<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10301" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/10301?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T17:39:36+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20743">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6e31c7df9e325c4ccb9a1d88ab2dc218.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0fb9d23106f9820fc1f0a291a088607c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32884">
                  <text>Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

Historic Russian cathedral ·

She said, he said:
co~stars talk
about 'Zelda'
By FRAZIER MOORE
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - She was
Zelda, dubbed " the fmt American
flapper'' of lhe Roaring '20s. Precoctous and spectacular, she was
skilled as a writer, painter, dancer.
But despite her otherworldly radiance, she would live in the shadow
of her husband ... until it drove her
mad.
He was Scott, the Jazz Age
shooting star who wrote "The
Beautiful and the Damned," "Tender is the Night" and "The Great
Gatsby."
They met in 1918 at a summer
dance, and together these golden
soulmates helped fashion . the
decade to come.
A lifestyle of the rich and
famous that would make Robin
Leach drool in his Perrier-Jouet,
the story of Zelda and F. Scott
Fitzgerald is dramatized in the rollicking yet heart-breaking
"Zelda," which premieres on the
TNT cable network Sunday at 8
p.m. EST, with encores at 10 ·p.m.
and midnight.
She is Natasha Richardson, the
gifted young actress who last
graced the airwaves in last winter's

consecrated in Red Square --;.

·'Suddenly Last Summer." Outfitted in what used to be called a
granny dress, her feet tucked up
under her on her publicist's couch,
she laiks about Zelda.
He is Timothy Hutton, bestknown ro audiences for such films
as "Taps" and "Ordinary People." Contemplatively leaning way
back in his chair in his Manhattan
hotel room, he laiks about Scott.
SHE: "The first time Tim and I
met to rehearse, he brought me a
painting done by Zelda!"
HE: "I remember1,1d that a
friend owned the painting, and
when I asked her about it, she said,
'I'm trying to sell it.' I bought it
and took it straight down to the
rehearsal in a taxi. It wasn't even
wrapped.''

SHE: "I was speechless. A real
paintin$ done in the last few weeks
of her life!"
HE: "What's it ofl It could be
almost anything. At times it looks
like flowers, or maybe a human
profile. It's hard 10 tell.''
SHE: "After that, we got on
like a house on ftre. The ~recror
nicknamed us the Bobbsey
Twins.''
HE: "We never had to do lhat

FITZGERALD FOR TV • Thpothy Hutton and Natasha
Richardson star as writer F. Scott Fitzgerald and his glamorons
wire, Zelda, In the TNT television production or "Zelda," which
premieres on Sunday, Nov. 7. (AP Photo. TNT)

stow dance of avoidance, wondering if we could trust lhe other person.' '
SHE: "You're not lovers,
you're actors, and you have to be
able to trust each other and feed off

Nudist colony poses
problems for clothed minds

·
Dear Ann Landers: This is in
response to ·x.t..." the woman
whose husband visited 1 nudist club
and now would like her 10 visit, too.
rd like 10 offer her a few pointers.
I'm a woman who has been a
nudist for I 3 years. I belong to 1
club and visit regularly. I love
getting up in the morning and
walking outside naked. The
surroundings are beautiful. TaU fir
trees, wildflowa:s, birds chirping and
the quiet sounds of any campground.
It is wonderful ro feel·the warm air
or cool rain on your skin.
When nude, all people are equal.
You can't telllhe business tycoons
from lhe laborers. I don't know the
last names of my fellow club
members, oor do I know what type
of worlt: they do. I couldn't cane less.
I am not there 10 look at their
bodies.
· I've been married for 30 years. My
-h11sband is also a member. My
warning 10 X.L. is 10 not let her
husband go alone and make sure he
is interested in nudity for the right
IQSOIIS. Most of us are monogamous
and family-oriented, but some
:people join nudist clubs because they
·think free sex will be available. A
-nudist environment ·can be
dangerous 10 a married couple if
their relationship isn't rock-solid.
Most nudi~ts are open and
unashamed of their bodies. SinRie
.as· well as married people join
:nndist clubs. But just as in a clothed
;world, some have no respect for the

Ann
Lan ders
sanctity of maniage.
Most clubs now allow nude
dancing. Some also allow alcohoL
If you or your spouse have
problems with llltllding parlies or
social events in a clothed world
(flirting, etc.), you will have three
times the problems in a nudist world
Can you Uilagine dancing naked .with
someone to whom you are
physically att.racted7 Add alcohol,
and it becomes a potentially highrisk situation.
Clubs do not pull your
membership if you have lin
ex11'811larital affair, but most clubs
requi.Je notarized permission from a
spouse for a married person to join
without.their spouse joining also. GOOD l..UCK FROM A NUDIST
IN OREGON
DEAR OREGON: Your leuer was
veryinforrnauv~anditbroughtout

possible problems that potenual
nudists should be aware of. Thank
you for the conslrUCtiYC input.
Dear Ann Landers: A while
back, you printed leUas from people
who complained about being called
"sugar," "babe" and "honey" by

waitresses. Several readers wrote in
to say it wss OK with them. Well,
recendy, my husband and I have
encountered a new brand of
familiarity.
I'm 4S, and "Jerry" ia S1. We love
ID eat· out and enjoy trying new
restaurants. N"me times out of I0,
our server (usiially aorneone in his
tce111 or 20s) refas to us throughout
the meal as "You auys." We fmd

this annoying.
Even if we get excellent service,
we will tip less if the server calls us
"You guys. • There must be othen
out ~ who feel as we do, or do
you think we are too stuffy7 •• L.B ..
VISALIA, C~LIF.
D~ VISALIA: "You guys" ia
certainly no way to address
cusromen. lnslead of lijiping less,
why not set them straight in a
non-beHigerent, insttuaive way and
leave 20 percent? If they are even
modetalely intelligent, you will have
done them a favor.
Lo1U!Some? Take charge of yow
life and t11n1 it aroJUtd. Write for
AM Latukrs' new booklet, ''How to

A flower festival was discussed
for May. The group is asking for ,
input from flower growers. Those
who would like to have some input
are asked to· call Lillian Weese
after 5 p.m. at 949-2034 with comments.
.
A vote of appreciation for items
contributed to the yard sale was
given by the jp9up,, ' ,
MembeQ'.a!$0 ei\tend a welCome
to any interested CQ(Ilmunity residents to join the . community
improvement group. Meetings are
held on the fourth Tuesday of each
month at 6:30p.m.
·

what the other's doing, and let that
be the point of it aU. It's like being
able to flirt outrageously while
knowing that it's not going 10 get
you into trouble."
HE: "I think we helpe!l each
other let go. Scott and Zelda egged
each other on, and that's what we
did to play lhem."

~===:::===;___=-=-;--;---:;-;---;--, ' .

Bolh Thomas Wotre•s "'Look •.
Homeward, Angel " and William •
Faulkner ' • "'The Sound and the
f!l 'Y~' Wet!;p~_blbhed_i!!.!~29 ,

.'

GOLDEN
RIPE
BANANAS

Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
•
•
announces expanszon proJect
•

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Senlinel News Starr
Construction of a new threelane, drive-thru banking facility
will get underway next week and

' BAKING
POTAIOES

•2~19

'$

$

TWO CONVEtfENr LOCATIONS:
24110 ~ Aw. (ICrOII from KMart), Gallipolis • &amp;14-446-1711

H

busi.Mss-siu envelo~ and a cMck
or lr!ORY order for $4.15 (this ill·
eludes postage and handling) to:

--~

114 Milt No/111 af PomeroY-Muon Brld~·· Mason. 304-773-5721
7 DAYS A WEEK· MONDAY-SATURDAY, 8-7; SUNDAY, 10-6

Friends, cloAMLiuukrs,P.O. Boz
11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611.()562. (In
und $5.05.)

I PIRI:·FDR
IT. 7 IN DOWNIOWN

I

•

(Over30)

MONTHS
FINANCING
$600.00.............0nly $25.00 AMonth
$1200.00 ..........0nly $$0.00 A Month
$2400.00.........0nly $100.00.A Month
liDO POB nr.J BOUDAJI
PJUDAY AND IATilllDAT
.

I

you;

/&lt;.) Keep ~g.

..

• · B) Run.
,
C) Scoop them up, take them

.

'
''

•

y

home and hOpe they hafllh in your
house.
•
An unidentified peasant chose
C) recently and came home one
day to fmd his hut literally crawling with SO infant pythons - a
rem.arkable 0 percent mortality
rate, Congolese radio reported
Wedneadav •. .

their customers for access to over
I,IOO JEANIE ATM's throughout
Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana,
West
Virginia
In addition the JEANIE card can

installation
of automatedfollo""''·'·~!tiqg
teller ture
maclli~,A!IlPPPU:nt..Yt,\ll
soon after that at the Farmers Bank ly with the main
and Savings co: iii Pomeroy.
tunnel under the parking
The
Announcement .bf the planned third Jane will use the deal drawer. ·
expansion was made today by Paul
Kloes said lhat there will be no
Klees, chief executive officer, and change in the hours of operation for
Paul Reed, president.
the drive-thru facility.
Contract for the work on the
In announcing the construction
new drive-thru has been awarded to of lhe new three lane drive-thru 10
Wesam Construction. The project replace the single lane one now in
is expected to be completed by operation, the banking officials
mid-February.
acknowledged some customer
According to Klees and Reed, a inconvenience which will result
structure will be built on the east while the construction is underway,
side of the parking lot next to the
"Just bear with us,:!. said Kloes.
building occupied by Banks ConOnce that phase is completed,
struction.
then the bank will move forward on
A portion of the parking lot will installation or a JEANIE automated
be converted into three lanes for teller machine (ATM) network,
drive·thru hank customers who will Reed said.
enter from Second Street and exit
An ATM will be located at the
onro Main Street.
main office in Pomeroy. According
While this will result in a 10 lhe bank officials, plans .call for
3,000 JEANIE cards 10 be issued to

Stations in the ·
Klees.
This will permit customers to make
deposits at any JEANIE or money
station in Ohio.
The ATM installation wiU be a
"first" for Meigs County, Klees
and Reed reponed,
The Farmers Banlc and Savings
Co. wtth $69 million in assets will
be joining 45 new members to the
JEANIE Network in I993. These
institutions add over 210 ATM
locations and nearly 220,000 cardholders 10 the network.
The new drive-thru and automated teller machine network make
the second major improvement in
facilities which lhe bank has undertaken this decade. In 1991·92 the
bank was completely renovated and
expanded 10 include the entire second floor.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Opposition to changing the
nation s health care industry is
nothing new, Hillary Rodham Clio·
ton told a gathering at Marshall
· University.
At least three other presidents,
including Franklin Roosevelt,
Harry Truman and Richard Nixon,
tried and failed to revise the way

;
.

I

FRIDAY I All TIL I PM
SATURDAY I All nL 5 PM

~e!~::~~~~~-··,be~~::at~=~~~:s~~tall~·on~sr ·~~

the United States delivers health
care, she said.
"Harry Truman saw in 1945
exactly what was going ro happen
to our health care system. but as
tough and strong-minded as he
was, he couldn't get past the opposition," Mrs. Clinron said.
"Well we're still going ro have
opposition. Some people don ' t

----Local briefs---...

DINEnES &lt;over 26J

Deputies investigate B&amp;E
Depuues of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department are investigating the apparent breaking and entering of the Portland Elementary School.
According 10 a report from Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, a subject or subjecJs entered the buildin~ Wednesday
evening or Thursday moming ihrough a broken rear wmdow,
Each classroom door was forced open and glass in the kitchen
door was broken, Soulsby reported. The storage areas in the gym
were also entered, he added,
A small amount of money was taken from kitchen, Soulsby said.
The subject or subjects exited the building by removing the
screws from a hasp on the gym door, he reported.

'

LIVING ROOM
SUITES (Over 70) .

Two cited to county court
Two people were cited 10 appear in Meigs County Court on traf.
fie violations Thursday night. Cited by deputies were: Alvin
Richard Harris, 57, of Buffalo, W.Va., on charges of driving under
lhe influence and left of center, and Emma Moodispaugh, Middle·
port, on charges of passing a stopped school bus in Middleport.

'

Man charged after accident.
A Pomeroy man was charged with failure 10 yield following an
accident Wednesday evening on West Main Street, Pomeroy.
.
Pomeroy police reported that Oscar ]. Qualls, 81, Kerr St.,
Pomeroy, pulled from a service station onto. West Msin into the .
path of a car driven by Kendra North, 16, Racine,
While .neither were injured lhere was light damage to the passens_er side headlight area of the North car and to the front end of the
QuaUs vehicle.
\

FREE DiUYERY
UYIWAYIOW
••&gt;
• ,,

•
•

cloudy, blab ID mld-301.

'

•

,I'

the culverts have already been
replaced. The village will prepare
new specifications and re-advertise
for the work.
Assistant Syracuse Fire Chief
Eber Pickens asked permission 10
purchase ftre hose for the department. The cost is $2,828. Council
approved the purchase.
He also noted that the depart·
ment has received a 100 percent
grant Jrom Support Resources, Inc.
or Columbus for a smoke machine
to be used for mask training.
Pickens and Council both commended youngsters of lhe community for their excellent behavior on .
trick or treat nighL
. :
Mayor Pape appointed Dennis·
Wolfe and Don Shaffer to the ftre-·
men's dependency board.
Newly-elected members, Larry
Lavender and Eber Pickens, Jr.,
week.
Two bids on culvert work who will take office in January
received by Council were rejected attended. Others there were Clerkbecause the scope of the work has Treasurer Janice Lawson, and
changed. During the recent paving Council members, Kenny Buckley,
work done in the village, some of Don Shafer, Dennis W~_&gt;lfe , Bill
Roush and
Crow.

cuse water supply is secure.
It was mentioned by Bob
Wingett, grants administraror for
the village, that at one time he had
heard Mayor Herman London say
that Syracuse's wells were served
by an "underground river".
Syracuse and Pomeroy have
separate wells and Pomeroy owns
the land on which its wells are
located.
Council postponed action on a
water meter proposal from the
Board of Poblic Affairs. The board
decided 10 defer action on meters
for customers outside the village
because of lhe cost involved.
Mayor Pape reported on the
ground breaking for the Waters
Edge Apartment Complex. a
$700,000 project. Constroction is
expected to get underway next

and

.,.

--

OBSERVES WEEK • National Medltal
Records Week, Nov. 1-S, was observed at Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital Wednesday with a
departmental luncheon. In the picture, clock·
wise from left, are Barbara Woodyard, Joyce
Manuel, department employees; Karen Brozak,
extended care facility medical record supervisor,

and Joyce Redman, department employee.
Supervisor or the Medical Records Departmeat
at VMH is Sue Stone, not pictured. The Medical
Records Department collects maay kinds ot data
from a variety ot sources, monitors the Integrity
of the information, ensures appropriate access to
health records and manages the analysis and use
or this data.

Lawmaker wants PUCO
to phase in rate hikes

Health care road show stops in Huntington

. Peasant peddles plethora of pythons
· BRAZZAVILLE, Congo (AP)
...__You're walking, alone in the
~ junaJO and come acroas
. SO eag• that may or may not
belong ro liD enormous snake. Do

decrease in the number of parking
spaces, there will remain an adequate parking area for customers,
Klees said.
Two of the three lanes will fea-

•

FREE

REFRIGERATORS

TV's

\

RECLINERS &lt;over so)

SUITES

left,
execunext week are rrom
tive vice president; Jon Karschnlk, vice president; Paullleed; president and Paul Kloes, chief
executive officer.

CONSTRUCTI
Farmers Bank and Sa•fini~S Co.'s site looking
over the building plans for the new three lane
drive-tbru which will get under construction

IIAifJI($ · !

Low tonl&amp;bt In mld-301, part·
17 cloudy. Saturday, panly

Syracuse mayor is told
additional water usage will
~ot hurt village's supply
By Kathryn Crow
Sentinel Ccirrespondent
A- proposal by Pomeroy and
Middleport officials 10 join forces
to supply residents of those two
commuruties with water and how it
might affect Syracuse's water supply was a subject of discussion
when Syracuse Village officials
met Thursday night at village hall.
Syracuse officials' concern centered around the fact that the wells
which provide water for Pomeroy
residents are in Syracuse and the
possibility of additional water
usage from those wells 10 provide
Middleport residents might create a
shortage in lhe toog term.
Mayor James Pape said that he
was "told that it would not hurt
Syracuse's supply".
Currently Syracuse has an
agreement with Pomeroy where
each will supfly water to ·the other
in lhe event o any problems. It was
stressed during the meeting that the
village has no problem with any
arrangement as long as the Syra-

tliinlc this is right, because they
were born lucky. They were born
healthy or they were born wealthy
and they like it just the way it is."
Mrs. Clinton was at Marshall
University on Thursday to win support for a proposed massive overhaul of the nation's health care system.
President and Mrs. Clinton
kicked off the national tour
Wednesday by presenting, copies of
lhe $S paperback at a public library
in Ambridge, Pa.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A state
lawmaker said he wants 10 give the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio authority to phase in utility
rate increases.
The Ohio Supreme Court ruled
Wednesday that the commission
does not have that power. The
court's ruling means Cincinnati and
Columbus utility cus10mers will
see their electnc bills increase
soon,
The president did not accompaState Rep. Frank Sawyer, D-.
ny his wife to Huntington but Mansfield, chairman of the House
instead visited Lexington, Ky ., Public Utilities Committee, said
about 114 miles to the wes~ 10 pro- Thursday he would support enactmote the North American Free ing a law 10 give lhe PUCO authorTrade Agreement.
ity to phase in utility rates. He said
Huntington is alongside the that would spare customers from
Ohio River, near the conjunction of being hit with a big increase all at
West Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky. once.
Mrs. Clinton chose Marshall
"I think that makes perfect
University because the school sense," Sawyer said. "I thought
focuses on training primary care the PUCO had that authority, but
doctors, especially for rural or evidently, thcydon't."
other underserved aneas.
Sawyer said he would want to
confer with Craig .Glazer, the
She was joined by Marshall PUCO's chairman, 10 draft the law.
President J. Wade GiHey, who said
State Sen. Richard Finan, Rthe Marshall medical school is Cincinnati, chairman of the Ways
among those leading the nation "in and Means Committee which hanlhe production of rural .health care dles utility legislation in the Senate,
pro(essionals."
said he would be willing to consid"If. every school had this er giving that authority to the
emphasis, we would not have some PUCO. He declined 10 say whether
of the problems we had today," he personally would suppon it.
Mrs. Clinton said. "We would
The Ohio consumers' counsel
have enough family practice physi- would be interested in the concepl
cians.' '
because the court's ruling leaves
Several Marshall medical stu- consumers vulnerable to having to
dents heard Mrs. Clinton's speech, . pay large rate increases at once.
and she rresented auto~raphed said Doug Flowers, a spokesman
copies o the 136•page 'Health for lhe agency, which represents
Security" book ro some of the stu- consumers in utility rate cases.
dents at lhe campus bookstore.
The rulint came in appeals of

,,
...

increases granted to Ci:llumbus
Southern Power Co. and Cincinnati
Gas &amp; Electric Co.
PUCO personnel began trying to
figure out how much the increase
will be for customers of the utili-

lies. Theolwo utilities serve a combined 1.3 million business and residential electric cusromers.
PUCO spokeswoman Stacie
Gilg said she did not know when
the commission wiU decide.

OUT WITH THE OLD- Worken prep•re a 40-foot section ot:
wall at the Robert C. Byrd Locks and Dam for demollti011 Thurs- ·
day afternoon. Holes drDied tbrougbout the wan were ftlled with a .
nlttoelycerin-based 1el wllkb was set oil' with a percussion wne at
about 4:30 p.m. Dennis Huehes, acting resident en1lneer •t the
locks, said the old Will was destroyed becaue it protrudes Into the
new locks' water Intake area and resb leta tile flow ot Wlter. The
Army Corpa ot Ellldneers plaas to lllllall a boom ID tbe 1re1 nidi
was occupied by tbe wall. Htqba 111d the boom wiD be used to
remove Ice and debris from tbe lntlke area. (OVP pboto by Kevin
Pinson)

,,

•

..

2s..tiOM,12P. . . 311_,11
A Multlmecl•lno. News~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 5, 1993

TRIVIA

APPLE BUnER • UDE IN A COPPER KEnLE
PINTS $2.98
(CIIIWIOI FLAVORED)
QUARTS $4.99

c

Vol. 44, NO. 136
Multlmodi•lno.

Richard Allenborough made his ~
film debut in Noel Coward's 1942 -::
gem, "'In Which We Serve ,"' co dire~ ted_bl'J.he_y~.u .ng· David. Lean.

,,•• ,..,_r... tH ,..,. •••,.- ,., ..,,, .............

•

•

~;::::::::::~:;:=:::::~:::;:-;:;:1~

WE WILL MIX OR MATCH VARIETIES OF ANY QUANTITY OF APPLES
TO THE CUSTOMER'S SAnsFACTION!

CALIFORNIA
RED ORWNIIE
UEDLESS GRAPES

Pick 3:
596
Pick 4:
4782
Buckeye 5:
6·9·19· 28-34

TRIVIA

C:

CALIFORNIA
ICEBERG
HEAD LEnUCE

.Buckeyes
to face
Badgers ··

••.

Offering 7 Varieties: Winesap • Ida Rad •Rae! &amp;Golden Delicious • Nittany • Rome Beauly • Macintosh
5 I.B. BAG ·~.98 tl ~0 J.&amp; BAG ts-49
OIIAJ111ry Ill
ZO I.B. (1./Z BUSHEL) 'S.49 ti Busaa *9.98
AVAilAt1 111f71.

Woody Allen's complaint
against prosecuto~ dismisse4 ·

, WALLINGFORD, Conn. (AP) he believed Allen hJU! c~mm1tted
_ A state disciplinary panel ruled the cnme but ~t he dido t wantro
a prosecuror did nothing wrong in lhe pu.t the child through the ordeal
saying he believed Woody Allen of a trial.
. .
•
molested his adopted daughter but
One commtsslOn m~'!et; Supenot preiSing charges.
rior c~ Mge A. WIIJiar!l M~Rejecting a complaint from tolese, cnbclzed Maco sa~mg, I
fo.llen ·against the proSecutor, the think ~· Maco coul~ easily have
Criminal justice Commission said accomplished the desired result by
w~ there was no evidance chQ&lt;&gt;sing his la~guage ~?re care- .
mat States Atrorney Frank Maco fully and more discreedy,
had violated the canon of ethics for
Allen's attorney, Elkan
lawyers.
Abramowitz, said that Allen .g~ a
Maco -announced Sept. 24 that fair hearing before the commwton
he was dropPing his investigation and that his goal wasn't ~o hu~t
into allepuons ~ Anen SCJtually Maco, but to make s~ the public
abused his then 7-year-old daugh- understood that Maces comments
ter, Dytan: N prosecutor said that weren't true.

two most precious and venera«i(J
icons from a state conection.
"
The announcement ended .a
long-running dispute between the
church and museum officials over
who owns the religious "paintingi
- the "Virf!in of Vladimir" arfit
the "Holy Tnnity."
•·
The church wanted the icons
back, but museum experts cotl'[plained humi~ty and temperatu~,
changes in ancient stone cathedrals'
would ruin the paintings. Som(
critics claimed museum officials ~
were more interested in savin'g .
their jobs.
~
Yeltsin said lhe icons would hi:,
kept in special conditions thit
would guarantee \heir safet~. Hb :
told Alexy about his decision·at 111Jl .
cathedral gares.
• ·
Alexy thanked Yeltsin, saying :
the chun:h would "pray for ~:
and accord in the homeland" ill"
front of the icons.

For Canning, ••king, O.r Julf Pial• Good Eating,
Check Be&amp;'• Selection Of Healthy, llutrltiett &amp; Delloioua APPLES I

Make Friends and Stop Being
I...ontly. Send a self-addressed. long.

·Christmas in park plans set
Plans for ChriStmas in the Parle
were discussed when the Racine
Area Community Organization met
recently at the park.
During the meeting conducted
by Frank Cleland, president,
arrangeme11ts were made to sponsor a Christmas decorating conteSt.
Five prizes will be awarded.
.
The meeting opc;oed with the 14
members at~~ili)iF singing
"America" follo\fed w1tll prayer by
Cleland.
.'t'· •
Lillian Weese gave the secretary's report followed by Tonja
Hunter with the treasurer's report.

By VLADIMIR ISACHENXOV
Alloclaled Preu Writer
"MOSCOW (AP)- T!lc head of
lhe Russian Ortborlox Church and
priests in flowing gold, black and
white robes today reconsecrated a
cathedral in Red S~uare that was
destroyed on Stalin s orders more
than a half-centurY ago.
The rebuilding of the Kazan
Cathedral symoblized the rising
fortunes of the church since the
collapse of the Soviet Union. Presi·
dent Boris Yeltsin and, other senior
· government leaders attended the
ceremony watched by hundreds of
people holding candles as a choir
sang.
A few hundred yards away from
the cathedral stands the tomb of
· Lenin, the father of Russian communism . City officials want to
close lhe romb and remove Lenin's
body to sever ties with the Communist past.
The cathedral, one of the most
important holy sites in Russia, was
tom down in 1936 on the orders of
Stalin, who wanted to crush the
Orthodox Church. The 300-yearold cathedral was destroyed to
clear the way for military parades
held by the Communists in Red
Square.
Work on rebuilding the cathe·
drat began in 1992, funded by government and public doilations. The
squat pink building, with gold
domes and crosses, stands next to
lhe famous GUM department store.
Yeltsin told Patriarch Alexy II,
head of the church, that the govern·
ment wo_uld return the country's

Ohio Lottery

.

Thursday, November 4, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

�Friday, November 5, 1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Sueet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF 'l1IE IIEIGS-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leuers
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Today's winner is
tomorrow's incumbent
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Beyond bragging rights, Republicans are ~ng 10
make their odd-year election viciOries P!l!"l of a recruiting dnve to
strengthen GOP congressional ti~ets !!Cxt year.
.
.
That could be the lasting nauonal unpnnt of the b1g three Republican
wins _ governor's ra_ces in New Jer~y and_Yirginia and the mayor's
office in New York C1ty. In each, they retaking over where Democrats
ruled.
_
.
.
.
,
President Chnton camprugned m two of those losmg races, and wasn t
wanled in Virginia He said the outcome was not a referendum or a repudiation of his presidency.
Republicans called it a big defeat for lhe White House, an overstalement as predictable as Demoq~tic insislence to lhe contrary.
There was accord on two pomts:
- Vo1ers still want change.
-Incumbents are still endangered.
Clinton said "the volers are not yet happy with the pace" and don't
think the ~ovemment is working for them, but added that he's on lhe way
to producmg the results they want. Republicans counlered that what people really want is to change from the Clin10n course.
.
,• .
"Incumbents are being challenged, m many cases effecuvely, satd
House Speaker Thomas S. I;oley.• :'But !hat's not a message thai strikes at
either Democrats or Repubhcans.
It could next time, simply because !here are more Democrats than
Republicans in Congress and up for re-election next year. The Democrats
hold 258 House seats, Republicans 175. In the Senate, it is 56 to 44.
, Nationally, the stakes this time were psychological, a prologue to lhe
1994 congressional elections for the House. and 34 Senate seats; Wh~n
those votes are counled, there'll bepo debatil!g ~e messag&lt;:. It ~1ll be m
the numbers for CliniOn who can t afford stgnificant eros1on m Democratic congreSsional majorlties, and ~C!" lhe Republican opposition, bent on
gaining power although upset maJOnUes are all but certainly out of reach.
In lhe House on Wednesday, a succession ~f Republi~s took the
floor to crow and 10 claim there are more GOP gams commg m 1994.
"If the Republicans can win in New York City we can wm any ~here," said Rep. Rod Grams, a Min~c:rota ~shman. He looked ac~ss
the House aisle at the Democrats, pohucally silent for the moment. If
you voled for lhe record Clin10n tax increase, guess what, you could be
next,"be sat'd.
.
. ·
lei
· That's the kind of argument GOP ?"¥anizers will be usmg m see ng
: congressional challengers. '·'I'm predicung it_'s going to help ·us enlist a
: iot of candidales who may have been. holdmg back to see what hap: pened," said Sen. Bob Do~e. the Republican leader.
. .
· "Our candidate recrutung already had been very ~ood ..... and tt wtll
get even betler now,'' said Haley Bar!Jour, lhe Repubh~an c_hamnan ..
Barbour said the biggest faciOrs m lhe Tuesday vtciOnes, and m the
earlier elections of a Republican mayor in Los Angeles and two GOP senators, were qu!llity candidates and_ good campaigns.
.
But he said there also are nauonal trends lhat help h1s party: a good
: environment for conservative answers even in big cities that have been
· bedrock Democratic and a slump in Clinton's popularity.
.
: Still, Mayor..elect ~udolph Giuliani ~f New York Sl!id his v1ctory was
on local issues, no nauonal message, no JUdgment of Omwn.
Appraising New Jersey, Republicans likened defealed Gov. James Florio 10 Clinton on taxes. He'd pro~ised no new taxes in w~ing fow; years
ago "and then like President Clmton, virtually the flfSt thmg he did was
10 put forward'lhe largest tax increase in the stale's his10ry," Barbour
5aid.
Fl ·
• Never mind that the better parallel would be George Bush. ono
didn't use Bush's 'Read my lips' line, but his no·~ ca!"pa1gn came
close. Clinton reneged on a narrower 1992 pledge agamst h1gher taxes on
:the middle class.
.
.
· Now lhe Republican ~ovemors..elect have 10 deliver on theu tax vows:
·the 30-percent cut promtsed by Christine Todd Whitman _in_ New Jersey
and George Allen's. pledge that.:'.we'r:e ~~ gmng to be nusmg any sales
er income taxes durmg my term m Vu~uua
.
: Such are lhe challenges awai~ng lhe mcumbent. While th~ Democrauc
chairman, David Wilhelm,_said u's not a good U!fte to be an _mc,umbent, 11
beats the a11emative. The mcumbent lS the candidate who didn t lose last
time.
.
.
· h th ~
And if the mood stays hosule 10ward mcumbents, w at en_ "Well, that's up to me, isn't it?" asked Gov.-elect WhiUnan, "I've got
to deliver."
' EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist ·ror The Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
national pollllcs for more than 30 years.

~ Letters

•

WASHINGTON - Is "Belt
Buckle Bunning" up to his old
tricks?
Rep. Jim Bunning, R-Ky. who was givt\n that nickname by
his opponent during last year' s
election - has long been accused
of sharpening his belt buckle in
order 10 doctor baseballs during his
major-Ieallue pitching career. Bunning dentes the allegation, but a
1990 book by Dan Guunan ("It
Ain't Cheatin' If You Don't Get
Caught") nominates him for the
"Scuffball Hall of Fame."
Bunning, who has been frustrated by his failure 10 be enshrined in
lhe Baseball Hall of Fame, has our
vote for election to the Hotheads
and Hypocriles' Hall of Shame. As
fellow Kentucky Sen. Wendell
Ford, a Democrat, says, Bunning is
"pressing Newt Gingrich for the
title of Mr. Nasty in the House.''
In vintage Bunning-style, he
recently called President Clinton
"the most corrupt, the most
amoral, the most despicable person
I've ever seen in the presidency." ·
Bunning jarred some of Washington's most seasoned hard-ball play.
ers with lhat hyperbole. One Senate
Democratic leader, echoing a senti-

Bunning's congressional district,
Eric Deters, beli~es Bunning can't
help himself. "The problem is be
has a temper and he doesn't control
it very well," Deters IOid our associate Ed Henry.
·
Bunning and _Deters had a
falling-out last year because they
supported different calldidates ror
Kentucky's gubernatorial race.
Bunning, who was one of the most
self-righteous critics during the
congressional check-bouncing
scandal,
supported a candidale who
go, and he crossed it''
had
32
overdrafts
on the House
Bunning's lack of political
as
a
member
or Congress.
Bank
sportsmanship registered with the
Deters
broke
from
Bunning and
normally unflappable first lady,
became
the
campaign
manager for
Hillary Rodharn Clinton. Ms. Clinton declared during the campaign Floyd Poore, the Democrat who
that she was not "some little challen~ed Bunning last year.
PreSident Ointon could defend
woman, standing by my man, like
himself
against Bunning's broad·
Tammy Wynette." But during a
sides
by
invoking an old prover!!:
small White House dinner party,
People
who
live in glass houses
days after Bunning's remarks,
friends were impressed by her pro- shoUldn't throw stones. A look at
Bunning's background suggests he
leCtiveness of the presidenL
According 10 these friends, Ms. has been no stranger to the kinds of
Clinton said: "I find it very inter- scwrilous rumors and reports he's
esting how people like Jim Bun- now trying 10 fan.
Bunning, who refused 10 comning - given (his) reputation ment
for this story, has said that
can call my husband" those names.
when
he called the president
A cortserVative Republican who
once served as ·GOP cha:irman of "amoral," he was "referring to the

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

IT'S ABOUT
OUR Lfi.TEST
EXPERIMENT. ..

GENI:TIC
RESEARCK
.sqssm

ment expressed by many on Capitol Hill, said: "I think even bitter
partisans recognize that there is a
line beyond which you just don't

~ ....

'

' '

I have wa11:bed them at the groCCI}' bUy T-b\lnel~ $2.79 a poun~
·•ckli moll ind olbcii prepUed deli
:food. All this ti11!e I am ·trying to
, :find aome !(heap ham bur,11er or
• • •
J

early-1992 allegations of infulelity,
which Clinton answered b_y
acknowledging that be had expeneneed marital problems.''
But an admission of·"marital
pfl)blems" is hardly an admission
of adullery - as Bunning learned
the hard way during his own Cl!ffi·
paign last year. When Bunnmg
erroneously and maliciously
accused Poore of failing to provide
sufficient financial support for the
children from his first marriage,
Poore shot back by suggesting
Bunning once had a mistress. Poore
later apologized, but refused to stop
callin~ the incumbent "Belt Buckle
Bunnmg."
"At. the very least, you would
think (Bunning) would follow the
golden rule," one aide to Ms. Clinton told us. "You know, 'Do IDIIO
others as you would want them to
do unto you.'''
Bunnin~ was dogged by other
character 1ssues last year. Press
accounts revealed that he lived for
32 years in neighborhoods that formally excluded blacks and other
minorities. For exampl~. the deed
for a house that BIUlning lived in
for 29 years stipulated that, "No
persons of any race other than (the)
caucasian race shall use or occupy
any building of any lot, except ...
domestic servants of a different
race domiciled with an owner or
~nanL''

,,

HUH HUM
HUH HUH

HEE HEE
COOL

Confronled with the conuoversy, Bunning- who has said he
called Clinton "corrupt" and
"despicable" because of "the IOta!
disiOrtion and l~ing he has done"
- gave three different versions of
why he lived there.
Bunning won't be on any While
House guest list anytime soon. But
Ms. Clinton might have some
respect for Bunning's wife, Mary.
During a floor speech last May,
Bunning revealed that she believes
"Ir you can't say something nice
about somebody, don't say anything at all. She tries to get me .to
follow that advice. Sometimes I
manage to follow it. Sometimes I
dn not do so well."
It's doubtful that "Belt Buckle
Bunning" will change his ways.
Jack An-d erson and Michael
Binsteln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Congress: Say yes to free .trade pact
Both Houses of Congress will Y,eats is that, thaiJks to leehnology,
shortly v.u 10 approve or rejec:t tile the nature of what America can do
North American Free Trade Agree- best has been shifting: from basic
ment, and it is time for everyone manufacturing (at 'which many
inlerested in public affairs in this
country to stand up and be counled
on the issue. Let me, then, go on
record as urging Congress to
approve NAFfA.
One of the great cenual themes
of modem American conservatism other countries can now compete
has been the preferability or free with us successfully) 10 all sorts of
trade to protectionism. The basic high-leeh en1erprises at which we
analysis goes back 10 Adam Smith: can run circles around almost
Everyone is better off in the long everybody else. This has unquesrun when markets, rather thati gov- tionably resulted in a certain
ernments, delermine prices. A tariff ainount of damage to some tradion Italian shoes (for example) tional American businesses, and
"protects" American shoe manu- will ineviJably result in a certain
facturers, but results in every amount more if it is allowed 10
American paying more for shoes continue (as NAFfA would do).
The only allernative, however,
than would otherwise he the case.
The same goes for men's shirts, is to rig the market 10 "protect"
automobiles, and indeed every politicallY, powerful American
businesses, to lhe immediale detriother commodity.
Letting the international market ment or consumers and the longdetermine prices, on the other range detriment or tile entire Amerhand, results over time in each ican economy, which would be
nation concentrating on producing doomed 10 continue outdated ecowhat it can do best and most cheap- nomic practices while tile world
ly - to the benefit of buyers outside rushed on to a more efficient future. Ir we have the courage
everywhere.
10. free trade
What has happened in recent 10 lower the barriers
.

William A. Rusher

with our North American neighbors, our economy will right itself
again swiftl;t and generate far more
jobs than w1U be lost
Naturally the big unions dread
NAFTA - not so much because
existing union jobs will be lost but
because they can't ·b e sure of
unionizing the tremendous number
of new jobs that will be ~- So
President Clinton, who is in bed
with the unions on just about
everything else, is totally dependent on Republican votes 10 pull
NAFT A through both the Iiouse
and the Senale.
I hope he gets them. This is no
time to play politics. If the Republicans join the majority of their
Democratic colleagues in shooting
NAFTA down, there will, to be
sure, be a certain amount of egg on
President Clin10n1s face. But long
afler it ,has 'disappeared, the historians of our lime will remember and
say that-on this major issue the
congressional Republicans simply
and cynically abandoned their freetrade principles.
I am weD aware that some conservatives rear that the so-called
" side agreements" (on the environment, etc.) that Mr. Clinton has

negotialed in order to placate his
Democratic critics have turned an
essentially good arrangement in10
an engine for international control
of important economic decisions.
But the arguments are dubious, the
alleged damage is remediable, and
the benefits ofNAFTA vastly outweigh minor objections to it
Repeatedly, in recent months, I
have noted prominent conservative
individuals and organizations
opposing, on one tendentious
ground or another, measures that
have long been advocated by the
conservative movement as a whole.
Before this column can even he
published, the California school
voucher initiative - the most
promising effort ever made to rescue American education from disas1er - will have been shot down
by a disgraceful coalition of the
National Education Association, a
handful of "libertarian" conservatives, a Christian home-school
lobby, and the Republican governor of California.
Don'tlet it happen toNAFfA.
William Rusher Is a syadicat·
ed writer ror Newspaper Enterprise Association.

Will we discover life beyond Earth?

"Conceivably, this might be the vard University physicist - under
last generation before contact is a project known as Search for
made with other civilizations in Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence
space - and the last moment (SETI) - ' have scanned 600 trilbefore we discover that someone in
the darkness is calling out to us,"
says scientist Carl Sagan.
chicken. Where I buy s10re name
U.S. astronome~ are dning all
items they buy name brands. I they can to speed up the day .that
drive a I977 Lincoln with 103,000 would change forever the way we iion radio signals.
miles on iL Wow! Go watch what look at our world. On an unpreceOnly 1.1 have satisfied all critethey put their food it. ·
ria
for a possible alien signal.
dented scale, they are listening for
The only problem with the II is
I watch them come from the "radio signals from possible alien
that we haven't been able to pick
dentist and have their teeth all civmzations.
fixed. They come in with new
"Here and there, peppered up !hose auspicious signals a secglasses. Try to have either one across space, maybe there are ond time.
But knowing that we may be
done on a meager income. worlds something like our own on
Medicine and doctor or hospital np which olher beings live who won- making progress cheers me up. It
problem to them. Just show the der about who else lives here," somehow makes the universe seem
card.
wrote Sagan in Parade magazine more friend! y to feel there are othTurtle sure is right about these recently.
ers out !here.
Contemplating the vast emptipeople working. Most have never
Over a period of five years,
worlced. They wouldn't take a job Sagan and Paul Horowitz, a Har- ness of outer space gives some peoif you gave them one. Aftaid they
'
would lose their gravy tram.
I have worked over SO years and
these people live and dress and
party better thati me. It is wonder·
By The Associated Press
ful that people like Sonny, Big
Today
is
Friday,
Nov.
5, the 309th day of I993. There are 56 days left
John, Sam and Betty, 10 name a
in lhe year.
·
few, look out for Turtle.
Highlight
in
History:
Today's
I know none of this stuff is
Twenty-five yean !'.fl• on Nov. 5, 1968, Ricliard M. Nixon won the
investigated like· it was several
presidency,
defeating V1ce President Iiubert H. Humphrey and third-patty
years ·ago. We need 10111e commucandldalt
George
C. Wallace.
·
nity support on this probleili. Speak
On
this
dale:
.
up tax payers. You are the one's
In
I60S,
_
t
he
so-called
Gunpowder
Plot
(ailed as Guy F~!wkes was
paying.
$Ciud before be could blow up the English Parliament.
Joe Bowlaad
In 1872, suffragist Susan B. An~ \V8S fined $100 for anempting to
Middleport
vote for President GranL She never · the f111C.

People abuse the system

see

OHIO Weather
Saturday, Nov. 6

Ohio will lose up to 2,000 coal jobs over next two years

Ac:cu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) The state will lose ~.sao to 2,000
more coal mining jobs over the
next two years as !ltilities try to
meet IOUgher federal .regulatiom, a
mining association leader said.
The reduction could cost the
state's economy $1.7 billion a year,
said Neal Tos1enson, president or
the Ohio Mining and Reclamation
Association.
Businesses relaled to coal and
.erailers who do business with miners will feellhe impact.
"I feel strongly that people
underrate lhe economic impact that
Ohio coal has," Tostenson told
The Columbus Dispitch for a swry

Bunning;s comments not taken lightly .

to the editor

- This leuet is in support of what
: "Turtle" wrote in conceming-medi: cal card and the welfare depart• menL
· I too went through with this
· before my mother passed away.
She also had to spend $240 before
• they would pay. a dime. When !left
, Miildlcport to go· to Thornport to
: care for her, she was. in bad shape.
: Sbe wouldn't buy her SUP!: pills or
• heart pills or see the doctor due 10
~ lack of money. I got this for her
and did manage 10 have her seven
mere months. ·
• ~ only lime the medical card
• paye4 off was when she waS l8ken
: 10 the hbspital and put into inten: si~c care. I still had to pay the
•$240. What a joke, all this is a pom•way for people like my mother who
was 86 whe" she passed away. I
" . toO
theSe young people drink' . : ing 'top shelf liquor and premium
; :beet. r 100 have seen them spend
• • theit whole check in' three days and
• : tlita' the 'children' have nothing to

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, November 5, 1993

George R. Plagenz

Today in history

pie an enlarged concept of God.
But not me.
I feel more as Pascal did when
he said, "The eternal silence\ of
the infmile spaces terrify me.''
Many of us find it hard, in a uni verse as boundless as ours, to conceive of a God who can be interest·
ed in the fallen sparrow.
The old biblical dimensions
made believing easier. Of course,
we cannot recover the heaven that
lay "behind the blue curtain of ·the
sky."
Still, to be able to feel thai !hose
are not i'ust ''cold, shelterless
deserts o asuonomical space" out
there, but somebody's home is at
least slightly comforting,
Many distinguished scientists
are almost sure there is inlelligent
life in outer space. As one bas
quipped, "The question is not
whetlter there is intelligent life
elsewhere in th~ universe, but
whether there is inlelligent life on
Earth.''

The conclusion that alien life
exists is inescapable, says Philip
Morrison, the eminent physicist at
Massachuseus Instirute of Technology: "There are 250 million sunlike stars in our galaxy. It seems
unlikely !hal only one in that number- our own - has a planet with
life on it."
.
·
What do these alien inhabitants
of the univrne look like?
It is hard to speculate, says Mor-

rison.
"They aren't 50 feet tall or any,
thing like that,'' he says. ' 'They are
probably a few feet -tall. But they
don't necessarily have five fingers
on each hand as we have.''
We can say, though, according
to Morrison, that these aliens are
similar to us. At least those we get
in !Ouch with will be. If there are
civilizations that bear no likeness
to us at all, we will never be able to
contact them.
How can we communicrue with
inhabitants from another realm?
"Because the messages are
transmltled by radio, we and they
must have radio physics in common," says Sagan.
He adds: "The laws of nature
are the same everywhere. So science itself provides a language of
communicalion."
MOITison says he doubts we will
ever meet aliens in space. They are
too far away.
But he reels the more advanced
civili~ations are trying ~_Fet in
touch,with us -by radio si~, right
now. lie says they are • patiently
waiting for signals from our solar .
system."
:
Somehow, just knowing that :_
somebody out there wantlto get In
· touch with us· malies the universe
Seem less impersOnal.

MICH.

..
IND.

• IColumbusl37" I

W. VA.

leo
01 Q93 Accu-Weether, Inc.

-----Weather-----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy. A
chance of drizzle or snow flurries
lrue. Low 35-40. Chance of precipitation 40 percent Saturday, mostly
cloudy and cold with a chance of
snow flurries. Temperatures nearly
sleady between 35 and 40. Chance
of snow SO percent
Extended forecast:

Sunday through Tuesday:
Fair on Sunday except for a
chance of morning snow flurries in
the northeast. Lows 20-25. Highs
in the 30s. Fair on Monday. Lows
in the 20s. Highs in the 40s. A
chance of showers or snow flurries
on Tuesday. Lows in the 30s.
Highs in the 40s.

--Meigs anouncements - Academic boosters
The Meigs Junior High School
academic boosters will meet Monday at 7 p.m. in the cafeleria. All
inleresled parents are welcome.
Chester Trustees to meet
The Chesler Township Trustees
will meat on Tuesday at 9 a.m. a1
lhe Chesler town hall.
Woodmen dinner
Modem Woodmen of America

Area death
Larry Thrley
Larry Turley, 55, Hartford,
W.Va., died Wednesday, Nov. 3,
1993 in the Veterans Administration Hospital in Lcxing10n, Ky.
Born May 8, 1938 in Hartford,
son of the late John G. Turley and
Freda V. James Turley, who sur·vives;'he·was a foreman for Jeb Oil
Co., Marietta.
A U.S. Army veleran, he was a
member of the Turley Family Trio,
in which he played lhe guitar and
sang. He enjoyed playing golf and
was a member of Father's House in
Hartford.
Surviving in addition to his
mother are his wife, Delores M.
Stewart Turley: two daughters and
sons-in-law, Teresa J. and Len
Fowler, and Virginia M. and Mike
Cram blett, bolh of Coshocton; two
sons, Larry D. Turley of Newnan,
Ga., and John C. Turley of
Coschocton; a slepson and daughlef-in-law, Troy M. and Lisa Stewart of Point Pleasant: a stepson,
Joshua N. Stewart of Hartford: a
sltpdaugbler and son-in-law, Renee
D. and Slewart Zirkle of Hartford;
seven grandchildren; two brothers,
James W. Turley of Letart, W.Va.,
and Leland N. Turley of Hartford:
and three sislers, Emma Lee Kerns
of Letart, Janice Cundiff of Mason,
w.Va., and Marty Riggs of West
Columbia. W.Va.
Services will be I :30 p.m. Saturday in the Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason, wnh lhe Rev. Mike
Finnicum and the Rev . Clyde
Fields officiating. Burial will be in
the Graham Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home IOday from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Military graveside rites will be
conducted at the cemelery.
In lieu of flowers, contributions
may be made 10 the Falher's House
Church in Hartford.

The Daily Sentinel
Pl!bW.hcd every aflemoon, Molld•y lhroulfl
friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by the
Ohio Valley Publilhlaa Comp~ayiMultimcdil
tnc., Poniii'Oy, Ohio 4!1769, Ph. 992·21!16.
S.c:ood cl• potlllt paid • Pomeroy, Ohio.
Membet: lbe Auoclated Prcu. aud tho Ohio
Newapip« AIIOdatioa. NaUoul A4mtiaiq
Repreaeatatlve, Branham Newtpaptt Sale&amp;,
733 Third Aveaue, New York, New York
10017.

POSTMASTER.: Sead lddrtaa thla&amp;e. 10 The
Dally SeaUael, 111 CoWl St., Pomeroy, Ohio
4!169.
SV8SCIIIPI10N RAmi

J, c.rl• or Mot« Ro.l•

Ole Weeii: ............... ~ .................................St.60
Ole Moodt ...................,.......................... .U.~l

ODe Y..-................. ...........- ............ - ..$1120
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Oaily .. ., ... ,................ N0"0""N""'_3$ Ceall
Subfcriben 10t dalrlnc; lD pay tbe Cllria' lillY

rtmtt Ia ldviDCI dkct lO The Dilly Seatlael

01alhrw, li1 or 12 tnoDth bllil. Credit will be
atvta ClfTi« erdl Met.

No IUbtcrlptlou by maH permitted Ia
whml home c.ritt .-ric:e ilnalllble.
.

. Geor1e Pla1eilz !J II lyndlcat- •
ed writer for Newspaper Eater- :
prise Association.

•e.

-hlloc!Ve

......MolpCooool,
IJ ............................................ .$21.14
16 ,.._,_,........... .............. ,.,_,,_,, .... .54U6
ll - -.......... ,_ ... ,_,.................. ~•.$1o1.76
-MolpC..IJ
IJ _
______
, __,........................ .W.40
:II w...........................................l45.50

5 2 -.........................................seuo

"I
,,

Tbe Dilly Sentinel Pa91 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Camp 7230 will have a Thanksgiving dinner on Sunday, Nov . 14
from noon to 2 p.m. at Dale's
Smorgasbord, Gallipolis. Cost is
$2.50 ror ~~&amp;es 10 and up and free
for children 9 and under. Guests
are- welcome. Call 992 · 7770 for
more information.
Dinner meeting changed
Rock SJH:ings United Melhotlist
Women w1sh 10 make a notice of a
date change for their Thanksgiving
dinner and meeting . The dinner
will now be held at noon on Nov.
I 6 This will be a carry in dinner.
Turkey will be provided.
Forty and eight meeting
Regular meeting of Meigs
County tilny and eight will be held
at Pomeroy Legion lJOst on Tuesday. Dinner will he at 7 p.m. Members are asked 10 attend and bring a
gucsL
Preceptor Beta Beta
PrecepiOf Beta Beta wiU met at
Episcopal Parish Social Room on
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Hostesses
will be Charlotle Elberfeld, Ruby
Baer and Jane WaiiOR.
Chamber or Commerce to meet
Meigs eounty Chamber of
Commerce will have a general
mem bcrship meeting Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the Tuppers Plains VFW
Post. Meal will be provided. Call
992-5005 for reservations.
Hartford Center bazaar
There will be a soup sale and
bazaar at the Hartford Early Childhood Cenler on Saturday, Nov. 20
from noon to 4 p.m. Tables wm
rent for $7 for a small table and
SI 0 for a large table. For more
information call Venus Roush at
304-882-3333.

published today. "The way I see it Act has been strengthened 10 help burning high-$Ullur coat. 1~
u we're going 10 lose about 10.5 cut sulfur-dioxide emissions, which recendy IOid a finance IUbcommUtce of the Ohio Home.
million additional tons!'
are linked 10 acid rain.
The job loss will hit hardelt iD
The Gavin power plant which
Coal production wu SS million
southeastern
Ohio because the
tons in 1970 and is expecled 10 be American Electric Power operates
region
has
no
other
majo( indUSII'Y, ·
about 28 million tons this year. is the only sizable plant that plans
TostcnSOII said.
:
Ta~tenson said it could fall to about ·to use 1eehnology that would allow
I 7.5 million within two yem.
The state had 20,000 coal min-.
ing jobs in 1970 at the peak of production. The loss Tostenson
would leave 3.000 to 3.500
The following cases were Loretta Dailey, Rutland, speed. $30
resolved
Wednesday in the Meigs plus costs:
Toslenson said coal-use swveys County Court
or Judge Patrick H.
Wilbur E. Caroulhen, BelmOIII,
showed that Ohio utililies plan to O'Brien:
w.
va.,
seat belt. $15 plus costs:
switch from lhe state's high-sulfur
Fined were Albert W. Schultz, Steven M. Todd, BowlinB Green,
coal to low-sulfur coal produced Pomeroy, speed, 530 plus costs; Ky .. speed, $30 plus costs: Stanley
elsewhere. The federal Oean Air seat belt, $25 plus costs: James D. G. McGuire. Middleport. seat belt,
Kloosterman, Hartsville, S.C .. $15 plus costs; _Douglas Edward
speed, $30 piWI costs: Jimmie D. Wiles Cberryv11le, N.C., speed,
Dyer, Syracuse, speed, $30 plus $30 pius costs: Lora L. Boring,
costs: David E. Stevens, Lloyd, Albany seat belt. $25 plus costs:
Ky .. speed, $30 plus costs: Jeffrey Stanley' G. McGuire, Middlef!O!!.
T. Roberts, Grove City, speed, $30 seat belt, S2S plus costs: futnie H.
plus costs; Bryan K. Banks, Obetz, Wawrzynski, Columbui, seat belt,
by Bob Hoeflich
speed, $30 plus costs: Cletus M. $25 plus costs: Paul E. Dailey,
Eckert, Asheboro, N.C., speed, $30 Racine, seat belt, $25 plus costs:
plus costs; Robert N. Justice, Marc A. Dailey, Toledo, IIC8l belt.
send
your
donation
to
the
Meigs
Ravenswood, W.Va., speed, $30 S15 plus costs:
If you are a resident of Pomeroy
.
Marching
Band
Coat
Fund,
Bank
plus costs; Charles Althouse,
Gary Eugene Toops, GreeMor an occasional visitor to the comPomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus costs; boro, N.C., speed, S30 plus costs:
munity, perhaps, you've heard the One, Rutland.
John A. Van Reeth, Syracuse, David W. Sigman, Syracuse, seat
That
ba.Qjl,
under
the
direction
beautiful chime music floating over
speed,
$30 plus costs: Douglas W. belt, $25 plus costs: Constance A.
of
Tony
Dingus,
68s
really
accomthe 10wn at times during the day.
Roush,
Reynoldsburg, speed. $30 Cremeans, Belle, W.Va., speed,
plished
wonders.
This comes from a computerplus
costs:
seat belt, $25 plus costs: $30 plus costs: Douglas S. Prather,
ized piece of equipment which bas
Tim
E.
Wells,
Middleport, seat Somerset, Ky., speed, $30 plus
Richard
Coleman,
a
retired
been purchased by the choir or
belt,
$25
plus
costs;
Rick L. Cheva- costs; Peggy L. Anthony, ColumMeigs
High
School
teacher,
is
getTrinity Church at a cost of about
lier,
Belpre,
driving
under the bus, speed, $30 plus costs; Terri L.
$25,000. An anonymous donor ting along just fine afler getting a
30
days
jail
suspended
to Yeauger, Middleport, seat belt, $15
influence,
pacemaker
recently.
helped considerably with the pur10
days,
$700
plus
costs,
one
year
Richard has been having heart
chase.
plus costs; Edward Cheney, MinThe equipment plays two hymns problems and so was sent 10 River- license suspension, one year proba- ersville, seat belt, $25 plus costs:
at 12 noon and 6 p.m. and can be side Hospital in Columbus on OcL tion, 90-day vehicle immobiliza· Theron Workman, Rutland, seat
programed to play at other times 19. The pacemaker was installed tion: failure to control, $30 plus belt, $25 plus costs.
and other music . Westminster and be was rewmed home on the costs:
Forfeiting bonds were Phillip
Phillip R. Barber, Dover, speed, Barbee, Dover, possession of manchimes come from the equipment following day, Oct. 20. Richard
10 nole the time during lhe day. It's says he's doing well and is feeling $21 plus costs: Paul J. Kitzmiller, joana, $140; Paul Van Cooney,
Racine, DUI, 30 days jail suspend· Shade, seat belt, $45; Timothy
such a pleasant addition to the a lot belief.
ed
to 10 days, $700 plus costs, one Gaus, Rutland, seat belt, $45.
community. I'm certainly looking
year
OL suspension, one year proI'm impressed.
forward to ihe Christmas season
bation,
90-day vehicle immobilizaThe public, individuals and
program, aren't you?
tion:
left
of centet, costs only: seat
businesses, has been so receptive to
VETERANS~ORIAL
belt,
525
plus costs: Paul Mitchell,
the "rise" again action of the Big
Someone to remember.
Langsville,
DUI,
$500
plus
costs,
Thursday
admissions
Friends are planning a card Bend Minstrel Association.
GertnJde
Finlaw,
Waller WCII'I and
10
days
jail
suspended
to
three
The association will present a
shower for Mrs. Loshia Mitchell,
Patricia
Wehnmg,
all of Pomeroy.
days,
$250
and
jail
suspended
upon
formerly of Middleport, who will Meigs County Talent Showcase on
Thursday
discharge.s
- Garol
completion
of
residential
treatment
mark ber 90th birthday anniversary Saturday, Nov. 27, in the Meigs
Racine,
and
Oarence
Potts,
Ball,
program:
left
of
center,
costs
only;
Junior High School in Middleport
next Wednesday, Nov. 10.
Middleport.
seat
belt,
$25
.plus
costs;
Mrs. Mitchell is now a resident at 8:10p.m.
Paul T. Van Cooney, Shade, HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
of the Extended Care Facili1y at
Meanwhile, cast members
tinted
cover on plates, $20 plus
Velerans Memorial Hospital. Cards which number about 80 are in
Nov. 4 discharges- Kristin
costs;
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Sprouse,
will reach her i.n at Room 151, rehearsals at various locations
Matthew Qabtree, Ashley
Extended Care Facility, Veterans about lhe county in preparation for Tina Williams, Racine, seat belt, Roach, Goldie Williams, Robert
Memorial Hospital, 115 E. Memo- the show, the first staged since $1 S plus costs: James Smith, Lambert. Charles Swan, Karm Van
seat belt, $25 plus costs;. Pelt, John Robinette, Dorothy
rial Drive, Pomeroy, 45769.
1989. The association is 40 years Racine,
Ray
Wellman,
Louisa, Ky., speed, Byus, Katie Pierson and Joan Coleold this year and has done numer$30 plus costs: ~Ia Sharp, Dex- man.
A fund drive is underway to ous musicals over lhe years.
ler, speed, $30 plus costs; Estella
secure attractive raincoats for the
Nov. 4 births - Mr. and Mrs.
Business houses have been very
award-winning Meigs High School receptive 10 sponsor representatives Colburn, Shade, speed, $30 plus Edward Campbell, son, of Crown
Band.
who are making their way about costs; Sandra Foley, Shade, seat City and Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Saturday the band took part in the county 10 prepare a program belt, $15 plus costs: Timothy Gaus, Stevens, daughter of ChilliCOthe.
state competition and received a book and cast members are really Rutland, seat belt, $20 plus costs:
superior rating. Naturally, it was in there pitching to ready 10 proraining, and sn&lt;lwing, since H duction. Son~e...,. Mel ~hling
seems to do that ever} S'atutday. people have volunteered their serThe band has consistend xmet with vices and I'm grrueful for thaL Volbad weather this .fall and that unteas are always needed 10 help
weather has really pressed home ouL Sponsoring the show are the
the need for lhe coats.
Meigs Division of the American
If you would like to contribule Heart Association headed by Sandy
Iannerelli and the Middleport Arts
Council headed by Mary Wise.
I think you 'II will be pleased
with the Nov. 27 effort if everyAm Ele Power ................... 34 5/8
thing continues to move forward as
Paid tor by W. David Gl'lham, Rl 2, Box •7794 Stall Rl 338, Racine, Ohio
Ashland Oil.. ...................... 34 3/8
well as it has so far. You'll be seeAT&amp;T ....................... .. ...... .55 318
ing on stage some impressive new
Bank One ........................... 36 1/8
talent as weU as the standbys from
Bob Evans.......................... 18 5/8
years past.
MRGAIN MAnHUS lAT. • SU..
SPRING VALLEHINE~A
Charming Shop .................. \3 1/4
Meantime, thanks to everyone
~ NIGHJ TUlSOAV
Gin
CRtli'ICU'I.S AVAli.Aaa.al
446-4524
' ...,
Champion Ind.................... 15 1/4
for such wonderful help and coopCity Holding .....................JI 1/4
eration.
Federal Mogul ...................25 1/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................42 3/4
I think that it's great that a lot of
--.~
Lands End ..... .....................41 1(2
us know how to laugh at ourselves.
••nn . ., ,,, ttni"CiiTU.
Limiled Inc......... ...............20 I(l
If we didn't, wouldn't it be hard 10
lr00,9115 DAJ:LJ'
DAILI
M'I'IIIIml U'l' &amp; . , .
1Ut'l'1. . . . U.'l' I SUI
Multimedia Inc .................. 35 1(2
keep smiling? I
Point Bancorp .......................... 14
....
:=;::::;"::"::'
::'·=·=~
'Cooi""'*'SI'
Rax Restaurant ....................... .03
__..,. GoaFoCOLONY THEATRE
llw Goo! Mil !Ids It!'
Reliance Elecoic ................ l6 3/4
TONIQHTlHRU 'lltUR8.
Robbins&amp;Myers .... .................. 16
10M HAHKS,IIEQ AYAH IN
aamw~~a
,,.,
Shoney's Inc ... ................... 21 7/8
Ill
SLEEPLESS
IN
SEATTLE
PO
111 o, 91 JO OAU.r
1:10 , 9:111 DAYLJ'
Star Bank .............. .. ........... 34 1/4
JU.'I'I . . . . IAT I IMI
tu.Tt•ns IA'I' •CM
SHOW1111EI
1:10 l 2D
1 :1 0 1 • 1
Wendy lnt'1... ..................... 15 3/4
FRI. I lAT. 7::10 &amp; 8::10
WorthingtOn Ind . ........ ....... 17 1/4
fRTRL INSTINCT
SUN. THAU THUAI.
1: IS oa.u.Y . . , . _ 1111 ... , 1 :1 !I I'CU
Stock reports are the 10:30
ONE EVEHIHG SHOW 7:30
a.m. quotes provided by Ad vest
ADIIIISION $2.00
or Gallipolis.
446-0823

42 fined in county court

r

Beat of the Bend...

--

Hospital news

,Th•n·k you for rour influence

and support in the
November 2nd election.

Stocks

W. David Graham

7

*** -::..:"

~~~
....
7rJG,9~DO

Turkey dinner to be held
The annual turkey dinner to be
served by lhe Tuppers Plains Fire
Department Auxiliary will be held
on Saturday, Nov. 13, Serving will
begin ·at 4:30 p.m. at the fuehouse.
The cost is $5 and the menu will
include a turlcey and dressing, potatoes, homemade noodles, green
bean~ . slaw and roll , as well as
dessert and beverage.

EMS responds
to six calls
Units of the Meigs 'County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to six calls for assislanCe
overnight. Units responding included:
Thur1day - II :34 a.m. Middleport 10 Beech Street for Vera Stewart who was transpOt'ted 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital; 12:19 p.m.
Pomeroy to Riverview Drive for
Patricia Webrung who was !fl'!S·
~ 10 VMH: 3:32 p.m. Middle- .
port to South Fourth Avenue for
Rhonda Stover who was transported 10 VMH: 6;07 p.m. Rutland to
Meigs MinC 31 for Marie Ballenger
who was transported to Holzer
Medical Centtt; 6:50 p.m. Racine
ror Cecil Brinager who was tmlted
at the scelie.
Friday - 2:28 a.m. Mid. dleport to. West Main Stree for
· Charles ~ew who was transport·
edtoVMH.

Beferlv Hillbillies
, , ·11;1

..

___

I
'

UMW Meetina Changed
A meeting of the Rock Springs
Uniled Methodist Women has been
changed from Tuesday 10 Nov. 16.
The meeting will be held at .I p.m.
at lhe church.

·-

\I \ I I! I

544 RICHLAND AVE. • 593-8697

7 Day Anniversary Sale
On·

Prices
Slashed

cing

as low as

5.99%
FltEE VIdeo Player
wllh Parchase of
Vehkle friday.
...._,Sata'rday &amp; san~~.!

FREE

Food &amp; Drink
Satarclay &amp;
Sandcly

9

aDl

to 8

Gmt

Deals all
week longl

�'

The

Sports

Neely.gets 300th goal as
.Boston·tops Flames 6-3

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 5, 1993
Page-4

.

.

Buckeyes to face Badgers in top Big 10 grid outing
MADISON, Wis. (AP) - He
jogged around campus lhis week
and Wisconsin coach Barry
Alvarez did more lhan get his exerclse and watch those fmalleaves of
autumn trickle to the ground. He
could feel a community starting to
recover.
" I could sense relief from th.~
student body lhat everyone 1s OK,
said Alvarez . ''I sensed things
sl8rting to pick up for this coming
weekend."
· Football wasn't too important
less than a week ago after the Badgers' 13-10 victory over Michigan
that makes this Saturday's game
with unbeaten Ohio State even

more meaningful.
we're close to lhe student body,"
At least 69 people were injured said Alvarez. "We appreciate how
in a stampede when students they bave been supportive and how
rushed to the turf at Camp Randall they've made it a difficult sradium
stadium to celebrate, crushing and to play in and given us a strong
trampling those in front of them.
home field advantage. We need
Two remained hos_pitali zed lhem .."
.
Thursday m good co~diuon. Some
W1sconsm no~ guard Lamark
students sa&gt;: they will stay home S~ackerford predicted the Badgers
ralher than nsk a recurrence Satur- w1U have as much suppon as ever.
day at a game that could determine
''They will be in the game, no
the Big Ten champion and Rose matter what. They arc ~ inspiraBowl paruc1pant.
.
. uon for us. _They apprec~te us and
But others w1ll be back m thell' we appreciate them. It s a great
red-clad outfits, hopefully wiser feeling when 12,000 people are
after last week's tragedy.
behind you all the time," he said.
"There is a strong bond
The No. 15 Badgers (7-1) will
between this team and the students. need more than crowd support to
beat the third-ranked Buckeyes (8-

OU seeks fourth straight
grid triumph Saturday
also was blessed with the best and
most experienced quarterback than
any of the other candidates had.
Pending his play in the stretch run,
Mike Neu is the front-runner to be
MAC player of the year.
" I thought all along we had a
good football team. It was a matter
of just waiting for them to
mature," Schudel said. "When we
play hard and as a team, we're
decent."
- Bowling Green's Gary
Blackney: There might be a move
to not pick Blackney, since he's
been the coach of the year the last
two seasons. But he has had a great
year, with sophomore quarterback
Ryan Henry stepping into Blackney's system without skipping a
beat.
"We don't always win the way
you'd like to win," Blackney said.
"But if you can win, that's the bottom line."
- Western Michigan's AI
Molde: He has the Broncos only a
game behind the co-leaders, despite
losing 17 starters and being picked
in the preseason to finish seventh.
If WMU beats ·Bowling Green in
s~ason finale, the balanre swings
hts way.
"I thought we had a chance to
be a decent football team. A lot
depended on the development of

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
Deciding the best team in the
Mid·Amencan Conference may
talce some time. But it's never too
early to check the grade cards of
l.he MAC coaches.
Ball State and Bowling Green
continue to stride through the con·
ference down the stretch . They
both have records of 5.-2-1 overall
and 4-0-1 in the MAC as the Cardinals welcome Miami of Ohio (2-6,
1-5) and the Falcons entertain Kent
(0-8, 0-6) on Saturday.
Other games find Eastern
Michigan (4-4, 3-2) at Akron (4-4,
3-3), Western Michigan (5-3, 4-1)
at Ohio U. (3-6, 3-4) and Central
Michigan (3-5, 3-3) at Toledo (3-5,
2-3).
It's as easy to mention those
who aren't candidates for MAC
coach of the year, as voted by the
MAC News Media Association,
!.han those who arc. A strong case
can be made for five coaches head·
ing into the final three weeks of
play:
- Ball State's Paul Schudel:
Might win league championship
with team picked 10 fmish sixth in
preseason. Lost big to out-of·
league opponents, but is unbealen
in MAC despite going down to the
final seconds in aU five games. He

the players,'' Mol de said.
- Eastern Michigan's Ron
Cooper: How bad was Eastern a
year ago? The former Notre Dame
assistant inherited the following: no
quarterbacks in the top 10 in the
MAC in 1992 total offense, no
backs in the top 10 in rushing, no
players in the top 10 in receiving,
no one in the top eight in tackles or
in the top nine in interceptions. Yet
from that 1-10 team, Cooper has
built a contender.
"At Eastern, the7 had some
really good athletes,' said Akron
coach Gerry Faust. " Ron needed to
convince them if they did the
things he wanted they could win.
And he'sdone that"
- Ohio U.'s Tom Lichten~:
A month ago, everyone thought hiS
job was in jeopardy. Isn't it funny
what a three-game winning streak
- and ending the nation's longest
major-college losing skid - will
do? If ~ichtenberg can squeeze
another two wins out of his team,
he might just jump to the top of the
ballot
"You don't know how to win
until- you win,'' .l.ichtenberg-caid.
"Once you win, whether you're
good or not, you start thmking
y~u' re good. You make plays you_
m1$ht not have made when you're
losmg. ••

NB'A: action gets underway tonight
By BILL BARNARD
AP Basketball Wr.lter
The New York Knicks, despite
being favored in the NBA's East·
em Conference, have only one AllStar, Patrick Ewing. That doesn't
mean, however, that coach Pat
Riley has any problem with any of
his other II ~layers.
· ·
Asked lhss week what his substitution rotation would be for the
Knicks' opener tonight at Boston,
Riley said, "We've got to get rid of
that 'ruration' word. I've got a deep
team. There are no constants. This
team has seven or eight guys who
know they are going to play and
four or five who probably are not.
But that doesn't mean that during
the course of a game, other people
who might be 11 or 12 on our team
won't &amp;e spotted in.''
Veteran Rolando Blackman is
listed as the No. 3 shooting guard,
but Riley says if he needs a perimeter shooter, he won't hesitate to use
him. Tony Campbell, Anthony
Bonner and Herb Williams might
not play every day, but Riley says
titer, must stay ready.
'We have so much talent," top
frontcourt reserve Anthony Mason
said, "that we can come at teams in

any way. We have scorers, bangers,
defenders, rebounders. It has to be
scary to other teams because we're
so versatile. We can combat any
style someone throws at us."
The Knicks' game against the
. Celtics is one of 13 season-opening
games tonight. Only Seattle, which
opens Saturday night at Inglewood
Calif., againsJ the Los Angele~
Lalcers, is idle tonight.
In other ~ners, it's Milwaukee
at Cleveland , Washington at
Philadelphia, Indiana at Atlanta,
Portland at the Los Angeles Clippers, Orlando at Miami, Chicago at
Charlotte, Minnesota at Detroit,
New Jersey at Houston, Golden
State at San Antonio, Dallas at
Utah, Phoenix at the Lakers and
Denver at Sacramento.
While lhe Knicks are expected
to dominate lhe Atlantic Division
·
·
•

Boston has an unaccustomed
underdog role.
''!'in glad it's the Knicks
because right away we'll see where
we are,'' guard Dee Brown said.
Brown takes over at shooting
guard from Reggie Lewis, who
died July 27 of a cardiilc ailment.
Lewis was the Celtics' captain,
their highest scorer and the player
they went to for critical shots.
No one has emerged to assume
that role, and coach Chris Ford is
concerned about Boston's offense.
Larry Bird retired before last
season and Kevin McHale quit
when it ended. The Celtics also
have five new players - free
agents Chris Corchiani, Jimmy
Oliver and Matt Wenstrom, 1989
second-round draft pick Dino
Radja. and 1993 top choice Acie
Earl.

0), who .moved the ball up and
down the field .last week behind
tailback Raymont Hanis in a 24-6
win over Penn State.
Ohio State fans also dashed onto
the field to celebl'fte only to be
grec;ted with sj!rayings ofmaee.
Buckeyes coach John Cooper
said he doesn't think the incident at
Camp Randall will affect the outcome of Saturday's game even
though some Wisconsin piayers
waded into the piles last week and
rescued people during ·a horrifying

k

several minutes.
"You can tum lhat right around
and say they're going to dedicate
this game to those people," said
Cooper.
• 'Obviously they'll be more
security involved, I don't think
you'll see that hapl'ening again.
Not only at Wisconsm, but here or
anyplace else where fans run on the
field after the game. There'll be
more security measures taken
aroWld the country. But that won't
have any bearing on lhe game"

0

By The Alloc:lated Press
Cam Neely started to doubt
whether he wOuld ever $et to 300
goals after aU the injunes he has
suffered the last two seasons.
The doubts all ended Thursday
night
.
Neely had .three goals to reach
No. 300 as the Boston Bruins
defeated the visiting Calgary
Flames 6-3. It was Neely's ninth
hat trick and his fust since February 1991.
"I ~ess there was a point when
I didn t know if I'd ever reach 300,
so it was gratifying," Neely said.
Neely woke up Thursday with
liale fluid or pain in the knee and
told coach Bnan Sutter he wanted
to play.
"It's a surprise once in a while
when he walks in and tells you he
wants to play and he's capable of
playing," Sutter said. "He played
every other day in the playoffs last
year, and !hat's a tough grind. He's
felt good since the fust week of the

The buckeyes have been hard to
stop this season, averaging 404
yards total offense and 35.8 points.
Hanis gained 151 yards on 32 ·carries against Penn State and the
Buckeyes. defense came up with

fo~,in~ptions.

Commg out of that tunnel ,
they throw marshmallows at you
and harass you probably as much
or more than anywhere else we
play," said Cooper. "It's a red-letter game for us. It's a game we lost
a year ago."

·
Top-ran ed teams eye bowl berths

By DICK BRINSTER
AP Sports Writer
How far the loser of next week's
1-2 showdown betweep Florida
State and Notre Dame drops in the
polls could determine whelher the
college football season will finish
with a colossal bowl game.
A very close game at South
Bend, Ind., and a clean sweep of
the remaining opponents by both
could result in just thaL Playmg for
the national title would be Florida
State and, yes ... Notre Dame.
That possibility - a bowl coalition-mandated meeting of No. 1
and No. 2 - exists for the Fiesta
Bowl. It would depend on the combined results of The Associated
Press and USA Today-CNN polls.
Otherwise, the winner goes to
either the Sugar Bowl or the
Orange Bowl' to play the highestranked winner of lhe conferences
committed to them.
Just what are the chances?
They could be a lot better if
lhird-ranked Ohio State loses Saturday at Winconsin. That scenario,
coupled with victories the rest of
the way by No. 4 Miami, would
virtually guarantee a final show-

17 Indiana (7-1) at No. 19 Penn
. At \Yisconsin, where they are
State (S-2), No. 18 Kansas State (6- sbllll)'mg to recover from the hor1-1) at Iowa State (2-6), No. 20 ror of a Slampede.that m~ulted in at
Oklahoma (6-2) at Missouri (3-4- least 69 injuries after last week's
1), Wake Forest (2-6) at No. 21 victory over Michigan , the
Virginia (6·2), No. 22 Norlh Car- approach to the game is much the
olina State (6-2) at Duke (2-7), No. same.
23 ColoradO (4-3-1) at Oklahoma
"It's a huge game for us "
State (3-S), and No. 25 Virginia offensive tackle Joe Panos said
Tech (6-2) at Boston College (5-2).
"We've come a long way since last
With Maryland seemingly a season. Now we get to play the No
pushover for Florida State, Notre 3 team in lhe country.
·
Dame idle and Miami, Alabama
" We're excited. We've been
and Nebraska facing at best nomi- waiting four years for this kind of
nal opposition, the colossal bowl ~ame. It's probably the most
focus ·Saturday must be on Madi- 1rnportant game we are going to
son, Wis.
face."'
A victory by Wisconsin not only
Wisconsin hasn't been to the
would remove Ohio State as an Rose Bowl in 31 seasons.
obstacle to No. 2, but would leave
the Rose Bowl race wide open. The
day could end with bolh teams plus
GRAVELY TRACTOR
Indiana and Ulinois tied for the Big
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Ten lead.
204
Ccndor
St
Pomeroy, OH.
But Ohio State John Cooper
FALL AND WINTER
says his Buckeyes won't be thinking about the Rose Bowl or the Big
HQURS
Ten.
Tues -Fri. 9:00-5:00
"That's the one good thing
Sat. 9:00-12:00
we've done so far this year. We've
Closed Monday
stayed focused," he salll. "We got
~· ·
to worry this week about Wiscondown.
sin.
The Hurricanes, who have lost
"You beat Wisconsin, lhen of
only to Florida State, could wind comse it's Indiana. Then afu;r that
up No. 2. That aside, only No. 5 it's Michigan."
Alabama and No. 6 Nebraska
would appear close enough to vault
aU the way to No. 2. As such, that
team would play No . I for the
national title.
The schedule Saturday:
No. I Florida St. (8-0) at Maryland (1-7), No. 3 Ohio State (8-0)
at No. 15 Wisconsin (7-1), No. 4
Miami (6-1) at Pittsburgh (2-6),
LSU (3-5) at No. 5 Alabama (7-01), No. 6 Nebraska (8-0) at Kansas
(4-5), No. 13 Louisville (7-1) at
No. 7 Tennessee (6-1-1 ), New
Mexico State (5-3) at No.8 Auburn
(8-0), Southwestern Louisiana (62) at No.9 Florida (6-1), Rutgers
(4-4) at No. II West Virginia (7-0),
No. 12 UCLA (6-2) at Washington
State (5-4), Oregon (5-3) at No. 14
Arizona (7-1), Clemson (6-2) at
.PIIkl lor by Clndld..., S1S40 Noble lummi! Ad., Ml~llllll Dl1, Oh.
No. 16 North Carolina (7-2), No.

season .• ,

KNOCKED DOWN - Chicago Blackhawks
rigbtwing Brian Noonan (10) gets knocked do'll'll
in front of the net by new York Islanders' Marty

TBI
. SilliLY

.Thanks To The
Voters of
. Salisbury
Township for Your
Votes and Support
During the Recent
Elections.

EDWARD DURST
Salisbury Township Trustee

...

_

,.

1994 GMC VAN

SAFARI
Deep ,tinted gl111, automatic,
atereo c ....tte, 8 pa11enger llat,
remote lift g1t1, 1lr, tilt, crulee,
power wlnclowa, ec:cent atrlpe.

AS LOW AS

$17,998
•All Rllbllt• Applies to Sill Price. Tu &amp; Title Not Included.

1994 GMC Ya TON

PICKUP SIERU

WaJton signs with Reds
CINCINNATl (AP)- Outfielder Jerome Walton, the Nationall.eq1)e's Rookie of the Year in
19'89, agreed to a minor-league
conu.ct Thursday with the Cincinnati Reds.
Walton, 28, will make $350,000
and up to $150,000 in performance
bonuses if he makes the Reds.
Walton has slipped every year
since he hit .293 in 116 games for
the Chicago Cubs in 1989. He batted ,263 in 101 games in 1990, .219
in 123 games in 1991, and .127 in
30 games in 1992, when he was
hurt most of the season.
Wal10n baued .313 in 54 games
for California's Class AAA Vancouver farm club this year, and was
hitleu in two at-bats with the
: Angels. ·
·
· . The Jl.eds also made several roster moves Th.u rsday involving

Air

1uto.

engine,
•'
•'

Hltl.

AS LOW AS

Get $200 In FREE Clothing Or Accessories
PLUS Two FREE Lifevests With The
Pur~hase Of Your 1994 Polaris Watercraft!

1

Reserve your new
1994 Polaris SL650,
• · SL750, or SLT750
with a non-refundable deposit
by November 22, 1993. Polaris
will guarantee availability of
the model you choose.

l

Just take delivery by
February 28, 1994
' and get &amp;200 in FREE
clothing or accessories PLUS
two FREE lifevests when you
complete your purchas'e.

14,291

5

•

••

•All Rlbltee.Appllel to Sill Price. Tax l lltle Not Included,

,

~----------------------~-----u :
FALL COOLINe SYSTEM
SERVICE ·SPECIAL

•Drain • Flu_, Syetem f
•Add 2 Quarti Anti·Frt 1111

They· •••iJned /pitcher Scott
RobiMon to Clal 'A AA Indianapolis and bouahtlbe (lOIIII'Ictl o( two
· Clue AA thananoop ·pitchers,
. John c~ 8l!d Kevin JII'Vil.
The~ leave them with 38
,playen oalhe 40.111111 'lOiter, ·
Coullrlabt WM 5"·11 in '1:1 starts
ror OtMenc•~ willl • 3.50 ERA.
Jarvil WM 3· wlill a 1.69 EllA In
. IIIVCII pillet .for Cilia~ ll)d
, B·7 with a 3.41 mtA In
11arts

believe that's the case. We believe
we can win this weekend, and if we
don·~ what's the sense of being out
here at all?"
Even so, some players joined
Green in conceding it's hard to
avoid getting a negative jolt from
outside opinions.
Linebacker Ricardo McDonald
said lhe possibility of going 0-16
has crossed his mind.
"Not that I think we will," he
said. "But I have friend who plays
for the Giants, (defensive end)
Keith Hamilton, and he's constantly reminding me of that. He'll read
off our schedule to me and say,
"This is a loss. This is anot~er
loss.'
"He's obviously a good friend
to be able to talk to me that way,
but still, it's tough.''
Tackle Joe Walter said he was
insulted by a sll'llllger.
"I do SOflle high school games
on the radio," Walter said, "and
the week after the (second) Cleveland game, as I was walking into
the stadium, the guy at ·the gate
says, "Ah, you had a good game
Sunday. Just,about got (quarterback David) ·Kiingler killed, didn't
you?' I didn't know the guy at aU,
and that's preuy brutal."
The Bengals (0-7) face lhe Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday in
Cincinnati.
.

NEW YORK (AP) -Canada's
chances of having two NBA teams
in 1995, instesd of just one, appear
to be growing. .
.
A Toronto group led by John
Bitove Jr. was accepted Thursday
as owners of the league's 28th team
in the 1995-96 season. The group
agreed to pay a franchise fee of
$125 million, nearly four times the
$32.5 million it cost expansion
teamS in Miami, Orlando, Charlotte
and Minnesota over a two-year
period in l.he late 1980s.
NBA owners delayed for up to
two months a decision on whether
to bring Vancouver into the league
along with Toronto. Giving both
cities a franchise would increase
the NBA to 29 teams.
"We're happy with the one
team we've chosen, but I get the
feeling that having two teams
would be an added plus,'' deputy
commissioner Russ Granik said.

"There is a strong case for
bringing in two Canadian franchises," said Expansion Committee
chairman Jerry Colangelo, who
termed the chances of lhe Vancouver group headed by Arlhur Griffiths as excellent
The NBA said .the Toronto and
Vancouver teams would get the
sixth and seveath picks in the fust
round of the 1995 draft, and if uary.
Toronto comes in alone, it would
get the sixth pick.
An expansion draft also will be
held for the new teams, with each AUTO RACING
existin~ club losing one player
ADELAIDE, Australia (AP) after bemg allowed to protect eight Ayrton Senna of Brazil edged
players.
Alain Prost of France to take the
"We are as excited as we can ·provisional pole for Sunday's Ausget about bringing NBA basketball tralian Grand Prix . Senna had the
to Canada and Toronto," NBA fastest lap ever around lhe 2.348commissioner David Stem said. mile track, reaching 115.245 m~h
"It's a spectacular day for our in his McLaren. Prost, who wtll
international expansion."
retire after the race, has clinched
his folllltl drivers' title.

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP)
- Arizona adtletic director Cedric
Dempsey is expected to be inttoduced today as lhe new executive
director of the NCAA.
A search committee that examined 250 candidates narrowed the
field to four and settled on
Dempsey, sources who asked not to
be identified told The Associated
Press:
The Presidents Commission had
the power to veto the nomination,
but it announced no decision
Thursday night. An official
announcement was scheduled for 3
p.m. EST today at the NCAA's
headquarters.
Dempsey was nominated over
Judith Sweet, athletic director at
the University of California-San
Diego, and William Cobey, a former secretary of the North Carolina
Department of Environment,
Health and Natural ResourCes.
R. Gerald Tisrner, chancellor of
the Unlveraity. of:Mietieeippi, will
thought to be the front-runner
among the finalists until he withdrew his name after being interviewed Monday.
Dempsey would' not comment
on lhe report, said Butch Henry, an
assistant athletic director at Arizona.
NCAA president Joseph Crowley, the head of the search commit·
tee, was not available and was
referring calls to the NCAA, said a
secretary reached at his office at
the University of Nevada.
Dempsey would succeed Dick
Schultz, who was pressured to
resign amid allegations that interest-free loans .were made .to alhletes
at Virginia when he was athletic
director. Schultz has denied knowing ahout the loans.
Dempsey has been secretarytreasurer of the NCAA since Jan-

Sports brief

•"

rear atep bumper,
AMIFM etereo ~

minor ~eaguen;

: Cor CIMI AWlnlton-Salem•

cond.,

trana., V&amp;

NCAA post

CINCINNATl (AP) - It's not
easy facing your neighbors when
you play for the winless Cincinnati
Ben gals.
"It's tough sometimes, real
tough," running back Harold
Green said. "Most people try to be
supponive when they encounter
you, but there are lots of families in
my neighborhood, and I can notice
the negative feeling in the kids.
"They want to still be excited,
about lhe Bengals and about you
being a pro athlete, but some of
them act like they feel they've been
let down. Instead of coming right
up to you, it's more like they're
sort of peeking around a corner at
you. They don't know what to say
to you because of the way things
are going. It's not like they can
congratulate you on having a big
game."
Left guard Ken Moyer said a
belief in winning potential is an
essential part of being a professiona! athlete.
" The way the media portrays
this team is ·not the altitude of the
team," Moyer said. "We don't see
ourselves as losers, or inept, or
incapable of winning. We don't
look down the schedule saying,
"This week? No -chance. Next
week? No chance then, either.
"Everybody's telling us how
terrible we are, but we don't

Vancouver may be second~
team from Canada to join NBA

,............. . .... ............................................. ...... . .......... . ....................... .................. . .... .......................................................................................... .................. ,.,
''
''
'
''
''
''
'
':
_

Mcinnis (18) as ISlanders eoalle Ron He:llall
looks on dpring second period action at Chicago
Thursday night. The Blackhawks won, 4-l. (AP)

'Dempsey to
Bengal players don't
see themselves as losers be named to

SYiftM

_

-InspeCt Ho... 1nd Belts
•P!'HIUrt .Tilt .Syltlm ·

$

95

THAN YOU MEIGS
COUNTY VO-TE S!
We Appreciate Your Support
The Mei.gs Cou~ty Council on

· I Senior (itizens Cenlter

Any Adclltlonll Plltl Exll'l
GM Care Oftly. Nq Vane

.
Paid for by the Malga Sanlor CltlltMI l.ftr Conlnllt-.
Jant1 Walton, ~ulberry ...lghta, Pilmlt'oy, OH. 417W, T_-urw

.

•''

R.ay Bourque, Ted Donato and
Glen Wesley also scored for the
Bruins, who broke a two-game losing streak. Joe Nieuwendyk had a
pair of goals for Calgary, which
had won three sttaight, and Theoren Fleury had the other.
The Bruins, who outshot the

·'

.,

•

Flames 53-29, trailed 3-2 af~ one
period but scored two goals !ale in
the second period and a pair of
goals within a nine-second span in
the third period.
Elsewhere in the NHL it was
Ch~o 4, the New York Islanders
2; Philadelphia 4, Quebec I; and
Toronto 3, Detroit 3.
Blackhawks 4, Islanders 2
Brent Sutter's short-handed goal
late in 'the first period and Ed
Belfour's 36 saves helped Chicago
beat the visiting Islanders.
Th~ Islanders made it 3-2 on
Derek King's power-play at 2:30 of
the final period, but Brian Noonan's close-range shot gave the
Blackhawks a goal at 13:20·on the
power play.
Flyers 4, Nordiq ues 1
Dominic Roussel made 27 saves
to improve his record to Il-l and
Eric Lindros scored his 13th goal
as Philadelphia defeated Quebec at
the Spectrum.
Quebec cut l.he Flyers' lead 10 21 at 3:49 of the third period on
Valeri Kamensky's third goal. Flyers rookie Mikael Renberg added a
goal with 4:44 remaining in the
. game on a power play t.o make it 3·
I.

Rod Brind'Amour capped the
scoring with his eighth goal, shorthanded, into an empty net with

I :36 remaining.
Maple Lears 3, Red WIDII: J
(0'0
Wendel Clark had a goal and an
assist to lead Toronto to a .3 ·3.
COI!Ieback tic at Detroit The Red
Wings led 3·1 with 11 minutes to
play, but Toronto scored two
power-play goals.
.
Felix Potvin starred in goal for
the Maple Leafs again, making 45.
saves.
Toronto (11-1-2) got within 3-2
at 9:00 of the third Jieriod when
Clark stripped Steve Chiasson in
front of the Red. Win~ net and beat
Chris Osgood for h1s 12th goal.
The Maple Leafs tied the score on
John Cullen's power-play goal at.
12:35.

Sports briefs
HOCKEY
TORONTO (AP) - TorontP
Maplde Leafs left wing Nikolai
Borschevsky will be sidelined up to
two months after surgery to remove
h1s ru~tured . spleen. Borschevsky
was InJured m Wednesday night'•
game against Fl9rida.
NEW YORK (AP) - Holdout
defenseman Jeff Beukeboom and
the New York Rangers agreed to
terms on an undisclosed contracL ·

�.

Poineroy-MiddlaP.,rt, Ohio

menL ''

Magee used not only birdies but
also an eagle to get his mind on his
work. He started the day with five
straight pars, birdied No. 6 from 10

•'

BROWN GAINS THREE- Texas' Phil
Brown (29) runs up the middle for a 3-yard gain
before Houston's Michael Newhouse (48) tack-

led bim during first quarter action at Houston
Thursday night. Texas won, 34-16. (AP)

Perry getting along
fine with Belichick
BEREA, Ohio (AP)- The
voice of reason during the Cleveland Browns • recent quarterback
controversy belonged to !he unlikeliest source: Michael Dean Perry.
That's right, the same Michael
Dean Peny who moaned and complained about coach Bill
Belichick's defense for two years
has become Belichick's ally, helping keep the Cleveland Browns
together while the benching of
Bernie Kosar was threatening to
disrupt their promising season.
"We are professionals, and
we're just moseying along. No
problems," Perry said this week as
the Browns prepared for Sunday's
game a¥.ainst the Denver Broncos.
"I don t have any problems with
him. He has no problems with me.
So everythin~ is fine.''
Winning, tt seems, has a way of
smoothing over problems that were
so much more annoying when the
Brown·s were losing. Perry: who
contended for two years that
Belichick's defense stifled hl~ ability to rush the quarterback, now
says sacks cannot be used to gauge
the effectiveness of an interior lineman.
"You know what? For a defensive Iackie, sacks are a luxury,"
said Perry, whose only two sacks
so far this season came in the season opener against Cincinnati.
"You're not going to find too
many defensive tack.les that are
going to get a lot of sacks. I've
been out there every year with
seven, eight, nine sacks . They
come in bunches, just like bananas.
I'm just playing within the scheme
of the defense and doing what I
have 10 do to malce the guys around

.

mebeuer. "
Belichick couldn't agree more.
Sacks, he said, are imponant as a
team statistic, not an individual
statistic.
" This is Michael's best season, .
by far, since I've been here," the
coach said. "Being in training
camp, being on top of his game
going into the season, not kind of
struggling to catch up like he did
!he last two years- he's playing
well. He's playing with a lot of
confidence. ••
Perry took it upon himself to
call his teammates together for a
meeting two weeks ago when all of
Cleveland was split over
Belichick's decision to start Vinny
Testaverde ahead of Kosar. Kosar
will return as the starter this week
because Teslaverde has a separated
shoulder.
"When I was very vocal and
didn't lilce cenain things, I spoke
· out, •; .Perry said. ''When it's to
help the team, I'll speak out also. 1
thmk that was one of the limes
when you neede!f a team meeting,
to lalk to the guys and say, 'Hey,
we need to keep focused on football,' and not worry about the
things that were going on around
us. The guys responded very well,
and that was iL"
He said he felt no obligation to
take a leadership role in such
instances, although clearly his
prominence has forced the role on
him.
"I think some of the guys look
at me as a leader on this team, but I
don't think it is up to me to call a
team meeting," he said. "It's
something I did, and felt should
have been done."
·

Some Wisconsin students
will not attend game Saturday

· MADISON, Wi~. (AP) - As fencing gave way. Two remained
!he Umverslly of Wtsconsm heads hospitalized Thursday in good coninto one of its biggest football dition.
games in decade~. dozens of stu·
dents have decided not to go to the
game 81 Camp Randall Stadium.
"There are a lot of people selling their tickets because they're
scared to go," Chris Gruhl, 20, a
UW psychology student, told a
reporter before a pep rally held 81 ,
the stadium Thursday nighL
School officials have announced
a number of changes aimed at preventing any repeat of last Saturday's trampling incident at the end
of the Badgers' U-10 win over
Michigan.
AI least 69 people were injured
when thousands of students pushed
toward the field, crushing and
trampling many as safety rails and

Murphy Harvard
coach candidate
CINCINNATI (AP) - Tim
tlfurpl!y, who has led the Universi. ty of Cincinnati to its rlfSt winning
: football season in 11 years, reportedly is a candidate for the head
coaching job 81 Harvard.
Murphy declined comment on
the Cincinnati Post repon Thurs. day. UC athletic director Rick Tay: lor wouldn't say whether Murphy
· has been interviewed.
"In light of what he's done at
ttie University of Cincinnati, it
wouldn't surprise me in the least
for other people to come after
him," Taylor said. "We will do
· everything jn our power to ensure
: lie'stays bete-"
: · Mur_phy , 37, ~as a IS-37-1
recOrd It Cincinnati, whete he toOk
OYCf in. 1989. He initially signed a
fi~o:e-)'Cif cotitrac,nlllt was extendoil t!_liouJll 1996.
. Cinctnna!i is 6-3 this seaso11
with two gameuemliDing.
''
'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - New
York Mets outfielder Vince Coleman, facing a felony explosives
charge, has worked out a plea bargain that will keep him out of jail,
according 10 a published report.
Coleman, who admitted throwing a powerful firecracker at a
group of fans last July, will plead
guilty roday in. Superior Court to a
misdemeanor charge of possession
of an explosive device, The New
York Times reported Friday_
A possible six-month Jail tenn
will be suspended and Coleman
will be given three years' probation
on the condition that he perform
200 hours of community service;
his attorney, Roben Shapiro, told
the newspaper.
Coleman will agree to. make
restitution to the three fans who
were injured July 24 in the players'
parking lot at Dodger Stadium. The
family of a girl , then 2 1/2, who
was injured in the incident has filed
a lawsuiL
CQI.c.man ~J~o wi.ll. be fiqed
$1,000, the paper said.
The Mets alread;y have said
Coleqiap, 32, will il~ver-play for
them'qahr:·Htllas il"~ $3
million contract for 1994.
Coleman faced a felony charge
of unlawful plissession of an ex_plosive device. Officials determtned
he had ignited an M-100, a device
used by the military to simulate
grenades, and Coleman admitted he
had thrown it from a Jeep Cherokee
driven by fanner Dodgers outfielder Eric Davis.
Also in the vehicle was Mets
outfielder Bobby Bonilla. Davis
and Bonilla were not charged.
The resulting explosion injured
Amanda Santos, then 2 1/2, who
suffered second-degree bwns to her
cheek and damage to an eye and
finger; Marshall Savoy, 11, who
suffered a bruised leg; and Cindy
Mayhew, 33, who was treated for
an ear injury.
The family of the Santos girl
filed suit against Coleman and
Davis .on Oct. 18. That matter is
still pending.

PARIS (AP)- ~rom one big
server to another, Pete Sampras
feet, then holed an 8-iron from 170 keeps on winning. And there is still
yards for his eagle on the par-4, another in his way. .
Afttz getting by David Wheaton
484-yard seventh hole.
·
.
and
Man: Rosset in his farst two
On !he back nine, Magee added
birdies from 12 feet at No. 12, 35 matches at the Paris Open, Sampras
feet at No. 16 and 20 feet 81 No. 18. battled Goran lvanisevic in roday's
Magee led by two shots over quartedinals.
So far it doesn 't seem to matter
Noland Henke, Peter Jacobsen and
to
Sampras, but lvanisevic thinks
SClllt Hoch.
he
can stop the No. I player iti the
The 52-man field is split for the
world.
first two rounds, with half at the
" I don't feel any pressure playpar-71 Bay Course and the other
ing
Pete," Ivanisevic said after
half at the par-73 Plantation
beating
seventh-seeded Michael
Course. The final 36 holes are
Chang
in
Thursday's third round.
played at the Plantation.
The
Croatian
defeated Chang 7·6
Magee played the more difficult
(7-5),
7-5,
serving
17 aces in a
Planlation Course, as did Henke.
matcb
that
ended
after
midnighL
Jacobsen and Hoch played the Bay,
"
Pete
doesn
't
lilce
left-banders
where they equaled Magee's 67 but
and
he
doesn't
like
my
serve, "
were two fewer strokes under par.
I
vanisevic
said.
"I
have
a good
The Kapalua Internationalts not
record
against
him."
an official stop on the PGA Tour,
But Sampras is ready, if he
but it is sanctioned by !he PGA.
returns serve like he did in beating
Rosset 7-5, 6-3 in their third-round
match of the $2.1 million tournament
Three-time champion Boris
Becker also advanced to the quarterfinals by beating Karel Novacek
7-6 (11-9), 6-2. Arnaud Boetsch of
France eliminated American qualifier Jared Palmer 6-7 (7-5), 6-3, 6-4
and was to play Beclcer roday.
Fourth -seeded Michael Stich
beat No. 13 Todd Martin 7-f&gt; (7-3),
6-1 and now will meet Stefan
Edberg. Also eighllt-seeded Andrei
Medvedev of Ukraine outlasted
Henri Leconte of France 7-5, 6-7
(7-3), 6-3.
Except for two forfeits, Becker
has never lost in the Paris tournament. He won in 1986, 1989 and
1992, did not compete in 1987 and
1988, and pulled out in 1990 and
1991 because of injury and illness.
He is seeded third this year.
Although Rosset's serve reached
125 mph and provided 18 aces,
Sampras put pressure on his Swiss
opponent whenever Rosset
approached the neL It paid off in
the 12th game of !he firSt set when
Sampras finally broke Rosset's service and won the seL ·
In the fourth game of the second
set, Sampras converted another
break point to go up 3-1 and held
the lead the rest of the way.

GOOD SHOT - Peter Jacobsen of Portland, Ore., pops his
ball out of Bay Course's fifth bole bunker during first-round play
of the Kapalua International golr tournament in Hawaii Thursday.
His 4-under-par 67 was good eoougb for a share of second place.
(AP)

Yount becomes free agent again
NEW YORK (AP)'- Robin
Yo.unt, who has .spent 20 seaso.ns
with the MilwaUkee Brewers, is a
free agent again.
.
Yount, 38, is expected to re-sign
with the Brewers. By filing after ·
the team failed to exercise a $3.2
million option Thursday he creates
an extra roster spot the Brewers can
use to protect a young player in
December~s major league drafL
"I'd love to have him back, but
only if he wants to come back"
Brewers general manager s'al
Bando said in Naples, Fla., where
the general managers' meetings
ended Thursday. "It's a personal
decision more than anything else.
Does he go another year or does he
call it quit?"
Yount, who re-signed lasi Dee.
3 after becoming a free agent, hit
just .258 with eight homers and 51
RBis in 1993 and made $2.7 million. He also has a personal services contract with the team for
$400,000 next season and$430,000
in 1995.
Two other players med for free

LOUISA, Va. (AP) - Robert
Shelton, a 6-foot-4 guard who averaged 27.8·points a game as a junior
last season for Louisa County High
School, has verbally committed to
attend Ohio State.
Louisa coach Fitzgerald Barnes
said Thursday that Shelton chose
Ohio State over Maryland, Texas
A&amp;M and East Tennessee State.
"He visited and just thought
that academically, that would be a
~ood place for him," Barnes said.
'And they' ve got a guard who's
going to be a senior this year, and
he figured l!e could come in and
play as a freshman."
Shelton, who has qualified academically to play as a freshman,
will sign with the Buckeyes when
the NCAA early-signing period
begins Wednesday, Barnes said.
Shelton scored 40 or more
points in four games last year while
leading the Lions to a 21-4 record.
He was named to the aU-Group AA
team.

THE
SECOND
HAlF
ISON .US

FREE Arm
sews Leather, denim
Monograms
10· Stitch Function
Built In Buttonhole

----------------F~EE

Shelton picks OSU

agency Thursday: Texas left-hander Charli~ L_eibrandt and Steve
Lyons, an mftelder-outfielder for
the B,oston Red Sox.
.
. Ntnty-two players have ftl.ed
smce the end of the World Senes
and 1_1 more can ftle by Sunday's
deadline.
One player signed Thursday,
outfielder Jerome Walton, who
a~reed to a ~uno~-league contract
wtth lhe.Cmcmnati Reds.
Walton, 28, was the 1989 NL
Rookie of the Year. when he hit
.293 for the Chicago Cub. He
slipped to .263 in 1990, .219 in
1991 and .127 1992, when he was
hurt most of the season_ He was 0for-2 for California this year and
hit .313 in 54 games at Vancouver
of the Class AAA Pacific Coast
League.
Walton would get a $350,000
salary if he makes the Reds and the
chance to earn $150,000 more in
perforp1ance bonuses.
1-------------------~

.· .

..····· ·""'·

..

.

. ··""
~

•.

,,,

Is now offering
MeatbaU &amp; Philly Steak Sui»
1 Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
Drink with putchase of a .

.-,

'

..- ... .

LESSONS INCLUDED-..,......-------

Officers were nominated at the
monthly meeting of the Meigs
County Women's Fellowship at
Pomeroy Church of Christ wilh·26
members present.
Nominated were Linda Bates,
president; Tina Lamben, rrrst vice
president; Ruth Underwood, second vice president: Kathryn Johnson. secreuuy; Ann Lambert, treasurer; Becky Amberger, new s
re(XlOer and Isadora Williams, card
secreuuy.
Linda Bates lead the opening
song which was "How Grea1 Thou

Art." Anna Shuler lead the opening
prayer.
Devotions entitled, "Being the
Best You Can Be" were given by
Sabra Ash.
A special song titled "Cleans
Me" was sung by Ann Lambert,
Ruth Underwood and Charldine
Alldre.
The business meeting was conducted by President Kathryn Johnson.
Officers reports were given.
The next meeting will be at the
Rudand Chun:h of Christ on Dec. 2

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received io advance to
. assure publication in tbe calendar.

Polnt·Piealant, wv
Phone 875-5390

.,/

Gall~s.OH

Phone 446-6483

813 W. Main Slraet

Pomeroy, of! '

Phone 992-6426

Weight Control
Holiday Season Special!
Thru Nov. 14
8 weeks- Only '79.95
Diet and Exercise Plan
at
Big Bend,Health &amp;
Fitness
87 Mill St. Middleport
Call 992-3967 for details

and the installation of officers will
be held.
Announcement made included a
revival at Bradbufy Church of
Christ on Nov. 19 - 21 with Art
Bush as guest speaker, Thanksgiving dinner hosted by the Meigs
County Men's Fellowship on Nov.
22 at 6:30p.m. Jerry Engle will be
!he entertainment.
The program was given by
Phyllis Love of Athens Church of
Christ who spoke on what it's like
to be a minister's wife.
Refreshments were served.

FRIDAY

POMEROY - The Grubb Family Singers will perform at Old
Bethel Free Will Baptist Church .
Preaching by Rev. Bob Grubb.
Everyone is welcome.

SALEM CENTER - Star
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town- Grange 11778 and Star Junior
ship Trustees will meet at 7:30p.m . Grange 11878 will meet in regular
at the Shade River State Forestry session 81 7:30 p.m. at the Grange
Building on Joppa Road.
Hall. Christine Napier and Pauline
Rife, delegates to State Grange
HOCKINGPORT - There will Session will give their reports.
be a round and square dance from 8 Potluck refreshments will follow
10 II p.m. 81 the Reynolds Build- the meeting. All members are
ing. Music will cbe by Out of the urged to attend.
Blue. Caller will be John Russell.
Everyone is welcome. No alcohol
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
wiD be allowed.
· Plains VFW Post 9053 badies
Auxiliary will have its annual
ROCK SPRINGS - Church turkey supper at 4 p.m. at llfe post
Women United will hold World home. Cost for the dinner will be
Community Day at 1:30 p.m. at SS for adults and S2.SO for children
Rock Springs Methodist Church. 12 and under. The -menu will
Church dues of $5 are due and $5 include turkey, dressing, mashed
gift blanket certifteates can be pur- potatoes, noodles, green beans,
chased.
cole slaw, dessert, tea and coffee.
Carry out will be available.
CARPENTER - The Carpenter
Baptist Church will have their
POMEROY - Pomeroy Elemenannual supper and bazaar with tary School will have its fall festiserving beginning at 6 p.m.
val from S to 8:311' p.m. The cafeteria will be open all evening. Games
TUPPERS PLAINS - Saint Paul will begin at 6:30p.m. until 8 p.m.
United Methodist Church annual Tickets for the games will be sold
bazaar and bake sale wiU be Nov. S at 10 for $1. 'A haunted house will
and 6 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The occupy the entire se&lt;:ond floor.
eYent is being sponsored by the Admission will be 50 cents for
Willing Workers.
adults and 25 cents for children.
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will ·
be a round and square dance sponsored by the ladies auxiliary at
Tuppers Plains VFW post 9053
from 8 to II :30 p.m. Music wiD be
by True Country Ramblers. Red
Cross will be caller.

(11) 5, 12; 2TC

At Carleton School an
aide I• ltd c:aue llhe'•

~

:~~~~~~;II
forty
today-Now
don't
In
be mad
Dear Frande

SUNDAY
LOTIRIDGE - Louridge Community Center will sponsor a smorgasbord from noon to I :30 p.m.
Cost is $5 for adults and $2.50 for
children. Carry out will be available. Everyone is welcome.

Jane just wanted to •Y

""'

8o the II

w•

who

lrlrnmod lha lampe
To light her chlldNn'a

..,,

II« .wart! Ja done, lho
luklto'er
NDr wiH lho aplrtl roam
For tho hM aone 1o
mellomo,.cM.r
Anou- ,_ ctllad
hDmo_
lady mlaNd and ever
loved by children:
J - ' , Mtrllyn and

*************
A Special Salute to

Veterans

ROCK SPRINGS - First Southern Baptist Chu1cl! wJllr,ha\:e a
revival Nov. 7 - 14 at 7 p.m. night·
ly. A nursery will be provided for
all services. Evangelist will be Rev.
Oifford B. Coleman. There wiD be
special singing with Rev. Charles
Walters.

1

.-!li

·'-

.

On November 11, our
nation will pause to pay
tribute to the thousands of
men and women who have
proudly served their .
country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, The
Dally Sentinel will publish
a very special tribute
honoring area veterans.
can join In our salute
by including the veteran in
your life, living or
deceased, who have
served or is currently
serving In any branch of
the U.S. armed forces.
Your Choice of
Two styles:

CHESTER
lzaak Walton
League slug shoots start at I p.m.
at the Izaak Walton Farm on Boy
Scout Camp Road. Smooth bore or
rifled barrels should be used, rio
scopes.
MONDAY
CHESHIRE - Women Alive
will meet at Kyger Creek Club
House at 7 p.m. There will be a
Thanksgiving .dinner and a devotional speaker. For more infonnation call 992-2469.

r••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I

Please fill out and return your payment to:
VETERAN SALUTE

I

C/0

1
I

CHOOSE ONE

I The Daily Sentinel
1 111 Court St.

-Ad Only ($5)

: Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

_Ad with Photo ($10)

Photo of
Your
Veteran

I

I
I
I
I
I

I
1

MILTON - Mountaineer Opery
House will present Doyle Lawson
and Quicksilver at 8 p.m.

I
1I
I
I Branch of Service'- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
County Pomona Grange will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall. Rock Springs Grange
will host.
'

1 Dates of Active D u t y - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

1

•

1
1
I

LONG BOTIOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church wiU have preaching
and singing at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve
Reed invites !he public.

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Elementary School will
have a fall festival from S to 8 p.m.
Dinner wiU be served from S to 6
p.m. There will also be games, raffles, a white atephant sale and craft
table81 For mor~ infonnation call

Which Watch
Turned 69 Years
Old No11. 4th?
Happy Birthday! ·
Frieruh &amp; Family

Randy

REEDS VILLE - There will be a
ham and turkey dinner sponsored
by the Racine Elementary PTO at
Southern High School from 11 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Cost is $4 for adults and
$3 for children. Carry out is welcome.

TORCH • Camp ~10900 Modern Woodmen of America will
RACINE - Racine Board of
sponsor a smorgasbord dinner from
4 to 8 p.m. at the Torch Communi- Public Affairs wiU meet at 10 a.m.
ty Budding to benefit the UMC at Star Mill Park.
food pantry. This will be a matchPOMEROY - The Disabled
ing fund benefit. Every donation
American
Veterans and Ladies
will be doubled up to $1,250 by the
Auxiliary
will
hold their regular
Woodmen. The dinner is free wilh
monthly
meeting
81 7 p.m.
a domition. The public is invited to
auend.
DARWIN - Bedford Township
Trustees
will hold their regular
CARPEN1ER --carpenter Bap·
monthly
meeting
at 7 p.m. at the
tist Church will have its annual
town
hall.
supper and bazaar with serving

We hope you ban a
gnat Bir11&gt;ct.y.

In memory of
CLETA KOEHLER,
who claptrted thlt life
November 5, 11163.
Aa Martha made lho
hewth all bright
And llhlnlng with love'a

Big Kids &amp; Baby Program
For Children becoming
Big Brothers and Sisters
Tuesday, November 9th
6:30p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Administrative
Conference Room
Call675·4340 Ext. 230
to register

beginning at6 p.m.

742-2630.

In Honor Of:
(name with rank) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I
I

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

I

I
I

In Honor of
lla(or
BobJohnton
Army 111-r.-12
Desett Storm
Love, Your Family

Ad Only
(not actual size)

$10 each

: ConflicVWar_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ I

In Honor of
Major

I

&amp; Saturday
9 p.m. -1:30 a.m.
Country • Soutl,ern Rock
50's and 60's

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge #411 stated meeting at 7:30p.m. Election of officers
for 1994 will be held. Refreshments will be served. All master
masons weleome.

303 Upper River Road

992-5500

Community calendar

SATURDAY

26trl Snet.&amp; .lackaon Avenue

O'dell Lumber
634 East Main St
Pomeroy, Oh

Officers elected at fellowship meeting .

~=~=~~~~~

.Office
November
by18,4 :30
1ft3,p.m.
to avoid
on
publication.
The avoid additional
lntaraal ch•'ll•· • tnporar
may, •"ler Into • written
agraamant with the County
Treaaurar to par one-tilth
(115) ollho delinquent ltleo,
plua all current """ due
prior lo Dacember 1, 1913.
Nancy Parker CompbeU
llelga County Auditor

stock
presldeat, Ryao Adams, vice president, ·
Stephaole Sayre, secretltry, Fred Matson, trea·
surer, aod Jamey Smith, recorder, aod Treotoo
Cleland, Jeremy Northup, and third row, David
Justis, Rachael Hensler, Crystal Harmon, Beth
Clark, and Andy Fields. (Photo by Charlene
tfoenich)

·. . . .,.. . .
r~

st.

IJI/ft. .......,..

-\\~~M7 North

•

.

:
(name relationship to veteran)
1
AD DEADLINE: Frlday,Nov. 5 at 5:00 p.m. Ads must be pre- 1
1 paid. Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11.
I
1I
______________________________ I
I
1

Love

YourN~me :

I
1
1

I

Bob Johnson
Anny 1979-92

Desert Storm
Love,
Your Family

Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
'

Phone

I
1

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Ad Only
(not actual size)

111 Court St.

448-0080

.

Soulheml-c

Eaoh porocn charged with
School Dlllrlct
Donnie E. Hill, T - . (
.real propartr toxaa tnd
paneltlta mor pay the lull
Box178
Roctne, Ohio 45771
.amount of tnea tt the
Mala• Countr Tr-urer'a (11) 2, 3, 4, 5, 7: 5TC

Kerosene Heater Repair
$12.50 plus parts
Don't be left in the cold!
Over 60 different wicks in

ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet at 7
p.m . at the Rock Springs Township
Hall.

.· ·~. ~

or"-

u.....W.

INDUCTED • Eight DeW members have been
inducted Into the Southern High School Chapter
of the National Honor Society. They are front
row, seated; left to right, Jenoy Cleek, Amy
Weaver, Kendra Norris, Amy Moore, Courtney
Roush, Matt Morrow, Jimmy Randolph, and
Mason Fisher. They are pictured with the chapter' s officers, second row, Michael McKelvey,

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

DELINQUENT
REAL
liOnel . •
ESTATE
PROPeRTY .
lty .... ....., .,
N011CE
ol Solflll.,.' .
In oolllpllanca wllh ·
provlalona ol Seell!ln
Dlalllol tf •
5721.01 of ... Ret&lt;1tad Code
umiii:GO.
ol .... ··~ of Ohio, !h.will be publlahed
NoveMber 22nd
op•• lof:
l h o T - ...,._,..
November zt, 1ft3, In
-pepar, t delinquent . . prooldtd lty
.
(1) .....
ltnd llal containing the , ..2 QIIC Yen, " ..........
deearlplon ollho property (1) ueod , _ In~
• It ..,..ro on the tax lit~ IIUe,- not""''
Tho ......, ....... lfallllo
lho nama ol the poraon In
wtloN ntmelhe property It ......... .. blile.
Motad, the omount ot ttxH
ly
ol lho Boetd oJ
and penollleo due tnd ~ -

Domino. Pizza

POMEROY - The eight annual
arts and crafts show wiU be held at
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Over
20 artisians will have a wide variety of homemade crafts for sale.
Food wiU be available from noon
to 5 p.m. The public is invited to
attend.

Now on Sundays, when you buy one sand wich
you get the second lor half price. •

-~

.

•I

Coleman works
out plea bargain

IT~!PWI~Ic~Not~:-~~i~5PI~IAI~Ic~NI~alll~c~•~
1

Friday, November 5,.1993

Sampras in Paris
Open quarterfinals

Magee first round
Kapalua leq,der
KAPALUA, Hawaii (AP) Playing a golf tournament on the
island of Maui can actuaUy have its
drawbacks.
Some players in the $1 million
Kapalua International see it as
more of a vacation than work. Others see it the. other way around.
And still others, such as Andrew
Magee. don't ·malce up their minds
right away.
"A couple of bogeys and it's a
vacation. A couple of a birdies and
it's a golf tOurnament," Magee
said Thursday after laking the rlfStround lead With a 6-under-par 67.
" I guess I'm in a golf tourna-

"

'rhe Daily Sentinel
••

$5each

PORMWO~Oh.45769

Call 992·7569

'

..

�Page

0

Ohio

l&amp;L

HOME. REPAIR
'
All types of

Chemr
Pu
G u~-tor. aryW....
SIIIICioy School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Servi- -7 p.m.

- . .1 Clturdl ~ c•r111
212 W. Main SL
Puwr. And..W Mileo
S...day School - 9:30 a.m.
WonhiP' 111'.30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m,

570
Pastor:
Sunday
Worship ·
Wednetday :&gt;e~nce
Free Will Bapllst Church
Ash SU..~ Middlepon
Pastor: Mark Morrow
Saturday Service-7:30p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · l J a.m.,
Wednesday Scrvice-7:30 p.m.
Rutland Flrst BaptiSI Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won hip - I 0:45 o.m.
Ponoeroy First Baptist
Pastor: Paul Stinson
" Ea11 Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · I 0:30 a.m.
Flnl Southern BaP.dst
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Putor: E. 4Jnar O'BryMtt
Sunday School - 9:3e un.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednaday Servicea-7:00p.rn.
Flnt Bapdst Cllun:II
6th and Palmer SL, Middlepon
Puwr. Rcv. Jamea A. Seddon
•
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
:
Worship - IO:IS Lm., 7:00p.m.
A B.Y.· 5:30p.m.
Lord's Supper In Sunday or every month.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m
Racine nnt Bapdsl
Pastor: Steve Fuller
Youth Pas10r. Aarcn Young
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worohip . 10:40 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servicc:a -7:00p.m.
Silver Run Bapdst
Putor: Bill Uttle
Sootday School - IOa.m.
Worship- lla.rn., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servic:es- 7:30 p.m.
ML Union BaptiSI
Pa!IOr: Joe N. Sayre
Sootday Sehool-9:45 a.m.
Evenina - 6:30p.m.
Wednerday Services - 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptist
Pastor : Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Thunday Service•· 7:30p.m.

Gnet E~ Cbordl
.
3261!. Main sl., Pwwouy
Re&lt;ror: Fr. Bill Lyle .
Holy Eucharut and Sunday Sehoollla.m.
Co«oelluur followin&amp;

Middleport Chur&lt;II ~Christ
5th and Main
P11tor: AJ Harucm
Youth MiniJICr. Bill Frazier
SWlday School· 9:30 a.m.
WonhiP' 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioes - 7 p.m.

Holiness

Keno Church of Christ
Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday S&lt;:hool - I0:30 a.m.
Bearwallow RldJ:e Church of Chrlst

Putor: Jade Colegrove
,
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 6:30pm.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.
Zion Church~ Christ
. Pomeroy, HarriJonville Rd. (RL143)
Pastor: Roser WalSCII
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servioea • 7 p.m.
Tuppen Plain Cburcb ~Christ
Putor: Bill Wines
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship· 9:45 i .m., 6:30p.m.
Bradburl Churdl ~ Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyoo
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Youth Meeting- 5:30 p.m.
Evening Service - 7 pm.
· Wednerday, Bible Study - 7 p.m.
Rudand Church of Christ
Putor: Eugene B. Underwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship -,10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Bradford Church or Christ
Comer or SL RL 124 .t Bradbury Rd.
Evangelist: ~Shimp
Youth Minister: Mark Notter
Sunday School - 9:30am.
Wonhip - 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.ln.
Wednesday Service• - 7:30p.m.
Hickory Hill! Church of Chrlllt
Pastor: Joseph B. Hotkinl
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Liberty Chrllltlan Church

o....r

Paswr. Woody Cad
Sunday Evenina- 6:30p.m.
Thunday Service - 6:30p.m.
LanpvUie Christian Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wunhip·l0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Old Bethel FrH Will Baptist Church

.
·
·

Vlciory Baptist JDdejiendant
525 N. 2nd SL Middlepon
Pa110r: Jamea E. Keesee
Wonhip- !Oa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednerday Servioes - 7 p.m.

.. .

Hemlock. Grove Churc•
Paat.or: Olarle• Domigan
Sunday school· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

28601 SL RL 7,,Middlepon
· Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evc:ninj- 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services- 7:30
Hlllllde Bapdllt Church
SLRL 143junoffRL 7
Puwr. Rev; lames R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonbip-lla.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Faith Bapllst Church
Railroad SL, Masoo
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
W.orship · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service! - 7 p.m.
Foreot Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonbip - II a.m.
ML Merlo• Bapllllt
Fawlh .t Main SL, Middlepon
Paaror: Rev. Gilben Croi&amp;,Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 Lm,
AnrJqulty Bapdst
Pa•tor: leennel.h Smith
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 Lm.
Thunday Services-7:30p.m.
Rutlllld FrH Will Baptist
Salem SL
Putor: Rev. Parr! Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a.m,'
Evmina·7p.m.
Wodneaday Servioes - 7 p.m.

Catholic

Episcopal

Pomeroy Westside Church of Christ
33226 Children's Homo Rd.
Sunday School· 11 a.m.
Wonhip. IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servioes-7 p.m.

. Reednlllc Clo. . . ~Christ

Paswr: l'hilip Slllnn
Sunday School: 9:30 IJII.
WonhipService: \0:30Lm.
Bible Study, W-.Jay, 6:30 P.rn·
'

Chri st1an Un1on
Harll'ord Clulr'cll of Clorllt Ia
Clorlltllill Uok!lo
Hanford,.W.Va.
'
PallOr. Rev. 0.\id McMIIIis
Somday S&lt;:hool •11 a,DL
9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
We&lt;ko
y Servicea -7:30p.m.

w""!"J.·

Hob- Clirllllu Uo...
Middlopon, Ohio
Sunday Sdoooi,IO un.
Sunday~ 7:30p.m.
Wodnelday,1:30p..m.

Church of God
ML M-ti·CI 1cioo .,,~ • ,
Racille .
Putor: Rev.James s-rlield
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Bvonin1 -1 p.m.
Wedncaday Services • 7 p.m.
Rulland Church ~Cod
P1110r: John P. Comoran
Sundar S&lt;:hool· 10 un.
Wonhip • 11 a:"'·• 7 p.m.
Wednesd'ay Servu:e&amp; - 7 p.m.

s1...,.. Churdl or God

AJ'Pe and 5eoo?nd Srs.
PasiOr: Rev. llavid R01sell
Sunday School aird Worohip- 9:30a.m.
Evening Servioes- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~ - 7 p.m.
Church orGnd ~Prophecy
OJ. WhiiO Rd. elf Sr. RL 160
Putor: P11 Henaon
S1111day School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

R- ~s ....... HoU- Clourdo
New Uma Road, Rorlarod
PasWr. Rev. Dewey Kin1
SIIIICioy achool· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday proyer meerin&amp;- 7 p.m.

Pine Grove Bible Boll- Church
11.1 mile offRL 325
Paao.or. Rev. O'Dell Manley
SIIIICioy School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30pm.

Pular.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonbip -llun.

Forat Run
Putor. Doton Newman
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Thundoy Services-6:30p.m.

Putor: Deron Newman
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 un.

Sl. John Lutheran Clolsrch

PineGrovc

Pastor: J?awn Spaldin&amp;
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Our SaviOur Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Rav-wood, W.Va.
Co.paswn: Revs. Richard &amp;:
Paoricia Bonda-Krug
Sunday S&lt;:hool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - J I a.m.
SL Plul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore .t Second SL, Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spaldina
Sunday S&lt;:hool- 9:4S a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

Umted Methodi st
Gnha• United Melhndllt
Worship- 9:30 Lm. (IR .t. 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. ('3nl &amp; 4th S...)
.Servii&gt;o- ~:30 p.m.

.w...,...,

ML Olive Uolted Metbodlll
Off 124 behind Willwville
Paswr. CiarleoJones
Sunday Scliool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.
Thunday Services - 7 p.m.
Melp Cooper•~•• Parbh
Northeast Cluster
Alfred

·PallOr: Sh1ron Hausman
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wo11hip · 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chester
Pastor. Sharon Hausman
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Sunday Scliool - 10 am.
Thunday Servioes - 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Brenda Weber
Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
SWlday School - I0:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Looallotrom
Pastor. Rev. Phillip S..rberry
Sunday S&lt;:hool • 9:30 IJII.
Wcnhip- ICl-.30 a.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.
ReediVIIle
Pas10r. Rev. Phillip S..rberry
Wonhip - 9:30 a.m.
ht .t 3nl Sunday-7:30p.m.
S001day S&lt;:hool : 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Pw11andFiniChu~~lhe Naza&lt;Me
Putor. Willi.n Jllftil

Pomeroy
Pallor: Ewlhae (Grace) Kee
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m., 6p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1:~ p.m.

RuUaDd
Putor: Anhur Crabtree
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Servioes - 7 p.m.

'

Rudand Chu~ ~ ... N-rene
Pllklr. Sanuel Buye
. Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
'"onhi
"'Wednesday
p- 10:30
·Services
a.m., 6•:730p.m.
p.m.

1'•••1 Chapel
PasWr..- Floronce Smith
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - !Oa.m.

H)'SOII Run Hollo,.. Church
Putor. Roben Manley
'Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7:30p.m.

Lutheran

Cheller Church Grille N-ene
Pu10r: Rev. Herbc:n o11,. ·
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - lla,m.. 6 p.m.
Wedneodly Services - 7 p.m.

MlnerniDe

RoctSprlnp
Putor:Kmth Rader
Sunday School · 9:1S a.m.
Wonhi~ -10 a.m.
Youth Fellowohip, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Reoraanlzed Church ~ J - Chrlllt
In Latter Dar s.•to
Porrland-Racine Rd.
Pasror. Jeny Collins
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m.
Wndoesday Services -7:30p.m.

Pemoror Ch.,.. ~ lhe ·N~rMe
Pastor. Rev. Thomas McClung
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp . !0:30a.m. and 6 pm.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Heath (MiddhpGrt)
Putor. Fnrnk Smith
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wedneaday Services - 6p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holln... Chordl
75 Pearl SL , Middleport.
Paswr. Rev. John Neville
Sunday school -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30·a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Service -1,j.10 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

PasiOr. Rev. Rick SlutJiD
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30un., 6p.m.
Wemeiday Servioeo _7 p.m.
.

Sunday Scbooi-IO:OOa.m.
WonhipServicei
• 6' 30 p.m.
Wednesday
• 7 p.m.
N., Ha,.... Chun:II ~theN~
Putor. Glauloa SIIOUd
Sunday S&lt;:hool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
7
Wodileiday Services · p.m.

Other Churches
HarrllonvDie Commua!IJ Cllun:II
Putor. Theroo Durham
SIIIICioy ·9:30a.m. Mid 7 p.m.
Wednesday -7 p.m.

Enddme H._ of.Pnrer

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School- 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip- 10:15 a.m.

(ll Burlinaham dourdi off Route 33)

PuiOr. RobeR Vanc:c
Sunday worship • 10 a.m.
Wedneaday service -6:30p.m.

Snowville ·

Putor: Florence Smith
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.

TriniiJ CCNlareaadOD~ Church
Putor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Church· 9:15 un.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

BethanJ
Putor. Konnelh Baker
Smday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Servicea- 10 am.

Tho Saindon Anny
115 Bullemul Avo., Pomeroy.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:00 a.m .• 7:30p.m.

Carmel
Putor. Kennelh Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 Lm. (2nd&amp;: 4th Sun)

Middleport C""!munliJ Chorch
575 Pcad SL, Middlcpon
Puwr. Sam Andenon
· Sunday Scbooi!O un.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

MornlnaStor
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Wo11hip- 10:30 Lm.
Thunday S&lt;rviees -7:30p.m.

FaHh Tab&lt;rnade Cburcll
. BoDey Run Rood
Putor: Rev. Bmmm Rawson
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Bveoia&amp; 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

Sutton

Pulor: Kemelh Baker
S...day School- 9:30a.m.
Wo11bip -10:45 a.m. (hl.t 3nl Sun)

Syracuae Million
1411 BridcemanSL,Syncuse
Pul&lt;lr. Roy (Mike) Thompaon
SUnday School- 10 a..m.
Evenia&amp;-6p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

EutLetart
Pulor: Ken Molrer
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wo~~·9am.
Wodo
y·7p.m.
Radsla
Putor. Ken Molter
SIIIICioy School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 11 a.m ...d 7 p.m.

u.... c.mmunlty Church
-

Sunday S&lt;:hool· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Laurel ClllrFree Metllodlot Churdl
Puwr. Peter Tremblay
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneiday Servioes • 7 pm.

•

Dyenllle Ccn•ODIIy ChSunday S&lt;:hool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Rulland Bible Metbodlllt
Pastor: Rcv.lvan Mye11
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Bveninc - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Christian Fellow•lp Centor
Salem SL, Rolland
Paswr: Robert B. Muuer
Sunday S&lt;:hool • I0 a.m.
Wonhip- 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servico - 7 p.m.

Coolville United Methodlllt Parlilh
Puwr. Helm Kline
Coolvll~ Church
Main &amp;'Fifth Sr.
SWlday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhi~ • 9 a.m.
Thesday SeMces - 7 p.m.

Mone Ch9.'1 Church
Pa-.:MikeMa11011
Sunday ldrool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 1 p.m.
WoMeaday ServiQoo': 7 p.m.
Faith Gcoopel Charch

Bethel Churcfi
· Township Rd., 468C
Sunday S&lt;:hool • 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Wednesday S'erviees- 10 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.,7:30 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Hoeklnaport Chorch
· GrandS.,...
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.
WoMeaday Services - g p.m.

ML Olive c-munlty Cbun:h
PuiOr. Lawronoe BUlb
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
EveniJoa-7p.m.
Wednedoy Service· 7 p.m.

Longllouom

Vnllacl Faith Church
Rt 7 on Pomeroy By· Pall
Paswr. Rev. Roberti!. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday ServillO - 7 p.m.

Tuppero Plain• St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Tuesday Servieea -7:30p.m.
Cenlrll Clutter

AsbUJ5!.,;.naue)

Putor:
NewmUI
Sunday S.hool • 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

FuU G..,.. JJah-

33045 Hiland Road, Paneroy
Paswr. Roy Hower
Sunday S&lt;:hool-10 a.m.
Bvenina 7:30p.m.
Tuesday .t Thunday · 7:30p.m.

Middleport Churdl or the N~o
Pasror: G"''ory A. Condiff
s...day School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi- - 7 p.m.

N- Settle.ent Chureh
Sunday Wonl!ip · 2:30p.m.; ·
Thunday .......s -7:30p.m.
Soutll Batllel NewT-eiol
· Silver Ridp
PallOr: DU&amp;no Sydenslricker
Sunday S&lt;:hool • 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m., 7.,.m.
Wednetday Servico • p.m.

R-..llleF-Ip

Enter~rt10

Putor. Kcuh Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- 9a.m.

OffRL 124

Puoor: Edsel Hall

Churdl~lhtN-r111e

PuiOr: Jolon W. Dooglas
Sunday School- 9:30a.m:
WonJOp · 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m,
Wednelclay Services - 7 p.m.

'

'

.

Rood
C1 de
H d
Puwr. ty04 . en enon
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m. .
Wednesday Service-,7 p.m.
Freedom G--' MIQion

~-..-

•

L·.-u '' l~ .,,
~ '· . • 1 \

Mill W01k
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

992 ·3978

.. · K&amp;C JEWELERS ·

ROIIRT IISSELL
CONmUCTION

212 E. Main Street
992-3785. PomtrOy

.

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

:!·

9

264 'South

5141

~

MEIGs· TIRl
·~-~ ' CENTER, INC.

(lr J.•::=:nz

INSURANCE
; SERVICES
214 E. MaiQ
992 •5130 Pomeroy

P. J.

fattenpJ~~
wlthawart~

Crow's Family .Restaurant
"FMurlnfl Keniucli/Frl«l Chickot~"
228 w. Main St., Pome~oy

992-5432

Micltlllport

;

Memorial Hospital

' 11 S

I. Memorial Dr.

Pomoror

EWING FUNERAl HOr.,£
..Di#(nit~· "?d Sttrl'irt• Alu·f'y~"

· Established 1913

992-2121
106 ~rry Avit.

•

"
1-I00-714,JIIE

Pornemy Pike. Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Block wood
Sunday School - 9:30.a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi~ - 7:30p.m.

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
12-30-92-lfn

Rejoicing Life Church
SOON. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Paator: lawrence Foreman
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m.
Church or J..., Christ,
Apolltollc Faith
1/4 mile past Fon Meigs on New l,.ima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meier
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wedncaday-7:00 p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

•
•

Limestone

Dirt
Gravel
992-7878
7f711rrr&gt;.

1cmt1mo.

Cllftoo Tab...acle Church
Clifron, W.Va.
Sunday S&lt;:hool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip -7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m·.

Public Notice

Public Notice

Ohio Rei1111 d COde lnllon
2701.14: 1A.01· IIICI Clvl

--ac•&gt;
... unlrn-n to
the PlolniH wPI tab nollca
lh.t a.., have boan auacl by

u CAlc' 11,_
If,...,.
~= OF

Rule

:

Pentecostal

CD'MIIC'N PLE~IEIGI ,

~c

.

DlooDill'~..,.~~~~~~···"'"
l . . oiOIIID
PWnlfl .

Ptn-.IA.embjy
SL RL 124, Racine
Paotor: William Hoback
Sunday Scbool-10 uri:
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

v.

Leo A. e.,trled, .. ol.

Dlf1li 1 ...
c... No. ta-CV-77

Mlddie,!Grt Peatecottal
Third Ave.
Pastor. Rev. Clarl&lt; Balcer
Sunday School - I0 am.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services • 7:00p.m.

.AIIIdnlt

.

STATE ·oF OHIO
COUNTY OF IIEIGI 18
RlhCCI A. lptllnllowlld,
being flrel clulr
depoe.. IIICI MP

•-n,
"'-l

aha

11 a duly 1polntad,
quallllad n
aotlng
Aaelet.nl Aaomey Ganarll
ollllillate of OhiO; thai Ill
l!lalntlfl, Jerry w...,
Dlraotor ol Tr•aporllltlan,
81818 of Ohio, .....1_11J hla
Pelllan, lo .,propnal8 Ill
porparty .....,IIMII U...aln
ancf lo fbr th. val• ......,;
tllollla
of Ill
DafondentC•I na ·
below
era unknown and cannot
with r-onallla diiiii'IIM
bf aacerl81necl: Lao A.
SaJtrlad, Qladya layfrlacl,

Presbyterian
Harrt...vllle Pnoobyterlan Ollrtll
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Sunday S&lt;:hool -9:45a.m.
Middleport l'noobyltrlan
· Sunday School • 9 Lm.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

_....':!d'

Syracuae Fll'll Unllacl Preab71..-1an
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wo11hip- II a.m., 4 p.m. (1st .t 3nl Sun.) .

Alma W. HoiAngaworth, M•

w.

Seyfried, Lucille
laylrladti.=.ra L c..to,

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se•enth.Day Ad•endllt
Molberry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Servioes:
Sabbath S&lt;:hool- 2 p.m.
Wo11hip - 3 p.m.

.

United Brethren
ML Hermoo UaHed llnthr• . ·
In Chrlllt Church ,
Texas Community off CR 82
Pa1tor: Roben Sanden
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
Eden United Brethren In Christ
2 II.! mili:&amp; north cl Reedsville
on Stile Reule 124
Pasior: Rev, Robert Marl&lt;ley
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship -7:30pm:
Wednesday services-7:30p.m.

bacoll, • Ciani
tmt.nbrrch.
The following aoUona
were ta1ten on bcihllf of Ill
Plolnllff to aaoartaln 1111
plHa(a) of realdonoa of lila
unknown Doofandent(a): A
lhorough llaron DJ an
~I of PlalnUif ofh doacf
Index• IM11o cumnt a a
ohen on the Aucltor'a
lo•puter found no further
lnfor111atlon 011 lhe11
clafenclrmta; 11111111 ....... lo
f1elghbora of lhe ,......, and
t.laphona dlr-rl• - •
. . . Q. .

·-chad
Jllv•

It Ia n.....ary
wllhout ·~ore
-·
1o
notloa ol lila ftll,. of
the Petition herein br
Publication, In accordance
with Section 27Q3;14:
I 13.07; . and Civil Rule
U(Al. AeviMCI Coda.
And further alllant ullh
noL
Reb 11 en A. Spaolnhoward
AMiatanl Attornar Gon•al
Sworn to before m• and
oubHrliMd In mr pr-o•
thla 4th day of October,

147.03R.C.
Ufttlma Comml..lon
Ohio Rav!Md Coda llactio!o
·:ma.t4; 111.01: and ClvU
Ride U(A) (Adclr-

· • 271. North
'
SaeOIIII

.

Pre'icnpflo•n
nl 191!

It •

Unfaioivnl

.......,

•. LEGAL NOTicE FOR

· PUBLICATION (lbc (I)

. SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY ' d
Wr F 1U Oodor..,·

Robart L lohiAttorn.y •• Law
Notary Publla In .,d
for h
of Ohio,

s-

992-6669

ru.
..

Pomeroy

S41E$ &amp; S£1t\'ICE .

Lao A. ~ay~r";:., Glady•
jeyfrlad, Alma
W.
Holllngaworth, Max W.
feYfrlect, Luollle aayfrlacl,
Clara L. c..to, Max G.
HllrloJibiDhr 6 , Claro
itarlenbun
who••

. Fit THE

992-707.5
112 NO..th $aeond Ave.
Ohio

Any Condition

614·992·7553

INTERIOR

I~:=~
trNd
dNign cord
I•
rklng
polyeatar

WllUI ALLEY

body.

Plfls ... Stnkt

Mow., - CIIIIIS.Ws

w-..,.,,

AuthoriZIIICI; Srtgga &amp;

192,7011 or
992·5551
or TOLL Fill
1-100..141-0070
DIIWII, OHIO

Stratton MTD,_ Ryan,
I.D.C. Repair c.nter
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Hollrl II-~ H SaL
Cloeecl Sunday

PHONE
INSTALLAnON

COUNTRYSIDE
CERAMICS

. Jacks Installed

949:2104

DHfnnt Rooms end
Outside Buildings
Free Elllmatea

era.... available

614-367'!()421

now.

FREE ESTIMATES
Take tha p~~ln out of
painting. Let me do It
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

10/IW3

304-773-5533
Open6Day'a

41211111nl

Blsqua, Greenwara,
Paint BNaheil,
Accnaorlo,
Finished Placn,
and Day Ia Evening

·Exte111lons run to

CALL

Bill's Tlra
ofRav-wood
annoui'IGII
Richard Moora
hu joined wr lbltl.
Richard c:omn to ua
wHh 12 yrs.
axparlanc:a at
Pomeroy Home l
Auto and ClA Auto

Coma Vlalt u•.

848:3086

HO. SITES
1Locatltd

In E1stem Meigs County. 1 to 5
tracts available. Tuppers Plains &amp;
1Cl'lel&gt;ter water; electric available, on site
tanka &amp; roads to each lot
Partially wooded with rolling

Announceme nts

3 Announcements
F - In C1iriat Chrlotlen
Doling . . - .
Sl~

"'looottnoo ctvt.
tlnsf Clortotlan

p::?J &amp;..., L:ac:.,...::;:

oOOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER

THE COUNTY O.UB
(Farmer Mason w,s)

Goll Clubol
llepolr,

ancl Pamitoy Strllfs
•TFJUCKING
Ma1011, wv
D.A. IOSTON
(3041773·5585 ' !'

uMdGolf

EICAYAnNG ·

WINTER HOURS
Sun.·Thurs. 4:10pm
Frl, &amp; Sat., 4 pm-7

JOHN TEAFORD

36358 SA 7

Clll $49-2244
aft,rl p.m.

EVERYTHURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB

Chester, Oh. 45720

thane• In a northerly
direction to lhe aornar of
NaiiO)'
lni'H aoull property
!hence •••t about 200
feel lo lh• canl8r of lha

•a:

Lie.

.

No.005;;:!2/Ifn

I~=:::::!!:::::::!:!!!~::=:~

g::::,~ of MeiiJI, State of
Owner• ''taln right of
lngr•• nnd " ' " ' to and
11-om
any"'~~
Bald
paroona noted above

:':.i:~"':he~ ~ti~

At~ornay, ftle an AM- no
Ia• than 21 daya.after ...
comlllatlon
ol
Publlc.tlon,olllalarJioa
lb.., will be
d-ad to have waived

HowriL Wrftesel

ROOFING

NEWGuttera
- REPAIR
DownipoUfi

G4:!r~r:;rng
FR.EE ESTIMATES

'949·2168

~E

DlrectorofTr.,apol~o~ ' l
~:&gt; e, 15, 22, 21,

Ia now 1ccapt1ng all farroua 111111111
Including: tin, cast Iron , long and ahort Iron.
Mull ba entlll enough to ba movad by hind.
Short Iron (INa than 3 ft.) 1.75 par hundred
Motor Cllt.....2.00 par hundrad
Claln, dry alum. cana .23 pound
Prlcaa subject to change whhout notice
Located at the corner of S.R. 143 and 7

Phone 992·5114

Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ·

ROCkJ R• Hupp1 D• C• U• • Agent
lox 119
Middleport, o•lo .45760
(614) 143•5264 5114183/tfn

I~;;;:;~;;;;;;;;:::

l11

446-9515
CUPIT &amp; UPHOLSTERY CLWIIIII
I
Wa give carpet and
upholatarythe
"SPECIAL CARE"
they da 11rvall

I~::;:zJ:: ....,

WINTERIZATION
SPECIALS
CERTIFIED MKHANIC

992·3470

WV013312

Wa apaclella In:
FIRE&amp;WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORATION·
INSURANCE CLAIMS
24Hou'
Emergency Service

OUTBOARD 'MOTOR •~.r.
INBOARD/OunOARD SSO"
WINTER STORAGE AVAILAILE
aD

Cnlwlonre - . , . . llosllleowv. ~.

Mobile •nd Doublewlde owners.,.

pHoorI 0 PLACE
108 High StrHt

Pomeroy
Bob and Chlrleni HOifllch

·-78ln.

2 male pulllllao, pon Rot Ttrrior.
104..........

llaok-n~d­
ploo, -.eJS.rm atlori:OO PM.

Callao 001, couple ol IIIGnlho
Old, to • good '-to, IU.IIII:I-

1771.

F- Kilt- To Good -

Only! Call Aftar 5:30 P.M. IU.

24UIIIl

----.

Kitten, 2mo. okf, Utter trained,
anaeslona1o, to goat~ .......

Lost &amp; Found

Found: calico cat wMh c:•lar,
Mkl-

ontr
• 1ow - h o a1c1,
dloport .._ 114-1112-ena.

l.oill: J Engllal! ~ .2
maiM 1 1Wnl .., TNT • • on
Ocl. ii. John Coolt, Ill at t-7M24H213 . . - , or lt)4.4J5.
22141.
l.oill:

.....

7

Yard Sale

MIIOniCUfton
11171.

&amp;

u.•- II Modele!

THE

Giveaway

100 Yoat Qd l'lana, Uorlght,
"-lr, 11m_., •lsielc,

6

FURNACES

HAUUNG
SERVIa

GRAVEL, SAND, .
LIMEST!)IIf,
TOP SOIL
&amp; .Fill Dill

......_. ..~ ::ir~:

2112192/tfn

AMERICAN GENEuL uFE .....
••
AC..CIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

$-11-13-1111

36970 ....~•l.o.ad
. P••nr.y, Ohio .

=1l,_~~..:;

(Ho S.IMiay Calls)

their
right to
· and r.r
r~;;;;:;~~~~~~~r:::~:;:;;;;:;~~~===::=~=:;;=,
tho Petition
wtlanew•,
be
true
and aocorcii,.IJ:
ruotemant wtnClvl
"'
Memory
Mates
• Portraits
randared
.
_
1
Rula121Al &lt; 1•
Spec/a/ Occasions

"*"' •

Co.I0245+11120.

ESTIMATES

614-992·7643

3l8l1ln

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •

=•

t::

TRI-COUNTY RECY«ING

985-3406

,IN POMEROY
8:46 p.m.
Special Early Bird
•
S100 Payon
Thla ad gOod for 1
FREE card.

r..tlo lhe cllft.

:=na~·.·~,·r::. tft::

4

11!t2111 mo.

Baglnnlnglnllloan•of
the road on lhe aoulll Ina of
11111
-e Lolwaat
No. 383:
thanoa
lbout 200

Fan&amp;u-Unlon Tobecco

New Homes • VInyl Siding
._._
115-11111 Edleon ....,_
New Garages • Repl~tcement WIndows . He ~~ He
Room Additions • Roofing
~~
i'11~"'f.r a.~
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
Par -.uuot a. 11 Yna. Pntoaa

4-18-93-lln

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

Lacetecl on Vlna St In
Racine. Ample lot,
fenced yard, walking
dlatanca to achool or
church. Ideal for
young family.

New

ulo NoW.arvn~o
22. Cal
-·
SIS.
w-,
or 1104-

Shade River

.,o•••,

111100

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

(614)
667·6621

_...,,..,,., llllllllillli9 :

HOME
FOR 'SALE

UMIT~~ro~ro~~:s·..
DESCRIBED PROPERTY

=~~~=~f~O:~

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

Specializing In Cuatorn
Frame Repair

•• ,__ wide 60 and 70 . Berlll
lltrf·onmlllCO proftl...
•· ·r.., •trona ftbergl- belli

~~14-M.

mLE AND INTEREST 1H
FEE SIMPLE, EXCWOINQ

Bag Inn lng,

M1mo.

Partrwra. Call1 100 130 . . .
Gun 1'-!!.. - l l l e , OH.
Nov 1111, ....... ........ Nov •h.
IA.II. .....~~. - - Fire

PARCEL NO...WD
(HIGHWAY) ALL RIGHT,

of

Daytona Radla160 and 70 !ltaii!M

742·2904

llan

followl:

P looe

1625 lallons

--~-

PAITS

111ftllll3

LINDA'S
.PAINTING

OWHEI:MfWIIbr:.._

·I

WHALEY'S AUTO
.

1112111311 mo.

P•cal No.
(Paga1ofl)
AMENDED
DEScRIPTION OF THE
PARCEL OF LAND AND
ESTATE, INTEREST OR
RIQHTTHERIH
APPROPRIATED
lltuotacl In lha Townahlp
of lallobury, County of
Melli' and a!ala of Ohio,
and 1u10wn • being port of
100 -e Lot No. HI, a part
of Town 1 North, Ranga 1:1
w..t, ae ahown b)' the
raoorclacl Moip County Tu
Plat, U.p No. 27, Pal'llll No.
oae, and mora fullr
bounclacl and daacrlbocl •

wal about 11 IMI 18 the

....-....

Pomeroy, Ohio

e..

HAULING
Call
Ralp.lt

(FREE EITIMATEII)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Specle!izlng In
Autdmatic
Transmissions
368
t Main Sl
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-6321

'TI'ophleo
Plaqueo

~ ClACCIIEO·AD~

FIRE &amp; SAFETY

......11. .

.

WATER
•so ,., io.11

:Jn'lartof • Extartor

DAN'S .
TUNSMISSION
&amp; AUTO REPAIR

Ctubl,

ro~~c• ooull 7 dagr-

.floollntl

614·915·4110

tha
Director
ot
Tronoportatlon of the State
of Ohio, who h• lnalltitacla
proclldlng In lha Common
" ' " Court of Malg•
County, Ohio, lo .,roprtata
certain property d-rlbacl
hereafter for hlghw•'l'
purpci'"· namely the
molrlng, oonatruotlon . or
lmprov- oJ:SIIIta Route
7, S.aotlon 0.~1, Melt~~
County, Ohio, and 1o llx die
value of aald property. Tile
eought to be
Ia mora
deacrll&gt;ad ao

lha Silvia R....- and

-Guu.Work
-eactrtcal and Plumb!,.

IUIUIU&amp; ...IU

WANTING
TO BUY
JUNK CARS
&amp; TRUCKS

GENERAL
HAULING

TUPPERS PLAINS
S..lc obec!lence,
18w anfon:ement,
~nol protection,
ket)nel Hrvlc:e, pupa l
young c1oa- for Hie.
· By 1ppt. only
61.w&amp;7.PETS

.
·

YOUNG'S
CARPEHTS{ SERVICE
..flaolll AdcltiCine

1121/lfn

7n'

TII.JTATE K·9
ACADEMY ·

JOII N•.Sayre

614-742·21.38

&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 1112:7474
POMEIIOY, OHIO

Porches,
·Patios,
Sidewalks
.·: 992-7878

BILL SLACK

Sllvenvllle Word of FaHh
Puwr: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

SAYRE TRUCKING

1110 110

CONCRETE
WORK

ofiREWOOD

Cahory Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

EVERY SUNDAY
AT 1 P.M.

QUALITY WORK ·

el..IGHT HAULING

· FaHh Fellowship Cruaade for Christ
Putor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Fljday, 7 p.m.

Rmo.llbii.RIIet

ARNOLD'S
PLU..BING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

SHRUI &amp; TREE
TilMan•
REMOVAL

Ohio

!·~ Veterans

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

71221f13

Cal••~
- • Bible ""u~
~~

GUN SHOOT
RACINE GUN CLUB
·Factory Clloke,
l2pgeo1ly.
Beginning Od. 3

tl5·4473

Mlddloport,

- ~-,

&amp;.COAL

w. ........ .....

-New Homes
-Garages
-complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

. .

RAWUN.GS-COATS

UMESTONE,
GRAVE~ TOPSOIL

given away December
24, 1893. No purchaaa
required to r••r and
don't have be preaent
to win.

·.;

tiN.

RACI.NE PLANING MILL

. . . 45771
614:tt2:5M4
1-t00-714·nRE
Come by and reglater
for free Bldlery to be

742-2443

Bald Knob, on Co. R&lt;l31
P11wr. Rev. Roaer Willford
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
White's Chapel Waleyan
Coolville Road
Putor. Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sundsy S.hool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service · 1 p.m.
Bl c
Fairview
bit burch
•~tan,
WV
• a. RL I
PallOr: James l.ewiJ
SundayScbool-11a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 un .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.

IIUUMI

e

Carpentry,
Plumbing,
Electric, etc.
10% Dlosc:ount
Senior Cltlzena

~-:::---:::::::::::::::::::::;-----~N:e:w:L:~~Ch:=wU::~~~~~------------~~:;;;~~---------s;,~:.:NM:;,C~h~u~~;;~~UM~N~~:;.rM:e~---.~c=.:m:w:.:,.=~mad~~Chu~
Church of Chnst
Apostolic
Kin~

UISI .... Irwtl...

~

=

-~.

IE-;~~-:- _o;_!).oo~-- ;.~.00;:...~
CaiiiEIIm'S MOilLE·lOME
HUnH- COOLIIIe

Cllllllpolla, Oh.

......tlot Tall F-I..I
...Dia.l~17ZPll-1117

Col1lo

1,..1,

Dcla.

304~nt.:

�Friday, November 5, 1993

'

1893
BEATTIE BLVD.... by Bruce Beattie

.:' ALLEYOOP
IR._D GE

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

Houllhold

42 Moblll HomM
for Rent

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,....,,_Oood;;.•-~

NEA Crouword Plizzh ·

....

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
bOd- -

2

-.

~·::..··-··
tMa:l '''

......
aftorSpm.....

.. ..
... .

Pomeroy,

NORTH

+a:

Mlddllporl
I VIcinity

'

'

: A; Yard .....
•-

•u

••

10:-m.

Sllurdllf.

SOUTH

••

.KQJtl6
.JS5 2
+AK

- . 111100, ~ Tlvol

•::r..~; ':!,'!':!--:x

guess you could say this is a surprise party.
We found out how old you really are."

~.of:,":;

...... - . -·
0

t:;=::=::====-r::~~:::~~~==~::Y. ~.t~~ _11__H_e;..I:;.P..;W.:.:a;..n;.;;ted;.;;._ _ l-;o;~H~oLim~efs;fo;r~S;a;le~;:

ond Sixth 81., Mlddllporl. Bib¥
wet.,._., anUqun, okl
e~mlvtll giiM, lola of mllc.

• tt--.

it.,..
8
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Plzu

drtvw nelded,
top
delln~ r:-r In .,.., 11lary ph,••
commlilalon, tlpa. UUM hive

I FOR SALE·

2 t 1-11 ..._,
112 ecn In country, Racine .,...
new double p.ne tlll.fn windawa, full biMIMnt 1 oulbulld-

~~~;~~:'1&gt;\'~Y..r _. :::..·~.~~i~::l1o ~~
Soyltr't .....,.. ot T_..,,.,, 1
"' &amp;:3o p.m.

Rick Polreon Auction Componr, 105 Buttomut Avenuo, Ponw.=r
- lull ~~- ouctl..,..r, oomploto It now lnlorvlowl;'p,. Wo
-..ice.
Uc.n..d part-time and ful t 1M watt,...
.uctlon • ..
...
and kh.ott.n help1n11. N..cf one
III,Ohlo a Wnt VIrginia, !J04. cook. muet hlv. ftNVIoue II•
773-8715.
porienoo In cooking, ord«&lt;ng
ond ~lng oupplilo. Will bt n:.
I I
Monel. N0 .. m ~
9 Wanted to Buy
orv
:l.;
-r
8th ond tldoy OYtmbtr 8th,
Antlque• and UMd twnhure, na tO:OOim-&amp;:OOpm.
lttm 10o latQ.I or too email. will Wanlod:
Ltgol
Soerollry
buy one p1te1 or compltto rotoronctt
roqulrod.
s.i.il
·· -thold, coli Oti&gt;W Martin, r..ume to Bo1 R-25, cJo Pt.
IM-te:l·lll4t.
PINIInl Rtglltor, 200 Moln Sl.,
• ~ .,_,_, woll ..... Pt. Pltoton~ WV2H50
- Jihanot, old "'':l:koold Ih..
• mom01ora. Old
ortlquo 18 Wanted to Do
t.mH~n. Rl-lnt Anllq!Ma.
, JILIII - . , _ . . ,, lf4.812. Boby oncl child oUting dono ol
2521. w. bUy ••tteL
r..l reaon1bl1 prrcea, will

'lt

GOVERNMENT HOMES From $1
!U Ropolr). Dollnquenl Tu
ProPir1,. R.,...alona. Your

ArN (1 80842-8000, Ext. QH ..
10181 'For Current Repo Usl

lbiM For Sole B~ Own.-:

~lng For So-hlng Un~
quo? Tired Of ljlgh Ulllhllo And
Nolghboro Too Clott For c..,.
fort? Thtn You May Wonl To
eo.- Tftlt lltc:IUdod, Low
Molnlonanct, Rutile Codar WHh
An::hltKt O.lllaned Pui.YI Solar
Room locltocJ on 311 Woodod
Acroe112MIIe From Clly Of 01~
llpollo. 1100 Pl.. Sq. Ft., a-3
- · 2 Bathe, Buln·ln
_......, Palltl Stovo, Docko,
Goroga, 1lx20 Born, 2ax3ll Polo
O.nga, Fruit T~•. G111pe Ar-

tf'lnaport child up to 12 mila bor. rnterMtld Panlea Only Call
from ond to homo. All houro. Wt 1614) 448-3485 Or 1814) 44t.0233.
hove rtfor--, Clll lt4-W.Z· HoUM tor NIO by ownot glllt

Don, Junlt ht Sill U. Your Non• =ng TV'":'"', .:,w~~
Froo.... 'ICR'o, Mk,]M;;;i; 20M"' HICJ0.&amp;5t-20INI.
. , Air Conclllonort, Wllhtrt, Bobyolnlng In My Home,
Dtrora. Elo. 8,..._1238,
Chttltlre ~~-. 114-387-7l48 •
J A D'oloulo Parlll ond 811Yago, Corpenlry Work Now Building
~o.• bUrlna Junk coro A tNCiL Or RtmoCiollng RootinG. Siding,
- m'Q(l
[)rr Wol~~col A lboonory
L.- - " ' v t mobile homo, Etc. 1144Unytlmt.
opprva., 114-t112·11811.
EIR TREE SERVICE .. Topping,
Trimming, T,.. R1moval, Hedga
Wantod To lur: 314 To 1 Acre 01 Trimming. Fr11 Eltlmatotl 8f4Lind In 011111 Counlw, 114-448- :167·711&amp;TAtlor 4p.m.
.
4114.
FoH · yord cilon up- roklng
Wantod To Bur: G.E.D. Boolct, brulh, trM t~mmlng ona1
CoUIIWI1-7734.
removal, fully lneurtd, 114-082Wa!llod To Bur: J101k Autoe 5!77.
Wllh Or WlthoUI Moton. Coli O.norol Mlln,.nonco, Polnl!na,
llrtr Llvtly. 8,.....11303.
Yonl Work WJ-. W11nta
Ctoanod Light Houllng,
Wartod To Buy: Standing nrn- Gutlert
Commorlcol, RNidtntill, Stove:
btr I Pint,
Prlcot, &amp;14- 114-44&amp;-11158.

.,_,

Good

Top Paid: All Old U.S.
Colno, Clold Rl-. Slim Colno,
~ Co1nt. II.T.S. Coin Sllop,
111 Avonlit, Cllllpollt.
Wantod to buy: uaed rnoblil
114 441 0171

ttelp Wanted

"1400" Or -

A Wotk, At
llolntHoEx...-oNicofo
OW)', lluilt $1.00 StiiAddrtllod
!!'·~~ 110 Envel- To: DU
Oll'flt". P.O. lox 81, Hlnaboro,

•

•
MuOI IIIII: 3 llldroomt, 2 AMIL

!;o&lt;celilnl CondKion, IIO'o Como
S..Mokt Oflor, &amp;14-388*08.
River Frontage 4 Bedroom
Brick, 814-44&amp;-7157 After 8 P.M.
St1t1IV'

~menta,

ANidence

Or

Gar1g1 Apartmtnt,

Full Lot. B4 Gropoil OIIIIIIOIIt,
Auction November th, 114-24&amp;-

1203.

1171 Tlt1n, 2br., rarnodllld, turnlahtd, ..11110. 3CJ4.175.3073.
, _ Cilyton mobil homo,
Mx'lll, 31&gt;!.1• 1 112 both, t7100.
304-372-2440.

Employment Serv1ces

11

oroo to roloo I tamU~. 3'04118128.
·
lbloo For Soil: I Monlht Old, !
lltclroome, a Bltho, LP OU
With HNI Pump. WID, SIOYI,
F~g, DW~Acroj: Cllroga, With
3rnUI: From Go~~t~ G~
llpo~!J_ Good Neighborhood,
814-;:,of' :r.tel

Nulling Atolllanl With Mtdlcll
Ext»- Will Do Homt Nu,..
lng Coro In Evonlngo And
Wllktndo, 1114-44&amp;-31181 Aftor 1
P.M.

rnDMr 01 . .Ill I CarMr, -'!hlr

WI-

Ma~IYn.

ot t.aoo-.asll.

304 112-ZMI

Autl1111 let dc11 c.tllt' In Hwa·
tlngton Ia.-"'I on lndlvlduol

to -IPPIOXI-~ tsli-lo.
In thl Pt. - Plluanl: · •r• 11 •

Paroonll eoro Anondanl. Sutlll
lnclutll ~ In olilnlt homt
and -lng _.dolly IIYing
1 - I lront§llng lo appolmm.oto 1
r. old clont
wlphwolcol dill lkiH. Mu01
hM oer • v-alkl drlvw'a
llolnat. Rlltnburoonoonl tor
mlllgt. Ftoxlbltf h&lt;&gt;uro. Sind

to P...oiiMI, P.O. 801
1107, Huntington, wv :11110.(1507.
loulo lody Ropolnnan Notdod
Clllllpollt Ar11. Prior Ex·
porlenco Ht-ory. Sind
Meeurne To: CLA 213, c/o OIJ..
Mpolil Dtlly T~bunt 125 Tlolnl
A...ut, 01111110111, i5lt 4513l .

I'IIUIM

AVON HOLIDAY • Your
0Wto Houra, IIICOI"!1 And
Av......
Hourtv·Sotllnt
"' Work
or
- . Mo DOOR /DOOR. t.aoo.

Trl Silto Trio Slrvtoo. tCIIIOing,
trtmmlng, lrM l'tiiMWII, itu'"p
rlmoYif. , , . . lltknM• Call
IM-te:I·2St2 II no antwer lolvt
name, number on machine.

.._

__

Wll btbplt In
plll~lmt,

my .......,

21

Antiques·
53
-:-::::=~;.;,;.:~:.:..-...,.....
Anllqut •urvod ,.._ •-ry,

taOO, lt4-H2•78G:I.

Antoni.. Stiodnortua, lll~ln, &amp;M.ZU em.

_..

............. tohool,

Opportunity
IHCmCII
OHIO VALLIY PUILIIIING CO,

Houtt Troller With HoUII TWt»
Roof 12x84 In Good Condition,
Moot Fumkuno U,OOO, No s..,.
dty Colli, lt4-388-8710.
LIMITED OFFER

you=-=

rl CDIIW&amp;W.ldl thll ~ do bullo

11114 Mx'IV, only 4yro loft on
not;o..makl :2: PIYrnlnta &amp; move
ntflwith . . . .
lnl
7116-11111.
NOT
lo
llfiod
·
tht
mollunlllyouhtoniNEW BANK REPOS
tht~
.
Never lived kl, ltlll heve new
1.- 'olltontlna Routo: *',200 A loon\o wornnly, onl~ 4 ilftl 304Wttk ............. Mutlltll.l111-0!14.
'
33 Fannalor Sale

.,_,

23

Pro-llonal

~lcea

44

Apanment
for Rent
2 llldroom Olrogo ADort.,.,,
Stove I iiiilnplll... F'umllhed,
Referencn, a Depolh R•
qulrtd, 1-.G284.
2bdnn. epll,, 10111 tlootrlc, opo
pllanoea lumlthod, ltun*y
ta0t11 loollhtoo IO In lown. A11!111c0ilona tnlltbl4
11: Vllilgo ·oroen Apia. 148 or
oolt 814-1112-3711. EOH.

2 Pilco Llvlna Room Suite Good
Condhlon, "oo, oao 114-441-

Ott&amp;.
2 Upltolatartd LMng Room
ChoiN, Ukt New, fM.441.107t.

-oro,

a Yomoho - - · II"
- . , . """""" I
1200N. :104-478-7:111.
2·11gal. oquo~u-, ltoh I ...
- - · . , _ 1·7Bgll. ..
quo~um, ftlh • .....
1300. :10W71-1128.
Alum, Slonn Door With, Cltoot
And Scrotnt Size: 31171 ..0.

Zbr., all electric, appU1nan turnlaMd, dOll to echoola1 114-218-1138.

otorta I chun:htt. Lourolona
Apto., NOW Hovon. 304-882·371&amp;.
3 Roome l Bath Fumlthecl,
Huga Front Yord, Totll Eltctrlc,
VerY Clll.n, Water &amp; Traah Paid,
Parler Ar.a, 1,4318 8000.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTA":~ &amp;311 .IIOI\000 Pika
trom
Wall to lhoD I
- · Collll4 448 :111111. EOH.
- h St, MkldiiDorl, 1 I 2
bedroom tumllhocf apl/lmtnll,
utllhiN pold, clop. I rtf. 304182-2581.
B-h Strttl, Middleport, 1

AHontlon: . Billing ChriiiF-r Arrlngarnonto ,..,_
From
Rovbul'nt
Markot,

Keno- Wotktndo, 114-2lfl.
,,27,1~···

8431.

l•utltul King 11u Wottrbed, I
Dro-, I S t - Commont. M I . . . - - - ·
Hlldboard $300i 114 318 8151.
Bluo uphlro ~ng. liu I, Grill
ChriltmM P - I 304-7721131.
Coller ID box, brond naw,
$3t.INI, &amp;IWI2-IItt.
Commt-lvo HIK Dotltr
room affialenar apartment, Coin tll2tlo Orogo_n Trolo EF To
I• Pr1oo Roduoitl SIS, IM.zA&amp;.
UIIIKitt pold, dop. A rtf. 304- 11501.
882-2581.
Fine
HO(I•
Apartment .. COHCRm . ,SPETIC TANKS,
t1!JOO Oollon;l321;- o11T IIIII
Second • • - · Clllllpollt. &amp;14- (Mo
lind Rltlr Required)
441-tiOO Btnlor, DINbltcl, •
Hlndlcoppod' 1 • 2 llld.-n $1,4111; Ron , ..... EntlUnkt. RontoiiHici On Adlutled olookton,Ohlo1~ ·
Income. FMHA 8ublkii11Cf, HUD
Ctrtlllcotn Aootpltd. ~-~1100t .EqUII· HoUalng Oppoolunlt,..,
lllclilo Hoopilol .... In Gootl
Fum1'1*11••011,
1 ....
_ , Ulllltl• Condlllon, t2!!, No 8undor
Paid,
Colla. 11,4 - wtO. .
Stoond A - . CIIIIIIIOIIt, No
Pttl1 Exotlilnt CondKion, 114- liltctilo rilr;ga, - · lttd

-

110, 11+81!1·1101.

-r

w-.

56

-tin

Aieo AnlW.. t144'714721.

:.:==Good

Concl~
Bilby Chow Chow Puitotoo, For
Slle, NO; IM~M772.·
tm Mercury Jltphtr, new bot·
loogiet, aoot1 gun doge, etn oi tory, lnl8rtor lrid · llllrlor In
lredi.,;,'r'ltt llld honilllo, 114- goOclohtpt, f200.114-Mt ZIH.
1112·
11711 eUiclt Lllllbrl, seo -1ne,
Dalmollon · DuW far Alt, olx PB. PI
- · aoOd·:..,.
cot, ;:.;:.-~14-t~WIII.
old, Ct4!882-eTM.
~-Forllfl,-

lrolltr, $1100• ..,...,..:1101.

woi~.)2D,OOO,

.,oa

MCurtty depoelt, no ptte; 114-

te:l-2218.

Wayne
01111.

-kar,
'

- .polltl Olcwtt. RC
Rooflng, - -·

Slooplng ..-ne Wlh -ng.
loloo troller-· All--upo.

C.H aler 2:0i0 p.m., 304·77'$

wv.

31 Homes
'
.for Sale
Houle M:h .....

lf7

noonl 011 581. AI City UIIIHINI
High lomltopl Part /Full Tlmt 1!1.100
Plrm, · Col
.....,, i114-441o1117.
Pi I Cll 'ng
AtA IIDftpae
IWUnca No lueMnce. own 22M .
Ho!tro. t.fiOI f41.0044. 24

Ont LINd ........ Htlural Oil
FY..._ t00 1f!1!10 ITU; Otto :10
Oilton 011 ...... - ; Ont
eo,ooo Oown """o. l'urnotot

Wanted to Rent

2 Bod- Aptrlmenl Or """" - . . •• Foo4, lkt
-,~~
. Or MIOon AF-....,
- • · Atklng
0111
pollt"
From tiO,·Col~HoY 1:!1h ..,., 20th, 114-317·'1171
Allor &amp;P.M.
Wanllng lo rorot· 2 or I bedn~ott~
""'-• ln otoon tnc1 good condllion, ,.,.,., ......... HltlntL 114te:l-2421, H no Pill•

-,.,unw

114-448-

::-:::7."=:::;,.----

5I

---··origin. .. ..., - l o
- . . , itUdo po.... ICII,

5QIJA,e W~ILt rAitt,
/,Of'/6 ~Alit ON/, Y

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

weAtt.

Skip~ 'li:ity a.rie:. With

~Y~Wf\~T~
DIC&gt; I DIAL'?

'i'eclualJDI t..e

world

cord. (U West had played bigb, declar·
er would have returned to hand with a
trump.)
True, if East passes throughout and
tbe slam Is reached (which Is unlikely),
South should play the same way. But
the pre-empt makes it easier.

cereal

45 PUiblo Indian
46 Two peai In
47 Unemployed
.

•a a.aat or

burd• ,
•e
Put on bo.ird
50 Wllow
51 lan't (II.) .
53 GrMk ltlltra

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebn~ Cipher cryp!OQrantl are cteated from quotsllons by lsmous peopte, p.Mt and ~1 .
~leiter tn tt'le ciphlr stWidsiOf aootn. _ roo.y'a au.: K ,._. N.

s y 0

FYP'AB

'LM

TNBKB

v

NYGLKS

VWYPKC
FYP'WB

PZ

NWFLKS
SYKKY

y p 0 ''

R 8 B Z F

VKC
VJJ

NWF

RLJJBG

FYP

s y

CVF ,
FYPWTBJM'

CVMYB .

.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Unless we take a stand indivktually to make a
difference, then there will be no difference made ." - Denzel Washington.

-

.

TIIAT DAILT
'UUIII

.

scc~~lA-~£.7fs·
::::
CLU I . ,OI&amp;AN _..;...._ _ __

- - - - - - Ulto4

~r

0 four
Rearrange letters of
scrambled words

the
be·

II I I rI I
low to form fou r words

T u N ,, 0 T

1

I

GRIBN

l I

II I I

3

I

1

I
~
I" ~ ~~~~~ ~~~:.y .~.~~~

EJ I CU

H0 Rp E G

Asked whether his

wife was

I

only generalyou'lleverseewho
packs a lunch to •• -.- .• •

Complete the chuclr:l~ q 111 oted
by t.u.ng in the m•u•no wcwds
you d@velop from step No. 3 below.

1--i;,s,...:.TI:.:..:,.,6,...::.,,.::....,,--1 0

AND I &lt;.lUMPED
UP AND

5HOWTCD

Hc:xJR.A.'Y!

WE'VE sar eoMe
Pf&lt;ETTY NP6lY KIDS

LETTER S TO

INOWRC! '6e.

II

SCIAM.lfTS ANSWEIS

ten Wltclerno• Yukon, 2111
llonto Corio L8, ... llrtl tullydoaulaed. olr • ewnlng, uC.
I -11, _,. oltarp, fill or ;on .. S7&amp;oo;304-812-2511.
lllklwln pllno UOO. 30M7Io lredi
lor pickup truoli, 11+112:1110.
1137.
.
79 Campers•

At 2.635 miles. Canad a's Macken ·

lnatruments

zie River is second onlv to the Mi s·

sissippi as North Amer.ica 's lon ges t

I FRIDAY

Otdlmoblll · Doltl II,
Motor Homes
FOR BALE: IPIIET .CQHIOLE 1~, PI, PI, PW, Pawtr;
_
.
,
·
Ctlnillo
Conlrol,
P-r
PIANO Wintod, · Roo~ onolblo
Door Huntor'a Sf*ill: Fully
PariJ To mlltt . _ Monthly ~llo.AIIot'llll-c.. 811~ I 112 FoOl
Pa-t. Sit loolilly. Col ,. - . . ~· Ont Owner Coochmtn illdt -In, Truck
100-321-3341.
.
_ - cor, Hood To Sold ,Camper, 11t U• 1452..
ExoOIIInl Condhlonl Lookt
Good Atldng: .. 711. 114-441Fruita I
4223 llttr 1:1111 P.M.
Serv1ces
11117 Cidllilo . Cout» Dtvtlle,
2dr., lllue, Mil' tiNI·~~ NM
Home
; .,.... 81
14Nm. good,
lmprovaments
1017 Cloryllor Lo-, AII-I'M
BASEMENT
- · ~~~~ orul-. •!.'t.II.OOO
WATERPROOFING
cond, "·'""'· 304- Unoondhlonll. lllotl- _ , . .
Far111 Suppllr',
IN. loolil ,.,.,.,... fumlthod.
1\ li'Ji"',tor~
1117 ,.... --.,L4 door, hitch Coil , ..CJ0.217-0171 Or 114-2311.
0411·" - Wllorprooft. . Eo· ~-· '"~~"' blut. - toblilhtoJ
1171.

::.:ar.·

ASTRO·GRAPH
Dovlo -lng lloolilnt And
~Ptoowm Cltlioar. Atpolr, Frot
clo.IJp And DotiY!I!L-goo
Crotk RoM, 114 4-114.
Ron'o TV ......... '.,-,111
In Zonltlo olio
otltar brlnclt. , olto
·- llnoa ,_.,., wv
304-61114:111 Oltlq 114:4'4414484.

-.":&amp;. ::3

...

4421
'IODAYIMUICMH .
OR RENT-a~ (NO DIPOIIT)

Slplia T...., P~~GIIU.
Co; RON EVANS II(TIIRP IIEI,
Jookton, OH 1.f100.1~.

01/TSIDI
I'URIIIIMIIII;
Wrouah4 lton Tololoo W14 Chlltt;
Fan leoll: Ra1 ltlno Chair Ill;
GoniOn- Wtoy'i 1121.00

......... -

WIU toulld ............. tltclo~
: ,.. up vtn
lrolltr Oklt11ng. I

=:L:

Plumbing•

'·

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'

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

'•

'

your sucCess or failures t~ay. If you see 1 mcllna~•ons today to make mounta1n~ from

pro~Je its true.

; lions , you coukt create a real problem.

is reluctant to discuss certain coniidential you re an Impulse buyer, two thmgs could

Satunlay, Nov. 6, 1113
NovemberS. 1993 In lhe year ahead you
could be quite restless and eager 10 explore

lvtitlngtt. (114) 441 IMI.

'

lor you. Mail 52 and a long, self·addressed, TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Argumenls
stamped envelo~ to Matchmaker, clo this ~tween you and your ~le should be dealt
newspaper, P 0 . Box 4465. New York . NY wolh pr!Vatel'f and not aored belore olhers .
10163.
· Onlooker could lose respect for both of you
SAGITTARIUS fNov. 23·Dec . 21) Your , illhis occurs,
.
own attitude will be lhe delermining lactor in I GEMINI (Moy 21-Junt 20) Guard agaonsl

CAPRICORN (Dec.' 22-Jan. 19) 11 a ~iend : CA~CER _ (June 21·July 22)_Today il

Low lllltlati C8lt WIOk- •

I

reveals which signs are romantically perfect , e\leryone concemed .

yourself as a loser . y_ou 'll lind a way to ; molehrlls. It you expand upon petty rnfrac·

e~&lt; amined .

Exciting developments are in lhe offing with
a number or big surprises .
SCORPIO (Oct. 2oi-Nov. 22) Persons who
disagree •With WQUr Ideas.and opinionS loday
mlgnt be classified bW you as enemies
Instead, of merely individuals ~ho have
olher points of view. Be fair mind~. Know
where 10 look tor romance and you'lltind it.
The A,Uo·G_raph ·Matchmaker inslantly

'
. , . . . . till OLAIIIC
•

,

32 Photogra•
ph.,'a wort
place
36 Cooling
devlu
37 Legend
39 Born
.
40 RffiiOIIIIble
44 Made of

Seeffle • Final- Mange • Absorb • NEIGHBORS

-

-

.,...

2g "'"'
30
Anglo-Saxon

I
It

. . . . .. mlfllltorflll--

.... 7 ...... tqUII

H0\.1 ::nJLX.D
r Kt-~o\..1 ?
rw~·r

M16e WINNI~ aAI.E LeiEN
!3olaEe OF HOY.E~ 1'02.
TONIGHT: ..

......

••rudln'*' a 1rr ,

dowfrlltMi

L-.1..-.1.._.1.._.J.-.J.-J.

knowl'fllw _ .

our-.,.

Pass

(Mapus Books, $17.95, 800·274-2221)
is recommended for serious partnerships. I particularly like the authors'
stress on discipline, but not in the way
you may think. Wben you open with a
pre-empt, you should have wbat your
partner e1pects. U be expects jack·
sixth and out, th~t is what you must
have. It's no good holding king-queen·
jack-sixth and then complaining when
you miall a laydown game.
However, the authors never point
out that If you make a pre-empt and
the opponents buy tbe contract, you
will have helped the declarer play the
band - as in today's deaL
South ruffed the second round of
spades, drew trumps with the king and
ace, and then ruffed dummy's last
spade in hand; West threw a club.
Declarer bad to assume West held
the diamond king, but was the suit
breaking ~2 or H? To find the an·
swer, South cashed both top clubs before leading the diamond jack. West
covered wilh lhe king and East
dropped the elgbt. When declarer
ruffed a club in hand , the count was
complete. East was known to have
started with seven spades, two bearts,
three clubs, and therefore only one
diamond.
South led the diamond two. When
West played tbe three, dummy's four
. . . l i*

areas you never previou sly

-~~ln-ot . .

,,.f

.......,., OUibtlril, 115' -or,

..,....... 01" dllcnnN.IIDn.·

llw.
f1lollly
lniOIIMd 1hllil d Ii 9

Pau

•

Hou8811okl

·~·Or,,

Pau

p_(.......)
23 &amp;Mel of .
gl- ;
.
24 Future attya.'
exatll
25 Cry of plln
27 Part of wln-

s+

'("'!

YrRA I'IJRNITUAE

root,-·

Tlolo ......._

londtt. 400 CC,Iow

T~llOU6~

1-1/&gt;-TC.H It-1'

Gpocla

.1'1111 MJot. •iiiiJIIa I
on
tllglon,

ttll&gt;t5 111\A,e

m - •.2100. :104-4'111-231.a or
1'11-17i2

Drogonwynd - Colt~: CFA
lletntllt Klltttlt. I ~41 :11..
After 7:00

r.1erchand1se

to ....... -..~llf•IIM)I,

,. Sv,e. L.Al&gt;Y Of'/ I&gt;Ailf:

Auto Parts I
Acceaorlle

IMft -•nage on nw:hlne.

AIIIMI--IIIn
lftlano •-lalitiiJOdto
ltiiF-F*IIOtllqM
ot1HI--IIItgol

"/,APY GOPIVA" TALf: ...(,AN
YO\J SlJM IT VP FOtt Mt 1

-· 1-

==-.......,...._,.,.,...;.....,,..1 LINd,,_._,

HoiJtL

T~IS'

AIIO With Troller, 11,000, 1142511-81104.

81-, I 112 Mill Out 111. 141,

Pau

COmpanloil
of Nit

22 Turn Uti

Eul

Mualcal

45

...,, Moton

: ·..

1812 Hondo CBIOOF Suporo

--.
=

Ont
bedroom
•partment•
f22&amp;1mo. - - ... nn,...

PLAY '' TIPPERAR'i' '' I=OR
ME, SON .. l !=EEL SORT OF
DOWN TONIG~T .. .

Motorcycles

end-

46

Hec~l Estate

I WAS PASSING 6'( T~IS

,;

...........

='

PEANUTS ·

,•r--;:~_:_-t?-~~li

1884

••

2()

The new book "Pre-empts from A to

QUAINT JOINT, AI&lt;ID ~EARD
T~E TINKLING OF A PIANO ..

Itt:! iluzukl

s•

1 Unclothed

z• by Sabine Zenkel and Ron Andenen

-r-t, ucellent· condition, cu.AKC Rtgltlored Cl~n Tenter ct.an, new tlrw, high mlltl, tom point, thorp. !11200, 114-W.Z.
Mala PuPIIJ I AKC Roglttortd condition, $1400, 114-US. ltl5t .... 5pm, •
MalaiJo0,1~77ft
~-'·
1884 Gold Wing ~J. ExcotAKC Alfliltlt'lod · Pua, a-, 185! Clolvy 112 T Plcii.Up Good ilnl Condlllon, . _ Millage,
8har-Pey, Cdlle, flottwliltr, Concllllon, 114-44f.7047.
12,800, 1-.e714 Aftor 4 PJI.
llnllturo Plnoohtr, f'tk!nll•o.
1lllll
Catv811ng~
17,000
11110 Hondo CA 210 R, 114-tmBotton
Ton1tr,
Poi&gt;dlt,
Rod, ·Wotli. T·T- 3202 oflor &amp;pm.
Daahuncl. 8--0404.
NO lluot 1.14,000. IM-44t 0440
AIIIr &amp;P.M.
Or ~1.
11110 Y11n1ht ~e'IC. thtpo,
many oxtrtt, s.....,..!IH,

M-

Pau

movie
6 - green
7 Edible lubtr
8 Having 1

DOWN

By Pbllllp Alder

Transportation

71 Autos for S81e
,.,.,=.,...,,..,.=-..,-:-....,.·u Old• Cui. Cllfra, 4 • .. auto ..

4•

.
1DOthetwlot
11 Actor- ·
O'NNI '
111 Back Of neck

28 Impudence
(II,)

'

AKC ~tgltltrtd A-tlcln Po~l
.Colored' Cocktr IIDonltl Pupolio Toll Docllod, Dtw CIIWto,
Rtmovod, Born: tom1n Toltlna Dopoolll, -tlv In nma
For ChriOimaot ltucf Stlvlce

Nerlll

kernel

e By Jowl

More fireworks
for Guy Fawkes

::

Hoy, oquort b11H1 $1.110 I up.
Sllurday only picKup. 304-6751 Month lllmttt Kltttnt 3860.
110,1--G734. ·
AKC Dolltrmon Pupptoo, lolte
AKC Malt Dobtnnon Stud sar!
viae. 11+211 1113 Allor &amp;:30
P.M. Sllunloy Or SUnday·

Wett

2 S.l..e
3 Yilt atudent1
4 Roedaldt
rtataurent
5 Tonw Perklna

Opening lead: + K

HtiQ

HaY &amp; Grain

64

Groom ond SUIIIIIY Shop Pat
Grooming. All !Wticn, llrllt.
Julio W- Colll14-44fi.Gtl.

Soolll

Batie nature
Ancient
Cheer
Ed_gar Allan

FER SUPPER

tx;:t-*1

Peta for Sale

'""'""·

..

r:c

1202. Coli 614-4112-ttH. EOH.
For-=--And
Nlco, ciNn, a.... oponmonl, wltf
~ Dutrr 114 Ut 2113
hook~p. ,.,,, dep., no pet1. 304&amp;71-1112.
GunoJ.~·!!..~
guno,
l:omplllfr Fumlahtd mobile 221. -lHI112.
Puppy P - POl 11!ofo.
loj&gt;tni, 1 tnlt OIIIIDOI..,
Loc:otOclln G.C. MUI'Dhv Co. Qil.
WltttUioitt llpolll.
oworloololna ~vor. DopoaH. No
-open, 114-441.-.
potllorobocl ltJfl, htod I
Peta. CA, trut. 114 ue 0338.
Schnauaor puppl- mlnillulll,
Ont bedroom oportmenl on tht moarott.
30WJI.2IOI.
.J. - ·
· - .......·
1111 I t»pptr, loi(C, oh.aitiplon
rlvor, 111 Ulllftlll t.mlohtd,
_ , ..., Coolvllil, &amp;-11.
1250/mo., 114-Mt-21:11.
:1404•
•

acrw, aome bottom lind
mootly ~1 ~.000. Horxt
d~lltd

UWii

t32.110; Ron E¥11nt Enlo.........
Jockoon,Ohlo, 1~21. ·
WATER ITOR- · TANKS
Abo.. And Ground FDA
Approvod For P Ron Evone Enlo...,.... Jock·
liOn, Oltlo, t.fl00-a:l'7-1112i.

Bur or 0011. Rl-lnt AnliqiMO.
t1a4 E. Main StrMI, on AI. 12_4, · 55
Building
~oy, lblno: M.T.W. IO:oo
o.m. lo &amp;:00 p.m., 8undoy 1:00
Supplies
lo 1:00 p,m. l14 f182.211:11.
Block, brlalc, l&gt;lpoo, winlWo bedroom, tumlthed, one
chlkl, no pet1, 1bove New 54 Miscellaneous
-ltrt, \U;;
llntoll,
""·
CloUdt
Grondt, OH Coli Wln114Haven, At. 33, $240fmo., 30424&amp;-1112\
882-2466 onytlme,
Merchandlae

102

• wv. :104-475-3....

2 I J

In

200 PSI $18.U; ., lnell 200 Pll

~

WE'RE FIXIN' BAKED
AN' STUFFED CHICKEN

~btr 11. ltn, AI 1 P.M. All
1\rtodl ........ Col- " ,..., Cottle Acolpltd stoning ll
4 P.ll. On f'rkill', All Cono
tlanmenle Wol.-, 1*5HZS22.0r&amp;1WN-3131.
Chtvrotot, Fonl, 11oc1ge. plctwp
bedt.
Of tong: No .....
IUicftorCol- CoiiAftor 7 P.M. 304-e184211.
114 ~~~ IMI.
Truclt Ont Ton 1• Fonl
U Eoch, Tako All,
Dlritl 42~0110 111111, I Ton
114-oMf.ZMI, '
Eltolrlo Uti, ..Condition, - . , , M.4D01 Con 1111
F,..h lkortnatr Hoiltoln
Sltn AI: '&lt;nrBtoOncl ........ Or
20 To' 21.0110 Pdil,
A - - · Y-lnllod. AltO, Colllt+44~ ·
Reg..
Built, loll Agoo,
1'14'-24H.
73 Vanl &amp; 4 WD's
Aegltl- Sllndlrdbrtd mare, 185! CJ38 oltep, ...,__ outo,
rldor only. !04-875- GOO( hunllng vlhlafl, 11350, 11471
or 114-44W708.
otll&amp;-3~~58~1~.-:--o-~.-.

WATER LJNE -CIAL: J/4 lnoh

b

Aporlmtnlolnlllddltport.F"""

1 112 both lrollor on t1 114

..,,....._tod

1251.

Throt bedroom oounlry ..nlng.
4 mUoo . - 01 Horrloonvllle on
SA Nlit
• 34~Jj"' ..._.,
ond 1111 too, 8
o72411.
Two d oom trailer tor ...,. In
Pomeroy lrN,Iotll-lrlc. coli
81WI2·:m211 no •no- pllll•
lu.ve name, numbw of machine
ond we'll gOI btck wllh you.

BARNEY

~~a:~::~

Nice 2 Bedroom Mobile Home,

Stoto R0411o :Ill Aru, A - • And Dtpoolt Roqulrod, 114-ue.

Livestock

Groaloua living. t lttd 2 btdo ,._,All Hilda o~ .,...
oponmen~o 11 VII- Dtllv- $4G PlaWp Loit1.
Monor
lttd
R I - lt+alloltll Or 1-7021

lull or

BUIIIIIU

63

Merch8ndll8 ·

OrLMv-elleellgl.

441..123.

FlllJilCIJI

lflz.4738,

EXTRA INCOME
EARN t20WSOO
WIIKL~}: MAILING
TRAVEL
GUIDD or Information t0nc1
otomotd .,.
..,.,_ 1o:· I I , B Mailing Str·
:,;._~o. lOll 130125, Mllml, Ft

Dt-

Miscellaneous

u,...,,.,

AVON I All - · I Shl~oy

tlptarw, IOWJI.M:Itl.

AVOHI AI . , _ Hood tKtro

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East ·
Mobile homo lor rtnlln Roclnt,
IIWI2-181t.
Mol&gt;llt Home: 2 Bodroomo,
A t - And
Rfo
qulrtd, 114-N:t-4107 .Anor I P.M.

18
20
21
22

23 Wield
26 Immediately
31 Stage
whlapor
33- moth
34 Preparta
(thttpakln,
e.g .)
35 California
wine •alloy

+QH •

Nov. IH, !1553 SR
1Q, ont mlltt Rt. 7,
"'-"r.
Slgnt
-od.
llurlolowl of - . Croft_,

C1orogt -

~

- SUmac

EAST
+AQ JIOU3

:.'• ,!lor. _-, odllioft.
. 1:00pm Friday,

14 Hot prettw
15 Del.111t
(2 wda:, al. )
16 Ent,rtalner
17 llellan house

+712

IIUIII: h Plld In

odftlon

U·$.01

• A 10 5
.AQI04

Doo-: , ,_
....
lht od Ia lo run,

~

1 NICHtlly
5 Mlddl4 Elat
org.
8 - -do-wtll
1z Ciltullruil
13 Incite to
at~Jek

•

2 bed,_ 1rof1!11 rot I dep, 111.
12 H. Looutl "" on rlglll, no
pelt. 304-m-1071.
.

3&amp; South of GA
37 El-ntary
portlcle
38 Alwoya
41 Opp, of NNW
42 Renge of
knoWledge
43 Howwn - know?
45 African
nation
48 Goapel
alngerJackson
52 Hair atylo
53 Engllah
tavern
54 Film director
Jacquu55contendere
56 Nojwtll
57 Paradlae
58 The aamt
59 Obaerve
60 Tldw

"

matters with you loday , be respecHul of 1 happen to you. One, you may buy inlerior
, his/her wishes. This person has vali_
d rea · ' merchan~lse and two, you migh t spend
sons for secrecy .
~ much more for it than you should.
AQU~RIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Be yoor own LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) In order to be a
advocate today instead of letting a surro-. good leader lodaw, _wou muSIIead by_exam·
gale speak tor you to authority ligures . pie, and your doreclives must be explocrt and
He/s he won't plead your case hall as well clear. You won't have a lollowlng if you taN
as you can .
In either area. _
PISCES (Ftb. ZO.March 20) Today il you VIRGO (Aug. 23-Stpt 22) When you ,'•II&lt;
want somelhlng .serious done. you must ~bout doing something. today. there s .a
shoulder your share ol the burden. 11 you're chance you might convonce y~ursell 11. •s
Inclined to jusr issue orders, don't eMpect a .already done jusl because ol was dos ·
productive response.
cusSed. This altitude could severely dilute
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 11) It you ' re yoor producti¥tlri8S8.
Involved In some type ol commercial . ~IIIRA (lllpt. 23·0ct. 23) Be extremely
endeavor today thai Includes lllliere, don'l !;&amp;tefulloda~ regardinl! to whOm wou go tor .
make any changtS wilhoul consulting lonancoal edvBB, eapeatllfr Hot Involves substantial amounts o1 monies.

The people next .dO?r were arguing loudly. Gramps
tumed to me and said, Have you ever noticed lhat most
peop)e repent by being lhankful that they aren't as bad as
they think the ir NEIGHBORS are?"

NOVEMBER 51

�'.

•

By The Bend
·.

The Daily Sentinel
· Page-12

Friday, November 5, 1993

:.
I

STUDENTS OF THE MONTH • Pictured from lert to right are
Missy Darnell, Tricia Davis, Nancy Whaley and BiUie Bentley who
were selected as students of the month for October at Meigs Junior
High School for behavioral and academic reasons.

Group recognizes
breast cancer month
The October meeting of the month by purchasing the gold rose
Ageless ClassmateS was held at the . pin that was designated as the offiBob Evans Reslauran~ Rio Grande. cial mammogram/breast cancer
The group was seated at two awareness pin.
tables and the dinner was preceded
Secret sister cards, gifts and
by the group holding hands and goodies were exchanged and a
shon business meeting was held.
praying.
.
The group chose a new meeung
Attending were Carol Workdale. It will now meet on the sec- man, Connie Smith, Marjorie Walond Monday of each month at 6 burn, Sue Hayes, Shirley Tucker,
p.m. The November meeting will Peggy Edwards, Emma Lee
be held at Shoney's Restaurant m Kearns, Pat Allensworth , June
Maxey, Carol Roush and guest
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
The group acknowledged Gcnny Wiggins, Ramona Knight
National Breast Cancer Awareness and Bernice Smith.

First
birthday
celebrated
Brfan Manley celebrated his
first binhday recently with a

pany

given by his parents Roger and
Margie Manley.
A Thomas the. Tank Engine
cake was served with ice cream,
chips and Kool-Aid. Garnes were
played with prizes going to Erica
. Haning, Maria Meadows and Kayla
Smith.
Others auendin~ and presenting
gifts were his stster, Chalsie;
grandparents Roger and Connie
Manley; grandmothers Ada
McHaffie and Margaret Nunn;
Dave and Becky Lynch, Trish
McHaffie, Charles, Dianna, Kevin
and Cody Smith, Timmy Dexter,
· Johnny and Nildd Roush and Cathy
Haning.
Sending gifts were Thurman

Smith, Ivan and Helen Myers, John
and Betty Roush, Chris Lane, Ted
and Crystal Dexter, Dave, Albena,
Andy, Beth and Hannah Hysell,
Tom, Connie, Tommy and Tricia
Roush, Christopher Smith and
Brandon and Raben Grover.

Woodmen benefit UNICEF
At the Modern Woodmen of
America Camp 10900 Halloween
masquerade pany, the Woodmen's
Creed Service was led by Ed Russell, Martha Elliott and John
Breedlove, all of Coolville. The
service included a "Silver" offering
for UNICEF.
Costume prizes were won by
Kim Cowdrey , Garnet Griffen,
Clint and Karen McPherson, Josh
and Gloria Gilbert, all of Coolville.
Games and contests featured Halloween safety tips and the meaning
· of giving to needy children around.

the world through UNICEF donations.
Door and contest prizes were
won by Ruth Hollman, Paul
McPherson, Juanita Litteral, Milford Griffin, all of Coolville and
Kaitlyn Cunningham, Parkersburg,
W.Va. ·
Camp 10900, MW A, will sponsor a matching fund smorgasbord
dinner for the benefit of Torch
Food Pantry, at Torch Community
Building on Nov. 6 from 4 to 8
p.m. Profits of the dinner, up to
$1250 will be matched by Modem
Woodmen of America.

Newspaper loses pay battle, judge
says reporters not professionals
By FRANK BAKER
Associated Pres Writer
CONCORD, N.H . (AP)
Newspaper reporterS and photographers are not professionals under
federal labor law and are entitled to
overtime, a federal judge ruled in
ordering The Concord Monitor to
. pay $21 ,000.
.
U.S. District Judge Shane
Devine said in the 12-year-old case
that the newspaper did not willfully
violate the law, but must pay 12
former and current employees for
· bilck overtime.
Tbe U.S. Depanment of Labor
filed a complaint accusing the
Monitor of pressuring employees
into not fil ing for overtime from
: . 1973 to 1980. The newspaper
· · arped tliat about 30 r:porten and
: ' pholpgraphets included m the com,· plaint were professionals exempt
• ~ &lt; from the law.
' •, ,. ·
'The law says editorial writers,
: ; j columnists and other "top-flight"
writers or anilyticitl or interpreta·
· live articles are professionals ~d
thUS ineligible for overtime. .
&gt; -' "There is no qliCstion but that
, · .Gme of the work product of the
~ , -loyces presented ~ evidence at

.

"l' ' . ;
'~

~

'

trial demonstrated creativity. invention, imagination and talent,"
Devine wrole in Wednesday's ruling, " but the bulk of such evidence
is not or this ilk.·'
"We were told to alter time
slips." said Margaret Bunon, a former Monitor reporter working for
the Cape Cod (Mass.) Times. "We
were told to find our own ways of
keeping overtime down and then
given assignments that required
overtime. How willful is that?"
Bunon will receive $99.76.
A former Monitor photographer
was awarded· more than $4,100,
and two former reporterS more than
$3,300 each.
The newspaper said its repcll'lelS
were professionals and therefore
exempt from the 1934 Pair Labor
Standalds Act. The act labels most
reporters, editors and photogra,
phers non-professionals and there·
fore eligible for overtime after 40
hours of work.
The Monitor's lawyer, Terry
Shumaker, said Thursday be still
believes reporters and photogra'
phcrs are professionals. The news·
paper has not decided if it will
appeal.

I" ' "''

·

Ann

·

111yway. Its about the snide remarks
from women who were critical of
the lady who "spoiled" hc:r husband
by bringing him a soft drink.
I know a man who gets up at 6
a.m. and fixes his wife breakfast
He pays the rent, the electric bill,
the phone bill and the cable TV bill.
He hires a service agency to do the
heavy household work. He does the
marketing and brings home steala,
lobsters, oysters, filet mignon, New
Zealand lamb, Norwegian salmon
and English pheasanL
He has given his wife a beautiful
air-COnditioned car and three credit
cards. for gas. He pays an account·
ant to do their taxes. He sits in as a
fourth for bridge when ooe or the
regulars can't make it He has given

know the man weU. I am he. - A
HAPPY HUSBAND IN MOUNT
ROYAL, QUEBEC
DEAR MOUNT ROYAL: I
wouldn't dare print your name. You'd
be mobbed by women from all
comers of the earth. Too bad you
didn't !ell us why your wife merits
such fabulous trealmenL
I'm not sure it's a .compliment to
be called by the name of a goat even Eisenhower's. But thanks for
letting us know that Ozzie and
Harriet are alive and well and living
in Quebec.
Dear Ann Landers: Neither I nor
my husband smoke. My hUsband and
I are in the military and can get
cigarettes at half price in the
commissary. My mother asks us to
buy cigarettes for her. We're not

should I do, Ann? - HONOLULU
SALLY
DEAR SALLY: Keep saying no.
. By this lime, we all kllow that
cigarcaea can kill YQU. That dueat,
plus breaking the ru.lca of the
commissary, is enougb to justify
your saying, "Sorry, Mom. No
more. • Crank up your cowage, and
doitl

to ·death. The heroine is abducled,

·slapped around , then stalked
through the desert by a bowhunler.
That's C, C, B, A, C.
By the end of the hour, Hen drickson has counted 15 acts of
violence. She puts down her pencil.
"I didn't realize how much I
overlooked," she said.
Concordia, across the stale line
from Far~o in Moorhead, Minn ., is
conducung the study for Sen.
Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., sponsor of
a bill that would require the Federal
Communications Commission to
issue a quanerly repon card on TV
violence.
Each volunteer rated a threehour segment of programs taped
between Sept. 28 and Oct. 4. The
ratings were completed Tuesday
and sample report cards are expected within two months.
"I hope this study will demonstrate that it £all be done and that it
should be done," Dor$an said.
At a Senate heanng Oct. 20,
Allorney General Janet Reno

warned ihat the government will
intervene if the TV industry
doesn't lake steps to curb violence
on television.
The Concordia study defines
violence as the " deliberate and
hostile use of overt force by one
individual against another." a standard set by the National Coalition
on Television Violence.
An "A" covers aggression that
inflicts minor or momenlary pain:
pushin~. grabbing, spanking, spit·
ting, mtld slapping.
A " B" is for stronger violence
that still lacks deadly force.
A "C" is for acts in which a
character clearly intends to kill,
maim or incapacitate. Shooting,
stran~ling, stabbing, poisoning ,
bombmg, hanging, torture and rape
are covered.
Martin Fnmks, Washington vice
president for CBS, said Dorgan's
bill and all the other anti-violence
legislation pending before
Congress have the same problem:
They would require subjective

•
·: tmtsHolzer's CEO sees need for health care reform
By TAMES J.ONG

TJmn=SC!JdpeJ Staft
GAlLIPOLIS · If
have ttouble
understanding why the United StaleS
needs to reform its system or health
care, imagine being president of a
• hospital and knowing that you're going to lose $20 million each year in
un(!OIIected fees.
Charles Adkins, president or Holzer
Medical Center, expects many
changes ill detail before health care
reform legislation cixnes about, but
be is certain of one thing: the system
that drains 13 percent or the GNP
needs an ovtthaul.
Seen from HMC's perspective, all
the concern over reform makes more
sense.
"At our bospitallasi year we recog-

Drugs are everywhere. They're
easy 10 get, easy 10 use and even
easier to get hooked on./f you have
questions about drugs, you llt!td Ann
Landers' boolclet, '7he Lowdown on
Dope. • Selld a se/f-addrused,long,
business-siu tnWilope and a check
or money ordu for $3.6S (this ill·
eludes postage alld lloMUng) to:
Lowdown, c/o Ann Uwltrs, P.O.

you

Box II562. Chicago. Ill. 606/l -

0562. (In CIUilJda, selld $4.45.)

judginents about what is violent.
" Define violence," said Franks,
recalling the Senale hearing, during
which the lawmakers themselves
could not agree on a defmition.
Hendrickson, who lives in Melrose, Minn., said sbe volunteered
" because in no way, shape or Conn
do I want censorship in television
or any media. But I don't think
there's anything wrong with a rating syslem."
.
"The feedback that's coming
back from students was that they
hadn't really watched television
with their eyes open," said psychology professor Mark Covey,
coordinator of the project.
CBS' Franks said Dorgan's bill
would unfairly target advertisersup)??.ned lelevision.
'If advertisers were intimidaled
into not showing what was interpreted as objectionable progqtm·
ming, that may get it off the networks," he said. "Does it get It off
the·independent channels·or cable?
No.''

By JENNIFER DIXON
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
Social Security Administration,
under pressure to do a better job
·answering its telephones, is looking
behind bars for a low-cost way of
handling the 80 million calls it gets
each year.
The agency said Thursday il is
considering using federal prisoners
to Lake down callers' recorded
requests for forms and applications.
The prisoners would not deal
directly with callers and they
wouldn't have access to Social
Security records, spokesman Phil
Gambino said.
Social Security acknowledges
Lhal it is not able to cope with the
volume of calls it receives and that
it puts many of them on hold.
.
"SSA is committed to providing
world-class lelephone service to the
American public," said Gambino.
"To accomplish this self-imposed

goal, within.the current fiSCal. environment, we must think creatively." ·
One option, he said, is contracting out some of the agency's telephone work to the Federal .Bureau
of Prisons, which pays working
prisoners between 42 .cents and
$1.05 an hour.
The inmates would be used to
transcribe recorded messages left
by callers · who request simple
forms and applications. Gambino
said the plan would free Social
Security workers to respond to
callers with more complex
requests.
"The privacy of SSA records
would be ~ully protected with no
access .~vatlabl_e to non-SSA per. sonnel, Gambtno S81d.
A spokest:nan for. th.e Federal
Bureau of Pr•sons, Dan tel Dunf!e.
S31d the agency has gtven Soctal
Security a "general proposal" to
do some telephone work but that

CONSTRIJCTIO
NT

the negotiations are "very prelimi·
nary."
The Baltimore Sun ftrst reported
Social Security's plans Thursday.
Federal prisoners are used elsewhere. In factories around the
country inmateS produce office furniture, bedding, textiles, brushes
and brooms, and they also work in
data enlry, printing optics and electronics, Dunne said.
Just putting callers to the tollfree line on hold cost the agency
$11.5 million during 1991, according to an internal agency audiL
In Seplem ber, a report from the
inspector general or the Health and
Human Services Department said
that getting through to the 800

number "oflen is not easy, which
has become a major problem for
SSA, and more importantly the
calling public."
" Nearly from its inception, the
800 number has been a source of
public comrlaints regarding high
busy signa rates and long hold
times," the report said.
Social Security took public
information phones out of its field
offices in the late 1980s when it
installed the toll-free number as
part of a restrocturing that cut its
work force by 21 percent
Congress demanded that callers
be allowed to contact their local
Social Security offices, and the
agency eventually relisted the local
ohone numbers.

THE KIND
OF FOOD
THAT
BUILT

ERICAO
/

Let Ctruclf WIIW«t
ShoW Yaq HUN Jb .5!we Ttrousancls
In Jtllllllry, February lint/. Mllrch
Purchase Your New Home Now. Take Delivery of Your
'New Horne Between January 1st and March 31st, 1994
and Receive Your Special Willter Construction Discount.

Chuck Wingett; Builder
Comer of Rt. 50 and Carol l.li. • Athens, Ohio
Call 592-4119,592-3749 or 698.:.ta404'

Dnllllk',Bulldl!r
'Homu Sold Umlu Fp!HA Do Not Qotal/6-

We've got your hearty dinners right here. Pot roau. Meatloaf.
Country Fried Stea k . Se rved with your choice of two vegetables,
fresh bread . AU-You-Care- To -Eat Soup , Salad &amp; Frui.' Bar.
AUf or one low price.

LOW

'Dr. Death' on hunger strike, AS

'above and beyond'· Bl

College students recruited to rate TV violence
By MARILYNN WHEELER
Associated Press Writer
FARGO, N. D~ (AP) - A slap
across the face is violent, but not
life-threalening. Amy Hendrickson
gives it WI "A."
Two men .are shot. Deadly force
gets 11 C's."
Hendricl&lt;son is one of 120 Concordia College students who volunteered to rate violence on television
during a week's worth of primetime programming as part of a
study for a U.S. senator.
It is a revealing exercise.
"I thought, 'How many violent
acts probably occur in half an
hour? Oh, probably one, when
somebody gets blown ~way , "' said
Hendrickson, 20.
She is nmed in to a CBS madefor-television movie, "River of
Rage." The heroine. played by
Victoria Principal, is on a rafting
trip with her boyfriend.
At the 20-minute mark, the
rafters are set upon by a pack of
drog'· dealing desperados . The
boyfriend and river guide are shot

IU40

three stories of service

which entitles suppoaed 10 btiy · cipn:aa ill the
her to alarge Ufe income and agreat commiaary for ,other dlltl penona1
use. but more imponant il that Mom
deal of cash.
should
really quit itnoldng.
All this by a man who WQiked his ·
When I ay "''m not buying you
way through llllhooi while supporting his parenll. He knows his wife any more cigareltell• abe yells, •All
Is a jewel and takes pleasure in the things I've dcne for you IOOs,
showing her how much he &amp;ppm:i· and you won~ do this for mel" Sbe
ales hc:r. He calls her KriKri after makes nle feel like a heel. Wlw

L--------~........1 Eisenhower's white Chinese goat. I

--···-----

Devils win SEO. grid title, C2

WW 11, Korea; Vietnam •

~a COpy of his will,

Federal prisoners may help social security cope with phones
BRIAN MANLEY

\loll~ Ill&lt; 1&lt;11&lt; r

'

Indulgent husband appreciates wife
Dear Ann Landers: I am a
17-year-old high scboo1 senior. I
ae~:identally got my girlfriend
pegnanL Here's the cau:h: We never
act~~ally engaged in sexual
inten:ourse. As a mauer of fact. we
IU'e both virgins.
Please tdl your rQdm that any ·
ejaculation, whether directly within
or outside the female, can lead to
pregnancy. Semen ejected outside of
the woman's body can drip into her
body and fertilize the ovum.
Although this is an uncommon
occurrence, I now know from
experience that it can happen.
I want to do everything I can to
inform other tcen-agm of this risk.
The media is saturated with
messages concerning teen-age sex
and pregnancy, but instead of
telling teens to use a condom,
parents should remind their kids that
e&gt;en what may seem like harmless
foreplay or "fooling around" can lead
to an unwanted pregnancy . ..
BUFFALO, N.Y.
DEAR BUFFALO: You told them
·· 8nd very effectively. Thank you.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm awfully
late with this, but I hope you print it

••

2,000 more
Ohio coal
mining jobs
in jeopardy
COWMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
stale will lose 1,500 to 2,000 more
coal mining jobs over the next two
years, costing Ohio's economy $1.7
billion annuOhlocoaiproduc- ally,amining
tlopwu5Smilllon .association
tou ill 1970 and Is leader said.
Theprob- .
expected to be lems arise as
· ~1-;t:'~" ~~ , utilities ll:Y to
toilftbls year.
meet tougher
fed«al regu·
~ql!S •. S)Yitchlng from the state's
ttigll-ilttlAtr cOal 10 tow-sulfur coul
produced elsewliere, said. Neal
Tostenson,JXe~ideilloftheOhioMin­

ing and Reclamation Association.
''If~ stronglr that people underrale the economte impact that Ohio
coal has," TostenSOn said.
Coalproducti(lll was 55 million tons
in I970andisexpectedtobeabout28
million toos this year. Tostenson said
it could fall to about 17.5 million
within two years.
The stale had 20,000 coal mining
jobs in 1970atthepea.kofproduction.

By TOM BAIJM .

Associated Prep Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ross
Perot and the White House traded
insults all day Friday, then settled
on lemls for an exttaordinary 90minule debale between the Texas
billionaire and Vice President AI
Gore.
The two will face off at 9 p.m.
EST Tuesday on CNN's "Lany
King Live" to debale the North
American Free Trade Agreement.
Theywiltalaotakepboned·ill~

lions.
Administration officials said.the
TV confrontation with Pr!lsident
Clillton'sf&lt;ntercampaignrival was·
necessary in a bid to drum up support. The meamre is still far short of
the backing needed for passage in a
Nov. 17 House vote.
White House spokesman Mark
Gearan said that time and fonnat
were nailed down in a lale·after·
noon conference call among Perot,
White House counselor David
Gergen and Cable News Network
president Tom Johnson.
. "The Titanic is sinking and

nized that 30 percent of our budget
was not going to becollceted," Adkins
says. This amounts to about $20 million lost in operating revenue.
Contractual adjustment! (hospital
terminology for the difference be·
tween ·what is charged and what is
actually paid by Medicare and Medicaid) are one of the biggest ways in
which money is losL On a $100 service, Adldns said, HMC might only
receive$76 from Medicare.Pay menu
are sometimes even less than the cost
of giving care.
"How would you like to run a business knowing a third of your charges
are not going to be collected?" he
says.
Patients who won't pay their bills
(bad debts) and people whoean 't pay

their biDs (charity care) help complete the 30 percent defiCit And the
problem Is com- - - - - --f
~ when hos"The .bigpttals ~ forced to gest thing in
charge msurance
•
. ,
companies suffi· C l 1 11 t 0 n s
ciently to make up health care
for these dangerous package is
losses,Adldnssays. that we're go~
''The president's •
plan does not cor- mg to have to
rectthat,"headds. change our
Clinton's pro- healthcanal·
posal, Adkins says, titruhs."
presents both prob- -:-:--:-:---1
lems and opponunities. And with actuallegislation at least a year abead, it
is hard to talk in specifiCs.
Continued on page A-2

HMC President
Charles .Adkins

EST Tues.my
-'- on CNN's
"Larry King Live" to de·
bate the North American
Free Trade Agreement.
They will take phone-in

they're despera~e," Perot declared.
Each side accused the other or try·
ingtobackout - agreeingtocometo
Tampa, Fla., on Sunday but disagreeingonjustabouteverythingelse.
Perot proposed that the debate be
held at a previously scheduled Perot
rally 81 the stale fairgrounds.
King said Friday afternoon that be
had talked to Perot in the morning.
"Ross said he'd be
about it,

ti"

buthewouldliketodoitmfion,LI·']of;~,~~;;~;;;;;~i;~~~.·~~=catelf.
- "=·~i:~~·"-Joluv
-~o::n:s:.Mct.aughlin's·'Onc'llll
:::::·::::=::--::=;;=::=:==:;:::;;;:::;:;IJ
irl'"'
'· ,, ·

this.
Administration officials conceded
that giving Perot a debale platfonn to
denotuice the pact would cany a risk.
They acknowledged Clinton remains
far behind in votes and needs something dramatic to try to build public
support. A House voto is scheduled
for Nov. I7.
Clinton is40or more votes short. A
heavy While House lobbying effort
over the past few days has produced
few converts.
· Perot and.organized labor con lend
the pact would cost hundreds of thousands of U.S. jobs.

largely
when he's been
questioned," Clinton said during an
Oval Office conference call to ranchers and farmers around the counlry.
"I think the vice president will do just
fme. I've got a lot of confidence in
him."
Some,including While House aides
speaking privately, suggested that
Gore could be dominated by Perot.
"He'sgoingtokiliGore,"saidEd
Rollins, a veleran Republican operalive who briefly worked for Perot's
1992 independent presidential campaign.
Rollinswasinlerviewedonthesyndi·

One."
Perot said there should be three
debaleS: Sunday at 2 P·'R: in Tampa,
Wednesday in Detroit arid Nov. 14 in
Seatde.
•
Said Gore: " I don't want togo to a
rally filled with 20,000people on one
side of the issue . ... We want a neutral
format and a neutral place." ·
Gore's chief of staff, Jack: Quinn,
said the vice president would go to
Tampa in any event on Sunday.
Perot, 81 his Dallas office, said:
"They made the challenge and now
they're scared to death. The question
is now, 'How do we wriggle out of

He said he would be at the fair.
gro\IDds in Tarnpa'at 2 p.m.
And he invited both Gore and
Clinton to show up "and I'll lake
them two-to-one."
In his conference call to farmers
andrancbersinMontana,Missouri,
NortbCarolina,lllinois,Kansasand
Texas, Clinton said that the agree.
ment would open new marlcets to
U.S. agricultural goods.
And the White House even sent
the popular former chainnan of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, Colin PoweU~
to the microphones outside the
While House to endorse the pacL

Harrison named Meigs County 'Person of the Year'
POMEROY· Phil Harrison of Pomeroy, Meigs County
person of the year, will be recognized when 12communities throughoutsoutheasrem Ohio present theirpersorwof
the year at the 25th annual Southeastern Ohio Regional
Council Annual Penon of the Year Banquet at the Ohio
University Inn on Thursday.
The honorees come from 10 counties and were nominaled by local committees and the SEORC. The award
winners h~ve distir1guished themselves as leaders in their
communities and are being honored for their efforts in the
industrial and economic development of their communities and s6utheastem Ohio, said Robert L. "Bob" Evans,
ptelident of the SEORC.
.
·The·honorees have given of themselve$ so that other
citizens of the region might enjoy a betler standard of
living, he added.
Bernard Fultz, an attorney from Meigs County, will act
as maswof ceremonies for theevenL The hospitality hour
begins at 5:30p.m. followed by the banquet at 6:30.

valuable basketball player
"This award goes to
.
.
someone who is commitled "Thisawtudgoes to someone wlw is commined in southeaslem Ohio basketball All Stale.
to Meigs County and has
I
'
to
Meigs
County
and
lws
brought
jobs
to
the
After graduating from
broughtjobs to the county,"
Pomeroy High School in
said Pultz.
1960. Harrison atlended
Harrison is pan owner of county."
Attorney Bernard Fultz Bethany College in
PDK Construction Inc. of
Banquet
MC graduated
Bethany, inW.Va.,
anda
Pomeroy which employeeS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _SEORC
___
......;___
1964 with
55..(]0 people, Fultz said.
"Most of the employees are Meigs County residents," bachelor of arts degree in education with a minor in
Fultz said. ''This, coupled with Harrison's involvement in economics.
youth athletics and scholarships, is why .Harrison was
Remaining active in athletics, while at Bethany College
selected as our person of the year."
Harrison was selected three times to the All Conference
About Harrison
Team in basketball and named Most Valuable Player in
Phil Harrison wasbomMay27,1942, inPomeroy,son 1964. He was also named outstanding senior athlele,
of Olen and Louise Harrison of Pomeroy,
holl018ble mention All American and was inducted into
He distinguished himself in scholarship and athletics the Bethany College Athletic Hall of Fame in 1981.
while a student at Pomeroy High SChool where he was a
Afler graduation, Harrison worked for American Oil
member of the National Honor Society and named most Company in Baltimore, M.D., from 1964-1967, St. Regis

Attorneys-negotiate
to end Fife stalemate
case against Robert D. Fife will not go to a grand jury
arnl~~~=~~a~~ceording to Meigs Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes.
take this case to the grand jury, we want to go before the grand
jury ready for trial," he said Friday morning. "If we file charges, we'll start with
a clean slate."
·
·
Meanwhile, attorneys representing' both sides are negotiating to end the
stalemale SIIJIOUDding Fife's pi~:~~ agreement.
Robert D: rue or Middleport was arrested July 9 on two counts of receiving
stolen property and one count or traffiCking in foOd stamps.
He pleaded guilty to the charges three daySIIaler in the Meigs County Court
of Common Pleas.
l.Jn~pnvisions or the original plea bargain, Fife agreed to forfeit approxi-'
mately SIBS,OOOandabout 1,540rifleS, shotgullsandhandguns seized from his
South Third Avenue hoiDe ilnd business to the Law Enf(Xcement Trust Fund
where they Wete to be distributed to the Meigs County l'r!lsecutor's Office and
the Meigs County Sherifrs Department.
On ()cL 15, Fife Silled be would not comply with the forfeituro agreernenL.
At that point, the forfeiture proceedings were dismissed without prejudice,
meaning they may ftled again at a latet dale.
At the time, Meigs Prosecuting Aitorney John Lentes indicated criminal
charges would continue agailtst Fife.
"We're in negotiations," saici.David Baeror Albany, oneofFife's attorneys.
"We hope to get into a beuer f.•logue lnd come to the table and see what
Cont DueG OD p8Je A2

Paper Company in Columbus from 19671971 and the Ben Tom
CO!pollltion ill Columbus and Pomeroy from
1971-1985.
In 1985, Harrison
slaned with PDK Con·
struction Inc: of
Pomeroy as pan owner.
PDK Construction
Inc. is in the highway
construction business ~,;;;;;;;;~Pb;iill:'ii:;;~;-==::.1
erecting guardmil, signs
and fencing. The company presently employs 8ppioximarely 55..(]0 employees.
He is married to the former Paulette Hudson ofPomcroy.
They have two sons, Trevor, 81 home, and Rodd, Who is
Contiaued 011 Pile A·l

News capsules
Reich joins coal negotiations
CHARLESTON; W.Va. (AP) - U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich met with both sides ill the.nation's
coal strike to urge a settlement and special mediator Bill
Useey said Friday be was optimistic.
"Secretary Reich implored the parties to work togethtl ill good faith to bring this unfortunate situation to
an ilnmediate conclusion,'' Usery said.
USery said he is optimistic an,qreement can be
reached soon, ''based primarily on the commiunent and
seriousness which both sides have demonstrated since

their return.'.'
Negotiations between the United Mine Workers and
the Bituminous Coal Operator's ..Association resumed
Wednesday in WashingtOn, D.C. Usery on Oct. 22
atUlOIIllCCd talks had broken off because an agreement
wasn't possible at the time.
Uiery said difficult issues still need to be resolved, be
he did not elalxnte. ·
"The ta11cs have continued almost nonstop since their
resumptiop,"hesaid.N'egotiationswillcontinuethrough
the weekend, hC said.
· While meeting with Usery and negotiaturs on Thun•
day, Reich e~tpressed his concema for the hardships
suffeted by all involved, Usery $aid.

Jobless rate
drops 0.7%
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio's unemployment ra1e
dropped 0.7 percentage point
in October, despite an increase in the national rate,
according to Labor Depanmentfiguresreleasedl'riday.
The Ohio rale decrea3ed to
6.6 pen:ent from 7.3 percent
the month before, the Labor
DeparUnent said.
Nationally, the liJIW'C for
October was 6.8 peltelll, up
from 6.7 percent ill September and August.
Labor ~nt off'teills
said more people fOUtldjobs,
but the national rate increased because more jobless
Americans were encouraged enough about tbe economy
to ~c looting for work.
OBES spokesman Briln Baker said the number of
employed Ohioans increased to 5.09 million in October.

Today's

.10 Sections . 180 .. .....
Business
Calendars
Classineds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituarlts
Akln11be River
Spp;rts
.Weather

-

Fred Crow

Bob HOcf!kb

CltarJcDc uO,.nirh

KcJbtPhem
llm.sUos '

Dl&amp;S
116&amp;5
Dl-7
(JIMI1

A6
A3
AI

81
(:1-1 .

.u ,

,t4_·
.. "'

Ia
M·
11

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="354">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9678">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32886">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32885">
              <text>November 5, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2149">
      <name>turley</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
