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                  <text>October 29. 1989 .

Ol'lio-Point Plea11nt. W.Va.

Tmes-Sentinal

Friday's Ohio Lottery numbers
PICK·3

PJ(JK:4

558.
PICK-3 · ticket sales totaled
$1,302.876.50, wlt h ~ payoff due of
$308,020.50.
!!!!

;562 .
PICK·4 ticket sales tott~led
$24
, with a payoff due of

!!!!'

Ohio Lottery .

Eastern
defeats
Southem

Pick-3
725
Pick

9184
Super Lotto
8-10.18-33-3443
Kicker 898326
•

Page~
.,
'
LONGEST MARRIED- Edward E. and Virginia M. WriShl, 45 •.
Chlllicotlae Road, Gallipolis, were honored as the couple married
I~ lonl(esl, Friday nlr;ht at Veterans 65 and Over Dinner,
sponsored by the Ladles Auxiliary, GaiUa County Post 4484,
Veterans of Foreign Wars. The couple has been married 47 years.

Beat of the Bend
By BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY- Leslie F. Fultz,
former
businessman
and a lonner
Pomeroy VIllage Councilman. Is seriously ill In a
Minnesota
_hospital.
Les had gone
to Burmlngton, Minn., due to the
death of his son-In-law, Tom
Becker, who was the husband of
the former Terri Fultz. While
there he suffered a stroke and
was take to the hospital where he
remains In serious condition.
His wife, Mildred Fultz, accompanied by Joan Morris, left
by plane today for Minnesota.
The address, by the way, Is
Fairview Hospllal. South Dale,
Edina. Mihn.
Greg Kaylor, operator of the
Continuity of Care, a supplier of
medical equipment in Pomeroy,
reports that his business located
on Mulberry Heights, is not
making the telephone calls to
residents in regard to lift chairs.
A firm apparently has been
telephoning residents in regard
to selling the c.hairs and Greg
reports that as a result' his
business has received calls from
residents who thought the calls

OLDEST VETERAN -Charles A. (Kip) Nuckles, 36 Henkle .
Ave., Gallpollll, received a gift as the Oldest Veteran attending
Friday alpt's Veterans OYer a p!nner, sponsored by the Ladles
Auxiliary ol Galla County, Posl4~. Veterans ol Foreign Wars.
Preeeadag~e gift is Mary Garwood, Rehabilitation Chairman ol
tbe Auxiliary. Nackles, 83, Is a retlr.e d em.ploye ol the Gallipolis
Post Olftee and veteran of .World War IL

Send a cheery word
were coming from .Continuity of
Care. Greg says that his business
does no telephone sales calling.
However, tl\e firm does stock the
Ufl chairs and Greg adds that
sometimes such purchases are
bel ter done locally from a
service standpoint.
I mentioned recently that VIrginia Buchanan of Middleport
had suffered a stroke recently
while vacationing In the Nashville. Tenn .. area.
She was hospitalized In Nashville but now has been trans·
ported from Nashville to the
Western Hills Rehabilitation
Center, Box 1428, Parkersburg,
W.Va., 26102. The room number,
by the way, Is 218.

PHA

786 NORTH SECOND

MIDDLEPOIT

WeAre A

PCS

J.

i\CY
.

Member

Jayne Hutchison Humphreys,
lunch consisted ' of butter and
Bank I employee In Pomeroy,
Moth~r·s homemade bread and
has undergone surgery at the · jelly. Sometimes, a Bttle jar of
fruit. Sometimes If Mom and Dad
Holzer Medical Center and has
went to the store on the weekends
been returned to her home. She's
doing'flne. The address Is Box 9,
we might get a stick or candy ora
banana. W.e were very lucky to
Pomeroy.
have two outfits of clothing. Back
Mrs. Laura Riggs Hoffman,
then you wall\ed about two miles·
1704 W. Mound St.. Columbus,
In mud or snow half way to your
knees. Oh. forthe good old days."
Ohio 43223. hasn't forgotten
Thanks for your letter, Mrs .
Meigs County.
Mrs. Hoffman wrote In regard
Hoffman .
to a recent column about schools
days of yesteryear and recalls a
How about this bonus of great
weather?
Why It's durned near
few of her memories:
"When I was six years old I enough to make you smile.
started · school In a one room
building up,New Lima Road from
Rutland. I was also a brown
bagger or a tin lunch bucket
· student. Living In the countrv.

•

..

Vot.40, No.1 22 M

Pro-choice march attracts thousands Sunday
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - . High Street .f rom th~ Ohio Center for vetoing le~!slation which legislative chambers," said CeVowing to demonstrate their to the rally site. Pollee estimated would have allowed federal funds leste. "l.,et us to.g ether seek out
political mu~le to anyone who the crowd at between 10,000 and tobeusedtopayforabortionsfor and support candidates for pubgets In their way, thousands ol 15,000 people. · Organizers of the poor women who are the victims lie office, especially those who
wish to serve In the Statehouse,
advocates of a woman's right to . event claimed 40,000 people were of rape or Incest.
''Thepresidentlscommittedto who will stand up for a woman's
choose an abortion marched past · on hand.
Tbe purpose of the ma:rch and cr!m!nallzlng abortion once right to choose."
the Statehouse Sunday and rallied for two hours at Blcentenpja! .~ally was to demonstrate to state . again," said the senator. "ToMolly Yard, president ol the
-lekislators that a maj4fity of day, we're here to say to the '
Park.
"Choice must be made In the Oh!oans favor choice and can president, 'Mr. President, If you National Organization for
heart of a woman, not mandated organize politically to fight any won't fight for us, we'll fight for Women, was even more blunt,
by politicians," Gov. Richard restrictive abortion bills. Anti· ourselves. If you won't march urging the crowd to lobby tbe
Celeste told cheering pro-choice abortion demonstrators claimed with us, then we'll march right Legislature for pro-choice
legislation.
supporters at the rally about five 20,000 participants at a similar over you.'"
march
In
the
capital
city
"Let
us
leave
here
today
She said If lawmakers fall to
blocks frOm the Statehouse.
In
our
commit·
come
through, "find a candidate
Saturday.
strengthened
An estimated 10.000 people
Sen.
Howard
Metze'hbaum,
D·
ment,
which
Is
pro-choice
at
the
who
Is
pro-choice. Run yourfrom throughout Ohio took more
than an hour to parade down Ohio, hammered President Bush polling place and pro-child In the selves and challenge them." she
said. "It Is the rl.-.hi time to run

Force's electronics school · at
Kessler AFB.
His next assignment will be for
two years In Germany.
Neville's mother and stepfather are Mr. and Mrs. Jack L.
Vance, ll45Second Ave .. Gaillpo·
lis. He Is a 1988graduateo!Gallia
Academy High SchooL f

- r-··

·· and

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Foreign Subsidiaries)

1989 BUICK REGAL

111/FM stereo, tit whool, cruise c011trol,
lalyo whools, Sport Appearance Pkg.
..lane• of 36/ '0 warranty.

1989 BUICK lEAnA

factory .,_Mtratlon, 4,,00 low Rilles,
white exterior, saddle ·leather interioJ:. ,

.

Sharpl
FACTORY UST

'27,250

·- ..

$22,900'

.

..

•

Court to hear arguments m newspaper case
1987 Buick Park Ave.
Loaded, local owner, silver
with cloth interior.

WAS '10,9DO

I, the undersigned officer, do hereby declare that this Report or Condition has
been prepared in co nformance with official Instructions and Is true to the best of
my knowledge and belief.
Madge E. Boggs
Vice President and Controller
We, the undersigned directors. attest the correctness of this Report of Condl. tlon anll declare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our krlowledge
and belief has been prepared In conformance with offlclal!nstructlons·and Is true
and correct.
Morris E. Haskins
Jeffrey E. Smith - Directors
.:1 •.
Robert H. Eastman

wtu'::r

Annual Hallaween bash held
in·Athens;. some are arr~ted

$9900

ASSETS
Cash and balances due from depository instilutions:
a. Nonlnterest-bearing balances and currency and coin .................. 4,310,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances ...... , ............................ .......................... 649,000.00
Securlt les ..... .. .... ..................................... .. .. ......... ........................... .43,465,000. 00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements
to reseB in domestic offices of the bank and of Its
·
Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and In IBF's:
Federal fund sold .......................... .... .... ........ ... ........................... .10,250,000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables:
·
Loans and leases. net of unearned Income .......... 130,986,000.00
LESS: ABowance for loan and lease losses ........... . 1,383,000.00
Loans and leases. net of unearned income,
·.
allowance. and reserve .. ... .... ........................_.............................. 129,603,000.00
Premises and fixed assets !including capitaBzed leases I ............... :... 1.535,000.00
Other assets ............ ..................... ..... .. ............................................. 2,592,000.00 :
Tot a I assets ............................................ ... ......... .........................1192,404,000.00
Total assets and losses def&lt;'rred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) ........ 192.404,000.00
LIABILITIES
Deposits:
a. In dom!'Stic offices .............................. , .................. , .............. . 175,938,()()9.00
n I Noninterest·bearing ............ ................. ......... .13,663,000.00
121 Interest-bearing .. .. ........ .............................. 162,275,000.00
Federal funds pu rchased and securities sold under agreements
to repurchase in dom estic offices of the bank and.of Its
Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and In IBFs:
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase ................................ 428,000.00
Other borrowed money ..................... ............................ : ........... , ........... 40,000.00
Other liabBities ....... .............. ................. .... .............. ..... ,, ... ,............. 2.526,000.00
Total Babilitles ......................................... ..... .... , ........................... 178,932,000.00
EQUITY CAPfi'AL
Common stock No. of shares a. Authorlzed .......... 417,824
b. Outstandlng ....... .411.104 ............... 4,111,000.00
Surplus ...... ......................... .. ........................ .................. :................ 5,911,000.00
a. Undivided profits and capital reserves ....................................... 3,772,()()(l,OO
b. LESS: Net unrealized lpss on marketable equity securities ........... 322,000.00
Total equity capital ..... ..... ..................... ....................... .................. .13,472,000.00
Total equity capital and losses deferred
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(!) ............................................... ... ....... 13,472,000.00
Total liabilities, limited-life preferred stock, and equity capital,
and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(jl ........ ... .... .. ....... H2,404,000.00

liMMrl:tJi'tlliilir" e, ·

'theSiiiail! atao
with a
House-passed bill redefining the
sales tax that manufacturers are
charged on equipment used In
manufacturing. The Ohio De·
partment of Taxation and the
out on a
Ohio Manufacturers's Assocla·
PERFECT WEATHER FOR GRID FINALE- Sa&amp;UI'day night. Cllpaelty cr-d
perfect
evening
for
loolball
lor
the
finale.
See
lion worked out an agreement on
The Eastern Eagles ended tbe 1881 aeuon on a
details
and
addiU11na1
photos
on
pal(e
4.
that bill.
·
high note by defeatlnr arch-rival Sou~a, 14.0,
'
Two bills ' must be passed
before the end of the year to avoid
federal penalties. One clarifies
eligibility for Medicaid, and the
other prohibits counties from
housing juvenile offenders In
adult correctional facilities.
The Senate may also act on a
bill authorizing the Ohio Depart' had said "Take lhe Street! Take the · ment of Youth Services to award
not to go to Athens. She
ATHENS, Ohio I UP!) -Thousands of young people, most of there were limited numbers of Street!" and within minutes grants to counties for services
and programs for delinquent
them In costumes, swarmed Into parking spaces and that ll!egally were Inside the barricades.
The
celebration
the
Saturday
parked
cars
would
be
towed.
But
children who commit felonies.
·the doWntown area near Ohio
night
nearest
Halloween
In
the
some
observers
thought
that
Another bill that may hit the
University Saturday night for
early
70s
and
kept
getting
larger.
action
brought
more
In
town.
Senate
floor Is a House-passed
what has become an annual
many
of
them
Young
people,
measure adding judges In a
Halloween party.
.
Pollee officials said many ol Ohio University students, number of counties.
Pollee dfllc!als estlmated as
As passed by the House, the bill
many as 4,000 to 5,000 people, the downtown revelers were emerged from the bars and
contains one additional judgemany from out oltown, gathered from out of town, and added that roamed the streets.
Merchants came to expect this ship for Summit Courlty Common
there were large parties In other
for the party.
.
party and began covering their Pleas Court, 6th DistriCt Court of
A fewerrests were made early parts of the university city.
Revelers donned such cos- plate glass windows wlht ply- Appeals (Toledo), 11th District
In the evening, and at least one
tumes
as Vice President Dan wood to prevent them from being Court of Appeals (Warren), and
person was believed Injured, but
police officials didn't have de· Quayle, Batman, a fish from the broken when violence broke out. three for the 8th District Court of
' tails of the Injury.
But the rowdiness diminished Appeals (Cleveland) . More
Alaskan oil spill to compete for
In
recent years as the Safe and judgeships could be added . .
Crowds gathered despite an priZes In both Individual and
Clean
Halloween Committee,
Tbe House will not be In
eflort by Mayor Sara Hendlcker group contests. Live bands perwith
members
representing
the
session,
but may return for one
to keep Invaders at a minimum. formed In corner parking lots.
cliy
and
the
university,
began
to
day
In
December
If necessary.
Police erected barricades
In recent weeks she had mailed
present
organized
events.
A speelal House committee
letters to college newspapers to around 9 p.m., and within min·
have them encoura~e students u tes students began chanting

State Bank No. 130

Federal ReserYe District No. 4
of Gallipolis, Galli a County, In I he state of Ohio all he close of business on Septem·
her 30, 1989.
~ ·
'
·

~

'

State of Ohio. County of Ga!l!a, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 24t)l day of October, 1989and I hereby
certify thai I am not an officer or director of thll bank.
Cindy H. Johnston, A.KA Cindy L. Harrington, Notary Pubic
My commission expires ,March 25, 1991.

1987 Century 4 Door

Power everything. silver,
aluminum wheals. Sharp!

2 in stock. Low miles.

S8995

S7995

1985
Camaro 128

Exceptionally clean.
white finish, maroon
Interior. Expect the

Sharp and sporty!
Maro()n, 52,000 miles.

S6995
t·

1987 LeSabre. Limited

1985 Delta 8·8 4
Door
best.

pro-choice. Defeat the antis In
The marchers, cheered,
1990."
•
. clapped and chanted: "Choice!
"Every state capital In this
Now!" and "Not the church, not
country Is our battleground,"
the state, women must decide
said Metzenbaum. ·'Up until thelt fate ."
now, . your voices have been
They carried American flags,
!lr-owned outby.a shrill minority. babies, and coat hangers symbolLet every state legislator In Ohio izing their beljef that abortion
know that we, too, are deterrestrictions will lead to primitive
mined and organized and pas- and illegal methods.
slonate and tireless, and we will
not rest until women's rights are
A wide variety of signs were
secure In the state of Ohio."
displayed: "Keep Your Laws Off
StateleglslatorsjoinedYardat My Body." "Bush - What If.
the head of the long line,
Barbara Got Raped," and "Elvis
marching behind a 12-foot wide Was Pro-Choice."
blue banner that read: "Keep
Two marchers In donkey heads
Choice In YOUR House, Not the carrjed a sign: "Don't Be An Ass
,Statehouse.''
- Support Choice.''

Ohio Senate ·will reconvene
Tuesday to 'tie loose ends'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The Ohio Senate will reconvene
Tuesday to tie up loose ends for
the year. One aide promised that
business will be strictly routine
and there will "be no trick or
treat bills that will scare anybody" at the Halloween session.
The meeting begins at 1: 30
p.m.
Much of the work Involves
ratifying House bills sent over
earlier this month. Final action
will be taken on a resolution
establishing a House-Senate task
force to study the problem or
ol)talnllllf affordable health care

The Ohio Valley ·aa-:tk
Company

26 Conta

A Multimedia Inc. N.wiP••

7

Neville honored for achievements
GALLIPOLIS - Airman Timothy C. Neville, was chosen on
the Commander's Honor Roll at
Kessler Air Force Base, Biloxi,
Miss, for his achievements In
academics. marching profl·
clency and Inspection of student
quarters.
· Neville Is a student in the Air

1 Section. 10 Pogo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday. October 30, 1989

Coprriphted 1888

Low ton!rht around !MI.
Tuesday, cooler. High In mid
60s. Chance of rain 811 percent.

WAS '1995.00

NOW

S799S

1-Biue

1-Grey

1982 Cadillac
Fleetwood
Brougham
Yellow with leather.
Shows excellent care.

S4995 ·

WASHINGTON tUPI) -The
U.S. Supreme Court will hear
oral arguments Monday In the
Detroit Free Press' effort to win
a joint operating agreement with
The Detroit News but It was. not
known when the court waul(!
release,lts decision.
Some experts said the Su·
preme Court could let Its views
be known In a matter of days and
others believe It would most
likely be sometime next year.
More than 3 ~ years have
passed since Knight-Ridder Co.
Inc .. owner of the Detroit Free
Press. and Gannett· Co. Inc.,
owner of the News, announced
they would seek the JOA .
If the court upholds the JOA,
the two papers will merge
business o!llfratlons, split profits
and publish joint weekend edl·
tlon&amp; while keeping separate
editorial staffs.
Should•the court strike down
the JOA, Knlght-Ridder plans
either 19 close the 158-year-old
Free Pres• or selllt. ·
In Detron, the Mlchlaan Inves:
tor Group, comprllled of var IDus

'
•

business, educational and civic
leaders, Sunday offered to purchase the Detroit Free Press for
$68 million In a letter to James
Batten, President and Chief
Executive Officer of the owner of
ttie newspaper, Knlght-Ridder
Inc.
·
"We are confident from the
financial 1nformatlon available
from publiC sources that a deal
can he concluded to purehase the
Detroit Free Press before the end
of this yeaY.," said . WIIUam
McMaster, a spokesman for
Michigan Investor Group.
II successful In purchasing the

Free Press, the Michigan Investor Group "will continue the
158-year·old Detroit Free Press
as an ongoing enterprise and
convert the edltorlallormat to a
'statewide community newspaper' with Michigan Investors,
Michigan management and
Michigan writers &amp;Jld adverllll·
lng personnel martcet1n1 lbelr
product to Michigan readers and
adYerdaers."
Beth companies contend tha!

the Free Press Is a "falling"
newspaper entitled to an antitrust exemption permitted by the
Newspaper Preservation Act of
1970. The Free Press has lost
more ihan $100 million In the
1980s.
The two papers received Justice Department approval of the
JOA on Aug. 8, 1988, but they did
not put it In place because of
numerous legal challenges . This
May, the Supreme Court agreed
to hear the JOA case.
·
"It's everybody's last shot to
win the case," said William
Schultz, a Washington lawyer
who will argue against the JOA
for Michigan Citizens for an
Independent Press - a group of
readers~ advertisers and news·
paper workers.
"It's the time when all the
elements of the case will converge, all the people Involved will
be tbgether for the last time," he
said.
Deputy Solicitor General Thomas Merrill will argue In favor ol
the JOA.
The case Is the first test of the

•

Newspaper Preservation Act,
which was passed alter the
Supreme. Court ruled In 1969 that
a JOA between two Tuscan
newspapers violated antitrust
laws.
Under Intense lobbying from
the newspaper Industry, · Congress passed the law seeking to
prevent newspapers from closIng In the lace of stiff
competition.
Tbe law allowed 22 existing
JOAs to stand. Since then, lour
more have been approved.
Only eight justices will vote In
the case. Justic~&gt; Byr9n White
wltlidrew from the case for
unspecified personal reasons.
•This Is a case that Is going to
turn on · Its own !acts and
circumstances - huge losaes, a
valiant attempt to,keep the (Free
Press) alive, proper competition
- that fits squarely within the
statute," said Stephen Shapiro, a
Knlght·Ridder lawyer with the
Chicago firm Mayer, Brown and
Platt.

studying Ohio's drug problen\
will hold its first meeting at 1
p.m. Tuesday. Rep. John Shivers, D-Salem, will present House
Speaker Vernal Riffe's comprehensive anti-drug bill, which
Includes ho~l!ng parents responsible if their children use drugs ..
Riffe said If the panel has a bill
ready to vote before the end oft he
year, he will bring the House

back Into session to vote on it.
The House Public Safety and·
Highways Committee will continue to work on drunken driving
legislation with a Wedisday
afternoon meeting. Law kers
are considering the "adm
tra·
live suspension'' of a rlnking
driver's license. meaning the
police officer confiscates it at the
scene.

Ohio records 13 deaths on
highways this past weekend
F: lng~ ' youl!l .people, dldaot him
At IH~ple, Jnelll!lllla' the · over', ancf Mile ot thole people
was Injured, the patrol said.
driver of a tractor for a' hayride,
Victims Included:
were killed In traffic accidents In
Friday night
Ohio this past weekend, the Ohio
Coshocton: Robert Grewell, 17,
Highway Patrol said early
West Lafayette, killed when the
Monday.
motorcycle he was operating
The count showed two deaths
collided with a truck on a
Friday night, nine Saturday and
Coshocton County road.
two Sunday .
Four motorcyclists were
Bryan: Patrick W. Daleska, 33,
among the victims.
Montpelier,
k !lied when the moOne victim, RandalL. Conrad,
torcycle
he
was operating
35, New Concord, was killed
crashed
on
Ohio
Route 49 In
Saturday night when the tractor
Williams
County.
.
he was driving for a hayride In
Saturday
Coshdcton County flipped over
Steubenville: David Rosenand pinned him beneath It.
berger, 22, Toronto, killed when
A patrol spok~swoman said
Conrad was driving the tractor his car failed to make a curve on
Ohio Route 152 In Jefferson
and wagon down a hill on a
township road, and lost control of County.
Columbus: Somath Xayavong,
the tractor when he applied the.
brakes. She said the tractor 25. Columbus, killed when his car
flipped over and he was pinned rolled over on Interstate 71 at
Interstate 70, throwing him out.
beneath the wreckage.
Columbus: Robert A. Connor,
He died a few hours later at
4,
Columbus, killed when he fell
Guernsey Memorial Hospital In
Continued on page 3
Cambridge. The wagon, carry-

- By Unlf.elll'reu.lntl:rllliUobal

'

--Local news briefs-.
MPI) cruiser hit; driver cited

.·

An Oak H!ll youth was charged and cited In a car-truck crash
Sunday at 1:24 a.m. In Salisbury Township on C.R. 25, about a
quarter of a mUe north of S.R. 7, according to tM Galtia-Melgs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Orson C. Flsher,17, was charged forDWiand cited for driving
without a seat belt and a license after his 1974 Datsun pickup
truck hit a 1986 Ford LTD police cruiser owned by the
Middleport Pollee Department and driven by Patrolman Ricky
L. Johnson, 41.
Fisher and Johnson were driving north when Johnson tried to
pass Fisher. Fisher went lett of center and hit the cruiser,
resulting In Fisher's going of! the r!ghtsldeofthe road and Into a
ditch.
.
A Connecticut woman was cited In a car-truck crash Saturday
at 11:40 a.m. In Salisbury Township on S.R. 7. 8.8 miles north of
the Meigs-Gall!a County line.
Brenda Holsinger, 27, of Thompson, Conn .. was cited for not
maintaining assured clear distance after her 1988 Chevrolet
S-10 pickup truck hit a 1978 Ford Thunderburd driven by John C.
Hile. 73, of 367 Ash St. , Middleport.
Hite and Holsinger were driving north when Hite stopped to
turn left to a private driveway. Hlte'scar was hit In the leftlront
quarter panel by the truck. Holsinger's truck continued past
that point, where It hit a guardrail on the left side ol the road
before crossing the road and going off the ,right side:

Racine man charged.with DWI
'
Charaes of DWI and failure
to control were flied agalns t Keith
White, Hill Road, Racine. by Pomeroy police following an
accident on Welahtown Hill.
According to the report, White was traveling south on
Welshtown Hill when he lost control of his vehicle, went to the
lett of tl)e roadway and struck a utility pole.
There was moderate dama1e to the car which had to be towed
from the scene. The Pomeroy unit ol the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service was on the scene but White
'
reportedly refilled treatment.
Continued on page 3

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Mondly, October 30, 1989

~---Local

Pa;• 2-The Deily Sa ,liillill
Pomeloy-Middlapon, Ohio
Mcroda;. October 30, 1989

The Daily Sentinel_
.lll Court SCreel

Pomeroy, Oblo .
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEJG8-liiASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'M'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
.o\3elotonl Pablloloer/ Colltrollel'

_,

CHARLENE H0Ef1..1CK

Genenlllluqer

A MEMBER otfte ,a,.,;..ted J&gt;ro!os,lniMd DUly l'n!!lo""""'
d . . . lllld llle Americu New....,... PuiJiisllero Asoodlltlon.
LETI'EJIS OFOPINION.,.owdcome. 'l'lloytlbould boleuUwaJM
· - ..... AD-· • • -jed 14! ..UllllJ ..d mou&amp; be olped wllh

-··

lolep-•...,...,.·

....-leUfr•

---~
No •
will be publiliaN. l.eUet-o ....... be 18 I!Mdluw, addresoill&amp;llsues, not personol~
l ....

America's bridges
are falling down

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i

Flag burning isn't the real issue
WASHINGTON - Gregory
Lee Johnson did something
worse than burn tbe American
flag at the Republican Conven·
t ion In Dallas In 1984. He started a
fire under one of th~&gt; seed!E&gt;r
elements of democracy - !bose
who would fight unto death to
protect their right to tell others
what to do.
Sadly, therE&gt; are eno11gh of
those people in the United States
to constitute a hefty voting bloc.
and now they have their repres~&gt;ntatives In CorfgrE&gt;Ss stuck
between that bloc and a liard
place.
For the record. we never met
Gregory Lee Johnson, but we
don't like him anyway. He took
advantage o! the very country
that he despises by burning the
flag to show his contempt. 'Then,
h~&gt; dragged the case against him
all the way to the Supreme Court,
which painfully had to a!lmlt that
Johnson had a right to burn the
flag.

Johnson was right and his case
was solid, but don' I ex~t us to
Invite him over to dinner for a
spirited debate on freedom of
expression. He attended every
American who cares dl&gt;eply
about this country.
Now Congress has com·
pounded that offense by com·
promising the right to freedOm of
expression. Johnson, who doesn't
deserve the time It takes to tell
hlm he Is a jerk. has sparked a
constitutional crisis.
Last week, Congress approved
the final version of an ant~ flag·
burning bill and serit It to the
president. That blll makes flag·
burning a crime, punishable by
up to one year In prison. If
Pr~&gt;Sident Bush doesn't veto the
bill, It will be a crime to express
one's opinion by putting a match
to one' s personal property.
/

Where do we go from here?
Will It be a crime to tear up a copy
of the Bill of Rights? Shall we

By ARNOLD SAWJSLAX
UPI Senior Editor
............_
WASHINGTON- Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan was on television
the Sunday after the Lorna Prieta earthquake talking about thE&gt;
ponlblllty of Increasing the gasoline tax to pay for fixing tbe nation's
dilapidated bridges.
To some, Moynihan's effort to use th~&gt; California catastrophe to
. bring up the problems of deteriorating bridges and overpasses
throughout tlie federal highway system may have sremed to be just
another money-hungry liberal trying to exploit an Isolated, albeit
tragic, event to get into the public's pocket.
More likely, it was a ~a'~ of a desperate public ol!lcial grasping at
the first straw that came to hand In hopes 0f finding help In what has
been a lonely ef!ort to Interest the public in an issue of elementary
highway safety.
Tho&gt;re Is much more than falling down bridges Involved In what
became known as "the Infrastructure problem" a few years ago.
"Infrastructure" Is just the kind of word that makes bureaucrats
smile and puts the public to sleep. which may be one reason why
precious little has .been done to deal with what really Is an extremely
serious problem.
In plain vanilla English, the roads, streets. bridges, sewer and
water systems and other public facilities in the United Stat~&gt;s are
starting to fall apart. In some cases - for example the water systems
In New York and Chicago - an effort Is being made to replace
.antiquated and run down facilities.
.J ,u.tln far too many otherca~s. absolutely nothing Is being done to
repalr'or replace public works that are going downi)Ul. The worst
situations are on the highways and bridges and the problem Is not just
a matter of potholes or rust on railings. Some say as many as one out ·
of every lour highway structures need work or rebuilding.
Hundreds of the overpasses. elevated structures and bridges that
millions of drivers must cross every day on tlle way to and from work
or on business are simply unsafe and ought t&lt;fbeclosed until they are
fixed or replaced.
But when the reports on the condition of these facilities started
coming out a few years ago. the public and the politicians who are
sensitive to whatever excites the publ!c reacted with a national yawn.
Moynnlhan, who heads the Senate public works subcommittee
responsible for federal roads and bridges, estimated the cost of
earthquake repair at $5 bllllon, but clearly had more In mind for
fixing.
.
"If ever It Is the moment to talk about Increasing the gas tax. now Is
the moment. when people have those pictures of the Nimitz Frreway
stlllln their minds. I would hope the president would come to us with a
proposal, bbut If not, we wlll write a blllof our own and send It to him,"
Moynihan said.
· Moynihan may be pinning hls hopes to a slender reed. If the past
r.ecord on this IssuE&gt; Is any Indicator, It Is likely the public wlll view the
Oakland highway disaster as a one-of·a·klnd event that could only
If Eric Foretlch raped hls
I don't have any reason to
have happened In earthquaklf country and put those horrendous small daughter as his ex-wife doubt Morgan's story, but
pictures of the collapsed freeway out or mtnd.
Elizabeth Morgan says, the dark·
neither do I have reason to doubt
Alter all, the rationale will go, a 6.9 Richter Scale quake It Isn't est corner of he Ills too high-class
Foretelch' s, because neither has
likely to happen anywhere else. That, In fact, happens to be wrong,
for him. If he didn't, nothing will bren cross examined In a court of
but ~ven without a major seismic disturbance, America' s bridges are make up for the treatment he's
law. All I want · \S to sre both
fal Ung down and nobody seems to know how to krep It from received In some of tbe press.
treated fairly by a press which Is
happening.
Morgan s!Jent 25 months In jail ethically bound to be objective.
. rather than reveal the wherea·
As a journalist who has Invest!·
bouts of her daughter Hilary, gated cases where people have
who she says Foretk:h raped. She
accused their spouses of molest·
was put Into jail by a judge who
lng their childr~&gt;n, I may require
found no "legally conclusive"
that objectivity mor~&gt; · than most.
evidence of the sexual abuse; he
Such cases are murky waters for
also ruled Foretich may see the .journalists to tread, because
The Dally Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 8 general
child, and Moran refused to bring court h~&gt;arlngs are closed to
eleCtion. However, In the Interest of fairness, no election letters will
the child forth.
"protect the privacy of the
be accepted after 12 noon on WedneSday, Nov . l.
If
Morgan
suffered
jail
to
child."
But I always went as far
Individuals should address Issues and not personalltl!!"·
protect
her
chlld
from
a
legit!·
as
I
could:
I read files kept by
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
mate
threat,
she
Is
a
hero.
I
guess
child-protection
officers. deposl·
Letters should be 300 words or less. Ali letters are subject to editing
that's
something
we
may
never
lions
of
accusers
and professed
and must be signed with name, address and telephone number. No
her
her,olsm
Is
someknow.
But
witnessed,
and
evaluations
by
•unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste.
thing we have gradually begun to
psychologists and psychiatrists.
.take for granted, thanks In large
In several of the cases, there
part to some less-than-objective
coverage by the media. Because were bitter disputes over child·
of h~&gt;r sacrifice, Morgan' s side Is support payments or custody.
One questionable custody case
cons lstently publicised. Fore·
llch's side Is usually relegated to sticks out In my mind. precisely
a short denial somewhere toward · because I was never able to find
evidence to justifY denying the
the end of the text.

..

Berry's World

Meigs S&amp; WCD fete Nov. '14
The annual meeting and banquet of the Meigs Soli and Water
Omservatlon District will be held Nov. 14 at 7: 21 p.m at the
Southern High School .
Tickets are $7 each and may be purchased from the SWCD
supervisors, Tom Theiss, Alan Holt,er, Ron Eastman. Rodney
Chevalier or David Gloeckner, or at the office on the second
floor of the Farmers Bank building. .
.
Joe McClanahan, retpred Hocklns County Extension Agent,
will be the speaker. Awards will be presented to lndlvdlual and
team winners from !he county soli judging contest. the 1989
Outstanding Farm FamUy, and to the Goodyear Farmers and
Afflllate Memberships:
.
·
During the meeting. one Meigs County resident wlll be elected
to serve three years on the Megls SWCD board o( supervisor's.
Candidates seeking elflCtiOn are D vld Gloeckner and David
King.
Reservations for the banqu~t aye due by Nov. 6.

•

Jack Anderson and DaM VanAtta .

----------------------------------------~------joCk people up for wadding up what we really need. Why smash :,
their "104().EZ" forms? Shall we the American spirit with a fiy
arrest them for setting fire to this swatter when you can use a
column?
sledgehammer!
The flag Is different, you say .
It's a symbol of our freedoms.
President Bush comes from
People dle for II. Since Gallup the sledgehammer school of
can't take a poll or everyone who lawmaking. He says he doesn't
has died in the service of their like the blli because It lsn' t
country, that point Is up Cor enough. He wants a constltu·
debate. Soldiers don't die for Ilona! amendlJlent, maybe some·
symbols. At the worst. some thing that can be squeezed In
soldiers die because they are ·right under the Bill or Rights.
stuck In a place they don't want to Bush's shallow presidential cam·
be. At best, some die to 'protect palgn was based on exactly the
their country or another country same blather that prompted the
from a hostUe takeover by others flag-burning ·bill. Candidate
who would limit their freedom.
Bush didn't gllle . the country a
The members of Congress who clue about how he would stop the
supported the bill did so either drug epidemic or eradicate the
through blind patriotism or fear deficit or achieve world peace or
of losing votes. The majority of house the homeless or feed the
those who voted against It dldn'·t hungry. But, by golly, be promMve the courage to say It was a Ised that your children would say
bad Idea. Instead, they said that the Pledge of Allegiance every
theytppposed a law because a day whether they wanted to or
consfltutlonal amendment ls not.

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The October State School Foundation Subsidy In basic and
transportation allowance to Meigs County totaled $769,971.91,
according to a report released today by State Auditor Thomas
E. Ferguson.
·
. ·
The report showed that In the J;astern Local School District,
the total of basic and transportation allowances was $151,801.77,
less $5,019 for school employees retirement; $15,315 for state
teachers retirement, leaving a net payment to the school
district of $131,467.77.
.
In the Meigs Local SchOol · District, the basic a~d
transporation allowances was $424,591.49, less $13,904 for school
employees retirement and $43,166 for teachers retirement.
leaving a balance of $367,521.49 as the net payment to the
district:
The Southern Local School District received $159,479.54, less
$7,706 In school employees retirement, and $22,051 In state
teachers retirement, leaving a total payment of $129,722.54.
The direct allotment to the Meigs County Board was
$34,099.11.

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The Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce will sponsor their
annual Hallowe~&gt;n party tonight (Monday) on Court St., with
costume judging starting at 7: 15 p.m. Candy and prizes wlll be
given away and refreshments wlll be served.
.
First. second and third places wlll be awarded to the ugliest,
prettiest and Judge's cbok:e In four categories- preschool to
kindergarten; first to third grades; fourth to sixth grades; and
seventh to eighth grades.
A pumpkin carVIng contest with already carved pumpkins
from home will also be judged and awarded first, second and
third places.
The party will be emceed by WMPO Radio personalities who
will also be doing a live remote from the party. A dance will
follow the costume judging ,with everyone welcome to attend.

•
'

No one· claims Super Lotto prize
.

CLEVELAND. 1UPH -The $6
In !he Kicker game the correct
million Ohio Super Lotto jackpot order was 898326. There was one
will go unclaimed because no one ticket with those numbl'rs \O win
correctly picked all six. numbers the 100,000 top prize.
,for Saturday's drawing. The top
Total sales were $713,223 and
prize rolls over to at least $9 the payout wlll be $325.960.
million Wednesday.
There were seven winners with
There were 104 tickets that had five of the slx first numbers
five of the sl~ riumbers that correct for, $5,000 each; 62 with
include 8. 10, 18, 33, 34,. ahd· 43. , the Urst fbur numbers for $1,000
worth $1.000 each; and 5,359 each. 651 tickets with lhe first
tickets with four of six numbers three numbers for$100each, and
for $75 each.
6,386 tickets with the first two
Total sales were $4,239,149 a"d numbers for $10 each.
the payout will be $505,925.

--Area death"g-!ii- -

~

father custody of his children.
The children's mother had left
the state and signed a paper
saying she no longer wanted
custody, y1!t the children had
bl&gt;en In 11 foster homes In three .
years. I wanted to find a smoking
gun, sol could say, "Yes, there is
a good reason that man doesn't
have his children." Here Is whatl
found from looking at the docu·
ments that were available to me:
During a custody dispute, a
neighbor (a friend of the mother)
accused the father of sexually
molesting hls then ·4-year;ald
daughter. According to testlm·
ony recorded by , a child·
protection worker, the little girl
said Daddy had penetrated her
with several toys, as well as what
the worker Interpreted as being·
the farber's penis. Yet an exam!·
nation by a respected pedlatrl·
clan showed the girl had never
bl&gt;en penetrated.
In the man's llle were two
diametrically opposite evalua·
tlons of his psychological rna·
keup, based on the same raw
testing data: One, a respected

Overstreet

Sarah 'L emley
Sarah Sue Luella Dawn Lem·
ley, 12·day old daughter of Kevin
Lawrence Lemley and Anna
Flo rena Gibson Lemley. 207
Butter,nut Ave., Pomeroy, died
Saturday at her home.
Born Oct. 161n Gallipolis, she Is
also 's urvived by sisters Cara,
Crystal and Kimberly Lemley.
all at home.
Also surviving are maternal

psychologist hired by the state,
assessed hlm as "hostile, a
volcano about ready to. erupt."
The other, an equally respected
psychiatrist hired by the man,
said therE&gt; was absolutely nothing
abnormal about the man's psychological state, and that he was
Justifiably angry because the
state was keeping his chlldren
from him. Neither of the psycho!·
ogists gave hlm tests designed to
detect pedophlllc tendencies.
The conclusion of the state
chlld·protectlon division - that
the girl had been molested by her father - was based solely on the
evaluation or the state's chlld
psycllologlst. Were his questions
leading, as many critics of these
kinds of cases allege? We don't
know.
Am I convinced one way or the
other? Absolutely not. But mY
research has given me a healthy
respect for the complexity and
l)ld~e~ components of these
cases. And when I read about
one, I'd like to see what Is not
known cl~&gt;arly reported as such.

Bond investment
made by fim1"
The Allstate Insurance Group
has Invested $200,000 In a bond In
Meigs County, according toRus·
sell P. Peterson, the companies'
regional vice president for Ohio.
According to Peterson. the
Meigs County Investments are
part of more than $317,899 In
bonds held by Allstate In ~
counties In Ohio. The Investment
In Meigs County . Is In the
Pomeroy Ohio Limited Tax.
In making the announcement,
Peterson said "It continues .to
Allstate policy to support the
development of areas , In which
we do business by Investing In
local communities."

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~;..,~. ~~~";;}
"I wish I had lived long agq so I could have
experienced the smell of burning leaves. "

a.

the supermarket's wall had
likelihood of an earthquake.
I had been In Tokyo In 1985, broken, scattering thousands of
When tl!at city experienced a glittering shards on tbe pavequake almost as blg as this one, ment. I could see my cable car
so I wasn't a complete novice In two blocks away - &amp;Qini nosuch matters. But my first where, since power had be!ln cut
thought, as I waited for a cable off. I managed to hall a cab, and
car at 5: 04 p.m. at the corner of came home.
California and Hyde, and the · Damage to my apartment
pavement began to rumble be· buDding had mercifully been
neath my feet, was that I hadn't slight. There were cracks II! the
realized BART - San Francis- plaster In the stairwells, and tbe
co's shiny new subway - ~arne glass In bay windows on the first
three floors had broken. But my
this ~Vay. For the sensation was a
dead ringer for one every New own bay wlnc!Q.w, like the others
above the third floor, had sur·
Yorker Is familiar with: that of a
train passing under Park Avenue vlvecl Intact.
on Its way to Grand Central
In my apartment, bOOks had
Terminal.
fallen on their side; a few ltelil8
But the rumble swiftly escal- of brlc-a·brac j)ad toppled, withated to a crazy, jlJillni sway, out damage. A lamp shade had
and I suddenly realized wbat was leaped sideways from tile rim of
happening. Before I had time to the lamp bowl It badresteJIOIL AI
I lnlpected one room, a sharp
feel scared, however, the sway·
lng stopped.
aft~&gt;rabock rippled throoP It,
P.eople PQIIred out· of a nearby and I heard the bl'lc-a-brac In the
Sllpermarket, talking excitedly. next room jiQie cheerfully.
But that waJI all. Dusk wu
Several large glaas windows In

falling now, with the power still
out (It won't be restored until all
danger of gas leaks In the area Is
past.) Now the experience became almost an exact replay of
the New Yorll blackouts of 1965
and 1976, both of which I
witnessed.
Now as then, water and phone
services were still functioningthough not to be abused. Eleva·
tors and traffic lights were out.
Here at home I puttered around
with a flashlight In the dark,
llstenlf!J to a battery-powered
radio, drinking warm beer, and
starlne out the window at the
dark city center and Its ring or
brUllantly lit suburbs. Tbe area's
variOUJI radio stations were doing
their frantic best to relay news,
rumora, official aniiOUitCI!ments
and aound advl~. At !Jat I fell
aaleep.
I woke before dawn lo find the
radio stations •tm ~~~~~ out
the same old newa, · rumors,
announcements IIDd advice.

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Stocks

•

Dally stock prkes
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Marlt Smith
of Blunt, Ellis ol Loewl

,,
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Am Electric Power ............. 30%
AT&amp;T .......... ........... ... .. ....... 43'JS
Ashland on ........................36%
Bob Evans ...................... .... 13%
C'har111lng Shoppes ......... .... .12'J(,
City Holding Co ... .... ............15%
Federal Mogul..., ........ , ....... 20%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................43')(,
Heck's ................................ . 6%
Key Centurloh ........~:........ :.. 15
Lands' End .... .. ....... ............ 26)a
Umlted Inc ........................
Multimedia Inc ................... 93%
Rax Rei tall rants .......... ; ....... 2'A
RobbiM &amp; Myers .. : .............. 14
Shoney's Inc ............... ........ 11 'A
Star Bank ............................ 23
Wendy's.lntl ........................ 5%
W&lt;?r.thlngton Ind ............. .. ... 23')(,

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Seventy-six cases have bl&gt;en ville, $25 and costs; Russell A.
processed In the past two wreks Strahler, Pomeroy, $27 and
by Judge Patrick O'Brien In costs; Kenneth G. Smith, Par·
Meigs County Court.
kersburg, W.Va., $20 and costs.
Fined by the court have been
Deborah S. Musser. Rutland,
Wendell Barber, Reedsville, $300 $21 and costs; Lottie L. Lawson,
and costs, 10 days In jail and Reedsville, $21 and costs; Jef·
120-day license suspension, frey Newell, Middleport, $20 and
DWI; $100 and costs, 10 days In costs; R. S. Davis, Racine. $26
jail, no operator's license; $30 and costs; Daniel B. Baldwin,
anSI costs, failure . to control;
The Plains, $20 and costs; Shawn
Mike Southern, Middleport, $200 A. Cunningham. Syracuse, $26
and costs, 10 days In jail and costs; Christl L. Hoffman,
suspended, probation untll age Pomeroy, $21 and costs; H. L.
21, contributing to the delln· Barber, ReedsVIlle, $22 and
quency of a minor; Bryan Carr, costs: Kevlil Milan, Pomeroy,
Albany. $100 fine suspended to $20 and costs; Trlna Davis,
$35, one Y!'ar probation, restrain· Syracuse, $21 and costs; Patrlcllt
lng order Issued, costs, dlsor· Smith, Greenville, S.C., $27 and
derly conduct: Gene E. Kline. · costs; · Elizabeth Van Slchle,
Pomeroy, $75 and costs, 10 days Crown City, $23 and costs; Oris
In jail suspended to threE&gt; days Hubbard, Syracuse, $25 and
upon proof of operator's license costs; Pearly Martin, Albany,
wlthln 90 days, no valid opera· $22 and costs: . Mildred Casto,
tor's license; Arlie Curtis. Che- Elizabeth. W.Va., $20 and costs;
shire, $75 and costs, 10 days In jail John A. Anderson.' Pomeroy, $20
suspended to three days, one and costs; Leonard Koenig Jr.,
year probation, no operator's Pomeroy, $22 and costs; Bryan
license; Temujln Taylor, Athens, Drake, Columbus, $20 and costs.
$75 and costs, three days In jail to
Bonds were forlelted ln county
be suspended If valid operator's court by RusS.. II Smith, Parkerslicense Is obtained wltjlln 90 burg, ' wva., $50, failure to
days, no operator's license.
·control; Raymond Miller, fiE!r·
Scott Curl, Middleport. $75 and lin, $40, assured clear distance;
costs, three days In j all sus· R. Jay Reynolds, Pomeroy, $111;
pended.' one year probation, Bryal) Holman, R~tland, $60;
obstructing official business; Ve- Lauren Skipp. Point Pleasant,
ronk:a Adkins, Chester. $75 and . W.Va.,$49; Kelly Meeks, Athens,
costs. three days In jail sus· $55; Steven Stalnaker, William·
pended due to proof of valid stown, W.Va ., $60; Roger Acree,
operator's license, no valid oper· Belpre, $60; Wendell Dunn. Leon,
W.Va., $60, all for speeding.
ator's license; Kenneth E.
Green, Shade, $75 and costs,
thrre days In jail suspended If
valid operator's license Is proContinued from page I
vided within 60 days; $20 and
out of the back seat of a van onto a
costs, expired plates; Peggy
Columbus
city street and was run
Davis, Long Bottom, $50 and
on.
.
over
costs, Uttering; Mat thew Schaal,
Marysville:
Eliza~JE!th
K. KibToledo, $50 and tosts, hunting
bey,
74,
Zanesville,
killed
when
squirrel on Sunday; $25 and
her
car
collided
with
another
on
costs, hunting without written
Ohio
Route
347
In
Union
County.
permission from lilnd owner;
Cleveland: Matthew Pasek, 30,
Guy W. Schuler, Rutland, $75and
Cleveland, killed when the mo·
costs, six months In jail suspended to 60 days, two years torcycle he was opera! lng flipped
over on a Cleveland street.
probation, costS, no valid opera·
Coshocton: Elizabeth D. Marr,
tor's license; 90 days in jail
32.
Amherst, killed when thE&gt;
suspended to60 days to be served
motorcycle
she was riding on
concurrently with other sent·
coUided
with
a car on U.S.' 3fi in
ence, costs, resisting arrest;
Coshocton
County:
Rodney D. , Hart.. Parkersburg,
Cleveland: Charles Jones, 36,
W.Va .. $75 and costs, three days
Cleveland,
killed wh~&gt;n the driver
In jail suspended to time served, ·
car
ran a red light on a
of
a
stolen
one year probation, no operator's
city
street
and
ran Into hls, van.
license:
'
Cambridge: Randal L. Con·
Shelby J ( Pickens, Racine, $20
rad, 35, New Concord, killed
and costs, failed to transfer
when the tractor he was driving
plates; $20 and costs. expired
for a hayride flipped over on a
plates; Lori Fry, address un·
Coshocton County road. pinning
available. $20 and costs, dlsor·
him under the vehicle.
derly conduct; Loretta Lynn
'Medina; J.ason N. Knoch, 18,
Atkins. Pomeroy, 10 days In jail
Homerville,
killed when his car
suspended, one year probation,
went
off
a
Medina
S!!O and costs on each of two · and flipped over. County road
charges or passing bad checks;
Sunday
Steve B. Donaldson, Long Bot·
Hamilton: Barry L. Brooks, 30,
tom, $50 and costs. disorderly
Middletown, killed when hls car
conduct; Steven Brown, Mineral
hit a pole along a Butler County
Wells. W.Va., $25 and costs,
road.
reckless operation; Gerald
New Philadelphia: Bonnie J.
Spencer, Klmbalton, $30 and ·
Beighley, 48, New Philadelphia.
costs, . stop sign violation; Ml·
killed when the car she was
chael Piotrowski, Marietta, $20
riding In crashed Into a ditch
and costs. 'a ssured clear dis·
along Interstate 77 ln Tuscara·
tance; Cindy Denney. Rutland,
was County.
$25 and costs, passing bad
checks.
Kenneth D. Shuman, New
Philadelphia. $20 and costs,
failure to control; Ronald Wil·
son, Racine, $10 and costs, no
By United Press International
registration; Jason L. Dodson.
South Central Ohio
Pomeroy, '$10 and costs. left of
Tonight,
thickening clouds
center; Belinda Wise, Rutland,
with a low around 50. South winds
$10 and costs. failure to control;
around 10 mph. Tuesday, show·
Lynne Miller, Tol~&gt;do, $10 and
ers likely. Cooler with a high in
costs, Improper passing; Ken·
the middle 60s. The chance of
neth Coen, Albany, $10 and costs,
rain Is 60 wrcent.
failed to yield from a stop sign;
· Extended Forecast
James Mash. Albany , $10 and
Wednesday
through Friday
costs, left of center; Derek M.
Fair
Wednesday,
a chance of
Stump, Pomeroy, $10 and costs.
showers
Thursday.
then fair
failed to stop on stop signal;
again
Friday.
Highs
will be
Roger L. Murphy. Reesville, $10
mainly
In
the
50s
and
lows
will be
and costs, left or center; Johnny
40
to45
Wedn~&gt;sday,
and
In
the30s
Bonecutter. Leon, W.Va.,SlOand
costs. load extended In excess of ThurSday and Friday .
four by eight feet.
Fined for speeding were Ger·
gory A. Harley, Rav~&gt;nswood,
The Daily Sentinel
W.Va .. $20 and costs; Amy G.
Shriver, Middleport, $24 and
{IJSPSUI-IM)
costs; Donna Y. Jacks, PomeA Dlvllllon of Multimedia. IDe.
roy, $24 and costs; Greg Mar·
Published every afternoon, Monday
cum, Stan ton, Ky .. $22 and costs;
through Friday, · 111 Court St., PoThomas Spencer, Long Bottom,
meroy. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
ltshlng Company/ Multimedia, Inc..
$22 and costs; Patsy L. Robinson.
Pomeroy, Ohlol5769, Ph. 992-21!56- Se·
GaiUpolls, $21 and costs; James
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
R. Wigal, Vienna. W.Va.,$20and
Ohio.
costs; Benny S. Dent, Pomeroy,
Member: United Press lnternatlonll,
$21 and costs; Jack L. Ritchie.
Inland Dally Press A!lsoclatlon and the
Ohio News~per Auoctatloa. National
Portland, $21 and costs; Temujin
Advertlslag Representative, Branham
Taylor, Athens, $25 and costs;
Newspaper S.les, 733 Third Avenue.
Helen D. Riling, Albany, $20 and
New York, New York 10017.
costs; E. Lytin Runyon, Middle·
POSTMASTER: send address chan&amp;e~
port, $21 and costs; Mlsaabrana
to The ll8llf Sentinel, 1l1 COOII1 St..
M. Bare, Chesapeake, $20 and
l"omEnny, &lt;JIIo 1.'1'1111.
costs; Gary G. Basham, Cool·

Ohio.; .

Chamber Halloween party tonight

Life goes on in San Francisco__W_illm_:m_R_us_he_/:
Faithful readers of these cO.
lumns, having endured my dlthy·
rambs on the subject of San
Francisco, are certainly entitled
to watch me eat a little crow In
the wake of the events of Oct. 17.
Very well, I propably overdid
lt. Certainly, on the basis of the
latest evidence, San Francisco
was considerably less enthuslas·
tic about my arrival here than I
was. But who said a great love
has to be required?
Anyway, In San Francisco
proper It wasn't all that bad. The
epicenter of the quake was some
50 miles south of here, and the
damage was accordlnJIY most
extensive In the communities
below San Francisco Bay. By fat'
tbe heaviest death toll , was In
Oakland, occjiSioned by the col·
lapse or a double-decker freeway
loaded with cars. In fairness to
the Coast Geodetic Survey map
I cited In a recent column,lt does
color the Santa Cruz area with
bright red, denoting the highest

.

Foundation funds distributed

,

•

When parents fight over children

Deadline for publication
of election letters Nov. I

news
...
..;.;.._--.,
Meigs Court cases
Continued from page 1

•

The Daily Sentinei-PIIge 3

Pomaoy-Midllapon, Ohio

I

grandparents Leroy and Brenda
Gibson of Cambridge and pater·
nal grandparents are Lawrence
and Doris Lemley of Pomeroy.
Graveside services will be
conducted 2:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call at Cremeens Funeral
Chapel Tuedsay, noon until the
lime of service.

Weather

Mary Manno
Mary Elizabeth Manno. 80.
formerly of Rupert. W.Va .. died
Saturday evening at Kern's
Nursing Home in Mason, W.Va.
Born Feb. 6, 1909ln Powellton.
W.Va., she was a daughter of the
late -Mack and Esther Wiseman
Grounds. She was .a homemaker
and a member of the Chesapeake
Baptist Church, Chesapeake,
W.Va.
Mrs. Manno Is survived by one
daughter, Esther Anderson, of
Dexter; eight grandchildren;
three great grandchildren; and
one sister, Mrs. John Likens, of
Concord, Tenn.
She was preceded In death by .
her husband, Sam Manno Sr.,
who died Feb. 20, 1987; one son,
David Proffitt; and five broth·
ers, Roy, Harrison, Henry, Ar·
thur, and Fred Grounds.
Services will be held Tuesday
at .2 p.m. from the Wallace and
Wallace Funeral Home, Ral·
nelle, W.Va., with Rev. Marvin
Marklns orrtctatlng. Burtal will
be In the End of the Trail
Celi'M'Iery at Clintonville, W.Va.
Calling hours at the Hunter
Funeral Home In Rutland wllllbe
today (Monday) from 6 to 9 p.m.

SVIIICIUI'TION KATI!S

a, earn• trlht• ••te
One wee~c ...................................suo

NOW
A1 . DOMINO'S PIZZA
.

16 INCH DELUXE PIZZA

.II.

4-PEPSI'S, 16 01.

!liNGLE COPY

PRICE

Deily ................................... 25 Cents

Su._rtbet's notdetlrlllg to pay thtear·
rter may l"ft111t ln advance dlred to
'l)e Dally Sentinel on • 3, I or 12 moatb

.S999
DIUVIIY AliA

Domino's
Piz·
z
a
992-2124 '
.
WEn lUll

One MODib .................................$6.10
()ne Year .... ... .. ....... .. .... ....... .... 17180

POIIIIOY, OliO

basil.
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Credit wm be atven carrier eacb

No' oubocrlpllou by mall pennltted In
1rea1 where hOme carrier service II
ovallable.

.::.·:.:= .

13W..U .......... ,....................... SI9.21
:16 w..u."" ...."" ..........""" ..... $37.11
illl WettJ .. .......................... ,..... flUB
- l l o l p Coaalll7

13 W..U .................................. DUO

:16 w..u .................................. 118.30
u w..u ............,.......... ........... $15.tO

Scattered rain falls
By United Prese lnlernatloul
Scatwred· showers and thun·
derstorms rumbled across the
nation's midsection early Mon· .
day while harsh wintry weather
that swept through the western
half of the nation gave way to
clear skies.
The National Weather Servicesaid parts of Texas, Oklahoma,
eastern Kansas , Missouri. Iowa,
-Illinois, Florida and the Caroll·
nas were Inundated with rain and
thunderstorms -late Sunday and
early Monday.
More than 3J.~hes o! rail\ fell
In Houston Sunday, more than an
lrich fell In Toneka. Kan .. """""
Inch was dumped on Sedalia,

EMS reponds ·to· 17 calls
called to an au to accident on
Pomeroy Pike. Charles Fisher
was transported from the aceldent to Veterans Memorial Hos·
pita!. At I: 35 a.m . , RaCine was
called to the same accident and
took Bob Ritchie from the scene
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. •
Middleport at 1:55 a.m. was
called to Watson Grove Road for
Georgia Hughes who was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.
Columbia Fire Department at
2: 28 a.m. was called to a
structure fire at the Fred Denney
residence on Happy Valley Road.
Pomeroy EMS and fire depart·
mentwerecalledat 3:16a.m. to a
motor vehicle accident on Welsh·
town Hill. Keith White refused
treatment at the scene. At 9:58
a.m.. Pomeroy was called to
Peacock Ave. forHenryWerryto .
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Middleport was called at 11:58
a.m. went to Plum St. for Mary
Lang to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; later to Holzer Medical
Center.
At 2:32p.m., Syracuse went to ·
Forest Run Road for Tammy
Bable to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Middleport at 8: 38 p.m. was
called to Pearl St. for Charles
Lewis who refused treatment.
Racine transported Irvin Phil·
lips to Vet.e rans Memorial Hospl· •
tal at 11:07 p.m. and at 11:12
p.m., was called to Elmwood
Divorces have been granted in Terrace Apartments for Lucille
Meigs County Common Pleas Diehl who was taken to Veterans
Court to Terry Hunter from Memorial Hospital.
Jeffrey A. Hunier; and to Johnny
Ed Lane Sr. from Charlotte Faye
Lane.
In an earlier divorce action,
Edna SE&gt;e was restored by thE&gt;
Veterans Memorial
court to her former narne, Edna
Saturday admissions - Ber·
nice Smith, Racine.
Martin.
In other court matters. the
Saturday discharges - Nolie.
case of Richard B: Payne, et ai,
Sunday a dmlsslons - Henry
versus Clyd~ E. Sayre, et al, has Werry, Pomeroy.
·
SUnday discharges
Grace
been dlsmfued.
·
Price, Merle Davis.

Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services responded to 17
calls for assistance over the
weekerur. five on Saturday and 12
on SUnday.
Saturday at 8: 28 a.m., Pome·
roy was called to Butternut Ave.
for Sarah Lemley who was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·Tuppers Plains at 5:42 p.m.
went to State Route681 for Henry
Eagle who was taken to St,
Joseph's Hospital In Parkers·
burg, W.Va.
At 9: 06 p.m., Bas han and
Racine Fire Departments were
called to a camper fire on
J)e\vltt's Run. Camper owner Is
Barney Hiles.
Syracuse at 9:22 p.m. took
Kevin Layne from the Southern
football fleldto Veterans Memor·
tal Hospital.
· Pomeroy · was called at 10: 21
p.m. to Rock St. for Charlie
Werry to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
On Sunday at 1: 18 p.m., Syracuse EMS and rescue truck were
called to a motor vehicle acci·
dent on State Route 124. Greg
Shamblin was taken from the
scene to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Pomeroy at 1:24 a.m. was·

Divorces. granted

Hospital news

Seeks divorce

James Dwight Gibbs, Racine,
has filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court for a divorce
from Lisa Ann Gibbs, In care of
Judy Roush, Hartford, W.Va.
Divorce have been granted In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Johnny Ed Lane Sr.
from Char\otte Faye Lane. and to
Candy Phillips from Kevin Phil·
lips. Candy Phillips was restored
by the court to he_r maiden name,
Riffle.
A divorce was granted to both
parties In the action of John
Thomas against Cheryl Thomas.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

. .

Your Hometown Bank
Hires Hometown People!
In our community, we're committed to offer
the kind of services and personal allen·
tion you want and need. When you bank
with us, you'll find that we're much nfbre
than just a financial institution, we're a ·
hometown friend.
Iris Paynt' has worked wilh
Farmers Bank as a Teller
for II years. Iris and hf'r
husband, 8oh, have two
daughters, Kimberly and
·Angela. Shf' reHides in
Middleport, Ohio. A
gradual~ of Pomf'roy Hi~h
·
School Mhf' also is a
member of XI Gamma Mu
Beta Si~ma Phi
S;;.:~~~:~~rIris
hPiongs to the
iHI Church and
works
thr American
Cancer Sociely.

"We're-Committed To Our
Hometown ••. "

n. Shltltt Lltht It Bankl•t
( FB J Farmers

Bank

Your Commwdty Qwned Bank
MEMBER FDIC

H2·2136
221 WIST SE(OND
POIIIOY, OliO

915·331$

STATE IOUTE 7
TUPPDS PlAINS, 01110

•

•

Mo., the NWS said.
Light rain fell over parts of
Wisconsin and Missouri, but no
slgnltlcant accumulations were
reported.
Early morning t~&gt;mperatures
were In the 50s and 60s over the :
Great Lakes and In the 40s and
30s where colder air was lnvad·
lng·the Plains.
A cold front blowing out of the
Rockies brought snow and chilly
temperatures to the central ·
Plains early Monday, while rna· '
lst air carried on southerly winds
triggered scattered showers
throughout the rest of the Mldw·
est. t!!e NWS said.

.

�•

...

~· 4 The o.ly Ssllltillel

Community _calendar

fEastem blanks Southern 1W .in fmal game
-

'

By SCO'JT, WOLFE

keep the ball on the ground to
. The Eastern Eagles ended the walt for any opportunity to arise.
Opportunity knocked first for
season on a high note by galrllng
the always coveted victory over the Eastern Eagles as the first of
arch-rival Southern, 14-0 here two nixed Southern nixed plays
: Saturday evening during a well- ledtoascore.Easternopenedthe
• played SVAC football contest. • door with 8: 23left In the game as
· Throughout the game, moving Senior QB Shaun Savoy rallied
the ball seemed to be a struggle,
his troops on the heels of SHS
· but both clubs seemed content to adversity.

A hard to handle snap deep In
Southern territory allowed East·
ern to block a punt and take
possession Inside the twenty.
Shaun Savoy threaded the needle
to Michael Smith on a ten yard
scoring connection,; allowing the
sure-handed receiver to trot
untouched Into the endzone.
A Horner two point conversion

Southern sustained a long
gave EllS the early 8-0 ·lead. a
drive
In the second half, but
lead that proved to be enough for
penalties
and over-anxiety bur·
the duration.
As usual the Eastern-South· led their chances.
ern battle was hard-fought In the
Petie Hendrix again had a
trenches, · where several hard
swell
punting game for SliS.
sticks by both c)ubs highlighted
In
the
second half SHS lost the
the clean, sportsmanlike game.
serviCI'S
of center Kevin Layne
One key to the game was
Eastern:s ability to keep South· who suffered a possible leg
fracture. Tyson Mugrage came
ern deep In the ho 1e.
Much of this was acco'mpllshed on and filled In quite well. ·
· In the final frame SHS had Its
by a great kicking game by
Shaun Savoy, that always put final chance for a lte;bu I perhaps
SHS In a position to. call a got a little anxious and fumbled
around the SHS twenty, settln the
conservative game.
stage
for a four . yard run by
. Wh&amp; Southern never really
Savoy.
The Horner kick fell short
penetrated beyond the EHS 40,
EHS
led 14·0.
and
EHS spent a good deal ollts time
Mlcha&lt;&gt;l
Smith was the Eagle,
of possession on Southern turf.
who
grabbwed
the ever lmpor·
Again the SHS defense was called
tan
1
recovery.
Smith
did the job
upon to do the l'tPQSSible, bu I
held like a steel plate, bending both offensively and defensively
just enough on two occasions for for the 'young Eagles.
Individual leaders were South·
the Eagles to hit paydtrt. .
'

nnaer 011 the I~ darlaJSII&amp;urday nl111t'a SVAC
curlal!Hlloaer II&amp; Racltle. Tile EaJies downed &amp;he
Tornadoes 14-0. (Sentinel plao&amp;o)

EAGLES IN PURSUIT - Eastern EaJies
Shawn Blish (58), Mlcllael Smith (80) _.,d Rod
Newt10111e (41, at far rlgh&amp;) pursue a Southern

Bengals
rip 'Bucs
I

CINCINNATI (UP!) - . The
CHASING THE WRONG MAN - Eastern's James McDaniel
Cl nclnnatl Ben gals' offense,
(82) IUJes after Southern's Travis Nease (far left), bl!t Nease
powder dry the past two weeks,
doesn't have the ball, as the play goes the other way during
finally caught fire and exploded
Saturday night's battle 111 Raclne~~ulhern's Chase Cleland (24) Is
Sunday In a record-setting 56-23
also In on the play. The Eagles beat the.lfornadoes 14-0. (Sentinel
demolition of the Tampa Bay
photo)
.,.
Buccaneers.
"We were a steamroller today," said Cincinnati coach Sam
. Wyche. "We were after blood."
Cincinnati, which came Into
the game with no touchdowns In
Its last seven quarters, erupted
for a team-record eight touchdowns, six of them a club-record
passing TDs.
Baseball fans must go back to
By MIKE TULLY
Boomer Eslason tied his own
1984.
when Detroit ripped San
UPI National Baseball Writer
club record with five TD tosses .
Diego
in five games, to find a
SAN FRANCISCO (UP I) -No
and James Brooks rushed 131
yards as Cincinnati reached the wonder Giants first baseman team approaching Oakland's
second highest point total In Its Will Clark tumbled tnt!' Fay strength.
Vincent's box during the World
22-year history.
"We hit homers when we
The Bengals, 5-3, snapped a Series finale. Things seemed to
needed
them,' got clutch pitching
two-game home· losing skid and land at the commissioner's doorand
fielding
when we needed It,"
remained tied with Cleveland lor step all year long.
said
Oakland
slugger Jose Can·
first place In the AFC Central , Allegations of Pete Rose's
seco.
"The
A's
will get better In
division. Tampa Bay, 3-5, lost Its gambling, and the legal moves
the
next
two
years.
They proved
third straight game. 1t was also that followed, occupied Bart
they
don't
need
any
one player
the Buccaneers' 14th consecutive Glamattl most of the summer.
this
year.
Yes,
we
could win
Then the Earthquake of '89
road loss to AFC teams. ·
year."
•
again
next
struck, turning a Bay Area Series
Oakland designated hitter
Wyche offered no apologies for Into a test of Vincent's Dave Parker has won titles a
rolling up the score on the weary leadership.
Frpm the chaos of this season, decade apart. first wllh a PittsBuccaneers. After dlsplay(ng no
burgh team that rallied from a
offense In two straight home however, a bedrock of truth 3-1 deficit.
losses, the Bengals felt they emerged - the Oakland AthletIcs are the best team In baseball.
needed a confidence-builder.
"!'he A's are a very, very good
"How can a team play any
"We got Ourselves rolling and
team,"
Parker said. "Much
our guys built up their confidence better than we did," Oakland better tHan the 1979 Pirates."
over and over on every play," first baseman Mark McGwtre
Dave Stewart, the World Series
said Wyche. "We were out to asked"Saturday night after the Most Valuable Player. has beprove ourselves. There was no A's beat San Francisco 9-6, . come a ·symbol of Oakland's
completing the first World Se'rtes
stopping us."
talent and ·focus. He warned
"We felt we were capable of sweep In 13 years.
about
the extent of the challenge
No one played any better than
getting 80 or 90 points," said
facing the club.
Brooks. "We needed a good game the A's In this World Series. They
"Sometimes In winning and
slugged· .582 and allowed just 14
and we got It today."
being
the No. 1 team. egos
"A lot of frustration had built runs, most of them·after pulling become Involved," Stewart.sald.
up from the last two weeks," well ahead.
"Clutch hitting, home runs. "The only tE&gt;am that can beat the
noted Eslason. "Our offense felt
Oakland A's In my opinion Is the
It had to prove Itself. This Is just a great pitching, solid . fielding," Oakland A's."
mild Indication of what our McGwlre continued. "We wi II get
better."
offense can do."
"We just didn't do the job In
Tampa Bay coach Ray Perkins
any
categories, particularly the
figured he saw a Super Bowl
starting
pllchtng," said Giants'
offense Sunday.
"I won't be surprised to see pitcher Don Robinson. "We
them go back to the big game," never gave the offense a
he said. "The key to their club Is a chance."
Put aside for a moment any
• big offensive line and their
temptation
to call Oakland the
quarterback.
emergent
dynasty
of the '90s.
"We were overpowered In all
Experience
argues
against
any
phases of the game. They're a
dynasty
taking
shape
anymore.
much superlpr, team, much bet·
Instead, savor the fact that
ter than us todaay."
anyone
Perkins also figured his play· best. at all can reign as the ·
ers need a short break from
Last' year, for example, Los
football.
Angeles
stole the World Series
"We looked so bad out there
that I'm going to give our players despite general agreement Oakland was the better club. The
two days off," said Perkins.
"Two days off will give us a World Series of 'M, '86 and '87 all ·
chance to clear our minds, get went seven games and proved
away !rom football and relax," nothing.
"If you win In four It says
said Tampa Bay ·quarterback
you're
the best team," said Joe
Vinny Testaverde. "We made a
HEAnNG &amp; COOUNG
Morgan,
second baseman on the
lot of mistakes today and Cincinnati took advantage of all of 1976 Cincinnati Reds, the preEfficiency and
vious team to sweep. "You go to a
them."
seventh game, anybody can
Wgh Quality

MONDAY
.TUPPERS PLAlNS . -The
Orange Township Volunteer Fire
Department has announced that
trick or treat will be held Monday
from 6-7 p.m.

ern's Richard Deaver with a fine
16·10~ night and Travis Nease a
respectable 10-42.
Jason Circle caught three
passes from twin Jarod Circle for
59 receiving yards. Todd Grindstaff caught 2 for 22 yards.
Young Mike Hoffman led the
Eagles with 11 carries for 36
yards and Jeff Horner was 8 for
20. Jason Hager also had several
fine runs, as did Savoy, who kept
the EHS offense moving and In
command.
Smith caught 2 passes for 26
yards. Scott McDonald had a
sack for Eastern.
Defensively, Southern was led
by Jarrod Arch Moore with 11
tackles, 1 unassisted; Chase
Cleland· 11; Tim Ryan 9, 1
. unassisted; John McClintock 9,
and Todd Grindstaff .s, three
unassisted.
Chris Murphy had 7, 3 U; Pete
Hendrix 8, and Doug Lavender 8.
Moore had two sacks. _1
Jarrod Circle had a arJ yard
kick-off return.
Southern Seniors playing their
last game were .Jerod Moore,
Chris Murphy, Petie and Robert
Hendrix, Marshall Jarrell,
Jamie Cummlns,Javler Bohollo,
Doug Lavender, John McCiln·
tock,Scott Hill. Todd Rice, and
Tim Ryan.
Eastern seniors were Shaun
Savoy, Jeff Horner, Shawn Bush,
Scott Phillips, Dan Tripp, Derek
Yonker, Billy Wells, and Scott
McDonald:
Eastern ended up 3-7 and 2·5,
while Southern ends 1-9 and 1-6.
Statistics:
S E
Departmt:nt
10
12
First downs
108 75
Rushing yards
so
38
Passing yards
188
113
Totals
6-9 ~-10
Passes-camp
0
0
· Intercepted
.fumbles-lost2-1 1-0
(4-30) (3-29)
Punts
8-65 12·80
Penalties
&amp;ore by quarters
Eastern .............. .S 0 0 6-14
Southern .. : ........... O 0 o 0- 0

CHESTER -The Chester Volunteer Fire . Department has
announced that trick or treat will
be observed Monday from 6-7
p.m. The siren will sound to begin
the trick or treat hour and it will
sound, again to signal the end of
the hour. Firemen will ·be
throughout the town for the
protection of the children.

( SeDtlael pllo&amp;o)

Final OHSAA

I
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REEDSVILLE -There will be
a weekend revival on Saturday,
Sunday, and Monday at 7 p.m. at
the South Bethel Church, located
one and one half mUes west of
Eastern High School. The evan-

.'

·.: J

I·

•

. ·~ I

-·'·

1 DAY ONLY!- TUESDAY 10/31/89 .

Get One FREE
WElCH'S

""'"-Get One FREE
SEU.S

•a

GRAPE JELLY

POTATO CHIPS
49 SID

$1
1 PER FAMILY

·.

'

Buy One, Get One FREE

CRISCO OIL
48 01.

BOOKS DONATED- Three books have been donated to the new
Melp COunty Public Library by local LaLeche League members,
from. &amp;he left, Jodi Likens and daughter, Samantha; Elaine
Matheny, leader, Angle Wamsley and dauJhter, Megan, and
Wendy Meek and son, Bradley.

recognize a baby's tempera- za(lon dedicated to helping
ment, and ·how a child's personal- women who wish to breastfeed
Ity development Is affected for their babies. Next meeting will
better or worse by the style of · be on Nov. 2 at 7 p.m. at the
Presbyterian Church on Eighth
parenting.
La Leche League Intern;~llonal and Main Streets In Point
'
Is a non-profit volunteer organ!· Pleasant.

The Gov. William Dennison
. CampNo.125oftheSonsofUnlon .
-· Veterans of the Civil War met
and the Bonanza Restaurant In
Jackson for Its quarterly
meeting.
.
: The camp commander, David
Medert, of Albany, conducted the
meeting with 15 present. Carl
Gaffin, of Logan, was welcomed
as a transfer member from
at-large status.
•. The camp discussed the
s.u.V.'snatlonal newsletter, The
Banner. The treasurer was asked
to contact the editor and see that
all members were on the mailing
list.
The camp has received permission from the.Ohio Department
SUV to take possession of an old
hall owned by a defunct camp of
the Grand Army of the Republic
jS.A.R.), the veteran'sorgantzatton for Union sold lers ott he Civil
Wary.
This is made possible since the
G .A.R&gt; willed all of Its properties
__ to the S.U.V. before ltwentoutof
existence. The camp Is planning
to dispose of the property as 1100n
as a deed II made.
For tbe prot~ram, Anthony
Sargentl, of Amesville, shOweCI a
ruptured duck piD, whlcb was
given to Union aoldtera mustered
out of the llll'vlce. 'lbe c:omniander 1110 pretented lnfOr:rJII·

Buy One, Get One FREE
lETTY CIOCIII

Buy· One, Get One FREE

HEINZ CATSUP
32

CAKE MIXES

oz.

Buy One. Get One FREE

Get One FREE
ICIIICH

SUPEIIOI

FRANKIE WINEIS

DRUG-FREE sx.rrs- These Melp Hlp School students went
Into elementary and junior high schools where tbey presented
skits coacernlnJ drup and alcohol as a part of Drug-Free Week.
Pictured, left to right, fr011t are Jennifer Taylor, April Hudson,
Marcia King, Nancy Baker, and back, Burt K.eunedy, Cho:ls
Stewart, Tony Miller, and Geoff Cogar. .
certificates.
Wednesday students wore red
In support of President and Mrs.
George Bush's Red Ribbon Campaign which has been geared to

creatlj.B~areness about th'e drug .
problems facing communities
and to establish effective parentcommunity teams across Amer· ·
tea In support of drug-free
healthy lifestyles.

Sons of Union Vets meet in Jackson

aors
-

RACINE - There will be a
hymn sing at the Sutton United
Methodist Church on Bas han
Road on Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
The public Is Invited to attend.

During the week students at
Meigs saw a variety of films
concerning drugs and alcohol,
and they have been encouraged
. to write poems about drugs and
, alcohol. First, second, and t)llrd
places, along with honorable
.mentions will receive

of Our Best
Buys.

,_...... ---

HA~RISONVILLE - The Sci·
plo township trustees have announced trick or treat for Monday from 6-7 p.m. for the
Harrisonville and l;'.(!,g~tqwn
areas. The siren will soui'it!' to

A highlight of the week was
Friday -when Meigs High School
students displayed at the MeigsFederal Hocking footb,all game
•banners which they have created
promoting drug free schools.
Maroon and gold balloons lm·
printed with "Meigs Local Drug
Free Schools" were given out.

Make Thls One

CJMJ 675·11..

RUTLAND -Students In the
Rutland Elementary School Will
parade through the streets of
Rutland In their Halloween costumes on Monday at 1:30 p.m.

LONG BOTTOM -Trick or
treat will be held on Monday
from 5:30-7 p.m. on Bas han-Keno Road. Residents wJshlng
to participate should turn on
their porch lights.
•
;
RUTLAND -The Rutland
Garden Club will meet Monday
at 7: 30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Pearl Kennedy on Hysell Run
Road.

Skits concerning drugs and
alcohol were presented last week
by a group of Meigs High School
students at the elementary and
junior high schools as ·a part of
the observance , of Drug-Free
Week.

~AL

Ill, 10g I 111011
·-l .
... . . . . . . Aitl"

BURLINGHAM -There will
be a community halloween party
on Monday from 6-7 p.m.
sponsored by the Burlingham
Modern Woodmen. There will be
games, a country store, cake
walk, and pies forr sale. Refresh·
ments will be served, and there
will be free souvenirs for all.

Students
note drug
free week

SYSTEM THAT DOES
TEMPSTj[.1' IT ALL.

JOH_N A. WADI, M.D. Inc:

lng are to turn on their porch
lights.

gellst will be Bud Hatfield .
Pastor Duane Sydenstrlcker Invites the public.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle·
port Literary Club will meet on
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. with
Mrs. ·Wilson Carpenter as hostess. Mrs. For res I Bachtel will
review "Han Fantel." Roll call
wtll be ' for members· to answer
with "The .first time you
danced."

Three books, "The Womanly
Art of Breastfeedlng", "Night·
time Parenting" and ''The Fussy
Baby", have been donated to the
·MelgsJ;ounty Public Library by
the Point Pleasant La Leche
League.
The books were purchased
with funds raised during the July
4 .Main Street Fair In Point
· Pleasant.
The book on breastfeedlng Is a
new edition and a total ·gulde to
Infant and child care with Information for fathers and working
mothers, as well as updates on
the latest research In the field of
breastfeedlng, according to the
donors.
As for the book on "Nighttime
Parenting" It tells why babies
sleep differently than adults and
explores new ways of coping with
nighttime needs, while the
"Fussy Baby" book raises the
!ssues or why babies fuss, how to

IT'S THE ONE·

win.'"

begln and fire trucks will be In

both towns. Residents partlclpal·

LONG BOTI'OM -The Olive
Township Fire Department Is
announcing trick or treat for the
Long Bottom and Reedsville
BASHAN -The Bashan Fireareas on Monday from 6.:_7 p.m. ' men Ladles Auxiliary will have a
Halloween party at the Bashan
RUTLAND -The Rutland VIl- fire house on Monday from 6-8
lage Council is announcing trick p.m. for the Rainbow Ridge,
or treat for Monday from 6-7 Keno, Bashan, and Ea!ile Ridge
p.m.
areas.

Books are
donated
by league

A's sweep Giants
to capture series

GET OVER TJIERE! - Soa&amp;bem head coach Dave Gaul (far
' riJht) palata toward Dill! of bla players lo gel Into pos[llon as
: asslatut coaches (L-R) Ike Spencer, J.D. Bradbury and Bill
Beaaler) Jive aipall durlac Saturday night's SVAC finale against
tbe viiii&amp;IDJ Eastern Eacles. The Eagles beat lhe Tornadoes 14-0.

The Daily Sa ttilei-Pagt 6

Mondly, October 30. 1989

• Monday. Octoblr 30, 1989

Pomeloy-Micklaport, Ohio

tion on Gen. Even's poster~
around Gettysburg opposing alcohol usage and possession, a
civilian account of Morgan's
Raid In Jackson, and letters from
the 73rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry
on the Battle of Gettysburg.
An announcement of a mock
:trial at the Licking County
Courthouse In Newark on the
accuracy of the service of John
Clem, better known as Johnny
Shiloh, a drummer boy.
The camp discussed Its recent
. triumph with the aid of Sen. Jan
Michael 4&gt;ng, In getting Ohio
.militia who fought Morgan's
Raiders being recognized as
non-pensioned veterans of the
Civil War. The camp then dis·
.c cussed the pos,slblllty of seeking
the Ohio Historical Society to buy
more ·land ar.ound Bufflng:ton

Grate birth

Island Memorial Park, at Portland, to have to have a full scale
military park for the only Cl'&gt;'ll
War battle to o~cur In Ohio.
The camp made plans to obtain
a man who portrays Gen. Joh'l~·
Morgan. Preliminary plans were
also made to conduct a public
wo.rkshop •on .Civil War
re-enacting.
The re-enactment at Peterburg was discussed with John
Barnes, or Chillicothe, and Keith
Ashley, of Pomeroy, planning to
attend .
The treasurer announced that
1990 dues were now due. He aiso
reported on the purchase of an
official seal for the camp, which
the camp approved. He further
reported . that Mrs. Lynn Bury,
past national president for the
Ladle~ of the G.A.R., would like
to speak "al'' the Lincoln Day,
dinner, which will be held Feb. 6
In Jackson.

Mr. and Mrs. Ron. Grate,
PomerD¥, are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Lindsey
Rebecca, on Oct. 11 .
Maternal grandparents are
Veda Davis, Pomeroy, was
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Ebersbach,
taken
by ambulance on WednesChester. Great grandparen Is are
day
to
Holzer Medical Center.
Leona Ebersbach, Middleport,
She
Is
a
medical patient there
and Dwlaht Spencer, Pomeroy.
·
and·
cards
may be tent to room
PaternalgrandpanmtsareMr.
413
B.
and Mrs. George Grate, Rutland .

BOLOGNA

luy One, Got Ont nEE

luy Oat, Get Ont FlEE

LEnUCE

MARGARINE

llUI IOIIJIU

HEAD

II.

---------------------------·
TRIPLE VENDOR !
COUPON
·i·

~---

!

Not A Buv oneGet one coupon

.'"·-'·S1°'•·'·

I

ac coLA

!

·~·

I
I
I
I
1
I

I

TUESDAY

0 ctober 31, 1989 Only

I
I
I
I
1
I

l-------------------------------!
Not A Buy One-

Get One .Coupon

.

FIISN

DOZ.

$)591

BAKERY DONUTS

We will redeem up to
5 .vendor coupons.
!Maximum 60¢ Valuel
(No Cigarane Coupon•l

Wt Reserve Tht Ri&amp;ht To
~ill it Quantities

SJOREHOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

In hospital

298 SECO.ND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFRC11YE TUESDAY, OCT. 31, 1919 ONLY

_,

•

'

�.
Pa;

6-The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlaport, Ohio
'

Monday, Octobar 30, 1989

'

Cleveland Browns rally to
.defeat Houston Oilers, 28-17
~

~A

·,

,

• CLEVELAND tUPll - The
"Every team has them (trick
Cleveland scored 14, 16, 10 and
: Cleveland er-os have turned to
plays). Every team works on 7 points In consecutive weeks
\ the slmpll! bomb and trick plays
them," J&lt;osar sald- "But It takes ·before beating ChleaJO 27-7. The
~ tO rescue a struggling offense
a lot of nerve on the criaches' part Browns' offensive problems re, and move Into a two-way tie with
to call them.
turned In the first half Sunday as
• Cincinnati for the AFC Central
"I really think using these Houston took a 10.0 lead. ·
: ll!ad.
plays wjll help us In the long run.
"For the ftnt time we were
i Houston, 4-4, which also en- It will keep people honest," said leaning on the offense tat half·
i !erect Sunday's game tied lor Kosar, who rompleted 14 Ofl9 for timel because we weren't play-"?'~ first In the division, dominated
262 yards: "The last couple of ing very well offensively," Car: Cleveland, S-3, for two quarters weeks, defenses have been son said. "To put It simply,
• In taking a 10-0 halftime lead.
crowding the line and !!laying our Houston was playing very well
: But a wide Open Cleveland receivers very close."
. offensively and we were strug·-offense exploded for touchdowns
Houston CQach Jerry Glanville gling on defense."
on Its flrstfour possessions of the admitted his team was caught off
; second half before going conser· guard.
· Houston outgalned Cleveland
"We have rules within the 186 yards to 57 in the first half, but
· vatlve on the last drive to run out .
: the final 9: 20 In a 28-17 victory defense that you don't do certain Cleveland had 326 yards In the
·, over the Oill!rs.
things that we shouldn't do," second half to the Oilers' 113.
The Browns' touchdowns came Glanville said. "We broke some
"You have to give their defense
: on a ~yard scramble by quarter- of those rules."
credit," said Houston quarter"
· Monday night against Chicago, back Warren Moon, who was
: back Bernie Kosar. an 80-yard
· Kosar to Slaughter pass on a flea Slaughter had a team-record sacked twice. "It was the big
: fi~ker play, a 77-yard Kosar to 97-yard TD pass In an eightplays that· changed the momen·
: Slaughter pass on a simple bomb, reception, 186-yard performance tum. They got the·blg plays. That
· and a 32-yard halfback pass from and came back Sunday for four got the crowd going ... and they
:, Eric Metcalf to Reggie more catches lind 184 yards.
put more pressure on."
: Langhorne.
Moon finished the day 15 of 25
The Browns also mixed In an
"The Houston Oilers have been for 241 yards and one touchdown,
· ·18-yard run by receiver Langh- playing zone all season. When but the Oilers staged only oileTD
1.orne on a reverse to set up the they played against us , they drive In the second half. They
" Kosar touchdown run and switched to man-to-man cover- went 86 yards on five plays,
;•another flea flicker for a 25-yard age," Slaughter sajd. " I like ending with a one-yard run by
playing against man-to-man Mike Rozier to take a 17-14 lead
pass to Metcalf to set up the final
•'"' score.
•
coverage.~·
with 2: 04 to go In the third period.

,.

·Scoreboard

I

........

Playoff pairings

•.

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c•n. 1:• ,.... ,.,..._,, Tr.,.

"* • • ...._,

a. ... w

~--- IM. MII'JII 4.... , 'II.. ,...... . .
Mt . ..._.,tt-l), 1: • p.m. Prl. . . Blah PI

(1-J}, 7 ; .

Mtdlwn

,..II. McO._.d

FrW.,, -'•KdMn•f1ll'll 8ladl.n Ia

,._. C......._.

8l-.ey

Dlvl!daa \1
111-Pon 17

VII. Ill liP .l•ld ... MIIIP { .. I),?; .p.m.

c.t.allll• ......... Btlpt• (\t4J ""'·
(t-1) , 1: M p.m.

. . . . . . ( . . ) YL

Mrmarhd &amp;adlllftl,

(IH), 7: • p.m. Frk~M)o. F1•~ A&amp;a411en

,

---

Tult

Loral•flunlf'W {1-)1

~· ... ft-IJ YM. IWI.rw 0 . . ).
, 1:. p.•. ~. Bar-41 .. Slalfhlm I•

......
e-_.,...... ..,.._,
•••••n
......

Jkook\'IUr

DaW!IOit'lk)'UI (1·1) """
Bal*kiJe P.UII Valll!'y (II~}. 7:.p.m.

f7-lt,1:a,.m. f'rMU,v. Harrnoastdlllm

........

""·

('... Grew

....... ... , ftf'llll• .,Monl.

...........

(IN)

tl-1) . 7 p.m. Sllli ... ay . Sp!lrlaft!itadl ...,
l"erblm. . .

..._(t-Il u . a ·....tlallr(1·l) ,1:•p. m.

lk~··
OMI
u. TIBin

Houston took a 7-0 lead when it
went 68 yards on 14 plays,
Including 10 running plays, after
the opening kickoff - the score
coming on a 13-yard Moon to
Haywood Jeffries pass.
The next Houston score was set
up when Bubba McDowell Intercepted Kosar. He returned the
Interception for a touchdown, but
an Illegal block by Sean Jones
cost the Oilers the touchdown, .
and Tony zendejas kicked a
23-yard field goal for a 10-0 lead
with 4:17 remaining In the half ..
"We just played a lot better In
the second half," said middle
linebacker Mike Johnson, who
led the Browns with nine tackles.
"The first series was the only
time we were really flat. Other
than that, we played pretty well
and our offense came through
like gang busters."

• • !!' . . . . . .

"'~r•ra-

1,_11. 7:ap.m. FrW.,·. r .... l.aStadl ...

.•'

('lur Fork (M·~l ,..,._ Lafa,ret •
t:-.1 11-11, 7 p.m·. 8 .. _...,.,

R.eP.n IS
Sl-'tnwUip CMIIolk ( :nl...t (K-1) "·"'
Amanlla-Or~rnk rl-1), 7 p .... sa_..

~-Oid.-L

'

.

Bfoll~lte

AIJM

c..n "' Mr• d•rilt'ld

o ...-1 ENtr ( 11-t) vs. Onrlaall
. . . . , {1-tJ, 'j ,.m. s..... IQ' . Nlpprrl

',.

(it-1),

i : • p.m. 'FrW.,, Bar•• stadium In
MiM.c_...
c......
PIQ ...,. .. P.tlllc..... ( IN) ... WavrriJ (1·1), 7:1tp.m.
Fr ..IQ'.6~FtHI .. KI111111Riu •.
Dhil ... l\'

Slllwday.

r•n., ....
.......,
.......arpat
...

•

Mottdey, Octobar 30, 1989

llf'Pt••

'\
·

W1Q'-rlftii-GMI8 tIM) --... Ml..-r
dH ), 7: • , ... Pr14q, \hpaltOWU!.
Sprt•lflflll Calllolk I I'-ll \'!l. CIM·I•
Mli ( 'G... ry 0.., Cit .. ), ?; 31 p . nl .

FTid-.l". IEdmU111111n tlf'ld •
SIE&gt;hhlnto

HI~ ~~ · lloGI.

Public Notice

D1111t•

Said Moon: "We have to play 60
minutes up here. We played only'
JO ·mlnutes."
Metcalf finished as Cleveland's leading rusher with 48
yards on 17 carries. He added 46
more yards on six receptions.
But his big play was the TD pass
to Langhonre.
"We seem to be working on it
every day - at least three times
a week," Metcalf said. "It was
like 1 said ... a matter of us
getting the perfect opportunity
and they were biting on the run."
Alonzo Highsmith had 58 yards
on 12 carrtes. Rozier, making his
second start after knee surgery.
was held to 13 yards on six
carrtes.
The streak by Cleveland tight
end Ozzle Newsome of catching
at least one pass In 150 straight
regular seasongamescametoan
end.
·

Public Notice

PROPOSED AMENDMENT .
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
PROPOSED CONSTI'n.ITIONAL AMENDMENT

1

.

'

.

.

(Proposed by Resolution of the General Assembly of Ohio)
A majority yes vote Is neceuary for pauagr.

4- 0iveaw•v-

e-Lost •nd Found
7-Y•d l.!elpaid in •do.r•ncel
I - Public Sale &amp; Auctlon
1
1 - Wentld to luy

,..
..

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No. 1

There is no provision under current law to fill a vaca~y in the office of Lieutenant Governor. This
amendment would allow the Governor to choose a Lieutenam Governor. The nominee could not take
office until a majority of all of the members of the Ohio House of Representatives and of the Ohio
Senate had approved that nomination. Under current Constirutional provisions, when there is a vacaney
in bo!" the offices of the Governor and Lieutenant Governor, the President of the Ohio Senate becomes
Governor.

ARGUMENTS AGAINST STATE ISSUE I

Presently, the Ohio Constitution is silent CC1n· Ohio no longer needs a lieutenant governor. For
ceming the filling of a vacancy in the office of five of the past ten years, the office was vacant,
Lieutenant Governor. In just the last ten years, ' and no one noticed. Over ti!e last fifty years, the
there have been two instances where the office of Lieutenant Governor has held the temporary ofLieutenant Governor became and remained YIICallt lice of Govenior for just eleven days .
for an extended period of lime due to resignation
or death .
Prior to the 1978 election, the first in which the
Governor and Ljeutenant Governor were elecled
This proposed ainendment would allow the as a team, the Lieutenant Governor presided over
Governor to nominale a candidate to fill the vacan-. the Ohio Senate and had some innuence and in- .
cy in the offiCe of Lieutenant Governor. Upon ap- dependent suppon since he was ele.Jted in his own
proval by a constiNtional majority of both Houses name. The Lleuteilant Governor now has no
of the Ohio General Assembly, the nominee would role except that of sucXeettlng the Governor,
assume the offiCe of Lieutenant Governor.
should that be necessary. The succession, without,
a lieutenant governor, would he the President of
Because Ohioans have previously approved the the Senate and the Speaker of the House.
tandem election of the Governor and Lieutenant
Governor, and the Governor already chooses his The State of Ohio will spend three quart~rs of
running mare and the eventual Lieutenant Gover· a million dollars In the next two yean on this
nor, lhis amendment would allow our state's chief office. A vote against the proposal will give the
executive to select a replacement who will pro- legislature two messages: I) the people agree that
vide for continuity in both philosophy and policy . . the office is unnecessary and 2) the people want
The required advice and consent of both Houses the state to confine its spending to real needs.
of the the General Assembly for confirmation will
insure the citizerls of Ohio a statewide scrutiny of Submined· by State Representatives ·
. ·and consensus on the proposed nominee through
William G. Balchelder and Joati W. Lawrence
their elected representatives in the Ohio General
Assembly. Just as exists in the administrative
structure of a business corporation, the Lieutenant
Governor should share the policy and management
philosophies of the Governor.

..

. . lafual Dlltrtcl. ,.,....
OIIID,,....., •tllllth

....
.., ., Aolllo.. , ..._- ·

I,. ' ..... , I
.·

olllooltu-flf

...................,
....... c..., .......

..•'
''

448387388245251643379-

G•IIipolil
Ch•hire
Vinton
Rio Grand•
Guyan Dist.
Arabl• Dist.

WIInut

Meigs County

M•on Co .• WV

Are1 Cod• 6U

Art• Code 304

992- MiddiiPOrt
Pomwov
985- ChMier
843,- PorUind
247-letlrt Fills
949- Aacine
742- Autland
1517- Coolville

ve••·

pu""'"olcommunltymontal retardotlon ond developmental diaobltlty progrorno
end oorviceo purouont to
choptot &amp;126 of the reviled

S•le

35- Lats a Acr•••
31- Aelllhtllle Wented

I;IQIIIII

for elld\ one dolt•
of
valuation, which ,mount1 lo
_., cent at 10. 0711or uch

doll••ve•s.of

·Public Notice
The Polio lor Mid Eleetlon
.
will
be opon at 11:30 o'cloc:lt
A .M . ..,d remain open untl
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON 7:30 o'clock P.M.
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
By o.- of the Boord of
THE TEN MILL
Eloc:tlona. of Mti91
LIMITATION
County, Ohio
NOTICE io hereby given
EvelynCIIrk,
that in pur1u1nce of 1 Re·
Chllrmon
solution ol
the 01111• Jane M. Frymyll', Director
Jaclloon - Mei(ll Montol Dole: Sopt..,btr 12, 1889
tt.olth Boord of tho the (10118. 23; 30, (1 11114tc
countr. of Golllo, Jacbon,
end Moill, Golllpolia, Ohio,
p11Hd on tho 17th dl'/ ol
2
in Memoriil m
July. 1989. there will be

Mei91. Ohio.

It

In loving memory
of

the roquter

pi- ol voting -oin. on

Tuoodoy, the . . .onth dl'/ of
Novembof. 1889. the quoo-

Doris Irene
Miller ··

••-• of tho ten millllmlcl·
tion.lor till ben~1 of Moigo
County for tho purpMe ol

who paued away
Oct. 30, 1986.

tion of levylng 1'1 tu, In

current oplfetiftt IIJlplft. ..
Sadly milled by
lllld tu belno:• on ..,...,
tlonll to• bf live Iantha mHI
Husband,
to run lor five (II yaoro ot 1
Ronnie
Miller,
rate not ftOMdinQ .5 milia
and family.
for Hch one doller. of v1lua·
~ion. which •mou::nt~o~to~thi~•:.f====:------,.

Help Wanted

PAT Hll FORD CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH DODGE
IS ~OOKING FOR AN
ENERGmC SALESPERSON.
APPLY IN PERSON AT

PAt ·.JIIlL FOlD
461 SO. TIIID - •DIUPOII

SUSAitl COLEMAitl

% '(614) 446--7619 or (614) 992-2104
Z 417 Second AVI!IIe, lloit 1213
- Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

742·2778
Ctll hr Ftll Sp1tltl1
1st visit FilE

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL

DAVE'S
.SMALL IIIGINE

STIA&lt;USf, 01110

IIICittlllatVDioy lu in
111 Ml.tlaport, Oh.
PARTS ANO SERVICE
For Moat 2 end 4-cyde

'" 5tcfion'
lht Cla•lifitd

Business
Services
3 BR ranch home,

•

baths, full basement, 2
car prqe, 10x60 fl.

dick. 3 ICrtS pfu~ 1~
ICrt

liD. Mint cand.

YAIDIIAN IIOWIIS
ECHO SAWS &amp; nt-IS
OUGOfiiAIS, cu1rrs

IY AN S11VK1 CEiml

,.......

,..,,s..

992·2571

9-22-19 .

---·

992-2269

All MAKES AND

.

NEW LISTING - · HARRl·
SOIIYILLE - Nice Country
Home. 3 bedrooms, I \7
baths, laundry room, eat·in
krtchen, all carpeted and attached I car garage sitting
on I acre. LOTS OF PRI·
VACYII $39,900.00

POIIEROY . - COIIIIER·
CIAL LOT - Approx. 108
foot frontage on Main Street.
Nice corner lot on heavily
traveled slreet. Approx. 200
feet ol depth. MAKE AN Of·
FER'! $89,500.00.
HARRISONVILLE - Aptli'[J(.
41h acres ol beautiful nice lay·
ing hay field now, homesle later. Electric -available lot ol
road ~ontage $7,500 00.
ANTIQUITY - One story
home wrth 3 bedrooms, and
coal furnace. Would make a
great summer place has 3
lots, induding river fronlage. $11,000.00.
IIIDDLEPORT- 6.09 acres
of beautiful coontry, close to
town. 3 bedroom mobile
home, small barn, and hookups for 2nd mobile home.
$21.900.00.
ST. RT. 331 - Riverfront
property with a 2 bedroom
cabin. Full basemen(. sunporch, metal Mding approx. 42~30. $27,900.00. ·
MIDDLEPOIT - GOOD
STIEfT - This nice I\0
story ~ome leatures 3·4
bedrooms, modern krtchen
wrth dining bar, all storms &amp;
many other leatu res. indudes trailer lot. Call lor appointment. PRICE RE·
DUCED, $25,200.00.
POIIEIOY - Abu~ness far
sale with all fi~tures. A
chance to own your own bu·
sines~ Just Like over where
ptesent owner leaves off.
Call lot more deteis.
-YE.OI'm
.

DOT1I,__.,,.s
..........a
JUIIIWSSal-Mt·J...

OIRCI-"I·IJSt

SWEEPER REPAIR

-r~ceo

•

HOURS: Mon.·fri. 8-7
S.1.8-5
Clooed Sundoy
949-2969
10/ 10/ 89 lfn

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE
POMEIOY, OH.
992-6872

1&gt;-5·'19-lfn

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
12

,_,.,,Ollie

RACINE
GUN· CLUB
GUN SHOOT

'
£V£1Y SUNDAY
leginning Sept. 17
Starts at 1:00 P.II.
Gauge

PliiMIING I Ill11NG
Now t.mlltn:
1U North S.ond
Mi.dlopert, Olio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Cerr, Fisf*lg luJ)Piill

P1y Your Phone
end Ceble Bille Hore

. ' ..litiS! hiOIIiE

t6141

Ga~~g~

Shotg'"" Only
Stri&lt;dy Enforco4

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

TRU~IING ·
CIEml, OliO

DUMP Tf\UCK

Sand-Stone-Dirt

16141 667·3271

EVENINGS ·
4/ 1/81/ tfn

Grant A. 111!•!!1!!!!'11

&amp;

PEST CONTIOL
st11a 1t76

ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
... llor llotionll Ptst
Coatrot Assn.

....._. ,,..

SALE
HIGLEY FARM
IUTlAND TOWNSIIIP

145 acres; bam,
bottom. hill land,
.timber. 2 producing gas wells.
$45,000

985.:4422

9-23·89- 1 mo. pd.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING
.._. CO.·
,

....

...

tfn

Call 742-2416
After 5

POMROY, OliO

HOURS

7 ·Dav- /!.Week

9 a.m.- 7 p.m .

It Jet, $.1, 7114J
Cht'lllt ..,_,,_

r··-·

Huntlna

No

or T._IOI*

A. H. H._. prap1rty It He
wlthoul written J*mll. For

larmotlon coN 3DWI2-3441.

llckol. Columlluo • Allonlo • Portlond Clrogon. - - 1.
$100. 114-fi2-5362.
' ...
TNMor _ _ _ . .
Ono -

pennia tor 11-.on County IM«·
nlod In hunting o - . i erae. P ...M wrtie to R. .......

nt

Rood; llockis1, llfV

Tool

258G1.

4

10 wiL old pupploo po~

- 114-367-0IIS
317·'1150.

IOOflltG·

·.

I wlc. old ml•od b&lt;ood puppl...
1 male, I t.rnele. C.ll 114-1813314 •Iter 5p.m.
..

PH. 949·1101
or Its. 949-2160

F,_ 1189 Feline Sitek tut ruqnlng 4 on • - pumo """ kln.•Ollo
luol ond ~~~- Included, - •
171-4189.

We

SER~IOE
call r~ and rt·

radiators and
hloter ewes. Wt can
lllro acitl boil and rotl

COI'I

ovt rltlliotan. We also

rtpalr Gas Tanb.

f,_ FIIOWOOCI,
171-3126.

,...

~UO. -

Full bloodod . . . _ , . """"
......,. Slomo. . til. To good
lowing- 114-MZ-2107. •
MorNM1nure.~

-lo

Nloo, _ , . - d o g lo good
...__ lll•od Cockor Sponlol
-•lf dog. ISpopd
hod
yura okl. 11l.m.
23:11.

•hal•.

...... . . .. old ,.,pp~oo;
Wolkor, PI~ bl110 lick.

114-381-I'PU oflor 7p.m.

Middleport, Ohio

6

882·2186

po~

Swtvel Aoc:Ur, 114 311 M11 or

PAT .LL fOlD

--..

Lost &amp; Found

,._,
llor .....

,.

0ot. 2t.

BISSELL

BUILDERS

--··-

CUSIOM lUll
'HMS &amp;GARAGES

"it 'r san;h Prices"

Pomeroy,

............
F11EIIITIMATU

... 949-2101 '
... .... 949·1160
' Doyorlllht

Mlddllpon
• VIcinity

Ciurtei'S
DOWIIIPO,Utl
GllttW Clnnlnt

or 11'-

3 klllono ond 2 old coto, ·171-3777.

114111-4312.
I

Qo"""'

3 ..., kin-. 2 ...,. , .........
10 wko old, 304-47~7111 1:00P.II.
• •

AI. lMI, ~-.

. . . . . LW.II

.,

Giveaway

I week old Beegle Pupe. 614441o0147.
~

3-11-tfo

WMI VIdeo Tepa
Weddings.
Birthd1ys,
Reunton1, Interiors
of Homes for
ln1urence.

3 Announcements·.. ·,

"Froe Eltlmn•"

NO SIIIIDA YCAW

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

Announcements

~6141

10-t-tfn

NEWLAND
'NTERPRISES

RECYCLING

·. 992-511.

Ht-•no

IIISIDINa PIIOfll

•LIGHT HAULING

Tll-(0.

Wtluy AI
... fttrous
Metals,
Plastics,
Stalnltti stttl~

DIIT HAULED .
992-5275 .

s- :?·tfrtt

R. L HOLLON

llortlt Df

. __ _.....,:1,;,:,
· 1~2-'

WlTEI SEtvla :
UMESTO•
SPIElD

ROUSH

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
ClEARIHG

992-7479

u

1

1r600 GALLON

' -POIIIIOY
· , ... ""
Dfflcto
OliO
10/lll/'19 tin

factory Chob

•Mobile Home
Perts
•Mobile Home
Rent1l1
•Lot Rentel1

lt.

HAUUIG ;

992-5335 or . .S-3561

POOLS, WELLS

COUNDY
MOBILE
HOME PARI

ALLEN'S

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

•SHRUB It TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

1rOOO GALLONS

4·211-'811·1 mo.

'j.

·IAIIGIS-Cos-llet.-112§
FRIIZER5-$125 up
•rcao OVUS-179 up

9-20-tfn

latham l•ihling

BILL SLACK
992-226t

992-2371

.

mo. ,

RUUO ,

90 DAY WAB&amp;NIY
WASHER5-SIOO up •
DRYERs-SO up
REFIIGIUTOR5-St00 up

742-2421

FREE ESTIMATES
Toke lite pain out of
polnti"'. let "" do
It for you.

IJITBIOR--EXTEIIOR

WATER
SERVICE
Call Anyti•

1 -22-1

•Gravel
· •Lilnestone
•Fill Dirt

GUN SHOOT
lAClNE
FIRE DEPT.

• •FIREWOOD'

CISTERNS

992-6944

USED A"UANCES

L. W.
STEWART
·TRUCKING

LINDA'S
PAINTING

8/4119-tfn

211 East_.n

SYRACUSE
991·1611 or

Factory Choked 12

YEIY IIASOIIAIU
HAYE IIFEIIIICIS
614·915·4180

MODELS

BOB'S
HEAnNG &amp; \
COOLING i

•

VISA - MASTERCHAAGE

$120,000 firm. All new
drapes, fully carpeted .
Built-in lg. TV. stove &amp;
re.fri&amp;. See·throuch fire·
place.

PH. 992-3922

UGLE RIDGE
SMAU ENGINE

2~

.,gin•

Stock ""n' for
Homelite. Weedelter.
Tecumooh, Briggo lo
Strltlon. ·

"DOC" VAUGHN

-HOUSE FOR SALE

.,.,_

'

CAll 992-6756

•

"l..ltl

UP All

Most Foreign 1nd
Dom•lilc Vehidll
A/ CSeMee
All Mljar A Minor
. Repairs
NIA.SE Cen:IH .. M•ch•ic

TEMPSTAR

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulbeny Hils. Pomttoy,

Cenilild ·

uld A1cine Ylllege. It aGE-

Said taa being:a a ren. ..r

I:i LISA
M. KOCH, M.S.
Licensed' Clinical Audiologist

IJntD ld. In
lutlellll, Oh.

WANT ADS

tionlf tu of 1.5 mills to run-

tion.

2 /t . . .sOvt • •

1

.........................
--·----

Lilllr lhing•
art Worth Alof

'

TlieYision Listeninc Dtvices
Dtpendlble Hearing Aid Sales &amp; c:.,.,;,..,
&lt;lJ Herrina Evaluations For All Aps

SERVICE

POMEROY, OH.

By order of the Bo1rd of

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
AI" Trt11ittlulei
PH. 992:5612
or 992-7121

SUN'S UP
TANNING

Serv1c1:s

41 - Houllllar Rent
.
42- Mobllt Hom• for Rent
•3- Fermt for Rent
44-AI*tment for Rtnt
45-Furnith,cl Rooms

d8y of Augu-.
1989, there wll be aubmi1-

the purpote of fire procec-

lt. 124, '-•Y Ohio

4-25-tfn

71- C•mping EquiiJmM'It
79 - C•mP•• &amp; Motor Homes

retlfded persons.

A.M. and r.-n•in open until

Roger Hysell
Garage

13" tlrot9! 20S·15"
$30.00 a Pair
MOU!Ittd oncl lalonctd
"REE''

71-AutOI for ....
72- Trucks for Sele
73- V•n• &amp; 4 WO 's
74- MotOJcycl•
75 - Bo•t• &amp; Motors for S•le
78 - Auto P•t• • Ace••••
77 , Auto Aeplir ,

101
l.M...

eubmltted to a vote of the
people of llid Meitll County
et 1 1 GENERAL ELECTION
to be held In till COUnty of

USED niE
SALE

rr,lllsnorl olrlln

code. to wtt the mlint• thl't in pur.....ne~~ of 1 R•
nance and
operation of aolutionoftheYII~geofR•·
achoola,
training centera cine. Racine. Ohio. PIIHd

NERAL ELECTION to be
hold in thi counly of Mei91,
Ohio. 111111 r-lor pl-. of
vo1ing thorein. on Tuoodoy,
1ho aoVenth dl'/ of Nowem·
ber, 1888. till quootlon of
lovyingotu.ln-aottlll
ton mill limtt.tlon, lor till
benefit of Rocine VIII-lor

9-21 -89·1 mo.

l /1 8 / 1 mo. JMI•

61 - F•rm ~EquiiJment

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEfll MilL
LIMITATION
NOTICE is . . . . . given

for fiVe (51 ylllr11t o rote not
••coodlng 1.$-rooHiolor eoch
one dollor
of voluotlon.
which omounto to fifteen
conll toO. 151 lor each one
hunclrtd doll•o ofvoluotlon,
for throe (31 yearo.
Tho Polio lor Mid Election
will be open It 11:30 o'clock

11:00 A.M. .

12 G....,. Sloot.... Choir
factory Choloo
mKnY EIIFOI&lt;EDI

992-9922 or 992-:f22B- .

. . _.,..,.for Rent
47-W~nMd to R...t
Q-EQulpm... lo&lt; Rtnl
41-ForLe. .

NOTICE OF ElECTION ON -.to !10.0111 lor eoch one
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF "hUndred doll. . olvlluotlon,
THE TEN MILL
tor fiVe 1111
LIMITATION
.The Polio lor Mid Eleetlon
NOTICE Ia hereby given wKI be open It 8:30 o'olock
thet In purouonce of • Re- A.M . end remoln- untl
aoh.ltion of the Board of 7:30 o'clock P.M.
"County Commiasioners of
By drdor ot tho 8 - II
Eloc:tlono, of Meloo
tho Counl'( II Moi91. Po·
Coumy, Ohio
m•oy, Ohio. ~aed on Ihe
23rd dly of Augult, 1989,
Evelyn Clllrll.
lhere wlf btl submitted to 1
Chllirrnon
Jono M. Frymyw, Dlr.ator
vote of lhe people of said
Meitll OUnly 11 1 GENERAL Dote: September 11, t989
ELECTION to be hold In 1111 t1DI Ill, 23, 30, ,, 11 8 4tc
county of Mei91, Ohio, et
tho r-1• piece of voting
therain. on T...o4Uy,- M·
- h day of November'.
1888, till qu•tlon of lewy·
Public Notice
ing 1 tax1 in exc.a of th1ten

11

Sherrod Brown
Secrellly or Stare

"33-F•rms for s ...
34--Busin•• Buildings

937-Bufhlo

valuation, for five (I)

I, Sherrod Brown, Secretary of State, do hereby cenify thRtthe foregoing is a true copy of Amend•
"ed House Joint Resolution No. 2, fded in the office of the Secretary of State, proposing to amend
the Constitution of the Slate of Ohio, together with the ballot language and explanation cenified to
me liy the Ohio Ballot Board and arguments for lnd against the amendment submined 111 me by the
appropriate committees. ·as prescribed by law.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hereunto subscribed my 111me and affixed my official seal
at Columbus, Ohio on the 8th day of September, ·1989 .

32-MobiltHome~lor

Oet Results F11t

mil lmit1tion, for the ben•
tit of Moitll County for 1he

POMEIOY AND MIDDUPOIT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PIIIA SHOP.
Pizta·Subs~Satacls-Dailv Saecials

CLASSES OFFEIED

82 - W.nted to Buy
63-liveltodc
64- H-v &amp; Grtin
65- Seed &amp; flrtilizer

· 31 - Hom• lor Slle

675-Pt. Pl . . .nt
458-Leon
576-Appte Grove
773-MHon
882- New t4wen
895-letlft

Dote' Soptembef 12, 1989
(101 16, 23. 30. (11) 6 4(c one hundred

.......... ., ......... Lo-

. . . . . . . D.. blcltMIGE. . . . IL&amp;TIC* .. ..

'

Chairman
Jef"l! M. Frymyer, Director

OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STATE OF OHIO

('. LIVI:SIIJCk

22- Monert to Lo.n
23- Prof•sioNII l•vic:e.

Eloc:tiona, of Moitll ofonoxiltlngtuofO.?milta
County. Ohio to run lor tl¥1 till-• It 1
Evelyn Clerk, rote not ox.-ng 0.7 milll

Section 17a. WHENEVER THERE IS A VACANCY IN THE OFFICE OF LIEUTENANT
GOVERNOR, THE GOVERNOR SHALL NOMINATE A LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR. WHO
SHALL TAKE OFFICE UPON CONFIRMATION BY VOTE OF A MAJ.(,&gt;RJTY OF THE
MEMBERS ELECTED TO EACH HOUSE OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.

f.tr111 Slilllllli''

H· W.ntlld
Stluttlon Wemlld
lnaur•nce
Bulin•• Training
Schooh a InstructiOn
Rodlo, TV II CB Rop ...
Mise•l.neous
Wented To Do

21 - Busin•• Opportunity

following telephone exchanges...

7:30 o'clock P.M.

Be it rtsolved by the General Assembly of the State of Ohio:
Three· fifths of the members elected to each house concurring herein, that there shall be submitted
to the electors of the state in lhe manner prescribed by law at the general election to be held on the
first TueSday after the first Mond~y in November, 1989. a proposal to amend Anicle Ill of the Constitution of Ohio by adding immediately following Section 17 a new Section 17a as follows:

I d til 1111-dll
I I
I~•• flf dol ...,_ Lo-

pages cover the

Sold tox being:' on oddi- tedtoovotoottlllpeopl•of

,,

S1:rv1~1·;;

ljiihhlifiil

end worbhopa for mentally on the lot

Proposing to amend Anicle Ill of the "constitution of the State of Ohio by adding thereto Section
17a to provide for the filling of a vacancy in the office of Lieutenant Governor.
'

........... -., ......

1 112131415.111718-

COPY DEADLINE DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION '
MONDAY PAPER
- 1 1 '00 A .M . SATURDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
- 2,00 P.M . MONDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPER
- 2 '00 P.M. TUESDAY
- 2 '00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY PAPER
- 2,00 P.M . THURSDAY
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER
- 2:00P.M . FRIDAY

Classifi~d

.....
,....
EYDY SUNDAY

[ lll~l&gt;~ylilf'!il

·A claaifitd ldvertilem•t placad in The Deity Sentinel (•·
ctpt- ciMtified dltplay, Butin•• C.rd and legll not len•
will elto app.., In the Pt. Pl . . ant Regiatar and thtl OalftpOh Daily Tribune. rll8ching over 11,000 hom•.

NO

..

·

5 - HIIPPY Ads

SfOIISIIIN'S Cwt
11. 124 lttww•hillo .,.

FlEE lOCAl DIUYEIY

SUPPLIES

51 - Household Goodl
12- l ....lntG63-Antiqoes
54-Mite. Mll'i:handile
56- &amp;uihlng Suppli•
58 - Pet• fof Slle
57- Mulicll lnttrumentt
58-Fruits • VegNbl•
59- For Sate or Trede

3- Annoucements

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

This proposed constitutional amendment is
modeled upon the 25th Amendmem to the U.S.
Constitption which has been successfully
employed twice to fill vacancies in the office of
Vice President. Presently, the Ohio Constitution
provides for a methOd to fill vacancies in all other
elected state offices; it should not remain silent
concerning a vacancy iti the office of Lieutenant
· Governor. This is a good housekeeping measure
for our stat. Constirution, and we urge its approval
to insure the orderly function of our state
government.

991·6155

M1: r clw1111 s1:

1 - C.d of Th~nkl
2- ln Memory

JOINT RESOLUTION

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
·'
THE TEN MILL
.
UMITATION
NOTICE lo ._..., .......

AIIIII) 11111:1) II II) Ills

RACCOON YAWY

lOWEST PIKES
IIGHEST QUAliTY

' - " ' · 01.

17.00
110.00
••&amp;.00
125.00
$60.00 .

WHENEVER THERE IS A VACANCY IN 111E OFFICE OF THE LIEUTENANT
GOVERNOR, THE GOVERNOR SHALL NOMINATE A UEUTENANT GOVERNOR,
WHO SHALL TAKE OFFICE UPON CONFIRMATION BY VOTE OF A MAJORITY
OF THE MEMBERS ELECTED TO EACH HOOSE OF 111E GENERAL ASSEMBLY.

ARGl.JMENTS FOR STATE ISSUE I

36415 lleclt•l••• Ill.

21-35WORDI

GUN SHOOT

MAIN STREET
........... PIZZA

BASin WEAVE
HANDWOVEN IASIEn
IASIET WEA YIIG

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

"

THE

To amend Anicle IU of the.Constitution of the State of Ohio and adding thereto Section 17a.

YES

ess.·s e.r vices

B

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Submitted by:
State Representative Daniel P. Troy
State Senators Charles Henry and Roy R. Ray

Pulllic N atlce

The Daily Sentinel-Page...:.

.ClaSSifie

,

: .-------------------------------------------~__,
,,

'

)

NO SUNDAY CAW

7

Yard Salt

..,
.

.

�"

Pig a 8-The Deily Sentinel

.

Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

7

Apartment
tor Rtnt

....

. Gdlpolls
• VIcinity

w:r.·itanp a

~~·.;r,~

•us.

tiM oonct..
Cltitvrotot
....
011

neo

Hlda • btdt
to
1br, $110/ona. ,.... clop. talllll•
IIIII. Roell_, $221 to 1175.
l.aotpo a2l to 1121. - $101 lnd up to Mil. WOod
rol.
- - 'l!ow.
'
:na-,..,.. 11. . . . . . ..
1 - w-1 cltOiro taiJ5 IO f7tl.
-1145 up to $171.Iorge klohon, • ......, MOO &amp; • bUnk._. xmr' 2•
... -ont,.Nooota.
'!P to
TCIIII Mlctrlo. Call 114 Ul M2T with ....... 1211 - . biabr 1111 n -.a:30p....
to

ALL---·Poldln
1N1! 1:11 P."'·

.... .,-. ................

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

114-117·7117.

r::,1

y.

low to

Public Salt .
&amp;Auction

Meconnl~:~lc

eC2l a&gt;
1111,....

... ttoK....,...,.. .. ..,.

on 11. M.ll4

In - v l l l o .

Cit- '"'J:!!'~
1of
I e·
I ront.
AI . nM. '"'
Nail
llmpo,
,....... fDr

'dna. Keith

......... '"*-·

oo !0

"I ·don't. care WHAT our tax
lawyer says ...l'm NOT having
another baby!"

wanted to Buy

9

••- Col

Junk .... with

.. without

t..hoiJ l14o

Lony

••

Qulh

111 laa•t .
3

lli\1" orlt4=t7.

....

- .

=:

=
-

- .

--

.._ -

... -

....

,.....

IOiur.- on¥.\ ..

.. . . , ...... 1 .....

" ...

11011
_. -

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Wanted

Hotflllcf'-l· llold~----.

ll4o7U. - . - · -·•~ '
In boby ofttlna In ·" "
own home. c.tl 114 M-11110 Dr
11..-.astS.

...... - l t t o - · Oollfpotfo
304-6~ or 114o
_

- - • Equipo
1144Mi114
H

Ee1ployment Serv1ces

=c:::
t;..:..:::"'.:.
-homo.

do-

::':le

*MI)_.._-Ntondlf,

COLLEGE. 121 - - Plh.
a.fl l14-44f.4317. Aog. No. 81,;,11~·1~N~SI~
· --------­

t01fl.

18 wanted to Do

........ 304-1711-1421.

Pouto'o Oer Coro Conlor.
..... . . . dlbll, Gtdk:tc8e. 11-F
I a.m. • S:SO p.M. 214-10.

BUSINESS

AVON • AI . , _ Coli llorlfyn - . , after ochoo[ D1otHno
e air ame. 111 111 1214,

;::::;..,-~~

..... TY-~~'l. Now- . . . .·..
- f o r - -·0111111-7111aLT.al:l.
I

fiE-UNCI fNTE5J!C!I!._~!!·
TEA!Oft MIIITINO, .....,.._,
CONCRIYI
WORK,
ELICTI!ICAt:l PLUIIIINO EXP.
HAl RIFEAENCES. ALL !If.

SUIIANCE CL.AIIIS ACCEPTED.

PLEASE CALL AFTER IP.M.
114-211-1111.

807 UL Ma111.

m

•

Olnlll .,,. 'enl ....... ... ...

0.r•,;ur:=
a..

:-'llrz.tar:

PI

11.....,..

'C, WV-

*

••lf!J&lt;J .,

.,;IM-:.::1=-..-.&amp;..::.
eo:
'1111 Dlillr - - . , ._ 'lit M.

_...,.you ll.naw,

=~~~9 ~-~·~nlil~youc.ltl=
..
_
.dtMoffltrfnl.

&amp;m.ll Down P•Yftllfll? PMI
Coocl1 Hlot!'l'f}'!"'blom? Wo
... ltolp. 1.aoH2H'752.
I

,.__.No

=D~·J,'r:.:,:,"i:

I ln. ..... Yau , _ tiK-424K

op;porlunlly. :104112 2111.
Wll • 'n hed a.uey ulon.
~ rill HliMiy priced. 114Ill llllobr &amp;p.10.

Till AltEAI 111.271 to 114,111:

Real Estate

-

CUlt- -

Aahlort. buutlful one IICN loll
with river~·· public Wit.,,
Clydo lloiililf, Jr. 304-571-2338.

Fv-

Aoltlon, Iorge bu! ldlna bolo,

Oroclouo i!v!ng. 1 one! 2 bocf.
raam oportmonto It YIIIIGO

-

c:-tty

-

Emor-

-.':t Pwauotbco, a

: ' t t f,

a a;:.

='~

=::-:.,..,. .....,......,.
"' lit d Ilion.

~

2722.
Throo

...... -

awn.

Rna1c1d,

Lion
304 Ill 2412 .. 116-4374.

S botfroom toto!

-rio. On

· - ·dip
' · •114-112-7714
il!dd!oport. 114-102·
1550
.....
1:00.

Finonc:lng
AVIIUibla. $100 down. 80 ecra
IrK!,
· 304-6757817, $1,000 -

~

1o.....

r.=.."="-=

...................
.... - I

-.Ali

Fer .... or Atnl: 211r, houu.
11~-.

Etnlcl, cau 114o
7 p.M.
..;;:::;;;;;;,:.:,:::::,,;.::::::;._ __

=~·

-In-

~ ...,. ,.._ -

Ono - - totlf 11101r1c In

Pomelor.

Ill

rem ad11ed. f221,, p~r own

Uootolro burnlohod olllcioncJ,
Drivoto ont,._, Hvlng ......
beclrDCMn,
ktlcMr:,
Nth

iblll-2311 ... , ..

114-411

unfumlohod.

with

2 bod-

- . , . oU cloy on Wod I

45

So~

-

..,.-_

•

Furnished

Roome

Hotot. 1 4-44f.1!51Q.

~na , _ with cooidnt.
k o - In Allo , _ opoco. Ali -~
gllng·to one!
- 1n·
Honnolt
Traco -~... oftor 2:00 P."'·· 304- ~
D!otllct. NMd blfVO 3 .. 4 lir 1111,-WV.

HELP

,_

46 Space for Rent

you holp?

- f o r - 311 - h 81, S 1 - 1 tal AI. 7, I tg. ""!o Ad"'"'"" both, b o - . 304- dllon fief. m por mo. wordo

42 Mobile Homes

Hom••

~
S.
-..silvo, 111ocioo!,__!Oftwlro,
~ living

DolOr ro • tntwnolonat with
...,.., IIODD 114-1'71-2403.

for Rent

Pw11.114-4tl t:ll!l.

Co: ib J 11obUe Home P.rk,
U, ol
~-rontaio,
11
717!5.

bum-.-·
of--

-~~~na

PICKENS FURNITURE

Nowll.llocf

7.

......... E••=*".oi

•

Houoohold burniohlnt. 112 mi.
Jorr!c:ho Rd. Pt. PI-nt. WV,
ca!l304-6711-1450.
PICKENS FURNITURE

dlng, 3po. · - ......
llopio Chino ~~. Dfnotto

Seta, l•uW Clrdl. M1nr
liON lornot 112 milo JorrlcltO
Rd. Pt. P!OIIont WV 304-67114sa.

DMrt so. - - .....

S ~~~~~ 0.,.&lt;!- ~~· 080.
114~·-• ••••
••
Livestock
~

P.P.Jr.H.Iond . - , 30 ao1 Roh
tonk, crptoi ' - sG4-I7I-

.-rtor r,~d~
1I yooro old, 1371. Coli 1
IllS -nlngo and-ilondl.

Portoblo, dual E·Tink

c:am-,

novor - doytiiOO.
· S7S.ao.
1'11-1132,

CON

304-

Unldon

....,..m.

:,.,..,.--~-.-.--..,,.,...

U.S.T.IOOO Millllto -

• ..-. . a/SO I. cebie,

nso.

Perftcl cond. f1WSI 1422.

:::;:,a=::= ~':o.~~J

'tYofgltlo, 310 ..... -·
- -.. 2 - 1
- u . Jog - · tno11no

SWAIN

of
lluo-

tumit~.n, Mltere W•em a
Worl&lt; boola. 11~111.
Sooro K....,... port- dloJt..
washor IDr - . L!ko ,.., 114o
H2-74n.

Hlte.llllll 1111.
:::':':::-'1~;;;::::~~~~ 1
olltly tt.ao. 304-

Sturdy ootid . - boHtlt -

-

with l&gt;unkiM, I m«ooho old,
1400..... $100. 304-6~.
VI'RA FURNITURE
RT. 1~,1,_4111LEI

8 Ulldlng
SupplieS

tilocl1. brtcto. -

Hnllil, -

-

mlinr

ofpoo, wt..
Cloudo WJn.

toro, 'RiO a..ncto, 011 Coli 114o
24U131.

56

-.71...,...,
1

oflor 4:00, 304-

8irow $1.21 171,Utl.

Pell ror Sale

CEtu~NARY

RENT TO OWN. 4 dreo ..... . - .... tswlt..liocf cornllloto • .J10 wit. Bwl¥lf
roekor ·II wit..- .....
chllro • S7.oa wk. Aoallnor • II
wlo. LOW CASH PRICII
IK
off for
- llon..aot.
· Crodtt I- a.m.
ovoliololo.
Opon
to I p.m.~ Sun. 12 noon to I p.m.

·FRANK AND ERNEST

..

7:30. C2l Flllllly FIUCI
(!)

dloll -

p..,...,.,,

porto, oo!oo. COli

51

·

Housthold
Good a

For Sale: I ,.._ twin blcl•oom
outlft, DOIIIIII for 1 !!Ubo glrlo
room. i14o311 H71.

e(J)USAT~

1orrrAt-~..,..rdyl r:;J
11)1 ClouliN
(II Night Coult

•'

-

1111 . , ,... 1.._ ar,....,

.._

u

.......

114-JJI.

Olhenl(2:00)

e C2l 1111 ALF Neal Tanner
abu- Ills brother's
IIO~IIty and moves in.

=

:•

NIP

~ M-y Night
'ifltch·Up Mlnn4taota vs N.Y.
Gltnts
·

"-'
51-.it
out- "' 1-t-o.
, •••
n 11 condition. Ill ibllll.ll- 7p.m.

,....

Ill •

441-1102.

114.

(I) MtcGyver

MacGyvar must again aid his
old nemesis, Murdoc. (1 :001

.

'·

gT
..viiMipllne
W Tr8vlll Explore rivers

.liZ

..

and canlls traveling to
Paris by_bi~OOI r:;J

...

all

HlllftMn ,._.....

Garfield enlists Odie's
company to go out on
Halloween to get more
candy; whln they get ceught
in a storm. they take shelter
in a haunted IIOule. (0:301 g
• liD 21 JumpTeenage psychic assists In
investiQIItlon ot h~ school
arson fires . (1:0011:;1

- : hoollnl

11ov• tao· O.lbwl .......,,
Ulod Apptfo,_ "-" a.
Konougo; &amp;14-441-T47S.

0 PrlmeNewa

53
Antiques
:B~uy~or~o~o::.I!.;.;A:,;Iverl~no~Antlq=~-~.
1124 E. 1111n ~~-~ P-ror.

G)) MOVIE: SOIMIIbill
(P013) (2:001

Me A ~tory

HDura: M.T.W. 10:00 Llll. to I:GO

-~.-

1:01 (]) MOVIE: Po-ergal8t tPOI
(2:251

r::c,:

pold. Old -

1171 Crufoo /1111 440 Dodge

-"'-filii·--·

Mtrchandllt

0111' . . .
$4011.
114 211

BANDSAWS,
Tobie
llowo,
Plonora, Jolrooro, . lltoporo,

1.11:-, ......... Dull Colloo-

Big P!cll...p :o.d - - Dlk

Coal 91- 910¥0 "" ..... Ell·
celtlnl c:oncltktn. 111 143 "M
orl14o247444S.
Flrowoocl lor 11:0,
304o411-1111 .

Sol-....... =·.:."". . trra

~

buml- op~ .1
yr old could be ~llt...al. ~
hod oil _., parllliby trolnOd,

Instrument•

fndlwldual
IIJ;tn.,....

~-

••

:lbr, 1250 prfvoto -~~::=
bumilhorf, Ioiii - --No ...... 11..24U111. '

BARNEY

"":.,
*•J04.111.7101.
Ill, PW, 72,000 tnliol,
...

unou.

oocl

4 -· _

r,nr 1 'Juppii!",

,\ l've·,rr::'
61 F.ann Equipment

i1J Prime Time W'NNIIS1tlnilnoll

IIINUINIIINew
t:30alli eG F-1 Teddy Z
Teddy discovers he ia the
only one who knows a
. quality IICrtpt. g
10:00 I)) 700 Club Will I'll

c:.n.ro.

....._....e
.... fiiOD. 11+
~117=·1~21::/:..;,

..

--::-"""'::""':""":':

82

(l)

- ........
ond-fnl

1

' 011\0

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

84 ' Elactrlcal &amp;
Rafrlgtratlon
......ndll

= .,. . . -

!l!rlne.
Unn11d

•

WlMMIDtll

1' - t I liM..........
'ldmour
lloolilool, 304-67..1711.

,.nt.
..... -a-.
• a
21ir,
' " ,.,..,.
- 1-

•·H·tt

.K7
.KJS
tQIUZ
.JIOl

•

.,

1·::

·..

EAST
• QJH

WEST

•asz
•sut
tn

••

tAJ6
.
+Q1713

.AKU

.I

SOUTH
.A IOU
.AQI07Z
tKIOf

fint ~lance. It leeDII lUI be could Jose
two dlamond triets and aUII make his

•

coatract by sJ:eddlnl Jomac spades on
the Joac dl•mond wlru:el'l. So · be
.'
Vulnerable: Norlh·Soulb
eJ:~ ue of bearlland 1 heart 10 the
Dealer:
South
WileD East lbti\nd oi:t, the situa·
·.
tioll t+l"l!d. Wllb Weal bolcJJnc
illlctliD tl'sllll!l. declarer silotlld DOW
for t1:e
bonors
'•
the niDe of
ud COli·
the ltlit wwld lint suceMCI~
•
but Soulll plaJetl ~d to bil dla·
Openlns lead~ K
mond kiD&amp; and lbell l:llck. So tbe cJe.
leaden took two dltmoed tricks, ll!d
lbe loa&amp; trump Ia the West band be- make !be coatract wltboul 'paiD by ,
CIIIIe tbe eettllb&amp; trick later.
playing K·A of spades, ruffb:&amp; upade . ·
Declarer sbould recocnize tbat be 8ad reiuroiD&amp; to bil biDd wtti lbe dla- .L;
needl tile trumps in dummy for ruff, IDIIIICI kiD&amp; to ruff aDOiber spade. Welt .
II:&amp; purpoeet. After ruffin&amp; the aeeood wiDds ' !ruffilbl bil partDer'l jlck of~:
club, be sltould lead 1 diamond to dwn- dlat!IO!Ids at lbe flnill:, and declan!l' . •
my'l ~ East wins and plays an- mates 10 triets.
-;
other club. Declarer ruffs and can now

"='. .

tcz;:::::'

.

+

....

CROSSWORD

.... ,......

by THOMAS JOSE,H
ACROSS

4 Part of a min.

1 Conftlct

5 F~ Dan

6 Gorge
11 Cowboys
event
12 Embank·

6 Tidy up
7 Jinx
8 Polynesian

'"·

....

·~

...
.. .."'
-.

~

drink
9 Scottish •setr

ment

13 Legislate 11t"When
14 Prelse

Harty -

., .

· 15 Retreat

Sally"
16 Health
17 Criticize
Yntenley'a Anawar
resort
20 Extracted 28 "SIIenl - • 38 Hsy·bltsy
18 Now,
21 Denver. 2t Stressful 39 Smell
In llaly
lor one
situation
explosion
19 Clutch, e.g.22 Pompey's
(sl.)
40 Old musical .
24 Came In
greeting 31 Cash earned note
first
23 Thicken 33 "Splash" 41 · - 54.
25 Nomadize 24 Direct
co·star
Where
28 Aspect
one's way ·34 James
' Are YouT
29 Insurgent 28 Not many
Dean film 42 Picnic
. 30 Dash
27 Actress, 35 Eqully
spoiler
31 Manhandle - MacGraw member 44 Prohibition
32Lynx
34 Pistol
(sl.)
37 ScoHish
county
38 Frosl
39Nut
43Subslde
45 Swedish
Island
41 Church law
47Fntlve
b-+-~~occaslon
48 Vestibule

DOWN
1 Summary

...

. ·-..'...

.. ...

~

. '
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....'
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.' ...'

'

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.....
.. -,
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r.•

.
• c
. •'

. '...
·"

•.....
-..-

-

of bellels

,,. '

2 SoiHary
person
3 Turkish
city
DAILY CRYPTOQU01'1!3- Here'1lllow &amp;!I work It:

w.-.......

c.:1n ,..,....,.

eu ui: tP

.'

•'

•..?"
.....
..
~

~

18130

..

R..,_

Plumbing a
HHtlng

Lotllolffablo-.....,_
........ c........,. •, ..

•• 0214 Of 11.....7741.

Perbapa, but South ri&amp;btly uparaded
bis cards wbea J'llortb made a twodiamond respoue to the oae-beart
openl55&amp; Since North bad notblna ex·
tra, l:e was quiet to alp off at game.
Tl:e blddlq wu fiDe, but declarer
foandered In the play.
South ruffed. the liiCODd club. AI

(!)) Llny King Uvll

';....~
=~u··.a~ ~
... --11+441-71 .

101 .

•

Murphy 1nd Frank compete
for the oame tip on a
goverment scandal. (0:301 g
• tiD Allen llltlon As
Halloween tppnNIChes, a
serial killer lsoetllkl~
Newcomeno. (1 :00) t;1

WIFE

aulllrt&amp; 1 • lttvmouth IWint • ooncl.
-....nflo ..... 11+441- P8, Pf. h - . IU4 ollie
0117, .loll . .. , - · •
• ,,. 211 all.
114 •• UU, . . .Iil apJnlngl. , . w
10011 OOIMI.

=--.
.
- .Conlio-=Cofl

w-,...,.,_Of
Take a IOilk at the art
the ewty

!II) •

17&amp;-1731.

. llr.-oM1~

WAnOITIMIW"*"

17th osntu.1.;
,!,:.:.~
@
IV iooWn

YONDER COMES
TH' PARSON'S

Coolin, lioto-11.

, ... ' -

1'-H

lnd

s--.
...........
........ ....... ........ iiM:ii
, ... -

,,

ltll II,

·

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

t:OO.

for s.re: ....,. l100i 114-241- '*••lnlm n. ontr 14.000 mJIIt..
S321ori14-2411C
_ . , a,IIS. 304-

Wl..td: llnpiAIIIIII ...., ttl

plllncee, g• r••· Lib

Q

Ill CJOOII • CliMe
C2l 1111 MOVE: ...... The
llconl' NIIC lllciiiMJ Nlgllt
At Tha Moolea (2:001 Cl
(!) Yac:lllillll San FranCisco
Big Bolt Series. Race 2
a&gt; (I) ABC Ma nday N1111t

:::.~-· 12010.

Mualcal

IDinei.Conull 1111• lergiiiL ~

Uood

F _ . Teddy Z

Q!8ndmolhlr.

.

, ... Iuick fllalf Umftod, ¥-6,

lome Pol o..:.~3:ii;
Wolib. Cofll14-441oOZ31.

57

e@

Teddy struggles with a la.;k
of ambition end a protectiVI

e

446-143'7 01 114-448-IZM•

-lc

1111

p.m.

pick. . Jood, S31 tiollnnod. fl~

F., Soil • CGncroto ond Ptllllc
tonbtl. A55 alzoo. RON

~r..:.. Oounnet

·,

130. 3oocf,

For Alrtl: log Cobin, lodtllnt,
night!)', . - . ,. 114o241 134

(!) NFL ~y Nlghl

.
'•
'

Porllon,
HIIMiopn ltltlChow IIUif
wvloe. 114 441 31U ...... 7

Fhw : d, all t.nlwaad, llrae

304-671-1411.

.,
'•

Improvement•

OrofOIIWrnd eoa., -

,.

:;

Homt

MI.

~=

..... -

Serv1ces

Sl,. Rklgo

114

-

,,_,-Ill.'-·_...,
taii.

54 MlscellantOUI

=r., s.:!.

Witch An evil witch enlists
the help of a cadre of
gargoyles on Halloween to
help her end the cui'H that
hu blnished her to the
netherwOrld lor 300 years.

'
=-'4-l:al
It
171. - l o n.

304-623-1154.

• -..,., u........a cttr,

1:30. (J) iiJl The WlcklcMit

= - ..

...

c
.......
oriental,
polntlngo, lop, .. ontloo - ·
t*l coUect 304-125-32'71, or

loro, DriH Po
304-612-3131.

...-

iiJ Munlw, 1111 W"* Stall

~~

~.

---·,...uti-- ,.,. -=
-·- ...
GuiiNUIIIIy . . . . 2t Ieee:

:IIOW-.
1t71 .......... 'r.'lll ......
-.2--. .,.,

.....1. .

7:35 w lllllfonf Son
1:00 (J) MOVIE: Teu lto&lt;y 01

S1SO:

a qu!ot, I =::::::~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.J.::::;;;:;;~:;;;;;;;;;;;:::~
Kin I 91 t"

Fooior'o- Honto Pork,

NFL Triwll Geml

! I l l ! - - Tonight

,,,.!!"0" •••:
dryoro

Countly c - ,

•

r.os w JllleNOna

114o44f.&gt;111.

Wolihor 11 25;
~-

LI I I I

DoeJ a revene bid by opener on 13
blp-card points seem overdone?

(II ChieN

75 Boall&amp; Motors
for

TransportJI&lt;on

c - Aff•lr

iiJ Mllml Vlcl The Maze

•

1m 11 1. ' ' - - " TJI.Hulf
loot. 125 HP, Evlnrudo
•Ill'7:00p.JI1..
_,, . . .top,
.,,......

(I)

~COurlr:;J ,·

2411131

salt

I

UNSCR,f\MBLE AsOVE LEITERS
TO GET ANSWER

•

NORTH

NlwwlfoUr (1 :00)

2!!. $710. or ·

lhll ',.. would

psl•l'l

PRINT NUMBERED LETTE~S IN
THESE SQUARES

...-------------~

1.l • .!lt-.1111 Whlll Of

cam tor s.:o, •

Elr

by flll•ng 1n the m1utng words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

lp artiCIIMII

w•

-olfar. llol-446-1-

-

Complete ..... chu~klo Quoted

SCIAM UT5 ANSWIIS
tD-21
. Grieve - Aboul - Ms~ve - Soften - BEf'C?RE
Aller getting caught~ea an all the way ptzza, lhe
overw al'llt woman
and aald. "Would you beHev!)'m working on my EFORE picture?"

ClJ W M•cNII/Uflrlr

old Colt out or 74
MotorcyciH
Quartor Moro, ff Into- '-:::::-::~~:::.=:=::;..=.=-::;­
lodcolll1.,-.1210oftwSp.m. 1llt luzultl 01250 74011 mt.,
R.a'ocf Quortar - . lorroR S210.114-4..-.
O.fdlng, lloy 1114'w 111-2, tllil ' 410 otroot bfko,
, _...., ntom · - : only 710 lllilol. satt.
- . . . . R.a"ocf. ...tina, 304 ..75-1731.

:._~;',.r.;;.~,4~· ,64.....,~Hay.....;_,a,..G~I'I-In.,.,..._
55

(I}

of

1111 Yoroohl yz

:='*r·
e

eC2l PM Mqeztne

1111 Ford · - · Yin. .....
nat -~ mh•IJ• 1... Ford.
,....... tow ""'""... • ....
lollY t&gt;fgo lor 1111. COIII14-141- ollon~h prlcod to ••· 304201 Toftori:OO p.m.
·
17Won.

1('-. """·

e

•

!II WKRP tn ClnciMd
II) He Mlft
1:3!1 w Ancly Ckltfllh
7:00 (J) Our HoUae

11 hind

li!ood
1171,
od S0rro1 11on1. 114o281J.

iii

I

'-:::::::::::::J~~ It's Gears, But Hillc:ry Rer-1
R I s E My I
The Onee Who ·-·

w:t-2·1 eam.ct r:;J
1orL~~

,.. to app~ ul 't.I1....Z-G:D.
1111 Topla 4.. P.U. 17S111•
tm .loop c - • o.ao, and
1ir · 11411; till CltoV P,U.
41,000 01lloo 2 1111. S4715; 110
11o1toa,•••
4 - or N.
Holan Hwr.
lf4 4tl
114441-1111.

oncl 1 w1t. old Dfol-. $30 , ... Duocf - · hfgh
~....
~-~
...~h·~·~,oo.~1!!:11~2~11~111!oa.~.,....l -h. Coillt4-14t.zhl.
I tow - . '"" pooltop ill
12
racb. , , . _ 4 p.m. 114o

AUCTION I FURNITURE.
011.. 91., Oolllpotio. - . ~

'·

l

I tllti~ li ~~~=

A_.tcan .._.......

I:Oii W a...oty H - 1
1:30. (J) 1111 NBC Nightly - ·
lpoftl'-k 10:30) .
W llody
(I)Ellctrlc
ABC - ·. r:;J
ClJ

.'·

I ~·

_J.....J...-I..._.:.L.;·~.'---1L

II)Jem

.a

For lobo: 1 -

N...tJoocf

Nlco Olflco Dooto, s....: Othlr
O.ka,·2pe . Living Room Sullee,
Choolo, DNo-, llodtt llod-

John

Orophloo - · Reg.
111.11 uio • ·• · Point Pluo,
2411 Jocttoon " "·· Pt. Pit. 304~~.

31JI.

r.lercrl&lt;mdtse

cftJ

nn1. - · - · M1c1-

d ' - '· 1114......,.,

rtwr v6ew.

-= _...,_

-

EVANIJ ENTERPRISES, eon, OH. 1..aDQ.I37-1121.

,,, lecurltr ..... ...

bMUtN

1ur 0001,

Fulllortglh - · -

=':...~..!'"
O::~:im~
room lUIIe 11

211.f233.

2 to 1 "•droo~R. nloe locleton,

--··-·

441·11'!1. 127 Srd. Avo. Qol.
llpobio,""

I a.m. lo I p.m. llon.-811 . • ,..

Nloo I br fum- · 001
~~--ltd.
114-441-170.

2 ml!o
w-.,411INni·II.--...
· 01111. Rt. as.
114

a:r~·.~::~

IL w- """ Mlbo, 1100.
Colll14-112..... oVIflintL

-

2br, lfr, , . , . - , -

61 Fann Equipment

Merchandllt

1111 Cllarlt&amp; tn Cherge

1l'l-21a,attor 4' 30 '·"'·

uootllppi-. T.V. aolo.llDon

c.....,
1400 oq.n. FJ........a:
cor- 1'::,:1co,
ll1d Pins. Amjilo Lorge 5oocll tSII or 110. You
bllrl&lt;lng. Coli 114 141 1241, houl m . lt4n141J.H215 or .,..
2321, or 441 U21.

-

54 MiscellaneOus

.,..

I'1111 . 1
CRIKT

I Is I I .I

(!))W_T_y

~~~---+~k~

rfl/f/0 iilfiM.

Couvaolon
Von •
~~==;:==~==;:r-===~~~~~~ -1111
fa.lf!l.ChoW
_..10-tm
•
Mndlilon suoo. Cofl-

Caun!y AppiJa-. lno. Good

m.fl71.

rol Fiur-ho

l1dl Did, Rlpler ROlli. llrp

• • -•••c.!..

.,

BROWN ..

olkllng

1' " Ool!to lllni VIII, '
•
Dll N; Trootor ..., liot· c:Oon, priOo rodUMd, 114-44tb1340
-hrMor, 13810; ::;:;:·=-::-::::=-:=::o;;-;;;;100 tirllndor ottaoltma• 1111 ChoW 110 - · P8, PB,
11450: 100 Font ' - wlllol5 AIC, '14 Chevy SIO. 304-S'IS- · pfowo, ..... ' -4
tsfll: Ooonor wllf h
=.·-~·:-c:-:-:-:-::,....,.,.-:::--:
ltot-a..i:..
,_, IUS 8-10 4 ..... -

UJIIIolro •. . . . _ oP,. Cor·

r-

3

to-

CHARLIE

- · Nlr
AT,

eOAncly~

TWO MORE MINUTES ..
Tt.IEN I'LL TURN AROUND,
AND YOU CAN SCRATCH
Tt&lt;E OTIIER EAR ...

QIIIT SCI«)()L,

vana&amp;4WD'a

,._iii
AIIIFM, tlulf

piriOI'I.

21D~.

Rd. Vinton, CH. _ , 1~==--.,.-=--,­
DNolll I ..~ required, I R:OOIMiot rent· WHk Of month.
11 .. -3811 to
•••
4p.m, lt11U1 M S120fmo. a.tl&amp;.

Prloo II I
I, ar, 1 Ill both,
uiiiiY - , . - - . I CA,

132 Mobile
in-~
forS81t

waua.....-. .....
~ ......._ wv. ...

.,, .... for 1

2Dryor,
bodroont
llc1 S200 month, ..,...
uilllttoo, .... 30W'11-4174.

-•.lil.lift., WVJIIIO. •I==-""='='_,.~-.,..
1 4 1 7 1 - - " " •to.
tt12tl rnr. ..

1111.
T'

Md Ullh
R..... et c11 .....

•2.114-44HUnturn. AI&gt;!., 4 n10t111 I both.
Controttr locotod. Soc. Dop. •
Ref. NC1 ed. 114-4UGt11.

3 bedroo111 houel Pomlf'OJ. FuN
- . . . . . Wid hooltup, nowly

..,_,,;:115... 3Q4.47f.

-

m". .:::I'J:.ollohortd

,.

.'' '

p.m., SuncloJ 1:00 10 1:00 p.m.
Smon burn. houoo. oultobio for 1 114-·-·

41 Hou... for Rtnt

wlr!ntl.
tomlty
- Jorge
- ·ucfton,
- - .........

-

---.
114
• • 1117 . . .Col~
11~

Wl\tr

plck14t lrM.
qulrod. 11 .....2014.

Rentals

-. 2 -

..- -- .. ---.-of
..........
--·.

tumlt.ed

Ono - - gongo lpl, 3IJ4.
t7t-tsso.

Lind Wlntod: 100 ...... up.
Wooded, .u. . ., Nwa. 1~
3213521,

..

,.,_ rn' AppiJ • PoMrtNr ....._. Pt p1rl). Houle lftd 4
e 9 JRII In.,._, lloelllnt
r IWt 1111.
1100 ILift.
--~~~~!~tuo~~~~~~·3Q4.tl2.;~~~~~~~~~·~
.....
. - -lo
~
1 ............
42.
Uo:t.u•................ . . . ,
.. all._flo_!ot• ... 11-c;
I
a 10 . . . .
-1111or '"""·
"'......, liitly .,. -or..., ~~t~~~~;;;-.,..

~

.,.,., -.. ..

b1 d oa:

One

Rea 1Estate
Wanted

1::""~·~·~~:r~-~,:!~~~'4~,~~rr~~~r.~"'~·_:~,
1

, ,. . -.I04-I7MIIM .. ~1.

.. -

In

•t::z·

2 br., ..... iurnioltod, .....c. ~ .... boo pold - ·- ond Otmor
. COblo......
TV
...
pop

..........

apt

~ fum'od opl. olr, :-1,
porlllna.
r1lll to
IIU~ for one .,.un. 11
15131.

ecree, ass.ooo.

:......-:,' I"':.....::!"· Add~ . ~~,:"· e~n

= __

_... 2 - - - .
~-""
011

bedroom

·
-· r.q.-.•
·-h
. 2-3121.
$1!!0
dopolft
,....

ownor

WOodlend. tU

2

3ltliclton.
...,_, botlt.
homo @wtngroont,
Cootjllotoby
,.mrd ' ~ lnek:le and out.

~ ~ """""' with . _ lot Ul.ooo. z
II
II
W...
_,
. ,IHIIty,
_ , kiQ; MCh --·~:: - , - ·
lor
•
ttl
liaf
ICP
- 1 liD 1:
uttllut ~waliMia.Rt. IO.KerrAd.a

:;; '1.' :..:-.:

~

~c-to-lnd

we.. , _ Gunvlll

Rood.

l14-4otlo

Manor
•nd
RIVW'Iiae
Aflllllmonlo In ll!ddleporl. From
$184. F...., loplanbor 1Sih to
Nov.,..,_ 15th, llrtll month Nnt
fno too• - who .,.nfy. Coli
114.el2·7717. ECH.
.

.yp, 304-171-

full

praga.

•ft• 5p.m.

,., Aont: 2 br, ....... bullY ...,..
ootod, now !litclton on 111.

, _ - " .. - ..~ :::"'~1:::'~ .....
............ ,llluCJIS.JIIIIICR
:0

8720

pormittocf. public

Cioon,

iil.ndMi ,..
... - · wv.
lrick3br,lllllth,2100:w. hNt

--fn-.. .
-

wf1tlllct.d

olllcloney opo~mont

31 HomHforS811

.... - .

- · colltol-446-

FOu~h OoHipotll, ., ..

441-Mtloftor 7p.m.

rooms. Cook wiOYI "'mlahecf. Ollocf. ilo polo, lnquiro ol :100
buiiY corpotod. Dopaofl roqulnid. Fowth Ave.
Noinllclepoto. l14-112-301!0.

Clll 1411~113 lOll
11iUF2741Aiafcunnt....,... 132,100.

""' -

pokl. 1151

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

ldiihloo, clopolft roqulnid. ....

'MTI CJPINitQII Cell 1·
, ..?a 1111 Ill • :m2A ,_

~I

Fv- opt. lbr, UOO, ldllb•

......411 lftM'

EARN __., a 2 1*tc TV!
IIO,GDIWyr. lnooMe prof.......
DUlle (11 --7.000 &amp;zt. 1(.
4112.
1'£0111Al., IYATE AND CIVIL

............... Cid ......
- 10 114,157.
IIIIo
-·
11QPI
-tdloto

Fourth Qolilpotll, IH 148 UIO
•Her7p.m,

con ltolp. , ..oo.azt.o71a.

f:=.'f,')
~ 1.fJ::'':
au.

CUll-~

Fum ..hed IPir1ment, 1br, 11.5.
Utlibloo Dd· Shiro IIIith. 701

Now 01' Utocl llotiiJo
Honto? ShOfl limo on iho Job?
Smoll poJtnllll? Poll
tndlt ltlotorv 1 Droblom? Wo
-

AI. 7, -

A - -A-~K a•

Don ~
., 1-diNct.-Cal ""
· factory
• 4 lool&amp;st - 1• 1117 tun.-lp.rn.
RMUI Praput, . ..._ •nd 4
mobile hotMII. Wll relum inU:NtiiWI In"!..,._ Ex.....,t

lliMCE---

Fum. EHicboncy $145 utliftloo
Dd. ShiN boih. la7 Socond,
O.lllpoll~ 114 '111 4418 •tt.r
lp.m.

SI,OOO. PUblic Wllol'. 304-671-

NCR' ,;-;-... money

-

Mabile

NNcl 1 New or UHd

Home? Short tlrM on lhll Jail?

Loll F., Slio • Gllilpollo Forty,

...........
- OltfoUMI ~¥ "

7744.

to move. $14,100. 11C.367·

~-"- ~RT TillE
IIEIMCi
COIIIIEACIAL A::. 36
CTI.,.,.....
011
Ell·
i l n t i l n - . - fitur"

, 0 for .... lhop. ioo olilo ,10t
.....
,,,.._....,_

... 1u1 -

haw.

For Rn: Furnl1hed 2 &amp; 3 room
apartrMnta. a..n euit•bll tor
ono. No polO, Ref I dopooft ,..
qulrod . .,,......1S18.

7111.

. .-.oa
...

1 LDungo AocilCltlfr, Stao;
lloUroool200;
1 doollcholr
1121;
114nMH741-Sp.lll.
h12corpot.HO: roncorpot M•
FurnHUN

1111 e a

CMmplanololp Fnl111
Rlwrlide. CA (R)
ClJ Arnerloa Story of
lrnposllllle dream: Many
Stouffer rtiHa adcplwd
grizzly cub . !;I
W llcjuiN OM TV 10:301 r:;J

601N6 .TO GIVE VP EVERI(~IN6, AND DEVOTE
MV liFE TO MAKIN6 MV D06 HAPN!

SOMEONE
SAID 't'OV'RE
&amp;01N6 TO

'·

ono

1110 a... hoi! lon 4114, -VI.

"!'•'*'•

rnovloo. Ca!lll~l. ECH.

Comp Conioy~!f" Jll.o01nl,

INOTICEI
OliO VALLIY PUBLII- CO.
rr r ,...,.. thll you do

n

Dtnrau~.':

1 lloYioa
1 l (
tor
S2ocr; Woohor,
1 ooil $75:
Sfzo W.torbod wbh Flbor Fbiiod

1m ,..,. f'SSO

ton
~:'Jr.:'~"·. .Cab
lndtruafL
GhiMit.

c'!rnor '&amp;:"".:....

11171.1bo~, 14170. -· 3
liocl.-no. Spocloul. Oon1

mobi:O -

ButlntSI
Opponunlty

,_ lali:

Ju.A

112

:'f ~:.
.old-,_~-1111-n..

Du-.

Wllor. pr"*' roducod, Clydo
-.n, Jr. 304-!171-2331.

Financtal

=:t. . .

dining ,_, botlt, doWnotolro.

=
'"':,.:;

tMnthhr ..

•
IAiili MONEY 1Jp11og ot -

100111 TV Ca ••• '1 .. No a.

will 11 ..
441.. 727.
7::1-. .-~-.,."-'-~...,.....,---.-304-6
-75prov-. 1211/mo.

...
...... 2 bod-, Uvlng _..,

1171
., . .
141111! .whh
I.Ullotllbo
01ponda
In
lhtng , _ , and dining """"·
Waadbu,..,. (Mrth etove) 1n
Hvlng room. s br, 1 1 112 bllhl.
Eloofrlc ~:;:od.. blitclton
Clbinoto. Ao
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Central olr -.lblonlng. 1 :argo

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w. • 2pdo.
br.• , bolh, prtvo••
CloM to

31 N. 2nd St, Mlddlrport. $110.
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BEAunFUL APARTMENTS AT
1117 Cloyton 14172. 2 bod.-,
Schools &amp;
15
flrepl•ce. •xc cond, tiM over ~~r!."A~:'J:~CI(~~
JIIIJmonlo, 304-1711-7141.
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Instruction

11 • Halp Wantad

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form four sirnple words

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LAYHi'S FURNITURi

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1311 to Sill. T-110 and up

.

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PUIIUI

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Reorrang~~ letters of
iCromblod -d•

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Gooda
rololg.

Television

ll6't, '{~ ww... .M't'lle

72 Truclct for S81t

Houwhold

$1

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p.

Monday, Octoblr 30, 1989

l;»om.-oy Middleport. Ohio

Oct.30, 1
. •

21ir, tnllor,
...,_,:.
011111. II WOOl
~-~• t111ti'SW 11424lltl0:.

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.... &amp;..- ...., 011 llgltl, 171-11511.

..

.. 1 wO_yiel have lnventeellhlsiOOntr. but my
g i l - b[ Oke. I ran out of chalk .....
•

'

You wtU be oxtrernel)' resourceful in lhe
yew eheld In deviSing ways to 1dvence
your 11111-ln-a. Y04J/I Ingenuity will
help your drCuriiVInt roedblockl end
Oliotecfll.
..
ICCIIII'IO (OoL 24-Nov. 22) Taking
pride In whit P' do II com~~W~dlble.
bul blinD proulf puNfy lolvenffy Hl1ell
•tolhor rrilller. Lit .your tneplrallon
oome
trom the lonnt:r, not 1111 - ·
M1jor oltlngee.,. alilld far 8Q Qrpto In
thl COi!llilll ve-. fllnd ·lor your AllroQrepll .,. _ _ tod1y. Mil Slto AI-

'
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tro-Graph, c/o lhla n~aper, P.O.
I!OxGI428, Cievlland;OH 4-4101-3428.
• Be sure to 111111 your zodlec !Jilin.
.IAGITTAIIIU8 (llow, IJ ll'lo 21) An
opportunity might eriH today whirl
you'll blln a poelllon to Ulist oomeont
who needs you. H
faiiiO do so, you
will liter ~rei your lndlflnnce.
CIJIRICOM (Det:. ........ 111 Trtndl
In gonoral IOilk WI'/ hOpeful lor you •I
lhla lime, 10 think poelllve - . your
expactlltlono.,. con011nad. Don't HI·
na lor eecond bnl II flrot pilei II •
poulblllty.
AGUAIIIUII.IM. • l'llt. 11) Once
· ~inl a courea of action lor your·
. llff lodey, cciuriQIOUI!Iy pur8U1 II. If
.you lltlt't to qUIIIIon your oonvtctlonl,
you'H Impede your own prognoos.
PIICII (l'llt. • Ill oil 81 It bl- y o u 11 t'" ttme to do ~ng
wttl*t your.,.,_ to otrenglliln IXIsllng
rellitlonlhlpa. You•re In 1 c:ydl whirl
frlendl could be vary hetptul In · your
alliiN.

you

Ilona and neg1llve previous happens
out of your decillion maklnQ pro entqdey. Your judgiiWII will-In mil·
Ia w111re you fill to cfllf with the

"now."
QEIIIII CMar 21....._ •1 A v.y ambf·

11oua objll:llve Q8l1 be ecltle..ed todly H
you .,.. strongly motl'ialed end cletor·
rnirtld. Utt11 of oonnqu: 10111 illlety to
r-.11 If you n too ..... wtllef•
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shoUld be quite kllft todly; ea 1111111 1
I500d time to lltrMi 10 put lmporllnt If·
In order. Sllrt with po lot II~

you r..

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. . . , ....... 21-Aprll 11). 8llng lofllxlbll 01' too oplniotllted could to
todey. IIIli :lilly

proJecta.

LIO(....,llt-AIIIJ.II)Youmighlnotbe
too ..,..Uwln 11)1 eerly roundl todey,
bul ~ could bl • '*Y QOOd ......
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, lllblicb.
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a ·~II) Yoor poweoa
olobethatlonntiY .._1hlnlllil11 toc1ey lftd you mull be .ery ..,.....
not to pc:fnt thlngl out to oompllllk5nl

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Try 10
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or, 1hllldltdn:bll qulllly may pity _.
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AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

Ill,....

w Journey Into 8llep
Exptons some of the

dlocovertea .. madl about the
phtnomenon Of aleep

ttvough the eyes of
dlsti~lhld

physieilns.

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One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apo~trophes, the length and f011111tlon ol the words are all
hints. Each day the code letten 1re different.

Charllnl lUml hlr coulln II
the vtct1m of en lbuoivl

hulblncf, r:;J

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10:30 (I) MOVIE: CllfaaJIII (1 :30)
(l) KanijM LIJind The life

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D NIWIIIOt Oiclc'l
e11or11 to eoillrllli• hia father

SHDYl

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Ey11 Ar8 Crying Stereo.

VFHAU

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of Herblft Von l&lt;arljlin,
muaiC dliectOI of the Blrlln
Philhlni:iOntc:. II cl1i onlcild.

n=.'Wz•o.. ....

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FAITW

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JZYUWZKE;
UH

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S.

WHRDZE
Yul 1 I u'•CttiPI•;aii811TIS WORTH A tHOlJ.
SAND POUNDS A YEAR 10 HAVE DIE tWill Of
LOOKING ON 1HE IRIGtn' SIDE OF lltiNGS.

JOftNBQN

•

'

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�•

Pllu• 10-The Dlily SentiiM!

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Alfred UMW mefts

Rock Springs UMW meets

Charlotte Van Meter and report on the UMW District
. Prayer · by Dorothy Jeffers
Dawn Kopec led the program
Thelma Hellderson served as Annual meeting at Gallipolis. opened the October meeting of by reading scripture from ExoanchoJ:WOIMII In the program, The society discussed plans for . lhe Rock Springs .United Metho· dus 22, verses 25-27. Mary
"A World Sisterhood," when the · November and December meet· dlst Women, followed by ·the Showalter and Fern Morris as·
Alfred Unlled Methodist Women !ngs as well as gtvlng to program "Are We Mortgaging s!sted with the program after
Our Children's Future?''
met recently at the church.
shut-Ins.
which a discussion was held on
Nina Robinson read the open·
Mrs. Van Meter had the prayer
!ng scripture from Revelations, calendar and chose Mary Morris,
Ph!Upplans, and Corinthians. All In education at Jack's Creek
member• took part In reading Center, Roark, Ky. The society
A Halloween party was held In ·Souls by, Sherry Haye, and Matt
and dbcullllon with favorable signed a birthday card for her.
the
recreation room of the Laurel Snyder. ·
COIIUMDts oa the stze and work of
Sara Caldwell asked the bless·
the World Federation of Metho- lng for refreshments served Cliff Free Methodist Church with
Winning In the junior class was
Belbtda
Soulsby
and
Sandy
Megan
Clark, Travis Friend, and
during the social hour. Mrs.
dist Womell.
Wright
In
charge.
An\ly
Sanders.
The business meeting · was Henderson served sloppy Joes ,
Games were held for the
opened with prayer by Mrs. Van pumpkbt pie, Halloween candles,
Refreshments were served to
children,
and a cake walk was 58 In attendance.
Meter and we~e by Nellle and punch.
enjoyed by all.
Parker. Martha Poole gave the
The next meeting will be at the
The children In costumes were
secretary's report and roD call. church on Nov. 14. The program
judged
by Eva Robson, Ruth
Six members were present and 10 will Thanksgtvl ng readings by
Williams,
and Clarence Story.
sick calls were reported.
all.
Mrs. Henderson gave a brief
Prizes were awarded ior the
prettiest, ugliest, and most
Dr. Daniel 0 . Trent will speak
original.
on Alzhetmers Disease and slni·
An election day atnner will be · Advanced orders for quarts of
Winners were Wesley Wright,
Bar diseases at a special Alzhel·
held lit the Rock Sprbtgs United soup are being taken and the Megan Adkins, and Kameron mers support group meeting on
Methodist Church on Nov. 7 price Is $1.50 per quart. Orders Sayre In the nursery class. In the Nov. 7 at 7 p.m. at Overbrook
beginning at 10 a.m.
can be placed by calling kindergarten class the winners Center In Mlddleporf.
Vegetable soup. bean soup and 992-5869, 992-3356. or 992-3512. were Buble Hayl', Kylle Sayre,
Shirley Finley, support group
combread,hotdogs,sloppyjoes, Those ordering soup must pro· and Tyson Lee. In the primary ' leader. Invites the public to
pop, coffee and desserts will be vide their own container.
class, 'winners were Billy attend.
served.

Monday. October 30. 1989
how children may be helped.
Roll call was takea with 15
members and two visitors pres·
ent. The secretary's and treasur· ·
er's reports were given, and Rev.
Katherbte Riley had prayer after
several requests were taken.
.Sharon Folmer led devotions

entltll'd " Prayer ." · Several
members had readings and
verses from the Bible pertaining
to the topic.
The meeting closed with
prayer and a social 11me was
enjoyed In the church lellpwsh!p .

Ohio Lottery,

rally to
top Vikings.

Pick-3

394
Pick

room.

Page 3

Halloween party held recently

·m oldy s11nny,
cooler. Hlp In mid 541s.

WedaeH&amp;J',

I

•

Alzheimer group
meeting slated

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tue1day. October 31, 1989
I

Election Day dinner scheduled

1 Section, 10 Poge

26 Cent&amp;

A Multlmedio Inc. N-opopor

·c hester furnace work
completed, board says
I

I
,.

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Dally Sea&amp;lael Staff

J

., ...

Bank One Is Pleased to Announce
The Opening Of The New
POMEROY AUTO BANK
Monday, November 6, 1989
~ 8:00 A.M.
..
Second and Lynn Streets
'

LDw In mid Sis tonllht.

3856

.

POMEROY HALLOWEEN PARTY- Brian
Reed, left, bad a rougb job on Monday nlgbt when
he served as one of the jud~res for tbe halloween
party held In Pomerq followlag trick-or-treating

•

'

•

Furnace work at the Chester
Elementary School has been
·completed at a cost of $31,577,
Supt. Dan Apllng reported at the
Monday night meeting of the
Eastern Local School District
Board of Education held at
Eastern High School.
Dr. Apllng noted that the: cost
covers the complete tear down
and rebuilding of both furnaces,
as well as the cost of replacement
parts, at the school.
''The cost of this project
graphically underlines the need
for voters In the district to pass
the upcoming school levy," com·
mented Dr. Aplllig .who ex·
Ia tbe towa. A crowd lnll of witches, c l - ,
plalned that without adequate
monalen, and some beyond detterlp&amp;loa, came out
local funding lor such emergen·
for tbe event In wblch entertahneat was
cles, the district will have to
provided by WMPO radio.
Increase the amount of money
borrowed from the state loan
fund.
It was also decided at the
meeting .that furnaces In the
other schools wm be Inspected.
Several are reportedly old and
~ possibly In need ol SOml' repairs.
The board employed Lois Ihle
and Michele J. Mowrey as
substitute teachers for the re·
malnder of the 1989-90 school
year to be used on an as-need
basts only.
Cat~y Janelle Sargent was
hired as a substitute custodian

and substitute cOOk and· Sheila of dangerous weapons contained
Ann King as substitute custodian In the student handbook, autho·
for the balance of the 1989-90. Bob r!zed a home Instruction tutor for
Shaver was employed on a a junior high school student for
supplemental contract as ele· medical reasons, and approved
mentary choir director.
~ the establishment of a new
student activity fund , the Teen·
A contract was entered Into age Institute.
The policy which required that
with the Ohio School Board
head
teachers be present at the
Association lor the purpose of
Board
of Education meetings
representing the district In ari
was
amended.
According to the
arbitration hearing. Tabled until
amendment,
head
teachers are
the regular November meeting
not
required
to
attend
unless
was action on adopting a policy
reganjlng oral recitation of the requested to be present.
Appropriations were made to
Pledge of Allegance.
The board approved retmbur· the Teenage Institute Fu!lQ, the
sement to George Gaga! for two Chester Student Council Fund,
college level courses, and ap- and the 1989 Chapter P Car·
proved the appUcatlon of Mar· ·ryover Fund. Modifications to
garet Cauthorn to establish com· the appropriations for several
pulsory back service ·wtth the · other funds were made Including
School Employee's Rl'ttrement. the PY90 General Fund, the
Cheerleader Fund, the Class of
System.
Several teachers, parents and 1989, the 1989 DPPF, the 198 Drug
students were at the meeting to Free Grant, the 1989 Chapter I
discuss concerns with the newly Fund. A transfer of $6,206.76 was
·enacted grading system for approved from the 1989 Chapter I
grades 7 through 12 this year. The Fund to the 1989 Chapter I
committee will continue Its study Carryover Fund.
Next meeting was set for Nov .
and analysis of the district's
poUcles on grading and honor roll 15 at 6: 30 p.m. to be held In the
attainment this year. Target h.lgh school cafeteria . Attending
date lor a recomml'ndatlon to be were Jim Smith, president,
made to the board Is by the end of Kathy Manlcke, vice president,
the first semester of this school and members, Ray Karr, Charles Knight, and I. 0. McCoy . The
year.
The board amended the exist· board met In executive session to
!ng poUcy governing !)ossesslon discuss personnel matters.

~AI9· one..la 14rt-:iR·-accidentflf--*"'tJe'r8 ·

cited by Ohio State Patrol Monday
One driver was cited In an
accident at 8:30a.m. Monday In
Meigs County, on SR. 124, In
Lebanon Township at the Inter·
section of TR. 132. No one was
Injured. according to the Meigs
Gallla Post. State Highway
The party goers were jlldgedla several categories
Patrol.
.
and these youngsters are j11st of lew of the many
Troopers said Nancy D. DeCosse, 35, Racine, driving a 1988
tbal turned out for tbe party.
Renault, stopped at the stop sign
then pulled ontoSR. 1241n front of
a 1979 Olds Cutlass driven by
Mary K. Michael, 20, Racine.
Damage was heavy to the DeCosse car and moderate to the
By United Press International
administrators said they were hopes of keeping the unwanted Michael vehicle.
Youngsll'rs and oyer-aged
not au thortzlng ally street pa· annual ritual of arson and
The patrol cited Decosse for
trick or treaters put the finishing rades In the posh Georgetown vandalism to a minimum. A 6 · fallure to yield the right of way.
touches on their costumes for a business district and residential p.m.-to-6 a.m. curfew has been In
night of Halloween fun and frolic neighborhood, the usual party effect since Sunday for unesTuesday while 'others Intend to spot .each year. About 75,000 corted youths under 18. By early
avoid the ghoulish pitfalls of the people turned out for last year's . Monday, there were 136 arrests
season by keeping their children celebration, when pollee closed for curfew violations, compared
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
off the streets.
offGeorgetown's main roads for with 182 Sunday night In 1988.
Commerce Department reported
Hospitals across the countr~ a parade of wacky costumes al\d
Tuesday that Its gauge of future
Broadcast reports said there
and two prisons In Indiana spectators.
economic activity rose 0.2 per·
had been a rash of about a dozen
offered their X·ray facilities to
Police olf!clals said the restrlc· fires, especially on Detroit's
cent In September, the second
ensure that no Halloween was !Ions came after years of efforts lower east side. One Involved a
consecijtive monthly Increase
ruined by tainted candy.
to cope with a large and often fire In an abandoned house that
and a sign that the l'COnomy Is not
In New York City's Greenwich rowdy crowd as well as public spread to an occupied dwellbtg.
heading for a re~esslon.
.VIllage, Halloween has become , drbtklng.
The modest jump In the Index
Kids had an early start on
an annual all-night street party
VIce E'resldent Dari Quayle and Halloween In Carson City, Nev.,
of Leading Indicators, 'Intended
for adults. If last year was any hls family plan to welcome where the celebrating took place to predict economic perfor·
Indication, Tuesday night's wild neighborhood children trlck·or· Monday to avoid conflict with the
mance six to n tne months In
bash should draw· some 250,000 treating at the U.S. Naval Obser- state's 125th birthday celebra·
advance, foUows a healthy gain
marchers and spectators. The vatory In Washington, where his lion Tuesday.
of 0.5 percent In August. A surge
"save the rain forests" theme family now resides. The Secret
In consumer confidence was the
this year will Include what Service Intends to search every
A divorced couple from L!vo, primary reason for the Sep·
organizers call a "moving rain ·visitor, no matter how small, and
nla, Mich., planned to walk the tember Increase, helping to
forest pageant."
magnetometers were specially aisle a second time on Hallooffset dec!btes In seven of the 11
Wicked witches and goblins Installed for the event.
ween, with bride Pam DeAngela economic Indicators that make
searching lor an olf!clal celebra·
In Detroit, about 30,000 pollee,
carrying her flowers In a plastic up the Index.
t!on In Washington, D.C., were firefighters , city employees and
orange pumpkin. DeAngela, 44;
Consumers have been a bright
out of luck this Halloween: City civilian volunteers teamed up In and Richard Kauranen, 45, said spot for the economy this year,
they picked Tuesday as the date dl'lvlng It on durtn.g the summer
for the second wedding alter 14 months with purchases, espeyears of divorce because ''It's cially of automobiles, when
scary to re-marry your ex· manY. analysts had expected an
spouse. ''
economic slowdown.
In Philadelphia, Halloween
But economists expect consu·
partlers at one costume shop mer spending to wane In coming
Middleport Pollee are Investigating the theft of a sliver gray
passed over Batman and Joker months, leading to slower
1976 Oldsmobile owned by Brian Well, Middleport. Pollee
disguises and opted for classics , growth, and Tul'sday's report
reported that the vehicle was taken from the Well driveway on
like Marc Antony and Cleopatra.
appeared to support that expec·
South Third St. sometime between 2:30 and 6 a.m. today
There also were requests to tatloti. The sharpest decline In
(Tuesday I.
Impersonate recent any of the 11 Indicators was In
Dl'wsmakers.
nl'w manufacturing orders for
"We've bad a few couples consumer ~roods and materials.
coming In wanting a Zsa Zsa
"Growth Is likely to be a little
Gabor look, and the guy as a
slow the Dl'Xt couple of quarters,
Thl'lt of the Ohio Valley Plumbing maintenance van
poUce officer," said John Weln·
bu I after that there II reason for
overnight Monday Is under Investigation by the Pomeroy Pollee
stein, the owner of Costumes by
optimism that the economy will
Department. . .
·
Pierre In Phlllldelphta.
piCk up," said Michael Penzer, a
.The theft was reported to pollee all: 49 a.m. Monday and at 11
seniOr
economlat with Bank of
"We can't rent an authentic·
a.m. Tuesday the maroon Chevrolet had not been recovered. It
America In San Fraaclaco.
looking pollee officer outfit reportedly was locked wben It was taken from In .front of the
that's lmpersonatlq an oflk:er
The COI!IeCIIdve Increases In
East Second St., Pomeroy business. ·
thl' Index followecla bad stretch
- but we can get close enouah
Continued on page 10
l'arller Ia theyearwh~ the Index
with a security guard look that
they get the Idea," he said.
declined four out of five months

No one was Injured In an
accident at 4:30p.m. Monday In
Salem Township on SR. 124, 5.2
miles east of the Jackson County
line.
Troopers said a 1984 Ford
Ranger driven by Johnny V.
McGuire, 43, Langsville, pulled
onto the highway In front or a 1974
Kenworth tractor-trailer driven
by Russell E . Boggs, 36, Rt. 3,
Oak Hill. There was moderate
damage to the Ranger: minor
damage to the tractor·traller.
The patrol cited McGuire for
failure to yield the right of way.
Nell C. Morgan,17, Cincinnati,
Ohio, was cited for failure to
maintain control after an ace!·

dent at 7: 47 p.m. Monday on SR.
124, 5.2 miles. west of the VInton
County line.
Troopers said Morgan, headed
west lost control and his 1982
Toyota Corolla went ofl the road,
striking some railroad tracks.
Damage was moderate to the
vehiCle. No one was Injured .
The patrol also Investigated an
accident at 8:30p.m. Monday on .
SR. 7, 2.1 miles north of the
Gallla-Melgs County line. Troopers said a deer was k!lled when
lty ran In front of a 1988 GMC
pickup truck driven by Britt
Wooten, 42, Springfield. Damage
was moderate. No one was
Injured.

Leading indicators up 0.2 percent

Enter From Second Street

You can now condu.ct the following business at our new facility which features. an indoor lobby
and 14 parking spaces:

•

•open of accounts
•Merchant transactions
•Loan applications
•utility payments
•Money orders and cashier checks
•purchase.and red•mption of Certificates of Deposit

•

'

LOBBY and AUTOTELLER HOURS:

·Mon.·Thurs.-8 am-5 pm
. Friday-8 am-6 pm
Saturday-S am-12 noon

BANKEONE.

..

Eighteen ~nd People WilD Care.
BANK ONE. ATHENS, NAIA ,AliT M THIE CAlliNG TIA.
Alll0111, Ohio

Meml&gt;et FDIC

.

-local news briefs--

!'r.
"'~ '·

..

Middleport police probe theft

'.

'

•

'

,...

..

Maintenance van reported stolen

from February to June, lnclud· mer goods and materials, were a
lng a sharp 1.1 percent drop In declbte In unfilled manufacter·
May, raising the specter of a ers orders, a drop In orders for
recession. As a result, the Index plant and equipment, faster
fell 0.1 percent overall during the .deliveries by vendors, higher
first nbte months of the year, average weekly Initial claims for
compared with a 3.8 percent state U'!employment Insurance·
Increase during thl' saml!'perlod and lower sensitive materials
·
In 1988.
prices.
In addition to consumer confl·
dence, the three Indicators that
In addition, tlie department
pushed up the September Index said that the Index of cobtcldent
were a larger money supply, a indicators, Intended to track
longer average workweek and current economic conditions,
high stock prices.
was unchanged In September
On the downside. the six after climbing a sharp 1 percent
negative Indicators besides a In August.
decline In new orders for consu·

Bad mushrooms alert issued
The Meigs County Health De·
partment wants to alert area
residents of a recent Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) an·
119uncement regarding canned
and bottled mushrooms from the
Peoples Republic of China
(PRC). ,
FDA has announced that all
mushrooms shipped from China
In any size can, glass jar or other
container, Including brlned
mushrooms In bulk containers,
will be automatically detained at
U.S. ports due to reoccurring
finds of staphylococcal enterotoxin contamination.
Thl' action represents a major
expansion of the May deten tlon of
lnstltutlonal·slze No. 10 cans.
FDA now has Identified staphy·
lococcal enterotoxin In 5.5,16 and
68ounc:e ldralnedwel&amp;ht) C8111of
either whole mushrooms or pieces and stenis prodllced by 10

plants In Cblna .
The foUowlng plant identifying
code numbers appear In the can
codes from the various plants
where contamination Is known to
have occurred : TM, T3, T17. M2,
B2, L1 and Ql3!nNo. 10cans. The
16-ounce cans bear a T1 or Tl7
code. FDA also has confirmed
the findings of a private laboratory of the presence ofthe toxin In ·
No.10cans with an R12 can code.
The agl'ncy has confirmed find·
lngs from the Canadian public
health authorities of the toxlri's
presence In 5.5 ounce cans with a
I '
Q1 can code.
All mushroom products from
the plants lndenllfted have been
or are being recalled. Anyonl'havlng cans of mushrooms bear·
lng these can code destanatlons
should cease use at o!ICI! and
return the product to where It
was purchased.
"

-

-

-- --·-·--

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