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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

~---------

---·-·

--

-~--

-- ··---.

--~

---

· 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

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4-D, Q-S

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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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commentary

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Page-:2-The DI!IIY Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wedne~1day, October .16, 1991
•

The Daily Sentinel
"DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~~1'1JLTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubUsber
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and

the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lhan 300
words long. All Ieners are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address 111d lclephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. LetlcJS
.-should be in good.wte, addressing issues, 110.1 )lCII!!Mii!ies.

Applicants for energy credit
decline; reason uncertain
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press W~iter
. COLUMBUS - The number of elderly and disabled who tried to get
into a state program lhat helps pay heating bills dropped by more lhan half
dver the past 10 years, but not necessarily because they no longer needed
tjle help.
. The likely reason, state officials say, is that people who would have
lleen eligible for benefits under income levels set in 1979 now make too
rriuch money to qualify. The income requirements haven't changed since
then.
. Applications for the Ohio Energy Credit Program administered by the
Ohio Department of Taxation decreased from 325,366 in the 1981-82
. w,inter heating season to 148,604 in 1989-90. The heating season runs
' from November through March.
: The cost of the program declined.over those years, also by more than
lialf. The program cost the slate $37.7 million in 1981-82. In 1989-90, it
c;Pst $16 million.
·
·, The taxation d~partment said the decrease in program spending can be
attributed to a warmer-than-normal winter, moderating utility rales and a
~eclining number of recipients.
. A preliminary department report for the winter of 1990-91 showed the
department processed 133,490 applications as of March 19. or that num~r. 115,039 were apProved.
. , "There are various reasons why over 18,451 applications were not
approved. Applicants may not have met eligibility requirements, may
have wilhdrawn from the progmm volun!arily, or may be deceased," the
a'aency said in an annual report.
. When the Energy Credit Program was made a permanent part of state
la)W in 1979, recipients could earn no more than $9,000 a year. In addition, they had to be at least 65 years of age or be permanen~y and lOtally
diSabled.
.', The program was established on a Iemporary basis in 1977 with lower ·
eligibility levels.
· · The $9,000 income cap has remained constant during a decade in
w~ich recipients on ftxed incomes have seen cost-of-living increases that
pushed them over that cap, making lhem ineligible.
·
· In contrast, a fedemlly funded heating ald program designed to help
lo)l'·incOiile residents regardless of age adjusts income requirements each

Y:~iclcy Mroczek, administrator of the federal Home Energy Assislance

WASHINGTON- It's a tossup who was more of a shopaholic,
Imelda Marcos of the Philippines
or Elena Ceausescu of Romania.
But when it comes to unmitigated
evil and unrelenting shrewishness,
Elena wins the contest, shoes
down.
During a visit we made to
Romania, the only good thing anyone could say about the late dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, who froze
and starved his people to death,
was that he was better than his
wife. Some in Romania arc rewriting history to say that of the two
Ceausesc.us wjm were executed on
Christmas Day 1989, Elena was the
diabolical fon:e behind the throne.
Dozens of times she urged her
husband to murder or maim some
of his ~oscst colleag ues an·d
friends, often after she manufactured insults that they allegedly had
said about her husband.
Elena nagged Nicolaeinto making her his first deputy prime minister, and then appointed herself
head of the counter-intelligence
section of the Romanian secret service so she could listen to wirelaps.
She particularly liked !apes of love-

· Berry's World

drcn - at no additional cost to the
state.
House Bill !55 also creates a
portable day care certificate program that will enable families to
obiain care from any licensed or
ccrtiricd child care provider,
including adult relatives. A special
division of child day care within
the Ohio Department of Human
Services is created to inspect and
license day care providers for safety and compliance wilh minimum
standards. The legislation also
empowers the Ohio Department of
Educ_ation to inspect and license
public and private schools, allowing poor children to be served in
preschool and latchkey programs.
Finally, it streamlines the paperwork process for regulating day
care, enabling parents to fill out
one app li cation an d ch:ld-carc
providers to complete one form for
government reimburseme nt. The
Child Ca re Ass is tance Act has

L.et's clean up campaign
..

~0 8~0NOE JOK.t.'S

In 1859, abolitionist John Brown led a group of about 20 men in a raid
on Harper's Ferry.
·
In 1888, playwright Eugene O'Neill was born in New York City.
In 1916, 75 years ago, Margaret Sanger opened lhe filllt birth control
clinic, in New York City.
In 1943, Chicago Mayor Edward J. Kelly snipped a red, white and blue
ribbon to open the city's new subway system.
·
In 1946, 10 Nazi war criminals condemned dwing the Nuremberg Irials were hanged.
.
In 1957, Britain's Queen Elizabeth 11 and Prince Philip arrived in Virginia 10 begin a tour of the United States ,
In 1964, China became the world's fifth nuclear power as it delonated
its first atomic bomb.

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plate and given him - not a ticket,
but an cscon.
Back home, folks no doubt were
glad to hear their representative
commanded such respect. Now, a
quarter-century -later, McDonald
makes an honest living as a lobbyist - and it's a good thing, because
fo lks in Michigan and everywhere
arc furious with Congress . The
House and its repute have fallen ill .
Talk-radio hosts and li steners
rage about how .we arc struggl ing
to make an hon es t livin g while
me mbers of Congress live in a
world of pri vilcge and perks - and
they arc right. Citizens from
Brooklyn to 'Bcvc,rly Hills arc
shouting: ~ ·rrow 'da bums out!"
- and they are ri ght.
We've seen members use the
House bank to bounce checks like
the Globetrotters bounce bas~et ­
balls- 134 members wrote 581

Today in historY---~----------By The A850Ciated Press

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Today is Wednesday, OcL 16, the 289th day of 1991. There arc 76
days left in the year.
Today's Highlighl in History:
On Oct. 16, 1962, the Cuban missile crisis began as President Kennedy
· was informed by bls aides that reconnaissance photographs had revealed
the presence of missile bases in Cuba.
On this date:
In 1793, Queen Marie Antoineue of France was beheaded.
In 1846, dentist William T. Monon demonstrated the effectiveness of
ether as an anesthetic by administering it to a patient undergoing jaw
surgery before an audience of doctors in Basion.

finartci~g

rubber checks for more than S I,()()()
each; 24 members regularly overdrew their accounts by m6re than
SI,OOO - EVERY MONTH! The•1
help t'hcm sclvcs to free lunches:
250 members owe the Hous·~
Rcslaumnt $300,000 in unpaid bills
dating back to 1986. And of course:,
the House Sergeant at Arms ha,s
fixed their parking tickets all over
town.
So talk-radio hosts and callers
arc demanding tenn limitations for
Congress. And that's where tht:y
arc wrong. Tern\ limitations will
not make represcnlativcs honest .. _
members who no longer have 10
answer to us will turn their lameduck days into great-big-come-andget-it days.
If we really want to get rid of
the incumbents, we have but one
sensible course of aciion: We must
level the playing field that has
given incumbents such an edge that
98 percent of them win every time
they run. We must make sure that
challengers an d incumbents have
the same amount of mon ey to
spend . And we must make sure
that, once in office; they arc not out
with_I!n c~ps, soliciting campa.n.gn
contnbuuons from th e spec: 1al
interests whose activities are re:gulatcd by the commitlees on which
they serve.
1ust as we spend money to l:.eep
ihe Capitol dome shined and. its
offices staffed, so too should we
consider the cost of our elections as
just another cost of operating a

Jack McDonald still likes 10 talk
of the good old days, in the late
'60s, when he wore his n~w ti~c of
"Congressman" as a badge or
honor and folks back in Michigan
viewed his Washington workplace
as a House or high-repute.
The Republican raconteur tells
of the night he and fell ow Rep.
Guy Vander Jagt were late for a
reception across town at the Shoreham Hotel. But not to worry,
· McDonald said he knew a shortcut
- "just follow me." He sped off
- the wrong way down a one-way
street.
Vander Jagt stopped just in time
to cvad~ the motorcycle cop who
tore afte r McDonald . Eventually,
Vander Jagt made it to the Shoreham Io find McDonald already
inside, schmoozing, Scotch in
hand, regaling all about how the
cop had spotted his congressional

passed both houses of the legislature wilh overwhelming, bipartisan
suppen.
Human decency says we should
not tum our backs on children who
arc unable to help themselves. Selfinteres t says we cannot afford to
because ignoring their needs imperils not only their futures but our .
own, as well. Nothing short of the
quality of the future leadclllhip of
our slate and nation - tomorrow's
teachers, doctors and presidents - is·
at stake. We have a long way to go
but Ohio government is committed
to putting Ohio children first.
· As always, please feel free to
call or write me, State Senator Jan
Mic hael Long, if you have any
qucs~on s or comments about these
or any other issues My number is
(614)466-8156, and my address is
the Siatchousc, Columbus Ohio,
43215.

By Mar(in Schram
democracy. Ellen Miller of the
Center for Responsible Politics and
Randy Kehl er of the Working
Group on Elec toral Democracy
estimate thm it will cost $500 million per year to have genuine "citizen-fi nanced" campaigns for the
Senate, f10u sc and president financed b )' tax revenues. (The:
funds would pay for general elec-tions and primaries; tandidates
would become eligible for public
funding by uccumulating a specified number or very small contribu-·
tions, $10 or less, to show broad·
comiJlunity support and discourage'
frivOlous candidacies.)
.
Can we afford that? Consider
au thor Philip M. Stern's notable
comparison : The Pentagon spent'
just und er S200 million in fiscal
1990 on military marching bands. .
It all comes down to priorities..
Right now, we pay through another
channel- political aciion committees. America's business PACs
alone gave candidates for Congress ·
$109 million in 1990; labor PACs
ga~e S37 million. Russell Long ..
former Senate Finance Committee ·
chairman, once ~ut that into perspective: ' ~The diStinction between
a large campaign contribution and ·
a bribe is almost a hairline's differ-

ence."
So let's slOp splitting hairs: The
case for citizen financing is acase
that beats Ihe band.

PA.

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IMansfield I 66' I~.

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•I Columbus I 67' I

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.....-.-Lo·cal bt:iejs-.---1 Financial
Three fined in Middleport court

W. VA.

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Showets T·storms Raio 1'/Ufrles

Snow

Via ASSJ:JcitJled Press GraptlcsNet

Three were !med and s1x others forfeited bonds in the court or
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday nighL
·
Fmed $10 only w1th no costs were James R. Buskirk of Middleport, Juanita, A: Bryant or Langsville, and Charles E. Bitonti, Gallipolis, all charged with expired registration.
·
ice
Suony Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
Forfeiting bonds were Jeffrey Clary, Bradenton, Fla., $210, drivC1991 Accu-Weather, Inc.
ing under suspension and $60, running a stop sign; James A. Richmond,, Middl~port, ~53, speeding; Douglas J. Johnson, Racine, $52.
speedmg; Vtcky 0 Day, Columbus, $56, speedmg; V1k1 Payne,
f- Mlddleport, .$210, assault; Barbara J. Slahl, Pomeroy, $50; speedExtended forecast
mg.
Friday through Sunday:
Patty Gcrlack of New Haven, W. Va. entered a plea of innocent
Fair through the period. Warm
to·charges or assault and her case was Iransferrect Io Meigs County
with highs 65-70 north and 70-75
Coun.
·
south. Lows in the 40s.
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------Weather---....-South-Central Ohio
Tonight, clear. Low 30-35.
Thursday, sunny and much
warmer. High in tHe mid-60s.

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5 forfeit bonds

--Area
deaths-Verlin Howery

Five forfeited bonds in the court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler Tuesday nighL Forfeiting were Michelle Taylor, Pomeroy,
$49, speeding; Damon Gibbs, Pomeroy, $63, driving under suspension; Priscilla Bmgg, George10wn, Ky., $49, speeding; Alfred Duff,
Athens, $63, expired registration; Richard Gilmore, Pomeroy, $63,
no valid driver's license.

Freda Blake

Verlin W. Howery, 77, of 30468
State Route 143 in Albany (Carpenter). died unexpectedly on
Tuesday, October 15, 1991 at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy.
He was born in Carpenter, the
son of Ihe late Shirley and Claire
Hull Howery. He was an equipment operator, retired from Conrail
Railroad, New York Central Railroad and Penn Central Railroad.
He is survived by a daughter,
Mrs. Ralph (Rea) Chapman. St.
Henry, Ohio; a son, Rodney (Marilyn) Howery of Albany; eight
grandchildren; and eight greatgrandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded irt death by a son, Ray, and a
brother, Eddie Lou Howery.
Services will be held on Friday
at 2 p.m. at Bigony-Jordan Funeral
Home in Albany with Roy W.
Carter officiating. Burial will be in
Wells Cemetery in Pageville.
Friends may call at the funeml
home on Thursday from 6 p.m. to 9
p.m.

Freda. Marie Blake, 85, of 2423
Blake Road, Coolville, died early
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1991 , at the
Arcadia Nursing Home, Coolville,
following an extended illness.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by the White Funeral
Home. Coolville.

Band to perform
. The Meigs High School Marching Band will attend the band festival in Point Pleasant, W.Va., on
Saturday. There are 15 bands competing in the event at Saunders
Field from II a.m. to 5 f.m .
The Meigs Band wil perform at
2!45 p.m. and lhe public is invited
to attend and enjoy the "Battle of
the Bands" festival. A band boosters award will be presented.
The cost of admission is $4 for
adults and $2.50 for students.
Homecomin'g
The St. Paul United Melhodist
Church in Tuppers Plains will
observe its annual homecoming on
Sunday. Sunday school is a 9 a.m.
and worship is at 10 a.m. with Rev.
Sharon Hausman. There will be a
carry-in dinner at 12:30 p.m. and
an afternoon sing at 2 p.m. with the
Fellowship Baptist Trio from Vienna, W.Va. There will also be a
youth trio from SL Paul. The public
is invited to attend.
Revival
Revival at the Old Bethel Free
Will Baptist Church, Route 7 and
Story's Run Road, soulh of Mid- ·
dl epo rt, will be held Monday
through Oct. 26 at 7:30p.m. nightly with Marvin Markin, evangelist.
There will be also be special

Vandalism reported
Two reports of vandalism overnight Tuesday are under invcsti. gation by Middleport Police. Both occurred on South Second
Avenue.
•
Diane Schartiger or 650 South Second and William Ward of 770
South Second reported Wednesday morning that the rear windows
of their vehicles parked on the street had been broken out overnight.

Dan Levingston

Dan LevingslOn, 53, of Rudand,
died early Wednesday, October 16,
1991. He was the owner of Pizza
Dan's in Rutland.
Arrangements arc under the
direction of Birchfield Funeral
Home in Ru~and,

Russell Daugherty
Russell Green Daugherty, 71, of
821 Westview Drive, Belpre, died
early Wednesday, OcL 16, 1991, at
his home following an extended illness.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by the White-Ethridge
Funeral Home in Belpre.

Meigs announcem~nts -

-

Sen. Jan M. Long

The Dally SenUoei-Page

singing.
AA meeting planned
There will be an Alcoholic's
Annonymous meeting on Saturday
at 1 p.m. at the Carmel United
Methodist Church on Cannel Road.
Call 949-2952 for information.
Homecoming slated
.
Homecoming services will be
scheduled at Reedsville United
Methodist Church on Sunday.
Potluck dinner will ,begin at 12:45
p.m., and special singing is planned
for the afternoon. Rev. Charles
Eaton, Pastor, will deliver a special
message. The public is invited to
attend.
Dance scheduled
Middleport Arts Council will
sponsor a date on Sunday from 6
p.m. to 10 p.m. at the Middleport
American Legion Hall . George
Hall will provide the music.
Tickets for the dance must be
purchased by Thursday, and are
available at Mick's Barber Shop in
Pomeroy, King's Servistar Hardware in Middlepon or by conlacting Mary Wise at 992-2675. Tickets are $28 per couple.

Farm...

Continued rrom page I

- that the State Board of Educalion membe!ll not be appointed but
continue to be elecled by the voters;
- the Multiflora Rose not be
placed on the noxious weed list
because of the legal consequences
it would place on the landowners;
- supporting legislalion thal
would enable the Corps or Engineers to stabilize and secure critically eroding areas along the Ohio
River to reduce the amount or soil
lost and to take corrective action on
the river bank erosion' which is
threatening to erode lhe highways;
- in support of a farm program
with a supply and demand concept
but with a supply and costs production floor price;
- that the bureau continue to
work through legislators to give the
President of the United States the
line veto;
- to encourage research and the
use of solar energy and other technologies so that we arc not dependent on any oil source;
- that the Federal Government
be mandated to balance the budget
by reducing the size of govern ment, unn ecessary increases, or
whaiever is presently needed;
. : to oppose the American Herilage Trust Fund now being consid·
ered in Congress. This is an Ameri·
can Government Land Acquisition
Program that allows government
agencies, local, state and federal,
the authority to take the land without the landowner' s consent. All
those agencies must do is to condemn the farmer's or rancher's
land lO gain the land.
Elected as truslees for the organiza~on for three-year tenns were:
Edward Hoi tcr, Pomeroy; George .
Holler, Racine; David King,

Pomeroy; and Norman Will, Rutland.
Elected as a delegate 10 the 1992
State Convention was George
Holter of Racine. Donna Davidson
of Middleport was named convcnLion alternate.

OSHA
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Continued from page 1
and unavailable for comment, an
employee said.
-Abell Elevator Iittcmational
Inc. of Louisville, Ky., accused of
three serious -violations; proposed
fine, $4,675.
Company President Kent Lloyd
didn't return a phone message left
Tuesday with a receptionist who
identified herself only as Diane.
-A.C . Dclovade Co . of
McMurray, Pa., accused of. three
serious violations; proposed fine,
$5 525. A Pennsylvania directory
as;is1ance operator said Tuesday
there was no listing for such a company in McMurray or lhe surround·
ing area.
Lightning cannot occur without
thunder, although the thunder may
be too far away to be heard.

Middleport Village Cou ncil
showed a balance of $457,149.73
in all funds at the end of September, according to the report of
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck at Monday night's meeting of Council.
Receipts for the mqnth tolaled
'8507,96 1.60 while disbursements
were $121,061.38.
Balance in th e general fund was
$24,250.71 wit~ receipts of
$72,859.92 and disbursements of ·
$29,898.60. The report showed disbu(sements of $19,415.56 from lhe
safety·fund (police) and $2,200.85
from the income laX fund with no
receipts and no balance in either
fund indicateil. ·
'!;he street maintenance fund had
a deficit balance of $3 I ,598.29
with receipts of $6,150.69, and disburscmenls of $8,398 .34. Also
showing a deficit balance was the
mini-golf fund of $8,904.86 with
receipts of $355 and disbursements
of $1 ,567.30.

Hospital n~ws
Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS None.
TUESDAY DICHARGES •
Nick Blackburn, Linda Eblin, Beatrice Williamson, Harold Jeffers and
Sarah McCarty .
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Oct I 5 - Jean
Davis, Carolyn Goody, Brillny
Gree n, Mrs. Keith Jon es and
daughter, Autumn Phillips, Cheryal
Webb, Marie Webb, Delores Wilhelm.
Births, Oct I5 - Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Ross, of Patriot, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs . Dale Teaford, of
Racine, a daughter.

LASTICSTOR
WINDOW KITS
PLASTIC STORM
DOOR KITS
WEATHER
STRIPPING
ADHESIVE FOAM
TAPE
WARP'S FLEX-0GLASS

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fire truck fund balance- ·
and the new truck is expected within the next few weeks- has a
a nee of $382,905.33 / with
$383,374.14 in receipts from the
sale of bonds, and $560.38 in di~­
burscments from the fund.
•
The balance of the economie
dcvelopme11t fund stands at
$4,16 1.96 with $7891.95 in
receipts and $782.13 in disbursements.•
Other balances, receipts and ~7
bursemcnts. listed respectively fp!.
the various ·funds are ODNit
Waterways safety, $1,000 deficll
with no receipts nor disbursementa;
public transporlation, $11,294.1t
with receipts of $6,580.30 and dmbursements of $12,045.38.
· ''
Water system improvemen,t,
$37,209.55 with no receipts not
disbursements; water funit,
$39,803.42 with receipts bf
$14,021.18 and disbursements!'(
$18,558 .91; sanitary sew_eJ.:
$6,208.48 with receipts of $11,CM.I
and disbursements of $9,014.~
swimming pool, deficit balance~
S32,382.46 with receipts of
$115.50 and disbursements o,f
·$3,778.25.
• -:
Cemetery, deficit balance or
$11,062.44 with receipts of
$1,324.15 and disbursements bf
$3,778.26; water meter trustSj
$20,282.98 with receipts or S7b.
and disbursements or $390; A~ ,
Council, deficit balance o~
S1,076.98 with no receipts and disbursements of $481.309; ARC
Housing, deficit balance Qf
$13,604.97 with no receipts alld
disbursements of $1,980:79.
Iss ue 2 deficit balance df
$2 ,937.05 with no receipts nor dis'
burscments; Revolving Loan fund,
$39,023.42 with receipts o(
$9 17.45 and no disbursements; and
refuse fund, $697.72 balance with,
S9 ,066.32 in receipts, and $8.61'3
in disbursements.
·"'
The longest running show if
Broadway history was "A Chorus'
Line," which ran for nearly ~5,
ycalll with 6,137 performances. _'" ,
SPRING VAllfY
446 4524

CI~EMA

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PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON. W;V.

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SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By CPrrlor or Motor Route
One Wook .... ...................... ................. Sl.60
One Manl.h ....................... ..................l6 .95
One Ycar.................................... _ ,..$83.20
StNGLECOPY
PRICE '
Dnily.......... ...... ......... ....... ............. 25 Ccnc.

or may rcmiL in 11dvan~ direct. W The
CaUipulia Dally Tribuna on a 3.6 or 12
each wiX!k.

20°AJ

No i ub anip tionll by moil permitted tn

areal whore home carrier torvicc i•
availllblo.
MaiiS~o~b•erlpUon•
ln~ido Galli• County

·

t3 Wccb.... ......... .............. ............. $21.84
26 w...~ct ........ ,.... ............................. f43. te
52 WI)Cb .... .....:................................ ~.78
•

Out.ahJo GaUl• County

ts w..~.....,................................ ..... l23.40

26 Wecb .... ......... ............. ........ ...... .. l&lt;!5.50
52 Wecb ............. ......................... :...~.40

Prescription Sh,op
992-6669 '

IIOITH SECOND

1\UDDLIPOIT, OHIO

'

Can you.Sinive·- --

____ . __ __

ofcollege?

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The ultimate test in highe~ education
' '
---~
:
comes when iiS time to p~ tuition bills.To Name
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·
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;,; .,. ia;,k o,;;G".ici,;,;. o&amp;~ i95i.M~rt~~- ooi3il.19,j--'
C 1991 BA NCONF. CORP0/«1101'1
~,----;c-c--=-----:-- ·

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\,
\

"•
west.
',
Freeze warnings were ill effect'
in Indiana and Ohio. Farther north,
across the Plains, temperatures ,
were much milder, but ....,inds gust- •
ing to 70 mph were expected to;
kick up clOI!~ gf dl!$1 in Wyoming :
and Montana. .
. , l
Highs were forecast in the 40s ,
in the northern Great Lakes region, l
northern New England and partS of •
the Midwest: the 50s anCI60s in the,
mid-Atlantic states; the 80s &amp;Cross ~
most of the So'uth; the 90s in much ;
'br the Southwest; and ·more than :
I00 in the California and Arizona ;
deserts,
'

by Village o Middleport

f.

.. ~

~

'

By The' A850Cla)ed Press
· · em Ohio communities might even system spread rain from Maine to
Freeze ":arnin~s. were pos~ for . touch 70 degrees. ·
Massac~usetts.
western Oh10 tontght as the NanonThis warmth ·will continue inlO - Rain also fell on parts of the
al Weather Service predicted clear-' the weekend and the only chll!lce of mid-Atlantic region, and' frost
ing skies 'and lows in .the mid-20s. . rain will be early Friday as a cold warnings were issued in the MidFrost is likely in the central part of front slips throti~h lhe slate.
west. In the West and Soulh, warm
the state while temperatures in
The record htgh temperature for weather ani! generally clear skies
eastern Ohio were expected to this date-at the Columbus weather prevailed.
·
remain above freezing.
station w.as 90 degrees in ·1897.
Fabian, which drenched Cuba
A feiv showers possibly mixed . The record low was 24 in 1939. . , on Tuesday, was expected to :get no
with sleet will linger in the east
Sunrise 'this morning was at ' closer to Florida than 7fi miles
lOnight and into early Wednesday 7:41 a.m. Sunset will be at .6:53 today, but forecasters said it could
morning over the ·northeast comer p.m.
'
bring up to 5 inches of rain 10 lhe
of the slale.
.
Around the nation
lower half of the s&amp;tc.
.
Warmer temperalures
return
Tropical Stonm Fabian dumped
Rain was also forecast in Ore.
to Ohio on Thursday· wit\! highs heavy rain on so uthern Florida gon and Washington as a CQ!d front
r~aching into the 60s. Some west- early today, while another storm churned across the Pacific North-

•
IToledo I 67' I

'

By Jack Anders,on
and Dale Van Atta

income ranges have difficulty
locating safe, reliable child care,
poor Ohio families face special
problems. As a consequence, many
of these families - especially single-parent ones - are being forced
to forego jobs and educational
opportunities that could lead to self
supperting futures.
The Ohio General Assembly is
taking action. Under the "Child
Care Assistance Act" (House Bill
155), Ohio is expected to atiract
million s of federal child care
mon ies which will benefit thou-.
sands of low-income Ohio families.
By placing Ohio law in compliance
with new federal rules, this legislation wi ll free up nearly $41 million
in new federal child care grant
monies this year. Currcn~y. fewer
than 15,000 of an estimated
300,000 youngsters in poor working families receive child care aid.
The new monies will provide
day care for another 20,000 chi!-

- -.

.

MICH.

Legislature helps working poor escape cycle

Oh,lp .

Freeze Warni_ngs ·posted-~g~in__tonig~t:

Thursday, Oct;17
Accu-We;t.ther- iorOO!S! for daytime conditions and high iemj)eratures

making by top Romanian leaders, escus.
.
or even ·passionate encounters of
Elena's inferiority caused her to
her own daughter Zoia or her son compensate. She decided to pose as
Nicu.
,
a gifted scientist and had Nicolae
Elena spewed insults on subor- name her the head of the Bucharest
dinates, bqlj·She expected everyone Insiitute of Chemical Research. unhappy. Elena wanted the Nobel
to pratse hc'f for her beauty and Real Romanian scientists were Prize for cheq~i,stry. She once pratintelligcncc, both of which were forced to write papers and books tied to a friend, "So many people
marginal. Mother Natu-re had not and put her name on !hem . Elena, all over the world are so grateful
been kind to Elena, so she sought who flunked out of school at 10, for my scientifil; effort. I feel lhat.
solace fn clothes and jewelry. Her "wrote" so much that !here was a the sc.ientific mind I was blessed
closet put Imelda's 10 shame.
noticeable decline in the published with shouldn't be used just for the
Diamonds were Elena's best output of top Romanian scientists well.'being of my own couniry but
friend. A Romanian girl, on for a decade, at least under their for !dl mankind. I should invent
instructions from Elena, wooed and own fllll1les.
somc:thing that will last fotever,
wed Central African Republic dieAs the "author" of the research, like fire or nuclear energy."
tator Jean-Bedel Bokassa in the Elena was ignorant of basic chcmHer greatest sin was not plagiamid· I 970s so Elena could have istry. When she refused to approve rism, posttlljng or even overspe~dacccss to Bokassa 's diamond purchases for the Institute for ing. It was her lack of human.tty.
mines. The girl acted as an inter- Chemical Research, lhe scientists Many believe she loved only NICo- .
mediary arranging for the Ceauses, would get around her by listing lhc lae und her dogs. When her people
..cus to invesrin-diamond·minennd-chemical-supplies-thcy·needed-by~complained- thal:'they-were swymg-~
put the profits in Swiss bank their. technical names. Rather than and freezing, she would belittle
accounts.
admtt she dcdn't know what they thern: "The worms! They never
When imported diamonds were were buying, Elena would approve have: enough."
not enough for Elena, sliepestercd the purchases. •
BETTER ACCOMMODANicolae in.to making synthetic diaWhen she went on state visits, TIONS - Hostage Terry Andermonds for her. Romanian intelli- she would needle foreign universi- son, in his videotaped message~gc ncc agents stole synthetic dia-. tics into giving her honorary doc- licr this month, reported that h1s
mond technology from the United torate degrees. She was even toast- living conditions were good. If
States and set up a factory outside ed at the Corter White House for Anderson .was speaking frankly,
of Bucharest to supply the Ceaus- her scientific prowess. Yet she was then times have changed. In the
pa5;t, Western hostages have been
beaten mercilessly. Anderson himself became so frustrated at one
. point !hat he beat his head against .
the wall until blood streamed down
his: face. And the captured CIA static'n chief William Buckley was
tortured so savagely that it induced
...-_ a Jialal heart attack. Who is respon. . _ sible for the abuse? The terrorists
arc trained and financed by Iran.
'rlheir orders are relayed to
Lebanon from the "Office of Suppmt for Lebanon" in the Revolutionary Guards headquarters in
Teheran.
MINI-EDITORIAL- Presid&lt;:nt Bush has handed out plenty of
a::nbassadorships as gifis to big
p•~litical donors who lmow next 10
nothing about the countries where
they arc assigned. But Bush has
proved that he knows when diplomacy must take precedence over
clonations. He appointed a Democrat, Robert Strauss, as his ambassador to the Soviet Union, and he is
now appointing career foreign service officers as ambassadolll to the
Baltic nations. It will boost morale
m the State Department in addition
to reinforcing Bush's rcpulation for
prowess when it comes to foreign
affairs.

~gram in the Ohio Department of Development, said the income guideOhio Legislature Help Working
lines are revised by the federal government.
·
Poor
Escape Welfare Cycle With
_ . ''It's very important to certain individuals because, particul;lrly among
two
of
every three Jl!Others of
elderly households, you will ftnd from time to time folks will get a cost of
school-age
children in the workI(Ving adjustment," Ms. Mroczek said.
·
force,
the
problem
of childcare is
· "If the guidelines remain the same over time !hat person may exceed
great
...
and
expensive.
It is a probby just a few dollars the maximum, and we wouldn't be able to serve
lem
that
hits
the
working
poor
them if there were not that ... inflation adjustment built in by lhc fcds
especially
hard,
and,
when
no
~ry year," she said.
affordable
solution
can
be
found,
it
• ; ·under the state Energy Credit Program, recipients with incomes of
$;5,000 to $9,000 receive a 25 percent credit on their utility bills, while eventually affects lhe taxpayer.
In just a generation, the workpose with incomes below $5,000 get a 30 percent credit.
force
has undergone a dramatic
.; Ms. Mroczek said low-income, .elderly Ohioans always have been able
transformat
ion. Working mothers
Ie apply for aid under both 'the Energy Credit Program and HEAP ,
with
children
enroHed in day care
plthough the eligibility criteria varies.
.
is
no
longer
an unusual phe, • The Ohio Department of Aging disiributes infonnation about both pronomenon.
It
is
a commonplace
~s. but has no direct role in lhe administration of eiiher.
experience
for
many
Ohio young.; Director Judith arachman said any change in the $9,000 income cap
sters.
An
estimated
185,000
Ohio
for the state progmm would have to be approved by the Le$islaturc.
children
are
enrolled
in
the
state's
.; "I would say that we have had discussions about changmg the eligibil2,900 licensed child care programs,
i6' level, but changing it would depend on additional funds being avail- and
thousands more are cared for .
able," Ms. Brachmll!l said.
., .
by neighbors or in private homes.
As more couples work and single
families increase, more children arc
being placed in child care program s. Whcrclls families in all

Pomeroy~lddleport,
.

Ceausescu had her own reign of terror
'

111 Court Street
Po~eroy, Ohlo

Wednesday, October 1&amp;; 1991

.

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e

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• •i ••

�.. _.. - · ·-- ....

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J

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Sports

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~-

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·

By JIM LITKE

That's aggressive, as in,
"Maybe that wasn't the smanest
thing to do at the tiJDe. But I (we)
no suc h thing as a screwup in base- only !mow how 10 play one way.
ball any more. There is only being An~ tllat's UHH-ggressive."
aggressive.
·
·
While that kind of play might

Transactions
Baseball

wins 3eries 4-1

National League
Wtdnead1y, OcL \1

Piu:sbw-ah 5, Atlanta 1
'fhunday, Oct. 10
12
3

13
llitt.sbltrW13,
2.10 innings
\1ond1y, Oct. l4
PittJburgh l, At lantl 0, Pituburgh
leada: seriCII 3-2
Wednesday , Oct. 16
Athn\1 (Avery 18-8) at Pittsburgh

(Drabek 15-14). i :J7p.m.
..
Thursd1y, Ocl.l7

.

•
ALhnta (Smoltz 14-13} at Pittsburgh
• (Smile)' 20 -8), 8:37 p.m., it necessary

--

WORLD SERIES

l

Saturday, OcL 19

f

Natiorul League champion at Min ·
OCSOII ,

8:29p.m.

I

1\'L at Minnuou, 8;40 p.m.
Tuesda y, OcL 2l

,

MinnesotJ 11 NL, S:29 p.m.
Wedneaday, Oct. 13
Minnuol.llat NL, 8:26 p.m.
Thur•day, Od. 14
~'linnesoll it NL, 1:26 p.m., if ne.:es -

SuQdl)' , Ckl. 20

"''1\'L

•'
1

S11 turd1y, OtL 16
Minneaob, 8:26p.m ., if ncces -

It

l sary

'·

SundiiJ, Oc:l.l7
NL •t Minnaob, 8:40p.m., if nece.s·

,$.UY

I n the NHL. ••

'·•:

WALES CONFERENCE
'
Patrltk Division
jr"m
W L T Pb. GF GA

,Washington · ...
~t!wlency
...
;flitt.sburgh ... ,.
·l'l'.Y. Rangen

!I I 0

10 25 18

4 I 0

8 23 14

3
3
,+}ol.Y. h landen . 2
'Philadelphia .... 1

l I
4 0

7 21 19
6 18 ~

2 I
3 I

5 19 20
3 15 20

Amerlnn Leagu e ·
KANSAS ClTY ROYALS
Wtivcd Jeffrey L:onard, outfielder.
MilWAUKE E ' BREWER S
Name&lt;! F~ Sunl cy director of player de·
n lOf'!'lenl. Reassigned Dick Backcn, vice
pre~tdcnt of marketing, to vice president
of governmental t!Tairs .
NEW YORK YANKEES - Waived
of giving him
TEXAS RA NGERS - Ann ounced
Mario Diu and Guy Green, in fielders,
an d Muk P11en1, Cltchcr, ha\le tejeCLed
outriWn m ignment to Ok.llh om~ City of
the Ameri~an Anociation and b c~cm1e
free agems.
TORONJ"O BLUI! JAYS - N;uned
Hank Zachariu s~ou t ing depanment adminisuator; Blll Monrc ~couting supcNi·
10r for sout.hem Califumi~; and Joe Sier1
and Al~in Rittman scouts for F\orid11 . As·
signed Efrain Valdez, pitcher, outright to
Syracuse of the In ternational League.
Added Dr.mingo Martine!'., fi.nt baseman,
to the 40 - m~n roster . An nounced John
Ste·uns, manager of Knoll ville of th e
Southern League, and Julio Division,
pitc hing coach fo r St. Catharines of th~
New York-Penn leajliiC, wiJI not return to
thclr respcclive positwm ncx 1 ~en on
Nallon~~o l Lugue
ClDCAGO CUBS ~ Ex.ercised the
1992 options of Ryne Sandbc r ~. second
baseman, and Lui1 Salaur, thtrd base·
man.
SMl DJEOO PADRES - Named
Bruce ll ochy manage r of Wichit.a of the
Tcus League and Bryan Litll c manager
of High Desert of the California League.
SAN fRA~C I SCO GlA~~ ·s - l'ro.
motcd fiill .Evm, man•gcr. Todd Chk.cs,
pil(h ing coach; and Tolly Ta~lo r, coach,
from Shreveport of lhe Texas League to
P'noeni~ of the Pacific Coast lc&amp;gue. Rc·
assigned Duane Espy, Photnh manager.
to minor luguc hitting inst ructor and
Al :~ n Bmnim:r, Phocni~ coilch, to manag·
cr of tr.c Gi1nts affiliate in the Arizona
Rookie Lc~guc . Ann o un~t:d the contuct
of Larry Hardy, Phoenix pitching coach.
will Ml be renewed.

Dasketball
NaUonal Uu kelball Association

NEW JERSEY NETS- Waivctl Teo

'
.Monu-eal

3 2

7 20 12

•llutford

2 1

5 1311

•jJ oston
' Juffa]o

1 3
I 3

3 13 19
3 IS 19

:Ouelxc

\]

316 17

I

i

;CAMPIJELL CONFERENCE

,•

Norrl1 Dlvblon

•Tum

W L T Pbi.GFCA

Chicagn

.... ..

3 2

I

7 28 22

MinnasOla .... 3 I 0
I.ouiJ
...... 3 2 0

6 13 12
6 16 16

2 4 0

4 20 21'

1 3 I

3 14 19

'S t.

~·oro_nto

Dcuoit

........

'

Smythe Dl viJion

~' a n c ouvc r

... S I 0
...... 3 3 0

10 23 16
6 29 18

1 2

6 18 18

2 1
4 1

~ u 19
3 13 24
2 19 30

Calguy
los Angeles ... 2
Winnipea
.... _ 2
Edmon t~
... 1
!an J011e
...... l

'

5 0

tuesday's scores

1

t'ootbnll
1'\allonal f'ootballl.t•aguc

CINCINNATI OE\IOALS
Wal,.ed Orl an Ul ado1, olh-rulve li neman , and Joe Kln11, uftl)'. S i~:,ned Ri ck
Trumbull, offensive Iack ie, and Brent
Colll ns 1 tlnebacktr, to the prar li ce
5quad. Attlv1ted ltk~! Woods, runni ng
back and Kirk StrlfTtH'd 1 olfl!nslvt line.
riun, from Injured rcsenc .
ll'o'DIANA I)OU S COLTS - Waived
Muk. CIIUlOI), offensive lineman.
SEA11"LE SEAIIAWK S - Waived
Jeff Kemp, quarterbacK.

In the MAC ...
Ovfrall
Tum
W l T P ~t. W L T
Bowlin&amp;Cirun 3 0 0 1.000 5 I 0
Conr.

Miami, Oh. ...

W. Mich. ....

2 0 I .833 4 1 1
2 0 1 .833 2 2 1
3 1 0 i50 5 2 0

DaU Stale ....
.....
~ . Mi&lt;h. .....

2 2 0 .500 4 3 0
0 1 3 .375 3 1 3
1 3 0 .250 1 6 0

Toledo

......

c. Mioh.

• [k:troit3, Erlmontan I

• Piusburgh 7, N.Y. bltndeu 6, OT
SL Loo is 5, Toronto I
; c.1 8'ary 6, Minnc&amp;Qll3
1

'
1

Atibegm·ic , fllrward

Ohio Univ.

0 3 I .125 1 4

Kmt Sbte ...

0 3 0 .000 0 6 0

Tonight's games

Saturday's results

J Du!fo~lo at Montrelll, 7:35p.m.
1 New Jersey at N.Y. Ranac\'1, 7:35p.m.

, l-t.rtiord 11 Wi.nnlpeJ, 8:JS p.m.
1 San J01e 11 U. Anaclca, 10:3S p.m.

Thursday's games

Ban State 10, B. Mithi~~oan 8
Bowlina Grecn4 ~. Oh.io Univ. 14
Miam~

Ohio 10, Cent. Michi1Jn 10,

tie

Non-conferen&lt;e

: St. l..o~ia It Detroit, 7:35p.m. '
, Queboc 11 P!liladelphia, 7:35p.m.

N.Y. IGlnndcm al PitLibwgh, 7:35 p.nl.
Edmontoo at Q.i cago, 8:35 p.m.
' Toromo 11 Calgu~. 9:35 p.m.

~

MinnesOlaat San Jose, 1O:JS p.m.
V1ncouver, 10:35 p.m.

Cincinn1ti 38, Kent Stltc.l9
Walhlngton 48, Toledo 0

W. MicFtialn 22, N. Dlinoia 10

This Saturday's games
Toledo at Bowlin&amp; Otcco

' B01t.an 11

Ccnl. Michiaan ai Ken\ St.
VV . Micru,ona1E. Mi~n

In the NFL ...

I

Ohio Univ. at Miami, Ohio

AME RI CAN CONFERENCE
W 1... T Pet. PF PA
..... 6 I 0 .8572101 54
... 3 4 0 .4291-27164

NY . JeU

...

3 4 0 .429140135

New England
Indianapolis ..

2 4 0 .333 66 Ill
0 7 0 .000 49176

Ctnlfal Dlvlllon
... S I 0 .833\79 89

~ OU$\On

Pituburgh

... 3 3 0 .500135127

C l ev~ h&amp;nd

.. l " 0 .333 89111
.. 0 6 0 .000 91111

;; ci ncinnati

•
4

'

A Heoring·Aid
Is Less Conspicuous
Thon Your Hearing Loss!

\Yetltrn Dlv!Jlon

•

lfKinm City
" Denver

.
....

: L.J\ . Raiders

• Seaulc
~San Diego

......

..

~

.rr

2 0 ,714140 76

4 2 0 .66"1128 107
4 3 0 .57 1114128
3 4 0 .429131 109
1 6 0 .14312115_7 ·

~

•
.,'
J

Hak-kaff!

Eaatern Olvls~n

•ream

W L T PeL PF PA

•washington

1 0 0 1.000231 82
5 2 0 .714150 136
4 3 0 .571111 11 3

! oallu

......

• N.Y. GiantJ

•Philadclptua

3 4 0 .429 96 93
3 4 o .429 99139

,•rhoeru..

·l

....

4 2 0 .667 97111

. 3 4 0 .429103113
.. I' 5 0 .167 83115
I

:
Wttlern
,;New Orleans
6
tlanta
..... 3
.A. R.anu
3

J

•n FI'Intilco

S 0 .167

731 13

Division
0 0 1.000 134 5l
3 0 ..50010112:2"
3 0 .500 !OJ J J3

2 4 0 .333 12910&amp;

:

Monday's score

•

New Ynrk Gianu 23. Piusbutgh 20

•

:

Th ursday's ~ame

•

Chla1o at Orccn Uay, 7:30 p.m.

••

Next wee k's games

•~f

Sund1y,~.2G

llou•ton at Miami, I p.m.
N'w York let~ atlndianapoW, 1 p.m.

~

.
~

~

:

•

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rl-

~•

Seattle •t PittJb~ 1 1p.m.
Minnel(ta 11 Now EI'I &amp;Jand, l p.m.
TamP' Bay at Now Odoan1, I p.m.
AlllfUial Aloenil, 4 p.m.
Clne tand at San Dleao. 4 p.m.
Detroilat San Francilm, 4 p.m.
Kan111 Cily tl Denver, 4 p.m.
Loa Angclea Rams at L o1 Anaole~

1idm. 4p.m.
OPEN DATE: DaUu, New York Gi·

nts, Philadelphia, Wu hinaton

~

~

•

·'•
~

Mond1y, Ott. :U
Clnclnn•llat 8urf'11lo, 9 p.m.

.

the Merchants Association and the people of
Racine would like to express their appreciation
for the support given The Fall.Festival by the
following Merchants and Individuals. Without
the support of concerned citizens like these,
small communities like ours could not prosper:
Cross's Store
Wagner Hardware ·
Hubbards Tru Value Hdwe Ebers Gulf
Dr. Douglas Hunter
· Dr. Margie Lawson
Paul Black
National Gas Co.
Hearld Od &amp;Gas
Chancy Foocl Mart
. Elmwood Apts'
Bank One
Home National Bank
Sarah Laulse Wholesale
Farmer's Bank
Harris Farms
THE RACINE MERCHANTS ASSOOAnON
BILL NEASE
BILL ARNOTT
\

By Maj. Amos B. Hoople
Pigskin Prophet
Egad, friends[ Major conference
titles will he on the line this week·
end in some traditional college
football rivalries:
In the Pac·lO, powerful Washington and resurgent California get
it on for-the-73rd-time-.
In the Big Eight, the "Game of
the Day" has defending champion
Colorado visiting Oklahoma for the
47th time.
And, in the hotly·contested
Southeastern Conference, Alabama
hosts rugged Tennessee for the
74th time.
- For coach Don James' Washington Huskies to get their second
straight Rose Bowl ticket, they
must go on the road to beat the
dangerous California Golden
Bears. Cal QB Mike Pawlaski is
one of the country's leading
passers, averaging 10 yards per
completion. And Heisman threat
Russell White of California is averaging five yards per carry.
The free·wheeling Huskies, av·
eraging 46·plus points per game,
move the ball well with either ju·
nior Mark Brunell or sophomore
sensation Billy Joe Hoben barking
the signals. But it will be the
Huskies' superior defense, led by
tackle Steve Emtman, that will
spell the difference in Washington's favor. Call it for the Huskies,
38-31.
Colorado's Buffaloes have
whipped Oklahoma the last two
years, but that's about 10 end. Oklahoma, with QB Cale Gundy throwing TDs, has astounded the Big
Eight. The SoQners' defense has
also sparkled as the ~tingiest in t.he
Ieag~.
·
.
Colorado has had a bumpy ride
t.his year, with QB Darian Hagan' s
injuries hampering the Buffaloes.

They already have dropped two
close ones - to Baylor and Stanford . This week will follow suit:
The Hoople System calls it for Oklahoma, 28·24. .
·
Alabama
3932-7
in their leads
series.Tennessee
The Crimson

·

head toward mid·Ice during the first period of ·
Tuesday night's NHL game in Uniondale, N.Y~
which the Penguins won 7·6 in overtime. (AP)

CHASING PUCK- N.Y.lslander lert wing
Derek King (left) and Pittsburgh Penguin
d~e fenseman Jlm Paek (2) chase lhe puck as they

Pittsburgh records 7-6 overtime
victory over Ne,v ·York .Jsla.nders
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
The De!Ioit Red Wings finally
won a game, the Minnesota Nonh
Stars fin ally lost one .. . and the
New York Islanders lost one they
should have won.
• .
"We have to play sound defen'
sively, and it's quite evident we
didn't do that," Islander goaltender
Glenn Healy said after his team
blew a four-goal lead in the third
period and lost to the Pittsburgh
Penguins 7-6 in overtime Tuesday
night.
The Islanders, who had led
throughout the game, looked like
certain winners when they took a 6·
2 lead on Randy Wood's goal early
in lhe third period. But they came
apart and allowed t.he Penguins to
score five s!Iaight goals, including
Phil Bourque's game-winner 2:30
into overtime.
"We gave them a lot'of room in
the neutral zone," said the
Islanders' Derek King, who had a
hat !Iick in a team-record 78-second span of the first period.
Meanwhile, the Red Wings beat
the Edmonton Oilers 3· I to become
the last team in t.he 22·team NHI..
to win a gam&lt;! this season. The Red
Wings had an 0·3- I record before
Tuesday night
Also, the Calgary Flames beat
Minnesota 6-3, handing t.he North
Stars thei r first loss of the season
after a 3-0-0 start. The Nonh Stars,
who played in the Stanley Cup
finals las t season, were the last
unbeaten tcain in t.he league.
In the night's other game, St.
Louis beat Toronto 5-1.
Mario Lemieux had two of his
three goals 10 spark the Penguins'
rally.

Mark Recchi scored one goal,
Lemieux twice on the power play
and Jaromir Jagr tied the game 'at
11:43 of the third period to send
the game into overtime.
On Bourque's game· winner,
defenseman Paul Coffey slapped a
shot from t.he right point Hewy got
a suck on the 11uck and the rebound
caromed to the left side of the
crease where Bourque was staoding
unchecked. The Pittsburgh forward
put it into the net before Healy
could recover.
Red Wings 3, Oilers 1
Shawn Burr's second-period
goal broke a 1·1 tje and Tim
Cheveldae stopped 18 shots.
Shawn Burr gave the Red
Wings the lead for good when he
beat Bill Ranford with a slap shot
fnJin the lOp of the faceoff circle at
17:36 of the second period. Brent·
Fedyk clinched the game with his
first goal with 51 seconds left in
t.he game.
Flames·6, North Stars 3
Carey Wilson's power-play goal

at 13:01 of the third period sent the
Flames past the Nonh Stars.
Wilson, parked at the edge of
the crease, took a pass from Gary
.Suter and then flipped the puck
over fallen goaltender Darcy
Wakaluk.
Other scorers for Calgary were
Robert Reichel, Theoren Fleury,
Doug Gilmour, Marc Habsche1d
and Gary Roberts. Neal Broten, Ulf
Dahlen and Dave Gagner scored
for Minnesota.
Blues 5, Mnple Leafs I
Vincent Riendeau stopped 37
shots and Rich Sutler set up two
first-period goals as the Blues
defeated tfie Maple Leafs.
Five St. ·Louts players scored a
goal apiece against Maple Leafs
goaltender Grant Fuhr. Fuhr
stopped 19 shots before getting
replaced by Jeff Reese after Ron
Sutter scored on a rebound shot to
ma~e it 5- l at 6:27 of the third
period.
.

'

'Barna was stunned by Florida, 35·

•

2
3

6-0-0

1,472

1

3-0·0 18-13-0 Kick game only weakness

Miami (1) .

5-0·0 1,392

2

2·0·0 14-10·0 loretta No. 11ot. o11.

WaShington

5-0·0

1,384

3

1·0·0 14·6· 1 1962 last lime consec. SO

-

s+o

1,236

1

1·1·0 15·9· 1 16·4 record over AFA

Florida

5-1·0

1,179 10

3·1·0 21-6·0 1st meellng wilh N. lll.

Callfolnla

5-0·0

1,021 13

1-0-0 12-11 -0 Las! W over Huskies 1976

Tmssae

4-1 -0

998

Nebraska

4-1 ·0

922 14

1·1-0 11-10·0 D. Brown 5 100-yard games

5-2·0

883

9

1-1 ·0 16-t6-0 17·2 record over Rutgers

856 t6

2.0·0 10· 13·0 No. 1 pass ing Din nation

4·1·0

760

0·0·0 5-1t ·O 0.2 VS Colo afler 14 W's

13mlnols

4·1·0

744 20

2·0·0 13·7· 1 1sttime 4W'sovet OSU

14 Alabama

5-1 ·0

69 1 19

1+0 14· 16·0 Largest

16towa

4·1·0

664 17 . (). 1-0 12· 1o,o Fry only 6·5 vs. lllini

16 Baylor
17 Georgia
18 Ohio St.

5·1 ·0

629

5· 1·0

571 22

2·0·0 16·12·1 Last loss lo Vandy 1973

4·1 ·0

504 11

0· 1·0 12·1 1·0 15 str W's over Cats

3·1·0

382 21

0·0·0 7· 13·0 4·0·1 last5 vs. Baylor_

5· 1.0

316 12

0·1·015·13·0 Van Pel lNo. 20BatPin

3·1·1

239 18

1·0·0 16-10·0 Va.0-16- 1 in the Valley

3· 2·0

229 25

0·1·0 11 · 10-2 Didn't need 5th down

5- 1-0

170

-

1·0·018·10.2 Lastrank: Jan. 3, 1984

4-2·0

t38 15

1·1·0 16·14·0 5-1 ·1 over Pitt since '84

4· 1·0

t22

1·1·0 10· 11-0 8·1 ·2 vs. WSU at home

N. Caroina St.

@!~§'&gt; ' Lumber Co.

Sl.,

9t2·11100

Oklahoma

1~Mile South of Tuppers .Plains
On State Route 7 (Look for Sign)

AVARIETY OF 1990
BASEBALL and
HOCKEY WAX PACKS
STILL LEFT.

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•Autographed Picture Plaques
•Autographed Bats
•Autographed Jersey of Chris Sabo
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CALL 416·667·6092 FOR SPECIAL APPOINTMENT ; .
'

'

Grate opens new sports card
shop near Thppers Plains
An active sports card collector
has opened a sports card shop near
Tuppers Plains. The shop offers a
complete line of sports cards and
supplies.
·
Describing himself as "no small
timer," Herb Grate, owner of "The
Card Box," reports that he offers
spons cards within every budget,
ranging in price from five cents to
$UOO. Grate says that he ~as four
million cards in the shop's mveniO-

A variety of Sports Memorabilia ....
•Autogranhed Baseballs of Players Past

.

COLLECTOR TURNED BUSINESSMAN - Herb Grate, an
avid sports card collector, is the owner of "The Card Box", a shop
offering cards and supplies to collectors. Located south of Tuppers
Plains on Stale Route 7, the shop is offering specials in conjunction
with ils grand opening.
•

ry.In addition to selling Cl!fds and
supplies, Grate also buys and trades
cards with other card colleetors.
.
Located a mile and a half south
ofTuppers Plains, ''The Card Box"
will be open extended hours
through ~aturday, lOa.m. to 9 p.m.
Beginning on Monday, the shop
will resume its regular hours, 10
a.m.. to 6 p.m., Monday through
Saturday. ·
.
In conjunction w1th the gra~d
OMning of the busmess, Grate will
be conducting drawings for free
gifts in the weeks to come. Some of
those prizes will include boxes of
spons cards, Topps Desen Stof!D
trading cards, a mounted Enc
Davis rookie trading card, and a
larger prize to be announced at a
later time. An autographed baseball

I

will also )lc given away.
All first· time visitors to the shop
will receive a free wax-pack of
sports cards for the grand opening,
and all of the grand opening offers
will be detailed in paid advertising
for the remainder of this week in
. The Daily Sentinel.

19 W. Washington St.
Athens, Ohio 45701
(614) 592·2366

2· 1·0 15·7-0 18-1over lnd since 1968

597617

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MEDICAL and SURGICAL TREATMENT
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CONSUMER Th•'s coupon tS good only on lhe No.oemller
5, 1991 ISSUe ol Fam1ly C+n:le Any other use consl•tutes
traud Coupon not!ransterable llm+t one coupon per pur·
cnase RETAILER Fam+iyC+rcle w+ll rermburse you tor the
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What mailers moslto you when it comes to prqpane?
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Retlrecl Employee of the Meigs Lacal School District

STARTING MONDAY, OCTOBER 14TH - DOMINO PIZZA WILL
OPEN FOR LUNCH: 11 A.M. TIL 4 P.M. $ 99
LUNCH SPECIAL: MED. PIZZA (1 Item, 2 Pepsi's) 4
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ENRICO TAN, D.P.M.

4·1·0 1,282

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YOUR INDEPENDENT .
AG.ENTS SERVING
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SINCE 1868

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Florida st.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

players and we're playing good
teams. If we· were in a little better
position to win, maybe we'd win
some. The other coaches are
smarter than me, apparently."
It's a ~tunning admission for
Wyche, who has spent most of the
season angrily ~ebutting criticism
of his coaching and the team's performance. .
·

CINCINNATI (AP) - Coach
Sam Wyche bristled at criticism as
his Cincinnati Bengals went 0-for. September. That's changing now
that the winless slump hall reached
mid-October.
·
For the fll'St time, Wyche is publicly admitting the Bengals' poor
play is his fault.
.
The Ben~als' 35-23 loss Sunday
in Dallas left them 0-6, matching
their second-worst start in franchise
history. The defense again gave up
big plays, the offense turned the
ball· over three times, and special
teams made more mistakes.
Wyche's players can't explain
how a team with eight Pro Bowl
players can be so bad. Wyche now
has an explanation.
" I t.hink it's me," he said. "I've
~otto do a better job coaching.
" Figure it out. We've got good

1

Youn&amp;. In lbe back""' 1n Chrllly Tayk!r, Trl·
cia Baer, Kim Hanning, &lt;:hrluy Wea.er aud
Coach Rick Ash. Meigs finished the season with
a 19·1 mark and owns a 39·1 mark lhe Iasl two
regular seasons.

Wyche publicly takes blame
for Bengals' 0-6 ·performance

13

T)IROUOH 10113/ll1

THE
·C ARD BOX
.

.

TVC VOLLEYBALL CHAMPS ~ The
Meigs Marauden clinc)led the Tri·Valley Con·
· ference volleyball cbamplonship on Tues~ay
against Betpre.ln the front row are (L"R) M1sly
Butcher, Nikki Meier, Carrie Bartels and Yvelle

. 14

Siran Stacy healthy, the Tide has
averaged 40 points per game in its
'other matchups,
·
• However, while Alabama's of.
fense is strong, it's not as strong as
Tennessee's. With QB Andy Kelly
firing to· WR Carl Pickens, Tennessee will win, 28-22.
In collegiate circles, Florida is
celebrated as the "Spring Break"
state. This week, it adds a dubious
distinction, which, for want of a
better name, we'll call "Breather
Week," Florida's three major powerhouses are all facing. inferior
competition. Um·kumph!
Top -rated Florida State will
trounce Division I·AA's Middle
Tennessee State, 58·7, in Tallahas·
see. Across · the state, in
Gainesville, the Florida Ga10rs will
hang '1111i4· 14 pasting lit lowranked Northern lllinois. Playing in
·-the friendly confines of t.he Orange
Bowl, Miami 's Hurricanes will
thump the Long Beach State 49ers,
49·7, Maybe there ought to be a
law against such matchups_in mid·
season.
Elsewhere, Syracusc will top
Pittsburgh, 28-27, in their 47th re,
newal,
·And it's "get-even" time for
Brigham Young, as the Cougars
defeat Hawaii, 49-25. Last year,
Hawaii beat BYU and QB Ty Det·
mer, 59-28, on the day Deaner won
the Reisman. Hak-kaff1

-2~~.

(Off·the·Saw Chains Only)

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CHAIN SAW
AND
CHAINS
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SHARPENED OIL

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BAR

•1991 Pro Line Portraits Wax
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•1991 Leaf Studio Wax Packs
•991 Topps Stadium Club Wax
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•1991 Bowman Football &amp;
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Wax P~cks
.
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Packs
•1991 Pni Line Sets
•1991 Pro Line Sets
•1991 Pro Set Platinum Sets
•1991 Leaf II Sets ·

Audiologist, CCC·A

with 1.2 ,POints; and Bobbie Butcher
added .s1x, while Amber Blackwell
had four. The Meigs reserves fmish
the season at 14-4.
Meigs is the top seed in the
Division II sectional tOurnaments
Saturday at the University of Rio
GJande. Meig~ will play Fairland at
.8:00pm, the ftnals wiD he at 9 p.m..

on

WE NOW HAVE IN
STOCK•••

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603 w. Union
Athens, Ohio 45701
Phone (614) 592·2863

up with a win defeating Belpre 15•

.5. IS-2, Billie Butchet led Meig~

Washington-Cal game among hot
gridiron rivalries Saturday 'slate·

BASEBALL, BASKETBALL, HOCKEY and FOOTBALL CARDS

c~ntull)l ~blon

5 1 0 .833 12811 9

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Jue A11 Karr, M.A.

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. 667·6092

udiolocty·
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~ NATIONAL CONFERENCE
4

The Meigs Marauders defeated ·record during t.he regular season.
Belpr~ ,15-2, 15-8 Tuesday"evening .. Chrissy Taylor, who led the
,at Me1g~ H1gh, School to give Marauders with 10 pointS and eight
Coach R1ck Ash s crew their sec- aces, was followed by Chrissy
ond s!Iaight Tri-Valley Conference W~a~er (eight), Nikki Meier (five),
Championship. The Marauders fin- Tt1cta Baer( four points; four
ish the regular season with a 19·1 assists), Misty Butcher (tWo pOints)
mark and 15-1 in the Tri-Valley and Kim Hanning (one point and
Conference. The last two years t.he four kills) .. '
Marauders ~ave posted a 39· 1
The Little Marauders also came

'

Eastern Division
Turii
Ruffalo
Miilmi

.

Meigs wins TVC volleyball title· ·

Wednesday, Qctober 16,1991
)

have c.arried the battle for the
Atlanta Braves in the Nati~nal
League West race, it may end up
costing them the war. It is one
thing to gamble full·tilt with Padres
and Astros in early October. II is
quite another to do it with the
Pirates of this world, who have
learned what it's like to be at the
table at this time of ytar with
something on the line.
Come Sunday, the Pirates will
likely be in Minnesota for the start
of the World Series and the Braves
will be watching on TV pr out
playing golf. It will be as much
because of their own mistakes as
anything the Pirates have done.
One of the few good things about
losing, as Piusburgh did to Cincin-natH n-six"]am·es-in-last-year"s
NLCS, is that it teaches you to pick
your spots, when 10 hold and when
to fold. And when not to be too
UHH·ggressive.
After Game 4 in Atlanta had
nung the momentum back north,
J;littsburgh shortstop Jay )'!ell stood
in front of his locker trying. to
reconstruct his team' s 3-2 win .
What stood out in his memory was
not the game-winning hit by team·
mate Mike LaValliere in t.he lOth,
but rather the ill·adviscd throw by
Manta right fielder David Justice
in the fifth inning that enabled
Gary Redus to score the tying run
from third.
Up until that point, Bell
recalled, "As much as we didn't
want to t.hink about last year (when
Cincinnati won the playoff in six
games), it was on our minds. ... But
after that play, we felt like, 'Yeah.
OK. A break went in our favor.' It
kind of lifted things. We got to
thinking, this is a shon series. We
might only need a few breaks.''
Sure enough, a few more turned
up the very next night and ttanslat·
ed into another Pirate win.
With the bases loaded in the
second and Atlanta pitcher Tom
Glavine at2-2 in the count, manag·
er Bobby Cox called for t.he suicide
squeeze. But the first time Glavine
learned about it was when he saw
teammate Brian Hunter racing pell
mell down the line from third, and
by then it was much too late. He
made a desperate stab at a lovv slid·
cr, missed, and wound up as the
front end of an inning·ending double play.
Cox did not have to tell anybody .
this was an aggressive play, but he
felt obliged to list'his reasons, in
this order: " Tommv Glavine is
probably the best bunter in baseball. Zane Smith is a control pitch·
er. The count went 2-2, perfect
time to do it."
Except ...
"Tommy missed a sign.'' .
With no score and two out in the .
fourt.h inning, Justice raced home
from second base on Mark
Lemke's single, but was called out
after apparenUy forgetting to pay
his respects at third. Alerted by
Bell, the Pirates threw the ball back
to the base and umpire Frank Pulli
- probably chuckling at the irony
- ruled Justice out.
Bell explained his unusual dill·
gence this way: "Whenever you're
totally out of a ~lay, you might as
well do somethmg, and watching
base·runners is as good as any·
thing.

Pomeroy-Middlel)9rt, Ohio

.

Pag&amp;-4

AP Sports Writer
PimBURGH (AP) ,_ There is

Sunday, Oct. 13
Minn~Otl 8, Toronto 5, Minneso\1

Wednesday, October 16, 1991

I ...

The.])ai}y SeD.ti,nef

Mistakes ·may cost Braves pennant

PLAYOFFS
American League

•

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Only

,.

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e

Jood only ol Pomeroy &amp; GolhpoU.

•••
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Pickup or DoUvery

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'
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..
Na(ive :Americans offended by Brav:esfans'

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

By DEBBIE NEWBY '
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTA (AP) :- Seeing
Jane Fonda, Ted Turner and Jimmy.
Carter doing the " tomahawk
chop" on national television may
have deligluedAdanta Braves fans,
but it outraged some American
Indians.
They regard the sight of thou,
sands of baseball fans doing the
chop, singing an Indian-like chant
and waving toy tomahawks during
the NL playoff games as blatant
disregard of Indian traditions and
c eremonie~. Some Indian groups
say they w1ll demonstrate in Saturday's opening game against the
Twins at Minnesota if Atlanta
reaches the World Series.
• 'It· s aehiimanlilii~.

Wednesday, October 16, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

bother many.of its members.
"Some tribes take it to an
extreme'' in protestin$ ·athletic
team depictions of Ind1ans, said
Steven Bowers of die tribe's head. quarters in Hollywood, Fla. •'You
have to take a tongue-in-cheek kind
of attitude. It's a motivational type
thing."
Defenders of the tomahawk
chop say the Atlanta fans' antics

EAStMAN'S..

are good, clean fun that.is not
meanttooffendanyooe.
•
"I can't get into the.minds of ·
other folks," Braves general manager'John Schuerllolz said Monday.
•'The fans are the ones who son of .
took to the characterization of the
Atlanta Braves as a wilminll team
... simulating warriors in~. all
of which we view as very positive
and certainly doing nothing to dis-

~tomahawk : chop'

criminate oi in any way negatively
impact"
·
Bill Higgins, 29, of West P;Um
.Beach, Fla., who wore afull Indian
headdress)artd carried a tom-tom to
M~nday's game, said he was just
trymg to ~ve fun.
"I hope no one is offended by
it," Higgins said. "I don't do it
other thAn for baseball. I don't go
home and do iL"

St. John said Adanta fans don't
realize what the(re doin,g whs:~
they wear headdresses, paml melt
faces and mimic Indian w~fCliants. ''You wear a headdress only
twice - when you. honor a loved
one ·or when a loved one passes
on " he sai&lt;L
'Mart. Trahant. publisher of The
Navajo Nation Today , a weekly
newspaper in ~indow RQ\:k, Afiz.,

"

said he finds the chop and the '
ch~tscst:;ecially.offensive.
:.
l .ean t ~magme any other race,,
that woul&lt;Lhave to have s~mething'C
a~apted from the.rr culture 1.n such a:;
d1stort~d .way· ~an you 1m~~~e,
fans pam~g their fac~ b~l!'
e
the old mmstrel mov1es? asked..
Trahan!: who als~ is presiden~ ot
the N~u.ve Amencan Journahsts,
Assoc1auon.
"

I

I

i

I

II=IJ

H IODI \'\II :-.I'U 1\1 • 411 1'0'\

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$. 59 '

32 oz
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LIMIT 1 WITJ-1 COUPON &amp; $tO ADDITIONAL PURCHASE .
GOOD THRU OCTOBER 19, 1991

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-~-----------------------------------------i
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ASSORTED VARIETIES~ GALLON

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FIVE GENERATIONS - Five 1eneralions of
the Vivian Coy family were present atlbe fami-

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~------------------------------------------~
I

FRESH PICNIC STYLE

-Sports briefs--

Whole
Pork
Roast

Fontbau
KIRKLAND, Wash. (AP)The Seattle Seahawks released Jeff
Kemp two days after he threw a
critical interception in a 23-20
overtime loss to the Los Angeles
Raiders.
Kemp started five of six games
while Seahawks starter Dave J(rieg
was sidelined with an injury. Kemp
had the NFL' s lowest qoarteiback
rating of 52.9 and a league-high 12
interceptions. Krieg returned from
injured reserve ..

c
LB.

GOLD 'N FRESH
GRADE I A' CHICKEN
, BREAST TENDERS or

Boneless$
Chicken ·
· Breast

·The ·Daily Sentinel
•l

------·----~----------~-----------------i

..

REGULAR • UGHT KRAFT

and very unethical,' said Aaron
Two Elk of Adanta, regional director of the. American Indian Movement. "It extends a portrayal of
Native American Jieople as being
warlike, aggressive, having a sav- ·
age approach."
The behavior of Braves fans,
whose team trails 3-2 in the bestof-seven National League playoff
series against .the Pittsburgh
Pirates, has touched a particularly
raw nerve in Minneapolis, where
more than 23,000 Indians represent
one of the largest concenttations of
urban Indians in die nation. About
50,000 Indians live in the state.
"People in Atlanta don't realize
they're talking about an entire race
of people, and it hurts to see these
white boys in. the bleachers singing
and chanting like that," said Phil
St. John, a Dakota Sioux and leader
of a group called Concerned American Indian Parents who pushed for
an end to Indian names and mascots in Minneapolis.
But not all Indian groups are
offended by the tomahawk chop
and war chant, which was originat·
ed by fans of\~~ :J::]orida State
Seminoles, the nation's top-ranked
college football team.
A spokesman for the Seminole
tribe said the use of the name and
rituals by Florida State does not

By The Bend

•
••

Community Calendar Items in Pomeroy {)n Thursday from 5 to
appear two days before an event 6:30 p~ m . Cost is $3 for chicken,
and the day or that evenL Items homemade noodles, mashed potamust be received weD in ldvanee toes and gravy. cole slaw, b1sc uit
to assure publication In th.e cal- · and beverage. Pie will be available
endar.
·
at an extta charge: Junior and Rita
White and AI Windon and Bill
WEDNESDAY
Ward will perform.
RUTLAND - Revival at the
Rutland Nazarene Church will be
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
held tlrrough Sunday at 7 p.m . Springs Better Health Club will
. nightly with Joe Jordan, evangelist. meet at the home of Phyllis Skinner
Pastor Sam Basye invites the pub- on Thursday at 1 p.m.
lic.
·
ROCK SPRINGS - Middleport
HARRISONVnkE • The Har- Child Conservation League will
risonville Holiness, Chapel, Route have a Halloween Party for the
684, Pomeroy, wiU have revival children of the members at 6:30
through Sunday at 7:30p.m. night- p.m. on Thursday at the Rock
ly with Rev. !;&gt;avid Neville, evan- Springs United MethodiS! Church.
·gelist. Rev. John Neville, pastor,
invites the public.
·
··
POMEROY - The Executive
Committee
the Meigs County
MIDDLEPORT - Revival ser- DemocraticofParty
will meet on
vices will be held through Sunday Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
at the Middleport Church of the penters Hall in Pomeroy.at the Car-.
Nazarene. Rev. Donald R. Dunn
will be the evangelist. Jim and
FRIDAY
Cathy Sisson will be the song evanNEW
ENGLAND
- There will
gelists. Services will be held at 7 . be a halloween dance at
Engp.m . nightly and 10:30 a.m. on land on Friday from 9 New
p.m.
to I
Sunday. The public is invited to a.m. Country Roads will perform
ly's recent reunion. Pictured are Bill Ogdin, J.R.
attend.
and the public is invited to artend.
Ogdin, Pam Fenwick, Miimie Young and Vivian
Coy.
LONG BOTTOM - The Long
TUPPERS PLAINS - The TupBottom/Reedsville charge of the pers
Plains VFW and Auxiliary
United Methodist ChW'Ch will hold
.
will
have
a round and square dance
revival services at the I.4&gt;ng Bottom
Friday with music by Rocky
ChUICh through Saturday at 7 p.m. on
Mountain
Bluegrass. The public is
/ nightly. Rev. Caron McCauley, invited to attend.
South Parkersburg United
Methodist Church, will be the
SATURDAY
evangelist, and special singing is
RUTLAND
- There will be a
planned for each evenini. Rev.
round
and
square
dance at the RutChar)es Eaton, pastor, inVIteS the land American Legiim
Hall on Satpublic.
urday from 8 p.m. to midnight.
Hard Times Band will perform ·and
THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Ray Fitch is the caller. Admission
Group of AA and AIAnon will is $3 for adults and $2 for children.
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
SYRACUSE - A fall festival
Sacred Heart Catholic Cliurch. For
will
be held Saturday at the Syrainformation cal1992-5763.
cuse Grade SchQOl. A soup dinner
POMEROY ·The Preceptor will begin at 5:30p.m. with games
Beta Beta Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Free entertainSorority, will meet Thursday at 10 ment begins ·at 6 p.m. with Jan and
a.m. at the home of Jane Walton to Kathy, The Rainbow Cloggers and
Circle and the Band performleave for the Circleville Pumpkin Doug
ing.

hold a dance on Saturday from 8 to '
11 p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior Citi- ;,
zens Center with caller Sonny .
Bess, Huntington, W.Va.:
·
:
'

POMEROY - Movies to be
shown at the Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy on Satorday
and Sunday at 2 p.m . are
"Ramona's Bad Day" and·"Reluctant Dragon." The movies will be
shown at die Middlepon Library on
Monday at 7 p.m.

a:

0

·-

and Technology Students Council
at Ohio University.
The Council, whose members
are appointed by other student ·
organ1zations within the College of
Engineering and Technology, ~- ·
resents students at functions withm
the college, works with faculty and ·
staff on various programs and par- .
ticipates in community projects.
.
Holter, president of the Institute
of Industrial Engineers, is a senior
industrial and systems engineering .
major. She is the daughter of ·
Ronald Holter of Bidwell and '
Linda Holter, Racine.

Hymn sing slated
The Rock Springs Uni1cd
Methodist Church will have a
hymn sing on Sunday at 7 p.m.
with Harmony Gospel 'Singers, .
Coolville. Rev. Keith Rader invites

(Your town)

z

w

::w::

'
FIVE GENERATION FAMILY-. Vivian Coy
: had live generations of her family present at a
• recent reunion. Pictured are --Chris
Hutton,
· .

BONELESS

~

English Roast
lB.

•

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.Sandwiches

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POTATO CHIPS

CANS

$219 .

.

Guest speaker ~amed

: Homecoming of the Morning
Star United Methodist Church will
lle held Sunday with services al.
9:45a.m. and Sunday school at II
a.m. Carry-in meal at 12:30 p.m.
Afternoon services are at 1:30 p.m.
.l(enny Baker, pastor, invites the
public.

Rev. Gene Skaggs will be the
guest speaker at services of the
Carleton Church on Kingsbury
Road .in Pomeroy on Sunday at 7
p.m. Clyde Henderson, pastor,
mvites the public.

16 oz.

. DORITOS

Tortilla Chips
BIG BEND FOODLAND

700 W. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO
'
992-2891
OPEN 7 AM-11 PM Mon. thru Sat.
SUNDAY 8 AM·10 PM

YFW turkey supper
: There will be a turkey supper
sponsored by the Tuppers Plains
YFW Post No. 9053 and Auxiliary
oo Nov. 2 beginning at4 p.m.
' Menu includes turkey dressing,
potatoes, noodles, green beans,
cole slaw, pie and cake, tea and
coffee. Cost is $4 for adults and $2
(or children under 12.

Revival slated
The Long Bottom/Reedsville
charge of the United Methodist
Church will hold revival services
Wednesday through Saturday at 7
p.m. each e,vening. Rev; Caroll
McCauley of the South Parkersburg United Methodist Church will
be the evangelist, and special
singing is planned for each
· evening. Rev. Charles Eaton, pastor, invites the public.

Annual Grange
Halloween party,
haunted house set
Star Grange and Star Junior
Grange wiU hold their annual Halloween Party and Haunted House
on Saturday at 6:30p.m. at the
grange hall located on County
Road I near Salem Center.
There will be costume judging
at 6:30 p.m. followed by a potluck
supper and games for all.
Officers will hold a conference
at approximately 8 p.m. to plan for
the coming year's activities.
All members, potential members
and guests are invited to come and
join the fun.

Land transfers

12 PACK

99'

Homecoming set

.

VELVEL 12 PAK

SUGAR FREE

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

o&gt;uckey Hutton, Minnie Young, Vivian Coy and
Corey Hutton.

r

,,

&gt;

z

CJ

&lt;I

:E
•
:t
1-

0%FIIWICE
CHARBETHRU
OCTOBER 26TH.
Formore
any qualified
purchasesend!
of $200
or
on a SaarsCharve
plan'

-zw 9IJ DAYS SAME AS CASH

f-~~==~ SAVE $120 on Ken_. -'terldryer pelr !=:::=:=~

• No billing
N • No finance charge
• • No payment 'tii·January
Ask for details. Offer begins Oct.
14th and extends thru Oct. 26th

wHh Amerlcl'a

Pre-Season
Winter Coat Sale

Kenneth E. McLaughlin, dec'd,
affid., to Carole E. McLaughlin,
Sutton.
• Clarence P. Grueser, dec'd,
. affid. (life estate) and Roger J.
Grueser, Sutton.
· Denver L. Rice and Nora E.
Rice, Parcel, to Denver L. Rice and
Nora E. Rice, Middleport ViUage.
· LFLB Land Trust, by Trustee,
parcels; to Herman A..Taylor, Bedford.
-.
:· Peggy A. Kirby and NKA,
Peggy A. Proffitt, parcel, to Joseph
. L. Kirby, Sutton.
· Gail Byrd, .53 A., sec. 16, to
Dennis R. Gillette, Columbia.
• John M. Folden and Vera I.
Folden, parcel, to John R. Folden,
Salem.
Kenneth E. McLaughlin, dec' d,
affid., to Carole E. McLaughlin,
Sutton.
Clarence P. Grueser, dec'd,
affid. (life estate) and Roger J.
Grueser, Sutton.
.
Denver L. Rice and Nora E.
Rice, Parcel, to Denver L. Rice and
Nora E: Rice,
Middleport Village.
'
..

20%

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Mid-size•.9-cu.lt.
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• Stereo hi-fi sound
• TVNCR/cable remote
• AN jack panel, incl. AN In

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• Ouiell-ol1
• Popcorn key and morel

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top-mount
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:::....--1 automatic
icemakerl
Our most powerful!
4.6-peak HP PowerMate vac • Fros«ess
• Bu!H·In with 5 cycles
• Pots/pans and china/crystal cycles

SAVINGS
ON ALL NEW

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• Dual 4·way speake111, AN remote
• 6-disc CD changer, 32·track

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Wpolll.

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2t .ku.ft. oidu

Family
MOST ITEMS
liiil.......
IN·STOCK FOR '-----M
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
tt.nltlhown .,. readily nailabll 11 actvtr'AIId
"nofon di1911Yfloor, 11ema mav be apeclaWy wderea.

Middl

OH

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27-inch MTS tabletop TV

$15 MO.NTHLY' tG043&gt;&lt;31

..,._.UMble CIIIJIChy

DonY (MY 11DOO
ibo' a..,_,
ciMnlng rang. wlflla ......, coolrlop/

,
Compiled b,Y:
• Emmogene Holstem Congo
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Court House, Pomeroy, OH

''

. ,Yf111 buy BIIYihlng In this ad!

0

&lt;I

•

:
-

Tammy D. Holter of Racine has '·
been appointed to the Engineering .:

:E

)(

·
'

Holter appointed :
to OU council ·

FREE $25 SEARS II~
CERTIFICATE
•

LB.

-

~

SALEM CENTER - Star ·
Grange and Star Junior Grange will hold their annual Halloween Party :
·and Haunted Mouse on Saturday at ·
6:30p.m. at the grange hall located ·
on County Road 1 near Salem Cen· .
ter. Costume judging at 6:30p.m.
followed by a potluck supper and .
games for all. Officers will hold a
conference at approximately 8 p.m. :

POMEROY - BeUes and Beaus
'
POMEROY·There will be a Western
Square Dance Club will
dinner at 'the Senior Citizens Center

w .,

'

REEDSVILLE - Riverview Ele- ;
mentary will have its fall festival ' ;
on Saturday with su~per at 5 p.m.
,
and games at 7 p.m. Refreshments .; ,
will be available. The public is ·
invited to attend.
·-

Festi~al .

49

'

.

�•
.. • •

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

18, 1991.'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·'

'

Wednesday, Octobe[ 18,1991

PEPSI _COLA
.
PRODUCTS
.

'if.

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

Beat of the Bend.-.: .

.

by Bob Hoeflich

'

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday

~ Seems like it has been a while

2 LITER BOTTLE

8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH
.

.

.

EFFECTIVE OCT.13 thru OCT. 19,1991
.•

FRITO
LAY
DORITOS

\

11 OUNCES

s
39
Breosts.............. 1
LB.

·

Steak/Roast~····•LB. ·
HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED
$· 99

1

Sousoge••••••••••••••La..
ASSORTED FLAVORITE

c·

14 Pork Loin......... LB.s 1 Lunch Meats•••• ~. LB.
$

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Ch uck,Roas t••••••• LB.. 1s9
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOTTOM

$

BULK SLICED

150UNCES - -

SJ99

ZESTA
I

LB.

PACKAGE

.

.

.

_speakers .announced

CHARMIN ·

·BATHROOM
TISSUE

DOZEN

INTERSTATE &lt;RINKLE CUT

French Fries •••••

10 LB. PACKAGE
SLB.

s.
Pizzo•••••••••••••••• 3 s

TONY'S

PINTO BEANS

4LB. 89(

FLAVORITE

CAT FOO~
60!.

5/ 1

GRAN~ SUGAR
20 oz.

;:,u:GAL NOTICE OF SALE
• OF REAL ESTATE
~: Notice Ia hereby given by
tho Boord of Park
tommlalllonera of the 0 . 0.
Mcintyre Park Dlalrlcl that
Uiey will offer for aalo by
...led bldo tho following .
illocrlbed reel oatato:
~
. TRACTI1
-: Situated In lht City •of
Golllpolla, being port of
- - l:ilngley'o Lot No. 15 ·and ·
· ' Commona No.7.
: Boglnnlng for reference at
1 point whore Spruce
llrHI'a aouthorly right of
way lnleraocta tho northerly
I!Qht of way of Slrewberry
Allen; Strowberry Alley hor·
ilnoftor rt~ll
d lo 11 5th

GROUND
BEEF

'

TWIN

Public Notice

GALLON

HANGING ROGK FARMS

Med. Eggs•••

JOHN and SUE AKINS

4 ROLL PACK

2o/o Milk••••••••

SLB.

.;) 149

venue;

SJJ90
I

,

SLICED
SLAB

BACON
10 LB. PACKAGE

$990

Good Only At Poweft's Suplt' Yalu
Offer
Oct. 13 thru O&lt;t. 19, 1991

,. Tho nco following I he
IIOI'Ih«ly right of way of 5th
lvonuo South 47 degreea
10' 00" ·woal, 294.00 feet to
tlit true placo of baglnnlng
fbr tho foilowlng deacrlbed
Nil ntateond paaafng Iron
(!l_na aot at 33.83 feel and
. :U4.00 feel aald point of
~Inning being marked by
in lron pin Ht;
MThtnct leaving 11ld right
-~way north 43 c:tegreaa 00'
QO" Will, 150.00. fool IO I
point;
·
• Thonco north 47 degr111
M'OO" out, 88.83 feel to a
I!:Oint;
. - Thence aoulh 43 dagreea
110' 00" out, 150.00 feet to
lh.-nort)lerty rlghl ol way of
l)hAvenut;
• Thtnct following aald
tfghl of woy aoulh 47
Mgi'Hll 00' 00" Will, 88.83
t to tho ptoco of
lnnln .
·
0 nto~nlng .211 ocroa
iiioro oriHo. Subloctto all
llg11 "oomonll, teuft and

~

.

'i

I

f

bers of the Meigs County Farm Bureau Federa·
tion were recognized on Tuesday for their lon~­
time memberships. Presenting them with the1r
membership pins is Maida Mora. Also pictured

'•

are,
Catharine and Rex Sbener~eld (40 years), Roherl
S. Burdette, Genevieve Burdette, Howard Frank
(30 years), Sharon Jewell, Cheryl Jewell and
•
Robert Jewell (25

122 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
(614) 992·6632
· WEDNESDAY: Fettudni Alfredo
THURSDAY: Cream Baked Chicken
FRIDAY: Shrimp Scampi
.SATURDAY: Honey Baked Ham
'.

.

Publl~

Nollce
right ofwaya ofrocord.
Bolng pari of the real
eetalo deecrlbed tn Volume
180, Page 274 ond Volume
t80, Pogo 265, Galt Ia
County Dted Recorda.
TRACTI2
Sllualed In the City of
Goltlr.ollo, being part . of
Long ey'a Lot No. t5 and
Commona No.7.
Beginning ot • point
whorolho ooulherty right of
way of Spruce Street and
lhe north«IY:rlghl ol way ol
Strawberry Alloy lnteraect;
Slrawber'ry Alloy hereinafter
reforred to 11 5th Avenue;
Thence following tho
northerly right of way of 5th
Avenue ooulh 47 degreot
00' 00" Wtl~ 207.17 feel to
on Iron pin oot and pa01lng
on Iron pln aoltt 33.83 feel;
Thence teovlng utd right
ofwoy north 43 degree&amp; 00'
00" Will, 150.00 feel to 1
point;
Thenco north 47 degreea
OO' OO" oaot, 207.17 feel to
tho aouthtrly right of way ol
Spruce Street;
Thonoo following said
right of wey lOUth 43
degreeo.OO' 00" ooal, 150.00
foot to tho place of
beginning.
Containing .713 acru
more or •••·
SubJol:t to ell leaol euom.n ll, leuoa encf right of
woyo of record.
Being part of tho rul
"tale deeorlbod In Volume
180 Po;o 21&amp; Gatti a
County Doocf Roco:da.
·
. TRACT 13
Sltuoted In tho City of
· '
·
Galllpo!l• being part of
Longley • ~~ No. 1l end
port of Common• No.7.
Baglnnlng at en Iron pin

Williams namea
to Who's Whos

~

Holly Allyn Willianis, daugh~r
of Allen and Marilyn Will~ams,
Pomeroy, has been selected t_o
appear in tl\e 25th·annivetSa{Y cdi·
lion of Who's Who Amoog A.neri-•.
can High School Students. This is .... ::
the second year Miss Williams bas
·
been chosen for this hom and only
five percent of studepts from l)le
nation' s 22,000 high schools are
honored. ·
Miss Williams is the 1991 Her- -itage Queen and a finalist iD the
Mlss T.E.E.N. OhiQ PaseanL She is _
a junior at Meigs High School
where she serves and participaies
on student council, yearbook: staff,
marching ban.d and head fJCld commander, pep band, pep club, choir,
choir treasurer, Choraliers, Madrigals, Electric Youth and track
team. She has also received slljieri- ·
or awards for _voice and piano solos
at Solo and Ensemble Competition
at Ohio University.
She does free·lance modeling, iS
a member of the Shady River ShufOers and is employed at Gilmore's
in Pomeroy.

Christmas In
OetoberAt
Mill Street Books!

ALL .HOLIDAY CARDS

20%0FF
OCTOBER 14th THRU 19th

01\\iff 5t~LE1 .Q3!Joks
992·6657

OPEN TUES. THRU FRI. 11-2; WED. &amp; THURS. 5·8;
FRI. 5-9; SAT. 5·9

SJ19

FLAVORITE

RE:CCIGI~IZEb • These mem-

' HOLLY

are -Alan Holter, who presented the membership
pins, Grace· Holter (56 years), Maida Mora (55
years), C.E. Br.keslee (53 years), Millie MidkitT
and Diana Kinder, representing Bank One (55
years), Mildred Gaul (S3 ,years), and Mary Kay
Yost (51 years). Third row,l-r, are Harry Holter
(56 years), Donald Mora (55 yearS), Roy Holter
(accompanying his
Ada Holter), Raymond Furbee
George Holter (56

ALSO FEATURING: Prime Rib, BBQ
Rack of Ribs, Broiled Alaskan Pollock, .
Deep-Fried Butterfly Shrimp and Steaks.

ICE
CREAM·

Bananas ••••••••••• LB.

;

Bring This Ad And Get 1Oo/o Discount!

FLAVORITE

(

· LONG-TIME MEMBERS. These families
were recognized last night for their membership
of SO years or more· in the Meigs County Farm
Bureau Federation. Front row, 1-r, Daisy
Blakeslee (53 years), Ada Holter (61 rears),
Grace Furbee (52 years), Pauline Atkms (73
years), Nellie· Parker (55 years), Rose Easterday
(55 yean) and Carson Yost (accompanying his
grandmother, Mary Kay Yost). Second row, 1-r,

~

99(

9
4

2
Bocori••••••••••••••~••.u.99

Round Steak •••••••La:

GENERAL
MILLS

s"129. CHEERIOS

0 BUTT
FRESH p RK

49

$159

Courthouse: the Holly Hill Inn, and
:J;ince Pomeroy has had .a haunted · the Sacred Heart Church. The
ll!ouse feature during the Halloween cou.nty fair and Rock Springs get
·season.
· spme mention along with some ·
~. However, adults involved in the interesting comment about Route
:teen center on Mechanie St.- 33 itself after the four -lane
, ,Locomotion-are taking care of exhausts itself. And do let me
:,that this year.
'
quote a coqple of sentences from ·
., The center will become a haunt- the article. Referripg.IO Route 33: ·
.'ed house ·this year and 'some neat
"Passing, but for !his suet~h •. is ·
.ideas ·are coming forth. Mem~rs an ·activity reserved for 'ihe locals
of the Jaycee$ who bave' been · who not only know the curves but
active with such endeavors in the know w)lo should be coming•
.past are providing some advice and around them depending on !he time
:know-how for the project.
of day. For everyone else, the
: The haunted house will open at route IS a cijlher."
·7:30 each evening except on openWe knew·tha==t!:....__
:~ng night and will remain open as
'long as the crowd keeps coming.
The Meigs Band Boosters who
·Admission wiD be $2 for adults and apparently are doing a good job in
·.$1 for students. The opening will suppon of.the Meigs High's excel•be on Oct. 25-and llils will take lent band director, Tony Dingess,
~place after the football game:- and are worldng out a major problem.
:lhe house will be open through
Previously, .seweral vehicles- a
jlalloween, Oct. 31. Of courSe, the pickup truck, .trailer, wllat-have·weekly dance which draws many · you-had to be -employed every:leen-agers will not be held on Oct. time the band•went out of !Own to
:26.
transport the large instruments and
' In conjunction w'ith the haunted . equipment needed by the band
· be' held members upon arrival.
•house a poster contest IS mg
Now a truck has been located
·for fifth and sixth graders to pro·
"mote the seasonal feature.
and "is being purchased so that in
• Sounds spooky to me.
the future the band and the direc10r
•
will know everytime they go out of
: The Midnight Cloggers have town that there will be transporta·
• lost a customer.
lion on hand for.the instruments• During the fair, it seems tl!at a · all in one vehicle.
;woman from the Racine area
To finance the purchase the
·ordered one of the t-shirts offered boosters are selling ads on the exteby the dancing group-fine and rior of !he vehicle 10 business hous.dandy. She paid for the purchase es. The cost per ad is $100 and
.and her name and phone number attempts have been made to contact
-were written down. The bad news every business house. However, if
::is that the name and phone number any business person is interested in
·.have been misplaced and no one supponing the project by purchas·
·'seems to know who the customer ing an ad, please get in touc,h with
j s. The good news is that the clog- Iva Sisson at 742-2187.. You may
gers are anxious to clear up the ~et an answenng scrvJce. l_f so,
-matter and the cus!Omer can get her JUst leave your number, Iva Will be
"t-shirt by calling 742-2926.
' happy to get back to you . . The
space of each busmess· ad w11J be
~ The October edition of !he mag- SIX inches by three feet. Incidental: azinc OHIO includes a feature on ly, smaller signature ads will also
:.U.S. Route 33 from the Ohio River be available to individuals who
wish their name on the instrument
:llonhward.
vehicle.
There are $20. ·
- Pomeroy is included in !he ani·
:'ere as well as the bridge to Noplace
The Thomas confmnation hear::Special as it is referred to in the
ings
seemed to have left a bad taSte
·:reature story. The bridge, of
across
the nation. Par for the
. ~curse, is the one crossing from
in
the way we do thi.!tgs
course
~Meigs into Ravenswood.
these
days,
I guess. Do keep smil: There are some interesting
ing.
-:".descriptions of the Meigs County

Mid.eport.,

John and Sue Akins, Broadway,
Va., will be the guest speakers at
the Rejoicing Life Church in Middleport on Friday and Saturday.
Mrs . Akins will speak at the
Ladies Breakfast on Saturday at
.9:30a.m. She will speak on her life
experiences and dedication to the
Lord for !he past 16 years.
Akins is founder and director of
Salt and Light Ministries. He will
be speaking at the Sunday 10 a.m.
and 6 p.m. services. Special cere ..
monies will be held at the 10 a.m.
service as Bill Asbeck and Mark
Davis, both of Middleport, will be
installed as Elders.

Public Nollce

Public Nollce

aelallhelnlerlllcllon of the Ohio, 45631 until 12·00
north east right of way line noon on Tuesday, October
of Spruce Street ond lhe 22, t99t , and opened lmme·
north weal right of way of dlately thereafter.
Strawberry filley;
Each tract will be sold to
Thence fotlowln; the the highest and best bidder
north weal right of way of pursuant to t545.t2 of the
Strawberry Atley north 47 Ohlc Revised Code. Terms
dagroea 00' 00" eaat,158.8t of Sate: The successrut
leet lo an Iron pin found tn· purchaser, as soon as his
the south east cprn« of tho bid Is accepted and lhey are
property deacrlbtd In notified, shall be required to
.Votuma 27Q; Page 27, Gallla deposit, within three (3)
County Deed Records;
days by cash or cetlllled
Thence north 84 degrees check payable to the o. 0.
Ot' 03" West, 50.00 feet to Mcintyre Park District, ten
an Iron pin eel;
· percent (tO%) of the amounl
.Thence north 04 degrooa of such accepted bid. The
58' 57" oosl, 90.00 feel to a unpaid balance ot tliu
point;
· ·
purchase price shalt ba duo
Thence aouth 84 degrees and payable to the 0. o.
Ot' 03" eul, 50.00 feello an Mcintyre Park Dlslrlcl up·&gt;n
l1on pin aet ond pualng an delivery of the deed. Ta xes
Iron pln set altS.OO ltiet;
witt be prorated to the d1y
Thence north 04 degrees of closing.
58' 57" east, 119.t6 feet to The Board ol Park
an Iron pin oel;
Commissioners ollha 0 . o.
Thence ooulh 47 degrees Mctiuyre Park Dlstriel
00' 00" wool, 3t4.00 leetlo reserves lhe right IO rejr,r.l
an Iron pin selln the north any an~ all bids and waive
o111 right of way "J'sprui:o any lnlormalllles.
Street;
By Order of the Board of
Thence following aald Park Commissioners of the
right of war, aoulh 43 0 ."0. Mcintyre Pork District,
dagreealiO' 00 'east, t40.00 Gallla County; Ohio.
feet lq Ihe place of
Board of Park
boglnntn;.
Commlnlonera,
Containing .856 ~crea
Dr. William B. Thomas,
more or ltaa.
Subject to ill legal 01Pros.; Ronnie Hatley, Sec.;
menlo, touea and right ol Judge Thomas S. Moulton,
Commissioner
woyo of rocord.
AllesI:·
Being ·part of tho• real
JoselloN. Baker,
ootalo ducrlbod . l l Tract
Dlroctor/Secrelary
No.'a 1 ond 3, Vot ·n•• 180, (8)25;(10) 2, 9, t6
Page 280, Gall'• ~o"rty 1 ---------1
Deed Rocordo.
"
Sooted • bl~o wlil Le
accepted at lho 0. n.
Mcintyre Park Dlatrlct Mo.n
Office, Gtltlt County .
courthouoo Oolllpotlo
·
• , ..
'

. It's a small price to pay.
And from Oct. 22 through Nov. 1, it's the special
price Pleasant Valley Hospital is offering the
women of ourcommunity for a screening breast
mammogram. Why? Because we know that when
breast cancer is found at the earliest possible stages,
your chance for survival jumps to nearly 100 per·
cent. • And mammography is an important part of
the three-step early detection program all women
should follow.

-.
National .
Breast Cancer
Awarenes·s Month

If you are age 35 or over - the age at which the American Cancer Society recommends you hav~ a
screening mammogram - you can take advantage of our$49 special with a physician's order. We'll
honor orders from any physician licensed to practice in West Virginia or Ohio. And you should also
know that most insurance carriers, induaing Medicare, are now covering screening mammography.
Call your doctor now to schedule an appointment for a screening mammogram at Pleasant Valley
Hospital between Oct. 22and Nov.l . And if you think you can't alford a mammogram, think again.
Now you can't afford not to have one.
I

For a free guide to breast self-ex~lnation, a referral to a physician on the PVH Medkal Staff
who can order a mammogram or niOl'e Information about this offer, call (304) 675-4340, exL 253.
'According to the American Cancer Soi:iety

WANT ADS

All JUIPifli .
WITH BARGAIS

:i520 Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550 (304) 675-4340

�Pomeroy-Middl.port, Ohio
Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Pap smear may still be
necessary after hysterectomy

Answer : The Jlurpose of a
screening test, such as the pap .
smear, is to test a large number of
individuals for signs of problems
so tlult more exacting tesiS can be
used to check those identified as
· having a high lilc:elihood of actually
being afflicted wilh the condition. ·
The common usage of the term
"pap smear" links it with testing for
cervical cancer, and this causes
some confusion here. The cervix is
removed during a hysterectomy, so
you could assume that there was no
longer a need to have a pap smear
.after surgery. But, that may not be

Health Recovery Services, Inc. time 'ihe program hilS been offered .
The Ariel Playen are.back with
will sponsor a free family program in ·Meigs County. In addition·, · a second season of perform!IJICt;S
on Sat!lfday from 1 to 5 p.m. in the Health Recovery Services has now s~g this weekend. The commuPomeroy municipal building audi- waived the fee for the program to nity theatre ensemlile will be pretoriulil, 320 East Main SL
make it available to a wider seg- senting the perennial favorite,
· The on-going program is mentofthecommunity;
"Beauty and the· Beast" on Saturdesigned to meet the educational
According ·to Russell Fisher, day, OcL 19 at 8 p.m. and Sunday,
•and informational needs of family HRS Outpatie11t Services Site Man- OcL 20 at 3 p.m.
members and/or concerned citiZens ager for Meigs County, ·the
"This is eillertainment for the
of Meigs and sliirounding coUnties. willespread .nature of this problem entire family," said Director Joseph
Areas to be addressed include ed.u• makes it vitally important to offer Wright about the classic tale of a
cation on alcohol and thd disease this free program to as many fami· young woman in love with an
concept pertaining to signs, symp- lies in our local anea as possible.
enchanted prince. "
tom s, and :stages, family issues,
For more information Fisher can
The part or Beauty will be perindividual common issues, feelings be coni8Cted at 99'?--5',1.77.
.
formed by Jenny Dyer. Dyer was a
and emotions, laws and the legal
HRS is accredited by the Joint · co-director of the Ariel Players
system,
and
personal Commission on Accreditation of recent production of "A Temperexperiences/consequences.
Healthcare Organizations
ance Town." The Beast will be perThis Saturday marks the first
trayed
Chri s
Kena

AOVERniED ITEM PoucY • each ott nasa aoven1HG nems llltQUifea 10 oe readilY 1vliiiDII lor Hit in eacn Krovtr Store.
axe~ u IJ)e(:thclllv noted In lhl s ad . !I we 40 run out olan aaver11sea 111m. we Will ottw you your cnotcl ola ~m~ADie
Item. wntn avaliiDII. (eflectmg ll'lt sama U'tlngs or a ra1nchte:k wnieh will entiUt you 10 purenua 1hf ldvtn1111C11tem It
the ldYM:IMCI priCI w1th1n 30 diiYI· Only one
coupon w11t be acceotfM.1 per 1Mm purdltlold.

"'ndor

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

-

must be

. tor ads JM!id in .•dv•nce.
"Aec.W• 1.110 diacaunl

pre,

Words

3·d.,.,,

15.1 .

6

16

15

SUNDAY PAPER

follotl'ing I elephon'!'
Gillie County

Mtl;t Caumy

AruCodt614

Aru Code 614

~-··"

A11110 11 11C l~ lil t: IllS

1-Cerd of Th1nk1

exchan~es ...

2 - ln Memory

9811 - Chesler

576 - Appl1 Grove
773 ~ MIIM

458 - leon

3 - Annoucements

U - MitO, Mttchendile
!&amp;.- Building Suppli•
56-Peta for Slit

5 - HIIPPY Ads

0- Lon and Found
7 -- Vad Salelpaid in ad\tancel

&amp;7 - Mulie~lln•trumtnll
58- Fruits &amp; Vlg'Mabl•

B~o~v

&amp;9-FOf' Sale or Trtdt

E111 ploy 1111'11 1
For111 Suppl 11:s

Srrvlcf' :;

&amp;2::-Wanttd to·Buy

9·6·1fn

7t31 /'91

(614) 4t6·UI6 or I·IOII·Il':I·S..J

tin

I&amp;C EICAYATtNG

ITS INSULATOr

MIUDOZIIG

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING '
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING:
Um•tone. Dirt,
Gravel end Coat

Fllctory

13- livestock
14 - HI~ &amp; Grain

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOW
We Will Not Be Undenold
*Save up to 50% on Fuel Bills
*Increase the Value of YQur Home
*Call for Free Estimates

Uaen•d end Bonded

7

PH. 614·992-6691

9 -11-1 mo: pd.

328

66-Setd I Fertilil lr

·'BISSELL
BUILDERS

Tr ;msllll r t alto 11
71 - Autoa for S1le
72 - Truck• for S1le

31 '- Momei.tor S1te
32- Mobilt Hom" for Stle
33- Farms tor Slle
34-Busin•• Buildings
.35- lott &amp; A:cr1191

73- Vena 6 4 · ~o · ,
74- Motorcvct•
76-Boltl I Motor• for S1l1
71- Auto Pint &amp; Acc•aoriM
· 77 -· Auto Rep1ir
78 - Cimping EqulpmenP
79-Cimpersl M01or Homn

H1ven
896 - lttert
937 - Bufflllo'

1;®1111
41 - Houaea for Ren\

Scrmes

.

42 - Mobile Homtt for Rent
43 - F•rms for Rent

83-hc.,aling

48 - Equipment for Atnt
49 - For Leue •

Public Notice

WANT ADS 8fT

' . ' . · RESUlTS
LIKE
DIAMONDS

.....

llead
~

CUSTOM BIILT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES
'~

IH-blt !'rKIS"

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

PH. 949·2101
or Its. 949·2160
Day or Night - ·

BILl SLACK
992-2269

NO SUNDAY CAllS

USED RAILROAD TIES
8·12·90-tfn

.

.

8&amp;- Eiectrictl I Refr;ger1tlon
&amp;e - Oenerel ~luling
88 - Mobile Home Repeir
8 7 - Uphol1terv

46 ~ Sptce for fhnt
47 - Wented.to Ren1

Fad

81 · · Home lmprovemerus
82 - Piumbing &amp; He•lng

•

and

.

Choke Only

M.UIIO"
.., • • &amp;
CO-G
Locat811 On Saff..,! SchoOl 141.
lt. ••1

BENNETT'S

OITOilFIU
1·11110·141..0070
DAIWIN OliO

•4•r~ZII6U

12 Gauge

11 - Ftrm Equipment

· ·· ········ ·· ·· ···············-·· ~ ·

992-7013
or'992.ss;3

Starting Sept. 22

X.l t VI~SI I II: k

All CONDmONERS ·IIAT PUll'S IIIII ,
FURNACES FOR MOillE.&amp; DOU~-

NEW I USED PAits
FOI AU MAlES&amp;
MODELS

NQ SUNDAY

RACINE GUNCLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

63-~ntiRwtl

4 - Giw ..way

44 - Apart'1'tnt tOr R tnt
45 - Furnithtd Aoom1 ·

Get ResuJts

Mer ctwHII sI'

36- Rt•l Ettete.Wented

247 - Letert falls 882-Ntw

Earnin~ ror
Learnina

0000000000000000

IZ-1-"'tG-

R.:1 l Estate

Mason Co .. WV
Aru Code 304

843 - Portt.nd

949 - Aicine
142 - Autllnd
667 - Coolville

·.or les.

! 1- HouHhold Goodl

22 -~oney to lo1n
23- Prof•lionll Servic•

388 - Vinton

379 - Wtlnat

.eo

·.O&amp;tdiy..

;IIHf/1

Cllltulfr-lttalr

PH. 949·2101

.42

. •.

. S••dllllzllltl I•

..FrM •lm.tnq .

.30

· ta.OO

WHALEY'S
AUTO PAm

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

Ov••
1~ Words
.
.20

· ~-.;R:'~'"~'~'•:'•=•~co:n;rio~cu=rw=o~ru:!;n•,.·b~•·."'."."".d oy 1 w 111 b 0 'h "0~od

21 - 8usin111 Oppo,r lunity

241 - Rio Grtnde

fi43 - Arabil Di1t

U

18 - Wented To Do

675 - PI Pleaunt

266- Guven Dist.

BISSELL
SIDING CO~'

1 2- S,tultion W1nted

992 - Middleport
Pomeroy

Gtllipolis

-

·

113.00 .
11.30/ diV

13 - lnturence
14-Butineu Tr~ i n l ng
15 - Schoo It a. lntnuclion
16 - Redio , TV &amp; CB Rep1ir
17- Miscellaneout

SATURDAY
:.. 2,00 PM. MONDAY
- 2 :00P .M. TUESDAY
- 2'00 PM, WEDNESDAY
- 2'00 PM . THURSDAY
- 2 :0 0 P .M . FRIDAY

&lt;
Classified paf{es,cot·er the

••&amp;387- Ch•hife

1&amp;

u .oo

11 - Help W1nted

~ 1UOA . M .

THURSDAY PAPER

FRIDA~ PAPER

.

16

9-Wented to

DAV BEfORE PUBLICATION

~~~i?tio~~p~:PER

u .oo

8 - Publ i c 811111 &amp; Auction

.

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER

R11o

1

3.

·

•Free adl - Gi111ewey 1nd found 1ds und• 16 wordl will be
run
no eh•ge.
"Price at ad for 111 cepi\a l l.tters is double price of ad coli.
•1 point WnetyPe only ustd.
•Sentinel it no1 responsible for errors 1ft~/ firs(d.,. . ICheck
tOt ertOJI lint day ad runs in ptpl!lrl. C•tl before 2 :00p.m
d.,. aft• publiuUon to mllke correetion ,
·
·' Adt th.t musl be paid in ictvence •e

WE RESERVE THE AIGH:T TO l.IMIT QUANTITIES. NQNE S0\.0 TO DEALERS.

Days

10
Mimlhly

"Ada ouuidt MOiga, G111i1 or Muon c:ount 1•

Pomero~.

RATES

•A c:lenified adve"iHment placed in The Daily SentineiiP ·
Ctp1 - c:l•tified ditpiiV. Busin~1 Cerd and leg II notices)
will alto IPPeer in the Pl . Ple•ent ftegi1ter 1nd 1he Gallipolis Deily Tribune, retching over 18.000 homes.

RENT·TO·OWN
NAME IRAND PRODUCTS
Faclory Aulhorized Repair
TV· VCR • Slereo
Boom Box· C. D. Player ,
Scenner ·Typewriter
Cordless PhoneMicrowave· Radar

Delector

Hame
Entertainment
Center
H.!.C.
Pomeroy

INUIPE.HIIT

Is YIMir Roof Ready for Another Year ofltt and Saew?
Now's The nme to find Out.

CAI'ET CLEANERS
and nLE FLOOR CAll

CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
992·2653

•Reuonable flates

•Quality Work

•FrM Eatimetes

•Carpllt Has Fest Dry
Time •
•High Gloss on Tile
Floor Finish

•

For ·old &amp; New Raafs, Shingles

Repairs, Gatters

Buildi~g

MIKE LEWIS. Ownw
It, t, lulta.-, OH.

We Guarantee Your Satlalaetlon

JO!IPHL~

IREIISTIMATIS

742·2U1

992·3524

aad Remodehng
~st-.

3-14·'91-tfn

9127/1 mo.

Uasslneds!

A

GUN SHOOT

MICIOWA E
OYEN·IEPAII

F.IREWOOD
SELLERS

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

AU. 111m .

lri.. HIIICit'We
Pick ...

Hardwood Slabs

CLUB
Begins Sept. 15
Enry Sunday 12 Noon
Factory Guns Only
9/9/,1/2 mo.

For Sale
Great Price!
CALL

KEN'S lPPUllla
SEIYICI

OHIO PALLET CO.

Aaess ,,... hit OHic.
"117 I. ,._. lt. ·
I'OMIIOY.-

992-5335 or
'915-3S.1

9

3/IIID/111

YOUNG'S
GROOM
' ROOM

IALL FESFIVAL
I

FIIOZEN KROOER FAT FREE
OESSER~ SUOAR FREE ICE
REAM OR

K~oger

Ice cream

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE OIEi PEPSI,
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH ·
MIDDLEPORT-Gonor1l H1rtintjlor Porkwoy·Oh, so pmtly,
II has 7 rooms thai are all nice soze. Two bedrooms up end
two down. Also has a one car garage. Its close to stores
and schools. You should see 10 appreciate.
$33,500

Foamy shave Diet Pep_si or
cream
Pepsi Cola

,,,, ,,, 7ft
Y:z-Gallon

,.

11-oz.

.l:&gt;

·9•.
· •

·,

0

0 ""

0

/

serve 'n' save
Bologna

2
SUMNER ROAD- SUPERIOifitVtNG - In this 2 story
brick bi-level homo! 9 rooms, 3-4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
stone front fireplace, woodburner, haal .pump, slorage
bulding, fruil cellar, upper and lower decks, 2 car,garage,
t .485 aae of lovely tandscapi~g . This is a MUST SEE 10
believe hamal ASKING $72,900.

2.5-oz.

PRICE!

VARIETIES CONCENTRATE

92t

COLO OR

Welch's cran· Cepacol
berry Blend Mouthwash
. 24-oz.
12-oz.

®
cottage
liE

""'W•N"" FROZE/I ASSORTED

CaliFornia Head Lettuce

MIDDLEPORT·Peart Slreei·A nice 2 slory home with 3
bedrooms, 1 t/2 baths, vinyl siding, new windows. lull
basement. House is on a GOOD STREET. Pnoe was
$39,900
NOW $37,000

Guy A. Guinther
whO passed away
two years ago .
today.
October 16, 1989
Gone But Not .

Forgotten. ·

NEW LISTING- 1975 t4x70 Nashua mobile home - 3
bedrooms and bath. Includes 10' deck, underpinning,
dryer and relrlgaralor. ASKING .$7.000.
MIDDLEPORT - RAfiCH STYLE HOME - Features 6
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, -uilt in bar and bookcase.
Large rear porch, shed, heat pump, Asking $39,500.
Needs a little worli. MAKE AN OFFERI

.

SEAL TEST

In Memory

In Memory of

POMEROY PIKE - kOTS QF ROOM - Ranch slyle
home wllh 25 acres. Home rer;antty remodeled. Includes
cherry b'ees; supply of wood and wood slave, additioilal
heating source. In Eastern school district Asking
$69,000. COme lake a look. Maklj an offer.

HAIS

Each

2-Llter

REOUU.R SIZE, BUTTER,
CHOCOLATE OR GRAHAM
CRACKER KEEBLER

ALL

·II

SPECIAL
20 SESSIONS
For $20.00

large warm home
· a large family! . roort:~s.• 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 enclosed porches, beau~ul ongonal
woodwork, added insulalion, with ne~ paint and repairs
ouiSido. Includes oplions on 2 addiDonat loiS. ASKING
$44,900. MAKE AN OFFER I

•

Siidlv Mlsstd BY.
.thlltlrtlt ani!
G111ndchiltlren

2

In Memory

POMEROY -COMFORTABLE &amp; AFFORDABLE! - 1~
story frame home wilh 3 bedrooms. Loca~, on two loiS
of 50x100 each of paved street Asking $21 ;t!pO.

Cheese

YOU MAY BE A PUMPKIN EATER, BUT YOU CAN'l
UVE IN A PUMPKII SHELL! COME ON IN 10
CLELAND REALTY•••WE HAVE A HOME 10 SUIT
YOU WELL!
HOMES ARE GOING fAmlf YOU ARE THINKING
" OF BELLI~ USA CALLI

24-oz.

IIIW= HAI.P HAU
PRICEI PRICEI ·PRICSI

- .._

_,_

__ --

--- -----------

•b·---, . . -

···-

,_

---·

HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD-Looking lor a place to build?
Then you gotta soo this. Approx. 2 acres ol nics laying
cleared land. Water and aleelric available.
WAS $8,500
NOW $5,900

Sitting on approx . one acre corner lot along a state route.

ONLY $60,500
CROW'S SUBDtVtSION.ftvo Potnlo·A nice one acre lot
with water and eleelric available. A greal builclng lol with a
ONLY S5,000
price you can't beat.

DomE TURNER, Broktr...............................llll2-5082
BRENDA ~EFFERS....... :....................... .......... JI240S§
OARUNE STEWART..............................." ••••••• 812-13ts-

'lANDY BUTCHEll ......................"''"'"'''.........:...4!?.t
SHERYL WALTER9......................~...................387.Q421

--

Offer Ends Oct. 31

FOREVER
BRONZE
949·2826

10-31

mo.

- lnttt6or • h • b

P,;mlnt
!FREE EJTIMATEII

V. C. YOUNG Ill
. 992·621 s

,_.,,Ollie

AGES 3 and UP

THE DANCE
COMPANY
992-6289
9-6-1 .....

--

Howll'd L Writtltl

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

FIUZEIS- $125 1t1

MICIO OYINS-$" up

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Painting

992-5335 or 985-3561

FREE ESTIMATES

Across from Poll OHi••
POMEROY, OHO
lMOf 89 tin

9/ 9 / 91 / 1 mo. pd .

949-2161
9/t/ 91 / 1 mo. pel.

.

J&amp;L
INSULATION '
•VInyl Siding
•Ropl1coment
Window a
• •Roofing
•ln1ulltlon

GUN SHOOT

IISSEU &amp; BURKE
CONSTIUCTtON

lAONE
FilE DEPT.

•N•w Homes
IGangts

Bashan lulling
. EVDY
·
SAT. NIGHI
6:30P.M.

•Complete

lemo~lng

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or '
742-2251
1539 8ry1n Ploce
Middleport Dhlo
.,

DOZER arid
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006
6-6."91

JAZZ CLASSES

lANG II- Gat· II~&lt;.-$ 12 ~ up ·

1·(3034)- .
773-9560

~

BALLET, TAP ,&amp;

lllfiiGIUTOIS- $100 up

Convertible Tops,
Carp,ets. Headliner
&amp; Seat CovMS and
Minor Auto Repair.
MAl• ST., MASDN, VA.

.... ...

·BOB JONES
EXCAVATING

WASHIIS-StOO,.
DIYIS- SU llfl

UPHOLSTDY

.

ll-14-'90 lfn

90 DAY WAIIUIIn

COMPLOE AUTO

wort&amp;

- Rooting

USED APPUANCES

A'&amp;I

ROUTE 124-Have you ever dreamed ol owning your own
business-Well, now's the time to buy. This business is
equipped with shake machine, 4 freezers, ice cream
machine, deep fryer, ice machine, grill, and lots more.

LANGSVILLE·Loo~t this nioa 1 112 story home thai sits
on appro~ .. 31 Ictal. II has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, heal
pump, and woocloumer. Some ot lite land is tillable, ·plus il
would be a great place for hunting. It has a dug watt plus a
spring.
S~t,tOO

HENRY E. CLELAND.........................................9i2-81i1
TRAG_Y BRINAGER...........................................i4i·243i
JEAN TRUSSELL .............................................94tl-2860
JO HILL.....................................,,,;.,.................. ,t85·446e

--

MIDDLEPORT·Historical looking corner store. Has 6
apartments up and another store down. Sian your own
businas. Has loiS ol room and has an .income.
CALL FOR MORE DETAILS

RACINE AREA.ST. RT. 124-Aimost4 acres of nice laying
lawn and garden area and a 4 beeroom home that within
the lasl 8 years has had a new roof, new siding, new
cabinels, new furnace, new winr;fows. new aa1811119, new
s~l garage, new 1ixtures, arid new plumbing in bath.
ALL FOR $40,000

OFFICE.......................... t""""'':.........................992·225t

~

- Gutter wort
and ~

-••-leal
-cOftCr'ttl

Pomeroy, Ohio
!·I

Chicken Breast Quarters

------ -

- "oom Addltioftt

614-9f2-6820

u.s. Grade A Tyson/Holly Farms

uteruS removed.

CARPENTER SEIVKE

Complete Grooming
For All Breeds
EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

lb.

Cancer of the vagina occurs
infrequently in the general population, so an annual pap smear for
women who ,have had hysterectomies for reuons other than cancer is probably not medically justifllble. An except!on is women who
have had multtple sexual partners
or venereal warts. TheSe·women like those who have had cancer are II increased risk of vaginal cancer. Anyone in this category should
have an annual pap smear, just like
the woman who has not had her

~ ----

"Beauty and the Beast" is !he
first of three performances .betn$
given by the A.riel Players !his sea:
son . . Agatha Christie's "The
Mouseu:ap" will be Dece'!lber fl
.and 22 and Marshall Umversuy
,;,ill present a "Cole Porter
Review" Ol) February 22. A seaso,n
ticket for all three ,performances IS
available for $10 or individual tickeiS can be purchased for $5. ·

You can J
Help Your School
Earn Free IBM

•VINYL SIDING.
•lii.UM lNUM SlJ;)INO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION .

• .The Area's Number 1. Marketplace

COPYRIGHT 1991 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND P~ICE S GOOD SUNDAY. OCT 13 THROUGH SATUROAY .

OCT. 19, 1991 IN

.

In Mernori•m

Hysterectomy is performed for a
number of reasons, including for
~er of the cervix. Woll)en who
have had cancer of the cervix are at
increased risk of also developing
cancer 'of the vagina and for recur·
renee of their cervical callcer in the
skin of the vagina. Women in
,poups should certainly continue to
have pap smears done on a regular
basis after their hysterectomy.

~

.

The Dilly Sentinel Pig I

Business··Services

ClaSsifie

Kemper p.lays the witc,h, .Erick.
Johnson the dwarf, Chris Alba the ·
father and Joseph Wright is Amos.
The children are plilyed by Katluyq
Strafford, Jessica Strafford, Jenny
Gills and Meredith Mullins, ·

c.,d ot Th~nks

so.
....

"Family Medicine" is a weeldy
colwnn. To submit questions, write
ro John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Univeulty College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Orosvenor Hall, Alhens,
Qbio45701.
.

Ohio

Family program slated Oct. 19 Ariel.Pl&amp;yers open Sa~urday ,

&amp;

Familr
Medicine

Question:, Do you think elderly
women should have pap Sl!lears?
Answer: That is an imponant
question that has a simple answer
- YES I The term "pap smear" has
been used so often to describe th~
process of screening· women for
cervical cancer that it has become
the generic equivalent of "pap
smear of the uterine cervix" much
lilce "Kleenex" is used as a generic
term to describe facial tissile. Actually, though, the "pap smear" technique is effective for identifyil\g
cancer in ti number of different tissues, not just in the cervix.
The uterus is shaped much lilc:e a
pear and can be thought of as being
composed of two portions. The
uterine body is the larger 'part lilc:e
the bottom of a pear, and the uterine cervix is the smaller end like
the stem end of the pear. Cells that
are scraped from the uterine cervix
!luring a pap smear are only a fair
indication of the health of that pan
df the uterus, and they are a poor
indication of the health of the body
of the uterus.
·I say these cells are only a "fair"
· indication of the health of the tissue
because for every 100 women who
actually have cancer of the cervix,
about 30 have normal pap smears.
This high rate of early cancers
missed by pap smears - called
false negatives" - is part of the
reason it is impor1ant for women of
reproductive age and older to have
thts test armuaHy.
Even though the "pap smear"
has a high false negative rate, it is
still a valuable screening tool
because it is relatively easy to per- ·
fonil and affordable. Three consecuiive negative pap smears reduce
the chance of lhe test missing can- ·
cer when it is actually there to
almost nothing. So yes, get your
pap smear done every year.
The pap smear that' has been
very successful at identifying cancer of the cervix in its early stages
is remarkably ineffective at detecting cancer of the body of the
uterus. The test may have up to an
80 percent false negative rate! The
cells that are present on the cervix
of. the uterus are not a very good
indication of what is occurring in
lhe body of the uterus. Other tests ·
that sample cells from inside the
body of the uterus are used to
delect cancer of the uterus. ·
About 75 percent of wom·en
wilh uterine cancer - not cervical
cancer - are post-menopausal
with 58 being the mosi common
age at deteCtion·of the cancer. Postmenopausal women who have any
vaginal bleeding must be checked
for cancer of the uterus. Thirty to
50 percent of these women will
have cancer as the cause of that
bleeding.
Question: Is a pap smear still
needed after a complete hysterectomy?

Wednesday, October 18, 1981

11·14- n

Stop &amp; Co111para
frH lltiNatel

Starting s.t. 21

\ 915-ttn

fodtry Cllelr1
12'-11 ...... ...,
St .tctly ..hftlll

667-6179

5-Jl.'to tin

1·13-'IHI•

"

"

/tJI I 1/ll!l/!1/lf/... /iJf'Oi. I (/!/1/ij ..

1/.lJJ&gt;JIJJ

�,.

•

'

•

Television
'
Viewing

TIAf NILY
PIZIUI

.

8 · WED.1 QCT.11 8

I
I Ill' ri
H u R N· E B

IVININO

e:aome

YOU'RE TAKING THAT .
LEAl= ~0 SC~OOL FOR .
''SHOW AND TELL"?

WELL,DE5CRIBETO mM
!-lOW VOU i=ELT WHEN
VOU SAW THE LEAF
FALL FROM TI-lE TREE ..

'

w llle

• a •

ONewo. ··
ID Vlc!eo Pow.
f~ Oat Teltvltlon

•

~-1-r.l,........
ot,....,J......~ r......tll

lii!~Q

e

5EEI.N6 IT DRJ FT
DOWN 'Ill EARTH FOR

THE LAST TIME ...

-T-D....;O.,.,F_,.O
5
I H
•I 1
.
_ .
-;
L-..J--t..-i......J'--J
.--H_Y_T_E__S-5-...,,

l:tll Ill Toci CloM IGr Conifan

1;30me

o Nie ..... ~

IDiaveclbvtlltlel

·

w tile Ale .....

il

(lJ Wild A - Stereo.

Q

1.7 1.8 .I· . 1. 1. 1·
.

1!1
Stereo. Oat THivlllon
·
IIIIID CIINewoQ
·liD • Andr.Clrlflllh
DUpCloM

.

7:00

111• .I!J) WhHI of FOIIune
WIIINim of J••llt
(f)lnoldl Edition C

SCIIAM-UTS ANSWIIS
•• • rs
·Vanity - Group - Quart - Plexus - GIVE US
A man goes into a bank and says to the lending
officer, "I'd like to talk to you about a loan.· "Great!" says
the banker. "How much can you GIVE US?"

e lllr TA": Tlit Ntld
=!:•lion
Lent Tonight
Sloreo.
liD

$2Q0.$50G Wookly Mailing
. 3 Slrd Doa pupo to glvoowoy, 12 Eom
Holiday Trani Broehur11. For
. WHko ota pointing b.,id. 614· More
lnlormltlon Send A Ad·
·258·1671.
dr11atd StamDed Envtlo.,. To:
: 52 g1l water hnttr, 304·773- ATW Trov!~ P.O. Sol 430780,
Mloml, FL :gt58.
· 5'1V.
•
· Lorgo doa port Alrodolo I port AVON • All oroio, Coli Marilyn
Weaver 304. .2·2645.
.•Lob, 114-f411-2341a~or 4pm
.
A Dolly Solory Of $300 For
:6 · Lost &amp; Found
Buying Marchandlu. Buyar

IIJMICCI

' Qll

Wllch,

aGmiWhlfl

fn

7:30me

(!) To

Dlolr~t .

MACHINFJ

tllle Flmlly Feud

8

Public Sale

a Ia I Stir Stereo.
Megu'M

7:35 Ill Ianford • Son
8:00 m• o uneo~voc1

Myaterlte SOidiefs mar have
survived a 1973 alrplace
crash In VIetnam. Stereo. C
(l) MOVIE: Tht Challtngera
(2:00)
Cll llle Dlnouurs Robbie
learns his paorents' special
dinner 11 a nearlY. extinct

C water, Eallern Mtlgl CO.,

&amp; AuC11on

Rick Pooreon Auction Compony,
full limo ouctlonNr, conidfote
ouctlon MFYfce. Uconood Ohio,
Wool Ylrglrjo, 304·'17:1o511S.

Mllnttntnet Suparvltor
We Are SHklng An Individual

9 · Wanted to Buy

With :

Wontod to buy, Slondlna llmbor,

.Plumbing
K.-ctgo

loll WUIIomo I Sono 114-1112·

And

~Gold

Ringo, .... Cotna,
Gold Co1M. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
·111 Socond A-uo, O.llpotlo.

Employment Serv1ces
11

Help wanted

Wo Olfor:

.CO...pot~lvo

SonofHo

Sofuy

And

• Excellent Trtlnlng Progr1m
-Cono• Growth opportiMiilloo
.Job Sotlafoctlon

AVON 1 AI Anoo t Slllrtoy
.,...., 304-171-1421.

Rehabilitation Clnttr

36711 Rockoprlngo Rood ·
Pomoroy, Ohio 4575V

36

21

Real Estate
31

Homes lor Sale
ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII
Roducod To Soli: 2 Story 3br
Comt&lt; Lol In Clmhlre, Ohio.
Exctlltnl Condition. Flananclng

1104'

2·Siary houoo In Rutlond, I·

PIN down EXTRA

CA6tl?!!

bdrm upotolra opt, 3-btdroom
upttallw,
living rm,
2·bldroom, blthroom, dining
rm,
utility nm, otldng
. $25,000, 114-1'12-215e
dawnatalr~

k~ohon,

3 Sodroom Houoo, 111 Klnoon
Drive, Goiilpotll. Living Room,
Dining A00111YI KMchon, Solh,

~~~ 2AJ'c.r "G,,:~~~

• cas h '
1ium your· c lu tter Into
~ it the ea8y tvay... bx phone,
no neeil to leave your home.
Place
xour classified ad todav!
--- --- .J.
15 words or l ess, 3 d
J!fS,
3 papers,$6.00

Woiklng Diotonco Drtho Pool,
Goll &lt;:ooroa And Clinic. Go~
llpolll City School Dlotrict. at4245.at62.
3br AFrome On 1 Aero Woodad
Lot. $27,500 Wilt Conlldor Lond
Controct With Rouonoblo
Down Poyment. 114-258-11181.
4 bod&lt;oomo; 2112 bolho, f1&lt;1rno 3
yro old, oloo hoot purnp, mootor
ouno with wh~poot. bulK In

:l:l:~{ir ~~=~~-c~~~
~'Tt.:Cbd:l.~~2. 2

south,

a room 1-112 both, otory a hilt.
Ktlchon, DR, LA, 2 IR
downotolro1 1 lorgo SR, 112 both
upotll
. ... 20124 g1rogo. ,......._

me

•"t.::·

For solo by ow-, 2
remodolod 3 bodroom
,
Call our office for paid in adwaRCe rate1/
Iorge out bldg, oonvonlont toea.
llol\, I Nofth Point
' 1.
9. - -- -- -"'"'-I Complex.
Elomontory ond Cllv Rocreotlon
30U71-3271 far op.
2. _ _ _ ___1
~pol::::ntmtnt=·===-=---=:
OOYERNIIEHT HOIIEI Fnom St
3· - - - - - - 11 •
IU Rlpll~'::'.":.::'' Tu
ProportT.
o. Your
12• ·
4•
Area 101 ~. Ell. OH·
5.
13. -~-----I 10188 orCurrontRopoLiot.
HOME8 FOR BALE IV GOY'T
6. .
14. - -- - - - - I AOENCIEII
IRS Forooloo.,..,
Ropoo., IlL hllouto Avollobto
7•
15.
AJ Boraotn Prfooll. 1..05-SM1100 Eil. HRI88 For lmmoclato

o.

9

8.

Real Estate
Wanted

Business
Opponunlty
Coupl1 w1nt1 houu with 2 yr
lt1.. or lind contracl. 3 ·to 4
,INOIICEt
DHID VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. bedrooms, 11rg1 home In Gal·
Ncommtnda-that you do bull- llpollo • Point Piouonl oroa.
NMd fomlly room ond lormol
""' with -lo you know •1111 dining room. Will poy up to
NOT to Hnd monorthrough lhl 1500. por month. No clllldron or
mall u~~ you have lnv..ugatld poll. 31)4.875-7144.
tho oN•Ing.

---:--:---:--:---'-+ - = ="======1 13z.'II'IO,
Avoltoblo. 1104-132-81511,
114-:M7-GI41.

W
· Q nt tQ:

45

11181 Chovy Von, Now Conv•
oton KM1 .~~ooo Or Oftor.,
114-441-RII• Allor lp.m.

Furnished
Rooms

Armstrong flut1, 304"'7&amp;.7880.

Roome tor rent .. week or month.
St•rtlng atlh20/mo. Gallll Holel.

614-44f.t580.

SlHplng

rDOma

with cooking.

AfoolroDor !lf'ICI, All hook·upo.
Colt onor 2:oa p.m., 304·7735651, Uaaon WV.

46 Space for Rent
Country Mobllo Homo Pork,
Ro... 3S, Nofth of Pomoroy.
Lots, nnt.tl, parts, ..,... can
114·11112-11171.
Good hunting and comp lltoo

~
R~
MP~·~
·~·-------•

Coal,

Hom~ O.llvary. Minimum

Of 4 112 Ton, $58 POr Ton, 814-

384-3336.

Cot,.pultr, Retrlga,_tor, China

Hutch, Gold Star Ring, Wash

Firewood for Nlo $20.00 por

4 Wh11l Pl.tform lcalta Corn·

plllo With Wolghto. Collfl~
2tl17.
PSE bow, 3 Olio ot olghto,
quiver, ntw arrow reli, extr11. 3
re~tgorotoro oo tow oo $40.
_ , 304-175-310G.

'

5I

Household

Goods

Borgoln Allt&gt;lloncoo 10 Doyo
Only. Frool . Froo Rofrlgorotor A1t1 Or Mict? In Vour House?
Woo S150 -175;.WIIh0r W11 Bur ENFORCER, Kfllo roll &amp;
$121, - $95 And,$75; llony To ml~ In only 1 fHdlng,
Choooo From All A/0 Oouron· GUARANTEED! Anllablo ol:
tMd. Skogga Applloncoo, 114- Blum TNt Value Store, 11 West

rongoo. Skoggo Apt&gt;Uoncoo,
Uppor Rlvlf Rd. 811iclo Stono
CreotMotol. Colll14-4411-7311.
Kenmort retrtgtr1tor, ,, cu ft,
wile• m1k1r, 1lmond, 4

r• aid,

$450, 304-871-711113.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comploto " - fumlohlngo.
Houro: lion-Sot, 9-5. 114-446-

Upright Soldwln plono, 304-882·

3271.

&amp; Ltveslock

Main Street, Cht.ttr, OH

A111 Or Mica? In Your HouN?

Buy ENFORCER, Kfllo roll I

mice

In

only · 1

fttdlng,

OUARANTEEDI Av1llobto ol:
O'Doll Truo Votuo Lumbor, 634
EootMoln Stroot, Pomoroy, DH
RATS OR MICE?
In Your Houoe? Buy ENFOR·
CER. Kitto Rolo And Mlco In
Only 1 Foodlng. OUARANTEEDI
Avolloblo At: Control Supply, 17
Court Stroot; Spring . Volloy
H•rclwtrt, 521 J.tckiOn Pike;

Odolt True Vllua LBR, Ylno
StrMI At Third Avanut, G•l·
ltpollo, Ohio.

61 Farm Equipment
1951 John Dooro Modol 8, Com·
plotoly Rebuln, Excollont Condl·
llonllft. Blode Lolo Spora Po~o,
614-446-2358.
3400 Ford Tl'llctor, With lolld•r,.
J5,150; 340 lntornollonol With

llowtng llochlnt, A1ko1 Sotor,
$3,450; 165 AI:, U,tso. oM-2861522.
35 MF Troctor With Dynobounce
Mo-, MF 81ior, 13,1195~ 30
Forguoon 11,1111!; 3000 rord
S!,*· Ownor Will Flnonco. 1142oo-8122.
Jim'• Form Equlpmont1 .SR. 31,
Wool Golllpotlo, 114... 1-tm;
Wldo ootoctlon - &amp; uood form
lroctoro I ""plomonlo. luy,
1111, trodo, 1:00.5:00 wookdoyo,
Sol 1111 Noon.
Now Hollond 7ft hoy blno. Now
Holland lh hoyblno. Now Ho~
lond 707 forogo horvootor whh 2
hoodo. Gohl Orlndor mlror. Alllo
Ch1tmor 2 row no tm oom plontw. All ore cond, 304-273-4:115.
Now ldu corn · plckoro. Ono
Modot 10 one row $100. TllrM
Modol 323 ono row 1111 modol
modo 11,100. oooh. Ono llodol
325 two row n1rrow 12 roU huek$
lng bod $3,100. Dnl S25
lwo row ntrraw wtlh .._.ler
$2,100. Ono Now Hollond 711
choppo!, 2 row hood cunrent
rnodol ...soa. on. Now Holland

~:~~=i Optll

PnoHnlo A passionate and
power-mad queen kMis her
husband, tans in lOve with
her son and Is in turn killed
by him. (3:40) Slereo.
1111 tllle IIOyll Flmlly AI
dreams of marrying off his
d!!U!Ihler EHzabeth. Stereo.

Motorcycles
1188 KIWIIIII KX-10, r.l good
oondllton, suo.oa f14-11112'1561
oftwi:OIIpn

75 Boats &amp; Motors • .
lor Sale

· '

R.

Boat And Wlverunner Win- ·
torlzotlon Foctory Tltlnod. 114- '
2511-8110.
'

MOVIE: The Long Nlot
1umtner (Pt 2 of 21 (2:0:QJ.
11J Murder, llhe Wnlle 1;1
MCA Fen Folr 111 The
annual Fen Fair festival
ltaturea: Vtnc:e Gill, George
Jones, Patty Lovoletii, Marl&lt;
Chesnutt and Mark Collie.
(1:00)
D LPIT BoWling From
Claymont. Del. (LI
Ql PrtmtNeWI .
IOIIQ'Irolhtr Joke
8:05 Ill MOVIE: Goldfinger (2:25)

a

Auto Pans&amp;
Accelsorras

Sl..,x Volvo Ortndor=rlndlna Sot, Guido Equ
• 114~301.

79

campers&amp;

Motor Home•
11181 201, Tovoto R.U, f!1!100;
Good Condltl0n.'n51,000 Milot,
Mlchlond m . 114-44f.

8:30

2021.

I n. llldHI compor, phone 3041111o4123.

81

Home
Improvement•
BASEMENT .
WATIRPRDOI'IHO
u-1ono1 Uflltmo ouoron••· Locol-..oo futillohod.
Froo 001-oa. Colt oo1oo1 I·
114-237-0481, doy or night.
R - leoomont - . , ;...
ling.
!lom!JioloMoblla Homo Sot.Upo,

DOYOUKNOrV
HOW e.ASI~

r DON'T eet..us.ve

WEARIN6r A TUXeDO

WnH A CA.RNATICN
IN THE LAPEL..

ARESORN~

A 'M::)RO OF IT.

'*·'"'

ell'-··

·--------

Slet'eo.
Ill 1D Mt!Or Laogut
IIIH!&gt;IN American League
Championship Series:
Toronto Blue Jays at
Mlnnesoll TWins (game 7, il
necessary) (L) (May be
replaced bY r~lar
~rogrammrng)
.
Mon~ Mon ton Stereo.

d

and Wanda fall blissfully In
lOve anlnslder marriage.

1
Stareo.
C1J Ill Dooglt Nlow-,
M;D. Coogle receives orders
from lhe coun to stop
treating Asian boy.
Stereo.
·
IIJ MOVI : Togget (2:00)

....irli Commerlcll, Rlllder.Utl
~:
Plumbing, Eloctrfcot. lntllronco

i

lrnPto•••••••·

' '

stereo. C

a

NuhVIilt Now Stereo.

8 l.lrry King LIYII
0 F - Dowllrt9 Myaterlta

' BARNEY
DON'T WORRY
ABOUT THAT
TOOTH,
JUGHAID!!

Sister Steve Impersonates a
vtelting member of royalty.
(A) Storfl(). Q
1:30
IDl Slfnftld Jerry is
contacted by lhe library
obout ~!111-overdue book .
Stereo.
C1J (I) Slba Howle Is
surprised when Nora gives
him a spona car. Stereo. Q
D Blllllrda u.s, Open,
men's championship from
Norfolk, Va. (T)
10:00
IDl Ouentuin Ltap As
a hairstyllat, Sam tries to
SIYI a crippled boy. Stereo.

I'LL HAVE IT
OUT AFORE YOU
CAN SAY ".TACK

m.

RABBIT"

.EAST .

'I'KQJ 9H&gt; 3

+QJ10903
'1'7

tJ 74

tK

• 84

+QJIOS3

SOUTH

+Al

Oh partner,
partner!

,

,

'I'At0 2
tAQ10 963

•

+As

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

By Phillip Alder

South

On today 's deal. East found a brilliant play, but it proved to betl.oo brilliant for his partner.
West had a textbook three-heart
opening, and South had an automalic
overcall of three no-trump. He might
not make it, but it was a worthwhile
gamble.
West led the heart king. If declarer
had won this Irick, he could have en·
sured his contract with an avoidance
play. He could cross to dummy's spade
king or club kin_g aod lead a diamond.
When East's king appears, South just
plays low , keeping West off the lead.
Without a heart to play. East cannot
harm declarer. South will wip 10
tricks: two spades,' one heart, five dia·
monds and two clubs.
But South ducked the first trick .
West continued with the heart jack,
and East, guessing the position, dis·
carded his diamond king. If South won
with the heart' ace, he had only seven
tricks available before West could
.gain the lead with the diamond jack to
run his hearts. Sensing the problem,

Norlk

Wtsl
3 'I'
Pass

3 NT

Pass
Pass

Eut
Pass
Pass

Opening'l ea~ : • K

South ducked the second heart.
Declarer felt much better when
West started thinking. West was ask·
ing himself about the significance of
East's discard. Eventually deciding incorrectly - that his pertner was
signaling for a diamond switch, West
led the diamond four at trick three.
Decla rer claimed II tricks: two
spades, one heart, six diamonds and
two clubs.
Why was West wrong? BecaiiSe if
East had the K·Q-10-9 o( diamonds, be
wouldn't know he could afford to slg·
nal with the king. Alter all, declarer
might have had the A·J . West sltould
have led another heart, defeating the
contract in the process.

It

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Antwr to Prewloua Puzzle

nickname

I Fllltd wilh
reverence
5 on ..spo_ts
9 11 precodea
gee
12 Play trlcl&lt;s
13 Folksinger
Gulhrle
14 Diminutive
suffix
15 Seed
covering
16 -Lang
Srne
17 llap
abbreviation
18 Rfght·hand
page
20 Form of
tftmenl
22 Plocos of
refuge
24 Drinking

......

33 Go lobed
(2 wds.)
35 Grasps
37 Peace
agreemenl
38 Putlonate
39 Former appla
alkfltlve
40 Lega~ald org.
42 Wooden tub
43 Place
45 Demons
47 Avoidance
50 Weafher
satellite
54 Organ for
hearing
55 Region
57 Build
58 Wish undone
59 Overpau
approach
6D Land
measure

61 Peculiar
62 Wing&amp;
63 Raise

25 Newl
28 Honk
30 Michael's

DOWN
1 Slightly open
2 Merchandise
3 Grand
4 River mouth
5 DriYers ' org.

6 Pleas ure trip

m.

iNtWI
(1) lllD Anything lui Lovo

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

"'"'!I':"•·

Pomor'3i

alter SChOOl.

9:00 m• IDl Night Court Bull

..O:"Ap,.f•:

= = :-::==c

w
tile wonc1tr v....
Kevin takes a job at the
harawa~atono

Serv1ces

Clotmo -.,.od. 114;258-1111.
A.condlllarwd
wathlrs
&amp;
0322, 3 mllel out Bullville Rd.
Curtle Homo to.ro.ornonta: ·
dryoro, ooch $100 ond up. Wo
Frao Dotlvory.
Yoora ExporlottCI On Oldor a
Mrvlce 111 m1kn. The Waaher &amp;
- Homoo.- Addftlono, .
m
c
-'
2rowhood$3Dryer
Shoppo.
114-441-2144.
·
Moving • Mutt Socroflco: 10 Ft.
Foundollon WCIIft, Rooli!lg,
Renlals
Couch With Motchlng Lovollll Small condy vondtng butlnooo, Koolora llorvlco Coni• SIOio Kftohono
And Sotho. Freo &amp; ·
AI. 87, Point PINoont iftd Rtptoy
And ovorotullod. Cholr Wnh 01· 20-mochlnoo, II loc11iy plocod, RaMI,
' llmotool Rol•- No Job To
304-I~'JII .
tomanj lhhogony Cofttt Tablt l2150.00,
114·1112·2005
llg OrSmoflll1+44t.oazl,
And 2 End Tobloo; 2 Dok Whlto
Uood I Row SUpor 717 Forogo
41 Houses lor Rent
KHchon Cholro: Swivel Lootho&lt; Surplue Army ClmouO•ugt Choppor, 1.4 R. CIIY 8-10 U'n• D I E Conolluollon Gonorol
Dolk Choir, 114-446·2234 Ahor I Ortglnal clothing, 1m111 accu- lolcfer, 54 ft. FMd Auglf, Both ~. Roollna, Conctota,
1 BA, lltov. &amp; fllfrlg. tum., new . p.m.
IOrill, toothor US Combol Hovo Eloctrlc Moloro. 114-3711Clir'*, Wllhtr I dryer ~up,
· ~.
cJir-w
Jtructlon,
liWii 1011,
Ft.eon;
!es -. Som 3omonrlllo'a Son- 21!1l
$225 por mo., $200 dop., I mo.
PICKENS FURNITURE
tlmotool
dyvllto,
WV
booldo
Pool
OHico,
leaH. 142 Fourth Avenue, G1lNtw!Used
Livestock
llpoill. IM-44WII7.
Houoohold fumlohlng. 112 mi. Rt. 21 N. Fri, Sot, sun, -n.a:oo 63
JET
Pll
(oxtondod
,_.,
during
i~;a;;;;;;;;;;r.Tr;ii;;ru
2 bodroom homo, llvlng/flmHy :;.";J't6 ~~. Plo-nt, WV, hunting Mltan). 304-273-5655.
2 Hotlt COOIIMCk ll'llill' With Aeration ltcltore, ropotrad, Now
I r•buiN -oro In otock, RON
r90fll, k•chon/dlnotto, both,
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1~
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS · ~~~:-il:I
gorogo, Sond HID Rd, 304-875RENT 2 OWN
Ron Allloon, 1210 Socond With 30 Doyo Protoootonol 537'1121.
2272.
•
114-441-2111
Avenue, O.lllpolla, Ohio, 114· Trllnlng. 114 zaeszz.
Vl'r11 FumtlUfl
Ron'a TV llifvlco, -"!lzlng
2 bedroom houu, Hand~~~ Sots 1 Chllr, $11.10 WHk; 4441 .. 336.
In
Zonllh .oloo -.a rnoo1
:1-StHr • 1·Holfor Approl. eoa othor
WV, S225. mo. Rtltrance tnd Recliner, $5.47 WMk, Swivel
brondo. collo, oloo
lbo. "600, 114-11112-1031.
dopoalt. 304-875-7811.
Roekor, $3.13 Wook.Bunk Bod 55,
,Building\ _
..... lflllllonoo ......... wv
2 bodroom unfurnlohod houao, Comploto $8.41 WHk, 4 Drower
4 Horw Gooltntck Trallel, :104-511..2:1118 Ohio t14411 2414.
Supplies ·
507 112 Sooond 81, Hovon, Choll, $3.21 Wook; Pootor Bod·
11,115; 5 Yoor Old AQHA lloro, Soptlc Tonk Pumping SIOitGolllo
1180. month, dopooK, S04-IS71- room SU-e, 1 po,, SIU7 Wook, 4 IIIII bldgo. Foctary doolo, $1,250; 2 Y11r Old, AOHA M1re,
34111
lnctudoo 8oddlng.Country Plno Mu• 1111 now. Two 30x40, two 11,600. 114-285-8522.
Co. RON EYANS!NTERP ISEI,
·
Dlnotto With Sonch &amp; 4 Cholro, 40110, CIIJ now and IIVI 304•
Jockoon, OH 1-etiN37"f21.
3 bedroom homo bock of Now Slo.lll Wook.OPEN: llondoy '1113-1810.
Cullom Llve1tock Hauling. C1n
S..VIC
S.rvlca,
Hovon, J250. wHh 1150; depod. Thru Soturday, ll.m. to lp.m.,
HIUI To Hllllboro Stltl Or lJ&gt;. DIVII
304-882-2681.
Sundoy 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4 Block, lwlck, aowor plpoo, w!n· colly, Chuck Wllllomo Trlpto Goorg• Crook Ad. Porto, oup.
plloo, pickup. and dollvuy. 114Mtloo ON Routo 1 On Routo 141, dowo, llntllo. ole. Cloude Win· Cnok Trucking. 114-24S.5018.
3-bdrm houH fCH' rent In Tupper
4411.0214.
. .
o"::'':c""Y~·
I Ia,., Alo Grtndt, OH Call 614- Gooto, Podlgreod Nublon luck,
Plolnol $210mo pluo depoott c'".,.e=
S.on
otock
wooho&lt;
1
dryor
llko
245-at21.
ond utili Ito 114-tll'-3487
$80 Dlhoro. Good Potol $20' Win build polio -ont, dockal
now. Coli oHor I p.m. 114-441- Oct- Spoclalo two oor And Up. Mount Olivo Rood, 114· scr-.d rooma, put ,. vinyl
oldlng or troUor okl~lng. 1143br l.Rsnch, Rodnly Vlll•g• II,
:=·-~=:-----ll'roiiH
24r24xi43HI.OO, 388-8548.
245-5657.
$300/mo. Pt .. Dopoon. 114'363- -.::~WAIN
4x27rll-$411111.00,27132liii8305 Allor 5p.m.
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12 '*4I.OG; Proctolon Pool Framo 64
Hay &amp; Grain
Plumbing &amp;
ogvo St., Oolllpollo. Now I Uood Sulldoro, 114-112·»11.
,.,...._,._...:._:__:....;_ _.,.,.. .82
42 Mobile Homg
holloro, Woatorn 1
Hoy 75 conto por bolo, locllod In
Heating
Work booto. 114-441-~18.
56 Pets for Sale
Ruttond, OH, 304-TIUias.
lor Rani
co~or'o Plumbing
VI'RA FURNrTUAE
::;o::-~m~o:::nd:::-;SU~pp::tyof-.-::Sho=P.P=ot
Fourth ond Pint
2 bodroom 'mobllo homo, Sond
114-4414111
G
I
TransportatiOn
GoiNpolll, Ohio
HIU Rood, 304-171-3134.
UVING ROOM: Soia &amp; Choir,
room~og. All lw!odo, otyloo.
IM-4411-3888
lomo
I'll Food Dooltr. Julio
llobllo home for rent, Uppor AI. SIIIII.OOi., Rocllnor,_ f141.0G;· Wobb. Col 114-441....., 1.1()0.
Swfvol IIOCkor, S.llll.ov· Co"" • ••• •231
-·,
7. 114-1 or 44W321.
End Tolll11, $1111.00 k .DtNING -~ '
71 Autos lor Sale
.
Electrical &amp;
ROOM: Tobie With 4 Poddocl
44
Apanment
Cholro, $14V.OO·'a Count'I Plno
Refrigeration
Dlnotto With onoh . nd 3
for Rent
Cholro1..$2IIII.OG: Molclll_ng 2
Aisldontlol D&lt; con&gt;~lol
Door ""ch $341; Or PII.OG
wiring, now oorvlco or 1-bclnm Opt
1 I z.bdrm Sol; Dok Toblo, 4adz With a
Master Uctnlld llectrlcl•n:
AKC rig• . loKOJ p..ploo, I
Sow
Book
Cholro, month
Rldonour Eloctrlcot, 304-111·
old, 4.mllll 1.flmale,
$828.00.SEDROOII: Pootor loci' 114-1111:1-3712
1788.
or
11112-8754
11181
Plymotllh
Charnpl
Good
2-IR In Mlddlopott. Nlo pOlo. _ , Sule (I po.), $:141.00; 4
Condillonl $500 Flnm. o14-441Par _, lllttlfoO, $20G per mo. Onwor Choll, $44.81; lunk AKC Rogl- ~~a'~po, 7311.
85 General Hauling
Bod,
1221;_
Complolo
Fuu
lion
DaDoeltiAtftt•IWI
r8qu1Nd.
150 Eoch, Doyo, •
n,
So~
Sot:
7
pc.
Codor
·114-elll-2311 doyo.
Anytime, 114~...111t, Stove 11181
lonnovlllo
Bodn10m Sullo, ..IIII.OO.!JPEN: Sloplolon.
.......
.
4
booutlfut
Monday Thru Soturdoy, 8o.m. to
flmlty car, avary optlan
Ina.
lp.m., SUndoy 12 Noon Till AKC Roglolored a- ChOw sunroof, .305 Y-1, 111V5, 304fil.m., 4 Milot Oft Route 7 Dn PuP.ploo, I W- Old. Blacko, 11124711
87
Upholltery
f!oull 1411n Corltonory.
R.;!:.lnd I lluo, Sti.! Eooh.
114- 1447.
. 11111 Tllundorblrd, good oond,
-.....-.
Goo
......
now tlroo...r.. outo tronomlooiof;l,
ntiiCIIEioofric AI:, 1100 OBO, ARHA Aoalltorod Boogto'o, ..
AC,
PW, ""• - locko!lo':"~~
goo wot• hoator, 54).gol. 810, moo. ot!', l•t otortod, HI oo. "''"·
....... t1,000.
•
814-'1112·i111N
114-11112·1171
2031.

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

ALLEY OOP

74

76

lood, 114·lll2·2455.

ov.,

Merchandise

ludwig Snare drum CIM, allnd,
ond otfcko. SlOG. 3Q4.....1518.

Stond, IHr SlgML And Ddda Wanttd to buy ulld piccolo,
304.al2·2225.
And Endo.lt4-388..,1!.
Conoroto &amp; pliootlc Hptlc 't1nko,
Ron Evans Entii'Drlut, Jack·
Farm Supp li es
oon, OH 1-801).637..521.

Flrowood For Solo: Moolly Hord
Wood. a14-3711-2878.
tor rtnt.
100 1crt8 to hunt Loa Splhtar For Atnl . Evans
on In Maean Caunly. Call •nr lloloro, 114-44e-8512.
limo, 304-571-25111.
One l.lrga Heater, Natunl Or
Sonlod Goo AIIO, I Polr Df Old

W111Mr1, drytra, relrlgtr.ton,

Forward Rnume Or L.etttr Of

lnleml Outlining Quollllcollono
And Solory Hillary To:
Bill Bloo ·Admlnlotrotor
Pomeroy
Nurolng
And

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

call
75·1l57.
Moodowhlll Subdlvlolon, 2.8
out Sand Hill Road, hal
Milo Poula'o Dly Core Contw. mllea
r118trlcttd building 1011 tor Mil
Slfl, atfordabll, chlldc.rt. U-F 11 low •• SUOO, ind one acrt 4411-73118.
a a.m. • 1:30 p.ni. Agoo 2\PIO. ~~~ for llngtt Widn IYIIIIble County Appllonct tno. Good
Btfott, eft., school. Oropolna
uood opplloncu, T.'v. olio. Dpon
wotcomo. 114-44W224. Now In- 1110, 304-175-3410 01815-11100. 1 o.rn. to I p.m. Mon ..Sol. 114font Toddlor CON,I14-44W227. Mercer Bottom Sub-dl'tlllion, 4,..·1111!.1. 127 3rd. Avo. Go~
one acre lolt, At. 2 fronttat, illpollo, .....
Drtc• rtducld, city we«.r, 304·
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Ftnancial
!175-2336. .

Eloclrlctl

51-11.
-llolnt11111noo
Erporionco
Prtftrrabltln
A
HNilh
C.rt Set·
Wontod To Buy: Junk Autooil ling
Sorop.Molol And Fltl Atmov
·FioxlbKIIy
From Woot Ylrglnlo. 114-441· ·Dopondoblo
0013.
Top Prlcol Paid: All Old U.S.

~-it'.f~o':'h:"~indJ:~ quortor milo SR 7, 114-1185-3514

•,

2

WEST

+a

'

D Mtlor L.togue laotball

Can You Travel?
lmmodloto oponlngo lor guyo

LABORERS Futt·Time,_Gonorol
Holp, to 114 HR. 1.-,..,.1731
LABORERS •
Full 'Ttmo, Gonorol Holp To 114
HR 1.eOQ.561·1738.

PHILLIP
ALDER

Q

' ra Crouflrl '

ond glrllotlont 11, to o11lot on
a nallonal travel lncenUve Wanted: Llld Gultarlat For
Country And Rock Sand. C11i Conoldor A Bonk R..clolmod
...,.....,-&amp;..,.,..V...,Ic_l::-n-:-lty:_,,..-.,--l progrom. No orporlonco noc... 614·363-1443.
llobllo Homo. $500 Down With
sary, •xpenlttl •, advanced
·I Family Yard Salt: October rransponallon provided at no Wanted: Part'·Timt Bartender, Approvod Crodlt Fne Sot Up &amp;
· 17th • 18th. Clay TownhouH, t cost. Must bt frH to tr.wtl the For locll PrlVfltl Club. Exctl· O.tlvory. Mony From Which To
_To,5..,·.,-..,-.,.,---,.-,--,-,-,-l onllro' USA (rondom ltlnorory) lonl Working Condition. Fridoyo Choooo. Coli llld Ohio Flnonco
ALL Yard Sa Ill Mu~ Be Paid In and start at Dnc•l ND phone And Sotru~ay Nlghto Dntr,•· AI1-..!BII-5711..
S11 Mr. Huston, Sli. Oc:t.
Ad vance. DEADLINE : 2:oa p.m. calls!
10, at the Blue Founlaln Motel, Aaply At: CLA 0114, c/o Golllpola Now 1992 141n, 2 or 3 bod·
tho doy bolore tho od It to run.
Dolly Trlbu!:'! 625 Third Avonuo, roome modele, a full baths,
SUndoy odltlon • 2:00 p.m. Golllpollo, 1:30 o.m. to I:00 p.m. Gtlllpolls, Ul11 45831.
ohlnglo root, vinyl oldlng, R21
c•lllng, 2a8 R20 wtlle, 11t"p
Frldoy. Mondoy odlllon • 2:0G CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
lncludod Sl7,9!1l00. Colt 1.eOQ.
p.m. Soturdoy.
Hiring Moi&gt;Womon. Up to. $60G 12
Situation
nll-4045.
·
w-"l_y. Transportation, HouaWanted
lng.
CALL
NOW
l·:ro&amp;-736-liiOG
Pomeroy, ·
Zero dotlare down on pre.
Ext. 111785.
Som1nt1 to live In tor lhllr owned mobllt hom• All yo11
Mlddlepon
EARN MONEY Roodlng Bookol board. 11,000 STU olt hoolor for poy It 111 ond thlo 1- wfth op.
proved credit. Clll EIHI Homt
S30,000/yr. Income Pottn11al. 1111 Chllp. I14-444-341V.
&amp; VIcinity
Ctnttr 111~711.
Dotollo. (I) 805-162-l!OOO Ell. Y·
AI Y1rd Soloo lluot So Pold In 10181.
14
Business
33 Farms lor Sale
Advlnct. Doodllnt: 1:00pm tho
Training
dly bolore tho od Ia to run, FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS
M1.an County 12• 1crn (40
SUndoy odlllon- 1:00pm Friday, HIRING. 111,000 • sn8ooo Yur Aelraln
NowiUSouth..ltlm ICfll timber), old hOme, 2 mttll
Ext. 0 Ill For
llondoy odlllon IO:OGo.m. 1o805-514-1500
Bu1ln111 Collogo, SDrin1 Volloy b1ma, At 35; 15 mi... to
lmmtdlltt Ruponea.
Soturdoy.
Ptw. Colt Toclly, 114-146-43870 Winfltld ,0 mlln to Point
llolhl&lt;. ot lWino Club foil yard Fatlvt Hair I Tan, Athtnl, II Roglotor1tlon IIIQ.OS-12748.
Pleaoont. SI50,00G. Cot130Hf5.
ooto,
Eplocopol
Church, looking for a quollllod ~ on.
3280 bolwoon 6:0G All ond 4:30
thuollotlc
otytlotlto
work
In
our
Pomoroy, Soturdoy Del. 11th,
PM.
foot poood wolk· n Nlon. Wo o~ 18 Wanted to Do
I:OG to 3:00pm
lor top hour por pl .. commlo- Sobyo~ In my homo, rauonoblo
olon, pold voctlton &amp; odvonco rotoo, Hondoroon • Point 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Pt. Pleasant
oducallon hoolth lnouronco to PillllniOrN. 304.e75-3115.
112 to 314 tcra late whh county
avalllblt Clll lynn Olttr l14o
&amp; VIcinity
Wiler tnd lltctric, 10 mlln
512-t707.
E &amp; RTREE SERVICE. Toppt11Q, south of Point Pl1111nt. $3,100.
TrM Removal, ..Hidga 304-8Jt.2614.
SUpor Lorge Yord Solo, Ool· HAIRSTYLIST
NEEDED: Trimming,
FrH Estlmattsl lf4.
lkoollo Ftrrj, Sldero, 17111- Gouninlood SilO WHk Pluo Trimming.
Building toto~·ocroond up, TP I
lttll. Soturday moot Homo 112 Moral Pold Vocollono. 114-441- 317·11ST.

-

o Jeoperdyt Q

a. Announced

1111 Whitt of Foi!Une

/,

. '/,

614·

7217.

+a '

s-•eo. l;l

ANJWf/tiNG

11-11-tl

+K 9 7 2

tile Moirftd...With Chlklnon

441·102'1.

Gallipolis

NORTH
+K64Z
"6 4

Cll Eme!!l!(luntnt Tonight

Reaume To P.O. Box 213, Gil·

Addovllla School

-· · ···~

(II) T1MI Wtllolla
7:05 (I) lavorfy Hlllbllllto

Excallent
Pey,
Bantflle,
, loat: Small Grey Short Htlrld Tranaportatlon,
407·292-4~7.
. Doa McCormick Road, Nur Ext 571. Ga.m.-10p.m. Toll
. Ro6blno And lly111, Golllpollo. Rtfundad.
· AIWirdf 114-441-1135.
Babyalnar NHMd. School Agt.

Yard Sale

.....

BRIDGE

• SportiCantW

llpollo, Ohio 45631.
· Pomoroy
I
. Mlddloporl
:Thurod1y, 114·112-'lll4.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

7

rQ

8Mot•l••

Naedtd. No' Experience NtCII•
: FOUNO. Eoolorn HIJih School eary.
6,4·365-2082, ExU&amp;83.
-small, mtll, bl~ck, lOng hair;d
·dog, ~londly, 114-~111
Admlulonl
Atprtllnlallvt
NHdod. Locol Coltoga. Sond·

· LOST.Sliver &amp; TeurquoiH nUQ·

GJ

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

1!1 Moc!!fi/Lifi,..
1\!lhiltiHour C
tile Condkl Canitnl
1111 Cumnl Afttlr ~

• EXTRA INCOME ''tl" *

--~:···· else."
·· ·
Complete th8 chuckle qu ote~d.

1

(lJ

1-Ftlnlll Blue Point Sl11'11tli, 3yn old, olvt to good hom• wino
othlr car•. 114.02·2607

My roomma.te had been
jilted by her ix1,'1riend. One
evening she was .&amp;ping
arouncf and sighed, "Most of
us can read the handwriting
• on the w~ . but we just
assume it's addressed to

.e m~JR~~:~~~RES 1 I' r.I• I' .r I' I* I
6
III IIIIII

.tf

ONtwZanoQ
1:31 Ill Andy Clrtflllh

r....;L~~J

r

lnaldt lite
ToOr
8 WOIIII Toclllr
0 Rln Dl Tin, K·l i:op Q

TELL HOW ;'OU FELT

\

make the relatlon~i p work . Mall $2
plus a long, selt•.edressed. stamped
envelope to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland,
OH 44101 -3428.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your rela·
lions with people In general should be
rather good today. however. there

Al\fl;.l_(March 21-Aprll 11) If you have
deallngs-..loday wl1h an individual you
know little about , be as cautious as pos~
sible , especially If you 're buying some·
thing about which this person professes

to bll an expert.~
TAURUS (April
oy 20) Be support.

ive of your mate i pUblic today, even if
might be one except ton. It's with an in- you are not in tot agreement with your
dividual you always cross swords with partner's Ideas. You can later resolve
whenever you meet .
. your differen ces In the•privacy of your

'·

SAGITTARIUS (Niov. 23-Doc. 21) USU· home.
----·-·~- your
ally, you're a rational thinker, but today GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) Instead of
emotions and teellngs might crowd criticizing the elforts ol co-workers toout your logic and cause you to make day. try to come up with constructive
suggestions that are superior 10 theirs.
'hiJ'~
poor decisions.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-~otl. 18) Don 't If you can't. It 's best 10 say nothing.
f.eel Intimidated Into going along with CANCER (Juno.21·Julr 221 This Is nota
friends today In Involvements that you good day to get lnvotved In risky ven·
realty can't afford . However. If they are lures. Lady Luck may decide to take the
prepared to; ay your expenses, It's an. day off, and she might not be around
Oct. 17, 111111
other story.
when you need her the most.
Financial trends look steady lor you In AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftb. 11) Be very LEO (JuiJ 23·Aug. 221 An old. unr&amp;.
the year ahead, provided you don 't rock careful loday that you do not compound solv&lt;!d domestic Issue might be resur·
the boat with periodic spending binges. errors where your career Is concerned. reeled by your mate today. If this OC·
'Try to put a lillie away for a rainy day. If you dlsco9er you've made a mistake. curs, the best thing you can do Is lo
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Someone who stop and correct It Instead of trying to ·change the subjecl Immediately rather
·
than fuel the lini.
has yet to repay you for what was prevl· cover II up.
ously borrovled shouldn't be granted PISCES (Fob. 20-Mirch 20) Your VIRGO (Aug. 23-Stpl. 221 If you at·
another loan today, unless you're pre· . splendid Imagination Is likely to be tempt to do a dllficulltask bY yourself
pared to think of II as a gill - or a lost working overtime today for the wrong that . requires a second pair of hands,
cauH. Trying to patch up a broken ro- reasons. Don't dwell on what mlghl go you'll only make more work for yoursell
mance? The Aslro-Graph Matchmaker wrong; concentrate on all the things today. Don"t be too proud to asf&lt; for
help.
can help you understand what lo do to that could go right.

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Ea ctl letter in the c:lphet lflndt lor another. roday·s cltllt: L ~tquals C.

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featurtl: VInce Gill, George
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(1 :00)
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The world Is a stage, ' but the play Ia badly
cast." - Oscar Wilde.

,

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•

Pagt..-14-The Dally Sentinel

•
•

.

Ohio Lottery·

Braves even
NL series
with 1-0 win

Wednesday, Octolrer 16, 1991

•

"

Pick 3:353
Pick 4:9866
Cards: 4-H, 5-C,
10-D, Q·S
Super Lotto:
4-7-16-25-36-37
Kicker: 093775

Page4

Low tonight 45.
'"
Friday, partly cloudy.
High 65•

•

BONELESS Pork

'

•

a1

Pork
Loin

Vol. 42, No. 116
Copyrighted 1991

By BlUAN J, REED
pany, the surety company covering
Sentinel News Staff
Parkersburg Plumbing and Heating,
A new plumbing contractor is has notified the board that Specialexpected to arrive on the site of the ty Piping Corporation . of
new Meigs Countr Department of Davisville, W.Va. has now been
Human' Services building in Mid- awarded the remainder of the prodlepon on Thursday morning.
ject for $138,513.
The contract with Parkersburg
At last week's meeting, ComPlumbing and Heating was can- · miSsioner Richard E. Jones comceled last week by the Meigs Coun- mented that the failure of Parkersty Commissioners due to poor job burg Plumbing and Heating to adeperformance. Erie Insurance Com- quately perform the job has held up

3 tbo. Or Heavier Pkg.

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'

,.,

U.S. No. 1 Russet Baking

1lh

' the work of other contractors on the
jab as well.
In other action, the board of
commissioners approved an animal
claim submitted lly Ronald Beegle
of Racine in the amoum of $50.
Beegle claims that one of his sheep
was killed by a stray dog.
County Engineer Phil Roberts
reponed to the board that he recently met with Ohio Department of
Tmnsportation Engineer Don Johnson and the trustees of Letart and

FOod· Club Lowfat

Limit I Loaf Free

.....,.., r.r Famll)' Wllh
AddJtklnal Purchase
(~ludlng llem1 prOhlblled
by law)

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NF-.50
3Z.58t49

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Fomlly With

Addltloool l'ur&lt;bue .
(eumdlnl Ileal• prehlltlled
by low)
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orses

12 oz.
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Limit

21!¥1. ..........IFutiiJ

_,..........."'...,

Willi Mil~,.,._ I

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Oreo · Oreo Double Stuf

Or Fudge Covered

Juice Drinks

-Oreos

Purdlllet-1••11•1

ltema prohibited by
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14·20 Oz,
Pkg.

Ice Cream
Your
Flavon

Asaorted
Fruit flaVOI'I
'Limit I Box
Pltue, P!r fliiiUy
Whh All)' Addldooal
Pun:hue (excludin1
Items prohibited by
low)

8.45 oz.
Box

Colgate ·

Borden's Elsie

Choke of
Regular

Hi·C 9 Pack

99

IV. Gallon
Carton

Tootbuaste

With Free 'toothbrush

99
8.2 oz.

Prices
4 ua,fS
October 1991
Wednesday, October 16 thru
Saturday, October 19, ·1991

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Makes A Great Sandwich

Turkey·Breast
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"''gCOb0l\18illEE VISITS Sf.HEtJ~ '

Tlie Ameriean Red Cross ·WiU be busy In Meigs .
Cpunty next weel\1 conducting two bloodmo·
bileS: Donors can visit Southern High S4:bool on
Monday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., or the Meigs

Limit I Ball
~Per

Semi-Sweet Chocolate

Pleue, Ptr F. .lly
Willi Any Addldooal

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP).Voters in 35 schdol districts are
being asked in the November election to authorize a local income tax
as an alternate to higher property
taxes to pay for their schools.
The Ohio Public Expenditure
Council said Wednesday if all the
issues are approved, it would bring
to 106 lhe number of districts that
have adopted income taxes since
the Legislature authorized them in
1989.
OPEC, a non-profit, indeJfendent research group, _released

Galloa
PWtlc

Toll House

.

2 Soctlono', 12 P•goo

Allulllmedillnc. Nowl~por

'•

to all roads traveled by detoured Ted Warner reported that grader
patching of county roads W!.S nearmotorists.
With the help of the state's ing completion and the commismaterial, however, Roberts did say sioners also approved an interthat townships should be able to depanmental tra.nsfer of funds for ,
rc!lllir their damaged roads to their the ljighway gar~ge at the meeting
anginal condition.
yesterday.
While the state established an
Present in addition to Robelts
official detour on state roads. most and Warner were Commissioners
local traffic, including 1r11cks load- Richard E. Jones, Manning K.
ed with summer produce, detoured Roush and David Koblentz, and
across township and county roads.
·commission Secretary Gloria
County Garage Superintendent Klees .

.

Income tax considered by 35
more Ohio school districts

••

Limit I Pk11.

Su.tton Townships, and that OOOT
has agreed to provide a specified
amount of material for the repair of
·township roads damaged when the
Yellowbush Bridge was closed.
According to Roberts, ODOT
has also pledged to provide paving
materials for a portion of Mile Hill
Road, a county road, to State Route
124 near Racine. However, Roberts
indieated that the state is only willing to help repair a specified route
involved in the detour, as opposed

Bag
..

.

Davisville·firm to finish plumbing pfoject·

lb.
.,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 17, 1991

lb.

Purina Premium

Cat ·Food

$

6 oz.
Cans

'23 ,from 1 P;l!l• to !:30 p.11. Red
. volunteers and donors Uke those pictured
here are aU needed to make each 'blood drive a
success.

Magistrate dismisses - Man kills
citations to union men 22, himself
in Texas
cafeteria
bannca the rolling blockades.
Last week, Magistrate Jack Neal
of Cabell County, acting as a special magistrate in the case, dismissed 145 citations because they
didn't comply with a state law
requiring police to record the
speeds of those accused of traffic
KJLLEEN, Texas (AP) - Dinviolations.
ers screamed in terror and cowered
"That is required. We didn't behind counters as a man with a
know t~at when we first started high-pQwered pistol methodically
writing them. We should have, but moved through a crowded cafeteria
we didn't," said Sgt. W.F. Dono- and killed 22 people in the nation's
hoe of the Ripley detachment.
deadliest shooting mmpage.
Jackson County Prosecutor
The assault began just bj:fore I
David Karr asked Neal to throw out . p.m. Wednesday when George
the citations. He said his only alter- Hennard, 35, of Belton, drove his
native was to obtain criminal war- . pickup through a plate-glass winrants for' the alleged offenders.
dow of a Luby's Cafeteria, climbed
"Because that problem is gone out and opened fire. The restaurant
at this point, I didn't see any need was jammed with I00 or more
to arrest people," Karr said.
lunchtime patrons, including several attending "Boss's Day" celebmtions.
Ten minutes after it began, the
rampage ended when Hennaed,
wounded by police gunfire, killed
himself with a bullet in the head as
he lay outside a restroom, authoriMiddlepon Village workers will start the pickup with the village
ties said. That brought the death
toll to 23. ~
scavenger in the first war_d. This year however, there will be no
A witness said Rennard shoutdesignated day for p1ckup .m each ward. Employees w1ll move from
one ward to the next until they complete the leaf collection . Resied, "This is what Bell County did
for me!" before he opened fire .
dents are asked to rake their leaves to the curb.
Another wi.tness said the gunman
yelled something about Belton or
Dayton. Belton is near Killeen;
Dayton is near Houston.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. Story reports that
Rennard killed many of his vic·
on October 10, Tom Stone pled guilty in the Meigs Coumy Comtims with point-blank blasts to the
mon Pleas Coun on three counts of trafficking in drugs. All· three
head· and wounded nearly two
counts are felonies of the fourth d~ee and carry a maximum possidozen more as they tried to flee.
ble penalty of up to four and aftf years in a penal institution and
He paused once to reload his
up to a $7,5.00 Hne. Stone will be s_entenced in early December
gun, a Glock 9mm semiautomatic
pending completion of a pre-sentence mvesugaban.
that is popular with police departOn Tuesday, Raben Scarberry pled guilty to the charge of aggraments beeause of its firepower, witvated trafficking in cocaine in the Meigs County Common ~lea s
nesses said.
Court. This offense 1s a felony of the thtrd degree and carnes a
penalty of up to two years in a penal institution and a fmc of up to
"It was boom. !loom. !loom.
$5,000. ~carberry's sentencing has been deferred until later in OctoThe 'shots weren't real fast. He
ber until a PSI can be conducted.
seemed very calm," said Angela
Wilson, a Luby's employee:
"He looked right at me and
pointed the pistol," said Sam
Wink. "I thought I bought the farm
An Athens woman received citations and minor injuries follow·
but a lady close to me got up to
ing an alcohol-related, one-vehicle wreck on U.S. 33 in Salisbury
run. He turned and fired at her."
Township Wednesday morning.
Sgt. Bill Cooper or the state
According to a repon from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Depanment of Public Safety said
Highway Patrol, Joanna L. Schoonover, 26, was nonhbound and
he saw Rennard approach an elderlost control of her vehicle in a right curve. The vehicle went off the
ly woman as she shielded her
left side of the .road, and struek an iron post and an embankment
wounded husband. The woman
before going airborne and rolling over onto its ri~ht side.
looked him in the eye, then bowed
her head, and Rennard shot her,
Continued on page 3
. I
Cooper said.

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)
-A magistrate has dismissed 145
citations issued to United Steelworkers members and supporters
for blocking trilffic in a protest
against Ravenswood Aluminum
Corp.
About 1,700 members of Steelworkers Local 5668 have been off
the job at the Jackson County plant
since last Nov. I, when their contract expired. The union says the
workers arc locked out; the cpmpany says they're on strike.
Last spring, union supporters
began organizing caravans of cars
to drive slowly past the plant during shift changes, tying up traffic
for plant truckers and non,union
replacement workers.
State police issued the pro-union
drivers citations for impeding traf- .
fie. State and federal judges later

CORN GRINDING POSITION - Norman
Will assumes the corn grinding position at the

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

ltemt and Pl'leet F.llec:the only at:

GAUIPOLJS'BIG BEAR SIDRE
..

Leaf pickup begins on Monday.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
One of only a few authentic
Indian com mills in Meigs County
is on the family farm of Norman
and Allegra Will in Rutland-Township.

Stone, Scarberry enter pleas

'"

Indian corn mill·wbicb is located just above the
Will home in Rutland Township.

Indian
corn
.
mill located in
R~tland Twp.

It is located about 300 feet up
the hill in back or the house on the
farm which has been in Mrs. Will's
family for four genemtions.
The Wills have always been fascinated with Meigs County· history
and their own family ancestry so
their enthusiam about the old com
mill is-understandable.

Noqnan likes nothing better
than to take visitors up to the site of
the old sandstone Indian mill. The
stone has a hole about eight inches
across dug to a depth of about a
foot. The Indians, Will explains,
put their shelled com down Into the
hole and then using a hard stick
worked it until it was of the desired
fineness.
The farm where Mr. and Mts.
Will reside was purchased by AUegra's great-grandfather, Philip
Wilkinson Nicholson, soon after he

Woniah cited following crash

MinimUm.Prices

Wednesday the results of a survey lhc income tax for schools.
it said an income tax gives votindicating growing acceptance of
ers
a new option, offering a tax that
the option.
is
based
on ability to pay and
The group said 16 of the 35 districts are subri) tting the proposals .11 reduciilg the need to raise propeny
second time after earUer ones were taxes. It also offers growth in revenues with innation, stretched-out
defeated. ' ·
Twenty-one are as;;ing for a payments through payroll deduccontinuing tax, while the others tions and relief for farmers who
propose a fixed period up to 5 bear a large share of the tax burden
years, after which their levies in rural districts.
But the council' said an income
would be discontinued unless
tax
also adds a fifth government
renewed.
entity
to those already imposing
The council said there are
advantages and disadvantages to such a tax.

INDIAN CORN MEAL • This hole in a sandstone rock on 1he
Rulland Township Farm or. Norman 'and Alleara Will is where
·Indians ground tbelr com with a bard stick. It is eight inches in
diameter. and about a root deep.
'·
returned from the War between the in Meigs County.
William Nicholson inherited the.
States.
.farm
from the P~ilip Nicholsons,
At that time the Nicho'lsons
and
then
it passed to Seth Nichollived in Mason, Va. (that, of
son,
longtime
Meigs County
course was before West Virginia).
School
teacher
and
noted hisiOriln.
The soory goes that Mrs. Nicholson
Norman
and
Allegra
WiU, niece of
sav~d her husband's paychecks so
that after the ,war ended, they had Seth Nicholson, have lived in the
the money to purchase the propeny hoineplace for maoy yean. ·

•
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