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                  <text>By The Bend

•

The D·aily SentineJ
Monday, N~vember 23, 1._
'
Page &gt;10'

Community calendar
,

Community Calendar itenu
appear two days before aa event
and the day ol that event. .Items
must be received weU in advance
• to assure publication In the cal·
endar.
MONDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary will have a &amp;pe~:ial meet·
ing Monday at 7:30p.m. All members urged to attend. Plans will be
made for the Christmas diriner.
RACINE · "Talking About
Health and Nulrition" will be pre·
sented at the Racine American
Legion Hall on Monday at 7 p.m.
There will be free refreshments.·

imponartt meeting.
POMEROY • A community
Thanksgiving service, sponsored
by the Meigs County Ministerial
Association, will be held at Trinity
Congregational Church at 7:30
p.m. on Tuesday. Rev, Deroo Newman, pastor of Syracuse United
Methodist Charge, will speak. Pub·
lie invited.

•

WEDNESDAY
LONG BO'ITOM • Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have a candlelight commlulion
service Wednesday at 7 p.m . PasiOr
Steve Reed invites the public.

RUTLAND · Rutland Garden
Club, Monday, 7:30p.m . at the
home of Mrs. Dorothy Woodard:
"Making Herbal Gifts" will be the
program.

MIDDLEPORT • Jim Oliphant
will conduct a bible study course, '
Wednesday, 7 p.m., Middleport
First Baptist Church.
.
·
POMEROY • Thanksgiving service, St. Paul Lutheran Church in
Pomeroy, We!(nesday, 7:30 p.m.
Sermon, "Tl!anksgiving: A
Response.t Rev, George WeiJ:ick
inviteS the public.

RACINE • Regular. meeting,
Southern Local Board of Education
will be held Monday at 8 p.m. at
the high school.

RACINE.· Rev. Charles Norris
will hold a special Thanksgiving
service Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
Racine Baptist Church.

TUESDAY
RACINE • Racine Lodge No.
461 F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday,
7:30 p.m., for election of officers.
· All members encouraged 10 attend.
Refreshments served.

· In both civil and criminal law, the
Supreme Court is the final court of
appeal.
,

SALISBURY • Meigs Local
Annual Chapter I Parent/Teacher
meeting, Monday, 6:30p.m.

RACINE • Southern Local
School Dislrict, parenl/teaeher con·
ference (district wide) Tuesday, 6-9
p.m. and Wednesday 8:30 a.m. 10
'noon . There will be no school
Wednesday.
MIDDLEPORT • Jean Trussell
will present plans for the Middlepan's down10wn revitalization on
Tuesdar at 7 p.m. at the Middleport
counci chambers. All downtown '
·merchants are urged 10 attend this ,

1912

MIDDLEPORT 'DEPARTMENT ,
STORE
will be open on
THANKSGIVING DAY
From 4:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
For 3 II Hours of Savin II

•.

a1

e

•

Vol. 43, No. 150

Copyrlght.d 1SIJ2

A

llultlmedla

Inc. Newapapej'

Council freezes wages, benefits one year
Will consider having financial
analysis done to help control costs
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Sentinel News Starr
PREPARING PUMPKIN PiES • Students
at Middleport Elementary prepared their annu·
al Thanksgiving Dinner Thursday momlag. Pictured as they make ·pumpkin pies are Jessica
Howell, Ashley Payne, Kasl Smith, Kenny

Carsey, Candace Casey and Page Bradbury. ~
They are assisted by Mrs. Emma Ashley and '"'"'
Mrs. Judy Eblin. This is the seventh year the "
dinner bas taken place.
•
,",·\

Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271 reorganized
partf

Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271
recently reorganized in October
with 19 girls registering.
Badges and activities worked on

A birthday
celebrating the
132nd birthday o the Girl Scout
founder, Juliette Gordon Low. A
collection was taken ror the Julictte
during the month were: "Girl Scout Low Friendship Fund. This fund is
Ways"· Girl Scout hand signs, Girl used to help Girl Scouts and Girl
Scout sayings and Girl 'Scout birth- Guides around the world. A decoday; "Science Magic" • chemistry rated cake was made by Terrie
magic, static eleclricity and magnet Houser. Others attending were
Blackwell, co-leader; Vicki
hu~ia"ns . were made to: attend th~ Shari
Michael and Sharon Burdcue.
county-wide junior brownie Indian
A Halloween pany Wl!S planned
I '· ·
M ·
H' h
and enjoyed. Games were played
oc .. -tn event at etgs tg
School. Girls learned to pack and including bobbi!lg for apples, fishroll a sleeping bag and how to roll ing pond, big bubble blowing cona blanket bedroll. Twelve girls test and eat's eye race. A costume
attended and learned Indian games, contest was held wilh winners:
tasted Indian food, looked at artiprettiest, Chelsea Moss; u~liest,
·
facts, learned how this area's .lri_bcs Maggie Roseberry; most onginal,
and made. a bead bracelet. G~rls Aja Blackwell; funniest,"Jennifer
then recetved. the Nattve Jndtan Roberts; wildest, Rebecca Houser;
traditional, Kimberly Lemley.
Try-tt Badge.

Judges were Brenda Ncutzling and
Denise Holman.
Girls enjoyed face painting by
"Sparky the Clown."
Building supplies were donated
by O'Dell Lumber and Valley
Lumber. Prizes were donated by
McDonald's.
Other ad.ults helping were coleader Vicki Michael, Shari Black·
well, Sh:lron Burdetie, Carolyn
Buck and Sharon Roseberry.
. ··
Plans were made for an investiture and rbdedication on T,uesday.

•

Monday by the employees ollmperial Electric,
Middleport, Local 1!87,..1BEW, for the Bikers'
JUtnual project or providlag toys ror underprivi·
.leged children. Sherry Swisher accepted the

Based on the Peterson's Guides An·
nual Survey of Undergraduate Insti·
lutions, the average cost of tuitiOD,
mandatory fees, and college room and
board at lour-year private collegeS is
$12,656.

TOY RUN 'CONTRIBVTION • A check for
$500 was given to tbe Meigs County Bikers

•

Li~deman

check from Lonnie Herdman, union president,
as left to rig41t, Becky Fisher, union treasurer,
and Toni GiviDS, nnancial -retary, lind bikers,
Patsy Price, Jane Slater, Brenda Davis, Nancy
Woolard, and Kathy Meadows and son,
Matthew, look on.

trial still. set for Dec. 2

Plans are moving ahead in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court· far tile murder bia1 of Donald 'Lindeman of Racine, (allowing
a .pre..Ujal bearin~ on motions held
on Monday murrung.
.
Lindeman is charged with the
June murder ·of Long Bottom
Storekeeper Howard Lawrence.
Lawrence, who also served as Long
Bottom posbllaster, was shot in the
head in his DeWitt's Run s10re on
June 25, and died in a Columbus
hospital several days later. Authorities believe that he was also robbed
prior 10 his death.
Lindeyrian, 28, was ipdicted on
June 30 by the Meigs County
Grand Jury, charged with aggravat·

ed robbery and aggravated murder. evidence in10 the holidays.
If convicted, he could be sentenced : A mption 10 continue .the lrial,
to the~electric chair. He has been · filed earlier .tly Westfall ,. was
incarcerated ill the Meigs County denied last week by Crow for sev·
Jail since the time of his indict· era! reasons, one of which was that
ment
continuing the case at this time
The names· of !50 potential woul.d place the trial ·into 1993,
jurors were selected in a special delaying proceedings and .placing
jury drawing in August, and they the responsibility of prosec11ting
have been ordered to appear for the case in the hands of Meigs
jury selection 'on December 2, the County Prosecutor-elect John
ftrst day of Lindeman's irial.
Lentes.
..
It has been speculated that jury
Lentes would not comment yes·
selection could take up to two terday- as to whether he would
·weeks, and Common Pleas Court request the appointment of current
Judge Fred W. Crow III ·said that Prosecutor. Steven L.. Story if evithe trial could be continued, but dence is not presented until after
only if jury selection takes long the new year. when LenteS assumes
enough ,to place presentation of the prosecutor's office.

Steps to control costs and provide operating funds for the fmansially-sttapped village were taken
by Middlepon Village Council at a
meeting Monday night at village
hall.
.
After a lengthy discussion of
finances and personnel, ~ouncil
.agreed to freeze ·an employee
wages and benefits for a period of
one year, to consider having a
financial analysis done by an inde· ·
pendent CPA 10'give recommenda·
lions on other cost-savings meth·
ods, and 10 authorize the issuance
of up 10 $200,000 in general obli·
galion notes to repay shan-term
notes and obligations of the village.
Those actions were taken after
Council went back into session last
night following adjournment of the
.regillar meeting.
· At the regular meeting Council·
man Paul Gerard brou'ght u~ vii·
!age finances and proposed a ~ complete analysis of everything to see
where we can cqt corners and
where we can save money."
It was noted by another council
member at that time that some

Vy ARLENE LEVINSON
Associated Press Writer
Hunger is pushed iniO the limelight as soup kitchens and panlries
scramble to meet a growing
Thanksgiving demand, but it's an
everyday, dull ache for the millions
of women, men and children poor
and out of luck in America.
An estimated 30 million Aroeri·
cans are hungry , and more than
ever, feeding them requires not
only generosity, but ingenuity.
The Chicago Christian lnduslrial League, a homeless shelter .
expects 10 serve at least 1,000 din·
ners Thursday. up from 700 last
year, at its " Plymouth Rock

Cafe."

"What we.re trying to do is be
hip for the homeless," executive
directot' Rick Roberts said·Monday.
"What we are trying to do is create
an ambience, like that of the yuppie
Hard Rock Cafe, where homeless
folks can have a fun experieni:e."
Striving for an intimate and dig·

rEns of tfiousands
of people will need blood
during tfie fiolidays.

nified fe.el, there will be table·
cloths, no more than six people per
-table, a pastry can and live music.
It's that kind of reaching out
that prompted the Kansas City
Chiefs football team to donate
money for the makings of Thanks·
giving dinner for about 120 faritilies.
On Monday, 12-~ear-old Seneca
Thomas siOOd grinning when foot·
ball players Neil Smith and Derrick
Thomas, no relation to the boy,
delivered two bogs of groceries for
.his family. The boy kept smiling
and mumbling answers as the giant
men delivered their gifts and asked
polite ques!ions about his school·
work.
As the car pulled away, Smith, a
. defensive end, said, "That makes it
all worthwhile."
II inspired the Black River Area
·Development Corp. in northern
Arkansas 10 help about 30 families
with an adopt-a-family program
that enlists aid from community

A Reedsville youth was cited for failure 10 control after a oiJe.
vehicle wreck on Ohlo 681 in Olive Township Saturday at approximately !:iS a.m.
·.
·
·
. Matthew P. Martin, 16, was westhound on Obio 681 when lhe
pickup truek be was driving slid off the right side of the road, the
Gallia-Mei~s Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
The vehicle then slid back across the road and went off the left
side of the road before slrilring a fence.
·
No injUries were reported.
·
·
Damage 10 the 1987 Dodge Dakota, o)Vlled by Ernest H. Martin
Jr. of Reedsville, was listed as heavy and disabling.

+

9'llf /Jood a!J!in Qncr morr . MIII~·,!CIIjor af~climt'.

Southern board hires substitutes
Personnel action was·taken by the Southern Local Board of Education when it met in regillar session on Monday night. .
.
The board hired the following as substitute teachers: Sandra 1
Coj&gt;b, D. Michael Mullen, Sandra Ash, .Michelle Frazier, Lisa·
Miller and Virgil Philli!l!l. :
·
,
'The board accepted the resil!ltarion of Suzanne Wolfe as volleyContinued o• page 3
· '
·

!

_..
,

.

•

••

people's tax money", there needs 10
be review of the bills, but not as a
pail of a regular council meeting.
Gerard also brought up the mat·
ter of approving minutes of previous meetings without ever having
seen them. It was voted that from
now on minutes of the previous
meeting would be prepare(j and
given to council members so that
they would have time to read the ·
minutes ·prior 10 voting to approve
them.
Trash Collection
Roger Manley of Manley ' s
Trash Service met with Middlepon
Village Council to discuss provisions of the village contract as it
pertains to what is to be picked up
for . the regular charge which
appeal'S on lhe village bill and what
will' carry an additional charge for
pickup. .
The questions revolved mostly
around leaves and yard ref~. The
contract, it was pointed out, calls
for Manley to pick up bagged
materials up 10 a maximum of six
bags. Not included in the regular
pickup charge arc,constructi!)n an4
remodeling materials, rocks;
cement, trees, or large 'pieces 'of
Continued on page 3
-

firm agrees to pay
$400 million in .S &amp;L scandal

WASHINGTON (AP) - Top S&amp;L failure in history, costing the
banlcing reguiaiOrs say a landmark government ~2.6 billion 10 co~er
insured depostts, and the total pnce
s~ttlement they reached with a
leading accounting firm will help tag for the four failures has been
end the abuses that led 10 the mas- put at $4.5 billion. The Silverado
si¥C government bailout of the sav· case became well-known because
one of the institution's directors
ings and loan industry.
But key members of Congress was President Blish's son, Neil.
In reaching the settlement, Ernst
are not so sure. While praising the
record $400 million settlement with &amp; Young neither admiued nor.
Ernst &amp; Young, they said a law denied wrongdoing. Chairman Ray
was n~eded to toughen auditing J. Groves said the firm saw the settlement as ' 'the only' realistic solu·
standards.
tion
10 an endless stream of law·
The Fed~ral Deposit Insurance
Corp., the Office or Thrift Supervi· suits that would have been ·even
sion and the Resolution Trust Corp. more expensive 10 defend.'·
OTS Chief Counsel Harris
announced Monday they had
Weinstein
said a major accomplish·
resolved a 135-page complaint
· against Ernst &amp; Young for viola· ment of the settlement was that it
iions of professional accounting spells out clear standards that·
groups, busineSSes· and individuals standards in its audits of savings accounting firms will have to
to provide Thanksgiving meals.
institutions over a seven-year peri- uphold in the future. ·
But Rep. Ed Markey, D' Mass.,
In Maryville, Tenn., a town of od.
18 000 peoJ?le about IS miles south
The complaint specifically cited ·said the settlement with Ernst &amp;
or' Knoxvtlle members of the violations concerning four of the Youn~ was "an expensive and
Maryville Cburch of Christ costl!est S&amp;Ls, failures in history graphtc reminder of the need for
making accountants truly accountJICSPOilded to minister Mike Brum' · -Lincoln _Savmgs &amp; Loan Co. of able
so that these mistakes aren 't
ley's "Sack. the Pulpit" plea by lrvt~e, Caltf.; Stlverado Banking,
repeated
in the future."
conlributing 200 bags of groceri¢s Savmgs and Loan of Denver; Ver·
He
said
the case showed the
on Sunday.
non Savings and Loan of Vernon, need for legislation
he and House
Brumley challenged members 10 t:ex.as, and Wes!trn Savings Asso- Commerce Committee
Chairman
donate food for needy families of ctabon ofPhoemx, Ariz.
John
Dingell,
D-Mich.,
are .spanfour. .
.
L·Lincoln Savings was the largest
Glona Abernathy ts a 34-year·
old clerical worker in Sacramen10,
Calif., and one-woman Thanlcsgiv·
ing Day Samaritan.
SUBIC BAY NAVAL BASE, tury of U.S. military prescn c ~ in
Last year she fed more than 900
Philippines
(AP) -U.S. sailors this former colony and leaves Ute
people with help from other volun·
and
Marines
joined
by thousands of Philippines free of foreign troops
teers.
'
Filipinos
wept
today
as the Stars for the f~rs1 time since the 16th cen"It's not organized," Ms. Aber·
and
Stripes
were
lowered
for the tury.
nathy said. "There's no commit·
''I was thanking the Ameri·
last
time
over
the
largest
U.S
. mili·
tees, It just all comes together. It's
cans,"
said laundry concessionaire
tary
base
in
Asia.
incredible."
The departure ends nearly a cen- Cesar Mascardo, 51 , as he cried
and placed his hand over his heart.
"My family has benefited much
from them and this is my way of
thanking them ."
A few hours later, more than
1,400 sailors and Marines boarded
the USS Belleau Wood, a heli·
copter carrier, and began a 1,000WASHINGTON (AP) - strengthen.
Although most of the gain carne mile journey to . Okinawa, the
Orders to U.S. factories for longlasting durable goods shot up 3.9 from a 20 percent surge in trans· .Japanese island that houses 40 U.S.
bases.
percen~ in October, pulled ~P by a partation equipment orders, other
areas
showed
strength
as
well,
, The public-address system
surge 1n transponauon equ•pment
such as aircraft and automobiles, including pri111Jll'Y metals such as played "I'm Proud to Be an Amer·
steel and alwninum, up 5.1 percent, tcan" as the ship set off. Di~ni ­
the government said IOday.
and
electrical equipment, up 1.5 taries, Filipino women and retired
The rise wu much larger than
looked fot by economists and was percenl
U.S. servicemembers stood on the
However, orders 'for industrial docks ·as the ship departed after
the biggest in 1S months.
In ·september, orders rose 0.3 machinery were down 4.5 percent.
final embraces.
percent, a substanlially better per·
Excluding transportation, orders
Earlier, Adm. Robert Kelly,
fo111!ance than the 0.4 percent feU 0.7 percent •
U.S. naval commander in the Pacif·
declil'le eitimitted by the Commerce
The ·highly volatile military ic, boarded a p.3 Orion plane as the
DtJ18ibilellt in Ut advance report.
goods sector, which overlaps the "symbolic last man" 10 leave. The
Today's report, which showed· aircraft category, shot up 42 per- plane flew low over Subic's flank·
new orders at a
•tally lllljllllCd cent following a 20 percent d~op mg hills and dipped its wings in
$124.4 billion in OciOber, a11o the the 'month before. Excludtng farewell.
best in 15 l)lOnths, fit with · defense, orders still rose 2.2. per·
"I'm depressed and sad," said
economists' contention that ,the cenL
one sailor, Dave Headly of Long
economy is gradually beginning :o
Beach, Calif. "We had .a lot of fun

soring to require accountants to
watch more closely and repon any
examples of questionable business
deitlings.
·
The legislation passed the
House last year but not the Senate.
House Banking Committee
Chairman Henry B. Gonzalez said
too inany accounting firms have
been unwilling to tell the truth
about banlcs and S&amp;Ls for fear of
losing business.
'
"The t;!Xpayer ended up holding
the bag when the fmancial institu·
lion failed because its auditor had
given it ·a clean bill of health which
was then accepted at face value,"
said Gonzalez, D-Texas.
·
Federal regulators said that if
they had pressed a case against
Ernst &amp; Young, they probably
would have sought $1 billion in
damages. However, FDIC General
Counsel Alfred Byrne said pursu·
ing such a case would have cost the
government at least $150 million
and taken up to a decade in court.
The FDIC, which pays off
depositors in failed institutions,
will receive $271.8 million of the
settlement amount while the- RTC,
created by Congress 10 clean up the
S&amp;L mess, will ger $128.2 million,
officials said.

U.S. troops leave Subic Bay after 94 years

Orders for durable goods
Local briefs---- up 3.9 percent in October ..
Youth cited in accident

Still wondering
. wfiat to give?

'steps have already been taken that overtime has been stopped and
that no Christmas bonuses will be
given to employees th is year. Gerard said that Council needs to be
"up front" with employees about
the village's finances and proposed
that salaries and benefits be frozen
until the village gets a handle on
expenses.
As for bills which Council routinely approves, Gerard made a
motion that all bills be presented to
Council for review before any vote
is taken on payment. While the
motion died for lack or a second,
there was a lengthy discussion with
Dewey Horton, Council president,
who approves the bills for payment
admitting that he silllls a lot of bills
he's "worried aboutY'.
While he agreed that the bills
need to be checked closer for dupli·
cation of purchases and decidmg
what's necessary and what's nqt in
the way of purchases, he was
emphatic in not wanting 10 review
bills at regular council meetings
because of the time involved. There
are about 400 bills to be approved
every inonth and it takes about four
hours, .said Hor10n. He conceded,
however, that as "guardian of the

A~counting

Rise in hunger illuminated in
glare .of!hanksgiving Day ne.e d

.American Red Cross

I

1 S.C.ton, 10 P-• 25 centa ·

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Tuesday, November 24, 1992

Middl~port

Club elects officers
Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Country
Clovers 4-H Club held at the home
nf Brian and Jackie 1ustice.
Officers are Mau Juslice, president; Jackie Buck, vice-president;
· Jessica Janey, secretary; Adam
Si¥:cts, treasurer; Erin Harris, news
reporter.
.
.
Matt Justtce prestded at !he
meeung ~tth Jerod Cook leadmg
the Amencan pledge ani!. James ·
Chapman the 4-H Pledge.
Eleven members answered roll
· call.
Two new members welcomed
were Whitney Ashley and Jessica
Justice.
·
A show and sales committee
meeting will be held Nov. 30.
The group project was discussed
with members to be thinking of
ideas.
A video on "4-H for You" was·
shown by Jim Sbeets, advisor.
Refreshments were served by
the Justice family and the next
meeting was announced for Jan. 12
at the home of Jessica Janey.

Low tonight In mid 40s.
high ntar 60.
• Clumce of rain 60 pe~ent
~dnesday,

, .

the Christmas meeting. The group
will give presents for community
shut-ins. Charlotte VanMeter will
be in charge of decorations. · •
Sarah Caldwell reported on the
recent charge meeting. The group
voted 10 pay $25 for the Christian
Copyright license.
Nellie Parker presided and pre·
sented the annual report. The group
voted 10 raise its pledge.
Mrs. Van Meter had the prayer
calendar and chose G. Lanee
Sharnlon, education missionary, in
Baton Rouge, La. The group signed
a birthday c8rd for him.
Rev. Sharon Hausman asked·the
grace before the Thanksgiving
meal.
The next meeting will be Dec. 8
at the church with a Christmas
meal and gift exchange for members and guests. Secret pals, program and serving assignments will
be chosen.

1

(

184

Page4

"How Lovely Are th&lt;: Senti·
In the )unior horticulture classes
menu", includin~ a madonna, Josh Bolin, took ftrst and second,
Pauline Atkins, Alice Thompson Niki Lewis, third, and Brooke
Donia Crane, and Peggy Crane. ' Bolin, and Derrick Bolin, fourth.
"De~ Heanwatming Scenes". 1 Nilt.i Lewis tOf?k first _and Josh
all wbne: Melanie Stethem ..~ Bobn, second, m terranums, and
Addalou Lewis, Evelyn Hollon: Nild Lew~. ftrst on uee '?f'l~ts.
and Pearle Canaday.
Josh Bobn also took first m the
"They Never Change So Very potted plant.category._ .
,
Much", creative mass design:
In the gtft wrappmg mcludmg
Sheila Curtis, Donia Crane, Brenda plant material classes. the awards
Bolin, and Pat Holter.
went 10 Evelyn Hollon, a blue for a
"Christmas Seems to Alwavs gift wrap for a child, and Addalou
Belong 10 Cedar Trees and Snow: Lewis, .blue, and Evelyn Hollon.
, .
including evergreens and snow: red,a gtft wrap for an.adult
Sheila Curtis Donia Crane Karen
In the semor horuculture divt·
Werry, and E:..Ctyn HoUon. '
sion, ~ribbon winners w'Cf!: Jean
"Greetings on a Christmas Card Moore, ftrst, '!"d Alice ptompson,
are Precious as a .Gem", including second and thi.nl for Christmas cac·
cilndles: Sheila Curtis, Evelyn Hoi· tus; ,Kathryn Miller, ~t, and. Janet
lon Karen Werry and Allegra Thetss, second, for African vtolets;
will
'
Jean Moore, ftrst, blooming house"Old Neighbors and Old Friends plants; Kathryn Miller, frrst, Jean
Send Their Love", dried designs: M~ore ,second and fourth, for
first class Donia Crane Sheila foliage houseplants.
Cunis, Gladys Cumings, ·and Jean
Placing first through fourth, in
Moore; and second class, Mildred other classes were the followm~
Jeffers, Evelyn Hollon, Mae Mora, exhibitors:
and Neva NiCholson.
Berried branch: Jean Moore,
"Warmin¥ Our Hearts with Lov· Evelyn Hollon, Mae Mora, and
ing Words' , miniature designs: Addalou Le.,..is.
Karen Werry, Janet Theiss, Pauline
Broad leaf evergreen: Alice
Atkins, and Karlita Stump.
Thompson, Neva Nicholson ,
. Thinking of Our Bygone Addalou Lewis, and Evelyn HoiTimes", including, treasured wood: Ion,
Krista! Bolin, Beuy Lou Dean.
Nauow leaf evergreen: Maye
Dorothy Karr, and Alice Thomp· . More apd Addalou Lewis , first,
son.
Alice Thompson and Evelyn Hoi" A Holly Wreath, A Little ton, seconds; Maida Mora and EveChurch, A Lovely Door": Indoor lyn Hollon, thirds, and Maye Mora
wreath, Sheila Curtis, Evel)'n Hoi- and Jean Moore, fourth places; nat·
ion, and Karen Werry, no fourth; urally dried, Janet Theiss, frrst and
outdoor wreath, Jean Moore, Karen fourth, Maye Mora, second and
Werry, and Gladys Cummings; third; treated plant material, Evelyn
swag, Sheila Curtis, Kathryn Hollon and Alice 1bompson; cacti
Miller, Evelyn Hollon, and Maida and succulents, two classes, with
Mora.
Jean Moore taking all four places
"Some Carol Singers in the in one class, and Gladys Cumings,
Street", a still life: Twila Bucldey, all four places in the second class.
Crystal Bolin, Gladys Cummings,
For contrived flowers, Janet
and Pauline Atkins.
Bolin lOok ftrst, Pe~y Craqe, sec"All a Pan of Christmas Time", ond, Addalou Lewts, thir~. and
a kissing ball, Peggy Crane, no Alice Thompson, fourth. In corn·
other awards.
husk flowers, the ribbon winners
In the artistic classes for 1·uniors were Janet Bolin, Alice Thompson,
'
Addal Le ·
dp
c
the wmners were Derrick Bolin,
ou wts, an eggy ranc,
Tracy Card, Niki Lewis,. and ftrst thrOugh fourth respeCtively.
Brooke Bolin, in the class, "It's
First place for small tabletop
Time for Gifts and Treasured trees went to Karen Werry, with
Cards" and Nild Lewis, Josh Bolin, Kathryn Miller taking second, ,
Mandy Miller, and Christin Miller, Addalou Lewis, third, and Sheila
"A Star So Bright AIOp the Tree".
Curtis, fourth.

read "Be ThaJ!kful," Nellie Parker
read "! Thank Thee, Lord" and
"Thanksgiving Prayer," and Martha
Elliott read "A Prayer for Tltartksgiving." Florence Ann Spencer
sang "Thank Ypu, Lord, For
Basics" 10 close the program.
During the busmess meeting
II 0 sick caiJs were reported.
Arrangements were made for

Pick 3:
Pick 4:

Alfred U.M.C. Women hold program
The Alfred United Methodist
Women enjoyed a Thanksgiving
program and potluck meal when
they mer recently at the church.
Sarah Caldwell read "Wealth,"
Martha Poole read "Tale of the
Turkey" and "Thanksgiving," Osie
Mae Follrod read "Hold On,"
Gertrude Robinson read "Thank
You, Jesus," Charlotte VanMeter

Ohio Lottery

Saints
defeat
Redskins

Annual flower show features
'Christmas Cards' theme
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
G.littered accessories and glistening snow, bciwtiful baubles and
tinldin~ bells, colorful C811dles and
cerarmc madonnas, all creatively
combined with flowers and Christ' mas plant materials made the annual holiday show of the' Meigs
County Garden Clubs Association
a delighiiO view.
Held over the weekend at Carleton Sc!lool, the show carried out
the theme, "Christmas Cards".
It featured not only elegant
flower arrangements, but holiday
wreathes and swags, specimen
exhibits including Christmas cactuS, berried branches, and tree
ornaments of nafural materials.
Janet Bolin, a inember of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners and a
past president of the Ohio. Associa·
tion of Garden Clubs, was chair·
man for the show judged by Faye
Collins of Minford, an accredited
judge.
The best of show award for an
arrangement went to Melanie
Stethem of the Shade Valley Club,
who consistently plucks 10p awards
wherever she exhibits. Her creative
design was in the class "Heart·
warming Scenes of Snowy Trees
and Yards" fearuring all white. In a
tall container, it featuted iwisted
vine and glittered holly with carna·
lions.
Crystal Bolin lOOk the reserve
best of show "Thinking of Bygone
Times", an arrangement using lrea·
sured wood with pine, eucalyptus,
and hot pint carnations.
The creative award went to
Karen Werry for her tabletop
grapevine wreath tree decorated
with plant materials including
. cockscomb, goldenrod, wheat, and
sttaw flowers.
In the junior division, the top
awards went 10 Derrick Bolin, best
of show, and Nild Lewis, reserve
best of show, with Josh Bolin talc·
ing tile junior horticulture sweepstakes award. In the adult division,
Jean Moore of the Middleport
Amateur Gardeners Club was the
horticulture sweepstakes award
winner.
The winners in the 14 artistic
arrangement 'classes, listed first
through fourlh were as follows:

•

"

=

here.'~

.

On the eve of the closing, the
tawdry bars along Magsaysay
Avenue in adjacent Olongapo were
largely deserted. The street had
long been the scene of some of the
Pacific's most raucous nightlife
when carrier groups came 10 call.
Now. about half the bars have
closed and many of the dancers,
bartenders and others say they plan
to leave.
Five other U.S. installations,
including Clark Air Base, were
turned over 10 the Philippines last
year . In September 1991, tjle
Philippine Senate rejected a neV(,
10-year lease for Subic ·and the
government gave the Americans
until the end of this year 10 leave. ,
The Philippine bases served as
the linchpin of the U.S. security
umbrella in the Far East d\)ring the
Cold War.
"As we bid bon voyage to the
American serviceman. we ask lhe
U.S. government and the AmeriCBII
people for the sttengthening of our
partnership on lhe basis of economIc cooreration, social conceri\,
mutua support and democratic
commitment," President Fidel
Rarrios. a West Point graduate, sar'd
during the 90-minute departure ooremony.

�·commentary
.

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The Daily Sentinel
u 1 COurt Street
Pomeroy, Oldo
DEVoTED TO TilE ll'n'I:U8TII OP THB IIBIG&amp;-IIAION ARM

ROBERT L. WINGETl'
Publlsber
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisber/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They abo\lid ·be leu than 300
subject Ill editing and must be sisned wilh name,
addms and !elepbone number. No unsigned lellen will be published. Lcuers
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
words. All !ellen are

Voinovich
administration
.
changing liquor quota system
By ROBERT E. MILL~
Associated Press Writer ,
COLUMBUS-. Ohio's Department of Liquor Conlrol soon will be ·
revising a local government quota system to allocale liquor permits inore
evenly among the population, but not everyone is happy about iL
. The Legislature last week sent Gov. George Voinovich a bill ending a
patchworlc system thst has ftxed quotas within municipalities and Other
local governments and giving each of the 88 counties a populalicjn-based
maximum.
'
1
Also, the bill seeks to resolve a problem in which restaurants and other
businesses that are open on Sundays have been denied Sunday pennits
although they sell liquor every olher day of the week.
.
· In addition. the bill allows the state to increase its l!llWmum profit on
liquor sold 81 state stores to 40 percent from 35 pereenL
. Voinovich is expecred to sign it.into law.
·
The changes stem from recommendations of a special stildy committee
· headed by Liquor Director John Hall, who said they will help earn more
revenue for the state while complimenting its economic development
effotts,
Rep. William Healy, D-Canton, who sponsored the~ in the House,
gave essentially the same assessment and said it will help the department
operare more efficiently.
·" " The key is, we are ll'ying to encournge economic growth," he said.
· Rep. Lynn Wachtmann, R-Napoleon, was among sevecal House members who expressed reservations about the bill.
· He questioned the provision ~t allows additional Sunday sales by
holders of permits that do not currently specify them.
.
.
Wachtmann said Sunday sales will be permitred in areas where they .
people have not voted on them at a local option election, currently
~uired by law. He offered a floor ameqdment to sttike that provision,
but it failed 57·36.
·
I
' Healy said deletilig the language weaken the intent of the bDl.
' He added thst the traditional work week has changed over the ye~~r.~
and more businesses, especially those located in enclosed shopping malls,
are open on Sundays. ·
.
: · Rep. JoAnn Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, objecred to county-wide quotas.
· · Claiming local governments should retain the right to limit permits
~ithin their boundaries, she offered an amendment requiring a local vote
og any thst exceed the area's current quota.
Mrs. Davidson's amendment met strong opposition.
.
' At the suggestion of her ad~es. it was reworded so thst loclil govemments could adopt resolutions 'OppOsing new permits, perhaps influencqlg department decisions. The amendment then was approved by voice
vote.
·• Tbe 12-mernber,panel that studied Ohio's permii system, besides Hall,
included ~epresentatives of indusll'y, alcohol awareness organizations and
lq:al governments.

•

B~rryts

World

• l •

.·•

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•'
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•,
•
•

•
•
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'

P~~g•

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
1\lleday, November 24,1992

•

their agenda (remember Gen'nifer
de Ia Radio Shack, the recording
artist who cashed in on her tales of
deflowering). Lesson: As we ali

•

Martin Schram

·-· - -- - - -- - - - · told the pollsters - w,e want the .
media to focus on solutions to our
problems, not private lives of publie figures.
· " ...it was the epoch of belief, it
was the epoch of incredulity.. .''
Never have so many become
uue believers so fast, as when Citizen Perot told CNN's Larry King
. that maybe he 'd run- and suddenly Ross Perot was soaring in all
polls. But, never have so many ll'lle
believers become so quickly disillusioned, as when Perot suddenly
quil - never mind all the people
who had quit their jobs 19 join his
petitioning crusade. Then he didn't

iike being called The Quitta", so he
came back, with ~~ one rop aide, a.
man named Swmdle. The m45ter
nom de plumer, Charles Dickens,
couldn't have written it betta'. Lesson: Democrats and Republicans
beware! We are fed up w,ith unresponsive politics as usual, and
we~~ not afraid to toss out all the
old labels to .seareh for a real lead·
er.
.
" ...it was the se8son of L~~ht, it
was the season of Darkness... ·
Never in the history of TV campaigning have we seen so much of
the candidates - on talk shows
every morning noon and night; and
never was the medium used so
nobly as in Perot's just-the-facts
flip-chart half-hour ads. But ne\&gt;er
have the rest of the wizards d TV
politics seemed so inept ...:. the
Bus~ and Clinton strategists gave
us po memorable TV messages,
just a few negative ads.'Lesson:

Substmlce seUs; it was Perot's only
political machine and it turned out
a sizable vote.
" ...it was the==·
g of hope, it
was the winter·of
· ..."
Never did a
· t lead more
skillfully than Bush did in marshal'ing ·the global coalition that won
the Gulf War- it seemed the
dawning of a !lew national pride,
the end of our Vieto.am legacy of
despair. But never has a president
been more ·unwilling"to lead at
home; ·Bush never even tried to
marshal his huge support behi9d
domestic efforts. For years, he
denied our recession and ig{lored
our health-care crisis. Lesson:
Flag-waving won't wak for aJII'CSident who seems unmoved by tales
of joblessness until his pollster tells
him his own job is in jeopardy;
" ...we had everything before us,
we had nothing before us, we were
all lfoiilg to Heaven, we were all
going direct the o.ther way.' '
It wasn't just the recession that
did in Bush , he made himself
seem downright unpresidential. He
was undone by the WOlds that came
out of his own mouth. In our living
rooms eath night, he no longer
resembled the man who once
promised "kinder and gentler"
governance (not to mention "no
new uues"). We saw instead, a
·, man who seemed desperate, meanspirited and unglued (see: Beware
of The Youth Who Went to
Moscow!) and we heard whining,
childish name;calling (see :
"Bozo'' and 'VIbe Ozone Man").
Now, as he nears the begiMing
of his ex -presidency, Bush is said
by friends to have reali:red, too late,
that he could have won. His friends
told reporters ot his view while he
was vacationing at a tiny Aorida
resori named Boca Grande. Lesson:
As Dickens might have politely
advised, presidents who utter
unpresidential campaign omtory
shouldn't vacation 81 a place that is
Spanish for "Big Mouth.'' .
Martim Schram is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise Association.

Clinton's ethics rule worries recruiters
•

LIITLE ROCK, Ark., (NEA)
- President-elect Bill Clinton has
promised that his administ,ration
will be filled only by the most
highly qualified people and they
will be governed by the strictest
ethics code ·ever. But many Washington observers and some in Clinton's transition team worry that
these two p!l&gt;mises pose a potential

conflict
Clinton has announced very
strict guidelines for his transition
staff. Under the rules spelled 'Out
here by transition head Wai'ren
Christopher, any paid transition
staffer will be prohibited for six
months after the transition from
doing any business with an Bl!ency
that he or she was involved wtth in
the transition, In addition, they will
be prohibited from using any
knowledge obtained in the transition for personal gain or from taking part in any transition matter in
which they, their fanlilies, employers or businesses, might have a
direct interesL
The Clinton "pre-transition"
staff spent much of the autumn
~g information on past prcstdential transitions and preparing
the structure for the transition
effort. They spent considerable
time studying the massive 1980
transition team put together by
Ronald Reagan. While the Clinton
team says it has come to appreciate
how smoothly the Reagan 1980

transition ran, the rules announced
by Christopher are a result of abus:
es that were said to have I)CCurred
during and after that transition.

Robert J. Wagman
The Reagan transition team in
1980 numbered· almost a thousand
people. In numerous cases, the
transition's representative to a particular agency or government office
came from • law firm or interest
group having business before that
agency. Not only did the individual
involved make recommendations
for who should be appointed to top
jobs. but completely debriefed
agency career employees about
problems and plans for the agency.
In many cases, these debriefings
were passed alon~ 'to employers
and were immedtately used by
clients who had business with the
agencies.
The Clinton transition guidelines were sharply debated internally before they were adopted. There
was a concern that in the
changeover of specialized 'agencies,
those involved wiD· have to ha~ a
current active knowledge of the
agency. Few such people will w•t
to get involved in the transiticxrif it
means they will be pfe!:luded from
earning a living for some period
after the transition .

What really worries some of the For most of the top-level appointClinton transition with past fedellll ments, especially within its
experience is thst the ethics regula- bureaus, you have to have people
tions will deter those · who are with significant industry or comalready at the· top of lists of poten- munications experience. What the
guidelines may end up saying is
tial appointees.
Clinton' is determined to close that the person will be effectively
the government-business revolving prevented from returning to his or
door, where someone from the pri- her profession after leaving governvate sector joins the fedellll .gov- ment.''
One former high-level appointee
ernment for some period, leaves
and then takes up business with the who left the Ge11eral Services
same agency. Current tules prohibit Administration has withdrawn his
a former federal employee from name from considemiion. He now
lobbying his or her former agency heads a consulting business that
for six months. Oile potential Clin- advises clients on how to deal with
ton rule being debated would the G~A. He is the top choice of
extend the period to as many as Capitol Hill Democrats who want
to bring reform to the agency. He
five years.
That rule would likely malce it fe~~r.~ he could not resume his condifficult, if not impossible , to sulting business for some substan- ·
recruit the best people for special- tial period after leaving governized agencies or technical people ment service.
"This was exactly the kind of
for other agencies.
"I am concerned," one Clinton • person we are looking for - expepersonnel recruiter said, "especial- rienced, very knowledgeable and
ly in the si.tuitions where we have already primed to bring about
to find people with very specific change," said the Clinion personexperience and expertise that.{:an nel souree, "But he has opted out,
• only be :obtained by worlcing with and I'm afraid this is going to be
an agency or in an industry. What repealed often if the regulations are
worries me is that if a person is too strict We need,to stop revolvprecluded from any contact with an ing door abuses, but we also need
agency he worlcs for in the Clinton to attract people who will be
administration, we will render him assured they have a life after gov·
unemployable after he leaves gov- ernment''
emmenL
Robert Wagman Is a symlic:at''Take an agency like the Feder- ed writer for Newspaper Eateral Communications Commission. prise Association.

.'

you' ONE MORE TIME,
SCREAM!"

I'm going

to

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••

froday--- in history
:
By Tbe Associated Press
·: Today is Tuesday, Nov. 24, the 329th day of 1992. There are 37 day!
left m the year.
.
l'oday's Highlight in History:
qt NoY. 24, 1859, British naturalist Charles Darwin published "On the
Oljgin d Species,' ' a paper in which he explained his theory of evolution
tluough the process of natural selection.
On this date:
.
, In. 1784, Zachary Taylor, the ·12th president of the Unired States was
bOrn m Orange County, Virginia.
·
'
: In 1863_. the Civil War battle for Lookout Mountain began in Tennessee. Unton forees succeeded in taking the mountain l'IVo days later.
! In 1864, French artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec was born in Albi.·
: I~ 1871, the National Rifle Association was illcorponued, and its first
JIICSident named: Maj. Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside.
; In
U.S: bombers based on Saipan auw:ted Tolcyo in what was
the firSt raid agaanst the Japanese capital by lind-based planes
; In 1947, the writm, producers and dim: ton who became known as the
"Jiollywood:Ten" were cited for contempt d Congress for ~fusing to
a~~~wer questions about all~ ·communilt influence in their industry
: In 1947,John SICinbec:t a novel"Thc Pe.l" was f111tpublished ·
: In 1963, in a ICCne captureil on live neiWorlr relevision, Dallas ~ight­
clilb owner Jack ~by ~ lnd miXlally woundted Lee Harvey Oswald
~ .a:used ISI8SSID Qf PraidentJohn F. Kennedy.
'
·In 1969, ~!lo 12JIIlashed down safely in the Plcirtc, ending the ~-

l94&lt;!,

;

0
·'

Let me tell you about the word

••media.••

It's rlght-wingese for a crummy.
excuse, as in ''the media clobbered
George Bush. " It's also leftwingese for much the same thing,
but the left-wing went into hiding
wi!h the rise d Reagan, so you are
currently hearing it mainly when
you stroll by the caves whe~ the
&amp;roglodytes hve.
The post-election drumbeat
from conservative critics and sore
losers has been relentless . "The
press was unashamedly pro-Clinton," wrote Fred Barnes in The
New Republic. The presa portrayed .
Ross Pel'OI as another Nixon, wrote
former hl'OI adviser Jim S~uires in
Newsweek. The prus was 'unmitigably biased (and) maliciously
negative" aJainst Bush, wrote
Woody West m Insight, the 'Wash- :
ington Times' Sunday rilagazine.
It befuddles me how these otherwise astute gentlemen could have
missed
all those allegations about
e

Clinton's fling with 'Aowers, his
draft evasion, his snealcy trip to
Moscow, his ties to chicken
tycoons , his funneling of state

Joseph Spear
money into Hillary's law fum and
especially that "Why Voters Don't
Trust Clinton" Time story last
April with the ghoulish photographic negative on the cover that
made Clinton loot like a mdioactive zombie.
But that's beside the point. The
fundamental fact is, the argument
that the media display a political
bias has always been a dumb one.
And after 28 years of listening to it
- I first heard it trumpeted as a
major issue during the 1964 GOP
Convention in San Francisco it's getting a little tiresome. ,
In the flnt place, no one can
state definitively whether the rmedia

ond manned minion to the moon.
In 1971, a hijacker who came to be known as "D,B. Cooper"
parachufe!! from a N~west A~lines 727 over w._hington state with
$200,000 m 1111110111. His fate relll8llls unknown.
·
Thought for Today: "Humor distons nothina. lnd only false gods are
!Bushed off their earthly pedestals." - Agne&amp; Repplier, American casaytst(I8S8-I9SO). .
'

is biased for ot·against a particular
candidate because the device used
to measure such things is itself subjective. The fancr, name for it is
"content analysis, ' and it amounts
to littlc more than counting positive
and nega~:s media references to
the candi
in question.
·
· And who defines the positives
and negatives? Why, the·
researcher, of course. And that
explains why conservative
reseirchets ~gularly conclude the
press is stacked against the right
and liberal researchers say the
press has an anti-left tilL Tbe rightof-center Center for Media and
Public Affairs specializes in this
son of uucrancc tallying, and by its
calculations, 71 _percent of the
things said about George Bush on
network evening news shows during the campaign were negative
and only 48 pircent of the thing's
said about Clinton were ne~ve.
But guess what? Even Robert
Lichter, the co-director of the Center and the gnmd guru of commentcoun~. is slowly coming around
.., the VICW that the JI'CSS IS not SO
. much anti-cOIIICIVative as it is just
plain COIItrary. If any thread runs
ihrough his results, he wrote last
. S~mber in the Washington Post,
"f.! js qot liberal bias but anti-

1.

incumbent coverage in presidential
campaigns." ·On clOser inspection,
though, this is just one facet of a
broader trend toward the thought
thst die press is not ideological. It .
is ornery. Now there's a real scoop
for you.
In the second place, the question ,
of whether the media are biased is ·
utterly irrelevant. There are thou- ·
sands of dailies and weeklies and •
alternative tabs and rags published '
in the United States, and four tele- :
vision networks, and CNN, and
copious cable services that Cllfl'Y ·
news, and C-SPAN, which offen ,
saturation coverage of political
events and is so obsessively neutral
that it counts the minutes accocded
all parties. If you don't like what
you are mHiing and Iisreoing, then •
switch. It's a free country and a .
free marketplace.
·
Of all the species on the planet,
you would think conservatives
would appreciate the free lllllkctplace d ideas lnd infonnatioa. But
ihen they'd have to give up their. '
cherished notion that the media R
responsible for their failures.
,
· Better to bend doctrine than to
give up a IICipegoat.
•
' Jusepb Spear Ia .a IJlldlcated
writer for Ntw~p~per Eaterprlle
Auodulloll.

The Dally SeRUnel Page 3

'

Rain forecast for Ohio on,Thanksgiving Day

·..·••

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and.high

We've all had a Dickens ·or a time
"It was the best of times, it was
the worst of times... "
.
It was the presidential campaign
·of 1992, perhaps our most remarkable, cenainly our most bizam: a C8111paign that ~ with Democmtic and Repubhcan candidates
giving us politics as usual, and
ended with the vo~rs giving_ candidates of both parttes the dickens.
Valuabl~ !essons for 1996Iie back
Ill~ '!Blnng to be 1eamed;
.
... tt was the ~e of wtS«!'&gt;m, tl
was the age offoolishness...'
Never have so many politicians
produ.c ed so ~any detatled
bluepnnts for SOIVI!Ig our problems
(remember the remarkable rise of
Paul Tsongas, who ran as the cons~m.mate draftsman Of.J~?li.cy, pro·
vtdtng all the_. sp~ctft~lt)' 11nd
chansma the IItie tmph~s). ~ut
.never hav~ so many ~edta ehtes
waUowed tn so much slune,I!S they
let sleazy SUP\lrmarket tablotds set

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather
lVednesday,Nov.l5

2-The Dally Sentinel

Blaming media is just a bad excuse
"If you say 'I want to share something with

j

Tuesday, November 24, 1992

By The Associated Press
Bad news for Thanksgiving
travelers - rain is forecast for the
holiday and the day preceding it.
The National Weather S"ervice
said a low pressure system moving
out of Texas and th e southern
plains will thicla:n, the cloud cover
and bring with it a substantial
amount of Gulf moisture.
Rain was forecast for tonight,
much of Wednesday and Thursday.
Lows tonight will be in th e
upper 30s and 40s. Slightly warmer
temperatur.es were forecast for
Wednesda)'. with highs ranging
from the·mid40s northwest to near

MICH.

•
IToledo I 50" I
IND.

60 southeast
The record-high temperature for
this date 81 the Columbus weather
station was 68 degrees in 1931
while the record low was 7 in 1950.
Sunset tonight wiU be 81 S:l O p.m.
and sunrise Wednesday at 7:28
a.m.
Around the 118tlon
Heavy snow blanketed pans of
the Rockies early today as an Arctic cold front moved into the southem Plains. Ahead of the storm, rain
drenched several cities in the Mississippi VIIlley and the Midwest.
The National Weather Service
posted snow advisories, warnings

Beat of the Bend...

W.VA.

·or watches for parts of New Mexi- derstonns CXIalded along the Glilf
co, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa and of Mexico region, southeast
Missouri today.
Mexico and western Texas. Raill
Forecasters -also predicted was sclltered in aonhern New
severe thunderstorms across the Engllnd, upstate New York, the
western Gulf or Mexico region, Midwest and the central Plains. •
with heavy rain in the Mississippi
Temperatures today. were
Valley. the southeastern Plains and expected to reach the teens in thCl
the Appalachians.
central Rockies· 20s in the ~ of
By late Monday night, blizzanls the Rockies and the northwestern
in the Rocky Mountains dumped Plains; 30s in the rest of the Plain(
more than a foot of snow on pans and much of the North'll(esl; .40s in
of Colora!k&gt; and Wyoming. -Wind ~ the Northeast., Michif!D and part$
gusted to 40 mph or more, causing of the Midwest; 50s m the centrat
whiteouts and snowdrifts and fore- Atlantic coast regioa, the
ing the closing of some highways Appalachians and the West Coasti
in northern Colorado and south- 60S in the S.outhwest and parts ot
'e&amp;Stem Wyoming.
the Southeast; 70s in southeastern
In Utah, nearly a foot of snow Teltas and southern Georgia; an!l
fell in Salt Lake Valley. At Alta, 80s in southern Florida
•
southeast of Salt Lake City, nearly
Tbe high temperature for th~
4 feet of snow fell m 24 hours.
nation Monday was 89 degrees a~
Monday evening, rain and thun- Fort ¥yen, Fla.
•

by Bob Hoeflich

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

Ice

-led,_ GntpticsNol
C19ll2 "-•u-WHiher,lne.
------Weather----Via

'

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, occasional rain. Low
45 ~50. Chance of rain is near 100
percent. Wednesday, rain likely,
mainly in the morn ing .- High
around 60. Chance of rain is 60
percenL
Extended forecast:

Thursday tllrough Friday:
Thursday, a chance of rain .
Lows from the mid-30s to mid-40s.
Highs from the mid-40s to mid50s. Friday, chance of rain or
snow. Lows iri the 30s, Highs
mainly in the 40s. Saturday, fair.
Lows in mid-20s to low 30s. Highs
in the 30s.

--Area deaths.--

Now remember, there's no need
for you to be without, alone or both
on Thanksgiving Day.
. There will be free turkey dinners
available at the Syracuse Fire Station and at the Middleport Chureh
of Christ. Residents of both communities-have gone to a good deal
of effort 8nd are giving up a part of
their holiday to handle the dinners.
Serving at the Middleport location
being staged by Vaughan's Cardinal and the chureh congregation
starts at II a.m. and in Syracuse
serving of the dinner, being held by
the Syracuse Fire Department and
its Auxiliary, starts at noon.
I feel confident you are cordially
welcome to attend either dinner.

--Meigs announcements··,·
Alice Wolfe, 949-2286; Kathy
Ruchti 81992-7606 or 992-6843, or
Sandy Ianerelli, president of the ·
unit at m-7606.
Wallace Bradford who· raises
Christmas trees has donated the
tree to be used in the project. If
you want to take part do contact
those in c!haige at your soonest
since the tree will be going up any
day now.
Beity Ohlinger who has been
undergoing treatment for her illness
observed a birthday at her Fourth
St. home in Middleport Monday.
She's taking one day at a time and
doing well at iL

- - -

You miaht want to make a note
that the Racine Unired Methodist
Church Women will be holding
their Christmas bazaar on Saturday,
Dec. 5, from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m. mlhe
church . The women have been
working since the ftrst of September to create attractive items for the
sale and lunch will be available
beginning at I I a.m. Rugs, quilts,
wall hangings, baskets, ornaments,
homemade candies and baked
goods will be available for you at
the bazaar.

Speaking of Syracuse, folks at
the Carleton School staged their taJt
Kathryn Josephine Byers, 53, of
William "Bill" Mauox, 72, of levy victory party Saturday afterSyracuse, died on Satur day, West Columbia died Monday, noon and the big bonfue burned as
November 21, 1992 at Camden- November 23, 1992 at Pleasant Val- planned despite the rain. A crowd
of some 20() people were on hand
Clark Memorial Hospital.
ley HospitaL
for
the celebratiQn. Wooden signs
She was born in Wood County,
Born May 28, 1920 in Leon, he
ylaced
about the county to promote
W.Va., a.daughter of the late Guy was a son of the late Tobias 0 . and
the
levy
were gathered up and
and Goldie Jackson Williamson. Ewart (Burgess) Mattox. He was a·
added
to
their
texts were yellow
She was a homemaker and a Pente- retired heavy equipment operator in
notations
saying
"Thanks". These
· costal by faith.
the coal mines and was a member
lined
the
parking
lot entrance-and
Surviving are two sons, Norman of Masonic Lodge No. 23 of Clifquite effectively.
Marks of Syracuse and Larry Byers 100
-"---of Washington; two daughters ,
ife was preceded in d~ath by a ·
Looking
ahead,
the Meigs DiviUnfortunately, it was announced
Debara Barter, Syracuse, and
w 1·Ir
J Ma
J
Karen Midcap, Washington; 11 son,
tam ·
ttox, r., a sion of the American Hean Associ- that an out-of-county physician had
brother and a grandson.
.
grandchildren; and three great~urvivors indlllde his wife, Be· ation is ready to stan its Christmas served as the home game physician
for the Meigs High football team
grandchildren.
. ssie (Coleman) Mattox; two tree-an annual fund raiser.
Last year the association used, this season. The announcement
Besides her parents, she was daughrers, M!'s. Roger (Delores)
preceded in death by her husband, Long of Pomeroy and Mrs. Earl and quite appropriately, large was made at the recent annual athIra Leonard Byers; one grandson (Belly) McKinley of Middleport; a hearts to decorate the tree which letic banquet. Just for the record,
and one great-grandson.
son, E. David Mattox of West , will be located at the front of the the doctor for the home games was
Services will be beld on Tues- . Columbia; two sisters, Mrs. Loris courthouse in Pomeroy. This year, none other than Dr. James Withday 112:30 p.m. at Leaviit Funeral (Faye), ,Pullin~ of Princeton and fireplace stockings will be used. erell of the Meigs Health. Services
Home in Parkersburg, W.Va., with Mrs. Wtlliam (Maxine) Stephens of Each will ..be . insc ~ibed with· the in Pomeroy and a resident of Meigs
- Rev. Walter Minney officiating. Clyde, Ohio; a brother, EarlL. Mat- name of the honoree and the year. County. Dr. Witherell was right
$5 you can place a stocking on .there on the bench to provide help
~=:ill be in Sunsei Memory tox of Spencer, OH; eight I:or
the tree-in memory of someone, for the team at every home game.
grandchildren and one great· in thoughtfulness to someone who
Incidentally, Dr. Witl{erell,
grandchild.
is ill-or just to remember a close joined by Dr. Wilma Mansfield and
Service will be Wednesday, friend or relative whom you love Dr. Thomas Spencer, performed
Judgment sought
November 25, at 10 a.m. at the and respecL Wben the tree is dis- t)le physical eJ(81Jlinations for all of
A judgment action has been Wilcoxen Funeral Home with Rev. mantled the honoree receives the the participants of the Big Bend
filed in Meigs County Common George Hoschar and Rev. Terry At- stocking as a memento. Kathy Youth Football League-including
Pleas Court by Mary Price, Long . varez officiating. Burial will be in Ruchti will be doing the writing of cheerleaders-this fall. The three
Bottom, and others, against Suncrest Cemetery with Masonic the names and date on the stock- physicians donated their services to
Bernard D. Bay, Reedsville. The Graveside Rites by Clifton Lodge ings.
the league.
1,
suit, which
alleges personal iniury N~ 23
.
Now you' can take part by consustamed in an. auto accident
Friends may call at the funeral tacting Denv,er and Nora Rice, 992Do have a wonderful Thankscaused·by 'Bay, does not list a spe- home today (Tuesday) from 7-9 3579; Donna Carr at 992-3222; giving and do keep smiling.
cUicjudgmentamounL
To end marriages
p.m.
An action for dissolution of Completeit'ame listed
marriage has been flied in Meigs
In the obituary of Ira G. Roach
County Common Pleas Court by which appeared in the Nov. 15
Continued from page 1
Norman L. Merrinar, Reedsville, issue of The Sunday Times-Senball coach, effective 81 the end of the 1992 season and the resignaand Emilee L. Merrinar, tinel, his mother's name was
tion
of Jetta Kmmer as home economics teacher, effective at the end
Reedsville.
incompletely listed. Her name is
of
the
ftrst semester. Melissa Stewart was hired as director of the
A divoree action has been grant- Estherla Eddy Roach Powell.
pep band during basketball season.
1~ ~~dra L. Stepp
SheUy Fortune's request for her daughter, Brittany, 10 attend sec·
ond
grade at Racine Elementary was approved. She now attends
An action for divoree has been
Veterans Memorial
Scioto
Elementary School in Jackson.
MONDAY ADMISSIONS •
ftled in Meigs County Common
Present
were board members Sue Grueser, Joseph Thoren, Tom
Pleas Court by Christine Lillian
Milton Hood, Middleport, and
Roseberry,
Denny Evans, Clerk Dennie Hill and Superintendent
Stewart, Middleport, against RayRobert Diddle, Middleport.
BobOrd.
mood Andrew Stewart II, GallipoMONDAY DISCHARGES lis,
None .
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Marriage license Issued
Discharges, Nov. 23'- Erica
Units of Meigs Emergency Services answered two calls for assisA ·marriage license has been Dowell, Laurie Wayland, Decie
tance
on Monday and early Tuesday. .
issued in Meigs County Probate Phipps, Mrs. Wesley Barnell and
On
Monday at 12:07 p.m., Middleport unit .to Mill Street, and
Court to Jerry David Swartz, 40, son, Daniel McNerlan, Peggy
took
Shirley
Appleby to Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport, ~d Nancy J o Beckner, Donna McGuire, Mrs.
At
8:41
a.m.
on Tuesday, Racine squad went to Elmwood :rerWoolard, 29, Middleport.
Anthony Lester and daughter,
race for Vicki Boso, who was taken to Vete~s Memonal Hospttal.
Demple Vance, Darla Haynes, Mrs.
Charles Fink and son , Dorris
Enyard, Mrs. Estel Lavender and
Tbe Daily Senlinel
son, Rhoda Grimm, Myrtle Neal,
(UIPIIiUID}
Harriet Mays, Warfield Collins,
Bobby Wolfe, Mary Childers,
Pv.bliabed tYtry aRenoon, Monday
lluoaP Friday, I U Court St. Pameroy
Justin
Ramey, Stacey, Stanley,
Ohio by lbe Ohio Valley Pabltablni
Savannah Coleman, Meagan Cole·
•
I
rdi.
CompanJIMultintedia Inc., Pomeny
Meigs County's $500,000 Rural by June J. Slo~, C&lt;?&lt;J ~ator,
o.io 4671111, Ph. 992-21156, Second.~
man, Sara Siders, Joseph Greenlee,
JXII&amp;IIe plid. aL PwbeaG), Ohio.
Demon~lralion Project and how .it g~aduate educatao~, Umversny o~
Otis Porter arid Mable Hill
tS
working to help tdentify educa· Rto Grande, have mclud~ a sum
M.-: ,., Auodolool Pnu, and lho
tiona! problems and overcome mer school program for etghth and
Ohio Nowopoper Auodollon, Naticmal
Adnrt:iatq ~JftMD&amp;atlwe, Branham
them in the classroom was dis- nt~th graders, devel~ classroom
Nowapaper Salaa, 733 Third Aron... ,
cussed
at a meeting held last week units of stud~ emphastzmg _sktii~.
New Yllll, N.,. 'l1lrk 10017,
at
Meigs
High School.
surveyed allm'!th graders to tden~:
Am Ele Power................... JI 1/8
I'OS'I'MA8J'BR: Send •bato
Allending
were
representatives
fy n~. provtded needed tech
Ashland 011... .....................24 1/4
The DaUy__Sentiael, 111 CourL St.,
of
the
University
of
Rio
Grande
cal
equtpmen! for math area, d~~el· .
p
G) . OHio 46188.
AT&amp;T.................................47 S/8
and
ieachers
and
staff
or
Meigs
o~
andare unplernenung posmve_
IIVIIIICKIPTIOPIIIATU
Bank One.................... " .....48 1,18
ll)oC_w_&amp;o.le
.
Bob Evans ........................ .19 3/4 County schools. Welcomes was discipline programs.
ODe WIIOL................. ,...................... $1.60
given by Dr. Barry Dorsey, Rio
Rtebel talked about the Jeruungs
Owrning Shop................ ,.36 3,18
Oao M...u..........................................$6.96
Oao Yur..................... , , ,,,, , ,;,__,,$8UO
Grande president, and John Riebel, G~t of $3,~ for developmen~ of
~Holding ...................... 17 3/4
lllPIGLii COPY
superintendent
of Meigs Goul'lty a We Care program, i!~d Rtc~
~ llll MoRui.............. ~.... .I7
PIUQ
Schools.
As~ math teacher at ~e1gs, an
Dolly. ......... , ... ,............... :........... , :u; Cenlo
T&amp;R .................. 68 114
The
first
year
of
the
program
Alhson
Gannaway, a htgh school
Key enturion ...................20 518
·Sab..,iben DOt ......... ,. lo poylhe c:arri-·
with
an
expenditure
of
$2SO;OOO
student,
tal~ed about the Hewlett
Lands End...........:..............24 1{2
or - 7 nlllit ta adYODOO dlnct to Tho
was
designated
for
providing
masPackard
eqwpment
sc:&lt;:ured by ~h
Dallr Sellllaol on a lhno, lis or 12
Limired Inc. ...................... 25 7,18
ter
degree
training
for
70
teachers
and
,
the
program
whtch
he cames
-lb - Cnolit will bo liven cam..
Multimedia Inc . ................. 26 3/4
CIKhweek.
~
as part of a planning program.
outm the _classroOm.
.
Rax RestauranL .................S/16
No oabacripliou by moil pormitlocl in
'fhis year the remaining
AI~ discussed were commuruly
Reliance
Elcctric
................
l7
3/4
.... when - - canter eemce il
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 14 1/4 $250,000 is to be used to imple· educallOn grants, a ~ g~
••allablo. l
ment programs . At last week's to getti~g parents m~ mvolved m
Shoney's lnc. :....................23
............. c-..11
Sw Bank ...........................331/4 meeting, reports were given by educauon. J.a net Bolm has been
13 Weob. ... ,..... ,....... ...................... $21.84
teachers. representing Eastern, · !*"~coordinator for the program
Wendy lnt'I... ........, ............ I4
J&amp; w-..........................................148.ta
Meigs and Southern on what is tn Metgs County. .
.
u
$14.76
Worthing!Qn Ind. ...............22
0.-llelpc-.Qo
planned
or
being
done
to
bring
l.cJyll;
Stuller,
chref
Ulbln/Rural
Stoek
reports
are
the
10:30
u w.u..........................................
Education Stale Depa~ment of
Lm. quotes proYided by Blunt, about more effective schools.
.110
u w-..........................................
Achievements in accordance Education, also spoke briefly at the
Ellis a_a d Loewl ol .Gallipalls.
with original planning as explained meeting.

Kathryn Byers

William Mattox

Court news

.

.

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

«;!!:

=

Hospital news

EMS units answer two calls

Rural Demonstration
Project discussed

Stocks

Gotl!l6ear

Mallh-..-

w-.. .. .. . . . ........ . ... . .. . ......
• w-...................... . . . ,.. . .... . E.40
.40

. I ~ -. . ,

\~•

.

'

-

..........

New

~

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

Trustees to meet
Lebanon Township Trustees
will meet on Saturday at 7 a.m., at
the township building.

Music night
Country Music Night will be
held Saturday at Lottridge Community Center. Ali bands are welcome, and music will begin at 7
p.m., and continue until midnighL
Refreshments will be available.
The center is located on Athens
Countr. Road 53, five miles west of
Coolv1lle.
Senior dance planned
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
bave a round and square dance on
Friday from 8 to II p.m. Music
will be provided by Millie and
Kenny Reynolds, a Blues Counll'y
band. Caller will be Arthur Conant

Those attending should i&gt;riog
snacks for the snack table. The
public is invited.
..

AA to meel
The Pomeroy group of AA will '
meet at 7 p.m. oo 'ijlursday at the
Saered Heart Catholic Olureh. For
more information, call 992-5763.
lloo5len •utili&amp; plallaecl
Southern Alhlctic Boosters wiD
meet on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
high school

Litenry Club
The Middleport Literary Clo11
will meet at 1:30 p.m. on December 2 at the home of Mrs. Bernard

FullZ. Mrs. Eldred Parsons will
review, The Girls ill rhe Balco11y,
by Nan Robertson. RoDcall will be
to clip a column by a woman jour~
nalisL
'

Middleport...

.

continuedrrompage t

C81peting.
. a distinctive and uruque snuation
Refrigerators, freezers and air since it involves sister communiconditioners can only be picked up ties.
,· .
if the compressors have been
The grants would be separate,
removed. There is no problem at aU Trussell said , and it would not
about picking up furniture an /t'&gt;..involvea co-mingling offunds.
other appliances if they are moved ),
.
.
to the curb. If such things have to '
Other Business
:
be removed from a house, then
Council gave a third reading :uid
the~ will be an additional charge.
adopted an onlinance regarding the
Gerard asked Manley about the sale of excess propertY adjacent to
tipping fees at the landfill and the Reuben ~o!l~ns property !)I)
whether since the mulli-county Hartinger subdivtSIOil.
~
solid waste management district is
Issue 2 projects were discussed
dissolved those are still in effect, and Mayor Fred Hoffman ~
and whal effect this might have on that.be and ~russell had been to
the village's conl111Ct cost for uash Marietta to d•scuss. the Broadway•.
pickup. Manley will check into Lo!lan Sucet dr~ mage problem
whether the tipping fees are still which prdlably will be funded. The
being paid and get back with Coun- mayor.5!Dd there was also a good
cil. This would amount to abuut posstbtlity that the North Secood
$145 a month on the approximate Street pavin&amp; project would ~i
25 tons of uash which are taken to funded in that it was one of f~
the landfill eath week.
projects to receive the district's
The recycling program was dis- recommendation.
., ,
cussed and Manley. said it is not
Mayor Hoffman asked Councl'
profitable and he ~ld like to dis- to think ~~ projects which might
continue the operauon. However, be submitted fl!" the seventh ~
the village still has in effect a recy- of Issue ~ ~JCCt ~ · Deadhne
cling collection program which was for su~t~g app~ons to the
funded with a grant. It is scheduled Buckeye-~ Regtonal Developto expire at the end·of this year. meru Agency IS Dec. 23.
Manley handles the recycled maiCThe annua! Midd leport Fire
rials from 1he village under a provi- Department dinner for honorary
sion of his conttact for uash collec· members was announced for 6 p.m.
·
·
on Dec. 3 at 1he ftre house. Council
non.
Downtown Revitalization
members and the cledc are invited.
Council approved submitting its
Next regular meeting· was
downtown revitalization grant nar- changed to Tuesday, Dec. 15.
rative in conjunction with
Attending were Mayor HoffPomeroy. That sam~Jlction had man, Council members Horton,
been taken by Pomeroy Village James Clatworthy, J udy Crooks,
Council last week.
Gerard, and Jack Sauerfreld, and
Jean Trussell who is handling Cledc-Treasurer Terri Hockman.
Middleport's program explained
that each village will have its own
project and that only the narrative
will be combined when 1he applications for funding are ~ubmiued lD
WITH A CHOICE!
the Ohio Department of Development.
The recommendation for the
joint narrative came from Mike
Stroth, SBA Consultants of Jackson, who is advising both villages.
Trussell said that Suoth's feeling is
that the joint narrative wiD provide

A THEATER

lnEIITIOIIILL HUITEU
IIID CHRISTIW SIIOPPEIS
Wt carry • .We nrlety ef
alzes fr• chDIIr••'• te
. . triple L IIEIT PIKESI

WIUOI'S liMY SUIPlUS
992·7093

••·7
s,.,_

S•n.·frl. t
Stlt. 9 •••
2 MD•s pest hi'I'MMI •
lt. 33 .(........... , ......
Co. ltl. 1'· .,,... Y.' .u..

FI{EE 1\"SPECTI():\

SHAVER REPAIR
(Ill Brands)
Sa• Dar S•vfct
AIP.m Ellrl

lltiii:Jes:

cJ-11i Olllg,

Alii slaells, Grea. .

TUESDAY, NOV. 24, 4 PA·7

,FRUTH PHAIIUCY

786 N. Seco•d Awe. • •ddlepert, Ohio ·,
_ ._., ... ...

-~

..

. -·

...... - -

•

1-

�-

·sports

The Daily Sentinel

J

Tuesday, November 24, 1992

·

..

Page 4

Saints' _ground defense shines
in 20-3 victory over Redski~s

.

·Meigs defeated Southern 15-2,
IS-I

S

•
first dowo-galnlng reception during Monday
night's NFC encounter In the New Orleans
Superdome, which the SainiS won :Z0-3. (AP) '

Meigs defeated Belpre 15-S IS-

'

Meigs defeated NelsonvilleYork lS-I, 15-1.
.

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

T...,

Norr~

ltulerio DI-

Ildmit........ :.......

lhdfalo............... 9 2 0 .818 301183
)(;aU. ............... 8 3 0 .7'II 269193

Toron\0 ..............
Cbie~ao..............
' TunpaBay ........

T-

W L T Pd. PFPA

Wjanepalit.. .....

4 1 0 ,364 1412jJ

N.Y . .Jeu ............ 3 I 0 .213 1~226
Nowlrqlaad ..... Z 9 0 .112 115ZUO

Cntral Dl•idoll
1 . , Pb........ .......... I ~·. 0 .7'II
............. 6 ! 0 545
CUVElAND ...
6 0 .455
' • CINCINNATI.... 4 7 (} .364

s

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:146197
161176
197248

Minna«~ .. . ...... .

SL!.ouio ............

1·0

GFGA
.,., 80
68 68
63 S7
73 12
IS HI
69 84

· Vancouver ......... 12 8 2
Edmon""' .......... 7 10 4
WUuUpos ., ....... ., 7 13 I

26 97 68
II 6!1 81
15 75 8?
SanJOOf ..., ... ., .. ., 4 16 1
9 57 91

'

Monday's scores
WuhinltOft l, Mormal l , de

6 5 0 .545 111119

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Tonight's &amp;ames

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

-: ·,

lutem·Dh·llloll
W L T Pd.
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I ~ ....... 7 4 o .636
6 5 o -'45
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ou.oao....... .......

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Alfanll ............... 4 7 0 .364 200296
LA. !Will .......4 7 0.364 200 233

Monday's score
New Orloaftl 20, Wuhinstm l

l

Futurepmes

I

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s n'lny, N••· z'

CoiapiiCUM!LAND,I p.m.

JC,uwuCityatN.Y. Jeu, 1 p.m.
Miuni It New Orlelnt, 1 p.m.
New~ 11 Atlanta , I p.m.
PhDaUJ.at Wuhinatm, l_1.m.
l'llllbullhiiCINCINNATI, l p.m.
Tampe Bay va. Green Bay ll Mi;lwau·
k... l ,..,,

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Monday, No¥.31
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at SeaaJe. 9 p.m.
• In the NHL: ..

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35 Ill! 74

N.Y. .......... 10 9 2

Plol' 1o1[6ia .. ..... I 9 4

22 64 61
22 77 II
211 19 16

N.Y. !Uwlon .... 110 2
12

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llulrllo............. 110 3

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CU!YI!LAND .......,.4 5
Deoolt,..................... 2 7

Team ........... W
Michia~a .... ... 6
0100 ST ...... .l
Mich;san SL,.5

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Jowa ............... 4
lndi.ana ...........3
WilccnM ......3
P\lld~ ...........3
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MU!neoota.,. .. ,2

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2.5
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3.5

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0 .455
0 .364
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CLEVEt'N'~~'I: ..::.:ddod

aNew 'VaG.. 7 :30p.m.
atCJad:rr 7:30p.m.

.. al CLEVELAND, 7~30

.·

BuketbaD
"...............

•· DETROIT PISTONS .
DtaoU Ro!but, farwud.

let ...

Rolnomod

Nad_,.....,......,.
Hockey

LOS ANOELI!S KINOS - lteeallod
S01n WhJII!, ript wlna, and Ouy Lev·
.... c.a-, froln Jlbo.nb. of dte latarw·

tiaJIIllocll

Leque.

NEW J'ElSEYDBVILS - RacalJod
Jtma Tod•. - • · , _ Ulica of t1oe
Amedraa Hooker Lllaue. l•u DaVid
rmm.....-.~w..

~

it-----~.---------------~------------~-------------------J
·I

Sincerely,

H9ckey
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Philadelphia rookie Eric Lindros
will be sidelined for at least a week
with a sprained left knee. Lindros,
injured in Sun\lay night's 4-4 tie
with Buf(alo, was examined and
treated by \earn physician Dr.
Arthur ~artolozzi, who said a magnetic resonance-imaging test confirmed the li~ent sprain. · .

Trac,. Sancltn and ~ Raaoa, outfi.eld·
en; Bill Watz and Shawn Bryan~ pltch·
en, aad Alvaro Elpinou. ahortat.op, to
their !OI&amp;er.

Pat Dobaan adva.nc:c 11C0UL

TO THE PEOPLE OF
.MEIGS COUNTY:
THANK YOU
FOR
YOUR
•
SUPPORT ON NOV. 3.

Spotts briefs

B-baU

COLOlADO ROCKIES -Named

Allanta 101, B..- 91 (01)
Sacrlmeo"' 103,Solllla99

·
Mihn

4
S
5
S

Nlllaoal Loa...

,

0 1.000
3 .«.7
3 .625
3 .625
4 .556

Conr.
OYfnll
T PeL W L T Pd.
Z .750 I 0 3 .164
I .681 I Z I.T/3
0 .6:1!1 l 6 0 .455

Transactions

Mln.tDiwllloa '

s -......................6

L
0
Z
3

llliDcil 14, Mic!U&amp;.. Slllc 10
MicltiJio 13. OHIO STATE 13
Minnclota 2&amp;, Iowa 1l
Nmth,...!Cm 'II, WiaOortlin 25
Purdue 13,1ndiana 10

3

3.5
3.5

.714
.«.7
.37l

The Southern Tornadoes will
host a basketball preview Friday
evening at Hayman Gymna8ium.
The evening's rlrSt contest wiH
put Southern's freshJDan team
against the Meigs Marauder frosh
at 6:30. Eastern will battle Southem in the varsity contesr after the
freshman contest.

Saturday's fioales

WESTERN CONFERENCE
T -- - - -W L
................ ..5 2
Utah ..... .......... :.......6 3
s........................] 5
o.........................3 6
MiMJ:IOII .............. ..2 6
J&gt;.llu...................... .1 6

Basketball preview
·Friday night at SHS

0

lllinoil ........... 4 :l 1 .563 6 "' 1 .542

2
4

.444
.444
,222

I 10

.125

Big Ten final standings

r.s2

.42?

0

NOIHOnrerence
. AJuon 24. CU\cimali 22
Toledo 25, N. lllinoD &amp;

.625
.S!i6
.444

7

Saturday's finales

GB

Cenlral Dl.takln
Chica1o .................... l 2 .800
Milwaukoe ...............6 2 .7SO
-~ ................. .5 4
.556
lodiuoa .....................4 4 .500

-

.

WLTPI.I.GfGA

-~ ........ ll 9 0

~

Paclllc llhlaloo

·WALES CONFERENCE

II'

Ali••UcDI,...._

W L
Orlando ................ ., ..5 3
New York ................ S 4
Wu~Unrton. .............4 S
Philodcl'phil ............. 3 4
New Jcmy .........~ ....4 6
Miami ..................... 3 5

4J"'·

' Blllralo lllodianapolll,
Mime1011 at L.A. Rani, p.m.
l'hiWolohiaat S..l'nncUOo, 4 '"''
L.A. Raldtn at San Dio&amp;o.. 8 p.m.

OlllO ..... ,...I

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Tum

50 .444560
70 .2222?0

Kall ........... 2
E. Mic:b..... J 7 0 .125: I 10 0

In the NBA ...

Baa10n ...... ., ..............2 S

Thundly
~WIUift at Detroit. 12:30 p.m.
N.Y. Oian&amp;latn.lla&amp;, .. p.m.

I
I

196219

c. Mich. ... ..4

Vancouver at Minnclo&amp;a, 1:10 p.m.
San 10H at CalauY, 9:40p.m.
~ AnaeJ.a: at l!d.inorKcn, 9:40p.m..

'II6174

z

•

I

114241

s.. Fnnc:iloo .... '
o .818 31?112
New oo.......... I 3 o .m 211141

t

;
•

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248249

168218
221261
t 98256

Miami ..... ., ..!
Ball SL .......S

include (front row, L-R) April Halley, Nikki
Bentley and Jaclyn Swartz. Standing are Cyn·
tbia Cotterill,· Mandy Jones, Melissa Clifford
and Amber Blackwell. Erica Robie and coacb
Dale Harrison are not pictured.

TVC RESERVE CHAMPS -The Meigs
Marauder reserve volleybaU team finished wltb
a 20-0 season, wbk:b was gi10d for the Trl-Valley
Conference championship. Only one of the
matches went to a third game. Team members

3 0 .6 2 5 1 3 0
3 0 ,625731
3 0 ,625641
4 0 .5 5 6 5 6 0

~ ..,......5

ldanueolllllartfonl.7:40 p.m.
Qucboe u BIUI'alo, 7:40p.m.
New Jasey at Ottawa, 7:40 p.m.
N.Y. Ranp:n It Pitllb\qh, 7:40 p.rn.
St. Louia It ~t. 7 :40p.m.
Bol1m at WuhiJtat.an, 1:10 p.m.

Wlllem Divl-'on

•

l
••

0 ,7'II
0 .455
0 .364
0 .364
o .213

Tolodo ...... ,.5

Wedne&amp;day'saamos

~162

:IDI68

C.ntraiDiwW.

1

~

PFPA

Overall

Tunt-W LTPcLWLT
X·BOSU .....8 001.!100920
w. Mioh. ....6 30 ' .«.7731

Tl:n1p&amp; Bay at Tc:lftmto, 7:40p.m.
N.Y. hlan*n at WinnjpeJ, I :40p.m.

'ot

.-R· .

....

Bucs cut salaries, risk chance at '93 NL East flag

MAC final standings

l'llllbwp 5. N.Y. R"''"" 2
Dooo;t 10, T...pa Bay 5
Vancouver 5, Ch.i.caso 2

5 6 0 ,455 116171
I 10 0 .091 13218

Red Wlnp 10, LlcblnlnJ15

Lemieux. knocke&lt;l out of last
Detroit avenged a 6-4 loss in
spring's playoff series against the Florida 12 days sao by scoring the
Rangers by Adam Graves' slash, most goals agamst expansion
also had an assist. ·
Tampa Bay in the ~·s short his"That's in the pilst," said
Lemieux, who now has 100 points ~-er~ei Fedorov, Ray Sheppard
against the Rangers, the most be's . and Dmo Ciccarelli each scored
scored against any NHL team. . twice and Steve Cliiasson, Dallas
~·we won the Stanley Cup ' and
Drake, Jimmy Carson and Steve
that's all that millers. What hap- Yzerman adde4 a goal apiece for
pened before is not important."
DetroiL
Lemieux put the game away
Detroit coach Bryan Murray
with I :29 remaining when. he
decided to pair Yzerman, Fedorov
his second of the game, and Rtck and Paul Ysebaert on lhc same line
Tocchet completed the scoring by after the trio- keyed a third-period
hining the empty net with 25 sec- comeback Friday in Washington.
onds left.
distance.~·
The sttategy worlted.
John Tucker, Brian Bradley,
Danton Cole, Doug Crossman and
Stan Drulia seomi for Tampa Bay.
Bruins 3, Senators :Z
At Otlawa, the Senators' winless streak reached 21 as Boston
got goals from Dmitri Kvartalnov,
The University of Rio Grande opponents resulted in a 96-72 win Adam Oates and Ray Bourque and
men's basketball team will have a for Rio Grande.
·
some excellent goalte~ding from
leg up over West Virginia State
WVS has entered the season Andy Moog in the third period.
tonight when the two meet on the under the direction of a new coach,
Ottawa's Sylvian Turgeon
Yellow Jackets • court in Institute.
Robert Marshall, and is looking to scomi with 30 seconds left, apparThe advanlage is Rio Grande's improve on its 13-16 finish from ently tying the game at three. But
four-game string of victories and a last year. Marshall succeeded the Senators were penalized for
14.2-point scoring mllgin, plus a Edgar Randall, who had the job on haviilg too many men on the ice f\
team that's demonsll8ted a pmfer- an interim basis and has mmained in fact eight ,
·.
ence for shooting often and accu- on the Yellow Jackets' coaching
r
•
Canacliens 1, Capitals 1
rately. WVS. on the other hand, staff.
At Montreal, Don Beaupre had
opened its season Monday night
Starting for Rio Grande will be 36 saves and Patrick Roy" turned
against Davis &amp; Elkins and has Jack Morgan, the S-9 freshman back 2S as the tean\s played a lackmade the Redmen its second oppo- from Barberton, at point guard luster tie.
' \.........,
'--~~ .;~~.....".:~ ~
wwith an average of S.8 points and
nent of the year.
John LeClair scored for MontreWhile Rio Grande has met the 4 assists .JlCI: game. Morgan's bus- al in the first period and Todd KryMonday night's NHL game In New York's
BODY SLAM - Pittsburgh's Bob Errey
Yellow Jackets in scrimmages in tie. on diSplay over the weekend, gier tied it for Washington in the
skates away after delivering a body slam to the
Madison Square Garden, where the Pea11uins
recent years, it has not competed will be complemented by Matt secon!J.
won 5-2. (AP)
New York Rangers' Darren Turcotte during
apmst them in mgular season play Powell (6-4, sophomore), who is
Canucks 5, Blackhawks 2
smce the 1982-83 campa1gn. currently IC&amp;tding the team in indiAt Vancouver, Gino Odjick
Tonight's game also marks the rll'St vidual scoring with 20.8 points per · scored two goals and Pavel Bure
of two games the Redmen will play outing.
got his 23rd of the season as the
with WVIAC opponents, the other
Jeff Brown (6-S, senior, 19.5 · Canucks opened a 5-Q lead before
being West Virginia Wesleyan on points~ 6.8 rebounds) continues as Chicago scored midway through
The merging talents of the Uni- Gena Norris - are averagin~ io Hamilton, the 6-0 junior from GalNov,. 30.
power forward, while Walter the third, ruining Kay Whitmore's versity of Rio Grande women's double figures in their shootmg, lipolis, brings 15.5 points and 7:S
Rio Grande's season up to now Stephens (6-4, sophomore, 10.3 bid for a shutout.
basketball team will be put to tile and the ream itself holds a 25.5- boards 10 the game to lead the team
'
has been in tournament play, but points, 3.S rebounds) is the most
test tonight in Lyne Center when 'it point margin of victory over all of in those departments.
Wilmington. under the guidance
the results have been gratifymg in likely candidate for continuing at
faces NCAA Division Ill opponent ns opponents.
that John Lawhorn's club has taken the small forward slot Troy DonIn other words, not bad for a of third-year coach Jerry Scheve,
Wilmington, starting at 7.
home trophies from each invita- aldson (6-8, senior, 14 points, 8.8
Dave Smalley's new Redwomen team that started with just five will probably slart Pandy Kerrigan
tiona!. A 92-8S defell of St Mary~s rebounds) wiD be at center.
edition is .3-l having shrugged off returning from last year's 25-7 (5-6, freshman) at the point an,d
(Texas) propelled the team into the
The Yellow Jackets' probable
its season opener loss 10 Findlay. squad, complementing two trans- provide Beth Barnell (5-7, senior)
championship round of the George- sl8flers will be Cody Porter (6-2,
The team went on to swamp fers and a host of freshmen,. How- as support. Forwards will be Cattown (Ky.) Classic, leading to an freshman) at the pOint and Rodger
Wilberforce 106-42, advance to the ever, one first-year player, guard olyn Deneke and Katrina Butcher,
80-78 vtctory over Georgetown, Trent (6-S, freshman) at the other
FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) championship round of the Bevo Rilter, came with impressive high both 5-l 0 juniors, with Tara
which was picked second in the guard slot. Forwards are Barry - Earle Bruce has vowed to fight Francis Classic with an 82-62 school cmientials and her work in Richardson (5-11, sophomore) tit
·
NAIA pm~n poll.
Baker and Antonio Hill, both 6-3 allegations of "intimidation and defeat of Spalding (Ky.), and win this weekend's tournament earned the post.
The Redmen took the momen- seniors, while Jimmy Mem,minger fear" that led to his dismissal as the tournament title with a 98-73 her most valuable player honors.
The Quakers are 1-1 afler opentum into last weekend's Bevo Fran- ' (6-S. sophomore) takes the post. 1
Riuer (5-6) hails from Sidney and ing their season with Wilmington's
·
Colorado State's head football victory over Midway (Ky.).
cis Classic, where they stopped
The game will be the first of coach.
is
currently ;Neraging 10.8 points a Tip-Off Tournament this past
·
In all four of the contests, Smalgame
and leadS the team in assists weekend. Scheve's club got into
McMaster 112:88 to win lhc privi- four on the road for Rio Grande,
Bruce, officially fired Monday ley has detected a balanced effort
lege of meeting Shawnee State for which goes to the Catawba (N.C.) by CSU president AI Yates and in which no one player has at 4.2 per outing.
the championship game after
Against Wilmington, Smalley knQJ:king off Wilberforce 83-S I&lt;
the title. An intensely physical bat' Classic on Dec. 4-S after playing . athletic director Comy Johnson at a emerged as 'a star, but have blended
tie between the two southern 'Ohio Wesleyan.
news conference at the school, their individual gifts to work· as a plans to star~ Norris (5-3, junior, 11 . but lost the title to Cedarville in an
points, S rebounds per game) at the 88-61 defeat by the Yellow JacketS.
spoke 10 reporters separately min- unit. '
point
guard position. with Crouse
After two games, the statisticlll
At the same time, the team has
utes later at a nearby hotel.
(S-6,
junior,
10
points,
3
rebounds)
leaders
for the Quakers are
At.times he had to choke back been working on improving its
providing
backup
as
the
shootmg
Richardson
with IS.S points and ll
tears but openly defied Yates' motion offense and other areas,
guard.
·
.
boards
per
game,
and Deneke witll
demand to resign ani! defended his , Smalley said, leaving him with an
Taking
the
small
forward
slot
IS
13
markers
and
5
rebounds.
:
actions during four years as the optimistic feeling following the
Gudorf
(5·9,
junior,
14
points,
4.5
mussen
knocked
away
Dee
Admission
to
the
game
is
$3
fot
ByTOMCOYNE
first few games.
Rams' coach.
Brown •s inside pass to McHale
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) Four-game statistics show six of rebounds), as Collins (6-0, sopho- adults and $1 for students. Rio
"I can't believe (my job) is
S.8
seconds
left
and
with
The Boston Celtics appeared ready
gQing to be snuffed out by some the Redwomen - Lori Hamilton, more. 11.5 poiqts, 6.3 rebounds) Grande students, faculty and staff
the
Dominique
Wilkins
grabbed
to shoot their way out of their
guy by the name of Corey Johnson Stephanie Gudorf, Tricia Collins. continues at power forward. Lon are admitted free with ID.
loose
ball.
slump before the Atlanta Hawks
and AI Yates. I can't believe that. I ,Gena Norris, Stacey Ritter and
Wilkins, who had two mbounds don't want to believe that," he
defense stiffened.
The Celtics, who entered the and two assists il'l overtime, was shouted, his voice quivering with
game ranked 21st in the league fouled by Brown and, hit two free emotion. "I'm sorry, but that's
worked so hard and now every- baseman Jose lind for two pitching
with a 45.5 percent shooting aver- throws with 4.3 seconds left.
how I feel. I can't believe 11\e probBy ALAN ROBINSON
Wilkins
had
19
points
and
eight
prospects;
age, shot 65 percent (11 of 17) in
lems are so big that they couldn't
PITTSBURGH (AP)- They're thing's going down the drain."
assists
and
Blaylock
also
had
eight
- Released one-fifth of their
Since the season ended a month
the rtrst three quarters, but led by
be solved."
breaking up lhe three-time National
roster
by waiving pitchers PatterStacey
Augmon
had
18
assists.
only six points because of
· The 62-year-old former Ohio League East champion Pittsburgh ago with their devastating Game 7
points
and
Jon
Koncak
13
rebounds
son,
Roger
Mason and Vicenre
turnovers and lhc Hawks' mboundSlate coach said he is considering Pirates - not because they didn't playoff loss to Atlanta, the Pirates:
Palacios
and
outfielders
Cecil ESJJY
as
the
Hawks
had
a
48-38
rebound- Decided not 10 enter the biding advantage.
legal action against Colorado Stare. make it to the World Series, but .
and
Gary
V
ai'sho.
·
ing
advantage.
Atlanta
also
had
15
The lead disappealed as quickly
He said he has retained a lawyer because they didn't make enough ding war for two-time MVP Barry
Leyland,
put
in
the
role
of
keeP.
steals
and
forced
24
turnovers.
Bonds;
as the Celiics shooting touch, howand will meet with him Wednesday money.
In Monday night's mily other to decide on a course of action.
- Risked losin$ former Cy ing a division champion competiever, and Mookie Blaylock finLeft-bander Bob Pauerson, disNBA
ga·
m
e,
Sacramento
edged
ished with 23 points, including two
Bruce: who rmisbed this season traught at being released for salary Young Award w1nner Doug tive with underpriced veterans and
Seattle
103-99.
key baskets in overtime, leading
with a 5-7 record and amassed a reasons after a successful season, Drabek by not re-signing him rookies, agreed the Pir~tes must
swing some trades or sago some.
Kinp
103,
Sonics
99
22-24-1 record in his four years said Monday he's upset the Pirates before he became a free agent;
the Hawks to a 101-97 victory
At Sacramento, the Kings SJII'· here, had two years remaining on ate breaking up a championship
- Traded Gold Glove second free agents.
Monday night ihat extended
"It's too early to teD how we'll
vived
a
13-point
third
quarter,
beat·
Boston •s losing streak 10 six.
.
his contract
·
team for economic reasons.
'
Sports
briefs
be,"
Leyla(ld said. "If we coul~
"We didn't let them get the ball injl Seattle behind Mitch RichBruce said that de~pire the aUe·
The Pirates have trimmed their
get
Drabek
in the fold, thai woulil
where they wanted it,' \ Hawks mond's 29 points and Wayman gations about his conduct. he never payroll from $34 million to $19
Running
be
a
big
one
for us. We need SOIIIt
Tisdale's 28 points and 14 intended to harm CSU's players or million in less than a month, but
;coach Bob Weiss said.
BLOOMING10N, Ind. (AP) offense.
We've
got to piece togethits football program.
·
they've also markedly jeopardized Four Arkansas runners were among
The Celtics, whose losing streak rebounds.
er
some
more
offense."
Sacramento led 63·46 at half"I'm an intense guy, and I love their chances of repeating- and of the top 20 finishers in the NCAA
-is their longest since 1979, shot just
36 percent in the fourth quarter and time, but was outscored 31-13 in to coach footbaU, but it was never again drawing 2 million fans.
Cross Country Championships,
"I just hate it ... those people helping the Razorbacks win their
·missed seven of eight shots in over- the third quarter and trailed 77-76 my intention to hurt kids or the
entering the fourth period. ·
football program, •' he said.
deserve better than that,·' Pauerson third consecutive men's title.
.tJme.
Richmond
brolce
a
94-94
tie
He
has
been
accused
of
physisaid Monday from his home in , · Indiana's Bob Kennelly, a 1992
. "We had everything going our
Shawn
with
a
three-pointer.
cally
and
verbally
abusing
his
playGreenville,
S.C. "I wanted to stay Olympian, won the men's IO·kilo·way and then we let it slip away,"
Kemp's
layup
wtth
2:44
remaining
ersa
violation
of
university
polin
Pittsburgh,
I would have loved metcr. race with a time of 30 minReggie Lewis said.
pulled
Seattle
within
a
point,.
but
icy
and
a
bmach
of
his
contractual
to
slay
in
Pittsburgh.
We had guys utes, IS.3 seconds. Gary Stolz of
Blayhx:k put the Hawks ahead
the
SuperSonics
managed
just
a
agreement.
rooting
they
wouldn't
get taken in Stanford was second in 30:36.1..
·97-94 with 1:32 left in overtime
throw
and
last-secol)d
layup
free
"Yes,
I've
grabbed
facemasks
the
expansion
draft
so
they could Arkansas finished with 46 points,
.with a 16-foot jumper, but Kevin
and
have
gotten
after
players,"
he
stay
in
Pittsburgh."
·McHale, who led Boston with 23 the mst of the way.
·
followed by Wisconsin with 57.
The Pirates have traded or
:points, hit a lhme-pointer, tying the
Benoit Benjamin led !he Super- said. ' 'If I have done anything
:score.
.
Sonics with 18 points. Michael wrong, I apologize. But I want you released many of the veterans who
State Auto's already
· Blaylock then put Atlanla ahead· Cage grabbed a season-high 19 ' to lcnow that 1 don't think I've done played big roles in their ch~p~­
NOW ...
low premiums can be
:agmn, 99-97, with a 20-foot ~per rebounds and added f3 points for anything that is cause for dis- onship seasons. ·Patterson saod ll
A BeauUful Way To
reduced even more by
missal."
ll!ay
be
a
signal
that
the
team
is
:with 20 seconds left. Bla1r Ras- Seattle..
'
Wall
Corners
..
.
Protect
insuring
bolh your car
Yates said an investigation into more concerned with trimming
·and home with the ~te
Bruce's
as a payroll
thanofwinning
games.up there
J..~L'J'
l .tS. .tS.
result ofconduct
rumors was
aboutlaunched
the footbaU
"Some
the people
Auto Companies.
program, " 'suggesting ~ si~ation are really under the gun," Patterexisted that put the UD1Ver5!lY, ~t SOn said. "And how are tlJey going
Let us tell you just
Unfinished , Stained
great risk and enhanced our liabilt- 10 si~ free agents with the signals
how much yoi.lr savings
or Varnished
.
ty considezably."
they m giving offl
can be.
Based on her showing in her
Mom than a dozen faculty, stu'(Leyland) went through so
· While hopes were high that
In Rich Oak or
Renee Peck, the University of Rio studies, Evans was also named an , deilt and staff members corroborat- many lean years, building that team
Econ-omical Beech
Grande's top women's runner, AcadeQ'Iic All-American. Peck's ed the alleged violations, Yates up. He deserves better than that He .
would win rll'St place in the NAIA
time
and Evans complet·
~~lllllllll~~~~~~~~~~-~
Prices
·thewas
race19:38
in 19:S3.
·
Cross Country Nationals Saturday ed
at Kenosha, Wis .. she did return
Start At
·
Chris Smith, a junior from Lonl.uuuiee Service.
.. 'with her ruth AII·Americln l!on«.
don, rlllished 92nd for Rio Grande
Available At:
Peck, a aenior from Baltlmom, in. the men's race. at 28:23, while
·
· Ohio, placed 1~th in the women's Chad Benson, a junior from Glen214 EAST MAIN
race, which placed her J~~~ong the
POMEROY
top 30 who finished the competi·
tion and are named AU-AmeriCans the two-mile llllll'k. but sulfcrcd an
'•,
992-6687
for achieving that distinction. · · injury lhll put him behind.
MEMORl:AL BRIDGE APPROACH
.
•
. In addition, Peck was nimed an
These four adlletcs qualified for
ON GARFIELD AVE., PARKERSBURG
:Academic AU-American, and was
Mon.-Fri. 9-8; SIL 9-5:30
joined 11 the nationals by teammate
·Bonnie Evans. a junior from
II
~~~--•CIIQR•IIR '
Xinpton, who ftnished the race in
tive divisions.
18th place.
•'
' .

Atlanta, .Sacramento latest
vic~ors in light NBA.action

CLEVELAND at Milwaukee, 11 :30
p.m.
Sacramrnto at Datvcr, 9 p.m.
San Antonio at Utah, 9 p.m.
Portland at Phoenix. 9:30p.m.
New lmey at LA. Laken, 10::30 p.m.

llooon 3, Oluw1 Z

Barrasso.

Mike Needham and Joe Mullen
also scored 'for Pittsburgh, while
Mark Messier and Mike Gartoer
tallied fm the Rangers (10.9-2).

Colorado State
removes Bruce
as head coach

Wednesday's £11Df!S
\VuhiaJim at 8011Cl!ll, 7:30p.m.
Ad.nta at Phi1aclelphia, 7:30p.m.
HOUitalat Orl.wlp, 7:30p.m.
Indiana at Mi.ani. 7:30 ~rn.
Chul«tc atDeaoi1., 7:30p.m.
New Yom at MiruiCiou, 8 p.m.
L.A. Oi.ppen at DaDu, 8:30p.m.

Smylhe Dlvllkln
Loe:Anacla ....... 14 6 2 30 102 BI
Colpey ......, ....... l3 1 2 28 ?3 75

w..aem.Dt.-Won
1 4 0 .636 175207
1 4 o .636 mtn

c....................
-. x..o.uaty .......
s.. ~ ..........
LA. twdon ......
, Sooale................

Dl•lllon
W L T P1.1.
13 9 0 26
l1 &amp; 2 24
10 7 3 23
10
3 23
9 3 l lO
7 11 3 17

Despite Bourque's -..ishes. the
won Monday's game
bebtnd two goals from Mario
Lemieux and 39 saves from Tom
Pen~ums

Redwomen host _Wilmington tonight

I;::
In the NFL .••

Pittsburgh .beats N.Y. Range.r s
·5-_2 to pad Patrick Division lead

Undefeated Redmen
will confront WV State

Meigs reserve volleyball team wins TVC championship ·with perfect mark
an average of 4.5 points out of a 15-4
possible of 15 pomts. In many,
Meigs defeated Miller I5-13,
games the spikers combined for JS-ll
double figures in number of kills.
Meigs defeated Trimble 1S-3.
· In one match with Meigs trail- IS-S
ing Belpre by a score of 3-0, fresh.
Meigs defeated Wellston 1S-9.
man April Halley stepped to the 15-1
line and wilh the help of her team·
Meigs d~feated Soulhern IS-I,
1S•3
.
mates. served 15 stratght points for
the wm. Halley cOntinued the string
Meigs defeated Belpre 10-15,
the next two matches and wound 15-7,15-3
Meigs defeated Nelsonvilleup s11rvin' a school record 27
straight pomts. In another contest York 15-1, IS-3
Federal Hocking led Meigs 11-0
Meigs defeated Eastern 15-2,
when CY.Dthia Cotterill srep up and 1S-.1
'
served 10 straight points to pull
Meigs defeated Vinton County
within one. After. a service JS-1 15-7
exchange HJIIley rmisbed with five
Meigs defeated Miller I5-6, 15straight points to complete the IS- 6
II come from behind win.
Meigs defeated Alexander 15-3,
Meigs reser\re results
IS-3
.
(:ZO.O, 16.0, TVC crOWD)
Meigs defeated Federal Hocking
Meigs defeated Vinton County 17-15, 15-11 . .
.
.
15-4, I 5-4
Meigs defeated Miller 15-6, 1S~
Meigs defeated Alexander 15-2, 6
15-2
Meigs defeated Trimble 15-5,
Meigs defeated Federal Hoclcing 15,3 .
IS-7, IS-4
Meigs defeated Wellston 15-2,
Meigs defeated Eastern 15-3, IS-3

1992

By CHRIS ~HERIDAN
AP Sporf!l Writer
One-quarter of the way through
the NHL season, the Pmsburgh
Penguins are looking like they
could run away with the Patrick
Division title.
The Penguins put some more
distance between themselvel and
the New Yodt ~ers on Monda)'
night with a S-2 victory at Madison
Square Garden. At 16-4-3, the Pen- ·
guins have 3S points, 13 mom than
the second-place Rangers and New
Jersey Devils.
·
"We don't want lhcm 10 get too
far ahead of us," said New Yodc.'s
Phil Bourque, who helped the Pen·
guins win two Stanley Cups before
signing as a free agent this summer. uWe want to Slay in striking

"It didn't feel like we played a ~~. 20 yards. New Orleans ad(led a
IJ MARY FOSTER
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The lot better than normal," Saints ftve-yard touchdown pass from
New Orleans Saints' game plan quarttlback Bobby Hebert said. "It Hebert to Quinn Early to make it
was simple- stop what the Wash- seemed like we played better last 14-3 llthe half.
Ington Redskins do best. Stop the week against the 49ers, and we lost
Hebert completed 14 of I8 for
run and don't allow the passing that one. I guess this was beaer, but I42 Ylllds and a touchdown.
it sure wasn't easier. The big dif.
Monep Andersen hit a 43:Yard
game to connect when it counts.
: The Saints (8-3~ limited the femnce was our running game was field goal in the third quari.er and a
Redsk:ins (6-S) to 58 yards and only beucr."
·
4S-yarder in lhc founh.
live first dbwns rushing Monday
Not great, but better. In last
With the defense playing its .
!light, wiming 20-3 by holding the week's game against San Francis- · usual bard-hitting game and the
defending Super Bowl champions' co, the Saints only ran for 43 yards offense moving the ball, scoring
leading rusher. Earnest Byner, to and only got nine yards rushing in. points and not making turnovers,
29 yards on 13 carries.
the fourth quarter.
the game was not in doubt after the
Tbe Redskins started off tough, first ~- Lillebaclcer Pat SwillRedskins quarterback Mark
Rypien completed 21 of 38 passes holding the ball for 10 minutes am! ing said. it was more than just
for 'JJJT yards, but was intercepted seven seconds in the rrrst quarter, another madr: in lhc win column.
but only coming up with a field
"Anytime youjust give up three
once and sacked four times.
"We got super pressure on Ryp- goal after offsetting penalties nulli' points against the Super Bowl
ien," Saints linebacker Vaughn fied an 18-yard touchdown pass to championS, I dori't cane what anyJohnson said. "We had him run- Gary Clark.
body says, it's gteat," Swilling
That was the.only trip to the end said. "I think the message in this
ning around all game long. We
game is that we can play against
didn ' t allow him to s1and back zone Washington was to make.
"It was tou~h to really say wh~t anybody, anytime, anywhere."
there and beat his feet. We kept
For the battered and battlecoming. We, knew we had to do · that did," Ryp1en said. "We can Sit
that and hold their runners. From and say it was Ibis and was that. It weary Red•kins, it was another lesson in frustration.
the start we knew that was the takes four points away from us.''
After a Washington field goal
Washington coach Joe Gibbs
job."
The Saints, meanwhile, cranked by Chip Lohmiller, New Orleans said his team, with 14 players on
up their running game for 82 much- got going in the second quarter injured reserve, just didn't have the
needed yards, 29 of them in the with an 18-yard scoring run by people to geqhejObdone.
"We can't make lhe plays to
fourth quarter to help them run Dalton Hilliard.
GET OFF ME! -Washington tight end
HiUiard, who had 13 carries for win it," Gibbs said. "Losing is
down the clock and protect their
Terry
Orr (left) tries to stiff-arm New Orleans
54 yards, also caught five passes awful, any way you look at it"
lead.
cornerback Toi Cook after Orr's seven-yard,

The Meigs Marauder reserve
voUeybaU team, under the direction
of coach Dale Harrison, recently
completed its season by. capturing
the TVC reserve championship
wilh a 20-0 record.
Team members include Amber
;Blackwell. Jaclyn Swartz, Melissa
,.Clifford, Mandy Jones. Erica
.:Robie, Cynthia CotteriU, Apil Halley and Nikki Bentley.
. Dominant net play by Clifford
and Robie, accurate passing from
:Jones, Cotterill, Halley and Bent,ley, and on the spot setting by
·~lackwell, and Swartz were saong
~ points of the team. Coach Harrison
also attributed good team play.
;,souiJd fundamentals, and a positive
·,j!ttltude for the success of the team.
The teams serving percentage
was an excellent 94%. The girls
.dominated their opponents as Only
,One of the 20 matches weht to three
games, their only loss w" a 10-15
g'ame to Belpm, but Meigs came
baclc to win the last two games to
r,lke th'e milch by scores of It· 7,
J,S-3. Meigs aUowed the opponcinis

November

JANET HOWARD
HO.I.IDA

Boxing
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) Olympic gold medalist Oscar De
La Hoya made his professional
debut a short one, stopping Lamar
Williams I minute, 42 seconds into
lhcir lightweiaJ!t fight De La Hoya
knocked Wtlliams down three .
times in the scheduled six-rounder
atlhcFmun.

:P
. eckfinz·shes 15th z"n
A
cross Country na.tiona[ meet

CALL
TODAY
992-2124

Hockey
·
NEW YORK (AP) -Tom Barrasso of Pittsburgh, 3-0 with a 1.00
goals against average last week,
wis n!lm~d NHL player o.f the
week. He s 13-2-2 with a 2.97
goals against average overall.

Corner Guards

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT
STORE
=i!r::e: !!~in~::,- :i~ ·
will be open on
THANKSGIVING DAY
~ c-h~':\~!~~~'!f ~:~!
From 4:00 p.m. ·to 7:00 p.m.
~~~o~:! ~"": ~~
For 3 II Hours of Savin s!

5

9•99

~·.\,

I'

Solid. Wood

iw::'d.::..-----....

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS
With litem!

.

I

.,

'

$1199 ·

ROGANER~ \

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP..

428·1065 .

~ .......;.

.

�Page 6 Th~ Dally Sentinel

Tuesdey, November 24, 1982

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

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

MEIGS COUNTY DELINQUENT ·LAND TAX NOTICE

DEUNQUENT•LAHD
Wll• C. llor Roeo 11111y,
TAX NOliCE
....1111 Til R11 N of IW 1/4
The ..... Lola ....... I N of 8E 1/4 l SW of NW

VIrgil/or a-Me 8., Lot 17·
22 t.IE Cor of 14.44 W ol RD
EDt, 11A, .11_., $S2.115.
114 N.IIA, N.ll HrM,
OUYE TOWNSHIP
$714.74.
EASTERN LSD
05· 00534.001, Soora,
08-01510.000, Anthony,
~ E. llor 0...0. 8tct ltavon 11or Deborah, Stet
8-10 Fr 12 HE Part 28.MIA, llllolld.of SW Pori of lw 114
5.0UA, 011t of 45A, I .OUA,
28.588 acrw, $430.52.
05·00US .OOO, leoro, S.DU- f108.74.
Thom• E. llor Goana, 8tct
011-00121.000, Arnott.
10 Fr 4 BE Port Ex. 1.2121 ThomM A. I C•ol A,, Stct
17.274A, 17.274 aoreo, 30 N Pori ol SW 114 IDA,
10.00-$154.31.
$73.52.
05-40810.000, lwMrlngor,
011-00114 . 000, Solley,
.fohn L I Joyoe, 8tct1S-8- Brian K., Soct10D-103 8 ol
171.071A of IUOA, 1.071 Rd 21 I 27 Comblnod, .55
ocre, 8227.47.
80 ro, $45.55.
I LEBANON TOWNSHIP
08· 00481.001, Bokor,
EASTERN LSD
Rodney E. llor Janclo M.,
01·00135.000, Gheen, Fr II T4N R11W 20A Out ol
Monllll EW S., 33, Soct33 15.87A Ex. 1.212A 11.788A,
E Port of NE 114 Ex. Coal 18.781aor•, $176.11.
08·00086.001, Barber,
103A, Ex 2A, 101.00, 101.00
Acroo, $231.27.
Duano F. 1/or Cryotol F.,
OII·OQOIO.OOD, Hupp, 100A lot 104 SE Cor•.86A
. Rocky Roy fJor Corol Juno, out ol 2.00A, .116A, .118 ..,.,
•8.21 , StcL 21 8PT oi1111A 847.08.
SEPT Ex Lola 87E .214A
Ofi.0023UOO, Sulllnglon,
Out of 11.50A, .284A, .28 E. E. c/o W.R. Bullington,
- . , $18.34.
Sect 111 .60A, .60 acre,
,
08·0DOat.DOO, Hupp, $82.77.
Rocky Roy 1/or Corol June,
OUVE TOWNSHIP
8.21,. Soot. 21 lid 8E ol
EASTERN LSD
011·00284.000, Conrad,
DeWitte Run .155A, Out of
1"32.75A, .I&amp;SA, .16 acre, Htlon, LA&gt;l8 MCD and TOR.
$408.58.
Add, $34.17.
LEBANON TOWNSHIP
011·01528.000, Conrad,
SOUTHER LSD
Holen, Lot 8 MCD. I TOR.
07-00148.000, Bumpue, Add., $72.22.
BOnnlt, 831, Socl318.25A
08-00148.000, Eubanke,
of 11.25A BE 114 E of Rd. Ex Roymond L. l/or Potrlcio A.,
7 .25A, 8.25 .,.., $21.82.
Sect 5 8 Part 18A,
148.24. .
07·00141.000, Bumpuo,
Bonnlo, 831, StcL 31 2.75A
08-00150.000, Eubanka,
Out ol SE Sldt o18A, 2.75A, Raymond L. 1/or Patricio A.,
Soct 11 SECor. .70A, .70
2.7Socreo,$7.18.
07-00150.000, Bumpuo, 80 ro, $1.111.
Bonnlt, S 31, Sect. '.11 2.56A
08-00134.000, Headley,
Out ol 7.25A, 2.SIA, S.56 . Robert, Stet 25 Tri In NE
ocrea, $238.62.
Cor ol Stct25 1.50A, 1.50
07·00151.000, Bumpua, 8CrM, $31.02.

rr-;-..=-.. . . , . . . . .

of LAlla returned Dlln=t
• .,. 11M
· c-ay, with · th'o.of :ruoo,

oh•
• 1reon ilgnntty
1o
conlainocl Jnd
dooor
In 1M foUowllllll
Net, vii:
,.
. (Nemo, DeocrlpUon, M•
, rea, Total TuM, ..._..
• montaand......,._l
:
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
. o1.ooon.ooo, cantu John
. E, 8. 35, Sect. :15 NE 114 36
· A, 31.00-$218.18
• 01-41115,000, Darrow,
Jam• D., Royalty lnterMt
. Producoro Fund 1187 1/Producora Fund 1187-4
; LTDS, $6.47.
• 01-00235.000, ~;..t .. an,
; Ron E. l Unda F., S. IW,
. • Lot Soct 13-3 S Part of E
: 112 30 A., 30--. 112.55
01 -00237.000, Eberobach
HowardS. Jr. Ea.l,l. I C. lSi
. SocL 14·15 NE Cor, of IOAc
.50A, .50 oc,re, 12.18.
01.01161.000, l;llbarl,
; Rigga, Walker,
Ro-y ally
· · lntereot Producoro Fund
; 1987 - 1/Producore Fund
11187- 2 LTDS, $5.82.
• · 01-41162.000, I R D,
· Roylllty lnteroot Producoro
· Fund 1817 - 1/Producoro
Fund 1887-2 LTOS, $5.82.
01-40485.000, Moler, Eu·
gono llor Dorothy, 8. ·1t,
$oct 111 W 1/3 of 61A of NW
114 20.33A, 20.33 ocroo,
$44.58. .
01-00013.000, Ollon,
,
. . Jonnlo L, S. 13·25, W Port
· · of SW 112 Soct 13-25, 2A, 2
. . ocroo, $42.42.
'
01 · 00560.000; Poroono,
Donald l/or Beverly, Lot
16.37A Out of 111.68A,
• :t&amp;.374A, 16.37 ocroo,
$35.81.
01-00655.000, Spurnoy
Jamoo A. Abbott Torry J.,
R3, T13, $36, Soct. 36 R3,
T13, 6A, 6.00 ocroo, S104.54.
01-410843.000, Werry, Mork
J. 1/or Sharon c., S2, Stet.
2 Noar Mid of W 112 Ex
.S.4A, I.OOA, 1.00 acre,
$2118.118.
01-00870.000, Wrlgh~ Bill
a Walter, s. 18, Soct 18 In
NE 114 ol Soct;\,47 .80A,
47.80 8Croo, $1,651.!17 • .
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
EASTERN LSD
. • 03· 014411.000, Al...a.
· worth, Floaalo EW, 8 21·22,
• 11tet 21 ·22 (262) W. End
; ~134.58A, 134.58 acroo,
. $86.78.
D3-0D613.DDD, Bartolo,
:
• •' •Chorloo H. 1/or 'Joyce L.,
R..... 13W, T2N, S. 5, Stet 5,
,. T2N, RI3W, I.OOA out ol
, ' UI5A, Ex. .732A, .268A, .27
·: aero, S14.S'.
·
03·00085.001, Boarho,
' • SecIt A. 1/or AnQ'- M., R.12,
: T•.2, 8.4, Stet~ T2, !112,
: 1.75A Out of 4i:~A.. 1.75A,
, 1.75 acre, $12.28. .,,
03·00143.000, ' Burko,
:
, Michal llor Marilyn, S. 28,
.. • soct 226 (640) N Part
, 271.50A, 271.50 acroo,
$545.28.
o:J.OD317.000, Froot Rich,
. ord Etol, Blqck 11 Routt
: 1248 Port of lf5, .22A, .22
• ocre, $150.05.
' 02·00136.000. Honoloy,
Roborl D., 64, Stet. 14 (640)
: NW PRT of 180A SW 114 Ex
• Coal of 80A, 27 A, 27.00
. •
ocreo, $240.011.
03-4Q605.0001 Hi!nll Earl
Rlchllrd I Gltr\ilo Koy,' -1213, Soct. 12·13·_ .Bog at,.NW
; Cor. ol S1P50Qix400/o
, X700'WX400' N ·to ' NW,
• ' 5.60A, 5.80 - - . $118.31.
·
03-00104.000, Hunt, Earl
;; Alchard llor Glenda Kay,
R.l2 U, 812, Sl2 T3 R12
BW 1/4 Exi.5A SSW EX9.75A
,-, NE Cor. Ex 7DA Ex 20A,
f: . J.25A,
$16.11 .
· ~· 03-407411.000, Loudtrmll~
: ' : Okoy Rty IIor ChtrYI Ann,
• • 8 21, StcL 21 W PRT ol

l•u,,-;•

a

i

.i:

us-·

: : Free. 24, .SSA, .55 acre,
·: · JI5.44.
. .
.
:.;. 03-40747.000, Loudtrmill,
,... o·Okoy Roy IIor· Cheryl Ann,
P )21, Stet 28 Froc. 24 . IIA
.~ ol 1.14A, .18A, .18 ocro,

{: .. 1622.46.

"'""' 03-000748.000,
:'; Loudtrmll~ Okay Rty l/or
~-Cheryl Ann, S28, SecL 28
, . Free. 24 .42A ofi.49A, .42A,
... .42 ocre, $11.011.
:
03-oD782.000, Mcintyre,
.,. C.D., NW PRT of Froc. 24
,:; Sect .OIIA, .OIIocrit, $5.54.
'•' 03-00170.000, Pohlln,
: Dtnnio Keith l/or Annotto,
R.ll, T.2, 64, Sect 4 T2, Rl3
-· lA out oiBE Cor. oi51.83A,
• Ex. .SA Lo~ 2.5DA, 2.50
:- ocrw, $448.22. · ·
•
03-00874.000, Pierce, L.M.
; S.l4·15, Stet 14·15 (262)
!· SW Cor. Ex. Coal 33.20A,
• 33.2 0 - $81-JI.
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
MEIGS LSD
. 04·0008.004, Faulk,
: · WMdtl Moo,_R.13, T.2, 8.12,
• Stet. 12 T2 R13 1.253A Out
: ol 188.36A, I .253A, 1.25 .
• ocre, $375.77.
::: COWMBIA TOWNSHIP
~·
ALEXANDER LSD
- 05-40084.000, Coldwell,
-tlruco Etol, Stet 12 BE of
-;sec. 36A, 36.00 acreo,
...120.04.
.
: ~. 05.00085.000, Caldwell,
• Bruce Etol, Stct 5 W Pi ol N
; 112 !&gt;1 NW 114 17A, 17.00
' ocrw, $81.34.
: 01141Cioa&amp;.OOO, Coldwell,
, Bruco Etol, Sect 11 E 112 ol
: NE 114 83A, 83.00 aoroo,
• $278.21.
: 05-00730.001, Qllletlo,
Dtnnll A., Stct 18 ~ Prl of
• IE Prt ol NW 1/4 .53A out ol
. :; te.28A, .13A,
aora,
' $40.01.
.
• · Ol-00432.000, Jordan.
;. Dan L, Stet 28 Til RIIW
' 5. 768A out of 71A 5.768A,
~. 768 acroo, $53.34.
• 05·00433.000, Jordan,
:Don L 1 Kim, lool ·27 Fr
42 Til All IW Cor. 1.171
, Out or t7tA a.mA, 1.871
-.-1.77.
OI·OOIOI.OdO, Miller,

t·

.sa

- ·- · -·

..

· - ~-- r

..

18.- .

:rn:,r~E8i~~~:;eL ,~l :_

2.75A, 5.25ocr•. $14.01.
. 07-40181,001, Clork, Torry
1/or Tr8Cy, R.11W, T2N,
~0, Soc~ 30 T2N RIIW NE
r. of 8 114 10.0017A Out
of 21.25, 10.DD17A, 10.00
acroo, MI. Ill.
07.000115.000, Coftman,
.fohn H. Sr~ 87-14, Soct 7·
14 E PAT of Rlvor .75A, .75
llj:l't, $12.10.
D7-oD640.000, Co limon,
R•ndolph L., ·Lot 31 Old
PorUancl, 524.21.
R 07~:1fDDL Coftm~rd
an o P
., ot 30
Portland, $62.54.
07-oo&amp;42.000, Coftman,
Randolph L., Lot ·2• Old
~~aOO&amp;nd,:·:O c0 11
•
•
•·
man,
Randolph L., Lot 23 Old
Porllond, $1D.21.
07.()0211 .000,
Evana,
Kathryn, 8. 24, Sect 24
I.OOA, 1·00 8Crt, $26.48.
07-00227.ooo, Fleming,

~··=VorpEtal
0

·

n :.::~:·~ •

o, · •
Side of 70A Ex. 18 112A 8

~ i.~':2~:o:."·Fr.~::g,
7

Velma Etal c/o Michael

~l:J.... Vorpo, S. II, SocL 8 °

o, 16.50A, 16.50 ocroa,
8
$43. 7.
.. 07·00229.000, Flaming,
.erma Etal c/o Michool
Robert Vorpo, S. 8, Stet iN
Side 15.DDA, 15.00 ocreo,
$38.71.
07·00461.000, Hamlin
Norman D., 8. 11-28, Soct
11.28 NE PT of W 28A Ex.
Coal 10. 15A, 10.15 acr..,
$26.16.
07-00462.000, Hamlin,
Norm• D:, ·s . 28; ~t . 28
W. End of 70A LAII Ex. Coal
6.78A,6.78-II,S11.17.
07·00463.000, Hamlin,
Norman D., S. 22-21, Stet
22-28 NW Corner E. Coal
3.22A, 3.22 acreo, $8.34.
07-00476.000, . Mid kill,
Ulyu11, c/o J - W. Moll,
S. 22, loct. 22 NW Corner
of E 17 112 A, 12A, 12.00
..,.., $31.77.
07-40045.002, Rowe, Paul
L, R.11W, T.2N, 8.35, 8tol
35 R11W T2N (16D-11711) W
112 5.17118A Out oi20.703A,
5.&amp;781A., 5.68 ~cr .. ,
8225.02.
07· 00805 .000, Word,·
Jamoe Eugono a Botty
Louioo, s. 11-18, Sect 11 •
18, .75A of 68.40A All Ex.
$217 37
Ml 75 • 75
n.. .., · ocro,
• ·
07-00820.00, Woddle,
Lawrence l/or Helen, S. 11·
14·15, Stet. 11· 14-15 E End
ol W PRT Ex 1A 1 .117A RT
Way Ex 4A, 1A, 1.00 acre,
$20.06.
LETART TOWNSHIP
SOUTHERN LSD
08-00274 -000, Hayoo, Poul
W. a Katrina M., Stet 32 on

1

"E._·c....

6

-.!:0

11

HC::i:·::.:·.
(

old W. EW, Lot 77 Ex. IE
Cor, '$2.11.
OH
18-01-.000, Fetty, Hor•
Corp.,
old W. E~ Lot SO Noylore
J -11 p
Run, SZII.H.
L.,.bert
18-01887.000, FollY, Hor•
$8.54.
old W. Etol, Lot 41 8 l'ort.of
14-00N1.000, Anopoch, Lot 411, 82.16.
Eugene F. 11or Judy, Stet
18-00118.000, Gagliano
M (100427) 80'x75' W St Eugene, R. 13, T. 1 LA&gt;t41 T.
Rd. 17 P1 ol .MA .07A, .07 I R.ta :SS'xiOO' I Port 8ub.
octW, $1.24.
5, $28.38. ,
. '
14·00288.000 Doorlor,
11·00584.000, Garnoo,
Henry Jr. 1/or Patty c/o Horry, Lot 257 Sub 25 1/2
Potty Thompoon, Sect 1 .II A .II A, .11 aero, $341.07.
(140) 8 of WUIIomoon 8 Port _ 11-01518.000, Groene
of .IIA .15A, .11 aero, ErnMt'L llor Dorothy C.,
821.43.
LAII 33 D Add., $66.36.
1•·DD3DD.ODO, Doorler,
18;,g2141 .DDD, Honaloy,
Henry Jr. 1/or Patty Ann c/o Robeil D. I ·Bovorly J., Lot
Potty Thompoon, ltcl I 104 Trl North E Cor. 103 E
(840) 8 Port ol IIIlA Bet Port 10210' 8 8iclo, $280.3J.
theetor Ro.d .SOA, .SO aoro,
18-00124.000, John eon
S107.48.
Simon H. llor Glodyo E.,
14·01455.000, Forry, Lol124 H 1 D Add, $223.11.
Dovld A., Soct I (840) On
16-41284.000, Ohlinger,
A11Mn1 Rd. In 17 Radford, Ro.., Lot 4112, $3.72.
SUO.
18-41285.000, Ohlinger,
14·0Dtl4.000, Hohman Roaa, Lot 4112 112 Strip 78'
/Kuhn, Edna Loulao, Etal oiO W Side l 18' S ol Lot,
Edna L Heahman, Stet I $3.65. ·
~140) Slrip 104' Lonl, W of
16·01288.000, Oldaker;
oung 112 A 112 '.o A, .05 Maxine, Lol 130 Ex. Trl.,
tcro, $2.18.
.
$22.26.
14-014117.000, Hook,
16·01289.000, Oldaker,
Mlchttl A. 1/or Sueanna, llaxlne, Lot 131 ·only,
Sect 33 (840) Mid on E Uno $18.25.
41 . 25A, 45.25 eo roe,
16· DD328.DQC!, Oldaker,
$136.12. .
Thomaa, Lot 208 D•.Add. 8
14·00701.00, Imboden, 112 Ex WEnd; $8.02.
·
Ernoot E. l/or Wanda J . c/o
111-!103211.000, Oldaker,
Emeot E. Imboden II, Sect Thomaa, Lot 208 E. PAT of
30 (100) 138 Panny Surv N 112 Ex. 12' N ~ $14.80.
.43"i'. l3ocre, $234.85.
11·01303.000, Paroono,
14-00881.000, Joflero, Franklin 8. l/or Violot E.,
.fohn R., Socl 8 (262) .30A ' Lol256 Sub. 32 112 Ex. .43A
Out ·ol U4A SW Cor Ex. loRy.,$25,56. ·
1D.34A .30A, .30 8Cro, $3.47. .
18. 01307.000, Perklna,
14·00882.000, Jeflera, · - • ~ •• •~ ~
John R., Soct 8 (262) Out or •
' ...., ""• .........
00 3
NE Cor of I.IIIA .57A, .57 J.:,:S~ V:. ~o:'~."idl~~.'~:j
ocra, szao.S'.
262·17 I.OIIA Port of Sub.

"o!~:.:~; :~.~~~!:del~: -~~L.4: BI!~:::OJ..•ll:i.~~:

w:.:SC:'T.• B.
Exoc. Soct 24 E 112 or 8W
114 Ex. 20A NW Ex 4.00A,
4.25aorM, $32.113
08·006511.000, Howell,
Howard C., 8 8.15A out ol
.liSA Being Pi oiTrl. TR Out
of 1.85A NW 114 .I SA, .15
ocro, $2.68.
01-00871 .000, Myore,
Keith llor Judy, Stct18 ol
37A in NW Cor of 70A 1120
2.00A, 2.00 ocroa, $52.48.
08-01180.000, Sandoro,
Michael l/or Rhonda, Soct
211 N End oi41A E 112 Ex.
7.751A, Ex. 7.648A 5.028A,
5.0211ocree, $450.66.
08-01181 .000, Stnclaro,
Mlchool Allon 1/or Rhonda
Faye, Stet 28 T4 R11 Ex.
lllnoralo 7.181A, 7.1181
8CrM, $53.58.
OII-0126S.Th000, Smlth, Er·
vln R. l/or alma M., 8 oct
15 (262) 128 Sq. Rdt. ol318
Sq Ado N Prl 128 Sq Ada.,
$31.40.

E~c:_ar 1~08A,

l4 210 lett. 10 Ex. 27A 1o
By. Ay. IIA, 11.00 - .
$311 14,
11·00334, 000, Durot,
lllllorlo A., 8.30, ltct 30
NW Corner Ex. Cool lA,
8.00 - · SIUI.
11-DOIU.ODO, Duro I
Malorle A., 8. 17, ltct 17
Z.SOA, 2.10- SUO.
11-00331.000, Dural,
Majorlt A., 8.1, StcL II Trl.
on W Uno .21A, .21 8Cro,
$2.13.

11·00337.000, Duro I,
Mojorlo A., 8.30, StcL 10 N
End Ex. Cool 11A, 11.00
8CrM, $211.00.
. 11·004.71.000, Grady
. Dormer L. l/or z.rmo E., A.
12, T. 2, 8.1, 8tcl. 3 R.12 T.2
E l!nd 1.873A ol 8.83A
1.873A, 1.87- $71.11,
II·OOIII.OQC!, Grooo,
Rolph T. I Gino R., S. 12·13,
StcL 12·11 NW Cor. ol8112
of SW 114 ond Mid. ol N 112
·of 8E 114 21.03A, 21.03
acreo, $13.114.
18-0081 ~.ODD, Greco,
Relph T. I Gino R., 8. 12·13,
Soct12·11 NE of 8E 114 ol
NE 1/4 8 of CR. 38.10A,
38.1Docroo, $118.21.
18-00417.000, Gruoaor,
Btrtrorn l/or llorlhll, Lot II
8ub. 0. Sl42.78.
.
18..Q0807.000, Hololngor,
Lort3 IIor NM~, 8. I, StcL
II
Cor. Ex•. 1 A 11DA Lot
11211 5.183A, 5.11 ocree,
$52.33.
18-00587.000, Hughoo,
Ptrry, S. 11, Stet .18 (140)
Moor Mid. of NE 114 Ex. Coal
2A Out or 1D.50A 1.50A,
8.50-,$2&amp;2.35.
·
18-00051.000, Jonoo,
Bronda J., R. 12W, T. 3N, 8.
13, Stet 13 T.:IN R.I2W BE
Cor. 2.1175A ol 51.3517A
· 2.1175A, 2.12 acroa,

sr:~:~cim.ooo,

18-00070.00, ltU,..cN1 0
Dwight E. 1/ol Terri L, LOt

.211ir. 11'1!, ....,.,
te-ocl071.00, 1tur10tn.
Dw1a11t ~ 1/ol Terri L., 1:01
21, fl:78.
:
1 ..00011.000, W~tloll,
wr... A. 1/or Ora .to, A.
1112, 8. 8-13, loot. 8-U R.12
R.2 IW PRT UUA of 4A
I.OUA, I .01-:-, ta.B.'
1a.DIW.GOD; Wolta, iiObby Joe 11or wo11o
J,
I, 8oct. 3 E End EiL Cool lli&lt;.
28A Ex. lA Ex. U7A E1j&lt;.
1.171A 4.757A, 4.71 - • ·
$82.12.
I
RACINE VILLAGE I
aotmERN LSD l
1 .. oo.1 11.ooo, Gh••r·
llllnutl, 81 ' .,., 82.
. •
I 1-00110.000, Gheen,
llonuol, 82, 11 ....21 . :
18-00111.000, Ghot!l,
llllnllll E. .,., llortaoro .....
17117, 1501.21.
I
18-00158.000, Ghaoh,
Alanllll E. llor Barbaro Q.,
Landing In Front 12t, S1.12.
1~·00157.000, Ghaep,
Monuel E. llor Barbara
Gone, 40 All Exoopt 30' E.
End, SI,G1211.45.
I
11·00151.000, Gheen,
Manuel E. llor Barbara
a-, 2t TrL ·w P~ of ~·
Front N. I 80', $2.011.
j
SYRACUSE VILLAGE l
SOUlHERN LSD '
20·00017.000, Cook,
Emma, LA&gt;t 2 8 112 Ex to;!,
$724.4t.
•
· 20·00171.000, Duro't,
MarJorie A., 2110 100A
15'x836' PCL 28 Rtlorred In
Yo. 144-172.&amp;73 .21A, .21
aoro, Sl .68.
20·001711.000, Dural,
Marjorie A., 288 IOOA BE
Ex. UA to SL Ry. 4.51A,
.4.58 - · $30.16.
.
20-00180.000, Durot,
MarJorie A., Lot 2110 100A ·
Ex. .27A lo St. Ry. 7 1A to
Grlncloy 5.72A, I. 72 ocr..,
$305.42.
2~41;000, N-oomo,
Auolon 1/or Loraine, Lot
2118 BE ol Mcbrlda 1.83A
.25A, .25 .... $187.04.
2D-005411.000, N-ome,
Aualon 1/or Loraine, LA&gt;l
288 .811 LMo 30xl87' In
N1111lo of Ruth Cunclft .lilA,
.
.18 ..... $58.13.
20-00623.000, Thomoon,
Roaollo, IE cor.
U
Bumngton EoL Ex. 4A lo SL
.70A, .70 .... $487.40.
w lila,
20-40426.000,
Roborl o, Jr. l/or Sh-nna
r.:., 10 Ex. Coal Righta,
841.17.
20-40427.000, WINio, Rob·
ort 0. Jr. l/or Sh-nna :1,..,
11 Ex. Coal Rl~lt, $&amp;5.21.:
(11) 10, ?tc
-:;
(11) 10, 24, ''1

a

CHRIRIIIS TREES
&amp; CWTS

BUDFORD'S
Fres• CutTretl
or Cut Your Ow••

MAKE IT ARUtE...
USE WANJ ADS.

To place an ad
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5r.M. - SAT.B-12

• .w. -we .......,,.... &amp;ol , _ ..;., ... pnpoid
............... for ... poW .. ao~-.
• r- ,y., c•-..1...t r...... .- ...... u -.u willk

.typo...,. . ......

-~-,.a

-·-llo• .

'"!'.!
N

..
.• Days

Words

1
3

15
15

15

·-•v--

Bl'LLETI:\ B().\RD
BULUTIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

•I
•
I

PRICE REDUCED!
-

~

live rado broadcaat/WGTR

,, ~

- -- . ·-

.

•
••~ ~----------------------------'

.'.........
;

&gt;'

1

•
~

.,
'·

l•

~

r

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

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

1s.,a,.1

AUCTIO

LOCATED AT 2002 CHATHAM AVENUE IN
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO. WATCH FOR SIGNS.
TO SffiLE THE ESTATE OF THE LATE HILLARD "DUCK"
•

I
;

I

1

btglno January 1, Ulll3 end
onda Doce•ber 31, 11183.
Uncomponooltd aorvio•
will be available upon
req-t ID tllglblo poroono
on a flrtt oo•o. llret oorvtd
baolo until the annual
COMpliance level Ia ootlolltd. Eligible poroono ••
lhooe who ore In nMd ·of
hoolth care an.d whooe
family income dooo not
exoeocl twlco tho curr111t
pov.rty Income guldtlln•
eotobllohod by the Community SerYicoa Admlnlotrotlon. Poraona whoeo
lnCMDI Ia 11r11tor loan tho
po¥orty lavtl, but not moro

than
twloo ... · will
be •-ldtred
for rtduotd
ohorgoe. , , _ _ lo clollnod
In uoordanco with tho
Community Sorvlcoo Admlnietrotlon guldellnoo
dtOnlllono. Thla nolloe Ia
ubliehod purouant to
tderal I• oet forth at 42
CFR 124.505 Notice of
Availability ol . Uncom·

ponootacl Sorvlcoo.
(11) 24, ftc

...

Public Notice
NOTICE OF DRAWING
JURORS
0111ce or Colllmleolonore of
Juroro, lhklo County, Ohio
No......!ior 23,111112
To All Whom h Moy
Concern:
On Tllllday, tho lot day
of Doconober, 11112 at 1:30
o'olook A.ll. at liM office of
11M Comllalon- of Juroro
ol Molgo Co.unty, Ohio,
Juror• will be publlclr
driown for the Stptarnber
111112 Term of the ·Com•on
Pille Court of oolcl County,
ao required In Sactlon
21145. II OAC.
WallacoBradford
1.0. McCoy
Conunloelonera ol Juroro
(11) 24, liD

1

Card of Thanks

THANK YOU
Wa would like to
thllnk everyone that
helped .. celebrate
our ICIIh wedding
annlvarury, and for

=we

rvcalvad.
Ill thanks
to
our claughte111,
Mlrgintand

Cliltrlolta,
g111ndchlklrvn and
their wiV'II•

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

All war. able to

AVCDONBER: RICK PL\RION , ..
AD.IIIMSTRATOR: STEVE WALUS

attend but MlchHI
. Edwarcle, who ..
tllchlng school In
Jacksonvllll, Fla.

773· 5785

TIRIIS: Ca1h or Chock with ID.

Nal R_.lblo lot accldtnb or lou of properlY
Uctnttd end Bonded In Olllo, KtniiiCIIy, and Wtll Virginia IIIII

II•

NOTICE TO BIDOERS
The Boord of Tru- of
8ollobury Townohip will
reoolve bldo for tho
purohaea of a IIIII elnglo
oxlo cltMI poworod dump
truck wilh tallgata • ..,.....,
and opllonlll onowplow for
- .. Bide wUI be raoelvocl
until 7:00 p.m. Docomber 3,
11112 at wloloh llmethoy wll
beopontd.
lpoclflcotlona ol buck,
aDNOCior, end anowplow on
lila with the crMk, Richard
Ballty, 463 Hooker Sb•t,
-Middleport, Ohio 45710,
8112-3111.
Blda wUI oleo be rteelvod
for a 1M2 Chov. Dump
Truck 10 be uood • a tracfo.
in.
Horokl Brinker,
Praoldont olllolord
Rlcluord Bolloy, Clorlc
(11) 17, 24, 2tc

CEJSMBREAD

WITH AWANT AD

ROUSH

AUCTION CONDUCTBD BY

• ,.•

------:--:--:--.,...
Public Notice.

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Nov-btr 11, 111112, in t Card of Thanks
tho Mtlga County Probale
Court, Coot No. 27147,
Robert C. Baylor, 7775
The Family Of
North
Rlvor
Rood,
ZaneoviUo, OH. •3701 wao
VELSIA (Ma)
appolnltd Executor of the
11tato of Bortha Baylor,
wlahM to thank
!locuotd, lata of 420 Grant
everyone
for the
Stroot, Middleport, Ohio
p111yers, cards,
45760.
Robert E. Buck,
flowers, food and
Probola Juclgo
comfort during thl
Lana It Nooulroed, Clerk
extended
lllneu and
(11) 24; (12)1, .. 3tc

WALLIS THE FOLLOWING ITEMS WILL BE SOLD
•1988 Chevy 5-10 ltUck 2.5llel O.jection, 39,354 aclllal mi~s.
•11181 Chevy Ci•llon 4 door. na1 running
•~'hard Riding uwnmoMf, 1211', 42" all, TspetKI i.e., nice condition.
'lllder modllemall TruTest riding mower •
•21" 8-mMHif popelled lawnmowar wilh bag · Uko New I
o4 flblo ftlg, M.F.
-e 11. Salallila Dish &amp; Re&lt;:eivor Amplifier

MASON, WV

FOREVER
BRONZE

QIIM&amp; ,

Beatrice Bmlth '

,,

East of Derwin on Rt.
611 on Grewal RDIKI
1Y. Mile to trove.
WATCII FOR SIOIIS
11124/'H/1-

CHARLIE'S

Iathan Rd., Racine

939·2826
ALL SESSIONS GOOD
FOR &amp;MONTHS

recent death of our
loved one.
Spec:lel thsnkl to
lsom Walker, II.D.,
4th floor Wend 2nd
Floor ICU nursing
staff•, Meigs Co.
EMS and allthct
aqulld8 who
n~~pondadso

quickly th1Hve1111
tlmM we nel"ded

them. To Rev. Art
Lund, Rev. John
Evans for a beautiful

Hrvlce, FHnay-

614·992~

c•e•hire,

992·7553

DAIIIIIII,

BINGO
EAGLES CLUB

01110

SUNDAYS

SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon

CLUB

Factory choka

Factory 12
Gauge Choke

11·17-112·1 IIIII pd •

DAVIDSON'S
PLUM-ING

nun•... .,..""

;jj•

IN POMEROY
6:45 ,.• •
Special Earlr llrd

Uc. Ito. 00511-32

38904Leatli•l
CrHkRoad
Middleport, o•io

614·992·714~

10/l/92111

Aulhat!Z&amp;d Agent
TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PERFORMANCE

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Been wailing for ogood reason ro oorchase ocellular {ilone ~

LIMIT£D
TIME ONLY dE

8 County
1ocar oorvrce
oroo.
Service ratoo
lrom $111.115
per month

$6995

39452 SR

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

1:00 P.M.

OPEN IH
Bob Snowden's
Residence
Rutl&amp;rld, Oh.
742·3051
SR124
Ready Nov. 26

CELLULAR

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS

10129fl2/1

885-4381 or

ROOFING

WE DO
AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH
GARAGES e ADDITIONS • SIDING

TROMM BUILDERS

12

gauge only

Quality Assured Corttractor•
20 Yr. Exp.
Call AI, 614·742·2328
•j

1117/lfn

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

HAULING

949·2398 or
1·100·837·1460

LIMESTONE,
Lawn Mowing.
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Reasonable rates
Shrub and Trae
Trimming I Removal
JOE N.SAYRE
RHidontlollo Commercial
FrM Eltllllllto ·
SAYRE TRUCKING
AREWOOO FOR
L---~~11614·742-2138
MICROWAVE OVEN
a•d VCIREPIII
lllllllll

Pkll !!f.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

GRAY'S TAXIDERMY
Deer Heads................... !19000
Turkeys ...........................'17500
00
'
•••••• ••• •54 per inch ,
F.IS h ••••••• ••••••••
Call {304) 895-3386
after 5 p.m ..

YOUNG PEOPLE
Qo you I'1CICid a ltllrt
·

llrlni It Ia Or Wo

In lifo? ·

18 yre and up. E•n •
much •• you wont, full
or per! time from your
homo. No CMh
lnvastment, Ill your
own bo.., even H
you' re 'otllla atudent.
Thla lo Income I hot
koepa golngaven
when you don'L
(614) 378-6153
9-12 and 6-10 pm

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

614-949·2801. 949·2860
or 985·3839
·
(No Sunday Callsl
2112192/lfn

MOTHERS AT
Chrlatmaelncomel

Eaay work from

home. No calli 1tar1
up. Start at once and

you'll never have to
worry about
Chrtlltm.. money

agalnl lncomt that
kMps going when
you can't.

(614) 3711-8153
•--12pmand

992-3838

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes

•Garages

•Complete

tROlLEY ftiTION
CRAFTS

BP OIL CO.

614-892-2549

HOME HEAT.ING OILS
DIESEL FUELS • GASOLINE$

tla_.. II., MWIIopert

•

· Remod•li•g

Stolt &amp; Com~t•r• ·
FIIEE

EXCAVATING

BULLOOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
BEPnC SYSTEMS,
HOlE SITES.nd
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING, .
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING.

FREE ESTIMATES

6pm·10pm

ESTIMAtES

985·4473
667·6179
2-7-92-tln

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVKE

CRAFT CLASSES
10 "Woll Boolctt" by
p;m. $14.00
28 • 211: "Happy
Holiday Open Houao"
HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. ICH pm
Sunday: 1-li p.m.
11M Trolley Station lor
mora Info.
1012611211 mo.

We Deliver ln...
Gallia, Meigs, Mason and
Surrounding Counties

1·800·598·5654
or 614·446·1157

NYA HALL

·New CiaNI
POM·POM,
1UMIUNG,
lATON TWIRUNG

Vouchers

We

All Ages W•lcome
Special Cia• 3-1
YtsrOk'*
For More Information
C811304-273-3721

rviiiCitllbtrad.
It we hllve forgotten
· anyone,piMH
forgive us. Your

TRIM and

Sliter and Brother

915-4352
or Stall lenHH
143·5316
I 1241'11211 mo.

TREES

111241'112/Un

1·100~141·0070

SHRUB &amp; TREE

husband; Chlldrvn,
G111ndchlldrvn,
G111111.0111nc:lchlldrvn

Thollaa White

· $1000 Paroff
This ad 10011 for 1
FRU card.

992·7013 or
992·5553
or TOll FREE

6637
St. Rt. 7

friend we

torvvar ...,....._..
Alblrt Aou.tl,

$8.00
Senior CH'-11 $1.00·
I you noocl traoh pick·
up or 11111re rnrorl!lllllon
call

Small loser Worlt
$25.00 Per llo.r
IWOIIIILI UTU

Specializing In Cuslom
Frame Repolr
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
AU MAKES &amp; MODElS

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

ltllff at Fisher
Fun1111J Homt for
taking IOIMOM wtfo
had been so sick
and '• urr..ca so long
and mumlng hlr to

klnCIIIMI will be

Decamber Spocilll

Fresh Cut Daily
5'- 8'. Tall

EVERY THURSDAY

WHALEY'S
PARTS

Quality
Stone Co.

Bruce Flshlr •net hla

tha wh, mother and

CHRISTMAS

lEDin
SDIITAnON

OH.

Btnnatt Unit 1128

for ...lngeveryone
wu fad and then
cltanlng up after
averyona; our
neighbors and
friends, and vary
epaclal thanks to

nun• He..1 1tt2

SMALL DOZER
WORI.
DRIVEWAY \YOU
and LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERViCE

Public Notice

AUC170NEfR'S NOTE:
Bf ON TIME/ THIS IS A COMPI.ETE LISTING.

WITH A (:=
CLASSIFID AD ~

. .

8

:
FRIDAY,
' NOVEMBER 27, 1992 • 10:0.0 AM

GATHERING DUSt i
"ADD" DOllARS. !
TO YOUR POCKET

~-

Public Notice

101 .5 - 10tiii2P.M.
Gih C.~icate givoewayt. Free
Criminal Rtcolds cup wllh $10.00
pun:hattll Tone of T-ahlrta,
ca-noiiCDa, Mexican Bajo1, hllto,
IWIII panll, potii&lt;W, box Ull, ale.
Doers open al10 om, open till?.
46 Court Sl, DowniDwn GaDipolio
Prieto So Low.... rr. A Crime

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·suBTRACT" THOSE THINGS !.

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charged fot: each day as separate ads.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

01

6 .
15
$9.00
$ .42
10
15
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day $.05/day
Rates are for consecutiw runs, brolcen up days will be

Col 814-llll2·71041or

~

•

742-Rooll&amp;ad
667..C..OI.We

·P
4 BR,
3 b-.
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BR opt.
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t y 2-4,800
oq.-td-1
ft . faim
bldg.
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.. $el,800and
flo ...... "' up 10 - " ' ......,_
may bt ...-.. lor qullll)'lng por1o bill' WIJ n1ot homo on 3:.\ ocroo In

Thtprl&lt;e ... _

At
CRIMINAL RECORDS

&lt;}

M')..Raelooe

37')...'11'"'-t

r.

•

ll's Our 3rd Year Anniversary

12'------------------

sw

pltol, localod at 115 E.
Memorial Drive, Ponoeroy,
Ohio 45781, onlloblo
un-ponaattd oervlcoo
during 11M ...... , _ wloloh

CI=IRTII=IC~lT!;~~·

. CIIRIY RIDGE

458-Leoa

643-\nW&amp; Dlot.

Public Notice

:•
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"

576-Applo Gnwe
773-M882-1'1- u....
895-l.et...
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I

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1 00168 000

$ .20
$ .30

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY
~:: OF UNCOMPENSATED
SERVICES
Mt_,lal Hot-

1-------------------

51

$4.00
$6.00

·!·-;-.-:Pu-b~llc-N:-:-ot-:-lce.,...._

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Fr~k~~-:o5 ~gc=~lt'' Lo~45)

Over 15 Words

GIFT

Call

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Rate

. Featuring Home Interiors
by Donna Wilson
Saturday, Nov. 28, 1 0 am-6 pm
219 Union Ave., Pomeroy, Oh.

mu:

985 °
IU
845-Ponlud
247""'-'- Folo

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...•. OPEN I:IOUSE ..

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25~Diot.

a.....,.

RATES
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•The Area's Number l
_ Marketplace

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24S..IIoG...-

NEED TO BUY A
PERFECT GIFT?
ASK ABOUT OUR

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675-Pt. ...__

S67Ar N..
·s88-VIa~oa

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446-Gollipola

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T,._ (01eapl Cluoillod Dilpi&amp;J, B - C&amp;nlor ~
No-) will o1oo ap-lo t1oo Polot Plouoat
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t1oo Dollr s..o~o~.r,
11,000
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Ann Code 614 Ana Code 614 Ana Code 304

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Melfo Co1111ty Muon Co., WV

G.Wa Co.mty

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DAY1IEI'ORI! PUBUCATION
. I :00 p.m. SMurdoy
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.111. Tutoday
1:00 p.111. Wedneoday
100p.111. 1lourld.oy
I :00 p.111. Priday

Claaflied poge• c011er the
fo11otllbw lelepltoftfl ezc#umge••••

• Pot.. ot &amp;ol for a8 •pilollouon 11 o1o..r.1o pr1oo or o d • 7-..... lloo
• S..IIM!io- ...,..u.1o ,•• ...,. .r-11nta7
fot-......,llntd&amp;J &amp;d...., iDpopor~ C..U loofON2:00 P·•·
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.Call 992-2156

ARANDY
fOOl

f.4

CHRI&amp;TIAS
24 SESSIONS &amp; FREE
'
BOnLE
OF LOTION
'32.00
. ., ..,. specials.

cmon,

435
1.011
Jonoa ,
ocro, $4.17.
Taylor, Stctl3 -30 (100) In , ~:Oolia.cioo, Perklno, Williem M., 8. 25, SteL 25
11.01201.000, · w - , Mid On WI ·uno Ex. 2. lOA Jornoo W.llor Judith L, Lot NE Cor. of Stcl 125 5.644A,
Richard N., 8.11, Sect. 8 1.81A, 1.81 aero, $10.08. ·.
2&amp;2·17 .ISA SUb. 436 314 Ex, 5.S' acroa, $3,105.33.
Mutchler Add 13, .42A, .42
14·001110.000 Kelloy, llro. Cool .15A, .15 - • · $12.50.
11·01231.000, Morarlty,
aero, $4.87.
Bloncht, Etol c/o Helon 8.
16-000742.000, Poworo, Joy Kay, R. 12W, T. 2N, 180A
11·01256.000, Woll8, Toylor, Sect 11-30 (10D-311)" Robert F. aJor Juno A., Lol Lot 1204 T.2N R. 12W S.OOA
Marlin L IJor Emly, ST 18 Mid on N Line Ex..111A 425 Woho Add. Sub. 18, Out of 133.17A 5.00A, 5.00
On N LN Ex. 20A of E PRT 1.11A, 1.111-, S&amp;.SL
$31.40.
- , $33.12.
Ex. 4DA Ex. .83A, 71.11161A,
14-001111.000, Kallay, Mro.
11·00743.000, Powero,
18-00131.000, Par.o ona,
71.112 8CrM, $288.11.
Blanche, Etal c/0 Htlon 8. Robert F. aJor Juno A., Lot Elmer I ' Franc•, 8. 3, S..t.
RUTLAND VILLAG!i
Taylor, Lot 147 Undlvldod 425 SUb. 17,$273.80.
, 3 E End Ex Coa_l 2A, 2.00
MEIGS LBO ·
112 .111A, .&amp;hera, $5.04
16·01637.000, Stephen- 182.17. ·
12-00188.000, Hyeell,
14-00812.000, Ktlloy, llio. eon, WIUiam R. l/or M1111lo,
18·001185.000, Powell,
Wilma Moy, Lot 13,$275.78.
Blanche, Etal c/o Holon s. Lot 262·17 .17A Sub. 483 314 Jerry F. llor Morgoro~ S. 3,
12·001117.000, Hyoell, Toylor, LA&gt;tl57 1.011A, 1.011 Sub 11.17A, 11 .17 acr11, SocL 3 W 112 of E 112 4DA,
Wilma May, B. I, Stct. 8 ocre, $5.118.
$15.31.
40.00 8CrM, $361.74.
(S'O) W ol Lot 13 PRT of 22
14·001110.000, May 11 ,
111·01374.000, Stump,
18-01021.000, Rodman,
1/2A.33A, .33-$12.18. Glon l/or Juno L, Soct 22 Ja!Doollor Carol Rooe, LAII HormM D. llor Eloanori L,
12-00277.000, Spirea, (262) F 23 A13 NE Cor of 285, $122.03.
.
LollS Eli. Coal, $10.80.
Charloo L, s. IC.15, soct SOA.IBA,.IIaore,$26.05.
16-01771.000, Van Mater,
18-01027.000, Rodman,
IC.15 (262) Nw Mid. 30.83A
1c-D1108.000 NoiUnghllft, . Leonerd Lot, Loll Plantz HormM D. l'or EINnora L ;
In BE PT Ex. 7 ooa sz• 12 Carl _E. Mary c/o Edward Add. .. 5 113 E 81dt, $4.75.
Lot 88 Ex. Coal, $10.80.
_., $2.011. · "'' "'·
Nollln~llll, Socii (640) NE
16-01772.000, Van Motor,
18-01028.000, Rodman,
SALEM TWP.-MEIG8 LSD
Cor ol W 1/l 14 R 0 F 8u1Y Leonard Lot, Lot 12 Plantz Harm'• D. 1/or Eloanora L,
I3·000U.ODD, Barrett, .25A, .21aor., S152.28.
Add. 33 113' W Side, Lot 17 Ex. Coal, $22.85
Woncloll, Soc. 111 SE of NW
14-oD115.DOI, Ohllngor, $237.36.
18-010211.000, RtdJBan,
18·01811.000,- VIning, Horman D. 1/or Eloonora L.,
1/4 of 58.75A Ex. 14 Vtln Jollroy, Sect 24, T2N, RI3W
R08-01A44D~~1,ShWiooo~l, Coal 1.17A, 1.17 acre, 1.7741AOutoiSOA,$30.45, Greg L Loll-I Sub. 11 N Lot. 100Ex.Cooi,SZ.U.
ogor • -or
ol , .oct $51.011.
14-4117.,000, Pugh, Clara 1/2 ol Sub. 16 Sub 10, ". 18· 00463.000, Rowo,
23 T4 R11 Ou! ol 24.74A 8
Richllrd Wayne llor Ada F.,
13•00038 _0 00, Borrell, Bolio, loci 30 (100-3011) f68 $84.115.
ol Cau..y'o 2.DDA, 2.00 Wondoll, Soc. It Near llld Ponny Surv Ex. lqto 1.87A
18-011130.QOO, Will, Carl 8.11, Stclll N Side 7A In BE
aorM, $4 7.08.
on N Line of Soc 1A, 1.00 1.17 ocro, $11.07.
' ·
EdWin I Meriel Joan, Lot Cor. Ex. 5112A S 3.50A, 3.50
ORANGE TOWNSHIP
ocro, $63.82.
14·01320.000, Scott, 237 Slrip 66' Wlcla Back ol ocreo, 8411.48.
,
EASTERN LSD
13-00070.001, Cummona, Evelyn l/or Mtllua, Soc-23 Lot253, $3UD.
18-00461.000,
~•
10-00103.000, Burke, Suaen aJor Jerry Stet 35 (640) .50A Right ol Woy ol
· 16.01131.000, Will, Carl Rlchllrd Wayno llor ~F.,
Michael 1/or Marilyn, S. 27, T8 Rl5 N Pr1 ol NE' 114 5.85A IOIIA NW Pr1.50A, .50 ocro, Edwin I Marlel Joan, Lot S.ll, Stott 8 Side 7A in BE
LA&gt;t SocL 27 sEnd EJI17 213 out of 14 .34 A, 5.II5A,; 5_85 $2.11.
253,$461.116.
Cor., Ex. 5112A s 3.50A, 3.50
AU4A,1.34ocre,$427.54. -.$17.01.
14·01321.000, Scott,
1"8·011175,000, Y011ng, acrtt,$18.44.
I 0·001 04.000, Burke,
13·00426.000, Fleming, Evelyn llor Mtlluo, Soct23 . Frank ·a Donna, Lot 25&amp;
Michael 1/or Marilyn, S. 27, ShMnon Etal Stct 30 NW (640~ BE ol NW 114 .86A, Sub. 1·112·1, $142.30.
v*. Coai7.SOA, II.OO'aorw, $141.03.
1&amp;·00521.000, Young,
Soct 27 SEnd 23.30A, 23.30 Patt Ex.
ocrM, $44.17.
7.50ocree, $150.511.
14;.oi3N.OOO, Sprouae, John Eort, Lot C 1131n Cor.
1D·DD105.000, Burke,
13·00428.000, Flomlng, Chill• l/or Ernoodne, Soc L11 Piocolo City lor Sblll,
lllchool llor Marilyn, S. 27, ShMnon, Eiol, Soct 30 NW 8 (840) T2 R13 S .Prt of 7A S300.57.
Soct. 27 8 End Ex. 17.23A, Ex. 14 Vein Coal .25A, .25 NE Prt ol S of Pom Choo
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP
56.511A, 58.511 ocroa, ocre, $2.23.
.SOA, .50 aore, $56.61.
MEIGS LSD
$3118.17.
13·00421.000, Fleming,
14-41385.000, Sproueo,
17·00557;001, Althouao,
10.00253.000, Eaatman, Shannon, EW; Stct 30 (S'O) Chorloo l/or ErnooUne, Soc Marvin 1/or Bonnie, R.14,
Roland E., 8. 36, Sect 38 NW 114 ol NW 114 Ex. 14 I (840) Pr1 of 4.25A Mlcl E ol T.7, 8. 36, StcL 36 R7 Rl4
NoorMicl. W 112 Ex..057A, VolnCool,1.81ocroo,S3.84. NE ~/•1A, 1.00 ocro, on N Uno ol8oct3.011A,
53.50A, 53.50 ocr11, , 13·00430.000, Flomlng, $1,804.14.
Out of 53.06A, 3.08~, 3.08
$500.03.
I Shannon, Etol, Stct 30 NW · 14·01430.000, Stobort, - . $334.74.
.10-003110.000, Hock, Port Ex. 14 Vein Coiiii.SOA, Roger Leo 1/or Linda
17·00847.000, Barley,
llochatl A. 1/or Suaanna, S. 8.50 ocree, $38.25.
Conoll, Soc. 31 (S'O) 2.80A Chllrl11 Wtolay 1/or Donna
27, .Lot SocL 27 Und. 314 ol
13-00427.000, Fleming, of N Prt E of Ad of 56.62A Foye, R. 14, T. 7, S. 25, Lot
Thm your clutter into ctuh,
28A NW Prt 28.50A, 28.50 Shannon, Etal, Sect 30 S 2.80A, 2.1Docr•, $337.11.
Stc-25 (140) T.7 R.14 Und.
~ iJ the
way.;.by ghone,
ocroo, $78.37.
112 ol NW 1/4 ol NW 114 Ex.
14-41517.000. VanCooney, 112 lnt In Coal I Olh Min.
,10-00391 .000, Heck, 14 Voln Coai16.00A, 11.00 Ralph L, Stet 33 (640) NE 71A, 71.00aor•. $21.53
no need to leave your home. ·
Mochllel A. llor Suaanna, 8. acrtt, $71.48.
of SW 1/4 1.0DA, 1.00 ocre,
17-00071.000, Eblin,
~. LAII Stct33 Unci. 76.115A 13-00707.000, Gordner, $4.41.
Goralcl s. 1/or Undo, S. 15,
Plqce your clquified qd tqdgyl
Mid onE Uno 57.71A, 57.71 David l/or Wanda, Sol Lot
14-41518.000, VanCooney, Lot Soct15 SW Cor. Ex. lA
aoroo, $158.30.
8 .75A, .75ocre, $150.30.
Ralph L., Soct 33 (840) BE 8 16.134A, 16.113 ocroo,
word. or
AA)'I,
1G-003112.000,
Hock,
13·00638.002, Garnoa, of NE 114 2.25A, 2.25 acrM, $168.112.
Michael A. llor Suaanna, S. Dollon 1.. If• Erika, 81 15 $100.80,
•
1.
, Eb)ln,
17 0007 001
RliJlen, 15.40 paifl in advance,
27, Lot SocL 27 Und. 114' ol ·27 SW Cor Ex. Sch LAII
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE
Gerald s. 1/or Unda, R. 14
38A NW Prt 8.SOA, 8.50 4.1'1A Out of 34.62A 4.17A,
t
N
ecroo, $26.27.
4.17 Acree, $372.llll.
MEIGS LSD
. 7, S. 2, Fr2, T7, Rl4,
ID-003113.000, Hock,
15·01354.000, Bentz, 81da of TWP RD 2582.066A ,
13•00538_000 , Hamilton,
Mlchatl A. I/or Suoanna, S. Norman J. l/or Vivian LM, Jameo II. IIor Almont, Lot Out of 111.00A, 2.066A, 2.07
2. _ _ ____._ _ _ ___
33 • ·t S t 33 Und 1,4 r a - 12 ~-lid N
••
45 5'011 S 81da, 84.38.
aorw, $11.80.
.
•'"" tc
· ,. o ..... t
.__
W 114 • ...,
15·01351.000, Bentz,
17· 00342.000, Hamon,
79.85A llld On E Lint, 3.00teree, $410.11.
11 ••
L
,_ D 11 ,._ 1o E s
3. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
1t.24A, 111.24 aoroo, $52.110.
13-D0273.000,
Hargla, Jameo M. • ...mona, ot -ry • or ,.ro
., •
10-00211.000, Hogan, John A. 1/or Unda 8 ., St II 48, $154.78.
33, ST 33 U67A oi38.711A
4. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
John C. llor Pamela L, LAII T7 RIS 7&amp;.50A of 10II.SOA
15.01567.000, Blaka, SW Cor. of NW 1/4 ol SW
Hickory Acr• Subdlv. W Mid s on S Lint Ex 30A mca, Lot Ui3 Lower Pom, 114 of Soct 33, $321,03.
5 •. __.;,.___________
6 _________________
111' 8 361 E 100' N. 407' Lot 78.11 A, 78.11 acre a,
1~:r,·568.DDO, Blaka, ~~!~t::~:.-~zt~~~
";::JiiJi.ooo, _ Mitchell, ~~:::::.20.000, McDonald, Joyce A., -Lot 114 Lowor 21 (640) W 112 ol E 112 Ex.
7. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
John H., R•. 12, T.4, 8 _34, David E. 1/or Volvlo, Stct II Pom -.112' E Side, $13.35.
80 213A E of BE 114, 53.33A,
8. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
S.CL 34 T.4 R.12 NW 1/UA SE ol N 200A Ex. 14 Vlln
15·005211. 000, Gilkey, S3.33 ocroo, $ 157: . .
of 53.50A, S.OA, 5.00 ocr•, Coal, 2.10 - - . $310.17.
Richard D. l/or KarM K., "!~t:::~:,'~n, Lot
.,
9. _ _ _ _ _ _..;..._
__
Mitchell,
.
145 • 23x45' WEnd, 211 (640) Noor Mlcl. on 8 Une
J h u s 35 LA&gt; SocL 36
$4. ·
lOA, 10.00 Acr•, hfl.85.
10~------------o n , .., · , t
Con of Soc 33, Running
15-D0802.000, Kauft, Carl
17-G01 5Z.OOO, Wilt, Ken
~!i c.or., .SOA, .so ocre, !2;.0_.R,,d 2.21A, 2.21 ocr•, 11or 8hlrloy, Lot 100 1 308 l/or
Kimberly, S. 14•15, Lot
11~--------------~
-.
...,..
lA Oft N llda ol 2.12A LA&gt;t·
15 W
9A
1 illld 20 •8 •
ID-OD35B.Ooo, Mitchell,
13-00046.000, Puckett, 3081A, 1.00 ocre, $3,124.85. Socl 14 15 $2°116.
John H., 8. 34, Lot Soct. 34 Frank, Soc 33 8 Part of NW
15-415011.000, Stallworth, 20•81 ocree,
.52•
W. Side of NW 114, 30A, 114 I IW 1/.4 Ex. Cool :::rnla, Lot"11 Bohon lot
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
l3·~---------------30.00 rM •~~&amp; 52
8C •• · ·
5.7113A of 1D3A 3.1301A,
$140.41.
.a
_000, •··oclatad
1151
1
10·007511.000, ·Sampoon, 3.8301 ..,.., S8.DD.
15-41417 ooo V
rv
....
14·~------------~--Anthony M. llor Kimberly
13-00047.000, Puckett, Laonord ~ L~t5:':' OW Carbon Inc. 8. 100,. 1ocl
A., Lot IS Hickory Acree Fronk, Stct 33 sw 114 1
E 8iclo ol Loll7 10' On 2nd 100 N..r Mormon .211A, .28
Subdlvlalon 100'x400', Strip N 123.7018A, 123.70tl St. Coolport PT 57, 825.111.
ocro, $13, 18·
B odl d
$605.07.
ocrtt, 5688.84.
IHI 41 1.ooo, Vlfllllt4tr,
11-001 57 .002 , r or ,
10.00780.000, 81111paon,
13·00041.000, Puckett, Leonard Leo, Lot 51 Keith llor Dobra 8., R. 12w,
Anthony M. llor Kimberly FrMk, 8oo 15 -8 42 NW Coolport 158 38' Front, T.2N, 180A lot 11185 RI2W
A., R.l2 T.4 1.5, Lot Stct. 5 114 180A, IIO.OO ocreo
$84.32.
T2N 2.814&amp;A Out ol 7.51A
R12 T4 NWPT 3.128A Out of Sl84.78.
.
'
11-0IDU .DOO,
Wlto, 2.1146A, 2.11 aorta,
12.80A, 3.1211A, 3.13 ocree,
13·00041.000, Puckett, Donny Joe 1/or AndrH Jo, *' ~· 1 1 · _
, Carnah-,
$84.28.
Frank, Soc 33 N- NW ·Cor Boer 21 .33A N of P•go
-·
10·00542.000, Shloldo, ol
114 w ol Rd 1A, 1.00 Stroot s. of Rd.
Jamoo A. c/o .romeo A.
RollolciRandaltllorPamtla aero Still
$211501
Cornohan, R.12, T.2, 8.11,
Suo, Lo1 (I) 174x41112 SW
' . .
PoMeROY VILLAGE
Sect. 11 T2 R12 4.21A, 4.21
Prt,$8.28.
IIEIGI LSD
ocrw,$4115.$4.
.
•
10·00541.000, 81\lolde,
13·00801.000, Scott,
1-01
,
l•llord,
11·0011411.003,
Dnla,
1
104 1100
Rollolcl Randilill l/or Pamola lllmuol llor Bonnie G-, Dovkl A. l/or Ktlll 1.., LA&gt;t William D. l/or Corel D.,
Sue, LAII (tO) Ex i'x284', :w33 ,~ E"!'. Coof NW =~A/4 l 4111 Ex. 112, ll 42.11. · ,
IOOA LAII 2$3 1.142!~ out of
1,. •
11 1
$172.41.
lc-DIIOI.OOO, Ballard, 11.83A 5.14211A, 5.... ecrll,
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP
5.713A 1.1821A, 1.1121 Dovld A. II« Kelll L, Lot $73.04.
MEIGS LSD
8Croo,S1,037.38.
453 Correction 1o Affoct Trl.
11·00850.003, Davie,
11-00021.001, Chipman,
Ex. El/2, la0.71.
William D. l/or Coral D.l
Kelly B. llor Molloea J .,
13·00710.000, T-rtor,
18-00101.000, Cltlland, IOOA LAII214 USIA Out o
R.I(W, UN, 1:~.51 FR 25 Flora E. c/o Robtrlllorroll, ThOIIIM C. 1/w Lo1e J., LA&gt;t 88.37A 2.35SA, 2.38 tcrM,
Tfn R14W No.- N of 8R Stct 111-8 8 Une of 8E 1/4 462 :KVdO' N of 4111, 52.H.
$31.1111.
124 1.00A Out ol 81.44A 7A, 7.00--,1187.31.
18-001011.000, Cltllond,
II·OOU2.000, Duro!,
I.OOA, 1.00 _., Sll.87.
11·00701.000, WaiDh Thornoa C. llw Lolo' J., LAII Malorle A., loct 100A Lot
11-00022.001, Chapman, T - ..,..,. Troct Sooltty 414lubclv. Lot 1414 of LA&gt;t
IE Ex. .14A 1o It Ay.
Crolg T. llor Sharry 1., of PeNwylvonla, loot 111-8 1412 E of lugor Run 5.77A, 1.77-. 111.08.
R.14W, UN, 8 .21, FR 21 I E of Lot 131A, 1.00 aore, lohool, IIU.41,
11·00333.000, Duro I
JtN R14W .71A Out of S11.17.
18-01115.000, Fetty, Har· llalorlo A., 8.30, locL IOOA

~~-~~ ~~.:Ow~.E:S3 ~~ ":~~~357 . 000 ,
011-00275.000, Hayoo, Paul

W 8 Klllri M S..
N.' ol W 112
~~~~~2
..,
16-&amp;S.Ho
6.~~'!.'.:• 5000
P
........,£, · • yoo, au1
W. a Katrina M., Stet 32 on
E line of W 1/2 Ex. coal
a
l a 2 sA
•·
• 1•-25 aoroo ,
$70"7.78.
08-00277.000, Hayoo, Poul
W.
1no ~· SoctE 32CNW
E I DKalr
x. • 11 ey ,. x.
o 11
13 · 50 A, U.50 acreo,
$2&amp;8.28.
08-00319.000, Hololngor,
Lorry llor Nanoy, Stetl N
PI ol NE Cor ol 15A Ex.
.17A, 11.83A, 11.$3 aoroo,
$31.44.
08-00320.900, Holalngor,
Lorry llor Nancy, loci I
.17A out of 12A .17A, .17
acre, $1.53.
08-407N.OOO, Holaln:er,
~~";' NodnEoy'•~AonN ol
on
x..
prt
ox 18S.3UA Ex. .3311A,
.-llaoro, 118.17.
QI.OOS21.001, Hololnl,o:t
~Rc;~:,.No!LA&gt;'7t~ W
o1c1a ol rd SA out of 45.75A
,. ooa 5 oo
S
"'· "' ' ICflt, 13.25.
VI
~~·
lot
In
NE
Cor oi
2411
2.1A, .lOA, .soaore, 840.SI.
08·001111.000, Walker,

7UIA Nlllll to c-tory
.71A, .78-$81.72.
11 · 00111.000, Graham,
Llzzlt Etal c/o llro. Julia
Wllllem.. I. I, ltcL I NE 114
I ol SPiroo 2.21A 1A, 1.00
aore, JID5.14.
11 · 000110.000, Hyoell,
J - &amp;lor Patricio, S. 14-7,
Lc414-7 NPT of 11.22Ain E
Port of NW 114 Ex. Coal
4.52A, 4.52 aor11, $25.'70.
11·000111.000, HreoU,
Jo111eo 1/or Poblcla, 8.7,
Sto;t 7 N Part ol I 112A In
Mid. of W Uno ol NW 114,
5.&amp;3A,U38CrM,$84.13.
11·0131 4.000.:. Maynard
Colli Company lnt, 8.7, LAII
StcL 7 Coal Under USA in
Stcl. 7 3.25A, 3.25 ecr11,
$47.58.
11·00671.000, McDaniel,
Ralphlo J. l/or Judy II., 8.
I, StcL 1 8 PT ol 30.48A 8
ol Rd. Out of 14.18A, .33A,
.33 ocro, $3.81.
11-40727.000,
Partlow,
John, 8.27, Lot Soct; 27
N..r Mid. Ex. 112 Mlnorale
5.60A, 5.80 aoroo, $12.88.
IHI1U18.000, Price, Linda, S.23, Lot Soc. 23 Near
llld. S 112 N of Rd. 5.118A,
5.86-, $278.48.
11-00848.000, Price,
Mlchllel Wayne, 8.271 Lot
Stct27 W 8ldt of 58A NW
Cor. iA, 8.00 ocrw, $14.21.
1HIOII27.000, Rumftold F.
M., 8:36, LA&gt;t Soct. 38 N Port
of 2331 NW 2A, 2.00 ocr•,
$5.11.
11;.o1031 .000, Snowdon,Robtrl L, S.30, Lot Sect30 ·
NW Part I3;64A, 13.S'
AcrM,$74.55.
.
'
11-411811.000, W_orner, ·
Richard N., 8.8, Soot II
Mutchler Add 11, .42A, .42
ocro, $317.02.
11·.01200.000, Worner,

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAUUNG •

I&amp;C IICAVITING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SI:PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING

WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES

•FIREWOOD

BASI;MENTS I

BILL SlACK
992·2269

HAUUNG: Umaatona,
Dlr:tL Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and 80NDED

USED RAILROAD TIES

4-4·92. .

HOME SITES

-

SDEL INSULATED
RAISED PANEL GAUGE DOOR
IISIILLED PRICES
9Jl7-$275.00 16K7-$450.00
OPENERS INSTILLE._Y. HP-$2iO.OO
With 2 Transmlta.111

· Wit• PurcHse of
~!!!Fill

hor Pin o,.••. :

PH. 614·992-5591

12·5·tfn

II

1.

�'I

JUT 'N' CAJtLYLD., ~

32 Mobile Homes

w...-

'!*day, November 24, 1992
BORN LOSER

,.._

71 .. , . . . . . .

for Slit

..

--

j

liUD 114Y

-

•Cooill

"

6

Pomeroy..,.Yid.dlepgrt, Ohio

,.

FALL~

'
SWORD AA!&gt;

~T~ .
()I FOUL

\._ t=:C!:-...
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......
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...
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•

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Television .
Viewing

TllY

AT

,~

,,..

.
..

..
EVENING

1:00 (2) •

(I). (J) •

. IDe 112 Newa

.

._..,,.,.

IIIJ IIJi

IZ/. Squore Ono TV Stereo.

__ ., __

1s::o::z=~\.-·
.

·

SOMET!.V.ES i LIE AWAKE AT .
NtG..;T AND l ASK M'ISELI= ..

.... --

---- -

·

IIOII&gt;IIIa ,_,. 1111111 _....._,
Aloo'trolla;

.

•• _ _,_ ..

·

3

'

l!llll Full Houao Q

IIJ~rv••Q
1221 NIA Todoy
.
1211 w~ Today
IIIJ Rln Tin nn_, K-9 Cop Q

..

6:30 (2) 8 112 NBC Newo Q

·

(JJ Ed McMehon's Star

Soorch .

-..

e

(I) fi (J)
ABC Ntwl Q
Cl) Wh8re In lhe WO~d II
Cannon Sllndlego? Stereo.

il!llllf1D 112.

11

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Col-.E---C._..._.._~-

-llock.._
.. o.v c... c.ntor 1
W• 01 HIICQo JK"-

.

Ancl-

-

NOTICE.
WI oldn, cut~ollor. $30. •

SM.

~----tilt

---~

. , Hon.

-.wv

.

·.

·-·

Loii: Z - ..... 1 - . 1

r:::.c..=-:=.'-

Rl..r Valloy Oak F'uml~P, 114441-1311.

Rentals

YaniSale

7:0012jD

·

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~MIA
Ton Do....,., I,...,

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llu13, 110. 3DW'II-1UD.

--

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SUPPOI~D TO Ofll&gt;f:/l WfllYIODY

.

Pilot HI. FL T.;,., RMio ,,....,

1.... -· ,,._,..

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

Good Condition! $100, · - ... - - ...
Plllllo And ....... _
llnali - - - - . . :

....A!.l.---·-.
...,-. ........ .

Fmancial

Corpot 1112 1110: Vlnrt 1112 ....
llle On AI Clrpll In Stoall
$8.00 Up. llallohiin Fumlton,

Tlwu .. In Ev- ......_ Ohio.
AHUI.
.

Floor,_- TV $111G.-

ottorlp.rn.

- - DEA!IliE:- ....
-.

1.........11144.

So!ndor - ....
~--2:10

·~27.12.

,_.,
Quollty

w-n

llan

Clothll: ....

~a:- ._.Only.

Pubic Sale ·
&amp;Audleln .

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@ Deoi§ing Women

Srereo .
(I)
Inti de Ed"lon Q
Cl) [!) MacNeil/Lehrer
NewoHour Q
(J) 8 Married ... With

a

m
a

0000 UIED APPLIANCES
w.~
. .......-.
.......
Apptlliioll, 71
Vlnei1Nol,~ oil ~14-44~-T.~~~, 1-

1100-4111144•.

42 Mobile HDmes ·
for Rent ·

-or- -Call

=~_...__.,.
_........ ·-11111. . a a.-y,

loW 11 ....00. C.K10daJJ~
NEW- CIIIIOg. 1
2 ..........
Palo
• . , . _- I
IIZIZ'

LIIQ'UWIILTtla PoW: M 0111 U.S.
~---.--.
Gald- . ,.... ....

111-~

unlo, 1 hcllaom Tllllllr, . Cl011 To
. . . . . .Lilnpo, Lollonl, Downtown O.Hipollo

-

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....

EEKANDMEEK

..

.. ....
Rei..,.,_
Ro-

qulrocl, 114:2&amp;1-111112:

Real Estate

a

.

2 bedtoom mobile home In
RtlciMiru,l......a-IISI.

morwh
lrllh

31 Homes for Sale

112 mi.

18 . . . . . 10Do

1111 Sq. ..... .11 - - lot, 211
...., 2 ...,...... llllho, dining
- . ....... -3bdrrn., -·~­
I n - . . lUIIJ ...,..... z por..... - · - - -'!"""-. . .
. -•
- · /It: olovo,
Door IIIV
' 7 ~I- · ~ltOI',
-•wiNd,
Home
::L - - . . . _....._ 114-. Not llnll. Roolno, OH. 114-14111210.
~
.
..

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wv,

·i Ill 112 •

SWAIN
AUCTION a FURNITliRE. 12
Olin 81., O.llpollo. - I Oood
lumllwa, - ·
1

:Ms40 .... - . 2 ,.., old, 4
· t ml; fnlin Holzor,
tsi.OOO. I'M 411 1373 or 304lllWUl

-.

IINJTI'UL HOUSE FOR BALE
Hlatorlcot l.at • 111
lllln Ill. Pl. ~1111 W. Yo.

Mobllo ~ 14110, Z Bodrooma, Furnished, Central Air A
Hilt. 114-441-2111. .
Complllllr llonon~~a: . 2 FuN
Nlco 2 lleclroomo, AM Eloctrlc
....... 31Argo
HYAC:, eo.,... Avoltabll With CA At.- :Mill AI E-g•-

c:an.

w-

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Want
'to:
..
PIN dowa EXTRA.
CA~H~I

sr-atclllrlcll......,s.......,.,
lllltho, l l l r a a - "'"""
In b
·-~~~ - . pond,
114.100.~-114DidwiW a., llktdhp 11. Two

c

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nice ...
I llllh,
Mklti

IF "raJ~

44

1 ~·dr-, Corwonlont To Holzer Hllpltll, Eoonomicol, Gao

-= __,.
- F o r - In

~Ire VI~

~I-. I both, Lg. Fill

lr-~!!!"1_1-3:30

P.M. I - - .

P.M.

After 3:30

2bdnn. lpll., Iaiii -trtc, II&gt;'
plio.- fumllhecl, loundry
room laciUII01 cl- to IChoOI
In town. Ap....,.rione avolloblo
ol: VII'- GiMft Atlo. 4141 or
colll14'112-3711. E0H.
·
Apiftmon11, Syr-, 1bd.,.

pi,.

" Cl..., Nil I d 11112 •:~ ol--

n-. 7,. da•rer inlo ea~a.
W if 11ae au ..,....h phone.
- rU!ed lo , _ ,_,. " - ·
PJggr J9HI' dmffi'd M kHiul
JS IIIOnla or lea, 3 M.JI.
3 ,._,. 15.411,.., ill Gdaranee.

l-----------------

4·------------------··----------~----­

7•.________.;,_______-'-'------------------··-------------'·----------.II.__..;_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
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"'"':'::L.M4-1141-23111ovenlngol~~~~~~~5~
.....

.

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'fl! • 1 ;.;p..~••';g ·~t ~umlahacl, I liMN • Both,
- · · Hoojlltol• =pin~ Cloln, No P,llo Rm.- I
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-

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32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

::..:r- ... -·-14'x10,
=-~
1~
-h

~olltl...,uw
..aclod I

·~ludlng •

Ill up, lldnlng,

$'laO .......

1171 -

llaon 12111, 14,000.

~I Alter I P.M.

room opon-. II ~

::.n:........ :.":lcldt.,:,..

From
1111 Coiii14-IIZ-TII?.IOH
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az 21111.

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Merchandise

llllahborhoad, ,,...
oquli'PI'!I ldt"'*' ~h

- . : I1WII'W71.

='~· For -

.

... 114-

Houll_.

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or

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446-2342

99~2156 '( ;

One wr..............
•I'M. II a?

1,:.14-~21:,:1.,.;1::.11;,:1;_.__,.---:,...,.,~

For Solo- INIMI , _ Brtvonll .
11" TV,
.,Jill'
,....,.~-- lflld, bto, 114lla4111, Mit lor lrlln. ,
,., . _ llu ........ Wll
- r · - · ........ wl ........

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114-

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AKC lllglll- Chlr-.l.,.. ,..,., - o r "'tc.~
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AKC
Mlnlton - . "'
1

a. -

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CIIJIIIIIJW ' - ' " " $10 loch,
Clio-~,_~. WI1'1111111, Allor 4 P.ll., Anrtllll
Wnll r*,l14-m-ZMO;
·
Drlpnwlmll Cottory: CI'A .....

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:1111, ...... oriM ... - · ...

btnhday g1ft . Send for your AstroGraph predJCIIOns for !he year ahead Oy
mailing $1.2,5 plus a long. self-addressea . stamped en&gt;~elope 10 AstroGraph,
cto !hiS newspaper, P.O. Bo&lt;
BERNICE . 91428. Cleveland.
OH' 44101 -3428 . Be
BEDE OSOL . sure to state your zodoac
sogn .
Ct,PRICORN (Dec. 22·Jen. 1llln order
10 get others 10 assost you roday, you
must first . make your needs known .
Don 't be seoreh'le or bashful aboul
m·ak1ng otners aware ot what you wan1
. done .
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 181 Hopes
and expectations can be realized today
1f you are in a positive frame of mind .
Don 't Jet sell-doubts . even small ones.
,· gel a toehold . ·
.
.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch _ 20) Your ,
chances for achieving your obtecllves
NOv: 25,1812
today wil! be enhanced 11 your goals are
Ia. !he year ahead you could eslaDiosn defined clearly . Clarity will provl_
de you
tlfree .mport~l r~rar i onshiPS that may wit~ the mo11vat1on that fuzzy .'mages
be of great benefit to you 1n tne com- can t generate. ·
m'ercial world . However. these same as· ARIEl (M.Rh zt,April1t) Try 10 aMI&lt;
sOciares mighr not mix too well soci~ . actlv111es tOday that are mentally chal·
DOn't Ioree tnem on your triends. - '
lengong . Avo1d •nvotvemenrs which are
IAGinAAIUI (Now. 23-Dllc. 21) Exer- '-too routine or . lnhib~ your lndepenCise yourof1floatlveroday instead ol wait- dMI,ce and mOboRty .
1,;g tor others before makong your movo. . TAUAUI (Apftl 20-MIJy 201 Usually
Your chances ror persorlal achlevornenr you'_
r e nol OVllt:iOred by cnonge. ·l)uttoare excellent. proVided you use your day you sh~d bo eble I~ adepl yourabtlltieS. Sagiuariys, rreat yo~rselt to a
adventageously to ~nexpe&lt;;ted de·

F'

"'

=
=.:-=: =
r-.

,.., -· -

;._;l~prn.~~=~=~;
Good _ . . . , .". , ......................
. . .;
u._,,,.._ 1111 l:r.,."'T:fl 1ao:J .
:::~.= .
"1"'\'!:
,..... '
.............,.......,.,..

,., 1111:

u. .... ........ """" ....... ...

0. I IIJ:

Nullllwt

Door, 110- ... AI
. . . . .._...., .... J "

..

71

Co.'tt

....... lnO.C.II......
llpollll.rt.-.lf«t11111.

ll'rlll-

... :::..::

111
Alii .....,.,..,.
Tlllll10ftl'10!2111.

...., 11 ............. lllrr . ,
-liDO: Cllltor ........ - .

r'''

miWi._.. •.,,...._.
11111a 21D7.

..

i

Tuoslloy Nighl Figllll (L)
·- aNIIohvlleNow
rD PITA Billiards Tour
Championship. ITJen's final
I rom Memphis: Ten~T)
~ Larry King Livel Q
Falllor Dowling Mraleriea

10:30

a

f12 t

"'

=.~111 bird, cop. 114-

!I

•

~~.:'... l':'.w'oad, :J ~ ;;;=r~
H"':: ~ •

- - It

BE~NPOI.E

SHE'S TWICE
YORE SILE.
LOWEELYI!

... .._

reg.....,.
•=""::--·-n=-;-,=-,-,"'•""•=--=,-,-.
..,"""' 1111111 ........... ....., .,.
c
Doo.
~~ ~ $ 9=7:. ..
--.
- •
~
10. 30M'IW1t3.
M.C ........h Terrlar pl ppln,
Mill, -"•ddlng, firM aftol,

. BEANPOI.E ??

I DON'T WANT
TO SEE THAT

•

PHILLIP

ALDER

'I P,

WE~T

EAST

• iO ~

• .19H 32
• •\ R 7
• J 10 1

'IKJ 9 ~
tQ a .; :~

'

velopments. espectally m business .
GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 201 Do not d1S·
count your'rnate's ideas and oplmons
to.d ay pertaining to issu8s Ot mutual im~
portance. He/she mtghl perce1ve lh•ngs
trom a clearer. perspe&lt;;IJve lhan yours.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You won't
be conlentloday if you lrltter your time
away unproductively . Busyyourself wilh
endeavors that provide you with a
sense
of
accomplishment
and

t AK~
• A !j 1 4

Vulntr ,1h le East -West
Dealer. So uth

8¥ Pbillip Alder
F..asl
All pass

J'\orth

Sou1h
: ~1'

:1 NT

Opening lead

L.....------------J.,

or in the suit and an 1merest 10 having
that suit continued (You mav break
thJS rule .-ol cou~_ ,r you are try1ng to
fool declarer and don 't-care what part·
ner thinks. But thiS is a rare situatiOn 1
In Lodav's
. dea l. WesL led the diamond five: e1ghr .. 10. king . South
crossed t o dummy w1th a spade w the
queen (thus keep~ng one opponenr in ,
the dark as to the whereaboulS or lhe
kmgJ ..Then declarer took a losmg club
!~nesse West SWilChed to the hearl
Lwo . EasL grabbed the tnck w1th the
ace and •mmedJately ~eturned the d1amond jack. Declarer gratefully. won
wjth the ace and claimed n1ne tr11'ks

three; spades. two diamonds and four
clubs.
As you can see. if Eas.t had returned

would have ca shed five tncks h&lt;'torQ '
deciJrcr could take mne
:;'~
"SOrry . partner.'· saJd . East. " but 1_
thought you nad started wilh ace-filth·
··,. .,,
of d.1amond s...
., •
'! .might have ." r eplied West. " but·
you should have Laken note of the size
of my heart card . If I had wanted yoJ' ·
to win lhe trick and go back to di&lt;b
monds. 1 would have led a high hea.t.·
nol lhe two. Bv leading my lowest; J;
was telling you that 1 wanted t~is suit"
continued . not diamonds returned." • . Thls· ts an excellent principle thar ·
can be a, IJ!esaver for defenders .
· -~
Re•ders arr mvlletl' to ~nd't;,;m1·plly qllt'$ ·
ttons co PhlliJp AldN. m cal'f' (){this newsp.aJWt ··
They can l'Jt.answcred.only

!h~ugh tM colum/i. :~

JEWIIPAPER Efll'ftRM~H • • • ·~·f'
*'i' .

CO 1•

a hearl .11 t rick fivr . th " dr fcr.rt r rs

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle ·
ACROSS

39 Tropical basket tiber

1 Aromatic
medicinal
Ingredient
(2 wdo.l
• 7 Clptured
13 Arrnr
command
(2 wds.)
14 RIIUCtanl
15 Former pari
or India
16 Give an
occounl ol
t7 Bolng
18 Ever (poet.)
20 Clothes tinter
2 I IIYttlriout
23 Start
27 Ballroom
dance
32 Two-masted
Vlllel
33 Scarlett 34 Acquire
knowledge
35 PhOnograph
mechine pari
36 Debating 1

40 La"'lhable
42 lnkHng

46 Ear (comb.
form)

47 Scottish
island
51 Large
arteries
53 Rumal'l!d
55 Foot part
(2 WdS.)
56 Hoapital
doc lor
57 Slealo
58 Cinnamon

source

DOWN
1 Battballer
Rulh
2 Cualard
apple
3 Longs (11.1
4 Fury
5 Belween
Can. and

6 Contused
light
7 Spanllhspeaklng
neighbor·
hood
8 HIU!
9 Anglo-S...on

....

Ill

a On Shiga

l!lllll Ro-nne Stereo. Q
1!11 MICGJYer C
1211 Club Donci'Steroo.

1221 Sports Almon11c Liconse
ro Thrill
~ Sporll Tonlghl

IIIJ Scarwcrow end Mro. King

11:301!1 Kajak C
(I)
Newl
Cl) To the
Stereo .
(J) II NighUine
•
t,....,lo Hli_l Slereo .

a

C-§:

R•

'F••"

I

e

!pilOIIII

a

..

t 5

11:oorne m Clle ®liD
1!21111 0 Newo
(JJ Nlghl Coull Q

achievement
LEO (July 23-AIIIJ. 22) Try to devote
some lime roday 16 activities or sports
in which you enjoy participating. A
break from mundane routines could re·
Knlghl'
0!111
turbish your psyche and outlook .
c~mellme t,lter l'rintllllmo
VIRGO (AIIIJ. 23-18pl. 22) ThiS IS a
Stereo. D
good day to entertain lriends at ~r ·
1221 SparljCenler
place to whom you are obligated SOCJ81·
IB Moneyllno
ly Gel on the phone arid instigate an
11:35&lt;2le
0 TOI)ight Sllaw With
Impromptu get-together.
Jor Lena Slereo. C
·
UIIIIA (18pl. 23-0cl. Dl You can best
. ®Je MeQ!.ed ... W1ih
gratlly your rest .... urges · tOday by
Chldi'IR 1;1
·
dropping In on friends you'vo negllle,led ·
11:50
(lJ
MOVIE:
The
Gutia
ol
a b!tlately. Whorevor YOU go, your presNov.,one(3:00)
ence will be appreciated.
SCORPIO (91;1.14-Nov. 221 Your llnan12:00 (I)
Nighlllne Q
(J)
Rulh Umbilugll
clot proopectt collllnue to took encour0 Till Hllclth•er
aging tOday, eopecially II you work on ~.
Miller CompsJny
ideas you've lleen contemplating that
-8-INighl .
.
·c an make or save you money .
llllllon8nza: The Loll ,

J..

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+ K 7 1\
• Q; .]

The attitude switch
was critical
When you are defending aga1nst a
no-trump, contract, 1t 1S tradJLional ro
lead fourth-highest from your longest
and strongest. In the middle of the
hand. you tend to doth~ same. buL with
one major proviso You should mily
lead a lciw card when you have an hon-

,.

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trim, • - 11n1n11. .... - . . ..... a-..... ... 114:
~ IJIId
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AKC IIIIo Cocller lponlol. llulf,
1 112 Y11,. Old. 175.00 .......
-~- ......... 1 - , 111.

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Onlyl 114-441-

Old, 01110.

lleclrlc ... - . 1100,

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TH' HOLLER,
IIISITIN' HER
KINFOLKS!!

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Antiques

54 Miscellaneous

FOR RENT: Nlco Aportmant
$300 Por Montll. 8otM UIIIHI..
I!ICiudltl O.IHpollo l.ooltlon,

lociiM In 1111ao County, tow 614-2411-5040.

IZ-----------"J_.____________ __
13-----.o;...----._

.

53

·-•
~~
Pomwot. llour8: II.T.W. 'IO:uu
il.m. lo 1:00 p.m., S - r 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 114 lea UZI
·
Fumlon
rwlltlllhlng
end
a-h llrMI lllddllport. Ohio, . _,,., ..........._, 0111 iMlumlohod 1 room
utliHI11
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lncludltiL-~!1' • ro roqutrocl, lla·JIM1.
·

3\14-112·-·

lnd

2. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,_,_.......
J.___________________

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIEtml AT
BUDGET PRICES AT ~ACKSON
ESTAT£!1L 531 JocbGn ptg
from $1IIZIIIIO. Welt to .._ •
movl11. Cotll14411 21181. EOH.

,iS BACK IN

a

9:30 (J) 111 Bllrblra wonora
Speclel/\1 Pacino, Jerry
Seinleld, Clint EastwoOd.
Frank and Kathie Lee
GINord. (1 :30) Q
10:00 Ill II I!}) Datelino NBC The
lear ol AIDS leads couples ro
look lor rnonogarnous
relationshie_s. Stereo. Q
I!IN..,I ....
(I) fl Berbara Wenero
Speclol AI Pacino, Jerry
Seinleld, Clint EastwoOd.
Frank and Katlloe Lee
Gilford. (1 :30) Q
[!) N,!.W Eurapaant
Stereo. 1.,1
l!lllll Hunter C
1221 American Muocle
Ma111111ne
IB wo~d News
IIIJ 700 Club Wilh Pet _
Robertson

BARNEY
·AMY

~

[!) Fronlline C
-(1)
Ro10anne Ffoseanne is
worried when Darlene and
Molly stay -out late . Stereo.

e

~ -· ~ ··· ~--.... ......

•r•

IMJ, ...,..., OM ICrt.

CKM\PfON OF i'\-:e '/tORLD.

--,;/_,..--.....,

HNI, $2451- PIUI UIU.III •
Dopoolt.IM-444-2157.

.$125, 2bcl.,. $131
utiiHieo,
-Or
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z .....
In E
. . _ Wlh
A1C
Llrao Lot II,IIOD. 114-38a..n0 lllpoolt;l14-112~ollorlpm.

Orf~7112.

· DON'T HANS UP.

Apartment
·for Rent

OOVERNIIEHT HOliES From 11

IL!'!!.''a· r ~u:, v~~
A;;j;r
- - - 111. OKFor CUrnnt R.,.. L111.

H5AR A L...OTCF WEir;i!D t-Oieee&gt;,

MY l!oRO'TI=IER!eo ~CT10N6i 10
eea::w.e "11-E ewRPIN&amp;

114-14H111.

1 blclroom unlllrnl"*' opt.
wtoto.. a m, nlco 1111ghbor·
hood, 304-1~1'".

-J311l

MY HaJSEi AND

r---~--------------~----~

$2711 Por Mo. Pluo llcurttr
DoposH. eon 114-441-1111 Or

hilt,
rttaod;
' 114-112'4113, 114-

•

9:00 C2i 0 I!}) Quanlum Leap
Sam returns to defend a
woman aga1nst murder
charges. (Pt 3 ol 3) Slereo.

MORTY MEEKLE A~DWINTHROP

lod-. -

lmn IdiliiJ.aM-4414201.

~VIE:

'Ltlhal •
Weapon 2' CB!I Tueldar
~ht Movie (RJ (2:30) Stereo.

- · - - - -

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+Q .IH·h ;

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7:30 lllD 112 JeopordyfC
1!1 The Jelfersono ~;~_:
(I) II Entertlinmenl Tonight
Stereo. Q
.
(J) D You Bot Your Lite
®JIID Wheel o1 Fortuno Q
1!21• Family Feud
,
1221 ESPN't SpeodWeek '
~ Cro11llre
7:35 (lJ Sanlord &amp; Son
8:00 (2)
IUl Quantum Leap
Sam leaps into a deptity who
is engaged to a beautilul girl.
(Pt 2) Stereo. Q
1!1 MOVIE: Deed Calm iRJ
(2:00)
•
College Exhibition
(D
Beokelboll Kenlllcky ·vs .
Ukraine Nat'l Tearn (T) ·
[!) The ilinOIIUrtl
Stereo. C
(J)
Fulf House Joey
psyches himself up to play
hockey against an old ·
college rival. Stereo. C
IIIJ 119 1!21111 Rescue:'l11
Home~securitY bars trap two
people: a boy is accidentally
shot Stereo. C
I!] Ill MOVIE:1iveriKiard lPG I
(2:00) .
1!11 Murder, She Wrale Q
Crook end ChilO
1221 .I CCA l!aclng Froin Sears
Point. Calif. (TI
, ·
~ PrimeNewo
. II1J Young .Rldera' Q
8:05 (lJ MOVIE: Midway (PGJ
(3:45)
8:30 (J) 11 Hengin' Willi Mr.
Coopor Mark and Robin
disagree over the future ol
one of their students. Slereo.

·.
.,

• ,\ ()I
• 10 ·~ ~
I

Qenerollon 1.,1
·,
1!21• E'!l!rtalnmenl Tonight
Stereo. Gl
1!11 Quanhlm Leap Stereo. Q
1221 SportoCenler
~ Monoyllne
IIIJ Life Goeo On Stereo. Q
7:05
aove~y Hilll)!llieo

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r&gt;:ORTH

BRIDGE

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ANSWERS

Bemoan - Plush - Cease - Venous - HAVE SOME
People should remember their blessings, of which .
every man has many. You should not dwetl upon your
misfortunes, of wh1ch an men HAVE SOME .

IIIJ Gl Jeopardy! C
[l) Ill Star T!!k: The Next

!led .... - Bod

NitW ..._p ........ "-·

\

SCRAM~LETS

112 Wheel ol Fortune

Chldi'IR

=- ,_. . .-·

Doubll
•FJm~
.
l

UNSCRAMBLE lEtTERS TO
GEt ANSW.ER

.

a

41 Houses for Rent

Wlloo• larMoii!IJ In my honle,

Gallpolls
&amp; VIcinity

a'..

am.

Q

6:35 (lJ Andy Griffith -

z =.~~-Ook, _ lno

......... C:U.In . , _ - El!·
porlonOod • - . Anti- . Ahr 4 P.ll.114-441-7762.

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1224•

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Round 0111 Tobll Whh

I.NYII And 4 - - Cholra
$)'50,
Oluo .China

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Lost '&amp; found

Found: N

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0uo111r

58

. , PRINT NUMBERED LE.JTERS I
~ IN THESE SQUARES .

Q

1221 Up Cloae
IIIJ New Zono Q

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Household

Goods

Piu ..., • A.M. ..a:30 P.M. 11
And E•pooto- 11 Till
111 Concom For Your Chlld'a
Coro. Col UO For A YIIIM. Infant
/Taddio.. 114-44N227: p -

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CSS Newt

RO!IB~nne Stereo.

Merchandtse

51

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•e:os (lJ Th-'a COf!lpany

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1111. U.eon YN. ·

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WOlD

F'OCT!

-

...... 1 -

The D,aily Sentlnei-Page-9 :

• L.

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WYYG

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V.ILAI

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WIEIVWTLKS
(I.IVF .RWLIEOI

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ONKV.I.IF.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION:' '" There are only two emotions
boredom lftd terror." - Orson Welles.

In

a ptino,

�•

•

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Pllg4!-:'1~ ·

Community
calendar
TUESDAY
RACINE ·. Racine Lodge .No.
461 F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday,
7:30 p.m., for elcc'tion of officers.
All members ellCOUillged IQ attend.
Refreshments served.
RAC~ ·1'he group formerly
known as Racine Ruritan Club
meets Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Star
Mill Parle in Racine.

RACINE • Southern Local
School District, parelif/leacher conference (district wide) Tuesday, 6-9
p.m. and Wednesday 8:30 a.m. to
noon . There will be no sc hoot
Wednesday.
MIDDLEPORT • Jean Trussell
will present plans for the Middle·
pon downtown revitalization pro·
JCCt on Tuesday at ? .p.m. at the
Middlepon council chambers. All
downtown merchants are .urged to
attend this important meeting.
POMEROY · .A community
Tnanksgiving service, sponsored
by the Meigs C()unty Ministerial
Association, wiD be held at Trinity
Congregational Church at 7:30
p.m. on Tuesday. ttev. Peron New·
man, pastor of Syracuse United
Methodist Charge, will speak. Pub·
lie invited.

MIDDLEPORT · Jim Oliphant
will conduct a bible study course,
Wednesday, 7 p.m., Middleport
First Baptist Church.

PageS

.

Dell' AD I ancJen: I can't let that .
Jetter from "Joy in Washinlton"
by without spealcing my piece.
she blaslecl pcapte who go to wolk
sick IIIII lOre into them as if they
out .there sp!Qding genns on
-

ao

JIUI'IIOIC. . .
•
Get a clue, Joy. Millions of people
in this country do not get paid siclc

lea-ve. Staying home means missing
a day's pay. For follrs who are
struggling to get by, this means
cutting even more comers and
doing without some genuine
RESERVE BEST OF ·SHOW ·Treasured wood with hot. pink
necessities. Single mothers really .
carnations, pine and eucalyptus used in this modern design won
get it in the neck.
the reserve best ot show for Krista I Bolin.ortbe Friends and Flow·
I have held 10 jobs in four
ers· Garden Club at tbe county flower show beld a~ Carleton
years. All of them have paid about
School over the weel!end. Here Krista I, left, accepts a nbbon from . . $1 an hour over the SIBle minimmn
tbe show judge, Faye Collins ot Minford.
wage •• just one step Bhead of the
law. How about some COin passion
for those who don't ha-ve mucb of
a choice? •• STEAMING IN
·'' • SEATil..E
DEAR
STEAMING
IN
SEATTLE: Meet "Chafing in
Chapel HiD," who also has a few
words 10 say on the subject •
Pear Aan: "Joy in Washington"
wonders why people who are siclc
don't just stay at home for a few
days. May 1tell her?
I. Your paycheck wiD be short
2. It will count against yoo when
raises are considered.
3. You could lose your job. This
happened to a friend of mine.
The reason for her dismissal was
"unscheduled absences."
The boss doesn't need much c:i a
reason to fue you. If be decides be

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY· Salvation Army,
Pomeroy, free clothing day, 10
a.m. to noon. Area .residents in
need of clothing are invited.
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have a candlelight collllilunion
service Wednesday at 7 p.m. Pastor
Steve Reed invites th~ public.

·announced

Readers defend those who go to ...
. work sick;.many have no choice.=~~
.
..

Community Calendar items
appear two da,s before au event
and the day ot that eveilt Items
•ust be received weD In advance
to assure publication in tbe cal·
endar,

Ann
Lan
· ders
. .
,
ANN LANDERS

"lll!l2, ..... ""'"'"
Tlm•S,..._
....
Craun
•CJM"

s,..

there:you're gone.
- CHAP1!L HIU., N.C.
DEAR~.~ sc:ene isn't
much beacr tn VIQIIIWl Beach,Va.
Read on:
Dear . Aan:. I'm a heal~·
care wotker w1th. so;"lled s1ck
!ea-ve. If you caJI tn siclc, lhal ~y
IS deducrcd , from your vacauon.
~te. isn't it? If you have several
1Dnesses dUring ~ year, YI?U can
forget about talting any kind . of
VICIIion. Wilhboldmyname,please.
The pay is lousy, but I need my
job.- SWAlLOWING HARD IN
VIRGINIA BEACH, VA.
Dear Ann: I'm on~ .of those
employees you see ~ ~
she ~ be home 11 bed. lm a
married mother of two. My husband
ba. been unemJdoyed since December. We ~ive f~ ~(IS, but
!iJat doesD t cover utiliucs, gas, car
~· cloches, soap and IIU!"Y
other thmgs people need 10 hve
decently. .
.
.
I work m a convenience' store
for $4.2S an hour - lhal's before
!Illes. I've wotked when I have
had pneumonia, the Ou and throat
infections. If I stayed home, my
wantS you out of

Weather

children would not have the basic
· necessities. ApparenUy "Joy" has
never had to decide between a pair
of shoes from the tluift shop or two
boales of vitaniins. Please aslc the:
lady if she has ever ~ to take.a
bath when there is no ~ beater. :
•• A.E. IN KIRBYVILLE. TEXAS
And here's the closer, fOlks, from
Philadelphia:
Dear Aan: If you stay home
when you're sick, your colleagues
may thank you, but yoilr boss haa
IIIOiher kind of message.
· Right now I have a temperature .
of 10 I. My throat is so sore I .
cant talk. I · worlc in a diScount
department store. If I'm absent, :
there is no one 10 cover for me. No
worlc. No pay. If I stay home, I
lose points at annual review lime .
for being "unreliable" and "failing
IQ meet aaendince expectatiOns.• ·
Excuse me, Ann. I have ·to take.
another aspirin. •• FEELING.
LOUSY,TiiANK YOU
DEAR READERS: Mter rQI(ing
all lbeae letters, I don't feel so hOt
myself. Thanks to all who wrote. • :

.

.
AwARD • This grapevine wreath tree won tbe
creativity award for Karen Werry at the annual Christmas flower
show or the Meigs County Garden Clubs .Association. It featured
decorations or cockscomb, pinecones, goldenrod, wheat, pampas
grass, and straw flowers. The show was held at Carleton SchQOI in
Syracuse Saturday and Sunday;

· MEMPms. Tenn. (AP) -Tom
Cruise hasn 'i forg()tten his days as
a student
The actor. in Memphis filming a
movie, .picked up the dinner lab for
10 coUege students Saturday after
seeing them in IIIXedos and formal
wear at a restaurant. the restaurant
.
owner said.
"He said, 'That reminds me of

when I was in school and taking
my glrt,ID the prom, I want them to
have a good time,'" said John
Grisanti of the. Origi~ Grisanti's
Restaurant
Cruise stopped and talked with
the students, who' didn't lcnow he
was paying for their dinner until
after be lefL
'
·
"I thought I was going to have

to keep my date from falling on the ·•
floor the whole time," said Dax ·:·
Wheeler, 21, who attends the Uni·
versity of Mississippi.
·
Cruise, star of features including
"Top Gun" and "Rain Man," is ~
filmmg the movie "The Firm,"
based on the novel by John .
Grisham. .,

-

STIVERSVILLE • Stiversville
Word of Faith Church meets
Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Pastor David
Dailey invites the public.

The acholarship commiaee con·
ducrcd the silent aucti011. Margaret
Benson was auctioneer for the
unbid irems. ·
·
Attending from Meigs County
were ROIIIIIie SIOI'y. Fern Grim and
Nellie Parter.
The next meeting will be Dec.
· 12 at 11 a.m. at the Holiday Inn in
Gallipolis.

'

'

Thomas Burke of the U.S. won
the J()().inetet race in 12 seconds in
the farst Modem Olympics in 1896.

HORTICULTURE SWEEPSTAKES. Jean Moore of the Mid·
dleport Amateur Gardeners was tbe winner or the horticulture
sweepstakes award at the county Christmas nower show at Car·
teton School. She's pictured here witb Janet Bolin, left, the sllow
·chairman.

oi3, No. 151

Meigs suspension policy
is put on h.old by board

Thanksgiving

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
There will be no more after school suspensions for elementary
students until the district's disCi ·
plinary policy is revised, if the recommendation of Supt. James Carpenter is accepted by the Meigs
Local Board of Education.
Meeting in regular sessionTues·
day night, Supt. Carpenter ~d that
before the next board meeung he
will have met with all of the ele·
menwy principals and will be pre·
senting ~ the board recommend&amp;·
tions for revisions in the policy on
disciplinary action for students,
kindergarten through sixth grade.
As it stands now elementary stu·
dents who are given after-school
suspensions are ttansported to the
high school by bus at 3:30p.m. and
remain there until 6:30 p.m. There
is no provision for their transpona·
lion home.
The problem became an issue at
laSt month's board meeting after a
Pomeroy secOnd ~r was ~iven
after-school suspens10n for bemg m

MINCE MEAT...................... $3.50 lb.
RED GLAZED CHERRIES••••••• $3.00 lb.
GREEN GWED CHERRIES••• $3.00 lb.
GWED PINEAPPLE .........~ •• $3.25 lb.
ENGLISH WALNUlS.............~$3.55 lb.

ing scrubbers at its Gavin power
plant in Cheshire.
The plan means job security for
hundreds·of area coal

Still wondering
what to give?

F.RUIT LOOPS........................... $3.90
SUGARED PUFFED WHEAT.........$3.42
FROSTED FLAKES••••••••••••••••••••• $2.;94
CINNAMON . APPLE CHEERIOS••• $3.90

+

IT'S FINAL • Tile 1.8 mill contlnuln1 levy for Carleton
SchooL'Melp ladllltl'let 1111 paued. A recount of ballola from the
29 precincts Tuesday eonnrmed that the levy passed by seven
votes, 4,999 for the levy, and 4,99,2 against lt. An automatic
recount was required by the Melp County Board ·or Elections
becauee tbe levy paued by Jell than oae-llalf of one percent of the
, total YOte. Here Rita S•ltll, director, 111111 the ballots throuall the
COIDputer as Steve Bella, director of Carleton Sello911Melillndastrlea, left, and Jolla Lealel, president or the Melp Couty 801rd
or·Mental Retardatioa/Developmental Dlaabllltles, await the
. results.

Amerklan Red Cross

9i!M! Hood ap. OJg; morr will lxfoltfora f(ktiTTif.

·_Soup Bases. • laking Staples
Merkins Chocolates • Spices and All
Holiday Bakl.ng N~eds • A•ls•
.Cheeses, MHts and Noodles
'

'(

..,,...

y
•

a fight. AI that time the student's
mother appeared before the Board
of Edllcation and lodged a complaint against the after-school sus·
pension in executive session. The
Board of Education upheld the sus·
pension.
However, at last night's meeting
Board member Randy Humphreys
said that while the suspension was
upheld, the superintendent had
been aslced to loolc into the policy
and see if revisions are needed.
The mother of the second grader
at last night's meeting said thai she
accompanied her son to the high
school for the after-school suspen·
sion Monday night and remamed
there with him . She said, in
response to a question from Meigs
High School Principal Fenton Tay·
lor, that the session attended by her
· son and four others was "well taken
care of". She said her complaint
was not against discipline but the
fact that her .son had to go to the
high school for three hours instead
of having something worked out at
h1s own school.

•

Vic Young also spoke. agai11,st
the after-school suspens1on PfO·
gram for elememary students ill
Meigs High. He said that he knows
students need discipline but obj~t·
ed to the present method as being
in ll:Je wrong, locatiop for too lonlta
penod of 11me. He asked about.
keeping kids in at recess or holdil\g
lhen an hour or so after school' as
an alternative to busing them to llie
high school for three hours. It's not
that discipline is wrong, it's just
that this way is wrong, Young said.
Carpenter said that there arc
more fights happening at Pomeroy
Elementary than in any other build·
ing in the district "We have a real
problem there because a lot of the
ltids want to settle things by fight·
ing and we have to take some kind
of disciplinary action. But we need
to gel a policy we can all live
with."
Meeting with the Board to discuss a bus problem was Dale
Brickles who lives on Canter Road.
Continued on page 3

·Rise in ~unge~ illuminated in
glare·of T~anksgiving Day need

'fens of thousands ·
of people will need blood
during the holidays.

CEREAL$ - All 2 lb. + Bags

~

Melgs County's elderly
homebound were · delivered
turkey with all the trimmings
from the..Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center today. More
than 130 meals were prepared
this mornin~ and delivered at
noon to semor citizens around
thecQunty.
In addition another 125 were
served ThankSgiving dlilner ·at
the Center .. So f11r this year
32,685 .meals fuive been provid·
ed through the Center's nutrition
pro~. A total of 245 different persons have been on the
hom~·delivered meal program
this year.
Pictured here lllllding her car
is one of several volunteers who
deliver meals, Sonia Parsons of
RuUarid An active volunteer for
10 years, Sonja, who is not a
sen1or citizen, delivers meals to
IS homebound residents in the
RuUand &lt;;ommunity every Tuesday and Wednesday.
In charge of preparing the
meals in the Center ltitchen is
Ruth Ann Sellers, head cook .
Here she pulls a turkey from the
oven, one of several which will
be sliced, put on trays with
dressing, mashed potatoes,
green beans, cranberry sauce,
and pumplcin pie and sent out to
homebound seniors.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) ..;...
State regulators. today approved a
plan by the American Electric
Power Co. io insllill sulfur-remov·

2 Sectlono, 20 Pagoo 25 oen..
A Muldmodla. Inc. -•paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 25, 1992

1m

PUCO approves Gavin scr0:bber plan

·.

.I

YOI.

Copyright.~

Actor Tom Cruise picks up the tab for students

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT ·The OH KAN
Coin Club will meet on 'Monday at
Burkett Barber Shop in Midldpon.
Social hour,bllding session, 7 p.m.,
precede meeting: New member
welcome.

6.

'·

What's the rru1h about pot.,, •
cocaillt, LSD, PCP, crack. spted. :
and downers? . ".The Lowdown
on Dope" -has up-lo·lhe·minute
informDiion on drugs. Send a self· ·
addressed. long, business-siu
enve/opt tJIId a clatck or money
order for $3.65 (this inc/11des ·
prutoge IUid ltandlillg) to: Lowdown,
c/o AM Landers, P.O. Bo:r ll562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In ,
Ctui(J(/(J, send $4.45.)
*

RACINE • Rev. Charles Norris
will hold a special Thanksgiving
·service Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
Racine Baptist Church.

Alpha Omicron Chapter, Della
Kappa Gamma, met recently at
Porter House in Wellston for a
steak dinner. Ida Mae Crabtree
gave the invocation and favors
were assoned jellies and teabags.
.Jackie Fain presented the music
program. She introduced the Well·
ston Junior High Chorus whose
songs included Adam's Family.
Good Old Days and Play Country
Music. The girls' chorus sang
Desert Storm Song. Trucy Riweth
closed the program with the solo,
Unchained Melody.
·
Sandra Nodruff presided at the
business meeting and thanked the
group for the get well card ·sent
during her hospital tests. Nellie
Parker, ~rewy, reponed on the
Christmas menu selections. The
group vOICd to allow the hostess
commiuee to make the selections.
Deborah Hammond, tteasurer,
announced she has membership
forms available.
. There will be a joint meeting
March 13 at noon at the Rodney
United Methodist Clturch with
reservations to be mad!: by March

· L - tonl&amp;htla mid 40s.
Tbunoday, blab Ia mid SO..
Chance Ill rafa 40 pti'Celll

-

POMEROY • Thanksgiving service, St Paul Lutherari Church in
Pomeroy, Wednesday, 7:30p.m. ·
Sermon, "Thanksgiving: A
Response." Rev. George Weirick
.invites the P!lblic.

Delta Kappa
Gamma meets

appy .

AP All. District

Tu..day, November 24, 1892

.t

AEP lllllde the proposal to meet
regulations of the federal Clean Air
Act ·
·
The utilitY. said the $800 million
scrubbers will let it continue burn·
ing Ohio's high-sulfur coal at its
Gavin power plant near Cheshire in
Gallia County.
The scrubbers will reduce sulfur
dioxide emissions an average of 40
pereent to 50 percent over the next
I 0 years, the company said.
The cost of building the scrub·
bers would add at least 4 percent.
about $22 a year, 10 the average bill
of residential customers. AEP said.
Critics said it would cost too
much and hurt the environment
more than belp it.
Critics included manufacturing
and envirOnmental grOups who said
the plan is more cosUy and be more
harmful to the air than swiu:hing to
cleaner Coat from western states. ·
The commission held six hear·
ings around the stale last summer
to get public response to die plan.
Columbus-based AEP is a utility
holding company that operates
eig~ electric subsidiaries in seven
states. It is the nation's largest coal
buyer.
·

By ARLENE LEVINSON
Associated Press Writer
Hunger is pushed into the lime·
light as,soup kitchens and pan~es
scramtile to meet a growl ng
Thanksgiving demand, but it's an
everyday, dull ache for tlul millions
of women, men and children poor
and out of lucie in America.
An estimated 30 million Amcri·
cans are hungry. and more than
ever, feeding them requires not
only generosity, but i;nl!enuity. .
The Chicago Chrisuan lndustn·
at League, a homeless shelter.
expects to serve at least 1,000 ilin·
ners Thursday, up from 700 last
year, at its "Plymouth Rock
Cafe."
" What we're trying to do is be
hip for the homeless," executive
director Rick Robens said Monday.
"What we are trying to do is create
an ambience, like that of the yuppie
Hard Rock Cafe, where homeless
follcs can have a fun !lxperience. •'
Striving for an intimate and dig·
nified feel, there will be table·
cloths, no more than six people per
table, a pastry can and live music.
It's that ltind of reaching out
that prompted the Kansas City
Chiefs football team to donate

money for the inakings of .Thanlcs· his family. The boy kept smiling
giving dinner for about 120 fami· and mumbling answers as the giant
men delivered their gifts and asked
lies.
On Monday, 12-year-old Seneca polite questions about his school·
Thomas stood grinning when foot· work.
As the car pulled away, Smith, a
ball players Neil Smith and Derrick
Thomas, no relation to the boy. defensive end, said, "That malces it
delivered two bags of groceries for all worthwhile."
It inspired the Black River ArCa ·
Continued on page 3

30
·

~=~~=~

1=

days un 11
Christmas
L----:, -------

Rutland man cited
in two-car wreck :
A Rutland man was cited after.a
two-car wreck on Ohio 124 in Rut·
land Township Monday around
11:30a.m.
.
According to a repon from the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, James R. Young;
39, of Salem Street, Rutland, pulled
from a private drive and struck the
side of a car driven by Basil R.
Cremeans, 79, of Depot Street,
Rutland.
No injuries were reponed.
Damage to Young's 1985 Ford
LTD and Cremeans' 1977 Pontiac
Catalina was listed as light.
.,
Young was cited for failure 10
yield from a private drive.

•

No1paper Thursday
The Daily Sentinel will not be
published On Thursday in order to
permit employees' IQ observe the
Thanksgiving Day holiday. Normal
business houft and publication will
reSume Friday.

COOPERAnvE PROJECT. Tbe Pomeroy
Merchula A.-ladOII aaaln this year partk:i·
pated with r!aJ¥• at Pomeroy Elementary tu
decorate Chrlltnias tretllloaiJ the street ia the
dOWIIOWJI buahs dlltrlcL Following the decoration ul the trees the lltudenla were served hot
chocolate Ia tile IIIDI-park by Suian Clark, pres·

ldeat ill tht IUOI:latkm. Pictured Is tbe second
grade claa of Mrs..Suzy Carpeater :whlcll decorated tile tree 011tside The Daily Sentinel. Tile
trees were decorated Mlllldlly Ia preparation lor
the anaual Christmas Open House on Sunday
from noon to 5 p.m. The Christmas parlde wiD
begin at 2 P·•·

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