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                  <text>By The Bend

.'

The Daily Sentine1

Veterans
Day

TueSday, November 10, 189l
.

'

Consider this ...

Ohio Lottery

Plgl

.'
1~

Pick 4:
Buckeye 5:
2·12-15-16-31

1992

comblt this problan," stated Johil:
R. Hall, director.
';
The video includes tJuee differ;:;
ent vipttes and stops at critieal.
decision-matins points 10 allow~
students to discuss what they've,
just - and how they would half.'::
die the situations. The progiD 'also•
includes activities for tllG s!Udents l
and aRIIOUrCC Jist
leather. :
. for tllG
.

Low tonight In 50s. Thursday,

rain. High In mld-60!.

•
VoL a, No. 141
Capyulglned 1112

2 Secllono 14 P•• 2 6 A llulllmedia lno. Ne• poper

-· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 11, 1992

Meig~

Chamber elects
new board members
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Stair

KERRY VISITS WALL· Sea ~ Bob Kerry,
D·Neb., a Vietnam veteran, pauses before tbe
wall or names at the Vietnam Memorial

Wednesday moraing. The wall's.JOtb aaa.lversaryls being observed tbis Veterans Day. (AP)
.

Veterans reminded to record ·
discharges at courthouse,

Community calendar

By BRIAN J. REED
Seatloel News Stair
Max Cale, Meigs County veter·
ans' service officer, and Recorder
· Emmogene Hamilton have jQined
together on Veterans Day to
remind local' veterans 10 record
their discharges.
· · Ac~ording tel Hamilion, veter·
ans' diSC:hatges are not recor.!ied
automatically by the armed Sbr·
vices, and it is the responsibility of
the veteran 10 have his or her dis·
charge recorded.
This serves several purposes.
Discharges are required when vet·
erans apply for VA benefits, social
security and veteran-relsted hospitalization. Furthermore, a certified
copy of a discharge serves the same
purpose as an original as long as
the original has been recorded,
Hamilton said. In such 1 case,
recording the discharge serves as
protection in case of a fii'C or other
loss.
"Reprdless of how long veterans have had their D.D. 214 velerans discharges, they should have,
them recorded if they've never
done so," Hamilton said. "If the
original is burned, desUoyed or
losi, a certified copy from this
office is as good as the original.
The clischarges are recorded free of
charge, so ihcrc's-really no reason
. not to have lhe discharge recorded
for safety's sate."
·
Hamilton also said lhat veterans
who recently mo~ed. to Meigs

Co••••lty Calntlar Items Wednesda~ 7 p.m. at the home
. Charles Blakeslee
appear two daJI heron ID evmt of Jean
ud the clay of tllat neat. Ilellll ' will show llides of past shows liy
. - " rei:clnd well Ia I l l - lbe club and Mlclcl1epon Garden
·
to u •• plblleab ia 1M cal· Club. ·
eadar.
RUTLAND • Leading Creek
Conservancy District offfccs will
TUESDAY
POMEROY • Fint Southern be closed Wednesday in obser·
Baptist Church, revival, through vance of Veterans Day.
.
.
Friday with Charles Altimore and
CHESTER • Past Councilors
Henry Roe. Lamar O'Bryant, pas.
Club of Chester Council No. 323,
tor, invicealhe public.
Daughters of America, will meet
on
Wednesday evening at 7 p.m., at
MIDDLEPORT • Women's
MiJs1onatY Union will meet Tues- the home or Esther Smith. The coday, 6:30 p.m., Hope Baptist hosteSs is EDa Osborne,

ChlilCh. Middleport

THURSDAY .
POMEROY
; Connie Smith will
PORTLAND • Portland Ele·
.
perform
Thunday
at 7:30 p.m. at
mentarY PTO wiD meet Tuesday, 7
Meigs
High
School.
The concert is
p.m., at the school. Everyone weisponsored
by
the
Meigs Band
cane,
BOOSiaS.
DARWIN • The Bedfoi'd Tll'im·
POMEROY • A meeting for
&amp;hip Trustees will meet Monday at
those
interested in helping to pro·
7 p.m. I! the town hall.
vide rural water service to the reli·
RACINI! • American Red Cross dents of Western Meigs County
Bloodmobile will be at Southern will be held Thursday at 7 p.ln. at
Hilh School Tuesday from 10 a.m. the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce Office on East Second
to 2 p.m. Public invited.
Street in Pom~roy. Townahip
POMEROY • Ohio Eta Phi trustees, water proViders and JoY·
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority emment represe~ves are invtltd.
wiD meet Tuesday It 7 p.m. 81 the
POMEROY • Sacred Heart
Sellior Citizens Center in Pomaoy.
Dr. Nick Robinson will discuss Catholic Church, Pomeroy; will
have its fall bar.aar Thursday. Din·
"Drs. With a Heart."
ner will begin at 5 p.m. and consist
RACINE • A meeting for all of cream baked Chicken or ham,
people interested in playing in a noodles, mashed potatoes and
Southern-Eastern alumni game will gravy, green beans, hot rolls,
be held Tuesday at 6 p.m. in South· choice of cole slaw. apple sauce or
pickled beets. Cost is $5 for adults
eriJ High School cafeteria.
and $2.SO for·children 12 and
under. Dessert included.
WEDNESDAY
COOLVIllE · Hunter's safety
ROCK SPRINGS • Rock
course, Wednesday, Friday, Nov.
18 and 20,6:30-9:30 p.m. and Nov. Springs Grange will hold an open
21 and 22 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at meeting Thursday at the grange
the Coolville Lions Club. To regis- hall at 8 p.m. Rev. William Mid·
ter, or for funbcr information, can dleswarth will show slides or
Bob Pullins, 667·3831, Ed Rood, churches in Meigs County. Public
invited. Refreshments will be
667-6348 or Ed Wigal, 667-6657.
served.
POMEROY· Veterans Day proMIDDLEPORT • Meigs Local
gram, Meigs County CoUrthouse,
Wednesday, All veterans and the OAPSE will meet ThurSday at 7
p.m. at Meigs Junior High SchOol
public inviltd.
10 Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT • Royal Ambas·
sador Recognition night, Wednes- - RUTLAND • Star Garden Club
day, 7 p.m., Hope Baptist Church, will meet Thursday at I p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Juanita Radetin.
Middleport
Each member is to bring a ThanksRACINE • Racine American giving arrangemenL
Legion Post 6lt2 will have a combread and bean soup 'dinner
A lieU ofa year .
Wednesday from noon 10 4:30p.m.
year 1969 wu quite a busy one,
Public invited. The post will visit as The
arguably
11101t tui'bulent de·
Portland Elementary at 10:30 a.m. cade In UnitedtheStalel
blltory came to
and Letart Elementary at I p.m.
a cla~e. Some hllbllchtl: The espand'
eel four-party VIetnam peace talkl be·
MIDDLEPORT • Jim Oliphant gan on Jan. 18, but U.S. force~ peaked
will conduct a bible study course at MS,OOO In April. Aati'OIIlUt NeU A.
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the First ·Armstronc. comn\aader of the Apollo
Baptist Church in Middleport. million, became the flrlt man to IM!t
foot on lbe moon on Jaly 20. Allcl anti·
Everyone welcome. ·
Vietnam
War demonltratiOIII
reached their __.. In America; lOme
·MIDDLEPORT • Middleport 250,000 marched. in Wuhinaton. nc.,
'Amateur Garden Club will meet on Nov. ~.

164

1347

Racine elementary students view ODLC program

Hoola. -the~ HiJ?PO. 1 noon pink JOII If which waa tQeQcOuriJe . choi~es ; I for look for the best
hippo bOlted an mtemctive v1deo studeau to think before makin&amp; choice, and A for act on the choice
•
program. sponsored by the Ohio decilionl- .,.UCularly diOie con- you've made.
By Briall J. Reed
Department or Liquor Control at cerninJ alcoliol and other drugs.
National swislics show lhat half
, the Racine Elementary School The vtdeo illua.tratea the steps of the students in srades seven ·
recently.
involved in decillon-matins. through 12 drink alcoholic beverJerry and Ellen Roush, members Hoola Ia an acronym for those qea. and that five percent of them
Gr, at Hoaor••• Loeal boaters fa~te" Oaldey Collins, SI8IC sen· of the local chapter of Mother's aeps; H !or bow do you feel about · beaan drinking at age ei&amp;ht )or
Dottie Turner and Jimmy Cain 110r, County AudiiOI' Gordon Cald· Against Drunk Drivins (MADD) the ldlillion, 0 for obtlln lhe faets, younger. Hoola is tllG Department
were among the first pleasure well, a Democrat, who defeated were present for the program, the 0 for options, consider all your of Liquor ,Conuol'a tciof to help
boaeers to uavel throub the new Wayne Gibbons of Middleport; and
Gallipolis Locks and Dam last inc11mbent Republican collimis·
month. According to Dottie, the sioners Robert Clark and Charles
privilege came as a reault of aniv- Karr, Sr. They defeated Dems Ken·
mg at the locks at the crack of neth Hager and Paul Simon,
dawn and patiently waiting with respectively.
.several othen. Businessman Jay
Richard Nixon and Michigan
Hall had a boatlOid of people, 37 Governor Gl!orge Romney had
all together, and Turner indicated emerged as the GOP frontrunnen
lhat the wait was worth the honor . for the presidential election in
of being among the firSt tO enjoy · 1968. Other possibilities: Califot-.
the histMc occasion.
nia's Governor-elect Ronald Rea·
gan, New Yort Gove~r .Nelson
McBucks .for EdiiCIItloa ... the A. Rockefeller lllil. yes, OhiO Gov·
program which allows customen at CI'IIOl' James Rhodes. The Republi·
McDonald's in Pomeroy to help cans saw "I good shoe" at defeating
their favorite school groups, has President Lyndon Johnson, who
been a terrific success, according to lalcr, of~. QPted not to run for
Sandee Mills, who owns and opei. re-election. ·
ates the restaurant along with her
OhiQ Univenity President Verhusband, Roscoe.
non R. Alden was about to wind up
Since September, 30,000 a 14-day tour of South VietNam.
McB ucts have been distributed, after promising lhat OU .would try
adding up to $1,5(XHor the partici- to expand its educational efforts
pating clubs and organizations. thete.
·
Five cents for every ·dollar span is
Southern High School and East·
given per $3 minimum purchase. eni Jtigh School were cited with 14
McBucks will then be converted minimum standarcls violations by
into cash at lhe end of the program, the state. Southern's shortcomings
November 20.
· ·
included limited materials on the
A list of partici,Paling schools elementary level, inadequacies in
.
and school groups IS posted in lhe the guidance deplrtrnent and execsSTUDENTS OF THE WEEK • Tbe followlalltadeiits were
restaurant, and some schools have . sive leaehcr turnover.
selected as studeats of the week for die m011tb of October. Tbll
begun to decorate the restaurant
A&amp;P advertbed its gift certifi·
honor is acbieved tbroup aadeialc uceDe-.IIDCI llllpro•••t
with poslers, indicating their partie- cates as "the Jl111£tical gift that's
in
behavior. L·r, Sabrlu Sllltb, sdeace; Micbel Lei~.':
ipation.
practically perfect".
alaebra;
Robin Dollobue, Ohio lliltory; aad Libby Klq,
On the comics page, "Carnival" ·
history.
Historic beadllaes... from this showed us a wanan addressing bet
week in 1966 reflected election husband with surprise: "You mean
news (what else?),
'
LBJ wants ME PERSONALLY 10
Clarence Miller was the lOth cut down on my spending? You're
District's new congressman after putting me on!"
his defeat of incumbent Democrat
--Waller H. Moeller bX 4,400 votes.
Tate care.
Othei winners were •Meigs County

Pick 3:

Two new members were named
Tuesday night 10 the Meip County
Chamber of Commerce Board of
Directors. The nominations were
approved by the chamber's general
membenhip at its regular meeting
on Tuesday nighL
'
Elected as new at-large mem·
bers wac Horace KmT of Pomeroy
and Gary "Denny" Evans, Racine.
Other members of the board were
reafrm'ned for the upcoming year.
The terms of two board memben,
Charles Kitchen and Lenny Eliason, wiD expire after the new year.
Executive Director Paula Thacker reported that the Small Business
Development Cen1er in Athens has
begun providing exlension services
to prospective business owners in
Meigs County through the chamber
office. and that in the fust visit,
nine appointments were made.
During those visits, the SBDC
assists those interested in starting
· new businesses with J!I'CPID'IIiQII of
· a business plan, seumg up book·
keeping systems and other procedures necessary 10 successful new
business ventures. The ~~~­
live visits Meigs County bi-weekly,
and appointments can be made
through Kathy Adlcins at the cham·

bet office, 992-5005.
Haven, W.Va. exchan~es has been
According 1Q Thacker, many of sent to the Public Uulitics Com-

those who have expressed an interest in opening new businesses are
displaced coal minen.
· Thacker stated that a meeting
will be held this week with water
providers and local governments in
an effort to provide rural water service to townships. in Western
Meigs County. A large number of
homes in Salem, Scipio, Bedford,
Rutland and Salisbury Townships
are without rural water service.
Thacker said. The 1P'oup will also
discuss the possibihty of developing a _plan between Tuppers
PlainS/Chester Water District and
Leading Creek Conservancy District to provide mutual' backup service, when needed.
Thacker said that she is wcxldng
closely with Buckeye HillS/Hock·
ing Valley Regional Development
District on providing water service
to the site .of the new Meigs Motel
on Slate Route 7 near Big Wbeel.
TP,C will provide water to the sile,
but water line must be installed
under U.S. Route 33, since their
service stops at Meigs High
School.
A petition containing 300 signatures in support of extended area
lelephone service between the 992
exchange and the Mason and !"'ew

mission of Ohio, and Thscter said
that she expects the hearing process
will begin in about 30 days. The
Public ·Service Commission of
West Virginia has already
approved the requesL
Thacker shared Information
received at a recent meeting or the
Ohio Development Association
regarding businesses in small communities. She said that many large
corporations are beginning to COil·
sider moving operations to small
communities, and Thacker indicated that the chamber should investigate this trend in its attempt to
auract industry into lhe county. The
O.D.A. said that those small communities should be within 50 miles
of a metropolitan area.
.
Mary Powell, chairman of 'the
mcmbenhip committee reported
that the recent " Membership
Round-up" was a success, resultil)g
in three new chamber members 10 ·
date. and .several other prospective
members.
·
John·Rice of Tuppen Plains was ·
introduced·as a new chamber mem•
ber. GueSis introduced were COlin;:
ty Commissioner-elect Jaqet
Howard and Ada Scott.
·:.:
The meeting was hosted by Fied'
Goebel at the Tuppen Plains VFW.

Trumka wins third term
'

· Richatd Trumkl won a thir.d
straight five-r- term as Jresident
of the United Mine WOlters union
on the strength of people . who
should not have been given a vote,
his opponent said.
Trumlca was leading challenger
Karl Kaftan Tuesday with a vote of
35,116· 9,651, with 529 of the
union's 622 locals reporting, said
international teller Marty Hudson.

.

.

Even Trumta's home local in
Nemacolin, Pa., has no active miners.
Kafton had said · Trumta's

.

"give-bact contiacts and sweet·
heart agreements have sent this
union into a tailspin." Some of
those voting Tuesday agreed,
·

The union's 15.0,000 retirees
outnumber working members by
more than 2·10-1. And although he
is a pensioner himself, Kaftan said
it was wrontr to let the union be
"ilominated'"by
retirees.
VETERANS REMINDED • Melp Couaty Recorder Emmo·
'
'I
have
a
problem
with the man
a:eae Hplstelli ~= aow 11;-., as Em11oa:ene Hamilton, left,
who
may
not
have
been
working
and VeteraDS
Ollk:er Mair: Cale, are remiadlaa velerans
for
20
years
voting
for
someone
he
that they ••oald •ave tbelr dlscbar1e doeumeata recorded ia
docsn
•
t
even
know,"
he
said.
In
Hamilton's olf'.ce. Tlie service is provided free or ~barie aad profact,
Kafton
won
an
active
local·
, iec:ts tile doeumeat IIi a . of c1Mt11e or 1os11.
Local 1810 at Powhatan No. 6
County from outside the sllite or the documenL The recording pro- Mine, in Alledonia, Ohio - by a
county can have tbeir discharges cess can be done while the veteran vote of 213 -24, President ~
Vucelich said.
re-recorded in thG interest of con- waits.
Trumlca said Kaftan's statement
venience.
Calc said that veterans who no
·was
ironic and unfair.
~!!!'!!
The recorder' s office never longer have their discharges can
"I
think
it's
tragic
that
he
would
holds the original discharge, so vet- apply for a replacement through the
erans always have possession of Velerans Service Office, located on seek 10 deny the people who built
this union ... ihe right 10 vote," he
Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy. · said. "We're winning it on the
veter~ns
~~~~~xen!:,11~~~~:· retired vote, the active vote, the
laid-off vote and the disabled vote.
the veteran nothing.
The U.S. Department of VeterTwice eac• year America remembers veteraas: Me•orial
"I think it's an overwhelming
FLAG DISPLAYED· Rev. William Middleswarth, a member
ans Affairs now offers a 1011-free
Day and Veterns Day. These are rlcbtful days of trlbale to
or
tlie
Lloas Clull, wu out eariJ Wedaetclay moraiiiJ (Veterans
mandate
for
our
team,"
said
Trum·
number that can be used throughthose who pve tlielr Dves, aad to tbose who served America.
Day)
dlsplaylns
tbe A•erlcaa na1 throughout Pomeroy. Special
out the United Slates and its pos- lea, 43, who has held the union's
For tliose or as at the.Departmnt ot Veten• All'alrs (VA),
services
were
abo
held tbrouahout the coanly by various posts or
sessions. By calling I (800) 827· top post for 10 years, a stay in
we remember nterans "year-rood" as we respoad to Presi·
American
Lqloa.
the
1000, velerans can be connected to office second only to the 1919deat Llacoln's call to ~'care ror blm wbo sball baYe ,horae tile
1960 tenure of the legendarY. John
their nearest regional office.
·
battle, aad ror bla widow, and liil orpha."·
L.
Lewis. ;'We're really graufted."
Veteru~:f- realadl us every tblrd pe,_ bi America Is a
Kafton, 67, of West Virginia,
veleraa or
ves a vetenu service. Yoa •ay be a veteran or
also
complained that the election ·,
yo• spouse, Uade Harry or Au at Slllly may be, 1 ad&amp;bbor,
yow dodor, realtor, vocer, baaker, barber, uyoae. ~er
!&gt;aJIOIS
lis~ Trumka and his slste y
m large pnnt at the top and Kafton
tliey are, wberever, wbeaever, however tbey served, t•ey are
~ey·Be~nctt f&gt;?st 128 of m,c ter for the event and indicated lhat
Five bus drivers' certificates a~d his running mates in small
America's 27 mUIIon veterau: Mea aad WOIIta (4.4 per cent
were issued at Tuesday night' s PfU.'! at~ boaom..
Amencan Legion, Middleport, will a dance, featuring Ron Hayes of
are womea) who. were drafted, who volunteered who 1t1 ted In
meeting of -the Meigs County . . I !hlnk ,the desigD of the ballot celebrate Veter.ans D~y .on McArthur, will conclude the
tbe Guard aad the Reaerva--4aactlve aad pa federal duty, socb
Board of Education.
· iS JUSUficsuon to pro!est the elec· Wednesday evemng, begmmng evening's festivities.
u tboae Ia tbe Penlan Gulr-d tho&amp;e who cbole •Ditary serReceiving tbe certificales were lion to the (U.S.) Labor Depart· with a dinner at 6:30p.m. accordvice to their euuatry ua career.
Cathy Barringer, Tom Dorst, Patsy ment," he said. " The internaUonal ing to POst Commander Jerrr Haw·
In carlnc for an estlnuited 1,254,000 veterilas Iii OJilo, tbe VA
Prater, Donna Bentley, and Clifford tellers who are ruming the election · ley.
distributed $1.3 biDioa Ia J.llacal Year 1991; $729 •llio- weat
arc supP,Orting the incumbent ...
Robert L. McCarty, past depart·
Brent Manley. ·
~ly ·t o vetenns llld tbeir beneficiaries 11 -~ Pd
Appropnations for ·the adult Absurd. '
. .. .
ment commander and past alternate
peliloil, $1G.9 •101011 for reldjustmeat aad voca;;JI.bm.
basic education program and the
Hudaon, who,~d he IS :indepe~- nationai .American Legion ex-comtatlon .benefits, and $7U mUlloa ror iniiii'Mce and Indemnity
. paymeats.
.
safety belt program which is being dent of Trumlca s campatgn, satd mitteeman, will be the featured
discontinued were revised. Satur· t1!e ballot "is iden~ 10 ~w it's speaker for the program,
· AI wars become more dlltaat billory, tile rav. viJIIe llld
McCarty is a me111ber of Marenday will be · the. last day when ~•storlcally been destgned when
more recent wan cbaap tlie prollle l'or IDedlcal Pd -pnmotorists charged with not using "'!depondents ~ Kaftan are run- go American Legion Post 110 near
satory care VA prt1Yides •ea lad womea vetei'UII.
their seat belts can see the movie In rung.
·
· Marion. He served as state comCare ror Oblo vetenu dur:I' FY 1991 by ftYe VA l'ldltla
.Trumta, a third-generation mander durin!! the 1986-1 987 ·
lieu ofa fine.
Included lnpatlfat care to 30,
veterau; ambulatGry care to
The board approved a contraCt mmer and attorney, ~ UJlOili)()Sed legion year. He 1s a U.S. Army vet·
791,000 aad aunliia bome care to 2,700. VA 1peat more tbaa
with the Southeastern.Qhio Special in 1987 and was remstalled by eran and served in the lith Air$15 miUion ror fac:Wty coaatructlon and more tbaa $451 mDIIoa'
Educational Re~esource acclamation. But Kaftan gave him borne division during the Korean
ror medical servkes Uld adllllalstrative cCJits.
Center for early c ·
supervi- a fi1ht. hatnmering at sore spOts Conflict
Ia addllloa, VA caaraateed 4,970 bome Joaas wortb
such as the decline in union memMcc'arty served the legion
sor
serviceS.
$354,804,600. .
.
benhlp
under
~
.
offiCes
at the post, couilty and dis.·
Next
meeting
was
set
for
S
p.m.
Tliere were 600 latermeats Ia Daytoli Natloul CfiDetery
In
l981,
the
unton
clatmed
10
trict
levels,
and was department
on
Dec.
8.
Attending
were
Oris
Veterau DaJ, a reiiJader tliat A•erka Ia Na•ber Oae,
have
160,000
memben.
Now,
the
assistant
sergeant-at-arms
in 1982·
Smith,
Bill
Quickel,
Harold
Lcbse,
,
tbaalklto ber YeterUL
UMW
bouta
only
abou.t
60,000
1983.
Bob
Burdette,
Jeff
Harris.
board
Submitted by Clrl L. Headei'SOII, Director c•1ca10 Of'lke of
Jay Ellis, P.ast eighth disulct
memben, and 1o1m Riebel. supet· ~~g memben, including about
!'Jibllc Atraln Departllleat of Vetenu Affairs , .
J,300 10. Kenlileky.. . .
commander w•D serve .as toastmasintendenL

. . -------"!--------------.....;...
Remember all
today!

Five bus drivers
receive certifcates

Just One Of The so-Million Americans
Who Invests In U.S. Savings Bon~.

•

Lloyd Mokler isn't afraid of a hard day's work. But when it comes to investing, he buys U.S. Savings
Bonds - the safe and easy way tQ earn competitive Interest rates with a guaranteecl minimum return.
That's why millions of Americans use Bonds to save.for
. ..
. •
the future. To find out how U.S. Savings Bonds can make
'f · • • Savings
0 ·
your future a little easier, calll 800 4 OS BOND, or write
.
to Box USTN, U.S. Savings Bonds, Washington, DC 20~.
,
. MakingAmericani&gt;rearmA~ty

US

Bo ds

I

A public Wrvlte of thh new•papr;r ·

.

.

P·OS1· 128 WI•11 ceJebral e.

D
•
•
eteranS ay thiS evening

T

�•

·commentary
-~

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111 Court Street
Pome!O)', Ohio

· ' DI:VOTZD TO THE llf'I'BilDTS OF THE IIEIQ8.1UBON A1UCA

c~~

.

Avoid Malpnictice."
These represent rnerely a few of
PAT WIDTEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
more eg~egious examples of
the
Assistant ·Publisber/ControDer
General Manager
how the- Nei&amp;hborbood Support
Networlc splUrged on itself in HurLEITERS 01' OPINION are welcome. 'IbOy should be leu than 300
ricane
HUJO's wake, which ravwords. All !otters are subject ID editing and . must be signed with 1111110,
.
aged
the
Vugin Islands in Septemaddress and r.lepboae number. No unsigoed lellm will be publisbed. l.ellm
ber
1989.
should be in good taste, addn:ssing issues, oot penonalitiel.
The NSN was set up as a trade
narne of the Caribbean Behavioral
Institute afler Hugo, which led
President Bush to dispatch some
1,100 Army military police and
170 federallaw-enforeement officers, includin&amp;75 FBI agents to lbe
Virgin Islands. They were sent to
'
· q_ueD whal was called the "pervaBI!cOBERT E. MILLER
Sive lOoting" on SL Croix. About
lilted Pmll Writer
.
90 percent !If the island's buildings
" • COLUMBUS - Slate lawmakers begin next weelc what leaders are were damaged.
· Callina an unpredictable lame-duck session ~may include~
It a~s that looting assumed
··of a w. increase to solve the Slale's $300 million bud&amp;et deficiL
many differeiu fonns. Thou&amp;h the
•· About two dozen of the 99 House rnembers two of the 33~ellllllln win Institute itself received a relatively
1101 be back for the new Legislalme, Which meets in January. ADd some of
·llieir vOleS may be needed for a politically sensitive bailout package.
·• · "I don't know what they wiD do. They might just say that IIley don't
··\Vant to ICl involved." House Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wbcelcrsbmg, said
"of the rnembin who did not ron for re-eleclion or were defealed Nov. 3. .
· ·.. Sen•e President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, also was vague after
be and the speaker met behind closed doors Thursday with. Gov. George
"Voinovicb to discuss budget options.
'
; - They are to met( with Voinovicb again Friday, in advJIIlce of the Monday session, 10 review update4 revenue projections lha~ they requested
from the Council of Econ!)mlc Adv1sers and lbe Legislative Budget
Office.
Voinovicb, turned down by the Legislature earlier Ibis year on a
requeat to raise taxes on alcobol and IObacco produc~S. bas made no rec·emmendalions. However, be indicated a lax inclease is needed
·• He already 1w implanented deep spending cuts, in higher education
and some other sensibve areas, to head off what by now_would have been
·a $600 million deficit, said slate Budget Director Gregory Browning said.
• Brownina said fur!hcr cuts would severely curtail state services.
.
Voinovicb aid lbat once the size of the prOblem is identified and a
·solution bas been so~, "You sit down and figwe out bow to aet
nMnll! to support iL l m not getting out front, tallring about.this lax or that
u;,r;hc told i'eponeq,
·
. .
Aronoff and Riffe said they wo!!ld like 10 see a long-range solutiOn, as
opposed to remporary, stoppp measures that could lead to another crunch
in the next few mooths. They asked the CoUncil of Economic Advisers to
provide projectic;IIIS for !he nex.t two y~.
,
When asked if a ~ w. 1ncrease ts something that a lame duck ses•
sion could bandlc~ Aronofl' said, "Very possibly. It boils down 10 votes.
There .-e a lot of turmvers, ••·be said.
.
He appandy was hinlinl that the lame duclcs could vote to raise taxes
without spcllldina the political capilllllhat would be required of the returnin&amp; members.
.
.
The Nov. 16 is scbedulod to last only a week, but Riffe and Aronoff
said the lame duck session could leConvene in December if necessary.

·: Lame duck session could ··
·tackle tax incre~se

·Today in history .
•'

By Tile Alloc:illted Press
Today is Wednesday, Nov .. 11, the 316tb day of 1992. There are 50
days left in the y~. This is Veterans Day in lbe United States, and
Remem~ Day m Canada.
• . Today's Hiahlilht in Hisuxy:
.
· On Nov. ll, 1918, fighting in World War I came to an end wilb the
&amp;anini of an armistice between the AUies and Germany.
. On Ibis dale:
' - In 1620, 41 Pilarims aboard the Mayflower,-anchored off MasSacbuseas. signed a COOlpact caUing for a "body politick" 10 enact "just
~ OQUI!IawL"

•

. . In 1831, f01111e1' slave Nat Turner, who bad led a violent insurrection,
'was exec:Uiod in Jaualem, Va.
.
·
· In 1889, Wallliqton became the 42rid state.
•
: In 1921, P,lelldenl Hardin&amp; dedicaled the Tomb of the Unknown Soliller iD AJtinltoO National Cemelery.
~
In 1939, ICIIt Smidl lint sana Irvin&amp; Berlin's "God Bless America''
OOLWIIIk radio.
·
· In 1942, SO years ago, during World War ll, Germany completed its
occc-ri• of Fmnce.
·
In 1955, Rhodesia proclaimed its independence from Brilain.
In 1966; 2S yellS ago, Gemini 12 blasted off from Cape Kennedy, Fla.,
With 1111011111111- A. LoveD and Edwin E. " Buzz" Aldrin Jr. aboard.
(Gelllini cin:led the. earth 59 times before rauming.)
·
In 1972. 20 years qo, the U.S. Army IUmed over its base at Long Bibn
· to die Sciath Vielnam- army, symbolizing the end of direct U.S. miliaary
tnvolveftlelll in die Viemam War.
.
. In 1981, stuntman Dan Goodwin scalod the outside of the 100-story
JOhn Hancock Center in Chicago in nearly six bows.
Tm ye1111 ago: The SfliEC sbutde Columbia was launcbed,from Cape
Canaveral, Fla., widl four astronauts aboard - . the largest sbuule crew 10
tbal time. Seventy-five people, IIIOIIt of them lsraellaoldien, were killed
in a suicide truck bombins of Israel's military headquarters in Tyre,
Leblnon.

oo

Berry's World

...

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•
·~·

11\

~E,_ · _. i

J

program?"

:.

•

Why so much software? Perhaps
because .. onlc:t was plll:ed for I 0
new desktop computers, computer
modems , and other computer
equipment in the spring of 1991,
just two months before the prognim
was slated to expire. Investiptors
doubt the computers were even
received by the time the proaram
ended .. ·
..
_
While .Virgin Islands residents_
were rebuilding lbeir lives after the
stonn and the IQolina lbal foDowed,
the Institute's director was spendins $303,000 for " consulliilf services." When investigators tried 10
discover just what kind of COillultinll was perform~i~ found no
wnuen conlrliCIS
, no re&lt;:ord
of the rate of compensation, no
time sheets and no evidence lbat
services were actually performed.
Investigators did find thlll
Sll,764 was spent b~ the Institute
10 research ~ potennal of wiiming
other federal grants. ..
According .10 the audit, the Jnsti,
tute also. spent' money on ~rsonal
utility biDs, Including biDs accrued
by a relative of the director,
$85,000 for 1'qJIIiQ and renovation
to a building leased from a relative
of the director, and a new videotape version of."The Godfather
Epic."
Thou$h FEMA didn't directly .
approprtate the money aiven to
CBI, the auditlre~nts yet another embarrassing cliapter for FEMA,
which e.ndured a gale of criticism
fOl' its handUna of lhe Hugo relief
effort. ,l.fter the aaency flubbed ·
relief c!tforts in South Carolina
,after Hugo, a furious Sen. Ernest
Hollinas, 0-S.C., called FEMA
"the smiest bunch of bureaucratic
jackasses I've evec seen."
Mter repeated phone calls to the
director, a "clinician" from the
Institute told our associate Jan
Moller that " to the best of my
knowledge ... the WOJic we did and
the funding was direcdy related 10 ·
the storm.'' Aooording 10 lbe audit,
the Institute disagrees with virtually every recommendation made ,by
the investigators and claims its
accountina system is "adequate."
FEMA refused to comment officially on the report, nor would the
Virgin Islands Department of
Health. "This is way out of the
ordinary," said 1oyce Fleischman, .
deputy Inspector General for DOl.
"The audit report speaks for
itself."
Jack A•derson and Michael
Binsteln are writers for ·uniteCI
Feature Syndicate, lac:., · ·

in sla~ p,Ueys. He imposed a milI do riot know how Jefferson
itaristic European value system oo rationalized the reprehensible pracpeace-lovina. environmentally tice of holding slaves. Indeed, I
upright Native Americans.
cannot know because I have no
Now the revisionists are doina a way of comprehending lbe mores
number on T!Jomas Jefferson, that impelled him or the motives
whose 250tb birthday rolls arOund that drove him. Was it a mattcr·of
elated with is coming up. and YO!! in April. For aU his talk about~ crude economics? Was he con·
run the icon through the 1deolo8Jcal pie being born equal', the chtics vinced he was playing a protccwr's
filterS of the present time. '·~n- . say, and despite his anti-slavery · role?
•
What I do know is that he stood
tism," the traditional historian$ call ·writinas, be failed to free his .own
it - judging lbe past by lbe stan· slaves. He. probably .sired children foursquare against tyranny. What I
dards of today.
.
by a sl8ve mistress, they say, and do know is that believed in the ·
Isn't that delicious? The Politi· he finnly belie~ed that 'the races • sovereignty of people, not geyemcally Correct crowd, the people could never be successfully inte- ments. w~- 1 do know is that he
who invented all-those "isms" lilce arated and lbat blacks should be champion free speech and that
"hei~btism" an'd "speciesism" . eiiiiiiiCipaled and resetlied as a dis- without'h genius, we miaht not
and 'scentism" now have an crete community. .
' even lie blessed with the privilege
"ism" to call their own . They
This is presentism run amuck. of freely discussina anything of a
engaae iii the scurvy practice of As hislllriarl" Douglas Wilson puts it political nature today, including:
.
.
"presentism."
in the November issue of The Jefferson's failinp.
What I lb know is that Thomas:
Take Christopher Columbu~, for Atlantic Mc!Jibly, the m001 approexample. When the 500tb anmver- priate question is this: ."How did a Jefferson is as true a hero as this· ·
sary of. his inaugural voyage roDed · man who was born into a slave- nation has ever had, and that he
around Ibis year, the PC crowd ~ holdins society, whose family and will be revered as such when his;
waitin~ to turn the wayfanng admired friends owned slaves, who .critics are particles of dust, llooting
weaver s son into a monster. He inherited a fortune that was depen- in the air with the detritus of the
wa$ personaUy responsible for lbe dent on slaves and slave labor, Mt. Pinatubos of tomormw.
Presentist dusL
''
.deaths of as many as 30 m,illion decide at an early age that slavery
Joseph Spear is 1 syndicated:
indiaenous people, lbey sa1d. He was morally wrona and forcefully
writer
ror Newspaper Enterprise'
was liable for the deaths of another declare; that it ought to be abolAssodatlou,
30 million Mricans who perish\ld ished?"
invented by the PoliticaUy Correct
crowd. You take an icon, check to
see when a birthday or the anniver·
sary of a big event the icon is asso-

Joseph Spear

Looking far into the
21st
·
c~.ntury
.

ffinduism and Buddhism, with
their streu on meditation, will.
grow to sizable religions in the
United SlateS. .

"No-demand" faiths will multiply.
.
Time maaazine is home free.
N 1.,.. _
1 ·u be aro nd iii
e """ you nor WI
u
··

George R. Plagenz .
2092 to ·check up on those predictions.
Other magazines should be so
lucky. ' ' By the year 2000, sot:ne of
us may be livin~ on the moon,"
said one publicanon in a 1970 issue
on " The. Year 2000: .What It Will
BeLike."
Only 22 years later, many who
read that are sliD arOiald II! ~.
Seven years before the tum of
the next century tnost of that magazine •s propostications appear to
be doomed, includinathe one about '
house-bunting on the moon.
Other flawed - ~: "House·
work In 2000 w11l be done by a
computerized robot named Rachel .
Once you program her, she'll dust
and vacuum, change the sheets,
scrub lbe floors. She wi11 also be
'

IToledo.I 50' I.

J

B The Alloc:iated Press
it .!m et wetter before it aets
better.
g
.
.
Thai' 8 the word from the
National Weather Service, which
predicted prolonged rain, some of it ·
heav lbrou b Tbursda 11 said ·
lb~aonn: were poss{(,ie south
and cast.
·
Tbcro'll be a continued chance
of rain or snow Friday and into the
weekend as tempcratitr&amp; get cold-

Pomeroy
Court news

co.
. . .
Colder au wtll enter the stare
from the northwest ~n ~riday.
Temperatures could d1p mto the
·20s.
.
· . The reco{d-bi&amp;b tempentUre for
·Ibis date If. the Columbus weather
sta~on was 74 dearees in 19~7
wbtle the reco~d to~ was 20 m
1957. Sunset ~gbt will be at 5:19
p.m. and sunnse Thursday at 7:14
a.m.
Around tile natloaA cold front dumped rain ~y
today from lbe lower Mississippi
Valley to Maine.
·
Strong Santa Ana winds were
expecl.ed 10 push temperatures iniO
the 80s in Los Angeles todav.

forecas~

Nonberly winds JIIS(Cd to 3S m(ib
Tuesday afternoon in Rivcnide.
Southeaullcm TCXIII and pans of
Arkansaa were under a flash flood
watch today: Nearly 2 1/2. inches
fell in Palacios, Texu, during the
six-hour period ending at 1 p m
EST Tuesday.
· •
Heavy rain was forecast later
today from east Texas through the
Great Lakes.
Tuesday evening, str.:f thunderstonns developed ab
of the
cold front crossina Oldaboma and
northwest Texas.
·
Showers and lbunllerstonns fell
over the western Gulf CO!ISI slates.
Rain Showers and drizzle prevailed
from.the middle Mississippi Valley

.

10 the _Gteat Likes regJOII.

.
. Rain and snow ~ ~ •
storm -system developmg 1D J!1_
Southwest were scaaered from •
zona to eastern Co~.
.·
f A heavy snow wanune was ,:!
effec t today for the San are ""
Cristo Mountain I or ~oloradq,
wh~ forecuters predicted up ~
18 ~of snow.
. the
":l&amp;bs today were~:. iD
30s. m the central~Roc~':..•. en.
Maine and the IIOIIhcm .--... """
in the rest_, of the Non,hcast, t¥
Midwest, the centtal ~ lnd f;lic
Pacif~ N~west: 60s m the IDicjAilanttalti&lt;;,.reiJ~!Jbe ~~:
c~
, exas."'"' mucli-of C
_
ma; and 70s m most of the South
east and So~thwest.

Kroger, _Union reach tentative agreement · __

W. VA.

C1D02Accu-Weal;her, Inc.

Weather
South-Central Ohla
Toniaht, rain. Low in the low
50s. Cluincc of rain "is IICII' 100 percent Thursday, rain, perhaps heavy
at times with thunderstom!s poastble. Hi&amp;h near 60. Chance of rain is
ncar 100 pcn;ent:
Extended foreciiSt:
Friday, turning colder with a

chance of rain or snow. Lows in lbe
30s. Higba from mid-30s northwest
to upper 40s southeast. Saturday,
chance of snovl'" flurries, mainly
northeast. Lows from mid-20 to
low 30s. Hiahs in lbe low and mid30s. Sunday, chance of, IIIOW flurries. Lows in the 20s. Highs in the
30s.

Area deaths .
Phyllis Rathburn
Phyllis Lorain Rathburn, 63, of
2149 Watkins Road, Columbus,
fonnerly of Meigs Count.Y, died
Tuesday, Nov. 10, 1992, 1n Doc·
tor's Hospital North.
She WM the dauahter of Floyd
and Garnet Wise and the widow of
James Rathburn who died in April
1985.
She is survived by her mother,
Gamet Wise, Columbus, a sister,

Dorolhr Rathburn, two brothers,
Paul W1se of Columbus and David
Wise of Whitehall, and numerous
nieces and nephews.
friends may call at the Wood·
yard East Chapel, 2300 E. Livmgston Ave., Columbus, Wednes·
day, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9/.in. Funeral
services will be bel at l 0 a.m.
Thursday at the Woodyard East
Chapel. Graveside services will be
held at 2 p.m. at lbe Miles Cemetery at Rutland.

,...,___ Local briefs - - - a
...,L...

Machine vandalism reported

Meip County Sheriff James M. Soulsby repated Wednesday
that deputies are lave•iprill&amp; the v81)dalism and lbeft at the soda
miiChines at Bia Wheel.
·
· Accordin&amp; to Soulsby, the machines were short cin:uited and the
cans of soda removed.
Jon Campbell, store manager, advised~ that the store w!ll
install c:loleck:in:ult cameras to keep the machines under surveillance, and to assist in the apprebensim of lbe guilty party.
Also, Bi&amp; Wheel is offcilng a $100 reward for infonnation lead·
ing to the amst and conviction of tllQSC ~bla for the theft
Any infonn!llion should be provided to Campbell at Big Wbecl

William Dye, Meip County Dot! Warden, reported to the Mei&amp;s
County Sheriff's Dcparnnent on Tuesday that IIOIIIetime ~ Monday or early Tue!day, loeb were cut off the do&amp; pound building and
several bqs of c1os food and a shovel were taken. Dye also reponed
that a white poodle. quarantined after bitina a person, was removed ·

Deer accident investigated

Daniel Drake, 42, of Reedsville, struck.a deer that was standing
on Slate Route 124 on Monday morning.
Accordin&amp; to the Meip County Sheriffs Department, Drake's
1985 Dodge sustained modenlte damage. ·

Bryant a"ested, returned

PMS units answer calls
Four caDs for assistance have been answered by units of Meias
Emergency Services since Tuesday.
·
On Tuesday at 10:44 p.m., Syracuse squad went 10 Third and
Apple for Naomi London. She was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
On Wednesday at 7:57 a.m., Tuppen Plains unit took Clifford
McCartney from the Arbau&amp;h Additioo to St JOII!pb Hospital. AI
7:5S a.m .. Chester unit went to Stare Route 248 for a chimney ftre at
the Junior Hunt residence. At 8:56 a.m., Midc!leport squad went to
Hobson and lOOk Janet Snyder 10 Holzer.

Middleport poUce probe B &amp; E
·A breakin&amp; and enterin4 at Delia Metal Fabrication, Logan
Street, Middleport, iJ under mvestiaation by the Middleport Police
DcpartiiiCIIL

Officer Bruce Swift reported Wednesday that lbc Bureau of
Criminal lnvestiption (BCI) lw been called in to .Ssisl in lbti
Investigation.·
.
.
.
Wilen uked lbout ibe time lllil breaking and entainl occwred,
Swift Slid that be did not know because POllee Chief Sid Liu!e bad
handled the initial investllation. He indicated that records oo the
incident were not available to him, that Little Is oo a three week
vacllioa lnd be may uy 10 cootact him.
.
.
Furda ukDd about what - talrcn, Swift said be did not know
for IUI'C but "'bouaht• undisclolled IIIIOUIII of cash."
Jim Pm:ker opera11es Della Mclal Fatncation.

Chesapeake woman .sentenced in killing
IRONTON (AP) - A ~mu . Huntinplll. W.Va.
.
· - sealellctd to live kl:ZS yean in
Ma. Mallin - 1e11tenced after
jail for ldlliDia wea Viflinia IDIIII.
chlnainl ber plel10 aulhY on the
Laura Mlrtin, 31, of Cbeaa- wluntlrY UI'III•IJI*'rchirge.
1011tenced Mollday in
Ms, Mutla wu ladle~ last
enee Couaa, Common Pleas
II1CIIIlh for lbootin&amp; Tayb 111 front
Court Ia lronllll iilo •neelioo with !l her home oo OcL 7.
the death ofRicbanl Taylor, 45, of
·

e,,

Fourteen were fined, includina
CINCINNATI (AP) - Neaotia- ui99 would begin voting on the from a two-month strike by 7,800
five who bad failed to comply with tors for the Kroger Co. and a tentative agreement this morning. · workers· at 64 Dctroit~area IIOI'es
previous coun orders, and four olb- 6,000-rnember union reached tatta· Results of the ratification vote were that contributed to a tbinl-q~r
ers forfeited bonds in the court of tive agreement on a new contract to be announced tonighL
loss of $20.4 million.
:·
Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed Mon- early today, possibly averting a . Details of the pact weren't
" If Kroger foDows the DetrOit
day !lighL
. .
strike at 59 stores in the area.
. announced pending the outcome of pauern, they will be bringina in
Fined were Suzann Eblin, Mid·
Federal mediator Lewis Man- the votina.
supervisors from other areas to run
dler-&gt;rt, $25 and costs, no opera- chise announced the seUiement
The meat cutters, clerks , bag· the stores, " said . AI Zack,
tor s license; Dorothy Boagess, after 39 hours of continuous nego- gers and stockers represented-by spokesman for the. international
Pomeroy, $213 and costs, menac· tiations.
Local 1099 had voted to strike at United Food aild Commerc1al
ing threats; Terry Hayes, MiddleUnited Food and Commercial 12:01 a.m: Thursday unless they Workers union.
The company and union were
port, $23 and costs, disorderly · Worlcers union spokesman George had a new contract. The union
manner; Christina Holloway, Mid- Quigley said members-of Local overw.helmingly rejected the gro- far apart Sunday on wages and bendleport, $23 and costs, disorderly
•
eery chain's latest proposal and set efits. The union asked for rai~.
and said the .company was declinmanner: Betty Boyd~ PoJ_Der.oy,
reportthestrikedateonSunda~.
.
$U3 and costs, public mtoXJcauon;
Workers were prepanng to piCk· ing 10 give them.
·
..
The union wanted a lbree-y\lllf
David Jones, Pomeroy, $213 and
et 51 stores in southwest Ohio,
costs, assault, and $213 and costs,
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) seven in northern Kentucky and . contract that would pve workers
menacing threats: Elmer B. Par- Direct livestock prices and receipts one in Lawrenceburg, Ind. The currently making $8.75 an hour -l!R
sons, Jr., Racine, $43 and costs, at selected buying points Wednes- company planned to keep the storeS increase to $10 an hour. It wanted
those makin&amp; $11.13 an hour to get
assured clear distance, and $50 and day by the Ohio Department of open if workers walkedollL
costs, no insurance; Boyd Brown- Agriculture;
Cincinnati-based Kroger oper- $12 an hour.
.
..·
The sides also d1sagreed on
ing, Pomeroy, $375 and cosl:l, three
Barrows and &amp;ilts: .50 lower; ares more than 1,200 supennarkets
days in jail, and 90 day license sus- demand moderate to light
· in 32 slates.
seniority issues, health benefits and
pension, DUI, and $63 and costs,
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs., country
The company still is recovering llVertime provisions. .
failure to yield; and Jeffrey Stone, points, 38.50-39.50, a few 40.00;
Pomeroy, $63 and costs, no opera- plants 39.50-40.50, a few 41.00.
lOr's license.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
Lottery results
On the charge of failure to com- points, 37.00-38.SO.
Hospital news
ply with previous court orders,
U.S. 1-2, 210-230 lbs., country .
/
CLEVELAND (AP) - Two
Dale Riffle of Pomeroy, Roland points, 36.00-37.50.
Ohio
Lottery tickets show the right
Veterans Memorial
Morris of Rutland, KendaU Lemley
Receipts Tuesday 8,100. Estifive-number
combination fn BuckTUESDAY ADMISSIONS· of Pomeroy, Lois Shane of Middle- mated receipts Wednesday 8,000.
eye
5,
and
each
entitles the owner
port, and Walid Zahran of
Prices from The Producers Live- Jewel Welch, Pomeroy; Ivan Van 10 claim the $100,000 prize, the lotMatre, Pomeroy; and George
Pomeroy, were each fmed $63 and stock Association:
~ announced today.
Kauff, Pomeroy.
.
costs.
Cattle: steady to 1.00 higbee.
Here are Tuesday night's Ohio
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Forfeiting bonds were Tamilene
Slaughter steers: choice 68.00Lottery
Slllections:
·
None. ·
Pettit, Pomeroy, $62, speeding; 75.35; select65.00-70.00.
Buckeye 5
Rudy Musser, Pomeroy, $60, stop
Slaughter heifers: choice 68.00- HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
2-12-15-16-31
sign violation; Melissa Snyder, . 75.75; select64.00-70.00.
Discharges , Nov. 10 - Jane
(two,
Pomeroy, $62, speeding; Charles
Cows : uneven, 2.00 lower to Miller, Gary Wolfe, Nooma Wise- t!Urty-one)twelve, tifteen, sixteen,
.
Smith, Jr., Pomeroy, $80, failure to 2.00 higher; all cows 51.75 and man Mabel Porter, David Swain,
Pick 3 Numbers
control.
down.
Ten). !son, Goldie Williams and
1-6-4
BuDs: sleady; aU bulls 68.50 and Grace White.
(one,
six, four)
down.
Births, Nov. 10 - Mr. and Mrs.
Plc:k
4
Numbers
Veal calves: 1.00 lower; choice Bradley Jeffers of Athens, a daugh·
Speaker named
l
-3-4-7
118.00 and down.
aer.
(one, three, four, seven)
Iudith Y. Bracbman, director of
Sheep and lambs: steady to 2.00
the Ohio Department of Agina. will higher; choice wools 42.00;52.50;
be guest speaker at the annual choice clips 40.00-4 7.50; feeder
announc~ments
meeting of the Reaional Council on lambs 35.00-53 .50; old sheep
Aging .10 be held Friday at II a '!I. 10.00-30.00.
Guest preac:be~
·
Country music: night
at the Sportsman Restaurant m
Rev. Eddie Buffmgton. GallipoCountry music night at the LotAthens.
lis, will preach at"Naomi Baptist !ridge Com~unity Center _wil.l be ·
The council acts in an advisory
Church in Pomeroy on SuQday at Saturday from 7 p.m. 10 midnight
capacity !O the Area. Agency !In
10:45 a.m. Public invited.
All bands are welc!&gt;me. Refres~­
Aging which serves e1ght counttes
ments will be available . Pubhc
Am Ele Power......... ...........31 1/8
including Meigs.
Gospel sing .
. invited.
Ashland Oil. ......................24 1(1.
Brachman will be discussin&amp;
Faith Full· Gospel Church m
··-'
AT&amp;T......... ......... ...............44 3/4 Long Botwm wiD bold a hymn sin&amp;
Gov. Goorge Voinovich's proposed
Community Care Choices legislaBank One...........................48 3/4
Friday at 7 p.m ..Pastor Stev~ R~
tion. The legislation is proposing
Bob Evans ......................... 19 3/4
The Daily Sentinel
invites the pubhc. Fellowsb1p w11l
changes in Ohio'
Channing Sbop..................37
follow.
(U8PII11·-l
A long tenn care system, that
City Holding ...................... 18 I(].
Pablilhed every afternoon, Monday
will increase lbe opportunlly to
Federal Mllg\1(.................... 16 318
Bazaar planned
.
&amp;broaBh Friday, IU Coon St. "-totGoodyear T&amp;R ..................69 l/4
by the Oblo Valley i'&gt;Ub~W.i..
choose community care over instiThe Asbury United Methodist Ohio
CompaDyiMultimedia Inc., P0111eny,'•
tutional care. The Area Asency on . Key Centurion ...................21
Church in Syracus~ will have a Ohio 45769, I'll. 1193-21156. s-.1 cl.uo
Lands End..........................29 3/4
Aging's Adv~ Council is made
poolop poid ot ~. Ohio.
bazaar Saturday in the church baseLimited Inc. ...................... 23 511!
up from citizens and elected offiment with crafts, vegeaable soup,. · Member: The Aooodoted Prwo, uo4 the
Multimedia Inc . ................. 27 1(1.
cials from Athens, Hocking, Meigs,
pies and baked goods.
Ohio New1paper ~tton, National
Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Rax RestauranL .. .............. .11/32
AdveTti•fna RapreHDtadve, .B ranham
NeW'IpaJM! Sale•, '193 Third M ernl8,
Washinawn Counties. Donald Bar·
Reliance Electric ............... .l6 2/8
New "11ft, New York 10011.
rett former-mayor Albens is the
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .14 1(1.
I.'OB'niAB'I'ER; Seod • . . . _ to
pre;ident of lbe Regional Co~ncil
Shooey 's Inc ...................... 23 SA!
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Cour t St.,
Star Bank .".......................... 34 1(1.
on Aging.
. .
Pometoy, OHio 46188.
The Area Agency on A11ng IS a
Wendy lnt'l... ... ..................l3 1/4
8VBSCBIP'I'ION IIATIC8
SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
program of Buckeye IDlls-Hocki~g
Worthington Ind. ...............23 SA!
By c.m.r oolllotor .....
446 4514
' .
ODe Woek. ......... ........... ...... ..... ...........l1.60
VaUey Regional Development DisStock reports are the 10:30
ODe MOIIth.................................... ..... $8.116 .
trict and administers approximately
a m. quotes provided by Blunt,
ODe Yoor................................. .___.... $83.20·
BINGLE COPY
.
$3 minion doUars in eldercare serEllis and i.oewl of GaUipolis.
PRICE
vices to the region.
Doily.... .....................................- ..25 c.n...

Lzvestock

·•

Meigs

Stocks

1

James E. Bryant, Red Hill Road, Lanesville, was arrested on
Monday in Pickerington m a Meigs County Wtllllllll charging him
with receiving stolen ptoperty. He was reiUmed to Mei&amp;s County to
face the cltargc. He was also charged with eluding an offlctl' after
failins to stop durins an incident on October 31. He drove his 1993
Chevrolet pickup buCk imo a field inc! Oed on foot. Later a cassette
. tape case and tapes were found in his buCk and were identified as
bein&amp; swlen from Todd Rotbbeg. . .
.
Bryant was later relcued to the Gallia County Sheriff's Depart·
ment to face cbalxes there. He is wanted for questionin&amp; in the John
Deere traeiOr theft rin&amp; in Gallia County, according Ill the Meigs
County Sheriff's DepartmenL

.

able to set lbe !able, serve meals, in the day, our mental faculties are
do dishes."
keeneSL We are more alert and lesi
Also: "Cars will be whisked nO. likely. to accept uncriticaDy wh~
,hands alona computet-driven hi&amp;h- the person speakina ·bas to say, · ~
ways lis the driver reads the paper,
But whe11 we are tired and the
looks at TV or plays a Fame of darkness bas its relaxing effect Ill)
hearts.with his p~~SSenger.'
us, our minds are m001 receptive 18
Not everybody was an optimist. what is presented 10 us.. (Ins1111111Ct
But the pessimists would appear to salesmen make most of their sales
be just as wrona. One alarmiSI said at· night.) The artificial darknesl ·
that by lbe year 2000 we "will ·and candlelight in some j:hurebe*
have traffic jams that will last for can produce the same flypnotie
days. A man willlesve the office at effecL
:
S on Monday: evening and arrive
Spiritual truths planted in our
home on Thlli1day."
minds in sucH a selling will grow .
Another prophet pictured a beaer.
:
world in 2000 where childr~n
"Slowly, through the sleeplna
would have to ao to the zoo 10 see hours," as Jtoben Schuller tells us:
a doa. Pets would have diecl out ''they will find their way to th6
because lba protein in their diet hidden ballways of the mind where
was needed for a mushroomin&amp; powerful .and silent and unseen ·
fon:es plber...
'
•
human race.
Here is my prediction for 100
The earliest Christians (like the
yean from now: We wiU be pnng Jews) wonhipe4 in the evening. By
10 cbwch in the evenina. not m the 2092 we will have rediscovered
morning. We will have diJcovered eVCI\ina's blessings. '
.
that, psycholoaically, a morning
Georae Plaaenz Is 1 syadlcatservice is all wrona. ·
ed writer for Newspaper Eater:
·This is why evening services are prise Assoc:llllloll.
better for our soul's health: Earlier

More rain, snow in Ohio

er. The rainy spell was being
caused by ·a nearly statio~ cold
front across Ohio. It was brinsin,!!
in moisture from the Gulf of Mcxi-

Dog pound v(lndali$m investigated

'

SomewHere in this United
Slates, somebody is preparina to
trash Benjamin Franklm.
Ben Franklin? Printer, statesman, . diplomat, author Ben
Franklin? The kindly, CO!pulent old
aendeman who invented bifocals,
flew kites and preached about sav·
ing pennies? The universal man of
letters who helped write the Decla~
ration Of Independence and the
Constitution? That Ben Franklin?
That's lbe one. He's got a big
birthday comina up in the year
2006. Nu!Rber 300, to be .exact.
And as sure as I am ~g this
keyboard, some revisiOnist historian is in the early stages of planning
a literary assault on Big Ben's
character.
· The fledgling author will prowl
tbrouah .the archives in search of
scandal and scuttlebutt and publish
a tome bearing a title something
like "The Franklin Fallacy." It
will sur~ly dwell on Franklin's
libido and his illegitimate son, and
one chapter at least will be devoted .
to his efforts to bribe lbe British
into granting land to himself and
·some American friends.
It's a new American in~ustry,

postlilaale era.

"Is this sn Infomercial. or an lnfots/nment

· MICH.

Modern values. erode he"roes·· of past

crystal-ball gazer is 10 project your
predictions far into the future - at
least I00 years. That way nobody
in your audience is likely to live 10
know whether you were ri&amp;ht or
wrona. ·
How many of us will fmd out
whether Time magazine tlirns out
· to be right about dlsWtt predictions
llllde in its special issue "Beyond
The Year 2000"7
On reli8ion, it projects that in
the year 2092, a century from now:
Catholicism will remain the
largest compOnent wltbin Chris·
tianity, the world's biggest and
most widespread faith. There wiD
still be a Roman Catholic ban on
women priests.
·
Old-style Protestants, though
shrlnkJn&amp; in numbers, will be the
leaden of the economic ruling
'Claas worldwide, becaUIC so irully
of them will still read books in a

•

•
•

.

'

•

•

By

.

I _;~~~~~fo~rec
=u
~
· t!_!~~or~~~~~~an~d~~~~~~
1.

'

The secret to beina a successful

·•·.·
·. :

...•

smaU share of the money dispcl8cd health depanment, coincidentally,
after the bwlicalie, details ferreted · was pan of the Virgin Islands govout by lnlerior Deputment investi- enunent that had just received $222
gators read 1i1cc 1 textbook case of million in hurricane relief from the
Federal Emergency Management
Agency.
.
1
Sources say lbe beallb depart. J aC
.
·
d
men,! "collaborated" with the
Institute in applying for the granL
No olbcr iJroposals were soliciled,
so. the Institute promptly got its
mone~, thOlJ8h sevctal non-profit
agenc1es and other soun:es were
the waste that SOJ11etimes results· also C!iSible for funding.
from fedCial disaster relief.
Orij!inally, the money was slatIn fact, a recent Inspector Gen- ed to provide crisis counseling and
eral audit found reason 10 question other psycholoaical services for
nearly every dime of the $(1.6 mil- hunicane victims. But the Institute
lion of federal money spent by the quickly found more opportune
lnstilute after . Hugo. Sorting ways to use the IIIOIICy.
throu&amp;h the accountin&amp; debris was
As the Virgin Islands were di&amp;apparently about as fonnidable as gina out of the rl!bble o( its worst·
sorting throu&amp;h the physical debris ever natural disasw the Institute's
caused by Hu$o: The-Institute's 'director was buyini himself "at
entire accoununa procedure was least nine pen and pencil sets tlu!t
limited to entries in the comP.!!ny ranged in price from $49. to $86
checkbook. Mote than $2.5 million cacti." Money was spent 10 buy ·
was identified by the audit as more than I 00 computer software
''unsuppoited costs.''
including aames such •
The Behavioral Institute packages,
"Friday Night Poker Club" and
received its slice of the federal "Life and Dtatb." Other software
relief pie after sendina an unsolicit· included personal finance proed request for fundin&amp; to the Virgin - ~s. "The Diet Balancer," and
Islands Department
of Health. The
.
'JS"ews of the Past"
.

k Anderson·
an
~'s'::r:.·.~dbc?:~;f:~~~~x:!; Michael Binstein

seeking to exploit a
1lllllrli diSaster, it can be 8 bonanza
of taxpayer dollars lavished on
"Slrell-free fun days," Thankspv-

ROBERT L WINGETr
Publisher

.

Thurmay,Nov.l2

Disaster relief
takes more than one form·
.
WASHINGTON - To most
hurriclne vicliml, emergency relief
effons by the federal government
evote images of shelter, food and

The Dally Senti

OHIO Weather

P11g1 2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wltdnetday, November 11,1992

.

.

'

The Daily Sentmel
..

W.dnledlay,, November 11,1112
0

.,

.,

.

A THEATER
WITH A CHOICE!

7

Sub8cn"b.n not detiriDK to tJ&amp;Y the cani· '
may rerrdt lft advance direct to The

Court news
Judgment sought
A judgment action has been
filed in Meigs County CofllmOn
Pleas Court by Citizens Natio.nal,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., aaamst
Sheridan L. Pieree, Long Bottom,
and others. The suit aUeges default
on an insaalmeilt loan contraCt in
f $3 942 90
. the amount o ' . .
Cases processed
An action for dissolution of
marriage has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas ~ourt by
Cathy Iane 'Hart, Racme, and
Monty Rae Hart, Racine.
· A divorce action has been filed
by Woodrow Hendrix~ Jr., Sy~a­
cuse, ~-• Cory Marie Hendrix,

-h-.

er

Daily Sentinel on a three, Iii. or 1 ~,
mooth buJ.. Credit wm be Jiven e&amp;niet'

Franklin, Wis.
A divorce bas been granted to
Di.ane Lou!se Smith from Gary
Michael Sm1th.
·
. lice
Mamaa.e
~
; Ma~1age !•censes have been
1ssued m Me1as County Probate
Court to Bradley Neal Colburn, 21,
Gallipolis, and Myrtle Mae Klein,
18, Pomeroy; James Darrell Ashton , 42, Henderson, W.Va._. and
Vicki Lynn Bradshaw, 37, Middleport; Charles John Snavelr. !r., 27,
Ratcliff, and Wendy Jo Phillips; 20,
Albany; 'and to Rodney Joe Oonch,
21. Langsville, and Delcie Kay
Phalen. 27, Lanpville.

No tubHriptiona by mail pmuitted tn"
anu where home canter aenice il ' ·
availab1e.
Mml hhoariptloiiO
1-'de Metp Co-f;J

.11/3/92.

SNOU'FFER

t!..168(

.

13 Woeb....................................... .

118W-.........................................

5~W..U ................................. .........

O.Uide Melli CoaatF

.76

13 Woob ............ ................. ............. ~ .40

118 w..u ..........................................uuo

52W..U ...... ........... .........................W.40

------------·--·-·.
COUPON
FREE·HEARING TESTS

------..
Thanks to the
Voters of Meigs
Co. Who
Supported Me In
My Bid For
County
Co••lssloner,

.

WUI.be give• II Melgs/Gama Couatles bJ .
~- HEARING

AID CENTER

1
I

FRIDAY, 110¥. 13, 1992-9:00·12:00
11 Dr. I. J1cbol 1•11••' Office
. II 0 . .cll11k Slrttl, b!!t!u
BEDORE lURING AID CENIII

1

Call'ol Free 1-100-'34-5265 for Clllmmediale Appointment

I
I 13121uttrll AniH (I•••• 7), Gtlll•ll•
1
614-446·1744
IWEDNESDAY, IIOY. II, 1992-9:00 ·····4:00 , ...
It ,_,. .,,.,_,. Un1 riHwtwfMS,r ''rat
Anyone who has trauble Marini«
WIN wllan Is lmlttd lo Ita" •
Fl£f ltaamg tnt to'" • ~Jirillntnn • """-..._this~ wllh yaufer
11I
JGif Fm
s1s.oo-.
IIIMA .. .. -CIIIPII5IIIIIII Rill
,I
IIIIID.
I

I

ntnla.

m"·nn.

L.'

�1812

Wedneeday,

Ohio

~

Mldwesl DlvlsioD rival in an NBA 1ame ba

Denver's MeNiehols Sports Arena Tuesday
nlzht. (Al')
,

brolhen - Cleveland's Mlrk and
B:r Tilt Allocllted ....
pointS.
.Tark ,tile Shark bas talten .bis
Danny Manning scored 17 of · Washington 'rookie Brent. Tltey
fUst bile our oldie NBA.
his 28 points in die fust ba1f fot ibe weze oo die court at the same time
Not lhlt c:a.ch Jeny Tarltania 'Clippers.
for only a few minute&amp; Made weot
seemed .too impreased by Saa HeatllO, Celdcl106
6 for 10 from die floor and 4 for 4
Antonio's 104-98 victory &lt;mr Mil·
At Milml, the Hell ..-d a 14- from the free-throw line, while
waukee Tuesday nl&amp;hL
point deficit. dlen nearly blew a 14- Brent mlde all four of his free·
" 1 don't think there arc any point lead. Olen Rice scored 27 throws, but missed a11 of his .
must-win pmes in die NBA when polats lllld bil four free throws in flea shots.
you play 82 games," Tarltanlan ibe finlll4.61111l001s.
LUen 101, Warrlon 106
said. "But Ibis was 1 big pmc for
ReJ&amp;ic Lewis led Boston with
At Olltland. Byron Scott's runus. I tbinlt ev«y game at tbis level 29 pomts. •
ning jump shot with 14.5 seconds
is importiDL"
Honellll2, Maak 101
rernaming won it after the Lalters
Tile Spurs dropped their fiut
At ·Orlando, Magic rookie lOll a 13-point fourth-quarter lead.
two games under die former UNLV Sbaquille O'Neal, die No. l choice
· Chris Mullin's off-balance
C()ICh. But David R~ saw 10 in ibe draft, had .3S points and 13 jumper from the top of die key at
it that San .-\ntonio's ~ump would rebounds. But tbe 7-foot-1 rootie the buzzer missed for ibe Warrion.
end.
, .
was blanlted in ibe fourth quarter
Sedalc Threatt had 26 PQints for
The 7-foot center scored 29 when Charlotte used some big Los Angeles, while Mullin scored
points, blocked 10 shots and pla}'s by Muggsy Bogues.
26 for Golden SIIIUI.
· . ·
grabbed nine rebounds. He also had
Bogues, a S-3 pd, ~ the
Trllll Blazen 100, Suas 19
five steals and five assists- .
Hornets' final six points and finAt Portland, Mario Elie sparked
. Dale Ellis added 23 points for ished with IS points and. five · a fOID'th-quarlet run 10 vil:lllry. Elie
the Spurs, who won therr seventh rebounds, four on the offensive scored 13 of his 17 points in the
consecutive home opener. Lloyd . end.
final period.
Daniels cootributed 21 points and Knil:ks 99, Nets !16
Charles Barldey had 21 points
Sean Elliott scored 18.
At New York, Patrick Ewing and 14 rebounds for Phoenix . .
Elsewhere, it was Sacramento had 23 points and 13 ~ for Tlmberwol¥tl 118, Manrlcks
99, the Los Angeles Clippers 97; ibe K)\icks (3-0). Ilaril:k COleman 104
Miami 110, BosiOII 106; Charloue led the Nell with 30 points; Kenny
At Minneapolis, a balanced
112, Orlando 108; New York 99, Anderson scored 24 and Dr112;en attack ·helped the· Wolves to their
New Jersey 96; Cleveland 131, Petrovic 16.
. .
first yictory of the seasoo. Chuck
Washington 92; the Los Angeles
Coach Chuct n.Iy, in his thin! Person scored 24 points, Doug
Lakers 107, Golden State 106; gamofordleNets,wasejectedwith West scored IS of h1s 23 points in
Portland 100, Phoenix .89; Min· two &amp;echaicals for arguing with the first half - when Mmnesota
nesota 118, Dallas 104; IUid Utah officials.
built a 21-point lead - Mil:heal
118, Denver 109.
Cavallen 131, Bullell92
Williams added 20 and Christian
At Richfield, Ohio, the Cava- Laettner bad 14 ~nts, 12
• Kings 99, Clippers 97 .
At Sacramento, the Kings went lien made 14 of 15 "'slrets in one rebounds and five bloc shots.
10 3-0 for the first time since 1968, sllell:h and tied a team record with Jau 111, Nuuets109
when they were the Cincinnati 46 points in die tbinl qllll'lel'. Larry
At Denver, ibe Jazz had runs of
Royals . Randy Brown made a Nance had all six of his blocks in 14, 12 and 11 points in overcoming
seven-foot jumper with one secood ibe tb4'd quaner and all 12 Cleve- a 19-point delteil
.
left, giving him a career-high 22 land players scored against the
Karl Malone and Jeff Malone
points. Brown, a second-year play- winleas Bullets (0-3).
put on an offensive show, with
er starting for the inj11red Spud
It marked the first game as Karl getting 29 points and Jeff
Webb, scored the Klilgs' last eight opponents in ibe NBA.for the Price . Malone scoring 27.

· BROWNS

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) No. 2 Alabama bas a chance to
silence all Its critil:s. Those people
who say the Crim1011 Tide has benefited from an easy schedule.
Those people who say that Alaba·
rna Is only half a team: all defense,
no offense.
·
.'!We probably have the toughest
road to the national championship," Derrick Lassie; Alabama's leading runner, said Monday.
''Mississippi State, they're a
great team. Next comes Auburn.
That's Auburn, so you can just
throw ibe records out the window.
Then it's the (Southeastern Coafer·
ence) championship game. And if
we make it that rar, we'll probably
play Miami in tbe Sugar Bowl."
Lassie bas a ~inL
Alabama .wall be on the road
Saturday against No." 16 Mississippi State (7-2), which Is still in conlention for the SEC Western Division title. Auburn. the opponent
Nov. 26, is only S-3-! but is the
Tide's biggest rival
'If Alabama wins the West, the
championship game opponent on

Thursday, Nov. 12 ·7:30p.m.

Sunday, Nov. 15- 2:00p.m.

Sports briefs
FOOTBALL
NEW YORK (AP) -Lawrence
Taylor underwent surgery 10 repair
ibe tear in his Achilles' tendon and
doctors said the New Yotk Giants
linebacker might be ab~ to begin
running in four mootbs.
The 33-year-old Taylor was
inJured in the thin! quarter of the
Gtants' 27-7 victory over Green
Bay on Sunday. Taylor had
announced Oct. 7 that this would
be his last season. However, he told
fonner teammate Beasley Reece,
now a sportscaster in Hartford,
COnn., that the injury might eause
him 10 reconsider.
·

•

MASON, W. VA.

6, San Jose 2.
McEachern assisted on Ron
Francis' first-period power-play
goal and scored twice m die third,
both times off passes ·from
Lemieu·x. Lemieux scored an
empty-net goal with 1:2lleft and
has~ held without a goal in just
one game thiS season. .
.
Ken Wre-get~ swung for JU~
the fourth tame m 17 games thiS
~· made 24 saves for the Pengums.
Oilers 4, Blues 4
Dave Manson's shorthanded
g~J!ll w,ith 6:31 left gave the Oilers
a ue w1th the Blues.
_Goals by Rich Sutter and Kevin
Miller ,helped the Bl~ take a 4-3
lead w•th 12:55 remammg, but they
couldn't hold it. Manson picked up
a loose puck at center i1:e and skated in untouched before beating
goalie Curtis Joseph.
Jets 4, Kings 4
Ed Olczyk's goal with seven
seconds left in regulatioo time gave
the Jets a tie with the Kings.
With goal1ender Bob Essensa oo
the bench in favor of an extra
attacker, the Jets controlled the
season.
puck in the offensive zone and
In other NHL games, it was defenseman Phil Housley took a
EdmooiOn 4, SL Louis 4; Winnipeg shot frpm the left point. Olczyk,
4, LOs Angeles 4, and Vancouver stationed in front (if goaltender

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
Mario Lemieux added tliree
more pointS 10 his runaway NHLIeading total So what's new?
Actually, ShaWl! McEachern.
While Lemieux cootinl~Qd on his
torrid pace Tuesday night with a
goal and two assists, the solid Pittsbur~h rookie came up with another
sohd ·game. McEachern had two
goals and an assist 10 lead !he Penguins 10 a 4-1 victory over 'the Minnesota North Stars.
"McEachern is a great goalscorer," Penguins coach Scott
Bowman said of his 23-year-old
rookie. ' 'He came in last yeat and
had a hard time breaking into the
lineup. He's really doing the job
. for us."
McEchern, who joined the Penguins after playing for the U.S.
Olympic team last year, ·has 11
goals - thi~d ·on the Penguins
behind Lemieux's team- and
league-leading 22.
··
Lemieux, meanwhile, boosted
his NHL-leading total to 48 points.
He has scored at least two points in
1S of the Penguins' 17 games Ibis

•

Scot" e boa •·d

.'

Nallaaii 1 •Ut:bll
A• 'd._

'

AIAGioIJTioo_olod,_

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AU..IIclli-

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21M/I
2 I
Mil I
a- .......... . 2.3332
New Jcncy ....... I 2 .333 2
PhllodclpiWo ....... 0 2 .ooo 2.!
Wubin&amp;uoa ..... 0 3 .0003

Special of the Week!

Re1ioaal Flnall Frlclay, Nov. 20

Re1Ioaal Fhaals Silturda:r Nov.
21
'
DIVISION V
All Games Friday
.
At Allllalld Commuaity Stadium
DaliDII (9·1) vs Monrocvillo (9·
1) 7·30 p m
·
At Berea'rb.aie Stadl. .
Independence (9·1~ vs. Sandusky Sl M.ys (7-3), 7.30 p.m.
At Jllncllay Doa11eU Stadium
Liberty Cenler (9-1) vs. Columubll Grove (9-1), 7:30p.m.
At Bellevue Atlaletil: Flelcl
Altica Seneca East (9-1) vs. Fremont SL Joseph (9-1), 'l:30 p.m.
At Mount v._ YeDow Jacket
Stadil!ID

DIVISIONW
All Games Frlclay
At Aust!IIIDWII Falcoa Stacllam
Youngstown Ursuline (9-1) vs.
Twinsburg Chain~lin (9-1), 7:39
p.m.
At Nllel Bo Relll Memorial Sta·
dlaiD .
Youngstown Mooney (8·2) vs.
Menlllt' Lake C8dl0lic (1~)~ 7:30

Newark Catholic (10-0) vs.
Danville (9-1), 7:30p.m.
At Mllrlon Hardin&amp; Stadium
Marion Pleasant (10-0) vs.
HOWII'd Bill Knox (9-1), 7:30p.m.
At Palrlleld HIP Scbool
Lockland (10..()) vs. Cedarville
(10-0), 7:30p.m.
At CtUDI StadiiUII '
Sl Henry (10-0) vs. Minster (91), 7:30p.m.

p.m~._.......... Arlin Field

Realoalll Finals Friday, Nov. 20

At~-

·

'

zona.

That gave the Hurricanes control of their destiny in pursuit of a
second successive national title and
their fifth siilee 1983. H the hil!h·
·est-rated teams continue to wm
Miami will play No. 2 Alabama i~
the Sugar Bowl.
"We just have to go out and

PO.IOY, OHIO

,¢P

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Sottile
........... 2
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PH. 992·2556 .

WU..LYOUR
UTU..ITIES
PUT YOU IN
THE .POOR
HOUSE TillS
WINTER?
CONSIDER

THE MAPLES

111181 be U

ve-t of age or hMclll'lijll*l
t

Equal Housing

FOI FURTHER DUAlS Wl TODAY

Opportunity

1-614-992·7022

....... 2

I'd. Cl

Local bowling

Bowling leagllC Team
Week of 10-fS-92
Rutland American Legion -62
Hacltetts Roofing- 46
Sports and Sluff· 38
Tonys Carryout· 32
Teafords Golf and 1iophys- 32
Team Ill· 30
Team High series Hackctts
Toofmg 1779
Team High game Hacketts
Toofmg 630
'
Women
,
Individual high series Dottie
Will472
MarleneWilson454
Individual high game Dottie
Will 181
I
Pat Carson 177
Men
Individual high series Dewey
Smith474
Larry Dugan 473
Individual high game Larry
Dugan 194
Bub Stivers 175

t

maer

.Sports briefs

BASEBALL
BASKETBALL
ATLANTA (AP) - Neilher the
SPRINGFIELl&gt;, Mass. (AP) NL office, the Atlanta Braves nor
Julius Erving and !lUI Walton head
a list of 10 players and ooe cootrib- oDeion;ders' agent could conutor nominated for the Baslcetball frrm a • n in ibe Atlanta Constitution
Sanders had been fmed
HaD of Fame.
Also on, ~ list for considera- $1 ,000 for dousing CBS analyst
tion by the honors commattee are Tim McCarver with water.
The newspaper said Sanders,
former &amp;layers Walt Bellamy,
Richie uerin, Dan Issei, Dick who dumped a bucket of ice water
McGuire, Calvin Murphy. Arinc and two otberbuckets of water oo
Meyers, Juliana Semenova and McCarver during the Brsves • celeEileen Banks Sprouse. Grady bration after beating Pittsburgh in
Lewis was l)ominaled as a contrib- the playoffs, was fined Monday
and was appealing the decisioo.
utor.
.
A two-thirds vote of the 24.mem~ honors committee Is need·
ed for induction. Enshrinement ceremooies are scheduled for May I0.
HOCKEY
TORONTO (AP) - Mario
Lemieux and two Pittsburgh reammates are among the Wales COnference leaders in early fan balloting for the All-Star Game in Moo·
trea1 on Feb. 6. Lemieux led ceoters with 49,327 votes, JIIJOillir 1&amp;Jl'
led wings with 58,712 and Kevm
. Slevens was secood among wings
with 38,798.
Patrick Roy of Montreal led
goalteflders with 40,259 votes and
ltay Bolque of Boston (52,682) and
Bnan Leetch of the New York
Rangers (42,811) were the top
•
defensemen.

0 1.000
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pbj!edeJ(Ie!• .. ~. 7:30p.m.

,.Tiua~·•da1'• C..•

·

Minnllda at New II:IIWIJ, 1:30 p.m.
W~atOrlando. 7:30p.m.
Miami.·at Dllllmit. 7:30p.m.
All&amp;null San "-lo; 1:30 p.m.

••

TheTop25
By The AIIIJC:lated Press

JlbOiniA " Uurb, 9p.m. .,

LA Lakas at Seattle. 10 p.m.

• ~atOnldmSutO.IQ:30p.m.

Final prep ratings

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DIVIIION I
l,a..t.S..~(25}1(1.()

l,lln. SLXIYIIr(S)I~
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.
4,Mont!Wdw..liooo(I)IG-0

311
2U
230
201 .
110

5, ~(I) 10.0
6,1ln.- 9 - l
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7, C... McEJally ,_I
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76
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319
:171

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171
125
122
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The Top TwtntJ FIYe - I n 1bo A&gt;·
- - 11192 ooUtp
"hit fint:pllol YOIN ia paren&amp;huu,

plloo--

· 7,oal,...llbuod
... 25 ~k•llnl

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How 1
atato pud of lportl wrhc:ft and broad-

·-

~.

INSUUIICE
Ill Sec••• St.., r.ny

'

.~­

YOUIIIDIPI-111 .,•
1•111 SEIVIII
•,
. . . COUIITY
SliCE 1161
••

THANK YOU!

To. the People of Meigs
County For Your Vote of ,
Confidence. ,

Your Vote Was Appreciated. '

OLYMPICS
ATLANTA (AP)- The design
for the proposed $207 million
Olympic stadium, as well as construction and 'fmancing plans, were
approved by ibe panel overseeing
pl..ning for ibe 1996 Games. The
approval by the Metropolitan
Adanta Olympic Games AuthOrity
means that work oo the 85,000-seat
facility can ptoceed.

Robert C.
Harten bach

;

· Paid for by R.C.H.,
43748 RIIIMII Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio
----.-- ·

J:lltaolt at Chi.aao,l:lO_p.m.
Milwaubo at Dlllu, 1:30 p.m.
Allanw •t ~ 1:30 p.m..
s....._ II LA Cippoft. IIUO p.m.

'.

DOWIIII CII.LII
MULUI MIBSII · ..,

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

Sports briefs

.6fil -

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.3331
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LALU•l07,0.W..-106
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BaNnatO dr 7·30p.na.

I

THANKS

·

Ill
Ill
.O!JO I

s..a.m....!'9ALA~1J
"""'""-1100,
'

Rents are computld according
to · your
Income.
Lovely
apartments featuring wall to wall
carpeting, all appliances.

STAY WARM This Winter!
All PRIMARY unUTIES PAID

-

Plo...U. · ......... I
LAClippon ...... 0 3
T...U.J'•G._
New Yc:rt ~ . New J~y 96
MWni 110,- 106
o...lond 131, Wuhio!atca 92
a...a-112. OrWwlo 101
- . . . . I l l, Dollu 104
SanAnlaaloi04,Mil-91
lllllllll, - · 0 9

~?'~~-

TO MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS

'•

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Datvar
......... . 1 2
Mw...... . I 2
Sm Antonio ....:. 1 2
Dollu
0 2
0 2
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P1_DI_

$1.49
WIIH FRIES.....$2.19

Last week offers an example of .
Miami's work ethic. With a bye on
Saturday, ibe fust·leam offense and
defense squared off for four days in
practice.
"You either get betler or you
j;et worse , and if you. don't
amprove, then you're 11oing to get
beat," Erickson said. •~'we work 10
get better all the time. If you do
that, then you're goinF, to ptsy weU
at the end o! the year._: ..

SHERIFF

Clovcland
MilW'nkeo
Admll

.6GI
.6fil
.6fil
.6Q
.500
.500

KeUy Hmdey, tipped the puclt into
the net to snap ibe Jets' five-game
losing streak.
Hnldey finished with 4S saves,
including four in-overtime.
Canucks 6, Sbarks l
Pavel Bure scored !Wice as ibe
Canucks used four power-play ·
goals to beat the Sharks for therr
· third straight victory.
Bure scored once on the power
play 10 raise his goal totaliD IS !"
as many pmes this season. Rookie
Dixon Ward, Doug Lidster an~
GeoffCourtnall also scored on die
power play in Vancouver's first
game~ San Jose this season.
Jytk• Lumme scored the oth~r
Vancouver goal against goahe
Brian Hayward who faced 28
shots.
· '
Rookie defenseman Sand is
Ozolnicb and second-year pro Pat
Falloon were the only Sharks to
solve the steady goallending of
Vancouver's Kil'k..McLean.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. ("'') ·sued the same consistent policy Giants from New York to San
The San Francisco Giantl aren't today that botb leagues have for a Francisco after the 19S7 seuon,
movina anywhere. And because long time."
·
and Lurie bought the lei!D from
they're not, St. Pecersburg'l baale , !ase~ll officials cited their .· Stoneham in ·1976 fer $8 million
for bueblll is heeded 10 court.
reluctance 10 move franchises; no when the Giants were about to
Nllional League owners reject· . ~ has ~ified ··s incc the expan- move to Toronto. Lurie said in
ed ibe Giants • proposed move to 1100 Wuhmgton Senators became August that he wouldn't c011sider
Florida by a 9-4 vote Tuesday, ibe Texas Rangers after the 1971 other offers until a vote· on hl1
leaving 'ibe r.eam in die city of cable season.
agreement with ibe Florida gt'lql
canllld windy Cand1esticlt Pazt.
But this deal appeared 10 have a headed by Vincent J. Naimoli.
The Giants' future had been chance for ~pproval; Bay area vot·
" I honored that commitment to
uncertain since Aug. 7, when ers have re~~ four ptoposals to the utmost of my ability," Lurie .
owner Bob Lurie announced a replace,the Suck, declared unac- said. " I also fully understand ibe •
$115 million agreement in princi· ceptabfc by Lurie and baseball offi- desire of many of my co~ in
pte with a Florida sioup.
cials. Still, it wasn't enough. The major league baseball to try 10 fmd
"This is clearly a ha~~Jry day in· plan needed approval by 10 NL a way to keep 11\e Giants in San
San FranciacO " Lurie wd "I feel clubS, but QDIY got four. From all Francisco."
badly for the PeoPle of ·SL Pe1ers- indications_. they w,ere ~ ChiC~~L~o
A group headed.by Safeway Inc.
burg, who were eagerly looking Cu_bs,. Florida Mar~. Ph~ph1a chairman Peter Magowan con·
forward to having major league PhtliiCs and St. LOuis Cardinals.
vinced the NL to reject a move by
baseball in dleir aea."
"To have major league basebltll proposing a $100 million coun.Officials were popping cham- justify not ~ving .~ Giants~ ICJ;Pffer. Lurie would retain a perpagne corks at San Francisco' s -because of histone. precedent u centage of the team in ihat plan,
City HaU in a scene reminiscent of indicative of the di,IJ)licity and the and said he and his lawyers will
a World Series clubhouse But in dishonesty that baseball seems to review iL
St. Petersburg, it was angry 1em- practice," said Jack Critchfield, a
" If Bob Lurie should decide 10
pen popping into public view.
leader ~f Tamp~ Bay' s baseball sell the Giants locally, our group is :
· "Baseball let us down . ... effort. The•~ htStotic _precedents ready to acquire the franchise," :
•·
They've damaged us spiritually and last about one meeung to the Magowan said
they've damaged us financially " next." .
Naimoli said he h~ expected ·
St. Perersburg mayor David Eiscber
lt was the first time in the mem- the rejection after assessing die sitsaid. ···we're oot ~ing 10 take..this ory of baseball officials ~ .a pro- ua~?n i~ the past few ~ys. . .
·
laying down. We re going 10 take posed move formally was re.JCCted. We re exllemely disi!PJX&gt;mtfd,
thiS 10 the end and we're going 10 In previous instances, shifts were as I'm sure ate the wonderful· flllS
get a baseball team here ariy way slOPPed prier 10 a vote.
of the Tampa Bay .area who ~ve ,.
we can."
Florida Sen. Connie Mack, a supported our group," be Atd:.
It was tampa Bay's seventh frequent critic of baseball, said he "We've given this our best effort'·
failure 10 get a team for the Florida would ask Congress to rescind an~ played by all the rules. At tbis
Suncoast Dome whil:h -"two
baseball's antitrust exemption t ere- pomt,
we'll thave
10 assess what our•
"~-""'-•
t
years a~o.
.
aled by a 1922 Supreme Court rul- opuons are.
' ·. •
"It s a wonderful area and a ing.
Those options appear to bil ·:
wooderful market," said Milwau"It was a long 3 lfl months," legal. St. Peters~g has ~ ':
kee Brewers owner Bud Selig, the San Francisco mayor frimk M. Jor- 10 sue San FranciSCO,
league '
chainnan ofbascball's ruling exec- dan said. "It was an uphill battle, baseball a.nd Magowa!' s group., .
utive council. ' But the National and at this stage we've won."
San Franc1sco filed sutt Tuesday ·.:
League was very sensitive and purHorace C. Stoneham moved the even before ·the v~te was :
·
announced, apparently trymg to get :
a California court 10 take jiuisdic: •
tioo first.
"· '

WES1'ERN CONFERENCE

CHICKEN PATTY

nation.''

JAMES M. SOULSBY

......... 2

l

Ill

"At theW ef . t~ P - y

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) Coach Dennis Erickson admits his
Miami Hurricanes are in the driver's seat, and that's· when they're
IO"f~ 10 beat.
·
season games bring out the
best in Miami. The last time the
Hurricanes lost after Halloween
was in 1986; over the past eight
seasons they're 27-0 during
November.
Now Miami (8-0) is No. 1 with
three regular-season games left,
including Saturday's home finale
against Temple (1-8). The Burri·
canes replaced Washington this
week as the na.tion's top-tanked
team after the Huskies lost to Ari·

o.;...ao

2

Doaoi&amp;
lrldlllla

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
win all our games and come home
with another title," quarterback
Gino Torretta said Tuesday.
He makes it sound simple, but
then it's been six seasons smce ibe
Hurricanes faltered laJe in the season. That year they were topranked before losing 10 Penn State
14-10 in the Fiesta Bowl.
"Knowing you're still going for
all the marbles keeps you driving
and working as hard as possible,"
taclde Mario Cristobal said. "We
practice harder tban any team in ibe

...... ,3

MWni
Orltodo

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I'd. Gl
0 1.000 -

.. .. W L

New Yadt

c..anr...._...

Rtlioaal Finals Saturday, Nov.

DMSIOND
All Games Friday
AJ Cmton Fawcett Stadium
, Louisville (10-0) vs. Richfield
Revere (8-2), 7:30p.m.
.
At Warren Mollenkopf Stadium
: Akron Buchtel (8-2) vs.
Youngstown Chaney (9-1). 7:30
p.m.
· AI Fremont Harmoa Stadium ·
1Fostoria (10-0) vs. Vennilion
(8,2), 7!30 p.m.
AI' Lorala Daniel Stadium
'Amherst Steele (8-2) vs. Elyria
West (10-0), 7:30p.m.
At' Upper Arlhtgton Memorial
Stadium
·,COI~mbus B~khaven (9-1) vs. '
W~lrtlungton Kilbourne (7-3), 7:30
p.m.
·
At:Gabaana Lincoln Jllelcl
Columbus Walnut Ridge (9-1)
vs. Columbus Watterson (8-2),
lr'~;o. We~ Stadilllll
. Da 1Dn Chllminade-Julienne (9Y.
1) vs. HillJboro (10-0), 7:30p.m.
At Tr117 Memcwlal ~St. Marys Memonal (9-1) vs.
Greenville (7-3), 7:30p.m.

oUI'I'IIMIIST

EASTERN CONFERENCE

0ah'le

u .

BJ'OW1li 'l1ae ltCODd pme wiD bella ai 7:30 ad
that will. put tile HOllie Natloaai,BI!IIk M.-aallll
apinst tbe MeDoulcls Ea&amp;les- The wlnen will
11qnart off • Suada:r ane- for tile da-pl·
o::!f,. at 3:30, willie the lolers wUI meet In tile
c
tloa pme at l. Thole games will aillo be
played at Boll Rt!berta Jlleld,

Penguins topple North Stars 4-1

By Yrmchester .

PICKENS
HARDWARE

3rd Place

BIG BEND YOUTH TOURNEY • The Bl&amp;
.Bend Youth Fooeball toul'IIMint will lid under
way. Tltunday evenlDI at Bob ,Roberts F~ld In
Pomeroy. Th. e lint 11me will bella at 6 p.m.
when the Veterau Memorial Hospital Dolphins
tangle wl~b the D.D. Blake Construction

SHOTGUN
SHELLS
AND
RIFLE SHELLS
and Remington

•

MUSTANGS

and ranlced No. 2 heading into the
season .finale against Au6urn. The
Tide lost that game 30-20 and fell
to eventual national champion
Miami in the Sugar Bowl.

.

Sunday, Nov. 15 ·3:30p.m.

EAGLES

The Deily Sentinel Page 5

Giants will stay in San Francisco

Thursday, Nov.12 • 6 p.m.

No. 2 Tide has chance to silence critics
Dec. 5 probably will be No. 11
Florida (6-2), the defending SEC
champioo. And top-ranked Miami
(8-0) appears to have the inside
uack to meet the SEC champion in
the. Sugar Bowl on New Yearls
Day.
•
Alabama hasn't won a national
title since 1979 - ibe last of five
chlllllpionships won by the late
Bear Bryant In Tuscaloosa, learns
are stiU held 10 .that standard.
"Alabama J!eq!le expect Alaba·
ma 10 end up on lOp ev«y year,"
said quarterback Jay Barker. "As
long as we're winning, that talk
wiD lllways be there."
Coach Gene' Stallings is trying
10 stress the old one-game·at-iime
philosophy, but he knows his players have gotten in position 10 begin
seriously tbinking about No. 1.
Last Saturday, die Tide defeated
Louisiana State 31-11 for its 19th
win in a row and moved up 10 No.
2 when former No. 1 Washington
was upset by Arizona.
, ..
"I would hope ibey are tbinking
about it." Stallin~ said. · ~What's
wroog with thinldng about it? We
talk all the time about dreaminjl
. and dreaming big and liaving asp!·
rstions. Now, all of a sudden. you
want me to leU them not to?"
Alabama was In a simUar position three years ago: undefeated

PomtrOY Mld~=rt, Ohio

WednnclaV, November 11,1992.
DOLPHINS

·Spurs give 'Shark' first NBA win

.

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a Z5lb plAce~ IIIII M -

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..._

SEATI'LE (AP)- Billy Joe
Hobert was declared ineligible 10
play intercollegiate sports by
Washington afler an investigation
delennined that $SO,OOO in loans
the quarterback received last spring
violated NCAA rules.
Athletic .- director Barbara
Hedges said she didn't think athletic offteials had acted improperly,
and didn't think ibe Husltiea should
have to forfeit _any of the eight
games in which Hobert played this
season.
The investigation"'letermined
that terms of the loans, obtained
from ibe faiber-in-law of a friend',
were improper in part beCause a
. Jlfil!"issory note signed by Hobert
mcluded payback terms based on
his future earnings as professional
fOOiball player.
TENNIS
ANTWERP, Belgium (AP) Top-seeded Jim Courier b.eat
Jimmy ComMn 6-3, 6-3 and thinJ.
·' seeded Petr Korda defeated Kelly
Jooes 6-4, 6-2 in ibe first I'CIIDI of
the European COmmunity Olampionship.
In other first-round matches,
Tom Nijssen upset fifth-seeded
MaliVai Washington 3-6,7-6 (7·5),
7-6 (7-1) and &lt;Trant Connell beat
Henrik Holm 6-4, 4-6, 6-4.

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from Peoples Bank. Checks that overdraw your account
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pre-approved line of credit, your acc'ount
will be reconciled, and all activity will
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AskPeoplesBankabout PLC-it'sthe
Peoples advantage.

..

PHILADElJ&gt;HIA (AP) -'l:opseeded Steffi Graf routed Elena
Brioukhovets 6-0, 6-1 in the IIIICOIId
rouno ot the Virginia Slims of
Philadelphia. ln a first-round
· match, sixth-seeded Mary Pierce
beat Kathy Rinaldi 6.(), 6-1. ·
JNDIANAPOIJS (AP) - '(opseeded Anke Hu~ de"•tec! Audra
Keller 7-6 (7-3), 6-4 and secondseeded Nathalie Tauziat beat
Donna Faber &amp;:2, 6;2 in the fust
round of the looiwpoUs Classic. ·'

p~
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ByTheBend
.

The Daily Sentinel

~

wectl'ieay, November 11,1892

-Page 7

•

Chester UMWm.umeet

Beat of the Bend...

SEE OUR STORE FOR

·Double

..

•

Coupons
•

can't
joo lick." Ways wete
listed in wjlich fOU c:at 'I get AIDS.
Mrs. Frost placed a cross on die
by Bob Hoeflich
table u a symbol of the plii!P's.
COIIImitment to bring healmg into·
tile midst of the AIDS aisis.
:._
WOJDeD.
·:: Thank you!
.
· •
Thoro
116 food
The croup closed with ·r.o~
The ntulllljJI)eeiiOI!! of die progta11 W8l
· ' You Ualn were so supportive at cnrataiDmcntllld die tlmd niler il
••
to consider dtc impUcations of the DiWie' and the bonediction.
: tuppers Plains Saturday night being held far Bill Wild, Bla lle.t
Mrs. Kathryn Mora presided l!!l
growing number of children with
when a fund raiser was held on resident, who also Is a cancer
AIDS. The leader lit a candle for the meeting widl 12 IIICIIIbors p
:behalf of Don Guthrie.
patient llld _ . funds so bclp out
Christ. The 1roup sane MSavio~ senL Thetc were S6 sick and shu(;
; ; Tile acdvltlel held at die Tup. widiiOIIIe bla mMical bills.
Like a Sbeplierd Lead Us" with ia calls reported. .
. . llers Plains Elementary Scbool
Tommow niabt'• activities will
Betty Dean as pianist. Scripture
A food~ve for the cooperauve
: broucbt not only the Tuppers 1Jesin • ~p.m. with a aoup ud pie
parish was announced for neX1
was read from Psalm 23.
:Ptaini commlinitr together but die supper ud tha will be IIUIIIeiOUI
It was stated in 1989, AIDS in month.
•
~ntire - county and ihen some. musical gtoups on bud to c:...:uain
the United' States spread fastest
·There wu musical entertainmont t~~Jou&amp;bouldle evening. Coinci·
among heterosexuals, newborns
·· like crazy, plenty of food. and· an clenlllly,JOIIeJlb and lllll White 11e
and women. Thousands of children
-;llqctiiJII. Proceeds from ·die S.· heading IOIIIOrrOW night's .benefit
· have died.of AIDS in the United
' : dar nigbt event iotaled $5,863.10 but they are not relatives of Bob
StaleS. It was Silled by 1994 AIDS
• brmgii!J ctbe total raised 'to help · While who so ably hr"td die Tup.
IIUIY be one or the top five ca•1ses
• Don to $6235.85.
pm Plains venture.
of
death for U.S. children under
Once upon a frostY, NoVernb6'
Cii~~W CQlCUS • Arrllqe.ea!J have been naaHred 11r
•,' . Bob· White orglillized Saturday
If _you are unab'!' to attend the . Sutl'l
age
14. .
· . ·
mom
r
Clu
.,,
•
•
Cirnlll
Ole Ratlucl Civic Center on Dec. 2
· lugbt'~ fund raiser and was given benefit. tomorrow.mgbt but would
The
leader
lit
a
S!Dall
white
canRabbit season here, so I reacheil
wi•two
ll8d I
Santa's Christmas Circus offers 90
' terrlftc support by everyone. lilte to belp donations-·dtecb are
dle in memory of children who for my Shotgun
:
vi
r-a,
Ia
1•'at
Ia
tile
cirCus
trlldltloa
vluwdut
·Groups on hand to provide enrcr• to be~ out to Bill Ward--mly
have died of AIDS
1 called oul for O'Ben, alwaytl
IDd
lfll'IIIIIIL
nl!l
JeU'I
periCJrll!lllft
features
the
best
In
Jul·
!tainment included the Hutchinson be sent to the WhiiCB' at 4S9S SIIIC
A story wu read ~t a baby raring to go
··
;
111•1• balaaclac, ·~ale, .perform Ia I docs, and c.lrcus clowas.
: Brother, Stoney Creek, the Blue Rourc554,Cheshire,Obio45620.
infected
by her peiCI1IS bee..... bet
With his big eyes a spuklin~
A~
tlckelll
are
$5
Air
adlllt
or
ddld
with
tickets
at
tbe
door
.
:Graas Review, The Classics, the
_ :•........._
parents were heroin addicts; a his nose wet and cold
"
;Shady River Shulllers, the Bi'saell
A note came in from Jack · available for U ~ adllll or clllld.
street tid who was refem:d to as a
O'Ben is my rabbit do&amp;, bi!J
. Brothers and vocalists, Laura. CovertofBattleCreek,Michigln.
" throwaway kid;" and the Ryan he's getting pretty old
,
Guthrie and Allison Rose. Henry
Let me connect you with him.
While Slliry.
He doesn't run much 111)'1'1101(.
Hunter emceed the program and Jact is the younger son of Mr. and
A toy wu placed on a table in just hWliS kinda slow
.
,Dan Smith and Jim Carnahan con· Mrs. Arthur Coven who bad the
memory of the babies and young
,When O'Ben hil's a rabbit 'l ip,
dueled the auction,
·
Coven Bakery for years. The li!C
children who have died from where the rabbit sits
'
By the way, the entertainment of the bakery was recently convert·
AIDS. A flower was placed in
He will bark a time or two, so let
'1811 so long that there wasn't time ed to a low-cost hoaslng site and a
Chris Hill was the program ing the morning wmhip service at memory of all the street children me know where he'sat
· ;
:ror three JiOUps who showed up to nearby sueet has been named leader when the Racine United the church. UMW members will who have died and a diploma was
We hunted all morning, both
help even to take part. · The three . Covert St.
•
placed in memory of Ryan White. tired and kinda beat
Methodist Church met recc:ndy at · present lbe service. .
.
:
1
groups were Specks of Blue Orus,
Jack learned of what is being die chulch.
The annual Ouisltilas IJflrty and A green candle Of hope was lit that
Now it' s lunch time, me anJl
tbe Wriston Srothers and Middle done at die Jocatjon and writes: ·
Ecumcnism ud Peace was die dinner will be Dec. 14 at Sonya's prejudice: against all people with O'Ben sat down to eat
. .
Branch.
MI appreciate die naming of the !OPic with the~ ofbelping Country Kitchen. A SS gift AIDS ,.m end and that Jove will
We rest and eat in the dme oil
.
spot
\
( ...
Don who had only~ hcdle slreet after mr. family. My father members reahze that althoush exchange will be held. Plan·s wiD · prevail.
begins with each individual be discussed at the November
A poster was shown tbat Slated
from the hospital on Saturday was would' bave liked die idea of low
Close to a strC8Dl, on top of il
"1 have AIDS. Please hug me. I big rock
qnable to be on liand but a video COlt bopsiiiJbeing built tba as he lhc~~'C:wneaiical C1lrilliln COIIImlini· meeting. ·
•
Fruit baskets will again be dis·
was .done so ~e will enjoy the did 1118Dy lhinp for people during 1y, tbrougb prayers, bible study,
Lunch lime is over. and bid. 10
.e:ventnc many tiJ1IC8 over. There the depression }'ears. Oive my offerings and actions, can bring tributed 10 the sick and shut-ins
the hunt
·
:
people c1oaer so world ~
during the Christmas season.
·were so many donations to con- 1'-b to the CitY c:ouncil."
Just can't wait for O'Ben G&gt;
' bibute to the success of the evening
· ScriplUre readinp were read,
The penny. fWld collection was
Sandra Hendricks Manshe,
· a bncr
· th'IC~t,
L...
I ......,_
·evenallofthefood.
. · And ~t Ibis time every yw, group singing of •Lov~ Divine" taken, sick calls reported and get daughter of Harley and Irene Hen· jump
Over m
.
•. The next such event coming up we can be thankful we're not and the Utany or Playa' and Praise weD canis signed.
.; :
graduated cum laude from old Ben bark
The complete slate of officers dricks,
:y;m be tomorrow night, Nov. 12,at turkeys can't we? DO keep smil· was preaentt.d.
O'Ben
found
that
rabbit,
as
if he
SL Louis University School of Law
· .7J!Ie Meigs County Senior Citizens ing.
Each member was given a per· for 1993 ~e Lee Lee, president; in May and recently passed the coold talk
. ~
•,
You see that old Rabbit, H,e ·
sona1 rdlection card to enumerate Margie West. vice·president; Chris Missouri B.-.
• the tblnp far which sbe was thank· Hill, secrerary; Clara Mae Sargent,
•
She is a 'udicial clerk for Judge won'trun
fuL
treasurer; Ruth Steams, secretary Lawrence
O'Ben
and
me
and
that
rabbll,
~raham. Eastern Dis- we' n: justliaving fWl
The World Thank Offering of program resources; Sharon Hub- trict. Missouri Cant or Appeals.
boxes were collecrcd.
bard, membership chalt. Mission
We
don
't
like
to
shoot
rabbili,
She lives in SL Louis, Mo. with
·
. ·
The program closed with a coordinators are: Louise Stewart, her husband, Dr. Paul Manshe and we just like to_hWlt
prayer rl TIJankssiviDg wiib JIICIII· Christian personhood; Sue GlliCe, their children. Ethan. Claire and
For hWlting mbbiiS, we hold 110
bora panicipadnJ.
Christian global concerns; Robyn
deal:
Lee Lee I* s :Jed 111 the meeting Reiber, supponive community; Louisa.
Well, let's go ho111e now Ben,
which opened with the group Karen Walker, Christian social
IICltl November
te p n'• die UMW purpose.
involvement; committee on nomi·
We will be back again.
•
1 Officers tqnll were given and nations, Etta Mae Hill, chairman,
The SOS distress signal was
a tllank·yOil note was read from Alice Wolfe and Tammy Hill. fint used in 1909 by .. American
Fmnk;l:lrehel
Benlee Carpenter, districl vice- Membership committee !IICIJ)I)ers ship,-ttJa.-Anlpalloe, oft Cape Hat314961...eijdi11J ()ll!i.. )t~
president.
are Ruth Wolfe arid Lei$ Bell.
Middlq!ort, Ohio
tc:ru, N.C..
The 1993 Spring Retmit will be
De!:orations with a fall motif
The .f irst federal prisoners
bekl Aprill6111d 17.
provided backcround for n:fresh· arrived at Alcatraz, tbe island
111ft·
The IIOIIP CJipi sse d iiS sadness JJICnts serveil by Mariam Bell and prison in San Francisco Bay, in
CIDCII''"I ·•
upon die death or fonner seaewy .Lois Bell.
1934.
iiiOIIIber Mlybell 1111e.
The next meeting wiD be Nov.
law. II.
Abstract artist Jackson Polloct
Sue Grace aave the mission 23 at7:30 p.m. at the church. .
died in 19S6 in an lliiOIIiobile acciCreamed blbd chlckln,
report. The IJOIIP is interested in
Attending were Margie West, dent in East Hampton. N.Y.
ham,~ noadlaa becc!tning a Five Star in Undesig· Clara Mae Sargent, Lois Bell, Eua•
"UbertY don't 'A'Oik 111 good in
DlniWB 8tart Ill 4:30 P.M. .
nilled Giving and will wqrt to meet Mae Hill, Alice Wolfe, Gladys practice as it docs in speeches,"
GltinM, Cl'llftl, filii pond, :
tbll pt;
Shields, Mariam Bell, Dorothy according to American humorist
l'lllglo... ~ .. ~ •
Ruth Stearns, Robyn Reiber, McKenzie, Sue Grace, Louise Will Rogers.
gaalll.
Margie West ud Lee Lee allaided Stewart, Francis Roberts, Chris
The minimum di,stance between
Cany-oul IIIIo IIVaJiabJe. '
the Athens District UMW Leader Hill, Sharon Hubbard, Nancy British parking meters was origi~ prlallfti'Y%
Enrichment Day in Athens recent· Ervin, Tammy Hill, Robyn Reiber. nally cletennined by die length of a
· hour atartlng Ill 6 P.M.
ly. "Caring for God's GifiS" .was Ruth Steams and Lee Lee.
Rolls-Royce Phantan.
the theme and Rev. Rocer Grace ·
was !be main speatrr. Kenny Wig·
. apob about the responsibilitY
gms
•
y -A-L!
IQ the CDYIIQIIIIICIIL ...,......,up SCS·
sions were held in die aflernoon.
· ; THE NUTCRACKER • Tbe Parkerlbara Wbeelbta Ballet Co.,
The Carnplign for Children pro• 'wiD preseot "'''le Nutcraeker" lbe A..ea~
Sdloal aiiCiilorlgram wiD continue through 1993
: ·um oa Suacilly, J'1.0v. D at2:30_p.m. Advuc:e
tickets are availand Project Teddy Bear is part of
: ·able at Mc:Aiarney's Cbrlllbnu Sbop Ia lbe Atllenl Mall, or
theptopan.
be purchased by pbcme wlih VIsa or Mastercard by calllDi 1-800The new bulletin board is up
: 882-1148. All aeats will be resened. Amonctbe dance~."~ will be
and
die vwious articles and news
·;Nikki McGee u "Clara" aDd Cllril BaDdy II lbe "Nutcrac:ker".
•
ileml
will be~ each month.
: :Donald Lopez or New Yort City aDd SUJ Gunter wDJ be prillclpal
The
membership song was prac·
' :dancerf. Guater is also lbe resideD! cboreop11pher.
ticed and Election Day plans were
RACINE~
•
Finalized.
The annual dinner"lllld Christ·
mas Bazaar will be Dec. S from 9
:i
· Christmas Parade Entry
1 a.m. to S p.m. Food will be served
OJT FROM POll LOIN
1 Christmas Open House in Pomeroy will be held Nov. 29 by 1 durlnJ the day and baked iiCDIS will
COUNTRY ST1U
1 participating merchants. The theme this year is "Hmne Along the River 1 beiMiilaiW:
Alice Wolfe announced all
:t92" and the public is invited and encouraged to participate in tbe
members
11e to don"'C five crafts
J ~nnual Ch.ristm&amp;S parade sponsored by the P0111eroy Merchants
and cnft matiq is sliD continuing
,I Association at 2 p.m. Parade chainnen are.t;lill and Becky Quickel and
at the church every Monday. All
J information may be obtained by contacting them at Davis-Quickel
WOIIICJIIIe inviled to parlicipll.e.
COllY LOIIGHOIN
t Insurance, 992-66TI.
Nov. 22 will be~ Day dur, , Entry·in the parade may be made by returning this coupon to Davis1 Quickellnsurance, 114 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

"'M the' Olildlal a Hag" tbe lide of die piopalll presealed
by Mrs. Jackie Frost and Miss
Debla Frost It the Oc:lober meeting
of the Chester United Methodist

Poet's comei

Magic November

••Illes .,.,_at'

p.-.

Hill. leads Racine UMW
progr3,m during meeting

Manshe graduates

.:. . . 1

•

News notes

ucan

.

at

WAI.DCROSS'
SONS

'!f!'

••J .

PEARL STREET
OHIO

.

,....,.
rauu•IPKIAlc:ovt'Oif F"i11"1 r-------------------~
. ·~ . MlnliDIPIQI.LCOVI'OII f'iii"1l
I ,-------------------~
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t.:.::J
I
1101.
.
I I
MOZ.
I
I
flloauAoTtiCIC a.aD ..ar I I
AUNT...,... lfWIIT
I
1
Armoilt Bolofu 1 1
Bread t Batter Chips I
:
iOY 0~. GBT ONJ! : :
BUY ONE· GBT 01!1! :
,.

FREE !!

!

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

wAUD
POOCII.MDII'KW.COWDII f"iii1
1r-------------------~
lt.II-1VI...
L.:.::J I

I
I
1
:

I
I
Assorted Dills 1
BUY ONE · GET ONE :
IWUJI.

PORK RIBS

Autfl' MHI'I

FREE !!

SJ.39 ..

FREE !

1...-----~----. -':."'-~----.J L- ---- -- ~ --~~~- - - - ~. 1.. ----·-- ------"".!~!~-- - ..1

YELm

UST.
HEINZ

Fill

Crea111
'h $349
GAL

Gravy.

.1 1~0!

YeiYet Ice Creall a.s... *I

SEALTEST

HEll'S '

ISST.YIRim

Potato Chips

10 Limit

SPECIAL

:l 159
·-Coca·Cola .
Products

S
·
GAL
• Plt.e Eftatlft tllru lilt.

(

REGULAR
PRICE

IOTTU

·----------

~. I

Clean your carpets . · .
tor less than ·
3' per sq. n.

------~I

CHEESE

I MAIL-INCER.TIFICATEI EXPIRES 1213J79?1

:r !r'OO"CASH'
R
EFU'
N
D!
5

••

I
VALID O NLY FOR 'STEAM" MACHINE RENTAL I
I lo Obtain yq,.r $5.00 Cosh Aolund
I
' l• ·lliUl •.tl• ·• li '' ' lf :( . • H~ I ·
I 1, Murlltll
m
ol purchmo ·
I 2. M01l your { mg,nol c o :.h reyl!. lfJiu_...;•I•PI
1 w•lt l thr, ,-c-,u pl'l•d c •rctea
3. Thl~ comPt••ted otf•c •ol request form rnusr
J QCCorTipOr oy.your f.JI Or')l 'o l purr: ho~o
I Motl Jo: C:urpf~ l MogK'_ ~ ~~ 00 Lo~h l&lt;nlurxJ
1
· Jl O Amr 140/1 , ROII IInOif) M() ~1 /M~
·.,.O,Jlr..unrt.: - - -

I

Clfy _

I
I
I
I
I

~ 101'@

D&lt;r.,~ 'fC-ut nv .... S~::r•~•f'l
•
It:~

Cht1Cif!'11
fJQyS

Coli

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0

D

0
0

0
0 .

.

,~--

~egin

next week at the Meigs ·.
weekly weigh-ins, relaulion lliCIJ•
.C:ounty Health Department.
• . The six-week class seuions will niques, recipies, diet recall sheets.
,~ held on Tuesdays and 11tursdays exercise techniques, and other
:beginning at 6 p.m. Residents may phases or weight conlrol.
There will be a limi1 u to the
·sign up for eidler nighL All clasaes
~ free 'and will be held in die con- number who can be admitted to
ference room of the Meip Multi· each claSs series. To regilter, n:si·
purpose Building on Mulberry dents are to call die Meip County
Health Department at 992·6626.
Heights, PomeroY.·
• · lrach class will be held for two Jacqueline Sbin:het is the instna:·
tor.

1~1
Not• •" "' 1 · · t' · • • •• "
•· ., ··. " ' •• · • • .... • 1,
· ., ,.... . . . 1' . ,. , ••.1 .. ' '" ' • ' " ' h
·r.• ·· ·' ,• 1
I·•"
,·~·• • II-" JW • Io • l""' ' ' '"' 1·,.·• 1: • • ••·•' 1
,• r ~ · ' 1 r : o'• •
• I•' o h o '" 1 .•• .1 • If ' I •
' •'' "' • I · • I •t . o• • t1 ' , '/r• l ',•ol o• " ' " ' '""' ' ,
1'.'•" , • ·• I ' '"' " • '" I"' • " • · ' '" "I 10• 1 l oll•• J,_. ,, ·&lt; '' •·. 1

·, ·.. ~. . ,. ...... ......,.· , ....... 1'·· · ···· ..• ••

EXPIRES 12/31/92 .

I

This offer Is no t redeemable at store. ·
·----------------~·

14, 1112. USDA Food ~ ilnd WIC C01tp0111 Au ; hd • Not ~for l'tllc••hloll or Plcloilltl Errora.
.

•
I

-

The Xi Gamma Mu Ch~pter,
Beta Sisma Pbi Sorority, met
recently 11 the home of A.R.
Knigbl in Ponaoy.
Kay Lo&amp;an reported the next
meeting will be I movie ewitb
a llllp It Bob EYanS. C..
will
leave the Bradbury C urcb of
Christ at 6:15 p.m. She also IIOied
the Chrisllnu dinner and cruise on
the West Vi!Jinia Belle will be
Dec. witb bulrdin.lliine • 6:30
p.m. at Harris lllva1'iunt Put. The
COlt II S30 per per-.- with prime
rib on die menu. i1loee lllliending
should notify ber by Nov. 17 and •
no laler than Nov. 25.
The lift achlnp will be Dec.
1S at the home of A.R. KnighL
Charloae Hamin1 reported that
the meaopause clinic is on' as
pllnned for Nov. 19 It die Ienior
citizens cent« with a doCtor from
Atllens who will pn:aent a film and
hold a dilcussion liine.

.:~eight control classes to begin
·; ' ClaSses on wcjght control will hours and will inelude nutrition
education, stress mana11ement,

·---

·;~ :""

Phone - - - - - - - -- - - -- -----------

------~-----------------:~ ;

,..1'\e,e JP.nlo7a - - - - -

h(J ;e

., :

·l:School between I and 1:30 p.m. on Nov. 29. Following the parade.
·,:santa Claus will be in the Court Street Mini-park for all area children.

'
: Poo&lt;e&gt;~--------------....:
_ __..:_ _ _~. · ~ 'Uil; _ _ __

members meet

J·
;J: The parade will line-up br hind the former Pomeroy J llnior High

~~,,. I)

J

•
Organization---- - - - - - - ' -"'-"'------

12 PAI12 OZ. WIS

COCA-cOLA

s2.99

STORCI

ROUND BUNS

79c

12 Pl.

. DINTY MOORE

BEEF SHW

s

s1.99 ·240L
•

PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES WT
We Reserve The RJPt To l.imit Quantities

YOU CAN DO THE BEST.AT CROSS' .

-----

IN RACINE SINCE 1860

..

I .
l

79' ..

SJ.89 Ll.

XiGammaMu

Name ~------------------~--------~
· ------

1'
1
J,

J'

ptO(}I

1
per day

2 UTEI

-

HOLIDAY
cARPET

TOMATOES

'•

'

�.

w~c~...ay, November 11, 1882

~

Novlftlber11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

· Dr. Newman to ie~d writing wotkshops

'

Dr. Steven M. No-. Ripley,
llllhor of "bcum F10111 Steven;
"Worldwalt" llld "GIIIllliul of
·YellowllOIIO" will coaduct a erealive wrltiq worklbop 011 Nov. 21
from 9:30 LID . Ill 12:30 p.m .• the
Meigs County Pllblic J.llnry. Rcg-

lltrlliOII il tequired for lhll wort-

shop.

NeWIDID sp11111 feu yeara alone,

walking around the wodd. He ~ with open arms and rare expe-

ncnces.

TRACY GRUFSER

Grueser among

........

..

~.

At Meigs Hi&amp;h School, ar. has been in tbc Choraliers and
Madrigals for four yean, and lbc
Eleclric Youth for duec yell'S. She
is president of the choir. At solo
. · and e~ble ccmpefitions, she has
. received three superior ratings for
solos. For three yean she has been ·
. · in the Ohio University Honors

; ------------------~------------------------~--~--------~~-~ ·:::::;::::::=~C:::;::o=:=:=n=1=;:rn~u~n=it=:::y:===:c==al==e=::n=da===r~;:===

choir.

She has !Jeen in lbc Fraach club
for one year. on studcnt'cauncil tor
two ,years, an office aide for two
years, on the yearl!ooll: IUif for two
years, and in VICA, one year, lllld
Teenage Institute for one year. At
Meigs she is in the nursmg program
.
Tracey IS a member of the Hope
Baptist Olurch and is active in the
puppet ministry of the cbun:h, "The

-

12 to 14

Master's Messcnp".

Avg. Whole
'

The Shade ·valley Council of
Floral Aru met recently at the
home of Mrs. Sheila Taylor with
eight members and two guests
auending.
Roll call was lmSWCif.d by sharing annual or perennial suds
brought by lbc -hers. Devotions were read by Sheila Curtis.
State dues have been paid and
each member paid club dues for the
year.
Schedules wen: distributed for
the Christmas flower show to be
held Nov. 211111122. The club is in
charxe of jiJd&amp;ini.
New program books were also
diBiributed.
Mrs. Alice Thompson had the
prog~am cntillect-"Pusionlle About
Pumpkins" stating they don't need
pampered. Indians used
Seeds for the procein and
the
pumpkin~ with ~. berries and
nuts in them. They arc 1 good

.

Beef Loin

Untrimmed

Wholesale Cut
· Sliced Free.

' 39 •••

lit.

....

Can

n

1I 4 ·" Trim Boneless

SIO~~~~A. ~epum~

.

Reel U.S. Fancy ·

.Top Fros_tFrozen

Jonathan Orange
Apples
Juice

.Tol P.
S1r o1n
Steak

A salute tO Christopher Columbus on the celebration of the SOOth
anniversary of his historical voyage
wasread.
.
·
The club painted faces on
pumpkins and everyone voted on
which pumpkin was the best with
Shelia Curtis and Sheila Taylor the
winners. Shelia Curtis also won the
door prize.
Refreshments were served by
tile hostesS. .

•

.

41b. Bag

'

12 oz. Can

.

..-.

....
.

-

..••
:
•

:

Junior Girl Scouts
send water to
hurricane victims

.:
:
•
:
·

BeefLol•

,

.Ciorox

Gteen Giant

Regular Bleach
Gal.
Bd. ·

. ..

Pillsbury Flour
Limit 1 Per
·Fomily, Please

IUto 15oz.s

I Per
Family, Please
limit

All Purpose 5 lb. Bag

• ..

•

• •

~

•

::
•
•
·:
:•
•
•

Corn, Beans·or Peas
Can

\..

Prepriced 69C.
Jumbo Roll
,·

HI·D,I Towels

!2

linlit 4 P•
Family,

Please

$_2

For

Margarine
·

t

r

· ROCK SPRINGS • Rock
Grange will hold an open
meeung Thursday at the grange
hall at 8 p.m. Rev. WiUiam Middleswarth will show slides of
churches in Meigs COIUity. Public
invited. Refreshmenu will be
•

'

. : MIDDLEPORT • Meigs Local
• OAPSE will meet Thursday at 7
: p.iD. at Meigs Junior Hlgb School
: : ID Middleport.

...

Per
- Family, Please

out the clay yo~ need us. Like today maybe. .

MDnth

Direct

.

:

RUI'LAND - Star Ganlcn Club
• will. meet Thursday It I p.m. It lhe
· home of Mn. Juanltaltadekin.
Each member ilto bl:inl a lbanb-

Ji'Yinl arranpiiiCIIt.

••

.

j

Loans

199.!
--

Sprin~

.. .

Limit!

to do "Whatever it takes"to help you

·ss

REEDSVILLE · Free clothing
day, Reedsville Church of Christ,
• • 12 noon to 3 p.m.

Orange Juice

,.
$199°
0*

' POMEROY • Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Pomeroy, will
have its fall ' - -'Thursday. Dinncr will beiin at S p.m. and consist
of cream bated chicken or ham,
noodles, mashed potatoes and
gravy, green beans, hot rolls,
choice of cole slaw. apple sauce or
plctled .beets. Cost is for adults
and $2.50 'for children 12 and
under. Dessert included.

.•

Food qub 64 oz. from Concenlrate

Food Club 1 lb. Olrs.

3!1

Can You Believe?

; saved.

~

I

Halloween.

'

.-

J

tins don't have hulls on the seeds
such as Lady Godiva. Sweet nut.
and triple treat arc others. They
should be planted in run sun or in a
com patch with five to eight seeds
in a hiD of weD dnlined soil. Pinch
off all but about two of the pum~
tins for a pizc pumpkin. She also
DOled 1992 is the year or the pum~
kin. One pumpkin this year wu
reported to have weighed over 800

They are presently working on
their Thinkin&amp; Day country which
is Korea and are also rmishina '-"
their junior ciliz.en badge. In addi·
. lion to this the girls dressed IS SID' rybook cbanlcters and distributed
shost suckers at Overbrook for

For

•

=kin

Farm Museum.

U.S. No. 1

Hills
Boneless· Russet·i
Potatoes Brothers
Beef
10 lb. •ag
·coffee. -.
Sirloin

Pumpkins topic
·· of Shade·Valley
Council program

1'he Middlepo~t" Junior Girl
Scout Troop 1216 began its year b)'
collecting billt1ed wller to IICIId to
hurricane victiml in F1cJrida.
In October the members and
adults aacnded a son~cat in Park- .
ersburg, W.Va. Dunns National
. Fire Prevention Week, two representatives from the M"oddleport FltC
Depanmcnt, Larry Bycr and Bobby
Duckwortll, helped the membcn
earn their "First Aid Badae."
Eleven girls and two adults pnci~ In the Huntington Mall Lockm where they bid a fashioa show, a
dance, a movie, did cnfti and had
dinner and breakfast. The troop
toured the \'lest Virginia State

Star :Grange plans for
Thanksgiving dinner

....-·

. Who Who's lisliilg.

pounds.

try to country. He also has
appeared in ldvcrtiscments promotial outdoor prodiK'lS.
Newman holds a bachelor of
science depec in journalism from
Ohio Univenity and an·Honorary
Docb of Humanities degm: from
C~pital Unive:;a.: .He and his
wife, SIIZIIIIIC,
m the southweitem Ohio· community of Rip·
ley.
.
.
To register for the Nov. 21
wortshop call the Meifs County
Public Ljbray at 992-58 3.

Preceptor Beta Beta
memb.ers view film

....

Tracy Renee Gruell2", daughter of
James and Donna Grueser, bas
been selected for listing in tbe
. Who's Who Among American
High School Students, 26th Edition.
Grueser is a senior a1 Meigs
High School where she is a stut!Cnt
in the nursing JX'OII'lllll. Only one- .
half of one peroent of higb ICbool
· students are multiple boooreca for

miJliZIIICI coest til coest and COilll·

Today. he spends much of hil
time speaking, reliving 1ome of
thOse experiences aDd demotlsirating to his audiences that, when
~ compared to others throushout the
world, "we've got it pretty good."
He illbc first. ~ only person
in history, documented to have
walked solo around the world.
From
April I, 1983 to April 1,
..
1987. Newman walked in an easterly direction across the widths or
THE .OLD .FASIUONED WAY· Resldeats and italf'of Over••
brook Ce•ter, Middleport, made applebutter last week tbe old
lengths of tlie eastern United
fashioned way - In a copper kettle over an open wood nre.
States, Ireland, Northern Ireland,
"Together
We
Grow
Thru
Trav••
Among the residents who joloed employee~ and voluntceri In the
Scotland. England, France, S!llin, el" was preiCIICd by Ann Rupe 11
•I •
pro~ect was Grace Hawley, pk:tured here taking ber llim at stir·
Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, !taly, the recent meetiDt of the Pn:ccptor
••
rinc.
·
Yugoslavia, Greece, Turkey, Pak· Bela ~ Olaptet, Bell Sigma Phi
istan, India, Thailand, Malaysia, SOI'OI'lty, held at her llom!i. Video
Singapore, Australia, western · llpel were shown of her leCCIIl trip
Canada and midwestern U.S.
to the National Parks In California
Newman also walked, from .and
\VyOilliJia, Arizona and Utah.
October 1987 to December 1987,
J
~an Corder preside4 at the
the entire length of Japan and the mcetJng
and presented "inlcresiing
TO SPE K
.
island of Okinawa. Since his walks Facts About our l'lesidents."
A ·Dr. Slevn M. Newman, Ripley, author rA "Letters
he. was authored tile three books
. ~he next meeting will be tile
Adoption of tile 1992-93 Grange convention included; membership
; From Steveo~' "Worldwalk" alid ''Guardians rA Yellowsllllle" will
Chnstmas
party at the home of Calendar and planning of the annu· award for ,granges with 45 plus
: Clllldact
a
a-eallve·wr"'worQbnn, on Nov. 2ll'rom 9 :..,. a.m. to
and
has
been
on
book
tours
from
1l 30
,...,.
_,
""
the United States to Australia and Donna Jones. Each member bring
al Thanksgi~ng supper were held members; traveling granger awards.
· : p.m. atlbe M~lp County Public Library. Repatratlon Is
bas lectured to nearly one-half milan
ornament
or
a
Christmas
related
when Star Grange met recently at for Waid Nicholson, Maxine Dyer,
:_ required for Ibis worJcsbop.
lion school children of all ages.
!tem for a gift ~e. The price the
Pauline Rife, Christine Napier,
hall.
IS 10 be between ss ana s1o.
Opal
Dyer and Patty Dyer. Also a
The Thanksgiving supper will
Members were urged to call be Nov. 21 at 6:30p.m. at the plaque for the grange with the most
Clw;lotte Elberfeld to attend tile Salem Center Fire Station.
traveling grangers. Neva Nicholson
making of crafts for the coming
received a certificate for entering
Eldo~ Barrows, · legislative
craft show, Christmas parade agent, discussed the past election the deaf program; award of excel:. ·Community Cale•dar Items
· POMEROY - The Pomeroy dinner, Friday; 6:30p.m., Meigs wce~end. The show will be in the ~d said it is time for everyone to lence for community service report;
of Kenny Utt on Main Street JOID f!!gether and be a team again. Maxine Dyer received a gtange
• appe,r two days before • event Group of AA .will meet Thursday at County Senior Citizens Center in omce
in~croy.
·
'
He ducussed animal rights and jacket for obtaining the most new
:: aDd tbe day ollbat eveat.ltems 7 p.m. at the JTPA office in Pomeroy. Public invited. Bring a
woodland issues.
members in the state.
: must be received weD In advance Potncroy. Call 992-5763 for infor· covered dish. Meat and beverages
Eldon Barrows, lecturer, preJanis
Macomber,
deaf
chairman
: to assure publication In the cal- mation.
·
will be provided. Admission is Board of Elections will hold its
discussed
questions
and
answer~
sented
a literacy program consist... endar.
fr~
omcial count of ballots cast during about deafness. She also asked ing of reading the IOOth Psalm by
. ~
~S~S-Aspecw
the gcncral election on Saturday at members to have used candles for Freda Smith; a Thanksgiving .
SATURDAY
.::
WEDNESDAY
meeting of VFW 'Post No. 9053
LETART FALLS - Letart Falls 11 a.m. at the board office, the hosting of National Convention prayer by Freda Smith; Cancer Pre'~ POMEROY • First Southern Tuppers Plains, will be held Thurs:
in 1993.
vention for Women by Janis
Baptist Church, revival, through day at 7 p.m. to announce results of PI'O fall festival will be Saturday. Mechanic Street
Jancf Morris, women's activities Macomber and Cancer Prevention
.Friday with Charles Altlmore and a fund-raising project All tickeu Turkey and bam dinner will begin
SALEM CENTER - ThC Salem
• Henry Roc. Lamar O'Bryant, pas- an: to be turned in thal night Pub- at S p.m. Cost is $3.50 for adults Center United Methodist Church chairman, discussed the national for Men by Eldon Barrows.
There were 38 members. juniors
; tor, invites the public.
lie invited. Refreshments will be and $2 for children and free for wi.ll hold a bazaar Saturday at the needlework, stuffed toy and quilt
and visitors present.
:
served. The regular meeting wiD be children IUlder age two. Cake.deco- fire house from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. contests for the coming year.
Christine Napier and Pauline
raling and pie baking contests with
The neJ~t meeting ·will be the
•
COOLVILLE - Hunter's safeiy held at 7:30 p.m.
. ·
Food
will
be
available
and
there
Rife
gave their report from slate Thanksr·ving. supper at 6:30 p.m.,
all entries to be at the school by II
; course, Wednesday, Friday, Nov.
will be 1 bake and craft sale. Public convention.
Nov. 2 at the Salem Center Pire
. : 18 and 20, 6:30-9:3Q p.m. and Nov.
CHESTER. Shade River Lodge a.m. Saturday.
invited.
Awards received during slate .Station. Public invited.
·
:: 21 and 22_from_IO,a.m. to 5 p.m. at No. 4~3 F and AM will meet
POMEROY - Gospel music
. • ·the Coolville Ltons Club. To regis- Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the lodge
. : ter, or for further information, call hall in Ches1er. Officers will be concert featuring Shammah will be
_. Bob Pullins, 667-3831. Ed Rood, elected. All master masons invited. at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church, Laurel Cliff Road,
. : 667-6348 or Ed Wigal, fKJ7-«J57.
Refreshments served.
Pomeroy, on Saturday at 7 p.m .
•
Public invited.
•
POMEROY
Benefit
for
Bill
MIDDLEPORT - Royai Ambos•
•• sador Recognition night, Wednes- Ward at the Meigs County Scni&lt;xs
REEDSVILLE - Fifth annual
~. 7 p.m., Hope Baptist Church, Center, 5 p.m. Food, live music
Eastern
High' School craft show,
including country, bluegrass, clas• Middleport.
Saturday
9 a.m. to 4 p.m:, sponsic, and gospel. No admission. For
sored
by
band
boosters. Call 985•
MIDDLEPORT - Jim Oliphant more information can 367-mo4 .
• will conduct a bible study course
4231
for
information.
•
• Wednesday ar 7 p.m. at the First
FRIDAY
•
FAIRPLAIN, W.VA.- Liberty
• Baptist Chur~h in Middleport .
POMEROY
• Meigs County
•
Mountaineers
will perform Satur·
React will meet Friday at 7 p.m. at
• Everyone welcome.
•
day
at
the
Jackson
County Jamthe Meigs County Public Library.
•
•
boree
in
FaiJplai.n;
W.Va
•
MIDDLEPORT · Middleport
•
• Amateur Garden Club will' meet
RIPLEY, W.VA. • Liberty
MIDDLEPORT - Slate painting
• Wednesday at 7&amp;.m. at the home Mountaineers will perform Friday
•
class,
Middleport Arts Council,
• of Jean Moore. harles Blakeslee at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
Saturday, noon to 2 p.m. Kathryn
• will show slides of /:t shows by
•
Meadows: instructor. Cost is $IS
• the club and Midd eport Garden
Meigs
County
POMEROY
·
•
Commissioners will meet Friday at and includes all supplies. Call 992·
•• Club.
2242 or 992-7733to register.
IOa.m.
CHESTER - Past Councilors
POMEROY - Pomeroy Senior
MIDDLEPORT • Ceramic tree
Club of Chester Council No. 323,
Citizens
Dance Club will sponsor a
• Daughters of America, will meet top angel, Middlepon Arts Council,
dance
Saturday
from 8-11 p.m.
Abank has to decide what it
· • on Wednesday evening at 7 p.m., at Friday and Nov. 20, 6:30p.m. Cost
with
music
by
SmOkey
Mountain
· • the home of Esther Smith. The co- is $12 and includes all material.
Judy Dixon, instructor. Call 992· Drifters. Arthur ·Connan! will be
: hostesS is Ella Osborne. ·
likes doing. It can spend its time worrying
the caller. Bring snacks for the
6564 or 992-'7133, to register.
'•
snack
table.
Public
invited.
TH\IRSDAY
•••
SYRACUSE • Youth rally at the
POMEROY
- Connie Smith will
•
about coffee futures in Brazil .
RU1LAND , Round and square
• perfonn Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at Syncusc Nazarene Olurch, Friday,
•
Meigs Hi&amp;h School. The CC)IICCil is 7 p.m., for all ·youth ages 12-23. dance,. Saturday, 8 p.m. to midOr the price of real estate in Tokyo Or if its
sponsored by the Meigs Band Greg Cundiff will be speaker. night. Rutland American Legion
• • Boosters.
Hall. Music by CJ and tile Country
Refreshments
served.
••
Gentlemen. Public invited .
•
Bank One, it can stay a little closer to
POMEROY
•
Meigs
County
POMEROY - A meeting for
• those interested in helpinlto pro- Democratic Party, potluck victory
POMEROY
Mcigs
County
•
• vide rural water service to the resi•
home. And be ready wnenthe pickup decides
•
• dents of Western Meigs County
•
• wiD be held Thursday at 7 p.m. at ·
• the Meigs County Chamber of
that Tuesday is a good clay to die. At
•
Commerce
Office
on
East
Second
•
•
• Street in Pomeroy. Township
Bank One, we always wam to be in a position
trustees, water providers and $0V·
•
• e~liept senlalives are invited.

.•.
....

Who's
Who
For the third CODJCCutive year

He has made appearances on
over 100 live radio talk abowa
ac:roa lbe Uniled Slillcl and in foreipl COUIID'iea IIIII baa apjWed en
many Americll! and fon:isn network televiJIOIIllllc shows.
Articles aboot his ellpcditions
h&amp;ve appcarccl in new~p~pcrs· and

1993 ACCORD LX 4 DOOR

l-800-677-4994

5 1p11d, 1lr, power windows and locu, crulu,
AMIFMICautte, tlntad glus and full wheel

covera.

B4NK!!ONE

'

oiOnDitliluo, $10D.OOobonpklo Ill pi1Y111ri lill .....cllpolit.

~ittahes:·

Tolii ...... SII3lM

ATHENS

114NK ewt..ATHF,Ni M Mrnin I 0C

HONDA

"THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE*

110 I. St.., St. •ltlle•s, o•lo
lewC•Dt... 594-1555

•

591·2114

-

·

"f

C&gt; J992 Bi\NC ONE CORPORATIO~ All loans art subjcelto crtdil appravoi. 'Offer good on 36-month lllans
to $5,000. $50frepaic
fi nance charge wdl1mpac11hc rate. ·ror txamp.lc, on a loon of !5,000 )or 36 months, 1hc payments woold be Sl6 .32 wttll a rate o 9.Jii
(9.99% APR). Minimum loan amount is SJ,500. Offer expires Novemb&lt;dO. 1992.
·

'

'

�Obio UDillcaaity
Colle&amp;e of Oale&lt;lpathic MediciDe

Family··
Medicine
Jobn C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of f'lmllv MediciDe
Question: I recendy read a SIOrY
of a soldier who had lhe plape. I
thought the plague disappeared
with the dark ages, but I JUCSS it
didn't. Could you leU me and yo..reidets more about the plague?
Answer: The plague. alao Clllled
"Buboni~ flague· or "The Blaek
Death," dev1151ated Europe in l!le
14th century. One fourlh of the
population
killed by Ibis then·
new epidemic.
·
Epidemics of infectious illness·
es follow a similar pMtem. Initially
there are only a few cases that
serve to spread the illness. As time
progresses. the number of individu·
als with the disease increases dra·
matically. It is this period of dra·
malic upswing lhat most of us dtinlt
of when the term "epidemic" is
used. As time progresses, the number of people afflicted wi.!!l the ill·
ness tapers off to a low level~
. We are now in this "tail end"
period when plague is no longer an
epidemic but still strikes every now
and then. There ~ sporadic cases
reported in the United StaleS, most·
ly from Western slates. New Mcd·
co reports the greatest numbers, but
California, Colorado, Arizona,
U!ah and Oregon have occasional ·
outbreaks.
Plague is caused by infection
with a bacterium Yersinia pestis.
This bacterium causes illness in
wild rodents, like rats, and other
animals such as rabbits and prairie
dogs. The iUness can be ll'llllsmilted
to humans "r direct handling of the
infected ammal, so veterinarians
and hunters are at increased risk of
catching this disease. More com·
monly though, plague is sprrad by
flea bites. A flea that has bitten an
infected animal can spread the .
infection to another animal or to·a
human by biting them.
T.he initial flea bite that ttans·
mits the infection usually produces
liule indication of the severe illness
to follow. After a period of two to
seven days the infecte4 per'SQII may

was

Q .. , .. Hflclllcy

illness. E~~r~;: to pcn:ent of
peoplye de
"bubos" - aeverelv en
inflamed lymph
glands.
of namc:.
bubo&amp;
lhat give .B1~~~= its
AbouiiO to pertent of indiYidu·
als wi~ve fever, malaise, nau·
sea, vomiting or shock - but no
bubo&amp;.
. Tbe t~ird form of P.lague, the
pnewMmc type. occurs infrequent·
· ly by iiSelf. ~ it oftal oecan
as a comiJikuion in those lhat also
have bubos . Tbe pneumonia is
qu.1'te severe and-may progress to
death in two to three days.

I

..

To place an ad

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.H-12
· CLOSED

effecti.ve treatment for it now.
What is it?
.
Auw~r: Tbe difficult part of
· trea~ng someone with plague_is
makm~ the correct dl&amp;l!liOsls.
.Placue IS WlCOIIUIIC)R, SO it IS rarely
the first illness a doctor thinks
about when confronted by a person
with pnc:umonia and swollen l)'ll!ph
glands.' AIDS and other illnesses
are more common causes or these

•

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I :00 p._...Saturday
1:00 p.m. MOI\day
I :00 p.m. Tllelday·
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
tOO p.m. Thuroday .
I :Oil p.m. Friday

Public Notice

Public Notice

DIYIDSOI'S
. PLUMIIIG

lltlWIDS.WlL
G. . rlt,OW.
;61 1614) 446-M 16 w l-100-172-5967

-~

;al

31904 .........
Creek b ..
Mhllllepert,OIIIe
614-992·7144

BP OIL .CO.
HOME HEATING OILS
DIESEL FUELS • GASOLINE$

IMTATIOft 10 BID ON

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

opener motono Md track.
Tha doan wtl bll8olcl - ...
Tho.. who have any
...-!lone...., all lie New
Hnen Flr• Dept. al (304)

1·800·598·5654
or 614·446·11 57

1124444.
.. . . ..
lllclo m..t be rn lived by
12:00 P.ll. Nov-bor 11,
11t2. Bldll wll be opened lit
7:00· p.m. November 11,
11112.

Vouc!Mirs

Tho.. lnt•r••ted In

p'-" Mild

eulinlllllng bide

to:

AlTN.: 0..,.. Bay D-.
New ....... Vol. Fl..

•

2

11w F1111lly Of
ELIZA MARIE
HAYMAN.
g!Wfulty

"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John . C. Wolf, D.O .• 250
Grosvenor Hall, College of Osteo.
palhic Medicine, Oltio University,
Athens, Ohio4S701.

IICitnowlldgMthe

outmndlng-given to her CUing
her Ulneaa by Dr.
Douglelltuntlr lltd
the n&amp;nM 8lld...,. at

•

Contest wmners named

lb.

v.t-~~emor•t

-lbs.

Hoepltll 8lld !Ia
utend1dc.-ewlng

1. Must want Ia make excellent money •
unlimited Income potentlall
·

WILLIAM S.

U.S. GRADE A YOUNG l4·7·LB~ AVG.J

GOLDEN RIPE

Fresh Turkey Breast·

•••••ian•

Dole Bananas

end,...,-. w.

••ny

F
wleh to
th8nlc Revwend
Rogw G.- for hll
wora,o1 comfort.
Your C8l'lnCI liNw no
bouncl8.

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614-992~

11/11/91
IN LOVING

an aggressive organization.

4. Open Aoor ·Sell Both New ond Pre-Owned

5

'

follow Instructions.

IF YOU ARE INTERESTED APPLY TO

Terry and Donna
. Matthews
and
thank Continuity ot
Care, Greg I Mary

Wllll-,
Ann, Brl1111
WhO
Wll OUF
OWn .
prtvataiOidler.
To all the people
who aant flowers,
cards and stopped
by to help. The
Added Touch, · Deb
and Loretta, a big
thanks. Brandl

...
.

•·'

thanks.
Jody Gum, thanks
tor being there. Fr.d
Hottman, thanks tor
Ambar1a whHicluilr
ramp. TI'IICY, Lee,
Phil, Steve, Danlelle
thanks tor getting
Amber out and
being good frlanda.
LJ. thanka tor being
In Columbus when '
we flew your alatar.
home, Larry Mitch
tor all the things
you hal(e .done and
tor jult being there
(and a apeclal

'j

Amr.

Gal.

• •
REGULAR SCENT

Clorox Bleach

2·Ltr.

'

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, DIET PEPSI,
MOUNTAIN DEW OR

I ...

PepsiCo/a

'I

.. 't

•I

.• '.

.
j

'

FROZEN KROGER FAT FREE
DESSERT, SUGAR FREE OR

. Deluxe
·Ice cream

WITH PRICES LIKE THIS •••
WHY SHOP ANYWHERE ELSE?

Rave

thanks to •my• fll•

•

tty,

the · Stave
Henderson tamlty.)
Amber Ia out ot hlr
whHichlllr and ehe
gets .tier ,ana out

•

. .'
•·

'

'I J

:

-. ..•

·'

this month.
lt'a bHn a tong I

•

Hair Spray

j

'

months, but we
made It, thanks to

~'I

7-oz;

;' J

.

our friend anci •my"

Has Part-nme 7:00 to 3:00 and
3:00-11:00 OpenlnSM for .
State Tasted Nurse's Aides.
Salary based on experience.

For More Information
Contact Karla Hunter

For
I

Real Estate General

-====~~;::s:::::::::===~
f
OFFia 992·2116
'

'

liD EVIIniiiiG UHDEIIEATI
IIIVES e IDDIDOIS • SIDIIG .

li,

• ringing;
In my heart I
kneW thoM bellal
w.,. alnglng,
'C.uM they '-•1
IINint tor you

._. a..

FOr
'

I !.

An~~ntl

c••,.,,.,. ·

C•ll AI, 614-742·2321
1117111n

s........

$40.00aload
••llvertd•
(614) 992·5449

GUN

. BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB

tltt'12ill2

New Homes • VInyl Siding

New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE .ESTIMATES
.

SUNDAYS

12:00Noon

HOUSE IMRROWIIItl?
ClEAN II Willi
CIASSfiBIADS! 1.. '
'

ma.
It wu a very Sp41Cl11ll
Dayyou ...l
(Veterans Day) ·
GloryiGioryiCan
you !Mlly be FOrtyl

Factory choke 1
Qll9tODIY

614-949·2101. 949·2160
or915-3139

STARTS

2112192Jtfn .

GRAY'S TAXIDERMY

Real Estate General

00
Deer Heads
....................
.
. '190
Turkeys...........................'175• :

Fish•.••...•.........•.•.....*4~ per Inch

205 North IICO.ld Ave• •
...dleratt,OH ·
POMEROY - W, Main Stl'Mt ·- A view of the

LANGSVILLE - You'll love to come home to relax
In the country. In thia 2 bedroom ranch w~h
equipped ldlchlln, lilting on 13 acrea. II you enjoy
hundrig, lhllla the place lor you. ···
t42,~.

992-3131

NEW LISTING • Gold Ridge Rd.· 54.25+ acre.s inctudts
older 30 x 30 house, mostly ilmber, electric available,
mineral rights with property. $24,500
.,

.$17,500.

NEW USTING· LebonQn Twp. Bold Knob-Stiversville
Rd. 25+ aaes of vacant land. Good hunting, building 01

SYRACUSE - Colleg• Raid - Mechanic'• •
Spacial - Two bay gariJIII with working outdoor
holll, Wir.d for air C0f111flua;o and Mk:lllra. lola of
ahefi!M. elblneta for atorage and palldng liM.
•

•

.

.

.11,000.

MIDDLEPORT - A IOOfi'IY I room horllll with 4
bdrma. lmd 3 1.- ~ Modem kachln with cherry
clblnetl, Cortan counterta,., dlahwuher, llland •
worlt 11'18. Family room with ekyllghla, cathedral
celllnga, peaohtiH doare and windoWI, 2 ear
garage alld bUIITIIIII.
,
f71,100

R&amp;C EICIYinNG
BULLDOZING .

992·2259 .
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO ,

IIDDLEPORT - II you want prlviiC)I ne~r town
wllh • great Yllw, then w. have 1111 place for you.
0n thll 8. n llCrM you !)an build your dream
home. There Ia water and elactrlc: IIYalleble.
FLATWOODS ROAD- Allclrox. 4~ acres with a
great laying buldlna lite. ~ weter available and
ellc1rlc _...,ble. Almoet rMdy to go, jut! nHda
you.
•12,000.

Call (304) 895-3386
after 5 p.m.

FREE ES'IUIATES

beautiful Ohio River c - wllh thla o4 bedroom
~orne which hu a FA NG furnace, city water and
aewage, 1 Clll' garage, and new tiR out window•
throughout.
$11,000.

·

PONDS ·.

·

SI:PTIC SYSTEMS

mobilll home II tel $8,750

LAND CLEARING
WATER I SEWER ,
UNES
:··
BASEMENTS &amp; :,: ·
HOME SITES
.
HAUUNG: Umeetone ·.
Dirt, Gravel and Coal"

SR. 321 Dllnvtu. MINI FARM· 2·3 acres with 1 1/2 story
home 2 bedrooms. POnd. bam. QaraQe. shod, .......

PH. 614·992·5591

LICENSED ond BONDEO

~houoe,drlleclwetl,lancing. GoodpaWctrd. $22,500

12·5·tln

POMEROY· Wright 81- Unique A-Frame home wlt!l 10

rooma~~blllla, 2.72511C1'81, electric &amp; wood
heat
.
• patio, 2 Clll gar.ge. outbuilding.
$16,000
. IIIIIY oonalder raallllllble alter.

.....

IISSEU&amp;
.COMIIUCIIOII

x

CARPENTER· 10+ acrea with 10 55 !!lObi" heme, dug
Will. aaplic t.nk, blm, gar~Qe. gardeiiU.. $23,500 ·

POMEROY· 1 11;! Italy home with 3. bedrooms, rwwly

GUN SHOOT
RACINE FIRE
DEPT•

EVERY

remodeled, llde claddilg, pcireh, lull blloemenL $32.500

SATURDAY
6:30'P.M.

H2•22A THE NUIIIER TO CALL FOR 1ME lEST

VALUES AROUND! CI.EI.ANO REALTYI THE HAllE
TO KNOW FOR ALL OF YOUR HOUSING NEEDS!

FKtol r Choke
12GM1g1Shot

667-6179

S.Uiellr Enforced
1D-12-'12

~
D.l.'s
· FARMTOYS
All Scllet • Vlnllgll
Calhc••~h

S.. Dllplay AL.. .
QUAUTY PRINT SHOP
25&amp; IIIII 8trM1
Mlllll=rt,Ohlo
Mil
0..
Ew•ah•
lt ..7G4CIIo .
lctiiMI

..

•

.\

•

BUILDERS

20 Jr. bp.

All Hartlwootl,

Donna II tlw•a
•

,.

992-6472

Our Jackie,
In Pomeroy 40;y•lrwl
ago' I wo~ to beHal

hor Plus Ope•r
IMI
==-==

...

fMIIy.

&gt;

Pwc..... ef
leceinFIU

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

wanted

Amber would lllra tQ

~h 2 Trenamlttlirs

11112111'11211

USlD

THE DAILY SENnNEL
BOX729B
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

OVERBROOK CENTER .
Card oll'hanl'S

Gauge Choke

BIUSlACK
•
992-2269
.
·.

The HllymM Flllll

1

IIISTAWD PIICII
h7.;,$27s.oo 16v·$4so.oo
OPEIEIS IIIS'riLU._llo IP-$200.00 .

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

6. Must be wiling to leam and

11

UISED PDEL GAUGE DOOR

SHRUB &amp; TREE
.TRIM and
REMOVAl

Happy Ads

5. Must haVe professional attitude and
appearance. _

mEl INSUUTED .

Factory 12

St. Rt. 7
Cllesllin,

MEMORY
John, Aaron &amp;

3. Must desire advancement. · .

IIY

1:00 P.M.

6637

HOBAK

2. Must want a ptrrnanent Job wHh

ll'ld 0. Ewing FIIMI'III

Home. We wtah to
thMk • ..n all 1111
,...u... 8lld frlencll
for their
ol aympalhy llllough
flo..-., food,--.

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS
SUNDAYS

Qualit_y
Stone Co.

lnMemory

•

r

Sunday Paper

HEART TO HEART MEETING
ltiURS., NOV. 12 • 7 p.m.
Speaker: Steve Burris
Topic: Experiences of a Heart
Transplant Recipient
675-4340, Ext. 405

An infection with Y. pestis can
be effectively treated wilh antibi·
otic.s lhat are. lllmioistered through
an mtravenous (IV) tube. S treptomycin is the antibiotic that is most
effeclive apinsl plague. After two
or three days or treabllent M~ith it,
lhe penon ihliuld no longer l!'ISC a
threat of !pmlding the infecuon to
others, so he or she can lhen be
safely removed from isolation. II
normally takes 10 days of IV
antibiotic treatment with strepto·
mycin ror the infeclion 10 be tolally
cleared up and the palient to recov·

COPY DI!ADUNE
MOI\day Paper
Tuooday Paper
Wedneoday Paper
Thwodoy Paper
Friday Piper

....... Heaters.
Bmnetts Mobile Home

BUlllnl BOARD DEADliNE
~';e":!, =~
. 4:30 P~ M. DIY IEFORE
::~.!!-:-~~,;:.!
(4) ueed 12x1:t etUMnum
Pu.llclnoN
_......;._ _ _
....,...._ _ _....;...
· _..,..._....,. 1•~•1• bay door• with

S)'ll!l*&gt;fn!!.

Winners of the recent drug-free ley; fourth gr_ade, Eric Stumbo,
grocery bag conteSt in lhe Meigs Adam Shank, ~lly Cana, Michael
Local School District have been Stacy, Shannon Price and Andy
announced. Prizes were' donated by Davis; ftflh grade, Amber Black·
McClure's Famil~ Restaurant. Sub- stan, Bonnie Rutter, Sara Fife,
way. MtJloDald ., Dlllry v IIIIey. Jail Back, lillie S,... 8lld John
Vaughan's Cardinal Video Depart· Hill; sixth grade. Misty Hart,
ment, Video Touch, Charli~'s Mid· - Michelle Watkins, Stephanie
town Video. Home Entertainment Robens, Rachell Davidson, .TrenCenter and the Meigs Local Drug ton QuaDs and Rainy Walker; DH
Free Grani. Winners are listed. ftrst I, Ryan Tcrzopplous, Megan
through third. rcspeclively in each Givens and Jess1ca Gray; DH II,
grade. Wbm ~ are six names Duslin Fellure, Chuck Aeiker and
they are also listed in order of r~JS~ Jodi Reeves; and LD, Tommy
Queen, Evan Stumbo and
through third by groups or two.
Bradbury Elementary: fifth Stephanie l!urdette.
Rutland Elementary: a.m .
grade, Renee Stewart, Bethany
Boyles, Mindy Halley, Brandy kindergarten, Kimberly Reynolds,
Stevens, Melissa C.remeans and Jeffrey Baughman and Samantha
April Blankenship; sixth grade, .Pierce; p.m. kinder$arten, Beth
Rusty Stewart, Melissa Holman. Nicole Williams, Curus Varian and
Jenn1 Howerton, becky Johnson, Renee Bailey; first grade, Matt
Ben Crane and Sarah Larkins; Salser, Chnstine Miller, Don
L.D., Ry~m Cozan, Jphn ijerdman Hysell; second l!rade, Brandon
and Lester I..owcry: DH fourth and Black, Allisoit Williamson, Mallofifth, Lauretta Landaker, Brian ry King; third grade, Aaron BowerKlein and Randy Sharrer; DH fifth sock, Lana Barrett, Bradley Baylor,
and sixth, Trent Paxton, Erick fourth grade, Man Cotterill, Zach
Johnson and Daniel Kuhn; DH Williams, Beatrice Morgan; fifth
sixth, Rocky Sharrer, Phillip Erwin grade, Jake Birchfield, Pam Cade,
and Gary Reitmire; and kinder- S1acy Gilmore; sixth grade, Clay·
garten, Jerri Bentley, Lula Webb ton Tromm, Justin Jeffers, Ben
Fowler; DH, Jeremy Richmond,
and Chris Trader.
Harrisonville Elementary: Samantha Marshall, Suzanne Runkindergarten, Zac Cotterill, Carl , nion: LD, Ann Kauff, Jesse
'
Noel and Travis Hayes; rust grade, Williams, Michelle Roush.
Salem center Elementary: rust
Courtney Kennedy, Abranda
Storms and Sarah Lee; second grade, Joshua Ray, Devin
grade, Jessica Preast, Ryan King Erlewine, Shane Nap~r; second
and Jamie Hayes; third grade, Jen· grade, Amanda Smnh, Austin
nifer Reeves, Amber Haning and Cross, Jenni Priddy; third grade,
. Ben Haley; rourth grade, Chris Josh Napper, . Misty P!Jclcett,
Dodson, Benji Call and Tenaya Chelsea Montgomery; fourlh grade,
Spencer, ruth grade, Hollie Welch. Robert Johnson, Nathan Bumem
Raina Bennet and Crystal Jacks; Jenny Daniels; fifth grade, Orio~
sixth grade, Franco Romuno, Joe Barren,.Jeremiah Smith, Laura
Vance and Thomas Kopcinslcy.
Payne; sixth ~.Bridget Vaugh·
Mi4dleport Elementary: a.m. an, Lori KinnJSOO, Jessica~·
kinderg~n. Kerri Evans, .Anna
Salisbury Elemelltary: ftrst
Sayre, Elizabeth Well; p.m. kiodcr· Rrade, Ben Collins, Nikki Butcher,
garteR, Lauren Schmoll, Michelle Jessica Rosier; second 1rade,
Neece Uld Lee Bryan; rust grade, Meghan Haynes, Josh King, Male
Jonathan Larkins, Erica Poole, Barr; third ~ade, Mindy O'Dell,
Amber Alderson, David Boyd, Mcihelle R1ffie, Amber Proffitt;
Zath Schuler and Kim Johnson; fourth grade,
Frecker, Abby
second grade, Josh Simpson and Hubbard, Sandi Gilkey; fifth l!fade,
David Vance, Peter Ditty and BJ. T .J. Thomas, MarJorie lfalar
Cremeans, Carla Smith and Carrie Christy Phalin; sixth grade, J.T:
Darsl; third grade, Heather Fetty, Humphreys, Ryan Dill and Tricia
Corrie Hoover, Tara Wyatt, Davis.
Richard Michael, Tyler Stewart
Meigs Junior High post contest
'and Erin Gerard; fourth grade, winners: section l, Michael Wyall,
Cassie V8U$han, Stephanie Wigal, Jason Frecker, Natalie Granda!;
Abby Hams, Jessica Chapman, section 2, Jennifer Sigmon, Carissa
Harley McDonald and Britni Ash, Jeremy Morris; section 3,
Bevan.
Jenny Hayman, Sean O'Brien,
Pomeroy' Elementary: a.m. Michelle Ramsburg; section 4
kindergarten, Jade Hershman, Danielle Grueser, Nancy Whaley
Megan Garnes and Lacey and Michelle BiiiiiCD,
Kennedy; p.m.lrioderprlen, Regan
Shuler, Rochelle Gloeckner and
Eddie Fife; first grade, Tbt~rien
Carter, Aira Little, Adlm Bias, Ty ·
Ault, Joel Cleland and Felisha
Stumbo; second grade, Trenton
Randolph, Jessica Hooten, Katie
fefrers, David McClure, Jason
Murdock and Kayte Davis; third
Jnde,Jcaica Roush, Kris JCnkins,
Matthew Willilmson, Becky Cun·
iliff, Marvin Day and Crystal Lem·

SUNDAY

Bl LLFTL\ BO \RD

Qn 1\oa: I doo 't hear of people

dyina of plague as they did in the
Middle Ages, so there mwit be an

er.

AH 'l'u l's, Heat
P t:Fa es&amp;

-.

•

•

�November 11 1H2

1tJT 'N' CARLYLUI b:r Lany Wrtpt

32 11111111 llomll
fllrllll

~b:r...... 4e

/

71 ..... -

....

.

Television
Viewing

'

/

•

O f011r
loarrvne- lott.ro of
acramblod -dt

below 1o form four olmplo -do .

•

WED., NOV. 11
I!VENIHQ

I

HE E ,. R I

I I · 1• I I

t!Ats1l

12
A;r.~; IT MUST 6E
VETERANS DAY ..

lite

•
.r,_::R~I=;;,.L_.i-.._E=~=~~
I I I I'

I SEE TI-lE I=L'f'IN6 ACE
IS ON 1-115 WAY TO SILL
MAULDIN'S I-lOUSE TO
QUAFF A FEW ROOT SEERS

rally. He said it
toug h
hometown
being a politician because haH
your reputation is ~lned ~
r~-T..._I_M_N___
E_T_....,IIies and theotherhaH1s ruined
f--r--'TE:-lr-r--r--1 ~the ·····I

~
=

I lit IS I I V Com~l~te
by. f1ll1ng 1n

· I.-I..
. ....J.L-..I.L-..I.L-.J.-..1~

.

...,_ One TV Steroo.
Found: '•mall, m1 .., bllck dog,
m•v be tJrrler, found rn
Mlnaravllle vicinity, 114.og2.

Loat: Black cow, whit• flee.

'Js

World EKoollorrl Pllyl ,..,_ E&amp;R TREE SERVICE.
Trimming, Tree Reluwwal,
10rnblo
Produc:to
,lt · Croll
- LOST:
Female
Beagle, loU FIN,
1-100_.117-81111,
Ed. Trimming. Froo brown/black.
Front
19 313.
317-:IIITAior..,.. .
Mtrcervllle aru. 61.f.258-1318.

wi'lltetspots.

Saturday.

Lost

Euy

Cora Ylll Rd. 814·379-2901, 3702275.
,. .

Female companion with mlniMII
care dutiH for ttd41rty woman,

Lost: Pomeranian pup, black
and brown mixed, Co. Rd. 19j

WMkfy wag•, -M1R8rvll• .....

614·992-7093.

I

-

Wiio . . . -

-.v. 1111ot&gt; I

Nll1:

114,158. :at?-..:143.

~-D-W.Coll'lll-

p.rn.

-c..eor•r.........'

ofllr.~

• .trlmmrng aeotlmatoo, 304o

ALL Yard Salao Mull Bo Pold In
Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

to"""·

41 . HOUUI for Rent

Houuholcl
Goods

5I

114 t41 14M OR~~~

p.m. Saturday.

3 I t * - Houoo. Oom=
~
lnduded ,
R--od . WID -.Up,

Friday. Mondoy odftlon • 2:Qq

MOING SALE 487 Kathy 51.
Ploaoant Valley Ell. (bohlno
Stato Patrol oHico) Thur. ·Fri.

F1na nc1al
Oau...- W.gn.

Business
Opponunlty

LAW ENFOACEIIENT DEA, U.S.
MARSHALL'8 H1rJN. No

Yard Salt, Thft!a • Frl, Nov. 12 •

13. Elahl mllot Nor1h Rl. 2.
Flalroc\. ~ue bottlel, CIOII,

gltiiWIIO. horm looiO,

21

.

~.::.=-:.=~·C:: ~
755.atll1, Ell1. OH1155 lo.m. To

8p.m. 7 Dtyo.
-1110

JNCmCEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINO CO.
riC at iiiWndl thll ~do 111111pooplo JOU iuww ond
to ltnd monty llwo;;;;!, tha

To.._

Peopll

o=:" have tnvoOiTtiiltld

~:!S:.. - Brond
· No New,
Wll p100%

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

lllfOr.....
0140.

7TJ.5785.
"eattoa full tim• •uctlon....

licensed &amp; bonded statu o 1

Ohio &amp; Wast VIrginia, :J04.1137o
2216 or 837·2126.

Wanted to Buy

~Coli Tom AI Topo'i

111:114o11112~aa.

LAYNI'II'UIINII'URE

~~

-I'UIINmiAI£
.........d
I' r hulll Ma' 111 . . .112: · mL
olooollr M
WY,

Good UMd bwdmll. Cd 114-

-td

TlmJ1. portollrno ft.lloy Nlllllng
Lob l o c h , - lob ! D r Gold Coins. II .T.~. Coin Shop, ORO IIIMrly ..tdftg
151 Socond Avonue, Galllpollo.
In
Hoi~.
· - wrno
· bar
- c.afarca ..tho
o1
Wanted ·to buy: ulld rldlng Point P-IRI !!tglllor, 200
m~ra. Call 8 a.m... 5 p~m.,
lloln St, Polnl P - , WY
251550.
.
Mon .• Sat. &amp;t4:25&amp;-t490..

Top Prlc,. Paid: All Old U.S.
Colna, Gold Ring~ Silver Coins,

to

buy ,Avon

Employment Services

W.ntOJ:

Nn

to -

lorrn, 114oltll-o:l171.

on dolry

WANTED

OLDER WOAKEAB

Hyouorol55-ofoge.or-.
dor, ond moll .ITPA -

tllalbltlty guldoll-. tha JTPA
11 Help Wanted
Olilor Woikor Progrwm ,..,_ Tho P"'from, which IIi
'AVON" ALL AREASI Short your Stott ond Fodoi1ttly tu.-, oltime with Ul. You'll love the horo lrH cllnroom trwlnlng, lol'
compt~ny. 1-800.~-6356.
lh- ollglblo. Tho Plllllolpont
r-vo tnlnlng In~
Apptlcttlono aro no'! bolng will
ln.homl care to the 1
,
taken for pert tlma nursing aldl. will bo -lad In
Must be available tor all shifts. ~mont with lholr c NurH aid• claea will be offi.W Medlcald Proar1m. For mor.
wl tmploymant. Apply at formltlon caf Tim or .ludy 304Pomaroy Nursing &amp; Rahabill11· 272-11112 or wrHo lo : WCCSO
tlon Center, 36759 Roekaprlnga Inc. P.O. Bo. 271, Wayno, W\1
Rd., .PomorOI', Ohio. No phono 251570. EOE.
CillO pltall. EOE.
Appllcatlono oro now baing
taken It Pomeroy Nursing 1
Aohablltotlon Contor lol' Cor·
tilled Huralng Aa1latama. Apply

ot

38751

PomtrQy.

14

Business
Training

Rocksprlngo Ad.,
No·

phon•

Rotrolri
_,IISouthooiicall• . Bualn. . eon•·:r'~ YaMey

;:P',::'u:,::::•·.;:EO.:.E;::·,.....,---:-=-:-:- Plua. Coil lodoy,
_.31711
AVON I All Areas I Shirley Rog.I9Q.Q5.12741.
S.,Oarw, 3o4-675-1429.
Babyolttor noodod In Addovlllo 18 Wanted to DO
School

'district.

Also

tom•

wookondo. Agoo 7 and 10. 614- Abontiano: Sawing • Mending,

441·t021.

EARN

BIG BUCKS
CHRISTMAS

Sell A~n. 614--445-3358,

,.....,..or, ..~.Home

Notrl'llonk, Roclno, OH. eMoMg.
2210.
2 lledroom, kWf twwttr'a,- no
-rocto, 114-NII-31111.
N•40 loa homo, 2 ,.-. old, 4
acra. I mi. 11'0111 Holtw,
f31,000. 114 141 1m or :J04..

1'15-333t

---""!,-::-:=---FALL SPaCIAL SALE

II

ndtdFiriiWoodQak.Ashil
Hioltory - . . 114417-o-4311

noAn.lllcom

1111

i

--

Nlco-

or3bod,_
onct otorws, liol wllor

Pl... .,

Untum._ 2bdrm.-. nice -old, - locol rltllnrr,
ondcloan,no-polo, IOWlWiil.
dtDoell . . .......
,.
·•qulredj 114-012 3010
AUCTION • FUiiNrniRE: 12

12,1110,goarleond, 3044!11'1111.

_l'eni ...... XLT,M,PI, ;

PI, PW, POL. A111F11 ........ .
Ul
- . tM end - · 4WD: •
1141111011

It

I ttd 8Dilt

Fll•ood. Alh.

....

.
Bod---

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

2 Nubian-., 11W4N171.
Clltllt

~:

i

•

wm.w,

llllr

74

-

Aftl•lw&amp;

ChUck

For

51"".

-

: .
,

;
'

·.;• .. . '
Detll
I'LHTC~ •
·-~. . .~

..

EEKANDMEEK

9

tonko, -

.•

• •.

z--·-tn

·.

;:;:d

LllwH

'N-D WN&gt; FltoW.C( aloYAITTED

Home
Improvements ' •
'

_
....

'

(L)

a

---.....~=24~

8tl'l!olonk
.......... -~~=,
CO.EYANIIIITERP

lbtaranot .......,..,

.lao'-OH~ ·:

Z bedroom Town ...._ apta.

82

.._
Nllli
....1210.·to 1271.
*--

3711. E.O.H.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale.

Plumbing li ,;. ~ ·
Heating
•

Ellctrlc:al &amp;

-·hOmo,
::&amp;h..........._

Rlfrlgeratlon

lnoludlng lol

...... New M'wldo
ln:aluda• ct.uv.,, .....,..., tat~

··--... -.
1-IIIN37o

. .'

....
__
...... -.... ...........
--.
fulnlllllld

'

- d Will

=::=~#"

&lt;·

-

,

.

•

·3 11011 unuaual
4 Anc:IOiftl
5 llusk:al

8 Dallcloua
be¥1111•

2-

· 29 Hoi crora 30~..
. pilei' .......

7 Okf mualcal

Arllllee

nole

I Fall bloom

I

La.... • baby tll1lr
aflor Jeii.Jj811 a lui.- jab.
SltlniO. ...
10:00 (2) • IIJ LAw • O!door A
lhop tlhOOII and klls

Graph Matchmaker can help roo under· -kieu could pro¥8 benellclot.
1tand what to do to mlltet!le relation- TAUINI (April »Mer 21) Conditione
BERNICE
lhlp work . Mall 12 plus a long, self· that ·~ your material IICUrlty look
IWO~but'g..-..
.
addreaaed, ·stamped envelope to. hopeful tOday. Don't 181 opportunltlal
Stereo.
D
BEDE OSOL ' Matchmaker, c/o lhll.-ap-. P.O. that could enhlrtc:8 your flnanc:lal poel·
Gj. &lt;If• Cl&lt;l w.. A
defendent ..-~~o~~agea; ·
Boxl1428, Cleveland , OH 4-4101·3428 . lion slip by.
,
IAGITTAIIIUI (Now. DOle. 21} If 01. . . (MQ 21...... 21) You'll tunc·
Sydney's brOih« ~ lite
~.s....o:c
you'relooklng to -.pe today'a boring tlon belt today free frOm the reotrlcllve
8 . 0 . 41 Hotiii A lool&lt;
routine, pick a perky partner wtto Ia of a . 1nnuenc:ooa o1 01.,.,., Who might make
at . . pollclo 'II thl llllldieal
Lllmllarspirtt. Colllcll¥81y, do IIOinOIIhlng demandl on
mel tiMnt. AtlOid
tun and dllfooreott.
paoploo w1to could you dawn.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-M!. 111 II you CAIICEII (oltlnl 21-.lutJ 21) K11p c:ur·
11111 to opend your"""' productively to- rlflt whh -atodaJ, but don't try to
D 710 C1trb Will Pat
day, you 'llcleprlveyourMifafa..,uot · paraona11y direct them. Vou'N tare bel·
Aoba'llan
lulftllment. Booing o1 aerw:oo to others 11· ter kii!Mnlll low proflla mel alaylng In
10:30 l!lln c. •
at
LIOiiiOIIhlng that COUld •n you out ottha. the badtQrOURCI.
dOidNml.
.
.. LIO ,,., ........ 21) Prottrlllous paoo ;
. . Vlell- w. Hoet Krll
. Kr It~ ron prn ttl 1
Now. 12, 1 . AQUAIIIUI (olaol. ....._ 11) People pie COUld make you tell..-lorlwhomeetyoutorthellrlttlmetoclaywlll . today. Rettrlcl your rocta1 LJCtl¥lllalto
apedll
muotc
y~ L'f)lght be more fortunate In the
be lavorably lmproouood. Thla Ia good, , pill whO don't flnd II nacmrry to lmaheild In enterprl- - · you're no baC:aUte you're In a bOinllk:ltll cycle tor , :p.- you.
. "
encumbered by pirtnero. Sltuatl
81tabMihlng 1Ift ralatiOotlhlpa.
l .'IIIIGO (...... 21 ltp4 21) s-tCf
wtoere you participate with othera ma111 PilCH (Pitb.IO llarllltiD) A pleUanh . p1K01 WWt'l ha¥8 much lfPIIIIII tor you
Cll•
not offer you ooquat challoongee and MlrpriM coufd be In the ,otftotg at lhla ' today, erpaaltlty N you're involved In
-'""·
1 t-. A attuatlon thltt appearac~ to be · \~o1 cortopooiiU .. ....,.IDIO&lt;tlfd.
ICDIIC'IO (Oct. M-Nn. 211 You might ·d eaiiMd lor 1t11uno might lake an
to
, but ~to wll l;r:l .,--. · ,..
E;J
toa¥8 a rpoocltll ttiiCf today that can be' abOut·'- end-.. wccmll1. . ,laRA (lepl. D 1'IL
'fou _ ,
tullllled ~valued frloond. It shouldn't .U.S(......, 21·Apltl11) Ketp your · ,qultear. . . hlghlftll LICIIVIIYtodaJ
Boa• llalyflekt
trke inore than a tiUblla ltlnt to get thla cMnnelo ol ccronmunlcallon open taclloy· · 'In order to gr.uty your t • r tqaa.
~po~~a Tonllhl
Individual_to help you. Trying to paldl wl1h IIICIIvlcl.-o who are partlrw!t to . ~ Don'l on olltOirl to mlltOO. thlnga
Q.SI,l~.ow IIIII Mrt. Kina
up a broklfl ramance? Tha j\llro-• ~.. P" .!.' t!. plana . .An ~- of • l_happOin: IIIFIIIta brill rolling yooo..-11.•.
•.

al

'fOUl"""'

ii!:~eo.Q " .

·

r· ._..

'''"1-alv::.m

'3i

=~o811-.
.On_.

••••a....,.

l!na::·
eaptrrc ·- ·- --

, II4D'IIo. No~.,.! ...... ... ht •• ••• • ....
411.1011

e Larga truck

Olcllfl*tment. Sllreo. Q

1Ptay

PhWorolll'erlale,an

1 Balol caaler

(I). (I). t.eurll -

n•IJl• ro w•

' -

lllnl
21 Staal from

ill M8d ~ lau

. Paul gl¥81 up hla
rent-wtobOIIId !aiM 10 hil

•".

· - .... rllpoo~ - .

DOWfll

·2e Fllglraan

F..... Dowling MllltWIIIItlltltltiiMI

m

goariiiOIIII., 114oltiN411,

I

-ber

lArrJ Kina LIWI

8:30(J) •

-""lllna j ·
In ,.,.., ............ llllll
Ron"a TV - .

·~0140.

-

24

e

'
t

=..1~011.1..00..:

, _ Gtlllpolll, AI Utlllloe Paid
El:otpl For Eltclrlo. ,, 'llo.

1211 Por -

..,.

=

tall}

bpoorltitcOI

(2:00} Steroo. C

Allllton Motora. !"'Il bel Ntit 1
I ...- In llook, 11011',:

... Qolllpolla ,..., piiM . . . . . . . . . . . . - .

304-nut77.

-

22 Type or rrt
23 Mal-

Jackel

41!aldmo
hOtnel
50 Altha !Jtck
51 Ada181canca
52 Shot parta

aiNtt'rvtleNOW
DTopbnklloolng
Fe~lght bout: Jesus
Salud (42·5, 21 KOI} va.
Jesus Poll (24-7-3, 4 KOI),
10 rounds, frOm San Diego

hoildng, ....

=r.~ lntlde and~;

14li1D- n.......,.,aad
..

0:0:11 I

lnhabllanl

I

47 81110r'l

I(J MOYil! '-fOiCt F8tlllly

_.,,.... _lr,-rt~

r

Pass

31Siale
33 Yllw
35 Regrets
37 Cloormara
41 =•~v• .
42 North Caroft.
. nacallege
43 Govt. houalrlt org.
« ltlola
ov-olghl

Steroo.C

THAT'S WHAT
OL' BULLET
TOLD ME!!

1 ........ Full lith. 10 . . . . .

Read·the Best Seller

Golf peg

• • • • l n . . HMtDI
"" Night Corbin hunts down
her ex-&lt;:onvlcl brolhlt' when
he comer to toWn. Q
II]) • MeiiOM Piece Jake ··
may hl¥8 met hll match
when a MW teNnt FIIOWIIIn.

····•=t
-= _.
-

Cllllrttk:ll
llllllx
RIW mlntttlt

with too much womanpower'
when .1111 takes a jOb. Stereo.

For----.. . . .

-

~-)

1~ Tim Is faced

~~-~n

llolrlo-IDr--- ...
For Sate In Choohlro VII· l o l l r i - I I R , a n laat. I Roome, I both, lt· Flol
..... . • , Ownor, 14:30 P.M. L ltd: ..................
Pork.11+441o_or_
Phone: 114-441-1171 Allor 3:30 P.II.I14-441.00W.

Uln ·lrlnguagtl·

~-(l)·ttoonoo

j

nenl, ~111L

1 En(llnt round

8 Suacapllbloo
to bribery
11 Loll
13 PoiiM't
Lach14Wrl&lt;

W' ahe Is a virgin. S1arao.

.

..,... *•..., -.

ba

ACROSS

tltinkllboul his date who

10 A 6TAT6 JNeTI'TU'TlQio.l
F'Cf&lt;! '!HE REST OF HIS~

=

a".'

~= ~

Pus

Eut
Pass
Pass
Pass

The World Almanace Crossword Puzzle

Steroo. 1f1
1:00(2)• IIJ S1lnteld Jerry

~~~·-

""!.'!."'

~:

Nortb

.:;,. .:.:___________

w.

ServiCPS

81

Hfllb Kelley of Edinburgh has writ·

Plltona at Cltlcago Bulla (L)
(I). detea
Doaglora M.D. Doogla
young·
deaf WOII1Fin wllll whom he

ton truck

~or1

W..l

S..tlt

ten two more mini quiz books, "Test 1 •

1:30® .............. Detroft

R-~1001"
AUlD,
, WY.lnl!tt,
304-;

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Soutll

By Plallllp Alder

0 Young IUdM Rock Creek
toc:all tre upret OV« lite
. . -.. of a con'ile*l
murderer. Stereo. Q

-T..-Ioow,UIIdl
roboill, til t y - -Ina II Qt:
-2211 -~ 114-371.
•·
-

+AQ82

SetS teStS

• ,......... .

lnqWIII

Hay &amp; Grain ·

A Scotsman
·

ij''",•

~

- ··

Acctl80rlel

oato: holton, SlOG ond up: bulla.
11• top pool toblo wlnn $1000 ond up~ftor llpm,
cloth, $800. IIC aond, 304..75- IM HI 11110.
1171.
only. .

: : ; , • • .........

., 2 .
tJ71

..._The

.

lfl!ltJ

+J91

Your ·eant Play s• and "Test Your
Card Play 6." They are published.by
Opening lead: • Q
Gollancz and. are available for $8.95
from The Bridge World, 39 W e s t ' - - - - - - - - -- ---'
tiiCipeS. Steroo. Q
Street, New York, NY 10025.
IJl llulltll .
Toclay's band from tlle fint booklet
I]) PGA QrMd
gives you a good idea of tlle level of
w1to1111 Of goll'a tour major
tlle material. You are sitting East, deto&lt;.Fmemenll, Fred Couples,
fending against four spades. West
Tom Klltt, Nick Faldo and
leads tlle heart queen: king, ace, two.
.
Nick Prlco, compete tor $1
Wbat should you play now?
\Passively. You should return a trump,
~H.Ion .,., • Wander
.
Yuro
The blddihg follows British Acolleaving Soutll to his own resources.
I&amp;'
""
IIDes, North's response of two no- U you study the aiagram, you will
=-~~='!.:n.~ an
trump showing a balanced hand witll see tllat tlle spade return defeats the
~ 5~.,
10·12 points.
·contracl But il you play back a heart,
80•
caUMS
""'""''·
.,. a dummy reCl)
l!)lctooudnc
You can see two defensive tricks: declarer gets horne wtuo
Fronlloort A SIUdy of your red-suit aces. So you must find venal. His 10 tricks will be three
monkaya In Costa Rica; lite
two more tricks. It is likely declarer spade winners in the dummy, three
lmpolct of tllellongtwtty.
has a sin1leton somewhere, otllerwi.se heart ruffs in band and four club
SW!ao.~
·
he migbt have just raised two no- tricks.
~tt•Squad•.!:!:w!.,:"'
.trump to three no-trump. And thHowe-. what I want to ~DOW is
hit men bto.,.,_. S.:eo
atruiJ t.nunpe in the dummy llhoultl wily tlee~rer pl&amp;yetl dUIIIJIIY s heart
D • le&lt;•tw Hli., 10210 ·
,ring a warning bell.
king at trick one. It ts harder for West
It is clear you cannot risk a minor·. to find tlle trump swttcb than tt rs for
Brenda, 0y1en rnd Kelly
otrugg1e w1111 their,_
· · .suit 1witcb; and if you are getting a . East.
r.lationohlpa. Steroo. Q_
second heart trick, lt ·can wait. This is
&lt;!l-.- -INtlio n ...._
ill Murdlr, Sill Wroll Q
a hand oo which it is correct to. defend
• Cnlolt end CltiiM
'
~
-=~~-----------

Motorcycles

.._L

'I'A985
tA1062

K95

+AKL092

~~

ra--~~:;
- 't•Win
"-' .'
Wll
Car -Or~
,.. a Clll1t ttl 0110. ··- .·

Wlme. ..___ -

H&lt;ly lor - · ltl por. - ; 1112-3014.

a.-11, IIM,llolrtgooator, No
.

PELIWOI'I'T

EAST

SOUTH

7....
=-ID ..,lord a 8orr
••(2)• iiiUneolvecl
~The MitCh tor
POw Col. Chltrlea Slwinon
conttnues: a murderer

......,._1111111.112110.~.·

w- a

12110 Edga Of Oallllolll. - .
Gao Hill, Carport, Jloteiwnco,

pfL.IGAI'I'T

•

U·U·II

+n

+763

11

- Col t.~O:...':'ml
...
. • •..t'l
.
---.~~
. -- - ..~ .:

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

.·• il

·'

WEST
+&amp;43
'I'QJI06

On

D ...:=.:.:utrom Lake

i

NORI'H
+QJ 8
'I'K713

t

. . rreo~oly~~,..
,.,_ .---... .,.

...... P.110 414 Auto, ·~ .

Llntr&amp;.._~

PHILLIP
ALDER

ro.,... •lfwta•IOI..:

ti,FAMM A~,..

1114 . _ 1-10, N, I opold,

I

• Q83
. +K 105

- ~·Er.otllllriT~

·~ ANIMAI-

Condt

1

luml-.

AYIIlable. 614 4411854.

'

MO~E

- . · - · 114-

=~=-::-......:~:-::==
aou-bulooJII$70'- j 210 Hondtl 4 - - .
Z - · ~~d 01 I t
tl,t10AIIor4P.IL114-441-~IO.
Holter GOlla, · - • 1 - •
•
$171. .,..._. XIIIOO II I r. . . 11;000.
1117.
11t .......... 1:10 p.m._.

12XIO P_,
1250.110
3 lldroom., ....._,. - · · llonth. Rotor.,.., W.llr tur· Moln,
AD, Pt.
locurMy Alarm. Dept. 1 ml 210111.
P-.nt For town 114$1110.
411 0711
Salo By Ownor.li4&lt;441.a152.
4 bod,_., tully IRM!IIIId, now 2
For
wtrlng, ,_ point, 30U16-2130. qulrod
- · 1Dopootl
....
No PilL• Col
Allor
2 P.ll.
BEAUTIFUL HOU8E FOR SALE 114 ••• 0527.
HllloriCtl AIM Corrw Lot • 111
lloln St. Pt. - . t , W. Vo.
c:-ptoiiiJ .._._, 2 FuM Rlolnt . . . . .,. - - · •
lithO, 3 ~ . . - , Now z bo*-na 1210. per month
HVAC, Corpot. Avalloblo
&amp;mm_rd'llly. 114 ttl ?205.
$150.
..,_tiii':I&gt;M.no
Irick - · 7 - . 2 baths,
tO
JIOII!It.3_ mltoo lnlm J IR troltor 1321.00 pluo
town.
N4,100. ~JI.I260 .
Dtpoalt. ,.,.,..,
No ~· In:
Broodwoy 81., lllcldloport. 1Wo .-..uoeoaa...-CNMAcl
llory, 1
both,
hill,
nlco lol
I nolahborhood,
IM-1112
, 114oll2'-3183, 114- fumlollod, ...... plnnod, ..... 011114 - 112·7301
I
Fwalolwd, 2 or llt!lmo.IDr rwtt1
Good etartlr home •Move In" In Couoo1rJ llolrlo Pork. Tlut0101
conct.
- ·llnllhod
3 bod114room, a1 bath,topor1lallv

HolM Or lliiiMtiMnl 2 Bid·
l:'t':-4.:.Uc:,l,;;tii3=4·--::-:,--..,- ,_,.
In Ewlnaton Wfth AJC
FOR Babyoltling In lly Homo: City ....... ..... ..... 814-311U710
SchOol Dilto1ct. Aohoroncoo Or ...._7112.

'

u'=Jn~

on.. a..-.......- . uaoct

42 MObile Homes
torRent

~--

Sttreo. Q
7:01 (I) ....oiJ H. Ill u
7:30(2)• ill JMpr IIVI..D

AP- :nn, Cnrl!?jAIIIFM .......,

------

Apanment
lor Rent

t

Bronco, a.-o. PS,
a...,
,_ IIKIIttor,

Dri a:...-&amp;."diiinl toni....:
.. ,.Alii'.... 13.000 114-'

-

llo10Mytlt"'

D LJho OoN

Will....; ;=:-. ~w:;;, i;ii&amp;
- - ooilt . D au-. 114- TNia Cnoll Tno!ldnl, I~ - . ...... ~~
-~~~--;;;~~~~·;;;;::w;;;;;;;:
n No - · Lllvo 11011.lolo·. qn.,N FED BE-, Hondtl I •-•Ill
:100 lit llod, :
1-Name. ..
A Igor
F
·~·~·~·
...
Wutw,
Dowei8, ~R
8tw11o c.1or Slgno: llghtod olgn lUI lb. on ,_.
lho rol. 1 _...., ··--· ·
T.Y."alla.
1231.
S2H. wA1111t1. dol~ - .
good
...-.IOWlWOltl.:
1
IIIFRIOERAl'ORI.
. - . :!,~~ere,. S47.so box,
........LJnicM..In IDr 76 Auto Parts &amp;

Etc. 814-2&amp;6-1231.

tlgurl,_. &amp;'f4.388.11354.

. . -·Rd.

llornlnglon ~Q, (lllugt llog,..,. 8por1 -gun wldWr
tllyor illrlfl!ll~ ltU: lloos..._
100-20
lhot- ·

Coor 11 • tummi-..,lblnao
-==tl311:r:
Moura: ...... N. ~ ·
---..

Applloncos,

Z oom,.... botha, aonlng
Nvlng,_, -rm., tnl~·
In - . lully carpotod, 2 poro
"'-. -rlo - . ~~ IIDVI,

Livestock

otzo bod wfth
ond rnonrooa, $175: 114 u1 rze oftor 1:00.
lciddlir cer ullt, $10; drelaw,
opflngo

R~aton,

tnlll,

63

. ~·-~·~w_.
· -.~·~--~~~
box 2 .._, 1 ~'- 1 --k •

a.-

a

.

1111 · ' - ,.._,.,_ 4 - . .

mr

QJ.~L

214

-

~~-

Piatlc And - 1 Culvorlllnch
11:.tfm.A
1'hru 10 Inch In - k . Ron - . . ~:"t
Evono, .tockoon, 'Ohio. 1 - .._. ~ .._

For

1111 lq. fl., .ta _, lolL 2lf

PI~....!WW

ea:,.... Conofd:

Looming. No lnvonto&lt;y . .
O.T.R. ftolbod drl.,.. wanted, quliaa•u. . 111ect IMrbl:a
Avollable, Coli
11Hr¥1tw,
good pay, -tiondo, 303-711-41311,
Ell. 1001.
frlngoo, 304-11111 ,2957.
VENDING ROUTE: Qol . Rich
Clulolt'l No Wort lui Wo Hove A
Good. -do, Atfordoll~luol­

31 Homes for Sale

1113 -

llalohln C.rplll. h12 $10, 1'14-- T~ • Nou•aiblf f1 - 1:00
441-11144. ·
P.ll. AlOng W1th lloflulor loll:
Oolvea, , _ . . _ ... Cltlvll
Au grlcd. Al.l r - Collie To
le !I!Wihl In Doy Of lell.
TI'Uoldng .., _ A..U-

Furnhwe. 811 ttl 0332.

Air Cbndlt~ra. Guitar Ampa,

like

~. I1W17-7127 Allor I:30 P.M.

k

245-6887. .
Ulld Mobile Homos, Call 614- Sporto ~to onond
. 446.0175.
• wrlto Honilon High lchool
bublboll
.., tho
W&amp;ntod To Buy: Junk . Autoo ar11cto1 phil_- 1111-.Pilei
II.., hove
With Or Wllhoul MoiOfl. CaU good .,_ldgl ot boollllbol.
Larry Lively. &amp;14-388-1303.
Oonlacl lllndy K - Ed~
WantH to buy: Stationary Point , _ ..............
lloln St or caM 304..1S-1333.
blcyclo. 814-446-166t

Cont-.

. . . _ Price: 11.1100. · -

3 - . . . , - Cortlort, Uno
tumlohod. Downtown Golllpollo.
l33llllo . Ptuo -rhr DoDoolt

FrMtara, V.CR'•, lllcrowavea,

Would

-

Roqulrod. 11+441-

~Don't Junk It! Sell Ua Your Non-

Mojor
TV'a,

CUI. 14.200. 114 4111014.
...... _
E~w• 8yo. Coal
F - U.Od 1

COII'IIH Whal··'- DlrHt: FrDm
The Facleoy. Sol
Portha Oil
MttMtal And Oontt., Whllo

,_, Wan"f ....._ 1 VEND.

:13
1Ift- . -

-ti,DOO.
.. 114-(41
•
-oa, _ poneto.·

311 Oanlln Trlctor,

John -

Nollnl, 100% OaUIIIIlMd. Col Oolrl Saol SIHI Building And
303~3.
llntw{Qod o.a-.hlp. Bur Dle-

Rick Pearson Auction Compilny,
full time auctioneer, complete
auction
nrvk:•.
Ucented
II&amp;B,Ohlo &amp; W11t VIrginia, 304-

-.....
loft
~ · -. .·."""''
·~

Procluolo
loolurlng Amino Acid Body
llullollng. wtlahl onct tat
...... lannuf-. Avollablo ...
.Nulrlllon

EIICIIIonl Condition! 18 liP, 42"

Dopaolt I Aohoronaa,

BRIDGE

·~
r.H~
~~IIIIQ

73 Ylns &amp; 4 WD'I

_ . . , Ot Aid Phannocy.
ThoUM-yiOclol.

114-441-2301, IM-22S-ll12,
3 Bedroom. 2 Pull ..... P8tlo,
Goo
- · Quill c-.y
t~ Depot)l ....
•

Pold

g.....s Don'l mil• thl• one!

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

132~

. .

-

II=R.Hut

-

I bodt-10 -~h ~z 01
1 L
Pol1or Cnoll Rd,
3 ll1dl0om ~'="IF at
Pol1or Cnoll Rd,
1L

Wortdng

~.~~ ... Willi

PUAHCEI

the day before the ac;llt
Sunday tdillon • 2:00 p.m.

Color

Ne•~.Q.

YI'RA I'UIINII'URE AND AP-

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

9

.dillon

(J). .
Q
Cll l!l MltoHPII/L811FW

1.1erChJ11diS€

Holt - . 1o1 . on Pint Drive

Ren1dls

8

7·&amp;or~..:.Forbone

-To_: _ _
For Wuu.tnd Trip To ......

.

-·

I:JI (I) AMf Clflflltlt

35 LOts &amp; Acreage

Yard Sale

7

Doll-.
Onln UN.

. E-'ld Con

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCitAM-I.ETS ANSWERS .
" · ••
ToffN ·• Plumb • Nomad • Adroit • ABOUT is FOOD
After his first visit to the diet clinic my friend came
straiaht home alld ·started eating. 'I'm starved," he .
_ __;:m=u=nlbl=led::,:"a::H::the:;:
· ::y_:ta:..lk.:_..;_
ABO
. _ .UT is FOOD!"
_.

ONewZ-Q

I All . _ Aro11 luldlngo,
-

-11Chr141 - - 112,427
11177;
saa~n
N-

willing lo nogollato llv.ln or

114-251-1317 lh., 5

&amp;7:.::m111 Steroo. Q

you develop from lftp No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

•

• o•caa ...... a

3466.

8

.the ctl~k1.• quoted
the m•SSJng words

a

'I

Pt.._

.

'D,

A F C,

IXIM.
PPII

S NI I

HXN

IDIIM

I K M

,,

LM,MCFI

AD'

XC

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RESURFACING • l•ue 2 money hu beta
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paved.

WASHINGTON (Al') - The watched in mild, cloudy weather as as he entered the grounds, some
Vietnam Veterans Memorial, the Mayor David Dinkins walked veterans told him "Welcome
black granite wall with the names along Fifth Avenue behind a home" and others said, "Bring
of nearly 60,000 dead and missing, Marine Corps color guard to take 'em home," referring to uncertain~
drew a president, a vice president- part in a wreath-laying ceremony. ty about the fate of some of the
missing .
elect and the nation's largest Veter- Farther back in the procession
.. Martin Merjave, prestQent of the
"We ·are determined to get the
ans Day crowd.
'
·
Turnouts elsewhere around the ·New York POW-MIA Awareness truth," said Gore.
Artist Maya Lin, who designed
country Wednesday varied sharply, Coalition, wore symbolic wrist
from the thousands who lined Pitts- shackles and chains to dramatize the black, V-shaped wall of names,
burgh streets for that city's 73rd the issue of Americans still unac- told the crowd, ' '! may be the
author, but I would like to remain
annual Veterans Day parade to the counted for in Indochina.
At the Vietnam Memorial here, fairly silent. This wall is designed
mere handfuls of spec\3tors along ·
15 blocks of Fifth Avehue in New Vice President-elect Gore said that for you."
York City for the American Legion
In Pittsburgh, thousands lined
the streets to watch a parade that
parade.
The National Park Police esti·
included 35 marching bands, a man
mated that 30,000 people jammed
dressed as Uncle Sam and an
artillery unit used in the Gulf War.
the Veterans Memorial and spilled
In Northampton, Mass., the
over onto the surrounding Mall
parade had a less traditional feahere to see wreaths laid, hear the
ture. Two women carrying a sign
names of Vietnam dead and missreading,
"Gay and Lesbian Vetering read aloud and listen to speech·
COAL GROVE, Ohio (AP) es by Vice President-elect AI Gore Three teen-agers coming home ans" joined other veterans in
and others.
from school were killed when their marching through downtown as
Gore expressed appreciation to car smashed into a IJ'ee off a state hundreds watched.
''I would like to see this country
President Bush, who had made a highway in Lawrence County
surprise midnight visit to the authorities said.
' no longer deprived of the skills and
Memorial some hours earlier with
Killed in the accident Wednes- loyalty of gay jlcople who wish to
his wife, Barbara. and took pan in day )'lere Robert !son, 18, and John serve," said Kay Marian Raymond,
the reading of names.
M. Crabtree, 16, both of Coal protesting exclusion of gays and
The ceremonies, held in a per- Grove, and Rena Stacy, 17, of Iron- lesbians from the military.
sistent and occasionally heavy rain, ton, the State Hi~hway Patrol said
Later Wednesday, President
marked the lOth anniversary of the
!son was drivtnjlthe cai in rainy Bush signed a measure authorizing
memorial.
cqndrtrons when 11 went off. Ohio $40 million in each of the next
But in Wausau, Wis., only a 243 about five miles east of this three years to set up counseling
small crowd gathered at the court- southern Ohio community and facililies for homeless veterans.
house for a ceremony honoring vet-· crashed into a tree, the patrol said.
Meanwhile, President-elect
crans.
•
They were students at Lawrence Clinton t.old a crow4 in the rotunda
"There aren'tthat many that County Joint Vocational School. of the Arkansas state Capitol at Litcongregate anymore," said Mil· Crabtree was president of the stu- tle Rock, "This Is a Veterans' Day
·
dred Schulta of Rothschild, Wis., a dent activities council, said Ron unlike any other for me."
World War II Army nurse. "We Blair, assistant superintendent
"Today I come here with spe•
don'tlolow what it's like."
Blair said counselors and mem- cia! responsibilities," Clinton said.
John Courtion, county veterans' bers of a crisis intervention team
He said that as commander-inservice officer, said the Gulf War would be at the school today to chief he would see that the nation
gave America "a resurgence of help students cope with the deaths . has a well-trained and mobile milipatriotism" but "unfortunately, of their classmates.
!B'Y ev~ as he cuts defense spendthat wanes rather rapidly."
Coal Grove is about three miles mg.
In New York, too, only handfuls south of Ironton along the Ohio
River.
·

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ams........LB.

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viUap, M•yor Frimk Clelaad advises. Of tbe
$56,000 total project cost, $4!1,900 was Ia laue 2
monies. Here 11 seetloa of·Sixtb Street Is being

Vietnam ·Wall .highlight .of
Veterans Day ceremonies

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Meigs School Boafd·
modifies dress code

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MIRACLE

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff ·
The dress code at Meigs High
School was modified by the Meigs
Local Board of Education at Tues.
day nig · 's meeting held at the
Meigs nio igh School.
St dents at the high School will
now pennitted to wear shorts all
¥1M'·r long instead of just the first
and last grading period of the
school year.
Nathan . Baloy and Randall
Johnston, junior class president,
spoke on behalf of a delegation of
students at the meeting. They presented petitions signed not only by
stu&lt;!ents but several staff members
who found no objection to shorts of
, an ·appropriate length. Two of the
students showed what they termed
appropriate attire for the classroom,
a girl in dark shorts with matching
tights, and a boy in just above the
knee jeans.
Members of the Meigs Athletic
Boosters made up a second delegation at the board meeting a! though
their discussion about the athletic
program was handled in executive
session.
Also handled in executive session was the suspension of a sec·
ond grader at Pomeroy Elementary
School. The board upheld the suspension which was made by the

principal, Debbie Haptonstail, 'on
the recommendation of the teacher.
Suspensions require "time-out"
periods of two or three hours after
school at the high school. .
.
Juanita Lambert, a bus driver,
spoke to the board about a fifth
grade student who has been j:Oing
on band trips and to compeutions
presumably as an assistant to the
musicians . She said that during
games l!Rd competitions, the stu·
dent has been gelling back on the
bus and playing with the radios and
other equipment and could cause
some damage. The board asked
Supt. James Carpenter to check
in!O'lhe mal!er.
Hired at the meeting was Todd
Johnson as a half-time kinderganen
teacher effective Nov. 16. Emma•
line Pratt was employed as a substi• ·
tute teacher, but Sandra Cobb and
D. Michael Mullen, both recom·
mended by the superintendent,
were not hired as substitute teach·
ers. The vote on Cobb and Mullen
was "yes" by Larry Rupe and Bob
Barton, and "no" by Randy
Humphreys, Roger Abbott, and
John Hood.
The board also rejected the recommendation of Supl Carpenter to
employ Andy White as a substitute
bus driver for the 1992-93 school·
year.

Delma Karr was hired as a pan.
tiine cook to be assigned to Middleport, with Hood, Barton and
Rupe voting in favor, Abbott voted
no and Humphreys abstaining. The
resignation of Lisa Miller from the
substitute teacher list was accepted.
Esther Black was granted a dock
day for Oct 30, and continuation of
the service contract of E. C. Babbert, Inc. for the high school
sewage system was approved.
The Board extended thanks to
the levy committee and to the VOl·
ers of Meigs Local who supported
the pennanent improvements levy. ·
Bruce Wilson, Junior High pnncipal, took board members on a
(our of the building prior to the
meeting. He reponed on the school
in open session noting that there
are 399 students and 27 staff members. This incJudes two developmental handicapped class, two
learning disabled classes, an OW A·
vocational u~it with 16 students,
chapter readrng and math classes
for students who need extra help in
those subjects.
.
He said that for the last grade
period, 81 students made the honor
roll and 112 had perfect attendance.
Wilson talked about incentives to
improve attendance, of an academic assembly planned for this week
and of a birthday recognition pro:
gram.

Statehouse architect backs
change in building control
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The architect responsible for the
$88 million Statehouse renovation
says a bill consolidating the build·
ing's management may not go far
enough.
Robert Loversidge Jr., vice pres·
ident of Schooley Caldwell Associ·
ates, told the Senate Ways and
Means Committee Tuesday the
measure should also ensure that the
restoration will be preserved.
Loversidge recalled that the
Civil War-era Statehouse, a
National Historic Landmark con·
sidered an excellent example of
Greek Revival architecture, origi·
nally had S3 rooms.
Now the building has 317
rooms, after decades of ill-advised
remodeling, he said.
"The current restoration proJecl
will correct the physical problems
of the Statehouse," Loversidge
said.
"How quickly might this work
be destroyed if, one-by-one, seem·
ingly minor changes are begun?
~emember the 317 rooms? They
were not inserted in one large project, but in many, many small
ones," he said.
Loversidgc supports the bill,
sponsored by Sen. Richard Finan,
R-Cincinnati, but said it should be

ground parkrng garage from the
· strengthened.
"I think the spirit of the rest.ora· Ohio Department of Administrative
tion and the quality of workman- Services and other agencies to an
ship need to be mentioned and the advisory panel.
Operation and maintenance of ·
law should encourage proper maintenance of the improvements," he the buildings and grounds would be
handed to the e_xisting Capitol
said.
Finan's measure would transfer · Square Review and Advisory ·
cont.rol of the Statehouse, adjacent Board, made up of four le!lislators
Senate. Building and the under- and five gubernatorial apporntees.
Restoration of the Senate Build·
ing and construction of an atrium
linking with the Statehouse arc
nearing completion. Work on the
Statehouse begins in January.
Loversidge said the bill should
contain specific regulations abou~
WASHINGTON (AP)- The physical changes to the structure
number of Americans filing new after restoration.
claims for jobless benefits fell by
"Further, I believe that S.B. 381
5,000 in late October to the lowest should require the board to retain .
level in more than two years, the the services of an exp·erienccd
government reported today.
restoration architect, so that it can
The Labor Department said receive proper advice and counsel'
first-time applicauons for unem - regarding user requests, mainteployment insurance totaled 355,000 nance problems and the ongoing
during the week ended Oct. 31, . life of the building," he said.
down from 360,000 during the pre·
Finan said the bill had the sup·
vious week.
port of legislative leaders and Gov.
It was the lowest since claims George Voinovich.
totaled 354,000 during the week"! can't emphasize· enough the
ended Aug. 4, 1990, at the begin- urgency," he said, referring to
ning of the recession. Claims had
reached a recession high of plans to move senators into the ·
530,000 during the week ended ·Senate Building, formerly known
as the Annex, next March:
March 23, 1991.
...:--ir'T-...,

Weekly jobless
claims down

,.---Local briefs----.
.B&amp;E investigated

Ice Cream........saT. PAIL

· Randy Johns, State Route 124 in Racine filed ·a report with the
Meigs County Sheriff's Office that last month, someone entered his
residence (the old Olin Boothe farm) and stole cash.
·
According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Johns withheld filing
the repor~, thinking. that he might find out who stole the money.
Invesugauon rs contmumg.

CLOROX

Morgan arrested, charged .

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Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported Thursday that
James I. Morgan, Jr., Albany, was cited to Meigs County Coun yesterday on a charge of operating a n\otor vehicle while under financial responsibility suspension.
He will appear in Meigs County Court next week.

,..;-----~1.::.=---=
Willi llEAOI ONLY

DDE DETERGENT

6

5 99 1360!.

EMS units answer calls

10 .LB. PACKAGE

Five calls for assistance were answered on We&lt;!nesday by units
of Meigs Emergency Services. ·
.
At4:04 p.m., Syracuse unit went to Bashan Road and took Cindr
Mayes to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 5:19p.m., Syracuse untt
went to State Route •24 for Don Rca. He was taken to Veterans. At
6:39 p.m., Racine squad was sent to Canter Road for Christie ·
Mitchell. She ·was taken to Ve~erans. At 9:14 p.m ., Pomeroy unit
~k Mary Lang from Locust Street to V~terans. At ll :3S p,m.,
Middleport squad went to Cole Street. Chns Rayburn was taken to
Veterans.
·

90
"'

'

••

VETERANS HONORED • Drew Webller P01t ot the American Legloa oreanlzed thll trlb•te to America•• vetti'IDI, beld ·on .
Wednescllly morning Ia front
the Melp Cou•ty Courlbouse
Post Co~mander Jobu Weeb presided over tbe service. Otbe;

or

groups p•rtlclpltlnl Jaclut!td tbe Amerle1a Lepoa Ia Raelae,
Rutland IDd Middleport, fuppen Plains VFW, Amwta, the Dis·
abled Amerleaa Veter•• and tbe Amerleaa Lealon Auxiliary
(Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)
'

•

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