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                  <text>By JORGE AMADO
A-..elated Prtu Writer
LUANDA, Angola - Spondic
IUIIfU'C ~ In the capital IOday
6oun after a U.N.-brobnd fire
e&amp;ct, but witnesles Slid
the fightiDa was less intense than
the W«tead clasbcs thlt threatmed
to renew civil ww.
Some civilians were reponed
looting bulldina• that had been
used by UNIT A rebels. Police
vehicles with loudspeakers eruiscd
the lliCCts appealing roc an end 10
the
A machme-gun battle filled for
about an hour after a police
armored car shelled UNITA positions in Luanda's diplomatic quar- ·

""*

shootin,.

.

~o:e:;:; ~o:;o.:::!

of the capital, but witnesses said

~=::d::::::::
died

Vikings
pound
Bears ,

:l:;iiiiWia

doctors, nothing, just bodies and
ill WubiiJiton, aid !he
an "Ill-out offensive
wounded lying 011 the floor...
The situation ouuide Lunda by ?be aoflllllllell? .. The aovern·
was unclear today. A resident of ment blimed UNITA.
The e•u•lties included three
the port city of Beai'Mia ?Old '!1Porta
...... th'!' dead Sunday ~y
Auocietec! Prell of heavy ~Mg
mil·
thele, 1M ?be auce III'P* to be IO"UIF • palic)e, They taJren
for
UNIT
A
members
trying
'-okling in otber c:itiea.
Durina Sundly's fish~ . 10 flee, u. rcpor1Cd.
U.N. offteials in Luan.~ ssid
Luanda, prvenunent forte~
•
by armored personnel carrters they ~ not confirm ICJ!"*ts that
pounded UNITA positions with two U.N.~ WIR kiled..
mortar and machin~-gun fire. ,
The c:iVII - . whicb brotc out
Armed civilians, including teen· shortly befcn indCpendence tiom
agers, fousht alongside police Portugl1l in 197S, $UI1Ied into one of
the Cold Wit'S fiercest proxy batagains? the rebels.
.
Jardo Muekalia, a UNIT A da
·

.

armed civilians moved out agala1t UNIT A
strongboldl In Luanda Suaday, poud:::l the
rormer rebels with mortar llllells and a
..e.
gna fire. A UN-sponsored ea.ftre lOok llold In
the southwest AFrican nation Sunday. (AP
Photo)

Fighting reported near Sarajevo
By TERRY LEONARD
Associated Press Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnill-Herzegovina - Heavy fighting was .reported
today between Serb and Bosnian
government forces in a broad arc of
territory nonh of Sarajevo, where
the government is steadily losing
ground.
Sarajevo radio reported intense
clashes around Olovo, Srebrenica,
Gradacac, Tuzla and Brck:o, IOwns
all located north and east of
Bosnia's besieged capital.
. It also reported heavy shelling
of S10lac, in SOI)thwestern BomiaHerzegovina near the CroatiaJI border. S10lac was attacked after more
than a month or relative peace, it
said.
Bosnia's Muslim"led government on ·Sunday rej.~:ct~!J Serbmade clothing brought by UNICEF
for needy Sarajevo children, an 1

indicatiori af the ·depth of animosity
felt for the Serbs, who have
besieged the city for severi months.
· "What could be more cynical
than to give this aid to a ldd whose
father was k:illed two days ago by
the same source?" · said Deputy
Premier Zlatko ~dzija.
Manuel Fontame, a UNICEF
representative in Sarajevo, said
other clothing would be SCllt quick:·
ly 10 replace the soclts. shoes and
winter clothing~ which arrived on
Sunday with UNICEF's executive
director, James P. GranL
GI'8Jil poclaimed the be~nning
of a "week: of tranquility ' -. a
time to provide supplies for chil·
dren before winter sets in. But
week:end fighting was intense.
Bosnian officials said nine people
were ldlled and 111 wounded in
fighting on Saturday, the heaviest
in weeks.

State of emerge-ncy :
·declared by Yeltsin
MOSCOW (AP) - President
Boris Yeltsin today declared a state
of emergency in two regions of
southern Russia to try to stop the .
latest explosion of ethruc warfare
in the Caucasus. ·
The declaration comes after
fighting brok:e out Friday between
lngush and Ossetian forces in
North Osselia. lngush mililaniS are
demanding conttol of part of Nonh
. Ossttia.
Following 'II Kremlin meeting
with his security council, Yeltsin
· · imposed the f110nth-long state of
emergency in North Ossetia and
lngushetia, a neighboring region
thai is predominandy ln~sh.
Yeltsin appointed VICe Premier
Georgy. Khizha 10 govern the conflict :zone temporarily. The decree
bans the activity of political

groups; allows roc searches of vehicles and people, increases secmity
at k:ey facilities such as power
plants and talces control of broad·
castin~ facilities, newspapers and
magazmes.
Seven people have been ldlled
and scores of Russian servicemen
talcen hostage since the violence
began. Russian paratroopers and
Interior Ministry llOOpS were called
in Sunday to help separate the
lngush and Ossellan fighters in
Prigorodny, near the capital of
Vladitavkaz, the ITAR-TBS$ news
agency said
Clashes ncar Vladikavlcaz were
reported today, despite a cease-rue
agreed to both sides that included
using the Russian llOOpS as a buffer
force, IT AR·Tass said. At least two
people were killed and nine
wounded, it said .

.

There was only lporadic fighting in Sarajevo overnight, and
occasional infanll')' fighting continued on a hill south of the Bosnian
presidency building.
On Sunday, a cameraman for
the British Broadcut Corp. was
killed when his vehicle was hit by
mortar rue near the northeastern
town of Travnit. Tihomir
Tunutovic, a Croatian, was at least
the 29th joumalislldlled covering
Bosnia's war.
Presidents Alija lzetbe~ovic of
Bosnia and Franjo TudJman of
Croatia met Sunday in Zagreb,
Croatia, in an apparent efforno
defuse tensions between the once
nominal allies.
A joint statement said the two
leaders agreed to punish those
r~spol)siblt~ for recent Muslim·
Croat clashes and 10 fonn a joint
military command to prevent fublre
conflicts.
Bosrtian officials have accused
the Croats of secretly conspiring
with Serb nalionalisls to the divide
up moat of Boani1 Only 1 101111
portion of the JqJUblic is still held
by the government's outgunned
supporters, who have recendy suffered a steady string of defeats in
northern towns.
The UNICEF aid was to be distributed among all ethnic groups.
F.ive truck:S carrying the relief supplies arrived in the capital on Sunday and five remained in Pale, the
Serb lieadquancrs outside Sarajevo.

RUNNING FOR COVER - Realduts of
Sar*vo prepare tu 1'1111 acn8 a street Ia dowa·
IOWII Sarajevo, ductlna anti-aircraft maclalae
pa fire wllld1 ilblal•a tbe r - military llolpltat (out or pboto • ri&amp;ht) Monday. Hetvy

Liberian rebel
blamed ih killing
MONROVIA, Liberia (AP) - .
Monrovia's Roman Catholic arch·
bishop today bllmed rebel leader
Chlrfes Taylor for the slaying of
five American nuns and prayed that
the guerrillas would end their siege
' oftbecapl!ll.
~

fiahtlal WM reported Monda;, hetweea Serb
ud ...... acmruant fon:a Ill • brold are
or territor;, aort11 or SuaJml, w11ere 111e ao•eo •·
meat illtadlly loollaalfOIIDd. (AP l'llolo)
·

r-----~------~~----~
von FOI

Robert C. (lola) Hartenbach
for •••• Co. Co••lsslo••r

•

••••r
11wn•alla ;
........... c.... .

32 Te•n ..,.,......

RE"IUCII- WI. W Ter•
fta... AIMI
Plllllarll¥• ., 7 ,RIIIMitC.I.... triii,417.Pt

liM, firM 1¥

Pick 4:

Low IVDigblln $0..

WedoHday, doudy. Chan~• of

6081

J

ralll 90 percenL High In mld-601.

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

WHY. VOTE FOR

Vol. 4S, No. 1SI
Copyr!ghted 1182

JOHN LENTES 'I

By BRIAN J. REED
• Sentinel News Stair
Pomeroy Village Administrator
John Andelson updaled the village
council on several pending
improvement projects when coun·
cjJ met in regular lleSSion Q11 Monday evening.
The village'$ new sewer treatment pla!tt, which will aiiJIIICDI the
existmg facility behtnd Bob
Roberts Field, is ahead of schedule,
and nesrly 95 percent complete,
Replacement of water line in the
area of West Ma.in Street to the
Middleport corporation line is

expected ·to go to·bid by the end of Historical ~o.ciety has requested
November, Anderson said. The clarification of portions of the jlroengineering work on .that projeCt is ~sal, and a timetable for such clarnow underway and will be hand Ification is not k:nown. The comdelivered to the Ohio Environmen- missioners are administering the
tal Protection Agency in Logan grant, which was· awarded through
discretionary funds of the Ohio
once it is completed.
A project to extend sewerage Department of DevelopmenL
The sewerage system and the
service 10 the new Riverside Food
Mart on West Main S~met is in the water line project are also funded
environmental assessment stage, through governmental grants.
i
with the ad~ertising process now
Anderson also said that tlie
underway.
engineering firm of Burgess &amp;
Mary Hobstetter, clerk: for the Niple of Park:ersbQrg, W.Va. is
Meigs County Commissioners, gathering da?a as it relates to a joint
reported on Tuesday that the Ohio water system between Middleport
'

VOTE JOHN
LE
.

MIL TON, Mass. (AP) George Bush was born in this town
a couple miles south of BOSton 68
years ago, but he's no favorite son
among some voters.
· "I am a Perotist," proclaimed
Stanley Manin, a jeweler. "I'm

tired of politics as usual. Give a
man lik:e Bush four years and if he
hasn't proved himself, why give
him four more just because he was
born locally? He's not a hometown
guy. He hasn't lived here...
For Manin, owner of Grono &amp;

s

FOR A BETTER MEIGS COUNTY
. ,.

QUESDON:
WHY SHOULD RICH JONES BE RE-ELECTED
'f.O THE OFFICE OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONER?
EXERCISING THEIR RJGHT • Joyce Ana MeCarthf, left,
and Jllll O'Brlea, were out early Ibis Electlou Day dolnllbeir dvk:
duty by exeo dlla=drlpt to vote. They're pldured as ~ey vote
at the third~
at ~Pomeroy Fire Departmeut. . ,

BECAUSE HE HAS PRODUCED
FOR THE
&lt;
PEOPLE OF MEIGS COUNTY DURING HIS
TIME IN OFFICE.

LETS LOOK
AT THE FACTS••••

•'

FACT-Rich Jones has always supported Village governments by distributing '
Block Grant monies to assist them witlf their needs.
.
FACT-Rich Jones led the way in establishing our current E,M.S. system and is
a strong supporter of that agency. The construction of a Heliport has
saved many lives.
FACT-Rich Jones has stood up to Sta$e and F9deral agencies and fought for , 1
Meigs County's fair share.
FACT-Rich Jones has supported Township governments with Block Grant
monies.
•
FACT-Rich Jones assisted in bringing Nursing Homes to Meigs County with
"no-risk" Industrial Revenue Bond sales.
·FACT-Rich Jones has assisted Fire peoenmaots with Block Grant monies.
FACT-Rich Jones was a leader lr\ establlshlilg the Meigs County Development
·
Office by assisting with financing. .
FACT-Rich Jones worked to keep the Meigs Mines open and retain coal miners
jobs. He testified before the PUCO in both Athens and Canton.
•.
FACT-Rich Jones has dempnstrated financial management ability by maintain·
ing a balanced County Budget.
FACT-Rich Jones ~s held the line on Ill increases.

RICH ]ONES il a prtmen letuler•••
working full-tims for the people of Meig• County . ··

Clinton is no exception,
althouch there was a time she
wasn't happy with him because he
tried to wriggle out of questions
about his character and his draft
status.

Bush, she said, ran an undignified campjlign. "I didn't think they
could get any dirtjer than they did
in '88, but they did," she said
.
John Minjlolelli, · a Boston
banker whose inWstry was hard hit
by the recessi.on and who lost
money himself in invesunent propas he .tried to flag down the vehicle erty, was drawn to the Clinton tid·
for assistance.
et because of running mate AI
Bates and his ~nger, Regina Gore's envirorimental stance.
F. Cook, 28, Gallipolis, were tranS"I don't know if I'm crazy
ported by the Gallia County Emer- about any candidate," Mingolelli
gency Medical Service to Holzer said. "Everything was rehashed
Med1cal Center where they were over and over again. They don't
admit?ed for trea?ment.
really getiO the poinL They just tell
Winbigler was uninjured.
you what you want 10 hear.'
Batea was listed in guarded conIn the Milton home wbere Bush
dition and Coot was listed in IIIJ1ble lived for only six months after his
condition Tuesday morning, a hos- birth, the current occupant, Nina
pital spotreswoman said.
couldn't be counted on 10
Batea' 1982 Chevrolet Ciprice Graves,
vote for him,llthough her husband,
and Evans' 1980 Oldsmobile Cut· Dean. is a staunch Bush supporter.
~ere both destroyed in the
"I was definitely for Bush
the debates," she said. "I
before
The accident is Gallia County's was pretty
impressed with Mr.
fifth fatal wreck of the. year.
~ I guess I really don't k:now."

Man k·illed in wreck,
two others injured

,.

Councilman Bill Young again
brought 10 council's attention needed repairs .on Willis Hill. According 10 Young, emergency vehicles
recently had difficulty responding
to a call in the area, and he
expressed concern for the safety of
residents in the area in those circumstances. The road is damaged
due to a slip, and estimates .
obtained by council earlier, involving piling installation and road ·
repair, placed repair costs at
approximately $10,000.
Courtcil also: . ·
• Presented a plaque· to the Big

Christie Inc. Jewelers in this town
of more than 2S,OOO, ,business has
· been off during the weak economy
under Bush. He wants a return 10
the past of textile, shoe and wa?ch
. manufll!:turing in the United States
instead of abroad.
"I'd tile~ to· sec government.sponsored industries which \Yould ,
put people to work: and generate ·
taxes," Manin said.
Like Manin, other voters across
the country are disenchanted with
the dirty campaigns run by Uush
and Bill Clinton and .are skeptical
about the future.
· ~ Some were leaning toward ROss
Perot, waiting to hear what he had
10 say in an e~on eve TV m~­
sage Monday mght before dec1d·
ing.
COMMITTEE RECOGNIZED • Pomeroy .
Voters backejl· their candidlte
VIllage Coun~il present,.. a plaque to the Big
for a variety of reasons: Party loyBend Sterawheel Association last ni&amp;bl, in
alty and tradition, the economy, the
recogni?IDa or the sacceSI or last moatb's Big
envirorunenL
Janice Gilbert, a Boston legal
secre7ary, said she always votes for
the ()emocraL

ANSWEB;

FACT-Rich Jones is continually working to improve Meigs County highways.
Over 150 miles have been blaCktopped.
FACT-Rich Jones is leading the effort to obtain STATE highway improvements
to bring about Ecor!omic [)eyeloomeot.
FACT-Rich Jones has strongly supported the Senior Citizens Center and

and Pomeroy, a project which both
village councils and mayocs have
been considering for several
months.
Mayor Bruce Reed distributed
petitions 11nd em;ouraged council
members to circulate them in support of extended area telephone
service between Pomeroy/Middleport and Mason and New Haven,
W.Va. The project is being spearheaded by the Meigs County Economic Development Office and
MasOn Mayot George Nichols. The
petitions are restricted to one name
per household or telephQne.

Bend Sternwheel Association,
through John Thomas, in appreciation of the success of the recent
Third Annual Big Bend Stemwheel
FeStival;
- Accepted the mayor's report of
fines collected, totaling $8,041, for
the month of October;
- Set leaf pick:up in the village
for the week:ofNovember9.
Present, in addition 10 Anderson, Reed, and Young, were Cooncit members Betty Baronick, John
Blaettnar; Scott Dillon, Larry
Wehrung and Thomas Werry; and
Clerk:.Kathy Hysell.

Voters tired ofpolitics·as
usual as campaign ends

u,s.

-

1 Sec:t!on,10 , . . 25 Ollila
A llult?med?l lni:. Nflw prper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi9.L TUesday, November 3, 1992

Pomeroy council receives update on village projects

NED OUNn PROSECUTOR

Senior proarams.

•

586

•

pte
in the wedl:end fighting,
the worst outburst since tenSions
c·
began escalating after national
elec?ions in 1a&amp;e Sep?ember.
UNITA leader Jonas Savimbi
contends the elections were rigged,
although the U_nited Nations says
the balloting' was geaerally free .and
Don't be misled by the Incumbent's STORIES
fair.
about his accompllshmlntl.
UNITA. the National Union for
1Don't be .misled by his STORIES about John
the Total Independence of Angola,
ran second to the ruling Popular
Lentu' positions~
Movement for the Liberation of
Angola in voting for the national
THE STORY: "Lentn Ia soft on crime.'
legislature and Savimbi trailc:d
THE TRUTH: Criminals who deeerv8 prison WIU
incumbent Eduardo dos San10s m
the presidential race, although dos
GET PRISON
Santos did not get the SO percent
Criminals who DESERVE a chance will get
needed foc a rust-round viciOI')'.
one.
The elections were held under a
1991 peace accord th•t ended the
THE STORY: "Lentes has no experience aa
16-yellr war between UNITA and
prosecutor.' ·
·
the MPLA, in which some 3SO,OOO
THE TRUTH: Appointed by Steve Story as
people died.
·
·
Unconfirmed reports on Porspecial prosecutor In Meigs County
tuguese radio IOday said a number
Appolnttd as Special Prosecutor In Gallla
of leading UNITA officials in
Co~ to fight government corruption.
Luanda had been ldlled, wounded .
oc captured over the weekend One
Chief Prosecutor In two large Cuyahoga
said Abel Chivuk:uvukli, UNIT A's
County cities.
,
foreign affairs spotesman was seriTHE STORY: 'LentH .repreHnts murderers In
ously wounded and being trea?ed at
a military hospi?al.
· other COUJ1tl88...
Savimbi left the capital three
THE TRUTH: Specially certified by the Ohio
weeks ago and was last reported in
. Supreme Cow1 as one of five attorney&amp; In SE
the central hiPJand city of Huam·
Ohio C!lpable to handle death cases.
bo.
.
The speed with which tbe ceaseStory, for 10 years, represented the worst
rue was worlted out Sqndly with
murclfrars, drug deal~rs.- rapists and child
.U.N.;
and Porlugllese media:
abtlaersln Meigs County. ·
tion - suggested that both sides
wan?ed to s?qJ back from the brink:
of another freab nationwide con·
flil:i. But Edmund de Jamette. head
of tbe U.S. mission, described the
situa?ion as ''still confused.''
A Competent and Dependable Attorney
The weekend fighting left the
capi?ll in chaos.
.
A nurse at Luanda's Prenda
Hospital lOki Usbon's TSF radio
Plld lor br ... c.nJ~ 11;211 E.lllcl, Pa••rov. 011.41711
todly: "There's no medicine, no

Northwest of Sarajevo, refugees
from Jajce continued to stream
southward. The city's fall to Serb
forces on Thursday was a severe
blow to the Muslim-led government.
About 25,000 refugees had
anived in Travnik, south of J ajcc,
and thousands more were expected,
Pecer Kessler, a spokesnwl foc the
U.N. High Commissioner for ·
Refugees, said in Zagreb.

Page4

Pick 3:

'

INTEGRITY

CEAS!J:-F1RE VIOLATED- This Is a photo
taken f'rom Portuguese television showing what
was said to be a polic:eman armed with rockets
and a rocket launeher u he moved out Into the
streets or Lullda, Sunday. Government rorces
backed by armored personnel carriers and

Ohio Lottery

A 79-year-Oid Vinton man, John
W. Evans, was tailed and two other
people injured in a two--car wreck:
at the intersection of U.S. 35 and
Vinton Street ncar Centerville
Monday around 7:SO p.m.
According 10 a report from the
Gallia-Meigs Post ofthe State
Highway Plt?rol, Evans was northbound on Vin10n Road and pulled
out on10 U.S. 3S in front of an eastbound car driven by Robert L.
Bates, 30, Gallipolis.
Batea' car ltnJC1c the left side of
Evans' car, the pabOI said.
According 10 the pabOI, Bates
was then struck: by an eastbound
?raetor and semi-trailer, driven by
Richard D. Winbigler, Sl, Newark:,

Creator of 'Our Gang,'
Hal Roach, 100, dies

Stuart pleads guilty

.
.
BOS.TON (AP) - Matthew
Laurel cr&gt;:ing or scratc~mg ~Is Stuart is goin" to jail for ·helping
head, or Oliver Hardy playmg ~th hide the
JJs brother
nd
his tie. They were adults plalmg used to~his pcgnant~ BJc
children, The reverse was the Our
utors sa he wasn't alone in
Gang' series with children playing C:..g his t!tt.er·s secreL
grown-ups."
. "There were 12 to 20 eo le
George McFarland, who plsyed privy to some version of w~at
pudFY.• lieanic-wearing Splllk:y in occurred that nighr."-prosecutor
the Our Gang" Belies, said Mon- Thorn Mundy 'd'
day: "I didn't know the man when·
Ma~thew St:'ri. 26, pleaded
1 was a child. ... He - the head of ..,,;Jty Monday 10 tsldng part in an
the studio and I wa an ICior, a kid f~ fraud scheme ?hat led 10
actor, at lhai."
the ala · and drew ~ to five
"But he was llways ~ 10 us C8l'll in~son But he declared "I
at Christmas and on bilthdlya,"' Y
.._,:' or' brothrr'1 tm
McFarland said. He said he and ~ wilem,r
P to
R011th lOOk IOIIIC lllllllhota togeltb- m Suffollt SuPerlor Court Judge
er recen~y, and
hadth~ wrO?e Robert BUlks said Matthew Stu·
on one, 'If 1
...,... you were art's c:onduet- •'lne:xc:usable and
JIQing 10 UDD out so good. I would Oll!l'qCIOUI.'\
liave lrttJl 'f.N 011 the contract • lit·
Carol Stuart, 30, wu shot and
tie longer. '
·
killed in 1989 ais sbe ll1d her h...
Bom in Elmira. N.Y., in 1892, bind left a childbirdl class. 01ar1ea
Roach ~j ~~.!~~In Stuart, 29, who was wounded,
Jold UJU , uou-.. m...., ....,,.
called for help 011 hil car phone in 1
thinl• a child foc
Alaska
and
driving
a
truCk
in'S.·
dnmatic
Clll tblt w.. broadcast on
doel.' • he oaoe llid. "But il ?abl , tie.
·
na71ona1
television.
a great ll?ill10 do it - lUte Stan

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Hal
Roach, who teamed Stan Laurel
with OliVer Hardy 011 celluloid, discovered Harold Lloyd and created
the beloved "Our Glllll" comedies
tblt endure on TV ?oday as "The
Little Rascal•," has died at 100.
· The ftlmmaker died Monday at
UCLA Medical Center after conaacting pneumonia.
Stai1ing in films as a cowboy
e1.tra at S.5 a day, Roach rose to
command a comedy factory that
produced hundreds of shorts,
begiJIDIIIIID the lilent.era.
"Out GaDa" and die teamin&amp; of
Lllnl and Hardy DIOVod hil great·
· est nceesses, wlnnlnl him two
Olean for short 1~11: Laurel
end Hardy'• '"Tho
Bo1." in
1932 and Our Oana'• "Bored of
· EdlcMk".. ln 1936.
He believed 1he formula fbr•

~ ';!:~

.J:

. Bend Stenwlleel FelllvaL Preseatlna tbe plaqae
to aieoclatiou member Job Tboaw, rlaht, were
Council President-Larry Wehrung, left, and
councilman ThCIDias Werry.

EasteFn board commends band honorees
Two students in ihe Eastern
Local School District will be
attending prestigious music programs, and Superintendent Richard
Smith reponed on those events
when the Eastern Local School
Board met in regular session on
Thursday.
Andrew Wolf and .Dawn Foley
will attend the Annual Ohio Music
Edudl?ion AssociatiOn Professional
Conference in Cincinnati in January. Wolf will he in the 1993 Ohio
All State OrcheStra and Foley in .
the 1993 Ohio All State Band.
''It is quite an honor to have two
students £rom Eastern pirticipate in
this program, because bundreds of
students tiom across the state have
applied," Smith said, ...and only the
most talented were selected."
The Eastern Band will participate in State Marching Finals on
Sarurday.
·
The following were employed
as substitute teachers for the
remainder of the year, to be used
on an as-needed basis: Debonth K.
Davis, Michelle Frazier, Sabra
Ash; Lisa Miller and Virgil
Phillips. Charlotte Smith was hired
as a substitute cook 10 be used on

an as-needed basis. Charlotte
Smith, Leonard Dailey and Helen
Dailey were employed as subs?i?utc
custodia!ls for !he remainder of the
year.
The board employed John Per·
in~&lt; as a home tutor for Michelle
0 'Nail effective September IS and
as long as needed for the school
year.
Joe Bailey and Roger Bissell
were approved as volunteer assistant jumor hi~h bask:etball coach
and volunteer Junior varsity basket·
ball coach, respectively.
Board Member Mik:e Martin
submitted a donation from .Kibble
J,.ogging to purchase Ohio State
bask:etball tick:ets for varsity bask:etball players.
·
Smith updated the board on leV)'
activities and reported that total
enrollment for the school year is
893. He also announced that founh,
fifth and sixth graders from Tuppers Plains Elementary will go to
the Center of Science and Industry
in Columbus on November 13.
It was reported that the board
had received approval concerning a
Community Education Grant in

collabonllion with the University of
Rio Grande.
The board also:
- Met in executive session to
discuss personnel;
• Approved adver1ising for fleet
insurance forcalen&amp;w year 1993;
- Approv~ 1!11 amended temporary appropnauons retroactive to
September 22, a spending plan for
FY93 and permanent appropriations for FY93 to several accounts;
• Set graduation f~ May 30;
- Approved a list of parent volunteers for the school year at Tuppers Plains Elementary;
- Accepted Scott Golden, Ellen
Watson and Jaclde Hall as tuition
srudents for the school year;
- Approved payment of membership and dues 10 the Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy in
School Funding;
- Set the next meeting on
November 23 111 6:30 p.m., to be
held at Chester Elementary School:
Present, in addition to Martin
and Smith, were Ray Karr, president: Jim Smith, vice president;
and members Ron Eastman and
Bill Hannum.

Voter turnout in Ohio heavy
Bystalr ... dWireR~ts
. Votet: t~t. was excepll~ly
h1_gh tht~ mo~mg, accordrng. to
Rita Smtth, dii'CCtor of ~;he Me1gs
-County Board of Elecuo~s. a~d
pollwork:ers at vanous precmcts m
the county.
.
Lin~s. '?f voters hll~ fo=
those vtSIUng many~ . !·p
. in the co~nty to wall m_ .me, an
unusual ctrcums!IDCc wh1ch has
created some probS~:;:s f~ voters
and pollworken. nu 111 . •
Ruth Powe~s, the p~estd!ng
jud~e of . Mtddleport ~ ftrst
precmct, sard thlt tbe pectiiCI had
received.78 Vll7lrl by 11 a.m .. three .
times that experienced in .most
~idential electionl., ~g
to
1
SthhirhirtcRacy~ne
iurgeeaprecld
,.:~6~
e
•
•
people~ w?ed there by ~1 a.m.,
1!'C1 has?ial
aboUt. twtce
the P'presidenct
expcnenced 1n recent
election yean.
P 11 ~
Ohio city
0 W01o.ers lD 0
pleade!f foc_more voting boo?hs as
long lmes formed at polling sites

!"'W

0:

around the s?ate this morning.
· Secretary of State Bob Taft predicted that 4.7 milliQII, or 72 per- ·•
cent, of Ohio's 6.S million registered voters wDuld vote today.
Ohio has about 8 million residents
of voting age.
' ·
Workers at polling· places
around Hamilton County in southwestern Ohio, which includes
Cincinnati, asked the county board
of elections .for more booths to
accommodate heavy blmOUL Each
polling place in the county was
assi~ five boo?hs.
' The problem is ... we don't
have any more," said Pamela
Swafford, elections board deputy
director. " .They just have to be
patient
Ken Fisher, a member of the
Cuylho11a County Board or Elections, sard that by 8 Lm., about 8
percent of the county's registered
voters had
to the polls. At the
same time m the last presldentill
election in 1988, aj)out S percent
had VOied.
"We 'rc running well above
1988," he said. "Our prediction

before today was thlt 70 percent of
the registered voters in the county
would participate and we are stick:ing with ?ha? prediCtiOJ!."

G~ T IN

11-\ERE.

r&gt;.NO ~jjg

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�nit Dilly sentinel Pia• 3

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

'·

Commentary
The Daily Sentfuel

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ROBERT L WJNGE'IT
Pllbllaber
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
·
General Manager

I.JlTI1!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be 1-.s than 300
words. All !etten are subject to edilins llld m1111 be signed with name,
addreSs snd ldopboae number. No unsigned letlen will be publisbed. Letlen
sbould be in sooci wre, oddleuing iu1101, not pononlliliea.

Voinovich could make
historic appointment
By ROBERT E. MILLER "
Allocllded PnM Writer
COLUMBUS - Gov. George Voinovicb, wbo once served
briefly as Ohio's lieu~e~~~mt sovcmor, may become the first govetnor in histDry Ill fill the No. 2 offiCe witb a Slrokc of bis band.
It depends on the ouialmc of Tuesday's race foc lhe U.S. Senate
between incumbent Democrat Jobn Glenn and LL Gov. Mike ·
DeWine, who will surrender his present post if he wins wliat looms
as a tiaht race.
.
DeWine was clccted with Voil1ovicb on a joint ticket twO ~
ago. He would stay on as lieutenant governor for tbe two years
remaining in his four-year 1en1J if he loses Ill GIDnn.
· Some Republicans have been speculating over Voinovicb' s
choice of a new liealenaDt govemor, should he be called upon to
make one. However, IIIey said the qUCition is premature and IIIey
dOclined to suggest- .
If VoinoviCh gets to make the IIPJ)Oinbllenl, he would have Ill
tbinlc in ll:tmS of his rwlection plans. He has said be intends to run
for a leO"" tam.
Mike Dawilon, one of tbe pernor's 10p aides, said Voinovich is
not apt ID pick anyone who was not goiJI&amp; ID share tbe ticket witb
bimin 1994.
.
He said the govemor has not diJcuued the m&amp;U« with bim and
tbat if DeWine is eleetcd to the Senate "he won't be sworn in until
· Janusry and tbat will give the govemor time to tbink about iL' •
Sucb an appoinanent would marie the first time that the lieu·
ltiWit go~ was not cleciCd by the people althoup since 1978,
gubemalorial candidales have handpicked their nmnmg mates and
had them share their tickets. ·
Before 1978, lieutenant f&gt;Vemon were nominated and elecle!l
separately, at times occupymg the offICC under a governor of the.
opposite JlllltY.
.
.
· Voinovicb wu the ftrsvlieutenant governor not to run on bis
own. He was cbosen by 8lld elected wilh GOP Gov. James Rbodes
in 1978.
· Voinovich resigned after 10 mootbs Ill run for and,bec:ome
J1II)U of Cleveland, BDd lbc ~~· ollicc l!'!"''iM'
VICIIIt IDIIil Rhodi!s left the p~
in Jansy 1983. Democnt Richanl Celeste, lieutenant_80V.~ under Rbodes
from 1974-1978111d the last elected mdividuiJJy, became pivemor
in 1982 after having picked Rep. Myrl Shoemaker of Bourneviile as
bis runnina mate.
.
• .
Shoemaker died in office in 1985, leaving it vacant !Inti!
Celeste's re-election with a new lieutenant governor, Paul Leonard,
in 1986.
.
.
The Ohio Constitution was amended in 1989 Ill allow the govrz.
nor 10 fill vanmcies in the No.2 spot. The appoinanent would llll
subject ID coofirmation by a majority of both the Senate and House.

.

Today in history
By Tilt Alloclatecll'na
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 3, the 308tb day cll992. There are 58 days
left in tbe )'(*'.This is EIDction Day.
. Toda 's Higblight in Histmy:
·
On tfov. 3, 1900, the fmt automobile show in the United Statc)s
opened at New Yen's MadiJon Square Garden under lbc IIISPiccs of the
Automobile Oub of America.
On this date:
.
In 1839, the fnt Qpinm War between China and Britain erupted as
twO British frigates and a fled of- junks clashed off the CbiJiese coast.
In 1868, Republicarl Ulysses S. Gnmt won the presidential election
OVCt DemDCnlllloraJio Seymour.
.
In 1896, Republican William McKinley defeated Democrat William
·Jenninp Bryan for the presidency.
.
In 1903. Panama proclaimed its independence from Colombia.
In 19al, RepuJllican W'llliml Howard Taft was elected the 27th president of the United Slltel, outpollin&amp; WiDiam Jennings Bryan.
In 1936, PresidCnt Frank1fn D. Roosevelt won a landslide victDry oVCt
Republican chal!Dnger Alfred M. "Alf' • Landon. . . '
In 1957, the Soviet Union launched Sputnik II, the second manmade
satellite, into orbiL On board was a dog named Laika who wss sacrifiCed
iii the expetimenL
In 1964, President Lyndon B. JOlulson soundly defeated Republican
cbaUc(lger Barry Goldwater 10 win a Wbite House tetm in bis own rigbL
In 1970, Salvador Allende was inluprated ss p-esident of Chile.

•

.J.

Quiet a it was kepi, 1991 was un1eu it is allowed by a warrant court.
tbe 200ib ...m__,. of lbe Bill of lllld lbat waa•t CIIIIIDt be iiSUed
The exclusionary rule CJliiC up
R.iabta -'bole s-teel of indi· unJea tbere- problble cat* to in only one of the debates ••
viduallibertie. apinst tbe power believe that something illegal wss Gcoqe BUlb urged that it be dis·
of the state tbat distinguish this
carded. Bill CUnton did not ob.lect.
1X11111iy fiom aD oCbets. There wrze .
Nor did Roa Pm1t. who baa fieen
IOIDO ~ 111111 -Y contests
in favor of random aearches and
for
by and la-gc, the
ICizurel - without wm~~~ta - in
~o?~t!t.:tntion 10 the going on in . 1he place lO.. e
::fevi.
Since ~ians palldcr to what searcbed. And each warrant has
sion interviews or queSJions from
they COIIW!er to be the interest$ of specify the place Ill be searched. votm were iny of the candidates
the electonte. it wss not SID})rising There would be no more random
about the future of the Fourth
tbat the Bill of Rights, the first 10 . searches, as undel' the Britisb.
· A nclment and the exclusionary
amendment&amp; Ill tbe Constitution,
For years, George Bush and rule.
none o the debates were
did not figure in the presidential or most Republicans - along with the
any questioo
the other campaigns this year. For many Democrats in Congress about other civillibertiea of Ameri"
example, to Americans 200 years have been pushing for police cans. We found out practically
ago, the Fourth Amendment was searches without warrants, which · nothing of the views of any of tbe
~ impm.tL That is why would bring us back to tbe time of candidates on the First Amend·1t is the most specifically worded the British. Until now, t!Je "excthl~- menL Do they believe in outlawing
part of the Bill of Rights.
sionary rule'' ·baJ prevented ts pornography'/ How do they define
It says there shall be no unrea- gutting of the Fourth AmendmenL PIJlll08f8Phy7 Does it include 80IIIC
sonable searches aild seizures. The exclusionary rule mandates of the work of William. Faillkner,
British ~udges had routinely permit· tbat no iUegally obtained evidence sections of the Old Tesiament or
ted Bntisb troops to rummage by the police can be used at trial. Ben Franklin's 8dvice on how to
throngb tbe colonists' "persons, Without the exclusionary rule, the choose a mistress?
housesrro:rs and effects at ran· Fourth Amendment cannot survive
One of the most vital rights of
..
'
.•
~
.....
our
eonsu·.
because
it
exists
Ill
assure
that
illean
American citizen is "the oo-t
dom.
0 ..,...,., "'"""
tution can be consideml reasonable gal searches cannot bear fruit in wril,' • the writ of habeas corpus. If

cbildren:l&gt;Ut

Berry's World

1•

.The biggest loser in the · elections

111 Coart Stleet
P'ollleiOJ, Oldo
DJ:VOTED TO 1D ll'I'I'UaTII OJ' TBil ..,.._IUIIOI'I ARBA

PAT WIDTEHEAD
· Assistant Publlsber/ConlroUtr

Pagr Z Thlo.llr II AWl
POmeroy lldepliilt Olllo
TueeUy, Ncnembw ~

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Meigs EMS units have made 28.runs since Saturday

J

nelf!'='l!'£:'1!'[

TRMHliP~

defend-ta believe !bey line._
deniocl duo Jl'* 1 oc 1ll¥e c6erwile been unfairly IIUI: d - iJa
Slate caDt, the writ of hi!
_..
pus baa in the pat allowed dlea
reviewinJ in fedlnl a.~~. W a
10!11' 40 pen:e11t of liUCh 1evicws
have succcoded in CMibanDc . .

:=~~~ictions, incledil!l

But in recent yean, Geor.ae
Busb .and Chief Justice Williaa
Relmquist bave been tryinJ llliplily to greaUy r~duce pnaoaen•
chances at JCWilllbeir cues rereviewed througb writa of W: 11
corpus. Bill Clinton WIIIIIIO do 11e
-thing. I belnl no Cll"il••from any somcc - dirctlll!la ~
of the"presidential CIDdic!WI ·c o.
ceming baJvoas corpu1.
Tbe conditions of poor IICOiile
were addressed only bried.z Mil
marginally dllring lbe JR ·- iel
canlpaign, and no oae •bioQallt ..,
tbe fact that although tile Sulll
Amendmcot of the Bill c1 RiPis
bas come Ill guarantee a law,r:r 10
• dan t, no matter ~-·
every de.en
_,..
poor. the quality of lepl OOUiloel
for indigents is abysmal ill -.r
cities and states. Tbis was a poiiat
Thurgood Marshall often liiCid to
emphasize.
Accordingly, to speak of the
right 10 due process and equal potection under lbc law to del,.. ••
who are poor is often a grim jJke.
And Ibm are tbouslnls 111111 .,._
sands of such deprivations of t.ic.
liberties every year. Not a wwd
was said about this during the

W. VA.

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IIONDAY ADIIISSIONS •
Adlta'
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Wo?k, 2 'q; 0 In Roaillc.
•&lt; P _. J..ala • " · ,IS,rac:.c.
.
IIONDAY DISCIL\RGES •

Hjmnilng

Hazel Community Church will
have a bymn sing Saturday at 7:30
J!,_m. featuring .tbe Haven Singen
(Taman Heyman, Rose and Rhon·
da VanMeter). Edsel Hart. pssmr,
invites the public.
Servka plaued
Darren Smith will be in concen
at the Chester Nazarene Cburcb oo
Sunday at 10:45 a.m. Public invit-

0. F. Henderson

Osie E. Henderson; 97, of
Alfred, died early on Tuesday,
November 3, 1992 at Veterans
Memosial Hospilal.
Sbe wa born in ~County, ed.
.
daugbter of the late W1Uiam and
Pep baDd to oi'JI~
.
Ro1e Barnhill Carr. She was a
Plans are linderway 10 orgaruze
bou$Cwife, a member of Alfred
pep band to play durins Southern
an.p, Alfred United Methodist aHigb
Sebool basketball games.
Cbttreb, Modem Woodmen of Any alumni
members wbo
America No. 10900, and a lifelong would like band
to
participate
are
P"idc• of 1bc Allied community. . requested Ill contaCt Melissa Stew. Sbe is survived by four sons:
art, music director, at the bigb
Clarence Wilsoa Henderson, · school at949-2611.
William Sherman Henderson and
Preacbla&amp;and iln&amp;ina
~~inton Henderson, all of
The
Faitb Full Gospel Church in
. laid Harold Lee HenderLong Bottom will have preaching
- c1 Guysville; a dauabt«, Mar- and singing Friday a~ 7 p.m. with
pret EJeanor Folbucl, limteroy; a
Pastor Steve Reed and local
brotber
••1-.a in law, Oatner Griffin,
siliginjl lalenL Public invited. Fel......
.,..; ~even grandchildren and
foar _,___....,,...__
lowship will follow.
e:-'&amp;'-Leaden meetin• ·
11er parbyenhcrts, hs~~~s
There will be a Pr1 scout leaders
poem_. m deaTh b
. ....-~.
meeting Thursday at tbe Trinity
ClaJace Lee l~uKknoo m 1986, a
Church.
laCMber and B Sister.
. Friendship nlgllt
•-·· will be held. on. Thurs~
.-flCCI
FriendshiP Nigbt for District 13,
. day at 1 p.m. at Wbue,Blower
FUIICfal Home in Coolville with
Rev; ~baron f:"'utman otnci,ating.
a.il;lwillbemSbadeCanetery.
Windows in three vebicles
Friulds ntay caD at tbe fiDieral · parked
on tbe upper parking lot in
lie.- oa Wednesday from .3 to 8 Pomeroy and one oo Lynn Street
p.m,
were broken out early Sunday
morning.
. ·
Pomeroy pollee said that a passenger side window oo the 1991
Nissan truck owned by Gary
Snouffer and parted oo Lynn was
lcnocked out and several notebooks
and other papers ivere taken. From
James Warner's 1987. Ford station
wagon a jacket was taken after the
back drlvrz' s side window has been
brpken OUL ·
NotbinJ was missing from the
other vebieles, a 1992 Cbevrolet
truck owned by Charles Ohlinger
which bad tbe driver's window
lcnocked oul, and a 1981 Ford truck
owned by Lois Wolfe whicb bad
the windshield damaged.
A penon who saw the incidents
occurrin_g called Pomeroy police.
The vehicle carryine the individu·
als ~ out the' windows were
reportedly m a dark colored station
wagon. Information on the vehicle
has been distributed to police in
several other counties.

...- ·

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11::-i:!::~Od.. B £ P
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B • WZila6'
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Assodatlon.

Ms.,_

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Campaigns overlooked' urgent issu¢s

=
7

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fasL As far as the presidential C8111·
paign was concerned, Ibis wa a
non-issue. Tbe new president is
g~ to discovet that It is one with
painful teeth.
The last issue on this shoct list is
tbe one !Dastlikely of all to be ·con· fronted by the man who is swam in
Jan. 20. Big money bas corrupted
the political syStem to the poiDt of
death. No one really taltcd about
this truth because each was impli·
cated in its corruption. Ross Perot
· tried to buy the presidency willlllis
own fabulous wealtb. Boib Bi~l
Clinton and George Busb weFC
masters of the fine art of .sbaJtilw
the money tree. Special inta'esll
poured political action committee
money miD congressional races It
record levels.
·
All tbat wa lost was the public
interesL The averaae citizen lllaDds
like a beggar outside the 1a::t door
while big political money weJb iii
through the front door..Tbat'a
they give the money - J&gt;o •we It
works. Until W11bington 'l eta a
bandle on the problei\1, oun Will

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~the best~~·
can influence. But will the w · rr

be willing to reform a ll)'llan lbal
bim?
None of tbele is a
None was COIIJidercd at¥w Clllllllll
· 10 warrant a frank dialope Wid! dJe
American people. Eacb cu lie
avoided after Jan. 20 only .a -.:ceptable ~ to the nation'• Jona·
tenn bealtb.
Hoddln1 Carter 10, fotaer
. State Departmeat spokesaaa
ud IIWIJ'd&gt;'ll'inlllna feJICIT'ler, .&amp;,
tor and publlsher,ll pf!TIJvt .r
MainSireet, a w......... D.C.,
billed teln=ialolldloa ·- ·
paay and 'a
ted waiter for
· Newspaper nterprht AI_.,
t!OD.
· •

etta,

....

I

*

Hodding Carter III

G011ptl sla~ ud revival
DiUTeil Smulr; GIIben, W.Va.,
will perform during the gospel ~g
on SUnday at 7 p.m. .at ML Moriah
Church ilf God on Mile Hill Road
in Racine. Brother Br_yce Utt. MariwiD conduct nMval Nov. 9-15
at 7 p.m. nightly. Public invited.
Dance pluited
There will be a dance at the Rutland American Legion Hall on Friday from 8 p.m. to midnight with
music by Jeannie and the Wolfe
Pack. Public invited.

--Area
deaths-zU+r

I

me

e::~. =:~ ~~a~s ..:::n~

I

Rights and the rest of lbc C1 i •
lion. Not only is their (laMIM
heritage badly taugbt in tllae
scboolli; but when mucb of
national consciousness is foo:1 1: I ·
on who will lead us for lbe aer;t
four years. none of the putati¥C
leaders is challenged .conccniing
the state of hcaltb of the OOc t• m
that supposedly binds and JliADCIII
us all
Nat Heatorr Is a .a ati...Ur ·
reDOwned autllorlty aa tile lllnll ·
Amendmeat aad tH rat .r tile

confront
tnith about tbe loom·
ing banking crisis. But both men
ran from the opportunity, resolulely
denying thaf financial stability
bangs by slender dueads. As with
the loominl savinp and loan disaster in 198 • both political parties
have .a vested interest in covering
up their joint complicity in the fail,
ure to conl8in the damage by early.
politi\:ally 111.-"nablc action.
At least 100 more banks arc
expected 10 go undel' l!cfore the end
of the year. Scores more ·~ trou·
bled, and hundreds are s•lti!lg on
balance sheets that are phonied·up
by overvalued real ~state investments. The more qwcldy the government acts to de~and.r~dical
treatmenl, the more likely It IS thaT
an S&amp;L scale dls•ster can )le avetted. It's going to be barder than it
sbould for tbe new president
because be avoided coming clean
wi_th the voters during !be cam·
JIIU8ll.
.
. ,
The llllll!e goes fo~ tbe nation s
troubled pn~ pens1011 programs.
too many of wbich MD uncbfunded
or~ but '!nfu~ i.n relation to
their potential obligations. Furtber,
according Ill the American Academy of Actuaries, !iOIIIC 30,000 U.S.
employers terminated · tbeir
defmed-benefit plans ovrz the past
three years. Almost 40 peteent did
not replace tbem, meaning their
workers no longer have pension
coverage. N. matters now stand, a
typical Ametican retiree can ex~
to live on roughly one,tJtird of. preretiretnent income, wbi!D retirees in
other indUSirial nations can expect
anything from SO percent 10 90 per·
~~ of tbat same IIICOliiO.
In otbet words, a hod~e-podge
retirement system that m1sses too
many people and provides inade,
quate benefits is going downhill

--·· Meigs announcements--

nlll'llla7 ~l'CMIP Satiirda7:
fair but enol Lows in
a
a cloillly. A low~·
1D
.
-30s.
HighS 404S. Fri·
ol........... '50.
day,
fair.
Lows
25-35.
Higbs most0
e of lllill is SO pen:cat.
ly
in
the
40s.
Saturday,
a cbance of
W
P ;.
• haiL Hip
.... ""' 1'1
..... • • IJD
qin. Lows in· the 30s. Higbs from
F
?1 . .&amp;111:
-...~~-·u:-~=•
F' "' the mid-405 to the low SOs.

PliFtis
..;, wondCt that IOOit y-a
people are ignorant of the Bill «

·~ \

At 9:33 i.m .• 1'UIJI)Orl Plaina IQuad
went to Long }j'ottom. Donald
Myers wa transported to Holzer.
At 10:47 Lm., Racine unit went to
Ducktown Road. Bllllda Anderson
was taken to Veterans. At 11:30
a.m., Syracuse squad went to
Well's Run Road. Pearl Hawtborn
wa taken to Veterans. At 11 :45
a.m., Rutland units went to an aocident on Main StreeL Amy Brothers
was taken to Veterans. Geary

---~--Weather-----

'*-· ·

The campaign is over. The real crack cOc8ine bad become the bane
war now begins, or at least should of the inner chy. The administtabegin, on 1\t least a balf-dozen tion was in the middle of 1111 all-out
fronts that were all but ignored "war" on drugs.
ov.rz the JI!ISl three montbs.
Consuler tbe i11ues that were
obscured, minimized or marginal·
ized by Clinmn, Bush and PeroL
Begin with the nation's widening
clCavages along lines of race and
From AugUst Ill this iv~k that
class. Each of the three men can "war" was barely mentioned by
point 10 at least one speech or ref. anyone. But only last week, new
erence that demonstrated bis con- figures were released showing that
cern. None was concerned enougb emergency room admissions for
to put and keep this issue iln tlie crack•related )iroblems had swelled .
front~.
, by a third in the first three months
Now ask yourself what you con· of 1992. Tbougb "hard" drug use
sider the nation's most·pressing by yo!Digrz Americans was declinproblems to include. How many ing, tbe number of bardcore
times does tbe question of race abusers age 30 and above was on
arise wben conversations with the rise. Critics blamed overemphafriends tum serious? Ovet the past .sis on law enforcement instead of
week, in states as distant as New treatment as the leading eulpriL
Jersey, Louisiana and Indiana, I
Yet all of this focus oo ''hard''
had casual acquaintances and for- drugs misses the main poinL The
mer classmates allte express their truly devastating addiction plague
fears about America's racial·divi· in this country arises from alcohol
sivenesa and their frusbation with and tobacco. Tcen-~ers· abuse of
the near-silence on tbe issue by . alcohol is not declining, but rising.
polldcians of all ideological ~- Tobacco continues to kill hundreds
. An4 this is not something ume of thousands of Americans each
will solve. The United Stales pows year. As fonner Surgeon General .
mm: ethnicaDy and racially diverse Evi'J'eU Koop observed a few yem
each day. "E Pluribus Ununi," one 8JO, nicotine is more addictive than
from many, our national seal pro- heroin.
claims. The task was never more
Did we bear any of .the candi·
,urgent oc diff'ICUIL Wbat the cam· dates talk regularly about these
paign did!l't touch will require realities, abOut their plans for pretmmedlate and sustained attention vention and treatment, about anyfrom the new Wbite House.
tbin11 other than their intention to
Whai about addiction, Ameri- be •'~'I!JUBII" on drug-peddlers and
ca's most persistent disease? A lit· drug-mlated crimes? the answer is
Ue over two years ago, thanks Ill no, though there is virtually no
media and presidential hype, poDs family tbat bas not been touched by
showed that we thought tbat drugs the ravages of one form of addicwere our leading problem. That lion or another.
came at a time when casual use in
For one brief momenl, it ~med
the middle class bad been declining as thougb Ross Perot migbt force
for about five years, but when the two major party candidates Ill

Adab Brown wu taken ID Voter·
an1. At 2:37 p.m., Racine 1quad
took Monica Chadwell from Tbin1
Street to Vetetans. At 5:32 p.m.,
Pomeroy units went to West Main
Stroot for • aum aocideaL Edwina
Ball, John Casm, Elmrz Parsons,
Keitb Scott, Ann Scou and Sean
Scott were ueated but not transported. AI 10:04 p.m., Micldlepon
. squad went to Lower Slate Route 7
for Lester CMm. -He wss taken Ill
Veterans; At 10:38 p.m., Middleport squad went Ill Noble Summit
~~ .md took Helen Reed to Holz·
On Monday ai 1:01 a.m., Rut·
land ~uad wss sent to Depot Street
for Wtlma Hysell, who wss taken
10 Veterans. AI 3:06 a.m., Micldle·
port squad went to Ash Street and
IAJOk John~ Smith m. Holzer. At
"""
6:22 a.m., yracuse un1t ·~.....,~
· 10 Bearwallow Ridge. Arthur
Sbumway was taken to Veterans.

Meia• Bmer1enc:r Servlcea
unita bive aaawerod 28 calls ror
alllllfliiiM ainco Saturday.
On Saturday • 6:19 p.m., Mid·
d1eport tlllll went to Alii Street and
lOci O'Dell Smitb 10 Holzer Medi,
cal Center. Al 8:04 p.m., Rutland
•quad was ~ent to Wblte'l Hill
Road for Walter Baggy. He wu
takeD Ill~~ VIOCy Hospital.
At 8:Sl p.m., Rutllnd unit went ID
Beech Grove Road with the fire
depanment for a fire at the Everett
Smith property. At 10:45 p.m.,
Syracuse squad went to Seeond
Street. Eric Stumbo and Tammy
Stumbo were transpOrt.ed to Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital.
At 9:41 a.m. oil Sunday,
' Pomerojy unit went to Condor
Street and took Adam Crouso Ill
Veterans; ·
At 1:14 p.m., Middleport squad
responded to Overbrook Center.

see•

Vehicles damaged

minor.-.

....,s
.

1

I

Holiday program
plabned.
Are you kriin&amp; for new recipes
. t iiiBIIID IJbare with C.Oily and
•
., attencl the 1992 B,oliday
hapPCniaa" apoa~red by the
Meip Conaty Exft!!I!C!jl Office on
Nov. 16 from 10 Lm. to noon at
dlr Meigs County Senior Citizens

.

There's still time to vote today
On November 3, residenta of
Ohio and the Nlllon will be faced
with the unique opporlllllity ID have!
their volcel beard by VCIIi . in this
yell" a aeacn1 etec:IIGD.
elec·
tiOD, &lt;illoln'l will decido the fatil

~

'

L

of numeroua issues and offices
aucb • tho Prelddeney, the United
SIIICIII Coop sa, this Ohio General
Auembly1 and a variety of local
offlcea tbat will bave a direct
impact 011 the way JIO'Oenlment Is to
be IIIII ill the fubae. 'J'berefore, it is
of,IIIIIIOit Importance tbll Obio'1
,... ed Wllllll mab- to-·
cil8 tbeir CODilitulioaal rilbt of

faced wilb a dec::reaing number of
regisleled votm &lt;:asting their vote
on election day. In 1988, only two,
thirds of Obio •1 registered vocerl

Sen.]an M. Long · .

managed te..cast a ballot. Thi1 II in
sharp Cllllli. . 10 other dcmocraclea
across tbe world wbere voter
turnout rell:bel • hJah • 95 pet·
cenL When COII8iderilia llle amount
'Of preaslna issues and problema
that confroat our area and tbe
nation, tho im~nance of voting
bocomea mqniflod u we decldo
vodq. .
wbich
avenue our leaden are to
Ia tbe put couple of decides,
lite
in
govemlng IIIII solving the
Obio -,t the COIDitry hav! _been
illuea of our t1mo.
·
\

Tbis year, Ohio, tbrougb the
Secretary cl State's office mlnlpcl
Ill rqister ICIIJ of thnus-1• of new
YOf«&lt;

tJuouab ag&amp;l

I lye

Jellslra·

tioo programa IUCb • "Cuiiomer
Vote 1 92" IJid I 1-800 lqlistration
hodinc. Obio baa reaclled ·an all
time hlfb of replered vatm wldl
approximately 6.5 million comPR!Ito 6.2 mllliOD ~ vot·
en In the 1988 10Mra1 election.
With the 1arp number of newly
re~ vOiflllln Ohio the ltBM
is ilpiimlatlc tbat Oltioan1 S willllllp
tbe trend of decreaaina voter
turnout and tate time out on
November 3 10 vote for the candi·
dales of their clloioe.
Ohio il commonly refetred Ill as

..

couna:r

the nearuana of the·
and il
is Important that Ohio o •
eo
set eumplc1 of citizculaip lly .
darnonllralial die 'ialli'* ' ... •
tbo pow« tbat
·everyday Uvea. V
II die Ilea-.
direct mecJwllsm
., ... • •
toward positive c:hanp . t a 111\'t .
ernmont thalli ftiiiiiiDilble eo • :
the needs and Wlllll rl. tile cilaJ•
of our COIIIIII)'.
.
•
As alway•~ ~ feel ,._ • ;
call or wrile me, Stale S
:r..
Michael Lon1. if you lllaft aay
QI!CIIIiaal ore&gt; •mlllullllll.._ ·
oc •Y
My
il
(614) &lt;166-8156, IIIII ..y •1
h ·
the StatebouiO, Collllllba, Ollio ·
43215.

•

=·
..-a. •. .

'

M,j!.fh

'

Lotte..Y numbers

TODAY!

992-2124

"*'
MPIIion
su
(five,

eigbt. six)

PkkCN.a.....
6-0-8-1

(six, zero. elgbt, OTIC)

. -

99c

BREAD STICKS

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

95
HOOVER.

ELIH IITI' 430 .

SAVE

Dual Purpore

Upright Vacuum

·

s,.,_

Total
Perlonnllta"' 430
• Top tool coooection
• Tools store in handy altaehed caddy
•lncludta dtluxe S·piece IQOI set
• 20' coni wilh wrap and release
• Headlight
•IIMhad edge cleaning

$50

Hoover Invented It

on bolh sides

......
-·--

C&amp;eNWie

ss
39

Ci II tiialliiiittitl

$

Jlrult.VlcTll
Hand·Held

Vacuum Cleaner
•E.zEmpty"'DirtCup
•Aulomatic Btushed Edge

Ciesniog

•Quiet Cooaect Hose aud

,, ...,
4 -=

9'5

. SAVI
$30

... lwldllblluiMilllr

20'cordwMh .........
•15qt. . . . IIN
• ~ ......... both ....
2 pos11on hol;lt odJo
I
1

rl

0p11ou1 TDoll ·
• Sft99

Tool Slorage ·
•ClesniDg Aa:essorles Optional

CIBVELAND (AP)- Here are
Monday niJht's Ohio Lottery
IUpllghiCiuner
a1ectiall:
·.

other..._

.

Tbc lJIGgtaD will be Jl senled
1»y Extenaioo Home Economists
C"iady Oliveri,
County;
Becty Clllllllllliii.
. Count)';
Lua Hanly, Lawreace County;
, _ Hnlli41WGih, Atbens Couil,
and l'nl&amp;laa •mll=t' J•1011e
.&amp;$ nW\'inCOD Counties and
Gut 10. Oellia Coullly.

1

CALL US

tiOn and

fa' h IIIia lloliday ~D!I"? Do you
..cl a c:reative )li'llject for. a.boli- , liualr or gift ucllaii~? If 10,

·
:
,
•

' CHESTER • The annual inspec·
house, or "dry ,run,"
for the ~County Office of the
Ohio Department of Transport&amp;·
lion, District 10, was held Thurs·
day at tbe county's gara'e near
Chester. Jim Proffiu is highway
superintendent for Meigs County
and Wes Arbaugh is assistant
superintendenL
lnspec:torS for the district garage
in Marieua and some from the cen·
tral offiee in Columbus 'were on
band Ill perform the inspections·of
the hJahway trucks. Bach highway
worker is responsible for mainte·
nance and upkeep of their trucks.
Ed Sisaon was selected, based on
an established point 1)'110111, • the
winnCt for the day in Meigs Count
ty. One county in District 10 will
also be selected a baYing the best
dry·run for the day.
Tbc Meip County office bas a
IDial of 12 lrucks. one jnder, two
1oaden and one bll:kboe.

unit visits
Me· :gs

A THEATER
A

Open house held .
for ODOT officials

10 obviously benefited

ea..
'

Adami refused treatmont.
At 12:11 p.m., Pomeroy unit
went to Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center for Francis
King, who wa taken to Ve~~n~~~.
At 1:3S p.m .,~ sqllad weilt
to PNRC IIIII liD; Kenneth Wolfe
to VeteranS. At 2:56 p.m.. Pocncro_y
and Syracuse unite went to an ace•·
dent on Pomeroy Pike and Plat·
woods Road. Debbie Cloncb was
taken 10 Holzer. Alvin McDaniehl
and Bill McDaniels were taken· Ill
Veterans. Donald Combs was treat·
ed at the scene. Al 3:01 p.m., Rut·
lalld unit went Ill Rormne Road.
Charles Romine was taken r0 Vererans. At 3:29 p.m., Racine squad .
"
went 10 Slate Route 338 for Kayla. ·
The Mobile Mammo11r?thy S10vrz. She wss taken Ill VeiCrans.
At S:34 p.m., Syracuse unit went Ill
Imagin• unit from the Obio tate . Sixth
Street and took Lola Bolen to
UniVCtSity
visited the on
Meigs
County'Health Department
Thursday.
Veterans. At 5:4S p.m., Middleport
Statistics show that breast can· unit went to Overbrook Center. ·
cer is lbe second leading cause of Edna Pickens was ttansported Ill :
Veterans. At 7:30 p.m., Middleport
•
unit went Ill Bai!Dy RIDI Road and
Daughters of America, will be cer. The visit by the unit gives transported Velsia Roush Ill Holz·
TblllSday at the Belle Pnlirie Coon· women in :W..eig~ County the oppor· er. At 8:21 p.m., Middleport sqUad
went to Logan Street for Cleni)OII
cil, Bel--. A potluck su\rvr wiD tunity Ill bli.v~ nccess 10 early detec:· Siders,
who wss taken 10 Veterans.
rv
,
lion of lreast cancrz.
begi11at .6 p.m. •ollowed Y meetWith assistance from the Meigs At 8:48 p.m.. Middleport squad
ing. All district officers to be · CoulltY Health Department, the went 10 the Ponderosa Restaurant
installed are urged 10 attend. ·
O.S.U. IDiil examined 2S women. in Gallipolis for Brook Marcum,
Soap dinner . ·
According to Norma Tlims, nurs- who was taken 10 Holzer. At 10: IS
Racme American Legion Post ing .director of tbe health depart· p.m., Pomeroy squad went to
602 wiD have a cornbread and bean
soup dinner at the post home on menl, Ibis is tbe mpximum number Welchtown Road and took Patty
Nov. 11 from noon to 4:30 p.m. of appoinanents that c8n be made Laudermilt to Holzer.
On Tuesday at 8:08 a:m., Midin one day. Another four screenings
The public is invited. The post will are scheduled for 1993, and inter- dlepon uniis went Ill State Route 7
yisit Ponland Elementary at 10:30 ested women can contact PhyUis for an auto accident. Elizabeth
a.m. and Letart Elementary at 1 Bearbs at the bealth department Swisher and Guy Sargent were
p:mDinner planoed
(992-6626) to be placed on the lisL taken Ill Vetetans.
The United Pentecostal Church
The unit uavels throughout the
in Middl~· will bave a chicken state to provide mammograms for
·
F 'd f
$SS, whicb is lower than tbe typical
an d noo Ie d mner n ay rom rat~ charged for tbe service,
WITH CHOICE!
10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. The cost is accordmg'. 10 ·Torres. Go.als of the
$3.SO and eat-in or .delivery orders
will be available. Tbe menu service are to reach clientele who
includes cbicken and noodles, com, are ovrz 35, have .not had a mamcoleslaw, bot roll and cboice of mogram in the past year, do not
cherry, pumplrln or apple pie. For have insurance 10 covrz mammog •
deliVery, call992·3824.
rap by. and are not currently
Headq..rlers to llosl recep· ellbibiting any sympJQ.ms of breast
tlon
cancer.lt is designed ss a screening
The Republican Headquarters c~ft'fs~~~m the Nalioil~l
on Main Street in Pomeroy wiD be
open tonight (Tuesday) at 7:30 Cancer Institute indicsrc that one in
p.m. for anyone who would like ten women will develop breast can·
mformation regarding election cer. Early detection througb pro·
results.
grams such as self-eXamination and
regular mammograms are important to successful treatment of
Costume winners nam~d breast cancer.
Additional information_is availWimiers of the costume· contest
able
from the beallb departmel!l, or
during the baunted hayride in
the
National
Cancer Institute at 1
Sleepy Hollow in Middlepon on
(800)
4-CANCER
Thursday evening bave been
announced. In order of first and
second the winners are a follows.
Prettiest • Jessica Jewell, Tyler
Little, birth to four years; Miehelle
Frencb, Channing Burge, five to
nine; and Andrea Neutzling, Jen·
nifer Neece, age 10.13.
Funniest • Marianda Barnett,
Lyndsey Casey, birth Ill four~
Carla Smith, Stephailie Wigll, five
to nine; aqd Kris Krawsczyn,
Adam Walker, age 10-13.
Ugliest • Lacey Bameu. Tommy
DOMINO'S NOW
Lavender, binh to four years; Jobn
OFFERS
Krawsczyn, Sara Reynolds. five Ill
nine; and Sara Craig, Zach Mead·
ows, age 10.13.
I lrHtl Sticks •tl
Most original - Jared McKinSncewit.the
ney, Brenda Dodson, liirtb IQ four
Special Introductory
years; Allen Moore, Mathew
Offer!
Krawsczyn, age five Ill nine; and
lclrp Pilflef
Julie Spsun, Wes Thoene, age !().
13.

lliiiiiiiiiii

•t~ .

I'll.
-t3.1_HP'_

• Swt¥11 ,...

•

~

1001

YOUR CHOICE

$189
IIIIU8e

95

cur 11•

...........
-7

3

I Lilli I

·M

�The Daily Sentinel

=Sports

~. ~-3, 1192

•

INo~.f~ N~?'(AP)

1·
M 1 h
•
1
an~ohen- :u!d :!:':!!!to
ball c:ait. wan on
-.
He IXluld pass. H could shooL
H uld bound ~
e co rc
· And he could'
rouse a ~wd ~ than an~.
The one tbmg ~ couldn t do
w•
his feD;ow playen ve .-the ~s vuus. And
~retired -:-- &amp;plll. This time for
g
On Monday - four days bef01e
ibe start o.f the NBA ~~ason Johnson .wd he•w.as retiring for a
second lime bei:ense of the "con·
troversica" IUIIOUnding .his renun
to the ·Los Angelca Laken.
~ he declinfd to be more
spec1f1c,, Johns.on s ~gen t Lon
Rosen sa1d: ''H!s feeling was, if
people were afraid to play against
him, that could affect the outcome
of the g~~e, and Earvin didn ' t
want thaL
. After ~king i~ over .with his
Wife C:~ ind his· family, John. ~~~~~asta~t: .
I dec1ded I will retire ~ for
good - fro!'l the Lakers. It. has
become ob~Jous that the .vanous
controvemes surroundmg my
·

· With 38-10 'whipping' ofBtars, ·

~

Vikings boost lead in NFC
: C_e ntral, capture series sweep
the Bears in !heir 11 seasons under
COiiCh Mite Dilb.
Unlike tbe 21 -20 win in tbe
Metrodome Oct. 4 when the'
Vikin~s raUied in the fourth quartet
after 'The AUdible" interception
by Todd Scott of a Jim Harbaugh
pass. Minneaota wasted no time
Monday ni~
On tbeu rust possession, the
Vikinp drove n yanls in 13 plays
with lager Craig scoring on a 1·
· yard nm.
Thea some crazy thinga started
to happen. Damn Lewis fumbled
and Chris Coleman recovered on
the Cllicl8o 32. Terry Allen gained
all 32 )'8l'd.l on eight carries, scoring on a 1-yard run.
It was 14-3 when the Bears
· kicked off in the second half. Allen
fumbled on the first play, the Bears
recoverina. On the next play, Harbaugh spotted Tom Waddle and
fired. Wlddle tripped over an omcjal and linebacker Jack Del Rio
came up 'with the interception. Del
Rio didn't stop until he went 84
yards for a touchdown. ·
· " Unlucky stuff," said Harbaufh.
.
' Dumb luck, " said Waddle,
who fell over umpire NeU Gereb.
'.'ThJ!..tlay is des1gned to get the
line . ers to drQp back."
DeHw_did. '
·
·
" Tiib"''liill was thrown low and I

.:n-Y.!'.!!ea'l

was silling bact in my,zone and I
went and got il," said Del Rio. " I
took off running for the nearest
sideline and picked up some .....,
blocking.'' .
. ... .Just to prove that W~m~'ta fluke,
Del Rio intercepted another Harbaugh· pass that resulted in a 28·
yard r~eld 'lOIII by Fuad Revciz.
Rich &lt;fannon hit Steve Jordan
'with a 60-yanl touchdown and Carlos Jenkins intercepted a Peter Tom
Willis pass and returned it 19 yards
for a touchdown.
Dilka reali~ what was happening from the start.
"When they took the ball and
drove it down tbe field rimnin,,
they showed they meani business, '
the Chicago coaeh said.
"We played good solid foot·
ball,'' said Green. "We're a pretty
decent team.''
Gannon completed 7 of IS passes for 157 yards and said "I did
evel)'lhing righL I did not tum the
ball over. We. talked about and said
if we held the ball, we'd have a
good chance."
" We wanted to show them we
could play physical, too," said
Allen, who committed Minnesota's
onlY. rumovcr.
'We came in really hyped and
took conttul early," said Jenkins.
"This is what we worked for the
whole season."
·

·LEAPS FOR. TD -Minnesota Unebacker
Carlos Jenklas leaps over Cblcaao llne?lllll Stan
Tboma.s for a toucbdowa after intercepting a
pass In the fourtll quarter of Monday night's

to beat sornoOneo

jl

II

In fact, except for the Dallas
CowbOys, whofe 7-1 record is the

Correction
Moi11 Marauder Heath Hudloo .
was NOT thrown out of Priclay's
game with Alexander, as was
reponed in the Sundlly-Times Stn·
tiMI.

Dwayne Hager of Alexander
was throWI! out of the game for
throwing a punch at Hudson. ·

In the NFL...

-_

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
rw L T Pd. PFPA
aull'olo............ 6 2
Mllad ....... ,_.,.. 6 2
ln&amp;nopolio ...... . 4
N.Y. Ico . ......... 2 6
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.750 202151
.500 99151
.250 130161

0 .000 17192

Ceetr•l.,...._
6 2 0 .750 I" 97
...... -. 5 3 0 .62S 199141
CIJ!VI!I.ANI) ... 4 • 0 .500 11713i
CINCINNATI... 3 5 0 .m 139114
~ ..... _.

........

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l[onouCily.- .. . . 0 .500
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LA.Jiaidea ......

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NATIONAL CONFERENCE
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Dollol...............
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7 I 0 .175
5 3 0 .62S
w--........ s 3 0 .62S
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5 0 .375 149163

Mlllldoy'IICOI'e

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In the NHL ...
~

--

W,ALIS CONJ'ERENCE

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··- ....· 'I 4I lI

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3 Z! 61

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::r;:

Bran. (AP)

toughest challenge yet. ·It was
Bowe who halted Cooper in two
rounds on the Douglas-Holyfield
Ullden:ard.
.
Holyfield, known for his versatility as a boxer and a puncher, is
· really a sleek, bulked-up auiser,
weight; he's 6-foot-2 1/2 and
weigha 210 pounds. Bowe is bigger
and stronger. He's 6-foot-5 and
weighs 235 poqnds. Jle has used
his size to stop 20 foes within the
fust three rounds - nine of them
in Round I.
,
·Neither fighter has much to
show on defense. Holyfield was
tagged by old, slow Foronan. and
llill'aed his rust CIICCI' knockdown
against Cooper. Bowe has never
been on the canvu, but be certainly
hasn't faced great competition •
And Coetzcr did manage to land
clean shots against him.
Lou Duva,lhc champ's co-uain·
er (with George Benton), believes
Holyfteld will fust outbox and then
outpunch Bowe, The challenger, ·
wbo is trained by Eddie Futc!l, will
try to ward ofJ those combinlltions
and find an opening for his best
punch - a right-hand uppeztuL
Look for Holyf~eld to prevail.
He'll probably seek to stay out of
harm's way by crowding inside.

Bllketball
AUBURN HILLS, Mkh. (AP) ·
-:- Dennis Rodman, who led the
NBA in rebounding last season
with • 18.7 averqe. rejoined the
Detroit PiltODI anil practiced for
tho finl time thiJ II U D1L Rodman,
rec:t,&amp;'Ar dl von:ed, will be fined
$14
for mllliJig eight exhibi·
don pmel and 20 dlyl of tanlp.

'

Bowe has gone 10 rounds just
once; and he has never fought 12
rounds. He •s likely to nm out of
sttamlalc in the fighL .
,Next up for Holyfield could be
an even more danaerous foe Lennox Lewis, the British champion. A few days ago, be knocked
down Razor Ruddock three times
befOIC stopping him for .keeps in
Round 2 of their bout in London.
Lewis is the heavyweight wllo
upsqt Bowe to win the 1988
Olynlpic gold niodal.
. ·· ·
Pro tootball'a tOOth anniversary ·
Wu Pudge Heffelfinger really
tbc rusa pro foothall player?
Perhaps not. But the NFL is
marking tlic I OOth anniversary of
pro football because of his documented debut as a pUd athlete in
Pittsburgh on Nov. 12, 1892.
Records show the former Yale All~c:ncan received $~ Cor playIng m a game at a ume of great
controversy over reimbursing
"ringcn" on club teams.
Heffelfinger, 24, who' was a
205-pound guard, led the Allegheny Athletic Asaociation to a 4-0
victary against the PittsburRh Athletic Club. He forced a fumble
recovered it and ran 25 yards ro;
the game's only IOUchdown, which
was worth four points beck then.
By the way, it happeaed only a
few days alter Grover Cleveland
regained the presidency by defca(..
ing BenjiJ!IIin Harrison, who had
ousted him four years before. A
few weeks befcn that, Jim Corbett
knocked out John L. Sullivan in
~ew ·Orleans in the first modem
Mivyweight tide r.,ht.
·
World Series video comiac
What marts the unoffi~ial open·
ing of the hot-stove league?
l'mlllbly the arrival of the annual Wcnl Series video, which is put
fOIICther by Major l..equc Baseball
Productions. The
version is
beinJ prqllled for release on Nov.
16, JWI three weeks after the world
champion TOnJntO Blue Jays oust(See SPORTS PROBE oa Pap 5)

(11), ciass seaewy, Student Council crcasurer and Varsil)' "E" club
for one year each. She 11 currenlly

enrolled in the post-secondary
achool proJrlllllt the University of
Rio Grinde.
Jcrany Buckley, the 1011 of Bill
and Twlla Buckley of Pomeroy,
has won aeveral ieademic awards
and bas been 1 member or tho
National Honor Society for the put
two yea. He .is a four·)'CII' member of the Varsity E club, and participated in vanity b I elbelf (three
years), baseball (two years) and
foodllll (t'MI years).
He is cunmdy a member of the
Vlnity football team and is one of
the team •• ading receivers.
I

·RI·ILICI

LARRY E.

SPENCER

MIIGS COUIIY
CLIII OP COUIIS
.,

•

llat.totOhlo
.DepMinent of '
~

JEREMY BUCKLEY

CEATIFJCATE OF
COMPLIANCE
The...........,, SUPERINTENDENT OF INSURANCE
0F
THE STATE OF OtiO,
hereby
certifies that
COASTAL STATES LFE INSUAANCE CO. of Allllnta,
Slate of Gtiorgla, hla complied with the lawa of thla
Slate IPPIIcable to •d 1a
aullloltz.cl during the cwrent
YMr to trMaact In VIII
Ita IPproprlate bualneu of

n

ala!!

lnMnnce.

'

n.

Financial cilndllon. Ia
ahown by Ita annual atat•
mant to haw "-' u followa

on DIDIIIIIInr 31, 1181:
Admllt.d
Anita
..$121,171.141.00
........ -".S125J'It,a1.00
00
IOGIIIe.-..1111,147,114.00
EJtpan. . . . 111.771,111.00
NeiAIHta
llat12,121.00

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CIIP"'

IN wnNE88 WHEREOF, I

...._. ._.unlo •lllnrlhd

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

-r

,..... and 1111111d my .... to
be all I d II Colurabutir Ofllo,

a

o; ~OLD T. DURY&amp;,

•

~

~....· ~

AII..Stlr game in FebruarY when he
scored 2S points and made three
sttalght three-pointers in the fmal
five minutes.
A week latt:r• his number w•
retired by the !.akers but even at
tbat time he made it ~lear he was
consiclerin a return He continued
to wort
during ihe · and
was a key member of the~team
tbat won the golil medal ui inen•1
baabtba11 at · the Barcelona
OI)'IIIpil:s.
·
Illlt last Friday ni ht, after the
Latera' final exbib,tion game
Johnson had said he and the teani
were ready ·for the upcomin 8 sea
110!1. Jllhlllon made only one 0 r ui
field-goal attempts while scoring
eight pointa in die l..akers' 103-92
loas to Cleveland at Chapel Hill
N.C. He~ 28 minutes and IJad
five ISSists m what turned out to be
his ftoal NBA game.
. Johnson, 33, played in five of
the I...akers' eight~ games
avengjng 10.4 JlOUIIS and nearly Ii
assist&amp; a game. The Lakers were 4·
1 withJohrJQiinthelineup.
. First-year La1ters coach Randy
Pfund said Rosen called him Sun·
day night with the news.
• 'I think everyt-ody realized
goinl in it might not have worked
as perfectll as we would have
wanted it to, ' Pfund said. ·
After leading
State to
tbe 1979 NCAA champonship as a
sophemore, Johnson turned pro and
played 12 seasons for the Lakers.
He averaged 19.7 points and led
tbcm to five NBA championships.

c!

Mic.

.OSU needs miracles
to make it to Rose Bowl

1m

Morrissey, Buckley selected as
Eastern 'Athletes of the Month'

.....

·~aiohl-lhould 11ep lside to
avoid any CIOI'lliovway.
.
·
ISSUOoflivln&amp;widiiDVformeand
Contacted Monday, Malone
the many
lffectecL"
. said: "Loot It the cutulld ICI'IIII:h·
ROiell
Jolmon felt that his es I act JIOW. AU of a Midden, the
~casaae lbout AIDS WM 1101 get· last second oldie pme, and here
ling !'ut because ''people were comea Mllic to the t.u It's the
foeusmg on the controversy,'' and llliiiiiC as, what if I had the virus • a
that J~ now plana to devoce player and whll if a Buck Williams
men ume to AIDS awaCMU.
or a Chales Batley comes in?
Rosen said Johnson called him
Sa~y n!gbt and informed him
''It is a physical game and you
of h11 deciaion.
.
do got~ andacratcbed." Mal·
Dr. Michael Melhnan, John· one dec~. "I do have concerns,
son's ~111!1 physician and the just like anybody would have. It's
Laken team ~m.r. ~there had not a thing (If kicking a man when
been no detert&lt;ntion m Johnson'• he's clown"
heallh.
,
.
Late!'l. gene~ manager Jerry
Mellman repelited what other Weat Slid be believed "a number
doctors have SB!d all along - that of things were unfairly said" conthere was prac~ly no chance of cemin8 Johnson.
contracting the vuus from Johnson
Slid Michllcl Jordan, anothei' of
tluough basketl!ell.
Johnson's Dream Team teammates:
, Nevertheless, some players "I guess he looked at it and said
aren't ~onvin.ced. Several NBA he'd~beremembaedlsaguy
star,, mcludmg fellow Dream ·who enJOyed the game, but not a
Team .member Karl Malone, ~d . guy wlio stirred problems amongst
the~ were concerned about pla)'lng his peas. I respect that decision."
agunstJohnsqnforhealthreasona.
West iaid Johnson would still
· On.e NBA genera_!, manager, recei~ the $14.6 million contract
speakm$ on. tbc condition tbat he cxteDSIOil he signed ~L I - two
not be idenUfied, was quoted in a days after. announcmg l)e was ·
New York T'IRICS story Sunday as renuning 10 the Lakers.
. ·
Johnson, the NBA's c8reer lead·
er in assists with 9,921, shocked
the sports world last Nov. 7 when
he announced his ret;irement after
testinj! HIV positive.
W1thin weeks of .his retirement
8111101111CC111nt, Johnsoo began con·
templating a comeback. He wu the
Most Valuable Player in the NBA

Will N~v. 13 be Holyfield's day?

By HOWARD SINER
Today's questions 1!1 the world
of~
.
Is
warld
heavyweight
c;hampion
NFL's 'best at the halfway mark,
- · Washington, a winner of
and the 0-8 New England Palriots, three straight, was solidly beaten Evander Holyfield pushing his luck
parity is once apin die rule. .
24-7 by its old nemesis, the New toO far by fighting top contender
Example: San Diego is 4-4 after York Giants (Must Ray 'Stay?), It Riddick Bowe on Friday the 13th?
That ' s what a lot of boxing
four straight wins following four kept the Giants alive as a wild-card
experts
are wondering. They
straight losses. In Sunday'·• 26-0 contender and emphasized a
believe
the
champ hasn't lived up
victory over Indianapolis, the notable deficiency in the Redsldns,
to
his
niclcname,
"The Real Deal,"
Chargers allowed only 99 yards who are without an offensive ·
since
he
knocked
out Buster Dou·
from scrimmage~ minus-5 m the touchdown in 11 quarters.
gii!S
two
years
ago
to win the
·first half - and are now just a
"We played a good team that's
undisputed
crown.
·
game behind tbc· ~nvcr Broncos been taking a lot of heat the last ·
and even with the Kansas City few weeks,'' Washington quarter- · Now Holyfield (28-0•.22 KOs)
Chiefs in the AFC WCSL
back Mark Rypien said after the will face Bowe (31-0, 27 KOs), tbc
And some of the hoi shots aren't · Redskin&amp; heard the boos that Ray WBA's No. 1 contender. on Nov.
doing • well.
Handley usually hears in the Mead· 13 at lbe Miraac in Las Vegas. The
To wit:
owlands. "They just physically 12•round title boui is to be a
nationwide pay-per-view event on
- The Eaales, 4-0 after beating beat us.''
!be Cowboys '31·7 1 month ago and
-Sat Francisco, crulsina along . cable TV.
Since his third-round KO of
011 the veqe of bein&amp; P- a 11111 116-l, lost Steve YOUII8 early to
to Pasadena, bave now lost three of the flu and lost 24-14 to Pboenix, Douglas, Holyfield has strugled in
four. And Randall C1mnin,harn, of all teams - that NFC East three tide defenses: He deciSioned
benched for Jim McMahOn 1n the again. An omen? The last time that two 40-plus ex-champions, George
second hall of the 20-10 loss Sun- happened was 1988, and tbe Nincrs Foreman and Larry Holmes; and he
day to Dallas, has completed five went on to win seven of eight and knocked out shopworn Ben Cooper
.
of 23 puacs fll' 26 yards in his last . the Super Bowl. This !oss left San in the seventh rOund.
four quarterS.
.
· Fmncisco tied with New Orleans at
To earn his title shot, Bowe
6-2 in the NFC West - those stopped PiCITC Coeuer in the sevSaints just creep up on you, don't enth-rOund on July 18. A seasoned
they?
newcomer, Bowe, 25, of Brooklyn,
- Miami, 6-0 just eight days N.Y., presents Holyfteld, 30, who
ago, lost for the second straight fights out of Atlanta, with his
CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
time, 26-14 to the Jets at the Mead·
,_
WLTPII.GFGA
owlands.
Docooil................ 7 5 0 14 49 44
-Buffalo, a 37-10 loser to lhe
r -.............. 6 ·4 2 14 4341
If
............ 6 5 I 13 43 4i1
Dolphins a montb ago, moved back
s........ ........... 5 6 1 11 43 50
to its accustomed place atop the
aa.................. 4 5 3 11 45 43
AFC East (tied with Miarrii). But
Tampa Bay ........ 4 I 1 9 43 43
the
Bills are still in tbe doldrums.
S•JIIoo Dl.tolao
At:ter two straight losses, they bare·
Ca!pty ........... . 9 4 0 11 54 31
LoaAo........... 7 4 1 15 51 46
ly beat the Jets last Monday and
VlnCCQV.. ....... - s 5 1 11 42 37
beat 0·8 New En,land 16-7 SunWiDnlpeJ ........... 490 I 45 !14
1!4maolal .......... 3 I 1 7 33 54
day. After averagmg 38 points in
San!... ............ l 9 1 5 31 l6
their first four games, the Bills
have averaged 13 in the last four.
M011day's KOres
N.Y. ..._7, BIIIfolo6,ar
- Cincinnati, a loser of five
hbu.ll,W...... I
straight after two victoica to q~en
cquy5, V - 3
the season, rose up and beat OeveTonlabt's CIIIIIH
land 30-10 just as the Browns, 4-3
CllkaJo \'1. Wubin,.., atlMianal"'
going in, were getting playoff inu·
Iii, ,~ ......
Qa.bec at Hard'CIIIIl, 7:40p.m.
sions.
N.Y. bJ.Mcn at Pktsl:urlh. 7:40p.m.
- Houston, the odds-onJ.reSt. Lauilat Timpl Bny,f....O p.m.
season favorite to win tbe FC
Otlowa "l!&lt;lm&lt;ll..., 9:40pm.
Central, fell behind Pittsburgh with
Wedllllday'aKIIIIIes
a 21-20 loss when AI Del Greco
7:-Wp.m.
missed a 39-yard field goal on the
Philaclelphla 11 N.Y.
RlliiOI'I, 7:40
CA!lRIE MORRISSEY
p.m.
game·
s rmal play. The Oilers, are
Cil&amp;ll')' at VII'ICCIUver, IO:otO p.m.
now a game plus a tiebreaker
be.hind the Steelers, after losaes in
Transactions
which tbe~ blew leads of 14, 13
ButbaD
and six pomts in the final cjuarter.'
Natloul....._
"We're a very talented team and it
CHICAOO CUBS - l'inod lim rny,
hurts to be 5-3 when we v«y easily
Mlftior vice p.idau. and lpCICill player
Carrie Morrissey and Jeremy
....u~......
could be 8-0," says wide receiver
Buckley
were named as tbc "AthHaywood JcffU'CS.
BllketbaD
letes
of
the
Month" at Eastern High
Ycab, but this is the NFL.
NaU.II . . .et"'' Allldaua.
School
for
the
month of Septtmber.
OIAJtLO't'l'B HOil'lETS - Waived
Madlllaka:, ...... """~-.....
Sports
briefs
Morrissey, the daughter of
f..........
Patrick and Nancy Morrissey of
HOUSTON JOCUTS- Walvo4
David Wooley,~
Basketball
Pomeroy, has earned this honor for
INDIANA JI'ACilas - Waivocl Frank
W
~SHINOTON
(AP)
The
her
outslanding effort in volleyball.
K-, fcnul, inti I-Pdoleau,pud.
Supreme Court refused to let the She is Involved in numerous activi· LOS ANOELI!S LAUJS - An·
tha tatltw- ol "!tJJo laltnion.
NBA limit tlie number af games lios II l!astem High School, wlwe
televised by s..,mtations, a victory llhe 'is a 'aeliior audCnt and current
NIW IIllEY NITS - Wal•etl
Melvla Newbem ua Muk Brisker,
for the Chic;ago Bulls and WON.
member of the volleyllilltellil.
The jllllicel, without comment,
She has been involved in the
PORTJ,A,I'ID TIWL BLAZERS W1lvM LlraOIIl Suolhen, MneUt
left intact rulings that called the following actlvi.ties at Eastern:
NBA's aaemp to impose a limit an National Honor Society, three
~,-IBATTLII IUPI!UONICS Illegal
resttaint of 00111pedtion.
Wal... "Ill'* Ed.Uti; ..,,.., Plaoetl
years; varsity volleyball;· four
~ Oaln-. ...~ .. tha inj.....t ...
In 1990, the NBA lliiSied a rule ye10; vanity IOftball, three yean;
limitillg each team to 20 ~that and Student Council, two yean.
could be broadcast natiOnally on She has been involved as a memb«
~lions. A federal trial .iud&amp;e of the yea boot I!Uf, TDCII lnstilllte
in Chicuo and the 7th u.s. CktUit
Coon of Appeals bad previously
· ruled ,that tbe 20-game rule was ,
illoplatd b:ared ill enf~DL

.......

·:, :U&amp;all
~ takinJ away from ooth
• a sport and the Jaraer

On this week's Sports Probe;

Parity once again dominates NFL
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
On the day after the New York
City Marathon, it's fitting 1Q note
that some of the NFL leaders are
" hitting the walL"
Or as Dan Marino of Miami put
it after his team's second suaight
loss, a 26-14 defeat by the New
York Jets: "You can't just throw
. your helmet on the r~eld and expect

NFC Cent:nl boat Ill Clltaao. The VIkings Intercepted tllree !laue&amp; ea route to a 38-10 win over
~

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Magic retires f~om . NBA .pertpanently

1

•
•

:
By JOE MOOSJIIL
:
CIDCAGO (AP) - Last lime, it
, was " The Audible." This time, it
~ was a plain old-fashioned whip·
piDf,·
'We got thoroughly whipped.
; We never got into the flow o{ what
• we warned to do,'' Chicaao COICh
: Mike Dilka said after the Minncso: ta Vikings crushed his Bears 38·10
• Monday nighL "They played bella"
·: fOOiball.
•
"Give them all the credit in the
world. Right now they are a bella"
team than we are."
.
The convincing Vikings vic\Ory
erased any stigma that their wiD in
the Metrodome last month was a
flute. And it could be the ticket to
the divisional tide for the Vikings,
the end of the 'line for the Olicago
Bears.
"We weren't playing around
here," said Minnesoca coach Dennis Green. " We came in to Win this
ball game. Goinf 2-0 against the
Bears is vrry big. '
The vic.tory left tbc Vitin's at
6-2, oo IIJp of the Central DiVISion
of the NFC, and chopped the Bears
to 4-4. Not only are the Vikings
two games~ of the Bears, but
• they would have the upper hand if
any tiebreakers lillC~
." They' ve got to catch us by
three games,'· said Green.
It was the worst home defeat for

1\JIIday, November·3~ 1892

~
. "''"'
' ofotllo

·-

.... 111 ~ II Ill
'

•

SUPER.SENIOR WINNERS - Wlnaen or tile Super Senior
Golf League at the Melp County Golf Coune were recoplzed Sun·
day nlpt at Ute annual dinner dance. Pictured rrGmleft to rlaht are
Bob Freed and Bob Hysell, who tied for low cross, and Harold
Lohse, who WMiow net. Coming In IIKOIId Ia low net but not pre·
sent Wll Bob CINicb.

TEAM CHAMPS- Olley Colulally ..d Kea Freeker WOII the
Tuesday aiPt mea'alnpe at tile Melaa Collllty Golf Coune.. Bob
Miller and Jolm Muaser came Ia secoad.In the Wednesday evening
leape, the team of Jolla M-r and Bob Hysell look home top bon•
on, wltb Randy and Scott Plerc:e ftnlsblnalll IKOI!d. Miller ~ft)
alld Hysel (right) were rec:CJ111Ized at the Melp County Goll Course
Dlaaer Dance lleld on Sunday evening. Th~ olhen were uneble to
·
attend.

Browns' future foes playing
better than .500 football
By CHUCK MELVIN
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns' 4-4 record
looks pretty good when you consider they played most' of those
.games without either of their top
two quatabacks.
··
Was the respectable first half
primarily the result of a weak
lchedul07 Don't try suggesting that
·to coach Bill Belichick.
"I think Overall the schedule's
been real competitive," Belie hick
said Mollday.
.
"I'm deflnitcl 1101 buying some
of the garbaao ~t's being sluna
eround,lhat the Raiden aren't any
good, the Dolphins aren'~
·good. the SIICeiers uat't any
,
'the Colts aren't any jood,"
,Belichlck said, naming four of
'etevelald'l lint-half ~IC?Ita. .
. There is, however, evidence that
tougher tlmu- ahead.
Tho Browns' first eight opponents put together a composite
rec;ord of 30.34, wiUle the next
eilht cuneady are six games over
.500. Only two of the upcoming
. foes - Cincinnati, whlell beat the
~ Browns 30-10 Sllllllly, and Detroit
. - ha\'elolina lllaliCis.
"I look for the second hall of
the ICbedule 10 bO just • competi.

..

live as tbe rust h8If," Belichick
said.
Cleveland will enter lhe second
half of the aeason with Mite Tdmczalt starting at quartirbact • he
has since week four, when he tpok
over because of injuries II! Bernie
Kosar (brobn ankle) .and Todd
Philcox (broken lhumb).
Kosar, who is still at least a
week away from returning, was
badly missed Sunday, when the
Browns fell behind 14-3 ·early and
lacked the ~ to come from
behind. Clev
hu 1101 reached
20 pobits in any of Tomc:rat's five
pmes • the slider.
·Even ao, the Browns n 3-2 in
those poles. They were o-2 with
Kosar and 1-0 with Philcox..
"I !hint
to a slo,v
start With the
' Ua game ~·
14·3 loss in the IICIIOII oponor). '
Belichict said. • 'The team
responded real weD to a nel&amp;llve
situltion after that loss and llfiCr tho
l:ijurles at qaarterbact. We nlllly
pulled together and played well fll'
a few weeks.
''We made a lot of JIIOIJOII, but
we t8 a 111ep l!ecltwad yetterday.
We're a better team than we
showed J I J! daf;"

w:J.:;!

By RUSTY MILLER
out of time.
Michigan is S-0 in the Big Ten ,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) About the last thing Ohio State and 7-0-1 overall. Ohio State (6-2
coach John Cooper expected Satnr· overall), Indiana (S-3) and Michi·
day was a litllt help from PUrdue. gan State (3-S) are all 3-2 in the
Big Ten.
He abnost got itatyway.
In order to go to Pasadena, the
Purdue had fourth-ranked
Michigan on the ropes, leading17- Buckeyes must have two things
7 at the half, before falling to the happen: they must win their last
Wolverines in the second lialf, 24- three games - against Minnesota
this week, at indiana next week and
17.
'
Ohio State needs some.one to then beat Michigan in their tradiupset Michigan if.tbc Buckeyes are tional seaaon-ending geme, Nov.
to keep alive their dim hopes of 21 at Ohio Stadium; and the
catching tbc Wolverines and mak· · Wolverines must lose at North. western this weekend or at borne
·ing it to the.Rose Bowl. '.
"I WIIChecllhat (Michigan-Pur- against Dlinois Nov. 14. ' ·
Barring that, Ohio State appears
du.e) game until we left (the hotel
for the Iowa game)," Cooper said to be heading for either of the Big
Monday. "It was 3-0 when I left. · Ten's aulilmalic bOwl bids. ·
The second-place team likely
Then when we got to the stadium,
would
go to the Florida Ciuus
·we heard it was 17·7 at halftime.
"So, you think, jeez, maybe it Bowl, where it would meet tbe
could happen. I never thought 'Southeastern Conference champigoi.ng into tbe .pme that Purdue onship P.J!Ie loser. The third-place
would beat Micbipn. That would team Will likely go to the Holiday
have been a pat upset. ... But any- Bowl to J11CC1 the Western Athletic
thing can happen. It would have Conference champion. In both
cases, the bowl may overlook .
beena~~"
.
Cooper was asked if, after teams without eight wins..
Cooper says lie isn't followinl
weeks of beating teams by scores
such as '61-7, 52-28 and 63-13, the bowl picture. y cL
"Never," he said. "(Maybe)
Michigan's ~;lose call proved it
when
the season's over. I looked at
wasn't invincible.
"I suppose it does," he said. tbe (Big Ten) standings when I
"But 1 think it'll help us more in came over here today. I guess us,
looking to see what Purdue did Michigan SWe and .Indiana are tied
offensively because there's some for second, it looks lite."
similar thinga that Jimmy (Purdue
Asked if he checked out r.&gt;tencoach Jim Collctto) does to what tial bOwl opponents, he sa1d, "I
.we do here."
haven'L I'm 1101 telling you I won:t
CoHCIID WM Cooper's offensive befll'e the season's over, but at thiS .
coordinator.at Ohio Swc for three · poirrt, I haven't. I know what's
years before taking the head coach· happening in college. football .. I
mg position at Purdue last season.
vote in the coaches' poll, so obviWith Michigan holdin' a two- ously I know the results of those
game Iced 011 the ~ With three games. And I go home Saturday
games mnaining m the Big Ten, night and watch CNN's score' .
22nd-1'1111ted Ohio State is running OOard.' '

B·ucs' Bonds named AP's
top baseball player of 1992
The difference this winter is that
By JIM DONAGHY
NEW YORK (AP) - Barry Bonds might be preparing to play
Bonds' years as a su~ntar may for a new team in 1993. The Alljust be starting .evCII though his Star outfielder wiD be a.looking for
time with the Pittsburgh Pirates a conb'IICt that will P!IY him at least
m beendin
· $6 million~eason, and it's
~onda, wt, led tbo Pirates to unlikely the · can aflonl iL
"I haven't closed the door to
their third lib~ East tide this
season, was
The Associat- anything," Bonds iaid. "I don't
ed Press Player oldie Year,jll bal- · rcally want to get involved in the
negotiations. My agatt will let me
loting PIIIIIIIUii:ed Monday.
lcnow
what's gomg 011.''
Bondi, who has filed for free
aonds. 28, has emaged as one
qency, received 87 votes from a
nationwide panel of sports writers of the best players in tbe major
and broldcasten. San Diego third leaguca because of his all-around
I
baseman Gary Sheffield was the amlilios.
'
runner-up with 67 vo&amp;es, followed
by Oakland reliever Dennis Eckers·
ley with·32.
· In what could·bil his last season
with Pittsburgh, Bonds hit .311
with 34 'homers and 103 RBis. He
also scored 109 runs, tops in the
NL, and IIOie 39 baael.
"I never· act pia for myself,"
(NO ALCOHOL SEFIVEID)
Bonds said. "I prepare the same
way· every year. I would do tbe
. same things if you paid me one
dollar."

.

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MAGIC RETIRES - Tbe Los Angeles Lakers' Earv1n (Map:)
Jobnson (ri~ht), shown In action against the Cleveland CaVIIllen'
Craie Eblo m an Oct. 30 pre-season game, aaaounced 11111 permanent retirement f'rom tbe Lakers aod the NBA Monday. (AP)

BGSU's first SID honored
with dedication of press box
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP)
- BowUng Green's wallring media
guide for Falcon sports had a
unique honor bestowed on him Sat·
urday.
The name of Don Cunningham,
an administrator in the Bowling
Green State University athletic
department for 33 · years. now
adorns tbe press box at Doyt L.
Perry Stadium.
.
"It's a~~ honor," Cunning.
ham said. 'Bowling Green's been
good to me; very, very good. I've
been with BowUnlf Green atbleti~s
for over SO years smce I was sports
editor of the BG News in 1941."
Cunningham was instrumental
in the design of the football press
oox as well as starting the sports
information program at Bowling
Green.
"I traveled around and looked at
a lot of press bOxes.when we were
designing the stadium,'' Cunningham said. "I'm JRtly proud of lhat
whole thing.
"With the stadium being named
for Doyt and now I'm a small port
of thai. It really makes me feel
good."
·
A 1943 graduate of Bowling

Green, Cunningham began his
career as BG's fust sports infonna·
tion director iii 1946. He was in
that position for 20 years while also
having additional duties as the athletic ticket manager and varsity
golf coach.
He became an assistant athletic
director in 1952 and was named an
associate atbletic director in 1976.

He also served as the athleiic buslness manager, in addition to his
other duties, from 1965 until his
retiremenL
''That someone would have that
much devotion and loyalty to Just
one institution is iare," iaid lim
Lessi~ a former alhlotic director at
Bowbng Green. "He's a unique
individual and he- the bacttme
of the athletic department for many
years.
.
"He's extremely deservina of
the honor."
· · Eve~ in ~ C.lllllljlllha!"
has mamtamed an active role 'in
Bowling Green athletics. He is a
mem~ of the BG ~I of ~arne
committee and works with Mickey
Cochrane, BG's former aoccer and
lacrosse coach, as the curator of the
athletic archives office.
" It's very enjoyable fir me; It's
like iCif!g oo the ~e,'' Cunningham. sa1d about hu wort in tbe
arch1ves:
.
Cu.nmnaham IS a member of the
Bowling Green Hall of Fame and
also the College Sports Information
Directors of AmeriFa (CoSIDA)
Hall of FJUJH:.
.
• .
Among his favonte memonca IS
Bowling Green's basketball viCtory
over Loyola of Chicago in 1963,
the ~ Lorola went on to win
the nauonal Ude. He also fondly
remembers many of the football
games against Ohio University llld
Miami, because those two teams
along with Bowling Green were
almost always battling for the .
MAC tide in the 19SOs and 1960s.

'liD REWARD

For laformalloa laadiDg to tile arrall
Md coavlctloa oltlle , .... •
,anoas wllo destroyed a park
at 111J ~~deaca,

.._ell

1047 s. lad An., Mld-ort.
c•Reg• ....., . •1-1114

•

•

·Sports Probe ...
(Continued from Page 4) .
ed the Atlalta Braves in alx Pn!cs.
The 60,minute ·tapc- high·
li&amp;htlng Totollto's four oao-run
vfc:torica - will bo 1old In the
Uniled S11$CB·II BJoc:khn- Video
stores; and in Canada at 1 wide
Ylrioty of retail oonJeb. 11lo World
Series videol al:z:jialuro dra·
lllllic clole-upa.
• -dle-ICCIIOI
ahoQ and exc:lualve voice rec:ord·
lnp.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
BN'I!RPRISE ASSN.
.

MASON FAMILY RESTAUUNT
t·•·
.... t1lly ltOO •·•· • faOO

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ByTheBeDd

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J•
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The.
Daily
Sentinel
.
·
Tuledlv,
.

November 3, 1112
Plgl IJ .

~

GRAY'S TAXIDERMY
Deer Heads •••••••••.•••.•••.•.'19000

Ex-husband shouldn't.come ·

rkeys ...... r\1·················· '1
Fish .........................1400 per Inch
Call (304) 895-3386
after 5 p.m.

·between mother arid children
'Ann

· De" A.. Laadera:.1.. I wa · ·.
)Xoblem Is thM Iller two drinb he
divorced 21 yem qo lfbell my
teliiiUCh filthy jokes I Willi to fall
d••pler, "Cyndi," wu 6 llld my
diiOUtlll tho floor. ·
·
SOD, "Lylo," wu 3. When my
To bepn wi~ .the man is no
ex· busbaacl Nmmied four yean
IIIOryteller and IIIC lfOrice he IClls
Ill«, Cyndi labmod mo thll a
AiiN
are .not fUIUiy •• jlllt dirty. l wonder
Wlllled to live widl her flthcr llld
if the fact tbat he bu been Impotent
bo p..t of a "nna1 family. • Lylallid
for threo ,e~n bU IIOIIIOibiqto do
ho didn'l c:~n~ wbcin: he lMd a big
with it. Of COUIIC, no oae in our
• bo wu with his Iiiier. Since I
aowd knows tbil, but I certalnly
wu ltill slncJe '"d SIIUggllng, I. willacve..rcqiWI me for divorcinJ do.
conacnlcd.
him, but this Is a rotlal wrj 10 get
Pieue relpOlld in die ptper, and .
Two yOII'I lstec, I muried a · '**at me. I 1111 crushed by,Lyle's· don't prim the name of my city. I
widowerwbohtldcbildJen the 111111C rejocdon.
would not - t Lloyd 10 know I
age a mino. We 10o1t Cyndi and
Tbi1 morning I received a wrote. Although he ieada your
Lyle ou V1C11ion8 wilh 1111 iililllel.wt birtbday cud liom .Lyle. Should I coloma, he will not think tbilleuet
them finlncially wbencvllr we
send it back? .. MIFFED IN is about him. He doesn't OIIIISider
When C)'llll married five yem MILWAUKEE
his jokea dirty, jlllt "a shade off·
will ·be provided by tbe Hillside Baptist Choir
ANNIVERSARY TO BE OBSJUlVI!!D • HID·
aao,berfatheroffcndtogiveheta
DEAR
MILWAUKEE:
The
color."
Thanks for~ ~p. ••
·alone-with other croups. Rev. James R. Acree
side Baptist Cllurcll will celebrate Us third
small
weddl"l
A1111r
a
had
ll)lllllt
birlbday
cud
was
the
olive
brlnch.
LONG.SUFFERING
SUE .
Sr. IDvltH the public.
,. anniversary Suaday at 11 a.m. Featured s1Daln1
alotoflferownmoney,heinfonned Iurpyounottoscnditback.Leave
DEAR SUE: These guys are .
her that he did not want me tQ the door ajlr and lei. Lyle take it hopelou. It's usually the nonI
. aaend.lt wu two ·wecb before tho liom there.
perf01111e11 who tdl thodlniestjotes
ceremony llld lhc couldn't cancel
Ia my opinion, Lyle has some - 10rt of a vabellllbstiture for the
•
it on such short notice.
fence-mending to do, but since real tliing. '
·
' Community Calendar Items ceeds will go 10 the school.
THURSDAY
Cyndi and my CX·huaband had your ~.-hus'*!d had the. Childml
To every man who tells off-color
appear two days Wore u eveat
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Junior some bluer llJIIIIIents. and I was m their l'ormative yean. 11 lhould stories, I _. this question: Could
ud the day fll .... eveat. lte•
WEDNESDAY
High academic boosters will meet fl11811y allowed to atlend tho cere- not be IUiprising that there Is 10100 this lea« be liom ~wife?
mlllt lie received weD Ia 1111ft11Ce
MIDDLEPORT • A six-week Thursday at 7 p.m. at the school mony but not tho dinner. She has dialancc bcneen you. I hope time
What COli you rive tilt per1011 w/lo
• to assure publieallon Ia tile cal· biblical background study, cafeteria.
not
forgiven
ber
father
for
!he
will
IIIIIOW ~ .PP ~ ' that you
luis
tvtrythinr? Ann Landers'
• endar.
·
Wednesday through Dec. 9 at 7
misery he caused, Several of my and your c~~ will develop a bOoklet, "Gems," l.r ideal for a
p.m. each Wednesday with Jim
MIDDLEPoRT • The Preceptor
lllghmOIId or coffee ltlble. "Gt111S"
~
TUESDAY
Oliphant. This study will examine Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi ex-husblnd's !datives told me how W8IIIICl' .elationslnp. Good luck.
'; . POMEROY - Revival at .Mt. how GOd prepared and used three Sorority, will meet Thursday at - cruel they thougbt it wu for him 10 . · _Dear Nnn ~~ndera: I can't iu collection tf AM l~Nlm' most
l : Hermon United Brethren in Christ groups or nations • Hebre":'s, 7:30 p.m. at the home of Ann exclude me. My son Lyle aaid, beliCVC 1 am wnu111 10 you but I re(flllsttd poems tl1ld euays. Stnd a
Church, off Texas Road ncar Greeks and. Romans • 10 establish Rupe. Mrs. Rupe will p.esent the "Don\ feel bad. Mom. Some day have had it up ,to here with my lcV-Mdrused, long, blui{tus·'si~ l,;
_ Pomeroy, through Sunday, 7:30· His word. Public invited.
envelope 1W1 a clrtc#: or m011ey
, program . Refreshments will be you~ he cominJ 10 Ill.)' wedding." hulband.l will call him "Lloyd."
p.m. nightly. Rev. Robat Mlrkley
Well, guca what. Lyle is getting
He Is a succeasful profeuional · order for $4.85 (this includes
served by the hostess and Clalice
• Will be the evangelist. Public invit·
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle- Krautter. ,
married next montb. and he just man, a JOOd father and a faithful ptJIIIJft tutd ltlllullillg) to: Gti/IS,
! eel.
port Literary Club will meet
phoned to tell me I will 1101 be husband (I would almost 10 clo AM Lalldtrs, P.O. Boi 11562,
Wednesday at l :30 p.m. at the
invired
because
bo
can't
bandle
the
il).
We
have
been
married
for
34
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562 . (In
RUTLAND
•
'The
Rutland
•'
POMEROY • American Legion home of Mrs. Richard Owen. Mrs. Township Trustees will meet "stress." I know my ex-husband yean. Lloyd Is 61; I am SB. The Ctlllllda, send $5.87.)
·
' Drew Webster Post No. 39 will Chester Erwin will .evlew the boolc Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rutmeet Tuesday for the annual oystec "Christy" by Catherine Marshall. land Fire Station. Public invited.
supper at 7 p.m. Meeting at 8 p.m.
Roll call will be ·~a canparlson of
schools 'then and now'." Members
REEDSVILLE • The Olive
Pircels to , Patrick Hill, Nancy
Doyle E. Melick, R/W, to,
RACINE • Southern Junior note the program change.
·
CompUed by:
Township Trustees , will meet
Buckeye
Rural EleCtric Coop. Inc.,
High Boosters will meet Tuesday
Hill,
Porn
Vill.
Emmocene Holstela c_,o
Thlilsday at 7:30 p.m•.at the Shade
Salem.
Clifford
Beegle,
Manic
Beegle,
• at 7:30 p.m . at the junior high
POMEROY • There will be a River State Forestry Building.
Recorder, Melp County, Ohio
Parcels to, Ronal.d G. Beegle;· . David M. Brickles, Edith A.
; school.
rummage sale at the Pomeroy rtrSt
Leanna
S. Beegle, Sutton.
Brickles, RJW, to, Buckeye Rural
Baptist Church on Wednesday and
•
ROCK
SPRINGS
·
The
Salis..
Ma~:~~·
=~a~
Jeffrey
Hubbard.
Julie
A.
'HubElectric
Coop. Inc. Bedfoid.
SHADE - Mlilllm Woodmen of Thursday from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m.
bury Township Trustees will meet
Bedfi:.....
bard. PJ. Lots 53 and 54, to Carol
Anthony Corsi, Helen J. Corsi,
Americs, Camp 4798, will ~
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the 10wnship L&lt;lrenc Nance,
uou.
R/W, to, Buckeye Rurai'Eicctric
Stephen P. Marcinko, Tamela S. L. Theiss, Syracuse .
i a matching (.und benefit for
STIVERSVlll..E • Kerry DrenMarcinko, S.OOOA, Joaeph Edward
Monis E. Teaford, Mattie Coop lac., Bedford.'
Aleundcr Junior Hi&amp;h at Shade on nan, Elizabeth, W.Va., will speak garage.
John Yosi, June Yost, R/W, to,
•. Tuesday from S·7:30. p. 1m. Soup- at the Stivcrsville Word of Faith
nJPI'ERS PLAINS • The Tup- Bowen, MarYBowcn, oraDge. . Teaford, Parcels to , Richard Lee
: beans, combleld, colellaw, IIIJPie· Church on Wedacsday and Thurs- pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
.Elizabeth A. Roulter, parcels, Teaford, Kevin D\Vayne Teaford, Buckeye Rural Electric Coop. lac.,
Rutland.
I • IIUCO. t'Uddi!!f0iCe tea llld coffee day It 7:30 p.m. Putllr David Dai· I adies Auxiliary will meet 'lbuli· \- ~~ ~· ~ Grif. UJwrioo
JIIIICI
R.
Priddy,
·Sr~
.Ruth
A.
, , Rob(lrt L. Mtasb,&gt;T.amera L.
~
aval-o!! for-13.50 n.re Icy ~die p•bljc:
day at 7:30p.m. lnspeedon will be fith, parcel a, Ma;lne Grlffitb, Priddy, 2A,Fl, T-6,R-J4',to Chades 1 Mash, Piln:els, 10, Scott L WaiiOn
will also be a bakC sale. All proheld and dues are payable. .
Karen Griffith. Salem
.
Calhoun, Rutland
Geri Walton;Pomeroy Village,
'
J.
Holden,
Ann
F.
Ellsworth
Homer Mills, Goldie Mills,
•
Holden,
Parcels
Sec.
12T
,RIS,
10
to, Brian C. Ric thhard,
0.838A.,
'•,
Sutton.
Stephen
R.'
Rife,
Rhonda
J.
Rife,
'•,
Billy T. Dailey, Carole Dailey, Salem.
Kennith E. Newland, Hoivard
';
The Homebuildenl etas's of the reservations: Thelma Boyer, f'lo and Nora Rice, Dale and Mary Rtw to Tuppen Plains· Chester
Tammy A. Hoffman, Tammy A. W. Newland, Parcels to, Glen R.
' Middleport Church of Christ qtueser and Hazel Wilson; derora- Hysell, Tammy Gilbert and Saman- Water District, Olive
·
Crider, James H. Crider, Parcels · Bissen, Chester.
' recently celebrated its S3rd uons: Ka!hryn Evans, Clarice tha, Raymond Russell, Glenn and
Edward E. Adams, Tammy R. · Sec.36, to.Bill E. Buchanan, BC\'erCarol F. PIC!J'(:e, Bonnie Gene
anniversary banquet in the church Erwin, Kathy Ihle and Dorothy Kathryn Evans, Dorothy Roach and Adams, R/W to Tuppers Plains· ly Buchanan.
Pierce, Parcels to, Carol F. Pierce,
, social rooms.
McDaniel.
Raymond, and Farie Cole.
Chester WIIICr Dislricl, Olive
Otis S. M c Clin took, dec·' d, Salem.
.: • The Fello~ Class p-epued·
Officers for the coming year
Tim B. Wolf, Donna M. Wolf, affid., to Emma Jane McClintock,
Pnnk M. Guptt~ di:c'd, Cat. to,
· .': and served a
dinner 10 mem- will be Dorothy Roach, president;
R!W to Tuppers Plains-Chester SUlton.
Eva Mac Stoecper, Porn Vill.
' · ben, former members ind friends. Flo Grueser, first vice-{&gt;resident;
Water District, Olive.
Hartly. Hardey &amp;; Hartley. lac..
Frank M. Fugate, Cert. 10, Eva
J Glenn Evans asked the blessing for
Mary Martin, second vice-presi.Ida W. Cowdery, l7.496A. to . l'ln:els to Fred~. Porn Viii. . Mac Srocper, Pom Vill. .
•• the food.
dent; Roseanna Manley, secretary;
James . C. Eddy, Cheryl L.
Gerald R. Thompson, Alice
:'
The tables were dec&lt;nred in fall Thelma Boyer, assistant secretary;
Eddy,Olive
· ·
ThomPIOD. 0.066A.,IO, Thomas G. A t
NASHVILLE; Tenn. (AP) ~- colors using candles, Indian com, and Kathryn Evans, treasura'.
Clifford E. Young, Sr., dec'd, McCfunc, Madelin.e McClung,
C reSS hoSpl"tQ I'zzed
The
best
country
dancers
in
the
,; gourds, acorns, bittersweet and
For the procrarn, Denver Rice
affid, to Clifford E. Young, Jr. , Pom Vill. ·
.
LOS' ANGELES . (AP) ,;_
United States will get a chanCe to Porn Vill.
:• yarrow.
showed slides ofpast meetings.
Gary
R.
Canterbuty,
Doris
L..
Audrey
H«ipburn had a .tumor
•,.
Dorothy Roach welcomed the
Attending were AI and Donna show their stepS during an appearSusan
E. Pigott, 1'nlcts to Virgil Canllitbury, Parcels 1o , Southern removed frcim her colon and was
:·; class and guests and thanked the Hartson, Bill and Missy Frazier, ance with singer Tanya Tucker A. Miller . and Sheny A. Ohio Coal Co., Salem.
expected to remain hospitalized for
. committees for helping to malre the Bud and Hazel Wilson, Bill and next year.
Miller,Oiivc. ·
·
Tcnsa
S.
Canterbury,
Pa1te1s
to
about a wect.
.
Winners of a national dance
; · clsss activities a success this past Flo G111C81:1', Osby and Mary MarGeorge H. Buchanan and Vera , Soulbem Ohio Coal Co. , Salem.
It
W1SD 't disclosed whether the
' ' year.
tin,' Clarice Erwin, Roseanns Man- competition will perform during M. Buchanan, 0.39A to James W.
Fred w.
Cathy Crow, tumorwucancerous.
·:
' · Farie Cole gave the history of ley, Lorena Ticmer.er. Lester Bow- one of Tucker's tour performances Baner and Margie M. Barter; Ease., to State _of Ohio, Lebd..
The 63-year-old star of such
the class, attendance records and a ers, Joe and Marilyn Bishop, Ed and appear in one of her -music Olive.
Jloy F. VanMeter, Bonnie F. films as "Breakfast at Tiffany's"
vi
(Ieos.
list of projects accomplished the and !;dna Evans, Cash and Nell
Betty Manin and Hernnm Marfpa LawraiCC, Parcel10 and "My Fair Lady" was at
Couples who win at several tin, Lot S3 to .William A. Young, ,VanMeter
•. past year.
Bahr, Harold and Elizabeth Lohse,
Roy
F.
VMJMeter,
Bonnie F. Van- - Cedan-Sinal MediCal Center.
•
Kathryn Evans presented gift Richanl and DoriS Bailey, Tom and doze!) sues will advance to regional Porn Vill.
Meier, Sutton.
Ho~taj spokesman Ron Wise
certificates to the teacher, Frank Mary B!'wen, ~ene and D!Jrotqy competition in Buffalo, N.Y., San
Miry E. Thompson, Parcels to
George"?"~
Millcr,_Jr.
by
wouldntelaborateonhercondition
'
lhleandaxothyRoach,presidenL McDaRJel, Willard and Nettie Diego, SeattiC, Denver, Minneapo- Phillip A. Thompson, Salem.
.O.A.,
Maril~ Jean Mill~, Lot
Monday.
P
•
~ Martin gave a tribute. to Boyer, Thelma Boyer, Frank and lis, Kansas City, Mo., and Tampa,
Carol W. Cline, JO.OOA to 1327, to, Manlyn Jean M1ller,
For the past six years she has
• • Delcie Forthc, a member who died Kathy Ihle, Jody and Josh, Gardner Fla. Finals will be in NashYille•
Charles B. Holsinger, Olive.
Midd.
V.
been
goodwill ambassador for
One of the judges of the fmals
"! last year.
and Pat Wehrung, Dorothy B•er.
Guy H. Shuler. dec'd. affid, 10
Evelyn
.
Elliott,
Parcels
to,
UNICEF.
Slie recently visited
..
Committees for the evening . Els. ic King, Danny and Jeanette will be Patsy Sway~. wbo ctlore- Mary Shuler,~
· Robert G. Graham, Keith Allen, towns and !'Cfugee camps in Soma.: were: program: Dorothy Roach; Thomas, Ken McElhinny, Denver ographcd the COIUltry dance movie
John C. Young, Parcel to, Chester.
lia and Kenya. .
.
•'Urban Cowboy" iri 1980.
Richard
R. Y011111. SUIIOII.
.
Robert G. Graham, Ruth A.
••
Vernon Bartels, Judge Entry, Graham, Parcels to, Keith Allen,
VS. Village of Syracuse, Syracuse.
Chester.
Dorothy Emmons, E. David
Jeffrey 0. Peckbam, Vichy K.
Colwell, Jolene Moliuna, Rex E. Pecldlam, UJOOA.,IO, Gary Haiper,
Shenefield, Catherine Shenefield. Charlotte Harper, Rutland.
A UTO
Catherine Colwell, Frink Colwell, · Jamca E. Oiddle, Linda C. DidPllmela Colwell. Ann Forboa. Paul dle, l.OOOA., lo Jimmy C. Cald·
Forbes, Mary C. JollnJou. Robin L. well, Sally Caldwell, Sutton.
Alpha Ramey, l/4 inL l 03 3/4
Johnson, Dean Colwell. Lana Col·
well, lA, to Southern Ohio Coal A., to, David Ramey, Kenny
• ••• ' I '
Co., Salem• .
Ramey, Craig s. Ram!r.·
'
Virgil L. Hill, dec d, affid, to, '
Ronald L. Hensley, et at; Lori L.
Slate Auto's already
.
Hcnslcy, ct al, James Nutter, Cl al, Kalbryn Hill, Letart. .
low prvmiums can be
C8rl Hcndril:tl, dec'd, affid, to •
Sheriffs deed 0.97A., to Micllacl
rediiC8d even more by ·
Dorothy Hendricks, Porn Viii.
Joe Hawk. Chcsti:r.
in8uring bolh your car
Nancy D. Hoback, TrfCII to .• . Dotothh="cb, Parcels to,
•
and home with the S~tt
. ts, Porn Viii.
John Bill Hoback, Aaron S. . Hlrley E.
AulD Companies.
.
Hoback, Troy David· Hoback,
Vlrall B • Price l.l6A . to,
Lelaaa.
Plllllnc LaBonte, Chclter.
WDiiam Krw:kombcqer, dec'd,
Haell. Conao. Clultes COngo,
Let us tell you just
Cert. Of Trans. to, Golda KrKk- Ruby Conao, ~leen Polk, Rose
hoW muct1your savings
omberpr, Olester.
Hatris, Alvin R. Harris, Anna L.
can be.
Charles Bush, Alice Marie
Janct .Jcffers, Everea .JefBush,.Parcels to , Arron L. Say.e, fers, Lot SB to, Odessa Proffitt,
.Shirley S. Sayre, Sutton.
Lebanon.
Bobble Brantam, 1/2 "-· to,
Robert Romines, J oycc
Richard A. Ki~, Scipio.
Rcmlncl, PEels.to, Bobbi Kuehn·
Linda W. Sllaver, Robert E. art, Rudand.
'.
Shaver, S.l, T-6, R-14 to, Ross
Jame• w. Bland, Virainia W.
Junior SteWIIt; Gertrude W. Stew- Bland, Tracll to, Dale L. Davis,
1111. Rudand.
.
Karyn,D. Davis, Sutton. ·
214 EAST MAIN ·
Kean P. Jalowy, Marie D.
Allah A. Lambert , Lot 7 to,
POMEROY
Jalowy, Pan:elto Enat E. Rania, Viclllf Counta, Virginia K. Counts,
RM•n Hania, I d+R{.ft,
882-6687
S}'IICUSC.
Max G. Gruescr~ Barbara
.,.
Jerry Cecil Wlrd, Blllna WIRI,
Lot 416, to Judith L. Thlvener, Orucser, R/W. 10. Buckeye Rural
Pom VIU.
l!lel:ll'il: Coop. lac .. Bedford..
..... Auto·.
Ronald L. Saunders, Audrey J.
RaYIIIOIId L. DeW'IU, Pan:el to •
Sannders, R/W, 10 Buckeye Rural
Cecil b. Frye, R••'ed.
·
. J-...,....._,...__ _ __.
.Orval L. Wllcl, Betty J, Wiles, l!lel:lric Coop. lac., Columbia.

Lan
· der's

..

lo M-orlaa

Call992-2156
.y ,.....

• Ado OOJ!oido .......
ad .......... pnpoW
• Recoho diocouat for ado poW Ia ...._.

• FneAdo: Ci--yudF....,jodo ...._IS ....... Ww ..
.... s cia,. .... dlup.
.
• Prico of ad for ollcaj.hal ' - io douhlo jw;.. of ...... ·
• 7 poild liMIJpo ooly ....
• Saatiaol lo 001 ...,....u.lo for ....,n aftor lint doy (chock
lc,r....,.. lint day ... 1'111111 Ia pepor). CaD Woro 2.00 p.a.
' day aftor pahllcotloa 10 .....

I

-tlo·

'

IULLEIII lOUD DEADLINE
4:30 P~ M. DIY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Community calendar·

.,aunl may be , . . - IDI' qu!llylng per·
son to ~uy very nice home on 3~ acrea In
Raclle. 4 BR. 3 baths, 2 - ·· ronlod 1
BR opt Pn&gt;pelly lnclu&lt;lOS 4,800 sq. ft . 111111
bldg.
'
·
CAI614·992-71041or~oool.

949·2391 or

Read the Best Seier
Readthe .

1·100·137·146~

. Lllwn Mowing.
Fef1111zing, Weeding.
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming I Removal

Clf\SSIFIED f\DS .

'

.

'

.,

"·,. ,_ ,,

,....

.. .

,,I

,,

you can't•

(814) 378-6153
, 11 am ·12 pm and
6
·10

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon

IC!II:Wa

RACINE FIRE
DEPT• .
EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.

PubliC Notice

· Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced

. STARTS
OCT. 18th

MICROWAVE OVEN
.aad VCR REPAII .
lllMlllt
lri.. it Ia Or Wo
Pic'!_~

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
915·3561
ac.... ,,.. '"'Ollke
217L ..... Il.

. POIIEIOY, OliO

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

lh-.

LICENSED and BONOEO

PH. 614-992-5591
·

"*"'

RACINE GUN.
CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

d

Factory 12
· Gauge Choke

Hplll, DtctUUI

10fl01'Q2/1 mo.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVKE

....Room',,.....
REDUC&amp;DI

IF YOU'RE WAITlNG FOR A REASON
TO BUY HERE IT II: Ownerhee r.ducod
on Ilia
IIOfDIOUI falm wilh llfliiiiiX. 78.33 - • with 1)\ llorv
home, bam. panda, fencing, ailo, outbuikinga, ltuit t,...,

era

Ruing

~nterfor

...,

• Exterior

V. C. YOUNG Ill

r------Lovin&amp;
· 1nuamory

Memory

!

CARL KAUTZ
who departed ,t his
life here on earth

•'
•
•

•''
'

.Nov. 1, 1967.
'Ihe lord ia my
· li(ht and my
. 118lvation;
Whom shall I fear?
'Ihe Lord ia the
atrenJth of my life;
Of whom shall I be
afraid.
· Sadly missed by,

i•
,
•·
;

Wlfe, Mary;
Children, Bob and
Joy and Fami1iaa
11

~JAYMAR
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992·
6637
St.Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH:

1121tfn

changMinour
lives, you are In our
thoughts and
h•rta. We miss you
and love .you
lllwlp.
Michael, Tammy,
Jaon, Family anc1
Frlenda

REDIICFD!
IICifi.IQ STARt IT WAI "A DEAL"
IEFOAE. • .NOW IT'I EVEN IIETTERI S.utiful Ill
llory log home with 4 '*11000111, electric Ilea~ 5+ ..,...~.
*1Je fRill' pordl, lui banment, 2 -ga~~~ge, centnll oor,
pewd
Juat 8IIIUIId 4 Y!Nf'll old. COME SEE I
.
Reduoedlo $71,500.

-t

NEW UMA AD. - 1W1011 1ty1o home wi1h 3 beclmoma,
I )I bllh, oenlnil air, gage, carport, oulbuldlnga,
IIPPftiiL I · OWNER ANXIOUS TO .SELL. . .HAS
RELOCATED.
·
AIICING 111,100. lilly 001. . der rm an1bh olferl

your-lpoltlilayeM
'

IliACI• - eomfollablo ono

.

117,000.

IGor ~~wno homo

wllh 3
'bl*-na, on 1M Jolin Racine. 'ClaM Ill .. ahopplng
' end benldng. Home .... hlid - r ..,..,.. and
' lnoluclle . . . . building. .
AMdng fii,OOO.

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

•W.....IIn

614·949·2804

PURCHAII THAT MDIII 'IOU'VE AUIAVI
WANTED. ••GIVE Ill A CALL 'IODAY AT
CLANID REALm

I • .

• - N-

.

.

EJ

.. '

i. .,;;.,:: .,

Ah• lp.!L 614-915-4110

FIREWOOD
·FOR SALE
Ill HarllwoH,
Seaso1ell,
$40.00• ....

llellwerell.
(614) 992·5449
I 11(121'112

ROOFI

TROMM BUILDERS
*A Quality Assured Co.,rractor•
20 Yr. Exp.
Call AI, 614·742~2328
.

8117/lfn

CELLULAR

Authorlzod Agent

TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PERFORMANCE
e .. e

10

e e • •

*

&lt;1o

•

e

6

e • '

6 • • It Ill II

*•

I

•

II

It •

*I

I

e

II

II

•FREE INSTALLATION• With any phone purch-

through October 31 .
Service ratea from $19.95 per month.
lncludea 180 mlnutee of off-peak air time.

Leulng available from $15.00 per month.
FOR MORE
CALL KEN

SMl~~::z~R .
DRIVEWAY WORK
a•d UMEnONE
IELIVERY SERVICE
S~.!l

hzer Work
25.00 Per Hour

REASOIIIIU UTES

. 992·7553

POMEROY, OH.

IC!/1:11112

· BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Addltlons ' Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
..CONSTRU(TION '
•Garages
•Compltte
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FlEE ESIIMii'ES

985·4473
667·6179

614-949·2801. 949·2160
or 915·3139
(No Sundar (ails)

2112192/lfn

I.

·.

.\TTE\ITIOl\
\loJHit. ~,.\.. J)1111h/l\\Hh IJHilll th\IHI '

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

H·92-tln .

Apprmti.M•Ifacl•tli
·

Haush!t PraM!s

FOREVER .
BRONZE
TANNING

lashaa U., Rad••
· Oeft~t; SpHial

UNUMITED TANNING
00

25

0

Quality HI EffJCieltcy
~ Coaditloaers, Heat
P1..1, Ftnaces &amp;
Naw Water Heaters.
Bennetts Mobile Home

=-=.

1391 SaHord Sd!ool U..

."(al (614) 446-9416«

949·2826

&amp; Cooling
W,alls, Ollie

1-800-&amp;72-5967

10.2-'112

H

WA~D

EXCAVAnNG

BP OIL CO.

and mACMUE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOllE BITES and
TRAILER liTES,

HOME HEATING OILS
DIESEL FUELS • GASOLINE$

BULLDOZE~ 1~ACKHOE

We Deliver In• • •
Gallia, Meigs, Mason and
Surrounding Counties

.WICK'S

1·800~598·5654

36970WI•Ialll

or 614~446·1157

.

We Accept Heating Vouchers

•

lex lt4-Wth Mer
RA~~o
(F,_,~.... s-1

PARTS &amp; SERVICE
Mowers e Gall Saws.

w•• ,,... ~.~w.......

WIDO
AND EVERnHING UNDERNUIH
GARAGES e ADDtnONS • SIDING

CHARLIE'S

P-1Y1!'M

ntiRI Ia NO a1 1&amp;1 .,.._ lHAN NOW TO

.~t

614-1182·2549

•SAND e:QRA'vi:L •DIRT
•UMESTONE

REEDIVIL.LE - One flaor block homol wl1h produce
bullclng. Home indudea 2 badrooma, 1 ca&lt; ga~~~ge, ...,.
ICIIe!Md pordl, nice lot $11,000.
Make., oflorl

FREE ISTIIURS
HAY£ IEfllliKIS

1011/

TROLLEY STATION
CUFTS

HAULING SERVKE

I

HUIIIEM' NPADISEI ~ HaiiDw Rd., "--nlAppa. 20.05 ..-. hulling cebln o101128. Great
laailllln. Hun*la II jUit Mlund lhe comer. Own

Help Wanted

10/1/92

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

.

992-3838

E.O.E. .
'I

111+12

FREE ESTIMATES

Contact Karla Hunter
992-6472 .

j

Wod.·S.I.

UMESTONE-TRUCIONG

year
Time gou by . ,

3% Hr•.Shlfte Morning 1nd Evening;
sallry t.•ed on Experience.

•••

••1111•·

and potpourri
ouppllaa,
HOURSdO am-5 pm

wrMtha

LANDCLEARING,

OVERBROOK CENTER
"'a• Part·Time Openings For
CNA'a.
•

Connlo.
Hanclcl'8ftecf

DAIVEWAYSINSTAUED

quickly. Though
theN hiVe been

11Wdle110rt,OIIio
614·992·7144

ondCraflllra
Ellmlnalll tho middle m.,
-buy wholeulo !&lt;om

(~EE

11·2-92·

In

Herb Shop Open for Foil
o\TTN: Local Craft Sbopa

Palnllna
DllMATEI)

..-1 '-""'"~ 3 Mlllr oyttema. MUCH . . .MUCH MOREl
MUST SEE. WAIT NO LONGERIII
NOW ....000

Patllll'oy, OIJio

•

la1Iaa, o•t•

~Wort

992-6215

2

31904LH••I ·
CfMkloiHI

CRAFT CLASSES
Oct. 28, 6:30 pm:
"Lunch Baeket" $14.00
Nov. 9, 6:30pm: "Pie
Baek.t" $16.00
SWAGS by Connie:
Nov. 4, &amp;:30: "OJied
Material Swag'
Call tha Trolley Station
for mo,. info.
1Cl121112/1 mo.

52100 t. L Ul

01 ,..,
U1 D. It FK Y•'

"Til:t

- · .. OcteiNr.
Frat E..-.o
742·H60

5

-Eioclrleal...r Plumbing

TN,.
o.t
- t.t

;a~

•New Homes

.......

EITATE NO. 27211 - 2
1 11t1em
Flnel and Dlatrlltutlvo :.____;;.:,n.:=:..:.;.;;.ory;.:__,__
Aooount of Rogw L. Powel,
Sr., Ellocutor of tho Eatate
of Wilma o. llollllllon,
Daaiand.
·
IN MEMORY
EBTAlE NO. 24105 SHARON KAY
Soo•oth AMual Acoount of
WHITLATCH
Jonnllo&lt; L. Sheota,
Quartlan of tha Eellllll of
Ollvor E. Balloy, an
IMompetenl .........
ESTATE NO. 25701
Fourth AMual Account of
Nanal' L~ .. HoJo.lngor,

12-5-tfn

&amp; co.

rM!jlln9

20¥.-M ...:.:: i,...

Quality
-------.. . Stone Co•.

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

Real Estate. General

'-==·. . .

~ PIINnNG.

• ........ IL,IIoNio,.rt

tCI-12-'112 tfn

Factory choke 12
· gauge only

Quardlan ot 1111 t:elllte ol
~.L!fiOBATE DIVISION Dooothy Y. Proffltl, an
lnoom .......t ..........
-COUNTY, OHIO
· ~nlll Mel vouch. . . Unl•• oxaeptlono ••
uld -nlll
ol tho following namecf lllocl
llcluolarlaa havo boon lllocl will ba lor h-lna baloro
In tho Prob Ill Court, llalgl Ullcl court on tho 4th dey ol
Counllf,
Ohio,
and O.O..bar, till, .t which
limo ulcl -nlll wiU INo
wttl
ESTAlE NO. 22412 - oonaldarecf end oonllnuecl
'IWelilh Annual ·AMount of lro111 cl8y lo dey until IIndy
RoiNoi1 B. 111ue, Guer.,., ot depoeedof.
Anlf poroon lnllraotad
tho Eolllte ol ltevon E.
lillie, an lncom patent mlllf lllo wrllton uoeplfona
to ..rd aocounte or to
EITATE NO. 27011 - mattare pertaining Ia the
Final and Olotrlltutlvo uocutl&lt;in ol tho truot, not
Aaoount of Cody D. Boollo, .... 111M .,. . , . prior "'
Exocutar · of tho Eotale of tho ........... lleilrlng.
ROBERT E.liUcK
Olin 0. Boolho, Doc
JUDGE
ESTATE NO. 27140 Common Plue Court,
Final and Dletrlbutlvo
ProiNIIII Dlvllllon
Account of Judlf D.
MeJge Counllf, Oblo
Humphrllfo, Ex-trlx of
tho Eotete of Ylolot Louloo (11l311c

Darley,

. . ..

Chrlatmaa money
agalnllneome that
kMPI going when

IN TIE COIIIIDft PLEAS

erow.m.

~

you'll never have to
worry about

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

PubliC Notice

114-742-3020

Eaay WOI'k from

JU llllutl
IEIIEUL tiRE

CONIIE'S HERBS
. &amp; MRLISTINGS

Evonlnge

•

home. No eallh etart
up. Start at once and

FreeEetlm....

National dance
competition set

f

Aak For o.JIM

Chrlstmaa Income!

A-lata com......tol

celebrate 53 years. - . w:=t=~;s~~;

·~

I :00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
'100 p.m. Thuroday
1:00 p.m. Friday

GUN SHOOT

KEVIN'S UWN
MIINRNINCE

wiU-

--HOME

Coltctlbll
See Dlaplay AL.
QUAUTY PRINT SHOP
255 IIIII Street
llldcloport, Ohio

DAYBEFO~E PUBLICATION

11-12 and 1-10

...

'

COPY DEADLINE
Monilly Paper
Tueldoy Paper
Wedneldoy Paper
Thunday Paper
Friday Paper
SundaY Paper

Do you liNd a 11tart
In llle?
ta yre and up. &amp;rn aa
much·aa you want,luU
Dr s-rt tline from your
home.Noc:aeh
lnvaati!Wit, .,. .your
own boee, even II
you',. atllla atudenl
, Thle 1e Income that ·
kellpe going .,.n
when you don'L
(814) 378-81&amp;3

PRICE REDUCED!

Meigs County land transfers posted

.

All Scalia • VIntage &amp;

MOTHERS AT HOME

The prtce has b_. reduced lo $611,900 1111d
. owner.flnanclng o4 Ll' lo 80% ol purchlae

1

Homebui~ders

TOYS

Bl .LLETL\ IH ).\ Rl&gt;

.

..

.D.K.'s

tJ.o Dolly S...tiaol, ....Joi"8 .... I8,j)OO ho-

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

Yord Siiloo

• Act..illool .... - . , plocod Ia &amp;he Callipolio Dally
,Tril&gt;uM (_,o Cluoillocl Dloplay, 81111D.., Cord or ~I
Notieoo) wUialoo oppoar ia tJ.o Polat Plouut Reptor 011d

MoN. tbru FRI. 8A,III.-5r.M. - SAT.B-12

a.dd:

'

•AIIo!M&amp;_ .. ,... ...._
...,
. Cord ol Tlumb
Happy Ado

To place an ad

~UNDI'S

DIVIDSOI'S
PLUMIIIG

SHRUI &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOYIL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

IIU SlACK
992·2269
USED

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE

f.'J!!II!II TIY OUR IIEW ~·
II!IWilil SBEL INSULATED II!.IWIIil
RAISED PINEL GIQGE DOOR
IIITAUID PRICES

.

9x7-$275.00 16•7-$450.!19

.OPIIIU IIRAW~Y.IP-$200.00
·
hana1o

Doer,... o,...r

Wlh 2 Tranamlllltra

Pwrc..H ef

�..
Ohio

November

~ -·

- ..

1192 '

31 Homll for 8ele

••n•.

....._enaiiUNo....._
11:..,1 ••• tl4

---·----.~Allor P.ll. Aoa- IIY

-

..

1

II

·viewing

;..g

...
........

-

t

loo

-

---14·---.
lttcludn cWfnry. OOiftlllllle ....

;aaklrtlng ........ 1-7-

•

17

1:011 (]) •

~
,1..1114Mi~~
I II•*- 1210. 1* monlh
- dapOoll,truh
ltkMI no

paid,

=

,ltH

.', Li'll

£1~

poll,
IIIII:GI Pll.
2 b d,_., G7L .... monlh

k

if

=.t...!•~in ~ rt_::o:t"'::"';;;";;;":·'":·====i=========:!J 61
Film Equipment
u.1no11 Traolor ,.... ao

,.... I0447WODO 11111:a1 io11.
2 11111....,.,._ UnlleoNthocl AU

Wlll'l
We dbu',_,
Privata 1.o1, At. ..., IIIIHpolia,
AC, ........._.,. 141 Mll2.
3
Electric

btd-ll 1M - . Clalllpollo

~. -=za.

....,.

lllllllto lo
- - - »&gt;-flS-4ool. .

Filllllohod, 2 or llxlmo. lor rant
In Counlry lloblle Plllk. Wuhorl
dfYtr, alt1 S23lll rnon., 114-HZ211~ 114 &gt;II 122!

Lost&amp; Found

6

In Cllollllrr.

Wllh 1111

Ell"'nclo. 2 l t d - . 2 lolhl,

Found: 2 young malo dogt, 1

John

~iCI. Ou Hoei~C,

Found: Gentlo tomolo Oobor-

-Up, 114-U7-' .
1 oam tnller, llld-

IU:k &amp;

whHt, 1 til

block;

llogord; 11444WIII4.

mon.

TlvM

O.lllpolla ....., vldnHy.

Jonat Raad, Ylnlon. 114-3888123 Lllvt M'M'Qe.
.
•ounct
lltlt
·~~
'
:
~-• Loaatd Col·
llel

C31~ fellow, •

White,

B,_n Color. GoOd Wllh People

After SP.II.

.._., AI 1 Lollul wtclnl1v- AKC
Aldla. lltwn a while wlih dork

ltco......... · lo WhHoltng.

Rowonl. 304-a:I.ZIIIt. ,

7

. Yard Sale .

Business
Training

Cloy'-·-·

2 family Novtmbtr 4th, Slh. AI
On 211.
ALL Yard IIIIo llutl Bo Pilei In

Advonco. DEADUNE: 2:GO p.m.
tho dly lho Ill lito Nn.

• lundly · - 2:00 p.m.
Flldly. llondly dian • 2:00
p . M . - f.

Rolreln
-11-otom
111 I Ifllll ,....._
Bt:J Valley
-.......
Pl-. Call Today, 11
431?11

IJnommondt Aulo Body • a
- n l c Work. FM Ellhnaloo.
=hltottlaad Ad, 1-1. •~

Business ,
·Buildings

·='"

&amp;224.

--

. . . . . . . . . Ptld In
- - Dtooll.. : 1:Ci0Dm....
..., .... Ill It lo "'"lluildor ....... 1:00pm Frldly,
lO:CIOLm.

- . . 'a.
- llldol1p
- · -on.
. ?,llby
7B2
High
.........
..,.,_,,- · lor

Public Sille

Rloll ,_,_ Auollon c-p.ny,
lull thM MICllonNr, complete
auction
eervica.
Llelftlld

w.. Vlrglnlt, -

wanted to Buy

Don' Junk HI Soli U. Your NanW-ng llojor Appllancu,
Cotof
TVe.
Ae~tntcn.
FFM--. VCR"•, Mkrowavee,
Alr Conditioners, Guitar Ampa,
E1o. 1114-251-12a8.

U..,.

-~~~

Homoo, Call 114-

441-4171.
Wlnltd To Buy: Junk Autoo
With Or Without llolora. Call
Larry I.Miy. 114-38t--.

Top PrloM Paid: All Qld U.S.
~.- Rlnat~ Sllvor C&lt;IIM,
Collie. II,T.!I. Coin Shop,

1111 -

........ O.Hipollo.

Employment Servtccs
11

Help Wanted

'AVON' ALL AREAS! Shara your
limo wMh uo. ,You'N love lho

_pan,.

tumlehed,

laundrJ

--hiM-Ioachocil

In town. ADD~rcailoM IVIIIablo
II: VII'- ·o_, A..t. Ml or
0111~1.£011.

-hid ..... $171. ~r

3month

pl.,. olhor
ulllftiM paid, ......... . ... roqulrad, aoWlll-1:0.

F........,. .......

Rent~lls

,.~2

-1111:
~ :L¥'r

......

FOurlhAv-, CW.
Pold,

r.::..o-., ~:.~~

1---1351.

AVON I AU Arlit I Slllrllf
Spoara, 304-11So1429.

Pold,

81.. oama.

'

RtteNncea.

Ra- a

F..........,a-aBolh

Clton, No Polo,
Dtpoalllloqulnd.IM-141-lSII.

Financial

Onlclout lvlng. 1 ond 2 -

,_

II VIU..

o~riiiWIII

Manor
and
Rlnrelia
.....,._,. In lllcldlotlan. F"""

21
5 - - ~ F\141 . _

:TI"uo.
~o 'Qiiiij;l cala::
Pluo Oapooill14 44~1. ,

OHIO

Ra-.

~II. Colll--mt

Nloo

lA

Ono

EOII.

Unlumlehed

~~:r--~.~.ao";':It

Air Condlllonlna, OoociiM RoHouOo
In
nloo qylrld. I~ All•lp.m. .
~b;!ftoad, 4 bdrm., 2 tul
Complolly Furnlohad Small
'
' pOOl rnon., ....,. - . .,..,._, • UIIIMIM. No
Poll. Callloloro 7 P.ll. 114-441Gold lulldl!'tl And ;;raqulrad~~
- ;·;.,~~~·~•;2217.;;;;;;;;;;.-; 0131.
•
Compltlly Fum- mobllo
Tho Foclory. SOli For Porm. On and ....... holw- - · l14- - . 1 inllt below lown And conot., Whllt 112-11111.
..
•
_,Ill ...... No Pall, Cl. 114Lwnlng. No lnviiiiDrY Ro.....:DI.
.
q u l - . Bolool llukalo 11n•-•~ ·~Avolltblo, Coli For lnfonnallan.andow•-m. - . nloo.. Two- ..
..................
locallll
303-111-4135. Ed.. 10111.
clepoell and ,..... CII ,._ 201 . _ h Sl-..i. ~ lurlhor
GULF GULF GULF
quiNd; 11111112 3010
lnlarmlllon
aak

81HI

&amp; Auction

9

pllancoo

Depolll Aequtr.cl. 14 4tl 02M

tllnj,-...
..................
-.

771-171&amp;.

'

2bdrm. lpll:., tolef electric, IP"

2

7. ..:

...Cillo •

..... ·~

304-1'11-2111.

Furnllhtd Upotllrl Apanmonl,

In . . . .: -P!lll.· 1 llvu ........

B

duplu, downllaln linlll 1 bocl-

~'t":.

llocand, llldd'-t.'

--··.......

2..., _ _ .,.,..,

car .

n

=:',"-:..':': -.. - ·

lillian

-r

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTI AT
IVDOET PRICEI AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 11f Jaokaon Pib
ln&gt;m 1112/mo. Walk to ...., a
PrlrM lui Ill'\.Lal WJ7f1; 4 moviiL C.U 11t 441 •cL EOH.
Illite 'Will Of
lpolla, Fronto
Jac:&gt;
Pika.
Walt&lt; Cltan, lumlllltd ...... ..,.,.
....,, NMural 0.. 114-448! mOnl. 1111 month plut oloclrlc
a .....-. You muot - lhll
..... """ nlca. :104-171-40111.

I '""'llY ronl ...._ ,_ to L &amp;L
l1te liM!, 138111 Pine -

~

2 IR apl. -lllbohlnd

r· ......

Elo R TREE SEIMCE. Toaolng,
Trilllllllng, Tno - . . . 1*111 Com_,lll bldg, IU brick, lui
TrimonlnD. Fno -..loot •~
tlnlthod ...- . .... lot,
311'7111'-4p.m.
'
INiced lor quick otla, Somorvlllt
RNIIf, 304-1?5-3030 or 175-3431.
a-g. Porlablo S.wmlll
haul your loal lo lho milt jull
0111 304-I?S-1117.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
IIIIa P-'o DIY C.... Cantor 1
oil iiOi Thompoon
Waol 01 HMC On Jac"-1 1-1 Pika ~ I A.ll. .a:30 P.ll. If Rood, 11mlnuloo ~r. U111ftl01
•
Clullhy And Erportonoe It Tho ava~bll.l14~11
t1 COncern For Yollr Chlld'a
Core. Call Uo For A Vlaft. ln,.,l In ........
14 .,... 1111.
.........
a... •
/Ttddlara 1,.,.......227. p,.._ ~
pOnd,
t'll.oQo.
•t - 3C21. '
cloooloq~hoa1Agol14-446-

=:,~~0::11'/.!.urF:?.:;

8:. ::.-~,.~~~.,

~-·-•· '"rllaoe

!'":

=

5
'::;~~

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Vending Roula: LocaL wa Hava
Tho N - 1 1 - - . llaldng A :;;:::;;-:-;==~~=-:-~
~. Sloodw. Caoh - · •r Ganga,
121110 2 Dop DIM And
WMh
La..,.
~u.aA
1111.,;:,::

a..-.

-

WOLFF TANNING BEOB

c:omn..1o1- Unllo,
loom tlH.OO. Lampo, LDIIane,
~·
na~~~·
loW I I tii.OO. Coli loday FREE
NEW Color Catalog, 1-22111292.
Real Estate
31 Homes for Sale
1 lldJOOffi DRIIIng ""'.......
lllllfiMI, ~. M 1161
Good
RIMII Prep I 1f. ..........1111l

c..«. .. •....."

=c.
fl.:.':"e"io':L. Takln. 114 Ill II

-

ll8quiiK No Pill.

Goods

..........

aft

_.

iio.ea
I'·-w-.

Ariel cholri 1211 Or
Weak; Colt.t And lnd With
Doore Ill·
Wllh I

••-

•

t.r::.... rr::-M.=Lt:
Gnln

lllrdwoDdl Ifill

$21\.-.:
· ...,
::W

kina fiGO,
paid t!IO;
· F•
Jjdlill_
~i
011aleo
114-112·1';1m

:.-:-.!'...,

ar114-114N204 •'"

For Ball: LIM -

ll!lndard

81a llorln Door, ISO. AI
211 lo. "-hAve. lllddep orl.

,,..
...,._ -·
~ ...

-

:::...
Fonl

==Ford

1D2II ?.ractor tt.•:

:.:."l

lraolcir, I

llallorl-

.-·-.

Qonoalo

ClaiJIII .......,_ -~-. . .., • ....,.-.

-Hoilond Ill hoy- AC- raw
no II _ , .,......,. AC 10 a

=

;.lni:;-::1~R=:ow=':PI:;"';'Iitr.:.:_:~:.,:..::~

COUNTRY · FURNITURE AHD
CRAFTS
'
2231- Route 141, GeiiiiiOIII.
F':.-:0:.

~41=

11VY

a.tunlllr. N

P.ll.

Both ,... Willi ....... •
Fa- .71. - - lillor 7
PJI.
·

John

A~ e..:re::.=..~
·· .

=-:s

CUI. 14,200. 11t Ul 1014. '

:=m~- TV~ 304-

t:,:.•I=J."-' Up. 0000 USED APPUANCEI II Iobin Carpolo, la1UIO, 114w.~,.,._ ,.....,.._ .....-.
"'~

~~

Appll-' 71

-7311,1LA-'IFUIININRE
C 1 .I 1• t.otlol\'tai:
Hou ,., 11on111, w. •
a lllllaa 0111 ButavMio Rd.
- Dlllwoy.
PICICEIII FURMTURE

F

No.-latd

Hot nhold lurnlo!.Jing." 112 1111.
PI-, WY,

Jtrrlcho
.Rd. Pl.
0111~·-~-

-··-

ll:',...,,
...."'".~~~~"':..w:;
T.'l..'a &amp;I _ . . _

T

Sale
On All Vlrljlln · - tl-11
Carpot"-OO IID.IIoUohln Furnlllft, 114-441-11144.

Gilll,..._-a
~urn~~-. - - -

AUCTION IIWFUAINIINITU_ Olive
u.;d

a.

Work-._l~om

1

Wa-lllrfM*IIOO&amp; Up. All

lold- Werrant~

Cal-

a Dryer . . _..,t 44121144.
Rahlgte-1 ... 1o 1150•
Wllllllarli a ~ tll 10 ~

liTO

dd

--~hpllkaMW
h

11

u--~2SO 4
~

12
• ••• •••

1044, Or 304-1'114701.
S.w oholno lo II 11, _ any
Sldtro Eq 1
304-

:-'lll:n,

u _ , . Co,
Kill ....,.
f t - • - -·~...,. • • • •
.. ~
--.. ...-. .

·.=r
63

30W31'

Fanll, At.

stt1111na , _ . wMh ~~~~.,.· lrilltr -·All-~·

1111r 2:00 p.m.,
llaeon WY.

•-m

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

Uve coverage of lila alecllon
nallonal and alate
results !hat may be
lntarrupled for local repor18,

300 lb J -

-

.,... -

171-14!0.
- I dr~1Fd1bl1118111n my llbyplga1Gr __ l_ll-at7.
--1114 - DIL
.
lltc• ..._ lui, Alor 4 P.ll.
·-·- w
-toAnd-lc:utv.~llnch ~'-·•·-"•'"*·
Thru 10 Inch 1n 11oc11. Ron Ev- .....__ Cillo.
Callie
HoUI!ng:. AnYIImo,
II3HI2I.
Alorwhww. ChUck WIIRamo
Ilia !ltd, • TruciJinQ, .t14-241!
Nlnl- a Pod·,
'I •-~·-~ - ... .......... a
~+
14" radial ~-; · - - vice Ago e.,ii;l'- Took a
1
Dakrolo,i114-111-11112.
•
alu wotlflltd,
=~.\!!d a Fllllllo od1d Llonoulln
IIIIH,_, tour utrl 111'11 -.11t ttNOtl After I P.M.
- . . ........ and llghlo. 1350. •
C.UOWI2o/1211.
Mn ForBit·Jai11o!t,~ Ftd,
100 To 1,000 PtJo. .r.. N 114RCA ¥ldlo--. 2 ....,...._ 3IM2?7.
1210.304-a:I-211Gafler7pm.
Hoooluod built,
lua Auto IT..,. llun'a -.rg 11oa11, 2 - . _ 1
_ , - · 11 • - . - lfiiiHIIIII:I; l14-llz-'JIISI,.

1- =:Creak

ca;

a-.-......,_

we-•

,_,-.old

~~o~~erya~11,2110;Fuot011
-Ilia • - Ill; m oa Fuel 84

1111 Tlri1l *!'i Glrtl' ...,.llka
PI EMil..,. Ml 1111
!lip: ........ alfll
All. wllllt... I'M Jllllwiy,
PI- t47.50 boa, 1-ICJO.
IIUIII

73

vans &amp; 4 WD's

co--

(J).

WNia, ...... Stol .

NewoHourQ

lnoh ua, 31 Inch
- . PlonoOr

11roo, t.iu

YOU NOT
LUNCM AT A GOLF
c.ou~.r~/

!IIJ

IIII.,_PIIolllda_..a
-~ ..,.......
. . . -.......
lllplllnoe
Uoad

ca..ao, Air Condlllon-

lncL Air Condllontr, Color
T.9:, VCR. Prloa: tiO,IOO. 11444~-~~H AftwS P.ll.

,,

.
52 Sportlng.Goocls
,

-

--·

- · :1312.

'111111 link ....... 111111, .,....
. _ Hunlorao.-- With Cnr ,_llfliG GIL 11eat11o Hoi
ac- And - · · - ..........
Lira ...... 112
....
........ ... 111All
7711.

53
Ant'--=~~~"'1;:.;:;;--~~iuy
or ..._ 111n11n1 Anllqute,
1124 L llaln 11-. on Ill. 124
_
_,_ M.T.W. 10:00

_ . . ......_ • -

Colle, Cal A1W 1 P.M• . _

:aou.
;;;;;;;;;.._

_,;,_..;;,._ __

55

Building
Supplies '

..... 10 I :CD P,l!!:t.,_ , 1:CD

lo 1:00 ,.... 114 -

2121

___

-·

.....,_ue

J.I.IIARINI SEIMCE
114-211-1110.

.J

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

..

71

......,
EEKANDMEEK
~ A K/1:&amp; 'TEAR- OF
1i&amp;II)(I1J6 PMJr C/-IM}fl.... ·

~

'

2213.
'
1
!!!_!~~ lanka, 0.. lon truck I
;j;,'1jllredo~OIIII, 1
II A~
,WY. 304- :
1
m . - or 1
.
,

cam&amp;
,.-·•

, •. ,

•, :

.MORTY MEEKLE ANDWINl'IIROP
IX).IT ~KENNY•..

Serv1ces

"
'

)

IASEIIEHJ'

)

WATERPAOOFJIQ

(

-- ...__

~

11WJ7.41411, doy

:::::.--

-

Cllowy

IJul'

,.,.

~

11-, ¥-1 auto,

or

'

(2:00)
10:30 18 On Stage

=~

.... -

pluo 1t11

QlJ e

~:--~----------10·~-------------Jl,,__......; ______-:------12.----~-------:-......;--~

13:~--------------1

)::~~--------~---

446-2342

992~2l56 ·~ I

Eul

.

'

•,

•

•
'
-.
'

•'

to,, ...... ,.....

5 Poor

tutenlng 1
Uoap
Ingredient

44 Tumlll1rply

46 IIOIIIHIIc

12 Slangy

15 M-ureof ·
length
1811ehearH
18 Noun lulfll
1g Zoc~~a· akin

21 3, Rolllan
23 SftooJI

1n111111
47 Circle of light
.50 Comparltl..
luflll
52 Child
55 HltiHchool
publication

58 lllractor

Pramlnger

.

sg Comedlln
t:lel.uiM

eo Want by car

61 TV ICior Ken
82 Chellllell

2 Relllled

1111111
83---peg•

28=11
2t 8lblng
33 Cultl'fltel

I rop4
3=~~···

4

84 D-IIJrl

5Bob• Ohio City
7 lim. in
118drld
I Lumbernml'•

34Tr-•

38WWIIaraa

DOWIII

37· Prtnter'l
meauraa

1 Not out

boot

11111 Mrs. King

a• o

11:30(2)•
lllc&amp;lan tight eo ......
(Cont.)

lll~=~

~
~ lpiCIII !lecllon

a.-

and ......, . "':. Pel
Cllaan~ AI.~
viM.

~...VOW.I!Iecllon
eo-a•
Coverage o1
fllecllon reaultl. (1 :30}

Welllt. 0111114
diL
1111!8
- ttl · JUlia

EleCtrical &amp;
Refrlg81'11llon
~nlllf • It ISa;lll
, .• . . , - - o r =
......
u.... u ......

..,..,.,
IIJ

81

LI'IMII_., . ~

Ger1nl Hauling

,'

$1.25 plus a long, sell-addrnaed,
stamped envelope to Aatro-Graph, c/o
this n..,.Papor, P.O. Box 91428, CleVeland, OH 4410·1-3428. Bo oure to 11ata
BERNICE ·
your zodiac olgn.
BEDE OSOL SAGmARIUe
(Nov. D-Dec. 21) Bo
logical In your cleallngl wllh othero today, bu1 11110 gtve crodenca to your
hunchol. UMCI properly, this comblna·
lion could make you a winner.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22....... 11) II you
truly believe In lhe cause you MPOUM
loday, o1hera will- merllln II u well.
Tho secral to your auccau 11 lllncerl1y.
AQUARIUS (~. . . . . 11) Pon'l
dawdlo lodiY an man1r1 wnlc:h promiM
m1terlal rewar~. Your Chllncee lor perNov. ., 1112
aonal gain are erlh..-:ed when you tal&lt;•
.
Immediate IICIIan.
You COUld ba quite lucky In the year 1 I'ISCII (Fob. .» Mircll Ill) II you're
..,.. where your mtJor enclaiYOI'I are conrronted by 1 critiCal c~ew~opmen~
_ _,.,.._ Don'l ~ your time and lodiY thalli almHar 111 one you -•ly
enort on In•~,. thai .,.,.·t truly hlndled IUCCISiiully, lrllde an your ex.011=AI·
Pfrler1Ce. The ume l.c:tlcllllould work
•8CQOIII~IPIOO (0111. McNow. 22) A lllultlon egaln.
t1111t 1111 1 dr-1 eiiiiC1 upon a llrong Alllll (Malclt 21·Aprll11) Condltlonl
-.11-lnt.., might ,...,. ,.-...nee 111111 ~lly aflect ana ol your major
lodaylnorct.rtobeiUCCIII'ul. A_,.. lnl...... COUld baglriiO Clllnge lor lhe
-"ICt yDii II8W could 1111 olgrNI help. lllltltrr tocley. Wllal wll 1111ne11t you will
a-pro, trMl yourMII to 1 blrtllday gill. lllo 1111M111 th• with wiJom you're
Send lar 8oorplo'1 AllrO..OIIIPII precllc- Involved.
,
110111 1Gr lhe· yM1 11re.c1 ' by mailing TAUfiUI J Aprlllll
Ill) SHuetJcrrio

•r

•

.
8[T) ....._

'i

54 MI8C81laneoua
Mln:hll'ldlse

··-----~--------5 . _______---:--------

'··--~--~~-----

£;I

Ran a~ Stereo. Q

Nord!

(2w•. )
311 'tow
40 Releg1l1
42 Nowlce

1 Vlfll followIng "thou"

ID Auto Reclng Big Bud
Shootoul lrom lndlenapolla

HIM--

~--~------

1.~-----------

Cll•

l=t':.~reo.

IF YOU
CAN'T
FIND

lor

l-,--------------2&amp;.,•. ____
________________

.6:-----------

m

Newoltour ~ EleCIIon

· CA6H~I!
1\un your cluUer into c,;m,
..s.Jl it tlul if!IX ~t~CJy... by ghone.
~ need to leoN your ltorru~.
Ploct your dMtitwJ gd «rxlr.W
15 1110rde or ,..,, 3 dqy1 •
3 JP'Ul•rl• 15,40 pold in cuf1Mn.ce.

(J)•

Ani..,

38 Flrat-rlla

20 GriVellkf...

a• ae q_[Il:Tc"~~
Repoll (1 :00}

-411-mtor,..;I , . . aoocl, Mll. 1fll -

11:00(2)•

,..

ACROSS .

14 c:c'dellfOURd
llborOII' org.

10:20 (]) MOVIE: Big Jllce {PG)

Well

The World Almanac rt Crosaword Puzzle .

'12 VOle:
EleCtion Coverage (Cont.)

RobartaOn

nlghl.

l

•fllrmatl.,.
13 Edible gr•n

~fto":gPal

'

Home
Improvements

IJIM)Qiij dlllan.l ttt.tn.

'TO ME.

=

There are some people who seem tc..
Pass z+
Pus
get out of_bed on the winning side ev- · 2 •
Pass 3t
Pass
Pass
ery morrung. One of them was in ac- 3 •
Pass 4NT
Pass
Pass 5NT
lion in the Women's NEC World Team , 5 + .
All pass
Pass &amp;+
Ol~~iad earlier this year.
· · 6+
Sitting North, (illlt she opened with I
Opening lead: t 3
a strong,. artificial and forcing two ·
clubs, which escapes criticism. Then ·
over South's negative response she
showed her suit: again re'asonabl~. But
when South bid three hearts, North ·
leapt to .Blackwood with no justification· at all. A quiet four hearts would
have sufficed. H a slam was on, South
would lake anot~er bid. After learning cashed the heart ace and clf!imed
that South had no aces and no kings when everyone followed. Her 12 tricks
North picked sil&lt; diamonds as the finai were one spade, four hearts,, slit ellacontract.
moods and one club.
West was on lead. Understandably
No doubt West sboolt her head in
she
a major-suit attack. An1i amazement, but have you noticed llaat
to open with a club (which she . missed a cbance tO cleleat the
kills the contract) because she bad an slam~ When the filllt heart is led to the
aversion to leading awa~,:m an un- queen, West m\151 play her two, not
su~:~:~jack. So she c
a trump. · · win with the king. West still has a
drew trumps in three heart trick, but the suit is now irreplthe led a heart to the rably blocked and South will flnisb ooe
king. Back came a clu)l, but . , or two down.
aet,la.,er went up. with dummy's ace,
Cl---pruu
-

(Coni.)

lll~ i

STAY~TAI..K

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

Q

1:00 Q]J. In Uvlng Color
Favorlla skits are taan.ed,
Including lhe hilarious ugly
woman. IR) Stereo. Q
0 MOVII: lue 'l'ou ·
LOlli. IDIII8 T r (PG131
(2:00) Stereo.
QIINiahvlll
ID Top Rank lolling
Heavvwelllhl bout. Carl
Wlllains (25-6, 19 KOs} vs.
Jimmy Lee Smith (12-3, 7
KOs}. 10 rounds, lrom
Ledyard, Conn. (t)
1B Eleellon Coverage .
t:30Glle Hormtn'• 11eac1
Harman has a problem
making a commllment In hla
new relationshiP.. Stereo. Q
!lllllordwtown Q
10:00 (]). 11:11 • IIJ
Electlon-Niglll Cov-ae

-'

....
..._
..........
lurillthtd
_
_
Cal_,;

Autos for Sale

a.-..
--.m,:.-

a~rtment. (R) Stereo.

I

Tl'lllllllllaloM, llatd'

11bulll,lll-. otanlng alllll·,

!,!_aY lor - - Ill ""' bait; 114'lltii-3GM.

T1 ansportc~tton

tells Bart he can'l see the
new Itchy and Scratc:hy
movie. Stereo. Q
0 Mutdet, .... w.- Q
Qll Crook and Cllaoa
ID Exp I ~Ilion Ear1h
8:011(]) MOVE: C1111111111 {G) (2:15}
1:30 Q]J • ....., A plumllllr
drops dead In Martin's

-~
U3oy.OUibaardiW
4tl cyl. . .lloardo AI
1-01--110
wa•
11 yra. up. ~ott Slone,_,.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

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

Q]J • The llmp1011i Homer

IIIIi, 12 plor
: - - . -- · · - -

......,_,... ~
1111 1-77 Ra-••11. 9IIIJ Ftl,

Co-.ga Uve coverage of

the a1act1on wllh national and
state rellulla lhat may 1111 ·
Interrupted 191' local reports.
(JIP} (3:QO)

.

+H

+roa

By Pbllllp Alder

reports:. Q.

~·------

.QJ6S4

Fortune favors
the lucky

I!Dle E'laleC"'Uoo......,,Night

ALLEYOOP

lor

IOWiwteo.

. . . ,.._ .

•.

+QtiO 74

7:30Cil·Tho Jeffenoiw Q
111e WI-' ol ForiUne Q
ID ESPN'elpeedW...
7:36 (I) IInford lo Ban
1:00 Cll MOVIE: The ..._ (2:00}
m (I) Flnleh 1.1ne Uvo
coverage or lila alacllon may
be lnlafTY21ed for local

. ..... .

'

SOUTH

7:011 (I) . .~"' 111111118•

:I1WO'lll::.

~

t943

+J963

O.K. Comol (2:30}

_1?5-;,;;"2214';;::':;:--=:;';;--;-;::;;--:••
1111 Hondo z!o-X, 4 WhHitr,
llatd Very UIUI, 12,500. 114411 11
.:.:=.·:i101:=::.·-:::::--:--:::c:-:::---':--:Hor!41a I · - 200 llg Rod,
Wft
drtn,
eleC 8tert
HW llr'M.
eu...,.,..,
oond, $1,200.
3Q4.!

t20. - · 81
~.., r, of llarid a llurpluo 11rrrf
11119!Clolhlnti.
llaavy -.Rt.M._IIorgon..
hoy Rlllt 121.
_..,~Ctnaug~,.-11111
w.. ,.,,..
11,000 ITU,·

'

.

EAST
+965 z
.98
• 10 z
+KQ54Z

WEST
+KJ8
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ALDER

18 Eleellon Coveragl
ID MOVIE: Gunllght It tho

~-

1111 Chon Atlro Tit,. ·lllnl
Van, lllnl t:ondlllon, PI, PW,

79

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.

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1111 Chon Atlro ••n lor 111o or

Motor Homes

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e '12 Vote:

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NORTH

+u

0 . liar TNI&lt;: Tfia Next

11A ~ ChorokN, 4 - Drive, G.jod Condllonl bcallonl
COndt a,ooo 114441-1121 Allor SP.Iil.

-....

BRIDGE

(!)(!)~

~ . Tqt.b

76

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

Election eo....,, Coverage
or alecllon results. (3:00}

:-·~.::~·
R,.. And
Soundl

-. I
114 2411011.

·

C
llial:WStereo.

410 C-1 Auto 4

1111 -

Hay &amp; Grain

Good

- FE!=_brQak!" ·

(3:00}

75 BoatS &amp; Motors
for Sale

,UVeStock

. The f1rst. dummy to ~ d1,1mmy: "What are the
drsadvantages ofWorklng for a tea company?" The sec.ond dummy replied: "That's easy. You don't get aCOF-

with

=~~;.~
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- - d.,.,, .,... .., • ._ -llply, ·
M.
~"':Wt.Mt..•
;12 ::·. 1111, liiO Warrior, 12,000. :JCK. '
$11; 114-'1112-2312.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
". z
Cprfew - Flock - Draft - Zenilfl - COFFEE

oe o
l!lectlon-Nighl Covenoge

a:::£-

111114.50 or 10
llldlra E - ' - ,
WY. 304-11&amp;-1112L

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1

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1
Comple;o tho chuckle quolod
by f1lling in the missing Words
L.--L-..J.L-...1.-..1.._J._--l~
. yoU develop from step No. 3 below.

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~

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lrlolo, lllnntllnlna, 1M ,.._ •
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IMIIJ!IIII A..no Aold lodr
: ;4 ..:::
Ptua luldlott,_,.,..,..
wolahl -A v
and 11•
111
Mt on ..._ , oiUIIvoly • Rite Aid - . , .
PI -~
Tho--lollll.
No ' ~ On Roo 1 a 9MJ;
Nolhlng E• Pn ritd.
HINY Jao. T - t : Uqlllcl
IGrirl •.....,.._ ....
.·~-"-r. $121;· 110 -~~~ I M - lo - ·
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:::.=.m~n
Aoh,

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Have you ever noticed that ·

a dropped penny always Ianda
at your feet, but when you drop
a twenty dollar bill it blows ---,,..~--F-E-T-C-E-F---,~ ---- away?

~~~ ::Cw"::-I,P

''QUACK! "

--

=rz..:::.~o-. ;.! '::; =·=:.:.·tit'~=:. ~. .
*..........
-.
---40
.
.......

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Rooms

45

.....,.
-1114-111'Bolita"!.--.

114-JM.lN.

1 llclrm. apartmanl, llldclr_.,
$1ICI/ mon., lnolucltl . .,..
114 141 1121 OR 114-oM84151
- · • gorbago, 114-1141~217.
Enl..,_.nmonl Canln $141 0r
ZF ,lA ............. al ClalllpoQo "-12 Wook· I olr1htl•• 11artc
orry. 304-175-2541.
lng 1211.11· Ract'-1121· eo..

Clinic Ill w. Ya. 311W711-44111.

I. I.

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I
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8Mn:ll

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I KNOW ..
I 51-iOULD

....;:::.:.;:::.::::.:=:.....-..
w.

..

0 Rln Tin Tin, K-1 Cop
1:01 (I) Tine'• Compgtny
1:30 (]). IIJ NBc Nlw1l

400 Gal lolar 111• Tri Wllh
__
Nlw ca.., r r a , Unlvenll 1
IF llU!np Willi Chen
loy- Llnte Arid OIIINolllllk
~.
"120. • For 114- Llnte Willi ~ ..... Of
•· nil 111 •
l'lra · Wold For Bolo, au IIU¥..., • .., od 114 441 1101
·Ailll Chair-. CA F - Tractor.
- . bloda, ouiiiYII- a
l't:eqood ,_
In~~~--&gt;
flftWIOil,

PUANCES

Fumlohlll ~-. 1 loci- . 120 I'Ou&lt;th Annua, 011-

... -

Wanltd To Ronl: lllolor For Wookand Trip To .....li
Bond, IN - - ••. ~-·Poll~
·-- ~
411-1'101.

VI'RA FURNITURE AND

1011100 o11 11111 111!111 "" oalo or
_ · heal .............
..... Galllpollt Forry, mako a ,
upotalre 1221.
Dtld.
NO
HUD.
owl
.e... -Uirad
~ body lhop, ole. 304-1?5-

POmeroy,
Mlcldlepon
&amp; VIcinity

110 -

47 Wanted to Rent

·~

54 Mltcellaneoua
Mtn:hlncllse

' · -.

tnd F.rvnl ...... llldclloa: I,
114-HZ-7327 or 114-317-7211.

.....

Apenment
for Rent

44

don'

Gallipolis
·&amp;VIcinity

lo -

pace lor Rent

rratltr 1a1 1or ...,., 311 - h
Front ltNII, oomer of AIAIInd

=:.'· - ,...,; .-.. 51

18
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~~~~ 1.::::::..'-----'----

Shtppard
.......Ewi!IGion
·~· 11312.
1
ChlkiiOR.
Ad
Found: 11111&lt;1 Braid, Tiny
Puppy, Black, Tan Fool, Ylclnhy:
J.O. Norlh Produco, Vlno S1rM1
Rh~ono Colltt. 114o4411-4113

t

dltllorl. CioN

304-73&amp;.03:11.
FOUIId: Gtr1111n Shophtnl
/Hound lllx. (Bitck /Brownl
Frtondly With Kldt. Found On

·,

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18 World Todly

TI-IATWAS
CLOSE ..VOU
. ALMOST
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114 •• . . . .
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EVENING

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IMIMILI
PI,ILII

Television

1iliia£,t ... IIMiilot

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1WI *• an

. . ...

f'omlrOy ·iifcf~

i'o

I•

~· .._....1111 ~tereo.

ihat reciulie a leam eliorl ShoUld tum
out favorably lor you today, provided
you're willing lo play a auppor11vo role.
Make whal'a good lor the team your pri-

llporbCen1er.
c

12:00 (J) Nlllht Coult
·Ill.'lll Dillin lfilht
c:o-ge IConl.l
t!J Tho ltlk:h.'llkll
18 Miler a Cwntaanr

mary concern.

GEMINI(IIIIJ 2'1-.luM Ill) Strive 10 find
lodly lo be or worthwhile service
to olllenl. You'l leel goad aboul baing
helpful, end JOUr gestures will be embedded In their memorial .
CANCIII (,_ 21-.lulr 22) II a lllluallon develops today
II Ia neceaury for you to_, your authorl1y, do
10 boldly. Half ........,... w!M not produce the ellecl the! II ,_,.'Y 10 re1101'18 the matter.
·
LIO l.lulr --~ 22) The 111d could
jUIIIiY the m811111odly, ptovldod what
you do le 11 ldv111tageou1lor other• u
II .. IGr you. Look out lor 8\'tlfYOIMI'I Int......, not lUll your own.
VIIIGO ,._ D-llpt. 8) People you
negotlll8 wfth lodey IIIOUid 1111 p..IIIICI
·by .... . . , you pack8gl the dell. Thllll
,_I 1M ,..,_ llfJd balarlce will 1111

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maltoc• Co•••a• .
l!plladu
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12-.20 (])

(2:00)

12:30 (J) MOVIE: Tho lllownlntl
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.
.

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3

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CELEBRITY"CCPHER
, • .,..,_.,...._ ,_. ..s .,._..

Olletwtlr Clpllir•»Jl I WM .,. ....... hill Ill

ID 011 llllllld llliDinl Ford
Gold Coat 300 11om Las
VeguiPt 1)(T)

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llftld~

lire pr1rMry ~ ...

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Oea.-C..u In

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D) You're lkaly
to ba aa ....-nY llllept a1 buying • you
wlllllll a1 llllng lodlly. n loob like you
lhould 111111118 to II'! wllllt you hope lar, .
prOvided you follow your own Ju&lt;lgrnont. ,

t!J MOVII: lloOIIr Oelroll (Ill
(2:00) Stlrao.

.. ....... ;&gt;~ftc!!~&lt;
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(tlliH by NEA. Ole.

Kuao

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pc. oSJPO.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Tho lather Ia ....,. a Republican Iowan! Ilia
1011, llfJd 1111 rnolhar'l aiWiyl I Democr•l." - Robert Froat.
'

·-"'-. ....

3

�..

November 3, 1112

'

Ohio

DAR members hold grave dedications

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
._...... . . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
.. _ . _..
You might want to pop oui to Thursday, Nov. 12, in ·'"- chun:b
Tuppers PlainS thiJ Salllrday ni&amp;IU auditorium.
.....
to help out with a benefit show
The bi••ie, of course, wiU be
beinJ ·vcn at the ~ Plains the dinner";nth acrving to start at
SDonchooGf.u'tt~.· nningat p.m., for ·chicken
4:30p.m. There will be ham and
diMcrs and a door prize
The limd raiJer is being bc1d by will be awarded every half hour
friends of Guthrie to assist with his 'beginning a1 6:30 p.m. There will
medical expenses and with the be cllft booChs as weD as pmcs for
expert~ involved with cxperimen- aduliS and childRn. The bazaar is
tal treatment in which he is now alwaysa hiJIC success and I'm sure
involved. .
this year wiD be 00 cli{l'emn.
•
Besides country, blue grass,lllld
·
gospel music teamed with some
Since it is election.day, it miJht
comedy them will be a lot of good be appropriate for me to .mention
food on hand. !'oD IIICiion sale will that the members of our great
also be hc,!!~gA
. ~~!imby . Congress while giving themselves
that i.errific sa1.y increase, so quiCamahan . - - UUiaii\JI"'
area merchanu as well as other etly yet, in 1989-they now get
items will be placed on dle·BIICtion $I29,SOO a year-also built in a
block.
formula throuJh which each year
Admission is $2 and if you they will receive a 3:2 ·pay raise.
would like any more information This is similar to lbc cost oUiving
on lhe benefit, contact Bob White hilr.c uscd .in the social secwity pro-

The Retura Jonathan Meigs ·moved 10 Lcllri Falls in 1817 and
Chapter, ~hten of the Amtri- was a member of the Methodist ·
can.«evolution, met recenUy lllld Church. AI part of the dedication
doclicated die graves of one chert« rllllll an eulc)gy 10 1bomu Love
member.and five RevolutiOnlfY was iiven by-Mrs. Grace Crow
W• JlllliOU. Twenty-one mcmbm Eicb.
··
of the chapter met for lunch at a
The Higley family cemetery at
~Y re8laUI'aDI bolted by Mrs. RuUand was tho_ ;rave "-..'cali'on
Plul EJCb.
site for LL Joel Pllclps ~ and
h'AI the ~~~Grove Cc;t'ercry, Brewster Higley. This family
t e_grave 0
11rence us sell_ cemetery is locared on pan of die
Smith, a chaJ"!er member from !lrisinal Bmvster Higley fann. At
1908, was dedicated and a DAR the time Brewster and Ids wife
m~ .was P~· Her daughter, Naomi were selecting the site f~
Miss Eleanor Smtih, Pomeroy • a the Higley burial ground Naomi
current member, gav~ a,eulogy _to tied her hone to a ni~lbcrry
her mother. Mrs. Sm•th s mother; Slllling. The SlUmp of this upling
Mrs. ~ Ralston Russell, was sti1J stands at die ~tery. 4 Joel
also a c~ member. Her grave Phelps Higley was born in Simshad. ~VIously been martcd. Mrs. bury. CL, on Jan. 1, 1739.0 Ensign
SmJ . was a delegate .~ the ~AR Brewstel Higley and Esther Hoi·
Continental Congress m WasbmJI, comb. He married Eunice Haskins
ton, D.C. when Mrs. Calv10 , 1111 Jan. 22. 1764. ne was commisC~lcdge, a DAR member, en~- sioned to the rank of Lt. 'In the
tatned m~mber~ at the Wh.lle North Train Band 00 Sept. 2S,
House. Miss SIJ!Ith accompanied 1777 by his cousin, Jonathan
her mother to th1s evenL She was liumbull ~ Caplain-Ocneral and
a:;li~e in national ~~ !ind .com~ Commlllldcr Chief.of die State of
mumg ~t iiiSti~J mher Connecticut. He and his family

•
•

·
'

m
~!~;~~!?At.!nJ;.e~~n~ .fnry;,us~s;n~t""!~J::~ ~iru::~~~=: ;v~ {tru:r~w1~3.i: ~~

~.!'...,~ totJM;gro,E you
....~..~- January, but Congress, naturally, emmg bodies.
1819. LL Joel Pbc]IJI Higley is die
UUI_...... u"' ......., Gudum "''"" would have to have a bit more. . The Letart &lt;:cmetery w!IB !he fifth arandfalber o( Mrs. Rae Rusfit Fund, P.O. Box 182, Tuppers
Plains, Ohio 45783~182.

Their increase will amount to
$4,144. H you're on social securi·
ty, just how much of an increase
will you be getting? Doesn~t that
ruffle you just a bit?
·

I hope some of you caught the
show on sinaer and songwriter,
Fmnlde Laine, Jlllllllllted on public
television Saturday night. Laine ·
who has been in the entertainment
business for decades is still up to
his eyebrows in show biz. He has
had two !lf'Cn heart surgeries and
will be 79 m Man:h. He even sang
a couple of manlJers.....nOt bad!
-wome· n of the Sacred
And
·Heart Chun:h, such good ccds. are
knee deep in preparations for lhe
aooual chmth bazaar to be held on

In a little while you willlcnow
which.of the Big Three made it in
the presidential race Don't ou
find thr..,~ -;-!!s amaZing?
must be an' uncountable number of
them PersonaU I'm still . to
fi~ 0111 how ~Y do all~r~
NobiJC!r asked me who I'm voting
for-did they ask you? Andprobably wouldn't have told the~
anyway would we? You keep
smilin11:. •

r&amp;:re

SJ!Il of the marlring and dedicatiOn
sell Reynolds, a membCr of the
of ~e .grave of Thomas Love, a chapter. A personal m"bute to 'Lt. ·
patriot m lbe Augusta County Rifle Higle7_ was given by Mrs.
Company 1777·1781. He is the RcynokiS.
~~Grace Crow Ei~. Bcr·
. On July 27, 1797, the RevoluD!ce Banutz Carpenter, Julia Bar· uonary War patriot, Brewster
CEREMONIES HELD • Grave dedication cereiiiOilles ror Rev·
nuz Young, Hayman Alexander Hi~y IV and his wife, Naomi, and
olutlonary
War patriots ud charter members, were condlldtd
Barnitz and l_tobert Willi~m their fll!"ily, loac!ed their JIC"'.!."al
by
the Retlml JonatUD Melp Chapter, Daughters of the · ·
receatly
' Alexander Barmtz. Love marned posses~~ons and H~ m a flatAmerican
Revolution
at ce111eterles across Meip Conaty. Pictuftd
Rosanna M~Ciurc. in 1787: They boat. and started from Vermont,
Ia
Miss
Eleaaor
Smlib
11 she presents a tribute to Capt. John
had .two children,. Susannah and ·fl081illg down the Ohio River until
Grant
durln11
serviceS
at
MUes Cemetery.
DaVId. Thomas Love was present they came to lhe mouth of~
'
at the Yorktowl!, Pa•• battle and Creek. From there. they paddled
Csurrenhldercof the troopSII
" . of0Genelral9 and poled their way up to the •
ar es ornwa IS on ct. , swollen waters of Leading Creek
1781. Thi.s defeat of Cornwallis until they came to a hand-sba~
.
.
.
helped. to msure lbe success of the valley surrounded by forested hJUs. Bell. Weber, a fri.end of the J{iglcy Robinson, Col. Henry Shubume
Amen can cause. Thomas Love Here they buUt die first early scuJer family, gave a historical. report on and Col. Henry Jackson. He was
cabin in Rutland Township. Their the Brewster Hi~ey famdy. Out of first married to Agnes Reed; bis
maniagc was to Samb Bolt- ·
son, Joseph, was the first male love and devotion for the early secmd
wood.
Capt.
Grant died in Middle.
child born in Rudand Township. fou':lder of Rutland," the Weber
port
in
1820;
Sarah died in 1825. .
Some residents in lbc Berkshire Brewster Higley also preached· lbe family. assumes the respo~sibiHty
There
sliD
remains
a Grant house
Mountains town opposed the cen· rust sermon in RuUand, delivered for mamtcnancc of the family buri·
on
Grant
Street
in
Middleport. •
in a maple grove; in 1825 he allll'OUIId..
.
. ·
De~endants
of
CIJIL
John Grant
ter.
helped build and organize the first
'rbc Miles Cemetery in Rutland
locally
are
Eleanlr
Sunth,
Lucille
NEW YORK (AP) _ _ John c~urch in Rutland Township, a was lhe final grave dedication pill.
Smith
and
Mueen
HeniiCISC)'.
Lennon's mislress, May Pang, says Presbyterian Church. The first Here the grave of P,ltriOt Captain
·
Mrs.
Rae
Russell
Reynolds,
.
be once envisioned .himself as a sawmill in RuUand. was also con· John G~t was dcdicared. Eleanor state organizing secretary,
UC!Cd by Brewster and his sons. Smith gave a tribute to Capt. G1'8111.
tbcll .ed 65 ·ycar-old WI'lh· "Iots SII'
~hair)'
Hewasclccrec!Justice.oflbel'eace He was born in Berwick, Maine, OSDAR, brought greetings from
the State and National Societiei,
· If of RuUand Township, havina pre- 1746, the rust botn of 12 children
displa ed Lc
Pan
DAR.
portait ~ ~ st!tc..e:n: ~: viously served such an offfce in · to Landress and Amv Shorev
Mrs. Anna Circle Cleland,
day's broadc;ast of the TV show Vermont. In IBIS he was made GranUle served in the Continental regent,
Return Jonathan Meigs .
"A Current Affair."
.
second postmaster of Rutland. Army 1776-1780; lie served as
Chapter,
closed the grave dedica- •
••A friend of ours said, 'You Brewster and Naomi had four sons Regimental Quartermaster, with
lion
service
with tile Pledge of
think you're really ~~:oing to have and th,ee daughters. Brewster Col. Ethan ADen'.• G~ ~n Allegiance, the
America's Creed ·
that much hair at 65?"~ I mean, John Higley VI, a grandson wrote Boys and at vanous umes m the
and
the
Lold's
Prayer.
.
got inllllled by lhlt," lho l8id.
Home on the Ranae. Mrs. Marsarct mass rc11iments of Col! .Samuel
Pang w.as the former Beatie •s
mistress 8l the time be w~ married .
toYokoOno.
Lennon was shot to death in
1980 !It age 40. '

·
• the_ ·news
------- Names
m
peered admirer- the Bush adminJsttation.
·
The 4S·ycar-&lt;&gt;ld folk singer last
month received one of President
Bush•s Point of Light awards for
his humanitarian work through the
Guthrie Center.
"It's a nice little letter,"
Guthrie said Monday. "I was actually quite pleased - not ·so much
for us, but b the people we try to
help. It means their needs become
izcd."
center, established in the
former cbllldl that once hoUicd the
restaurant made famous in
Guthrie's anti-war ballad "Alice's
. Restaurant," belps peoetc with
AIDS and other terminal illnesses,
MIAMI (AP) -The estranged abused children and "just about
wife of baseball slugger Jose anyone else who needs help" he
Canscco is going into the ilightclub Said.
'
1
business.
Esther Canseco put up ''the
money for The Hidden Sailor, lllld
her brother, Roberto Haddad, is
managing it, The Miami Herald
reponed MIIJday.
Mr. and Mrs. Corbet Cleek
Mrs. Canseco last wcdc 61ed for
enrenained
recenUy with an outing
divorce from the Texas Rangers
at
their
home
in Great Bend.
outfielder after four years of marGuests
included
Mr. and Mrs
riag~
~igbt Raines, Mr. and Mrs. ~
GREi\1' BARRINGTON, Mass. Rainer, Mr. and Mrs. 'Paul Raines,
(AP) - Arlo Guthrie has an IDICX- M~. and MrS. Danny Raines and
children, all of Ripley, W.Va. Inlaws of Dl!nnl' Raines, also aaending, were on visit from New YIR.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Casto,
A"cankhowcr will be held Nov.
13 at Overbrook Center for Edna Kenna, W.Va.; Mrs. Edyth ParPickens. She will be 92 )'CID old. sons, Charleston, W.Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. George Starcher, West
Columbia, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger W"J.DCbrenncr, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Milr.c Evans, Mr.

PRINCETON, W."Va. (AP) A w01J18!1 drew six months in jail
for falsely advertising that actor
Chuck Norris would appear at a
martial arts toumamenL
Connie Altcc8e. 34, of Margate.
Fla., was also fined $SOO Monday.
She was convicted of obtaining
money IJIIder false preteiiSCS.
Prosccutors said Mteesc, who
with her husband IBII a martial-arts
supplies same, hired a Norris lootalike - and cluQcd $4 for spcctators and up to $30 for partiCipants
- but the tourney was never held
for lll:k of insw•~.
Her "sa 'DMul, Frlll1t AIIMic, 46,
awaits trial next month.

recrfe

r------------------.;....,;.--------------.

Couple entertains guests

.

Cardshower

and Mrs. Ken Rizer, Doc Dailey
and.Wanda, Charles Hmris, Charlie
Wayne, Earl and Macic Clcdc, and
RacheUe Davis, all of Portland.
Bob Spencer and Margaret Tut·
tie, Letart; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. John
Gruescr, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Diddle, Shawn, Justin and grandson, Bo Diddle, Jim. Carnahan,
Amy J{arrison, Kevin Turley and
'Mike JarreD, all of Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Tcim Mankin, and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Davis,
Pomeroy.
The music was provided by
lbcal musicians.
·

RISING T&lt;:&gt; THE
C
LENGE
.

Mississippi Queen reunion held

'

.

.

'·

by Evelyn Rothgeb
decked out with flags and
It's been 77 years since I had bunting, and a calliope played,
my flrst visit to the Gallipolis while each boat contributed it's
Lqcks on the Ohio River, locared own whistle - - all kinds of
at ChambcrsburK. It was the Ded- boats--tow boats, passenger
ication of our lirst Lock 26, in boats, side wbcclen, tail wbcel1915. Our nearest neighbors were en, ferry boats, power boats and
Silas and Luella Wood, and we row boats. We had to cover our
girls always spoke of Mrs. Wood . ll!IIS at times to shut outlbe noise.
as "Grandrii8 Wood". On the day ·Trains f?ing by on thew~ Virof the Lock 26 Dedication; olir · ginia side added their whistles,
family and Grandma Wood went too. The boats stayed i!l a single
to Gallipolis on the street car to parade line down to the locks,
sec the "Boat Parade" which with their whistles_calling to
assembled on the Park Front. everyone along the way.
Grandma Wood had an invitation
Lunch time came before we
to go dowllto the new Lock 26 reached die loeb, and thenas her husband was the captain: were we in for a surprise, only
and she wanred our family to go, those of the Clptain's party could
too. Dad lbougbl that it might be eat at the ~n·s table --'too cold b we girls (I was eight' and we weren t I believe lbe boat
yeail old and my sister, Irene, Mr. Wood commanded Willi a tow
was five) to go on the boat, so boat and there wasn't anything
mother bought each of we girls a you could buy on the boaL This
new mliWIIIIcr.
was before lhe time of hot dogs
It was a beautiful day and ,lbc and J!OP m.achines-in 1915. So
boats on .the Park Front were all two littl~ girls were really hungry

.

Fourth birthday

,

Memories of a trip to the first locks and dam
when we arrived at the Lock
House on lhe West Virginia side
of the Ohio River. We evidenUy
stayed in the lock channel during
the dedication there, as Dad got
off the boat, and. went up to the
Lock House. After telling his
need_to the Matron there, be came
back with sandwiches-· two
huge slices of bread with a chick·'
en leg between. And I'm stating
now - I never had a chicken leg
taste so good in my life.
After the. Dedication Service
was over, alllbe boats relumcd to
their starting place on the Park
Front. I often wonder if. the
Matron at the Lock House ever
knew how much two little girls
blessed her that day. I do know it
taught me to be JXepared · I lid
coOkies with me when the Senior
Citizens went to visit the new
Lock Replacement on the Ohio
River, at Gallipolis Ferry, in
Oc10ber,l992.-

.

World Community Day
to be celebrated Friday
World Community Day will be unbtolren circle.
celebrated kically on Friday at the
The 1992 World Community
Enterprise United Methodist Day materials, wriilcn by a team of
Church at 1 p.m.
. Native A!nerical Christian women
The aimual worship event is from Oklahoma, communicate a
~by Chun:h Women Unit- sense of the culture, history, bored, a group that welcomes women itage and related issues that affect
~'ron) .a wide diversity of Christian Native Americans today.
UlldilionS to s1we mutual concems
World Community Day is one
about jU;Jiice ~ within a c.aring, of three 1110ual, ecumcnical days of
· ~nical enVJl'lliiJ-.L
, celebration sponsored by Church
Th1s year's event responds to Women United. The others are
the. observance _of the SOOth World Day of Prayer IIJd May Fcl·
TABITHA SNYDER
aM~v~ of Chriltopbcr Colum- · lowahlp Day. cwtJ is ibe ecumeni·
bus arrtval.m .~"new ~orld." cal movement lbat brin&amp;s Protca·
The theme IS D1scovenng the tant Roman Catholic Orthodox
Sac:~ed Circl~" and refers to the and* Christian woinen togeth·
Native
Amencan symbol of the er into one community of prayer
Tabitha Jean Snyder :was bon·
Hoop
of
Nations which pictures lbe . advocacy and service.
'
orcd on her fourth birthday with
power
of
the
world
as
a
great
party.
She is the daughter pf Norma
Jeail Snyder, 7.anesville, and James
E. Saydcr, Ponlr(OY.
.
A balloon theme was carried out
.
I
with refreshments served. Gifts
. On the luly Mississippi Queen Rachael Downie, Jean Nease,
WCftJ opc11ed and a hayride held by
tnp up die Ohio River &amp;Om Cincin· Robert and Addalou Lewis,
Mr. and Mrs. Rap Jell'ers. ·
nali 10 PittsburJb, • a bond was Dorothy Davis, Maxine Gaskill,
Attending were Norma Jean created by the Bank One Senior Marvin and Lois Burt, Charles and
Snyder, Zanesville; Mr. and Mrs. Cba01ps tbat they got together Maxine Griffith, Karen Griffith,
Bruce Hysell and Travis, Cross recendy for a picnic eo lhlre mcm· and the host and hostess. Jato and
Lana, W.Va.; Mrs. Dora Hyaell, ories and pbcqil!lh
Mildred Gaul, all of Meigs County;
The ,:ountry l!ome of Jake and Inez Bentz, Roberti Kcrcel, Frallk
Mrs. Nancy Rose, Cassie and Hoi·
lie ROse, Racine; Kevin Howard, Milchd\Qaul 011 Lovers Lane pro- and Dorothy Gaskins, Coolville;
Ste¥ell Hwcll. Mr. and Mrs. llopr vided lbe aeuing for the get-togeth· Billy and Betty Thomas, Mason,
Jcft'cn. Mr. and Mrs. J - Snyder cr. A replica of the Miuiasippi W.Va.; Rodney and Mary Pullins.
St., Mr. and Mrs. Norman E. Queen graced 1 table as well as Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Marie
Hysell, Samantha and Jessica flowers from the gardens of Bob Conard, Huntington, W.Va.; and
Lewis and Pat Holter. Rachacl Delma Roush, OaJ~i·
Hyell.~.
SendinL!!!: we~ R~v. and Downie pve the blcuing in GetThe binhclay oflab Gaul was
Mrs. Ray
• Oa ipoiJI; Mrs, man.
oblervcd during die-afternoon with
Attending were Qerbert and ice cream IIJd a decoi'IICd birthday .
Janie McFanli, Rev. and Mrs.
Robed Halel. Zanesville; and Mi. Janet Jones, Dublin; Roy and Pat cake.
Holter, Don and Maida Mora
and Mrs. Doa Arnold, Pomeroy.
.

"Dedicated to enriching and .
impro ving the life of Senior Citizem
in Mason, .Gallia and Meigs counties. "

•

Keeping our nation free isn't an easy job. 'It take~ the combined
efforts of dedicated people who can rise to meet any challenge.
Pe.o ple like the proud men and women of the U.S. Navy. From
the polar ice to. the tropics, th.e Navy riseS to ~he challenge every
day. Representmg us, defending us and makmg us proud of our
country. All around the world, they're out there for America.

IT'S YOUR NAVY.

Tie MeltJ Couaty Senior Citizens elljoyed a boat trip oa the P.A. Denney dnrlD1 the receilt .
Stel'llwlleel Pestlval. Aa eDjoyable time
had by ,all, viewing the $!gilts aloag the Beantltul OhiO
wblle llltealllg to IDUSic: by 'The C~cs. .
. .
.

w•

Gallla Co. Seniors are lfttlnl a close-up view of one of the
new, larcer chambers at the loc:ks, that will speed up the process
or locldq through the dans ror towboals. '

Emergency Heap begins
. The Emergency Heap applicalion period for I.992-1993 heating
season begins October 26, 1992

and c. ontinues through April 2,
199 3
Emcrgency Heap allows a
onc·time payment per heating
season of up to $175.00 to res10n1
or continue home heating services for a 30 day period.
To be eligible for the program,
both lbe income guide lineS and
the emergency requirement must
be met. Household income is
defined as gross income of all
housellold members except
earned income of dependent
minors 18 years of age. Allowable aMual income for a one person household is SI0,21S.OO, two
person $13,785.00, t1uce persons
$17,355.00, four persons
$20,925.00, five persons
$24,495.00, and six persons
$28,065.00, add $3,570.00 for
each individual member.
T~ meet the emergency
n:qwremeniS of lbc propam, the
household must be threatened
with disconnect of their beating
source or already disconnected,
or have a bulk fuel supply of ten
days or less.
.
. ·
Households With beat supplied
by PUOO regulated utilities mUll
be enrolled on die Percentaie of

Income Plan (PIP) to be eligible
for emergency benefits.
Applications are also available
for the Regular Heap program
which is additional beating assistance of a non-emaxency IUIIJJrC.
The income guidelines arc the
same for both programs. The
deadline for Regular Heap appliC8lions is Fea.-y 26, 1~3.
Both Emergency Heap and
Reguw Heap epplicaaions can be
completed at the Cbcsbirc CAA
Office, Gallia Outreach Office
and Meigs Outreach omce. ~
GaUia Outreacb·Officc is located
at 220 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
The Meigs Outreach Office is
located at 39350 Unioo Avenue,
Pomeroy.
Applicatiqns will be taken
from 9:00 AM to 1101111 and from
1:00 to 3:30PM Monday lbru Friday at the two Outreach Offices.
The central office in Cheshire
will accept applications Monday
lbru Thursday 9:00 AM to noon
and 1:00 to 3:30 PM. No applications will be taken at the
Cheshire office on Fridays
The telephone number "for the
Cheshire olrJCe is 367-7341 the
Gallipolis Outreacb,off'Jce 4460611 and the Meigs Outreach
offJCC is 992-S605 ·
. •

·

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