<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10642" 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/10642?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-10T09:12:42+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="21086">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b9d387947eb2f2d3d36de0b68003a3b7.pdf</src>
      <authentication>36ab41ab2a10416eec0f7b3db49d9bd8</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="33909">
                  <text>•

'fuesd8Y, OCtober 21, 1912

Pomoroy.-Middleport. OhiO

Tip sheet for community members
asked to house teen-a 'guests' ·
Dear · Aaa Laadera: A while
our teen-age lOll 1111 away
from hQme. Due 10 the pneroeily
of a well-meaning, ltind· hearted
-..pr, his recovay was lielllpo-

baet,

nrily delayed.

VISITS CARLETON • As a part or Fire
Prevention Week, Syracuse firemen and emer·
gency squadmen visited Carleton School. The
students were given the opportunity to look over
the vehicles, listen to the sirens, and learn about
what the volunteer firemen do to help in the

community. Here, left to right, Lt. Eber Pickens,
Jr., ami Fire Chid Jack Peterson, fll'emen, show
John Porter, teacher, and Carleton students,
Gail English and Deidra Carleton, the Syracuse
rescue unit.

Woman's remains believed
to be at least 11 ,600 years ·old
CINCINNATI (AP) ..:. A his age estimate ·would make .the
woman whose remains are believed bones the oldest human skeletal
to be 811east 11,600 years old prob- remains found in the Americas.
ably lived in an Indiail culture that
"There are a number dated ·
hunted big game and processed between 10,000 and 11,000 years
meat, says the geologist who exam- old, but this is the only one over
ined her bones.
, 11,000 years," be said
Curtis R. McKinney, director of ·
An amateur archaeOlogist found
geologic research at the Center for the bones in a sand dune in 1953
American. Archaeology in near Midland, Texas, The bones
Kampsville, .I!J., reported his fihd- are housed at Southern Methodist ·
ings Monday at the Geological University in I;&gt;allas.
.
Society of America's annual meet·
' No artifacts were found w1th the
ing.
remains that could tell how the
f,1cKinney calculated the "Midland woman'.' 'and her society
woman's age using a technique lived, McKinney said. But his ~e
called
alpha sJ!ecttumetry.
He_
said
eslimate
would Jllace the woman&gt;m
·- -......;_....,
____
__
_ _..,.....

Beat of the IJend...
by Bob.fl_oejlich
Dear Aunt Maude and Uncle
E~.

.

Flnally getting around to that
long overdue letter that I've intend·
ed to write for so Ions.
Can you beheve we're
approaching the end of October
already? Time really flies when
you're having fun doesn't it? Of
course, Saturday will be Halloween, Oct. 31, and I surely hope
the ghosts and goblins don't get
you. I haVe 10 get down to Middle·
port between now an&lt;! Sunday to
see the Halloween decorations of
Jon and Amy Perrin. They live in
the ~cond floor apartment at the
home of Velma Rue on Third
Avenue and I'm told their decora•.
lions are outstanding so I won't
want to miss 'em.
· Did you know that Helen Miller
who used to live in the Rutland
area will mark her 95th birthday
this Halloween? She's living at
!68 Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy,
these days. And you certaioly
remember Middleport High
School's beloved English and liter·
ature teacher, Nan Moore. Nan
· will mark her 92nd birthday on Sat·
urday also and loves to hear from
her'former students. Nan still lives
at 1(l0 N. Fourth St., in Middleport.
And it does follow that Nan's twin
sister, Elizabeth Mourning, will
also mark her 92nd on Saturdayshe resides at Overbrook these
days.
As usual, things are busy. busy,
busy with us. Saturday afternoon
we attended a memorial serviee for
our High St. neighbor, Florence
Smith, held at the Middleport Presbyterian Church. As you probably
remember, Florence, after an interesting career in several locations
including Russia, · retired to
Pomeroy about nine years ago.
She built a house across from us
and looked forward to many happy
years in Pomeroy. Her dream was
cut short by illness.
High Street in Pomeroy is quite
a place-dead end with a 10181 of
10 houses and one of the few
remaining brick streets in town.
Just a little stteet where old friends~
meet, you might say. Rutland's
Charlie Barrett says ihat turning
onto High SL is like entering l)isney World. Come to think of it. I
wonder what he means 'by that.
However, resideniJ of the street are
familiar widt deadl. Pleceding Florence from the tiny IDeCit - Ted
Downie, Vida Ihle, Pal and Clara
Lochary, Phyllis and Leslie Pultz
IOd Mlrie Bictunao--all ~
and such good
•
y like a numbel' of other
MeiJS Countians-even you,

nei=

·

the time frame of the Clovis cuiture, which was known to have
used spears to hunt game that
included
mammoths
and
mastodons, he said.
Evidence indicates that the Ciovis spread within 1,000 years to
.inhabit the Great Plains and areas
as far away as Alaska and Florida,
McKinney said. That evidence
includes finely worked spear heads
that had a characteri~ long! fluted
shape with a groQ\Ie mthe m1ddle.
Archaeologists have found evi·
dence that those people built cam{'"
ftres and apparently cuned mest m
pita,
said. They also had
smallMcKinney
settlements.
Michael B. Collins, a research
fellow 81 the Texas Archaeol0$ical
Research Labor8lory at the Umversity of Texas, said McKimey's age
estimate was reasonable, but more
· resean:h is needed 10 axtf'JJDI iL
"We've had claims of human
skeletons ·having been dated at
20,000 ancl 70,000 and other ages
like that based on one line of evi·
dence or another and they end' liP
not being corroborated or being
refuted by later and more advanced
techniques," Collins said.
"There's a lot more to be done to
verify this age determination."
Scientists believe several other
archaeological sites in North Amer·
ica may be as much as 30,000 years
old, but none yielded skeletal
remains. The oldest modem human ·
skeletons .are estimated to be
35,000 years old and have been
discovered in western Europe and
the Middle .East
•

Believinl his story thai he had
been kicbd out, the woman gave
him a safe place tD stay and fed
him for eight days. Meanwllile, we
were sick with worry, not knowing
if he was dead or alive. When the
detective we hired finally tracked
him down and told the woman the
real story, she cooperated and our
son was brought home. We are now •
WOiking at being a family again, and
through counseling, life is getting
beau.
Afttt talking to other parents of
runaways, we realized that our
experience was not uncommon.
Well-meaning people who befriend
runaways do not understand that
they may be hurting rather than
helping. Our parent suppon group
made up the following tip sheet
for corilmlillity members who may
be asked to house teen-age "guests."
' That child may be a runaway if:
I. A friend of your child is
spending the night more frequently
or on imusual nights (such as school
nights). Some runaways rowe nights
from friend to friend It might be
, your tum once a week.
2. A teeli-aget says be or she was
kicked out or abused, but balks wben
you suggest help rrom legitimate
agencies.
3. When you-teU the "guest" you
want to call his or her parents, you
, get excuses such as, "They've gone
out and won't be back until late,"
"Their phone number is unlisted and
I can't give it out, • or "They are
away on vacalion. •
·
4. When an oveniight guest
brings several items of clothing
for a one-night stay and "seutes
in."
If you suspect a.. child is a
runaway, please contact your
nearest poliee station. Aldtough I
am grateful 10 the kind-hearted
WOIIUIII who took our son in, the
pain and anxiety we suffered.during
those eight long days and nights is
· indesc.ribable. Tlliutb for printing
my letter, Ann. This information is
vital. - A HAPPIER HOME NOW
INruLSA ·
DEAR HAPPIER: fm sure you
alerted a great many faders to a
possibility that never occurred to
them. Thanks for opening a lot of
eyes today. I wmdcr if teen-agen
· realize how much pain they cause
when they "disapptar." What you

maybo-we were glued to the ·Ide~
vision set Saturday night 'to watch
Racine's Barbara Chapman take
part in the Ohio Lottery's Cash
Explosion show. She did so well
and might have done even better
had I been 11ble to find my lucky
troll to hold in her behalf during
the show. However, Barbara did
win $22,000 which earned her a
spot to participate in the $200,000
wheel game. Unfortunately, her
luck ran out, but who can sneeze at
$22,000? Barbara did us proud.
I suppose you noted that the
Glenn Miller band entertained in
· Columbus recently.. As I reflect on
that I wonder how that can be pos·
· sible. Glenn Miller died in a plane
crash alniost SO years ago. Unless
those musicians were in diaP.ers
when they were .with the Miller
band, it seems highly unlikely that
ih~ same band members are still
gomll. On the other hand maybe
,
they''ve been "energized". Don't ·
you wonder why they just don't say
NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Fourthe band will play Glenn Miller year-old Eric Boyd died the way so
~angements-that's got to be a
many tenants of the St. Thomas
b1t more accurale.
Housing Project die each year And wasn't that a fmc tribute to from li bullet wound.
e~tertainer Minnie Pearl Mo.nday
"They was shooting all over us
mght? Remember when Mmme and it turned out it was Eric that
visited MeiJIS County durihg the got dead," said 5-year-Old TiwariBraUer Fesuvals? She was 51!Ch a da Royal. "You have to always
down-to-earth, pleasant and fnend- watch for those bad men with
ly individual, offs~;~ge as well as guns."
.
.
on, ":e learned dunng her appear·
In housing projects in New
ance m Pomeroy.
.
Orleans and other big cities chit·
~s I stated I know I'm late in dren have been gunned do~n getung thiS teuer off to you. We the victims of more weapons short
apprecialed the Christmas presents tempers and the drug trade. '
so much. We !oved theieather
. ~ sni~r at a Chicago housing
coats, !he G~cc1 watches and the proJect !tilled a 7-year-old earlier
~500 g1ft ~rtJfiCIIe to ~en was this month a~ the boy walked to
JUSt fan~. ~twas ruce of,you ID school with h1s mother. He was the
send !he gtfls in by a Blue Sttealt third pupil rrom the p~~t's ele·
Cab sJDCe I seemed too busy iO Jel, mentary school to be slain mseven
clear out to. Rock SprinjiB ID piCk mOnths.
them up dunng the yuletide. Actu·
In New York City, tenants of
ally, I did try to call ynce to thank the Red Hook project say they keep
you but the line wu busy and I their children indoors when they
never got back 10 it. I'm sorry I aren't in school.
didn't gel you anything. I did piCk:
"The ltids ltids can't go to the
up a poinsettia for you but was to playground, because the drug deal·
busy to.~ it out to you. Needless ers tell you to move,'' said Edward
to asy, It along gene.
· Negron, the 32-year·old fatber of
At any rate the gifts were two. "It could be one o'clock in
grea1--10 nice ol you to remem!'Cr the afternoon and they could start
me so well. You know that I ve shooting. They don't care if other .
always felt very close to you- people are around." · ·
more like your son than your · · Chicago's mayor. closed four
nephew. You're just my very buildings; lightened security and
favorite aunt and uncle. By the ordered tenants to carry ID cards
way, d!d YOII.JCI.-ound to getting aftertheOcL 13 slaying.
.
YOIJI' wills wnuen7
In New Orleans, the city has
Hopefully, I'll gel out ID lleC you used feclcnl funds since last year to
sometime 10011 or maybe I'll even assign extra patrOl can to IIDIIIC of
phone. Meantime, do keep smil· the city's 10 lederatly funded housang.
· illJ projectl. ''But we need more,
Love, Bob more pab'ols, moril money,'' Sgt.
Gilbert lo!mson said.

Drug free
week edition

lr tlltll .4IIIJ i..tlltdul cobiiM )'DII
clipped '1f"'' dl#' )ldlow wtt1J age?
For a copy t1{ lttr MOll /rt4WIIl/y
·rtqwllal poem~ llltd usays, IQd a
IIC/f-odirUIICd, Wllg, bluiiJUI•Ru
ANN IANDICIII
tllvelope aNl a clr6ck or ~
order for $4.85 (litis iiJciKder
·un.
'l'IIIHIIp II ' _.
postage aNl lliwllillg) to: Gtm~,
c........ s,.... .... .
c/o AM Lllltdtrs, 1'.0. Box 11562,
Clticago,
Ill: 60611-0562. (In
have written might give them
Canada.
sellll
$5.87.)
something to think abouL

Ann

Inside today's
Daily Sentinel .

Loo""'"""

AS
PROSECUTING
AnORNEY . .

VoLa, No.131

Co~IM1182

1. A 131 per cent Increase In
prosecutions!
2. A 72 per cent Increase In drunk driving
prosecutions!
3. Prosecuted more drug-cases than at any
time In the history of Me'lga Countyl
4. In 1991 alone, collected more than
$570,000 In delinquent land taxes. ·
5. In 1992 collected thi largeat delinquent tax
foreclosure Judgment In Meigs County
history for our school systiiiiSI
6. Obtained the first two death penalty
Indictments In more than 50 years In
Meigs County!

Steve Story is a le-loaa resldelt of Meftp
Co.••ty alld a.1972 gra&amp;ate of Melas_HIP.
SdJool. He us ~ked law slice 1979 aiel
served tile people of Meigs Cotlly as
ProsecuH~g Attoney slice Jatary 1989.

STATE BOUND • Tbe Eastern High School'
marehing band concludes its competition season
on Saturday afternoon at Huntingon Vinson
Higlt School, before progressing to the state
marching flllals on November 7. The band took
grand champion laurels last Saturday at Trl. Valley High Sdlont. Pictured are, frontl-r, Field
Commllllder Da- Foley, Vicki Warner, Kristi
Warner, Branilon Buckley and Joey Weeks. Second row I-r. Meredith Crow, Christie Gross·

RE·ElECT

STEVE' STORY

PROSECU~~~~~f!!!~~~~~~.

•Advocates for Effective Public Administration
•American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees .
•National Rifle Association
•United Onion of Roofers &amp; Waterproofers &amp; Allied Workers
•Fraternal Order of Police (call Steve Young)
•AFUCIO
•United Steel Workers
eQhio Civil Servant Employees ~ssociatlon
eQhlo Building Construction &amp; Trade
•United Auto Workers
eQhlo Nurses Asasoclatlon
.United Food Commercial Workers
-Executive Council of the Ohio Federation of Teachers
eQhlo Education Association
.United Mine Workers of America
e()l)lo Valley Council of Sheet Metal Workers
•Farm Bureau
•Farmers Union
•Committee for AgrlculturefA.E.P.E.
eCitlzens Against Crime.

POINT PLEAS~. W.Va. (AP) Tuesday.
- A Mason ~ounty school board
It is the first time the state
member says ihe stare had neither Department · of Education has
the right'· nor the reason to remove removed a county school board
him from office, e'veq though he m~mber' for refus in¥ to take the
refused to take required training training, Marocltie S81d. ·
courses.
·
Marockie said the four remaining
"I coulll teach those darim Mason County school board memcourses. I don't have to take them," bers have 45 days to appoint a
said Olston 0. "Nick" Wright of replacement for Wright. If they 'do
Mason. Wright is a fanner teacher not, he will appoint a pew board
and school principal, as well II&amp; a member to serve until the next elecformer director of auendance, .. lion, -he said.
director of transportalion, SUJ?Cr·
Wright said that is unconstituvisor of free text· books, supemsor tiona!.
'
of the hot lunch program, director
"I hate to think the world has
of social services and anendance, goucn ID the place where an apand county school board president.
pointed official can ~lace an elecWright refused several oppor- ted official," he said. 'It's Hitler all
tunities to complete the training, over again."
including a video version sent 10
The Le~islature passed a law in
him at his home, state schools Su- 1990 reqmring all board members
perintendent Hank Marockie said

'

1. .. 1

.,

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

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - · Presi- showed that the economy grew 2.7 to increase the fuel effiCiency standent Bush today told supporters percent in the third quarter,
dard to require aulllnlllkers to buiid
"It carne out that our economy vehicles that pruvide 81 least 40 to
that the economy is not in a deep
recession and is 1r0proving, and he · is growing ... ye~. people were 45 miles per gallon. The·current
warned that Ohio autoworkers hurting but we are not in a reces- standard is 27.5 miles per galli)D.
would lose their .jobs if Bill Clinton sion. We are }!roWing," be said.
"That will put IDOSt Ohio
He .reminded supporters that the autoworkers out of work,'' Bush
is elected.
He also criticized Clinton for last time the country had a Demo- said.
protesting the Vietnam War while a cratic president and a Democratic
Earlier today in · Lima, Bush
Congress interest rates were at 21 appeared on ABC-TV's "Good
student in Oxford, En~land . .
"You can protest m front of the percent and inflation was at15 perContinued on page 3
White House, but whim you're cent.
."Let's keep our economy grow.abroad stand up for the United
States," Bush told. about 8,000 ing. Let's reduce spending. Let's
people at. the Seagate Convention · reduce taxes : .. The only way they
Center downtown: ''Characrer does (Democrats) can win IS to lie to
people, to tell them we're in a deep
make a difference.''
The Dwight D. Eisenhower
recession,
and we're not.''
Bush noted statistics the governMath
and Science Jrant of
Bush
said
the
Democrats
want
ment released Tuesday which
$4,151.03 was acknowledged wben
tbe Southern Local School Board
met in regular session Monday
evening at the Racine Elementary
School.
.
The board established a position
The jury trial in Meigs County Court set for Thursday has been
for pep band instructor, and voted
canceled. Jurors need not, appear.
to hire Dave Gaul as the junior
high school girls' basketball coach .
Upon inspection, it was decided
that a new roof is needed at the
How would you like to watch a live political debate, modeled
Racine Elemenrary Scliool and that ·
after the presidential encounters?
asbestos (emoval is necessary at
. ,That opportunity will be available on Friday, from 2:4S to 3:20
the Portland school and Southern
p.m., when incumbent Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby and
High.
his Republicap opponent, Paul Gerard meet on stage at Southern
A schedule to stan replacing
High School.
.
text books was established bepnEach candidate will make a three-minute opening statement.
ning with math lxds.
Then, then two will field questions from a panel of Southern Hi$h
The ~ard approved the purSchool students. Bill Lake, high school government teacher, w1U
chase of 400 folding chairs to bo
serve as moderator.
.
used at the junior high and hi&amp;h
While this propam is in preparation for the mock election to be
school.
held at Southern H~ School, several 11f the students ,are old
The next meetin1 will be Nov.
enoup to vote on
lion Day. The faculty feel• that informed
23 818 p.m. at !he hilh school.
.
vllltn llllb men intielllpnt choices, and debates such as this can
Attendina were Scou Wolfe,
lead ID wiser dec:ili0111 in dte votina booth, Lake said.
president; Sue Oruelet, vice-JINii· The public II wek:ome to
the debare. Since only 3S mindent; Joseph Thoren, Tom Rose·
ute~ have been aliOlled for the program, however, anyone attending
beiTy and Denny Evans, members;
should plan to arrive in plenty ol time to be seated.
DeMy Hill, treaiUrer; llld Bobby J.
Ord
, ,....,...u_.....,,._
~·-""'--'-'
!I

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
If fright in the night brin~ you
great delight, then don't m1ss tl)e
haunted hayride along the winding
roads of Sleepy Hollow Thursday
night.
The wooded area adjacent to the
Middleport marina off Page Street
is being converted into a den for
witches, a place where ghosts ~
goblins roam, where the dead nse
from their coffins, Jaws strikes
again, and the headless horseman

rides.
Again this year the third annual
Halloween party is co-sponsored
by Feeney-Benneu P~st 128,
American Legion, and Middleport
Village.
Open to everyone, it is aU free.
The party wuh a bonfire, costume judging, and refreshments
will take place on the hili above the
marina. That's also where the
hayrides will originate. .
The Legion and its Auxiliary
have purchased gallons of cider,

Mock election planned

'

~.·j~ ·~&lt;a, , • •

.aena

.

Haunted hayride set Thursday night ·.

Jury trial canceled

'

•

party co-sponsored by Feeney-Bennett Post 128, ·
American Legion, and Middleport Village will •
be held Thursday evening at the Middleport ·
marina.

--Local briefs-·---.,

tile Commltl11to Elect U.rlt Milone; K. 'h'Oiie, '-uf8r; Rt. 1, Box R, Ironton, Oh. 4M3I

0 .............. ,. .. lf"""' .. f""""····~·'-'~1" I . ... _ . . . ..... IM ~OO ... ~j·&lt;l-1•~'

to complete seven hours of training
in school laws and parliamentary
procedure, said Beth Vorhees, a
depai1ment spokeswoman,
The state agency held a hearing
for Wright on Sept. 28. Mason
County Schools Superintendent
Grant Shephard testified at the
h~ng that Wright had told him he
had no intention of viewing the
trnining tapes, Marocltie said.
"The reason they want me off of
there is because I've been blowing
the whistle on the whole damn
bunch for two years, and they don't
like it," Wright Said.
UP GOES THE SIGN • Bob 'Gilmore, len,
The financial coordinator for the ·
chairman
of Middleport's annual Halloween
Mason County schools, Patty Pyles,
and
his
son, Bilr Gllmo,~, erected the sign
bash,
was suspended last month and is
at
the
entrance
of Sleepy Hollow Tuesday. The
under investigation for alleged em'
bezzlement, according to Assislllnt
Superintendent George Miller.

Bush promises to ·improve economy

'

in ~ew orders was concentrated io
the volatile aircraft industry, at
automobile manufacturers and at
defense plants.
·
Transportation orders fell 8.4
percent to $26 billion. Orders for
military goods dropped 15.7 pe~centto$5.4 billion.
.
Excluding ll'liDsportation, ordeis
w.ould have risen 2.1 percen1.
Excluding defense, orders would
have increased 0.5 percent,
· A 10.2 percent drop was recorded for primary metals such ass~.
It was worst since March 1989.
On the positive side, orders rose
5.6 percent for electrical equipma\t
and 2.3 percent for industrial
machinery.
Orders tor non-defense capital
. goods, a gauge of business invest·
menr-spending, rose 4.1 'percent in
September, making up for a 3.9
percent decline in AugusL

LLoW

•I• ~
w
.

Eisenhower grant
acknowledged

ONE.

Trad Rfna ro ,.., .,., 11sf

nickle, Jennifer Mora, Noelle Pickens, Lisa
Stethem and Angie Chaney. Third row 1-r, are
Ch1J'Iene DaUey, Lauren Youoa, Eric Hollon,
Anna Wotr and·Amber Fortney. Fourth row 1-r,
Ginger Nutter, Julie Brown, Andy Wolf,. Letitia
Holsinger, Jonathan Avis and Heather Well.
Band members not pictured: Judy West, Bill
Baker, James Ewing and Jeanie Cline. (Sentinel
Photo by Brian J, Reed)

state has no right
to remove-him from Maso1J board

THESE FOLKS KNOW MARK MALO"E WILL FIGHT FOR OUR INTERESTS,
THAT'S WHY THEY ENDORSE .AND SUPPORT HIM. PLEASE JOIN THEM IN
SUPPORTING MARK MALONE:

MARK

A lluhlmadla Inc. Hewlplper

WASHINGTON (AP) port his claim the economic recovOrders to U.S. factories for long- ery is accelerating. '
lasting durable goods such as comWith ·only a week left before
puters and cars fell in September Election Day, the Commerce
for the third consecutive month, the Department S81d the GDP grew at a
government said today.
seasonally adjusted annual rate of
It was the farst triple drop since 2. 7 percent during the Julylanuary-March 1991, during the September quarter.
depths of the recession, and it was
But, economists said the susthe fourth decline in five months.
lllined fall in durable goods orders
The Commerce Department sail! _:.~~as a bad sign for the future. It
· orderS feU a seasonally adjusted 0.4 · coiild portend more layoffs at fac·
percent to $118.9 billion last tories_
month. In advance, economists
Underscoring that, the Com, were looking for. orders to increase merce Department said the bacldog
by about that percentage.
of unfilled orders feU for the 13th
· Orders also fell 0.4 percent in consecutive month to $452.6 bilAugust after plunging 2.7 percent lion, the lowest level since Decem·
in July.
·
-ber 1988.
The latest decline ~ted a
That's a sign that factories are
disappointment to President Bush, easily keeping up with the flow of
who on Tuesday latched onto a new orders with their current work,
stronger-than-expected report on force.
the gross domestic product to supMost of the September decline

~."Jl!right says

231 ·W. a-clltnet, Pom•oy,Oh. 457tl

STilE REPitESENTAT.YE

3 Section&amp;, 22 Pagee 21 -.io

Orders for durable ·goods ·
.· are down in September ·

HAS:

•

50..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohl!),. Wednesday, October 28, 1992

STEVE STORY

.

Low tonJcbt near .a

Tbunday, .,llDy.lfl&amp;b Ill mid·

•

FUTURE OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO. THEY KNOW HE'S FOUGHT
TO RETAIN AND EXPAND NEARLY 7,000 JOBS AID PROTECT
~·
OUR COAL ECONOMY.
In this upcoming election, you'll be able to keep moving forward, when you
vote to ~eep a strong voice for Southeastern Ohio in Columbus. OR Tuesday,
November 3rd, send a message to Columbus, just as these folks have don.
Tell them that we want a proven fighter. We want Mar~ ~alone, because
he's on our sidel

Paid lor

Pick 3:
439 '
Pick 4:
6662
BuckeyeS:
10-24-25-27-31

Landers

,..
naa,.
roa
THEY KNOW HE'S BEEN FIGHTING IN COLUMBUS FOR THE

Children
learn·about
death early

Ohio Lottery

JAWS S'I'IUitES AGAIN • Something new for those on tbe
haunted byrlde dlrouall Sleepy Hollow this year will be Jaws
emeral•l frO• LeadiDJ Creek as the wagons move aloa1 the
lhoreUne;
111'1 .,.•• into place in preparation for the third
~DDul Hdoweeu ptU1y to be held Thursday night at the Middle·
port marla oltPaae.Street.
· . -

s-.

dozens of donuts, and plenty of
hotdogs in anticipation of hundreds
of area residents attending.
Twenty-four trophies donated
by Middleport Trophies and Tees
will be awarded to the winners in
the costume judging in categories
of prettiest, ugliest, scariest and
most original in several age groups.
The judging will take pi~J!:e at 6:30
p.m.
Hayrides will begin at 6 p.m:
with the first two wagons to be residents of Overbroolt Centet.
Everyone will be required to
have a ticket to board one of the
wagons. When entering the marina
area, Legionnaire Torn Brewer will
be there to give a ticket to each per.
son. The tickets will be collected
each time a wagon pulls out.
Because of a problem wbere a
few teenagers tried to disrupt the
hayrides last year, a search light ,
will be in used in the wooded area. ·
surrounding the section where the.:
Halloween scenes have been creat·
edL
' ...
Bob Gilmore, chairman, advis-_. '
es that he will be working will!·
Middleport police and that those
trying to disrupt activity or dj) van- , ·
dalism will be prosecuted.
..
The legionnaires are being. •
joined in creating scenes this year
py the Farmers Bank ~f Pomeroy.
and Peoples Bank of Middleport. ..,
The use or sound effects and
blacldights has been made possible.,
by Columbus Southern Power and :·
George Miller who put eloctricity :
in10 a section of Sleepy Hollow.
.
As in I?revious years motorisll •
can pull nght into the marina IRa ,
to park. Norm Van Matre and .
Melvin Cross will be the putini :
assistants on the lot. Middlepoii
ftre equipment will be there willa
equipment and lights. The ftrlllleil:
will rope ()[f the Leading Creek:
shoreline so that youn&amp;SietS cannDc
wander into that area.
l
....
&gt;

�•
Wedne1dey, October 28,1992

'Commentary
....

'

111 COurt Street
Pomei'O)', Oblo

·: DJNO'BD TO TilE IJII1'BU8TS OP TD IBJQ8-M!SON ARitA

•

.Jol.ll'MCIA. NC.

seen."

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher

'
PAT WWTEHEAD

~tant Publlsher/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Geoeral Manager

LE'JiERS O F OPINION ar&lt; welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All !etten are subject 10 editing and must be .signed with name,
· , address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
sbould be in good laste, addressing issues, not pcnonllities.

:.Letters to the editor
.
··
'·

Uroed to vote
l&gt;

It will soon be election time
-'again. I h!ll)e ~ each ~ ,will
.practice their nght and pnvdege to
· vote Ibis year for the party of their

'choice.
: · Wc also need to support our
schools . Meigs Local parents,
·grandparents and concerned people. vote for the permanent

Page ~The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio
Wednelday, October 28, 1992

WASHINGTON - Sen. Miu:h
McConnell, R-Ky., is ·roiling the
waters inside the Republican cloak
room by launching what one insider calls the " ftrsl negative leader·
ship campaign the Senate has ever

,•

-•

5

'improvemeiu levy. The' funds will
help make many improvements to
the buildings, They will also purchase buses and books for leammg.
Let us back the Carleton levy
and the Health Department opcrating levy.
Jean Wright
Pomeroy

The NRSC has rmea a recon1 SJ3
million more f« Republican Senate
candidates than - raiied 81 a sim·
ilar point in-the last election cycle.

BJ

k A nderSOn
and
l .
•
·Michae Bznstezn

.
1
McConneU's unusual carnpair.
o~aC
to depose Sen. Phii .Gramm, •
Texas, as chairman of the National
Republican Senatorial Committee,
which works to get Republicans .
elec~ to the Senate, is variously ·
descnbed by Republicans as
" unsenatorial," "bush-league"
Political strategists invoke 1974
and even "malicious."
as an analogy. Republicans were
The palace intrigue now unfold- . routed, u~hering into office a new
ing may ~e in comparison to the generation of Democrats known as
presidential elections, but it could the " Watergate babies." At this
decil!e how quickly Republicans point, a net loss of only one or two
rebuild in the wake of what looms SC1181C seats would be a moral vicas a possible electoral landslide.
tory for Republicans.
.~ronic~ly, Senate Repu~lic_ans
_McConnell, however, ha_s been
- mcluding several locked m ~t¥ht trymg to undercut Gramm wtlh colre~ection races - generally g1ve leagues and candidates across the
Gramm high marks for his leader- counlry - claiming, among other
ship of the NRSC in one of the things, that Gramm's 100 distracted
· toughest political years for the by his likely 'run for the White
GOP in hiStory. President Bush's House in 1996 to serve as NRSC
· sinkinjr fortunes are a drag on chainilan.
Republicans across the country and
Brit McConnell has rankled col·
c~ contr!bute to~ loss of up to
leagues by trying to drive a wedge
SIX Repubi1C8!1 seats m the Senate
between Gramm ~several Senate
next ~ear.
·
candidates, suggesttng that Gramm
·Wm or lose, Senate Republicans was short-changing their cam·
can't blame it on poor fund raising.
and in,Rratiatin.R himself as
··
· •
·

someone who could.help apply

pressure on Gramm. Of course, if
these candidates win, they would
have an opportunity ·dJ return the
favor by voting for McConnell
over Gramm when GOP senators
piclt: their leaden a week after elec·
tionday.
In the most recent example,
·sources say that McConnell called
California Senate candidate Bruce
Herschensohn's campaign to
inquire about funding from the
NRSC. McConnell revortedly stated that he could tafk .to Senate
Minority Leader Bob Dole of
Kansas to lean on Gramm if Herschensohn wasn't getting enough
financial backing from the MRSC.
Herschensohn expressed no complaints with NRSC.
But It was an exchange of acid- ·
tipped letters by the _two 'senators
that probably marks the most heated moment of the feud, which may
trace its origins-back to when
Gramm beat McConnell for the
-NRSC slot in 1990. .
·
McConnel~ wrote Gramm a letter dated Sept. 10, in which he
explained that he "just spoke with
Rod Chandler (Senate candidate in
the state of Washington) over the
telephone today, and he informed
me that he is in desperate need of
funds for his media effort before

Grandmother supports levy
.
· I'm writing this lener in regards some of the things they do.
·io my granddaughter, Mary Ann
·Ranlcin, who is nine 'years old.
··When she was two and a half, she
-was hit by an automobile, which
caused a very serious head injury
·'lild several broken bones, and was
•hospitalized for two and a half
· months. When she was released,
. ·we started her in CarletOn School,
'·liS each day went by we could see
·improvements in Mary. They sure
. 'did a lot with Mary Ann, and she
· toved every minute of it. Let me
tell you Ibis - if you have never
·been down to Carleton School, talce
the time to go down and see how
they work with these l:ids, nnd

:···

DO 'rOO
ifAVE ANY

It's doubtful !hat our liUie Mary
Ann would be walking or talking
either if it hadn't been for their
help. Allhough she is wearing
braces and has been uansferred to
Riverview School, she misses
everyone so much and hopes to
make a visit back with everyone
someday.
These kids need help :tnd educa·
lion as same as other kids, so let's
get out there and help them by
going to' the polls and voting for
our CarletOn School levy.
·
Shirley A. Jones
Tuppers Pl:lins

'M()tl'

C~TuMES?

'

'Yes' vote sought

: : . Dear Editor,
·
discovered that at Southetn you
; : : 1 have attended schools in lluee were important as an individual.
O: SIBICs; New Jersey, Ohio, and West Because of the small school atmo;. ~irginia. In each individual area sphere, you weren't just a number,
::(lie schools were unique and all but you were a penon.
·;very imponantto me.
That was imponantiO me! Now,
;. : In New Jersey, we had new Southern has the opportunity to
•:s.tatc-of-the·art schools and all of have both modem facilities and
:;the most modern equipment for the that individual rell!tionship
:·classroom. Good teaChers and the between students and teaehen.
•:necessary space and equipment to
Please take advantage of the
:-wort wilh provided me with a great · state money that Southern.has the .
::stan in my educational endeavors. oppmunity to gel for the new K-8
•: · Schools back East were huge elementary school·building. This is
:·compared 10 thole in Meigs Coun- · an opportunity we cannot afford to
::ty, but having ~ necessary f~~i- pass up. I've experienced the best
-:~ gave me uruquc opponumues of both worlds. Let the Southern
kids experience the same thing.
:·to excel.
·:- When moving to West Virginia
Please vote yes for the Southern
:-ind lau:r here lb Racine and South- Local bond levy on November 3,
·~ High School, I witnessed some 1992.
::overwhelming changes. I discovSincerely,
·
ered that in many ways this area
Amy LiUiefield Wolfe,
•JIBS behind the times, but I also
Box 8n Racine, Ohio 45771

Yes vote a must Tuesday

the primary election I1CX1 Tuerday.
·'I am sending what I can by
overnight express, and I urge you
to release from the NRSC the
$17,SOO permiUed by law to help
Rod wind up his primary cam·
paign," McConnell wrote. "This is
a race we should be able to win,
and Rod reallrcould use the support right now." ·
·
Gramm fired back a two-page
letter dated Sept. 11, enraged that '
Mc~U was instigating a problem w11h Chandler when the NRSC
was bound by its own rules not to
interject itself into primary cam·
paiP.!s.
•
•Jt was very thOughtful of you
to provide me with so much advice
this week on how the Republican
Senatorial Committee should be
run," Gramm wrote san:astlcally.
"~OW: suggestioo ~~violate our
.gu1delines by contnbuung $17 .SOO
to Rod Chandler in a c:oniCSied primary was most interesting, and I
am cenain that the carbon copy that
yoU sent to' Congressman Chandler
was helpful to him ·as weU.In addi·
tion, I 1111 pweful for your advice
that the Committee should spend
more money in Kentucky,' and I'm
sure that our Kentucky candidate,
David Williams, was grateful to
receive a copy of the Jener you sent
me."
In the the Jetter. Gramm also
noted that McConnell had refused
to do a mailing to ~ of his big
donors on Williams• behalf. asking
McConnell to "reconsider."
Gramm concluded that he would he
more grateful to McConnell if be
paid more attention to lhC races in
his own state.
Gramm spokesperson Larry
Neal said Gramm has not yet
decided whether or not to seek reelection as NRSC chairman and did
not want to be distrBCted from the
fund-raising challenges al hand.
" Sen. McConnell has the highest personal regard for Sen.
Gramm," McConnell chief of staff
Steven Law told us. "He, like Sen.
Gramm, is concenttating on getting
Republicans elected tQ the Sen. ate." Law hinted that Gramm.
might yet decide not to run and
said that if there is a race "it certainly won't be nasty."
It may be 100 late, for that.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

:

{l

Accu-~ forecut for daytime ccoditiona and

By The ~ted Pnu
Temperatures overnight will
remain fairl mild fill' this time of
year. By ~Uilday. temperatures
will cool, with lows mostly from
3S to 40 lild highs in the 50s.
The cause of the cooling trend
will be the movement of a cold
front put Ohio tonight. The passage of the front should also bring
partly cloudy conditions tonight
and Thursday. There is a chance of
showers during the night in the
northeast counties •.

• ""·

.
enforcement sections. One of those
sections is the Office of Consumer
Protection which ensures that
Ohio's laws against consumer

Sen. Jl~'an M. Long·
fmud are not violated.
Ohio has 5even basic consumer
Jaws to protect Ohioans from consumer fraud and abuse. The comerstone of Ohio's conswner'.s laws is
the Consumer Sales Practices Act.
This Act prohibits deceptive and
unconscionable business practices.
A deceptive sales practice can be
falsely ~nting the qualities or
characteriStics of a product, indieating that a replacement or. a
repair is needed when it is not, or
falsely claiming a product has a
warranty. An example of an unconscionable sales practice is taking
advantage of a person's disability,

illiteracy, or inability to understand
the tenns.of the sale •.
The other area covered by
Ohio's consumer laws are automobiles; repair and serv~ce, self·
improvement programs, get-rich·
qutek schemes, door-to door sales,
and advertising. Copies of each of
the consumer protection Jaws are
available from the Auomey General' s office as well as brochures
which explain your rights in JI!'CIIter
detail. You may contact the Attorney General's Conswner Protection
Office by calling toll-free 1-8002820S I 5.
·
Approximately one-third of the
coml,'lliints the Attorney General
rece1ves relate to automobiles.
Concerns that consumers have
raised with the Attorney General
range from questionable sales practices 10 unauthoril.ed or unneeded
repairs. A brochure is available
which explains guidelines for pur-·

a

Friday throup Sunday:
South-Central Ohio
Friday,
fair. Lows in upper 20s
. Tonight, mostly clear. Low near
·to
mid-30s.
Highs in mid40s to
. 40. Thursday, partly sunny. High
mid-50s.
Saturday
and Sunday,
55-60.
fair.
Lows
in
the
30s.
Highs in the
Extended forecast:
40s.

-Meigs announcements--

chasing new or a used car. rules .
relating to advertising, warranties
and service contracts, as well as
information regardin~ odometer
statements, rustproofmg, repairs
and services and resolving consumer complaints.
By using common sense and
knowing the terms of contracts,
warranties, and.refund policies,
consumers can protect lhemsel ves
from unethical businesses looking
to make a fast buck. If you feel you
· have been the victim of consumer
fraud, you may wish to contact one
of the consumer law experts in the
Attorney General's Office.
As always, please feel free to
call or write me, State Senator Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions Cll' comments about these
or any other issues. My number is
(614) 466-8156, and my address is
the Statehouse, Columbus, Qhio
43215.

Bush ...

public; Duane Boyntoit, Pomeroy,
$375 and costs, ·three days in jail,
90 day license suspension, DUJ.
Jason Hysell, Pomeroy, $313
and costs, resisting arresi, $213 and
costs, assault, and $63 and costs
m~ing ihreats, with a three day
Jail sentence; Mary Uribe
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, drug
abuse; Marilyn Cupp, Pomeroy ,
$63 and costs, driving under suspension; Gene Morris, Springfield,
$63·and costs, traffic light violation; Serena Minshall, Langsville
six months probation, assault.
'
Forfeiting bonds were William
'?· Hysell, Pomeroy, $80, squealing
ures; Chad Wolfe, Racine, $80,
disorderly conduct; Dencil Yost.
Jr., Bidwell, $60, stop sign violation; Joseph Wilson, Middleport,
$80, disorderly conduct; Michelle
Stevens, Middleport, $65, speeding; Tommi Chandelier, Cheshire,
$70, excessive speed; .Tamela Milhone, Pomeroy, $80, expired
license plates; and Robert E. Lan·
ders, Pomeroy, $130, possession of
coobOied substance. .

Widely scattered showers and across the southern states; in th6
thunderstorms were also repol'led 80s in Texas and southern Florida. :
over Southern California, southern
The high fell' the nation TUCiday
Arizona and.westem New Mexico. was 92 degrees at LajiiiS, Texas. :

Maho.od, 18, concerning item's
missi~ from a mobile home they
rented m Syracuse. The department
was assisted in the arrest by Syrac~Police.

On Tuesday;- Amanda Brewer,
Antiquity, reported Tuesday morning that around I: 15 a.m. , she
heard a noise, looked in the front
yard and observed an individual
walking across he r yard. She
checked and discovered that someone had Stiulshed the windshield in
her car. She is expected to file
charges against an unnamed per-

. son.

Earlier on Monday. ~utiCI had
gone to Antiquity on a disturbance
and arrested Gary Reese on a bench
warrant from Meigs County Court
for failing to comply. No the violation w~ committed in tho offiCClS•
presence, Soulsby said, so no other
arrests were made.
Mike Harmon of Beech Grove

Hospital news
Veterans Me-lal
THURSDAY ADMJSSICS&gt;NS •
Diana Neace, Langsville. ·
THURSDAY DISCHARGES Carl Niclt:ols and Opal Basim.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Oct. '1.7 - Samantha
Carmen, Wanda Boston, William
Trapp, William Oldaker, Herbert
Black, Vikki Birchfield, Martha
Oliver, Mrs. James Riffle and
daughter, Henry Upton, .Chrlsta
Eisnaugle,Jeanette Canode, Gre_l!ory Gooderham, Mrs. Daniel Raird'
en and son, Rita Dennison; Donald
HoweU, Linda Baker, Jennifer Harris and Cole Jones.
Births, Oct. '1.7 • Mr. and Mrs.
David Bmdley, daughter, Oak Hill;
Mr. and Mrs. Radford Wheatley,
'
mated receipts Wednesday .7.000.
daughter. Wellston and Mr. and
Prices from The Producers Live- Mrs. Brian Halfhill, daughtef, Bid·
stoCk Association:
Well.
I
Cattle: steady to .50 higher.
Sbiughter steers: choice 69.5075.60; select65.00-70.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 68.0074.00; select64.50-69.50.
Cows: steady to 2.50 lower; all
cows 53.50 and down.
Bulls: mostly lower; all bulls
111 Seca.. St..
60.00 and down.
Vcal calves: Sheep and Jambs: steady to 2.00
higher; choice wools 40.00-50.00;
choice clips 40.00·51.00; feeder
.IISCOUITY
lambs 57.00 and down; aged
slaughter sheep 32.50 and doWn.

=.-:c.=

.............. . ......-..c
..

......._

I
I

=.

:;:':".=~·

' '

~ ~~ :

~1

..

l.t1

l, '

'o

\

s1.,000 OFF ANY IN STOCK
Athens Honda
Now Features:
31M STOCK
•• til 0 N D IA

'9fere COttUS tlie Sun. •
SERVICE HOU~~
Monday-Thursday
8am-8pm
Friday 8 am-6 pm
Saturday I am-6 pm

ATHENS
..

'~

PLUS
ofREE car waah with
·~ MrVIc• caM
ofREE pick-up and

SALES HOURS
Monday·Thursday
lam-8pm

Service
ofREE kM!ner car If your
car Ia 111 for 11nice
overnl

Friday • Saturday

clellvely on Honda

.

lam-6pm

CARS

IIJ'IIE HAPPY HONDA PEOI'U'

110 E. State St. • ,AIIIHI, Olllt
Dept. 594-1555
UIM C•

iii·•·~=~
"

WITH A CHOICE!

1993 HO.NDA ACCORD

Lottery numbers

,.

A THEATER

SliCE 1161 .

. . _... . ... . . . . . . . . .... . . =.80

I

On· Tuesday at II a.m., Middle•
· port squad went to Meigs Mine :31
for Wetzel Bailey, who was trlllisported to Veterans Memorial HQspitaJ:
•
At I p.m., Middleport squad
went to Pearl Street. Mary Hawki!Js
was taken .to Holzer Medical Qlnter. At 3:46p.m., Pomeroy . units
went to U.S . Route 33 and
. Pomeroy Pike for an auto aec~L
Rhonda Raymond, Tim ROU41l.
Rogl2' Roush and Jim Dunlap were
transported to Veterans. At 6:~2
p.m., Pomeroy squad was senl to
UniOQ Avenue for Scott Shank. .ife
was taken to Veterans.
1 • ,,

r.ny
YOUIIIHPIIHif
A.IBIIIVIII

· stocks·

.

EMS units answer calls

INSUUNCE

til;:..

--

~

Road reported that on Saturdar
evening, while ·his vehicle wa)
parked at the Little Coal Bucket
Carryout where he worts, JOIIIeont
driving il van with Dliliois regis~
lion left the scene 81 a high r&amp;Je.s/.
speed and spun gravels, breakinJ
the windshield in Harmon's veil''••
cle.
Lisa Triplett of Scottown reported on Monday that sometime on
Friday night, someone scratched
bOth sides of her 1986 Ford 4x4
while she was at a the Southern
High School football game.
'·
On Saturday afternoon, Linh
Crislip, Pomeroy Pike, notified !he
department that sometime between
2:l0 and 6 p.m.• someone had broken out a ltitchen window. Ho
entry was made into the resid$e
and nothing was found that could
· have been used to break the glus.

DOWIINI CIILDS
MULLEI MUSSER·

Area ·~death

history

~

A crackdown is underway in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Bruce
Reed on defendants who fail to pay
fanes levied on ch&amp;rges in his cowt.
Monday night 'there were additional fines of $63 and costs against
nine ~efe~ts for failing 10 e;om- •
ply With pnor court orders. Fmed
011 the charge Terry Michael of
Pomeroy, John Imboden of
Pomeroy, Angel Hannon, of Rutlal!d• Joseph Anthony y.'ilson of
Middleport, Shawn G1lmore of
Pomeroy, Stephanie English of
Pomeroy, Joseph Riffle of
Pomeroy, Christopher Rayburn,
Middleport, Paul Richard Qualls of
Pomeroy.
Others fined in the court were
Micah Large, Pomeroy, $263 and
costs, leaving the scene of an accident; Teresa Alderson, Middleport,
failure to control vehicle, $35 and
coats; Shawn Baker, Athens, $63
and costs, no operator's license;
Charles McCloud, Jr., Middleport.
$113 and c~. public intoxication;
Dale Herman, Middleport, $100
and costs, ind1,1cent behavior in

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
at seleCted buying points Wednesday 11y the Ohio Department of
wiD meet Monday 81 thci Page"iUe Agriculture:
Smorptllorcl dinner
There will be a smorgasbord Town Hall at 6:30p.m.
Barrows and gilts: mostly .50
diMet at the Loaridge Community
lower; demand 1ighL
Haunted
bouse
Center ilh Sunday from noon to
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.: country
There wiU be a haunted house at · points, 39.75-40.75, a few 41.00;
1:30 p.m. Coat is $5 for adults and
. $2.50 for children under 12. Public the old Chester' Court· House plants 40.7541.75, a few 42.25.
invited.
Wednesday ,1Jtursday and SaturU.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs .• country
day from 7-10 p.m. Admission to points, 38.25-39.75.
Meedlt&amp; ca~~eeled .
the house is free of charge and the
U.S. 1-2, 210-230 Jbs., country
The Meigs County Republican PUblic is' invited.
points, 37.75-39.25.
.
, Womcns Club meeting scheduled
Eltdloa day dinner
Receipts Tuesday 7 .I 00. Esti·
for Thuraday .h~ been cancel_ed
An Election Da sou dinner
du~ .t~ confl1ct~ng communuy will be beld by th/sduse Fire
. acttYIIleS. RCIJUblican Women Who, Department auxiliary at the departContinued from page 1
can. help, staff the headq~rs or ment headquarters. Vegetable and
· assist. With telephone call~ng are chili soup, beans and cornlitead, .Morning, America." He also was
. ask~d to contact Patty P1ckens, and desseru will be sold 10 eight to appear later today in the Cleve·
president, at 9854231.
eat in or carry out. ·serving will land suburb of Strongsville artd in
begin alii a.m.
Columbus.
FOE Auxiliary to meet ·
About 250 members of labor
, The POE Ladie8 Auxiliary No.
!lnions
- many holding Clinton, ;2111 will hold a SpeCial meeting
Gore
signs
- . waited for Bush out·
Sunday at I p.m. 10 discuss special
side
lhq
Seagate
Convention Center
initiation.
in
Toledo.
H. Scott Shank
H. Scott Shank, 68, of Union
Sutlonii'IIStees to meet
The p~otesters said they were
Ave.
Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Oct.
The Sutton towrtship Trustees
upset
by an executive order Bush
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at 27; 1992, at Veterans Memorial
issued
last week that.Seets to throw
Hospital.
.
the Syracuse Mun1cipal Building.
open
federal
consttuction contracts
Born oo April28, 1924 at Apple
to
non-union
labor.
Grove, W. Va., he was the son of
Revival
"I
would
like to ask him why
Revival at Mt. Hermon United the late Wilbur and Harriet Hartley
he's
decided
·10
take famiiy wages
. Brethren in Christ Church, off Shank. He was a member of the
and
lower
them
again," said·Tom
Texas Road near Pomeroy, will be Rutland Methodist Church, a veter·
Joseph
,
head
of
Plumbers and
· Sunday throt~gh Nov. 8 at 7:30 an of World War II, u, S. Army,
Steamfiuers
Local
so.
. p.m. nightly. Rev, Robert Markley and a member of Drew Webster
Joseph said Toledo has suffered
· wiU be the evangelist. Public invit· Post 39. American Legion.
'ed.
.
under
12 years of Republican lead·
Mr. Shank retired as a steel
ership
under Bush and former Presworker from Foote Mineral and has
Scipio trusteeato meet
ident
Ronald
Reagan. He said the
employed by Farmers Bank
The Scipio Township Trustees been
city
has
lost
30,000
manufacturing
for the past 26 years.
jobs.
and
38
plants
have
closed.
He is survived by his wife, Ethel
Nash Shank, Pomeroy; three sons,
The Daily Selllinel
"People are angry in this' comBryan, Chris and Stacey Shank,
munity,"
Joseph said. "People
cv-.n..,..
two sons and daughters-in-law,
need
those
jobs to raise their famiPa..loi.ed ":'J: oltora-. Moadoy
Michael and Susanna Shank, and lies, and he's
. . _ . l'lidoJ, II c-t l)!:jj••OJ,
done nothing 10 save
Jeffery and Wanda Shank, all of
Obto 11J lito Obto V.Oq
obi"l
them.
You
can't
make it on serPomeroy; a brother, Robert Shanlc.
C-pao,IM•IIImMio lacilro~:-·
vice-industry
jobs.
•'
Ohio
Pb. 11111-211141.
• ....
Tucson, Ariz,, and six grandchil·
.....
.. Pouw:a;, Oldo.
dren.
.
M..-., Tlto Aooodolod "'-a, uld lhe
Funeral services will be held
Ohio Nenpo5.,!::!""tl'"'• Nolleoal
friday at 2 p.,m. at the Ewing
A&lt;IYirilli"l
lltlft, Braobom
Funeral Home. The Rev. Arthur
New~
• · 1a3 Tllln Awoao.
Nool
..... '111rtl0017.
Crabtree will officiate and burial
Am Ele Power....................32 318
will be in the Letart Falls CemeP081'NAII'I'KR: .... ...._ Ia
Ashland
Oil........................25 3/4
Tbo O.D~otlnol, Ill Co•n 81.,
tery. Military &amp;raveside services
AT&amp;T
.................................
441/8
l\waa4
41118.
will be conducted by Drew Web·
Bank
One
...................
~
•......
49
118
11_.1JW"IKM ......
ster Post 39, American Legion .
Bob
Evans
.......................
:.19
1/2
... c...t. ... .....
Frie.nds may call at the funeral
~--..
Charming
Sbop
..................
36
118
OM ....111...........~ ........................... .Ill
home Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7
City Holding ...................... J8 114
OM v-................................- ...111.110
to 9 p.m.
IIRIJU 001'1'
Federal MORUL ...................J7
PlllCII
Goodyear T.lR ...... ............69
o.a,............................................2tl C.Oto
!J
Key CenllllicJil ...................20 314
s I ...... 411111DiloLiboaorrl·
l..a.nds End..........................29 718
•-.-1\la-IoTito
Limiced Inc. ...................... 24 7/8
Doltr, ...llMI . . . . . . . . ol• .. 12
'
..... ~..atMafftiOOJrio&lt;
Multimedia Inc ..................27 314
. CLEVELAND (AP)- Here·are
Rax
RestluranL ..................7132 ·
Tuesday night's Ohio Lottery
No ._
_,._
. iiJ 111011
Ia
_
..,.
_
_pomdllo•
.....t•io
Reliance
Blectric................ l7 If].
selections:
·
Robbins&amp;Myen
................ J4
a; "+II
Pkk 3 NUIIIbers
Shoney's
Inc
......................
19
4-3-9
7/BSW'
Bank
......................
32
314
' k:..
(four, three, nine)
Welldy
Int'L
.......................
t3
SIB
---·--...- ............... &amp;::.14
•!! .w t ...........
,_,_...................
,. . Pkk 4 NUIIIberl
-...................
6-6-6-2
1;1..
Owl"
'I
(six. six, six, two)
IJ ..........- ................................
Lm. quotel provided by Bl...,
..............................................
Bud:eye 5
EJila and .:-1 tl GaDipoJIL
............~................ ........
I0-24-2S-27-31

h
.,osep . ']lear

~

state, the Sierra Nevada, CaliforMoiJture from the Rockies MJ
nia's Cenb'al Valley and lbc Rock- expected .to sDI'Cid to the central
ies.
·.
and southern Jilaina bh,.~Y· : .
in ,...,
On Tuesday. showers and thun· · Highs today were
derstlirms were scattered over 30s in northern MinneiOia; in ~
Norlhem California.
. 40s in northern New England. the
A thunderstorm produced wind Great Lakes. and the norther11
gustS of 40 to SO mph 81 Hayfort. Plains; in the 50s and 60s in 11M
dumping I If]. inches of rain mj ust Pacific Noclhwest and ICf08I tit¢
15 minutes.
cenb'al pan of lhe nation; in the 70s

_ __;__Livestock report--

Pol willi the cybernated smile; Dan
the Eveready_ Attack Ch!huahua
who kept gomg and gomg and
going; Admiral Unready Stockdale, .

Today~· in

Reed cracks down .on those
who are not paying fines

------Weather-----

'

tax breaks for rich folks, the Bwh intense. Was it George Bush's ,
panacea for ch~blains, collyw~b- claim to. four homes and a h'!ICI
bles and consupatcd econom1es. room? .H1s anernpt to portray hunAnd what does a pol do when he self as a disadvanta&amp;ed Yalie going
doesn't have anything positive to up against an "OxTord debater"?
1
s· .
say? He Jays waste to the other Was it Dan Quayle's effortt9 make
guy. And so we began hearing us believe he is a small-town boy
about Bill Clintoil's alleged Jack of of humble means who grew up
who had the good sense 10 tum off character, about his sorry Jack of reading the Good Book by lamp.
his hearing aid; Hal The HaP.leSS patriotism, his .draft-dodging, his light?
·
·
Modemtor Bruno, flattened hke a godless platform, his treasonous
No, I think the most absur4
tulip under a tank tread? And the trip 10 Moscow.
thing about this and any other elec·
post-bmw! spin, when Quayle wu
Jt was squalid stuff, beneath the tion - forgiv~ the preachment~
praised as a Lazarus risen from the . aln:ady paltry Slalldards of decency please - is people who bitch an4
dead, wholly reconstructed from that govern the political process, don't vote. They deserve what the¥
the babbling blob of protoplasm and certainly a lrCSJI8SS of the rules geL
,
·.that Sen. Lloyd Bentsen reduced that presidents ought to honor.
Joseph Spear Is a syndlcate;d
him 10 four years aeo?
And the Utterly Absur!l. The writer for NewspaJXlr Enterpr~
The pressies loved iL "I have a competition in this category is . Association.
·
,
mortifying confession to make, ••
·
wrote columnist Molly Ivins. "I
enjoyed the vice-presidential
clebate." Intoned The New Rc:pu\): .
lie: ' 'The debate was livelier and
more substantive than any in ~t
memory.l'
By The As&amp;ocllled Press ·
•
I hated it. I learned nothing from
Today
is
Wednesday,
Oct.
28,
the
302nd
day
of
1992.
There
are
6.(
it, except that Dan Quayle can be
·
,
•
programmed to wave his fmger and days left in the ~·
Today's
Highlight
in
History:
:
chant banalities. That do&amp; didn't
Thirty years ago, on Oct. 28, 196~.~ Soviet leader Nikita KhrushcheV:
b~rk . He didn't even yap. He
informed tho United State&amp; thai be had ordered the dismantling of Sovle(
y1Piled.
·the Ualy. The Bush-Quayle missile bases in Cuba. President Kennedy praised Khrushchev for hil
' .
:
campaign gave me the heaves from "saatesmanlite decision.''
On this date:
.
•
day one. For four years, we've
In 1636, Harvlld College was founded in Massachuseas.
:
been hearing that the president
In 1776, the Baale of White Plains was fought during the Revolution-:
doesn'tlike to deal with the vision
~~
.
.
thing, but it never ~r regillmd
In 1886. the StalliC of Liberty, a gift from the people of France was~
with me until ~dy. kept wail·
ing for something positive, some dedicated in New Yor1t: Harbor by President Clevellnd in the ~ ol
·
:
sign that he has at least an occa· sculptor Predelic Augusre Bartholdi. ·
In 19 I 9, Coapess enacted the Volstead Act, which provided for:
sional twinkle of a thought about
enforcementofProllibition. over Pillsiclent Wil!llll's YCID.
'
•
where he wants to ta1rc us.
In
1922,
fascism
came
to
Italy
as
Benito
Mussolini
took
conbOJ
of
lhej
But be cloeln'L He hasn't a clue
- excuse me, I fCII'gor cap~ pins gov~L
.
.
,

The record high on this date in
Columbus was 81 In 1927. The
record low was 21 in 1976.
Sunset tonight at 5:34 p.m. Sun·
rise Thursday at 6:58a.m.
Around the utloa
Temperatures dropped towatd
freezing in several Nonhem cities
overnight.
Snow was forecast today for the
western Great Lakes. turning to
showers ~n Michigan, .
Rain was forecast from Florida
to Virginia and over Washin.gton

Syracuic trailer park and sold to a
Pomeroy resident. Tbe Po111eroy
resident r.otilied the sheriff's office
late on Saturday afternoon that she
had plli'Chased the air conditioner.
Nicholas appeared in Meigs
County Court on Monday. and was
released pn bond. Soulsy said that
additional charges are pending
against Nichofas and Shelia

Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby reJ)oned Wed~y that
John Nicholas, 29, Syracuse, was
arrested on Saturday afternoon and
jailed on a charge of receiving and
disposing of a stolen air con&lt;litioner. According to the report, the air
conditioner was alleged to have
been taken from a trailer at the

W. VA.

October is consumer protection month ·
.

'

.:;

Meigs deputies p_robe vandalism reports

Pause to reflect before /Election _Day

space:

Cooler weather expected through. Thursday

MICH.

'

Products and services available
in today's marketplace are brought
to the coosumer thru flashy television ads, catchy radio· ads, and
enticing mailings. Consumers can
be bombarded with special offers,
great deals, and bargain prices
which oftentimes sound too good
to be true. Many consumers realize
only .after purchasing a product or a
service that in fact the offer was
100 good to be uue and they have
lost money. In an effort to raise
consumers' awareness of fraud,
October has been designated as
,.
Consumer Protection Month.
·:~ .
The Ohio Atto.rney General's
:.; DearEditor,
We do have control over Office serves a variety of functions
•! The Soulhem Local School Dis- whether or not we will receive from providing leg8J representation
:c;ict will be voting on a school nearly three and one-half million for the Governor, all statewide
;l!ond levy
dollars from the state. We deserve elected officials, the General
·Co build a new K-8 elementary this money! This is a one-time deal Assembly, and all the statewide
:JI:hool and additional space at the only.
departments, boards and commis•111gb school on November 3, 1992.
We, as vocers, can prove to die sions. However, the Auomey Gcn::. In auracting new industry, busi· SI81C that we really want nothing in eral also oversees 20 legal and law
:~sses look closely at two ~rime
Meigs County, or we can disprove
';.11ctors. according to pubhshed the bureaucniiS' opinions of us by
•llusiness reportS and news letters. voting yes. Either way we control
: rJJose factors are Schools and our own destiny.
;lfighways.
·
I ask that you as a Southern
In keeping will! my conviction
•:· We as Meigs County citizens Local voter view first-hand, the that colwn!'ists and COff.lmentat?rs
~annot directly build highways.
classes in .
ought to sufle the metonc arid gtve
•iJthough devoced efforts have made the hallways, and the children people time to pause for sober
::,Ome progress in that area lately. crammed into rooms that were reflection during the last few days
:We can directly deltnnine our own meant for stora§e
Please do of a campaign, I hereby avow that
&lt;fate by voting ' YES" for the SHS not vote "NO unless you have this is the last word you'll hear
=.~g~S:es its toU, both on man's actually
seen this first-hand, espe- from me about politics until after
,
ciaUy at Racine Elementary, which Election Day.
·lady and man's works, s.uch as the \1\!as built in 1911.
·
, But I am not going gently into
:(our\llging el-ed buildings we now
The. new school will be located that good void. Herewith, a few
:Jtjlve.
away from the high school kids, a reflections on the last few weelcs of
· :- Meigs County lost a PRISON, concern of the failed levy seven partisan combat:
~ecause we ,have "no roads", .a years ago;
The Good. Could anything have
.•Catch 22" Situation that we have
Is a new building important?
been better than Debate Ill?
•6o control !)ver. We don't have to Yes, but not nearly as importal!t as "Yes t ~ • I shouted when citizen
:10se a new school! Our own fate the 2uali education our teachers Denton Walthall stood up in theare
· ·n1 now without modem · studio in Richmond, Va., and
;!tiD derennine this.
•• ·
faci itiet. lust think of lhe totally demanded, 'JCan we focus on the
:::
ftrSI ci.- opel'llion we can have at issues and notlhe personalities and
•• .
.our reqUCSL
the mud?" And ··vest•.• 1 shouted
moderator Carole Simpson
,..::."::a=-e-rry'---:-s---:-W:::-:-o-:rl-:d-:-----, .~IIi=!'::.~~ ~v~ when
encoura~ed the audience to keep
::
to-" community. Yes, times 11re the candidates focused on issues.
:··
tovP fill' IUIY of Ul now, but the
I know many of my media col•:
•
bolrd could not pus up a chance at
leagues and the academic
••·
1!1!:1!!!
this Jarp 111111 of money. Southern
"ex peru'' detested it and wanted
~:;
peoplo have been known to buckle
to see fisticuffs. The public's ques: ;·
down wbell the aoiniiCII tough.
Lions were too general and com·
:•:
ENDLE~s
luat one more tfme, Purple monplace, they said. Simpson was
::
Allfe~re...~
Pl'ldet We 111111&amp; IICt when opponu- 100 mtrusive and gave the impres••·
"'ESIOI!H"!I~\.
nity knocks.
sion that character, issues are not
•=·
CAMPAIG~~
No, "Read my lipt" promises
impottant. they said.
;: '
here, but the liVIngs of operating
And I aay horse stools, The
four buildings as ~ to one
; •:
messaae that got dc'liveted that
·I
uiiii-IIIClCiem facility "MAY" ren· riilht wa not Bush's messqe. or
:•
der enouah savings to non-renew .Ciinton's mes!IIIIC. or Peru's 1111111·
;:;
the current three mill emergency
liP: It ~ tho peoples' meaage,
and it laid we are up to our keillas
opelaling levy.
·
Act now! Don't Re-Act! Vote in political detritus and want to
YES on November 3. The future hear them addreas things thallellly
•..
"iJJI•
•
~·· ~ depends on it!
JIIIIIU, God biCis tho hoi polloi.
e _ ., .. &amp;..
s•-·-·
,•.
,
u.....,..,y,
The Bad. Could anything have
•!• DANTE'S INFERNO UPDATED
Scott D. Wolfe,
bceu more ~volting than De* II.
;· ;
SLSD Board President Box 872
the veep melee? AI the Wooden

::.:
....
..

OHIO We.ttlwr
Thunday, Oct. 29

Republican senators fight over NRSC chair

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally sentinel~

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

'

'

�'

-

.

Pomeroy-Middleport~ Ohio

'

Wedneld')y, OCtober 28, 1982

•

Sports

DR.
PEPPER

STORE HOURS

Wednesday, October 28, 1992:

. .

120LCAN5

s

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. :
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN~, OCT. 25 THRU OCT. 31, 1992

99
WAID CROSS'
SONS

MIRACLE WHIP

'

'

.32

USDA .CHOICE· . B~NELESS BEEF

Chuck Roasts.............La.
SUGAR CREEK ENDS and PIECES

Bacon....................3 LB. BOX

r

\ '
\ \
' \ ! I
\

-\

.79(

PEPSI
COLA
.
.
PRO DUOS
2 LmR IOTTlES

;\.

BR~UGHTON. · .

.

.

2 YO Mllk. . . . . . . . . . . GAL.

$_139

Ice Cream..........~......PAIL
'

ORE-IDA CRINKLE CUT

·

1
59(
,,

$299

.DOMINO

GRANULATED SUGAR

69
5LB.
Good Only AI Powell'• '~~~* Yllu
Offer Good Oct. 25thru oct. 31,1882
LJm1t 1 Per Cutto!IM

,.. .

MAXWELL
HOUSE
.
.

·COFFEE

$399
'
.· 39 oz.

I
I
I
I
I

GROUND.

·

-~-

.AT

ARMOUR TREO

.89

c.

120Z.

90

GROUND

CHUCK

10 LB. PACKAGE

s

90

\

\

.

1\.

\

\

\\,

•\

'I

e

\

l,

\

'

\

tJ&lt;:

&lt;

...

Ii ~,I•

LIBBY PUMPKIN

\

79c 160Z.

Slllllflll IUTTEIMILK

BISCUITS

4 10 OZ. CANS 89c
PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST
We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities
No Coupons or Minimum .Purchase

YOU CAN DO THE BEST AT CROSS'
IN RACINE SINCE 1860
'
I

L

By RONALD BLUM
vote, one second and five thirds.
NEW YORK (AP) _ Tony La Mike Hargrove of the Cleveland
Russa, who led lhe Oaldand Athlet- Indians got four points from four
ics to its fourth AL West title in third-place vott:s.
five yean, won his !bird American
LaRussa, 48, won the initial AL
League Man&amp;aer of lhe Year award manager's awanl from the writers
on Tuesday.
in ~ 983 for leading the Chicago
• La Russa, who kept the ream in Whu~ Sox,~ the AL West ti~e. He
contention during the fJrst half of · w?n Jt agam 1n 1989 for leading the
the year despite injuries to key A s 10 the fJJ'St of three straight AL
players, received 25 of 28 first- pennants.
. .
. . ,
.Oaldand ~ 51gmlicant JDJUfles
place votes in ballotin' by the
Bas11ball Writers Association of th1s year, dtsab,llng 16 players I
America.' He got two secohd·place club- record 22 umes. Ammg them
votes and one third for 132 points
were outfJCiders Qavc Henderson,
in the hlllo!ing, which is done 00 a Rickey H~nderson and Jose
S-3-1 basis.
,.
Canaec:o: pitchers Dave Stewart
Phil Gamer, who kept the Mil- an~ Bob ·Welch, catcher Terry
waukee Brewers in contention in Stembllch and first basemlll Mark
the AL East Wllillhe fillalll'eekead ~cO wire. In addition, pitch!lrs
o( the - · wu leCOIId with 76 Kilt ~er and Joe Klink
poinu. He received two ftrst~place ~~~~ ~.e:=:=· rarsc place
YOfel; 2~ ~ea~~llk and tine lhinls.
r, ......., A • "·-'ftft
· h
Jobaity Oates of the Baltimore or a~ 111 ug• ., ..... 111 011 t·
Orioles finished third with '27 pme wlnnln&amp;. strclk, then used 1
points on four IOCOIId-plac:e votes · 10-pme winnmgstrclk 10 extend
1111115 thirds. CliO 0.11111, who led the lead over )(innesota 10 8 1{1.
the TQIOIIIO Blue JayaiO Canlllla'a · gam~ .bY Sept•.18. Oakland won
tint World Series title, wu fOII'th lhe .diVIsion _by IIX pmea over the
with 13 points from one fltll-place · Twins.
l

.

•.

•

-

•
•
•
•

•
•
•
•

••

'

•
'

I

•

•
•
•

Ocl0ber,'l992

•

.••
••

Dear Friends:

•

In a few days, you must choose the pelSOII who will represent you in the Stale
House in Columbus. One: c::mdid:ue h:Js fought h:ird in Columbus for the past
decade 10 help the people of Soulhc:lsl Ohio. Th:lt c::~ndid:llc is Mark Malone.
'

•

•
•
•
•
•

.

.

•
•

Mrut M:llonc h:Js foughtiO rebuild the CCOIIQilly of Southeast Ohio. He took on

the Washington bureaucrats for passing a Cle:m Air Act which put an unfair
burden on Ohio. and tbreai&amp;ed the jobs of Ohio coal miners. Mark took actiqn
to keep Ohio coal burning in the state. by fighting for Ohio's Clean Coal legislation
which protected mining jobs 'all over Southeast Ohio. ·

1

•
'•

:JAN LONG
Stare Scnmor

•
•
•
~

..
•
•
'••

••

Mark Malone has fought for stale dollars for area highways and bridges, and haS
worked to bring money,_ro the area for job training pmgrnms.

•

•

•

•
•
•
•
••
•
'•

Those big city politicians in Columbus sometimes forget about the needs of the people
of Southeastern Ohio. Mark Malone will fight to m:d:c sure that we gel our fnir
share.

'•

On November 3rd, choose a candidate who will fight for the needs of Southeast Ohio.
On November 3rd, vote for Mart M:ilone.

••·"

I

•

•

Sincerely,

•

~

lt#!L-·

cz-;.LONG ~
State Senator ·

.k

'/ • - "-(}lr'fV
'

/-L~c.•
)_.;n -:#-- t. "''
-

•
'•

•
•'•

JOLYNN BOSTER (Bll11..ER)
Former Stale Representative

-

:·

'fOL YNN BOSTER (BUTLER)
Former State Representative

'
,•

.' •••

•

.'

u,.

~I

.

•
•
·•,
.,
•

A MESSAGE FROM SENATOR
JAN LONG &amp; FORMER REP.
JOLYNN BOSTER (BUTLER)

.

10 LB. PACKAGE

s
99C

I

~· i~,l,

I

I

i.~

I

'

Oakland's LaRussa
.chosen
.
AL's Manager of the Year ·

BEEF

·

French
Fries
.
.
.
.
.
.
32 oz. · ·
---Miili--·- N ----,

PINEAPPLE

$ 89

Lg. Eggs....:~.......................ooz.
· . ·.

LIBERTY GOLD

. 2001.

GRADE A

KEMPS SQ~ART PAIL

1\.

LB.

, I

\

By JOHN MOSSMAN
youn~ kids how to win," Baylor
DENVER (AP) - Don Baylor, said. 'If I tell our young guys in
whose first managerial job will spring training, 'We're going to
involve nurturing the fledgling Col- lose 100 game~ust stick with me,'
orado Rockies, insists that expan- that doesn't w . You need enthusion teams don 'i have to-be equaled siasm 10 carry you through S,eptemwith losing.
.
ber.
Baylor, 43, on Tuesday became
"I don't know who wrote that
the fourth cum:nt mjoority manag- rule that you have to lose 100
cr. in the major leagues, joining games if rou'rc an Cllpansion ream.
Cito Gaston of Toronto. Hal We're gomg 10 change the thinking
McRae of Kansas City and Felipe of being an expansion team.
·Alou of Montreal. He signed a
Baylor, an outf~elder, farst base·
three-year contract with lhe Nation- man and designat~d hitter for 19
al League expansion club, which 'seasons with six big league teams,
will begin pJay next spring.
finished his playing career in 1988
Long considered managerial with a .260 average. He had 2,135
material, Baylor was bypassed for . hits, including 338 home runs, and
manager's jobs in Seaule and Mil- . 1,276 RBis, and he wes hit by
waukee a yet~~ ago. He also was a pitches a major leaguc-rec~ 267
finalist for the St. Louis job in times.
August 1990. The former major
Consideied a "manager on the
!eague slugger spent last season as . field" because of his leadership
batting coach for lhe StLouis Cat- qualities, Baylor played in three
dinals, and served in .a similar World Series and seven AL playeaP.acity in 1990 and 1991 with offs. In the latter stages of h1s
Milwaukee.
career, he was acquired by Boston,
At a news conference to Minnesota and Oakland to help
announce the selection, Rockies those teams win pennants.
general manager Bob Gebhard said
He was lhe American League's ,
Baylor agrees with his philosophy Most Valuable Player in 1979.
thl!t expansion teams can be com- when he batted .296, hit 36 homers,
petitive.
.
arove in 139 runs and scoted 120
"1 looked for a patient man 10 runs for the California Angels. ·
deal with our young players and be · Baylor said he never.despaired
a teacher,'• Gebhard said. "But I of getting a managerial position,
also wanted someone who stiU had and said his race had nothing 10 do
a burning desire 10 win baseball with either failing to win olher jobs
games, which is the reason we're or winning this one.
all here. I think we're getting a 1
"I never got into the race pan,"
quality leader for our young ball Baylor said. "I tried 10 be honest
club.'
.
with people and was hopeful I'd
Baylor echoed that winning sen- get one of those jobs. The Colorado
timent
··
·
Rockies job is more than I could
"Eveo though this is an expan- have blirgained for."
sion team, we must teach these
·

GALLON

Potatoes. . . . . . . . . . . 1o LB.

;

Colorado.Rockies hire Baylor
as team's first field manager ·.

CHATEAU
BLEACH·

U. S. #1 RUSSET

\\\\
I

'

79c

BAYLOR HIRED.- Former major league slugger Don Baylor
talks with reporters at a press conference shortly art'er, being
announced 115 the Colorllllo Rockies' first manager Tuesday In Den' ver. ne Rockies will be one or the National Leall"e's· two newest
teams wben the 19!13 season begins In AprO. (AP)

12 oz.

(

lb•

BARTLETT PEARS

FARM
GRAVY

.

Wieners. .-..-". .". .12 oz. 19

oz.

,

$499

KENTUCKY BORDER

$1.29

$159

Round Steak. . . . . . . . .LB.
R1beye Steak.....-..LB.

SHOULDER STEAK

\ ..''

·$229

.

PORK

$169

HAMILTON'S BONELESS

•

PEARL STREET
RACINE, OHIO
949·2550

SALAD
DRESSING

US~A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

·Page-~:

. 24 PACK

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·lO PM •

USDA CHOICE BONELESS.BEEF BOTTOM

Sentinel~

The Daily

•

"Those politicians in Columbus sometimes
forget about the.needs of the people of South- .
. eastern Ohio. Mark Malone win·fight to make
.sure that we get Ol}T fair share.u
Paid for ood

1 oioodloJ* C

•

' '•

••
••

.•••
,•
,•.
.•
•

I,

' •

•

•
••••

••

.•

.."'

•

·wID Eled Moot Malone, Cadlerine Malooe, Trusun:r, Roure I. tronton, OH 4S631

•

•••
1

�-

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

- WednHCfay, October 28,1992
PonMCtj

EASTMAN'S

•clcllePort. Ohio

:Adkins, Shain among winners in Pepper Downs go-kart action

•Your Coi•••••••nity Minded

••

The Dally Senllnel Page 7

By SCOTT WOLFE
Seadnel COI'I'HJIOIIdent
• Mike Adkins ancl Jason Shain,
• both of Racine, were the feature
· winners reapectively in the Stock

Low-Priced S••twa "'•rkeL

and ModifiCCI ponioas of the "T~

pby Day Championship" go-tart
~ program II Pepper Downs
s '!'0Willle8l' Racine Sunday.
Uverlll, 2A tans IIIII 1!0 people

were on hand.
After claimiog

a first and. lhird

in the qualifyinJ beats, Shain
earned enoqli poults f« the pole
position of the modified main.
Shain's IID-7 jumped inlo lhe lead
ill the ei4"t-brt fldd and led all12
laps. tatinl a convincing will over

runner-up Tommy Adkins of

Shain was aboard a Shain Chas- running a suong aecond, the rea!
sis built by hi.! father, Dave .Shain. race was for third place betwee(
The top three finishers, Shain, Randy Beegle, Keilh Hayman
Adkins lllld WUson aD =ived tro- ·scou "Wally" ~ Lap afttj;
phies compliments or Wolfe's lap Beegle led the three car .balll(
Garage in Racine..
WJih Hayman and RanJome m hot'
Heal winners were Shain and pursuit. RIUIS!&gt;me paned Haymaa,
FOx.
'
on the eighth lap, then Hayman•
Ronnie 'wilson in lhc other B &amp;. went bact by two laps later. Ran~
W Garage enlry had lhe fii'St best some again went by on. the outside: ·
won until his kart stalled on the then challenged Beegle f« !bird. :
backchilrc of the final lap. Wilson's
· Finally, Hayman too1c a SIJIOilllj;
problems became more apparent line around Ransome on the insid¢
when his mount blew an engi.ne in to nail down fourth behind ~
the second qualifier.
Ransome was firth followed bl'
. Mike Adkins claimed two sec- Jimmy Pickens, James Smilh, Tim
onds ill lhe qualifying heat races to PiUard,Jerry Slappe of Sissonville;
eam the ~e ror the s,rock feawre W. Vii. and Rick Miller; .
·•
along S1de of nephew Eugene
The always, tough Mill~ boysC
"Grumpy" Adkins Jr. Despite some Rick and Bobby, both suffere&amp;
close action at the start, Adkins through a long day. Bob suffered;
pulled away from the rest of the engine woes, and Rict W!IS w~
field of 14 starters to easily win the out after two accidents.
.
~
20-lap championship.
The top three fmi.sheres were al
•
While "Grumpy" Adkins was
(See RACING on Pa&amp;e 9) '.:

Racine.

anct

Butch Wilson survived 1 first
~ tangle with Charleston, W.Va.

driver Alvin Fox aboard the C &amp;. S
Construction tart ~ finish third.
Fox was fourth ahead of Doug
Reed of Elkview, W.Va.

'

Bartrum contributes to Herd's
victory over UT-Chattanooga

.VELVET SUPEI DIP .

lc C

•

5 QT.
~

PAIL

~

:
:
,,

•j

Pa r-Towels .
BROCCOLI
IUNOI

69

c

~·

WALES CONFERENCE
Palrkk Dlvillon

Tum

W
Pituburp .......... I
N.Y. R...on ..... 7
N.Y. ~.widen .... 5
N.n.J.aoy ... ..... 5
Phlladelphio....... 3
w...._........ 3

T Pta. GF(!A ,
2 II l6 31·
I IS 41 1JI
I II 3'1 36
o 10 32 33

11 -St..ben&lt;illo 40. 12-llilllbom lot. 13Amhcnl SIOclc 31. 14-l.odi C1overloof

6

o

Sako! 21. 18-Col... tou. Wolnut Ridp II:
19-Cin. WinWIIt W. . . 17. lO-LoYCiand-

~

2

Norrll Dlvliion
W L T Pta. GFGA
Miouiooota .......... s 3 1 11 3S 33
TCIIOIWo.............. 5 3 · 1 11 · 35 '19
Doo..;L ...... ......... s 4 o 10 n n
T.,.po Bay ... :.... 4 S 1 9 3S 32
CIUcqo..... ......... 3 S 1 7 33 32

l

.......

TYSON • HOlLY FilMS

c

MIXED

...

FRYER PARTS

USDA CIOICE

T•BONE STEAK
INSTANT
•

IIAXWELL.HOUSE 12

2 22 47

..

•ox

Dlolsloll V
h.
1-Nowadl C.lllaUo Ql) H ................336

panel of lpoftl writ.clft: aftd. broad~
ca1tan raw Ohio hif,b achool rOOlb•U
'IMINI Ut tt. .U.th JtiiUlar-IMICir! pol1 for
Ths Auociued Preu, by Ohio Hiah
School ALhlolic Auoeinion di~iliOftl,
wiLh w.on-Jon record and lOll I poinu

"
•

•

•
•
•
•

Othen neee.-... 12 w

u -llollloYillo ... n

nw (I) 36.

Mort poiAtl:
(tic~Dthon. ~.oooo-

I""MiddkloMI Fenwick 25.
IS-Howard Eu1 K.11oJ. 16. 16 (tie)·
Donvillo, Summi1 S~adon Lictln&amp; lloo. 13.
11 (H)-Canal Winchala', ~ l..cwil-

(fl!lt·placc "'*'in parauhcen):

•

•

•

1' Iowa Triad 12.

,,

BaaebaU

1-0 ..........................!11

;:~-tr.:.~~. :::::::::::::: :::::: ~

1oU.V.. City 7-1 ... .............................. cSS

Division u

TPll.
1 · - (29) 8-0 ..............................333
2-Bclolt w... ~nndo (1) B·O ........... ..279
3-Louimllo (1) 1-0............................ .266 .C.P~lll7- l.------ ..1M

s-v............. a...., (1)7-1 ...........163

...•
•

A-Lea...

S·l•oc••er I..O ................................ ,.. ITJ
6-Monolidd 1-0 .... .............. .152

OIMn J«eewl.. ll or more pOinll:
11-C..ton M&lt;Kinley 37, 12-Cin.1on l4. l~Younp&amp;own Auttlnlown FilCh
19. l""Troy 17. 13-Mentor 14.

'

~

Transactions

2-Cin. (511.0 ......................320
3-Cin. SL Xavier (4) 1-0 .................... .275
4-l!udld .... ........... ... ..........................229

·

•.•

9--7-1 ........................................10
10-Aoil.cl 5onoca Eoa 7.1.. ............ ........49

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Uow •

9

•

2-SL llanry (6) 1-0........................ ...... 3116
3-Frrm&lt;ou SL Joooph (2) 1-e.............. no
4-Morion Plouonl (2) l-ll ................... 214
S-CodoM1Io (1) 1-G ................. :..........169
6-(:ol·'-br• (lrrgyc 1..() ................. ...... 111

ILIII

7--~

. . . . .,.}

7-Mdlonold , . , .................................105
8-J.o&lt;klond (3) ....................................91

Ttan1
•
Pla.
1-0en. s~ lpatius (27) 8-0 ..........~ ..357

;

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

T-

Ohio high school
football poll

ol 399

BANQUET .... OL

CaJsay .. W'"""'"" 1&gt;411 p.m.

Division I

~

Uma S. 35. 14-0iwoll a....! VIIley 26. 15-CV ,wei 24. 16 (lie)-Cincin. nali Wyomina; (1), IAcurillt VsL 11.
11-Sprinaflold N....__ (I) 14. 19C&amp;rc)' ll.lO-~vWeCalh. OinL 12:

PbUicWpldlll Chiclao, 1:40 p.m.
Piulbuqh at St. LoW, 1:40 p.m.

II.

Pastor: llike Pa•1lo, 500 I. S.co•dlve., Middleport, o•io 45760

tnanlpr of COIIUTUmlly propml.

it-= ltti-~~;";,~~:

NowJ...,.atlllliiOid, 7:4()p.m.
7:40p.m.
Tampa Bay al MoaiiMl. 7:-tO p.m.
SanJ.-oOlllooooil, 7:40p.m.
BlllfaloatTamn~

Thursday's zames

IPftE

~

...

I

Lao...,.••. - . 7:40p.m.
Queboc•tN.Y. R...- . 7:40p.m.

PF

~

&amp;!i-ll. . . . . . . . . . . . .

~ II Edmciitoo, 9:40 1'"'WuhinJ&amp;on at VucouYfl', 10:40 p.m.

"-

..:

Sunday: 10:00 A.M. and 7:00 P.M.
Monday &amp; Tuesday: 7:00P.M.

of pubU~a ­
tiCiftl and information. Named Ed Olin

~

..

•
•
•

_...y

~ D'A&amp;Qitino ditectcw

.,'

. S-llameovillo
lSI
6-T...oapny
ol-li ..................... Jll
7-SuWvm Black "y•l-0................. 106
1-B""*"i'io(l) 7-1 .. .............................
g...a.,..c-.1CIIh.7•1 N..._.. OOOOOo0 ..0011
. l ..WII
---'1

',.,

,

Gifts Of
The Holy Spirit

••

:I-Colllmbu ....._,_(S) l-ll ............ 7ll3
3-Alaon- (2) ............ ...... 25!
4-CH!. Acaol. ~ Phya. 1!&lt;1, (317-1 ....... 205

' Toalcht'spmea

$ 89

FROZEN

..

"Jesus Christ"

,.,.

1-w.,.. KanodY (70) 1.0 ............... 326

~4,TompoBay3

"

Praise and
Worship

Dlvlsl011 IV .
T....

to. Anplel4, N.Y. klanden 3

COFFEE · . Jo
DINNERS

l!4mocit&lt;it .......... I 8 1
S1nl010............. J I 0

11

The Gospel Of

Pil'-001 center, SI,IXIO, and Tom Cb•mbal PboeiW&amp; s.... forward , Sl,SOO, for
an ~llioa. d\lrina a P!IIC ..,_ Oc1. 21
Fino4 Jlhoeais'• ClluW Barldey,_Olnny
""'40 ,..t Oli.., Millor, ISIJQ "1!'0:0 lor
la.WlJ 1M t.da ue. diWina u.e incidena. .
Fined s-ale'• Shawn JCtmp. $8,(#J, and
llolmr'• Seal .......,.,stJOO, few their
~ u. aa a1wr:.uaa durina 1he Sllpcr......_N_pmc .. Oc&lt;22.
NBA P1:AYERS ASSOCIATION - CI-DCAGO BUU.S- WalY
8lan10n, rorwud.

Jesus

Preaching

· Basketball

GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS -;
Waived 5\eve Hawan,auard.
NEW YORK. KNICKS - Named

n

12 36 2o4
9 33 26

Of

tcrin.

PlalbwJb 7. aa.... 2

......

~~~~

••

n

1.oo Jln&amp;cl&lt;a....... 6 3 1
6 3 0
VIDCOUw:r ......... 4 3 1

Salvation
Jn The Name

Prayer
For The Sick

ll·Uma DISh 40. 11-Chapin Falla Ken·
'""' 34. 13 (U.).........•IIt Sherldon (1~
TwWbuiJ Chomberlin 22. IS (li&amp;)·KolAhct, Mmmw Lil:llcMi&amp;mi 16.17BollaUol3.
..

Tuesday's ICOns

PIUII(

I

-NOVEMBER 1, 2, &amp; 3, 1992

NotlooiiBukolboll As10&lt;~llon .
NBA -Mood Olden Polynioo, lldroit

4-N-•IIIe- Ycwk (1) 1-t--.191
S.OcNe. Bc:n dictine 7-1 ·-················· 129
6-llamilionBodin 7-1........,.............. .. 122
7-0amonoown Y.U.y Yacw (I) 1-0...110
a-v....,...... Mocnoy 6-2 ...............101

1D-Mu1ino Fary 7-1 .............................69
' l
0...,.. na:IYina 12 or 111~ pal nil:

wu.up.., ........... 4 6 o 1 n 42
3 2'\ SO .

\

HOLY · GHOST CAMPMEETING

buckle~-·

Namod Alex En&amp;lilh d.ircetor of p1•~r
_
.... _
' od"'·'

"'Wawrly 7·1 ---------"'3

7. lt ..2

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

'

REJOICING LIFE CHURCH

DeclaMCI 1a aerNe 1hc 1993 oplion on
Ken Howoll, pi~ehu. N1mecl Mike Ar·

II

,_.,_ ())U

2 20 47

3 6 I

·h.

1-Maoar Like Calltolic (25) 1-0........332
!1-Y....,.town UnuJine (4) 1-0........ .297

·
T...,

St.Loui.J ....... .....

Division m

T.-

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

Ora·

polnla:

Hwoa 14.

tO 40 30
6 7ll 36

IW1fard ............. 3 6 0
Ottawa ·-···'-······ I I 0

retdYia&amp; 12a •on

30. 15·0.)'\0n Cbaminad.J~aliC~Me (1)
27. t6-Cohnnbu1 Brookl\avcn 22. 11·

I 42 49

Smythe Dlrillon

.'

Olhen

6 1JI 3S

Bulfllo............... S 3 0

~, ·

.:::.=

·

L
0
2
4
4

Aclunl Dl•ldoll
801\0n................ 6 1 1 13 41 26
- . ............ 5 3 2 12 ., 31
~ ............... 531114233

SEAliEST .

~·

6-Wuh. CH Miami True 7·1 •... _., .._145
7-ll.oyloM Boclt.,. 7-1 ....:................. 1·10
I.SL Mayo Manaoill (2) 7-1............ 103
~Akron B~ 6-2 ................ l........... 54
ID-Ely&gt;io W,.t(l) 8-0 ...........................43

: . In the NHL ..:

..
..•.

yards and a touchdown in Marshall's big 34-13 win over The
Citadel. For his effort, he was
named lhe Mars~all Quarterback
Club's player of the week and also
lhe C~' s Spon Tavern player of
lhe week.
The Thundering Herd is ranlced
second in the nation ill Division 1AA. This week, Marshall willlJ'avel to Western Carolina.

Scorehoat·d

"

- lOll

FUSN

BARTRUM SCORES - Former Melp standout Mike Bartrum
(19) runs over a UT -Chattanooga player and diVH into the end zone
ror bls third toucbdo- ot the year iD last week's 52-13 wla by Marshall over the Moccasins. Bartram pidled In the 10-:rard scoring toss
-one or two passes he cau1bt ror the day ror 16.yards- from
quarterback Micbael Payton late in the second period. Bartrum is
second In tbe Southern Conrerence wltb 31 receptions.

Former Meigs High standout
Mike Banrum continues to have an
outstanding season fm" the Mmbal
.
I
University Thundering Herd.
• The 6-S, 240-pound senior tight
elid caught two more passes for 16
. yards and a touchdown in last Sat-.
urday's S2-23 win over liT-Chattanooga. Bartram, like most of the
Thundering Herd starters played
only in the first half after Marshall
rolled up a large halftime lead.
On the season, Bartrum has
pulled in 31 passes 'for 3S3 ' yards
and three touchdowns. His catches
rank him second in the Southern
Confi:tence behind leal!imarc Troy
Brown, who has 36. All of
Bartrum 's touchdowns have come
. in the last thi!C conieS IS.
Two weets ago, Banrwn caught
a career-high seven passes for 65

~

•

.CALIFORNIA 1 ANGl!LS - An·
nounc:ed they wiUIIDI offer ,atary ubi.,_.
uoo 10 llubio Broob ond K"' Ol.alt/oll,
w--., and Mike Fi~QM~d, eak:ha-.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS - An·
p i -...
r~ .. Clll&amp;rif:bl
w bceamc

•......., tMt"'""·•prncn•
a....c-.
I fft1c lied.

.,

NEW YOIUC YAN1CEES - Deolinod

Lo &amp;l&amp;rchs lite 1"993 opdon on Scou
S• d m, pi&amp;dam'.

Nollooo!Lol...

th----

COLORADO ROCKIES -: Named
Don Ba)'lot IMn..... and •aped him 10 •

PIULADELPHIA PIIILUES --, An·

nouncod. they will Dell Glfer W..l)' llbiln·
tieD Lo W.Uy Backman, MC:md buanua.

Get your free gift for Christmas '92 and extra cash for Christmas '93.
Just open a Christmas Club now and receive a free gift (free serving tray with $1 , $2 or $3 per week club; choice of one or lhree cookie
tins for $5, $10 or $20 per week club) .. . then just make 50 weekly payments toward your 1993 Chnstmas Club and Peoples Bank w11l
make the 51st payment for you-that's the Peoples advantage!
J'

I
I
I

r

·FOODLAND
~JJ!' 1~ DOZEN
.-~ LARGE

:

•SKIPPY
· •IUTieUIII.O.UIES

DELICIOUS COOliES

$ 29
. 14 oz.
We AIIIIW . . . Algi!IID

••

r

........
COCI·COLI

I

1
1

I
I

I

)

Limit ; ·With Coupon and $10.00 Additional Pun:haae
1
. ValldthruO~~r!1:_.1~. __ • • • _ • • • _ .1

$ 79
CPOTATO
MIKE·SELU

11

FOODLAIID

16oz.

BAG

Of

,:

Jones

99c

:

I .

I

I Address

1

I.

I
I

I~

~ .

•

:

: Circle amount and enclose check for first payment. .

$1

$2 .

$3

$5

$tO

$20

.

Gih selection: a $1 , $2 or S3 per week club qualilies for a lree serving lray: a S5. $10 or $20
per week club q&gt;Jfl~es for choice of one ol lhree cookie tins. Ask youtleller.

:

I
·

Cll'llt~
f"IUII"1t)el
~~
inltrtsl

•

ha\11 rid lllln

.111ft

:

I
J
J
I

I

Date

,,_ 1

P1ld for by C1ndldatl

fits
~--------------------~
Register -

· StiPPit of

MARlEnA

I

I

1 Siplure

COMMISSIONER·

I
I
I

I _ I request and aut110;ize autcxMtic transfer from (circle one):
I Checking Regular Savings
II Acoqin1 No. - Social Seolrnty No.
PlflMldOI Plf)ury. l
11llhat N
srmwn on h lamliS l!l'fOOI'I'K1 1UPI)'tl' Wr!lllti!IO!l
I l'ltJrillf nl (2) tiiiiiMn 1'101 kllljlt'110
ei!tw t:Mit.al.dl l
IIIKif1ld fr.t I SIIII!KIIO
t.t.up
rtiiA at at..,.., ~ all
or ~- or ltlllnllmll AlwntJe s.Mcllt\11 I'10IIIild me
I lhl! ,., no
wih'IOianil·
wilttdding • 1
IOnglt' . _ . , - . .

Member FDIC

To open a 1993 Christmas Club, complete the form
1 and return it to any offiCe of Peoples Bank.

I Weekly Amount ol1993 Christmas Club

~

FRENCH ONION
DIP

o. .

Phooo

1 Automatic Transfer Option

Richard E.

I

- -------------•--

CHIPS

Re·Eiect .

18 COUNT CARlON. :

: Name

I
I
I

I

EGGS

I

Ability
Experience
Knowledge

r--------------~~----,
1
Reserve my free gift and open a Christmas Club! I
I
J

mey be irnited and SIAJjec1 to evailalilily.

ATHENS
BELPRE
LOWELL
MIDDLEPORT ·
NELSONVILLE
THE PLAINS

138 Putnam St.
Frontier Shopping Center
Second &amp; Scammel Sts.
State Route 7, Reno.
Washington Square Center
1 North Court St.
801 East State St.
1902 Washington Blvd.
510 Washington Blvd.
300 Main St.
97 N. Second Ave.
35 Public Square
W~h ington St.
70 N. Plains Rd.

373-3155

593-n61
423-7516

896-2369
992-6661
753-1955'
797-4547

·

Plolollll Enono.

1',
v

'

'

••

'~

•"'
II

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Peg a 1 The Dally Sentinel

-..

.

.. .....
·~

•.~edneeday, October 28,1992

Wednesday, October 28, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel-Pap• I

Ohio football
sideline notes •..

•
•
•
:
.
.
.

:
.

'

By RUSI'Y MILLER
AP Sports Wrltrr
Maybe that's why !hey call it
Wailie.
Tuledo Waite, beaten up last
year by Toledo Woodward 56·0~
wailed a year to exact reven!le,
pounding Woodwa'd 49-0 Friday.
"We told die kids aU week bow
they beat us S6-()." said Waite
coach Charlie Deiter. "In high
school football. that was pretty
good iJ)cenrive."
.Elsew here around the state,
Cory-Rawson's JeH Crawford
completed IS of 29 (J8SSCS for 329
yards and two tOucbdowns in a 12·
7 viciOf)'·OVer An:adilL Doug Kosc
caught six passes for 20S yards and
lhc touchdowns, covering 73 and
S&amp; yards. Crawford. who hit Kose
·w1llllhc winning touchdown pass
with 2:52 to play, intercepted a
pass 30 seconds larcr to seal the
win.
Marcus }looter scored on five
runs and a twO-puint conversion to
set single game (32) and season
(ISO) leCOrds for points at Swnmit
Station Licking Heights. He also
gained 238 yards to liln his season
101a1 .0 a school-record 1,627 in a
67-15 victory over New Albany,
lhc d1ird rime Ibis year be's scored
five TDs in a game.
Quarterback Allen Adams
accounrcd for six of Cardington·
Lincoln •s $even touchdowns in a
48-19 victory over Sparta Highland. He SCOIW dm:e and ran for
three Olbers.. paSsed for one two·
point conversion and ran for another. He complellld all six or his passes for 161 yards and carried five
times for lOS ya-ds.
.
Looclon's Carl King gained 331
yards on 19 carries and scored six
IOuChdowns in a 58- IS vic:tory over
Johnstown; Akron Manchester's
Tucker Plppls complcttd all seven
of his pass llllelllpts for 204 yards
in a 49-6 vic:tory over Indian Valley; Colwnbus Grove's Jim Eversole ran for 210 yards - 196 in lhe
rust half - and scored twice in a
36-6 win over Crider;Jville Perry;
Man Allshouse of Van Buren carried 11 times for 269 yardsa and
two soores in a 44-7 win over Vanlue; Malk Riegle inteltqllCd three
passes but abo converted all three
eKJra-point kicks in Arlington's 2120 victory over Hardin Northern;
Canton South's Kevin Burch
tewrned an intcra:plion I 02 yards
for a touchdown in a 21-6 victory

'

.

·Has ·yo r H _gs for Health
Flash Frozen

Tu ey
Breast:::~

lTo-kartracing ... __~cc~on~ti~oo~ea~fr~om~P~a~ge~7&gt;~------------------aboard Gene Adkins Sr.'s chassis Jerry Slappe and Riel&gt; Miller.
Lacomb over Milhone
and received trophies from Wolfe's
Two-cycle division
ROOKIE OF THE YEAR Garage.
Heat - Steve Milhone, Fox, Scott Ransome
Heat winners were Beegle and
Shain
Youngest Driver "beat win·
Eugene Adllins Jr., while Mike
Grudge Match Race - Phil ner"- Tyler French
•
Adkins also lOOk a preliminary.
Scott Ransome earned "Rookie
or the year" honors for his hardcharging race to fifth.
WILL BE HOLDING
A special race was staged in
honor of lhe field's youngest competitor, six year-old Tyler French,
who received a trophy for his
7:30 p.m. each evening
·
1•
effon. The youngster got to carry
EVANGEUST: DAVE COUCH
the checkered flag as well.
Bishopville Churcl) of Christ, Glouster, Ohio
In .the two-cycle grudge match,
(Dave fllld hia wife, Debbie, ap111t !I ,..,. in Ghana, Woat Africa,
Phil LaComb defeated Steve Mil•• mi11ionarloa
hone. Milhone also won the first
SPECIAL
MUSIC
EACH
EVENING BEGINNING AT7:15
heal.
Tom
Runvon,
Miniater,
invitea tho public to allond
Thi s week the racers race at
Beltline Speedway in East Letart.
SUMMARY
Modified division
First heat- Alvin Fox , Jason
Shain, Tommy Adkins, Butch Wilson and Doug Reed.
Second heat- Shain, Adkins,
Wilson, Fox and Reed.
Feature- Shain , Adkins, Wil·
son, Fox, Reed.
Stock division
Preliminary heat - Mite
Adkins, Gene Adkins, Rick Miller.
First heat - Randy Beegle,
•
Mike Adkins, Scott Ransome,
Grumpy Adkins and Keith Hay·
man.
,
Second · heat Eugene
· "Grumpy" Adkins, M. Adkins,
Jimmy Pickens, Beegle and Marc
French.
Feature - M. Adkins, Adkins
Jr .. Beegle, Hayman, Ransome,
Pickef\S, James Smith, Tim Dillard,

.lcler
.
.
.
.
,
...
C

BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST

REVIVAL·

OCT. 30, 31 ·and NOV. 1, 1992

Hallow•• ·

'

Partie•

RED • U.S. Fancy

·- Jonathon
les

4

lb.

•

Bag

Great For
Irick or
INatNigllt

• ROOKIE OF THE YEAR - Scolt (Wally) ·
V.ansome (center) or Letart, W.Va. finished ftfth
in tbe reature event In last '!eeketid's Pepper

. DowDs &amp;O·kart action 'at Dorcas to win Rookie or
tbe Yeu bonors. Flanking ~im are Hillton
Wf!ll'e Jr. (left) and ftagman Fred Miller. .

-•
•

••

'

'

points.

••
•
• AROUND THE BEND- Drivers Ronnie
:I.VUson, Jason Sbaln, Butch Wilson, Dou~ Reed; ·
Steve Milbone, Alvin Fox, Tommy Adktns and

.;llban, Mascitti OAC

..w........., ;_
: -_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,.,_

PASS DE DEUX: HopewellLoudon's Josh Zoeller compleled
18 of 49 passes for 212 yards aild
two touchdowns in a 19-1 S win
over North Baltimore and quarterbatt Btent Crous. who hit II of 22
for I 18 yards and one IOUChdown;
Marc Rueblc hit 20 of 27 for 177
yards and a score but Galion still
lost .to Upper Sandusky 29-21 as
Ryan Holman completed 11 of 21
for 16I yards and a touchdown;
Fostoria St. Wendelin's Andy
Moes complered IS or 23 for 252
yards and four tcuchdowns in a 3226 overtime win over Tiffin
Calvert and R)'lll Shultz, who complded 12 ol22 for 164 yards.

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

-

'"'1

•
: CLEVELAND (AP) - John
C;rroll fullback Bruce Saban and
Mount Union defensive back Nick
M"asciui have been chosen the
players of the week in the Ohio
Conference.

1 Roll Pkg.

He Will Represent Our Values!

Tennis
,
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)
- Second-seeded Stefan Edberg of
· Sweden beat Andrei Medvedev of
Ukraine 6-1, 7-6 (7-1) and sixthseeded Boris Becker of Germany
defeated Jonas Svensson or Sweden 6-4. 6-2 in the second round of
the Stockholm Open.

,.

'

STATE REPRESENTATIVE

Sports shorts

.Yow C..lce of flowers· llttlf Gal• Clil.

Velvet....-...
Ice Cream .:

PhD LaComR ·makt it around tbe bend during
last weekend's Trophy Day Championships at
Pepper Downs Speedway at.Dorcas. ·
.

Pd. for by the Committee to Elect Frank Cremeana,
Steven B. Chapman, Tre88.

Why Vote For John Lentes
Next County Prosecutor

players of the week
· Saban, a senior from Parma, tied
a school record with five touch·
downs in a 56-20 victory over
Otterbein. He carried 18 times for
92 yards and caught three passes
for 43 Yanls.

...........

t1 COMMITTED .to collect all delinqu-

Paper low~Is.

Boun

For

If

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

STRAINED

PBL results

.Heinz ·
Baby·. Food

House

These are lbe results of recent

, Fre•ch
•-••
or
Ute Yal'ltl
.. ·
12·13 ... c.

PARKA¥

,..., ...........' 12~

.1 ''
TOP FROST

26·30·40-44·54 Ct.

Chicken, .
Turkey or Beef

Diapers

3.....
'·'1

'

.

'
I

Parkay ~

2.0.

r
' '

::

.

.

fARM RAISID

Fresh Whole ·.

''".
., •
" ••
I•

"'"-•
••

,

1'1!

6:00 P.M. 'TIL I 0:00 P.M. ·

.

20%.0FF STOREWIDE
il

••
••
••
• ••
•' ••
••
' ••

Catfish
\.

,.

HALLOWEEN
.MOONLIGHT SALE
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29

________________1__,....:!

ies

Pies

DAN'S ANNUAL

$ ' ..

4 ...

VoTE FOR .

til
••

MARGARINE · :~
.... Qll'l.

ent land taxes
~ COMMITTED to be available to
public officials and general public
t1 COMMITTED to fair and · iust
criminal prosecutions .free from
political pressur~
t1 COMMITTED to prevent crime,
not jusi,Jeact to crime
t1 COMMITTED to put the Prosecutor's Office ahead
of private prac.
.
lice
ELECT

CAST YOUR

LIMIT 4 Per Family, Plu..
'----_.;..;._~--------..,., __
•

FRANK CREMEANS

ELECT

...

Larry Wotre, Wayne (Butcb) Wilson (third),
Tommy Adkins (second), nagman Fred MiUer,
Shain and sponsor Hilton Woll'e Jr.

MODIFIED WINNERS - Jason Shain or
Antiquity won tbe Briggs &amp; Stratton Modified
1/C class at Pepper Downs Speedway at Dorcas
last weekend. From left to right are sponsor

Apple~

Derek Miller of Millersburg
West Holmes c:ompleted just six
passes against Orrville, but dm:e
were for touchdowns in a 19-15
victory; ln.C.'I Ryaa Gatbrle ~plfCft 1 oru , ... ror 190
yards ud Wee ICGftl ia a 62·7
Japddkle over No. 4-nnked West
Vil'liDia Class lt.AA poWer Hunt·
in§~!! East; Briaa Toppiag,
W . K - ud Travis Layae
~ac· rubed ror IIOI'e tban 100
yards as Coal Grov.e bat South
Poiat 43-12; Genoa's Jim Mazey
rushed .for 212 yards on 18 carries
as Kansas ' atot.a lost for lhe rust
time, 26- I 3; Man Grant scored four
touchdowns and rushed for 174
yards as Bellevue won its sevenlh ·
in a row.
SL Henry's Doug Speck scored
three times in a 44-7 win over
Parkway; Defiance's Chris Ripke
hit 16 of 21 passes for 239 yards
and a toucbdown in a 41-0 victory
over Kenton; Caldwell's Josh
Ptrkiu bu 1,312 yards on 147
rarries, ._ caacltl D passes ror
~J4 yards aad bas stored 22
tuaclldowas aad two extra

,.

From left to right are trophy sponsor Hilton
Wotre Jr or Wolfe's Garage, Randy Beegle
(third place), Mike Adkins, ftagman Fred MiUer
and Eugeue Adkins (runner-up).

GROWER'S PRIDE • Gallon

over Marlington. ·

action at the Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes.
Oct.l4
L~acae - Early Wednesday
Mixed
Teaas (ia on1n- or r..lsh) R!ltland American Legion (46),
Hactcu Roormg (34), No. S S&amp;V
(32). Tony's Carry Out (30).
Teaford Golf &amp; Trophies (28), No.
I (22).
,
Hi&amp;ll Rrie5- Terry Scidenahcl
(504) llld Becky Ellis (489)
Secoad-lli&amp;lleat anita
Jimmy Hawley (474) and Dottie
WiU(474)
HiJb_.JI•t - T-•Y li•·
(187) ... Beety Ellil (113)
Seeead ..IP ..- -Dewey
Smitb (177) 8lld Marlcoe Wi11011
(172)
T - Rrie5 -Rutland Ameri·
can Lqion (1860)
'
T - p11t - Rudand American Lqion (683)

: PEPPER DOWNS STOCK WINNERS Racine's Mike Adkins won tbe Briggs. stock
class title in tbe first Tropby Day Cbampi·
'bnsblps at Pepper DOWII5 Speedway at Dorcas.

HEALTH!

BE?r"IER
Thesday, Nov. 3

~

10 a.m. - 3 p .m .
,,

I

l's Election Day! On you 're w~y to and from the

.

polls stop by and cast your vote forbenei' health at ,1
our 3rd Annual Fall Health Resource
. Festival Take advanta!le of our free health
screenings. pick up some valuable health·
rehlted infonnation. and enjoy our AllAmerican refreshments ... popcom, hot
dogs &amp; apple pie!

.

tl

'

'• •

'' •
•
.' ' ••

... •

..
..
-

-

~

•

290 North Second
Mi&lt;Jdleport. Ohio 4&amp; 760

PLEASANT VALLEY

Home Medical Equipment

•

JOHN LENTES
•

A COMPETENT AND DEPENDABLE ATIORNEY....
FOR A BEITER MEIGS COUNTY...
Paid for by the Candidate

1011 VIand Street • POint Plea~nt. WV • (304) 675-61 00

.

·

�.

By The Bend

The Daily Sentbiel
VVednesda~October28,1992

MICIOWAYI OYIN
.•IHI VCR REPAIR

- Page-10

AU IIlilS
lrl.. lt Ia Or We
Pick U!!o
liN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or

Woman feels her ex~husbaiid's
, change of heart for child is fake
Dear Aal I IIden: I believe in
fairnca, bUt divon:e judgea are
~ thinp too far theac days ••
s"caflc:aUy ftlgarding visitation
rights for fadlers.
.1 ftlCC:IIiJy ~ of I cate wJ1en1

the court ordered I young mother
who WIS breast-feeding her infant
to pump her lRast mill; and bollle
!t so ~ father could participate
1~ th~ mfant's feedings during

v•s•'ata.

FREEWAY RUNWAY • Burl Burris, 66, tu·
ies hi~ Ce5$na 172 up tbe Center Street of'r-ramp
along I580 in Castro Valley, Calif., Tuesday
afternoon after makin&amp; a forced emergency
landing onto tbe ffftWlly center divider wbeil be

·ran out or ruel. Burris landed bls plane without
mishap just btrore the evening commute, but
snarled tratric until tbe plane was removed l'rom
the freeway. (AP photo)

---Names in the news ___
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Bill
Cosby is considering buying NBC.
" It's for real. It is serious. ll's
not a rumor," his spokesman ,
David Brokaw, said Tuesday:
The 55-year-old comedian is
wonh more than $300 million, by
Forbes magazine's estimate.
NBC spokeswoman Betty Hudson had no commenL
·
The network, own~ by General
Electric Co., has fallen to third
place in the prime-time ratings and
for months has been rumored to be
up for sale.
NEW YORK (AP) - Julie
Andrews is returning to the New
York stage for the first time in
three decades.
" Putting II Together," a cele-

bration of. Stephen Sondhei m
songs, opens off-Broadway in
March . . It also stars James
Naughton, Michael .Rupert, Rachel
York and Christopher Durang.
Andrews, 57, made her Broadway debut in 1954 in "The Boy
Friend" and became a star in 1956
when she appeared opposite Rex
Harrison in "My Fair Lady." Her
last Broadway .appearance was in
"Camel01," which opened in 1960.
"Really, Stephen Sondheim is
the .reason I'm doing this," she
said in today's The New York
Times. " I've known him for many
years, since I was frrst on Broad·
way , and I' ve always been an
admirer.''
The show features songs from
"Sunday in the Park With

Community calendar
.=====================
•

George," "Merrily We Roll
Along," ~~.Sweeney Todd," "Into
the Woods ' ' and ''Assassins.''
CHICAGO (AP) - Michael
Jordan says he has learned his lesson - no high-stakes betting.
The Chicago Bulls basketball
star admitted during !ames "Slim"
Bouler's federal drug and moneylaundering trial last week that he
lost $57,000 in golf and poker bets
to Bouler in one weekend last year.
" Winning is great, but when
you lose thai. amount and get all the
abuse) got, it ain't worth it any
longer," Jordan said in an interview MOnday.
He said he wiD stick to $20 bets.
" I think people can accept my losing $40 or $50. It's easy to relate
to," Jordan said.
Bouler was acquitted of drug
charges Friday in Charlotte, N.C.,
but was found guilty of trying to
launder money.

•

Wben I became pregnant, my
husblnd hounded me to get an
abortion and madJ:: several threats.
When I refused,' he beat me qp,
hoping rd have a miscarriage. I left
the animal. and went through the
biM of my daughler alone,
· We wm diYOited after the baby
was born and I was awarded
custody. The rat suddenly turned
"palei'Da)" and demanded his rights
to visitation. I fought against it,
reminding the judge .th!lt this was a
child he did nol wanL Well, Ann, I
lost
I am extremely angry .that the
court never IOOic this man's violertt
behavior into consideration. I
thought the welfare of the child was
SUpposed to CClllle ftrSt in the eyes
or the law. What dO you have to say
. about this? - HOT UNDER 1lffi
COLLAR IN SARASOTA, R.A.
DERA SARA: I can understand
your anger but "the animal" may
have had a change ol hearL Encour·

--

CINCINNATI (AP)- A feder·
Community Calendar Items Mountaineers will perfonn Friday
at
appeals
court refused to recon · appear two da,s before an event at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
sider
its
ruling
that 2 Live Crew's
•
•a"d the day or th!lt event. Items
'parody
of
Roy
Orbison's ''Oh,
must be received .wen in advance
WILKESVILLE - Smorgasbord
Pretty
Woman"
violated
the song's
to assure publication in tbe cal· dinner, Wilkesville Pythian Hall,
·
copyright.
Friday beginning at 4 p.m. Mults,
endar.
The parody, Written in 1989, is
$5; children under 12, $2.50. Pubon
the album "As Clean as .They
WEDNESDAY
lic invited.
Wanna
Be." The copyright hOlder,
· REEDSVILLE • Eden United
Acuff-Rose
Music Inc., had refused
Brethren Church will hold revival
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppermission
to use the song and
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
sued
the
rap
group and its record
with Rev. Bob Wiseman. There . Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
company
for
unspecified
damages.
wiU be special singing nightly.
Halloween Dance Friday from 8A
panel
of
the
6th
U.S.
Circuit
11:30 p.m. with music by Smokey
Court
of
Appeals
ruled
2-1
in
favor
• POMEROY • The Republi ~an Mountain Drifters. Public invited.
of
AcufT-Rose
in
AugusL
The
rap
- Executive Committee will meet
group
asked
the
fun
14-judge
court
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at headquarMIDDLEPORT • Bradbury
ters, Main Sueet,J&gt;omeroy. The Church of Christ, revival, Friday to consider the case. That request
Republican Women's Club will through Sunday, 7:30p.m. nightly. was denied Tuesday.
meet there at 7 p.m. Thursday.
Dave Couch BishoP.ville Church of
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - TV
Christ, Glouster. w1U be evangelist
actor
James Wainwri~ht was senCHESTER · .There will be a Special music ni~htly a'r 7:15 p.m.
tenced
to a year in jail for cocaine
haunted house at the old Chester Tom Runyon, mmister, invites the
possession.
Coun House Wednesila:y, Thursday public.
The 54-year-old Wainright, who
· and SaiUrday from 7-10 p.m.
appeared
as mad scientist Simon
. Admission to the house is free of
LON() BOTTOM • Faith Full
Quaid
in
the 1980 CBS series
· charge and the public is invited.
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have preaching and s inging " Beyond Westworld" and also
LONG BOTTOM • Mt. Olive Friday at 7 p.m. with David Dailey starred -as Lt. Franle Dain in the
Community Church, Loog Bonom, and the Dailey Family . Pastor ABC police drama "Jigsaw" in
will have revival, Wednesday Steve Reed invites the public. Fel- 1976, pleaded guilty Monday.
Police confiscated four ounces
through Saturday at 7 p.m. nightly. lowship will follow.
of cocaine when they arrested
· Rev. Lawrence Parsons is the evangelist. Pastor Lawrence Bush
HOCKINGPORT • There will Wainwright last year.
invites the public.
be a Halloween dance Friday from
8-11 :30 p.m. at the Reynolds build·
Justice, American style
·'
THURSDAY
ing in Hockingpon. Those attendThe 7th Amendment to the Consti·
TUPPERS PLAINS • Trick-or- ing may dress in costume if tution is the right of trial by jury. It
:_ treat in Tuppers Plains will be desired. Public invited. Ronnie states: "In suits at common law.
:. Thursday from 6-7 p.m. The siren Wood will be the caner. Music will where the value in controversy shall
: will sound to begin and end the be provided by "Out of the Blue.''
exceed $20 dollars. the right of trial
by jury shall be preserved, and no fact
• ·• hour. The frre department will be
PORTLAND • The Lebanon tried by a jury shall be otherwise re·
: on hand to assist the trick-or·
Township Trustees will meet Fri- examined in any court of the United
treaters.
day at 7 p.m. at the township build- - States, than according to the rules of
.the common law.'
REEDSVILLE • Eastern Local ·mg.
School Board will meet Thursday
In an 8-1 decision, the U.S. Supreme
at 7 p.m. at Riverview Elementary.
POMEROY • Church Women Court h~ld, on May 24, 1983, that the
United will hold a planning session Internal Revenue service could deny
CHESTER • Trick or treat in • Friday at I :30 p.m. at the Enter- tax exemptions to those private
:: Chester will be Thursday from 6· 7 prise United Methodist Church of schools ' that practiced racial
discrimination.
: • p.m. The siren wiU sound to begin World Community Day.
and end the hour.
SATURDAY
POMEROY • Free clothing day
NITRO, W.VA. • Liberty
will be held at The Salvation Army Mountaineers will perform Satur_. in Pomeroy on Thursday from 10 day at Cin-San Theatre in Nitro,
a.m. to noon. All area residents in W.Va.
: need of clothing are welcome.
HARTFORD, W.VA .· Bend
MIDDLEPORT • A "Member- Area Gospel Sing, Saturday, 7:30
ship Round -up" potluck dinner, p.m., Father's House, Hartfotd
hosted by the Meigs County Cham- W.Va. featuring Grubb Family:
ber of Commerce, Thursday, 6:30 Reflections Trio, Rita McFarland
p.m., Middleport American Legidn and Joy. Pastor Clyde Fields invites
Anne~. Mill Street. A Westernthe public.
style them e is planned for the
evenin$. The public is invited, and .
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
admiSSIOn is free.
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Ladies
'I
Auxiliary, turkey supper, Saturday
FRIDAY
at 4 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults and
MIDDLEPORT • There will be $2 for children 12 and under.
a Hallelujah Party Friday at 6:30
p.m. at Hope Baptist Church in
SALEM CENTER • Salem Cen·
Middleport. Bible character cos- ter Elementary Fall Festival will be
tumes are emphasized.
Satwday from 5-8 p.m. with food,
games and auction. Public invited.
RIPLEY, W.VA . • Liberty
&gt;

CONNIE SMITH

Ann

Landers

The Meigs Local Band Boosters
are sponsoring a coun~ benefit
concert Nov. 12 at Me•11s High
School at 7:30 p.m. fratunng Connie Smith of Nashville's Grand Ole
~.

&gt;

Smith went from a small town
housewife to winning a talent con·
~at Frontier Ranch (near Columbus). There sbe met country music
star Bill Anderson who ~ed
her to come to Nashville to make
some demo tapes for him. Chet
Atkins heard the tapes, loved Connie's voice, and immediately
signed her to RCA records. After
years of touring, albums and
numerous awards she quit touring
and recording to be with her family
of five children. Now she is back
on the road enjoying her fans. signing autographs and talking with
them.
Also appearing during the concert is Jeannie Jeffers, Athens, with
Broadland International Records.
Ticket information may be
pbtained by calling 992-3561. .

'Guest Sunday' held

;

•1.29

WITH FRIES•••~••••• $ I.99
ADOLPH'S DAllY VALLEY

&gt;

orful decor1tlng schernee
without objtcUonabl• paint
odore. For Ill Interior walls.
Wuhmle.

PICKENS
HARDWARE
W. VI.

COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2156

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper

• Ad. ullide th.: eouty )'OUr ad rwu mUll be prepaid
• Recei..,. d»co•l for ad. paid in ad wabCe.
• F... Ada;_Gi•eoway aa_,t Found ado uadar 15 wordt will be
ru.a 3 da,.. at 110 charp.
~ Price of ad for aD capitalletten t. doub le pr tee of ad co.t
• 7 poialliae lfpo only ....t
• Seatiaelll DOlr•pouible for elrOI'I &amp;fler farlt day (check
for errotl fw1t .Jay ad n&amp;DI in -~per). C.U befon !:00 p.m.
. day afler publication to ·mU:e.correetion
• AdltUt mWit be pAid 'i n acbaace are :
Card of Th'"'b
Happy Ada
ln MeNorLam
Yard Sal•
• Acl...ifood ad•eriiMNeal placed Ia Jbe GaUipolil Daily
TrU..ae (euepl CJo.,ifoocl Dioplay, B...ia.., Card or Losol
NoticM) wll! al.o appear in the Point Pleuanl Repter and
lhe Daily Sentinel, reaebins over 18,000 bomea

1:00 p.m. SaiUrday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1;00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
f :OO p.m. Friday

Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

Claaaified pagea Clnier the
foUowing telephone exchangea ...
Gallla County Melgo Counly Maoon Co., WV
Area CO&lt;Ie'614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304 '
446-GalllpoUo ·
367-Cheohire
388-VInton
245-llio Grande
256-Guyaa Dial.
643-Arabla Dial.
379-Walnul

992~ddloporll

675-1'1, Pleuanl
458-IAoa
576-Apple Gro••
773- Muon
882- New Uavea.
895-Lotorl
937- Bullolo

Pomeroy
98s..ct-ler
843-Porlland
247- Leooio Folia
949- Racine

7 42-Rulland
667-Coobille

•The Area's Number l
Marl&lt;.etplace
RATES
Days
1

3
6

Words
IS
15
15

.Rate

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

$ .20
$ .30

10
Monthly

15
15

$13.00
$1.30/day

$ .60
$.05 / da y

Rates arc fo r consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

$ .42

Public Notice
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON op.n undl 7:30 o'clock P.M.
TAX ~ IN EXCESS OF olaald diiJ.. ·
THE TEN IIILL UIIITATION
By ordw of th• Board of
NOTICE .11 h•rltby given El~~eUona of _Melgo County,
thai In purauanc• ·of • Ohio.
~oolutloti ol tho Board of
Hwuy L Hunter, CMirmon
Rita D. Smllh, DirCICtor
Coml!llaalon•r• of th•
County ol M•lg•, M•lga, Dalecl Sapt.mbor c, 11192
Ohio, puld on the 22nd (10) 7, 14, 2t, 28, etc
lilly of JulY, 11182 thorowVI 1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
b• aubmltted to • vola of ~ P bll N 1
the people of aald .,..vi· 1_.._....,.u_c__o.;..lc.;..e;.__
olon 111• GeMnl EICICtlon to 1be held In lh• County of
Th• onnualelecllon-ofthe
M.Jp at tile regulllt p i - BoardoiDircoctorawlllbeheld
of vdntllhlnln, on 1M 3rd at lho SCICr.U.rya olllce on
lilly of Novomt..r, 11192, the the Melga County F•lr·
qu•lon qf ~ovy~,. a·tax, 1n groundaonNov.2·1U2poHa
•••-• ol th• eon mill Hmlta- wlllN open from 5:00p.m. to
tion,lor the benallt or Melgo g:oo p.m. on th• doy of the
County Bo•rd of M•nt•l election.
Ratarlllltlon for tho purpoH
The elecl)on ohall be by
ol. M•lnt•nanca and ballot. The cooallng ol votea
Op•ratlon of C•rleton lor dlractora by proxies Ia
School ud M•lga nollo be permllted.
lnduotrl• Worbhop for
Only reoldenta of llelga
Pouono with ll•nt•l County holding memberahlp
Retardation •nd· Dav•lop- &lt;t•dllcatea, tor at lent 15
·m-1 DIMililllleo.
lllly_o before the date olelec&gt;
S•ld tax .being 1111 •ddl· Ilona, m•y voto.
donal tax of 1:1 milia •I •
llembero of the aoclety
'rata not axaewllng 1.1 miUo muatdeclar•thllrcoondlciCICy
tor .-ell - ctoaw of vllua- lor the olllce ol Dlreclora of
lion, which •mounta to. the Society by flUng wllh the
eight- a..ta ($0.11) lor aecretary of the aoclety, •
•ch on• hundred dollara of petlllon algnwlby10ormora
:valu•Uon, lor • continuing membera ollhe ooclety who
p.rlocl of UJM.
•re realdent• of llelga
Th• Pollll lor aald County, •tleaat 7 daya b•
·El~~eUon will op•n •t 6:30 fore the election ol Dlrec1ora .
o'clock A.M. •nd r•m•ln lo held. Only regularly noml:
Real Estate General

OFFICE 992·2886

HAS:
1.

Public Notice

2.
3.

natecl candidate• who have
mal lh• flllng requirements
wtllbitellglbletorelectlonaa
director. ·
The term ol office of the
retiring directors •h•ll expire
and I hot ofthe dlreclora elect
ahall begin on the 111 Man·
dayoiDecemboroteachyear
or u.nllllhelr aucc..aora ore
eleclwl ond quallfled.
Memberahlp tlckelo may
be purchuecl Sugar Run
MUla.
(10) 14, 2t1 28, 3TC
-------PubliC Notice
_ _..:;;;..:.;;..;.:.;;..:.;.;;.;;__
NOTICE Ofi EU:C'IWIN ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL UlllATION
NOTICE Ia hwelly glvon
th•1 In purauance of a
R•oluUon of lh• Board of
Trualaee of lh• Townlhlp ol
Rutllllld, Ohio, pa..i"cc on
~:~t·,tc,(..,
".i 1 ' t , t '
the 2Cih day of July, 11182,
!her• wiH N aubmltt•cfto a
vat• ol tha p.opl• of nld
WICK'S
oubcllvlolon •t • G•n••l
El~~eUon to -be hold In the
HAULING SERVICE
Townohtp of Rutblnd ai tho
36970 W R• Road
regulor pl•c• ol voting
,, P-ar. OW.
lh•reln, on the 3rcl lilly of
November, 11182, the quea• •SAND oGRAVEL •DIRT
•UMESTONE
lion ol lovylng • tax, In
••c•aa ollh• tan mlllllmitalion, lor lh• bon•tlt of
Rull•nd Townahip lor the
purpoa• of maintaining •nd
operating com-.ln.
· We Aleo tgul Colli, Hay,
Said tax blllng • renaw•l .
Umo, Com, Grain
of an oxlotlng tax of .3 mil'
ond Wood
at • lata not exoHCilng .3
(614)992·3470
mill lor •ch ~n• dollar of .__ _ _,.,.1::;:0l:.,:t:,::1t21::.:,1:::m;:;,~o.

•

Real Estate General

· 4.
5.

Steve Story is a bfe-long resident of Melas County
llld a 1972 graduate of Meigs High Sdloll. He •as
practiced law slice. 1979 and served the people of
Mel&amp;s Co•ty as . Prosea.tlng Attoney since
Ja•ary 1989.
·

RE·ELECT

I

•

STEVE STORY

LOOKING FOR A CO. .ERClAL LOT? - Jusl on the
main at,..t Located on 3rd str..~ Middleport. Has an
income~
510,000.
POMEROY ·- Union Av•nua. - OWNER WANTS AN
OFFER - Larga rooma and a beautiful alAirway coJM
with this home. II also haa 3·4 bedroomo, a FA 'NG
fum-. and 1:-lbatho. Wao$1Q,800. NOW $17,800.
MIDDLEPORT - Cornar of HeadiiiY and MIPia Str•ta. ·
Have you always wanlad to live in a nica qulat
neighborhood thafa in !own? Wall, hera's your chance. A
3 bed1110m, 2 story home with 2 batha. The home has
been I'IICandy l'lll!lodalad. HouM sits on a double lot wilh
a chain Wnk fonca. Was $48,000.
Now $44,000.
HARRISONVILLE - Mobile Home Only - A 1984
Nashua mobile homa. Com .. with equipped kit&lt;:han pius
microwave, dishwashar, front porch, raar dack and
lindo11pinning. LDokslika NEW.
Juat S1S,OOO.
MIDDLEPORT- Mill Str•t- AHandymon'e Speclal2 Iota 1111d a live rocm houM with 2·3 bedrooma. Naads
quita a bit of woJk inside bul the outside looks pretty nice.
.
. ...000.

•

, RU~LAND- ACorn11 Bualn_.- Opened 3·yaara ago,
buill doing a thriving buaintaa. Everything you need to
operale: a video renlal, eoft MJVe ica c.... m. hoi dogs,
ale._ThCI businou comet with the building, approx. 2,300
current vicfooa, VCRa, Nintendo gameo, 2 ica cream
machineo, and much more. Lock, otoCk, and bamol.
Only $115,000.
DOTTIE TURNER, Brokor................................ ll92·56!12
BRENDA .rEFFERI.... ....................................812-3058
DARIJitE ITEWART.......~··········· .. ••••••·••• ..........I82-1315

PROSECUTING AnORNEY, NOV. 3

lANDY BUTCIER............................................II82-5371

Pel. lor loy 1M C:.dld... , · - L ~ton~
2H W. IIDDncllhll, '-of, Oh. 417ft

.lEARY ll'FIADIJNQ. .. ........................... (304) 112-3411
OFFICE ...............................................................112·21M

&gt;

•

---

CHARLIE'S
SMALL·DOZER
WORK

DRIVEWAY WORK
••d UMERONE
DELMRY SERVICE
S!•ll Dozer Work

992·7553 .

SHRUB &amp;
TRIM and
REMOVAL .

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

.
POMEROY. OHIO
NEW USTING- B•olcan Rd.· 6 room frame home with 3
bedrooms, I 112 bath, oat in kitchen, encloaed patio car·
paled, lnsulaled, Anderson windows, eleelric heat pLmp
cenlralair, I car garage, on 2+ actes. $55,000

. .
REDUCED- Cheallf'· one floor frame horne with 2 bed-

rooms, enc:loaadrvarporch, shed, .-vinylsiding,.natul8i
gas heal. Reducad lo $17,000 oome see ... make an offerl
RACINE· Momlng Star Rd.• I 112 BIOI)' log home wilh 4
bedrooms, eleclrii: heat pump, 5 a~s. Also has a loft
room, large front porch, full basement and 2 car garage,
cenlral air all in counlly setting on a paved slraell $89,900
SYRACUSE· 1M Clr._ Ranch style home wilh 3 bedrooms,carpon, appllancea, cable, in a good neighborhood.
lmmadiala posaeasionl $34,800
CARPENTER· Mini farm in the cOtmlly ·10+ ecrei wilh 10
x 55 mobile home with 2 bec*ooms, well, septic, bam 1
glltage, garden aJea. $23,500
MIDDLEPORT· VIne SL· 1 loor tr.ne home with 3-4 ·
badroo•!l•J caJpOn, PlliD, ftraolaoa, cellar. Home has been
ramodarea wltl\ llddiJd lniUllllon 81C. Hu nice fenced yard
with storage shwl: ASKING $29,1klo
WE HAVE OOUUiiH GOOD DEALS...THAT WON'T
SCARE YOU TO DEATHI AND AGENTS WHO
AREN'T AFRAID....TO WORK FOR YOUR BEST
INTEREST! COME SEE US TODAY, •
· WE'RE WAITING... FOR YOUI
HAVE A SAFE HALLOWEEN!
HENRY E. CLELAND....-.....................................H2-411tl
TRACY BRINAGER....................................:.......M..2at
JEAN TAU88ELL ..............................................M..211Q

OFFICE...............................................................H2·2211

EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES •nd
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

SALE

BISSELL &amp;BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

33 acres,
Rutland TWp.
25 acres,
Olive Twp.
Timber on both
tracts.
Call 614-667-3484
or 614-667-3109

•New Homes
•Garaft:s
•Comp te
Remodeling
Sto" &amp; Co=are
f EE ESTI
IS
985·4473
667·6179

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
n~~.tplng

;a

~

D.K.'s
TOYS
All Scales· Vintage &amp;
Collectable
see Display At...
QUAUTY PRINT SHOP
255 Mill Street
Midclaport, Ohio
Aak For Dill•
Evwlingo
614-742-3020
1W1!1192

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

614·992·7144

949·2826

GUN SHOOT
RACINE FIRE
DEPT.
EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Striclly Enforced
l
10·12·'92 dn

Re•ldtntlll I commtrclll

FrHutlmll"
AREWOOD FOR SALE
6-:IC·'IHin

&lt;ai'JAYMAR
Quali2

Stone o.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call 614·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7
C.eshire, OH.
112/tfn
R&amp;C EXCAVATING

BULlDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Umeolone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED
PH. 614·992·5591
12·5-lfn

20%-30% Dl~:.!: .......

P.O. kxi94-Nir ,., .

..... Oct....
fr.. lstiMttt-742·2110

IAOIII, OliO

lf--'J ~ IJqe . .
&amp;jat)
PARTS &amp; SERVICE

TROLLEY STATIGN

cuns

614-992-2549

Mowers • Cllall Saw'
•Weedeaten

Oct. 211, 6:30 l)rii:

614·949·2804

llllla.... lt,. ......peff

CRAFT CLASSES
"Liineh Baaket" $14.00
Nov. 9, 6:30pm: "Pie
BMkel" $16.00
SWAGS by Connie:
Nov. 4, 6:30: "Dried
Material Swag"
Call the Trolley Station
for more Info.
I l!o'26111211 mo.

•

••" TJr••
!,
•' - N-!

.

•

Wlltillf Alley

[!]

...

.

""'S·l4-92·tfn
""'

I

.

HOUSE FOR SALE .
· BYOWNER
12 Year old ranch type house.
bedrooms, 2 baths, 1'!. car garage
and bree~eway, central air and heat .
pump, many extras.
On 2 acres of land.
Eastern School District.
Blacktop roads Co. Rd. 28 and 32.
949-2860, 949-2801 or 985-3839

WE DO

ROOFING

AND ·EVERnHING UNDERNEATH
GARAGES • ADDITIONS e SIDING

TROMM BUILDERS
•A Quality Assurtd Co•tractor• •
20 Yr. Exp.

Call AI, 614·742·2328
1117/lfn

CELLULARONEe
Authollzod Agent

PERFORMANCE
.........
..
................
....... .
•FREE INSTALLATION• With any phone purchMe
through October 31
Service ratea from S1Q.95 per month.
lncludaa 180 minutes of oH·peak air time.
Leasing available from $15.00
month.
FOR MORE INFORMATION n
CALL KEN RIGGS AT
614 985-4391 or 614 591·5000

per

BISSELL BU-ILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
614·949·280 1 ° 949·2860
or-985·3839

lashan Rd., Racine
Oetehr .lpttl1l
UNliMITED TANNING

10/1/92111

RAONEMOWER
CLINIC

T~~~-- .

TOTAlLY AUTOMOTIVE

38904 Leadl•g
kRo•d
Middl•port, Ohio

c....

f&amp;A Till •tl
GINIUL SIRICI

3

POMEROY, OH.

949·2398 or
1·800·837·1460
Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trlrrunlng &amp; Removal

608 EAST MAIN

Frame Rapafr
NEW r. USED PARTS FOR

25.00 Per Hour

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

992-2259

SpedaiiJing In Custom

REASOIIAILE RATES

Public Notice
Vallllltloll, which •mounta to
lhr" centa ($0.03) for •••h
CONNIE'S HERBS
on• hunchd doll•r• ol valuation, tor five (5) y~ra.
&amp; EVERLASTINGS
Th• Polio . for uld
52100 S. R. lU
ElecUon will op.n •t 6:30
helM, Ohl•
o'clock A.M. •nd. r•maln
Herb
Shop
Or,:n Cor Foil
op.n until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
ATTN:
Loc.l
r•fl Shope
of ..lei lilly.
MC!Grllllera
By order of the Board of
EICICtiono ol Meiga County EUminlllllthe middle min
- buy wholnat. from
Ohio.
'
Connia.
HW1ry L Hunter, Chllrm.ft
IUndcrafted •wega,
Alta-D. 6mlth, DirCICtor
wr•lha llld potpounl
0.'-'1 a.p....,t..r 4, 11182
auppU...
(1 0) 7, 14, 21' 28, 4tc
HOURS: 10 -.-s pm .
Wwi.·Sal 1~12

205 N01lh Scco"d Ave.
Middleport , OH
YOST ROAD - 7.8 acreo and ranch ly~ homa with 3
bedrocma, full baseman!, and one car garage. Home has
just becln redecorated with new cabinets and hardwood
floonl. Great location - just off Fonsl Run Road.
.
$48,500

A 131
per cent Increase In • felony
·prosecutions!
A 72 per cent Increase In drunk driving
prosecutions!
Prosecuted more drug cases than at any time
In the history of Meigs County!
In 1991 alone, collected more than. $570,000
In delinquent land taxes~
In 1992 collected the largest delinquent tax
foreclosure judgment In . Meigs County
!llatory for our schOol systems!
Obtained the first two death penalty
ln~lctments In more than SO.years In Meigs
County!

Ill Hardwood,
St•soatd,
$40.00 I load
dtllvtrid.
(614) 992·5449

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION .

STEVE STORY

·,

---·--

· To place.an ad

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.·5P.M • • S AT. B-12
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES

tHE RE41. STORY!
AS
PROSECUTING
-AnORNEY

6.

.FOOTLONG

The quick, osy way to ~of.

Twenty-third President of the
United States Benjamin Harrison's
great-grandfather, Benjamin Harri·
son. was a signer of the Declaration
of Independence. His grandfather,
William Henry ijarrison, was the
9th presidenL And his father, John
Scott Harrison, was a member of
CongreS$.

Bradbury Church of Christ held
its annual "guest Sunday" this past
week. Members and guests enjoyed
the service, special music by the
. Bradbury Youth Choir and a duet
by Gary and Unda Bates.
The meal afterwards was served
to all in attendance. BiU and Naomi
King were in charge ol the prepara.
bon committee.

•

seams.

2

Benefit concert
slated Nov.JZ News notes

Special of "the Week!

•

'

the number of people wbo feel 111
obliption Ill ""'P'"" to -·IIV·ytr·
bizmizz type qUIIIIions lhll only '
clod would 1st. Prime eumples:
"How m~~~:h money do 70U inlkc?"
ANN LANDEIIS
. "Did YO!J get pregnalll on purp01e7"
"lll!ll, LooAaploo
And the one you are
"Wheri
n..s,.,t·
are you going 10 have c:hildlal?"
CNII&amp;ori&amp;,..CIIIe"
The belt way to mpond to IIICh
. rude inquiries is ~ a qtalion of
age it for the c:bild's salr.e. If be is your own. Try Ibis ~: "Why would
faking it to spite you, you'D rmd out you ask such. pcnonal qiiCSiion?"
soon enough by his abscllce Tlw
Forget to SIIYe some o' your
wiD be the end of iL
{IIYorite Ann Landers colJUMS?
Too often, innoceiU chilclren are "Nllfltts 1111d Doo:ies" is the
the baalepound on which parents tJIISWtr. Sellll a self.:addressed, long;
wllglll war apinst one anodler and
bJUineu-siu t1111e/ope aiJd a checlc
the ehilclmn I!Je the victims. Don't or money orlkrfor $5 (this iiiCiudes
I~ this ~ to your lilile one. postage a'ltd Nwlling) to: Nuggets,
Meanwhtle, tf yoUJ ~x-husband c/o (tM Lalllkrs, P.O. Box IJ562i
should as much as hft a finger ~icbgo, l/1. 60611-0562. (In
toward. you, file charges at once Canada. send $6.)
·
and get a restraining ordtz. .
Dear Ann Luclers: Seven years
ago, I learned that I was HIV
positive. I'm enjoying relatively
good health and feel very fortunate.
The e~tal medication seems
10 be working well.
I met a wonderful woman who
_is intelligent, independent and
successful. She -saw "no problem"
with going out with me despite my .
HIV status, which I revealed after
our ru-St date and before our ftrSt
kiss. We were married 18 months
ago, after having lived toFther for
a year. We are very happy.
My wife told me early in our
courtship thai. she never wanted 10
have a family. Her father was an
alcoholic and her childhood was
miserable. In light of my physiCal
condition and because things copld
take a sudden tum for the worse, we
have qreed to remain childless.
The problem is with family
members and friends. We are
conawnly asked, "So when are
you going to have childrell? How
many cbildren' do you want? Why ·
don't you have childn:n, you would
be the perfect parents..
Ann. Ibis intrusive questioning
bolben me. How should I respood?
My JHV lllllWl is no one's business
but mUll I always end lip with a
· stone in the pit of my stomach
whenever theac queslions are asked?
•• DISCONCERTED IN D.C. •
DEAR D.C.: I am amazed at

.FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

s2soo

(No Sunday Calls)
2112192/tfn

A'I'TENTION
\ loi&gt;Jlt· ,\. 1louhl&lt;lllde

10.2-'92

TOP TO BOTTOM
MAINTENANCE
and REPAIR
•Roofing •Siding
-Gutters
•Room Additions
•Interior Remodeling
Coalact Roiiert L Jacks

(614) 992·2866
(9) 26-'92·1 mo.
GUN SHOOT
. FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
' CLUB
SUNDAYS
·12:00 Noon
Factory choke 12
gauge only
STARTS
OCT. 18th
10. II- • m
Howard L Wrilesel

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspguts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
tlt8/'92/lfn.

t9
'

LINDA'S
PAINTING

&amp; co.

"Tait Tilt Pu Oul 01 Pllinff19
·ltl U1llo II for Y011 ..
INnRIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
fREE ESTIMAHS
HAVE REFlRENCES
laftro 6 pA Lon• lltssogo

Ah• 6...... 614-915-4110
1W1

ftJTER~RM, .

I Ioiii&lt; ()II"' 1 ,

OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.

ApproveciMim.r.t•ntl
HDUslng Producrs.'"""',.,_, 1

0

BErTER BY DESIGN

Quality HI Efficiency
Air Co1tlitioners, Heat

Pumps, Fumaces &amp; ·
Now Water

Heaters.

:IC.

Bennetts Mobile Home

&amp; Cooling

- 1391-Sofford Scf.ool Rd.
Gallp ..s, Ohio
."cmJ [6141 446·9416 or 1-800-872·5967

BP OIL CO.HOME HEATING OILS
DIESEL FUELS • ' GASOLINE$
We Deliver In• ••
Gallia, Meigs, Mason and
Surrounding Counties

1·800·598·5654
or 614·446·1157
Vouchers

•

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
f.'mn TRY OUR _NEW
IIJlJUilil STEEL INSULATED
RAISED PANEL GARAGE DOOR
INSTILLED PRICES
9x7-$27S.OO t6x7-$450.00
OPENERS INSTILLED-Yo HP,.$20_..00
With 2 Tranemltters
·
Wit• Purcllaie of
Door Plu1 Opeur
Receive FREE
S.•l Tri•

�•
Page

r

Wednesday, October 28, 1992

1·2-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wldnesday, October 28, 1892

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

..

HEY IIUYSIII
To Tllk To
Youll , _ . , . IEII!. IOU
$3.18 Pot IIIII. II'* 1o 11 YrL
Unlolar Co. - - 1 1 .
Nolloo no '"""Ina or trw"'t
lllo """"" F-. CJol.
Qpollo fenot. wv. Pro- ,.,..
mite are VoW.
REDUCE• burn off lit lfO!I
. . _, tllco OPAL 1.11&gt;11111 I E·
. Yap diUrotlc. A v - Fruth
Drug.
.
~ Clkto -

For Soloo 11711 Fllltwood mobill
home w/ ,..... ut:IMion, 1.25
-ntlghbotho'od,
ot land, good
-od In rico
concl., l14·
1112-211L

REDUCE: Bum 011 Fat Whllo
You Sloap, Tau OPAL Avallllllo
At• Fruth Pharmacy.
.

'
~-"~ua."':':':
=.-.No-.
'
"
"
,.._
-.................
--·-·for...... tl

· Giveaway

II

IorlA

-77ID. ,_ 1 TM
. Truetr, 11W1J1.

.

All lloC. 2
ll.,'
:
'
L
lllt~""'::d No
1i liotnav.i
N.

AVIIL Nov. I"' -

tm C!\OVJ lo« Jaio. 4 wiiMt

,.:,,;1M2111 ~AfteriP_:.:..

Employment Servtces

11

35 Lots a. Acreage

Help Wanted .

Unl-loty Rio Grwndl Child
Bottle g~a range, works, 3D4.
He
Core Otilnlngo: Infante, Tat·
1
d -1 • Pr--ro. 7:30 To
::'"::..-3821=·-----,-----1 1
lp V(ilnted
5:00 M.f'. 614-:M5-6353 Ell!. 447.
Cute, fuzzy
I - . _ 'AVON' ALL.AREASI Shorw your
w
..="""c.:l==
ld· :::
614-~•::..::~::::·:.__ _ 1limo with ... vou•• - tha
Business
1
. FIWI clolhlo. I1WIIf.I8SI.
1121311.
14
a yr aid ....,. Mld8 eomeon•
Training

""""ie':s

--Y.

to 1rw1n a do llaht ~ wor1r
noutorod I dlcLiwod, 114olll2- lor,_, 1 boonf. 304-773-'1458. Rllrwln · N"""lliSouthNatom
5Q31.
• AVON I All AIWII I Shl~oy Bull- Coilogl, Spring Vallow
Mt•od brood pupptoo, ldonlblo, ._,.. 3114-1'15-14211. ,
PLID. cau T-r. &amp;~ool36711
&amp;14-MII-2481 '"" 5pm.
;Ait!,;;:;·;;;-;.;.;::::..:::'2111::.:::B:;.
· ~--••""
rtotivl . Wanted, 18 - Wanted to· Do
Roglllorld 1·112 yr. old Tri-Col- AAll Area
114oo141-33511.
Male tabby cat,

~

~d,

151 Sociudod ..... lloioon Co

(Ambroalol. llortwrl a mopood,
aood ....... •oat ltuiilng.
S.oiod bldl to bO oponod tO:OO
All, Oct. 28. o.m.r rrrtrwee the
right to rojoct .., a au blda.
Cill
lnlarmollon 304-175:mlevanlngo 304-773-4007.
in Lltart, 14 ..... 11/L WIAPilc
.,.pond
..m, 11Mil wotor, a out bidgo,
, Sla,ooo. 304 na 3421.

for

I

-kind•

111. Good homo or good hornaln
country. Good with chlldrwn. Borbor , _,
off.
&amp;14-44f.OD55.
Ouorontlod lV'IIo Call 114-:Ml'
711211olor 1:30 p.m,
Tin pu1ppl• 4 wU 01~
. 0111 '
-her Contnoct Cllrlcol P01HI.,. Part
~ lfs.s~5e~ lllnoto -••, nm., Comoutor Elport.,..
N•c•-rY· il ·20 HoUra Per
To ;:ood homa: ldun, - I I , - . Sind A-mo· To: CLA
ion
!rod black cal. Atilhoio. Box 244, Golllpoiitl Dolly
;DIC:::.:;a::wod:::,.1::¥i::-2::51-=;:1058::=;·---l =."'ot,l2~ Avenue. Go~

..

To glvuway. 1 IC:Iult Btag'-, 1

B..gLI pup, 814-fi;!o6111.

Dopondablo Bobnittot Nlodod:
A~ Shift. Coli &amp;ofonl 2:00
P.ll. ,,._..,.,.,
.
6 Lost&amp; Found
EARN IIDNEY Rlodi"JJookll
Loot: Block, whltol"-n malo 130 ........r. ~---ontla'
laulll.
"'R.J.• 114-1121418,
,_.,,, ~·
'"
~
1or Anglo., 1... .,.._. \::'a.il.(t) IIIHIZ-, Ell!. Y·
.

7

313

EIR· TREE SERVICE. Topping
Trimming, Tr11 Romovli, Hiartgi
Trim~. Fr11 Eallmltoal 61434IJI.
ARw 4p.m.
,
..__. Porture Sawmill. don,
~·
:.':J~~~~~o tho mill just

Clr~~

-=

1 El:pM'Iel
·
cad PIP'IOII to eon- Mlae
BlockPaula"
West eOfDay
HMC Oi1 Canter
J1ckson1
GallipoliS
llruct _ . , . 15Q ft borbod Plkl ll.f' I A.ll. -5:30 P.M. II
WIM - · 304ol75-7783.
OU.tHy And E1port1,.. II Tho
&amp; VIcinity
11 COncern For Yow Chlld'o
Halrllyillf
Paid Core. Coli U. For A Vlah. lnhlnt
3
family
GoSale: V-IOM Clourontlld WIQII. /Toddlorw 114-446-11227. P..O.
-parw. Fumllurw, 'Mioo, Firat 114-4*7217.
. - . , . /School Ago 614-MIIHouM Plat SandoJw D1: ......_ I ,.........., ,_11- I · 11221.
.
Neighborhood Rd, Frt e.a.
. . ·-.. .....,... ..
"'"'
1
101
ALL Yard Soieolluot Ia Paid In
oOrPII::.
Ad.-, DEADI:INE: 2:00 p.m. •-. •u Ohio II. Pt.
1115-3-lhl day bolono thl od Ia 1o run.
Wll
do hoUM tiNning, II·
Sundly odllon • 2:00 p.m. I'M - . , . lor I inlwlllod por•
F~doy. llondoy odHion • a:OO to lili NotiOnal ......-. 304-175-7185.
P·"'· Soturdoy.
lfdn ..,. dMalon. Sorlola
tal ·10 flO how.
Financial

~
- P~_!l El~'

Ftret 11me Yard Sell! 4 FamU,:

Rnpactable

1'11dor, Satunloy, Rain, Shlnit.
IIOI Orohlm School Rood, Qol.
lpolil.
Firlll 11n1o Vent Solo: C«Mr

Fr•

trolrilng. .,......_,
II d J· A From Crwn
City To Rio ...,...~~una To 21
Business
Help With Corw, I .
IIOtl.
0. pportunHy
0111oo .,_.... • _ _ ....
In I ..In111 IIIMgement
• -INOTICEI
.
•
OHIO
'lALLEY
PUBLISHING
CO.
_ ,.... ,..do

- . r • llotn ·Crawn City, Sat,
Sun, Man, 1W.

t.~:..:"=~"';;'

Pomeroy,

Mlddlepon

Pit, WV. 211R

" VlclnHy

-r

:-.:..1,: ;;,..
411°~.~ ·..::.~!,g ~

company,

•

'

'

. MRT·TIIE CASHIER SOliE

=-:::-:-=,.~~~...,..,,.,..,.. EVENt- AND WEEKEND
Alt Yard Salol lluat Be Paid In HOURI. APPLY IN PERSON·
Advance. DootiiM: 1:00pm t1Ja r--.8 IJO.iT CENTER, mi
cloy boton tha od to to run, IICCORIICK · ROAD, GAL·
ldftlono 1:00pm Friday, UPOLIS.
,
Monday
odHion 10:00L111. _ , nMdld, apply In
S.turdoy.
~ Rutland Civic Clnllr

-·

-=2-

------1 - '-'

...._

,... (30 -ra~·

.,...
_,::,;;;.;=;..·

8

....... -h~

Public 5ale
.,__. &amp; Auction

2

...

por ,_,(I

1------....---

b&lt;l~

.-wtth,...,..youk.- and
NOT to.- -..y through tha
malt uniU you hovolnvlltlgatod
lhe oltwtng.

VENDING ROUTE: Gal Rich
Ouicll? No Woyl But We Have A

Enl_....,.

":t'..::J::"••

-

Choltw~:-......
• ••

.......

Dry...

-

,..

qutrod, no poll,
In .lloclnl,
rico
t
11J,
4
lldnn,
2
lull
wat
a

=

"i!tti":"J:i.

,......., 114 141 2217...

One B1droom Small Houu F•

nllhld In TGWft, - No Pill,
- . . . I Dlpoolt. ·114o441-

Portllily s ,_.. 1
bath In the city. tm1 - · 114441-4101 or I7N'JIIO.
and - . _ 110 -

W.nlod atondlllfl tlmbor, kip

=-pild, frM ...,..,,.,
11115 3055.1ogglng company, 304-

·~·-~~
• sc1i

W.nlod To Buy• J..,k Autoo
With Or WIIIIDIA llolora. Coli
Lorry Llvtly. 114 3.. 1303.

Top -

Paid: All .Oicf U.S.
COina, Oold HingeS Sl- Colno,
Oold Colna. II.T. . Coin Shop
151 Second A...... Oalllpolll. '

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

CA~H?!!
Thm your clutter inro caah,
~ it the ~ way... by phone,

no need to leave. your home.
Pwce your clauified qd'toda,y!
15 wordl or re.., 3 dqu,
3 gqger•, 15.4Q paid in advance.
1

•

____ __

2.·--------------~--L
I
3 •. ______________~--...;..__
. 4.
,

5 . ....
. --------

6.---------------7·-----------

8. _____~------9._
. --------

10,_____~-----~~
11.._______________

q

end

Nfwenc11

: 114113-.

..,.

992-2156 ..
675~1333
•

3134.

LAYNE'Ii FURNITURE
-llallvor,.

.

llodlrn I Rd1 ll W.w led, Wllh

llotohlng

Choir. Eoi • nl Con-

- . . . . - . m i l Col
-2P.II.

-oak_.;., .. -

a

ohaln,

..

-

-

~ Nlli*r"'~ v.:~
OokF--1~111.

PICKENS FURNriuRE

~. .hold
.w~·~k===Yc•:e•d
....
-!11"1·

112 mL.

--.

· wv.
Iota on Att Vlnytln Stock aut
Corpat JII.OO Up. llloliohon Fu,..
Rd. Pt. COIIIOWlll-1480.

........

Fumlehed, 2 or :lbclrm., tor rent
In Counlry llobllo P - W..hltf AUCTION ISWAIN
FURNITURE. 12
dryer, ~tZlll mon.. 114o112o Othe ••
Uwd

Golilpolle.-.
helil...
•u ~·· 318.

2167,114- HD7.

""'*~
Wortl boola.
-

w•~~m

44

Apanment
tor Rent

llorh....,_

lnow:

2-rnatumlohedl!lllln

after

Stacbd

!Drvw, Ukl -

Wuhlr

/lluat Solll

SOcrlllcl $4110 PIUI With

sco:

ss

Conllll ro.ts
Plcturw•
Each. 114-241-11111.
King liD Wollrbod SomJ.Wov•
.... aasol Elllctrlc Stove With
uven ll~i. Konmoro
lllc.-vo Ovon .... 114-3811.....
llollotion
1112 a10, 11...
~11144.
•
PAIIT PWS , _ open lundly
1:00
to 1:00. Pttl•burgh

c.,.....,

.w.-- -

Lolli 1111

wan jlalnt, ...1111 II" I, Somt;~loo•

St3.H gal. Wlatlior INih 1111.
till latu tt3.H .-. a4tl Jock·

-----·-paid, r :.-===53

upalln N2S. goo I jlold.
NO HUll. rwf 11 dip required.
ilpollo. Call 614-371-2112.
. 30WJ'5.2111.
2lodnn. opto., tGLII -...., ..,.
32 Mobile Homes
p i - flrrillortood, ......,
tor Sale
roomlocllillla -tooohool
lntGWft. ~loMivaiilllll
U13 Par Month lncludillfl lot at: VliloQO ~OiMii AIIIO. 1141 or
Mnl. NIW 14' wide mobllt hOme
Cliii1441N?tt. EOI4.
Includes delivery, complete ·H t!
3--opt.tt?l.por
up, lklrtlng I liopo. 1-8QG.837·
8625.
. month ,.... olhar

~

1111•.104112... '

131-1121.

F;Hm Suppltc',

damuk cover, $200;
1010.

v.., 5

oond~_wlll taka 2,
rn, 3Q4.t?l.

1D

~~~

boggor

for-·

Com P~klro 1 And a - · PTO
llonuro
s-arw.
1.1m1
Sprooclorw, ......... Hoy And
Groin EilniD&lt;~Uood Rfllory
- . 18 Fl.
Honf.t«,
WhMI Dllit8,
llpoclbrw,
Fonmoll H Tractor, s Potnl Hllch.
Othor Flold Rudy Equ'-",
Howe's Farm IIIOhl...,, ..leek·

eon Ohio. 114-211 8144.

74

7:35 (J) l!lnfonl • Son

*"· ,._.,..., ..
-~~~

llyou 4
-.~oftori:OO.

2110 Big Rid,

,_llrH, eiC oond,l1,200. 304-

I7WO'JII.

75 Boats &amp; Motors .
for Sale
.... -

·~11121.

EEK AND M.EEK
IIJ-IATS "fHE. fMTt£R
IU!ltl HIM 1

any

Equlpmonl Co,-

62 Wanted to Buy

No

1*11113'11.

63

~~~~~~~~
Baby plgllor-. 1--.attn

Hauling:
Anvtlmo,
AnywiiiN. ChUck . WNliomo,

Cllllio

=~ CrMII Trudrlng.

-Tronomioolono,Uiod&amp;
all typal, OIIJtina at , ...
. .,., ll44fl.ll7l ...~
aatl3.

..buT.,

=:,lr."..........
t.,kl, -

-

-

.......

• Fl.

64

•

s.... .
Eloclrlclnd oU

Servtces

-

Home
lmprovemtntl

11:131~3~413~,......~,.....,,......~­
"'
=...":'l...tend..Q..~,'Z,
Ao clltlrlee. S.m Somervlla"•

!logorl • . _ . . . Wit-ling.

a.~ s.., - .:aoPII, olhar

=
.. L:l't 4Pf'!t=IJ..'//:; =:"\J:

~

Col~

homn, 11 eiKtrlc fumlahed
AIC, undarpenned, extra clean'

l'trilofl- Cor;

. . . .)

. . . 1141. ...

..,.,, fiWI

Iitie-.

v.. ........

~

eMir, _.._,

-.
- .,_..

ASTRO-GRAPH

_, ....

tlonlhlp work. Mall $2 plus along, Hlf. gantlc plus.
.
addr-..1. stamped envelope 10 TAURUI (Aprii:IIHiay 20) Ralher thlil
Malchmol&lt;•, c/o this newspaper, P.O. leiUng others how to do things today,
Box 91428, Cleveland OH 44101-3428 you'll be incNn8(1 to~ lhl _proper ••·
uamAIIILII (Nov. :.ia o.c. 211 Am.: ample. This will ·make your methode
BERNICE
Jor change aftectlng your .flnancaa. constructive. not contentious:
BEDE OSOL which you'l have Illite control 0GEMINI (MQ 21-.IUM 20) Give expreacould tranaplre 1oday. AI nrst, yoo lion to your enterprillna Inclinations tomight lntorprelltea negaUve, but11me day,Mpedatlylltheyurgeyoutogenorwill prow you wrong.
ate mora tncomll. Your lnatlncto tor
CAPRICORN (DMI. 22....... 11) You molcing money ore bettor lhM ulull.
might have to tal&lt;e a llltle heat tram CANCER (.lime 11._ 22) s-hlng
some of your,other ~Ill today on behlll you'ra pr_,ly Involved in Ia no1 being
ot a friend you'll """"- ro defend. eftec1lvety inMaged by,_ who are
YOU'rtl doing the righl thing, and your · running the lhow. Don't be rtliuctMIIo
loyally won'! be forgotten.
youroell- II you can doH belt•.
AGUAIIIUI(olltft.20 l'elt.11)Yourpoo- UO (....., 21-.Aul. 22) Plana you'r11
ltbilltlel for acfllevtng two lmportM1 pr-lly formulating ara good 01181,
Md ambitloul objeetl- are excellent · bUt you might .be plagued with loll·
to&lt;lay - If you .,PY yourlolf. It you'rtl doubt. I)!ICI•I your Ideal wtlh otherl:
, determined 10 be IUCCIIelut, woe to ,thelrWidonementlhouldorth8nciyour
Two mafor area could be the focus of th- Who block your paltt.
.
· cour-.ro. ·
·
·
your attortoln the've- ahead: creative PilCH (l'elt. 20 llltcll ' 211
VIRGO (AIItl.dos.pi.22)Waye.,.;, be
endeavorund romance. In both . - . time~ "'• l'eCIIIIry to take 1 CIIIC:uiated found today to llddtiCe ., endeavor
your projecllonl for IUC c111 loOk good. rlol&lt;ln otder 10
the dellrtld end,... which r-.tty attrected your attentiOn . .
ICORPIO (ODL Mollelr. 22) In litu• autt. If you thlni&lt; 111e odda -In your fa. A friend of yours might
au;;n
tlono rocley where rou put otherl' ,... vor today. you may hiYI to g~mble ,. . Uonllhllt mar be qutte holpful.
·
qulr-'• belonl your own. your prob- bit.,
~ (SIIpl.ll Dol. II) Don't . , for
abll1lol I« IU~CIII are elGiilent. By AIIIIS (llllofl 21•Aprft 11) When you ' INngl t~ ........ t today in order fOr you
helping them. you'll ltolp rourllllf. Try· · Md your mate are in harmony on tNtfor to 1111 What you Wllit. In thiS cue, PIIng.1o patch up • brollen romance? The 1...,. today. the declololll you mal&lt;e ' 111not Ia not • ¥1rtue. nyou - your lnl·
Aatro-Graph Matcllmal&lt;er can holp you lhould have far· .-lng, favorable -'" ltlllve, golll can be lchiiVId:
underltand wlla1 10 do 10 mlll&lt;e lha rill· tecto. Conscilldatlon of pu,_ to a gl· .

--.....-lor-

~'Your

W'Birthday

·

some-

glln

oar

...... ·- _......,.,.........

Looking For ADNI? Corio*; A Clraalu• ~ 1 Md 1 bedPr..OWn.d llobilo - . Lorge
IIIII
Ill . . . .
Sollcllon1 • Low 11onoy Down llllnor
Froo Sot-up And Dlilvory
Ap bu•* In IIHMw FL Ff8IR
58t-611o.
r
·
..... C o l - · m t EOit.

,_

1!110 _ _ _ ,......

....~.. Uphollf~ ......
lnfllt
:rr .... Till
In - . . . . ..,.,.,.,....

.....-r-

tloft -LD lOOt( INCfCQL.
PIDtA triO 01, 1M ••
IJI.I7JI.

.

......

18 Of a ssNvary
gland
20 CIIMrt
21 - Pan AlleJ
Airline Info
24 Ulllfetel
27 RadloaciiYII
tllntenl
31 lnvalion
32 Small piece
33F-Ied
drink
. 348ttinder
. 35 Thill pancakl
31 Plltl1dtSiall
37 FltmiJ ftxed

zz

30 Brall
lnotrumenfl
40 LaiiOr or;.
41 Longtime
42 Set of
QUeiUonl
45 Of I Will
40 Curronl
52 Actre11
Cha11
53 Cooling
beYirltll
54 Pllchlr

55 Sltht
5e- Kippur
57 Stop working
58 Foudal allvo

DOWN
1 Jest
2

-llttor

conotell
•tlonl
3 Gelatlnout
eubatanco
41nllcolld
5 B1ar
6 Country

7 E•clamatlon
of dllliU11
8 - Grande
0 Soothe
tO Genu• of
ON¥1tr111
11 Hilling
IOUnd

17 ActorO'Ntal

Q

• a Nalhvlllo NOw

D Top Rank Boxing (L)
8 Larry King Uvel

e

Falller Dowtlng MJiterieo

ff:t~ii4

'

&lt;

for - ..:
r

on.

'I
,'

. _ , Performances by the
singer and his special g-1$
are in1erwovon wllh glimpses
Into hit personal life and
professional career. (t :OOI

'

w-e
D (J) e Chit Waro

. (I)

Sydney has nightmares after
a self-avowed witch casts a
spell on har. Stereo. C

iw-+-+--1--1

ca.en

(Z) Oflto
- · Bl!l
and
Ben ·
PlsCltoll
mediate a
discussion on the proposed
linlllltion of termi for olecled
officlalo In Ohio. (0:30)
llllD 1121D 41 Houri A took
at Loa Angeleo elx months

::.:

19- tho oe• ·- ·
10n to be... ·
22 Actr111- :'.
lloran
23- dance
24 Dancer
Allaire
25 Scarce
261rtll27 Enttty
28 PoeHc toot
29 HlwaNan
food flah .
30 Now York baH
club
32 TWill about
35 YoUih or;.
36 Jlroak of clov
38 "Godfa,..,"
outhor 111r10

tO:oo~e OThltllaMichael

:z:aa
;r'-11&lt;1. '*'-.
·

11KC ...... CI.WihUI

on lte

@,_....,..... _ _

e

Ponltoo
.......Ill
............. 4dr.........
10,0011 ....... Jlliioe, .,..
lion, 110
ttlQOi ....
IIIIU7tt.
Ita ZIOoZII. 1.._, P8, doc
brUII, I opo!., Ill:, Alml,
--;.:- oond. ....

~

114-11112-ZIIi.

,,eoo:

w.woo....,

.. ..................
., -""""'....'

"""""' lotio
HlolfCholr All lila Thl

3bdnn.,
85x12.
lumlohod
central a~ skirting, will tina nco'

=-~mon.,

lfterl:•pm.

ltal.

Vulnerable: North·Soutb
Dealer: West

OIMadAbouiYou
Paul puts on a brave tsce
when his film Is rpecl by a
network. Stereo. '"" .....
(i) D (I)
Laurie Hill
laurie and Jill realize they
should slow down attar
Illness atrlkaa'. Stereo, Q

tm

cl::l:' .....

(2:00) Stereo.

+7

. +83

9: 30~e

.....

.

c:.ndll.....

IZII;

NEW
PAPPIES II

doyo hourw -J73.&amp;e55.
Yory na oult;..::ka, ilnglrlo,

onAnt~·=- . ~4·~·~·~311~.-;-:~--:-~-:-

Atr~'d',IIU-,

DADBURN

I AIN'T PASSIN'
OUT SEEGARS,
SNUFFY

IM. Locoi "'""""• lumllhld.
FrM oatlmlf• 'Colt 1·
.,.._... day Of night.

-Ealll ~77londyvlilo
Poll Olfkll.
...........ood. ontr Frl,

1 Clmpul •••
5 Iloilo cloud'
0 Dawn
12 Incite
13 Cerealgtlll
141oxlfMII'
llammld15No.,..- latand
16 TlMOWI from

0 MOVIE: Wild Card (PG13)

.BARNEY

IAIEIIINT
WATERPROOFING
-ltlonoi Ullliml guorwn-

Transportation

.AQJI062

-------------------------------------------The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle ~
ACROSS

Improvement Tilri builds a
haunhld house for Brad
which holds horrors for
everyone. Stereo~
(Z) Heallll' QuerM!fY
(!)A-nlo
[]
llllD 0 Din
Heal oT ·
till Nlgtii(Premlere) Gillespie
rries to hide his romance
with Harriet. (PI 1) Stereo. Q
~ 8) Place Stereo.

CondiUon. All 1031

Hay &amp; Grain

\1

_(i)D &lt;mDHIIflll

~_Com~

Wh

'

I CI\N MEE:T ea,a.~:
INTE' L..L..Ica-r=NT 1!!10-te.

NAY MOVE 10 A NEW
NE:IBHI'ORHOOD...

;ea.

304o4175-2722.

WHE~

"'* , _
=atC!f, We'll:: 1,040o Pdl,

::::::-::~~~-=~~-­
hoy lor Nil, S2 tior
~~~- 11111,- - · 114oll2o
_

~p: Portobte lghtod olgn
tal. Wl1att... p,_ dall~'Jl_:
Plllllo lortllro $47.50 bo1, 1

L~·~·~·~q~·~~:;~;=~~

-~·--

n

MY NOM SA.'Y!e&gt; WE

Poo••Of·
ll.'tW. to:ao W....'l ~ I luodl
L11L to I:Otl p.m., ....., 1:GO t ~Gal Allor I P.ll. · toi:OOp.m.ll4ol82-2121.
21121.
•
:r.nlth Color eou.oti· 27 54 llacellaneous
WllnUI Flnllfl T.V. Eoo ollln Ita Codllloo SOvllll .... - ·
Cor-.L IZID, Aftlr I P.ll. tlon, bolow .._ - . 4.1 y.
JET
Merchandise
I, l2400i IM-1124'M.
-.ration llolon, ropolnot, .1111;4!··~~IO~l~;..::...::...::.:
• -1ft motorw In atook, RON
112,000 BTU Filii Oti Fu,.,...., :
tta Ponttoo- ·
Alklng: ~ - .. Wlnctow 55
autkltna
Olduu-.15 •· 1171 DNun .=..JACKSON, OH. t.Air
12~00 BTU'I
Sup
utiiHIIe paid,.....,.
~~aan.4:ao
14x55 ~mmodore, 2bdnn., 111 - ,_._, IIIIU?I-UIII.
Alfllng: aao.eti •• 1214.
plllts
Ron'o TY a..t01, -'"llzlng
lppllanc•a, t)IQI~nt con'ditlon,
In
l&lt;lnlll .... MIV~­
$8500 nogotlablo: 114-94,.2184.
BEAUTlFUL APAIITIIEHTI AT 110 .... tUb,, rhoolt. llrlok.
111&lt;1 l l o - - L III.OOD olhorbrandl.1
....
BUDGET PIIICEI AT .IACKSON
mttoo.-ctororf?l.
...,. oiM&gt;ilonco ..,.1...' WV
OH
1880 Parkwood1 3 bodroomo, 314 ESTATE!.. 1M I r• n Plkl
304-1114311 Dhlo ·-2411.
acre lind, • Wocka from
" -·
lo """" •
PINAnt Val .. y Hoap, $18,000. trorn
-·Call
114- 441 :1111.1011.
loptlo Tonk Pumptna 110..Oolllo
1121
20 Cloi Aoq. For · .... ·-I7HDIL
"""'"' ....
or belt ort.r. Mutt Hll Moving
Ulltlt.
·,' aiding,· Co. RDN EVANS INTERP"ISE8
304..75-1506.
. Ctoon, 2bdrm .. """""'""" no
Jackson, 011 ~131. , '
J iikan ,._ MINn. 10,0011 BTU Cia ,u,.. 118 Pets tor 8ate
1182 ~modore, Mx70, 3bdnn.
. Allo IORWiMotel ....... or
kitchen · oppllo....
total
- · A1oo
8,000
BTU G.===;..:_:~::::=~~~
-YoUI
ItI 11anti 1: 1/111 ~~
olactrlc, oldrtlng, coiling lana,
If
Gaor
,_II
........
To
40
Do llln&amp; All """'"'
Furn'od.
a
.:a
one owner, $i0,500; 114--915lnaMe.tt4 ttl liN
. . . N PM11 . . . ..
4400.
.... lull ... ,.,.... :m WIIIII.CoiiM . . . . . .
.......
Cloon.
c:.dlr
. . Oo"
lio.paid.
1885 mobile home 14170, over *IIIL
4
half acr. lot oomplet:aly tur--•
_ . , . 100 '"'· .oa. .,
a ..IGUfnt
dc!IIIIDr
...
ma4J.
.... ..r;,
ICJ4.Ill.
nlohod lnciUdH 11to11H1 dllh

a..._

11

•K6$3

h••e

Waterfal Apprentices reunite
lor the 50th anniversary of
Fallingwater's construction. a
201h-c:entury house designed
by Frank Lloyd Wright in the
mld·1930s. (0:30)
t:OO ~ D rDI 811,_ Jerry
wresUea with a script for the
pilot episOde ot his new
show. Stereo. Q

MORTY MEEKLii

campers&amp;

Hou11

(l) I])

'

Ito. Di R Au1o. Rf-. WY. 304ma~Uort~.

,.,.w,.,.Q

Gl PtiAWNIWI Q
0 YDUIIfl R - . Noah Is
Implicated when.an enemy ol
his Is found dead . Stereo. Q
1:05 (JJ MOVIE: Dr8c:ula (AI (2:05)
1:30 (i) • (J) e Oaoglo Hawllr,
M.O. Doogie faces the first .
solo sw:;ry of his career.
Stereo.

' ' /' .I
't,

ton buck ,

=-

a Crook anc1 Cha11

Auto Parts&amp;
Accessories

76

Uve$tock

114--lil~

*::'J

IIJ

Very G - , Wall lroko Dkflr
Worto Or PC!nJ. ,_ lion
II VIera Old.
F- -

rote

Buo A\l'o tr""" Run'o
Blurton~.~, Now
!!~~~torr • Tirol tl,200; Fvol Olf
-!nil Stove Jll: 1?1 Gal. Fuol
Oti Torila
~rto • Boya lllto
131 Each.
11-11444.

who Inhabits rocky
clilfs in California. Stereo. Q
(J) MOYIE: A Cry In tile
lllgtl1 (2:00)
we (J)e wonc1or Yean
Kevin spreads lies about ·
Winnie alter they spend the
night together. Stereo. Q
(l) I]) lilarll Ru- Comedy
Spectel Sharp-witted song
parodlel and pointed
one-liners are directed at
politiCians and other names
in the rteWs. (0:30) Stereo .
1111 D 1121 D Hat Squad
Buddy villtllhe father of a
-ld who rOUQhed u.e_Darneli
a t -· Stereo. Q
Q]
111111, 1021.0
Stereo.

Olea
brllce.,
~.,chain. tl,200.

K 10
.AKQ642

L-----------......1

g~t

...... . . . . . . . . . . . . Clift,

Sow chalno to Ill -

ou-

. My...,..a A report on a

1118Hondo4--X,

•n
+

W.ll
Norlll Eu1
In the final of the Women's Series of Soalll
Pass
1+
!NT
the NEC World Team Olympiad, Aus- ·
Pass
3+
Pass
tria beat Great Britain by 265 to 218 Obi.
Pass
3 NT
Pass
international matcbpoints (IMPs). AI· 3 •
t
•
Obi.
All pass
ter hall of the 96 boards, Britain Jed by
36 IMPs, but the Austrians were virtuOpening lead: • 8
ally level by board 62. Then they
cruised away to victory. The winning
team was Maria Erhart/ Barbara
Lindinger, Doris Fischer /Terry Weig·
krich( and Harta Gyimesi /Jovanka
Smederevac.
pushed on to four hearts, doubled hap- •
Today's deal started the Austrian pily by West.
·
surge. At the two tables. the first five
The lead was the spade eight. When;
calls were identical. The Britisb North dummy played low, East bad an a witpassed over her partner's penalty dou· ward d""ision to make. If West bad led:
ble. However, the declarer couldn't he from K-9· 8, she had to play the queeil;
stopped lrom collecting seven tricks, whereas with the actual layout. Eut.
the six-card club suit being a blow to had to play low. Eventually she mis~
.the defenders.
guessed, putting in the queen. Lind-· ·
The Austrian North, Erhart, jUdged .inxer won with the spade king and
that her hand was better ·l or oflense drove out !be heart king. Later she fi than defense. And because her opening nessed the spade 10 and lost just three
bid had denied as many as 17 bigh- tricks: one heart and two clubs. Thu.'
card points, she felt justified in jump- the Austrians were plus 790 and plu'
ing to three diamonds. South, Lin· 180 for a gain of 14 IMPs on the board.
dinger, might
passed. but she

Clll Crotlflre

71111

EAST
.Q 7 2

.K9 13

By Pblllip Alder .

Open from Rochester, N.Y.
(L)

1HO
Hondo _.,
10, gMd
-··
'=:;.
""" C
overtuoulod,
~. uidng MOO,

WEST
98

Austria overhauls
Great Britain

Fomlly F -

l:ao~e

·'

II·ZI·H

SOUTH •

a PfiA lowlh'fl Rochester

Moiorcyctes

Hondo I -

e

.J

.J9 5

Clll Moneyllne

8 Ufe Goeo On Q
7:05(1) llevllty 1111111111111
7:30 ~ • . 0 ""-RIJ!.J:I
. (!) ,.... Jlftertlonl ~:;~..:
ft.~~~lnment Tonight
(I) D You Bet Your Ufe

38 EXCIIIIYIIY
41 Put ln1o
action
42 Pier
43 .Halrotyte
44 ArHck
45 Southwell·
ern lndlano
46 Ailment•
47 Otthtllllll
kind
·48 Unconvincing
50 Gorman
irlk:lo
51 RIVIronce

r:1nald
after
Dennytile
. Stlrao.

ale"""*
8World

8 ?CIO Club Wt1tl Pat
ADblrtiOn

10:10.(1) MOYIE: The Howling (AI .
(1 :56)
10:30 (l) Oflto 1..ue1 A d)SCUISion

of Sllllll Ballot 5, which
would require manufacturers
to put warning labels on food
lnd houllhold producta that
might CIUII cancer « birth
-· (11:30) .
I]) Ceuaht In ...... ..,

Flohlng1o Alaoka:a
.
nurtar·two Industry. and
·
Bristol Bay II one Of Alaoka's _
moat deolrable filharleo .

'

+AQJ98S2
. 10 7

.,~,

1111e WIIMI ot , _ Q

Motor Homes

School

Alf.'LINES A~f IN
T#lOUILE TI'4AN
/ ~ TtiOUGtiT/

C:AirOVS'tL
flll&gt;E -

1HO Ford XLT llln~Von, 17,000
m._, loltded, $13,500. ~
.:mt Of 17&amp;o2112.

810 Ford tnoctor wlh 4 ft. .....
c.u 111 441 ton: .

ALDER

8par1aCorJter '

Wll . ploln)t
· - ... 3Q4.t?l.
4I4L
.

61 Farm.Equipment

IIJ auerii'Um Llap Q

=

.

•s

PHILLIP

C

.;

.A 10 4

1121e Eniat181t•••nt Tonighl
Stereo.

-Ford Rlngor 4 wet, v.., l

au- liD hldl+bod, brown
plaid, tiOOJ quMn oill Sooty
Poolurwpacoc boll oprlngo ond
triime,

~don

- ' w, 110 iond~_will loki 2·

&amp; L1vestock

'

wtth

t,..

WD •

4I4L

NORTH

B.RIDGE

Morrild ... Willi
C.,_ Stereo.
dll • 'I aplfdvl
Q] D Star TNII:
N4Xt

for •II or

.

SCIIAMoUTS ANSWERS
"·~a
Flfnch • Mower • Guess • Eleven • SO WELL
"This sweater is worth much more than $200 • the
saleswoman inlooned the man. "It's made of an amaz·
ing Y.am," she added. The man smiled, "Yes and you
ten tl SO WELL!" .
.
'
.

i

(J) e

PB, PW, POL. AllfFM caNitte,
....r ond wh... 4WD:

Ptoatlo Anclllodol Culvortllnch
Ttw 80 Inch In Stock. Ron
Evona, Jockoon, Ohio. t -

WHITE'S IIETAL DETECTORS
Ron Ailloon 1210 Second
A-uo, Goll1poBo. Ohio, 114-

Antique.

............ Q

111111 Slat

, . . Ford Rlnaor 4 wet,

..

you develop from step No. 3 below.

.,

(I) D In
Edition Q
(l) I]) MacNeil~

R~Andeo;:::,;

..... ·~.....r.,lca:,:.,no

Complele the chuckle quored
by fill ing in tt\e missing words

llquart1 One TV Stereo .

~Deo:tngW­
Stereo.

'!!!'~roof,

oonA.._30+f~,

~~uoa. After =::04a,ll4otll't'7iel~nr

dupla, ~ -~ bocf.

Two Bedroom Home For Sale:
Fenced In Double Lol. Ga~

Muitcal
Instruments
HarmDIIJ otoo _guttor .a

L.

1 :35 (J) AndJ QriffHh
7:00\)le 01 WllMI al Fortune

-..n..=~~

57

I ..t

I

I I I G
. -L..15-L.Ii -I.L-.J.L-.J--'

8NnrZorroQ

-ton -I

!Jet

Q

@UpCtole

Po- Pit 11!oP.
, ... lui ctwn nn, ....
l..ociltod In G.C. lluraltv Co. G01r .,.,..,,
ra&amp;.cl tDp, lront a ,..,
Now op1n. Alit
air. El~=~:.ooo
mlloo,tto,ooo.
.
.
Dolo
1. . Fanf lrwiDO XLT, v..., PS,

IPuppy

. . .. SilO:

I ll*m. _........ lllddloporl,

Pomeroy;
6:30.

on,OH41112.

lftltti'IM

..

II

Tour

D IQID CIIS Nnro Q
Q] D " - Slareo. t:;J

tm - - 480 c.t Aiitoil 4

-ctwn Aolrw nn

_...,lat1210 B. PomOytvanlo
tt.lbo

l

1814 A•• •

lncll Ul, II lncll Tlnlo, · kO
New, ,.._, CD S.ereo And
- - -• .~:~ PI, T1il, CruiM,

=··=·~

"This sweater is worth much
more than $200." the sales·
woman Informed the man. ·n·s
I~
L-.J-..1-l.-L.J
made ol an amazing yarn;
.-------..:.-.., she added. The man smiled,
•r-r"::-;Er.:-v.,:E:.....:;.E...:L:..,..~~ -ves. and you ten it •• -·-t'

ea.- S..illllgo? srereo.

73 Vana &amp; 4 WD'I

r.:l..

lodl•

• - t s.ato n

N~ 2 lA CA, CH, Exp LA.
1250.11onth.
614 m 2300 OotiLa ml out .... - - - 1 ~.. ttao a tJp. All
--rC.IiWO.t.r
• Dryer lhoppe .,. ttl IMt.

2BR ope.- bOhlnd - r
Cllnlo Gf W. Va. IOW'II-4418.

=~~ 1 owner, $11,500. -

.,

m

Kttt-. .,..

"":'/.:':·,~1~!

Kti'IIMIW

Compilll. ...... - llor 811, K 114-4*0322, S ou1 lutovtllo Rd.

ThrM bedroom, 1 both, bna-

14 ___________________

'---4-:-4:-:6~-2::-:3::-:4:-::2:----

?ii('f~=-

a s~a-

.-, IM4174131.

~ Aw.,W

:::r

12--------------..,..

1.5

1 -

·--·~·1110-i
goo
dryon 1?1 to "!i.~tric I
~ ,...... m to PD' 1 port$1501 IliOn,
ibto - · 110; W. -ae. • gorlloge.. ~~. lllodl
• oppll•..._
Uwd
I lod,_ Gotago Aport.-, pllll. lnollldM
.a .,.... Qao~ ~ ...... oornar of lionel •
Arwo (1 I 805-H2-IOIIO Ell. QH. , CrMII Rood. IZfGIIIo, PM:h .. Kinluga, • ......._11173.
4&amp;e2 For Cumont Ropo Uot.
Rlqulrod. ............._ Da•:
•
GoodI
·-· 52 Spoi11ng
Large 4bdnn., older home, new 114-44141111.
24 1 30 Motion building, Llrgo 2 BR aportmon1 at Clollipoilo Hunter c;,_ - · With
lot, Rutland village, 614-742- Forry. 304-17&amp;-2641.
Anti Clulvor. I~
614-185-4427

Filosa a J, . .lt.' Dull verN &amp;
!!!"kid Oak, Hic!cory &amp; Alh,

..:0~

-

12110.111

a...nr.

manl, $1~0, 810 East Main,

FLew · ad. oU Muoned apllt 1
$31 dallvorod, f30 "'1-k up·
814 Dl13ltOafter7pm. JNCO
•

==------=-

Kina ltu For loll,
Podilad - · 11or11 Pint Flnioll,

42 Mobile Hom es
for Rent

31 Homes tor Sale

11ae Sonn7 Brooke by Ctayton

13.___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

.

'llli G . l . - ~-

11383.

2888, llm-4pm.

on loedi I1WINIIO.

o - 1 Ellctrlc Range, Soil·
Thlu-J.MP.II.
Cloonlng 0vlf11 ~1DIIilnl Condl·
floor.- color TY ttiO. lion, ttOD.I14-:JOJI.'JII55. ·
::,:t7W722,:;,:,=·
0000 USED APPUAiicES . , _ Nutrition Producto
W.~~=.~
Amino lou
Ao:ldandBody
,.._.
::ii!:'"--11 laotu!lna
Building, weigh!
lat
Stfllll
•,. bumor -tormuru. Av,nabie ox· .
100 411 14ii.
'
-.!!_~•e:IJ s1 Alta Aid Pharm1ey.
trw .... way to dlett
K8Nnore •....., •
CUt To
f?l• K - o.- Ill CUI To Qratn l'llod tt.al ... Dl?li
G.E. Dryor Ill CUI To Ill; led W.lghl. l14 411 34111, .
Elootrto Ronal 30 Ill CUI n you hove P-.te., rod drv,
To ,rtllu\;.Rilrlgorlf« ICOir lldn: try our no PiiOiliifo
AI
1111 CUI To 1M
-onlorr:

ll,II_Hoo

-

4,1112.

.

Uta, S:J5 IOOIId

=
=
J::: :,c:,..=
ta.forl LIRflllnlllood-.......,- =
·

2143.

go-.

Uoed llobllo - . , Call 114-

kii

':1:r: -

-ion 01rvlce. · Uconlod holldoyl paid. Contoct: lotae lot, good
4118,0hlo &amp;' W111 VIrginia, 304- llomorlll Ubrory. No PhDiil nolgfiborhood;' Goiilpoilo Forry,
T?3o5785.
Col... CIDIIng Dolo: Novo-r 304o417UIItl7.

-.omt.

-

.......,..

Good, Studf, Affordable, Busf.

nrod of
TllaHigh"'-Urt
At.-phorw?
Solo By Ownor. 114-446-6152.
Point -accounting
firm_,. Four onclolafllllolir 4 t.lroom holM, 11105 N. Ualn
Sl, 104o67~2130.
lhlfto ovolloblo.
• P-nt, ~alonot work
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FDR SALE
onvlrOIIIIIOIII.
·
' Rallblo DAY hourw and trot"' HliotOijcol Aroo Corner 'Lot • 816
lloln St. Pl. Plouoni, W. Va.
Compillliy
2 Full
;..'ir-"monl Hltlng only no Botho, 3 largoRononlodl
Blllroomo to $1.00 por hour pluo HVAC, Now Corp«. Aviltablo
lmmldlatly. 614-448~5.
~pl
.. 1or
lntlfYiow call•
GOYERNMEKT HOliES f1&lt;1111 $1
, ..00.331.0778
(U Repair). Daiinquant Tu
Property. Rtpoueulona. Your

Firw Wood ol - - · IM-44&amp;.
~~~ Bunce Rd oil Gaorgn

•~~~~~~~~~~
._, :a= --- ,.............,...,
•$2211
-00111h
_,. , ttoo

~~ana

I·

(l) Wlwe In 1111 Wortd II

tnado, ....... 30+f71.241G.

,_..,..11M -um
......,.
,.....

'=h1:z .,

• - -.

Wanted to Buy

441-3144 Attor 7:00 p.m.

....., GDII, lllenlrn WI lUther
uu.1112• ......low..... .
as
Aero """" s 1 J
:12141 0r 4 • • a.. 141 on . . - triM, llanflll Hnlng, IIIII "'w . .
Bothe,
.. -~.
kina tt00, paid tt50;' OliO mile.
301115
Ptll8.
o.r.go,
Lorge lodlior clolhlng· coil 114-11112·
1021!
21SS, ...... Of 1114-114..2204 a~
sPonw
bunom
~
No DIPlloit on -~
Creo11 Ad,
111.
Nolhlng E- Pn a nod.
COUNTRY PURIITURI AND Cia Fino Bolilr 124,000 BTU
Ulto - ·incllldll
Ulod " Cln:utatlng
- Than 6
CRAFTII
llontha,
~~
. ZZH 811111 - · 141, Golllpollo, Pump, All Roloyo a Goltllo
~
1-1422. .WI Bur And lol JNO, 114-441-U11

. -. Won'! LuL t-801).2114-

3 BN OOIIW, Modern Houae,
Garage, AC, llaclllily Alarm.
2108lf. Main, Pl. Plaltanl. For

::o :'"":1

Drogonwrnd catt.,Y: CFA p.,..

••• 2120.

Conlor'o tMI Or
SI.U
filM..
lntlal.ll•
1!21• Arid ChaiN t:111 · Or 8i0.13
Wollt; eo- And End Wlh
Doon ttl8 ~h'l

M Houaes tor Rent

=-=·

I

WROME

s u GE s

AIC Newo Q

WD

AKC Roglatorod c:rw..
tote of wrl'*ioe, 114- 30W?M2A

~-. For Solo $25, ....

PUAHCEII
11t4t84. . 0A~

Rentals

.......(J)e

·euu..

1111

form four

· 1--r-.....:..r.-T-~

1:01 (J) ,..,...•• Cbmp lilY
1:30~G ONBC NeWt C
(J) Ed McMahon' I 8tiT

- . . . Font, ~· pickup
Shor- - . " long. NO ruol.

~=~= .SSOO. Ahor
5:00PII
,

--·

, ._

•r.""·
ett ua
P. .
·

Pets tor Salt

56

- . Wll loll " - Than 112
PriDe. llllw11111 I I I P.ll. 114-

VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP-

h .........., as ..,... a lodrm., t 112 both, 2
plfd lor I.JIInry
cw
garage, all .tectrlc,
O..toO: c111n1ng woodbUmer In ,.mlly room, 614:::-=~-:"~:::-:.:.:---1
oN wl- Sonii 'JII2·2111,1om-4pm,
Rick Pllreon Auction Company, wwk, anti
ltrl
full liml auc:l-,
rnolnt- work. Hoildoyl: ali 3 bedroom ,.nch wlatt•chld

-pill·

-=

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Couoh1.. Loft - · Rocllnor
W.nlod To
llolor Fo( WMklnd Tllp To hulh
Dryer 1400, lt411 tt.n~on.
:.;:.,:.- 11-11. Col Pot '""
Dlnolto Bot With 4 Cholre Ukl

Good.a · 1

=~..r;t..:,'"lt:'~~Ciol~ 5:-::P..~::""rw..::'

Ttuirlcloy, Wpm. Sowing m•
chinl, bicretoo, kowboMI, clothIna, mllc. homo. Flrwt fO!Id on
rftjhl off SR124 corning lnlo

Wanted to Rent

HousehOld

Vondlng Route: Locoi. Wo Have
Thl N - IIIIC/Ii-, llaklng A
SINdy Cah Income. 1·
P08ITtDN OPEN: CUSTODIAL. 100455 0354.
:10 por - . 1 hourw par
day, I doyo par - . nm. of
Real Estate
day " Mrty 11Mnlug(J1.12). v....
tloitl
por r- (30 hourw
-h). llcll 1.11•: 3 por

oil-._ 30" rengo, dl-ulw,

Col alor 2:00 p.m., . .. , .
... WV,
'

Alorltlons: Sowing I llondlng,
814--4*41134.
=
.....,...._--:w::-:--.,..----...,."'log In my home, acrOA
trorn Nortfl Point Schocl, hove
,...,._, 3Q4.175ool612 • .

Loot: Goid Brocllll Aowontl 114- Eooy Work! Elcolilnt Pori ,... Ha" _.,., tor lodv pat~t 1
::44=1.:2=::q2.!::..__ _ _ _ _ _ 1 PnNILIOIO At Hoftw. Call good . _. rwooonobio, OIC
Yard sate
Toll F-. r.-...r.esea. Ell. pattont , . . _ , ....114..22711.

:=;::=======

:_sAna
room. wlh ao:ldn..
tn1or - · A l l ! : I t -

.....

I

Q]:.~~Q

0 lllacOJver
@lneldelle

8 World Today
8 Aln Tin Tin, K·t Cop

.000. ....
1117~
·
r.-a.-~4
:na. ~Jol: • \tl lnl
And
JoAn. •And

• ,. . . . .10.

Q

AIC:E 't'OLI
COMING
WIT~ ME?

QIIC

_ . . . , rwnt · - o r - h.
8torang a t . -. a.tt1a Hrrtot.

r.1erchandtse

Drummond• Auto Body I
lloc:hanlc Work. F,.. Eotlmotos.
~hbodlood Ad, 8-6. 6......0.

t Ait.ll"

"

e '"'" ",.·"' '
~-'=======~:::;::~~=W~IWW'!~-U
~'I'm..
.. WD, .

Aooml ·
Fumllhecl

45

.

'

.__.,oa.
'
1-11. A\1' II IIIIo, Air

t • · l-t

10

'

(J)hveitbyllelel
~Square One TV Storeo.

AND YOU WANT ME
TO 60 FR.OM DOOR
TO DOOR AND GIVE'
Ti-l EM TO PEOPLE"

-.V..~Ior-

low

we we ae
aeoNen

•

~.a:.:~~.-=
...,,....~11.110oeoar

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

1

1:00~e

72 Trucka tor Sale

-n!ESE ARE PAMPHLET$
ABOVT T~E 1'6~EAT
Pl/MPKIW'..

_;~.;__ __

EVENING

'

Condition, 13,5011. 114o319-2U5,
. 114-37f.2812.

...

8

WED., OCT. 28

i

tm Ubort_r _12150. flcoltont

on

4

•

l

s· :::

'~!::' s~~~lA-4£
IWilall "' CUaY I. POUAN
0 lour
Reorrange 1etter
ICramblod

Television
·Viewing

32 Mobile Homes
for Salt

3 Announcement•

The Dall Senti

' II 0

LDNVKVONVOW

F 0 Q

CZM

w zv

C A 0 W P

K M U L W L.T P

KMULWLTP. •

L p

WM
MDW

II

WRY V
MH

RNURL

PWVJVOPMO.
·PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "ft _ , s to be a law ot nature thllt Republicans
are more boring than Democrats." - Stewart Alsop.

e

1112 bJ MEA. inC.

28

�•

Ohio University .
College of OsiCOPatbic Medicine

Ohio Lottery

Pirates'
Leyland
honored

Family .

Medicine

100

Pick 4:
6798

. Super Lotto:
7-9-22-33-37-42
Kicker:
957030

Assoclate Professor

ol Flmily Medicille
Question: I .exercise regularly
and try to eat a proper diet. My
cholesterol stays around 125. A
few IIIOIId!s ago I saw a briefrqxxt
of research that said low cholesterol, like mine, increases the risk
of cancer. Is this true?
.us-: I recmdy wrote a aJI.
umn about high cholesterol. Your
question lets me address the other
end of the spec:trum of choleS~Crol
v81ues - those with lower than
normal levels.
It has taken many careful
leSC8rch studies to be sure that high
lewis of cholesterol are assoc:ialed
with heart artKks and lllhei' circu·
latory problems . The health of
thousands of individuals had to be
followed for years before lhe levels.
of cholesterol that produce he!llth
risk were detennincd. In fact, we
still aren't sure we have the numbers correct for those over 6S or for
women of any age.
The reason it has taken such
extensive research 10 validate the ·
claims of risk produced by
inc:reased cholesterol is that the
process is a very slow one. It lalces
years of high cholesterol before
any significant increase in the fre.
quency of heart dise- is seen.
Although our understanding of
the health consequences of below
aYCili&amp;C choleslerol levels is not as
impressive as for high cholesterol
levels, we do have some knowledge that c:an help us provide at
least a tentalive assessment of lhe
risk. Let me review for you what ·
I'w di$:overed reviewing the rned·
icallilellllure in this area.
.
Studies of low cholesterol have

•

been conducted in lhc v.ast ·few
years. In the National L1llivy of
Medicine's databue, tllere are
more than 60 rec:Cnlly published
papers listed. Many of lbesc evalu- '
ated lhousands ·of individuals 0\U
a period of ye~n. To dale, thete bas
been DO coosistmt fioding ofbealth
risk associated with low cholesJapan e study showed a possible in=ucd risk of suote with
low cholesterol. A Greek study
found a sligbt increase in the risk
of colon or l q cancer. But, and more careful studies haw not
replicated these ltiginal fmdiogs of
increased risk of cancer or suote.
There inay be some bealth risk .
associalcd wilh lower than normal
cholesterol levels.' If there is, the
real amount of risk it poses to
heallh is small More reJWCb will
reveal whether or not low c:holeaJerol is even a lllinm health worry.
Question: Since my cholcsu:rol is
low, should I eat more saturated
fats and cbolestetol in .. attempt to
raise it 10 a normal level? Answer:
No! FoUow a healthy .diet that is
low in fats and higb in fiber -just
as you would if your cholesterol
values were normal. You don't
have 10 stricdy avoid food high in
fats as soniconc with high choleslerol should, but you shou1dn't go
out of your way to eat more of
them, either.
·
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To subnrlt questions, write
to John C. worf, D.O., 2SO
Grosvenor HaD, CoUege of Osleopathic Medicine, Ohio University,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
A

vaa, •1»
·ca;saU, 11•

·Record
voter
turnout
forecast
I

day.
.
Taft offered bis prediclion a1 a
'news cmfetw in which be said
die _..., of Oilx-s registered

said.
""I thillk this Jeflec:ts both the
inlelat ia dlr: ,.aidentiid election
:rc-.lhe cv • .,.,. of a line-way
0 I d, md alJO very .aUJCSSive ,
¥011:1' iqpm.... tmW:S ecw'ICifld

lb.
, FRESH "SILVER PLATTER" WHOLE

Boston Butt Pork,Roast
SLICED FREE!

•

recoverin.J:!J

he saiL
All..... die l!lllllber of votm
e110 kil 10 c:atl blllols .would be a

.rec:ord. tbe pen:entage turnout

WASHINGTON EXTRA FANCY GOLDEN OR

wonld be less tbln in -

Red Delicio~s Apples ,

rhc•i•

teeent

A five year 2. mill renewal levy once the Village is reclassified. An
for fire protection will be on the inspection to detennine fue insurballol of Middleport voters Tues- ance classification has been
day.
requested, the mayor said.
Proceeds from the levy are ' "We have one of the finest valbeing ~ to pay for the new lad· . unteer fire departments in the State
der truck which Mayor Fred Hoff- of Ohio," said Hoffman, "and we
man desc:ribes as "having tremen- need to continue to provide our
dously improved the rue fighting firemen with the necessary equipabilities of the Middleport Fire ment which they need to protect
. Department."
us."
With the addition of the new
The mayor stressed that the levy
truCk, Hoffman said that he antici· is a renewal of an existing levy and
viUaac fire insurance · wiU not increase taxes.
:

......... -pndicting-hcie is

-

·- a 1• ,.. • ahoul12

pmtCIIl of

=:t:'i:...~w:! isoom-

•
•

Bua he said bec:ause there are
•cpaacd Wllas, 11181 would
i*udoa:e 4.7 •iiJim 1llliCiS.
1inloUI ofiqislcicd ~ 73.1 pc:ac:aa in 1910, 73.6 percent
in 11184, ... 71.7 pr.n:all in 1988.
Basal 0D 1CJ90 CCJIPIS figures,
tbe .-•s ~· popnlatioo is

.

8,0f7,371,1eavinglllout l.S mil·
lion-·· I cd WllaS statewide.
Tift Slid he is wouicd about the
pi i''"lily of ... lines at polling
places bec:aase of the expected
1aiJC -her of YOICIS aad compieiil)' of swe WIOl issues that
c:oald hlgda lillellhil to VOle.

"

Trick or treat times

....

Trick-«·lnat U.a i•

. ......-Mripc...,..."

tlii.Ja..a-a

*'-.......
~-tile lridt-«-ll'lilt ...... na.e
i

....

I

l'lw&amp; - .ad to hlill

- . . . ,..0 llp?s.
D• ?•, 1\.w•IAJ, 6-7 P·•~
Ts;;ers n b , Thnday, 6:7

....

'

p:&amp;

lteadaw. .n lllily,6-7p.m.
; FrilaJ, 6-7 ....
MIFI; t, .. ...,, 6-7
1'1
.,... ldlt.6-7p.-l
.....,,6:7p.a
t FridaJ, 6-7 ....
.J, FrilaJ, 6-7;30 p.a

,..1

s,.

••I
....

·Jury convicts
StyerofDUI
'

'

B~Pak

12-oz. cans

.

The honor roll for Rejoicing
Life Christian School has been
lllliiOUliCcd:
Kindergarten: Emuuel CISto,
Wallace Hill, Brittany Philson,
Courtney Rife md Sarah Wilkes.
Fir11 1rade: Andrew Philson,
Stephen Riggs, Brandon Williams
and Jerenly Ye&amp;u&amp;er.
Secon4 gradc: Cassie Braun and
Joshua Eagle.
•
Fourth grade: Chasidi Biggs,
Erin Harris and Role Schroclr;.
Fifth glide: Joileph McCall and
Aaion Schlt:tel
Sixth grade: Rachel FOrbes.

by _,,many~. including
our 01111 office owr the past year,''

lb.

A lOlii- of'Ohio's historic Roscoe
Village at Coshocton was enjoyed
· recently by the Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
All enjoyed the auractions and
the history of the Ohio and Erie

Honor roll posted

lllso was at an all-time

cou•ties lhrougbout Obio," Taft

•

Attending were Clarice Krautter, Norma Custer, Donna Jones,
Margaret Stewart, Velma Rue, Ann
Rupe, Reva Vaughan and Joan
Corder. ·

IIIII dlae- obviolisly than
offset hJ tile increases in many

Midleport voters asked to
renew fire protection levy

vOle

•-nus JOlt• • iDcre 1 ra in VCitS
rqisn?ion iD IIOIIIC 71 couaties
a:aoss the llale. 1'bal: v.ae some
dtu
ill a •••ober of coanlies,

Group takes tour

Canal

nxud of6.5 nnmo.

LEvY TO PAY · Middleport's new ru-e truck is being paid for
with ·money generated from a two mHI levy which is ap ror renewal
in Tuesday's election. Renewal or the nve-year two mill levy wiU
not increase taxes.

to

~.

'

ioo SHEETS PfR ROLL 2 Pl. YWHITE OR ASSOilTED

Kroger Bathroom ·Tissue

CAFFEINE FI?EE DIET COKE, DIET COKE, Sl'fl/TE Oil

reoca Cola Classic

: : . A jaJy in Meigs County Court
· fo..d Meli•d• Styer, Tuppers
PI . , pilty of .mint: under the
inDwof alcoboi on tue!day.
Aaudii1g to PJOIICWling Aaoraey Sleven I.. Stoly, die mnviction
-the remit of a cilllion issued to
Sl)'Cr by die Ohio Slllle Highway
PMrol on Allpll29.
· She wu senteuc:ed by Judge
Paid H. O'Brien 10 line days in

$3:;t:
~~
.....;.1:

j~l·l:a:!

lillie Wll n:paenl-

'

'

FROZEN ASSORTED VARIETIES

Banquet
Meals
6;15-11-oz.

FROZEN ASSORTED VARIETIES

rom"!:
Light I'A s '

,,,,
.....2...

I

~

t.&amp;awap·psr.

•

•.
•
I

juvenile detention center:

A• 9 df'MIWrlkr
COLUMBUS - SC4:retary of.
State Bob Taft said today he
!'11*1""'' aiiiXIid....,.,. of 4.7 mil·
lion .,.,.,. 10 10 to lhe polls Tues-

.&lt;

. A lluttn.dll

Progress report given
commission on ·regional

., JOHN CHALJi'.\NT

•

2 s.ctloM, 14 P.gee 21 wnt~:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi~, , Thursday, October 29, 1992 .

•

Named to dean's list

Dianna Camden and friend,
CiiiCinnati, visited hu {'&amp;reRts, Mr.
and Mrs . Lonnie Bohn over the
weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kloes, Mrs.
Stella Atkins, attended the gradua. tion of Danny Riggs from Ohio
Stale University recently.
Julia Steveos and Barbara Stet·
man, Fairfax, Va,,.visited Stella
Atkins and Ruby Diehl recmdy ..
Mrs. Tamra Lyons and· sons,
Racine, were Sunday dinner guests
of her &amp;randmother, Mrs. Lola
CJart.
.
Mr. and Mrs, Bob Alkire visited
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Sydenstricker,
Mason, W.Va. oo Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Gibson and
sons, Columbus, were weekend
visitors of Mrs. Virginia Gibson.
Bob Mahr, who w opeqted on
aldie V.A. HOspital in Huntington,
il slowly
home.
Mrs. Edith. H
visiiDd Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Mahr recently.

•

Jerol.

By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
reponed.
~lated Press Writer
"We would .like 10 promote· a
CHICAGO - Get to a phone concept called the 'chain of surand call an ambulance before you vi val,"' said LaiTy NeweD, diieaor
start CPR, experts say.
of program development for the
In a reversal, dociOrll and other American Red Cross, the leading
experts now recommenst thai lone provider of CPR llaining.
rescuers postpone cardiopulmonary
The four links in the chain are:
musc:italion oa adults until they callinl 911 or liiOdler CDJeJIC!iC'.f
summon help.
num~r. 11tarting C~~. getting a
That's because CPR rarely saves defibrilllla' 10 the VICbm and fol·
lives unless it is followed quic:kly lowing with adVID:Cd life support,
by advanced medical treatment, he Desaidfibrillllion_ _ u elecbiC
' jolt
such IS defibrillation 10 jiJI!Ip-start
the heart, the experts said in to the heart- is especially impoil
today's Journal of the American llml bccan9: 80 pm:entlll 90 per·
Medical Association.
cent of adults who collapse need it, ·
The old teeommendatioa was the conference report said. Defibthat a lone rescuer give a heart· rillation requires !rained opei&amp;l«S.
attack victim one minute of CPR
Studies show adults have tile
before calling.
best c:hancc of survival wheo CPR
The change is one of 19 drafted is given within 4 minuteS of canliac
by the Fifth National Conferen&amp; ·, 8f!C~t and ~vanced life support
on CPR and Emergency Cariliac w1thm 8 mmutes, the conference
Care.
said.
"CPR was taugbt to lay people
"If you haw someone who colin the 1970s with a great deal of lapses or has severe chest pains,
enthusiasm that it was going to difficulty breathing, a very dizzy
a~ a lot of livea," said Dr. John spell or is faint - somcthmg like
A. f'!waskos, chairman' of the ton· that - don't wait, go ahead and
ference of S12 professionals in call," Newell said. "The whole
Fe~. "ltiUms out, it doesn't concept here is call early, call
unless it's bactcd up by adequate fast"
ernc~ency systems lnd advanced
Children under 8 usually have
care.'
.
problems other than heart failure
~ is direc:tor o.f dia~- and do.n 't.~eed defibrillation. ~o
tic cardiology at the Umvmny ·of the pnon11es for them remam
Massachusetts Medical Center in unchanged for a lone rescuer: one
Won:ester.
min~ of CPR before calling for
A half-million Americans die help. ·, ,
each year from heart disease, most
Other recommended changes
of them suddenly. Two-thirds of include leng'th~ning slightly the
tho9: people aren't in hospitals at time spent inflating-the lungs of the·
the time,
victim. That should help prevent
Only IS percent of people who the resc:uer from blowing air inlll
get CPR live 10 go home from the the ~ach. The previous recomhospital, conference participants mendatioo was 1 to LS seconds per
breath. The new one is LS to 2 seconds per brealh.

Harrisonville news

Low lolllabt Ia mid 4k

Friday, doud;r. KIP !Mar 5t.

•

New CPR guidelines say call
· an ambulance before you start

Karla Ghevalier was among
those named to the Dean's List at
Hocking Technical ~Uege during
the summer.

...

Pick 3:

PapS

Jolla C. Wolf, D.O.

•

cd by Assisl • i'roe:lllOf George
P. Mccan~~,., tile defendant by
a.bH.bpl

Renewtd ~¥1 sought
for street lighting
R:z will oCs,...·s one mill
Jewy for live ,_. will be on the
bdol of s~ ...... n-~ay.
. While tile 1t1WJ is .. Ji&amp; I j Ill the

ballot u for carreat expenses,
Xat11iJa Crow, CODDCil me~~
adriaea ... tbe _ , gene
will lie .-I far~ li8fiinl.

By BRIAN J. REED
.
Sentinel News Staff
• Progress on construction of a
juvenile detention center in Nelsonville was discussed when the
Meigs County Commissioners met
in re,ular session on Wednesday
mmung.
.
. Susan Mitchell, Regional Services Coordinator for the new
Hocking Valley Community Residential Center, said that construe·
tion on the facility should be completed by June, ani! that it will be
ready for occupation by fall, 1993.
The center bas been developed
by juvenile court judges in II
counties: Athens, Fairf~eld, Gallia,
Hocldng, . Jackson , Lawrence,
Meigs, Pike, Scioto, Vinton and
Washington. Once completed, it
will be available 10 house up 10 42
third and fourth degree juvenile
felony offenders from those colinlies.
·

Now, Mitchell said, juveniles
from Southern Ohio who are sentenced 10 serve in detention centers
are sent 10 Columbus and Cleveland, where they are housed with
violent, first and second degree
felons. As a rule, juvenile offenders
from this area commit "lower level
crimes" than their urban Ohio
counterparts and are placed in
facilities with juveniles who have
commiued "higher level" crimes.
"The goal of the center wm be
10 rehabilitate, rather than deteriorate," Mitchell said, stressing the
importance of treating juvenjle
offenders with "dignity and
respec:t" if rehabilitation effms are
10 be successful.
.
She said that the new facility
will suess the importance of "after·
care", which treats not only the
offender, but his family, as well as
working with commumty resources
in effort 10 prevent furure offenses.
Commissioner Richard E. JoneS

asked whether the center wiD make
an effort to hire qualif"lcd IIIJPlicants from throughout die 11-&lt;01111ty area, and MitcheltwiS·unablc 10
answer the question, but urged the
commissioners 10 attend a meeting
with lhe boan1 and projec:t architect
on November 18.
.
Although funded by the Ollio
Depanmert of Youth Services, lhC
center will be administered by th&lt;
judges, who make up the center's
board of direciOrll.
.
The board approved requests fot
interdepartmental funds transfers
for the probate COWl ($3,783), and
children's services ($16,518), and
approved a transfer in the amouni
of $8,494.36 on behalf of the chil;
dren's services department Ill cor;
reel an error,
Present, in addition to Jones;
were commissioners David
Koblentz and Manning Roush; and
Clerk Mary HobSIClter.

Wright's removal ratses questions-~
By TED ANTHONY
CHARLESroN. W:Va. (AP) The saga of a Mason County school
board member, which started at the
polls and wound its way to,lhe state
Board of . EA!11Ca~on. could be
headed for the courts.
At issue is a seven-hour training
class Olsllln 0. Wright has refused.
10 lalce.
"The further it goes from IOWA,
the more .remote and bewildering it
becomes," said Wright, who was
removed from the school board last
week for oot completing the course.
.State

sChools

right away from (hiril) -lhe right
hold public office," McGinley
said Wednesday.
"For Dr. Marockie Ill just step in
and remove someqne the citizens of
MUon CoUnty have placed their
trust in, without any kind of a
process in place, smacks of
Ill

aurhori~ism," said McGinley, ,.:

eounw:

fanner assiStant Mason
prosecutor who represented tJ.IC:
schoo.l board..
Wnght SBid the ~moval of a
publicly elected"oflieial .IYt;.~ ~
pomtee su~h as Marockie IS liC
ContiDued on pap 3

Superintendent

Hank Marockie Kted on the advice

of hearing officer Carolyn Ar·
rington, who cited a 1990 state law
allowing the state to punish county
sc:hool officials who neglect 10 take
the seminar.
"Just because. someone is an
elected official doesn't give them
cane blanche authority to . do
whatever that person wants to do,''
Marockie said.
Wright, 70, retired after 37 years
·of teaching and schoel administration. He said he doesn't need the
· tralning.
. He said state law bars anyone but
a circuit judge from removing him.
.Auomey General Mario PalumbO
said Wednesday he sees merit in
that argumenL
"I thinlc therc:s a real question of
authority here," Palumbo said.
"Elected officials are typically:
removed by the courts."
· Palumbo called the removal a
brealc from procedure and predicted
HAUNTED HOUSE • II JOn are looking for a treepy
it would end up before the state
encounter Ibis Halloween, look no farther than ?be old Chester
Supreme Court
Houe.lt hiS been tuned lato a haunted bouse and is ope11 free of
Wright has vowed 10 appeal. .
cbarge to visltora oa n11rag~d and Saturday from 7-10 p.m. The
"I can't let those people get by
structure is located OD tbe • in Chester behind the nre depart·
wilh this," he said. "They have no
meat.
jurisdiction. And most of all, they
didn't elect me.''
The stale Board of Education
told Mason County's board Ill
choose a replacement within 4S'
days,, oorr 1have Marockie do•it.
NEW YORK (AP) - · For the under 3 ~ntage pomts.
The Post said its Sllrvey indicat·
Marockie said Wright is the only
first time sin~e August, a major
national poll shows the presidential ed that Perot's surge in support school board member in any of
rac:e as a dead heat, but other polls since the presidentilll debates was Well Vuginia's 55 counties who
show Bill Clinton leading by seven leveling olf and could hold llelldy. bas not lalcen the course,
" Of those who said they would VOle
Marockie said a 1990 state law
1010 points.
.
for
hil!l,
8.
8
pen:ent
said
they
SU.P"
allows'
the state schools superinten·
The attention-grabber Wednesport
h1m
stronaly,
~pared
w1th
dent
day wss the poll Gallup takes daily
10 begin the procfflinB' 10
79
percent
of
Chn!'J'I
s
voters
and
remove
officials accused of
for CNN and USA Today. Clinton
74
percent.
of
~ush
s
su~.
dishonesty
or continued neglect of
led by only two points, 40 percent
Pr~ol
u\
h1s
~dvcrusmg
has
cJ¥ty.
.
.
to 38 percent for President Bush
exphcllly
asked
h1s
su~
not
The
law,·
however,
apparendy
and 16 percent for Ross Perot.
to worry that a vote for him would · ~ 't · · the
·ntendent sole
Those figures, which have a 3· be
wasted.
The
wide
exposure
power~~pen
point margin of error, were an
The lllle acboOls su'perintendent
average of results from polls talten gi'ven the CN~-USA Today poll
may
wo~k
aga~nst
tbat
effort
by
.is
not an eieciDd official. Marockie
Monday and Tuesday of 1,2171ike·
ly votera. At the lime, the Bush :':JJ!::l':f!:av~ ~ ICiecfed by_the W~t Vilgi!Jia
campaign was pilloryina Perot for ference in a close match between Bolilrd of lidaaltion, ~hiCh conSIStS
making unsubstantiated char~JeS Bush and Clinton.
of lllbcma?orilliJIIIODIIeeS.
about smear tactics and also toubng
The Clinton cam~ actnowl·
Not all ad members were apa report of higher-than:expected· edjled the race was tightilnlng but pointed cluriila Gov. GBSIOD Capereconomic powth.
Satd its own polls were clo~r to 1011'1~,however.
In a Washin~, Post poD taken ABC News' Monday-Tuesday
Wllliml Mc:Ginllly, g.e~
Friday through Tuesday, Clinton
· lri of 900 likel oters wbich coauel for the ·West Virgtma
had 44 percent, a 10-point lead : : c':~IOilleading 7 inas. 42 Educ•rn
Amd"jon. said
over BIIA's. 34 percent, and~ ~ent 10 3S perca~i'for
and "!'ri&amp;JU I IOIIOYII, )-allt:d or 1101,
WIS SIIPIICifled by 19 percenL The
Perot a1 20 pen:em. The mqin of tlltUiiiWDlllhe dc•nocrauc process
poll o( 1,837 likely voters had a
Contlllutd on page J
m,J•
,~~tial
margin of sampling .error_of just

Bush gains ground .i n polls,

e

rUsh,

.y:::"

=

OVPP-Jo, Miodya-

MAY BE HEADED FOR COURT • Olston 0 . "Nick" Wrigbt,
Mason, may be aoina to court soon if he decides to challenRe a dee!:
sion brought down last week by State S,uperintendent of S~hoollll_lu~
Marockle which removed him from h1s board or educatiOn positloa;
Marockie cited Wript's failure to re&lt;eive seven boars training• tile
reason for dismissal. Altorney general Mario Palumbo stated hoftwr,
that generally, elected ollkials are removed by tbe court Systew and
not appointed onlclals. Wright Is pictured above talking ;with WSAZ
reporter Heather Hartley.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="328">
    <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="9622">
                <text>10. October</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="33911">
            <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="33910">
              <text>October 28, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="959">
      <name>shank</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
