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Beat of
the Bend..

Bob

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oellicJJ

-OhJ~_Lottery
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.Braves ~drop,
t~o battle to

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percent. Wedn~~ay

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·• high in tilid,$0s.

1 Stcllon,.10 PagH 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Funds sought
for Hobson
water lines

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199lMeigs High School marching Band

Meigs band wins more competition awards
The Meigs Marauder Marching
Band was again victorious on Sat·
urday as members participated in
two competitions - one at
Riverview Stadium and one at
Claymont High School. At both
events the band participated in
. Class A competition.
At Riverview the flag corps was
awarded first place and the auxil-

iary, which includes boih tlag corps at Ri vervicw with a score of
and feature twirler, April Hudson, . 252.50, fini shing behind the first
won-most outstanding auxiUary of place band which scored 252. 65
points.
the entire festival.
At Claymon1, Meigs' auxiliary
.~eigs field commanders Holly
and
field commanders won first
Williams and Stephame Price won
place
as the band marched their
first place in Class A at Riverview
way
to
a f~rst place victory over the
with a score of 90, which was the
other two class A bands.
highest score overall.
Meigs was rated superior at both
The band captured second place
contests making 'this season the

first time in the school's history
that the Marauders have received
superior ratings at all regular sea·
son contests.
The band will compete Satuf'llay
in Point Pleasant, W.Va. at2 p.m.
and again at state contest on
November 2.
The_band is under_tbe direcJio!L
of Toney Dingess.

·Thom·as ~awaits confirmation vote
spokesman Marlin Fitzwater, an opposes Thomas. Hatch criticized
assessment shared not only by Democrats for their conduct during
Thomas' Republican backers but the weekend hearings, and Leahy
also by Shelby, who predicted on answered with an indictment of
NBC's "Today" ~ show that Republican tactics . "It wa sn' l a
Thomas would win by a narrow search for the truth," Leahy said.
"It was a search to try to smear
margin.
After a weekend of heated, Anita Hill."
A simple majorily was needed
sometimes sexually explicit hearings televised to the nation, the to confirm and send the conservaissue of Thomas' nomination at last tive black judge to a lifetime scat
was before the Senate, where floor on the nation's highest court.
debate was preceding the scheduled Democrat Shelby predicted a narrow Thomas victory, but opponents
6 p.m. EDT roll call vote.
"He's feeling good," Thomas' held out hopes their last-minute
chief Senate backer, Missouri lobbying would win enough dcfcc·
Republican Sen . John Danforth, lions to block the.nomination.
Thomas would have 52 votes if
said of the nominee.
"This is obviously, in my opin- 41 Republicans and I!. Democrats
ion, not one that you can decide by stick with pledges of suppOrt made
looking at public opinion polls," before Ms. Hill's allegations sursaid one wavering Democra~ Sen. faced. The Judiciary Committee.
had voted to send the nomination to
Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut.
the
floor without recommendation
Those polls indicated that more .
after
a motion of approval lost on a
Americans believed Thomas' total
7-7
tie
vote.
denial than Anita Hill's detailed
A key Southern Democrat, Sen.
allegations of ugly sexual harass- J. Bennett Johnston of Louisiana,
Two accidents with light to moderate vehicle damage and no .
ment in the office a decade ago.
reaffirmed his support for Thomas,
injuries nor citations were investigated Monday afternoon by
"Her story in my opinion was saying three days of hearings into
Pomeroy Police.
not credible," said Republican Sen. the allegations by the Universily of
At 12:06 p.m. near the intersection of west Main and St. and
Orrm Hatch of Utah , a Tho':" as Oklahoma law professor had not
Ebenezer, a-vehicle·driven·-by-Roland-Goodwin, Middleport, -was-- •. su_pp_oner ~n the Seltate_J u_!!JcJar r_ -changed his mind. Georgia Demostruck in the rear by a Ferrell Gas truck driven by Robert Cunnin$·
Co~mlUec told CB'"S _today, .
cratic Sen. Sam Nunn .reserved the
ham, Syracuse. According to the report, Goodwin had stopped m
I th1~~ Amta Hill was tclh~g right to change his mind, but said
preparation to making a 'left hand turn when truck driven by Cunthe truth .. ~ountered DemocratiC Monday night , " At this stage I
ningham slid on the wet pavement into the rear of his vehicle. There
Sen,. ?atr1ck Lea.hy of Vermont, a continue to support Jud ge
was light damage to the rear of the Goodwin car, and light damage
Jud1c1ary Committee member who Thomas."
to the front end of the truck.
The second accident occurred at I :06 p.m·. on West Main.
Martha Pearson, Mason, W. Va, was traveling west on West Main
when a car driven -by Irene Parker, Syracuse, pulled from the Foodland parkin~ lot into her path. There was moderate damage to the .
·R!asults of a NewawMk poll on sexual hmiSsintrll.
passenger s1de of the Pearson car, and light to the passenger side
. Here aruome questions asked:
and front of the Parker vehicle.

_ WASHINGTON (AP) .
Thomas but also over the Senate's
Supreme Court nominee Clarence handling of the nomination.
An Associated Press survey
Thomas awai,ted tonight's verdict
on his confirmation as a cqnfident indicated that Thomas would have
White House predicted victory. a majority of·at least 52 votes if
Pres ident Bush was working the Democrats stick with pledges of
phones today to forstall any last- support made before Ms . Hill's
1Tlinute defections by Democratic allegations surfaced.
Bush, leading the lobbying
backers.
"I have been troubled by the effort for his nominee, said public
allegations" against Thomas, Sen. support for Thomas was ''holding
Richard Shelby, D-Aia., said today. strong. " It appeared much of
"But !intimately you have to make Thomas' crucial support among
a decision and I made a decision Southern Democrats was holding,
this mornin g to support Judge too , leading to predictions the
Thomas, to give him the benefit of embattled nominee would win confirmation by a narrow margin.
lhe doubt"
Still , the White House said Bush
The weekend's acrimonious
hearings were over but the debate would contact a half-dozen or so
waged on as the climactic Senate · wavering senators.
" We think we have the votes to
vote drew near, not only over sexu·
win,"
said White House
al harassment allegations against

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--Local briefs----.
No one hurt in two wrecks

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SIIVIngs
Maybe not as far as you think. Accon:iing to a__recent survey, the average American, at age 55, has saved
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That will gp pretty fast in today's dollars.And a
whole lot fasrer in tomorrows.
~t does that mean for you? Start planning

for retirement. And the sooner, the.bener.
Around here,we'll do whatever it takes to help.So
we're offering The Bank One Retirement Guide. .
, It helps you calculate how much money you'll
need when you retire, and how much you should be
putting~ now. Plus, there's a no-nonseJ.1Se explana-

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tion of all the invesnn~nt options to choose from,
For your free copy of The Bank One Retirement
Guide, visit any Bank One. Or calll-800-766-1515.
. Either way, we'll get
you headed in the rigllt
direction.
Wha.te\.er it takes."
~·M-./ DIC.

Low tonight near 40.
Chance .or showers 60

Page4

Community calendar

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Spielberg, Capshaw marry

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_ Pick 3:076
--· 'Pick
' 4:... 7044
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Cards: A-H, 2-C,
A-D, 7-S

doing well

National 9rug Free Week is Chuck's 65th high school class
coming up Octl9 through Sunday, reun ion held at St. Johns, Mich.
ABERDEEN, S.D . .(AP) ::_
Oct 27.
Nineteen of the original class of 54
Twins born to. their grandmother
As a pan of the observance, stu,- were present for the reunion and 27
were
well but likely j~iill be ·
dents of the Meigs Local School class members are still living.
for-another two weeks,
District llfC being requested to wear
Mr. and Mrs. Blakeslee also visa
spokeswoman said.
red-colored clothing on Wednes· iLCd Reed City to view the ancestral
·- -day, Qct-.-23 to-shGw suppon of the-- ·home·of-Mrs. ·Bhlkes:lee'~s-rrlatemal- ..-twins ·o r
national campaign.
,
,
grandparents, the .Knuths. , .
b'abics),"
Patty
At Veterans Memonal Hpspnal, Knuth walked 75 miles north of
spokc~woman for St.
employeC;I will be w~aring red rib- Grand Rapids, Mich., to stake out
- land Hospital.
-~
bol!.S_dnnng the e_nure week at a hi s homestead. His deed was
Chad Daniel Uchytil and
part of the National Red Ribbon signed by Ulysses S. Grant, PresiCampaign to show support of a dent.
Chelsea Arlette Uchylil were.ileliy.
drug free society.
ered early Saturday io Arlette
By the way, speaking of VeterSchweitzer, 42, who served as a
Edie Hubbard of Racine has .
ans Memorial, the hospital's annual now entered the Arcadia Nursing
surrogate to her daughter and sonfamily picnic was held Saturday Home in Coolville . She is in
in-law. The daughter, Christa
· afternoon at the Kyger Creek Room 16 and would appreciate
Uchytil, was born without a uterus.
Power Plant Employees Club . hearing from fiiends.
Eggs were taken from Mrs.
There were games for hath youngUchyti1' s ovaries, fertilized'with
sters and adults and Christina
Women of the Sacred Heart
.her husband's spetm and implanted
HERBAL HARVEST HELD ~ "Herbal Har·
Looking over the itenis or Donna Nease, one or
McGuire won the attendance prize. Chuich in Pomeroy have their
in Mrs. Schweitzer's womb.
vest and Country Fair" was presented In the
the organizers for the event, are Barbara Riggs
Jackie Starcher, head of the nutri- heads together planning for their
Mrs. Uchytil, 22, and ·her hus·
mini-park in Pomeroy on Saturday in conjuncand Mina Swisher. The event was sponsored by
tion department, was in charge of annual dinner to be served as usual
band, Kevin, live in Rapid City,
tion with the Sternwbeel Festival. A abundance
the Pomeroy Me.rchants Association.
the picnic food.
·
in conjun ction with the annual
about 250 miles southw.est of
of
crea.tive
and
crafty
items
were
on
display.
Aberdeen .
bazaar.
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You're invited to a retirement
Nov . 14 had been set for the
reception for Otis Knopp to be held date with servin~ to start at 4:30
from 3 to 6 p.m. tomorrow, Tues- p.m . and bazaar activities with
day, at the Meigs County Board of games and craft features will be
Education Office, E. Main St., from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. There will
Pomeroy. Knopp has retired after be a $25 attendance prize awarded
Community Calendar items gclist. Pastor Sam Basye invites the
serving 33 years as Meigs County every half hour during the evening.
school attendance officer.
By lhc way , dinner to featured appear two days before an event public.
creamed bake chicken,. homemade and the day or that event. Items
HAR.RlSONVILLlf. The HarCharles and Daisy Blakeslee noodles and the trimmings will be must be received well in advance
to
assure
publication
in
the
cal·
risonville
Holiness Chapel, Route
have returned to their Pomeroy $4.50 and S2.50 for kids 12 and
endar.
684,
Pomeroy,
will have revival
home from Wichita , Kansas , under.
Tuesday through Sunday at 7~ 30
where Mr. Blakeslee participated in
p.m. nightly with Rev . David
The Clarence Thomas confirmaMONDAY
the initiation of his grandson, Mark
RACINE • The Southern Band Nev ill e, evangelist. Rev . John
Circle, as an Entered Apprentice in tion hearings go on and on. Obvithe Bestor G. Brown Ma sonic ously, someone is lying and only a Boosters will meet Monday at 7 Neville, pastor, invites the public.
Lodge there. The Blakeslees' confession- which isn't apt to take p.m. at the high school band room.
LONG BOTTOM • The Faith
granddaughter, Marianne Circle of place-will cleat that up. The All parents are urged to attend.
Full Gospel Church in Long BotKansas City was visiting her moth- hearings have, of course, proven
BURLINGHAM· The Bedford tom will have a fundraiser for the
er, Patricia Circle while the that we across the nation arc going
to
have
the
same
problem
with
the
.
Township
Trustees will meet Mon· church on -Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
Blakeslees were in Wichita so it
pronunciation
of
harassment
as
we
day
at
7
p.m.'
at the town haiL
The public is invited to attend .
made for a nice reunion.&lt;"
Earlier, the Blakeslccs attended do wilh the Caribbean. Do keep
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Revival sersmiling.
POME~OY ·The Ladies Auxil·
vices will begin Tuesday and coniary at Veterans Memorial Hospital tinue through Sunday at the Midwill meet Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. dleport Church of the Nazarene.
There will be a white elephant sale Rev , Donald R. Dunn will be the
and refreshments will be served.
evangelist. Jim and Cathy Sisson
will be the song evangelists. SerEA_ST HAMPTON, N.Y. (AP) ccssful film s, including " Jaws,"
POMEROY - The annual meet- vices will be held at 7 p.m. nightly
-Steven Sp,ielberg and Kate Cap- " E.T. The E~ traterrestrial, " and
ing of the Meigs County Council and 10:30 a.m. on Sunday. The
shaw were married in a traditional " Raiders of the Lost Ark."
Cap
shaw
co-starred
in
the
on
Aging, Inc., will be held Tues- public is invited to attend.
Jewish ceremony at his Long
"
Raiders"
sequel
"Indiana
Jones
day
at I p.m. at the Meigs Multi·
Island estate.
and
the
Temple
of
Doom."
purpose
Senior Center.
WEDNESDAY
Harrison Ford and Dustin HoffThe
marriage
is
Spielberg
's
secman_.wJ;rc among 100 guests Satur- FIREMAN'S.PARADE ·The Fireman's Parade.ot'tht Big Bend
SYRACUSE - The ~ Third
ond and Capshaw 'Sfhird. They . RUTLAND - Revival at lhe
day night at the ceremony .
Steqmheel Festival drew ·quite a bit or attention on Sat~rday
Spielberg produced and directed have two children and ~are expect- Rutland Nazarene Church will be Wednesday Homc'makers Club will
morning as units from Meigs and Masqn Counties participated
held Tuesday through Sunday at 7 meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
some of Hollywood's most sue- ing a third in February.
together in the event. A water battle was tonclucted Iiiier in the
p.m. nightly with Joe Jordan, evan- muniCipal building in Syracuse.
afternoon in Mason, W.Va., by several ol the units.'

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Bahr Clothiers Rotary topic
Bahr Clothiers is possibly the oldest retail business with continu·
ous business in Middleport, according to Cash Bahr who was the
speaker on Monday night at the Middleport.Pomcroy Rotary Club
meeting. The meeting was held at Heath United Methodist Church.
Bahr Clothiers started in 1912 as Curtis Smith Clothing. Bahr
went to work in the store in 1949 for Charlie McMaster. Bahr purchased half of the store in 1951 and the remainder of the business in
1956.
.
Until 1974, business continued 10 increase, but with the advent
of shopping malls, the clothing business both here and elsewhere
has continued to decline.
.
Clothin~ manufacturing as well as distribution continues to
decline, wtth much of the goods produced overseas. Today, the
women's deparupent in the store is much more active than the
men's depanmcnt. Today's young.v.eople, Bahr reported, apparently
do not like to dress up, but they wiJI pay $40 to $95 to rent a tuxedo
for only two or three hours use.
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Bahr was a former member and president of the Rotary Club.
Within recent years, health has been a problem, but he is now .
renewing his activity and Iouks forward to many more years in the
· clothing business.
Howard Frank was announced as a new member of the club.
Gene Riggs, vice president of the club presided.
Plans are movmg ahead for the Rotary Pancake Breakfast to be
held at Vaughan's Cardinal store on Saturday, November 16 from 7
a.m. to 11 a.m.

In your opinion, should a man
nominated to the Suprema
Court who has sexually
harassed a women In the past ...
Should be confirmed Never be
depending on the · · conlirmed
circumstances
to the Court

Don't know/
refused to
answer

Should not be
an Important
consideration

,

Somewhat
closely

7%

8%
..

How closely have you
tollowed news coverage
of aceuaallons of sexual
harassment made against
Supreme Court nominee
Clarence Thomas:
Don't know/
refused to
Very
closely

Not
closely

T,titP~ poll oi70. .dUit81ntervlewed on Oct 10,and
~anlZation tor ~ewsweek . Margin
error 11piiJt or
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t

Source: New1Wttk

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APIManha P, Hernll!1dez

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
the lagoons in the Hobson area will
Sentinel News StafT
begin next week.
An application for funding
Equipment is to be moved in
assistance from the Ohio Depan- next week to begin the requ ired
ment of Transportation to extend excavation in preparation for the
water lines into the Hobson area bank stabilization work, he said .
was filed today by Middleport Vii· The erosion of the baDk has threatlage Council.
.
ened the sewage lagoons and creatMeeting Monday night Council ed a threat of leaching from th e
passed a resolution authorizing lagoons into the Ohio River.
Mayor Fred Hoffman to submit the
Several months will be req uired
application in the amount of to complete that $742,000 project,
$178,125.
Miller said. The project is being
That amount represents 7$ per- funded by the U. S. (:o!']?_s of Engi cent of the estimated total project neers, other state and federal agencost The remaining 2S percent, or cies, and a contribution from Mid$59,375; would be the village slulre dleport village of $12,000.
of the cost and would come from
As for the Pearl Street project of
the water revenue fund.
rebuilding the street, s id ewal~s .
Mayor Hoffman noted that the curbing and storm sewer, Miller
Ohio Department ofTransp&lt;irtation reported that the work being done
provides financial assistance to by C. J. Contracting and Trucking
municipalities contiguous to the of Gallipolis should be .completed
Ohio River through the Ohio Port by the end of the month.
Assistance Program.
The mayor reported that the
The mayor explained that the Meigs County Commissioners
proposed project consists of approved Community Develop·
mstalling a water main out Hobson ment Block Grant monies in the
_Qrive wit)l~_br;lliC_l! 3\QI\g L,!i()()"-_ amount'of $18,()()Q for the_paving
Drive to the railtiiidand a second ofFroiitSlreet. Smci! the t&lt;illil esu:
branch along S. R. 710 the entrance mated cost is $23,000, Council
of Facemeyer Lumber's drive.
voted to pick up the difference of
Elich branch may be described about $5,000 so that th e entire
as' brlhging watel"service to the street can be paved.
edge of the prime port areas, the
As for the wOIX on the Middlefirst to the potential port site on the port levee, additional information
south side of the tracks, and the has to be secured before the bid can
second. to the possible staging area be awarded, Miller reported.
on the north side of the tracks, he '
· Other Bu5iness
said.
It was reported that Feeney- ·
Floyd Browne Associates- in Bennett Post 128, American
preliminary engineering reports Legion, had donated $1,000 toward
stated that the present lack of water the· purchase of an intoxilizer and
and sewer service in the Hobson $500 for a new light bar for a cruisarea is a constraint to site develop· er for the Middleport Police
menL
·
Department.
.
When the Hobson area was
The planned purchase of Central
annexed into the village of Middle- Trust in Middleport by the Peoples .
port a couple of year ago, residents Bank Corporation was noted by
were told that water and sewer Mayor Hoffman who said he had
lines would eventually be extended met with pcrsonne) from Peoples
into that area and those services Bank who are hopeful of completmade available 10 their-homes.
ing the transfer by the end of the
"This is a good way to get a year.
water line started into that area,"
The f~reworks used at the My 4
the mayor said, although he said celebration have been paid for, the
admitted that getting full fundl!lg' is mayor reported. He noted that
somewhat of a "long shot."
Sl ,800 came in from donations and
In the applicat,ion the water line that the ~lance of t!te $3,600 cost
extension will be broken down into was spltt by the vtllage and the
two phases. Phase I will be the Middleport Fire Department with
water main out Hobson Drive and each paying $900.
down alon$ Lagoon Drive, while
James Johnson met with Connphase 2 wtll be the water main cil to discuss the possibility of initifrom Lagoon Road down Route 7 ating a pickup service for recyto Facemyer Lumber.
clables, including metal materials
Other possible funding sources, like refri gerators and sto ves, as
such as the availability of Issue 2 well as plastics and glass. Roger
monies,_were giscussec!, by th!l _r-.J a_llley recentl y• ~~~:~~~:\'.~ '1:~:~[~!:------~-t
mayor.
s1de p1ckup o-r 1r
Other Projects
cling. Council suggested Johnson
. Middleport's Developm ent talk to Manley about recycling and
Dlre_ctor 1)1ll M1ller reported that then come back to Council if anyreprur of the OhiO R1ver' bank ncar
Continued on page 3

Thomas support continues
to grow following hearings
NEW YORK (AP) :._ The'credibility question was answered in
Clarence Thomas' favor as polls
showed Americans found the
Supreme Court nominee's denials
far more believable than Anita
Hill's allegations of sexual harass'ment.
A CBS poll conducted Monday
found that 56 percent did not
believe Hill's allegations against
Thomas, and 27 percent thought
they were true.
Fifty-seven per&lt;:ent of the 497
adults surveyed nationwide thought
Thomas should be confumed to the
high court, and 19 percent thought
he should be rejec~. The poll had
a margin of error of plus or minus
five percentage points.
An ABC-Washington Post poll
released Monday found that 56 per·
cent favored Thomas' confirmation
and 54 pe&gt;cent were inclined to
believe be had not sexually
harassed Hill.
While the poll sho.)!led a gender
gap, both men and women found
Thomas more believable than Hill.
. Fifty-nine per&lt;:ent of men and 49
. ~~

percent of wo men said they were
inclined to beli eve Hill's c ~arges
were fal se: 33 percent of men and
41 percent of women were inclined
to believe they were true.
The poll of 506 people, conducted Sunday, had a margin of error of
· five points.
. '"
A CBS News-New York Times1,
poll conducted Sunday found ·that
58 percent said they were more
likely to believe Thomas and 24
percent were more likely to believe
Hill .
There was linlc, difference in
responses between men and women
and between blacks and whites but
party affiliation appeared to be a
significant factor: 54 percent of
Republicans versus 36 percent of
Democrats favored confir!lling
Thomas.
I
.
The poll, based on telephone
interviews with 501 adults rlation·
wide, had a margin of error of five
points.
,
Another survey found that three
out of every four AmCijcans paid
Continued on page 3

�....

D
tar·
y
Comme
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Tueaclay, October 15, 1991

Paga-2..:.Thel&gt;ally~nt[n!ll . 3

F'omeroy-Middt~port, Ohio

A.ccu-Weather• forecast

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· .,

MICH..

Ceausescu left a strange and sad legacy
I

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By Jack Anderson :

WASHINGTON- The megaNo praise was effusive enough at Buckingham Palace in 1978111 Court Street
\omaniacallegend of the late com- for Ceausescu. Each night the state the fust communist leader to spend
Pomeroy, Ohio
, monist
king, Nicolae Ceausescu, '!;V news program_was required to the night there- and gave him the
Yt
1
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA and his queen , El~na, is growing · run one hour of news of Ceauses- Order of the Knight Grand Cross.
more sensational by the. day. If cu's daily activities. When he visit- The queen had first been warned by
_
.
.
·-Romania had sleazytablot&lt;IS, they · ed villages, the dead leaves on trees . then-French President Giscard
Ceausescu had 40 homes, half
..•.. __ ....... _ •... lY9JJ.!!i.bll.f!lle4J!!Ii!Y..With J!!\t.s.~:.___l\clli~. PJiiJJ.l~d._grocn,.nex.f.!!!iage,_ d:Estaing .to.nail.down.anything.of_.._of-them palaces .and. haltpt!Mm ~. ries now being revealed b~ famtly was pl~nted and children were value. When the Ceausescus had hunting lodges .. H~ Wl\5 no crack 1,
·members, defectors and witnesses quarannned for 48 hours before he been guests of France a few months shot, but that dtdn t ma!ter. HunROBERT L. WINGE:TI
at trials.
·
arrived lest they infect him with earlier, they had stolen everything · .dreds of trophy animals ~ere :
PublisheJ!ll
We. talked to some .of. these any illness_. .
.
.
that wasn't bolted down ·in the imported, fattened and domesncat- 1
sources on a ·vmt to Romanta; and
-RomantanS taxed theu-brams-to ·• guest-residence for visiting-heads~-ed-so-they could be drugged-and--~~
also to our intelligence sources. come up with new words of praise of state
herded into his sights for can't· . '
PAT WlllTEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
What emerges is a fleshed-out por- to satisfy Ceausescu. Chiseled in
Cea~sescu was more careful miss shots. He once shot 60 wild ' l
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Manager
trait of Ceausescu, w~o ruled m~rbfe on univer~ity ":ails, and when he stayed at Blair House, the black mountai~ goats in one day..
:·
Romania
for
2S
years
until
he
was
patnted
on
roadstde
billboards
White
House
guest
residence.
But
He
talked
hunself
mto
believmg
'
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
executed
in
a
popular
uprising
on
were,
"The
Genius
of
the
Carpathihis
behavior
was
sti!l
bizarre.
Fearthat
his
people
loved
himpeople
_;
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
Christmas Day 1989.
ans," ''Paragon of Reason and ing that the Central Intelligence who starved and fro~e to death ~
He was a short, dowdy man who Clearsightedness,'' '"Hero of Agency would use some sort of because of his economic policies. l
LE'ITERS OF OPINION ue welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. Alllcttell ue subject to editing and must be signed with name, . necessarily, adopted t!t_e s~or!_ Heroes," ''Worker o~.\Vor~~~·" chemical on him to disorienthim-or. Sources told us that in the_end,_~()() :
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters . Napoleon as his role mOdel. He "Source of Our Ltght, .!l"d Ftrst make him look foolish, Ceausescu soldiers volunteered for the pnv1- "'
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
' demanded that pictures taken _o[ Personage of the World. Cea~ses- had his staff launder the sheets at lege of shooting Ceausescu. . . ~
him be retouched to make h1m · cu f1gured he earned th.ose t1tles. IJiair House, tum off the air coildi- - ARMED ENEMIES - F1del
appear taller and more ~a~dsome. He once confid~ to a friend that a tioning and stuf(the vents.
Castro's downfall may be close, .'.
But he had three quahttes that man as rare as h1mself only comes
He was a teetotaler because he but not necessarily at the hands of ··:·
served him weU ~ street smarts, a along once every 500 years or so.
feared he would tum out like 'his his dissatisfied people. He could be.
photographic memory an~ the Yfill
Foreign leaders also laid 9n. th.e . drunken and abusive father - a ousted by his own select and pamto overcome any setback, mcluding accolades, after some arm lwtsung. man so oblivious that he named pered army. Two years ago, Castro a severe stammering problem.
Queen Elizabeth hosted Ceausescu two of his 10 children NicO!ae.
ordered the executiol) of one of his
most respected generals, accusing
him of drug trafficking. But the •I
By ROBERT E. MILLER
general's real crime was that he
Associated Press Writer
was becoming too popular among
COLUMBUS- The Voinovich administration says a push to improve
his fellow officers. This made him
Great Lakes water quality is not a threat to businesses concerned it may
a potential threat to CaStro. After
lead to overly stringent, statewide sewage discharge.standards.
.
the execution, Castro purged the
Donald.Schregardus, director of the state Envlfonmental Protecuon
officers' ranks of others who were
Agency, responded to concerns from the Ohio Chamber of Commerce and
too powerful .for his comfort. He
others that tougher standards for Lake Erie and its tributaries might apply
replaced those professionals with
statewide.
'
lackeys who jlre personally loyal to
I. John Reimers, OCC president, said businesses in areas that drain into
him. The soldiers Castro ousted
the Ohio Valley feel their standards are tough enough and will fight any
may be the ones who mount a
effort to punish them for the lakes' problems.
rebellion against his regime.
Schregardus is a member of an interstate committee that is working
MINI-EDITORIAL - Presiwith the U.S. EPA to develop minimum water criteria and standards for
dent Bush has defended himself
the entire region under the 6reat Lakes Critical !'{ograms Act of 1990.
against critics who were turn¢ off
The commirtee will meet in Chicago early next month to act on a SO·
by his. expensive "ph~to ~p" ~~ a
called draft guidance document although it is not scheduled to be pub- wa·shlngton , D.C .. JUntor h1gh
lished in the so-called Federal Registry until next year, he said.
school earlier this month. The EduPublic hearings and a review process would follow, and the states
cation Department produced a
would have two years to adopt the standards which, under the federal law,
glitzy video of Bush's visit to the ·o
"apply only to the Great Lakes and their tributaries," Schregardus said.
school, and the excuse was thatthe
He conceded the standards could be applied statewide in Ohio but said
president wanted to reach out to '
there is no plan to do so without input from the Chamber of Commerce,
children in the high-tech way that ··
farmers, cities or others who would be affected.
they understand. White House ··
The OCC provided a memo to The Associated Press last week that said
spgkesman M~rlin Fitzwal!;! said' ,
the timetable of the so-called Great Lakes Water Qu~lity Initiative· does
the video cost less than sending a ·.
not allow for the development of sound anti-pollution principles.
letter
to every school child in
• I
The memo said Schregardus has recommended ''an adequate review to
••
America. We .WO!I't argue with .,
.
the GLWQI but was attacked by some as standing in ·the way of environ:
Bush's approach, especially when ..
mental progress." It said Ohio is ahead of most states in writing standards
Johnny can't read.
··
so that they only are "as protective as necessary.''
The memo said some stateS hav~ taken the easy way out and ad,opted
standards more stringent than necessary to avoid the cost of deeper analy.'
sis. It did not name the states.
·
"Ohio communities' goal should be to slow' the rule-making process
.
'
so that the gutidance will receive proper review by the scientific and regulacking
respect
for
traditional
valMONTERREY,
MexicoIn
economic
mitacle
ready
to
happen.
lated communities before a dralt is published in the Federal Registry,"
the United States, many people ues, competitive and wildly indi- It has educated people, oil, and
the memo said.
when the NAFrA arrives, proximiThe other states in the GLWQI include Michigan, Wisconsin, New worry about Latinization: See, vidualistic.
•
How
this
contest
for
the
culture
ty
and access to the greatest market
there
is
this
tan
wave
of
Mexican
What about Mexican politics? :;
Yark and Illinois.
The Detroit News, in a Sept. 3 editorial, called on U.S. EPA Director immigrants, and they still speak · is to be resolved will, of course, be in the world - just over the Rio The electoral process is (slowly) .,
William Jteilly to look more closely at the eff~rt to regulate.municipalities Spanish, and they suck together. revealed here. But it can't be Grande. Foreign investment is getting better than it used to be, l;lut
·
and industries. "That is an EPA undertakmg where sc1ence 1S bemg One hears talk, from some Hispan- understood without a look at Mexi- pouring in:
what it used to be stank to high
can
economics
and
politics.
ics and some Anglos, sometimes
heaven. Unlike most of his prede- ·
junked," the newspaper said.
While the United States is slow- · As that economic growth and cessors, Salinas is not accused of .·.
half-serious and sometimes halfnot, that they (the Mexicans) will lycoming out of recession, Mexico •· economic linkage occurs, other stealing money, only elections.
,
re-occupy the American Southwest is booming, particularly here in the things will happen in Mexico, and
wealthier North, which has roughly the United States.
-Montezuma's real revenge.
But one-party rule won 't surIn Mexicq, there is an opposite 20 percent of the population of 90
vive
Free trade and free media
In Mexico, the middle class will bring.. in
anxiety: Americanization . This million people. Mexico's GNP
free political values, now
booming metropolis, with almost 4 climbed by about 4 percent last burgeon, as per capita income sweeping the world. If those values
'
meeting. It is important to know million people, allegedly has the year, and about 5 perceilt so far this climbs from the current roughly
Dear Editor,
are not accommodated, they ~an
their objectives and their ideas to world's highest rate of television year.
$2,000, a figure that puts Mexico explode,
derailing economic
On behalf of the Pomeroy Ele- be able to make an informed choice satellite dishes, bringing down
Something ·remarkable is hap- well above Third World nations progress. Salinas
knows that.
mentary PTO and its officers, I on election day.
everything from Monday Night pening. It's said that a former pres- and well behind First Worlders.
All
that
yields
modernism ,
Our best wishes to all of you.
would like to thank the candidates
Football to the Playboy Channel. ident of Mexico, Luis Echeverria,
which
in
its
most
popular
form 1s
Sincerely,
running for the Meigs Local School
When (it's regarded as a done deal) . wanted to make-Mexico the leader
In
America,
exports
will
grow
to
called
Americanization,
and
which ,
Francie Shrimplin, secretary' the North American Free Trade of the Third World. That was when meet the high-end demands of the
board for attending our recent
·will proceed umong Latins a~ ~th . •
Agreement (NAFT A) 'i s signed, "The New World Economic new middle class, from cars to sides of the border. Modemtzallon
possibly early next year, many Order" (read: "U.N.-style beggar computers. The best thing Mexico yields longevity, prosperity, higher
Mexicans fear an even greater socialism") was a hot item.
brings to NAFTA is market
But of Carlos Salinas, the cur- growth, precisely what our low- status for women, literacy, urbanflood
of
Yankee
influence.
Dear editor.
menton a piece of road equipment.
ization, individualism - and with
There is cross-border caricature rent president, something very dif- immigrant/low-fertility competitors it a fearsome challenge to family
·I am yet to hear a satisfactory I estimate that this was about 10 %
ferent is .said: He wants to make
explanation as to why the Lebanon of the total cost ofthis equipment. at work. Mexicans resent-the U.S. Mexico, finally, a member of the in Europe and Japan lack. Even and traditional values.
cartoon
view
of
Mexicans:
lazy
though birth rates are sinking,
Township Trustees need an The State Examiner, in her report
First
World
(read:
"marlcet
democfolks
on
a
burro,
covered
with
a
Mexico will still add 60 million
That, in turn, becomes the cen- ·
increase in money for cemetery to the Township Trustees, does not
racy.")
serape
and
a
sombrero,
always
on
people
by
2025.
It's
our
ultimate
tral
issue in modem democracies
purposes as set forth in the legal recommend that they intermingle
Salinas' bold Thatcherite eco- economiC msurance agamst a everywhere,
siesta:
At
the
same
time,
m
·any
including the United
advertisement for the levy to be their funds.
policies have given Mexico "fortress Europe" protectionist States. In culrure, as in economics.
voted on NovemberS,
G. R. Workers are available for Mexicans see the United States in anomic
runmng start toward the "mar- trade bloc.
there is no free lunch.
The cemeteries never looked free labor to the ' Township equally broad stereotypes: broken ket"
part. Mexico may well be an
better than they do l'fOW and Trustees. su.bstantial donati_o~s l? families, crime, sex an4 violence;
according tO my conversations witll - our cemeten~s are ~ade by mdtthe township clerk there is a bal- vtduals from ume to bme.
ance on hand.
This is not a boat load of money
"
Cemetery lots are sold and this we are asked for but it is a substanmonel should be escrowed for per- ·tial amount and is typical of the
These should be the best of political issue because most people ernment is belaying its recent repupetua care. A grave opening and way taxing authorities want to keep times,
a period in history to savor. have yet to attach specific partisan tation as the center of ~ovemmen1
closing fee is charged and likely •to on with the nickel and dime It is not Just that the Cold War has blame for what most afflicts their tal innovation. Havtng grown
1
be increased, I am told. A new method of getting more and more
but also that an era of global pysches. Control ·of Washington . explosively in the I 980s, it is ior. The law was for saps. The art 1\
($500) power mower was pur- taxes out of the people who pay ended,
triumph for democracy is at least a . being a biPartisan thing, blame imploding spectacularly in the of the dirty deal ·was venerated in •
chased last year, so that is taken them.
possibility. The prestdents of the tends to be spread out in more or 1990s. De.mocratic governors like private and practiced with impuni· : 1
care of. .
·
. ·
-Gayle Price, United States and the Soviet Union less even allocations.
James Florio of New Jersey and ty. Those who should have
'
In 1987 $2.500) was taken from
Portland · match and uise each otller·in a.. - Bhlrne-ror what? 'FoTitart-ers~ Robert Caser or PenmyiV!Iliavie- ed- or legis lated in tile
the cemetery fund to make a paycontest to see who can reduce his the domestic economy .is obviously with Republican ones like Pete behalf were blinkered by
nation's nuclear arsenal the most. anemic and the international com- Wilsoh of Califqmia or indepen- or neutralized by campaign
1
Viewed ftom the long perspective petitive' situation mbre.threatening dents like Lowell Weicker of Con- butions.
.
:
of the 20th century's tragic history, than at any time.since the Depres- nectlcut for low man on the popuLying seems to have become an : !
the world ls a palpably better place. sion of the 1930s. The recession, larity pole - and poDs. The reason AmericAn art form, most admired · 1
Why then1 with large events guing which the experts dido 't expect, in each case is remarkably similar. when most obvious. The recent l
By The Associated Press
.
so well, do so many people seem to has given way to a recovery which Forced to make hard choices in the plea bargain admission by Elliott : l
Today is Tuesday, Oct. 15, the 288th day of 1991. There are 77 days be suffering from tired blood of the adamantly refuses to appear on face · of glaring mismatches Abrams, former assistance secre- . !
left in the year. .
.
.
_
spirit? Why .the long faces and · command. Everyday conversation· between income and c;xpendi_tures, _ tary of state, that he lied to f
Today's flighligh(iii History: . .
gloomy sighs? ~·. ~ dwells on tales of new- liiyoffs in they have discovered that no Congress was akin to a frog admit- 1
On Oct. 15, 1964, it was announced that Soviet leader Nikita s.
Primarily, I think, because most local plants, our children's difficul- answer is acceptable to many of ling that he is ugly. Nor did it begin , :
Khrushchev had been removed from office. He was succeeded as premier of us do not view the world from ties in a tight job market and wor- their constituents.
and end with Abrams and his fel- : '
by Alexei N. Kosygin and as Communist Party secretary by Leonid r. 'the mountaintop. Our~pective is ries about the stability of once solid
But if governors are in ill repute low Palladins of self-righteous
Brezhnev.
.
more personal and therefore more financial institutions.
and big government is unable or deceit. We recently saw Judge •
On th' d
restricted. The climate may be
There is much rbetotic from unwilling to come up with big solu- Clarence Thomas, lawyer and :
In 1~. ~~~ear-old Graee BedeU of Westfield, N.Y., wrote a letter to c_hanging, but lpcal weather ~ondi- Washin~ton about all of th!s. but tions, there is an equally serious right-wing warrior, tell a Senate :
RSidential
candidate Abraham Lincoln, suggesti~g he would look better ttOns are what we expenence litde acuon that promises rehef and component of the national mood. committee he had never discussed ; •
P
if he were 10 grow a beard.
directly. Up close, thi~gs seem 1;0 renewal. To say bealth care, infras- Appalling numbers of our reeent or even thought about Roe v. :
In l9l4, the Clayton Antitrust Act was passed.
be a great deal murkter,.the atr. tructure and education is to indict "masters of the universe," to steal Wade, the most contentious legal •
In l9l7, Mala Hari, a Dutch dancer who had spied for the Gel111ans, fouler and the prospects· for the the political process. The president T?JII.W?lfe's telling phrase for the issue of our ti~e. We heard Robert · 1
was executed by a firing squad outside Paris.
near-term future considcnlbly less wags the fing~r of blame at the htgh f11ers of Wall Street, were Gates, a man mordinately proud of · :
In 1928, the Gernwt dirigible Graf Zeppelin landed -in Lakehurst, N.J., inviting than tlley .do from the. Democratic Congress and the · liars, cheats and thieves. Gresham's his. prodigious memory in all otller •
on its fnt commen:ial flight across the Atlantic.
detached distance of the profes- Congress points at the presideni, ~w seems to have been proved out matters, tell. another Senate com:_ :
In 1937, the Ernest Hemingway novel "To Have and Have Not" was sional observer.
whife creative governance goes w1th a vengeance: bad money · mittee he was virtually a blank . :
fi !published.
That is not a ~litical comment, begging.
drove out good repeat~dly,_from sl~te on Iran-contra while serving ,1 :
"', 1939 New York Municipal Airpon, later re-named LaGuardia Air- though the ~ocrats undoubk:dly .
And not just in Washington. .
Salomon Brothers~ Mike Milken, BtU Casey at the CIA. And then we
wu~cated.
.
~ hope to capitahze on the pubbc's
From the richest of stateS, like from the local savmgs and loan to watched both .commiuees releomln·I94S, the former premier of Vichy France, Pierre Laval, was execut- anxieties in tlext year's election. So California, to the 'poorest,Hke Ivan Boesky. "Ma~i~g it" was mend that men or such limited :, 1
1
ed. ,
far, however, it is not a useful Maine and Mississippi, state gov- synonymous with cnqnnal behav- veracity be elevated

t

and·Dale I.T.an Atta :
I

· [ Mansfield

I

PA.

I so• I•

~ ·

Mexico-vs. U.S. - Wh9's

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, showers likely early,
then becoming partly cloudy late.
Low around 40.1be chance of rain
is 60 percent. Wednesday, sunny ..
Cool with the high 50-55.
Extended forecast:

Virginia M.-Myers

.

. 'i

.

Gov. Voin~ovich says schools
must 'sqvueeze every dollar'

Thomas ...

Continued from page I
close attention to the hearings during the weekend.
Forty-one percent of respon dents to a telephone poll completed
By JOHN CHALFANT
Sunday by the Times Mirror Center
Associated .Press Writer_
for the -People &amp; the Press said
they followed Thomas' confil111aCOLUMBUS - State officials
tion hearings "very closely." Thir- .must demonstrate that funds spent
ty-four percent said they paid on schools are being efficiently
"fairly close" attention to the con- used before deciging whether to
troversy.
pump more money into education,
The results were based on a Gov. George Voinovich said.
nationwide sample of 719 allults.
Voinovich also told reporters
The margin of error was three after an appearance before the State
points.
Board of Education Monday that a
compromise may be near on a bill
which would change the panel
from an elected to an appointed
board.
·
•' •
In other action, former board
Continued from page 1
member Paul Brickner of

Hospital news

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·j

v

AND THEY'RE OFF! - Runners in the Big Ben(! Stemwheel Festival SK race Saturday are pictured above as they begin their
journey friHII the Mason Town Park, through the streets or Mason, across the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, to the Pomeroy levee, where the
race ended. The Village of Pomeroy can be seen in the background. Pbotos ·of the race and walk winners will be published in this
week's Register.
.
.

Councz'l

I

.

.,

Ra~cel L. Jividen;-66, of North
Main Street, Point Pleasant, died
Monday morning, Oc~. 14, 1991, in
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal. .
.
He was an employee of the Ohio
Valley Publishing Company at the
Point Pleasant Register, and aretired employee of Lakin State
Hospital. fie served as a night
.
watchman for many yl!ars at the
Mason
County Fair, and was a forHarry Edward Purdum
mer
patrolman
for the City of Point
'
Harry Edward Purdum, 74, of Pleasant. Jividen was also a u.s.
Bradenton, Fla., formerly of Amny veteran.
Born Sept. 10, 1925, in ElmMason, died Sunday, Oct. 13,
wood,
W.Va., he was a son of the
1991, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
late
Alba
Jividen and Lucy. (Thorn- . thing further needs to be done. The
Born Sept: 12, 1917, in Mason,
ton)
Jividen
Cash. He was also pre- village does not now have a recyhe was a son of the late Harry H.
ceded
in
death
by his wife, Eileen cling program .
and Marie (Shank) Purdum.
L.
(Duff)
Jividen.
The mayor' s report showed
He was also preceded in death
He
is
s11rvived
by
his
son,
receipts
of S7 ,023 for September.
by his wife, Elizabeth; and two
Michael
Lee
Jividen
of
Point
PleasJudy
Crooks,
council mcmbc!. probrothers, John Hall Purdum and ant; and two sisters, Georgia Mar- posed that something
be done to
Jim Shank Purdum.
tin
of
Point
Pleasant,
and
Norine
clean
up
the
Park
Street
village
Purdum lived many years in
Bailey
of
Columbus.
·
equipment
storage
area.
New York, England, and most
The funeral will be Wednesday,
The Rev. Frank Smith of Heath
recently Bradenton, where he
11
a.m.,
at
the
Crow-Russell
United
Methodi st Church had the
served as mana~er for several
Funeral
Home
with
the
Rev.
Louis
opening
prayer. He also discussed
retirement hotels. He was a captain
A.
Russell
officiating.
Burial
will
with
Council
the possibility of
in the Air Force, serving in World
be in the Lone Oak Cemetery.. "store front" distribution of clothPoint Pleasant.
ing collected by the United
Friends may call at the funeral Methodist Cooperative Parish. He
home Tuesday, 6to 9 p.m.
said that the agency has an abun,
dance of clothing which they want
Winning lottery ticket to make readily availab le to those
VETERANS MEMORIAL
who need it.
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
sold
in
Columbus
Attending were Mayor HoffTed Halfield Jr.• Rutland.
man, Clerk Jon Buck, and Council
MONDA_)' DISCHAR9ES •
CLEVELAND (AP) - The members Dewey HOrton, Jam·cs
None.
holder of the sin~le winning ticket Clatworhty, Judy Crook s, Paul
from Saturday mght's $24 million Gerard, William Walters and Jack
Holzer Medical Center .
"Super Lotto" drawing can make
Discharges, Oct. 14 - Behnda a claim on the jackpot beginning Satterfield.
Gibbs, Audra Haffelt, Mrs: Bruce today.
•
..
,.
Moore and daughter, Bobbie RanThe winning ticket, sold 10
'
·
dolph.
. .
Colum~USr couldn't be submitted
Births,_OcL_l4~-for-validauon-Monday because the- - - - - ~ - - . --Keith Errett, of Potnt Pleasant, lottery's headquarten in Cleveland
W.Va., a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. and its nine regional offices were
(AP)- Here are
Howard Jef.fers, of P!Jmeroy, a closed for the Columbus Day holi- theCLEVELAND
Ohio Lottery drawing selecdaughter.
day, lottery spokeswoman Sandy tions made Monday nighc
Lesko Mounts said.
The ticket, worth more than Pick 3 Numbers
0-7-6
The Daily Sentinel
$9,23,000 a year for 26 years before
(zero, seven, six)
&lt;VSPS IU·IMIO)
taxes or a single, discounted pay' Pick 4 Numbers
Publithed eve-ey a n.ernoon, Monday
ment of more than $10 million, was
7-0-4-4
through Friday, Ill Coori 8!2 Pomorvy,
sold
at Flags Beer Wine and ~li,
Ohio b)' the Ohio Valley t"ubUahinr
(seven, zero, four, four)
Ms. Lesko Mounts said.
Company/Multimedia lnc;r . Pomeroy,
·
Ohltr-4&amp;7691 Ph. 992·21M. ~eeond eloM
The wipning numberS were 3, 4, Cards
A (Ace) of Hearts
poa""ge paiCI at. Pomet'O)', Ohio. ..
9,19,41 and46.
2 (Two) of Clubs
Mombor: The A11oeiated Prou Inland
The Super Lotto jackpot wi)l
A (Ace) ofDiamonds
Dally Proal AleociaL~on. •nd the Ohio
again hold $4 million for Wednes7 (Seven) of Spades
Newapapor A:IIOC:lltlon, National
day night's drawing.
Advcrti••n« Rcpnscnt.aLive, Branham

The name of a sister who· pre~
ceded Virginia.M. Myers in death,
Neta Wiggins, was omitted from·
Mrs. Myer's obituary in The Daily
Senlinel on Friday.
Mrs. Myers died on Wednesday,
October 9, 1991 at Regional Hospital in Bristol, Ill.

Today in history ·

~

·-•'

Thursday ihrough Saturday:
Fair on Thursday and Saturday.
A chance of showsrs Friday. Highs
in the 60s Thursday and Friday and
55-65 Saturday. Lows in the 30s
Thursday, the 40s Friday and 35-45
Saturday.

War II.
Surviying are three sisters, Mary
van Hom of Point Pleasant, Alah
Funeral services for Virginia H. Rodgers of Mason, Elizabeth Sayre
Grover, 83, will be conducted 1 of Ravenswood; six nieces and
p.m. Wednesday at the Waugh- nephews, and 13 great-nieces and
Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with great-nephews.
the Rev. Chester Lemley officiatA graveside service will be held
ing. Burial ·will be in ·Reynolds Wednesday, II a.m., at Kirkland
Cemetery.
Memorial Gardens. Father Andrew
Friends may call at the funeral Hohman will officiate.
home from 7-9 today.
Friends may . call at the
Pallbearers will be Clyde Bur- Foglesong Funeral Home Wednesnett, Claude Burnett, Joe Drum- day, 10 a.m. until time of service.
mond, Vaughn French, Jack Mink
and Gordon Fisher.
Rancel L. Jividen

Hodding Cai1er III ;

I

•
'.

Virginia H. Grover

Why-Amerfc·a's outlook isn't better

t

•

---Area deaths--

Wants satisfat;tory explanation

••

__

-----Weather-----

Thanks candidates

rxn::

was forecast along the
The low temperature for the ·:
Atlantic and Northeast nation Monday was 22 degrees at
tonight. Sl!owers and Gunnison, Colo.
were ex!JC¥ted
___,__._......_

..•

Ben Wattenberg .'

'

in the Southeast. icy.winds of 30 .
mph, showers and flurries were ~
forecast over the northern Great
Lakes.
High temperatures were forecast
in the 30s and 40s in the Great
Lakes; the 40s and ·50s in New
England; the 60s and 70s along the
mid-Atlantic, the South and the
Midwest; the 80s in Florida, the
Southwest and part of the North·
the 90s in much of Southern
over 100 in the

_i )_

~~Y!lding?

Letters to the editor

touch 70 degrees.
.
.
Great Lakes region, and the South· This .warmth will continue into · ivest continued wa'rrn and fair.
the weekend and the only chance of Honolulu was cloudy. ·
rain will be early.Friday as a cold
On Monday, rainshowers were
front slips through the state.
scattered over the Ohio Valley, the
The record high temperature for · .Idaho Panhandle, Montana and
this date at the Columbus .weather Southern California.
station was 90 degrees in 1897.
Northwest winds over the Plains
The record low was 24 in 1939.
were expected to drive cooling air
Sunrise this morning was at into the center of the nation today.
7:41 a.m. Sunset will be at 6:53 · ·The sultry air that caused' heavy
p.m.
··
- ·" ·· .
-rain in Florida last week was
·
Around
expected to bring ,
and scat-

W.VA.

rF.

.

f&lt;!r !V~o~~~rJJ · QbiQ~~ ·

·1111&amp;

EPA; Great Lakes water
standards not for whole state

..

'By Th~ ASsociated Press
Freeze warnings were posted for
western Ohio tonight as the 'National Weather Service ~t¢icted clear,
iog skies and lows m the mid-20s.
Frost is likely in the central part of
the state while temperatures in
eastern Ohio were expected. to
remain above freezing.
A few showers possibly mixed
with sleet will linger in the east
tonight-and into early Wednesday
momi·r•g over the northeast comer

WIUlller temperatures will return Awmuc seaboard today. Rain con. to Ohio on Thursday with highs tinued in southern Florida. ,
reaching into the 60s. Some westThe Gulf states had cloudy
em Ohio communities might even weather, skies were fair in the
~~~====~~~

1

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The Dally Senllnei-Page-3

_F~e~~~" ~~xni~gs _po~~~~4

Wednesday, Q;t, t6.:_ ~

1

Tuesday, October 15, 1991 ~- ;

·

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy...:..Middleport, Ohio

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J

'

~-"t l ~·

-Meigs announcements - Dance to be held
There will be a round· and
squ;u-e dance at the Rutland American Legion Hall on Saturday from
8 p.m. to midnight with Hard
Times Band. The·caller will be Ray
Fitch. Admission is $3 for adults
and $2 for children.
· Bills to be coUec:ted
Jane Beelge, Racine billing and
collection agent, reminds all
Racine RSidents who have not prud
their water and trash bills that pay. ment on those bills now must be
· mailed to the Village of Racine;
Box 375, between the first of the
month and the 15th. Mrs. Beegle
states she collects every quaner on
those dates.

Movies·to be shown
Movies to be . shown at the
Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy on Saturday and Sunday
at 2 p.m. are "Ramona's Bad Day"
and "Reluctant Dragon." The
movies will be shown at the Middleport Library on Monday at 7
p.m.
CCL to hold party
Middleport Child Conservation
League will have a Haloween Party
for the children of the members at
6:30p.m. on Thursday at the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church .

..

Democrats to meet
The Executive Committee of the
Meigs County Democratic Pany
will meet on Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
at the Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy.

you are giving us. We are utilizing
it in the most effective wa~ possible ... I think when people hear that
message then it makes them more
likely to say to themselves, 'By
golly, these people are serious,'
and will be more likely, I think, to
look at education as a good investment in their future," he sai&lt;L- ·-~ Voinovich did not mention his
disputed proposal for overhauling
the bgar!l,.durina hi~ appearance
before the 21-memoor panel. The
meeting was the first for new State
School Superintendent Ted
Sanders.

But Voinovich insisted later he
had not given up on the bill. The
measure has passed the Senate and '
is pending in the House.
·
"We' re pressing it very, very
hard behind the scenes," he said.
"I don't think it's dead. I think
there's a possibility that before the
end of-the year a compromise-will
be worked out."
School board members now are
.elected .from e!'ch. oi the state's
U.S. House dtstncts. The bill
would shrink the panel to 11 membel'S appointed by a governor.

Uni'ts respond to et·ght calls

Willoughby
an unsuccessful
bid to reclaimmade
the seat
from which '
he was removed last month. The
panel listened to his presentation
Units of the Meigs County
but took no action.
Emergency Medical Service
Voinovich said many issues responded to eight calls for assisremai n to 'be examined before a tance on Monday and early Tuesfinal decision is made about a boost day morning.
in school funding, including possiOn Monday at 1:22 p.m. the.
ble changes in the disputed formula Pomeroy untt was called to
now used by the state to distribute Hartinger Road for Benny Dent
money to local districts. The for- who was transported to Veterans
mula currently is the target of law- Memorial Hospital. At 2:45 p.m .
suits filell by rural and urban dis- the unit went to 307 Spring Ave.
tricJS.
for Laurie Games who was taken to
ln.the meantime, Voinovich said Holzer Medical Center. ,
s4:ong support for education must
The Pomeroy Fire Department
be built.
went to County Road 19 at 3:43
" I think what the taxpayers p.m. on a motor vehicle accident in
have heard too often is, 'We've got which Rebecca Lavender was taken
problems with our schools, give us 10 Pleasant Valley Hospital.
more money,'" Voinovich said.
At 8:14p.m. the Middleport unit
"I think what they-need to hear went to 693 South Second Ave. for
is. 'We're doing everything we June Smith who was treated but not
possibly can with the money that transported.
The Rutland unit, at 8:48 p.m.,
went to Route 143 for Francis
Davidson who was taken to Holzer.
On Tuesday at 3:58 a.m. the
Divorce granted
A divorce action has been granted in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Murl W. BoUdinot against ·
Allen E. Boudinot.

Pomeroy unit transported Ruth
Bennett from Overbrook Center in ,
Middleport to Veterans, and at4:42 •
the unit went to Route 7 for John · •
Louks who was taken to· Camden
Clark Hospital in Parkersburg,
W.Va.
At 7:50 a.m. the Rutland unit '.
went to Route 143 for Bessie Graham who was uansported to 0 ' Bleness Memorial Hospital.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514
.

' . •..

~Tllllll' I Sl.lbl'
8ARGAIJI NUiHT T\ES.DU .

IARGAI N MTIIIE[S

Court news

Judgement sought
A judgement suit has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Asplundh Tree Expert
Co., of Columbus, against Wendell
T. Howard , Flatwoods, Ky. in the
amount of$2,423.71. ·/'t. request for
punitive damages has been filed in
the amoun t of $7,500.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................30 7!8
Ashland Oil ......................28 l/4
AT&amp;T................................37 7/8
Bob Evans ....................... .18 7!8
Charming Shop ....:............. 21 5!8
City Holding .................... .l6
Federal Mogul................... l4 1/8
Goodyear T&amp;R .................43 7!8
Key Centurion .................. J4 7/8
Lands' End ........................19 518
Limited Inc....................... 23 7/8
Multimedia Inc..................22 718
Rax Restaurant .;................ 1/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 37118
Shoney's Inc .................... .17'1/8
Star Bank ..........................22 3/4
Wendy Int'l.,........... ............ s 3/4
Worthington Ind .... ........... 27
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m .
quotes prorlded by Blunt, Ellis
and Loew/ of GallipoUr.

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E. Main St.
992·2094
Pomeroy, OH.
Utll ANNlVDSA.RY 1'EAR. .

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·sp.orts

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The ·Daily Sentinel
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Page,.-.4 .

•

23-20 in final seconds .

Braves base running blUnders costly in 1-0 loss
By TOM SALADINO
AP Sports Writer
ATLANTA - The Atlanta
Braves had their chances. The
.·~ ....The..E.irates..got..afifth.inning-

'Pittsburgh Pirates like theirs.
RBI single by Jose Lind, and the
rwstood up in a 1-0 victory as the
·Braves' magical season in which
-they rose from worst to r~tbegan
•to tarnisH in a se'ties of misses
Monday.
:. The vic tory sends the Pirates
back home to Three Rivers Stadi·
·Urn with a 3-2 lead in the best-of-7
'NL playoffs. Ga_me 6 will be
Wednesday night, and Game 7, if
lleeded, on Thursday.
·. ''It sounds good," said Pitts·
burgh manager Jim Leyland. "It's
€ertainly better going home needing only one win.''

Leyland will send Doug Drabek the Braves ' David Justice gave up a 1-0 loser to Avery.
to the mound Wednesday against . Piltsburgh an unearned run and the , This time, Smith struck out
the Braves'. Steve Avery, the win- chance to win.
Rafael Belliard. Starting pitcher
ner in Atlanta's. 1-0 Game 2 vktoThen came Monday's game, and ·Tom ·Glavine then lllissed the

PITTSBURGH (AP) - For 2 a 44-yard field goal by Bahr with win the game,'' Pro B!iwl ~
112 quarters, the Piasburgb Steelers four seconds left. Of the Giants' ~~·Rod Woodson said. ,:·.we aJ1
he offer&amp;! at it."
with Andy Van Slyke making a '
had nothing to celebrate, save for last six victories, Bahr's field goals
Leyland said he had no idea the shoe-top catch.
an occasional first down. They have· decided four of them, three in
Except the Giants, wbo Suddensqueeze was on.
Lemke then grounded _a single
were getting embarrissed his time, the closing seconds.
ly realized they were headed .!0
Cox thoughnlwsituation was to lefi and Justice, stumblin·g-sltgbt- and the most- audible ·sound in - ~sure, the Steelers' -c:;pmeback overt1mcnmd, perhaps, a caw. ·
· Three Rivers
was that of 1Y115 remal'kable, but so was Bahr's, trophic loss. And the Steelers, who
offacross the Cut by the Steelers 11 years ·ago, did' nothing right for ~ 1/2 quarr.e,1,
___._____
nation.
and Smith's a conlrol pitcher. If he throw got away from Slaugh!.
he's still in the league, mostly then ~ould do no wrong, did two
· "'Man, we were l9oking bad in because he just might be the best things very wrong.
makes contact, we've got a run; if
The P~es, however, Called for
front of the whole counll)',' • Barry cluiCh kicker in football.
he fouls it off, we've still got Lon· the ball at third, claiming Ju~tice
First, they ce)ebrated Green's
Foster said.
.nie.Smith coming up_with.runners .had missed.the base. Umpire.Erank
_ --~t worrie~.Jbe GiaJ!ts was it touchftow!l '16th _way_IOOJI\uch
The defending Super Bowl was close.
in scoring position . I had a good Pulli agreed, calling him out.
exuberance. Bad mistake, beca~
champion New York Gtantl, lead·
"It shouldn't have been that it cost them five yards on the kick·
feeling." ·
The Braves still had a couple of
ing ~0:{) in the third quarter, were close," quarterback Jeff Hosteder off. Then, A-nderson, the second
The next crucial-inning was the opportunities left, but didn't capilooking - well, super agilin.
fourth, which had several bizarre talize, leaving eight runners on
said.
most accurate kicker in NFL histo·
· Only 22 minutes of playing time
occurrences.
base, five reaching third.
Dave Meggett set up New ry, kicked the ball out of bounds
later, following one-o(-lbe most York's first touchdown:With a-22· while trying to steer inway·ftom
Justice led off by reaching on
Terry Pendleton tripled with two
first baseman Gary Redus' two- out in the eighth, knocking out
remarkable second-half comebacks yard reception, then scored his ftrSt Meggeu.
·
base error before Hunter was called Smith, who issued seven hits,
in recent NFL seasons. the Steelers career rushing touchdown on a 30·
Under NFL rul~, ihe =,iv_ing
finaily bad something to. celebrate. yard run and the Giants. led b&gt;: 20 team can take a kickoff that g~
out for interference when ·ne ran · walked one and struck out five. In
into catcher Don Slaught after hit- carne Roger Mason, who got Ron
The trouble was they did.
with 7: 13 left m the tbrrd penod. out of bounds .30 yards from ~
ling a 15-foot chopper to the left of Gant on a pop to end the threat~
Helped by an ill-timed. touch· . New York had .a 3-to-1 edge in it was kicked.off. Since the ~teelers
down celebration penalty, a rare time of possession and the Steelers kicked off from their 30, that gave
the mound. Olson lined to cent~r.
mistake by one of the most depend· were generating ·about as much the Giants the ball on New York~s
.
able kickers in NFL bistorr and a offen~e as - well, the Pirates' 40.
quarterback who dido't qwl when Barry Bonds, who just happened to
"I was real surprised they did
WINNING FIELD
- New York
on the game clock to beat the Steelers 23-20 on
his counterpart got started, the be in the stands.
that,"
Hoste!]er said. "It gave us
Giants placekicker Matt Bahr, right, boots the
Monday in Pittsburgh. Lawrence Taylor (56)
Giants
beat
the
Steelers
23-20
Exit
Bubby
Brister,
who
was
6
great
field
position. I was very sur·
. ball from a Jeff Hostetler hold with four seconds
~locks David Johnson (44). (AP LaserPhoto)
Monday nighL
of 16 for 97 yards. Enter O' Don- prised ..• they didn 'I play it safe
Just when it looked like the nell, who had thrown exacdy five and II)' to kick it down the field."
Giants might lose the kind of game passes .in his NFL career.
" That meant 25 yards differby a state panel of sportscasters and third, Cincinnati Putceii Marian
that
can
desiroy
a
season
espe·
,
If
the
Giants
dido't
believe
they
ence,"
writers. '
,
Woodson said. "They get
fourth and Mentor Lake Catholic
cially the kind of turbulent, ten· still were in a game, they were after the ball on ihe 40 and they've only
Fourteen of last week's top-10 fffth. Girard, off its victory over
sion-filled season they've been two Gary Andc:+son field goals and got to go 35 yards to set up the
teams lost over the weekend.
Warren Kennedy, sneaked into the
having - they turned to ole Mr. two O'Donnell touchdown passes field goal."
Elder trails Princeton by 40 top 10 for the ftrSI time this season.
Dependable,
Matt Bahr.
in less than five minutes, a 16Precisely, they went 36, with
points in the big-school division,
Clearview had trailed 'Kennedy
The
Giants
(4·2)
.took
a
20-0
yarder
to
Louis
Lipps
and
a
5·
Hos!Qtler
hitting_Meggett for 16
followed by Grove City, Mentor by 53 points last week; this week it
lead,
lost
it
to
a
dramatic
20-point
yarder to Eric Green, tied it with 50 yatWbefore endmg the ftve-play
and Warren Harding.
leads Akron Manchester by 30.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- To to have his team pass more.
scram bled out of the pocket two or comeback directed by, of all JICO" seconds to play.
drive by scrambling himself for 18.
St. Ignatius dropped five spots Steubenville Catholic was third,
criticism tlu!t he has become a rurr·
"I would like to have a 60-40 three times, If we keep everybody pie, Neil O'DOnnell, then won 1t on
"I really felt we were going to Enter Bahr. Exit Steelers.
to seventh, while Piqua made its Portsmouth East fourth and
happy clone of Woody Hayes, balance (between the run and off the quarterback, we'll throw
•
first appearance in the top 10.
Kennedy fell to fifth.
Ohio State coach John Cooper says pass)," Cooper said arhis weekly every down. But thai's hard to do."
Fostoria knocked off Division I
Three teams made their first
fans need to realize he has a run- news conference. "We're working
He said critics need not blame
NoJO Toledo St. Francis and appearance in the top 10: eighthoriented team that is having diffi- to that We're trying to do those the offensive line for breakdowns
increased its lead over second· place-carey, No.9 Wheelersburg
culty protecting its quanerback.
things that give us the best chance in the passing attack.
place SteubenviUe to 49 points. St. and NoJO Marion Elgin.
NEW YORK (AP) - Mike
"It may be one guy," he said.
of winning football games."
In
Ohio
State's
10-7
loss
at
llliMarys Memorial was again third,
Gartner
scored a goal he will
The top two stayed the same in
nois Saturday, the Buckeyes ran the
So far, Ohio State is running on "One guy breaks down and you're
with Uniontown Lake and Rayland Division·V, with Minster holding a
always
remember
in a game he
·
ball on 53 of their ftrst·62 offensive 78 percent of its plays. ·coojler said running for'yoilr life.
Buckeye each moving_up a notch !O ·56-point lead over McDonald.
would
like
to
forget.
plays and trailed 7-0.
·
"But I'm not sitting here moanthe culprit was not play-calling but
fourth and fifth, respectively.
Gartner notched the SOOth goal
Newark Catholic, Malvern and
ing,
Part of it is our philosophy.
Passing on their final seven .lack of protection.
The only ranked team to fall in Woodsfield each moved up a rung
of
his NHL career, but tile Wash·
snaps, the Buckeyes completed
"We threw 16 passes in the We're a running football team. You. ington
Division· II was Solon, which lost to fill the top five.
came from behind
three for 103 yards and a tying game, although we called more win four games running the ball to beat Capitals
his
New
York Rangers 5·3
to Twinsburg Chamberlin 15-14
New teams to the too 10 were
touchdown. Chris Richardson's 36- than that We didn't get them all and all of a sudden you play in a in one of two NHL
games on Mon· .
. and dropped six spot$ to lOth.
Reedsville Eastern and Sandusky
yard field goal with 36 seconds left off. The problem you have got to big ball game. What are you going day night. In the other,
Hartford
No.2 Ironton fell in Division III, St. Mary's.
was the winning margin.
understand is ,.. one of protection. to do, say we can't run and we've beat Montreal 4-3.
allowing CAPE to expand its lead
The poll will continue for three
_
Running .ba.ck Butler Ry'not'e When w~J!iJI ~Qil :wm~ pas_ses our got to throw it tlljs game?:'
The Capitals trailed--3~-wben
from 45 points to·76 over the new more weeks through the regular
Ohio Stille (4-1 ov~mll and 1-1
sald after the game that there was quarterback was son of running for
Peter
Bondra and Kevin Hatcher
runnerup, Minerva. Bellbrook was season.
·
in the Big Ten) totaled 199 yards
some grumbling in the huddle that his life," Cooper said.
scored
period goals 1:58
"Even with (option quarterback rushing, but came into the game apart forthird·
Ohio State was n.ot passing enou$,h.
Washington,
which out·
Cooper said Monday be would like Kirk) Hcrbstreit in the game, he averaging 259 a game on the shot New York 15·2 in the
final 20
ground. · ·
minutes.
Cooper said the problem was
Capitals, w..ho elil)ijnated
not the game-plan established by the1:be
lost the game," Slaughter said. of which he caught for-tou'ChRangers
in last year's playoffs
offensive coordinator and assistant
" We rushed the ball and we downs. The third pass was overhead coach Elliot Uzelac.
, and also beat New York 5·1 in
made mistakes. I felt like I could thrown.
·
on Friday, raised ,their
"Elliot Uzelac and everybody Washington
have been in a better position to
"I've been open on all three
season
record
to S·I·O and moved
help us have a chance to win the occasions," he said. "And still
the drive came with Meigs facing a on our staff, we're fighting for our into first place in the Patrick Divi·
By Dave Harris
game if I'd been used a little more when they go deep, they don'tlook
The Meigs Marauders spotted third and 1'2 at the Wellston 22 lives and trying to win football sion.
my
way
too
often
anymore."
instead of throwing me a pass with
WcUstpn a 14·0 first quarter lead, yard line, quarterback Brett New- games," he said. "We're going to
The loss for the Rangers was
(39 seconds) left in the fourth quarCoach Bill Belichick said he
only to shut out the Golden Rock· some hooked-up with Pullins for a do what it takes to win. If that their third straight after aJ-1 start.
ter."
didn't view Slaughter's discontent
. cts the rest of the way and post a 17 yard gain to the Wellston five means throwing it 70 percent of the It spoiled the night for Gartner,
Slaughter, who leads the as a problem.
19-14 in reserve football action on yard line settiM up the Meigs time in one game, then line. If that who became the 16th player in
touchdown three plays later.
Browns with 23 receptions for 328
"Any time you've got talented
Monday evening.
means running it 100 percent of the league history to score 500 goals
yards, said he's only been thrown people, they want the ball," he
Wellston recieved a break early , The winning Marauder touch- time another game, fine and dandy. · when he opened the scoring at 3:27
·
three long passes Ibis season, two said. ·
in the first period when Marauder down came after a bad snap on a
of the first period.
punter Shannon Staats got off a Wellston punt gave the Marauders
FIVE FOR FIGHTING - Nick Kypreos (9) of the Washington
short punt after a bad snap from a first down at the Roctet 18 yard
Capitals
and Mark Janssens (15) of the New York Rangers each got a
center giving the Golden Rockets line. With Meigs facing a fourth OAC players honored
With the Rangers on ;;power five-minute penall)l for fighting during Monday night's NUL game at
the ball on the Marauder 33. Five and 11, Newsome hooked up with
play, Mark Messier sped down the
CLEVELAND (AP)- Quarter· left side and slid a centering pass in Madison Square Garden. Tbe Caps socked the Rangers witll a 5-3
plays .tater Troy Smith scored from Bryan Hoffman on a 19 yard scor·
three yards out, Shannon Weber ing strike. Brian Smith's kick split back Jim Newland of Heidelberg front of Washington goaltender victory. (AP LaserPboto)
added the extra points to give Well· the uprights and the Marauders and defensive back Bryan Brown Mike Liut. Gartner then shuffled
of Marietta have been named the the puck under Liut's left skate.
st6ri a 8-0 with 5:221eft in the peri· held a 19-141ead with 5:37 left.
MAC players honored
After
the
Marauder
kickoff
the
players of the week in the Ohio
od.
"When you get close to a mile·
,
Wellston recovered a Marauder Rockets drove to the Meigs 16 in Conference.
stone, it's something you look for·
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Bowl- been sacked in three games, dUring
15
plays,
but
the
Marauder
defense
Newland
a
freshman
from
Tif·
ward to," Gartner said·, "but it ing Green center Brian Sherman which the Falcons have attempced
Jumble three plays later at the .
·
and Miami of Ohio middle 83 passes. Quarterback Erik White
Meigs 22 yard line and ·Lawrence stiffened and Meigs held on for the · fin, totaled 314 yards Qf total takes away fro m ·tt when you g•ve
offense in a 37-14 victory over the ~ame away in the thud peri· lc'nebacker Cun McMillan have leads the MAC in passin~ efficienOusley scored from a yard out to v1ctory.
been named the players of the week cy, total offense and passmg yard$. ·
Jared Hill led Meigs on the Otterbein. He completed 11 of 18 od.•f'
make it a 14·0 game with 54 secMcMillan, a junior from Upper
ground with 16 carries for 48 passes for 167 yards and a iouch·
After Gartner scored, Brian in the Mid-American Conference.
ond left in the period."
·
Sandusky,
was named for the seca senior from Newark,
Meigs cut the Wellston led to yards, Newsome was two for four down and rushed for 147 yards on Leetch ~ave the Rangers a 2•0 Iead . Shennan,
f' · · f' · I'
ond
time
this
season. He had 19
. 1s the ll'St mtermr o .ens•ve me14-6 at the half when Jim Pullins in the air for 36 yards and a touch· 19 carries with a 30-yard touch - eight mmu!es later.
tackles,
including
two for losses of
Dimitri Khristich and Bondra man to ever wm player-of-the returned a Golden Rocket punt 65 down, Eric Wagner was one of two down run,
Brown, -a sophomore- from answered for Washington,- before week honors. He anchored a front $ix yards in Miami's "IO·HLtie at
yards for a score with 1:04 left in for eight yards.
Ousley
led
Wellston
on
the
Bethel
Park, Pa., recorded 20 tack· Tony Amante gave New York a 3- wall whiCh all_owed the Falcons to Central Michigan. He had 11 solos
-the half.
After a scoreless third quarter ground with 66 yards in 18 carries, les in Marietta's 49-0 loss to Musk· 2 lead at 10·39 of the second peri- t~tal 235 rushm~ yarll;s m ~ 45-14 and eight assists as Miami held the
'
v1ctory over Oh10 Umvemty, The MAC's top-rated offense to 82
Tom Cremeans made it a 14-12 Shan~on Weber was one of _four in ingum. Nine of his tackles were od
'
BowUng
Green quarterback has not rushing yards.
game with a two yard run with 9:34 the a1r, a 33 yard complet1on to solos and he also intercepted two
passes.
left in the game. The .big play of Matt Murdoch.

!f!~~~~~~w~ho~~su~Jff~fe:~re~:d~a!:p~ut~l~led!
-·· ~i~~~~~J;-u;s~ti~cie~!,~;;afla~~m1aJO~·~r~ro:~le~·--~~~~r.~~~~!io~n~~a~~~2~-2~~1l~~--;~;~fl~t~or~th~;e;s~~~~:;\~1:~r~~~i~!"-i~a~:srh~~e:~~~~:;~~~~~~~~:;
bases in Pittsburgh's 5·1 ftrSt-game
and striking out
a

vipory, threw on the mound Mon·
day for th e first time since the
injury and was proclaimed f!l. .
The Pirates' chances of going
home with the edj!e didn't look
promising after the Braves ripped
Pittsburgh 10-3 Saturday in Atlanta
fo r their seventh consecutive victo·
ry over the East champions in
Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium
this year and took a 2-1 edge.
. The Pirates, however, won 3-2
in 10 innings Sunday night on
Mike La Valliere's RBI single, a
game in which a throwing error by

. being
out.
But Braves manager Bobby Cox
isn't wilUng.to give up.just}'et. _
"We won two in a row and
Piusburgh won two straight. I don't
see why we can't win two," be
said.
In the secon~ inning. the Braves
loaded the bases with nOJle out
against Zane Smith on a single by
Brian Hunter, a walk to Greg Olson
and another single by Mark Lemke.
It was the exact same scenario
as in Game 2, when Smith escaped
the jam without a run, but wound

double play when Hunter was

cau~ht in a rundown.

'It was my fault." said-Glavine,
who lost his second game in the
series despite allowing only six
hits, walking three and striking out
seven in eight innings.
•'I missed the sign, I should
. have called time," said Glavine.
Smith said he saw Hunter run· ninF, and Glavine squaring to bunt.
'Unfonunately, I was !lying to
throw a strike," Smith said. "But it
did what it was supposed to do ·it sank pretty good and fonunately

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) For the first time in four years,
Cleveland St. Ignatius win not be
named the No.I team in Division I
by The Associated Press.
St. Ignatius, ranked No.2 in the
big-school division, was upset 8-0
by Cleveland Villa Angela-St.
Joseph last weekend. all but elimi·
nating the Wildcats from contention for the poll crown,
With St. Ignatius dropping its
ftrSt.game, front-running Cincinnati
Princeton solidified its lead, 'this
time over another hometown
school, Elder.
There was also a new leader in
Division IV, where Warren
Kennedy lost to Girard in a battle
of unbeatens, 20-14. Lorain
Clearview picked up the reins as
No.I.
Elsewhere, the Status quo held
as Minster continued to lead in
Division V, CAPE was again tops
in Division III and-Fostoria was
still No, I in Division IT in balloting

Cooper says Bucks have trouble
protecting their quarterback..

Capitals rally to defeat Rangers 5-3

Cleveland's Slaughter 'very unhappy'
CLEVELAND (AP) - Receiver Webster Slau~hter of the Cleveland Browns isn t satisfied with the
team's 2-4 record or the team's use·
of his skills.
"I'm very unhappy," he told
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer in an
interview published today, "We're
2-4 and I'm not being involved in
the o(fense."
The Browns, who lost 42,17 to
Washington on Sunday, "had a
good offensive outing but we still

CAUGHT IN THE SQUEEZE -Pittsburgh
Pirates third baseman Steve Buechele tags out
·· Atlanta Braves runner Brian Hunter {14) at

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Manager Tom Kelly got the Minnesota
Twins into the World Series again
by using the entire roster1 and he
proved it in the finaf game of the
playoffs.
· When Rick Aguilera relieved to
pitch the ninth inning against
Toronto in Game 5, Kelly also
inserted catcher Junior Ortiz for
defense.
After the final out was made ,
'ortiz ran to the mound anll-jlilfipell
on Aguilera. It's a scene every
catcher dreams about
·
Brian Harper played eight
i,nnings in Game 5 and was three
outs away from running out to the
fuound when Ortiz took over.
"I wai disappointed, " said
Harper, who played in 123 games
this season and batted .311. "T .K.
(Kelly) does what he does for rea..sons. He's my man~ger. l ·do what
Ihe ssys,
"Let's not make a big deal out
f this. We're going to the World
Series."
: • Kelly pushed all the right but·
;tPns in the AL playoffs and wasn't
•finking much about postpne eel·
; brations before things were set·
• ed.
',! !'My job is to win ballgames
' nd not play sentiments," Kelly
id,
; ;Kelly, 41, guided the Twins to a
, orld Series victory over St. Louis
,!\1987 as a rookie manager and
~tn endured a last-place finish in
:1990. After the Twins got off to a
~ start this year, there was talk he
ight be in !rouble.
But all the whispers went away
the Twins won 15 straight and
~Ow Kelly is regarded as one of the
~I managers in baseball. Winning
~o pennants in five seasons will
ilo that.
r;· "There is something special
tho Twins," plarorr MVP
y Puckett said. 'Nobody
they'te better than .anybody

~

f

.,

Meigs_reserves post 19-14 win
over Wellston squad Monday

..

I

third
· lill 'a failed squeeze play in the
second inning on Tom Gavine's strikeout during
game-five play of the NLCS In Atlanta. :

Kelly uses bench to ·reach series

.

~

Cleveland prep team knocked from
AP poll lead first time in four y(!ars

J

~

The Dally

(Yiants -edgeSteelers ·~"--

_ . _]Jesd_al', Qctober 15, 1~1

. _ __

Ohio

else. We're all the same team. We
play hard every day."
The Twins didn't play hard on
Monday as they took the day off
following a long night of celebra·
tion. They started World Series
preparations today with a workout.
"I'm not rooting for Atlanta,
but that would be nice," Haryer
said of a potential worst-to· f•rst
Series matchup. "Whoever wins is
fine, I suppose..!_ w~uld like ~-sec
1l.tl:rntaw1n because !fie weather
will be warmer there. It can get
pretty cold in Pittsburgh,

The World Series begins Satur·
day night in the Metrodome and
Jack Morris is expected to sJart for
theTwins.
_
Morris, 36, pitched with a sore
throat and upper respiratory infection and still won two games
against Toronto. A few days off
will help the right-hander recover.
In 1984, Morris was a member
of the World Series champion
Delroit Tigers_an_d lte .bas_a. chance
to add another ring in his fust sea·
son with the Twins.
·

Bartrum scores first college TD
-in Marshall ,-s win over Furman -- .

Browns skid stirs up
painful memories of '90
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns' d!ree·game losing streak has stirred up painful
memories of last year's 3-13 season.
" I guess it is time for people to
wonder if we'll do any better,"
receiver Reggie Langhorne said
Monday. "I don't think it'll get
like last year."
After six games last season, the
Browns were also 2-4, and the seriousness of their problems was just
becoming apparent. Game six, ·a
Joss at New Orleans, was the frrst
of eight straight defeats en route til
the worst record in franchise history.
}'
•
Nearly half the players from last
ear's team are gone, and
anghorne is hoping the struggles
this year are simply the result of
unfamiliarity.
"I hope it ends when all the
guys get to know each other," he
said, "I hope that comes sooner
than later. We're just feeling each
other out right now.''
Safety Vince Newsome, a Plan
B acquisition from the Los Angeles
Rams, wasn't around for last year's

r

I

debacle, and he doesn't sense any
deterioration in the team's attitude .
yet.·
''Wins always make your confi.
dence level rise. A loss always
takes a little bit away," Newsome
ssid. "But I don't think it's to the
point of desperation, where players
are going to go into the tank. I
don't think 'it's like that atalL"
Coach Bill ·Belicb'ick said be
couldn't assess the team's morale
in the wake of Sunday 's 42-17
beating by the Washington Red·
skins.
.
''You're talking. about a lot of
different types of ~eople on the
team,." Belichick satd. "There are
a lot of people here who weren't
here during, as you call it, the
nightmarish season last year.
"Without regard to last season,
though, I think there's a certain
confidence level on Ibis team that,
when we're on the right page,
we've had fairly good production."
The Browns were the first visit·
ing team to score a point at Washington this season, and the unl)eat.
en Redskins didn't put the game
away until the fourth quarter . •

I

INTERFERENCE .AT 1:HE PLATE Atlanta Braves baUer Brian Hunter (14) is
called out attbe plate on interference with Pitts·.
burgh Pirates catcher Don Slaugh! by home

plate.umpire Bob DavidsQn in the fourth inning
· Monday in game five of the NLCS in Atlanta.
{AP Laser Photo)

FALL Fl

· SPECIAL

STARTING MONDAY, OCTOBER 14TH- DOMINO PIZZA WILL
OPEN FOR LUNCH: II A.M. TIL 4 P.M. $ 99
LUNC" SPECIAL: MED. PIZZA (1 lteltlr 2 Pepsi's) 4
)

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2 MEDIUM

PEPPERONI PIZZAS

AND 4 LARGE COLAS
Pomeroy &amp; GaWpoU•
Sto...,.

I
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For

Pickup or DcUvery Only

.-

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LARGE
PEPPERONI PIZZA

I
•

I
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AT AHOT PRICE

I

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1

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IllY
Offer good only al Pomeroy &amp; Go!Upollo Sloreo
:
Pickup or DcU.tcry
~

The Thundering Herd will .have be November 2nd when they play
By Dave Harris
Mike Bartrum a 1987 graduate their hands full this week as they host to Western Carolina at 1:30.
of Meigs High School, scored the travel to Raleigh North Carolina to Local fans interested in going to
first touchdown of his collegiate play North Carolina State, the see Banrum play can call the Mar·
career this past Saturday as Mar- Wolfpack is 5·0 and ranked 11th in shall ticket office Monday-Friday
shall upset Furman 38-35 i.n the latest Associated Press Poll.
between 8 a.m.-4:~0 p.m. atl-8()().
Marshall's next home game will THE HERD.
Greenville South Carolina, The win
gave .!he He1d a 4-1 record on..Jhe - ,._..-..__ _ _..;-;;;-;;;;;;;~...;;;;;;;;..;;;;.-:'------""""'t
year, Furman drops to 5-1.
The. 6-5, 235 pound junior tight
end pulled in a one yard pass from
quarterback Michael Payton in the
second period. Oo the afternoon
Mike caught two passes for nine
NOW FOR ALIMITED nME GET A
yards. Furman came into the game
BEAUTIFUL, BRAND NEW 1997 HOME
with a 5-0 record and was ranked
WITH FIREPLACE, CEILING FAPI,
number two in the country in Divi·
sion 1-AA, the win. oYer.tbe Pal· .
CATHEDRAL-CEILING AND BAY WINDOW
adins was only the third in 17 tries ·
in the series' and Marshall's first
football win ever in the state of
South Carolina.
The former M3rauder all-state
·quarterback· is coming off a career
threateninf knee injury that kept
17
him out o action·all of last year.
240 .. lOll
Mike is second on the team in
JiJNcnON
OPEN_
receiving with 1!\ eaacbes for 145
RT. 33 &amp; 595
yards and the one touchdown.
MON.·SAT.
BETWEEN
Brian Dowler leads the team with
8:30-1:00
LOGAN
21 catches for 407 yards and six
CLOSED ·
touchdowns. Dowler is the son of
AND
SUNDAY
former Green Bay Packer AII·Pro
NELSONVIW
Boyd Dowler.
· ·The win over Furman moved
Marshall from 13th in Division I·
AA to 8th in this weeks ratings,

I
I
I

I
II

..._. .. ~
..... ~.
~ Wlllid....,"
......
....,.-..
__
., _
__
_P~~Ct~,..,.
..... ,. I
...,.
.... ...,...O..d!llonUMY~,'*'UIJCIO.CitflYM•''"I
·(M I
...... noii*'IIMdlof . . ~ .
" IWIDcwftll~lflc.

L-----------~--------~~;•..;------------------~

. PULLS Ill! PASS-Mike Bartrum a 1987
1raduate or Melp H11b Sdlool caught the first
touchdown p• or his colleJiate career In last
Saturday's Marshall 38·35 upset win over the
nation lltCOnd ranked Dlvlsloa l·AA team the
Furman Paladins. Bartrum (#19) Is shown above

I••

catching one of five passes be pulled .In In the
win over Brown University on September 28th.
The 6-5, 235 pound junior Is second on tbe team
In recelvln1 with 16 catches for 145 yards. (Sen·
tlnel Photo By Dave Harris)
·
·'

�'j

-

By-The Bend

'.

years-old, living what I expected to
be some of the best years of my life
(Old enough to know what I want
and still young enough to do it) .
Instead, !live to mourn the death of
my sen.
·I have two children. Charlie, 26,
has Downe's Syndrome, lives at
hojlle and is extraordinary in his
own right. Neil is dead, killed last
year on Oct. 14, at age 21 , by an
1988 Ohio Univer sity graduate
who had returned to "enjoy "
H~mecoming weekend. Apparently; hc visited friends, "partied" and
go~t drunk, then decided to drive
hotne to Columbus. He didn' t make
it.
Instead, he drove left of center
· causing a head-on collision with
my son's truck. The "accident"
occurred on S.R. 33 just above Nclsonville. Neil was returning home
with hi s companion after dinner
and a movie. The drunk driver's
bJood alcohol concentration, when
tested , was .19 percent (An individual ' s simple reaction time is
.,
impaired at .04 percent).
: Miraculously, Neil's companion
.
eScaped severe physical mjury and
. ..;,as able to get out of the vehicle
due to the heroic efforts of a passiljg motori st, Lisa Kayner, who put
herself in danger to pull Lori from
tli e burning truck. I'm told she
attempted to get Neil out, but his
tiody was pinned by the overturned
truck. The "experts" tell me that
my son died instantly. In all likcli hood the drunk driver never knew
\\illatliappen¢.
-left to wonder,
diJily , hourly how much my son
a~ually suffered before his death .
Tlic words of the experts are of little:comfort.
, ~These preventable deaths instant;U'lcously and irrevocably changed
the lives of two families and
nwmcrous friends. The ripple effect

I'm

ot dea)h is always unknown as we
ask and can't answer, :'If only." I
celebrated my son's twenty-second
birthday last. month . with 22 ice
cream sandwtches, h1s. ashes, and
!~~any tre;asured memor~es of a liv- __
10g, lov~ng . talented young man
w~o lfl hfe I found 10 be blessedly

.

NEIL SLOANE

I came 10 see you, but was told
only a couple days I could:stay,
There was no room for me, but I
..had no olher place to go. , .
If I knew you loved me,.the rest
would be OK,
· ·But Dad, I understand I really
do.
. .,

CBS' Red Foxx
sitcom postponed

Wood named to Cumberland
College homecoming court

Public Notice

T;wins celebrate birthdays
Jacob ~nd Joshua Venoy cele- Grover, Steve •. Brenda, Stephanie,
brated thell' fourth bmhday recently Brad Hagg, T1m Hall, Tim Kim
at !he home_oLiheir_parents, Tony _ ..lan:d_and Beth. Long.,..-Bo'b andand Lisa Venoy, Pomeroy.
Alice Russell, Mary Dem~sey and
Jh e "theme of the party was Adam, Sam Rayburn, ·Jan1ce Hen"Monstcr Trucks."
.
dricks, Ronnie, Brenda and Zach
:Attending were paternal grand- Anms.
parents, Bob and Loraine Venoy,
Sending gifts were Bill and
maternal grandmother, Sandra Donna Leonard, Howard Keyser
Ke~scr, great grandparents Bill and Bo]J .and Marcia Houdashcl~ TerrY
Golda Krackomberger and Louise Wayland, Estel, Missy and Sarah
Gibbs, Roybn Wayland, Mark and Lavender, Bob Hendricks and
Melinda Br_ooke, Alex Veney , paternal grandmother, Mrytle
Greg, Linda, LaDeana and Kayla Grover.

Public Nollce

•'•

.

'

of comedian Redd Foxx, star of
CBS' "Royal Family," puts the
future of that Wednesday night sitcom in doubt.
On Monday, CBS spokesman
Michael Silver said "Royal Family" would not air on Wednesday.
Instead, CBS will air two episodes
of "Tcech," which follO'!&gt;'S it on
-the schCilule. On Oct. 23, CBSw ill
broadcast a World Series pregame
show.
" Royal Family" will return
Oct. 30, Silver said.
· ·
There arc three unaired shows
remaining of the seven already_p_roduccd , but whether the show would
be rcogranized around co-star Della
Reese remains tinans~~o~ered ....., ,

:
•
:
:
:
•
~

r

Public Notice

Galha Countw

Area Co de614

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 AM SATURDAY
20CPM MONDAY

m~ ~ · ~lJ~.~YDAV

WE'LL ..
_OVERLOOK
YOUR FIRST
~

e . ', .

Aftbra Dlst .

Chellef
Ponland

742 RuU..-.d
Coolville

GUN SHOOT
F.ORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

PIIU IEOUCIDI
.
Pani~ OWitr fi,.nrio\1,,~~·- Tho price hGI booo
~ducod 10 5tt;!!e:
, S13,100 and owMr
flnandn, o] up lo !bK o( pr•mo on"'l 1n1Y bo .

- CLUB
Begins Sept. 15

~· or 1ialfr!ot .P'""'l' buy 1?1J olct lono

" 3-1/2 acrllltlliaH. 4 Bl 3beihl: 2 IG'!IIII,
U~od 1 81 opt. "'polly locludt&lt; 4,1111f 'l'J.lt. lirm
Cd 114-992-7104 for l(lpl.

valua tlon, 'hlch amounts ·to

thirty cents ($0.30) lor each
one hundred dollars of val·
uatlon, for llve (5) rears.
The Polio lor said Election
will open·
A.M. and remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. old day.r
By order oltho Board of
Elections, of
Meigs County, Ohlo.
Evelyn Clark, Chairman

1 11

(5)

P:lle Yj;~- laid
Election will open at 6,30
o'clock A.M. and
7:30
d
By
of the Board of
Elections, of Molgo County,
Ohio.
Evelyn Clark, Cholrmon
Jana M. Frymyor, Director
Janel M. Frymyer, Director Dated Sept. 4, 1991
Dated: September 4, t991 (tO) 8, 15, 22, 29, 4tc
(tO) 8,t5, 22, 29 4tc
Public Notice
Public Notice
NOTlCE.OF ELECTtON ON
TAX LEVV IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION.
NOTICE Is hereby given
thai ln purouance ol a
Rnotutlon •of the Board of
Trustees ollho Township of
Rutland, •Rutland, Ohlo,
paned on .lhe 11th day of
JJIIY 199t,, there will bo.oubinlll;.., 10 I VOle at lhe poo•
pie of aald aubcllvlslon at a
General Election to be held
In the Townohlp of Rutland,
Ohlo, at the regular placea
ol vollng therein, on the
flllh doy of November, 1991,
the queotlon of levying a
111, In erceoa•olthe ten mill
tlmllatlon,llor the benelll of
Rutland Township for the
purpooe ol Fire Protection..
Said tax being a renewal
of an existing tax of 1.0 mill
at a rate nol exceeding 1

mills for each one dollar of
vatuotlon, which amounts to
ton cents ($0.10) lor each
one hundred dollars ol val·
uatlon, fol flvo (5) years.
The Polls for said.
Election wtll •open 11 6:30
o'clock A.M . .and remain
oren until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
o oald day'.
Br, order of the Board of

576
773

Mason
Haven

~ lll ew

895 lelilft
937 Burlillo

I oTheor

1-(30341773-9560

9/ 9/ 91 / 1 mo.

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM and
.REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

I-NSULATION

SLACK
992-2269

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or '
742-2251

J&amp;L
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
-•Insulation ~

539 Bryan Place
Middleport,

8 - t 2-90-ttn

Public Notice

Public Notice

11

rate not exceeding 1 mill • lax, In e1cesa of the. len

. lor each one dollar of valualion, which amounts to ten
cents (SO .tO} tor each one
dollars ot- valualion, for flve (5) years.
The Polls lor said Election
will open at 6:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open unlll
7:30 o'clock P.M. sald day.
By order of the Board of
Elections, of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Evetrn Clark Chairman
Janet M. Frymyer, Director
Dated: September 4, 1991
(10) 8 15 22 29 4lc
' ' '
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Publfc Notice
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given NOTICE OF ELECTION o'N
that In' pursuance of a · TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Resolution of the Board of · THE TEN MILL LIMITATION.
NOTICE lo hereby given
Commissioners ol the
County' of Meigs, Pomeroy, lhll In pursuance ol a
Ohio, paued on the 5th day Rooolutlon of tho Board of
or Juno, 199t, there will be Commissioner• ol the
subrnllled to e vote of tho COunty ol Meli!s, Pomeroy,
people of said su~•dlvlalc•n_l Ohlo,_pouoot_ on tho 2tll
at a General Electlqn to be doy ol August, t99t, there
held ln the County of Melgi, wilt be aubmlued to a vote
people of oald oubdl·
Ohl 0 ' at 1he regu Iar· p1aces olthe
vlolon ol 1 General Election
of voting therein, on the
fifth day of November, 199t, to be ~old In tho County or
the question or levying a Uolgs, Ohio It tho regular
tax, In excess of the ten mill pltcl I ol voting therein , on
limitation, for tho benefll of tho filth doy of November,
Melgo County who aro 1181, tho qu'!•llon of levylulferlng from tuborculoala lng o ln, In erceu ol tho
~~ hospitals with which the ton mill limitation, for tho
commissioners of Melgo btnofll of Mtlgo County lor
County have contracted, lht purpolt or molntalnlng
and support oltuberculoals and oporollnQ · Corle ton
cllnlcs.
.School ond
Meigs
Sald lex being a renowol lnduolrlu Workshop for
of an erlatlng ta~ ol1 12 mill poroono with mental rolar·
at a rate not exceeding 'h dolton and dovolopmontol
mill for each one dollar of dlaobllllln punulnt to
valuation, which amounts·to 5128, Ohio Revised Code.
five cants ($0.05) for each
Said lox being an add~
one hundred dollars of vol· tlonollax of one (1) mill at 1
uallon,lor five (5) years.
role not exceeding 1 mllllor
The Polls lor sold etchonodollarolvaluallon,
Election will be open al 6:30
omounlo to len cento

or:l;

Hulll lt!i tor Sale
M o bllt~ Homes tor Sal u.F&lt;ftntt lor Slllt!

41

Houses to, Rent

&amp; Ltmluok
6 1 Faun EqUtpnlutl t
62 Wilnte-d to Buy
63 l1vt~sto c k •
6C Hay &amp; Gtllm
· 6 5 Sut:d lr f~lttlll f;! l

Bu1rnes 5 Butldrny~
35 lot i &amp; Acreage ·
3 6 Real E,t~te W¥rtcd

5 Htppy Ads
6 lost and Found
7 Yard Saletpaidm ad\lan ctl
8 Publt c S ale&amp; Auc t ion
9 Wanted to Buy

ljfll)ll

Trans ortaltan

42

Mqbde Ho rn es lu1 Rtml
A3 Farms101 Rtmt
44 ~ pirrlrritlftt for Rt:'nt--- -- -· 45 Furnished Rooms
46 Sp~~ ee t or Rent
47 W~ntvd to R ent
48 EqurPment for Aunt
49 Forle•e

Employmenl
Serv1ces
1l Help Wantud
12 SituatKJn Waruod
l l lnsuran ct!"

14 Bustneu ftiumn11
15 Schools &amp; ln1truc tmn- -

7 1 Au1os fur Saltt
72 Trucks tor Sil lt!----'--- -~ ~--"73 \l ~ ns &amp;4WD ' s '"
H Mot 01cvclcs
75 Buill !I &amp; Moton lur S i!IM
76 A.u1 o Pan s 1!. Ac cessor u.l!&gt;
77 A.uto Re p arr

z• c.,Ca ••m
f9

Merchandtse

16 Radio, TV 8. CB R cpa1f
17 MISCCUant!OlU

51

.

''

pet ~ &amp; Motor H n•!•el&gt;

Services

Houwho ld Goodt

52 · SpOfting Goods
53 Ant iques ,
54
55

M isc. M e1e hafldrs.c
Bwldtng Sup phes
56 Pets' to, Sale
57 MuS! c alln!tlu rnt!l'll s
5 8 fft~rts '&amp; \legutiib\1111
S9 For Sal e or Twt ~

21 Busin•s o·ppOftunnv
22 Monev to loan
23 Prol8l~onal 's ervi ct:S

..

1tJ!I1!1 E QIIIPIIIt/11 1

81

·H o n\e· l~lpr ovii n ~ -

82

Plumbrn g '&amp; Ht!iJimg

83 h c watinu.

.

84 flecto c at &amp;. ~Rt~h r !Jt~iii iO n
as GiJOtlfill Haultng
86 Mobrl ~ Hume Rr.pa u
~7

Uphols.H!ry

.
----------,.J,,
Business Services

Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M. Frymyer, Director o'clock A:M. and remain (SO .tO) for each one
open unlll7:30 o'clock P.M. hundred dollers ol voluaDoled Sept. 4, 199t
· By Order ollhe llon, lor three (3) yearo.
(tO) 8, 15, 22, 29, 41c
Board ol Elections, ol Meigs
The Polls lor sold
County, Ohio. Elec.llon will open at 6:30
Public Notice
Evelyn Clark, Chairman o'clock A. M.' and remain
Jane M. Frymyer, Director open unlll 7:30 o'clock P.M.
Dated September 4, 1991
of uld day.
. NOTICE OF ELECTION ON (10) 8,15, 22, 29, 4tc
By order ol the Board of
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Elections, of Meigs County,
THE TEN UlLL LIMITAnON.
Ohlo.
Public Notice
NOTICE It hereby given
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
that In purauonco of o
Jane M. Frrmyer, Director
Reaolutlon of tho Vllloge NOTICE OF ElECTION OF
Council of the Vllloge of TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF Dated Sept. 4, t99t
Rutland, Rullond, Ohio, THE TEN MILL LIMITATION (tO) 8, tS, 22, 29, 44tc
paned on tho 2Qlh day of
NOTICE ls hereby given aiJ-~------Augusl, 1881 thoro will bo In pursuance ol a ResoluPublic Notice
aubmltlod to 1 vote of the lion ol the Township o l l - - . - - - - - - poople of 11ld aubdlvlolon Lebanon, Portland, Ohio ,
at o Genorol Election to be passed on the 29th day of NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
held In the Vllloge of June, 199t there wlll be .sub· TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF .
Rullond; Ohio, ot tho rogular milled to a vole of the peo- THE TEN MILL LIMITATION,
placel of voting theroln, on pie of said subdivision at a NOTICE Ia hereby given
tht fifth doy of November, General ELECTION to ba
In pursuance of a
• h
1o
held In the Township of
of tho Vllloge
t9.1, t e quoot na of levy- Lebanon, Ohio, at the reguthe Vlllage of
lng a tax, In exce11 of the
R 1 d R 1 d Ohl
ten milt limitation, for tho tar places of voting therein, ut on , ul on ,
o,
b 11 1 R
d VI
on the Filth day of .paned on lho 29th day of
o ullonof current
llago November, 199t, the ques- ,Auguol, 189t, lhort will bo
foronethoI purpo1e
oxponaea.
lion of levying a lax , ln ,,rrubmllled lo a vole of tho
Said lax being on odd!- excess ollhe ten mill llmita- people of aald aubdlvlolon
tlonaltar of two ((2) mlllolo lion, for the ben ell I of at 1 Generol Election to bo
rate nolerceedlng 2
·
-Township ·tor the held n lhe~VIIIago -of
each one dolllr of
purpose. of Maintaining and Rutland, Ohio, at tho regular
hi h
operating cemeteries.
places of voting therein, on
w c amounts to twenty
Said tax being : an add I- ' the filth day of November,
~~~~;!~0 J2/t::: :~c~a~~~ llonaltax of one (t) mills at 1991tho queallon of levying
I'

.G IV8 i1Wily

Pt_ P-:Ittir$&lt;1nl
leon
App\ 11 Grovt!

Convertible Tops,
Carpets, Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN ST., MASON, VA.

Factory Guns Only
9/9/9112 mo.

Ela•cllo,ns, of Meigs Couriiy,

lion of the Village Council of
the VIllage of Middleport,
Mlddloporrohlo, passed on
tho 8th day of July, t991
thoro wilt be submlued to a
voto of ,the people of uld
aubdlvltlon al 1 General
ELECTION to be hold In the
Village of Middleport, Ohlo,
at the regular places of votIng therein, on tho llllh day
of November, t991, the
question of levying a lax, In
erceu ollhe len mlllllmltatlon, tor the benefit of
Mlddl~port yutage lor the
purpose of CURRENT
EXPENSES ..
Said tax being: a renewal
of an exlsllrig tax of three (3)
milts at a r11• not exceeding
3 mills for each one dollar of

67_5
458

A&amp;B
COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

Every Sunday 12 Noon

"AFTER 5:00" MODEL SEARCH
Presentee by Mary. Kay Cosmetics
THURS., OCT. 17-7 p.m .
At The Stowaway Restaurant
Lafayette Mall, GalliP9Iis, Oh.
For info Ph. (304) 675-5276
or 446-3934

In pursuance of a Resolu·

4

Jl
12
33
J I

••

"·

BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30 .P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

NOTICE OF ELECTION OF
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Ia hereby given ol

Armoucemoot s

--.-~-

BtJLLETIN BOARD

Public Notice

j

s~ ppdes

Fa·rn

Real Eslate

1 Card ot Thttnks
2 In Memory

18 WantttdTuDu

247 letar1 Falls - &amp;82

949 A•cme

Co , WV

AretlCode304

985
843

Po"""OY

667

2 00 PM . FRIDAY

Mas o n

388 "Vtnton

643

2 .00 PM THURSO.AV

Metgs County
AreirCode61C
99 ~ _M!9dlepurt

379 Willnut

Publlc.Notlce

I'

.06/ day
·

USED RAILROAD TIES

PubliC Notice

'

$1.30/ day

U6 ~Q~~p~hs
367 Ch•hire

245 Rio Gflmdu
256-' Guvan Drat .

\
'

The Commonwealth of the Bahamas attained full independence from
Great Britain July 10, 1~73.

•

~

.

The American flag is said to have .
been named Old Glory by William
Driver, a sea captain of Salem, Mass.
·

.60

$13.00

Uussi.fic•d fllll!;t' .~ c'lll'c•r I l11•

i,

NOTICE OF ELECTION OF will open at 6:30 o'clock November•. t991, tho quoo•
ADVERTISEMENT FOR 1
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF A.M. and remain open until lion of levying 1 lax, ln
BIDS
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION 7:30 o'clock P.M. oald doy. · excesa of !helen mlllllmlta·
The
VIllage
of Pomeroy.:
By order of tho Board of tlon, for the benefit of
NOTICE It hereby given at
will
accept
oeolod
bids 11 1
Etec:llons,
of
Racine
VIllage
for
the
purIn pursuance. of o Reaolulha
Clark's
OHlco,
320
E111
Meigs County, Ohio. pose of CURRENT EX·
Uon ol tho VIllage Council of
Moln
Street,
Pomeroy,'
Ohio
,
Evelyn Clark, Chairman PENSES.
the VIllage of Pomeroy,
for
the
following
.
Janet
M.
Frymyar,
Director
Said
tax
being:
a
renewal
Pomeroy, Ohio, p111ed .on
Insurances:
·
·
Dated: September 4, 199t of an existing tax of 2 milia
the ith doy of Auguat, 1991
t . Pollee Uebltlly
at a rate not exceeding 2
thoro will be oubmlued to a (10) 8, t5, 22, 29 4lc
2. Public Ofllclal'a ·
mlll for aach one dollar of Uablllty
vote ol the people of uld
'
valuation, which amounts to
.tubdlvlolon 11 1 General
Public
Notice
3.
Fleet
Coverogo
twenty canto ($0.20) for
ELECTION to be held In tho
4. General Liability
Vlllog.-of Po_,oy, Ohio, at
each one hundred doll oro of
NOTICE
OF
ELECTION
OF
5.
Hoalthllllelnsurance
the rogulor placu of voting TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF valuation, for live (5) yoaro.
Speclllcotlona
may be '
The
Polls
for
aald
Election
therein, on the fifth day of
THE
TEN
MILL
LIMITATION
picked
up
al
tho
Clerk's ··
wll( open at 6:30 ·o'clock
November, 1991, tho ques·
NOTICE
Ia
hereby
given
at
Olllco.
Bids
may
be
oubmllA.M. and remain open unlll
· ···
lion ol levying 1 tar, In
until 10:00 A.M. EST on
."Pred.dy's Dead"
ex~au ol the ten mlllllmlta• . In pursuance. of _a Resolu- 7:30 o'clock_P.U. oald day. _ ted
O
iion, lor the benellt of lion of the B~arU oiTrustees
By order of tho Board of Novembei -,, 1991 . The$1.2 million
Pomeroy VIllage for tho pur- .of tho Township of Scipio,
Elecllona, of VIllage reaervoo tl\,e right to ,
.
Meigs
County,
Ohio. reJect any oral! bldo.
I -~~~~~r.---~ pose of currenterpensea. Pogevlllo., passed on the
Rlchord D. Seyler, Mayor .;
lo
AP
Said lax being : a renews! 7th day of August, 199t
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Brondo L Morris, Clerk
of an exlollng tar 0 r 1 mill 11 lheto will be submllled lo a
Janet M. Frymyer, Director
(tO)
t,
a, 15, 22 4tc
"
rate
nol
exceeding
mill
vote
of
tho
people
of
said
Dated: September 4, t99t
0
1
--- --·· ·- ·-· - · ·- --., for
each one dollor of valua- oubdlvlolon at a General (tO) 8, t5, 22, 29 4tc
lion which omountl 10 ten ELECTION to be held In the
Public Notice
~
_
c.Anta_($0.t0)-lor-each-one- Townohlp of Sclpl~ Ohlo,_at _ ~- ___. -~---.. _
.
- --hundred dollaro of valua- the regular places ol voting
lion, forflvo(S)yoaro.
therein, on the filth day ot.
IN THE COURT OF
Tho Potts tor oold Election November, 1991, the quosPubliC Notice
COMMON PLEAS
will open 11 6,30 o'clock lion of levying a tax, In
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
A.M. ond remain open until excoss olthe ten mill llmlla- NOTICE OF ELECTION OF
p~~::-:,~zVb~
ACCIDENT
7:30
o'clock
P.M
.
..
td
day.
lion,
lor
the
benent
of
Scipio
TAX
LEVY
IN
EXCESS
OF
NOTICE OF •
When you quollfy 11 1 preferred
By ordet of the Boord of townshjp Village lor the pur- THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
PUBLICATION
risk for St111 Auto Comp1nies'
Elections of pooe of Fire protectlon.
l!llclol Med1llot Auto Polley, your
Meigs County ohlo
Said lax being : an add I·
NOTICE f1 herobyglvon at IN THE MATTER OF:
r1111 won't liJD up with your first
Evelyn
Clark
Ch~lrman Uonaltar ol y, mlll lor one In purauonco ,of 1 Rooolu- THE ESTATE OF ·
accident.
Janet M. Frymy~. Director (1) year, at a rate not lion of lht VHioge Coundt of ELNORA REYNOLDS
Unlike. olmllor pollclo1 that roqujra
Dated: September 4 199 t , exceeding 1~ mill lor each tho Townohlp of Olivo, Noll co 11 'Keroby glvon
three yean of policy ownerlhlp,
· one· dollar or valuallon, Roedavlllo, Ohio, (lllltd on that on October tO 19it
(tO) 8• t 5,!•22 • 29 41c•
the Med1ll1t 1llow1 the ••emption
which amounts to f[ve cents tho Slh .day of July, 18il VIrgil Havono, Executor ol
. lmmediltoly.
·
(so :os) lor each one thete wfll be oubmiUocl to • ·ihe estate ol · Elnoro
The Medelilt recognize• the older,
hundred dollora of vatuo- vote of tho people 'of uld Reynold a, late of 4t1
Pub lie Notice
11fer driver with lltbltentilll rata
lion, lor one (t) years.
oubdlvlolon It a Olivo Coocenl Street, •Parker•- •
reduction• end broader coverage.
Tho Polls lor said Election , Townohlp Generol ELECT· burg, WV 26t.Ot, flied In thlo
NOTICE OF ELECTION OF
Rete reductions begin 11 early ·••
TAX LEVV IN EXCESS OF wlll open at 6:30 o'clock · ION lo bt hold In lho Court under Dockol N C111 ..
ago 26 end oro portlculafly ollroc'ij!E
TEN MILL LIMITATION A.M. and remain open until Townohlp of Olivo, Ohio, 11 No. 27201 on authonUcoled
tive tor tho 45 to 14 yeor old.
• NOTICE lo horoby given ot 7:30 o'clock P.M. said day, lho regular plocea of voting copy of Lonero of •
It you hove 1 oofo driving record. . In punuonce of • ReooluBy order of the Board of therein, on theilflh doy of Admlnlotr1llon lnuod lo
IH juat how low your cer ineur·
Elections, of November, 1911, tho qutl· hlm by tho Cl.erk of tho
tlon
of
tho
Vlllogo
Coundt
of
ance premium c.n bl with the
· Meigs County, Ohio. lion of levying a In, In County Commtulan of
the
Pomeroy
ol
Pomeroy,
Medlliot Auto Polley from Stole Ohio, panocf on the 5th cloy
Evelyn Clark, Chairman oxcoao of tholln millllmflo- Wood County, Woat Vlrgtnll.
Aut~lneurence Comp1ni11.
_
JJI\01 M..Frymyer, Director lion, tor the boneftt of Ollv• Notice lo further given thol
·of Auguot, 11111hofo will be
Colt ua obout thlo cor lnauronce lubtnlllocf lo I VOII Of lhl
Dated: September 4, 199f Townohlp for tho purpCMio of oll credltoro of oold eo tale
brooklhrough tor "'' drlvora.
molntalnlng and opetttlng who doslro lo •••ett lhtlr
people of oold aubdlvlolon (tO) 8,15, 22,29 4tc
cornotorloo,
Ilana on lho root tltllo of
It I Gonorot ELECTION to
Said tor being: an oddl· oald decedent located In u
be hold, In tho Vlllogo oi
Public Notice
llonll lax of t mill 11 1 rote lhls state shall pre1ont their "
Pomoroy, Ohio, 11 the rogU&gt;
not exceeding 1 mill for ·Claims, dulr. oworn to, to ,,
ler ptices ol voting lhoreln,
on the fifth day of · NOTICE OF ELECTION OF nch one dollor of vatuodon, lhl1 Court w thin alx monthl
N........... 1881, the qUOI• TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF which emounllto ten conll 1ftar the filing of nld lttlora ,,
lion of levying 1 tu, In THE TEN MILL LIMITATION ($0.10) for •tch ono In thla Court; or thlfr atild "
Iuun.oCe Setvices oxcon of the lin mil llmllo- NOTICE to hereby given It hundrocf doltaro 'til voluo- llon·a oholt forever bt ·
doemoa barred ond canlfon, for the bonofll ol In punuance of 1 Reaolu- lion, for flvo (5) yeoro,
·1
I
214 EAST MAIN
Pomeroy Vlllll(l for the pur- tlon of tho Vllloge Council of Tho Polio for oold Election coled,
will open 11 e:30 o'clock Robert~· Buck, Judge
pooe of flro prolocllon. ·
tho
Vlllogo
of
Reolno,
POMEROY
Sold tn being: a renowol Recine, Ohio, polled on the A.M. 1nd romoln open until (tO} t5 , 22, l!Q , 31c
of
an oxlollng lor of 2 mlllo 15th day of July, t89t theta 7:30 o'clock P.M. oald doy. ·
~
992-6687
By order of tho Board of
lit n
tl 1 nto not orc11dlng 2 will be oubmllled lo 1 vole
Eltcllono, of
miUo for ooch ono dollar of of tho people of oold au bell·
'
Melgo County, Ohio.
valuation, which omounlo to vlolon It I Gtnt,.l
Evelyn Clork, Cholrman
II fll
twenty centa ($0.20) for ELECTION to bo htld In lht
0
i
each one hundred dollara of Vlltogo of Roclna, Ohio, at Janel M. Frymyor, Director
.......aM.
Doled: Septombet &gt;1. 188t
valuation, lor flvt (5) yoora. the regulor pleceo of voting
Tht Polls lor oold Election 1heteln, on tho filth day of (10) 8, 15, 22, 2Q 4tc

..1!1 .........
c.,..,,..

t

•,'·

•'•
NEW YORK (AP) - The dealh ••

ROGAN ~
. . w.,.ER ·

•

.•

.42

R•tesare f01 oonwcuiJ\Ie run5. brokenupd.ilys wrll b e chMged

i.,

'

.30

folic llt 1inp; .I 1•lc•t' l11 ;Ill' c•xdwrt p;t'.'· ..-

SUNDAY PAPER

I oscphine Tyree
122 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy

.20

lor 4Uith d._ n separate ads.

~nnouncemenls

15 Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

H41ppy Ad ~

W[ONF.SOAY PAPER
lHURSOAY PAPER
~HIUAY PAP(R

.

.

-

'A d , l!i ~ llu:d mtv~rtisenu.tnl piJcmlm Uw OaiiV Srm1111~ l""'
Ce ll i
cl;tSSiflt.'&lt;l d1Sph1., . Bu s nu ~i; C ;uil mHIIt.'!.lill nolu: ~s ) w rll ,,15 u ••pp t!ar rn Ihi.!' Pt P\u;1urrt ~~Uili ll.!'l ;md thv Gal\r
1Jnlrs Dally Tuhunt: re achm!l nvm 18. 000 hotnes

COPY OEADLINE
MdNOAY PAPER
TUESO.AY PAPER

Dad, just please come and. tell •
me you love me,
~
Let me hear you say it, before,!
have to go away.
You love me and are' proud I'm .,
your.stm,
I'm nearly 18, but I'm just a lit- ;'
tie boy, and !love you, Dad.
1

3
6
10
Monthly

In McniUI 14tn

.,

. t5
•15
t6
15 t6

1

Ov~r

Rate

Wo'r ds

Oays

• 7 ~HIIII\ hilt! ly~n 1111ly U!lled
"Scnluwlrs 110t r1:15pon ~ 1bletor urrur 5 aht:r fiUtllifV ICht~ck
- tonrtun ftnl "d ltV ifr1 Tfit1iTrfp ij)i!il CaWIIUfofe 2 00 p m
day i!fl!:r publr catlon to malo: CUIIIJC 11011
. 'Ads thai musl be par~ 111 advoncc il ltl

C;11d o t lhankl&gt;

Ar~J·s Numbe~ -,--M~~-ketpl!l'e

• The

RATES

POUCit.S
'Ad s cou htd c Merus, Galhir or Ma&amp;un c U uulr~ ntLI~I bt~ prt!
pru~
.
·'fll!r.llrVI: S 5 0 dts coun! for i~ dC p&lt;~id rn 1.11tvt~ncu.
'f •t~e 11ds
GIY~tawav and Found ad:!. umlt!f 15woHis w111 he
nm 3 d~li at no. c hauc ~
.·
'Prrct: ol &lt;~ d fo1 0111 cap11allt.1ltlr s •s cloublt~ pr~ ct: at Old cos t

.

'

Please Dad, I'm nearly I 8, but
I'm just a little boy,
·, ',
The scpry-world awaits-me; aild - I'm not ready ,
I feel so alone, with no home to
·call my own,
Just once,tell me you care, and
you '!\\ proud I'm your sen.

life has convinced me of what I
already knew .,. that the miracte :of
life is one person's humanity to
anolher ... regardless of.what befalls
each individual. That even !hough I
do not want a life without my sbn's
physical presence... I know that it
is right to make the effort to look
for rcascns to have a fulfilling life,
to do less would deny my son's
worth and dishonor his memory.
But it is not easy. Idon'tknow that
I will be successful. Neil's father
and I are now belong to a select but
unwanted group: parents who have
lost children to violent and unnecessary, preventable deaths. Don't
ON COURT - Terre W&lt;!Ofl or Racine was Cumberland College
think, "tt can't happen to me." It
senior class representative on the homecoming court during footsupport and caring of others m lhc can and it will occur again unless
ball festivities there recently. Sbe is shown here as she was escorted
wake of thi s tra gedy. I find no
across the field by Jamie Stewart, also a Cumberland College sturewards in thi s life·for death. I only something is done. Do what you
dent.
hope there aren't more unnecessary can NOW not to become a member
victims.
of our group. From my current
1 write and hope this is read by slanted view, there is more wrong
man y for both selfish and unselfish with our world than is right. .. but
reasons. One, to share my persenal drunk driving and its aftermath can
grief and to acknowledge my child be prevented. Enough community
for what he means to his father and interest can save lives ... perhaps
1. Two, 1expose my inner grief and your's or your child.
thoughts with the hope that the
To join MADD and 10 promote
Terre Wood, student at Cumber- homecoming queen and Vince
reality of this experience will cause designated drivers, call Athens land College, wtis recently chosen Henley, a senior from Owenton,
the reader or someone you care County, Sandy Collins at698-6551 as the senior class representative on Ky. was chosen homecoming king.
about to be more careful; TO DES- after 5 p. m;; Meigs County, call the I991 homecoming court.
Cumberland College is located
IGNATE A DRIVER IF YOU Sue Roush at 742-2933 and Gallia
in
Williamsburg,
Ky ., and is a priShe is the daughter of Robert
CHOOSE TD DRINK ALCOHOL; County , call the State MADD and Cath erine Wood, Racine. At vate four-year liberal arts instituCumberland C_ollege..s!te is major- tion in its \02nd y~ oi operation. _
to generate interest in the local office: I ,800-552- 8641 __ ._
ing in speech communications and
MADD Chapter which has now
started in Athens and Meigs Coonthealre arts and is a member of the
ties (and which I regret not starting
Creative Ministries team , secretary
many years ago, perhaps my efforts
Ta~talk
of the Baptist Student Union, and
could have averted these deaths
Fellowship and Drama Coordinator
The standard deduction is a flat
and others.) There are also people
for the Fellowship of Christian
amount
that iS .subtracted Irom-ad.
.in Gallia County interested in orga~-·
justed
gross
income for taxpayers
nizing a MADD Chapter.
Twenty students were chosen
who
do
not
itemize
their deductions.
A year without my son in this
for the homecoming court by the
The
amount
of
the
basic
standard deentire student body during a camduction
depends
upon
the
pus-wide election and were pre- filing status and is adjustedtaxpayer's
annually
sented at a special convocation dur- for inflation. Taxpayers with ifeming Homecoming Week. The 1991 ized deductions - sucb as medical exhomecoming court also was pre- penses, cbaritable contributions, etc.
sented during halftime at lhe foot- - totaling more than the standard deball game.
duction amount should ·not use the
Tina Miller, a senior from standard deductioo. Instead, they
Louisville, Ky .. was crowned should itemize their deductions.

JACOB and JOS.HUA VENOY

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 9112~21511
MONDAY thru FRID~Y 8 A.M. to 5 P.N!.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
·· ClOSED SUND-Y .

.I'm nearly 18, I guess that
means I'm a man!
But Dad, I'm really jtiSt a· little
boy.
Co.me please tell me-you iove
' me .
'
·
. That you 1eally care, even
· though you're never there. •

imperfect and perfectly special. A
true miracle of life for those who
love him.
I believe that I understand an·d
accept death as well as most, what)
can not and do not accept is the
needle ss and unnecessary deaths of
two young men ... deaths that,could
have been prevented had just one
of several people cared enough to
tak e responsibility for the drunk
driver's ac tions. Because no one
did, lhrough no fault of my son's or
my own, I, and others are forced to
live with the realitY of these orevcmable deaths and the calllstrophic aftermath.
Life has become a struggle and
even though 1 continue to walk,
talk, participate in most daily activ ities, do some work, even lau gh
..and have pleasurable moments, I
think of my son daily, hourly. His
death and its. aftermath are always
with me. Nearly everyone and
everything is a reminder. The entire
world changes. A simple well meant, "How are you?" becomes
an -imposs ible inquiry. A sincere,
" Have a nice day," is a reminder of
who is missing in your day. .
I'm grateful and feel blessed by
his 21 years and 26 days of life as
we know it. I'm thankful for the
quality of the life we shared and for
the many good expe riences that
were his. I am appreciative of the

Ohio
'

Tragic aftermath of a 'homecoming'
(The roUowing article was submilled by Larrine Sroan NewS()me, Post Office Box 252, Syracuse, Ohio).
'j am Neil's mother. I am 48 _

~

Tuesday, October 15, 1991

mlllllmlbtlon, tort he benefit of Rutland VIllage for tho
purpou of Current
Exponoes.
Said lax being a renewal
of an erlatlng tax of two·(2)
mlllsato rate not exceeding
2 mills for each one dollar
of valuallon, which amounts
to twenty-cents ($0.20) for
each one hundred dollars of
valuation, lor live yearo.
Tho Polls for aald
E!ecllon will open at 6:30
o clock A.M . a~d remain
open until 7:30 o clock P.M.
Qf said day.
_ ~- ..
- By order ql the Board of
Elections, of Meigs County,
Ohio.
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M. Frymyor, Dlrectqr
Doled Sept. 4, t99t
(10) 8, t5, 22, 29, 4lc

5

Happy Ads
_;__ _.:....:,.:.,__ _ __

Heyl Hayl eyl
look Whou
Birthday

•Remodeling and
Home Rap_airs
•Roofing
r
•Siding
•Painting

IALL fESTIVAL
SPECIAL

Is Your Roof Ready For Anolher Yetir of lee and ~nc~&gt;w?'l '
Haw's The TI1111 to Find Out.

CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION .
992·2653
•

20 SESSIONS
For $20.00

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUCtiON
992-6648 or.
698-6864

For Old &amp; New Roofs, Shingles
· Repairs, G.Hers
Building and ReniOCie&amp;ng

Offer Ends Oct. 31

FOBEVER
BRONZE

We Guarantee YOUII" Satlsracllon
FR£1 IS11MAIES
JOSIPH D.J.lCIS'

_949·2826

~·

10-31 mo,

and nll FLOOR CliE

·'B'B,ISSELL
UILDERS

742-2451

NO SUNDAY CAlLS

c~::~~==•s

•Reaaonable flatoo
CUSTOM BUILT
•Ouality work
•Free Eatlmates
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
•Carpel Has Fast ""l'_,I+I+",~-Reaso"alllo Prim"
~ Time
· ~
•High Gloso on lila
PH. 949-2101
Floor Finioh
or Itt. 949-2160
Mill liWIS, Ow ..
Rt. I, lotlonll, OH.
Day or Night · · ·
•

.. .

~

--- ·

•VINYL SIDING
o.(LUMINUM SIPINO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPliES

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday
10 :00 am-5:00pm

Ntw IIOmM lult

742-2421

''Free llltim1tn''

PH. 949-2101
· or Res. 949-21110
NQ SUNDAY CAliS

. R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

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

0

•

•

•

•

•

•

••

0

••••

0

•

•

•

•

•

•

0

•

••

0

•••

0

•••

locoted Oa Safford School ld, •ff lt. 141
1•141 446·94U or 1-800-871-59117

5-10.-91-ltn.

RENT·TO·OWN
NAMIIlAND PRODUCTS
Factory Aul~orized Repair
TV · VCR - Stereo
Boom Box- C.D. Player

Delector

Home
Enterlainment
Center
H.!.(.
Pomeroy

'

0

'

MOEIIOME
.. ATIIIG I

Rutland 011 New
Lima Rd.

COOUNG

4-29-lt

'

..•.

ATS INSULATOR8
VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOW .
We WUI Not Be Undersold ·
*Save up to 50% on Fuel Bills
*Increase the Value of Your Home
*Call for Free Estimates

742·2328

992-3524
9/2711 rfto ,

9·! 1 ·1 !'l~ P~

'

AIR CONDmONERS - HEAT Pllfii'S and
'
FURNACES FOR MOllE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

BENNETT'S

Microwave • Radar

PH . 614-992-5591

;$mill

.

21ft Mi. outside

Scanner· Typewriter
Cordless Phone ·

liceniMtd and Bonded

Now I•· -

•BUY •SELL •TilDE

3-ll-HA

.. ·

r--------..:..----~-~-

lOfl/lfo •·

.
BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCnON

RACINE GUN

CLUB
--GUN-SHOOT

•N•w Homes
--HI-••Garagea

l:OO P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

Stop I Contpar•
· Fret Estintatos

985-4473
667-6179

9-6-tfn

WHALEY'S

AUTO PARTS.
Sptciali1ing Ia
Custom Fr- l'f"!ir
NE,TUSED PARTS FOR All MAlES &amp;

MODElS

992-7013
or 992·5553
01 tau 1111
1-ID0-148-0070
· DAIWitl, OliO
7t 31 /'9t rln

.-. .-C-IO_W_l'~'"'VE--. ·'
OVEN IEPAII
AU IIAIIS
lring_JUt.Dr-Wa

fildt lp.

'I

KEN'S APPLIANCE · ..
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985-35111

....

Acrors F..- Poat OHka " .
117 I. Stcotocf .St.
POMIIOY, OHIO
3/6/ 90/lln

. '• ''

Howard L. Writttel

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters

'Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

9/ 9/ 9111 mo. pd.

YOUNG'S . ,

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashan luilcing

EVElY

Downspouts

- -- -'---=--. .•'

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Starting Sept. 21

Factory Clloko
12 Gaorga She'lun Only
Strictly Enforced
9·13-'91-lln

GROOM
· ROOM
Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

EMILEE MERINAR
Owntr &amp; Operator

614-9f2-6820
Pomeroy,

CARPENTER SERVIC' :
- Room Addition•
- Gutter worfl

~:

• ..

- Etectric1l 1nd Ptumb i~ ~
- Conc:111t• work ,

- Roofing
- Interior a Ext..-tor

Ptlntlng

~

!FREE ESJIMAtES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill · ~
.. 992-6215 ·::
Pomny, Ohio
. 11·14-'90 I

•

USID
90

WAIIIIIS-$1 00 .,

OIYIS-$69 "'
IIIIGIIATOIS-S 100 "'

BALLET, TAP &amp;
JAZZ CLASSES

UIIGIS•Goo-lltc.-$1U

AGES 3 and UP

•uo OYINS-$19 •P
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

THE DANCE
COMPANY

1111111!-$125 .,

'

992-S US or 915•3561
Aaon From l'esl, Offke
POMIIOY, OliO

992-6289
9-6-1 mo.

BOB JONES

ATTENTION

EXCAYADNG

FIREWOOD
SElLERS

DOZER and

BACKHOE
WORK
(614)

696·1006
1-1-'tl

Hardwood Slabs
For Salt
Great Price!

CAll

OHIO PAUET CO.
992-6461'
t -1·11· 1mo.

�Tuesday, ()(;Iober

a

Page
'

The Dally Sentinel

Announcements

Pomei'Qy-Micjdliport, Ohio

SNAfU® by Bi'uce Beattie

3

Announcements
ILOAHSI All lypoe ot .loans!

ofllcor lod.ly, 1-2.aGO No
eredH ., collllllll-1
AbooiUIIIy no
·' ·--··· . ··:

l

LOOK! HE C»l 00 F.i""T 011;
I£FT·HM!lf:D!

- -,
I

-lae . Bonnavi!IO. !

tilt .

l't\16N I tf.$ 'IWIG, I'D Mtl..tt
lllt. ~

,tomlly
Broughom,
dr - opllon
· blautltut
eor, 4 IVII'J
Inc. 'o
IUIVOOfiJ 301 Y.a, ltaH, IQ4. I
112-671
I"'IW tlrM, IUIO trlnlinluion

AC, PW, PS, oleo llclto, ~M

........

S€RIES ... " .

..•.·. -c.. ...

iDOL. ... ~E

·!
1
'\

COULl&gt; ~IT

lttfl01 C~ll, $1,000. 304-&amp;12· ~
2038.
' t

centra_! llr~ . Maaonl
$9,000 or .boll C!fler, Muot Soil
304·773-11155.

~CY.E&lt; ~Tf.f. IN

H£W16 1M

:

1ttt Thunderbird. ~ caiNI,

roomt,

TrMpu~~~n

BORN

15; 1991

-AutOI for Sale

6-·1211.
•
1m Corrtago Hou11, 2br, 2
Bltho, 12d5, · All Ellctrlc.
$6,000. 114-446-15!1.
1982 Holly Park 14170, 3 bad·

lualn.a, ele. C.H tor
I frM COnlultltlon wfth 1'1Nin

ro'rrv...·

..KIT. 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright _,

AC; Fwnhura For Salt _A lao.

P8raon~l,

II'MPIIIn'fh

· Ap11rtment " ~ ·
for Rent

Mobile-Homes
. tarSale
ttm Skyline 121M, Goo HNI,

Tuesday, October

15, 1991

EOOILI.'(

· e:00w•
IJl me a a•
IIJNewt
.

weu. FR:rM

t883 Otda DIHI 88, $1400. 814- :
266-1671.

tiTHER 51 DE

. &lt; '

•,.., rr;/b;~'""1

ATTENTION DEER HUNlERSI
Have commtrclll tMat allcer1
Rent tl HR. ~H tiOO. COli
114-lm-8585.. •

®

BAHAMA CRUISE
a Nlghlo, OVer Bouahl
.
Corporate Trip, Hotel POld,
TiekMo Good 1 Yw. Pluo
Drllndo
Trlp1
UmHoa

FEEL SAD
BECAUSE A LEAF FELL?

· [ 51-!0ULD

-

Informal~ to Chlm~
ton, Inc, PO Box 22, Norwalk.

Ohlo..a57.
No Hunllng or Trupoulng on
Stilla lloofi proi&gt;ony tho fofmor
Dovy end Hozll Taylor piece
whl'ioul written ponmlulon.

11)1 Rln Tin Tin, K-1 Cop

Shl~oy

Situation
Wanted

Business
Buildings

Somtne lo llvt In tor their
baird. 11,000 BTU oil htaler tor
Nit cheap. 614-446.a4UI.

For Salt or lNM, 5011100 all

12

Spears, 304-675-1421.

14
Business
Bobyolltor N-d. School Ago,
Giveaway
Addovlllo Sehool Dlllriet. 814Training
441-1021.
3 ~lrd Dog pupo to glvOiwoy. 12
Rolraln
NowiiiSoulhuslom
W•k• o1a pointing brood. lt4·
BuJinu.a College, Spring Valley
2!41-1871.
'
Plua. Coli Today, 6t4-446-436711
Rogllllrlllon 1!10-05-1274B.
52 , gel Wlltr Miter, 304·773-

4 .

57V.

18 Wanted to Do

8 Waak Old HoR Colli!&gt; Half

Babysit In my homt, reasonable

Gormon Shepherd ••malo
Puppy. Ganuo With Klda. 814245-1071.

111la,

Henderson

•

Polnt

Pluunt trH. 304-675-3995.

E &amp; R TREE SERVICE. Topping,'

Trlmmh'9 1 Trw Removal, Hedgt

•

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
t/2 to 314 ocra loto'wllh eounly·
water .1nd electric, 10 mllu
ooUih ol Point Ploooont. $3,1100.
304-578-26114.

M11dowhlll Subdivision, 2.6
mlln out Sind Hill Rood, hoo
rutrlclld building lata lor sale

II low U $6500, and OM ICtl

Iota tor alng,. wldn avtllablt
alto, 304..&amp;75-3460 or 175-4100.
Boltam

Sub-division,

ont acre lot•. At. 2 frontage,
prlct reduced, city wlttr, 304-

576-2336.

G - Por1oblo Slwmlll, don1
houl your loas to tho mill jull
coll304-675·t~7. .

36

Ml11 Ptula'a Day Care Center.

tVIIO Ford Eocort, GT, Aoklng,
Poodle, toys, and IN eupo, alao $6,000. Bt4-44t.o731.
45 Furnished ·
mlr,hure Schna~ur.
I
11183 Chevy !J.tO 1800. PV 400 poppor, Champion Gr•nd Sl,.,. AUTOMOBILES. BAD CREDIT '
Rooms
PA Syatom and ax1nu, $500. AKC, CoolviiiO 1-]1.3404,
OK. 11-11 llodoto. Guaranllld
304.a~1871altlr s pm
Rooms farflnl·wetkor month.
Roglstorld Dllmatlorw tor Nlo. Approvol, No Down Payment. I·
Stsrtlng 11 $120/mo.·GIIUa Hotel. 350 CUmmlna oH trama co~ &amp;14-416-1758.
~-233-12811 , 24 Hro.
,
,
614-446-8580.
20,000 mlloa on tho major, ..T
Mlck Mator, 35,000 on fftljor, 44 Raglllorod llmalo Groat Dono
SIMplng rooms with eool&lt;lng. Bockwotl nor Indo, rubber puppy; vocclnalld &amp; wonmld. 72 Trucks for Sale
.,
Also tl'llltr •pace.. All hook-up~. block ouoponolon, ~ow b = tl50. 614-.146-1354.
18711 ' lntomatlonol Tronaxtar 11 '
Coli onor 2:00 p.m., 304-77.1- l'lar end, ,.., llultt. 15
ooml, modal 40701 400 Cum15651, llooon WV.
ovardrlvo tnnamlulon with Rtallleracl Schnauzw pupa, rnlns, axe cond, $6000, 614·;as.
d•p rlduelton eoll Don R011 Regltttrtd Hlmelayan ltlltens, 33M 1fter 5pm.
46 Space for Rent
81+843-5340 aftor I.OOpm tor olso Slam•• khtono. COsh, no k:::,-;':7-:.;;:;..;:...= - -chockt. 614-1192·2807
18711 314 · 350 oulo, runo
men Information.
Country Mobil• Homa Ptrk,
a-.1 nn1a ,..,, tl500, phono
Roult 3:J, North ol Pomeroy. AKC "'I· 8o1or pupplal, 1 Roglllorod Slam- Klltono, 8 614-11112·5170, loovo mooogo.
Lots , rentals, parts, nits. Clll month Old, 2-maiH 1·temalt, WMko, 2 l:llac Fomoln, Coli
814-11112-3712 or 11112.a7.54
·
614--446-9730 Attar 4:00p.m.
!Dati Chevy Plck.Up, One
614·11112·11179.
Dwnor, Low Mlloago1 Elleallonl
Good hunting snd camp altu Alpho I oure111 maehlna uod
Musical
Condlllonl Prlca Froauced. 614aa&amp;·72A.
for rent. Over 100 acres to hunt vary llnla, 1800. nator will llkl 57
on In Mason County. C.ll any $500. COIIalor 8:00 Pll 304-178Instruments
1181 Chtvr 5-10, automatic, 4
77111 wloua lnqulno only.
limo, 304-576-2~.
whlol drive, vory good eondlAnllq,. Wood Cool Cookltovo Plano Tuning Slrvlca,, Coli EJ. tlon. low mllolgo, 304-475-3433
Wo~S OVen, Wotor Tank. 814- mer Gets., ('14-381 8801.
or 111-71011.
· Merchandi se
446
'
Wanlld lo buy uod piccolo, 1181 8·10 PU, 58,000 mil•, 1
Bll'tllft Wlldeat c.-bow. $71; 104-U2·2228.
owner. Excelltnt condition.
1D78 C.mara $100, Needl Work.
51
•'I •
14250. IM-448o8015.
Household
lt4-446-8845.
58
Fruits &amp;
F!!&lt;.. SIIo Dr Jrado, 75. Jntomo· '
.Goods
BIIUIIIul · 1u11 kitchen, . Oilk
llanal Tandem Loa Truck, 360
Vegeta~les
nmbll Jack Skld"dor. 114-44t·
Borgoln Applloncoo . 10 Dlyo coblnllo, oink, garobogo dl•
Tumlpo,
Winter 0410.
Only. F-1 FrM Rohtgorator lnalqiOilolvo, _,.,, or pock·
W11 ti!O Now S7S; W10hlr W11 - · · range, OVII1, - - · Aldlah, Call 114-241-1131.
tl25, Now $115 And 175; Mony To ago daal, 304-t7&amp;-M80.
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
ChooH From All A,. Gaul'ln- Coal, Noma llallvory. Minimum
lod. Ska1111o Applloncoo, ltC- 01 a 112 Ton, IN Por Ton, 114Farm
Supplies
11187 Ford Aero Stir, XL, Low
446·7398..
.
384-3331.
'
Mlln, $1,1100 Dr 8101 Otter. 8t4&amp; L1vestock
38ao41032.
CornDIAor, Ro!rlgorator, Chino
HUieh, Gold Stor Ring, Wu"
74 Motorc)'cles_ _ .
P••~s~:'i,II.
MII_Qdcla 61 Fann
...._1
18M Kawaokl KX-10, Nal good
Conerata &amp; plaatlc lllpllc llnko, 111111 Jolin lloaro 11- I, c..,. eondllon, fQO.OO 114-1112:t551
Ron Evono EnlarDrioaa. Jock· flllllly Rebuilt. !Excalllnl Cond~ after 5:00pm
'.
.on, OH 1-100-137-0528. . ·
tlonl dft. Blldo lola Spore Pana
814-446-2351.
'
3400 Ford Tractor, With Loader,
Glrto Pink HuffY 10 IDOid $1,1110;
lntarnallonll Whh
blcyola !Ill now $111. Glrllllaek -ng 340
llochlne,
Rlko1 Boler,
Woatorn Fllor 10 111*11 bicycle 13,450; Ill 11::, $5,1150.
114·211$20. Four otonm wlndowa eom- 8522.
.
plaCI Ill 53130 elljng 110.
... h.30U71-&lt;117t.
.
'·
35 IIF Tractor With DJnabounea
76 Auto Pans&amp;
~·
· IIFti,M
later,
$3,19SL 30
Ono Largo Hoator, Natuill Or -Farguoon
· 3000 •ord
Accllssortes
•\
lloltlad Goa Alao, 1 Pair 01 Old 13,GH. Ownar Will Flnanct. 1144 WI!MI Platform $coloo Corn- 2111-t522.
"'iru'"doii,...,..,T,..ra_norn....;,lu,;.;.lona;,;.;,.;;U.,.told...,._&amp;
With Wolghta. COIIS14-146robuTn, otanlng at IH; Auto •
J.D•.ao good oond., wldo "FIE, 3- Pallo,
114-24UI77, 114,3711pt•. httc~. romotl hydraulle Por1.
2263.
PSE bow, 3 lllo of olghtl, Iva PTO. tl500. IM-tel-4111
qulv•, ... anaw r111t, utru. 3
ratrlgoratoro 11 low u .1400. Jlm'o Fann Equl-nl, SR. 35, For BolO: 11180 AIIC Spirit tor
-h. 30U7WIIOO,
Wool GIJUI&gt;OIIo, 114-1411-11777; PI~'- llolor'*-nona., roar and
.
rio good
Wide ootKtlon ,_ &amp;uold farm and .,G,z47T after
Alto Dr Mica? In Yout Houoo? troctoro &amp; lmplomonlo. Buy, eond., 1250.
'
Buy ENFORCER, Klllo rata l 1111, trade, 1:00-5:00 woakdOJI, 1:00pm.
:
mlco
In
only 1 INdlng SOL till Noon.
•··F
d
~
"h
5 ·~GUARANTEED! Anltallll llo
~ or nml Wn
, _,
•·
Boum TIUI Y- Blora, 11 Will Holland 711 hay blno. Now now 11 ' 10• back tlroa -"""!I
~
Moln 81-, Cllolllr, OH
Holland 11ft hoyblna. Now Ho~ Pt115 75 A14. 1100. 30U75-5bo
&lt;
0
land 7117 toroga horvllllr with 2 ::.v;.;•;.;nl;;:ng~•;..·- - - - - - 'Of,
Role Dr Mlol? In Your Noull? hoodo. Gahl Grlndar ml11t. AIMo ·~
Buy ENFORCiR, Klllo rota &amp; Chotmor 2 - no tUI oom Dian- 79
Campers I
~~
~/:RAI:ru'1ll" A~~1; tor. Au uc oond, *·27.3-4:1ts.
Motor Homes
~
D'Dotl
Tnua
VU.
L
-,
834
kill
oom plckano. Dna ,..,......,., . . , - " - - - - - - · -'
p.m.
Eul lloln St-, Poma_...,, OH
10 ono row QOO; ThrN 8 ft. llldo-ln compor, phone 304- "·
323 ono row 1111 model 675-4t23.
·
PICKENS FURNITURE
OR
macla
-h. Ono Now/Used
''
HouNhold furnishing. 112 mi. In YolK _ , Bur ENFOR- 3211 two row narrow12 11111 huok·
Services
Klllo Alia And lllol In lng bid 13,1100. Ono 325
Jtrrlcho Rd. Pt. Plnunt, WV, CER.
)
Only 1 Feeding. OUA••Yft~N two row narrow wHh lhelltr
eoll304-675-1450.
Avallablo At: cOntrat sutitiit'i7 12,1100. One Hollond 718
..
coun Sl-; Spring · ·VIIIoy chool&gt;lr, z row hood curront 81
Home
RENT20WN
I
Hlrdworo,
ttZI
JaottoOn
PIU;
morlill3,500.
Onot
Now
Holland
8t4-446-3158
'
Yl'ra Fuinltu,.
~'l'"n:'J""A~!i, ~ ~::'t'~~"..O:~
Improvements
&amp;
'
!!polls, Dhlo.
At. 17, Point Plolunt aiM/ RlpiiJ
BASEMENT
''
i"ilro;;; I Small candy .-ng
Road, -JI'JII.
WATERPAOOFINQ
»mochln.., II locally "'•-', Uood 1 Row Su- 717 FortP,• UneondHional Ulotlmo guaran- •'..
•o21150.00, 8M·'lll2·2001. ,....... Choppir, 1.4 Ft."'"
rollroncM
Cloy !J.tO n· ••·
Froa Local
llllmll•.
Call tumlahool.
oo11ac1 1•

Ftrry, 304-675-5332 or · 1-800-

752-l'11S.

Mtrc.r

Real Estate
Wanted
Coupla wanll houM -"" 2 yr
loooa or lind· contract. 3 to 4
bedroama, llrgt home In Gal·

llpollo , or Point ~PiNiirii oroi.
Nood tomlly room ond t..mal
dining room. Will "Y up to

$500. PI' month. No ·ehlldran or

Rentals

Rea l Estate

31

=

Homes for Sale

ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII
RldUOid To SOl: 2 Slory 3br
Comor I.GI In ChMhlro, Ohio.
EliCOIIOhl Condition. Flonanclng
Avlllllblo. -.all611, 1104'

13:1·117U, 114-311114MII.

houM In AUIIInd, 1·
Wo An Soaking An Individual 2-&amp;ory
bdrm upalalro opt, 3-ltldroom

Gallipolis
I VICinity
AU Yanl latoalluol le Paid In
DIADUNE:
lho ...·
, b11DN,tha
ld 2:00
.....p.m.
run.
_ , - . 2 : 0 0 p.m.
Frtdar- llondar ldKion • 2:00

-,.

........

_,___=
-

8

Public Sale

I Auction

1
~~~~---·
¥lriJinla, 104·1'7W711.

........ ..._,,

-

wanted to Buy

Wllllod
lo ~......
ltlftdlnti"l14-tla·
-·
loll Wlllllmoi

w.n1111 To Bur: Jlllk AUioa1

lanp llllal Anil AlmoYII
From Weal Vlt;lnta. l"""t·
aot:L
Top Prlole Paid: All Old U.S.

-PIIHRblng
Knowtodgl

And

Ellcttical

upetalrs, downetllrs ll'llng rm,
2·btclroom, bittlroom, dining

nm, ldtehon, Ulllhy nm, asking
12o,ooo, 8'14-1112•2151
..Utlntenana
ExDtrience
3br AI~ Rodnoy VIllaGe II,
Pratorrablo In A Hoonh Caro Slt- 3 Bedroom Houoo, 118 Klnoon 1300/mo. ..... Dlpcialt, 814-38811!'9
Glllllpollo. Uvlng Room, 1301 Allor &amp;p.m.
.fiOalblthy
Dining Room, Kheheil, Bath,
.O.pondoblo
Control AlrJ.. VInYl 8kllng1__Car·
ootid. 2 ""' Oarog1. wnhln
Woptllr:
WolldnJI Dlotonco Oflho Poool,
oCOmpolhiYI
Sllary
And Goll Ccano And Clinic. Got· 42 Mobile Homes
Bonatllo
llpollo Chy Sehool Dlttnct. 6t4for Rent
• Ellcolllnl Trolnlng Progrom
245~52.
-Carur G.-" Opportunlllll
3br A Frome On 1 Aero Wooded 14xl0 2 Br, 1 milt South al
.Job Slllotocllon
Lot 127,500 Witt Consider Land Euroka, on St. R1.7. No pots,
Forword Rnumo Or Lotter 01 Cc!nlrocl Whh ·R11oonoblo rallooo-. 814-251.a08t.
lnllrlll OUII!nlng Ouollllcollono Down Poymant. 814-266-111811.
And Slloty Hlllory To:
3
4 ............ 2112 blthl, yr1 Old, tlec hMt pump, m11ter
Bill Bill • .ldmlnlllrolor
ouno with whlrpool, buln In·
Pomoror,. Nurai!'V
And di1hwuher, mlcrowa_.t. VInyl
A• blllbllon Cinltr
moblll homo, Sand
sldlng 1 "'"'" &amp;coblo, 1 oera lot 2HIMbedroom
3117611 Roekoj)l'lngo Road
Rood, 304-675-31134.
In
tuDalvtalon,
At
2
So\Ah
Pomeroy, Ohio 45'M
$71,1100. 30W~2502.
' Mobile hO&lt;nl tor rant, u - At.
room 1•112·blth, llory &amp;-hoR. ~IU 4tl O!Oior441-0111.
1400 WEEK; Or 11..1 SluHing IKhchon,
DR, LA, 2 BR
Envtlopn AI Home. Ruth $1.00
t Iorge BR, 112 both 44
Apartment .
SIII·Addmlld Stampld En· downllolro,
upololra. 24&gt;&lt;24 gorago. 114.446vllopo, No. 10 to D6A lluppllao, 7878.
for Reill
P.O•. Bo1 1443, ' F1lrbom, Ohio
45324.
1·bdnm opt Pomeroy, t l 2·bdrm
apt lllddlopon, COli 614-1192·
No Experl•ne•· Ntc•ury. A
2&lt;03
Dally ~I•IJ 01 $300 For Buying
llareliandiM. 614-385-2012, Ex1.

Drl••·

·COina,GoldR-.-Colno,
Gold Co1ne. II.U Coin Shot!.
• _ , Avonua, Gallipolis.
3833.

Employment Services
2br
F1Knlohod1 1230/mo.
Rotonon,. Soeunly Dlpoalt 01
$200. 451 Sieond AVIRUI, 814·
448-2231,.114-445-2581.
2br Mollllo Noma, &amp; EH!cloney
Go3: Aportmonl (Ground
Lev. "'"'.. IDII And Deposh
A"''U nod. No Palo. 114-446-18711.
2br, Rolrtgorll., And Stove
Fu,mlo~ Alao Wolor And
Trd K •umllhld, Carpotld

ThroughoUII114-«6o31140.

__.

A'ION • AI -

Call Marilyn

DINO-MITE

lnvoalmonl Paekago. 11•houon

In

Pomtroy/Mlddleport

1r11,

email daM! poymanl lnd ownor
tlnanclng,

excellent

11112-2403.

-

•*

lnc:om•

.. ..... lnqulroo only, eon

lluttl Unh Rontll, t Yoar Old.
VInyl Stdl!'9, Low llolnlononea,
Coritrally I.Ocotlll, 1511,1100. 114-

«HIII.

Ap.inmonll tor tho Eldorly. Gel·
~~ Manor Apo~monto. 855 Buhl
Monon Raa&lt;l. Daolanld tor tho
Slnlor CMIUn (ttZ I oldorl ond
Hondlcappld _ .. Equol
ho,.lng -"'unhy. Apt&gt;llcoltono moy bl ~ked up ot
Spring VI lily Ptua ·1211 Jock•
aon Plka,or ealllt4 448 41311.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDQET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE!._. 831 Jaeklon Pike
trom .t l -. Wolk to ohop &amp;
movloa. COR 814-446-2518. EDil.
EHiclaney Aportmont, Fur•
nlohod, All UtHhllo Pold. 814,
388-itMa.
For ront· - 1 bdrm opt, tum
or unturn, In Mldrloport, 81411112.a221 or IID2.a304.
Fumlahool 1 Roorna &amp; Bllh,"
Claan, No ~~ A I - 1
D1poo1t R..,l_ 114-441-1tl.l .
Fumlahooloplll-. 4 , _ 1
bllh1 noJI!o. lao. dip. &amp; rat.
114 ••• Ql«.
NloaiJ F - Apanmont,
1br, nod to Ubrary, parking,
oontral hlal, alrL.~IIronea ,.
qulrld. 1 - . o Fumlahool
All utltltloo
IR
1 • upot • 2nd Avo.
oond. 114-4*112J.
Graoloua living. 1 and 2 bactnoom aponntonll 11 VII'Minor
and
Rlvarolile
Aputmanto In MldciiOport, Frvm
1111. CIN 114-tltl2·7711. EOH.

:r.

SAVINGS•••
In th~ ((lasslfleds%

••
••
,..,. . •

,.

t:;!

e . IIJ_~ ol!fi!I!IM

.... .

=

....

t1,800.

..

~

'
~ '·
'
'
CornplllaMobllo Noma s.t.Upo, i

:i':::'"E:.':k.F::~a;r,J~ 1I-;:~~~f!;.~~J

Surpl.. elolhlng,
Army COmoulllugo
Orlalnol
IIRIII 26~
oorToo, loothor us Cornblt ="';;.·- - - - - - Booll. sam Somarvllll'a J...~ 63
Livestock
dyvlllo1• WV blllcla Pool unlco
Rt. 21 N. F~, llal, tlun,"noon.a:oci 2 - - k Trallor With
~~~~~~~~XI=). :llf._~5~ Big O...lna Room, 12,500;
Cliaatnut Oolrlng, April 1111
Star1 stsck weshtr l drylr like
ntw. COli oftor 5 p.m. IM-146- WHITE'S METAL DElECTDRS Whh 30 Goyo Protoulonal
4606.
Allloon 1210 Socond Tralnlng.114-21U522.
Goll(polla, Ohio, 814- 3-SIMr a t-Haltar APPI'OI. 1100
Solid O.k Chino
... SlSOO;llRI2-to3a.Llg~to; 1 Yur Old, $800.
lor 4p.m. 6M ... I-f41D.
55
4 HDrll GODMNek Trailer,
. Building
ti,GH; 8 Yoor Old AaHA lllro,
SWAIN
,
Supplies
$1.250; 2 V•r Old, AOHA Mare,
AUCTION &amp; FURNITUR£. 82
ti,500. 114-21M522.
Olivo St., Go!Npolla. Now &amp;UMd Bloelt, brick, plpao, wlntumhure, 1\M.tn, ·WHiem a dowo, llnlllo, ale. Cloudo Wln- CUllom U-ock Hlullng. COn
Work booto. I,......31S8.
te,., Rio Grandt, OH C.l 114- Haul To Hllltboro S - Dr 1..1&gt;24S.at21.
colly. Chuek WIU- Trlpla
VI'RA FURNITURE
CrMtt Trucking. 114oZ46-MH.
814-44WIU
Oet- Spoclllo, two · eor
UVING 110011: Sola &amp; Choir, gorag~o
24x24do8311911.00, GollabiPidlg- Nublon Buck,
tiH.OO· RocllnH
f148.00• 24127xll-14tii9.00,%711ZdtaO, hlrl. Good Pilei 120
Swlval Roeltar, IIIII.Oo; Cettoo I l4541.00, Proelolon Pool Frame """ Up. 11ount Oliva Rood, 114End T-. 111.00 Sot.DINIIQ Bulldm, 814-tl2·3841.
388.a541,
ROOM: Toblo Whh 4 Poddod
Choirs, f14I.OO· Coumy Pinl
Pure brood roglot- Umouoln
Dinette Whn hnch Anti· 3
• ..~ patro, .... &amp;
Cholro1• 12911.00; Motchlng 2
ltotllro. 114-tltl2.a1110.
Ooor ~hch 1341· Or Slft.OO
SOt; Dlk Toblo1 ~21112 WM" s
Tra nsporlat1on
Bow
BaCK
Cholro, rw'"'"· Col 114=~
H2II.OOSU
.B,!ODROOM: Pottor Bid- =
3&amp;2;;:; : .0; 23!=:.:-:---::::-:-:-,.,.-,-:roorn "' (a t&gt;O..;~ 1341.00; 4 •
Drawor Chnt, ..4.11; lunk AKC Boogll pupo, 30Utl5-3517.
71 Auloa for Sale
Bid, 12211i.Cornploll Full II••
Sot1 tl05.w Sot; 7 po. Cadlr AKC Coc~or lponlat pupplto,
Boonoom SuMo, $1119.00.01'EN: aholo lnd worrnact, tiOO. oaeh
'
Monday Thru Solurdly, lo.m. to 304.a78.Z22S.
lp.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till AKC Roglatorld Sa- Hound
5p.m.,~ 4 Milos Ott .RoUia 7 On Pupploa, a -liltlir
Route t41 In Clnlonary.
111 10111, $121, 114...74111. moy
Wntlngho,.o
G11
Fur· AKC Real- 11aaato Pu~, 1871 ChevY Coprieo · Clololc,
nonco/Eioetrie AC, $100 010, $50. Each, Dolo, 1 ~1n; Runa Good[ 1800. 814 4411032.
gat water hNter, 50-gil. ISO, An"'lm•, 114~51-1111, Stove 1m Clvyotor Cordoba. 3110 ong,
IM-1192-5878
,.
= .;.;.;;.:.:.:..:..._____, j .;St:;:ot&gt;l:::;••;:on~.,.,--.,.-::::--:::,--- SIWI24155 304-47Mfl55.
53
Antiques
AKC Regia!- Chow Chow 1871 Ford LTD Good Condition,
PuPIIIoa, I W.U Old, llaeka Runa Good; i'riiii. 814-:m.211t,
Bur ot 1111. Rlvorlna Antlq,.o, A~ 1 .And 1 lluo, tiD Eacll' Attorlp.m.
1124 E. llaln - . Pornoroy. l,......t«l
' 187lllonta COrio, T~opa. mony
Houro: lt.T.W. 10:00 a.m. toi:OO ARu•
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
~
rod BMII!o'o, 1- axtnu, - to •-lata,
114-1192-2121.
old . i.m stortld, lll ." · JDC~arm.aae.
1111 Cho11* CaDrioa Cloaalc,
54 Miscellaneous
Chlhualtuo, Put1111oa. w 11a11y .... - . - · k • - . l o w
mill!!, 111 aquiii!:'?'A.- 11-.
Merchandise
lunnloo. Cat18W.li1Ntu.
C - trom :tt-llnodl AKC :101 .... tillS. •-.a?ll
DISNIV!IAHAIIAI
Cockar lpanlol, AIIC Wit.. 1111 Ptymauth Champ1 Good
8 Dlyo, 7 Nlghto In Drtando, Weal H - Torrllro AKC Condltlcinl S500 Finn. ot4-4467317.
.
Florida.aAirNlahll
Forolnoluclacl
And • laottloh Torrllro. 11UM77
Dlyo,
In lahl11111,
Holll P11d. 1281 Coupla. 404- Dragon•r•td cattary Porolon 1110 11 ..11na or,_:!'lnt condl·
JIIO.UOO.
Stlmlll andlllmatayanltltt-: tlon, loadld, m...... ,Cat! 114114 44UI44-7p.m.
11112-1170 IIIVI-QI.
Fl-ood tor ulo $20.00 per
load, lt4-1112-2455.
Fllh Tonk, 2411 .laekoon AYI, .11110 Ill Camaro v;a, whholgray
Point P-nt, 30W'11-20113,
13000 miiOo,
Fl-ood F., Soli: IIDIIIy Hlrd lull Bno Tropical llah lllrdo lntorlor,
· tl1, . 1roy K,.bl,
~ood. 114-3711;..;;.
2178
.:..:;..- -lrRIII anlmolllnd a.,p!lai. ' f'.a?l-7127.

=-::--:-=--_,,..,...,....,.,,..

i1=
:l:'llt2

't;C:o

BRIDGE

7:06 Clllllverly Hlllbllllol

!r:c

l"fOpf THAi {)OfJNI T

HAVE

A fl'Pf&gt;t..t EFFfCT
ON Llf,

EI!Nti I

"3-~

.

7:30(2). IIJ)Jeapanlyl !;I
(J) To Ill Announced
(I)
T0111ght
stereo.
al. M
...Witll Cltllcktn
1111 WhHI of F-ne Q '

1121. fii!RIIr Feud
ill Ill a Star Stereo.
tr11 Secreta or 8paed

Ill Cronllre .
7:35 W Benford &amp; Son

ALLEY OOP

.

\Ill.

It's a man,s world,
not a bot~
By Phillip Alder

E: Till Long Hot

flllmrMr (PI 1 Of 2) (2:Q2l

0 Murder, 1M Wrott 1:;1
ill On Staaa

tZ11 HASCAll Racing All Pro
400 from Nashvlle, Tann. (T)
8P~molllwa

0 Rln Tin Tin, K·l Cop
·- 8:G5 (I) lilO'IIE: Big JikaJPG) .
(2:00)
1:30 (I) (J) • Home
ltnplo•-.Tim realizes
lhe crearure hiding In his
baaemejmay be a snake.
Stereo.
!Ill iiJ ~lor League
IIIHIIIH American League
Championship Series:
Toronto Blue Jays at
MlnnNOII Twlna (game 6, 11
,..ctlllry) (L) (May be
replaced liY~Iar
programmfn )
ill Chun:h
StatiOn
11)1 Wltntll to Survlvlll;'l
t:oo
1111 · womtn NIIM4
Jlcltle (PI3 Of 3)' NIC
Mlnl-lltrlal (2:00) S1ereo. l;l
Cll (J)•Ro...Rosunne'a neighbor
surprlutl her with an ottem.J!!
to help 1he nead~Siereo. 1:;1
(lJ (f) f'ronlllnu,r!
0 1'1111day Night Flghll
Heavyweight bout carl The
Truth Williams vs. Mike
Evans, 10 rounds, from
Allan~ N.J. (L)
ill
l!kNr Stereo.
Ill Llny King UYII
11)1 Fllher Dowling M1rrtynltlllllll&lt;ie1AI
A drunkan artist -m• to be
targeted lor murder. (R) Q
9:30 (I) aJ • Coach Lulltar Ia
_ angry *'uae Hayden sold
him a mellunct!onlng truck.

SC~W:TIME6

r SREA1He so

L.a.ID AT NIGHT Tl-\A&lt;r I
WAKe .M'!5ELF UP.

THA1t ~11-G 10 WORRY
ABCtJT. IF YO!..l 'M'I&gt;KE U!='
AT NIGHT..•

/

Ne

\

....

Stereo. 1;1
10:00 (!) NeWI

BARNEY

··

(I) (J). Homelront Mike

wanla to help Gina, but RU1h
Is determined to have har
dtported. Sla!!!'·
\Ill. Hunter Lrl.
tZ11 NHRA Drag Racing AC
- oelcOHtilllland"NatiOnlllr
from Topeka, Kan. (T)

WHY'S

r;a

oO
0

TV Serilloo, -lallllna-·- In Zlnlth aloo ' ..W:Ing ,....
.chlr brando. HoUM collo, allo
oomt allt&gt;llanoo ropalno. wv
304-6JW3tll Ohio 114-448-2414.
Slpt~ Tonk Pumolr'll no..Gai111
C!&gt;-RDN EVANS INlERPHIIIES
.lar:klon, OH 1~ '
Davis . IM!-Vae
llo&lt;vlco,
~ c-k Rd, P•~•. aup- '
pllll~kup, ond dollvory. etc.

·---.~---

.BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

\
·,

lo

Cl~or'•

Plumlllna
Founll and Plno

' O:J~~:.a

Oct: 11, 1M1

.

'

'·
R"ldlntlll or - e l l ! ""
wiring, nator III'Yioo or rapalra. • •
lllllor Uoanood llaetrielan '
Ridenour Etoetrtcal, 304-e.,.: •·
1718.

87

.

'·

Upholstery

~-..,...:,..,,_;.;;,;.;,;,:___

~~Yr.:';.~~!:

biit In fumlturo u...-g.

Cat! 30W"III-41M tor liM .,_
tlmotn.
1

•

...

o.

"•'

.KI09874 3 2
t95
+KJ

l

At the bridge table, as in life, it gen·
erally pays to be cautious. If you can
handle a bad split in a suit, do so. Take
risks only when you have no option.
In today's hand, you as South have
driven the auction to six spades, hop,
ing that partner wiU have a useful
card or two. Things have been running
your way all afternoon, so you decide
to push a llttle.
West leads the spade three: five, six ,
queen. How do you continue?
· Westlet the unfavorable vulnerabil·
lly dissuade him from bidding four
bearts, the nonnal actioo with an
eight-c:ard suit even against a strong
two--club opening.
The actual South could see only two
heart losers, and It looked as though he
could ruff them in the dummy. He won
trick one in hand and cashed the heart
ace, dropping East's queen. South
f::~:~b~lat~ki~·n~g~a quick look at East.
reallybeasingleton ?
No, it was obviously a falseeard . He
ruffed the heart six with the spade

. "

EAST
t916
.Q
tJ10872
+QI096

'

SOOTH
+AKQJI2
.AJ6
tA K 3
+A

\}

·I-. · ~

Sotttb

West

NM'tll

East

2+

3•
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

6+

I+

Pass

Opening lead:

..
·-.

••
,,
. ......

Vuln~rable : East-West
Deal~r: South

3+

·-•

"

~

•

+ 3·

~

...

.

...,

• ... r

"' ,"
seven. Disaster! East over rufled and ::
returned his last trump. Now South .,
had no home, forthe heart jaclfana haa::to finish one down.
•,
II only South badn't sent a boy to do·:_.
a man's job (and tried for the over- . trick), he would have been sale. He ' ·
should have ruffed the heart si• with-- the spade 10. He n!turns to hand with a - ·
. club to the ace and ruffs the.heart jack
· with the spade seven. He is .bappy for
East to overruff; he bas no loser
remaining. He wins Eut's return draws the last trum p and claims tb~ ~-:
slam.
·. :;,

. "•
' · P.

The World Almanac~ Crossword Puzzle

--------------------------------------~~ :·,
ACROSS

1 Chamlcal
elemenl
7 Circus
entrepreneur
13 Theater
dlltrlct
14 Fret
15 Severe
e•perlence
16 Hollow under
shoulder
17 Be vlclorloua
18 t:alr
20·School org.
21 Llrge knlte
23 Molancholy
24 A11tore to
health
25 Small welghl
27 Comedian
Joan29 Sallis agent
31 Cover with
-turf~---·,

32 Firearm

Answer to Prewloue Puzzle

owners' org.
33 Clup
3~ Gun part
37 A Slav
40 Placed
41 Papar ol
Indebtedness
43 Dry
45 Phonetic
srmbol
461n good
condition
47 109, Roman
48 Soulh SeBI
,pa!!!IID_ .
51 Obslruct
54 Disloyal
55 Dlreclor
56 Throws (ball)
57 Ea111eot born

DOWN

4 - de France
5 Actrlll
1 Forthtadl
2 RtYtlli!'V
Hagen
- "3- Actrtll Gllcll- - &amp; Shapu- 7• WIVf ,
menacingly
·

11)1 700 Club With Pat

Robii'IIOII
10:05 W MOYIE: Tlte Treln
Frobberi(PGI (2:00)
10:30 1111 Moyera' World of

Is' likely

More !ravel lhan usual
In lhe·
year ahead, lor both practical and pleasurable purpoaea. Repeat visits to spots
you enjoy could be on your Itinerary.
UIRA (Sept. 21-0ct. 23) II you do nol
manager your resources prudanlly to,
day, spender's. remorae Is likely later:
Try lo llmll your purchases ltriC11y to essentials. Libra, treat yourself to a birth·
day gin . Send lor Libra's Aslro-Graph
predlc11onl lor the year ahead by mailIng $1.25 plua a long, sell-addressed,

i•

students take a
behlnd-the-acenel look at
the Brevard Muslo canter,
one ol the CO&lt;Jntry's
premiere music camps. (0:40)
Ill Croolt •nd ChaM

. .- .

stamped envelope to Astra--Graph, c/o
ASTRO-GRAPH
,..---- - - - - . this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleve-

«&amp;.......

"'

WEST

'

111M• .

537-115ZI.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

..

(f) Brevard Summer Two

~Ro~'a

84

.1.-7

m

..

Plumbing I
Heating

.3

• J,

.,

w•

'
JET
Alrollon M.coro, ropolrld. Now
&amp;,.bulK motors In •oek, RON ~
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. t.foo. , ,

82

... "'.

.,

+17 5 4 3 2

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Forrest and his lrlends enjoy
a hunting trip In lhe
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(2!00)
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dlseppolnts little P,llellelle by
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professton 11 1sn1 a graded course. You either PASS or
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1. J.m, .,.Ji,:;JO .p.m. Ages 211-10.
Btforw, anw Khool. Drop-lnt
welcome. lt4 446 8224. Now Infant Toddler Coro, 614-44~227.

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tho Iormor Chollor Govroll
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land, OH 44t0 t·3428. Be sure to stale
your zod iac sign .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) There Is a
possibility you might treat outsiders
with more tolerance and consideration
today than you do members ot your
own·famlly. This could creale a problemthai will be dlfliculllo resolve.
SAQITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0.C. 21) The
pasl ls lhe past, so strive to be forgiving
and forgeltul where old slights are con,
cerned. II you nurse a senseless grudge
today, rou could be crowding out some
ot the sunshine In your llle.
CAPRICORN (O.C. ~.Jon. 1t) 11 you go
somewhere and hava a good 11me with
lriends loday, be willing to split lhe tab
- even It you only drink beer while your
pals drink champagne.
.
AQUARIUS (hn. zo.Fib. 18) e.rore
pushing youraelllo the llmll to achieve
an objective today, be absolulely certaln ll's whal you want There Is a very
good chance It might not be.
'
PISCES (Fib. 20-Mercii2Q) While talk ·
lngwllhatrlendtoday.youmlghthavea
c hance1o take a IIIW shols at an lndlvld·
ual you dislike. II your commen1s are
untrul~tul , you'll be caught
ARIES (Merch 21·Aprfl 10) A doml·.

neerlng , older Individual you're present·
ly Involved with mlg~l try to lake advanlege ol y~ur good nature today. This Is
the lype ol Individual you can't allow to
gelloo much leeway. •
TAURUS (AprH 20-M•r 20) You might
lind II necessary to form some lype ol
partnership today. This Is well and
gOod, provided your cohorl-l s~poSitlve
and nol peoalmlstlc.
GEMINI (Mer 21.June 20) It's lmporla~l you keep pac:e with your dulles and
responsibilities today , because, II
things begin to plla up, you're f\OIIIkely
lo work well, under pressure.
CANCER (June 21~1y 22) II you talk
about a subject or an Issue you're barely 1amlllar with today, and someone
sayo you're all wet, you won'tlook too
good trying 1o de~ ~r position.
LEO (Julr 21-A... 22) A finance meetlng wllh your mate could turn oul ra1her
frustrating todl)l. Both ol you might
. want to cut expenaes In areas that are
objectionable lo -the other .
VIRGO (A... 21-llpt. 22) A relatiOn•
lhlp with' a co-worker coold be a bit
touchy . todl)l. voo. mlght become 10
ove~y concerned about this Individual
doing what' s exj)ectad lhat you neolect
your own reeponSiblllllel.

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Olsraell .

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Page-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

(pttril!

~ecalls

Many at one time or another
have seen something that wasn't
there·a mirage perhaps, an optical illusion, but something tbat
left an eerie feeling long after the
incident.
That's what happened to Mr.
and Mrs. Mac Cottrill or 130
East Main St., Pomeroy. Cottrill
wrote about their sighting of
"The G:host Ship."

Tuesday, October 15, 199~

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

~ PCCCC

'sighting' of ghost ~bip

s1dc?" Not being able to answer her
own question, she went to bed.
Upon investigation the next morning, she said there was no sign of a
boat ever hav ing been there.
I was out of town that nigh t and
did not see the boat. Needless to
say, I heard all about it when I
returned.
Sometime later this summer
during one of our few rain s, I
walked to the front of the hoUse to
see if it was raining in the front
door. It was dark except for the
amber street light. I stepped 10 the
porch and behold, there moored
across the river, was a big boat lit
up along the deck-with illuminated
port holes along, or just above, the
water line.
I called to my wife aiid asked if
this is what she had seen earlier.
·"Yes/' she said, il was the same
big boat moored in the · same
place."
:
One of our grandsons, Allan
Orth of Carroll, a coollaid=bacf II
year old, was here for a visit. He
and my wife went to sit on the
porch to watch the big boat while I
went to set my binoculars. We
were determined to find out what
kind of a boat it was, and maybe,

Beat~~ the

why it was moored there.'
I trained the birloculw-s on it and
could see absolutely nothing. Then,
in his laid-back manner, Allan said
"That's not a boat, that's rain drops
hanging on the phone wires. My
wife informed him that the wires
were on this side of the river and
the big boat on the other side. I
could make out no outline or shape,
but I knew it was a boat because of
the lights.
Again Allan made his raindropson-the-wires remarks. We paid no
attention to him . Shortly my wife
said, "It looks like it's way upon
the bank!"
Then, - s uddenly~ I- could no
longer see lights across the river
and al most at the same time we
both realized what we were seeing
was an optical illusion. The wires
under the amber street lights were,
in fact, hanging heavy with rain drops, which again, under the
amber light, ,!av!l_the illusiog of
lights on a big boat across the river.
Tonight it is raining. When I
went to lock the fronnloor,- tllere
·across the river was the big boat.
This time, however, I paused to see
the rain drops on the wires.

We've cornea long way, Baby.
Remember back in the days of
the Innocent Age when inflation
wasn't part of the daily jargon?
The only time we used the word
was when. we-were talking about
By Mac Cottrill
balloons or bicycle tires. And
One warm rainy night early this
interest meant only that we had
su mmer my wife walked to the
interest in something like swimfront door and stepped out on the
min~, skating or music or we
didn t.
.
porch. There, moored across the
river, was a big boat lit up along
However, since we've come
the deck wi th illuminated port
such a long way ... ,,Baby....:.we
holes along, or just above , the
know about inflation IOday (do we
water line. She was not quite sure
evcr1 and we know about interest
what to make of it, and she went
lnnation is when the prices on
·everything keep going higher,
back into the house.
higher, higher and higher~and
Later when she went upstairs to
bed, she looked out the window
we've'learned that interest is something which you pay a lot of if
and saw that it had moved close to
the Ohio shore and seemed to be
you're borrowing and get much
less if you're on the other end of
"just sitting there." There was not a
sound and the whole thing was just
-the stick•-- -•
There
are,
of
course,
numerous
a bit spooky, she said.
factors contributing to innationShe asked herself "what's a boat
salaries of workers, higher utilities
doing moored on the West Virginia
and the cost of raw materials to
si de and later close to the Ohio
name only a few . Now that cost of
raw ·materials is a real catcher and
ismany times enhanced by a shortage. You remember, of course,
when there was a sugar shortage
and the "cost of raw materials"
really renected inflation. At that
time
the price we paid for every·
Community Calendar items Neville, pastor, invites the public.
THURSDAY
thing
containing•sugar went on a
appear two days before an event
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
und the day of that event. Items
LONG BOTTOM - The Faith Group of AA and AI Anon .will rampage-especially and unfortumust be received well in advance Full Gospel Church in Long Bot- meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the nately for those of us having a
to assure publication in the cal- tom will have a fundraiser for the Sacred Heart Catholic Church. For sweet 10olh--candy. Somewhere
along the way; sugar became more
cndnr.
church ori Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. information call992·5763.
plentiful, prices carne down ~ut the
The public is invited to attend.
POMEROY - The Preceptor price of a trip to the candy shop
TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Ladies Aux ilMIDDLEPORT - Revival ser- Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi didn't.
iury at Veterans Memorial Hospital vices will begin Tuesday and con- Sorority, will meet Thursday at 10 . Of course, there are a few tricks
wi ll meet Tuesday at 1:30 p.m . tinue through Sunday at the Mid- a.m. at the home of Jane Walton ~ '"the bottom. of the sack. You
There will be a white elephant sale dleport Church of the Nazarene. leave for the Circleville Pumpkin ....nay have not1ced that the can of
coffee .you pi~k up .under the
and refreshments will be served.
Rev. Donald R. Dunn will be the Festival.
assumpuon that 11 contams a pound
evangelist. Jim and· Cathy Sisson
POMEROY - The annual meet- will be the song evangelists. SerPOMEROY - There will be a isn' t really a pound-it can be
ing of the Meigs County Council . vices wi ll be held at 7 p.m. nightly dinner at the Senior Citizens Center somewhere around 11.5 ounces.
on Aging, Inc., will be held Tues- and 10:30 a.m. on Sunday. The in Pomeroy on Thursday from 5 to You learned your math well-a
day at 1 p.m. at the Meigs Multi- public is invited to attend.
6:30 p.m. Cost is $3 for chicken, pound is 16 ounces. Containers for
purpose Senior Center.
homemade noodles, mashed potaWEDNESDAY
toes and gravy, cole slaw, bisc uii
RUTLAND - Revival at the
POMEROY - The Middleport and bevemge. Pie will be available
Rutland Nazarene Church will be Literary Club will meet Wednesday at an extra charge. Junior and Rita
held Tuesday through Sunday at 7 at 1:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy Nurs- White and AI Windon and Bill
p.m. nighdy with Joe Jordan, evan- ing and Rehabilitation Center. Mrs. Ward will perform.
gelist. Pas tor Sam Basye invites the George Hackett will review "The
public.
Age of Power." Roll call is a 17th
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
or I8th century invention.
Springs Beuer Health Club wi ll
HARRISONVILLE - The Harmeet at the home of Phyllis Skinner
risonville Holiness Chapel, Route
SYRACUSE '- The Third on Thursday at I p.m. •
684, Pomeroy, will have revival Wednesday Homemakers Club will
Tuesday through Sunday at 7:30 meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
The garden saail has been clocked
p. m. nightly with Rev. David municipal building in Syracuse.
at
0.03 miles per hour.
Neville, evangelist. Rev . John
11

· The Past Councilor's Club pf.
Chester Council No, 323, Daughters of America, met recently wit))
Bulah Maxey presiding.
,
Mrs. Maxey read from the booi&lt;
various products may have of Corinthians and the Lord' s
remained the same size but many Prayer and Pledge to the America
times you're getting less inside. If flag were given in unison.
not, yo u are probably paying more.
Members answered roll 'all by
If yqu will forgive my earthy naming a flowering bush or tree. .
approach- I' m whispering ' nowMary Jo Barringer, secretarY:,
check out the toilet paper. You read the minqtes of the previOU$.
could be feeling quite elated with meeting and JoAnn Baum gave th~
'the· impression that the price is treasurer's report.
.
coming down. After all, you've
The club voted to have · its
gotten some pretty durned good Christmas party at Mason Family
byys QILU lately. _ llQ:w~verLcheck.:. Restaurant on Dec . II at which
ing out one of btirrecent purchases t ime 'there ~wll f be- a-$'3- gilt of t.p.-wc felt good about the pur- exchange.
·
Sadie Trussell. Charlotte Gran t
· chase until we found !hat the new
"batch"-the big bargain-has and Mary K. Holter served refresh' ·
only 230 2-ply sheets per roll while ments.
the-packag ing-from-!lll-earli.er-pur-~- Games were conducted by Marchase-the same brand- indicates cia I(eiier, JoAnn Baum and Lauro
the roll s each have 250 2-ply Mae Nice.
sheets. Not major, you say. Well,
Door prizes were won by BettYthat all depends- there are times Roush and Laura Mae Nice.
when that 20_extra sheets .could _.
Present were Pauline_Ridenol'r; ·
make allthedifferenceintheworld Betty Young, Ethel Orr, Inzy,
to your well being.
Newell, Betty Roush, Erma CleAnd you may have noticed the land, Charlolle Grant, Opal Hollon,
media attention given in the past Sadie Trussell, Goldie Frederick,
week or so to the factthaf many of Mary K. Holter, Margaret Ambergtoday's college students have more er, Laurd Mac Nice, Marcia Keller;
credit 'cards than classes. I don't Mary Jo Barringer, Bulah Maxcy
know why it wasn't'realized earlier and JoAnn Baum.
·
that this is a problem. It' s been
going on for years. As a result, the lation to force the credit card
young people-who, perhaps, look issuers to lower those rates. You
upon securing credit cards as a sta- will also notice that this just
tus symbol or a ma rk of hav ing doesn' t happen. Credit these days
reached adulthood-are finding is too easy to come by- it' s con,
themselves with debts that will siderably easier to get into debt.
haunt them for years as they try to than 10 get out. Small wonder that
make ends meet in the world 6f ·• the- bankruptcy route is becoming.
work. It's so easy to secure the more prevalent as the "way to go.:
plastic and use it-without fully Baby"..
.
realizing that payback day docs
Wh1le the philosophy of some·
come. And the rate of interesttoday may be "after all, you can' t
there's that word again-is atro- take. it with you:'-ther~·s really.
cious. Even though interest rates nothmg wrong w1th holdmg on10 ~:
continue to fall in most instances, dollar or two-you know, fo,r a:
· the credit ~ard rate just doesn' t. nuny day. Naturally, y_ou vc.
Eighteen arid one-half percent isn't learned that you can't beat the·
unusual. If you recall, there has interest or infl~tion raps, .but you
even been a lot of talk about legis- also know that mto each hfe some
min must fall" . Do keep smiling.

Still More Reasons
.fo]oin

·...I-

I

J

Will Your Kids Yield
To :9rugs?
'

Your kids will be offered drugs!
Don't pretend it won't happen. Odds are it will
. sooner than you expect.
What can you do to prepare your kids?
-· -- -'fe-aeh,-by-e:xample-;-standar-ds-of-r-ight--and wrong. ---Help children resist peer pressure by communicating
with them and giving them the facts.
-Learn about drugs and how to recognize
the first signs of drug abuse.
Educating our children to refuse drugs is 'the
surest way to fight the problem.
Talk to your kids.
J

The Daily Sentinel
I

,.

You want to get one of the free tote bags.
Your credit cards will be protected against l.oss or theft.
_
You want to "Cook Up A Country Christmas" with
. Jim Nabors.
L You spent the first 50 years learning to have a good time, and
now yo}-1 want to .practice.
L It's easy. (You may already qualify!)
'
The trips are affordable because they're based on cost alone.
.L You'll have fun. You-like to have a lot of choices.
L All your friends have already joined.
You don't want every minute to be planned for you.
~ - Mary_personally_plans every tril'. (and_~hf~ picky!)
'
.
You've
always wanted to go on a crutse.
...,___ You'll have fun.
You'll get to go Christmas shopping
in Williamsburg.
. .
.
L Afree Jeanie card would come in handy on a shopping ttip.
...I- If your spouse is a member, you automatically qualify.
You w~nt tQsee }'OUr pichue in the new~letter.
L And you'll have fun.

PEOPLEs·

any

2ND STREET

5TH STREET

MASON

NEW HAVEN

-·773-5514

882·2435

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY
EOUAL HOUSIHQ

LENOEA

~---------

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· Yol. 42, No. 115

. Copyrlghtod 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wedne•day, October 16, 1991

2S.Ct!on, 14 Peg• 25 cent•
A llultlmec!U Inc. Newopaper

)

Farm Bureau ~s- top-·
ution-..is U. S. 33
project to Athens
4

QUEEN CANDIDATES- Southern High
Schf?OI's homecO!JiiJ!g queeg w)~l be_announetd
durmg half-time festivities at Friday night's
game between Southern and So utbwestern. Tbe
queen ~andidates are left to right, seated front,

Dawn Shuler, Marcy HOI, Jody Hay~ Michelle
McCoy, and Amber Cumings, The. class allen,
dants are second row, left to right, Jenni Hill,
sophomore; Tracy Pickett, freshman; and
Megan Wolfe, junior.

Design officials confer with Pomeroy
revitalization group; no action taken
provide the committee wiih a list of
other sources for funding that may
be used toward revitalization,
including funding from the
Appalachian Regional Commission, Community Development
Block Grants and the Ohio Department of Natilral Resources.
No action was taken at Tuesday's meeting as oiher consultants
wiU be interViewed throu hout lhe .
coming weeks but Rafetd and
Jablonski a~eed to work with the
committee m establishing a list of
considerations desired for revital·
ization.
Another consultant interview is
planned for Oct 29 at 5:30 p.m. at
the Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
Attending the meeting in addi·
tion 10 Rafeld !llld Jablonski were
John Musser, Joe and Susan Clark,
Annie Chapman , Dr. Harold
Brown, An and Ada Nease, Vicki
Ferrell, Jim Anderson, Dianna
Lawson, Scott Dillon, Bruce Reed,
Larry Wehrung, Ellen Rought and
BiU Quickel.

Local -briefs-...., Thomas

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Stan
Fred Dailey, Director of the
Ohio Department of Agriculture
spoke to members and friends of'
the Meig&amp; County Farm Bureau
~tian whea the bureau beld its
annuaf'&lt;llnner meeting at Eastern
High School on Tuesday evening.
Also speaking to the group were
· Secretary Donna Davidson, Trea·
surer Jack W. Carsey, Pauline
Atkins of the Nominating Commit·
tee, Jeff Warner and Jim Barr of
Nationwide Insurance, and State
Trustee Glerui K: Lackey.
President Rex Shenefield
presided over 1he dinner meeting
and entertainment was provided by
Kendra Ward and Bob Bence.
The membership passed the following county, state and national
·resolutions at the meeting:
• encouraging Meigs County
officials to begin the consb'Uction ·
of the U.S. Route 33 four-lane
highway from Athens to Pomeroy
and on to the Ravenswood Bridge
in 1992;
• thai the seriousness of the drug
situation be fully realized and that
authorities be encouraged .to talce
i!nul~~
· n with
stronger eri!Oiceineii~sriffef
penalties;
- in support of le$islation .that
would mandate depos1ts on all bottles and cans;
_. encouraging .local officials to
find a more economical method of
trash disposal, encouraging more
research on accelerated compost·
ing, and encouraging recycling for
the area;
- supporting the farmer's right
to raise animals and fowls in confinement f!lr the purpose of profitable productivity;
- encouraging the search for an

'
SPEClAL GUEST • Fred Dailey, right, Director or the Ohio
Dep~rtment or Agriculture, was a special speaker at the annual
meeting or the Melgs County Farm Bureau Federation. The meet·
ing was held Tuesday night at Eastern High School. Pictured wltb
Dailey is Rex E. Shenefield, President of the group.
· .
equiJ!i~le ~o,IuUgn to ad~qu~~ly

fund sch~ls. Also, !1!3t ihe funding
of vocauonal education, espec1ally
in agricuttw:e. be put to the forefront of funding;
- that local OffiCials continue to
be encouraged ~o take corrective
act! on .()n the pverbanlc erosion
whtch. ts threatening the state highways m the county;
• ~o c_onllnue to oppose the
Iegahzauon of manJuana and in
support of a federal program to
fight thew~ on drug,s; . ·
. - «? conunue mo.mtonng all forelgn mvestments m the State of
Ohio and the U.S. and an immedi-

,. a.te }.tpdY to determine an equilable
hml! as to what this investment
should be·
• !hat ihe Federal Government
be ur~ed to institute a program of
crop msurance for fresh market
vegetable farmcn as they have for
com and wheat farmers:
• that the use of ethanol made
from farm crops be promoted as a
major energy source;
• that health care costs be
researched 10 tiy to find a method
to lower costs to the consumer,
costs being 100 great with or without hospitalization insurance;
. Continued on page 3

OSHA accuses Goodyear, 7 other
companies of safety violations

confirmed

APPLE GROVE, W.Va. (AP)
mitted because he was unaware of
- Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co. serious violation; proposed fine, new regulations.
officials will meet with federal $6,300. President Art Avalotis
"I don 't feel that I'm liable for
Powell'.s Super Valu was threatened by a possible major blaze
any of these violations," Maynard
WASHINGTON (AP) of~cials Thursday 10 discuss aile· didn't return a phone message
:ruesda&gt;: DIB,Ii!_when_ card_!Joard, boxt;s. arK! food Wlli!Jping_lllateriaJs_ __CJareoc_e_IhJ!m.a.s.....s;~.ying ·us_. gat!QI!!_ the company_o/oke ~~afety Tuesday.
m a fenced-m area at the rear of the s:tore caugfit fire:
"time to put these things behind rules at a construcu~n stte, a - ~Nitro Electric-Co:-Divisioll'Of- said. "I'm very disappointed that
Un ion Boiler of Nitro, accused of they have a regulation. that no one
.While flames shot high above U~e building, the fire was conus " will take his seat on the Goodyear spokesman S31d.
tamed to the open area and damag·e was minimal Pomeroy Fire
Supreme Court positioned to help
The U.S. Occ.u~atio~al ~afety II serious violations and one otherknew about that says I was supChief Danny Zirkle reponed.
'
.shape the nation's laws for decades and He~lth Adm1mstrauon 1ssued than-serious violation; proposed pose~ 10 police the safety of a proHe said !hat some smoke did get into the building, but fll'emen
to come. His contentious confmna- 57 CltaUons agamst Goodyear and fine, $8,575.
JCCt I m not mcharge of. •·
Employee Roger Adkins said
, were able to use exhaust fans to pullnt ouL
.
lion battle left President Bush and seven subcontractors from West
Maynard believed the general
Firemen were called to the scene about 9:30p.m. and were there
other supporters today demanding a Virginia, Kent~ and Pen~sylva- company President Pete Ferguson c.ontracto r, Goodyear, should be
for about an hour. Cause of the fll'e which was extinuuished with
change m th·e process.
ma after an Apnl mspecuon m was out' of town and unavailable hable fo( safety and health mainte- -water llliS notoeen aetem~ipoo~Zirlili'lsruct: - ---r-:=
''I'd like to thank-America," Mason Coun~y, the U.S. Labor for comment Tuesday.
nance.
-Aero Fab Inc. of HuntingiOn,
Thomas said after the Senate's 52· Departm~nt ~d TueSday..
-Jarvis, Downing &amp; Emch of
48 confirmation vote Tuesday
The CltaUons alleged Improper accused of five serious violations; Wh1:eling, accused of six serious
night.
·
housek~ing and use o~ ~olds proposed fine, $675.
violations; proposed fine, $8,550.
Company President Ronald
Meigs County Sheriff James M. :Soulsby reponed several inci"No matter how difficult or and poor employee u:a1~10g, the
Company President George Cardents of theft and vandalism have been inv~dgated !Jy his departpainful this is a time for healing in department S31d. The CtWions also Maynard said Tuesday he has roll was at Goodyear on Tuesday
on tjle matter.
\...\U IIIU C~ uoo t'"'fi,'ment.
,
our co~ntry, " he said. "We have to said the company left elevator requested a
He
said
Thursday, the department received· repons from Lyle Showalterput-these-things-behind-us-:-We- shafts open and unguarded:
.
have to go forward.' • The 43·yearThe de part~ent d1d~ t detail
and Arhe Hager on Vanderhoof Rond that their mailboxes were
damaged during the night·
old Thomas is likely 10 be sworn in · spec1fic allegations agamst each
A report from Owen Smith of Gold Ridge Road in Pomeroy statMonday and assume the court's comGpany.
ninth seat ·
oodyear spoke.s.IDan_.Bob _
ed that sometime on Friday, someono had tom through and darnaged his fence.
He wo~ confmnation only after Roberts saie!._th~_citations stemmed
one of the nastiest confirmation from a $17 m1U10n expansiOn at the
Eugene Davis of Rowe Road, Racine, reported that a battery had
been stOlen from his tractor.
.
fights in American history, one that Apple Grove plant, wh1.ch makes
his backers called ·"a search and resm for m1crowave dishes and
Monday, life department received a call from Riverview School
in Reedsville that someone had knock•ed the lock off the school.' s
destroy mission" by Thomas oppo- plast1c soda bottles.
.
ncnts
Roberts
S31d
Goodyear
officials
gas tank and stolen some gasoline. Thi~' incident is believed to have
occurred over the weekend.
F~Uowing hearings on lhe aile- were sur~rised at the charges
gation Thomas sexual!¥ harassed a because the company was mvolved
former aide, Bush sa1d today he only as property owner.
.
would present some proposals to
. Goodyear ~as c.harged wtth
change the conftrmation process.
~.me senous vwi~\Jo~s and one
- -· ·· -- .. Meigs County Sheriff James M; Sou.lsby·urges-parei!ts 10 remind
"I
'm
going
to
have
something
other·than-senous vtolabon, the
children \hat it is unlawful to throw co1n and other objects at movto
say.
I
owe
the
people
my
obserLabor
Department said. O~ficials
ing vehicles.
·
vations
and
more
importantly
some
proposed
a $22,950 fme agamst the
Soulsby reminda parents that they could be held liable for any
suggestions 10 improve the pro- company.
.
damage done by thelf children should .any vehicle be damaged by
cess," Bush said during a photo
Other compan1es ~~ged were:
the thrown objects.
·
·
session this morning. He said he
- Huntmgton P1pmg. Inc. ~f
A juvenile was apprehended Monda)'' night for throwing com at
would
be
worldng
on
his
proposals
Huntmgton,
accused of mne sencars on Stat~ Route 124 near Sycamore Grove. He will be cited to
and
present
them
"fairly
soon."
·
ous.
v1ola~on:;
.and one other-thru)Meigs County Juvenile Coun.
"There's general agreement senous vJolatton; proposed fme,
around the country and certainly 'in SI5,775.
the Senate that the present process
I;lookkeeper Gerry Young said
KNOPP HONORED • Otla Knopp, outgoing attendance om- ·
is not fair,'' Bush said.
company Pres1dent Sam H~ was
cer for the Melp County Board of Education, was honored with a ·
•''We definitely have to change out of the office and unavadable
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that the 1981
reception at the board's offlet in Pomeroy on Tuesday afternoon •.
the process," Sen. John Breaux of for comment :rues~y . .
Oldsmobile reported stolen Friday nigh 1 from the Racine Hydro
Pictured as Knopp is presented with a gift from friends are, l·r .'
- Avalous Pamttng Co. of
Louisiana · one of II Democrats
Plant was recovered Sunday at the Clifford Hill Farm.
Mrs. Otis (Edna) Knopp, Mr. Knopp and John Riebel, County :
who voted' in favor of the Thomas Verona, Pa., accused of seven seri·
Superintendent or Schools.
·
nomination, 10!d CBS IOday.
ous violations .and one olher-than-

Sheriff discourages p,ranks

Stolen Oldsmobile recovered

MEMBER F.D.I.C.
WITHDRAWAL OF COs and IRAs.

•

oJ

To be eligible, members must maintain a $10,000 minimum balance In a Peoples Bank savings account, CD, IRA, or
combinatkm thereof. Peoples Choice~ Choice flnandal bencflts1 and choice trilvcl opporlunitil"S for people 50 and over.
Mary Fowlor at (3()1) 675-1121 for 1110re informal!on.

675-1121

I

Thefts, vandalism in:vestigated ·

. __ t __Ba.nking _Can Be. Fun! .._
POINT PLEASANT

Low tonight in mid30s. Thursday, sunny..
High in mid·60s.

PageS .

Cause offire not yet determined

PEOPLES CHOICE

'

4-D, Q-S

r----

,

2212 JACKSON AVENUE

Pick 3: 842
Pick 4: 9306
Cards: Q-H, 9-C,

By JULIE E. DILLON
downtown business plan according
Sentinel News Starr
to considerations desired by the
Blake. Rafeld and Robert L. committee. The cost of this plan
Jablonski, both of Columbus and would be relative to those coDSider·
re p~e s7 ntatives for Poggemeyer _ ati~ns .an~ other ideas regarding
Des1gn. Group, spo!Ce to members rev1talizauon. A consultant interof. Pomeroy's Revitalization Com- viewed previou~ly,, )ly the cornmitmJttee and other Pomeroy residents tee stated such a plan wouta ·cilst
on Tuesday evening.
approximately '$10,000.
Poggemeyer Design Group is an
Rafeld and Jablonski stated the
architectural, en~ineerinl! and plan- committee, before progressing any
nmg fmn based m Bowling_Green. further, should establish a desired
John Musser, chairman for the plan of what is to be accomplished
committee, organized the meeting by revitalization. They presented
to allow ~ommittee ~einbers .lhe several project;s alreadY ~or:npleted
opportunl!y to gam mformauon or currently ~mg executed m other
about services offered by Pogge· · communities to inform the commitmeyer Design Group.
tee of services they offer.
The commiuee is in the process
When creating a downtown
of interviewing consultants that business plan, Poggemeyer Design ·
could provide a downiOwn business ·Group expedites all necessary proplan. Completion of this plan is 1:edures. 1'11!:Y provide the commu·
required before application may be nity with market surveys for both
made to receive grant monies avail- shoppers and merchants as well as
able from the State of Ohio for perform st~dies on parking, s10re
revitalization.
l'ronts, streetscapes, transnortation
The representatives stated the !'md traffic patterns. According 10
design group could complete the Hafeld and Jablonski, they can also

· -- -- - - --

Ohio Lottery _

Hoople l~kes
- Washington
over Cal

Ghristmqsparty:

Bend....

by Bob Hoeflich

to hold·

•

,.,
'

•

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