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                  <text>Tum your
clocks hack
Sunday

I
•

We Reserve The Ri&amp;hl To

HOURS
Monday thru Sunday

624
Pick
9281
· Super l.otto
21-22-33-35-37-38
Kicker 537485

Oct. 29

1

STOR~

Pick-3

LIMIT ONE COUPON
PER FAMILY.

.
r------------MUELLERS

pmit Quantities

Ohio LOttery

1

•

ELBOW
MACARONI

8 AM-10 PM

3 Ll. lOX

298 SECOND ST.
_POMEROY, OH;.
PIICES EFFECTIVE SUN., OCT. 22 THRU SAT., OCT. 28, 1989

Vol.40. No.120 M
Copyrighted 1988

Powell'• Super Valu
Expires Oct. 2S, 1989

,.. ___________ _

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

CAMPBELL'S

TOMATO
SOUP
I 01/• OZ. CAN

I3/S1
79C
Bacon •••••••••••••• ~•••••

CRISPY SERVE

1

ASSORTED SUPERIOR

. •

lunch Meats ••• ~••••

$1 39

Powell'• Supor Volu

Expires Oct. 28. 1989

-·
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I

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---------!
--------------·
PRE GO
SPAGHETTI
SAUCE

$

9
11
Chuck Roast ••• ~••••
19
Sausage ••••••••••~•••• S2
U.S.D.A. CHOICE

1

By NANCY YOi\cHAM
used pollee cruisers. The comDally Sentinel Starr
missioners had already okayed
The resignation of Herbert the purchase of one used vehicle
(Pete) Shields, Racine , as a to be paid for with a combination
member of the Meigs County of · funds Including a $2,500
Regional Planning Commission. Insurance settlement for a demwas accepted with regret by the · olished cruiser. Because the
commissioners. According to lhe sheriff is trying to provide a
letler submitted by Shields to the . vehicle for each deputy., In order
commissioners. he Is resigning to save wear and tear on vehicles
due to lll·health. The resignation In the long run. the commissionIs effective from Oct. 20. The ers said they would check wllh
commissioners commend.ed the county auditor to see If the
Shields for his many years of additional purchase can be arservice on the planning commls- ranged, with the sheriff's departslon. and his othe~ Involvement men! lo reimburse the purchase
In county ·p rojects.
from his 1990 budget. As pointed
Thecommlsslonersareconsld· out by Sheriff Soulsby, many of
ering a request from Sheriff the department's cruisers are on
James Souls by to purchase two the road round-the-clock when

they are being shared by ·depu- Co .• Marietta, the only company
ties. By providing each officer submitting bids.
County Auditor William Wick·
with a car. a vehiCle would only
une
submitted a letter to the
have to be used !or one shift.
commissioners
notifying lhem
Bids from Gibson Inc., Athens,
that
informallon
supplied by
were accepted by the ·commls·Mtddleporl
VIllage
regarding a
stoners upon recommendation of
annex·atlon
of ptoperty
proposed
Engineer Phutp Roberts, lor two
Into
Middleport,
was
adequate
to
diesel dump trucks. dne truck ,
Identify
the
parcels
Included
in
which Includes a spreader bar.
the
annexation.
Next
week,
the
will cosl $37,691.48 . The other,
without a spreader bar. will cost commissioners v;ill formally
$35.791.48. Gibson Inc. was the adopt a resolu lion accepting the
only company which submitted · proposed annexallon proposal
bids for the counly highway from Middleport.
The commissioners approved
department trucks.
··
state
figUres for I he 1990 operaBids for bituminous products
tions
of
the Community Correcfor the highway department lor
tions
Program
. State funds for
the month of November were
the
program
for
next .v ear will
accepted from Asphalt Materials

~~~~~~~~-~

..

31112 OZ. JAR

ECKRICH SMOKED

Leg Quarters ••~••••• 39 c

BUCKET

Cube Steak •••••~••••

$249

200

a.

l 59C

·

I

I

Powell'1 SUI* Vllu
Expirea Oct. 21. 1989

L--------------------------.
~

-

FAlTER'S LB. ROLl

Powell' 1 Super Volu

Expires Oct. 28. 1989

1
I

$ 69
Chuck Roast •••~... 1

lm&amp;U~

_____________ ...
,---------------1
CHATEAU
'I
! COFFIE l
! FILTERS

89&lt;
Sausage ~·········~·····

TONY'S

PIZZA

.,

$159
Powell' 1 Super Volu

Expires Oct. 28. 1988

l-------------~

r-------------4
I

Celery •••••••••••••••• 2/S1.
.

I

STALKS

SWISS MISS

HOT
COCOA MIX
10 Envllape Pkg.-lllg.(Wy

FLAVORITE

'99&lt;

2°/o Milk •••••• ::~~~ ••• $15 9

Powell' 1 Super Vllu

Expires Oct. 28. 1989

~-------------J

3-LB. CROCK

s

49
Shedd's Spread •••• 1

--~---,--------,

' GALA

PAPER
TOWELS

BANQUET

oz. 99&lt;
TV
Dinner
. oz. 2/ $."1
•••••••••••••
P·•neaGoplDple •••••••••••

59~

10-12

20

•

•

•

2 liTER Bonus

.

Lotsa Pop .......... 2/
36
IOAST ar
39 OZ. AD(, EP, REGULAR

IUIWEu HOUSE

COFFEE

$

1

TIDE DETERGENT
13601.

s5''

UmM 1 ..., Cullomer
Only At POWtll'1 Su.,.,morlurt
-Sun., Oct. 22 thru Sot.. Oct. 28

APPLE, CHERRY, PEACH

oz. 89·&lt;
Banquet Pies ••••••••
20

SUNSHINE CHUNK

IIG CHIEF

DOG FOOD

GRAN. SUGAR

20LI.

$299

Limit 1 Pot Cullomor
Good Only At Powell'o Su.,.,morkll
Good lun., Oct. 2~ thru Sot., Oct. 28

. HI.

Sll9
Umit 1 Per Customer

•

Good Only At Powell' 1 Supormorket

~---------------

1

! Sl 00

OFF

3 LIS. OR MORE
PUR(HASE OF

GROUND BEEF
OR

GROUND
CHUCK
Powoll'l au.,., vu.

Expires October 28, 1911

Good Sun., Oct-22 thru Sot., Oct. 28

L---

2 Sections. 12 Pogn 26 Conto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 26, 1989 ·

A Multimedia Inc. New.,aper

Shields resigns Meigs County planning post

-------------I

CHICKEN

Low In mid 40s tonJcht.
Friday, sunny and warm.
High In mid 708.

total $13,843.
A request to transfer a CI-C2
license from Gregory L. and
Rebecca J. Meeks, doing business as Dry Rock Carry-Out,
Bedford Township, to Lyle R. and
'Joyce A. Sinclair, has been
received !rom the Ohio Deparlment of Liquor Control. The
transfer request must be returned lo the state by Nov. 27.
Public comments regarding the
request must be submltled to the
commissioners no later than
Nov. 17.
In final matters. the commls·
sioners adopted a needed resolullon to file the county's Commun·
ity Development Block Grant

appllcallon wllb the Oh lo Departmen! of Development.
The commissioners approved
a request from the Meigs County
Court office to use some additional monies . In the office's
equipment accounl to paint and
carpet the county courtroom,
and purchase new drapes.
Also, the commissioners accepted TMC , a long-distance
carrier. to provide long distance
telephone service for offices In
the courthouse, apd also the
sheriff's department, prosecu·
tor's office. board of elt&lt;?tlons,
dog pound, litter control agency.
county development o!!lce and
the county Infirmary.

Nation's ecomony improves;
inflation climbs 2.9.percent

WASHINGTON (UPII - The they were down $30.7 billion. The below 2 percent. A few econonation's economy grew at a reason was while exports stayed mists, In fact, are predicting a
stronger than expected season· even, Imports ·rose at a 15.1
recession If not In the fourth
ally adjusled 2.&gt; percent annual percent annual rate. the depart - quarter than early nexl year.
rate in the July-September quar- men! said.
Economic growth was not hurt
ter. matching the growth rat e for
So far this year. the economy much by Hurricane Hugo, but the
the second quarter of the year, hasgrownatanannualrateol2 .9 · storm did reduce personal Inthe Commerce Department re- percent. To reach the Bush come forthequarter by $4 billion.
ported Thursday .
·
administration's projection of a Personal income. not adjusted
Meanwhile. the deparlment 2.7 percent growth rate for 1989. for inflation, rose $56.2 billion In
reporled that lnflatl oncllmbedat the economy would have 10 the third quarter compared with
amoderate2.9percentratelnthe expandata2.1Jl('rcentratelnthe $82., billion in the second ·
'
quart.er.
lhlrd quarter as measured by its fourth quarler.
price deflator, compared with a · But economists not~d that the
Thursday's report was Ihe first
4.6
rate In the second economy grew weaRer as. the . of three monthly reports on
: .&lt;:..,;J~~~~-'li!rif,r
.
nnortor.~ .p~ssM' '·and .
I"
rn:)fii -;:ri:.ss'"na:·:· :o
· ~.~ti:n.tfd .thaobfftop fourth quarter tlonal product - t1e total of
with growths
goods and ·services· produced In ; ',0 "" .
the econmy - - followed an
Identical 2.5 Percent annual rate
of Increase In the April-June
quarler and Indicated the economy was chugging along at a
stronger clip than lnlllally
be known as Karr Street In her honor. ''That was
RECEIVES RECOGNll'ION - Friday has
expected.
the nicest thing you could have done," Marcia
been proclaimed "Marcia Karr Day" In the
Economists had lhoughl that
stated.
Marcia moved to Syracuae In 1912. She
village of Syracuse by Mayor Eber Pickens .
the economy wOuld become in·
jolnM th~ Syracuse Methodl•l Church In 1913. She
Marcia will be 99 yeiU's of age Oct. 27. She Is lhe
creaslngly sluggish during the
has been and still Is an active member of the
oldest resident of the vlllllge. Wednesday night,
summer months under the pres,
church. Marcia Is also a member of the Carleton
Marcia was presented a plaque containing a Key
sure
of the Federal Reserve·s
Board of Trustees and attends all of their
to the City by members of lhe council .. "I lt11ve
tight monetary policy and subsemeetings. She Is a retired schoolteacher, haVIng
never had a plaque before," 'she quipped. Also,
quent high Interest rates.
taught 20 years.
more exciting to her than anything, was when she
But stong consumer..,onsumpwas told that the street on which she lives will now
tion , especially for au tomoblles,
kept the economy going. Personal consumption expenditures
were up at an annual rate of 5.8
percent during the quarter, the
fastest rate of growth since the
firs I quarter of 1988, when it was
6.2
percent.
the Oct . 20 session of the Meigs
Six Individuals have been ar- passing bad checks.
this category, expend!·
Within
Ersel Blevens Jr .• of Dexter. County Grand Jury. Three of the
raigned in Meigs County Comtures
for
durable goods -those
'
mon Pleas Court as the result of was arraigned yesterday on a Oct. 20 Indictments are lor products such as cars designed to
Indictments handed down In cultivation of marijuana charge. cultivation of marijuana. In
Prosecutor Story reports that addition to five more Indictments last at least three years- rose at
September by the Mei.gs County
a 15 percent annual rate, also the
Grand Jury. According to Meigs culllvatlon of marijuana Is a on other charges. Information on
fourth degree felony and carries the Oct. 20 Indictments will be biggest rate of gain since the first
County Prosecuting Attorney
TUPPERS PLAINS HAS NEW POSTMASTER - MarUyn S.
with It a max·lmum penalty oilS forthcoming from the prosecu- three months of lasl year when
Sleven L. Slory, three of the
the rale was 21 percent.
Burke, at right, Tuppers Plains postmuter, welcomes · new
months months In prison and a tor's office.
Individuals were arraigned on
Officer-In-Charge Laoa Proffitt to tbe Tuppers Plains Post Office.
In other Meigs County Com- · Meanwhile. the nation's nel
maximum fine of $2,500.
charges of tra fficking in drugs,
exports fell $22.9 billion, IndicatProffitt will be In charge at Tuppers PlaiDs during the coming
mon
Pleas
Court
wws,
Michael
The cultivation charges arose
the olher three were arraigned
Ing a widening of the trade gnp as
montlts while Burke completes a detailed aselgnmeatat the Belpre
has
been
ar1'algned
on
an
Pierce
from the summer eradication
on charges of. passing bad
the stronger dollar made U.S.
Post
Office 1111 a supervisor of postal operatlou. Burke has been a
charging
him
with
indictment
efforts .carried on by the Meigs
checks.
.
products
more
expensive
to
U.
S.
Postal Service employee since .June 37, 1980, starting as a
County Sheriff's Department, domestic violence and vandalArraigned lasl week were
foreigners.
It
was
the
biggest
aubllltute
rural carrier from Reedsville, lbea as a rural carrier at
Delbert Patlerson, of Portland, the Meigs County .Prosecuting ism. Charles Knight appointed as decline In U.S. net exports since
Middleport. Sbe aerved lor a time as Offlcer-ln-Charre at Coolville
Attorney's office. the State Attor- counsel lor Pierce for any future
and David B. Dillard, of Racine.
before being aamed postmaster at Tuppers Plains In September
ney General's olllce and lhe proceedings. Pierce enlered the second quarter of 1983. when
Indicted fo r lra!flcklng in drugs
1988. Proffitt began her employmeat with the U. S. Postal Service
Nallonal Guard : Those efforts pleas of Innocent to the char~jtes.
(cultivation of marijuana 1.
I• OctOber 1980 as a subsHtule rural carrier at Portland. S~e ha.;
A jury trial for Pierce has been
Also arraigned last week were netted nearly 8,000 marijuana
since
been a rural carrier at Portland and Little Hocking, and was
Dec.
18,
slarting
at
scheduled
for
plants,
says
Story.
LaDonna A. Nestor on one
a
rural
C'arrler at Racine before her aew assignment at Tuppers
9
a.m.,
with
discovery
to
be
the
prosecutor
Additionally,
charge of passing ·bad checks;
Plains.
·
completed
by
Dec.
8.
reports
there
were
further
such
James S. Slump, on two charges
•
Bond
for
Pierce
was
set
for
lndlclments.
res1,11ting
from
the
of passing bad checks; and
Donna J. Miller, on four counts of summer eradication efforts • .at $25,000.

Six individuals are arraigned in
Meigs County Comm~n .Pleas Court

I

••

Celeste calls for drug
free week in Ohio

Vehicles damaged by shots, sheriff reports
On Wednesday evening, deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's
Deparlment were called to Bowman's Run Road to take a report
of damage to vehicles. According
to Ihe reporl, the vehicles, owned
by Perry Smith, apparently had
their windshields shot out. Two
juveniles were apparently s~en
In the vlclnlly wllh guns. Charges
are pending.
On Tuesday evening. deputies
took a fire report In which a 1980
Chevrolel . Citation. owned by
. Raymond Hayes, Point Pleasant, W.Va .. was sitting In the
driveway at lhe Tom Wolle
residence on County Road 28.
Hayes noticed smoke coming
frOfll under the hood. and the
Bashan Fire Department respllnded. The car's engine received moderate damage.

Betty Wilson, Peach Fork reports that deputies are lnvestl·
Road, Pomeroy. also reported on ··gating the breaking and entering
Tuesday that during the night. a of the Alfred United Methodist
tractor blade was stolen from Church and the Bear Wallow
that property. It was valued Church. of Christ Both church
were entered late Saturday
around $450.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby also . night

'·

Glenn punched in face
WASHINGTON (UPil -Sen.
John Glenn, D-Ohlo, was slugged
In the jaw Wednesday after a
tree-planting ceremony In the
nation's capital. but t~e former
Marine grabbed and held the
as~llant until he was turned
over to pollee.
Glenn. 68, was slugged "fairly
hard" but was not knocked down
and left after the Incident to keep

•

I

by assailant

an appointment, according to
assistant press secretary Lowell
Solomon.
· District of Columbia pollee
arrested Michael J . Breen, 31. of
southwest Washington, and
charged him with assault on a
member of the U.S. Congress, a
federal olfense. He Is scbeduled
to be arra1110ed Thursday In U.S.
Dis tttct Court.

..... ,

' NBW 1'08'1'11MTBR -

Na.y Mo- Is the nelliy
appointed ptMitn\uler for the
Pertlalld Poat Office. She
brlnp ·with her from the
Z..vllle ..-ea three yean of
Pfl!ltli aervfce. 811e II lakin&amp;
for Iva Lawrence who
. nllr~ Ia .Ju!J. Fllllllg bt for
Lawrelllle up .unltl now •1111
'been Charlotte Harper.

over

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!} Amid a sea of red-clad school
children chanllng, "Hey! Ho!
Just Say No!" Gov . Richard
· Celeste proclaimed ·oct. 22-29
"Red RibbOn Week" to celebrate
community Involvement and
commllment for a drug -free
society.
The governor was joined by his
wile, Dagmar, and Hope Taft of
Cincinnati, president-elect of the
Ohio Association of Parents for
Drug Free Youth. In meeting
with abOut 150 pupils at Douglas
Alternative School.
"AirohQI and drug abuae have
reached epidemic proporUOIIllln
this nation," Celeste said. "It Is
lm!l@ratlve that visible, unified
efforts be continued In this war
on drugs."

Songs , cho&gt;ers and skits punctuated the half-hour program . The
pupils, who were wearing red
shirts and outfits to symbolize
the" Red Ribbon Week," cheerPd
loudly when Mrs. CPieste said,
"You and I know that we don't
have .to get drunk lo have fun.
You don't have to get high on
drugs to ger lovP or a hug."
Celeste s aid a recent survey
showed children, through teiPVIslon, can name more brands of
beer and win&lt;' than presidents.
"How many of you know
someonewho·s having a problem
with drugs or a leo hoi?' •he asked.
AbOut 40 pupils raised their
hands.
"I suspect you think you can't
do much tohelp older people smp
Continued on page 12

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:::

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--

October 26, 1

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 10·27-89

40

40

50

1:: : .IStiOW
FROtHS:

"W ~ 11n

ff%'/ft] RAIN
"

.

Col~

f"';:':j SHOWERS

9W OccluJGd

. . Static

.

WEATHER MAP -Showers are forecast Friday for paris or the
Central and northern Intermountain rer;lon and extreme Northern
Plalllll. Showers are possible In the (,!enlral to Northern Pacific
Coast slates "ilh showers and thunderstorms in parts of the
Southern Plains and paris ollhe South Atlantic Coast. (UPI)

Barbs·are exchanged
. governors' race
tn
t

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) Several figures in the Ohio
governor's race urged candl·
dates Wednesday to avoid ne!(a·
tive campaigning, then engaged
in some of-lt'themselves.
Ohio Democratic Party Chair·
man Jim Ruvulo said in a letter
he tried to distribute to the Ohio
Association of Broadcasters that
national media consultant Roger
Ailes had used " slimeball
tactics."
The asso&lt;:latlon blocked Ruvolo's attempt to give the letter to
members of the OAB -Vefore
Ailes· speech. but reporters
received copies. The letter called
for Ailes to "leave his gutter
tactics at our borders."
"Ohioans expect elections
based on issues. It's too bad that
the slimeball tactics Ailes is

Seeks divorce
A divorce action has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Hermetta Kay Hysell.
Racine. against Giles Lee Hysell
Sr .. Racine.
Granted a divorce were Faye
R. Aelker from Charles R
Aelker .
Donald M. Stamper and Emily
A. Stamper have been granted a
dissolution of their marriage.
Vincent E. Mossman and Susan E . Mossman have also been
granted a dissolution. Susan
Mossman has been restored to
her previous name, Susan E.
Davis.

Weather
By United Press International
Tonight. mostly clear and cool.
Low In the mid 40s.·Winds nearly
calm. Friday, mostly sunny and
warm. High In the mid 70s.
Extended Forecast
Saturday .throu1h Mollday
Fair through the period, with
highs mainly In the 70s and lows
In the 40s or the low 50s.

Connecting.
joints cited
in collapse
. SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) The shattered stretch e&gt;f the
Nimitz Freeway collapsed durIng last week's earthquake because the joints connecting the
two decks failed, scientists said
after an inspection.
The scientists said reinforcement of the 35-foot columns
would not have prevented the
disaster.
In Washington Thursday. PresIdent Bush signed a $2.85 billion
disaster aid package to help
earthquake-stricken California
and areas ot the Carolinas and
Caribbean devastated by Hurricane Hugo.
The measure sailed through
Congress just ~lght days after
northern Cal itornla was rocked
by the Lama Prieta earthquake,
which measured 7.1 on the
Richter scale.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Wed·
nesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK·3

624.

_,/

PJCK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,174,749, with a payoff due of
$819,075.
. PICK-4

using In New Jersey and New
York are clouding Important
Issues in those states," Ruvolo
wrote.
Alles, who coordinated Pres!·
dent Bush's media campaign last
year and has been . hired by
George Voinovich, who is seekIng the Republican nomination
.for governor, responded that
Ruvolo, "doesn't want any more
slime in Ohio because there's
been so much in the Statehouse
while he's been around."
After the exchange, the two
men again called for candidates
to conduct clean campaigns
focusing on the issues. But Ailes.
who was criticized for negative
campaigning In the Bush presidential race, added that the
public loves negative
adver.tislng.
"The greatest Indoor sport In
America is politics, and they love
to hate It," he sal d.
Also joining the accusal ions
was Curt Steiner, Voinovich's
communications director.
Steiner provided reporters copies of newspaper articles highly
critical of Voinovlch that he said
were sent on a state-owned
facsimile machine from Ohio
Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze Jr.'s office to stati' Democratic Party headquarters on the
day Voinovlch announced for
governor.
The articles concerned a Cleveland police "sting" operation In
which police provided money to a
convicted drug dealer who later
sold drugs in a black
neighborhOod.
Wayne 'Hill, a spokesman for
Celebrezze, admitted the articles
were sent from his office but
defended the transmission, .sayIng they were intended to provide
information to legislators Introducing bills dealing with such
pollee operations.

Uvestock report
Trend&amp;·Feeder Cattle-~eady, Vul
Calves Steady
Med•m Framt&gt; 1 &amp;: 2 Steer~:
25t-lt00 lbo....................... ... 16.10-115.011
- l b o..................... .. .. . ti.IO-IIUO
- - lhs.......................... 83.1.111.01
lhs ............................ IIUIUII.III
-7ltll lhs............................ '70.10-81.111
-1!4Mllhs............................ 111.111-71.111
Mfodhlm Frame 1 A% Hellen:
. 210-3111 tllo.......................... IIUIHOt.lll
- l b o, ......... , .................80.111-91.00
-ltllllbo............................78.80-st.OO
-IIIJIIM ............................ 71.1111-M.III
100-700 lhs ....... ..................... 70.1111-111.111
71J0.800 lhs ............................ &amp;Uo-7UI
Holstein St~t1 and llulll:
-llllllbo ............................&amp;Uil-811.GO

OHIO WELFAIE
COMPINSAnOIN
GINWL REUEF
.UNITED .NE .WOllER$
BOILEIIUBEIS
PAID
P.C.S.
MDUIIT
ADYACARE

SALE

Utllltlet t7.1 .. 55.18; Canner/Cutter
Ucht wei Kilt low l"ade COWA
-41.01-dowlli Heif«et.te
n.

u.--...

~ 1.11-fi.OI;

Buteller B•D:

UIIIUI~ ~8.50.&amp;'7.75;

12.1MJ.III.OO.

II'- and chow oeu:

Canner/CuUer

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1990

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"To au.tlfled 4PPII'*'t• .

PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$235,754, with a payoff due of
$107,100.
Super Lotto
21, 22, 33, 35, 37' 38.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$3,100,2Jl.
lOcker
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Kicker tlcl\et sales totaled
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~

final game of season .

tackles Aaron Sheet.• and Doug
Stewart blew open large holes for
the running backs and man
handled theGo)denEaglesdefenslve line. Th~C&gt; Hawley brothers
!Randy and Shawn) were also
singled out for outstanding per·
formaces by their coach as was
freshman linebacker Mike Cremeans. "R$ndy Hawley played
as well as anyone all yea,r in the
d.efensive backfield, Shawn
played well from his defensive

28-6 at Stewart.
Kickoff for time Friday I~ at
7:30 at Marauder Stadium.
~ame .

end position" Staggs went on to
,

~ a y.

The Maraud er offensive at tack
Is led by sophomores Frank
Blake and Terry McGuire. Blake
who ha s gained 765 yards on th e
year ru shed for 139 yard s and
three 1ouchdowns on 23 carries
and McGuire chipped In with 96
yard s on 9 ca rries Including a 56
yard scamper to set up the
Marauders firs t touchdown.
The Maraudt&gt;rs won last year's

. TVC standings

t

UPI Sports Writer
DALLAS (UP!l - With the
specter of a winless season
staring him In the face. Dallas
Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson
said Tuesday he was disappointed but not embarrassed by
his team's 0-7 start.
Johnson said he knows there
are people wllo are glad to see-his
team fall.but thalli was "unrealIstic" to think the Cowboys could
be a winning team this year.
Johnson was asked In particular about remarks by former
Washington Redsklns executive
.Bobby Beathard, who was quoted
two weeks ago as saying he
thought Dallas would not win a
game this season. Slnee the NFL
went to a 16-game season In 1978,
no team has gone an entire year
without a win.
"I don't respond to things like
that."' Johnson said . "People are
·going to make comments In a
negative way for two reasons .
Maybe they resent that we are
her~ In the first place. And people
who are having problems look for
people who are having more
problems ihan they are ·and
re llsh In that.
"I don't think of It (the team's
0-7 record) as an embarrass·
ment. I think of Ita sa disappointment. You can't be embarrassed
, when you are doing everything
1. you can do. And that's what we
- are tryln&amp; to do.
"You just don't go In with as
• many new facet as we have and a
rookie quarterback and expect to
'get things turned around with a
team that was 3-13 last year,"
Johnson added. "People say that
, last year's team was better than
3-13, but the llottom Une was that
It was 3-13 for some reason.
' 'Tom Landry 1who was fired
· by Dallas owner Jerry Jones
when Jones bought the team)
,was a great coach &amp;l)d he had a
"great staff. I've always said that.
But It Is unrealistic to think With
the chan&amp;es we've made we
,would have a good rl!cord.

The Daily Sentinel
)USPS 141&gt;&amp;18)

A Division ol MuiUmeclla, Inc.

REGIOI\!AL QUALIFIER~ The Meigs Ma·
rauder boys cross country team will lake pari In
Regional competition this Saturday In Lancaster.
Front row from left to right are: Jeremy Heck,
John Haggy, Nathan Baloy, P .•J. Chadwell.

Pictured In the second row are: Coach · Jim
Oliphant, Chris Sloan, Phil Smith, Chris Stewart
and Ryan Lemley. Not pictured Is Cary Betzlng
and Dan Kennedy and assistant coach Mike
Kennedy.

Meigs runners fifth in district meet
Nathan Baloy was the top
Marauder - finisher out of 111
runners as he came in 28th. P .J.
Chadwell came In 30th. followed
by ChrL• StE•wart :!8th, Cary
Bet zing 39th and Phil Smith 41si.
In -the girls division Meigs
finished sixth. with the top three
teams advancing. Missy Nelson
was the top Marauder as she
finisl!od In 2:1rd. place, folowed
by Katrina Turner 26th, Amy

The Meigs Marauder boys
cross country finished fifth In the
Southeast District meet last
week at Athens.
This qual~ies the Marauders
lor the Regional Meet Saturday
at 3:20 In Lancaster . This is thl'
first time a Marauder cross
country team has advanced to
t·egional competition. Nineteen
teams wm compete ~aturday .
with ·the top five teams advancIng to the state.

Johnson 41st, April Hudson 49th;
and Missy Sisson In 51st.

Patertto wary of
No. 5 Alabama

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
(UP!) - For a change, Joe
_Paterno was not just blowing
smoke whim he sang.the praises
of an upcoming opponent.
"I think this Is the best
Alabama team I have seen since
1978," Paterno said Tuesday of
the fifth-ranked Crimson Tide ·
squad that visits the Nlttany
Lions Saturday.
The 1978 Alaba:ma team beat
"I know there are people who
PennState14·7 In the Sugar Bowl
are·smillng and saying, 'we told ·to w 1 n the natIon a I
you so. • But that's their problem.
championship.
I can't worry about what they are
"Their offense is playing exsaying. I know the fans won't
tremely well and their defense
stand for losing. I won't stand for
has been dominant· when It has
losing, either. We'll do whatever
had to be. Combine that with a
possible to keep from losing."
solid kicking game and they're
Johnson admitted some of
the best team I've seen at
Dallas' problems have stemmed Alabama since 1978."
from a major roster turnover. Of
Although Paterno routinely
47 active players on the roster -.heaps praise on an upcoming ·
last week, 24 were not with the . opponent, then just as routinely .
team last year. Eleven current handles them on the football
members of the team were not field, his feelings probably are
with the Cowboys wheri they justified this week.
reported to training camp.
Alabama Is undefeated In six
Johnson has made liberal use games and Is coming off an
of the waiver wire since the Impressive 47-30 victory over No.
beginning of the regular season. 12 Tennessee, which entered
their Southeastern Conference

Rainbow Inn
HALLOWEEN
PARTY
SATURDAY
. OCTOBER 28, 1,89
9:00 P.M.-1 Z:OO Midnight

New York, New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Serul address Ch!JIIges

to -The

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No subscriptions by mail permUted In
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HOME ENTERTAINMENT (ENTER
POMEROY, OHIO

391 WEST MAIN mEET

· Member: United Press lntf!'I"DDItlonal,
Inland Dally PrmsAssoclatlonand the
Ohio Newspaper Assoclatlon. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sale~, 733 Third Avenue,

avaUabl~.

Tom Poyne &amp;
Brian Collins

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Goldstar
Samsung
Soundeslgn
Zenith

Published every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company / Multimedia, Inc ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

MUSIC PROVIDED BY

showdown ranked In the fifth spot
the Crimson Tide Inherited.
The Nit tany Lions, _5-l, were off
last week but still climbed to No.
13 In the Top 20 . ·

VCR-TV
Repair Center
'

TVC F1&gt;01ball Slaadlnp
(All Game.)
OP
P
Team
W L
Trimble ........ .. .....9 0 225 44
Nelsonville-York . .7 2 176 "92
Vinton County ......5 4 183 144
Belpre ... .. ............5 4 125 126
Melgs ....... ..... ; .....4 5 122 202
Wellston ............. .4 5 115 126
Miller .. .. ...... .... .... 2 7 69 178
Alexander ...... .....1 8 41 . 232
Federal Hocking ..0 9 37 189
TVC Games Only
Team
W L P OP
Trimble ..... .. ...... ..7 0 156 44
Nelsonville-York ..7· 0 204 23
Belpre ...... .. ....... .. 5 3 116 111
Vinton County .... .. 4 3 165 108
Meigs ........ ..... ...... 4 3 · 108 97
Wellston ..... .. .......3 4 88 100
Miller .... ...... .. ..... .1 6 43 151 ·
Alexander ... .. .. .... 1 6 33 165
Federal Hocking .. 0 7 37 201
Friday's rt!11Uit8:
Trimble 41 Centennial 0
Alexander 6 Federal Hocking 0
Meigs 22 Belpre 7
Nelsonville -York 30 Vinton
County o
Wellston 12 Miller 0
October 2'7 r;ames:
Federal Hocking at Meigs
Wellston at VInton County
Mlller•at Alexander
Nelsonville-York at Trimble
Williamstown at Belpre

·;·~ Johnson disappointoo,
.~ : . but not embarrassed

Solkl oak or mapte finish.

Reii- '329... 5 pc. Set ........................ '263
Reg. S699...Trestle Table, 6"chairs .. 1559
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METAL CABINET
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Ook ond mopr.. Eac:ellant quality lor

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WARDROBES, BASE CAIINm,

Hug~ 11l1ction of 3. 5 and 7 piece

-·'IINo

ft
D

I~

· October
Savings Continue!

Butcher Cows:

The J..ancer. come to Pomeroy running mate In the backfield Is
looklnl( lor their first Win of the 5·6, 185 fullback Rick Fuller who
season after losing to Alexander averaged 8.4 yards a carry last
last Friday ; 6·0. Federal Hocking year . .
has an outstanding tailback In
The Marauders exploded In the
second half last weekenroute to a
Randy Shuford.
Shuford, who attended elemen· 22-7 upset victory over the Belpre
tary and junior high school in Golden Eagles. "Our offensive
Middleport Is .a 5-10 and 201 line played outstanding In the
junior. As a sophomore Randy - second half" coach Mike Staggs
was a first team Ail-TVC selec- said of his team.
tlon rushing for 812 yards In 134
Center Jim Durst. guards Burt
carries for a 6J average. His Kennedy and Dennl~ Booth, and

By GENE CADDES
from second to ninth after losing
UPI Sports Writer
14-0 to Akron Garfield .
COLUMBUS - There were no
It was still Ironton No. 1 and
changes among the leaders as CAPE No. 2 in Division III, with
the United Press International- just eight points separating the
Ohio High School Board of two teams this week. Ironton
Coaches football ratings headed recelv,ed 12 first place votes and
Into their final week.
.199 points, while the Crusaders
Cleveland St. Ignatius, Fos to- had eight firsts and 191 points.
ria, Ironton. Wheelersburg and
Ironton winds up the regular
San&lt;!usky St. Marys maintained season by hosting Miami Trace.
their No.1 positions, with playoff while CAPE takes on Cincinnati
spots assured for all five even If Deer Park.
they should stumble In their final
Urbana, which closes by host game.
-ing 8-1 Bellefontaine, again fin·
St. Ignatius.- a 32-14 winner ished third in .Ulvlsion Ill,
over Cleveland Benedictine Sat· r·eceiving 156 points. Hamilton
urday night to run Its record to . Badin was fourth with 128,
8-0, held a 285-263 lead over followed by YoungstDwn Ursu·
runnerup Cincinnati Elder In line in fifth with no .
Division I this week.
Wheelersburg held a 219-158
The Wildcats, wh.o wind up margin over runnerup Frede-·
their regular season this .wee- rlcktown In Division IV , with the
kend against Parma Holy Name. Pirates, who play Washington
received 24 of 29 first place votes Court House in their · regular
and were picked second on the season finale, also holding a 15-2
other five ballots to amass 285 of edge in first place votes.
-a possible 290 points.
The next five · teams In the
Elder, 9-0, got the other fjve Division IV list also were the
first place votes and was llstl'd same as a week ago, with Warren
lower than second on onl~· one Kennedy In third, followed by
coach's ballot.
Steubenville Catholic , Beach. Dayton Wayne, 9-0, was third wood. West Jefferson and
with 191. followed b:&lt; Euclid, Amanda Clearcreek.
whose only loss was 10 · St.
On~v five points separated No.
Ignatius. fourth with 172 and 1 Sandusky St. Marys and No. ·2
Lancaster. · an 18-13 loser to Lima Cenlral Catholic In Div'
Fremont Ross Friday night. In lslon V, with St. Marys holding a
fifth wllh 110.
215-2l0 point lead an'd a 12·6
· One newcomer emerged this margin In first place votes.
week In the Division I lop ten.
St. Marys winds up regular
Grove City, 8-1, replaced Canton _season play by hosting Milan
McKinley, which lost 12-7 to_ Edison, while LCC hosts Ada In
Youngstown Cardinal Mooney Its finale.
.
and fell to 11th.
.
Lorain Clearview advanced
Fostoria. which winds up its from sixth a week ago to third
regular season Friday night at third, foUowed by Ayersvllle iri
Sylvania Northview. held a 190- fourth and Delphos St. John's in
112 lead over second place fifth.
Minster, which lost 26-0 to
Minerva In Division II. the
Redmen picked up )5 first place Delphos St . John's Friday night,
votes to only one for Minerva. fell from third to sixth, while
Both are 9-0.
ArlinRton, a 20-0 loser to unbeaten Van Buren. tumbled from
Cleveland St. .Joseph, a 14-7 fourth to 1llh. Van Buren.
winner over Masslllon Washing- however. still was unable to
ton Friday night. vaulted from crack the top ten and was 13th.
eighth a week ago to third. The
Perennial top ten finisher
Vikings had 111 points, followed
Newark Catholic. beaten fonhe
by Franklin In fourth with 110 and
third time this season. freefellall
the way from fifth to 15th place.
Gal-ion In fifth with 106.
Two-time ·defending · champ The Green Wave lost 12-6 to
Akron Buchtel fell all the way Hebron Lakewood.

10 1HOSI 60 liD OVEI
01 Ali PIISCIIPTIOIS

DINING ROOM

I~ancers \in

Leaders stay same
in· coaches · UPI poll

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO
THE .BILLING FOI THE FOLLOWING:

Ticket sales totaled $:!.100.211
and the total prize payout was
$364,725.
/
In the accompanying Kicker
game, there was one winner of
the $100.000 grand prize. The
winning Kicker combination was
537485.
In addition to the one ticket
that had the numbers in order.
six had the first five numbers,
which pays$5,000; 38hadtheflrst
four, which pays $1,000; 476 had
the first three. wl\jch pays $100;
and 4,945 had theflrstt.wo, which
pays $10.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$548,168, while the prize payout
totaled $265,050.

1990 COUGAR LS

----Cool------_

•

10°/o DISCOUNT

'90 MODEL
INTRO SPECIALS
•Til

•

" RITA IS OUR WINNER IN
THIS WEEK'S DAILY
SENTINEL CO-SPONSORED
FOOTBALL CONTEST!!

along the north Pacific Coast
region.
Another day of mild tempera tures were welcomed In the
Midwest and the eastern part of
the nation ' Thursday. A day
earlier, the mercury climbed
Into lhe 70s and 80s. breaking
record high t!lmperatures In 20 ·
cities In the north-central United
States, the NWS said.
Forecasters said a high·
pressure system stalled over
western Pennsylvania caused
the pleasant weather In the
Midwest, which was expected to
continue through the week.
Temperatures early Thursday
were in the 50s and 60s across the
region with daytime highs forecast In the 70s and 80s.
A high-pressure system kept
the mid-South and the Plains
states clear and dry early Thursday. But a storm system moving
eastward from the Pacific Ocean
brought considerable cloudiness
over Colorado. northwest New
Mexico and western Oklahoma.

By DAVE HARRIS
Seven Meigs football players
Will put o.n the maroon and gold
uniforms one last tlmq as the
Marauders host winless Federal
Hocking Friday night.
Ed Crooks . Randy Hawley.
Danyel VanGarderan , Jim
Durst, Tony Miller, and Jay
Humphreys all will walk off the
Marauder Stadium field for the
las 1 time as a player when the
game Is over.

GALLIPOLIS STOCKY AIIDS
Oct. 21, list

9281.

•

Congratulations
RITA D. SMITH

Super Lotto jackpot goes unclaimed
CLEVELAND IUPII -There
was no winner of the $3 million
jackpot in Ohio's Super Lotto
drawing Wednesday night, increasing the top prize to $6
million for Saturday's game.
None of the tickets sold for the
midweek game listed the six
winning numbers of 21. 22. 33. 35,
37 and 38, a lottery commission
spokesman said Thursday.
However, 78 players picked
five of the numbers to win $1,000
each, and 3,823 players selected
four of the numbers to win $75
apiece.

I .

The Daily Sedtinai-PBge-3

Ponwoy Micklaport, Ohio

28, 1989

Marauders hos-t winless

'

Warm weather
•
•
continues m
-Midwest states
By United Press International
Harsh Winter weather continued to Inundate the West early
Thursday while unseasonably
warm temperatures lingered
over the central and eastern
portion of the nation.
The National Weather Service
Issued a winter storm warning
for the mountain r11nge In Utah
late Wednesday and earlyThurs·
day. Advisories for snow and
blowing snow also were posted
for the mountains and valleys of
Colorado into Thursday
morning.
·Snow fell in Nevada and spread
Into Utah, Colorado and WyomIng. the NWS -said. '
Thunderstorms and showers.
combined with chilly tem~ra ­
tures, swept across much of
California and into Utah and
northern Arizona during the
early morning hours, the NWS
said. Showers were also scat·
tered across the Florida Peninsula. sout!lern Texas , western
Michigan, into New Mexico and

. lhunday, Oetobei

'

992-3524

'

... •••••• c....
lOI~totll

911

112

�.

:~

;.--·

.

lhuncley, October 26. 1989

COinmentary
The Daily Sentinel _·
lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
. DEVOTED TO THE iN:I'ERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslo- Publisher/ ConlroUer

CHARLENE HOEft.ICH

General Muqer

A MEMBER of The Associated Preis, lallllld Dally Preis Assoclllilan aad lbe American NewllpiiH!l' Publlohen Aalocllliloa.
LETI'ER.S OF OPINION are welcome. Tilef -~~~be leulluuliiH
wonll lotlr. Au leiters are subject to ediiiDr ... - • be slrned wil~
1111111e,
and lelepbone number. No uui(Aed letters wUI be publis-. LeHers should be In pod Iaaie, addreoolarisoueo, nol peroonall·

""*••

lies.

Administration forced to
reveal nomination documents
By .JIM ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The adminiStration assured the Senate In
a .CertifiCation of Competence tbat Thomas Slroock; a Wyoming oil 1
man and banker. was an "exceptional·candidate for U.S. ambassador
to Venezuela" because of his business experience and extensive
knowledge of the region.
Unfortunately, Stroock had not been nominated to be the U.S. envoy
to Venezuela. He had been put forward to be U.S. ambassador to
Guatemala.
What might be dismissed as a secretarial slip of the finger In one
case emerges as a pattern or creative resume-writing for
ambassadorial political appointees by the flush administration.
· Representatives of the career Foreign Service see the pattern as a
cavalier and damaging payoff of political campaign debts by
President Bush and his secretary of state and former campaign
jrumager. James Baker, at the expense of U.S. representation abroad
and the careers of qualified career diplomats.
~ The American Foreign Service Association, which represents
professional diplomats In their dealings with the State Department,
sued Baker In a federal court for the release of the required
"Certification of Demonstrated Competence" for ambassadorial
nominees.
• The AFSA contended In Its suit that there was no reason, other than
· embarrassment over the lack of c!emonstrated compelency, for
:teep!ng the justificatiOn for the nominations secret.
: The State Department gave In to the suit and, under a Freedom of
information request by the AFSA. released the previously
.~nfldentlal certifications of competence. The documents bolster
j\FSA's argument that the Bush administration has little regard for
-the needs of diplomacy but a very high esteem for past and future
i&gt;oUtlcal contributors.
• Some examples:
: -Penne Percy Korth, riamed to be ambassador to Mauritius, an
lsland nation off the eastern coast of Africa. Her previous foreign
;!!Olley experience consisted of helping organize a 1982 Kennedy
:center reception of Afghanistan Day. The certifiCate said, "Mrs.
.:Korth's diverse background makes her an excellent candidate for
'limbassador to Mauritius."
:, -Richard Moore, a Washington lawyer and television executive,
.J iamed to be ambassador to Ireland. The certification said that he
'!Would be an excellent choice because hiS brother was once envoy to
:rreland "and his father was one of a committee that welcomed
President Eamon de Valera on his visit to the United States In 1919."
: -Mrs. Della Newman, a Seattle real estate agent and Bush
'Campaign contributor, named to be ambassador to New Zealand and
:Western Samoa. The certification sent to the Senate said, "Mrs .
t~ewman's extensive background In the real estate business
eomblned with her many civic commltmenfs gives her the
jRanagerlal qualities to make her an excellent candidate."
. .- -Melvin Sembler, a F1orlda real estate developer, Bush
:COntributor and member of civic groups, named to be ambassador to
;Australia. Without any other explanation, the certification of his
eompetence said, "Mr. Sembler's extensive business background
:COmbined with his Involvement In a drug free Amerlca will serve him
j¥ell as an excellent candidate for U.S. ambassador to Australia."
• Charles Schmitz, an AFSA vice president who has been heading the
ilrlve against the pollticallzatlon of ambassadorships, said of the
State Department decision to open the previously classified
documents, "We win the little ones, but lose the big ones."
: He was talking about the situation just after the Senate voted 79·2Jl
to confirm Joseph Zappala, a Florlda real estate developer and
dog·track owner who does not speak Spanish, to be ambassador to
Spain.
· Baker has pledged that the Bush administration will achieve a
quota or two-thirds professional diplomats In ambassadorial posts, an
Increase over the past. Schmitz believes that will entail bookkeeping
that will be as creative as the formerly secret resumes that were sent
'to the Senate promoting the nominations of Republican loyalists who
)iave demonstrated their devotion by giving more than $100,000 to the
Bush .campaign. .
: He said the AFSA now calculates that 61 percent of U.S.
Jmhassadors are career and In order to meet the 67 percent goal
pledged by Baker, every future nomination will have to be a career
foreign service officer.
· . "We don't see that happening with a secretary of state who was
campaign manager to the president, .. he said.
.

Letters to the editor
-•.
••

Fall carnival success

l):!ar Editor:
: Riverview Elementary would
Mke to thank parents, staff, and
.S:Ommunlty members who
Helped make our fall carnival a
success. The carnival Is a lot of
hard work ·and your efforts are.
'

'

.

~

very much appreciated. Your
co-operation Is essential for the
success or our whole school
program.
Thank you,
Debbie Weber, Head Teacher
Riverview Elementary School

Yearbook staff apprecwtes support

Dear Editor:
.. The Eastern HighSchool YearIIOOk Staff would like lo take this
'!Pportunlty to thank the many
busineu In the area who contribUted to our 1990 . Ad Sales
Campaign. ThiS was one or the
mot! succes,rul campaigns our
staff has conducted In many
)'l!arl and without your support
our Yearbook would 11a Impossible to put toaether. 'Our Eastemer wtfl be around for )'l!ars to
come. tllanlll to your support. We
Will do our best to make your
liltvertllemellt as appealing as
PGJIIIble 10 !bat we can return the
fiJ!Or to yDU.

Also, io those businesses who
have not yet placed an ad, but
would like to, It Is not too late.
Just drop us a card here at the
schoolat 38900 SR 7, Reedsville,
Ohio 45772, or call us at 985-3329
and ask for Gina TUlia. Hurry,
because we only have a couple of
weeks before we close down our
ad campaign for 19110.
1\Jaln, we tlwlk you for all of
your support 811d we urae you to
continue supportlllt tbe area's
youth and It's activities.
Sincerely
Robin L. While
Editor

Markets boycott pesticide-treated produce

OK

GRoUP, lrbU'R~

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

the government to act, It would
walt a long time. The EPA has
spent the last two years studying
one of the pesticides that the
supermarkets are worried about,
although It had Information 10
years ago that the pesticide could
cause cancer.
The supermarket che,tns. like
the public, simply got tired of
waiting. "We've gotten to the
point where the Industry, the
media and everyone else Is
making decisions on pesticides
while the EPA Is sitting around
sucking Its thumb," one Independent research scientist who
specializes In pesticides told our
reporter Greg Moore.
The chains are ABCO Supermarkets In Arizona, Raleys In
California and Nevada, Petrini In

•

California, Provtgo Distribution
Inc. In Canada and Bread and
Circus In Boston. Their gradual
phaseout of produce treated with
cancer·causing pesticides will be
a small ripple for consumers, but
the announcement made a big
splash In the grocery Industry.
The Food Marketing Institute,
the supermarket Industry group
In Washington, D.C., sent a
menacing letter to Its members
warning them not to participate
in the phase-out. The Institute
called the tactics "economic

terrorism.''
On the list of pesticides the
stores want to phase out are
ethyleneblsdlthlocarbamates or
EBDCs. They are used on one-

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A L.ITTLE:l
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third of all fruits and vegetables
grown In the United States. The
EPA suspects something might
be wrong with EBDCs, but the
agency Is taking Its own sweet
time figuring that out.
Evidence linking EBDCs to
cancer was available as early as
1974. The EPA circulated a
memo In 1979 reporting that tests
of EBDCs on mice resulted In
liver tumors.
In 1982, the EPA had closed
meetings with the pestiCide Industry and decided to Impose
minimal restrictions of EBDCs.
The Natural Resources Defense
Council, a private environmental
group, sued the EPA over the
decision to lock envrlonmentallsts out ofthose meetings, and the
EPA said It wouldn't do that any
more.
But It wasn't unt!l1987 that the
EPA agreed to reconsider the
rules on EBDCs. It · has been
. promising a decision slnce.May.
While the EPA has been
sucking Its thumb, another study
has turned up damning evidence
about EBDCs. The National
Toxicology Program In North
Carolina released data In July
showing that more than 90
percent of the rats whO were fed
EBDCs In an experiment deve- ·
loped tumors. The results are
preliminary and are stUI being
reviewed.
EBDC pesticides are made by
four companies. They're waiting
on the EPA too, and doing
damage control In themeanttme.
The companies say they will
reduce the number of crops
treated with EBDCs from 73 to
13, but that Is only window
dressing. EBDCs are still used on
major crops Including wheat,
tomatpes, potatoes, onions,
grapes and sweet corn.

Self-service education gets an F
Here you are, baffled again by
a request to name the man who
was president during the Civil
War. Youcan'tplaceMexlcoona
map, and you don't have a clue
how to compute the area of a
10.by·IO·foot room .
In other words, you're a fairly
common U.S. high-school
student.
What do you suppose top
education officials have to say
about your Ignorance? Are they
alarmed? Surprised, perhaps?
Do they respond by exhorting
schools toward greater effort and
a renewed emphasis on basic
1
knowledge?
Not necessarUy. Consider the
reaction of Bill Randall, ·Colorado education commissioner:
"Instead ' of asking who was
president during the Civil War,"
Randall said, "It may be more

useful to ask, 'How would you
find out?"'
Ignorance of Abraham Lincoln
Is acceptable? Is It really possible to appreciate the history of
the greatest social Issue this
nation has known - race without at least a fleeting ac- .
qualntance with the 16th
president?
"I think It probably Is Important to know (about Lincoln),"
Randall concedes under questioning. But having offered this
limp endorsement, Randall .
quickly . retreat.s. "Knowing_
(such facts) may just be something our generallon thinks Is
Important and II really lsn'.t," he
suggests.
"Information Is growing at
exponential rates, and It's going
to be Impossible for any of us to
know all we should," he con·

Court
ruling
boosts
·
·
HO-HO-KUS, N.J. (NE;A) The "pro-life" advocates strldently opposed to any form of
legalized abortion appear to have
made a strategic mlscalculallon
that could have a devastating
Impact on their cause. ,
By pressing their case· In the
federal courts, thepro-llteforces
secured a U.S. Supreme Court
ruling In early July that Initially
appeared to have advanc~d their
cause because It slgnllicantly
broadened the states' pi&gt;wer to
/
regulate abortion.
That decision gave public
officials of the _50 states specifically governors and
members of, legislatures - In·
creased authority to decide
whether women's rights to abor·
lions should be legally restricted.
That shifted much , of the
contentious debate ovedhe Issue
from the courts to the political
sphere - and In that arena the
pro-llfeproponentshavesuffered
repeated setbacks during the
ensuing three months.
Politicians who long resisted a
"pro-choice" stance or were
avowedly pro-life have been
forced to reconsider - 'and often
reformulate - their positions as
polls revealed overwhelming vq,ter support for the concept that
women have the right toindlvldually decide whether to have an
abortion.
,
Officeholders In that calegory
range from New York Gov.
Marlo Cuomo, a liberal Democrat, to Florida Gov. Bob Martlnez, a conservative Republlcan. Indeed, the Ill sue cutsacroas
both political and Ideological
Una.
Cuomo, wllo previously refuaed to respond directly to
questions about wllether be bellevedwoml!llshouldbavearlght
to an abortion, unexpectedly
proclaimed last month that abortlon "must be a matter of a

•
•

Eagles ·class· meets

Pllg8 4 The o.ily Senti ooal
Pomiloy-Michleport. Ohio
Thunday. October 26. 1989

WASHINGTON - Five small
supermarket chains in the United States and Canada have
pledged to phase out all produce
treated with cancer-causing pes·
ilcldes. For their trouble they
have been lambasted by the very
agency that IS supposed to take
the consumer's side - the
Environmental Protection
Agency.
Despite the EPA's sleepy record of pesticide regulation, It
can't seem to stomach the Idea of
someone else-doing the job. EPA
Assistant AdminiStrator Linda
Fisher condemned the super·
market chains, saying that decisions about pesticides should be
taken out of marketplace and put
back In the government where
they belong.
But If marketplace walled for

Vincent Carroll

tlnues. So, he says, we may have
to decide whether to know about
things or "to know how to find
out" about them.
My conversation with Randall
followed publication of a poll of
Denver area ·hlgh·school students that revealed a wearylngly
predictable lack or knowledge
and skills. Among the findings:
- A majority couldn't name
the president during the Civil"'-'
War.
- Nearly half (44 percent)
couldn't compute the square
footage of a 10·by·10 room.
- F1fty-seven percent were
stumped by a request to calcu·
late a 5 percent sales tax on a $2
purchase.
-One of .five failed to cite the
country on our southern border.
Randall's reaction would
hardly be worth mentiOning were

It not for the fact that It reflects a
common mlndset within today's
education establishment. Atthough a growing number of
educators admit that U.S. students lag behind their counter·
parts abroad tri math, science,
geography, history and know!·
edge of foreign countries, a
pervading ambivalence under·
mines their resolve to respond.
They're llkecavalryofflcers who
shout "charge" while reclining
on a sofa.
All the education summits In
the world will not rejuvenate our
schools unless we're willing to
acknowledge, for starters, the
modest notion that content and
context still count -or, to put It
another way, that a high school
kid who · doesn't know about
Lincoln Is disgracefully Ill·
educated.

pr&amp;.choic~

forces
. Robert Walters

woman's conscience.- "
On the first working day after
the Supreme Court decision,
Martinez Issued a call for the
state legislature to convene In
special session, specifically to
enact laws that would rigidly
control access to abortions.
But that Initiative met with
overwhelming grass-roots resist-.
ance, forcing Martinez to diffuse
the focus on abortion by subs tantlally expanding the agenda for
the upcoming special session.
Nowhere are the recent poilUcal gains of the "pro-choice"
forces more apparent, however,
than In the only two states that
wUI hold gubernatorial contests
this November - New Jersey
and VIrginia.
In New Jersey, the Democratic
nominee, Rep. James Florio,
was unwavering following hls
court decision In support or the
pro·cholce philosophy be has
long embraced. The Republican
nominee, Rep. James Courter,
had long been equally firm in hls
pro-life position, but he failed to
react to the Supreme Court
ruling for several days.
Courter subsequently has done
more than his share of backing
and filling, variously proclaim·
lng that he will not: a) "simply
Impose my personal views on the
women of New Jersey"; b)
recommend any restriCtive legislatlon because the state has not
reached "a consensus" on the
Issue; or c) oppose abortions In ·
cases In which there Is a threat to
the mother's life or in which rape
or incest are Involved.
In VIrginia's trubernatorlal
contest, Republlc811 JIOIDlnee J.
Marshall Coleman bas been
reticent about promoting his
pro-lite stance. But the Democratlc nominee, Lt. Gov. L.
Douglas Wilder, has displayed no
such reluctance about publctzlntr
his pro-choice position In televl- .

sloncommerclalsthatproclalm:
"Marshall Coleman wants to ·
take away your right to choose
and gtve It to the politicians. He
wants to go back to outlawing
abortion, even In cases of rape
and Incest. Doug Wilder believes
the government shouldn't Inter· ·
fere In your right to choose. He
wants to keep the politicians out

Several Items were discu ssed
Including a bazaar to be held on
Dec. 1 and 2 at the church. This
wllllnclude a bake sale also.
, The class Is meeting a\ the

church on Tuesday mornings at 9
a .m . to work on quilts and
projects for fhe bazaar. All
members of the church are
Invited 10 participate.
n was voted to held with the
·
·: ~11quenchable fire fund" at the . .
end of the quarter.
The Christmas dinner was
discussed and tentatively set for
Nov. 14 . 11 will be discussed
luther In class.
There will be no more m'eetlngs
.
until January.
Attending with those · prevlously mentioned were Bob and
Donna Smith, Martha Moore,
.
Beulah Ward,. and Mary Usle.

Bridal shower held
Heldt Cobb, bride-elect of Zane
Beegle. was recently honored
with a shower at the Racine
Baptist Church.
Hostesses were Libby Fisher:
Marilyn Powell, and Leanne
Clark. Cake and mints,' made by
Miss Cobb's grandmother, Carolyn Adams, nuts, coffee, and ·
punch were served. Several
games were played with prizes
awaroed.
Attending were Sandra ·Cobb,
Sue Beegle, Carolyn Adams,
Pearl /\dams, Genewth Holley ,
Eileen Buck, Patty Pape. Marilyn Powell, Karen Connolly ;
Libby Fisher, Florence Adams,
Mary Pickens, Opal Diddle,
Dorothy · Watson, Marie · Roy,
Donna and Aimee Wolfe, Janie
and Michelle Butris, Barbara
Dugan, Shannon Slavin, Ellen
Deaver, Judy Roberts, Wendy
Wolfe, Jane Ann and Heather
Hill, Doris Adams, Eileen Roush ,
Martha and Heather McPhail,

Martha Lou Beegle, Lucy Qo·
nahue, Etta Mae Hill, Gladys
Shields, Julia Norris, Bau lah
Nelgler, Edison Johnson , Leanne
Clark, Jeanie and -Valerie Connolly, Laura Salser, Carol
McCullough, Jan Cardone, Carol
Adams, Nancy Campbell, Clara
Adams, Flocle Haymeil, Melanie
Adams, Dixie Wolfe. Carol Old· .
die, Phyllls O'Brien, and JoAnn
Smith. ·
·
·
Other presenting gifts to the
bride elect were Marjorie
Grimm, Garnet Ervine, Bonnie
White; Mary Ball, Eleanor Cobb,
Lillian Hayman, Wanda Imboden. Mary Ann Roush, Tonya
Cummins, Hazel Roy 1 Shelly
Fortune, Nan Davis, Lillian and
Mel Weese., Wanda Powell, Marlene Fisher, Jan Norris. Sandra
Baer, Julie Hubbard, Regina .
Roush, Carrie Roush, Hazel Fox,
Bernice Roush. Margaret
Glockner, and Clara Mae
Sargent.

·Racine ·Auxiliary meets
The Halloween party lobe held
Oct. 30 was discussed at the
recent meeting of the Racine
Fire Department Ladles
Auxiliary _
The party wlll begin at 7 p.m.
and !he event is sponsored by
both the fire department and the
ladies auxiliary . All children of
the Racine area are encouraged
to ·attend. The auxiliary will
serve hot dogs, cookies, donuts,
cufl'cc, and elder.

The election day dinner will be
held Nov. 7 with coffee and
donuts served at 6 a.m. Dinner
will be served at 11 a.m. with
soup bzans, . cornbread, chill,
sandwiches, coffee, donuts, and
pie .
Attending were Alana Butler.
Sandy Patlerson, Wanda Patterson, Jean Johnson, Emma
Lyons. Bea Autherson, JoAnn
Grady. Angle Patterson, Missy
Jones, Gene Lyons, Ann Layne,
Rhonda Lyons, and Kay Holman .
Junior mer~tbers .at tending were
· Sls.sy Lyoris -and : Valeri
Patrerrwn.
·
, New members welcomed were
Cybll Rlffl~. and Mary Roberts.
,. ,
junior member.
~n-~r Airman E4 Ronald B.
Shelly Gillenwater was not
Denny, who has completed a
taken In as a new member ..
three year' assignment with the
u.s. Air Foree In Berlin. Ger11\any, and his wife. Bonnie, and
their two children, Brittany
Nicole, and Andrew Ryan have
spent the past three weeks In the
bend area visiting with relatives
and iriends.
They were the guests of hls
parents. Earl and Betty ~nny ,'
Middleport. They left Sunday for
Denny's new assignmeqt al
Keesler Air Force Base In Biloxi, ''
Miss.
Denny Is the grandson.of Mrs.
Lillian Demosky. Middleport.

The o.ily lentN-DJII I

MIM1pcrt. Ohio

legion Halloween

Manley· unit meets
A report on the fall conference, from desecration, the special
held Oct. 5 at Junction City, was pension for World War 1 vetegiven by Mrs. Margaret Bowles, rans, Increased services for
president, when the American aging World War II veterans, the
Legion Lewis Manley Unit 263 restoration of benefits as they
met recently at the hOme of Mrs. were before1981, and support for
'F lorence Richards.
programs to benefit homeless
An Invitation was received for veterans.
the group to attend the reception
Mrs. Richards discussed an
for the eighth district president, AmeriCan Legion resolution to
Maxine Barnes, of Lancaster.
reduce dependence on foreign
Get well cards wen: sent to defense Items whiCh might not be
Rev. Nyle Borden, Gallipolis; available durlng the time of war.
Mrs. Helen Boyd, Pomeroy; and
The ·meeting closed with a
J
w d
c
. erry are and harlle Boy", prayer for peace. the singing of
Middleport .
"America," and remarks by the .
Lula Hampton state from the president.
Leg111a11ve Bu 11e tl n tha 1 the
Refreshments were served by
newly e 1eel ed nat 1ona 1 com· Mrs. Richards.
mander of the American Legion . . The next meeting will be held
Is pressing for additional support at the home or Edith Roush In
to protect the United States flag Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Herbalists meet

that now Is a good time to bring In
River Valley.Herballsts
some
of the herbs for winter.
Patty Hayman gavetheherbof
The
harvest dinner will be held
the month report on oregano at
14
at 6:30p.m. Dorothy Karr
Nov.
the Oc,t ober·meeting of t)le River
will
be
the
hostess. Members are
Valley HerbaliSts when the group
to
bring
a
covered herbal .dish,
met at the home of Sheila Curtis.
craft
Items for the
and
also
Oregano Is known as the pizza
auction.
Juanita
Conrad will
herb and It Is used In other meat
making
topiary.
demonstrate
dishes and salads.
lierbal
brown
bag
sale was
A
Connie Hill conducted the
buslnf!Ss meeting In which a cbnducted and refreshments of
report on the sale of the cook- . hot elder, herbal oyster
crackers, ·and pumpkin cookies
bOoks was given.
Linda McCoy discussed ' the were served by Jill Knopp. Sue
Blennerhassett herb garden Hayman. and Janet Theiss.
The December meeting will be
showing the keyhole design lo.be
at Lila Ridenour's residence
held
used.
on
Route
248 just out of Chester.
Recipes were distributed on
hetbaLjellles and It was noted

Philathea Woman
meet
.

of your personal life."
The aborllon Issue long was
presumed to be uncomfortable
for politlcans on both sides of the
debate. Now that It has been
removed from the judicial set·
ling, however, the pro-life partlsans appear to be experiencing
most of the discomfort.

1-

-.

nounced for Nov. 5' wlth Mildred
Riley, Terri Hockman. and
Kathy Ihle In charge.
Refreshments were served by
the Phllathea hldles of the
Homebuilders class.
For the Nov. 9 meeting a
''Something Christmas" auction
will be held with Phllathea
women form the Fellowship I
class as hostesses. Bea Stewar1
and 'Donna Ha'rtson will
co-chair.

Eleanor Circle hears program
· Shirley Quickel presented the
program at the recent meeting of
the Eleanor Circle of the Heath
United Methodist Church.
For her program Mrs. Quickel
gave a brief talk on dance
therapy. She and Kristlan Stawter, a dance student, performed a
tap dance number. Ms. Stawter
also performed a short ballet
number.
Scully Hayes, vice presld~nt,
presided over the meeting and

~argaret Weber gave the devotions on happiness.
Two new members, Anne Rl·
chardson and Cathy Lentes. were
welcomed.
The circle will be sponsoring a
candy and bake sale along with
s;mdwlches and beveragl!ll on
Nov. llln the church basement.
Hostesses were Helen·· Byer
and Grace Johnson. A halloween
theme was carried out In the
decorations.

Heath UMW meeting conducted
Emma Clatworthy .presented a
The program leader was Nan
plano prelude "He Touched Me''
Moore. She presented a program
at the recent meeting of ·the ·· ' on "The World Thank Offering."
Heath United Methodist Women.
Devotions were by 'Emily ·
New officers were announcftl , Sprague on "Love." ·
·
for 1990. They are Betty Fultz,
Hostesses .were Juanita Bachtie, Jeanne Anne Bradbury, and
president; Euvetta Bechtle, vice
Terry Byer. A halloween theme
president; 'VIcki Houchins, · se·
cretary; and Clara Crlsswell,
was c.arrled out In the decora- ·
treasurer.
lions and refreshments.

.Read the

Clf\SSIFED 1\DS

S/indereUa meets
In the Monday night Five
Points class of Sllnderella. Cindy
Lambert ' lost · the most weeklJI
weight and Mary Browning was
the runner up.
In the Tuesday night Mason
class Joan Vaughan lost the most
weight and ·there was a lie for
runner up between Marlene
Radford and Lois Ann Reltmlre.
New 'm embers are now being
accepted In the classes.

A baby shower was ·given
recently In honor of Becky and
Ed Roush. Racine. by Kim
McClure, s ·hE'rry Teaford, and
the Roush family.
Mary Crow assisted with
games and r,efreshments. Games
were played with prizes going to
Diane Hendricks, Terri Roush,
and Teresa Roush. The door
prize was awarded to VIcki
Cundiff.
Atti!nding were Roberta Lewis, Bernice Roush, Carrie
,Roush. Karen Connolly, 'Mary
· Bulcher, Mel VanM~ter, Krlsten
Pape, Mary Crow, JoAnn Smith,
Kim McClu.re, Darlene Bartrum
and daughters, Penny Williams,
Redtna Mills . and daughter ,
Sherry Harrls. Gina Roush. apd
daughter , Nancy Russell, Sharon
Hupp,' Cindy Sands, Teresa ,
Roush, Diane Hendricks, VIcki
Cundiff, Valarie and Jason Cundiff, Terrie Roush. Tammy Hlll,
j;:dlth Manuel, Teresa , Pullins,
Amy Mills, Sherry Teaford , and
Angle Teaford.
Oth·ers presenting gifts were ·
Dorothy Johnson, Marge Crow,
Terri Shain, Mary Voss, Carol
l:fupp, Allsha Findley, Sharon
Stewart, Brenda and Missy
Jeffers, Margaret Rose, and
Diana Thomas.

•1295

-.
"

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$600

WAS*4495

1978 FORD FAIRMONT

1 1111063, 4 docn, 111ion wogon, V-1. oir Slock I 911212. 4 docn, wogon, 6
11110. 111111., PS, Pe, ~t whoa!. Alloflol IIIIo. lrn., PS, P8. Alloflol rodio.
flpll.

*1295

WAS'995

CUTLASS SUPREME

NOW

$3995

'

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LOCATBD 1/4 Mil&amp; KOilTB
. POIRitOY·•WW

•••noB

onH 1 bAYS A WIEK

'992-21 56

NOW

1979 CHEVY MAUBU

.'

II

mu sic. There Is no charge for this
It was voli'd to hold a Halloween parl y on Nov. 4 at the - costume eve nt.
It wa s a Iso voted to give the
recent meeling of the Ra cine
Amer ican Cancer Society a dona·
American Legion Post 602.
tlon of $100. The Southern At·
Commander William Arnott
hletlc Booster will receive a
conducted the meeting In which
donation of $200, and the Racine .
the party was discussed .
It will be held at the post home
Boy Scout troop 244 will receive a
from 4-6 p.m . A teen dance will donation of $225.68.
•
Following the meeting, re- :
be beld from 7-11 p.m. Refresh·
ments will be served and Glen freshments were served to 12 .
Alden or WMPO wlll provide the members.

.

Judy Snowden presented the
program when the Phllathea
women of the Middleport Church
of Christ met recently. She
showed the group how to make
corsages and ribbons.
Maryln Wilcox presided at the
meeting which opened with the
Phllathea song and prayer by
Mildred Riley.
The secretary, treasurer,
flower, and card reports were
given and approved. ·
Farle Cole had devotions with
readings "What Am I Here
After?," "What Fragrance Do
You Leave?" and a poem,
"Fragrance.''
.
Named on the prayer list were
Carl Nelson, Eddie Burkett,
Larry Baker, Thelma Boyer,
Marie Francis, Art Hall, Colleen
VanMeter, Allee Koenig, O'Dell
· Smith, and Doris Carder.
The group voted to serve the
Loyal men and women's Christmas dinner on Dec. 9 at thE'
church.
Octogenarian Sunday was an-

party set

,Baby shower held

WILL THE LAST
PERSON TO LEAVE
EAS,. GERMANY
PLEASE 'TURN
OUT THE LlGHTS.

I

The Eagles class of Ihe Asbury
United Methodist Church held Its
recent meeting In the church
social room with Mary Cundiff as
hostess, a-ssiSted by Harriette
Sinclair.
Irene Parker presided at th e
meeting which opened with the
Lord's Prayer In unison. Helen
Teaford 's devotions were from
Proverbs 18 and a reading "A
Letter from a Friend, Jesus."

Completes
assignment

Berry's World

I

~

FOOD iTAMPS ACCEPIED · ·
PROD: (SCM) .,.,.1711 • 778-1100

·'

�'-II I 1ha Dllv SentiiNII

Pon•C&gt;f Micldlapon. Ohio

Thuncley. Octobel 26, 1989

The Dllity Sentinel-"-ge 7

Eastem-Southem feud ends regular season grid play

0

By G. SPENCQ OSBORNE
OVP SUil~rller
Saturday night s EasternSouthern encounter wlllcondude
the 1989 season.
Southern has lost Its last four
and Easter~ has dropped l!s last
r five.
.
While Southern's offense bas
been considerably more producJ ive In the last five weeks,
seating 43 points t including 12 In
their shutout ag;llnst Trace), the
defPnse has also surrendered 140
points.
Bo~h teams have fairly silent
passing attacks, so the o;onnlng
backs will be counted upon to
move the ball.
.
Eastern will glvP the ball to
Jett Horner and Mike Hoffman,
while Southern wlll go with
Richard Deaver and Travis
Nease.
Eastern will bid farewell to
seniors Shawn Bush, Jell
Horner, Scott McDonald, Scott
Phillips, Shaun Savoy. Dan
Tripp, Billy Wells and Derek
Yonker, while the Racine fans
will say good-byP to Jamie
. Cummins, Pete Hendrix, Scott
Hill, John McClintick, Jarrod
Moore, Travis Nease, Todd Rice,

lnd Tim and Tip Ryan.
Otlwr Gamea
The books on the 1989 football
campaign will close this wee, kend, ,as In ye11rs past, wllh the
SVAC s hottest rivalrieS Kyger Creek vs. North Gallla;
Symmes Valley vs. Hannan
Trace and Southwestern vs. Oak
Hill.
The Pirates having sbaken
thPir September blahs, havp won
their last three , games, all
against the league s basement ,
while the Bobcats, ~homafched
to seven stral,ght wins out of the
gate, ran Into the- Oak Hill·
Symmes Valley buzzsaw that has
claimed all four league teams
that had both squads schedul(ld
on consecutive weeks.
KC will be looking to do unto
the Pirates as the Plra~es did
unto them last ye~r, when the
Bucs handed the Cats a 26·14
defeat In Cheshire. But they will .
have to do so by jump-starting a
rushing attack that has spent the
last two weeks In jail.
It's been a long way down from
the 100.3.yards·per-game rush·
lng average . tbe Bobcats had
golng.intoWeek8, as the83yards
tbe Bobcat ground assault team

Scoreboard ...
. . . . . . . . Citlt".... lk .......

Post-Season

Ml•a'!o!t&amp;a a&amp; MI.

... IP

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.....,..

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el~ll'.

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fkt . l.ll- OUM• S, "'• Fn~.t·..... I
Oct. I I - No
wlll. .k'd.
Oct. 17 - Gamt' ,.&amp;p1M'4 dMr IO
. t•llf'ltlqWtkt•,
Cki . r.- a1 SM ,.,..........., II: :JS p.m.
fk'l . til- • ~- .-~.":A p.m.

r.rt Clip-

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'
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.... _..P"'

(All game•)
T&lt;'IUll
W L . PF
. Symmes Valley ... 9 0 265
Oak Hill , ............. 8 ·1 · :n5
Kyger CreE'k ..... ... 7 2 153
SouthwestE'o·n ....... 5 4 165
North Gallla .. .... .. 5 4 141
Eastern .......... ..... 2 7 99
Southern ......... ..... ] R ~9 ·
Hannan Trac&lt;' ..... 0 9 16

~- .......... ,,, (1-1) ...........................1-1

It fel...e." ....•lllt•RA'IIII-IJ ~ ......71
I. ,\k,..lftkit'ICI-t) ....................... .St
II.WIIIII:Wi• .._artiiiiHl .............. .. .ss
IWN .. t ..: II. St ... Sl; lt. Nertll
l'ut•lkoWI' .:11: II. st. Ill_,. • • •
, ~ ft: U. Rl ......... ilfowol'l' I 11 II; 15.
f.....w II: II. fl..) WM . .....,.,. ....
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Mil 0 . . . . .I f'llt'll; • . UWJ Wflltlalw
Mil 11M• fei...W-.1•••111.

(SVAC only)
Teoun
wL
Symmes Vallt&gt;y ...6 0
. Oak Hill .. ........... }i 1
Kyger C!'t'ek ...... .. 4 2
North Galllll ...... .A 2
SouthwestPrn ....... 3 :J
·Eastern .............. .1 ;;
Southern ............... ! ;;
Hannan Tract&gt; .....0 6

T•Pul•b;
I. lr••••Cit) 11-11 ......................... l!tt
~-(',\PI; (It) Cl-11-............. .............. 11111
-1. llm- IHI ................... ............. 151
I . llama• laiii•CHJ .................... I'tll.
L , ......... u,. • ., Cl) 11·1) ...... 111
1. r ...w~tet• ·•......,..aca.•• ~ ............:a
1. 0 .........,.. . . . (t-1) ........... , ...... .1:!
Jl , Orrl'll.. l'J~I ... ..; ............................ At
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ltJtwut• tll-11 ~ .................: ........... .n
!Cr..... In: II. a ·M'f1'ty '!1: l!. Ctl1•)
Um~ Wh. fehmhll11 H.,.UIH Tn-•
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c....... .....,. ..

11. •('..........: li.
Uk'l EM.._ WIH.UI.- 1UM1 ........ $

a.

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lllrJ 0 . . Rutlor del S,rf•l(·
nf'!d N'orthnt'*'lll'll, ~

r .. .,.

...... "

I. Wlk'I'I~FJ:II$111-fl ................ tl!ll
f'rl•..... t•lla..·•f!l {RI) ....... ......... UK

to

:t. lfiii'W'• ...... .,. 1r1 ~~· 1 .... ........ 111
t. KlNIH-B\tiJr' ( 'IMHIIr (!J CIC·I) ~ .... liM
s. 8f'.IIII·IM"ciOIICN) H'"""" " ! '"""""' llt
....""''"""...,...(I-I) ...... ................ .All
~.
nr...-I'N"t tM· IJ
77
II, ~.. (11-1) ........................ ....... .11\
II. llrllvUII' Clrar F•ll tll-IJ ~-, ...........u
ti.Vrr*'llf'olllll-IJ ................ ............. .!Ijl
tf'• : 11. {'AI tiro"'
II')'UII Jl: It. !&gt;&amp;MIIwu. • •·k RIW"r Ill

:tmu•

H

Sr•••

tailback Josh Rut! can rise above take the game of a lifetime, not to
the 1,50().yard plane when the mention superior blocking from
Oaks host Southwestern.
the Highlanders' tront wall and
In nine games Ruff. an ex- racing the non-starters of the
quarterback who will wrap uphls south Jackson battalion In the
second season wllh ihe Oaks second half, to make It happen.
after transferring trorn SouthwValley Takes Third
estern In 1987, has 1,510 yards·on
Symmes Valley continues to
201 carries, scortng 14 touch· rise In the computer ratings, as
downs and six extra points the VIkings came In third In
(Rurt's statscourtesyofOakHill DivisiOn v, Region 19, behind
correspondent Harold •'Buzz" unbeaten TVC co-leader Trimble
Fisher) . ln addition to Ru!l, the and top-ranked Shadyside.
Oaks' fans will also say good-bye
Kyger Creek's loss to the
to fellow seniors Mickey Angel, VIkings dropped them to 14th,
Larry Davis, Shane Diltz, Andy and North GalUa dropped a notch
Hildebrant, Steve JenJ&lt;Ins, Nick to 20th. Southwestern fell a slot to
Kenney, Wayne Mcintosh, Brent 23rd, and Eastern remained tied
Michael. Jpff Webb ari'd Chopper with Gallon Northmor at 32nd.
Willis.
Southern and Hannan Trace
Also anllclpatlng a chance at stayed put at 35th and 36th,
being the league's third 1,000. respectively.
yard 'rusher Is Southwestprn
Oak Hill remained at 16th In
fuUback Josh Halslop. The 5·9, . Division IV, Region 15, one place
160-pound senior has run 161 above Belpre and six spots
Urnes for 904 yards and eight bPhind Nelsonville-York.
touchdowns. However, 11 ·wm

PF PA
179 40
219 . 30
'96 78
86 62
100 91
fi:; 140
4:1 16:1
IJ 177

TORONTO CUPII - The To- coach.
serve as batting coach .after his
ronto Blue Jays 0 n Wednesday . Tenace. 43, a native of Lucas- appointment.
named former Oakland World ville, Ohio. replaces.Cilo·Gaston, ·
Tenace joined the Blue Jays·
Series hero Gene Tenace to whobecametheteam'smanager organization In 1989 as a minor
become the team's batting in May. Gaston continued to . league hitting Instructor. He
• came from the New York Yan·
kees Qrganlzatlon, where he
served as a minor league hitting
Instructor and Interim manager
of
their Class-A affiliate at
BOSTON tUPI) - . Kevin jumpers , two defensive rebounds
Prince
William.
McHale SCOI't'd 23 points Wednes- and-a steal.
Since retiring after the 1983
day night and the Boston Celtlcs
·Houston. which •also lost to
season, Tenace also has been a
extended their exhibition season Boston 109-lOO.on Sunday, drops
minor league hitting Instructor
record to 6-0 with · a 119-101 to 3-3 In the pre-season with one
for the Milwaukee Brewers •In
victory over the Houston . game left . The Rockets werP ·Ied
1984 and a buUpen coach for the
ROckets.
by Mitchell Wiggins' 25 points,
Houston Astros lm 19~6 and 1987.
Larry Bird, playing In his first while Otis Thorpe contributed 20.
Tenace, who retired after more
game at Boston Garden slncP
For Boston. Robert Parish
than 13 years In the major
Nov.ll, 1988, scored 18 points and added 15 points and Reggie Lewis
leagues, played for 11\e Oakland
at )lis Introduction the sellout 12.
A's, San Diego Padres, St. Louis
crowd of 14,890 greeted him with
The Celtlcs built a 43-30 lead
Cardinals
and ·Pittsburgh PIa thunderous ovation and loud early In the second q11arter, but ·
rates.
He
was
a career .241 hitter
chant of "Larry, Larry." The Houston twice pulled within a
with 201 home runs and 674 RBI In
three-time MVP missed all but point In the last minutes of the
six games last year due to heel half, Boston holding a 58-54 lead' 1,555 major-league games.
Tenace Is remembered as the
surgery for removal of bone at Intermission. In the third
first
playpr tohll home runs In his
spurs.
quarter, a 12-2 Boston run was
first two World Series at bats,
Bird, who turns 33 In De· lmml'fllately answt'red by a 174
cember, showed signs or regain· Rockets' effort; pulling Houston coming Oct. 14, 1972 against
Cincinnati. He finished the series
lng his old form, hitting a 12-foot ·within 78-76.
a .348 average with four
with
lefthanded hook In the llrst
Boston then scored the next 10
home
runs and nine RBI.
quarter and sparking a 10-0 third points as part or a 17·2 surge
Tenace,
who lives In Poway,
quarter run with a pair of long which ended with Boston IPatllng
California,
appeared In four
95-78 early In· the fourth quarter.
WorJ4..')erles,
three with Oakland
The Celtics twice led by as many
11972-74)
and
one'
with the Card!·
as 20 points In last seven minutes.
nals
(}982).
Tennis
West Germany's Sylvia Hanika, one game from victory·,
retired because of tendinitis
during the llnal-sel tie-breaker
against Czechoslovakia's Jan
Posplsllova during a tournament
at Brighton, England .... Monica
Seles, the 15-year-okl Yugoslavian who has climbed to No. 7 In
the ranklngs, Is the ninth quail·
fler for the 51 million VIrginia
Slims Championships In Nel" ·
York. ... Anders Jarryd of
Sweden retired with a hlp Injury
during his first-round match
against Soviet Andrei' Chesnokov
at the European Community
Championships exhibition tournament In Antwerp, Belgium.
. Chesnokov had won the first set
6-3.... JQI!n Curry will replace
Buzzer Hadlngham as chairman
of the All England Tennis Club,
home of the Wimbledon
championships. .

Celtics bounce Houston five, 119-10 I

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

,.

D••••

1-1. ,\J~ron
.....
(:h Jl: 15. 8C'IIIIII U; IL
IW*W.r Patlll \ 'ldWy:!!: l"i. A1uliwr

:tl: 13. F•J hatH Jl:
•..-~~t~t~

.,

P)mal•••r\'aU"Y IS: lit All,.. Ea.~ It·
Ill. Col_.. ... " H..,., II: :el. iUt•)
narft"tborUII' Gulf'kll ,..4 ..... ~lit•

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DMMioll \ '
Tum
Polnl11
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H. ..... ~II· II ............................... .. .. .l!t

\ "- 1\ri .fillllni'I'IIDe

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lt.a ·••fiiiiM-&lt;toNIIrll (I-I) ...............1.1
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IWIAn'ft'C'k 0-.-.-., H.

(&gt;

••

~' •• f

.•
(

San Francisco works out at Candlestick"Our guys' backs are against
the wart." said team president AI
Rosen. ''They know they can not
afford to lose another game. So ,
really there Is every Indication
that they are going to come out
and play as hard as they can."
The task Craig has faced since
5:04 p.m. PDT last TUesday has •
been how best to deflate the
psychological lime bomb build·
lng up within each player. He
decided the best way was to allow
his players to once again play as
if they were children.
; \
"I think the worse thing 1 could
have done was have them · play
lntrasquad games all week,"
Craig said. "I wanted to IPt them
go out and have fun, be kids
again."
Craig's strategy seems to be
working. ·Each day the Giants
have getteri one step closer to
regaining their pre-quake form.
And each day, Craig has carefully planned his actions.
"I've been thinking for the last
four or fives days about when I

SAN FRANCISCO IUPI ) The signs of las tweek's devas tal·
lng earthquake have all but
vanished from Candlestick Park,
scene or Friday's Game 3 or the
World Series.
L
The repair work has been
completed, the concrete In Section 53 patched. All seemed
relatively normal as the San
Francisco Giants practiced Wed·
nesday under blue skies. There
was laughter once again around
the bat iing cage, and not of the
nervous variety.
" Everytlme you turn on the
radio or television there Is news
of the .quake," Giants Manager
Roger Craig said. "It's always
there, bu I people have gone back
to work. That's what we want to
do, go back to work and get on
with our lives."
The Giants not only have had to
recover from the anxieties
brought on by the killer quake,
but also are confronted with the
stark reality of being down 2-0 In
the best-of-seven Series.

:

Lucasville native named Ja)rs batting coach

Sports briefs

PA
86
o2
106
12;
122
195
210
283

Friday's slate
Kyger .C reek at North Gallia
SymmPS Valley at Hannan Trace .
Oak Hill at Southwestern
Saturday'• game
Ea~tern at Southern

"*'"· '

DivW.•IV

mention Its first-ever perfect
season. rr the VIkings win, 11
would be a satisfying win tor all
the Norsemen, especially since It
will be the !all gAme for seniors
Paul Hayes, FredKeeney, Harry
Morris, Alan Murdock, Roy
Payton, Jason Pernestl, Fred .
Wilburn and Kl!lth Wilson. .
Junior ruMing back Kenny
Daniels, wl!o In nine. games has
1,249 yards on 132 attempts, or
nearly a first down every time he
touches the ball, n~s 251 yards
to reach the 1,50Q.yard plateau .
Daniels, who has $CO~ 16
touchdowns so far, just might get
It against a Wildcat defpnse
trampled In last week's 42·0
decision against Southwestern.
Oak Hill, which mol't' than
likely lost Its chance to win the
brass ring for the fourth straight
year when 1.' l!&gt;SI that 20·14
decision to thP Valley six weeks
· ago, will see how much farther

1•

W•l'lll KH'If"'l

T.-...1k-'1 •l.r

Pot•"

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t. :wu .......... filii.. ) ~ .... ................... 11!
'· flP\'t'Sl . -l&amp;lll'pll (:t) (I-t) ............. Ill
~. F'ruiiHBIIJ lt-1) ......................... 111
~' 61lll•• (14) ""''''''"""''''""''""'"' ...
I. !U......... ir(~l) .......................... JS

INvlll••tn

Or ..... - .................. ('f'Mri'Br•

""'..,. rr,.....

SVAC standings

IMvlllioell

I.- ............ WlittiiiM"I- .....

.,...

Pol11t10

~ tfti~ II. , ...... McJUitlr7111;
lt. EM-I Cltowol_. · - It II. ~IMf-.
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gained In the battles against t~e
Oaks and the VIkings weren t
enough to ball Cheshire outo!the
trouble they got Into against t~e
stingy defenses of the league s
top duo.
.
On the other h.and, the Pirates,
also victims ofthe buzzsaw, have
experienced a turnaround In
their fortunes. While their e.a rly
losses, brought about primarily
by .the knockout blow su!IP~ by
junior quarterback Brian Stout
against Green Local. hurt .their
chancesatgettlnglntotheleague
chase, the Plralf&gt;S stood by their
running game, which turned out
three 100-yard-plus elforts (two
by tailback Billy Williamson, one
by luUback Casey Staton) and
allo~d II to gain strength until
Stout s return.
Stout returned for the Symmes
Valley game, but It wasn't until
the Hannan Trace game two
'!'eeks ago that he and .his
receiver corps- wldeouts Cllnton Kelley and Rob Canaday,
tight end D.J. J:lammel and
Williamson Cthe st{lrtlng quar·
terba~k while Stout was O!l the
mend) -showed what they could
do. In the last two games, North
has passed for 2'72 yards and
scored five touchdowns by air.
Kyge,r Creek. on the other hand,
has 'p assed lor 302 yards and two
to,..chdown~ In nine galJ1es.
While It's true that the Bobcats
haven't had anyone rush for 100
or more yards so far, they have
had at least nine people running
th~ ball. not just the backfield
tandem of Joe Edwards and Phil
Bradbu')', who are due to team
up agalq next year for another
shot at the league title. And even
though Kyger's offense shows
few ~urprises, one of them may
be tackle John Sipple. The. 6·0,
230-pound senior played fullback
last year, and If KC gets In a
pinch, Sipple will be ready to
come out or the pits and l't'turn to
the backlleld.
Tille a111·alts Vlklllp
With Hannan Trace as the last
dish on Its 10-course menu,
Symmes · V!llley Is the morning
line favorite to beat tile host
WHclcats and capture Its first·
ever SVAC championship, not to

&lt;.,tntl

am going to give them som&lt;;&gt; kind
of Inspirational speech." the
Giants skipper said . "I was going
todolltheotherday, but decided
that thPy would probably forget
what I said by Friday . I'm going
to talk to them right before the
game Friday ."
Craig has chosen t.o emphasize
the Giants' outstanding home
record Instead of dwelling upon
the club' s 0-2 Series deficit. San
Francisco was 53-28 at home,
thl,l'd best In the Majors .
"They are two games up, bu 1 ·
· we're not worried," Craig said.
"We play real well here. Friday
Is a big gamp. If we can win
Friday, we'rE' right back In It ."
'Vhlle Craig Is firmly focused
on the Series, his team also Is

beginning to zone Into the game.
"I think everybody, the play·
ers and the City, can see the light
at the end of the tunnel," said
reliever Steve Bedrosian. "The
excitement Is coming back to the
World Series ."
.
While the Giants worked out In
Candlestick Wednesday, the
Oakland Athletics held practice
at their Spring training facility In
Arizona.
"We decided we could get two
good practices In before Friday II
we went down to Arizona," said
Sandy Alderson, Oakland gen·
era I manager. ''The Sei-les has
been set, the weather Is uncertain and the region I~ gradually
getting back to normal so we fell
It was appropriate."

NFL owners take a break
CLEVELAND iUPII - NFL
owners. again falling to elect a
commissioner, recessed until
Wednesday night so representatives or two missing teams could
return for another attempt.
An Impasse that began July 6
has
· lasted through 11 votes
HENDERSON WARMS UP - Oakland's Ricky Henderson
during
46 hours of meetings over
warms up his arm during Wednesday's practice In Phoenix, Ariz.
five
days
In three cities.
The Athletics moved to their spring training facility, due to bad
The
power
struggle has preweather In the Bay Area. (UPI)
•
vented Pete Rozelle from retirIng after 29 years as the league
commissioner. Rozelle an nounced 218 days ago that he
.
wanted to step down.
A vote .of 26 owners present
Wednesday found 15 favoring
Craig Erickson CknuckiP) con- Paul Tagliabue, a Washington
By DAVID MOFFIT
tinues to heal. "Some games are attorney who has represented the
UP! Sports Writer
NFL since 1969, and ll for Jim
Tl)e No.1 slot In college football bigger than others."
Finks, president and genPral
Considering Alabama's schewill be at greater stake than
of the New Orleans
·manager
usual Saturday when the nation's dule , it 's early to think about the
Saints.
Nineteen
votes are
top two ·teams both face high· No. 5 Crimson Tide, 6-0, winning
needed
lo
approve
a new
the national title but such hopes
ranking opponents.
commissioner.
With current No. 1 Notre could be boosted by a victory
San Diego owner Alex Spanos
Dame, 7-0, home against No. 7 over No. 13 Penn State. 5'1.
and
Los AngpJes Raiders owner
"I think this is the best
Pittsburgh, 5-0-1, In the afterAI
Davis
departed the meet.lngs
noon, and No. 2 Miami , 6-0, Alabama team I have seen since
after
Tuesday's
11-hour session.
visiting No.8 Florida State, 5-2, 1978," said Penn State coach Joe
Wednesday's
meeting
was halted
at night , there could be the first Paterno. The 1978 Alabama team
3:
15
p.m.
EDT
and
set to
at
beat Penn State 14-7 In the Sugar
changP in a year at No.1.
resume
at
8:30
p.m.
EDT
so
Notre Dame has won 19 'Bowl to win the national cham·
the
clubs
representatives
of
~traight games the nation 's plonshlp. "We'rp' playing one or could catch airplanes to
longest winning streak, and Its the better teams In the country, II'
Cleveland.
longest In 41 years - and has not the bestleam In the country. " .
Steve Ortmayer, San Diego's
"We shouldn't be up therP Cal
been ranked No. 1 for the last 12
director
of football operations.
months . But ,coach Lou Holtz No. 5 l ," counfer!Kj Alabama
Coidt BIU. Curty - ·'We rnaM.iMW will ~prese~t the Chargers while
~11'-PA! ''J.I'tjllrtfng lflsli t~ to
ll!pl &lt;!OUIIII!I Jeft Blrren will
distance tliemselves · frotn 'elk the &amp;p&amp;tilftty to be II verY.'1iltli!Y
•
•
at
tend for the Raiders.
rated team. bu I we haven t
about the ratings.
"The owners fell that If they
"I'm being honest when I tell performed up to that level, In my
you we never talk about being opinion. We haven't put 60
No. 1," he said. "It never crosses minutes together In any game
our minds. I sure don't look on us despite some great victories."
In other top 10 action Saturday.
as the No. 1 team. based on the
way we've played this year, and I No. 3 Colorado, 7·0, Is at Okla·
haven' I voted us that way. All we hom a; Iowa State at No. 4
talk about Is getting better. All Nebraska, 7-0; Indiana at No. 6
we're concerned a bout Is being Michigan, 5-1; Wisconsin at No.9
the best team In the stadium each Illinois. 5-l; and Stanford at No.
Saturday. We don't feel any 10 Southern California, 5-2.
For Big Eight rivals Colorado
obligation to do this or do that
and
Nebraska, Saturday's
just because we're supposed to
'games
set the stage for next
be the No. 1 team."
Miami has won 48 of Its last 49 week's showdown between those
regular-season games, the lone two national powers at Boulder.
loss by 1 point last yPar at Notre Colo.
Nebraska Is already assured of
Dame. But Satl.lrday's game at
Tallahassee. Fla., Is rated a an NCAA-record 28th consecutossup because Florida State has tive winning season. Four more
been Impressive In flv&lt;&gt; straight victories In this decade would
allow Nebraska to break the
victories. ·
Florida State flgu~s to be fired record Alabama set with 103
up for Miami since the Hurri- triumphs' In the 1970s. The only
canes are the team that knocked other team to win 100 games In a
the Seminoles out of the national decade was Oklahoma. with 102
championship In both l987 and victories In the 1970s.
1988 by handing Florida State Its . Michigan coach Bo Schemonly losses In back-to-back ll-1 · beehler refuses to look ahead to
next month's showdown with
seasons.
"It's. just a game." says Illinois, a game that should
Miami's 19-year-old redshlrt · determine who wins the Big Ten
Conference and goes to the Rose
freshman quarterback Gino TorBowl.
retia, who will start _again while

got ali 28 clubs here, we could
have movement and perhaps a
decision," said NFL spokesman
Joe Browne . ·
Should the s talemate continue,
Rozelle said the league might
have to begin searching for
another candidate ~ that could
appeal to both members of both
·feuding factions in what has
become an NFL civil war.

Unbeaten Irish ·host
Pittsburgh Saturday

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�PIG• 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomelov-Middapu~.

_Co1f!-munity calendar
THURSDAY
POMEROY -The Meigs
County Health Department will
be administering flu vaccines on
Thursday from 9a.m. to noon and
1-3 p.m. for the general public at
I he health department. There
will be a charge of $1 for the
general public. A make up date
will be held on Nov. 3 from noon
to 4 p.m.

RACINE
The American
Legion Auxiliary of Racine Post
602 will meet Thursday at 7: 30at
the haiL
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
group of A .A. and Al-Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
For more in(ormation call
1-1!00-333-5051.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport troop 245 will host jts fall
roundup on Thursday at 7 p.m. at
the Middleport Presbyterian
Church. All boys between the
ages of 1l and 17 are invited to
attend.
·
· '
BRADFORD - Tile Women's
Fellows~ip of the Meigs County
Churches of Christ will meet at
the Bradford Church of Cllriston
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m.
·
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
VFW Post 9053. Tuppt&gt;rs Plains,

will meet at 8 p.m. on Thursday
at the post home.
·
RACINE - Tile Southern Lo·
cal Scllool Board will hold a
special meeting on Thursday at 7
p.r_n. at tile high schooL
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Church
Women United of Meigs County
will have a planning session at
1: 30 Friday at the Mount Moriah
Baptist Church in Middleport. All
key women from area churches
are urged to attend.
POMEROY - The UMWA
Support Group will meet Thursday at 6 p.m . at Pleasers.
POMEROY The Senior
Citizens Dance Club will sponsor
a roilnd and square dance on
Friday from s:-n p.m. at the
center on Mulberry Hzlghts.
True Cpunty Ramblers will perform and admission Is $2. Those
11ttendlng are to bring snacks for
the snack r&gt;~ble. Those attending
may also dress for Halloween.
!!ATURDAY
RUTI.AND Homecoming
weekend will be observed at the
Rutland Nazarene Church. On
Saturday evening the drama, "IS
My Name Written There' • will be
presented. Activities In celebra.tlon of I he 40th anniversary of the
..

People in thew news--By WILLIAM C . TROTI'

United Press International
ANIMAL LOVERS, PART 1: Singer Whitney Houston called a
news conference at the Bronx Zoo to. introduce the world to
Geol'l!e and Gracie. the lion cub&amp; she is providing for the zoo.
Houston invited a fifth-grade class from the Franklin School in
East Orange, N.J., where she once was a student, for the
occasion. "For a long time I wanted to take my own love for
animals one step farther," Houston said.
"When it came to my attention that th&lt;' Bronx Zoo was seeking
lion cubs, it seemed like a very spt&gt;clal and rar&lt;' opportunity to
get involved with an effort that goes beyond a pt&gt;rsonal affinity
for animals. to help ensure that the creatures oftheear.th will be
protected lo• fu lure generations." George and Gracie were
born In Buffalo In May and Houston also is picking up thetabfor
their care for a year.
ANIMAL LOVERS, PART II: Rue McClanahan and Estelle
Getty say people- especially elderly people- need pt&gt;ts. The
"Golden Girls" stars were in Washington Wednesday to mark
th&lt;' 25,000th pairing of a senior citizen with a sheltE&gt;r animal in
thP Ralston Purina "Pets lor People" program, In which the
company gives shelter animals to seniors free of charge.
"We aren't made to live without dogs and ·cats. obviously,"
said McClanahan, who owns five of the former and three of the
latter. "They're domestic creatures and they give us so much."
Getty said she has a "vested Interest in senior citizens both as a
pt&gt;rson and as playing the role of Sophia. If pt&gt;ts help lower your
blood prPSsure, • Isn't u bel,..,. than taking needles. being on
drugs or lying in a ·hospital?"
Other celebritiPs who participate in the program includE&gt;
fellow "Golden Girl" Be a Arthur, advisory board chairwoman
Audrey Meadows, George Bums, Jimmy Stewart, Dick Van
Dyke, Robert Wagner, Stefanie Powel'tl, Uoyd Bridges, Mary
Tyler Moore, Clint E..,a.·ood, Waller Cr011kMe, Willard Scott
and Steve Allen.
·
STONES MUFFLED IN L.A.: The'Rolling Stones had to tone
down their act in Los Angeles. After the first of their four shows
last week at Memorial Coliseum, policP received more than 300
complaints about the noise from nearby residents. City officials
asked if the Stones could muffle themselves so the band turned
down the volume by 15 deci!Jels. Only four noise complaints
were received after that.
TELLING HIMSELF TO SAY NO: Robert Chambers, who Is
serving five to I:i years forkllllng.Jennlfer Levin in New York's
"preppie murder" case, wants to be a drug counselo{ despite
being caught with drugs in. prison twice. Chambers. 22, who
admitted having a drug problem before going to prison, has
filed a suit claiming he Is being unjus.tly barred from enrolling
in a prlson-coUegp program so he can be a counselor.
He claims he got high marks on an entrance exam for the
program and his lawyer says he's being excluded because his
case was so infamous. Prison. officials have twice found.
marijuana in Chambers's cell and he also has been dl~lplined
for having a razor blade and accepting unau thorlzed· papt&gt;rs
from a visitor.
GLIMPSES: For those who jus·t can't get enough of ZsaZsa
Gabor, TriCoast International is putting out a 60-minute video.
''The People vs. ZsaZsa Gabor," covering her ordeal from the
slap heard ·round the world to her sentencing to three days in
jail. The highlight is Zsa Zsa throwing a tantrum and stalking .
from courtoom. A TriCoas t spokesman says the $9.95 video will
appeal to people "who read the National Enquirer" ... Mildred
Wlrt Benson. the author of the Nancy. Drew adventures and
scores of other children's books, wm be honored by Ohloana
Library for distinguished service on Nov. 4. "So many years
have elapsed since I actively wrote children's books that I doubt
I deserve the honor," Benson told library officials. when slle
learned she was to be honored.
.

G&gt;unty insuring performance
' "'

UPPER MARLBORO, Md.
tUPil -Some say a high school
de!(ree isn't worth what It used to

tie.
But school officials in Prince
Geol'l!e's County, Md., have
taken an unusual step to guarantee that It Is.
The school system Is offering a
one-year employa b!llty warranty on many of Its graduates. I!
they fall on the job, graduates of
the 104,000-student school system
are sent back to school lor
retunin!(- at the!'Chool system's
expt&gt;nse.
''There Is a checklist for
certain skUis and competency
that local businesses require and
hav~ suggested to Ul," school
spokesman llrlan Porter said
Wednesday. ''These are not
trade skills, these deal with kind
of entry level employability
skills that make a child a
worthwlle Investment for (an
employer) to retrain."
'I'M first warranlled graduates
- 2,575 of the county's 7,000
graduating seniors from 22 high
schoell - received cerlfncalet

'

of employability after gradual·
lng in June.
If an employer is unsatisfied
with a graduate's performance
within· the first year of employment, school officials will Inter·
vene and retrain In the basics
career education programs.

church will be held on Sunday.
POMEROY - Free Clothing
Day will be held at the Salvation
Army on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, on Thursday from 10 a.m.
until noon. All area residents In
need of clothing are welcome to
come, Salvation Army officials
advise.
REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
Local Academic Boosters will be
sponsoring a consignment and
donation auction on Saturday at
the high school. ContacthAnna
McCoy at 985-3907 or Kathy
Manlcke at 667-3730 for Information. I.O. McCoy will serve as
the auctioneer.

Ohio
I'

gospt&gt;l hymn sing on Saturday at
the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church at 7 p.m. The group,
Sunrise, will be featured. Pastor
Bill Williams Invites the public.
RUTLAND -There will be a
square, round, and slow dance on
Saturday from 8p.m. to midnight
at the Ell Denison Post 467 of the
American Legion In Rutland .
True Country Ramblers will
pt&gt;rform. The public is Invited to
attend.

RUTLAND -The Rutland
Church of the Nazarene will have
Its 40th anniversary homecomIng on Saturday and Sunday.
Services will be at 7 p.m. on
Saturday. On Sunday worship
LONG BOTTOM -The Long services will begin at 10:30 a.m.
Bottom Community Association · followed by a group picture,
wUl stage Its fall smorgasbord carry In dinner and a slngsperadlnner on Saturday at 5 p.m. In tlon at 2 p.m. with the Musser
the community building. The all family and other local talent.
you can eat meal will feature
turkey arid ham, homemade
SUNDAY
dressing and noodles , desserts,
CARPENTER -There will be
and drinks for $4. Childrens price a hymn sing on Sunday at thP Mt.
Is $2.25.
Union Baptist Church. The Gabriels Quartet will sing·. The
RUTLAND -The Rutland church Is located off Route 143
Emergency Medlcai Service will and Country Road 14. two mlies
sponsor its annual Christmas south of Carpt&gt;nter. Local talents .
Bazaar on Saturday from 9 a.m. welcome. Pastor Joe N. Sayre
to 5 p.m. at the Rutland Civic Invites the public.
Center. There will be crafts,
baked goods, and refreshments
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
for sale. Table rentat'ls available Order of the Eastern Star No. 186
by contacting Marcia Eliott at will meet Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
742-2233 or JoAnn Eads at Royal Oak Resort In the archery
742-3078.
building. All Eastern Star
members , and families are
POMEROY - There will be a Invited.

Shattered shop recovers pets ·
OAKLAND, Calif. !UP[) -:The nation 's largPst rep til&lt;' shop,
which was completely shattered
by the collapse of the
earthquake-weakened Nimitz
Freeway, has finally completed
a roundup of most of the snakes
and lizards that slithered for ·
cover.
Owen Maercks, owner of the
East Bay Vivarium, said only
about 50 of his 600 specially bred
reptiles -many worth up to $500
each - were still missing Wed·
nesday night and most of tliem
were probably curled up somewhere in the huge 5,600-foot

reptile."
He said people often prefer
reptiles because they are silent.
have no odor, no veterinarian
bills, require no licensing, are
non-allergenic and don't have to
be walked late at night.
"They're very simple to keep,
not requiring a lot of work and
you only have to feed them once a
week. As pt&gt;ople move into
smaller living quarters. they
need a pt&gt;l tlrat lnvplves less
space and care and provide a lot
of Interest In return."

Sorority chapter meets

Thief returns stuffed animal to kid

A halloween party was held at
the recent meeting of the Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter. Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority when
members met at the home of
Barbara Welsh.
Tim Hood served. as judge In
selecting winners tor the categories of ugliest, Barb Black;
prettiest, Kay Adkins; scariest,
Sandy Hanning; and most orlgl·
nal. Sharon Pratt. Those named
were awarded prizes :

HOUSTON tUPii - A 6-year·
old girl has been reunited with
her best friend, "Mittens the
Kitten," thanks to a convicted
auto thief who got a three-year
break In his prison sentence for
returning the stuffed animal.
"SQmetlmes It's more Important to please the victim In the
case than to prosecute fhe case to
the fullest." said Harris County
prosecutor D4vld Singer. ·
Laura Higbie, 6, and Mittens
were reunited Tuesday when
.John Jackson's wife appt&gt;ared In
court with the stuffed animal. In
exchange, Jackson was sent·
enced to four years hi prison for
unauthorized use of a motor
vehicle.
"I'm happy because I got
Mit tells back," Higbie said. "I
slept with her and took her
places. I felt real sad when she

The group plans to tour the
Middleton Doll Factory and
Fenton Glass on Nov. 4. Any

member attending is to meet at
the old junior high building In
Pomeroy at 9 a.m.
Gall Roush presented a program on "Assertive Management" noting the differences In
being assertive and aggressive.
The next meeting w111 be held
.at the home of A.R. Knight in ·
Pomeroy. Debbie Fin law will
have th'e culiural report and
hostesses will be Pat Arnold and
Kay Logan.
A bonfire with welners and
marshmallows ended the meet.
lng.wlth Ruth Riffle, Susie Baer,
and Barbara Welsh as hostesses. ,

Pedigreed puppy .returned
potential earning&amp; from future
HINGHAM, Mass. ( UPH - A
young dognappt&gt;r had to relin- litters.
The Patriot Ledger of Quincy
quish his vl~tlm when a higher
ran a front-page story on the case
authority, his mother, read about
in Its Tuesday edition, .and sure
the crime in a local papt&gt;r.
Penny, a 9-week-old pedigreed enough, I he dog was returned
golden retriever, was taken that evening.
Bennett said a woman accomMonday from yard of her owner' s
panied
by two teenagers drove up
house, said Hingham Police Lt.
to her house. One of the boys
Edmond Burgess. The thief left a
. pumpkin with the message: handed her the dog and said his
"Thanks for the dog, sorry no younger brother had taken the
money ... 'Don't Worry, Be puppy.
Happy." '
Bennett said the mother was
Penny's owner, Lynda Ben- embarrassed alter she read
nett, 44, contacted Burgess, who . about the puppr in the paper.
"She looked very upset," Bensuggested she publicize the missnett said :
Ing puppy through local media .
Bennett. who has raised golden
Bennett promised not to ask
retrievers for 17 )•ears, said the ques tions if the puppy was .
puppy, because of her pedigree, returned , so the woman drove off
was worth up to $30,000 in without being identified.

.

BERRY

SYRACUSE, OHIO

Classified pages cover the

We Have A Free

.following telephone exchantces ...

...._

8xl0 Color·· Portrait
Just For You!

__

' Meigs County

ANa Cocta &amp;1•
912-M_

H7-c......-.

_.

.......Ov

3. .-VintDfl
241-RIO Gqnde
256-Guwn O••t
143-ArMMaDtat
379-Wtlnut

915-CMnlr

14~-Pon•nc:l

2·7-L.Mirt F..ts

9•t-Radne
742-Autt.nd

Maon Co .. WV
Aru Coda 30._

175-Pt. Pl-.nt

. . . _L8on

17•-,._.• Growt~
773-M•on
112-t.ew Heven
111-Leurt
937-Buff•o

117-CooNiie

18.00
113.00
833.00

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

26·35 WORD&amp;

$7 .00

15.00
18.00

$10.00
S15 .00

St3.00
&amp;21.00
851.00

Announccnll: nts
1 -Card of Thanks

2-ln Memory

3-Annoucam .. ts
4-Givaevvay
5-ltappy Ads
6-Lost end FoUnd
7-Y•d Sale tDatd in •ch-ancel
8-Pubhc S•le • Auchofl
9-Wam .. to luv

f tllitlllVtllf'lil
St:r vtr:t~.,

The Columbia Chapel Chris·
tlan Church
. on Route ,,689 will be.
celebratmg with homecoming on
Sunday.
Worship services will be at
10: 30 a.m. A'carry In dinner will
begin at 12:30 p.m. and afternoon
services will be at 2 p.m. .
The clown ministry from Galli·
polis will have a presenmtion at 6
p.m. lor children and adults .
Those at tending can come
dressed as a Bible character If
desired. The public Is Invited to
attend. ·

9F

•tate of Arnold M. Gr11e.

FIDUCIARY
On Octobor 18, 1988, in
thtt Melao County Proboto

dec-ed. tile of Box 23,

Mcrchanrl1se
51-HouHhold Good'
52-SponinO Goods:
153-An11QUII
i4-M•sc . MarchMCIIIe
~~-Buildm9 Supph•
16-Pttl tor Self!
57-Mutlcal lnatrum.,ts
18-fruill &amp;
19-For Sale or lrad~

13-lnsurance
14-8"''"•• Traininu
16-Schools • lnnn~edon
16-RHio. TV &amp; Cl Repair

17-Mitcellaneous
11-W•tlld To Do

RoHtte MMI•. 3410 Irwin
Roat. Ool- ONo4301&amp;.

Lena K. Ne. .elrold, Clerk

Court. Cue No.

28392.

1·13·ttc

_..._...

tho-·Porn-.

DrW•
Molgo
ty,()No,487ell. .

34---·. . . . .
s••

315-Lots-a Aofa.,.
36-Aaal btata W... H

Robert E. Buck.
Proboto Judgo
Lona K. NH ...oad. Clerll
(10) 19. 21, tn) 3tc

z.

1 c.KW~mliOn

Roger Hysell
Garage

11-Ferm Eauipm.,,
12-Wantec:l to Buv

BiNGO

13-Liveatock
••-tt•v &amp; Gra1n
16-S.ed &amp; Fert Mqer

POMEROY -EAGLES
CLUI
992-91178

75-Bo•ts • Motors tor Sale
76-Auto Pans &amp; Acc•IOI'•a
77-Aulo ReP•r
:.~:;:: Equtp~n:enl
:.t•
a MotDr Hom•

THUIS. 1,1. 6:45 P.M.
SUN. 1.1. I :45 P.M.
1001 PIRI
2 H.D. FREE with COUJIQR and·
pun:h.. of min. H.C. Ptcf&lt;.'
lit. lim~ I coupon per cus·tomer per binfl 111slon.
w. ,, •so.oo '" Garw•

Dw11 10 P..,to 165.00 :

rr -·

•oo1-1

VISIT OUR

SALE ROOM

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF

IIGH TOP LUTHEI

On October 19. 1989, in
the Meip County Probate

2-J·"•

13" through 205-IS"

83-hcaw•t•nu
11-0en•al ..._utmv
U-Mobile Home Repair

$30.00 a

Poir
Mounted and lalatKtd

"FREE"

87..:...Uphotn.-y

41-FCII' L8•e

mMtmg or on en ablentee

FIDUCIARY

130 PAllS OF IIIII'S

Coun, Cooo No. 28414,
Mildred M. Grete, Box 23,

Basketball Shoes

RuttMld, OH. 4&amp;77&amp; WOI

Sizes 5 111·13

We are pleased to offer this gift to the general publtc.
Simply make an appoint~nent, ap.d bring your family in
to be photographed in the comfort of our offices.
PICTURES WILL BE TAKEN:
NOV!iMDR 8 A 7
NOVEMBER 8 &amp; 9
People• Bank
Peoples Bank
2212 Jackson Avenue
tsth Street
Point Pleaqnt
New Haven

•

•'
'

PHCYI'OGRAPHY BY C.R. MCDANIEL II
Your Free 8z10 Color Portrait Will Be Ready In Time For The HoUdays.
You May Purcbue Additional Portraits If You Choose. ·
Please Call MarllyD llartiD at 875-1121 To Schedule Your Appointment. · .

Thank You For Banking With Us!

OPLES BANK
POINT PLEASANT

NEW HAVEN

MEMBER F,D.I.C.

-o11'er Ia Ulnlted To One Free Poi ball ~'tor Jl'unlly And Exl!ludelllndlvldual Baby and ~'tot Portralta.
I

moy 1111 tacured

.

TRACT VW-139

ltoa•; , . . .d tltt:lrtc;

~

. .ent; county .or. Old«

2-story wood sided house;

tltt:lric: well wet•. Loatled
Oil 1.00 ICI'I IPPI'CitiUtiY
two (2) llil• saqth of WI~
ksevlllt on 51111 Route 160.
. $51.750.00.

TRACT IIC·73

S.lll 4-111011 ilouH In
poor coHitlan; loatled on

1sec1t1dM U•cr•tnCol-

ullbll Township, lltip

Cotmty. Electric 111d well
Wll•. llo lntloor plltmbin1
• $7,000.00.
TIACT 15·154
R1stic 4--lol ilollll
locllld on 50.00 ~er•. ApproaillltiiJ 40.00 Ieise ol
.....-: IIIC!ric 111d well
Wiler; loCIIIId on llltp

CONTACT: Manning Klots
Cmtral Trust .- 992·6661
Good lnvlltment PropertJI Finlncinc
n1ilable throu1h Central Trust or mke
prtferred arranpments. Central Trust of·
firs competitive rates and friandly service!

L&amp;L TIRES

614-992-5344
FIVE

2tc

IEDIOOM SUITtS
DINEnf SETS
"II:W" RfCUN£1S

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Located

w.

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
742-2455
Sala111
Ruttllllld

FOR SALE
HIGLEY

z

F~IM

RUTLAND TOWNSHIP

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

::1: '(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
·

Behin~

Tracto1 Dealership

417 Second Av11111e. Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

$45,000
742-2143

DAVE'S ·
SMALL INGINE
REPAIR
Locat.d ot Vahy lumber
In Middleport, Oh.
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Most 2 and 4-cycle
engin11

Stock Parts for

01110

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

II' s Time Now!
Have That Furnace

.....

Checked.

j_911:

We Service All
Makes- Gas or
Electric. AI•D Parts
for All Makes.

~IG I. 1011511

•• "J .

- ~ IESIDENTIAI.

}f'~ COI!IIIEICIAL

•CUtrOM Mf'TGMENI a IATHI

CAll flOW

•EXTENIM! ftEMODELINQ
WIN,.l IICMNO a ROOfiNG

Hometite, Waedeater,
Tecumseh, Briggs &amp;

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVIC~

•NEW HOMES

Stranon.

992·5335 or
985-3561

•sn Sf. IYMQISI

R. L HOLLON

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

-MnAL IUILDINGI

SINCf: 1969

99~!-7611

9-27·'89-tm

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Basham Building

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
StrictiJ

f,.,....

10-!1-tln

TRUCKING
CHEml, OHIO
•GRAVEL
.·
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL
9·23-89- 1 mo. pd.

GUN SHOOT

STEWART
TRUCKING

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB

9-20-tfn

Call 742-2416
After 5 p.m.

985-4422

L. W.
•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

Will Video Tape
Weddings,
Birthdays,
Reunions, Interiors
of Homes for
lnsurince.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

lt. 124 letw•n
Willt•nillt on4
Soltsn c.. t.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

EVERY SUNDAY

. . . . .swt
"Free Estimllf8tl"

11:00 A.M.
12 Gouge Shotguns Only
Factory ChoU
STIICRY fNFOiaD!

PH. 949-2801 .
or les. 949·2160

9-21-89-1 mo.

NO SUNDAY CAliS
3-11-tfn

Business
Services

VAUGHN'S
AUTO ....:... DIESEL
SERVICE
SYUCUSf. OHIO

Moat Fmeian and
Oom•tic Vehidas
AIC S1rvice
All M~or &amp; MinOt
Repain
NIASE Certified M•chanic

CALl 992-67 56
"00(" VAUGHN
Certified Licensed Shop

THE
BASKET WEAVE
36425 lodttpri"l• ld.
P-rey, 011.

992-6155
HANDWOVEN IASIETS
lASifT WEAVING

llown L WriteMI

ROOFING
. . . -IIPAII
Gutters
Down .Pouts
Gutter Cleening
Peinting
FREE ESTI.MATES

949-2161
•
.... tid:.

ALLEN'S
HAULING

' MOO GALLON
WATER SIIYICE
UMESIONI
SPIEAD
Dill HAULED

1-1~'·1

TEMPSTAR

Starts at 1:00 P.M.

Foctllry Choked 12
Gauge OnlY.

MOBILE ·
HOME PARK

. BOB'S
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

•Moblla Home
Part•
•Mobil• Home
Rent1l1
•Lot Ront1l1

SYIACUSE
992·2621 or
992-6944

INTERIOR·MERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Ta•• tho palo out of
painting. Let mo do

It far yau.
VUY IEASONAILE
HAVE IEFEUNCES

614-915-4110

Til-CO. TEIMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL

SWEEPER REPAIR
All MAlES AND

MODElS

MARTIN'S
FU.NI1UIE
and MO.E

County Road llo. I In li·

TowMiip, •111
Coutlty; aclllllll hlnllnl
••.• $32,000.00.

992-6172

POMIIOY, 011.

•

WATER
SERVICE
1,010 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS

• CISTERNS
Call AnytiiM

992-2371

4·28·'11-1 mo.

'oUGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD'

IIU SLACK
992-226.

*••s·

~/1/11/ltft

7 Days A Week

9 a.m.- 7 p.m ..

992-5114

At Jet. S.l. 7 &amp; 143

. On fhe IJ_;~smo

Sand-StDne·Dirt

Announcements

(6141 667-3271
Grant A. M!?!~

EAGLE IIDGI

SMALL ENGINE

.......

3 Announcements
No HuntinG or T,..paa~ng on
R. H. Hk;lctl prope...,. II H.lffwd
whhout
~ ln-

wrin•!*"*·

tormotton COl 304-la-3a.a.

4

Giveaway

IYAN SUW'ICE CINIU
Parts I S•wlco Oo
VISA • MAITEACHAROE

HOURS' Mon.-Fri. 9· 7

Sot.9·&amp;

•SHAUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

HOURS

DUMP Tf\UCK

ECHO SAWS I TIIIIMUS
0110011 IAIS, CIIAIJIS

8·7·11-1 mo.

Stainless Steel.

~NTERPRISES

ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SI'IDERS
BEES •WASPS
Momltor llatiottll Pest
Control Assn.

1-800-535-2199

Metals,
Plastics,

NEWLAND

YAIDMAN 'MOWRS

RULlO

POMEIOY, OHIO
We Buy AI
Non Ferrous

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARII',IG

SIIKE 1976

Tal Fr""

1·22·1 010.

RECYCLING

9·6· 89-tfn

9· 28·'81'1 mo.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

111-COUNTY

EVERY SUNDAY
Beginning Sept. 17

New Fall/Winter Hours
ThursdaYS 10:00-3:00,
Saturdays 10:00-3:00

114/19-tfn

COUNTRY

RACINE
GUN ClUB
GUN SHOOT

SUPPliES
ClASSES OFFERED.

&amp;-25.'88-tfn

2221alt_...

I•

'·

trict office.
(10) 13, 26

1

2 ltou• - l·slf!!r bridt

NEWLY REMODELED -In-town two-story, 3
bedroom, vinyl siding. low Maintenance! !58
S. 3rd St., Middleport. Old charm, modern
convenience priced at 77% of appraised value - $35,000.

from the conai!II'Vation dis-

G..eral

NOTICE OF PROPERTY
FOR SALE
Usted below 111 fiwe (5)
tlacts otl..d. indudin&amp;tes~
denw loattedllt.-.tn, bela&amp;
olf•ad fur saltily Ft111klln
Rt. ESIIIt C011pany. For
more inlurttlllion or 1~
-==~ toRtmsw
view, II
p(tl!t
Soutt.n tlllo Coli Complny
line Office. 614128&amp;-5051,
or o... Btny 11 tllio P ColnPI!Ir. Lind ...lllllltnt
Ofli Cl in llt:ConntiSvNie.
614/962-4525.
TRACT YY-07
House 1nd 5.00 acres
lot:l!ed on Vinton Coanty
loed No. 38, s~uatMI in
Section I of Vinton Township, Vinton County, Ollio;
9 re•s old: 2-story, wood
1nd brick home; 111 eltc·
tric; 2~ bllhs; CGUnly WIler, ~ _outbuildinas in fait
condttton · $54,000.00.
TRACT VW-91
Old« 1-story house wHit
jllintld wood sidin&amp; lot:l!ed
lllr• (3) tnil• west ol Wil·
kenlll• on Stile Roall124:
illlnent; , . ..d lllt:lrlc;
ludlnl Creek Wiler; l acres

- S36.tllo.oo.

UVIHG lOOM Sllns

~ LISA M. KOCH', M.S.
~ Licensed' Clinical Audiologist

~- ~

USED TIRE
SALE

81 ·~Home lmprowm.ms
12-Piumblng &amp; ..... '"9
M-Eiectncal • Refrig•auon

48- iQUiprn.-rt tor Fl11n

Public N atice

USED FURNITURE

. Depentlltble Hearing Aid sBies &amp; ServiCII.
" Hearing Evaluations ~or All Ages

4-25-tfn

Services

41- FumtthH Rooms
46-lt~..::e tor fl., I
47-WantM tD Ren1

1

LOWEST PRKES
IIGHEST QUAUTY

New location:
161 North S•cond
Mitldltport, Ohio 45760

car aaraae', 10x60 ft.
deck. 3 acres plus I \1,
acre lake. Mint cond.
$120,000 firm. All new
drapes. fully carpeted.
Built-in lg. TV. stove &amp;
refrig. See-through fire·
place.

tic.

•1-11011 ... tor "en•

c.....

PlUMIING &amp; IlEADNG

POMEIOY AND .DDLEPOIT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWJIIED PIZil SHOP.

or 992-7121

Ltvt~stock

74-MotCH"cvcl•

31 -Hom• tor Sale
32-Mobile Hom• tor Sale
33-Fuma tor

oppolnlad E-mk of
of John L. Mor&amp; De-at. tlto of 41198 Seneca

MAIN STREET
PIZZA
FifE lOCAl OEUVEIY

~~: ~:;~~:~;

71 :...Autos tor S .. e
72-Trucka tor Sale
73-Yans &amp; 4 WD "s

HP,II f SI&lt;Jit•

110) 28; (11) 2. a 3tc

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

P011118ntv,
Loc•Uy Owned • Op•roted .,Y Bill, ---,, -.-:

Middleport, Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Trans~nrtallon

hr~oea

R""l Eatate

614·992·2471

1

224 E. MAIN ST.

21-Bua•n•• Opportunity
22-MoniiV to Loan

Robert E. Buc:k,
Probote Judge

· PH. 949·2101
or les. 949-2160

FAMILY .HOMES INC.
P. 0. lox 207

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

V•v••bl•

/';

1 2-Sitv.ttan WMtM

Rutlend, OH . 411776.

"At leason•l• Pricet"

9·26·'89-1 mo.

F.t'lll Suppl11:s

11-Help Wantec:l

-ch

MODR OPEN DAlY MONDAY THIU SATURDAY
1:00 P.M.·6:0D P.M. or Call For Appointment

$25.00
860.00

• •D••t•

ballot

CUSTOM IUI.T
HOMES &amp; GAIAGES

""

,.... '

992-2198

SALE STAllS
SEPT. 29, 1989
•ppointed ExecutOf of the

MODUUI HOMES ·
SINCE 1970
lanch, Cape Cod &amp; 2 Story

I

3 BR ranch home, 2\'t
baths. full basement, 2

R.t• are tor con•cutweruna. broken uDdiNIWill bech•91d
tor e..-:h d~
ads .

"'-"PIIftrnant tOt" Rent

Chapel homecoming
Jet for Sunday

Nike • Converse
Reebok • Brooki • Ponl
~~ •• t ••' Lt..I ...,......

16-26 WORDS

•2-Mobile Hom• for Rant
43- F•rme tor Rant

Cet · Retultc f11t

·t!'tii;

9/18/1 mo. pd:

n .oo

23-Prot•lional

Wt can r~r ancl rt·
cart ratlratar1 and
htattr caru. W• can
also acid boil oncl rod
out ratliatars. Wt aho
rtpair Gas Tanks.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

992-9922 or 992-1228

14.00

I MONTH

NEED A HOME?

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Dailv Specials

O·Hi WORDS

1 OA¥ .
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS

RADIATOR
SEUICE

PAT HILL FOlD

NEW YORK ~UP!) - Mary
McCarthy, the author who covered the VIetnam War, Watergate and wrote such major works
as "The Group," "The Company
She Keeps" and "Memorle.s of a
Catholic Girlhood," died Tues- .
day . She was 77.
She died of cancer about 2:45
p.m. In New York · Hospital
Cornell Medical Center, where
she was admitted Sept. 21.

f tnonr:t&lt;JI

store .
Although the animal cages
shattered in the major earth·
quake eight days earlier, the
shop Itself was structurally
sound, he said. The probl'em was
that the cpllapsed freeway
blocked access to the store,
which he may havP to abandon
for another location.
"I sell primarily reptiles and
amphibians ·and we're the largest store of its kind • in the
country," said Maercks. ···I'd
venture to say that In any
residential block In Oakland,
there's somebody who has a pet

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
-11:00 A.M. SATURDAY
- 2'00 P.t,l . MONDAY
- 2'00 P.r.! . TUESDAY
- 2'00 P.r.! . WEDNESDAY
- 2,00 P.r.! . THURSDAY
- 2,00 P.M . FRIDAY

COllY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TU!SDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
l'MURIDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPEA
SUNDAY PAPER ,

"COME SEE WHAT'S NEW"

Author McCarthy
dead at age 77

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 ~.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED
Y

•A claMitltd acwanllem.,t Dieted m The Daily &amp;entin•l•·
cept - ct•sihed • .,..,, Bua;n•• Card and leg at nM10111
wiU 1110 app.., In ttte Pt. Pl. . .nt R-.s•r end the Galli·
polis Dlilv Tribune. ,..cmn, 0\'11 18.000 Mm•-

OCTOBER 27th-28th-29th
10:00 A.M.-8:00 ·P.M.

"She didn't want to give It
back, but I told her It's for me,"
Jackson said. "She had grown
atmched to lt."

• The Area's Number · 1 Marketplace

•Price of ad fctf all ~itall.-.en 11 double pnce of ad ca.,.
•7 point lin• typa ontv u.d.-.,.
OJ
•&amp;.-tinal is not r•pon~~lble tor errors after first d-r . !Check
tor en01s ftrat a., ad runs in ,..,.,, _Call before 2:00p.m.
d• .tt• publ1•ion to mllla cmrecuon.
•Ads that must H paid in adtfllnc:e ••
Card of Th111lls
ttappy Ads
In Memor*'"
V·~ IIi•

FALL OPEN HOUSE

Business Services

•
Classi .1e

run 3 d.,, at no ch•••·

COUNTRY GIFTS &amp; DECOR

2301 SIXTH STIEET

was gone. I just wanted Mittens
back."
The child's troubles began
when she placed Mittens Inside a
suitcase In the trunk of the family
car after spending the night with
a friend. The car was stolen, and
Jackson, 23, a construction
draftsman, was arrested a week
later while driving the vehicle,
Singer said.
Singer said several Items were
lound, "but nothing as Important
as Mittens." He contacted Jackson's attorney and offered a
reduced sentence In exchange lor
the stuffed animal's safe return.
· "I offered him seven years In
the joint; or four If the cat was
returned unharmed," Singer
said.
Jackson said he first had to
convince his wife to give up the
present he had given her.

oulllide MeiQI, Gttllit or Mnon counti• mu It be pr•
paid.
·
•Aeceill.re 1.50 diacount tor ada f*c!•n ad\lnce.
•F'" edt - Qive..,..ay Md Found.adl una.- 1 r. words will be

BASKET

The Daily

Ohio

ThW'ICiav. October 26, 1989

Clo•ed Sunday

····2969
10/10/89 ...

SUN'S UP
TANNING

,.,, ... o......

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

I hMtty kltt•M. Liter ,...._, 2
onont11o Okl. eon IIWU.H31.
8onllr Collie 3 pupe ml•lld,
mUll taka all, 4 wke. olll. 114448-4375.

c... 1r.l ft.
-boord, Wltno 1 gold, good
oon&lt;U14--44f.4ta.

Dollolman P I - to gl..
IWIJ to aoocl home. GOod

wotclt dog. 114--211-1:1411.

Four 1 - . old~ I Collco,
1 ltl8clt, _,.,, htn WMtuw4. to
good-- 11..._.1711

......... -.*"

, _ 5 .... old (lOft ....... -

SUSAN COUIAN
7t2-2771

C.ll fw Fill St~ellli
ht .......
-P'~~

-------

'

.

"

�PRJ I

s. ltilel

10-lhe

'ThuncMv. October 26. 1989

LAFF 1\DAY

4

----.. ·- --···--.

........
---. ....

-- --- - ----- -,

42 Molllll Homll

tlnp'na ...,.. wlh

=·~~-~AIIhrat¥9t

......................
1111,:..~......

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

111L

.

---·

"'

11

ElpollooOI d

~~~~

de~- t~

y.

p.wt.

....... e.; •ot• Rt.

211. In
...,_...., l'rlclly tH7. . . .
,... .... ellc. IICM, ~

t8ina.laiSrnlK.

hood
1117 Ohio - .

=:,

to

::,.=

C1w11-

.:.~.

~c:.=~
....

-rr _

L.-

-

=torMrtOulnM•'de:·•,H
--11&amp;,111111 lA

-lly.

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

.
. - A• t t • Ctorll - .
lor • 100 bod FJIS.ICI'

..-a. c111 ruamiMildllf

~ IF:"\,Yord Bolo ot 31&lt;1

bUt

nol ~- E-lool-0.
ot -lo Nurolna

-~....i.~= =~~-21n21211dwol,

t:1o~~ 2L 1:00 till
Pomeroy,
MlddllpOrt
a VIcinity

~oi!L,.lVI

IAiiN -

=

=~~·
-~..d'Eii~oiK:
.
- - -- .
1n

111to -ltoltyolt
· All

1-1111--11.

"'

.... --"'-

. . 4 - , _ 'IIU.

a. ••

a

1raa1.

4

-

- · lull
au-•
Addn,
"

llld

blolmonl. 5
Point Ptt I nl, WV.

- tlon,=~--::..r::::-

S -

-

lty - ·
150,000. Seriollll~ra onlf.
21WSW852.

lrlclt atr, I both, ZIIIG tQ11. -

---hoheooa.
.., ..-.114-246 1371.
fo&lt; Solo: ..... 2 . . botho, Iorge
IMng I'DOII'I, ~ room,

ldlchln, .IIMttMhld 2 01r
gantlll w/2 - . ..., 4 if-rd.
2 - · · 8chool
lldw•ll1
Potter Ettmenl~
NCIIIh Oolllo High llehool,
0wn1r muot ooH ollan,
114 311 141W,IIWiiita.

fo&lt;- . . , _ a..llr-.
out IMIIldlng portilllr In,
I~D

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

p' 111100. . . .

Pliuuwl C..
I - . 114tho D.O.N.

--.,..._.Gel-

-.. ......
a -

,_,, --of

to....,

-till

lnlfOivod;
plo-.Cll
1111110
....
Md left•
In ftnlt . .
J::~n.w6."1e to loK Pa, Cll,. of
IIIIo . .- Pt. Pl.,

T.U

-··
"'211Uo.

200

ORilla. C.l CMOI
111441 , , Of . . . ,, .......
- : 001. ill. • •, Loo - LII Nilltlse-. Tyrw IMII..
---a-Jiiup.
Tolloooo
W-.1, Nor_ . Yaung, ·~ wv, J04.
lnl1

w-

9

wanted to Buy

Unturnlohod houoo, .... RodOOI'
Vllioat.U. 1250~,_Roll-,11444f-4411 •fler ,...m.

,.,:a:

1871 Gnndbrool!.
room, 2 acne land.

bod114-

~ta.

t671 ~ t4dl. 21tr, ownor

will 001
2121.

ld

. . . . . . . ..

114471-

..,_ion.

lit. f!M :f 114
. . IOU.

011 ..._

1122.

44

-101-wlth

Apartment

-

• .-11447111n
.
.lm'a F.,. r.lrmoo•: lA II

....,_,_.• ......,r-

lOr Rent

w...

t IR ......._ oJII. lllngll raltlg.

~-~~~. Qli:
I'Oid·w.tor,
Dop. I Rot. It 4-441fllr,

rol.

ro-

~~~ pluo . . .

ldt-

llhp.
·TllctoN. Klni Kutter
lqulp"'"':io.:?ld
J.D. Fold,..... n
I

ullltl•

-~-w.~ouv,.u,

I
RlwrYIIw,

Ntolutt-,
1
1M l'lnl Avo. 11-1 ~-;'a&amp;. llrp kllahln,

t-W WM~o~rt•- IOL

Uveatock

·

... onlr- No poll. 1112-. .; ...............
Tabl ~ c.II11111M27 1tV111 up;-....,_...
114-441-7444.
llofaro 2:30p.m.
'

-·

opo~IOOOI,

~~~

llcll~loo 1 - . Cillt4-lliJ.

UttEOH.
:~!"',

l!fll ...pill.

n..,..,

pe~lolly

....

,.~Rd.

41111 aolllor Lony.
3 bId ODnl untumllhed lpl
located- Cllnle ol VIV. It4-

-

rang•. lllcoggo Upper Rlvtr Ail. . .w.

tso.-rr.- .........

VI'RA FURNITUIII
RT. 1~1._4 IIILEI

,,0

.~ ~·:::'"~·.:

wli. LDW CASH PIIICIIil

1011.
o11 1or
-.
Clotllt
lvtlloblo.
Open
lion.
..... I- o.m.
to I p.m., Sun. 12 noon to I p.m.
614-446-3161.

7:00 ,....

I

I

I

..

...

Employnwnt Serv1ces
Help wanted

11

_,.c us ""-'

ao ..

-

-

. . - . ... Cloiodo' llo - . 014 Col 114MH111.

full

54 a.tiiiCtllineoua

Merchandlu
111 duol Ulo a:::,=~ novor
lloiRIId,
, 304ll'WOit.

---- ...........

- ....

......

...

~--·tor 111"'~1

lor ....... will -

..,, 304-17W141.~
1171 luloll. 4 - ·
Llntltotl. Lib - - , ...........

m-..

IIIn dnl,

au.

~'Fth.:'~~8

....,,

· or~• ..,.wn~~~

117111-..ry ~..... CA,

-Ito

2

1:011 (I) MOVIl: Coal -

111"'1 _....

I!IM71-

1110 PlnaiAit llortaon TC3
11'12 ClltYr 210 ... •1'1

.,... Tutlto . . ......
lot' ChoYy 171. 1171 vw dloolf
Rlbblt .............. it71.
~

::.:~--

C loltlolo (II ""' , _
. . - - .,. -4710.

POOR lOY TIRES, 304-171oM lflontoOOI
., ..... -4,iaa 111"'
1 .... 111M,

-.tr.M,-11101.

Serv1ces

Ani_,
Carson. Ed

27111

Doc Severinaen IIW In lhis

WaTIRPRDOFIND

UM:ao: lllanal lltlti:M ~
.... LoDII tllr&amp;W]DTT furitiiMd.
,,.. • I ' • C l l l - t·

salutll, which -... '-'"',.

g • r 1 I • 1 • •

•

n t

"BEWARE OF

THAR OUGHT TO BE

'-t1c~Tqctar ·~

Frcim Minneapolis, MN
(I) • (J)
Live
Willi'lam DonaldeOn &amp; Diane

Ptln,..,,.

FALLIN'

A WARNIN' SiaN

lOCKERS II"

.IN THIS DADBURN
HOUSE!!

MOO. , .... 1181.

=---.. . .

.

or coblo tool ~-

IIOIIWII.. oomplned .... dli.

.

104-Vac
-..
CrMk Rd._Pa:ta. •..-

•

45

FurniShed

==ldrr trldl. Phone 104-

Rooma

StO 0.1111

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE·
BEDEOSOL

..

oorn&amp;nii'Ciel

~~
Oct. . . , . .

ThiOflllool&lt; better thor usual lor yoilln

~-. .... Coli

fR

. . . . . ..

·- -~ -· -

-·----- ____ ...•___
_ ____
_.

I

'

the year llhMd......,. your maleriallntor•ll are eo~ocerned. Thla could be a
y.- ,.._ you'M be IIIII to get a number of lUXury Retnl lor which you've

-longing.
ICCIIII'IO (0ot.l4 •••• Ill) 11 you-

on Idee you Ml COUld be of be11811t to
you, H'a betMr not lo d ' - 11 Wltll oths
.,. 1111111 you h - .-ythlng In a "go':
polltiOn. somaone might I1MI your
brllln child. Scorpio, treat ~I to a
birthday gilt. Send for your Altro-

Jlguw puzz~~~-. loo euy lor Leo. He
INN ltd llrolcen panw of gl....

"
~--------------- ...!. . . _._
------

Upholatery

~-- ·

~-

_,

Graph prilcllcllonllor lhe yea(. aheltd by TAURUI (April 8 .., :II) Be pallent
i
$1 t 0 All ro-G raph ' 0 I 0 thlo with
co-worlcn tod.,.,tepeCiollymali ng
w11o do not - l h e 1111110e o f newiPIIP«· P.O. Bo• 91428, CleVelilnd,

OH ~ 101-3428. Be aure to llate your
zodiac llgn.
SAGITTAIIIUI (Now. 23-1*. :111 Slclear of sa1ee today lhat .,. promoting
unique or ..otic -andlse. There'l
a possibility you might and up buying
gadgeta lltd Hem11or wltlch you'll never haw a UM.
CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. ZWIII. 11) Usually

!'JIInl,
- 111- Llolan...Ridlnow
-""LIH lid
lltolrloo~ :IOM7J.t711.

I I
l!li\
- . blot
a,aoo......
to c,aoo oopecllr,

When~

findl SIHy's

friend. Val a lfllllr wllh Danny
1a1111-ltld.

a

·, .GJ Colll..w.lch Tonl(jtlt
dream of romance with a

Heating

.,

Knoll LMI'dlng

- -: (1:00)1;1

Plumbing &amp;

...........

,...

10:30 (l) MtiiiiiPIICI 1'lleltN A
glri with a halrllp beglna to

Co. -IVANilNTEAPhiSEI,
oleo_,, OH 1-100-637-1621.

82

~I.:··
• 0

(1)
~•

clvettlnfiNewa

~ oM illflvorr. lt4-

Rentals

-- ::.t-- --.!~:_.._ ____ _ _ _•_ __ _;&lt;i:.__ _

apecill=tsalld
· rnemor
Cllpafrom lhtl
past. Q .
10:00 ()) 700 Clull With pat
_Ro1Mr1M41
' Ill Fonl/ ludwtiMf TIUCk

~--.dorornlght.Ro

- · hMr - . o1r, ·
111M,
IIOclr
.Ntillt-wn.

tlh Z11 110 ...-lo, - ·

Johnny

McMahOn and

IIASEIIENT

~~~Tonk-

~~

1:30. (2) Gl Tonlflltlllllow:

Improvement•

-01r~

Cll

~~N~Figha
a ....-Now

Home

!!OWr

·

.
Campion
linda a well ollamily intrigUe .
w11ere no one Is abOvo the ,
law. (1 :OOl J:1
,
1111 e@ Top Of The IIIII
Bell Is esked to helP comer a
po-'&gt;llarma dellef. Q '

- a.... -

-"=-..

his ampiOyHJ.

Yotm(l Alderl

(I) •

1110 Toroa ndt OUin aUr 2

1110oftK
z.ll,114-... DIU
....

eScope
t Marriage

invents a tyrannical partner

('

your 1 - -~you to 111&lt;:1&lt;
to your pyrpo111 un1n you reach your oblectlve. But today you might take yoursell out of tll'e running whoP lhe goal 11
within light. ••

AGuAIIIII ( - ....... tl)

10-

Before

IPtlnglnglniO ec:tlon on a 118111 oflnlpiration tcay. pu1 your 1W1f1111 1110ug1t1
. down on Pill*
He1n blltUCIIild
. turtlter. Up 11 mlghl not lOOk a1
thll good
.
fiiiCII
71 . ell 8) Wyou are
.,., Jill)' .uklng on • - prolecl, be
patient lltCIIIkl
u-.You001$1falonyourlaoeHyou ·
1ry to -.plllh your oblaOii" With

cP...:.

••lf}'lltll1fl--..

_._,.

lhllr biMIIt.

big llllp.

~

wtto 11 not IUIIy lnfluenGid Ill' oomproo
mill. Today. Ito IM, you m1g11t y1t1c1

.liD -

Den

TwlllgH ZOI1I

a ...... Elichenled l!venlnfl
With WWe NeleOn A global
by
tributiiO
muale lndullly
lelderllrom
around the - " '· NeiiOn

MUll &lt;*1 :11.,._ :Ill 11'a belt not
nowllbum.
lo bortow money from Minda today W
you're urteert.ln lbOu1 , _ you'll be 10:50(1) MOYIE: One Plew o111&amp; Cucltoo'l Meet IRI (2:~)
to ,.,.... H. Try to mike due with
w1ta1 you haw rlllter lhan )eoperdlzlng ' 11:00()). ....
.
I rwletloltlltlp.
'
,
•111
•!ll
111
CAIICIII (..._ :11......, Ill) 11 you are
. Gl News
lndKI1ha llboul IMklnga deelllon to(J) Rwc tgldll/ TNT Manti r
dar - 11"-C11 otlterl u well • yourTrualt
From .
14111, dllmlll 11 from ~ mind lor a
while 81111 OOIM beOk to 11 .... whln ,
=-~Hell(1 :00)
you hM a fNih !*Ill Ullve.
' · · '
GJ ltlil,tRI ·
LIO ( - ..... .B) 11 mlgllt bl wile
lllllaahllt ..
to len pnrlly lllllft 111111 or MllgnOlillaltiiVIaer-vmen1llhll n U80IIng. Y- _ , _
lltnO.
trlllon mlaltl not be up 10 1111' t0418l'lltCI
let tilt
you GOUld up wiiiN detslll . .

w

•a

Ctlal7

COI~Celned.
¥1180 (All. •

-

, =•Ill

11114

u--

a) An "MIY
. . , go" , _ of mind . .

could~
t _......
- 10- ~of l i......--~,

wiiiN your lndlllw•aiMJ lei thing pnillllllll llfp Ill a _. ~

o,l . , y - .......

na1lltlp qtllllle mlglll not be up lo

.1111' 101181' llldtlwe'1 a P lbllb' you,
lo .,_ PI 1.11 w• and~ countef1lrO- ma,'lllt YD!I' ~ ollllteltool! be- ,
duetlve IIIVIce.
you .. a poor a...
'.

~=·~--

IEiiiQ

It~~
And Mlndl

..

5 Item

e

11ttin9
Pertain
. 10 Bolster
7 Biblical
12 P.olnt
man
of vieW
I Indian
13 Fright
Ocean
111 Hafl
wind
a score , 11 S.D. 23 Bastinado
1 Badly
capHal 24 Paltry : '
18lndlan
14 Wicker 25 Paul
welghl
basket
Newman
11 Spoilage 17 New
Him
21 Mining find Guinea 28 Type of
22 Brew
.town
chemlslt'y
23 Nucleus 20 Dude 27 Cure-al .

e

24 Selected

terrltOfY

•

31 Aenlal sign

32Do

business·

38Czech
river

37 Saucy

31 Big luss
41 Building

21 Espouse . ·

wing

27 Jury list

..-·.

21Moss-

21 Pallid
30 WOI'I&lt; unit
31 Basic

belief
33 Bfazlllan

.'

tree
34Harem
chamber
35L8cerate

,,

38Colony
or code
40 Call II quite
42Tease
43Senlor
44Sieeplng

setup
411 Vlgllanl
DOWN
1 Beyond
DAILY CRYP'I'OQUOI i!S- Here's how to work It:

·-·,

10121

.

)

perfonnS IIIIClkMil from hll

=f:..:, = =(IIIII,.
0111

_,.,hUrt

• rapidly • you do. H
you to
repeet 1n1orm1t10n or lllllruc:tiOnl for

(I) Rylll'l

..

2 Auk genue
3'Tolerale

1 Turkish ·
title

1111 CMen Norm

"""I

: ~ 10

4=y

'

a c..- a Chile
to
(0:3011

SOUI'II
• AQ 10 I 4

CROSSWORD
ACROSS

shoe salesman belore a
firing ·aq..d linda hope lor
true love. f0:30l Q
.

•IJ)

: ~~m

uz

by lHOMAS JOSE,H

(l)
....... - - · · Oon
VlciH
(I) Trying n-&amp; Crooi&lt;Lid

tllt

OntM 1'111 101

'

a .

(l)

--·--- .....,.......

AKC oeyl*od -Tau, hod

e

t:CIO

In li:a: .• ~:

Lulie

lPG) (2:451
Wl.ll)
DIDIIftlllw
...
ill
. I World
,
Wliltley'uplrlll a-t a 1111
from 1eacnong oence II the
y_auth center. (0:301

(1:00)1

••• 114-4414140.

411,

COllY.....,-

Wlfnlts For lbe Detense
Dinah

a

mille on-... Chuclt.
IIIU71-t•.

81

. ..

.

~,::ae&amp;a arrived

•aoru

.-cll:!::.s.

I~~!:DOl
arM"=

-:100

'*"" Qoprloo. S1100. ._
· - · - - A v o.. llld-

Wo • tel. 1:12 131.000.
lit. 7, Eunllo, Col 114-thflor7p.tto.

I up.

lrom
Del - ' CA
(I) ' .(JJM~
lmpo•lll• The force has 24
' hours to llrid and delctlvale

:101 VI, Still. lt....._

==""·'""·lbp.I14-441-

w.. d•!.r . , _ . - . , -

It~-- IM$A GTP

Auto Parte a

1171

400 llornlng Cool 114112 1171.

LoM Wtntod: tOO -

•Soncn
()) Ul
Coabr - Ulll Uvin reiUctanlly
enlllt OeniM •• babySitter.

-..~.

-

...

Real Estate
wanted

aropcn

7:35 (I)IMiard And Son
1:00 CD The Flm OIYtoDic:e:
'Aih&amp;M. , .... (Pail 2 Of 3l
(1 :231

' .

•Q• 8

•n

+KQ 7 u
amoacll. TileD cune aee of chilli, followed by a dloiiiQ!Id ruff. Tbe klnl of
Vulllerable: Both
chilli - pla:ped, IIIII tbella club wu
Dealer: South
ruffed u Welt threw a diai'IOIId . De- ~
clanr- tileD eble to ruff IIJIOtber dl- ,_.
Nartll
ai'IOIIdlow, aDd ruff bla lilt Httle club I •
P• 2.
with the·DIDe oliPIIdel. Tbat left de- : ~
~ ::
c1arer wit11 A-Q-ti of 1IPides IIIII .tile ~ NT
.,_ 1 •
aood q - of clab8, wlllle dummy wu u
All pall
1ltlll left witb tile lpaM jaet. He DOW
bad 1 IUI'e play for bla contract. He
Opellinl lead: t 4
ruffed a heart with tile ~re of lpldes.
T111D be played the ~- of cluba, L - - - - - - - - - '
rufflll&amp; witb clammy I lpade jack.
,•
West could take 1111 lpade kiD1 any
·
..._.
flit ·
time, but tbat wu tile Olliy trick for lowed with the ei&amp;bL ...,.. ·
tbe clelaM. ·
klnl IIIII retarDed I apade, IIIII tleclarOIIe declarer ~~
wiD- er wu left with a club ~ U IIIII de-DiDC dtmlmy'• q - of
at clam bad flnt led tbe ~Pi* aiBr.
tbe firll trtct. He a[ll-' A-K of I rum dammy, bla -111111 lead wwkl :
,_
....... lint beeD the jack. Willi Blllt piiJbiC
bearta. lbed"lnl a cl llld tben _,. tbe fliPt.. ~ coa)d pla:J 1M 10. ;
tbe aee of clubL Willi Olliy- club 10 Tllat way, na If Welt .we bela&amp; .
ruff, be played the jed ol~pades IIIII m-. 111e lpade w.Jd be u
let It' ride. Tbell lie led tile niDe of en•- to dumm• for the aood bear!.
spades, pla:rlnl low wftell Eat folw'
'

IIJ Night Court

3011
.... 30,
_ . -, __ pllloonl
.. lly -ulod.

1171 Novo. ...... - aoo.
tm llolltu 110c1r

Pelllor Sale

old

Malt

EAST

•ltu

IP8deL A
wu normally led.
Wlleo declarer played low from dummy, Eut'l jP farced 1111 ace. Dummy'a A-It of beatll were cphld so
~t declarer ewld tbrow tbe 10 of di-

!l.::~~nlrl Q

ltltro

WEST

ByJUIHJ.eei!J

• (J) USA Toellly

Acceuorlea

71 Autollor S.le

1171

36

FRANK AND ERNEST

Aaa t J' • foG. .,._.. OUf.
ltoMI 120HP. ~unrne ,...,.
dillon. Itt IIIMitlllttr 7p.m.

Tr dnsportat10n

t'

==--::a Pl.. ....

'!'!!.

Greed causes
a problem

.

a~
7:011 Ill Jelferaonl
7:30. (2) Family F - · ·
(J) lpnltwMk
(I) l!nterWin- Tonight

--114-441-ta:oo.

76

I dlllc'CI •. 1111-F
I LIP. • 1::10 p.m. 2.,._10.

T V - - I o r WII do odd jollo. 304-I'II-:IOSI
11..771-7111 nt. T-.
Bo.,TV--Ior
ca
'±NOw hirlnl II
- . ,_ 011t11ng Into I1S.7ttt ool. T-.
uzxwolllr ,_ Cllliltg Info.

1114 Dodgo 11171 - . nloo I
- · .... todllliod, 114-441~'1111 Plymouth Yoy- minivan•• 4 cyl .• ltUto., ~ eeaoo
or t11ut ovor poymonto. .,.._
11711V0111nge.
tiUI-104 _ _ _

.... 1144H-1171.

•• -

A·-

..,...,..L __c_a.

171-t11'L

Building
~·~I!_PI~I~I!I,_,....,._
,._.,.....,_..
...

a-. 11r1o11. -

BIUDOI

IIJ Miami VIce Golden
Triangle IPt 1 01 2l

12,111....... '11-tT.It •

_lor
...
IOATERI: _
- _
-orbing

55

-'a
Dor CoN Contor.
1

A--

;a._,...,.....

304-mMIII or IIIW?I-7114.

17W101.

Evon TERIOII ~·-· -IHO I
-:...._~.. Ll:.....&amp;.---1
dh ltod - · - 0010 ~-· COIICIIITI
WORK,
Col213 lrll 1101 ut. 112101.
ELECTRICAL I PLUIIIINO
ElCP.
A- 1 All 1 111t1rtor HAl REFERENCEI. ALL IN~ --1421
IUIIAHCI CLAI- ACCEPTI!O.
.,_,.. -•r
·
PLUIE CAU AI'TlR IP.II.
A l l - Col lllrllyn 114-aM-1111.
-:104-l.
Trooh Hou!ILIII-._ - l y
._.. 7
- - tDr IIJicll..uD. ·Hone~~. d J dcbll .
1e111 TV CoftNM....Ie. No II· &amp;144~~-~t~l.
~ QICIUI'J. for c:aMfna
,Eat. T9 Wll bollrtlt In . . - . 41112

1110 Chn hill ton 4&amp;4, -¥1.
IDhrDIM whelll, AT;
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64

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ANYONE CAN APPLYI Outrli&gt;- REIIOOIUNO INTERiiOOf11011£11-

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(l) (I) MuN&amp;I/LehNr

oo · LI"

Obllgf - Ctlalr - Hiker - Wizard - CAB or KID
One Old timer to anolhtr: "Do you 1en•ember ~
1118dull1tldom ran unlea In pursuit of a CAB or KID?"

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UNSCRAMBLE lE,TTERS
FOR ANSWER
.

SCIAM-Lm .ANSWERS

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1210•.11' 4•• 1381.

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AUCTION I FURNITUIII. Cl
Oliva ••• Golllpollt. - I ~
tunoltln.
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WOlle
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over In home
of olclotlr lldr .. • ..,. 32 Mobile Homes

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form four slrftl)le worda.

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.

I(OlTLL SIT IN M'1 LAf ,
AND I'LL SCRATCI-l '{OUR
EAR5, AND WE'LL liiATCI-l TV
AMD I'LL 6tVE '(01) COOKIES ...

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WE'LL&amp;O FOR
LONG WALK5 IN
TI-lE WOODS AND

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Norlt ot Poena~

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"I'm sorry, ma'am, but the
price went up 14' while you
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Yard Salt

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Lost&amp;Found

Loll -

OCT. 21

THURS.,

- - - - - . , . ; . 1411o4 lor CIA¥ a. POLIAII
Roarranao loiters of tho
,..._,,..~

I!YENING

... *iiiii flmollool. ,., 0 . . . . . . ll:l.aof.
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Viewing

&lt;;O HE PfaNI...'{ ~ILL
11IIS '(fAA ~tOO..

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....
':~~, sca~4\llA-~~~s·

Pomlaoy-Midthport. Ohio

October 26, 1989

Room a

--.~­
·~

b

Tlt~nday,

Furnished

lor Rent

~--.

. . . .

..

AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW
One Jetter stands for another. In this sample II is IL'IE'd
for the three L's, X for the two O's, et&lt;'. Single lettl'rs,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints..Each day the code letters a~e different .
.

....,

CIIYPTOQUOTE

AKDUBUNN
PU M SU

AN

MSU

AN

.
MSU

..·-

.,

.

' •

NMOIAKAMG

Z P K G • R B K N M 0 I. 1\ K A M G

A K D U B-U N .N

P II

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MSU

'
T 'A B K. - N U 0 T U
Yn._ • .,.. Cis: ILQ lilt BElTER UAVE AN

OLD MAN TO HUMOR 'DIAN A. YOUNG RAKE TO
BREAK YOUR tEART. - ANON
,C) 11119 K"''l Fellures Syn&lt;ttcot• In'· •.

- ·-.
'•

•

.

�~•a•

12-The Dilly Sutinel

Pomeloy-Middhport. Ohio

-Local news briefsPranksters will be prosecuted .
Allyone caught doing Halloween pranks tn Syracuse which
result In damage to property will be prosecuted, Syracuse
Pollee Chief Jim Connolly reported today .
Accord Ill&amp; to the pollee chief, several young people have been
seen tbrowin&amp; corn at moving vehicles causing some minor
damare to the finish 11.nd also distracting the drtver which could
result In u accident.
Trick or treat night will be observed In Syracuse from 6 to 7
p.m on Monday.

EMS has 3 Wednesday calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to three calls on Wednesday.
·
·
At 1!22 a.m. the Racine unit went to Statton No.2 for Ralph
Fisher who was transported to Holzer Medical Center.
The Pomeroy unit, at 10:44 a.m. was called to Spring Ave. for
Veda Davis who was taken lo Veterans Memorial Hospital, and
at 11: 15 a .m . the unit responded to a call at Laurel Cliff where
Bertha Parker was transported to Veterans.

--Area deaths•--Walter R. Neal
Walter R. Neal, 87, of Crown
City, died Wednesday at. Holzer
Medical Center,
He was born on March 13, 1902
In Hurricane, W.Va., son of the
late SamuE'I F. and Laura
.(Qualls) Neal.
A Rio Grande College graduate
and a retired Gallia County
teachE'r who taught for 35 years.
hE' was one of the founders of thE' ·
Gallla County Rural Water Association before serving as a Rural
Water trustee.
He was also a member of
Porter United Methodist Church,
the Gai11a County and Ohio
RE'tired TE'achers Associations.
the Ga!Ua County Senior Cit!·
Zl'ns, the Vinton LOdge No. 131 of
the Free and Accepted Masons
and the Council Chapter and
t:ommandery •of the F&amp;AM of
Gai11polls. HE' was a 32nd dE'grce
Mason.
HE' was preceded in dE'ath by
his first wifE', Mary Myrtle NE'al,
one brother and fivE' sisters.
Survivors include his second
wife, Miriam ILanlerl Dough· .
man Neal, whom he married-in
1981; one daughtE'r, Mrs. Maxine ,
Dinunzio of Lantana, Fla.; two
so.is, Loren Neal. Rt. 3. Bidwell,
and William Neal of Medina;
1hrl!f' stepsons, Jerome Dough·
man of Galllpolls, Charles Lanter
Doughman • of Lima, and •Jan
StE'phen Doughman of Yuma,
Ariz.; two sisters. Freda Facem·
ire of Ga!Upolis and Georgia
Hayes of Newport Richey, Fla.;
one ·brother, Howard Neal of
ColumbUs; eight grilndcltlldren ·
and four great-grandchildren;
and ~ix step-grandchildren and
four step-great"gtandchlldren.
Masonic services will be Frl·
day at 7:30p.m. at Wlllls Funeral
Home. ·The VInton Lodge No. 131
will COndUCt the service. Public
services will be Saturday at 10:30
a.m. at Willis Funeral Home. The'
Rev. C.J. Lemli!y will officiate.
Burial will be In VInton Memorial
Park.
·
Pallbearers ·will be Jerome
Doughman; David Facemire,

Billy Neal, Kenny Neal. Loren
Neal II and Mike Po Isley .
Friends may call the funeral
home Friday from 2 to 4 p.m. and
from 7 to 9 p.m.

l'hurldllv. October 28. 1989
---Meigs announcements.---- Open house to be held Sunday
Hevlal ~Revlvallervlces will be held at
theSouthBetbe!Chun:honSUver
Ridge Road located one mOe
west' of EastMn High School,
Friday, Saturday and Sunday, 7
p.m . each evening. Thl! evenge-

Celeste
...
Condnued from page 1
drinking or using drugs," said
Taft, wbo spends up to 50 hours a
week as a volunteer fighting
drugs. "You have more power
than you think. You'd be surprised what children CIIJI do.
"Your school Is the Douglas
Alternative School," sh,e said.
"Aitunative means choice. You
have the· cllotce to remain drug

list will be Bud Hatfield. The
An open house will be held on
pastor, Duane Sydenstricker.
·
Sunday
at ·Canter's Cave 4H
Invites the public to attend.
__
Camp
to
dedicatE' the new
1
. 001\!1
Harrison-Powell Lodge.
The event will be held from 1·3
In the Meigs County Court of p.m . with a ,brief program at 2
Common Pleas, the Huntington p.m. which will Include the
National &amp;nk; Columbus, Is dedication of the lodge.
seeking $5,4311,51 from Mary L.
The Meigs -County Extension
Woods, Middleport.
Office Invites the public to attend
this ev:ent an~ see the lmprovl!-,

S

Divorce sought
Ruby Ruth - Yarrington, Ra·
cine, has !II~ for a divorce ftom
Arnold Lee Yarrington, Jr. In thE'
Meigs Court of Common Pleas.

WOMEN'S SHOES
90 PAllS · .
VALRS 10 '42.95

446 4574

•

•

NOW

Hospital news

Vot.40. No.121 M

.

~

.

PLACE i ,·
I :" SHOE
MIDDLEMRT
r lj

=..:.=:..:.

-.

-.

-~

21 Centa

A Muttlmedl• Inc. NewiPIIPM

Brennan named Meigs junior high principal

.~;· ;·~~ h~~~-~~
I

2 Soctlono. 14 P -

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday, October 27, 1989

~GPfilghNd 1889

By CHABLENE RI)EFLJCR
Stadium.
hours a week, and the other not to ,
, The ceremony for renam'lng exceed 2~ hours
Dall7 Selltlael Staff
week. Also
A principal for the Meigs the stadium, at the meeting set hired as a tutor · was Judy
Junior High School was hired and for half· time at the , Meigs- Gannaway. The board adopted a
two school facUlties were re· Federal Hocking football game pay rate for tutors as based on
named at the Thursday night to be held tonight, was this
thestatesalaryschedulestardng
meeting of the Meigs Local mornlngrescheduledfortheflrst at $11.72 per hour.
School Board of Education heid home' football game of the 1990
Supt. James Carpenter was
In the board room.
season.
authorized bY the board · to
Hired for the principal's post·
The late Robert Roberts was a
proceed with an appUcatlon to
lion was Deborah Brennan who lorur·tlme teacher In Meigs
secure Channel 1 as an ,a ddition
now teaches fourth grade In the school and a staunch supporter of to the high school television
Fairfield Local School District In the athletic programs.
reception. In exchange for ac·
HlghlaJid County. She tills the
Donna Clark was employed as ceptlng the dally 14 minute news
vacancy crea!ed by the recent elementary art teacher In the and two minute commercial
death of Johil L. Mora. Ms. district for. the 1989-90 year. No program, Channell will provide
Brenner will- liegin her duties action was taken on filling an all necessary equipment lnclud·
here on Nov. 3.
elementary school teaching post- lng television sets for the school
Durtne last night's meet!Jig lion at Salem Center.
at no cost.
Others employed were Mil·
The resignations of Wanda
two candidates for the position
were Interviewed by board. chell Meadows as seventh grade Ashley as a substitute secretary
members In a lengthy execu live boys' basketball coach, and and Jane Manuel as a subsdtute
sessiOn .
Chris Stout as eighth grade boys'
teacher were accepted.
Tbe board voted to rename two basketball coach. It was also
Employed as substitute
Meigs facilities. The Middleport voted to establish a junior high
teachers for the 1989-90 year
High School auditorium was . program In girls' volleyball for
were Robert Ashley, Jr., physl·
cal education; Linda Dye, read·
renamed the John L. Mora the 1990-91 ~~ehool year.
The board also employed Shlr·
lng and elementary; Barry
Auditorium, and thE' Meigs Marauder Stadium was renamed ley McDonald as a tutor lor two
comprehensive social
the Bob Roberts Memqrlal students, one 'not to exceed~f~lv~e~~~;
,,~;Lo~ts~I~h~le~,~~M~ic~h~e~le~
..

a

-- -· --- -'

•

FURNITURE'S TWO

GS KICKOFF!

OhioanS
favor

Mowrey, 7·12 English; VIctoria Fry, the board voted to withdraw
Peavley, elementary and LOBO, an appUcallon for a loan from the
and -Shirley Salisbury , State Emergency Loan Fund
since that money was not needed
cosmetology.
Orland Laudermllt was hired for district operations.
to transport a handicapped stu·
A report from Barbara Goff,
dent, and John Ambrose was food service director for Meigs
accepted as a tuition student In Local schools, was read by Supt.
the Middleport El~mentary Carpenter detailing Increases In
School. •
participation at the various
On recommendation of Treas- schools.
urer Jane Fry, the board adopted
The student and parent hand·
an additional temporary appro- books for the 1989·90 school year
priations to meet the require· was approved with the discipline
ments of the Meigs County policy earlier adopted by the
Budget Commission. She. re- board Included In the revision.
ported that all funds are now in
The board also adopted a
excess of $10 mUIIon. Certain number of policies, mostly as
budget modifications as recom· · explained by Supt. Carpenter,
mended by the treasurer were revisions of current policies
approved as was the transfer of required to meet new standards.
These Included a policy on
funds.
The board vote to retain patrlodc exercises, by·laws go·
Gates-McDonald to continuing verning board voting procehandling certain unemployment dures, and policies on non-re·
activities, and retained Comp employment of treasurer,
Mangement, Inc. for $250 to extra-curricular activities, stuhandle the district's workers dent abuse and neglect, transpor-,
tatlon for field and other district· '
compensation matters.
Also on the recommendation of soonaored trip~. suspension and

expulsion of handicapped stu·
dents, creating a clasl!lfled J)oll·
lion, creating a professional
position; programs for gifted .
students, and · student supervl·
slon and welfare.
Also adopted were policies on
equal educational opportunity,
field andotherdlstrtct-sponsored
trips. eligibility on resident·
nonresident students, suspension
and expulsion, equal access of
student organizations, public re· .
cords, confldendallty, and school
visitors.
No action was taken un the
poUcy regarding instructional
supplies pending further
consideration.
The board went Into a second
executive session during the
meeting to discuss personnel and
pending litigation.
Richard Vaughan. president,
conducted the meeting atlended
bY board members, Jeff Werry.
Bob Barton, Bob Snowden and
Larry Rupe. and Supt. Carpenter
and Fry.

Mayor

•.

denies
reports

coun~eling
B:r ALJ80N GRANT

Ualled .,.._. later!flldlonal
CLEVELAND (UPI)- Mavor
A substantial majority of Ohio
George Volnovich said nutrsc!ay
iloulta belieVe a woman llllould be
rs
~tllrea 10 rec:e1~ ,.lltlliaiiilflk
about ·pllclnt the babY for
untrue.
~doption before an abortion can
bi! performed, accordllli to sur·
waa greatiy disturbed by
vey results released Thursday.
recent news reports that Po !lee
A narrower majority ofsurv.ey
Chief Howard Rudolph and
respondents also favor a state
Safety Director Ml.tchell Brown
law prohibiting public hospitals
met with members of the pollee
In Ohio from performing an
unions to _plot poll tical tactics.'"
abortion unless it Is necessary to
said Volnovlch.
save thE' life of the mother.
''Today, I talked extensively
Results of the Ohio PoD, taken
with both Brown and Rudolph,
last month bY the lnsdtute for
and based on our discussion, It Is.
Polley ~an:h at the Unlver·
my opinion that sucb reports are
NEW PRINCIPAL - Dllbarab BnmBD'111 WMhlnatea, C. R.
slty of Cincinnati, were released
not true," he said.
waslllrecl by llle Melp Local Board ol Educalloa 'nundiiJ nlrht
by the Ohtc\ Right to Life Society
A Cleveland television station
u principal of Melp Junior Hlp Sebool. BrelllltUI wu one ol two
during news conferences In
!WKYC l reported earner this
seven cities. Right to U II!. com· · eudlcllaea latervlewed lor llle poeltlon by llle bolll"ll at Jut nlrbt'a
week that Rudolph had met with
meetlar. Here she talb with Supt. James Carpenter about the job
misstoned five quesdons as part
Brown, pollee union leaders and
slle
will bepn on Nov. 3.
a representative of City Council
of an Ohio PoU , on abortl()n
conducted for the Dayton Dally
President George Forbes.
The purpose of the meeting
News, The Cincinnati Post and
was to plan ways for pollee to
WKRC·TV.
When asked whether they
help Forbes defeat state Sen.
favored a state law to require
Michael White In the election for
women to receive adoption coun·
mayor. salt;! WKYC.
sellng before an abortion can be
A Pomeroy man Is confined to football fiE'ld.
The station also said two
.
performed, 87 percent said they
the Meigs County jail pending the
on-duty pollee officers were used
At 10:30 p.m. Thursday night
supported such legislation, 11 filing of breaking and entering pollee were called to West Main
to gather Incriminating informa·
percent opposed it and 2 percent charges by the Pomeroy Pollee St. where four men were al·
lion on White.
Department.
were undecided.
"Before the primary, the po
legedly Involved in an altercaA similarly large majority, 86
According to Pomeroy pollee, tion. During the fight, the front
lice unions announced their en·
percent, said they favored a state Gary Moore, 122 Butternut Ave. window of VIdeo Touch was
dorsements," Votnovich said.
reqlllrement that before·an abor· was apprehended about 1: 40a.m. broken out.
''At that time, there were rela·
tlon can be performed, the Wednesday after he allegedly
tlvely new civil service rules
The four men Involved were
mother be given Information broke lntQ a houseboat owned by Sammy Freeman and Jim FarInterpreting the charter -prohlbl·
about the . development of the Dottle Turner and took a cooler, ley, Marietta, Frank Haggy and
tlon on employee Involvement In
baby In the womb and on the fishing poles, some liquor and Thomas Stone, Pomeroy. All
political activity.
possible physical and psycho log!· other items.
''These rules dictate clearly
have been charged with destruc·
cal compUcattons oft he abortion.
It was reported that Patrolman tlon of proper)y and dtsordE'rly
what can and cannot be done by
Flfty-flye percent of respond·
Joe Fields observed Moore walk· conduct, pollee report. Haggy
pollee or any other classified
lng down East Main Street, then and Stone reeeived severe Iacer·
enta said they favored.a state law
employee. Rudolph and Brown
prohibiting public hospitals In ·saw him enter the boat. When he allons In the Incident and were
met with union offiCials to outline
came out of the boat carrying taken by the Pomeroy unit of the
Ohio from performing an abor·
the new rules to them, not to plot
tlon unless It Is necessary to save several articles, the offtcer Meigs County Emergency Medl·
campaign strategy, as was repursued him on toot and appre. cal Service to Veterans Memor·
the life of the moth~, 41 percent
ported In the medlll," said the
opposed the law and 4 percent hended him near the Meigs tal Hospital for treatment.
mayor.
were undecided.
,.--------,
Supporl for restrictions on
abordon was greeted enthusiast!·
cally bY Right to Life officials.
''It strikes down the myth that
the majority of Ohioans . are In
favor of laissez falre abordon on
demand," said Alldrea White,
spokeswoman tor the society's
Dayton chapter. .
· The decision to have an abor·
tion Is viewed by Ohioans as
extremely serious, Allen Tuch·
farber. director of the Institute
for Polley Research, said In an
analysis accompanying the poU.
''They feel It should not be made
In haste or with Incomplete
Information.
''They are •lso uneasy over the
state playlag a direct role In
al.lortlon," he added, "although
• ma.t Ohloana realti!Je that the
atate bu a lelltimate role Ia
1101111! typel of aborUon."
The poll asltied respondents·
wlletber ·a poUtkal candidate' •
of Cuuw;oe, - ld • rlaM- DH _..,,
pomtlon on aborllon wu lmpor·
Paal ~ CarnU NoR;IIII ud am .ble••••
· tant In deckllnl whether to vote

~::~'!were

Dally alock prices
(Ali ollt:M a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
ol Blunt, Ellill 6 Loewl

Pomeroy man confined to
Meigs jail; charges pending

Am Electric Power .... ......... 30%
AT&amp;T ......... ..... ...... .... ....... ..43%
Ashland on ...........................37
Bob Evans ...................... .... 13l',
Charming Shoppes ...... ....... .12';,
City Holding Co . ................ .15~
Federal Mogul . ........ .. .... .....20%
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. ......43¥.
Heck's ........... ...... .... .. .......... 7~
Key Centurion ............ ...... .... .15
Lands' End .... ...... .... ......... .. 26%
Limited Inc ......... .. ............ .36*
Multimedia Inc ..... ........ .. ....... 94
Rax Restaurants ......... ......... 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ .. ........ .14
Star Bank .... .. .... .... .. .. .. .... .. .23%
ShOney's Inc . .................... ..10)'8
Wendy's Inti. .. .................. ... 5~
Worthington lnd ..... .. .. ......... 23l',

Grant application
review ·available

•

Bur17ln Por 'l'laese

Services.

TbeCAA administers tlie block
IJ'Ilftt for Gallla and Melp
countlel. Tbe IJ"&amp;nt provides
fundiJII fpt a nllmber of services
to Jow-tnconw residents.

'.

th. Sa&amp;urd.,, l'OMklerallle
8UIIIhlne. JUrh aral• In mJd.
7h. ·

c\\ANGE YOUR BA1TERY

.. ; .

S20••o•
2 PAllS FOI $35
IIING A F• •
Sltep y,., Lttll Mere..•t•
_;_.-------· -·-

Moally clear. lAw Ia m ..

0278

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA

Stocks ·

The 1990 Community Service
Block Grant Application, prepared by the GaiUa-Melgs Community Action Agency ICAA), to
be submitted to the state, is
available , for review, stardng
Friday Oct. 27 and ending Nov. 6.
A copy ofthe application can be
reviewed at the county commissioner offices In Gallla and Meigs
counties and at the CAA oftlce In
Cheshire. Ally comment. on the
appUcatlon should be received bY
tile CAA no later than Nov. 6,
1989.
All commeflts received bY the
CAA will be forwarded to the
OhiO Department of Develop'
ment, Office of Community ·

Oct. 29

Pick-3
974
·PiC'k

OlliE hCI

free."

Velerana MemoJ1al
Wednesday admissions
Misty Francis, . Long Bottom;
and Bertha Parker, Pomeroy .
Wednesday discharges~ Shlr·
ley Willis, Benny Spears. Joseph
Leach, Leo Morris, and Ann
Williams.

.ud
J gtnent

menrs that have taken place at
the camp. ThE' camp Is located
six miles west of Jackson on
Route 35.

Ohio lottery

Standard
Time retums
2 a.m. Sunday

CODtllltled on paae 10
.I

'1.

I

'

\,

..,...,

.,

FLU SHOTS ADMINISTERED - Nearly a thousand Melp
Counll111111 turaed oqt TbundiiJ IUid FrldiQ lor Du abola ctven by
the Melp County Departmeat of Reallll. ThundiiJ 702 aealor
citizens aad baadlcapped received sbola IIi llle clinic held IIi llle
Sealor Cltbena Center, while Hll weal to llle Healllt Department
Friday for llllola. B11tll you mlued Jeltlnr your flu sllol, It's nolloo
late. A mal!eup da.y hu been set lor Nov. 3 lrom noon tot p.m. al
Ihe Heath Department. The cost Is 50 cents lor lllose over 55, and S1
for everyone else. Here Carolyn Dalley of Rutland received her
~ shot lrom T. G,.Ervln, R. N., a staff nurse.

Local news briefs-Middleport trick-or-treat Oct. 30
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman said today this year's
"Trick-or-Treat Night" will be held Monday, Oct. 30, for all
youth 12 years or age and under.
The fire siren will be sounded at the beginning and end of the
event, scheduled from 6 until 7 p.m.
Residents wishing to treat the children are requested to leave
their porcli lights on. Youth are asked not to stop al homes
without porch lights on since they have elected not to
participate.
Motorists are urged to use extreme caution Monday evening
since there will be numerous small children on the strE&gt;ets
throughout the community.

Community party Monday
Youngsters In Middleport shpuld remember to attend
Monday night's community Halloween party at the Dave Diles
Park. Dick Owen Jr., president of the Middleport Chamber of
Commerce. reports that the partY will be held 7: 30p.m. Monday
at the park, following trick or treatwhtch will from 6 to 7p.m. ln.
Middleport. The party Is being sponsored by the chamber and
Feeney-Bennett Post and Unit 128 of the American Legion.
Prtzes will be awarded for the prettiest. ugliest, funniest,
scariest and most original costumes In three different age
categories, Owen says. The categories will be ages four and
under; five to eight years; and nine to 12 years.
FoUowtng the costume judging, apple elder and doughnuts
wlll, be passed out. ·
Ill addition to thl! costume judging and r~fresbments,
Mtddlwort stores will be open until at least 9 p.m. -Monday
evening for last mln'!te Halloween shoppers, Owen rePQrts.

Sheriffs deputies probe mishap

.
An Incident of vandaliSm tn the parking lot at Eastern Hlp
School ls being Investigated bY the Meigs County Sh~lf1's
Department.
Oeputlea took a repan 'l'bundiiJ evening from Mary Weill, at
Flatwoodl Road. Weill 1tpo1 ltd that a tire on IM!r - · • 1m
CbeYrolet Nova had beeft puetured while parked at tile ecllool.
Accordlllf to tbe IDfonnatiDD. the damage took P'- bela uu
3: 311 ud 8:311 p.m. while her IMal was at fool ball puocnte.
Oepu11es were called earlier Thunday to BlcteY Rldp 10
uttrer a dilmeatlc dl&amp;pu~. Deputies talltied to both 118111• Willi
Contlll-' OD pqe 10
.

.

·t

•

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