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                  <text>10-llw o.ly SI tti11el
r - -.

'

'

Meigs County Eme111ency Medical Services answered eight
calls for assistance on Monday.
At$: 19 a.m., Pomeroy went to Seneca Drive lor Ida Clark who
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy was called at 8: 52 a.m. to Rose Hill lor Bernice
Evans who was dead on arrival. At 9:16a.m., Pomeroy" was
called to Mulberry Hellhts for Edna Cooper, dead on arrival.
At 3:21 p.m., Syracuse went to Bridgeman St. for .Jane
Teaford to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy was called at 3:40 p.m. to Indian Run for Walter
Barber who was taken to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital,
Parkersburg, W.Va.
.
At 6:44p.m., Pomeroy was called to the Country Mobile Home
Park for Della Mohler who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Tuppers Plains was called at 7:08p.m. to State Route 681 lor
Franklin Kidwell who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 8:21 p.m., Syracuse was called to Minersville for Debbie
Utchtleld to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Area
Deaths
Bemire Evans
Bernice Mae Arnold Evans, 84,
Pomeroy, died unexpectedly on
Monday at her residence.
Born July 30, 1~ In Pomeroy,
she was the daughter of the late
Edgar Nelson and Effie Louella
Flnlaw Arnold. She was a graduate of Pomeroy High School. She
was a school teacher and homemaker, attended the Enterprise
United Methodist Church and
was a charter member of the
United Methodist Women.
She Is survived by four daughters and sons-In-law, Jeannine
and John Cunningham, Gallipolis, with whom she resided tor a
number of years; Carol ·and
PbllipOhllnger, Pomeroy; Fran- ·
ces and Donald Hunnel, Pomeroy; Jennifer and Charles Warth.
Pomeroy; two sons and
daughters-In-law, Michael and
Sharlee Evans, Portland; and
Arnold and Margaret Evans,
Palmerston N., New Zealand; a
daughter, Andrea Ownes, Marshall, Mich.; a son, Terry Evans,
Harrisonville; · two brothers,
Rev. Walter Arnold, Holliday,
Fla.; and Samuel Arnold, Syra;
cuse; three sisters. Virginia
Blazewlcz. Pomeroy; Madge
Smith, Holliday, Fla.; and Nancy
Clark, Cleves; 19 grandchildren,
. iO great grandchildren, and
several nieces and nephews.
Preceding Mrs. Evans In death
were her husband, Arthur James
Evans In 1970, a son. James
Arthur Evans, and three broih!~
Ralph, and Epgar

•.iarl,

Services will be Wednesday at
1 p.m. at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Katherine
RIIIIY officiating. Burial will be In
l)le Rock Springs, Cemetery.
Friends may call on Tuesd;~y
. from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to the United
Methodist Cooperative Parish
Food Pantry, 311 Condor St.,
Pomeroy.

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. IOCBAEL B. CARUSLB. DDS OIEDRAJ. D&amp;lma11lT

'

WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
long deadlock on proposals to
raise the federal minimum wage
hils ended with agreement between President Bush and Democrats in Congress on a compromise plan to boost the wage to $4.25
by April, 1991.
.\
The House tentatively scheduled a vote Wednesday on the
plan that would boost the current
$3.35 wage in two Installments.
Democratic leaders hailed the
agreement
as a victory, but they ·
, I
appeared to have yielded to Bush
on several key points.
Labor Secretary Elizabeth
. '· .
Dole went to Capitol Hill to
announce the administration's
acceptance of the plan. ''I'm
"
delighted that we do have an
agreement," she said.
In a statement released at the
White House, Bush said the
package "gives relief to those
TOBOGGAN LADY -Blanche Serasg, rlgbt, a . the Communily 'Action Agllncy lo give to neecty
with the greatest need in our
children. Accepting the toboggans for the agency
realdent at Overbrook Center In Middleport,
work force while at the sa'me
is Sid Edwards, director.
keeps herself busy In her spare time making these
time protects job opportunities
wonderful, warm toboggans which she donated to
for young workers."
.
l
The plan includes a low~r
training wage ftlr new workers
age 16 to· 19, but the provision
I
woukl be eliminated In 1993.
Bush vetoed an earlier bill
because it would have raised the
minimum wage by 30 cents more
titan lhe $4..25 he In sis ted on, and
did not include his proposal for a
..UX-montll .trai~ Wa.p for new
... MANAGUA, Nicaragua ~ l/Pil Wednesday, the- day the paot . Buslt b~ DO Immediate ,..etlillt emplo)'ees.
' ' · ''
'
to Ortega's announcement and a
- President Dan.lel Ortega, expired.
Under the new comprom1se
accusing President Bush of
''It seems the United States has Contra leader In Honduras said
plan, the training w;~ge - 85
promoting "criminal terrorism" lost Its head and wan is to add a he would seek aid from
percent of the full minimum
In Nicaragua, said Wednesday he state," Ortega said. "Nicaragua Washington.
wage - could be paid to new
Ortega had stunned Bush and
would go ahead with plans to end is not another state of the United
workers for just three months. It
a 19-month unilateral cease-fire States. We are not slaves of the Latin leaders at a summit In
could be extended for another
with U.S.-backed Contra rebels.
United . States and we don't Costa Rica last week when he
three months if the employer has
"We are nat going to extend the accept the dictates of anyone nor announced his Intention ·not to
a training program in effect.
extend the cease-tire and he
cease-tire, Mr. Bush," Ortega of any po,w er."
The two sides appeared to h;~ve
said · In a broadcast' speech
A White House spokesman said
Continued on page 4
diHerent understandings about
whether the Labor Department
would have to certify such

ta,•••,
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:::::;

Ortega goes ahead .with plans
to .s uspend Contra cease-fire

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'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A ·wide drug plan Involving schools,
bill to the floor In December It It
labor union representative communities and government.
is ready. He said "drastic times"
"While I favor getting parents
raised concerns Tuesday over
In the area of drug control call for
possible random dr.ug tis ting In more Involved, I wonder whether
''drastic measures."
the !workplace l! a bill under we're going to turn our parents
Ralph Eckhardt .of Local 4 of
consideration In the Ohio House into police authorities," said
the American Federation · of
Rep. Wayne Jones, D-Akron, In
becomes law.
State, County and Municipal
At the same time, members of ·questioning the provision that ' Employees expressed concern
a select House committee study- provides jail time for parents
that any stat~wlde drug policy
lng' ways to combat . the drug who knowingly permit their
·'be applied in a fair and uniform
problem warned of potential children to use drugs .
mannet."
trouble with language making
Eckhardt said any drug testing
"There's a lot of work to be
parents legally accountable for done on this bill," said Rep. Otto in the workplace should be
their children's drug abuse.
Beatty Jr., D-Columbus, refer- initiated only upon "probable
The select committee, chaired ring to the "horror stories aiX&gt;ut . cause" to detect a violation, and
by Rep. John Shivers Jr., D- what happened after we enacted should ~ accompanied by
Salem, began hearings, using a law making parents responsi- rehabilitation.
legislation .drafted by House ble for car thefts by their
He said random testing "holds
Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D- children."
· a lot of questions- constitutionWheelersburg.
Shivers said the committee ality, the right of privacy and the
Among other things, Riffe's will soon be dealing with amend: reliability of the test."
bill provides strict penalties for inents, and he urged members to
"We recognize that this is a
drug trafficking. revocation of propose changes. He said at least serious problem and It must be
drivers' licenses in some Instan- three hearings will be held In ·remedied, but the plan cannot
infringe on anyone's constituces, mandatory drug counseling November on the legislation.
lor certain youth, and a state' ·
RlfJe has said he will bring the tional rights," he said.

B

•••wrr·

Thermogrip•

Hearings begin on drug bill

Sfa" Pawtr Wrench

ca_lo, l·httorrtchor" ' ' - 120
lOIII •dlooiiL
IJJI/51211

Quett the MlleiRi Confetti/
WE WILL GIVE AWAY A
HUFFY 10 SPEED BIKE.

Voinovich·proposes to use
rnment
gove
volunteers in state

TO WIN GUESS HOW FAI THE WHEEL WILL TURN
ON THE BilE IN THE STORE WINDOW.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN.

I
announcements

Tlte Lebanon Township Trustees will meel tonight at 7 p.m. at

the township bulldina.
Vall tome«
Big Bend .Girl Scout Service
Utili will meet Thunday, 7 p.m.,
at the Pomeroy Un lied Methodist
Church. All Girl Scout leaders In
Metp County should attend:
Eleel... dtmetl'
The Columbia Township Volunteer Fire Department Auxiliary
"Bucket Brigade" will sei'VI!
food all day Election Day at the
firehouse on State Route 1~3

ORAND

·RE-OPENING

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WEDNESDAY ·

•

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THIU SATURDAY
NOYD11f14
8:00 A.M.-7:00 P;M.

992-5020
. ----

~

MIDDLEPOn, OHIO

WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER 1
'THRU SATURDAY
NOVEMBER 4
8:00 A.M. 7:00 P.M.

'

The savings could go lor live Services Into the governor's
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) education, drug-fighting pro- office.
Saying he wants his administra-Establish an Ohio Youth
grams and economic develoption to be known as the· 'Together
Services
Corps · to mobilize
ment programs, said Votnovlch.
We Can Do It Administration,"
·
nearly
2
million school-age
Republican gubernatorial candiThe Cleveland mayor sal.d he
date George Volnovich Sllld Tuesbelieves the number of govern- youth; seriously consider requlrday he will, It elected, Implement ment employees on the payroll tng a fixed number of hours of
' a six-point plan to use volunteers
also could be reduced, as they community servlee before high
were with a similar progralll in school graduallon.
in' government.
-create a Higher Education
"Government works best when
his city.
Volunteer
Initiative so colleges
"I am absolutely convinced
it reaches out and Involves
and
universities
will help growpeople, utilizing the time, energy
that through public-private partlng
businesses,
local
school disexpertise, talent and commitnership and volunteerlsm, we
trlcts
and
state
government.
ment of our citizens," .said can change the direction of
-Establish "Ohio TomorVolnovich. ''By itself,. ·govern- Ohio," he told reporters.
row,"
a broad·based volunteer
The six-point plan:
ment cannqt effectively solve
committee
of Oblo bllslness and
problems."
-Appoint an Obio Operations
labor
leaders
worklnl to Improve
Volnovlcb conceded the state
Improvement Task Force of
budget, now al
billion, could
business and management ex· state aowr-t and plaa t.r
perts to conduct an Independent Ohio's economic future;
not be ~uced.
-Form a Governor's PubliC
"We're going to get a handle on audit of state government and
it," he said, adding that he . find ways to "cut the fat" and Relations Council consl.sUng of
state officials and private public
expects to keep up with Inflation improve efficiency.
·
relations
professionals who will
by shllvlng 10 . percent from
-ReOrganize the Ohio Office of
develop
an
effective marketing
operational costs, so taxes would Volunteerlsm and move It !rom
stratety
for
Ohio.
not have to be Increased.
the Department of Admlnlstra·

s:n

· -.
I

1989

Minimum wag~ going
up ·to $4.25 by 1991

Me~

Meed•l &amp;Hrpt

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday. November 1,

2 Sections, 12 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. NewiJ)aper

j

2924 JACKSON AVENUE .

REGISTER FOR OYER 50 DOOR
PRIZES. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
'
NEED NOT IE PRESENT TO WIN.
PRIZES INCLUDE •••
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Cloudy, low tonight In m ld
30•. Thursday, cloudy. Hlp In
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percent.

~

lEG 5399.00

SLEEP SOFAS

.Veleraas HospHal
The civil trial set for WednesMonday admissions
Della
day
morning In the Meigs Com.
Mohler, Shade.
mon
Pleas Court will not be held.
Monday discharges
Fred
Jurors
need not report.
Sayre.

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Trial Wednesday

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Ohio Lottery

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'

Edna Cooper
Edna H. Cooper, 96, Pomeroy,
died unexpectedly on Sunday at
her residence.
Born Sept. 26, 1893 In Meigs
County, she was the daughter of
the late William S. and Blanche
Tewksbary Hart. She was a 1910
graduate of Pomeroy High
SchOOl, a homemaker, and a
n:tember of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
She Is survived by a daughter,
Eloise C. White, Columbus; a son
and daughter-in-law, William G.
and Phyllis Cooper, Morehead
Cliy, N.C.; a brother, Lester
Hart, Pomeroy; three grandchildren, Barbara White, Colul}l• bus; J. Michael Cooper, Broadview Hts.; and William R.
Cooper, Southbury, Conn.; a
niece, Jackie Menchlne, Millwood, W.Va.; a cousin, Murl
Wood, Pomeroy; and three great
grandchildren.
Mrs. Cooper was preceded In
death by her husband, Homer.E.
.Cooper, and two sisters, Elsie
Hart and Audrey Maag.
Graveside services will be held
Wednesd~y at 3: 30 p.m. at the
Beech Grove Cemetery with the
Rev. Don Meadows officiating.
Arrangements are being
handled by the Ewing Funeral
Home.
In lieu of flowers donations
may be made to the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.

•Jumbo
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Am Electric Power .. ,.......... 30'jk
AT&amp;T ................................. 43'jk
Ashland 011 ......................... 36
Bob Evans .......................... 13%
Cha~g Shoppes .............. 12% ·
City Holding Co .................. 15%
Federal Mogul.. .................. 21%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... :............43li
Heck's .:............................... 6~
Key Centurion ....................15%
Lands' End .......................... 27
Limited Inc ........... .............35~
Multimedia Inc .................... 95
Rax Restaurants ...... ........ ......2
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... ........... 14
Shoney's Inc . ........ .............. 11%
St;~r Bank ............... :........... 22)7
Wendy's Inti......... ..... : ...........5
Worthington Ind .. .. .............. 23~

Hospital news

GREAT GIFT IDEAS

•

Dally stock prices
(As oflt:3t Lm.)
Bryce ud MU'k Smllh
of Bluat, Ellll 6 Loewl

Squads have eight Monday calls

I

--

Local news briefs... - - , Stocks
Continued from page 1

·~

'

'&gt;

JOE MCClANAHAN

Speaker
named for
banquet
Joe McClanahan, retired HockIng County extension agent, will
be the speaker at the annual
banquet of the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District's
annual meeting and banquet to
be held on Nov. 14.at 7:21p.m. at
Southern High School.
McClanahan and his wife,
Judy, live on a farm and raise
sheep and truck crops.
Tickets for the annual meeting
and banquet are $7 each and may
be purchased from SWCD supervisors Tom Theiss, Alan Holter,
Ron Eastman, Rodney Chevaller, and David Gloeckner.
Tickets may also be purchased
from the SWCD office.
During the annual meeting,
Gne supervisor will be electe4 for
a three year ll!rm on tile board.
Calldidatft are David Gloeclmer

81111 O.v .. ~.

Tlte outsta•dtng farm family
and Goodyear Farmer will be
recognized during the evening as
well as the 1989 Affiliate
Members.
De,a dllpe · for . purchasing
tickets to the banquet Is Monday.

•

training programs, but Dole said
that was something "we will
work out with the Congress."
The federal minimum wage.
currently $3.35, has not been
Increased since ·1981. Under the
new bill it would rise by 45 cents
next April and another 45 cents
the following year.
Senate Democratic leader
George Mitchell of Maine called
.the plan "a victory for working
Americans, those at the bottom
of the economic scale who need a
boost and who need It .as ,soon as
possl ble.".
·
He said the compromise eliminates "any unreasonable, extended subminimum wage structure." It applies only to
teenagers and lasts just 90 days
. "unless an employer is able tq
provide a certified, bonifide
training program for an additional 90 days."
House Speaker Thomas Foley,
D-Wash.. agreed It was " a
victory'' and was "one of the
principle Items" on the Democrats' agenda for this Congress.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, DMass., said both sides had
compromised, but the bill is less

~

•

tha:n what he wanted or "the
working poor desired."
The "stalemate on the minImum wage is finally over. May
we do everything within our
power to ensure these workers
never have to wait that long
again," said Kennedy, chairman
of the Senate Labor and Human
Resources Committee.
Rep. Augustus Hawkins, DCalif., chairman of the House
committee, said he supports the
compromise, but said It was "not
a dramatic breakthrough" because the wage should have been
Increased over the years to $5.05.
Hawkins Indicated he still opposes the training wage.
AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland said the union "welcomes
the long overdue agreement on
minimum wage. It will benefit
·America's lowest·paid wo~kers
who badly need and richly
destrve this small wage
increase."
Kirkland said the training
wage plan "contains adequatt:
safeguards so the youth are not
exploited and older workers are
not displaced."

Senate passes

judgeship ·bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio . (UP!) The Ohio Senate passed legislation Tuesday adding state· appeals court judgeships In Toledo,
Cleveland and Trumbull County,
and returned It to the flouse for
concurrence in amendments. ·
The judgeship bill was one of
seven acted upon by the senators
during a one-day Halloween
session.
Two of the bills, revising
Medicaid eligibility and juvenile
sentencing to prison, were re·
qulred by the federal government at the end of this year to
avoid a loss in federal funds .
The Senate adopted, 29-2, and
forwarded to Gov. Richard Ce·
leste a bill requiring gas stations
to offer fu\1 service at sell-serve
prices to handicapped motorists.
The judgeship bill adds thre~
judges in the 8th District Court of
Appeals, with headquarters In
Cleveland, and one apiece In the
11th District (Trumbull County)
court and 6th District (Lucas
County) court.
Before passing the bill, senators eliminated an extra domestic relations ' court judge for
Summit County and added two
common pleas court judgeships
for Montgomery County. The
House will be asked to support
those changes, probably at an
early December session .
The blll also attempts to create
an objective standard for determining which court districts
need additional judges.
Some senators privately com-

plained the current system is
little more than a "pork barrel,"
with judgeships being added
haphazardlY for communities
with political clout.

Utilities told .
to use 'least
.
cost ' optt.ons
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio adopted rules Tuesday
requiring electric utility compan.ies to show they are pursuing
~he "least cost" options when
planning for future load growth.
The new rules require a method of planning for the deployment of electricity resources in
wh lch conventional generation
options. such as new power
plants, are evaluated alongside
other options, such as cogeneration, conservation, or
ioad- re~uction programs.
Electric companies in Ohio
now wiU have to provide the
PUCO with new plahs. and at
least every five years, those
plans will be subject to hearings
and review.
"They (new rules) will provide
a forum for ail parties to discuss
the costs and benefits of various
ways of meeting Ohio's energy
needs, " said Jolynn Barry
Butler, chairman of the PUCO.

.---Local news briefs---.
No one hurt in Meigs wreck
The Meigs-Gallla' Post, State Highway Patrol investigated a
one·car accident at 12:15 p.m. Tuesday on CR. 5, 0.7 of a mile
west of SR. 7. No one was injured.
The patrol said Rex D. Vance, 35, Rutland, lost control of h.ls
1986 Z-28 on a curve. The vehicle went off the road, striking a
utility pole. Damage was minor to the car. There was no
citation.

Lawmen recover &amp;tolen van
A 19~ Dodge van stolen Tuesday morning from the
V;~Uey Plumbing Company; Second St., Pomeroy,

Ohio
·was
recovered Tueeday night on Hooker St.ln Middleport. Seraeut
Bill Browninl of lilt Mftldlaport Pulice Departme•t diiiCII•~
the vehicle, IICCOI'dlng to Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby.
__ Nick Leonard, owner of the vehicle, has reported· to
authorities that the only thing missing from the vehicle Is the
keys.
Investigation Is continuing Into a two-car accident which
Conttnu,ed on page 4

'v'

�•

.

Commentary
,/;(he Daily S_entinel

\

\

,.

· Sytrunes Valley first SVAC
iearn· to make Ohio playoffs

Page-2-The Deity Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednlllday, November 1, 1989

WASHINGTON- A Washing·
tpn, D.C., police detective wheels
tl)rough the ·ghetto with an,
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
Informant in the back seat of the
car, sipping from a can of Schlitz
Malt Liquor. Tpe passenger
slumps low In the seat. He. can't
afford to be seen with a cop In this
ROBERT L. WINGETI'
neiibborhood, even in an unPublisher
marked car.
They pull into a parking lot and
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
the detective quizzes the lnfor·
General Manacer
Aulollut Publlaher/ConlroUer
mant about top-level drug dealers In Washington. The answers
A MEMBER o) Tile A._,ta'e&lt;l Press, Inland Dally Press ASIOare mumbled. Our associate Jim
dMina ud llle American Newspaper Publishers Alsoclalloo.
Lynch Is in the car, and the
LETTEIUI OF OPINlON are welcome. They should be lesslhan SOO
Informant Is cagey.
...,. IHc. AU tellers are subject to edltln1 and moo&amp; be slped wllh
The man is fresh out of the
- · • aad te\ephooe number. No uaolpled leltero wll be puh·
Lorton
Correctional Complex, a
111..... Leiters lllould be In 1ood taste, addres&amp;lnl looueo, not penonall·
graduate school for Washington's drug merchants. They may
go in with the equivalent of a high
school education in crime, but
they come out with a Ph.D.
The Informant brightens when
asked to describe life at Lorton,
located in a northern Virginia
suburb of Washington. It sound
much like life o!the streets ofthe
By STEVE GERSTEL
nation's capital. " You can get
WASHINGTON (UP I)- Fora very long time, presidents, Irritated
and irked l&gt;Y Congress, have longed for the line item veto, the chance • everything In there you can get
out here," he says. "Guys smoke
to pick and choose what Is best for the nation.
Nothing has happened. Constitutional amendments have been
crack right there In their bunks.
proposed, statutes suggested and arguments on both sides repeated
.. . I walked into the bathroom
without even the hint of any serious action.
• This Inactivity is not suprlsing, considering that Congress, equally
jealous of its powers, must approve either a constitutional
amendplent or a law -which It has no intention of doing. .
Now comes President Bush, mulling .over the possibility of court
test to see If maybe he already does have the power of the line item
veto.
Bush Is looking fo~ some bill, certainly one that is not pressing, as a
test of piecemeal veto - accepting parts and rejecting others - to
determine If the courts find this constitutional.
If Bush succeeds, Rep. Neal Smith, D-lowa, third-ranking member
of the House Appropriations Committee, said it "would be ihe biggest
shift in power from the legislative branch to the executive branch In
200 years."
"It's the Soviet method of negotiations -1 get allhvant and then I
go back and try to get the rest of it," Smith said.
The demand for the line Item veto Is prompted by Congress's habit
of attaching riders to "must" bills, putting the president in a no-win
situation of having to swallow what he does not want or refusing t9
accept what he does.
An e)lcellent example or this awkward situation is the $157 billion
money bill for the departments of Health and Human Services,
Education and Labor. It is the second largest appropriation bill of the
session.
The bill contained much that Bush wanted - money to fight drugs
and the AIDS epidemic, funds to better education and much, much
more.
•
But the appropriations bill Included a provision that would allow
federally financed abortions for poor women in cases of rape and
incest.
This was a broadening of the anti-abortion ban that for the p_ast 10
y@81'S exempted from the ban only pregnancies in ca~s where the life
ot the mother is endangered.
It was on this point- the new abortion language- that Bush killed
the whole bill.
I! Bush had the power of line item veto, he could have have rejected
just the abortion language, sending it to Congress for an override
.- attempt, and signed the rest of the bill.
-- This would be the best of all worlds for a president - which Is
exactly why the thought of a court test Is appealing to Bush.
But the line item veto would, at the same time, turn Congress Into a
puppet of the executive branch.
In effect, the concept of majority rule would be weakened,
supplanted by the need to muster a two-thirds vote to enact any part of
any bill objectionable to a president
So far. there has been little outcry on the part Congress and those
• who have chosen to comment have expressed little concern.
SALT LAKE CITY (NEA) ''The Constitution's rather clear,'·' Smith said. "It doesn't refer to
The story begins in Washington,
. parts of the act - it refers to bills. I don't think there is a possibility
D.C ., in late August 1984.
they could prevail on that."
Members of Congress are espeAnd Senate Democratic leader George Mitchell said, "I am under
cially eager to adjourn because
the impression the president does not now have a line Item veto. If he
mote than 80 percent of them are
does, a lot of time and effort has been wasted for years (by the Wl)ite
House) to try and get one."
.
· ' 1 seeking re-election In less than
three mopths.
A batch of paperwork arrives
on Capitol Hill from the Defense
Department, seektns routine authorization for ~: reprogram­
ming" of S66 ·mUlion In military
construction funds - shl!tlng the
money from initially designated
The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 8 general
projects to newly selected
election. However, in the Interest of fairness, no election letters will
programs.
.
· be accepted after 12 noon on Wednesday, Nov. 1.
Specifically, the Pentagon
Individuals should address issues and not personalities.
wants to buUd additional troop
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used .
housing In Europe, a heated
Letters should be 300words or tess. AU letters are subject to editing
parking garage at 'o ne base In
and mus.t be signed with name, address and telephone number. No
upstate New York, a new physiunsigned letters will be published. Letters should be -in good taste.
cal fitness center at another base·
in rural Pennsylvania and an
"Aerosol Toxin Test Facility" In
Utah.
What was that last item? Sen.
James R. Sasser, D·Tenn., one of
four legislators whose authorization is required for the reprogramming, has approved the

....

·A new version
of governing

....

once and saw a guy shooting up."
For the detective, the litany Is
a painful rel'un of what narcotics
officers all over the country are
seelhg:· They w9rk long nights,
wearing bulletproof vests, compiling the elusive evidence
needed to get criminals off the
street and into prison. But this
detective has stopped expecting
places like Lorton to scare them
straight. "I think even if some-one went there wanting to , reform, they couldn't," he says.
It's easy to find your drug of
choice In Lorton, says the Informant. You just have to pay more.
Inmates will trade five packs of
cigarettes for half a joint marl·
juana. He claims some of those
drugs are smuggled in by guards,
for a price. It happens in the D.C.
city jail, too, he says. One
Christmas about 20 of the 80 jail
inmates in his dorm celebrated
by getting high on marijuana, the
informant says. He swears the
pot was supplied by a guard.
The contraband in Lorton is
well-hidden when guards come
around for shakedowns. A streetwise Inmate is never surprised
by unannounced inspections. The

-.·

t -·

lack Anderson -and Dale VanAtta
I

going rate to pay ·a guard for
advance notice Is $50, which buys
inmates time to stash their
goods, including guns and prisonmade blades, according tc the
Informant.
"
A spokeswoman for both the .
D.C. jail and Lorton woul~n· t talk
to. us about the allegations. She
would only say, "The correctional system Is a microcosm of
the community at large and is
affected by the same problems.'.'. ·
Except that taxpayers don't
expect prison to be a · "microcosm." They expect it to be a
place Where people are punished
and reformed; not an expensive
finishing school for drug dealers.
The Informant explains that
_heads of drug gangs often con·
tlnue running their businesses
from inside Lorton. They call
from prison pay phones and talk
in a street code. Those outside
contacts can be intimidating to .
guards. From behind bars, an
inmate can threaten guards with
what his friends on the outside
can do.

It's against the rules in Lorton
to have money or valuables, but
those whO are used to strutting
their status on the outside find
ways to do It on thelnsldetoo. The
Informant talks about a Lort.on
Inmate who wears a gold neck·
lace and always sports a new pair
of high-top sneakers.
In Lorton, a "lockdown" Is .
punishment - two weeks In
solitary confinement. But the
Informant laughs II off., Even In
lockdown, an inmate ·can get
drugs. ·
The detective calls Lorton "out
of control." Why does he still
work so hard to send people
there? "You just can't sit and do
'nothing," he shrugs.
He · pulls his car to a dark
stretch of road and tells the
Informant to keep his "nose

-Sports briefs-

.

Berry's World

((.rJJUQ

Scott D. Wolfe

SOUTHERN LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCAnON

Scoreboard ...

P1U.-II(hat Dtnwr,4 p.m.
0&amp;1 ... at W•III•Kt•., II p.m.

. ,. . . . . . . II'IC.

"Do you , _ somBth/ng otlw than a d/I'JK(t
flight ...,.. 10 I can get off tha p/antl to
SMOKE?"

.

-~

•

- ......__

· -~-~

. .

Mln~noea

•

••

•

•

Pentagon submission but now is
having second thoughts.
Eventually, Sasser temporarIly thwarted construction of a
highly secure laboratory specially deslgnM to conduct sophisticated experiments with lethal
biological warfare agents. It
Initially was to be buUtat a cost of
$1.4 million at the Army's Dugway Proving Grounds, 70 miles
southwest of Salt Lake City:
. At the beginning of 1988,
however, the Defense Depart·
ment revived the plan, raised the
cost to $5.4 million and insisted
that no public health or safety
problems would be posed by its
tests of anthrax, tularemia, Q
fever, encephalitis and other
deadly pathogens.
In earlier years, Utah residents probably would have offered little or no resistance to the
expansion of Dugway, where the
Pentagon has be~n testing chemical and biological warfare
agents since the middle of World
War II.
_
Other Western states - nota-

bly New Mexico, Washington,
Idaho, Nevada and Colorado for years offered little or no
objection to the Defense Department's development, production
and testing of nuclear weapons
within their borders.
Last year, Utah did something
tnily extraordinary: It said no to
the Pentagon's plans for expanded CBW testing. Sen. Qrrin
G. Hatch, a conservative Republican, not only opposed. the
planned laboratory but . also
accused the Army of "reckless
endangerment.''
Republican Gov. Norman H.
Bangerter publicly expressed
the concern that the new facility
could be used for testing of
genetically altered organisms
for which no neutralizing vaccine
in available.
In a single day, more than 50
biologists and 'p hysicians on the
faculty of .the University of Utah
· signed a petition critical of the
Army's plans as scientifically
tuttle and milltartlyprovocative.
Organizations ranging from the
Utah Medical Association to the

Robert Walters
Utah Wildlife Federation opposed the project.
Salt Lake City television station KSL broadcast an editorial
urging the state government to
"officially and actlviely oppose"
the project. The Deseret News
one of the city's ·two daily
newspapers, also opposed the
laboratory. construction until
nagging questions abOut safety
were resolved.
There were outsiders who were
vocal opponents of the project,
notably Jeremy Rifkin, president of the Foundation on Economic Trends In Washington,
D.C .. who has been especially
concerned about the ethical and
safety problems posed by genetic
engineering.
But it was local opposition- a
dramatically changed attitude in
a state that had long given the
military carte blanche - that
forced abandonment of 'the
project.

Prime Minister Toshlkl Kai!ua
and other Japanese officials. Her
message became one about seekIng cooperation, ·not confrontation; with Japan to deal with our
$50 billion annual tra,de deficit.
Hills got off on the wrong foot In
her Initial meeting when she
raised the touchy subject of rice
imports. Rice - the staple of the
Japanese diet - Is l!xpens lve In
Japan because the supply Is
rigidly controlled by the coun·
try's politically powerful
farmers. The United States has
long argued that Japanese
markets should be opened to rice
Imports, but the · government
does not even want to discuss the
subject for fear of an ensuing
political crisis.
Kaifu's ruling party, which has
been playing musical prime
ministers over the last six
months, thou~ht It had made a

Robert Wagman

deal with Wasnlngton in which
the S\lbject would not even be
mentioned until after next year's
critical elections. Thus the Japanese were angered when the
subject came up and made course, that Hills' example was
headlines during the first day of not valid. The objection had been
raised initially, they Said, . but It
Hills' visit.
Then there was the baby bottle was decided '!hat consumers
could tell the difference between
incident.
.
liters and ounces and the bottles
During a speech, Hills complained about the host of petty were ultimately allowed.
Not so, shot back the U.S.
regulations that · often keep
Embassy.
U,S. baby bottles are
American consumer goods off
banned. So MIT! directed repor·
th~ shelves of Japanese stores.
ters to the largest supermarket
Asked by reporters to give an
chain
in Japan where dualexample, •she said that a U.S.
marked
baby bottles made In the
baby bottle· can be kept off the
United
States
by Gerber are on
market In Japan by MITI "bethe
shelves
and have been
cause It has measurements in
~!nee 1975.
both metric and English sysAfter the incident, Hills
tems." Japan is a metric
seemed
to soften her approach.
country.
Mm officials immediately She said she had not come to ·
explained, very politely of make specific demands.

- AftetOUIIC~· Mil pkk up
opUon on cenlnltl of oudii!Yfor Brliln
Downln«·

The hunting seasons for cottontail rabbits, pheasants, chukars
' (rock partridges) and bobwhites
1989 .F OOTBALL TOURNAMENT
will open Friday, according to
the Ohio Department of Natural
~ WHALEY'S DOLPHINS
Resources.
'
The hunting season for cotton.tails w111 remain open until Jan.
ll / 1 6:00
31, 1990, but the seasons for
pheasants, chukars and bobwhiles
will end on Jan. 1. 1990 .
MURRAY
CITY
•
Only two chukars per day may
be taken, while there are no
,.
longer
possession limits for rab·
11/5 2:00
HEIILOCl PIPELINE
bits, pheasants and quail. How BROWNS
ever, only male pheasants can be
CHAIIPIONSHIP GAllE
shot.
Locally, quail hunting is open
ll/1 7:30
in Athens, Gallla, Jackson, Lawll/7 7:30
rence and Meigs Counites.
GLOUSTER LIONS
For more information on game
laws, contact game protector
CONSOLATIONG AilE
THIRD PLACE FIIST PLACE
Terry Hawk in· Galli a County at
1/7 6:00
446-1967 or Keith Wood In Meigs
PAT HILL FORD
County
at 985-4400.
MUSTANGS

I

.

SECOND PLACE

ll/2 7:30

GtDUSER
BLUE CATS

'

PLEASEI'S EAGLES

'

11/2 6:00

.

Tile Big Bend Midget Footb.ail League will be sponsoring its
third annual midget league touranment. The games will be
played at the Southern High School field. Games will begin November lsi with the championship game to be held on Novem·
ber 7th .. The public is invited to attend!

POSTMASTER: send addre~~ change;
to The Dally Sentinel, Ul Court St.,
Pornt!I'Gl', Ohio &lt;15769.

•r

111J118CBTPTION BATI!I
Corn« or MaO• _..,

-- --

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA

16 .INCH DELUXE PIZZA

,11

4-PEPSI'S, 16 OZ.

$999

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one Week................................... $UO
One Month ................................. $6.10
one Year .............................. ,., $72.80
I
81NGLB COPY
I'IIICB
Dally .................... ............... 25 Cento

=

Subocrlbera not dOIIrlnl topsy thecarrter
remit In advance dlrect to
The
&amp;e.tlatl on 1 3,1or l2month
baltl. Credit wm be llvl!ll carrier e~~ch

--

No llllllcrlpt- 11y molt pom~lltod In
areu wbere borne curl• III"'Vk'e II
avaDatrle.

-IIIIYIIY AIU

Domino's
Pizza
..J.J1J4
WIST IWII

, I

(USPSft~)

A 01~ •lon ol Multimedia, IDe.•

Member: t.Jnlted Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and tlleOhlo Newspaper AS&amp;oclatlon. Natlortal
Advertlstne Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue.
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'

UIII1ID

The Dally Sentinel
Published every afternoon, Monday
throueh Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
Ushln(l: Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 157QI, Ph. 992·2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy.
Ohio.

'

11/5 3:30

,,

'

Hunting seasons
begin Friday

C~tiHorllla

NATIONAL ROCilEV LEAGUE
'he.IIQI'III """'"
M.oMrul S. Nf IMiandnMt
{.111cqo S. Qlll'tw-1
·

•••

at Chltllll"· nlpt

' '1\tHd_, s:::hoiTN••ct..,•
I

Mtllll10. Nn. l

New OrJeu1111l San FTancl-co, t p.m.

•

Trade rep's trip battles U. ·s. experts
WASHINGTON (NEA)- U.S. ·
Trade Representative Carla
Hills has returned from her first
trip to Japan, and her perfor·
mance there has left experts on
both sides of the Pacific
perplexed.
Initially It seemed that Hilla
would be talking tough- at least
that wa1 the impression she
seemed to give In her first
meeting with Hikaru Maisuaaga,
head of the Ministry of Trade and
Industry, known as MITI. The
local press carried stories saying .
that some Japanete officials
were offended by her nononsense manner and r~d schedule. Stories appeared calllng
her another Margaret Thatcher,
another "Iron Lady."
Then thlnga suddenly changed.
A klnder, 1 gentler Carla Hills
emerged. She seemed almost
conciliatory In ber meetlng5 with

.

••• RE-ELECT •••

Utah finally says .no to the Pentagon

Deadline for publication
of election letters Nov. I

Zimmer.named NL manager of year

Rio Grande to host NAJA
district running competition

clean."

"Yeah, yeah;" the informant
says as he steps out Into the night.
''He's a night person," the
detective says. "If he could find a
night job, he might be able to
keep it."

ln the state fOQtball ranklngs, ' p.m. to face Greg Holbert's
the Norsemen finished fourth in Trl-Valley Conference champion
Division V's Region 19, behind Trimble Tomcats , who are also
Green Local, Trimble and top- unbeaten .
Ed Miller's SOC Division II
ranked Shadyside.
champion Wheelersburg Piln the last 10 ·years, only two
rates, also 10.0, retain something
SVAC teams have come within a
halr's breadth of making the of a home-field advantage when
playoffs - Jack James' 1980 they host the 9-1 Brookvil te Blue
Devils of the Southwestern BuckSoutthwestern co-champion
eye
League Saturday at 7 p.m. at
squad and Jeff Conroy's 1988 Oak
Portst:nouth's
Spartan Stadium.
Hill championship team. Both
The
Pirates
ended
the season on
teams missed the playoffs by
top
in
Division
IV's
Region 16,
only a'few percentage points.
Commerce goH tournament are, left lo riJhl FlNISH SECOND - - Second place learn
while
the
Dayton
area
Blue
Around The Area
York
Ingels, Joe CIIU'k, Kea tJttand Mike Warner.
members of the recent Pomeroy Chamber of
Devils captured fourth in that
However, Symmes Valley isn't
region.
the only area team whose grl·
In the other Division IV playoff
dlron season will continue, as
game, Dave Lucas' Coal Grove
Dan McDavid's Green Local
Hornets 19-1), champions of the
Bobcats, who won the Southern
Ohio Valley Conference, will host
Ohio Conference's Division I title
NEW YORK (UP!) - Don first World Series appearance
players. You know , I didn't get a
unbeaten Bainbridge Paint Val· Zimmer, who led the the Chicago since 1945, lost to the Giants in the
with the school's first-ever perbase hit all year."
ley Saturday at 7:30p.m. at Tank Cubs from also-rans to division NL playoffs in five games.
fect regular season, will try to
Voting was based on a 5-3-l
Memorial Stadium In Ironton.
keep their winning streak alive
champions, Tuesday was named
.Zimmer said the recog·nttion system. Also receiving vote5
Bob Lutz's Ohio-Kentucky Atwhen they travel to Rutter
National League Manager of the makes him all the more anxious were Whitey Herzog of St. Loui ,
hletic
Conference champion Year by the Baseball Writers' for spring to roll around.
Stadium in Athens Friday at 7:30
131), Art Howe of Houston (4) and
Ironton Tigers (10.0), who lost to Association of America.
"As soon as Christmas is over,
Jack McKeon of San Diego 0 ).
Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary in
Zimmer received 23 first-place I'm ready."
Previous winners includ0
last year's Division Ill chamvotes and 118 points .from the Zimmer is the second Chicago Tommy Lasorda of Los Angeles
pionship game, will return to panel of 24 NL writers to easily manager to win the award since
(1983, 1988) , Frey (1984) , Herzof(
postseason play when they take ouldlstance Roger Craig from it began in 1983. Jim Frey, the
185), Hal Lanier of Houston
on the 7-3 Orrville Red Riders of San Francisco, who collected one Cubs General Manager who (1986) and Buck Rodgers o ·
the All Ohio League Saturday at 1
hired Zimmer, won In 1984.
Montreal (1987) .
The University of Rio Grande
Renee Peck, Becky Webb and p.m. contest at Peden Stadium, first-place vote and 62 points.
Zimmer,
58,
has
been
involved
''I
wish
I
could
share
this
with
·will host this year's NAIA Dis·
Atsuko Yamazaki. Men's team on the campus of Ohio
with professional baseball 40 some people I know helped get us
trlct 22/Mid·Ohlo Conference
runners · Include Matt Bagent, University.
HIII'ness racing
years,
but said 1989 was his. here," Zimmer added. " Jim
Cross Country ChampiOnships on
Mark Cline, Rusty Edens, Vince
The Tigers finished their cam- proudest as his team befuddled Frey, who hired me when a Jot of
Matt's Scooter is ranked No. 1
Saturday, Nov. 4.
Fatica, Bob Ferguson, Bob Fritz, paign as the top-ranked team in
horse in the weekly harness poll
preseason predictors to win the people said he shouldn't, and
Races will be run at Stanley L.
Doug Horne, Scott Lafferty, Region 11, while the Red Riders
by Harness Horse Magazine.
Hugh Alexander and Scotty Reed
NL East.
Evans Field, starling with the James Peck, Brad Shannon, Jon took the No. 3 spot In tgat region.
Peace
Corps is second and Goalie
The Cubs finished fourth at of our coaching staff. And my
men's open competition at 10: 15 Benfer and Bryan Kimble.
In the Southeasti!l-n Ohio 77-85 in 1988 in Zimmer's first
Jeff third.
a.m., followed by the women's
In the 1988 district race, League, Gaill)50lis had a chance
year
at
Chicago
and
were
exvarsity race at 11 a.m. and the Dowler qualified for the nation- In Division II, Region 8, trailing
pected to finish back in the pack
men's varsity race at 11: 45 a.m. als when she finished first in the fourth place Sidney only four
again
in 1989 behind the New
Scheduled to compete are women's varsity race in 18:43. A points going Into Friday's game
York
Mets,
St. Louis Cardinals
teams from Bluffton, Central senior from Jackson, Dowler at home against Jackson, bu"t the
and
Montreal
Expos.
State, Cedarville, Defiance,
became the third .Rio Grande lronmen not only knocked GAHS
But Zimmer enjoyed one of his
Findlay, Malone, Rio Grande,
runner to individually win a race out of a tri-champlonship with a
best
years as a manager, emWalsh and Wilmington. The in the district competition. The 13-7 win, but a possible slot in the
CANDIDATE FOR
ploying
unconventional tactics
races determine which district others were Archie Mundy in 1977 playoffs as well. GAHS finished
and giving a rookie team confiteams will participate in the and Mark Pierson in 1985.
seventh in the region In the final
dence
to succeed. Chicago raced
NAIA Cross Country Nationals
The first to finish for Rio ratings.
to
the
lead and never faltered
Experience:
; on Nov. 18 at Kenosha, Wis.
Grande's men's team in last
Co-champion Athens finished · down the stretch.
Dedication:
year's race was Fritz, who sixth in Division II, Region 7 and
Vol. Fireman 9 yrs.
lifelong Resident
Expected to run for Rio
placed 21st in 27: 58. Overall, the Logan was lOth.
"It's great," Zimmer said
Board
President
1919
AH111ds Racine U.M. Church
Grande's women's team are
Redwomen placed fifth In a field
Rest of the SVAC
from Florida . "This Is the first
Racine
Council
'81·'19
Mary Dowler, Bonnie Evans, · of six teams in 1988 and the men
Meigs Co. Teacher 9 years
Upon the conclusion of the time this has happened to me,
Debbie Gray, Gina Kilchenman,
were fifth of eight teams.
regular season, Kyger Creek and I sure didn't t~lnk it was
Paid for by C.ndidote Scott D . Wolfe,
P.O . Box 872. Racine, Ohio 45771 .
(8-2, 5-2), which stayed in the going to happen this year."
SVAC title race until losses .to
The Cubs, bidding for their
Oak Hill and Symmes Valley put
the Bobcats out of contention,
finished 14th in Division V's
Region 19.
Lo11 All,.elea 11. rtltall'lilt
Pro results
91:. LDulll, WMblqt••l (lk')
North Gallla (5·5, 4-3) came in
To"*• I . Mlall!'lloLI .fl
19th,
loliowed by Southwestern
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
VMC.oo•~r t, New Ieney 3
su ... .,., Nov.5
,..edltelldg'• Game!'
(5-5, 3-4) at No. 22, Eastern (3-7,
Buflalo Ill Alluta, I p.m.
st. Loul11 at Hartfont, 7: Sl p.m.
2-5) at No. 30, Southern (1-9, 1-6)
Chi cap .a Gnet~ IIIli, I p.m.
Phlla.~plll• al Dttrvtt. 1:1$ p.m.
CleWi ..... Tillft .. ~ . I p.m .
at No. 35 and winless Hannan
D!tnll. • Houlll•n. 1 ,....
New .I""~ at P.dm•lllon, t: !5p.nl.
Trace
at No: 36.
l
'
......... ollalllMiaml, I p.m.
WIIYiPfl at caa.,,, t:a p.m.
L.4. a.- al Ml•. .e&amp;&amp;. I p.m.
TIMincl~~r'aGanMtl
Oak
Hlllt
(9-1.
6-I)
finished
14th
NY lrt.• New EDP... I p.m.
Lo• ........ Boel-. ......
in Division IV's Region 15, five
s..11u. .a a. ..- t11r 1 p.m .
BIIUIIo .M M011lrell. aiPt
CIIICI.-IMLA aaa•rs.-lp.m.
Qllebft at NY KUp!l'l, llllfll
slots above Belpre and three
NV 01-• M Plloralx, .J p.m.
Nl' ..IM!IHa al PMIII!Urrh. nlp:lll
Ptllla•el ...la 118aaDI.-_JO, 4 p.m .
places behind Nelsonville-York .

Merrill Triplett's Symmes Valley VIkings, fresh off the school's
first-ever perfect season and
enjoying the distinction of being
tho:,first team in Southern Valley
Athletic Conference history to
make the state playoffs, wUlface
the 9-1 Shadyside Tigers of the
Ohio Valley Athletic Conference
Friday at 7: 30 p.m. at Sulsberger
Stadium In Zanesville.
The Vikings· used a comblna·
tion of a strong running game
fueled by 1,000-yard rusher
Kenny Daniels and backfield
mates Jason Sheppard and Fred
Wilburn and a swarming, aggressive defense to take them
through a heart-stopping, overtime victory against Rock Hill,
not to mention turning back an
Oak HUI squad knockl~g on the
end zone door In the lairl minutes
of their league opener, to pave ·
the way for their march to the
playoffs.

Many prisons do little to refor·tn inmates

• Court Street
111
Pomeroy, Olllo

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeioy-Midd'aport, Ohio

WednMday, November 1, 1989 ·

PGMDOY, GIRO

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Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio"

Plgl 4 The o.ily Sa 1tinel

Pomeroy Court news

.Cold ·weather sweeps midsection

• Niue perSODs were lined and 15 lin, Trenton, Clned $43 and costs,
iltben fodelled bonds In the Illegal left turn.
~urt of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Also fined were Anthony
Seyler Tuesday nl&amp;ht.
Seyler, Columbus, $375 and costs
·' At the result or the altercation ' on two charges of DUI, and $52
Which took place last Thursday and costs on speeding; John
lll&amp;ht on West Main St., Frank Harper, Pomeroy , fined $3'15 and
flaw, Pomeroy was lined $63 costs, DUI , and $63 and costs,
&amp;lid costs on a disorderly driving under suspension; and
inanuer, willie that same charge Michael Celli, Pomeroy, $43 and
was dismissed for Thomas Stone, costs, Illegal h~ft turn.
Pomeroy, although he was
Forfeiting bonds were Keith
placed on six months probation. White, Racine, $63, failure to ·
As a result of the same Incident control and $375, DUI; Roger ·
Sammy J . Freeman and Jim Dowell, $47, speeding; Michael
Farley, Marietta, botb fodelted Proffitt, Pomeroy, $45, speed·
$63 on charges of disorderly log; John Jeffers, Middleport.
ronduct. The four Involved In the $48, speeding; Lois Haning,
altercation which resulted In a Pomeroy, $47, speeding; William
broken front window at Video Kinsley, Glen Allen, Va .. $51,
Touch were all charged with speeding; Janice Pearch, Mrytle
destruction of property and were Beach, S. C.. S631llegalleft turn;
ordered to make restitution In James Birchfield, Pomery, $47,
exchange for dropping . the speeding.
charges.
Others forfeiting bonds were
Mark
Mahoney. Coolvtlle, $63,
Others fined In the court were
open
container;
. Timothy RoRita Hayman, Pomeroy, $63 and
berts,
Gallipolis
Ferry,
W. Va .,
costs. failure to display a valid $48, speeding; Roy Jenkins,
registration; Frank Mattllew,
Albany, flned $375 and costs, Minersville, $45, speeding; MarDUI; Paul Holsinger, Thompson, vin Craig, Willis Hill, Pomeroy,
driving under suspension ·
Conn, Clned $63 and costs, traffic $63,
llgbt violation; Harry Chamber· and $3'15, DUI; and Me!J1;sa
Boren, Loris. S. C., $47, speeding.

By United l'ress lnleraatlonal
Heavy rain and strong gusty
winds swept through the East
early Wednesday while cold
wintry weather inundated the
nation's midsection and snow
dumped several Inches over
parts of Wyoming.
The National Weather Service
said showers producing wind
gusts up to 46 mph pummeled

--Local news briefs... - - .
Continued from page 1
: occurred In Racine at 3:20p.m. Tuesday at the intersection of
Route 338 and V!mt St. According to a preliminary report,
vehicles operated by Inez Roy, Racine, and Kay Rowe, Racine,
'· collided at the Intersection. The Rowe vehicle overturned.
, , 1 • Racine Fire Department and EMS were at the scene. Both
drivers were transported to Holzer Medical Center.
'
Deputies had not yet talked to the drivers.
Both vehicles sustained heavy damage.

EMS has six Tuesday calls
Six calls for assistance were answered on Tuesday by units of
the Meigs County EmergencyhMed!cal Services.
·
At 12:24 a.m., Pomeroy was called to Spring Ave. for Leon
McKnight who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Racine was called at 1: 46 a.m. to Portland for Zelia Coppick to
Holzer Medical Center.
.
Pomeroy at 10:35 a.m: transported Edith Harper from
Tuppers Plains to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
Tuppers Plains EMS and ·the Olive Township Fire
Department were called at 2:40p.m. to a structure fire on Route
681. The structure, owned by a Bobo, was unoccupied. No
Injuries were reported.
·
At 3:04·p.m., Syracuse was called to Court St . Road for Mike
I(nboden who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Racine EMS and the Racine Fire Department responded at
3:21p.m. to a two-car accident at Fifth and Vine Streets. Squad
28 transported Kay Rowe and Squad 24 transported Inez Roy.
. Both women were taken to Holzer Medical Center.

Deputies
probe.one-car
wreck
.
.
1'he Meigs County sheriff's
dei)artment Investigated . a
handled allllgle-car accident on
Route 325 at the Intersection of
Route 124. This aC&lt;'ident OCcurred at 2:30p.m. Tuesday.
The sheriff reports that Gary
P. Burgi, 37, of Pickerington, was
northbound on Route 325 when he
lost control on a curve due to the
wet pavement. His 1988 Pontiac
Grand Am skidded off the right
side of the road, striking a
guardrall. There was light damage to the vehicle. No Injuries
were reported nor citations
Issued.
Several other sheriffs department Investigations are also
underway at tbe present time,
Including the following:
-Entry of a trailer on State
Route 338 near tile Ravenswood
Bridge. Acrord!ng to the report,
the trailer was entered around
9:30 p.m. Sunday. A C.B. radio
and AM-FM radio.were reported
taken. A strange vehicle. a van
with Florida tags, had been seen
In the area.
-Damage to a window 'at the
HarrisonVille Fire House. According to the report, a small
caliber bullet went through the
storm window and regular windoW. There was no damage to the
t 111lde of the building. The exact
time of the incident Is unknown.
- Tllett of tools from a tool box
owned by Paul DIU. The theft
occured between Oct. 26-30 at the
Meigs Courity Garage where Dill
works.
-Theft within the past two
weeks of electric wire from the
Scout Cabin at Chester. The theft

Divorces sought
Divorce actions have been filed
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Pamela Laleta Stlll,
Middleport, against Elmer Michael Si!ll, Middleport; Kat)ty
Ann Barringer. Pomeroy,
against Donnie Wayne Barringer, Reedsville; Margaret Ellen
Johnson, Rutland, against Chester Johnson, Langsville. A restraining order has been Issued by
the court agaiM t tbe defendant in
tbe Still action.
Vonda Annetta George, Pomeroy, and Terry L. George,
Rutland, have filed for a dissolution of their marriage.

I.Jeenles iMued
Marriare Ilcerures have been
tuued In Melp County Probate
Court toWesll!yOwen Prealt, 22,
Albany, and Christina Ann
Slw'pe, 21, Albany; Kenneth W.
Madden Jr., 33, Middleport, and
Edna 'Jane Madden, 34,
Ml~ .•
,,' .

.;

.~.·

'"

Ortega...
Continued from page 1
appeared to blame Bush Wednesday for the suspension of the
cease-fire, apparently referring
to continuing U.S. humanitarian
aid to Contra rebiHs.
The Nicaraguan government
alleges theContras have recently
Increased their attacks. Diplomats and observers have said the
Contras are more active, staging
three large attacks in the last two
months despite the cease·!!re,
which began In March 1988.
"President Bush Is not support·
lng peace in Nicaragua," Ortega
said. "President Bush Is promot·
lng war, death, assassinations
and cr!m Ina! terrorism In
Nicaragua.
"President Bush Is hot support·
ing democracy in Nicaragua.
President Bush Is supporting
terrorism in Nicaragua.
"We don't want a cease-fire.
We want the war to cease."
Ortega said.
In a comment possibly reflect·
lng the unpopularity of the draft
In Nicaragua, he said, "We want
to abolish the war because only
that way there won't be obliga·
tory m !l!tary service."

GOOD USED
WA-", DIYQS,
IIIIIGIUT-, TYs,
GAS &amp; DIC. IAIGIS
•

COUNTY
APPUANCES
617 JN ....... llt•lll .

..........

... ~·1'",...

Dally Jtoek prices
(As of 18:30 a.m.)
Bryce and ~ark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp;t Loew!
Am Electric Power .... .. .... ... 30%
AT&amp;T ... ... ... ...... .. ........ ........ 44%
Ashland Oil .... .. .... ........... ...35 Ys
Bob Evans .. .. .. .. .... ...... .... ....13%
Charming Shoppes .......... .... 12%
City Holding Co... .... .. .. .......15%
Federal Mogu1 ...... ...... .. .... .. 21Y.
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. .......... .. ... 45%
Heck's ............ ....... ............ .. 6)'s
Key Centurion ................. ...15'!.
Lands' End .. .. .... .. ...... ......... 27~
Limited Inc ........................ 36% Multimedia Inc ... .. ...... ......., .95~
Rax Restaurants ................ .. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... ....... .. 13%
Shoney's Inc . .. .. .. .. .. ... ..... .... ll'h
Star Bank ................ .. ... ...... 22:Y.
Wendy's Inti. .. ........ .. .......... . 51A.
Worthington Ind .. ...... ...... .... . 24

snowshowers, the NWS said.
Light snow fell over North and
South Dakota, northern Mlnne·
sota and Wisconsin and the
Nebraska Panhandle. forecasters said.
Freeze wa~nlngs were postl.'d
for Indiana and Indianapolis
Tuesday night, the NWS said.
Temperatures dip(led lnto the 20s
Wednesday over the Dakotas and
the 30s over the central Midwest.

40

Bartlett commented, "The entire communications industry
has always had the greatest
respect and admiration for Wil·
son Wearn. I am very pleased to
have been so closely associated
with him over the last 15 years

Pie~

'

SELF BASTING
CELEBRATE

1990 CHEVROLET
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BUT THAT'S NOT ALL. - 11' WILL BE

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Name: _________________________________

E!:.illsNOW
-RAIN
f/..?;(1 SHOWERS
FRONTS: . . Warm "Cold
. . Static . .Occluded
Map shows minimum temperaiUres. At te~st50% or any shaded area is forecast

Address: ______::_____:__ _ _ _ _ __
State: ----'---~lip:

to receive precipitation lndlcaled ·
' •
UPI
WEATHER MAP- Showers and thunderstonns are forecllSifor
parts of Gulf Coast region. Snow Is pOssible In parts of the upper '
'
Mississippi Valley and parts of the upper Great Lakes. (UPI)

and to have the opportunity to
continue the excellent plans he
created for Multimedia."
Wearn participated in the
organization of the predecessor
company. to Multimedia and in
The Pomeroy office of the
1966 was named president of Farmers Home Administration
Multimedia Broadcasting. He announces a substantial increase
was president and chief execu· • in the volume of Its housing loans
tlve Officer of Multimedia, Inc. and grant activities for fiscal
from 1978 to 1985 and was elected year 1989.
.
chairman of the bo~rd In 1981.
According to a report from that
Bartlett joined Greenviile· agency, for the period Oct.l,1988
oased Multimedia in 1976 and through Sept. 30, 1989, FmHA
became president of Multimedia approved $1,011,520 ln.. housing
Broadcasting Co. in 1977. In 1981 loans and grants in Athens.
he was elected President and Meigs and Vinton Counties.
Chief Operating Officer of Mul·
Of this, $882,900 was provided
timedla, Inc., and In 1985, pres!· under the 501 program, primardent and chief executive officer. ily for home pure base and new
He and Wearn worked closely home construction. Home repair
together during these years assistance for very low Income
building the company into a homeowners under the !j(l94 prodiversified national communica- gram was provided In the
tions corporation and adding · amount of $128,620.
Industry leaders to their manageThis level of housing assist·
ment team.
ance amounts to a 50 perc en I
Multimedia, Inc. Is a media Increase over the previous year.
communications company which according to FmHA officials.
publishes 14· dally newspapers, The Pomeroy ,offices expects to
Inc! ud!ng The Gall!polls Dally continue to expand Its housing
Tribune, The Dally Sentinel, loan activity in fiscal year 1990, it
.Pomeroy, ,Point Pleasant Regis· was reported.
ter and Sunday Times-Sentinel,
FmHA is a rural credit agency
and 43 non-dally newspapers, of the United States Department
owns and operates 4. television of Agriculture. Its office is
and 7 radio stations, operates presently located at 200 E.
more than 100 cable franchises In Second St., Pomeroy. Carol Cosfour states, and produces and tanzo of FmHA is available in
syndicates quality television pro- Athens 6n the first and third
gramming, Including the Phil Wednesdays of each month at the
Donahue and Sally Jessy Ra· ASCS Office, 540 West Union
phael shows.
Plaza from 10a.m. to12noon. She
may be contacted at 992-6644.

FmH.A activities
increase in 1989

Court news

Hospital news

court on a $1,000 personal recog·
nlzance bond, pending comple·
lion of a pre-sentence
inves ligation.
In the State's case against
Ersel Blevins, bond has been
amended by the the court to a
$10,000 personal recognizance
bond.
In the case of Sherman White
versus lj:athy L. Pierce, et al, the
defendants have been found In
default and ordered to pay $2,300
plus Interest to the plaintiff.

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Leon
McKnight, Pomeory; Mary Huff,
Pomeroy; Ann L. Williams,
Clifton, W.Va.
Tuesday discharges - None.

Phone:

By United Press International
South Central Ohio
Tonight, becoming cloudy.
Low In the middle 30s. Variable
winds around 10 mph. Thursday,
cloudy with a chance of rain.
High 45 to 50. The chance o~ rain
Is 40 percent.
Extended Forecast
Friday tbrOUih Sunday
A chance of flurries In the
·northeast, with a few squalls In
the snow belt Friday. Fair In the
southwest Friday. Fair Saturday
'and ·a chance of rain Sunday.
Highs will be In the 30s Friday; 35
to 45 Saturday and 45 to 55
Sunday. Lows will he 25 ' to 35
Friday, 20 to 30 Saturday and 25
to 35 Sunday.

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L-----~~~~'!._b!.~:!_S.!!!!.rd..:V.:.~!.~· 1989

Enter Today .••
We'll Give
It Away
Just In Time
For
Christmas!

Weather

out In last weeks articles leading
•
up to the Meigs versus Federal
Hocking game.
We apologize for these
omissions.
Dance slated
To
Dance this Saturday night to
the music of the Gary Stewart
Quintet . The Royal Oak Dance
Club Is sponsoring Saturday's
dance which wll! be held at the
Royal Oak Resol'l from 8 to 11
p.m.
Scipio trustees to meet
The Scipio Township Trustees ~-r:::ee..._111¢~··
7
( _._..
will meet Friday at 6 p.m. at the
,=-:::=;iii....,~t~::=f-·,- ~
·Pagevllle township building.

TURKEY

HOLIDA~S .....

NEW

•

Meigs area announcements
Sall&amp;bury to meet
The Salisbury Township Trustees will meet Thursday.even!ng
at the township ball.
Lodge to meet
The Pomeroy Lodge 164 will
have Its monthly meeting tonight
(Wednesday) at 7!30 p.m. at the
Middleport Ma~'onlc Temple.
Election of otncers will be held
and refreshments will be served.
All master masons are urged to
attend.
Names omitted
The names of seniors Doug
Stewart, Dennis Booth, and Tony
Mil!er, were unintentionally left

'

•

The Jim Farley of Marietta,
arrested on an alleged altercation charge by Pomeroy pollee
late Thursday night, Is not the
Jim Farley of Marietta who Is the
husband of Paulette Leach Far·
ley. Jim and Paulette Leach
Farley are former residents of
Meigs County now resldjng In
Marietta .

.

GOLDEN 'DELIGHT
GRADE 'A'

t •. -

Clarification

GREENVILLE, SC - Walter
E. Bartlett, President and Chief
Executive Officer of Multimedia,
Inc., has been elected chairman
of the board of the communications corporation, ·succeeding
Wilson C. Wearn who has relln·
qu!shed the office.
Wearn, age 70, was elected
chairman emeritus and · will
serve as a ·consultant to the
Chairman and Board of Direc·
tors of MUltimedia . He will
Continue as chairman of the
executive committee and remain
on the Multimedia Board of
Directors until his term expires
In April 1990.
·
Bartlett will assume the duties
of chairman immediately and
continue as. president and chief
executive officer of the
corporation:
Wearn said' when announcing
his decision to step down as
.chairman, "I am indeed pleased
to see Wait Bartlett become
chairman of Multimedia. We
have had an enjoyable and
productive relationship over the
years, and he has done ·a
phenomenal job as chief executive Officer of this company since
our recapitalization in 1985."

David B. Dillard, appearing
recently In Meigs ·county Common Pleas Court. entered a plea
of guilty to a charge of trafficking
In drugs (cbtlivat!on of marl·
Juana) . Dillard had during arraignment, earlier on the same
dayg, entered a plea of Innocent
to the charge. However, Dillard
opted to change his plea and was
returned to the court of Judge
Fred W. Crow II where he
ente~ed the plea of guilty.
Dillard was teleased by the

Readings In the 40s were re·
ported over southern and eastern
sections of the region. Tempera! ures were expected to continue '
falling as tll,e cold front drifted ·
eastward, th~ NWS said.
Cloudiness covered most of
Texa'S early Wednesday and a
fast-moving cold front pushed
Into northern New Mexico, west·
ern Kansas. western Oklahoma •
and the northern Texas Panhan·
die.

Your Jn•.l ettendmatly Ow•u~d
Low-l,riced Sult~rmarkt~t

PICKUP TRUCK

Bartlett succeeds Weam as
Multimedia board chainnan

Common

IIG .BEND

Pomeroy-Middlapon. Ohio·

NATtONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 11·2~9

..

r

'

was reported by Bob Arms.
Pomeroy. The wiring ran to the
outhouse.
-Theft of approximately 200
feet of No.2 aluminum wire from
poles and wells on West Shade
Road. Roy Miller. of Miller Road,
Chester Township, reported the
theft.
-Oil and antifreeze have also
been reported stolen ·from the
Salisbury Township Garage
sometime between Oct. 26·30.
John Colwell, of Salem Township, reported the , theft. It
appears the theft took place
during the day when the door was
unlocked since entry through the
door was not forced.
Finally, the sheriff reports that
Todd Ackerman, 19, of Lottrldge,
has been arrested on a bench
warrant issued from the Meigs
County Court for failure to
comply with orders of the court.

Stocks

northern New Jersey in the early
morning hours and extended
from parts of Pennsylvania and
Into New York City.
Scattered patches of rain
moved into the Northeast. from
Connecticut to Massachusetts
and across the Atlantic and Into
Maryland and Virginia, the NWS
said.
Occass!onally heavy rains that
began Tuesday afternoon In
southern New England bad
spread across the' region by
Wednesday, causing some In·
stances of localized flooding.
Temperatures throughout the
region held In the upper 50s and
lower 60s Wednesday but were
expected to dip below freezing In
some parts by nightfall.
A cold front rolled across the
Plains and Into the Midwest
Wednesday with freezing
temperatures . and scattered

Wednaaltey, November 1, 1989

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PIPa11111••-16 The o.ily Sa llinel

Pomeroy Midcleport. Ohio

~.--Honor
lbrrllonvDle
The first six weeks honor roll
for the Harrisonville Elementary
School 'has been announced.
Making a grade of B or above In
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
Second Grade: Raina Bennett,
Denise CotterUI, Stacy Gilmore,
Amanda Hamon, Crystal King,
Tonya Mllard, Jason Miller,
Krlsty Six, Kyle Sintddle, James
Stanley, Harmony Thobaben,
Gillian Wilt.
Third Grade: Erin Dlllon,
KriStina Kennedy, Jennifer Lam·
bert. Waylon McKinney, Jason
·
Preas!, Shannan Sievers.
Fourth Grade: Michelle Bls·
sell, Scott Dodson. Robin Do·
nohue, Rusty Haning, George
Miller, Melissa Reeves, E~ra
Tbobaben, ,Jessica Wheeler.
Fifth Grade: Laura Artx, Jes·
sle Blackford. Jesse Dillon,
Cheryl Jewell, Brian Young.
Sixth Grade: Amber Bennett,
Gary Stanley .
Middleport
The first six weeks honor roll
for the Middleport Elementary
School has been announced.
Making a grade of S. or above In
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
Second Grade: Seth Baker,
Bethany Boyles, J .P. Boling,
Charla Burge, Missy Cremeans,
Bram Dixon, jennifer Eakins,
Mindy Halley, ChriS Imboden,
Scott Johnson, Jennifer Nease,
Nicholas Mlc~a~l. Nicholas
Smith. Brandy Stevens, Renee
Stewart, Candace Werry, Til·
fany Richmond, April Blanken·
ship, Max Bratton, Stacey
Brewer, Ashley Burton, Janie
Compton, Chris Gilkey, Brawn
Herman, Bridget Johnson, Jo·
shua Jones, Crystal Leach, Seth
Rawson, Tommy Roush, Joshua
Sorden, Brandy Tobin, Asblee
,
Vaughan.
Third Grade: Bambi Breeding,
Donald. Carnahan. Joe Davis,
Jennl Howerton, Sarah Larkins,
Joshua Price, William Scanlon, .
Mindy Sigman, Mellsha Swisher,
Sara Williams, Tiffany Aliens·
worth, PhlllpBurch, Austin Carr,
Ben Crane, Jessica Evans, Jes·
sica Johnson, T.J. King, Joshua
Lynch, Patrick Martin, Josiah
Rawson, Michelle Watkins.
Fourth Grade: Rachel Ashley,
Carrie Hartson, Jenny Hayman,
Sheila Neace. Brartdon Smith,
Jennifer VIning, Tony Whitt,
Matthew Wllllams, Angela ·
Baum, Ginger Darst, Martin
ileem, Natalie Granda!, Chad,
Hanson, James Hudson, Collin
"•

¢, Nalley~-

Pomeroy Elemeatary
The first siX weeks honor roll
for the Pomeroy Elementary
School has been announced.
Making a grade of B or above In
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
Second Grade: Tod Daniels,
MeliSsa Davis, Tim McGraw.
Michelle Painter, Wesley
Thoene, Adam Thomas, Michael
Williamson, Grant Abbott,
Amber Blackston, Jackie Buck,
Chris Darst. C.D. Ellis, P.J. '
Erwin. Mlstie Musser, Andrea
Neutzllng, Amber Perkins, Ryan
Pratt, Abam Shank, Jennifer
Shrlmplln, Julie Spaun, Chris·
tlan Welker.
Third Grade: Tracy Colley,
Missy Darnell. Jessica Matson,
Benjamin Molden, Stefani
Pickens, Bonne Smith, Kasey
Williams, John · Davidson, Jennifer. Heck, Amy Johnson, Sean
Powell, Cortney Scarberry.
Fourth Grade: David Ander·
son, Lauren Anderson. Wayne
Barnhart, Wendt Daniels, April
Foreman, Steven McCullough,

rolls---

Scott Sellers, Wendy ShrlmpUn,
Amy Smith, Michael Brown,
Jerlca Clark, Danlelle Grueser,
Erin Haggerty, Ronald Hlr.th.
Stacy Hubbard, Mlchzlle Ramsburg,_ Lisa Russell, Amy See,
Adam Thomas.
Fifth Grade: Chad Baloy, Tara
Grueser, Whitney Hap tons tall,
Jessica .McElroy , Heath.er
McLain, Stacy Price, Stacie
Reed, Nate Sisson. Matthew
Ault, Crystal Bartlett, Taryn
Doidge. Paul Epperson, Ben
Freeman, Shawn King, Erin
Krawsczyn , Leigh Mash, Kim
Petrie, Jodie Sisson.
Sixth Grade: Travis Abbott,
Anne Brown, Megan Clark, LeDeana Grover, Alicia Haggy ,
Palma Wiles, Corey Darst, Cyn·
thla Cotterill, Israel Grimm,
Amy Harrison, Suzanna Render·
son, Monty Hunter, Luke Snod·
grass. Jessica Stobart, James
White, Lee Williams.
D.H.l : Brooke Hart.
D.H.2: Carllsa Barton, Mark
Haynes.
-Rutland
The· first six weekshonor roll
for the Rutland Elementary
School has been announced.
Making a grade of B or above in
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
Second Grade: Jake Birch·
field, Brandon Collins, Tamra
Dukgan, Heather Ferrell, Til·
!any Halfhlll, Jess! Hutton,
Amanda Miller, Michael Rams·
. burg, Shawn Workman; Chris
Jones .
· Third Grade: Jamie Barrett,
Kristen Brown, Robby Diddle,
Ben Fowler, Amanda Hays,
Justin Jeffers, Matthew Justice,
Tanya Miller. Amos Mills, Alyson Patterson, Melissa Priddy,
Robby Smith, Brandy Stanley,
Clark VanMatre, Stacy
Williamson.
Fourth Grade: Emily Fowler,
Jill Lemley. Melissa Titus, A.J.
Vaughan. Melissa Williams, San·
dra Young.
Fifth Grade: Chad .Bartrum,
Casey Booth, Elizabeth Ellis,
Michelle Miller, Beverly Stewart, Morgan Vanaman, Jamie
Williamson.
.Sixth Grade: Phyllis Clark,
John Cleland, Jeremy Coleman,
Timmy Priddy, Lori · Russell,
Clndl Stewart, Candice Walker,
Roxanne Williams.
LD: Joey Kemmer.
SBH:. Chris Jones, Alex
Chaffee.
Salem CAlnter
The first six weeks honor roll
tor the Salem Center !:Jementary
School has been announced.
Making a grade of B or above In
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
First Grade: Kendra Cleland,
Eric Montgomery, Amber
Roush. Brian Tarleton.
Second Grade: Orion Barrett,
Scott Colwell, Mlkka Jude,
Brandy Laudermllt, Laura
Payne, Jeremiah Smith, Jeremy
Smith.

Third Grade: Bridget
Vaughan. Andrea Dunfee, Clln·
ton Hendricks, Lori KIMison,
Jessica Priddy .
· Fourlb Grade: Leigh Ann
Canterbury, Christal Fitzwater,
Sherrie' Garnes, Amanda
Napper, Matthew Metheney,
Leanna Davis, Larry Ogdln,
Paula Rupe, Rebecca Russell,
Michelle Smith.
Filth Grade: Carrie Harmon,
Jenny Ervin.
Sixth Grade: Jake Gannaway,
Brya n Colwell, Mike Jarvis.
Salisbury
The first six weeks honor roll
lor the Salisbury School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above In all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:
Second Grade: Jamie Boyd,
Kim Conde, Marjorie Halar,
Tiffany Harder, Clinton Horn,
Morgan Mathews, Kim Peavley,
Anna Story.
Third Grade: Lacy Banks,
Jeremiah Bentley, Trlcla Davis,
Becky Johnson, Tamra O'Dell,
Fourth Grade: Bllll Bentley,
Vincent Broderick, Jesse East·
man, Chad Folmer, Jason
Frecker, Myca Haynes, Heldt
Legar, Michael Leifheit, Jared
Warner.
·Fifth Grade: Chelsle Dodson,
Raquel Maddux, 'l'lm Peavley,
Melissa Whaley.
Sixth Grade: Nikki Bentley,
Autumn Conde, Jeremy Hubbard, Dorothy Leifheit, Matt'
O'Bryant, Mindy Patterson,
Tracy Shaffer.
,

Wednesday, November 1, 198&amp;

Cooking·class for arthritics set
An E·Z cooking class for
persons with arthritis will be held
ThurSday, Dec. 7, at .the Meigs
County SeniOr Center from 12:45
p.m. to 2 p.m . . The· free class
Involves a demonstration In
preparing healthy food while

won the room count.
All parents are Invited to
· attend the 7 p.m., Nov. 6 meeting
at the school. Bill Downle:s class
will present the program.

111 Second St., Pomeroy

YOUI INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SEIVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1168

games and songs, the Carleton and Glagerbread
shadents were given a tour of a haunted house courtesy of Carleton's Intermediate and senior
high· aged classes wbo !ashloaed the haunted
house In a classroom. For some of the little ones,
the haunted house was more ~f,a trick than Nreat.

Bl GUYS! -l.'fonday alter noon was a great day
· lot a Halloween party at Carleton School In
Syracuse. Carleton preschoolers 1!1'eet friends
from dle .Glngerbread House Preschool, Middle·
port, who were Invited to jolD Carl\lton students
for some Halloween fun. In addition to treats,

'
{a) Stetua Collectlon4' SUede Pumps with
back bow. In red, plum, mustard or black.
Women's sizes 6- t 1. Reg. 19.99, sale 14.99'
{b) Run ArOunda41l Lug Sole Booties in brown.
Women's sizes 6-10. Reg. 17.99, aale 14.99.
{c) Chanceae Low Heel Dress Pumps in black.
Girls' si~es 12'12-4. Reg. 13.99, sale 9.99.

SALE 14

17.99
(b)

11
\

11
SALE 1

' . :: .

Avldeoprogramonthe"Sonof
Heaven" Imperial Arts of China
exhibit, currently on display In
Columbus. was presented to
mell)bers of the Middleport·
Pomeroy Branch of the Amerl·
can Association of University
Women (AAUW) during their

SALE 1411
1!;:G,

REG. 1

..

(c)
ASHLEY HAMILTON.

.,'

.

MENS &amp; BOYS
{d) Volfll HI·Top Basketball Shoes in while.
Boys' sizes 2'12·6. Reg. 22.99, sal'! 14.99.
{e) Conllll'll "Starlon" Leather HI·Tops in
white. Men's sizes 7-12. Reg. 49.99, sale 39.99.

SALE 31

REG. 49.99

(d)

MENS

CY

-PRA

SALE 31

REG. 52.99

.

WeAre A
·Member
PCS

11

{" Elldand4!l Insulated Nubuck Leather Boots
with lightweight Thinsulate® for comfort, warmth.
Men's sizes 8-12, 13. Reg. 52.99, sale 39.99.
{g) Elkland® Insulated Nubuck LeetherBoots
in khaki. men's sizes 6Y2-11, 12, 13 wide.
Reg. 42.99, sale 29.99.
·

SALI21 11

REG.42.99

·oUTSTANDING EMPLoYEE - Meigs Industries' employee
Charlea Grueller has been oele&lt;!led by the Community
Employment Program as this year's Outstanding Employee of the
Year.

MRDD. emp1oyee 0 f year nam· eel

The Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation and Devel·
opmenial Disabilities (Meigs
MRDD) ' Is pleased to announce
the Community Employment
Program's selection of Charles
Grueser as the Employee of the
Year.
Timothy Custer, manager of
theBigWheelDepartmentStore,
bas been selected as the Em·
ployer of the Year.

' were made at this
The awards
year's Job Training Partnership
Act Annual Recognition Dinner
In Columbus. JTPA provides
training a·nd financial support to
the emplOyee and employer
during a S;Clteduled training
period. JTPA's eight-percent
program offers these services to
Individuals who have developmental disabilities.
Also rec;ognlzed at the annual
dinner were Cathl~;&gt; Wood, work
adjustment specialist, for ex·
ceedlng community employment
statistics, and Melanie Arnold,
as an outstanding job coach.
Grueser and Arnold were In· ·

Auxiliary to meet
The Ladln Auxiliary, Frater· ·
nal Order of Eagles 2171, will
meet at 7 p.m. on Nov. 7.
Meeiings will be held at 7 p.m.
until further notice. All members .
are asked to bring a covered dish
tor a potluck meal.
I•

..

Veter;ms Memorial · Hospital,
will · present the program. The
program will offer self-help ·
suggestions and oPPOrtunities lor
_questions.
.· •
Early registration Is recom·
mended because the cl'!SS size is
limited to 50 partlclpallls. Regis· ·
trallon and more Information are·
avallab.le by calling the Meigs·
County' Senior Center.
The Arthritis· Services and
Edlicat.lon Division of the Ohio
University Osteopathic Medical
Center . is sponsoring the class .
with an endorsement from the
Arthritis ·Foundation:

preserving joint function and
saving en.ergy. ·
Cindy Oliveri, · a home econo· . ·
mist, .PamMees,adletltlon in the
Meigs County Health Depart· ·
ment, and Diane Howell, a
physical therapy provider at

Portland PTO meets ·

INSURANCE

REG. 22.99

••

Middleport visited Monday with preschooler• at
Carleton School ln. Syracuse and all the students
had a IITell&amp; time gobbling up the Halloween
&amp;oodles.

HALLOWEEN TREATS - The best part of
Halloween Is the treats. The best place to find
. Hal.loween treats Is at a school party. Preschool·
I ers from the Gingerbread Bouse Prll&amp;ehool In

SALE 1411

716 NOnl SEC.,_

. A .cost~me 'party was held 1!1 Krawscryn.
$75; Patty Pickens, $50; David
conjunction with this year's
Sidwell, Ntntendo; .Molly Heinz,
radio; Josh Broderick; baseball
annaul fall carntvar at Chester . ·. In .the second and third grade,
cards
and case; and Pat Clifford,
Elementary.
the wlnner.s were. Leah Welf.
·WifU!ers for the. categories · or Chris · Krawsczyn, and Jessica
split the pot. Pat Aelker was a
prettiest. ugl~sl , . most original Barringer.
game winner .
Several · door prizes were
were as lolJQws.
. The winners In .the Jourth,llfth,
Jn the preschool group, Carle and sixth grade were Billee · awarded and there was a cake
Crow, Greg Gillilan, and Adam Pooler, and Myllssa Dempsey. · walk and sub walk winner.
Will.
Judges for the contest were . ollelping: with . the event were
Winning in kindergarten and Keltha Hunt and Flossy. Dill.
Kathy Barringer, Anna McCoy,
Denise Mora, Kathy Taylor, and
first grade were Julie Batley.
Other prizes awarded went to
Timothy Hill, · and John . Gary Smith, $100; Katie Crow,
Paula Mora.
.
.
.

Soulbern High School
The first six weeks honor roll

DOWNING CHILDS
AJULLEN MUSSER

Th8 Daily Sentinel- Page-7

.~ Pall _·carnivar costume conteit judged

-

Sing held

..

Pqrriaroy-Midcleport, Ohio

Wednslday, NOvembir 1, 1989 .

Syracuae Elemeaury
for the Southern Jr. High School Reiber, Stephanie Sayre, Jamie·
The first six weeks honor roll
•
has been announced. Making a Smith.
lor the Syracuse Elementary grade of B or above In all their
School bas been announced. . subjects to be named to the roll
Making a grade of B ol" a hove In were:
•
.all their subjects to be named to Seventh Grade: Brian Anderson,
Over 200 people attended Oc·
the roll were:
Randy Bing, Grant Circle, Ma·
Second Grade: Adam Cum- son Fisher, Andrea Moore, Matt tober 29th's Fifth Sunday Meigs
Ings, Josh Davis, Sara Fife, Morrow, Kendra Norris, David County-Wide Hymn Sing, which'
Michelle Lonas, Donnie Proffitt, Pickens. Tracy Pickett. Brandy was hosted by the Pomeroy.
Jon Smith.
Roush, Courtney Ro11sb, Amy Church of Christ for area..
Churches of ChriSt. A special:,
Third Grade: Bridget Cross, Weaver, Ryan Williams.
Ashll Davis, Tara Knighting, Eighth Grade: Ryan Adams, offering was collected during the.
Kim Sayre.
Trenton Cleland, Cllrlstl Cooper, service on behalf of the Ohio'
Fourth Grade: Cynthia Cald· Christi Hawkins, Rachael Valley Christian Assembly
building program.
Hepsler, · Ryan Holter, Oavld (OVCAl
well, Evan Struble.
I
Fifth Grade: Brian Allen, Justis, Brian Knopp, Fred Mat·
Chris Ball, Kevin Fields, Jason son, Michael McKelvey, Aimee
Roy Rogers' original name wd
Mills, Jeremy ~orthup, Robert Leonard Slye.
Lawrence, Amber Thomas . .
Sixth Grade: Robby Crow,
Rochelle Jenkins, Jennifer Law·
renee, Jay McKelvey, Mandy
Mills, Samml Sisson. Rayan
Young, Ryan Hill.

SPRINii VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

..

valved in the Meigs MRDD
Occupational Skills Training
Program at the Subway Sand·
wlch Shop In Middleport.
Lee Wedemeye~: superintend·
ent, and Keith Black, adult
services director. were recog1\lzed as representatives of Meigs
MRDD for participation In the
enhancement of lives of citizens
with disabilities.

Hamilton
birthday
Ashley (Miller) Hamilton cele·
brated her birthday recently
,...with a party hosted by her
parents, Gerrt and Chuck Miller.
The theme of the party was
·'My Pet Monster and Dina·
saurs." A cookout was held at the
home of an aunt.
Attending were grandparents,
Ellen and Jerry Rought, and
BUlla and Stanley Jones.
Others attending were Kellle
Snider. Randy Snider, Jason
Knight, Brandy Snider, Janet
Jenkins, and Jessica iMIIler)
Hamilton.

PRE-HOLIDAY
SAVINGS

25°/o
STOREWIDE

OFF

SALE ENDS SATURDAY, NOV. 4
'

9ork·11's Classics

112 WEST MAiir'

.
. 992·2151
OPIII'IUL &amp; . . .10·7
MOll., wa., fll;&amp; SAT. 10·5

II

POMIIOY

October meeting. Eric
Chambers, of Middleport, a long
" time China scholar, made the
presentation. ·
D11rlng a short business meet· ·
tng conducted by President Lee
Lee, MUW members were reminded that reservations are due
Nov. 28 for the group's Ch.rtstrrias
· dinner to be held at the Gallipolis
Ho Uday lim.
Hostesses for the meeting were
Delores Wolfe, Janice Curry,
Donna ·sayre and Kathryn Hill .. ·
The n.e xt meeting will be
Tuesday, Nov ..28; at the Racine
United ·Methodist Church, with
November being recruitment
month. Host('sses wlll 'be Joan. ·
Jane, Jenny and . Carmen
Manuel.

Sntart
Women.
Smart
Choices.

ICRISP &amp; SERVE VAC. PACK

BACON •••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••_!!~~····· 99&lt;.
KAHN'S JUMBO FRANKSt~~. 51.99
SWifT ECKRICH

VA. BRAND HAM •••••••••• ~~ •• 52.19
HOMEMDE MEAT SALAD~~~ ••••• 89c
.•

DAfT 16 SLICE .

WINESAP
APPLES ..............t~•.~~~ 99&lt;

AI&amp;. l'tiOC.

CHEESE ............ !.UL $J ;99
MAYER VAllEY
GRADE l
SMALL· £GGS.~ ......P.4!!....83&lt;

IDAHO BAKING

POTATOES .....!P..IJ\·.!'!9 S2.29

lt.Ul IONNET
QUART liS

HEAD UTTUCE ...¥~.~..... 79&lt;

MARGARINE ........... !!·."89'

IIIDSIYE

CAULIFLOWER ................1.~.~~·••• 89c
REGUlAR

BANQUET TV DINNERS ••1•0.~z$1.39 ·
WIITE ClOUD
Smart women make the right
choice with flexible, hand'

sewn Career Coll)forts!"
They come in various sizes,
widths and colors. So you're
sure to find a fit and fashion
thars right 'for you. AU shoes
feature glove-soft leather.~,
cushioned insOle and TruMoccasin construction for
extra comfort.

·BATHROOM TISSUE •••••4.~~l!~ •• 51.69
CREAM OF CRERY

CAMPBELL'S SOUP ...~~~.l!l•..• 2I 99&lt;
UIIY'S

PUMPKIN ••••••••••••••••••• ~!.~~·.....•• 99&lt; ,
RALSTON CEREAL .

WHEAT

CHEX~ ..................... 52.59

s:J=TSPis

SIIElD

CHAPMAN

BAR SOAP •••••••••••• Mt·••••• 2./51.19
.SQUEEZE-IT ..........u~.~I•..... 3/99c

ro·mYQiaun

TUNA FISH ............:!'t:!•••••.•. S1.19

~ bea.Jtifi.j

-

SHOISTOII

••

~

1.

GUD LOCI

STORAGE BAGS ••••••••~u!•.... S1

,

--

�----.
.. P

a

.
.a..:...The

..

.

o.1v Sa ·u1e1 ·

..

.

·Honor
rolls·

Bins,

-·

AIIV£1111110 ITlll I'OI.ICY-E•eh

of " -

J..niood herht il ,_ired 10 be

s-..

readitv available tor . . in each Kroger
exciiPt •• specific•ltv nol~ in
this ad , If we do run out of an adverttstcl item', we will offer vou your chOK::e
ol a comparable irem, when ava~. rdecting lf:'• ~me saving~ or a r~·
check which witleotitle you to purchaae the advertised 1t1m at the ld.vertiled
price within 30 daya. ·Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item
purchaaed .

Tammy Mlller,Steve R. r&gt;fartln,
Nikki Meier, Penny. Klein; Darin
Logan. · Roger PartlOw, Joe
McElroy, Lorena. Reltmlre, .
Marjorlla tromm, Bobby V~e•
Robby ·wyatt, Robert Marllliall,
Chrissy Weaver, Becky Wile .
Freshmen: Me11an Bartels.
Debbie Alkire. Wendy Clark,
Lorena Oller, St~e Swatzel,
Michelle Young, Rusty Triplett,
Katrina Turner, Joshua Dickens,
Ginger Findlay, Allison Ganllll·
way, Kevin Lambert. Courtney
Mldkllf. Randall Johnston.

COPYRIGHT 1- ·THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, OCT. 29, THROUGH
SATURDAY. NOV. 4. I,_, IN POMEROY, OHIO.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHTTO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

.

•
rtces •.

w

n

-----Honor rolls-___;_--Syracuee honor roll
The first six weeks honor roll
for the Syracuse Elementary
School has been an:wunced.
Making a grade of B or above In
all their subjects ta be named lo
the roll were:
Second Grade: Adam Cum·
lngs, Josh Davis, Sara File,
Michelle Lonas, Donnie Proltltt,
Jon Smith.
Th lrd Grade: Bridget Cross,
Ashll Davis, Tara Knighting,
Kim Sayre.
Fourth Grade: Cynthia Cald·
well, Evan Struble.
. Fifth Grade: Brian Allen,
. Chris Ball. Kevin Fields, Jason
Lawrence, Amber Thomas.
Sixth Grade: HRobby Cr&lt;;&gt;w,
Rochelle Jenkins, Jenniler Lawrence, Jay McKelvey. Mandy
Mills, Samml Sisson, Rayan
. Young, Ryan Hlll.
· Southern High School
, The llrst six weeks honor roll
for the Southern Jr. High School
!)as been announced. Making a
grade of B or above In all their
subjects to be named to the roll

ore.

were:
Seventh Grade: Brian Anderson,
Randy Bing, Grant Circle, Ma·
son Flgher, Andrea Moore. Matt
Mor~ow, Kendra Norris ; David
Pickens, Tracy Pickett, Brandy
' Roush. Courtney Roush , Amy
Weaver, Ryan Williams.
Eighth Grade!. Ryan Adams,
Trenton Cleland. Christi Cooper,
Christl Hawkins, Rachael
llensler, Ryan Holter, David
Justis, Btlan Knopp, Fred Mat·
son; Michael McKelvey, Aimee
Mills, Jeremy Northup, Robert
Reiber. Stephanie Sayre, Jamie
Smith.

f.

Racine Elementary
The llrst six weeks honor roll
for ·the Racine Elementary
School has been anpounced.
Making a grade orB or above In
all their subjects to be named lo
the roll were:
·
Second Grade: J.B. Boso,
Sarah Brauer, Kim Ihle, Stacy
Lyons, Amber
Maynard, Kyle Norris, Chris
Randolph, Tara Rose, Dena
Sayre. Bobbie Scarberry, Jared
Smith, Brandon Wolfe. · Lena
Yoacham, Carty Crow,
Rosalynn Elkins, Tasha John·
son, Jessica Ash, Stacey Ervin.
Third Grade: Steven Boso,
Jennifer Carleton, Joshua Ervin,
Suzanne Evans, Jody Hupp,
Josle Jarrell. Bobby Johnson.
Kara King, Jesse Little, Jessica
Smith, Tommy Sml~h, Crissy
Snider, Jessica Theiss.
Fourth Grade: Matt Dlll, Ty·
son Evans. Ryan Grace. Matt
Hill. ~lcole Hill. Missy Layne,

I

'
j.-

•

Save Kroger register receipts for
free IBM computers in schools.
-----=~
Call you local Kroger Store Manager and enroll

U

Each

I

U.S. GRADE A
10· 16-LB. AVG . FROZEN

Pound

Split Chicken
Breast

TO PlACE AN AD CAU 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M, until NOON SATURDAY
•Adl
Meigs. Gllllia Of M•on countitl must be pr•
paid.
•Receive t .50 clilcount foradl paid in advence.
.
•fru ldl - Giveaway and Found tdl und• 11 words w•ll be
run 3 d•• at no ch•oe.
•Price of ad for • c.pltellllters is double prlc. af td co1t.
•7 point line
anty uttd.
•Sentln .. 11 n'ot r-ponslble for errors aft., first d8f. (Check
for effort fir.t d.,. ad ruM In paper) . ~all before 2:00p.m.
dw aft• publlc•lon to make corr.cteon.
•Ad• thlt mutt be ,.ld in advtnce ara
Card of Th•ka
HIPPY Adl
In Memoriam
Yerd Sal•

•

•

Pound

II
SEALTEST ICE CREAM

Mountain Grown
Folgers Coffee

~-GAL ...

••z.

3kz.

Muppet
Characters

•

'

Mason Co., WV
Area Code 304

••e-Gatlll*i•

992-Middleport

171 - P1. Pl ....nt
458-Leon
57t T Apple Grove
773- Mason
882- New Hw~m
895-Letar't:

Pom•oy

241-Rio Grande

Only

218-G..,... Olst.
143-Arlbta Oiat.
371- WIInut

981-Ch•-r
e•3-PortJend
2•1-Latart Fall•
9•1- Reclne
742-Rutl.,d
117-Cootvlle

937- Bufftlo

BUY
ONE
20-QZ.
Krog_•

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE

Dr. Papper or
Diet Dr. Pepper

LOAF

White Bread

1- Card of Thll'lb
2- ln Memory
3- Annouc:emantl

4-0ktatwey

5-Happy Ad1
1-Lost and Found
7-Y•d Sale (paid in adv•nce)
I-Public Sal• &amp; Auction
9-Want.. toAuy

Basham Building
EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

•FIREWOOD'

BILL SLACK
992-22 ..

6:30P.M.
. f11&lt;tory Choke
12 Gaugo Shotg'"" Only
Strictly Enfarcod

EVININGS ·

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home .
Pert a
•Mobile Home
Rentala
•Lot 'R•ntels

992-7479

lt. 33 North of

P-roy, Ohio

l· t2-'88·tln

10-f.tfn

• f e t 89ttfn

•--------t
USED APPUANCES

L W.

90 Df.Y WABAJI.TY

STEWART
TRUCKING

WASHIR$-$100 up

DIYERS-$&amp;9 up
REFIIGERATOR$-$100 up
RUGES-Ills·Eiec.-ms up
FREEZER5-$12S up

992-S33S or 91S-3S61 '

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

Acrou F.- Post OHico
POMEIOY, OliO

742-2421

MICRO OVENS-$79 op

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
10/l0/'19 thl

9-20-tfn

DAVE'S
SMAU I!NGINE
. IEPAII

VAUGHN'S •
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

Locatllll at Vahy Lumller

SYRACUSE, OHIO

In llillllloport, Oh.
PARTS AND SERVICE

Mott Foreign end

Domestic Vehicles
AI C Serviee
All Major &amp; Minor

For Most 2 end 4-cyele

engin111

· Repairs

Stock Pins for

NIASE Certified Mechanic

Homefite, Weedeater.
Tecumseh. Brigga &amp;

CALl 992-11756

Stratton.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
Beginning Sept. 17
Starts at 1:00 P.M.
ftKtory Choked 12

Gauge OnlY.

9-tl· 89-lfn

ALLEN'S
HAULING

·MOO GAUON
WATEI SEIYICE
UMEnONE
SPIEAD
Dllt HlUUD
.992-5275

S.:7-tfn

• "DOC" VAUGHN

PH. 992-3922 .

Certified licensed Shop
6·26-' 88-ttn

Public Notice

Public Notice

diligence

be llcertoinod. · eatate in order to pay the
you are hereby notified that debts of the decedent.
You ere requWed to "•n·
you hwe been named deswer tha complaint wtthin
fendants in a legal action en28 dl'fl after the la~t publititled Freddie Houd•helt,
Adminiatntor of the Eltate cation of thi1 notice which
of Leona Kohl. Plaintiff. "''· wiU be publitt.d once e1ch
Ruth McElroy. Et AI .. Do· Week for tiK IUCC811ive

•VINYL SIDING .
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSUlATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
lhw~luilt

.. Free EltimateS•'

PH. 949-2801

fendlntl. Thia ection h•
been ••igned
Numbw

- · the l•t pullltOMion
wil be made on liMo 22nd

Court of Common Pie• of
Meig1 County, Prob.-te Divi-

In c111 of your failure to
answer or otherwile r•·
pond • r-.uWed by the Ohio
Rul81 of Civl Procedure,
judgment by doi.Uit will be
rendered ageintt you for the
reli.ef demanded in the corn~

Roger Hysell
Garage

Len• K. Neaaelroad,
Clerk of Count
Meigt County Common
PleM Court
Probate Divtlion

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o TrtiiMI ttl Dn
PH. 992~5682

C••
26.413and is pending in the

doy of No,.,...bor, 1118.

sion. Pomeroy, Ohio 46789.
The oblect of thio com-

plaint it to givt the above
-named Plaintiff the authar-

scribed in Volume 241. Page

ploint.
D•tod: October 13. 1989.

Recordl, end the prayer Ia
that the righta, intwest and
liens olllll p,o niel !&gt;e lu lly d•
termined, adjuRed and protected and th8t the Plaintiff
be authorized to aeH the real

110118. 25;
(111 1, 8, 15. 22. 6tc

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

or 992-7121

,__ ,

1:1 - HelpW ... M
12-Stluatton Wanted

2 1-Bulin•• Opportunity
22-Mon., to Latn.
23- Praf•tional Services

74-Motorcycl•
7&amp;-Boats &amp; Moton for Sale
71- Auto Parts&amp;. Acc•IOf'i•
77- Auto Aaptlr
71- C•mping Equjpmant
79- C•m.,en &amp; Motor Homn

3'1 -Hom• tor I ale

Mobilt Hom• for Stle
F•m• for Sale
lusin•• Boildii'IOI
lots • Acreage
38-Real Ettate Wanted
32333435-

Sl'l VII: I";

41-HouMe tof Rent
42-Molaile Hom• lor Rent

82-lllumbing • Healna
83- !ac:•.rt:lnl,

••-IEIICilricll Atfrigtration
11-Gen.,.l HeuN"o
81-MobUt HHtt Repair
17-Up.fMtlatllt

IN THI! COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
COUNTY. OHIO
DONITA APRIL POOLER,

·-·
""" -·.......---=·
••• '-:1! =·

'

..-f

To Dwvld

. . . Dit-101
I'UIIUCATION

IIIDII Hen·

...-. whoN II'- of r•~

In 11W C.rl of

Co Ml-Ohio
c.nv.
u. M:::
onAuguot1t,1
You on required to ., .

To the unknown helra.
devil-. and next of ldn of
Uon• Kohl, whole n•m•
and lddr• ... are unlmeftVn
.nd oannot with fNion•bl•

81 --Homelmprovemtnts

oold Coniptllirll wtll*l
21 doyl from tho 1011 publ~
Olllioll of tho nocloe whlah
IIIII be,.,........ - -fur
-_
. . The...
....,.,_
will be ........ 1.. 11hhdoy
ofNovorn'*, 1111.

I

RUTH McELROY.
ond
JACK McDONALD.
ond
JOSEPH McDONALD,
and
GEORGE COLLINS
TREASURER.
MEIGS COUNTY
end
THE UNKNOWN HEIRS
OF LEONA KOHL.
.
DEFEND.ANTS
. CASE NO. 25,413
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

wo·,

48-EquipmMit lor Ronl

X:::: ..........

vs.

71-Autos for Sale
72-Trucka for Sale
73-V•n• • 4

4t-ForLI•e

h•lbl' n011llled that you oro
........ Dw ..
ot In ....
Dololte
Pooler, Plllirlllffn D•·
vld llllolt Heoldrlllll. De-

IN THE
COMMON PLEAB COURT
OF MEIGS COUNtv. OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
FREDDIE HOUDASHELT.
ADMINISTRATOR OF THE
ESTATE OF LEONA KOHL.
PlAINTIFF,

Tr .lnspoll o:11•11

In Memoriam
In Loving Memory
Of EARL H. DEAN
who passed away

Public N otlce

--

- · wll be grontod • dl·

--~~~·
pr:C:

Colnplolnt; wit .... alvM an
oqubble clvlllon of
any:

and pot.,lialy

•

mo"L..r, •-.c
1
... ot
Courta of Mel,t::ounty

eocoun
"'-••f-hllureto
By Marlene tt.rrloon,
awn•., ........
bfiiWOhlo
Clvl Proaodure,
the (101 11.18.21:(11) ~~
ofr-lrad
PlaintIll.

r•

Donlto

Aprl

ltc

-' '

Nov. 1, 1979
Every blade in the

field,
Every leaf In the fo·

rwt,

lAva down ha life In

hoo-on ·

AI beau1Ifu(ly II

It

-•taken up.
Betty D11n

Fm

BANK ONE. ATHENS. NA 2 South Court Street,
Athens. Ohio 46701 wil offor tor ule the following
dncribed items free and clear of any encumbrances:

DESCIIPTION

INVENTORY AND FIXTURES OF SHOE STORE
FDBA: HARTLEY'S SHOES, 210 E. Main St..

1

Pomeroy, OH.
Approximately 870 pairs of shoes. miscellaneous••·
eorted ahoe strings. hotiery, ghr.t•. purl81, belh.rubber boote, etc .. ell store fi~turn: racks. chairs.
stools, cath regilt8f, floor mirror, shelving, etc.
Bidl wll be .ccepted tor the entire conlents or by lot
lo1 (l)ohoeo; (21 mioceltonoous: (3) ltoro fi.,ureo.
The aforementioned item• shall be told by private
Ale by eealed bid at4'!'30 pm EST on Friday, Novem -

BISSELl ·
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUlLT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

"A I Reasonable Price•"
PH. 949·2801
or Re1. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

ber 17. 1989otBANKONE. ATHENS, NA 2 S. Coun
Sl., Athena, OH . 457011o!he hlgheouealed bid. Bido

Public Notice

8 1-Farm Equillment
82-Wanted to Buy
83-Livettock
8·-Hay • Grain
86-Selld • Fet"tiiler

13- lnsu,.,_ce

1•-Bu.tneu Training
15-Schools • Instruction
18-Ridlo, TV. CB Replif
17-MisCtll..,eou•
18-Wanted To Do

dena. • unkitown. YDU are

·DR·

StiO.OO

Fmn Suppiii'S •
&amp; l IVJ:~;IIll;k

Public N otloe

-VIDAVID ILU01T
HINOIIICU,

HfRf'C ACAlf
.FORf YOU
IN THE.

&amp;2-S_,ing Goo•
53-Antiques
54-Misc. Merchandise
56-Building Suppti•
68 - Pet1 for lila
57~Musictl lnatrumants
58- Fruits &amp; Veo•bl•
69-For Sale CM" 'trade

Si:IVILI:S

Public Notice

l't.AINTIFP,

NOTICE OF SALE

2e-31WOROI
. $700
siO.DD
et5.00
$25.00

f.IIIJI Ill 'IIIII: Ill

Public Notice

MEIGS

$5.00
a8.00
113.00
$21.00
861 .00

61-HouMholdGoodl

'

2-Liter

I

$4.00
$5.00
$8.00
$13.00
$33.00

43-Farms for A.,t
44-A.,.nrnent tor Renl
4&amp;-F..,...... Rooms
•t-lp.ce for AIM
47-WenMd to Rent

Oet Retalft Fttt

'FREE!
I

Meigs County
Area Coda 814

317-Ch•'*•
3B8-Vinton

GET ONE
•

Oellia County
..,.. , Code 114

2 FOR f5

.Downy Fabric
Softener

•LIGHf HAULING

743. Meigo County Deed

i--i: eltl':h d• •• •P•ata •:•::;•·- : - - - - - - - - A11111111111.1~ 1111: 111 s

following telephone exchanges...

PLUSH

..

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

•SHRUB 8o TREE
TRIM and RE ·
MOVAL

decedent, leona Kohl, de-

AM• are for c;onMcutiw runs, broken upd.,swill be ch•o_.

:fi
polls DtUy Tribune, reeching over 18,000 h~m• .

Gallon

992-6172

6-5·'19-tfn

ltytotolllhoroollloteofthe

0-15 WORDS 11-215 WORDS

'" DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
COPY DEADLINE -11:00 A.M. SATURDAY
MONDAY PAPER
- 2'00 P.M. MONDAY
TUEIDAY PAPER
- 2'00 P.M. TUESDAY
WEONEIOAY PAPER
- 2'00 P.M. WEDNEIOAY
THURSDAY ~APER
- 2,00 P.M. THURSDAY
FRIDAY PAPER
- 2'00 P.M. FRIDAY
SUNDAY PAPER

~-Gallon

I,

lena K. Nouotroad. Clerk
(1 1) 1. 8, 15. 3tc

I DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
I MONTH

•A clusffltd adrertiMmant pl.eed in The Daily Sentinal (~DC·
c t - d•lffied display, hsin•• Card and leg .. not I~)
tllo app ... in 1he Pt. Ple. .nt Aegilter tnd the Gall ..

Sealtest
Orange Juice

Robert E. Buck. Judge

222 EIISt _."
POIIEIOY, OH.

or uus;pilr!!
Veterans Memorial "'
Mulberry Hets. Pomeroy.

........

t.,..

CHILLED

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

-

All MAKES AND
MODELS

MAmN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

::r:
446·7619 or (614) 992-2104
z '(614)
417 Second A'lnte, Bol1213

•uoo

_."""''"""t

All Aces

c UcensecfCiinical Audioloeist
w

rr, r-•o.oo~."OtLGamt

._tiaft,

Hearinc Evalultions For

z
OC MS
a; LISA M. K H, . .

I

4·25 -tln

Pound

Country Club
Ice Cream

CJ

1

Classified pages cover the
U.S. GRADE A
HOLLY FARMS

· ·Depencllble Htarinc Aid Sales &amp;San~al

u. ,,., ••·

• The Area's Number 1 Marketpla(e

Boneless ·
Chuck Roast
•

c.'

--

-

t,.,.y;:_::_=-~-i·~-~-~·~=~Fr====l~~;~~~~~;;===rtt:;;;;;;;;:~.
SWEEPER REPAIR

Classi 18

· U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

Young Butterball
Turkey

-..

Bu iness Services

John Matson, Nikki Robinson,
Jessica Roush. Danny Sayre, Lawson, Amanda Milhoan. Car·
Newlun.
BiNGO
Derek Smith, Stephanie Stemple, rleSixth
Grade: Beth Bay, Jeanie -1 POIIIIOY.UGI.IS
1
Amanda Theiss, Anna Cline, Rebecca Evans, Candy
(lUI
1
Thompson.
Mays, Crystal Morris, Connie 'I
224 E. MAIN IT.
Fifth Grade: Tonia Nazare- . Pooler.
•1 ·
tt2-1171
.
wycz, Amy Northup, Jennie
twu.
I
Scarberry, Melissa Smllh, Tuppers PlaiM
5111
J..
io':i~'.a. r
Bobby Wrltesel.
The first six weeks honor roll •,1'2 H.D. Fin wlthcouJIQII•dl
Sixth Grade: John Card, Paul for the Tuppers Plains Elemen· rl :pun:h• of min. H.C. h&lt;*- .
Ihle, Craig Knight, Nick Smith.
tary School has been announced. ~ lit. liml ~ coupon J* cusMaking a grade ol B or above In
Letary Falll Elementary
all. their subjects to be named to II ";:
'
The tlrst six weeks honor roll the roll were:
il 0'" ~ro'G:~
_ .,. _ _ _ _ _
""!"' ·
I ,~L_IDOl-S:
'-'·"'
lor the Letart Falls Elementary
· Third Gr3de: Jessica Bran· ...,.
School has been announced. non . Sarah Hoffman, Jessica
Making a grade or B ·or above In Bartram, Jennllef Cline. Josh
all their subjects to be named to Hager, Sarah Householder , J.T.
the roll were:
White, Allsha Rojas, Sari Put·
Second Grade: Jessica Alley. man, Michael Stephens, Michael
PI.IJMIING &amp; IlEA nNG
Joe Aikins, Autumn Hlll , Ryan Lefebre. Billy Schultz, Leann
New
Hill. Mls ty Sellers .
· 1/ol North Socood
Rowe. Steven Whitlock, Greg
Midclloporl, Olio 45760 '
Third Grade: Daniel Hannan,
Burke, Tommy Coram.
Janey Hill, Jennller Morris,
Fourth Grade: VlcklAdams,
SAlES &amp; SERVICE
Rebecca Wolfe . .
We C....-y Fithing Suppll•
Blllena Buchanan, Chris Bucha·
Fourth Grade: · Amber Atkins,
Your Phone
nan, Wes . Buckley, Michelle
Wesley Hall, Dean Hlll, Julie Caldwell. Steve Durst, Joanna
~!bl" Billa Here
..SIIIISS PHONE
Hunnell, Jackie rroffllt, ,Jen· Gumpf. Jeremy Kehl. Lamar
16141
99:i-uso
nlfer Roush. Ranetta Wheeler.
Lyons, Mls ty Lyons. Kelli Norris,
IIESIDINCE
PHONE
Filth Grade: Daniel Fisher, Betsy Sheets, Joey Weeks.
16141
John Gilland. Trudy Justis,
Fifth Grade: Erin Sexton,
Brian Kimes, Adam Roush,
Chance Watson , Tracl HelnPs,
Jessica Sayre, Lora Sayre, VaKelly Osborne, Sean Maxey. I ,..__,___
nessa Shuler.
·
Katy Manieke. Billy Francis,
ROUSH
Sixth Grade: Jason Barnett, Amber ·F orJney. CathertneCo·
CONSTRUCTION
Jennifer Cummins. Tasslca
ram, Angela Chaney, Sherry
&amp;lEG 1. 1011511
Cummins, Jason Shuler .
B11rke. Laura Buckley, Desiree
' GENERAL
•
Beaumont.
Portland Elementary
Sixth Grade: Brian Bowen,
The first six weeks honor roll Mlke~ Laughery .Ginger Nulter.
for the Poruand Elementary Michael Barnett. Alex Brown,
School has been announced. Jamie Erwin, Jessica Fredrick,
Making a grade of B or above In Brian Hoffman, Tract Lance,
all their subjects to be named to Chris Michael, Micah Otto,
the rolj were:
Noelle Pickens, Ann Smedes,
Second Grade: Rebekah Col· Tony Vance.
IIns, Erin Bolin. Anita Holter.
Joey McKinney, Joshua Pullins.
Third Grade: Teresa Bush· Bradbury
,Patty Lawrence, Leslie Rl·
The first six weeks honor roll
EAGL~ IIDGE
char.ds, Jason Roush.
for the Bradbury School has been
SMALL ENGINE
Fourth Grade: Jonathan Dai· announced. Making a grade of B
YAIDMAN MOW IllS
ley, Ashley McKinney, Jayme or above in all th~lr subjects to be
EC~O
SAWS &amp; TIIMMEIS
Mlller, Jenny Sellers.
named to the roll were:
OIEGOII
UIS, CllliiiS
Fifth Grade: Hlllery Harris,
Fifth Grade: Libby King, Ryan
RYAll SIIVlCE Cllml
Greg McKinney, Amy Rizer.
Bareswllt, Mike Parker, Nathan
Parts&amp;SwwlcoOn
Sixth Grade: Robin Gillispie, Goodwin. Stephanie Stewart.
C .J. Harris. Denise Roush. Gabe
Amy Clonch, Anna Fink. Krls·
·VISA · MA&amp;TERCHARGE
Smith.
HOURS: Mon.· Fri. 9-7
tina Grate, John Kelly, Amber
Sot.9-5
Slavin, Darrick St C)alr.
Cloaed Sunday
Riverview
Sixth Grade: Jill Burch, Alison
949-2969
The six weeks honor roll for the
Gerlach, Tony a Phalln, , April
10/ 10/ 89tfn
~lvervlew Elementary School · lfalley, Nicky Mllls, Paul Pul·
has been announced. Making a
llns, Kenda Reynolds. Chris
grade of B or above In all their
Chapman, Jereml' Hartson, Wll·
Public Notice
subjects to be named to the roll
lie Johnson , Erin Smith, Dodger
were:
. Vaughan.
NOTICE OF ·
. Third Grade: Michelle BuckDH: Lynn Kennedy, Scott
APPOINTMENT OF
ley, Shane Church, 1(Christa Cir·
FIDUCIARY
Autherson. Michelle Casto. Di·
cle, Stephanie Evans, . Jull HayOn October 26, 1989. In
ane Hook.
the M1i91 County Probate
man. Wes Kanawalsky, Heath
LD:· Zebulon Thobaben.
Coun.
Cttt No. 28393.
Proffitt.
Eatt. Second StrHt, P. 0.
Fourth Grade: Paul FrldenThe premier bicycling center in the Box 688, Po~eroy, Ohio
stlne, Jeffrey Kimes, Judy West. world IS the city of Shanghai, China, 46789, was aplfolnted ExeFl!lh Grade: David Baker. An· where an estimated 2.5 mUlion bike cutor of the •tete of Relph
Swan. Jr.. decea~ed, late of
gle Bissell. Martie Holter , Mike trtps take place dally.
Dexter Road.
Lang~wlle.
Ohio 45741 .

•

your
school in this e~citing new educational program to
obtain ·a FREE IBM Personal System/2"' computer with
printer for your school. We'll give you a $25,000 bonus
in receipts just. for signing up. There's no limit to the
number of computers with printers your school can
earn. Start saving your Kroger register receipts and call
for details today. Kroger cares about your children's
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California
Head Lettuce

...

~V~Ja~~~n~ll~d~~~·~N~~~~bw~l1·~1~98~9~------------------------~p~~~~oy~~M~~~d~~~~·~Oh~~~----~-------------r~~----~~~~D-Iy&amp;Mtt~el-~-9

.

·.Vedr.utlaY. NM111ber 1. ,._

.
Met·p 'mp. Sc~M~l!i
.. r:u~ers, Slierrl.Carl, Amy ~pple, ··
Junlors:'Mandle Harris , Spring Reed, Richard Peyton.
The lint stx weeks honor rou Kim Eblm, Angela Donohue, Randy Corsi, Teresa Deem, Lori ·Pierce, . Jame)' Uttle. Jo·
11)1' .tlie Meigs High School bas Usa Darst; J;:d Crooks, Derek . Tracy .Eblin, Tt1111 Molden, sephSmlth, AarOilSheets, Raena
beeJ:1 announced. Making a 'g rad.e Creine~s. Lara Hall, Kelly Amber Eblin, Jeaanette McDo, Eblin, .Amy Wagner, Amy
ot B or abQve In all their subjects HamUton. Ryan Harper, Wendy naki,.Robert Fields, Kim Ewing. . Warth, Jennl Werry, Pam Wha·
to be named to the roll were:
...Gilkey, Leea' Johnson, Dale John· ... Barbai-a Donohue, R1!$!1 ·Harrts, · ··ley. Missy Leach, Chris Neecv.
.Seniors: Ylnda
Patricia stoit, Dan Kennedy, Kristin King,
Eric Heck, Susan Houchins,
Darcl Wolte, Brenda Wright.
· Hetzer. NlchoJe Delauder. Kim Karen Lambert, Tammy, Lam·
James Lester, Shawn Llpacomb,
Angle Elliot.
Masters, · Melissa .. Morris. bert. Roberla-Napper, Jim Rey- . Kristen Slawter. Steve M. Mar·
Sophomores: Trlcla Baer.
Jeremy Lawrence, Trlcla Burke, . nolds. Wendy PhiUips, Becky tin. Tim Mayes, Sandy Lan·
Frank Blake, Misty Butcher,
Amy Mann, Lisa ·Gray; John Pearson, Joe .. R~ush. Terra · dliker; Jennlter Taylor, Maary · Barbie Anderion, Julie Buck,
J;ljlrton, Nancy Baker,Tracl Bar·. S(:boonover~ Natalie · Tromm, Morton, Stephanie Wlllker, Amy Heather Davenport, Stacey Duntels, · Raelynn Basham, SieVe . Cheryl Stevens, Kathleen Shane, Might, Lucy Winebrenner, Ml·
can. Dennis Edmiston. Stacey
Bass. Melanie · -Beegle. Cary Allyson McBenge, Tom ·werry- chelle Malhotra, Missy Nelson , Fry, Tara Gerlach'. Jon Harrl·
Betzlng, Amy Blake. Heidi Ca· ,Sandra Whaley. Carl Wtlllams.
son, April Hudson, Jeremy Heck,

I . ..
..;

.

--

·-·---

must be received by 4:00pm EST Friday, November
10, 191!19. The iteme.will be told u is without any expreas or impliMI w•rrantiel.ltemsmay be IHn prior to
the ule by appoiMment by calling Millie Midkiff,

BANK ONE. ATHENS. Pomeroy Brench. •t 614-9922133.
BANK ONE, ATHENI!i. NA of Athena. Ohio rtotrvM the

right to rej.ct any or Ill bids, the right to wit,_aw-el of
eny or aU lleme from thl .... prior to confirmation.

TERMS

cenlfiod chod&lt; or olficiol
confirm•lon.

SER~ICE

We tan repair and re .
toro radiators and
heator torts. We tan
also tKid. ltoil and rod
out radiators. Wt also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

ve~

Middleport,

J'

CHEESE

Jucf Arrlv.. l

lhls chNH Is frCnek, heme
of the Anlislt.
13,55 ..

Sugar

BABY

LONGHOIN .................................... 12.75 ..
PEPPEl .......................................... *2.15 ..
FAIMIIS-.................................... 13.00 ._
SIIOIED CIIEDDAI ......................... 53.00 ..
SHAIP CIIDDAI ......................... 13 ••0 ..
MODIIBLI ... -.......................... 2.75 ._
tall
LOW SODIUM/LOW
.
CIIOIISIAGL c•ESE .............. •3... ._
MAIIII C-SI-..................... S2,15 ._
llOYD'S 011. IOLOGNA ........ 13.60 tt..

a•

•

•

........... llenaratllsh, . . _..Ish
Spr...t, _. lin. Troyan' N•••••
t••P ••• plrt- Otr Prim Art Law~rl

e..

Ohio VaHey Bulk Foods
11• US1' 1W11

-

.

.......

192..910
foe4 St

;

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
ClEARI~G

NEWLAND
~NTERPRISES

DUMP Tf\UCK

Sand-Stone-Dirt .

(6141 667·3271
Gr•t A.

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING I'
Win Video Tape
Weddings,

Birthd1ya,
Reunion•.

Interiors

of H-•for

lnswanca.

Cel 741·1416
After

�•

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1G-'l'M Deily Sentinel

.

Pon •ov-Middlaport, Ohio

-·I=. . ·=-=· . ,.,.,

LAFF-A-OAY

.1 Hou. . for Rent

..

mN'

Apartment

;~2-

U

MoblltHomtl
tor Rent

OM

llachom

..

_.,atlnal~.

.·

.

The Daily

November 1,. 19.8 9

BORN .·L O.SER . ·

for Rent

-Cloon, CoM pow ............
lillY ........ Dopooll
No 1nlllde pita. 11' •
.

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Viewing

twniMid

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R. H.-.;!
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72 Trucks tor Salt

s bedroom. In Kner CfMk
School District, wuo-·pproved.

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4M2.

· - ....... i1 .......

Clwltl

' J ltaul•• ~

....... ••••• c.t. To

- . . - .. 4--aol'.

_ , 114-112·7110.
Dente~ All I It needed ...
madlaWy tor e

ifood

--n
4.ti!i'M7':"

illdtr ....... -·

to

I

,..

I

'"'••or,
Ohio mit.
EARN MONEY Alldlng Boob!
130,0011/yr , _ ootonllol.
Dttollt. (11 105-6117- Ext. v.

liii447H1:10. lhophonlpupo,

...... old put&gt;lllat, po~

Mil.· poll -

-

tlclL .......

•sa~•~r:~~~~~:

~

TooDOOOihomo,_l_ EARN
tlog.l14·ttiiJD.
S50,0001yr.
Dttollo (1)

ao.,---r. -r
Lost &amp; Found

8

Ful t""' billing -~~
Tonnl.......y .......,., 306.. 71-1d'fl.
Hllr Oly1lt1 01110 ~Bond to P.O. 121.

whlw opolo

11oo
0 .; 1. a0111te,104-8~1.

Yard Salt

7

11~,011.

I n - uoylo

-- -

-on
·
....... -,.

.y - - tho od2 :00
lo to run.
p.m.

.':*,_,_

...

tho
~

0 I ling lot 0 por·
8UMiw ......,. Comc:ekzlan.
_ , odllon • 2:00 .
. . . . . . . . . . . . hllloryto:
lu
)71,
- h , 0114MII.
lot Nlof -llnll
card co. 0 Approec. ~ ..,._ ,.r
....._ Bond """" I pll. no. 1o
1n11
&lt;lth, 120 -lonl cordi •111 R l - Dr. Colo,
Drl¥1. Oalllp"ih, ...... lillie.
0H 43220.

T-,

a

!!l:*...!..l'!slolo-:c:.-:ro~ ~~ ~~ T=~
- - - • -• Rt. -, •••••.Sill. .....
4. N. y~ llulldl"' nul.
11 · IIHI. ,._,.
..........

Pool~•
-~~t~ovol-

elad••
====..----•1
pt, PltiUnt

tor M.S.~ 17-23 ,._._,
Ptcp *&amp;On .........._ Exc.
tdlning p1ck..,, ODSI'Ipltllfw

_....,_zthnl-.4,

100 212
2p.IL

• VIcinity

5

ollllly, .......... -

-

._,ore

tbr. unlumlohod opl. wlttoYO I
Nlr1g. no P"i!L S17tlmo wolor
Included S10111dop. 11....,...
31117.
2 btrlroom oplt. lot' rtnl Carolllod. Nice -lng, ioUnrlrY

P - Rood.

t~e!IHiel afti!.lble. Cl:ll 11c-t0-

Col Colloot, 1-61 ..

....

10 rotoolllo Cal 1·

' ......Thin, .......

-=-=-=-==-==to-;:IIH=,..:;
ourDallpO'II -

lllcldltpOrt

Rlllll

In
..-+'ling ono1 •

&amp; VIcinity

...... .,..

''''V;i

r

-:::·~-'::1..- ......
~=':lV.L!sJrS',\"r.t
=.
Pua•or F: . end JJiocn R•u rna: 8u all 011 olo Gal-

~~~~o2NI-:-:.-='"'-=-::.,:-:.:;:.,.,:::,..:-I
....,..
- ,,_:00,
- !,oiiOI! ~.,
-.

~-

...

1:00-4:00. llllut

EARN MOIEY lllodlng Boobl
130.0011/yr• • - - oottnllol.
Dttillo. &lt;11- - E x t. v-

wanttcl to Buy

.,.
"'•"\.·· ,..
c.. -"""' or
L.Miy
IIIII

- lnl.,.._

12

Wanted

In babt oiling In my
or
1144121111.

:::1 ":/':,U:r::~~~~·

.... boord lot' - . , .
...... ble. 114-112-tiO'I.

._ -

ond "'" I:OICI
I14-7U·

. _ _ . . , . . ploco.,

..........hokf..,. ........
....7 -.

PI-,

Tlblt

•

-.

&amp;::::r;.. .._.,

r ,, rn Suppi!P'
11 Lrveo,lock

f"

.:=:

Dlt ~ Trro!lor w/3 bol·
- o rattKIUMnl
. IIIlO;
tr.d
Wnoader
PiiO; 100 Pont Tnlotor wlllol
~ - • " -·
~
;wW flnonoo.

Co-·

44

.lm'a Potm Equr...,..,. :~ 311,
Wolll Go!IIIIOIII, II
m;
-lon ,_I uaodlono

roorno.

Bulovlllo

Rd. Opon I A.M. 10 I P.ll. lion,
thru Sill. Call114 ..oti-03ZI.

In

encloeecl pa11o.
CloM to
_., " tllopplng ..,.
fer,
wlter,
. ...,.L • traah

Far Sale: 12 cu. I. Whlrtpoof

4 Hclroom, lumflhtd. All
uiiiRioo oolrl. $350Jmonth, 150.

GOOO USED APPUAHCES
Woolloro,
relrlgontO&lt;O,
rongn. Bkiii!IO AI&gt;OIIonoo
. o,
Uppor Rlvor Rd. lloolrlo Stone

provlclod. 1265/mo. ....1 81 ..
.., ..213.

ct.PDIII!. Pomeror arM. 114-M'i

21121.

Apo~-

lor ronl, 30ot-871-

Altl. 2 bodroomo, Hvlng ,_.,,

dining room, belh, dowrllll1lra.

_ __ _

,., _,
301•-·
For

~fo't' FrttZor,

••a; l~~~"-~711-

d'Y' "·

c,... Mot•l. Call 11~7311.
Mullwn Furnlhn

•farm
Frooh" ColYoo 1111-111 lbo.
- - .7 . , . old...........

.....

For Bolo: -

2321 .

Toolr,~

JlllmP . - ...... I

64

lltt1 - · 304-6'11-

rllco--homo.

zoo -

ol hoy,
-ondINdy
out, - to 10,..
- ........
......
uti.
AjlpNII.

IQ-o lloloo II hoy $1.0G. l'll.sl71.

lllriW 11.110 Colt ~11.

M~$1110. Apl. 1 - . .
, kKchtn beth.

room.
p..,_,

_..blrlk!lnt wiNd 1oi - ·

May &amp; Grain

1000
... -Cll114
-H
· at
hoy
.. 111.
I· to(

UYI-&amp;.":""onrl!dlchen,
Third,

llltohon

.

l"'llniPiua naw hM II JJIE I end

bedroom,
bli1h. Comot

a-h._,..., tl'dcH tart,

p-"'

... ~~u~-..

$110.11t ~27 otter lp.IIL

-.tho .,10.' W.tnut dlnillll

50 ydo. corptl I 1&gt;111 ln1Uil1td,
$498. Whllo oupplloo loti. 11&lt;1- - , . -

..0·7W1.

DAIRY FARMERS

v..a Practuo• nntlna

O H - ...... on._,._
lt2t. l14 441 - ·

llut:"t'::ni
C
'=. \":; Old .....:
p1ono . . . - ; Ivory,

~P

Motorcycltl

=-=4~r::o.:

term. (1 :00) Q
(I) Adventure Con~uer The

Arctic (PI 1 01 2)

~ 'f!#J Growing Paino·.

30

(!) Ill~ Ruuell Comedy
Special Russell creates
hilarious songs and
commentaries. {O::lj))

&amp;taa8ft r . . - ,
- · 111 HP, Evlntudo Englna, •
oompllllo top, now u..-..,.
Coi111W..1311oftlt 7:00p.m. '~
tta 11ft. l111 I•L lhorll ~.,.
Uno Trollor. 1111110 HP ........, ,,

l1ll

Wlnlorlzlng

P r - _ ........... lion'

bliss

clod. I1W5N171.

(0:30)

01 PrlmeN-•

GUn lPG! (2:00)
1:30 &lt;Il • (J) 01 The c:to ..

Arvid and Dennis take their
project to the Johnson Space ·
Contar. (0:30) C
(ZJ Tlmaline fn 1247, Genghls
Khan and his hordes met

•m_,. __ .

::..:::::::t:
.=.::: .
-••
no.

2

b e - lumlohocl ""'·
utUMiot oolrl. ' " - · 112~511.

. with a papal 8ftVOJ. Q .

(!) Mork R..... C01MGJ

-~

~I Russel's ditties
cover a spectrum ol social

lllrlo 1ft -por Ill. Good - 11100.
·oomee -. . ,Ill.
caL
.·
___,_
_..... '
f.t01.11WMIOSI.

Pork.
1 - .... . - Potk 1•x7Q

bod-.

-. 2
firlploca, nc cond. 304 IIIII

Serv rce s

1117 Ubeily 14r70. GH hoot, 3
....,,__ lpoolouo. Don,
heve to enove. 114,500. 114-317·

Home
Improvements

and cultural isauos. (0:30)
1111 e@ Hqar The Hontble
Hagar returns home to his
family after years ol pillaging
to discover that his
household is a shambles in
1his animated special. (0:30)

:IM1 oftor 1:00PM.

Q

u-

8:00 •

111111mo • ..,....
t-. Laal ...... CJI furillthH.
F- . . -... 'Call ...... 1·
11441l+t81, dly or night. A o

gerel•••m•nt

""'wanted

e!ll Docgll Ho-.
M.D. Frustrated aHer several
broken dates,. wanda breaks
up with Ooogll. (0:30) Q

(I)

BARNEY

rn&lt;&gt;ro -

RE·TIIAIII NOW1
IOUTHEASTERN
IUIINESI
COI.L£GE. Ill ,...._ Plkt.
Clll14 4M 41117. ..... No....

NV-Women 's Final: Beardon
vs Konnlston (T)

'11- 1

WMeopwlle.j.

-p . . .

YONDER COMES ·
MAW BACK FROM
TH' STORE··

NOW, 'THAR'S

A SlCSHT

CD (!) Tttoniaa Hart llleidon

-·AN' SORE

Using arc;hlvallootage, home

EARS, TOO II

movies and lnter.iews with

those who knew him, this
film oilers a a loseinatlng
portra" ol the Influential
artist. (1 :30) 1;1
·
!Ill
II) Jaka And The
Fatman Derek ..-ives a
case ol his own which was
more than he bargained lor.

FER SORE
EYES!!

Rotorr or cablt *lltlng.
wlllr. oompllllod ooiM
ond . . .leo,

SChools I

::Z:

e

111114102.

~~'King Live!

11·10811.

liJIIIIOVIE:

(2:001

18 Wanted to Do

Electrical 1

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Refrigeration

•IIETIER-

.1
21

,....._

RPnlals

,__,._.

achleva 11.

=....:t.=~
- ........ue-:.-1*
......_0111u
oat.

8ultntsa
Opportunity

.

•

I

- ....

1001.

-~

.

~--·~------------

;:,r'JII

"

• panics·when Charles hires a
beautiful consultant. (0:30) Q
(I) Gill A"'H•tt IJut Love
Hannah's compassion in
dealing with an unpopular

'TAURUI (April.-, :!O)IIIoOktllke

employee bacllflres . (0:30)

R•

(I)

.

01 Outtntum LMP

Sam leaps Into the life ol a
blind concert pianist in 1964.
(1:00)0.

-..noT.,...

Waltlra 8p1alll Barbara's

"•

NORrH
ll·l·lt
+QU
.AKQ75

W&amp;W
+95
.10913

..
·.

EAST
+AI

tlO

+KQJB62

.,

•Ju

· tKJI8632

••

SOUTH .
+KJI0742

.AQH
+73
Vulnerable: Both

Dealer: North
Sooth

w..t

3+
INT
6+

NO&lt;tlo

I'

Eu1

u
P•

Pass U
Pass 5'
Allpus

Pua

Opening lead: • K

. ,.'
bis contract.

1 don't suaest that East or West :
sbould stay out of the bidding - Soulb :::
migbt cet 10 elam anyway - but It ·
11111 lroaic bere that boldly getting In .
the way made it easy for North-soutb ...
to bid the slam.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
45 An In

ACROSS

DOWN

6 Turf
1 Swell
9 Cheapen
2 Inamorata
10 Breakwater 3 Cognizant
12'Egg:shaped of
13 Apportion
• Group
15 Chalice
5 N.J. city
veil
8 Tiff
16 Clear
7 Lubricant
8 Get resulls
alter
expenses 11 Revolve 2• Scurry off 32 - Wences
18 "How was t• Primitive 25 Tank
33 Poem
- know?"
symbol
leature 34 Pronged
19 Peace pact 17 Waich
28 Endless 38 Seeman's
21 ·Tub
20 Israeli
27 Hellion
drink
22 College
port
29 New
39 Gold (Sp.)
In Iowa
23 Security
Guinea 41 Mother
23 - noir
money
town
of Hezekiah
24 Harsh
27 Seraglio
28 Attractive
29Wahine·s
· gartand
30 Pay dirt
31 Ready
to roll
3SHockey
great ·
36 Colloidal
substance
37 Spire
ornament
38 Glgll
or Schipa
40 Cathedral
clergyman

DAILYCRYPTOQUOO'ES-Here's how to work It:

1111

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single \etters,
apostrophes, the length and fDmlBlion of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters 1re different.
CRYPIOQOO'IE

NTPKP OF VANTOVC OHIAFFOUMP

II) . . . . . . . . . .

'.

.

•3 Residence
.. Ship's diary

ll·l

lllllewa
10:01 (I) Chiao M•Mia..- Vetoe 01
The Amaaon Thll llpeclal
,....... thll explaltatlon ot
lhll ralll foNat and points out
lhll viable lntpac:t a lllronQ
htllllllallo..r- might
hiiYI In halplug to NVhelhll
·lorelll.
1CI-.30(ZJNewa

'•

42 Rootstock

guests include The Duchess

Vlnnla'e tathllr unlock the
ol hla past. !;I
eiiD CrlmeWalch TOnight

,,.-

..

t5
+AIOH

or York, 1ctre11 Kathleen
Tumor end actor Ted
.

Da..on. CII
ill e G WlaeguJ A diary ol

,,

•

CROSSWORD

(I) Ljcfu Pto
(I) • (J) The .......

CAJICIII (....,. 21.,.., Zll) Condltlona 1
look pooo1!111ng lor you at lhla limo
your IOCial oontacts are concerMd. You'l be' able to do more now
to ~te greater good wll with

=

Q

10:00 (J) 700 Club With Pa1

-'111 retume.

AQIWIUI(,..._»Falt.11)Youhave 0 . ,
eome extru going lOr you today that LIO (oluiJ D.Afll. B) Your polllbiiHiee
l1hould enable you to lare well In com- lor • c c111 are ltiOOICIIf today II you
..... 1,1petHI'III deV81opouenll. One Is your per-! oont11tue to po DCMd along llnae that
YOOM' - 1 1 1 with blg corpora- slatency and lhll-ls peaple who are proo1uct1W thua Ia'. Forego !
11111ta.
tlonl or eotallllflled clube could pro- -'Y -lnQ on your btthall.
,
Thllre Ia no
(Alii- Z11 11.1 8) TecldO lllu.- 1
duce . . , . exciting fringe blnelltl lor PIICII (l'a. M
you In the veer . ~. You're In a cycle reuon tocfey why you cen'l be Ill DC Ill 1'- IOCI&amp;y that ahCIIIICI be t....-1 with
whlre you can miK ,....,_ with • lui In a llltuatlon lfmller to ·· thll .....,_ and NepeCI ..., • '
Otdellt • Ia eKIIemeiJ lmpOr~
. you eapetlll 1*1 victory In the 1*1· ICOS£ 10 (Otll. :le No o. B) Not only ; Whlll you did MIOnl you can do ...... IMI, b1081• H . . onalte -rtlllng
. . you a good aonceptUIIIsl today, (v.tall .,_Aprl111) Bon • - .....,•
you'd also lnlllnctlwlly , . _ , _ to lln- wtlll whom you . . aloellr ......-c~ , ~(llfi.ZII OM II)Y1Mftoii1ICIII
mfahl be lniiNmeottal todey In opening aap 11 11M* wry 1fn1n0 st pnunt ,
.......t,outldelllnaPIOdUCIIW!alll1
dllnnef 1111' rD~~Ihat -*1 laid to 1*'"1 .You n ,_ In U.. type ol c y d e Pillto good-.
8c:or1llo. trM'I
to a blr1lldsy gilt. IOI1al gain. h'l an lndMdual who hal · lhllbtt1NIIIIyou011111MUouldcontln- !
Send far your• Atfro..Greplt
predlcttolto
. 1 .ue.
bell) hill~'? you~•
•
•
•
.
•
.I
. to. --In lor elonO-

all.,

-- ,....

to As-

tr&lt;H&gt;raph, c/o lhls _ , _ , P.O. you may dtlrlve eome type of la8ttng
Box 91428, Clevel.,d, OH 44101-3428. -ltodsy 1rom a cherilhed part-Be oure Ia stale your zodiac aiQn.
llhlp ~t. You have an ally who
SAGmARIUI (..... Zll .,__ 21) Thla can be dlpended upon.
,
Is a good tlrne to remind a periOft who Is GIIMIII (lllor 21..,.,. 211) Your -n&lt;ng
Indebted to yoU of his/her ovwdue obi I- potential appeera to be bttller tiWI uaugatlon. Your polllbll"lee lor stirring up at today owing to your lndustrtoua attl·
a polltlwl responoe look hopeful.
tude. z.ro In onlltuatlonslhat oller the
your lnnato prectlcallty to bring your
dr-lnto being today. Somathlng lor
wtitclt you're hoping Is achievable, provlded. you lake lha logical stepe to,

-old. t7UO. 11&lt;1-74N11tl.

Hou. . for-Rent

lor the year ahead by mailing $1

CAI'IIICOIIN (Dec. 2NML 11) Ule

A

(

Hloh Deaert KHI

Ill N..hvlllo Now
8-.30. (I) 01 Nutt " - Saly

ASTRO.QRAPH

AllAIN

~ IIJ) Night Court Dan

takes Bull to a swinging
singles night dub. (0:30) 1;1
(I) lllllard'a Brunswick WOrld
Open 11-Ball Ch1111plon1hlps
from Las Vegas,

SASEIIENT
WATERPROOFING

to a slam·lnvitatioaal band. He fig·
ured bow to lind Ollt his invitation be cue-bid four diamoads. Althougb
Solltb bad minimum values, be could
plctare tile 10001 fit betweeo the two
banda. He uied fOI' aces and bid slam:
When tile klag of clubs wu led. declarer bad some sligbt worry that
West migbt be void in diamoads. If
that were the ~. be w111 probably
doomed to defeat. He woa dummy's
club ace, played A·K-Q of bearts,
sbedding a club and a diamond, and
then led a diamond back to his ace.
When West followed ·.rith the 10, South
was able to ruff diamonds In dummy,
knock out the ace of trumps and make

1 Explosion

® MOVIE: H..lo_n II (AI
(2:00)
liJI Mulder, She Wroto
Trouble In Eden
1:05 C5l MOVIE: Hoonn Wllh A

UIO, -

l ra nsportalro n

Oh~.

.

VII!: Bocheklr Pa~

(A) (2:00) •

'

Accesaorltl

ianewing their vows .

•liD

,

Auto P1rts &amp;

atonc11e Aitd
In this animated

special. Blondie a~d
Oa~ood deCide to celabrata
their fifty yaan of martial

Motor. Roodf 1o ga -lngl11&lt;1- · •
Ill 3M2.

76

eC

~

Calll14-112-ti72

1n11ruct1on

Mr-• Report that a

.....

..,...,__ LPN on coli. Low

Ernrloymcnl Servrccs

•

·

llJl Nlght.Court
7:35 (J) ilanlord And Son
8:00 (J) IIICIVIE: NOI1h Country
(2:001
-~ 8)Un-.cl

a.

-

After South bid three spades, what
should North do1 He ~ a comfort·
able raise to four spades, and more.
Flnt·l'OIIlld controls in bearts and
clubs, a singleton diamond, and good
support for a suit that South was able
to bid freely at the three-level, add up

;·

double aervecl Nezi war
criminal Rudoll Hess· jail

Wo . _ tor •lrloriJ ond honIn- ........ ,.,.

••• 7:00 p.iO. lor
-!on.

I

.. "
..

advantage.

.I[DM"A"''"H

for Salt

BOATERS:

nastJ:.?,:-e"ts

Famlt, Foud

OCro11ftre

75 Boall &amp; Motora
1112 11

PrHmptive interference bids
crowd the opponents' auction. That's
the 1oocf news. Tbe bad news is that a
pre-emptive Ofti'CaU may just provide tbole
with an ex·
tra tool for bi · their eards to the
bill Of course it's fine for East to
Jump to three diamoods, but lOOk how
North-5outh Uled thai bid to their

.Ill USA TDCiey
!Ill •a~ 01 "-niJI Q

OffiCE •I

I

Compleoe tho chuckle quoted

BRIDGE

(I) E.-lnment Tonight

MY

. ..

_____

Jell--•

A - (0:30)-,.

f-1'1 APAATMENT

1

1111 Ford A-or ~ · n1oo ml'- , _ Pont

,."
'

.---.....:....

(J)Scltoleatlc-

TffE ~ENT ON--

1114 Doclge lllnl Yon, nice I
elton, pra ..,.-. 11 . , _

1•

Uvtstoqk

0

.

RINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
IN THE SF ' 0UARE S
uNsC RAMBLE FORI
AN SWER

01-01

7:30·~

~AifiP

TtfEY

ion 13100, Call171~111, ••• • :30 p.lil.

Good

7:05 (J)

llll11oftlt 1:00 p.ruo.

I l l - caoo, PI; OUotn bollitrinll
. 1 ....,._ . .i 114~ 7• •

room 11M wtth

11.111. 304-4175-1 I.
11113 ~~ Con..rolon Wn •

labw.tor ..... c.ll1~..

,......,, I J11111-* 1250.

Jill -

.

..

Our eon tried to teach his
dad how to ski. After many
hard tumbles, my husband
mumbled, "Remember, son, if
anything happens to me, your
mother will -- with ·-1·

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
•• ·• •
Ramrod - Verve- Slole- Gladly - GEOMETRY
Not too blight teen: "Is Paris in England?" Exasper·
ated teacher: "No, It's in France." Teen : "I never was
good at GEOMETRY."

Stereo.
·
IIIIIIOVIE: Henl1 Wllllamo:
The Show Ho Ne- Qoove
(2:00)

•
FRANK AND ERNEST

••~

63

d - . $171 end 1180. Apt. 1

Eloolrlo - ·

A
V

liJIIIIIaml VIce Bushkto

F \
....,..,,_
xtro
!-··-•·
•·~.
1111 .., •m -go, o
........
-..
-•·
"'""It
h
prloorl
w
ool,
~~~~~ Indo, I:OO.S:OO w-ya, - • 71
loLIIINoon.
.

31 N. 2nd St., Mlddlopoit. 1110.

BEAI/TlFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDOET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE!L. 1131 .tocluoon Plko
""'" ......... Wolk to tllop •
movtN. CIU &amp;14 ttl lilt. EOH.

,

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duel tonk~ allrllng tior
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Tnck, •••• 110, 4 opd. 11400.

73 vans &amp; 4 WD'S .

81 Ftnn Equipment

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(I) SportaCenler
(I) •Ill Current Alfllr

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MI.
$385
$9H.- To-ptlr:or1
SilO ....
up
to $121. Hide 1 blda
lo
t
$585. RocllnotO $225 to 1371.
lompo Ill lo 1121. Dtnllll• , _ , Whlitpool • olda,
$108 ond up lo .....
'lahll w-1 ahalra 1281 to 1715. Roll1gtrolor, - · 11-.a'llDtskt I1Q up to U71. Hutchto llllll.
$400 I up, bunk btrlo oompllllt F1dSLUH d For
: Qood
with m1nre• 1211 IIU'td up
- - llltdorood.
whMt
ook.
$381. INiby $110
Plctl-uplllll.
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$76, ftn11 111. orid $91. 0....
lliMI ~IMo 1271 I up, Klllfl 1310. 4 Flri sa a II: I
Lorllo
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or · You
ohllll ""· Qu~
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Lollloo, londtta, Du111 Col!to10&lt;1. 11r111 Pr
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15
11

IIANDIAWI1

HOUBihOid
Goods

a.-

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Caoll Colli.- 1117 ..
,,.,• •1.

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b e - ..... Oil.
llr. -~~~~~
101.
• .___.. • : : Clarinet. All MW

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- · on

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s!Hplng

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14&gt;170 wfth I.a. oxponclo In
IIYtng room ond dlnlilfl ,_,,
Waacauner (..th •ove) In
lwl... ...n. l'br,11112 .......

Dock wt1
.. -•••n c.,.
Vtry ot.
-can
· hot
bMn
et1• lp.10. 11.,241-9211. Sill up
.. Quoll Crook ltollllo Homo

304-

oil 1ri. E10111 ~
C...lrwlllltttt•l14 4• sn•

P!l$illllllllla

County ApDIIance. Inc. Good
Sale: Aml'lh'Onl ~aAur­
uood oppllonctt, T.V. otlo. 01itn , . 1110 chlrnnoy - . " "
Pomeroy. 114-112-1101.
8 o.m. to I p.m. Mon.-8111 .•,._ &lt;MW717; ·
•• 127 3rd. An. Qol.
31 W. opt. 2 br., 1 INith, prlvoll ..0·1111!
llpollt, ""
For _ _. At.l~ I 14 I

11171 -

Tlllo
Coool
114 tM- t317......
or looea•
11.._

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rHII: .._,.. llble party to
low
_,.hlr
........
1

E. 2nd. II iiO. Call
114-11a·2403.111yoo Rill Etltlt
or 114-1112·2710.

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-

1171 Clrandbrook. 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2 Kftl land. 15500. 114-MWIIS.

..
- - 1lnoldt.
Cooll,.l
11r oonciH!ollklg.
torgo

, _ OH. II.SII, 1 lillie _, Young, lullolo, W¥,
dl&amp; c n curt ........, tore. m..-.

9

tor Sale

11po11o 11o11r T~a1 Thlnl
Clllllpol!o. 011
"·

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51

.... color ....,Ill am. NO. oond.
114 HI IIU.
111,000 IITU ....,_ OOUillel

-dlnlllfl .....
Eor:h,..· llvlng-~
ld1ohonL.Iiothiil
bMrooms, walnut •. ,
lei--

· All

-!on.

..._ _

Ex~-

Two tniiW •plote, Route OM
Looulll flood .., rtglll. ~
107• '

I

N0 D Ry E

liJIIte-Min
1:35 (I) AnriJ Qrtlthh

2 room apartment, lirst floor.

Alto,

221a.

~ J•hlfta.l14 4.1411.

Pomeroy,

3711 EOII.

-24M.

32 Mobile Homn

wla1ove,

Tolal Motric. Cell 114 414111627
2:30p.m.

_..,110!1. Front IcC 1.•..,. told

_...,Ky.

kftchen

hOOkup, ilduho only. No polo.

ge,.. """

Unlumlohocl houtt, 3bi:, Rod·-·
VIUeae It $250, Ae...,c••· f14446-i4111ft.,7p.m.

":.'r.'r.•

I
refrlgerllor, no ,-te, River V..W,
231 Flrtl Afo. 11......._.V211.
1br. Iorge kltohon, wooh-dty

looL
Brlcll 3br, 2 both, 2100 0qft. hoot
pump,
h•lf. acr•,
city ochoolo, I1C-245-I271.
HA~RD. I ,_,.,both, op-

lull
batmt,..,
Somerville
Rtol1y, 304-6714030 or 175...."" 1
-.
Prico roduood, 3br 1 112 bath,
utll~y -m, gu hUt, • CA,
locolod •PP"oxlmotoly 2 milo
Wnt, frDm Holzer, on 'St. Rt. 35.
11 .._.4H071.
llenlol ' - "· Houoo ond •
mobl:. homa. WIU return lnveelrn.nt In ~1:-~· &amp;a.ll•nt

for Rent

tbr, 1180/mo. pluo dop. utlllln

ref.

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oncl both.
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rent ot ale, 14170,

Apartment

sr·

GallipoliS
..... Inland ,, '1'\ JacbM't
42"11
Pll,
Na
Grenda.
Ma•d
Mook Drln, owrw out
&amp; VIcinity
of .......... ·"· . . ,. nlct 3
ALL Yn MuOI lo Polrlln Melllble Mlp ..... fat I IMMOI bedroom, CGII'Iptltt klchtn,
Join
1:. rllnlng oncl :rv room Wnlreploco,
DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. ~.loil.

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tor

~=~:-::::-::::::::o:-::::::11A untum.oltl. Rongol Nfrlg.
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poid. Dop. ••
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1ond
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$32,100. o.,,. 11 ~·.!--'
or.- . 304 511 2412 or sa~.74 .

.

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Tralter nice clean Unfumlthed,
,.,.,_ roqulrod, Routt Ollt
out Looutl Rood on rlghl, 31M175-1071.

1 1 - . • both, 111,000 catll or
Lond Conl .. ot with - n
~.114112 1101.
3 bedroom home llvlngroom,
~~~~-. both. Compl-::t
,.madllld lniiH •ncl
·

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ANI nice Zbr, 12XI5, Cl~, AC,

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31 Homeator SaIt

""'mto

Dolll- lofllorll llllop. be olilt t o - II=:

.

•-'Y IMng, 2 bod,_.,

Tr1Uer

Real Estate

• month old 1111·

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mobile homo 1200. pluo utliiiiM
30-t..ll&amp;-3504.

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1;05 (J) Bevelly Htlllllllll
1:30. ~ liS NBC Nigll1ly Newa

TerTice
Moblto Homo Community, 11".._....-.,

protllable
114-441-1102 Mk tor

....,.
odD. ...
- 11. Point
to
Ia
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wvP.21110,

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II) Wllllci'.Tocley .
Ill Chllrloo In Charge
liJI,.,

MAKIN6 1-115 CAT 14APP'1'..

:::

MEN~IV

eiiD Andy oritftth

1'·

F-1 lo Your Own - 1 Novor
be un.mplo1monl ogoln. Sto~ I

II ,..,., . . . . . . , Gil:

PRINCIPAL I-IA5 RESIGNED!

~E'S 601N6 TO DEVOTE
THE REST 01:: HIS LIFE TO

11
.:,:..:•..:
..,::a-232e:,:::::::,.·-:--:-:--=
3br, sao prtvat.
luml-. 1.._1 ..... Rod..Y
-.Hop,ao.•~w.....,
Exira nice •••70 :lbt, ... hlgltWIV 1eG SoUih of VInton,
$25011no pluo -u~~=;···

t====~~=::;:==lr========="f •••-4*4181
"",,._.
Lata awalllble OrNII

1:10; 11wta-71SS ottw7:oo.
,...,. I 2
old. wllbe

GUESS WI-lAT.. OUR SCHOOL

'

-'

be·
low to form four slmpl. worda

•

(J) 1. . AMA . . . .QCII
(!) OegruaiJwtlor . . .
Thllmtl: Storeotyplng,
aeM-Image, ~ lnd
emb&amp;rraaoment.
(!) ....... One
(0:30) Q

*'"' ,.rt.,

,.!.;!.___ _ _ _

loo( """"'...,.. _ _ ,

"Of course, it's only a rough
t• te "
es lma ...

-oftltllp.m.

-

REALL'&lt;? JUST FROM WHAT l
SAID TO HIM? I CAN'T
BELIEVE IT!

.fill

Olllewa

II/I

..

3 Announctmtntl

•

leorrang• Jetter• of
0 lour
ocromblod -ds

liVENING

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S@i-.illA-l&amp;i-~S·

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PI IIlii
--------~~.4~4~,c~••- ~

I:OOi=hAnd

Annou!H. emenl ~

r--..

WED., NOV. 1

Sentinel-Page 11 -

OV

NTOF

SPZK

OF

EAKIH;
NJZN

HOVZNOAV
XTOVPFP

HPV

NTP
AS

AVMQ
LPNP~

ZKP , EZVNOVC .
IKA.IPKU

ea.,..,.,.,,

Y1alelf.,'•
NATURE HAS NOT
SAID TO ME. "DDN'T IE fi(Qt"; NOT "BE RICH":
Bt.rr SHE CRIES, "BE INDEPENDENT," - NICOLAS
CHAMFORT

'

'
,.

�· WEDNESDAY' ·
-The Middleport Literary Club ·wm meet on
Wednesl;lay at 1: 30 p.m. with .
Mrs. ·Wilson Carpenter as hos·
tess. Mrs. Forrest Bachtel will
review "Han Fan tel." Roll call ' ·
will be for members to answer ·
with !'The first time . you

·.

MIDDL~PORT

. life Reserve The Ri1ht To
limil Qulntilits .

..

.

danced."

RACINE - There will be .a ·
by- sing at the Sutton United .
· .iilil!cllodlst Church on Bashan
ROad on ~ednesday ·at 7:30p.m.
The public Is Invited to attend.

JTORE HOORS
,Monday thru ·Sunday
. 8 AM-1 0 PM ,.

298 SECO~D Sl
POMEROY, OH.

.,

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., OCT. 29 THRU SAT., NOV. 4, 1989

THURSDAY
.
POMEROY - Big Bend Girl
Scout SerVice Unit will meet 7
. p.m. Thursday at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. ·All ·
leaders should attend.
·
.

MIDDLEPORT -The Evangel (lie &lt;;hapter No .. 172, Order of the
Eastern Star, Middleport, will
have Its · regular meeting on
. · Thursday at 7:30 p:tn. Initiatory
WGi1! will be exemplified. Offlc·
ers are to wear chapter dresses.·
MIDDLEPORT -There will

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS . .

be a · bake and rummage sale on
. Thursday and Friday from 9a.m.
·. to 4 p.m. at the Ash Street
Freewill Baptls I Church In
Middleport ·

Rump .Roast~ •••• !••

POMEROY -The Xl Gamma
Epsilon.Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
· Sorority will have Its Ritual of
Jewells Tea on Thursday at 7
p.m. at : the · home of · Sharon
Stewart. Members are to bring .
canned goods for .the needy
family.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
·Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
·. will meet Thursday at 7: 30 p.m.
Mrs. VIrginia Sml!h, Dis trlct 12 .
president, will be. there for
inspection. All men:tbers are
urged to atjend. Members are to
pay dues by l':lov. 10 to prevent
Interruption of Insurance
·coverage.
PQMEROY - The Pomeroy
group of A.A. and AI Anon will
meet Thursday ·a t the· Sacred .
-Heart Catholic Church at 7 p.m.
For more information call1·800·
3:U-5051.
.
.
.
POMEROY - The Meigs High
School Yearbooks wlll be on sale
"naw na _.fttlay.'nllteoat'* ·
S20 plus S2 for JU!me eqravlng,_.
and $1 for a plastic cover.
~

POMEROY · -The Salisbury
· township trustees will meet in
regular session on Thursday at 7
p.m. at the .township !)all. The
·public Is welcome'
RACINE -There will be . a ·
hymn sing at the Morse Chapel
on Racine-Portland Road on
Thursday -at 7 p.m. The Gabdel
Quartet will perform.

$ _, 79
.

1.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

T.. Bone Stea_k&gt;•••••• $3.59·
U.S.D.A. CHOICE ..
$
Round Steak ·•••• !•• ·_199
LB.

CAROLINA PRIZE 1· LB.
SWIFTiS BUnERBALL

.

.Turke~s •••••••••••••••
·· •
:99&lt;
WILSON'S RN KING BONELESS
·. ·
Hams. ••••••••••••••••••
· ·. $1 79
i0-22l8.

lB.

•

•

•

6·· Ll. AYG.

Sliced .Bacon ••••• !-.. 79&lt;

lB.

•

•

SlKED

:

·

Pork .· Loin •••• ~~ S-.159
FRESH PORK BUTT
.
Steaks/Roast-s ••~- $11.9
1/4

MIDDLEPORT -The Ash
Street Freewill Baptist Church
will have a bake and rummage ·
sale on Thursday and Friday
.from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m . . at the
church In Middleport. The sale
will be held rain or shine.
FRIDAY

TUPPERS PLAINS -The WI!·
ling ·Workers of the St. Paul
United Methodist Church In
Tuppers Plains will · have Its
ba.za ar on Friday and Saturday
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Homemade
pies, cakes, bread, cookies,
crafts, quUts, comforts, and
more will be available.

U.S. # 1 WHITE

Potatoes •••••••••••• $149
10 lB•

.\

MIDDLEPORT -A square
dance will be held at the
·American Legion Annex on Mill ·
St . .In Middleport on Friday from
8 p.m. to midnight. Bernard
Connolly and the Traverlers will
perform. The costls S5 per couph!
and $3 single. The public Is
Invited to attend. The caller will
be Ronnie Woods.

FLAVORITE

GAl.

NEW COUNTRY

Yogurt •••••••••••••oz. 4/$1

STlVERSVILLE -Timothy D.
Chrisman, New Concord, will be
the guest speaker at the Sliversville Word of Faith Church on
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday at
7: 30 p.m. Pastor Gary Holter
Invites the public.

6

..

.

,FLAVORITE

•

STOVE TOP TURKEY .OR CHICKEN

oz. 4/S1.Pot
Pies
Dressing ..........~~z•• 79~
·~·········
MT. TOP
ZESTA .
oz. $119
Pumpkin
Pie
Saltines .........'.~:~x•• 99&lt;
••••••
7

26

HARRISONVILLE -The Harrisonville Lodge 411 F and AM
will hold Its regular meeting on
Saturday at 7: 30 p.m.

MAXWEll HOUSE or SANKA
POMEROY -The UMWA
Christmas Committee will present the fourth annual Coal Miners
Jamboree to benefit area child·
rens services on Saturday at 7
p.m. In the Metp Hlp School
Gymnulom. Tlclrets c811 be
purclwed at !be door for S5 for
adult• and S2 for cblldrell. Tbe
River JuDCtlon Bluegrass Band
will perform.

INSTANT COFFEE
IOZ.

$299

.. li:llll 1 p., Colt I
GeM O:::ly At Pewlll's S 1 uwbt
Oct. 2. "'"' Set. ""· 4

.... s.:.

'

TIDE DETERGENT
1360Z.s

599

LIMit 1 •• ( l l f o-1 Only AI ......., S I :

\.it
Gaotl S.:.
Oct.
2'
tl:n:
Set.
lin.
4
.
.

CHARMIN

TOILET nSSUE
41011

PIG.

99(

U:::it 1 •• , ..._
o-1 Only At ....., s.ILLLIGrbt
Gaotl S.:. Oct. Jt tin Set. lin. 4

WILSONS

EVAPORATED MILK

~:H~l. s5
f$2
••

U:::lt
&lt;•t- . .
GMtl Only At Pewtll's S •• nNIII:el'
GeM S.:. Oct. 29 thru Set. ilew. 4

111ft.

M

I

2°/o Milk •••••••••••• $1.5~

SATURDAY

JACKSON -There will be a
winter craftfest, craft show and
sale, on Saturday and Sunday at
Canter's Cave 4H Camp In
Jackson.

... .....
..... ..... .....
•
3

4

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