoo~~ews

(J) Atlllricl'o Cen1Ury
America makes Its debut on
the stage ol world power.
(1 :00}
t1ll •IJ2)1olancl Son ,t,
patient ol Daniel's becomes
a center ol conlroversy. Q
18 «ll CrtmeW1tch Tonlgl1t
Ol Evening Newa
10:05 (I) MOVIE: Coog1n'1 Bluff
IR) (2:00)
10:30 IZl Fonm
18 «ll New Twilight Zon•
411 George Jonas: Thtl Uving
Lagend Country music
lagend George Jones
pertorms many ol his classic
hils Including He Stopped
Lovin' Her Today, lrom . ·
O~ando, Ftorida. (1 :00)

a CJ&gt;

(l) .........

1'be Ur".clblrgh

C.OII Edwin Newman hOSts
lhla eX1mln11ion ot the
historic kidnapping, which
features lntarvlews with
people who lOok part In lhe
trtve~llaali9n and trial . 11:00)
• «ll ArMnlo - (1 :00)
'

lllllonerlltoe

!11N1wi!M
i1J llilllml VIce French Twist
SleriO.
11:30()) . . . . . .
• (J) Ill TonlgiiiiiiOW

ll=i~ll~

III .......... J ......

Madnul (Pit Of 21
• Croolt .. ChiH
12:00 ()) MOVII: Fallow The lull
(2:00)

'

NORTH

..

11-!4-11

.KJ

•us

Although a balanced hand is not idefor competing over an opponent's .
opening bid, the West cards looked
better with the A-Q of heartl over the
heart bidder. So West doubled lor
takeout. That led to a normal pariscore battle, with South bidding three
bearls oyer two spades. A_defensive
mistake gave declarer. a chance to
mate nine tricks, but be mulled ot.
On the opening lead, declarer
played dummy's club jack, covered by
the queen aod ace. A spade was led lo
dummy's kiD&amp;- (U West bad not beld
the ace, he mlgbt bave led a spade.)
Wben another spade was played, West
won the ace aod played another club.
King of clube aod a ruff were followed
by a spade ruff. South now led a heart.
West took the A-Q 111111 then got off
lead with another clilb. Eventually de,
clarer bad to lead away from the king
of diamonds, IOiin1 two t~ks and the
contract.
Declarer could have succeeded af·
ter the x : : f if be bad played the
jack of
from dummy and let
it ride. Even if that lost to the queen,
declarer collld stlll lead the killg of
hearts from bis baud with aome slight
clla~ that be might smother tbe sin·

.KJ4

tJI0982

EAST

WEST
• A 10 2

.QHIS

•z

.AQ4
tA75

• Ql 3
.Q732

.10986

•

SOUTH

•us

.KJJ098S
tK4
•As

Vulnerable: East-Wesl
Dealer: East
West

Nor*

Obi.
All pass
Opening

Eul

z• z•Pau

le.ad: + 10

L-------:---:--:-1. ·
gletoo queen of trump&amp; in either de- '·
fender's band.
':
And the defensive mistake that gave ·
declarer this chance? It was West's_ :
wlmolng the second spade. East llbould
win thai trick with bis queen aod lead _
a trump. West would take tile A-Q aod. :
IIIIOtber, 1nd declarer would never .,.,_ joy a spade ruff.

-·

CROSSWORD
lty lHOMAS ,JOS",H
ACROSS
.4 Roman
1 Diplomat's · foimlaln
asset
5 Ma~t&gt;made
5 Denture
8 Biography ·
10 "The 7 Black
· PurP,Je"
cuckoo
(1985 film} I Thrice
t1 Ship
(lal.}
or plane
I Before
12 Mexican 10 Summit
Yntarday'l Anabrick
11 Hgt.
13 Blazing ·17 Barra- 23 Egg-shaped 37 Like
summRr
14 Soft drink
cuds
25 Libertine
drinks
t 5 Porcelain 18 lnlanl
27 Egyplian
38 Apiece
11 Unem ·
city
ilem
39 Athlete's
17 River mud
played 30 Hairdo
orgn.
18 Somewhat 20 Adolescent gadget
40
Lawyer's
21 Drop
21 Piece
34 Pretend
degree
24 Harangue
of land 35 By nalur!!
41
Grassland
28 Glandular 22 Italian
38 Golfer.
43 Regrel
organ
river
Steve _, ...
28 Heavy rope
,......,.,_..,,.......~~-.
29 Spell·
binder

31 Acule
32 Sesame

..,.
..,'
\

.·
. ·•

'·

..

·

' '

.
.
'.

"

_3 3 Buyers·
evenI
35- noire

'

36 Dilly
39 Allocale
42Tinge
44 Vigllanl
45 External
46 Turkish
city
47 Penury
DOWN
1 Commotion i,.,.+- J--1--~-2 Droopin!l
3 Small
horse
~-,_..J...--L...JL.-.L-...J
llAIJ.\' (ltVMOQU(Jfts -llerc~'s how 111 w•,rk il:

10124

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFEI.LOW
One tetter stands for another. In this sample 1\ is usrd

9 eiiZ

1=~--

UNSCRAMBlE FORI
ANSWER
.

By Jame1 Jacoby

11 :DO(]) Bebnan

• &lt;JJ rn
llJl Newa

A
V

I' I, I' Is I' I' 1· I' I . ..
III II I I II .

BRIDGE

•o

vans a 4 wo·s

PRINT NUMBHED I'
•
•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
•• ·"
Beaker- PauSB - Goos9 - Invent- SNEAKERS
My sister !)egan Wilking amile a day in order lo lose
wei~. Discouraged, she sighed, "I've only lost ~
inches, and that was off the bottom of my SNEAKERS.

~~m
01
f'ortuneC llJl ID I!] Nlgill Coun I;J
«&lt;l Mone,Une

1101 410 ...... blka,
wlllel-; only l'UO mlioo, S811.
. . . .711-1731.
.

Fumlohod lpll1mo;:;:~ 1221.
UtotL lSI
Qal.

•llr

t--

11110 '- - 114 ,._,
.....
"'"""'..-rO
..!. - dlf....
-ror
-rl,
manuro . . . . - . $4HO. OWnor

Allco

-~~-·All-·
~=·AI:-ar ~r= -.011.1-.aT-.

14W II r l:lrocm apt. A llovlna In Solol Now brOI• '*.It
1-lwo bod100111 ap1. Uplown ..._ 'M.t., .... VCR-.;;,·.;;-;;
locollwl, llko ~•- ooollancao ...tng . lniCihiM.
lliOR*•
furnlohod.....11&gt;&lt;11114;
clolhM, II• f:10, """" - .
Fum. Effk:loncy $141 Ulllltloo aizt •10 Novlll, caakbnllt,
.... ...... both. 007 Socond, chlthno boob, A_, - .
Galllpollo, 114 441 4411 oftor kitchen ware, tOMtit' owen. 114441.,639 llon-Frt oltor llpJto.
lp.nL
w..Undlanrthne.
FumiehM a~ment, 1br, 1115.
llultohln Fumlt...
Ulllltloo pd. Shoro both. 701 50 ..a
-pol I poet lnltolotl,
Fourth CIIWpola. IU t• U11 MH.
Whllo
oupplloo loot. 114aft•Tp.m.
441·7444.

-

-

1044.

1Wo trallor opo-, Aouto Ono 1yr. old hall ... lumoc:o, IIUIIPilo. lltiN nloe. see 2412 or ....,..374.
Lfcuot Road on right, _.75- 100,000 II'IU dooin flow, 114- t1H.I14·•1'-.
3 11011-, fotol -ric. Oor Houoo ond lrollor In Pamoror I':•:,..:·=======J.:4441:::-117=4.======~ AICC -.
' 11,. 1 Do• _, .~nl
. NI114-1418roodwoy, llldd-. 014-112- 10&lt; ronl. 114-V12-3122 ovonlngo. 1-

1150 up or 114-012-1754 after H - for Nnt 2327 112 lincoln
1:00.
A.., $1~r month, raforon.
0 ho...nt.. loto by ownor. -lOCI
• _.70-3111.
otllllr lncoma. Houoolor roroi. $100-......
$10,000. Sorlouo In-tor• only. $100 ofopollt. 114-1112..117.
21W15-3152.

-L..••,_Hat
c.m - · _ ,

:110 JD o-, ..., blodo, ~""!~
cond. lltody to wOriL 114'441-

Dlnn I chair lor ulo. 110 lor

. , 11u1 ...,_. laEFllll• •

as:

lor

Eioo1rlo 11ft oncl NCIIM IIIO.Ntw.l14-et2-IIU.

....... 304

'

EARN -

lloatrlo- ...... ....
3:M~I, I 1ft longlh. 114-4411-

T-. c.h pallll. Old luml&amp;n
cublllrde.
......
orilnlal,
t111plng roome with or without pelntlnglt. IOJII, or en11re Illite
UM of connunlty kitchen. call 00111at 104ol21-3271, or
Aoody br 2nd o f - - · 114- :t04..22-6104.
m.allof.

Real Estate

- · 1)--IOOOExt. a.
101. .
EARll IIOIIEY

-

4023;

lfoopl"!! noomo wHh oOoldng.
Al10 tr1ller epao.. All hook.upt.
call lftw 2:00 p.m., 304-7731111, MalOn WV.

EAIIN IIOIIEY A Crt - 1

81 Fann Equipment

814-446-7444.

er..t llotol. Collt1...-TSN.

3641 aftor 6:00 Pll.

7~

- . llrldor llodo, dol,~- ...
114--

11180 Clorton-v.Gu 1MO,
$5,000. 304-675-7842 doyo,
Evonlngo, 014-1411-t347.
Park 14170
2 bedroom,

&amp; I. ,;estock

A

'1;11' lEITERS

. I ! ] Thtee'l Company
(B) WKAP In Cincinnati
9 H•·Mon
6:35 (I) Andy Grlfftlh
7:D0 (Jl Our HOUH
D &lt;Jl PM Magozlne
I]J
W 0 (J) Current Affair
IZl (J) MacNeil/Lehrer
NewaHour (1:00)
.

For Solo: 1177 112 lon ChoyY
Truolt, 414, :110, 4 oprL t140CI.
.14•141 .1003

rs

llt12 corpot,~; rolf Clrpol $4 I
yonl I up; - - FUmlltn

••c

=-

1

131 . .

Avolloblo Nov. 1o1. $250/mo.
014-4*-1157 oftor 7p.l0. 1-.. Couch, extr•lona. 2 ~. toot
4501 alii tor Larry.
•Dill, DalilA. ~71-213 bedroom untumle,.,_. apl County Appllo- Inc. 0oot1
locolld- Clinic of WV. 114- . - opptw-, T.V. ooto. ODin
4441-61• tor""'"' lntormo-.
I Lm. to I p.m. llon ..a.t. 6144441·1".!,, 027 3nl. Ave. Qal.
3 room ond both opl, -.7&amp;- Apollo, uro

~727.

H T' ~uppl

701.

- · 114-140-3341.
0000 USED APPLIANCES

mobl._ homo,
fireplace, IXC cond, 30~

- . ... 114-

r

building wlrocf lor olooitlro...CA1
hu bMrl . .11 ..kin care of 111a SO W. opt. 2 br., 1 both, prlvato
I• In vtty good condltlon...call' encao.d .,.tlo. C... lo
on.p.m. 114-2454211. Sot , _ , . oto,. &amp; ohopplna ..,_
up ol OtaD Crllllt llobllo Homo fer,
Wll•, •-.~.. _ trMh
Por1L
puavld•d. $2151mo. Qll 114-

11180 Sloo!Wood

114-74W415.
~171.

1171 Bawlow mobllo homo...3
br, 1 I lt.lllolho. Woodbumor In
trYing room, (011111 ot..o) pluo
MKfrlc hNII Hoo - .

2br 11a1t duploo, 1"'11lolf lur·
nieh.d,
neighborhood
Rd.

1;J

SportaC-· .

1 IIYing room couch 1100, 4
2 lA oponmont, totll - · llvlna 100111 cholto, $21 liCit,
- - I truh pold. 114-4411- 014-446-2501 . ·
:11140.
4 . . - wllho .... gold ......,
bed .... Lib n.w ......._and
ltoo oprlngo. 11310 nnn. 114-112·

,,oo

~- brlflo ......
....... hottelhokl allo HNing.
..- -

117e 14170 Elcono ar, good
ccnd, 014-200·15211 or 114-21111n.

oldorlr lldr no - " "' coro
plo- atoto uklng n~rm datad lnakle. v.ry nice.
onc1 roltooocoo 1n nm tot· Dock on front. 1 Iorge .,..ol
o1

Situation
=

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1173 .........., 12d0 2111', 12500

I

""'*
.-Col whh
-

rp.m.

m....... rnowid tooltld on un..

lrVIclnlty

...

+M..t411 after

2 lA I P I - ctuola,

(J) ABC Newo

e

-r

fumlohOII.I14-44&amp;--.

ICCOflllnCI ll&gt;!lllcotlonD

-..z:30p.nL

8

IZlllodJEiectrlc
9
il2l CIS Newa 1;J

ldlchon, -..tly

-

P-,

ALL Yonl Soloo llo Pold In
DEADtiiiE: 2:00 ......
t h o . , - " " ' ld lo to .....
~2:00p.m.
Frldot: llonclay Ollltlon • 2:00
p.m. Sllunlly.
.

!':'-L 1119'

- · $227 me. 114 U&amp;loU
Unlumlthod - · ,..., Rodnoy
YllioQO II. 1250"Roll,.._, 014-

lor
lull &amp;In .....
-·
......
aiY
. --. LMobl'o
Plua,
lilvw 11r1e1g1
Oolllpalll,
11•.m.-4p.ln.

Yard Sale

cOIIoge, corpot1 olr

... .... q. No - ·
Tafel iillctric~ c.N 114 441162'7

E.O.E.

7

ar.

•11J I!]
"""'
Ortflllh
World
Tod8y
·
IHl Charlet In Chlrge
!!)Jam
11!1 Arnericln Mapzlne
6:05 (I) Beverty HIUbllllea
6:30 e (Jl llJ) NBC Nlglrtty Newl

~ Sportalook (0:30)

condttlon 150' lof, 5 mlle. rrom
Golllpollt. OWnor flnoncoL $500,

law to l«m f0&lt;1r olmpll WO&lt;ds.

•

• IZl R 1 - The multi oro
diiUIIOUI when Beezus
pays lor ~er own salon
.haircut,
(J) Mlth L.e1mlng Hour

(J)

._::1br:.:,=::,-:-,IO::/mo..,.--pl-:-uo--:llop:--.-ut:::ll:::ltloo-=Nt
ldlch«&lt;
WlatOYI,
•
..- o r, no ":~le- r ¥low,
DlflroiA,._014-11121.

Small

tllo
bt·

I]) leel Olllttt... Maglltne

Apanment
for Rent

Conlor 1111 Jockoon PIIIO, 014-.7112, Conlacl tho D.D.N.

Roorrongo !otters of
0 four
~erambled words

Ill·=

~-I;J(J)
llJ) Newa

coli-~

18R 101fum. opt. Ringo I rolrtg.

31

PUUUI

I:DO (]) Hll'llcll. . And

Old "V", Ill. 2 I 12, lflor 1:00

t'=========T=========1
~id.'r::.'1 ".to~!;~
==~- m
HelpWsntecl
HomeaforSaiQ
:;ra:""

1.oo1-

TUES.. OCT. 24

TUTUILT

EVI!NING

,_

We now hive • nklll 811ectlon of
loto ovolloblo. Quill C!'Nit
llobllo Homo Comm...,ny, lor lno
lormotlon. 014445-1314 ofter
3:30p.m.

"It's a triumphant wedding
of two current trends

-'"-liCk_-.

s-.l'S-2241.
ou1 R

... .

.....,~

Lostlrfound

~.oo~•

.
I
'

W.lnule to alve ••r. 'You pick.
1144123111.
- .
M·tnn Av.t,glvo
Pt "Pl
25"-

J
-~

.-

.......

llobllo - , I Ill'., -

\

_
D~l1sou
0 _
Pll. ._
. . to _p
EIIIDlrlo

---- ~·-­10
t1norl1~

71 Autos for Salt

=:..""t.:'\.:J
..-..... CeN ,,,, .. att.

............
-of-..,_
JM,

lbro nloe 14rnl ar, •IIIIIMeY

r. ........

24, 1989
.

LAFF-A-DAY

~

1111441.
- - 111
- ..

Tuaedlv. October

Pomaov Mi«&lt;aport, Ohio

lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single lettrrs,
apostrophes, the length and lonnation ol thc words arP all
hints. Each day the code letters are different .

CRVPTOQOOTE

11·24

v

AQLB

NVK :

'

"BZBTK

QVIVZB

GVN

EBVTC

DYQ

WVQC

JATQ

VQ

VTVNEDYQ
WAZRN

GEBIERT .

IE B T 8

AT

EVN
EB

Q A I . ''

· - IEADVN
OVILE
Yu••••••'• C.;pb,a...t WE IX&gt;N'T LIKE TO
BACK UP, BUT WE HAD RAlHER BACK UP THAN
BACK DOWN. - aJIJ.EN HIGHTOWER
~ 19119 Kin!! Feaourn Syndicale. Inc

.

..,

..•.. '

�•
Tuesday, October 24. 1989

,...
· --I.ocal news briefs---. Father....
Middleport Council session brief
AD hlvltatloa to tiM! Mef&amp;l Collaty PubliC Ubrary dediCation
at 1:30 p.m. 011 Svaday, Nov. 5, was rud at Moaday's niJht
meetlag of Middleport Vtllqe Council.
· It was &amp;epca1ed clurtiq' tbe brief meetlill by Middleport Mayor
lfotOnaa that tile aaaeutioa proeeclurel are "mov!Dialoal."
He Mid tlaat once the Nelp Couaty Board of County
Commlllloilen atYe their ftaal q~proval on tiM! clellaed area,
tbell tbe vlllaae will proceed with the annexationordlaance. The
area IIMIM!d II from the vlllllp' s south corporation lbnl~o
belc. tile -•ae laaoon, all PfOpertles oq the Ohio River lldfllt
State Route 7.
TriCk or treat nllht was 1111D aniiOilllced for Moaday night
from 6 to 7 p.m. It was suge~ted that residents who want to
participate Ia that activity tum on their porch lllhts. The siren
will sound to belin and end triCk or treat.
Attendllll were Mayor Hoffman, Couacll members Paul
Gerard, Robert Gilmore. Dewey Horton, Jack Satterfield, and
William Walters, and Clerk·Treasurer Jon Buck.
·

No one hurt in two mishaps
The Gallla-Melp Post of the State Highway Patrol
lavestlgated two accidents Moaday In MeiiS County. No one
was lajured. There was one citation.
No one was cited In a two car collision at 4:54p.m. Monday on
CR 31, 2.5 miles north of CR. 28.
Troopers said a 1974 Ford Torino driven by Denise A. Miller,
32. Portland, and a 1983 Ford Escort, driven by Jerry L.
Hayman, 16, Portland, sideswiped on a curve. Minor damage
was done to the Miller car and moderate to the Hayman vehicle.
There was lleavy damage to a 1989 Ford Escort In an accident
at 11:15 a.m. Monday on qt. 12, 0.2 of a mile east of TR. 353.,
Troopers said Catherine C. White, 30, Pomeroy,lost control·
on a curve. The vehicle went off one side the road, then the other
and overturned Into a ditch. Damage was heavy. ·
The patrol cl~ White for failure to maintain control.

Squat,ls have 3 Monday calls
Meils County Emergency Medical Services reports three
calls answered on Monday.
Syracuse at 11:55 ·a.m. was called to Five Points for Don
Dalley to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 4:24p.m., Middleport went to State Route 7for Chris Darst
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy was called at 9: 28 p.m. to Willow Creek Road for
Flora Jeffers who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Soil suroey field work to end
The Meigs County SoD Survey will mark the end of field work
wltb a last acre ceremony on Thursday at 10 a.m. The last acre
will be mapped at Portland Indian Mound State Park,located on
State Route ·124 at Portland. The public Is cordially Invited to
at lend, says Gordon Gilmore, Melp COunty SoD Survey team
member.

.'

State Issue II meeting Thursday

Melp Enatneer Philip Roberts has announced that all
: · t0W115blp trustees and village officials In the county are Invited
! to li meetlnj Thursday evening at the courthouse In Pomeroy
' where the State ISsue II program will be updated. The meeting
will start at 7 p.m. and Roberts will be explalnlag the many
chaqes Ia the State Issue II program for tbe 1990 grantiDI
process. Bootlets of Instructions and necessary forma for 1990
will be distributed.
.

------Area deaths.-Jolm Vroman
. Several relatives traveled to
London Thursday tor the
funeral aervices of Jerome Lee
Dials, 37, who died Oct. 16 at the
Toledo Medical College of Ohio.
Mr. Dials, married to -- the
former Breada Sayre of-Pomeroy, died as the result of an .
apparent Infection following
l)eart transplant surgery In
August.
: Besides bls wife, he Is survived
lly three daughters. Melinda,
Janet, and Jllllan, all at home, a
son. Jerry Lee. at home, his
father and stepmother, Arthur
8nd Adria Dlala of New London, a
ltater, Lora Jean McGhee, WakelfWI, and a brother. Chuck,
Penefleld. He was preceded In
taeath by llts mother, Sherry, and
a brother, Ru-IL
• Going from here for the aervl·
~ were the aunts and uncles of
Mrs. Dials, Marilyn and Jerry
Powell, Rac:lne; June and GetCJie Kallifia, Syracuse, and
Ruby Burnside, Pomeroy.
A truck driver, Mr. Dials had
the heart transplant In August
when Ills old heart, only 10
percent functlo ..l, was attacked
by a virus and an emergency
iltuatlon existed. He reportedly
was xec:uperatlilg sattsfactorlly
until ahollt a· month ago when he
was striCken by the Infection.
~ew

John C. Vroman, 81, Middleport, died Modnay at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Born on Jan. .19, 1909 at
Parkersburg, he was the son of
the late Frank and Grace Mason
Vroman. Hewasaretlredtooldle
maker at 1m perlal Electric, and
a member of the Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department.
He Is survived by two sons and
daugbers-ID-law, . Charlee and
Dee Vroman, Belpre; and John
and Judy Vroman, Columbus; a
grandson and his wife; Jotui H.
and Melanie Vroman, COlumbus,
a granddaughter and her husband, Mary and Mike Hapney,
Little Hocklill, two grandsons,
Mark Vroman, Costa Mesa,
Calif. and Jimmy Vroman, Columbus, and a granddaurhter,
Julie Vroman, Columbus; two
great·grandchlklren, Meltssa
and Mark Hapney, Utile Hock·
lng, and a niece, Sandy LuckeydoG, Richmond, Va.
He was preceded In by his wife
Gladys Vroman In 1973.
•
Graveside services will be held
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the
Riverview Cemetery with tbe
Rev. Harvey Rllldfllesc:h official·
lng. Friends may call at the
Rawllngs-Coats-Ftsber Funeral
Home Ia Middleport from 6 to 9
p.m. Tuesday.

--------Annoonce~n~-------llaiiNeell party
: The Basban Firemen's Ladles
Auxiliary will have a halloween
party Moaday from 6 to 8 p.m. at
the Buhan firehouse. Tile party
II for children from the Rainbow
Ridge, Keno, Bashan and Eagle
Rldae areas.

...........

The Rev. Steve Sklllett will
ipeak at the Calvary Plllrlm
Cbapel on State Route 143 WedDelday at 7:30 p.m. The Rev.
Vlctar Rolllh, pastor, lnvltea the
public to atll!nd.

rro
... .,.. r.r '"'
: The. Mkldleport Elemetnsry

fTO wlll have a

fall carnival at

tile ~c:bool on Nov. 4 trom2 to5: 30

p.m. In conJunction wltb that
tbel'e will be a craft bazaar and
epac.'es are for sale at ~ each.
~ lateteatect Ia rnervina
..,.ee li alllcl to call!ll2-711li or
- - IIebe Moaday.

.........

Past Matera' nl&amp;ht wUl be
• tn'Ed at tbe Middleport
J..odpJia,F.aadA.M.Frldayat
7:30 p.m. There wt1l be a
COI'IIIJread and bean dinner at
1:30p.m. follolll'l!d by worktn tbe

J '

master maste11degree. Members
of craft teams are asked to
atlend. Any member want111 to
take part are asked to call Jtm
Hill at 912-'1038 or 992-21157. All
Masons are urged to attend.

.. ,......

A haunted ho~~~e Is betna held
In the I8Jile building as the
LangsiiUie Post Office and will
continue to operate throurh Oct.
31 from 6 to 9 p.m. Numerous
tickets have been gt\leli to
cburchea and ~~:boola of the
county. and can be purchased at
the door, acoordtq to Barbara
Varney wbo prepared the
haunted boule.

..........

A cburch revival Will be held at
the South Betbel Cbureh 011 Silwr
Rldp Road lOcated about oae
mile west of Eastern Hlahllebool
Friday, S.tarday and IIUIIday at
7 p.m. The evaaplllt Will be Bud
Hatfield. IluaDe Sydenstrlcller.
pastor, lnvlta the publk:.
T.iDitla+ ,.,.
Tbe Melp Local Sellool DIJ·
trlrt IINrd Ill Education will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. In tile
board's meetlna roam.
I

n-:un"':'uec~_fr_om..,;pa;.,.,ge:..._1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

-eo-:·
he went IDald&amp; to Inquire tram
emptoyeee If anyone had been
there loo!rlaa for him. In the
courae ot tiM! converaatton, he
told them what wtil bappenlill;
that he was betq reunited with a
dauglltrr hebadn'taeenslncealle
was a baby.
Wheil Kimes finally arrived,
Flnkellblader knew It was ber
before she even aot out of tbe car
..,•• becaute lhe Memed so ner·
vous." And that was. how · they
met. In a parking lot with "the
people from the service· station
all stan~IDI In front of the
window watching," they lauah.
From Belpre they drove home
to Racine where Kimes' family
members were anxiously awaltlng their arrival. ''They were all
there walttna." she says. "We
had four generations Ia the
hOuse.''
Flnkenblader, now a widower,
met grandaons and great grand·
sons and a great &amp;randdauahter
he never knew he bad. • 'I have to
look up at every one of my
grandsons," he says proudly.
And one grandson who Is In the
Air Force, was leavlll for Korea
on Monday. "Dad niade It 1ust In
time to see him." aays Kimes
wltb a smile.
. "Between laughing and crying
and just looklilg at each other,"
says Kimes, "It was dltflcuh to
talk.,

Bur after the Initial shock
finally wore off, father and
daughter began to really get
acquainted. Now he's dad to her
and grandpa to her children. She
knows now that she has half
brothers and slllters and that all
of them have famWei. "We
fiiUred out that altogether, there
are 19 grandchildren and five
great grandchildren," Kimes
says. "And he has a granddaughter up north who looka just like
his great granddaughter down
here. It was after 3 a.m. on
Monday before we flaally went to
bed," she laughs.
Both father and dauahter also
took a day off from work so they
could spend more time together
before dad's return to Orrvi)Je.
Finkenbinder says he always
wondered about his Utile daughter. The last time he actually saw
her was when she was three and .

Meigs ...
Continued from page 1
support the mental health levy
whlc:h It passed, will enable her
agency to provide additional
support for the frail elderly. With
tile,.. . . . ot U..lew1. a4dttlonal servlc:t!ll could be provided
by the Mella County Senior
Cltliens Center, Thomas said. ·
Frank Cleland, a Melp County
membel-of the Hlpway Users
Committee of the Southeastern
Ohio Regional 'Developmeni
Council, reportecl that efforts are
currently underway by the Route
33-Route 124 Corridor Committee to 11pdate the Impact report of
the proposed corridor road on
business trom Lane: aster, Logan,
Athens, Melp County and the
Ravenswood, W.Va. areas. The
111$1 study was Completed In 19114.
Cleland also reported that
pressure for a public bearing
which Is to be be held Nov. 1 at 7
p.m. at the MeiiS Senior Citizens
Center, may have come from this
area group.
The Reatonal Plannlag Commlsalon voted to support the
update of thta business study.
Yesterday's meetiDa was conducted by Regional Planning
COmmission President Fred Hoffman, with Orion Roush, fanner
president, as secretary. ·

one-half, althourh Kimes has no
memory ol ever seeing her
father. But after a few years
pasaed "I had no way of fladlng
her/' Finkenbinder says. "The
lull knew of her, her name was
Wlllte." He aever bn&amp;glned that

she'would find 111m, or even want
to find him, "especially after
almost 50 years."
But find him shedld. ''Andnow
there'll be a tot more weekends
and holidays together," Kimes
states emphatically, as father

and daughter try to c&amp;tch up on
all the years missed.
"''m not resentlul of the
missed years," Kimes Is quick to
explain, "but I am regget!ul. I
guess It was just meantto be this
way."

Vol.40, No.119 M
Copyrlghttd 1989

4962.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$218,374.50, with a payoff due of
$86,000.

DENTIS'ntY EXPLAINED - Dends&amp;ry used

young woman -

Stocks

Am Electric Power ............. 30%
AT&amp;T ................................. 42%
Ashland 011 ........................37',(,
Bob Evans ..................... ..... 13*
Charm lag Shoppes ........... ... 12*
City Holding Co.......... ........15*
Federal Mogul ....................20*
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 45*
Heck:s ............. .... ................ 6¥s
Key Centurion .................... 14~
Lands' End .................... ..... 26~
Umlted Inc ................ .. ...... 35~
Multimedia Inc: .............. ...... 95
Rax Restaurants ............. ..... 2*
Robbins&amp;: Myers ................ 13*
Shoney's Inc....................... 10~
Wendy's Inti........................ 5~
Worthlagton Ind .......... ........ 23*
(Aiblalld Oil IDc.'s fourlhquarler lola S.'71/lllare after
cbarce vs. aet Sl.l8. Federal
Mopl's net S.Zifllhare va. S.U.
GoodJoear TAR's thlnl-q~~&amp;rler
neiSI.IS/IIIare vs. Sl.ll.)

A IJ,APPY DAY FO~ SEO- Governor Richard
Cele11te viSited Gallipolis yesterday to announce
the commitment of S8U million to relocate US
Route 31. With lhe governor are Stale Rep. Mary

· OPEN YOUQ
1990 CHQI~TMA~ CLUB
AND RECEIVE A
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Have

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Light the way for your holiday
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CHQI&lt;£&gt;TMA6 CLUB
Give yopr home a festive glow with our
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310 AND

Hospital news

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I

PEOPLES ,BANK

Marrlap lice- have been
llaued Ia tiM! Melp County
Probate Court to Michael Allell
n1111, 30, Rullud, and Teresa
Renee WlldealliUth, 30, PiJme..
roy; aadRodileyDeleWrla'llt,41,
Rutland, and Andrea Margaret
Enrllbt. 35, RuUand.
-~

....

YOU MAKE 49 PAYMENT&amp;.,
AND THE 5orn I&amp; ON U&amp;l

Vt!MnuMemerlal
Monday aclmtallona - Ann
Wllllama, Clifton, W.Va.; Benny
Spesn, Syracuse; . Mary Olivia
Page, Lanpvtlle.
Monday dllcharpl -Mildred
Fultz, Detn Smith, Lovle Watson, John Metqer.

Your Good Neighbor Bank
MASON
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- --·-··-,.,

POINT PLEASANT
675-1121

By LEE ANN WELCH
single pro)!!Ct on the drawing
OVP News Start
board, at an estimated cost of
Relocation ol ..US Route 35 $61.2 million. .
"This lsaglantstep,butnotthe
through GaiUa County should be
the economic development boost end of our 'l!!!l~- f.9_r Southeast
'I;!Jt'( l'jllil bas.IIHIIId fOr. ~s~• --.OIIkl' hlldl~-;:wnl!'• !Gill"' a
ac:cordiJII to a number "of state crowdofmorethan lOOgathered
on the parking lot of Woodland
and locat offiCials.
''Thls will open to way to Centers.
' ·
economic development Into the
'"I'he road to economic recovnext century," State Sen. Jan ery (In Southeast Ohio) must be
MlchaeV Long said yesterday. paved and four lanes," Long said
Long and other state officials to the cheers of those attE-nding.
were In Gallipolis with ~v.
CommunltyimprovementCor·
Richard Celeste lo announce the poratlon Director Jack Fowler
project to local reskiE!nts.
said an Improved highway sysOn Monday, Celeste an· tem wlll help attract light Indus- ,
n~~nced nearly 30 highway protry to this area. Many companies
)eels statewide to be funded from have expressed Interest in locatthe additional 5.2 cent per gallon lng here In the past, Fowler said,
gasoline tax, approved by the but the problem was the transportatlon system.
legislatW'e In Ju iy.
The Southeast Ohio Regional
The US Route 35 relocation In
GaiUa County Is ·the largest Development Council has more

Following the presentation of
the resolutions, Jeff Warner, a
NatiOnwide Insurance agent, reviewed the benefits and special
servlc~ or being a Farm Bureau
member.
Among the benefits are lower
insurance discounts for Nation·
wide policy holders, savings on
eyeglasses and prescriptions
drugs, as well as the represent&amp;·
tlon the Farm Bureau receives In
the legislature.
One of the speakers for the
evening was State Represents·
tlve Mary Ables, who spoke on
the development of Route35 from
the Jackson County line Ia
Gallipolis, as well as the needed
completion of the four lane
highway from Athens to Pomeroy and on to the Ravenswood
bridge. She also spoke of the
growing drug problem In the
nation, as well as recycling
legislation and the problems with
area landfills.
Following the entertainment
for the evening, which was
provided by "Jan and Kathy," a

gospel singing duo from the area,
the results of the district trustee
elections were presented.
Serving as trustee lor District
No.1, Orange, Olive, and Chester
Townships, will be Wendy Win·
don. In District No. 2, Lebanon;
Letart, and Sutton Townships,
the trustee will be Nita Yost:
Pauline Atkins will serve In
District No. 3, Bedford, Scipio,
and Sutton Townships, an!!
Donna Davidson will serve as
trustee for District No. 4, Ru·
!land, Salem, and Columbia
Townships. David King w•s
elected as the 1990 delegate to the
state convention with Alvin Tripp
as alternate.
Twenty·elght new members
lor 1988-89 were welcomed Into
the organization and pins wer~
presented to those with 25, 30, 35,
45, 50, and more years of
membership In the Farm
Bureau.
:
Following dinner, served by
the Eastern band boosters, Jack.
Carsey gave the treasurer's:
report.

work ahead of It, now $61.2
mDI,lon has been . committed to
US Route 35 relocation, accord·
lng to hllhway users commltttee
Chairman ~·nn~ B~' ~

,

"t!R!m.
.
··-- .
"Thill project allowslhe Importance of region-Wide cooperation," Bush said priOr to the
governor's arrival. The next step
'is gettlag funding for those SEO
projects furthers along In the
planning process. which Includes
highways In Athens, Meigs and
Pike Counties, In addition to a
Portsmouth bypass.
"We (SEORC) will be urging
the governor to fund at least two
ol these projects next," Bush
said. After that, SEORC will
work to bring attention to projects the state doesn't recognize
yet, like maklngUSRoute35four
continued on page 10
FORTV·FIVE AND $0 YEAR MEMBERSPresented pins for membership In the Meigs
County Farm Bureau for 50 years were, from left,

(Choo!c rrom Two Dcsigll!l.)

IW.....,

Long, Abel say US 35 project
should boost development

By JULm E. DILLON
Dally Sendnel Staff
Approximately 250 people at tended the Meigs County Farm
Bureau banquet and annual
meeting held Tuesday evening at
Eastern High School.
Farm Bureau member Nor·
man Will read a list of 26
resolutions dealing w!tlllssues at
the county, state, and national
level, which were voted on and
passed, Including completion of
Route 33 from Athens to Pome·
roy and on to the Ravenswood
bridge; corrective action on the
river bank erosion within the
VIllage of Pomeroy, and a more
economical way of trash
disposal.
·
Another resolution passed
stated the farm bureau's opposl·
tton to the American Heritage
Trust Fund. This program allows
government agencies. local,
state, and federal, the authority
to take land without the landowners consent by condemning
the property.

Kanawha County Circuit judge
orders Webb to be reinstated ·u. S. Atty. Crites addresses pupils

with our Antique-finish
&amp;mta Claus Tree Ornament.

~

Abel, and Slate Sen . .ran Mlcllael Loas, right, who
lobbied Celeste almost dally for the highway
lund tog. (OVP photo)

Gov. Celeste makes its official
CARNIVAL ATMOSPHERE - You can't llave any kind of
carnival - even a "Carnival of Careers" - wltlaout a carousel.
Soutllern Wgh art students fashioned Ibis carowoel to aet.the theme
for MondRJ'II "Carnival of Careers" at tbe school.

2 Section•. 1 4 P•gn 25 Cent•
A Multimedi• Inc. Newtpaper

Fa1"1n Bureau urges
completion of US 33

or young man - to pursue.

So••

--~--

Low tonl~tht In mid 41111.
Thursday, mostly sunny and
warm. Hlsh In mid-70s.

Pomeroy· Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday, October 2&amp;. 1989

Dally 1&amp;oct prices
(AI of li:H a.m.)
Bryce aad Mark Smltb
ot Blunt, 1:11111 6 Loewl

By U•Med P,.. Jateraa&amp;loaal
Cellini t&gt;lllo
Tonlll:ht, mostly clear. Low In
the upper 40s. Wlads near calm.
Wednesday, m01Uy sunny.
High Ia the mid 'lOs.
Exte•ded Foreeu&amp;
n.a 'IQ' 1111' , ...
Fair. Hlgha mainly In the 'lOs.
Lows from the mid 40stomld50s.

..

•

lirlllllal de•lls&amp;ry Ilia rewarding career for any

Weather

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Pick
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to be prlmuily a maa's field. But Pam Diddle, ' Diddle Is amoag over-38 career experts who were
rep-liar Dr. Marate Lawson, of the Raelne
on hand for Monday's "Carnival of Careers" at
Soutbem High.
Deallll Clllllc, explal• to tbese Soulbern Wgh

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PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,142.212.50, with a payoff due of ·

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Major
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Page 3

NEW HAVEN
882-2135
I

CHARLESTON, W.Va . (UP!)
- A Kanawha County Circuit
Court judge Tuesday orderPd
Mason County school officials to
reinstate tleless teacher Bill
Webb, saying the county's dress
code violates his academic and
expressive freedoms.
Mason County school Superintendent Rick Powell· said the
hoard of education would appeal
the decision to the state Sup~eme
Court.
Webb, a mathematics teacher
at Point Pleasanl High School.
was fired in December 1988 after
refusing to adhere to a dress code
requiring teachers to wear dress
slacks and recommending they
wear lies.
Webb, a farmer who lives near
Gallipolis. Ohio. lost a bid lo get
his job back lhrough the employees' grievance board. But
Kanawha Circuli Judge Tod
Kaufman ruled county school
boards do not have the authority
to Issue dress codes.
"It Is held that the respondent
county board lacked the authorIty to lllsue this dress code and
thus could not discharge William
Webb tor not complying with It,"
Kaufman wrote In a 25-page
opinion.
Kaufman wrote that Mason
County's dress code violated
Webb's rights to academic freedom and freedom o! expression.
"Apart from the parents and
children of this one school losing
a valued higher mathematics
teacher and department chairman, the pervasive chilling mes·
sage to other schoolteachers ... Is
that they are considerably less
than free to devise and apply
varying educational methods
which promise higher academic
achievement."

.

Kaufrpan also ruled the school
board failed to adhere to its own
policies by not warning Webb in
writing that he could be !Ired for
not obeying the dress code. The
dress code also was Imposed
after Webb had signed . a new
contracl for the school year, and
the contracl made no menllon of
the new requirements, Kaufman
wrote.
Powell said Kaufman was off

the mark in ruling the dress code
violated academic and constltu·
Ilona I freedoms.
"Mr. Webb was Insubordinate
and that was why he was
dismissed," said Powell, who
Inherited the widely publicized
case when he took tlie post In
July.
,
Webb was not available for
comment Tuesday .

Whenever U. S. Attorney Ml·
chael Crites, Columbus, has time
from a busy schedule In U. S.
District Court, Southern District
of Ohio, he can usually be caught
fighting - against drugs. Crites
says his number one priority Is
the fight against drugs and he Is
enlisting soldiers to help him in
Ills fight from Ohio's public
school systems. Crites spent
Tuesday discussing the light
against drugs with junior high
and elementary students In
Suuthern Local School District.
"l'm the last person you want
to see" If you are Involved in any
way with drugs, Crites explains
to students In his presentations.
He then d eta!Is aspects of his
work as a U. S. Attorney
"worklag for the President," as
Ills work relates tohprosecutlng
drug offenders. He reinforces the
belief of President Bush that the
Illegal use of drugs Is the most
serious problem In the United
States today. Then In very simple
and stralghforward terms, he
tells students the reasons that
some youngsters get Involved In
drugs and encourages them to
"Just say no."
He explains to students that he
Is against drugs not only because
he Ill sworn to uphold the law,
"but because I'm a parent with
three you11· daughters. I'm here
because I care about my
cbllbren, and I care about each of
you. I want my glrJIIIIld I want
each of you, to hav't!'IWiftllves,"
Crites says to youngsters. "And
It everyone wollld just say no to
druas. then the drug problem
would soon ao away." he adds.
Crites cites the example ol
University ot Maryland athlete
Len Bias who had just staned a

Raymoad hmee, Grace Furbee, and Howard
Nolan. For 45 years of membership were Pat and
Roy Holter.

mDllon dollar contract to play
professional basketball with the
Boston Celtlcs, then went out to
celebrate the slgnlag of his
contract "and'snorted cocaine up
his nose and dropped over dead.
He snorted his life up his nose.
Now he has no future anymore.
He's dead. Drugs can kill you. I
want you to be achievers like Len
Bias was an achiever as an
athlete, but not to go the way of

Len Bias," Crites says.
He then goes on to ex phi in In his
presentations to youngsters the
health effects of the most prevalent Illegal drugs being used
today, as well as the health
effects of alcohol.
He talks to students about P.eer
pressure and encourages them to
be couragous and resist peer
pressure when It comes to the use
Continued on page 10

REPLICA - ~.Mart 1'11111 PrliiC!lplll .....

aeeet* a repllo• of tile Dnr E.rereeil

•*

Areacy.'•IIJIIIMI " V. S. Atlonley Mlellael CriM. Cr11e11 t!pOke to fludeat. • .........,.

a&amp; ~.Mart Fallll. Pertlutl, RMine ud Syraeaa E l - krill, uti
sa- Oel. a-1811• b-. PI'IC'hl Iii
Nattnal Bed Rill... Week to premole a dnc floee .tmerloa, Crltea
pr 11•teil eaeb at• leld a&amp; tile sclloela with a red rlllllea wid! tile
. . . . "'l'be Cllelce F• Me, Drq Free!"
.
)

at Sou•era Jultr BIP.

.

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